HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-06-18 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesat• Ii
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. . . --sA-_Kiibte,-· ~vi· -ti1n .
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-Susan Mazze.~s
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Co:Ddiiion \Vorse
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·~o-.J~ty 1
J, : • ·Six-Hore ' . . ' . '
·ode Dan~ers · Rule.
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:Lewd~: ·Fined . $1~'.500
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Fueling .,for: Apollo 11
, Mooµ .. Begins ,. ' . WEDN.ESQAY A~.E!(NOON, JUNE ;11, 1~9· ~.i,,.,. .... ~ ... ··-
YOL & NO. 1 .. l SICTIOMS. n P'ANI
--.t·' "'r4
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Kiiied ~-S¢or~ . -· Tickiisli Tilslt
~Mystery Shrouds. Gets Okay
.. "Sh t• . D th After Review 00 ing·. ea. . CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Teclml-
nlclana begin IU<llng the Apollo 11
A Garden Grove yout!I Inside Ills
grandparents' closed liquor store with
tllelf peimlssion WI! shot to death by
eomPton police late Tuesday nigbt when
lie unuplainedly opened fire on them.
Arthur G. Laramie, 17, wall dead on ar·
rival ·at Harbor General Hospital as the trap:: climax to a trip to the store to get.
some cookies and milk for a mldnlgbt
Iliad<. · •
The. ·victirp. acckient.ally tr.iggered .a
silent 'buf81ar .alann in th,e sl)op, leading .
to a cn,pat.ch ·of One regular patrolman
and j'te!erve officer to investigate. cmnpton Police Lt. A. M. Thotn4s iden-
tified the pair involved as George· Keaton _
and Ralph Reeves.
. '
He said OfDcer Keaton wtht'to the rear
of the ·)1quoi-·store whlle the reserve
patrolman covered the frool, spotting
young Laramie lhrou&h the back door.
Officer Keaton shouted at the figure in-.
side, Lt. 'lllomas said, at whl~ Ume
Laramie fired ,a ..38 caliber Pistol and
daried 'back .. the patrOJman !Ired back.
BOth ·bullets In !lie udiange mlutd, tiut Keat.on tired again al1d stnick
Laramie in .tJie head: '
'Mle v)cf.im's ~randparents aid be was
In the store with their ~on but
they were mystified u to· why he bad one '
o( the two &UDI in the store ani:l why be
used it.
6 County Nude Dancers
-.
Hit Wi-th-$1,SrJO. FilwS ·
s11·more iw~ tavern dancers were fin-
ed a total of 11,lOO Tuesday following
I.heir convictioh on lewd conduct and
indecent exposure charges.
~ Orange County Municipal
Judge! Eugene C. Langehauser ordered
probation fqr all sentenced. Sentencing
was delayed In four other cases, one
woman was held innocent of charges aod
a warrant issued for another who failed
to appear in court.
cam~1o the judge on tht basl!I or af-
fidavits. .
Miu Zlmmer, convicted of tJ1ht counts
of lewd c:onduct and lndeooit exposure,
wtn be ,..tenc:ed Tueaday. ·
Others continued to ~ were
Ethel Mae Sooter, n, of Fountain-Valley,
Joan Thompson. Ontario and Llnda Rae
Clark. Santa Ana. · Charl"s againll Be9erly Vleriro, 28, of
El Toro went dllmiaed.
A warrant was ordered bsued far
Ellllier 'Pike, 'll, of Cyprus, wheo al!o
failed to appear.
nJOOl)Ship t~y to start• final ~·
raUons for the l~unch four weeks away of
man 's first moon landing mission.
The g<><lhead for 1he ticklish and llme-
consuming spacecraft tuellng operatiloo
came from project officials after a ·41y~
long rev1ew Tuesday of all aspect.a ol the
historic lunar flight.
Astrooauts· Nell A. Armstrong, Michael
Colllns and F.dwln E. Aldrin were pro-
nounced in e~uent health by Dr.
Charles A. ·Berry, the dlrect.or of medkal
operaUons for the tpactmen. '
Chief aatronaut Donakl K. Slayton said
the pllot.s wll1 work IO-hour days, at1. days
a week for the final four weekll. He said
be e1.pecls tbem ·to be "adequately train-
ed and adequately rested" at launch
time, 6:32 a.m. POT July 16.
"We are go at U\ls Ume, subject lo suc-
ctSS!ul compleUon ct the remaining
tests, u reported U. Gen. Samuel C.
Phillips, the •Apollo program director.
"After hearfug the -readiness &BSessment
or'all e1ements of tfMi tWas1on, t am con-
·fldent 'that _we an p_rocetd wil!l .our
preparatiOl'UI to meft the July launch wt.
dow."
Today's fueling operaUon was the start
of preparations for the last big test -a
dress rehearsal countdown scheduled to
begin June· 25 ·and end with a mock
laUnch July 2. The spacecraft will rtmaill
fueled a!IA!f the tell.
Ship Strike Settled
NEW YORK (AP) -Slrlklng decl< of·
flcen have reached a tentaUve set• *menl with • major portlon ol the ...
tion'• merchant fnUlne1 tndln& a two-dat•
tleup at EaJt and Gull Cout ports. '.
t . . • -'
• • J;seapes Uyitery A~ush
Lana's Hypnotist Mat.e
.FaeingMesa Theft Rap
By~ 1tTllUI\ R. VINSEL
Of 111t C.llr Pia.I II.rt
Jet oet hypnotist Dr. ~d Dante -
Harbor Area enl~ and, conllctante
~' of stars -today faces a theft charge lh·
volvlng $18,500 worth of boats at a Costa
Mesa firm, after surviving a mysterious
murder attempt Tuesday.
l~ES MURDER TRY
St<ir'1 Hu1bon11'Danto
~ing B9y, 6,
FmliiaAiiv~, werr
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -A &,year·
cld boy missing. foufldays~tn. the San
Bernardino mountalnl. Was found alive
today 11 INl'Chen were about to pve qp
hope. (See eorller lllary, Page ll)
First wOrd fnm the sCene WIS lhat
Matthew Joseph ..%bnmerman was in
good C<lllditton. He W.. being Down by
helicopter to 1 hoipltaJ· for a checkup._
The 1"'I, bad ~n fDin.ing sine<. Salur·
day wpen bit ·wandered away ftom !Us .
mothei' and sister near the 1>eBennevtlle
Plna.t:,mp GnJllllClt ri!ar Barton i1at.s.
lie .... ·founif-~ two mu. awar··
Sant.a Ana police recogni:.ed the name
tn news reports of the live-shot ambush
and tipped off Hollywood detectives who
arrested the ill-starred seventh husband
of actress Lana Turner about mictmgbt.
The attack b)' a mystery gunman wear.o ,
Ing a rakish Australian bush hat earlier,
as Dante drove into his fuhlonable
office-apartment on Doheny Drive, left .
him with only a cut on the (ac~
SHATl'EllED GLASS
The barrage ol, bullets ahat\ered the
"'ihdshield· of his .car and be 1Jll nicked ·
by Oylng gWs u he dove . for . the 1 ltoorboardl ·durlnc what autllotltlel aald
WiStHt 'thttd--itt~mpt Orrhtl·Ufe. '
Once bet.,., a jealooo tovir wbo claJm>. · .;i th• b}'llllOllat . twf 'llf'!ftilted hlo'
girllriend, fii'ed a· .45 caliber p1.a&ol shot
at Dr. Danfe · durlni a . San l>ie10
nJghiclub pe~ormance. ·
He wu not blt.. and lawmen dliS not
elaborate Tuesday oo the third alle1ed
rilurder attempl
Dante w11 apparently u shaken by bis
arrest as be had been by the mur4er at..
tempt earlier, ~lling autboriUes he knew
of no reason for e'itbet, . unW the bolt
cue Was explained.
••1 don 't know anyone who would want
to kill me," he said, "unless it would be
aomeone who is jealOUI about the woman
I jw:t married."
I OTHER HUSBANDS
Dante rolfowed six other hul!lbands
down the aisle with Miu TUrner in a Las
· Vegas wedding chapel aix weeks :1go,
after they met at a fashionable discatbe-
que three weeb earUer.
The alleged attempted theft of sever.
motorboats belonging to the Marlin Boat
Co., 1595 Newport Blvd.;Costa Mesa, oc-
ourred almost one.year to the day before ·
Dante's recent May 8 marriage to the
blon<le Star. \. ' . .
Mla Turner, 49, and her daughter
Cbery'I, 25,-were present when the
S!ni•por .. born nlghiclub bypnotllt waa
picked up at their Sheraton-Universal
Hotel suite. ·
-He llsted-hta age .. 49 during the book-
ing piocioe ind told police be. bu a doo-
(See DANTE, Pqe I)
Orange Coan '
Weatlier
. The sun will ma.ice its perfunc-
lory appearance ThUrsday after-
noon, but otherwise It'll be D10llly cloudy with temperatures' in the
blah IO'a lloog the Oranp Coul. . All had been arrested in recent weeks
while performing at two Santa ft.Jla beer
bars, ,the Apartment A~ and the
Apartmtbt.
'lbole fined were: r
A.-W1laleo, JI, ol "11llndl, Calif.,
1121; mnwo y ... probo-
R-. Bedmao, U,. llurllln):, 13111 'and
Moon to · Get U.S .•. Flt)g. ·
Susan Mazze
Suffers Relapse
·Susan Mane, the 17-)'UM>ld Santa Ana
Kiri who .-tved· ,Oranga Co\mty'1 lint
kidney tralllplMf on June 3, ltU lulferell
ti r<laiiot and ·II' In cr!tkial. qtl1dlti!ll-ln:
INSWE TODAY ' Two of the fastest t1GC1tU
a/loot £o~lc thit weekend GI
Wil'tdwdrd' Pm1age mettl Black--
fin·for the California Cup. Boat.
ing, Page, 29. . • . · ' : 1 four years probation. •
Patricia C.W., 111, N-Holl)'wood, fl25 and two years probatloo. Bellr Vi,brs, :15, GanlM Grove, f3'I>
and four .Y••n probatloo.
PrildOa ~ D, Santa Alla, 1125
and two years J>rOblUoa.
Na-Wlleel4r, a, s,.., f40ll and two
comecutive two-year Dtbbatloo terma.
Miss Wlleeter and !icltio AhaZlmmer,
21, of Santa Aha,...,. found guilty of the
charges late tall -u. by a munlclpal
court jury. All o( the otl><n lnvolftd ta ·
Tuesday's oent...,,. submltled lhelr
. 'f I
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WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Sil< houri
a!IA!f man rint lmla oo 11>o ,_ ll,HI
month. .-ul lliil ~ wtU
boll! a nykrl, S by I foot -llaC on an I-fool pole, and plant 11 In Ibo hmar
crust. • I •
The nae will be lln!tchnd out•...S. 111 a
simulation of llylni, by a sprlnc cle>!o'
made. oece111ry bec1nte then II no wiDd
OD the mooft.·
And becaUR ther< It "no wtlll, no rain,
nothing to knodc tt down," the -
agency l&icl 1'1etd11, the -11111111
. -
l \,
,
~· Coiilfly lledlcal Cenf<r. · ,Dr. lloDold Mlller l&icl her llOW kidney •
It fyflCllGalnl pe:rfectly • but ' otl><t Postoperative co·mPllcatlon1 hive
... -Suaan and llllde.lt dUflcU!t !Qr her to b;ealhe. :
~The mct<r dodloed lo dbclOOI cle{ails
on the aimptlcatlonl. 18uSM11 tDoltJer,• Mfl. Flotence Mazze,
Will "'1eued f"!'/' , the hoopli,I lafll
Wednmoy, I .... t afteT -11111-of btr w..,. to btr dlulllter.
,.,.,
-.. •-n C.r.-c... 11
c~ ""' c.lc•' '1 ·-.. DNtll Mtltttl 11
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• f DAILY PllOT s WfdntsdaY. June 18, 1969
Killer Elud~s ~.Manh;µst -
-. I
fter Hospital Eseape
By roM llAJILEY
CM lllf Dtflr ~IM lfdf
"Candlelight killer" Robert Willard
lJberty is still at liberty today, defying
the intensifying manhunt beit!i launched
h1 biw enforctmenl officers in Orange
ud Loi ..,.i.. counUea.
•• • ~ I •t •, \• ~
recon!ed. , Hltebcock·lilll ~ In tlle .pin.
It Is not unknown, We& odd!, for the menl, they Nld , wu the !Id 11111 Lll>ml'
Norwalk hoopital lo make such a belated had pla<ed bumlng candles all UOllDd lllil
entry on the records of a patient who bas body ol h1s vtct1m. , r
managed lo eocape from the facility. And Both Liberty ond hir ........... tkllit
be bruda .. "utremeb' _ .. the had i<lf1I -d --.. 111pervillon of a man who wu lllted aa boll> hacl baan di ...... ad trMled la
highly dangeroua at the ttme of his com-the mental wml ol ~ Colmlr
mitt.al to Atascadero Stale Hospital. Medical Center. And both. it WU lailf
n..11.year-old Wettrnln5ter man is~
joying the sixth day of a freedom that
was, Deputy Di.strict Attorney Al Wells
claims, handed to him on a plat.e with h1I
utonl3hlng rel...,. from M etropolllln
Stall! HOlpital al N°"'alk.
Sheriff's Investigators also condemn discovered, had made several WWI-+
Uberty, IJTelted two years ago for the
murder of Mrs. Marcella Landis, was due
to be returned to Superior Court for the
revivaJ ol char19 which were 1uspended
because of his mental concUtion.
Hospital officials say the fonner
machinist walked to freedom from an
open ward at the Norwalk: facility and
thlt their paUent, recently ruled to be
sane, could hive done that at any time in
the days Lm.medlately preceding that new
diagnoola.
Welll acidly contends that what wu
reported w him as 4'a sttnographic er-
nt'' must have been a big help. He
aJ'fUel lbat Liberty'• papen ahould have
been endoned "d1schatged to court" and
nol the slm.ple "discharged" that was
the first report of Liber1y's able.nee that ce&Sful .Weide attempts. ·
was Issued by the haopltal. Superior COurt Judp B,,.. I[.
Thal AWOL lill!Ji1, lhe1 uld, gave no McMillan ... 1 Ll))arty lo Al-
lndlcoUon of 1Jberly'1 backl!i'ound and aNr detomlininc that the W-
that the escapee wu to be returned to man wae insane and unable to a.tst i1J
court on a murder Indictment. "We step. his own defense, -
ped up Ille Mar<b -we did-... He la lodl)' ngmled as -by these facts, an officer commented, "but Ata.9cadero and Metropolltan S t a t e
we lost a lot of valuable time because we Hospital of(ldals.
thought he was just another J'Wl--Of·the "That may well be,'' said Wells. "Blrt
mill get.aw~." you hive to wonder about. U. eepebillt.ies
Uberty won his "CandJell&ht Killer'' ol J*JPI• wtlo cu ltt a mln. Mb that
peeudooym from olficera wbo in-Wilk Out ol ouch a bolpftal la broad
veatlgated the bizarre s1*ylng of Mrs. daylla:ht. -
Landis, the attractive brunette who "I'm remembering todU what Mr.
$Ired IJbert)''• apa~ al 8382 IJberly wu arraW·for ud I'm mnem-
Westminlter Ave., In Weolmlnlter. berlng the long.-.!"' moolal'Ulnea
orn.,.,. aid they fnund Liberty -... that WU dlJplayed In ""'11. Wa -have
ming his gullar and IOflly lliDging while lo ruli>e tbal ho may be -on the
Ille body of 1111 p&rllDOUr lay draped 11ntta of W-er ml U'I DOI a very
ac:ro3s a living room sofa. Adding to the comforting thought .....
~ouncll mt b y Writ From P .. e I
Fountain Valley Told
To Go On With Recall
BY TERRY COVILLE
ot tllt D.lllY f'J ... Sl•ff
A writ of mandate ordering the city of
Fountain Valley to continue validating
recall peUUons turned in June 2 by recall
leader Eugene .Van Dask was 5et'Ved on
councilmen Tueaday night prior to the Ci·
ly Cooncll session.
Signed by Orange County Superior
Court Judge Claude Ptt. Owens, the writ
of mandate rules City Clerk Mary Cole
must continue validation or the petitions,
or the city must appear in court July 2 to
&how cause why it didn't.
City AUorney Edwin Martin indicated
Tuelday night thit he ltllf advlle the ct.
ty clerk not to vaUdate the recall peti.
tiona. However, as of UUs morning, city
officials had received no word from lhe
city attcJrney.
U Martin opposes the writ of mandate
he must appear in court July 2 to defend
flis earlitt ruling that the petitions are in·
valld.
Subjects of the recall petillons are
Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, Vice
Mayor Donald Fregeau and Councilman
Joseph Courreges.
Van Duk and supporters of the recall
are 1ee.klnt to OU!l the three from their
posts for alleged Improprieties in office.
Distributed with the recall petitions
were photo cgpies of replies to the
charges wbJcb led ·to the recall action.
The repUea were answen to the charges
and were pubUstied as a legal notice in a
Santa Ana newspaper by the three coun-
cilmen who are targets of the recall.
Two weeks ago, Martin told Mrs. Cole
not to validate the petlllons because
copies of those legal nollees w_ere too
small and difficlt to read. thus allegedly
falling to follow legal recall procedures.
July 2. attorneys for both sides can fiaht over the validity of tbe peUUon.s in
Superior Court.
The writ ol mandate wu addressed lo
members of the City Councll, City Clerk
Cole and acting City AdmJnistrator Jim
Hollywood.
Attorneys Paul Augustine, Jr., and
Robert Sassone petitioned Superior Court
'J'Uesday for Lhe writ, which they recelv·
ed.
Van Da.sk and bis supporters lnlt.lated
the recall acUon three months aao after
the City Council approved the con-
troversial small lot Larwin Tr8ct 3 to 2.
Councilmen John Harper and Edward
Just opposed the propooed 500 home
Larwin development and have not been
directly involved in the recall battle.
Larwin Company filed ila: 1eCOOd ap-
peal recently to attempt to overturn a
ruling by Superior Court Judge Byron K.
~lcMillan which in effect stopped the
Larwin Tract from proceedinj: on several
points.
At ilsue has been whether the city can
give land credit to a developer f~
developing a park on )lfoperty it'.doe.s not
own, and whlSf,her certain cUr iohln& pro-
cedures were correct or Incorrect.
AUonleys for both !Ides h.ave ex·
pressed feelings that the case might go
aU the way to the U.S. Supreme court.
Countian Held in Sho.oting .
Tires of Ex-wile's Auto
AD El Toro man ls ln Orange County
jall today charged with assault with in-·
teat to commit murder after he allegedly
.shot out the tires of a car Tuesday nisht
· tn which his u-wUe and a companion
were riding.
Donald L. Winslow, 26, of %4172
DAILY PILOI
............... ................
a--·-·-C....lilllili ,.. ....
CAUPOIMIA
OAANGI COAS1 l'\/SllM41MO CCIMl"lHY
..... ,., N. w ....
~,..,.,.. .,. Putllblow
J•t• It. Cltfl1y
Vb '"'lcltftl -CkN1• ~
Th•1""' K • .,,11 ....
n..-~~:=l•t -
-
o.t. -..., m ... , .., a1rw ..... .,11 ........ ....... ....... ._..,m,,_,._
................ ;»tlolll ......
Blrdrock Drive, also threatened the pair
and fired five shot! Into the air from his
.30-callber rUle, sheriff's depuUes allege.
Shertff'1 Capt. James Broadbelt said
deputies were alerted by El Toro service
5tation attendant Wllllam Maas.
Maas said a man, later lde.ntlfied as
Winslow, drove into the station and a.Red
him to "go up the road a piece and fix
some tires I shot out.••
Winslow was captured Shortly by the
Callfomla Hlahway Patrol whUe parked
be.hlnd a-su~nn~kel in Lellure World
Laguna Hill$ •
Patricia L. Winslow, '11, of 133 PelaYo
Circle, San Clemente, and her com·
panlon, Robert L. Cary, 21, of 143 Cadiz
St., also San Clement., told deputies they
were driving alon& El Toro Road nur
Valendl Avenue when Winslow started
shooting at thetr l'!:at tires. He flattened.
both of them.
The couple stopped and Wln!low 1ot out
of his car and threatened .them with the
rifle, nrtng: five shots into lhe air, they
told deputies. The suspect then sped oU
in his car.
Rioting Ei:upts
At Kansas Prison
LANSING, Kah. (AP)"-Rioting, which
prison ofOclt1.ll aa!d apparenUy wu
touched off by a ceneral shakedown of
the lnatltullon "and a dlltw:bed nl~'•
sleep," broke 'out al lht Kwu Sta!o
P<nllentlary lodq.
The trouble beKan u inmltea _, lo
their ...,pectlva Job Ull¢m.!enta altar
brwfa.t. Warden Sherman O'olllt said
that at 10:30 a.m. order had baan
&.'!'"'al\)I reatored.
frt.on olllclall lald lw gu wu UIOd,
"bill not lndlscrlmlnaltl)l, lo bliq !be~ rutes under Control." •
DANTE •••
lorale In poycholngy !ram lllnppore
Unlvenlly.
STILL lllW!EN
Tbe former entertainC" at the Vllla
Marina nightclub In Newport Btacll -
still shaken by the murder altempt -
spent several hours in the West
Hollywood sheriff's station before release
on $12,500 ball.
Dante, who rtnted a C08ta Mesa apart·
ment during his booking at tbe bayalde
spa, told Los ~eles Sherill's Sgt'. Ray-
mond Goll he believed the theft case bad
beendlsmlaled.
Ron Snyder, or 237.() College Drln,
COlta Mesa, aid be caught Dante In the
act of auperv\sing theft of lhe fleet of 1e.
boall May 5, 1968 at a now-ddUDCt Santa
Ana boatyard.
, SQYder and his brother Paul are
partners in the Marlin· firm. whJch
markets the boata at Mesa Boat. taur,
151$ Newport Bivd., and had been trylnC
to work out a dee! wKh Dante..
"He was an elulive character," aald
Paul Snyder today, "he'd call U1 from
Lai Vegas and try to get. us to ship them
to him C.O.D.1 which of course we relus--
ed to do.".
S&CRETlVE PERSON
The Colla M,.. boat compaey U •
ecuUve II.Id Dute w11 a .,.Uva
-and " la unknown •111 he -trying lo blt1 the ......., moton:rall.
EarUar, Ron Snyder told aulbGrlllM
Ponte had aivto them. --!or 117,4111 In _... !or the llolla, llul
promiaed lo deliYV the pur<bua prlca in
call! -Ille ;p.p.r ~ A -toe vial! lo lhe Sanle ADI flrd
whenl tho boall wera built !or the Colla
Meaa firm ·early May ·1, 1111, ltd lo
discovery ol the allqed lhell In prosrea.
Snyder uld.
Dante wu amated on a warran\ Juoe
3, 191&. but one of the Jl'lnclpal Wltr 1171•
was unavailable for court ·~ and Ille cue WU dlRniall!d prior.'!' Ille ·~·· .l1'ly !t ~ balilliC· SllOOND W.u!IANT ., -•
A Mco.ci band. wmnnl WM illMd II)'
Judge Leonanl )!. Mc:Bridt '"' Jiiiy 10
however. but the nllbtclub frn:inothl hid
appartnlly departed In !be biflol ba ·-
abtolved. -"He wu never plcbd up beet• ft
just didn't know when be wu," Aid
Sanle Ana Police sat. Kent -afllr
Dania had been taken Into Cltllod1 la
We!! Hollywood Tlleadq olllll,
Miss Tumer's ... -taclude bandluder Artie Shaw, Steve Crane, Bob
Topplng, actor W Barker, Fred MaJ
and Robert Eatoo, whole divorce wu
final onJy two mon&hl ago.
One sultor, Johnny Stompanato. ntvtr
quite reached the altar, ttabbed to delth
10 yeara II~ by MiM Turntr's 15-year-old
d1u1hter Clleryi In a aplclacular c:aa
Mississippi
Miles Marred
By Oil Slick
ALMA, WI~ (AP) -'.ll)I !"!'pit ol
E"""eer1 todq O(dettdl. ~~ ·~ ment to tab up a beU t .... [19\ an
film ol oil, which sprucl 1::
alona the ~c upper Mlea I Rlvw
from a wrttted barge.
Col., IUclWd J. H...,_, bud ol Ille
corps' St. Paul, MiM.j dlYlltoo,-ordored a
iurvey tum lnto the .,,._
Also d~ wU I · vicu\im tn1C\:,
Cot Htae said the machine wm be used
lo cuct 111> Ille oil WW-. paaalblt, .-
bably Into barpl. lloall\l·wlll ba UMd lo
contain the .u; where tllat c .. Ile 4ooe,
to '-•P 111e· mill from lj>tUdlnl. · -" ..
11wo Mid the q\lanl!ly o1 on,......
leak ad ll<lal lhe wrechcl barl' ,'dCJlOI .. _, .. orlllnill1 f-. .. 11111 "
amOllnted lo about 40,GIO 1allolla-dcoll
-ol lhe !lilt ......... ; -
The oil WU '*'"' locW--in
lbme boc~ater aitU. ~ 1a14~· II wUI be lit U-pl-.... t ti. \
ttiitk ;;m b< lillM. Mort wen. ba
br«>&bl In 11 they't• lldd.r, Hde '
. ·-
BarlMr T•ldng s•pe ' .
. .,., ..
~" . ~ Work PtDlrMI• O!l'Dana Harbor, Onll&e County's neweat ilileJI c'rtdl refuge. 'lbla II aerial view look-
lllc eut aloDJ cOuillnt 1o11an1 San Clem-. Land
JUll!nf .1nto -at utnme upper ed1e d plloto is
· C!lUoo's Polilt, silo Of President Nixon's Wbite
HotJ.e . WHt. Work on harbor ttlelf Involves con-
~111 ol temporary coffer dems within b"ak-
.Wlldl, pwilplng out , .. water , then scrap!ni dry
stk(ace to make harbor bottom.
.
Thi~·u Gove.rnnient Rapped
-.
Clifford Calls for Reduction of Vietnam Fighting
NEW YORK (Al') -rormer lltlenJe
SecrelAry Clark M. Clilford oay• the
United States should order a reduction of
fJgbllng In South Vietnam and remove all
lta: ground combat troops by the end or
1970.
In a remarkably candid statement Cll£.
ford. bllalen the South Vie!nam<M
govomment, plc:turln( Ila leaders aa hav·
Ing a tq alake In conUnuad war. He aaya: ~
a1r resources."
Clifford contends that a policy of ap-
plying maximum military pressure has
resulted in continuing high U . S .
casualties "without any discernible im-
ptcl .., Ille -neaoUa~on In Parla." Ht ._,. a dlcWon to lhlft the combat
bW"den to the South Vietnam• "would
coolnol North ViebWneJe leaden wilb
a ~ul dilemma." "\lrwd !hit 1111 ~reana ,.... begiz>
nlnl to withdraw ml&ht at fin:t lead tbem
to claims of victory," he wrote. "But
even these initial claims cruld be. ex-
pected 1o be tinged with appreheru:lon.
There has, in my view, long been con-
slderable evidence that Hanoi fean the
poalblllly that thoae whom I h e y
charact.rize as 'puppet forces' may, with
continued but aradually re du c e d
American support, prove able to stand off
the comm.unlit forees."
11 M the Saigon autboriUes saw it, the
longer the war went. on, with the large.
scale American involvement, the more
stable wu their regime and the fewet
concessiw they would have to mab to
other poUUcat IJ'O\!Plng!."
Astronauts Describe How
dllford, ance retarded " a "hawk," oemd aa P,.lagoa dllef for the last
yeor ol the Lypdoo B. Jobnaon acl-
minlstraUon. Hil statement, appearin1 1n
Foreign Allain, quarterly of the Council
on Foreign Relations, ls the most
ou~ commait on the S&lgoa rt&ime
lo com4 from a tt<ellt U.S. government
offldal at thla level.
State Looks From Moon
The article ls likely to play an im·
port.ant role in the conUnulng American
debate on the w1r.
He make! these propou11:
1. As a first step, the United Slates
shou1d annOW'ICt it will withdraw 100,000
troops before the end of UliJ year.
President NIJ:on already hu llllDOUDCed
an Ulltial withdrawal of 25,001 'Ibe Clif-
ford arUtle wu written before the
preatdenllal announcetnllll but releaaed
Wedneaday nlghl ,
I. "Wt lhould alao mate lt clear th1t
thiJ I! not M loolated acllon, but tha
bqtnn1nC of a pn:M.'tl! under which all
U.S. ground com.bit forcee will hive betn
wtlbdrawu ll<lal Vlelnllll by the end \JI
1870.u
3. ''Concum:nUy wtth the declJlon to
be&in withdrawal, ordera ebauld be illued
to our mllltaey commanders to diacon-
tlnue elforla lo apply mulmum military
prusure on the eomny and to seek in-
stead to reduce the level of combat."
4. "While our comhlt troopc are being
withdrawn, we could continua lo provide
the anntd forces of the Sat1oa 1overn-
met with loclaUc .,pport and with our
SACRAME!ml (UPI) -From the
moon, acxordin« to those who have beer!
thet<, Ille San Joaquin Valley loob u il
"somebody had taken a big shovel and
just opooned it oul."
The Sierra appears to be 1'bet.uUfully
snow capped" -wblch it 11.
The llale -I belt aelling book lo the
contrary -doesn't seem· ready to 0 sllp
into lhe ocean ."
And the CaWomia Aqueduct just can't
be seen, diaproving a myth promulgated
by state water projecta publicist.I.
Apollo 10 utronautl ~eecrlbed what
California looks like frCIOt the moon Tues-
day during a capitol press conference -
their only official one of a thrtt-day
formal ill.le visit.
Col Tho,,,.. P. S.talford, Cindr. John w. Young and Cmdt. Eu.lenfl A. Cernan
and ·their famWea flew here from San
. Fraaclaco after a _, 1lckerl.lpe
parade In tho Bay city.
On their &ehe.dule today WIS an ap-
ptartn>ee before a joint seelon of the
Leglslaturt, tom through Aarojel and
McDonnell DoucJaa Auoapace facillUes
and a flight lo Loi Angelea. They'll be In
San Dle10 1111.u·9d1y.
Gov. Ronald Reaa;an 1ccompanled the
astronauts at every public appearance,
acting 11 tmtff.
,.,,_, three are a product ol -I so
BLACK STAR SAPPHIRE
.. ~', -. ·-1 .( ....
~ ' J )I
fr.ly •II •1n111l1lk l•wtl ••• "on• of
• •1t14:'
5,_,11lly tlo1l911.cl plt ti1111111 "'ount•
Int • ..,~ro"41 with tho •l•9111co of
41•11'1•'"'•·
$1200.00
0..lpH wftt. fh 111 ll'lllMI , • • FroM
011r J11•t11lfl1011I c.il1c:tio11 •f i111n•lld·
1•t •r••tf•U. ,.. ht •• thil ''" plt l•
h1"11J1 ino1111tetl 4.JO t•r•t v-11••
4it moM, wfflri 1911flc11loualy ,,,.1~
41t mon41 In tM rt1111d.
$3750.00
many would malign and amend -our
aoctety," said the governor. "Too many
are te1llna our youna children Ullt berot•
are a thing of the put. Well, the9e are
aulhentk: heroes."
What does C!li!ornla look like from up
lhere?
"You know, one of the amadn& things
that we saw when wt were out at the
moon," said Young, "was CaUfornla •••
"During •earthrLse' you could see it
with the naked eye. It is really
something. The San Joaquin Valley
stands out like aomebody had taken a big
shovel and just spooned it out And you
could see it from 250,000 miles away."
