HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-06-09 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa MesaJ
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·.Nixon
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·a eii.eve s I . . Peace·~
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President •
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Re.tu~~ing to ·coast Today ' .
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DAILY PILOT
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, ~UNE 9, )969
'IOI., '2, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS, 4' l"AOl!S
f;l_,..,.,,.=,,,..~rnm •11 a
1 ·stain • ID Shootout t
Slain in LA Sh ootout ' . The body of Louis AJvirdes lies in a Los Angele5 parking lol follow-
ing a ·s!lootout·wilh police Sunday. Two officers were wounded in the
fracas. See story, Page 9.
300 Teach ers Bo yco tt
Class es i n Hu ntin gton . . ,
Dy RUDI NIEDZl~LSKI four pcrccnt·increase with a two pcrccnl
OI IM DtHy .. 11.1 Slit.fr boost. ' ' •. • • Mdre thaii 300 teaChers sli yed away "\Vhal We ha ve offered ·you.oil fair,
from·ctisses loday in a protest:'againt the equitable pnd just. If you are unhappy
HunUnm' B ch Iii h Schoot Distr' t hei:-e. there are other ~hoot districts . .,...,n ea g . K: • LoOk arolind,"'he added ;
Boartl of Trustees whk:h failed ~o c:ume Followil'lg a lengthy executive sE:ssion .
to tqm$ wil.h Uiem in a salary dft';pute, t~chers,'.deckied to. offer yet another pro·
Students at-alJ°feur dlstrict111gli~ls· -posa1 ~lch m~ched-~~ee-:fi~~
-Huntington Beach, Marina, 'feslm1ni.
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but Wt\!fh provided for work1n~ o~t :i
ster·and Fountain VaUey-began,tinal·eX· ;boost ':"yond ~ tw_o perctnt 1f extra
aminations today bul faced confusion money ;should be avatlablC.
about where to go and what to do. _The meeting, held. in the Westminster
To provide relief, the administration High ~h?Ol Cafeteria at the :~and or
hlted-sublstltute teachers to acb:nlnister the Dist{i~t Educators Associahon, was
exams and man vacant classrooms. paclr;ed with teachers w~o were bopll)g
According to Disf. Supt. Max Forney , th~L ,ihe trustees would bite at the latest-a~proximately SO percent of lhe ,egular off~... .
leaching'staf£ was on duty today'fn what ·Bf'l lhe board turned a deaf car to•the
was declared a minimum day by·.,e ad· neW _ proposal and • TruStee Matthew
minisf.r~lion. 1 \rt:1 uker moved lo adjourn, despl~ .in-
1Since the early morning , houq&., the s1 ent dem~d~ by _ P:t.A ne~oliabng
school district telephone exchange )uzzed ... ncll CtJainnan Ray' Cooper Jo; keep-the
with . incoming calls from teac~ .. ln· ~Ung pptn. .. ..
fcrming their employer that they i,vould Tnistees Bentley anti Ray M. ~Schmitt '~laking "persona] leave" today. · radded • their votes "Ind •cleared 1the
1The exact degree of at.nteeism "JWill 1cafeteri.a, leaving: Ule angerednteacbers
nOt be. knOwn until Tuesday, buti,_ it, Is ~behind. Absent from the meeUn8::'t'Ue
. e1tJmated that a majority or the di.irict's l Trustees Dr. Joseph · RJblll and R. B.
497 teachers are involved. . ~ Wilson.
'Ibe teachers decided 1o go ahead' with 1 DEA preldent Carl MaonemaM then
tl)eit protest action Salurday follo1'·ing a faced the saddened educators and said,
ffat refusal by lhe ~boatd of trustet1 to; "Well, where do we 10 frc:m heret''
consider lbe'ir latest. proposal of a 1 four • He did not have to wait long. An Im·
percent increase with a 2.8 percent bj>ost • Mediate motlQll followed caU~ for. Ule,
from unbudgeted money . wolkout t oday. rt was acctptcd by ·an
"Our prosmal is so ckl6e to yours~_~t overwhelming majority.
we are asking you to actept ours. we ''We're just disgusted wUh·lhe fact that
have gone just about as far as we cap," the board would not coater. 'f'h11t's the
1aid trustee Chail'man John Bentley, reas0n ror the·walkOO~,tt said "-fanemann
whose five-member board offered them a · (Set BOYC01T1 Pact 2)
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By End of August
Two Panthers
Sought; Rites
Honor Victim Nixon P-lans Pullout
T)vo of three Black Panther Pal'IY
members accused of killing a Santa Ana
police officer are still at large today. Of 25,000 V.S. Troops
Sought by police are Nathaniel Odis
Grimes, 21, of 2018 W. 8th St., and Arthur .By MERJUM:.(N SMITH ference with Thieu on this tiny island ln De Witte League, 20, o( 1633 W~ Highland UP'f wllitt " ... ._.,..,. St, both of Santa Ana. MIDWAY ISLANP (UPI) _ President the Pa.cific. It was the seventh meeting or
rn Or"ange County Jail charged with Nixon haS arino~d that 25,000 11.S. a U.S. president with leaders or the
mUrder and consplr"acy 1s Daniel M. troops wiR ~ WfthcJrawn frorii 'So!:rth Saiaon • government. They appeareQ af·
Lynem, 22, of 1711 W. Chestnut St., Sarita Vietnam by the end 'of August and ln-fable and relaxed, confident of the course
Ana. dicated others will li!ave as ·n\ilitary con-of t~e war and mildly optlmisHc· about
i'Police said the,search for .Grimes and ditlons . warrant .... .J , i • • • • • __ pea~.
League has been widespread throughout At ·t,he S&l'fle time, Nt~n. bAcked· South Defense Secrtita'ry Mt lvln R. Laird,
California and neigh,boring ztales sirice Slorln oft Reicffofl who new back to Wasllington from
Friday. Midway, ¥1id in· \'i'ashlngton loday , th;u.
The policempn, Ne lion A. Saszcer. 24, To .me; Cut Pate 2 more troops may be pulled out in August
was shot and killed while on duty Vietnamese Pmident Nguyen Van Thieu but gave no figures. .
Wednesday nighl at 3rd and Raiit streets. In · opposing · the lmpoa:IUOn of any At the sal]'le time, Pentagon s°'i'rces in·
A memorial mass was held Sunday for coalition govermnent, Including the dlcated the 25,000 troops being pulled q_ut
officer Sasscer at St. Cecilia Church In ~munlsb, on the w1norn· southeast wUI be transferred, at leas~ inJUallY..' lo
Tustin.. .• · ,Asia t"e'pUt?Uc. ·• '. , _ Okinawa and Ha wall rather than being
--HI-know that---811 present wouldJikewis:c.: Nfron Jri~ ~-~ reauctlOil i~ rehlrrted dlf'tttly .. to the ·fX>lltinental
be ready ·to do exactly as be did," said nouncement !Uiiai}. Ila sumnut .con· --(Rf TROOP-CU'l,P1Je·21---
tlle Rev. John Sammon, pallor of the • ··
chu rch, to IOll10 llO Tepre11<11tatives O[ ' * o * * * "'({ *
county law enforcement and lirefighUng 11i.Jl'~~;,d. · · ' · ·~~~:"havenothingiobea!hamedof," lT_I uUu_, 0, f Midway
the priest sakt ''The bad1e you wear ls a riiark~and-sicrLol~lon." , Santa Ana Police Chltf Edward ;l;:l''e~n~--.~ Ei "~ ---· -' --re~~~f.:-were held today In Preridertt,. e~~ Peace Hopes Boosted
ca:den Grove Community Church for the HONOLULU (\JPl) -Pr~t Nl1on the feeling the United Slates, South Vlct.-
slt.tn ofOcer · An escort of more Ut1n lOO went kl Midway Island h!tPl'na tO tnhapce nam and thelr other aWei In the war. ha11 motorcycle policelnen convoyed Is ~y ·the cha" '. fOi: ...-'.lit V(,..••m He "
rtom a Santa Ana h.neral home lo the · came a~ thfnktna,:=;.-:·· . Improved thcli: bargaining position ~·
rs.e J\IANHUNT,,P•ae 11 • , His 'meitfnt -wllli , -(. Ncuye\t . P1r11: • •
• 1 , Van T1IJMI it. 5cM1t 1-1 br,ouctf a The reuobini w"as .thal trn! i.llles had
"N' I XON RET UD1'1JNG' . r~:tt.!~,e ~'Gflldlll · l!oilh. 1oll1f ltOOt lgalnst :Vitt Cont or J.U l I hOi><!f .. _ lllo~·~ lb ·Nor!fl Vletnamue'•~ptl ·I~ Paris to • ' ·. ' ' ' · · · ·."' •" I , :~~--lf;/r, . "'111"'1 :ljilll tl\4111. or (4U-Cbt "dl\'Orce" Coni·
T""' CO ~ST'TO"'""HT ""'~' " · ' ' · ~-" " -~..... .......... .t....., 1ut eek v 4 ~'•V ' "Nii"" idovW imi lll._:lldftd i;. be · '.'~~ ·• "'':,;;=. .. :~ ·the
The"Pr,.krent 1od hll'"porty II duo his blue cjlli'l Into Ille. .-:i.r in-·wGidl ofllie~. ,t;~.; the
l>ack on the Oran(• PMA fl t :IO this mlltn( to st'ak ~ ,,,.,_ wttMmr~I ta..,..,, .o( theli: communlq\lll .lu the J•-The b"· •· I "led tr _... di 1$,GQf ~ ~~ ......., iii Mkflr17 -~lei ·with ~ .. oon, :11" -~ q•• • 1'"'' .-•. tcibt reol ..... , "" , • · ,· '. ' 'M "•""'-'"1n• l!lliisit-''"--'~•--• hlOl on h a •rtivat· at· El Toro Marjne 1 ""'V"' f -r --~ "' .. 1 ..,,,v.\;I, a 'Clrlll:R m· uu.-. tori)S Air Station. ' • forces. • • · , It · wu clurl)' dilltrti\t· ~ earl)' .~-t~ ·~ ~rt• ~111 d-·~ (or .thli<I "J8 lnloll loNi.. fir ..-.."'" llet...en lollJ!Or PraNlent L~ "~" •re« "~ ~ ' " .,... " tho~ . ~ ..il!b~~ :;::·""""a.,~...._ and •-~·-1o1 ••· Sal:.;;. his ~Whlte House West ln-S.n Clemente -•.rtlllANJISI \Mil Ullll!IYfl ~· \QIC evu
Car •.n ~vernJ1t>t stay be[ort returnin(• ;:l:f~J! , ·~•w:otwlqi 1~•inl<}'!· Thleol Weiit'out of lilt wa)
Tuesday to Wa~hington, o.c. 1 ,,;;;:.ia ti ·~ Nmin with ·=~·ny any differ~s of oplrti~ ..
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federal Agent
Burns Hiniself,
Foils Ki dnap
A kidnaped lederal narcoties ·a.gent Jn..
volved in • major deal gambled on
suicide in$tad ot murder Sunday by set-
ting fire to a ·Rossmoor garate whefe he
had been handcuffed 1to a waterplpe ·by
abductors. l
Six persons including· lbe own~ ol ·the
home -a paraplegic psychology major
at Cal St.ate, Long Beach •_,, are{,in
.Cl:!~tody today on~uspicion of .being In·
volved in .he allegeOkfdhad-to-kill case.
Bruce Becil, 30, of J:lolf~oocl. is . In
critica l conditJbn fill 'the Orai\ge County
fl1edical Center bUTn care. unit, with third
degree bums over 40 i)ercenl" or his tiOCly.
JnVestigators s.iid Beck had tplen(y of
reason to believe he.,vduld 'he eRCUted
when his kidfu1J>Qrs·,~ef\lrned to 1~
(See KlUN'A'P, Page Z) .
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' . Weedier
F-air.:and~aP~:oo~tJ1 what
the man said, and Tuesday shapes
up as a sunny one with tempera·
ture~ ranglna from 70 to n 1atong
the Orange Coast. 1
I NSIDI;; TODA 1'
Along tvi th a 10r"~PUP of".the
Emntu a1U0rdl .. ioday'1 enttrtain-
WJent page-of/en re views oJ:.the
la~sl. Pr11•11tqtjP11,s. '/r'\"l ", thf
Hu,iitinoton · iBcac~ • l?tayhou.se
;and 'Ike' UC ' Ifvl•~ Sllh1liljbn1J
'Orch'estr, •.',Page • 18.. 1 • • If ' • ,. ••
•I~ " M Mifl'ff ... U.:... jl ... ""'' . ,, """'""' " caurtn1.. ' ' MtW'IM .. ' 11
Cllffllf.. "' \Ul8, JHet._ """-W C:~ft I , •lt Or-lll!M CllWllllY>\ 11
C ........ rtl 11 SJl'tll l'trttl' 11
'DMffl Nttlt" I' t.dM~ U-'' Ow.tCll M · Uitftl • lt-41
•flttrllt ..... ' • llKI .. ,.....___ "'" •1"1fl'tMll!Mnl 11 ' TM...... ' lt
"IN!IU a.11 """""" •• • , • ..__ .. ,uw..,.._ ••
AIMI '--"ti'$ 11 W«lil ...... 4f
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PILOT
LOGBOOK
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Nixon .Moving Political
Center of U.S. to West
By NOllMAN ANDEllSON
Of ... DellY .. ,. • ..,,
Jllll lib LondiJn, 'M""°"; Parb, the daullne SAN CLEMENTE (0<
11EWPORT BEACH or LAGUNA BEACH) locates the capital or the Unittd
' S&.llM: -even thou&h temporarily -and indicates even more dd.inltely where
.. pa1111eo1 -o1 the nation 111 moving -to t!ie west aod partlcul.lrly
California.
1be lfkdlon by President Richard Nixon of his White Hoose West on
the Orange Coast ls the latest and most impressive step
In a process that began more than a century ago when
President Lincoln flnanced the \Jnioa during the Civil War
with gold and ailver from Callfomil and Nevada mines.
* Shiftln& or the power balance frorn East to West has
been: rapid alnce World War II. California is now the
lvgest and th .. -politically -the -· powerful or Slates.
Com.iderlng the poUUCs ol' it alone, 1ook al the1e r .... ,
1be hiolt powerful man in the ftte world -President Nixon -is a
Watemer and another Westerner is one of the small number of most import-
ant tnen in the nation: Earl Warren, former governor or California, iJ chief
jUl&ice. With them. as polent political figures is a Californian, Robett Finch,
a member of tbe President's cabinet {and a good bet to succeed his boss il
aD '°" weJI). nus js nOt the first time a triwnvir&te of Californians has been pollt.ic-
• oJl;r ~L In the 1950s Nixon wu Vice president, Warren chief ju.slice
and Sm. WillWu F. Knowlaod was Senate majority leader. * . Here are 10111e other indicaticm ti the West's im~:
1'ao11'1 lllr<nlth in the area beld firm in 1961 aod contributtd mlghtily
to bll narrow n:tary, in which be did not carry one maj<r urbe area. But he
ova wbelm'.ia&b-. canied Orqi!: and San Diego counUe, and got Callfornia's
to electoral YOtes. He might not have needed lllinolJ.
-1be polilica] life of the Kenned)" has been sea led in Uie West.
John F. Kennedy went from Los Angeles to become President .of the
United states (having ·to defut a Westerner in the process) and Robert F.
Kennedy 's political fortunes -and life -died in Los Angeles.
. Primaries in the West oo more than one occasion have changed the
CCG"lt fl. a man. or a nation.
U was California in JMI whk:h made -for a le=rt momenta -
Robert P. Kennedy the froot nmner far the DemocraUc ential nondna1
lion, ....,. an earlier W"""11 prfmaey, In Oregon, bad ap plooibly 14
baft dealt him a fatal blow.
It ,. .. the Call!omla primary l JJM which gaye Barry Goldwater ...:
.bimlelf a We:s&emer -the Republican prmidenUal iJOmination (in San Jl'rln-
dlCO, Incidentally) over an Eutemer. 'Ndsm .Rocte:ft;}ler. , , 1 And during the time Barry Coldwater wai .teader of the Republican
Party, the Orange Coast, out of the. Balboa Bay Club, was the party's ma!n
headquarters.
Again it wa.s a California primary -that of 1956 -with which Adlai
Stevenson knocked out Estes Kefauver and clinched his second Democratic
presidential nomination.
An Oregon primary ended for all time the presidential aspirations ol
Harold Staam. onetime boy wonder of the GOP, when he lost in 1943 to
~ n!...~'Y (who aubs<quenlJY ~ 1;tis. ~ Whi~ ~°'r.!"~.,to
Call!omla again played the vital role In the political fortune& or -
P1esidtnl
It was the deal between Sm. Hiram Johnson of California (and there's
more to his role in U.S. life) and the Texas deJegation whlch gave New York
Gav. Franklin Rooeevelt the Dtmocralic presidential nomination in 1932 and
m1de the Texas favorite son, House Speaker John N. Gamer, vice president . * . Johnson, as a powerful man from a pot.edt state, played other influential
roles. He helped to male two other presidents and might have been one him-
ltlf, or at least a vice president · 1 It wu his candidacy u a favorite son that contributed to a deadlocked :mo GOP NaUonal Convention lb.at settled in a smoke-fiUed room in favor or
Warren G. Hard.Ing. Johnson haughtily refused the vice presidential nomina-
tion and Calvin Coolidge got it instead, along with. a couple years later, tile
White House.
Johnson played a role, somewhat smaller, in making Woodrow Wilson
President of the United States. Then governor of California, Johnson was a
leader ol lhe Progressives in 1912 wbo fought the COP Old Guard in behalf of
Er-President Theodore Roosevelt aga.Wt President William Howard Talt. They
10&1 to the machine and the Progressives formed their own party. with John-
son the vice presidentlal candidate on TR's presidential Ucket. The party ran
aecood, splitUng the Republican vote and electing Wilson a minority president.
And as a final lac:t, Wilson owed -in a manner of speaking .:.. hU re-
electlon in 1916 to California.I Charles Evans Hughts, COP nominee, went lo
bed believing himseU Preaidenl~lect Final returns early the next morning,
gave the st.ate and the election to Wilson.
The West has had a great role in U.S. life up to now. With Richard Ni.Ion
leading the way politically, who can foretell what will come nest!
Food Strike Waning?
LOS ANGEL.F.S (AP) -Negotiations in
the Los Angeles area supermarket strike
resumed. today with the Retail Clerks
Union saying seWement Is near and the
Food Employers Council denying it.
DAILY PILOT
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CAl..IFOINIA
QtlAHGI COAST l'UaLllHINO COM,.AN'I'
RoHrt H. We1d
,.,..._,, 11'111 P.itintllfr
Jec:k It, Curley
Vk:I ,,..._. 9llil Gtnerll Mt11191r
11iot1•I" K1.Wil . ... ..
Fro111 Page l
TROOP CUT. ••
United States.
The announcement of the troop
withdrawal and other decisions reached
by Nixon and Thieu drew a mixed recep-
tion. The North Vietnamese, the Viet
Cong and li-1oscow denounced the move as
a "meaningless. • • propaganda
maneuver" designed to apptll!e antiwar
critics in the United States and elsewhere
around the world.
Reaction in Washington also varied.
Senate ·Republican Leader Everett M.
Dirksen said It represented the "first
solid hope for the American people" since
the war began si.z years ago. But Sen.
George D. McGove-n (0.S.D. ), a leading
dave, said it amounted to mere
"tokenism."
Thieu flew directly back lo Saigon rrom \Tiio11111 A. Mvr,~lne
-M&n91lnl MIW - -. ----Mldway and cautioned newsrnen against
describing the reduction of U.S. forces u
a "withdrawal." He said the correct tenn
was ''repla cement" -noting that South
Vietnamese forces will take over.
'lbleu also warned that anyone in South
Vietnamese public life ':Vho ad;-oeates a
'coalition with the Communists "wlll be
severely punlstfed. , .because_ he hl5
lldped the inemy."
He Said the subject of South Viti·
namese elections ~· npt ~ .at
Mldw>y because ''l!W ljuestioa ,beJmas
to.the Vielnap>eae people thomlelves Ind
Pmldent N-does no& wllll to . IJl.
terf"" jtl the politkal We. o! South Vlei. mm.•
In the. 1irn1 wonls of the joint Midway
1>xm111111Jquf, Nim! aod 'lbieu told the
COrnmwlllll to ruU.. the !utility •nd
dangu of trJin1 to win a military vktory
In Vittnam and said Uw!:rt must be self-
determination for ·the V~amese peor,to
without interference or terror. They ro ed
out imposition of a coalllion 1ovcmment
on South Vietnam.
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MesanHurt f . " '.
In Freak
Auto Crash
A c .. ta Meu \... tlnk<ring with hiJ
car in the driveway .suffered a broken
back tat< Saturday when an ou1..r ... 1ro1
car jumped a curb and rammed the vebl-
cle, Cruahing bim against the back wall of
tbe garqe.
The driver of the second car wu boot-
ed on JUSp!clon ol. fekmy drunken drMn&.
Daniel P. Wabh, 12, of UQ Eldeo A .. .,
Is In fair condiUon today at Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital, with a fractured
vertebra.and multiple btuila.
Bobby H. Fox, 20, or 153 Cent« SL,
Costa Mesa, was held at Costa Mesa City
Jail as traffic investigators conferrtd
with lhe Orange County District Attorney
seeking a complaint.
Officer George Webster said Fox was
driving south on Elden Avtnue ap.. proachltic Cecn Place about 11 p.m.
• Saturday night when be miAed the turn
and smubed into Walsh's car.
Terey A. Rogers, 22, of 2710 Wildwood
St., Santa Ana, was helping Walsh work
on the car's fuel pump but escaped injury
when his buddy was piMed agaimt the.
wall.
Patrolman David N. Stem said he ar-
rest~ Fox when the latter appeared
unable to pass a field sobriety tut at the
accident scene.
From P.,,e l
KIDNAP ..•
DAA.Y I'll.OT' ...... 11r ~ ,,._
GOOD ·WORK, Sl~Miaa Mel'-,
mild, Fountain Valley's Donna
Flory, · geta a C<lDll"lllulatolY
kiss 1r0m· brother Clan, 3.
1
-'2Beautie~
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SIUJre ~
'~ry'·T~~s·
' . I ... '4 ,, w..i onnce Cowtty Joj;l)es caplured
twe of the three iop llDni' Sunday ar·
i.rnooo In the aM1lll be/luty ~ at
the ' Cotti M<fa-Newpoct' Harbor · Lions
Club Fish Fry. · · j
Seventeen-ye.ar-old ~a F I o r Y "av~" an earlier to .MW Foun-
tain Valley, Ellen Ev , by capturing
the co"veted Miss Mermaid trophy over a
field.of U &irb that included Miss Evans
and W..mtinster's n!lgnlng tiUlsl, Jayme
Boyd. ' n.e new ~1iss Mermaid i& a Uny blue.
eyed blonde who mUS!6es JS.-24-35 ~ is
bi .lier JunW ,... al r-. ya11ey
!lljii SitioOL She -at-111117 CaNlml UiDeoand !lopes to 1*lime a ti!acber! 11111 Boyd, ti, o(<D Welb Road,
woilmlnsler, toiil< ,..neN<p honers 1n
the-Mermaid compedtion. She la a senklr
11 toun1a1n v~ lU1h aod , liats
.........._.1~1-3>.
"V)<t! Yeell, 11, .... cbolen Mlcl'(:os11
)(aa iii~ jl!dfel' ~Ung. Milf,)'oak.
w11o tueteOcb;llll queen Parnll4 I!fed or
lluntlnaioa' ~ b a IOJllt<>mC!i'• at •
Colll M-lll&h ldlool aod meaaures 36-2'-3&. • ' •
The contest wu conducted before a
large and appredatlve O"Owd at the main
stage of the Coata Me.sa city park where
the Lions' 14111 )l!lllual Fl!h Fry w11 held
l"riday throq!t Sunday,
NEW MESA QUEEN
Vicki Yoak, 16
From Puge 1
Martha Ann Drive, IO be set the bWe to
attracl help.
Firemen &l1l8Shed tbelr way into the
• blazing structure and cut the agonized Beck free, after which lawmen began
picking up suspects in tbe bi.z.arrt case,
based on hiJ information.
Authoritiea said Beck had been in-
volved in a sa1e 11ncluding up to 500 kilos
or marijulllll and the <jrug dealera
evidently loamed or his rolt In belptq to
break the ease.
Talking Wins Students
.At VCI Chance to Talk
BOYCOTI •••
after the meeting.
Although a majority of the teachers
will be away from the classrooms today,
they are not remaining idle and will con·
sider further strategy during a general
membership meeting scheduled today at
lhe Surf Theater.
Arrested at Vlrioul place& In Onnge
and Los Ancelet -fiultday """' Raymond Gra~es Jr., 24, of 12322
Martha Ann Drive, a be~Pl)'chology
student and son of retired naval officer
R. J. Graves, a dental professor in San
Mateo.
He and his male nurse attendanl, Ray
Thurman, 24, were picked up at Los
Alamitos Racetrack as they were about
to leave the area for San Diego.
Los Angeles Police De~ve Sgt. Glen
Bachman identified the "other four
.&UI~ )IJ lhl;, ~ ·-u -Jtny ....... 38, ~I YCtirbtopber, 29,
Elizabeth Christopher, 2'1, Ind a 17•yeat•
old juvenile.
Silt. Qachman said 1_1 .JI caliber
revMter a~ a .'tit calbet derringer
allegedly used to kidnap Beck Saturday
were Kl.zed by lawmen who invaded a
home in the Ramparts Diltrict of the city
SW!d&y.
Beck, who had been held captive in the
garage l1nce the group arrived Saturday
at mid-day, was screaming for help as
flames blazed from the garage Sunday
night.
Suspects in the case art held on several
charges, while Lo! Angeles police &eek
formal complaints from the Los Angeles
District Attorney 's office.
Orange County 18.wmen confiscated
some 2,000 drug pills during tbelr portion
of the investigation said Sil Buchman,
but the exact role was not known.
"Beck had good reason to believe be
would be kill ed when his abductors
returned," Sgt. Bachman said, "so he
struck matches and lit • om e
newspapers."
Fro1n Page l
MANHUNT •..
Studenta wbo a couple of mon1hl ago
tweed ncess of the UC Irvine faculty'•
Academk Senal< With their llCtla or
talklng out today bave wen full voice in
Senate meetings.
Students now will be gtven the same
pivilege to speak i.s professors. 1bey
Will not however, have a vote.
During the past year, all students who
wished to attend have regulrly been
granted admission to Academk Senate
sessions. But only two student represeir
tatives have had the right to speak.
The students' presence has been very
largely felt and at Umes they have out·
numbered. faculty. By applaUle and oc-
casslonal sroam « bool tbt · dta\clent
stud'2lt -bu angered """"' ~ ressors and rdhforced the voice of
others.
A few weeb aio Gerald Whipple of the
mtlkli odtool r<lerred to them ~ ':!ht
howlma. claque.'' Chairman of Infor:ma·
Uon ind Computer Science Julian
Feldman complained that they were in--
timldatlng. . •
Most profe53ors att.end.lnJ Senate
meelinp have shown ,tolerance for the
students and sympathy for their desire to
win a voice in faculty affairs.
Some weeks ago, professors declded to
add non-voting student mem~rs to all
faculty committees -about 40 student
School Shelter Asked
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Stat< School
Superintendent Max Rafferty and two
other top state officials today caUed for
the inclusion of fallout lhelten lD IChool
construction and alteration projects.
appolnlm<nb In all.
1ben the quelllon. before the Senate
last weet wU whether lo give those 40
studmtJ equal privilege or debat< In the
general faculty meetings. In a surprise
twist, an amendment by Chairman of
Organlsmic BJolgy Grover Stephen& to
extend 1peaking rights to the entire stu-
dent body passed.
Only four er five hands were shown in
opposition aJDOrli the about SO professors
attending the meeting. Among the better
than 200 professors who did not attend
are tome who have ltopped coming lo
Academic Senate metUnp because they
an dJlitllttd with the aludmt clamor
and, they feel, laculty aellout.
The now prevaillns voice was ei:-
pmaed by Miiian! Pro!easor or
~~ Biology Jooeph Anilt~. 'oo
"1'11 vof.'rJU,. mclron' 'matl biis a
representative body instead of a private
club. We nee~ the 1reyelutionary zeal" of
the students." · ; •
In a more conservaUve vote, professors
defeated only 24 to 18 a resolution by
As!oclate Dean of Physical Sciences
Bernard Gelbawn reaffirming that p~
posala normally should be first reviewed
by Senate committees.
He argued that matters were being too
often introduced oo the floor and the
AcadtmJc Senate was passing them in
precipitous action.
An angry Professor of Engll.sh Howard
Babb backed him up, scolding that "It is
morally ridiculous for this group to act as
if committees are set up to prevent
business from coming to the floor .
''Not that my vete means a god damn,''
Babb muttered.
Under consideration at that Ume will
be an attempt to gain a restraining Order
against adoption of the tnut'ee proposed
salary schedule,
The trustees have offered a salary
range of $8,850 to $13,700 whi!e~A
has been asking for a range of S6,900 lo
$13,000. The current range is from $6,460
to $12,920.
Classes are planned for a normal
schedule Tuesday but repercussions from
the teacher action will probably C1>ntinue
weeks after school lets out this Thursday.
The administration has been in con·
slant contact "'ith the Orange County
Coume.l since May 29, when the teachers
called a minimum day whicll was
described by the administration aS a
"mutiny." ~f0'4Pl the aid of the counsel's office
as lawye~ for lhe district, they are look·
Ing into the legality of the teacher pro·
test, but have not made definite plans for
punitive action. .~
In addition, it is possible that students
as well as the teachers may face 8.n ad·
di tional day of school. since the board of
trustees can declare· a makeup day to be
added to the end of the year for the loss
of any school day_
Flood A1cl Requested
\VASHINGTON <AP) -Unprecedented
winter floods and a possibly record
s1'.01vpack in the Sierra Nevada mowi·
tains brought 70 state and local officials
fror.1 t:::l1lornia today lo appeal for
doubled fede ral funding of nood control,
recla1nation and navigation projecls.
Clyde \\'asn"t 11r nc ti c 1 n g
salesmanshi1t. 1\1 l cas l. not
kno\\·ingly. lie "·as lr)i11g lo he
helpful, because 1ha1"s l1i!' joh.
If 1hat's old fashioned, I ~1c"s
church, and following services, on to Los
Angeles International Airport.
Officer Sa.sscer's body was flown to
Washington D.C. for services and burial
in his native city of Upper Marlboro, Md.
How to kick the we're guilly.
A 101 of retail people ha,·f'n·1
learned how to listen. 'f'hey
"·a11t to use the n1onth J,efore
they use 1l1e ears. • •
He is survived by hU wife, Lynn, 11., of
Garden Grove, and his mother, five
br<ithers and three sisters, all residents
of the eastern part of the United Slatu:.
een1e-meen1e-Every store o\\·ner thinks his
Alore iii a cul above any other
store, and certainlv we're as
proud of our store b i:u1y store
• • mm1e-moe
~1eanwhile, members of the Negro
community in Santa Ana drafted an open Don't ever uk a customer why
letter to Chief Allen. he buya from you.
. ~y .depLo~_u..__ o(fici!r':z ~lb.-W ''-t--t~~'.We ~ed tltal 1''h.~ OD(!
also aattd poli~ \o heed a call for ~CUl!ltomer pff,.1,-a--fumlf-look
coo1nus to forestall mor~ bloodshed. and replied, ''For ab1K>lutely
nie ietter readsl n qart:-."As far as we no realOn wbataoeYer.''
can tell, this murdered·oWcer was not Not being real mre what be
the, obiect of any _parUcular_ill will in the meant by that, we abut up and blacl: c:Ommunlly,'Nor wu this killing a part of any "organized plot aimed at po. 10Jd him two 1uih.
lice omcers... · The ~n we mention this
Il cooUif\lei1":'"l'hert-arrnlt-OUt.s1de· --i1 beanie the other My One of
agltatots. ~e Is no desire for violence did II h on 1he 'part of Ule· black community. our cu1tomen le us w y
Please ensure that your men do not he bou8ht from u1. We learned
become the q:ltalors." tha1 he i1 a practicin~ pt}'·
Offtcei Sanoer was sh~ at 11:53 p.m. cbologi1t in Anaheim. While
WedneSday; aeeonda itttt he radioed wailing for 01 to wrile up hi1
bcadquarten: he was, ,Stopping some pa-1........ he aald some nice ~iano for q..-ias, ,.......,,
. 1Au1s ~U1lnel 'Ji .. II; or 1804 w. 3rd thinp oboul ua, and then
St.: wliO u ... I i!lil a (ew'feet from tho uked u -·d he 1n1e ... 1ec1 in
,comer when .010-murd!r took pile<, Imo"'°' why he dro•e clear
1lw\f a SllOI and 0 tr/ for help aod found d h --~ ••o Sulcer tyq oo hiJ blc.I< In front ol the own .,.. lo ,,_... -on •
.... .....i • 1port flOlll, ,....-cu. N --" d MJrttoez. a part Ume ambulance at· alarau7 we want e to
teoclllll called !or aasia11nce on the bow why. ·
patn>l cu radio. Well, .. ide Crom enjoylns
The mortall1 woundtd officer wu au excuM to •hit the area on
hahit.
atore where he uaed to buy bis owner could be. And yrl, we
clolha, a very fine store by don't try to kid 011ri;eJ,,es. Our
th~ because whenever he merchandise. Ii e I e c t i o 11 111111
~Wen1 ~ln flf'jiiCk out a suit the values are quite app ealinµ. l1ut
aaleani.a.n had immediately let'B fa ce it. On 1hr. "hulr.
tried to eelJ him what the atore "-e're rather like Anv nll1 rr
wanted him to buy. good men 'g stol"f". ·
What thia man wanted to do There's on.ly one tllini.: '1c '
wu to buy eomething, not be l1ave tl1al no other 1ne11'11 l'iloro
eold eome!!iiJi8. ha•. Ua.
LUt_year 'Le Was agrefthly ,-.-"W"e~·"'tr"'y-ct-=o-rhc"' frie111lly 11n1I
1nrprised, on a chance vi1it to helpful, }1111 \'i e k1to\\· 11110
Bidwell't, when our Clyde t11ing that n1ay be si~u i fi1·11nl.
Reyes took e11oush intereat, Our castomer!'! are n1ore lnya l
be.lore ever taking a suit from than most.
the rack, to aAk about h11 color lnAtead 0£ using tlu: tt:nie--
and pattem preferences, a.nd meenie-minie-moe s ye le rn of
to learn eomethlng about ihe picking a 1tore,, you 111ighL try
ldnd.oLatyLea he had ~buy-buying from UA ''for abr;olutely
ing ehewhere. no reaaon "'batsoever."
Jack Bidwell
rushed to Slnll Ana C<mmunitJ Hooplul wh.,. be died at IJ:J$ Lm. 'l,bunday. • pleaMUt oanny altt:rnoon, he 3467 Vio Udo, Ju1t beyond the Arc:heo o•·e11,.,. 0, . ._
He oppamiUy bad anticipated no trou-Nid his maiR rouon wu our Pacifie Coul Hiflhw•y. Teierhone 6734510.
ble becaute his eervice revolver wu In tftlli11pa• to U.ten. He had Drive between Udo Theall'e & Diy •lore & park in renr.
tu holsttr with the ham-llrap snap-finally been driven out of th• Coypriflht 1969, Jack Bidwell,
ped in place, Chld Allen Nvealed. '--'-----------------------------------'
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' ~ '\. .. • • \ ORANGE C0U~TY, OALIFORNI~ ' . . . ' . voi:. 62, NO. 137, '4 SECTIONS, ~ ·Pil.&ES: --r1 \ • I ..,'\I I , ,. '
Viet
-' . '·.
ton
Troops Cut
"
eac·
Nixon Says 25,000 Leaving Soon
By MERRIMAN SMITH
Ul'I WN+I Mwtl ...... ,
MIDWAY ISLAND (UPI) -President
Nixon has annolinced that 15,cm U.S.
troops will be withdrawn from South
Vietnam by the end or August and in-
dicated others will leave as military con-
ditions warrant.
At the same time, Nixon backed South
Vletnamese Prtsident Nguyen Van Thieu
in "Opposing the imposition of any
coalition government, including the
Communlsts1 on the wartorn southeast ASia rtpublic.
Nixon made his troop reduction an·
Federal Agent
Burns Himself,
Foils Kidnap
nouncement Sunday at a summit con-
ference with Thieu on this tiny island in
the Pacific. it was the seventh meeting or ~
a U.S. president with leaders o( the
Saigon government. They appeareQ ar.
Stories on Reaction
To Troop CUt Page 1
fable and relaxed, confident of the course
of the war and ~Idly optimistic about
peace ..
De.fense Secretary Melvin R. Laird,
who new ·back to· W.ash!ngton from
Midway, said in .washingtpn today thaL
more troopo may be pulled out In A"'"'t
but gave no flgurts.
At the same time, Pentagon sources in·
dlcatql the ZS;DOO troops being pulled out
will be transferred, at least iniUallJ, to
Okinawa and Hawaii rather than being
returned dlrediy to the c0ntlnental
United States.
The llUlOWlCelll'1lt of the troop
• withdrawal and other dedsions reached
by Nixon and Th1eu drew a mixed recep.
tiGn. The North Vletnaineae. the Viet
Cong and.Moscow denounced the 'move as
a "meaningless. , . p rOp a g and a
(See TROOP CUT, Page t)
2 Still Sought.
In Slaying
Of SA Officer '
' ~DAY, JUNE t, :1969
'
ers
•
~.
. -~·1 ..
~ . -.
' ' l ... 1TEN-CiNTS
• • • • •
r1-e
300 Boycott
Classes in
Pay Dispute
By RUDI NIEDZJEJS,U'
Of -0.llY ..........
I
More than 300 teaChers .lll.)'td. away
from classes today· In a prolelt apinl the
Huntington Beach High Scbool. 'District
Board of Trustees which failed lo couic;
lo terms with them in a salary dilpute.
StudeoU at all four district high schools
-Huntington Beach, Mar~ Westmin·
ster and Fountain Valley~ tlnal ex-
aminaUoos today . but faced ccdmion
about where to go and what to do.
To prov~e relief. tbe ldm,inlctraUon
hired aubstitip.e, ~rs .to ·ldmlnilttr
exama Jl:!1d man 17p.cant cl~
Acconllng to llisl. Sup!. Max l'orney,
approximately 50 percent of the regular
teaching ·staff was 'on duty .today bl'1rhat
was declared..!-minimum day by: the ad··
ministraUon.
Since the early morning hours, the
school district telephone exchange bmzed
with incoming calls from · .teacben jn.
forming tbelr employer thal 11\<1 would
be taking "penonal.leavei' today.
The exac,t degree o! abaent~tm wlll
no: be 1;no.,. until Tu<odoy, bul " is
estim1&etf·tbat a·majclrit;y1of ~district's
A kidn1ped federal narcotics qent In·
valved In a major deal gambled ort
&Weide instead of murder Sunda1 by set-
tinj fire tO a Roumoor 1araee where· be
bid been handcuffed to 1 waterpipe by
abdQctors. ~
Two of three Black Panther Party
members accused Of killing a Santa Ana
'police officer Ire still at Iarie today.
• , .w1'T......-: 497~.are.i!J.volffd. 1 . •·
Sii person9 ... 1nchiding the. owner of the
home -a paraplegic psfcholog:y major
at Cal State, Long Beach -are in
custody today on suspicion ol. being in·
volved in he alleged kldnap-to-klll case.
Bruce Beck, 30, of Hollywood, ls in
critical Condltlon at the Orange County
Medical Center burn care unit, with third
decree buml over 40 percent of his body.
Invesligaton uid Beek had plenty of
.ftUOD to believe he _ would be executed
when bis kldnapers returned' to 1232%
Martha Ann Drive, so be set the blaze to
attract help.
Firemen unashed Q)eir way into the
bluing structure and cut the agoniud
Beck free, aft.er wbtch lawmen began
picking up suspects in lhe bizarri case,
based on his information.
Authorities said Beck had been in·
volved in a sale including up to 500 kilos
of marijuana and the drug dealers
evidently learned or his role in helpin& to
break the case.
Arrested at various places in Orange
and Los Angeles counties Sunday 'were:
Raymond Graves Jr., 24, of 12322
Mattha Ann Drive, a bearded psychology
student and aon of retired naval officer
R. J; Graves, a dental professor in San
Mateo.
He and his male nurse attendant, Ray
Thurman, 24, were picked up at Los
Alamilos Racetrack as they were about
to leave the a~a for San Diego.
Los Angeles Ponce Oet.ective Sgt. Glen
Bachman identified the other four
suspects in lhe kidnap case as Jerry
Swi.in, ~. Cheser Christopher, 29,
Elb:abeth Christopher, 29, and a 17-year·
~ juvenile. =91t. -Jlacbman -said a-.38 _caliber
nvolver and a .22 caliber .derringer alleg~tly used lo kidnap Beck Saturday
were Kized by lawmen who invaded a
(Seo KIDNAP, P ... I)
County Approves
. $390,00 --Seacli-
Erosion Funds
' Approval of $390,000 ln btach erosion
control funds was completed this week
when county ~rvisor1 approved $1;4,·
350 as the county's and other agencies'
share olthe four-yeer-old "project.
The project. started in 1965 "wilh the
rl!!plenishmtr,l Of. eroded sand from· the
beaches at Sunset Beach and ,Surfside
Colody, extends from thfil' area ·to· tbe
Newport BeaCh pier. k 1 i
The federal government pays 67 per·
ctnt of the total spent each year and the
tlate, cpunty and affected ciUes and
private landownen pick up the balance.
Orange Coast allocatlont this year !D-
elude Newport Beach, $10,781; Hun-
tington Beach C.., ltU71; city of Hun-
tington Bcacll,, S$,S71; Surfside Colony,
13.041.
The county will PIY 1:11,511 for lls shore
of the overall· project, artd an ad41tional ~5.376 for1the cOuhty-owncd Sunset Beach.
The 1tato allocattd 161,3511.
· . -· · ;., . . The teacbeil decided I• p oheld wtlh Nl ~ONr T~j:u ANllOU!"ICE, tROOP PULLOUTS, , -, , • , ·their JlfOleM oclloli SlhmllJ JpUOw!iii 1 Sought by P!>lioe aro Nalhanl<I Odil
Grimes, 2.1, of 2011 W. 8th St., anti' Arthur
DeWltte League, 20, of 1633 W. ffi&hland
St., both of Safjta Ana;
P_rilic1iplt "· .~l~t'°" .to.;~-~· , ,\i /f.;,;-\, . IJol'Tdasal-W,ll* ~ tJ,' ~ to
· ,:· conaidertheir .. ~~alal1m
' DAil. Y Pll.01 ""''-W Ttnl Tltw
GOOD-WORK, SIS-Miss Mer-
maid, Fountain Valley's Donna
Flory. gets a congratulatory
kiss' from brother Clare, 3.
Fountain Valley's
Donna Flory N eiv
Mesa 'Mermaid'
\V.~t Orange County l~velies capit.lrid
llwo of the three· top honors SUnday af·
ternoon in the annual beauty contest at
tlie-Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
Club Fish fry.
Seventeen-year-old DoMa F I o r y
"avenged" an earlier loss to Miss Foun-
tain Vailey,...Elkn Eva"ns, by capturing
the coveted MW Mermaid 'trciphy over a
fie ld of 11 girls that included Miss Evan s
an~ Westminster's reigning titllst, Jayme
BOyd.
The new Miss Mermaid is a tiny blue·
eyed blonde who measures 35-Z4-3S and is
in her junior year at Fountain Valley
High School. She lives at 10297 Cardinal
In Orange County Jail cba"rged with
murder ~nd cons?lr!CY b Daniel M.
Lynem, 22, of f711 W. 'Chestnut St., Santa
Ana.
Police said the search for Grimes and
League has been widespread throughout
California and neighboring states since
Friday.
The policeman, Nelson A. Sasscer, 24,
was shot and killed while on duty
Wednesday nieht at 3rd and Raitt streets.
A memorial mNS was held Sunday for
officer Sasscer at SL Cecilia Church in
Tustin.
"! know that all present would likewise
be ready to do exactly as he did , .. said
the Rev. John Sammon, pastor of the
church, to· some 150 representatives or
county Jaw enforcement and firefighting
agenciei.
"You have nothing to be ashamed of,"
the priest said. "The badge you wear js a
mark and sign or distinction."
Santa Ana Police Chief Edward Allen
read the services.
Memorial rites were held today in
Garden Grove Community Church for the
slain officer. An escort of more than 100
motorcycle policemen convoyed is body
from a Santa Ana ft..neral home to th e
church, and following services, on to Los
Angeles International Airport
Officer Sasscer's body was Oown to
Washington D.C. for services and burial
in his native city of Upper Marlboro, Md.
He is survived by his wife, Lynn, 21, or
Garden Grove, and his mother; fi ve
brothers and three sisters. all Jesid~ls
of the eastern part of the United States.
Meanwhile, members of the Negro
community In Sanlf. Ana drafted an open
letter io Chief Alle11. _ _
They depkired the offiw-'s death but
also asked police to heed a cill for
coolness lo forestall more bloodshed.
The ietter reads In qart: "As far as we
can teU, this murdUed officer was not
the object of any parUcular ill will Jn the
black cotnf9.L1nity. Nor was th.is killins a
part pf any organized plot aimed at po-
lice officers."
It continued : "There are no ·outside
agitators. There is no desire for violence
(See MANHUNT, Page ZI
Countians to Greet Nixon
._. • ' ' , ' ' ' . '"' I ~ . . . . ~ . -' ' -. ~ . ,,,,, .
The public has been invited to ·greet ·P resident NixOO ·tortight,'en
his return to Orange County from his Midway talks with ~resjdent
Nguyen Va n nueu of'~utb Vietnam, spokesm·en 8t El Toro Marine
Corps· Air Slatlon announced !Oday.
Air Force .,O,ne, carrying the Presidential part)!, is ex~ted to .
touch down at El Toro at 5:30 p.m.
· Mr. Nixon is to greet the crowd, possibly say a few words and
depart for hi• San Clemente home with his family by helicopter.'
Marine officials said the gates would be open t 0 the public at
4 p.m. Parking is limit.ed. The base is accessible via Sapta Ana Free--
way by the Sand Canyon Road Or Culver Road ex its to Trabuco.Road
and the main gate.
, The Presidential party is to leave for \Vashington, D.C. Tuesday
about noon.
* * * * * * Mood of lfidway
Presideot -Fe.els Peace H op~s Boosted .
-.
HONOl,..ULU ".(~) ·,President Nixon The reasoning wa1 that the aWes .had
went to Midway Jslal)d hoplng to enhance built a aotld· front aplnst · v1ef amg, or
the chances for ·pe11ce In Vietnam. He North Vietnamese atteniptS hi ·Paris io
came a~ay th~ni he did ." . His meeting With Pr:e.s\dent Niuyen split them, or cause the "dlvorce" Com·
Van Thieu of South Vietnam brolight a rr.unist delegates ment.lontd. Int Week.
feeli,og ·of apied unity American officl&.ls Probably more ln)portanl than the
hoped would .force .the , Communists to words o( lhe pfess stalementa '.or uie
aUandon their hopes (or a NUon.Thieu language of their commun)Q1e •was ·the
split. · · mood or ~1idw~y -hospitable, with
Nixon moved what he 'considered to be Th!eu approaching tfluslvenm at times.
his blue chips into the irena by pro-It .was . clea'r)y .different fr.om earfy
mtsili& 14 slaj'I U.. \m~wlthdrawal . meellnji ~een•lotnit• ~"11!£Yri·
or 25,000 Amer1Cii1 tooops ffam the war don~ Jo]lnaon and leaden of'the·Salgon
zone, to be replaced by South Vietnamese goVernment: Thleu W~t' out-of hl"1 wa)'
forces. , ... • ' . twict-to deny iny differencts of opinion
Thieu responded wllh javl.Sh praise for with Nixon. . '
the American President and an emotional The' American ; PresldeMo. 111 ·. ho&t,
denlat-he had ariy l>illC diUerences with re.ponded wtth U'\UCb 1the .&1me atU,tudt.
the-Nb:on administration. · U.S. oCficjala ~elt J{anoi could only· be b;n·
1hl1 mood of. MJdwily left Nilon with pressed by this unity apd read,Jperhap;i
the feeUrig the iJnltfd si;ri.s, South Viel· · gral(ually,·at the peace tablo., , _
nam ~tl!J thtlr other1 lilies in' the war ha'd Nlxorr at thjl , same' tltn~; 1.eft l!lmself
lmproved their bargalhlilg pOsltion In roori), to m8J1euvtr, nqt spelling .out how
Paril. . (See MipWAY, P11e !)
UCI Students ,Ge.t '-Voi,ee . ., ..
Lane and hopes to become a teacher. , • ,
MlsS Boyd, 11· r lllO'WeUl Road, Will Spen 1·-But· .Noc ·V'oee . .;in ~e"n~"''S>D.; .. ii.n · Westminster,' tex>t runner-up honors 1n .,..fli , • • , , · • . Lf' ~'~' • ~~
.the Mtrmai~ compeUti~ She ~• ,~ior • :St~en whO ·~ ~P,leir. ~~ qo' l~*'!-tit iand al ~:aw;.~~. o:aJ. ·~ W ~ tdt'UJeif de.ir~ to ·:.:::: .. :,a1:ri..i.!tilh a.e;, 111~ ' '{ori111..r.c~ '" 11\e. vc lr;vl!!O' il6tlll''• ' nl!nlbiticl f~lly~ By opploUM Ind '11"'. JM I '*''In, f~ol~· ~ ' , , • '
Academic Senate' with their ' ladles 101 c~sloilal _JfOlna,or -· ~ d-1 . Somt -.U qo, pro(ellSOl'I iltdded lo
Vicki Yoak, 11, waa chosen Miu Costa tal!dna oul tod_oy have W.ll_'lu,11 voice tn sludenl tlemenl his a'~·~ pro-, add llooi·•ol!lii ilu<lanl -Vlit!f lo ill
Mesa In thejudgea' balloting. Mis! Yoak, Senate meetlilgs. ......!,.;. r ....... _and ,_-ced Y.. .vol .. of facilJIJI commllllet·-· obout'ti atude 't
wboaucceedllllSqueenPamttaReedof Students now wUI be ,jty(a,lhe'aame · otht~... i' , . ~ _ . ., , . n
Huntington Beach, It 1 sophomore at privilege to speak as ~-The>' A f~,. weeks qo'Gtrald Whil>9~ of the •~lnlliltnll hi '!'l" ! ' I ', -,
<;osta Mesa High School and measures 36· .will no! however, have a ito!L' • · m"'lcol ,-Shool ('lqrtll.101bOl)I aa ''Ille 'nlon ~ ~ 6ef~~' Stn~te
2W8. During Ille pai!l•year, ·iJ .liUden~ wbo ' hqotlllna cllf!ut,~ 'Cbllrniin d lillorml-18'( wee~ WIS '.lhculel-· to ' t) lllGle 40
'!'he cont'81 was conduc\ed before a wished to attend bav~' '. (iii ' bftn \I "non/ '11111 C6!riputer, " Sci'I'" , Ju)lan 1tudoril4' equai,prifD~! al, ~ 'In !lit
large and apprecittl•e crowd al the main gronted admission to ;lenfto Feidmon. oomplal'!"' :tl!al \hey' were In-aen<lll fllcllllr "'"ti°'":' 1(1 '0' FPf1ae
1fage of the Costa. Mesa ctty park where lltMlorill. But Only two studen ~sen· "Umldatlng. ·• · .' : ,n.tst,, ·a&1~~nd"7ent Pi ~n .of
the l.iions' 24th annual Fish. Fry was held latlves have had the rlaht to speak. \ Most pr.ofeasors attendlna: Senate Org8nlsmlc BJaliY G~ver ·st~ .i"°
Fridoy through Sunday. The students' presence has been very meellnl!s have 1bown toleronce for Ill< l!ft UC SENATI!!, pq. I) . . ..
' ' "
-lincrwewi~ I :U,percenl-from ll1lbu4pled __ , ' I
•"Oar :s;· Ii ID clooe. to ~,lhal 'It~ •7iN (IO,~ m Wo haye ~ I.lit al)ob ·11 flt u,,. can.,.
aaid !/!illee. Clialm!ai> ;Jolui-jleatlef,
wboae OvHnember board offered them •
. four pel-ceiit increase~wJth a &wo per'cent
boos!. '
"What we have offered you Is fair,
equitable and just. U you are, unhappy
here, there are other ICbool distrk:ii.
Look around," he added.
Following 1 lengthy exeeutlve -· teachers decided to offer yet ¬berln-
""'81 which matched the lrullM u,ura
but which provided for 1~ out'' '•
boos> beyond the two percenl U ·-• money 1hould be available. •
The meeting, held ui ·thi. Westm~
High Scfiool cafeteria at the -IDll al
the Dbtrlct Educaton Aaciclalioii, w•
packtd w:lth tea,cheri who were bopjJ2'
that U.. lnlsfeei woilld bite al the lalell offer. · 1 1 • • ' ' '
Bµt the lioli)'il lumed,a ~Iii ~ar_ to the
. new -Pto!IOO•I aild 1'ruJlee .. Matlhew Wey~ker mo.led iii ai!Joi(ni; detWte ID-slslenl dtmands by DEA' negOiuiU~
council Chairman Ray-Cooper to lllep the
meeting open.
Trustees Bentley and Ray M. ScluniU
added theiJ', votes aM 1clel.reCl • the
cafete'ria. leaving iht . a~ 1aeherl
behind. Absent from Ille meeting ....,.
Trusbees Dr. Joseph ·Ribal and. R. B.
_Wjlioo. · r,
DEA. P"\denl Carl 'Mannemano the!'
faced .the saddened educators and_uict,
"Well, where.do we go front he~?"
"' did 'not """" 19 will .,.,._ An Im-mediate .-foll<n!ed coJ\lni for ~
wolkout t o d. a y ... It wu accepted by u
overwhelming ma~ority.
• 0 We're just disgusted wtth.itne fact-that
the board would r¥Jt ,coaler. That's the
reason for the walkouL" ~ Manem1DD (See ,llOYpoTr,_~~ %)_
Oraa&e ' .
Coan
Weedier
Fair and l"ll'J1.1er. Thlt'a what
lhe man said. IZld, Tu.~ shlpes
~p as a sunny one with tem~•
tures ran&ing from 70 to 75 aloriJ
the Orange Coul. '
' INSWll TOD&\'
AlQna Wi"'f o · uiropvp o/ the
Emmii aaoonk,. ~11 antfrtai•
!11</lt pcqe ~ffm, revi<Wf 'oJ, lit!
latt1t ptt1tn~6m · from tM
.R~Jl!l~~io'lc , ~<<l<h , It~~·
>and> Ille · UC ,/J11i11e' S,,,.P/lony .'0Tc~ei1nl. /'og,r ·fa , ' ·
. '
• 1
1
fl ,, .,
•"· _,
' •. ,
~ ...
' ..
~·
2 IWLY l'llOT
• l.
" .. OT -I
• ,
I , " • •
,. •1 i ,.1 •J t ' I I -• ... I ~ ,._ '
Nixon Movillg Political
I I .,
Center of U.S. to West
.. r
By NORMAN ANDEllSON
ot JM Dtlly Nit Stiff
JUlt like London, Moscow, Paria, lbe dalellne SAN CLEMENTE (or
NEWPORT BEACH or LACUNA BEACH) locates lhe capital of the Uni~
Stat.ea -even though temporarily -and indkates even more delinit.e.l~ where
the political center oI the nation is moving -to the West and particularly
Calilomia. .
•
'
I
lbe seledJon by President Richard Nixon of ·his White House West on
the Orange Coast is the latest and most impressive step
In a process that ·began more than a century ago when
President Lin«>ln financed the Vnlan durini the Civil War
wllh gold and diver from California and Nevada mtne.s.
. ' .. '
••
' 1.
•
*· ShifUng of the power balance from Eut to Wu:t hal
been rapid since World War U. Callfornla is now the
largest and thus -politically -the mov powtrfuJ of
&lates.
Considering the. politics of It alone, look at these
'' •• •
:·; •• facts : .-
The-most powerful man in the free world -Preaident Nixon -b a
Westerner and another Westerner is one ol the smill number of. most import-
ant men ln the naUon: Earl Warren, loriner governor of callfornla, ls chief
JUSUce. With them, as potent political Ilium ls a C>llfomlan, Robert Finch,
a member of the President's Cabinet-(and a good-bet-to-succeed-his--bcm ·u
all goes well). ~·
-4"":': ..• ~'. .......
TbJs ls not the first time a triumvlrata Of Callfornisnl .bu been polltJc.
ally Important In the 1~ Nuon was viee ·prisldent, Wamn chief just.Ice
and Sen. William F. Knowland was Senate majority leader. . * .. -:,~ ' Here are some other indlcatlom of the WeSt's importance:
Nixon's strength in the ana held firm in 1988 and contributed mlshtily
to his narrow victory, in which he did noc carty one major urban area. But he
ove:nrbelmingly carried Orange and San Dlq:o countiea and got Ca1Uornia'1
~ electoral votes. He might not have needed Dlloois.
The political We of !he Kennooys bu been oealoo In the West.
John F. Kennedy went from Los. Angeles to become President of the
Unll<d States (having to. defeat a Wes-In the prOOell) and Robert F.
Kmnedy'1 political fortunes -and We -died In Loi Angela.
Primaries Jn the West on more than one occa&loa have chanced the
COQJ"!e of 1 man, or a naUon.
It wu CalifonUa in 1968' which made -for a few abort moments -
Robert F. Kennedy the front runner for the Democratic presiderltlal nomina·
Uon, altar an earlier Western prllllllrJ', In Or'llbn, !lad appeared possibly to
have dealt 'him a fatal bloWt ' . , * It wu the c.tihfrnja primary of 1954 wblctt eave Barry Goldwater -
hhn..U a Westerner -the Republican presidential nomination (ln San Fran-
claco, tncldentally) over an Easterner, Nellon Roctefeller.
And during the time Bury Gold'tralu was leader of the Ropublican
Party, the Orange Coast, out of ,the BalbGa Bay Club, WU the party's main
headquarters. I
Again it was a CaWomJa primary -that of' 1958 -With which Adlai
Stevenson tnocted out Estes Kefauver and clinched his second Democratic
preddentlal nomination. ·
An Oregon primary ended for all Lime the prtsidenUal aspirations of
Harold Stassen, onetime boy wonder of the GOP, when he lost in 1948 to
Thomas E. Dewex (who subsequently lost his seeond White House bid to
Barry Truman).
California again played the vital role in the political fortun es of another
Pr<sldenl ' , ." I It was the deal between Sen:'lfirllll Johnson of Calltornfa (ana there's
more to his rple in U.S. life) and the Tezaa delegation which gave New York
Gov. Franklin Roosevelt the Democratic presidential nomination in 1932 and
made the Tezas favorite son, House Speaker John N. Garner, v,ice president. * . Johnson, as a powerful man from a pot.ent state, played other Innuenbal
roles. He helped to ma>ce two other presidents and might have been one him·
aelf, or at least a vice president.
It was his candidacy as a favorite son that contributed to a deadlocked
1920 GOP National Convention that settled in a smoke-filled rooin in favor of
Warren G. Harding. J ohnson haughtily refused the vice presidential nomina·
tion and Calvin Coolidge got it Instead, along with, a couple yean later, lhe
While House. :
Johnson played a role, somewhat smaller, in· making WOOdrow Wilson
President of the United States. Then governor of caurornia, Johnson wa.s a
leader of the Progressives in 1912 who fought the GOP Old Guard in behalf of
EJ:-Preaident Theodore ~veil igainst President Wflliarn Howard Taft. They
lost to the machine and lbe Progre.ssives formed their own party, with John-
&OD the vice presidential candidate on TR's presidential ticket. The party ran
aecond, splitting the Republican vote and electing Wilson a minority president.
And u a final fact, Wilson owed -in a manner of speaking -his re-
elect.ion in 191& lo California. Charles Evans Hughes, GOP nolrilnee, went to
bed be.Ueving himself Pre.sldent-elocL FinaJ returns early the nezt morning,
gave the slate and the election to Wilson.
The West has had a great role in U.S. life up to now. With Richard Nixon
leading the way politicaUy, who can foretell what will come next'!
Food Strike Wanin2? New Zealanders
To Study Beach
Lifeguard Work
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Negotiations in
tbe Los Angeles area supennarket strike
resumed today with the Retail Clerks
Union saying settlement is near and the
Food Employers CouncU denying it.
DAILY PILOT
OIV.MGE COAn l'Ull..1~1HG COMl'AH'I'
R.ob-rt N. Wood
PAt161nt ond M111Mt
Joel.: l. ~rloy
VlUI l'rftldWd Ollll o.twrml Mol'lnlfl'
Tlo:om•• Koovll .. ,,,
1110111•• ;... M"'Phl110
Mennlne Edllw
Alb.rt W. l•IM Willl•m R•o-1
-'-''" ttllllfllll'lllll •e•dl Edllot City Edita'
H• ...... ._.Oftb
lo• 5th Str1ot
M•lll"t Add~.11 P.O.••• 190, •2•'41 --Nft'll8'f INCll; 2211 Wal l•lbOa BcNltwN
C.lo ...... , .. Wftl • .., ''"""' U9\lfM kMfl! m l'-..1 Av•nw . -.... __
Five members of the New Zealand Surf
Life Saving Association will be in Hun-
tington Beach for a week ntglnning
Wednesday to take a close look at lifesav-
ing methods used by the Huntington
Beach Department of Harbors and
Beaches.
'11le 'New Zealanders arrive Wednesday
.tvelllng llld wtll stay at the HuntJniton
· Sborel .Motel as guests of the Huntington
Beach Company.
While in Huntington Beach they will
ptrlicfpata In a ~oor ncean JHeguard
training program to see methods and
techniques used locally.
They wlll also tour Disneyland and
Knott1s Berry farm, according to Capt.
Douglas O'AmaU or lhe . Harbors · ~d
Beaches Depirtmlnt. The city and Hun·
tlngton Beath Sufi LHe Saving AssQcia~ tion•e'~g 'the· CJ'OUP in the lociil
stay.
The New Zealanders will COlltlnue on In
Soothm! Callfonila'.far-30 dl,y1 lookini •I
Wol\Wd deplrtme!IU alonfl the coall.
Trustees ·to Resume . .
' Regular Meetings
After meeting with teachera during
several special meelinp lut week, the
HuntJnaton Beach lliP School Board ol
Trustees wW rt!Ume with thelr regular
busl.nw at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday ·in the
District Board Room, 1902 17th St.
Biggest item uoder conslderaUon wlll
bt the dislrict'1 prelimlnary budget for
1969-70 •
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' • ""\ I ' ' '' . ' ;,. -. ... .,. . ' ? . --~;-r,
't•" .. !·¢4~rican&' ~n Gobd~ill Still. ~issmg~-~
By AJMON LOCnlt.EY .. ~ald Comstock, *· er ='z Vis de Santa Maflana, FOUf!t.aln Valley. He was °''" "*' ~, ... ••11# Catallna, South Lajuna. emp loyed as a deckhJnd on the yacht.
The search continued today (or · COm.Sllc~ •n tleCtrkll eng.lneer, wu Qivers reported no s1gn ol t!(e .three ~U,:.~08 ~= ~i1a~e ~s:.;,:rd one,. of.~ ruP, .~r~ ~tioard the s~ boa\!1r:an"'. Jb<Wd \l:le..G.~111.
the 161-fdot schooner Goodwill when the GoOdwlll on a trip f,rom Cabo San Lucas It was J?l'!vlOUal ported that~ boats
yacht wu wrecked 00 Sacramento Reef to Enaeaada. were still in davl , t>n the yachts, stem.
off Baja Calllomia May 25. ()wncl Ralph Larrabee, a Huntington But CXlJl"!PlnY offJcl~s of J.4rrabee s L &
Prolmional divers who searched the P,ark lDdultrlallst and part time Newport F Machine Shop said ll was possible the
sunkea bulk for the first time Friday Beach . resident, was also abQard the boats could have been carried awa~
reported finding no bodies aboard. GoodwUt whtn she struck the reef, the seas w~kh comtantly rake the . .
1be 9eCOl)d of two bodies given up by presumably on the night of May 25. The yacht it.self was reported as being
tbe sea off Punta San AntonJo. 200 miles The onlf other body lrom the wrecked broken up. by the surging sea and sa.root
south of San Diego. bu been iclentifled u yacht wu tllat m Thn Smilb. U. of 188U wavei which break over the reef.
MESA VIEW PRINCIPAL
Gordon ,Blohop
•
CIRCLE VIEW PRINCIPAL
Thomas E. Griffith
Plane Assists
hi Rescue of
Stalled Cruiser
A Civil Air Patrol plane came to the
rescue of a stalled cabin cruiser Sunday
afternoon off Huntington City Beach by
signaUng another boat that the first was
in trouble.
Pilot Joe Fisher and his observer, Jim
Heggins, both of Garden Grove, were
flying over µte area when they spolted
the disabled craft of Perry Pence, Seal
Beach, which had run out of gas.
F. E. Barnhart, 73, of 17115 Pacific
Coast Highway, &Inset Beach, a passen-
ger on the di.sabled craft, lost a portion
of his right ring finger when it caught in
an anchor line as the anchor was drop-
ped over the side.
The Civil A1r Patrol plane signaled a
nearby boat with Its landing lights to tow
the Pence craft into shore. Near the Hun-
tington Beach Pier city lifeguards took
over, giving first aid to Barnhart, who
later went for private medicaJ afd.
2 New Principals Named, TR.;{;; ~uT1 • • •
2 Others Changed in OV maneuver" designed to appease antiwar
critics in the United Slates and elsewhere
around .the world.
ReacUon in Washington also varied.
Senate RepUbUcan Leader Everett f.1.
Dirksen said it represented the "first The appointment of two new principals
and reassignment of two others has been
announced by Ocean View School District
Superintendent Clarence Hall .
Ne'Rcomers are 'l'bomas E. Griffith of
Fro11• Page 1
UCISENATE • • •
Paramount and Gordon Bishop of Duarte. solid hope for the American people" since
Griffith will assume duties at Circle View the war began sh: years ago. But Sen.
School this fall and Bishop will open the George D. McGovern (0-S.D.J, a leading
new Mesa View school, which is schedul-dove, said it amoun~d to mere
ed for completion late this fall. "tokenism ." ·
Taking new positions within the district Thieu flew directly back to Saigon from
will be Leon Hilton, currently Circle View ?.Udway and . cautioned newsmer\ against
principal, who will move to Sun Vie\\'. de&cribing Ute !'eduction of U.S: tbJ'ces as
Sun VJew's Don Miller will open tbe new a "withdrawal." He said the correct term
Park View School, also scheduled for a was "replacement" -noting that SouU1
late fall opening. Vietnamese1'orces will take over. ·
Griffith holds BA and MA degrees from '!'hieu also warned that anyone in South
d k. · hts t lb ,. J Cal Slate Long Beach, and ls currently Vietnamese public life who advocates a ex ten spea 1ng rig o e en ire s u-coalilion win. the Commun1'sls "w1'JJ be ed director of the Lincoln Demonstration .,.., dent body pus · School In Paramount. He taught in severely punished. • .because he has
DAILY •IL.OT SI"' ..... LEADS TEACH'ERS ' ·
DEA Pr11ident Mannem1n
Fron1 . Page 1
BOY COIT •••
after the meeting .
Although a majority or the teacher:.
\vill be away from the classrooms today,
they are not remaining idle and will con-
side r further strategy durlng a general
membership meeting scheduled tod17 at
the Surf Theater.
Under consideration at that tirri'e will
be an attempt to gain a restraining order
against adoption of the trustee propiost!d
salary schedule.
The trustees have offered a aalary
ran ge of $6,850 to $13,700 while the DEA
has been asking for a range of $6,900 lo
$13,000. The rurrent range is from $6,460
to $12,920.
Classes are planned for a normal
schedule TuesQ.ay but repercussions from
thr teacher action will probably conUnue
v•ceks after school lets out this Thuraday.
The administration has been in con--
stant contact with the Orange C.ounty
Counsel since May 29, when the teachers
called a minimum day which was
described by the administration u a
"mutiny.''
Through the aid of the counsel's office
as lawyers for the district, they are look·
ing into the legality ol the teacher pro-
test, but have not made definite plam for
punitive action.
In addition, it is poss.ible that students
as well as the teachers may face an ad-
ditional day of school. since the board of
trustees can declart a makeup day to be
added to the end of the year for the loss
of any school day.
Fron• Page 1
MIDWAY .•. Only four or five hands :were shown in Cypress and Los Alamilos before taking helped the enemy."
opposition among the about 50 professors his present position. He said the subje~t of South Viet. h lr . 'lbd 1 uld bo attending the meeting. Among the better namese elections was not discussed at I e oop WI rawa wo come a ut
than 200 professors who did not attenJ Bishop is 8 graduate of Cal State Los Midway because "that quesUon belongs or just when more American Gls would
are some -wtio have stopped corning to Angeles and is currently a doctoral can· to the Vietnamese people themselves and be sent home.
Academic Senate meetings because the y dfdate at the University of Southern President Nixon does not want to in-The two presidenls steered around the
art disgusted with the student clamor California. He ii currently principal of terfere in the pollUcal life of South Virt-·the Vall•y Vt'ew School In Duarte · subi"ect of a ·coalition government, with and, they feel, fa cul ty sellout. · nam ." The now prevailin g voke was ex-In the finn words of the joint Midw ay the American position emerging that It
prersed by Assistant Professor or S h l Sh I A k d communique, Nixon and Thieu t<ild the was up to Saigon to detennine the degree
Organismic Biology Joseph Arditti, wbo C 00 e ler S e C-Ommunisl5 lo realize the futility and to which the Viet Cong participate in the
said: danger of trying to win a military victory Saigon government.
•·r ·n vote for the motion to make this a SACRAMENTO (UPI) ..., State School in Vietnam and said there must be self· Thieu had said during his slate visit to
representative body instead of a private Superintendent Max Rafferty and two detenninaUon for the Vietnamese people
club. We need the revolutionary zeal of other top state officials today called for without interference or terror. They ru led Soutb Korea two weeks ago that ~e would
the students." the Inclusion o1 fallout shelters in school out lmposlUon of a coalition government never accept a Coalilion government with
In a more conservative vote, professors e-0nstruction and alteration projects. on South Vietnam. the communists.
defeated only 24 to 18 a resolution by\---;:=========================================
Associate Dean of Physical Sciences
Bernard Gelbaum reaffirming that pr<r
penis normally should be first rev:iewed
by Senate committees.
He argued that matters were being too
often introduced on the floor and the
Academic Senate was passing them in
precipitous action.
An angry Professor of English Howa~d
Babb backed him up, scolding that "It 1s
morally ridiculous for this group to act as
if committees are set up to prev~t
business from coming to the floor.
"Not that my vote means a god damn,"
Babb muttered.
Fro1n Page J
Kil)NAP •.. -
home ln the Ramparts Di.strict of the city
Sllhdoy. ' •
Beck who ha~ been held captive in the
gar1le 'stnce the groop arrived Saturday
at mllklQ", was screaming for help as
flames blaied from the garage Sunday
nljht. · Suspects in the case are held on several
charges, while Los Angeles police seek
formal complaints from the Los Angeles
District Attorney's cffice.
Otange CoUtity Ja~men confiscated
some J,000 drug pills during their pertion
oC the lnvestlgalion said Sgt. Buchman,
but the encl role was not known.
"Beck had good reason to believe he
would De kWed when ·his abductors
returned," Sgt. Bachman uld, "so he
struck matches and tit s o m c
·ilewapajien."
. From Pqe 1
MANHUNT •..
on the part of the black community.
Pleue ensure that your men do not
become the agjtators." ,
Officer Sasscer wa.s shot it 11:$3 p.m.
Wedne.'iday, seconds after be radioed
headquarters he was stoppin& some
pedestrians for questioning.
How to kick the
Clyde wasn't practicing
88lesmanship: At I ea• t, not
knowingly. He waa trying to be
helpful, because that'• hia job.
rr that's old fashioned, I gue&I
we're guilty.
A Jot of retail people haven't
learned how to lilten. They
want to UMl the mouth before
they use the ears.
• . a een1e-meen1e-
It> Every store 01''ner thinks h ie • • mm1e-moe
Don't ever a1k a customer "·by
he buy1 from you. -. -
We learned .that when one
customer pve u1 a funny look
and replied, "For abaolutely
DO n!AIOD whauoever. ''
Not being real 1ore what he
meant by that. we shut up and
10Jd him two auita.
The rear.on we mention lhis
is l>eca11Mi the other day one of
our custon1en did tell 111 "'by
he bought from u1. We )earued
that he i1 a practici11g psy•
~hologi1t in A11a11ein1. While
"'ailing for ua lo write up his
purch~ be said AOme nice
tblnp about w, and lhen
uked if we'd be inlttel&ed in
knowing why he droff clear
down h•re to spend SSO on a
1p0rt coat.
Naturally we w a ate d lo
kuow why. w.11. aalde from enjoying
an acute to vialt the area on
a pleaunt 11tony af1emoon, he
.. id W. main reuon wu our
N1i.Uinrnes1 to U..ten. He had
{in1lly been driven out of lhe
hahita
store. where h e uaed to buy his
clolhet, a very· fine e~ore· hy-
the way, becauae wl1enever he
went in to pick out a 111uit i.he
aaleaman had immediately
tried 10 eell him what the atore
wanted him to b11y.
What thi1 man wanted lo do
waa lo buy 10mething, not be
sold something.
Last jrear h e ""·as agreeably
111urprised, on a chance vi11it to
8 i d we 11 ' 1, "'hen our Clyde
Reye11 look enough juterest,
before. ever taking a suit from
the rack, to uk about his color
and pattern prefen:ncea, and
10 learn eomething about the
kind of atyl .. ho had been buy·
ing eJ..,where.
store ia • cut above any other
!-lore, and certainly \\'e're aa
proud of our store aa any 1lore
owner could be. And yet, we
don!t lry to kid-ounel\-'es. Our
mr:rcliandiae, ae le"c tion and
\'Blues are quite appealing, but
let's face it. On the wl1ole
"·e're rather like any other
good men's Atore.
There's only one thing we
have that no other men'! store
hae. Us.
"'e try to be friendly and
J1elpfnl, hut "·e know one
tl1ing lhat may be aignilicant.
Our c11slon1ers a-re more loyal
than most.
l1111tead or u sing the eenie-
meenie-minic-moe 1ystem of
picltini! a store, you m¥it 1ry
buying from us ''for abAOlutely
no reason whatAoever.''
Jack Bidwell
3467 Via Lido, j ust beyond the Arch~a overpu11 oyer
Pacific Coaa1 Hlljbway. Telephone 673-4510 .
Drive between Udo Theatre & myttore & park in rear.
Coypriljbo 1969, Jack Bidwell.
-
SA
Roat
slde1
fer I
help
milli -· pie.
Th
Andi
gene
turni
meo
Boa!
builc u
bypa
noat
the
issut
colle
builc
lion
Th
stal<
bond
misi
terel
by I
paro
unso
Uc
state
corp
bullc
R
F
BE
prev
anne
tions
raid,
!!"
fieer
dOWli
tool '
SW~
patiM
~ mer
to ·cit
the t
"the
seve1
the
dislri
from
park.
Po,
said
we'v1
danu
ficeri
miso
disci1
Bet
Rona
want:
was
polic•
play(
said.
Ca1
pa rk
ber •
had 1
• Ea:
up a·
origil
Sot
durio
repoi
Bel
ANll
• • "'-.:
(
Th
ht
''" .. Co .. •• bv pn
tll i
wi •• rh<
Wi
HI
do
lh•
.tTnltpe Solution
Private Finances
!Ml~""'----..
MR.MUM~~
I
Help 1 Considered (
n fl il
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Reagan adminl.!tratlon ls con·
slderlng a unlcJue financial of-
ter from frivate enterprise lo
help the • state borrow $200
million foz\new state buildings
-without \• vote of the peo-
ple.
The offe was made to
Andrew Lolli , director of
general services. He said he is
turning IL over without recom-
mendation to the Publlc Works
Board, in charge or the state
building program.
U would allow the state lo
bypass the electorate i n
floating bond issues. In 1968.
the voters ~ject.ed a bond
issue to finance university,
college _and other s c h o o I
buildings, the first such educa·
ti on bond eve( .rejected. •
The plan woold permit the
state to offer a new type or
bond to raise! money, pro-
mising buyers a higher in-
terest rate than now permitted
by law. Present bonds, at S
percent interest, are going
unsold. ·
Under the proposal , the
Jitate would form a nonprofit
corporation to put up new
buildings.
The corporation. under 1 lit·
tie known 19'8 law. would
have the authority to issue
la:r~rempt bonds without the
consent of voters. When the
stale wants to issUt ibonds • itself, directly, it mu go to
the electorate.
Alter the bonds we sold,
the corporation would lease
the bui14ings to tbe state. The
state lease payments would be
used to repay the bond
holders.
'Ibe proposal was made by a
Los Angeles real estate man,
who told Lolli that h e
represented financial interests
who would buy the bonds, and
resell them at an interest rate
of no more than 6.75 percent.
The realtor,. who C!eclined
the use of his name, said one ---------------------
advantage of the plan to the
state would be assurance of
construction funds without
risking a popular vote.
Lolli said he is interested in
raising money fot parking
garages the state needs in Los
Angeles and Sacramento. But
he acknowledged the money
could also be used for other
state buildings. such as col·
leges, universities and prisons.
Assemblymen Work
On Tax Reform Bill
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A
select su be om m I ttee of
Assembly tax experts began
work today on a dran of an
Bagley CR-San Rafael.)
omnibus tax reform bill it Reverberations Grow ~ :~ ~i~mw:,:~~"1 .;~
Reagan is facing signs of in-
creasing support for man·
datory withholding f r o m
within ,Republican leadership
rank.s.
Republicans .
From Frl.dav Park Rru·d But a major.question was whether G<lv, Ronald Reagan
. " would accept a bill calling for
compulsory withholding of in·
BERKELEY (AP} -Calm annex, a leaflet had been come taxes.
2 Policemen
Wounded in
Gun Battle
prevaiied at "people's park distributed, apparently b Y Mandatory withholding is an anne~~ today, but reverber~· residents in the neighborhood, essential feature or the recom-
tions cont,inued about a police declaring: mendations made to the sub-
raid.F. riday night. "We would like to get rid of committee late last week by a bipartisan six-member panel LOS ANGELES (UPI! - A
burglary suspect was shot and
killed and two policemen
wounded late Sunday in an ex·
change of gun fire at a
downtown parking lot.
'4i'k supporters claim of· Ute wild bongo dRlms, frenzied named· to study all tax reform
Heers Intentionally knocked war dances and ceaseless programs.
down .small trees, flowers, a chanting, 1be revenue and taxalion
tool '-shed ,a.00 a playground "Most or us would like to en-subcommittee is expected to
sw\IJi·Whlle.clearlng out young joy a full night's sleep -follow the recommendations
penoDs camping overnight. especially since we work for a which proposed a $1 blllion program shifting part o( the Patrol Capt. Charles Plum-· living and are not able to sleep property tax burden to sales
mCr said pOlice did not intend all day." and income taxes.
Dead was Luis J. Alvidres.
25, Los Angeles. Two other
suspects, one a woman, were
taken into custody. to deslroy, the park. He said Some of those arrested ad· The governor's own lax ad ·
the dalna):e was done during mitted marijuana was being vlsers were busy over the
.. the wild process of clearirig smoked in the park, police weekend also studying the recommendations.
Officers Dave Turnquist, 31,
and Richard Ford, 29, were in
fair condition at General
Receiving Hospital. Turnquist
was shot in the leg and groin
and Ford in the shoulder.
police said.
several hundred people" from said. A spokesman f o'r' Reagan
the park on rapid transit Councilwoman Bernice Hub-declined to comment on the
district properly about a mile bard May said she didn't recommended plan except lo
from the original people's believe accusations of police · s~y a report on it should ~
park. v~ndaLism. She §aid tbe city given the governor early thi s
Police Lt. Henry Sanders has, Jawa ·apinSt .. camping w::~gan has ifven no sign he
said "we don't like the reports out,• and sbe would reserve has modified hls hard stand
The two officers were ques·
tionihg, El~th Meehan, 21
and Elpidio Salaz, 2i, both of
Los Angeles, about 'a car
burglary at the lot when
Alvidres, who was hiding
behind a car, allegedly . at·
tacked Turnquist and took his
gun, authorities said.
we've heard concerning' the 1 damage" and said if any of· any urther comment until she against comp u Is or y
ficers were found guilty of sees a report on the incident withholding. Only last week he
misconduct, they would be · · said he would .not accept man-
disciplined. 1:f * 1:f datory withholding as the
Berkeley City Councilman price ol a tax reform packsge.
Ronald Dell'Jms declared he Regents Still The goverf!Or's·own proposal
wants "a full explanation." It included some v o I u n tar y
was "way out of bounds" for forms of withholding but these
A melee followed in which at
leas t 12 shots were fired.
I d U d • d d got a cool reception from the police to damage Pants an ll eel e Assembly Revenue and Tax-
playground equipment, he ation Committee. headed by Yorty Hits
At Bradley
said.
capt. Plummer said the About 'Park' Assemblyman William T .
park was cleared after a num-
ber of neighbors in the area
had complained about noise.
·Earlier, oHicers had broken
up a~ torchlight parade at the
original park.
Some 30 arrests were made
during the night," Plummer
reported.
Before the police raid on the
BERKELEY (AP) - A Uni-No Market versity of California regents' LOS ANGELES (AP) -
committee ha! decided to hold Mayor Sam Yorty says Coun·
a second meeting over the dis· Tieup Ac tion cilman Thomas Bradley and
puted Berkeley "p e 0 pl e's Bradley's followers "are doing
park" as the controversy over LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ more today to cause bitterness
the UC-owned land moved to Negotiators seeking to settle a and divisiveness in L os
new territory. s t r i k e • I 0 c k 0 u t at area Angeles · than before the elec·
Police arrested more th a n supe rmarkets "are still far tion."
J{) persons in two Friday n1glu apart," according to Robert K. Yorty, who defeated lhe
incidents -a raid that clear· Fox, president of the Food Negro councilman in th e May
ed the stHalled "people's Employers Council. 27 mayoral runoff election.
park annex'' and an attempt Fox made the sta tement said Bradley's camp is mak-
by demonstrators lo hold a following talks Sunday with ing "continued and unob-
torcblingbt parade. representatives or AFL-CIO jective efforts to sugaest the
Fencing of the original. im· Retail Clerks Local 770 before campaign was based on fear promp~u "~ple's park" by a federal mediator. and "acism."
the university May lit led tol :;;;+;;+;;+;;+;;+;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;+;;+;;+;;;l*":tt:;;f
violent demonstrations a n drr•••• • * * • * * • *** • • *" •• •' • ••• •' • '" • • • • ""***; on~~·~~geots• Committee on£ YOUR PROBLEM: -:
Buildings and Grounds heard • : 21 speakers Saturday and• You w•nt to sell some item • decl~ed t~ meet again to de· : that you no longer nee~ bu t :
term1ne its recommendation : someone else can use for It"
for the full Board of Regents ii i
June 20. ! N O T 0 V E R $ 5 0 •
No date for the other com· 1 : m!Uee session was set, b u l • 'H~"°"""'•l01CMl'.f-~fM> -il-wti-indicated-lhe meeting ? ? .. · --? ? ? -? : f..l/~ OMt Of TM!l'.M,.. might be closed to the public. • • • • =
Adwrl'-1 _ : :
• YOUR ANSWER: :
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Gets to a MajQr·Cause
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Now! Most complete 3-way reliefl
Thi$ important development in
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Counterrt0id• wo11t br l1ss1nin1
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ind p.ootecifn1 Injured tissve •••
blll unliltt every othw hemorrholJ
product Counternold also WD'1s I
lhirdw1y.
Thanks to 1n 11elush1 fOflllllla
wilh OSS1o tll ontr Cvunlernold
f'!S lo a major cause of hemof· rllolcb~ h lnfur l'lltd constipation.
Without irritllin1 lax1liY1 tfte<t.
He1e·s howi In 11Qspit1I X.r11 tnl5
doctors h1v1 demonstr1ted th1t
1ht remll'klbll Count1rnoid tormu·
lation with OSS,. penttr1t1s In
minutu to tht top of the· rtctll
area lo soften the stool tnd tut
!ht bowilll ..... 1.
It ~ thll """"' -that dots so muctt to tnakl ftltlnl ietline:
-~~. So. ")IOll Qyt wltll tbe pain •nd
le. of rtarrlnt minor llemcwrhoid
l'oubln.1'11•-•J "iltf oith medically.tested Counfemoid.
Attvllty, used as direttid, ~
llmoid ,prfers the most c::ornpl1t1
l·w•r 1elief you ctn ref without
• pr1sa1J>lion or without swpry.
In stalnleu «11111 or suppositories.
At tll dM.11COllnt111.
i You coll THE DAILY PILOT, u k for i i Cl111ifled Advertising, and pl•c• a : • • • • • • • T • : PILO : : : ! PENNY ; I PINCHER i
; CLASSIFIED AD !
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......................... ~ ..................... ..
~w .App eal
ifeadied in
'64 Killing
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) .. -
Attorneys tri. Lucille Miller ' have a month to prepare
briefs baCkin1 their cla im that
her murder conviction was
based on improperly obtained
evidence.
·Mrs, Miller was convicted of
the 1964 murder of her dentist
husbanrl and ls serving a life
sentence in the California
Institute for Women a t
Frontera.
Her atlorneys argue that her
constitutional right not to in·
crlmlnate herself was violated
wben an undercover oflicer
was placed in her jail cell and
tt'o<!n testified at her trial.
Judgt Richard M. Bench of
the U.S. Circuit Court ol .Ap-
peals agreed FrldaY' tf1 hear
the arguments. The CQnvlction
was upheld last year Qy the
U.S. Supreme COurl buL•it dMI
not rule on the ~Ible Viola·
tion of. Mrs. Milter's con·
stitutlonal rights. ,
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
F1>R BREAKFASTI
\
/i
DEllCIOUS
Monday, Jvne •, l96ct DAILY '!LOT .9
Sailo~ Bero !Again . '
L
13 Saved From Car i11. Raging Creek
' ' SAN BERNARDINO •(UPI) , lmperlal and JO unidenllfl<d rived on the ..... wlfb a lolll
-Jesse H. BrooU,\21.taald he ' children. rope and belped the Ctl''I
!'as-· sca~d ·Su~ay when he The' flit:e of the water tum-.,.._"'"•ert up the ......... I> iurnped "'.Lytle Creek n<ar --:--• ·-• here but it' was a 1 repeat ·ed the car croN•*fS while Cline aftu Brooks 1ot ~-;"
performance of heroisn\ as he Brq>l\J attempted to 1et the salely near the edge of pte
plucked 13 persons ft.om a 1 pauef!~r1 out ·•nd obRrvers crffk. ·
nearly submerged car I said It began to dam up the . ~rooks who would not allow
1·1 didn 't know whal was t'ere.!'k J • • ' · going-to heppen to me but ' hts ' picture beini taktn by •
there was no other wa.Y you "All ~r the· wlndow' w~re local newspaper, is betweet1
could get to~the car," Brooks, c.lo$ed·· and the people insJde Navy assignments. He fa
a sailor on leave, said. eontJnued to hold themselves scheduled to co.to Japan_.;-e
"Then I fell in and the first atiove the water by the doors 21 /
one I saved was myself." as.I was trying to pull them.1==· ==:::::;;::;:~===::; Five years .. ago, ,;Hobie" open," said the recent Viet-11
Brooks pulled four sailors nam veteran. llOl'OIP'fi,.it'Os><' ID T.o
from a car sul:tmerged in the "Someone came down -I
raging creek at the same site. don 't know who he was. He 'RED. ·ROUTEr
Brooks said he was walking pulled the branch off the car
home from a grocery store to and then J started pulllnc kids ··-his home in Ute area when a oul like you wouldn't believe. 7 ~~ ~ :;. . 'bW:
car missed a turn, went downl-=~A~n~u~nl;d;en;;tif~ied;;m;:;;ot~Olist~·;,ar-;;~=:::;=:=:=:=:;;;s;s~ a 50-foot embankment and Jan· r
ded on its side in more than 1 four feet of water. A BOOK from the SteU .• 4
• 9r•et GIFT for e lll The driver of the car, Gene
H. Massey. 36, Rialto, was
later arrested on a charge of
drunken driving. Also in the
car were Massey's wife. Max·
ine, Forest H. Shields, 49,
The Bookatall n • 1. "" 11., c:.. -..... , ..
IMllllM TIMI ,_._ M-1
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
at El Rancho:
the supermarket
where the price is right!
FARMER JOHN
LINKS ••• V2·1b.
°\ ECONOMICAL
• • • • • e l
• • • • • • • /.
'
• • • • • • •
Little links • : • \\'iU1 lhat special Farmer John flavor.;. did you kno\v you , an freeze them, for later uu f
Fresh Eggs .:.. ....... : ............. 43 "doz. Pancake Mix ............................ 39'-
El Rancho's 0"'" ... Large Size • , , GrAde AA! Bctty Crocker's .•. Buttermilk ••• 28 ·or. pki'.
Birds Eye's Awake ............... 3 1" $1
}.[ore orange-y than orange juice'. r·rozcn ... 9 or..
Pure Maple Svrup ............. , .... 79'
lllcDonit!d's ••• real Eutem goodnesr1 ! , •• 12 oz.
Sc1·r e 71orf.: {(Jr fl l!'f'lron1e cltitnfir, of 1>rLrr.'
Pork Shoulder Roast ............ 59~
1:or a treat that \Vill offer 11hecr pleasure!,., from the f ineAt mid-,vcstcrn grain fed pork!
Pork Steak ............................ 69 ~ Pork Cutlets ........................... 79~
Lean, tasty ..• serve applPs!111rc on the side! Already breaded ••. ready to cook and aerve !
J'o1t'll /01:r lli is dclighlfu/111 rli//r1·r11 t trent!
F ..t..-t&-1· -S+v• -Sa ----AUTllENTIC RECIPE 89'~--res11 . u.a 'an . · .1;11e usage ............. ;.,~............. •
Made right on the premises •.• fresh ••. perfect blend of fine meat with the1 rj ght SE\,~soninr1 !
Shake. n' Bake .................... 4 1., '1 .
1'1c1v ! for Pork ! great on Pork Steak! Reg. Pkg.
Instant Potatoes ................... 59¢
F11eneh'~,., 1nashed potaiocs in minutes: 15 o:i:.
I nvitation lo it snlurl ftcrtt... 4. . $1 Avocad.os .......................... FOR
".Haas VAricly ... butlrry smooth!
Pritu in tffc~t Mon., Tues., Wed.,
J11ne 9, 10, 1 t ... No Aalu tb dtakr1.
•
Apple Sauce .. :, ...... : ................. 43•
Seneca .•• "·Ith A touch of cinnamon! 35 oz.
Baked Beans .............. , ............. 39«
S&\V , .. New England ityle .... 28 oz. can
Accomp11nimenl lo a pork main-cour1t! 2r
Sauerkraut .......................... ..
l~omade ••• mild cured ••• 22 oi. rlau
•
'
_,
.ARCADIA:
. Slmset •nd ltl!ti/lllOft Dr. (D Rlndio Clllll PWDENAV ...
320 West. Col«llo ~;
· SOUTII PASAllW&
fromonl 1nd Huntiniton Dr.
HUNTill&TOll IEACH :
"' Worner 1nd Alconquln (B01mrolk et•)
NEWPORT RACH :
2727 Newport 11111. Ind 2555 f.11tbh1ff Dr. ~(Uff Vin.~
\
"
r
I
I
r
• I
I' '~
I
'
,j
1
r
,.. ______ ...,_,~ --. --,=~"' -~''''·•·c-~""'~== --~ ----·--.. •
H MondtY. Jutlf ff, 1964)
LEGAL N(11"1CE I.WAL N<Yl'l€f" -l Your 1'foney's Worth
... m 1• l------... 11.1111 <J
c1ar11t1C.&TI 011 1u1111•11 NOTICI fO ClllOl!OIS
l'ktll ... ,.,..,. "'-su .. 11110• COUllf 01' THI!
Tlle Uliltl.itnft .. ilt'"°' <tl'I""" IMI ST&TI 01< CALl~ll-1.l JOll
thfto ~61111MflN •' ....... , -, o>I THI COUNfY 01' OIANCiE
-tftll--· ...... ..u ... W. l)tflllt S!f .. 1. Cltlr Ill t.11t• ....... f1t1"' "' ANITA ADELINE OOCKTl!ll, ~ fl ~. Sttlt or C1l1tw11i., o.ce.i ....
Ty 1·a nny of Te ens Ending
...., "-llt'tltllo.ll lltfll ,_ W ..__ NOTICE IS HflEIV G!Vl!!N le Ille
•• wti1ct1 ..._ 11111 .,_ •11e fl'W ....... o-Ml""1 ·.t 111t ·~ ~""" OKIMH!I• B• SYLVI ' PORTER et MfMI fl thl__, 111 ..... IM lfl .. Id ltwif 111---. MI L.t' I I IN .1 ,,
MlnlM. ..wit: Ot:Nl!IOE 11"1"..()N ..w M<w:lilflf '"' ",::U~,,,...jo i:_ ~Mn!. Todo•, I submit to you an otlUSTMM LIOKT 5Ul'POll T CO, -"Id wllll 111t llKnH,..,. ..._.,.,., lft ftll ot!l(lf J ...... w 11rm It t~ of 1t1t to••· "' 1t1t (1«r1t ot"" 111ow tnt111e11 ~ • ., ite.m which I trust )'OU'll rtad ,,. Mt-. ~ MIMI •lid oocldtntn la DfHelll lhtrft, wllh IM f>K•lH'Y
••• •• fotlDw•~ voucllerl. 10 ttw ""'""'r'IW'd '' 11wc o1t1t• "'llh delo'g'I •tr and 'lrs 4'*1'1 ltw!I ,.,,._, 1D4U l'llcioll o1 Pitt 1rtor ..... l. (A.'!'l;Olt AND llEAD, "• I' ' l• • I> ' ....... F-11111 v11~,. C•ti"'"''· .t.t1or1W¥t 11 l1w, 1S0 E. 1,,.. '""'' 5oull• adult American . The lte1n also Mlftlff Fedll(:lt, 1(11 l•tlt !toed, llt, ("It lo\nt. (1lllor11!1, Wlll(h Is Ille
N.--t e .. c:11, c1111«n11. lllt« "' budNt• "' ...,. \lfldertlgfw4! 111,,.11 c~ries massive and 1n11gnlfi-w1TNE1s our "-" 1~11 1111 o•• 01 1ntfl•~ Hl'ltlfllN 10 .,.,· ''"" oi 11111 ce t econoinic slm1iflcante ~'• lN•. , Ge<ech!11t, wltt.ln louf m6"1l11 tlltr IM I>'
ltoMt'I l-t• s•u-11n1 •~l>ll<•l!oti 01 111r, 110ll<t. whlcb I trust you'll r.ecogniztl
M.Anlff Ftcl1><!.I 0.1~ Ml• JI Ifft , · I 'I J '1 -STATE OF c ... 1.1Fn11 .. 1A 1 1 or,11,,.',., JC.yet in l me, 1• r. anr 1• r5. In·
COVJ'l!TV OF 011 ... NGE 1 ss A11n.1n111r1ir1• or ,,,.. t•t•l~ tclllgcnt Uusincs~:man. Herl' ii On tllls tth 1111 of '""'' t.. 0 ,,.., of 1111 1bove ntmlCI Gftrd•"' .............. lhe Ulld~<1l1ne<1 .• Not1r1 CAVLOll ANO lllAD -is:
"llblk "' ll'G tor Mid Cou1111 •!Id .!.!t~. Att.rMr• 11 ).1w The last' of the kids born :n rulctl,.._ l"'r•ln lllill' t!Hnml'l'l'"N ~nd Ht IE. 11111 st .... 1, Suli. IU, 1wor"' perion11lt' •-•·tc1 11~·· L, ... 1, c .. r.-.... c1li..,.i1 the post-\\'orld \Var II baby
S.S0... Incl Mlflle"f FeOl><ll ~!ICW~ TO -T .. l OUJ M14nt boo ' bo f -. "'" 1111 --wt1oM "'-••• Att•rMv• 'ttr A<11lflllihtrt1rla n1 is a ut to move oul (J tubKrltlff fo Ille wltlllrl 1n111uM4tfll, •ncl Pull!!~ 0r1,.... ™" Deil• P1io1, his t@ens. The posl·\Vorld W:i.r r~~ -"" Intl jllfy ''f<llloll Ml• 2'. J""' 2. '· u . lNt 1((1•4• 11 baby boom Lopped out In
WITNEJ$ ...., llff'llll tnll atlkJ1I tttL -1949. 40FFICl,l,l SEAl> LEGAL NOTICE
"""' Aurr\llllM. Jr THE TYRANN\' of the NolltY P~lc-(lt1+ornl1 II · h h' Prw.i...t OltJa 111 T4tttt teenager w I end wit l IS
Of ~ty 'UP•••Dll COUllT 0' T"I' "A "''~ Ellti•'' STATI 0, CALllllC•NU 1"011 deeadc Dec. 31. Tncre are •..n ~~~'f"', THI cou"~~~i,1011•Not: 17,000,000 in Lhe 15-19 year age
1u·w. t:ttflll• ti. HOTICE OF Nlt:AlllHO 0, Pt:TITIO" bracket today, up ~ pert'ent ........... C111f. '011 ,IOIATt: 0, WILL ""0 FO• in the 1960s atone: in the PutrHt..., o ...... Cotti "ltlly Pilol. LEnEllS Tl!'STt.MENTAllY ~
"""" 1 ...... INI June ,, '· ltbt .~.. E\tllP .... -THEODORA J. v II, 1970s. this number \\ill hardly ..C-'..-'--'-----------1 °~~~~£: 15 HEREBY GrllEN ft•! budgt'.
LEGAL NOT ICE SECURITY PAc1F1c NATIONAL llANIC, Replacing this group will be ----~-------J'r•m••lv S.Ouwl•v F"'' Nlllorill Bt"-""' I 20 29 id Tl LEGAL NOTICI' lllt<t t>er•in 1 Pf'lll!on tcr P•-lt ol will I IC -year-O ll. 11.'V
"N,OllT-MESA UNl,IED SCHOOL t..C !or l••Ul"te or LeUe•s l••l•m•nl lrv nun1ber 25.CKI0.000 llOW, \\'ill 01sT•1cT to th• i>ellOo,,e•, ••fere"<t flJ wlllch i, Miiiet IR•ll1tll Ii.• m1ae lo• lurlher P••li<ularl, •NI I.hf! ttuo tota l 40,000,000 by Hl80, NOTICE tS HEllEIY Giii[" lh•I lllt time ""° Pile• of ... ~.i~ 1"' llmr n., In lhC words of Matin It. lolnl "'1 EdvOtlOll of II•• Nt-r!·Mew bff11 ''' lo• J•m• 11. 196t. al •:30 •·"' • In Unlttld Sdwol Olitr1c1 o• O••n•• co1m1v 1rie coutT•-' of Oet>••tment No. l ot Gainsbrugh, chief economist Ctl!k>rni. wilt rl(tlv• ielltd "1"' UP I~ ilid courl, II 1(') Wfit fl•Mh ~ ... ~ •. In or ihc National Industrial 11:00 ..._,;., Ori tr... 1•111 cl•v 01 June, Ifft ,,,. City ot S•,,I• An•, C11ilQ•"l1,
•t fM Gttk• "' 111a khol>I oi.1r1a , DetN June '· 1•H Conference Board, "The Se.v·
lo(ai.d It !ISi .-.1ece"tl1 ... venue, Cotll W, E. ST JOHN d d f lh MIN Ct!t1or1111 •t whl<h !lm• ,.111 111c1s C1>11nl1 ci.r~ c11ties is the eca e 0 e
win.;.. DlltllldY ~ '""•••a """ •11 AieME 1· GIOAI you nit marrieds." PAINT ,n. Ml1•iwl !lr11t
"'" bkh in 10 bt In •<co•ll•"'' wllh Sout-P1..,..111. c1mor~11. t Ull THE NE\V FORCE in our
CW!Clhlor!" IMtruc11eo11 •nd SPKlflullori• At1tr111r•"" P1t1n1e11t1 economy, in short. is tile wllkft ... -Of! lite l" Ir~ Dffi(f o• Ille Tth UIJI m.sm
PurdlllJ!nt A•""' ,,, "'" S<M<il DltlrkT, Publi,~ed or1t1" '°''' D•ll• Piiot. growing up of !he gent"ralion
11H1 Pll""'lt ,.,,"'~· Cott• Mrw. J\ll'lii·~·~· ~"~· ~"~·!'~"''!iiJ!!ii!ii!!'!i'!!'~"'.;'l'I born ri11hl arter \.\1orld \Var If Ce l1fort1l1. -----· " EKfl blOde< musl 1ut1ml! 1 bid det>OSll -th(' S\\'ilch fro1n IC'Cn:i,i:cr to
,,., ""' torm cf t <r•t1t•e11 °' c.1S11iert IUSINESS PROILEMS! · t f cr..ct: llol' 1 blct bof>G .... u•I "' litt ...,,un1 C•" young In a r r l e 1 • r01ll
IJO.I of--!11t tmCMllll or lh~ bid. mllllt Olve-ffo~• Counsefo<S dC•"'nflC:'CY to a ll'f'll)~t'r l1f H ••l:lle to lhf ore1er of tl'lt "twPOrt-Mfu 1 , • -I'~ Ulllfltd Scl'locll Ol•l•ltl. A 11•1rlorm.11<• lh'! \'."Crk rorte, frCIH p•;-
Bollell ''"'be •eooulrt'd 11 ,.,. dl"'"u"" 011 6 7 5 • 2 3 0 0 · 1 ·111 lar1 n1 Ill' tne OTitJ'lc:t. 111 111e r'tt11t o1 ttllurt 10 Pt'tlSJ\ C (' 11 f O sa . ·l'i' ' " .,,,tr in"" oudl ..,,.,,,,~,. 1111 ..-ocff<l1 ~• H•Yr1• 11 "' s P.M. parent."
''-die<). wm bt TOttttltd. or In c•.e cf 'llP~~~·~-~-~·~·~·~·~"'~·~·~~·~· ~~~l ===l=d~o~n~'l~k~n~ow how th1~ 1)\l'1~e.,1 .......... 11M Ml : •llfl' IM•eof wlll be +orlelted fo MM kllOol Oll1dcl el 0••11111e c......r.o. • ,, LECAL f\'.OTICE
He •kldt• """ wHhOr1w 1"" 1:1111 le• • ------; tllf'lod ·flf lortl .. l!n C4jf dlY' 111tr lhf T411tl
""' Id 1or ,,.. -111r11 '"'"°'· ., See our su,.e111011; cou•T oF Tiu: T""' •1111'11 ctl Eductl..,,, Ill !ht N-1• STATl 0, CAL"ORNl.l 'Dll
Mf;a U111fled Sc:Mol Ol1lrkl '*"'vn IN falf•page ad THE COU"TT OF QAA~GE ri.M It N!tct lftY or tit bllh, t nd ll01 NI. A·•lU! -rliy •e<.,.I tM lewHI bid. tr.cl le NOTICE 0,.-"IEAlllNG 0, l'ETIT!ON
-Ive 1"1 fMormtlllY O<' lrrt11urtr ltv I" in this Week 's ,011 PROl,,TE 01' WILL •ND etlr llld <Ktlved. CODICIL ANO FOii LETT EA S HtWPOrl•Mtt• U"llltd TIME TlSTA/\l!!NT/\11"1
School Dl1trl<I r \;-:t ~I n• N ''· I'; 01i;r •• O.:ttVd. of Oru•11e C1>11n11 M • "'OT IC[ IS 1<!'.Plr.Y GIVEN That C•lllorr'e agazJO C LEO'I ... SO'NIO~ hO• hie<! htrt!11 I IH'll·
BY Oorc1h1 H1rv•v 1:on le• prollftt cl will '"° todl<ll arid !or Pu•<hlll"9 At~n• l!!U•rK• of i.oli.<1 Te•l•mt"lfn' to Ill•
l'vlitlVMct Or•~"' c~t\I 0,11, "''"'· m FIRST. pelllloner, reltfff'<t IC which ii m..ae lor J unt t t nll Junt 16, 1'0 !filt-6t l~•lllU P1>rlleultrs. 111d lh1t lh~ !lmt ""°
CA'l~ORN !A Pl•<• of httrlno lht •I>"" II•• bte11 '"' LEGAL f\'.OTJCE ._. T lot Jun• 71 . lff9, fl ''lO '·"'·•.Jn !h• COMPAN Y eourlroom 01 o~~•r!m•nl No, l er ••'d -----P-SU?f 1 ro~•'· M 100 wesf lln~l h Sl•e•'· In th• Cf:ltTl,IC ... Tl o,.-IUllNESS \\'here !he inl'tbll/r (i!1 cl Stnl• All• c.~1l!ornl1. FICT ITIOUJ H•ME Ot trd JUM t. 1919 o/woy1 conies Jin;! w. E. ST JOHN TM ur.cltr1 l1nlCI -<t•tlf'f !My ltl! Coun!v Clf'r~ ,_U(flng t buslt!tit •t 1l«I L1111111 ... w.. ])SS Vii l ido LIPPOLD, Hl!HDEllSON
COl!t Me11. Ctl!fornlt, undlr fllie lie:• AND Oll'ISMOO ll tltlwt llM'I nlmt Ill ELECTlllCAL N1wport l1•ch .&YSTEMS PL ... NNING ~E 5 .-.·~ trlll ""-' 1SI llll 11111 II., i.id flnn 11 comPOtfd 111 11'11 ~ Pho"'' 675-1940 Sullt 111
"
,._,.,, wllDH "'"'" In hiU IOlld •"'•-..1 WilHtm E. McClellcfo11 C•ll• Mn•, CtUf, f1lll
"""'""' "' l'-tltitnor .. rnlOMCt •rt 11 follows: Viet Pr11ide11I Ttl: 11141 SU.II~
Kent tc. "'""'"'""· 11011 Or•k• Aw.; l~===;:::======:--=-::!.'..!:~'~"';:;:":""'~i:'o""9• cc~ll Dt11¥ l'llot, Frtd 0. M<Gr~, 1.:>I Orak• ........ • o Ji/M t, lO. ii, ite9 IO'll-•t Coslt Mt1•. Ctlllor"ll. WIUl1m G. lr•"ler, ')" CDll•I• 0.,. (Olll Mttt. C1llf:!r'llt ,
Otlt'<I MfY I. lfft.
Kt"! IC. Btnntnm FrttJ 0. Mt;Gtl!il"' \'/illl•m G. T<lrlPr St~t• ct C•flcr•lll, Orfflll• r W"11· Or! Mtv I, 1te9 trl-r• ml'. • t11;11rY Put>lic Ill And "' ,..o'd !!~!•. Qrr1c•111~
'PPI'~'"' ""'' IC. tlt•q:'•e,,., F•rd o. MCGregor, Wlltla"' G Tr1nttr ~n"Y'" lo
,,.. le be 1ne <H:•!.O<l' ..i,~·· ~~"''' 1 .. MJM£rlbed 10 ,,, .. nn·• '"1'•ume"t '""
ad!"ow!fdvrG l~•v r•r<. '"d '"' ''"''· (OFFICIAL SE ... l ~
lll~k! s. Sp;[., Nett,., Publ'~-' 11tl~•nl•
Prlnc!cfl Olflct In 0•1n1r cou"tv My Comn.l11I0<1 F•P<ffl Jin. !I, 1'13
Pu~lls'>ed Or•n•• C·•s! 01oly ~ 'M.
MIY It, 2f, l!>d JUM 7, t . ''·' ''=·4f
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTlCI: TO Cll t:;DITf·~~
•"~"l•f\111 l"nUPT , 2 r~r STATE 01' CALl,DllNIA ,011 Tfle COUNTY OF 011,.r:r.i:; Ht. 1411'1
E•l•I• cf CLIFFOllO C. l'UBEI!.
Ott••~. NOTICE IS HER<'llY f",\'IEU to !h•
cf'e<lllTOtl ol 1he •bevt "'"'td ~·"~":
!Ml 111 ct•M!M h•v•n11 cltln.1 191•nll I~· 11kl oetrtltnl ••• '~'""d kl Ille !hem
Witt! Ille llf<•U•'1 Yl>\IC , .... In r~t oll•C•
flf !ht clllt1i or t~• 4t)tl 1• r Allt!H crurl. t• lo trewnt lhtfn, ,..11" th, 11tctssttY
vouc1>ers, to ''-Y"""'••9~·a .i 00 li '!d Slrttl, N~I IHtcll. C•llto•"ll •:Ul. wfll<h h Ille cl~c· ti ""'1•~•" ~f !~·
Undel'lltl'lt<I I• ti! mt!lttt otf!ti"'"' !O
tlle etll .. llf 11111 art"<l•nt, wim•" f1>11r
"'°"1"' '"'" !ht ''"' •ubllc•11.., ol "'" 110llte. D•lecl M1v I), 1969 HUllW ITl. HUR 'J•T: t. ll El/l ll
llw ' M1•llr•n 11v·~ & Rotlf'rl l , HitCO l'•tru!oa o! lft• 1'>'111
of lf>e f!l(>Vt nlmod d•r<l~'I HUllWITt, MUllWIT! & D[l,I(~
~lt . J:lftd ''"''' tf-"'1 II•••~. l':•IJ!or•I• TIL• (Tltl 61J-"2t
AttwMrt ftf l~e<Ult'I
'ubftSl\etl Ortr•'H Co•1I O••'• "•lal Mty It, lt, Incl JUM ). ,, l,69 •11~
LEGAL NOTICE
p.JJftJ C&'llTl,tC•TE o,.-IU 51 "ES$ FICTITIOUS NAM E Th• ~et1it"1:<1 <ta etrtlt• 11'11!1 "" tonctudl"" • bu1lne11 •I ~ N•'"'"°'' llOll!tYltd. Cotlt M<!H, Cttl!O!'~lt, ll<llltf
rlwc fldlllot.ll llrm n.m• ot AllEllO(EN PUILISHING (0MP ... NV ar.cl lhU !tier ttrm h comPOltd rf 111• •ellr' •'"o n••..,,,, W II c It M rntl !n lyll 1"4 1l•<tl ol
... ~tr>« '" •• 1~11c .... -o.· "----.l.!12.\~~ Ave""'· C•t• Melt. Ct!•fo•"TI. . lloritld ,.-_ HetWl'h, 1t11 N•,..110rt •1wd,, C<»lf Me11, Ctll!Of'"'I•
0.ltd W V 16, 1~6•
0. lloae• Hn tn
111"11111 F, HOJ'•tlh
t Sit'• ol C1!11of11il, Oll"Ot Ccuntv On Mt., 16. !Ht. Y,..tOf• "'f· • No•o•v pyl:lftc. Ill t n d tor 1•1ct s111e. arr>01111ll•
...... ,... 0" ll09fr HO~ln 1'1d llONld ,.-,
Hetvt"' kllOWfl TO m • lo 'le thr lf'Hl>'" .,.. ,.,_, '" 1ubot•~ 10 lhC wllll•~ .... .,_, •"" .. ~-~.. ...... ·-· ~ll'lt t•me. COFFIC!Al lE ... L1 M.lrJ IC,. ......... Nollr'I' P~bllC·C1t11orr1• Pr!Mh•tl Oltlu .n
Oftnt• c-" ,,., Coml'\IH IOI' E••l•u "°"· t•. 1tn .-.u111l,n.i OftM• CO>lltl 0111v
IM't 19l M. '"" J""t 1. t. 1te•
LEGAL NITTICE
The Daily , Pilot
Coyer1 Booting
\
..............
• •• • • • •
FOR AS
LOW AS
TAI call
Call NOW for
ontwC"r yo1i1r phon•.
bfochwr• and lnfarmotlon.
I~ • • ~
' -lllVINO . .-U.Of COUNTl ~ ····~·····~,,._._
* HALLI DAY'S *
WARM WEATHER BLAZERS
The fabric ls a crisp dacron~l,~ool blend,
that kf?tps its good looks on those v.•arn1-
csl of days.
Tradit ionally tailored in the just right
Halliday's manTier. It comes in !Ive nev~
summer colors plus class ic na\·y. S60.
Coordinated Pattern Slac ks-$18 to S32.JO
MEN'S TRADITIONAi. CLOTHING
17t~ & t•VINE AVE, WfSTCllFf PV.ZA
NEWPOflT 9[A.CM llM. 645.07•1
you but t willingly report it
lmpresse~ me enormously. ln
fact, ev~ a tidy 10 of the Im·
plicalioos I can easily fore5ee
leave me a bit breathless. To
iltustratti:
(I) The aging of s~· tremen-
dous a group i~ our pulatlon
telegraphs an xplosi l in the
demand for alltypes o she lter
-all sizes, for sale. r r rc11t.
\Vhen kids get mar~'ed in an
1:1Hh1ent society, the. 100\'t' In-
to pl11c<'::; of their O\\' i ,
f!I THE DEMAND for
mortg:H.:" money \.o build the
housing will also explode.
Even assuming funds become
more avai lable after the Viet·
nam war , the cost o f
mortgage money should re-
main very high compared with
the 1950s and most of the
'"""· 13) Industries which will be
riding the demographic wave
will be those catering to the
burgeoning numbers of youn~
n1arried, not the stabilized
number of teen-agers -and
this covers the entire range of
goods and services, either ne\v
or tradjtional.
(4) There wiH be an ex-
ceedingly important a n d
welcome increase in our work
fo'rce as the dependent teen·
agers of the 19§0s become the
independent young adulls of 9 1~1c 1970s. Since this is an
c:luctled generation. a furt her
rn1ptica tion i!i that these
\1·orkt'rs 1·:il1 be unusually pro-
d'•t•li\'C -1\"hich means they
\\'ill ~pur our ecor.::imic growth
to an unu:.ual d cg r cc .
Gainsb ru gh sees our annual
rate of real gro•vth /after ad·
juslment for price increases)
Ill 4.5 percent in the 1970s.
against only about 3 percent in
IC enti re 20th century and 4
percent during the post-\Vorld
War II period. Th :s mc~ns our
national output y,·ill double
wit hi; 16 years!
(5) THE mGHER education
of our young adults implies
steady and big pay· hikes,
which in turn implies more
buying power.
16) Equally imp'lr!anl. thc~.1·
C'<lucated buyers v.•1Jl llt'1nanct
Bnnk ~ln11a9e 1·
Laguna 13cach resident
Donald B. i'\JcKec has
been assigned as 1nun·
• ager or Security Paci-
fic Na t i on al Bank's
South L3-guna;branch.
Zod vs Opens
Po111011a SI ore
Zodys has opened its 15th
department store, covering
100.800 square feet, in Pom ona
Valley Center. Pomona. ..i.
The Zodys 'chain began in
Garden Grove in 1960. Other
Orange Coast areri stores in•
elude the facility at Hun-
tington Beach wllich v.·as tht'
ninth link in the chain and the
r~ountai n Valley store. !ht
13th. Sc\'en more stores are
planned for this year. ;t(.'·
cording to· Lee Freesman, cx-
tculiv.e vice presid~J!t·
Business
In Brief ______ .., ... .,,
CALGARY (UPI ) -Pan
Amerit'an Petroleum Corp .. a
subsidiary of Standard Oil Co.
flndiana), has siJmed a sales
con tract with No r I her n
Natural Gas Co. covering up
to one trillion cubic feel of gas
from the Strachan-Rlcinus
field 100 miles northwest of
Calgary and 400 billion cubic
feet from the Southern Caybor
rield 250 miles northwest of
Calgary. The de.al is subject to
approval of reg u I a l o r y
authorities.
NEW DEL HI iUPll -The
Indian government may ask
Burn1ah-Shel1 Refineries, Ltd ,
anci Esso to cul back pro-
,Juction next month 1·:hen lhc
r:~IV stalc-0y,·ned f\I a d r a s
refinery goes in production,
the financial paper Economic
Times said. The two foreign
companies presently are ex-
ceeding their authorized out -
puts .
NE\\' YORK /UPI) -Allied
Stores r orp. "'ill open 31 n"1.,.
stores by th r end of 1971 , th('
compa11y said in its 1968 an·
nual report. Allied curren:ty
has 12.1 stores in 17 stales ar.1t
h a d a sales volume of $1 . l
bill ion last year.
\VASl·llNGTON tUPl)-lt is
high tim e the nation's steel
producers and auto makers
make a strlous efrort to solve
the junk automobile problem ,
~:rn. Jennings Randolph, (0-
\\'. Vu.I. said Thur s da y .
\'."ritin:t in a pt:bli cation of the
Institu te .:if Scrap lron & Steel.
Senator Randolph s a i d
CongrCfS v.·il\ inve>tigv.1c 1hC'
1•rob!ern th is !lummcr to J;t'Ck
.~on1c alternal~'t' to a massi\·t"
1111tlay of publi e funds to
dis!)Ost' of jun k t'a rs.
i\'E\\1 YOllK <UPI) -U. S.
Ran k l\1ote Corp. said Thurs·
tlay ii has dc\'eloped a ne\Y
lo\v-cnsl mt'lhod or . rapid
handling and a u tom a t I c
reading or stock certificates
!hat could sol\'e tht present
back office 1ogjan1 in \Vall
Sl reel. U .S Bank Note said
the i;ystt'nl 1ras developed
jointly \vi!h Control Data
Corp. or Minneapolis.
NE\V YORI\ IU PJ\
Spartans Industries. Inc .. ha s
:igL"ecd lo buy for $~ ITiilJion
in 511 f>ercent subordinated
notes and olher securities
fro1n Arlen Operating Co. 48
real estate properties in "''hich
Sparta.n's prestntly i:; the so!e
or principal retail tenant. The
properties are encumbered by
n1ortgages totalling $ 1 2 0
million .
J. WALTER THOMPSON
we're not
But t!len maybe you're not IBM.
:..iaybe you're fust a growing company wh~
r.pprecic.te s the value of advertising,
and you cO urd use a consulta nt
That'i where we come Jn.
V..'e give l~~!l~ez!. though t
to your marketing problems,
and we come up with and prod uce
attention-getting advertising and publicity.
Let's t:ilk about how it can work for your company.
Ol1h (7 1 ~) 642-la&O
~y~ v
ARTHUR C06PER / Advertising'
2043 Vlct~cllff Dr1111, Sult1 200
Newport B11ch, C1!1lom\1 t'!eO
'A con1ylt!t1C end Ptl:ldUctlon t trlllol
"""\.. with 1dv1n11lr.11 •ll•"cy 11ceonltla11. 'IF-~~~~~~--~
I
IKL Gains
Boeckler
l11struments
Martcc Buys . '
Paln1 Press
;;u ... ~ w 1.l<I 81krO!Jl .&l 0:1:&i: 01~!0 ~. ·~Pu~1 .to ;>e<~ l• ,~,, ~ar~O" I. t toard CR . S 1111< Ir< lO l•lc DI '·!oil lla'e1 MrQ lla'h l~d l.ih Ind DI ! 1u1chlb .to :'llartec R e product Ion. ••i•L•~ .11
Ne\vport Beach, a subl)idiary ,::~1~~~0 130
or Genge Industries. Inc .. ha!ii l:i~~:~ ~so
purchased Palm Pres.~ for :~~f;,:-,~ Jl ('~<:IJ, 1 ~:rc':P~~~ 4
Hirhard T. \!:ir\'in, l\1:Jl'!Pc l5;:f H~~ e.~
11rcsirlcnt n1ade the an-Re·1 In "'oo -· IR'm l1 Co 1 11~unce1ntnt. Pain\ Press. 'vith s'"~:• 1 ao3 a current annuil 1·n!••n1c nr 11~::;;;~1~', ·o . _ rc~r1 rn t1 :.4 rpprox11nat rlv S350.0M. \1•11l 1 B•~ r •!)rl i1 . ,·L~"'J• (\''C'r<il~ as a div1s1011 or 1e~n ~· r~
"J:irtf'C'. ~=~~0 c:;~
Since Hs founding in 1962. B~'h s.i:.,,1 !?
f\lartec has specialized in pri n-=::licu•1 :~
ting technical man u a Is, ll~:11~t1"'1 Ji
reports and proposals primari· =~~~~~ ~1,i~i
iy for the aerospace industry 11ct1111 1.10 . . · &ol1C11 !;!) 1n c l ud 1ng brochures. 8onll s•r~ 1 • Booi<Mth 1 ?I 1nagaz1nes and r e I a t e d aor~•" 1.;>11
publications. :::~·~~~ 1:lJ
l(cystonc
Ac quired
Pool Eclll ) O• Ocurn! l"t f!,,,~,1 ... 1. .•o i\rl99S! ) l~• !\fu1 IA~ I 10 !lrit1Mv Ml i~k:1·~~ ... ~ B~l~nUG 1 /1 fl•ow• Co Bro"" Co of B~" ~hlrp I llwn51'1t>' 1 iO llru"l'N~ Olit ButvEr 1 ;o
\
'
... 1 h l!lucldCe .llt
1 grcemen 1n pr1nc1p e as ':frl,'' r" ·''
been reached for Trans-Coasl G~~v:''.1~·10
1 -I I Co I A I lu"~ ll&mo n\'eJ'. men ., AS nge es Bunkll on.so
based s<1vings and loan holding =~~~ .~40
company, to acquire Keystone -~~ar"n: i~u
Sa\·ings and Loan Association euiie .. $1'1 .10
or An aheim for common stock. C•l>Ot co •c
Trans-Coa!il O\\'llS I \Vo !11 Fl"tnl • . . t111h1,1 n1 l)per<!t1ng sav1ngs <1nd loan 1mpllL •5• · (' 0 rd s • lmPSD 1.10 as.~oc1a ions, xna av1ngs !'"Sou 11,. J
and Santa l\!aria Savi ngs. :~e'::.!wr"·:
Assets of the holding comp.'.lny :~ ~:i ,~ 1
totaled $9'2,625.000 as or Dec. ~~·'f"e~c~~
31. 1968. :~~~~11 :o'o A,.,,ui~ition of Keystone Sav-1•·• ca.Ci~ 1 ~·i l•DPLI l.•1
lngs "'Ith assets of. $'1~.405.000 :;!1~~~c 1.~ at year end 1968 will increase .,. pf;,,,
total assets of Trans.coast to ::~·,~~ .•c.
more than $135 milli on. ·!:!~f./.~"1 >n60
• Cl Mtr~d!
Community
Envision ed
C(IM ofl,1S c~(O Cc .IO
Cel•n.t1•CP ' Cfn<i ~ ~ Ctnt 111 .:70~ C'1• Hu<l 1 11 Cf~ lllLI I 3' C.r11111•s l,U (lf'!L1£I .II cr~M..., 111 c~~· sw ' ~o Cri• 5ev1 .ff CrnTtlU! .M c .... o 1.6Gb
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A plan l:";:;:!:1r ·If.
to develop a community for ~(.:.n!1! ·~c
nearly 34.000 persons on Camp m·~~"y'·'!
Elliott lands has been outlined ::=::"" ~:t'
by the Qiri~tia!'ll'l Oil Corp. or !'!~~;~ ~-::
Huntington Bt'ach. ~h'"'*'• ·,., •ti II• I.ta The plan calls for con· .," °"'°
struction of some 11.000 livina gri17't i~
units during the n'!:ct JO years. g:\,>~·•':" :i
beginning With up to 600 ~=1'~ ~ t
single-family rcsldt'nces In ~1,r~','
a~l a yC'.ar. ~:~.11 ~~ ..
Tht" rie\'elopn1t'nt y.·il br on1 ~"' flu•<' 1'(I
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""" I 110 " f•• G H•wl El I J2 tl•Vtl Alb I M11 tl1!111t Cfi :l:f~~~ .: "'~'""· ~· M<I .;wt 60 ti. v Pi• o"f H rMPds I Ht !!'J•llP 10 ~=imp,,"' ct: Herc "i
Htrtll d I Htr1llF d 10 111 OloC JO eub~111 75 rQ.-;; tfo11,.~1 IUonHolt Uco 15 rt Ml 1•
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~loti~"~ HGMMI 17CI tl~ra,J:g: "ffi:tJ., .0 .,. " 160 l<H• lisle l t-11 PU JS 111 Ctr1I 1 Jl •u cen ptJ.50 UI Pow l IO hi Pw PU!' Ill Pw pl7 l Imp C• Am l~A (p 1.-0 l~t Ct •lt Inc.cum "" Indian Hd .~ Ind Genl ,~ ltte1tl1PL 50 lnEIMt• !?<I llld8ancP •o
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-. '
MOftdq, lWM 9, 19" H DAILY ,ILD1' 11
Monday's· Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List -.... -----------0*.)Mlllt..C•a.,.
list
'.~
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0AtLY PILOT PhDIO by P•I O'Donnell
What Now, My Love?
Here's an off duty executive who knows what he's
after -relaxation. No sleek racing yachts for him
-just give him his Sabot (Mein Liebchen ), a bit
of cruising room off LltUe Balboa JsJand and mix
well With a breeze and some sunshine.
G WC Gives Scholars
Awards for $9,350
Scholarships totaling $9,350
have been presented t o 60
Golden West College students
by 26 business and pro-
fessk>nal groups, s e r v i c e
organizations and individuals.
Donora and scholarship win·
ners are the following :
Assisiance League of Hun-
tington B each: Joan
Workman, Westminster, $100;
Diane Theil, Huntington
Beach, $100.
Huntington Beach Business
and Professional W o m e n :
Mary Battershill, Hunlington
Beach, $50 : Linda Louzao,
·Fountain Valley, '50.
Junior Women's Club of
Huntington Beach: Mar 1 a
Monce aod Robert Henstridge,
Huntington Beach. $100 each t
Huntington Beach, $100 each.
Woman's Club of Se a I
Beach: Stephen Scheiblauer,
Sunset Beach, $100. ·
Rancho Alamitos Rotary
Club : Richard Craig, Newport
Beach, $100; Ray Baker, Hun-
tington Beach, $50.
Golden West College Faculty
Association : Gary Turner,
Robert Walters, K e r r y
Redican, Don 7.oll, Huntington
Beach, $50 each: Cheryle
Silver, Fountain Valley , $50.
Golden West College
Associated Students: Gerald
Baggs. Westminster, $50.
RobertMcCausland
Memorial Fund : Frank Cid,
Yvonne Bethrum, Patricia
Stone, Westminster, $Io O
each : Dave Dow, Garden
Grove, $10Q; Ke·nnettt Wagner;
Foun,tain Valley,'$100, Women'.s 'Club of Huntington
Beacti: Susan Sugden. Hun-lingtoo11eadi. $125, · , ¥qu"« l!;Olll'n's <;Iv.I c
Costa Mesa Art League : Ueague: Patncll t t 'n d s e y ,
Et.helyo BradshaW Hunti~ Douglas Ahlvers~ G a r d e n &achl; ,$100; Ly;.. 1'r11/cfe, ,, g .. ,..\ I'" .each,: <)ary Kim· Westminster,. $100. _ · brol.!gtl; · Huntin bn Beach,
. Delt.a:-Kappa Gamma : Can-po_,, -·
-dace Suermann. Sunset Beach, DAILY PILOT: Sue Green,
$225. Westmlnster •. :$50.
Mercury Savings and Loan: Mrs. J>hylh~ ~oy and Dody
Jean ,OOrmier, Midway City, Thomaa Memor1~l Award : Jan
$200; W'dliam 'Pingree, Garden Pearso~. Westrrunster. $!1(1. '
Grove, $100: Diane Gaedig, Am~~an Busio.ess Wo!"en s
Huntington Beach. $JOO: Kathy Assoc1at1on: Gail Alt!mari,
Quinn, Garden Grove, $l00. Gwen Van Aker. Huntington
-Bahia Chapter, Nat Ion at Beach, ~·
Secretaries Association: Huntington . Beach
Debra Stevenson, Westmin-PlayhOl;ISC, Inc.: Diane Bety,
ster $100 · Nailcy Johnson Fountain Valley, $100. Hun'tin~ Belich, $100. ' Bank of America Business
Sisti and Siracu sa Awards : Robert Jensen ,
Memorial: William. Carpenter, W~tminst~, ~: Jacuelin
Garden Grove · M o r r i s Shies, Huntington Beach. $300.
Chinkin, MidwaY City; Peggy Bank of America Man of the
Fuller, Garden Grove ; Year:. James Roth we 11 ,
Octavia Winzer, Huntington \Yestm1nster, ~-.
Beach ; Ch;ristopher Li JI y, Bank of A~enc~ Woman of
6 ,Residents
Get Degrees
Six Jocal residents received
degrees along with 2.542 other
graduates -at Fresno State
College'.s commencement ex-
ercises Wednesday.
Thomas Jerome Cook, or
Costa Mesa, along with John
Ryan Bradford and Cranvillc
Conner of Newport Beach,
were awarded Bachelor of Arts degrees.
James Marshall McCall. ol
Fountain V a 11 e y , was
present.fid with a Bachelor or
Science ~iploma. while Ken
nelh LeRoy Pederson . and
Lynne Eleanor Lenger com-
pleted teaching credential re-
quirements.
1
the Year; Gall Altunari, Hun-
tington Beach, srio.
Golden West cOUege F'aculty
Wives ·Association : J a m e s
Cooper. Westminster, $SO :
Vern Hodge, Garden Grove,
$50.
Proto Tool Award : David
Klatt, Huntington Beach, $100;
Lloyd Swan, Costa Mesa, $100.
Southern California a n d
Southern. Counti~ Gas Com·
paoies : Bill Volga r i no)
Westminster, $100bond:
Ric hard Craig, N e w p o r t
Beach, $100 bond ..
Chapman College W o r I d
Campos A f 1 o a l : Stephanie
Brower. Huntingtol": Beach.
$800: Tom Carroll, Huntington
Beach, $200 : Thomas Biddle, Huntin~oil Beach. $ 4 o o ;
Ernestine JOJ1es, G a rd en
Grove. '700; Susan Jordan
Huntington Beach. $ 4 O O {
Sharon D. Long. Huntington
Beac~. $700 : Diane Gaedig.
Huntington Beach, $650.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• Fur La.die~ 11·ho \\'rile, a
f>.d ta\\·er French Provinc-
ial Desk and 1vhite cha.Ir.
• 1''ot the yearning, a sum·
me r In f\toroeco on tht
~100itt1'11.nian.
•,>'or the cyclls1, a nearly
11e1v 10.spet'd b1cycl<'-.
' /
, ., . , . ' " r ·-
• .. "' • .... ·.:J:
ANNIVERSARY 5ALE
~?WEST PRICES OF THE YEAR tN ~~·~y bEP~RTMENT AT \ALL _ 1 ~ST ORES
Dacron ® and wool tropical
weight Maybrooke suits
Dacron• palyc1ter for lightweight, wool
for a luxuriow f cc 1 and longer wear.
Handsome one and two button models in
a large color choice of plaids and solids.
regularlr ,,,oo 59,00
m.ty CO ,PC'D 0I juit.s 21
t-1aybrooke lightweight
double -breasted blazers
Cool Dacron11 polyester and ,v.·ool with
top-fashion doublc-brca.stcd styling. Single
breutcd models arc at wne big wvings.
18.00 /\iacPhcrgus v.·ool slack~ 14.99
regularly ,0,00 39,00
may co m01'1 spartswcir 4)
I
,. '
'
I \\ \
. , .
Maybrooke sport coats
in new 2 -button models
The new summer Jilhouctte, slimmer, trim·
mc.r, accented by t and 2-button closures,
d~p side v~nts. Many fresh-spi rited colors.
regularly 2).00 wool slacks 30-40 16.99
regularly 60.00 49,00
boys' perm anently pressed
Ivy style wa lking short s
\'Vrink\c shedding polye~tcr and cool rot·
ton in bright solid colors and plaids. Trim
Ivy 5tyling with belt loops. Sizes 8 to 18.
l .00-4.00 cotton knit-shirts 8-20 2.19
shorts regular ly 4.UO 2.99
may co south coast pine, sen die90 fwy, al bristol, co!I• mest; 546-9321
shop m~nd•y through seturd1y I 0 a,m, lo 9:30 p,m,
"
.'
imported
made of
English shoes
supple calfskin
Made exclusively for us of exrellent quality
calfskin by fine craftsmen. Slip-on style
in black. or brown leather. The moc-toc
oxford i1 available in black leather only.
regularly 23 .00 16.99
'
m~y co men's !hoes 60
'
boy's double -knee jeans
that never need ironing
Famous ma.kc polyester and cotton jean~.
extra-hardy .,,ilh mra·"-'ear double knees.
ln pt"tt'r, loden or grttn co lors.
Reg. 7.00 pre11 sizes 26 through }2 3.99
regularly 6.00 8-ll -299
m.i.y co boy~· v.e~r 14
MAVCO
------· ------·---·----------.,, ___ . ___ --~---·-· ---
•
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MI
NIH
'""" Vietr
dicat
ditiOI
At
Viel!:
in ' coall:
Conu
Asia
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Fi
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volvt
suici·
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had
abdu
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hom1
at C
custc
volve
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critic
Medi
degr1
In\
reasc
when
Mart
aUra
Fir
blazi
Beck
picki
base.
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volv1
of r
evid1
brea
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and I
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stud1
R. J
Mate
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Alan
to le
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susp
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allet
wen
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sbao
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~ph beac
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dull
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13,04
Th
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15,Jl
The
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Fou1J1aiD Valley
~01.'.. Ill, .NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS, •'1 RO.:GEs . , "
~
.. I' •
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFCRNIA '
~ . . ....
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• •• . . ..
'Ull .·1n on
Viet Troops ·Cut
Nixon Says 25,000 Leaving Soon·
By MERRIMAN SMITH
Ul"I W""9 Hllllt lbHrtW
MIDWAY ISLAND (UPI) -President
Nixon has announced that 25;000 U.S.
troops will be withdi'awn from South
Vietnam by the end of August and in-
dicated others will leave as military con-
• ditiops warrant.
At the same time, Ni.Ion backed South
Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu
in opposing the imposition of any
coaUtion government, including the
Communi.stS, on the wartorn southeast
Asia republic.
Nixon . made his troop reduction an-
Federal Agent
. .
Burns Himself,
Foils ~dnap
A kidnaped federal narcotics agent Jn-
volved in a major deal gambled on
suicide instead of murder Sunday by set-
ting fire to a Rossmoor garage where he
had been handcuffed to a waterpir)e by
abductors.
Six persons i{lcluding the q,wner of the
home -a paraplegic psychfloly major
at Cal State, Long Beacb · -are in
custody today on suspjcion of beine in-
volved in he alleged lddna~~ldll case.
Bruc·e Beck, 30, of Hollywood, is in
critical condition at the Orange County
Med.icaJ Center burn care unit1 with third
degree bums over 40 percent Of bis body.
Investigators said Beck had plenty of
reason to belie've he would be erecuted
when h.is kldnapers retufned to 12322
Martha Ann Drive, so he set the blaze to
attract help. ·
Firemen smashed their way into the
blazing structure and cUt the agonized
Beck free, after which lawmen t>uan
picking up suspects in the bizarre case.
based on his information.
Authorities said Beck had been In-
volved in a sale including up to 500 kilos
of marijuana and the drug dealers
evidently learned of rus ·role in helping to
break the case.
Arrested at various places in Orange
and U:is Angeles counties Sunday were:
Raymond Graves Jr., 24, of 12322
Martha Ann Drive, a bearded psychology
student and son o( retired naval officer
R. J. Graves, a dental professor in San
Mateo.
He and his male nurse attendant, Ray
Thurm.an, 24, were picked up at Los
Alamitos Racetrack as they were about
to leave the area far San-Diego.
Los Angeles Police Detective Sgt. Glen
Bachman identified the other four
suspect! In the kidnap case as Jerry
Swain, 36, Cheser Chri!lopher, 29,
Elizabeth Christopher, 29, and a 17·year-
oll! juvenile.
Sgt. I B,achman $aid a .38 caliber
revolver and _a .22 caliber derringer
allegedly used to kidnap Beck Saturday
were· aeized by lawmen who invaded a
(See KJDNAP, P11e %) __
County Approves
$390,000 Beach
Erosion Funds
Approval of $390,000 ln beach erosion
control funds wu completed this wtelc
when county aupervison approved "4.·
350 as the courn'y's and other agencles'
8hare oftbe four-year~ld project.
The pl)ljecl, started in 19&5 willi the
replentstllnent of eroded sand from the
beaches at Sunset Beach and Surfside
C(>lony, extends from that area to the
Newport Beach pier.
The fedetal government pays 87 per-
cent of the total spent each year and lhe
state, county and aHected cities and
private Iimdownm pick up the balance.
Orange Coast allocations this year in·
elude Newport Beach, $10,761; Hun-
tington .Beach Co .• 118,115; city of Hun-
tington Beach, 15,375; Surfside Colony,
13.019. •
nie county will pay 121.511 for its lhare
of the overall ,,.Jee!, and an at!dltional 1&.m for tbe<ounty-owned Sunaet Beech.
'll!t llllt• ~ted ~.3511.
nouncement Sunday at a summit con·
ference with Thieu on this tiny island in
the Pacific. It was the seventh meeting cf
a U.S. president with leaders of the
Saigon government. They appeareO a£-
Storles on Reaction
To Troop Cut Page 3
fable and relaxed, confidtnt of the ·course
of the war and mildly optimistic about·
peace.
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird,
who Dew back to Washington from
Midway, said in w·ashington t~ay that
, OAILY l'ILOT l'lloto ~ Tllm Tll•l
GOOD WORK, SIS-Miss Mer-
maid , Fountain Valley's ·Donna
Flory. gets a congratulatory
kiss from brother Clare, 3.
F ountai11; V alle:y' s
Donna Flory New
Mesa 'Me rmaid'
'Yest Orange County lovelies cap(ured
two <if the three top honors Sunday af-
ternoon in the annual beauty contest at
the-COflta -M""'d8.·Newp0rt:.Hirbor1.i1>ns-
Club Fish Fry.
Seventeen.year-old Doooa F I o r y
"avenged'' an earlier loss to Miss Foun·
lain Valley, Ellen Evans, by capturing
the coveted Miss Mermaid trophy over a
tield of 11 girls that included Miss Evans
and Westminster's reigning Utlist, Jayme
Boyd.
The new Miss Mermaid is a ti!JY bh1e-
eyed blonde who measures 35-24-35 and is
in ,,her junior year at Fountain Valley
High School. She lives at 10297 Cardinal
Lane and hopes to become a teacher.
Mis& Boyd, 11, of 8320 Wells Road,
WestmiDltet, took runner-up honors in
the Mumaid competJtlon. She is a senior
al Fountain Valley. •High and , lists
m~remen~. er ~21-35.
VJckl Yoe.k, 16, was chosen Miss Costa
Mesa Jn the ju~es' balloting. Miss Yoak,
wl>o succeedl 1968 queen Pamila Reed ol
HWlllngtoo Beach, Is a JOPhom,.. •I Costa'Mesa.Jligh School and........., 36.
2fo3L
1be contest was conducted before a
larae and apprectatlve C1'9'Wd at the main
ataae of -the Costa Mesa city -park where
th& Lions' 2.fth annual Fish Fry was held
Friday .lhrough Sunda ,
. .
more troops may be pulled out in August
but gave no-figUres.
dl::~e~i:.::;;!== s;!U: C!i
will be transferred, at least inltially, to
Okinawa and ·Hawaii rather than being
returned directly to the continental
United States.
The announc.emenl of the troop
withdrawal and ·other decisions reached
by Nixon and Thieu,drew a ~ed recep-
ticn;-1be"-North Vietnamese, the Viet
Cong and Moscow denounced the move as
a "meaningless. . : propaganda
(See TROOP CUT, Pa&• I)
2 Still Sought
In Slaying
Of SA Officer
Two of three Black Panther Party
members accused of killing a Santa Ana
police officer are st\11 at large today.
Sought by police ar~ .Nathaniel _Odis
G_rim_es, 21, 9f 2018 W. Btli St. and Arthur
DeWitt• League, 20, of 163.l w. Highland
St., both of Santa Ana.
Jn_ Orange County Jail charged v.Jt'th
1nUrder and conspltaey Is Daniel .
Lynem, 22, of 1111,W. Chestnut St., Sa ta Ant .
Pciflce said the search for Grim.ts 'and
League has been widespread throughout
California and neighboring states since
Friday.
The policeman, Nelson A. Sasscer, 24.
Was shot and killed while on duty
Wednesday night at 3rd and Raitt streets.
A memorial mass was held Sunday for
officer Sasscer at St. Cecilia Church in
Tustin.
"J know that all present would likewise
be ready to do exactly as he did," said
the Rev. John Sarnmon, pastor of the
church, to some 150 reprtsentatives ()f
county law enforcement and firefighting
agencies. ·
"You have nothing to be ashamed of."
the priest said. "The badge you wear is a
mark and sign of distinction."
Santa Ana Police Chief Edward Allen
read the services.
Memorial rites were held tod ay in
Garden Grove Community Church for the
slain officer. An escort of more than 100
motorcycle policemen convoyed is body
from a Santa Ana fL.neral home tc the
church, and following services, on to Los
Angeles International Airport.
Officer Sasscer's body was flown to
Washington D.C. for serviCes and burial
in h~ native city of Upper Marlboro, Md.
He is survived by his lvife, Lynn, 21, of
Garden Grove. and his mQther, five
brcthers and thrl!e sisters, all residents
of the eastern part of the United States.
?ifeanwhile, members cf the Negro
community in Santa Ana drafted an open
letter to Chief Allen.
They deplored the oUicer's death but
also asked police · to heed a call for
coolness tc forestall more bloodshed.
The lttter·reads ·in qart-:. "As far-as we
can tell, this murdered officer was nol
the object of any particular ill will in the
black community. Nor was thJs killing a
part o( any organized plct aimed at po-
lice officers."
It continued: "There are oo ()Ulside
agitators. There Is no desire for violence
(See MANHUNT, Pas• I)
Ul'I T11Wlltll
NIXON, THIEU ANNOUNCE TROOP PULLOUTS
Principle of Self-determin1tlon-·for South Viets
~ , . . , . I . , . . "' ... '' . '., . ' ., . ' ' . i ,. l '<; ,. • ". • • • ' ·-< ' ' ,. \,!, ,:· ·'·· ' <'l ' " .... ·~
Counti«ns to G"eet Nixon ,, ' . -• -• ' j. : ••
The pu6lic ·has ·been invited to ir.eet ·President Nixon toni3llt on
his ·return to· Orange Gounty from his Midway talks with e President
Nguye n Van Thieu of South Vietnam, spokesmen at El Toro Manne
Corps Air Station announced today.
Air Force One, carrying the Presidential party, is expected to
tolJch down at El Toro at 5:30 p.m.
Mr. NIX.on is. t9 greet the crowd, possi~ly Say a f~'Y words ·and
depart for his San Qlemente· home with his family by helicopter.
Marine officials said the gates would 1>e open to the' public at
4 p.m. Parking is limited. The base is accessible via Sal]ta Ana Free-
'vay by'the Sand Canyon Road .or CuJver Road exits to Trabuco Road
and the main ~ate. . • . · · • ·
The Presidential party'is .fo leave for Washington, O.C.'Tuesdi>y
about noon. · · . .
* * * * * * Mood of M .idway
Presi,dent Feels Peace Hopes Boosted
HONOLULU (UPI) -President Nixon
"'·ent to Midway Island hoping tc enhance
the chances £or peace' in Vielnam. He
came away thinking he did.
J1is meeting with President Nguy~n
Van Thieu of Sol!th Vietnam brought a
feeling of alliecl unity American officials
hoped would force the Communists to
al..andon -their hoptS for i Nixon-Thieu
split.
Nixon moved what he considered to be
his. blue chips into the arena by pro--
mising to start the immediate withdrawal
of 25,000 · American tooope ttom tbe war
zone, to be replaced by South Vietnamese
force·s. ·
-Thitt11 re·spahd~ w1th lav1sfl prai!e fer
the American Pte.siaent-and an emOtional
denial he'. had ah'y· h4~lc differences. with
the "Nixon administration. .
This mood of Midway left tilxon with
the ·feeling the Uilited States, ~utb Viet-
naip apd their other allies Jn·the war' hatl
iniproved their bargaining poslUon in
Paris.
·The reasoning was that the allies had
built a solid ·front' against ·Viet Cool or
North Vielnall)ese attempts in Paris to
split them, or cause the "divorce .. Com-
munist delegates mentioned last week.
Probably more Important than the
words of .the prt?ss statemenls or the
language of their commun'lque was: the
mood of Midway -'hospitable, with
Th~eu approaching effusiveness at times.
It was clearly different from earl)'
meetings between former 1President Lyn-
don B: Johnson and Jeaders of the SaigOn
government.. T.hleu went rout ¢' his way
twice tc deny any dlfferenct.!!I or opinion
with Nixon. . _ _ . . . .
The American PreSiden~, as host,
responded wilh Jtll!C~ )he swnc;, aUltude.
U.S. ofllcials fefi HMOl could.onlY be Im-
pressed bf this unity and 'I-e.Ct, ~rhaps
.graduaUy, ttt the peact·\able. .• · ·
"Nixon at the same lime · J~ft himself
r<IC!m io·rhaneUver •• no~ siJeJUng out 'haw
(See' MIDWAY, Pag• l) ' .
UCI Students .Get Voice . . .
. ; . ' ' \ . '
Will Speak-But Not ·V ·ote ·'."'.in Senqre, Ses,si9n . ,
' .
Students who • couple of months ago largely felt and at Uniea they .have out.> students and sympathy' for their desire to
,forced recesa OE the _UC lryine f;culty 's numbered faculty. By appltiu.se · aiid oc-\vio.a voice in r1·cuuy--affair1 .. • . · ·'
Academic Senate with ' their tat:tJCS cf casslonal groans or . boos the ditsldent Some wteks aQ:o, 'protessoq ·decl~ed to
talking out today bave.woft1fidl-volce in student elemegtlw UMtd'iome p~ a(Sd non-vo&a tllucient ruemt>us to 'all
Senate meetings. fesaors and reJnforccd ~ voJce of faculty 'commltltes _ abou( 40 stud~t Students now will bc,.,iven.the •same others. ' • ~~ ., ... ,· ,· .', ··~1·
privilege Jo speak ... ~...,... They , A lb'wtell> ago ~r'1!1 ·Wllipple 'ohh< ~Pl>Ollltni<nts in1 aUf" : ·· 1 • ", will notbOWevet .. ba'fe a vol!"!' medical m::bo()f'.referr«ir).o lhtm u "the i .Thtn ·the" qUestlan befOre. the :s.nate
' Dm'llif1be j>ut,year: 111' atudentl wllo 1 hO)OllO( cl"'u .. 11 'ChafrmAn.' o£ilrll«nill' '1'11 weelc lwn 'whettleri tO , ... v'e'lllOie·ie
w!Jhed to atttnd have r,.w'rly be<n 'lion • and "'computer '1 SCi<nce · Jilllon Jtii<knts · equaf·erfvlleJ•. qi ~~ate In tne
gtanted admission to Acad~ Sen,te ,Feldmaq . comP.Iained that thly· -II> ..,..,., 'facuhy meetlngJ .. ·lll' a 'ourprlae
sessions. Bui only two stud~~·,.represen-·timidatlftJ. , ··' · • · "-)f:.' twist, -In ·~endment by · Chatrinan of
Ioliveit have had therlghl to l!i<ili. 1 • Moif '1>!'of....,..· 1 ltttlldldc·' · SeOalt, Or' ahtsmle Blol~y" Otovfr' ... to Thi students' pmence bU 1*o very m..tln&t •havi sho)Vn loie..,,,..'.1« tilt • (tleo UCl'lllNATB,IPop;IY, '
• . ' ' ,.
·~ '.''"oti,il'. _..;.. _,.. . ... (· • -.
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.. •• r1· ' . e -. ' -.,
300 Boycott
ClaseeS'-in
Pay Dispute
By RUDI NIEDZIEUIKI
Of IM Oalb Pflet Stiff ' .
More than 300 teachers 1tay.c! 1W1y
from classes today in a "proteat Alafni the
Huntington Be8ch High School Dlltricf
Board al Trustees which failed to eame
to ~nns with them in a salary.,dllpute.
Students ll,all four district hi&h schools
-Huntington Beach, ~lnai Wesimin-
st!r and Fountain Valley~ fiqiil ex.
aminatlcns today but faced cbhfualcm
about where to go .:nd what to do.
To provide relief, the admJDistratiorl
hired subSUt11te teachers to administer
exams aod man vacant classrooms:
~ According to Dlst. Supt. Max Forney,
approximately 50 percent of tile. regular
teaching staff waa on duty~ay.in ,what
was declared a minimum day, by tbe·1Q.
ministra~lon. . '
Since the early morning hours, ·the
school district telephorie exchci.nge buzzed
with incomtna: calls from teachers · iJ>..
forming th~ empJoyer that th~y would
be taking ."personal leave''. today.
~e exact degree of absenteeism wiO:
no~ be kncwn until Tuesday, but it li
estimated that a majority of the district'•
491 teachers are inVolved.
The · teachers decided le 1go ahea.d with·
their protest acUon Saturd~y fotlowipg a nat. refusal by: tile . bo8.rd of trustees to
const®r their latest · proj>olaj ot a lour
pei:cerit liicrea~ wlih 4,S.j Pm>eOl,boott
from unbudgeted moriey.
"Our proposal is so close ~ youn that
'.-we~ you1 to ·~ ours. W.
have ~e ... juat &po,ut, as far· as We can~
.. ld wsie,. . Cbainrian..Jom.'..Benlley, w-nve-menibei 00.i'd ottere.r111em • f~ percent increase with a two ..,..._. boOst. . ...--·
"\Vl\a.t we have offered· you . Js· fair.
equitable and just. Jf you are unhappy
he.rt, tpere are other school . districts.
Look.around," he •dded. ·
F9110wing a lengthy executive session,
teachers declded to oiler yet iiDother. pro-
posal which matched the trustee fil'arel
but which provided for "working·out" a
boost beyond the two percent'·1t'~atia
mcney should be available: i , ·. "
The meeting, held jn tbe Weolminiltr
High School cafeteria al the deinand of
the DI.strict F.d0Clior1 1A'.ssbciation.':1'@1
paclted wJl.h teachers who were Hoping
that tJ1e.. trustees would, bite at the latest
offer.' ·
But th-e: board·t11m~ a deat earto'"tbe
new proposal and Trustee M"aithw
Weyuk'ei' riloVed 'tO adjourit~ d!spite in-
sisterit demands by' DE* nesoUating
council Chairman Ray Cooper to .teep~tbe
meeting open,
Trustee s Bentley and Ray M, Schmitt
added their votes and cleated the
cafeteria, leaving the angered teachen
behind. Absent frOm th~ mee:tJnl . wtre
Trustees Dr. Joseph lUbal and R. B. \Vf!son. · ·. r
DEA preident Carl Mannemann •&hen
raced the saddened educators and ·Aid~
"Well, where do v.·e ~o fron1 hete?" ·
~'! did nol have~&o Wait"~. An im~
mediate motion followed calling· for ~
wolkout today. It was accepted ·by an
overwhelming ma;jority.
"We're just-disgusted with tne fact that
the board would nol confer. That's the
reason ror tile· wa:Jkcut.~' said MJtiemann is .. Bovim;r,. P~1• 11
Orao11e
' Wea*r .
. Fair .and war~~· 'f1\ll'1 what
the man said,, and Tuesday lhlpes
up as a SUl1J11'. ,one with temper•
t~res rtinglng from, 10 to ,75 akin&
the Orange Coall.
INSIDE, TODAY ' .
Along "witl~G wrapiq> of the
Emmy award!, tbda u.'.1 t11tcrtam-
ment . j>a9t offtrs review• o/ th1
latest pr'eiehtptib!ls: ·from lhf
H1l~Hngton B~ac4 • . Plat(h..,.
and tht UC., Jrvine' Symi;iMntt
Orc~••tra. Papt 18.
'""" ._. ,...m ... "~ " ~'!. 14, Mtttllltl . 11 ......, ... ., f MW11t I 1f ,.....,. ..................
Cifrllitl , I , It \ Oftnl ~ 17 c;,.....,. ' ii .,.,,.. """' '' °""'·""'"' 11'-........ ,tt-tt ........ , ,.,,,_ ....
1'""1tt ..... • --,...., .,, a11twu1: a 1 ll.,....,.,.... "" il'llllllCI 1•n ~ .. =-~~ .. " ;; ' :..-:-.... f-~.:
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· DolllV P!lOT--.-~ . ~ ...
.LOGBOOK
~·· . . .
,.
• • r .
~ : • •
•
-: ~ ,,._
Nixon Movillg PoliiiC81 ·
Center of U.S. to West
By NORMAN ANDERSON
Oftllt.,.... P*flW
Just like London, MO&COw, Part.I, the dateline' SAN CLEMENTE (or
NEWPORT BEACH or LAGUNA BEACH) locates the capital ol the United
St.ates -even though temporarily -and lncllcates even more definltel~ where
the political center or the nation is moving -to the West and particularly
Ca!Uom!L
'
'
The oelectlon by Prald"'t llldwd Nb:on o! his White Hoose Wesl Oii
the Oraqe Coast is the latest. aM most im~ve ate:p
in a proceu that began more than a century aco wben
President Lincoln linuced the Unkla durinf the Civil ,Wu
with gold and silver ·from Clllfomla and Nevada m1na.
£~ ' • •
.,
*
, ..
Sblltlng of the power balance fr<m Eut lo Well bu
' •• been rapid since Wcrld War IL California is now tbl
largest and lhua -pollllcal'1 -the moot powerful ot states. '\. ........ '
..,... r ,,
"
I
Con&iderlng the politics of It alone, look at lhe1e
facts :
The most powerful man ht the free world -President Ni.ion -is a Western~r and another Westerner is one of the amall numtter of moat Import..
fP)t m~ in_ tl\e nation: Earl Warren, fonntr governor of Calltornlt, Is chief
justice. Will\ them , as potent political figurea is a Californian, .Robert Finch,
a member, of the President's Cabinet (and a good "bet to succeed hiJ boss lf
all goes well). ·
Tbl&' ls •not lht first Ume a trlumVtrate of Callfom1anl hu Deen pollUc-
;:·.., ally important. Jn the 1950s Nixon was vice president. Warren chlef JuaUce
·; •• "' and Sen. William F. Knowland was Senate·majority leader. . * ' . .~-. Here are some other indications of the West's lmport&nct:
f
NIIoo• strength In the area held firm In 1111 and contrlbut.d mlpU!y
to his narrow victory, Jn which-he did not carry one major urblQ area. But he
overwbelmiDg!y carried Orange and San Diego cowrtla lllld s<t·Collfornla'1
40 electoral votef. He might not have needed IWnols. ·
The pollUcal We o! the Keonedya bu been Haled In the West .
John F. Kennedy went from Los An&elts to become PrtsJdent of the
Unitt.d Slates (having to defeat a Westerner ln the procal) and Robert P'.
Kennedy's political fortunes -and life -died in Loa An&eleJ.
Primaries in the West on more than one occasion have chfnsed the
course of a man, or a nation. •
It was CaWonlla in 1961 which made -for a few abort moments ~
Robert F. Kennedy the front runner for the Democratk prealdentlal nomlna-
lloo, after an earlier Western primary, In Orecon, llld lppeared poatbly lo
have dealt him a fatal blow. ; · ·,.:
ll was the CaWornla prlnlory 1 1111 -~~eh:pve &,,,. .G<IJ!lwater -
himaelf • Westerner -the ~b!lcan ~a{:-(11).San Fron·
ciaco, incldenLally) Over an Eiatemtt, Nelloin Rockefeller.
And durln1 the time Barry Gold"1tu wu lelder of the RepubllCM
Party, the Orange Coast, out of the Balboa Bay CJab, "u the party'• matn
headquarters. . .
Again it was a C.lilornll primary '":"' thaL of 195f' -with Which Adlai
St.even.son koocked out E.!tes Kefauver and clinched his second Democratic
preaidenUal nomination.
An Oregon primary ended for all time the pruidentlal upir1lions or
Harold Stassen, onetime boy wonder of the GOP, when he lost in 1948 lo
Thomas E. Dewey (who rubsequentJy lost his second White House bid lo
Harty Truman).
Calilomla again plfyed the vital role in the political fortunes of another
PraidenL
It w1s the deal between Sen. Hiram Joo.>n'ol California (IJ'ld there's
more to his nle In U.S. 'tire) and tlle \Teus dtlegation which gave New Yort
Gov. Fr1111klln Roooevelt the DemocraUc inaldentlal nomlnaUon' In 1932 and
made the Texas favorite son, House Speaker Jotm N. Gamer, vice presldenL
* Johnson, as a powerful man from a potent lta.te, played othe:r inf]uentlal
roles. He helped to make two other presidents and might have been one him·
aetl, or at least a vice president.
It was his candidacy as a favoi'lte son that contributed to a deadloc ked
1920 GOP NaUonal Convention that aettled lo a amoke-filled room in favor ot
Warren G. Harding. Johnson haughtlly retused the vice presidential nomina·
tion and Calvin Coolidge got it Instead, along wilh, a couple years later, the
Whlte ·House.
Johnson played a role, somewhat smaller, in making Woodrow Wilson
Pruident of the United States. Then governor of California, Johnson was a
leader of ~ Progress.i ve.s in 1912 who fought .the GOP Old Guard In behalf of
J,:z·Presldent Theodore Roosevelt against PreSidtm William Howard Taft. They
lost to the machine and the Progressives formed thefr own party, with John·
son the vice presidential candidate on TR's presidential ticket. The party ran
eecood, splitting the Republican vote and electing Wilson a minority presidenL
And as 1 finaJ fact, Wibon owed -in a manner of speaking -his re-
election in 1916 to California . Charles Evans ffu&bq, GOP nominee, went to
bed believing himself President-elect. Finlt] returns early the next morning,
gave the state and the elect.ion to Wilson. .
The West has had a great role in U.S. life up to now. With Ri chard Nixon
Jeading the way politically, who can foretell. what will come ne:rt?
Food Strike Wanin2?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Negotiations in
the Los Anceles area supermarket strike
resumed today with the Retail Clerks
Union saying seltiement is near and the
Food Employen Council denying it.
DAILY PILOT
OltANGI CO.lll ~UlllSH tNQ COMP'ANY
New Zealanders .
To Study Beach
Lifeguard Work
Five members of the New Zealand Surf
Lile Saving: AuodaUon will be in Hun.
lington Beach for a week btglrurlng
Wednesday to take a close klok 1t llfcsav· ••"t+ N. w •• d Ing methods used by tbe Huntington ,,..ldent .,.. rv111111Mr Beach Department of Harbors and ---J ,,1r: l.·C~ ---Biai:bes. -4 '
\'k.• '"""ldmt w c.-:1' Mlnatu 'lbe N"ew Zealanders arrive Wedne.sday n-•• ICHwll evenlo( and will stay at the Huntington
edtt'Cll' Sboru Motel as guests of the Huntington Th~ J.. M:i11• Beach c.ompany.
AIO.rt·.w ... =.-.'.:,111j1 111 it.~, While in Huntington Beach they will
.-.MCIC'Ntt .. tt111111"'1M 1 .. e11 participate in a 40-hour oetlll Wegu.ard
£1111at Cit)' t.i11ot tl"ainlng program to see methods and
H......._ ..... OHk9 techniques used locally.
· aOt; ltfi Stf..ri They will also tour Disneyland and
M1ill111 A4ft.11t, fl,O, its 790, tlt-41• Knoll 's Berry farm, according (.o Capt. o.a.r 0-... Douglas O'Arnall of the Harbors and
,....,, 1Met11 nu w.t ..... ...,..,.NI .Beaches Department. 1be city ind Hun-: '°='-'•.m'*':=~':r 1~ ti.~stop ·Betcb SUrf Llte SaVitl1 AsSocll-
" tlon are CO'boollna the group In the local
Sta)'.
1be New Zealandtr& will o;1ntlnut oo iri
:loli!llem:Callfornla fU' :IO do1• -... •l
Weguord <If~ al°"' the cout.
'ffqs~ees to Resume .. -, '
~egular Meetings
After meeUna with teoclltn lllJrlns
-special motU.,1 lul w .. t. the
1hmtlngtoo 8ea<b lllib Scbool Board ol
-will ,.,..,., with their recutar
bualnffl al 7:IO p.m. Tuuday In the
D!slrlcl lloanl Raom, 1903 I7lh 51.
Blfpat ti.m under cooaldentloo· will
be the dlltrlct'a pre1lmlnuy budget for
196•70. -
Y~Chl .. V:ictill;is Httnt~d
'' . I ~ " ~ I • r I I
'. I I I ' . _. ~ f4mer~ ~ ~· Gooo~~tl ·Stiil.~ilisifigl_
' sf ALMON· WCKIB!!Y ' Gerald Comaloelc, 4', o! ml Itta. de
0.llY ,_ IMtMrl Mlt.r Cilallm South 1 .. m1nJ1
The search conUnued today f ' · • ~..:7.l:."-· ·
Santa Mariani, Founti.l.n. Valley. Ke was
en\ployed u a dickhand on the yacht.
survivors .and/or bodies of s eve Comstbck, an. •l~al,'f:ftiinetr, was
Americans known ~ have been aboar one of .. tho.. nlne..~Ddlarls ... abo&rd the
Dlven rt~ oo stP of the· three
small -,carried ""'8rd Ille. GoodwlU. ll was prevloo1ly reporto<I that the boat.
were stiJl.Jo davits on the Y•cht's Stern.
Bul company olf!ctala of Larrabee'• L &
F '.Machine Shop aald it was )>OSllble the
boats pould have '*° carried away by
the -which ~·rob tbe ....i.
The yacht itself Wll rtparted U being.
broken up by the rurgJ.ng sea and 30-foot
waves which break over the reef.
the 161-loot schooner Goodwill when th Goodwtll on.a trip {r(lm -CabO San ~as
yacht waa wrecked on Sacramento Ree to En.sen1d~1..
off Baja California May 2$. Qwner. Rlrpu Larrabee, a H1111t.ington
Prolesskloal divers who searched the P,ark iodmtt1albt and part time Newport
sunk.ea bulk for &be first Ume Friday Beach • realdent~ was also aboard the
reported finding no bo'dieJ aboard. Goodwfll wben slle alnld: the r.ef,
The oecocid ol two bodJea given up by p,_ly "' the nlcbt ol May 25.
the -olf Punla San Antonio, 200 miles The aaf1 o\her body from the wrecked
soulb of San Diego, has beeD ldentlfied u yacht wu that ol. Tim SDlith, 15, of 18842
MESA VIEW PRINCIPAL
Gordon Bllhop
CIRCLE VIEW PRINCIPAL
Thomas E. Griffith
Plane Assists
In Rescue of
Stalled Cruiser
A Civil Air Patrol plane came to the
rescue of a stalled cabin cruiser Sunday
afternoon off Huntington City Beach by
signallng another boat that the first was
in trouble.
Pilot Joe Fisher and his observer, Jim
Beggins, bOth Of Garden Grove, were
flying over the area when they spotted
tbe disabled craft of Perry .Pence,. Seal
Beach, which had run out of gas.
F. E. Barnhart, 73, of f1115 ·Pacific
Coast Highway, Sunset Beach, a passen·
ger on the disabled craft, lost a portion
of his right ring finger when it caught in
an anchor line as the anchor was drop-
ped over the side.
The Civil Air Patrol plane signaled a
nearby bOat with its landing lights to tow
the Pence craft into shore. Near the Hun·
tington Beach Pier city lifeguards took
over, giving first aid to Barnhart, who
later went for private medical aid.
2 New Principals Named, TR~·;~~~. • • . . maneuver" desi1ned to appease anti war
criUcs in the Uni ted States and elsewhere
arotind the world. 2 Others Changed in OV Reaction in Waslilngton also varied.
The app>intme.nt of two new principals
and reasslgrunent of two others has been
announced by Ocean View School District
Superintendent Clarence Han.
Newct1mers are Thomas E. Griffith of
Fro111 Page l
UCI SENATE. • •
Senate Republican Leader Everett ?i1.
Dirt.sen said it rtpresented the "first Paramount and Gordon Bishop of Duarte. solid hope for the American people" since
Griffith will assume duties at Circle View the war began six ·years ago. But Sen.
School this £all and Bishop will open the George D. McGovern (D-S.D.), a leading
new Ptiesa View school, which is schedul· dove, said it amounted to mere
ed for completion late this fall . "tokenism."
Taking new positions within the district Thieu flew directly back to Saigon from
will be Leon Hilton, currenUy Circle View hlidway and cautioned newsmen against
prln~ipal, who will move to Sun View. describing the reduction of U.S. force s as
Sun View's Don Miller will open the Dew a ""ltbdrawal." He said the corrett term
Park View School,' also 3Cheduled for a was "replacement" -noting that South
late fall oJk!nlng. Vietnamese fortts wUltake ov~r.
Griffith holds BA and MA degrees 'tram ThieU 81.to Warnfd ll~t anyorit!>in 'South
eztend Jpeaklng rights to the entire stu-Cal State Long Beach, and is currently Vietnamese public life who advocates a
director of the Lincoln Demonstration coalition with the Communists ''will be
dent body paased. School in Paramount. He taught in se verely punished. • .because he has
DAILY r1LOT SWf l"M• LEADS TEACHERS
DEA ·President Manntiman
From Page l
BOYCOTI • • •
after the meeting.
Although a majority of the teachers
will be away from ihe classrooms toda y.
they are not remainin1 idle and wil1 con·
sider further strategy during a general
membership meeting scheduled today at
the Surf Theater.
Under consideration at that time will
be an attempt to gain a restraining order
against adoption of the trusi:ee proposed
salary schedule.
The trustees have offered a salary
range or $6,851) to $13,700 while the DEA
has been asking for a range of '4,900 to
$13,000. The current range is from '8,"60
to $12,920.
Classes are planned for a normal
schedule Tuesday but repercussions from
the teacher action will probably ctintinue
wee ks alter school Jets out this Thunday.
T,he administration has been in con--
slant contact with the Orange County
Counse( since May 29, when the teachers
called a minimum day which was
described by the administration as a
•·mutiny."
Through the aid of the co1.1nsel's offi ce
as lawyers for the district, they are look·
ing Into the legality o{ the teacher pro-
test, but have not made definite plans fo r
punitive action.
In addition. it is possible that students
as well as the teachers may face an ad·
ditional day of school, since the board of
trustees can declare a makeup day to be
added to the end of the year for the loss
of any school day .
Fro111 Page l
MIDWAY •.. Only four or five hands were shown in CyprftSS and Los Alamitos before taking helped tbe enemy."
opposition among the about 50 professors his present position. He said the subject of South Viet-the trOop withdrawal would come abOul a'.ttendlng the meeting. Among the better namese elections was not discussed at
than 200 prof essors who did not attenJ Bishop ls a graduate of Cal State Los Midway because ''that question belongs or just when more American Gia would
are some who have stopped coming to An~les and Is currently 8 doctoral can-to the Vietnamese people themselves and be sent home.
d . Se t' bee lh didate al the Unlverslly of Southern p 'd l N'-doe Aca emtc nate mee 1ngs ause ey res1 en "'on s not want to in· The two presidents steered around the
d ed j" th .... , l 1 California . He is currently princi pal of t rf · lh li · I I" f Sou h are Uigust w 1-11 e il,1-Ul.len c amor th V II v· Sch I . Du e ere 1D e po tica ue o I Viet· subi·ect of a coalition governmen• with and, they feel, faculty sellout. e 8 ey iew 00 in arte. Dam." ..,
The now prevailing voice was ex· In the finn words of the joint Ptiidway the American posilion emerging that IL
pressed by Assistant Professor of C1Jmmunique, Nixon and Thieu told the was up to Saigon to determine tbe degree
Organi!mlc Biology Joaeph Arditli, who School Shelter Asked Communlsls. lo real~• the fulUlly and to which the Viel Cong participate In the
said : danger of trying to win a military victory Saigon government.
"I'll vote for the motion lo make this a SACRA l\fENTO (UPI) -Slate School in Vietnam and said thett must be self. Thieu had said during his state visit lo
representallve body instead or· a private Superintendent ,_1az Rafferty and two determination for the Vietnamese people South Korea hvo weeks ago that he would club. we nted. the revolutionary zeal of other top state officials today called for without interference or terror. They rultrl
the students." the inclusion of fallout shellers in school out imposition of a coalition govemmc:-,t 11c1·cr accept a coalition government with
In a more conservaUve vote, profes.sors cooslrpction and alteration project!. on South Vietnam. the communists.
defeated only 24 to 18 a resolution by \--;:=========================================-Associate Dean of Physical Scien<;es
Bernard Gelbaunl reaffirming that pro-
posals normally should be first reviewed
by Senate committees.
He argued that matters were being too
often introduced on the floor and the
Academic Senate was passing them In
precipitous action .
An angry Professor of English Howard
Babb backed him up, acolding that "It is
morally ridiculous for this group to act as
1f commlUees are set up lo preven t
bulliness from corning to the floor.
"Not that my vote means a god damn,"
Babb muttered. ·
l 'ro1n Pa9e 1
KIDNAP .•.
home In the Ramparts District of the city
Sunday. . . h Beck, who bad betn beld captive 1n t e
garage; alnce the gnup arrived Saturday
at' nild-daY., was acceamlng for help as
fl8"'es bla'ztd trom the garage Sunday
nlghL '
suspects in the case are held on several
cha.rees, while Los Angi!:les police seek
formal complaints fivm the Los Angeles
DlMtlct Attomey'll ·oruce. 0tance Co1lnty la1!W• conflocaled
IOJQe .J,000 drag pills dlirln& their portion
o! the investigation said Sgt. Buchman,
but the end 'role Was not known.
"Beek bad .good reuon to believe he
would be kWed when bis abductors
retumed',11 ~ Bachmaa said, "so-he
struck , mtiitche5 4nd lit s o m e
newspapen.-"'
Front Pagel
MANHUNT ...
on tbe part of Jbe bl~ck community.
Please tn1ure that 1·our men do not
btcome the 1gltaton."
Officer Sassctr was shot at l1 :5S p.m.
Wedbelday, seconds arter he radioed
htldqutrterl he w•a atoppln, aome
pedestrians for quesllonlng.
How to kick the
Clyde "''a s11·t practicing
@alesmanship. At I ea s 1, not
knowingly. He '''BS trying to be
helpful,. because that's his job.
Jf that'• old Iasl1ioned, I guess
,..-e're guil1y.
A 101 ol retail people haven't
learned how to listen. dhey
,..·anl to use the mouth before
they u!e the ear!!.
• • een1e-meen1e-
• • mm1e-moe
Don't ever uk a cuttomer why
he buya Crom you.
We learned that when one
cu s101ner gave us • f11nny look
and re1•lied, ''For abtolutely
oo reason ,.·battoever. ''
Not being real 1ure ,.·bat he
meant by tltal, ,..e thut Up and
told him two 1uit1.
· The reason 1ve u1entio11 this
it heeause the 01l1er day one of
our c11t11onien-did tell tis ""·by
he bougltt from 01. We learned
tl11t lie is a practicing psy·
chologist i11 Anaheini. While
"'·ailing for ua to write up his
purch11e. he uid eome 11ice
1blnp about us., and theu
asked if wt11d be inleretted in
knowifl8 why be drove clear
down here to opend •so on •
1port eoat..
Naturally we wan t e d lo
know why.
W el~ aaide from enjoying
•n ueote to vi1it the area on
a pleaaant tunny alter11oon~ be
taJd hJ1 nialn rea10n wae our
uiUinrne•• to IUt"n. He had
finally been driven oqt of the
l1ahit.
•lore where he used to buy his
elothea, a very fine store by
the way, because whenever b'e'
went in lo pick out a suit the
salesman bad immediately
tried to tell him what lhe store
wanted him to b11y.
What this.man wauted to clo
was to buf 10mf;tfting:, riOt be
1old something.
Last year J1e "'as agreeably
1ur-pri8e<I, on a r.h1nce visit lo
Bidwell'1, wbe11 our Clyde
Rtyes took e11ough inlere11,
before ever laking a suit from
lhe rack, to ask about hie color
and pattem preferences, and
to learn 10methlng about lhe
kind of 1tylo1 ho had been buy·
ing eleewhett.
E,·ery atore Ol'l'Uer thinks his
slore is • cui above any other
store. and cerlainly we're ••
proud t}f our store as any 1tore
owner cou1d be. And yet, we
don't try to kid ounelve1. Our
-rnerchandiae; seleetion and -
val11e• are qttite appealin;r. but
let'11 lace it. Ou 1he lrholc
,..·e're rather like"" an y olher
good 111e11'11 6lore.
There'• only one thing "''e
1111,-e Iha\ 110 01l1er n1ei1's s lorc
11a11. Us.
\ We try lo be friendly and
hel1>fnl. but we know one
tl1ing that 1uny be 1ignificant.
Our customers are more loyal
1han most.
l~ste11d of 0 1ing the eenie-
n1eenie-mini&-moe t y 1 t em of
picking a 1tore, you might try
boyin~ from us 'lfor abtolntcly
no reason ,..·halsoever. ,,
Jack Bidwell
3467 \r'ia Lido. ju11 beyo11d the 1\.tthe1 O\·erpasa oYrr
Pocllie Cooot Hi~woy. Tolophone 6734510.
Drive between Lido The•tre & mr store & park ita rear.
Coypri@ht 1969, Jack Bidwell.
~-·~~~~~~~~~~~-~~--~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·
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Lag•~ ;Beaeh
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TedaY's Ft.al
• N,;t'. Stedr:s· •
voi:. l.2, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlFoRNIA' -· \ ,' ,1. TEN CENTS ' . I . '
• lXOll u •
Down tlae
Mission
Trail
Clemente Budget
Up; :faxes Down?
SAN CLEMENTE -While the pro-
posed city ...,_ ha> gone up about •
hall million dollan, or 16 percenl over
this year's budget, the city tu: rate may
go down, San Clemente city councilmen
have been told. Increased assessed val·
uation is wby.
Councilmen may 1,,Wer both the gener< t
propeft)i tu and the munlcipol lilJ!Uni•
district levy by a total of 'about thref'
cents per $100 of assessed valuation. If at'
works out, this Will be the fifth fisc~t
year taxes have been lowered.
e lliot Talk PlaRned
SAN CLEMENTE -Preventing cam·
pus riots will be the topic of discussion in
a meeting called by the San Clemente
servict clubs for Wedne!day at 7:30 p.m.
in the San Clemente High School
caretorium.
A persooal representive of Gov. Ronald
Reagan's office, John Keohoe, and Police
Chief Clifford MuM"ay will speak.
Presidents of neighboring communiti~s·
servict clubs have been invited lo attend
the session.
e Art Work Dl•pla•!l'd
U.GUNA lllLLS -Art, crafts ~d
wriUni work by stude.l]ts W the Adult
Education Art and Crofts claua In
Leisure World, Lquna Hilla will be oi1 cIL.J>1>1 today throup Tbutlday. EU>lblts
will be at each class's respeCtive
classroom. On display wilt be knitting, millinery,
ceramics, sculpture, mosaics, crea.Uve
writing, as well as 'Oil and watercolor
paintings.
e China Talk Slated
EL TORO -The ruture and past of
Communist China will be explored in a
talk by Dr. J. Stuart Innerst, a Quaker
clergyman from La Jolla, before a
meeting or the Retired Officers Associa-
tion, Orange County Chapter, Sa\urday at
the El Toro Marine Corps Officers Club.
· Dinner at 1:30 p.m. will be preceded by
a cocktail hour. Dr. Innerst, a fonner
nliuionary in China during the 1920s, will
speak on "What is Happening ln!ide
China."
·• Bloedmoblle Vblls
EL TORO -'!'he American Red Cros'
Bloodmobile will make lU first visit to
the Saddleback area Monday, June 30,
from 3 to 7:30 p.m. at Olivewood School,
23391 Dune ?t1ear Road. El Toro.
Appointments for the blood donation
may be madt with Mrs. Stanley Berman.'
coordinalor. An appointment assures ef-
ficient processing at lhe bloodmobile and
little waiting.
e G1dld to Meet
MISSION VIEJO -St. George's
Episcopal Church'11 St. JGan of Lorraine
Guild will meet Wednesday at I p:m. in
the home ol Mn. Peter Wendorf, lffll
Ouisant.a Drive, Pi-fission Viejo.
Tuesdcfl Meet
Trustees to Air
Coaches
By RICHARD P~ NALL
OI ... O•HY Plllt lt.tf
The current disagreement between
Laguna Beach High School coaches and
principal Robert Reeves will be aired by
trustees Tuesday .m e1eCUtive &eS1ion.
Dr. WUliam Ullom, di.strict superin-
tendent, said the secret. seWon was call·
•'d to allow coach FA Bowen to make a
i::resenta~ to the bolrd.
Bowen, assistant varsltY football coach
;1nd head golf coach, has been mentioned
ns the fifth man who" might nsign his
roaching assignment in · differences of
opinion with the high school ad-
1ninistration.
Coaching resignations have already
been handed in by Nonnan Borluki,
baseball coach; Jack Lythgoe, varsity
track coach, and lightweight football and
basketball coaches Warrt:n Watkins and
·Jerry Neumann. -
Coaches are unhappy about changes
proposed in assignments. However, prin-
cipal Reeves said, "all of the coaches
' r. Jellyfish Take • • Secon~ .Fjddle
. ff
ToNllde~ c
LatiUna Beoch lileg1111td3 stopped
treating jellyfil!lh weltJ an bathers Sun-
day 'long enoueb-to remove 1 nude male
sun worslitpeT from ltird Bock.
"It was kind of funny. He was jumping
around out there in the nude and said it
was ihe first lime he had seen the sun In
a month," reported Lifeguard Lt. Eugene
De Paulis.
The young man, in his twenties, was
removed via surfboard by Lifeguard Jack
Llncke and turned over to Laguna Beach
police. DePaulli said the sun seeker ap-
parenUy swam to Bird Rock.
DePaulis said Japanese currents, while
wanning the water to about H .,degrees,
brought the wont jeJlyfish jnfestatlon in
several years:
They're big, DePaulis said, addins;, "I
saw one about 11 inches a:crOSll and a kid
told me he had seen one about two and a
half feel." Lifeguards treated about 30
persons with rubbing alcohol for the pain-
ful jellyfish contacts.
DePau\is sa'id the waters have cleared
of plankton, 11n which jellyfish feed , to·
day aod described the surf as beautiful
and crystal clear.
Stork Market•
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed with a wide-ranging loss Monday
in reaction to an increase ip banks' prime
rate to an all-time high ol 81,i percent
from ?Y.: percent. (See quotations, Pages
JO-ti).
But in late trading the decline was
trimmed from the mid-day l<vel.
C •• r1s ,1s
who have said they are quitting {coaching
assll:nments) are invited back to coach
next. year."
Hat Akins, head football coadt. laid to
rest rumors that ht might resign that du·
ty Friday when he told spting footballers
that he intended to stay wttlflhe job.
The school board held a clOstd session
Sunday which was said to ~ largely
background.inlonnalion oo the ooac:hlng
sltuaUon prior to hearing Bowen's Tues·
day presentation.
Also Tuesday, board memben will
prepare a ·counter proposal to -the last
salary and benefit offer from the
district's teachers.
This is the second proposal sent to the
board by the teachers. The first would
have called for the spending of an ad-
ditional $267 ,000 over this year's allot-
ment of $1,180,000 for teachers' salaries.
In response to that first proposaJ, the
board offered a general S perctnt in-
crease with the, details lo be decided' upon
by the teachers. The increase lmOUDted
14 abwt "4),000.
The teachers' p~t offer is unknown.
School officials would not reveal what is
being requested. However; Dr. ·Ullom,
sak1 that ''some CO(llpromise" between
the tl\'O groups mt.tSt be made.
Pio;~rLag~
Contrdct(>r Dies;
Rites on Tuesday
Funeral services for Arthur Littlejohns.
Sr., builder or the Laguna Beach City
Hall, wUf be held Tuesday at 11 1.m. it
the Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel.
Mr. Littlejohns died Sunday. He was 7~.
Mr. Uttlejolw was a pioneer Laguna
Beach building contractor. He came to
Laguna Beach in the late 1920s and in ad-
dition to the City Hall. constructed many
churches including the C o m m u n I t y
Presbyterian Church and numerous
private homes.
Six years ago, Mr. Little johns retired
to Yucajpa California ho...,·ever,. the L.it-
tlejohns family two weeks ago moved to
23262 Buckland Laoe, El Toro.
\Vhile a Laguna Beach resident, Mr.
Littlejohns was active in many com-
munity organizations including the YMCA
and the Lawn Bowling Club. He was an
elder in the Community Presbyterian
Church.
?\-fr. Lit'tlejohns is survived by his wife,
Addie, of the El Toro home: son, Arthur,
Littlejohns, Jr., of La Canada; daughters,
Phyllis Litllejohns of Laguna Beach;
Mrs. Lois Miller of Fallbrook, Calif.;
sister Mrs. R. M. Piety, of Laguna
Beach; and four grandchildren.
The Rev. Dr. Dallas Turner of the
Community Presbyterian Chwch ort
Laguna Beach ~ will officiate at the
memorial services. Entombment will
foJlow •t Pacific View. Funeral ar-
rangement,., are under direction of
Pacific View Memorial Park, Corona del
Mar.
' .
Hotel Complex Stu~y Set
Firm Looks Over Plan for Main Beach Center
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .. Dtlb' Pll9t Steff
Whether Lagi.na Beach's Main Beach
Mtel~venUon center Js to be, or nol to
be, will be decided Jn part by a feasibility
study now under way.
As part of the total. feuibility study
bein.g master-minded by the B u d
Holscher & A$.10Clates Inc., ot Los
Angeles, another team of consultantsl.wffl
be iii town llu<lylng the site, talkinl with
city officials and residents.
The groop is the national firm oi Har-
ris. Kerr & Foster and they will be
detenninlng the possibility of succeu for
• hotel, James O. Wheaton, city manager
••id.
''They will tell us whether there Is •
need for and potential for the lllCCCSS of
• hotel. Jt ls in essence a 11turaUon
report.
un1y wlll say, 'yes, there Is a need for
so m1n1 tiote.I room• In the community l
or t.he1 wlll1say, 'no, there are too many
alrtady," Wbuton 11.ld.
Wheaton had an btlU.l mcelinc with be decided by the city council. --
the Harris grcK!p Thuraday. "The report. could come back and say
Purpose or the entire study Is of course 'go, 10, go/ and the council could decide,
to determine, first ol.f, whether a corr-in spite of that, we woo't do ft," the city
vention center and hotel pioject is a 1oocf manager said.
idea. min the -firm wlU adv~<. The .project would be' !uncled by the
deai&ni aod setoap-optratfoftal guidelines ·' tame non-profit corporation. PubUc
for the proj~t. U it proves f1uible. Improvement Corp., th.at bou&bt the
1be botef..conveotion center idea is Main Beach.
thought to be the "highest •Od bell ,use" No deadline hos yet been detennined
for a parlioa ol. the city's btacb, Wheaton for receipt of the study,-or tfle council
said. dderminaUon. Wheaton said that there is
The city purchased the Main Beach no sense of ur1ency involved.
about a year ago for a little more than P The city manaaer said tbal despite lhe
million. Included in the Holscher study city's need !Of' addlUonil pubUc parking,
will be the advillbillty of laying out it "1ppom doubllul that publlc Wking another" $l'i00,000 for an a d J a c e n t will be involved," in addition tO that
trilncular piece of land al Laguna neodld for Ille hotel and 1ttendant lhcips.
Avenue. The proptrty Involved la just not that
The Holscher study wlll coil fll.000. malllve, l\e 11kl. ·
lfol!Cher ~ Jlnlpoled lhlt' hiJ IVOUP be The Hol1el\er dudy w11 1ppnived by
Involved In the initial deolp and "°"' th• city'"""""" Morell $. It Is a COO·
lill'UCUon of the pnijecL • tlnulng invtlllgaUon on the patt 'Of th•
Wl\eaton emph.,lud that policy mat· city tor M•in BoaclLdevolo!jmen~ the ten concerning UIO projecl. 11111 bave 14 city ma~ger 1¢ _ _
\
..
-
I :t
' . -ome . , ' £~00 .s
t
• . -
1~1; • r u;1 T•llt>M!ti
".' . NIXON; THIEU ~NNOUNCE TROOP PULLOUTS
.. ' Principle ..4f Stl~tte·rmlnatiOn for Sovth Vlits . . '
. . . . . .
eauJttidnS'W ei-e~t Ntirin ...... ,, . ' . . .. -~ .
-• ~ .. l
·' ! ' 'J'.be pu'bQc ·h .. · Ileen lnvlled to 1r•• Pre1ldent Nixon tonlaht on
his re\ur!I to O~ge "CountyJ!rom hia _Midw1y, talks WitJl,PNi14fnt. Nguyen Van:Tbleµ of.SOµth Viefnam, spotumen al;Ei Toro-.M4tlne
Corps J\ir S~.tli>n 1U1no'l"c.eil today. , . . ,
Air Forf!,e. Ooe, carryu;ig the Presidenlial party, is expected to
touch down at El'Toro 'at 5:311 p.m. '
. , Mr, Nixqn·~s "to' gre~t the cro~d', ,po,s.sibly say a few ~ords Cllld
depart !or his ,San Clemente bOme witll bis family by helicopter.
Marine offlc;ials said the gates wdtilil be,' open to the public at
4 p.m. Parking is limited. The base is accessfhJe·via Sant& Ana Free·
way by the Sand Canyon Road or Culver Road exits ·to Trabuco Road
and the main gate. · . ·
The Presidential party is to leave for \\lasbington , D.C. Tuesday
about noon. ..
25,0QO Due
·Home ;hy .
' ' -~
August End
By MERRfl\IAN SMrrjl
UPI WlllM """ It'"""
MIDWAY ISLAND (UPI) -l'l:Uld<nt
Nixon has announei!d that 25,Qm U.S.
troops wlll be withdrawn from 'South
Vietnam by the il.nd' of Aligi.lst •nd b
dicated others will leave u mWtary .con-
ditions JWarrant.
At the same time, N'u:On baeked ·SoUth
Vietnamese President NP.Yea Van Thieu
in opposing the ,iJD~tlon of e,
coalition government, . including tht
~mmuniats, on the wartom soulheast
Asia republic.
Nixon made his troop rtdurjlon an--
nouncement Sunday at a summit cono-
ference with Thieu on this tiny Island in
lhe Pacific. It was the seventh meeting ~
a U.S. president with leaders of the
Saigon government. They appeaffii a{.
fable and reined, confident of the course
of ttie w:ar ffld mildly opUmist.ic about:
peace.
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird,
wt_io fle)V ~ck to Washington from
Midway, said .in Washington today that
more ·t.roops may be RUUed out in 1.ugust
but gave no figures. . .
At ~ same: Ume, Pentaa.qp IOUJ'Ctl in-
dicated the 25,bOO troopo being pulled out
will be transferred, at leaat initlally, to
O~n.awa and Hawaii rather than bein.1
retµroed directly to the continental
Uni~ Slates. . , ·
Tbe .. llJlllOuncement of the ttoop withd~wal arxl other dedlkm rudNld
by. Nixon and Thieu drew a rniXed recepo
ttol>; 'J'be' North Vietnamne; -tha Vlei
Cong and Matcow·dehOunced the inoft·u
a "meaningless. . . 'P r b.p· a 1 • h d •
maneuver" designed to appeue antiwar
critics In die United State:J..IDd ebewbere
around 'the world.: .
Reaction in '·Washington •lso varied.
Senate Republican Lead.er E•erett M.
DirUen -said it reptesented the "first
solid hope for the American people'' alnc1
the war becan sii: years a10. But Sen.
George D. McGovern (l>-5.D.), 1 leadtng dove., said it amounted to mere
."toktni.vn." •
Thieu flew direcUy back to SaJaoa «.rt.n
Midway and cautioned newsmen lpiost
. describing the reduction of U.S •. forca)a11
Mid way Enhances a ''withdrawal ." He said the co~ · w" '.'replacement" -noting that Soutll
* *' * Nixon Believes
Chance of Peace
Vietnamese forces will take over.
Thieu al~o warned that aQY(lne in SoQth
Vietnamese public life w\Jo advocatea •
:; · coalition With the Communls:ts ····wm be
HONOLULU (UPI) -President Nixon severely punished. . .because· he has
went to Midway Island hoping to enhance helped the enemy."
the chhnces for peace Jn Vietnam. He He said thff subject of South" Viet!
came away thinking he did. namese elections was not dl.salssed 1t MJciWay because ''that question belong1 His meeting With President Nguyen to the Vietnamese people themselves.and
Var! Thieu of ,South Vietnam brought a President Nixon ®es not want to ln·
fefling of allied unity American officials terfere in the political llfe of South Viet.-
hoped would force lhe Communi5ls to nam.'' .
•Wndon their hopes for a Nixon·Thieu In the firm ~words of the j9lnt Midway
r-communique. NixoD and· '11Ueli told the
ipllt. • Communists to realize ~-·tytility and
Nixon moved what he considered to be danger of trying to Win a n\llltary victory
his blue chips into ·the. arena by pro-in Vietnam and said thert must be .elf ..
misin1 to start U'le immediate-withdrawal• "detennination. for the. Yiet.namese people
of zs·ooo American tooops frOm the war· with.out in~~~feren,ce or t~i:or ., They ruled ' . . . . out 1mpos.1hon· of a coalition govermneat..
_ zone_, to.be replaced by Soil~ Vletnapt~ --· ~!1 ~Vietnam. · ..: forces . . . . . • --r •
' Thieu 'responded wtth· 1a~1$b"",p1-a1se ,for ·
the,Amerkan 'Presidept and J.11 tmot.iOl}al
de.nial• he had any basic differences with
the Nlxon '.adl'nlnlstratfori.
This mood of Midway left Nixon with . ' . the · feeling the United State!, South Vjet·
nam apd their other allies Jn·the war liad
improved lheir· bargaining posiUon in
Paris. •
, • t · • • UPI T..;.-· T.Qe-rusoning was that the alij~ had
'ALOHA. MR. P-l(rSID!ii\!T' !>uil\ a aolJ<I front· ·1~inat . Viet. ~J or
.. • H-lulu SlefOO .. r !I~. Vletnornm , •ile\"PI'· in 'Parb 'to .
, · ! . . . split u.,n. """'""' the -'tdlvor,Qe'' Com". · • • . , •· ri'dltilit*9itptea men.Uoiled Jut Weik.
reek 'Assaulnation ' '~ mo.. I llnl!Oriint' -'the
. . J'llVI ~ the -a· . . .. ·"' thJ uspect Recaptured · .. , ian.uue ~ ~1r , ·wu th6 iQaiid ~r" Midway ,-blo, ,wjth ATIIENS, Greece,~).-, Aleunclet 111:.U -.c;hlrtl Ot/uaii .11 Uinu '
Pal>1goups, who •IC.IP<i! ail •!tot. hf1 It ""' ci.lrii ,&ur.,,.nt '~'9111 Uf!i
lctlon lor lcyln1 to lill G.~·· ~ ~ 1~ Pl'eildtnt .Lyn.
or, wu captured· todl)' In a 11cuse· don B; ~~ aod ~ of 'tha llaip\
l!'nl4wn Atl\en1. , . • , , , pv~ent. 1'lkll ''"'11' otl.t 1!f iu, ..,,.,
!JG.year-old "'11'1 cloHrter oacoped twlci to \l'•Y ony dttfe,.ncn or ·op~
Thundl)'. A pollct rilanbultl.wu otdtted wtth Nlion. ~ , ;
Immediately. Pana1bulil •'j'fll1 originally · 1'tle AmerlCu Prealdtnt, 1 aa ~
,
led shortly alfol "~n atletl)pt, '!'" responded with much the aamo ·altltude.
to ljomb the car ofl'rimlor,Ge6ri•· :u.s."o11tc1al1 foh llano! could pnlf. btJm,
\dopl)uloc on· a ahoto. ~ let Aug. pr.....! by this unl\Y ind react, perhaps
, _ 1 • 1 l"aciualb', al the peace table. 1
..
· ,-tiir and ·wafmer! ""-·~·s whit
· the man s'aid/ and ·~1y shlpb
up u a sunny on&\wl\h tempera.
ture~ r.,,gini 'fron\ ·70 to 75 1lona: th& Orlftlt eout..' . ' , .
INSIDE; TODA 1t'. . . . .
A.lo'llg with a wropup of the
1 Emm.~ owardl1.toda11'1 tnttrtain--
ment pagt 01fer 1 rtvfew1 or th.a
roielt pr~1en1a.1io'ns' /r""4 ' the
Hun,ti~QI01J 'Bi!aQ't : Plavh01ut
on4 the CIC 1rt1lnc Svmphonlf
Orchestra. PaQe 18. ,
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Nixrn Moving Pol~~ical
Center of U.S. to West
~ -' .. ~:·stlldi~a •
By NOllMAN ANDERSON
Of .. °"" ,... ,,..,
Just Uk< London. MOICOW, ParlJ. the datdin• SAN CLEMENTE (or
NEWPORT BEACH or LAGUNA BEACH) locatts the capital o( the United
St.ates -even though temporarily -and indicates even more definitely where
the political center of the nation is moving -to the West and parUcularly
California.
Tho lielectlon b>J Prosldot!t Richard Nixon of his Wlllto House WO!! on · llii Oranp Coast is the lalell and most lmpr"8lvo "'P
In a procea that began more than a.century ago when
Pruldent Lincoln finanoed Ibo Union cfurinc lhe Civil War
With gold and silver from CalifGrnia ~.Nevada .min~
* . ShlltU11 ii th• power baJ>nce rr.in Eill to w .. 1 hia
1 been rapid since World War IL Calif«n1a 11 now the
largest and thus -politically ~ ·the most po1Nliul o!
atatts.
Considering the ~Utica of 'It alone, look at these factl: \.
The most powerful man in the free world -Prtaidtnt Nixon -ii a
Westerner and another Westerner ts one of the small· number of· molt Import..
an~ ~en Jn the nation: Earl Warren, former pvemor.of CaUfornia, la chief
justice. With them, as potent political figures ll·a CaUfornlan, Robert Finch.
a.member o( the President's Cabinet (and a good bet to aucce;ed hb boss if
all.&<>eJ well). , ·
This is not the fir1t time 1 triumvirate of Clllfomians baa been politic·
ally important. ln the 1950s Nixon was vice president; W.fren chief justice
and Sen. William F. Knawland wu S.nale majorlt}' "-·
Htte are some other lndicaUons~ tbe Welt'•~:
Nixon's strength In the ., .. held firm bi illl ucl contrlbtll£d mfghUly . to ru, narrow victory, In which he dfd not cmy -major urban .,... But he .
. o"'"'heloUnilY carried Oral!i• ud 8an Dleft. countla ml l!'I Marilla'• 40 electorll vota. He might nof have De<ded fillniU. ·· · ·
Tho political Ille of the Kenneilyt---oil been ... 1ec1 1n· the_ Wm.
John F. Kennedy ,..., from Lot Anpla to become Praldont of the
Uniled Statts (having to deloat a w .. tmier to the -) .m. Robert F.
Kennedy's political fortunes -and life -died In Los Anlt1es.
Primaries in the West on more than. one occuioa have changed the
course of a man, or a nation.
It was California Jn 1951 which made -for a few lhort momenb -
Robe.rt F. Kennedy the front runner for the DemocraUc presidenUaCDODdlla-:
t.lon, after an earlier Western primary, in Oregon, bad appeared poJBlbly·to
have dea1t hlm a falal blow. ·;, · . * ... lt was the California primary of 19N wbicla. a:a•e 8arTy Goldwattt -
hlmsell a Wealmler -the · Reeu1!1Jcan ~ nD!natfon (fn '31m '1'ran-
cilco. incidentally) over an E.t~ lleiD1f'Rockifiller. -~ : '
And durinl the ·umo llan1 ·GO!P.-,=..., liader of Ibo ""°bllcan
Party, the Orange Coast, oot o( tho Balboa flay Club, wu the pUty's main
headquarters.
Again it was a Cllilornia primary -that of 1956 -with which Adlai
stevenson knocked out Estes Kefauver and clinched his l«Uld Dempcratic
presldentiaJ nomtnaUon. • · · ·
An Oregon primary ended ror all time the presidenUal aspirations of
Harold St.wen. onetime boy wondtt ef the GOP t wbtn he lOl!t in lNI to
Tbomaa E. Dewey (who su~uOinii · ~ hli .Mcotlcl tWiile ~ ~ \9'~
IWTy Truman).
Cal~ornla •fain played the vilal role in the political fortunes of another
Pnsfd<nl.
It was the deaJ between Sen. Hiram Johiuon of California (and there's
more to hi• role in U.S. life) and the Texu dtleJ•U~ wtUcll 1ave New York
Gov. Franklin Roosevelt the Democrat.le presldehtlaljnomln&Uon la 1932 and
·made tbe Texu favorite IOn, House Speaker John N. Garner, v.ice president. . * . . .
Jchnson, as a powerful man from a potent state, played other lnnuenlial
rOles. He helped to make two other presidents and might haVe been one him-
Mlf. or at least a vice president. ·
It wu bl1 candidacy u a favorite son that contributed to a deadlocked
192:0 GOP NaUonal ConvenUon that .etUed in a a:moke-filled room ln favor or
Warren G. Harding. Johnson haua:hWy refused the vice ·prtmdentlJI nomina-
tion and Calvin Coolidge got it lnatead. along with. a couple yem later, the
Wblte House.
Johnson played a role, somewhat smaller, in making Woodrow Wilson
Presklenl of the United States. Tben governor of California, Johnson was a
leader of the Progressives In I9l2 who foll8ht the GOP Old Guard in behalf of
Ex-President Theodore RooseYelt against President William Howard Tait. They
Jost to the machine and the Progrua:ives formed their own party, with John-
son the vice presidential candidate on TR's presidential ticktl The party ran
second, rplitUng the Republican· \lote and electin& Wl19on a minority president.
And as a final fact, Wilson owed .:.. fn a manner· of speaking -his re-
election in 1916 lo Calllornla. Charles Evans Hughes. GOP nominee, went to
bed believing himself President-elect. Final returns early the next morning,
gave the state and the election to Wilson.
The West bas had 1 great role in U.S. life up to now. With Richard Nixon
leading the way poliUcally, who can foretell what will come next!
Food Strike Wanin2?
LOS ANGELES (AP) -NegoUaUons to
the Los Angeles area supennarket strike
resumed today with the Retail Clerks
Union. saying settlement is near and the
Food Employers Council denying it.
DAILY PILOT
Rolitrt H. W114
,,.lcllnl end P'llli;llftt
J•dt l. CYtl.y
Vlca ,.,.ldtnt 1111111 G4Mr .. MtMttt
' Tholl'I•• k""" ••w
TitorfltJ A. M1r,hll'lt
"""'-"" ll:tlltor
.P.1r;.,•t4 '· tt11n _,__ ._.
: ~ lllltlw __ ......
211 For•d A¥ ..
Meilll'lt :A.4ilri•1i P.0.~lu ."•· f21il2 --c ... -.... ----' H....,,, INtdlt :tlU Witf ...... t.•MveN ' """""""" ..... '........... .
Black Panther
Arraigned for
Officer's Death
Daniel Michael Lynem was formally
charged today with the murdtr of 1 po-
lice df'Ker in a Santa A1>a Municipal
Court arraignment which produced pro-
test.! that his arrest was nothing more
tba "a political plot."
Defense·attorney Peter Marx of Bever·
Jy Hills .asked for the immediate release
on ball'Qf die. Black Panther member. He
arguect ·tbat the ta.JJ, lmpusive Santa Ana
man wu "nothing more than lhe victim
ot a compiracy" and that "his arrest is
jusl another manife.naUon of the con-
tinued represa:lon of black people.
'!AM nowhere is this more evident than In Orange County,'' Marx added. "Im-
mediately any incident occurs it Is the
reaction of .police to scour the streets ·
looking ror a black penon who will Jil the
crime."
Man: uked ·for treatment <>f t~
"coiopanble 10 lhal ...tfordod by f L«f AllQele'i court m~·a ·whlte ..e.rrty iollnl _~ Gf·Jlle'....itt·o! a'blad:
!Diii ~"--~·ball witbaut any tu. " ••• ,u • ' -·-'::. c.'!.adse.P.lal=~ !he'....., foe ..,.. lie_..... f tht arralaNnoot-~ J-llcto. 'ellll>IO'· the B~.'bnlii«
orpotqncoi "' -~'lot the lidliro ~tf\.Jnem... .
·• L,_,, "2(_ w11 ·~ J1\111t 4 ift<r ~ ~«s.nta AM pollce,Olllcu !l¥on-A.·~. Two meo wllo all•ftd·
• 11 were his companionl In the 1bootfllg
are still beln( IOUght In an lnlenslvo
manhunt
npt lfCur1ty WU lhe order o! lhe clay
In Judie Mut't counroom with 0Ulctr1
caJT11n& out a cartful ttarch or all spec--tatorr.
'Ille whys and hoWe: of future ' Laguna
. Beach trash collection will be taken up
Wednesday In a City Council e:tudy
session.
City Manager James D. Wheaton u1d
dlscu.s.tlon at the 7:30 p.m. meeun:g will
be open end.
It is expected to range~ from reeent
Chamber of Commerce beautification
on c o rn m It t e e recommendations on
commercial trash collec tion to the
possibility that the city will invite new
bids on trash collection.
: : ile,tidenu.; tr.as!\ colleqiOn is l?asod on
flat rates. However, Wheaton 1ald, com-
mercial trUh collection is essentially an
arrangement berween the trash con-
tractor and individuaf• businesses.
The beautifK:ati6n commiftee chaired
by Lloyd Milne has recommended that:
-Everyone in commercial and pro-
fessional enterprise pay a fee for trash
collection.
-The council study the question •of
assessment.
-Slandard sized trash containers be
established throughout the city or at Itast
the business di strict.
-A regulation be set up to cover the
collapsing of trash cartons in the bwlin~ss
area prior to collection.
-The contract with the trub con-
tractor be revised to stipulate strict
pk:kup regulations governing scattering
of refuae .and pickup from screened
areas.
-The city more strictly enforce
ordinance• now oo the boob.
Whoalnn i...cI>ea tho ,J>Ol!l!billty o(
calling foe bid& on trash i:olledloo after
Laguna lleacb Disposal co. Hq1l<lted ..
extension for three ye.an and renewal ~
clon on its ocmtract which expires Sept.
30, 1970. He said it had been more than 10
years since bids had been called for on
Laguna trash collectlon.
' ' Lib~y Ftje~ds
• ' r •
G.et Underwater
I~.. .,
I • V '
Tour on Filln
Alvin Sa.nlmyer, undersea explorer
from Laguna Beach, will lake the
Friends of ,the Library aloilg on his next
adventure.
The medium will be films he has laken
I/' J.fur~~=iile n~ l!ld C<ITT!·
ment on them Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
Laguna Federal. The pi:am is public.
The bu.i';ine&111Jlan's.tal '!ith SCUBA
gear' Ind' cariieta 'hate 'I bun to the
Caribbean wqere he. explored the
Manlecirus, a Spanish merchant vessel of
the early 1500s from whiCh his party
recovered coins and buckles. It is believ.
ed the oldest New World wreck.
The Red Sea lured Santmyer on
another adventure to tl\e depth of 230
feet. His party explored a magnificent
Phoenician YH.set.
One oC his finds was an amphora urn
once used in the transport of wheat, oil
and grain. Santrnyer's career began 20
years ago as a hobby at the University of
Miami.
Capo to Study
Budget Figw·es
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen,
mee.Ling tonight at 7 o'clock in city hall,
will aet tbelr first Jook at the city's
prellminary budget for the coming fiscal
year.
The total budget has not yet been
tabulated, but it wW be hl&her than this
yeilr's, said Ernest 1bompson, city ad-
mlnistrator. Thompson said he hopes the
present city tax of 90 cents per $100
assessed -valuation will be maintained.
The major budgeta.fincrease comes In
the public works department because of
storm damage, Thompson 1'8id. The
city's assessed valuation has risen nearly
nine percent from $14.16 million this year
to $15.98 mlllion.
" "'" 1 Beech Mi.yor Glenn E. Veeder
proc " riai jlily Juri<·.11 as "a tlm•
for ,th!'d splaY "-our na.tional emblem,"
and uigfd Lagunitna·to·attend the Flag
Day~· c.,:remony. ,aponaored by the Laguna
MalOlllc L&lge1612.
Ctrei}:toDJes will be hekl at 11 a.m. at
Uie n.a. po1e near the' memorial column
In. Heisl~1 Piark.
O, W., pticf, an American Legion of-
ficer,' hu made .1.arrange\nents to have
soUed Amutcan. 11•&J .dry.-deaned free
oldlitgep!IOI ~~Juntll dfsplay.
Price noted· tbi\lt_ags ,solled or tattered bel'91"1 aavl!>c aboWd be dostroyod. Flap
may bi tallen. to'ilie IAIV1)a Beach Fit<
• Department for datructloa.
8 Peri.1di in Fire;
• Toll May Mount
THREE LAKES; Wil, .(UP.I) -AI least
elaht pef'IOOS were. killed &oday when a
wn fit< raotd lhroogb a 1a1 .. 1c1o
cabin and the shttlff'1 department
N tt ••upecttd io n.nd mote'.·• ""11 The casualty count In lhe firt tl'lat
destroyed the story-and·a·half log cabin
rQle u lire.men dug throush the rubble.
- s
CAILY PILOT~.., Ttm Tlht1
GOOD WORK, SIS-Miss Mer-
maid, Fountain Valley's Donna
Flory, gets a congratulatory
kiss from brother Clare, 3. ·
Fountain Valley's
Donna Flory New
Mesa 'Mermaid'
West Orange County.lovelies caplurtd
two of the three top honors Sunday af.
ternoon In the annual beauty contest at
the Costa Mesa·Newport" Harbor Lions
Club Fish Fry.
Seventeen-year~ld Donna F I o r y
"avenged'' an earlier loss to Miss Foun-
tain Valley, Ellen Evans. by capturing
the coveted Miu Mermakl trophy over a
field of II girls that included Miu Evans
and Westminster's reigning titlist, Jayme
Beyd.
The new Miss Mermaid is a tiny blue·
eyed blonde who measures 35-24-35 and is
in her junior year at Fountain Valley
High School. She lives at 10297 Cardinal
Lane and hopes to become a teacher.
fl.tiss Boyd, 18, of 8.120 Wells Road,
\V~ster, took r..inaer·up honors in
the Merl!laid contpe4~wn:,~hf is a senior
at FowlJaln VJJiey . !\!~ and Jfsts
rneasuremenll of ~21-35,
Vicki Yoak, 16, was cho.!:en Miss Costa
Mesa in the judges' balloting. Miss Yoak,
who succeeds 1968 queen Pamila Rtta of
HUntington Beach, is a sophomore at
Costa 'Mesa IDgh School and measures 36·
u.:ie.
The contest was conducted before a
large and appreciative crowd at tbe main
stqe of the Costa Mesa city park where
the Lions' 24th annual Fish Fry was held
Friday througb Sunday.
School Shelter Asked
SACRAfl.1ENTO (UPI) -State School
Superintendent Max Rafferty and two
other top stale officials today called for
the inclusion of fallout shelters in school
construction and alteration projects.
= =
nan .
•
'
' .. . ' ,. . ,.., . ....... __ ·--~-· .. -·~,. ...... ,. : ..
. '' By ALMON LOClill~
'.-l~ o.ll!f-...., ...,... ......
11)'~ , se~~~ijuec1: 1~y fur
surVlvors ,~or ~ )M>dles of s e v &n ~ ·boWn 'lo'have tJeeo,abdl(d •
lho, IUfnot ~ ,Qoodwlll when tfle "
)'tld'IL was wrt~ an Sacramento Reef I Oil Ba),' Cailfontll( •lfay za. . I
'·Pr0fessiona1 divers· who searched the
su.nken ·hulk for the nrst time Friday
repcrted finding no bodies aboard. ·
•
The second of wo1 bodies given up by
the sea ort .P.u.otJ.San AJU9niQ, 200 ~t south of San.-Diq:o, has bteo identlfied as
Gora'.d Corpstock, ·~ o< 32m vi.ta: de
Catalina, SWlb Laguna. · .~ . · t
Comstock;, ~ electr1ca1~ eftai~~. wa~
one of the nine persons · aboard the
Goodwill on .a trip from Cabo.Sao LuCa$
to Enseoada.' . . ' · ! •I ' Owner Ral~ Larra~e,.. .a Huntington
Park iil.dustrt8Ust and )fart Ume Newport
Belch resident, was also aboard tha
Goodwill when sbe struck the reef.·
presu~bl>j.,on the night of ~lay 25,
, The o4Jy other bodY from lhe wrecked yacht wu that ot Tfni smith, >5. o1 1&12 sailta Mariana, Fountain Valley. He was
eq:1ployed as a deckhand on the yacht.
·nw,i::s 'reported no sign of the ,three
small boats· carried ·aboard the Goodwill.
It was previously reported that the boats
were still in davits on the yacht's stem.
But company officials of Larrabee's L &
F Machine Shop said it was possible the
boats could have been carried away by
the seas which constantly rake the reef.
Tiie yacht itself was reported as being
broken up by the surging sea and 30-foot
waves which break <>ver the reef.
Flood Aid Requested
\VASHTNGTON (AP) -Unprecedented
winter floods and a possibly record
snowpack in the Sierra Nevada moun·
tains brought 70 state and local officials
from Califomia today lo appeal for
doubled federal funding of flood control.
reclamation and naviga tion projects.
. • • • • • .
•
!l""'~.11 .... ~, .. ., ; II. ll1r: CA1A1• ...
,t/1'41,, ''"'-''" -..... -~
OFF COURSE -Map lndl-
catei locatio~ of wreck ol'
Goodwill, which went down ol't
Baja California alter hitting
Sacramento Reef off Punta San
Antonio. Some yach~men ta·
rriiliar ·with aiea speculate
ship 's navigator failed to ac·
count for strong on shore drift
in setting course for Ensenada.
Talking Gets UCI Students
Voice in Academic Senate
Students who a couple of months ago
forced .recess of the UC Irvine faculty's
Ac11d~mlo Senate with their tad.lea C>f
talk ing out today ha ve won full voice in
Senate rneeUnp.
Students now will be g1ven the same
privilege to speak as professors. They
will not however, have a vote.
Durlng the pa.it year, all 1tudenls who
wished to attend have regulrly been
granted admission to Academic Senate
sessions. But only two student represen·
talive.» have had the right to speak.
The students' presence has been very
largely felt and at times they have out-
numbered faculty. By applause and oc-
casslonal 1roans or boos the dissident
student tlement has angered some pro-
fessors and reinforced the voice of
others.
A few weeks ago Gerald Whipple of the
medical school teferred to them as "the
howling claque." Chairman of lnforn1:i-
tion and Computer Science Ju\· .. 11
Feldman complained that they were in-
limidaling. M~t , p(Qftssors attendln& Seriite
meef£ngs hiVe-shown tolerance for the
students anq, sympathy for their desire to
win a voice in, faculty affairs. '
Some weeks ago, proflissors decided to
add non-voting student members to illl
faculty committees -about 40 student
appointments in all.
Then the question before the Senate
last week was whether to give those 40
students equal privilege of debate in the
general faculty meetings. In a. surprise
twist, an amendment by Chairman of
Organismic Biolgy Grover Stephens to
extend speaking rights to the entire 1tu-
dent body passed. •
Only four or fi ve hands were shown in
opposition among the about 50 professors
alter.ding the meeting. Among the betllr
than 200 professors who did not attenJ
r1re some who have stopped coming to
,,, ... ~·!nic Senate meetings because they
urc Uisriusl ed with U!.e student clamor
and, they feel , faculty sellout.
How to kick the
Clyde ~·a s11't practicing
salesmansl1ip. At I ea 11 t, not
kno""·ingly. He ''•as trying to be
l1elpful, becau5e tltat's hia job.
If that's old fasl1io11ed, I gue111
""''e're guilty.
A lot of retail people haven't
learned how to listen. They
"·ant lo 1111e the mouth before
they u&e the ears. • • een1e-meen1e-E,·ery ,;tore ow11er thinks hi11
alore i11 a 1Cut above any other
,;tore, and certainly we're a1
proud of our !tore as any store
01'-ner eoold be. And yet, we
don't try to kid ounelve11. Our
merchaodi1e, selection and
values arc quite appealing, bot
let'11 face ii. On ~e 'fhole
we're rather like anv otl1er
• • mm1e-moe
Don't ever ask a customer why
he buys from you.
We learned thal wl1en one
cu11tomer gave us a funny look
·and replied. ''For absolutely
no l"d:110'1 wbataoever;''
Not being real sure -,,.·hat )1e
111ea11t by thal, 'h'e ~la111 UJ> and
sold him two 11ui111.
The rea5011 1Ye we11tion thi11
i11 l1ecauae tl1e otlter day one of
011r cu111omen did tell 011 ""·by
ho bought from u1. We learned
lhat he i1 a practicin~ pay·
ehologlot ·in Ahaboim. While
waiting for us to write up his
purchase, he said eome nice
thill8' about us~ and then
uked if we'd be interated-in
knowing why he drove clear
down ho"' to 1pena 150 on a
sport coat.
N•turally "'e w • n t e d to
know why.
Well, aside ffl)m· enjoying
an exco§C to• TiAll the area on
a pleasant •Wlhy afternoou, he
aaid hie main l"fJUOD wu our
t0Ufinpa1 to u.-.. Be ' had
fl.aally been driven out of th•
hahit.
store where ~ used to buy his
clotbea, a very fine 1tore by
the way, became whene,·er he
wi nt in to pick out a suit the
11le11man had Immediately
fried to &ell hirii ~ltat 1he 111ore
't\'anted hi.m to buy.'
Whal this man ,va11ted to tlo
w111 to hoy aome~ing, nol be
1old 1101netl1ing.
Last year he wu agreeably
eur1lrised. on a chance vi1it to
Bidwell's, -,,.·hen our Clyde
Reyes took enough intere1t,
befon ever tak.ing a 1uJt from
the rack., to atk about hit color
and pattun preforeneea, and
to learn eomethlag about the
kind of atyleo he had been buy·
ing el11t:1'·here.
'goocl men'e ~lore." "
There·s only one 1hi11 g \\C
ha,·e that no other 111e11'111i lore
l1a11. U11.
-u·e lry to be friendly anti
}1el11lul, but 'h'e know one
1hing that n1Jy be significant.
Our customen a~e more loyal
than mo111.
lmtead of using the een.ie-
meenie-m.ini~moe tyttem of
pickfug a 1tore, you mlpt try
buying from 01 ''for abeolately
no reason "'·bal.IOever. ''
Jack Bidwell
3467 Via Udo, just beyond tho An:heo ov•rpus o•er
Pacl(ic Cout rupway. Telephone 673-4Sl0.
Drive be-Lido Tboatre & my atore & parlr.111 rear.
Coyprlpt )969, J1ck Bidwell.
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.Slain itt LA Shootout
UPITt_....
The body of Louis Alvlrdcs lies in a Los Angeles parking lot follow·
ing a shooto.ut with police Sunday. Two officer1 were wounded fn the
fracas. See story, Page 9. •
2 P(lnthers ·Still Sought
In Policeman's Slaying
Two of ,lhree Black Panther Party
mem~rs accused of killing a Santa Ana
police 'officer.are still at large today.
Sought' by police are Nathaniel Od~
Grimes, 21, of 2018 W. !th St.. and Arthur.
DeWiUe League. 20. of 'I6l3 W. llig'hlarid ·
St., both. of Santa Ana.
In. Orange County Jail charged with
S. Viets Oaiin
Nixon Blu~ti11g
War Opposition
From Wire Ser,·iees
Two top South Vietnamese leaders
today viewed Presi dent Nixon's troop
withdrawal announcement as an attempt
f.o appease opposition to the war in the
United States.
The legislators said such a move had
been expected in the Saigon go vernment.
''It will soften the attitude of public
opinion in the Unii ed Stales and op-
ponents of U.S. policy." said Ho Van
,.linh. deputy chairman or the house of
representatives.
"It will help President Nix<>n appease
the opposition in tht Uni ted States." said
Tran Ngoc Chau. secretary general of the
lower house.
The Soviet news agency Tass today
des c r i bed Preside nt Nlxon 's an-
nouooement of the withdrawal of 25,000
troops from Vietnam as a "propaganda
Yep" partly aimed at placaling U.S. war
cri tics.
"U is not de-escalation or the beginni ng
of complete with~ra1val of all American
1roops but tht': ren1oval of oniy 1111
insignificant part of American troops."
the ·agency said in a \\rashington dispatch.
Seal Beach Trustees
Slate Long Agenda
A 15-point agenda goes bt'.!fore trustees
of the &al Beach School District at 6:30
p.m. Tuesday during their busin::?ss
meeti'1g at t.IcGaugh I n t c r m e d i a I c
School.
murder and cons,iracy Is Daniel hf.
Ly nem, 22, of 1711 \\'.Chestnut SI., Santa
Ana. ' .
Police said the search for Grimes and
League· bas been 'widespread :throughout
California and neighboring state! since
Friday.
The poUceman , Nelson A. Sasscer, 24,
was shot and killed while ~on dµty
Wednesday night ·at 3rd and 'Raitt streets.
A memorial mass was held Sunday for
officer Sasscer at St. Cecilia Church in
Tustin,
"l koow that all present would like1l'ise
be ready to do exactly as he did,·~ 1aiil
th e R!!v. John Sammon, paator of· !the
church, to S<>me l:;G representatives of
county Jaw enforcement and firefighting
agencies.
"You have noth ing to be ashamed of,"
the priest said. "The badge you wear is a
mark and sign of distinction."
Santa Ana Police Chief Edward Allen
read the services. •
1'1emorial rites were held today In
Garden Grove Community Churrh for the
slain officer. An escort o[ more than 100
motorcycle policeinen convoyed is body
from a Santa Ana f1.n eral hoine to the
church, and following services, on to Lo!!
Angeles International Airport.
Officer Sasscer's body was flown lo
Washington D.C. for services and burial
in his native ci ty of Upper Marlboro, Md.
He is t;Llrvived by hi.5 wife. Lynn, 21 , of
Garden Grove, and his mother. fi ve
brothers and thrP.e sisters. all resJderits
of the eastern part of the Untted State:!!.
t.feanwhile, members of the Negro
community in Santa Ana drafted an open
letter to Chief Allen. ·
They deplored the offit-er's death but
also asked polit:r to heed a call for
coolr.css to forestall more blood shed.
The ietter reads in qart: "As far as we
can tell. this murdered officer v.•as not
the object of any particular iii wlTI In the
black community. Nor \Vas this killing a
part of any organized plot aimed at po-
lice officers."
Jt continued: ''There are no outside
agitators. There is no desire for violence
on the part of the black community.
Please ensure that your irien -do not
become the agjta:tOrs." '
Officer Sassctr was shot at 11:53 p.m.
\Vednesday, seconds aflt r he radioed
headQ1111rters he was stopp'ing: some
pedestrians for questioning.
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' • ' ,,,_; J ..... 1969 -1.-, . ·DAllY:l'UT 3 • •
Mixed Over Pµ}lQut
-·~·· . . . ~. .
.. GO'f P.~d.~es Move, But Democrats Charge 'Token' Gesture
'wASifn:IGToN (AP) :. , Qof!IOC:tttlc
critics ol the Vietnam war •tt caWnc
Pniident Ni>oo's troo9 .mlidraw•"'an·
nouncement tnacreci~tt. ·~uil(epu~Uclns
In Coftlreos l.lijra)!y'~.it., at lel!t'a
step In. the rl1ht alredion, •I T Sell .. G<orge S. McGovem of SOUlh
DUola anil EU(tne,J . )lcCinhy of Min·
n...i,, bOtb , ......Ws!ul coridldatU for
I.be De'mocritic· 1 prt!)ldtl)tlal nomf!l•tlon
1ut year, said they were diuppo~ted by
Nixon s aMoun'cemeot.
"I cM't see where it represents any
1lgnlflca.nt shift of Amerlcan1 policy,"
said . McGOVern. "I'm &lid for the
withdr.illwal, !>pt I Qilnk we ought to ,begin
taklr.a: them an out, and the faster the
bell" ... l ' '
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McC.trthy iald: "I iton•t see thai this is
any !!lgnifk:ant i~aUon of any proaram
to try and resolve g_r,lnd the war."·
Similar cr1uc18m ~i~e . rrom· sen.
Albert oOce, (l>-1'•1\D.\• "\llO lllld lbat .,
President Ni.son's trip to M~Way If.VI,
South Vietnam President Nwen Van
Thieu "a leverage to which be is not en·
titled." ' . '
"The principal issue •t the, conference
waJ whelher to o_egot.iate a political com·
pro!Thse wllich would permit not 2.5,000
American boya, but 540,000, to come
homo. From what wt have beard st far,
there is no indication that President Nix-
• on bai .woa a..llngle. major point , . , . "
• •'1Jit .ch0Jee, 11 'MlciWiy wu between
the N~ peace plan and the Thieu plan
for prolonced war," Gore added . '"Jbt
Thieu pla11 ~eems "to have~ won· ~
dOWJl."
' * * * * * * * * *
There "-•s no Immediate respanse front
three other major Democratic antiwar
critics: Sen. Edward• 1.f. Kennedy, tbi
assistant Democratic leader f r o na
1'1a¥i~l1.!et.ta; Sen. J, Willlan;i Fu!bright
of Arkansas and Sen. Stuart Symington al
?ifissouti. • 'Troops Calip:. at News Rep. Robert L. stkes, (D·Fla.), ~ht
\\'<JS not certain lhe wllhdrawal war • wi~e idea because he 'doesn 'l thiuk Hanoi
\\'iU be impressed by CODCestiiOp.s. • ' ' :-~;:Fis llealize _e~ances of -G~i~g_,Horne Early 20 to 1
'S,\IGO~ (UPI) -U.S. aoldiera •Jii;V.('!I'
-·llik1 alu)laetl Of! Piutd<ii\_.N!X-
Oll'a, '~l or a ~.of
.llOql!!. ·"-"Ith a colm .delli;ltnlenl
"I don't think lhe Communlsta are Im;
press!!(I by anything' but force. They apio
preciate force and, -they under.sta~,
~·Jll. elation:. . · . ,-i
'l!"tJcfeaU..il .their ch!UJC<s of ,•01n1 ~e early were 20-1 agaln.i;L tbtpi,-aild
as>OD4!'J)('lvate said: jjUntll si,~ tell s me 'dKfertntly, t figure I'll ptit in my 385 dll$i. hefe ....
f.toSt lelmed of .NixQQ'i decislon to
wlttFaw 25,000 of the ~.500 American
troopS in Vietnam through 'the· Arm~
F'brce! Network or by word of mouth,
pai;&td from GI to GI. . ~ ·-:.
"l'd like,to think this is the beginning
of the end," aaid Sgt:Davld C«bus, 18,
of Yakima, W8sh., "but I can't believe
it'll have much 'ef[ect ofi tqe war.
Anyway, I go home in eight days. That's
ll~ that is on M1 mind."
300 Huntington
,Teacliers Stage
Class Boycott
By ltUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of fltt Dll" 1'11M 51111
,.~ore than -300 .te'acliers 'staytd away
from classes today in a protest againt the
Huntington Beac.h· High School District
Board of Tru'stees which failed to come
to terms with them in a·salary dispute.