Publicists for the state wate:r project a
couple of ye&rs ago contended, somewhat
joklngly, that when man reached the
moon two public works he ooWd aee
would be the California Aqueduct. down
the well! side of the Central Valley and
the Grtat Wall of China.
Not so.
It "would have taken a mighty
powerful telt!cope to see anything:"
beyond the valley Itself and the Sierra,
said Ceman.
11We did obeerve and we watched cloM"·
ly for the full eight daya t.o make 11Ure
that ca.lllornl1 was not going to slip lnto
the ocean. We want to \ell you we saw no
ev1dence of It."
• ' " ..
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untingto.,l B~ae-.
• • • • l. -
.
-~ ' I I :VOL li2, NO. 145, 6 SE910NS n PAQS
In Fountain l' alley Swim
Summer lifeguard Mary pupuy, 23, is welcoming
Fountain Valley residents io swim program offered
at Fountain Valley High School and other' pools in
the city. Program, along With wide variety of other
DAILY Ptl.OT $lift Plllft
activities, is sponsored by city's Parks and Recrea-
tion DePartmenl Details on all programs can be
obtained at department offices in Fowitain Valley
Community Center, 10200 Slater Ave.
Court Supports Recall
11
Orders Valley to Keep Validating Petitions .
BY TERRY COVILLE he must appear iA court July 2 to defend
his earlier ~ilia\ tlte peUUonS are in-
failing lo follow legal recall procedures.
ot .. ...., ..... M.tt ~
""writ .i "'""""In .......... ~ cily•l'f · FIUalaln Valley to oootlnue vflida!ing
,_u l"tiUons -In June 1-y ftOll -~ Van llask was sorved oo .$f>!'pcii1Jnlftle:ictay night prlor to tbe Ci-
·1y _Council session . ~
SlJbil<I by orange COUJ1ty Superior .
Couit Judge Claude M. Owens, .the w~t
QI. tnltldate Nles City Clerk MiltJ COie
mllll continue validation of the pe,t.itions,
l i ot the city must appear in court July 2 to
1 1how cause why It didn't.
I
City AUomey Edwin Martin indicated
Tuesday nigt)t that he maY advise the ci-
ty clerk not to validate .the recall peti-
tiona. However, a!I pf this morning, city
<1fficlals bad receJ•ed no word from the
city attorney.
U Martin opposes the writ ot mandate
. County Boy Slain
I After Shooting ·
At Policemen
A Garden Grove youth inside hi!I
1randparents' closed liquor store with
Vieir permission was shot to death by
Ccimpton police late Tuesday night when
he uoexplainedly opened fire on them.
Arthur G. Laramie, 17, was d~d on ar·
rival at Harbor General Hospit.'at as Ole
tragic climax to a trip to the &tore lo get
some cookies and milk for a midnight
snack.
The victim accidentally triggered a
!lilent burglar a\ann in the shop, leading
to a dispatch of one regular patrolman
and a reserve officer lo investigate.
Compton Police U . A. M. Thomas Iden-
tified the pair invo!ved as George Keaton
and Ralph Rtt"".
•aUd. . ' '/ · ... , '
1 Subjedi ASt the ~ )et16ons are Marol---K"ob ·ert ~ SChwerdtfeger, Vice
MayoIYfiOnald Fregeau and Councilman
Joseph Cottrreges.
....Y at1 ·Dut'and supporters of tbe recall
are seeking to oust the tltree from their
posts for alleged inl~leti~ in office.
·Distributed with the recall petitions
were photo copies of replies to the
charges wNch led to the recall action.
The repllea were answers to the ch<ttges
and were published as a legal notice in a
Santa Ana newspaper by the three coun~
cilmen who are targets of the recall.
Two weeks ago, Martin told Mrs. Cole
not to validate the petitions because
copies <if those legal notices were too
small and difficlt to read, Uws allegedly
July· 2, atlomeyl for bOljl aides C8ll
~ghl ..., ibe ~li of !liO jletilions Iii
Superlor Court.
The writ of mandate. was ad4fttsed· tG
members of the City Cotmcil, Clt;y Clerk
Cole and acting Citf Adminlstrator Jim
Hollywood.
Attorneys Paul Augustine, Jr., and
Robert Sassone peUtiOoed SUperlor Court
'I\lesday for the writ, which they rece.iv.-
ed.
Van Dask and his supporters lniUated
the recall action three months ago after
the City Council approved the con-
troversial sma1l lot Lanvin Tract 3 to 2.
C~ilmen John Harper and Edward
Just opposed the proposed 500 home
Larwin development and have not been
direcUy involved in the rec.all battle.
Substation Held Over;
Trailer Park Loses Bid
Future construction of the Huntington
Beach Central City Park prompted plan-
ning commissiooers Tuesday night lo
continue a hearing on a proposed elec-
trical substaUon for one month and to
deny construction of a trailer park.
Both of the projects fall within the park
site, which will be acquired from funds
made available from a $6 million bond
issue passed June 3.
Reason for continuing the hearing on
the tw~and-a-half acre Edison Company
substation at Golden West Street and
Ellis Av'enue wu to allow Parks and
RecreaUon Director Norm. Worthy to
take the matter to the city rouncil for
consideration Monday.
Worthy will ask the council tr establish
special zoning around the park site to
prevent commercial ~ablishments from
building in the area.
Ralph Kiser, general manager of the
utility company's Huntington Beach bran·
ch, told the commissioners that even
though the substation Would be located in
land which has been proposed for a golf
course, the design would be compatible
with the park co.ncept.
He added that all powerlines leaving
(See PLANNING, Page I)
S~JJ.J. E__iglatifig Cut
, I
' . I' ' WEDNESDA .Y, JUNE • II, 1969'
•
. T~ay's-F~
N.Y. StoekS.
• • . .
TEN CENTS
Apollo Fueling Starts
Preparations Begin for l ·st Moon Landing
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Technl·
nlcians begin fueling the Apollo 11
moonshlp today to start final prepa-
rations for the launch four weeks away of
man's fir'!! moon landing mission.
'The ~u-anead for the ticklish and llme--
Consuming Spacecr&ft fuellna opUaUori
came from project officials after a day.
long review Tuesday of all aspects of the
b,istorie lunar flight. '
Amonaute Nell A. Annllrol!I, Mlcllael
CoUlna and Edwin E. Aldtln were pro-
Beach Complex
Plan Delayed
:By Commission •
PotenUal developers of a 352-acre in-
dustrial and _ commercial complex in
north Huntington Beach were unable to
aeUle their dliferences with the city
Planning Commission Tuesday-rligbt, but
will be back for another try.
The planning commission, although
generally in favor of the project proposed
for Bo~a Avenue and Springdale Street,
continued the matter to July 1 for further
study.
Developers John D. Lusk and Son have
asked that lots smaller than the city's
20,000-square.foot minimum for industrial
properties, be allowed in portions of the
tract.
At Tuesday's meeting, the commission
was stW hesitant about granting tt)e
15.,000-square-foot Jots requested by Lusk,
ey~n _tboc~ the 4eveloper.lndicated he is
now bavl!ig aecand tbougbla about mov·
Ing Into the ma. .
~ to Lusk "the ·•rea ti not a
jlrimt ~·111l Wiih all the mtilc·
lioill liefug place<! oft UI we ate beglnl\1Jlg !o have ·• competlliff' 'problem with the
Irvine Industrial C:Omplex."
He said, that while the plannfni coi;n·
-ts taking ibe tJmt to wort oot the detaill of granting tract appronl, he hu
lost three major deala.
Cornmislloners wW study the lot size
problem with the _developer dUrin& a
special session T••Y· "This is a reputable conctrn,'' Nid
Commission Chainnao Robert Baiil, "l
trun'k we should coOperate with them and '
not throw roadblocks ln their way."
Susan Mazze
Suffers Relapse
Susan Ji.taue, the 17-year-otd Santa Ana
girl who received Orange County's tirst
kidney transplant on June 3, has 1uffered
a relapse and is in criUcal condition in
Orange county Medical Center.
Dr. Ronald Mlll~r said her new kidney
ls functioning perfecUy but other ..
postoperaUve comp 1 i 'cat l On s have
weakened Susan and made it diUlcult for
her to breathe.
The doctor declined to disclose details
on the complications. ·
Stoek Market•
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed almoat even today, after an early
sharp, advance,. partially ~oyed by
bargain hunting, slowed in • 1 a t e r
trading. (See quotations, Pages Z0.21).
OOUJ\Ced In excellent heallb 'by Di.
Charles A. ~ry, the director of medical
operations for the spacemen.
Chief astronaut Qonald K. Slayton l&ld
the pilots will work l();hour days, ilJ days
a week for. the final four weeks. .Ke sald
he expects them to be .. adequately train-
ed and adequately rested" at launch
time, 6:32 a.m. PDT Jaly; 16. · ·
"We. are go at thiS timi, Rlbject t,o f\lc-~sful .' oomplelion /JI . lllll .: i:Cnaintng
tests," reported Lt C.o. 5amuel · C.
· •SCAPES MURDER TRV
: $1• ... •1:1"""'11\1 ~1\19 .. :·
... t J
·tana' s lf:usbanil
E1cape1 Sh.ot1.,
Faces Mesa Rap
' .
B7 AllTR\)1'. R. VJNSEL ot Hit ~llY 'lllt Slaff
· Jel set· hypootlll Dr. Ronald Dente -
Harbor Area entertainer and confidante
of stars -, today faces a theft charge in.
volvlng $18,500 worth o( boats at a CO&ta
Mesa firm, after surviving a inysterlous
murder attempt Tu~sday.
Santa Ana 'pglloe recognized the name
· In news reports of qie five-sh9t amblllh
and tippet. off Hollywood detectives-who
arresteil the" iU'.ttiited &even th husbaud
of actress Lana Turner about ~dnight.
The'attack by a mystery gunman wear-tnr' a rakish Australian bush hat earlier,
as Dante drove into his fashionable
oUlce-apartment ·on Doheny Drive, left
him with only a cut on the face.
SHATTERED GLASS
: The barrage of bullets shattered the
windshield of his car and he was nicked
by flying glass as · he ·dove for the
floorboards during what .authoritiel aaid
wa'S the third attempt on ,his lifei
· Once before, a jealous !Qver who claim·
·ed the hypJloUlt . f14d. alienated his
.g~UrleQd, fired a .45 caliber. piltol shot
at Dr. Dante . during a San Diego
.nightclub performanc~. ·
He was not hit, and lawmen did not
.elaborate Tuesday qn the third alle1ed
murder. attempt. ,
· Dante w8ri apparently.as sba~en by his
.arrest u he bad· been .by: the murder at.
.ttmi>t e"iU.r, ttlllng ciutbtrit!U 1ie knew
·o1 no ·-·for~.~ tho boat
.CWJfllleipllitMi)d. · :_.,_;J.:.-~,._~<; •
Pltlllies, the 'Ai>ollO pr0aram du.tlor.
"After bearlna the mdlnesa .,.._1
of all eiemeols of Ute nlWion, I am con-
fident that we can ~ with ,our
preparations lo meet tlie July launch win-
dow."
Today's fueling oper.ation was the start
of preparaUons for the tut ·big test -a
dresa rebear11l coun~wn· scheduled . to
begin June 25 and end ·with a moot
launcn July I. The spac!etrall will remain
fueled after UJo•tea1.
Killer Eludes
Manhunt After
Hospital Break
' By "TOM BAllLEY
Of ... Dtllr ,,. Sftft
"~ellght killer" Robert Wli1ard
Liberty ts •till at liberty today, d~
!he lnttnsllylng manhunt being llluncbed
by law enforcement officers in Oranee
and Los Abgetes counties.
The 21-year-<1ld Westmln!ter man Is en-
joying the sixth day of a freedom Ulat
was, Deputy District ~ttorney Al 't\'ella
clalms, 'handed to him on a plate with bis
astonishing release from Metropolitan
Staltl' H~ltal at Norwalk. ·
IJbetty, arrested two.ye.an ago,for the
murder of Mn. ·Marcella. Landis, wu due
to be returned to Superior·COurl ·fer the
re>jval of Clhar1ea w6lc:h were IUlpendad
•\llO·ol hil mental <OllCIJllon.'
' H"""ta) ofQcllt AY the. !..,.... m"'bfqlsl w~ to ·ltteclop\ front aa
oprn ward at the No.walldacllity and
that their 1patient, recently ruled to be
•aoe,.could.have c1o11e thal .at 1111 llmLln
the clays !mmediltely preeedli>l.tliid -.,....,,,., I
Wallt .~ ooalnoda that Whal WU
rtpOrted Jt Jfu9 .... "a ....,apMc ....
rot" mult ba9' been a bit ihelp, He
argues that Liberty'• papers 1boold have
been endorsed *'diachlrpd to court" and
not the slniple '.'dlscbaiaed". thal ., ..
reeordecl .
ll ia nol uolmol'll, wen. adds, for the
NorwaJll· boi!pllOl to make auch a belated
entry on the i eccrds of a paUeot who has
mamaged 1o escape from the faclllty. And
be bra'Slda u "utrt!m.ely careleu" ·the
auperJilJon of a man who was lilted u
bii;hly d..,.rolia al ibe lime of bill com-
mittal to Atascadero Slale !iOIPltal.
Slwiff'a invati1ator1 'also condemn
the firtt repprt of Ubetty'a absence that
was llsued by the hocpltal.
Thal 11.WOL llsllng, ;bey laid, pve· no
Jndicailon of Liberty's background and
that the eacapee was to be returned to court on a ·murder indictment. ;'We step.
ped up the search when we did cll500ver
these ract.s, an officer commented, "but
we lost a lot of valuable time because we
thought he waa just another run·of.lhe
,mill getaway."
· Liberty won hit "CandleU&hl Killer''
pseudonym from o(flctta who tn-
veotlgated the bizarre &laying of Mr1.
LandJs, the attrictlve brunette who
.6bared !.l))erty's apartment al 1382
· (See KILLEll, Page !I
Blood Bank · Slated
A community blood bank wW be held at
St. Bonaventure· Catbolic Church at ~pringdale Street and H~ Avenue, Hun-
tington Beacli, on July I. Appolntmenta
may be obtained by. callhia· Gllea Meyer
al-. · .He said Officer KeaWL~went to the rear of-the li"ijOOt-stoie -while -the reserve
patrolman covered the front, spotting
7oung Laramie through the back door.
Officer Keaton shouted at· the figure in•
~. Lt. Thomas said, at which time
Laramie fired a .38 caliber pistol and
darted back as the patrolman fired back.
Clifford Calls for Pullout
. "l Qon't know aftyone wbj).wOWd ·Wlnt
to kill me,". &e· said~ Ji•iqil,• Jt; would be
soin~e who· UI j~ a~~~ woman r just married." ~ . ,
1 OTHER miBliANti6 .
Oruse
Both bullets in the exchange missed,
but Keaton fired again and struck
Laramie in the bead.
The victim'• grandparents said be was tn., the store with their permission but
they were mysUfied as to Why he hacf one
of ibe two guns In ibe store and why be
Uoed i~
Jersey City Mayor
W.ins on Law:, Order · ,,
.<JERSEY CITY, N. J. (AP) -Mayor ·~ J . Wb4lab, running on 9·.,Jaw
.and order" plank, won re--tlectlon as
. mayor of New Jeney-'1 second! tarcest
• oily Tuesday. •• • ,I •. • He defeated toimer: Ma)WX' 'I)lomas
Gangemi in a ninoff eleeU<!rt with whit
Whelan called "an ovei*hebhiJC ma~
date." The final ullJllnclal tally pve
Whelan 50,231 ·~ lo JS,131 for GqemL •
•
NEW YORK (AP} -Former Defense
Secretary Clark M. Clllford says the
United States should order a reduction of
fighting in South Vietnam and remove all
Its ground collibal "troops by the end of
lt'(ll. ,. .
In a rtmarllably candid $1alemenl Clif,.
loril bliMtf the · jiooth Yletnameoe ..Wrmneii~ pl(:lurln1 its leaders as hav-1"8 • big stake in contklled war. He A}!I~ .
'1At the Saigon authorities ltiW ft .. the lonllel' ibe war went oo, With .the IBl'l! ..
«ale ' American .liwol•f'emenit the-more
gt.able wu their riclme and the (ewer
conceasioft!l ,they 'A'OUld ha.vt to make to
other poliUcal groupings." .
Cllfotd .. once ~~ as a: .. baWtt,"
,.Md '8 l>eiiti(Oll' dllef fqr tho last
yw d. the L,-' B. Johnoon ad·
ministration. His statement, appeafinl In ·
Fori!ip.Aftaln, qaatlerly.ol the·Cooncll
on F\lftlp , RelaUcm, II the ..,.t
wispolletl commeol on the Saison rqbne to CODJt-lrom a ..... 1 U.S. ,.........1
I
official at this level.
The article is likely to play an im-
portant role in the continuing American
debate on the war.
lie makes these proposals:
I, Ni a lint step, the United Stales
sbouJd,announce jl·wlll withdraw 100,000
,ll'OOPI be! ... ibe end of· this year.
Piesldenl NlsonMeidy has announced
an ililU.1 Wllbdrawal ,of )5,000. The Cllf.
ford ari&cle was' t.nitten before the
presidenlial announcement but released
Wedneaday night.
2. ''We lhoWd IJao make it clear that
this Is not an. llotal«I action, bul the
beginninc of a process under which all
u.s. ground combat '°"""' will have been withdrawn rrom Vietnam by the end of,
1970."
3. 11CoDcU.rrintb' with the dtcislofJ to ' beaJn withdrawal, ordora should be Issued •
to our n;jlltaey ~ to dJscon.
tlnue eflorll lli apply m,.X\mllm mllitar)'
pmaurt on llli -and. to ... k.Jn.
alead to.~lllo>lefel;el CODlbaL"
f, "While our combat troops are belng
withdrawn, we could continue to provide
the armed, forces of the Saigon govern·
ment with logistic support and with our
air resource!!." •
CllUord contends that a poHcy of ap.
plying mulmum ntllltary pressure h ..
resulted In contlltulng blgb u. s .
casualties "without anr. discernible im·
pact on the peace· negotiation !Ji-Pa& ...
_He. '\BY• a .d~sion to shUt ibe. combat
burden to the ~tti Vletnainese "wou\d
confront North Vietnamese leaden with
a pitnlul dUemma.' ~ • •
· "Word U!•t 'the Ameercans were begin-
. ~ing to wllhdiaw might al first lead thein
to ' claims of vtctory,"· he wrote. ''but :even .~ inlt!aI ,clai~J ~d . be.,~· pect~ lo ·~ 'tinged ·wiib ~ppr0hl"'1!>~·
There 'has" fn .my,'vlew, Jobi bffn.<Oft . ·,1~ble ·evtdenit __ thpl Hri\01 fe~.-. ibe
. poos!HliJly that . ~ wbom I b • y
characteme aa,'i'\iiool f9fW' may, wllb '~ed '"hllt·. giijlually., re·duce<l
• :Anietlcall iupport, ~·~to llal!d o(l
'Ute Commwd.il f~~ . .
' •
Dante followed aix other tiuaband.s
down the aisle with Mlss 'I'urner 1in a Lis
Vega!! wedding chapel six weeks .\go,
after ·they met at a fashionable diacothe-
que three weeks earlier. 1
The alleged ittemptacnliefl GI seven
motorboata belonging to the Marlin Boal
Co., 1595 Newport Blvd., Colla Me<J, .,,_
cunecl allDOllt one year to the day .be£ ore
Dante's recent May a maniage to the
blonde star.
MlaS Turner, .19, and -hei' dauibter
Chefyl, 15, w.. prtllllt -tile Singapore-born ·~lub hypnotist waiis
· plck~.cf ,;p ·it · 11;elr''Sllera10n-unwer.,i
Hotel•raite. ~ , r I ·
· He.llsled hill age ... II ninl the bool·
Ina proce88 and told polica .l\elia1 a lloc· •!orate 1n· ·psyCbOlolY · lrom Slnfapore
, Unlveratt,. t 1 , _ •
· ' Tbei formet' entenaiaerv at the Villa
·:GF~~~bt1!t\!t:r.c1.~ :
'irpetll ·. aeverat •bolln bi • UiO ·Well
llollywood lblrjfl'j 11411on bdtre rel-
1 on·112.110CtbAf1., i. 1. ~ r ' . .
·. Diale, wbo.1'9111od•a·Colla M.,.,apaa.
. (llet~J)J:
. ' .
Weatller
. The 1un will m~ lt.s perfunc-
tory appearance Thursday aflel'
noon, but otbenriSe-1i1U be mosUy
cloudy with tem!><ra!Ures In the
high !O'• alon1(ibe Orange coast.
INSmE TODA li
Two of • the faal<•I t/CIC~lr
·aflool" tang la this • ,...k,ftd oa
Wi!id!Dor<I Pauao< m<<I.! BIG<lo,.
fl• for tho Colifornla Cup. B°""'
Ing, POQe 29.
I
J.
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t;ltlMM .... , ...
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2 DAll.Y r!LOT H W•• t d'!f, • l& lM
'~µ<l~e' .D~;q~er.s . Fined
'Six Ru~d Lewd, Sw~,ped~Wr:ith $1,~Q.Q f~vy :
Six more nude tavern danCOll ,..,.. fin. 'lliooe fined w'"'' court jury. All o11 the othen [nyolved In
ed a total or 'I"°° Tutsday following Arlene WU.lea, 34, of Valinda, Calil., Tuesday's aen~s submitted their
tbl:lr ~vlction 00 lewd conduct and 'l2S and two years probaUon. ca&eS to the Judie On the basil of af• Roae Redmu, 24, Bwtank, $3lO and fldavlts .
Sn4liclat txpOll,lTt charges. four years probation. Miss Zimmer, convicted of elght coonts
Central Orange County Municipal Patricia CelllnJ, 30, Nonb Hollywood, or lewd conduct and indecent uposure,
Judge Euaene C. Langeha\<t' ordered· $125 and two years probation. will be sentenced Tuesday.
probaliOn for all sentenced. Sentencing Betty vtcke:n, 25, Garden Grove, '375 Others continued to Tuesday were
wu delayed ln four other cases, one and four years probaUon. Ethel Mae Sooter, Z2, of Fountain VaUay,
waman was be!d .inooceat ol charces and Prilcllla Blackwell, 22, Santa Ana, $1.25 .loan 11iompson, Ontario and µnda Rae
• wwrant lscue.d for another who failed a.nd two ytars probation. Ciark, Santa Ana.
to appear in court. Nannie Wbetler, 28, Brea, $400 and two Charges agaiNt Beverly Vlerlra, 28, of
All llad been arrested In recenl wee.ks consecutive two-year probation terms. El Toro were dismissed.
while performini at two Sanla Ana beer MW Wheeler aod Jackie Ann Zimmer, A warranl was ordered Wued for
bin, the Apartment A-Go-Go and the 7.6, of Sanla Ana, were found g\J.lty Of the Esther Pike, 'Zl1 of Cypress, when she
AputmenL cbarg.., late last montL by a mOnlclpal failed to appear. '
Beach Hires
Coordinator
For Parks
A two headed Recrutlon and Parka
Department seemed a dlJtinct possibility
in Huntington Beach today following an
aonouncem<OI that the' clfY hai created
the )IOlllioD cl·coordloator of parks and
recreational development and has hired
'lbomaa Severns to fill the poalUon. .
'Ibo deportment prete11Uy h di1'Cted
by Norman Wortl:iy, recreation directer
for many years, who took on the pa.i:k
development and operat)oD. program 10
1985.
Sevmis curmrtly Is deputy dir<dor of
parks and executive assist.ant lo the
director of parks, barboi'a and beaches
fot Orange County. His new di.ties begin
July I~
WorU:!Y said this morning that 11we will
have to get together, Tom and I and City
Admtnlstrator Doyle Millet, and work out
the neW" system. II
Miller's announcement today ·said rriit
''the city council bas created the posiUon
o! coordinator of parks and recreational
· development and has employed Severns
to fill the position.
.. Ia cooperation with Mr. Worthy.
dtrector of Recreation and Parks, Mr.
Severna: will be .coordinating Im·
plementaUon of the park plans and their
future operation:"
Severns is a (U'aduate ()f the Unlvmlty
af Soo.lhern California with a degree in
buatneu admlnistretlon and has two
· yem of . graduate •tudy In· 1111bUc Id·
m1iL11tiatlon. Hi ts a fellow ()f the
AmWt<iib ~ark !ind llecr<illon Soelety.
Mlller said "the council feels that the
comblnaUon of the talent& Clf Severns and
Worthy will brloi to the Roc:reaUon and
P1rks llepartmen\ ezperlence In parks
arxt recreaUon admlniitraUon and im·
.......-"1UohjWl!l ~.pub
aqol r-prostam .oc.ind to none In or..,. ewzt.y!'
Pair Face Court
In Bank Holdup ..
Two ,... a«uae<I ol ·Uldng 145.lllO at
ll\lllpolnl from • a Hmrtiqt<in Beach hank
muJI -lriOl ADg. & llo ~ Lei Angelea
federal court. ' • ·,
Raymond Arthur VJin.oatlii 43, ol
Lomita and Kenneth RJchaid Werner, 41,
of Long Leach are accused of the holdup
of the Brook.burst al Adams branch o~ the
B.ank of America last Aprll 16. Police
clalm that they arc the two stocking~
masked bandits who marched into th•
bank and orde:rtd shocked tellers:
"Everybody hang up the phones."'
Vigneau and \Verner were pursued by
police in a high speed tjlase tbal ended iD
Fountain Valley when lhe'.bandi~ auto
11lddded oot of control s.nd.,,craabed •• 0£.
flcers fired repeat.edly at ·the Jet.way
vettlcle and believe the dlstractlon caused
by their gunfire Jed lo the driver's lO!inC
control of his speeding car.
Both men are held ·tn jail In Ueu of
$25,000 bail each. Both have pleaded not
guilty.
DAii Y PILOT
Despite Opposition
Apartment Project OK'd
In 2.Jiour Valley Hearing ,
PBS Corporation defeated heavy op-
position Tuelday night to win an appea I
before the Fountain valley City Cooncll
fer a propooed 13.5 m1Illol1 apartment
project.
FoD°""'B a twt>bour poblli: hearing,
cOwooibiJen voled H to •f!P!VV• the aportment lllll!ng (RA) la< pr~ m
tbe northwest corner ,d. Bushard Street
and Slater Avenue. lt had been defeated
April 11 by the planning commisalon.
Jobn Parker, pre&ldent of PBS Corp.,
ezplafned to councilmen that be bad
ellmirlaled the three bedroom apartments
and the -bacllelor units wbich planners
bad objected to In bis developmenl
About 10 residents spoke against the
apartment unlta, ouutoing the followtng
reasons: -lk>.vkr burden on schooh.
~~ter tralflc problem.
-Undesirable tenants In apartments.
-DevaluaUon of nearby property.
Parker answered thOle charges et·
plainln& no one Wider 16 would be allowed
In the al)artments, traffic surveys tn~.
dicated only a sUght increase ln tralflc,
studies showed blgh education level in
high quality apartments, property vahle.s
would not go down.
Councilman John Hal'Jlel' Voted against
the apartments because he wanted the.
area zoned R..1 (11partments, but less
units P,er acre) rather than R-4 (high
density).
Parker's apartments are ne.arly of an
R-3 (medium density) level, with only
about five to ten unlli too many for an R·
3 zone. Other councllmen £elt wasting
time to modl!y the proposal for such a
miall nwnber af units would not be
Justifiable.
Councilman Edward Just, normally an
opponent at high density, favored the
apartments because the area is "a pro.
blem piece of property and lb.ls use ls ap-
parently the only ineans po.sslble to
develop the area."
The San Diego Freeway cuts across the
back ol-lhe PBS property.
From Page 1
PLANNING. • •
the oubolallon would be pieced un·
dergniuod. bul a fll;Ooo \>Oii fe<ding line
would have i<> be broU&Ht in overhead
because of the high voltages involved.
According to Kiser, construction of the
statioo is "critical'" since oil drllllng
operaUons nearby have placed a higher
load on the system.
"We'Obtafned this pniPer!Y fw9 lo thtte . yfan ago wtlli the itdv!Ce cl Ille city ataff
and DOW we an bclna: told that maybe it
im't the right locaUoo after all,"" oald
Kiser.
The su1":tation drew a vig(!rous protest
from Robert "Sutake1 a member of lhe
People £or Parks Committee, He told
commlssioners that "anything" Which in·
terferes with . the fl\Ullniz•tl~ .pf the
park plao should be ,..jecied!'.
Ke alnfed . that ""tbls' power. ~Uon H
not In 1he pobfic tntemt.'' and uUcl whi ~ • ~ • -· • r' ~ . . . ...... -... ~ -. ~ 1• "': I -•• s l:F....,.. Page, l ,
IOtttR ~ .·.
Westmlnsler Ave., In Westmlnster.
the city 11shoutd allow public utilities to
develop an eyesore where natural .beauty '3 paramount.'1 ,
. A-ding to Satoe, power poles and
lines feeding the station would interfere
wtth a proposed park blrd sanctuary and
might Jeopardize additional funds oought
from the Hou.sing and Urban Develop-
ment Apocy (HUD) for the Jll"OJect.
"I ttJ}Jy expected Ibey would .drop the
plam for the aubAltion when the bond bsue was paged, ll sutake added.
The planning commias.ione"r also denied
a request by Jaseph Ferm and Rolo
McClellan to place a moblle home park
an 30 acres near the intersection ol
Gothard Street and Slater Avenue.
'Ibelr request .was denied al the sug·
gestlon of Senior Planner Dick Harlow
who reminded the commission the city is
In the, process of filing · eminent domain
actiom on property for the -park.
Ferm, who did not oppose the planning
staff's recommendation at the meeting,
told the commlsSoners that it lJ dlUlcult
for property owners to do anything with
the land there until !he city makes a
inove to purchase it. .
"We are on the horns of a dilemma,"
said Ferm, "untJl the dty can acqulre the
property." .-• ..
Offlr.ers sal.d they found Liberty strum·
ming bis guitar and ="'fUy &inglng while
Iha body of bis J>lf..,.....' liy d!"Po<I "aero~ a li vlng,room &Ota. Adding to the
l'Jtcbcock·like atm~ ... 1n the apart' :Men. tal. ::uosp· 1• .... 1 rn<nt, they said, was the flct that !Jberlt :H. UI
hail plaeed burning c:andlea an around the
body of his victim. D Ob• • Both !Jberly and his strangled victim raws Jections
had long records of mental llln~ and
both had been diagnosed and treated in A proposed tS2-bed long t e r rn
the mental · ward of Orange CMmty psychiatric hospital drew vigorout1 oho
Medical Center. And both, it was later jcctlons from Huntington Beach residents
discovered, had made seveMI. WlSOO. Tuesday night berore the city planning
ce.ssfuJ suicide attempts. commi.!slon.
Sqperior Court Judge Byron K. Commluloners decided to continue ac-
McMillan sent Uberty to Atascadero tlon on the facility to their nett meeUng
after determlnlng that the Westminster to allow for more lltudy time: after hear.
man was insane and unable ta assist In ing from several homeowners adamantly
his own defense. oppo8ed to it.
He l! today reaarded as aane by Major D CorporaUon or Pasadena filed
. :~ leMf.f N. Wetl
PralMflt ""II l"\llllllhlf
Atucadero and Metropolitan S t a t e for the use permit on property located
uospltal 01·~-·, south of Holland Drive an.d east or Beach JJ. llClllJ • \ ,.,_ ......
. ..
•
. ,
').
~ •
.Ne• I. C:.'l'J Vice ~I ~no~ ..,_...,
no11111 k11l'll
'"* TltMt1 A. l.fyr .. ~I"' -...i"f !Iller
IJMr+ w. '"-' W.1111111 ···" AH«.... ""°"'llol!OIO 91ad'I ll!lliof (lly ld>tw
" ............. o.. Jett Ith St1 11t
: Mo1Ttlftf u-;, •••• P.O •••• )'tCI, t2Ht ·--.........., '-°'· nu ,,,.., .. lllOI "'-""""'
(,oM INM! • w.t In llr.et ~ --"' m ,.,.._., ,,....,..
..
-·-_ ... _. -·.
•
'1That may ,well be," iald wens. "But BOulevird. .
you have towondtr about the capabilities A'ccording to their represenlalive, Ned
of ~fe· 1fho: ea11 ·Jd a man like that 1'filler, the facility would be ued for
walk ·Out· ofl;llkb a·· hospital in broad senile, elder!~ ~e~e and not for those
dayllgll.'"L . cansldertd cr1m.1Aally l.nslne.
"I'm rememberiQa today what Mr. Mrs. Kathryn Sheldon fOe.d a 77·
Liberty wu muted for and I'm re.mem· signature petition with the petition, op-
bering the long record or mental illness posing construction of the hOl!lpital
lhat wu displayed in court. We now have because "there are other places ht Hun-
to realize that be m•• be loooe on the tington ·B~ach more suited lor Uli! type of ··~ hospital." streets of Westminster and it's not a very
comforting thought , • , "
__ ~aglund HeadS
Exchange Club
Marv Hagflllld. direclcr cl oublic _.ks
lot .FountsJn Valle~. lla1 &oeri elected
presldent of lhe Foantatn Valley Ex·
chan&• Club. • •
Other ne" oUlcers jolnlna Haglund Jn
recent election victories .are J o e l
R.o9tnfekl. vice preaident: Ber n i e
ll<i111111g, -.1acy; aid Leon· llaUllT, truaur.r. .. .
Directon elected lo two :roar ,tmnJ
wen Marvin .Adltr, Floyd Warr eod..Ed
Myers, while Ron 11f<e, Tom Sbepbeod
.illd .• PJntt T!Kfrpe · recetvad Gilt year
Boord 0( lllroctoc terms.
Cau.lina Trip 0
Set for Youths
Fun and ldv.-0 oil c;atallll-1 Joland awatt boyi and girh ~ the trip oo
the white steamship Ju~·.17 In • trip
sponaored. by the H~-n Beach
Roc:reaUon ao4 ~kl ~nh
Deadline for younpt<ra•T thro<IJ!h 17
yean old to sign up for Uie trip la Thurs·
day •\ l :IO P•lll-,'Ille cost of.o1S.for
)'O\lnplon 7 thrwgh u and $10 flir. -IS \bfuu'1117 m\Jst be pal4 at thtnlna-
tJon center, 17th Street aod 'Ofuat
Avonue by Thund11:a11:10 p.m. ,
P~ 11\ll lttYo .a&. l'L~JIJllO 27 i!ld Mum at lll«lt 1:15 p.in; QIT·
dren wlll'1le atl,ed w ~ --mt ID00t:Y ffr toti drinb. • ._ • ... .I :,. .. '
. Ba'r'IJor Taking Slulpe
Work,progressea on Da'.na Har_bor, Or~ge County's....
-~,I MIJ4}1 craft re!uge. This Is aenal view loo~·
ing eaSt along coastline toward San Clemente. Land
"jutting into sea at .extreme upper edge of photo is
Cotion•s Point, site Of President Nixon's White
Houstf •wist. Work on harbor itself Involves con-
s\ructlo11;<1f temporary coffer dams wilhln br .. k-
.... wal!rs, pumping out sea water, then scraping dry
lur!ace to make harbor bottom.
Froiia PGfle 1
DANTE ••• Astronalits Describe How
men! di\'!!)~ bis boolclng"it•lha bayside
',pa, told Los·Angelel Sheriff's Sgt. Ray-
mond Gott he believed the theft case had
been dismissed.
State Lofiks From Moon
Ran Snyder, of 2320 College Drive,
Coita Mesa, said he caught J?ante in the
act ol supervising theft of the fleet or 1~
boats :P.fay 5, 1968 at a now-defunct Santa
Ana boatyard. Snyder and his brother Paul are
partners In the Martin finn. which
markets the boats at Mesa Boat Center,
1595 Newport Blvd., and had been trying
to work out a deal with Dante.
"He was an elusive character," said
Paul Snyder today, "he'd call us from
Las Vegas and try lo get us to ship them
to him C.O.D., which of course we refus-
ed to do."
SECRETIVE PERSON
The Costa Mesa boat company ex·
ecutive said Dante wa!I a secreUve
person and It is unknown why he was
trying to buy the seven motorcraft.
Earlier, Ran Snyder told authorities
Dante had given them a worthless check
for $17,460 in payment for the ~ats, but
promised ta deliver the purchase price in
cash when the .paper bounced.
A surprise visit to the Santa Ana yard
where the boa1a were built for the Costa
Mesa firm early May 5, 1968, led to
discovery of the alle,ged theft in progress,
Snyder said.
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -From the
moon, according ta tha:te who have been
there, the San Joaquin Valley looks as if
"somebody had taken a big sbovel and
just spooned il out."
The Sierra appears to be "beautifully
linow ·capped" -which it Is.
The state - a best selling book to the
contrary -doesn't seem ready to "slip
it)to the ocean."
Aod the C~Ji(ornia Aqueduct"just can't
be seen, disproving a myth promulgated
by state water projects publicists.
Apollo 10 astronauts described what
California looks like from the moon Tues-
day during a capitol press conference -
their only official one af . a three-day
f~rmal 6\ate visit,., . .
Col. Thomas ,P. Staffordt Cmdr. John
\V. Young and Cmdr·. Eugene A. Ceman
and their families Uew here" from San
Francisco after a downtown ti~pe
parade in the Bay city. ..1 On their" 6Chedule today wu, an ap-
pearanct befare a joint _msian of tbe
Leglslatqre, tours thtough Ae~t and
11c0onnell Douglas Aerospace facilities
and a flight to L<is Angeles. They'll be in
San Diego Thursday.
Gov. RonaJd Reagan acaunpanied the
utronatit.s: at every public appearance,
acllng as emcee. .
"These three art a product of what so
many would malign and amend -our
society," said the governor. "Too many
are telling our young children that heroes
are a thing of the past. Well, these are
authentic heroes."
What does California look like from up
there?
"You know, one or the amazing thin&s
that we saw when we were oul at tbe
moon," said Young, "was Califarnia ••.
"During 'earthris.e' you could see it
with the naked eye. It is really
something. The San Joaquin Valley
stands out like somebody had takei;i a big
shovel and just spooned it out. And you
could set it from 250,000 miles away."
Publlclsta for the-state water praject a
couple of years ago cantended, sonlewhat
jokmgly, that when man reached the
moon two public worka he could &ee I would be the cau£amla Aqueduct down
the west side of the Ce.ntrat Valley and
the Great Wall ol China. 1 Not SQ.. •
lt ·~ould have taken a mighty
powerfUJ. -telescope to see anything''
beyond the v.Uey itself and lhe Sierra,
said Cernan. Dante. was arrested on a warrant June
3, 1968, but ane of the principal witnesses
was unavailable for court appearance
and the case was dismissed prior to the
suspect's July II preUminary hearing. * * * * * *
SECOND WARRANT Flag_ for Moon
A s.econd bench warrant was signed by
Judge Leonard H. :P.fcBrlde on July 10
however, but the nl&htclub hypnotist had
apparently departed in the belief he was
absolved.
U.S. Ba1irwr to Fly Forever?
"He was never picked up because we
just didn't know where he was," said
Santa Ana Police Sgt. Kent Reesor after
Dante had . betn ·taken inlo custody in
West Hollywood Tue!day nighl. •
Miss Turner's ex-husbands include
bandleader Artie Shaw, Steve Crane, Bob
Topping, actor Lex Bark: er, Fred 11ay
and Rebert Eaton, whose divorce was
final only two months ago.
One suitor, JohMy Stompanato, never
quite reached the altar, stabbed to death
10 yea.rs qo by Miss Turner's 1$-year-old
daughter Cheryl in a spectacular case.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -\Six hours
after man first Jaru:ls on the J]loon next
month, astronaut Neil Armstrong will
hoist a nylon, 3 by $ foot American flag
on an 8-fool pole, and: P?nt it in the lunar
crust.
The flag will be stretched outward. in a
simul ation of flying, by a spring device
made necessary because there is no wind
on the moon.
And because there is "oo wind, no rain,
nothing to knock it down," the spnce
agency said Tuesday, the banner may fly
forever -or at last until man starts
colonizing his natural satellite in the
BLACK STAR SAPPHIRE
Trvly •11 1.quhit1 jewel , • , "0111 •f
• •111d."
s.,.,;.11y d1si9"ed pl.ti"""' '"-"·-1"9 1rribt-•t•d witb lh• 1l•9•nc1 1f
di1mond1.
$1200.00. . __ ....._._ __ _
Dotlt11.d ._;tfi VM i11 r11i"4 • , • ~
1 wr ''"9"ifie111t colt1ctio11 of di11t111!d•
''' er11tioJPi, w1 h1•1 11\h •If• pltt.
lftt11n 1now11tM 4 .JO c•r1f"' y1l'-
di1mol'Mll, wiffrt. lll•iicwlou1ly 1ppoiftt.cl
di11no11ch i1 *"• relll!d.
$3750.00
years beyond the horizon .
The flag planting will take place after
Armstrong, commander of Apollo JI,
steps out on the lunar surface around
11 p.m. POT July 20. I
Armstrong wlll be followed 30 minutes
later by Edwin E. "Buz" Aldrin to make
a moon walk lasting two hours and 4D
minutes. One of Armstrong's first duties,
the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration said, will be to take the
flag assembly down from one of the legs
of the lunar lander where it will be
fastened, wrapped in plastic inside an
aluminum tube.
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' ' PILOT-ADVERTISER 7Wed"'sday, J,ne 18, 1'169 DAJLV PILOT ·19
/ -..
9.95 value
1!'.0RTABLE 4-SPEED
STEREO PHONOGRAPH
49.95 value
3 99 29''
i1rs1
•Solid state circuitry
with 8 tran•istors
•Dynamic speaker
• PeMnal listening
earphon• and jack
•With carrying strap
•Includes 9"'10lt battery
EMERSON SOLID STATE
ll~ .. ~~~~.~~,.~~~10
::~ormance and high reliability 1 S.95 value
~~uid:_-on provides in,tont 8 BJ
-..:J1~n1ng t •Automaticvolume control • .---.
1 , ·';/!~1h-~vll autput for I EMERSON
'"""°leper.or sound -·
•All-transistor d ual chon·
nei amplifier
I Automatic 4-speed record
changer
•Multi-speaker 1ound
syste~ in detachable lid
•variable tone-
control
l1MEISOll
~ll.$1
IMERSON SOLID STATE
AM CLOCK RADIO
•Accufot• 1elf-1torting clock
woktt you to 111u1ic
• Eo1)"'to-teod full.-.,bion diol
•Solid state, in1tont·on sound
•Beovtifully molded Slimline
de,;gn cabinet
l111u11I
19.95 value
12''
SAVI OVll $71 .
AM·FM SOLID STATE AM·FM·POUCE &AIR ilAND
..
.!" ·'
-::··:·-
PORTABLI RADIO TWI SPIAKER R.4DIO
. •Big vertical style luggage radio
• AC·DC with built-in line cord
•Earphone, pe.nlite batteries
,· (-'
-'
0
1•YIAl OVlll·THl-COUNlll IXCMANGI
UHF·YHF·FM COLOR
ANTENNA KIT
12.95 value
' 10''
•Receives oll 82
chonnel1
•Rang• up to 120
miles-VHF
I Rong• up to 60
miles-UHF .
I Rcinge up to 80 miles-FM i
"'•II-' tOSIM I Pole, .5"0-ft. twin lead, I
MMel JA' ~704
49.95 value
28''
•AC and DC 1peak1r
•Twin 1pealt1n for
fuller sound
•AM, FM, police1bond
a _nd aircraft band
1·YIAll 0 11-lNl.C:OUNTU IXC:MANGI
.
i I
'
SOLID STATE
WALKIE TALKIE
ilC
15.95 value
2:81
'
• Wtth 1'0lum• control
I High 1eNftlvity
•Telescoping antenna
MHel WllO•.
I
-."i 'fl \I.I . \l"l"l .I \ \('l ·:."i \'f ~(Ill\."\ 1.(1\t l"lfl('I ·."\!
IMMERSIBLE DELUX•· auithT
Hl·DOMI HOOVER FRY PAN • • • l
SQUIBB BROXODENT
AUTOMATIC TOOTHBRUSH
19.95 10'' value
• Recommnded by more
dent!sts than oil other out~
mat!c toot+.brvsll .. combined
I Includes 4 indiyjdual
color-coded bru1he1
GREAT GIFTI
MoJt l 2502
FAMOUS MAKE HA,IR
DRYER ... ~~ ' •.... ' •:C.." I
9.95 vC\iue
4'' -... ''C': .. · .. ·'
.......
11500
•••
• 2 position tempera·
f\lrt control switch
•Handy stand ltave1
hands fre•
I Ba• con alsO be
rtimoved
I Fcrst spot drying
12°CUP STAiNLISS
COFFUMAKIR
19.95 value 917
•fully eutomatk;
c.offHmoker
• Ea1y-to-povr,
non-drip spout
I Large handle protectt
flngel'I
11 yr. over-the-counte r
• !~i!~ 10''
•Big 12·inch 1i:r:• electrlc fry•pan
I High dome C0¥9r fcir extra capacity
• ReMO¥able te111p11ratvte co..trof
I Pon immenible for easy cleonin.9.
WATIR PIK" ORAL
HYGllNE APPLIAINCI
24.95 vcrl•e
1687
I Recommended by
thousands of cfntflfl
IWoter Pik* carri• M
the cleaning job .,0...
· toothbrush begins
I Cleans lnac:ceulbfe
places your bNsh
cannot reach.
Mo4el :Jt
AUTOMATIC 4·SLICI
FAMliY SIZE TOAITIR
19.95 valae
9''
• T oosts fovr 1lice1
aitnuftoneovtly for
family bnoldadl ·
•Adj intable color £Olllnll
I Beautiful chrome fftthh
ITIAM 'N SPRAY
TEFLON®·COA TED IRON .
21.95 ,.,
value
•Teflon•-coohld '°'' pla
for eosr-gllde ltonln1
•Dial foioll fabtta
• Pvsh-bwtton 1pray
• J yr. unconcfiflona1
guarantee
LADTWOITH
5907/l:Jtll
l·l'EAR ON·THE·SPOT [}NCONDITIONAL GlJARANTEE
ON ALL TRAFFIC 'APPLIANCES AT ZODl'St
I\ \'f; \TOR\' Rf;fll ('Tffl \ ! S . \ \ I \f'-'<t l 1• 1'tl I :1 11:;1 ti\ . \I .I, '' l \'.4''1'1 \ti lltll SI·: 1'\ -S'l 'f;H l~tl.4' . \'I' :tflf)\ ... !
.... ~~ ~. WESTINGHOUSE TY CONSOLES
. ~WITH AUTOMATIC FINI TUNING
• .
l
......... I SAVE OYER $1001 I
518.l7valueo . $ 488· YOUR CHOICE
·--~ ---~..,..-~-
.World's lorge.11 bright TV
picture (295-aq. htthe.1)
I Automatic fine tuning co~ls .
•Separot9 VHF/VHF chcinn•I
selecton
• Exclusi•• "Cho1si1 22"
• lnstont automatic color
'fidelity with -fingertip
control
•Fine furniture cabinets
Including a few ' ltalfon
and fl'9nch provincial
model1
AS LOW AS
NO,MONIY
DOWN •••
TAKE MONTHS
TO PAYI
. .
WESTiNGHOUll 12''* JET SIT
INl'IANT~ON® PORTABLE TY
WISTINGHOUSE·UHF 19''*
JET SIT PORTABLE TY
$109 '79
• lm.tont-on•-·no wait; no warm· up
•front mounted speaker o~pVHF·UHF -.w;c.11nernumber.
•Soft•r, clearer,
easier to wokh
ITel•scoping VHF
antenna
I UHF loop antenna
•11ue10 .. e1 ,.,,, .. , ....... ,
WESTINGH0,11 SO~fl!t STATE STIR•o CONSOLI
IN CHOICI OP 3 FINI FURNITURE CABINllS .
.. AM/~M/FM.Stereo multlpieX with FM tuning meter
•Tape h•put-outpvt focb and external speaker lock1
•300 watts peak Music power for lt1ttning pleasure
•In Contemporary Wolnvt, Spaniih Pecan, Frenth
Pnwinclal Fruitwood
@$
169.9S value
'124 '
•B•avtiful off and beautiful 'Ort
•.fftttant·On, no waiting,· · · --
no wolk-boclr.
I Illuminated UHF/VHF
channel numb&n
I Full 19"• diagonal
p'ictvre
I Walnut grain finish
(N .. I•, ..... )
1· SAVI $3471 I '. •m••a ·
tN•t 111 ,._ .. ,
HURIYI SOMi .QUANTITIES UMITED ••• SOME MODEIS NOT AVAii.Ai"' AT ALL STOlESI
· ~:!iilOP WITH ZODYl.CONVINllNT CRIDIT OR YOUR BAlll(AMIRICARD ••• IATllFACTIOll GUARANTllD ALWAYll
'-('n"l • ' • II "'·--•HOP & SAVI AT ZODYI MON. THRU SAT. 10 A.M. TO 9 ..... , SUNDAY 10 TO 7 ••• LOTS OF .... PARKING!
• ..
Jll '~Yffi.Ol H
----~-----,------"'°.,---,,,==---,TUOI e• OCCUllATION LEGAL N<n'!CE LEGAL NotlCE
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IWLY l'ILOT JJ
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Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
•
1-'ist
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Saeeeeds With Stmadards Kaye Joins
Don's Sl1ow Tony Benne.tt S·urvives Music Trend
Kaye Stevens will be Don
Rickles' special guest star at
Melodyland when the insult
comic presenta his nigh~ club
act there June 2'1·29.
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
P-»111
c •JITl,ICAT• Of' •U•••u• MOTW:I Of' IHT•WT!Gtt TO IMOAOI LEGAL NOTICE PICTITKWI Mot.Ml IN THI V.ll Of' ALCOHO~IC Tiit W!Mn .......... drtlfY Witt tMo h llhlltAlll 1--------------1 ~ 1 MIMU 11 3'° Vl1t1 a.y1, Jvne t, 1Mt ,-ll41t
N-' IMdo. Callloftll1, ~ ~ flo. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: CI JI TI, I C AT II 01" DlKOJrt.
111\tut..,,., -of &ClliHTIFICO ~ SUblld le IHWrlCt ol ""' lie-..,. TINUANCI Of' use ANO/OJI ,,,.,. ...
t!llC C~h ~l'rl' 1nd !Mt MW •1'-for, llOtlcl II "-•etl¥ 1IWft lhll fllt DONMl'.NT Oii f'IC1'1TIOUI NAMI
ti•"' i. ~ tf 1IM tolloWlfll WMtl, llftdoln".,..i pr-.. lo HI! t Jcol>ollc THE UNDERSIGNED lkllll hftlb"f
WNM -In tun Ind .!&(a of rt1i*flC:ll bev9rfftS •I "" ltel'llwt, ~Ibid II ~r!lfy 11111, lffl(ll~ Ml'f ll, ltO, ...
lit ........ ! !oltow.: <.MMd lo clo IMnlMtl 11n0tr tM llctlllouf
f"l'9d W11ftf, 11511 Vblt awa. "'"""°" 2Ul lrl1lol s1,...1, COlll IM"' llrm ntmt of THE COPY HOUSE 11 77'
.._.,, C1llfonll1 ,,,... Plll'Want to well lnlentlon, !ht 11r1o W. ltlll SlrHI, Cos!1 Me5&, Clllloml1,
Dtllill Mn U. \tff. ~ 11 -1\rl"' la Ille Dfperlme!ll Wfllcll butl,,_ w11 farrnttlv c~ Of F,... W1lltt of Alalll&tk Btytr-Conlrol tor l"INllQ Ille follawln1 HrlOfl, wt.ow n1me ln foll
$111'1 .. (11...,.,11, °""" Couirtv:Nol Pw 1,.n1!fl" of •n 1kdlallc btwf1 .. incl pllct af ruldftw;t 11 lalloWJ, to-wit: Ofl ,,..., U. lMt ~ WW. I •,~. lletftko ltt Ileen'") tor fhet.e Prtmltl• It Alln II. l•Mlltv, MU Mlrllold ""'le Ill ... • ..,.. . '~"'-,..,_ lollowl: Aw .• Fllll'lltlfl v111rt, C1lltornl1.
_,..,. ,,..,. Wt .... ~•-... ·"• ON SALi!" GENERAL (lonl FIOI C1tlllk111 !or lr..,....dion al blnlnnt
"" ...,._ ..,_ -JI """""' Pllbllc E1tl1111 Plloct) uncltr lllt tbow lk!llkllll ntrne, Ind ti· tht wllfllol ..,,._. 11'111 IQ!llli•I.,..•~ M-•l•lnt to ..-olftt ttw 1....,.n« 1Wlv11 ot PUbllulion ll'le<'fOI. 1r1 on lilt
ht .._,,... """ Mlftt. al -" 1ic-c1J rn.tY 11111 1 vtrlli.d -ln IM olllc.t ot lllt CwnlY Cltrk flf (Ol!',KIAL it:ALI t.tt wltfl ..,., elfl<t af Ille Dtptr1'mtfll af 0.1"" CounlY, lll'IC!tr lt'lf 11<owl1~ ot :r:-O.l«r1n Alccllolk kvtr-Control, wltllln ::. SKt'°'"' ?W el lht C!vit CDM. Jrtot1no Pi.IDllc-C:t lltomlt dlvl Ill lllt Hto 11w1 ,.._,., premlSll WITNESS llW lllfld tnl1 21th Ol1 ot
Prlflll;IHI Ol'llot In -. flr11 -ted, 1 .. tl... prwnd1 tor ~ ..... 1Ht.
Loe. .......... Coul\IY dtrlltl H ll""'lded by llw. lhe l>l'ln'llllt Al1111 II. Brlodlev "'' "-"'*' ~fts 1r1 ,,.,. llcMllH +or lt'lt tato ot 11(oholk Pubtl1hed 0••.,...e Cw!I 01111 Piiot. Oct. J, lt71 ( I .. 1 ... PllOt t..Yltltftl. The forrn (If Vl'l'lflct!IOll n'llV MIV H, Junt ~, 11, 11, 1'69 102Ht ~~ Ol'I""' NI " 'be oblllntd I,.,.. lnY ol!IU af llltl---"""°""-°"==c=-----1 ,,.,.., ., ,,_.a. 11, 11. "" 111wt o.Nrtrntnt. LEGAL I~OTICE
LEGAi, NOTICE ttll lrl1!ol SlrMI (Or•. 1--------------1 Putolld!M Or1111• (Oflf 0111'1' .. llol, IAl·U~,
J-1 .. !Hf 11~ NOTI CE TO CllEOITOll
lllOTICI IMVITI,.. 1101 I UPl!llOll COUllT 011 TMI" 110 !TIM fltO. ,. LEGAL N011CE ST.I.Tl 0, CALlllOllll.I. 1"011;
NOftcl! IS HEllEIY GtvEN tllet -\. THt: COUNTY 0, OllANOE
.. '""'°"II Wilt bl rKelwcl b'r !ht CllY polJffl Mol. A ... 1"11
., C-1• ""'9 ... •It: The CHV eouricn, Ct:1tn1'1C&TI 0, COltl'OllATION ,0111 E1tlle al CYNTHIA ANN DOWELL. ~-A~, 1!';,,Cll'~l:.al.!:t:.~ TIUlllAC::~~l:i:u~U~l::~s UNOl"lt ~~~i:: 15 WE~EIY GIVEN le 1111'
'·"'·• D11 1''1dl'I', Jl,IM 27, !Hf. BICll wllt THE UNDERllGNIO CORPORATION crt'dll«1 Ill !hi tbavt ""mtd declde"r "-Mbllcl'I....,.. •nit •Nd •loud'' ll:IG daH hlrttw certllY !hit n II toNIU(!in. 1 11111 111 """"" llavl.,. elllm• 1111ln1t 1n1
1.lfl,, .,. 11 -ll•t....itff 11 "'Kllublt, M inni Ioctl«! 11 MIO MIU<rtllur lllvd., 111d dKe<lt"I are ..aulrtG lo Ille !Mm,
Oii 'rfM'" June !7, 1"69 In IM c-11 N-1 B .. cl'I. C.ll!wnla, uriclef tM tk-with !he ll«tH•rv voucller1, In lht olll1;9
(Ill""""' City Htll. 77 fllf Drive, Cotti tltl-!!rm ntrM af AEl.0 CHAITElll ol IM Cltrll af Ille Ibo~ enlltled tour!. or
""""' C1llfvm!1, "°' !ht luf!l llllt,,. of -Ind ftllt ulcl llrm It mrnPOlld ot the l'O prei.tnl them, will! Ille ne<e111N
(11 Ol'l'Sl!T PRINTING MACHINE. followlnt corpartllon, whlls• prlnc;lpil ~O\ICl\ert. ta ll>e '"'derolvM<I ti lt'lt L1w
A "' el 1M -lfkllloM !MY blo ob-Pll<:• ot ti.t.t,_0 It et tot-.: Oll!te. er! HAFIER. $ILLS & WOOO, Union
t•IMlll •I 1hl ot!lct af !Ml CllY Cto'1!. 11 <:alllGrn!t Mro Tr1mpart, Inc .. *7 Bink $Quirt. South "Tawer, Sullr '°'" Tl 1"1lr Drl\lt, Cot.tll ~. Ctlllll'llll. Ml(Arlt'lur l lvcl., fff'#Plrt Se""' O!'l"9f, C1llfarnl1, wMcll 1• '"'° pl1c1 er!
111111 ...,Id bl ~urnld to '"'-11ttntkWI If CtlllorPll bullnHt fJf lhe Un<te.-S~fd 111 111 mlllff• tlll Clf"I' Clrrll. In 1 M•totd ....,,lellt, ..,.._ WITNEss' nt MIMI' this 2nc1 cr11 of Ju111, pert11111,,. lo 1111 Hl•h! af w ld dtlcl'Oenl, Tin.II en 1hl flltblft wttti !tie l ld u .... Ifft. wlthl" lour monlt'la 11ter tile l!rtl pu,lk1·
""""'lier -""' IM -• oeN. (Corllfl"•lt lffll llen ol It'll• Mll<t.
Etd'I bid lhtn tPtdfV hdl 11'11 _., ClLtFOINIA AIEl.O 01ltcl M-:t l", 1Nf.
llln'I H Mt l9rltl In the -Jflailia... "TRAN51"011T, INC, Armll""" M. Dowt'll Af!Y ...CS ell 1llC9llf• ta "-..e<lllc.. Frl'd I". W1rrl(k Adm!flltlr1klr af IM! Eiltlt
t!.,.. """'' bt c ... rl, 5!1'-1 In lllt ~14. St<.·Trt•., ot ltw tboll'I nu•>td dlee.i.ril .,n4 .. lllmo to Mt !°"" l flY tltf!I In Ille Glfltd 0 . Hllt!ld NA,.11, SILU & WOOO
-lflullonl, ..... ll bt trl1\llllb tor ,.. Pl'ftlclttll A,...._,, II UW lect1-I f/l h 11141. STAT!! OF CAL1FOllNtA. U11 .... l•nlr S.U1f9, Sell!-T-r
l!l>dl bid th.Ill wt ......... lt'le tun _, COUHT'I' 0' ORANGE. st. IYlll M .
lftd reklenc .. of 111 1>1r-Ind pert!" Ori lll!t 2nd N1 If Ju,,., A.Cl. Ifft, Or .... , CtllltfRll ftUI
111,.,..lold tri tlle -I It Pl"IMillllt. 111 befof9 rn1 Miry IC, Ht,.,., 1 Noltno Tth 147.fUI c1 .. el _....,..11a1u;, lnclucll llwl llllMi ot l"utollc 111 1nd far 111d Cou111Y •I'd Stitt, Allel'MYI "r Adnll11l11r111r the Pmldeflt, 5tcnl1no. Tr.aur., •lid rn1•1nt 1twrtln, dulV comrn111lonl'll incl Publl1Md Or•"lll Cat•! Q1Ur P!IQI, M•MW-,_.,,, ,.,_,,.rv ll>Hlrtd Frtd P. w .... JUM" 11, 11, ts, 1Mt r 1056-49
LEGAL NOTICE T1'l4I Contrtclor 5"111 ui.t only u11-rick Ind Glr1td D. Hlla...S ~-to .,,. to ,.......,.lld\H'W ,...mra11 •'1)(1uttd In !ht bt IM Stc·Truwrer •nd Praldtfll ol 1111
U111'1>11 St1tn Ind onlY n'll"llll<Wrtd tofll'Ol"ltlon !Not ••Kloli.ci !"'-wltll"' ln-.... mi.11 INU'IUIKll/rMI lfl !ht Ulll'" 11.--1 en bth!IN af lhlr ~ll""l ·-0-,-,-,-.-,-.-.. -.-.-,-.-,,-,-.-,-.-,-,-.-,-.-I
Sl•lu. .. lltl!llllY Ill fr<ln'I rnt .. rl11t ......_I" ,..mid, Ind idlnowledttll to me IN TM• SALi OF "LCOHOLI(
llrMIN.., 111 """ \lnll'l!d Sl11tt. Ill tllt !Nol WCll -r1Tloll t ffCVlff ......... IN. ll!VIR.AGl!S ...,ruo11•nq el lht Contr1ct. 111 Wffne11 WhlrlOI. t htw lltrwrllll Ml
Tiii (lf"I' C-1~ ol 1M Clt1 ol COlll ""' lltnd tftd ,lftl•.:I rnr oftlclll Wtl 1M Meu ,....,_ tllt rltM la rtlKI '"' .,. u v 1111 .,.., 1n #Ill ctr1Hk•tt llrat ellllu To W11on'1 n MtY Conc•rfl:
1n ~ ... 111.... Sllbltel "' luut..u al "" llcenu
DATiD: J-"· lfff. 10,FICIAL SEAL) 1apllrd ror, l'IOlk.e h Mrtll'r oTwn Thi!
Publ!....... 0!'1.... Cattl D1llY •1101. Mlrv IC lffnno !tie und'"IVneil prOP<l"I"' ta ••II
6-17 ...
EDITOR'S NOTE -I/is Ii<
0$kew, coUar ope11, 111icro-
phone tn ha11d, Tony Be11·
"ett has survived succt$S·
fu.llr;, by si11ging the stand·
ilrtU. Bennett goes with "I
Left My HeaTt in Sa11 f'ran·
!'is'cil" as much as the pro.-
verbiat ham with eggs. But
the entertainer U hoping
to b-ranch out into other
areas now, movies in par·
ticutar.
By NORMAN GOLDSTEIN
NEW YORK (AP) -In this
age of turbulent change and
raucous revolution, it I s
somewhat comforting to know
there is still Tony Bennett.
An island of calm durability
In a churning sea of song,
Bennett continues to sing the
slandards, with the same
romantic style he's used in
recording and night clubs for
the past 20 years.