Student! at all four district high schools
-Huntington 'Biach, ~larin;i,, Weslmin·
ster and Founlain Valley-began final ez-
aminatipn!I today but faced •confusion
about where to go and what to do.
To provi de relief, the adminf!ltfation
htred subslt,~~t~ te~~l's ·to a,dlMJister
exams and man vac.anf classrooms ..
·According to bist. SUpt. Mal Forney,
approximately 50 percent of the regular
teaching staff was on duty today in wtia i
was declared a rnii'iimum day by the ad·
ministration.
SlnCe the earlY morning hours, the
school district telephone exchange buued
with incoming calls from teachers in·
forining their. t;mPloyer that they would
be taking "personal leave" today.
The exact degree of absenteeism will
no'. be knmvn until Tuesday. but It is
estimated that a majority o,f lhe district's
497 teachers are involved.
The teachers W.ided to go ahead with
their protest action Saturday following a
flat refusal by the board of trustees to
coniiider their latest proposal of a four
percent increase with a 2.8 per~nt boost
from unbudgeted money.
"Our proposal is so close to yourii that
we are asking. you to accept ours. We
have gone just about as far as we can •. ,
said truslct: Chairman · John Bentley,
whose five-mtmber board offered them a
four percent increase with a t\vo percent
boost
''\Vi1at \ve have olfcred you is fair.
equitable and just. If you are unh•PPY
here, there are other school districtii.
Look around," be added.
Foliow ing a lengthy executive session ,
teachers decided to offer yet another pro-
posal which matched the trustee· figures
bul, which provided for "wc.rking out" a
boost beyond the two percent if c1tra
money should be available.
Tht meeting, held in the Westminster
High School Cafeteria' at t~e demand of
the District Educators Association. was
packed with teachers .who were hoping
that the trustets would bite at the latest
offer. ·
"I didn't figwt we ~ld sta\rpqJ_llng Lonnie Edwards, 24, of Oklahoma City. strength," said Sfkes,, a: member: Of tht
out for 1t least a·ye1r,",s"aid,SPje.14''M:ike ''I( they do. though, it'a golng to leave a defense subcommittee of tbe ·House A~
Gannon, a· ~ear-old &0ldler· 'ftQm big void and I've never beard any com· propriations. Committee. •
Brooklyn, N.Y. '"Nixon must have dOn'!"jt pliments about the South Vietnamese RellUbTicans had cautious pr~li>o. ~ .,. ,, J •
t::; quiet the SUr'lk'in Ute Slates." army." House 'Republican ' Leader Gerald Rl
Officially, the U.S. command ·had no In a recent interview, Maj. Gen. or-ford said : "I hope thiS initial wlth4rawaJ:
reaction to Ntxon'a, statemCOt and telus· monrl Simpson, commander of the 1st of 25,000 U.S. troops serves to stimul1t~,
ed to specu)ate 1bout what unit would Marine Division in Da Nang, was asked progress.in the Paris peace taiks." ;'
leave. how m1~ch fore1rarnln~ he would expect if Freshman Sen. Robert Packwood, (ffi ~'For the present. the Presidenl's stat~ his unit was to leave Vietnam. Ore.), called il,;;'a ster,.;ln the ri~ht di~Sj;·
me:it speaks for itself," said a "P bab"• thr f k " h 11·00. ft would my pe lhat n·'um• k r ro v ee or our wee s, e "'•-spo esman or U.S. troop comn1ander ans\\·ered. "ff a unit had much more the rtassessment \VOUld allow a substan-, Gen. Crelalrtop Abrams. f · hd · I " " There hmvf! been unconfirmed reports fore,varning than that, the Comm:inder tially iOcreased rate o wit rawa . .•
that the llth infantry Division, head-would have to alter his military tactfcs. "At Jong last dHscalation has becom6o
quartered al QI Chi, 20 miles northwest He might get overly cautious and it a fact rather than a phrase." commented'
would lead to an unhealthy situation .'' s Ed ard w Brooke f"M••s J ' or Saigon, would return to Hawaii. But en. w , · • .rv .... · · ~
division spokesmen said today they had So despite Nixon's decision, life in Viet-Sen. George.O . .\ilu:n of Verrn:ont', sen!>"
rectived no'order to redeploy. nam -for the enlisted troops at least -ior Republican on the F'orelgn Reial~
"\\'e've heatd'rumors that the 25th was continued unchanged today .. The war Committee , sai-1 the_1.anaouncement waulct
going home for month.s.'! said spec. 5 I dragged on.· New battles lay ahead. haye a. healthy effect O!l _the na,tlan. .!
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Chevrolet·
Pacesetter Values.
' ' ''' '
Want a reason why c~~a~~~ ~ ~tter buy.
than any other sportster;at itS pnce? . · . ..
'I 1 , .. '" Here are ~5 •.
'I '"'''' -<i. " .. It , • J
1. Only Camaro otrera i resilient color·rnatcbed front bumper."
2. Only Camara olfera a liquid traction-improvement •Y.Stem-
3. Only Camaro·olfera a light monitoring •Y•tein.
4. Only·Camaro olfera low'c<>•t Torque-Drive cluti:hlt!M driving.
5. Only Camara off era heodlight "'ashers.
6, Only Camero baa computer-oelecied springs.
7. Camara offers more po\.ver team choices.
8. Camaro offers a wider r.hoice of Option• Md Custom ~'eatures.
9. Only Camaro h ~s an anti-theft lock system for ignition,
stee ring wheel and transmission ~lee.tor. ·
10. Only Camaro offef' concealed headlighl5. . •
11. Only Camaro offers variable-ratio po\ver steering. ' "
12. Only Camara offer• a four -speed transmiMion with 8'ery enime.
13. OnJy Camaro Offers a choice of two eutoll),atic 'tranerpiMiona.
U. Only Camaro offero a speed warning indicator.
15. Only Camaro has an ignition-key alarm.
16. Only Camara hS! Body by fisher craft8manship.
17. Only Camaro ha s Magic,Mirror acrylic lacquer finish.
1&. Only Camara has flush-and-dry rocker panel!.
19. Csmaro's front stance is wider.
20. Camaro's rear st.ance is wider.
21. Camara itse lf is wider. _..,.
22. Camaro's got more front shouJder room.
23. Camaro's heavier, n1odel for model.
24, Only Camara offers a fold-down rear seai in every modeL
25. Only Camara offers power windows.
PUtttns you first, ke1ps us first. .. . .... ~ .
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Kidnaped Agent Burns Self l
l
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Gcunbles on Death to Foil Captors' Murder Plot
A ·kidnapcd federal narcotics agent In-
volved in a major deal gambled on
,;uicide · iTisteaC of murder Sui\day by set.
ting fire to a Ros smoor aarage where he
had been handcuffed to a waterpipe by
abdUctors.
Six ·persons inch/di ng the o\vner of the
home - a paraplegic psycholo&l' major
at Cal State, Long Beach -are in
custody today on suspicion of be.ing in-
volved" in he alleited kidnap.lo-kill case.
Bruce Beck. 30, of HOiiywood.' is in
criUcal condition at the Orange c:ounty
Medical Center burn care unit, with third
degree burns over 40 percent of his body.
1nvest11ator1 u.ld Beck had plenty o(
reason to1 believe he would be executed
when hi! kldnapers returned to 12322:
Martha Ann Drive, itO he stt lhe blaze to
attract help.
Firemen smashed thelr way lnto lhe
blazing structurr and cut the agoniiea'
•
Beck free, aftfr' wh'ich · t:i\Ymen •began
pir.klng up «uSpects ·In the biZarre Cast,
based on his inrormation. · 1
Authorities silid Beck had been · in-
volved in a sale inclUding up to 500 icJq
of marijuana and the drug dt'alds
evidently I~ of his role In helpina tO
breai the taait.
Arresteet at varklw places In Orange
and Los Angeles counties Sunday were:
Raymood Gnves Jr., 24, of 12322
Martha Ann Drift, a bearded psycholo,Y
student. and son of retired naval officer
R. J. Graves, a dental professor in San
Mateo.
He ·and his male nurse atlendam', Ray
ThUnnan, 24, were picked up at Lo!I
Alamitos jUce~ac~ as Ujey "tfe• 1bout
toJeave the am ror San Die&•· 11 1
Loi Ans<les l'Qlict D<le<llve·stt. (lien B~hman • ldenUI~ :the <>!her lqur
auspecta In t~ kJdnap case. o , Jerry
Swain, 36, Cheser Chrl,stopher, 21),
Ellzalielh Chrfstoimer; 211, ar.d a 17-yoa~
ol~tjuvenilc. ,
S&f. · Bachman sai~ ~ , .31 calit>ef
r~volvtr and a .22 callber derringer
a~1t4ly used to kidnap Beck Sa\Urdly
wertlleized by lawmen who in\•aded a
h..., In the Rampart. llistrict ot t1ie ctty
S\lllUY.'
Beck, who had been hel.d captive In tht
1ar11t al&ce the group arrived Salurdly
at mJd.daf, wu tcrtaminc for he.IP •s
names blazed from the 3arage Sundal'
nit~ ln the cue are beld on 1evera~
cbarfet, while Los Anl•l" police seek
formal COlllJ>lalnts from the Los AnCelea
Diltrict Attorney'• ofOct! 0ra.,. C<lllnty lawmen cooli>c1i.d
soroe 1,1110 <ltui pilil dUrlnC .the~ eortlon
or the ln...tlption uid ¥· Jliltbman,
bUt the ex1<1 rofe;w11 no1 lcJ\oWjl. • '
"Beek '"*' a«Mt: reilOn tosbeUt'(e •be
""'ould be killed wben~ his ibductors
returned.'' Sf:. Bachtnan Aid,\"So he
struck matchd and lit I IJ m e
newspapers.''·
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Adinir I TeUs:uf. -~~lli·ott~n1 ear Mis.
An(J(her Ship Alino~i:· Ramme J Thr~ Qays Before ··Fatal ·l;ollision .~.·-
sue1c ~;; Ph!Upp~-~cuPn -dtt or the 11,.,.iJO:, ~SEATO ~~J hiJ said Iii• ~i~pronlpttd~ hlili to Cl'lllb ,... the Ont ot a ~ ~ ..U. -.~ the .!uw... oil. .;"' d,.
Thne days. bllore It sll«d. lbe U.SS maneuvtrs In '. the. South C/llna Sta. order .. ,. procedures 10< destroym ...,. a,.ctod to .... """""11 ol the UIS Koinlrle. ii ilmlft' cerrier.
Frank E •. Ev1n1 Jn two, tWlna. 71 testilitd that anotbtr ship psoed within scr<eJ>ing the Mtlbourne from allnulattd cot-lut ~-miler -ol . 1" loaonl oC Inquiry 'will tllnl Ill fin.
Amtrtce iallors. the Australian alrcr1ft 50 1 .. 1 of the Mell!oorne bi What he called submarine at.lad<. ~ ll,e1lt,blo Dial -bHe uJil dllp -to the U.S. ud Aultrallan
can1<r Mtlboume slmost c:ollldtd with a'"ntar colllstoo~' · · . ' '111e orders 111ade· mandatory tile use or the banS,.. al!aoilt In the ecddtDt ~ l.r "'" In eotablilhinr guilt In the
l.Mther sbtp. . ,He elaborat.ed on the incldtrtt·whtn the navigation lllhts" after SUD.Mt lnd"llJoved P1eet tup towed '1be It.era Mdkm ot cotHiWD J
I An unprecedented U.S.-Austr~an . slx·man board ~t into closed aeulon, the deJltroytrl from 2,000 ~"' 3,000 yards the EYIN Into ~ at•'dlwa. Jt ,looked Lt .. (.J.(!l) Rcea1d Crall:~; ~of
bOard or h!qulry he'an !ta lnvestlllatlon ol away from """'"'"· The Navy banned away from the aircraft carrier. Jiu a slant metal -llM alitind JI Loni Jl6ol:b, the officer JD <Imp fJf 1be I cc--.... ..., ..... ...,, the MeJboume.Evam co111s1on today end both camer., 'and tape recorden from C.p1: J~ Slevemon cl the Mtlbourne off atmoot at a ricl>C.-...; A·fila! ol 1• ~-·-Ille -· ~· hurd. u _AustraHan admlral~ the tb.e open Hsslons at Ge9qe E. · Dewey told fteWlmtn In Singapore P'ridl7 that Emll aewmea IUitbi:i iht,iapact. Nftll9d • ••n°• W new11• Pl'll\. to.
i ~ adverttH Illa hafi, Harry· Fox j pat •ix girls in bis shop wind?\¥ on
l c:.rnaoy street in London wearing I "8 bliti and i ~ strategically
carrier's near miss befOI'! d1Wn· on May High School. the EVw, one of the sereenirlg About llO el tltolt' i@li(fl•wa were lea•· tlltbnalo' beftlre the board. ,.
31. Crabb'• accounl lndlcat~ '""fnd ~ii:;..., =I~""'"° when ~tiy ~ 1a1., • '*1 !0< Lcinc crabb ~ ~a:'JJ' Rw Adm. G. J. B. Cfabb, coniman· ship, like the Evans, was a _ ••• ,.r, or • me • . • port Ibo. ltvans. '111ey -M I -"Juoe s -the Evana t.,i. .~t"'"""'
~Ced feathers. Aa a crowd gath·
E two policemen came by.
'ii lain.I a.bit far, isn't ll?"
asked. "No," sltid Fox. "It's
ijl l~gitimate ·I' 1 n d'q'w display."
~~ }'ox relll10!! 1o remove the llria• from .Jlle window, police
~ into fbe shop and drew a ~ Fox, but no!·.lh• girlJ, WU
1 taken to a po)ice station. He was
I d>arged with obltructin& !he high·
I way. Fox pleaded &WJly in · 1wii-
mary court and ·was fined $60.
I e I Ed ''Ace'' Huddy, who's been
; aelllng newspapers at tbe aame ! comer tn ·P11Uburgb, for over '° , ,.U., )!Js a new stand. It's eight i feet high by six feet square, has
, lour round windows in the roof, a '! pidure window in the back and
several compartments for papers. '! ''The only thing I don't have is a
shower to cool me off," said Ace.
I '!be stand ,WfiS designed and built
by students at CUntgif>.Mellon
Banks Boost
Prime Rate
To New High . .
NEW YORK (AP) -Major banks l<>-
day raised ~ prime rate -the interest
charged their biggest and best customers
!or)--to a hlst«lc high ·o1 81\ per·
cent •from 7~ percent, effective Im·
mtdlattly. ·
An incretse had been expected for
some 0timt, but the amount of the hike -
a run one percent -was surpriling.
The· first bant to Increase the rate was
Banken Trust Co. of New York and It did
ao wi~t making any comment on tts
reasom. Other New York banks, and then
cbtcago, Philodtlpbl' and Boston banks
quickly made the Wl'MI move. Amon& the
b4nb wt1 Chaee Manhattan and Fir1t
National City of N"' York.
• .-; ·'· course. Rtliable a0urcoa Mid .....,~
did not ..,_ two onion to ~
, Ul"tT~
dlrectlon. ' :: ~"" *· . -1;( '* .. ,,I
Saiwr Cazt;Jl·
M "-
Sea OperaC~
OM Big Fal!C.~
' . LONG BEACH (AP) -1'1 MPi:our
well being never depends on sUch l &JOUp
as tbla," wrote 1 sailor a weft Wen ht
and 73 othen <Ued in interiltkmal
maneuvers in the South Odna S.-. •
"The ship is now engaged in ' 1 lirce
SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty ~anlJ:a
tioo) operation," Sonar Surface. Ttii'tinl·
cian 2.C John R. Spray wrote to relaUvQ
from hls _ship,_ the destroyer-Frank E.
Evans. .
The Australian carrier Melbourne slic-
ed the Evans in two la.st Tuesday.
"There are approximately six member
nations and 30 ships involved in this ex·
erclse," said the letter dated Miy 27. • University Who were doing a proj. ! eel for !hbr architectural design
1 class •.
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Reactinc to the move, the Dow Jones
industrial average dropped __ about seven
polnb shortly after the New York Stock
•Exch .... optntd.
MOVIE IDOL ROBERT TAYLOR LOSES BATTLE AGAINST LUNG CANCER
"The whole thing is one big farce. None
of the ships can cooperate with each
(>ther. I only hope that our well being
never depends upon such a group as
this.'' ! • !
The weekly Mwrpaper car·
ried thi& front paoe notice: *'Be·
CXl1"t of the imoll num.btr of
~atroing candidaU1 for 'Mon
of the Week' honors, this col-
umn is bt1ng discontinUfd. Jn
its plac,e wtzz be a monthlJI eol·
umn titled 'Mn of tht: J(onth'."
TM MW~r. Tht: Forum, U
publi.sht:d by inmaUs of the Ne·
bra.ska pt:Ml compLt:z in Lin-
coln.
When one bank increases the ~
rate, others usually follow. ·
The prime rate ts used in determintn&
Ute 1nW!rat rata Charged most large cor·
~.qther r"ales, IUCb., lnterat
rlita to1 < D ""•"*"· ar e IClletl upward
lmn the .,..tmo rale.
The old rate· of 71h percent was a
record blgh when it was set on March 17.
• A1 ~y as Jut Dec. 2 the rate was
:~.A Los Angeles maid thougllt ll>e . av .. A wi .. of rate 1ncr ...... usually·
Wt way to smoke out a swarm..()l __ ooe-f~ or oae-half)ot a pucent at a
bites in a chimney was to start a. Umt, bid otcurred · betwttn December
fre in the fireplace. The bees clog· and March. 4ed th~ chimney and.a spark atart· The Federal Reserve Board has taken
4td. a ftre on the shmgled. rooftop a number o( steps to make it more ex-
" a Pacific Palisadea ·~me.sFif'e. .ipenfiY.t;~ more difficult Iii' bl(lb to r. en estimated damage at ,12,000, borrolr mooey. But the d,eJnaOil ·'"'banks
• !or inone>: to borrow hu continued .-..
Th.ii German JShepht:rd p u p p y
"amt:d .. Lucky" TtaJly is jUJ!lt that.
Kortn Hoffman of Chicago hm: adopt-
l!!d th.t: pup oftn he W(IS found with
his t:Ors cut off and abandoned in a
ccrdbooTcl box in the middle of tht
h.ightooy.
By ralJil?l Ille prlmuate,hanks can af.
ford ·to Jll1 more !or Ille mooey Ibey bor· fO'IV. . .
* * * U.S. E"mployment .
In Slight Rise
'WASHINGTON (UPI) -Total tm~loy·
meni,tn tbe aatkla lncrNsed only slightly
in May, the ..tblrd consecutive month of
moderate gaJn. lodiqling an eastni of
the economy, the eovernment said today.
The jobless rati: for May was 3.5 per·
cent, uncUnced from April. Howard
Stambler of the Labor department's
bureau ot labor staUsticl llJd the over-all
employment picture for last month
"probably reflecta an easing ln the
economy."
Nonfarm employment in May was 73.3
million, 1 slight drop from the 73.4
million in April. TotlJ employment,
however, was 77.2 million, up slightly
from the 77 milll<>n jobs held in April.
Ht W•s M1rritd Twice-to Barb•r• St1nwyck (left) and Ursul• Theiss
Can~er Kills Robert Taylor
Matinee Idol of Movies, TV Quit S1noking Too Late
SANT A MONICA (UPIJ -Beroro
Robert Taylor's operation for remova l o(
a cancerous lung in October, he kicked
his three-pack-a-day cigarette habit.
"I'm a:oinc to take the situation by the
horns .•. " he vowed. "You're damned
ri&ht I am. I'm going lo whip it, knock it
down and tromp on it."
Sunday the matinee idol lost hi.Ii battle .
He died at 10:30 a.m. at St. John 's
HosP,.itaJ. Officiab said the ~7-year-old ac-
tor knew ht had terminal cancer.
Men derided the almost too-hamhoine
actor u a "pretty boy." Girls crashed
through the cloon of a Umdon hotel in um to get near him.
Later in 1 career that included more
than 70 films , Taylor was cast in more
manly roles and ln 1966, his hair less
wavy and his face more creased, he
became the host of television's "Death
Valley Days."
In the months after his lung operation.
Taylo r was in and out of the hospital
seven times.
Taylor. who i;ald he had "smoked since
1 was a kid," pledged to "take the sltua·
Lion by the horns like John Wayne did ."
Wayne unden.·ent surgery for lung can-
cer in 1964 and announced : "I've kicked
the big C." Wayne has completed five
pictures ~e.
Taylor's wile of IS years, actress
Ursua! Theiss, was at his si<k when he
died.
Gov. Ronald Reagan, who preceded
Taylor as holt of "Deetb.Valley D1ys,"
will deliver the eulogy at runeral services
Wednesd ay morning at Forest Lawn.
Taylor was under contract at f\1elro--
Goldwyn-Mayer {rom 1934 until Igjlj, a
Hollywood record. In rus early days as an
actor, fl.tGM eap'llalized on his good looks
and put him in films appealing to womtn .
When Taylor's first film played
Beatrict, Neb., near. his birthplace of
Filley, Neb., the marquee billed him
under his real name. It prciclaimed :
"Starring Spangler Arlington Brugh."
After two years as a Navy flight ln-
struck>r during World War II, Taylor ap-
peared in a series ol relatively in-
significant films until ''Quo Vadis" in
1951.
That movie re.established Taylor as a
twi star. The same year he was divorced
by Barbara Stanwyck, whom he married
in l939. They had no children. Taylor
mafried Miss Theiss in 1954. They had a
son,1 Terence, 13, and a daughter, Tessa,
9.
Withdrawal Won't Hurt
U.S., Abrams Declares
SAIGON !UPI) -U.S. military of·
ficial1 &aid today President Nixon's troop
withdrawal would neither hann the
American fighting machine nor deter the
Communists from further offensives.
The guerrillas shelled 22 military
camps overnight - a sharp dropoff from
the 102 and 59 salvos the previous two
nights in an attempt to show their
strength to President Nixon and Nguyen
Van Thieu at Midway.
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams' military
Electrical Failure
Str1~ck Jetliner
Before Sea Crash
command ~ad no v.·ord on who would be
among the 25,000 Gls sent borne or when
they would go.
One officer said the Anny's view was
that the withdrawal would "cut o1f lhe
fat without cutting off the muScle" of the
538,500 Gls now fighting in Vietnam.
An official Saigon go v e r n m e n t
spokesman said the removal of U.S.
troops "will not be harmful lo the securi·
ty of the allied forces or to the self·
determination of the Vietnamese people.''
U. S. military officials predicted
more waves of Communlst shellings such
as the stepped-up lighting before the
Midway conference which cost the Reds
an es timated 1,500 dead. U.S. IOSJ1es were
estimated at %00 dead, 600 wounded.
"I sus~t they'll keep at it for a month
or l~·o,' a high-ranking offiC!r said. The
aim : to. increase American casualties,
draw troops aWay from population
centers like Saigon and grab headlines.
Wet Skies Cover Nation
WASHINGTON (AP)-The Nalional
Transportation Sarety Board says there
was an electrical failure on a United
Air Lines Boeing 727 just before it
plunged into the Pacific Ocean tast Jan.
18, sbortly after takeoff from Los An · g~les Jntemational Ati'port.
U.S. headquarters m ea n time an.
nounced the total evacuation ot U.S
troops from Hamburger Hill, the moun·
tain near Laos that cost 84 Gls killed and
about 400 wounded to capture in May.
"Th~re are no troops on the hill as far
as we know," a U.S. spokesman said' in
announcing the el)d of the 10.000-man
allied offensive through the A Shau
Valley, which Hamburger Hill overlooks. Sault Ste. Marie Records U.S. Low of 33
The crash killed all 38 persons aboard
the Denver-bound plane.
..
"I have become so dislllu&oned. with
the service. There is nothing I woWdn't
do to be back with Laurl and real people.
"The military is Jiving in a world of
its own. Totally unrealistic."
Spray wrote the letter lo two of his
wife's aunt, Esiher Cohen and Leona:
lo.1erkow. Lauri is Spray's widow.
The letter was disclosed by the aamts
after the collision.
A cousin of the dead seaman, FranJc
Merkow, said, "John was not a radical
penon, far from it. He was part of the
military and he did a good job in the
military , •• "
Court Upholds
U.S. Doctrine
Of TV Fairness
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court ruled, 7 to 0, today that radio and
television broadcasters are subject to the
government's "raimess doctrine'' and
can be ordered to air opposing viewl on
controversial issues raised in their awn
programs.
The opinion by Justice Byron R. White
rejected the claim of a PeMsylvania
broadcasting company and the industry
at large that the authority exercised by
lht Federal Communications Commiaalon
(FCX:) infringed on the 1st Amendment
guarantets of right of freedom of the
press.
The court, sitling as an eight·judge
panel since the resignation of Abe Fortas,
look these other actions:
-Ruled 7 to 1 that state laws cannot
permit the garnishee of a worker's wages
without first granting htm a hearing. The
opinion by Justice William 0 . Douglas
struck down specifically a Wisconsin Jaw
but at least 17 oth~r states operate under
simil.ar statutes and as many as 250,000
gai:rushee actions ·may be nullified by the
ruhng. The lone dissenter. Justice Hugo
L. Black, contended the decision was an
intrusion of state authority.
-Tumed down a request by Cleveland
L. Sellers Jr., a Negro civil rights work-
er, for review or his broadscale challenge
of the racial composition of local drift
boards. ~ellers, a native of Bamberg,
S.C., clai.med Negroes have 1 right to
refuse inducUon because members of
their race have been 5)'Slematically tl·
eluded from the boards.
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failed. A preliminary report indicated
one of the lhret generators was inoper-
ative three days be:fore the accident
and that the plane had been flown 41
hours with only two functioning genera-
tars •
. Loss of ele<:tricity 11'it?ans hydtaulic
and other flight controls, instrutnent
panels and cockpit lighting would no
longer function. A cockpit blackout at
night would have left the crew unable
to make required corrections· to' keep
the plane nylng.
Oilme11 Freed by Biafrans
Describe Days of Terror •
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Nonnally, cockpit conversations are
monitored on two tape tf'C()rders, but
the power Joss !n Oigbt rendered them
inO!>frable llX' all tiut nine seconds durinl the critical moment'.s lftet a fire
wamflJI was reported to ground coia-
tn>lltrs and the plane alasl>ed Into the octan .
Goldberg Asks War
End, Mil itary Study
STOCKTON (uPI) -Former Supremt
court Jusllce Arthur Goldber1 called
Sunday for an end to the Vietnam war
and a lhoroul:h coqrua\onal review of
the "mllltary tatalll!Jlunenl ..
Goldberg, Who ftsiped ,_ the coort
to btoome ambusad« to tbe United Na'
tim1, tddreAtd 31000 penong • t
Unlverall7 of Pad!le sractuauon OX·
erclseJ.
•• I
ROME (AP) -"We bear no bate
toward the Bia.frans," one ol the oilmen
freed by the rebela in E&stem Nigeria
said Sunday Jlliht. "They are a people
who know· nolhilli of the rest of the
world."
.. They don't even know that Italy ex-
ists, that Italy Mlps them," Vittorio
LucareJli continued as be told bow the
B!afran 10ldiers that overran the
oilmen's camp ~ar Kwale. Midwest
Nigeria , a month 8go araued among
themselves about how many to kill. They
shot 11 of 29.
"The ones who rlred Into our group .
were part ol an advance patrol ; , they
wert all young," Lucarelij. said • ..,Thty
understood only that their jOb wu to kill,
not be killed!'
Allor to ltatlom and • Jordanian wert
shot. Lucarelli s1id, 0 tbey took us to a
nurby vlllap where the PI01'h wanled
to jump on us and kill us. 'Iltef put us in
a big bole covered with cloth. We stayed
there for three days.
"Then we bad a trial, but even before
that someone gave us to underltand that
we would be condemned to die. We were conv~ that there waa no hope left. No
one, tn fact, said anything about the i~
terventon of the Italian eovernment. We
relt abandoned."
The Biafran leader, LI. Gen. Odumegu
Ojukwu , pardoned the men after appeals
by other Afritan governments. the
governments of France and Portugal and
by Po~ PauJ VI. Blafra had ch1rged that'
the oilmen were fighting alonpida
federal Nigerian troops.
1be II su"ivors -14 Italians, three
\\'est Gumans and a Lebanese -were
taken to Cabon, an African nation that
recognlies Blafra. They •ere Oown te
Romt Saturday, arrlvlnc Just before mid.
night to be welcomed by thouoand! at tht
airport and rectivtd jn a special alidi.nce
by the Pope.
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New Foreman
•
. Come for grub, the invitation reads. ~
Sendillg the bids to ranch hands of the Santa Ana-Newport Harbor
Alumnae .Chapter of Delta Gamma sorority was the newJy.formed J
Huntington Beach Association.
Tuesday, June 17, will be the date of the round-up, for which
members will gather at noon in the Huntington Harbour home of Mrs.
Harry .Riegel Jr.
Greeting the guests as theY, arrive, in .addition to Mrs. Riegel,
will be her co--hostesses, the Mnies. Victor Bullock Jr. of HWltington
Beach and Mrs. Larry Hudack of Westminrl:er. ·
'On the chuck wagon "menu" will be installation of newly~elected
officers of both groups. + • • ,
Presiding during the ceremonies will be Mrs. Donald 'M. Suther ..
land of Costa Mesa, outgoing president of the Santa Ana-Newport
Harbor Chapter.
Filling new roles in the Santa Ana-Newport Harbor group will be
. the Mmes. Norman Canfield of Tustin, president; Stanley Hafe..r,
Santa Ana, vice president; L. Jean Gauthier, Corona del M~f. corres ..
ponding secretary; William Scholes, Costa Mesa, recording secretary,
and Steven Urry, Santa Ana, treasurer.
Also saddling up will be the Mmes. John Coyne , Newport Beach,
public relations; Sutherland; parliamentarian: Richard Jimenez,
Costa Mesa,• philanthropyj Robert Scholler, Corona del Mar an d
George Johns, Santa Ana, city recommendation, and Lew.is Mac-
Donald, Costa Mesa, Panhel1enic representativ.e.
ROUND-UP TIME -New officers have been corralled for the
Santa Ana-Newport Harbor Alumnae · Chapter of Delta Gamma
Sorority and the newly-formed Huntington Beach Association.
Roping Mrs. Norman Canfield to fill her position Is Mn. Donald
M. Sutherland, outgoing president. The.new leaders will be seated
during a luncheon Tuesday, June 17.
"Dessert" will be the announc~ment of the presentation made ~y
the Santa Ana-Newport 'Harbor Chapter of a check for $2,150 to tho
Blind Children's Center in Los Angeles, the highlight of Mrs. Suther ..
1and's tenn of office. Funds were g~rnered during a Holiday Boutique
last November.
J
The Laguna Line
Fiesta .Taking · Shape . . .
LAG.UN A NIGUEL
Coordinating Council already
Is making plans for the third
annual Fiesta de! Niguel which
will take place Sept. 20 from
10 a.m. to 10 p.m. with dan-
cing from 10 to 11:30 p.m.
~ John ·Recd.
chairman of
the event, is
assisted by
Mrs. Jack We-
ber, planning
. director; Mrs.
· Tom Fortune,
'.youth fair
" chairman; Da-
.i .. ~ c.x vid Graham,
bOoth construction; Knowlton
Fernald, finance director;
Mrs. Roy Baughman, publici-
ty ; Leigh Collins, youth ac-
Uvities; Mrs. Bloom, booth
chairman; Mrs. Laurence Jay,
art chairman; Robert
Parsons, mas ter of
ceremonies, and R a n n e y
Draper, entertainment
chairman.
Arch Bay Women's Associa-
tion, reported that while she
and her hU.sband are away
th.eir three daughters, one son
and their families will make
use of their home for vaca-
tioning. This will be the
·couple's second European trip.
J\.llSS MERI mcKS was
honored as the out.standing
junior coed of San Clemente
High SchooJ by El Camino
Real Junior Woman's Club
last Thursday during a n
awards assembly.
The · daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. K. C. Hicks was chosen
because she maintained a high
scholastic average w h 11 e
participating in many school,
church and community
organizations, according to
Mrs. Patrick Hayes, spokes-
n1an for the club.
Activities in school Include'
California Scholarship Federa-
tion, Pep Club, Flag Girls, A
Cappella Choir and the
Humanitie.! Club. In addition
she is active in Mariner
Scouts, Lamplighters Teen
Group and ChrisUan Science
Sunday School.
pie, spoosors or lhe recent
Red, White and Blue Fashion
Tea to benefit Interfaith
Servicemen's Center in San
Clemente plan to make It an
annual affair.
A large contfugcnt of Marine
Corps officers wives, headed
by Mrs. Donn J. Robertson,
wife of Maj. Gen. RoberLson,
base commander of Camp
Pendleton, attended the show.
A group of Marine Corps of·
ficers also served as an escort
guard for models and visitors.
Congratulations are in order
for Mrs. Michael Feruu.i,
chainnan, Mrs. William D.
Plowden III of Monarch Bay,
co-chainnan, and the many
members of Overseas Wives
Club and Marine Corps of.
ficers wives headed by Mrs.
Dave Marks.
Proceeds from the tea will
help alleviate the expense of
seryic::ing more than 20QO
marines each month Jn the
center, according to Mrs.
Elizabeth Shadwick, executive
director.
' FIFTY GOLFERS were or
THE GEORGE CUN-
NINGHAMS of ThHe Arch
Bay; will depart next. S~ay
for a three-month trip: to
Europe which will take them
to England, Ireland, Scotland,
Norway, Swede~ Denmark,
Russia and Spain.
Future plans for the coed ,
who lists her hobbies as sew-
ing and ·music, include college
where she will s t u d y
psychology. SOmeday I he
hopes lo become •· tchool counselor or. teacher.
hand for El Toro Women's
Golf Assoclatloii's fin a I
luncheon where officers were
installed and championship
awards presented.
Mn. William G. Xbrash,
wife of the commanding
general of Marine Corps Air
Station, El Toro and Wally
Bradley, golf c I u b pro-
f essional, presented the prizes.
Chapter Picks a Winner fo r Hospital's Benefit "
Mrs. Cunningham, newly
elected president of Three
ENCOURAGED B Y a
turnout of more than' S50 peo-
Silver and Gold Chapter. South Coast Commiinity Hospitai Auxili·
ary is making its next benefit a D8y at the Races Tuesday, June
17. Hoping to pick the winners during the event in .Hollywood
Park's-Turf Club are (left to right) M-ni. Sam ·Garst, J Ol!n Wela
and Mrs . E. M. Jonhstoµ. Ticket ip!ormation. may be obtained
by calling Mrs: Garst, 494-7075 or Mils Fe'!J Randolph. 494-1630.
Maternal lnsti net Magnified After Three-year Separation
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Who gave )'OU
a Ucenae to play God? How can you bt
sure your advice a1ways is right? Well, it
isn't and I know because I am one of
your victims. . .
_ Tbrte yearl ago: when I •wa.s ·l6,· I
became pregnant. My · boyfriend wu 18.
When I told Mic~ey I was carrying his
child, he left town. He didn 't say where
he was going -he just ·Jelt. My mother
haddied the year before and I hated my
&teplather. I was ocared lo deaih and felt
all alone when I Wrote to you for advice.
You suggested the Florence Crittenton
homo and doled by.aa)'inf, "Give the
baby up for adoption, lhen cet back in .
ANN LANDERS
..
11chool and graduate." J took your advice
and I'll never forgi ve myaelf.
Mickey showed up last week and
wanted to see hia child. When J told him
what I had done he broke down and cried
like a baby. He Aid he had come back to
marry me but he hated the sight of me
because J a;ave away bis child. He said I
had no right lo do that and be wO<lld ~Ver rorstve .me.
.
You have ruined my Ille, Ann Landers.
On account of you I gave away my baby
and I JOst a chance to marry a wonderful
boy. -NELLIE
DEAR NnuE: Tbe advl<t l,g1~e yoo
wu good Mvl~ at t!ae Ume. I'd atve It
iigala. nt 1'e1C '1olatl01 for a t•ye1r-e¥
,..put strl wllote boyfrt..d IUn •
ltlte t1 to pve •P .,, cbltd for adGpllao.
,... ....... of Ille boy .. -, .... If·
1er111 marriage m mlghlJ lllm •
\,
A1 for yogr llavln1 fott 1 cha.ace to
-m•rl'J a "wOlderlu.1 boy" -J aee nodllq:
wonderfvl about a heel wbo ciluppear1
and Jeave1 Illa preput gtrl !rle.i to
face tbe future alone.
'DEAR AliN LANDERS: I'm going to
marry a wonderful man whose last name
is the same as a notorio:u:i crook. It so
happens that the crook ls a distant
relative of my fiance'S father -like a
third cousin. The wedding-ls ln August
and several of my ouklf-town relatives
are coming ln for the occasion. I am cer-
tain Ibey wttt .,k me If my husband ls
related lo the hoodlum. What shall I aay ?
' -GEE GEE
•
DEAR G.: Say., "Yes He'•·• coa1la.'1 "' they 1ay glueet do not dilcourqe
Nobody will be\feve tt. · romance. In other word•, cents oftea
make paue.1 1t &kb wbo wear gluses. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am an 18-
yeaMld girl who Js ashamed to be asking
this question, but 1 do need an answer.
Wbtn a young: m,an takes me to the
door to ,say Rood-night (a very special
young man, ol course), would It be loo
obvious If I removed my glasses ln an·
ticipatiOn ot a good-filght kiss? I woukl
die on the spot if I took off my glasses
and he didn't kiss me. Please answer in
the paper. My mother never looks to 11ee
to whom a letter is addreuea. She opens
everything. Thank you. -PANED
DEAR PANED: I've cheeked wlth
ttveral )'OUDI lauilet who wear I~ aia
CONFIDENTIAL TO B R 0 K. E N •
HEAR~D LORRAINE: Cheer·up. Scan
can be more valuable than medals. You
team from thtm what not to do again.
Alcohol l11H1 Hortcit to social sacca1.
U you thhak ,._. have to drink to be a~
cepted .by ,_ frtadl, 1e1 Ille facl&
Reid 0 Bbox.e atld Y• -Felt Teeupn
Onl)'," by Au Landen. Stad S5 eeata I•
coin ud a loag, telf~sed, 1iampec1
envelopt wUl yov rtqatll
. Aan Landen wtJJ be glad to help y,.
wllll Y"" problem1. 8ead lhem IO lier 18
care of tbe DAD.. Y PILOT, eaclOIJn& •
111mped, Kif·~ ei•elope.
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Fashions and Furbelows Reflected
Fashions and an al fresco luncheon by the pool will be enjoyed by members
and guests of the Women•s Division , Huntington ];leach Chamber of Com-
merce next Wednesday. Mrs. Alvin Toilet first will open her home to guests
for a soci~ hour at 11 :30 a.m. Displaying some of the styles from Jeanine's
Boutique are (left to riglJt) Mrs. Charles Bubrow and Cathy Southerland, a
princess in the court of Miss Huntington Beach, Connie Pfister.
Zontians Close Generation Gap
Doing their part to bridge
the generation 1ap by honor-
ing guests from teens to senior
citir.ens will be members of
Newp0rl Harbor Zonia Club.
Setlinl for tbe event at noon
next Thursday will be the
Senior Citizens Recreation
Center, Newport Heighl.3.
Among honored guests will
be l\fiss Linda Hitchcock,
Otange Coast C o 11 e g e
scholarship winner, and her
mother and the four Zonta-
girls-of-lhe-year, the Misses
Amy Dye, Corona del Mar
High School; Ann Lynch,
Costa Mesa; Joann Taylor,
Estancia, and Jessica Jones,
Ne_,-t Harbor.
Also in the lim'.ellght will be.
Mrs. Geor'e Schoonover, the
former Miss ROObie Fiero,
who was the first recipient of
the Zonta scholarship at OCC
in 1951.
Taklnr center stage during
the entertainment part of the
program will be senior citizens
who will present a comic sk.it, ,
dJrected by Mrs. Aaron D.
Christensen, mistress o f
ceremoniea.
· ParUcipaUng will be James
Sawyer, ,President of t be
Senlo.a Citizens, John Stoff and
the Mmes. Stella Marks,
Wilhelmine Redman, Gertrude
Mattocks, Roy Owens and
Steve Klechka.
Chairman of luncheon ar·
rangements ls Mrs. George P.
Zebal, asssited by the Mmes.
Catherine Keister, C I a r a
Spaulding and Chester Welty.
1/2 PRICE SALE!
Tradition Sterling Silver
PEMBROOKESTERLING
66 Piece Service for i ._ ____ _
44 Piece Service for"-------
22 Piece Service for ~------
TERAMO STERLING
Regular
'660
'440
•220
Sale
'330
'220
'110
66 Piece Service for 1 ~-----
44 Piece Service for"-------22 Piece Service for.,_ _____ _
'660
'440
'220
'330
•220
•110
Aak About Seon Convenient Credit Plana
'
PEMBROOKE •••
An anfullr CUrYed des;,.
with complete grace and
dipiry .•. it11ilhouctte out·
lined U>d deniled with the
tiniest lilftf bl0$l0ms.
Proceeds ~Turned Over ' . .
To Hospital · Account
Prmntailaa ol • check In
the 1mouol ol fU,000 _....Una procteds of the
IMUal Bil t.{uque were
praelUd to Sister Jane Fran-
cia, admlnlstrotor or St. Jude
Hoopltal, IS the highlight ol
the final luncheon meet.Ina: of
the year for Damu de
Caridad.
Los Coyotes Country Club
was the setting for the gather·
inc, during which n e w
membert were introduced and
officers )Jlstalled.
'!be funaB ,......ted will be
used f9f the Damas de
Carlct.d pledge toward the
purchue price of a linear ac~
ctleratcr for the hospital in
Troth Told
By Parents
Mr. and Mn. Mathew A.
GI0%1 " Costa Mesa .have &n·
nounced the engaguoent of
their daughter, Patricia Jean
Gioia to Larry Edward
Solenbe.rger, son of the Ed.Win·
E. Solenbergers of Buena
Park.
No date hu been set for
the~ wedding.
The future bride is a
graduate ol Mater Del High
School and will graduate in
June from Orange Coast
College. Her fianet was a stu.
dent at Buena Park High
School and ls enrolled at
lo'ulltrton JwUor College.
Fullerton.
M". • Robert Raab ol
Newport Belch, Jiii Bal Mu·
que chalnnan, thanked the
members for tbe1-' aupport of
the annual fUnd-ralsing event.
Installing olflcet; Mn. Fred
Kay Jr., past P"~· con· ducted ceremonies for the new
officer•, who are the Mmes. s.
D. Anderson, president ;
William Ulrich and A. C.
Bona, vice presidents ; Mtl
Bullinger and Le!lle
ch r Is temen, secretaries:
Marlo Mereurio, treasurer;
Leonard Bouas, f i n an c e
chairmM; William R. Moore,
publicity chairman, and Calvin
Schmidt, ball chairman.
Auction Bids Sisterhood
An auction ol unusual, new
Items will fill the calendar
Monday/ June 16, foi; mem·
bers a the Sisterhood af
Temple Hillel and t h e i r guests.
The gathering wlll take
place In the Community Meth·
odist C h u r c h, Huntington
\leach at 8 p.m. and v.·ill fea-
ture a tribute to the religious
school teacheni.
A special sweets table will
be prepared for the social
hour after the meeting.
Anyone wishing information
may call Mn:. Abraham Cal·
las, 536-8921, or Mn. Ed Far·
ber, 847-5821.
NB Aux il iary
Newport Beach Pdlice Aux·
iliary gathers the last Tuesday
of the month at 7:30 p.m.
Location Is available with
Mrs. Robert Wheeler, 675-1129.
Sears
\
TERAMO •••
The thoroughJJ modern
desi&a with pure, con-
toured l.inH ••• 1ta.rk,
smooth aurfaces. Ultra.·
n~ in its excirin.g threc-
di.mcwioaal effect.
------------------------------r-------------------, I IUtN.\ rAllC · ll MONT! lONG ltACH PICO ot Rlmpc11 S~TA ,E SPJtNGS VAU.EY I
CAN004 P..W: OlfNOAl!' ot.YW.C." SOTO l'OMONA SANTA MONICA VDMONT 91 Stor.llOll I COiWTON HOllVWOOO otANGE SANTA ANA SOUTH coAST rlAZA I "-="-----.!'~~ -- --'!!.~:----ISea11i I ----!.OR~£..-------- - - ---'
"Solltl .... Go••11d•l•w-111G<k" ""'--• 1!1tp6Hl9htoMondoJ-pltlwnlqt~AM.llt".allP.M.
..
•
•
,HQroscope •
•
Leo: You Gai ,n
cia-.o"" Now! ,..,, ........ --TU~DA Y. dlaclpllne. U·patltnt, you 1uo-\l~~~~~~
JliNI ceed. Pressure on area ot WEIGHT(tl
NE ·i.P.:.~... horn~. ....:.. w~· ~rn "· By~-""""" P (Feb. lf.M-...,:JO): •
Altlll (Mlrdl ll~pril 11): Not wile to 1pread efforts In
Se I e o t w l 1 e_l y • · B e too mtlllY direcOonl. Relatives San'lt ttllctng, &Otl'll litNnlng •nd
d I 1 c r l m t:ll ~Ill· Choose may mean well but cwJ,d lack • progr•m tt11t worb.
quality. S"oeod tO)nsure !uture knowledge. Know tblJ-,be oeU· llft llOOIUll-Wl US·SSOS
seeur.ity. Avold f:ftr1vllgance. ~r§eU~an~t.~A~v=ol:d~w~l~l~d~·~g~o~o~•~•~======::=== T~VllVS (Aprll lll-May lq):I· chase.
Cycle high -but romance
couW hit·• ..,... You desire! \<~'1!J
lflectlon, but could meet witil
obstacles. Be paUent, wture.l fll'i'~t~
GEMINI (Mty %t.June 211):
Serioul conaideraUon mull be1 ';:~r given \0 pro.Mein·whlch aeemsl ~
to artse'lrom the put Your
key' is to enllst aid of
authoritiet. You IU'e right aod •
you can ll"Ovt It -do 19.
CANCER (June II.Jilly' I%):"
Some 1riends are dt~
JUN!! 1111o THBV JUNE "'1>
,.,_ .. n.c., ........
• I ..
becauai! of love 'problems. f.nd 1,G.n...-~.,...,.,_._...,.._.
some try to have you 1hare :.=.i-:z::.:;:~1111.,;o.,:=.~
burdens.,CBe .tlnd, but not ,1 ·· awu.n lllft'IU) ... _....,,......., ,..._..,
foolish. Messqe crystal clear C _.,....Nol..,.--ao1.a.~
by t ..... l .. ht. ~ ./llol..., ..... ~ ....... .a., ........ ,.... .. ...,....... --~~:.::.-&.--. ... LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): . =~~ .. '!.......!::. .. ~~= Don't look ror special favors. ~ ............,...._ ... _
Do what mmt be done. Beef· ft ~ .. '='°~·~-~1-•~
ficlent.' Reward comes as a -. ca..:_.~==-_...,.,._._.._
result ot conscientious effort. ~ !:.:0.-""'--v . ._..,,._..,..._
You gain what you need. But · ttain'llOI:..._~~~:': • .,.... ... ......_
determinaUon, origlnaUty are ( -~ .J1:; =»-°"-:i&~ ~ ~ requisites. ..-...-.111 ilollclt< • -,... VIR~A (Aug •••·pt 22)• GloWJ,....., _ _, ...... _.._~-·-~ .~.. --
What you bear may not reflect ~ ' """"'(}1 A!/ / entire truth. Koow this ; res-:VM4c..--
pond accordingly. Your own ,(;.
hunches may be better for you ~'~ '-----------=~~--' than official reports. You must ~~ DlNNillS EXTRAORDINARE
be discerning. I::!~ Wednetday1 Thru Saturday From 5:30 PM
UBRA (~pt. 23-0ct. 22): \k Su:Dday Dinn"." From Two PM
Restriction evident w be re ~unday Bnmch ln~tiOa.11le From II A .. M .. ::,SC)i~
some money sourecs are con-ti..., • (714) 673-1267 -. ,1
cerned. Be Oexlble. Don't bel j~~~.J/.~~~{)~J~\\~ ~~~1~.,_,..,,§ll"~J/~~~~~~ depeodent on one who is ti.,:~~.,.~
bas!Cally selfish. E n 1 a r g e
horizons. ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Stick to .,hat yo11 know.
Means don't take unnecessary
chances. Heed voice of ex·
perience -especially {rom
legal source. Mate, partner
may act in unusual manner.
SAGmARIVS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 )~ Work conditions are
subjec t to revision. Older
person may appear to make
th ings difficult. Could be test.
challenge. Key Is to maintain
steady pace. Don't vee r from
basic course.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan ..
19): One close to you ts
serious, perhaps depress~.
May be youngster---0r in-
dividual v.-'ho is normally hap-
py. Be understanding. Strive
for harmony. Live up to home
obligations.
AQUARIUS (.Jan. 20-Fib.
18): Obtain hint from
Capricorn message. S o me
freedoms are re s t r I c led .
Necessary to apply s e I f -
-. -<t!ff '-.. ~ ...... ~-
BE FREE OF
FACIAL. HAIR
FOREVER •••
LET US SHOW YOU HOW
EASY IT IS TO REMOVE
EXCESS HAIR WITH
MODERN ELECTROLYSIS,
MEDICALLY APPROVEO, •"
SAFE, FAST , GENTLE,
CALL 644-2800 TO
CONSULT WITH OUR'
LICENSED TECHNICIAN,
IN OUR BEAUTY SALON•
ROBINSON'S
ROB NSON 1S
CLAIROL·s~SHINY SUNLIGHT FROSTING .. YC?lJ CAN'T ALWAY! AUST THE SUH TO PUT HIGHLIGHTS v.tfEltE
THEY Bli:LONG. SO LET OVA STY\..ISTS RIPPLE IT TH .. OUGH YOUft
HAltit! WITH FINGEft Tl, l"lltOSTING 0.ft STREAKS OF LIGHTENING,
Oft ~ONDE ON BLOND E. DO IT WHILE OUR FROSTING SPECIAL 19
ONLY 20.00, INCWJDINC. SHAMPOO ANO SET. HAIR aJT1 !5 .00.
Q.JSTOM COL.OlltlHQ INDIVIDUALLY "RICED. OUft BEAUTY SALONS.
ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASHION ISLAJ\JD • 644·2800
' ---------------------------------~~---
•
VOL -
-
I -
• SAN
posed
hall a
thls yt
go dO<
have 1
uaUon
Cour
proper
distric
cents I
works
year ti
• JI
.SAN
pus ri(
a me<
servio
in lh
cafetD1
Ape
Reaga
Olief
Prtsid
servic;o
the se
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LAG
wriUn1
Edu ca
Leisur
displa:
wil)
cia=
On•
ceram
wriUDi
painti1 •<
EL
Comrr
talk b
cl erg,;
meetil
lion.<
the El
Dini
• coc
mlssic
speak
China •• EL
Blood
the S
fn>m
23391
Apr
may I
coon!
ficieD
little ••
ll1lt
Episc
Guild
lh• h
Qiris
wt
holal
be" stud; ,,.
beit'lf
Ho!>
Angt be Ir
cit·· Th
ris,
detei
• h•
said .
"1
need
• ho
repo
··1
"' n or U
11 ....
•
S~dllleha~k
E!olTION
voi.:. 62, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORAN&E COUNTY, tALIFORNIA
• •
lXOll u
Dowta tfae
Mission
Trail ·
Clemente Budget
Up; Taxes Down?
• SAN CLEMENTE -While the pro-
posed city budget has gone up about a
half million dollars, or ~6 percent over
this year's budget, the city tu rate may
go down, San Clemente city councilmen
have been told. ll)creased assessed val -
uaUon is .why.
Councilmen may lower both the general
property tax and the ml.lnicipal lighting
district levy by a total of' about three
Cents per $100 or asses'sed valuation. Jf all
works out, this will be the filth fiscal
year taxes have been lowered.
e Riot Talk Pla1111ed
.SAN CLEMENTE -Preventing cam-
pus riots will be the topic of discussion in
a meeting called by the San Clemente
service ch,1bs for Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
in the San Clemente High School
caretorium.
A personal representive of Gov. Rcnald
Reagan's office, John Keohoe. and Police
Chief Clifford Murray will speak.
Presidents or neighboring communili_es'
service clubs have been invit.ed lo attend
the session.
e Art Work Dlrplayed
' LAGUNA HlLU -AJ1~ crafts and
writing· 1\'ork by students of the Adult
Education Art and Crafts' cla'Ssts in
Leisure World, Laguna Hills will be on
display today through Thursday. Exhft!il!
wilJ be at each class's res~ve
classroom.
On display will be knitting, millinery.
ceramics, sculpture, mosaics, creative
writing, as well as oil and watercolor
paintings.
e Chhaa Talk Slated
EL TORO -The future and past of
Communist China will be explored in a
talk by Dr. J. Stuart Innerst, a Quaker
clergyman· from La Jolla. before a.
meeting of the Retired Officers Assocla·
tion. Orange County Chapter. Saturday at
the EI Toro Marine Corps Officers Club.
Dinner at 6:30 p.m. will be preceded bY
a :cocktail hoiir. Dr. Innerst, a fonner
missionary in China during the 19'21'.l!!. will
speak on "What is Happening · Inside
China."
e Blood111obile Visits ·
EL TORO -'Jlhe American Red Cross
Bloodmobile will make its first visit to
the Saddleback area Monday, June 30,
from 3 to 7:30 p.m. at Ollvewood School,
23391 Dune Mear Road. El Toro.
Appointments for the blood donation
may be made with Mrs. Stariley Berman,
coordinator. An appointment assures ef·
ficient processing at the bloodmobile and
little waiting.
e Guild to Jtleel
P.1JSSION VIEJO -SL George's
Episcopal Church's St. Joan of Lorraine
Guild will meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. in
the home of Mrs. Peter Wendorf, 24411
Chrisanta Drive, Mission Viejo.
. '
Tuesda11 ltleet
Trustees to Air
Coaches
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of 111r1 0•11• l"Uet St•H The current disagreement between
Laguna Beach High School coaches and
principal Robert Reeves will be aired by
trustees Tuesday in executive sesSi.on.
Dr. William Ullom, district superin·
tendent, said the secret session was call·
ed. to allow coach Ed Bowen to· make a
presentation. to the board.
Bowen, assistant varsity football coach
and head golf coach, bu been mentioned
as the filth man who might resign his
coaching assignment in ·differences of
opinion with the high school ad.
ministration.
Coaching resignations have already
been .handed in by Nonnan Borluki,
baseball coach : Jack Lythgoe, varsity
track coach, and lightweight football and
basketball coaches Warren Watkins and
Jerry Neumann.
Coaches arc unhappy about changes
proposed in assignments. However, prin·
cipal Reeves said, "all of the coaches
Jellvfish Take •
Second Fiddle
. '
To Nude ·M_~1i
'
Leguna Beach lifeguards stopped
treating jellyfiih welts an bathers Sun-
day long eneugh to remove a nude male
sun worshiper from Bird Rock.
"It was kind of funny. He was jumping
aroond out there in the nude and said it
was the first time be bad seen the sun in
a month," reported Lifeguard Lt. Eugene
DePaulis.
The young man, In hit twenties, was
removed via surfboard by Lifeguard Jack
Lincke and turned over to Lagun' Beach
police. DePaulis said the sun seeker ap-
parently swam to Bird Rock.
DePaulis said Japanese currents, while
1varming the water to about 86 degrees,
brought the worn jellyfish infestation i.11
several years.
They 're big, DePaulis said, adding, "I
saw one about 11 .inches across and a kid
tald me he had seen one about two and a
half feel." Lifeguards treated about 30
persons with rubbing alcohol for the pain·
ful jellyfish contacts.
De.Paulis said the waters have cleared
of plankton, on which jellyfish feed, to-
day and described the surf as beautiful
and crystal clear.
Stork Jllarkets
NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market
closed with rr wide-ranging loss Monday
in r~ctioA to ;in increase in banks• prime
rate to -an all-time high oi 914 percent
from 71,J percent. (See quotations, Pages
10·11).
But in late trading tbe decline was
trimmed from the mid-day level.
Crisis
who have said they are quitting (coaching
assignments) are invited back ·to coach
next year ." ·
Hal "Akins, head football coach, laid to
rest. rumors ·thil.t he might resign that dU·
ty Friday when he told apring footballers
that he intended to stay with the job.
The school board held a closed session
Sunday which was said to be largely
hackgroUnd information on the coaching
situation prior to hearing Bowen's Tues·
day presentation.
Also Tuesday, board members will
prepare a counter proposal to the last
salary and benefit offer from the
district's teachers.
This Is the second pre>posal sent to the
board by the teachers. The first would
have called for the spending of an ad·
ditlonal $267,000 over this year's allo~
ment,of $1,180,000 for teachers' salaries.
Jn response to tl\at first proposal, the
board offered a general · S percent in-
crease with the details to be decided upon
by the teachers. The increase amounted
to about $60,000.
The teachers' present offer is unknown.
School officials wou1d not reveal what is
beinj; requested: However. "Dr. Ullom,
said thar "some compromise" between
the tWoigJ1)Ups must be 111ade.
• "J • •· •
.' . •)'. '' .... . . ···-....
Pioneer Laguna
Contl'~cfor Dies;
Rites on Tuesday
.Funeral services for Arthur Littlejohn!,
Sr .. builder of the Laguna Beach City
Hall, wili be held Tuesday at 11 a.m. at
the · Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel.
Mr. Littlejohns died Sunday. He was 75.
Mr. Littlejohns was a pioneer Laguna
Beach building contractor. He came to
Laguna Beach in the late 1920s and in ad-
dition to the City Hall, constructed many
churches including the C o m m u n i t y
Presbyterian Church and numerous
p_rivate homes.
Six years ago. Mr. Littlejohns reUred
to Yucaipa California however. the Lit·
tlejohns family two weeks ago moved to
23262 Buckland Lane, El Toro. .. .
While a Laguna Beach resident, M~.
Littlejohns was active in many com-
munity organizations including the YMCA
and the Lawn ~wl!ng Club. He was an
elder in the Community Presbyterian
Church.
Mr. Lit"tlejohns is survivedOy his wife,
Addie, of the El Toro home; son, Arthur,
Littlejohns, Jr., of La Canada: daughters,
Phyllis Littlejohns of Laguna Beach;
Mrs. Lois Miller of Fallbrook, CaliL:
sister Mrs. R. M. Piety, of Laguna
Beach; and four grandchildren,
The Rev. Or. Dali as Tiimer of the
Community Pres':lyterian Church of
Laguna Beach will officiate at the
memoi'ial services. Entombment will
follow at" Pacific View. Funeral ar.
rangemenls are under direction of
Pacific View Mem1rial Park, Corona del
Mar.
Hotel Complex· Study Set
Firm Looks Over Plan for Main Beach Center
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .,,. hltr l'Ott St8ff
Whether Lagt.na Beach's Main Beach
hotel-<:0nvention center 1s to be, or not to
be, will be decided in part by a feasibility
study now under way. ·
As part of the total fcaslbHity study
being muter-minded by · the· Bud
HoJscher · & . Associales Inc., o( • Los
AngtleS, another team of consulta'ntS will
be in town studying the site, talking with
ci~f=~·~~~~~r:j firm of Har·
ris, Kerr & Foster and they will be
detennlning the possibility of success for
a hotel, Jame.s D. Wheaton, city manager
said . •
"They will tell us whether ther« Is a
need for and potential for the success of
a hotel. It is in e.sence a ..... turaUon ,
repcrt. • "They will a.ay, 'y.es, there ls a need ·for
liO many hotel rooms in t)\e·commuatty,'
or they will say, 'no, there ~e too many
already,'! Wheaton Wet.
..
Wheaton had an Initial meeting v;ith be decided by the city council .
the. Harris group Thursday. "The repor;t could come back and say
Purpose of the entire study is ol course ~go, go, go,' and the council could decide,
to determine., first off, whether a con· in spite of that, we won't do it," the city
vention center and hot.el prOject Is a good manager said.
idea. Then the Holaclter firm will advise, The project would be funded by the
design, and .se.L up .operational guidelines. same no~pro{it i corporaUon, Public
for the project, U it pn?vu·fe~b\c. lmproVt:ml!lll Corp., lbat bought the
The hotel-«inventlcan ce11t!!r Idea is Main Belch.
thought lo be the ·~est and !>Ost use·• No deadline ~·• yet been determined
for a portion CJ{ the ctfy1s beach, Wheaton for receipt of the study, or the council
said. dttermlnallon. 'Wbeaiofl uid that there is
The city· purchased the Main Beach no senle -of urgency Involved.
about a year ago for a litUe more than $3 The city manager said that despite the
million. Included in the Holscher study city's need' for. idditional public pli.rldng. ·
will be the advisability or laying out it "appears dfiUblful . that public parking
another $500.000 for an a d j a e c n t will be involved.1," in addition to ~hat
·trianauJ>r piece or ta!lil at. Lal""• needed for ,Ille hotel and attendant !l»po.
A.venue. , ..• : Tho-p~y ~o_Jved ~s..just. ~t!tbat 1 ~ Holacher, l\U<ly woll coel IJO,llDO. m~1Jit·1814. · , · · · Holtcher·!lu~ tblt hla group be ··The HoliCher sftidy Wi~-apPmed by ,
involTed ln the inlUal .de1ip and con· the city councn· ~~h s. It. 11• a 1con··
lt.raetion of 'the projtd.. . ti1N1ng . lnvtttlg1tlon on \M-' )$art of~ ~be1
Wlleoton einil)laaized that policy mat· city !or !>!•in !leach de'<lopmenf, Ifie ,
ters cooceralnl &he p.roJect tUD hive to city m1niger Jlid. ~ .. 1..' 1
'
--
t i • ' , '
-. '
'
•• 1-• ' -: \ t
J ' .. '
' . . '' ' . -, "'u;,,,..-..
NJXON·; THiEU ANNOUNCE. TROOP PULLOUTS
,Princlpl1.0;f Se~f~eterminlt11on....for South Vlits .. . . . .
·. t;f>niitmns ·1(J ·6r~~t Ni~w
: · ''l'Jle.i;u~llc· has· ~eri lnvttd to l!reet. Pre&ldent Nixon .fonl&Jji-mi
h1a return' to Oranee County · from bls Midway talks· w1tn-, President
'Nfuyen Va.o Tfii'eu .Of SOµth Vietnam1 spokesmen at El Toro 'Marjfje
Corps .1if S.tation·annoQnc!'d today. _ ·
·Air Force 'One, carrying the Presidential party, i~ expected to
to.uch d9wn at El-Toro at 5:30 p.m.
Mr. Nixon is tci greet the crowd. possibly say a few words and
depart for his San Clemente home with hi! family by helicopter.
Marine officials .said the gates would be open ~o the public at
4 p.m. Parking is lirnit.ed. The base is accessible via Santa Ana Free-
way .by .the Sand Canyon Road or Culver Road exits·to Trabuco Road
and the main gate. · .
The Presidential party is to leave ·ror Washington , 0 .C. Tuesday
about noon. · · '
* -tr .. *
Nixon Believes
Midway Enhances . .
Chance of Peace
HONOLULU (UPI) -President .Nixon
went to Midway Island hoping to enhan(:e
the chances-for pe~e !n -Vietnatn. He
came away thinking tre did.
His f!leeting w~th frp~ident Nguyen
Van Thieu of" South Vietnam btought a
feeling of allied u.nity ~merican officials ·
hoped would . force U!c Communists to
a\..andon their hopes for a Nixon·Thieu
spllt.
Nixon movei;l wh~t he considered to be
his blue chips Jnto the areri.a by, pro-
mising ~ start J~~ immediate withdrawal
of 25;000 Ame11ican looops frorg. t~ ·War
zone, to be replaced by' South Vietnaniese
-forces .
, ThiCu reswn~ett -with 18V~sb1 praj.se rpr
the· American Pr~d~pt .and :an emotional
denial he had any·bfsic "dlfferences~lth .
the Nlxon ."adhiin iitH.tk>fl.
·, This ·fn6od ' of Mid~af left Nixon with
.the fcelin'g tli~ Unit~ ;~tales, So~th ·~iet
. nam <!nd their oth~r ·al!les in.the Wat had
improved the.i'r batgaittlng 1positkln Jn
Paris. . > .. -· ·· .. · • · • Y"!• ;.;;;..., 'l'he reasoning tvas· tl'lat "the allies had
~AbOHA, ~R. p$Es1peNT; .built a solid I'°)lt. against Ytet. Cong .or
l ··; ··-Honofulur Stopo.yer, Nqr9;1 Vietnamese atte.JJiP,lS in Par~: ~o
....... ~ ~· ~i· ·split~,qrcauðe"divorce".Gom:
~ • 1 ~-• muniat· delegates mentlooeCt last welt.
Gr~ek A8sa8s.lna iit;>n . Probablf mote" lrbp;Nnf 'than ' !lie
.wo\d• ,o.f. the .pr'"· ~OITlenta ; .r· th~ Suspect Recantured .1•11il>at• oU))eir co~q~i .... tilt r , mood ol. lojldw~ ' .!..• ' ftitile· "'Ith
ATHENS, Ore~ JAPl. ""7 Alcx,ndtr 'Th* • , · hl 1tft I ' 't' . " ' Panogo~lli, wh~ este~ jail. after b~ · ~~w/J?f:~r1'f.'dlll~;r~.t_~~~Y
convlctto.n : ror ~IJig to .Jd,11 9reeee's .m~gs (?etw•en ro'"1,er )'realoj~~' i.~n;ter WU .. ~~ ~od•Y cln :''~ ._<!<Jilft:B. ·.·~~q 'a~,I~·~Jl\I, ( l\Jn ..._~'!"' Aihi .•.. •--'-"' ;w;...., .ID.'!~ "1#1' 1!>IOI . '!!(1)1ob( pl, .w1y. · '"" ~r~lcfarmY • ...,.,., . ._....... twtce ·« '"»'t1trtere)I# or .........
·Thµndavt A')IOlic;t'nf111hihtl•WU·orili!rdl ·11l!h Nimo. '. S · '. ' ··<r,r·· imniOdJOltjy. Plnqoalil WU ~If· . The' 'Alit!rfu Pretldent .I ~ •bbst q<~ !hortly after, ~· · ~tt""'?t'..!_8! .r~. wjth m~ch 'the .~,;,, ~ttituitt. tiifde 1!11\oQ!b the,caf 9f·~ ....., .. ··;U.S. otn.!lila re)rH11>91'~ <inll'·bl:tm, '"~Q\>oul<is .. , shOr• ioff.' 1os1 Aug. • preaOfid•by ·tlltl w!lli':f-"-reac1: wh'a!>. 13.· 1
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. . ' ::J -.rer-FCENTS
25,ooo _:nue
Home .hy
August End ,
By MERRIMAN SMJ.TH
U,t WftlM H-It""""
MIDWAY ISLAND (UPI) -~ldenf
Nixon has announced that 25,000 U.s.:
troops will be withdrawn froni "South,
\rietnam by the end ; of August a~ Jp..
dicated: o\hers will leave as military con.
diliQllS warrant.
At" the same time, Nixon backed SoUth
Vietn.amese President Niufen Van Thi"eu
in opposing the JmposlUo.n of' any
~ition government, , including the
Communists, on the wartorn soodw:uL....
Asia republic.
Nixon made his troop reduction an·
nouncem.ent Sunday at a -summi t con-1
fcrence with Thieu on this Uny Island in '
the Pacific. It was the sevenUt meetin1 o(
a U.S. president with ·1ead<?rs of the
Saigon government. They appeared a(-
Stortes on Reaction
To Tnop Cut Page 3
fable and relaxed, confident of the courSe
of the ~ar. ~nd mildly optimiltjc about
pea~. .
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, w~o ~e~ bae:k to Washington from
f\f1dway, sai~ ~n V{ashin11~n today that
.more,t.roops .may be. pµlled out lo AugUst
but 81\Ye. no figures. , , .
J.~t the sam~ ""1e. ll!P!M!l!! ~In· lcaloo the 25,000 troops·beliig P!liied out
wtll, !J!f;~nnsler,.d. at ~ Joliially, to
Okina"a a~ KawaU raOler than being retu~ \-~Jy to. the · continental
Unllod 51iles. .
Tbt IUltM>llllCelll<nt. ,of thf . troop
wtthdra\'(al •and other: decisions reached
by Nixon and Thieu drew a mixed ~
tlon. -The' Noith Vietnamese; the ·vret
Cong and Moscow denounced the move as
a "meaningless ... pr opat f.nd a
maneuver" designed to appeastr anUwar
crilics in the United States and elsewhere
around the world.
. ReactJon . In Washington also ·varied.
Scn:ite Republican Leader Everett• M.
Dirksen . aaid 'it represented the ~"first
so lid t19pe fol"the American people" since
t:1e war began six years ago., But Sen.
George D. McGovern (0-S.D.), a leading
dove, safd It amounted to mer1 • 'tokenism.'.
~· llew direcUy back to SaJ&on from
Midway and cautioned newsmen· agaiitst
describiJJg the reduction of U.S. forces u
a."withdrawal." He said the correct term.
was "replacement'' -noting that South
Vietnamese forces will take over.
Thieu also warned that anyone I.Jr sooth
Vietnamese pub1ic life who 8ctvocates a
coalitio'h with 'the Communists .. will .be
severely punished. , .because be has
hel ped .the enemy.''
He ·said the subject of Solith Viet.
namese elections was no~ discussed at
Midway because "that question belongs
to the ,Vietnamese people themsel;ves and
President Nixon does not wan.t Ut , in·
terrere 1n the political life of South Viet-
na1n."
In the firm words of the joint Midway
communique, NjXon and Tbleu told the
Communists to .realize .th• 'futility -and
d3nger of trying to Win lt.lfillltary victory
in Vietnam· and said there must be ·eelf-
detcnnlnatio" for th1! Vietn~ese j>eople
without interference· or rte.trot •. Tbej ruled
out imposition of a coallU.on government
on South Vietnam. • .
Oraage
' .
-i ' I ~ Weatlaer .
FJir and ~anner_:. !I'hf.t's· what
the man sald~ and··Tuesday shapes'
up as a sunny .one•with t.empera·
ture.,, T~gtng fro!."" ?G to 115 flona , the 0r..,..Coaal. .
•NSIDE TODAY
Along ldrtli • wraoup of th<
E1nmy awa.i:cta.. todayfa tnttrtoin-
'nent 'pagt offtrs rtvit101 of th• la~st prts~n~tigns' /+om. ''the
Jluntington 1Btach· Rlay~
and .tl1e lJC lrtiinC Svrnphonu
Orchestra. Page 13. ·
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LOGBOOK ' . .
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Nixon Moving Political
Center of U.S. to West
By NORMAN ANDERSON
Of ... Oii~ 'tw Sltff ,
'
Jiiii like London, M-. Paril. the daltline SAN CLEMENTE (or
NEWPORT BEACI! or LAGUNA BEACI!) locates the capital of the United
States -even though temporarily -and Indicates even more definJlely where
the poliUcaJ center ol the nation ls moving -to the West and particularly
Clll/omia.
'l1IO •oil<dlon by Prt!lde!ll Richard l<ttoo <i bll Wblle JloUM West ,on the Orallp eo..t iJ the Jalat llld._. in\piuaive 11ep
to a proceas that began more than a century ago whm
Pruident Lincoln financed the Un!oa dtjring the Civil War
with gold and silver from California and Nevada mint's.
* ShifUng of the power bal&nCe from Eut·to West hu
been rap~ since World War It. California ls now the
largest and thus -pollllcally .,:. ·the most powerfu) of
.states.
Considering the politics of it alone, look at these
facts :
'!be ·most powt rful man In the free. world -Pruident Nlson .:.... 11 a
West.errJer ~ another Westerner ii cne of Ule mnaU number of. molt import..
ant tl\ft\ in the naUon : Earl WarTen, former governor .al Callfcnla, ta chief
juJtice. With them, aa potent Political fi(urts 'ia a Calllornlan, Robert Finch,
a member of the President's Cabinet (and a good bet to succeed his boss if
a111aes well). ·
Thb: ill not the first time a triumvir.ate oJ. Californians hu been politic-
ally Important. In the 1"'°5 Nixon was vice praident, W.arren · chief just.Ice
and Sen. Wllllam F. Knowland wu Senate majority leader.
* Here are some olher lndlcaUona of tht West'• importance:
Ni•on's strength In the area held firm In 19111 and contrlbuf<d mightily to his narrow victory, in whlch he did not carr; one' major urban mu. But he
""'"'helmlngly carried OrlD(e ·and San Dlqo e«mli .. and Joi California'•
40 electoral votes. He might not have needed llllnoiJ.
The political !Ue of the Kennedys has been sealed In the West.
John F. Kennedy went from Los Angeles to become Presjdent of the
United Slates fhavlng to defeat a West.mer In the proces1) and Robert F.
Kennedy's polJtical fortunes -and life -died in Los Ana:elea.
Primaries in the West on more than one occasion have chan&ed the
course of a man, or a nation.
lt was California. In ISM which made -for a few abort moialenll -,
Robert F. Kennedy the front runner for the Democratic praldenUal·nomina·
tion, &fter an earlier ~estern primary, in Oregon, had appeared .. ibly1to
have dealt hJm a fatal blow.. · " * -It was the California primary of 19M whicla .eave Barry Goldwater..;..
himself a Weaterner -the RepUblican :,rtlicfeottiJ naminati9n (ia..Sln.J:ru-
cilco, incidentally) over an ~. AelP_':.RocUftUer. ·
And durlni the .time :BorlY' GOJdwWf.w .. liider ol the !\IJ>!lbHcan
Party, the Orange Coast, oul ot 1he'lia!b03 'Bif"'CJUb, was the panj'i maln
budquart<rs.
Agaln it was a California primary -that of 1956 -with which Adlal
Stevensm knocked out Estes Kefauvu and clinched his second DemocraUc
presidential nominatJon: '~ ; •
lion .. .
j
Of rash
• • ••1St~kd '
L
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The whys and hows of future Laguna
Beach trash collecUon will be taken up
Wednesday in a City Council study
session.
City Mar.ager James D. Wheaton iaid
discussion at the 7:30 p.m. meeting will
bl open end.
It is expected to range from recent
Chamber of Commerce beautification
on com m I t t e e recommendations on
commercial trash collection to the
possibility that the cily will invite new
bids on trash collection.
:.. ,ltesidenti#J. trash ~ccUon is ,ltased on ~ flat rates. HoWever, Wheaton said, cOm·
mercial trash ~n is essentially an
arrang~tween the trash con-
tractor and individual businesses.
The-beat1tirlcaUon committee chaired
by Lloyd Milne has recommended that:
-Everyone In commercial and pro.
fesaional enterprise pay a fee for trash
collection.
-The council study the question of
assessmenL
-Standard sized trash containers be
established throughout the city or a~ least
the business district.
-A regulation be set up to aiver the
collapsing of trash cartons in the business
area prior to collection.
-The contract with the trash con·
tractor be revised to sUpulate strict
pickup rqulations governing scattering
of refuse arid pickup from screened
areas.
-The city more stricUy enforce
ordinance.s now on the books.
Wheaton broachea lhe possi.bilµy or
calling for bids on trash collection after
Laguna Beach Disposal Co. requested an
extension for three years and renewal op-
clon on its cc:trtract which erpires Sept.
30, 1970. He said it had been more than 10
years since bidll had been called for on
Laguna trash collection.
Library ·Friends
Get Undernmter . .. . .. . ~ .... ~·~
Tout -0n Filfu
Alvin Santmyer, undersea explorer
from Laguna Beach, will take the
Friends of the Library along on his next
adventure.
The medium will be films he has taken An Oregon primary ended foi' 811 Ume the presidential aspirations of
Harold Stassen, onetime boy wonder of the GOP, when be }011t io 1948 to
Tbomu E. Dewey (who S11bsequillUji JP¥ hi# ~W!Jte 11(!!1!1' ,liiJ i 'lli:
Harry Truman).
California qain played the vital role In the political fortunes of another
Pmident.
It wu the deal between Sen. Hiram Jobnaon of California (Ind there'•
more to hfJ role In U.S. nre) and the Te:s:u delegation whJch gave New York
Gov. Franklin Rooeevelt the DemocraUc presldeoUal nomination in 1932 and
made the Texas favorite son, House Speaker JohP 'N. Gamer, vice 'president.
In th!""'"''• oce•~•. 1 •,T~..,WiJI'stiO;}l110-tihs and com·
ment on them Tuesday at 8 p.m. at
Laguna F;'~rat. ~ is publ ic. Tht bu$1.,...111an's. .tltb SCUBA gear~'1tf\c.triiera • · · 11\tim to the
* Johnson, l.ll a powerful man from a potent slate, played. other influential
roles. He helped lo make two other presidents and might have been .one him·
telf, or at least a vice president.
It wu his candidacy u a favorite son that contributed to a deadlocked
1920 GOP National Convention that settled in a smoke-filled room in favor of
Warren G. Harding. Johnson haughtily refused the vice presidential nomina·
tion and Calvin Coolidge 1ot It lnakad, along with, a couple years later, the
White House.
Johnson played a role, somewhat smaller, in making Woodrow Wilson
President of the United States. Then governor of California, Johnson wu a
leader U the Progress.Ives In 1912 who fought the GOP Old Guard in behalf or
Ez·President 'Ibeodore Roosevelt against President William Howard Taft. They
Jost to the machine and the Progressives fonned their own party, with John.
son the vi~ presidential candidate on TR 's presidential ticket. The party ran
second, splitting the Republican vote and electing Wilson a minority president.
And as a final fad, Wilson owed -in a manner of speaking -his re·
elect.ion in 1916 to California. Charles Evans Hughes, GOP nominee, went to
bed believing himself Presldent~ltct. Final returns early the nert morning,
gave the state and the election to Wilson.
The West hall had a great role in U.S. life up to now. With Richard Ni:iron
Jeading the way politically, who can foretell what will aime nert?
Food Strike Wanin2? Black Panther
Arraigned for
Officer's' Deatli
LOS ANGELES (AP) -NegotlaUoos in
the Los Angeles area supennartet strike
rt:SUmed today with the Retail Clerks
Union saying seWement ill near and the
Food Employen ~I denyln1 it.
I
DAILY PILOT
,
OllAMGI COAST PUSLl'"ING COMPANY
ko!i.ri N.· W•••
p,.ldtflt w f'vbll.iwt'
Jock ll. c.,1.y
Vito Pr•ldenl •1111 Gontral Mine"'
Danit! Michael Lynem was formally
charged today ~rith the murder of a po-
lice officer in a Santa Ana Municipal
Court arraignment which produced prt>
tests that his arrest was nothing more
tha "a political plot." .
Defense attorney Peter Man: or Bever·
Jy Hills asked for the immediate release
Oh battaftt.e Black Panther member. He
argtltd1hat the tall, tmpasstve'Santa Ami.
man'"\lrU "'nothing more than the victim
of a cOOspiracy" and that "his arrest Is
jU&t another manifestation of the con· Un~ repression Of black people.
' And nowhere is this more evident than
In Ora'nge County," Marx added. "Im-
mediately any incident occurs it Is the
reaction of police to scour the streets •
looking for a black person who will flt the
crime."
Marz Wed fot tre!atment or1 Lyntfil
_-.-parablt. to thal affoc<l•ci"by a Loa
"'Allge!# ...rt'ln'whldl a white .ir«urily .!\!IN ·•••••~cfcil· the ·...., o!ca Wack
"!Ill \i1 ~ ... baJI wttlioal. "1Y · ".f~ =·,~de.Jed ihe .;.w.;. 1cr
·)ioil;.111 :-jmM lli.e ~ to ·
1'11111;1• .... lllll>li 'Ille -p-.. ~ .. ·-.amaa ...... ·ldt · lllj-.tlldlre llflaOM' o( L ' .. -· ~~ ....... --..=,, ..... ,flu ~~".~Ana Po!QoJ!lce!' -~\\:-&.acer. Two mtn who allesed·
ly were h1I companions in the shooting
are 1UU beln& sought in -.ii intensive
·-~ · Tight lllcurftr was tile order Ot tile day
In Judge MUI • courtroom with olllcon
canyln& out a careful seareb or au 1pec· tators.
Caribbean where }\e . explored !he
Mantecirus, a Spanish merchant vessel of
the early 1500s from which his party
recovered coins and buckles. It is believ·
cd the oldest New World wreck.
The Red Sea lured Santmyer on
another adventure ' to the depth of 230
feet. His party explored a magnificent
Phoenician vessel.
One of his finds was an amphora urn
once used in the transPort· or wheat, oil
and grain. Santmyer's career began 20
years ago as a hobby at the University of
1'.11ami.
Capo to Study
Budget Figures
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen,
meeUng tonight at 7 o'clock tn city hall,
will get their first look at the city 's
preliminary budget for the coming fiscal
year.
The total budget hu not yet been
tabulated, but it will be higher than this
year's, said Emett Thompson, city ad·
minl.strator. Thompson said he hopes the
present dty tu ot 90 cents per $100
assessed valuation will be maintained.
nit major budgetary increase comes in
the public works department because of
storm damage, Thompson : said. The
city's assessed valuation has risen nearly
nine percent from $14.16 million this year
to $15.98 million.
4~una to Honor
~':°',c '• +. ._
F1; :--·. on ·::June 14 -.. ~~ ~" -·l-•• . "-··· ~~ch Magof'Gknti E. Veeder p<'<~~"'.!'Jaa:· Day.Jllile 14 as "a Ume
tori ·" dlaJilAy of Oii!' l)i.liooal emblem,"
a ;u{.1'!d ·Wunan..~1tO· ~itend the Flag
l?•Y ·cvel\lOl)l.•poh.oored by the Laguna
l\lasonl~~lt. 672.
;Cet$ion.le1. will be beJd at 11 a.m. at
thf 'Dag jSole1near the. memorial columr.
ha Heiskt· P.ark. '
0, w. Prit,e1 an. Ame~iC.n Legion or. fleer~ has m~ arr~ments to ha ve
it0lled' An1eriC:ab Fl~ ~.cleaned free ol aiarge:-prior to their11Ule 14 display.
Price noled tbal flags .90iltd or tattered
~ ... •lzl(sbould 11c·deslroyed. Fl•gs
""l''be ·!Oleo to the 1'quna Beach Fire
Dejiar\lneol< for destniclioo.
8 :J>eri&h in Fire;
'·Toll May Molllll
THREE LAKES, Wlp. (UPI) -At least
eight ~.!!'re kUfed toilay when a ~WD fire raced thr«fgb a lakeside
Jog ~In and the sherUf's department aald tt 1•eipect.ed t"o f1nd more .. ,
The cuualty count in the fire that
deslroyed the story-&nd-a·halr Jog cabin
rose as firemen dug lhrt1ugb the rubble.
•
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DAlt.T PILOT PMhl "Tlfll Tll111
GOOD WORK, SIS-Miss Mer·
maid, Fountain Valley's Donna
Flory, gets a congratulatory
kiss from brother Clare, 3.
Fountain V all.ey' s
Donna Flory New
Mesa 'Mermaid'
West Orange County lovelies captured
two of the three top honors Sunday af·
temoon in the annual beauty contest at
the COsta Mesa·Newporf Harbor Lions
Club Fish Fry.
Seventeen·year-0ld Donna F I o r 1
"avenged" an earlier loss to. Miss Foun·
tain Valley, EUl?n Evans, by capturing
the coveted Miss Mermaid trophy over a
field of 11 girls that included Miss Evans
and Westminster's reigning titlist, Jayme
Boyd.
The new 1'.fiu Mermaid is a tiny blue·
eyed blonde who measures 35--24+$ and is
in her junior year at Fountain Valley
High School. Sbe lives at 10297 Cardinal
Lane and hopes to become a teacher.
Miss Boyd, 18, of 8320 Wells Road,
Westminster, took runner·up honors in
the Mermaid"' co'll}peU(io~L Shf is a ~enio.r
ll 'Folintaiil Valley 111tH and list•
measurements of'$.21-35.
·--------------
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·'..."'·~~ :.t ...... .. Victim ·· of·; ·sea ' . -··~ .. , .. . . f· .~-· .. ;l;~ii" ~sv· ..-,·
.,. ....... ...,... • 1.
1)'1\e ... ~ued loday for~-'""'" sw"Yivqn 6 attor~ tlod1e;1 ol seven \ ~q:i<ons )oowl[,~ tiave be<a aboard , " .
tKe ··•~oot ' ~~will when the ''U-iHl•IUIJ #ch' ._·,, wreCbil on Sacramento Reef ' ,. Oii Bala ·ca!Uomla"!Uf zs. '
'. PrVfession'al dlMis who searched the . .
sunien hulk for the nnt time Friday 1111#•~ ' re~ finding no bodies aboard.
The 5¢eond of two .bodtes given up by
t~ sea 9f1 Pu~~.~ Ant~n~o, 200 mUa sOutf of SU ~go. has beeit Identified-as
Gerald Cam&lock, 49, of 3220Z Vista de
Catalina, South Lal!UOa. • · \ .. -i::.-• •
Comstock, an electtlcal~enainett, was
one or the nine person! a"board 'the
Goodwill on a trip from Cabo.S.n Lucas
to EnseJµid8:. . • .
Owner ~.Larrabee,' a HWlUngton
Part[ tndustTtB.llst and part'time Newport
Be<ieh rHident, was also aboard the
Goodwill when she struck Lhe reef,
presum?b.1~.orl the night.of 1'.fay 2._5.
Ttic oi;il.Y other ~Y.. from the wrecked ~'wU 'tbat d'I1mSrnith. 15, of 18842
Se.nl!ll.-Mariaoa, Founliin V,a11ey. He was
emplofed u a deckJtand on the yactlL
Diven reported no sign of the three
srilall boatt carried abol:rd the Goodwill.
rt was previously reported that the boats
""'re still in davits on the yacht's stern.
But company officials of Larrabee's L &
F Machine Shop said it was possible the
boats could have been carried away by
the .seas which constantly rake the reef.
The yacht itself wa.s reported as being
broken up by the surging sea and JG.foot
waves which break over the reef.
Flood Aid Requested
WASHINGTON (AP) -Unprecedented
winter floods and a possibly record
snowpack in the Sierra Nevada .moun·
lains brought 70 state a"nd local officials
from Califomi3 today to appeal ror
doubled federal funding of flood control,
reclamation and navigation projects.
\ • • ' • . ' ' ' .
\ I I. lfl 1llC•1A1• il .. u~ ''•'~''" . ..
111411 1' Cll~ll#IL
OFF COURSE -Map indi·
cates 19(;8iion of wreck of
Goodwill, which went down oft
Baja California after hittlng
Sacramento Reef off Punta San
Antonio. Some yachtsmen fa-
nliliar with area speculate
ship's navigator failed to ac-
count for strong on shore drift
in setting course for Ensenada.
Talking Gets UCI Studenm--..
Voice in Academic Senate
Students who a aiuple of months: ago
forced recess of. the UC Irvine faculty's
AeadeRiic' 8'!:nate wJth lbeir tactics · or
talking out today have won full voice in .
Senate meetings.
timidatins.
Most pr¢.epors attending Senate
meetings h<fv'el shown tolerance for the
students and sympathy for their desire to
win a voice In faculty affairs.
Vicki Yoak, 16, was chosen Miss Costa
?itesa in the judges'. balloting. Miss Yoak.
who succeeds 1968 queen Pamila Reed of
liuntlngton Beach, is a sophomore at
Costa ?ifesa High School and measures 36·
26-36.
• Students now will be gfven the same
privilege to speak as professors. They
will not however, have a vote.
Some ·weeks ago; professors decided to
add non·voting student members to a11
faculty commi ttees -about 40 student
appointments in all.
The contest was conducted before a
large and appreciative crowd at the main
st3ge of the Costa Mesa city park where
the Lions' 24th annual Fish Fry was held
Friday through Sunday.
School Shelter Asked
SACRA!\tENTO (UPI) -State School
Supefintendenl fl.1ax Rafferty and tv.'o
other top state officials today called for
the inclusion of fallout shelters In school
construction and alteration projects.
During the· past year, all students who
\\'ished to attend have regulrly be en
granted admissiOn to Academic Senate
sessions. But only two student reprcsen·
tatlves have had the right to speak.
The students ' presence has been very
largely felt and at times they .have out·
numbered faculty . By applause and OC·
cassional groans or boos the dissident
student element has angered some pro-
fessors and reinforced the voice of
others.
A few weeks ago Gerald Whipple of the
medical school teferred to them as "the
howling claque." Chairman of lnform a·
tion and Computer Scieace J uli.·.n
Feldman complained that they were in·
Then the question before the Senate
last w~k was whether to give Uioae 40
students equal privil ege of debate in the
general faculty meetings. Jn a surprise
twist, an ameodmenl by Chairman of
Organismic .Biolgy Grover Stephens tp
extend speaking rights to the entire stu-
dent body passed.
Only four or five hands were shown in
opposition among the about 50 professon:
attending the mtf:!ling. Among the better
lhan 200 professors who did not attend
are some who have stopped c9ming to
Ar:od--mic Senate meetings because they
arc disgusted with the student clamor
and. they feel, faculty sellout.
How to kick the
Clyde "\\'asn'r practicing
ealesn1anship. At I east, 11ot
knowingly. He ,,·ae trying to be
helpful, beeau&e tl1at'11 his job.
U that'• old fashioned, I guea1
we're pilty.
A lot of retail people haven't
learned how to listen. They
want to U!e the mo111h before
they use the ear11 . • • een1e-meen1e-Every &lore owi1er ll1ink& 11is
store i1. a cut above any other
slo~ an(I certainly we're a1
proud of oor 1tore a11 any atore
o wner could be. And yet, we
don't try lo kid ounel1'e8. Our
merehandiee, s e I e c t ion and
va1uea are quite •ppealiog. but
let'• face it, On the "·hole
~e're rather like •nY. o ther
good men'11 store.
• • m1n1e-moe
Do11't et'er a&k a customer "·hy
lte b11 y1 from you,
We learned that when one
cu11omer gave u1 a funny look
t~•nd replied, "For ab&0lutely
•;no· reHOn wball«>e\.'tr. ''
Not bei11g reil 11ure· "·hal he
1neant by tl1a1, "'e 1hu1 up and
eold him t"·o 1111i11.
The reat011 we n1e11tjon this
i11 l>ecaU1e the other day one of
our cueton1 ert did tell 11s ,,-J1 y
he bought from u1, We learned
1ha1 he is a practicin~ psy·
ehologi11· in AriabeiDJ. While
waiting for u1·10 write up his
purebaee-he uid some nice
thlnfp about ut, and then
Hked ii we'd be lnterated in
knowing wby he dro.. el .. r
down beni to •pend ISO on a
1pdrt co.11.
Naturally we ~a n-ted to
know why.
Well, atlde frocn enjoying
· •n excu!e to \'Jai l the ~ on
• >pleuant IU.Orl)' afterqOOtt, he
sa1'1 hia main reaton wu our ,.;Ir;,.,,..,, 1o luwi. He hod
flnolly been .lriven out of tl1e
--~------
hahit .
a tore where .he u11ed to buy hi11
clothe1, a t·ery fine 1tore by
the way, becau11e whene\'er he
went in to pick out a 1uit the
·uleaq;aan had lmmedi•tely
lried to teD him what the •tore'
,,·anted him to b11y.
Whal thi1 man w•oted 10 do
was to boy R01nething, not be
sold 11omethi118·
La11t year lie wa1 agreeably
~urprised, on a chance vl1it to
Bidwell '&, "'hen our Clyde
R.eye1 took e.noul b intere1t,
before ever laking a auit from
the rack, to. •1k about hi1 color
and pattern preferences, and
to IMrn oomething about the
kind of atyleo be bod been buy.
Ing ehewbere.
There'e onlv one 1hin:r \\C
l1a1'e that 110 oiher nu~n1s Store
as. Us.
"\'f e t1·y to he friendly nn1I
l1elpful, hut we know one
thing tl1at may be significant,
Oar c11s tomer1 are u1ore loyal
than n1ost.
In1tead of u sing the eenie-
meenie-mini~moe 1 y a t em of
picking a llore, you might try
bnying from ua "for aboolutely
no reason wbataoe"f'er. ''
Jack Bidwell
3467 Via Udo, Jn1t beyond the Arch .. overpH• o .. r
Pocllic Coa11 Highway. Telephone 6734510.
Prive betw .. n Udo Theatre & my a tore le pork In reor.
Co1Pright J 969,-Jaek B!dwell.
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:· Newpo:rt ·DIJrhor,
voe 62, ·No. 137, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
,., .
-4 .-~"\,__.
ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFoRNIA
Viet Pullou,t S \ ... .. ..
oOII . . •
•
Nixon Says 25,00() Coming .Home by August
'ALOHA, MR. PRESIOENT'
Honolulu Stopover
Nixon Believes
Midway Enhances
Chance of Peace
HONOLULU (UPI) -President Nixon
went to Midway Island hOping to enhance
the chances for ' peace in Vietnam. He
came away thinking be did.
His meeting with President Ngiiyen
Van Thieu of South Vietnam ti:rou&hl a
feeling of allied unity Amei'iClll officials
hoped would force the Communist• to
aUandon their hopes for a Nixon-Thieu
6plit.
Nix.on moved what he considered lo be
his blue chips into the arena by pro-
mising to start the immediate withdrawal
ol 15,000 American troops from the war
zone, to be replaced by South Vietnamese
forces.
Thieu responded with JaYish praise for
the American Preside.nt and an emotional
denial he had any basic '"[£ettnces with
the Nixon administration.
This mood of Midway left Nixon with
the feeling the United States, South Viet-
nam and their other allies in the war had
improved the'ir bargaining position in
Paris.
The reasoning was that the allies had
built a solid front against Viet Cong or
North Vietnamese attempts in Pari.5 to
split them, or cause the "divorce" Com·
munist delegates mentioned last week .
Probably more important than the
words of the puss statements or the
lan.uage of_ their communique was the
moQ<t of Midway ..-hospitable, \\•ith
Thleu approaching erru·siveness at times.
I~ was clearly diUerent from early
meeUn(s between fonner President Lyn-
don B. Johnson and leaders of the Saigon
government. Thieu went out of his way
twice to deny any differences of opinion
wifb Nlxon. The American President, as host,
nsponded with much the same attitude.
U.S. officials felt Hanoi could only be im-
pre!sed by this unity and react, peirha'ps
gradu&lly, at the peace table.
Nixon at the same time left himseH
room to maneuver, not spelllna: out hOw
the troop wl:Uldrawal would come about
or just when more Amerjcan Gls would
be md home. .
The two presidents steered around the
11ubject of a coalition government, with
the. American position emerging that il
was up to Saigon to determine the degree
to which the Viet Cong participate in lhe
Saigon governrr.enL
Thieu had said during his state visit to
Soulb Korea two Weeks ago that he would
never accept a coalition government with
the communists.
* * *
By MERRIMAN SMITH
U,IWJllM ....... __.
MIDWAY ISLAND (UPI) -President
Nixon has announced that 25,000 U.S.
tr~ will be withdrawn from South
Vietnam by the end of August .and in-
dicated others will leave as military con-
ditions warrant.
At the same time, Nixon backed South
Vletname~e President Nguyen Van Thieu
in opposing the impositlon of any
coalition governrnent, includ!M the
Communists, on the wartorn aoulheast
Asia republic.
Nixon made his troop reduction an-
nouncement Sunday at a summit con·
ference with Thieu on this tiny island in
S~rfers Urge
Newport Drop
License Law
By JEROME F. COLUNS
Of IM O.Hr ,lltt Sleff
Ninety-six surfers today a.sited the city
of Newport Beach to abandon .its unique
licensing of surfboards and to open up
an area south of the Newport Pier to
full·time surfing.
A petition from the youths, all Newport
residenu, declares:
"It is our opinion that the surfing
license law is unfair and lhou.ld ·be re-
voked. It. does not make sense to tax
surfers to use the ocean and at the same
time not tax swimmers."
The petition also asserts that the
license decals "art ugly and do not stay
on su rfboards well."
City councilmen two months ago
Instructed the nlunlclpal ~f to C®·
sider cancellation of the ··lhfee-year-old
JicenstnJ ordinance. Tonight. .councilmen
are ei,ec:ted to turn the !lkignat.urt
petition over to the staff ai pert of that
study.
City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt
said today it is unlikely any meve to-
ward doing away with the licensing
requirement ($3 per ~) ffin be made
tor at least a few months.
He explained that the lletnses are iss~ for the Calendar year period. "If
we were to decide to abandon the pro-
gram-and I'm not sure what the council
might do at this stage -it w0n't be
abandoned until Jan. 1 oert year," be
said.
Pat 'Hanifin, 600 Balboa Avenue,
Balboa Island, was rU'St to sign the
petition. He said if a section of the beach just south of the pier is turned over to
the surfers, as requested, it w9ul? be
t.he only all-day surfing area in the city.
""By openillg this one area," aa1d
Hanilin, "we would be able to surf
when we please while still leaving
swimmers with a huge are.a. Surfers
have as much right to use the ocean
during the day as swimmers do."
At present, various .sections of the
beachfront in Newport 11nd Corona del
Mar are used exclusively by surfers,
but only al des.ignaled hourly periods.
Lifeguards control the use under the
"blackball" system. which ir:ivolves
hoisting a flar signalling an end to surf·
ing.
Market Robber
Gets $700 Cash
A bandil, usin& the ruse of kiting h.ia
wallet at closing time, took $700 Jn cuh
at gunpoint Friday night f r o m
Albertson's Market in Corona del Mar.
The bearded gunman was the' last
customer oot of the store at 10 p.m.,
store aides told police..
After he was locked out, he returned to
tbe door and asted to come back inside
to Eind bis missing w1Uel.
A clerk let the robber in and the man
pulled a short-barreled revolver. He
repeatedly told clerks, "I oeed the money
desperately ... boy, do I.''
During the holdup the suspect cocked
.lbe revolver, keeping it pointed at a 22·
year-old clerk e.mptyilli ihe store safe.
Couritians to Greet Nixon
The public has been invited lo greet President Nixon lonlght on
bis return to Orange County from his Midway tal)<s witb President
Nguyen Van Thieu of South Vietnam, spokesmen at El Toro Manne
Corps Air Station anllounced today. ·-
Air Force One, carrying the Presidential party, is expected to
touch down at El Toro at 5:30 p.m.
Mr. Nixon is lo greet !be crowd, possibly say a few words and
depart for bis San Clemente home with his family by helicopter.
Marine officials said the fates would be open lo the public at
4 p.m. Parkinf Is limited. The b .. e i1 accessible via Santa Ana Free-
way by the Sand Canyon Road or Culver Road exits lo Trabuco Road
and the main gate. • ·
The Presidential party Is to leave for Washington, D.C. Tuesday
about noon. , ..
·-
the P1clft~. It was the seventh mee.uoc ol
a U.S. president wilh l...t,n GI the
Saiglln 1ovmuneot. The)' appearoci af-
fable and "'lued, c:oofldent of the "°""" GI the war and mildly optimistic about
peace. •
Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird,
SIGriOloo~·
To l'rGop C.f P.qe I
who new back· to W~on from
Midway~ said Jn Wash1ngton todly that
more troops m1y be p.ille<!_ out ln August
but gave no fiaure.s.
At the same time, Pentagon sources in-
dicated the 25,000 troops being pulled out
I •
... • • ·-,. • • 4 • . . . . .. . will be transferred, at leall lftllWll', )0
Okinawa and H1waii rather than .._
returned directly lo the ~
United Statts.
The annoonce·me.rit of the trOop
withdrawal and ~r ded,skm ~
by Nixon and, Thieu drt,w ' mlRd receP'." tion . The North Vietnamese,, PM' Vitt
Cong and Moscow de119Unced the move as
a "meaningless ••. prop1a1a;n-<J·•
maneµver" dt!lgne<I to •Rptase. anti'!_lr
critics in the United States aud else.wtieR
around tbe _world.
Reaction fo Washlugton . alao varied.
Sen&te Republican Lucier Everett M.
Dirben uJd it repmented the. "firlt
.
N-M Teachers • • ~ 1 . . .
1.n :Class But ..
Marking Tune
By THOMAS FOlmJNE
Of .... ...., ""' ....,
!lewport-r.lua school teochen tau~!
cl.ass a1 usu,I '°:dlY and mBI~ed llrne11n.
t~~ aalai'y diapute· · !V~th . ~ ·sc~l
~d.. .
They wn waiting ·on · a · ~ of
teacher• rt~ttng · ta(b' i C-11 o o I ·-1.... . . . _.....,.. ·• ' r•. Here0
11 ·the w thin ' llloo•f.oi..t•• Ille . '" .,u . ca .. ~· .i;r.::: lull today· UJ&t fo owed ·.-~ "PW-.rlJ''•
nilnlmum teacblng day ~11kout,~·-tbe
scboo\ ~·; ~1!.AI .Frlc(i7 to reqpen
ntg~1tlons. . .in..,:~·~ ial4 ·U Is ,.m•••·to.."-· =~1;:::.~ an avtrlae uli·ry ~uti:·Of "41. ftom
... 1 per·'"' to ~:.-. • . T .. cjier UIO!'iaUoil Ie..ien m l!idn& lot••M.f' •ftwo..-~JM :=-•·J~ !'!U~ t~--~-~ --.. , ... ~~ and -, .. _ ,.., • .., car..r (<~,._ ..
they '!al l.llC"UJ.
The bolrd bM 1akl·U l> ·wlOlnil ·o IC-
cept.-"ollrlflcalloo of ftdl'~ 11DUI . t)le
budget is finally ·ldopted In August, INl
wan ta· no part •of, medJaUQo:· 1
"WltJrthe:re-.-of thll baud
we feel cllrif5caUon·Qf flCl ... aJJ we need
to mu.d\lco 11em1-.ir-.. ••rmt11orn
to . reuseu thelr Posf"Uot1," said Dart
Hal;e, encutJw: 1t~re·ta:r·1 o( ~
te•cben' Newport·M,W Ed-aeiatlo·n
Al!Ociatkwl. . • ~ ' . I
Special Flag Day Program Tf:achiftrdi,pute tht \lffi'IP .. ~
tag• pay. lncrttae used "' tlle ;boud.
Basically, they ·flgure tt differently~
Ttacher1· aeparate the 1verace IJ p,r-
ce:nt Increue for all teactien fro.m the
4.S per<:<nl"lncreriltol ~a-thlnll of dllllrkt teachen l't far on ad-
diUorud year ·of ex~. Set by Exchange Club
E11per)ence lncr""""'t . il)cre,.. Ocily
are given to teachers""'tbe.il first .U -yrU.
(or leas depind!lul; up on the.ulent of Special ceremonies in observance of
Flag Da)' are planned by the Newport
Ha•bor Exchange Club Saturday at
r\ewport Beach City Hall , George
Doubledee, president of the club an·
nounced today.
A nag which has flown over the na·
Market Plunges
Over Hike in
Interest Rate.
NEW YORK (AP.) -Tht stock market
fell back on 1 broad...,ront today iJl re·
action to an increase in banks' prime
rate to a record high Of S'h perCenl from
7'h percent.
On the New York Stock Exchange,
declines of individual issues ¢xceeded ad·
vances I,O'i2 to 298.
The Dow Jones average of 30 In·
dU!lrials closed with a loss of · fi.n 1l
tt!.05 lifter having been down l.OI al
noon. .
The Associated Press 60-stock 1vtrage
d~·U io :116.S, • new lilt low, wilh
industrials off '3.4, rails off t.I and
uUUties off 1. I.
The New York Stock Excllange com-
mon Stoel tndax sluinped 45 ctnts in the
averagt price of 1 share. ·
ffii:fffi) volume was a moderate to.ls
million shares compar'td •Ith tl.U
million &Hares Friday. ·
Broken said that while an increase tn
the prlmt rale had been widely apecttd.
lht mo.e tn I~ percent, rather than I
percent, WU IUl'pl'iainl· •
The market hu been dee:Unloa: for
more fhln three. weeks under the
prwun ol lhe t11HI ,,,.,,.y" 1lfjJOl!ori a.-i
1low JIJ'Olrf'S& toward pe1ce m-~ittriam.
'
tion"s Capitol "has been donated by ReP.
James B. Ult (ft.Tustin). for the affair.
·The piogram wtll ,~'11n at t :;i(l 1,m.
The Third Marine Aircraft Wing Band
rrom El Toro wtfl p~ay: Su.pervisor Alton .
E. Allen will speak. M1yor Doreen
t.farshaft will accept the ·nag. A detail of
Marines will raise it.
Girl Sroub and Boy SCouts will
participate in· the ceremOnies. ·
··Stock : /lf.vkeU . . . . ' ' .. • l
NEW YORK (AP) .-' T!l.:.tlick ll)Artet
clb!ed with 'I wide·t1n1t~'.10.. Mondiy
in reacUon ta·an ihcfease m·blni1' Prime ·
rate to an all-time ,hilh oi •~ )>etct11t
from 7'12 ptrcegt. fSft quotaUona,~Jtacts
t0.11). • .
their llG\fiUonaf sclioolln1. ) .
Taking alone the 5.1 percent a:Jven all
of them, te1chen don't thini "they are
getUng sucb a a:reit deal. .
Hake iiay1 the cost of living Increase
for ·he · firll half · of this ye.ar has ap-
proacned six percept. Jn • other woi'di,
lhose te1chers to a:et 5.1 percent (the
ones with many year~ of eipt~)
would just hold their owu in ape.od1n,a:
power.
Ha~e 1Jao c11led into arious quuUon school dlJtricl a<rii/i>iatr.aU"1·0rtpilltl ...
how rnany ··'¥1W~ teak pirt Iii t)ie Th~ay· protl\lt. · · ' ...
A apcikesmail lor ·the .~htinde~t sal~ it only ftve of 25 flemtntary tcbriols
did -inx tracberl 1 Jrlik · out • of . l~ c1.,.r00;ri to llqld . auperv!Jlil r<Cieall"'1
: . . (See SALAl\IES. Ptp II. . ~ ' : . . .
Senate Confir.ms IJurger
As 15th ·chie1 ·jlt8iic i :
WASHINGTON (AP) -"Tile :>wta
gave res0m1ding ap,roval MondaJ. to
President Nlsoo's cholce ol Jud1e War-
ren E. Burger \o bt th 15th ~hie! fys'lict
of the United States. , ·
The action, w"hich could open a polilble
new era In the. trend or Judiclal decllioqs,
came ·afler , ~nate, RapubU~n Leader-
Everlll• ~· Dirl!J<n pradlci.i! Burfl! will,
take 1 mkldle. roadi u cbW )Ul!Uc!e,
bftc9mlng .,.Jlher an~a.;cb ,CooiwvaliV<
nor an arch llbtnl.
But 'actien Wal dejayad IOI' a ilJM \IY
aome ~ Wlmla '""° ctlliQlad jlla opted GI lhe.drtw lor ~.'l)IY "'"ghtu~.todolaY"~ ' Bttr(<I' will ~ .q.MI J~~:arr
W4l"Ten, wbo .il ~.u•u:!te•M Court eoftcludel "" , ...... ,. ,,,.
Warrtni coun11 ~. hi.Vt' ,,been . . .
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llflUlti tHl/IHfll,,' '•
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Qf!': coi!Rse . ..;, · Map Ind!·
cates location of wreck · ol
Goodwill, wl)icll. went down off
Baja ,,Callfomta after hitting.
Sacramento-Reef off Puntii San
A!llonlo. SOD!• ,yacht.men: tl-
mWar with .area sl>flCUlate
ship's navigator failed lo ac-
count for strong::0n shore drift
m·setting Coui:se-for Enaenada.
Searc'1, Goes On
. Fot Victirfis' of
. ' . . .1 ... , . . i '
..Yac'ht Sinking . . . ,_
By ALMOi!f i.ocµ1cy . ..., ................
~· ieafd< l ~ war for • "'"'*'" ll!d!Or1 iiOdiei . "' ·••.e.n Am~ ~ to have -alloanl
the Ht ·fOOI achooner Goodwill when the
yacbt •• ; wrecked on SacralrieQto Reef
off Baj.r ·ea1uor\ila May 2$.
Pl))teakiniJ diV~ who Se.rcbed the
SWlftn hulk for ihe · fint tbne Friday
repiined fi!>dln« ... bodia •'!o<r)l-,r,
111er-ortwo-~ ... -11y-
lh• ,.. off Punta San Antonio, 2111 mllot
IOUlh 6fSanDteg0: tibbeea·-u
GerOld CoibstOcJc, 41, ·o1 ·mi "Vlita-de
Calalina, SOuth Lqu ... ' • ' . .
• • ' I • • . • • Coo)Jtoc~. an el•clt;ical .aljj-.;.waa
ODe · o( ·tbe ·liine --·the G6cichlm on a lrip·f-'Cabo su,i.aeu
to Euenac14: • . · · : .
Owner Ralph. Lariabte; a llilnlllllon
Part ~t an~ part tlm!I NeWporl
BHCh· resident; Wu also aboard tbt
Goodw1ll wtie.n she struck 1 ihe reef,
pre.sum.ably on the riight of May 25..
The only other body front the wrecked
yacJ!t _was t~t of Tim ~mlth, 15.. of lllU
Santa Mariana, Fountain Valley. Hf.was
employed as-I deckh&n!i on the yabht.
Divers rtportrd no sign of \be ·tbr>e
smali boall carried ""°""' lbi Gciodwill.
II wa1 pre.vlou,sl,f re.ported tbl.t 1he boait.
we.re still In dl'fll! on the yacbt'l.ttttn.
But compa111 citid1!1 a( Lambee'I L ..
F M1chine (lllopc*"'!'ll ... u ~ble.lhe
boats could -liOlii oarrlOdl away by
the NU which constan1'y1 r~-~ r~.·
'Ille .7acht ll>elf .... ~ .'fported u belnC
broken. up by. the surlh1C·,.. _and 30-loot
waves which brealt over .the r*f. . "
Orul•·
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t ~· ' ·"l b I WlJS .I'-' u • ~ I i.;. • ••~I\ 'f't-'';" .. ~ ~ ~
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Ei!h Fr~ .. -: .
")\;,'.~ .. '-. ~~-... , •,:· Big~est Yet " :~ixon Moving Political
·c~nter of U.S. to West
By NORMAN ANDERSON
Of .. 0.llT 'lW Steff
· _ JUll like Landon, Moscow, Paris, the dateline SAN CLEMENTE (or ~ NEWPORT BEACH or LAGUNA BEACH) locates the capital of the United
Statea -even though temporarily -and Indicates e\ren more definitely where
, ~.political center of the nation is moving -to the West and particularly
California. • . . · ·.f ~ ~The selection bf President .Richard Nixon of hf(Wtille''House West on
the Oran&e Coast is the ·Jatest and mo&t impressive step
in a process that began more than a century ago when
P!esjdent Lincoln financed Ute· Unjcm, dlJ!ing the ~vll War
wt lb gold and silver from califomla and Nevada ·mines,
* , Shifting of the power bllanee lrom East to West has
1' been rapid since World War 11. CaWom>a ii now the
, largest and thus -poUtlcally -the mcot powerful of
states.
Considering the politics of it alone, loot at these .. !acts:·
· fhe moil powerful man in the free. -world -· Presldent Nixon -is a
Westerner and another Westerner is one c4 u.e· amall nuaibe.r of most import.
ant .men in the nation: Earl Warren, former aovemor of CaJUornia, is chief ·justi~ ·With them, as .potent political figures is a Californian, ·Robert Finch,
1 ~a member of the"Pres1dent's Cabinet (and a good bet to succeed his boss if
.• aft :goes well ).