The more music changes, so
to speak, the more Tony Ben-
nett stays the same. He 's
survived rock 'n' roll, electric
guitars and protest songs to
remain a so1id-selling record-
ing artist and a consistent
ni ght club and concert attrac·
tion.
Whether it be London or
Cherry Hill, N.J.1 Seattle or
the Ccpacabana -or Apollo
10 on its way to the moon -
Tony Bennetl is there. When
lhe astronauts were awakened
one day during lheir recent
Apollo 10 mission, it was with
a Bennett recording of "The
Bowl Tickets
on Sale Going
Best Ts Yet To Corne" -
because its lyrics included
"You think you'vl! flown
before, but you ain't left the
ground."
Bennett, a q u i e t , In-
troverted, businesslike singer
who has managed to stay pret-
ty much out of the public eye
when he's flQt working , was 6
when he first got the singing
spotlight. He sang at the
ceremonies opening N e w
York's Triborough Bridge,
with Mayor LaGuardia,
sir.ging "Ma rching A I o n g
Together."
"That was it. I decided show
business was it for me," he
recalls. And show business it
has been .
Bennett says he was the
first pop singer to make an
album -"Cloud 7" -back in
the "pioneer days," in 1951.
"Now any group comes along
and right away they cut an
album."
He isn't overly impressed by
the quick success of young
rock groups. nor does he feel
he has to change his style to
keep in the running. ;. A good
song will last no matter what
the changes in style," he says.
•·11 isn't old time if it 's good
music."
"I Left My Heart in San
Francisco," which he recorded
se ven years ago, slill is his
biggest seller. ''It's just one of
those standards. It's a good
music song.'' And ''It Had To
Be You," "I Can't Give You
Big Shorty
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
0 n e t i m e heavyweight con·
tender Hal Baylor (G·foot 4-in·
· ches) will play the rote of
Shorty, a petty racketee r, in
"A Hall ol Mirrors" starring
Paul Newman and Joanne
Woodward.
The Vi\•aclow singer-com-
edienne will appear In all five
performances with Rickie$ at
8:30 p.m. opening night, 7 and
10 Saturday night and at S and
8:30 p.m. Sunday.
Tickets for the IUckles show
are available now at the
Melodyland box office, by mail
and at all agencies.
TALE of the WHALE
NEW SIAFOOD RESTAURANT
BALBOAI
673-4048
o,..
6:45 7tt I. a.ttiN .. , ... '"''"•'•
STE.VE
NATIONAL GENEltAL CORf'ORATIOf<I ,.,,.c "U EEN
Jl,l'M lt. ntt 1151.ft Nor.,., ioubllc-Ci llfa,.,,1• 1!cohallc tievu&OK 11 IM ..,..rn11.n,1-~====~:::::;~iil P•lncloal Ol'llct In CIMC•lbtd •• l!>llo...,: LEGAL NOTICE 0 ,11111 eou111Y 11 ' M1rn strn!, Huntlfl<;l!on Bncll, '.t:!ll:lll:!;~i;illfiwlf Mr C""'"llHlan £~pfr.. c11111>rnl1. 111 Nav, 2•, itn Pul'l'utlll fO ""'" lnltntklll, ff>t Ull· F e~••-. I"'• ~ ox SOUTH COAST I AS S-OiecoFwt~..:~ I 'f>ULI ITT". SUPl•le• COU•T 0, "THll l"ub"•l'lld Ori~ '°'"' D1IJ1 Plll!I, dtnlgMd 11 IPl)IVl"9 lo jllf, Dt!lartment STATI OP CALIPOllMIA FOR Ju,,. 4 11, It. tJ, Ifft IOJl .. t 11 AICQl'lollc llVtt"!ll Control lof li~utntf
THI COUNTY OP OUNOI by trimter ot 1n 1lcahallc !Hlver1oe C-M-M• 1Mnt ... ,,
.u.•-"s ON PlatT AMl"DID Uc-lot thlH ort'"I"' 11 •v ows: -LEGAL NOTICE OH-SALE BEEll COMPLAINT An-dtllrlnv IO ll<OllU ~ 1HlllllCI
TAaTAN HOMES, INC,, WA Ill D Ll!OAI. MOTICI!" af ""II tlctfl .. 1n1y Ill• 1 ver!tled ,.-otnt
Cl!Vl!LOf'MIEHt COMPANY NO. 10, Nl!"WPOlllT~lilA UNIFll!O KMOOL wltll '"'' attlu al I"'° DtpfrTmtnt ot INC., C, G. WAllO lfllll JAMES H. OISTalCT Al~lc e.P..11,.. Canlrol, wlllllll :111
ICINOllL, JR., II Tl'\ll~ of lllt ANN PN!tct lft'f'ffillto .,. dt'i Ill the di .. ttw Pr-eel prtmllll
t!Al.lllNGTOH, JUDITH HAlllllNGTOH NOTICE 11 HERESY GIVEH !Not It'll! -• tint paoftod, 11111"11 trounos for
11\d JAMES A, HAllR.INGTOH TJtUST, latrd af Educ•llaft ol lllt N~Mtw dl'l!l•t It Pt'OVIOl'd tl'Y ltw Tl>e pr...,1," d1'9d Novrmbtr 1, ltN. dolnt bullntsl It . •-GLEN MAtt Ot:Vt:LOPMfMT COM-Unllftcl ~I Dlltrlct of Or1ng1 CGUfllY, 1rt llOW l!ct ...... for l1't .ule ol 1tcohlll"'
PANY 1 Joint VlnM'I Iii.I ttlh VS C11!fln1lll, wilt l"ft't(yt w11rd bids UP 10 1>1Wr19t1. TIW lorm af v1rltlc1llon ITlll'J'
llLAICi-J, HUFF, IM"G.i.llET ~ HUFF: 11:00 A.M. on "'-Jrd dt' af July, lNt be ob11ll\fd !rain 111r alflu ol 1111
lltOGfll O\.MS"TED irld Mlt$. llCGIR 11 llW alflcl of 11ld Sdioal Ol1trlcl, Oe11erlrnenl.
OLMStl!"O OOt: f ttir-ll DOE V localld It llS7 P ltCll'l!lt Avtnue, Cast1 Strnutl J. Goadt lnclullNt 0....,.,1,.,.. ' M111, C1Ufornl1, I I wllldl llmt u ld blOI l"ullllthld Ortngt Co.ts! O.lly Plkl!, Pf~ll! OF 'i'HE STATf OF W'lll ... PUl!lclY -!led tl'ld rtod far: J-11, Ifft HN--H CALIPOllNIA to 1fW l boYI Mr'llld Dlfen. GllAl'HIC AllTS IEQUll'MENr
N nh· • All bld1 1r1 lo be In 1ccorl"1nct w!lt'I LEGAL NOTICE
vW •rt"-""" d!l'ftll!d ta f!lt 1 .,11. Co11<1llfan1, lnltrucll-111<1 Sl>Klllutkln•,_==~~====-0,---0,-,--,,, ~ -wflf(.11 1•1 l'IOW 1111 !lit In lt'lt alfl<I af ~1· n I !ne lfl --· "' ,,.. ..... rlfll'd P~• "''"' er! Slld Sd'laol Dlll fd NOTIC• OP tNTl'NTtON TO l!Nl>AGI ~ltlnt el llW lboll'I "'"""' ll1l11llfl1 1lS7 l'l1un111 Avt"'ut COill ,:...· IN lltl SALi OF "LCOHOL1C wl"' "'t cl•r'll el IM l tlo'A tftlllll<S OIUrT C1tlfarnl1 ' ' l lVlttAOES
lft "'' lbovt ...illltd M;flm;t broutlll E1cll 11icklu must 1ubmlt 1 bid W-11 •••lflil YOU 111 llld coun, W•lllln Tl!N In "" lomi ol • ctrTlllfd ; ..... _. Tl W1Wll'n It Mn COl'IC'tf'T\: "'" lfltr .,,. ""'I<' WI YOU ,,, 1~11 ........ or ............. I ,._. It .. f'l'td wllt'lln tr.. itiov. Ill/Md clltck W I bid barld -I IO llvt Pt!'· SlllllKI fll IHlllllCI al tr. !lctMI IP.
c-.;.,, w wt"'ln THtflTY dlrl II Mrvl'O Ulll U per<tnl) ol lllt ll'l'IOU'l'll ol !tie bid, pli.d for, nollct 11 hert!by glvtn IMI lhe elMWMff !llldt ,.11bto fo lt'le •"r of IN llftdlnltlltd pr-H to Mii •lcahclllc
You •rf "~ nel11i.d ,.,., Utlllsl YOU N-'-Mew U"llll'd Sctlaol Oltlrlc!. A btVl•IOtl II "" P''tnb H , Clncr!btd .s
.., Ill• 1 wrltttft fe-.1¥• Plffdlnt llld Pfffonn1nc1 land,..,., be ""utl'ld 11 '"'-fotlowa:
Pilllnllff1 wlll ll kt lvdvmenl ,,,: 111¥ dlK!'tllon ol "" Ol5lrlcl. '" "" "'"'1 Ill U10V. Cotti Hl9hw1v, Se•t BH<1" ,......, ar .,.......,. 0-•ncltd ll't "" l•Uur1 fo 1t1ltr lnl!> 11>th conlr1ct. lt'lt Punu.nl ID iutll lf'1tntlon, IM .,....
....,.llltd ~ll lnl 11 i •lllntl .._, ,_ Pl'llClfdt of lt'lt d'ltdl wltr be forl11!1'd, or d1nlon!d 11 1pply!119 IO lht Dtpar!menl
tr1Cl • .,. wl~ ia•1Y Ill "'' callrT far t nY In Ult ol 1 bonO, 11\t fllH llltn ""!'IOI al AICOflOllc 8t\ltrlp Contra! for luu•nct
atlltr .,.1111 dft"lll'lded In tlle urlfi.r wlll be forftllfll fo lltd Ser-! Dlllrlc:t ol an orlglNI 19Pllctllon al 1n tlootiailc
Clrfl•lt lnl. · Ortl'ltlt Cauntv. bn'trtgt llctf'llt tor thne prtml•a 11
Ya11 ,..11 Mele ,.,., ld'vlcl ol 1" t"-v No bkl<llr rn11 wltlldrtw hit bid for 1 follll'Wi:
911 111y ,,,.lltr ~ wllt'I lhe ~ H•lacl ol forlv-llve !di Hrs tlltr In. ON SALE BEER
plt lftf IH' ttilt SUn'llllOlll Suell 1nor dll<I 111 far !ht OPtnlnt IMreal. A..,,,_ d .. !rlrt; II> prolttl 1111 h1ut11Ct
tl>ould llt con.urtl'd wllt'li" ~ !lml! n~ M:~: ~::i ~!!,U::'J\"': 1of1 t!>e N~rf-al 1ucll i1<1ni.e moy lilt 1 vtrllltd Pl'Oletl
tltltd 11111111 """""-'tor llil"IJ t wrl!ltn •ltrllt"' rotlK! ,..., w ',j1cbl~"""',: ~ w!ltl 111'1 oflla! ol ll>t DtPlrTrntnt o1
llletdl.., II llW comoil1lnl. MCttHrllY ace"'! !he lownt ~i.J 1 nd ":, l lcQhalk l!rvttavt Con•ral, wHhln :Ill
01111" Mlv lt. Ifft. wtlv• 1ny ll'lfwml H'1 w lrrqui.:itv In dlr• al ll>t 0111 tr.. !!faPOStll -mlttt
W. •· IT J.OMM. ci.n ,,., bid rlt.'flvllll ... ,, flht ~~. titting orou""s for
Bv ~rr LIN Gorlton Otltd J-1.., ·1fft d..-ltl as provldtd bY" lllw. ,.,.. prft"lllet. 0.......... Cto'1! ~1-Mnl Unified 1n1 flCJt MW' tic-rd tor ll'le salt af 15EALI ~ OIUrkt 1 lcolwllc 111\11!'1911. Tr.. IOm'I al vtr\lk. ..
W4Uwot1TM, t•IOl'L & CflAIL cl Orll'ltll Co;in1Y !Ion ,,,.T bt ot>Mln.:I lrorn 1ny allla! ot
1tU W•klHI' DrlVI, SWIM 2" Ctffklrllll ll'le Dtsllrlmtnl.
.. _, -..ct\. C1llftrtllt nut By ~Illy He~y Dt~ld Jot..n SIHIQ~!1nd
•TILr ,......7t -tn-9"t Purc~••ll'ltl """' Publbhld Of•ntl c.wu Diiiy Piiat.
NOW
PLAYING
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JACll fWllCE
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Color 117 Dr lint
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
ITATI 0' CAL1POllNIA
EllPAl.TMINT 011 Ml!NTAL NYOllNll
,-AIRVllW STATI HOSPITAL
NOTICE TO COMTfll.CTOllS
lt:ALl!D PltCll'OSALS W"lll bt ,~ .. Yid ~ t11t FAlttVllEW STATE HOSPITAL
2111 H1111Dr •114~ Cotti Mal. C.tlf0rnl1 unlit 11:00 A.M., FrlcltY, Jlll\I n:
IHt If wtllch llmt I ncl Pllct lllcy 1¥111 bt pWlkly 11P911ed' tt'lll rtld far !!'It If\..
1t1ltollln of Hl~f"lf W•lnKollklt.
lfl ,,_.~ flli. lll"OIKI C011illt1 Of: Flll"fthll ind ln1l1n 1_,,lfln\Allly S11' 14 ft
.i J/I " "'I(-"nowpl"f'' Cllrt re!ttOenl Plfllcltt bolrO -9-lJ lllrnt ••ldl W1rti ·=~i.:.1 ... Ind l pjlnllllme!t!y lot 1111111 IHI af mt11r be1t. •II IS hll'tlnllllf"
lllok mu•! bt 1ubmltted' for !11• 1t1lltt -k dtKrlbl'd lt'llrtln Dn-llllools fn1111
pll ... l1'lcl IPICllla!llllN Will flOI ti. CO!Olldl'rd •I'd Wiii be c1ui1 IOr r•IKllCll ol •t111.
TIW lltd Sl•le A(ltllCy """"" fflt tlQh! IO nlrU 11\'f •r I ll bkl•
In IKcordll'ICt Wllh 1111 prP'>t l1lom ol Sl!clloll 177J af It'll Ltbol' (Odt, lf'le ta!O
Slit. .-...ncr IWltdlno !hit <O<itrect "-• IM:l!'ltlnld !hit "" ""9f"lll~ pr ... •!111111 nl" ol ""'".#'Plk..Olt IO_tnti_-1< 11;1 be done 11 tt f9ilow1:
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GALA OPENING TODAY!
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MfWl"CRT BEACH • Oll.3-&SO
"THE
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OSCAR FOR
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COLOR -Raled M
En. Show Sllll'tl 6:45
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in the ComHy
"THE GNOME-MOBILE"
Contin uous Dally from 2 p.m •
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-PACIFIC-jCl~li:!j;~
Ftr Ov! Ad~11 Camrdy
Cl11tlSTOPNER JONES
"3 IN THE ATTIC"
IClllK DOUl>U.5
"THE BROTHERHOOD"
PEI.SONS UNCl!ll 11 Wlll NOT llE AOMITTEC UNLESI
ACCOMPAHIEO IY PAllENT Cit TOULT QUAROIAH
JAPANESE MOVIES EYEIY TUESDAY NIGHT
SPECIAL NOTICE TO OUR PATRONS
THIE PtCTUllEI LI STEO IN "THIS BOX MlY aE CON510t:llEQ
av SOMIE TO llE UNSUITAILE FQR CKILOJllEN ANO YOUNG
ECl'LE -ANO ttEOUllll! PARENTAL DISCRETION.
''MICHAEL & HELGA"
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CONTllART TO AOVIEttTl~INQ IEVOND OUll CCNTJl:OL ANO
APl'E.t.JllNG l!L51!WMlllE YOUNG l'EOl'LE UNOlll U (NOT H I
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"HOW TO COMMIT MARRIAGE"
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"THE ILLUSTRATED MAN"
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YOf. 62, NO. ·145, i SECTIONS, 7.2 PA~S-' ~61: COUl'{TY, ¢ALIFORNIA ' ' WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 195' ' TEN CENTS
•
Apollo Fueling . Starts
Preparations B egin for l ~t Moon Landing
DAILY PILOT still'"''
In Fountain Valley Switta ·
Summer lUeguard Mary Dupuy, 23, is welcoming
Fountain Valley -residents to swim program offered
al Fountain Valley High School and other pools in
the city. Program, along with wide variety of other
activities, is sponsored'·by city's Parks and Recrea·
tion Department. Details on all programs can be
obtained at department offices in Fountain Valley
Community Center, 10200 Slater Ave.
Court Supports Recall
Or de rs Valley to Kee_p Validating Petitions
BY TERRY COVILLE
Of t1M o.tlr PMll Staff
A writ of mandate ordering the city of
Fount.a.in Valley lo continue validaUng
recall petiUqns turned in June 2 by,.recAU
leader" Eqane v .. Dasi\ WIJ ·-e<I on
COWlClllllen TutSdaf nigllt;pfiorlo tho ci.
ty C<luocil session. , ·
Sigried by Qrange Coun~y . Swlerior
Court. Judge Claude M. OWens,, t&t writ
o£ maqdate rules City Clerk Mary Cole
Jmlltfconti.nu.e validation or the pttilions,
or ~ city muot •PPW iA court Jiily l lo
show cause why it didn't. .
City Atto~ey Edwin Martin Indicated
Tuesday night that he may advise the ci·
ty clerk not to validate the recall peti-
tions. However, as of this morning, city
oflicials had rec:e.ived no word from the
city attorney.
If Martin opposes the writ of mandate
C.Ounty Bo y Slain
After Shooting
At Policemen
A Garden Grove youth inside his
grandparents' closed liquor store with
their pennission was shot to death by
Q.rnpton police late Tuesday night when
he unexplainedly opened fire on them.
Arthur G. Laramie, 17, was dead on ar-
rival at Harbor General Hospital as the
tragic cHmax to a trip to the :.tore to get
some cookies and milk for a midnight
anack.
The victim accidenlally triggered a
silent burglar alann in the shop, leading
to a dispatch of one regular patrotmao
and a reserve officer to investigate.
Compton Police Lt. A. M. Thomas Iden.
lilied the pair involved as George Keaton
and Ralph Reeves.
he must appear in court July 2 to defend
his eacliet ruling that the petitions are in·
valid.
Subjects of the recall petitions are
Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger, Vice
Mayor llonald Fng""' Jnct Ciluncilmon
Joseph. Courrege!. ~· • :
Van Dask and supporten or the recall
are ~ oust 1be three 'f!tm-their
poolS-f(r a'&fied ilnPioprteties ti office.
Distributed with the recall petiUona
were photo .copies of repliel to the
charges which led to the recall acUon.
The replies were answers to lbe diarges
and were published as a legal notice in a
Sant.a Ana newspaper by th'e three coun-
cilmen who are targets of the reeall.
Two weeks ago, MarUn told Mrs. Cole
not to valfdate the petitlpns because
copies of those legal notices were too
small and dillicll ~ read, thus alleged ly
failing lo follow legal recall procedures.
July 2, attorneys for both sides can
fight over the va.lidity of the peµUons in
Superior Courl
~ wrjt of """""'le,. .. ~· ... ~ •! thei:tty·CoUndl, City CIOrl<
Cole and lcllng City Administrator Jim -HoUywood. • ..
Attorneys Paul AuiustJoe, Jr., and
Robert Sassone pet.Wooed Superior Court
Tuesday for the writ, which they reeeiv-
ed. .
Van Dask" and hil aupporters hUUated
the recall action three month& ago afler
the City Council · approved tfie con-
troversial small lot Larwin Tract 3 to 2.
Councllmep John Harper and Edward
Just opposed the proposed 500 home
Larwin development ·and have not been
direct:y lnvolved in the recall battle.
Substation Held Over-;
Trailer Park Loses Bid
Future construction of the Huntingtcn
Beach Central City Park prompted plan·
ning commissioners Tuesday night to
continue a hearing on a proposed elec·
trical substation for one month and to
deny construction oI a trailer park.
Both o( the projects fall within the park
site, which will be acqutred from funds
made available from a $6 million bond
issue passed June 3.
Reason for continulng the hearing on
the two-and·a-haU acre Edi5911 Company
su~tation at Golden West Street ·and
Ellis Avenue was to allow Park! and
Recreation Diredor Nonn Worthy to
take the matter to the city council for
consideration Monday.
Worthy will ask the council tr establish
special zoning around the park site to
prevent commercial establishments from
building in the area.
Ralph Kiser, general manager of the
utility company's Huntington Beach bran-
ch, told the commissioners that even
though the substation would be located in
land which has been proposed for a golf
course, the design wouJd be compatible
with the park concept.
He adde.d that all powerlines leaving
(See PLANNING, Pa&< %)
Seeks Fighting Cut
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -Tecbni·
nlcians begin fueling the Apollo 11
moonshlp today to start final prepa·
rations for the launch four weeks away of
man's fint moon landing mlssioa.
The go.ahead for tho Uckllsh and 14ne-.
consuming spacecraft fueling operation
came from project officials after a day·
long review Tuesday of all aspectl o! tbe
historic lunar fllghL.
Astronauts Nell A. Armstrong, Michael
Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin were pro-
Beach Complex
Plan Delayed
By Commission
Potential developers of a 352-acrt in-
dustrial and commerclal complex ln
north Huntington Beach were unable to
settle their differences with the city
Planning Commission Tuesday night, but
will be back for another try.
'Ibe plaMlng commission, although
generally in favor of the project proposed
for Bolsa Avenue and Springdale Street,
continued the matter to July 1 for further
study.
Developers John D. Lusk and Son have
asked that loLs smaller than tbe city 's
20,000-square-foot minimum for industrial
properties, be allowed in porl.lons o1 tbe
tract.
At Tuesday's meeting, the commission
was still hesitant about granting the
15,000-square-foot lots requested by Lusk.
even. thol!gh the developer indicated he is
now having second thoughts about mov·
ing brto the area.
Accqrdlng to Lusk, "the area Is not a
prlnie inC:!Ustrial site. Witb all the restric· tions beil)& plai:'!ed on ua·we are tiegµµUng to'Y~' -, .. bt.n\'Wlli'll>" ~· . 'Ccimpl:!" --; '' <;T
-. &;said, wtdll 'lbi planil!n!,·""l!' ,,,_ ia tiklnirlbfllme lo wOrt out thO
details of granting tNcl lpptOfal, be bas
lost three major deals.
c.ommisl1oners will ataMty the lot al!e
probltm with tho devet-during· a
1peclal """°" Tueaclay. 'llJ'his is a reputable concern/' spid
C:ommiSSlon Chairman Robert Bazil, "l
think we should cooperate with them and
n®throw roadblocks in ~ir way."
Susan Ma zze
Suffers Relapse
Susan Mazze, the 17-year-old Santa Ana
girl who received Orange County's rlrsl
kidney transplant on June 3, has Suffered
a relapse and iS in critical ~odilion in
Or dnge County Medical Center.
Dr. Ronald Miller said her new kidney
Is ,functioning perfectly but other
post.operative c o m p I 1 c a t I o n s have
weakened Susan af!4 made it difficult for
her to breathe. l
The doctor declined to disclose details
on the complications.
Stacie Market•
NEW YORK (AP) -The alock market
closed al~l even today, after an early
sharp advance, partially buoyed by
barg~in hunting, slowed in I ate r tracung. (See quotations, Pages 20-21).
He said Officer Keaton went to the nar
of the liquor store ¥hile the reserve
11:alrolman covered 1he front spotting
-~ youri(-Uram e tffi'oUgfi"tfie back door.
Officer Keaton shouted at the figun ln·
side, Lt. Thomas said. at which Ume
Laramie firecj a .38 caJibu pistol aod
darted back as the patrolman fired back.
·-=e iifford Calls for Pullout ' .
Both bullets in the exchange mi!!ed,
bul Keaton fired again and struck
Laramie In the head.
Ttie victim's grandparents said he was
Jn the store with their permission but
they were mystified as to why he had one
of the two guns in .the store and why he
uaed ~.
Jersey City Mayor
Wins on Law, Order
NEW YORK (IJ') -Fol'pler De!enoe
Secret.ari Clark M. -Clifford •ays the
United States !hould order a reduct.ion of
fighting in South Vielnam and remove all
its groUnd combat troops by·the end of
1970.
In a remarkably candid statement cur.
ford bllslera tho South Vietnamese
govemmen~ picturing lta leaden u hav·
Ing a big -ln conttaued·'ll'll'i -He
11ys::
"As the Saieon authorities llW n, the
tonger the war went on, wtth lhe large.
JERSEY CJTY, N. J. (AP) -Mayor . scale American involvement, lhe more
Thomat J. Whelan, running on a "law stable was their · ~lme and the fewer
and order" plank. wnn re-electlon as concesslons they· would have to make lo
mayor or .New ,Jersey's second lar(ot othei: poUUcal groupln&s.1'
cit1 be5day. CUlford. once regan!ed ·u a 1'b1wk."
He defeated ronner Mayor Thomaa tef"ffd u Pentu:on chlel for the last
Ganaemi in a runolf election w_ith what.-year of I.he t~ B. Jolwon ado
Whdati called lljan overwbelmlna m1n-mlnisttlllon. Bia statement. appeadng to
date." The final unO!liclaf tally gav• Fortign Al!atra, quarterl,y o/ the Ccwlcil
Whdan 50~ volt! ti SI.Ill foe on PCftlgn Rtlatlons, I• the moot
GlJll'llll. outapoilfn "'""""'t on tho sat,..,~
lo come lrom a ..,,.m. u .S. rovermneot
-.. ••
•
olficlal at this level. •
The article Is likely to play an Im·
portant role Jn the continuing American
de~ate on the war.
He makes these proposals:
l. As a first step, the United Slates
sbruld anoouoct tt wUl withdraw 100,000
troops befon the end ot thi.S yur.
Praldent Nlroo already has announced
an lnlt1al WiU\drawal ot 25,(0). The Clif-
ford artJcle wu written before the
prnidenUal announcement buL releued
Wedn<tday nlgb~
2. "We should also make It clear that
thiJ b not an · isolated action, but the
beginning of a process under which all
U.S. ground combat forces will have bee.n
withdrawn from Vietnam by the end of
1970."
3.-••Concurrently wtth the decision to
begin withdrawal, orders should be ilaued
to our military commanden to diacoo-'
Unue el!Ol'.b lo apply mulmam militai'y p._,.. ... tile-and lo •,..koJn.
. mad lo radoee.the leVel'OI combo~" I
4. "Whlle our comhat troops aft ~Ing
wJthdrawn, we could conUnue ,to 'provide
the anned forces of the Salgon govern·
ment witb logistic support and with our
air relOl.lrcea."
..Cli!!ord eontends that a poHey of a!>'
plying maximum military p~s.!Ure has
re.ulted In contlnulng lltgh U .• S.
casualties ••wttbout any discernible im·
pact on the peace nqoUaUon lf1 Parts.••
He."s.&YI a dedtlon to sblft the combat
burden lo the South ~ "would
confront North Vletnamue leaden with
a palnlul dilemma."
"Word that the Ameercans wen begin-
ning to withdraw might at first lead them
to claims of. victory,' he wrote. ''But
even these tntUal clalfns C®ld be ei-~
pected lo be Unged ·with opprehension.
There has, In my vlt~, long bttn CM-
=~ ~~ J!t u::,: .. 't'\ ~
char"Fler1Je IS 'pu""'t f~' Mlj', wtfh
~·but ~ r1duc1d
Amet!Can :'z1f:'rt.,~. -~ allniI oil 'ti>O Comm (~. . .. .
--
nounc,ed ln excellent heallh by Dr.
Charles A. Berry, the director of medical
operations for the spacemen.
Chief astronaut Donald K. Slayton said
the pilots wlll work l&.bour di)>&, alt days
.a week for the fmel four weeka.· He said
he ezpects them to be "ade<tuatel,y train·
ed and adequately rested" at launch
-time, 8:S2 1.m. PDT Juif .16. · •
"WI! are go al th1a time, subject to lllC·
c,osoful -pletlon .«. . tho . remaining
tests," reported U. Gett.: Samuel C.
ESCAPES MURDER TRY
St•r'1 HUllNnd Dante
I
. r -,, 'Jl 'band ·.~~(~\T U1 ·1f ·. ·; . . "°. ' E1Mpe1;S~,_-..
Faces Mesa Rap
By A~ R. VINSEL
Of Iii .... ll'lllt lleft. . .
Jet oet hypnotllt 'Dr. Ronald Dinte -
Harbor Arel(l entt!"tiiiner ahd contidante
or stars-. today faces ~a the.it 'chafie fn.
vol,v!PI i\!,liJO '!•rth of lloata. at a Coile
Mesa firm, after surviving a mysterious
murder fµempt Tuesday.
Santa Ana' police recognlzed~UM: name
In news reports of ijte flv~ahol unbulll
and Uppe<: off Hollywood det«Uves who
arrested the' ill-starred seventh lfuaban<I
of a~s Lana Turner about :nldnight. ,
The' attack by a mystery gunman wear-
' Ing a '!akish Australian )?uah hat e~ller,
as Dante drove into his faahlonable
office-apartment on Doheny Drive, ·left
him with only a cut on the face.
SDATrERED GLASS .
The barrage of bullets shatlerecL•e
witldshield of his car .and he ·was n\Pltd
by ·nytng glass as · he dove for l ltie
floorboards durlna: what authoriUea aid
WQ1 the third attempt on his life. . :'.
Once before, a jealous lover who clai.m-
·ed the hypnotist ·had alienated hls
girllrjel)d, flre:d a .45 caliber:pbLol ahot
at Dr. Dante during a San Diego
nigh\club perfonnance. ·.
He was not hit, and J,awrrien dldr pot
elaborate Tuesday on the third alleged
murder attempt. · ,
Dante was apparently.as aha~en by.~
arrest as he had been :bY the rmµrdar at.-
tempt earlier, teilln' aUthoriUea h&.knew
of no 'reason tor edh~, unUJ. the ·bolt
ca~e was explained. . . ·
"I Clon't know anyone wbo wO\Wl want
lo kW me," he said, "unless it would be
&Om!"'!" wh<>Jo j,alooa ~ the_wonwi
I just married." .
I crlRER hUSBANIJS
Dante followed aix other husband!
down the aisle with Miss Tum'er in a Lu
Vegas wedding chapel six WetU '.f!'.O,
after they met al a fa!hionable dilc8tbe-
que three weeks earlier.
The alleged attempted theft of· seven
motorboats belonging to the Marlin Boat
Co., 1595 Newport !llvd., C:O.te Mesa, <><-
curred almost one year to the day before
Dante's recent May, 8 m.arrtace ·to the
blonde l1ar.
Miu '.llimer.,49, and her dauit>ltt
Cheryl, • 21.. wm pment when th<
Singapore-born nightclub hypnotist w111
picked up at · tbeJ.r Stieraton-Uttivel"lfl Hotel i aulte. , , • '
He.lllted hla op at 49 durlilg tho book·
Ing process and told police .be has a doc·
lotate iA P'YcbolOI)' !rom Sillga"""
. UnlVeralty. 1 · ~''
The !armer enlertalner at,..ltfo Villa
, MariJ111 nlglttclub Jo N Beach ~
stW ahaktn by the er attempt -
· aper1I · ..,..al: < 1tt · the• West
llollywoocl alltlon Wore rel..,.
. on 1)1,IGO " r
-.. Qen~ rente<l a Colla Mesa •]1111-
•"-(Illa DANTE, Pact I~ ,
-
Phillips, 111' Apollo program director.
••After hiartnl Ule readiness assessment
of all elements of the mission, I am ron-
fidenl that we can. proceed wllh our
preperttiona to meet the July launch wfD..
dow .".
Today's fueling operaUon wu the st.art
of preparaUona for the lut big ·test -·a
dress rehearsal countdown scheduled to
be&in June 25 and end· wllh a mock
launcn July 2. The !pacecraft wW remaln
·f1icleil after the tesl. .
Killer Eludes ·
Manhunt After
Hospital Break
By TOM BARLEY
Of tail DlllW fli.t Stiff
"Candlelight killer" Robert , Willard
!Jberty b sUll at liberty today, defyJni
the Intensifying manhunt betnc launched
by law enforcement offlcen In Orqt
and Loo Angel" counties.
11te 21-year-old Westminster man ls en-
joying the sixth day of a freedom that
was, Deputy District Attorney Al Wells
claims, handed to him on a plate with hla
as:t.ontshing release from Metropolitan
State Hospital at Norwalk.
Liberty, arrested two yean ago for the
murder of Mrs. Mareelll LandlJ, wu due
lo be returned lo Superior Court for the
revival of charges which were IUlpCDded
.because of hls mental concUUon,
Hospital ofllclala · uy tho former
m.ochtnlst wallted lo freedom from an
opeo word at.tho N~alk' Iaclllly and
t!W• their papen!, ~ '?Ukd lo be
·sane, could have doni that it!any 11ml bl
tbll ... ' tl..., .......... tbat..,, •:;1 . rt · aiwt,, ,,._ !bet whet wu
reponed lo hta! ar "a '"-grapblc er-
ror'' mlllt have been a bit help. Be
argues 'that Liberty's papers sbotdd have
been endorted "diacharged to cow-t" and
not the airliPle "dischar1ed" that wu
recorded.
lt Is not unknown, Wells adds, for the
Norwalk hospital to f11ake such a belated
entry on the records 'Of a pa.Uent who has
mHn1ged to escape from the facility. And
he bruds as 0 eitremtly careleu" the
supervision of a man who wu listed as
hfi;hly dangeroua at the Ume ol hll '°""
mittal tn Atascadero State Hospital.
Sheriff's investigators also condemn
,tbe ·first report of Llberty'a absence that ,
was ilsued by the hospital.
11tat AWOL llsUng, they said, gave no
Indication o/ !Jberty'a background and
that the escapee wu to be returned to
court on a murder Indictment. "We step..
ped up the search when we did dlaeover
these factl, an officer commented, "but
we lost a lot Of Valuable Ume because we
thought he was just another run-of·the
mill getaway."
Liberty won his "Candlelight Killer"
pseudonym from officers who ln-
vesllgated the bliarre slaying of Mrs.
Landis, the attractive brunette who
shared Liberty's apartment at 8382
CSee KIILER, Pege %)
Blood Bank Slated
A community blood bank will be held at
St. Bonaventure Catholic Church at:
Springdale Street and Helt Avenue Hun-
tington Beach, on Jiily 3. AppoiAtmenta
may be obtelned by calling Gllea Meyer at 846-0558.
OrBDf e
Weather
• The sun will make ill perfunc-
tory appearance Thw:lday after.
noon, but otherwise It'll be mosUy
cloudy wJlh temperatures in the
high Ill's aloog tho Orange CoasL
INSIDE TODA\' .
Two of &he f<Ul<•t JICChta
a.float · tanglt thU welcend ai
Windward PouaQ1 meets Black·
fin for Ute California Cup. Boot-
ino •• R6ae 29. / -.. .. c......... 11
Ul'Mf' ClrMt 11 CltMI.... 11..t ._ .
·-u °""' ........ 11 ~-14 ..........
htwl I t IMS ·-... -.. --.. ...,_ ' -
-·,
(
l.lciNteM 14
M9ll In llrTlu I
Mettllltl ll -...... ............ ,. --.. =-=".:. --.... Dr .......... 11 ---·-. ---' .,.,. .... .. .
•
• 2 NllY PILOT H
'Nudie ·' Da~ers ·:·Fin ·· d
• I
Six Rh"led .Lewd, Sf4pped Witli; $1;5·oo· Eevy .
stx more DUde tavern dancers were fin..
ed a total o! ll,500 Tuesday following
their coavlctlon on lewd conduct 111d
bidecea1 uposure charges.
Central Orange County Municipal
Judge Eugene C. LangehauMr ordered
probaUon for all sentenced. Sentencing
Was delayed in four ~ cues, one
woman was held innocent ol. charges and
a wanant issued for another who failed
to appear in oourt.
All had been arrested ln recent weeks
while perfonning at two Santa Ana beer
bars, the Apartment A-G&-01> 'and the
Apartmenl.
Beach Hires
Coordinator
For Parks
A two beaded Racrealinn and Parkl
Department seemed a distinct possibility
In HunUnglon B.acb today following an
announcement that the city has created
the POlluOn ol coordinator of parks and
, recreaUonal development and has hired
Thomas Severns to fill the position.
Tbe department presenUy is dirtcted
by Norman Worthy, recreaUon direclor
for many years, who took on the ~k
development and operaUon program m.
1915. Severns cummlly is deputy direcU>r ol
-. parks and executive assistant to the
director of Jl&Tks, harbors and. beaches
for Orange County. Ill> new duties begin
;. July 11.
. WortJlY said this morning that "we will
have to get togetlw, Tom and I and City
Administrator Doyle Miller, and work out
-. &be new systeni.''
-Miller's announcement today said Ciit
:· t •tbe city councll bas created the poslUon ' Of coordinator of parks and recreational
-developmeilt and has employed Severns
, to fill the POllUon.
: 11ln cooperation wllh Mr. Worthy,
· director of Recreation and Parb:, Mr.
.. Severns will be c oord t n at i n g lm·
ptementaUon of the park plans and their
·, future operation."
' Severns is a ,raduate of the University
" of Southern Califamla wllb a degree In
· business administration and ha1 two
years or graduate study in public ad·
· ministration. He ls a fellow of the
" American Park and Recreation Society.
-Miller sald "the council feals that the
,. CQ111billallon ol the talenll ol Sevtma and
Worthy will bring to the Reaeatlon and
•. Parb Department experience In parks
and recreaUon administtatiop al)d im-
plementation which will1~eveIOp a parks
and recreation program second to none in
Orance Coum)'.''
Pair Face Court ...
n Bank Ho~up
Two men acMecl of Aaldng "5,000 at
gunpoint from a ~untington Beach bank must &tand lria! Ang. 6 In a l.os Angeles
federal courl·
Raymond Arthur Vigneau. 43, of
Lomita and Kenneth Richard Werner, 41,
of Long Leach are aceused of the holdup
of the Brookhurst at Adams branch of the
n:ank of America last April 11.· POUce
claim that they are : the '"-°' atocklnf'
masked bandits 'fl'lo · m~ ·into · the
bank and ordered sbo<1'ed · tellen;
"Everybody bang up the phoPes.'' · ·
Vigneau and Werner were pursu~··by
police in a high speed chaM,that ended 'in
Founl.ain Valley when the bandits' auto
skidded out of control and crash~ or.
fleers fired repeatedly at the getaway
vehicle and believe the distraction caused
by their gunfire led to the driver 's losing
control of his speeding car.
Both men are held Jn jail in lieu ot
$2.5,000 bail each. Both have pleaded not
guilty.
DAl!Y Pl!OT
OL\NGI ~ l"UIL ISHIMG ~Alfi
•et.ti N. W..l "-*"" .,,. Putl!Wllt
, Jee.Ir l. C.lw
YU ~kllnl a."° Gtftfl'J-.....
!--· nol'ltet kaa1i1 .....
1\.111e1 A. Mllf,hl110 ~Edllw
IJN•t W. let•• Wll1l1"' Re ... A1MCl1'9 Hl,l!Ollf>tHlll 8etdt EOI..,, Cir, fdllor
................ OMu
Jot Jtlt Street · u.n;"' At1t1,.·.n r.o. a.. m. '2w1 . _.._
.......... ltMtl, Ull ""'' ..... ,...,,..,,.
<NI• #ltM: .. "''" ~_., ..... "--~ m "~.A;.,...
I
' ...
Those fined were:
Arlene Whalen, 341 of Vallnda, Callf.,
$125 and two yean 'J)robltion.
Ro,. Redmaa, 24, Burbank, l3SO and
four years proba:Uon.
Patricia CoWu, 30, Nonlt Hollywood,
$125 and two years probation.
Betty Vlcken, 2.5, Garden Grove, $375
•and four yean probation.
Prll<Ula Blackwell, 22, 5anla Ana, $125
a.nd two years probation.
Nannie Wheeler, 28, Brea, $400 and two
COMecutive two-year probation tenns.
Ml!s Wheeler and Jackie Ann Zimmer,
26, of Sanla, Ana, were found 11.1.illy of the
chargea late last moutL by a municipal
court Jury. AU of the others Involved In
Tuesday's sehtencings $ubmif™I their
cases to the judge on the basfS of af.
fidavlts.
Miss Zimmer, conVlcted of eight counts
of lewd conduct and indecent ixposure,
·will be sentenced Tuesday.
Others continqed to Tue_,day "'1!re
Ethel Mae Sooter,'2Z, of Fountain Valley,
Joan Thampson. Ontario and Linda Rao
Ciark, Santa Ana.
Charges against Beverly Vierira, 28, of
El Toro were dismissed.
A warrant was ordered issued for
Eslher Pike, 'll, of Cypress, when she
failed to appear.
Despite Opposition
Apartment Project OK'd
In 2-hour Valley Hearing
PBS Corporation defesled heavy op-PoSition Tuesday nl&ht to win an appeal
before the Fountain Valley City Council
lot a propooed 13.s million apartment
projed. u ·--~-Following a two-boor pub c •-••B· coundlmen ,_ H lo approve the
apartment zoalng (JI.I) for property on
the northwest corner d.. Bushard Street
and Slater Avenue. It bad been defeated
April ·I! by the planning commission.
John Parker, prea!denl of PBS Corp ..
explained to councilmen that he had
ellminated the three bedroom apartments
and the bachelor units which planners
had ol;Jected lo In bis developmenL
About 10 residents spoke against the
apartment units, oulllnlng the following
reasons:
-Heavier burden on schools.
-Greater traffic problem.
-Undesirable i.nanta in aparlmenll.
-DeYaluation of nearby property.
Parker answered thooe charges ex·
p!alnlng no one Wider 16 would be allowed
In the apartments, traffic surveys in·
dicated only a slight increase in traffic,
studies showed high education level in
high quality apartments, property values
would not go down.
Councilman Jahn Harper vot.ed against
the apartments because he wanted the
area zoned R-3 (apartments, but less
units per acre) rather than R-4 (high
density).
Parker's aparbnents are nearly of an
R-3 (medium density) level, with <1nly
about five to ten units too many for an R·
3 zone. Other councilmen felt wasting
time to modify the proposal for such a
small cumber of units would not be
justifiable. •
Councilman Edward Just, normally an
opponent of high density, favored the
apartments because the area ia "a pro-
blem piece of property and tbis use Is ap-
parent1y the only means possible to
develop the area."
The San Diego Freeway cuts across the
back of the PBS property.
From Page 1
PLANNING. ••
the subei.aUon would be placed un·
dergrouncl, but a 66,000 volt feeding line
would have to be brought in ove rhead
because of the high voltages involved.
AccordiDg to Kiser, construction of the
staUon is "aitlcal" sirice oil drilling
operaUc;ms nearby have placed a higher
load on the system.
"We'obtaioed this property two to three
~ars·ago with the advice of die city staff
and now we are being told that maybe it
isn't the right location after all," said
Kl!!Cr.
The substation dre~ -_ yigorous protest
from Robert Sutake, • me~r of the
People for Parks CommitteeJ He told
C<lmmissiOQea. that ~~~~eh .ill<o
tederea with . the ~Ubn tof tbe · park plan sbouJd !Ji!:.r.ieeled.";: ' He stated Uiat "tfilS po"\ttr Stltlon ts
nol In the public: in~t" llflll uU<t wb,y ~ . . ... .
From Page 1
KILLER •.•
WeMmln.ste.r Ave., 1n W.mmlnster. ~ .
. Officer!; said lh\,yfOUl>d ~'min& J!i! f!Uilar ;µ;.i.ioflly ~ging while Ute l>Ody of bis paramour lay draped
across' a living room sofa. Adding to the
Hitchcock-li ke atmosphere in the apart-
ment, they said, waa the tact thet Llberty
had placed burning candles all arowtd tbe
body of his victim.
Both Uberty and bis strangled victim
had long records of mental illness and
bof.h had been diagnosed and treated in
the mental ward of Orange County
Medical Center. And both, it was later
discovered, had made several unsuc-
cessful suicide attempts.
Superior Court Judge Byron K.
McMillan aent Liberty to Atascadero
after determining that the Westminster
man was it}sane and unable to assist in
his own defense.
He is today rqanled as sane-by
Atucadero and Metropolitan S t a t e
Hospital officlals. ·
"Tbat may well be. •1 said Wells. 1'But
yau "have.tO ~about the c-r>ablllties
of people wh9 can · let a man like that wal< Dill ol Stieb'.. hospital in b=d
daylight.
"I'm remembering · today what Mr.
Liberty was arre.'>ted for and I'm remem·
beriug the long record ~f mental Ulne!&
that was displayed in court. We now have
Lo realize that he may be 1008e on the
streets of Westminster 8nd it's not a very
comforting thoughl ••• "
Haglund Heads
Exchange Club
Marv Haglund, director of public work.l
for Fountain Valley, has been elected
presid<nl of the Fountain Valley Ell· ~Club.
Other new officers Join!111 Haglund in
rtctn\ elec\ton victories are J o e l
·ltoaeofekl.-. vice president: Bern I e
.Jlea111111g, ..._etary, and Uon Sutlill,
treaBUN!f. •·
Dlreclon elected to two yt!ar term s
•Were Marvin Adler, F~ Warr ud Ed
Myer~ while Ron Ri"'1 ,.... Shepherd
-and Pini<)' Thorpe nceived~~ year
Board ol Director """'-'.
the city "should allow public utilities to
develop an eye50re where natural beauty
is paramount."
According to Sutake, power poles and
lines feeding the station would interfere
with a proposed park bird sanctuary and
might jeopardize addiUonal funds sought
from the Housing and Urban Develop-
ment Agency (HUD) for the project.
"I really u:pected they would drop the
plans for the substation when the bond
issue was passed," Su take added.
The plaMlng commissioner also denied
a request by Joseph Fenn and Rolo
McClellan to place a moblle home park
on 30 acres near the in'tersection of
Gothard Street and Slater Avenue. •
Their requ.est was denied at the sug-
gestion of Senior Planner Dlck Harlow
who reminded the commission the city is
in the process of filing eminent domain
actions on property for the park.
Ferm, who did not oppose the planning
staff's recommendation at the meeting,
told the commissioners that it is dllficult
for property owners to do anything with
the land tllere un~ ~ city makes a move to purch~se it. .
, "W.e are on the Jloms of ·a dilemma,"
said Fenn, "unUl the ¢tycait .acq~ the property." .
Mental Hospital
Draws Objections
A proposed 1$2-bed long term
psychiatric hospital drew vigorous ob-
jections from Huntington Beach residents
Tuesday night before tbe city planning
commission.
Commissioners decided to amtinue ac·
tion on the facility to their next meeUng
to allow for more study time after hear·
Ing from several homeowners adamantly
opposed to il
Mdjor D Corporation of Pasadena filed
for the use permit on property located
south of Holland Drive and east of Beach
Boulevard.
According lo-their represent.aUve,-Ned-
Miller, the facility 'WOUid be used for
senile, elderly people and not for .those
considered criminally Insane.
Mn. Kathryn Sheldon filed a 77-
signature petition with the petition. oir
posing construction of the hospital
becat11e ·"th~ are'other·places"in Hun-t!naton Beach more suited lot. thls tfpe or
bospltll."
Catalina 'f rip
' .
Set for Y9uths
Fun and ' odventure iin coJ,ii1.a Island
await boys and ftrb l')llk!ni·t!lo trip on
the while · st"irishlp .lune 27 ·in,.• trip
8pan80red by the 11\m= l!<&ch Recreation llnd Par Its' DepW • nit •,
Deadlloo fl>!' younnulll '! lhroulh 17
years old lo sign ·~ liir the ldp ~ "l;hur•·
day al 4:30 p.m.'~ c9'I or "Jf for · youn,gf!crs i thro\igb land $10 'for th ...
1l Ulroug11 l7 must Ile Id at'~' ....,..,. lion center, 1 \th Stroet , i/id Orange
Aveflue by Thllrsdllf' at J::IO p.m."
Pardc!paott 'lltlt~fo It 8 ~.in.,Junc
.!! nd rtllllil at ""1llt 1:46 9.m. Olli·
·dren will be asi\l!d .lh•bring ~cti_es and money for loll i!z1$t. -
Barbot• Taking Shape
Work progresses on Dana Harbor, Orange County's
newest sma11 craft refuge. This is aerial view look·
ing east along coastline toward San C1emente. Land
jutting into sea f\t extreme upper edge of photo is
Cotton's Point, site of President Nixon's White
House West. Work on harbor itself involves con-
structiOn of temporary coffer dams within break-
wpten, pumping out sea water, then scraping dry
surface. to make harbor bottom.
From Page 1
DANTE ••• Astronall)ts Describe How
ment during bts booking at the bayside
spa, told Los Angeles Sheriff's Sgt'. Ray-
mond Gott he believed the theft case had
been dismissed.
State Looks From Moon
Ron Snyder, of 2320 College Drive,
Costa Mesa, said he caught Dante in the
act of supervising theft of the fleet of 16--
boats May 5, 1968 at a now-defunct Santa
Ana boatyard.
Snyder and his brother Paul are
partners in the Marlin firm, which
markets the boats at Mesa Boat Center,
1595 NewPort Blvd., and had been trying
to work out a deal with Dante.
"He was an elusive character,M said
Paul Snyder today, "he'd call us from
Las Vegas and try to get us to ship them
lo him C.O.D., which of course we refus·
cd to do."
SECRETIVE PERSON
The Costa Mesa boat company ex:·
ecutive said Dante wa s a secretive
person and it is unknown why he was
trying to buy the seven motorcralt.
Earlier, Ron Snyder told authorities
Dante had given them a worthless check
for $17,460 in payment for the boats, but
promised to deliver the purchase price in
cash when the paper bounced.
A &U"prise visit to the Santa Ana yard
where the boats wete built for the Costa
Mesa flrm early May 5, 1968, led to
discovery of the alleged tbelt in progress,
Snyder said.
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -From the
moon, according Lo those who have been
there, the San Joaquin Valley looks as if
"somebody had taken a big shovel and
just spooned it out."
The Sierra appears to be "beautifully
snow capped" -which it is.
The state -a best stiling book to the
contrary -doesn't seem ready to "slip
into the Ocean."
And the California Aqueduct just can't
be seen, disproving a myth promulgated
by state water projects publicists.
Apollo 10 astronauts described what
California looks like from the moon Tues-
day during a capitol press conference -
their only official one of a three-day
formal state visit.
Col Thomas P. Stafford, Cmdr. John
W. Young and Cmdr. Eugene A. Ceman
and their families flew here from San
Francisco after a downtown tlckertape
parade in the Bay city.
On tbeir schedule today was an air
pearance before a joint sesSion of the
Legislature, tours through AerOjet and
~tct>onnell Douglas Aerospace facilities
and a flight to Los Angeles. They'll be in
San Diego Thursday.
Gov. Ronald Reagan accompanied the
astronauts at every public appearance,
acUng as emcee.
"These three are a product of what 10
many would malign aod amend -our
society," said the governor. "Too many
are telling our young children that heroes
are a thing of the past. Well, these are
authentic heroes."
What does calilomia look like from up
there?
"You know, one of the amazing things
that we saw when "''e were out at the
n1oon," said Young, "was California .••
"During 'earthrise' you could see it
with the naked eye. It is really
something. The San Joaquin Valley
stands out like somebody had taken a big
shovel and just spooned it out. And you
could see it from 250,000 miles away."
Publicists for the state water project a
couple of years ago contended, somewhat
jokingly, that when man reached the
moon two public works be could see
would be the Cali£omia Aqueduct down
the west side of the Central Valley and
Ute Great Wall of China.
Not so,
lt ''would have taken a mighty
powerful telescope to see anything"
beyond the valley itseH and the Sierra,
said Ceman. Dante was anesled on a v.·arrant June
3, 1968, but one of the principal witnesses
was unavailable for court appearance
and the case was dismissed prior to the
s:uspect's July 11 preliminary hearing. * * * * * *
SECOND WARRANT Flag for Moon
A sec-on~ bench warrant was signed by
Judge Leonard H. McBride on July 10
however, but the nightclub hypnotist had
apparently departed in tbe belief he v;•as
absolved.
U.S. Banner to Fly Forever?
"He was never picked up because we
just didn"t· know where he was," sa id
Santa Ana Police Sgt. Kent Ree.<;0r after
Dante had been taken into custody in
West Hollywood Tuesday night.
Mi ss Turner's ex·husbands Include
bandleader Artie Shaw , Steve Crane, Bob
Topping, actor Lex Barker, Fred May
and Robert Eaton, whose divorce was
final only tv;o months ago.
One suito r, Johnny Stompanalo, never
quite reached the altar, stabbed to death
10 years agG by MW Turner's 15-year-old
daughter Cheryl in a ~tacular case.
..
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -Six hours
after man first lands on the moon next
month, astronaut Ne il A11T1slrong will
hoist a nylon , 3 by 5 foot American flag
on an 8-foot pole, and plant it in the lunar
crust.
The fiag will be stretched outward. In a
~imulation of flying, by a spring device
n1ade necessary because there is no wind
on the moon.
And because there iS "no wind, no rain,
nothing to knock it down," the space
agency said Tuesday, the banner may fly
forever -or at least witil man starts
colonizing hi s natural .satellite in the
BLACK STAR SA PPHIRE
J
I
Trvl'I' e11 •Jl'l•ilile lew1I • 0 , "0111 of
e kjnd ."
Sptc.j1t1y d11i,11ed pl1tinvlfl "'01111•·
1119 1mbr1c1d with th• ol19 1nc.1 of
di1mo11dJ.
$1200.00
.
l>Mi911ed "'ii~ yo• 111 mlttd ••• Fro111
our1i11jilfft•lit c.olt•ction of di1111011d~
ltl C.ffltloM, -hlYO lhil flrO pl1t•
l11v111 mownhul <J.lO c111t v•llow
di1mo11d, wifh 111olic.ulov1ly 1ppoi 11!1d
di1mo11d1 in tho 1ov!ld.
$3750.0<i
years beyond the horizon .
The flag planting will tak e place after
Arm strong, commander of Apollo 11,
steps out on the lunar surface around
11 p.m. PDT July 20.
Armstrong will be followed 30 minutes
later by Edwin E. "Buz" Aldrin to tnake
a moon walk lasting two hours and 40
minutes. One of l.rmslrong's first duties,
the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration sald, will be to take the
fl ag assembly down from one of the legs
of the lunar lander where it will be
fastened, wrapped in plastic Jnside an
aluminum tube.
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Lagga _Bea~h
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YOt ~2, NO, '145, l 'SlCTIONS, 72 P,4.vES , OAANGE COUNTY, CA(IFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE ·11, 1969 '
• -.. scs1·n ...... .().
' ' oun
Lana'• 7th Bub"1.I
J)a,ite Escape.s Mission
Trail .
Death, Not Law
· San Clemente
• By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
U' 17 050 Of'tllt CM!lr 1'1111 Sllfr p to ' Jet set hypootlsl Dr. Ronald Dante -
SAN CLEMENTE -The ci ty of San Harbor Art.a entertainer and confidante
q.emente now has a populaUon Of 17,050 of stars-today faces a theft charge in-
-an increase of 450 persons since April l volving fll,500 worth of boats at a Costa
of last year, according to an officia1 state M~ firm, after surviving a mysterious
estimate. l]lUrder aUempt Tuesday. The lnertase of 2.7 percent will mean San ,_ ... an additional $6,750 in revenue to the d Ly, ta Ana police recognued "'"' name
wti:ich receives shares or state-collected in news reports of the five-shot ambush
license fees and gasoli ne taxes based and tippe(. off Hollywood detectives who
upon the current population. arrested the ill-starred seventh husband
Population of the seaside resort has ()f actress Lana Turner about =ni.dnlght.
nearly doubled since the federal census of The attack by a mystery gunman wear-
1860 whic:J:i listed 8,527 residents. Ing a rakish Australian bush hat Wlier.
as Dante drove into his fashionable ·• Girls Win Wings offic"•partment on Doheny Dnve, left
MISSION' VIEJO - Ten airline him with only a cut on the face.
5lewardess students have won wings at · SHA'ITE':ED GLASS
Saddleback College. The bafrage of bullets Mattered the
The girls, who served as hostesses d~r-windshield or hiS car and he was nicked
Ing campus functions, are Peggy Barret by ijying glass as he Cove for the
of Newport Beach, Cyndee Hendrickson floorboards during what authorities said
of Laguna Beach, Terri Hennan of was the third attempt on his life.
Laguna Beach, Patl Laney of Dana Point, Once before, a jealous lover who claim-
Jayce Leonard of Tustin, Pat McCarth y eel the hypnotist had alienated his
of Tustin, Kathy Sco('ield, San Clemente, girlfriend, fired a .45 caliber pistol shot
Debbie Shea of San Clemente, Debbie at Dr. Dante di.iring a San Diego
Smith ()f Lacuna Beach and Wendy Weiss nightclub performance.
of !I'ustin, He was-not hit, and lawmen did not
The college will add a second year to elaborate Tuesda)' on the third alleged
the program in the falL urdet ~
'.• Te.eller Gets Gr..C m Daftle-w1111pp1reiitf1-.j ibllie.'1ir hi• arreSt aS he had been by the m6rder at-
MISS!ON VIEJO -Rober! W. Olson, a tempi~. telling authoriUes be knew
Saddleback C<ltlege dralttl\I and of no ~ for either, WJtU... the boat
engineerln1 instructor, has reoetved a case W.. Opla.ined. . •
NaUonal Scl~nee FoUndaUon ardt to at· 0 l·don'&.kDOW anyone who would want
tenlf a slimmer conference for engineer-to tlll me," he said, "unless It would be
ing and social science instructor&. · someone who ii jealous· about t'.he woman
The conference, to be held Auaust lt-22 1 jusf married."
-·
ESCAPES MURDER TRY
St•r's Husb•nd Dantt
·r • ~~·-· • •
·El Toro· MU!J
•
Held iii Slwotout
Ov'Cr Ex-wife
/ st the University of Santa Clara, will In-
clude courses of study involvinl future 'g'!':a,:~ other·h~nds Ah El Toro man ls 1n Orange County
technology d th · <n a • jail today chatged with assault with in-
olson W.·, a project en•;•eer ror the own the aisle wi Mi.ss TumJW n a Las , -· vegu ...i..i:M Ahn ) .. 1..-weeks <M tent.to commit murder after he allegedly U.S. Atomic Energy COmmlsslon and W-.n.uug ...,Klpe T. ·'e¥• Atomic Power Equipment Department after they met at a faJttfonable discothe-shot out the tires ()f a car Tuesday night
· bef que three weeE:=Her. in which his ex-wife and a companion engineer for General Electric ore Tbe allaaed empted theft or sev~n
l · ed ••:n~ -were riding. en ermg UC i.wit-mo~rboa , onging to the Marlin Boat Donald L. Winslow, 26, ol 24172 ·_e Photo Contest Set Co., 1 . ewport Blvd., Costa Mesa, oc-cu almost one year to the day before Blrd rock Drive, also threatened the pair
IBVINE RANCH - Irv ine 's "Pathways Dante's marriage to "tbe blonde star. and fired five shots into the air from hiS
To Prog~s Week," June 5 through 22 Miss Turner, 49, and her daughter .30<8liber rifle , sh'erifrs deputies allege.
will feature a photography contest for Cheryl ,· 25, were present. when the sher'iff's CaPf. James Broadbelt said
children under 12 years .rA " age. Singapore-born nightclub hypnotist w<1s deputies were alerted by El Toro service
Youngsters are invited to take·pictures of picked up at their Sheraton-Universal station attendant William Maas.
sites and activM.ies on tbe ranch.. Hotel "Sllite. Maas said a man, later identified as
Application blanks for the contest are He listed hi! age as 49 during the book· Winslow, drove into th e station and asked
,
• ' Dr. Ullom
Hits State
Tax Plans
Laguna Beach Unified School District
Superintendent William Ullom · <warned
Tuesday nl&ht that paaaage of a proposed
state-wide school tax would have "a
devastaUng effect on our community."
Ullom and Laguna school trustees urg·
ed that Lagunans write their state
assemblyman (Robert Badbam) and
senator (John G. Schmitz) to ui:ge d~eat
of an assembly bill which would set up
11uch a la'I structure.
Board members were ·speaking o(
Assembly Bill 1678 which attempts to
equallr.e educatlonal finances throughout
the state by imposing a statewide tax in
lieu of local property taxes.
Its passage wtll.lld mean taxpayers in
Laguna Beach would pay higher property
ta xes, and yet less money would go into
local school coffers. they sa id.
Opponents of the bill also maintain that
It will eventually destroy local coptrol of
education.
"l don't disagree children in other
areas should have equal opportunities,
but there are other ways of flnancliig
tbis. For exam ple, there is.safes tax,"
said trustee Larry Taylor. He added ,
''Every taxpayer ip b guna Beach. should
be concerned."
"For our ·community, it would 'be
devlplatlqg," ·Dr. William Ullom.
"'1>Crintendenl of Laguna 8;~nifled School Dillrlot, aaiil ol an bill .~.·~-·, -l ie m! llChool truateei TueodaJ ~\ed
the pre1S to encourage tupayers to write
lltelr ~tlvoo In tile state capitol
to tell them to vote asainlt the !>ill.
Board members were tipeaking of
Asseiiili!)I bill 1878 which atten!pts to
equallr.e educational rinaneea thrOughout
the state by Imposing a statewide tax in
lieu oC local property taxes.
Its passage would mean taxpayers in
Laguna Beach would pay higher property
taxes, and yet less money would go into
local school coffers, lhey said.
Opponents of the bill also maintain that
It will eventually destroy local control of
education.
"I don 't disagree children In· ()ther
areas should have equal opportunities,
but there are other ways of financing
th~s. For example, there ls sales tax,''
s~ud trustee Larry Taylor. He added,
"Every taxpayer in Laguna Beacb shOuld
be concerned."
Stock ltlarkets
available from Irvine I n f O r m Cl t i o n Ing process and told police he bas a doc· him to "go up the road a piece and fix
Center, at the Island House in Fashion torate , in psychology from Singapore some tires I shot out." NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
Island, and the Irvine Gardens at Myford University. Winslow was captured shortly by the closed almost even today, after an early
Road and Irvine Boulevard. The former entertainer at the Villa California Highway Patrol while parked sharp advance, partially buoyed by
Marina nightclub in Newport Beach -behind a supennarket in Leisure World bargain hunting, slowed in I a i e r • Big Spla11t Slated (See DANTE, Page!) Laguna Hills. trading. (See quota tions, Pages 20-21).
MISSION VIEJO - A &iant water fight ---------=-------=--------------_;:...;.. _ _:_ __ :_..:_ __ _
promises that the Mission Viejo Recrea·
tion Center will be wet and wild Thursday
and Friday alternooos.