· This is not the first time . a triumvirate of CaliforniallS has been politic-
;. ally important. In the 1950s Nuron was vice president, Warren chief justice
.. and Sen. WUUam F. Knowland was Senate majority leader. . * . • J;lere are some other indicaUons of the West:s importance:
"· • Nixon's strength In lhe .,.. held llnn In 1168 and contributed mightily
·.to hla narrow victory. in wbJch he did not carry one major urban area. But he
overwhelmingly carried Orange and San Diego COUDUel and aot California'•
fO -electoral votes. He might not have needed IllinoJs._ ·
The political life of the Kennedys has been sealed In the West.
Johl) F. Kennedy went frqm Los Angeln to bteome Prtaide.nt of the
Untied Slates (having to deleat a Westerner In Ille process) and Robert F.
..
For Sale: Southland tradition, only wed
once a ye.ar in January by U'l old com·
munlty get-toeether ~ Pasadena.
Veteran observers say they· won't be ..
surprl.Sed if the above advertisement
should pop up in the ~thland press one
of these years, following the 24th AMual
Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club
Fish Fry.
'fh~ three-Oay Harbor Area celebration
su~ssed r&ll . prior yem, just a~
predicted, and Lions Club members today
are wearily working over·the books for
ap accurate a~ount of proceeds and
bi11S. '
Lions Club secretary Forrest Foster to-.
day esumated the gross intake at roughly
$74,000, a healthy chunk of which wUl g0
to Harbor An!a youth services and agen-
cies aiding the blitJ,d.
The increase is about $6,000 over last
year.
}lighlight of the Friday-through-Sunday
event was the Saturday parade, which
drew anywhere from 30,000 to 100,-000
persons,. depending upon the source .
"'It had lo be the biggest ever " said para~e chairynan Cliff Wesdorf, 'adding
that tf anything, the 2lh: hour procession
was too long for television crews
videot,ping it.
Police Auction
Due Saturday
Kellnedy's poliUcaJ fortunes -and lile -died in Loa Angeles.
Primaries in the West on more than one occasion have changed the At Cit y d course of a man, or a natJon. . y ar s
It was California in 1961 which made -for a few short moments -. ..
Robert F. Kennedy the front runner for the Democratic presidential' Ii~~: .-: . What has UI& wheels, "hair aftd floats"
Uon. alt.er an earlier Western primary, In oregon. had appeared pe...!bl7, lo" -The Ne~ Beacli Police .l)epartment
have dealt him a fatal blow. _ • ·• ·• "" Aucqoo to be held at 10 ~ taturday at . * . ~''<-the city Yard, 6lrl Supeliof A'Ve.
. It wu the Calilomia Jlri!na,ry ol.!1!11. :w.lllclf , ... Barry Goldw.W "-Well , maybe lhe auetW·119esn't really
himself•. Westerner -the J\!Pµ~c;an~· • tfal.~uaa (m·s.n Fran-floe\. But lhe ~13 !har,fl:O.l!l> lor grabs
C15C01 InCldentally) over •an ~. ~kel'eller. I •.. • do. ~
· And during the· tine Barri 601 · ie.r:• ..)fader of, the Republic.in 'nle hafi? Two new ~wigs aie for sale.
Party, the Oran&e Coast, out of the Balboa Bay Club, wu the party's ma1n· And It doesn't take much imagination
headquarters. , to figure out that the wheels are attached
Again it was a californla primary -that Of ?956 -with which Adlai to M bicycles, in various stages of repa ir Stev~ knocked ow.,._~ K~~ _and clln~ed bis second Democra\ic and despair. presidential nomination. -·" .,, •• · ·~ (.. , · ·. . • • c;>oe officer estimated that some of tlie An Oregon prlma'.ry end~. for all time 1thi .'ptesfdential aSplraUons of .. bikes can be had for 50 ceflt.S. "But those
Harold siamn. oneUme boy ""'"~" !'l!Ae -.-•hl.lost,1if..iN.·1.0, . ,f~lo,.Jjre\ty .luld sh~' '-l!l"ltd. Thomas , E. Dewey (who subsequently JiM' t1lS 1slem,a~ Wftlte 1f6Ule "~ fo ~-(°i)zen f>b4ts thit'Wtif be ·auctioned
Harry Truman). off range from a four-foot rowboat made
Callfcrnta again played the vital role in the political fortunes of another of plastic to a fiberglass dlnghy "to a
PresldenL sail~ 'l11ere 4re l\llQA.('lr.~abots, and
It WU the deal between Sen. Hiram John19n of California (and there's lhe &11J&z-111Cfl '1e 16Wlfllli sold for as
D)Ol'e to his role in U.S. life) and I.he Te111 deJea:11t1~ which gave New York little as '20 at the auction.
Gov. Franklin Roosevelt the Democratic presidential nomfnatlon in 1932 and Proceeds from the sale benefit the
made the Texas favorite son, House Speaitr John'·N: Gamer, vlcp president. general fund of the Newport Beach city * ' . . treasury, to do with as the city council
Johnson, as a powerful man (ton) a potent at.ate. elayed othet influential sees flt .
roles. He helped to make two otbt{ -presidents anti .mJgbt have ~ one him· All . th merchandise has a past. It's
self, or at least a vice presidenl • unclaimed property that's been lying
It was his. candidacy as a favorite son that contributed to a deadlocked' around for sil months, or it's been im·
1920 GOP National Convention that aetUed In a smoke-filled room tn •favor of pounded as evidence and nobody has
Warren G. Harding. Johnson haughtily refused the vice presidential nomina-claimed It or been able to identify it. -tion~and--Calvin Coolidge got it ~ &IODI -~ a _coup]! yeail later, the So no~ it can be bqught by the public.
While House. . ' ~ ·· ' --. . 1There:s a list of what will be going, and
Johnson playe.d a role, somewhat smillt'r, In making Woodrow Wilson lt s available at the records section of the
President of the United States. Then governor of Caillomia, Johhlon was a police department.
leader of the Progressives in 1912 who fought the GOP Old Guard in. behalf of . Ground rules for the auction are
Ex-President Theodore Roosevelt against Presldeot·Wllliam Howard Taft: They !tmple. Anyone can play, but all
· lost to the machine and the Progressives formed theit own party, wttb John-paY'!lents mu.st be made in cash im·
son the vice presidential candidate ,otti TR'• pr:eatdential ticket. The party ran mediately after a bid is accepted, and all '
second, splitting tbe Republican vote and electing Wilson a minority presidenL purchases must be taken from the lot at
And as a final fact, Wilson owed -tn ·a-manner of speaking -his re· the end of the auc tion.
election in 1916 to California. Charles Evans Hughts, GOP nominee, went to Despite the fact that a lot of the
bed believing·mmseir ·Prestdent.:elect. .. Final returns early the nm morning, goodies look new, none of them have any
gave the state and the election to Wilson. guar?n~ee that they 'll act new, old, or
The West has had a great role in U.S. J)fe up to now. With Richard Nixon otherwise. . leading the way politically who can foretell what will come nut? Come and get 1t -a stereo tape deck ' -for your car, a fishing pole, a purse, a
camera, or an accordion.
Food Strike Wanin2?
LOO ANGELES (AP) -NegoUations in
the Los Angeles arta supennarket strike
ruumed today wit!t the Retail Clerks
Union saying settlement is near and the
Food Employers Council denying it.
DAILY PILOT
OltANGI! COAST PUll.ISHING COMPANY
loMrt N. We1d
' -
1',_llttl'll 1111! Plolbll•htr
'J1clr: R. Curley
Vl<.t PrMlde~I ll'ld Ge11tr11 Me~ter
Tho"''' x .. "u ....
Tko111t• /.. Mur,hin1 Mallllllnt,~lklf; ' ~
JNolM F.: C61liM ·~ .. ldr _ --'lw ·uit.t . _, ............... -l211 ~ .... •·i~'l.1'l~rtl
Mtlli"I A~t '~g,, ffit. IJ:?I, '266J
•-O.-
I -··-----
. -· •
Youths Selling
Chances on CdM
Center Carnival
Young baseball players from the
Harbor Area will be going door-to-door
11elllng chances on a $500 U.S. Savlngs
Bond, to be given away at the Qirona de1
?-.1ar Youth Center Carnival June 21 and
22. '
Rides, games and huMrtds of prizes
will b! offered at the sixth annual event.
. a~ ~e}ium bal!Oons will fly over the
camivet$ite at 5th and Iris streets. 1'li aim of the event is to raise money
fat"" JlnltOvements at the Community
YbUtl'!: center. ~s from last year's
carnival financed a teen room .
· SUch far-ranging activities as a c0-0p
-nur~ry school, a teen program, and arts
and crafts lnsttuctionJu'e offered by the
non-profit Youth Center. which was
founded in 1954 by local citizens and
service clubs for children throughout the ·llaibor Amo. · · .;,.· · •
"'Mannina: the ·-canilvaJ boOtM .,,u.lbe
~t .'!( ll!e ~jco,clu~, that 11111>-11offl!if -. ;'11!e1 ~!Id• we Balboa LIO.nl.-N"1Jort ·Opt1m1sls, lle,;pott'
·Harbor~. Club, Corooa·del:'Mtr'
Olimbet ot~.ll!d'khranll, and
Ule' J-1:bell.Cllll>" ll<OpOR•lloacb. ~ SCbe4UJ6iS fl'Oin~Moft ui,tU l lJ.mY,eech•
" ~\ht.f~~.UI h>!lude,lio,t'dop, ~, end ~ ~inds of ~el
-o\dinbi!Oo a ~ ... _._.., .. ' ... -~ .
8 Perish in Fire
THBEE LAKES. Wis. ~UPI) -Al least
el&ht perootli were klll<d 14day when 1
pre-dawn fire raced through a 11keslde
Jog cabtn and the lheriff'I dtparUne.nt
said It "expedtd lo llnd m.,.."
•
-. .
Or a face mask, cufflink!, life jackets,
silvenvare, watches, water akis ..•
·Police Disarm
Mental Patient ~
Police Friday nlght disanned a men·
tally ill woman who threatened her sister
and a friend in an Eastbluff resident with
a loaded ..automatic pistol.
The brief, but harrowil!g episode OC·
curred ·at 9 p.m. when: tjle -48-year-old-
ronner •mental patient ban&ed her way
intcihtr ftlOlber's hol1ll!I and threatened lo shoci~ tier sister if the •f&tnlly ct1mmitted
her again, .officers' said.
, Two police offtctrs_ arrived after the
sister's friend slipped away to call police.
~-dlle<ri eheckOd'I~ rtar of the
hOUJe,. the woman with the gun exited
frofri front aOO tried to drive away.
The ofliteis took her from the car and
found ~apon under a seat.
She •as taken to the.· Orange County
·Medical Center's'~ychtati'lc ward.
Pranksters Set
' '.
Gas Leak ·Afire
·Under otl\l!t:·ebyumstMefl It might hiVe been a1blHllng •. but the pranksters
*M "!•Well N"'l>Ort'••sm•lly, seeping
811.MP cas anre lllree times this
weekend got no praise from Newport
firemen.
• Fire trucks were summoned S.turday
and Sunday to th&· seepage area along
PacUlc Cout Hfg~ay lo· mln&Uish Ille
£nflammable and unpleast1nt ps.
l'he pranJr;sten haven1 been found .
'nlt eltj ~lans to burn lhe gas IU.U
sometime thfs ~tr, but only after build· ing conerett '1ieehlves" around the
seepage holes.
---
DAil Y PILOT l"tlfM 1rY T1m Tttu1
GOOD ·woRK. SIS-Miss Mer-
maid, Fountain Valley's Donna
Flory, gets a congratulatory
kiss from brother Clare, 3.
Beauties Share
Honors in Mesa
Fi.Sh Fry Pageant
Two Orange Coast beauty queens
reign (oday as a result of the contest
conducted Sunday afternoon at the Costa
Mesa·Newport Harbor Lions Club Fish
Fry.
Sixteen-yUr-old Vicki Yoak, a Costa
Mesa High School sophomore, was
voted Miss Costa Mesa, while the Miss
Mermaid title, an overall honor for the
Fish Fry queen, went ro Donna Flory,
17, Fountain Valley.
Miss Yoek, of 3034 Coilege Ave., Costa
Mesa, is a brown-eyed blonde who
hopes to become. a model or an interior
decorat'or. She lists measurements of
JS-23-36. .
Miss Flory, ·a tiny blue-eyed blonde
whose statistics , read 35-2H5, is· a jun·
ior at Fountain Valley H~h School. In
her victory oyer ~~n ll·gtrl field, she
bested the gtrl , Wbo pr(viously had
beaten• her fo~' her~1hity'jl title, Ellen
Evans,·tHe curtent Miss FOUntaln Valley.
Runner-up to Miss YOak and Mi.ss
Flory was Jayme Boyd, 18, Westmin·
ster, a &enior at Fountain Valley Hlgh
School. Miss Boyd, her city's reigning
queen, measures 35·21·3$ and hopes to
become a recreation specialist.
C~ing the ~ew Miss Costa l\tesa
aI!d Miss Mermaid was the outgoing
winner of both titles in 1968, Pamila
Re ed of Hunti ngton Beach.
~ contest was held before a large
and apprec iative crowd at the stage of
t~e qosta l\1esa city park as one of the
highlights of the 24th annual Fish Fry.
School Shelte1· Asked
SACRAME NTO (UPI) -State School
Superintendent Max Rafferty and two
Qilier lop slate of(lcials toda/ called for
the Inclusion of fallout shelters in school
-construction and atter.ation projects.
' ' ' ·on · ~Groins . " . I . !
. ' .
• •' ,I I •~
-. Will, ~ol;e about three weeks df wotk on
each, eroin.
·Tbe work areas will be open to bathers
oh w~kends, but cj.uring ~on
hours barricades wW ei-~ beach
a.long a 150-foot radiua of each wort 'lite.
stone was selected to replac•'tUlll as
th~ ~d~g material because or j~lic
coniideratKITIS, Dawes .said. · '
Two 'steel projections were bul~ last
year irt tpe same area.
The four stone 'structures will<;bftni to
she the· ~I of sand-saving d~)uilt
by the corps. ,
Origin~ P._lans called for a tiuge aand -
haul pro.ieet to be included in .U>e ,l!Oin
construcUqn ~Ith saild carried ftom
Balboa ~eninsufa. to west !lepport.
The Ai'Jt:lY engmeers, 'however, can-
celled the Idea to borrow Balboa's sand.
In.stead, the material wW ~ pulled
rrom the mouth of the Santa Ana ~r
where 'Wipter storm runotf deJ]olited U bf
the ton.
N: ·::.p~rt Fund GorJ . Set
At · ghest in Hist(}ry
The highest campaign goal In the
history of the Newport aeach Uni ted
Fund -'205.isa -was. disclosed today
by the fund 's Board of Directors.
The 1~9-70 figure repr.esenl$ an iri-
crease of ;$20,33<1 over .1968-69'8 goal of
$184,928, which has not yet been reached.
In addition to increasing the budgets of
several already exist.inlf fund agencies,
the new bqdgef also iricorporates one new
agency, Ute Orange County Association
for Retarded Children.
The new budget was prepared and
recommended by United Fund treasurer
Beverley Benson, and budget committee
members approved it unanimously. The
campaign will begin in the fall.
Agencies participating in the 1969·70
County Approves
$390,000 Beach
Erosion Funds '
Approval of $390,000 In beach erosion
control funds was ct1mpleted this week
\vhen county ~upervisors ·approved $64,-
350 as lhe count'y's and other agencies'
share ofthe four·year-old project.
The projecti started in 1965 with the
replenishment of eroded sand from the
beaches al SQnset Beach and Surfside
Colony, extends from that area to the
Newport Beach pier.
The federal government pays 67 per·
cent of the total spent each year and the
state, county and affected ciUes and
private landowners pick up the balance.
Orange Coast allocations this year in·
elude Newport Beach, $10,761 ; Hun·
tington Beach Co., $18,27S; city of Hun·
lington Beach, $5,376; Surfside Colony,
$3,049.
The county will pay $21,513 for Its share
of the overall project, and an additional
$5,376 for the co1,1nty-0wned Sunset Beach.
The slate allocated $64,350.
fund, and the amount budgeted for tach,
are:
Boys' Club of the Harbor Area, $18,000;
Boy Scouts of America, Orange F.mP1re
Council, $31,000; Camp · Firo Girls,
Orange County. Council, $3,lilo" Catllollc
Social Services; ts,J33; Unlled ~Certbral
Palsy Ass~ati~ of Orange County, Inc.,
$8,000; Child Guidance Center of Orange
Counly, $8,000 : Christmas Welfare Fund,
Elks Club. Newport Harbor, $500; Family
Service Association of Orange County,
$4,500; Girls' Club of the Harbor Ar.ea ~6,5i7. '
Also, Girl Scou~ Coun.cil of Orange
County, $16,490 ; Childrens Hospital of Los
Angeles, $1,502 ; Childrens Hospital of
Orange County, $689; 0 rt hop a e di c
Hospital of Los Angeles, $664; Orange
County Association for Mental Health,
$3,976; Protestant Welfare Fund, $1,500·
American National Red Cross: Orang;
Count¥ ~hapter, $32 ,000 ; Orange County
Assoc1at1on for Retarded C h i I d re n ,
$1,053 ; Salvation Army, $7,500.
From P1111e 1
SA-liA'.RIES ';': .
after teaching four hours.
Hake said teachers at fully 15 to 20 of
the elementary schools participated, but
not all principals reported it. "I talked to
about half a dozen (principals) informally
and they agreed in their report they were
protecting their teachers." he said.
Hake said the principals were shielding
the teachers because of ·a directive that
went out from the superintendent's office
telling them to take down names. .
Teachers are continuing their cam·
paign for public support and have taken
out an advertisement in Tuesday'•
newspaper headlined : "Could You Advise
Your Son to be a Teacher ?"
Teachers also are spendin-g "teacher
dollars" along with their real dollars to
show their contribution tG the are.a
economy, and are telephoning friends and
acquaintances to drum up support.
How to kick the
Clyde wasn't practicing
salesman11hip. At I ea s t, not
knowingly. He waa trying to be
helpful, becau1te that'• h is job.
If tha1'1 old fashio11ed, I guess
we're guilty.
A Jot of retail people haven't
learne<I how to lislen. They
want lo use the mouth before
they use the ear•.
• • een1e-meen1e-
Every store owner 1hinks his
&tore is a cut above any olher
store, and cerlaiiily we're a1
proud of our •tore as any store
owner could be. And yel, we
don't lry to kid ounelvu. Our
merchandise, selection and
values are quile appealing, but
let'.a face ii. On lhe whole
"'e're rail1er like any other
good men'1 1tore.
• • m1n1e-moe
Don't ever ask a cu11omer why
he buy• front you.
We learned lhal when one
cu~ton1er gave UI! a funny look
and replied. ''For ahsolu1ely
110 rea•on "·hat!oever. ,,
Not bei11g real snre what lie
111ean~ by that, \re 1l1ut tt}l a11,f
1old l1in1 l\fO suits.
The l'easou we n1ention thi•
is becau&e tlte other day one of
our cuslomen did 1ell ua ~·by
l1e bougl11 from u1. We learned
t11a1 he i1 a ,practicing P:•Y·
cbologi:&in -Anaheim. Wh1Ie
"'ailln@ for ue to write up lUs
putt.hue. he said tome nice
thinp · aho111 ua, and then
.. ked if we'd be intereetecl in
knowing wliy he drove clear
down heN> to •pend SSO on a
1port coat.
Na1urally ".., wanted to
know why.
Well, 11ide lron1 enjoying
an excu&e 10 Tltit th& area on
a p·Jeaunt tunny dtemoon, he
u.id hit main reuon -.tU Our .. uu,.,,.... lo lidM. 11.i bad
fbWJy been driven oal o{ the
'
hahit.
store where he u~d 10 buy hil
clothe1, a very fine tlore by
the way, because whenever·he
went in t~ pick out a euit tl1e
uleeruan ~ad immediately
·1ried to .ell hirit what the store
"'a111ed him to h11y.
What this man wanted to do
was lo bur &ontething, not be
sol<l 10mething. ·
Last year be was agreeably
eurpriied. on a chance vi&il to
Bidwell's, "'·hen our Clyde
Reyes look enough in1ere111,
before ever takins a 111i1 from
the rack, to Olk aboat hio color
and patlern preference&, and
to learn t0mething about the
kind of atylet he bad been buy·
ing elle"·heN>.
There'• only one thing we
ha\'C 1liat no other n1en's etore
has. Uo.
' We try lo be friendly and
helpful, but we know one
thi11g that may l>e 1ignificant .
Our cuslomers are more Joyal
than moal.
ln11ead o{ uling the een1.,.
meenie.minie-moe 1y1tem of
picking a •tore, yo11 might try
buyin@ from n• ''for absolutely
no reuon wbatJoever.''
Jack Bidwell
3447 Via Udo, jast)>eyond lhe Arebeo overpa" o-
Paclfle Co .. 1 ID8hway. Telephone 673-4510.
Dr.i•e between Udo Theatre &-my 1tore & park in rear.
f.oypri@bt 1969, Jack Bidwtll, -·
I
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• ' CoshJ. M~sa
• EDJTI ON
'' ,._ ~ voe. '2, NO. 137, 4 SECTIONS , 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, • ' . . -.. 1 .
'Biggest Ever' Me ·sa Fish Fry RaiSes
For Sale: Southland lradltion, only used
ooct.a year in January by li'I old com·
mtlnity get-together in Pasaderui. ·
Veteran observers say they woo'l be
surprised if the above advertisement
should pop up in the Southland press one
ol these yea"-foUowiq the 14th 1Annual Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club
Fish Fry ..
The th~ Harbor· Area celebration
surpassed all prior years, just as
predicted, and Liom; Club meqtbers today
are wearily working over the books for
an accurate account of procted5 and
bills.
Uons Club secretary Fo~ Foster lo-
day estimated the gross intall at roughly
$74,000, a healthy dwnk of which wlll go
to Harbor Area youth seMoictll and agen-
cies aiding the blind. ·
The inci::ease is about $6,000 Over last
year.
Highlight of the Friday-through-Sunday
event was the Saturday parade, which
drew anywhere from 30,000 to 100,000_
persons, depending upori the IOW"Ct:.
"It had to be the bluest ever," sald
parade chalpnan. cuu·weoc1or1. addini that U anytliing, the 11>. llilur proCessjGn
was 190 long for ~ crtws
vl<1e9taptng It. . .
"The only possible disrui>Jion in the
parade . was tHe Tijuana P o 11 c e
Department's acrobatic m o to r c Y c 1 e
team,'' Wesdorf sai~1_'1but the crowd lov·
eel it. It WBYWOrth It."·
Viet Troops Cut
• · Nixon Says 25 ,000 Leaving Soon
UPI T......,.
'ALOHA, MR. PRESIDENT'
Honolulu Stopover
Nixon Believes
Midway Enhanc es
Chan ce of Peace
HONOLULU (UP I) -President Nixon
went to Midway Island hoping to enhance
the chances for peace in Vietnam. He
came away thinking he did.
His meeting with President Nguyen
Van Thieu of South Vietnam brought a
feeling of allied unity American officials
!loped would force the Communists to
aUandon their ho~ for a Nixon-Thieu
split.
Niton moved what he considered to be
his· blue' chips Into the arena by pro-
mising t.o start the immediate withdrawal
of 25 000 American troops from the war J . • zone, to be replaced by South V1etnrnese
forces.
Thieu responded with lavish praise for
the Amtrican President and an emotional
denial he hid any basic differencu with
the Nixon administraUoo.
Tm mood of Midway left Nil"on with
!he feeling the United States, South Viet-
nam and their other allies in the war had
improved their . bargaining pqsltion in
Paris.
By ~tERRIMAN SMITH
U'°I WN• It-·--MIDWAY ISLAND {UPI) -President
Nixon has announced that 25,000 U.S.
troops will be withdrawn from South
Vietnam by the end of August and in-
. dfcated others will leave as ·military con-
ditions warrant.
At the same time, Nia:on backed South
Stories on Reaction
To Troop Cut P11e 3
Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu
in opposing the imposition of any
coalition governn1ent.-iocludlng the
Communists, on the wartorn sottlheast Asia republic.
Nixon made his troop reduction an-
nouncement Sunday at a summit con-
fereoce 'Wfth Thieu on .this tiny island in
the Pacific. It was the seventh meeting of
a U.S. president with leaders of the
Saigon government. They appeareO af.
fable and relaxed, confident of the course
or the war and mildly optimistic about
peace.
Defense Secretary ~ R. Laird, .
who new back to Washington from
hfidway, said in Washington today that
more troops may be pulled out in August
but ga ve no figures.
At the same time, Pentagon sources in-
dic ated the 25,000 troops being puUed;out
will be transferred, at least initially, to
Okinawa and Hawaii rather than being
returned dire<:lly to the contiMntaJ
United States.
The announcement ol the troop
withdrawal and other decisions -reached
by Nixon and Thieu drew a mi:xed.rtci!p-
tloo. The North Vletnameae, the Viet
Cong and Moscow denounced the move as
a "meaningless. . . prop a 1 and a
maneuver" designed to appease antiwar
critics in the United States and elsewhere
around the world .
* * * * * * Countians to Greet Ni x.On
. . J . The public has been lnvlted to greet President Nixon tonigb(· On
his return to Orange County from his Midway talks with President
Nguyen Van Tbie.u of South Vietnam, spokesmen at El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station aMounced today. ·
Air Force One, carrying the Presidential party, is expected to
touch down at El Toro at 5:30 p.rn.
Mr. Nixon is to greet the crowd, possibly say a few words and
depart for his San Clemente home with his family by helicopter.
Marine officials said the gates would be open to the public at
4 p.m. Parking is limited. The base is accessible via Santa Ana Free..
way by the Sand Canyon Road or Clilver Road exits to Ti'abuco Roa"d
and the main gate. ' .
The Presidential party Is to leave for \Va shington, D.C. Tuesday
about noon.
Burger Quickly Approved
As New U.S. Chief Justice
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate
gave resounding approva l f\.1onday to
President Nixon's choice of Judge Wa r-
ren E. Burger to be the 15th chief justit"e
of the United States.
The action, which could open a possible
new era in the trend of judicial decisions.
came arter Senate Republican. Leader
Everett M. Dirksen predicted Burger will
take a middle road as chief justice.
becomlng neither an arch conservative
nor an arch liberal.
But action was delayed for a time by
some Senate liberals who criticized the
apeed oi lhe drive for confirmation. They
sought unsuccessfully to delay a vote.
Burger will succeed Chief Justice Earl
Warren, who is reUring as the Supreme
Court concludes its tenn this month. The
Warren court's decisions have been
criticized by conservatives as being too
liberal.
Burger, 61, is now a judge on the U.Sb
Cour\ of Appeals tor the District of
Columbia.
He is Nixon's first nominee to the high
court, but the President is now ea:pected
. lo act soon on a SCC(Jnd court ap-
pointment, to succeed Justice Abe Fortas
who re.!lgned .
Dirksen, an Illinois Republica n and a
friend of Burger, ea:pressed confidence
tha t the nominee wtD avoid the
''legislative thicket" of court intrusion in-
to the powers of Congress. This has been
a source of criticism of tbe court under
\Verren.
He sa id Burger will stay on "lhr
judicial skle of the fence."
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed with 1 wide-ranging lo!s Monday
in reaction to an increase in banks' ptlme
rate to an all-tUne high ol 81A percent
from 7~ percent. (See quotatJons, Pages
10-11).
"Ai. usual, we went . over Olzt' u-
peq&llons," he said. ,
.strairilors walUnc 1t the foll-<ncl of the
line · Sw\day, when S,70J dlnnera ··were
se~. jult ,aboot went h"PIJ'l' !n.fact
aince .U>e.LiQM came 9'-1t 20 pounds .short
of ~ QIJt ol fl~. ' '
"In~" aid Rea, ''there· were .many canunenls that the fish' 't9u better· than
ever · a"M ')'ct we didn't changt .the recipe ...
.. Jle Aid ihe :che(-ol-chefs, YMC!r~Y'g.. .. ., -
' ' • -• f
,.,, ....... 4 ••~
o.n.y·,n.OT ~.tf.~
TOPS'WITH TOTS ..: ·.Wt:nnenol thc:TI!il.fcy tiil1Y·~~· trophies.' At· left is Mrs. Werner Berndt llnd daughter St!ii> ~is .
months; at light, Mrs. Cecile Cttarle ~ dallghter; 'JUifett-: 110tb
winners are f1'9m Cost~ Mesa. • . .. . . . . . . . . .
Harbor Teachers at Work,
Markit1g Titne .in pispute
Cy THOi\IAS fORTUNE 9! fM Dl llY Pli.t_ SMll
Newport·Mua school teachers taught
class 11 usual today and marked time in
t~ir salary dispute with the school
board.
They were wailing on a meeting of
teachers , re~Ung each s e h o o I
tonight.
Here Is the 'way things 1to0,d during the
lull today that followed .la&t· Thursdi'y's
minlmun1 teaching day walkout. and tH'e.
school board's refusal Friday. lo reopen
negotiations.
The board hz.s seltt It is a:illing to ac·
schedule that. Wiii give teachers 11ext year
an a.6 percent raise. on the average~with
an average salary increase of $$41 from·
$9,$91 per year to 110,438. '
Teacher association 'leaders are asking
for an additional two percent average pay
inc rease that would give larger raises to
those teachers with the most experience
and educ .. tion "T' tbe.earW teachtrs, .as
lhey ·:?all Plem. • 1 •
The board '.ha* s:a1ct it ls willingt o-ac:
cept . "elartflcatloin · of faCL!I" until · tbe
budget 1S fina lly adopted in August, but
want. no plll't of mtdiatk>n. . .
"With the reasonableness of thls.bo&rd
we feel c!arlflcaUon of fact ts e:U we·need
to introduce items of.concern to eet·them.
to reas.sei& .t~ir-pmJiUon,I' 11!d llai't
Hake, executive 1 e. c r e t. 1 r y ·of the ·
•
teachers' Newport.htisa E d u c a t l o n
Associ8fl(ln. 1 • 1 • •
Teachers· disputll ·the average, pe:rce'n.
tagc pay ·lncrtUI· uJed by the ·board.
Ballcally, lhey figure.It dilfereiilly .•
Teacher a sep~ral!! the averase .5.a. P.tr-
cent increase for an . teachera from the
4.2 perctnt incremenl'lncreile'about t.wo-
tlµrda of district teacher ... set for an .ad -
ditlonil' year of ea:perienc'e,
Exp_erience incr !ment iffl'rea~es only
are glveri;to teachers theit;IP'.61:12 years
(or Jess depending up. on the extent of
their addlUori_al ·scihcioltng.) ~·, · ·
~Taking ' alOne the 5.8 percent given all
of them, teachers don 't think !hey are
getting such a great deal ·
·Hake says the cosf. of living increase
(See SALA!\I~, Pa1e Z)
Market Plunges . . .
Ove·r Hike · in
. I .
lntere8 t Rate
' . NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
fell bR«!!k ·<m i .br'oad front today in re·
action to· an , Increase ln WIW' prime. rate to.a·.record hlgh 1of l;1h pereenf froin
71,t percent. · The reasoning was that the allies had
built a solid front against Viet Cong or
NMth Vietn8mese a~tempts in Paris to
split them . or cause the "divorce" Com·
mlinist delegates mentioned last week.
Prtlbably more important than the
worcb of the pr~temenl!I or the
language of their communique was the
mood ol Midway -holpitable, with
Th!eu approaching effusiveneu at Umes.
it was clearly different from early
UCI Students Get Voice
· On· the f"ew-.Yor~ Stock Ea:change,
~ecl!nes or lndlvldual lss.uts ex~eeded ad·
vanees ·1,072.to 2111. 1 .
. The Dow ·Jones average· er 30 In·
dusll'.Jaia' f'loMd 11lth 1 ""' ol &171 ·•t t il.05 after havin1 been do~a ll;ol at
meetings between ronner President Lyn--
don B. Johnson and leaden or the Saia<>n
government. Thieu went out of hls way
twice to deny any differtnct3 of opinion
with Nia:on. ·
The American President, as host,
res~ed with much the same allitude.
u.s.,oJJiclals felt Hanoi could only be bn-
pr~ by thl1 unity and rea.ct, perhaps
graduall)', at the peace table.
Nixon at the wne tJme-le.ft himself
room to maneuver, not spelllnc out how
the troop withdrawal would come about
or just when more American Gt1 would
ht aent ~ome.
Will Speak-But Not Vote...:.in Senate · Session ·
Student& who a couple of months aa:o
forced recess or the UC. Irvine facultr '•
Academic Senate with their tactJca or
ta1k1ng out today have won full voice in
Senate meetJngs.
'Students now will be gJven the t.9.mt
Prl.vile1e to speak as professors. They
Will not bowever, have a vt¥·
During the pa.it year, all atudent1 who
wjshed to attend have /etUlrly been
gtanted admission to Academic Senate
lflUW>os. But onl1 two student represen·
t1tlve1 hlWl had the right to speak.
·The students' presence. bu tieen very I
largely felt and at times t.hey have out·
IUllilb<(ed laculty. By applause and oc·
cassiOOal sroans or bool the dissident
studenl element has angered sOme pro-
fessors and reinforced ·the voice. of
others.
A few weeks igo Gerald Whipple of the
medical· acbool reJerred to them 11 "the
howling claqiae." Cllalnnan 'of tnronna·
lion and cOmputer Selene~ Julian
Feldman complained that 'they were ln--
tlmldatlhf.
MMt proleuon atteodln1 Stnate
meeUnp have ahbWn tolerance for t.h•
..
students and sympathy.for 'their desire td
· wJn a volce In iaculty affairl. -
Some '1ceill aa:ot Pl'QfellGl'I deetded lQ
add l)Ofl·votJng 1tOOent memben to all
faculty «:mmJtlffl -about • 40 slUdent
appoint.ments 1ln all. . '
'.!11en. tho questloo before ll>e 8'oatf.
laat weelt w~ 'Whether to &Ive ·~,19
1tudenla ~ pii~v al Wato to I~ ge'neral faeillty • In .a~lte
twin. .. ,ommd111tpt r Cllolnli4n 'of
Organlml!c Blolo .Qrov.t Steplttns to
extend ai(dkll\g rights to tllt. tnUre llu-
CSee UCI SENATE, P1 ... tJ
..
noon. · · ·• . •• ~ .
I 'l'lje ~ted Preti IQ.stock 1vera1e
. ~I.I t<l.311.1, a new lllt'.lolr, with
lnduotriill off U , rolil •oil ,~I ond
uUUUn off·t .t. ' , ", , . 1iio New York Stick' ~ic~.C0"1·
mon lloc:t lndu olump;;J 4l"c111la.ln the ,. verac• pr~ of I thart. 1 ' 1 ' •
' Trodfnl V~uip,e, Wll I 4nod1r41( 10.Q.
mW'-lharel _..,.,.. 111lh. 1.1,11 nii~.ihates'FrldoJ.· . ' .
Brokm 'Uld thal whllt an lncrfU. in •
the prlme'nlle had beat irklely llQIOClod.
the.~ to ~~,r-U.,! pm!erit; ••• • ... U~·., , ,
!n'l'he, 11)1,.._l h~ -declinlal'. for ....-1hen· 't!n'Oe' ftOb. .-,. Jh
)>re""re 01. the t!lh1 rn.n.t •-ind slow prolfU! -.i peece lnl \'1-. .. • !I' • ~
• o! .,.. •
(
--. ----• • . ·~.;..:
.... .r._ Jlt'f~~~
· BeciutieS.,share . . . . . . '. •
Hotiors 'in MJ~ia ·
Fish ·Pry Pageant
' Two Orange· Coast beauty · ~
reign ·today as a result of the• cdrtest
conduct<d '&in<IBy af1tmoon 11"he Coita
h1esa._Newpcirt H1!1>or t.Iims 1.c?ub! Fish
fry. .
Sixteen-yUi;-old 11{icki Yqik., a Ctata
1-tesa High School :seph~~: "'.U
voted Mm CO.ta M-· wbile·lhe.)!ia
Mtrmaid title, an overall hmor for t~
Fish Fry' lJlleen. 'weftf.,to · Ddnna'Ftoi-r,
17, ~ountJt1n Vllley. , ,._,
Miu Voak, of S034 COilege Ave.,._eoit&
Mesa , is a brown-eyed blonde Wba
hopes to become a model {P,r' .. n terlor deeorat·or. She lists · measu remfnU: ~of
J6.23-38;
MW Flory, a tiny blue"tyed :bl.opde
whose •staUstica· read li-H-35, JI.& a ju.
ior it FClUJtain Valley Hiah ·SchioL In
her victory over an .:JJ·gfrl lie)(J;' j She
bested the· girl who preVioos,!Y had
beaten het for her city'a 'title, El~eb
Evallll,, the .d.ii'reDf'M1$1 rF.ln Valley.
Runner-up• to Mils Ybek and Misl Flory was~ Jayme_ Boyd,°, tl.1 Westmii~
ster, a senior. at Founla,in ValleJ ~
School. ?i.fiss ·Boyd, ~r 'ctty'i reignhig
queen, m"3Utel '38-21~· and . hopes t9
(Set QUEENS; Pq• I)_
or .. a• '
• I '
I
• l
•
'
•
•
I
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t ........ ,,.. •. 1"?
e , • J
:iiL• • I • •
-· ' ... '
l.OGBOOll ' ' ' ,,.1 .1 C·
. Nixon MovIDg Political
Center of U.S. to West
' By NORMAN ANDERSON
ot .. ~llY 'll•f '""
• Jllll •liile Lol>don, MOl<Ow. Pam, the dateline SAN CLEMENTE (or
NEWPORT • BEACH or LAGUNA BEACH) local!' the capital of the United
State& -even though temporarily -and indicates even more delinitely where
·Ille. poliUcal c<nter of !be nation ts moving -lo the W.,\ and ~oiJarty
c.ufornl&. . ' l -•
'Ille oelodlan by Pruldeat Richard Nl<oo of hla While H-West on
the. Orqe Co&st is the latest and moat imprealve step
in a proc;tSI ·that began more than a century ago whea
Pnoideot Llocoln flnan<ed the Union durin& the Civil War
with gold and allver from California and Nevaaa·mines.
* ShHting of the pow'er balance from East to West bas
1 been rapid since World War n. CalUornia 11 now the
largest and thus -pallUcall7 -the m°'t powerful of
ltlles. .
Comlderlna the politlca of It alone, look al these
, ~ -faeta :
· 'Ille -powerful man In the free world -Pmidenl NiJon -fl a
W-ai>fanother Wllllrner fl one al tbe aoll eumber al -imparl-oot -In tW naUon: Earl W1m11. fonnor ,...,, ... of CalllorlUa, fl clllel '~ Wllb thorn, u J>Ol<nl palllleal figunl II a Collfornlan, Roberi Fillch,
"a -i.r al .the President's Cabinet (and a IOOd bono lllCCtOd hla bou u
.. aD .-wdl), '
Tbil ts not ihe Ont time a trluinvlrale Gf Collfoniialll bu been palitJc.
'ally Important. In the lllOI NiJoo wu -..-,,i. Wamn chld Jlllllce
' mid &o. Wlllllm F. Knowland wu Senate ...iortlJ luder, : ' * ' . Hire an 110me otber lndlcatiollll of the Wat's Importance :
• •• 'Nbma'• ·atrtogtb la lhe aroa beld llrm In Ult and conlrtbuled mls!>Uly
,
, ..
DAIL.Y PIL.OT,..,. -TMI"""' GOOD WORK, SIS-Miss Mer-
maid, Founlaln Valley's Donna
Flory, get• a congratulatory
kiss from brother Clare, 3.
From Page J
• to-1111 ....., vlctoey. in wbldl be did not carry -major urbon aru. Bui be ~ carTled 0rani• ... s.n Oft•• OOWtttes and got Collfcrnia'• FISH FRY ·• ~ votes. Be miibl 11111 have needed llllnoil. · • • •
1be poUUcal life of the Kennedys bu been lealed in the Weal -Saturday, but judging was made more
Jolin F. Kennedy went from Los Anple& lo become. Prelident of the difficult by doubling of float and band en· Unlled States (having lo defeat a WesW-In lhe procaa) and Robert F. tries.
Keanedy'1 polltlc&I fortunes -and life -died in Loi Anples. Sweepatakes winner for the entire Fish
Prim.aria 1n tbe West on more than one OCC'Pm have chanced the Fry parade was the Garden Grove
toune of a man, or a nation. Strawberry Float FesUval entry, whlle
It wu CaUCanda ln 1981 which made -for a few abort ~ -witizten: first throu&h third place follow
J1111>ert F. ~ Ille !root runner for Uie DemocraUc pnaldenttal ~ ;. ·\!)'-l"lalory:' ·
, tloD, after 9!1 w-Uer Western primary, m Oregon. bad appeared P*!blf ~i . , Liw~ 'J'rop!ty for youth entrants ·-Y have dealt him a lalal blow. . • • 1ndlan • MaJileiis, Prine< of p e a c e
11 waa the c&u!crnia primary...ot l • ..,,...i, srie Bl!rY Goldwater '" ~theran School and Crance Coast YM·
~ a Welleuwr -lhe ~lcl•~nomlnation (In 1!tn J1'ran. • ~n'• Trophy for ·community en·
oaco, Incidentally) °"" an -.;a• -.r.Jler. • · · tranta -Mdlould's Hamburgers Sweet And durq tbe~tlriie BifrY Goll'iraior·•u -al the ~ AdeU... Ind Knott'I l!erry Farm:
l'lrly, the ar..,.. COlll, out al the Balboa lloY Club, wu the party • main Mayw'1 Trophy f« civic enlriot.. -
. ~ . , • . Banjo Pickers' · Squart Dance Club, Aph1 it wu a Cllifonua primary -that of ~ -tnth .which Adl~I Anahejm Chamber of Commerce and the -~ ~ OU!"Eltea ~r and cllncbed bfl -Democratic City of Westminster.
preaidenllal nammaUon. · Rell"' le • . K ·••ts I An °"PO primary eoded for ail time lhe pi:eaidenttal aspirations of CoJwnf!' ca gury -ru.,, 0
llan>ld &a.n, -boy wander' of the GOP. w11en be lost in· JH&, to Col!!' ~ _ Loi Alimito. Naval
Tbamu E. Dewey (who aubsequenUy IOll h1a ·aeconc1 White' Houae· bkf~to Air StiUOR\ Sinla Ana Ahierican Legion
Harry ~·again played the vital role in the polillcal tortunea of ll!Otber ~':!t.131 and Costa Mesa Police Depart·
Prllident. . . . , Novelty -Oran1e County Shrine. It wu the ~eal ~ Stu. Hiram Jobnlon of Callfonua (atld there 1 Valencia Shrine and Che perennial
mare to bla .role m U.S. life) and thf Te1=~ ~Vt ,New yort Javorite Buckin' Car.
Gov. Franklin ~II the llemoctotfc ---al 1 Oii Iii ll!J ud lligtl School Bands -Sweel"lakes,
made the Tetu favonte IOn, Houae Speaker Joha.N. Garner, vice prt.aident. Anaheim, Santa Aila, santa Fe and Ken·
Johnson, as a powerful man ~a potent &late, pl13ed other lnOuen~al n~~ior High School Bands -Corona,
roles. He helped to make ~o otblt presidents and might have been one him· Dale and Chemawa.
self, or at least a vice president. El •· u· h 0 ·n I B d I h. -·-"'d I ·1 that trtbuled lo d dlock-.. emen .... ry ig <A 00 an s -t was 1s ~JIU acy as a avor1 e son con a ea cu Johnson
1920 GOP Natianal ConvenUon that aetUed in a amoke-ftlled room in favoz:-of ' Senior. !Ugh School Majorettes _
\Yatren G. ~Ing. Johnson _haughtily refuled the vice prealdenUal nonuna· Rancho Alamitos, Anaheim, La Quinta. ti°'! and Calvm Coolidge got it Instead, along wll.b, a couple yeara later, tbe Junior lllgh School Majorettes -South
White House. . . '.· Jr. High, Debbics ' Gal-Ons, and the . John.son played a role, aomewhat smaller, in making Woodrow Wilson Calicoettes.
Pre!ident of the United St;ates. Then governor of. CalltmD.a, Johnson waa a Senior High School Drill Teams -La
leader of the Progressives 1D 1912 who fought .the GOP Old Gl:llfd in behalf or Quinta, Santa Ana and Rancho Alamitos.
Ex.Jlresident Tb~ Roosevelt ag~t Pre&dent Willlam Howard T~t. They Junior High School Drill Teams _
Jost to lb~ ma~ and the P:roer~ves form~ their own party, with John· Johnson Intermediate, Daleland and St.
IOI\ the vlce prtaidenUal candidate on TR'• pre11dential ticket. The party ran Polycarp
second, 1pUlUng · ~e Republl~an vote and ~ecting Wil50n a minority JllU!dent. Drum ~nd Bugle Corps _ Santa Ana
And as a fmal fact, ~tlson owed -m a maMtJ". of speaki_na -bia-re-Squires and Boy Scout Troop J&S, whose
electJon tn 1911 to Callforrua. Charles Ev1n1 Hushes, GOP no:mmee, went t.o home city was not immediately available
bed believing himself President-elect Flnal returns early the next morning, today
eave the state and the election to Wilson. •
The West bas had a great role in U.S. life up to now. With RJchard Nixon U
leading the way politically, who can foretell what will come nut? Fron• Page l
Food Strike Wanin2? From P .. e J QUEENS ...
become a recreation specialist.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Negoliallorui in
the Los Anatles area supennarltet strike
nsumed today with the Retail Clerks
Union saying setUement Is near and the
Food Employers Council denying iL
.-
DAILY PILOT
OltANGE COAST 'UILISWING COllVAP<'t
Rob.tort N. Wood
'f"ldent end l"llMIM•,
Joci: R. Curl•y
Vlc.e ,, .. ldtftl 0111111 GeMrll Mlllffff'
n ...... 1t:e .... il . .. ·-n. ..... A. Mt1rph1i,,• _ ll\l!MflM Yler
-·---
UCISENATE •••
dent body passed.
Only four or five hands wert shown In
opposition among the about 50 professors
attending the meetiilg. Among the helter
than 200 professors who did not attenJ
are some who have stopped coming to
Academic Senate meetings becau1e they
are disgusted wU.h .Jhe student clamor
and, they feel, faculty sellout.
The now prevailing voice was ex;
pre!sed by Al>lstant Professor of
Or1anlsm.ic Biology Joseph Arditti, who
said:
''I'll vote for the motion to make this a
repraentath'e body instead or a private
club. We need the revolutionary zeal of
the sludents."
In 1 more conservative vote, profeBSors
tlefeate(! only 2-4 to 18 a resolution by
Associate Dean of Physical Scieoces
Bernard Gelbawn reaffinnlng that pro-
posals: normally should be first ttviewtd
by Senate committees. · .
Ht .arJUfd that mattei:s were ~& ~oo
ollen 11\ln>d~ on the noor In<! the
· A~ S<llata WU PaJSlnl than Iii
Pf'CIJiltous action. · ' · .
1'• urn Pnlfeaor of EnaUab' B010ard
Babb baaed him up; acoldlnl lhtt "It ts
-Illy 1'!d!CUJdis lor 1111' ,...e_ lo ad al II ......iu.a . .,. Ml ilp tO pment
biJilnea.fn>m comln( lo lhe lloor.
"Not O\at M)' vote means a pd, damn,"
Babb muttmd. '
School Shelter As%ed
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -state School
Supe.r1nteJ>dtnt Max Rafferty and two
other lop llll• olllcl&ts today C>)Jed for
the Inclusion of fallout sbeltert ln achoo!
ccnstructlOD and alteraUon projecia.
Crowning the new Miss Costa hfesa
and Miss Mermaid was the outgoing
winner of bolh titles in 19118, Pamila
Reed of Huntington Beacli.
The contest was held before a large
and appreciative crowd at the stage of
the Costa Mesa city park as one pf the
highlights of the 24th annual Fish fry,
From P1111e 1
' SALARIES ...
' ' for· he . first half' ol lhls year has ap-
P~ '1x perctn~ · In other words,
lhoM teachers lg 1<! I;! _percent (lhe
dbes 'whh ·many jtar1 of experience)
~d jull hold · their OW1I In spending power: .. .
Hab alao ' called .into. serious question
school. ~t administration report! on
how mar,y teachers ~k part in the
Thursday protest.
A spokesman for the superintendent
said al only five af 25 elementary schools
did aey leach!rs walk out of the
classroom to hold sup:ervised recreation
after leaching four hours.
Hake said icathers at Jully IS to 20 or
the eler itary schooli jlarticipated, but
not all t cipils repnrt!<ljl. "I talked lo
about he l dOUft (principals) informally
and they -.e<I In t~!i,1$orl they were protec~ ~tr teaCPUJ, .. he sllid.
Hake sa ._., principall were shielding
the tcache~ '9Caule of i. directive that
WClll aut tro . 'ht superlniendent's office
telling them t ''-e down nimt!.
Teachen: ar ~ conUnulng their ~•m·
paign for pub!.! -upport and have taken
out an advt ement ln Tue3day's
newtpapet htat ed: ''(:ould You AdvlAC
Your Son to be 1 Teachert"
Teacher• also are spending "teacher
doUan" •Jona with lbelr reel dollars to
show tbelt contribution lo the 1rt.11
economy. and are lelephonlng friends and
acquaintances to drum up aupport.
--~ -------~·----.
W••dwlll Vlci1.... . ,, ,
&ar~·h :F Co . .. r'.' •. ; ... • : . Mesan Hµrt
J l \ 1 tin:p~·S. (fu.:l: eak ·· ·~
J I ,. • t' f '1 'For 7·: on· Yacht . Auiri Crash · I ~ I • 'I,; .. ; • MO... I • ' • ..... ,.
By ALMON LOCltABEY
The xardl continued tod•.Y for
survlvon and/or bod1ts of 'e ven
Americ'ans known to have been aboard
the 161·foot scboo:Der Goodwill when the
yacht was wrecked on Sacramento Reef
off Baja Calilomla May 25.
Professional diven frho' searched the ;.w..; J.uik for ·U.. tint time Friday
rePorted Ondlng no bodl"' aboo.n:I.
The second of two bodies given up by
the sea off Punta sU: Antonio, 200 mHes
south of San Diego, bu been ldenU!led a!
Gerald. Conutock, 49, of .32202 Vlata Je
Coitalina, Soulh Laguna.
Comstock, an electrical engineer, was
one or the nine persons aboard the
Goodwill on a trip from Cabo San Lucas
to Ensenada.
Owner Ralph Larrabee, a Huntington
Park industrialist and part time Newport
Beach resident, was also aboard the
Goodwill when she struck the reef,
presumably on the night of rwlay ZS.
The only other body from the wrecked
yacht was that of Tim Smith, 15, of 188~2
Sanla Mariana, Fountain Valley. He \1-'as
employed as a deckhand on the yacht.
Diven reported no sign of the three
small boats carried aboard the Goodwill.
' ll was prtviously reported that the boats
y;ere sUII in davits on the yacht's stern.
But company official's of Larrabee'• L &
F Machine Shop said it was possible the
boats OJUld have been carried away by
the seu which cowitantly rake the reef.
The yacht : itself was reported as belng
broken up by the surging sea and 30-foot
waves which break over the reef.
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OFF COURSE .,-. Map indi·
cates location of wreck of
Goodwill, which we nt doWn off
Baja California after hitting
Sacramento Reef off Punta San
Antonio. Some yachtsmen. fa·
miliar with area speculate
ship's navigator failed to ac·
count !or strong on :c;hore drift
in setting course for Ensenada.
".\ Costa Mesa man ttnlminr wltll' his
car in the ¥veway .suffered .-~roken
~late Satprday when ao,om.tf.-U-ol
ur..jwnped ~ CW'b.IDd ra.m.m.ei! tht :vehJ~
~ c:ruahl>g him agalnlt !ht hart wan of
the Sarage1 \ ' • ' •
The ,driver¥ lhe 'second car was book·
ed on suspicio~ of felony drunken driving.
.DanftJ ,p. Wil!h~22,.of zuz Elatn Ave:,
Is in' flilr condiliM~ tod1y at Coata•Mesa
Alernoriaf . Hospital, with a 1tlCtured
vertebra and mulUpJe bruise!1
• •
Bobby H. Foz. 20, of 853 ~ .st.,'
Co5la Mesa1 w~ held at Costa Meu·City
J~il as traffic investigators ~Dfefred
with lhe·Orange Coonty ·Dlstrict' Al/ofney
1ecking a complaint. ••
Officer George Webster sale;!. For was
dri ving south on Eldep Avepue aJ>-
proachiog Cecil . Place about 11 p.m.
Saturday .n,ight whenihe misted t1i'e turn
and sma!hed into'Walsh's c.ar . .IJ,
Terry A. Roger\, 22, Of 2710 Wiidwood
St., Santa Ana, wls helping Wabb work
on the car'a fuel pump but escaped injury
when his buddy was pinned against the wall.
Patrolman David N. Stern said lie at·
rested Fox 'vhen the latter appeared
unable to pass a field sobriety test at the
accident scene.
Fair Security
Discussion Set
By Mesa Council
Discussion of police securitJ re·
qui:-ements and an acUvity committee for
Orange County Fairground! eventa are
on the agenda for tonight's special Co$ta
Mesa City Council meeting.
Girl Tots Sweep
The adjourned meeting ls set for 7 p.m.
in the conference room behind rtl\lla:r ci·
ly council chambers, whert the Costa
Mesa Planning Commission convenes at
7:30 p.m. as usual.
Planners are faced with a largely
routine agenda, while the city council
s2ssi on is designed to clear Up mattera
held ov er from last week. Bab y Contest Draivs Record Field
Among items of new business up for
discussion will be, besides t h e
fairgrounds security and activities, joint
use of a proposed police helicopter: patrol
system with other cl~s.
The name of the game was captivate..
the-judge and the girls.whipped the boys
5-to-l Sunday 'in Cbsta Mesa Park:
Only one: manchild took a trophy home
aft.er the popu]ar Costa Mesa·Newport
Harbor Lio~ Club Fish Fry Baby
Contest.
Rude Awakening
In D1·unk Tank
A 17-year-old ManhaUan Beach boy
.folind sleeping through the big Fish Fry
in Costa Mesa Park Sunday night was a
bit unhappy when he woke up in a drunk
tank at city jail, police said today.
The juvenile, arrested on suspicion of
drug in toxication and possession of a
narcotics Injection needle , tried to kJ,ck a
lank .toilet apart, jailers said.
One officer entered to confisca te the
teen-ager's high boots, but was joined by
another when the suspect refused to take
ther.i off and had to be subdued.
Chairman Bud Mears said the li9-entry
field this year was the biggest ever bu t
of course the 24th annua l fish Fry
eelebraUon Itself followed the same pal·
tern .
Trophy winners In the six to 12 months·
old category were : ·
-Jeanette Charle, eight mo n th s .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Charle, 2387
Westminster Ave., Costa Mesa.
~ynthla Cuccia, seven m o n t h s ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Cuccia,
271 E. 16th St., C.Osta' Mesa.
-Karen Putnam, -12 months, daughter
of ?i-1r. and Mrs. W. Putnam, 788 W. 18th
St., Costa Mesa.
The next 10 runnttups Jn the category
received certificates, as did .runnerups in
the 13-lo-24 months old category, won by:
-Stephanie Berndt, 16 m o n t h s .
daughter of J\1rs . Helga Berndt, 1195
Bismark Way, Costa Mesa .
-Heather Wicker, 18 months. daughter
of A1rs. Janis Wicker, 268 Sherwood
Place, Costa Mesa.
-David Lebet, 18 months. son of Mr,
and Mrs. Paul Lebel, 1033 Mission Drive,
Costa Mesa.
Councilmen are to. rtach a derision .on
whetbe,r.).o go ahead with the helieop cOo..
cept u.raatby·Pollce Chief Roger Ne~ at
a Junt® public hefri!)g on the new tlitll
blJdiot,
\
Mobile Chest
X-raw on Duty
California Chest Surveys w.ill be
operaLing its Mobile Chest X-ray this
week at the Harbor Shopping Center.
The vehicle, \\o"hich helps in early detee.
lion of tuberculosis, lung cancer and
other abrlormalities. will be at the shop·
ping center 8 o'clock tonight and from 2
p.m. to 8 p.m. through Thursday.
The films will be interpreted by
specialists in diseases of the chest. There
will be a nominal fee of $1.50.
How to kick ~the
Clyde wasn't p rac ticing
1alesmauship. At tea 1 I, 1101
knowingly. He was trying to be
11elpful, becau!ie that's his job.
If that's old fasliioned, I guess
,,·e're guilly.
A Jot of relail people h&l'en'l
learned bow to li1ten. They
want to use the mouth before
they 11se tlte eani.
• • een1e-meen1e-
minie-moe habit. E\·ery store o"''lter lhinlu bis
store is a cut above any other
11 tore. and certainly we're u
proud of our slore a11 any 11ore
o,,-ner co11ld be. And yet, ,,,e
do11't lry to kid ourselves. Our
'merchanWae, 1elect ion and
values are quite appealing, but
le,t'11 face it. On the whole
,,.e~re rather like any other
good meu'11 store.
Don't ever uk a cu1tomer why
he buy1 from you.
We learned that when one
cu1tomer pve u1 a funny look
. ~d replied, ''For abt0lutely
no reuon whattoever." ·
Not being real ;u..., whit be
meant by thar, we 1hot up and
10Jd him t"·o euit1.
The reason ,..e me11l ion 1his
ia because the other tJay oue of
our cu5tomen did tell u1 why
he bought from u1. We leamod
tl1at h e is a praclicintr psy·
cl1ologi11 i.u A11abein1. While
,.·ailing for us to write up bit
purchaae~ 'he uid eome nice
tbingl abou~ u a, and t.lien
uked if ""'d be lnlenlioted In
knowing why he dro•e clear
down here to 1pend SSO on a
aport coat.
Naturally we wan t e d to
know why.
Wei~ uide from enjoylns
an exeulfl to vfl it the area on
a ple1eant aunny afternoon, he
1aid bis main reaeon wu our
uillinp ... to /ufen. lie bad
finally bee~ drl-out of the
store where h'e· uted lo buy l1 is
clothe1, a very fine alore by
the way, because whenever be
went in to pick .out a 1uit the
.U..rum b~d immediately
tried to tell him what'the 1tore
wanted him to btty.
What thi1 man wanted to do
wa1 lo boy Hmething, not be
.1old somethina.
La.it year he waa agi-eeal>l y
1urprited, on a cl1nnce ,·i1it lo
8 i d •· e 11 ' 11, "·hen our Clyde
Reye1 took enough interesl,
before ever taking a auit from
the rack, to ult about hia color
and pattern pn1ference1, and
to Jeam eomething ah9ut the
kind of 1tylea he hod been buy•
Ing ehewbere.
There'• only one thing "'e
ha,·e 1ha1 no other n1en"s &tore ..... u •.
We ll'y lo be friendly a11d
helpful, h11t we know one
thing that rnay be aignificant.
Our cUs lon1er1 are ntore Jo,·al
than mo111 . •
Instead of ol!iiog the eeni;:
n1eenie-minie-moe 1r1 t em of
picking a •ti-re, you might try
b11ying from 0 1 ''for abeolutcly
no reuon whataoever.''
Jack Bidwell
3467 Via U do, ju1t beyond the Arch .. overpu1 o"er
Pacific Cout BiPway. Telephone 6'734Sl O.
Drive between. Lido Tbe.atre a my !lore 4 park in rear.
Co1J>righ t 1969. Jaek Bid,..,11,
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Pullout Gets
GOP Praise,
D·em Chides
\'IAS!l!NGTON (API -Oemocrauc crttl.cs of the Vietnam war are calling
Presldent Nixon's troop withdrawal-an·
nouncement inadequate, but Republicans
ift-Congress generally see It as at least a
1tep in the right direction.
Sen. George S. McGovern of South
Dakota and Eugene J. ~1cCarthy of Min·
nesota both unsuccessful candidates for
the ~mocratic presidential nomination
last year, said they were disappointed by
Nixon s announcement.
"'l can't see where It represents any
significant sh.ift of American policy,"
said McGovern. "I'm gled for the
withdrawal, but I think we ought to begin
taking them all out. and the faster the
better ..•. "
McCdrthy said: "I don 't see that this i~
any significant indication or any progra n1
to try and resolve or end the war."
Similar criticism came from Sen.
Albert Gore, CO.Tenn.). who said that
Pres.ident Ni son's trip to Midway gave
South Vietnam President Nguyen Van
Thieu "a leverage to which he is not en-
titled ."
"The principal issue at the conference
was whether to negotiate a political com·
prom;se which \Vould permit• not 25,000
American boys, but 540,000, to come
home. From what we have heard so far,
there Is no indication that President Nil:-
oo has won a single major point .... "
"The choice at ti1idway "'as between
the Nixon peace plan and the Thieu plan
for prolonged war," Gore added. "The
Thieu plan seems to have \von hands
down."
There was no immediate response from
three other major Democratic antiwar
critics: Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the
assistant Democratic leader f r o m
Musachusett.s ; Sen. J. William F'ulbright
of Arkansas and Sen . Stuart Symington of
Missouri.
Rep. Robert L. Sikes, (D-Fla.), said he
was not certain the withdrawal was a
wise idea because he doesn't think Hanoi
will be impressed by concessions.
"I don't think the Communists are im·
pressed by anything but force. They air
preciate force and they understand
strength," said Sikes, a member of the
defense subcommittee of the House Air
propriaticns Commiiteei
Re'>ubl icans had cautious praise.
House Republican Leader Gerald R.
Ford said: "I hope this initial withdrawal
of 25.000 U.S. troops serves lo stimulate
progress in the Paris peace talks."
Freshman Sen. Robert Packwood. (R-
Ore.), called it "a step in the ri~ht direc-
tion. It would be my hope that in August
the reassessment would allow a substan-
tially increased rate of withdrawal ."
"At long last de-escalation has become
a fact rather th an a phrase," commented
Sen. Edward W. Brooke. !R-Mass.).
Sen. George D. Aiken of Vermont, sen-
ior Republicen on lhe Foreign Relations
Committee. said the announcement would
have a healthy effect on the nation.
"We don 't know the whole story yet.
but it does seem as if !he South Viet·
namese themselves should now Qe strong
eTlCIU~ to take over their responsibili-
ties,' he said.
Rep . William B. Widnall, (R·N .J.), "'as
one of the n1ost enthusiastic.
"It has got to mean that conditions arc
such that we can see the beginning or the
end," he said.
And Rep . Loll'ell P. \Ve ickcr. IH·
Conn.), ac!ded : "I don't care ir it's 25,000
or 10,000 -it certainly represents a
departure fro1n the Jo h n son ad·
ministration."
Disneyland Set
For Grad Party
The first of se\'en Disneyland AJl·Ni1
Grad Parties started over the 1veeke1v
Ior more than 12.000 graduates in th«
fl.1agic Kingdom at Anaheim.
More than 100,000 students from 388
schools statewide will be attending the
ninth year of the private party.
Twenty-four high schools from Orar.q:-
County will attend the e"cnt during th::
next two ""·eeks.
Orange Coast high schools planning 10
attend on June 12 include Estancia, Mis-
sion Viejo, F'ountain Vallev and f{un t-
ington Beach.· Corona de! ·Mar will at-
tend on June 13.
U1'1T.-...lt
Here's Mud it& Y 0111· Eye
And every'\\•here ·else too, as is-Year-old Kathy Anderson of Brent-
\Vood, Mo .• has a ball in a YMCA Mud Ball . She started out Jookinj?
like this (top left), then got into the swim of things (bottom) and
came out looking like this (top right). ·
Laird Says New Pullout
Moves U.S. Near Peace
\VASl1I NGTON (AP) -Secretary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird declared todav
Presiden t Nixon's deci sion lo pull '.?5.ocio
troops out of Vietnam moves the United
States "claser to peace."
S. Viets Claim
Nixon Blunting
War Opposition
From Wirt Services
Two top South Vietnamese leaders
today ""viewed President Nixon's troop
withdrawal announcement as an attempt
to appease opposition to the war in th e
Unite<! States.
The legislators said such a ~o~·e had
b:?en expected in the Saigon government.
"ll will soften the attitude of public
opinion in the United Stales and op-
ponents of U.S. policy," said Ho Van
!\tinh. deputy chairman of the house of
representalives.
"It \vill help President Nixon appca::r
the opposition in the UAiled States," said
Tran Ngoc Chau. secretary gene ral of thr:-
lower housr.
The Soviet news agency Tass today
d cs c r i bed President Nixon 's an·
nouncement or the 1vithd ra"•al of 25,000
trQQps from Vietnam as a "propaganda
step" partly aimed at placating U.S. \l'ar
crit:cs.
''It is not de-escalation or the beginning:
of complete withd ra1\•a\ of all American
tr(}Q ps but the removal of on ly an
l'ls ignl ficant part of American froop.<1."
the agency said in a 'Vashinglon dispatch.
.'ical Beach Trublec:,
Slate Long Agenda
A 15-point agen<la goes before trus1c~ \
o( lhe SE.al Beach School District at 6:3!1
p.rn. Tuesday during thei r business
1nccti1g at l\icGaugh I n ter m c di a I e
Schoo!.
Items include setting dates for the nest
two , board meetings. kindergarten pre-
registration and consideration of pro-
re~:~ for kitchen food SCr\•ice equip-
Arriving from the joint U.S.-Viel·
na mese meeting at ti1idway, Laird said :
"I believe \Ve return closer lo peace and
\l'e no1v have a program moving forward
to change the role of United States forces
in Vietnam and in Southeast Asia.··
The defense chief said he believn the
U.S. effort to give South Vietnam a 'big-
i:cr role in the "'ar "will bear fruit" in
the coming days.
Lai rd did not identify which units will
'11C' fflt flr!t Ito lea Ve the1war ~···said
'lliil'Will be decided ·Thursd~y 1111'~· join!
i;er\•ice task force 1vhich is being assign-
ed to prepare for the movement of
\l'ilhdravring units in early July.
Other sources indicated the witlldrawn
troops would not retu rn to thi s country,
but would be held in reserve in such
areas as Okina1\'a and Hawaii, from
which they could be rushed back to Viet-
nam in case they should be needed.
The pullout i~ cxP-,Cetecl . to stai:t y,•ith
the \Vithdrawal of several combat bat-
,lalions or support-type forces.
The task force, to convene at the
Pacific command in Hawaii , will include
representatives of Laird's ofrice and . of
each of the military services, and air and
. se<: transport specialists.
Laird 1vould not forecast how the North
Vietnamese "·ould react to thr initial U.S.
\\"ithdrawal.
"I don't make predictions as to what
kind of response there ~·ill be." he said.
But Laird eontendeil that the U.S.
rlccision ''should be a signal to the North
Vietnamese that the Uniteil Slates is
going to mni nlain its objcctil'e'' of self
flctrrn1ination for the South Vietnamese
by its carefully measured troop reduc·
lion.
This should al so indicate to the North
Vietna1nese. Laird sai d, that the United
States "is firm in its resolve to sec that
the Sout h Vietnamese da take ol'er arid
nrt.. prepared and are capable " of defen-
ding the1nselves.
On Capitol Hill, a new s1nan noted,
there already are comments by war
critics that the 25,000 troop withdrawal is
only a token reduction.
To that, Laird 6aid he had gone to the
t.lidway meeUng feeling optimistic that
the United States was reaching a turning
point in the war and !hat bis hopes and
C:."tpectations "have been fulfilled by the
historic decision of President Nixon to
begin Vietna mization of the war in
southeast Asia."
-tr * tr
Troops Calm at News
Gls Realize Chances of Going Ho1ne Earl:y 20to1
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. soldiers In Viet-
nam toiu shrugged off President Nix-
on's announcement of a withdrawal or
aome troops with a calm detachment
devoid of elation.
They realized their chaoces of going
home early were 20-1 against them. and
as one private said: "Until someone tells
me differently, I rigure I'll put In my 3M
d1ys here."
Most learned or Nixon's decision to
wlthdraw 25,000 or the $33,500 American
troops in Vietnam through the Armed
Forces Net\\-'Ork or by word of mouth,
paued rrom GI to GI.
"I'd like lo think this b !he beginning
or lhe end,'' u.ld Sgt. David Corbu11, 18,
of YakJma, Wish., "but J can't bt:lleve '
tt'U have much effect on the war.
Anyway, I go hom e In eight days, That's
all that Is on my mind."
"I didn 't figure we would start pulling
out for at least a year," said Spec. 4 !\like
Gannon, a 20-year.-old soldier from
BrookJyn, N.Y. "Nixoo must have done It
to quiet the stink in the States."
Officiall y, the U.S. command had oo
reaction lo Nixon's statement and rcfus·
ed to speculate about what unit would
leave. ·
"For the present, the President'.11 state-
ment speaks for Itself," said a
SJ>Okesman for U.S. troop commander
Gen. Creighton Abrams.
There have been unconfirmed reporl:ii
that the ZSth Infantry Division. heait-
quartered at Cu Chi. 2G miles northwest
of Saigon, would return to Hawaii. But
divU;ion spokesmen 11aid loday they had
received no order to redeploy.
"We've heafd rumor~ that the 2~th well
i;oing home for months," said S~c. S
Lonnie Edwards, 2~. of Oklahoma City.
"If tHe:y do, though, it's going to leave a
big void and I've never heard any com·
pliments about the South Vietnamese
arm1."
In a recent interview, Maj. Gen. Or-
mond Simpson. commander of the Isl
ft1arlne Division in Da Nang, was asked
how much forewarning he would expect if
his wUt was to leave Vietnam.
"Probably three or four weeks." he
ana:wertd. "It a unit hid much more
forewarning than that, the .comm:1ndtr
lvould have lo alter hia mlUttry tactics.
He mi1tht get overly cautious and it
would lead to-an-unhealthy situation."
So despite Nixon's decision, Ute In Vlet8
nam -for the 1ntl11ted troops at least -
conUnued unchanged toda y. The war
dragged on. New battles lay ahead •
. ·-
• ·t I .
McDonnell 4 Sll_!fle Accidents • •• •• ,•·
'
To Describe
STOL ' Plans
Couµty Traf fie
W reeks Kill 5
• ' ,'.
~
• .. ,• .
' -·
., .
Tbe McDoqnFll Douglas Corp. will
present a program on 1hort takeoff and
landing (STOLi aircraft before the coun-
ty Al~rt commission at 7 p.m. Tues-
da,y, Cortuµlsslon . Chair min Dennis
Carpenter has Mnounced .
Carpenter. said the meeting is open to
the public and wltl be held In IM county
Soard of Supervisors' hearing room .at
515 N. Sycamore St ., Santa Ana.
The commission requested ~McDonnell
Douglas lo give the presentaUon because
of the "Intense Interest In STOL
transports and their relation to proposed
metroporls In Orange Counfy," Carpenter
.. aid.
"We a1e largely concerned about the
second and third generation or STOL
:ilrcra:t and therefore asked ~1cDonnell
Douglas to reveal what Is belng proposed
for the future ," the chairman added .
ThP. ~orpG:ratlon's team of speakers will
lnclucle D. R:. Gilbert marketing manager
STOL transports. and R. K. Schaefer,
s en · or group engineer-operations
analysis.
n1c presentation 1vill consist of slides
and movie films of some of the aircraft
now in &E.rvlce. as "·ell as those being
proposed. Covered will be STOL ground
envtr0nment and the future of such
planes In air transport, Carpenter ad ded.
"\Ve u r I e those Interested in shorl
takeoff a n d landing aircraft and t h e
metroporl concept to attend," the
chairman concluded.
Five peraons died over Ute weekend, u
tbe result of traffic accldenla ior1 Oratige
County treew1y1 and hlatlways~ Four
wert killed In single car accidents, police
reported, and Ille fi!UI died of lnjurlu
received in a two-car crash on lhe
Beach Chamber
Expects Manager
By Next.Month
Members of tbe Huntin£lon Be8ch
Chamber of Commerce hope' to have 1
new manager by July t.
"We already have ten applicants." said
chamber pre sident C. E. "Bill" Woods t~
day, ';anC: v•e wlll accept more ap-
plications uotll.June. 15." '
"Our prime requisite," explalTled
Woods, "is to find a man who can create
good communications with the inembers
and tnititate and move programs."
Dale Dunn resigned the manager's past
tilay 3<l to enter the business world as a
financial plaMtr. Woods is currenlly fill-
ing a dual role as chamber president and
manager.
"I think our entire program will un-
dergo a re-cvaluaUon and reaffirmation
of its structure," said WoodJ looking at
the future, "with a irreater emphasis on
volunteer work." J
NtwPorl Freeway IHl·Wedneoclay. The dead : ·
PbWp J. ~dklns, 21, Lakewood.
Larry G. l'tfessenger, 16, Malibu. . .
" Jama c. Wela, 23, Orange. _ • ·
Andrea R\ Jara.mJllo, 21, La Puente ••.
Josepb G. Welaen, 22, Camp Pendlet&'J.
Adkins was tilled Sundax momLac
whe.n his southbound car went 'out of ~
trol and hit ·a center divider at the 'l:D-
tcrchange of the San Dleg9 and . Sac~
.Ana freeways in El Toro. He was thrOJm
rrom !he car and \lled o( head lnjurf(:!,
the coroner's office reported. :
The Messenger bQj died Sunday ni&bt
at Costa A-lesa Memorial Hos pital of m.
juries received In a he'adon cr11h \V~nesday on the N~w.port f~way niar
Dyer Road. His sister. Donna ..J.
19$9
91
. County TraHlc
Death Ttlll •
,
,Joh~ston, 22, of 82HJ 19th sf.,
Westminster, was killed in \he accide~ Weis~ died eariy Saturday of mult!fle
injuries received when his car went eut
of control ·and overturned on the Nthl
Rarlch Road In northeast Anaheim. ~
Jaramillo died Saturday of head Jn-
jurtes received when his car went ouc«
control and hit a ct:nter di vider at BDaa
and Harbor boulevard:ii in Fullerton. ;
. Weinen was killeil Sunday when be ltlll
control of his· southbound car ofl the !S:U
Diego Freeway, one mile south of La 1).1
Road In Mtssion Viejo. He was throp
from the vehicle and died from muIUjll:
injuries. the coroner's office reported;;; • -. .. .
Chevrolet -
Pacesetter Values.
Want a re~son why Camaro's a better buy
than any other sportster at its price?
Here are 25. ' . 1. Only Caniaro ofl'era a resilient calor-matebed fiant bumper.
2. Only Camaro ofl'ers a liquid traction-improvement sy1tem.
3. Only Camaro ofl'en a light monitoring a}'ltem.
4. Only Camaro offen low -cost Torque·Drive clutchless drivin(.
5; Only Camara offers heArllight washers.
6. Only Camaro has co 1np11t;er-~l~ted tipri11gs.
7. Camaro offers more power tearn c}1oices. a. C~maro o'ffers a wirier r.hnice uf OptionR A.ncl Custom Features..
9. Only Camaro~has 11.n-snti-thf:'ft locH;YMlerr1--f1>r igrUtion,
steering wheel anc,l trani-;mission selector.
10. Only Camara ·offers concealed headlights.
11. Only Camaro offers va1iable~ratio power 8teering.
U. Only Camara offer. a four -•,,..,d transmission with every engine.
13. OnJy Camaro offers a choice of two automatic ttansmissiom.
14. Only Camara offPrs a speed warniJ1g indicator.
15. Only Camaro ha~ a.n ignition-key alarm.
16. Only Camaro ha s B<,dy by Fisher craftsmanship.
17. Only Camaro ha s Ma gic-Mirror acrylic lacquer finish.
18. Only Camaro has tlush-and-dry rocker panels.
19. (;smaro's front stance is lr'i der.
20. Camaro's rear stance is wider.
21. Camaro itself is wider.
22. Camaro"s got more front shoulder room .
23. Camaro's heavier, model for model.
24. Only Camaro offers a fold-down rear .. at in every model.
25. Only Camara offers power windows.
Puttin1 you first, keeps us f ir ~t.
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Another Ship . Almost· Ram~d Three Day Belo-re f at l Collision:~
,
IN TOHY'I =~ -.
~ "' ., OtltJ Plllf 1'9fn
To advjrtise .his bat.s, Harry Fo""
put "1ii)irJs, In bis shop window on
Camaby l!treet in London wearing
Qie !Ult.s . and a few strategically
placed; feathers. As a crowd gatlr
4red. two policemen came by:
•nits 'ls going a bit far, isn't il'!''
9ne' aSked. f<No," sajd Fox. "It's
a Iegittmale win.do w display.''
After' FOx. refused to-temove the brts 'f($1 the wlodow, police
4trt>d.e 1into the shop and drew a
iru_rt.ain. Fox, but not the girls, was
t:aken to a police station. He was
~barged with obslruc;ting the bigb·
l"ay. Fox pleaded guilty in sum·
Qlar)' court and was fined $60. • ; Ed "Ace" Hudci'y, who's been
selling newspapers at the same
Corner in Pittsburgh, for over 30 : jears , has a new stand. It's eight
, .{eet high by six feet square, bas
·. ~ur round windows in the roof, a
picture window in the back and
~everal compartments for papers.
i'l'he only thing I don't have is a
fihower to cool me off," said Ace.
: The stand was designed and built
'. by students. at Carnegie-Mellon
tJniversJty, who were doing a proj~
ect for their architectural design
Class. 'ij • · t The weekly riet0spapt"r car-
• t ried Uiis fra11t page notice: "Be-
• cause of the small number of
deserving candidatti f or 'Man
of the \Veek' honors, thil col-
umn is being discontinued, In
il! place will be a monthly col·
umn titled 'Man of the Month' ... 1 TM 'tewspaper, The Forum, ii
l published by inmates of tht N~
braska penal complex in Lin-
coln. '' Jlll<~!:J...::·~-~~~-==:i:<:eir::=~ • • /\ Los Angeles maid thought the
best way to smoke out a swarm of ~s in a chimney was to start a
fire in. the fireplace. The bees clog-
ged the chimney and a spark start-
ed a fire on the shingled rooftop
W a Pacific Palisades hoO').et ·Ftre.
men estimated damage at $12,ooO:-
• •
Thi1 Germ.an shepherd puppy
named "Lucky" really is just that.
Karen Hoffman of Chicago llas adopt-
ed the pup after he 1vas found wit/1
his ears cut off and abandoned in a
cardboard box in the middle of the
highway.
SllBlC 'BAY. Philippines (UPI) -
Three di).a bdore tt sliced Ille USS
l'rank B. !nm In two, llllllng 71
American altlon, the Austnill.an aircraft
can1er. Melbourne. almost collided with
another ship. • A 11 unprecedented U.S.-Aultrallan
boon! of toqulry bepn 1111n,,..11gatlon of
the Melbou,...E .. ns colllllon loday ud
heanl an A-.Ilan admiral deocrtbe tile
carrier's near mtu beforf! dawn on May
31.
Rear Adm. G. J. B. Crabb, comman·
Banks Boost
Prime Rate '
To New High
NEW YORK CAP) -Major banl<s t ..
day nised lhe prime rate -lhe interest
charged their biggest and besl customers
for loans -to 1 hla:toric hlgh of 8~~ per-
cent from 7~ percent, effective im·
mediately.
An increase had been expectt.d for
aome timt, but the amOWlt ol the hike -
a full one per~ent -was surprl11ing.
The first bank to lncttase the rate was
Bankers Tnist Co. of New York and it did
sa without making any comment on Its
feasons. Other New York banks, and then
Chicago, Philadelphia aDd ~ston ~anks
quickly made the same move. Among the
banks ·was Otase Manhattan and First
National City of New York.
Reacting to the move, the Dow Jones
industrial av~~e dropped about seven
pojnts shorUy after the New York Stock
Exchange opened.
When one bank increaser lhe prime
rate, others usually follow.
The prime rate is used in detemllning
the interest rate charged most large cor·
poratiom:. Other rates. 1t1ch as lnteiut
ra&ea to COlllUlllers, a re acaled upward
from Ute prime rate.
The old rate of 71h percent was a
record high when it was set on March 17.
As recently as last Dec. 2 the rate was
fiVt. A aeries ol rate increases, usually
one-fourth or one-hall or a percent at a
time, bad GCCWTed between December
and March.
The Federal Reserve Board ha,, taken
a number pf-steps to make tt ·more ex•
~pensive and more dUficult for banks to,
borrow money. But the demand on banlri
for ltlQOtY to borro1' bu continued '
strong.
By rai.!ln1 lbe prime rate banks can af.
· ford to· pay more for lbe money t.hey bor-
row.
* * * U.S. Employinent
In Slight Rise
WASHINGTON CUP!) -Toll! employ-
ment ln the naUon increased only slightly
~ Ma)'., the third consecutive month of
moderate gain, lndlcating an easing or
the economy, the government said today.
The jobless rate for May was 3.5 per-
cent, unchanged Jrom April. Howard
Stambler of the Labor department's
bureau of labor staUsUcs aald the over.all
employment picture for last month
"probably reflects an easing in the
economy."
Nonfarm employment in May was 73.3
million, a slight drop rrom the 73.4
million in April. Total employment,
however, was 77.2 milliori, up slightly
lrom the 77 million jobs held in April
der· of the 1b:-natfon1 SEATO naval
oianeu..... In ttie Soutb aitna sea.
·t"1!fled lhlt oDOll1<'1.ahtp palOed within
IO feet of tile Melbourne In what he called
a "near oolUslO..." •
He elaborated ·on tht.iocldent when the
six-man board wt.nt Into clOsed · sesslon,
i way from newsmen.' 'lbe "NiVy banned
both cameru and tape TtCOrden from
tile opj:ll !"'ions •I Georp E. Dewty
HJ&b Sci>9ol· Crabb's aCcount indicated the second
ship, like the Evans, ...as 'a dt!troyer, for
hll Niel the tnddtnt pmnpled him to
·-_...,._p~llf._for ~ acr-in, tile Me1bcMUne from almulated
submarine attack. •
'Ille onien made ..-1nry the use of
nav!gauon llchts after IUDllt and moved
the destn>yers Inn 2,1100 lo 3,000 yardl
away from the almalt corrler.
Capt. Jolla Stevenson of Ille Melbourne
told 11ewsu11en 1n Singapore Friday that
tile E""'8. one of Ille ocreenlng
destroyers, was chanainl: its course when tile Melbourne atlced-lnfO It.
. \11'1 T.it....,_ MOVIE IDOL ROBERT TAYLOR LOSES BATTLE AGAINST LUNG CANCER
Ht Wa s M•rried Twice-to Barb~ra St•l'lwyck (left) and Ursula Theiss
Can~er Kills Robert Taylor
Matinee Idol of· Movies, TV Quit Smoking Too Late
SANTA MONICA (UPI ) - Before
Robert Taylor 's operation for removal of
a cancerous lung ill October, he kicked
his three-pack-a-day cigarette habit.
"I'm going to take the situation by the
horns .•. " he vowed . "You're damned
right 1 am. I'm going to whip it, knock il
down and tromp on it."
Sunday the matinee idol lost his baltlc.
He died at 10:30 a.m. at St. John's
Hospital. Offidal1 said the 5'l·year-old ac-
tor knew ·he had terminal cancer.
. ?den derided the al.mo6t too-handsome
a~tor as a "pretty boy." Girls crashed
through the doors of a London hotel in
J937 to get near him .
Later in a career lhat included more
than 70 films, Taylor was cast in more
manly roles and in 1966, his hair less
wavy and his face more creased, he
became the host of tele vision's "Death
Valley Days."-
ln the months after his lung operation,
Taylor was In and out of the hospital
seven times.
Taylor, who said he had "mloked si nce
J was a kid," pledged to "lake the situa-
tion by the horns like John Wayne did."
Wayne undenvent surgery for lun g can-
cer in 1984 and announced : "I've kicked
the big C." Wayne baa completed five
pictures liince.
Taylor's wife of 15 years, aclress
Ursua! Theiss, was at his side when he
died.
Gov. Ronald Reagan, who preceded
Taylor as host ol "Death Valley Days,"
\viii deliver the eulogy at funeral services
\Vednesday morning at Forest Lawn.
Taylor was under contract a:t Metro-
Goldwyn-Mayer from 1934 until 1958, a
Hollywood record. Jn his early days as an
actor, MG~t capitalized on. his good looks
and put him in films appealing to women.
Whe.n Taylor 's first Him played
Beatrice, Neb., near his birthplace of
Filley, Neb .• the marquee billed him
under his real name. It proclaimed:
''Starring Spangler Arlington Brugh.''
After two years as a Navy flight in·
structor during World War JI, Taylor ap.
peared in a series of reJatively in-
significant films-until "Quo Vadis'' in
195 1. ·i
That movie re-established Taylor as a
top star. The same ye.ar he was di vorced
hy Barbara St.anwyck, whom he married
in 1939. They had no children. Taylor
married ri1iss Theiss in 1954. They had a
son, Terence, 13, and a daughter, Tessa,
9,
Withdrawal Won't Hurt
U.S., Abrams Declnres
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. military of-
ficials said today President Nixon's troop
v.·ithdrawal would neither harm the
American fighting machine nor deter the
Communists from further offensives.
The guerriltas shelled 22 military
camps overnight - a sharp dropoff from
the 102 and 59 salvos the previous tv;o
nights in an attempt to show their
strength to President Nixon and Nguyen
·Van Thieu at Midway.
Gen. Creighton W. Abrams' military
Electrical Failure
Struck Jetliner
Before Sea Crash
command had no word on who would be
among the 25,000 Gls sent home or when
they would go.
One officer said the Army's view \\'as
that the withdrawal would "cut on the
fat without cutting off the muscle" of the
538,500 Gls now fighting in Vietnam.
An official Saigon go v e r n m e n t
spokesman said the removal of U.S.
troops "will not be harmful to the sccuri-.
ty of the allied (urces or lo the self·
determination of the Vietnamese people."
U. S. military officials predicted
more waves of Communist shell ings such
as the stepped-up fighting before the
Midway conference which cost the Reds
an estimated 1,500 dead. U.S. losses were
estimated at 200 dead , 600 wounded.
"I sus~t they'll keep at it for a month
or two,' a high·ranking officer said. The
aim : to increase American casualties,
draw troops away from population
centers like Saigon and grab headlines.
Wet Skies Cover Nation
WASHINGTON (AP) -The National
Transportation Safety Board says there
was an electrica l fa ilure on a United
Air Lines Boeing Tn just before it
plunged into the Pacific Ocean last Jan.
18. shortly after takeoff rrom Los An·
geles International Airport.
U.S. headquarters meant Im e an·
nounced the total evacuation of U .S
troops from Hamburger Hill, the. moun-
tain near Laos that cost 84 Gls killed and
about 400 wounded to capture in May.
''There are no troops on the hill as rar
as we know," a U.S. spokes man said in
announcing the end of the 10,000-man
allied offensive through the A Shau
Valley, which Hamburger Hill overlooks.
•'
" ~· ·-: . . . Sault Ste. Marie Records V.S. Low of 33
The crash killed all 38 persons aboard
the Denver-bound plane.
came from the colilslon site aboard the
USS Xeanargi!, an aircraft canier.
'111• beard of Inquiry will tum ill fln.
d~ over to the U.S. and Australian
nav1es for use in establishing guilt in the
collisJon.
' Lt. CJ.G,) Ronald Craig Ramsey, 24,'ol
Long Beach; the officer in dlaJ:p ,of .~
Evans when ihe collision occurredt ~s
refused commt.nt to newsmen prior lo l1s
testimony bet' ore · the board. r!
Crabb said he was awakened 1 in 'ht1
stateroom on the MeJboUme ~t inorhi)lg
of June 3 when the Evans toot' a coUllf011
course. Reliable &OUrces said the Evans ·
did not answer two orders to cbanga~ltt ·
direcUon.
* * * Sailor Calkd'
Sea Operation
One Big Farce
. .. ,.
LONG BEACH CA~) -"l 1-our
well belrig never depends on such a lf'CIUP
as this ," wrote a sailor a week before he
and 73 others died in internaUi::lila.I
maneuvers in the South China-Sea ..
"The ship is now· engaged in a large
SEATO (Southeast Asia Treaty Organiza.
tioo) operation," Sona r Surface Techni·
cian 2.C John R. Spray wrote to relatives
from hi! ship, the destroyer Frank E.
Eva ns.
The Ausiralian carr ier Melbourne slic-
ed the Evans in two last Tuesday.
"There are approximately six member
nations and 30 ships involved in this u-
ercise," said the letter dated May 27.
"The whole thi ng is one big farce. None
or the ships can cooperate with each
other. I only hope that our well beini
neve r depends upon such a group as
this.''
"I ha ve become so disillusioned with
the service. There is nothing I wouldn 't
do to be back with Lau ri and real people.
"The military is living in a world of
ils own. Totally unrealistic."
Spray wrote the letter to two of his
wife's aunt, Esther Cohen and Leona
riterki>w. Lauri is Spray's widow.
The letter was disclosed by the ltlnls
after the collision.
A cousin or the dead seaman, Frank
riferkow, said, "John was not a radical
persan, far from it. He was part of the
military and he did a good job in the
military •• ," '
Court Upholds ,
U.S. Doctrine
' Of TV Fairness
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court ruled, 7 to 0, today that radia and
television broadcasters are subject ta"the
government's "fairness doctrine'' and
can be ordered to air opposi ng views on
controversial issues raised in their own·
programs.
The opinion by Justi ce Byron R. White
rejected the claim of a Pennsylvania
broadcasting company and the industry
<1l large that the aulhority exercised by
the Federal Communications Commission
(FOC) infringed on the Jst Amendment
guarantees of• right of freedom of the
press.
The court, sitting as an eight.judge
panel since the resignation of Abe Fortas,
took these other actions:
-Ruled 7 to I that state law:1, cannot
permit the garnishee of a worker's wages
without first granlillg him a hearing. The
opinion by Justice William 0. Douglas
struck down specifically a Wisconsin law
but al least 17 olb..>r states operate under
similar statu tes CJnd as many as 250 000
garnishee actio~ may be nullirted by 1the
ruling. The lone dissenter. Justice Hugo
L. Black, con tended the decision was an
intrusion of state authority.
-Turned down a request by Cleveland
L. Sellers Jr., a Negro civil rights work-
er, for review of his broadscale cha11enge
of the racial composition of local draft
boar4s. Sellers, a native of Bamberg
S.C., clain)ed Negroes h'ave a rtght t~
refuse induetion because members of
their race have been sys tematically ex-
cluded from the boards.
CaHfornla
Mltfl LIW l"rK. . " S6 !11 • ,14
n 'l-,
The' board reported Sunday evening
the poWer suppiled by three generators
failed. A preliminary report indicated
one <>f the three generators was lnoper.l
alive three days before the accident
and that the plane had been flown 41
houn with only two functioning genera-
tOr.s.
Loss of electricity means hydraulic
and other ftiRht controls, Instrument
panels and cockpit lighting would no
longer £unction. A cockpit blackout at
night would have left the crew unable
to make ~uired corrections to keep
the plane flying .
Oilmen Freed by Biafrans
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Nonnally, cockpit conversations are
monitored on two tape rE'COrders, but
the power k>ss :n flight rendered them
inoperable for all but ni ne seconds
during the critlcal moments after a fire
warning was reported ta ground con·
trollers and the plane slashed into the ocean.
Goldberg Asks \Var
End, Military Study
STOCKTON (UPI) -Fonner Supmne
Court Just.ice Arthur Goldbera called
Sunday for an end to tbe Vietnam war
and a thorough congressional review of
tile .. mllltar7 e>labllalunenl"
Goklberg, who r~ from the court
to become ambassador to the United Na·
tiOM: addresaed 3.000 peraons a t
Univer$1ty of Paclflc sr1du1tlo11 ex-
ercises.
'
D~,scrihe Days of Terror
R0h1E (AP) -"We bear no llate
toward the Bialrans, '' one ol the oilmen
freed by the rebels in Eastern Nlgef'\a
sa id Sunday night. '·They are a people
\Vho know noUUng of the re.!t of the
world.''
''They don't even know that Italy Cl·
ists, that Italy helps them," Vittorio
Lucarelli continued as he told how the
Biafran soldiers UVJ.l overran the
oilmen's Camp near Kwale, Midwest
Nigeria, a month ago argued among
themselves abOut how many to kill. They
shot 11 or 29.
"The ones who fired into our IJ'OUP
we.re part of an advance patrol; they
Wltt'e all young," LucareUI said. "They
understood onJy that lheir job was to kill,
not be kilted ...
After 10 ltalt1ns and a Jordanian were
~hot, Lucarelli said, "they took us to 1
nearby village where the people wanted
to jump on us and ltlll us. They put us In
a big hole covered with cloth. We stayed
there for three days.
.. Then we had a trial, but even before
that sameone gave us to understand that
we would be condemned to die. We we,.
convl_nced that there was na hope left. No
one, tn fact, said anyUUng about the ln-
terventon of, the Italian government. We
felt abandoned."
The 8iafran leader, Lt. Gen. Odumep
Ojukwu, pardoned the men after appeali
by Other A£rican governments, the
governments or France and Portuial and
by Poi>:' Paul VI. Biafra had charged that
the 01ime.n were fighting alonpidl,
federal Nigerian troops. ~
The 18 survivors -14 Italians, three
West C.ermans and a Lebanese -were
1aken to Gabon. an African nation \h•t
r~olus· Biafra. They were Oown tt
Rome Saturday, arriving just before mld-1
night to be welcomed by thousands at the
airport and receitied In a epeciat audience by the Pope,
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~'-------~ .. --....--=~~~~===~==:~~=;"=~~~~~--~~-:--~~~-=----=-------• .l:.-'
IO (:hJldre~ Die
Pair See · Family:
Perish in Blaze
PARKERSBURG, W. Va .
(Al') -A t..,,..ge boy and
c!rl watched horrllled-and
helpless as their parents and
Tel Aviv
Denies It's
Eying War -~ By United P~ laieruUcmal
10 brothers and slsten perish-
ed in a fire which togulled
their $48-a-month home.
Th eir grandfather, Wh o
leaped through a bathroom
window, was the only one in
the house to escape the blaze,
The eight-room, f r ame
residence wa.s leveled In 45
minutes.
ly PhR lnttrlandl
~.)iln• '· 1969
13 Copter
Factories
l Shut Down
OAILV Plltlf &
Poet ·Attends
College Rites
CL!NToN, N.Y. (UPI)
Aged pie\ Ezra Pound paid a
1urprlse vlslt to bis aim& ...,
ttr Swlday and r<etlV«I •
sta~ ovl:Uon from th o s e
IWRST, Tex. (Al') -Slrlk· gathered for commencemeot
Ing .United Auto Worktn to-tertmool" at Hamilton Col.
day picl<tted lht 8 e l ll-::l ... ==lp:;:Cllmon,=====N.=Y=. =:::::;
Helicopter Co., a major sup-Ir
pu.r of oopten·for u.~. f~·
in Vietnam. About tO,OOG
workers were involved.
The st:ike action ca.me after
members ol UAW Local 218
• Israeli Premier Golda Meir
illSmlssed suggestions that her
nation is preparing for another
pre-empUve strike against its
Arab neighbors. At least one
Arab official does Dot believe
her.
Roger Bailey, 13, and his
slsler Susan, 15, whose father
~les was _a county!
maintenance ':Yorker, were
staying in a smaller structure
behind the house when the fire ~ G-9
struck about 1 :30 a.m . .SUnday. 1....,,-------..,...----------"'
shouted down a teiitaUve new
contract negotiated by Union
leaden and management. The
agreement wou1d have hlked
wages by up to 10 cents an
hot.Ir ' during 11 thr~ear
period to a peak of'$5.14 in top
job classifications.
Al\er the rejecti9n, Bell an-
nounced a shutdown at mid·
night Sunday of 13 plants in
the Dalles-Fort. Worth area.
The atrlke had been set for
that hour and picketing began
on schedule.
Sitting on a porch bannister •l()td Farnd&y la really gotn,g fut-he'& ch•aing
o( en uncle's home later, the ------~M~~-~ml~•~DOW~.~·:.;·:..:,· ~"-----=-
dazed boy could manage only
.... I U~IT4 ......
GRADS PROTEST -Some 15 graduatillg students
arr!ved at Brandeis Uniyersity commeneement e'x·
erc1se~ at Waltham, Ma ss. with stenciled red fist
on their g~wns to show support for black students
~ho occupied administration building fo r 11 days
m ... Janu ary.
·Violence Panel Urges
Colleges Act Quickly
WASHINGTON (UPI) -__..-"Most importantly, universi-
The National Violence Com-ty authorities should make
mission said today colleges known in advance that they
and universities s h o u I d will not hesitate to call on civil
develop plans for dealing police when circumstances
Quickly and firmlY with slu· dictate, and shou ld review in
dent violence . Implicit in a statement by advance with police orriclals
chairman ~1i lton s. the degrees of force suitable
Eisenhower was criticism that for particular situations," the
some campus officials have commission said.
been too slow la act in the The cammission also rccom,
past when trouble erupts on mended that:
campuses.
The commission at the same
time strongly opposed some
congressional proposals to cut
off federal fin ancial aid to
students involved in campus
disorders.
"Existing laws al re ·ad y
withdrew financial aid from
students who engage in disrup-
tive acts," Eisenhower said.
"Additional laws along the
same lines would nat ac·
complish any useful purpose."
Eisenhower urged instead
that laws be passed to give
courts stronger powers of in·
junction against c a m p u s
obstructionists.
The commissic:;n s a i d
--Students, faculty members
and university officials should
set up common guidelipeB ·on
icceplable method!; '(If iiking
up grievances and other mat·
ters. but ' the commission
stressed that s t u d e n t
participation shauld _ n o t
obstruct the disciplinary pro-
cesses.
Speaking on a prereco~
~vision program SUnday
I ·(A.BG,_'s ~·Jss;ue s'" a·nd
~Answer!"}, Mrs. 'Meir said,
"Our position is that Ufere was
a war, -there wls an end of the
91F.' there was a cease-fire
tliat all ol .lhe parties agre<d
to1 and as far as we are con· c6i:ned, we meant it. . ~·w~ have said right along
v.·e don't want to add up vic-
t<t"les. We just don't want
w.r."
i r.s. Meir said neither Lhe
four talks nor the U.S.-
et dis·cu sslons in
hington wOllld re1Ult In · a
stVilement or the Middle East
ict. She repeated th e
ell position that direct
between the Arabs and
lsi;i\fl was the only way to ob-
tain a settlement.
1" Baden-Baden, Germany,
Tra president and Premier
Gen Acbmed Hassan El-Bakr
saiil In a taped television in-
te ' that ISrael will launch
-a . >'r!ar against the Arabs
and lther the United States
nor thf! Soviet Union is
pre &:red to prevent it.
a mumbled "yes" or "no"
when asked about the fire.
Roger, wearing jeans ,
cowboy boots and open-necked
shirt, smoked a cigarette as ,
he was questioned.
His sister stayed ir~ide her
uncle's house, too upset to
meet newsmen.
Roger said they had slept In
the small building to make
room for their grandfather·,
Obie Bailey, 63, released from
a loca1 hospital last week.
Most or the bodies were
found in the three bedrooms,·
and one was...found in the din·
Ing room.
The grandlathei". who \Vas
treated in a hospital for shock,
said he and Mrs. Bailey, 36,
had noUced nothlng unusual
when they reUred at 11 p.m.
Saturday. He said they were
the last to go lo bed.
Firemen said they didn't
know how the-fire started.
The children killed in the
blaze were Nancy, I 7 ;
Patricia, II; Claudla, 8; Marv,
7; Tim, I ; Debbie, 5: Steve, 3;
Dale, 2; Ted, 1 and Ricky, 6
months.
Landing Risky?
Apollo 11 Dangers Told
NgW YORK (UPI) -The
touchiest part of next month's
scheduled Apallo 11 moon Ian·
dirlg probably will be the last-
m~ment search ~or ~ exact -s~t'to touch down, Uie· Apollo
IO commander said Sunday.
Air Force Col. Thomas P.
slii!ford was here r 0 r ttl~vlsion appearance1 •.ri lh
his' crew, Navy Cmdrs. John ¥'· Young and Eugene A.
feman. He said the Apollo 10
/light checked out all pro-
t"edures for the Jaly moon
mission except th e actual lan-
1ding.
They were returning lo their
homes in Houston today. On
Wednesday they will fly with
their families to Cape Ken·
nedy for a parade-~innlng a
public-appearance to\ir ...
Ceman said the I u n a r
module in which he and "Staf-
ford flew wlthin 10 miles of
the moon was safe -though
rather noisy -vehicle, despite
its crazy el.ght-second gyration
as they start!d to pull away to
rejoin the orbiti ng command
module for the flight back to
earth.
Spain Closes Gates,
L·ays Siege .tn 'Gib'
"We didn't think the con·
tract would be rejected," said
~~d Woodcock, UAW in-
ternational president. ''It was
not a vote we would have
recommended."
GIBRALTAR (UPI} -Ann· ttie London government feels Bell's anoouncement said:
ed Spanish guatds today U.N. General Assembly "Inasmuch as the cessation
patrolled ' SJ)aln's bdrder with resolutions are not mandatory, of acUvitles n or m a 11 y
Glbraltar · afttr the 'Madrid then!fore the December U.N. performed by Local 118 will
govermnent sealed off the measure calling on Britain to substantially disrupt the total
frontier in the lat.est chapter return Gibraltar to Spain can plant operations, all activities
of a lq dispute o v e r be ignored. and all departments at all
ownership of the tiny British The spokesman cited a facilities will close at mid-
Mediterranean C<llony. , referendum ·t n "September, night."
Spain ordered the land gates 1967, in which GI bra l tar Local 218 has 6,l)OO mem-
to Gibra1tar closed at mid· residents voted to retain their bers.
night Sun4ay, barring some ties .with Britain and said thel-----------
4,liOO Spanish laborers from new constitution is in ac-YOU KNOW
their jobs on the ·2i..; square--cordance with their wishes.
mile "rock" and forcing the C<llony'sgovernmenttoinitiate In London, the~llrlt·ts.h YOUR CHILD
emergency plans lo C()ver the government today "deplored"
loss of one.third of its work ~=~t::-~·~::~,:;: WI.LL LEA' RN
foN:e. Spaniards should be barred
. The cause of the closing was from Bft.ta~ and Sp~ 11ea1ed TO SWIM AT a. cpnstitutlan for the oolc>ny off from Bntish tour18ts. ,
Britain publlshed May 30. "The Spanish move hes only · .
Madrid said I.he document BLUE BUOY defies a United Nations i'esolu-~ad~ B~~~ G1:~r:.1;
lion calling on the Britisl! to sovereignty," said Forel(l:?I hil s. wm '"
return Gibraltar to Spain by Office spokesman. .....,., wttN ltlaa4,
Oct. l . "The act is deplorable," he S.... AH, Tnth1
Spain was expected to take added, "but Gibraltar is calm 546 1800 even more steps against d •
Let us
copy that
old family
picture now
SALE!
$3
Sx7 copy of your
picture In 10011 condition
Preserve fond .memories
for 111 the famfly; have
your .favorite old photo-..
araph copied now, If
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charges for restoretlon
•r• lll•Prlced, tool Your
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bl r1tumerl unharmed,
Hu11tlntlo11 l•1th
192·llll, ht. 211
,l'lotogt1pll Sf\ldlo 111 Floot" Gibraltar within two weeks, an coping quilt: well in spite l ~of::th:•::•i:eg:·:·':'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::;;:~ including possibly a blanket
ban on travel to the colony for
all Spaniards. It also could cut
water, cable and telephone
communications.
Britain seized Gibraltar by
force ln 1704 duriiig the
Spanish War of Succession.
The Madrid.govemme.nt'ceded
it to the British by the T_reaty
of Utrecht in 1713. The t~aty
banned any land contact
between the colony and Spain
-:-and this is cited by Spaln
for its actions today.
According to a British em·
bassy spokesman in Madrid, .
Flight Starts _ _
LONDON (UPI) -A three-
man crew Sunday set off in a
British ·built Wessex 60 heli-
with Southern Federal you now earn from
'D&'!f-IN -2'0 DA r-our
which means your funds eam ll>r the full time
they are ln the account • 5% cui'rent annual rate
earna 5.13% when compounded dally and held
one year• 5.25% on 3 year certificates (multlplel
of $1,000) •Funds placed between the 1st &.10th
of the month earn from the 1st • Accounts
insured to $15,000.
SOUTHERN-FEDERAL
SAVING S l LOAN ASSOCIATION • EST. 112'
copW on the longest flight HEAD OFF1CE: -Wlllfrl .. IMl.. Lo-........ OU .. , •• TAllZNM:
ever attempted by a helicop-11111 v-.r1 BmJ., ~· • HUNTINGTON aEACM: e1 1.....a 1u n ; •
universities should prepare
and update emergency plans
for dealing with disorders -
to include disciplinary
measures, the role of campus
police and civil police, and the
use of court actions such as
-U n i ve rsity authorities
should re-organize t h e i r
decision•making procedures
during emergencies, painting
()Ut that on many campuses
"there is g r e a t misun-
derstanding and C()nfusion as
to where ultimate authority
for campus decision-making
lies." ·
-Improved communications
within the campus and with
the alumni and general public
be slressed in order to prevent
"misinformation and misun -
derstanding" during disorders.
'·Probably the riskiest part
·is lhe final t.000 feet because
you only have a certain
amount of hover time in the
lunar module.'' Stafford said
On a television show (ABC
"Issues and Answers").
He said there probably will
be only about two minutes in
which to locate a smooth lan-
ding place when the module
carrying America's first two
"It's noisy, but we knew It
would be," Ceman said. "It's
like putting a washbasin on
your head and beating it with
a big rubber mallet."
Clue to Plane
False Alartn -
ter -10,500 miles to the west c.w, "1·10f1 ' ,. \.:c~oa~~~o~f~Aus~lr~a~llL~----~.;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~;;;~~f:
injunctions.
GRAFFlTI by Leary
FOR FALL
Summer
School
July 7 •
August 1
t .. 1J ,.., -...-Nel
Nlllht ..... ,.... -... _ ... _
Tr...,wtllriH proft4" -e
'
Sup1·emes Quit
After Pets Die
moon men arri ves in the JUNEAU, Alaska CUPJ) -
general target area. SeveraJ false alarms have
Cernan said the Apollo 11 been the only result of a
astronauts will have plenty of fruitless search for a Strategic
praclice in other aspects of Air Command plane missing
the fli ght, but "the only way since Thursday with 19 men
CHERRY HlLL, N.J. (UPll you can practice lending on abaard.
A · hi 1 b cb d the moon with a lunar module A U.S. Coast Guard
-ntg c u owner argc is by landing on the moon In a spokesman said S u n d a y
today that Diana Ross and the lunar module.'' J "gh · f Supremes broke a $27 ,500 a Th severa s1 tings o orange.
week contract and new lo the e astronauts rec el v e d floating objects were made
wes t Coast over the weekend special awards at the Emmy over the weekend. But closer ceremonies Sunday night on inspection each time identified
after Miss Ross' two pet dogs beball of lhe Apollo 7, 8, 9, and the objects as floats used by ~ied from rat poi¥>n they ate 10 crews for their in-space crab fishermen rather than
in her dressing room. television performances. h hoped ·
J?ave Dushoff, operator ofqr-:O:-m:~~~~;i;;;o,;;;;;;;;;;;'iiiii;e;iiii~~·l~or;;il~if~e~ral;;;l•~·--·I
the Latin Casino, 'aid Missll
Ross with one week still to run Hree's A FA TH ER'S DAY GIFT Ht Can
on her engagement t 'ft OPEN EVERY DAY ·' without notifying tbe manage-
ment. lfe said the nightclub
had been farced 1to cloae for
the seaSon a week early.
NOW
EM ESTER
Qay
Camp
June 23 •
A119ust 29 .. ,..,_ ... _ ,.__ ...... .... ·-----.................
6 I .J.. .. 1:)0 ,.._
Col ...., fef , .. .,....,. ...
RECTIUC
GAllAtH DOOl
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Seacoast aunc1.,. Supply
1651 l'l.ACINTIA AYI. • M2 3490 ht ........ ~ Y•h.,.: 161l5 lfMll nt St. I t61·JJl2 COSTA MISA . •
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The instant
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Northw1ev• comes on twice as stron9
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ell with Northwe•v•'s
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running mtt•s for men
on-th•0901 or for
tho1e who'd like to
use trousers #2 as
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CARL .TON'S
The Sllop For /lfert
I 270 E. 17th St., Coato Mfta -548·8711
e IN HlLLOREN SQUAii! e
•
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[ BAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I
Who's on
It would appear that politics can unmak e some bed·
fellows now and then as well as make them.
Row's this for a solid list of solid Republicans -
-United States Sen, George Murphy, Congressman
James B. UU, slate Sen. John G. Schmill, Orange
County Sup~rvisor \Villiam Hirstein?
What these men have in common, other than their rather strong political persuasions, ts a common view•
point on the proposed interim use of the El Toro Marine
Corps Air Station to relieve some of Orange County's
mounting air traffic problems. Following the lead of
lbe Saddlebae< Repub lican Assembly, these lour gentle-
men have voi ced disapproval of ciyilian·military use
of the Marine base.
And who is the most outspoken advocate 1of this
clvilian·milltary use as an interim solution to the air·
port problem?
None other than Denni s E. Carpenter, chairman ot
the Orange County Airport CommJssloh. · _
Mr. Carpenter's role on the airport commission
Isn't as interesting in the political machinery, however,
as his role in politics itself. For Mr. Carpenter ts a
potent force in the Republican Party -in Orange Coun·
ty, in California and in the U.S.
As chairman of the California Republican Central
Committee, be is the state's No. 1 Republican organi·
zat.ion official. Moreover, he is a longtime toiler in the
party's vineyard, a superb political tactician , respon·
sible in no small part for GOP votes behind h-1essrs.
Murphy, Utt and Schmitz.
This trio of Republicans undoubtedly made friends
inside the Saddleback, GOP organization with their
&tand, but one wonders what kind of messages they're
getting from some of those heavy campaign contribu·
tors in Newport Beach -those with homes under the
flight patrern from Orange County Airport.
At least it shows that pattisan politics offers little
Whose Side?
sip of solvlnC tllt county's mowrtlnc air travti pro!>
!ems. I
• Hurts a Little While 1
rt you notice th4t your service s1a1L.n maQ chanced
the dials inside lbe pumf.7Jn the pHt Tew days, blame
it on those heavy rains 1st winter.
The state's gasoline tax went up from seven to
eight cents to raise up to $50 million for repair work on
streets and highways damaged by last winrer's floods.
Unlike many tax measures adopted for a 11dlsaster••
only to remain in effect into infinity, this one does
have a Ume limit. It cannot extend beyond Nov. 1, and
Governor Reagan, in fact, can call a halt to it any time
after July I.
No new tax is greeted warmly, but this one appears
justified and Its •pecific limitations are welcome.
Dean Dean, Meet ...
Dr. John F. Dean, a loni·time harbor area edu·
ca tor, bas been elevated in position and stature by
Orange Coast ColleJe. For this, he warrants congratu·
lations and good w11bes.
But John F. Dean joins an even more select circle
with his advancement for he is now Dean Dean -
speeificaUy evening college dean of OCC. others who share this same-name.same-title uniqueness ·include
Judge James F. Judge of the Orange County Superior
Court and Doctor Robert L. Docter, recenUy m the
news for being elected to the Los Angelos Board of
Education.
We presume El Toro Marine Corps Air Station can
now provide a Majer Major to add to lbe list.
--
Over 65? Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Challenges That Jtlove Jtlen
You Drive
Pretty Well
Kind Words for Robert F. Kennedy
By JAMES E. WRETMORE
State Senator
The resull! of a naUonwide study lntD
the driving records of senior motorists
may well catapult the over-65 driver to a
respected place on tDe highway and make
his current reputation as a "hazard" a
myth of the past.
A report on the accident ipvolvement or
Ute &enior driver, released by the
Univel'llty or Denver College of Law, Is
so favorable to the senior motorist that J&i.e Sherman G. Finesilver, head of the seUdY team, believes it "will he pivotal in
rdutinl current popular thinking about
older drivers.''
THE snJDY was most comprehensive,
iil:ice it wu based on an examination or
the ncordJ of the total driver population
ol each of 30 states aod the District or
(Xiumbi.a, i.Ntead of on samples alone,
i.nd appeaz:s to hold a ~t significance
fa seruor drivers, especially with regard
to · their lnsurability, license privileges,
and general · acce ptance as competent
.motorists.
ID the thirty-one.jurisdictions for which
ct,ata were available. senior drive rs
(penona of age 6S and over ) averaged 37
percent fewer accidents than would exist
if tbelr proportion of accidents were in
euct ratio to their proportion of the driv·
ID; population.
• ·Altbough senior drivers represented 7.4
pllt'Cf:nt of all drivers in the states
arvtyed, they were involved in only 4.8
p@rcent or all accidents in these stales.
SENIOR DRIVERS averaged lowest o(
all age groups in frequ ency of injury-pr0:-
dacing accidents. The senior driver's in·
aYerages 40 percent below his pro-
C'.ionate share of the driving popula·
· Tbe study has evoked enthusiasm
among officials of the Administration on
:Aging of the U.S. Department of Health,
EdUcaUon aod Welfare, who, together
with the uruversity of Denver. sponsored
the study. William Bechill bailed the stu·
.dy as "a breakthrough which hopefully 't1fUl replace discriminatory mJs.
l(!t)DCfptjOll! about licensing and In·
llU'lbllltJ of older dri vers with objective
Jt took raw courage for Nl%on to
confront the students of General
Beadle College in South Dakota,
:!on't you think ?
J.E.H.
Tlllt fNNrl Nftwt9 .... Ht' _...... .t
llKHMl'tfY tfll.te ff fM --· hH """ Ht "'" II 0........, Olllo O.Hr Plllt.
facts. Judge Finesilver's study should be
or primary Interest to lhe country's older
ROJ>Ulation, licensing officials, insuranCe
eieeutlves and safety professlooall. I
Tbe flooCI or memorial comment on
Sen. Robert F. Kennedy in the year
since he died and in the week tha\'
marked lhe annlvenary endangers
what he lived lo aceomplbh. The pcr-
aonal memoir, the rememberf.d conver-
sation, the minutely preserved moments
of death-all ob5CUre tht idea that drove
him to his final challenge. 111 this trim
sprini, it ii that idea lhat is worth
rememberlnr:
The strength and joy he gave his
family, companjotl! and friends are
mourned mO!lt because thty lie closest
to the heart. But every man c.an so live
his lUe lo eain that remembered atfec·
Uon.
hope that it wiU lead to a cess1Uon of WHAT MADE Robert Kennedy dif·
arbitrary practices and attitudes dlrtcttd ferent wu his eoncepl'. of hi1tory whJcb
to older drJven and ulUmately .,ere.ail wu that one man can make a dl.Uer·
fairer, more enlightened prac:Uett ..,ia ~ ence, that each lndiv.idual wltoess of
licensing and insuring ol older driven . ., • in/ult.Ice becomes part ol a force for
ul !mote chani•·
THE STUDY further shows that as From tbil central belief so thorou&hly
senior drivers have increased in numbers
their involvement rate In accldents have
decreased. Senior drivers have the lowest
frequency of accident Involvement of all
age groups.
tu a result of the:i:e findina,
Wa!hlngtoni-D.C., his di1Jpped lti
previous requirement& that drlVm take
m a n d a-t or y rHuminaUoas upoo
reachine age 15. The new mandatory re-
e"amination age has been set at 70 years.
"Recent Department of Motor Vehiclu
Research showed that driver1 in the IS
and over age bracket have the lowest
rale of responsibility for accide.At.s .of any
age group."
ACTUALLY, there are logical reasons
(or the senior driver belng a good, rather
than poor, motorist. For example.
numerous studies have shown that he is
almost enor·frte with respect to some of
the most disastrous driving errors.
S~ing,. drunk· and 'tailgating• are ac·
c1dent producing causes, or errors, of
which senior drivers are almos t never
guilty.
These lindin$s should raise a beacon of
hope (or curing a profound inequity,
namely, the gross under-esti mation or the
senior driver.
His lictnse has been jeopardized, his
insurance at times curtailed or adverse ly
affected, and his abillUes a 1 m o s t
universally questioned.
But now it becomes lncrea,ingly ap·
parent that the senior driver Is not only a
iood risk, but often may be amon1 the
safest motorists on the highway , ac-
cording to this latest study.
' Scum's the Word
Down in Florida
Hollywood IFltriU) Buolcl
California, keep your scum.
Se.Del us your luscious red mawbtrrlts,
your juicy-n'eet cantaloupes, y o u r
beautfful pottery, your Sood movie!, your
good T.V. shows, but please, Ca!Uornla,
keep your scum. KMp your Hippies, your
Yipples, your Riot-Mad eolltge students
and your sick Drug Addicts -they are
not welcome in our beautilul clean State
of Florida.
Members of the Sexual Freedom
Uague or Berkeley, CalifornJa, will find
no Southern hospitality awaltinl them
with their nude wide-in at our Ft.
Lauderdale beach. They will find a very
capable Police Department with o[ficers
ready to escort them to JAIL.
Th• Youth of our orea STOOD UP -
30,000 1troni -on March J3rd at the
<>r:ange Bowl In Miami for : I. BeJlel in
God and that He lovet ua. 2. Love of our
planet and country -PatrlotJim. 3. Love
of family . 4. Reverence for one's ltl·
uaUty. 5. Equ1Uty of men.
SG you aee. dear State of Callfornta,
there ls no place for SCUM be.rt.
B11 George ---·
Ota Georae:
What a Bank Can Tell
1 llke your humor, but J1ve ofltn
\\'Ondered -why don't you wrtie a
somewhat mort serious advice coJ..
um n which actually ctves pgicttc1I
advice to young men inlerested in
When you o~n an account, you expect
.the bank to keep your financial affalrs
confidential. A bank has a legal duty to
.~P your affairs private. If It breaches
thfJ duty, the depot;ltor can hold the bank
l""1Jy responsible.
Yet because of our credit economy, the
bi.nk is oftr.n requuted to give financial
tnlormaUon to government agents or
'*1ies in a lawsuit How far can the Ima: safely go!
~~AS A DEPOSITOR you can conRnt to
the dllclolure of 1nfonnation -perhaps
'when you aflPi1 !0f a loan. Then the bank
has no llablllly lo yau. The bank may 51111
rd"'° lo pve out the Information, but, u
a nlle, the blnk will dllclose U It hu
)'(JUI'-· Sometb:Dca a coart ""1 allow aomeone
t0 look ill 10Uf f"'t::" ~ II< lo I
Ja;roul1 « -whtdl a c:mt -If IO, tlle oourl Will 1wt I
, ..
1... Ibo Jnlarmalloo. ind the
a a rule, must turn It over.
the cm&omer may not want lo
Ibo lolonDllioo, thl boll!: 1hould
..
t f't '
li&w 'in-Action, '
inform tht depositor aboul the subixicna
bt(ore givln& out the information.
A depositor may then cha llenee the
sub~na ln coort as a "fishing ex·
ped1lion" or a violation of his freedom
from "Illegal search and seizure."
THE FACT that a person changes
banks does not destroy the bank's duties
to lt1 former customers.
Jt the bank gives out v.·rong in·
formation, It m:iy he liable If It harms
tht depositor's credit.
A bank may make business rules for
supplylna in!onnatlon. It may reqWre
form s for consent to dlsclost, for ex·
ample. or rtQuire payment for galhtrlng
lnfonnation whJch Is costly to comf)lle.
Note: Californltt lawytr.r offer tlLis
colum11 so you may know about our
laws.
girl~~ .
SAlll C. Dear Sam C.:
Actually, Sam, that was the w1y
this column started -serious.
1Jn{orlunately. I ran out of serious
advice after the first column. (tad·
vised a1ainst readlng advice col·
umnlsts if you're Interested In
a:irls.)
Dear George:
I think the guy11 in my office have
playeti a pretty bad trick on the
boss. lie had a calendar with 3 hun-
linl{ dog on it. They sneaked ln and
:;ubsU tuted a pln-up. (Topless.) The
joke Is lh11it he dotm't know a
toplrss girl from a topless dog.
Should I tell him ?
MISS B. Dear Mw B.:
What maka you think he
dotsn't! He probtbly just likes
Jrirls better. Of Cl'IUrst, lf )'OU MnQ rn a bird dot oelt tlme he rings for
his secretary and tie starts stvlna It
dtctaUon. that's another story.
Amtrican that it reminded us of every-
thing we stand for came Ideas and
challenges which move us still.
The war still goes on, draining our
blood and our treasure as we are reviled
around the world and revile ourselves
at homt. But if it is to be ended, it will
be ended on the principles for which
Robert Kennedy was so denounced two
and three year3 ago.
ABOVE ALL, he WUd of the need to de-.~ the war, to maie the Sal~ bear ii.! share of the
fighdEg or fact the fact that it could
not because ita people did not support
'I lhe 1ovemm""1. These are all accept·
able war ~s' now. They point to the
ooly · honorab'FJ way out.
But Vietnam: was not the only chal·
lenge. Our ']1l!are 1ystem, he ~1d, was
"a 3Cl'etn ~~ovemment agencies keep-
ing the poor .~ from the rest of us"
-and it sUll is, though a new admin·
istration has recognized that this cha!·
Jenge was cofrect.
He found hunger 1n this most affluent
of societies and the secretary of agri-
culture regr.etted there was nothing to
be done. Today, ending hunger is an
imperative at , every level of i overn·
ment.
THE NEW Pf\~OCCUPATIONS of the
young he saw l\OOre clearly than any
other man. This generation, he told us,
hu chosen for ill concern the dignity
of the indi vidual. He never mistook their
excesses for crime or sinister ideoJogy.
He understood' that it was possible to
reel . estranged and alien?-ted from .a
soci ety which counted nuclear warhead!
as gross national product and ma de
Gen. Hershey a central figu re in the
life or the young.
Above all, he gave Americans unity
at a time when it was most needed,
and ii is here most of all that we miss
him. Black and wh ite. young and old,
poor and newly aflluent, all found in
Robert Kennedy an ally in their des·
perate need to wrest a change from
.systems that seemed increasingly irre!·
evant, even threateni ng.
In the sweep of history these may be
problems of a day, a year, a genera·
lion. Bur Robert Kennedy knew they
were part of our history and, more im•
port.ant, that thei r solutions were our
destiny. He told us with Blake:
"To see a world In a grain or sand
And a heaven in a wild flower,
Hold infinity in the palm of your ha nd
And eternity in an hou r.''
By Frank ft1anklewicz
and Tom Braden
* * * ~ * * * * *
• • • And Some Unkind Ones for Teddy
tf you look clo!le:ly, you will discern a
glarlna incoqruJty In thole stridently
moraliallc preacbmenl! of Sen. Edward
Kennedy against the Vietnam war. the
Safeguard anti--balUsUc missile system
and other poliUcs.rlfe issues.
The 37-,Year-old eager-beaver presiden·
tial scrambler is the last man to do any
holieNhan·lhou stone throwing. For him
to as1ume a lofty ethical stance is com·
parable to the pot calling the kettle black.
As a Harvard student, Kennedy, in t f·
feet, was etpelled for cheating.
DOING POORLY ln Spanish. ne ducked
an 11;1amJnatlon by inducin& another stu·
dent to take it for him. Tbe deception
wu d!Scovered, and Kennedy and his
accomplice wtte "asked to withdraw."
The sorry affair came to light in the
spring of 1!162 when KeMedy rocked
l\!auachusetts politics by announcing for
the U.S. senate.
Until then, the Democr•tlc nomination
W&I considered certain to go k. State At·
torney General Edward McCormack. An
Annapolis eraduate. nephew of Speaker
John Mt"Connack, popular and able, he
had worked his way up the polltical lad·
der.
KENNEDY, M, had no pol\ Uc al service
or e"pulence. ~t he had four un-
beatable assets -his father'• immense
v.'ellth: an oldtr brother who was Pres-ident of the U.S .. another brother who
wu U.S. attonie) ceneral, and the
fomlly's htahtY orallllled ond w•ll oiled
polltlcol machine. _
Intrepidly, McCormack fouaht this_ in-
superable combination down to the wtre.
The bitter campalp cost the KeMedys
more than Sl million. But In the. end,
"Teddy" tot the SenatL eeat.
During the KOrChlna tray, McCormack
char,ed Kennedy with chea tinc ·in col·
teat. KenMdy admjtted It In the follov.·ing
statement:
"I was h•vin& dUllculty In ooe course,
a roreif" lall(Uaae. I became so a~
prehens1ve that I arranged with a fellow
student to take lbe exlm in that coune
for me. The dean learned of th!:. and my
friend and t wtre asked to withdraw,
v•llh the understand.inc th•t we might
reapply for admission after a period of
absence, provldtd that durlng the time
"''e could demonstrate a record of con·
ilructive and rt1ponslblt cllilenfhlp.
"WHAT l nm was wron1. I have
regretted it ever s\.oct. Tht unhappiness I
caused my family and my friends, even
though ytarl 110, bu betn a bitter H ·
perieoct for me. But It alao ha1 bten a
very valuable leuon. That ts the story."
Kennedy wu later readmi\ted to
llarvard alld craduated ln JM&. But he
did not attend Biirvard's famed Law
School. In.stead, ~ graduated Crom the
University Of Virglifa Law School in 1959.
His vehement miralisUc denunciations
of the Vietnam war continue to be ex·
tensively broadcast by Hanoi and Moscow
radio. In these casligatlons, Kennedy
Carefully Says nothing about the fact that
his late brother, President John F. Ken·
nedy, initiated the policy of sendi ng com·
bat troops to Vietnam to avert a Com·
munist take-over.
By Robert S. Allen
and John A. Goldsmith
Some Useful Phrases
A Short Dictionary of Useful Everyday
Pbra1e1:
"Excuse me" means "Gel out or my
y,·ay!"
''Can I help you?" means "\Yhat are
you doing here?" '
''\Vilh all res pect for1 your opinion."
means "t have no r~petl for your
opinion."
"The honest tnuh " means '·The
smallest lie I can tell you." ',
"By popular demand"' means "This is
what we're stuck with."
''Let's get together some Um,e" means
"Not lf I set you c«nlng." \
"I didn't nalize J was dri~lng that
fast" means 1'1 didn't realize there was a
squad car behind me."
"She's a fine fi¥UTC of a woman"
means "Why doesn't she knock off SO
pounds'!" 1
•''THAT'S QUITE a !pirited chi~~ you
have there'' means "You ought lo put a
leash and muulc on him." \
"You haven•t changed In 20 years"
mean1 "My God, was that senile crealure
in my high school class!"
"\Ve have an early day tomorrow"
means "Another half-hour here and we'll
perish from boredom."
"Nol that It's any of my businesS,"
means "l'm going to make It l
bus.iness whet.her y~ like it or nol.''
''OF COlJRSE 1·m not an expert'
means "But I've got 1 lot more common
st rut than mast ao<•lled experts. believe ..
me."
''Not to chance the subject'' means fas '
tvervont knows) "to change the sub-ject.'' -
1'Ltt'1 be practical about thls" means
"Let's ljnore tht truth of the matter and
concentrate on the ll'roflt."
11Don't breath thll lo a tc1Vl11 m'IM
''That's the same thing I was told. but r
Ignored it."
"THE FACTS speak Cor themselves"
means "Those facts I have carefully
selected and arranged speak for what I
want them, lo say."
• "Every ''fa ir-minded citizen'' meanll'.
"every ciUzcn who shares my particula r
biases."
•• "Of COlfrse I hardly kno1v her" means
''This "'·•n't stop me from telling the
worst of r·hat I suspect."
"He's ~n a meeting" means "He Jell
without ~aylng where he was going or when i d be back."
''I'm looking for cons t ruc liv c
rrillcis " means "Buck me up!"
'
Monday, .June 9, 1969
T~ editorial page of the Da.il!I
Pi t saelcs to i11fortn and stim.
1 r1a.dt'rs b11 pr1se-nling thi.3
spaptr's opJnion1 and com-
nuntarv 011 topla of int~est
a11d sig11ificanc1. bt1 protnd1ng a
forum for the czpreukm of
o»r readtf1' opinionl. and bSI
fKtStnting the dlvtrse uiew-
~jnQ of informed ob.terver1
111d rpoicsstnen un topics of the caiv.
Robert N. Wood, Publls~er
1
..,
he rt
Quir
lr.an
moU
IS
ldat
\\'hOt
Bon•
AGE
\\'hO
l'OUr
Ml
'.\!isl
~ce
\'OU'> ~oldi
hack ~ char
n1an
to.ost
sam• ly a
do s
eoml
Turn
didn
"Fa!
IT
.Joh a ;. If
agre
cons•
thinE
knO\\
LO
recei
p\air
alien
one i
AL:
c ,.
--
Test £or Goo~. lop Sergemit
By L. M. BOYD
"WHEN LOSS of hair is
hereditary, contends Don
Quimby, "thal trait i s
tra.nsmitted through t h e
mot.her. not the father." ...
JN PRACTICE at Kellogg,
Idaho, J'm told, is a doctor
whose true n a m e is
Boni!brake .••• AVERAGE
AGE of all men and women
who receive paychecks in this
country now is 39.
~tlLITARY MIND
~lister, here's a little test tG
se c \Vhat kind of a top kick
vou'd make in lite army. Two
Soldiers are Standing back to
back at attention. You're in
charge. You 're required to
n1aneuver them into shoulder-
t~houlder position , fac ing the
same direction. But you're on-
ly allowed two rommands to
do so. Quick. now, what two
commands would you give?
Turn in your stripes if you
didn't say. "Fa!! out~" then
•·Fall in ~··
IT WAS TH.,.T Swiss poet
Johann Lavater who advised.
•·If you wish to appear
agreeable in society, you must
consent to be taught many
things which you already
know ." Astute fell ow, Johann.
LOVE AND WAR -Have
received a number of com-
plaints by wives about -in-
attentive husbands, but this
one is extraordinary. Writes a
'
l!HECKING ·
!" • UP •
Roanoke v.·oman: ·eter 114 ~~~ -It.ls a.common
yearsofmarriage ,l a belief 1m,on1 the
lit lie v.·eary of bei?lJ aten or d t! mo n st f I ~in I colliie
granted, e s p e e 1 a 11 y 1at youngsters that police fed
breakfast. So . this morning I mass arrest! are more trouble
tried an experiment. My hu. than they're wo"1h, By ,going
band came downstairs whefl ~ lo Jail In droves, 1bese youtbl
called, picked up the paper, think they plague the police
sat down across the table and disrupt the Establishment.
from me, finished his Disrupt It? Not at a11. They
breakfasi. put on his jacket support it. With money. In re.
and hat, waved good-bye ov~r ... cent years, the mass arrests
his shoulder , 8f!d left. If he at Galveston, Fort
noticed, which I doubt, he La.uderdale, and, el!e~hen; -
made no comment at all about \fith t~e {l;ccom~ing fines
the fact that I was wearing a -enr1cbei-Jnunicipal coffers
gas mask." considerably. What makes 4 those kids think they sadden CUSTO~tER SERVICE : Q, · 'the municipal oflJcials when
"My dad came home last ·they climb Into police paddy nigh~ with an egg, shell and wagons? Not rpuch fattens up
all. 1n a glass bottle. But the the civic trea!UI')' as quickly
mouth of the bottle was a lot 4s a heavy night's police work.
smaller than the egg. So how ·
did he get the JU in there Your qve3tions and ccim-
without break.int k?" A. Ask ments are wtlconud and
him if he soaked \the egg in will bt used wMrever pos·
vinegar. That sof~ns up · an stle in "Checking Up."
eggshell .•. , Q. ""HAT PRO-~~rus mai l to L. M.
PORTION of the men are over Boild, in COf't of tM DA.JLY
six feet tall?" A. AbOOt a Pll,cOT, IBo:r 1875, Newpora
tenth af them. Bedch, Calif., 92643.
,,
Shop cit
home!
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~-·
DAil Y I'll.OT MoodaJ, m •. 1969
Sweepstakes in ~and
Lee Shuck, 14-year-old Lincoln Intermediate School
student, Corona del Mar, bolds swee~stak .. trophy
he won in Orange County Science Fair Mathematics
division. Young Shuck, 2515 Bluewater Drive, .says
he put in 200 hours devising bis own computer Ian·
guage he calls COBOL math. His entry now goes to
State Science Fair.
UCI Lists Lectures
For Next Two Weeks.
The following public lectures
v.·ill be offered by UC Irvine
Extension the next two weeks :
Fire Show
Set in Mesa
The Oral'!ge C ount y
Fairgrounds in Costa ?i1esa on
June 14 wilt be the SC1!ne of
the annual California Fire
Show.
The public is invited at no
charge to the 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
event, which will feature
displays and use of fi re-
fighting equipment and will in-
clude rescue demonstrations.
"It'll be a full day of fun for
the entire family," he said.
All Orange County rire
departments will participate
in the show, sponso red by the
county Fireman's Association.
'Y' Starts
• I Campaign
The YMCA Executive Club
of the Harbor Area. with 300
members. is embarking on a
campaign to double th at mem-
bership within the next two
months.
Each member will au.empt
to recruit one new member,
aod all old and new members
will be guests on a "fun cruise
to nowhere" to be held aboard
yachts in Newport Harbor in
mid-August.
Executive memberships cost
between $100 and $140 per
year, depending on the class of
membership.
The executive club helps
finance Y program s
throughout the yea r, with
particular emphasis on sum·
mer camping scholarships.
The group aho holds weekly
luncheons with guest speakers.
For more infonnatic>n, con-
tact lhe YMCA, 23Xl Universi-
ty Drive. Newport Beach, or
phone 642-9990.
For carefree
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wear a wiglet
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DAILY l'IUT S
I I . (°1
New ~ppeal
Readied in
'64 Killing 13 Saved Fro~.Car
' .\
: .. Raging Creek ,·
SAN BER{iARDINO.}(UPI) lmtioriOI :and 10 unidentified
SAN FRANClscO· .(AP) -~Jesse ff. Brook>,.21, said he children.
1 . was scared Suntlay when he lffl...i", 1 the 1 tu f .. tomeys for Lucille Mlller_jumped in Lytle Creek near , w1:1 .._orce o wa er m·
have a month to prepare here but it was a repeat ed the c~. crossw•)'I wtjile
briefs backing their claim that performance of heroism as he .B~ atleq'I!~ to get -the
rived on the scene with a Ja11 . ' rope and helped the car'• ' passengera up the steep 1"'
cllne altu Brooks got thGn:
safely near the edge of the
creek. :
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
neagan administration ls con-
sidering a unique financia1 of.
fer from private .enterprise to
help the state borrow $'200
million for new slate buildings
-without a vote of U)e peo-
Tbe ~tion, under a lit-. tie known 1968. law. woula
have the a tho.ritf': to issue.
tax-exempt bonds 'Y.lthou ;ihe
consent of voters, When he
state wants to issue the bonds
itseU, directly, it mus,t go to
the electorate. ~
her murdi r conviction was plucked 13 persons from a passengers out and ob.servers
bilsed .od·improperly obtained nearly submerged car. said."·t' ·.,tgan ,'t~ daRa up' the
, 1• • • • "I didn't know what was ;reek. i' · .eyl~. -" going to heppen \o me, but
Brooks, who would not allC)w
his picture being taken by 1 a
Joe.al ne9\'1paper1 ts-between:
plt'. ' The offer WU, made to
Andrew Loll ,' direct.or of
general services. He said he ls
turning It over without recom-
1nendation to lhe Public Works
Board, in charge of the state
building program.
It would allow the state to
bypass the ~lectorate l n
floating bond issues. In 1168,
the voters rejected a ·bend
is sue to finance univerSity,
college and other s c h o o I
buildings, lhe fiait such educa·
tion bond ever rejected.
The plan would permit the
state to offer If new type of
bond to raise money, pro-
mising buyers a higher in-
terest rate than now pennitted
by law. Present bonds, at 5
percent interest, are going
unsold.
Under the proposaJ, ~e ~late would form .a nonprQfit
corporation to pt.It up new
buildings. '
After the bonds. were sol4,,
the" corporation · would least
lhe buildings to the state. The
state lease payments would be
used to repay the bon~
holders. ,
The proposal was made by '
Los Angeles real estate man,
who told Lolli that : . h e
represented financial interests
who wOuld buy the bonds, and
resell them at an interest rate \· l~f,~:_-----~==~::::h:;;; of no more than 6.75 percent. Ut
The real tor, who declined
the use of his name, said one"~.----,.------------------
advantage of the plan to the
state would be Jssurance of
construction funds without
risking a popular \',ote-. .
Lolli said ~ .is interested in
raising m!ITT«!)' fOr p1'rking
garages the State Deeds in Los
Angeles and Sacramento. But
he acknowledged: 'the money
C<lUid also be use4 for other
state buildings, sueh as col-
leges, universities 311d prisons.
Assemblymen· Work
On Tax Reform Bill
SACRAMENTO (UPIJ - A
sel!ct s ub co mm i ttee of
AssE:mbly tax expert$ began
wort today on ·a draft of an
..
Bagley {ft.San Rafael .)
Reverberations Grow om~ tax retofm bill it
hope!; will win approval of
both· Demo.erats and
Republicans.
Reagan is facing signs of in-
creasing support for man-
datory , withholding f r o m
within Republican leadership
ranks.
' .
From Fridav Park Raid 2 P-0licemen But a major question was
whether Gov. ·Ronald Reagan
woi.ild accept a ~ill calling for
compul,sory withholding o( 'in·
BERKELEY' (AP).. -Calm ~. a leaflet· had been come. <axes. Wounded in
Gun Battle
prevailed at . ''peop(e'S par~ 'distributed, 1pparenUy b Y Mandatory, withholding Is an
anOeX" today, but reverbera-residents in the ~neighborhood, esSen!iaI featt1rt of the recoin-
tion'~r continued about a police declaring: mtndations made to the sub-
. . Id r · d of ~itee late last week by 11. raid ~y night. .. We w~ ' ike to get ri bi~ six-member panel LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A
Patt· 61.ij>porlers claim of· the•Wildbariio ~. fr~ed named.to study all tax reform burglary suspect was shot and fic~r~ ... irit'egfionally knocked war-da~s and ceueless programs. killed a n d two Policemen
do\9ri • .small" trees, flowers, a chanting. • .. -The revenue and taxation wounded late Sunday in an ell'.-
too( shed , Bnd a playground "Most of us wou1d like to ert-subcommittee is expected to change or gun fire at a
s\1·irig wbile.clearino out young jo_ y a full nJifit's sleep -£0lloW lrthe recommendations 0 ' whidi"iiri>posed a $1 billion downto~ parking lot. perlfms carTiping overnight especially since we work for a program shilling part of the Qead was Luis J. Alvidres.
PB.ttof·..,capt. Charles Plum-living_ a~'ire not able to sleep propert)'-tax burden to sales 25, Los Angeles. Two olher
mer said police did· not intend all day.'' and U\come taxes. suspects, one a woman, were
to destroy lhe park. He said " S0mc of thOse arrested ad-The i;overnor's own tax ad· taken Into custody.
the damage was done during .. milled marijuana was being visers'; were b!Jsy over the Officers Dave' Turnquist. 31,
"the w•'ld process of clear•·ng smoked in the nark, police ·Weekend also studying the " recomilendati ons-. and Richard Ford, 29, were in
several hundred people" from sai~. , A spbkE!sman f 0 r Reagan fair condition at General
the park ofi rapid transit C~ilwoD}~. f!eplice -Hu'b--dcc\inett to CGmment on the Receivirig Hospital. Turnquist
dis trict property aQoul a mile bird ~ M~y .Bai,<!, she didn 'l recommended plan except to was shot in the leg and groin
lrom the original people's be'U~· ac:tils,i•. of Police say a report on it should be and Ford ' jn the shoulder,
Park . vandafiam.~ ~_'.aa· id ••e c•'ty given the governor early this police said. • 9fft!' LU week The two Q[~rs were ques·
Polfue . Lt. Henry Sanders hatl~~.laWi ~ 'gainst ".catnping Re~gan has given no sign he tioning ~Iizabeth Meehan, f2J
said "we'don'L like lhe reporls out: and· .6:he wou1CI reserve has modified his hard ~I.and and Elp1dio Salaz, 22, boQt of
\ve've heard concerning the any further comment until she aga in st c 0 mp u 1s 0 r y Los Angeles, about a~ear
damage" and said if any of· =d· ~· 1 ~" i..... burglary at the Jot n sees.a report On·uie incident,_ wi. mg .. u_. .. y _ast,~~ ··.&.lvldres -0-was .. ng· ficers were found guilty of t • <., .• , , saJ<t would•not aecept.-n-.n • '"" .
misconduct, they would be '(:( ""k • '"{:( .J:., dato_!'Y withholding as the behind · i car! aUegedly: a_t-
disciplined, P.ri~ of a tax reform package. . tacked .Tu~.uist a~d too~ h1s
Berkeley 1City Councilman R ·s 'ill Ttie governor's own proPosal gun, authont1es sa1_d. .
llonald Del!Ums declared he egents f. · included some v 0 I u n't a r y . A melee followed I? wh1Ch at
\vants "a full explanation." It ; · forms of withholding but these least 12 shots were fired.
\vas "way out of bounds" for U d 'd d ~-got 8 ·cool reception· from the
police lo damage plants and fl eCI e Assembly RtvenUe and Tax-
playground equipment, he · atiOn Commitlee, headed b·y Yorty Hits ~aid. ~ Ah 'p k' As~blyman William T . Capt. Plummer said the, OUt ar pa rk was cleared after a num-
ber of neighbors in the area
had complained about noise.
I At Bradley,:'
Earlier, officers had broken
!lfl a torchlight parade at ·the
original park.
Some 30 arrests were made
during the night, Plummer
reported .
Before the police raid, on the
•Nl\.l f.1.IVi.~.Mlt) l C~N'f ~tf\D
f.Vf.t.l CME. Of 1"1-teM I ..
SERKELEY (AP) -A unJ-·' No Market
versity of California regents' LOS ANGELES (AP) -
committee has decided to hold Mayor Sam Yorty. says, Coun•
a second meeting over the dis· Tieup Action cilman Thomas Bradley and
puted Berkeley "p e op 1 e's Bradley's rollowers "are doing
park" as the controversy over LOS ANGELES (\l'Pi) _ more today to cause bitterness
the UC-owned land mov<::d to Negotiators seeking to settle a and divisiveness In Lo s
new territory. s t r i k e • I 0 c k 0 u t at area Angeles than before.' the elec·
Police arrested more than supermarkets "are still far lion,"
30 persons in two Friday night apart." according to Robert J(, Vorty, who defeated the
incidents - a raid that clear· Fox, president of the ' Food Negro councilman in the May
ed the so-called "people's Employers Council. 27 mayoral rul"!off ~Jection.
park annex "' and an attempt Fox made the statement said Bradley's camp is mak·
by demonslrators to hold a following talks Sunday with ing "continued and unob-
torch.linght parade. . representatives of Af'L.CIO jective efforts to suggc::st the
Fencing of the orig inal , im· Retail Clerks Local 770 before campaign was based on fear
promptu "people's park" by a federal mediator. and racism ."
the university May IS led lo -.:tt'tt'O.:tt;tt;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;tt';tt;:;tt;:H;.;;; \ violent de{llonstrations a n d t******** * * ** ***~*******"AA***" A" t""" ** * **'%
'·
00~~e~~gents' Committee on i YOUR p·10BLEM: -!
Bu1ld1ngs and Grounds heard .-· •
·2l ~peake~s Saturday and : Yov want t~ Hll ~.ome Item •
decided to meet again lo de· .., th1t you no longer need but :
termine its recommendation t someone else cen use for •
fbr the full Board of Regents • :
June 20. . : N 0 T 0 V E R $ 5 0 :
No date for }he o1'icr com· « •
mittee session was set, b u t : ? ? :
it was indicated the meeting • ? ? ? ? *
might be-'closed to Ute public. : : -.---, .. -.. ,_-" .. '-------'-~·-'-'--f YOUR ANSWER: f
T~'l1\edi lo~'that : You call THE •DAILY PILOT, 11k for ! Gets. )l·~~r·Cause f c1 • .,;11oc1 Ad••rll•fng, '"d pl•u • i
-ot Herriorrnoids i PILOT I
Now!-Most complete 3-way relief! : PENNY i : . 1his impo1tant dev1lopment in
hemorrhoid treatment COINS to
YCllt after five years of scitntific
and clinical testipg. Nol o~ly ~es
CounternoWI" work .by "*sellillnl
Nin fast,~ by coetfnt, soothinc.
and prottctin1 h\jured tisu ...
b111 unlike avery other hemorrhol,j
product Counttmoid also worb •
lh!tdw1y,
Thinks to an ticlusi91 formula
wit h oss,0 r• only Counttrnold
gets to 1 major cause of hem«·
rhoi<h: Painful hard constlpetlon.
\Vlthout irritatin1 lwtl\ll effect.
Here's hOw: In ho!plt1I X·riY tests
doctors !'lave dtmonslraled that
!ht remark1ble Count1rnold formu·
latiori with osslt p1n1trat11 h'I
minut.-Jo tht top ol the · r1ct1f
1rn tt.4atten thf stool and t1se
the bowel lllO'lemtnt.
It ts-this unlQll 1clion tMt ioe:s
so much to maM flllunl h11Un1
poulble.
So, i( you live wilh 11111 pai11 1nd
fear of recurrtn1minot hemol'Tfloid
troubles, ret temporary relief with
medicllly·tnted Colllttrl'IOid,
Act111llY, UMd u directed, Coun-
ternoid often the most compl1l1
l·way relirf you c.an pt without
a JN'tSCl'lrtlion er without sin1ery.
In stainless ueam or suppoi!tories.
At an dru1 counters. .,,., ....... .., ............ ~··""'· , ...
: PINCHER i i CLASSIFIED AD a
I AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE :i
3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 ·DOLLARS ;i
DIAL NOW DIRECT! ! 642°5678 i ~ IT••,_ ..... c...., 140.llJOI ~
L AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I -' . ................................................ }
Mrs. Miller was convicted of there was no other way you "All ol lbe wlndowt . w.ere
the 196' murder of her dentist could· get to the car,"' Brooks. clo&ed ·.and the people inside
husba)'ld 1;nd\ Is serving a llft -a.~ailor ?n lea.~e, said. . contlnued to bold thematlves
Navy &Stigrui\ellti. ·11• '. 11
s<hMuled to go .lo JaP.arl Jilile
26. sentence 'in lhe California Then I fell .in and the first above the water by the doors
for one I saved wu..myse!f." as I was trying t.o pull them
Institute Women at Five years ago. "Hobie" open," said the recent Viet.I.==========:;:;
Frontera. Brooks pulled four sailors nam veteran. OPPOSED TO
Her attorneys argue that her from a car submerged in the "Someone came down -I
constitutional right not to in· raging creek at the same site. don't know wt>o he was. He 'RED .. ROUTE?·'
criminate herself was violated Brooks said he was walking pulled the branch off the car
when an undercover ·officer home from a grocery store to and then I started ·'111lng kids . Wlrrl
was placed·-in ber,ja.il ~eU and his home in the area when a O;Ul like you wouldn t believe.i. C•ll''"''-.. ..., cecu t IM
th .~,. <o.I. ... ''" :_, .... ••l "'"· en teswi":at her uiaJ. • car missed a tUrn, went down l1-;:· =A:;:n~u;;ni;;;de;;n;;ti;;fi;;:ed;;,;m;;;oto;;;;;r;;is;t,;•;•·,;,::::=:=:=:=:=:=:==~ Judge·Ri#J•r.d M.' Bench pf a f>O.foot embankment and Ian-fr
the U.~Cirtuit Court':of· Apo ded on its side in more than 1 peals Hg'.teed ·Friday tu· hear. four feet of water.
the ar~ts. ~convict.kin The driver of the car, Gene
was upbeld last-.year by · the H. Massey, 36, Rialto, was
U.S. Supreme Court .Qui it··did'' later arrested on a charge of
not rule pl the possible viola~ ' drunken driving. Also in the
tion .of Mrs. Miller's . c9n·· car were Massey's ~ife, Max-
stitulional rights. ine,. Forest H. Shields, 49,
• • • • •
A BOOK from the St•ll ...
• great GIFT for •Ill
The Bookstall »l 1. 11tti sr., c .... w ... Ut-4•11
!11111111111 n. l"tiK••• H->
• • • • • • • • • • •
at El Rancho: • •
the supermarket • •, where the price is right! •' ,, • • FOR BREAKFASTI t OR AMYTIME! • \ I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • "/ • • ~ • • • • DELICIOUS \ • ECOHOMICAI. • ·• • FARMER JOHN •
LINKS .•• V2·fb.
..
Little lin};s ••. ·\Vi th Lhat specia l }'a~·mer John flavor.,. did you kno\v you can freeze thei;n, for later use!
Fresh Eggs .. ........ ........... . ... 43¢doz.
El }1ancho's O\\'n • , • Large Si ze , , , Grnrlc AA!
Pancake Mix .. : ...................... .: ... 39'-
Betty Crocker's ... Buttermilk ••• 28 ol. pkg.
Birds Eye's Awake ............... 3 1 .. $1
1-lore orange-.v than orange juicr! Frozen •.• 9 oz.
Pure Maple Syrup .............. : ... 79•
~1 c Don:.tl<l's , •• real Eastern goodness! ••• 12 ot.
.'\rrrc ]Jori; for a n·1·lro111 e chttnyr of''""".'
Pork Shoulder Roast ............ 59~
l :or a trc;it that \viii offer sheer plca~ure!.,. from the finest mid-\vestern grain f ed pork!
'
Pork Steak ... -. ......................... 69~
'Lean, tas1y .•. s_c rve applcsaurc on the· !ide !
Pork Cutlets .......................... 79~
Already lireaded ••. rtady to cook and 1erve!
1·011'/l lo rt. I.his dcliyhlf 11ll11 di(/P rr.nf, t reul!
Fresh Italian Style Sausage ...... ~~~:~C.1~ ..... 89~
lif ade r ight on lhe premises , , . fresh , . , perfect blenrl of fine meat with the right 1easonings !
Shake n' Bake .................... 4 1,, $1
New ! fo r Pork! great on Pork Steak! Reg. Pkg.
Instant Potatoes ..................... 59•
Ffench's : .. mashed po~'ltocs in minutes ! 15 oz. ·
/n'viluti.011 to (I s«latl 1 l'f(Ll'.. 4 s1
Avocados . . . . . ... .. . .. . . . .. .. .. .. . . roR
Jl)t?-S v-arie}Y •.. b1:1ttrry Rmnoth !
I Prictt in effect Mo n., 1'11rs., lVtd,,
J u,,,,.c !J1 101 11 . , , No 8(1.lr.t1 to deale1·11.
Apple Sauce ............................ 43•
Seneca .•• wjth a touch of cinnamon! 35 oz.
Baked Beans ............................ 39"
S& \V .. , Ne\v England iityle ..• 28 oz. can
Acconivani11tent to a 11ork 1nain--course! 2°'
Sauerkraut .. . .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. . .. . .. . . . . 7 ·
Hornadi ••• milcf cured ••• 22 01.. glaaa
ARCADIA:
SuMet and ffuntinston Dr, Ill Rlnclto Cl!lllll
PASADENA:
320 West Colorado Blvd.
SOUTH PWDEllAr
Fremont and Huntlniton Dr.
HUNTINGTON BUCH:
Warner and AicOlllJUln (lloanlwalk Cln!lr)
MEWPDRT BUCH:
2n1 NeWporl 81'111. and
2~5 rntliltrff Dr. (Elstbluff Villlit c.nt.ltl
~ i
'
' I
I
I
•
• • !
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE TO C•FDITl'llS ,u .. i;11:101t t"O<'PT '= TMr
ITATE OF CALIFOllN!A ,Olt
THE COUNTY o r OIHlt:Ge
..... ,\-'1101
El!•I• Of CL !FFOllO C, HUBL ll D•c11~e<1
NOTICE IS HEAEl!Y r,1•1t1i I~ I~(
ct..ilio,. 01 the •l>O'<t ,,,,,..., a•c"Cl•nt
ll\11 111 or"'m' hav•A~ c '~'"'' 1g1,n1: '"' ••:a ci•ctd~n1 ••t rro •. r•d lo f<f• !n•,..
with thr n•ct\f~•v Ynv . ., .. , In ''" ~ol.c•
nt l l>t cle--ol tne .,,... ·• '"·-11•<1 <t'"'· "I
1o t>r~M:n! ll>t m, w<!h lhe ntC!l!lro
Yot/Ch•"· to !he Y<><I" """" •I •JO J;"a
Stt•fl, NtWOO•I !hie•, (nlo!~•n0> ·;~l.j
wh•cl\ \< ,.,. ol•c• '' ,.,. ·~··• •! '"'
\o<>de" ~"'" :n 111 m11r.-,. l>"rl•;n,n,, 10
!ht t ll1'1l ol •1.d <ltted•nl w11n,n l~ur
"IO<>lh1 lfltt !~ '"" P~bhC1l10" al lhll no•lct I
D11~d Ma• ll, ••t?
... URWITl, fiUll ",'lC ,\ IUO"~lll
S~ Marilynn l•Y·n I. Rot>crt L l'IM,.,,
E~•tulo•~ Of !!>• \\ II
ol T~e ~D<"·' ~·moo d•··:i·1I
HUltWITI, HURWITZ I. Rt:Mto
•Jf • Unf Strttr
~...,..,-, •••<ft, C•llto•n•• 1'lL: (7U) ftl•ttH
"'"-" IW E~-c~lt•I Pul>I~ Or1n9t [(>11•1 O•·'v r> lo!
M1v lt, 11, """June :i. o, 11·~ t/I ~;,
LEGAL NOTICE
"·JJ!U
[[ltTIFICATE OF BUSI NE SS
FIETITIOUS NAME
1'M llM••si•nt"G 110 <••l<!V '"•Y l rt I c.-ucton~ ~ bu>'n•n "' JO'~ N• ~011•!1 8oul.-.1rd, C0.1t1 M~1•, C1rl!o•n••· ~ncltt
tt\fo !lthho•a """ n1tT>0 o! .t.iCPOi:E'I "Ult.1~;11/.IG COMPINY 10<! 1n•t •~id
''"" 11 tomoos"' ct •~· 1111o,,,~ oor!.Pn1
w ~ 11 I • n1rn~1 "' lull 1f0d 1>l1ce1 1111 fl!11d~r<tf •<• •• 1ouow• '
D llOll"• l-!Cl'l1n ,;,7a /'u. t•lc1n AV!n~. (0111 M .. 1, C11i!(trn,1.
Ro,..ld F. Hono11n, )o:ll ~·woo"
8 1v8., Co111 ~ ... C1t1!11rn11.
Oiied Milv II, 191•
0 R09tr 1<0-0~0
Re>nlld F, !olo•vll~
Sl•t• o! [ttotorn•o. Ot•~~f Cov"I•
On Mty !6, 1919. l>"'cr• ,,_,, a lln'"V
"ul>lk. In • n d !or '''d ~l~lt. ll('"C"•''• '"~··"° o . Roger l'<C~ln •no 11.oM•IG F Hor•ll~ ~"'"''~ •o ..,. •o .,. ••• 1>•• • .,..,
-.. n•""s l'O 1ubS1;.,b'IO 10 lt-r ""'~"
inilr-nl '"" '°'""'"~ I~•• u -.cute<:I ll>e $•m•
iDFFICIAl ~EAll
Mirr K. l'<t~•v
Not1rv P ubhC·C1111c•••t
P•itl<loel 0Ho<o .~
Orll>llt Cct<i~IV
M • comm••··""' £••"•• Nov. Ii. 1'1?
'°UblllM<I C•l"~C (O•!I 01uf
,,... .. 11, M, '"" Juno 7. t, !~
LEGAL r\OTICE
I' •ot ..... I
Ll!:G.t.l ftOTICE I
MOTICE '' tiElllllY ,GIVEN l~t! ,~,! tollewl"" Items o< lou<>o or ... .,. 6<011'.,
tie.-~ Mid i.v •~• •oil<• Otu•nm•~t
el f1!e Cllv Of C1111• ,.., ... tor 1 nt••(ICJ +~
UC:•I of nlMI¥ (.01 d•I•
Sill,, lr1tn11, DO'f''I O•il•, bl'"' ~.~,,
nid ...... • NOTICli Ii FUltft-t[R GIVEN t~.i 11
... --·" Incl ,.,...,.., ~ .. ~I.-fl/ fM ··~ny w.l~)ft \~Yf"
(11 cMn IOllOWI"' Ii.. P11bllt1ll011 DI 11111 • Hof!«, !M ll!lf l'Mft!O ·~•II YHI I" tlw
'flndtr, " ~ be -· OI' ·~ "" (+!y O! Cit!• MfM, lrl wl'llCll <.t>e l~t .,_nv
: 91Mlf ... Jot! ., 111111\e '"''!Oto ......... ...... ,. .. tit _ ....
• DATl!Oi J-t. lftt. It. £. NETH
(Hlif Qll ~LICE : ~utllftittd Or....,. COllll O•llr • '1101,
.J-'· "" ·~ ~ The Doily Pilot '
Covers Boating I
• Monday, .ftlnt '· 1969
•
Tyr~'!'ny ~f Teens Ending
Dy SYLVIA PORTE,R· you but•! willingly rirt tt
Today, I submit to you en Impresses me enonn ty. Jn
ltc1n which l trust you'll read fact, even a tidy 10 of e Jm· pllcations J can easily foreset "'ilh dellgl•I, Mr. and Mrs. leave me a bil breathless. To
adult American. The ilem als:> illustrate:
carries massive and magnlfi~ . (I) The aging ot so tremen·
cent economic significance dous a group Jn our populaUon
y,·hich T trust you'll recogniz.e .telearaphs an explbsion ln 'the
in time, Mr. and Mrs. in· demand for all types of shelter
telligent businessman. Here it _ all sizes, fOr sale, for rr:nt.
ls: \Vhen kids 11et married In an
The last of the kids born in arnuent society, they move In
the post·\Vorld War II baby to places of their own.
that all coods and services be
ol a hlghtr quality and type.
(7) There also will be an Im·
menae increase In demand for
all types of services. '
(I ) THE IDGBER pr ..
dUctlvl\y. of our new worker11
6hoUld Ji'lp temper thelannu~
rate of rise in prl~es · and
gradually"bring back tht' rate
of innalion to a tolr:rable
range,
(9) As the young marrieds
havt babies, a whole new ey·
cle of demands for school
facilltie.'1, goods and serl'iccs
boom is about to move out or f2) THE DDIAND for
his teens. Tht post-World War 1norlga~ .. money to build the
11 baby boom topped out in housing . "'iii also r::cplodc.
1949. l!:ven ass uming funds becon1e
THE TYRANNY of the more available after the Viet-
teenager v.·ill 1 end with this nam war, the cost o f
decade Dec. 31. There are mortgage money should re.
17 ,000,000 in the 15-19 year age mai n very high compared with
bracket today, up 50 percent the 1950s and n\ost of the
will get underway -even J . K. "Dusty" ,Fo,wl· ~
assuming the birth rate con· kcs Was : recently ho~· ',
tinues Jot,i:. ored a~ the a'nnual · cori-
(101 Our nation v.•ill slop ventiun ol -the' Society
(has stopped) gr:tting younger . for American· Va I u e
You carry on with im· fSAVE) in San Diego
in the 1960s alone: in the 1960s.
19i0s. this number will hardly 13) Industries which will be
plications of your own. As one Folkes is president and adull who has been tyran·
budge. riding the demographic \V&ve
Replacing this group wil l be 1vill be those catering to the
the 20·29 ye3r-olds. The.v burgeoning numbers or. young
number 25,000.000 now. \11ill married, not the. stabilized
niud, I just want to relax, co-founder of Value An-
contemplate and savor my alysis •. Inc. ' f
previous sentence. -------------!I
total ·40,000.000 by 1980. number or teen-agers ..... and ~.lrt#fll'."'!l°'"'""""'"" .In the words of Malin R. this covers the entire ranae of · ..,
.Cainsbrugh, chief economisl goods and services. either ne1v B •
or the National Industrial or traditional. usiness
Con ference Board, "The Sev· (4) There will be an ex·
enti es is the decade of the ceedingly importan t a n d
young marrieds." welcome increase. in our work In Brief THE NE\V FORCE in our force as the dependent teen·
economy, in short, is the agers of lhc: 1960s become the
growing up of the generation independent young adults of ..... ..,,.,.,...., .. .,..,,..,,....
born righl after World \Var n the 1970s. Since this is an
-the switch from teenager lo educilted generation, a further
young mar r i e d . from implication is that these
dependency to a member of \VOrkers will be unusually pro-
thc v.·ork rorce, fron1 eX· ductive -which means they
pensi1'e child to salary.e:i rning will spur our economic growth
parent. to an unusual d e g r c e .
I don 't know ho\v this strikes Gainsbrugh sees our annual
CALGARY (UPI) -Pan
American Petroleum Corp., a
subsidiary of Standard Oil Co.
(India na), has si~ed a sales
contract with N o r t h e r n
Natural Gas Co. coveri ng up
to one trillion cubic feet of gas
from !ht Strachan-Ricinus
fi eld 100 miles northwest of
Calgary and «IO billion cubic
feet from the Southern Caybor
field 250 miles northwest of
Calgary. The deal is subject lo
approval of rr:gulator y
author\ties.
LEGAL NOTICE
* HALLI DAY'S *
WARM WEATHER BLAZERS
rhe [;ibrie is a tri~p ~!;tt·:u;; II • 1 J.l:::d,
!hat keeps il.'l good· look.'i on !11o~e \.\ ar1n-
cst of day~.
'fradilionally tailored in the Jll<~l r right
llalliday'.'i 1nC1nnl'r, II comes iR fi1c llCll
r;1im mer c·nlor~· plus rl:issic nal'r '60
Coordinated l'illlcrn ::,t01chs-4l8 tu *~! . .,(!
:\IEN'S TltADITIO~AL CLOTl:ITNG
17tlo I IJl:VINE AV[, Wt!.TCLIFF PLAZA N~WPO RT l~ACH PH. 6'45 ·01•2
rate of real growth (after ad·
justment for price incrtascs)
at 4.5 percent In the 1970s.
against only about 3 percent in
te entire 20th century and '4
percent during lhe post-World
\\'ar II period. This means our
national output will double
\Vilhin 16 years!
\5) THE HIGHER education
of our young adults implies
steady and big pay hikes,
which in turn implits more
buying power.
16) Equally important. these
educated buyr:rs v.•itl demand
Bank ltla11a9~r
Laguna Beach residP.nl
Donald B. McKee ha s
been assigned ~s man-
ager of Security Paci·
fie Na ti o 1l al Bank's
South Laguna branch.
Zodvs -Opens
Po111oua Store
Zodys has opened its lflth
department store, covering
100.800 square feel, in Pomona
Valley Center, Pomona.
The Zodys chai n began in
Garden (;rove in 1960. ·other
Orange Coast area stores in·
elude the faclli ty at Hun-
tington Brach v.·hich \1•as the
ninth link in the chain and lhe
Fountain Vallry storr. the
13th. Seven more .stores arc
planned for this year. ac·
cording to Lee Freesman, ex-
ccuth·e vice president.
NE\V DELHf (UPI) -The
Indian government may ask
Burmah.Shell Refineries, Ltd.,
and Esso to cut back pro·
duction next month 'vhen the
new state-0wned 11f a d r a s
refinery goes in production.
the fin ancial paper Economi c
Times said. The two foreign
companies presently are ex·
cecding their authorized out -
puts.
NE\V YORK (U PI J -Allied
Sto res Corp. will open 31 ne\Y
stores by the r:nd of 1971, the
company said in its 196& an·
nual report. Allied cu rren!ly
has 12:1 storr:s in 17 states and
had a sales volume of SI.I
billion la st year.
, \VASlJINGTO?( (UPl )-Jt ls
)ligh -time · the nation's str:el
PrOOucers and auto makers
make a serious effort to so]\"e
the junk automobilt problem,
Sen. Jennings Randolph. (0·
\V. Va .), said Thur s da y .
\Vriting in a publication of the
Institute of Scrap Iron & Steel.
Senator Ra ndolph s a i d
Congress will investigate the
problem th.is summer to seek
somt alternative to a massive
outlay of public funds to
dispose of junk cars.
NE:\V YORK IUP IJ -U. S.
Bank Note Corp. said Thurs·
day it has de\•eloped a ne1\•
101\•-cosl method of rapid
handling and aulomatic
reading or stock certificates
lh<!I could solve the present
back office logja m in \\'all
Street. U.S. Bank Not~ said
the system ~·as developed
jointly ·with Control Data
Corp. of l\Iinneapolis.
NE\V ''ORK (UP!l
Spartans 11ldustri es. Inc .. ha~
agreed lo buy for $a5 million
in 51, percent subordina ted
ootes and other securities
from Arlen Operating Co. 48
rea l estate properties in \\'hlch
Spartan's presently is the sole
or principal retail tenant. The
properties arl!! encumbered by
mortgaaes tot:illlng $ I 2 0
milnon.
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.J. WALTER THOMPSOIJ
we're not
But then maybt you're not IBM.
Maybe you're just 1 growl~g company whc
apprecietes the value of 1dvertising,
and you could use a consu'.ta nt.
Th~t'' where we come in.
V.'e give long. sincere thoiJght
to you r marketing problems,
end we come up with end produc e
attention-gettin g 11dverti11ng •nd publicity.
l et's talk about ho\v it cen work for yo ur compa ny.
Dlok (114) 642°711110
ARTHUR COOPER/ Advart isin g'
204S Wt,tchff 0t.v1, Suitt 200
Newport eettl'I, c.~f'ornt• t2E60
·• tanw/1111; •~d pr1id11cllan •t1v.c1
wot~ 1dvW1•1lr.g 1gtncy r.co~n~Jan.
IKL Gains .
Boeckler .~ ,
Instruments I
TKL Inc .. Newport. Beach,
and Boeck It r Instruments
havr: rr:ached an agreement in
principle for • IKL to acquire
Boeckler.
The announcement w a s
made by Guy E. Inshaw, lKL
president. and William Birt'
Birren. president of Boeckler. I
Terms of the salt were not
announced, but It was reported!
that Boeckell!!r will continue to
be headed by Birren and willl
remai n in Tucson, Ariz., at it.sl
present add11;ss. Boeckeler is
kno"'n for the micrometer.
head it invented In 1942 and
has been manufacturing since.,
Both Boeckeler and IKL·
products are sold In industries!
"'her e close tolerances are
held -integrated circuits,!
bu si n ess machine,,,
metalworking, plastics, and
n1i croscopes. projectors. gages
and other precision products.
Boeckeler "ill operate as 2
wholly owned subsidiary o!
!KL, wh ich is located in the
Irvine industrial comp I ex .
Boeckeler In st rumen t ~
formerly v.•as known a s
Ar izona Tool and Oil!! Co., and:
,\·as establi shed in 1942. I
Martec Byys
Paln1 Press
T\lartec Re prod uc tion.
Ne\vport Beach , a subsidiary
of Genge Industries. In c., has
purchased Palm Pre.53 for
Ca!'h.
Richard T. Marvin. T\1artcr
pre5ident. maclc I h e an·
nouncement. Palm Press. v.'jtl·
a current annual \'O\umc nf
approximately $350.000. \l'ill
opcrat llo as a division or
T\lartec.
Since lts foundin.; i11 19f.2
T\lartec has sprcielizcd in p•~n
ting technical n1 a n u a I s .
reports and proposals primari-
ly for the aerospaCt' industry.
inc I u ding b roc h urei;.
magazinl!!s and r c I a t c d
publications.
l\.eystone
Acquired
Agree1nent in principle ha~
been re<iched for 'frans.Coas:
I
Investm ent Co .. Los Angele·
based savin gs and loan holding
company. to 2cquire Keystone
Savings and Loan Association !
of An aheim for com1non stock ..
Trcins..Coast 01vns I \Vo
operoting savings an d loan
associ:it!ons, Oxnard Savin:!S1
and Soni:\ T\1aria Saving.c
Assets of the holding company
lotaled $9'l,625.000 as of Dec .
31, 1968. I
Acquisi tion of Keystone Sa\"I
lng:s with assets of $42.405.000
at yr:ar end 19611 will increase
tot al assets of Trans-Coast to
more th an $135 million.
Comn1unity
Envisioned I
SAN DIEGO (AP ) -A plan
lo develop a community for
nearly 34,000 persons on Camp
Elliott lands his been outlined
by the Christiana Oil Corp. of
Huntington Beach.
The plan cans for con·
etructlon of some 11,000 livtnp
unit!! durina the n~X'l 10 year~.
beginning "'ith up to ~
single.faimlly rcsldcnct~ In
About a ytar.
TIWI dt\'CIOpn1e.nt \\'ii ht' on
t.800 ac;es of forni~r NHl'.\
land. 10 1nllcs north ol
THE NEEDLE -
' t
I IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN
And the man who
knowi ilUt how to twn
the phrlUt. to get tht
most out of the bMb 11
QAlLY Pll,.OT ~otumu·
ist Sydne~ Harris. Ile
has been-called the
moder1L • tUJy 11 e n r JI
~ft.tLcken. If you're
rt.ad'y fOr his ITTe of t/11'!
acid adjecti vt and
tho ugh t -prooo kin!?
pros!!· ta ' give you. the
11cedle ... ·if yoii want
to f ind . something to
thi11k qbo·ut in wha t you
read .•. if you have,..n
sense tjf 11ur11or. you
b cl o ng with"•nadcrs
who dt'lf.glit in telling
othn-s what· "Syd said"
tn one-of the nation'•
most • quott.d column3.
Some Sample Barbs
Recently Thrown
By Sydney Harris:
"One of the hlgheat p1 ld joba in Amerlc1
con1i1t1 of 1t1nding up in front of 1 mic·
rophone, separating the good records
from the bid ones -ind pl1yin9 the
bad ones."
''It's sari but true that \\'hile alcoholics
are the best argun1cnt for abstinence, so
many abstainers arc equally effective ar·
gument for a little drink now and then.''
"Most of the 10..c1Jltd 'incomp1tibility' in
m1rrlage springs from the f1ct th1t to
most men , sex is 1n act; while to 111
women, it is 1n emotion. And this differ-
ence in 1ttilude c•n be bridged only by
love."
1'The sole difference between a 'dedica-
ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer' con·
sists in our agreemeut or disagreement
'rith his obj<!cli ves.''
"The most explo&iv• combin1tlon in the
worl d consists of sincerity added lo
ignorance."
1'\Vheneve r I an) the recipient of an e~·
cessively hearty ha ndshak{', I suspect
~I r. 1\fuscles is tr.1·ing to sell so1nething,
hide son1ething, or prove something."
• • Check The Editorial Page !
'
For This Signature
It'll Help You Fihd The :
Latest Quota bles Created By '.
'The Needler' For His Col-:
umn,
the
A Regular Feature of ; •
DAILY PILOT
Your Hometown Dilly New1p1per
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downlo"·n San DlCs;o.
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·ce1ebra1e With Flying Colors
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Get Flag For ew a . • •••
. ·
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FLAG DAY • • • .
JUNE 14th
INDEPENDENCE DAY • • •
JULY 4th
LABOR DAY ·.· 4 •
SEPTEMBER 1st
, .
Delp Yourself . , Help The Boys~ Clubs
Fly a new flag at your , home or office during this patriotic season. Here's an offer 'that lets ' you sav,. money and help
I.
your Boys' Club, too. Participating in th is public service offer are the Boys' Club of the Harbor Area~ Boys' CI u b of
Huntington Beach and Laguna Beach Bays' Club. Here's how you can help them and help . yours.elf. Just order this
beautiful deluxe flag kit, at a fraction of its retail value, and get as. a bonus a California state flog -all deliver-
ed to your door by Boys' Club representatives or mailed directly to your home in time for holiday use.
.,
Order Now At Any of Four Boys' Club Headquarters .
HARBOR AREA
!CENTRAL IRANCHI
594 Center Street
Costa Mesa, Ccrlif.
PhOfte 548-9387
HAHOI AIEA
IUl'l'EI IAYJ
2131 Tntl• AYtflut
Costo Mina, Calif.
PhOfto 642-1372
HUNTINCiTON llACH
BOYS' CLUI lltY .... _
HUfttl"'"" -· C:.111.
l'ltoll• 536·'415
LACiUNA llACH
IOYS' CLUI
175 Nortfl C-t Hkjh"Y 1.ot--.c:.111.
l'ltollo4t4-l535
Use miil order coupon below and send it directly to club headquarters nearest you: Your flag kit afld bonus state flag wiH
be delivered or mailed directly to your home or office. Or you can pick them up in person at the Boys' Club headquert1r1
1n your area.
Piclt. :Up Your Own Flag Kit and Get This Ff'ee Giff
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Just clip out this meil ord•r coupon incl fill it out. Sencl , 1lon9 with
check or rnon•y orcl•r, to th• Boy1' Clu b he1clqu1rter1 ne•r•st you.
Meke checks pey1hl• to "Boys' Club."
l'fease snd me .................. Amerlc• flat klh at $3.95 per kit.
I undenhntcl I win receive Cll a holklay bonus a Colfornla stote f1ot
with each kit.
I Nem t ........................................................................................................ ..
I Street Acldres'\ ...................................................... -.................................... ..
I Cily ............................ ,_ .. _ .... _ .... _ .. _ .. ,_, ___ ........ ,_ ... Zip ........................... .
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I Phont ................................................ Enclosecl is $ ............................................. -..... 1
I This~ special holidey offer is t public service of tht DAILY PILOT tnd the Boy•'' I Clubs of the Harbor Area, Huntin9ton Beai:h encl L19un1 Be1ch. I · '---------------..J
. ' !THIS IS ACTUAL DICAL SID I
Free De¢al. ':
While they last, ~he lofl' .Cktbs"offer you this sP.cial, fr•• 9ift
..• t elect I of th• Am•rJcen Flt9 lilt• tho•• you S•• ~ ev•rywh•r•
on cir winclshielcls , hom• encl offfc1 window•, or eYlft on th1
f1mily boet. Visit the Boys' Club r.••r•st you IFfhorie for hours of
operation). Buy • fle9 kit : 9•t th• clec1I free . Supply of clec1ls
11 limited. Hurry. _
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DAll.V PllOT
lfhat Now, My Love?
Here's an off duly executive who knows what he's
r:. after -relaxation. No sleek racing .ye1chts for him
-just give him his Sabot {Mein Llebchen ), a bit°
of cruising room off Little Balboa Island and mix
well with -a breeze and some sunshine.
GWC Gives
Awards for
Scholars
$9 ,350
Scholarships totaling $9,~
have been presettted t o 60
Golden West College students
by 2fi busines,, and pro-
fessional groups, s e r v i c e
organizations and individuals.
Donors and sCholarship win-
ners are the following:
· Assistance League of Hun·
lington Beach : Joan
Worlcman, Westminster, $100 ;
Diane Theil, H untington
BeaC:h. $100.
Huntington Beach Business
and Professional W om en :
Mary Battershill, Huntington
Beach, $50: Linda Louzao,
Fountain Valley. $50.
Junior Women's Club of
Huntingto~ Beach: M a r i a
Monce and Robert Henstridge.
Huntington Beach, $100 each .
Women's Club of Huntington
Beach: Susan Sugden. llun-
Ungton Beach, $125.
Costa Mesa Art League:
Elhelya Bradsbaw~unUnaton
Beach, $100; Lyifn Pringle ,
Westminster, $100.
Delta K.ippa Gamma : Can·
dace SU"1naM, su·nut Beach,
$225.
Mercury Savi ngs and Loan :
Jean Connler, Midway City,
$200; William Pingree, Garden
Grove, $IOU; Diane Gaedig.
Huntington Beach, $100; Kathy
Quinn, Garden Grove, $100.
Bahia Chapter, Natio n a 1
Secret 1 r ie s Association:
Debra Stevenson, Westmin·
ster, $100; Nancy Johnson.
Huntington Beach, $UIO.
Sisti and Sira cusa
Memorial: William Carpenter,
Garden Grove; Morri s
Chinkin, Midway City; Peggy
Fuller, Ga rden Grove :
Octavia Winzer, Huntington
Beach; Christopher L i 11 y,
6 Residents
Get Degrees
Six local residents received
degrees along with 2,542 other
graduates at Fresno State
College's commencement ex-
ercises Wednesday.
Thomas Jerome Cook. of
Costa Mesa, along with John
Ryan Bradford and Cranvillr
Conner of Newport Beach,
were awarded Bachelo1 (If
Arts degrees.
James Marshall McCall. 01
Fountain Va 11 c y, wa ..
presented with a Bachelor of
Science diploma. while Ken
nelh LeRoy Pederson ano
Lynne Eleanor Lenger com·
pleted teaching credential re
quirements.
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Huntington Beach. $100 each.
Woman 's Club or Se a J
Beach : Stephen Schtiblauer.
Sunset Beach. $100.
Rancho Alamitos Rotary
Club: Richard Craig, Newport
Beach, $100: Ray Baker. Hun-
tington Beach, $50. ·
Gold en West College Faculty
Association : Gary Turner.
Robert Walters, Kerry
Redican, Don Zoll , Huntington
Beach, $50 each: Cheryle
Silver. Fountain Valley, $50.
Golden West College
Associ atid Students: Gerald
Baggs, Westminster. $50.
RobertM cC au sland
Memorial Fund : Frank Cid.
Yvonne Bethrum, Patricia
Slone, Westminster, SI O O
each : Dave Dow, Garden
Grove , SIOO ; Kenneth Wagner.
Fountain Valley, $100.
Young Women's Ci vi c
League: Patricia Lind sey ,
~glas Ablvers, G a r d e, n
'Omve. ·$50 eacl'i : Gary Kim-
brough. Huntington Beach,
1-\0.
OAf!.Y PlLOT: &le Green,
\Vestminster, $50.
Mrs. Phyllis Joy and Dody
TiwmaS Memorial Award : Jan
Pearson, Westminster. $50.
American Business Women's
Association : Gail Altlmart
Gwen Van Aker, Huntington
Beach, $300.
Huntington B eac h
Playhouse, Inc.: Diane Bety ,
J.,ountain Valley, $100.
Bank of America Business
Awards r Robert Jensen
Westminster, $300; Jacueli~
Stiles, Huntington Beach, $300.
Bank of America Man of the
Year: . James Ro th we 11 ,
Westminster, $50.
Bank of America Woman or
l~ Year ; Gail Altimari, Hun-
hngton Beach, $50.
Golden \Vest College Faculty
Yi'ives Association : J a m e s
Cooper, Westminster. S 5 o ;
Vern Hodge, Garden Grove,
1-\0.
Proto Tool Award : Da vid
Klatt, Huntington Beach. SIOO:
Lloyd Swan, Costa Mesa, SUIO.
Southern California a nd
Soulhern Counties Gas Com·
panies: Bill Vo 1 g a r i n o \~est min s ter, $100 bond~
Richard Craig, N e w port
Beach. $100 bond.
Chapman College W o r I d
Campus A ( I o a t : Stephanie
BrO\\'er, liuntingtor; Beach.
S800: Tom Carroll, Huntington
Beach. $200: Thomas Biddle
Huntingtor Beach. S 4 O O ;
Ernestin! Jones. Ga r d e n
Grove , $700; Susan Jordan
Huntington Beach. S 4 o o ;
Sharon D. Long, Huntington
Beach , $700; Diane Gaedig .
Hantlngton &ad\, $650.
I See by Today· s
Want Ads
• For Ladles \\'ho write, a
a-01'8\\1:'r F'1't'nrh Proviflc-
ia) Dt'sk and whltio, chair.
• F'm the: yearning, a 1um·
mer In t.1orocco on lhe
i\lcditeranian,
• F'or !he l"Y"lis!. a nearly
new IIJ..spttd bicycle:.
•
• ~N ~ l:VER.SARY SALE
'.LOWEST PRICES OF THE YEA.R IN· EVERY DEPARTMENT AT ALL 17 STORES
" . , ' "
'1
Da cron® and wool tropical
weight Maybrooke suits
l)acronl!D polrcstcr for lightweight, wool
for a luxurious f cc I and longcr v.•ear.
11and5o1ne one and two button models in
a large color choice of plaids and 50Jids.
regularly 7~.00 59.00
. .. . ' ' • m.iy co men's 1u1ts 21
Maybrookc li ghtweig ht
double -brea sted blazers
Cool Dacron~ polyester and v.•oo l with
tup·fJshinn Jnublc:-brc:a~tcd ~tyling. Single
brc:1s1c:d mode ls arc: at umc: big s.i.vinss.
18.00 MacPher,1.!u$ woo l sl.1cks 14.99
39.00 . -
..
... • • •• J!;'"f
''IJ '
..
T, ll
Maybrooke sport coats
in l)e\\' 2 -button models
The new sun\mcr silhouette, slimmer, uim·
mer, aCCC'ntcd by I and 2-buttan closures,
d«p side vents. Afany fr~h-spiritcd colors.
regularly 23.00 wool slacks 30-'40 16.99
rcgul,1,rly 60.00 49.00
' I
boys' permanently pressed
Ivy style walking shorts
\'7rinklc: shNdir)g polyc:stc:r and cool cot-
ton in hrighl solid colors and plaids. Trim
Ivy st}·li ng v.·ith bc:li loops. Sizc:s 8 to LS .
J.00·4.00 cotton l:n it·shirt~ 8·20 2.19
2.99
m~y co boys' (urnishings 2)
may co touth coHI plau, san diego fwy. at bristol. cost• mese ; 546-9321
thop monday through soturd•y I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.
•
.... •
. imported
made of
English shoes
supple calfskin
1-tade cxc lusivclr for~ of cxcclltnt ciuality
calfskin by fine craftsmen. Slip-on style
in black or brown le:ithcr. The moc-toc
uxford is avail1 ble in black lt':llher only.
rcguJarly 23.00 16.99
may co men's shoes 60
c
boy's double· knee jeans
that never need ironing
Famous make polyc:stc:r and cotton jc:ans,
c:xtra-hardy with atrl·"-etr double: kn~s.
In pc:v.•tc:r, loden or itttn cnlors.
R<"g. 7.00 prep !izes 26 through 32 j .99
1 rc:gul.1.rly 6.00 8· l 1 2.99
MAY CO
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ROUND-UP TIME -New officers have been corralled· for the
Santa Ana-Newport Harbor Alumnae Chapter of Delta Gamma
Sorority and the newly.formed Huntington Beach Association.
First Observance
Tiara --de Nino·s
Seat Off ice rs
For the first time, members of Tiara de Ninos Auxillary of the
Children's Home Society will celebrate the installation of new officers
during a noon luncheon Saturday, June 14, in the Fisherman rest:aur·
ant, Huntington Beach.
A spec ial ceremonv is being arranged by outgoing president
Mrs. Robert Vernon, who will install the new board.
Taking oflice will be the Mmes. Kenneth Brown, president;'
John Forte and Robert Knox , first vice presidents; Carlson Nippe!,
second vice president; Stewart Easterby, third vice president; Alger
Clarke, corresponding secrelaryi Joseph Blaik.ie, treasurer, and Paul
Lower, recording secretary.
The first activity to be coordinated by the new board will be a
summer social to honor husbands for their support during many . .
hours of auxiliary service volunteered by members. It will be a com·
bined effort of the new end retiring boards, and will take place in
July in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Knox.
l\.1rs. Brown and her new slate will continue to emphasize mem·
bership when the auxiliary's year opens in September with the an ..
nual coffee. She will ·encourage additional support from associate
memberships.
Other annual events whlch will be continued include a layette
shower in Decembe'r. the semilonnal Tiara Ball, a golf-a-thon and
interpretive luncheons for new members joining the active group.
Several other evepts will be calendared at a later date.
Mrs. Browri, who has served seyeral years as an auxiliary mem-
ber. commented on the oµtstanding dedication of Children's Home
Society volunteers and . the. wide range of services they offer during
the year. . ,
Jn addition to effecting the discliarge of babies from Hospitals,
they also transport Uiem to statewide locations for foster home place-
ment or adoption, and serve as photographers, stenographers, ·baby
sitters, nurse~· aides and social worker,s ..
The support of 15,248 auxiliary members contributed 21 percent
of the society's total operating expense last year. Children's Home
Society is the nation's largest privately supported adoption agency.
•
Roping .Mrs: j'lorman Canfield io fill her position is Mrs. Donald
M: Sutherland, outgoing president. The new leaders will be seated
during.a luncheon Tuesday, June 17.
. -'
'
;
JODEAN WTINGS, 642-4321
MOiidtro-.llf"I•'•' lNP I PM II
•
DGs Brand
•
New 'Foreman
Come for grub, the invitation reads.
Sending the bids to ranch hands of the Santa Ana-Newport Harbor
Alumnae. Chapter of Delta Gamma sorority was the newly.formed
Huntington Beach Association.
Tuesday, June 17, will be the date of the round-up, for whi~
members will gather at noon"in the Huntington Harbour home of·Mrs. ·
Harry Riegel Jr, . . . . . .
Greeting the guests as they anive, in add1t1on to Mrs. Riegel,
will be her co-hostesses, the Mme s. Victor Bullock Jr. of Huntingtoil_
Bt!ach and Mrs. Larry Hudack of We$tminster. .
On the chuck wagon '"menu" will be installation·of ne~ly-elected
officers of both groups. 1•
Presiding during the ceremonies will be Mrs. Donald M. S1.1ilher·
land of,. Costa Mesa, outgoing piesi dent of the Santa Ana·Newport
Harbor Chapter. .
Filling new roles in the Santa Ana-Newport Harbor group will"be
the Mmes. Norman Canfield of Tustin, presit!,ent; Stanley Hafer,
Santa Ana, vice president; L. Jean Gauthier, Corona de~ Mar, CQrTes ..
. ponding secretary; William Scholes, Costa Mesa, recording secretary.
~nd Steven Urry, Santa Ana, treasurer. · .
Also saddling up wl11 be the Mmes. John Coyne, Newport Beach,
public relations; Sutherland, parli8me~tarian: Richard. Jimenez:.
Costa Mesa, philanthropy; Robert ,Scholler, Corona del Mar .aD<l
George Johns, Santa Ana, city recommendation, and Lewis Mac-
Donald , Costa Mesa, Panhellenic representative. , . .
"Dessert" will be the announcement of the presentati9n made by
the Santa Ana-Newport Harbor Chapter of a check for .$2,150 to tho
Blind Children's Center in Los Angeles, the highlight of Mrs. Suther-
land's term of office. Funds were garnered during a Holiday BouUque
last November. ·
. . . MEMBERSHIP RISING -Just as the children they have aided
du'ring the past1 year continue to grow, so does membership in
Tiara de Ninos Auxiliary of th e Children's Home Society. New of-
ficers of the growing organization who will be installed on satur-
day, June 14, are (left to right) the Mmes. Joseph ·Blalkie, treas-ure~; John Forte, first vice presid,ent; Kenneth Brvwn, presideht,
and Carlson Nippel, second vice preSident.
. .
.,
Maternal
. I -
Instinct Magnified After Three-year Separation
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Who gave you
a license to play God? How can you be -
sure your advice always Is right? Well, it
Isn't and I know because I am one of
yoor victims.
Three years ago. whe1;1 l was JI, I
became pregnant. My boyfriend wu 18.
When I told Mickey. I was carryjng his
child, he left town. He didn't say where
he wu going -he jusl left. My ·mother
had died the year before and l hated my
stepfather. I was scared to death and felt
all alone when I \r.'t'ote lo you for advice.
You suggested the Florenee Crittenton
home and closed by saying'., "Give the
baby up for adoption, then gel back In
ANN LANDERS
l!Cbool and lf8dual<." I took your advice
and I'll never forgive myself.
Mickey showed up last wee.k aod
wanted to see his child. When I told him
what I had done he broke down and crted
like a baby. He said he had come back to
marry me but he hated the sight ol me
because I gave away his child. He said [
had oo rlghl to do that and he would
never forgive me. ·
You have ruined m1 life, Ann Landers.
On accow.rt of you I gave away my baby
and I Jost a chance to marry a wonderful
boy. -NELLIE
DEAR NEWE: The advtce I gave you
WU cood advice at &he time. I'd give It
a1ai1. 'J'tte besi soluUoa for a l~year .. Jd
pregnant 1lrl whole boyfriend lakes a
bike ii to gtve ap ber cbUd for edoptloa.
Tbe chucts of Ute boy retuning ud of·
!erhlg marriage are mlghly slim.
--------·--------'-------------•
As for your bavlng Jost a chao.ce lo
marry a •iwonderful boy" -I 1et nothing
wonderful about a heel wbo dJaappear1
and leaves bis pregnant. girl friend to
'face Ute filta~ alone.
DEAR G.: Say, "Ye1 He's a ct1111ln:••
Nobody will beJleve It.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am an 18·
year-old girl who.is ashamed to be asking
this question, but I do need an answer.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: J'm going to When a young man takes me to the
marry a wonderful man whose last name door to say good-night (a very special
Is the same u a notorious crook. Jt so young man. of course), would Jt be too
happens that the crook is a distant obvious if I removed my glasses ln 1an-
relatlve of my fiance's father _ like 8 ticl(>ltlon ot a good·nlght kin? 1~wou.1d die on the spot U 1 took off my glasses third cousin. The wedding Is In August and he didn't kiss me. Please answer in
and several of my out.of-town relatives the paper. My mother never lookl to see
are comiag in for the occasion. I am cer· tO whom a letter 11 addressed. She opens
lain lhey will ask me if mr husband is everythlrig. Thank you. -PANED . j
relaled to the hoodlum . Wha shall I say? DEAR PANED: I've checked with
-GEE GEE aeveral youn1 I.Utt wbo wear 1pec1 ,aod
l
tbey 11ay puses do not dl1coara1e
rOmance. In otber words, gents ofko
make puse~ at girls wbo wear gl1ue1.
CONFIDENTIAL TO B R 0 .K E N •
HEARTED LORRAINE: Chier up. Scars
can be more valuable' than medals. You
learn from them what-not to do•qain.
Alcobol tsao-t to IOdal -U you !Mak ,... .. ,. to drink to be ..,.
cepled by y..,. -· r.1 lbe f ... Read ''Boost and. YOI: -er ~
Only," by Au Landen. ~ SS eata t.
cola ud a loog, aeU-add ......... llalllpad
envelope wllh your request.
Ann Land"' will be Clad to llol1' )'00 wllb yoar pnlllemt. Sod lbem to lier la
care of .... DAIL y PILOT, .. cloala& •
ttomped, 1tU-addrtucd eavtlopo:
I
~
1
...
1
I
I
-· .... . _ ....
b.\ILY l'ILllT Mondi)', JIH• 9, l'l6Y
Fashions and Furbelows Reflected
Fasl1ions and an al fresco luncheon by the pool will be enjoyed by members
and .guest& of the Women's DJvision, Huntington Beach Chamber of Com·
merCe next Wednesday. Mrs. Alvin ToUel first will open her home to guests
for a social hour at 11 :30 a.m. Displaying some of the styles from Jeanine's
Boutique are (left to right) Mrs. Charles Buhrow and Calby Soulberland, a
princess. in the court of Miss Huntington Beach, Connie Pfister.
' 1/2 PRICE SALE!
Tradition Sterling Silver
PEMBROOKE STERLING
66 Piece Service for i._ ___ _
44 Piece Service for------22 Piece Service for..__ ____ _
TERAMO STERLING
66 Piece Service for 1,_ ____ _
44 Piece Service for~------
22 Piece Service for~------
Regular
'660
'440
1220
'660
'440
'220
Aak About Sean Convenient Credit Pl•n•
PEMBROOKE •••
An artfully curved design
with complete grace and
digni ty ... iu silhouette out·
lined tnd detailed with the
unicst ailver blossoms.
Sale
1330
1220
1110
'330
1220
1110
·-.. . . .. . -.
Proceeds Turned Ov~r
To Hospital Account
""'°'1tatlon of a check In
the IJllO\llll or f u , o o o
~ proceedl of the ~to st!r"1:0;:::
cl.a. admln1atr1tor ot SL Jude
lklipltal, u the htghllgbl of
the f~ luncheon meeU.,. of
thl :year for Damas de
~Coyola Country Club
WU the Mltlni fO< the lltheJ'.
lq, durloi which n e w
members were introduced and
olllcera lnltafled.
The funcil ..,...nted will be
used for the Damas de
~artdld pledle toward the
purchase price of a llDear ac~
celerator for the hospital In
Troth Told
By Parents
Fullerton.
Mn. Robert Raab o f
Newport Beach, ltlt Bal Mu-
que chairman, thanked the
membera for 1belr support of
the annual fund.ralllng event.
Installing officer, Mn. Fred
Kay Jr., past pN!1ldent, con·
ducted ceremonies for the ntW
officers, who are the Mmes. S.
D. Anderson, president ;
Wiiliam Ulrich and A. C.
Bona, vice presidenl!; Mel
Bu ll inger and Leslie
Ch rt 1 tensen, secretaries ;
Marlo Mercurio, treasurer;
Leonard Bouas, f I n a n c e
cbalrm111n; William R. Moore,
publldty chairman, and Calvin
Sclunldt, ball chairman.
·-
Sears
\ '
TERAMO •••
'fhe thoroughly modern
design with pure, con·
loured lines ... stuk,
smooth surfaces. Ultra·
new in iu ~citing thrt:e·
dimensional effect.
--
~---~---------------------------------------------, I .._..,,.. . UMOHTE lOHGIEA01 JKO.tlifllpew SANTAfESl'llNG$ YAU.fl I
QN00A PAM OlENDAlf OlY.wtC ' SOTO POMONA SANTA MONICA V!RMOHT llt lklUIOlll
I COQ#lClfl HOl.lYWOOO ORANGE SANTA ANA. SOUTH C0"5T nA%A I
aJWrri&A .. INOlfWOOO PAS.t.OfNA I s I TORRANCE
'-----------------------eam ---------------------' •Safldocaiea Guorontttd Of'YourMontyla'k.. ..-.~--. S!Mp 6 Niah11 MIMldoy thiov9h h111rclor fi~AM.tt t-.ao P.M.
-r •
. -
Horoscop•
•
..
Classtt
Open Nowt "" ......... --
JUNE 11111> TIUIU JUNE JOlh
.._ .. tlm., ....... -
BE FREE OF
FACIAi. HAIR
FOREVER.••
LET US SHOW-YOU HOW
EASY IT 15 TO REMOVE
EXCESS HAIR WITH
MODERN ELECTROLYSIS,
MEO I CALLY APPROVED•••
SAFE 0 FAST, GEtffLE.
CALL 644-2800 TO
CONSULT WITH OUR
LICO/SEO TECHNICIAN 1
IN OUR BEAUTY SAL.ON.
ROBINSON'S
CLAIROL'S9SHINY SUNLIGHT FROSTING
YOU CAN.1T ALWAYf RUST THE SUN TO PUT HIGHLIGHTS YMEftE
THEY BELONG. 50 LET OUR STYLI STS RIPPLE IT THROUGH YOUJt
HAIR! WITH l"'IHGEft TIP F'ft05TING OR STREAKS 01" LIGKT&HIHG,
OR lll.OHDI ON ILONDE, DO IT WHILE OUR l"'lltOSTINO l"'ICIAL JS
ONLY 20.00, INCl.UDING SMAM~OO AND srr. HAlft CVT t !5.00.
OJIT'OM COL.OftlNQ INDIVIDUALLY PftlCED, OUR BEMJTY SALONS ,
ROBINSONS NEWFORT ·FASHION ISLN\ID • 044-2800
DAILY Pll171' 'J 5
figure Flattering
Two Dates ·
Set Aside
At Champagne Party-
Betrothal News Told
Alpha Phis Installing ................ " ..............
Mrs. , !'lward Bowen of llces are 'the Mmea. Duane • •
1-Beach will tat• .... Zink o1 -Ana, a. It. p I t t U I e.
the ' lea<loi1hlp, of Aljllla Phi Bradlbaw· o1 H u ft Ii n I t o n \ •
..
~
j , , ;
i
• .
A noon luncheon ln Jus
Steak mtaurant, Tultln, will
be the occaaion when new of.
flcers of the S~terhood of
Temple Beth Sholom are tn-
&talled Wednesday, June 11.
Jnstalling oUJcer will be
Mil:· Melville Singer, pasl
presldent of the sisterhood and
current first vice president of
the NaUonal Federation of
Temple Sisterhoods, Di.!ltrict
21.
Assuming the presidency
will be Mrs. Norman Redlich
or Anaheim, and ltl'Ving on
her boa.rd from the Harbor
Area wUJ be Mrs. Robert Hof·
fman ot Costa Mesa.
The zisterhood will sponsor
its aMual Angel Ball dinner
honoring donors In the Villa
Marina restaurant, Newport
Beach, Saturday. June 14.
• A cblmpqne porl)' WU lhe
occ•aloa cbolen by Mn. Jane
Rober1a of .Newport Beacb to
IDDOODCO Jhe eocqenieol<JI
her dtqhter, Valerlt J-
Roberla lo V, A. Galley Jr. <ii
COiia Meu.
Ralnl>ow colors clecoralod
Mrs. Roberti' home -the couple were smted by lrlenda
from Suntand, San Joae and
SanFrancltoo.
Miss Roberti, 11to the
d•uahter ol Walter lloberb ol
VtnNuya,atleoded.Etttncia lllP School u did her !lance.
Galley Ia ....... b1 the U.S.
Navy and ncenU1 .,..iuated
from boot camp In San Diet•
u a hospital 1pprentict. He
will continue bia ll'llnllll In
Balboa Hospital. San Diet•·
Al EHS tbe futuh llrlde was
a member of the German
Club, drill team, Al"S and
GM. Sbe toured Europe wtlh
the ForelJn Lanplp Lel&U•
Gzoupe.
Her !Wice wu a member of
tbe Medlanlcs CIUll a ft d
VALERIE ROBERTS
Stplember Bride
Alumnae ol Orance COunty Be1ch, H. u llenlbaw ol Udo k • , followtoc a I~ and In-••
1t111a11oo In tbe Udo Ille Isle, llollerl Haeckel of TusUn, p e e s •
1-e ol Mn. Bicbard Don P~ of Lido lale,' • IAraeim Wedneodty; Jone 11. Ken Walker of Soulh Lquna •
Other 0111cen to be 1mta11ec1 Ind 11; s. TGmnce u<1 ArUwr ~ M.wp• • • • • ••
will lnclude~ 111e Mme 1 ·;i.;A:;::Wle:=ol:'=N:;::en,;P"'=rt==-==· ==I ,
Dooclu l)orrle ot Santa Ao• DO SINa' • ti"'• Twem'y five y..,. 1' a quar· l!1d EdwlzJ Role Ol Tultln, -,... ter-ctntury, ample tillle ror
-.Jl".:ldenta; ,P. G. HAVI MOU fUN? many men lo become gray
.Barkd of Newpcirt Beach, ..... 1y K.....,... -halred_ or a bit balder, tnd per-tr ea a a r e r , ·and James the llOHT MANI haps a blt1 more paunchy
Flor_ of Oranie, aecretary. CALL M7 .... 7 around tbe mid-ril. Bu4 not Add1tloria1 leaden tatinJI _ :M-Heur lee.,...__ enough time to-erase the men1-chalrmanahJps and other of. "'W ortes of "O.Day,"' 1M4!
IT'S A FACT!
If you spent 30 seconds looking at
each of our s~ag samples, it would
take you over 9 hours to see them all-
so come early end bring your lunch.
Plenty ol guys and gals can
tell tales of that memorable moment in history. and, they
most certainly do. The Mesa
remembers that event with a
terrific mollon picture bated on
the aetlonl of that day, 25 years
ago Ulla pest week-end.
Tbe Lonaest Day is a tnovie never to be forgorten. 'Those
who lived it, at home or serv·
DON 'S CARPET SHOP ing in U.S. anned services, will partlclptlod In track, cro.. lhrill to tbe screen revision of
country ·and wrestling. this page in history. The cast
The couple will eicbange 426 SO. MAIN (2 Blks. No. of Bullock's) ORANGE is one ol tbe Joog..i names of
\'OWi Sept. 13 In Chri.t stars in 'ftlm h~lory, Newporl .·
Projects undertaken by the
sisterhood during the pa1t
year Included lumishing the
temple's board room, and
donations were made to the
UC! Interfallh Fund, Temple
Youth Lounge, Hebrtw Union
Co~lege, Camp Swig, Temple
Rellgious School and Susan
Mazze Fund.
Diamond Is
Bride's Jewel
, ... --~-• ~~-Meaa HOU1$1 94:11 DAILY CLOllD SUNDAY Beach's John Wayne and Rob-1_!~~-~u~·~~~·,!~~!.!~~·h ......................... !!!!!!!!!!!;;;;'""'""';;;,;;,;;,!!!!!!!!!!~jert Mitchum art! but a pair of
In d • 'op names In ne Lon~est Day. tro uc1ng
0 0 0
Try not to miss it at the Mesa.
) I .
60&59
I
Shannan
Rod11ers
for } ! JorySv··
No matter \vhat shape your, figure is in -you'll
find this a most slenderizing design.
· Shannon Rodgers created this for Jerry Silver-
.man in a silk plaid. The collar is set off with a gros.
:grain bow ; the inset belt is cut on the bias, and the
:flared skirt is shirred in at the waist, sporting a
deep center front pleat and pockets. It is zipped up
:the back.
, Make it in medium.weight cotton, silk linen, shan-
:tung, checks and plaids, surab. 60659 is cut in Miss-
es sizes S-16.
Overeaters
Every ·Monday at 8 p.m.
)nembers gather in Anderson
J;chool au ditorium .
;westminster, for .meetlugs of
JJvereaters Anon y rn o u 1.
!Guests are welcome to attend.
• ! ADVllltTISIMINT
lose 10 lbs. In
; 10 days on
• ; Grapefruit
!
Teen Weddings
Go On and On
The teenage marriqes ao
on and on.
Modem Bride ,....,..,,.,
Which IJ>OlllOied I n ~
depeodent sampling of the
bridal market, found that n ..
percent of women married far
the IInl time ID the IUf yur
"-15 ,...,. old "' tbOlt wec141nf day.
Fow-percent at the men
wod f" th• llnt llmt were 17
yem old.
'l11e evening will begin with
a 7 p.m. cocktail hour, follow·
ed by dinner at a. Jim
Howorth's orchestra will pro-
vide music for dancing.
Ship's Sails Set
The diamond Is menlloned
u tbe jewel ol brldff lnlm the
lllh Cenlury Oil.
The -called the dla·
mond lhe -tieoaute of
ill brillianl -ol life.
Boarding Ille SS Lurline for Honolulu are Mr. and.
Mrs. Fergus c. McKay of Corolla dol Mar. Diet Cosf1 Mesi Only TUES., JUNE 10th Tllnl
SAT., JUNE 14111
.--FOR MOTHER'S DAYl
, HOLLYWOOD, CALIF.
JSpecial), -This is tha
;evolutionary gt•pefr1.1it
Miet that everyone is 11.1d·
~enly talking •bout, Liter-
)lly thousi1nds upon thou•
iands of copies hi1ve been
.. ssed from hend to hand
In factories, plants and of.
fices throughout ihe U.S.
tnd Canada.
' • j: Word o. 111 iliccm 1111 1Pf'Mlf
Ill:• wUdllrt. 8Kall$f ttllll .. flle•
•111 th11 ,,_.llY wtt'ks. WI ,..,,.
fl-tlmonl1b 111 otW fllet r..,.ntnf
... tti.-IWtftl of "'" dllt, If )'Oii .,low II •n~tly, yov lhould Ml
" pounc11 1n 10 divs. '"""-wm " i!> wcilOhl lo11 111 1111 flf'111 foW fltYI.
flll YfU Wiii Wddtnly drop • "'1!llll
~ ,,.. 511! dl'f', Tlltr•llt~ "" WUI
Ike -POUnd • dtr un11t tt.e lll!ll
hr. T...., YOI/ Will iosl Jl\i llO\llldl
Mr'/' '"' din 11ntu YOlll oet *"""" tg your "°"" welgllt. Int of 111.
lhtr• •Ill -,. """"" PlftOt. ...... \)w'*I .,. lllll'llld. .. ,. -ditt
•11 1*11 W11 1Mf yO\lf'Mlf wttll
..,. "'" """ ..,.,......,. "fortlld0.11,"
-II bll ti.Ill trllnll'ltlll Wtfll
fit, rt11t w tried dlkfl"'-rid!
....... llll'f'Olllllllf, lobtttt ••lln-
11111 In b\tltW, bKOl'I fltt, M\lllOft
4f'lf 1cr1mbled •'· You C111 •I
(iitll YOll ,,, f\111, 1111111 vov ur-t
,..lbly HI 1ny ll'IOl't. Md t llll
-10 POlll'ld• 111 "" ""'' 1111 ,...,. ~ 1 \.\ POUndJ f¥11Y ,_ d1n
... ltl!W unlfl your weiSlllt ft dDWll
4 -mel. Tiie flt,., INllllld •111
,.. "quid!: wtltM lou" dllt la
,,,,. ...... , don llOt '°"" "'· """"
tk 1r1ptfnilt 1111c:1 Ill """ MW dllt
IC"" 11 I Cllll'f$t (IM "lflfllt"),
ft '"" "" fit °""'"" illf'O(Mt, v .. 1Mf 'l"Uf'ltlf on ,.,. "'""'tftld fleC
lllltod In 1111 dltt 1>1111, Ind 11111 ....
llMIOhHV !~I Ind IXCHt bod°'f
lluld1. Wl'leil !hi !It Ind blOll art
llOM you wm '"'' lo IOSI 'llltiOfll
•nd \'Oltf welfhl will remel11 tOfl.
1141111. A COPV ol 11111 ,,., .. tnd t llrl·
llflOly l llCCl'»lul 0111 plln c•n bl
OMll~td ey tllllllflg U to GJlAPE·
,JlUIT OIET PUILISHEJlS, hltt
lk. 0.,1. V ·t, Ult No. HIOlr'-1111
A~ •• HOll\"lf'Md, C1!1t, tcllm. MOl'llly-
bldt !llll•lfltff. " .,,., trying tllt
dlti p1111 yov IM1t1 llOt lmt 7 ""'"°'
Ill 1111 11ra1 """' din . '"°""" '
Pll•Jn•h In f"9 nerl 1 din. Ind IV.
CIOurd1 ..,.rv ,_ din "'-"'""
11"1111'1' '''""" flll diet plan 11\d )IOVI"
S1 wlll bl rtl\11\dfd ~ly 11111
W!lllDIJI 1r;~menl, Tf1r Ollf ~It
rMS1101 11 1 reml...Oer. D«ldt -
to r9111ln 1111 "'""· 1tlf1C:lh'* tllure
of ,,_ 'fOlllll, whll1 t11IOY"'9 hHr·
fJ ll'Mltl11tt. kMctllt lrw:I 111_,..
tcue-to-life portraits
IN COLOR
5x7 POITIAIT, 0< a Mt 1 49
Of 4 WAUlf SIZE PHOTOS ,. ..... , • ._. t
2 CHllDIEN PHOTOGRAPHED TOOmfER •. ,:, .2.9'
Great colot portraitt, tt only tile "Plxy" photocnplioti cep.
tura tfltm. All portraitsaradtliverad to"'°' at our..,.; You
h1VO )'l)Ur choice of s1VOral poses. No malllnc, lltndllnc,
orothtrehl'lt$.A10llmlt,12y1us.
2300 HARIOR ILYD., COSTA MESA ..
HOURS: 9:30 A.M. To 5:00 P.M.
NEW Qne Size Stretch
·----~
Sears
Cbooee from
Two Stylee Now in
ONE SIZE
STRETCH NYLONS
For Gre11t Fit,_ Better Wear
Your Ch!>ia: 5 9~
"little Friend" Stretch N7lon1
. ...
Price
Effective
Through
June 14th
Wrinkly looks turn into smooth sheer glamoar on
your leas •.• shopeleu until roa put them on,
theft cbey ouetch to conform to rour lep. Aftilable in
· SUlllCt, i..te bei&c. mocha, pu1els aftd deep tones.
One Size Stntoh Nrlona
Sheer llNlCb mesh kn tr with llOde, one liJe fill all Aftil·
able la IUnteC, bire beise, mocha puceb and cleeP tones .
Ute Sean Revolting Charge
George Peppard, James Ma·
son and Ursula Andress share
top billing in the companion
film at the Mesa, along with
The Lona:e1t Day. Here is Blue
Max. still another action fil m
about a world war, this one
being WW I. The St'ory deals
with now-famous aerial battles
between allied and German
pilots.
Down Lido-way lhe !ftl:rving
still is B&B. B for 81illltt and
another second letter for Ban.
dolero! The later is a good
western with James Stewart
and Dean Martin portraying
two brothers who have just fin-
ished the Civil War on opposing
sides of the lines. Raquel Welch
pitches in for the femme bit.
Bullitt ls a movie about a guy
wtt'h that name. He is a detec-
tive In the S&n Francisco police
department. His job is to pro-
tect a hood until he testifies in
a senate investigation. Steve
McQueen Is that cop, and does he ever ge( involved. Set it on
the big, wide Lido screen.
C 0 M I N G: The Ola1trated
Man, co-starring Rod Steiger
and Claire Bloom, hubby-and~
wife in real life. It 's all about a
guy who Is 'covered with tattoo
designs that forecast future
events for others! Pendulum
stars George Peppard as a
Washington, D.C. police officer
who is framed for a murder of
his own wile and her lover.
Also headed !or local screen·
ing are My Side Of The Moun-
iain and Hello Down There.
The latter stars Tony Randall •
Janet eLigh, Jim Backus and
Roddy McDowell Jn a happy
story about . a guy who has to
live in an undersea house .
MESA MATINEES star! eac~
new movie week with a first
showing of the cwn:n~ rtleases. lt'a a "fint nighter" in the
middle of Wedne9day afternoon.
Try one for size some day soon.
The programs start promptly at
l o'clock, opening ,.,,j,t free re·
freshments.
FREE PASSES to the Mesa
, or tbe Lido will be mailed to-
day i·o .JI. G. Dear, 119 Di.a·
mon~, Btl Isle, Gilbert Benson, 2M MaYllower, Newport .Beach,
D. W. filxon, 601 Narcissus, Co-
rona del Mar and V. D. Cooper,
117 E. 19th, Costa M•.
Sam/action GuaTD11teed ~
or Yow Money Back ~
Thm are lhe lalesi guest. ol
"Picture Peeks" lnvlted to en-
joy a fine fllm at the Mesa or
Shep M11i111~ro S11 .. t111 lhe Lido. We sincerely hope to see your name In print one
':30 A.I. I• 9:30 P.M.
"""' MlllKI ,. ~
week rtal quick. 1ben you, too,
may enjoy a Udo or Mesa movie program.
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JI DAILY' l!llDT ' .....
Mi>ftd11, .time'· l96t
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-
BARBARA SIMPSON
Engas1m1nt Revealed
r January Nuptials
:<· -.T.roth · Told ..
,~, Mr. and Mn;. J. H~wes Crispin of ·San
· ~.anclsco .. announped the betrothal o( her
,4'!ugliter, • Bljrbai'a Simpson to Edwin.A.
~Meserve, spn, of Mr. and Mrs. Robe}:t
Bo:rhetli~·
'
CoalsH~at
' ' .
1 Bac~yard• picnic ·ideas IOI'
California , livl!ll will b e
prestnled by_ home· ecoaomist
Mrs. , Clrol Hein~ in the
Southern Calif,omia , Edjson
Co's. Elec/J!C Living Center,
Hun.,tlngton ~ach. ·
A d,epi..onat,ration of
barbecue ideas wiU be 'of.feffij
at 10 ·a.m. Wednes4ay, Friday,
Tuesday and Thursday, June
II, 13, ll and 19. · Eventrig 'programs win be
'presenled at 7 p.m. tomorrow. d Thursday, Monday and
~' Wednesday June 10. 12, 16, 18.
'There is 'no charge for the·
demonstrations, and e a ch
guest· receives' a free recipe
book. Additional infonnatiorf
may· be obtained b}' calling-
Mrs. Heinz at 547·7581, ext.
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278. . j
Members
Quizzed
' SUSAN THOMAS
'Troth T~ld
' . September
' Selected
For Rites
~ A quiz ori the CiVil Defense Mr. and :Mis, W.i 11 i am
Program Studied ·during the Thomas III of South Laguna . r~ past year recenUy was on the . agenda for Mu u p 11 i I 0 n .have announced the engage-
• Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. ment of their daughter, Susan
Mrs. John Gillan,. Fountain Thomas, to Stan M. Gordon of t. Valley, opened her home for Los Angeles. ~ the meetirig. Mrs. Don Parker Miss Thomas will marry the
presented 'a cultural program son of Si<iney Gordon of Los from tbe·book of Happiness.
Mrs , Ben Mellinger of Angeles and Mrs. Harry Press
WestminSter was installed as of Oakland in Laguna Beach
president of the group, and Congregational Church Sept. 6.
, , assistin.g during the comi~g A graduate of Laguna Beach
"' year will be the Mmes. Denis . ~ . Ci Fine, vice president; 9.tllan, High SCbool, t~ br1d~lect at· \l. treasurer· Mike Parrish·,. leqded Untvers1ty of
l recording' s~rY; Terry Calif.ornla, Santa Barbara and ~!. Faff, corresponding secretary recei ved her bachelors degree
. .. and Ken . ~thardt c i v i I from UCLA where she cur·
-· .. -.... ' .
3
-..t.~_·n_"d~ti i _: N. up~lals . Link Sweet Adelines Medit~l .. G~"f '
--Harborlltes Chapter, Sweet , . Every ,~;~~.cf·
P. . d 11 . · · · , Adeilnes coa epe eyirY Mon-thel!JOblb ~rs of,IOrinse;
' .;,Ii • gQ Ke ' "'''am·' 'es day at l 'p.m .. lor.1Metiags.1n Shore•~~.~ ,Qr t!f'I > • t:· . I 'I · College Park School, Costa Assoc~n . ..-hleaU.p-.m.
· · · · Mesa. Mrs. William Gartner, ·Loc;ition may'be ·~·bY:. :nie Christ Church ,In . Lon-; newiyw0¢.t .will iliiike . their ~11 will ansWer questions qllln Mrs. M'!(jorre'flumboo.
don, Eng~, was the setting bOrne 'ln· Londol).' · · regarding the chOral givup: . 644"~· ' 1 • ,. ,
fo[' the double rhli 'cerelllOOy 11,;;;;·,_,;;;;,;· ~-;;;;;;,.:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~~iii;i;~ii;;i~i';;;;;;i;;;;o;;~;;;;;;;;;;;i;ii;;;;;J~;-,
·Uftking· in marria,s.e Karen ' , , · • "
' Eiieen Kell• 'aOO Jobn ~· 1 , 1 ... • ¥
""Partfldge, bo~li ~ Londori.
·parents 1of 'the' CouPte are
1 Mr.. anst Mrs: ~erJck M.
Keil , <if )leWi>o\1 Beach 'apd
Si~ney J. Pal'Q'jdge of London
and, the 111te Mrs:, Partridge,
·The bride Was gi~en,Jn mar·
riage by her father during the
noon nµptials. She selected .an
empir.e style satin gown l
trimmetf with tact, and pearls
lined her headpiece ~ n d
caugl:]t a· fuII v¢U. of tulle . The
new Mrs. Parti:idg'e carriet;I a
prayer bOok and 'a· cascade of
cainellias . and or a·.n g e
blossoms. ·
·Junior btide'smaids were
~bor.ah Kirby' and Deborah
Bobertson. · They donned1 long
aqua goWns and held rose
buds. Edward Partridge, the l
bridegroom's brother was best
man, and William Potts seated
guests. .
The '.Crescent Lodge Hotel In
London was the setting for the
reception. . .
The former Miss Kell iS; an I
alumna of Newport llarbor l
High School and ·auended the •
University of · S o u·t h er n I
California where she affiliated
with Gamma Phi Beta sorori·
ty arld Spur~.' She was a
Children's Home . Soc I et y
debutante in' 1962. ·
Her husband graduated with
an honors degree in hiStory
from Cambridge University. I
Following a honeymoon, the1
Family Weekly
Now in Our family: '
Date Nut· Dessert ·Loaf
A moist, chewY loaf, rich with dates and
chopped nuts. A perfec't not~too-sweet des·
sirt. ttc
Fruit Pan Dowdy
Richard's own buttery pound cake, 'topped
with luscious fruits, like pineapple, cherry,
apple or boysenberry. 79c
Peasant Bread
A hearty, healthful bread, made .from whole
9r,ain flours .. A. 9reat bre,ad for toe st oi send-
"'!'iches.
WIN A llRTHDAY CAKE, FREE!
?rleserve•ofiNewport Beach.
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1
, Miss "SiJ?ipsQn, a Las Madrinas debutanie
fll . .1966,_ is a graduate of MariboroQih School
and.L,.is:'atteDding the University of. Southern
Californja where she affiliated with Delta
~ defense. ' rently is a graduate student.
Her fian~. an alumnU:S ofjiiiiii!iiiiiiiii!iiiii~
HB Tops Club Beverly Hills High School and MARITAL PRO~EM.S!
If your birthday is in July, August or Sepfem•
ber, stop in and fill out an entry ... a de-
corated 2.layer cake to 5 lucky people each
month! :; UCLA, ls attending law school c.H·, ,
~ Allen School Is the meetjng at the same university. He DIYenlfled Cou111elon '.£_~LIDO CENTER place for members of Hun-was a member of Blue Key, 6 7 0
tjngton Beach TOPS Pound national honorary fraternit 5 • 2 3 0
673-6360
· ·Ganinia 110rotjty. The daughter of Richard .c.
~_pion.lof,l\i>< ·Angeles is majoring in edu-
:catKm:. 1 ' • ,
. ·: , Th\~ C:Qu2I~. plan to be married in Janu· ary. followinJ\her ·~raduatioo.
Plnch.ei:s~at 7 p.m. every Mon-and the 1967 National Volley· •=."~1~::0:..::!t ti day, · ball Championship Team. 3433 VIA LIDO !NEWPORT BEACH
·. ~ Tlie 'f~e .. brldegroom, an alumnus ol JieWpo'rt ·HarbPr High · School, received his
·deg't'ee in business .from use and was active
ill ·the·J>hi Kappa Psi fraternity.
~ t r He·js'tbe grandson ·o~ Mrs. Frederick
Webster of Newport Beach, and the late Dr.
WebSter· and · Mrs. Shirley Meserve of New-··P<irt• Beach .im<f. the. late Mr. Meserve.
Summer Employment
"
Jobs ·for , Yo·uth
Opel!iog today · in Fountain
V.U.y is the Youtb Employ·
ment ·Service .(YES),
spo1;15ored again this :year by .
the South Coast J u n i o r
·Woman's Club.. 1 ;
Area youlh seeld,ng summer f
employment will be;invited to1
come into the 'Off.ice.' .for
registration each wee k,Pa-~:
between 10 a.m. and ·2 p,.rb. for
the next eight weeks, Cf'' call
the office, 962·2449 •. fOr ad-'
ditional information. .
Businesses and indivil:luals t
Interested in hiring. swDmer
help also are invited to cOntact
the YES office. ·
' .
Occupations needed by boys
include contract filing, flying,
music, box, stock and bus
boys, dish and window
washers, TV repair, theater
usher, mechanical, lawn work,
construction clean-up a n d
radio repair.
Of· interest to .:lrls are iron·
ing, commercial art, post of·
!ice , work, modeling, clothes
design, motel maid, animal
hoSpltal help, dog walking.
mu~lc,J e·s eons ,.1¥eguards,
J.f.it\t'ary work, camp
cdUnseldrs, nursery s c ho o I
aides;, nsearch laboratories,
CQnvalescent home aide and
secretarial duties ..
Mrs. R. Bond Thompson is
YES chairman. · ·
;Mts, RObert Marten, first !
'vt~, pi'esident of the group,
was presented with a silver
three-tier dlih as the outstan-'
ding distrie! solely chairman. /
The award, presenied during
a three-day conferenc;e in
Sacrame'nto f o r catifornia
Conference of · W o m e n
Highway Safety Leaders, is
sponsored by Farmer's
Insurance Group.
FIND OF THE WEEK
A 1rUlyfine example of English pewter.
Mug has glass bottom. $8.95. ., .
. SL~CK'S
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l ' 1 18 Feshion l1l•nd
; •' I 'New'port 1Hch-M4-llt0 . .
V• ~N '~ -.8•rMmerlcAnl. M•lltt CMrt1, tot r r ..... 11¥" '• '
\. ...... ....,, MWr •lltfl t:JI ''"'° •
FIGpRE CONTROL SALONS
DlllJM, Sit. N • 1 m._loar_ 1111 -Cllorp Wtlw
Thi W07Lr1 leading figure control '1tlem
NEWPORT BEACH-430 Pacific Coast Hiqhway ( !..:'~,!,~ J 642-3639
SANTA ANA-1840 West 17th Street-543-9457
S•lons Also Int An•htlm, Btvtrly Hills, Covina , Crenshaw, Downey, Glendale, 1.u::ewo:od, long 9tlech, Newport Beach, No rth Hollywood,
. Ontario, Pasadena, San Diego, S.-nt"' An ... Sa,,ta Barbara, Sunland, T•rzana, Torrance, Westchester, Whittler .• , Alto Fresno, San JOH,
Sacramento, Sunnyvale •nd Walnut Creek, C11iforniL (c) COP1JriQht 1969 Gloria ~farsl1alt Mgt. Co., lnc:
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For The
Record
, ~·
MOHOAY
Senior ClllH•'ll ~CluD of H11ntlneton
IMdl, P1rk •nd ltec'r••lloll 1!111llCll119,
11th 11'111 Or111tt Stroeti. Hunnnvt""
81Kll, l~ 1.m. .
H1rbor knlar ClllltM C\ub, 5'nl0t'
ClllZttnt Clubh_, Ulfl Slteel 1nd
lrVIM Aveni.., N•W'PO•I lle1ch, 10
'·"'· NewPMt (91111'r Klw1nl1 Club, J011/•1
Rtilturtnl, 2171 E. Co.ti Hlt hWl'f,
Co•-del Mllr, lt -·
Cost1m1111rs T .. 11m1111rs. Cott i Reff
AQ!iuru•I, 16.lJ H1rtiar Blvd., (D$ll
Meu, 1 p.m. E~Plortr $<DUIS, ltDCodl Eltctraflla,
EKfOlottr Post Na. 1ff. 81bc«k f:IK· tronlu. 3.$01 Htr1XI• Blvd., Cost•
Meu. J:U 11.m. . O.MOlaY. Huntlnvl'on hKh CNPltt, ~sonic ,,,..1e, 1IM l•kt Aw .. Huri-
flrltlCll't BtKll. 1;XI 11.m. Founl1ln v111e, Junior C1>1.nber of (-rm'•Ct. ,_ner1I ......,Nftfllp, (11'>'
H111, lll200 Slaltr Aw.. FOUt1lllt1
V1lle'f, 7::10 P.m. Orintt CN!il Coln (klb, Ml<IMrl
Library, 7005 Dover Orlv1, NtWloOrl
BtKll, 7:l0 P.m. (Olli Mesa H1rmot1'f LoOte Na. 7', Odd Fellow$ H1ll. 2~11 Ntwi>OrT
Blvd .• Costt Mt'H• I p.m.
FVW No. 7361. VFW Hiii, Yonnown
..,.,..,...,, Hu11111'191i>ft Be.ctl, I 1.m.
Amrrlc1n Sct11raohrenl1 Founclltlon, Or1nv1 Countv Ch1pf9r. Unlll(I Fund
B1111dlnt, \Ull Sl1nlord Ave .• G1rclen
Grove.
TUESDAY
'"''' Meu City Emolovea. CoW!nl&1 l(,!tcllrn, 512 w. 19!h $1 .• Cost• Mn1,
7 ...... • (Ol'Ol'll dtl Mir Eic1111111e Club. J"'' •1
Rest1ur1nl, 1111 E, Colt! H1ghw1v,
Coron• cle1 Mer, U noon.