Grades six and above will fight it out
Thursday beginning at 1 :30 p.m. while
fi ve and under will meet Friday at 1:30
p.111'. Each participant should bring an
empty hall 1allon milk carton.
Hobie Cat Maker
Sued for Divorce
Millionaire surfboard manufacturer
Hobart Laidlaw "Hobie" Alter~ charged
with ''extreme cruelly" alld-"grievous
mental suffering" in a divorce complaint
on file today in Superior Court.
Seeking an end lo her t~year maniage
to the Laguna Beach sportmian iJ Mrs.
Sharon Diane Alter, 1073 Gaviota Drive.
Jn a complaint that seeks division of con·
siderable community property a n d
bustness Interests, she asks for an
allowance of '50,000 a year plus monthly
benefits ol l100 for hmelf and each of
her three chiidmi -Paula 14, H~
12 and Jeffrey, 7.
Mrs. Alter ..U th•! the court mtraln
her estrang<d hulhlnd fn>m dlsporlnc ol
any or the ~ ooain., hotdlnp
and Inter""' Ille poJnstalMiJy detalll In
her 11-pap filing.
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CHRIS HANCE CASTS OFF
Summer In the Swim
. ' ·swim·= ClaMes ·~1 ·,'
Slated Along
. Soutl1 Coast
li:or the dcnliens of the Orange Cow!ty
south.em coastal area, swimming seems
to be almost ~s necessary a, meana ,of
locomoUor; as w1lking.
To ensure that swimming skill la ·&C·
quired by all who need It, several com-
munities have Initiated swimming In·
st'ruction in their summer recreaUon
programs.
In Laguna Beach, Mission Viejo, and
San Clemente, organized swimming In-
struction programs are now . under 1"&J
and will be conUriulng throughout. ihe
summer.· .
In Laguna Beach. five suslont of nine
daily half'hour classea are gol"' on, but
the classes for t~ summer are now full,
said Mrs. Mary Wormald, chief lifeguard.
By the end or the summer, nearly 1000
youngs te-rs will have tieen taught to
swim.
At Mission Viejo, a full slate ol classes
Is offered for mothers and ' tot.s,
youngsters and adults in beginning, In-
termediate, and adva nced level1 at the
Mission Viejo Recreation~Center.
Six sessions will be held through Sept.
5. Adult cl asses will be held durln1 even-
ing hours. Fee ls $5 for membera and fiS
tor non·mem bers.
In San Clemente, a joint ctty-
Caplstrano Unified School District pro.
gram will. make SlVlmmlng lnslrQdtlon
available to all who livo1wHhln the: ·school
dlitrict incl!Jdin1 ·Paot( Pottil, SM Jiian,
Ca pi.Wand Beac~ il!d, .PIJ'il .ot· Licuna
Ni~cl. · ~· · ·
'"'"' th ..... ..et~ 0( weeltday ct.assel Will be held at. t.he San Clemente
municipal pool. ~ve 'ltud!llt
swimmers must be at te&st sb:-ytaf\ldf
age. -First. session started:,:.____oo4af.
Classes meet Crom a a.m. to noon. :lee ii
11. /. l I Susan Ma z1e ' Suffers !Jelapse ,
-·
Su..an Mazze, tht<J 7·year'°ld Sanl&Ana
girl' who r<,<elV~ or..,. c.uiity•s·fli.1
kidney transPIJ"ll oa June 3, has IUffer.d
a relapse iql·ls in crtUCal' coodWosi.in
Orange Coonty M«llcal c..ter. · ·
She cites Alter'• .-oJ ol lllll'fbolrd
and catamaran Ccnttuction facWtiel I.pd
mt eJtate ln Sin JlllJI Cap-.'Doba
Point, Lake l!!lainore and aeverll out-«·
county locaUons.
Dr. ~ ~Al~ i.<-~ lddlio7
Is ~. perfedl)' 'bul. -~at1ve eorqp11c1tlon1 ba¥e
w.-..i Suaan ond ll1lde II dWlcult I«
• • heJ; (o breltbe, ' ' ' I
Alter II known in an.,. Coast boalfnt
circles as the dellCJ:ler-ol "Hobie
cat.111 -the popular 14-loot eatamannl
that hive trlmnplled In aovenl coollal
races. lie atao eootlols Hobie -loo.
'
. \Vork pfOll'IU8l •O!I' Dua Hatbor, Orange County' a
newesL IDllll croft ref•ge. Tbl s lJ aerial view look·
1111 east aionf coellline toward San Clemente. Land
jatllng lllto ·aea at utreme upper eel&• of photo la
Cottol>'J Point, alte ol. Prtlldent Nixon'• White
' ' . . /'Ille 'doc\Or declined to di..inM clOtalli House west. Work . ot1 harb!>r Itself ·Involves eon· 'On 111e'<>>mJilleidGllO -,-~ _ •
structioo ol'le01porary -coUer dams within .break· : Solan'i iftoibtr Mn. ~ Moue.
waters,;pu,,,Ptng•out lea water .then scraptn¥ dry :' v/u f<JellOd .,;.,,, Ille' hoopllil 1111
surface t.o 'llllke harbor bottomi , ' lVeclno!dor.·•..., ·~·-liq'"" ol ! ...., lddoef•'lo lier .......... • '
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'fpday'• Flael
N.Y. Steeb
TEN CENTS
_Breath Stops
During Trip
To Hospital .
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) ~ A if-year.
old boy mJB1i1i1 to lllOUJ!lalm since Satur·
day was found today lylnC in a tnOW
pat<h. · Autliorlu.. .Aid he llOpfled
breathing while beJnt taken by helicopter
to 8: hospital and was ritven moutb-to-
mooth resuscitation.
Upon anivll, a team ol dodon woriled
over Matthew Joseph ZJmmerman. 1bey
~--ii! oertoua C<Jlldl~oa:auflerlng
fram exposure.
Two youths, volunteer IW'chen from
San Bemll'llino, found tile boy •bout 9
a.m. al an alUtude of more than a mile
near Bartott Flals, where snow still
lingers in patches from a record winter
fall .
At first the lad's condiUon. wu reported
as good, and teani came to the eyes of
men at a base camp for a four-day
seirch. Later, however, came unofflclal
word. hia condition wa1 "not good."
Sheriff's Sgt. Ollie Gray, traveling tn
the copter with the boy, gave the mouth-
to-mouth rtSUscltaUon 1n· the copter and
continued until be was takeri to a clinic at
Norton Air Force Base.
The boy wandered. away Saturday from
• campgniund where his t.mlly w• on an outing. Durlll( 1..arch,-by 200 men at
one time, tracten f()llowed hll footprtnta
but c:ouldn'\ find Ma-.
When be WU diteOYerfld thls ·~ 111 Wll ilJ'la1 I '1liJo ml:_ llllt ,.al ' fioin' tb't C:lrnpgroCnt. '~ ... ,. "We bow he's at 11.,.....,.._.,7'!:.."! . ··--.·......-~·~"'"""'" ll1lle 8111' " lltJOlla!Jnt terTlln you ,,. _,bell .... " .
The Mardi lfU lnclud" heavy timber and uncWbtuah, some ·oprn areu and
fut·.ntOflq mounta.ID ltream1 with an
occuional ca1iln -. tile banla!. .
Some people Uve in the l!f", deputle!
aald , but most of the cabins are unoc-
cupied and Wlltocked with food.
Five Arrested
On Narco Counts
f
Three juveniles and two adults were
picked up Tuesday by Lagun8. BU.ch
police o~ a variety of narcotiCI· ~es
incJuding possession of beroln.
Of the ldults, Eugene La For<e, SI, of
Long aeach WU booked·on_·'":barp of
possesiton ol J>eroin, and 'l)lnOthY Eric
Wiley, 2>,' of Arcadia, wu booked on
charges of posseaalon of dan¥erous drugs
and marijuana. :
The~ were made at 190 McAulay
Place after a sherllf's deputy and ~a
Beach Sgt. Norm ~bcock went .to the
residence to serve · a warrant charging
unlawful posaessJ9" of dangerous drugs
by Alfred Jame.a/De Stefano, 20, of that
address.
Taken into eVidence were a variety ol
pllt1 bellevet by offlcen to be llllelt
drugs, a" llftall quanUty of huhilh, a
marijuanaJ.-clgaette and several small
packagea;rof heroln1 Police Lt. Frank
Schopen 'aa.id today.
La Force remained tn police custody
this ti'iOrniflg. Wiley .,put up P12 ball and
th~ juveniles were 'releued to tblir
.parents, U. ~ Aid.
Weadler
The sun wilt lllUt HI ~.
tory appemmce ·Thunday ar-.
.-i, bul otbenrls< It'll he mootlJ
cloudy with temperatures In the
l)ICi1 IO'I along the Onqe Coast.
INSIDE TODAY
Two of th• /alle1t l/OCklS
cfloat tanQle &hil weekend ca
Wind"'°rd Pcuao• IMtlt Bia.;k·
fi11 f"1' the Coiifomia Cup. Boo~
inp, POQe at.
....... ft u-. t•
ClilJlf.a 11 • -• ....,.. • CW--ClfW' II .......... tt ~ n.-..... •• c.... .............. . c""""" a . ,...... .._. u
Dlllll ..... • 11 .,_ ""'-II
...._ M ----........... ' ......... ==· I = :.·::: .: ........ -~ . -~ . .,........ --. .._ ... ~ ..,.. ..,.. :w
(
~·--.:...--~~---~~~-=="""'-'"'"""~~~~ .... .._~ ......... ~...._~,._,~..,.,,.,""' ... """"'""'~'-"'""-!.;1'!"-~'"''-"-'-"-""".._~~ ..... ~.;;.~~~...:.....;..~~:.:-..:..~---~----~~~~~~-..
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UllOi». Wil li ~o~fti,ri El M<).t ro Traffic Fight
' j ~ •
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tbe ICbool ontraneo n«lll ol tbe city. UUom llld~=--o1 1111 l!lalo PrtYiOUlly, bolrd meu>l)en bid wlocl Dlvlaloo ol . . end Clllltiml&
lo ohare O>IU with the ._..lo Ip ~I'll!!! Je.t J~r.J: lilt e'llahllebl01:a:tra1fle 1111111 to 'ilo'! IM-: lld>Oa\.illl!rlll . ii · lo
.; Niii -lo -lill .... _ ..... ~,,, ........ "* • ... .. ll!!o . ~ -~iiiil---Jlf!C
'IWOI .... In -.ol Iii ---G( lit ~....... . • Boyd --"" not -·-~ driver could never legally bave bHn i.. ."we.,.~abll : "--:-• ,...-... ·-~•Y
tbe r1aJ1t unlll alier he complelld l>Ja tun• , lh" neeclo{,~ .illd Edwll'd ~~= evening, 8'!'i r.cn. Bo}'il will be abt<ot at
5$-mlle-per-holir trafflc iD Z milu when lhe sehool 80 ~bus drivers and ~er
El Morro School ii in seulon. motorists would have a better vlew ol Ult
onto Ute higbway. . . : bt.11lneu manager •. .H~ aalcl oUt of the t.be OW pthlt~fll·
• Jn olher bulinul, -~ -~t, " moo<y, $2$,000 woiild "' ~-·-Apfr!lltdbi(!;l_tf ll awmn.,..ICbool
Laguna tn\lleet: · . " saJanes and $20,000 wJliJd Iii ·fof other teacher• and 51ven subltltutea at 1 rile Since, Ullom hu been advlted thlt highway.
they wert miltaken in believing that traf. BecaUS6 the &Cbool drive ii • prlv1te -Adopted • ....olutaon for -a:~i•·-: ulerief « Jmrtruetion.---;--of M pefhour to teach 11 courees which
o! addltloha! b1COme wblcl> ~.lll<l'I\. -.,Delayed to July I Ibo QJWll)R In oJ r-lrom el,emtqll\r)' and intermediate
to take 145,000 wortll :'! ~ · 1¥>1 • , nC\f' ""'1'.d members ~'!\Norman chorus lo inlerm~lle al'I. fie past the school could be legally slowed drive, a bus driver entering Coast
to 25 miles per hour. Highway from the elementary school bas .. •
Soil Report
\ '• -CoII·~g~ Aid B,ill
•
e1ett~ Asse~hly On Canyon
i ~eT~~~t
• c0onet1Jnen tooi.ht lake up I ll!iil
eftlineerina: and geologic report on poten-
Ual lerT&ln bazar<b In the Laguna Can-
yan .,-ea. .. . . . . Thi ,..n_.eipected lo play a part In '
the cit)''• current .1eneral pla" atudy,
dotalll auapecled problem areas and
recommend•:
-CouideraUon be alven to rettrlcUng
lmprovem..ta on PfO!"'rlY aubjecl lo
: · polonUal terrain haWit• unlll remedlal
::. actlon· " t4en.
A bill that could provide Ill 111.mloo In
1avings for South Orange Cout •tax-
payers of Sld<Ue~ck Junior College
District lw pasoed another hurdle in the
llate Legl!latur.e.
With Supt. Fred Bremer an4--board
Trailer Park -,
E~pansio!J: .. Set .... -&>II qlneerinl and engineering
nolo<le lnvuUgaUon should be roqulrod
... Tof develo~) ln order to o b t a I n
blilldlnl permlll In the Canyon Aerts
" Drive area.
SCHOOL'S OUT -Dr. Norman Browne (left) bids
farewell to three Laguna Beach school teachers
and a achool board member who are retiring after
Browne are (from le.ti) Mmes.'Margaret Sumbera,
Jean Tuttle and Ruth BWlngton and board mem-
ber Robert Turner.
At EI Morro'-
~ .. ·~ ' -Barring any lalt ml~lt itioeill today
. the f;I !-I'"'° Trajjer Put W!l!-belin con'.
strucUOn this year on an lddiUonal 96
trailer space! just north of Lacuna Buch.
•· -s1omi drain Jmprovoment ol the can-
,.. boljGa1 ind Ila major lrlbullries
would -the flood lwanl and bellelil larrtan llablllty con<llUOlll.
servlnJ the dlslrtct for a total of .:5.:9..:y.:e::.ar.:•.:· _w_1_th __________________ _
"":""Fear vertical cut alope1 tn colluvlal
ma!erWI (porOUI llope waablnp) at the
' -ol many H11denca ..,, aubJect lo ;,• IOudlllde and abouJd be Improved by pro-
perly dellgned retaalning 1truclures.
· · -E1cavaUon of cut •lopu end place-
ment Of flll ln 'the project 1re:a should be
.: ... · accomplllbed only under aupervilion of a
~ quallflod aotl engineer and enaineerlng
Three Teachers,
Trustee Leaving
School Di.strict
Free Univer sity Plan
Be fore Council To night
Although the El Morro lnvesbnent Co.
has the blessing o:i both the Orange Coun·
ty Plannlng CommWloo and Iha Irvine
Company 1 the Laguna Beach City Coun·
cil has written to the county commission
requesting denial pf tht appll<(ltion.
TPe addition to the 20.\ospace p a r k ...
the city council wrote, would mean In·
creased problem& Jn both traffic and sew·
age. · 1eo1ot1t11. · Tbm leachen and one trustee from :. ~.:':!teo ~~dev~~ lh~ the Laguna Beach Unified School District
· -Clllj'oo Acl'll aroa llaa'bapptnod without retlte lhla month. .
· adequate land-UM planning .to allow for Leaving the 1chool dlatrlct are lrustee
u.lltlnc and potenUal terra1n huardl. Robert Turner, Mrs. Margaret Bumbera,
0 Tbe IUIJ*t.ed old landllldt eree• may Mn. Ruth Billington, and Mrs. Jean Tut·
bl ect.lvated If a atrona: earthquake were u •• to follow 1 lona wet aeuoo," it states. Turner, a local realtor, has volunteered A map lhows tbe two alldt are.as . located between Skyline Drive and Can-his time to the school district u a trustee
yon Acrea Drive. The narrative of lbe for the past 13 years, serving as presi·
report delO'lbel t.bem u ha v In I dent for one year. He has spent an .= f~ .. ~ ,of 500 estimated ten hours a week on the )Olicy
Tho llUdy 11 111 aflennath ol lhe winter and bUdgeWllaklng bolrd.
1tonn11 tnclud1nc tbl l'eb. 24 Ind 25 Mrs. Bumbera. who worked with Aliso
ltcrm. which deatroyed three Canyon fi~t graders in reading, has spent 22
Acrel resldencea and,1 cauaed heavy years teachiq. Mrs. Billlnglon. with 11
damaie to others. Thi cib' t)'.ICl,llled the yean f,eachlng experience, instructed
ltU. . I ! j hJI Tbe city hu In put ween feced a first gtaders at El D.torro, w e 1.lrs.
Hdel of claJrm from property owners TutUe, who worked With &eventh graders
for flood daJnqe. Such claiml often are .at Th~ton Intermediate, has 23 years'
• tecbnic~prelude to landta. experience in the claismom.
·' . . ' . ' Lri~ (;oo~will ~fut~
Ashes to Be Scatt ered
A proposed free university ln Laguna
Beach that would mlnlster to community
ills as well as educate will be back before
councllmen tonight in the form of a legal
evaluaUon.
P ublic Comfort
Cost May Rise
Fo r · Lagunans
\VIII Lagunans 8tarld still for a hike In
pay LoiJet raWJ? Councilmen t o n I g h t
are to plumb the soc lo·econom i c
ramifications or a proposed hike in the
cost o{ public comfarl \
Talk about the vanishing five-cent
cigar, the Pacific Nik.().Lok Co. -for
years the city's public comfort turnkey -
has 11commended that pay toilets join
the inflation lipiral. Not~g tt.at the city is having new steel
partitk>ns installed at one comfort ata~
tion, the company suggested by letter :
" ... Now would be an Ideal time for
you to give consideration to having all of
the new equipment which will be installed
designed to operate on a ten-cent rather
t.han a pve-cent coin."
e.-.. 1.. ' ~ • =t'orh. ·1v of Newport Beach made this The uhel of popular ouvUl Lagqnan 'f.bout ~00 yea.rs liO· -.--., : · ,::hB.~~11;"1' ef· several ·years ago and has
Gerald Comllock will be ICattoreil al .., · · 'Th,&"''' olher 1iOdt f9l\I".! (rtfll~ • . · costs of · bile Ccmforl i. ap-
-tbe aea lhat coat bllJUt.alxlard-1lle'lli< Wll>dlllli vessel 1fU llltlt',ol Tl>n 6jnl'll:, •· · · ·11'' · bi~lii.l'li'!jlil. ·
fatal yacilt Goodwill,;· .. -• ;._:~~ .. ·,,; .-.!' 111342 sa.ta·Martnr. Fogntilo parenThe !!"~ny Slates' ft llisbeen gain•
The body of co~ tr.i•·--M. · "\tallly ,--· . ·-"~ • end father hu beea · ermuted tn · ' on 1n lhe U.S. and Canada for the pat.t
Ense ad M th ~ that 0,. ' ?ttr. Com5tock, an ~lec:trlclan. was a five or s1x years. "We very seldom
Goodn m'did ~tx., It e The ill* ~ captain in the Marinea hi 1World War 11 receive requ~ts today for a five-cent
bo -~ sh:hf· M...u.··-· ·~1 before he wss 21 years nld. Soon· pro-coin tock equipment," the Letter states. Cl te er .,._,. n moted to major, he was the youngest
=~~ttock, 32202 Villa de Catalina. ltfarine major in \Vorld War II.
Upper Three Arch Bay, wu one of nine H~ was .•. member ()f. the Second
aboard the Goodwill on 1 trip from Cabo Marine DivlS1on and led his men in the
San Lucu to Enaenada . bloody . .landings on Tawara and Salpan,
The vessel died on the reef Sacramento serving from 1941 to 1945 in the bitter
about 200 mile• south of San Diego. The South Pacific fighting. reef wu named for an historic wreck A resident or the area 11lnce 1959, Mr. Comstock was born In San Francisco and
was graduated from San Mateo Junior
{JflllY PllOI
Cl!Wtl' ~T PUil laoltNe <C:ClillUWl'f
• 11 • a.MrtN.W•" ·
. . -. . ~
,,....,. ..., ,....,
tt...11 11:...,q ....
College. He was athletic, known for his
good game of volleyball, and was a good
sw1mtne.r. \ ~tr. ~ I! 11urvlved by his wife.
B~el~~~y home, a teacher ~t
1-ttacG:rqreter or High; a son, Neil,
5: and a ija~. , ti.
Road Decision
Delays Complex
I n Boat Can yon
A proposed 44-unit resldenUal complex
above Riddle Fle1d in Boat Canyon wl.11
have to remain just a proposal unUI the
county and city come up wllh a definite
future location for campus Drive,
Laguna City Planners decided Monday
night.
·~'
n. .. , A. M•rplli••
....... fdifl;w
l lthtrlll P. Nell , __
Mr: <;?Ols:tock'i-.ur-vlvors alao Include
hts~. ADce .Qlrru:tock of Laguna ~-1l!<'filhe'r, !;ell of Redwood City
an'¢ bis liltv Mi's. Pau1 Eaton of
Cup<rtln~
Attorney Rlchlfd Mudge la handling a
fund set up by friends of the Comstooks
to search the area. it has included 19
boui's of hi!Jicopter search of the vicinity
The four-to six-1anfi hljhway. which
would lint the inland freeway with Coast
Highway, will wind throuih Boat Canyon
on a still undetermined route. The county
has offered three !!IUUesUons for the
route:, and the city engineering depart·
m<m l!ls com• up with a fourlh; f. . ("" . ..., .:·
. '
aQd use of a diving team. '
Friends aald that Mr. C<!mstock ht,d
been recently Involved' in electrical_ fn-
:;tf11lations for the ne\v Laguna-Moubpn
Playb~ that ia nearing completion.
'
Council Studies
Uotll lhe precise allinmenl b etlabllah·
ed, Iha Ul acre development propooed
by ardiltect William Bluroct and engl·
neer Bernard Syfan will remain on tli.e
drawing boordl.
In-olber acUOn Monday nlght. the plan-
ning commlulon : "" ..
-Deterred action on a ptopOU.I by
LyM J~ Muir Assoc. to construct 1 plan-
ned r~de11Ual cleYelopment for five
elngle'dwelllnp "' -undeftloped R-Art Show Pl "ll 1 Cmlldenua11 iota 111 lh• .!06 :block of ~ I Sonora.SU..L •
Piamlon will invt1Ucalo=I , Give• Cltf. councjl ,pprolt Pork · !ft .a . atu!IY -'11!1111'· ra
AveNJe bet.ween Coast· lifshw snd ~tenilne ll Sonora cu be over
Glenneyn·Street may be the acine 0( an th., •tetP 1lopu of Arch Be~ H41Pt.a.
art Jbow (July t. ' ~ -ATIOwed Mr. aitd Mrs. U~~oyd,
CO<lncUmen !<>night wlll lalol 1!11 \h• i.. !SSS Sjcyllnc Dr., 19 continue lheh< dllna·
,quat, by Chal!lber of Commll'Cf Pm1-paln~g classes lot ~tr ~.,;:-when
dent lllll'!')I Lawrtnct to bold a ooe day • the C(h\n!lslon · wlU qiln · m1d •Iha
,art festi val, lfmll&r to the aucoeat'.uJ \~\l&rlartce. · ; ' ··'.
. :Jl•lllOl1al Day .Sidewalk Art Sho~, . \ , ~~wed a .mohttoll~· 'far tho • !f a . Id, lhl ~ lhg of pels In.a , aone,
•how :f&'l'( ~ llaiid ll'<ll!I .7, f.m. !<> , ~' as , It -DOI : IUde ov~t
p,m. r .. -r;.;\urg of "'"' \ •
•
With the council agenda comes a lhree-
page report from city altorney Jack
Rimel on the unlverslty proponents' 're·
quest that the council recognlze, endorse
and give financial aid to the project.
Dr. John Wallace, a UCI associate pro-
ftssor, bad requeiiled city assistance for
the project al 1 May 21 councll meeting
and that the matter was referred to
Rimel.
,The atl9mey sald the university is just
p-elUng started, that articles of incorpora·
lion were filed with the state March 21.
nimel said the city could acknowledge
this fact but said he (lid not believe the
city could acknowledge that a "going
university" actually e1ilt1 withoot furth·
er lnvesl!gation.
The city attorney also suggested that
the council might wish to determine If the
free university is carrying out the pur·
)XlSes stated in lts articles before giving
endorsement to the project.
Rlmel stated lhat lhe city could give
financial assistance In cert<Jn areas.such
as comm\Jnitf health and recreation.
"Certa in olher activities, however,
such as general education. legal services
and draft counseliJlg would not in the opi-
nlnn of this oHlce be included within
allowable aclivities which a city could
subsidize out o{ public funds," R!niel
wrote.
If the city should chose to subsidize the
project, Rimel recommended that the
university segregate on a trial basils the
services which the city could legally help
finance.
At the earlier meeting, councilmen
agreed that they would want considerably
1nore Information about the project
before loose ning the purse strings and
giving endonsement.
The county planninC. commluion de--
• nied the city'• requtat, and~ Ji.m. today
i! the deadline for any rurther ,Ppeab.
Tl1e Laguna Beach Planning Commis-
sion Monday night sent a letter to t h e
city council requesting the council appeal
the decision due to "the tremendous lraf·
fie hazard occWTing at thls location."
But when the council offlclally receives
tht' letter at tonight'• 7:30 meeting, it
will be too late for effective acUOn.
In addressing the county plarming com·
mi salon, J. W. Peyton of El Mocro aa.id
the park could handle triple the sewage,
-and tbat·lhe llaltlc preble!m are aeat.d
by g<!neral condition o! the highway and
are not related to the park.
When constructed, the ~ Would e:<·
' 1st on a~ interim ba&Ls. The i5-ytar lease fr~ ·tb~ Irvine Company· la 'not renew·
able.
Conditions laid down by the county com·
mWion ·stipulate that the El Morro In-
vestment Co. will be required to bulld
aoceleratlon and deceltratlon lanes onto
Coasl ·Highway.
Another'C(lfldltlon demands the detailed
land!Cape pl& be approved by the plan·
ning t!01pmilslon.· 'l'be other eight' condi·
tionli df.9',l with hliiM4'1 coi:les, parking
' facil ities and undergroilnd utilities.
The expansion will be on the northeast
side of Coast Highway end apprat.ch the
: .sou~ boundary of El Morro School. ' .. . l -
2 Captured, 2 at Large
SAN BRUNO, Calif. (UPI) -Four
prisoners at the San Francisco County
Jail slid down 15 knotted blankets Tues-
day night in an eacape attempt, but two
were quickly apprehended .
~till at large Wednesday were twc.
fugiJives identified as Joe Jojoll1, 25,
charged with armed robbery, and Claren-
ce Galindo, 18, accu11ed of petty theft.
BLACK STAR SAPPHIRE
'•
'
Truly e11 e.ciui1if• I••-' •• , ''•11• ef
• •i11d."
Speci•lly det!911.d ,t.1i11u111 111 .. 11t•
tn9 e111brececf wi t~ ffie ele1e11u. el .... ,,,.nd ..
$1200.00
De1i1~td ~,.,. h1 111i114 , ;: Fni"'
eur ,,, • ...,.ceflt cellectlo11 ef cUeMe11d·
••' c .. eti..c. .,.. h .... till1-,.,. ,t.1.
111uri . ll'ltlill ... _ 4.JO cer.,, veltpw
il lelflollll, wffti ""•tic~le111ly •l'll•lllfttl
4ieP11ett41 h1 tit. r•u!ICI.
$3750.00
member Hans Vogel lookin& on, Senate
Bill ~ Monday cleared the Asaembly
educaUm flnlnct subcommittee and was sent to the ways and means cmnmittee.
From there the bill, if sUJI alive, goes
to the full education committee and then
to the Autmbly floor. It previously pass·
ed committees of the state Senate.
The trip to Sacramento Monday to
watch progress of the t>ill was the fourt h
for Supt. Bremer. Saddleback represen·
tativea have not yet been called on tG
speak.
The legislation, introduced by Slate
Sen. Donald Grunsky (R·WatsonvUJe),
would make funds available to new junior
college districts established after 1964.
based on student enrollment projections
flve years in the future.
Because allocations are now bated on
curnnt enrollment, new junior colleae
district& with low initial enrollment
becauae of limited courae offeri.np do not
receive much 1tate ~Id.
Saddleback was one of three junlor cal·
lege districts in the state that did not
reeeive a shart of the slltewide junior
college bond issue passed last June.
The expected cost of construction and
equipment purehase for the next five
years for Saddleback is $14 million. If tho
Grunaky bill paases and the •lite con·
tributes $6 million the local taxpayers
share will be -8 million. That much is
covered by the $9.~ million bond Lsauc
passed lalt year.
From Page l
DAN TE •••
still shaken by the murder attempt -
spent several hours In the West
Hollywood sherW's 1talion before releue
on sn,500 bail.
Dante, who rented a Colla Mesa apart..
m.ent durin1 his boot1nt at the bay•lds
spa, told Los Angeles Sher!U's Sgi. Ray·
mond·Gott he believed the theft case had
been dlsmlsaed.
Rori' Snyder, or 2320 Colleie Drive,
Cotlta Mesa, said he caught Dente In the
act of supervWng theft of the fleet of JI)..
boals May 5, 1968 at a now-defunct Santa
Ana boatyard.
Snyder and hls brother Paul are
partnen In the Marlin finn, whlcti
markets the boats at Mesa Boat Center,
1595 Newport Blvd., and haa been lrylng
to work out a deal with Dante.
"He was an elualve character," said 1
Paul Snyder today, "he'd call u1 from
Las Vegas ind try to get w to ahip them
to h1m C.O.Q., wWcb of cour&e we refus-
ed l<i do."
The Costa Mesa boat company ex·
ecutlvt said · Dant~ was a secretive
person and It is unknown why he was
trying to buy the seven motorcraft.
Earlier, Ron Snyder told author!Ues
Dante had given them a worthless check
for $11,460 in payment for the boats, but
prorniaed to deliver the purchase price in
cub when the paper bounced.
A surprise visit ·to the Santa Ana yard
where the boats were built for the Costa
Meu firm early May S, 1968, led l()
discovery of the alleged theft In proere1s,
Snyder said.
\;
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I I
I
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•
'1
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!BQard Cool
To Protest
,.
Q.f Auclitor
·County Auditor·Controller· Victor A.
Helm's letter to the C<lunty supervisors
advising them that he could "not com·
ply" wiU1 their order to cancel tai:es 'on
457 acrei: tbe Irvine Company has
"deeded" to the county in the Vppet
Newpo:t Bay Land Exchange paet failed
to stir the board members Tuesday.
The yvoted lo refer the missive to
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper. Kuyper
has steadfastly maintained that the tax·
es should be·· canceled as "the county
now owns the propeny."
Hein1's Jett.er puts him in County
Assessor Andrew J . Hinshaw's-camp.
Hinshaw has consislenlly rerused to take
an action to1Yard cancellation of the tax-
es, saying he will not do so until so
ordered by a court of law.
Heim noted that "there is litigation
pending between the auditor-controller
and the company ... dictating that I not
comply \vilh the board's orders.·•
Heim referred to a lawsuit in. which he
questi<"lns the validity and the con·
situtionality o( the transf:!r of title of the
457 acres of Irvine property for 150 acres
of county-0wned tidelands. The case has
been oending for more than a year and is
not expected to be sctlled \\'ilhin three or
four years.
When Heim released his Jetter last
week, Assistant County Counfcl Robert
Nuttman said the supervisors and the
company ha\·e !lvo.alternatives in view of
Heim's ultim3tum-they can go to court,
jointly or either of thcn1, or the Irvine
Company can pay the taxes under pro-
test. f"
Involved are about $130,000 in taxes for
the 1969·70 fiscal year. Hinshaw assessed
the 457 acres at $1.53 nlilllon last year
and says they are worth more now.