Coste Mes• E~ch1ngf Club, C<1r11 R""'·
M.l5 Htrbor Blvd., COl11 MIMI, 11
H;,:':l",,91i>ft Br•cll Norlll Lions Cluh.
MeldOWl1r\: Cwntry Club, 16117
Gr1h1m. Hunllnt!on Brech, 1? noon.
Co1!1 Mts1 Rol1rv CIYl>-Norltl. Cr••~ Mn1 Golf 1nd Count,.. Clut>, 1701
C".lilt Count Drl\lf, CO.II /'MY. 1?:10
,. c!"e~i !!el Mar Klwtnlt Club, VIII~
sw.oen, ll3ol E. Co11t Hlllllway.
Coron• del Mir. 12 :10 o.m. Munllll!llDl'I fttllCll Roll<Y Clut> -~ No~ll Fovr Winds Rr111ur111I, 1._.?1 Boh1' Clllcl, H11ntl11,ton 8t1<ll, 1:U
~ Mi;n';;;,gton 8Nch Klw1nl• Club, Hun·
llntlon Sf1dltt Counlrv Clvb. lOOO
1! P1lm A~., Huntllltlton Bl&d'I. 11:15
•~ N~I M1rbor OJitlmllt Club. VIiii
Mirlfll, 1Gol5 BIYildt tlrlrt, N1woort ·~ Bold>. 2:U o.m. t ~ Cotl1 Mn1 Klw1nll; Club, Cotl1 M•~-~~ Golf 11\d Coun!ry C!ut>, C01t1 Mei•·
~ ~n"-''f;~''..t~·c:::;.~H~T'li=OT=r"-c"'E",s"'
~ • BRENNAN
~~ AN'lll B. Bren111n. Att 511, of 51' Sf~·
.. • wird 110M1. cor-11e1 /'Mr, D1!r of
;.• dfflfl, JU'le $. $11rvlwcl bY iOI\, Wll· :i !lim B....,.,111, B1ltio.; two 1111.rghttrs, ~· Dr. SlllY Frtd. Ro<kYl!lt. M1rvl111d,
i.-11111 Mtrar 8~n111n, 81ltio.. serv·
!ces. !odlY, MOnd•v. 1 PM;• Biltz
"· C,hi'Pt!I, l,Sl<I E. Coiisl Hl•hwlY, Cc-
,:: ton1 del M•r, jnttrm!nl ln 111ck~
bunt, Vlrvlnlf. 81ttz Mo~yffY, D•·
~"°"·
FRANK
ARBUCKLE & WEUiB
Wntcllft Mertllary m E. 17th St., Costa Mesa -BALTZ MORTUARIES ~ Coro11 del Mar OR S.MSt
~ MeP Mii-mt
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Co•\J Meq
LI l-3433
DILDAY BR0111ERS
Ba1ttlnctn VaDe1
MortUrJ
lllll Beadl Bmt.
Haatln~ B<ac•
14%-'l'Tll
PACIFIC VIEW
•IEMORIAL PARK
r .f!metery • l\11rtDary
Chapel
J50I Paclflc View Drive
Newport Be1cb. CaUfomia
14 ... !7 ..
PEElt FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
'1111 a.Ila ATe.
We1tmbl1ter nJ.SS2I
S~UTll'li MORTUARY
_ m l\tat1 St.
Hunttngtoa Beac'
LE~
DAJ~Y rn.QT
Sqpervisors Get County Salar-y Pact
C.st-Allr•I A-.i.,llAUt1-"° M.LDM•lf <
By JACK BROBACK
0t llM Oe!W l'lllt ltlft
Orange County Super\lisors
Tuesday will consider a 7 .l
percent employe salary and
frin11;e benefit increase and ~ which could add $4.3
million to the ~ty poyroll.
The agreement, to b e
presented· bf William ·Hart,
county personnel director, was
reached after about 2 S
meetings over the past two
months with John H. Sawyer,
general manager of t h e
Orlinge County E n. " I o y e s
Association, and his aides .
The $4,S addition would be to
a current county payroll of $61
million a year. Salary in·
creases alone amount to 6.8
percent of the proposed in·
crease and non-salary items.
.4 percent, Hart said.
The 7 .2 percent figure com·
pares with a total 6.7 percent
increase last year in salaries
and non·salary items. Hart
pointed out that the county has
about 620 more employes hr
day than a year ago, for a
total of more than 7 ,000.
In cash breakdowns, con1-
paring 1968-69 and 196g...70, the
proposals show $3.7 million jn
general fund salary increases
and $438,452 in salaries in
special districts governed by
the Board of Supervisors. This
compares with a $3.3 million
general fund and spteia\
districts total last year, Hart
said.
A breakdown or overall
salary increases shows that
498 job classifications af.
feeling 4,543 positions _ were
given two-step salary in·
creases of 5.5 percent. This
covers 63.6 percent of all coun-
ty jobs.
Some 223 classifications af·
feeling 2,407 positions \\·ere
given three-step raises of 8.Z5
perce nt. Cove red are 33.7 per-
cent of all jobs.
Twenty-two classirications
arfecting 94 jobs got four-step
increases or more upping their
pay I I percent or more. Hart
said most of this 1.3 percent
section of county job holders
v.-i.11 get a straight four-ste11
raise.
In 16 elassification.s at-
fecting 87 jobs no increases
.. • M" I. CO-'ST HWY l
were recommended. These are when Christmas or New wllh 25 percent of tbe-unu.sed t$etween the county employ• c I a 11..I f I c 1 t Ion and payl!~~,..~~-~~-~T'~,..~~11~2~2~ largely J>OSIUons in which the Year's Day fall on Saturday, s!tk: ltave; 1WO yun:,. 17~ woclatlon and the penonntf {Si~; Divid J:fi1chcock,
salaries are set by the slate time off is granted on the pe~nt, and 20 or more years, department arc the belt ln the , ft~, ~ county ad-
legblature or for persom who preceding Friday. 5D 'percent. state." • ' m~ 1 olOce. a n d
are elected to office. Such -Upon paid relimnent or W>i!tf' µld the ts$0claUon Hart and Sawyer ~1ded the Rayner ~. deputy
wages are not negotiable, Hart death, an employe or hlis +aa '"hapPy'". wltl\. t.h e ~wo negotlallng teams. Bick-,coUn4J~. •
e1p!ained. estate will be paid for ,a por-a~merils· "We. eliminated a ing up Hart were J&IJlW Wor~-"b Sawryer wert
Fringe benefit c h an g es lion of the em ploye's unused Jarge~ Damber 1 'ol' incOulUes Shelton, chief of the employe Johft r · and Vfl.m.am
which County Em p Io yes sick leave. Tho~ with to!ts wl}ic~ had exlsteit:1•·ht ~a'itded. relations division of personnel ; Nie~ OI. ·,the lllOCi.IUoil
Association General Manager yea rs service will be credited "I beliive the re 1 a 't Io n s Richard Jambop, chief ot· the stltL:-' ... -. • ~ '
SaWyer called "major" in.1------------------------
cluded;
-An Increase in mileage
rates paid those cmployes re-
quited to furnish an
automobile lrom 13 cents to 15
for the fi rst 150 miles, nine
cents to 12 !or the next 450
miles and t he current six
cents: for over 600 miles.
Starting Oct. I, 1969, a $10 11
month minimum m 11 e a g e
allowance is established for
employes using their own
cars.
-Tim e and a half for
overtime In excess of 40 hours
of paid time i,1 a "'Drk week.
rather than hour.s of actual
work. This eliminates deduc·
lion of hours per week for
those employes who happened
to have sick leave time or a
paid holiday on a given week
in which they worked
overtime.
Not included in the overtime
provision are employes in the
nursing division of the County
Medical Center. They will be
paid time and a hall for woo:k
in excess of 80 hours of paid
time in a pay period, or in ex·
cess of eight hours in a work
day.
New, according t o
Sawyer, is a $10,000 allocation
to be used as a tuition reim-
bursement program f o r
employes doing outside stu-
dying . .
-Also new is a "grievance
procedure" which will permit
employes to ask for a review
of management d e c i sl o n s
which adversely affect the
employe's wages, hours or
conditions o f employment.
This is required in a new state
law.
-When county holidays
(there are 10 such) fall on a
Saturday eligible employes
"'ill be granted compensatory
time which may be taken
v"ithin one year. An exception,
..
"
Where should young fa111ili£s ·
keep the money they can't ,
afford to risk?
In California Federal
5.25% savings accounts.
•
LOCAL
No ether Mw1pejt•r tell1 yH
... .,.., ... ,..., ~· ·~llf , ••••••
,f e.I ii t °"' I• tho t,.•fer
Orortp Gi•1t . tfrl•• t~· DAILY PILOT. ' ~ .J '
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••
Courthouse Sought
•
As New SA . City Hall
SANTA ANA -City Coun·
ci\man J. Ogden ?-.1arkef. one
of three city fathers who oir
pose financing a new $3.5
million city hall through a
joint powers agreement with
the Civic Center Commission,
has his eyes on the former Or-
ange County courthouse as the
city's new home.
Markel was one of the losers
in a 4-3 vote last week by the
council to go ahead with the
eight-story strll'Clure near lith
and Hoss streets under the
lease back financing ar·
rangement. Santa Ana voters
twice in 1967 turned down
bond issues requirin g a two-
thirds majority approval to
build a new city hall.
County ofiicials noted that
the courthouse building boasts
only 34,000 square feet , only
one third the size proposed for
the new city hall.
The county also points to
long range plans to convert
t h e three-story 6g..year--0ld
building to a county museum.
The county-Building Services
Department noted that the
building Is now being used and
bids are to be let soon to con·
vert two former courtrollms
Coin Locker
Pact Okayed
SANTA ANA -Co ln ·
operated storage lockers for
use of travelers will be in·
stalled soon in the Orange
County Airport t e r m i n a I
building by the owners of
Flare Imports, the airport gift
shop.
C o u n t y Supervisors ap·
JWOVed an agreement for in·
atallaUon of 18 various-sized
lockers at the north entrance
of the building near the bag·
gage return area.
The county wllI gel eight
percent of the gross income as
it does from airport cigarette
and candy machines also
operated by Flare Imports.
into hearing rooms lor·county
Tax Appeals Boards.
Under the proposed
leaseback arrangement, which
would have to be approved by
the Civic Center Commission,
the commission w o u I d
construct. the new city hall
and the city would 'fay for ii
with "rental" paymenta out of
general revenue, according to
City Manager Carl 1bomton.
This method of financing does
not require voter approval.
Markel blamed a~val of
the proposed arransement on
"an establishment now run-
ning city hall."
Use Permit
Given Okay
LAGUNA HILLS A
change in tenninology has
gained the Golden Rain Foun-
tain in Laguna Hil111 Leisure
World a permit to use two ex·
isUng buildings for com-
mercial purposes.
The county Planning Com·
mission has approved a
variance for a newspaper of-
fice and other use! for the
buildings on the northeast side
of Calle Aragon , l ,000 feet
sou lh of Avenida Sevilla.
Previously the requested
permit was delayed when the
faundatlon aske(i for use as ad·
mlnistratlve orfices. J l "ft d
recreational 1aellitles of the ·
two structures in an area
designated for "sales offices
and parking." -----
·--Science Shrinks Painful
Hemorrhoids
Stops It.ch-Relieves Pain
Fmcls Way That Both ReJieoreo Pain
and Shrinb P'Jet In Moot C.-
... ) toolc p1-TIMI -k Prt:p&"'U.. H•, T111•n is 11e
other fonnula I« Mmonholdl
Ilka IL Prep•r•tloa H al10
1oothn Irritated U11a .. a1ul
he.lps p.....,,_t farther Infection.
IAoiDtmn._~-
NOW! DIVIDENDS PAID FROM DAV·IN TO I>Al.'-OU'i' ..
AT HJGmm' RATE PERMITTED IN CAuFdRNIA BYLAW!
ForaJOUD&family'a noeds, there'£ nothing~ a Otlifucnia Federal savingg accoant. Farufd1,
it's the1DOll!Jt'a allO Casi>. to buy bi~itt.ins ~payingJiiPiale1mt~inc·ch•1'*"'
Some clay it can be c0llege for their y,onnpler, IeadrJnoney for in-oppiltlmdtit8, cc a
busiamsof~own. . -'-i" t.·
So, join the young slnart seL Open a savings account at Califomia Federal, the11atiOll'1
largest fedct:al. Earn from clay-in to day-out. There's no.minimum ti.t'ne perio4-required. In
addition, fonds r"""ived by the 10th of any monlh'eam from !he J,st wbcn on deP,osit at the end
of the quarter. Start your account today-and.choo5e your rate:
5.25% Bonus AccoUnt: (Anilable ln maltiple. of S~O.) ~ ¥4* ~ .adl
yearallOTenpla'puiliookratewbenhdd3years. •· _· _ . ·
5.13%PuiibookAccoont:5.139'!1!!11m!;yieldoai,tmredpe ..... ...,.,ti._ ..
all .map ud olitldmdsremain a year, if tbe 5% c:arrnt -91. nit ls1Lsl 'f ••
and compoanded dally for a year. -• · · -; · ' ' · '
•
..
California Federal Savings
aodLouAlloc:i11ic:a•lloaicw •Aa.11•$LS..._ _ •
NATION'S LARCESl'FEDERAL. ' . •
ANAHEIM OFFiCE: 600 N. EUCLID AVE.• 77t-2222
COSTA MESA OFFICE:2700 !fARBOR BLVD.• S41-a300
ORANGE OFFICE: 3810 W. CHAPMAN AVI!. • 6'9-11133
Head Office: 5670 Wilsblre BIVd., Los Angeles
A--"'-''1'totU,00011n<ter,,....;.io..oltl>oFeda.rs.fi1111t1-lim1-0Npcw-.a--.0Ptl1eU""'-Oo1awwwoL
.u-1tim
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y DAILY PU.OT
Student MBBielans Score , canceled
'FV Shows UCI Orchestra in Solid Bartok Concert
'Emmied'
l!OLL~WOOD (AP)
Several shows canceled by
their networks won Emmys at
•· the 21st Television Academy
ay,·ards.. including ' ' G e t
Snu1rt." 'The Ghost and Mrs.
Muir." ··Judd for the
Defensl!" and the "Smothers
Brothers Comedy Hour!'
And Barbara Bain, who has
announced she is quitting
''~fission: Impossible," claim·
ed her third Emmy with one
of the frankest acceptance
speeches on r&'Qrd.
These were the highlights
Sundav night of the annual
prescritations by the National
Academv of Television Aris
and Sciences, televised by
CBS.
DAll.Y Pll.OT Sl•ff ,_..
By TOM BARLEY oi tlll Cl8111 f'lllt SMoff
"At tbnes like this when we
seem to be the fOC'JI or so
many kinds of criticism, it's
a wonderful feeling to know
that we can do something
right."
niat pre-concert commenl
Saturday night by Dean Clay-
ton Garrison -0f UC Irvine's
School -0i Fine Arts was not
related to the ambitioos pro-
gram which wa5 just seconds
away from an expectant au·
dience in the Science Lee·
ture Hall.
The \Vinners i n c 1 u d e d
everyone from Lord Snowden
to the Apollo astronauts.
•·cet Smart," canceled by
NBC, won its second straight
award as best comedy series
and Don Adams his third in a
row as best comedy series ac-
DROPPING OUT -Ann Walker flop; into the arms of Pat Mullins as Nancy
\Veils offers support in this scene frotn ';Breath of Spring" al the Huntington
Beach Playhouse.
But it turned oot to be a
piece ol prophecy that par-
ticularly delighted this wriler.
For a work that we had sin·
cerely believed to be beyond
the powers of that young
University Orchestra -and
we refuse to be ldentified as
a Job's comforter -turned
out to be so right, so splen·
didly, gloriously ri~t.
We refer to the piece de re-
sistance of an entertaining
program, Bela Bartok's tu·
mulluous, and at times over-
powering, Concerto for Or-
e hes tr a. Its labyrinthine
structure and enormous tech-
nical demands are such that
we have known its qualities
and subtle song or inspiration
to escape orchestras whose
names have C<Jme to the mind
of the music lo~r much more
readily than this happy, en·
thusiastic r·r-v·i n·e--aggrega-
tion.
t tor. The spy spoof was picked
up by CBS for next season. 'Breath of Spring' Hope Lange was a surprise
; victor as con1edy series star
for "The Ghost and Mrs.
Muir," also dropped by NBC.
The series won a reprieve
when it was bought by ABC.
English Comedy Falters
P-layhouse
Carl Betz, long the patient
husband on "The Donna Reed----A ll • Show" was named b est -I .. •"WI h ·ngton drama Uc series star lor ··'Jii(fcl -1,;-: -l;l;rf·lrf71r -· ·
for the Defense." which has ·
beer1 dropped from the ABC
schedule. By TOM TITUS
Of ,,.. D1l1J l"llol Slaff The writing platoon of "The
Smothers Brothers Comedy "Breath of Spring" Isn't
Hour" won Emmys for their really a very deep breath for
(.-Ontributions to the series the H u n t I n g to n .Beach
which CBS fired amid much Playhouse which labors com -
acrimony. mendably but fruitlessly to
Miss Baln. winnln& as best puff a bit of life into this
series dramatic actress, drew lackluster English comedy.
a gasp from the 8anta Monica I Civic Auditorium audience Despite t w o particular y
H•••A1H o• s••Out" A comedv Vy P.ettr Cak•, lllrKted
bY Rutti DOrW1rcl, praducM IJy Ron Ltmi.rt. tttftn!UI Olrector Ron Lint·
Mll'lo pt'hffl!ed Fl'kUIVI .ncl $1!\lfdlYI
tlH'OY!ilh June 21 1t ,,,. lot\J!!t}ntton
Bt•eh Plli'l'llOll•· 2110 M1ln $1.,
HunllntlPll kold'o. f
THa US\
Brit. Au.rt lt1vnt ....... blpll Qulctl
D1m1 8-.tl'IC• .-..i.tl'Y .. ., •. OkldY l1t"mer1
LMV Allct' Mllltl' ......... HMOCY Wtll•
M-"-P1rry ............ ,,tt M1.tlllM
Ellabelti Htffleld .• ,.,. ... Mtl W•lt..-
Llly Tl'lomPton., ••••••. ~ CamPtlolll
P-...................... ,.,,..rtl!I Flldl1
1(1mp ..••••.••••..•.•.••. ~. lt•lph wltb her speech. Last week memorable perfonnances, an
she withdrew from t h e attractive set and some im·
"Mission: Impossible" cast, aginatlve direction, Peter
clabning breach or contract by Coke's feathery little script
Paramount. never really takes wing. It Is due partly to an unempathetic
Describing the award of her hardly a question of falling script and partly to a de£l-
Emmy as "a bit'·rsweet mo-short o! potential since there 1 ~ II · •t h t t. 1 t ciency in ense mb e ment." she remarked: rea y 1sn muc po en 1a o '"There are a couple of peo-begin with. perforn1ance. It is basically a
ple l'd like not to thank. Since The plot revolves around a plot for a one-act play thinly
they both know their names, t quartet of middle-aged ladies stretched over three acts, the
won't call them." and a retired army officer first of which Is a masterpiece
Another tense momenl came who add a dash of larcenous of immobility.
in New York's Carnegie Hall spice to their dreary lives by There are, nevertheless,
\Yhen producer George Lef· heisting fur coals, fencing some notable individual ac-
ferts, winner for the best them and giving the proceeds comPllshments. Ralph Qulck,
dramatic prograin, "Teacher, to charity. The crisis in their as the brigadier ecstatic over
·reacher." criticized t h e situation is the thought that the opportunity of agaln com-
academy for eliminating the they might be found out -manding authority; turns in a
best supporting actor award. though it is Utis fear itself that sharp, solid performance and
One nominee was the play's makes their venture so ex· rarely neglects ail opportunity
star, Billy Schulman. a retard-citing. to convey h1s character's of·
ed youth. Shortly afterwards. The excitement, however, is ficious nature. Ramrod stlif
the academy made a special _n_ot_th_e_tr_a_nsc_en_d_en_t_v_ar_iet-'-y. __ an_d __ b_ri_·rnm_in_;_g_w_lth __ •_n
award to the boy.
"'Laugh-In." the shotg~n
style show of blackout gags,
was best variety.musical
series for the second year in a
row.
Best single dr amatic
performance awards went to
Paul Scofield for "Male of the
Species" and Geraldine Page
for ''The Thanksg iving
Vicilor."
The National Educa tion
'Television Playhouse won over
five commercial network
entertainment sho ws as
out st;)nding dran1atic series.
Lord Sno11.'den, husband of
BriLain·s Princess r.largaret
won an a11.•ard for outstanding
cultural docuinentary achieve-
ment for his study or old age,
"Don"t Count the Candles."
The academy trustees gave
an award to Apollo astronauts
•·for sharing \Vith l he
American puhlic and the rest
of the world the incrt'dible ex-
i;iel'ience of the unfoldlng of
the mysteries of outer space
and the surface or the n1oon
via live television "
Bowl Sets
Shea1·ing,
Pops Fete
Arthur Fiedler ·will conduct
the San Francisco Symphony
in a speci al pre.season "pops"
concert in the Hollywood Bowl
June 28.
Appearing with Fiedler and
the orchestra will be pianist
George Shearing, who will
play many of his popular jazz
hits as well as Mozart's Piano
Concerto .No. 23 in A Major.
Also taking part in the Bowl
prog·ram wlll be the New York
Rock and Roll Enwmble with
Its "turned-oo Bach" and rock
selections. Among the pietts
they wiJJ perform Is Jhelr rock
version o I B a c h 1 s Bran·
deoburg Concerto No. s, first
movement. Ttle San Francisco Sym-
pbooy "Pops" Orchestra will
Jaunch Its.summer toUr at the
Bowl. and then wijl proceed to
appear Vi ti~es up and d0Wl1 U.. Wesl Coas
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
l Doctor In
tbe news
6 Enjoy a
ple1sant
situ1Uon
10 BibJ carriage 14 Kayak
15 African
"" 16 Latin
American , shout 17 Olympie's
Mr. Brund· aye •
18 Formtr
I Frtnch
~ruler:
2 words 20 Hem of furnlture
21 Pursue one's way
22 Fetds the
kllty 23 Fish of the
hm!ng
family
25 British Coh1mbla river 26 Kind of oath
29 Cod's
rel1t1w
31 Add beau!~·
" 32 Pardon 37 Geo111eu1, shape
38 Easlly alarmed
39 tmpulst
40 Movi ng
sluggishly:
Z words
.f2 Kind of l••tenrr: 2 wards
0 Kinda!-. 44 Items of
constructloa
equll)llllft
45 Cottalll
Ru11lm1 OSlngSlng«
the Bntlll• 50 In solitary confll'ltfltnl
51 Gem
53 Assay
57 Old Test-ament ruler: 2 words 59 Musical dlrtcll on 60 Morally
wrong
61 Part of I
highway
62 Prescribe
63 ArTOyo ·:
o., '""' 64 Toot: fll.ght
65 Folklore
creature
DOWN
I Great
quantily 2 Malet a l'llllCld• ... d
3 Monetary
units: Slang
4 Household lmplment
5 Tonality 6. Alaska 7 Of the
same family
8 Oellght
Sl ang
Saturday's Puzzle Solftd:
Cl Container 10 Bell lnvtntlon: Informal 11 Regula r llnt
of travel
12 Foreign
13 He's In the
cold, cold <ground
19 Tahot and Winnipeg
21 Small mass
24 Kind of pa1ty: Slang
25 ·Row
26 Ctrtaln
Scots111en
27 Noted
celebl'hr 28 Forcel\I nqativt:
Z words
2:9 ltlfht
llfttrs, •.g.
30 Surroundtd
32 ~otmtr 11re1t sports wrlltt
33 lower In r;;;nk
6/9/69
34 Fe 35 Kind of
look
3, Flshfn!I ,..,
38 Bugle call 41 Read avidly
42 Swiss c Olllll 1111 ty
44 State: Abbr.
45 Ca'"eri·
ml!l11S concems 46 Exfst!ng
47 lnvigotatin~
mtdlclne 48 English :
Comb. fo rm
49 lorn out
51 Clgarttte
shape 52 Conifer
54 llthln:
Co'"b. f«m 55 Rtsttaln
56 Wrenched
IW'ilY with for ct
58 Mt. Landon
59 Kind of fecord
lr"!;'2 "T>3-r,,-~.-T-.7,-,T,_,,,,_
" 1 •
1
"
Mail orders lor tickets arc
nnw being accepted. Box of·
fices for thl$ event only will .
ol>fo June 10. 1°'
overdose -0f discipline. he
gives a fine caricature of the
"military way."
The other shining light of
the cast -doubly so since it is
her stage debut -is Ann
Walker as the frowsy, ultra..
nervous splnlter whose chief
talent for the great fur capers
consists of going all to pieces
-llnd be1uUfully. Mi a 1
Walker takes a death grip on
her characterization from the
outset and clings to it with
heightening energy throughout
the show, saving the fiat first
act from complete ennui.
Less impressive are Diddy
Lammers and Nancy Wells as
a pair of elderly noblewcmen
b o I h pursuing I b o dashing
brigadier. Mi.a Lammers has
dilliculty maintaininf the pace
required by her role, while
M i s s Wells mars a skillful
performance with a reluctance
to assert her own character in
the few opportunities aff-Orded
her.
Pat Mullins as th e
vociferous voice coach tries to
inject some juice into the pro-
ceedings a n d occasionally
overdoes it, though she a~
pears the most authentic com·
edlenne -On staa:e. L a n a
Campbell as the worldly wise
maid supplies what tTKISt of
the major characters lack, a
believable British aceent, tern·
pered though it is ~y a
Cockney twang. She turns in a
particularly fine performance.
It ts regrettable t h a t
playwrlgbl Coke waited until
the third act to introduce the
Scotland Yard inspector, fo r
Martin Fuchs turns it into an
excellent cameo. The diatribe
We hive no reservations
ab o u t our reaction to
this distinguished reading of
o n e of the m-0 s t mem·
orable scores in t h e mu-
sic book. Faults there were,
to be sure, but they are rip-
ped from our notebook in the
overall assessment -0f an in·
spired, dedicated delivery of
a sweeping, turbulent work
that brought our young art-
ists a tremendous and richly
deserved -OVati-On.
Orchestra a n d audience
alike immediately recognized
and warmly acknowledged
the architect of this superb
Bartok: conductor Peter Ode-
gard, a man who left his po-
dium completely exhaW1ted
but obviously delighted with
-ALSO-
·Ti .. · "l'ri111<· •11'
'•lli ... -..·j,·mr •llr,11/it·
:: II I •
""'lfM!N ..... •NI> GOLIHH Wf:Sf ·.,._.a•> over dialect between him and I
-· :::J -Miss Mullins is especially well 1irw1i" G••aur ,.ov1 • ••" D1icg ,...,
d NEXT '"""•" & "9-" 1 , ENOS TUESDAY
one. ':::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:Ill Rulh Dorward clearly has 1; !10 nctt'sttttnspltndor-
done her darnedest as a direc-'lbcmostmagnific:cnL
tor in attempting to make NF'""""o-·x';.~=""!,111111::-:-.!!!·-I pie.UR au! 11 Br ea th of Spring'' MllO.!ID:ICXS-..-~
stageworthy. The panic scenes I ~"wa;hl~~h r~;t ~~~:a:~ ,__.,_,.~ . .-1111 0'?'';11t~¥J¥.~
most effective, and shots of ACRES OF FREE PARKING --· ----- -
directorial adrenalin are ap-CIX"RK GABLE "•io.f:l
parenl throughout the show. l'l\1EN LfJGII '::.:;
The raw material, however, ~ I.""LIEJ!Om•nft remains basically of the -. ,.., ·1n\ru1
ch.ckling rather than the beUy OJ.MA deHAVILIAt~
laugh variety. ~ AIM l11rt Repolds I•
"Breath of Spring" con· "SAM WHISKEY "
tinues for three m ore
weekends, F r i d a y s and 1' . '-="
Saturdays, at the playhouse,
2110 Main St., Huntington
·~r.~ tis~
..,CC)Uf:~ Si>Mi eorge"
'f:>UWTT' Beryl Reid . ®
Susannah York
Coral Browne
'"· Stt.w ltwrt& 6141 Co.t ... ....,. frto• 2 p.a.
. '
• STARTS WEDNESDAY
··coooen. COlUMIUS" IS
BOUND TO 8E A Ol'tlAT
SUCCESSr
~-~ _,,..,_,<it_
COfltfnuous
Set., Sun. end Holid1y1
I
'90S tCIQ' ""*'Ill. Wo.11
Lhe Inherent and superbly
classical verve and elan that
so exudes from Lhis happy
work.
The opening movement or
the J.fozart carried, perha~
understandably, a wobble or
lwo, but all was forgiven
with a breathtaking, immac·
ulately delivered final movc-
n1ent. Grant, never flustered
in h\" handling of this al-the·
gallop n1o vement, 1nost ca1r
ably led his orthestra in a
rnasterful delivery of thi~
sweeping. v i go r o u s Clnal
stanza. It would not be rair. in the
final analysts. to wilhhold
tribute from those members
of the com1nunity who aug·
rnented the student orchestra
for this ambitious prog ram.
r.1r. Odegard. indeetl, did thi3
very thing before the concert
tloscd and it is only right, of
cou rse, thal the spi rit of these
splendid volunteers should be
recognized.
Student or stand-in, do this
column a favor, ladles and
gentlen1en: stand up righ~
now and take an extra bow.
Abo
George Peppard
Ursula Andress ,,
"BLUE MAX"
Now Showing
l.tiehoel Coine-
Anthony Quinn
Condicv ler9111
;,
"THE MAGUS"
ALSO PLAYING-The Big One-FOR ADULTS
cf"1ies fvra;w. /labi Bri ·RX!nd B'Jl1oo ·Jo""' COOttn
John H<Oioo Woler lloJllw Ril-.,o S:orr .:::., Ewo Aufui. _
99odgrief
its candy!
l!obm Hagg;og, PtlE< Zoref ond'
Selrru,.. P1ctvrti Corp. pr•"'"'
A Chri11o001 Morquond Production
Candy
Technlcofor8 CRC
(!]<>:>
SEE FOR THE FIRST TIME,
JQMM · PROJECTION ON OUR 72' SCREEN
-V1n,e11f Contly,
N. y, 7;.,,,,
I ll(allfnll:'l!l'll~ • 111n0Mim
I VANES&\~VE.1'HEWVESOFl&\DOM:
JAMES FOX-I'' AN TCIJENI\.O
JASON ROBAUDS
r1~,
TH•&TRE ...... """""'°""' ~ ,....~·~m
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M ONDAY
JUHi I
,,., B n. llo -<CJ (OI) ""' OVnphy, am•·-<CJ <30)
0 -""" -(C) (90) D .. ....... -(Cl "Tbt fr~ KW" (Whltm) '5l-Auclie
Murphy, Yv.tte Du117.
fJI ... (CJ IOI)
m I lM ""' IOI)
m111:a111 <C> (lo>
tm (]) ..... Crffll1 (C) (90)
ED nit's MN? (C) (30)
OJ U11 Coler Plfl E* Pltl (30)
lil!l IPUI -(Cl IOI)
1:30 0 MIC Ma...,ice (CJ (60) m v., • ., ......... , ta. s.1 (CJ (OI)
D lll -•-(CJ (30l e cw.,. (30) ~·w Enrich·
11'1&1\t, P1rt IL" T1acher rrtd SL
Cyr conducts 1 llnru1;1 1eS$0fl rcr
w:eptlontl stucltnts 1t the 190th
Street Scllool.
ll!J(ll Ill -(Cl (30)
m -" (C) <Oil
7:00 IJ CIS &elll•c Mns (C) (30)
Watter Ctotikite. ,,30 ID I-.... (C) (30) Undo BUI WMles •boat .... lnft11111C9S
on the childrn lftW Ill ..U 1
suptr-.,itl*'-1 dlWll (Sull11
0 lftaf'1 MJ Unt? (C) (30) Willy
Bruner and Mtne rr1ricls wllco1111
1u1sts Soupy S.fes, Pem Cess 11111 Bert Convy,
m Pnnord (C) (30) Connie Stew·
er11 and~Oiek-SJnn ruest.
Ci) 00 MllldaJ MM (C) (2 hr)
ED &mn WIMtM Md MeMrn
Lill (30) ''P1ln." Hindu, Buddhist
1nd Taoist idels ebout physical 1nd
morel pe ln 111 dl!cullld b1 host
Alan W1ttL a oo , •• "' Aft.tr (C) (30) m ea.'1 Wlrid (C) (30)
Ill --(C) (30)
Abbott) ., '*"' •nf -""" roulflllou9I PJIMI tht twl111 pltJ,
(R)
fJh (t)(!O)
1110.• ....... (CJ (60)
ll!J (I) ............ "~
m-·-"~
'""fJil!J(t)C... ·-(C) IOI) Geor11 Gobel Ind Bobbit Glntry
7:30 IJ 9 Ci) l111•el1 (C) (60) "fir to Dodp." Mmhll Diiien
Ind Dot Adlllll lff troublld by I
m1clcll1aom1 wom111 p1111n11r
(Joenn1 UnY!llt) 1nc1 !.• ttuut of
hljetkm wtlen tfltY llCOrt an 11·
eaptd convict (Todd AnnlUonll) on
I tenll b1l1 trip bid; ID Dodlf
~. (R)
vi•lt with Ciro! In I rt!Nll If Ill
Odoblr lhow, but iR 1 ntwtJ ti,..
Mfflllfll. Ceri>I lntn:lduo. lnlMlt
Rodpn: who ditcllmS 1111 1W
aummer lllrits, "C.VOI Blnlltt ,,..
1111b Tiie Jimmit Rod1n lhtw:
whidl pr1mltre1 Monday, .111111 1,
Bl!J-(CJ (OI)
D IHJ ID !ill D)a .-(C) (IO)
IJ.... (t) (60) Otll• 111-.
S.ndy Biron 111 l•tuM. IAulii
HJt, Loa Ra'lris ind Ce'*" Mii ......
•
D m I Drtlll II JMMll (CJ (3(1) "fit lndltpe1111blt lunoit." Jun-
nit Mes to PtM NASA otrldals ire
"'Olll In their conclllllon tt11t Tony
Ind ROiif lllOlllcl not lllltl COITI·
pi1tlbl1 1p1e11111111 comp1n1Gn1. (R)
:::> Jed. '""'' (30)
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of the Ntw York City IMN of
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can .ltwbh r.otnmlltllr.
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(60) ''flit fur Mlfdllntl." StMd
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victlmizin1 utcUllYll In tht 1:1-
r1mlcs industry, {R)
fJ llllllitlr S MM: "C..wldl hr' lO'JO ID Mlm (C) (30) Bill .lallftl.
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ED lnDOVatlon (30) .. Rah Pruttln 8 AlfrN Hildadi;
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m•n ind 111ut1 fram Swco, Inc. -J•tt Pal1nca, Eddie Alktt.
di1e11ss • pllot P11nt to product
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r!'lld !ram H1kl flsh. Thi pelltl 1!so
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TUESOA¥
DAYTIME MOVIES
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(drt!M) '51-.ltlR hftlOftl..
e JOB PRINTING
• PUBLICATIONS
• NEWSPAPERS
Q1111ity '1l11tl111 111d D•p•~•bl• 5,,..1,,
fOf" 111et1 0;111 • Ou•rf•r ef • C.11t-ty,
t2tl WIST IAUOA II.YI. NIWPOlf llACH
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!ASY, HOMl!VOlW!
FRIGHTE~O BY STEVE'S
GRtt.L.11'/G,
HONEYDEW
JIAS FLEO ,9 l~R
A-™EJIT ,,.A.AID
F<XJND AW
JJW/IMTEO
CALLER
7HERE,I ·-·
PERKINS
JUDGE PARKER
As Tl!E
pOOll.u:N TAKES
LUKE \.AICGO
UP 10 Hl5
HOTEL FlDOlt
JN THE 5BVICE
ElEVi\TOI. THEY
J.l'E UNI.WA.IE TM4T
LUCIE HM !SEEM
"""'""""'"-
!fr-P1-~~
't'Ol.I SAV lf•WM THE
Ml!Tft I)' WHO TOlP
LUCIE l'P TM.EN
1M1t1e our ?
TUMILIWEEDS
MUn AND JEFF
.GORDO
DON'"T SCli'EAM· ..
OR rt.L !-'AVE TO
GET ROUGH /
,j).
~·...... _ ............... -
By Saunders a11dOvertard
ITS OKAY, DOLL/-I "'™ A.
GOP! SEE \>·• .. AAO f'M HERE
WITH A. 'lt#iRRA.UT lO :SE H
TMIS PL.A.CE/
By John Miles
By Tom K. Ryon
ly Al Smith
By Gus Arriola
..
•
•
Morid1t, Junt 9, 1969
NEW DUO -DeUa Reese begins the first full-week
of a nightly hour-long conversation-variety series
with comedian Sandy Baron, tonight, on CbaMel 9
at 10 p.m. Guests tonight are Louis Nye, Lou Rawls
and Carolyn Jones.
TELEVISION VIEWS
Emmy Show
Real Bust
By RICK DU llROW
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Near the end of Sunday
night's Emmy awards show on CBS-TV. Jack Ben-
ny observed that the television academy really im-
proved things this year.
"For example," he said, "this year they vali-
date the parking."
Good old Jack. As usual, be got rlgbt to the
heart ol the matter. Another year, anotlier bomb,
this time wasting the exceptional talents of two fine
hosts, Bill Cos by in California and Merv Griffin in
New York.
From what T could tell, the chief improvement
in the Emmy system was that, instead of four mil·
lion awards this year, there were only three million.
l'M NOT GOING to bore y.ou by noting in detail
again that the procession of awards was end1ess,
that the lumping of different types of s~.ows into one
category was ludicrous, and that the tnvia of much
of the low--quality nominating was underpowerlng.
.f'or this is just par for the course.
What was appalling, however, was the total
absence -in the program's conceptiop and pro.
duction -of even the slightest trace of show busi·
ness magic, except perhaps for Cosby's personal
magnetism and way with even mediocre material.
He is a comedy genius, but the materi~l provided
him and Grillin was woeful by any writing stand·
ards.
THE PROGRAM ran a full hall hour over scbed·
ule, and that was typical of the dullness· of the pro-
duction end. Among other things, this prize night
for the industry was helped right into the televialon
groove immediately after it starled by the pres,ence
of a nice, fat, long commerciaJ.
And where was the makeup department? You
never saw so many shining faces on presenters and
winners. A powder puif is really not such a parUc--
ular expense.
To giye you an idea of the basic note of the eve-
nin g. the magic of exceptional show business pro-
duction was replaced by award highlights that, es-
sentially, were a mixture of regret and bitterness.
FOR EXAMPLE, Don Adams got an award for
"Get Smart," and observed that tt was picked up
by CBS-TV afler being canceled by NBC-TV. Hope
Lange got an award for l<The Ghost and Mrs. Muir,"
and It Is transferring to ABC-TV after being let go
by NBC-TV. Carl Betz got an award for 11Judd for
the Defense,'' and it has been canceled by ABC..TV.
Barbara Bain got an award for "Mission: Impos-
sible," and at this point it seems that she is leaving
the series because of sharp differences.
Miss Bain, in fact, really socked it home to the
video audience Sunday night that there was bitter-
ness in the way she and her husband, Martin Landau
-also a star of. "Mission: Impossible" -appar--
ently have parted from the series.
'WELL, OF COURSE, the news awards had
much merit. And Susan Saint James got an award,
and Arte Johnson t<lo , and Geraldine Page and Paul
Scofield, so there were some bright moments.
And, of all thlngo, the writers for CBS-TV's
canceled Smothers Brothers .show got awards too,
and Tom Smothers was in the audience, so chalk up
another moment for regret and bitterness. Mr.
Benny, by the way, delivered a pretty nifty zinger
himseU. Referring to the Marlboro ads on tho
show, he said he had learned that if ynu sit on a
horse, a cigarette won't hurt you.
Dennis the Jtlenaee ..
' '
'
l
I
' '
1
' I
I
I
' l
..... -
·ff DAJlV PILOT _.,, June 9, 1969
Vital Statisties for the O.range · C~ast Area
Marriage
Licenses
TOOO-OA1ti11~. ~ M .. tt. '1f H, lrhtol &t., i.nl•...,.. •114 $Mf'Ol'I B i t L Mir l" Mr. •NI Mtt. It, '!'l\Ofllt1 Moor•. M IMCft. ,1,1, T\tllt. Dtnlllr ,_YI fl:ollttt '· 1.... .,..,_ at,. ,_..,,. Vel..., IE .. 11, rll 7f 1lon1to ltHCI, Hunt!-r .... Mr. 11111 M<"I. JOlln O, M!Jhh11, 3.U1'1 C:e11I.,. Ho. ·~ Cos.ti MtM, tioy. Mn,.» H"'*-WrY ,wf11 YI Cl\IU. J.,_
........ r L.. .... ,.. w ...... ri ... ion &ffdl, c.,,...1111 Prlw, t.\111I011 Viti•· bor Mir JI Mr. Ind M,.. l tWAIKot G. WM\blff, CWltlY1 "'°""'\ J. YI Wltl.tc.-J,
11--. Wi"'9rll..,.W, l(OSHAll-STM.MEI., Wbll1m F., tO. Mir t, Mr, llld Mn. ~ltk L. ltlln., 1111! 15902 hlltlt L1111, HWlftNIOn kith, hnntfl, Jllltf NvrA " 111111 J0t ST£P'HE~tlAHCM, "*" M., 2S. r11 11'$1 p1,,..1, $11'111 Anl 111111 ST, JOS•PM HOS,lfAl Mr. alld Nn. P11,11 01lt:1t, 7100 S!t1>1. Huntl°'9ton tMCll, bOr. t lrl. s.1"'611,,. J.ii Frlfttlt• "' 1.Mft It , .... "~ SMtto _,,,,.. """' G..,,,i. L. 22. flf 11M fl•lrld• llotel. Mff • Ptl ... Mlll W1r, No ...... C:otll 11\fft, JUflt I ,_,.. •
...,..,. J,, 11, fll HI y ........ l.1111:, .... ,. 11, N.-t l+9d!., W , Inf Ml'f. Mlkt Mldlovk ll, U!O? t lrt, Mr, Ind Mrt. 0.nltl T, ArmilrOI!', Di Att ... 1r,. Jlldllll Ann YI lltnr1 JN
C•• "'"9.. MAY 17 AIUCll Orlvt> Ml1110rt Vltlo, t lrl Mir at IOIWI .Tr..O.rt. C:irClt, We.ltnlntllr, v or-s Gfetn, M1rlon C. -n C:1rolt )NII ... ti MAP!Y-EDOY, AIWl.\W,. ti,! ti Vlt At.lEN-lll HllS. l.obtrt J .. 11, of tUl Ml'. llfl« MI'S. G-R, Ro11, 1'412 Mr. end M.ft, Al'll\111' l , LOV111!1«1, f lrl. '-~ Stnlltl, ''"" J•IW vt Jlf'Mt Alr'llll
OUMt. w .... , ~ ... W ..... c. L•"'"l'f Ori._.., Huntlnolon IMCft 01"" Clrctf, Hvritll'lllllin 811dl, t lrl ?4UI Chlmllel PrJw, Mi..IOrl Vlt lo, Mr. tnd Mrs. 1.0lllh:I C, Wlll!'M. ?S.W Gortnlll. Niner A. "' f6trlo W,
Gl.EWEll-OINGWALL, Jftf'Y \.., "-I(,, U. '1f 111 erne.!. ..... "'9llO. 1nd JP-rt. L, 10, o1 U11 (, Sll\11 Mf.r tl f lrl. Olorlotl Dr1 .... , MINkw! Vltlo. f lrt.. INTfll:LOCUTOltl' DICallS Worlev, M iii l . vt Tllomll ll. 1M P'-""8 L , 21, bottrl II lOIJ Mt(ltAV-IUfflMOTON. , ,,_ A., Cieri, Unll A.Ill. Mr. 1111$ M'I, llotiert • l.1dcl1tfr, 1nl$ Mr. 1rld' Mtt. EHo A, M1rlno, 13132 LONG •1.&C:H C: 0 MM U NIT Y a-n, J._nltt M. "1 8i.llll' 1. Wttoell~ri. llll IC. YI ""'*-Wolot.hrl' ~I St., ""t. A. Westntlfttjw th fll lrMl LUCI .. AYtl" GetWfl l0Hll$-OAVIS. S,.,,.,. ,\,, 21 , of 1617 R1cl111, ltylf!t, bOr C:1llt G•'*'°"· Minion Vlelo, boY. t'OSl'ITAL ICI....,_, °""'*"• ..,._ ¥1 Georgi Rawilllcroft, 1111111•• LYllll YI E1W1r• CUNlOG$ON-lfl:OWN. MIMI ...... ,., flt <;,.... .... ......., .,. , .. tf I.* C:1r1J11'9t PflYI, Goll• """' •r.d M•r u M-r • • Ma'f • Frearlc: A
1U1 ,,_.. $1.. WftlmillllW ll'ld W•lolut A,,,.,, ~ &lilCll. JHft 11:., 20. of 1lllll Oll!K l•M• Mr. 1nd Mrs. Plllll• E. l o.rtllY, lJUI Mr. ll'o<t Mrt. Donald L. M1llllt, 1•7'0 Mr. Ind "'"· ~lff M. t.\1c1it1M~, IC~lflll, t11l'Olr1 E. VI Cherie WIUltm wiiloll, Judllll l , VI Cle'lllCI Alletl, )it,
Jtllk:I 11: .. 1'* " tut ~ 1.-.._ .. ,.;,...:.:;••~>-4:...:c,.o'c""cr.r.c:.:J .... _~<-cl'c.:..·":...fl_• ___ ,;;,;.:.;.;,..:8c''"'=·---------•-"-°'-'-""'-'-·-•-'-u_..,_v_•_•_·_"_' ___ ,_,_,, _____ ._,_-_._.,_••-'-"-'·-"'-·---'-"'-'-°"'-""'--"-'-'---· -"'-'-"~-""--"-""'-·-<.·~-• -'"-'"-'-"-";..."-'-"----'-'-""-"'-'·-"'-'-'~-"-'-· -"-'"'-'-"-'-·-GI'*"' ~ 1·
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Be1cll MEMEO-FLOllES, J<nepl\ R .• :tt. 1rwl 8-141 R., 21. both of •20 l$llnd View
Drive, Stal kith
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OHSLU"IO·ICENNEOY, Jolln J., 30, of 7'1 Mith OrlYe Ind Patr1Cll A .. 27, of
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Apl. ,t,, Cotlto Mesll. MERCER-MAAG, Oollllm W .. :Ill, 01
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11, o1" IU1 Woolburn, bafh of Hun-
tington lle1cll. StllllNEll-ll:ll lEGlEll, Jon11'h1n ll.,
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Jovce. 31. o1 11Jll Bubb11ne Well
Ra.od. Senti An•. PATTERSON-ROOEGHEfl:. LHl!r H,,
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Any$7,400car is tight-Ile~
The ·sinewy Mercedes-Benz 280SE is builtto be
rattle-free .even after 50,000 miles.
lift the hood, and you'll see why.
One of the sweet pleasuttS of
Cl riving any branci-new car is that firm,
buttoned-up feeling it has when it
thumps across the inevitable potholes
and corrugated railroad tracks..
EspeciRlly if the car you traded-
in liad taken to moaning and gI-oaning
over such indignities.
Mercedes-Benz engine_ers like
the nice, tight, "new-car feel" so much
they think it ought to last longer than
new-car smell, new-car payments, and
even a new-car warranty. In fact, they
see no reason why you should not go
right on enjoying it year after yei!
after year.
And, since Mercei:les-Beru: en-
gineers stubbornly refuse to was.ft time
on a nnual face-lifts or superfluous
gimmickry, they have ample opportu-
nity to make such dreams come true.
Born to last
Result: every Mercedrs-Benz
280SE begins life in a shower of sparks.
Its chassis and body are not bolted into
being, like those of a conventional
sedan, but solidified by thousands of
welds into a single, rigid unit.
Flip up the hood or peer into
the wheel wells behind the tires, and
examine the frame. You can actually
see the telltale pockmarks of the welds.
And you'll "feel" the difference
they make from the first tar strip you
hit. After 50,000 miles or so, you may
begin to wonder if your 280SE will
ever rattle.
When welding stops, hands in
soft gloves caress the exterior of the
body to detect bumps and burrs. They
are smoothed away. Vital seams arc
soldered and buffed to oblivion •
Then the raw body is dunked
whole, like a taffy apple, into a gigantic
vat of primer. It emerges with 24
pounds of rust protection.
Next, it is baked, spray-painted,
hand-sanded, sprayed again, then
l1and--spraycd. Even the i11sides of the
-hubcaps are coated" Total-primer·,U,d -
paint anti-corrosion protection: over
44 pounds.
As a final flourish in its arma-
ment against road salt, rust and rot,
the 2805£ gets a 24-pound factory
slathering of undercoRtins.
Unrelenting power
The overhead-cam, fwtl•inj1e·
tion engine equals the coachw~rk for
longevity.
Bearings are delicately ma-
chined to within 4/10,000ths of an
The 2805£ is n1ted the 1afe1t, mo•t roadworthy C4t in tht "/u.ru"¥" field, A ·aounJ invtstmtnl, too.
inch, and pistons and connecting rods corkscrew turns of a mountain road-
are painstakingly matched and bal-and en;oy yourself.
anced. Yet this power plant is about There's no sloppy play in the
as fragile as a bull. It's built to cruise steering, either. No mushiness. When
above 100 mph on Germany's wide-you hold the wheel, you are blessed
open autobahns for hours on end (a11d with the "feel" of the road. When you
often does). tum the wheel, the car responds in-
st antly. Suddenly, you are a more coi·z-
Heroic handling fiden t driver.
The legendary stamina of a Taut, sensitive steering is re-
Mercedes-Benz is a virtue you can taineOevenw'ithMercedes-Benzpower
appreciate only with the passing of steering-characterized by Car and
titne. But you needn't wait a moment Driver as "unquestionably the most
tosavor·this car's true genius : its quick precise unit of its kind ever developed."
reflexes and heroic handling ability.
The 2soSE bristles with SQP.b~-:. -~~eso~~-b_ra_k_e_s_
tICated:--Ult-ra.:-perfOrmail'Ce features ·· Unless you ~ave driven a 180-
that simply do not exist on domestic mph Grand Prix racing car or a
sedans in the so-called "fine car" field. Mercedes-Benz, chances are you have
Scrapping the solid "beam'' never experienced the awesome stop-
rear-axle system of domestic sedans, it ping power of really good brakes.
uses an articulated axle, so that each Disc brakes.
,re•t wheel can mQye up and down Mercedes-Benzengineersinsist
i11dependentlg of the other, just as the on them. Nor do they stint by putting
front wheels do. disc brakes only at the front wheels,
This endows the car with the and settling fo r conventional drum
agility of a scrambling quarterback. brakes on the rear. They attach a mas-
You can blast it over rutted gravel siye, caliperMtype disc brake to every
lanes; it behaves with almost eer ie \-vheel of every Mercedes-Benz.
calm. You can thread it through the Someday, doubtless, 4-,vh ecl
disc brakes will be offered on a do-
mes tic '1uxury" car.
The pinn acl e of safe ty
The responsiveness wli:ich
makes the 280SE such a pleasure to
drive is its best defense against blun-
dering motorists. liowever, if the worst
happens, the car is designed to shield
you. Naturally, it meets all the U.S.
safe ty regulations. But a Mercedes-
Bcnz has additionnl safety features.
The entire passenger compart-
ment is built as a sturdy"safety zone."
Doors are designed to stay shut on im-
-~p.1ct.-The-f.ront and-rear-of-the-car--are-
engineered to crun1pfe in a crash at-a
controlled rate, absorbing ~hock and
reducing the threat o'f serious injury. 1
C~r and Driver's sober conclu-·
sion: Of all the world's can, the Mer·
cedes-Benz line"represents the present
pinnacle in safe car engineering."
Showroom experiments
The 280SE is as l1Rbitablt as it
is durable, roadworthy, aOd safe.
Slip behind the wheel, and flex
your back. This is no ma.r shmallow
seat. It s11pJ?Orl s you. It should: it was
'contoured with: li:elp from orthopedic
physicians. The springs inside are
actually tuned to the car's suspension
movements-to cancel thousands of
tiny1 tiring tremors every mile.
Check the rear shelf. Carpeted.
Feel the underside of the dash. No spa-
ghetti tangle of wires-it's fully fin-
ished off. Finger the wood trim. Real
walnut, not plastic.
Many cars a.re designed to win
aifmiration for their owners. Mercedes-
Benz cars are designed to win admira-
tion from their owners.
Unconventional? Defiantly so,
Mercedes-Benz does not build conven-
tional cars-and never will.
280SE vs. 2805 vs. 280SEl
The 260SE sells for about
$7,400 complete with automatic shift,
power steering, vinyl upholstery, white
walls, and AM/FM radio.
If you can live without the 15°/o'
power-boost from that "E"-for
E.inspritzmotor, or fuel-injection en-
gine-you can make a tidy savings by
ordering the standard 280S.
You can also order a 280SEt:-
tlie 2805F with a wheelbase four inches
longer. (Four inches invested in leg-
room for the rear compartment, not
squandered in useless overhang.)
Other models to ponder:
250 Sedan-an unflappable
road car with superb handling and
braking, $5.299'.
300SEL 6.3 Sedan-"Merely
the greatest sedan in the world"-
Road & Track, $14,450•.
Idea: If you plan to vacation
abroad this year, clip the coupon for a
brochure with details of European
Delivery. You can enjoy the conve-
nience of touring in your own new
Mercedes-Benz-while making a sub-
stantial saving on U.S. prices,
••••••••••••••••••••••••••
:· Mtrctdt1-Ben.z of North
-• Amt:riea, ln't~ -
: Jim Slemmons lmporU Inc.
• 120 Wrst Warner Ave.
: Santa Ana, Calif, 92707 •
• Pltaff stnd mt your ntw European De-
livery brCKhurt, complth1: with work-•
• 1httt for computlng cny 1avings. • • • ·--------------
• •
..... .,,, __ ,,, __________ _ .........
CITY
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • ITAt t "' • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
C:Con .-rfi.1 tMt, Mucrdtt-8riu of North All'lrriuo. fll(..
•Wt•I C0.t1l porll of entry, excl~ive o( lran1porhltion, optiont, tttlt and loc•l taxes, lf any,
Jim Slemons Impo rts, Inc. 12o·w .wamerAvenu•,San1aNia,Califomia92101Phon•:714-s46·4114
Wll,.La.-llitMINOHANI• ....... P., It.
f/f iU1t K"""*" 9"'"' ~llfl '"" ~·.:i:..,...,..°""·'I·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
·-
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•
MM111, Ju111 9, 1969 DAILY 'ILOT
"''
Laver Near
•· -' . ·" I "• • ,. (. · Of Stats' Center"~
A'.Icind~·1-;.~ Sorr"y~
I I ' . .
Impossible
DoUble Slam
'. PARIS (A.il) -Rod Laver of Corona
dol ~ aoil· Mn, M1rsant Court, left
tOl!l,y for °" lrw courts of EniJ&Dd and tbt Qext . .ur-ol their bid for a double
. . I
,' F~~.ll!~~kingJaw
LOS ANGE~ (~Pt-Lew ~k:iodor, knee injuries ·.ro an Achillt!:a tendori.lft..
Gi~~ Ther'tiafti:Won ·the singles Utles tn the
Austrlllan dlJunplonshlps' Ille! the French
~. •tllch flnlabed ~a_t tbe
RMand Gll'l'til Stadium Sanday.
Now tlley ladle the AIJ.Englaod <;ham·
pionsbipc al'Wlmbledoo, which 8larl in
two· "eeb. ,·· '
The AmedCan Open Cbampionships•-
the·last ol the yur's Bl.I Four evtnts -
are .aehdlled to start at .. Forest Hlllil,
New York, Aug. 21 .. ~o meri ·have pulled off the 'Grand
Slam.-Donald Budge in 19.11 ind Laver
in'<l962.
,Only one Woman player has done it -
Maureen "Little Mo" Connolly In 1953.
taver, 30;·has won $44,210 in prize
money in ti wetks of tournament play. '
Long recognized as suvreme on fast
surfacts, he mastered his old rival Ken
Rosewall, the king of clay courts for a
decide, in' straight sets in' tbe final hei'e.
Mrs. Court won the Women's crown
Sunday by defeating Mrs. Ann Jonts of
Brjtain H . U , lh!.
Laver said the Grand Slam is
something a player might pull off once in
a lifetime. · '
"So I'm ·not setting my si;hts' on it,"
the Utt1e left.b&nder said.
GOQDBYE , MICKEY -Over 60,000 fans turned
out to Say goodbye to Mickey Mantle Sunday ai
Yankee Stadium and their ovation was so great it
wai; sb: minutes before he was able to speak. After
UPl,'b ....
18 years 'with the Yanks, he retired this spriil.g to
become a TV commentator. The occasion . Sunday
caused many old-time Yankee fans to remember
the July 4, 1939 "day" for Lou Gehrig.
"Coming back to the world circuit since
open tennis started a year ago, I have
been tmprewd by the growing number
of fine young playen.
"It's tough going for anybody to win a
major tournament these days.
Laver named Zeljko Franulovic of
Yugoslavia as the most eiclUng new p~
apect he ·has seen· on the circuit this
1eason.
Franulovic, who ranks No. 2 in his
country, reached the quarter-finals here
after defeating Newport Beach's Roy
Emerson -a touring pro who hu: won
$24.909 in 15 weekl.
"Franulovie played very well on these
alow courts here, but he is •.player who
ought to be able to adl,pt ~to grass
t.oo. He could mike quite l:t'~ at
Wimbledon," Liver 18.ld. , •
The French c!WnpiOMhlpc.ftte dialp.
pointing f o r the· Ameriel:fil.'. Arthur
Asbe , St.. Smith ·and CUii Richey Ill
failed after rudli,rC the luLJe. · ..
Nancy Richey' Ol'illllu: 'itoo ·W... the
women'• crown 1 tut yur, lost to Mn.
Court in the semllinlll.
Fielding Play
Snaps Expos'
Skein at 20
LOS ANGELES '(AP):_ F.or/li d1y1,
I · 1
Angels . Face
Baltin1ore
After Split
CLEVELAND (AB'.) , ..... : "I:he California
Angels h a v e snapped a lf.game I o s s
string on the road, but Tuesday they
~e their American League baseball
cbes against Eamrn .PlviSion leader
JJtlttmoie. \} .,
,The Angels mana&!<f ~I three hit! In
SUnday'1 twinbill acamst. the Cleveland
Indians: Manager -~ty Fhilllps' crew
mt the · opener 34-" ~ Sam McDowell
pitc~ a two-hitter for the Tribe, but tbt
Western Division taUeodti-1 caJne b.ek in ~ ruptcap for I J.2 vktory 011 jiiJI «le
Tbe Angeh scored all their runs in•'the
double header in the· fiflh lnhing of tbe -""game. "
Bubti'a Morton and Jim Hieb drew
walks to open the innings. Aurelio
Rodtigue:; foUowed with a double, plating
Morton. Lou Johnson was walked to load
the bases.
HickS scored when Tom Egan drove a
fly ,,ball to center field.
Johnson then took second on the front
e~~of a double steal as Rodriguez sUd
home,.tlcking the ball out of Cleveland
catcbu·Ray Fosse's glove.
the Montrul Expoe had, IClpe ~lt>Out, vie· StuM ••IM "f CAl.IPOllUA CLIVILAHO tory and the-drought bnlugbt tbe N1tional •" • a. rt11 • ., r h ...,.
Le.gue •~no10n· '"'-fo . ~·tliln i·ust MO..,.,, 2b ' • • I SnyOer. cf $ 1 1 -,.--K-.i w1 Joll,..IOM, d ' O I I L.lrown, n J o
three dt!:feats ol the al};.Ume loss record. ~i:'.· :t_ : : : : ::;:.'"';· '' !
But at Last it wu over. And' ihe final ~i:t.--~. : ~ : ! ~;~,:=:; .. ;'';,, ~
touch that wrote finis to the 21-game loss s~er. "' 1 • • o ver .. 11... lb ' mat wu •defensive play, enabling the ~:~...i:e1·1,• ; : : ; ~r· Pc :
eo-to but the Los Anot!:les Dodgt!:rl 4-Repoi. " 1 • • • ~m. llh I ...,........, " i:;..,..c 2 111Kro!Lo o J 'Suoday. McOIDlltlll'o. ' I I I o AMt. pn 1
Dl'""'t·.i-Y.o1--Rusty Staub flashed to Wl~ p I ••• H•mll!M, ' •• ·~• '~ S.Wlllllms, p O I ~tbeibuilpl!n.inee,_311..Jett' f.tQai__bome.,~~ s1"", ""' . 1 •
plate, nlihd•Odt and tpelr1!lf ~an(I:. f.~1-t M.: 0» ~ ..
ed Wfiie <l'nford'1 lonil:, two.out, two-on ~~""rtue. DP _ c~i.: ,~Lo":: ~*11. drtvetO'end·l~LoiArigtlelrJDy. lol'ni. &. C"""'i.n.f J, 11 -SflY!Hr. '" 1;oe1r1t1111.
"TM •""'"hestf·-of the Wllole streak se ...... ,......,,,., ·t. "'''"_,_ s~ -Ea-ri. ...... to-• £11n. fl!M ..... ?:.,, Atl ..... n« -11''7.
LAST ANAjo!EIM t-PPEARANCE -During his last season, Mickey
--Mantle was a....shadow..oLthe. gerformet..h._was-at.. his-prime. The
above plfoto .. taken by DAILY PILOT photographer Dick Koehler,
\\las snapped. after Mantle stn.1ck out in his fa st appearance at the
plate in Anaheim Stadium lasb year.
wU thlt liinth lnniai," said a ham brit t ~ E i p o·'Manag~Gfni Mauch. '41 · · "' ' dktft•~ thlnt·tbit .ball .. otek-1wford'1 was T ' R d w Id ' ~ 1Mit1hf'i .0 stroni .and. thef:e. WIS a • ·, . • . n ·t .ur~~::.i~~lr;~::;:t~... , ':;pomey .. ·ee. or . .o_ u.t
two-nm 1home· nm in the fourth ·inning
that 11vtMontruJ a U lead and another
nn·came home on a perfectly e.14!:Cllted oci•-bljnt. ' Both"Jt~ took today off.
MOttfJlaM.. 1.ot Al'UllLal .. ,."" .. ,.,...
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~ ...... .
It ... ,.....,"" ' •• Tttelt tt••• Te'l1' J:!JS Mtlltrwl 001 »1 toO -' l• Miit!• 000 .,. 001 -1
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l'•fW t 1° t I I t
Stvt -Pec1, ltlll: -P11q, Tfine -t :•l, ~-·"*·
By GLENN WHITE . ot .. Dlol~ ... .., ,,..,
..LOS ANGELES -Olympic dec.alhlon
COid medalist BUI Toomey tuned up for
two upcoming assaults on I.he elusive
WW!~ record as he came within a
wbliker of lhe American 11.andard for lhe
gtuelling 11 events by !COrinf 1,1111 points
in a weekend meet at UCLA. •1
' Totllbey, a Lqum resident now
tead>log ta 8anta Barblr1, wu only II
poinll behind Russ HOO,.'a U.S. ttCMI .
and coold ...Uy hive topped lhlt 1.131!
total If he'd have gott.n 'Oii ant;~!nd ot
normal· tos. rn the Javelin durtni . Sun-
day's action.
However, he.. threw only 111 ·7. A ·208-l
Y.'OOld have netted the mark -maybe.
Mckey mouse meet organliallon cast A
dark shadow on whether any record score
• .,
by Toomey mii:ht haye been al':tepted by
record committees .
First, tbtre were not _eOough timer:. to
jet l1'0 watches on e3ch (inisher -..a
mOlt when record appµcauon is mede.
Too, there wu "° attt1r at the fin~
linet • , • lnl'Jtbtr stk:ty item when
reooriil "Ire consJdered .
Allo\ die pole V.W ~~ wu taped on tor tome ptrformen because of strong
wlnds wtiilktng across the new UCLA
tract stadium. I Toomey, nOw '3), wu aware of these
l!andlqopc and ·wu tl1tls l10! chagrined
ovt!:r mlssin( the record. I
He confided afterward that he was ndt pu~hlng himselr. \ 1
rnstt!:ad he wa s ple:ised to be ahead <I ·
the pC!l'90nal schedule. he had set for
himself. He has two big meets coming up
-the U.S. AAU dlampionships in Salina,
Kaiis..:And, the triangular at tht!: Coliseum
bet)Ycen Russi~. the BriUsti . Corti·
monwealth aod the USA. •
Al his currenl conditiooll!i P3:;)' be
could nail !he world recor¢ or 1,319. bdd
by Ge,rmany't Kurt Bendlin. . Toom~y 'Olli be alter his· firljl 'str~t
notional. crown and he'll \>t ~~!ltg ii It
·lh< sllt·ol ,a ']>riovloo1 disaJ>POIJ!lnte;n~ 1!~
cracktd the world record at Saflna •. fiW
yeara..oes:i but lost any cha,nce-10 m~e tt
official when blah leajue rrieet di~
ulM!d Lllghtwe.l)!ht hurdles la,nd faOed jo
have a steel ring around the sMt put l'tng.
Sonday at UCLA the musculnr Olympic
champ pole vat11led IS.5~ for 831 points.
ran·lhi 11500 mt!:ters In 4:33 for 569; cot
-----------
three-time ~ All·Aqit!:rlcan b~kt!:t· jury· •
ball star, baa' apologized for punching Los tte-al9:1 Wa,5 in .~ ft!:w fights, the _fint
Angeles Stars' ce nter OeMis Grey but one commg the first Ume he . played an . . ABA g'ame. Ira J:large of" tbe Oaklanil Grey, hiJ jaw .&haltered, isn't talklna:. oaks VKI Grey bal.Ued It out. (;.
Alciodor, the 1-lY. agite11iant Who led Just two weeki ago. In ~r pic;kup
the Bruins t& thret!: • str~ight national game, Grey 'Suffire:l 'a..,halrllnt!: fracture
titles, sent Grt!:y of the Amt!:rican Basket-of his left cheek~e. ~ .
ball Association Stars rttling sitturd3Y -. : \ ~ ., • -·
J •
•
during a pick-up basketball game. The Lo d ' ., B ks
blow sent Gny to I loqll 00,.pital where ' ng .e.~n .•. ' ac a tw<rhour operation wu required to set
the broken bones. ' · ,,
Grey said the alt.n:ation """ alter Harta. c' k's R1.de· ·; Lew had made a stuff shot to end the
game at tht!: Hamilton High School gym·
nasium.
.He said Alclndor suddenly lashed out . A
few wordll wei-e ~exchanged and Ak:indor,
unawart!: of the.injury, h! liad catiaed, left.
"I told him It was only a game1" Grey '.
said. "I told him that If he couldn't take
it in a grunt!: like that, ht!: ·would be killt!:d
if he tried It with Will Chamberlain or
Bill Russell."
Grey admitted there had been physical
Contact bElween playerc during the game
and ;::dmlfted using "my forearm to try
to keep hhn away from the basket .''
Alc1ndor, when informed of the
seriousness of the injury, called tht!:
hospital and apologiled. He said he would
pay all medical expenses.
"I was provoked," aaid Lew. "I rt!:gret
very much lhat I reacted the way I did. l
am sorry for what happened."
Alcindor has signed a $l.f million con-
tract for neit season with the Milwai.ikee
Bucks. ' ...
Warren Davis, a Star teammate of
Grey, said tht!: gamt!: was the last om of
the day and "the last one sometimt!:s gt!:ts
a little rough because tht!: players are
g~ltlng a littlt!: tired but there's never bf!en. a fight -th Is wasn 't a i flgh. either'." . .' , , .
Grey ;t~itted he aJ\d Alcind~·got µito
a shoving match during a·~lmt!: a couplt!:
of ·w·eeks agd and some words Wert!: 4!:1·
changed.
The altercation Saturday was a 1boCk
to some. Alcindor, through tbree yean at
UCLA, remaint!:d calm and cool on and
off Ule.court:
A B averagt!: student, he was never
known to t!:ven eichangt!: harah words
with an opposing playt!:r.
Grey, &-a, was Injury prone during his
first ABA season last year. He suUt!:red
chipped teeth, a concussion, anklt!: and
Wins $28,000
Ai Belmoni
• . _\ ' -
NEW YOllK '(UPI) -Did Biii Hartat~
b!Ow the trl_p:le _wi1v1tfor Majt!:IUC Prtnce
Dy Takingthe m®t expensive ''snoozt!:'i ju
racing_ history? -~ ..
Would t h e h{litdsome. p<>pu\ar Prl~
have beaten arcb riYal' Arts •nd Lett.era
lr;i Saturday's Belmont Stakes lf HarLa~
hadn't allowed 'htm t<t lumber along ~
to last through tht!: incredlbly slow first
sil furlongs? · -~ _ . · •• or did tht!: rua:ed· Belmon,, -longest of
the triple crown classics. slmply Show
that Arts and Letters -winner by s.and
lfl lengths as Majestic Prince finished se..
cond and Dlkt!: third -was the best hone
after all?
Bring on tht!: witnesses:
. Johnny L o n g d ' n , much dlsap-
""pointed trainer of MajesUe Prince, refus-
ed to blame Hartack for the defeat of the J
'Kt!:ntucky Derby and Prtakness cham-1
pion. He answered. "Yes. he will" wht!:n
ask~ If Hartack would ridt!: the horse !
again.
But Longden also said: "There Is no :
doubt we needed to be closer to the p8te. 1
I could see we were going to lose wht!:D ,.
we were so far behind. When they had 1
half milt!: to go, J turned to owner Frank
McMJlhon and told him . 'no chance.' "
E!Uott Bureh:~tra.l.Mr .of Arts 4nt1 Ut-
ters. was asked. wtiei.ht!:r he thOOght
Br8ulio Daeia. ·wh9 kept Arts amt-.Let-
ten °clos'er 16 Dike's ~low pace, .1•out ..
rode" Hartack.
"No," said Burch slowly, "I think Art!
and Letters won the Bt!:lmont. I think
what lhe race proved was simply .and on-
ly that on Saturday, June 7, 1t Belrnoat
Park. Arta and Letters was the. best
horse."
Caspe'r Eyes Open Tide
I After Four-stroke .Win
' • • · ' • Ir , · , ' ; 1 • • I
MIJJLDTHJAN. Ill. '(AP) ...; 'Bal!alo
· Billy Catper set hit slihJ.s. bn 1 _ thtr:d
United Stilqo•Open golf l~i>!ohsblp ·~
day, hill conUdtiice bubbling, his' game in
great shape: and his troublesome allergy
problems subsidine.
"This sets. mt!: Up very ..Jen for the
Open,.!.' the..on•UfueJat man 1ald Sllnday
after shooting a brilliant. four.under-par
. ·~7 and "'inning the $28,000 first prize in
the Western Open by four strokes on the
water·logged Midlothian Country Club
Count -
741 for tht!: ,HIVelln; hqrled ibe discus 154-2
for 81~ ai\!t did )h<.iio,hlfii ~unl!es in
·14.7.-ror 881. ,,..... • 4 -
. To0mey talli.d ~,327 ·!lit ~ day of !he
ml'et-Uxl ,de!lnitely.wd In~ ol an
Aoterka..n ....:. ev~a-Id record.
Ritt Sloan, I Anlhelln Illa!) 1Dil
Full<rtm JC , came ~p,'jllh ~
lifeUme boll ol l,~it J>Qin1f lo be run-ntnij> 1o 'T~.,iiodp ,'~ oot
after Sllf!ertng 1 •lllbt knee JJUury In the
pol' vault.
Toomey and S\otn' 1ri'ranked two and
three lfl ~ W6rtd tJ\11 1tnon. Gennany'1
Joachlm,Kf11t lt'aclo wllh 1.m .. t 1 ,.,.t
ago. , • · • "'\
Tooinef 'ts ·~C.Onalderlng hlch altitude
work' •t·t.eke'Ttboe berore the big te1ta
at Salin• and iht Qillaeum. ,
-
,COJ.Jr~. , ~: • 11 '"l'; pld~iv1pg, th~'''f.laU very well, and
• 1ong ror me;" the 37-~r-old master sild. I "r bit 'a lot of good lrom. And lt -givt!:t
you a great deal of confidence to roll In f
some putts like l did." "Does wlMing J
!his ~ make you the man to beat in
tbe .:9Pefl?.'._' someone as.ked. -t
Billy itiglieil. . . !
"Sure. if ... " ~said. "If I conUnije t.o •
1 driye. the ball wt!:ll, hit my irons real l
good, chip wt!:ll and can drop some tiilg I
putts, Wt!:ll, I'll be pretty hard to beat.''
That formula, near-perfecl golf,~Wa!I
his combination in winning his third
Western Utle, one of the most presllal049
in the country and· secood in age only~~o
U.S. Open. which ,t0lll be played this~ !
in Houston. . · · ·, I
A steady, ll·hour rain lifted [11ldWa~ l
through C¥per;s fllW!d. bul left tho 8,4"·
yard COW'S~ • ser~ of pools and puddles.
"When t:teed,'c:ff, I was surprised we
were playing," Casper said. ' •
prlu _.,_
,
I ' ..
• I '
I
~
"' ~· ...
~ .. ;.. .• . ' . ... -•• ' •, .
. .
• .
.. .
,.
-:tz DAll.Y l'llJIT
~ . ,).,
M""", Jllne •. 1'69
•
6 Underclassmen
Sparkle
LOS ANG~lassy Dave Whitt, a
junior at El Modena High here !n Orange
County. r.llll lhe third rutest two-mile in
Callf0l11ia prep history when h e
negotiated. the distance in 8:59.& at
Sa{urday'a Slit running of the state meet .
However, White was only third among
lhr speedy field which competed on lhe
swift tartan.track at UCLA.
That's what kind of keen compeUUon
the 12,340 fans on hand were treated to
during \he afternoon as five state m e e l
records were brOken or lied.
\Vhite was one of six underclassmen
turning in sparkling performances Salu1 ·
~ay .
Santa Ana HJ.ah School's juillor, Jackie
White, wis the moat succtaaful athlete
from Orange County in the meet, placing
second ln the IOO'and 21) to give Santa
Ana its eight points and seventh place in
team standl.np.
'Ibe Saint ace raced to 9.7 and 21.1 in
the sprints, losing. to .El Centro'• Willie
Roblnson in both cues .
. That was the extent ol Orange County
scoring as the balance of the small con·
Ungenl of countians fell by lhe wayside.
"
in1 State I
·ellOUlh to view Huntington Beicb'1
Southern Counties MeeL earlier mi Ibo
season saw "lhree familiar ronns gatner
first place awards.
Decker Underwood, the South Torranct
!Ugh flash who won U1e DAILY 1PILOT
~file trophy for the second year,in I row
at the Southern Counties. com~leted hl5
spectacular season with 1 'Victory in
4:12.1.
It came only moments after his mate
Steve Smith successfully defended h.is
state championshi p in the pole vault with
a J&.-0 effort.
And it was Chappins showing his
mastery over the field In lhe 2·mile.
{,VIKE~' SNAPPY RELAY TEAM -Ma;lna High's nifty 440 relay J eam ol (left to right) Tony Ventimiglia, loe Ventimiglia, Bob Dreil-
ing and Dave Lacy just missed a berth in Saturday's state meet finals
when they placed fourth in the preceding day's prelims.
Morningside sophomore Pe.reel.I Keeling
covered the 881 in 1:&2.8 ... fastest ever
for a IS.year-old andi iood eriough for
fourth in the race.
West Torrance two-qtller Ron Johnson
zipped to an 1:59.0 in the two-mile -&e· ~ ~ports in Brief Pirates Row
Pollnrd Survives Wreck Against MIT,
To Win Mays Classic
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP)'-Slarting
from the back of the pack after a U<ar
smasbup on the first la'p, Art Pollard won
the 150-mile Rti: Mays Merqorial Classic
Sunday wtth a recont average speed or
112.157 miles an hour. ~
Ironically, It was POltard who triggered
the spectacular crash when h i I
transmission broke cominl out of the No.
2 tum, caumi. bis-ear ,lo fishtail, grue
an outside retainintitraD' and 1~ wheels
with Lloyd Ruby's ear.-
Pollard, 42, whose car was too badly
damaged lo continue, took .the wheel or
another Andy Granatelli racer.
Starting ln last place, he worked up
through the pack and took over the lead
in the toth lap.
Indianapolis 500 victor Mario AndrelU ,
slarting In the pole positioo, """"""'rod
mechanical troubles after I e • d t n g
through 89 turns and finished !eventh.
•
Los Angeles Dodgers' outfielder Willie
Davis was recuperating today from
surgery performed Sunday to repair ·a
fractured cheekbone.
Davis suffered a dislocated and frac·
lured cheekbone Friday when struck in
the first inning by a pitch thrown by Dan
McGinn of the Monlrea:I Expos.
Davis will be hospitalit.ed for four more
days but should be back in uniform
within 10 days and, baning com·
plicalions, will be able lo join lhe team
on its next road trip.
• CASTLE ROCK, Colo. -The Lolas, led
Mulhall, 'l:l, Littleton, Colo., was killed
following a spinout In the straightaway.
Three other men were injured, two
critically, when they were hit by SO-gallon
barrels or water set in motion • as
Mulhall's car crashed into a retaining
wall. 1
Simon wen the race in 58 :19.S. a one
minute and seven second margin over
Sam Posey of Shaon. Conn.
•
MEXICO CITY-The Mexican Tenni s
Federation will consider wilhdrawing its
entry from Davis Cup competition as a
tribute to Rafael Osuna, the MeJ.ican
tennis star who was killed in a plane
crash last week, it wu rumored Sunday.
However, public opinioo appeared to
favor Meli<.'Q's continued competllioo for
the 1'-'0rld title in memory of Osuna, who
perished with 78 others in the crash of
a jet airliner last Wednesday near
Monterrey.
•
CARACAS, Venezuela -Three people
were killed anq at least 10 serio~sly
injured Sunday when a racing car driven
by Armando Caprile.s skklded in a water
wddle and crashed into spectators at a
fice in Lagunillas in western Vene·
zuela.
Capriles, a well known Venezuelan
driver who has participated in many
races and in the United States, was un·
hurt although bis car was severely
'damal!'d .
Wiseonsin
Orange Coast College's four-oared shell
Is entered in the third heat of the varsity
division at Thursday's" operung day of the
International Rowing Association's
Regatta on Lake Onandaga at Syracuse,
N.Y. 1
The. Pirates are paired with MIT,
Wlscoil.sin, Rutgers and Purdue in its
heat. OCC competed in the junior varsity
division last year but felt it had as good a
chance in the varsity class this year.
Rowing for Orange Coast will be slroke
Rocky Raun, Joe Flynn, Brad Shoemaker
and J,en Warneke plus alternates Bevan
flarvey and Dave Allen. Coxswain is John
Nielson.
Opening day lineup:
Varsity Four-roared
J~eal t -Dartmouth, Jane I ; Trinity
2: California, Long Beach, 3; Amherst 4;
M.J.T. A crew S; Rutgers B crew 6. .
Heat 2 -Virginia, lane I; Navy 2;
Oregon State 3; Georgetown 4: Cornell 5;
Los Angeles Loyola 6.
Heat 3 -MJ.T. B crew. lane t:
Wisconsin 2; Rutgers A crew 3; Purdue
4; Orange Coast.
Vanity Eigbt-oartd
Heat I -Georgetown, lane l; UCLA 2:
Stanford 3; Dartmouth 4; Northeastern 5.
Heat 2 -Navy, lane J; Princeton 2;
Washington 3; Brown 4: Syracuse 5.
Heat 3 -Penn, lane 2; Cornell 3;
Wisconsin 4; Columbia 5.
Juaior Vanity
Heat l -Columbia, lane 1; Princeton
2: Northeastern 3; Washington 4; Navy
S; Cornell 6.
fieat 2 -Dartmouth, lane I; Penn 2;
Wi consin 3; UCLA 4; Brown S; Syracuse
6,
by Dick Simon of Salt Lake City, Utah, Cardinals Pick M11irks won seven of the first 10 positions in lhe
abbreviated Formula A Colorado Grand
~i::::11:~:~d:::.~: :: 4 Jaycee Stars Drafted
was called after 1:1 laps wh'n Jim
:ILLNESS HITS
'·l'-
:7'A.R NET TEA~I
lllness turned back Newport Harbor
High School 's bid for the doubles title
Saturday afternoon at the Balboa Bay
Club in the CIF individual teMis cham·
pionships.
The Sailor team of Robbie Cunningham
and Bruce Charles made it to the semis.
however, before losing to Santa Ana
High's Phil DuM and Bruce Foster, 6-3,
6~.
Estancia High's Attilio Rosetti im·
pressed, before losing in the quarterfinals
____ t_ctBi~ ~ontJE!Yl~!'f'S .-!.i!'l Ott~ 6-4, S-!,_
4-6.
'
Newport's Glenn Cripe lost in the
quarterfinals to eventual singles champ
Jeff Austin of Rolling Hills, 1"4i, 1-6.
Four more Orange Coast a,rea junior
college baseball stars -Bill Jenkins of
Orange Coast, Gary Marks and Steve
Griffith of Golden West and Jim Langrill
or Saddleback -were snapped up in the
secondary pluses of the annual major
league draft.
Jenkins, who "'as drafted by lhe
Pittsburgh Pirates. already has signed a
letter of intent to attend the University of
Southern Catilomia where he received a
baseball and football scholarship. Arid
Griffith, who was picked by the Kansas
City Royals, figures to be Golden West 's
starting quarterback this fall .
Like the other three secondary phase
draftees. P.1arks didn 't enjoy an ex-
"Cep\ionat. -1969··baseball· season:--He~ wu
slated to play the outrield and do some.
pitching for Golden \Vest . Ho~·e\•er, arm
problems limited his ability to pitch. The
St. Louis Cardinals selected him.
Aller a miserable start at t.he plate,
Marks wound uP the season with a .284
aiierage and collected 13 runs batted in
his last nine games. He had four homers.
Langrill was expected to be a big ad-
dition to Saddlebaek's pitching staff.
However, he ran into problems ln the
classroom and was ineligible for the en-
tire season. He was drafted by the Mon-
treal Expos.
Griffith got off to a fast start this
spring, with a 4-1 pitching record, but
was involved in an automobile accident in
the opening weeks of the conference
season and made only two other token
appearances.
Jenkins was another slj)w starter. but
hit a· torrid streak at the close of the
-"Eastern ConftflhCe season-and Wound up
with a .270 season average and a .306
conference mark. He hit three homers.
Both P.larks and Jenkins v;on All -EC
honorable mention .
·Laguna Grid Outlook Bright
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of ... °""' , .. ltaff LllUJll IDgh football coach Hal Akins,
admittedly an incurable optimist, says
bil hopes f o r the 1169 seaMm have been
~ by his just.concluded spring
'Jbe Artists couldn't stage their annual
..,,. pme because of the ~g of Uieir' -fllld. but the coacb liked -what he .. .,. . .,.
.. I blft a UUle more hope for lht fall Ji.;; f old ...,.,. we started sprln1 proc· u.e.· ... ._is. . "I wu eoocerned about our ....-.r+ IUYa'ion with St c v e
,,...... .... boiOf graduated but MW l'm
JiaprDd Brim Ottottt w1s our Bet -totMolt ..., year and h<'• shown 1 .. °' ...........
___ _, __ ... ,.::'.:r.: --.
•·Qur olher candidate Is Greg Kessler
and he looks like he could do the job,
too.··
Kessler , who 'll be JUSI a junior In the
f a 11, is a S-1 , 170-pounder. Ottmer, a
senior neJ.t season, is tnore compact at 5-
9 and 140. Akins says Ottmer has a slight
edge in the passing d'partment .
Akins., who had a high of 37 candidates
knows he must have an explosive
breakaway threat to come close to such a
banner season next time. He may have It
in Mike Abbey, one of the most e1ciUng
football prospec1.1 In recent yean at
Lagurui ,
A gtnuine touchdown threat each timt
he handlts the ball Abbey has grown to
170 Pounds. li e has all the moves and
more than sufllcltnt ~peed.
"I think he's going to be on e of the best
backs in the Crestview U!agu' next
year ," Akins predicts.
Ask 1he coach where h.is strongest posi-
tion is and he points to right tackle, oc·
cupied by l!IG-pound Chris Bowman, who
started every game last fall as a junior.
"This boy Is all·league material. He's
going to be a good one," hUi coach say1.
Another standout will start at center,
senior Rolllnd McElhaney, a 190-pounder
who also plays linebacker.
Akinl, who hada hi&h o( 37 candldatu
during spring: drills, says Laguna will
stlc:k with the triple.I formation ne1t
season.
""'t 'll go w1lh it again -I had more
success with it la.-;t l!C41SOn than any or-
f enSc I've t ver used ."
cond fastest in California high ICbo9I an·
DAN.,.:K TOSSES
DISCU S 218-2
nals. But he was a aecond behind defen-
ding champion Ruben <:bappjm of. Ex·
celsior, who is oow the ~le record
holder. '
Blalr (Pasadena) junior Jim McAlister
won tbe long jump at 24-2'A. ~ Down the list of finishers in a fantastic LONG IBEACH-Former world record 2-mile field was a lad named Kasto Lopez
holder Ludvik Danek of Czechoslovakia from sang er High. A sophomore, he
, hurled the discus 218 feet 2 inches in an ran a 9:06.2.
From st.art to finish, it was Los all-comers track and field meet' Sunday Angeles High School dominaUng the
to set a European record . scoreboard for ·team honors -although
Danek's toss, his second of lhe C<1m-the Romans were able to net on1y a vie·
petitioo, broke his own record of 213-11 lh tory in lhe final mile relay event.
set in Sokolov, Czechoslovakia. Orange County fans who were fortunate '-'--~~--~~~~~~~~~~
AL£S~S~~TY.,.
~®OU@ OO~ooo ~D'DITilil @J®WOU
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Good new$! Now you can recaprure that lean waist look
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••. all You do is ~ear it.
Skeptical? Try ill The weight resistance principle h;1s
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'
CLINT WAUCER. mcMe and 1V star, WMrS the 1
TONE..0-MATIC Aeighted belt durfns ....... -=tiw-
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Chlrhon Hffton 1nd J.,... Brown stay in top
physic1l condi!ion by · weiring Tofte o.Mltk belt
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ln th.ir business steyin4M1 in shape is a must •••
,Ii lhey 1011 tlieir sliape they 1rt out of business.
11'.s wonderful fat' the ladies too. Wm the
TGM-0-Malic during yow regul« dvftilt of
housewo<k, ganlening, shopping or fust -
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\Vomen's belts are ~und, whit~ in lwo
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like it ••• Charge ffl
•
•
I ' • • ' • ! • • • .
i f
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•.. . ---' .
----------..... ...--------....----- -
•·--
Oiler on the Loose
Huntington lle<lch High's Garth Wise (with ball)
scampers for a gain during the Oilers' final spnng
practice football scrimmage. Transfer Marty Val·
dez of Marina is on the turf while Bob Ryder (left)
comes up and Frank Neal runs inlerierence for
Wise.
Baseball
Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Won Lofi1 Pct. GB
OUcago 36 16 .69'2 -
New York 28 23 .549 71!.z
Pittmurgb 26 28 .481 II st. Lcuis 25 29 .463 12
Philadelphia 18 31 .367 161h
Montreal 12 '37 .245 221h
West Division
Atlanta 3%. 20 ,615·-
Los Angeles 30 22 .577 -2
S. Francisco 29 23 .55!'!3
Cincinnati 2& 21 .~ '31f.i
HOUS1Dn 24 30 .47( '.'11f~
San Diego 24 33 .421 lO'h
SUncl..,., lln11ltl '
New vor\ l. Sen D!f!IJC 1 s.n FrMKl$CO 9, Phi!t!lelphl1 f,
12 !Mines ~t1..-.i1 11..4, Plnscu.,11 11>-s
(lMlnowtl If (hlOllO. r11n
HoinlOll :L $1. Loui. !, 11 1nnin11
Monlrul 4. Lee: A119eles '
T....,.. G1'"-Cl11el-I! (Cvlver )-•l 1! Cl'llU911
[~!!-. 1-7)
Orlly .. ..,. Ktieduleo' "' TllllA..-1 Games
ChlU'llO 1t At11nl1, nllrhl
Sl. Loui. 11 (inc;ln!'llll, nl1ht
Plt'!.tlllrvh 11 Hlll.ISIOll, nllM
Mllflllrw1 11 $.In Oie'9a· nklhl fll'tH~la 11 Los AniiP'"le'1.o tlle/'11
Hew York ti S.n Fr~i$CCI, nl!1t>I
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
Won Losi PcL GB
Baltimore 39 16 . 709 -
Boston 34 18 ,654 31/l
Detroit 27 22 .551 9
New York 23 28 .soo 11v~
~~ 29 29 .500 JI~ v=-N J7 32 .347 J9
West Division
Minnesota 29 22 .069-0aktind 25 24 .510 3 Seattle 2l 28 • •s 1 6
Chii;ago 21 27 .438 61h
Kansas City 22 31 .415 8
CaHfornia 17 34 .333 12
SvNIJ"I •ft\1111 New "l"trk J.11, Cl'llCl90 1·1 ~ 3-2; C.eifoml• ~J
8•1'0rl·I, ICli'IMs Cltv 2
WQtilntlon 7, MlnrM!S!Jfl ,, 12 l"n-
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Backs Stand Out Baseball's
Top Ten In Oiler Scrum AMl!IUUN lfAOUI!
After vtewmg his spring
football game Thursday af·
ternoon. Huntington Beach
High football coach Ken Moats
thinks his quarterback and
tailback pictures are in clear
focus today.
Garth Wise. who will be a
junior in the fall, completed
two-of-six passes ·-Th~
and handled himself with! a
style that Moat.a figures Will
make him a starter in Ule fall.
Wise played behind starter
-Tony Bonwell last year and
will start the '69 season with a
dearth of experience.
Randy Lloyd, the tailback.
picked up 35 yards in six car·
ries and looks like a cinch
starter at this point, according
to Moats, Lloyd is a 185·
pounder.
The game, a touch affair.
pitled last season's varsity
'seniors against the upcoming
varsity. The 168 velerans won,
IHI.
"We whistled dead a play on
which Joe Stubbins would've
returned an interception all
the way and that would've
given each side: a touchdown •. "
explained assistant Dennis
Casfno.
Moats said the game proved
what he had projected
throughout spring drills -the
Oilers w\11 have enough speed
and quickl).ess in the fall lo
offset a marked lack of bulk.
The biggest of the potential
starters is offensive tackle
Galen Gilliland", who totes 195.
Moats indicated he was hap-
py with the defensive line play
of Bill Bruce, Jim Haverthur
and Lee Wailers. Senior
center George Olivit pulled a
tendon before the game but
played anyway and stood out.
Linebacker Dan Moats also
spa~ed for the retu~s.
"C)verall, we were , pretty
pleased," Moats rttharked,
"we thought we played a prel·
ty good team."
Sign ups
Set June 14
Signups for boys wishing to
play in the Huntingtbn Beach
All-American Football pro-
gram will be heJd June 14 at
the Huntington Beach High
gym.
Added signup sessions -all
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.fn. -will
be conducted July 12 and July
26.
PllYtr Club G Aa It M Pd. Cl/?# Min ~1 lM ll 6! .Hl
Peln>C~lll a... S1 Ill :M St .J~l
F .RobllllOl'I lhl 5-1 ,03 4i t1 .lJO
R.$mlth 81n 42 ISi 2S » .116
F,Haw~nl W•t. Y 2?l ~ 70 .J!(
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McN111v. a1111more. 1..0. 1.0Dll.: to.,.
bor9. !lo.ton, 6-4, 1.000; Ly~. llOilon,
5·G. 1.000; PllDeb\11, lllllmore, 4-1,
.1511 t ollcll, Oetron • .i.-1, .UJ.
NATION.IL LEAGUE
"lt'f'tr Ct~ll G .11 It H ,d,
M.Alou "•h S• 1l1 33 U .3-S-I
C..J-* HY 51 190 .l(t '' .lSJ
.... JCll!nson Cln •8 201 36 7!I .3 ...
H ..... .,, AU S1 190 :i. 66 .JO
MC(OV<'Y SF •8 162 ~I SS .loll! ~r Cln 'I l•• 40 66 .340
s11rget1 Poll •• 116 31 6l .m Me'nke Hin SS 191 25 6J .lll
11.Al~n Pl\! 41 Ill lS 51 .Jl'I Hf!bner P;h d 166 31 5-1 .315
Nome ltYM
McC1Wt'Y, 51n Fr1r1tiK01 19! H. AtrD"· Atl.lnl1, !Si l .Mlv, Clnclnnttl,
U; It .Al"", Phlllio.!lpl\lf, lJI Wynn,
HOIJS!Ol'I, 1'.
ltuM .. tiff In
B•nko, Ch1t•9D. '°' Mc.Ce\l~y. Sin ~rin<:i1co. 4'; R.Allen, Pllll•dtlplll1.
''' S.nlo. Cl!l(fllD. «!I 9en<l't, Cln. (;n,,.tl, :It. The program provides ~ltcl'tln• tackle football tor boys In the 1 01c111on1. · ht I 13 b k t a d S1<>nll, A!l1n11. •o. 1.00lti ~.1d-eig -0-age rac C n •Chun, s..n 0;~11. s.o, 1.0001 H11ll1· from SS to 115 pounds. m111. ClliC1to, 9.1, ·'°°' Jt11k.!n1, C~I· Boys must appear al the ~.·,~·.J.?· .IOI; McG••w. New Var~,
signup sessions wilh a parent. ,=='==========;!
a report card showing a C N HE TUBE I average. a birth certif icate 0 T
and $5 for registration. FDr the b11t 911id1 111 wh1t'1
Further information on the hepp1nin9 Dn TV, r11d TV I
WEEK -di1fribr.rf1d with th1 I program can be obtained by Stturdiy idition of th• DAILY calling Joh.n Cwieka at 968-PILOT.
2370.
STEREO SENSATION!
The colorflll soun-= of
Orange County Music
RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM ....
From Fashion Island. Newport Beach
~
Mondq, Ju11t t, 196-9 IWLYM R
Funnies,
Dragsters
At OCIR
The March of Dimes con·
ducts its special benefit drag
racing program at Orange
County lnlemational Raceway
Saturday evening.
In Kono Lanes Classie
Riccilli Shoots For Lead
Westmlnster bowler Fred cha.mp -who sqged from
Riccilll will be sbooling fGr 27th to 81st.
Jea<tership of the tZO.man After 21 games, the tleld
West Coast Match Game will be cut ln hall. Trimmings
Elimlnatlons toni1ht at Costa will continue until only four
Mesa's Kona Lanes. are left on Sept. 1. 1be. Elims
·Riccilll moved up from 14lh winner will then ta~e on .the
to fifth after last Monday winner or a dupllcafe tourna-
nlght;_s session of .the 14-week ment being held at~ ~stlel
tournament that ends Sept. L Lanes In S an Franctseo. DO Sl...U MIN
Action Is held each Monday at Coast Area Stlndlngs HA YI MOU FUN7
Similar to the all-pro races
held earlier in the year,
Saturday's fonnat will include
eight-car fields of flUUl.f cars
and top fuel dragsters.
Reseda's Dick Harding '.Viii
also be on hand with his uni·
que "back-up pickup," a con-
verted Dodge A-100 truck that
negotiates the quarter-mile
backwards. Harding sits in the
cab facing the rear window
and his• rear wheels shoot
skyward as he takes off.
I 5 Frff ltrccUW, W11tml"'''" lMD, ~u = ~ 9 Pm ,,: Dick 9rusc~. Fou"l•lnl •··• .-. -• • V1!1eY l,5'1 j ntMtl"I II .. llJ.tl
Riccilli has l,s:;(l pins, com-M2:i. llrrv Schoenleldtr, Co1•J.;1 CALL 5474667
Pared with the leading total of l-1 Jtn Fl1hlllitn, FD u n t • 1 n _ .... _u_ ••-----v1i1t1 • ·1 1.JiM ....n -•-.
1,705 owned by Roland Alex-,_~•:· ~·~"~"-'"".:...,~·_'"~".:".'.."~"~'.'.."~''.!!::========::;::=·
Several area car clubs have
been selling tickets ·to the
event to help raise funds for
the March of Dimes. The two
clubs selling the most tickets
will earn a chance to race
each other for a special cash
a~rd Saturday night:
Resedr.'s Dave R u s s e l l
emerged as lhe winner last
Saturday evening ii" OCIR's
top ga seliminator purse.
He shared the winner's cir·
cle, however, with Limmy lge
of Long Beach, whG won the
junior fuel eliminator crown.
ander of West Los Angeles.
Riccilli is the highest-standing
Orange Coast area entrant.
Next is Fountain Valley's Dick
Braasch, who Is 24th at 1,587. ' , Leader A1exander ls evetzaa:.·
ing 213 so far in the to~nty. ,
He's put together blocks of 8•9
and 8S6. •
Last Monday's session was
marked by w l I d, wholesale
changes In lthc standings.
Southpaw Torp ... Long o f
Garden Grove moved from
·86th lo 14\h in the field and
two-li me tourney champ Bob
Ramirez of Oxnard jumped
from 14th to 16th.
One who slipped was Costa
Mesan Roy Wilson - a former
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CHULA VISTA CANOGA PARK FULLERTON
' HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCL:AJR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA , : _,
\
)
I
I
'·
\
I
r
I ... -·-· .
•
.. Cat On a Wild Wet Ride
-. . , '
catamaran and well known surfboard designer
balance! on one pontoon of his Hobie Cat in action
at Lake Havasu City.
'The increasingly popular Hobie Cat 14 catarmarans
~ve begun a series of 111Cet·in1 Newpnt Harbor on
. '.-Wednesday evenings olf"1l!e.!9t!!:§l!:~J"'!lding. In
.)!:;above photo HO,bi.e Alter, designer of the sporty
;-..;.=:.:..:.'-'c::.:..:.:...:.c.;;__;_ __ .:._ _ __;~------'--'-----------------------~
I• '•' •
' ' .. Tidelands Colorful ,/· '
5 at BYC
Dominate
•
rl
N~ R1ating Rule Readiect~;!
Fqr R eaching E ffec t on Y acht R acing Ex pected ~I
The much talked of, hotly
debated Jn~tlonat Offshore
RaUng rule lor long d~tanc<
yacht r:acins will go into effect
in 1970.
The aMouncement w a s
made by Clayton Ewing, com·
modore of lbe Cruising Club of
America which formulated the
present measurement rule in
use by American yachtsmen.
Ewing said the move will
hav,e "wholesome and far·
n:aching effects on the sport
ul distance yacht racing."
The rating or measurement
rule is a complex
mathematical formula which
takes into account numerous
measurements and charac-
teristics of a yacht, and when
computed comes up with a
handicap rating that
theoretically makes one yacht
as fast as another, regardless
of size.
' Council. hurt of any rating rule. The "We.ighlna: under tbl ll9ltj
The ORC ls a recenUy Oilahore Ralin& C.ouncU 0 L" rule is etiminated. Under c<!J<
formali%ed group repreaenUng is believed to be an im-weighing lw ~ ~Iv~
most of the world'• yacht rao--provement over the <X:A "L". and not alway1 acturate. >~ I
Ing organizations. It will con-Jn the CCA Rule "L'' b "Eli.mloaUoo oC we.IPlnt:
tin ue as the international body measured on the ctnterline a n d pennanence of b u I J1
responsible for keeping the only and no account is taken measurements lYOUld greatfv\
rule in step with new develop-of Lbe character of the ends. reduce \he cost lo an owner ·o~
ment.s in yachl design and The ORC "L" ls a ,f\lncUon of maintaining a rating. • l
construction and materials for the distance between· girths "The broad objective or ~
insuring that the rule is and so reflects the character tru1y international rule Will ~
equitably enforced throogbout o( the eods and so is a better served by the 9Ceeptance 'oC
the world. measurement of the eUeelive the rule by CCA. :
LOOK ro Ft.rrURE sailing length. "The Measurement R~~ Committee has reason to· Looking to the future, Ewing ABUSD ELIMfNATED satisfied that there will be. ~
said the Measurement Ru1e "The CCA "L'' depends en· fective preedure.s for ~i~
Committee ,o( CCA will con· t i r e I y o n f l o t a t i o n fying and improving the ri'lle'.
tinue Its study of yacht rating measurements and is very as experience dictates." 1 and handicapping in order to sensitive lo trim, leading lo Concurrent with ita adoption•
make recommendations for the all·l.OC>-frequent bow-down of the intemaUonaJ rule, CCA'
improvement of tbe new rule, abuse at the time of the announced that it is working
and to keep the present CCA measurement. Under ORC with the North Amel.lean
rulecurrentuntilsuchtimeas most of the hull Yacht Racing Union
it is entirely supplanted by the m e a s u r e m e n t s are not (NA YRU) to tum over to that
new rule. dependent on flotation and body the administration of the
E>A·ing also pointed out that those that are are quite insen· new rule, the issuance l oe
the CCA rule committee has sitive lo trim variations. Thus, measurement cut.ificates, in·
made a thorough study of the abuses common to the CCA struction, qualificaUon ani:I!
RA nNG COMPUTED n e w rule and its effect on a procedure are I a r g e I y supervision of measurers, ind:
The rating which the wide variety of .yacht designs eliminated. the coOrdinatlon of Its wyk·
formula comes up with is a aOO sizes be f 0 1 e recom· "Because hull measure--with the ORC. l ,
computed water line len~h. meOOing its adoption. He rnents are largely dependent Transition lo the new rule ;
Water line length determines quoted Arthur Home r • on flotation, they may be this country will be a grad'
the hull ipeed of a sailing chairman of the committee, as made oot or the waler one, depending on the s '
yacht under given conditions. to the considerations which led at lime of Jay.up, and once with which the race •
The handicap is in the form of to its recommendation. made need not be repealed as m· g yacht clubs adopt 1·1 --~0 I. llo "The basic length "L" is the &DU a 1me a wance. long as the boat is not the rate at which some f
First CaUfornia reactioo to rftodWed. boats now rarini. with Commodore Ewing's an· --.
nouncement came from Ash Ki H ho "Measurers will not be as certificates can
Bown, commodore of San • n g ar r hard·pressed because they can remeasured. . I
Cl b B · d do much of their work in the However, NA YRU will Pf' Diego Yacht u • own sai off season. Th1s could lead lo up its administrative functi& the new rule would not be used H S • in the 1970 Acapulco race. OSl S Dlpes requiring fewer measurers immediately, not on1y for i
The international measure. and create an opportunity for · new rule but for the pre
ment rule is purportedly a Cl b better administration of the CCA rule -until such time: King Harbor Yachl u at measuremen~ setup. it is phased out. comblnahon of the CCA and Redondo Beach will host the ---,-,~------------------'f-
Royal Ocean Racing Club rule Snipe District 6 champions~ips LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL. NOTICE
of Great Britain. next Saturd~y and Sunday, NOTO<• 0, '""-'' ,,,,,,., •••••• ' :
C•. I
,,,, Vag rant Breezes Provide Excitement
.7"..: Vagrant breezes roamed the
;~ompass Saturday, providing
ricane gulch," sending the
fleet around the Point Fermin
Booy on a dud beat to
weather.
PHRF -(J).Cheerk>, Barry
Faber, BCYC; (2) Laughing
Lio,, Jell Barber, LIYC; (3)
Bonita, Goldie Joseph, LIYC.
Lido 14s
A universal or international Th t r th most I e even IS one 0 e THE ~UNNIN5 C~ISSION 01' TNE. CITY 01' l'OU~AIN VALLEY rule will benefit all American competitive eve nts irt the U.S. . No11c£ ts HElt£BY 111...,.. tti11 on w.ci~1y. June 11, '"' 11 7 JO ~ ..... •
yachtsmen whether or not ror the world's largest class t::rn':: ft.~:~n~~m~:.:,·m~~;~ "!\\i ~~ ,!~111~' h~z~,:· !.~~·1~01~~;1;· ,~;t :
lhey plan lo race in European of one-design sailboats. In the ~~:~~n• Ch•n•• ,1" ,t,ppllci ti<>n •utimilte<i by P•Hley o.eve1opment Company.~
• · one of the most c.olorfu1 Hun· j1 ftngton Tidelands races in the
! : <fiislory of the NHYC e,vent.
. ""~'Virtually eVerythillJ about
: · (he race !rom the weather f, :·aspect was contrary to what
1 :'was expecte~. The
l. -weatherman's menu consisted
,'
1.:ot 1bolh feast and famine for
' , .lPe Ocean Racing. fleet racing f ~ 39--mile round trip to Point
11· 'Fermin and return -tht third t· ··:race of the Ahmanson Series.
i· The MORF, PHRF, Rhodes· !~_~;pc and Luders·I6 classes, all
! of which sailed a short course I, . pround Emmy oil derrick, at
I ·1,ast were blessed with con-
, .. #iStent winds which remained ! -Out of the south from start to
;· "fin.ish. . •
~~·NEWSBOY LEADS
:-.. ,Jack Baillie's 12·meter
; -Newsboy led the 39·boat fleet
t around the course as was ex· ' ~ peeled, but the overall han· l dicap winner came out of the
\ Class B ranks as Fred
? -~~ebhardt's Sparkman &
· Stephens 4 7 · f o o t sloop
Chimaera, San Diego Yacht
Club, was fourth boat to finish
and easily saved her lime over
'the Class A fronl·runners.
Cbi.ites w-:re again popped
as .. "the frooi.funners Maded
for home, but were doomed to
come tumbling down again as
the remain$ of .lbe morning 's
southerly refwied to be banish·
ed from Seal Beach easterly to
the finish line.
For the front runners who
had carried the westerly with
them, the change wasn't so
disastrous. Three Class A
b o a t s and Chimera, the
overall and Class B winner, all
finished short of seven hours
on elapsed time.
LONG BA1TLE
But t~ Class C and D boats
fought a long and arduous bat-
tle with the shifting zephyrs, a
number of them finishing after
10 p.m.
Watched wllh interest in her
maiden outing was Jack Hall 's
new Columbia·S7 C o n c e r l o
yawl from Newport Harbor
Yacht Club. She did not disap-
point her owner, finishing se·
cond behind Newsboy and sav·
ing her time to win second
overa ll and first in Class A.
Concerto was launched only a
: "fi10RF \\'inne r was M. R. week earlier and is being
' Minly 's Sandpiper JI from groomed for the July 4 start o(
; South Shore Sailing Club, and the 2,225-mile Transpac.
'_th~ PHRF winner was Barry Here are the final results : ,. Faber's &·meter Cheerio ,
. .h.ahia Corinthian Yacht Club. OCEAN RACING OVERALL (ll Chimaera, Fred The annual boat.for-boat Liebhardt. SDYC; (2) Con·
ballle bct\\·een the Rhodes·33s certo, John Hall, NHYC; (3)
and PCs was won by Bob Serpais tColumbia·SO), Bill Sodaro's PC Flyer from Voyager Yacht Club. Barry, BCYC; (4) Intermezzo
· The Luders·\6 class race <Columbia·SO yawlJ. St an
was won by Ben Hromadka's W i 11 i a ms, NHYC; (S)
Ktld_ et, Lahaina Yacht Club. Newsboy, Jack Baillie, BYC. CLASS A -(1) Concerto;
BRISK SOUTIIEASTER 12) Orient. Peter D a vi s ,
The race started in a brisk NHYC; (3) Newsboy.
~utheasl'er thal had spin.-CLASS B -Chimaera ; (2)
;.lJttkers blossoming as the Serapis: (3) lntermeiz.o.
: yachts crossed the starling CLASS C-(!) Mahia (San·
. Jine and giving promise that tana·37) Tom Schock, NHYC;
: .I.he Ocean Rac ing Fleet would !21 Atari (K-40), John Cazier,
: be home for dinner. BYC; {3) La Prensa (K-41 ),
Bul the colorful chutes Al Lockabey, BYC.
• •reluctanlly came dov.·n as th e CLASS D -(I) Windswlft
f fleet approached the Long {Cal 2·30) Carl Tunberg , CYC :
~ Beach light and the wind 12) Volante II (Cal 2-30), Mike
• cl wind 1 e d and hauled · Hirsh, BYC; (3) Swiss Navy
' gadually.~ Th.is gave rise lo {C~9), Jack Jens.en, BYC. I the hope that the v.·esterly MORF -(1) Sandpiper II,
l·'W6uld fill·in &nd provide M. R. Minty, SS.SC; (2) CecC
1 another spinnaker run home. II . Bill Headden, BYC: (3) I kt.1'lt westerly .did ftll in off Vfvacious, Bill von KleinSmid,
{ ~~ Angeles Harbor's "hur· NHYC.
! "l 02.048 mph Average ·-i '.~f Budweiser Also Wins
, • JI
!~··Dixie Cup Regatta
!we u NT E RSVILLE. Ala .
~~) -Bill Sterrett of
~Owensboro, Ky .. pushed Miss
·~dweiler to the Dixie Cup
~tt.a tltle Sunday in the nnt race of the season for
unlfmlled 11ydn>plan.,.
_Mjg --total«! 1.200 jJJOlatl ln the five heats over u Gun1mVllfe'1111looth 11>·
1~ eour-and ~ a race .,.,.... .of 1•.M ·miles per •• • -~:111.,_lelt.f, driven by ~ -of Xenia. tJNo. sec:oncf with
1 • poinll. 'Sl<n'<ll llld Chenoweth each
had 800 points going into tht:
final heat.
"fiflss Budweiser had lhe
fastest lap of the day, 106.509
m.p.lh., and the fastest he.at
average, 103.329 m.p.h.
The event's only mishap OC·
curred In the first tum of lhe
second heat when Miss Owens-
boro nipped drlvt:r Ed Morgan
of Dclroit into the water. He
WU not hurt .
Officials estimated JS.000
pe.rt0111 watched the big boata
race in M-dtgret weather.
The hydroplanC3 race next
Sunday on the Ohio River al
Owensboro, Ky.
RHODES-PC -(I) Flyer,
(PC), Bob Sodaro, BYC; !21
Mlstms (l\hode&-33), Bf It
Taylor, BYC; (3) Patrician
(PC). Dave Pillsbury, NHYC.
LUDERS--16 -(1) Kildee,
Ben Hromadka, LYC ; (%)Pre-
empt.. L e r o y Southerland.
VYC ; (3) No, 158, Carl
Gantner , VYC.
'Bud,veiser'
President's
Cup Win11er
WASHINGTON (AP)
Miss Budweiser, the Colum·
bus, Ohio, 7·litre·cl .a s s
hydroplane, fought cff a
challenge by the smaller Wa·
Wa·Too o( Gladwyn, Pa .• to
win the 38th annual
President's cup Regatta Sun·
day.
Powered by a modified 426--
cubic-lnch Chrysler ensine, the
Budweiser was a doubtful en·
try in the 81n-mlle finale after
she punctured her hull In a
preliminary heat Saturda_y.
After overnight r e p a 1 r s •
driver Frank Byers, Jr., had
his craft back in the waler in
lime to grab the lead in th_e
championship race and hold 1t
for all five laps.
The H&-cubic·inch~lass Wa·
Wa-Too, piloted by Ron Larson
who flew out from Long
Beach, Calif., had an easy
weekend. winning four heats
before losing by 40 yards to
the Budweiser in the run for
the President's Cup.
The 7.Utre Miss N.J . driven
by 'perry Walter of Rumson,
N.J ., was the third big winner
of the weekend with two first
place finishes Saturday and a
first and second in early heats
Sunday before placing third in
the President's Cup. _
Rules Issued
For Beach
Safety Week
The Newport Beach Marine
Safety Department has Issued
general rules for recognizing
and swimming out of ri)H.ides
in observance cf National
Beach Safely Week.
''Rip-tides are caused by
waves striking the coastline at
an angle resulting in an off·
shore current which even·
lually reaches still water." a
life guard explaint:d," There Is
a distinctive "look " to a rip-
tide . ll is dlscolored with foam
and sand surrounded by blue-
sreen water. moving fast."
If eaught in a ri~tide, the
Marine Departmtnt advlses a
swimmer to yell or wave for
ht:lp ; remain calm and look
around for ri~tide bound•rles
and swim strongly at 45-90
degru angle o( the tide which
will ronow lea$! rt:Sislancc In
moving out to sea .
Led by Dave Ullman, five races, Ewing said, 1968 nationals four of the loP. •• •lll>lkanr, re<1u"11"' ch...-01 11111• Ol'I pro.,er1.,:
five were won by District 6 loactm 660 more or less '""' _, of Nl'Wlwpe s,,, Balboa Yacht Club skippers APPUES TO B,EJ\MJJDA. l'f •nd 660 more or ins ltott """"' of Edinger Awnve 1 • . The new rule will apply lo sailors from Southern Ca I OT· ,., ~ral Agrlcuuurat 01srr1c1 10 Rl·PO noo s · domi°'ted the Lld0--14 flee\ · ramlly Resid~nce and Plannod Develoom"'1t co ~· the 1970 Bennuda race and to nta. 1n11 Dl•••kt R~ulation or mor• re•trlcilve dl1trlct.t ' No. I champlonships in a five other events sponsored by the The regatta will attract such Ill Preeil41 Pl•n 11n Applicelian s11bmil!fll by Ernest E. Ke ll, Jr .... adj,11-,
race regatta held at BYC '"tstanding skippers as Earl c•nt, !o ~rmlt cOl'l'ltrucJIOl'I of l lnd111rr111 buHd)~ "", CCA. New York Yacht Club ~rooerty loco1K Ol'I "'" nort11-• twMI' of Mt. W•sri-• Saturday and Sunday. also declared its intention to Elms, three time Snipe nation. 1ng1on •nd condor ""Mve '" tne Ml 01st••c1. • ·
al Champion: Dave Ullman UJ PrKltl ~i.~ rlll Al>Plk•tlon submittf<I by Crocker Cll!tens N1tk>MI 81nlr , Runner-up in the 30-boat .-·use the new rule be(l:inning in tor cons1ruc11on 01 • r...111< oui1<11no °" property 1oc.a1.ci . from Balboa Yacht Club: Tom ·tutn ot siater A-. no m11re o• ten 1ee1 "'' of • fleet was Gared s m it h , 1970 for measuring of cruising p 1 d Le llroo1r.h11,., s1reei. . type yachts partieipating in its Nte. Dave e erson an w 10 ZOtl• Ch11191 •JOO .lpi:i!lc.i""' 1n1ri1ted bV th• Pi.nn\f!9 commi>sion '', Rowland Lohman was third, Bedfor from f.lission B a re1one lour specotk 1rea1 !tom R2"6000. PO jSOO,. races. · b d F G ll•:roDD. Po i1~ to 1t1.po noo. • Jim Tyler. fourth and Bill The Royal Ocean Racing Yacht Clu . an ran ra , 11 1 Wtit .1c1e ot Euc1oc1 jtreer •wraJtlm.tei. .w 11.:
McCord fifth . Club Of Great Britain, who co-current PaCif\c Coasl champ· ~;~1"wO:S.W~;;;r ~"~iid SI, al the soultlffsl corner ;
I . ·1 d sponsored the development of ion from KHYC. "' "'• G"""' V•H•v Dhe1<1pnien1, ll•""r.111 bord'fed ' Al fJve races were sa1 e on ..,. !tie '""'" by !he v1t1ey F100d control Ch•~I. ,.,... · outside courses starting off the new rule with CC A, has ~1on11 "'" -.1 •id• 11r Los J1rc11 .... s 'E111. · already adopted il for 1970 !J1 11w proi>er1y st11H1ted 1t """ nor1tiea11 corrier "': the Balboa Pier. G . e ll w1·n s S!•rtr ..... .,., .. ~ •nd W•f'd Sl•oi:et. : • racin'g. as have most of the rJllll .. ••> Ar•• 1oca~"" ._,, "' Los J1rd1nn wesi •Pl)(fl~I-· Leo Pernick or Voyagm yacbt'·g o·g•"''°IJ'o•• 0 f • I T·-· m.a111y lSO !eel SOU!ll of W1r.,er ....... ve. • • .., ' ,,._ " .,~. malttn 1•1 be~ Pf'OC'!l.$fd pU'lUllnt lo "'9 Pt.nnlng l"'S Of~•'.' Yacht Club was the winner of Europe and Australia. . Hugh Grinnell's Dismas was s111e a1 ~1;tom11 1Gov't. C"°'! W100 "' • ..._, 1nd lfl9 FWf!l•lrl v11111 z.t1n11 . sa'd the e ..... J I th .. ,;.....,r Sunday of the Vik· on11 ... nc1. ri.. -c,....., ... n 1nvo1Yr ,.....,.......,~ to s.c1-1 oisrrkt M191 . lhe Harrowby Trophy for !he 1 n w .... e s e ._. .. :.... . it-.s.10 ..-.1 ,,..s.10..Tite.~lrW °"'~"· zon1.., M•JB, Pr~lte ~i.n. •nd .~1 · " remarkable example ina Heel s Memorial Day Plus P~ ••• on fll• It\ it.e Pllnnlnll -..rmeni ant •r• '"''"ble rw put1111:t ti-: firs! Class B skipper to finish, · · "to 'led · spec1t0n and •••mlNuon of ational cooperation."· leek Regatta sru In Those oeilrln!I io 16'11ty rn 11_. or tn opp111;11an fo !llHe ,_,., wilt' '9 ; and Lohman was the winner of H paid tribute lo Olin· •t "'. _. 0 Olannel off Viking's 111-•n apparrunllr ~ do so. 11 1.,r111er. rn1t,.n11;on 11 <1e1lrt<1. """ may conf,Rr •
f I ts h. s•"""•h' f d N' . y k !!'le-Planning ~rtmtnl "' P62-2Gf'lrld rmr 10 z-C,,."111 Nos. 1", ••• the . e e t spor mans ip ~ s, ame ew or ' Prtc;se Plan• ''" •rld 1n1. ...., :
l•ophy. s1·11 McCord was the naval architect and his· nd in the three race re· PLAt-1Nl"1G cOMM1ss10N 01= 1HE ~" ' . , . , ... CITY OF FOUl'(T.llN V,l,LLEV •' • winner of lhe Hole-In-The· technical comm1tlee which gatta· was 1-loward Appel s 't· sr,1,NL ev R. MANSFIELO ·:· • developed the rule under the Saga and third was Al Mu el· • ·· P11nn1119 01riecto• and sec:r11.,·v J · I-lead Trophy for the skipper ' ' t.\jo ~o ""' Pl•nnl1>9 CommlHlon. t aegis of the Offshore Rating ler's Saucy. 'l.lbll$11 ora~ c11151 0.11., P11o1, J11ne t. 1m '°'· , ; making the most glaring goof
during the regatta. \
Al a fleet meeting Saturday[
night at BYC, Pat Dunisan of
the host club was elected fleet \
captain for the coming year.
Other officers ,\ected were
John Mcclarty, Voyagers YC,
secretary ; Al Perez, BYC,
lreasurer. and Don Bradbury,
BYC, fleet measurer.
Columbia SO
Taken by
Host Oub
Bill Feuerslein's Querida
from the host ~I Rey Yacht
Club Sunday was the winner of
the Pacific Southwest Cham·
pionship for the Columbia·SO
Class in a slam-bang lhree-
race regatta that wasn't
decided until the final gun.
The five -boat fleet \vas
scrambled in the final race
Sunday when the r:~ce com·
mittee signalled a reverse
course, calling for the star!
and all marks to be taken in
the reverse direction. Four of
the five yachts started in the
nonnal direction. Two of them
realized their error and
restarted, but the other two
sailed the course oblivious to
their error.
Even with such a confused
finale, Feuerslein's v\ctory
was only by a one point
margin over Dick Valdes'
Esudero. Long Beach Yacht
Club, and Bob Grant's Robon
Ill, NHYC. which lied for se·
cood. ·All five yachts finished
within 2 ~~ points of the leader.
Saturday's Sill.lie race was
sailed in S.knot breezes in the
ocean off Marina del Rey.
Winds for Sunday's two races
rana:ed from f to I knots for
the first race and 8-11 for the
final . The scortni:
I. Querida, Jim Feuerstein,
DRyC. Iii.
2. Escudero, Dick Valdes ,
LBYC. ti> .
3. Rabon III. Bab Grant,
NHYC, m.
4. Charisma , Ed Feo, Seal
Beach YC, It
S. Ya Turko. George Antarr,
Just this once, don't
-~ .~ire your nephew.
This summer, there :ue a lot of kids Who will need the job
mOre than he does. Like this boy. And not for just the n1on ey-
though he can sure \l5e it.
I-le needs the·job for all the things Lhal come· with earn ing
a day·s wages. Things like pride, self-respect, self-confidence.
And most important. what co111es with knowing somebody
trusts him for 1 change.
Right now alt he needs is a su1n111cr job -ro1nethiug 10
carry hiin through until school starts in lhc fall. And il's
. Trbptirtant he find one. Important, that is, if he's going to
be 3hk to return 10 school. The su1nn1er job co"Jld mean 1hc
differenc.e -ii could keep him in school.
lle's one of the youn~ people the sociologisls label
''disadvantaged ." They don't look any differen1 than your
11wn kids. In facl. you probahly couldn"t lcl1 thcn1 from
thl' kids on your own slrett. They don"t wear a label.
It 111ay su rp rise yu u, hut there ire a lot of 1he1n in
01angc County. Sonic have had previous work experience,
others have no l. But they 111want10 \\'Ozk. They just
don't know where lo lo ok. :
They have no uncles to n1ake jobs for the1n, no inOuen·
lial rclati11cs, no friends among lhe higher-ups. They have
110 connections -unless it's you.
t-.lou of them don't have much confidence , eithtr. 11.nd
that's lhe worst part of all . Their only qualificat ions: tv.·o
hand s. two legs, st rong backs, n1inds that can think, stomachs
to feed, feelings lo consider. Just like your nephew.
And like YpUr nephew, too, they're going to be around
for a Jong titne.
So, is lhert a catch to all this? You bet. I Cs you -and
the sun1mcr job you can give one of these kids.
You've read this far. w you're probably interested. 'Vhy
no t go the rest of the way and pick up the phone. Dial
OJ~-JOBS. \Vc'vc tried to make ii ea ~y.
National Alliance
of Businessmen
,10111
Orange County Metro
1193 North Miller Street • And:heim, C1l iforni192803
·,,· .. ...
' : . .-·· .. r •
·._.· ·,,, -·· . '•"_. .
;-. :-. :.-:: ... • ..
• .
• :
..
Pflcific Mariners YC. II. 'L----------------------------------------'
·-~-------------------~-..... ----~--...----.-----... -... -...--------;, ----------.....-------·----'""" • <+ ;
•' . ' HOUSES FOlt ULI! HOUSES FOlt $A~E -------·-HOUSES FOlt 5,o\LE
_;.;._•e_1 ___ ~ 0, .. ,.1 1000 Gener.I
WE'RE
WAVING
E FLAG
our efforts aJ'e conctn·
rli-ated in the Newport Har-
bor-Costa Me&& area. We
~ IU'O your ncli;hbors. \Vt:
,.live here and mll8t con-
rtinuc to suetted he~!
...
•,',•
..
'•
..
Newport Helglt!s
C u s t om designed
with brick front. 3
bdrms, 2 be.ths, cov-
ered patio. Beauti-
fully landscaped lge.
lot. $33,500 -10%
down.
20 Professionals
To Serve You!
Hone Lowers
Santa Ana HeighL~,
66x200 with 2 bed -
room home and a
2 car garage. Lot
completely fenct'd.
$23,500 -Great , .. .__terms.
Unbellnable
Builders Close Out ,
No Down v.A. lease With Option
Brand new and ready for a . Veteran buyer 3 Queenslze Tiu• beautiful .f bdrm bomc
bcdroo . tamil m lull Is VACANT 4 niady ror ma, . Y too. • P quick occupa.ncy MIUly fe;,,-tonna1 diOJJ'lg room. A.I I · clcctric bl.illt-ins pJus dlih• tures include: large fa~)'
h 1 tured In thl'I room, underground utilities, was er att t a large fenced )'at-rl fully brlg~t ~try kilcpen,i!:°'1 equlPpcd kitchen l~ludlng
burning fireplace a~ vy dlshwasher lovely w/w car. ~ roof. Immediate pos.. pets, Arutk>os owner says,
seas.ion. $33,~, FllA Terms "SELL it fur $17,500 or
available too. LEASE for S22j/mo. '' Lo-
"For A Wise Buy"
Colesw~rthy & Co.
&i2-7ir1
SHARP
3 Bedroom
Plus FamiJy Room
Extra large bedrooms. Beau.
Hfully enclosed patio, even
a sewing room in this love-
ly home. Extras to numer-
ous to mention. VA.
$21,300
I OHi 'I I. 111 \0\
. ' .
645-0303
4 BEDROOMS
No Down VA
cated in a fa,otutic &rf'a oJ
ROUJNC Hll.LS! r
JOkf;,. COATS
~WA~AC!
REALTORS
-->-S4 .. M>4141-
(0pon E-lnpl
Beach Duplex Lois
NEWPORT BEACH : Corner
lot, ¥.. block from Rio Alto
Cahal, I~ blocks 1 r o m
RJCHARDS f\fARKET and
shopping $25,00'.l.
BALBOA ISLAND: Corner
Ruby & Park ~ 60' on Ruby.
ldeat location $42,500.
Eyenings Call 646-IOC>O
MESA DEL MAR
5112 °/o LOAN
Walk To College
A 21 x 30 Rumpus
noom "-ith a giant
firl'place & bar that :;;cats 8 _ A 4 bed· Only 3 years old. Selll'r \viii
room + family rm., pay all buyer's closing L'Osts
2500 sq. ft. all total· & will glve you
You can assun1e this 51,7%
loan. SUO per month P & I.
3 Bedroom plus fan\ily
room, l * bath, hardwood
Doors.
$27,SOO ed . A 75' :< 200' lol, $100 to move
A 20'x40' work shop 546-9521 or 540-6631
• Monday, Junt t, 1969 DAJlf<mor 14
I "H"'OU=S:.::E.:;.S :..'O.:.R=SA-"L;.;;E:;._.;..;H.;:;.OU.:;.S;.;;E;;;S.-F_.O"'ll"'SAl.=J!.::.'-1 HOUSES FOlt SALE HOUSES F!)ll SA(I ..; .. ;.;;o;;.;u;.;:s;;:E.:.S .;_FO.:.R=SA.:.:L;.;;Ec.....H;.:.OO=S:.::E.:.S:..i"O.:.l=Uo::ti::;:l:;;:o. -~ ~
1000 General 1000 1-------1000-Newport Buch iiiii~iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l 0~~ene""''e~1----':;;:
$4JO Down To An~
$110 Per Moftth Totel
JnelUdea evcrythlnc. QuaJlf>'
tor thia ooay one bedroom
and bath cu.tie, priced at
only IL!,900. VETS ' NO
DO\VN: ! ! Thia little home
Is AVAl.LA.BLE JULY ht.
Near 5Chools and 3hopplng!
Room for boat or ean1per! I
IHO j ~H~un~t~01n~p~ton~~,Be~•~chiiiiil~400iiiilH~un~t~lngi:iiii*\iiille~ .ch 14"
Cul·de-Sac MODERN LIVING . IN
COSTA MESA
Now und er construction
SEVEN ·CUSTOM HOMES
from SZB,575
WITH SUCH FEATURES AS :
• Fi replaces
• 4 Large Bedrooms
• v A & FHA Financing
• Wood Roofs
• 20 Year Guarantee Dishwashers
e Oversized Lots Up to IA Acre
e Roman Tubs & Showers
·• In Prime Area e PLUS MUCH MORE
SELECT YOURS NOW & CHOOSE
YOUR COLORS & STYLES
Yes, we ·have a trade-in 'program
for information c:oll
COATS & WALLACE Rf A LT ORS
1491 BAKER STREET
546-4141
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
CHARMING
ESTATE
S1\•eeping ocean vir"'
Built amcing tall trees
On 11.~ Acres with
con1pletc privacy
1000
Baycrest • $65,000
Beautiful Jvan Wells home
just put on t h e market.
Four huge bedrooms, 4 ~ bath!'!, large FORMAL DIN-
ING ROOM, plus family
room, Abundance of to\ver-
ing trees and shrub11 give
you atmosphrrt". Owner
transrcrred, \van111 action. 6 Bedrooms + guest house
Large cuvered lanai
Huge s1virnming pool
Definitely one of a kind
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & lee
2190 Jiarbor Blvd. at Adams
54$.9491
Open 'lll t 1M
1100
Spanish Style
Fonner model home occu-
pied 7 months & stiU looks
1~ a model. 3 BR 2 baths.
lge lam mi &: kitchen eat-
ing area. Finished &: cptd
garage, Super clean & new
lookinr. C\lstom wall paper,
drps/cpls. Full pr\~'$28,950.
Assume l°'v int, fliA Joan,
$215/mo. pays everything.
CALL 540-1151. Heritage
Real Estate {open eves)
JAt + Sack Bay view. New
4 bedroom 3 bath, i'5x12Z' Jot,
rootn for boat A: tra.ller.
Delta Real Est•te 646-44.14
Newport Heights 1210
CHEERFUL HOME
Nice 2 bdrm., dinlnf: nn.:
h'PIC. Obi. range on alley,
Laree back. yard, fePCed.
A3klng·$2;,-000.
0 &i•'--7':r Al t T
Near NB P0$1. Ole. 646-2414
----&S .. ---. -NEWPORT HEIGHTS
OPEN' DAILY
401 Santa Ana Ave.
Tutefully decorated cornero
home in nicest residential
area. This lovely 2 Bdrm
home is immacu1att! & has'
lush crpl'g, drps, Ire kitch-
en w/ bltns 4:: can be 'pur-
chased w I a klw dowu pa.y.
ment at $29,500. 642-:rl99
DUPLEX 4 yn ola. 2 BR
C'OLI.EGE PARK .. Spotless ~ach. .Built-ins, c r p t s,
3 bdrm 1% bath. 'NICE! drapes. Xlnt renting area.
NICE? NICE! AS K'J NC $32,500 Owner. 6 4 6-2 S 1 O
UT,500. A.gt. 646-3255 or Pri~ipals only
546-.20;}4 Ask for Bill, ========= l "'~""'!~~~~""!I B•l.boo Coves. 1215 * BY OWNER-POOL. 3 ----~~-
BR, crpts, drp1, X·Lrg LR. WATERFRONT-4 Br, 2 Ba.
Low maint yrd, $30,500. 2000 sq ft . Pier l slip. No. * 646-2895 * 50 Balboa Coves. $58,(Xll) •
$200> dwn. P & i $392. Mo. BY O\VNER 3 BR Homes. Z. or make offer. 529-8100 E. side, 2-\V, sll!e. Very Jrg
transferable loans 5'A.-61Ai%.
Need ca.sh. 548-1059
Meta Verde 1110
Dover Shores '1227
BEAUTIFUL 3 BDRM. 2
baths, formal dining room,
spacious family It living ro-
oms. Magnificent Vie\V! By
owner. 543-6901
E1stbluff 1242
New homes, ready to move in, 1f.& mile from
beach. First payment up to 60 days alter
move in.
Tums VA/FHA, From $22,!QCI
The Beach
(on Brookhunt I mlle South of Ademsl
96Z • 1353
Huntington h•ch 1400
LIST your proporty
with confkltnce
SELL with profes-
sional skill
THROUGH
YOUR
REAL TOR MEMBER
HuntlngfOn BMch/
Fount•in Va'lley
Multlple
listing S.rVic1
8 LISTER
REALTY
I R~NIALS
HOUIOI Furnished -----! 2200 Newport Beech
--''------1
WATERFRONT. BeautU\ll s
BR Duplex, Newport 11!11
Garg, lndry, boat dock. Wk,
or mo. Sept only. 673--78tl o~
&7~1158 I
2910
HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
Watertront .( BR home
complete; including linens,] u.tenaile, sallOO.t Ir pr\l
qock/' Summer or Jq l'.'r
16612 Be1ch Blvd. lease. 'J1.41847-9645 l
Suite F CLEAN Balboa Beach Units.1
Huntington Beach Sleeps 2· to 10; for suntmClj.
842-6633 reaeM.tiollll cal l 673--9945 l --,2~BEDROOM 315 l:' Balboa Blv., Bal"°" ·1
. • LIDO ls!e 2 BR apt furn. $3300 move in, payment Sl25 Be b Ii · arage pa'tio
per monlh incllldlng taxes, . ~ ~I ' • !
built·in range & oven, dou-,, vie • ,
ble garage, covered patio LIDO ISLE, 4 BR., 2 BA I
with BBQ, beautifully land-A'Ugust $13XI.
$Caped, quiet street, n4: 673--lllJ ZlJ:-464-4708
RENTALS
Hou... Urtfurnlahed
I
l
I
I
I I
I I
lJIUMIV
Transferred 3 !I-fl. from bch, bet. 2 shop'.
Gener1I 3000~
ctrs. 4 BR, 2 BA, fncd. yd,..
1
I
$250 mo, Lease. Aft i P
Leaving area in1med!ately 968--4541
Florida bound, Musi sell. nGS. 3 Br, 2 Ba, Condo
for $29,950 -Try h 1 '"" down. J • K. Nie 0 S I OHi \I I 111 \0\ $144.,500
Call Kent Kinisley
Submit your smaller hon1e
pn our guarantee saJes
plan.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
3 BEDROOMS BY O\VNER.
$2700 down-no 2nd. $26,950.
Large family room, 2 baths,
w/1v carpets. dr a pe a,
dismvasher, ex tr a cup-
boards, fire place. s h a k e
roof, double garage. Guava,
apple, avocado, or a n I e
trees. 545-6446
Delta Real Estate RIO. retrig, frplc. Childrc~ I BLUFFS-\VORTH $39,SOC. 646-4-114 & pets O.K. Bkr. 5J4....6980 I
Btrr MAKE "bFrER!
..
....
'.
I d
• • '
-1
Honest Action,
S incere Service,
We're Proud
to Scrve
" . . Res. 54().8812 M"'I .. u View ... unll "e' 2 Blocks To Beach $270·1BR,2 Ba,"'"'· Bay
Plan w/1950 sq. ft, 4 BR's, J front, w/w, gar, boat "lip
avail Bkr. 534-$80 Realtor 645. 0303 Walker & lee Spaciously Yours BA's, sep. dinln1. Upgrad· Nice 2 BR home + a I BR 1-=========
ed. ImmRculate! Call Mrs. rental, Will make nice home
White 673-9060 or 61a-.5764 or gOOd investment. Better
Home + Income
Npt. Hghts. Dist. 2
bed room com11lete-
Jy remodeded + 1
bedroom rental -2
i;aragcs. Ne\v _drive-
ways -inc. pol.
$300 :--$29,500.
546-2313
O<
646-7171
SPARKLE FOR SALE 4 BEDROOM Jn popular "B\uUs" area:
2 BR. 2 ba, Spotless thrU·
out. Entertaining·is a pleas-MESA DEL MAR
ure in this delighlful & func-Enjoy Jiving on a quiet
tionaJ home. Inviting cnlr)'. stref't. Beautilu\ ash panC!l·
Rear patio overlook~ green Jing in living & family room,
belt, $39,900. Look & you'll bit-ins, trplc, nice lge back
agree the pricl' is riglil!' yri. Good financing.
• Red Carpet Realty 1860 Newport Blvd., CM
Call Anytime e 675-6000 RHr. 646-3928 Eve. 644-1655 ""' ;iA~11::2-~~;o· NB Lachenmyer
AND find out about a grt"at
buy. "1ust needs Tender-Lov-1 ---,,~~==o=--
ing-Care. It is a 3 BR Free-GROOVEY
dom home for only $18,950 · OM
,vill go FHA/VA. Rltr. e~s. 4 BEDRO
548--0720 It's vaeant with an out II
• KENNED. y sight ct1Stom made is.land
kHchon, D ow n poymoot?
5 Bedrooms
Mesa d1I Mor
2400 sq. ft. Spark·
Jing clean, Lile elec-
tric kitchen-3 lux-ury baths. Enclosedi------~=~
boat • t<ailec 'pace. OPEN HOUSE
nsoo to anybody, its a gas •
move ill in 7 days. Go man
go. $37.95-0. DAILY l·S PM
At 141 YORKTOWN LANE,
CM. See seven homes from
Sl.400 down. 2 • 3 & 4 BR.
Ocean Yiew For sale & rental in!orma· ORANGE COUNTY'S
Sit in 32 ft. Jivi ng lion call J.leri tage Real £s.. LARGEST
room and see-all the 5 ( J way to catalina. Ab-talc 40-1151 ope~ e~ 293 E. 17th St. 644-4494
•olutoly pecfoctcon-LIDO ISLE $ 6 ·pER MONTH-dition thr~ughout Exceptionally allr. custom 14 t;--
4 bdrms plus 3 baths,
plus large fam. rm.,
plus fonnaJ dining, plus
impressive living room,
plus unique hillside Jo-
~tion, O l!ere d at
S4C.950, 2726 Cardinal.
''1'· · 1'\ •,.\ ·'11' ~ t •' 1 • ',l'-1 ' , , ' • ' '
546-5990
OCEANFRONT
DUPLEX
200 Westcl!U Dr.
646-ml Open Eves.
BUCCOLA BEAUTY
Eastside Costa Mesa Gem ..•
This 3 BR + family room + dining room ha~ a walnut
\\'Cl bar l tine wood pan-
elUnb. Olvner moving to
East Coast so lei's see what
CASI-I WILL DO.
$Z6,950
New pert
at
Vidff'i•
john macnab
Corona del Mar
Charmer
Lovely 4 Br 2 ba home with
separate dining nn. 2'.lOO sq.
ft. located expertly over 2
levels. $38,900. 675-4070.
Stuart & Robbins ReaJton
ASSU?ttE 5~~ Loan. Sharr>
spacious 1800 sq. It. 3 BR, 2
BA, family rn1, Ranch.
PJTJ.$203/mo. Priced low at
eves. O\vner/agt. call no\v. Only $25,000. e NEW BLUFFS e MUTUAL REAL TY
2 Br, 2 Ba split level. Many l --~842~·~14,Cl-'-8,Ca~n'-yl.ci"c."~' --I
custon1 fealures, all elec, DESPERATE
etc. Lowest main!. & lease-
hold. t.1UST SELL. • BY 0\VNER. Real buy VA, F HA
O\VNER. Call Dick Dyer or cash + 2nd. 3 BR, IJ tam
53.3-4456 ext 401 or 673.5777, rm, l~~ ba, cpts/rl1-p~. dish·
12SO $33,000. Owner ~ Coron• del Mir
O\VNE:R Mesa Verde tri--"'.;..c~------
\\'ashl"r. 70' cor. lo!, block
frnrc, boat door.
BRASHEAR REAL TY
S47..&531 Eve s. 4Jl·3769 level. 4 BR, lg. famiy rn1, OPEN HOUSE
fonnal DR, 3 car garg. 2017 Mon., Tues •• Wed. 1·5
Kamat Dr., c.r..1 . $4£..8597 2700 WAVECREST Fount1in V1lley 1410
TRlPLEX Nr. College Park, Be our guest; dellghlful ex~ ---------
C.M. 2 BR ea, kit. bit-ins; cutive homc;.;J,. ao beaut. to 2100 sq. ft. Tahitian 1 story
1 b I '
•'trallll Im on canter. Patio, encl. rear encl. garages. Income $34{1 eave, u o 1 • • mo. $32,500. owner 642-9192 mac. & thoughtfully plan-yd. \vith boat gate. 4 BR, :.!
oed A Bdrm. + family rm. BA, fonnl. Dr & dinette oU
w/wft bar, ·l\16t r Br. I5xl7 built-in k.iteh. Spac. Liv. rm,
w/trpl. Loads of cupboan:ls fani. rm. & master bedrm.
It closet space: mod. kltch. Custom 1 drapes & crpt. + tonna1 dining rm. $67,900 thruout . .'! min, San Diego
Coll111e P•rk 1115
3 BR A: ~n, hwd nrs, cov
patio, blk wall, close in
achools/shops. $26,900. 4~
GI Joan. By ownr 545-3945
Newport Be•ch 1200
OeL1ncy Real E1t1te frecwy, 6 min. to beach.
2828 E, Coast Hwy., CdM $31. 775 tlex. term!, 6% '/~
6'13-3770 Joan. Brookhun;t &. Garfield
area. 4!}.l..1954 INCOME, TOOi
2 BR. home, ocean side o! L1guna 8e1eh 1705 SPACIOUS Hwy, Nowly painlod; palio r -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
COUNTRY LIVING w/privacy AND aep . rcar 1•
bach. apt. A good buy • 10-!. DN.-No Loan Fff
Cost• Mew 3100
HOME or business or both. "
BR, cov'd. patio, 2 BA,
drapes, crpts, fresh pain1
plus Xtra rm. with lg, pie·
ture windows. Ideal for, of.
fice or var. bu.11inesses. Al
present it i~ fully equ!JiPecl
for beauty stlop. Perfect for
fom. nn. Gd. deal for a'"l!;d.
tenant. Owner 213-~
SUBLET 4 BR. 21,S BA.. ta"m-I
nn, "-'/W crpt'g, lrplc,
bulll·lns, Pool & t e c
facilities. Children 0 K .
Avail July 15 on S mos
let1se. $250 mo. 642-1460
I YR I..SE W/OPTION ~'iXcll
BUY' Lovely 3 Br, den', 2
Ba. Cpts. drps, bltins, trplc,
S275. Mo. Refs r e q· • ,0 ,
'4i.7061
4 mt, fam. rm., 2 BA. built.-
Ins plus dishwshr. $265/100!
Wall Iii wall crpts & drap!s.
Fenced yd. 531-9563
*3 BR, $160. Avail July 5.
Call aft 6 or wkncls,
"'-"""
3 BR house. l~i BA. Double
garage. Adults only,
646-3314 v.ii th attractive shag home on Via Qrvieto. Ideal Includcit ·ALL when you tak~
carpets and decor· for couple or sn1aU family. over this low interest GI ~sto~i;:i~· ~~~~ 2 Br., 2 Ba .. formal din. or loan with only Sl.000 down
Custom-hilt modern on best
beaGP. Booked ful l U1is sum-
mer,, • always lilled v.•inter
for .e..'tcellent il\COJlle. Pric·
cd low at S77 ,50'.l,
\Valter Haase
Nc1vJ.y decorated 2 bedroom
1 bath, home 1vith f"'"vlatt
l separate guest accomoda-
tions. An exciting home on a
Jot ~ a half • just above
Little Corona. $47,500.
Clost to Park, schools A Call to see! Owner \viii JJMnce balance
horseback ridin1. Gracious Gene RotM!'rtson, Realtor at 7'/r> on ttus beauliful cus-3 BR, 11/) BA, patio. fenced
entryway opening to warm 67.S.2440 tom 3 bdrm OCEAN VIEW big yd, dbl. garg. $165/lno
area and offers at fam ily rm. lrnn1aculate. payment. Just put on tl~e -~k ' Co (714) 642-1235
family nn. DlstincUve open I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I home. Call now for appt. 64G-33l4"
beam ceilings add cha nn to 2 SEPARATE Won't last at this price of ---------• $38,500. $51.~ market • should go this
LIDO REALTY INC, wock. "'"today. Cotowell, .... er . 901 Dovor Drlvo, Suit< 120
this large, 4 bdrm. home for $43 500 EASTSIDE 2 BR, fenced
your family , $52,500. 155-C HOUSES PERRON • 21 yard, 1 child, no pets 3~00 Via Lido 673-8830 WE SELL A HOME 550~Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach PROPERTIES WEST Oo l lol. 3 Y... old. 3 BR.. 64 • 771 $1D5. * 54Jl.-0289
1028 Bayside Drive 2'-Ai ba, each. Cpts .. drapes It I :-C--i-C-~-C"':zi-z=::i=:Z:::iii: I .=;:=,;=;::;:::;:::==="'::::1 $ll,SOO! EVERY 31 MINUTES
Sl/40/o Loan S~ort dri~e to ocean & ma-Walker & Lee Newport Beach. Calif. I !!!'~!l!i!!i!!!!!!!i!i!!~!!!!
a»-0100 • 644-2430 4 Bedroom + Newport Beach bit-ins. S64.500 3V2 ACRES ~-port S..ch 3200
675-4130 Or•nge Coast Property Undeveloped land. City of
4 •-• ,1 d 1 JOl' shopping, Ca1hcdral type .,.,..room " esa e .1. . 1 .. Mar beauty. Huge ~Lings i_n iv_1ng room. 2043 Wes1cliU Dr. Family Room 332 l\Iargueritc 673-!l;,;-iQ Laguna. 9 Blks, to beach.
family ro om ,vith Kilchrn \v1th bu1lt-1n range 646-77ll Open Eves.
rals<'d fireplace, scr-& oven. Paneled garage for1-:::::::: vice porch, fenced extra party room. 540.1720 I• BarreH Realty This beautiful 4 bedroom Prime area, 3 br. & dress. Col'ona Highland s: 0 c ~a n ~ $137 .00 Mo. Totol OE LUXE POOL --i;itw LISTINc;-
yard. New outside TARBELL 2955 Harbor SCHOOL
paint. S31.500. --s1;,.o;. l oAN--
rm. 2 ba, Large liv. rm. Kit-vle\v; 3 BR. 2 Ba. You own
presents ~'" homr has sep. family rm., chen bit-ins. Pool has htr. the land. Full price $44,000.
custom kitche11 with built-d k CORBIN-MARTIN
Nttd Information? We are as close
as your phone!
SI65 MONTH that's all. 3 BR + Fam rm charmer, I~
ba, beautiful w/w cpts thru-
out. custom dr,>s. hit-in klt,
Nr all schools. Only $26,500
WITHIN 2 BLOCKS special cover, large cc LOTS OF ACTIVE ins. green shag carpeting, a'''· VA appraised at Ro•lto•1 3 bdrm • fQmily room walnut paneling, Se l I e r 1 '
Large Yard CHILDREN? have moved east • leavin&' $31,000. 30l6 E, Coast Hwy., CdM
thing about this home is W° I N V E ST NEAR TI-IE
Im00mooLLEiatGoEocPcuApanRKcy NEED ROOM ? Ever~.. it vacant. Hurry on this one. ,,,.,., 675-1662
JEAN SMITH, large bul the price of .... OCEAN 3 BJ\, 31k ba, den, 2
Hurry! $47,B:iO. 5 extra large bd· I I A L r Y frplcll. 3 garages, brick,
P W C 546-5440 Realtor rms, plui1 family room 2 · Dolt House • • • ORANGE 'COUNTY'S Near NB Post Ore. &l6-414 be am/ceillngs, charming
S 1 3 c d I M 646-3255 PL.US secluded den. Let us LARGEST home or use all Duplex. or
Ocean views. Should divide
Into 13 lots. Price SW,000;
29% Dn. A real aleeper.
i\flSSlON RiLTY.' 494-0731
LAGUNA Canyon. 90' x 400':
rustic Z.sty, house; possible
C-1 or M-1 20ne: $4,000 dn.
Bkr. 67"",,..&191: 494.'lliil Res.
SUPERB view, newer eust. 3
Br. Sell/trade. $15,000 Eq,
6T;i-659l : 494-nGI ltes.
L1gun1 Niguel 1707 parkling c can . orOna e ar 1.,...,....,~..,...,...,...,.~ sho\v you this Baycrest bar--GROWi-NG-ROOM. -buo·ld 2nd horn• 00 big lot. bedroom or 2 and , , 1: . · 293 E 17th SI "' •••• den home in dandy Profess I Mans.Den . Beautiful Mesa Verde. Cul· gain. • • --" You can lose the 1childrcn BROKER 673-2011: ON Cul-de-sac with beautiful
Eastside location. You own the land with this de-sac lot. Walk lo Mesa 1605 \VeatcliU Dr, NB 642_5200 and enjoy 15 minutes quiet SHORECLIFF 3 BR, 2 BA. view, pool size !ot. Lge Jiv
Just a few steps 3 bdrm 2 bath home. 60" Verde Counr.ry Oub, Price Baycrest Bargai'1 in this contemporary-st31Jed Quiet tree lined area by the r m, scp. din rm. 4 Br, 2 Ba.
from schools & shop-frontage. easy care yard. right at $16,250. ----5 bdrm 3~~ bath home In d~ 5 bedroom Baycrest home sea. Fee simple. Access to 2 Landscaped w/sprinklers. 2
ping. s24 .500--L.ers Quic-k occupancy, $.f2,500 ~ 5.f6 -SllO Huge Colonial ,ireable location, 0 1v n c r just 1h block from future beaches. Under $50,000. By sep patios. Must be seen. By
talk termll. firm. l h · E I '1 I "· Id Pa'k & M•"••'· ~--,!err. -~1 owner. 29932 MRl!a.qg Pl. LEIGHTON LINDEN RLTY (Marcinemathealll! Big 2900 !l<f ft 5 bdrm omc mov1 n1 as ." us ""1!0 . .... .. , ''"'" o\vner. * 5,..........,
LLEGE REALTY with Anthony pool, dining Amold & Freud ed owner will coMider $5.00'.I 495-5538 6:il-Il.tl _,or _SU-037'2 1500,.,_at lM_rbor.~ & family rooms&· walking down or San Diego home ln O\\'NER. Open Daily. 2 BR., ===~--~~~R~2=11
W .. 1.Hff $23.'-MES• VERDE· ,,,, ........................ ,.,.,.
1
M •• v _, -38!1 E. 17th St., CM . -~~chan••e. den, crp ts, a p p l.I a n c es. ~ED .• occup. 4-S B • ,,,_. _ ~ 1: di.!ltance to esa e,.,e Realtors 646-7755 .. Orps. 535 Hazel, C.dM. BA, built-in kJtchen, frpl, lg.
B/B
TOWNHOUSE ,
SPLIT-LEVEL 3 Bclnn, 2
bath Unit. Faces p o o J,
carpets, drapes. fireplace,
elec bit-ins, $265/mo.
Please call Mni. Fay
Bay & Beach
• Realty, Inc.
901 Dover Dr., NB Suite 126
645-2000 i:-ves. 548;69G6
THE BLUJ<"FS on !he ~
f,O' deck w/awnlng & glass
enclosed gazebo, Charmi11g
patio oU din rm , lge mastr
Br suite. PrescnUy 2 &. 2
Ba. Expansion to 3 Br; den
& 3rd Ba, $425 mo/o.r $500
w/addltion.
6-14-0837 or 497.1537 _
4 BR. $375 month. 3 BR. S'J85
n1onth .
Cay\i.'OOU Realty VacBnt &: lonesome Park likt yard with ca.scad-INVESTORS Country Oub. A great "en-Hal Plnchin & Assoc. 673-4869 lot, rm. for pool. 495-56.17
ready for Immediate ry::, waterfalls & pond, F_ull tertaining" home for the ~urury SChool--3900 E. Coai;t H111. ti1 .l-'-la92 ""'"=======:= Irvine
.oecupancy. Spacious ~ming room, 2 baths, Bu1ll-young e!l:ecutlve wilh a 2 CHOIC-E~CHOICE-L1'do Isle 1351 Dupltixes For Sil• 1975 3231
' , livi ng room with. log in rangf' & oven. Freshly $19,950 large fan1ily. POTENTIAL.. 3 BR bath
t I · od Q · t 4 BR & I '"'··-home, corner lot, 130xl80' P referred school~: I a r g e -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. burning ircp ace. pn1nt . uie street. am r.11. vw1ler pre-~ S4l·SllO all tenood. r~• !for details. rooms, airy , brightness, • carpeted & draped. Sf0.1720 fers to lease back at $185 nearl;itlelNlhtllftl _. • 3 Bedrooms, 2 BalhA $40.~10% d0"-'n. TARBELL 2955 Harbor for period of year. OlUGER~U ilattia lltalfy ~:rt ;:1se~s~nB1t. f~=: •Master sultr v.•/ stud)'
Fallbrook 61/2 Ac Rand Realty __ 645-?340 Adlllttltttl ' 642-0060 assistance from ~uer add : :a~:1tr1~~t~~
Million Dollar View 6% fHA RfSAI! l=====z:z: ~=:z:o lu~s~E-,.-ur-'GC,:Jc:Jo.:;buy::_~lh~~-,-,,·.I up lo unequal<d vollue. JUJ! e 45• Lot. So patlo. $69,500 Call or Come-In .
We Can Explain
FHA and
Veterans Plan.
2 OFFICES:
New luxucy home & income I d Po , ganl 3 bdr, 1%. baths, beam-~~ ~~:hin & Aasoc.. R, C. GREER, Realty 2 BR + 1afge • light • corr Total pymn1 s ju11t SlJl/1no. mme , $$8S$10ft ed cathedral C'lilinp, gor-3.15j Via Lido 673-9300
verlable studio. S54.000 • 3 BR llomr on tal'Jlc 101. •• gtous swimml~ pool, Eaiit. 3900 E. Coast HW)'. 67M392
10~ dn. Owoer/Bldr, 1714) DAVIDSON Realty 3 BR 2 l>aths ,fi1'f'placc. rar-side C.M. $29.900. Klnga· BL.UITS ·Bay View, on ma· -r-oTS OF-ROOM
128-1113 RH r, 27:;o Jl1trbor 18, cr.1 pets, drapc>s, builf·ins. dou· -m Real Estate. f\1I 2-2222. jor green belt. 3 Br, 3 Ba, Custom quality 3 Br., on !II'
J'I UPL.EX $55,000 6~S~'c-In-
terest. 514 Fernl~af, CdM.
S. of l\wy. 61?-6044 Broker.
~ENTALS
HpuMI Furnfshed
Turtle Rock next to UCI '
-4 BR, 3 BA. tam nn, crptc-.
DW. atov, 2 sty, 3 car e r
· $325. lnclud Club memtitr-
11hlp. Leaae OK . 833-""'9 ., 32SO
-level,
Corona dal M
4 BDRM. split
hll.lha. 3 outBid
Heart of Corona
l400
2'>
' ICl'l"llCCi'i.
del Afar.
2790 HARBOR Bl.VD.
1700 NEWPORT BLVD.
-PENINSULA p~ 540-5400 Eves. M6-8169 blc 'i;arav;c. S2:J,7"J(I, MEREDITH GARDENS-:---4 many cusl features. Low str!J'et to street lot, 3 Car
Chaim lng 3 er. 3 Ba. hOme. ---SF,500-POOC--Well,..McC•rdle, Rltr s. t>Mrooin split level, 3 bath!. 1111'. MS.500 value, Sacrifice garage. i..ge: So11th pa tio:
(ce. sunny patio. Nr, oooan You won't find a nicer Pool 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. family room. 3 car 'garage. $44,950. 644-426.i nr. clubhouse & tcnni5 els.
Gener•I 2000
BEAUTIFUL Me!IA Verde
home. 4 BR, 2~i BA, pool,
formal DR, den. l.cRsc
$400/nm. 54 6 -1220 or
5<6--0631
673-2222 Re
H~ntington Be
l BDRM. 1% ba.
beach. UlO. Mo.
536-7744
alt or
och 3400
:
I
1
i I
546-2313
OR
646-7171
\ ._:> Tl!E REAL
"-. ESTA'i'r.RS
&: bay, $49,500 homet Heavy shake roo(, 548-n29 anytime Move right In with 10% BY Owner, BaYcresl 4 hr + $69,500. Call for app 't.
Ba.lboa Real E 1t1te Co. cov..ored patio. beautiful down. Bou.I h..ltr. 962--f,637 den or 5th, fm nn, 3 Ba, lie WALKER Rlty. 675--5200 ~ E Balboa Blvd., Balboa heated "-filtered pool. Couirtyard Pool 6$11 GI ASSUME. 4 bedroom. PR-11° &: J>OOI. Be au t • HOME & Income on
673-4140 54().1720 family room, 2 baths, $223 landscaped, price reduced Bay(ront. flneat bch loc,
A·F &• ~E TARIE LL 29S5 H1;rbor "Forewr View" New Well a' pf'r mo. pays all. Bow to $73,500. 548--4598 :newt,y remod. 0 w n er . ~-_plan .rtad)' tor Aue._ ddiV· Rll --DELUXE Du"l OCEAN -... , ~ ~~ .r.fodern 3 BR. l • Blk, io ..:::::':.· ::-:::.::::.:'--~--.., ex. otil"'\lM or v•--
ocean, S2S,900 OCEANFRONT !Zl ;,.~~ 1~~~ s': BUSIEST marketplace In VtEW. $42,SOO.low dn. Ask BUSlE81' madteiplac. In
CAYWOOD REAL TY l BR haml' on excellent now t.o 3tlect colori.. town. The DAll.Y Pn.or for Naomi. Doyle C 0 · town. The DAILY PILOT
6.106 w. Coa!t H1\')', NB be h S54 950 Roy J. Ward Co. Oua16ed stcUou. Save. 548-u.68. Eve11. 6~1917 Cauifted i;ectJon. S.ve
548-1290 ~rge' Wllllamion (Ba)'crcit OUiccl money. lime l ettort, Look .r.tOBtLE HOME $19.000 money, time '-effort. Look
REAL.TOR 1-130 Galaxy Or, 646-1500 now!!! &)'rront On 'Peninsula nowl tl
n"S WONDERFUL the many 673--43SQ Ev~8• 6il-156~ DON'T JUST w::;n for aome.1 ~==6~!!>3808=""="' _.:-6T.;_S-_.322S_,,._~ =p~LA~CE=----w-a-n~t-ad~•-: . .,..,.-,,..
!:Mo>• In appllanc::« YoU (ind l~~~~~~~:!"'~ DIAL di.reel 64Ui678. O)arre thin&" lo furnish your home Bi\YFRONT bch. cottage, 3 they are Jooktni -01\lLY
\n the Cl8$8itled Ads. Check DAILY PILOT WANT ADS your •d, then sit bJck and . , . nnd f'l't&I buyt ln to. BR, Ba.y11ho1~ Pk. l...ruc PILOT elalRtliedl 64U6'18
tbtm MWI OiaJ &U.51rn!. _Us_i.n_~.2!!,t>~J1naf__ ~ay'a Cl31sit~~·-~ S~·~2!~ Whlt6 e!t::pNlntat Dun~f!
•
Rentals to Sh•r• 2005 ='°"".;.:...;=c.;:._-
S HARE nice home. 2 work·
1111> girls. Prefer teacher or
Real Estate. $100 Mo.
642--tm cw. 646-7365
Newport Beech 2200
DOVER Shore• h • y t ro n t
home. 6 Br. 4 &.. largr
patio, 70' pl'iVll~ dock.
Sl2(l0. mo, on yrly ISt,
213/7!(>5011 Of 2)3/78;.!133.!.
THE Ql/1001\ YOU CAIL.
'l'llE QlllCKER YOU SELL ..
2 ml ~in on yrlf s;. .. ..
crpts, C1rp: 4 BR. 2 bath,
fenced. $19:i leaM
•M7w9752 ' *
y 34,11
born&-...
rplc, a1rlu1p .~·
Fount•ln Ville
F"OR l.ea&e lUXUfY
Br I& tam m\, f
Tl °'°"" ' t Ii.ct .,,
no. rinl:l
It wet bar. $.123 mo
DIAL dllw• W.."1
your ad, then sl
listen to I.ht pho
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Mondiy, June It, 1 %CJ
"""'fAlS
•
Houses Unfurnished
', • ... " ~ ...
-ENTALS ~ENTALS.
Apts. Unfurnlshod Apts. Unfurnl1hod
• . ..
RIAL IJTATI
G ... ~al
-• •• ' o ir~-.. ~.-....,+. . ,.: -..
!II.AL ISTAT'
General ' IUllNIUS-
FINANCIAL
ANNOUNC •MINTS
ond NOTICIS
-, ...
..,..
No Matter What It Is L19un1 Nlguet 3707 G.ntral 5000 CoroM dol Mar 5250 . lutlnna Rental 6060 Ac...,_ llus. C?f P ortunllloo 61111 Found (f,... Atlt) 6400
DLSTRJBUT0Jt YOUNG mf.le puppy, put
N AT I 0 N A L OftGANIZA-Gennan Shepherd. We 11 ',•
YOU CAN
SELL IT
WITH A
DAILY
PILOT
WANT
AD!
EXtC resldc'noe • ! Br' 2
Ba., bUna, d1bwhr,
crpl/drp. Beaut Ww PX!.
836-5'r.JO, ~ 1215
3710
3 BR. 2 Ba. Ocean \•\cw.
S40.0CKJ homf'. lnn11ed. J>O!iS.
U6(1. Mo. 714J;,f,4-(29.I
Duplex .. Unfurn. 3975
2 BR, i&rage, drps, cpts,
111ovc & gardener.' Adulr11 nu
pels. 2A)85 Tustin ~Yl!, Cf\I
t<l:NfAL~
APh. Furnished
General <4000
SllO. SPACIOUS Bach. Apt.
\•//\I', UtiJ pd.
Broker 534-6980
Sl5S. 2 BR 4-plex W/\Y, a:ar.
....,..,~
4100
• RENT I!
3 Rooms Fumlture
$20 °$25 & UP
Alonth-To-Month Renllls
WIDE SELECMON
AppllllJ'ICeS If. TV's avail.
No Secu1it,y Deposit
I IFRC Furnilul"l!I Ren1al1
517 \IJ, 19th, Cf.1 5~~1
1568 W, Lncln, Anhm 77+2800
$155. 2 BR. l% Ba, w/w,
elec kitthen. pool, avail
6n~. Ekr. 53o..-G!l80
NE\VLY redecorated, 2 8~ lie liv nu, adlbi:, lie, rtb.
St75. mo. 646-<t095
Sl'ORa For lease Villa.re _ f
Shoppln; Cen1~r. cor. or El 160 AC or lea·~t Wt.mtr
Camino & Mendcu. Ot. Sprin&J; nr Orna:-)Cnty Boy SUl~able Deli., 1V, varitty1 Soou.ta cam, Ut N. .San
81lbol 5300 Drlu SIX!p, etc. 5'!e-Uquor Ditto Cnt)'. \VW ;.. trade
1tore tor key. tlear, w/ tine. vwnm'.
GRACIOUS adult I i v I n•, Al \VQgncr 2.13: 981-6510 815-3243 or 673-0305
SJ'3C. :l BH, 2 BA. 1.1,·nU; i11 1-sTREET-FRONTAGE 29 AC Moblle hm l*'k •\le,
clasct1. Bay &. ~a.~1 ~VIO\\', (Jn B~neh Blvd. 1480 Sq, Ft. Corona. WUI • rte~ all/put. 1, •. 1 & boat tll11.1. G1..-::oo3 ~· Jc! I••· Id···• 1 ;..., OW!'ll!r 673--0300, ti7>3243 -----=----=---~ , .. u ._,.,1c ~ or ..... u.r.•,I.;;:=-==-==,-.,"""'=
H .. untlnnton Be•ch 5400 Rltr., etc. (Bet. Ratella and Takn~owr pymntJ. 10 Acres
• Ctrrilol) S I t n s. lndacpd., no wn. $29 mo. Near
Exciting Living 1~ ·n:· ~~~· Blvd. ' • City. _,..,
In '11.J\V <IPhi. l l'K.'<ll'OOl!I, 2' RENT or lease center C.i\1. Mount, A 0...rf 6210
Costa Mes• 5100 bcttrt10ni · 2 bulh. 3000 lo 6000 !q ft. FA heat, iiiiiiiii~iijjjiijjj~iiiiiiiiiiiiii ! $140 to $19 5 •ood """''· lmprovod pa'k· S1\'in1n1ing pool. gym, uu1111, ing, 2 dbl car garages. 1\11 HARBOR l'CCrcation 1·0<11n. at 2005 Char)C? SI. Owuer.
Ceni!r;il Elr.ctl'ic Appllall<'Cs. 1>46-4401, 's;;. Rtnt all or
NEWBERRY
SPRINGS
GREENS Adull1 only. one 20 f\IUea E, of Bantow, on · Lamplighter Apts. • PRL'><E Rotail Location • ftteway. Elv , .... IL, "
16l02 Springdale SI, 17X40, Xlnt foot 4 auto trat-Acres adj to La.kt-Loretn.
City of L1k11
i\IAKE YOUR O\VN LAKE
BACHELOR UNFUR.N. Phone 59'l·:>l2l fie. 1871 Harbor, CM OUerin& the N. portion of from $11 0 .. .._ ""' <-0 acm, "'""'Int s. 2 BEJJROOi\f 2 BATII, FC!t LEASE store 23x4l. 10 tl't'C!& improved w/mOd·
ALSO AVAILABLE F-'URNISHt.:D l< l33 ern ranch houst e lc. Un-1 • 2 It 3 BD!Uf. UN URN!S ED Allio office space. E. F M Ilmiled. perftct wate.r. 301 !Ieated Pools. Oilld Care Cpts. drun.iz, huil!ins, besl 17th St. Cl\l. 64 5-2 450 , G 80 f d h .
Adj I .--·· 5-IS -.::r.1> Pf\! a l t cpl . P1ice
noN RAS trtlnl!d. bouaebrkn
UNUSUAL OPPORTUN?TY' white. Yk: Ne'llfP)rl
And & 1'll't one too. \Ve are ~
mamdacil&rm. Qur pro.l;BO~STO""NC;bW=f c:.,:;:ix.<1;:;;-,-;;.,=:i:
ducts att made 1n Ntiw approx. 1"' yn. V
York, Georeia. and Flofkla. Fairview Rd. &: \Vil /
They're wtll accepted, uni-f.1s,y JO. ~l8--60.i!I eves onlr
que, and ae:lllng like cnuy -
6401 but becauae we are young Lost
and crow1nl tut, we nee<1 l---------rood people to be our F E M A L E pup. PaJ1
"DISTRIBUTORS" to llCl'V-Shf'pherd & Bern&rd. Blk
lee and handle n>Ordrrs wHh while large pa1vs ~
bi aCf.'Ounta lllm<'d over to white .tip tail. Loil In vie:. of
then1. So, if you want a Victoria & Ftdtral. L1ttk
buaincss ot your own wilh boy broke~ hearted. S50
tremendout income a n d Reward. 642-5761 or LI
gn:r.vth potential and Call af.l _S-_l_iJ_<_~~~~--1
lord an immediate in-TINY \'ORKY male 5 mos.,,
vestment of $3,(D).00 and 4 lbs. Shaggy black fur "(itli
start PART TIME, drop us tan mrkg5. Very friendly.I
• note and we will talk it nu collar. Sinc't' 5 /2 7
over. \Vhal can you lose -\Veslminster. Reward fo1•
R~bl -P.S. There is no rel. or infor. No que&tiOno,T -_
doubt you'll love what )-'OU asktd. 892-3467
Center. ·. to Shopp nz: -location, l blk to 5 Points ...,......... $18,000, 1,; cash , bal ls! TD. $30.'QQ wk. up No pets all0'4·ed shopping e r<'. fJYln1 Si~.O. \V.\.'"TED: Busintss ioc. for SuhJf'<"t land has 220 ft,
2700 Ptlerson \Yay, at Har-nOl Ellis, apt. a), ti~:?-:Z')JJ, liq11'1r P;tckin;:: siti:'l'. 2.cro f.runta,zt! :111 Sliver Vallty
~tt and hear. Wrltt at once: Black & \\'hite btqle, I ma..
Color C0-0rdinales Corp., Answers to ?ifatthl!:w Vi .
23.i F'iflh Avtnue. Ntw \Yave St., Laguna. eall Nan-,
York, Ne1v York 10016 <'Y, 494-7909
FRIGIDAIRE 8 WK. Old bl"'k ldt!en, .,..,. • Day, week, month. bor & Adams, Costa Mesa 842-830~ sti ft. up. 213/4:::1-~:.1~ I~ .. 7 nii, E. of 1ehool. For e Studio Ir. Bach. Aplll. 546-0370 CHEZ O'"R°'Oo-cA~P'°A"'RT:\11iN'rS ___ ..;:;._,___..:;.:..,_,._-map &-. further details wrllt JET ACTION blu<' eye.s, vie. Diamond SL :'
• Inct Utils " Phone 11erv. \!!!!!!!'!!!!!!,!!!~!'Ji!!!!'!!~~ &::!l4 Atlanta Office Rental 6070 George R. Kress, t.quna • Maid Service. TV avail. 1 BR, priv patio, all elcc. Be h Box 914 Box 155
Fr\cldaice 11 min. cycle ta Balboa Isl. 6 7 5 -6 Ii I 7 ... ·
the futest In the industry. Reward. , ;•" ,
e New Caft &: Bar Nrw "I ·:! Ikdrooms -Pay LAGUNA IEACH ac • ' or , cpl.s. ,drps, car po r I . electric only Ne,vbeny, Call!. 92365 2376 N--rt Blvd. 548-9755 R ·bl d It -• N A'r Condit!--·•
30 Frlaidaircs do the work ESf ANCIA L r t t e r m e 1t1~•
ol 40, 30 min. washert. Find Jacket, Vic El Rancho(,,
out how easy it is to own Markel, NB. Rt' wa r~!~' ~~..,.. cspons1 e a u s 01uy. o ~-39'.!7 or :i.36-2T.!7 I --FURNISRED Cabin, BI E
f125. LARGE 1-Br, clean. pct! or children. SUD. Pool-\V1U1hr.rs-Oiycrs ON 1"URES'I' AVENUE Bear, 1/3 acre heavily
· quiet; adults. Beaut. furn. 54g..1l22 Pdvatc Garages Desk spacts a~ble tn wooded. beaut. like view,
Nr mlrtl. Washer/dryer. QUIET Deluxe 2 BR & Den, I newe&1 oft1ct buildln& a : alps 10 or mort. $8000.
a payiria: laWldry. 548--0220 -· '
Garden Grove, Santa Ana, Lost small black TtJTler/1; ••""°"'· 1922-B Wallace, CM 2 · 1 h lMMAC 2 Br duplx, new -t loca!k>n tn downtown ..... '"'" ·-~ BA. patio. poo. nears pg. · 1 d bli• --paint, ,crp , rp~. ..s, I • -~··• "'"h. ·~ ~ . Tuatln,, Orana:e, Anaheim Poodle puppy. male. vie Rti ., Coin·O·Matic Bch. Flea Collar. 968-5920 ' 1 REAUT quiet 1 BR, newly Adults only, No p ets . • "-t) , " ..... _. ""' """""'~
35 . 64~ ""'" 1rern1: · \Y.llll1u op · """ Uantd, c•-.tod. , ,,_111ul R. E Wan~• dee, adults over ~. pallO. .,_........., . , -·-I f _, -.-_ Equipment, Inc. Lost female red Irish Sett~r~ cov pntio. I.A/VI: y ncL... paneled partitionfnl. T" o •
no pets. $145. 2151 Orange IftllllAC. 2 BR new Etnds. Gar I:. boat park'r . entrucea: .1ront.la:• on ---------
Avt. cpt.s/drps, bit-ins. Quiel. $140. Quit!!, adl13, no pet.s. Forut A.Ye., rear leads 10 WANTED To buy from
'240 2334%. W. Valencia 6/6 vie 19th & S.A. Ave CM
Fullerton n4: 525-7833 5'!i8·3041 . \ ·,
BAOiELOR apt, rn cooking Adults. No pets. $135/mo. 847~401 P.tuncipal puk1nJ lots. $50 ov.'11tr. Baylbore•, 3 or 4 BR
facilities. $55. Utilities paid, 548--0560 I -BAYFRONT--per m<>1>th tor Qtce-Oesk house under $45,000. Prln-
good area. 642-3108 I BR grdn apt. fpl, cpl<>. Delu.-;<' z Bt>dror)m, 2 halh and chain ••ailable tor $S. ~ipali onl.v· 213-693--9530
Affiliate BLACI\ &. \vhit" male do£:,··•
Vic \Vave SI. La~ .. · * Partner * Roward! N"''Y <94-7909 ·
BEAl!r. Lgc. l Br., I ~• ha. <lrp.~. bllns, palio, pool. F ireplace, crpt~. dl'J)S, bltns. Busineu boun unerinJ 8USINISJ, •M
studio. pool, adult.s. $190 Adlts. no J)('ls $l20. 546-5163 sm. (213) 592-586.l eves . 1ervict a:-'ail1.ble_ tor $10. FINANCIAL
Light r.1rg. I.: distribulion.
Active \V/$30,000 ca 1 h & Parson•ls 6405"' · 023~10~Sa="\a=A-""-64.>-_'93-,3=-o I 2 SR Deluxe Sl45. Pr-patio. 2 BR uni dpb:. Cpl, tlrps, All utilltiM ptJd exCfiPf ~·--------
BACHELOR apt. near 17th & Gar·Adulls-no J>Pls. 2:'.'16 $140 nw. Jst & last mo. telepl.ont. Bus Oppor1un1tles 6300 mana&ement ability. Xlnt VO.RCED ~
start.in& salary + share of * DI I M
Irvint. S.1nla Ana. 548-0728 962-7292 DAIL! PILOT --·-----,--
222 FOREST A vmuI. AFFTLIATE -=~~"64"2"'-368'"°'3...,...=,.-,,., 11 BR Duplex, &:art;., elderly
f\100. 3 BR $125 -I util. No prel'd. ~o dogs, dose lo
gari:;, upgtairs. 548-6731. shop'g. 548-2720
profits. Should net party . t
seltcted ov"r $50,000 1st Yes It's Your F•ulf .:...,::. ~ Nt.:W t. 2 & l BR. Heated &:.
sauna pools, rec rm. Heil &
Algonquin. t.'llf 846-3137
LAGUNA BEACH CANDY SUPPLY
....... ROUTE
year. To arrange personal For recorded meS5> tha.i .
intervitw phone will change yolll' life. : I (ll4) 642-2n7 CAU.. · 2472 Eldin, CM. !=='==:======
1 BR. Adult or couple. noo. Newport 'Be•ch 5200 Sant• An• 5620
3345 NE\VPORT BLVD. fNo Selll.ns lnvolved)
OHices suitable for Com· Exctlle.nt income for few
merciaJ. Medical. Dental. hoW'll wetkly wofk (Days or
10 am - 5 pm J\ton-Fri SANTA ANA n) • ,
BU IL OE R • Custom res. 547-6667 .:. I · ·
"'"· paid. 54>-""5 * GARDEN APTS *
Beach Rentals i BR, 2 BA. Verv clea n.
A1r-cond .. crpta, eltvator evenings), RefilllnJ It col·
3Sc PER SQ .rr. ltctinr: money from coin OP-
remodel &: new canst. bus. LICENSED ~ · .. Estab. oHlce 10 yn. Balboa J Nawport· Buch 4200
YEARLY LEASES AVATL.
1 BR. 1 ba. wlrfnt. fur. $230
1 BR. 1 ba. View. Uni. $'lOO
:i SR. 2 ba. unfurn. $300
Sumrner & year 'round.
1"rom Sl50/wk, in 1ummer
10 $210/mo. & up ye arly.
BROKER
lii541 ?,() 642-4816 Eves.
3 BR. l ba. furnishr1I s:oo I;!~'::!"":!!'""!~"':"~~ BURR WHJTE, RP:iltor OCEAN vk>w, 3 Br luxurious
2901 Ne wport Blvd .. N.B. apr. $DJ. mo yrly lse. Cal
675-4630 642·2'l.'i.1 F.Vf'S }·o.~s, Rltr. 642-:m5{1
SlNGLE Young Adul!s Lu_-;. •,, BLOCK to beach. 4 BR. 2
ury 1.:arden a.pis 111it h coon-Ha . Avail. June 151h . S300
try club almosphert an.-1 !\lo. 67:l--4220 evelwknd
5-1().1525
Co•stal 5700
Ocean Fron! Apls
New • Deluxe
( 714) S:i.46 16
17141 SJ6.1417
711 Oc:ta n Avenut-
fl blk! W. of H. 8 . P\~rl
541.5032 OR 61S.2f64 erated dillpenaen In Costa Jale 673-5500. eves 673-l5sl Spiritual Readings, advlqs.,. ~ ,
NEW. de.luxe office spaces l\1esa & surrounding area. SMALL Groc. store in H.B.
320 to 1200 sq ft al Sanla We t!ll. routt. lHandltA res. area. Available $80 mo.
Ana F\vy & Crown Valley name b r 1 n d candy & lease. 213: 696-9880
1urnolf. 831-1400, 499-4198. snacks), S1450 C&.!h requir-ESTABLISHED gal'dening A ti E 07--,=o-=·--ed For pe"°'1&1 interview 61 ttrac ve Xptrt 300 Sq. Ft. Office .,.·"--la M••• a-a, stnd route. trucks & equip-YOUNG WOMAN
on all matters. 1~ S. ~.·,,t
Camino Real, San Clemente '
492-9136. 10 AM-10 PM ~I :
SPECIAL $2 READING:,;.,.
~STA MESA 646-2130 ......,,. ...... '"' ment available. 548--0952 all ......., -name, addreu & phont num-dancer will teach you · '
Industrial Prop. 6080 ber to Multi-State Jnc .• 9075 Mo 632 latest steps. CalJ Ardell
E. Imperial Hwy., Downey, ney to Loin 0 213: 591-4538 1-10 PAI ~-
?.f-1 Level lot in prime Calir. 9a142 ls! 11 2nd k>ans for quick ALCOHOLICS An«!ymi:llC ~-·
manuf'g. atta. 157~~ x 300 1 -~c~A~N=D"Y'"S"U"'P"'P..-LY"-cuh. Bonvw on your pm. Phone 542-7217 °' 9rTite ta -: •
con1ph>te privary. SOUTll
BAY CLUB APTS. Trvine at
16th Newport Beach.
Newport Hgts. 5210 Rent•ls Wanted -~--~---
~·i 1h 7 BR houst k 2 car ROUTE petty eq without disturb~ P.O. Box 1223 Costa Meta. _
garg. SW W. 17th St., Cl\1 . I Part or Full Time) Jlout 1ow interest lst TOs. BAOi seeks girl to exch ~, ::· -5990
{7141 645-05.1() •2 BR. 1 ba duplex, Jri ·==;-:-yard, young cpl, kids OK. *NEW BAY FRONT* 1140. 64&-9739
\Vinlrr rentals, lov.•l'r duplex, ""========
'l BR. 2 Ba fum. Avail Sept.
6. S-?25. mo. 2'11 J91h st..
N.B. STa-0236.
1 BEDROOM. La~ Apl.
Furn. Yearly $150. f\10,
*•673-8088+*
East Bluff 5242
e NEW DELUXE e
3 Br. 21h ha apl for le~
Jncl. spac. mstr, suite, din
rm. & dbl. garage, auto. I ==========I door opener avail, Pool It
East Bluff 4242
2131861-7660 Excellent Inoogie fe;r few hMI. Aleo buytrs for 2nd TDs. nis lessons 1 o r dancinj: 1 .
PHILCO Ford En&: In e er, ========= weekly work (days or tves) Sattlu Mortaaae Co. Inc. lessons. 492--0386 f'vcs. · -
need8 a room. Prtler Nwpt Commerclal 60l5 -r.n; .... • -n-H.-monty SeMril' Harbor ~ 20 yn,I========~ ;;;,;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;/ '~'6 Cl< ".,,..,........ ; 336 E. 17U. St. ' Bch/Cdf\.f. Call 833-1«1 Elcl from coin operated dtapen-e • ., "M .... ,, •• ·.'~\I! .. ,._... Announce,.,,.nts 6410 ZI04 wkdys: in c.. .. M ~ pr-n-..,.•..i ~~
• LANDL-· • INVES™'NT, "" ........ ' ASTROLOGY cia..,. -
FREE RENT~VlCE 6 wilt 0Ulce-1tore bild4: .. 6 =~ ~~·b~ ~-= Mon" Wanted '350 forming. Sununtr i;esskni,
Broker 53MllB2 years old. 20% down-owner It 1nacksl. $1~ total cash l-W-ANT....;.:.IJ5.-000--h-t_TD_1D_""'_d beginners/advanced. Ji"or •
will carry lst. __ ~--600 rtquired. For perso~ _tnt~r-info call 6r.M:i661 Day11,
Unfum house w/fr.f• l< fcnc-en fl •tore-front '"'cant' for view in your atta, i.end an archittct designed home 61a-2140 alter 6 d d f d ...., ... in HB (near Lake Park) l-:;c-====-;;;=;;;-.-1 c yar or og. b nam•, address &:. phone num-* THE COIN CHEsr * 646-2134 aft ~ pm ntw uyer. b S55,000 mortgqc v & l u t . . JEAN SMITH l!r lo: -· Resporu;ible pany, 536-6338, Rare coins, rets, maU aue: • WANTED: Garage for furn. 1 "ROUTE DEPARTQNT"' 64~ tiou, etc. 7.U. S. Coast, M-..
storage in Cdl\1 U'f!a. 67:>. Realtor P.O. Box 293tt. · gwia Bch. 494-558.i ' S~~11; ~:· sitj~Af.a~i~t. 71M allrr 5:30 p.m. 64~3255 Anaheim. Cali!o111ill 92801 ANNOUNCIEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTORY~ ..
4 BR house to lease for J or 2 --ASSOCIATES and NOTICES Pool, lirK"ns, dishes. lltil pd, \e
rec. area. Nr. Catholic
Oiun:h & school & Coi-ona
de' f\1nr lligh. e ONLY $260 e
S.17-871 Amigos \Vay, N.B. Adult~ no P<'IS. S.l7J mo. years on Lido ls ·· Will con-COMM'L BLDG. Expanding Nat'L Scrvic~ Co. Found (Fr" Ad&) 6400 Applllnce Repairs •
6·14-1352 Coron• del ~r 5250 sider buying. 673-6197 needs man to optra~ a 1---------Parts 651 ========= l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!~ & RESIDENC~ bianch office Soon to be BLACK&: yellow female ca1,l--'-":_:;;---....:c:;.:.;[
Coron• del Mar 4250 Rooms for RMt 5995 Large corner lot 50x180' opened in 0.1, 1'1ott. work about 4 yrs old, Vic 200 • AUTOi\fATfC \VASHER
----------noxt lo OP.IV red u c. e d than Wt can handle. Co. block Goldtnrocl, c d t.I _ REPAIRMAN 2 BR rum . emply'd cpl. No
pets. Avail 7/1. $300. mo .
673-797;, evM & wknd11.
Garden G rove 4610
SINGLE Young Adults Lux·
ury garden :iplg "'ith coun-
try llub alnlOSpherc and
complete privacy. SOUTJ.I
BAY CLUB APTS. 13100
CHAPMAN Ave... Garden
Grove {7141 6.16-..10.10
L•guna !leach 4705
NICELY 1urn. 2 BR, 2 BA,
Sl 75 yrly No pcls. Choice loc
538-:lOOa a fter 4 p.m.
.. .., ;"TUDIO. Pvt. entr. &: bath: $14,000, now · training at home o{C. Per-ti7J..3982 64S.5848
t:t,. _.,,. kit. privl; Pool, Back Bay. $31,000 ~ra selected must have Si\t mack puppy, \Vhite on SUPREP.IB. Appliance ~ ,.
Student/girl $65. 646--5607 PERRON 642•1!71 goocl rers. &: be bohdtble. chin. Poodle type, 2 collars. pair. Refri~. TVa.shers, ~ r • l
ON TEN ACRF.S PVT. home, ni<'f' room, gd. I ~~~~~~"!'~~. 10,00) inVesl. in lnlck I.: Vic Irvine & lSth, C.M. ers. Tom. 546.136.1. 547~
1 &: 2 BR. Furn &-Unfurn Joe. Nf'WJ)Or't Hts. Kitchen OFFICES FOR RENT tqU.ipt. Start at $250 Per wk. 646-4~
Frplcs / pri·1. patios/Pools. l='=n=·'="=· =ISO=·=,..._===== i\1oden1, spacious, profes.s:Con-+ 5ubstantial s hare 01 pro+f. BLACK &-Tan 1 err i er, Babysitting 65
al ''' mon'hly •-••. Ava,·i its, Should return ~.000 Ttnnis • Contnt'I Bkfst. put. ...,.,, ro • h f I No TD v · Do e BA Income Property 6000 811169. Contact ?ttr. Upp. per yr. ror appoint. p ont ema e. . . ic v r BYSfTifNG, f.ly home, ~ ~ni~r:ie. CdM 644-2611 Do,,..·ntoy S & L AsSOC', J\:li~ TI4 -63S-3370 t :ict. 604. .;>tiores & \VestchH. Call to Nice play room & fen~ lp ~ 6 APTS. ,·,-v,·,,..·. 837 •911 BEAUTY SALON-rent space identily 646-3173 yard. Only lunch furnished,.,, !M11cArthur nr. Coast Hwyl "'' ....., •n ... , N w !cliff ho •·· \\'ell n1aln1aincd. J::nclosrd &. have your O\VD business. WlEM~~ER. about 3 ear es Ii PP'-"6 .,.
garages. $620 nio. income MEDICAL CENTER Del ightful dr.cor, 111 mp I e mos. old. Vic. Pac. Coast area. Call 548--4J38 _ B / B FORTIN REALTOR lmmtdi•tely Avail. parking. NB, CdM area. Hiway, NB. Lt 8-9729 WILL Babysit my home i -.-;
Sparkling 1. bedroom 2 balh 1701-A \Vestcllft Drive On Atlr•ctlve Terms 642--0844 SM. Puppy found vi c . days \\'ttk. Peterson School ·
ground noor apt, Cheerful Newport Beach 642-5000 Jjj1J 8 C';ich Bl\'d, WANTED: oH-lale liquor Newport Blvd. & Bristol. area. H.B. Good ref .
den-dining room. All clcc. 12 BEAUTIFUL furnig~ \Vcs!minsler licenst, Orange County. 645--0831 53&-6784 .-:
Bl1 • init incl. dish1\'ashcr. R · l Hod Riiy "·U ... ~39 aptz w/pool. $1BllO. per mo ex. • ges • .._. : V'M"O.I \VALLET, White Front Park· BABYSITTING, my horde: Patio-deck & &arage, 2 short S4-"~'L
blocks to Ocean. Yearly income. $1.JS,000. By owner. •-£.J ;, BEER BAR Ir: Piua. \Yalk in Ing Lot, CM. Owner Idcntily r><Jesa Verde area
lf'll!!e S250 per mo. Available Costa f\-,esa. Box P 862 Dai-C "·°'l,-A'°•",.-,0e=1....,,7!•-,-. -,.-,.-n cooler. Close to \Vhittfronl, 642--0857 * 54(1.2732 +
July 1st. ly Pilot. Ol!menlto. 120' x I 0 n '. C~1. Sac tor cuh. ~3343 TIIE HUB or activity tor CHJLO care 5 days week, my.,, ·~
642-5678
BUSIEm' marketplace in
town. The DAJLY Pllm
Oassified section. S a v t
money, tinie & error1. Look
now!!!
Bay & Be11.ch Rralty, Inc. FOR SALE BY OWNER Owner, .-.9~ or 492--0386 CHINCHILLAS service bwtnessea ••• tbt home. 1'fature woman.
6Ta-3000 4 units. 2 -2 BR. I BA I.: I d , I R I ... _,.. Are .vou interested! Ousified Ads. Dial 642MS ~1932 • '~ 2~7 E. Coast Hwy., 001: 2-3BR, 1~~ BA. 548-6155 n u1tria enta VVYV Vi!il our ranch 6(2.-0465 to ot1tt your l'Cl'vioe NOW. SUf\.11\tER Fun for your~ .•
TI{F: SUN NEVER SETS on I'::"'==-======-=======":':= i\l·l, COR.i~ER 127 x 90 Toys, playmates. swim'..
ClaM:ilied's action power. Costa Mes• 5100 Cost1 Me11 .5100 ,vl900 !Sq. rt. bldg. 19th I.: Bus. Oppor.tunities 6lOO 8u1. Opportunltl• 6300 ming. Day or week. 536-~ .• J.~or an ad lo sell around \Vhittier, Ci\1. &t2-3490 24 -
the clock, dial 642-5678. hr. Brick, Mllsonry, e tc.
2000Generet
Solve a Simple: Scnnnbl£d Word Puzzle jor a.Chuck le:
0 R..:iHonv-l.tten 111 the ,~-..,
lour 1Crombltd wordi b.-
low 10 form four a;mp1• wonh.
IOIRNIG l . I' I I I' I _
IROYFA I
. I I I' I
I' I I I I' A man never knows tliot o
woman hos any old clothes
..--:-.,.,..,,,.,.-----, until l'MI -h.r.
• ,TOMTUS I L·Q
I I' I I' I o .:-1... .... ''"k" ·~"' by filling In thti mis.Wig word
you dtvtlop from llep No. 3 bl.low.
t 1 ~~E~~~~~EsElTE•S r r r 1· 11 I' 1' 1
. •GcF:N~~l!l'""0 1 ,, 1 1 1 1 1 1
2000
--.
ICIAM-Ll'JS ANSWER IN_ CLASSIFICATION 8800
----
CONS.TRUCTION.~UST CO~PLETING
HARBOR HEIGHTS Jour
LUXURIOUS 2 l 3 BEDROOM APTS.
•Fireplaces
• Dilhwashcr
• l\tammolh master
bedrooms
• 2 Bathroom~
•Central forctd
air heatina:
HARBOR HEIGHTS
e Spacious <:&bin.ts
·e Gafftl'!I A: Sattlcl"!I
gas bullt0lns
•Balanced po\ver l\vini;:
• Enclosed parldns:
• C~t• l drapes
Jour
3117·A Cinnamon Ave .• Coste M111
(1 block west of Harbor BJ,·d.
2 blocks IOlllh of th• San Dit:IO f"rttway)
Phone 546-1034
l\1·1 Industrial Units
12.11 to 16,000 sq ft.
See Robtt1 Nattress Rltr.
Costa P.lcsa 642-1485
6100
BLUFF Lot 100' from Pacific
Oct!an, 20 ml. from Calif. &
?.lex. at San Antonio shores.
99 yr. lease. S9500 value lor
$4!m. 642-7788
BEAUT. Panoramic lot, all j
utll, Tustin. 12300 Vl!ita
Panoranla. Owner 6i~l243 1
or 6'13-031Xi
Acreage 6200
COUNTRY HOME
Larae l'Omfortab}e 4 bdrm
homt. Very ttcc!:niq remod-
elfd l en!arred. Hu fam-
ily room, utility room. '°"'
mal dlnin& room,. 2 f11>1cs.
etc. On approxim&tely 4
beautUul acres of avocados
Ir. Hmt1. Jn tht ('OWi.try but
cklle to Vista, San Ditto
Co. F\111 price $47,500, tor
more lnfOl'm•tlon can GJimn
Tho1npton. I
Eckhoff & Astoc., Inc •
JSU W. 0\apman Ave.
Oranat. Calif.
lil-:1621, Eve.wkntJs 53MTn
CANDf SUPPLY ROUTE
Man or woman to restock new type coin
dispensers wiUt high quallly package candy
products. NO SELLING!
Df PEJIDABLE PERSON CAN
EARN UP TO $800.00 A MONTH
Part or full time positions needed in this
area. Requires car, exchange of referen·
ces. $1450 to $2990 cash, secured by inven·
lory and equipment.
\Yrite for personal intervle.w,
number, to:
Jiving phone
STRAIE61C FRAIKHISfS DEPT. 25
533 South ·2nd West,
Salt Lake City, Utah 84101
65to
BUILD, Remodel, Repa'tr
Brick, block, concret e ,
crpntry, no job too 1m11!1.
Lie Contr. !J62.6945 "
QUALITY Repairs -Alter>.-; '
tions -New cons!. by mµi .
or Contract. 646-3442
Bullden 657~ "
"' * CARPENTRY
& GENERAL REPAIRS
Call Dan 642-7505 aft 5 ,
C•rpentering • 6590
CARPENTRY
"
~UNOR REPAIRS. No Job .
Too Small. Cabinet in sar-
agts A: o I he r cablnett. ' ..
$45-11~. U no answer lcavt .,:,
mq at &46-2312. ll. o .
Ande...:Jn ,
REPAIR, Partltions, Sm&D 'i, •
Rt'model. etc. Nlte or dsJ. .
'tt!u! Call KL."'I 54C).46T9
i\IASTER carptnler, $4 per •
hour. Remodcllrw-Repaln. ,. . .
M2-Ml9or53&-3900 1.
REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS ·,.,
CABINEITS. Any 11.ze )ob ~ • ti )Tl. exper. 54&-6tl3
CARPENTRY • repalt1 . •. ! ,
atn'I nx it. Qulllty worlr:. • .. ••
642-8484 or 64j....{H1J ::
• "
.... ...
$9000 '•
w/ed·
Garde:
H& ~
fo r un
SiXl
lii&:hl&
built -
d111s. · .....
Lak•.
rent 5
&lake
Airpla;
Owner
337-31E
Do Y" \Vill !;I
unit1'
\no, • Ow""
Wild '
Corvet
C..tl
!Ate j i:
VO WI;
s...,ni;
offshot
trlr, l
lat~ n .,.,,,.,
HAVE
lot N'.
Hwy t
WAN1
499-19!
!!AVE
A·l cc
ri~ fll
for Pf\
sum;;;
t.ltdl!I
lama.ti
f""' h
hnre. 1 ..
!!!!!!!I SERl -cenM
• Qj
Co""
Roa.; .-a
!>pet c.an .:
~
"""" s
Corit --"'' K: uc·i:J: •• l
ADDI' .....,,
esliq'. ... ~
~ -Cal'jl -A Kl'I
of a'!
for U
trolu: poi<j:
Cup
CAR:
I
BIJ
642-141 = Dr1fJ
DESii
""'" ..... ,
==;
Ga~
~
Th<
Exp
E
Gr.
NE'ii
Com
"P I
estir .....
...
"' AiTs
Law
Ing .
JAPI ..,.,, -CLEi .... -' ""' Plant
YAii
'""
--------. .,..-----.. -·' , ...... • • ' _, ---~-t ~ -". .. .... ' . . ............. ,.;.'-1~• I
-
I~*~-~:~;,.__ *!111-•:fll-•:•·-~il'IHllVICI D_!!ICTOltY 'JOIS ~~~'OYMINT
Up!!t!'"'"ry 6HO 11o1, w....-MO.. mo
=-a·s °'"'· Uhol. · ·
EllrolleUO.-t OCA I~ tin! f0.145'
00 Ntwport BL, Cll. i..rp --
.IQIS i IMPLOYMINT ~ 1o o..,.. eo.ntr
..... woni.i·• 1000 l'Alt TIME
YOUNG man -Job tralnln& In ........ _ ..
hla. etc., tor min. .,,.....
"~
.
~ • .Nott, IM o.111.Y P1lOf
Jqtl & IMl'LOYMINT JOll & IMPLOYMINT Jl~O~ll~&~IJ~MP~L~. M.~_~!!;~~~~~~ !!!~~!!!m
H•i• W•nt .. , Mon.7200Holii W•nted. M•n noa Holp HUaHES ~ :=• J4GO "":.!..anted
IMMIDIATI Ol'ENINGS for NIWl'ORT llACH CLERK * * COOKS * ..,...
•xfllrleneH, m•ture, rtllebJe.
R•lt-l'IHoo ILICTRO.
PLATIRS
TYPISTS
'*
J. c. ,..,_ Ila.
l'ulliao-Nt<fPOll-
NEEDS P.lln' TIME
SALESLADIES
*
· • Wheddy• W•nlt Whaddy• o.t?
SPECIAL CLASSIPICATION l'OR
NATURAL IORN SWAPPERS
Speci•I llale
HILi' WAJITCD
WORK EVES I: 30 TO 10:30
PM, WE NEED 2j MEN
TO START WOl\K IMMEI).
L\TELY. NO EXl'EIU·
ENCE NECESSAllY AJ
WE ntAIN YOV.
APl'L Y IN l'IRSON
-=~& W RESTAURANT 2115 Horllor IMI, Corio Mo1•
546-nOI
TOP STARTING PAY
S Llnas-S limoo-5 bucb
ltUl.ES -AD ¥UH IMCl.UDl
ALSO
EXPERIENCED mne-cam--...,..., Cook dltb.' Ex..i. SUMMIR WORK fOR
Hof, Wontod, Man 7200 Holp W•nled, Man 7100 HUGHES
NEWPORT llACH
~ SUperlor Avenue
Newport 8-b. c.10. __ ,,, 1-W~I J"lll MW i. trtot. 1-WMf ....... IA .,... -..vou• 1t110M •Ml., ---.. ......, ,_ ., ~1111. Jent ""· Ext 1111, -TIACHlltS & FILTAIRI
NOW HIRING
'410TMIHG l'Oft IAl.l -TltAOIS OMI. YI * RELlABLE, .,. .... Mid> STUDINTS HUGHES PHONE 642-5671 BABYSITS my bome. J\e&t. PLt¥ an ~. work c houn To Pl1ce Your Trader's P1rMllM M , ,,_•nii""ii'"-' ""494-"-"lM'-'7,__~-· I in tM evtnil!r. For tnttr-'EXP k o view ctJJ Mond1.1 and,...._
employer • M • r
NIW1'0RT llACH
$9000 ' eq. in 50x140 R-3 lot
w/&d· Tented hse, next to
Garden Grovl'! Civic Cntr &
HS. tQ!al val. $20,500. Trd
!or units or ? 547-6469 Bkr.
SIX 'U n i l • apartments
Highland Pk. 7 yn old,
built • ins, air -concl, cpts,
drps. Will trade for lot in
Beach Cities. 213-796-1210
Lake Arrowhl'!ad • Magnifi·
cent 5 Br, 4 Ba on rolf cse
& ia.kt.-View, $125,000 clear.
AirplMI'! or boat trade.
Ow!'lel' (TI4) 459-3103 or
337-3169
Do yo.u want more income?
iviu tJ!d. $26,009 eq, &side
units wl$3&3 mo. spendable
inc, · fctt" your clear home.
Ownet/bkr. 646-3750
WUd '65 Italian sportl car,
Corvette eng; 370 hp, 2+2.
Cost SJ,0,000 new. Trade for
late j~ep, carry-ah or Vol·
vo w~a-546-53117
Spo~ Power Boat, 18'
oUshore 1/0 , fully equip!,
lrlr. ~t cond. Trade Jor
late nliPdel car or income
property. 837-8664
HA VE qcean iront 9/10 acre
lot N'.. San Francsico on
Hwy l, Utt & clear, $15,000
\VANT beach units. Bkr,
499-1990, 494-5488
HA Vi::. 24' Cabin Cruiaer,
A-1 cond, 135 hp grey ma.
ril'll'! enr. $3000 value. Trade
for property or ?????.
."Call 675-1900
SUmmer in Morocco on
Ml'!dltejTltnean, Amer. Dip-
lomatic Corp. Will trd Jae
furn home &: cars for same
here, &42-7297 & 67J..5323
* *
APPLY IN PERSON
Lake An-owhead wattttront , w~r er . wn da)'. Alie for Mr. Jame1
-• ""· 150,000 vat Pa---Oood .... ,. 774-7251 Ku establilbtd a new
--Dip!.
La:se international corpora..
lion .......... In Orarw<
County. Many ,....,,.. now
available in all departments.
Net experience neeeasary.
Port .,. Full Tlmo
poeition now avail for .-veraJ
ambitious men, ~. 1'1ex.
lble hn, 1C1me eves. pre!.
Car nee, Pra:ttae won -with
above averqe eamlnr•·
• l'ENNIY'S ciflc Pallsadel OCl'!&D vu kit, ~ 131-6186 alt C
frtt I: cir, $21,500 val. HOUSECLEANING. Exp .
Want: Income. Bkr. SU.mt Dependable. Own ear. Don't
amokt. $1S dly, IG-'7111
43' Mathew• FIB yacht, twn
lm,...W '""· Full olec w/ -tic Halp 7035
a/p, $50,000 clear, Want
S50M home, bus. or smlr. * HOUSEKEEP~ O'R
boat. S46-8030, ext 434 8&4-COMPANION available Jor
4004 tam1b' care or lin&le lady.
Sallboat 38' J'OOIJ\Y, fast ~::wftfertnct'S, drive.
sailer. $17,500 vaJ + ~r 3 HOMEMAJCERs 547.fi681
Br. hae CM, $15.750 vaJ.1;.;.;~-,_-,;......,~~,..1
Want ccmm'I or indust. OUnelt live.ina. ChetrfW
prop in CM. 673-«i17 Pennanent. Experienced
Almost 1000 ac., $250 M val, Far Eut Altl'ICY 6U41CB
80 mi from dntwn LA. 5 Cieor(e Allen Byland Abency
min. from Jwy en paved rd. Employer Pay1 FM
btwn Buumonl & Oak Glen. lc.i-B E. 15th, SA 54T-o395
TTd !or ? ? 547-6469 Bkr.
OLDER unit:s, aood write-Htlp Wantelf, Min 7200
oU. $20,0CO Equity. Want
out. Will exchange for land,
TD'a, or ?
Broker ~2'29 HUGHES
Lake ArTowhl'!ad waterfront I CH ~"' < "'· l'O.OOO vat P•· NEWPOltT I A
cific Pallsadaa ocean vu lot
~t: ~n:~~. ~~~ bu ~ requirements to:
BAYFRONT &: dock, 3 Br.
3 ea., val. $89,500. FOR
T.D.'a (cons.ider be/opt, or
trade !or !? 1 No. 2 Balboa
Coves. Owner &T>C.111.
Newp:irt Hei&hta JovtlY 2
BR home in nlceat tt1idl'!nt·
ial area. Trade SU,000
equity for income or va·
SWISS
SCREW
MACHINE
Ol'ERATORS
cant land. 642-2799 with Torno uperienot, Abil·
What do YoU bave to trade t ity to do own lf!tUPI ta de.
Lilt tt heIT -tn Oranae mable. Top dcUan tor top
County's Wwut read b'ad-men. inc post -aM make a deal.
Openinr• on Fint and sec.
* * * ond ""1h!.
DISPAT0-1!.'R
'IRI IMIRGINCY
l!QUll'MINT
DISPATCHER
$562. • $614. por ....mil
{~mml'!Dded for
$59L-'1!1. July I, 1'69)
CITY Of
NEWPORT llACH
Requln:• H.S, diploma
or G.!:.O., 2 )'ft. feeent
experitra in public con-
tact WClfk. Expertence in
operat1on of radio • ttle-
P h o n e c:ommuntt=aUon
~pment Ii td&'hb' de-
atred, ·-.. -. "'1 Olli«, Ct1y lloli. 3300
NtwpOrt Blvd.. cnt>
673-6633 ~ 5 p.rn.
.. ....,. June If. 1119.
* DISHWASHft
tfull ·•-1
Prefer clean cut YOW1I man
with ............ •P!lll< ...
twHn 2:D:t pm M(t C:OO pm,
in ptnon.
COCO'S
tmme41&tt ope~ are a-... exptrltn<:ed
penonMl with ~·
-mold expel'l<nc<. We Med:
e SITUI' MIN e MAINTINANCI
MIN . e Ol'IRATORS
OpenizWI are on &lJ 1hift1.
APPb' in penon or tend re-awne to:
ALSO
SUMMER WORK fOR
TiiACHIRS &
STUDENTS
For intl'!l'View call Monday
and TUl'!tday. Ask for Mr.
J..,...
Oppty tor --\Vo train. For introd!. interview
call Mr. MWt SM-8550,
\VANTED: Marble ca,tpenter
SS per hr. Prtvate party.
343-2519
Alonclo, Women 7IOO
A VARIAN SUBSlDlARY
2722 Michel-Drl,,. tAdl. to Or-Co.
Airpert)
I rvlne# Cellf. 92664
Mequajopportunlty
l'!mplo)oer M I! F
FASHION ISLAND
10 AM Id 5 PM
-·-~
* *
MISS me A&EllCY 774-7251 Extt. Secty, Mloolon VI•Jo e TELLER e t.rta ••••••• , ••••• $500 mo. ~.11 ._, -CAREER Secty, aood lypbl. ••m• EXPEl\IENCED -~·--.......... -
Ol'POITUNITYI ebor11W>d ........ l<IO mo. ~Uvelo ~ty .... ~ ~
Centi.I Aul.st, Garden Grow ._._v .... ,_ '" "' "' -
S J~ ~---~ -·-a .... e PROOF Secretary .......... to 1S25 HUGHE . ,,;.-:.;y:,.,.,..., s';,1,.""i;;"~H~: OPERATOR. Secty/Pur<hulnr .... -
-No ~ IMC'IA,,. tncton Btach art& • $433 MO. Sec/SaJu, leaainc •••• $500
NIWPORT IEACH 'll'•lnln·IUD.,put-RecoptlonUt,hl&hcluabe&u-UNITED CALIP'ORNIAS. Cl•rl<lno llCllis •••• ;m
. Mutuol futMI· Mvt.-1Y aa1on ••••• .... • 1331 mo. IANK BooKel'/:,~h • ··""" • "' .. ,, SOD Superier Avenue ,_.., 488 E. 17th St., Sulit 22t ....... _per · ·········•• ,... a
.. h C Ill inc. Cotta M,.. "2 11111 -H•r•--ll•d. Gli'l Frl/ltto lh ···• lo $450 Ntwperl •c , • . Npt a. ta Wettclltt IQ.Im • -..-UUf' .. Accta Pl)'able •••••• $COup
I.A. 1212 N. Bro.dwQ Helft Want.ti Ce1te Mtte Secty/1-ctrl ofc •••• $4&lup Equal opportunity
l'!mployv • M • r
NOW HIRING
UMIN
347-WI Women 7400 546-2031 Secrotar)' .............. l450
DISHW .. SHER Recpt/PBX ••••••••• to $H2
.. Oenorol Olli.. Equal opportunity employer Equip Control ...... to 1<1• IOTH SHlm xint ,..,,, ,. join ,......, s.cty!Rea! &tat• .... SlllO
Apply In ,..,_ N•wport Beach '°· Good G~l Frillllo ·" •• ... 11..1<1»
SURF & SIRLOIN •d....,.menc Pmty ""· Bench Bllllnl am ........ to SM0
BIO Pac. Cot Hwy l<OO. ~!!,.e.,~o =~·:·:::::
Nowport Beech Employment Apncy Assemblers c.lhler ................ -
MAOIJNlsr --So ~-•· •··i. •• Me4icai Sec/P.T, •• 12--"-"'"' · ....... ~. ~· "'i''• Gen Ofc/P.T ••••••• PJ5br Wo Hood Oporolers HosPrrALITY HOSTESS 11 Of a...n proc!aion electzo. ' Drill Prell I: Bl&nchard J-1.l .. _ rot ture trlndm, packer 6 3 ma. .......... ,. ma. women tn6clwlie&J devices. E:xptr-'10. W. Cout HilbwlN
chlnl&t hineet. lo welcome ntwcomtn to ienee preftrred in amall Newport Buch ...... 21'1 Woatcllff Dr., NI LAllGE COMPANY the community. Muat lulve pull uaembly. Trainee• -"'-=",-,-,--__ ...,.._I EXP~INO IN Wtbtr Speed Equip Co. typewriter, car, and ht bon. considered. Apply at GIRL l'RIDAY IOY'S ATHLITIC o••Va• co·~-310 So. C.nt>r, Senti Ana .. hie A ... -· E .. _,_ -~· -· ~ u"" n<· ... , ••• = · PP~ -· ·~. STACO INC we .,. •.,..,.Unc "" ~ ATTINDINT ~ -· Suite 1, Tuatin, C•lll r , Iti<J. Grat,_ 1or
Knowl:edfe of equip~nt A TOP JIAY Recefvlnt Clerk ~ rtaht woman. Run front aa. a~tus U5td in p)\yllcal $3'0 Typlit with• fvturel 1139 l•ktr St. tee,: typlJl& (accancy a
fduoation &:-sports p~ Must bl al* io 1tut imn'M:d· Youns ma.rrled, 11Able, Call Unu.~al cppty now open w/ Cnt• M-1• mllltl , Ute bookkHpUlc &r: ~. ~~ ~~ iakb'. CALL PERSONNEL Dan, :P.ferchants Personnel top notch So Santa Ana Co. 54~1 pl.ufn& pmonalH;y. Vari-
-.. ·-..-·-OfflCE FOR INTERVIEW Apncy, 20C3 Westcliff Dr., Will train tlexowrtter. Start Equal Opportunity Employer et)' of dutieai. ~Ult pbone
··---------------Rl'!location a.uislanct
provided.
inc school"•' athletic l'!q\lip. MONDAY &: TUESDAY. N ... MS-2770 $420. Call Ed~. 5fl.54lO. Ja. fOT appt: 540-1154 ~ '*':!' .:'~= ~: 774-7251 .LATHE & MILL "'n Best Employment..... EXPERIENCID PHN'S & LYN'S SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY
Ce~t, Concrete 66001 ---------G•rdonlnt 6680 HUGHES
17, 1969, Contact penonneJ O~t':t>ot-s \\·unted. Also cy, 2120 So. Main. Santa Experienced Public Health
dept., u-. Beach MOTOR HOME SALES RIP. Ana e ISCltOW e N...,.. and U..-v-
• O)ftcrete llta, patios etc.
Co~te a: blk top ••win&.
Reas;-Don, 642-8514
• CfiNCRErE work an
types._ Pool declm &: ciatom.
Call ,lilS-J.124
•C:OSI'O_M PATIOSe
concrete .awing &: ttmoval
Stall'! Lie. •842--1010
J•p11nt1• G•nlner
Exper, compl yard lll'!rviot!
f'rff.4ia!1 .548-7358, 546-ar.zt
EST¥1LJSHED ' prdenint
roui,. 67 truckl A equip.
mtnt avillabll'!. stS-0962.
NEWPORT IEACH
Unlon Hisb Sehool Diltrlet. l'xperlencedonly. GIRL FRI DAY, book· SECRITARY tionalNunea......,,lor ...
S3&-93ll 9lll Knmer Ave, Unit E keepln&/ ll'!cntarial. Mon namie home health apnc:y
.IANaoa • BUILDERS oll rtoc~ ~ft;~tmlr ~i"' s-s. ... ~: UNITID ~~l'ORNIA ........... WAda>& -
50I SuploriM Avanue MAC ~·s II hirinS • ASSIMBLfRS "'° per -lb 1o ,,.,.._ N• J, J. KNJCICEIUIOCKER 54~
Newport leHh, C•llf. janttoriaf help. Preternd • •. . exl)l'!rlence necreiaary. Men-Huntinaton Btach 3141 E. Coast Hwy Pholemat Drlfto-Tltru *'" 43 tolO. Experiencied .. Immediate Ofl'ninll f« tnen liq th1'0Ulh Friday. Chance SALES WOMAN, Ex· Corone ftl M.r S&1ea 11rt.ast U lo 25. -...k ~. .. M 6'~ ~.::. :.,.. JWC!f= with ~ ift pl\lmb-to advance. Write Dally PQ'ienced in ladle11 rudy to 67J.9240 day A Wftkend ah1tta. Ad-
H•uH"I t130 be~'ll ··-"-t -flw, ei.ctrScaJ;·waUt, ed1n-Pilot Sox M-417. wtar. Apply Mon thru Fri vance to $1.95 per hr. Not -,. • .., ' -"'~ ... and &llh wU1 SHOE .,._., •0 from IM APROPOS No. a 11ummer Job. Appl)' ill conditions. A-1 .. in -" °"we ~ ma na.se r -. Town.· ~-un-·, ,.,_,._ Equ•I opportuntl;lt employer penon •t Pbo~·t -•. GEN&RAL HAULING l--------·lbe ·~ ~-· train YolL Muat lulve .,,., traIMe. Ammca'• !useat •• s~ ., -·-•· .... -~ CoritrKton 6620 & CLEANUJI BARJBIDER tween 2 PM to 5 PM • hand tool•. See R1cJc. 2135 retailtrs of. women's lhoe1. EXP'D t e I e Pb one in. 17th St., c;:M. June I, 10 A
.ADOmONS-REPAms $12 per load. call MT-9100, 'attentien ~ Canyon Drive, C.Osta Mesa LEEDS Shoe Store, So. terv:lewen, work J ro m ll 9 am • C pm.
: REMODELING 962~ alt. 3 & wkends. f.lr.Jack~·16168 Beach "2·9'7Sa Ccut Plazt. Contact ?.Ir. borne, hour• to aWt your Qbjljfie& J&WILRY SALIS °''"'"1nc A Plarutln• HAUUNG, c1e ........ ,..., DAYS. a. Nms BI..i. HB Pbel.. ac11 ....... c.n •1wn 10.2. L" ft b R•lall ..i ...... 5 -·
Kttcl"'n'·Ba1"'. "'· """"''· etc. 1.rg truck, GARDtNEJiS • 1111 i iii I COST ACCOUNTANT ProjKt l"llneor $700. Morilyn Scharer 862-5957 CHl Im e <o hn. s.iary + comm.,
Llo'd. A Bonded. Frtt est. handyman, --can Apply in ponan ~lnal•. tor ~~ .. ~ °"""' Cowl"' Mft. Mini· 2 yrs coilose + mtchAnl· HOUSEKPR • com-n. 5 ageOCjY '°· bend!tl. L>waon'1J....i.
A a · B CONSTRUCTION BOB 645-2256 armer type l'•"'•q•1;1<f• mum 2 yn eXP prettr&bly ell &bWl)t a: draftl.nr; Call daya, muil havt car .l 1ocaJ en, 6500 Huntincton Omta-,
1122 Paularino CM GHT RUEBfll £ l£E tart .l amall Mlary, Good w/ ttanda:d costs. Salary "'--... _ .. __ 11 a..-: ____ , refll ''"' •·• h Quality Posi tions for ._Hii-ii.B-.;. ;;--;:;===-:..,.,! • 1J haulin&. Fumlture, job Cor a pensiontr Wrttt te I -1 .. t-..,_., .im:-n...... ....., • ...,JUJCI • ......,et u>· om e. Q···"• " *SfS...4!Ml * gari,ge clean-up, t r a 1 b . • Box ' commtnaura w ..... -.. Apncy 2043 Wfltelltr Dr 644-3285 1-5 wkday1 Mr ouuu..ied Applicants SARAH COVENTRY bu '
ADDITIONS. rem o d e I • 642-2070 p Cl9 Dally Pilot. .l upnienee; $9 M ran.st'· N.B Ms.mo ., ~ . . 411 E. 17th St., S\dte 224 optnlnp f« fUll .... put
bl t th 151 E. C..tt Hwy. iXFiiUiNCED -1.. Send NIWDt • A1U7 re-'s•• ... • u.u LI=SED -•--poo p-I, Cotta Meu MZ-1470 ttrne salts. u-1 ....... 11. re~ e; ~ o e r YARD/car. .......... n---"'VJ -.t-lo ~... -··t -~ • 1 e n er a I ... ~~ aJMLP1 ~·"' · Th c 1 1 ....._. ~ Newpert leach ltead1 emplofmot wtlb "' ....... ._.ts ..,,._ .rlllU -• N ....... , P!easant work, m lnfttt, n0 l'!Sli\tta~es, en a tnea. ivy, dirt. tractor b&ck1---::-'--:--:---I ocea.nocra.phlc co. Apply Box M ISO. be]Jler *flit nQnt:ty. top pay, ewport 'IOD • SECI'YIREQIT dellv~. hr lntllrit•
!47-<!'16 hoe, andlnc. 96U7'5 Assist1nt Ult PI;canti.. C.M. INSTRUCTORS Mi-om * Ar ... "2-<851 Xlnt opply .., str1 w/ ... ..n 5'1).<)81<f &!1-1149/
-liba'IWa moldtn tor rou. T I me deUcattn!tn MANAGER small ~. ctptl ptnonalU;y. Hta\')' 1474950 1 .C:.;•;;;•.,Mt:;,:..C;:;.l::;N;:;.n;;;i:;;n~g-..:;66.;.2;;;5 HouseclMnlnt 673J EdiAN Matwe, Youns adult, looldna: man. 5 Day1 -wk. Stt Terry, o/35. Xlnt dreu / QOtU typq, Ute bkJEn'. Advance ..;..-=-'"c.,..~~~~~-1
A .. --· ·-wax ---M1n11er M IC. Marine exp. fqr aood futuft, able to meet 495 £. 17th St., Costa Mela wtar exp, S26-m6 .WI. to Exec Secty w/ln 1 year. Cott Accnt,. Clerk 1U1 t..nL1~ ....... ,-u-= CARPETS, Windows, firs, pret'd or -w1il train auto ~.. bll A .~In .., ~"""" ""'" to.,, of a '9 ':t 12 rug sblim poo free medwtlc. Call eollect Lake '-'1• pu c, Pl'"# pertcn. ,o --...-.. Mr. Richards, . ...,#
for ~c. 1bowin .. of 1~ Elec· l'!lc. Res or Comc'I. Xhlt Retail rrocery expl'!fience, Holid1v Ht•lth Sp1 Help WtntM, Men 7200 H•I" \.V,. .. t~-t. M•n 7200 ~ Able to use e&lcW&tor + trol·~ Call 96i-7221 wan. work Reas! Rl'!ls. 54M1ll dlY or night thift. Paid vtc, Arrowhead Marina. n• . ' COASTAL AGENCY exp., call Lorraine. Ma-
-• 67'0 lnaur etc. Xlnt Opph•, cau 337.250'1, Costa M!'A e Hunttnrton BC'fl. A -·mber ol eha.nb . Ptnonnel AcfnCy, poir4Ment alter 5 p.m. J 'teri I ~ I -1n1 • for appl, 842-8520 a.EANUP MAN, over IJ. OYS 10. 14 SnreUine A SntWna Inc. 2043 Westclitt I>rtw. N.B.
C1r;9t l1ylng & WAU.S, Windows, l'.loon, Dr•ftsm•n te $700. Start 5 AM. No ex,. WW Carrier Rout• Open 21'9o Harbot Bl, Costa M.aa 1·6'>-2170""-"ii"-===c;--·I " · R•pair 6626 cupeta. C<>mmm:W ~ Sim ... dralttna. mochanlcol. train. nu: ZOO, E. Cout !or . FASTIDIOUS Si!CltlTARY
reatd•ntlal. Dilly, weekly c.u nan. Mm:..,,., Per· Hwy• MacArthur N.B. Laa11na-. So. Laa\llla Atlentic: Reseerc:h SEAMSTRESS KEZY, Inc. ""' ... tmmedi· CARPET • VINYL • TILE and/or Mo. 897·7350 80Mel Apncy, 20'1 Wtatr WANTED: Cun cut colll'!(I'! DAILY PlLO'l' Sou&bt by YOW'll proereatwe ate opeft;lnl for a teerttary.
Expert installation ========~!dill Drive, N.B, ~ 1tudent w/own car tor pvt 542-Gn OPENINGS IN n.llm&ker in N.B. area. TOp Send rtS\U'DI to KEZT. Jnc ••
BLANKINSHIP FLOORS Jli1perh1nfint FI 8 E R. G L A S tool int• time evenin&: delivery work. SAl..ESMEN W&aff paid for •P"d • ae-1190 E.t 8aD Rd., An&bttm,
642-1403 540-7262 Painting 6150 moldina, boncllna. boat 500 W. Oout Hwy, NB CarMt ~ty w Ith curaq. Prtvloua experience Attn, uan Mitchell.
Drallt"! Service -66.7 carpenter.Expen•n<:edonly. EXPERIENCE6B .. Ufalt£ -Co. Preltr exp'd Adm1"n1"strat1'on pttlerrtd. Apply Rick DRtAiiJob-x..p,..,1m. -PAINTING Int A Ext Lowest AUTOCOAST Fr)' Cook. No SWx!aJI, no mtl'I. Fut floot, ruat&nt.ffd Taylor, Ccaat Cl~ port.ant joh u wtte le
DESIGN Dt-&flina, l'!lectro
nu:clr.P/C layout IJ detail-
ing. ,ccn Sr. 6'75-1191
6680
'iNTHoHY'S
' : 64'-1948
The:lk1I, coats no more!
~ced Mab111'!nwxie
BUcJiet Landscaplni Gr~uate Horticulturiat
contracted prtce1. Fully inl. 1914 Placentia CM n.itea. Apply 512 W. Utb St., + ccmmission + P.M.'t. & M f • Sail•. 117 W. 17th St., CM motMr A earn • w'1y ~::v~~~!6 ......... ~~ :,:;~-;.;.: :~ m .... ovtr 35. Apply .:f"'i_YJ'lth St, Cotta Me.. anu actur1ng =UCTRESSES A:-"00s sc:::N=
• INT EXT •• ~ sIZE _ • .,,..._._ .......... y. 4&4 s. Main st .. Santa Ana 10 e TIONSJ •• h --~ -"~---~ • • ~" waa• + c ommlulon. '"..,..... -..... -u .,.. P RA y..,.., mature slna able 1o _.., •-·~-~ ·--· JOB. Xlnl work. ftfl, fne Unitbrm11 furnilbtd. 990 E. auna Cnyn Rd. Lq Bth Manaa:emtnt ~ meet the public. Mlllt be at-~ AluyN ": ~y
est. nM '42-4669, Cout Hwy, N8. '6M-4Jll . YOUNG man lrith initiative PAltT TIMI IVIS. . ll'active with a eood firure. 1'srs=·~ •• ~. M•~v ~ .. ~
PAJNTJNG, Papering 16 yn SEMJ-Retired man for Ala roJ. rttta.W'IJ'lt work. e StNIOl TOOL INWINilll te •rltl11tte f•ellnt Apply In pl'!rson l;i;:::::.,;-:;:,;:;;;,;-,,.,.-,.,--I
in Harbnr atta. Uc A bond-a: rentals of tr&Uen. "~ 56-1616 $3 50 per hr ,.41vlr•4' ftr •• , •• , ••• lft•llufeth.lf•· Hohday Hea~h c;_,... WOMAN for tuU t Im e "'· ...,. -· eu.m; •• MESA l.!Cli'Qas, ISlf oRArTSMEN. Stm1 ..-. • . ,; · --r~· ...... ,...., .. __ .,. ....,. f'JEAT, exp. Painter, no. Newport Blv<i, Colta Mha fOr pt time .-.. -ln No. . I • MANUFACTUa."ING 1Nw1k1111 •tth -.1,.,1.11t• CO.fa Mesa. Hunttnaton Bc:b Pb' store. some buuty Ot
---· I 111 •It"•' .1 •• 1r.11!t ., ,., •• h.11it•I flltllwf••••dllt I ...... E G -r.o ~ u~--'d -~ drlnkilJC. Collea-student. S.r•Ja/O.llvery Hanttnrton BMch. "2-MU Call 14'1·m2 Ml Bond
1
"'•the4i. ..,.,...... ~ mecucu prae-....-au ..,...,. exp ·""I--·
Low prices! Steve 54M5t9 $130 week aftl'!r tra1ntna per-COOK. Deptl)d&blt. ~. Llctrlled RMI t:at:ate . Salt• ttce n et d ' experienced Call &ft T p.m. m.a3
I I It I 6180 lod. H.~ ••rk. s-·" ••----•. -·· ~~ tor ~-~•-tc • SIN 0 SI 0 I t ._. In oil ....... ol lront BANK P!ool Operator/O-p I ~ .. .,. ,. .... ~ --••-· ~ ~.-I a, I IMAT I. t. ,,,,.,. ce•t eat Mt••· _...,_ Backs d a ••tr"!• .,. r Strvilott, 506 31 St. N.B. SpllMhift. C&M. fllt.Tn2 emp1o)'mtnt. Ntw unst now 1 u""""'. . roQn puter Ot:rk. Polltlon new
•PATCH PLASTEIUNG. All SERVICE STA ATT. Full A DiiJVBtY drtVtt. &a;;n•t 11JlltW, WUl train. e lX'El.IMENTAL MACHINISTS with •111•rl•1t•• 111 =~~Box l72t ~~ ~ r::
NEW ,llwn1 re • s e e d in 1 • l;ypes. Free l'!ltimate. C.aD Pt SlLuy • comm. Ton\ Blueprint 1 ll o P • Call Peur S..111n1 Hemes ,,•••tv•• •114' I 1t •rtiet. febtl•t lle11. EXP JIUtl'7 COOk a: suna Br&ncb. •2:224
Complele lawn eatt, clean S0'8'J5 · Sharp 61W320 5'M313 Huntln,ten ... ch Exp try cook, part TEENAGE lltttr, my ......