Heim contends ~ his letter that "the
circumstances under which the county
agreed to the recording of the cor·
poration grant deeds indicates only that
bare legal title was transferred, and that
this was apparently accomplished for the
purpose of providing property lax relief
to the Irvine Company \Vhile the current
litigation is pending."
Heim further contends the county docs
not have the normal indices of ownership,
i. e., possession, the right to make im·
provements, and the right to~ alter the
physical characteristics of the property
(to dredge it).
, "The contracts between the parties
clearly indicate that there has been no
consideratiol\_given the company because
the county property being us~ as such is
still in escrow," Hein1 continues.
The supervisors ordered the 457 acres
removed from the lax. rolb l~t May 'J:l.
Previous objections by Hinshaw to the
action were termed by County Counsel
Kuyper as "without merit..,
"Th~se lands are now O\vned by Orange
County," Kuyper emphasized, "and the
C.:allfornia constitution specifics that they
are therefore tax exempt."
Car Ban Planned
For Stockholm
STOCKhOLl\1 (UPI\ -Cars will be
banned from the city of Stockholm for
one day later this year on an ex-
perimental basis, traffic safety and
tourist organizations announced today.
They proclaimed Aug. 24 -a Sunday
- a "carfree day" and promised dancing
in th e streets, concerts and other ac·
tivities for all Stockholmers \\'ho leave
their cars at home.
Organizers said the ban on cars
bet\\·een 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. will be volun·
lary.
"But we believe most people will follow
our proclamation and use p u b Ii c
transportation." orSani7.ers said.
• "' O:N
--------..,--------------------·----------------------~ ------. ~ ..... --
L DAILY PlLOT ll .
Moon Ship Fueled
"•
I
Preparations for· F ir_~t Landing Begin
CAPE KENNEDY <UPI> -Technl·
nicians begin fueling the Apollo 11
moonship today to start final prepa-
rations tor the launch four weeks away of
man's first moon landing mi~slon.
Tbe go-ahead for the tlcklUJh and time·
consuming spacecraft fueling operation
Came from project officials after a day.
long review Tuesday of all aspects of tbe
hi$rlc lunar rught.
Astr'lnauts Nell A. Annstrong, Michael
Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin were pro--
-i:r -i:r -i:r
U.S. Astronauts
Will Plant Flag
On MQOn Surface
I WASHINGTON (UPI) -Six hours
after man first lands on the moon nrxt
month, astronaut Neil Armstrong will
hoist a nylon , 3 by 5 foot An1erican flag
on an 8-foot pole. and plant :t in the lun:ir
crust.
The flag will be stretched oulward, in a
simulation of flying, _by a spring device
made neressary because there is no \\'ind
on the moon.
nounced In 'xeellerit be&h:h by Dr.
Charles A. BefrY, Ille dlrtcl«'ol medlcal
operatiorts for ,the apaceiiien.
Chief astronaut Donakt X. Slayton said
the pilot& will work 10..hout d&l'S, six days
a week for the flnal 0fobr weeks. He said
he expects them to be "adequately train·
ed and adequately 'rested" ai launch
lime, s,32 a.m. ,rDT July_ u .. ·
"We arc go at uus Ume, subject to suc·
ces.sful. completion of ~ -remai ning
tests," repafte4 Lt. Gen. Samuel C.
Fled Hospital
Phillips, the Apollo program director.
'•After bfaring the readiness assessment ot all-element!" of the mlsSlon.~J am Cofi!.
fident that we can proceed wlth out
preparations to meet the Ju1y, launeh win·
dow."
Today's fueling operation waS lh.e start
of p?'tparatlons for the last bi8 lest -a
dress rehearsal countdown scbedUled to
begin June 25 and end with a mock
launcn July 2. The spacecraft will remain
fueled after the test.
'Candtelig ht Killer'· Still
Gone Despite Ma:n~itnt
By TOM ~ARLEY the first report' of Liberty's absenct that
01111e 0.11, "11t1 '"" was.issued by the hospital.
"CandleUght killer" Robert Wi\l;;:rd That AWOL· Ii.sting, they said, gave no
Liberty is still ar liberty toda)', defying indicadon of Liberty's backgro~nd and
the intensifying manhunt being launched that the escapee was to be returned to
by law enforcement officers in Orange court un a .murder lndict,ment. '"f{e .step.
and Los .Angeles counties. ped up the search when we did discover
The ~!·year-old Westminster man is en· these fa cts, an officer comment~, "but
joying the sixth day of a freedom that we lost a lot Of veluable time because we was, Deputy District Attorney Al Wells
claims; handed to him on a plate with his thought he 'Y.'as just anoiher run-Of-the
astonishing release from Metropolitan mill getaway.''
FIRST LADY HAS A BIG SMILE FOR ANOTHER PAT
Pat Nixon Helps Patly Munigia with Painting During Vi1it
And because there is "no wind. no rain,
nothing to knock it down."' tl1e space
agency said Tuesday, the banner mci.y fly
forevP.r -or al least until man starts
colonizing his natural satellite In the
yearb beyond the horizon.
Ti)e Oag planting will take place after
Armstrong, commander of Apollo II,
stePs out on the lunar surf3cc around
11 p.m. PDT July 20.
State tiospital at Norwalk. Liberty won his "Candlelight Killer"
Liberty, arrested two years ago for the pseudonym from officers who in-
murrler of Mrs. t.1arcella Landis, was due vesUgated the bizarre slaying of Mrs.
to b~ returned to Superior Court for the Land.is, the atlractlve brunette who
Pat Nixon Fits in Well Armstrong will be foJloy,•ed 30 minutes
later by Edwin E. "Buz" Aldrin to make
a moon walk lasting two hours and 40
n1lnt.tes. One of Arn1strong's fir st duties,
the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration said, will be to take the
flag assembly down from one 01 the legs
of the lunar lander where it '"ill be
fastened, v•rapped in plastic inside an
reviva l of charges which were suspended shared Liberty's apartment at 8382
btcause of his mental condition. v,.·estmlnst~r Ave., h; Westminster.
}fospitat officials say the former OffirerJ said they found Liberty strum•
machinist walked to freedom from an ming his gUi tar and softly singing wbil~
open \\'ard at the Norwalk facility and the body of his paramour lay draped
that their patient, recently ruled to be across a living room sofa. Adding to the
sane, could have done t.hat at any time In tlitchr.ock·likc. atmosphere in the apart,..
the days immediately preceding that ne\Y ment, they said, was the fact that Liberty
diagnosis. tiad placed burning candles all around \he Ai Watts Se1Avice Center
LOS ANGELES <UPI) -Pat Nixon,
taken in as an "honorary volunteer'' of
an intlir1 acial settlement house on the
edge nf \Vatts. says "I do love and I am
concerned, so I fit in very well.''
The First Lady 3nd her daughter, Julie
Eisenhower, 20, wer~ present'-<.! their
"volWlleer" plru depicting the black and
\l'hite hitndclasp or "eternal brotherhood"
when they loured the ' Wesley Social
Service Center Tuesday night.
The)' drove to the Watts black com·
muniJ,Y buoyed by a1telepi;lpne call from
the President telling thi!m he had heard a
lot of "good reports" abOut their current
lour of vo!Unteer projects.
They had three more on ~p !Oday,
planning lo visit a public school, a foun·
·dation for the blind and a c\earing~use
for those who want to "do ~methinC" for·
others. •
Wells acidly contends that what w;is body of his victhn.
reported to him as "a stenographic er· Both Liberty and his strangled victim
ror" must have been a big help. He had long records of mental Illness and
Mrs. Nixon and Julie were ~hoy,-n the argues that Liberty's papers should have both had been diagnosed and treated in
center by its founder, the Rev. \\'illiam been endorsed "discharged to C<iurt" and the men tal ward of Orange County
aluminum tube.
Rollins, and his y,•ife. Janet, an in· not the simple "discharged'' that was f\.fedlcal Center. And both. it was later
terracial couple. Couuty GI J(il!cd recorded discovered , had ,.ac1, several unsuc-
Rollins, a N.egro minister, told the F'irst lt is not unknown, Wells adds, for the cessful suicide attempts.
Lady their theme was "love and concern Army Special 4 Ja1nes C. Luc ero, Ule Norwalk hospital to make such a belated Superior Court Judge Byron K.
in the inner city" and said the volunteers son of J\fr. and Mrs. Frank L. Lucero, 621 entry on the records of a patient who has McMiiian sent Liberty to Atascadero
received pins after working with the N. Mantle Lane, Santa Ana, has been kill· managed to escape ~rom the: faclllly. And after determlning that the Westminster
center for three years. ~ · .. ed in Vietnam action, the U.S. Defense he bra11ds as "extr,mely careless" the man was insane and unable to 1lSSist in
\Valking over to a microphone in an off. Department announced today. supervision of a man who was listed as his own d'fens,, /
theoeuff response, MrS. Nixon said "but l Lucero was one of 49 victims. includ ing hit;hly dangerous at the tlmt of his com· He Is today regarded as sane by
also am one o{· you1'in that I am coo· eight Californians. who died in action 1niltal tro Atasc;adero Sta te Hospital. Atascadero· and Metropolitan . St·ate
cerned and I ·do love. So J really flt in during the pail week in Vietnam. Sheriff's investia1tors 1llo condemn Hoapltal officlals ..
very well, and I'm proud of this pin ..• 1---=-'-'-----------------....:.----------'------------
and I think J'll have to come back to do
my three years of duty to earn it."
Mrs. Nixon and her daughter also
Visited weightlifting, music and drama
classrooms.
Now al A TLANJIC MUSIC only • • • SAVE $83.00 (LIMITED TIME!)
Evans Officer Tells Radio
NEW 80 WATT
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..__ '
Foulup .Before Collision
SUBJC BAY. Philippines (UPl) - A
young American Navy officer testified to.
day that there was a "potentiality for
confusion" in the USS Frank E. Evans'
communication systen1 on the night it
collided with the Aus{ralia n carrier
Melbourne.
· Lt. (j.g.) T. E. Bowler Ill, 24, of An·
napolis, Md., told a six-man U.S.·
Australian board of officers investigating
the crash that there were two task
groups operating on the same tactical
radio nety,·ork that night.
"When two task groups operate on the
net, there certainly Is potentiality fo r
confu sion," he said.
Seventy-four U.S. sailors were k.ill~d in
the June 3 collision , which occurred while
both ships were. participating i n
Southeast Asia Treaty Organiiation ex-
ercises in lhe South China Sea.
Bowler testified after the board con·
ferred for four hours In c:osed session on
the ref us a I of Lt. (j.g.) Runald C.
Ramsey, 24, of Long Beach, Calif., to
testify. Ramsey, officer of the deck on
the Evans at the time of the crash. asked
to be excused on constitutiona.1 grounds.
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A London book publisher doesn't
like the spare Ure ~round bis mid-
dle. He plans to trade his vest and
striped lie one day a week for
dungarees, a pick and shovel and
72 cents an hour laborer's wages.
Chrl1 West, 30, an Oxford grad·
uate, took out this ad in the Lon·
don Times: "Publisher wilh pugil-
istic and soccer background over-
weight. Progressing toward early
coronary, be seeks heavy manual
labor. Anilnalistic work please:
heavy portering, gardening, etc." • r:~Sila1 Spe~r Griffin has spent .
li\ore than half of his 55 years be-
hind bars. This week be stood
before a Portland, Ore. judge. for
&entencing on his fifth felony con-
viction -armed robbery. "If you
had your choice between life in
prison and a 25-year sentence,
which would you choose?" asked
IU judge. "! think l ,.,ould pr#er
life, your honor," said Griffin. "It
would keep me out of trouble." He
got his wish . •
Tricia Ni.%on and Swa1• EUenhawer,
both. "'at home" in pre1ide11tial sur·
roundings, watch the welcoming cere·
monies for W h I t e. H o u s e fellow1.
Susan is a granddaughter of the late
Geh. Dwight D. Eisenhower. • The North Carolina House ap-
.,._roved a bill to make the gray
~uirrel the official state mammal.
Quring the d e b a t e, state Rtp.
J:1 • n r y Bosham•r, a Democrat
1rom Carteret County in the eastern
part of the state. quipped : "I
,yould like to say that an animal
that can bury nuts could be dan·
gerous to this General Assembly." •
' Th irt1tfive oora went do un& at
1
.
~ seci off the .coaat of England
near ltam.sgate. The car.s wt're 1
aboard the German freighte r
Aphaia whet~ it beaclied on a ~·
mud ba11k. Tiie a1ttomobiles slip-• .
ped off the deck a11d sa11k. •
• . Cindy is having her toenails
~becked toda:y -with an x-ray
ib.achine. Cindy is an elephant, and
.t'he x-ray machine was the. only
wav attendants at the Dudley Zoo ill "worcester, England could fig-
lire to check her feel "Long or in·
growing toenails can cause, an
elephant great discomfort,•• a zoo
spokesman said.
W.....,, .J\lot It. IM
Lindsay· ~o~es, Will Form .New Party
. .
DEMOCRATS' CHOICE
Mario Proc1ccino
N ~s GOP S'!lons Pledge 'to Supp0rt 1Ma yor
...!.. • ' 'NEW YulU\ CAP) -M'aj<or John V. tlull any Republic.on le&\!tf wtlo IUpporlr , 111...,..11.oe,nocrauc flO!d• H•-wlth
l.indsay, de!ealed in his bid (or lhe Marohl in tbe aeneral elocUoo oemJ>alln CllllJ lboirt I third ol ill' -
Republicao mayoral nOf'l\inalion,.aakl t~ "had better look vert, _..,uHy." ,. Bronx Barou&h Prtlldetlt Herman
aay be wiD ronn • new"'urban pat1y" o"l.lndlay uked ... ,,. ... _,_. __ to Badillo, .... WU bom to ~"~• . ~ ' ~-·-r-·.. ,,.. ran • ~third. Autbor NGl'1Ufli'MISJtr and appeal to ln<k~enll and Uberall New ·York Gov. ~ A . .ROcW~. and !lop. Jam., H.·Scbeutt lrallod.
In the Democrallcond Republican parlles who bad "1d .be· would l1lj)port lk· The ,qie • ., Proc'°'lno ·1111,213
1 the fall mayoral ele«lon. • Pl'iniltT w-. 'l'ejlllld' Iha! H 11 fit. Wagne ' fll,806, Badillo Jt5)11; ,...,.,;
Undsay, •ho said be ':would remain a "WeU, ihll'• the cue." . iJ,13", SCheuer SS,t.11. , ' ~
Republkan, •aid that State Sen. John J. ' N .... York'• lwo .~ 11nalora, · .!f':'JJ!.~li~ tbe :':i"' :.i-
Mmhl, who de!eated him, had bceo Jacob K. ~avltl and Cbarla J!l, Gooddl, ~lemporacy" con:!i Or ~· panf:en
"captured by the rorcea o1 the uHra rilhl. liave Aid thOy wotlld • .,ppor\ Lindlay iJie city. , • m
"He at.ands Ior negat.lviam," Lindsay even Ube lolt. ·• '"l'here· la: a' mood fl. bostil t_ irr thls
said, ·~and appeal.~ to the forces ol hatred T1)e lllllle .... cduervatlve.itrend that hit city and,naUon,"· IJncbltJ •l.d.. 1'but be-
and divisiveness. , ~also wreCked former Dimocratic . lore;JJoyember the mood ot 1'l50n will
'lMy the mt In the campaign," he said, . , . :. return.~ ' , . ·'will be 'a.mayor for all the city.' We Mayor Rober1. F. Wagner 1 comeback bid Tbt GoP ~efeat wu a aevmi bk>w to ·
will create an independent line for a new TUeaday. the· party pri:stige of Undaay, who last
urban party." The !lnal unoffiClal -coun& for Lindsay yearWu considered a poasible contender
The mayf. said no name had been was 108,351 •pinlt .. tbf 111,725 for for ·the national ticket.
choaen for the new party. But he is Marchi. a llttl•known &tale senator fronf· However, It did not knock the 47-year·
already on the ballot as the candidate of Staten Isl d • o.ld mayor out of contention for re-e!ec·
the Liberal party. W im~r an,~... t 11 .. 11 ...... lv-Cit bon to a aecond term in November. In a . . •~·---· 0 ...,........ruuo.. 1 city that is 1·2 DemocraUc in voter Lindsay, \tho lost in a mayoral PfUTlary Comptioller Mario A. Procaccino, who registration he will be the moal liberal
that echoed the results of recent elections rejected the label of "law4nekJrder'CiJ1-candldate u; the three.man field
in Los Angeles and Minneapolis, warned did.ate"· but wu lhe most conservative iD '
U~I T...,._.
GOP WINNER
Sen. John MarChl
Senate lnvesti9atio1i Sl).S Convention
Opens Behind
'Security Wall'
Liberals Still Outweigh
Right Wing in New York.
Bl.ack Pantl1er ~arty Aim
To l\.ill Policemen Told CHICAGO (UPI) -Students for a
Democratic Society opened their national
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A S.note In·
vestlgator testUled today that Black
Panther Party leaders said In broadcasts
originating in Havana that their aims
were to kill American policemen and
government officials and destroy fac-
tories, airports and other facilities.
Transcripts of broadcasts, rtad at a
Senate hearing, included praise for Negro
militan~ tor lbe deaths of policemen in
Cleveland, New \>ork, .Chicago, Peoria,
Ill., Llttle Rock, Ark., and Seatlle, Wash.
John E. Drass,, J Washington, D.C.,
police caple'in who has been on loan to
Sen. John L. McClellan's Senate in·
vesllgation !\lbcommittee, read excerpts
from the tranScrlpu at the third day of
the group's hearings into the relationsh ip
between city disorders and campus
unrest.
Drass has betn working for the sub-
committee since January, 1968, to con·
duct an in\•esll1atlon of the Black
Panther Party. one of four militant
organizations which McClellan is in·
vestigatiog.
Drass said the radio broadcasts were
monitored by the U.S. govemment and
included statements by Bobby Seale Iden·
I
convention ioo.y behind a wall of sell-lm· NEW YORK (UPI) -Republicans may while Lindsay finished up with 108,358.
tlfled as chalrman of the Black Panthers: posed security and in ferment over which have overthrown Mayor John V. Lindsay Many of the Democrats who voted for
Huey P. Newton, "minister of defen11e," ideological direction the radical student in their primary but he's hardly ready to liberal candidates can be e.i:pected to :cin::~~~~.~ tt1ason Murray, "mini&ter of movemenl should lake. be counted out of the general election. start looking for a liberal in the fall, and
"Murray spelled out the Black Panther SDS marshals were posted at all doors The conservative trend in l he their only choice in the three-way race is
Party's intention to fight the United of the old Chicago Coliseum, the con· Republican and Democratic races that Lindsay.
States through guerrilla warfare," Dress vention site. All newsmen were required brought State Sen. John J. Marchi and After the mayor conceded his loss, one
testified. t · le I 'th th d I t Controller Mario A. Procaccino to the of his advisers expressed relief at the "Murray further stated that by guer-0 regis r a ong ·w1 e e ega es. rilla warfare the BPP means: 'To Cameras and electronic media gear were fore, still fails lo outweigh the liberal Democratic outcome. "Al least they did us the favor of nominating Procaccino," organiie tl{e black people in twos and barred from the hall. vote. he sald.
threes andJours to assassinate the police An SOS spokesman said one resolution In the unofficial returns, the liberal In the headquarters af all the
who kill us.' " to be voted on would exclude coverage by vote for Herman Badillo, James H. Den1ocratic candidates except ~rocac-
Drass . further quoted Murray as the New York Times. Scheuer, Norman Mailer and Robert 1'~. cino, many campaign workers conceded
saying; The "underground press" would be ex-Wagner adds up to more than 500,000. they would probably vote for Llndsay in
"The U.S. a:overnment has guards that empted from the restriction, he said. Marchi's unoffi cial tally is 111,725. the fall.
can be killed. They have bridges that can 1------------------------''---'----------------
be blewn up, factories that can be burned
to the ground, airports that can be blown
up, people walking the streets. mayors,
senators, governors, whose lives can be
taken in exchange for the Ji ves of black
people that they have taken."
Orass said the Black Panthers are con-
nected with the Black Student Union and
has an alliance with Students for a
Democratic Society (SOS ), which has
been sparking many of the demonstra·
lions on college and university campuses.
Reds on Hamburger Hill,
Fire on Support Copters
SAIGON (UP I) -Communlst sunners
~ntrenched on Hamburger Hill in the A
Shau Valley opened fire today on U.~
helicopters fupporting a major new allie1!
drive in the area, infonned Americn·
1nilitary sources reported In Sai1on. They
said none of ~ (..'Opters was. hit.
Several tbousand U.S. paratroopers and
'South Vietilamesc infantrymen a r e
sweeplnc' thfough the valley 375 miles
northwt of Salton and two miles from
lhe border of Laos, but there were no
reports of any American attacks in lhe
immediate vicinity of the controversial
heii;iht.
The 3,000-fool peak was captured by
U.S. paratroops In an 11-<lay battle that
CQSt the Am!ricans more than 50 dead
and 300 woUnded. It was abandon ed as
"useless" and was promptly reoccupied
~ y the North Vietnamese.
The U.S. command announced Tuesday
t had launched a new multi-battalion
,weep through the A Shau Valley, Opcra-
1ion Monl&omery Rendezv9us, but
spokesmen today steered clear of ti'>!
!llbject of Hamburger Hill. The hill had
been captuitd In a similar operation call·
:d Apache Snow,
The Communist gunfire from Uie hill
came as 'Ainerican spokesmen reported
stepped up Communist drive» ran;ina
rro1n the demilitarized 1,one to Saigon's
defense perimeters had killed S 7
Americans and 'A.'O unded 114 in fl&hting ,
Tuesday and today.
The cost was heavy for the North Viel·
namese and Viet Cong -249 dud.
Hail Blankets A'lnarillo
Most of Nation Enjoys Mild Spring Weather
co .. tal
tt""1 1nc1 ""'"1"' 1ow overT.1t1 bf.
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Gttel L•• trM .. "" 10fo Md' to. ti, Louit • -. • !;11!1\1~ lfl ,,,_ d"' 1~111, I"" 1rlf r"ltrl ot h tl i.1~1 City lftt klrtllfl,..1t tflll tl'lt IMe•lw '*" 1111 Dltff
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...
QUEENIE By Phil fnterlancll
"WilJ,·at least the tb•ater manacer ls honest."
Prisoners' Families
Get U.S. Reassurance
me most recent official
casualty report listed 341 U.S.
servicemen captured or in·
Pentagon and State Depart-
ment officials are holding
meetings with families of
more than 1,300 captured U.S.
,ervicemen in a widening ef-
fort to assure them they have
not been forgotten.
terned and 987 missing. Most.I•------------
of the missing are believed to
Two sessions already have
been held and more briefings
arc planned in the next four or
five weeks to inform the
relatives about th e
government's: efforts to free
the men and ease their con·
ditions o( captivity.
Another pu~ is to make
sure the families of men miss-
ing or captured in the Vietnam
war are receiving all the help
to which they are entitled .
HEADS TEAM
Richard G. Capen, deputy
assistant secretary tlf defense,
is head of the team of officials
arranging the meetings as
part of a new Nixon ad-
ministration program.
Sessions a r e tentatively
planned in San Francisco, Los
Angeles, P h o e n i x. Ariz.,
Denver, Colo., Kansas Cit y,
~1cGuire Air Force Base, N.J .,
Westtlver Air Force Base,
Masa.,. and an '\lDdertermined
location in· the sOutheastern
Unile<I; °States" .. · ·. Gas:ien said ~new etfor~ -which' bJ! included a series o(
statements by Secreta~~of
Defense MelVin R. ~d
designed to focus world ~i
niqn tln the side of 11.s.
prisoners -represents a
r;w1tch from the last ad-·
ministration's pOlicy. ,
"The policy 'In the past was
not to say any.thing· publicly
for fear of reducing the
possibility of release tlf the
men or release of information
by North Vietnam on· their
st.a~" Capen said. "It seem-
ed to Us the time was now for
us to 'express deep concern
about these :mei:i."
be pri$onen; in North Vietnam L..-
-pilots captured when their
planes were shot down during
the air war.
Laird sent key Pentagon of-
ficials a memorandum last
March 3 stressing that he is
"deeply concerned about the
welfare" of captured and missing servicemen and their
families.
"I want to be assured that
the military services and the
office of the secretary of
defense are doing all that we
possibly can for the next-of.
kin," Laird said at the Ume.
Later that month, Capen
held the first private, informal
session with about 75 wives in
the San Diego area. He and his
associates followed this up last
week with a similar gathering
of about 100 next~f-kin from
the San Antonio and the Fort Worth-Dallas areas of Tei.as.
CLOSED OOORS
The sessions are behind
. closed -doors, Capen said, to
pr.eserve the privacy o( the
.faroj,lies.
In ·addition to p u b 11 c
statements by Laird deploring
.Nm1h Vlctnan'5 'ti:eatment o U.S. pr1so~ there have Peen be~nes moves
'by"· the ~ense secretar:y in '
thil area.
In one such move several
weeks ago, he briefed U.S.
ambassadors in Belgium and
Br.ltain so they could solicit
Jielp from European countries
in bringing pressure on North
Vietnam for '·humanitarian
handling or Americans in cap-
tivity.
So !ar, Capen ackno\yledged, .
Hanoi 's response has-been ·
disappointing.
Ex-price Control Chief
Asks Voluntary Controls
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The
man· who caUed the shots
wben price ceilings were last
clamped on the nalion thinks
it ls ·time for the government
to try controls again -but
voluntary, this time.
restored. were marking UJ>
price tags to be in an ad-
vantageous position when the
anticipated "freeze" came.
Prices cla imbed I percent In ,
lhe six-month· period o f •
military escalation preceding pt·,.
the clampdoWn in January ;""'
1951, even -though some in·
rlirect controls were still in ef-
fect.
Midiiiel V. DiSallc , Korean War price boss, suggested the
, Nixon Jldministration might
try for hold-the -l ine
agreements with the 500 bis-
1 gest corporations. or with ma-STILL PREVAILED
jor industries. "Credit restraints were In
f That would mean aban-use, rent controls still prevail·
d 0-n· m en t of the ad· ed. and the excess profits ta1.
ministration 's policy st.and was still in force ," DiSalle
· aga1nst price-wage controls or said. ·~vet none of these seem-~
"guidelines, DiSalle said in an ed to slow -'up the spiral.'' ' ~
-1 interview, but he added : ~ situaUOn is s'ln:t1!8r now; ,
" "The administration doesn't Ute lawyer said, with the .
have many optioris left now. suriex having no m o re "
. "If they keep putting it orr, dampenif11 ef;fed than th&.-old . -excess profits ~ and •Uh this inflation is just going to businesses· bori-owing hand , \ keep on accelerating." 1· I DiSalle, former Democratic over ist n spite of record '
high interest rates. goverqor or Ohio and mayo,_or .
'Toledo, directed the Office'of Tfghtening the money
•Price Stabilization from·· 1950 screws brtngs" lnequltable ef-~ to 1952 and in the latter year lccts, with hardships on small ~
'administered wage curbs alsn, flnns, on marginal businesses ·
d' t of 0 i that need Joans to expand, and I as U'ec or e c n ° m c on housing, DiSallo said.
1 stablllzation.
And a wrench violent enough
•DO NOTHING lo cause a rapid deflation
• "I didn't think the 10 per-causes shutdowr.s and
t «nl surtax would do anything unemployment "which hurts
•to slow things dowr., and it those whom you want m0$t to
fhasn't." said DiSalle, now protect" -the poor, the shim
'practicing law In Washington. dwellers and minority groups,
l "I do think some kind of and the lower~killed workers. •1 quasi-voluntary system might
work." Voluntary controls fail· TRIED BRIEFLY fed In lhe Korean War, he con. The idea of Industry-wide
ANAHEIM
J
I
•
\
'
Ill __
coded. The "'"'¥'"'1 ·was atill ·ho!d-the-llne . •f"lementJI "u i•~n<llnf oil'.the m.ntth or · trrea brief'>' Jf1 the . Korean ,COl"AltMJel deintnd pent up War. A at~ pact wu made
1dlW!nl WorJd War IL Prlto whlrh worked, Dis.Ile m.all-
1«1llii!• hld•been·removed -eel, but the id<a !•U apart
;llt"l>bal>IY llJ'lllAllhly, I h whei ij ptj>Yed. imposaiblo .to ,bis.De's oplnlon -a n d bring the auto industry into
4# N. Euclid' s3t.s12•1 47 Fashion Island 6+4-1212
)>!alnessmen, lull¥ expectll\fl agreement. 11 might -k this
lhal ceilings would b e lime, DiScllle 1uggestecl.
Mon. t.hru Sot.
I 0 e.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Mon. thru Fri. 10 e.m. io 9:30 p.m.
Sot. I 0 e.m. to 6 p.m.
We~. J.,.. Ja, 1969 D~LY PILOT S
•
•
• . '
•
=
SWIVEL ROCKERS PROMISE
DEEP COMFORT
' .
' "
99.95 reg. 139.95
We salute the tall and handsome swivef rocker ••• in
cot.ton cut velvet imported from Belgium. Bottom tulteg
beck, deeply comlorteble soo t cushions wit h polyfoem ~
wrapped in Dat!ron polyester for snap back resilience,
non allBrgic qUalWies. A final custom flourish •• • •.
out line welting in solid color.
Furniture, 38
'
•
"¥AQUERO" ••• COORDINATES
MEXICANA, SPECIALLY PRICED.
FROM MORRIS OF CALIFORNIA
Reg. 39.95 .129 .95 34.00·116.00
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rugged series in mellow brown woods .
11 9.95 6 dr Ar•n •r h•1•
Jt .t S '"•fcliiR9 '"irror
f4.95 ,t!Jd•Rt cl•1lr
119.t S Iii ck.tt, 5 clr•w•r1
69.t5 lo ch•tf, l dr1~r1
69.95 lo cup~e1rd
19.95 corR•r d•1lr
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Sleep Shop, 69
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7777 Edinger Ave. a92.333 I"
Mon. thru Set.
.I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m •
r L
. 't • .
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\.DADiY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE I
'
Laguna's Flood Menace
We've been warned.
EnJti,neers from two governmental agencies lai d it
on the 1ine for Laguna Beach councilmen and a.hand·
fUI of spectators last week .
They described the very real flood hazards that
face Laguna Canyon and the downtown basiq,.
Engineers, tor Instance, pointed out that the recent
flood s which wreaked canyon havoc. were only one
fotu1h the volume of a Oood termed "1ntermediate Re·
gional Flood'1 that could arrive any time -like next
winter.
The candid conversations were the upshot of a
study of Laguna Canyon, its eight.square mile water
shed and its "flood plain" from about a mile upstream
of El Toro Road to the sea.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' study-a first
in Orange County-showed many things.
It showed inadequate flood checks. The existing
drainage channel didn't cut the J1"1stard this time and
it certainly wouldn't in a bigger flood.
\Vorse, the flood plain (path of drainage and flood-
ing) is populated with people and businesses.
Not only are the lives and property of occupants on
the line in a bad flood, many of the structures in tho
canyon actually hamper drainage.
For instance. one man's fence might force water
through another man's home. One man's bridge might
let go and cause a drainage obstruction that would
build a destructive head of water.
Oddly enough, a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
study to come up with recommended solutions was au-
thorized by Congress' after World War II. This was ap-
parently due to nagging by persons hit in floods of the
1930's.