Up by job or month. ~ ... 450t • ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN "A". ,.,.,1.11 .. ,, 111 time ....... E. 21tt
estiriiates. For info, can Plumlt1nt 6191 Http W•nt•, ~ 7200 ...., Wante4. Men 7200
1
~ UHFIVH' ''"'"'"11lcttl•11• a AM/flM ••'•'"•trv. Benton'; CoUet Shop ~ Call ext. ~.N=8
846-0032 or 893-1995 PLUMBING REPAIR 1• •• • e • • e • • • • • • • • • • e • • • • • i JI ARKING AnND'T '''" 133 S. Colat H-..Y L8 days Cl.It & Edp Lawn DRAIN CLEANING e l.E,1.0 TYPISTS "A" to ty'• 11r•11•••l1 LIV!: I btl · P.talnlenance, Lloernied MS-2317 540--7211 MANUfl.4CTUl.IN~ 1'uQ or part time, di,)' crtvt. lit1'14wrltte• c.•11v lty,1111 '"''' 60 wpMI . n p; mothn1ta WC
,,. -/11'54310 aft 4 or t P"OOUCTION Uc. c.tIL drl•er. N,.t •P-home, "'1 ... 1. To •tart _, ,,_..._ PLUMBING REPAIR • " pean.nce, r'lfl. Call ... 1700. •PPtox June 23rd. Send hlrtwor
AL'S Glrduing Ser v i cf:. No job IOO nnall t TRAINEES tx1 ~ • tO I p.m, Cont•ct Employmant Office mume a: rm B. Clook.1500 npa. Lawn.maintenance, prden-e 642-JJ21 e Slid .. nttde4 at Oftet, 2 ~ SWtt *'3, CM lt!D
Inc •.dean up. '*'1629 ========= rnen lo •ork ...,, No tn. 17141 146-10)0 OOhi!Y WOIUCROOM olllct
JAPANRSE pnkncr Comp! SNl!!I "'° watment, no experience. llll H•rL-II·'., Co1to '-J•s.a TraltiMs • lmmtd'--W opm-experienced aerv~ • Ex;ier, deptndabk, NO IX,11.llNCf; NlCESSAl.Y, 21 TO JI YI.A.I.$. Oood CU' DICtllU')'. Call g.,, n "" iJW, leach l>rapay, 908 W. ::::mr • r~"' ~-et>raamaldrW • Alter&tkn Hl•H SCHOOl $lADUATl. I, YOU HAVE THI A'· .... --. 17lb St. Of 5t0-4tM ~Tl free ftl -CUltOm DHlpa rlTUDE, WE WILL Tl.AIM YOU. Pl•MANlNT IM· Mr •• _ .. ,...,, !Df.111' • • llloft
CLEAN-UP Sprdallst! Mov· •8'Wf48* ,LOYMINT. EXCELLINl' 0''°1.TUNITY f()l AO· *EXP d10rwuber • kit i1ousiKEiP.awant•d .....
Ina:. :t;dgtni. odd Joba . AthratJen.......wMS VANCIMEkT. Mlptt, full ttmt. DEPZN· Ml91fe~llllfMDMtlofl :fo 1mall chtlllren M!t.
lle•'l'nahl" -i I r•• 0 •u F• 1 !>ABLE. -MOO/Wtd/Fr1. -« ,_., G.m.nlnc Nu~ """""'"' 20 )"-..... N .-VIEWS M N, TH• ". -·• c.u.. llhop aft &llftll IESEAll. rm. !148-IOSI -Fineit~t'qtllp.,uptttcait. ~•Altl!l'l.dona SPS w ms.c.stH.,.,UI AIWlllJlll korEL ~ Pi'i pt.:OOW
Pl•ntJtw, cit ....... 982-203S MMlll'J estern DfiHWASHER ooanttd ~ Hme, 1lPlll TO ?AM. 1'r\. In
Y•mallChl Garden Servi .. Troo s..vteo -t . •"J'd. Apply In pcnon l!lu• ~ """ • Sat 15 wpm tnln. drf >1':<'i..n<1..ape °'""'uJnc + Dilphln 11t1taurant. S35!l A Dtflllon offre 114-1100
:.• m.1116 • TREES pntned. topped • t 2701 So. H•rb.t, S.nto An• Via Lido.NS. I llulq..,,_Corp. -,6'-1=11=cE...---=CAIHIER==-
EXPifRT .tapenett mm r.movtd. 26 yn • • p • AtffO Mechanic For ltr'Vloa Part Tbt'lf"'.'~ in Ptnao f'Ull tenarice H.B .. r .v. area. PaUllOrt nee S ervice AN EQUAL OP,OlTUNITY IMPLOYll atatJoft, S&l&I}' A comm. ........ '£ ....... .,, IACK ITltllT ""
Coll"'""· -~-:!!:!""~--...:.. ___ I~~~~~~!:!~!:!~~~~!:!~!:!~ I ~ 15 --· NB
.
MAN to hel]t can tar ........ ....... ~ IJte
It, '.SOOd --Ii
lrl.f123
JCAL .......... Dont
• Put time. -... ·-ONIST to. -ty
loc:atad In .NIL CllJ
1510 -----A,.iylo .......
E. 11111 Ol
« •• lo41 lo Uvt .Lite_....,...._, w,rtt....-
lloouty Oporolen
O<parttlme ...........
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llotlOI.,\ ~ '· ~~'? • ~~!~~~~ . .t.ll!!!IL°'Y~NT JOIS ,._ ~LGYMIHT Mllc;"4NPll~ . Mlll(tcttAllDISI .,.;OR Ml!llCllANDJSll EDI MlllCHA-1 POii FREE TO Y0!11' I~ -5<hool .. ln1t~l.., J600 School .. lnitivction 7600 l-S"'A"'L"'E'TA"""'N"-D_T=';,;jl;....;SA=L:.;E~AN'!., Tlt ... D_E,...._ $ALE AND TRAD! , SALE ANO TRADI •• _. 1
I ;;~~~_..:~..!!7il00!!! 7400 Fumllu,. IOOOFumliv re ' IQOO 1 Antiques IJ 10 Ml-II•-l600 ~ ,.,. th<se )if> :
Ii '"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ACHJl!'l(IMINT le11 then AllLmES? J i~~~;i;;;;~~;~i~ I -. -"""' the pdund. one :·tflu. : I I too mUch l'ltESSUltE? little SUCCES~? ORIENTAL rug ""U, ""°· • o MIXED IA~ • • male• 3 r.rn.i ... One.IJ:<o \ n-E ~1 f f II .____~ , Sheet muaic cabinet, claw • -b3d w/eL kitten., WW
P
"ersOnnel"I"'"' "'¥1 . now or 1 '....-"' f~t. s:ua. lttaho&at11 pie llOWiebola and pt r,, on• I .._1t..:_ ,.'.Ml J!'rl,5 ••
--*'" OfERITOI
Mud be opecienc:ed on
muWpJe ix.rd. PB.'<
and ltte twtnl:. 1: SO Pit
to lO;Q) PM shttt. * TELE1YPE
OPERAJOR
' .
-Should know -multiple ~ 'ip!X,. ml have
~ ye&r1 prlva le line
operience. 10 AM to
6;30 PM shift.
*~KEY
PUNCH
OPERATOR
o~ to thl'ff. )'el.I'$ ex·
Jl(!rience, 4:30 P.M. ro
l :Q) AK .sbUL Monday
""" Friday. ''
S'CRE·TARY
Mlftlmuin · 4 yeara acc·
retuial experience. SH
80, t,ypiJia: ~ wpm, 181\J
electric.
CLERK
TYPIST
4o wpm mM electric
COLLINS
RADIO CO.
19700 Jamboree Rud
Newport Beach
i:qual opportunity employer
Clerical
PRINCIPAl.o CLERK
U98 • Sfm pu roonth
($523-$638 recommended
July 1, 196!1)
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
: lemtd table p. ~1&12 ltemt. lncludlJW Honeywdl _. ......-. _,...,,, .r. • SAUCERMAN SCHOOL ====-,,,==I lllelancrS!tobo •Ith battety 5 KITTENS mu.t .. .-.~ agency KDGN. Ith County Folr9round1 CIUP)'ENDALE E>o<ullv• colt, 4 x $ Wm holden. ma!ca, 1 !omalA>, hl-.::1.
DECORATOR GETS C TIO,tl , d•sl<-wrltlm: tabk, n.is, -•r!fblo ""' """ two """"'· 642-4%10 allo~A • ~.:~~~"J WHERE THE PROGRAM FITS THE. CHJ,LD OF 18 LUXURY APARTM S "'==·="= .. ======:"I ''""'·~~".~ pm. 0 !
d F I Stwin9 ~hlnn 11"" era. ""'t""' m .. CYI-, THR Pink Pus!l)'tat Is him!. 6t2·3tl'O 1lnc• MOTIVATION 11 1n inner f~rc• , , Sp1nis~ & M1. ittrrap11n um turt .,.. case and bowttne ball, tutl g wks. old, well mannetff ~
that g rows with feelings of 1uc.t'*ls. "; ~ · All BRAN~ NEW SAVE SS$ on new Zl&:·Zaa, wli: and ea~.· maple bed Also l tiger sUpred ·gref."Tfi •
Bkkpr 1o $600 EPF* ~' ' L' •. Automatic •tral·~t •tlt•h frame, diahet, bed spread, loving home. 545-. 11178 6. /10 :
t. . WILLARD H SAUCERMAN Ed ·D •1 t-~ r,ec1u ... _ ... , .. ,_ 1411" rK4>• , ...... _,.. ,... .. lle1vy AIP, payroll, pas ma • ' • • ~l "i ,f'fp;.oo~! 'Cv.!Mi.•u11t SOl•_'w1r111M1at1111 ~.r..:.... isewlng n1achlnea. Portablf' rug, bird e&&r:,_utenails, and 1 Lovablt \\•hite and 1 C~:
le> G.L. Very busy position Ttl: 541-1758 · < ~--u11u1 ,,.ic. 1• .. "4"·"~ . ., .... ,Mow 'tn·!! & cabinet models. Yt Old other Hems. 905 Fm Ave., ........... fur -'•t .--> ~ . I l=========='O'========;=: ~'iii ''' ~ ,.., • .1. .. ;.~1 .. 1.: ... o., 'l li l...ag Be b. $98a2 ,.......-.,.,.. i."t:\I r.'f" wJtRh "pt"' ntlc.;-•~so'A'·PF Help· Wan~• I Help Wa_.. _ _. •II o~!!!';_!Mlieo ._::..cm=. ~.'151 ·:::::::::.'.',"''"8•" 11 :': ~~~ng S1f.ppc, ~1? .. a. E. una a.c hornes. 836-4493 ·«1g tC o.,... ,_ nrwu 11IJ11 ":"-"' $'111• .L1"1D' 111 ... "'9'.•J1. ......... H .....,...t H'"°, C.dM. v•.,....,.,..,, MOVING, many house itt"ma. OLD SOfa • small cbild'll
Good typing, pleasa.n1 per80rl· Wlil'Mn 7400 Women 7~ A decOrator dream house on display -3 1~ SINCER with. zig.u,g 1: Tabl?s· ~Ila.In, lamps, TV!--dresser . 122 'l\lrlJUOise, Bal
&lily + \.'el')' careful groom. 1----------h f \ ( walnut ("On!IC>le. Makes but· slant., divans, hutc!b ' paliO lsl \ng. AOVERT IS.l~G rooms of gorgeous Spanis urn t\Jre ~CIS ton bolff, deai&:l'll etc., $5.%5 furniture. Electric b 0 at ' -
Stet Clerk to $SOO HUGHES Sec'r' etalry/ reg, $1 095.00 -' mo. or 136.00 ............. ,. moto' • '""'" Complele F!<EE to good horn<. F•riiaf• 1fJ EPF, 1/J CRF f' ft H.O. train layout, boys bike, Teni-poo puppies. 897'-~farketing analyais, statisU. SACRIFJCE $a98 Musical Inst. 112$ needs repair. PI cc i 11 o , al~r 6 p.m. •
cal dala, accurate typing. NEWPORT BEACH Bookkeeper • I • • • • 1---------1 violin. organ. Toys, all ADORABLE kittena I b01"11
xtnt potential. MO MOlit•Y DM. 1.201J1•eo -WI! CAl.•v ou• ~ ... ects Guitar& • Amp• • Drwru bargains. 2573 Ford b am ~·ithout tails, 1tubby Manx,
Secretary t o $600 baa immedlate openifw:s for RespOnslblt , 1op level m m FURN-ITURE NEW AND USED Drive, C.M. 7 wks. '94-2070 6/9 ;
Y, EPF, l'l. CRF HYBRID • po1itlon for sharp, l•k<-12 MAJOR BRANDS * AUCTION * DOUBLE pawod ltittooa. 7 : • h I I M h Also Many Impo~ At k 61" 2273 6/10 Sh 90, typing 60, for corporate INTEGRATED c arge 9 r , ust ave BIG DISCOUNTS Jt you will sdi or buy 1..::""'=:::'-c..:.:::r.=.c.,,==~
attorney. No lepl experi-CIRCUIT excellent skills incl. 1844 II rt Bf ..I lot EVERYTHING IN P..IUSIC give Windy a tr:· PETS 1nd LIVESTOCK
'""' roqutred. "1ll trom ASSEMBLERS 1horth1nd; he ndl• Iii• newpo Va.it.rt.o r 11..i.1 Be h M ' c I Aoction• Friday "30 ..... Ge •• I llOO s~tsi~;:.:~ion/PR A minimum of six months of ~k~i. ~~b!; •. u(~~:> c t M I IC USIC en er Windy's Auction Barn ~~,.~,·~:;•;;•::."o:·---"'~
$550 experience is dr.sirable, 642-3910. OS I esa on y Daily 12 noon till 9, Sat, 9.-5 Behind Tony's Bldg, ?itat'l SCRAMLETS + Comm. 1/2 EPF, Openinp are on ht and 2nd Ewry Nifht 1'11 t -Wtd., Sit. 'Sun. 'Ti1 6 174~ Beach Blvd, (Hwy. 39J 201SIA Newpoprt., CM 646-868(; .• , ,
V2 CRF shifts. EXPERIENCED
1
~~~~: ~~~lcg~f:st SICK ROOM ANSWERS~~~:. '. f.1ust have airline ste..,,·ardess PART TIME ,,,.-n,"°';::;o;:'.:::;-:;:::-:,.-,::: 1• Hospital Beds e Cnitchcs . , ... ,
imagl", be sales oriented & Pll?ase apply in perll<ln lo: Furniture iooo Furniture , IOOO * O~!ashioned _drunt set. e Wheel chairs e Walkers Origin _ Foray _ Utl.c!J 7." (
a people lover. An unusual e e e TELLER iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!ii!ii!i!i!!iiii!!iiiiiii!iP.!i!iii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I corwats of Ludwig bMe &: United Rent All Utmosl _MARRIES .. ,. ;
opr1ty for just lhe right girl. HUGHES LIMITED TIME'' s~rc. 2 Liberty tom io1ns, A man never knows thit IBM Keypunch Oper UNITED CALIFORNIA •• 1 hia;h hat & e"tras. TIO w. 19th st., Costa Mesa a 1.\-'oman has any old c1(;0iCs 1
to $475 APF NEWPORT BEACH ',t\NK * 494-2157 * 645--0760 until he f\.1ARRJES her. • '
I '"'"'"IBM "''."''· ' Conlraclor Wanls to Build hnmedialely MARTIN u olring KUIW-, 0 I Ila" many top qualHy.
alpha & numeric, good po. SOO Superior Avenut 2'l2 Ocean Ave., LagUna Sch. 12-35, like new! With case. 100% human hair wigs, O~s 1.125
tential! 494-6:>46 TH'rl"9 Down Buildlnv to Call 897-Sln y,•lglets, etc. Ji s 10 1 v e d 1
Clerk Typist to Newport Beach, Calif. Make Ro0Fn For Our New Store =========I partnership, Must sell. 1917 p Upp y .. t
$425 EPF Equal opportunity NU RSE AIDE TRAINING • SI' ANISH ** MEDITERRANEAN Pi1nos & Organs 1130 P.1aple, No. 1, CM. 646-7083 6 mo. old, black/white rU,k :
Stepping stone poailion \\'ilh employer. M &: }' An Xlnt opportunity for $75,000 CLEARANCE PIANO SALE $3..25 & up. Cocker puppy, Loves ~Oblt. {
growing linn. Accurate ty~ persons interesled in a NE\V ... -· .......... , USED '6 5 P . _F . Co 11 i er (especially kids), Must':ll'P.~
ine: a R)USt. health career. 2 wk. training • Game -Sets • Dining rm sets e Bedroom Grands • Consoles • Spinets Encycloped1u ,v/bk. case. because "·e have too ll'li!'S: .
Secr•t•ry"$4SO APF BUfflJM'S c..vursc· no charge, limited sets • Living room sets • Corner units Practice Pianos from Sl.25 Ncve1·_used. Yr bk for every dogs. $10.00 to good h~. :
\\'ork with students in a very opcnlngs. Seeking full timt, • Tables e Lamps e Recliner chairs e Dec~ , , ... , ............ \VAS NO\V yr until 1975. S200 or best of-Phone 962-1007 alter 5 p:vft ..... ; intrrestin~ job, NEWPORT long tenn employees~ lnq. orative Spanish chairs e Buffet W/china StaIT Studio S"45 S295 fer . 67~ aft 6 It 'vnds. BE AU T, mini a l ~ r i! ~
Seely ~ .. S" •550 E PF Pe~SQnhtt Dept, H 0 a &: tops, Mediterranean • Pictures e WtOught Knabe p1""' gmd S2T;iO $21~ SALE-Furnishings. n1 i s c. S..-hnauzer puppies. 8 '"'ks .,... """' P.1emorial H o & p i I a I [ M · f id AKC ham tock f'or a stlarp yoong lady in Presbyterian, 301 Ne,vport ron Chickering grand $239:; S1725 oving out o s I ate, o . T'f'g. c P·, S
Marketing Division. Now Interviewing Blvd, NB No ~o~n -, ter ms to meet your budget -Aeolian Grand Sl595 $1088 everything cues! 2ll l2lh 1,.:63!!-"'-~""'=,~G~G~.~~--""'· I
legal S.cty to bank: fine; Master Ch•rge, B•nk of Amuic.. Brambach Grand S1595 $1cm5 SL . HB. 536-3976 L.\BRADOR Relritvcr-.pup ·:
$700 EPF COSMETIC SALES Beauty Operators or Store Ch•rge. Chickering Cons. $1395 $695 BARGAIN! Membership in Ch. sired, AKC, aboli':. t
These lovely attorneys in !ht • Experienced 0pqa,tors need· • This S•lt For Stock'o,1· H•nd Only •. Lester Spi.IJet Sfa9 S445 Newport Beach Tennis Club. wormed, must sacrili~. ~ ,
Beach area will happily pay EXPERIENCED ONL y «I al a rapidly growing first MANY ·MANY· MORE $700 you pay transfer fee. 642-56.?» , , ;
the placement fee, and you class salon located near the S~c ial·C•r~ Buy I 642-3417 alt 3 pm. MINIATURE poodles.-: ' ,
only work from 9 to 5 &: UC! campus in University Nationalls Famous Brand UPRIGHT Pracllcc piano & males 1-silver, 1-black, ~~ ~
have an hour for lunch. FULL TIME Park Sho pping Center. Guar· ~96S Consol~s $7'22 misc. household items & years. All sbots Sla eac:Q. '·
Constr Bkpr $550 EPF antee, Commission, Pa.id va· l\1cd1tt 'valn~t, bench incl. furn. Fishing skiU l2' & 5 543--0454 · .. , ·.,
Constr Secty $SOO EPF Ir you have. been accustom-cation. Call 833-0270 G~ld Music Com,pan~ hp ou!board. 53S-39iG OUTSfANDING I~. Go~ t'd to working with the fin· 1 ---~8~E-A~tm=~ci-AN=--2f>.1a N. l\laln, SA ."17-~J 0 . 1 ..• Many other steretarial est clientele and merchan---DIAM ND J row \veddmg Shep. puppy. Pal'en •~,pp
openings for qualified, disc, you will enjoy the to wc.rk full time Costa i1csa GULBRANSEN ring, 2 els T.\\'. Have apprsl premises. JJO. 847·9936.,.;
moon. Paid vat.ations, etc. ORGANS ..,..,,..,. stll ~-""' ca h ' ·well groomed applicants. excyllent opportunitic11 and .,, .. ......,, ~ s ·TOY poodle puppies, blac~ '· ,
company benelits oUcrcd No clientele required-new WURLITZER 673-3600 1vhit e; are cllgible for~~ •I
• EPF, tmployer
pays fM
• APF, applicant
pays fM
• CRF. company
reimburses fee
MAIDS -
INSPECTRfSSES
Larre lwnuy hotel, Experl·
e~ neceuuy.
by these posit.ions. :,",~!_,•54·e~co99m1od9 · Ca ll Furniture 1000 P IANOS & ORGANS
1610
dle security. (1) 528-81$:··; j
.. ·-~ ,,... Jobs-.Men. Worn. 7SOO p· • 0 nA ,_.. Misc. W1nted ----------ianos ""' rgans n.<::n~ \VEil\lARANER l e m.a 1 e... ! Apply in person only MATURE \Voman for ll to 7 PART Time piano pla_...,. SACRIFICE! Solid birch tri-EVERYTHING lN l\fUSJC Shots, AKC, $Th. Call l.Ut:. ' Interviews between 2·5 Pl\I shift ln SA\vYER HOP.1E. ,,~. Jo d I · •-·· SCOITIE.S. 436 E. 17th St. P "'sser w mirror, uvu· WE PAY MORE 5 548-0!ITI -#1 FASHION lSLAND Call 646--6716 hle bed '"'' bookcase head-8 ch M ' ( f ' 1 Am~!:!~'!:! ':e°::ity. DRAP;!vT~=~~TI)RS "M. af~~~CEO ::r.~~Ex:~~~;nro~ ea USIC en er CASH ~:1o~uil~redAf\CC:fllllte ;
Use of car, over 21. Some s.16-14ll DESK CLERK wrought iron patio table & 4 DF.~cl~ Salc~ut' 9Service l..tM!s children. S.l5-~
evenino-s pref. Avc•"''"'e part Phone 646-7443 chrs, nev.', $50. 540-95&4 17-~~.Y .,_ ~Blv , Sat 9.5 AKC Afghan puppies. • ' -... ....., ...,,.. °"a"'' d .. (Hwy 39J $200 • ..,,.... • limf', S59 \Vk., full time, Jobs-Men, Wom. 7500 Schocls-fnstruction 7600 6 ROSE.\VOOD & walnut l Y,, mi. So. San Diego Fwy. For turnlt~. appliances, · ·!1• ' j
Sl24. No exp. nee, For chairs circa 1840. S285; Huntingtoii Beach ' 8,17--8536 coi>ttd TV, stereos and an-&tG-758!1 •7'
prompt introd. Interview, DESK (lfRI( Educational Vacation 4th walnut tiMltf(-lim"t J50; I\' • · ti<J\j!s. LOVABLE 10 wk , d
call Mr. lt1ills, 544-8550. graden , , •; si Cittz.en~ Zenitl. TV .console $135. JUNE SALE!'!! Dav or nie:ht Chocolate miniature ~ ~ ~OOKK.EEPER $600 Chilcoat 10 lesson typing 3031,t Goldenrod, Cd ?tt , Factory authorized.cltarancc 636-3620 ' male. 350 Monte Vista <if ~
Able to take books lhru fin-CASHIER Sehl. Trial Les.'!ln. 173 Del tnter by-alley, upstairs. of overage, returnjj; & dcrnos _.t e GERMAN She~hcrd eups.
•
Position in Finance Deo-
partment requirH H.S.
eraduat.ion and 5 yn, oI
res~ibie clerical ex-
perience including ac-
counting and accounts
P8.)'able. Apply to City
of Newport Beach, City
HaIJ, Penonnel OUiec •
3300 Newport Blvd ..
Newport Beach. (n4>
673"6.13 before S p.m.
Thul'9day, June 12. 1969.
Apply in per50n, Mimi King
. The Newporter Inn
ancial 1tatemcnl &r: co. will lttar C.M. 548-28M MODEL home! furnishings. Pianos & Organ11~ J?ractice $ WE BllY. $ AKC, 10 weeks, Jarge lfencd.
neg-iotatc the fct, call Lo-POOR Grades'!' summe r Decorators rost & belo1v. p~anos, nc1v 'valnut spinet . ~~, S50 up. 496-2184 ::,.
rainc, Merchants Personnel Lar&'e lu.'<ury hotel, G"ood saJ. Tutdring now avail. Rtmed Counlry club hort1e. Corner pianos, ne1v & u~d Grands $ FURNJTURE $ AKC Toy \vhite Poodlli\t 7 ,:
Agency, 2043 Weslclill Dr., ary, 5 days, Mu11t be exper· f':lading teacher !USC cred) Hell & Springdale. HB. & dt mo Baldw1~ Organs APPLl~~QES wks, s75 l.o $125. Ml•n .;
N.B, 645-2T70 icnted on NCR 4200. emphasis 011 Ph 0 n i cs. l!OUSEFU' f 1 .t really 4:-truly icli, money C 1 TV' .,, , , , v· . o~ .. .......,. ~
SEAMSTRESSES .., o unu ure. saving SALE!1;;'5di!t in on • o• .. •-r•,_l'l• •-S!!:':1• 1 te)O, ....,_,.,/H,
PART TTME Office work. Apply In pcnon onl.v. 644-4678 Sectional, twin beds. dble the big deals al : I , .. ,.or He1110 Fdff,. AKC Registered e I a +k
Exp'd power machtne oper-
ators to aew naJJ&ah.yde boat
CU5hions 4 canvus pro-
ducts. Top wqes, pd holi-
days, vacationi;, Ins. Xlnt
workill& conditions. Apply
Jack Cole Co., 1763 Pla0t>r>
tia Ave., CM, 646-ZC51
IJ.107 Jamboree Road
Newport Beach
ATIRACTIVE. "-1!11 groomed
Secretary for G e n e r a I
Manager of ,~·ell known
Company in Costa Mesa.
1.-Just be personable and
between the ages of 22-35.
M i n I m u m requirements,
lhorlhand 100, type 60.
.References required. This is
an excellent opportunity for
a competent young lady who
desires permanency & pn;
fessional growth. Outstan-
ding fringe benefits in-
cludir11: retirement plan.
Salary rommensurale w/
experience. 8:3()...5:30 Mon·
day thru Friday. 546-$82
8:30 • 1 daily. Alert girl who I l'.tONTESSORI & Pre-School beds, chests, misc. 688 \V, \YARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO CASH IN lO MINUTES miniature female poodl*8 \~'Ol'ks with figures to write The Newporter nn children acccpttd' y 0 a r \Vi4Pn. Ct.I ... ~~ 1819 NC\\'porl, C.l\1. 6'12-8484 • ,54IAS~1~• months. S.-iO. 54;....s938____i ~
orders on IBM accounting round. ~ 21),, to 10. Call : GiltEN davenport '!i niece llA"'!ONO s I w A N rti BASSETT PUPS 6 ·, machint. \Ve \viii train. 1107 Ja1nboree Road 64~706, 541-5697 ' ...-.r "1.1' -te nway • ' T · • , 'O ,·
Year-round job, min. age 24. Nl?'lvport Bt!ach ~~~~! alter S -~· m'' maha • new & used pl~ AKC. 545-7098 ':-~
54:-rno1 VOICE preparation fo r .... ..-of all makes. Bejt ~·in ~ TRANSPORTATION ~· • J. W. Robinson popularorclassltalsinglng-, ALMOST new Be""l'Ml ine So. Calit'. right bilre. \Ve need quality (no junk_ 1j •=~~~.:tnN".:1wpo'hartirn~idac'h H•s o-no'n•i for ·. Beginner thru advanced rceliner w/ottoman, Ox· SCHMIDT P.IUSIC CO., pTVle~). Furniture, co lor Boats & Yichts fOOb j ~ '" ct: r-• training. 642.SS12, 494-9340 blood vinyl $25. 837-9583 1907 N. Main. II. stereos, appliances, -l
orthodontic office. Send •P rf J' S le • Santa Ana. tools and oUlce equipment. 37. FIB Expre.ss ,64 :·
"'''m" to"'" M 418 I 1me i S MERCHANDISE FOR 8010 TOP CASH JN 30 >finute" 3 PRIVATE :. Daily Pilot. SALE AND TRADE Of!i_~ Furniture TIIOl\fAS Electric or g a n 5311212 * m.-0555 NURSE AIDE
11 you are interested in: * Prognasive patient ca.re * SeJVlce education * Excell, working eond's.
Call Orange County's lal'Eest
ex1ended ca.re hospilal,
54U4SO
Radio-Telephone
Dispatch Girl
25 or over. Must know local
arra. Apply in person_
YELLOW CAB. CO.
186 E. 16th SL
Costa ?11esa 1 ~F·.-m-al9Secty. 500.00
A top beach area co, is look-
ing !or an attractive ral with
good sec. skills, gTe&t pt>
tenlial and the l'O will re·
imbune tht fee. ·call J..o.
rame, Merchants Personnel
Agency, 20-13 \\'ClitcliU Pr.,
N.B. 645-mo.
Cashier /Hos1ess
Credit -Cashier
4 hours per day, 5 day "'eek.
Ple~ant personality, enjoy
working with people and
phone work. Experience pre-
ferred, but not necessary.
Phone !\Ir. Do11·ning.
Public Finance Corp.
I&! E, 17th St., Cill
616-4&41
* CONVALESCENT AlDE.
Aui.li t lady during n'Cllpera-
tion. Live in a days. To SJOO
""'· * HOUSEKEEPER COJ\1-
PANION !or olrler rouple.
Li"t' in, long or short lenn.
Apply
HOME?l1AKERS
3-4 Days ,\•eek. Stamp Dt-STEEL company rfueases 1\·ith all Instruction books. -DOUBLES .~
EXPERlENU.:D -Newport partment. Prefer knowledi'e fu"1ifur• 1000 $350. Xlnt cond. throughouf. WANTED: Drapes to fit a TS 2'.?j's. Onan, auto.. ;...
Beach Orthodontic offi~. ol atamps. surplus office fumlture. Call ~7 eves & wkends 12' \Vindow, floor lo ceiling. pilot. TV, elc. Electric:,
tront desk. Send f'l'SUn1e to APPLY SPANISH Returned from • files • Desks • Chain, \VANTED 646-4003 galley, re(rg, }f/C show~
Daily Pilot Box M 354 PERSONNEL DEPT, l\lodel HDmes on aale at f'tc. SPINETS & GRA MUST BE SOLO '
LAUN DR y help, all Fashion Island less than wholesale! Group McMAHAN'S 772-8450 636-3620 NOS Machinery, etc. 8700 e PACJl'JC YACHT SALEi
departnient.s. Will train ii N rt B h includes beautiful 9 6 '' 1830 S. Ana heim Blvd ., in 34 16 v· 0 1 N ewpo eac quilled sofa & lovt seat. Anaheim !alongside S.A. GULBRANSEN Organ Modf'I GARDENER'S 2:i" triiner ' ia po: ''I, cwpo ~~1-iuntin&ton B ch. F..qual Opportunity Emplpytr 3 Spanish oak deo)ra\or Jo'rec1vay at Kate.Ila) ~-Like nc"'-Cost $2700, i::as OJ)<'ra1ed hcdgt trimtr'. 1213) .597-x.GS li14) 673-15
Real E•lale Sales t?.bles, swag or tab.le lamps, I========== sac. $1400. G1;,_.i344 Nu vac, 20" & 22" J'.Otar.Y PROTOTYPE & 1 actor
DREAM Job -Kctp your im-U v.·all pla.....,,•e, JU-., queen. G1r1ge SAie 8022 mo1vers. &l2-JJ4j 6-9 p.m. 2nd's. 8Vi dinghys, 12' t -t · b ·1 & "" ·~ --"---"-----CONN ConCt'rl Qr'm>n • 25 """.an JO as \VI c or full size bedroom suite --·~·· huh boats. 2117 South Lyo
mother & earn 1 wkly Experieoccd salesperson for 1 1 l 1 •--1 THE GARAGE: pedal, large Leslie .!ipeukcr, FREE TO y· OU St s A 54)..00iJ comp e e nc U1M s pr ngs, $900 cash or best offer. ' · · ' paycheck. 544-3854, 636--3497 bu!>)' San Clcrncnte oUice. mattress, linens & boudoir 646-9U!8 ~ F-tolopi-,.~-~,,_,,.,, Jo•-I'"" A ·s .. pe· r0-0· r C'I 642.-9909, eves. 546-1384 ---------S llbo I MATURE RectpUonist for ''"' '"""" '""' y • "'I lamps. Spanish oak 6 pc JoN "' • t• ==========12 GRO\VN cats; 3 ""• r , I as . al ff' 1 of floor tin1e-, listing com. B<'Cls Drtssers Sofas -,,. . busy profe~inn o ice n mi ssions paid proniptly. dining &t>t prl~ elsewhere Cha·,.,-,, o,·-tt••, -, ••• ,·g. & !portinn _Goods 8500 choc-pl SiamcS!'. 1 yr M, COLUMBIA [)(>fender · -.. downlo"'" C.M. 9-S daily, at approx. Sll95.00 AlL '"' .. ...... -• -orange calim r ed H ~ ·
h I I I Pl "'" '~J Ellen C. f•tahoney Realty FOR ONL"'' ~...., r"In d .stoves. MiS<'. , , , t _ · ix ' ousc sleeps 6; 30 HP lnbou\t. exp e P u · \Olle .r-...o 1624 No. El Camino Real ... s...,"· ~.., own, Skl.n O tv1n9 Equip _ pc s. 5-15-4i77 6/9 lull r11.cing gear & exlru.v
ROOM & board at the beach San Clemente S'l.99 per .. f'Ck , out of CLCYI'HING, Auto par ts. ~.s. D~vers tanks fr ...... $:>9 f'UNNY, cute, a v a i 1a b 1 e 646-6047; 4!M-7735 ,..
for reliable ~!other's helper or call collect for appt &ta!e-crtdlt OK. \V 111 fu1nishings, dishes, poWC'r U.S. Divers ~gula~o1-s fr S40 green t>yed k I t t ens . \VEST\VIND 20' lass sl .....
\\'/driven; license. \\'eekday (TI4) 492.514:; separale for quick sale. 20th tools, etc. '117 Costa l\lesa Nrw Nylon hned Vi ci Sulls lfunlorous & unique. . _&: ..,...:
mornings only. 673-8860 r.~ntury F urniture, 9? 7 2 St. C.~1. low as . ,, .... , ...... $39.95 6T>-5983 619 dinghy, motor, 1r:ict. new Ji
BOOKKE PER I U . * DRIVERS * Garden Grove· 8 I v·d . •G =~,=RA=G~E-Sa_l_c ___ m_o-vi~""~! Cusle>m durk ft't'I fins .. SS.95 -oU shore mooring, S2.Qgj.
. E , u hn1e, Garden Gl'Olre Daily 10-9, '"° AQUATIC CENTER PA1:ft AKC long coat 675-3685or 833--0J86 ti for retail operation. Conlact No Experience Sat 1n ~ S··· ,.5 ~·mo f urnitul"f'. clothes, antiques, Chihuahuas free to i;ood
•1 '' V "" .. , , •n~ L~ """ ""' ._.. ....., household ilt>ms, I o o Is . 4535 \V, Coast lli:;h1vay ho A . 6 1 .. _ HOURLY RENTALS (; " r. ' c ay. """"'"" 1, 1"" "'· Ntc:essary'. In or call 1714 ) 530--5240 N l "-h 673 "'40 me. pprox. v.i;:t. ""'· * "~-19'• * 17th St., Cosla Mesa 96&-3692 ewpor ocac . .,.. 96S-l04S • n.i ........
M"'' ha"o cioan California EST ATE SALE GAR 'GE s \LE •ruST ScU 8.8 .. Ch k ,..._ Fun Zone Boat Co. Bal * WAITRESS * (l\l~r 21 • CO<'lrtall ta"ble, 14.-:", custom " I .. UC 1.A:mp KITTENS mixed bag Have Graveyard shill. Coniuct driving recon::I. Apply mcdiferrancan, o'M.... Sl:iO. JUNK TO ANTIQUE 1111rfbrd. Semi.gun, f'l'm. fin. had hcal,thfu.I secure. start. COLUMBIA 2:_R_.l/jlrd ·
fi1r. Zln1mer Gi1-(l9'n YELLOW CAB CO. ~~-,·r,·-1250 _ .. ,, """d. l38 A. Victoria, CM in rear Ahnost nev.·. $75 or best of-\V ho / 1 terest lop .. vuu, e>:fril. J86 E. 161h St. .,,..._, .. ~ ..... ...... fl!'r. 642-2398 anl nlf' w more 0 $1000 dn. 642.3295, '7J..7'l1J!' Experienced Appl,y lfOUSEKEEPER Seeking DRESS OPERATORS C Solid brwn 8' sccl'I, btst of. A 1 llOO same. 646-2388 6/9 ---· 4'
. • I
l l
MANNINGS, I NC, Pc rm a n t n I full time Top Salary_ Call 640-2766 osta 1.fesa ftr. Stereo co n s o I e. PP iinces BICYCL£:-Man's 10 speed, FIVE,: kittens, v.'Called, box l 1' O 'OAY SPRITf.i
El Toro Rd. (Leisure World) employee, good '\"Orking DENTAL s E c / RE c p T . COUPLE To clean fllesa A~l-Ff.I, best olfer. La.mps, NORGE ntver d t fr 0 st near llC'~\ 1ralned, J fem., 2 male. G'll-,1114 __l '
Laguna lliUs 831-1014 conditions & benefits. In-Sinrlt, 2j 10 4.i Exp. nee. Theatre a-6 or 7 days per draperies odfll'I & ends., refrigerator -rrce'lcr com· 646-lOTI * Part Slaniese Ir;' Persian. P-CAT~ RACE·rta,dy.it !
a.ERK-S ENIOR quire personnel dept. Hoag * :>46-3000 * ireek, pcrnlaneni, &c l\fr. 968-3787 or 96S-aJOS eves. binallon. S\00. E' I r ctr 1 e HOBIE SURFBOARD 5f.8....0718 6/10 e lh2·3TI6 e A
Menwrial Hospital, Newport ==~~-="--~ Hamann, manager. 548-4701 dryer. good eond. $3S. Table Scuba Tanlt., , Leading South Santa Ana Co. Beach GR~fT. Fact. help. Oper .· eves for appointment or in-6 PC ~·In rock maple bdrm 494-41212 BEAUTIFUL 1vhile kittens 18' Cat1 m1r1n ;
Top bencULs, congenial co-sngl llt"cdlc _ :<;pee niach· qulf'I' l\ir. or l\lrs. I-fen-S>'l · ron1 p. S300. Ladles & 4 chairs, SlO. Aft 5 pm, w l t h b I u e eyes, * 646-!071 * .., !
workers. $502 mo. Call NURSES needed for private pl'eSS(!rs. S42-26fi6 derson at theatre, bt"•n 7 Ir; French Pro\'. 5 thvt desk, 540-6310 7' SURFBOARD, like nt>w. housebroken. 54IJ-4808 6/911-~.,~.~C~IJP-=~P~ER="~c~LA~SS~4! '
Edee, St&-5410. duly. RN, LVN. PRAC· 10.30 am da1ly solid fruil\.\'000. S200. \Vhll c '196=1-KE;=:N=M~O~RE=~E~l-"-·""o~..,c. Rllm/flns, fantastic clrs, 3 LONG hali' gray kittens, 10 Sailboat Che • l
JASON BEST TICAL, AID All shift \VAITRESS Ex P, d · . . na ,. f'"""nn .. n-v Ir 170 X"~ ondl · Tok $30. 673-5637 -Rp: ! • • • , s. ~1 .... ·1 S ,. "-· ' 11 I ST u~ ~~ ''" ••v. c1 . er, JM•• c lion, e wits. to alXld homes. 815~ * 642-0!M8 * ,, Employment Agency 1.lusl have refettl'IC(>S. Call '""""""'' s. m. inner nuusc . ., A R YLISfS ivith \Valnut bl!r $Gj. All A·l ofltr. 57;,..73o; E I Ci I Ha 619
2'120 So. Main, Santa Ana any hour, 6f2-99j.) CdM. Alert. neat, pleasant. follo\1'ing. Interested In a cond. 5'l9--07l 9 "'"°':;;;;;-;;,-.,==:-;o;:::::::: Miscellineous 1600 vc ync re'" · 61l--17Z.. <"hange 10 int"n:11.scd c.-arn-J..:ENMORE Electric Dr)'er. FDfALE black Ir; ,.,·hite cat, Spee~ki Boats f030
CAN YOU QUALIFY? RELIEF wanted 2 d:r.•· 2 I "-II I f.tOVING lnll• rnodcl. xlnt c on d· • •NjCvCL E 2 Id ood horn ~ · C BEAUTICIAN' "'ith sonH' ng". a><:aut U 111.rgr salon --X. ., l-1°* O to g e. SMITl • Could you spare two Ill'$. 11 nLtc~. ompanion kl ~ derly Uo in L:tguna Beach. 4~-50'lt Kcnn1orc \\'a~her, studio bed. $:i0. tit 847-8115 -, $20 Very k>Vable. '646-()338. 619 · . £ ~AT P.~AIR
da)' tor flYe days a ""ttk, ti invalid laity. Cooking. l!te 10 wing llMJ not •Kteei;i;,tr.-. Wood~·ard \\TOUght Iron KEN'IORE •1
1 f'tberglasing Ir; pa1nlini
ho Gd. 1,.'0mn1i,slon. For ap-Tllf'!!, \\'et1. Thurs, 3 to 5 " Autc.mat c 613-2706 a.fl 6 ONE blAck kitkn, a black0 11-~~·~··-;t=~·~·J~·';'~"'~,~~·~·1 )'flU rectiw $65 Jor lt! If llO use.,.,Tk. I: sonic nurslrtE" pin, ~Ir. Joseph furn. India & Pen: Ian Orlen-Washt r, late mode l, Nnt d. g 0 1 d m 0 1 h , r ""' ""' ... ....,
calf Mrs. Nelion. &\2.-8500 ='='='~· =673-354_:,.,~·~7~----point. Call 847-9161 ,.,.....,,..=,...., 111.I Throw rugs, mlscl. DIMtOND Piel"C't'd earritJi::i,. • n ·
bet. 2.-4 PN: Jor an ap-COCKTAIL g:lri no food • HOTEL MAID. lull hmt. \VANTED: !lair Dres!;ers. 968-~~. cond. $60. * 8-17-Sllj ())st $495, sell SIZ. 64&--0623 619 Bolit M1inten1nc• 903
pointment ee:rvlcc for the FAbulous pleasant surroundings. Nt>"1>0rt ;.rea. E.'lpancling a 3 rms ol fum Incl all acttS. G.f .. Ele.ctric dryer, runs on * 6f:>-4Ul • 5 PUPPlES. 5 wks. sm. rob:· ,,..1,... * 494-1196 '* Ill year old sttlon. Full A 110 or 220 v. Excellent con-PORTABLE TV, I.I" c .. --.n ed brd, variety color/coat. JAU{'S. Electronic Sc .& AU TY C pc ra t or .... ,.. Apply In person f1ing 1 t• r 11 · 1 la01ps, plctuf'I'•, 'le., RCA di lo ·~ •• 1 "~•n -. ... , .. , El-cal 1 ~ tor an ex-Cocktail Lounge, 145 E. 8AR~1AID -all 'hilts. par init>. 0 owmg ptt er-c.olor TV/sler.o, SRIOO. com-t n . .,.,.,. 000 ~o.:r VHF.UHF great ·condition, 962"648~ 619 '""~1 repa r, re
,_.tenoed cpehtor, Full or 19th, CM. 410 Ocean A\lf:., im ~m.butk 'tne~S&ll~ plete. 546-<fi61 all ~ GROOVY Refrig. Kelv. in $40. 673-zio& •It. 6 2 TABBY. 2 Ugtn, 6 wk! new installation. 54Ml2!I
,.t time. Corona dft Mar ·w~~ANT==rn='-, ~Chain~.-..,-=o.-n-ta!-1 * 64fl-..S291 • 673-TI59 for Interview. QuaJlty kin; bed, quilted. ~~nd. $4.S. rold ca.sh. HAIRPIECE :'sdbrk~ 1~tfe::, 1~~~~ Merine Equip. 90~
aft I PM...rrs.GSIM Aaistant with &d. exp. ooly. -HA~~,RO=R-i:ss==.,=~~,,.-.,.~.-folALE or JtmaJe, cxp'd "'wl complete, untmd $98; worth 4:1. brown, human hair, 25", ~-
IOmeontl &o care lor 54S-&844 Balboa Jslal'ld Mlon. prtsaer. Apply In ~rson. n;,o. Aft S or wltnd1, 847-MOG Y.'ASHJ::R and Dryer. Eltc-fall • like-new. 545-0042 CUTE Gray &; Wbtte killens. 6 11P Llstc.r Dlt1tl • ll•vy
t • lid lad.Y. Uve-ln. •M"'O'l'llE==.~.,~,~,E~L-P-ER~-h-il:h 61".>4232 or 6i'S-37Ul Expert cleaners, 333 E. lith Blond drts5er w/mirror S25. trlc Excel. Cond. SlOO. Qunllty king bed quilled f"l'l!C.' to good home. (Sunsel Duty $125. 673-7431 ~
"-6. boat)t. 5 ~ wk. scJIOOI senior. o"'n ltJ.tu;, GIRL FRIDAY SI. C.l\I, Gas 111ow, 6 mo old Xlnt •G73-2S78 * complele, unus!'d i!lS: "11Mh Beach\. 592-l$9C' 6/lO B I Sii M ,
9036 OOf 1re11. 675-2206 Mar, Gregor \'acht Corp. cond S:iO. 642.gjlj:l p;,Q, Aft 5 or 1vknds 847-CllOG l Calico & l buU colored kl!. O• P oor1ng --===-=='-~-1 1631 Pl 1 ,..~1 llAIRSTYLIST lull or purl A_nflques 1110 · 1 'IB 61 -\\'ArrRESs. over 21 ¢ 1' ""' fln1e. Some following prcf'd. (rt)LO '"'r«I trodlOolltLl .oh1, llOBIF. SURrBOARO 9'-ttJn$, \i'k5. 616-..:il9 !l NEED Side rle for 23' boat
f\llJ or Pl'l'l time. -MAID WANTED--Bu9¥ llbop, Xln t loc. Ii fl. Crea.I 1h11pe. $7.'.i. 1506 Frtnc.h P rayer Clotlt ·• Scuba Tankt PUPPIES. 11doN1ble. 6. 'vk, BaJboa 1~1 OI' t•lc. Call Gary
545--0863 646-144~ 6~ V1vt1.n Lane. N.B. 548-3281 ' KI 2·1Wn after !'I <l!M-1212 mL"(t'd b11!t'd. 67J...7&21 6110 213--2-1;)....!08!! t'Ollr.ct.
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TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T!IANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT iON
Motorcycl" .9300 JHPI 9510 lm-~otl Auta -lmportotl Aut..1 -aoat-Y1cht ,..... ,_ tmer•otl Autes ~h•rt•ra 91)19 1965 HONDA '61 BRONCO w ..... c ....,., DATSUN TRIU,....
BWEWATER OIARTERS ~-~'· 1.300 mllet. drlvo, 6 cyl., ndlo, ... ,.,, VOLVO
Po uvuu UEUJUoo., A. k In' rear I Red with whit ' ......... '" ............ p-• 21· Trojan, ""' 1315.oo. Call aft" 4:00 p.m. ' "' · ' '67 Datsun 1968 TRIUMPH -~ Sp!• VOLVO ..._ ~or• 26' numderblrd, Sall hardtop. $1,895. CaU f19..6<118 tire conv. Like new, iiaoo. '64 BUICK ~peclal with Conv., dlr, fact-air, pwr wln-
S>]pper •"'""'' 64&-0000
84
1-1
187 Station WaCJon ,.._,,.. ""'°"' v .. '""""' s.e to ...,., loaded! 11> Cub ••b
CHOICE sUp avail. 35-6' y AMAHA i.:i Trallmastet. C1!!1P9n 9520 All ortglnal, f spd, dlr, radk> TRI 4, 'ii Roadlltt, red N EW 164 apl)ttclatr. $900. ~ ot take totetan car in trade.
s:tlll)oaL $90/mo. lot sunt· ~~many Xtras. $195. heater, like new! $75 Cash w/blk Int, wood duh. Orie. & '65 BUICK Slcylark Gn.n-Pyrnnta '31.86 mo. LB YNW HE IS
mer. 548-4783 -7,j;"i;;,,.=;-;::::--CAMPER dels, pymnts $39.00 mo. owner. Very clean. 673-0048 NEW llOO Sport 401 cu tn, 325 hp. 4 on 381. C&l1 Ken, 49f..9713 or c.~uc•t•d to •u' polf4y
'Ii& TRIUMPH, fJOO cc VHG 01<1, call Ken, 494-9773 NOW ON DISPLAY Jloo:. llillO. &t?--0621. 545-0IM. of ~oet . Storaue 9048 hnm&c COlld, fl1any extras. Sales " Rentals VOLKSWAGEN fJ L 1 '51 BUICK: Gd. motor. $125. '65 DART, id· rond .. engine Ceutle•y·Ser~ic••lnl•trlty -. "'° !)1-13500.,. 67~7lll>Evtt Autbo..ued °"'" ENGLISH FORD "''" 1...:11 .;,5Cll-:==:IS;,77,.atta""';,,';:';:'m=."==I...........,, aood tlr.o•, i . , BOAT S1'0RACE '6" BSA 650cc, A·l shape, Eldorado • Four \Vlnds '4111. UUIO 1. brake•, trana. 547-0933 • '
',:;' ;';,r.;';.:,.!;' ~ ~~~ 5. Sac. $150. 8':'~~.;,,":.:;c~ ORANGE COUNTY'S ~ IHPORTS CADILLAC .. FORD '
""""' "'" lnclooe. . . 1199 VOLUME ENGLISH · -·-.....,.---1--------u .. of Hoot • ''8 BSA 141. &d. rood., low Mod<! # liOO FORD DEALER IOYOTA-'fOLWO ... ch CllY Cotlllloca .61 r'ORO Couoll'y Sq., 9 ~ La,......,,,_ . n1i!eage, many X tr a 1. Th--...1--1968 liarbor, CM, ""8S03 * BIG DISoJUNTS '* NllQ• w1m., Power & AJC, -~·-• 5<0-1746 -·· SALES· SERVICE ·~69 •-•·· . Call Anlhooy·, ROBINS FORD '69 MODELS S 9610 ~· CADILLACS ,.11ow with Mahoa. trlm.
83!).22St ·~TRIUMPH Bonneville, """"' 1•-..a.....-BJ..... Iinn\edlate delivery '59 YW ... $ 695 p:or! C•ra __ .;..;.;.; "8AlldeN!Vn•~r--Facl .~.~ • .,5'S-,..,!'32=,,..,-=-=:-:;;.,.-:;;;;
--.N mi, paint & chroml', •uvu ...... .._. ..... LARGE SELECTION 2 Dr. Radio. healt!t'. 'M OORV!:TTE.. Conv. P/W, , ...,. ............ ""'""'1"6 FAIRLANE GT 335 HP
,.M;.;;o;oli-'-ll_e_H_o_mH ___ 92_00 cp;:;v;;;t i:;pt:Cy.-;;BC-42=:,"'72:::,:c_~~ COjl& l\1esa 642-0010 Theodore Llr. VEPU5 P/B, 327, 4 speed. RlH, ·~ ~· .............. $4195 390, kpd. lndiea American
•· HONDA 90, u new, only 962 ~~~!!!!!!~!!!!!!.,.!!!!!!•I • $ 5 lk1t otter. Mi-0102 art 8. ~. , ............. $3795 549-0433
mil". WANTED: Good ""d ROBINS FORD 61 YW . . . 74 '16 Sod ............... 12895~/;;o;map.~"""""'=:::o;-;;::/i
a,•o ... camper or sleeper 10 fil 1969 2000 Harbor Blvd. 2 DR, Radio, heattr. Antlnuea, Cl .... a 9615 '6.1 Std ............... $995 1.966 FORD Ga1u;y 2 Dr. .."" 1111-ll'f• ""' c•rw MOBILE HOME
$10,000
LEN HU TTON
.....,.,;;e after 6 pm. '-' Ton 8' long pick-up. P.fust ::! SOME ~vrnp• .,., HT, &1r--cori. $11 t 5 , ..,. •e1<11 A J11~•. s rHr Costa l\tesa &f2.0010 Uc LPM529 UAAJQ ~ ..,..,., ''" '"""'· '61 YAMAHA 80 1"raW...tor. be '" eood rood. & I ~~~~~~~~'
1
,62 VW $ 795 A Shup Model A Ford! MANY MORE TO OIOOSE 61>-29U or m.4613 Stttct/trail. 1,00'.l ml. $225,. reasonable. 646-406S I • • • 1930 standard COUJM!:• e $1r.G DELIVERS '66 FORD eountry Sedan lD
613-5549 '*PAM-TOPS * FIAT 2 DR. heat~. Llc. HDR312 $500 '* 494--82QO •EASY CR.EDrr pea.. wen .• PS, PB, A/C,
,:· $lSO,ROOO 'ts~u0zu~.1 P~.~-~. ".-or All steel shells. Sales &. ren-'63 YW ... $·. 895 Autos Wa~ted 97o0 • 41 MO. '::f~~t cd· cent. &U-lNS
•
IUND :
_ 11 \..U•AJ •>= tals. $149 up. Buy factory '67 FIAT 2 OR, radio, heater, IIA~ ;,.;;;=..;.;==--'= on app '66 FORD lD p.aa win, air ~::··· HOUSE tobelieve.~7053 aft.8 direct.1010So.Harbor,SA. 850Coupe '64VW ... $ 995 WEPAY ... &::a:tbusbe.fore:;;: 1 owntr. mo Ara l la: ·~ :: . ' . ,I Auto s. .. ; .. , ·~":;"EY; ."ciru.,';1.!:.:.::; s;:.~~ .~~':''in,~~~ :6o5R Gradlohl ........ $o1WY235295 CASH 17281 Buch Blvd. Eastbildl, N.s. 64C-llD2
•• ·1 •M••• •~ & P1rta 9400 cruwo mount oa mp er. FM ra.dto. ll.25 Cub deb or a · · MERCURY C.ift'r.c n ~ ...., see JU.II:• -~.o;.;;... __ ..;.;=
uiy IWing at down to earth BUC $1995. 545-3048 older trade. LB VHE 743. Radio, heater~ T8X&ti 1 block s. o( i NEW
1969
Pricdi. Es.~·'ly now dur· KET seats for Corvalr 2 Call Ken '194-9173 or 5f5..06.1.t '66 YW $1395 for used cars Ir trucks ju.If Warner on Beach Blvd. '67 MERCURY 9 pus Wblte ~-.. !K'ls $35 and $50 a pair. Camper Rentals 9522 ' ' ' call • for free mtmate. HUNTINGTON BEACH Coloey Pk Station Wgn., ttd
!n; our clearance sale on 515--0906. 1829 Iowa St., C.P.!. FERRARI 2 DR. Radio, heater SVAl<rl GROTH CHEVROlfJ e OPEN SUNDAYS e debt. lnt., auto traru, pwr. BUICK ~11\c~:~~~f:':~:e~1~~ Trailer Trivet 9425 * EXPLORER * ---Fe··R--RA-Rl:---'66 VW ... $1495 '65 covr~vute. 2 dr., tilt Ji~:S·~wr. S:~~·
Paiks available In all areas ' By week or month. Luxufl. Fastbac@k, l~atl'.'r. RYFSJJ Alk ror Salet MIJ\l&U Xlnt rond. l owner, $2400 or ~WC rackt, new ~1, pert'. $2444 · '· Bay Har bor TENT TRAILER ous, Sleeps 6. Self contRin· Newport lmporll Ltd. Or-1B2ll Beach Blvd. best otter. 936-2651 • .,._ 613 .. 194 Mebile Homa Sales 1967 APACHE $890 ed. t.imlt<X:I number. Call an1::e County's onb' author-Hunttneton Beach cond . .-......
. •• · 1425 Bake• SI. 642·2273 today. 1"d doalor. JO 9-3331 CHEVROLET MUSTANG \~6.loCkF.astof HarborBlvd. LEISURE RENTALS SALES-SERVICE-PARTS
. .
OIDll YOUU' TODAY ·
on Baker Trucks 9500 (714) &tUi&ll, (714) 837-3809 31~~~a~wy. WE PAY CASH NEED A CAR? '65 MUSTANG 6 eyl stick oua OPIL PllCU
Costa hfesa Cn4) 50-9470 ,63 CHEVY Panel truck, auto 642-9405 540-1764 We Can Help You! Good cond, new tires. $950. ITAIT AT
GliEENLEAF PARK """'· 1'1S. •··-. ti73-<255, lmporlod Autos 9600 Aulhorl"d MG Deafer "Euy to R•ach fOR YOUR W e II olhen hav• """"1 '°" Coll 842-2956 l
"-J" on the way to the Buch" do e If ha •--in .ClW, clean, eool c.osta eves & wknds 61}-0693 AUSTIN HEALEY wn YoU ve no uuwu '68 SHELBY GT 500. m cu i $ 1777 t<!c~ New 9'.l space adult ~61 OODGE Van Truck, r&h. JAGUAR HARBOUR CONNEU payment, • II )'OU. are em-In. Convertible. Make offer!
park. 1'.lodels &: Sales oWce exccll cond. $1850. Priv pr· CHEVROLET ployed. 54>2670 OlDft YOUIS TOIAY
loc.ied at Pe;!<. ()p<n 9 AM ty. ,...._or........,. '63 SPRITE, '64 oogtnc, reblt '62 JAGUAR Sedan ·OXC<i VOLKSWAGEN, INC. Many mode], to-from OLDSMOBILE :
lo 6 PP.f. -trans, new generator, $-150. co111l. stick shift. wire Authorized 2821 Hubar Blvd. * * ~ !'!_ Ulrntr • Ora-. Couoty'1 • . ACCENT MOBILE 1969 FORD " Ton Needs 'II.Wk. 546-358.l .1vheels. SlliO. (TI4) 521_.m Sales and Service Colt& Mesa 545-1200 ..,.,,_,,,. ·:-
. HOME SALES MUST SACR!FlCE' ext. 346 or """ 67>-2803 J87U Beach Blvd. 342.1435 CONFIDENTIALL y GO"lllNG to V~toam, M"'I • • I LARGEST •
"!750 Wltitt;c, Ave. &lfr80S8 BMW ''9 VW'1 SELECTI"'N
Costa ~lesa 714: 642·1350 '62 FORD Eronoline Van MERCEDES IENZ IMMEDIATE DELIVERY \Ve Pay Mort For '63 Impala • 327 S.S. IRAND NEW !lit'
VERY clean llb:47 2 BO, $550. Davis Brown Co., 411 '68 B~f\V lfiO:l. AM/F~l Forei&;n Or Sports Cars PIS. P /B, air R/H. $350 ,69 (UJWS OF '
rugii;_ drps, awning 1 . "E,,_·..,'~'th~·~C~·~"~· ~~--tape. Sunroof. XJnt li'f3 =~ PAID FOR. OR NOT eqty. ·Auume Pay m 11 . i
&Mtlul adwt puk. '61 CORVAJR P.U., ramp, :::=:::co=""=·:::*=6:::7;.3J3.I=== $14.Cll * 36..,.. B. J. SPORTSCAR ..,.._ JAGUARS SJ6-Jli32,. 47,000 mi, auto trans. $400 Plus l ·Dninp)lmllt'for CENTER '5f BEL Afr Chev.· W/W F.U SPTS. CPE.
fO{t a new Mille Home in or best ofler.546-8169 DATSUN title, Full 2 )T, :U.rlOI) tlre1, otilinal ena., ori&IMJ Dtluxa belts front &:. rtat,
new Adult Park. Walk to '59 FORD P/U, 8' bed W/ ml warranty, Avail only at 2833 Harbor mw. 2 tone paint 3), 130, or la It PAddtd dash. f'L1lly lactory COMPLm IA.LIS AND ocean, sauna •lid pool, Goll tool box. Runs good. $425. '69 DATSUN T & M MOTORS Costa Mesa 54().4(.t'j} 230.000 miles! transport&· e<iUJ:pped. lllYICI DIPAITMQIT
hi!Jrse, 536-2731 847-3677 Big sedan, 96 hp, overhead 8081 Garden Grove Blvd. Will Buy lion for S175. 644--0883 $1tt D.N. $65 Mo.lt---------!I ~ ANDERSON 1 Br Xlnt ========o I cam eng., dlr, <! spd, radio, 5.1f.m4 at Beach 89US.51 '63 QlEVRO~ Impala, S2399
Cohd. Beaut. interior. Sp Jetps 9510 heater. wsw tltts, loaded! OPEN SUNDAY Your Volkswagen or Porsche power, Ortpnal ownu, low Z!OO Miles, under factory mUeaa:e, beaptitul. Best of· re;it135 Cooler 642.-46&1 '56 CJS CHEVY V-8, AU. warranty. Ba.I to fine. S1T15. '65 VW le pay top dollan, Paid for fer over $800. M5--09tll 12'1-A POOLE'S FINE
USED CARS Is"tOUiAdinourclusWeds! NE\V. Sell or trade . Take $75 cash dels, or older "'="'°'""'"""''==""'== OY."ned by Uttle 'ole painter or not, Call Ra1ph Vlrainla Pl. CM Pluth Tax & Lie. ~.wW be Jookinr for 548-85&4. 418 Tustin A"ve., ~~;;....,~~. _YNW 087, Call Bill -from Laguna Beach, xlnt -=="'',,;73--0900..;..;,,:,..,.=~ .64 ST Payments include tax and • ., ii . .D!al 642-5678 NB ~~ MG IMPORTS WANTED ATION w.., Belaltt, u.,..,.. ""' noance <ba!1<• '65 ·1u1c:K I =.:;::=:;=::====_:,,:;;=======~======== cond! $75 Cash dell, dlr, R I H, w I w, orta owner 48 ths A roved i take pymnt $36.86, WIU fine Orani'e Countlet 46 000 ml lrlr h I t h O!I mon · PP El1ctfe cou pe. Full power, tmPorted Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 '67 MGB prvt party. Call Ken, 494-977J TOP 1 BuYER ~ ' c · credit, Serial No. 331119Zll. F1ctory eir ce"d. NCI.
---Rdst. with cover &: wire ,61 VW BILL MAXEY TOYOTA =-==,,.,..=~--· -:-1 6351. 420
"
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WE .~],:LL
LOVELY
' ' . ,
-'
-
;:"Chick lv•r1on c1nnot 1•11 tired
-b1191. He i1 1utori1•d not to. M•I·
ler of f1ct h1 ch•c•1 •nd recheck1
h<1 used c1n. Send1 th•l'll th•ou9h
•ulhori11d clinic wh1fe th1v 91!
th1t f1mou1 16 point check-up '"d
• ,•nv rep1in ne1d•d. Th•n he check1
~ end f1check1 th em •9•in incl tl-••n
",tueu wh111 H• puh th1m in ffi1
p•p•t! IP.S, If '' l u9 it too tir•d
'to melt• voU hi ppy ... h• 91h
'•· iold ta 1nolh1r de1lerl
'ti~. ~ ~'!: , .~ ~ ,.J~G I
Don'\ M11.1 'J'bls! Radio
$1699 $1399
" '65 VW BUG '64-VW --if!
BUGS
Low, Low Prices
On The1e
SPECIALLY
PRICED BUGSI
'66 VW BUG
Uc. No. SOC 851
Radio
$1299
'63 VW BUG
•• . Lie. No. PBU 246
"Color Me Red"
Uc. No. TXT 141 Lie. No. JKP 04·1
Striped A Beautiful Radio
$999 . $999 $899 ··'.~..,;:~.;.~~-..--~--~~~~--~----~~~-
'62 GHIA Cl"1 .'59 YW BUG
Lie. No. KGK 72l Lie. No. GWF 380
"Your Best Buy'' "Wow!"
·5999 $399
I '62 vw IUG
). Lie. No. OMJ 108.
I Jtadlo ,, ' $899
~;~970 HARQOR BLVD.C::s't
"·::' ...
'. \, .
... ·.
"
'73·0900
Ext. 66
°" " ''f-"/ '@;,
549-3031
Ext. 67 &68
wheels. Excellent condition. l.88S1 Buch Blvd. '55 OiEVY V-3, top cond. u $ 1 795
Only l3,000 miles. Lie. GHS. Excellent condition Inside & R. Beach. P'A. Ml .a.5 New radiator new brakes, n'1vers'1ty ·
023_ out, hOney cream.ext, plush WANTED: JUNK CARS lune-up. SZM). • 0 w n er ,
$1795 bd~:k ... ,~terlor. S125 Cash TOP$$$. ~'n "6S OLDSMOllU
lloliday 1.969 Harbor Blvd. e~ U11, or trade· take low * ~100 * 1962 CHEV IMP, SS. full pow· Old b I 4 doOf H.T. F1ctory eir,
Costa Me1a 6(2-6023 :mnill. ~~ !:f! .• VHJ 194, Call ======== er, fact air, whlte/creen smo '1 e pow1r st1•rlnt l br••••· •;;,:;;;;.~=.:;;;.:,;,..=~~ Auto Lt.llli-9810 interior very clean. Priced 1ute. !MOY '"'' 63 MG'"lilJdPt. El<e•llent 'MuST ..U '66 VIV. Looks ·.c;;;.o..;;;.FlRST=;;.··..:TI•-,_-, -'-'-"' below bluo book. !l62--M63 $ 1 395 cond. New seats. recent ~
OVl'>rhaul. ·Price 0 Pe n . like new, Xlnt conct., many Lease• Ne• ,69 lot 6 Months '68 EL CAMINO ~ turb 2850 Harbor Co.sta Mesa l
•'"1404 Xtras. $200~ ..Jt. l&ke over ....... fct a~ PIS, -11 ... •u•
..,.... payments, Call Before 4 p.m. • return with no obliption. ,..,.,, ' r-u 1==='-""',;'-===,.,I• '67 MUSTANG Call ... M·'-' Reid f am/fm. Xlnl cond. $2505. 962-S666 uu·. IU.l.Ulm .or 83s.-6369 PLYMOUTH Co""''rt. 4 , 1peod, r1d'i11, MGB '65 vw Sunroof AM·FM, Full Deta.UasJ:;0 --~63~CH=EV~Y~ll~--·--------l!he•t•r$. TXS Ill
MG $850. '66 Sunbeam Convt. Ford Authorized NOVA WAGON $250 'fO Fur)', completely rebuilt 1995 t
Sales, Service, Parts $1250. 673-3465 Leulna: System • 642-2273 e engine, dual quads, torque l
Inimedlate Delivery, 1961:1 VW Bug. 13,000 miles. Theodore '66 01£VELLE SS 396 Ol te ~1, new uphohteey '66 TEMPEST
AU ?t1odel1 Xlnt condition. 0 w n er ROllNS FORD Muntz it2roo, 5':W i auie1'. (over $600 lnve1ted) $375. C1ntoM cp•. RIH, •11to.,
J1rlllP Llrl
311np or1 ,,
310C \\/. Coos! Hwy., N.B.
&il-9-K'j -SfO..l'iif
Authorized l\1G Dealer
PORSCHE
tranalerred. U'lSI. 847-1464 $)400. 646-.,.,.,, 498-2463 , s f t · I d11· 2060 Harbor mvd. ~;;:.,~:!...,,~...,.,-,,..,--l'&;"V.illm:.i;ntT;B;:k:I + • " •c ory •'ca" ion· '61 VW sedan, 31,000 ml, 64).00lO ·55 Chev Bel Air, 2 dr. '&i VALIANT, alant 8, 1dck, 1111. ISTDl77 1 .~~~~=::::: :·:;~t~:..:wi pwr. '65·:;¥.::.:=: =iGso~~· toterlor $1595 :
mo. ~ .. '· ~'.·000 mi, .• , $llH9 ,.mo. titts. 39,ooo ml. llliOO. ___ PO-,_NTIA __ C __ . II ''1 CADILLAC: i * 531·1318 * \..UUgt.r, ¥r, · p, 5(9...3446 ,67 'Eu•NS SH. D•Ylll11.' Full pow t r., VOLKSWAG~"" •-' $86.94 mo. L '""' f•ct. 1lr. I HXS 7'421 ~ ... new enau"' '66 Continental sed., air & CO TIN N Bucket aeall, factory air, :On~: 54~73 tranlporta. leather. $99.75 mo, N E TAL pwr 1teerifll', nu tires, xlnt $995
SOUTH COAST • condlllon """'' • out, dfr, i ·~ vw. Sunroof. New tlre1, CAR. LEASING 61 CONTINENTAL, tact alr, $175 Cuh or forelp car.l!--------
'68 PORSCHE Targa m.2. clutcl1, top. $750. 300 w. Cit Hwy, NB 645-21.82 lull pwr, itereo tape, new Take Jow pymnts LB TKR '66 THUNDERllRD
Like new, must sell $5600 or 1 _ _.::Prv..:.:.:·..cPc:t1y=, ::."::'"..:""'=" ::__ premium tires., S 3 5 7 5 · 595, CAJ.l Ken, 4!M-B113 or fec.torv eir corid. Fi.ill pow·
bes: oUer. 642--0609 1968 V\V, auto, UNd C1rs 9900 642-4158 &ft2r 4 p.m. 56-0634 ''· '"'""' top. )(LY "''
'68 PORSCHE 9U, 5 '"'"''· ""'Ev••'oll. :.'. ~ CORVETTE '65 GTO only 7,000 ml. Hd<a., $2795 •
\Vcbc1-s, l\onis, rad lo, ...........,... .lll&D A CAR! ------·I map, 1 p e c. IUlpellllon.
on1/f1n, 01hcr extras. $5200. '62 vw, xlnt cond. Y ,65 CORVETTE black Int., .t:ll posl, manyl 4--------..+/
642-41:>8 after '1 p.m. Must Rll. $650. \VE CAN HELP YOU CONVERTIBLE * 642-mM more Xtns. must He to '65 SKYLARK ·· --·---* 673-0443 * e If olhen have turned you _ -· believe $1,000. Muat aell, 4 dr. Autol'll•llc, power RENAULT '67 V\V Futback, radk>, disc down e U you have no down COUGAR Ask far Doui. S4M366 i1t1edn9, r•dio, h••f1r.
---brakes,goodconditlon. payment • If you are em· --------i'64 STA Wq, auto trans, IRGV4t<41 '67 RENAULT 11300. Coll 00>-9683 ployed. .61 XI\-? Loaded. PIS, "'lac""· rack, •le. Xlnt $ 1395
R·lO 4 Dr. Sedan. Still looks * '62 VW * ** MANY MODELS Tapes, ipd conlrt, tilt St ~7 Asking $1000 1'.ll t
nc"" Ser. No. :>824.". S1J77. 40 hp dc-pcndoble. $625. TO CHOOSE FROM '** wl".i, vinyl top, air. $2595. .·--------!I
New Car Dir. 646-9307 897-1974 after 6 PM · · · · Call Mr. Ulmer Call 675-6373 FIREBIRD '68, 6500 ml. t '67 IMPALA
SUBARU
Subaru of Colif.
lnc.-Retail Div.
$1297 POE
Opt equip S30. Fl't'ight SI~.50
I landling $49. r>cl. $1390.50 + Tax and License
1000 \V. Coa.'it.Jliway. _N.8.
61:).0050 • 5'16-2733
.TOYOTA
TOYOTA
$ SAYE $
E xtcutive C•r Salt
Hurry Whlle They Last I
tulllr7U
IMPORTS I TOYOTA-YOLYO
1006 Harbor, C.l\1. 646-9303
-TOYOTA-
IIE:\DQUARTEr .. c;
ELMORE
15300 Beach 81\.'d, \V•trnrutr
Phone 894--3322
BILL MAXEY
lT@YIQIT!Al
1101 BEACH BLVD •
Hunt, 8 t1ch 847-1555
3 n1'1 N. or Coa1t I-fwy. on Bch
·59 vw Sedan, rebuil! engine, * 89]•50]8 * P/S, auto, 6 cyl, radio, 1H.T. Cpe. Auia., PS, RI H
11.1XI good tires. l\1ust sell. DODGE $2695. 638-1885 I ICK 95•1
Sl'Xl. 516-2.168 after 5Pl\1. .62 SIGNET 2 di', HT. $36. --------1'59 PONT., 2 dr. hardtop, $1995
Now·s THE mo., Stock No. 131. '62 F85, '68 CHARGER, air, ps, pb, ,:'..~·~·-~m=lnor==·:::"':::k.=·""'=·l i·:--:::-;::::;:::;--tl 2 dr., $32.50 mo., stock No. landau top, tape stereo. : TIME fOR 15!. ·51 T·Blrd 137. mo.. $2150. finn 5 46-33 41 • • '67 C:AMARO i QUICK CASH Sto.-k No. 142. 543-4118 RAMBLER •H.T. c,.. Aoto .. P5, '"'·
G-MAC MOTORS '67 CORONET 500, 23,400 ml. --------+,1,, RIH. tTFX 111•1 THROUGH A 3630 W. 1'1 St. Fae ""· p/b, p/r, wht llhr PRE-OWNED : $2295 ·
DAIL¥-.PILOT _.Santa Ana 531-91&'! bkt seats. Alust -~~ B1~ ~~~~-+
TiiE QUICKER YOU CALL. 12(0)~222S.. --• I WANT AD THE QUICKER YOU SELL White elephants! Olme•.Une ~ci:s:O~ '64 FORD WAC50N ·
e e e e C"try S41 ulr1. Full 1t•••r,
BRAND NE\V '69 $1898 f•ctery 11r. fOQXJIJli
$1495
''7 RIVIW c,,, full PfW•r, f1ctory
6424023 1Jr, <TQI lt tl
'65 RAMBLER Clualc, V-8. $3595
4 Or. new tires.• very clean. !I----_;,' ---·II
Good cond. mo or offer. ,66 CAJRICI 646-3319, 2421-D Elden Ave., t . 1 CM ~wfer111tle, •Ct. •Ir, power+
· · • +•tterl19, r•dl•, h1•tt'-+
'&I American, ovenbive, new +•S IMJ711 :
""' batt. Ille! pwnp. """' • $ 1 995 l lqoks aood· Quick Alo, • •
"""· 49J..J423 ·-------61
T -llRD 23, E. 17111 ST.
'61 T-BIRO l.and&u 10,000 141•7761 Ml. tun pbw. l owner Da)'I
891--0lll Ext Sl29 Evts.
61'MOM OHNt 7 '-A .........
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Stronger! Wider! Deeper Tr~:
Firmer R~a~ Grip in Any Weather
4 PJy Nylon f'_,o:rd Plus=-._
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I Extra 2 E>.1ra . a· . Extra · 4 E~i·
• Wide • Strength e Deep ·'l'reed . e ~~: ... ·' ~ .....
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Tubeless Blackwalll Tlibel ... Wllitewdt .
6.50s13 J Sf&.115 I tz.95 I 1.79 ~·8. J i213s J 15,95 ~ '
7.35•14 I $2),95 15.95 J Z.07 I .H•l' I l2Z.95 I ·111.95 . t 1..11
7.75s14 I UJ.9~ 17.95 ~.20 7.Us •' 1.124.95 I llUS ,J. 2.VI
s.25x14 I $21.95 I 20.95 2,$1 , is i ·I S28.95 I 20.,1..1 .ll20
7.75x15 J I 95 J7.95 I z.11 · al I 129-95 23:'11·.1 .µ1 · . ' ' . sl . ·ll!l-9S :M.9S :2157
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' I.~• 129.95 I 23,95 •2:!!, :· .. ·~ ' --..
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SA~· S28 on . ' I '
Sears C:Ompaet Auto
Air Conditioner
Lifetime-·Guaranteed
For a!!I Long a,,
You Own Your Car
.,. . . . .
Guarantee
• • Mun'LD GUABA.NTEE 5 W • aya -• or-...... 1. ·
11 ••lfl•• falh ••• t. d.elfft la Fila ~ C..: '. • ... :..... \•
I .,•l•rl•I• er ••1luua1lll• v ltlew· J. Workmanship ' ,. ~ . • -·· ..... • • ..,_ __ _. ,. _ _. T t d"' T t·"' •'lit. n1t-•1't r •ean•t, ••lk -............ • F..t.r cool.down tbne ftJlt .,. l·now 'u.;.,... ~ ""'~U!'9 N • · • • u .,.. •\'flll•I ••rellwr , .... tll• ...,, " 2. Material •l-¥ r ..... f. • ....., Jt,?:: ' · .. . '°"'-'""-· . , bich C.F .'J'. for rr-t ..tr mt the ecorchtnr mid-Stlmmer Ariz~ w 1 k "''heN. 'C: ,.., .... '-n....r~ . '-=-' b\-> .,·,, .. 1 ......_.... • • ~Ii:--• : --.,-It ...... -~-tty• or ,, •• .,. tr ... l.nl"' ••fDu ~ ~" ..-1 -~ '" · · · .,........... · ., .. i:.w~ "'a.an. -wil • .,. 3. Rust-Gut ..... ~ •. • u..iit .._. ....,--.§.C·~ . • • &leek. cleuti ctestann-lltJilng for a •_Keeps out du11t. dirt, pollen, •mot; . • • 1taU ""' "" ••ftlnld!Psi:!,l:1l Jheta• ' iut.art look. aatety padded be&e:L keepe out annoying lraftlc notl!t!s , ... 11.radetl Md 11eu. •• u·1• • 4. Blow.out tl-&1 ...... ., ( ;t:: .... :' ' ·
Kountl, Up6er daah • Teninc v•lu• at thls tow prie•! 5. Wear-ept ••·• ~ om ....., . ' :
~·
.,
• Expert
~tion .Aftilable
• • • #-·-~----~------~------------------------~-------•, ' .,_u. .... TA ·~400, nt-4UO IL ... GI i-nn IOllG l6IOI HE 5.0121 . PICO WE M262 SolNtA II-'"8Dtt -· --r I G1NOCM ,,..M04661 · ~Of ,.1004 a ""611 -a."''° AN 8-5211 P<lMCNl.11> 2.11u, w. u161, 'Yll ur11 -· MCNtA Ee "6111 v.......O uu1, ,.1 •• ~ ; • " I I ti JUI"-·~I, NE U761 llOllYWOCll HO N\l~l CLIHGl 637·2100 l.INIA ANA ia · 7-3371 SOUIH COASUIAM llGml • ~ 01"1 Pl '-1'11 : ,
• :a:Mll> Nf0611 -Olt "2521 •-MU 1-3211, I.I. 5-4!11 ~ S4_:Z.1111. • '"' .,. .. __________________ -----------------------1 '.
"SalWadfollGuaranlffclorlOurMoneyBack" .... ,.,.,.""""" Shap6NltlilsM1•doyll•n"'s""•tMOA.M. .. ,..,.M. •
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• JIH1 lla11 an )lnJel!
It's that time of the year ••• so kids, get your crayons and
paints and "Make Dad An Angel." Anyone between 9-12 is·
eligible. Draw Dad the way you usually see him ( shavi1Jg. ·
cutting the tawn~ watching TV, whatever). Fill in ( belo~)
and submit this entry to Vickie at the Carousel. Cont~t
closes June 20. Winners will be judged by m'embers of the
'Angels team on Saturday, June 21, who will also hold a base· !'.'
ball clinic ·On that day. First place winner and Dad will fJy
~ir California, ioin the team in Oakland next month on Fri-
'day, July 11 and return on the same plane with the teem
Sunday the I 3th. You'll eat and . sleep with the halos, ev~n
sit in the dugout for the four game Oakland series. An Angel
uniform will be yO\Jrs. Other winners will receive autograph-
ed ball•. mitts and bats. So, make Dad an An9el, and while
you're a.tit, shop South Coast Plaza for the dear. During the ·
next two weeks ·you'll ~e able :tp pick up a free tic~et for
Dad to the Angel.s/Wh1te Sox game June 21 when you buy
one. Available at the Carousel Court.
NAME AGE
ADDRESS
CITY -... I
' PHONE ' . ~
' . ,,.. ..
:loiith Coast ?taza ' -I
,..I
HISTOL AT THI SAN Ill'° ElllWAY, COSTA MIU
$uppl1m1nt te Oren91 Coat Deily lilot-Moncley, J11n1 t, ltH
l I It • I I I • • I I IO o I I I It t e.
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J June I, 119
--·
LORD REGIS OF
LONDONTOWN SQUARES
WHEN SHOPPING TRIED
0Nlr1FIM£S
WfTH A GLANCE IN TliE
GlASS
HE SAID, BLIMEY
WHAT CLASS
AHO SO. HE BOUGHT
EIGHT MILLION PAIRSI
$10.00 to $11.00
rm
FLARES SOUTH COAST PLAZA
~1~ weisfieldS
JEWBLERI
presents
SEIKO, the watch that automation built. Come see these
precision watches made the modem way.
With special features and incredible accuracy usually
found only in watches costing twice as much.
Seiko makes them starting at only $29.95.
The largest manufacturer of jew~ed lever
watches· in the world: SEIKO
•
smco~
SOUTH COAST PWA • •ts~ at the S•n Dt.to F,...way
COSTA MESA 540-7187
HUNDREDS OF UlllOU• • USEFUL
GIFTS for FATHER
COMPLETE DESK sm CUTllS ... lncludl111 pen, dally diary, ,, .. _ -....... _..... ...._.opener, blott.,.,
-......,. --..._....., llolder. All lrlmrntd ........_......,_,. -
:=':=:."' :=.tu~. 2"
REG. 2.15 .. • _MG._t._oo_ .... _•_Jt_,;;;,;~-1 ~
-BELT HANGER .... ..., w Wlct.,,, belt ..
-1.L.to.:.. ... L NmCMWttll-. ,,_-~ 24KGold
'
FATHER'S ~z.oo • ._
DAY ~-.. -
CARDS
lot Sunday, JUNE ts
II · . OCWI i1 a BOTilE
CAPTIVATINGTHENATIOll
CMATE YOOft OWll OCENt STORMS
..
+tt'"4)l.
Graduation· Cards '·
When you care enough
so senJ the w:ry bc.sc
Am.
DESK UMPS =.. C99 ... WI .,-
VE"V SP•CIAL -'" 0111' TO ALL BRIDe.8 .
~~~,. 10% dhcount °" lnvlatfoM, 8ftnt• c••• ~ fl'Odt, 9'o ....... awat *"'· f~vors, peper aoodt. etc.~ IMctieo. '
~ STATIONERS
IUOfA PAltK SHOf'PtMI corru
COSTA MESA SOUTH COAST PLAZA
IMIMCTM coma • lt\IWl'IMTON 1W1 ----
•
I
-~-----------------------------..... ------~1!111119----------mllll!I ......... ._~~
Harris & Frank
SINCE 1856
SOUTH COAST PWA
COSTA MESA
3133 BRISTOL AVENUE
•t S.n Diego Freew•y
~ 1t •.m. • t p.m. Monday thru F_rid~y ,
.• . .... .
H & F MEANS
HAPP-Y FATHERS •
FATHER'S DAY
SUNDAY,
.•UNE I Sth
Robe Dad the RIGHT Way! In A
Royal Cc,ma Kimona by 'Roytex' ·
Superbly fashioned of a luxurious, deep pile Velour-
this handsome robe makes a perfect lounging companion
pool -side. • • beach-side .•. or fire-sidel 85% Amel
Triacetate; 15% Nylon and available in strictly he-man
solid co1ors: Blue, Green, Orange or Gold. Gift seekers will
have no hang-ups on FIT either, since ONE SIZE FITS ALL! 22 .50
·FIRST ANNIVERSARY
SALE
DRAW . DAD
Just drtw Dad as you see him (shaving, cutting the lawn, watching
TV, wh1tever), then you are eligible for the prize of 1 lffetime •••
an all-expense trip for you and Dad with the California Angels.
You wiO travel Air Celifornia with the halos , eat at the same resteu·
rants, ~ay in the same hotel •nd even sit in the· dugout. Y ou1 wear
your own special An991 "niform. Al this t.it.11 place for the four ..
game series with O•kltnd, July 11-13.
Entries 1vatl1bfe •t •II s.uth COHt Pina tfottt.
Pick up, then turn into Vlck1t It the Carovtel.
~.~ liit-"oas'f •aza w.'r• .. ,,... OU \• 1 I ind Open
• Nfghtly 'Til 9:30 l&IUOLAUAN DIMO NllWAY, COITA MllA ,. .... "_. ................. ,..,.. .......... ~
I ._.._._ ........ _. ..... ._ .. ._ ..................... -=;;;a--===::::;:==:.;::===:::=:=::===:=:= -------------------~~ -.... .-. .. . ..... ---
4 June 9, 1969 South Coast Plaza
CORD
· Levrs ·
Rugged corduroy levi'a
9 ivM you built-in I com·
fort. Trim, muculino
Levi's styling gives you
tho look you want • , •
The tevi's look.
SAAD
OLIY•
all OWN aLua
GOLD 5.91
South Coast Plaza.
•tstol at S-Dfeto fwy.
540-3197
LOST .or GAINED
WEIGHT?
We have thie lar ... t Tallorlnt Shope In Or1n9e
CCH1nty with 32 Ma1ter Tellers and fitter•
epeclalblnt In all form• of Tallwt~. All WORK GUARANTEED
• sum & SLACKS REDESIGNED e ALTERATIONS FOR MEN & WOMEN e NAllOW LAPELS AND SHOULDERS
ON COATS e REMOVI PLEATS, TAPIR LEGS e COATS, DRESSU SHORTENED e EXPllT PUNCH llWDVING e WI AL TU SUEDE, LEA Tlfll & FUR ·-~
CUSTOM· MADE
SUITS • COATS e SLACKS
For th. ru" wh o hH btt" un•bl• to t•t • u t-
i1fectory fit in • reedy mede suit. Our d11i;"·
ers will 1tyle to your ... ct 1pecific•tion1,
CUSTOM TAILORED SHIRTS
Eech 1hirt lndividu•lly hend cut for • propor-
tioned, slim look! Choo1e from 011r l•rt• selec•
lion of perm • preu •nd p11re finish febrics.
H .. d, .. of ,.nu to ,...... fr9111
I
----
FOi GIADUA TION •••
Fr•"' tht lertest select!°" of
Music loxet ht ell Ctlifornle. 1ivo
them "E 4 o I wt ft•" or "Tere't
Theme" or orty ef '•ae111 ef t1111H
:n htntl10Me Music In es fre"'
Switserle..4, Italy or 6erlftany
•vail•blo fr•111 $7.IO to $110.00.
Just erri"M 111 time for 1r•tlu•·
liOlt, 20 •tltlitien•I 1111111bers tt •"'
le our f•"uleus collectlu.
FOi FATHER"S DAY •••
..
Fer Fether the fisherman, Tho Flah ·
erm•11'1 ttride. Co111bi1111 the pllera
111tith • ptc~et knife •1141 auler.
les;dts, the fish u" be welt hed
end meuured wlt+i the acale a11d
mH111 rin9 ••P•· all bvilt irt. S 11.ts
CHINA • CRYSTAL e SILVER e GIFTS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA • l33J BRISTOL e COSTA MESA e 5-40-2627
TUXEDO HNTALS
eAUCelefs e All Slnt
.II
•• -.. ••.• •i•·• J 7'
.•
. . .
~------. ,,
.... , ... ca.
___ .... t .....
South Coalt Plaza
1HW IM AT IOUTM COAST PL.AU. aatSTOL A1' SAM .. IM IHIWA'tt MOMOAY, TMuttsoAY AND PR IDAY It:• 1'D f 1-. TUISDAY, WIDNISDAY ANO SATUllDAY tt1• 1'D •:-.
,. . ·-.....
....... ··-............. a
June t , 1961 5
..............
s June 9, 1969 South Coast Pla~
&oath Coast ftua\ .
fliclc1r1 ~t.r11r.
~ ' IJFOIUIJ
llllT lllllSTllll
taa F&Tlll'S DIT11m1 ·
Dad will enjoy the tuta temptin1 ch111-, llll0ked
meats and other fooda mea 1J1JoY ••• iD oar c:ompletr
selection of sift pab. l
I Take It I With You I or
i We'll Mail FAMlLYFAVORITE
I It t " I) d 1 ti' lb. IBBP STJCIC. Maetucl, laotr 0 a (lao1ted ChHH lu). laalf·pound Coda.
wi. Plnr a. .... , Honen.clJah Sauce plaa
fmPorted candlf'• • I
I :
I I
MIDNIGHT SPBaAL $1.11
Thia II a uefU tota Ms. c.tewe '".. 1Y. lb. IBIP STICK. MSW Midget LoaPon.
BEEF mcx, Cnc1ten. ~,.,_ l1lcb. ltUe 11nr Chene. Smokr (Smoked elate ..
two 1mport.d a.... .,...... .......... S.. lu) .U baported cendlee to add apukle. din11 ad laported Candiea.
NEW PLEASURE PAIC •1.111 THE AMBASSADOR $13.18
1 ~ lb. BBBP ITICX, G01&da, Honu1dl11a l V. lb. IBBF ll'IC%. Imported Dutdl ~
8Hce, Mild MJcl11t LoD1laou, l•okr l•t• Bar, two Imported CbHH lprudr,
(a.oke4 CbetM Bu-). twe ~ Cbetle Coata, Maatarcl. Appla l•tter, laokt4
lprtacfa. a.De Plew a..... plu llllpartM Orsten, Pt.ua r.a., Dep '• DeUte (c:lteoo-
C&adlta. '-ta dtNm ct.Ip), Dttetn cu. aad Import••,
Codlee. lo• Coast?lm
IMt Wint Loww CarouMI IA.II
lrfltol et the Sin Di• F....way
i
I •
RAY WILSON'S .
FIRST ANNIVERSARY
SALE
~~~~ ..
5~~':5
..... ~m• ...... 1., 99
~~~~,!~~In~ 161 :: ........ 1 ~9'
!~~!!_~<!,I!,~ 2u 99
S"-9 JI te 40 •.•••••••.•.•..•••• • ••••••••••••••
~~~n:~~~~~~.~:~~ ... 3 J 99 .
~~~~5...-~~!: '" ~ ............. 41t"
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
'333 8rl1tol
DAD 'N GRADS
IUSHNIU llNOCULAIS
All Sll11 la Stock
1/3 off~~.
PARKER PEN Ir PENCIL
PENS .... _ 1/3 OFF
PENCILS ·-1 /2 OFF
Umited Quanitie.s
HONEYWEU
WEA THEI INSTRUMENTS
AND WALL PIECES
1/2 off
SOUTH COAST PLAZA Pree --.r1111m111t cu,,........ .... ........ ............... Pwy ..... .........
MNUt dNfte IN!Mm~ e MMW .°""fl. e DIMrt a.a
• Cent ...... """""" .... -~ .
"FOUk·WAY .. MIN'S
POCDT SICmAIY
J'lle eve?')'thlq you have to CUT)' In your
pockets. Here'a a completel)t appointed
aecreta17 ftttecl wl\b a removabi. cbtck· ·book/card cue •
,...7.50 1,
, •• ,.. •• tlut-e••el •Ille
111-1.1rS11TS ··
Ouala pullovenl NyJon.
bib ~ casual placket
eollar or mock tmtJeneclr.
Lob Of cobs. Machine•
waah,.no-iron.. S..M-L-XL. 39! 4JJ9 .
.
P•,.e•'er-eetNa Ire• ...... .. . .
I ' ......
I ..... ~ , __
June'l.1961 7
COAST
...
' .
Craftsman
7-in. Saw
• ...._.Jectleft •Ml• chvte
e Ne I-' .... ti IMI "PM • ll-4e ........ ,.,.
eDev...,. 1% HP
Soper V aloes on
Signa~ Golf Sets
· for Dad's Dayl
~ ... , .... c:-· n ... .. . .
Gift Dad With a Golf Starter Set
\
I
• Men's sigllClhlre set In choice. of riCJllt or
left..hanclecl models
• Set lnclucles 3, 5, 7, '· piltter lroM:
1 and 3 woods. Co111pl,te wltla tolf bacjs
.
35aa
Spectacular Savings on Sears
Craftsman Gifts for Father
. SA VE $9 to $10! Your Choice?
Regular
$46.48 to l $47.98 3 .ft99
Alk AMut SM rt ·Conveni.nt Credit Plana
SAVE $101 Craftsman 1 /2 ·in.
Drill with Masonry Drill Set
lhtvhlr ......... Prk• Totel 147.58. Sin-
gle-speed reversible drill develops % HP to
drill steel and concrete. With masonry drill
bits.
SAVE $91 Craftsman Circular
Saw with Exira Veneer Bla'de
a..,&ar S46AI law devel<>pt full 1 ~ UP "'1th ball bearings at heavy load points.
• Zlpc thru 2xf'1, WJth rip guide and extra
blade.
SAVE $101 Craftsman Sabre . . .
Saw with Steel Miler Table
...... 1.,1rate Prket Tot.I 147.fl. Slide
.. awltcb concrol lor 3 1peeds with full torque
at every 1peed. Developc ~ HP, With ta~.
TSears J . Sear8 Costa Mesa, 3333 Brisiol St., South Coast Plalza Phone 540-3333 --... .
-----........ ~
ri .. , C"• C' I) •• ,.., ..
-
-.. . ...... Lt _g t .I , . .
.J111!9f,.. '
Total :Look .
Coordinated Wardrobe
lpecl.I CCMl'41natet fw the t•t•I m ... Shirts. twMtw J•bta. aa.dca •net walklnt lhorts ••• In C1llfornla'1 .....,.,. c.ronr
Mock Turtleneck Shirts
s.r14 c.lon In ltlue, 1rwn, to14 anti
r•plttrry In th ... c.lors. ... -····-·····-·-·-···-•
'atKhs .,..t and 1roovl•·····-········-··········-··-·.,
Shirt Jae in
Sweater Jackets
7.99
8.99
'" ltlue, ,,...., .. w. whlt•·······-··-·m······-····-........ 12. 99
Walking S1torts
.,.._,, Ill MIW. anti check-. Wlltte. Mve, lf'M", ,.w, ru11••ry checb ... _._ ..
Solid and Checked Slacks
'
Use Sears
Revolving
Charge
$7
Popular Mock Turtleneck 3 9 7
Acrylic Knit Sport Shirts • ·
SEAR~Costa Mesa 'Bristol at Sunflower Park Free
I
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'
r ~-
. '
11 Janet. 1111 .
Prep·
Prep
-S~op
FASHIONS
FOR -THE
YOUNG
;MAN
latest fashions for
the style conscious
young men of
today.
From tha
doublebreasted
blazer and flare
pants to the
traditional three
button sport coat.
Slut 14 .. JI
,,_ S2600
s1 .. u to 42 ,,... s4000
Shop
South Coast Plaza
~9521
......... -. -·· -,..._ ---.. ~-................. --· _... ....... .
·----·"""""'""""_ ..... , ....
For an extra $2.00
,you can b~a shoe
I thats not as ·
as this one.
You know the shoe we' re ta I kine about. It's Just II famous IS our Thom McAn PQssum. And
to be perfettly honest, just as IOOd looklna. But
not just II &ood.
Because the Possum has a cush-ioned crepe sole. Pigskin uppers
that are proces.sed to
npeldirtandwnr.A
wntilated &low leather
..
'
SOU1H COAST PLAZA
'1 3333 lristol Ave.
Costa Mesa
llninf. And 1 cushioned Inner heel. (Tbt
Inner heel II whit )IUUI' hell rests on.)
Tit• other aho. 1110 has a
cushiontd U9PI IC>lt 8nd pipkin
Upptrl thlt 1111 proc:esaed to repel
dirt and Wiler.
eut 1t doesn't hM • nn1nc.
Am llttlOUlh It dots hlYI 111 lnnerhell, h hell iln'tcuahioned.
So whit it an boilt down to is
lllnplytNs: For $2.00 lesa YoU can
bLfy a lhc)I that's better thM the
lhl» u.t cost.a $2.00 more.
'lboloaum. ~~
HUN11N&TOK CENTER
Ecli•ger at leadl
So1th Coast Plaza -· 3333 S. Bristol
P~one 548-82&2 Costa Mesa, California
The Best Darn Pipe
Lighter Dael Could
Ev~r Have •••
UC)hts & Tamps
{$ttn5ul Qt:Jip sa. 9,
'<!'\~ ~inbttt ~~ ~nbacrn$
Our most popular aromatic 2 Mild and smokes c!ean
• and dry to the heel of our
pipe.
~n~-,~1 Slow bum.ing English .. _ 0'1 rt-'" type blend of straight
weH aged +obacco1
Jhif~Titit
Well ba1anced blend of
~rginia and Oriental
tobaccos, with full body
I rich flavor • • •
Remember a Free 1-oz. of
T obocco With Every Purchase.
SPACE AGE PIPE
for the iet set dad.
South Coast Plaza
-Ideas ·for .. Dad! ~ , -
·Handmade Pipes by .
PREBEN HOLM
From .,
Made Exclusively
For The Tinder Box
Comoy's
of London
Sandblast or walnut
finish briars with
handrubbed bowls, pre-
charred for easy break-in.
June t. ta 11
Beautiful
Handcut Bit
. & Bowl-
Made in
Co,lenhagen
s35 .. s75
sa.95
~ane 600 Sweet Smoking
Natural or a· Special Father's Day
Price ••• Regu~ar 5.95, · Now 4.95
$)2.50
' Now la colon $11.00
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Imported & domestic cigars pl,us ell. other 1mokin9 items. 9"::,~---..,. . ~-~ .. ·-· --
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• 2 June t , 1969
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Jl $1.tJ
}2 fl.ts
J4 $4.00
J> $7.50
II
South Coast Plaza
LET'S CELEIRATEl
~ ............. wlttl ...i,. te Metcli ~ Jeal Ger4•tt
The fuw1kalJ1 outty, h1pp,. book for 1hou who enjo1 any u cuM fot
eatin&, chinking i nd meuym•kina. Jleciptt for such 0«uioo1 as Fen4ct·
Bender Mendel, HtpPJ Unbirthd.y_ Piny, ~ew BabJ: Lunch, Bast to
Beat the Heat, Gucta Who'a C:ooun• to D111ner, t5ict Fett, Roman or,, and many 11\0rt.
DISTILLED WISDOM
~, ...... A.~,..t
Herc in then owe word'l·ta the ~~ ol chc
w0tld'1 wises< men to '" bf, tit 1Np1rc and
auide IU to !(ive Ill couttifr Pacbd with t~n·
chant, ~d.ble, proloun.cl ..ct wiUJ quotttiont
Di11il/1tl 'I' istlolfl Ul.uninatcs the whole art and
wiJdom of succcnful livin•. $1.ts
THE COSMIC POWER WITHIN YOU
~ ,,...,. M.,,.,, D.D., D.l .S., Plt.D., LL.D.
AMAZING TBCHNIQUI HAS HELPED
THOUSANDS! In thcM fucinating pages.
rou'IJ discover how Dr. Murphy's technique
for concentrating the Cosmic Mind h11 helped
thousands of men .ad women, ol all •!(CS, in all
walks of l!fe-c'len unbelievers! $5.ts 13 $S.tl
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A Y081
lllJ P•r•111•h•1tM Y ... 1!111'4•
"I Jm &ra1efol to yo" Coe granting me some insighl into d1is faKinat-
ing wotld .. -Tho""'J AfMlf, Nob1/ Priu"'""
"YogaoaoJ• expounds the IO-called esoteric doctrines of tJ~ East wi1h
utmolt fraolmess •nd &ood h11mor. Hia book Is r~ardinj:' for It• ac·
rount of 1 life filltod with apirltual •dveoture,"-t'#1fftl Pm r
Stlf ·Rtllliz11io1t P1//ow1hi~, Pdlish1r. $4.00
THE &RUTUT IAME OF ILL
My l it. .. G.H ~,,.. Hi.u.w .... " ...... w."" Wia4,
wltti • ,_,._... ~~Tr-J-.
Not for thirty f~ .;nee the publicatioo o( Dow11 IH hirwJ lw
Bobby Jonca and O. B. Keeler, lw !ht world't eop aotfu coUahontta
with the world'• top golf wcitet to turn out • mtstcrplt<'f cl JOl.finl
history, iolfiQ& lore, •utobiograph, and instruction about the G.tM
ol GamCj. Now it ha1 bc~n done again by Jade N1ckl1uJ and Hc.rbcrt Warren Wind. $7.50
MAIUAL OF HOME REPAIRS,
REMODELllll AND MAllTENANCE
An indispensable tool for the home h•ddyman, hobbyist, anJ Jo-.t·
yourself rcpeirman, thiJ ,oncisc and simple guide:
•explains Ille inlciacies of everything in and around the house: clcc-
criClll Sf Stems, pJurobin~, house Construction, I ml.s.onty, roofiag, hell•
a)'stems, etc.
•and aho"Wt, ,_-1th step-by-step pbotograrhs, Jra• ings, anJ di~gmru,
Jtqw to •intai.o, tepa.ir, or tq1laa t*· · · ·
fol ~he lp4Ut'lllfnt dwelltc a1 well IS the home owner, thece uc val11ahle
iectlona on the-mainknanct and-ttpair of the n~-nt kitchen and
flouschold appliances, ·
Addition to llefcrcoce Boob Siu : 8'"xl0~~ .. ; ~8~ ~>?" iltuttrated
1'ith photographs and line drawings. Hudcovcr clod1 binding "ith dull
iad:ec.
THE 1911 OW JOIES
llVUTOR'I JlllDIODI•
Convenient rele«f>ct to stock and bond nurkct
indiatora. Complete 1968 Dow JOocl Aver-
.,a; ttpOrt oo mutual funds; iDdi•ldual te<"·
ords ol cncrunon and prefurC(f stocks listed on
the New York and Ameri('IJi l!xchanies, yetr"a nqc ol prices, net chanAf, .olwne •nd di•i·
dcod, plut rear's JOOJt active issues. lH paics, •
Soft cover, $1.45
lllYESTllO FOR PRIFIT
In • tcquel to t'he runawar teller, "Profit. On ~)t~Q~ii Wall Street," 12 profess1onu investors and
mANgera ol mu tual funde discuss their tech-niq~• and outlook. Over 2n pages, Soft cover, I .IS }17 $1.41
Jlf $3.ts
J20 $9.SO
Jt8 $!.II
"YOUR HHOKOft AID TOUR DREAMS" .
" • ......., ... _. c..u ~ caost complete utrol~al guide available. 768 pqts iQdltding:
a 70 ya.r Cl1lpbemefU oi the Moon, charu ol Vet1ua for binbdates up
to 1970, an encyclopedia ol dnsms, etc. A reliable rcfuee<e foe lcara-
io,e the adencc of Asttolo,, uid the mcanio• o( dreams. 1969 RcviS('d •
Edition. :
THE CALL TO IAUFOllllla Tiiie I,_ '"'"' tf th
Ptrttla·ltrra El~• t1 lllf c-•.....,.lltt Cellkntl.'a IOOtll Aniyenery ~ 1Uclter4 '· , ....... . c .. .-. ... ~ Je1M1 S. c.,fey
A graphic etocy in worda and plctwes ol the foundll1g o( Californi•.
Btou,Ylt together for the fint time are a cerpts from all the joumala of
the SaCted Rxpeditioo, .ad the entire trail tluoup Baja Californi• 111
the way ro Su Pranciacu Bar ia revca.led ill rue N\d beautiful photog-
lll)fly. Containa 100 fll)J.pqe iJluatratiMa, a third of tbctn in &lo'll•int
color, a_nd thrtt spcdallr commissioned paintinAS.
HAIDIOOK OF OOEU HD UHHWATER EllllHHIH
...... ~ Hettll Jt.. ........... c.r,. •-' t41te4 ~ Jth11
J. M1•, C.ff H ....... H4 I. P. Mclt.llltitw.
The oalr boolt ol ill kind U. lllf lan&UllC· thia timelr work meeu the
pressm, need fot 1 colJccdoft ol tested met.bods,-~. lolld faca
for 11ac in underwaler comtNctioa md mg:ince.rio1projectt.The1ubject
m1.tttt ranice hom buic conccpta in oceanosrsph1 and fluid pro~its,
throllgh lacu oe toola Md techniques, cable tcchnolon, underwater
power SOUKct, liud ud floatin1 atructures, divlftJ and othtr opcraiions.
JU
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JH.Jt I s,..s.12'Mtour Or4er Ph .... HO. 9-1191
f . •
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~-~----------~~------------------------------------.... --ml!lll ................ .....
ORANGE COUNTY DEALERS WILL DISIU Y
ALFO ROMEO
JAGUAR
PORSCHE
VOLKSWAGON
RENAULT
MERCEDES
FIAT
ENGLISH FORD CORTINA
VOLVO
TOYOTA
TRIUMPH
ROVER.
• Enzo wilf sing ·ThurJday, June 12
• The Bellshanny Men, ORCO Recording
Stars will perform Friday, June 13
4:30, 6:45 and 9:00 p.m.
~ South foast ?tua
ll15TOLAT SAN DIE~O FHIWAY, COSTA MESA
We're 14 Stores
md Opm
Nigf)tly .'Tll -9:30 ..
If we paid any higher
interest we'd be breaking
the law
We start out by paying the highest interest rate a savings & loan
is allowed to pay. ·
Now it is even better. Wt are now doin& somethin& new-to make
sure you'll earn Interest 100-"1 of the time. And then some.
Here's how it works . . ..
~ , . ' ....
J ~..... . .. -,.,
Put money in anytime you please. Take mone,·oui •~r-108
feel like it. And you'll get paid for every sin&l• hy ·~·plittini
in to takine out. • • .
4 I • ... ~ . -.. . . -. ' ,, .. '
South Coast Plaza
'
Qri top of. this, you can take us for ~O. dayf extra ln~reat every
month even before we see the· color of your money. Just put it lD
. by the 10th. And you'll get interest from the 1st. ('lbe catch: )'O\I
· have tO leave it iri till quarter's end.)
In short, we give you every chance to .get money for your money. ·
Don't pus us up. That would r•~ be 1 crime, lMc1use we'r.•
right •cross the strHt from South Co~ut Pl111.
'
Jil.ITINGTON PMK BELL/MAYWOOD STUDIO CITY (MAIN CFFICE) ilSO·At&lntic A.,_., 114'1 Vwun Blvd. SOU1HOATB W~L!H I . OJITAMBM 4140 T~ Blvd. ,,.. MIMI ..... 1taJO 1.ot AwrAJt Jll-6111 1f1M)SI
'SJ..1'41 .................. ,..," ......... ,..... ..... ),,_-... ...... ,..._.,,, 49af lllllrcBlvd; ..........
., .. ,," Pim) . '
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• ~ tf f ._ l Io 0 ,' ~ Y '•• • ,. t I t o ' I • # • •
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14 June '· uee South Coast Plaza ,
ro• and KING
.1
i . SWEATERS
The fine5t in C1lifornj1 knit~
wear. V • Nec k, 14mbswool
blends in long & short sleeves,
GoKtt L I " k, 1lp1ca • wool
c1rdi91ns. Wi~e H led ion of
col~rs in sizes S-M-L-XL.
Solith Coast Plaza
lrlstol« S. Diego Fwy.
540-3897
C:CWW4
.J atflm~ ~m ~~I~~ 6Uta.i~ blWH4
\9t\d.o.l ~owrz (q whihl
O!°io.n~6..1UiU1 ~ln0i6hil
chAPel '"'1in-1\qo
u • Ci
WANT ... INTEREST
ON YOUR BANK
CHECKING .. ACCOUNT? . ,,.. ..
YOU G:AN'T GET IT
BUT WITH PACIFIC'S
SWITCH 'N SAVE ACCOUNT
.You can do almost as well by keeping a lot
less mon&y in your checking acco~nt and a lot more
in your Pacific 5 °/0 Passbook Account and swit ch.
ing money beck end forth as often as you like.
BECAUSE
EVERY DOLLAR EARNS EVERY DAY
IT IS YOUR PACIFIC ACCOUNT
EVEN FOR JUST ONE DAY
5 °/0 annually on Passbook Accounts compounde·d
daily and 1/4 °/0 additional on three-year bonus ac-
counts are ·current rates . ••
Savings in your accou!Jt at quarter', end earn from
the I st of any month when receiv ed by th e I 0th .
FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX FOR
MAINTAINING $500 SAYINGS ACCOU~T
Choose from the most
specteculer colection
of dolht."1 accessories
and gifts anywher..
• Topsiden
• Sansabelt Slacks
• Stacy Adams Shot1
• Don Loper Neclcwar•
•London~
• Lancer Shirtt
• Manhattan Shirts
• Dante Jewelry
• etc.
XTIA SPICIAL FOi DAD
SPORT COATS
•49 .
Value to '75
Fabulous Selection. As.st. Colors
Yes! We heve
FLAI RS AND BELLS.·•
in solid and p1ttern1. . .
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BANKAMERICARD -MASTER CHARGE
GENTR-Y'S CHARGE
f
SOUTH COAST PLAZA STORE HOUltS
DAILY 10.t:JO
SATURDAY 10.4
540-1502
HAHOR CENTH
HOURS.
DAILY f 1J0·6 PM MOH. tlira FRI.
f:JO.t ,.
540-1500
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY I BRISTOl_ COSTA MESA
HARBOR BL VD. At WILSON STREET, COSTA MESA:
.. 3 DAY SPECIAU $320
Reg._3.19 Stat, Thong II t1a1 .._ ....-..
Ka la lllilr • ..-w'Wtl lll&htr .,,. • 1latbw ...
·Arm • ~wa.at"l*Jdoe:MW•ftmamortl
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
FIRSY ANNIVERSARY
SAlE
June •• -u
l ,
L
· 19 June t, 1968
.. . .. . ....,,,. ,, ·-·-
South Cioast Plaza
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Here comes the bride, her
radiant smile ma~hed
only by the danling
diamonds on her finger.
They are • pledge that •
his love will last forever
• • • end they are the finest •
from iewek by ioseph. •
Exquisite diamond pendants
Extensive selection of diamond
wedding sets, solitaries and fancies
'
Solid gold pierced earrings n4 \AV.. 110\4
'd f,\\ed a
,. \\" S\\~et' <}0' \. It\\ \)tate\e\S S\et'' ~ al\d t,,a
t\\at\l\S
,,, tie lacs
----
Co/orf1t/ . hi
rm,sfone ,..
'lngs
I 4K gold cuff 1· k m sets
, Many h eaufifu/ Pear/ . Pendants
.
Here are rhe rin11s1· Wdtches
you could gift the graduate
with at prices you'll r.~el
' Beau''' 1 " ~ 1l 1U S/r;a J . . uflus Of cu/fured Pearls
Fine dre~ . ~, Sporfs anat'' --. ulver watches
Fme 1. • C1101ce of drer · ~:r Wa~ b c bands
lankAmel'icard e Master. Char9•
· Penonalized Credit
..... CMlt ,.._ e JJJJ 1ri1to1 e Com M ... e 140·tf66
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