But the authorized study was never funded. It may
be now, with some more na¥ging. The cost is only $301•
000 to find out what ls needed . We need to know.
The Orange County Flood Control District ba s rec-
ommended an up-canyon dam to serve as a water
check.
Better Oood control is essential. Until better solu·
Uons can be found, it may even become the moral re·
spousibility of concerned governmentaJ agencies to rig-
idly control and limit building I~ the flood plain.
Money is one problem. Twiet in rece'nt years flood
control bonds have been defeated on a county level.
Despite the short·liigbtedness of those who voted
"no," money must be found for solutions. Growth in
the area is going to add to· runoU and increase the mag-
nitude of the problem.
'Time to Take a Stand'
"Perhaps we should not have been as diplomatic
and careful and should have taken a strong stand for
what we really believe in . Perhaps it's time to take a
sLand."
Former Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
president Tom Johnston was speaking to feJiow board
members a bou t a new role for the chamber, a stand-:
up-and-be.counted posture, instead of kid-glove diplo.-
tnacy.
This would be desirable when a consensus of Ute
chamber govQrning board feel s a position is called for.
The problem li as been one of not biting the hand that
feeds sine~ .the chamber r~eives $35,000 from the city
for advert1s1ng and promotion of the city.
It's tough to blast one's financial benefactor even
if the criticism seems deserved and the money has been
earned.
T
L
Truth-in-Lending
Vs. Buying Habit
Impropriety
Question Has
·Been Removed
• Gatnes of Senatorial Cat-and-Mouse
Businesaes which offer credit are gear·
ing up -with new printed forms and
salecman training -for the Consumer
Protection Act of 1968, which takes effect
July 1. Popularly tagged trutl't-in-lending,
the law is designed to let buyers and bor-
l'owers learn clearly and unequivocally
\Vhat they must pay for merchandise and
credit.
Much merchandising In reetnt years
haa been carried on, for example, on the
$1-down-St-weekly basis, with the option
left to the buyer to compare the total
weekly installments with the original
purcbaae price.
NOW "REGULATION Z,'' a Federal
Ruerve Board publication of rules to
ltr>d and sell by, has been dispersed-
across the nation t.o acquaint affected
buslntsses with the law. whose en·
forcement is the responsibility of nine
federa1 agencies, chle!ly the federal
Trade Commission.
"Finance charges" and 1 ' an nu a I
percenl.age rate" must be printed more
conspicuously than surrounding material
lin contrast to the sometimes "read the
fine print" caution ). Finance charges
( • ~· ··J:" --; -..
Guest Editorial
mu st list "the works": interest, loan rce,
c:redit investigation fee. cost of life or
other insurance associated with a time
purchase, and any amount paid as a
"discount," service or carrying charge.
BUYERS AND borrowers not gifted in
the "higher math" for discovering the
full price of an item or money acqulred
"on time" may raise eyebrows momen-
tarily when the whole cost.picture stares
them in the face. One effect may be to
prompt shoppers to hunt around for the
''best financial deal," since final cost
answers will be available for easy com·
parison.
\Vilh the national habit of Jiving on next
week 's or next year's paychecks well in·
grained by now, we seriously doubt the
new truth-in-lending disclosures will
permanently divert many Americans
from their buy-now, pay-later way of life.
The Times-Picayune
New Orlean1
Just to Stay Even ...
IF YOUR
1958 INCOME
WAS···
$3,000
$5,000
$7,500
$10,000
$20,000
$50,000
$100,000
-IN 1969 YOU
MUST EARN, JUST
TO STAY EVEN--
-$3,846
-$6,332
$9,417
A PERCENTAGE
INCREASE OF··
21%
21,..;
26%
$12,543 -25%
--$24,888 247.
$63,1 60 26"•
247.
The effect.I of inflation and tax.es are illuslrated In thili chart. A married man
with two chJldren who earned $7 ,500 ln 1968 must earn in 1969 about 26 percent more
lo be as ''wen off."
,.......-------.811 Geor1e --------·
Dw G«lfp:
1...i thil follow at the ollice and
... -perfectly nice, harm] .. ,
and -· Some of the other clril lnlilt he ii an•awlul wolf. How
can I find U it to true ht Is a woU!
J've accepted an lnvJt.atlon for a
•
e1adlcHitit dinner lit his apart-
ment.
WONDERING
Dur Wondering:
What are you writing me for? t
can't think of a better v.'ay to find
out.
To the Editor :
Please be advised Iha~ Mr. Arthur
Strock has removed any question of im·
propriety that may have. arisen in C1>n-
neclion with his conduct to which you
referred in your June 7, 1969 -issue
regarding the O'Donnell case.
CLAUDE M. OWENS
.Judge of the Superior Court
i\lr. Strock , while acting as attor·
11ey rcpresenti-ng Dr. /11errill (,'. O'·
Do11ncll in Judge Owe1ls' court. dre111
a complaint from the judge that he
M.ai.lho.ll • ,,
appeared to bt flouting Ca11on 22 of
the Canon& of Professiunal fthics
when he cited a previously rejected
dec~io1~ during law a1ld motio1~ ar-
gur11ents. Judge Owens' l.etter reports
the result of /11r. Strock.'s re1po11se
10 the judge's request to him for com·
nienl.
-Editor
JtJoral Aspecu, Too
To the Editor :
Recently critics of sex education pro-
grams have-voiced their opposition
dramatically and emotionally. Their ma-
jor objection1 is that their children are
being influenced away from thfi IMl'llity
of church and home and being in·
doctrinated into the "new immorality"
taught in sex education programs.
Statistics show that there has been a
rise in unwed pregnancies and venereal
disease in America today. This is an in·
dicat.ion that the youth of today are im-
properly instructed in the moral aspect of
sex,
WHERE DO TH~E children get their
misinformation? If parents cannot or will
not leach thoJr chlidren about sex, and in-
still in thd'in a healthy attitude, the
children ~Ill look for information
elsewhere. 'hieir whole knowledge etiout
sex will be derived from discussions with
their equally uninformed, or worse yet,'
mJslnformed peers.
Children 'ti.re curious by nature, "and
they will seek out the. forbidden in·
formation oo that they can satisfy their
curiosity. Ttiey will read as many filthy
books as they can find and they will
eagerly accept the moral attitudes of
their "more experienced" friends.
ANAHEU.f HAS A four-year-old sex
education program taught in the seventh
through twelflh grades. This course in·
tegrates the biological. psychological, and.
moral aspects of sex education. It
emphasizes that the sex act demands the
knowledge, trust, security, maturity and
the love fouod in marriage.
Once the need for sex education has
been recognlted, what must be done to
ensure that there is a sex educaUon pro-
gram taught 1n the community thlit ls in·
formative, moralistic and relevant to
.society?
IF A SEX education program exists in
your community, Investigate its aims and
methOOs. Talk to the teachers and to the
studtnts. The students' attitudes are in-
dicative of the SUccelt& of the program.
ti a stx education course does not ex·
1st, study the programs taught In othtr
communitle1 and write to SUX:US, Sex
Information and EducaUan CounCil of the
t.'nlted States, New York, N.Y., for in·
forma:tlon regarding organiEing and in·
itlatlng a progr1m in your e<1mmunity.
FRANCES OLDENBURG
Student at UCI
More Tarnish on Congress
WASHINGTON -President Nixon,
who has been slow in filling top govern·
ment jobs, is now having some of his ap-
pointments delayed by games of
senaloria\-cat.and·mouse.
Senate leaders of both parties are in-
volved. The result is a little more tarnish
on the lack·lustre facade of the current,
91 st, Congress.
The Senate has always been zealous in
carrying out its constitutional responsiili·
ty to "advise and consent" on presiden-
tial nominations. In the past, however,
ra ther precise criteria were applied in
considering presidential appointments.
The old formula, as the late Sen.
Robert A. Taft, R-0., once explained it,
gave a president wide latitude in selec-
ting top aides, provided that an appointee
(1) was not clearly incompetent to do the
job assigned, and (2) bad not been gullt'y
of an offense involving moral turpitude.
THERE WAS another proviso. A single
senator could block a presidential ap-
pointment on grounds that the nominee
was "personally obnO'Xious," but such an
objecUon could only be applied to a
nominee from a senator's own state to a
federal position within that state.
Now a nominee can be opposed on
grounds of prejudice, personality, or even
pique. This is how things have been going
for President Nixon :
DR. JOHN H. KNOWLES -President
Nixon hadn't even nominated Knowles,
his .choice to be assistant HEW secretary
fo r health. when Senate Republican
Leader Everett M. Dirksen, Ill.. an-
nounced weeks ago that he would fight
Knowles' appointment. With the post still
unfilled, Dirksen restated his opposition
last week.
Knowles Is the director nf the
prestigious Massachusetts Gen e r a I
Hospital. The American Medical Associa-
tion opposed his appointment to the HEW
post because Knowles has supported
I ' I '
!lleu-Gol<bniith ; ' . ~ .f
•• compulsory health care plans and other
liberal social welfare projects.
Dirksen, who professes great ad-
miration for Taft, has not really e.1-
plained his opposition to Knowles.
Dirksen has noted that the AMA is op·
posing Knowles and he was reported to
have described the doctor, a fello\v
Republican , as a "radical'' at one closed·
door meeting.
OTTO F. OTEPKA -He is the former
State Department Security Officer who
was demoted after he privately slipped
some departmental data lo the senate
Internal Security Subcommittee in 1963.
His · cause was quickly espoused by a
number of right wing groups, and he then
became a target of the left wing. . •
At Oirksen's. behest, President Nixon
nominated Otepka on March 20 to· be ·a
member of the nearly defunct Subversive
Activities Control Board. No one testified
against the nomination, and the Senate
Judiciary Committee approved it 12 to 3
more than a month ago.
Since that time the nomination ha~
been stalled and in a sort of limbo on the
Senate calendar. The Se n a t e ' s
Democratic leadership. which attends to
such procedural matters, simply has not
scheduled the Otepka nomination for
floor consideration. Ev~ntually, the nomination will be ap..
proved. The word now is that action may
come this week after a few opponents,
mostly Democrats, air their objeclions.
which are keyed to the old security mat·
ter and to the way Otepka raised money
to fight the long legal battle which
ensued.
CARL J. GILBERT -Two Senate
committee chairmen are in a jurisdlc-
tional battle over Gilbert, who was
nominated by President Nixon on April 14
to be the U.S. special representative for
trade negotiations, a job with am·
bassadorial rank .
Gilbert's nomination was approved by
the Foreign Relations Committee, since it
is a foreign policy post. Then Chairman
Russell B. Long, D·La .. complained that
his Finance Committee, which created
the job. should have a say in filling it.
Long and Chainnan J. William
F'ulbright, D·Ark .. of the Foreign Re\a-
lions Committee. have now agreed that
the Finance Committee can study the
nomination for up to 30 days. Then
Gilbert too, will probably be confirmed,
and he can get down to the rather im·
portant job ol ,tariff negotiations.
While the President's nomination or
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger was
Quickly and overwhelmingly approved
last week. by a vote of 74 to 3. th.c
reasons advanced by the three Burger
opponents fell far short of the old Senate
formula .
SEN. STEPHEN M. YOUNG, D-0.,
complained that an attorney who opposed
Burger's nomination was not heard by
the Judiciary Committee in its hearing!
an d could not even get into the hearin1:
room. Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D·Wis., said
he kne1v "nothing derogatory1' about
Burger but had not been afforded a
chance to examine his credentials.
Sen . Eugene J. McCa rthy, 0-Minn .. the
third nay.sayer. said Burger campaigned
against him in 1952 in a manner
calculated to elicit "an emotional if not
prejudiced response." McCarthy did not
attempt to employ the old personally ob-
noxious tradition on a broader base. It
was, as usual. just the lone McCarthy
voice. unheeded by his C1>1leagues.
By Robert S. Alltn
and John A. Goldsmltb
Pot Is Calling Kettle Black
It has always amused me to hear
some pompous business official stand up
in public and upbraid "the guvment" for
its massive bureaucracy and its absurd
spending policies. For I have seen enougl\
of private business establishments al
first-hand to know when a pot is calling,.
kettle black. .
The thesis of tl:tese public denunciators
ls the "govment" should emulate private
enterprise -.but-in the cases t have
personally observed , there is scarcely a
shade of difference between the two, ex-
cept that business is designed to make
money, and government to provide
,a vice.
THE BUREAUCR.ACY IN a large and
thriving corporation Is not to be believed.
The wastac• Js immense, and the level of
Dear
Gloomv •
Gus: t Oun sharp-eyed Laguna B e a c h
parking meter men are able to
spot a rtd "violaUon" al too
pa ces, but always mW seeing the
big delivery trucks which park
lllt(llly in lh• alley betwten For-
est and Octan A venues. blocking
It off lo the poor harassed motor·
\st searching for an hontJl parking
space.
-M. L.
J
~; r •"--~'""'' ·-..... -~~ ·-• • ..-'""""'
; ! ' • i' (" ' ~i.dt\~y J;, -U~irls ., ~' '·.·fff ' i.,, .. ,~ f
\.. .ti!;~ ... i,j .... ...... --~ ~
e<1mpetence not very high. It is only the
essential viability of capitalism that
keeps some of these firms afloat -they
succeed despite their sloppy manage-
ment.
Most of them are venny·wise and
pound·foolish. They wlll alienate their
minor employes by instituting some petty
economic reform (dealing with something
as inconsequential as pencil·sharpeners),
and then squander millions on some
foolish scheme that tickles the vanity of
the top executive -but which any un-
derling could tell him is a waste of funds.
IN FACT, one of the best arguments
for capitalism has never been advanced
In its favor, !or it Is too embarrassing to
mention -and that Is the indisputable
fa<:t that the system works so well in the
business area, that it can withstand even
the mediocrity a.nd mismanagement o(
its custodians. It's hard to lose money in
an expanding economy.
The closer one get:& lo lhe scat ol cor·
porate power, the more obvious It
becomes thal the system is supporting
these pt01>le, rather than the people lbe
system. Many or them haven'l evtn bad
enough uvvy to keep thelr own com-
pa;rtits under control -wh ich accounts
for the appalling number Of c:orporele
takeovers and fictlllous "mergers" ln the
lut. rew years, The corporate
bureaucracy gets so top-heavy that Its
J'gs are amputa ted before i~ head beains
to know what is going on.
TJDS IS NOT meant to be a defense of
the indefensible practices in government,
whic~. should be more tailored, efCieient,
and responsive to public needs -it is
si mply to suggest that all bureaucracie~
are pretty much alike, no matter what
, their professed philosophy may be. It's
just that the idiocies of government
become a matt.er of public record , while
the Ineptitudes of business ar11
camouflaged by profits that are almost
impossible not to make.
When businessmen take over an ad· .
ministration, as in thi s Nixon era, they
will spend as much as their Democratic
predecessors; the difference is in the
:;peeches, not ln the actions.
-----
Wednesday. June 18. 1969
Th• editorial P<D• Of th• Dcilu
Pilot seeks to inform and stim-
ulate readerr bv pre.stntino thif
ntw.tpapu's opiniom and com-
menro:rv on topict ot intereat
and significance, bV P"'OVidino a
forum for the et:prtUi01' of
our rtaderi' optmon&, and b~
pre&tn&ing Ute diwrse viirta.
pobatl of inform~ obsmiers
and IJ)Okttmfl'& on topic1 of tilt dou.
Robert N. Weed, Publi shcr
I
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YOt 62, NO. l4S, 6 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE ·11, 1196.
• • IS Sill 0 ' ' oun
Down the
M ••
ISSIOD
Trail
San Clemente
Up to 17,050
SAN CLEMENTE -The city of San.
Clemente now has a population of 17 ,OM
-·an increase of 450 persons since Aprill
of .last year, according to an official st.ate
estimate.
The increase of 2.7 percent will mean
an additional $6,750 in revenue to the city,
which receives shares of state-collected
license fees and gasoline taxes based
upon the current population.
Pcipulation of the seaside resort has
nearly doubled slnct the federal census of
1960 which listed 8,527 residents.
.• uirls Wln Wh19s
MISSION . VIEJO -Ten airline
stewardess studenl.ll have won wings at
Saddleback College.
The girls, who served as hostesses dur-
ing campus functions, are Peggy Barret
of Newport Beach, Cyndee Hendrickson
of Laguna Beach, Teni Hennan of
Laguna Beach, Pati Laney of Dana Point,
Joyce Leonard of Tustin, Pat Mc;Carthy
of Tustin, Kathy Scofield, San Clemente,
Debbie Shea of San Clemente, Debbie
Smith of Laguna Beach and Wendy Weiss
of Tustin.
11te etillege will add a second year to
the program in the fall
•. Teacher GeU Gtillllt
MISSlON VIEJO -Robert W. Olson, a
Saddlebact College drafting a n d
engineering instructor, has reCeived a
NaUonal Science Foundation grant to at-
tend a summer conference for engineer-
ing and social science instructors.
The conference, to be held August ll·ZZ
at the University of Santa Clara~ will in-
clude courses of study involving future
technology.
Olson was a project engineer ror the
U.S. Atomic Energy Cormnission and
Atomic Power Equipment Department
engineer for General Electric before
entering education.
·• Photo Contest Set • IRVINE RANCH -Irvine's "Pathways
To Progress Week," June 5 through 22
will feature a photography conten for
children under 12 years of age.
Youngsters are invited to take pictures of
sites and activities on the ranch..
Application blanks for the contest are
available from Irvine I n f o r rn l. t i o n
Center at the Island House in Fashion
Island.' and the Irvine Gardens at Myford
Road and Irvine Boulevard.
e Big Splmh Slated
MISSION VIEJO -A giant water fi ght
promises that the Mission Viejo Recrea-
tion Center will be wet and wild Thursday
and Friday afternoons.
Grades s,i.t: and above will fight it out
Thursday beginning at I :30 p.m. while
five and under will meet Friday al l :30
p.m. Each participant should bring an
empty half gallon milk carton.
Hobie Cat Maker
Sued for Dworce
Millionaire surfboard manufacturer. •
Hobart Laidlaw "Hobie" Aller 1s Charged
with "extreme cruelty" and "grievous
mental suffering" in a divorce complaint
on rue today in Superior Court.
Seeking an erid to her t~year marriage
to the Laguna Beach sportsman is Mrs.
Sharon Diane Alter, 1073 Gavlota Drive,
In a complaint that seeks division of con-
siderable community property a n a
business interests, she asks for an
allowance of $50,000 a year plus monthly
beoelits ol l'IOO fer benelf and each of
her three children -Paula, 14, Hobort,
11 and Jeffrey, 7.
Mn!. Alter askl lhll the courl mtraln
her estranged husband from dispolling of
any ol the substantial business holdings
and lnterestl she painstakingly detallJ In
lier IJ.page filing.
She cites Alt<r'1 con1rol of surfboanl
and catamaran construction faclUUes and
red estate in Sin Juan capllttano, Dana
Point, l,.ake Elsinore and 'leveral out..of4
countJ localiona.
Alter ii known In er..,.. CoUt boating
circles aa the dal~ of uHoble
Cl.ta" -the popular It-foot catamarans
lhlt ha•• triumphed In oe•erol cout>I
raoa. He aJao controls Hobie Surlbolnll
Inc.
Lata1J's 7th' Hubby
Dante E~capes
' .
Death, Not L~w-
Br ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of the Diii, Jlllel Stiff
Jet set hypnotist Dr. Ronald Dante -
Harbor Area entertainer and confldan~e
of stars -today faces a theft charge in-
volving $18,500 worth ol boats at a Costa
Mesa firm, after survivlng a mysterious
murder attempt Tuesday.
Santa An~ police recognized the name
in news reports of lhe five-shot ambush
an d tipJ>Cf'. off Holly\l'ood detectives who
arrested the ill-starred seventh husband
of actress Lana Turner about "Tiidnight.
The attack by a mystery gunman wear-
ing a rakish AustrallllJl busb hat earlier,
as Dan te drove into his fashionable
office-apartment on Dobeny Drive, left
him with only a cut on the face.
SHA1TERED GLASS
The barrage of bullels shattered the
windshield of his car and he was nicked
by flying glass as he dove for lhe
floorboards during what authorities said
was the third attempt on his life.
Once before , a jealous lover who claim·
ed the hypnotist had alienated his
girlfriend, fired a .45 caliber pistol sh9t
at Dr. Dante during a San Diego
nightclub performance.
He was not hit. and lawmen did not
elaborate Tuesday on the third alleged
murder attempt.
Dante'Was apparenUy lJ shaken by his
ar.rest1u lie had been bf•tbe murder at-
tempt earlier, telling authorities he knew
of no rt,aS<>n-for either, unUl the boat
case warttplaJoed. ·
"I don't know anyone who would want
to klll me,'' he sald, "unles.s it would be
someone who is jealous about the woman
I just·matrled."
6 OTQER HUSBANDS
Dante followed six other husbands
down the aisle with Miss Turner in a Las
Vegas wedding chapel six ·weeks 1wo,
after they met at a fashionable discothe-
que three weeks earlier.
The alleged attemn.ted theft of sev1::n
motorboats belonginglo the Marlin Boat
Co., 1595 Newport Blvd., CO$. Mesa, oc-
curred almost one year to the day belore
Dante's marriage to the blondt star.
Miss Turner, 49, and her daughter
Cheryl, 2S, were present . when the
Singapore-born nightclub hypnotist wois
picked up at their Sheraton-Universal
Hotel suite.
He listed his age as 49 during the book-
ing process and told police he has a doc-
torate In psychology from Singapore
University.
The fonner entertainer at the Villa
Marina nigbtclub in Newport Beach -
(Set DANTE, Page Z)
ESCAPES MURDER TRY
Star's Husb.tnd .Dante
• • 'ti :El 'Toro Man '"
Held ·in Shoowilt
Over . Ex•tbife '.
An El ~Toro man ls ·1n Orange Count'y
Jail today charged with assauJt with in-
tent to commit murder after he allegedly
shot Out the tires of a car Tuesday night
in which his ex-wife and a companion
were riding.
Donald L. Winslow, 26, of 24172
Birdrock Drive. also threatened the pair
and fired five shots into the air from his
.31kaliber rifle, sheriff's deputies allege.
Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt said
deputies were alerted by El Toro servi<:e
station attendant William Maas.
Maas . said a man, later idenUrted as
Winslow, drove into the station and asked
him to "go up the road a piece and fix
some tires I shot out."
Winslow was captufed shortly by the
CalifonUa Highway Patrol whlle parked
behind a supermarket in Leisure World
Laguna Hills.
Barr.or T•klng $,..pe
Dr. Ullom
Hits Slate
Tax Plans
Laguna Beach Unified School Dlstrlct
Superintendent WlWam Ullom warned
Tueoday nigtll lhlt passage of a proposed
st,te-wld~ school tax would haxe "a
devastating effect on oUr comml,In.lty."
\JUom and Laguna school trustees urg-
ed · that Lagunins write 'their state
assemblyman (Robert lladha<U) • and
senator (John G. Schmitz) to urge defeat
of an assembly bUI which would set up
such a tax structure.
Board members were speaking of
Assembly Bill 1878 which attemiit.s to
equalize educaUonal flnances throughout
the slate by imposing a statewide tax in
lieu of local ·property taxes.
Its passage would mean taxpayers 1n
Laguna Beach would pay hlgber p"'P'fll'
Laxes, and yet less money would a:o into
local school co"fiers, they said.
Opponent. of the bill also maintain !hat
it will eventually destroy local control of
e~ucation.
'I don't disagree children in other
areas should have equal opportunities,
but there are other ways ol. flnanclng
this. For example, there Is sales tax,"
said trustee Larry Taylor. He added,
"EY'1'y tllpay" In Laguna Beach ohou1d
be concerned.·~
"Far our community. it would 'be
devS.SWUog," ·Dr:. Wtwam U I lo m ,
superinlen4eo1.ol Laguna. Beaoh Unified
School lllstrlct, sild of an .,,.mbty bill
J>r~~~
ti;.>pr.si '.........., · to · le
tbelr repmentatl~a ln the state cllj>itol
to tell tl\em to ••It qalJlll thl bill.
Board mem~ were 1peakin1 of
Assembly bill 1511 which attempta to
equalhe educaliooal flDincel thn>ughoul
the state by imJ>Ol4nl 1 ·1tatftide,tax in
IJeu of loCal "phiperty taxes.
· Ils · paUage would' mean taxpay.ers in
Laguna Beach would PIY higher property
taie1, and yet less mbney would go ·into
local achoo! cofCers, they &aid.
Opponents of \ht bill al.10 maintain that
it wlll eventually dellroy local control of
education. ,
"l don't disagree children IQ .other
areas should have equal opportonitles,
but lhere are other nys of thlancing
this. ·For example, theN! Is sales tax"
said trust~ Larl-y Taylor. He added,
"Every lazpayer In J,.aguna Beach ll>Ould
be concerned." ·
Storie M•rhets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed almost even today, after an early
sharp advance, partially buoyed by
bargain hunting, slowed Jn I a t e r
trading. ·cSee quotations, Pages 20-21).
•
• I
Work progresses on Dana Harbor, Orange County's
newut small crall refuge. Tbfs I,s qrlal view look·
ing east along coutline tow1rd San Clemenll. Land
jutting into sea al extreme upper edge of photo is
Cotton's Point, silo of President Nixon's Whlte
. . f •
Houae west. Work on :barbor !!&elf trivolves con-
slrucllon of temporary coffer clam• wtlbin brtalt·
waters, pumping out If& water, ·lhen .Jer1pint dry
surla<:e lo make b~ bo~ ! j,'
.. I•'· I f" I . . ~ . /
' .
' I
I) I
CHRIS HANCE CASTS OPF
Summer In the Swim
'1 · •. ''1'11 .: • ,:. ; t O~;t~S~~·~:t:,t'.
' ' . ' I . . ' .
Slated· Along
Souill f.oast
For the d1µ1herw of,the .Orange County
southern coast.al irea, swimming seems
to be almost a1 necessary a means of
locomotlO!: as Walking. ' ·
To ensure that swimming skill 11 IC•
quired by all who need It, several COJTl4
munitie1 have initiated swimming Jn·
struction ln ·their summer recreation
prorram1 •.
Ift Laguna Beach, Mlasion Viejo, and
San Clemente, organized swimming ln-
strucUon programs are now under way
and will be coqUnWng throughout the
summer.
In Laguna Beach, five ~ons of nine
dafly hall ·hour claue1 are ·1olng on, but
the classe11 for U:te summer are now full,
said Mrr. Mary Wormald, chief lifeguard,
By the end of the summer, nearly 1000
youngsters wUI have been taught to
swim.
At MisMon Viejo, a full slate of classes
Is offered for" mothers and toll,
youngsters and adults In beginning, in-
termediate, and advanced levels at the
Ml8Slon Viejo Recre&Uon C.enter.
~Ix •esslons will be beld through 5ept.
S. Adult classes will be held during eftl:>-
lng hours. Fee is '6 for members and •15
for non-mem.Qera. ·
In San Clemenle, a 'joint 'City.-
Capistrano Unified School Dlstrlck~
gram will !Jlak• 1Wlmmln1 'inllfucilOn
available to all who Uve wilhiD'}be ldloal
district Including Dtna Poiltt, san laan,
Capl!lrancJ' Beach ·and _pOrja · of ti......;
Nll!U"L · ~ -,< ~-~-~ '"""" thiee--11';.....,. ~day ell..., wll!· be,l!Old 1t' the ·SY. Clementi
m1D1iClpal .,001. ~· l!u\1a\l awllnm<rl"'must be ·at !Wt' alx-yeara di
age. ,Plfst ...,..,, starled · Monilay.
Cla*s meet from I 1,mlto nooo. Fee ii
$1. l -7 '
T~ay's Flnal
'N.Y. Stoeks
'
TEN CENTS
• 1ve
Breath Stops
During Trip
To Hospital
SAN BEil!iAilinNO (APJ - A I-year·
old bo)' miallll ID ...U.ta1ns since Satur-
day was ·found today lying in a :mow
patch. AuthorlUtll aald be stopped
~rt!athlng while beina Ialcen by bellcopter
to a tmpltal and Waa 1 given mouth-to..
mouth resuscitation.
Upon ll'rival, t team of doctors worked
over Matthew JOlepb Zlmmerman. They
said be was in seriouJ condition suffering
from exposure.
Two youths, vohmteer searchers Crom
San Bernardino,. found the boy about 9
a.m. at an altitude ol more than a mile
near Barton ll"lats, where snow still
lingers in patches from a record winter
fall,
At first the lad's condlUon w11 reportf.d
as good, and tears came to the eyes of
men at a base camp for a four-day
search. Later, however, came unofflclal
word h15 condition was "not good:"
Sheriff's Sgt. Ollie Gray, traveling In
the copter with the boy, gave the mouth-
to-moutb resuacltaUon ln the copter and
continueCI unW he was taken to a cllnlc ;i.t
Norton Air Force Base.
The boy wandered away Saturday from
a campgraond where his family wu on
an outing. rmtng a search, by 200 men at
one time, trackers followed b.ls footprint.I
but c:ouldn' find Matthew.
When.be WU dJaco>ered lhiJ morning
he was. about a mile and one half upbW
· '""'1 tilt eamPlll'CJUDd. "Wa mow be's ........t hlacktop Roule
38 at least twice,'' aaJd Sgt. Gray, "The
tlllle Ill¥ b oegotlatlng terrain yoo Just
wooldll't' btlilVe."
'Ille "'8l'd> ireo Includes heavy timber
ll1d ~. """"' open areal and
fut-m0vtn1 mountain ltreamJ witb an
OCCf'\aial eabln along. the bankl.
Some people Uve in the area, deputle,,
said, but most of the cabins are UDOC·
cupied and unatocked with food.
Five Arrested
On Narco Counts
Three juveniles and two adults were
picked up Tuesday by Laguna Beach
police on a variety of narcotica charges
Including P"""S6ion of beroin.
Of the adults, Eugene La Force, 34, of
Long Beach was booked on a charge of
pouessiOJl of ~oin, and Timothy Eric
WUey, 20, of Madia, was booked on
charges of possession or dangerous drup
and marijuana.
The ~ were made at 190 McAulay
Place after a 1herur1 deputy and Laguna
Beach Sgt. Norm Babcock went to th•
residence to terVe a warrant · charging
unlawful possession of dangerous drU&I
by Alfre<l,James De Stefano, 20, of lb.al -Taken into evidence were a variety ol
pi1ll belleved by oUlcers to be llllcij
Jffup, a mtall quanUty of bashish, a
marijuana dgaette and several small
packages of beroin, Police LI. Frank
Scbopen aid today. .
La F°""' remained In police cuslod1 lhiJ. ""'"'111g. Wiley put up 1312 ball and
the juvenllel ...... -to theJr porenla, Yo Sch6pen sajd. ~
Oran1• Cout
We•tller
The sun will make its perfuno-
tory appeartnce Tlwnd111, afte>-
,_,,, but otherwlte !I'll be mootly
ctoucty with temperatures In the blP Ill's along Ule Mage CouL
INSIDE TGDA 't'
. Two of th< foltesl l/OChtl •!loo• tonoi. thjl .,,.,kend ..
Wind......i POS!O(Jt mttil Black·
fi• far-Ult CllU/0nti4 Cup. Boo~
Ing, P091 D.
-'e c........ I t1 ==-"' .. .:: -' ..
-h :::C"-.. .. ==· .... -,_ -..., -. ---. ,_ . -
•
L..... tt ......... -.. ...._., a.n .............. --.. ~(MW 11 --.... .... ... °'· "7 =• 11 ----.. ---. ....,. _ ..
• •
--1 -----~
I D&n;y PROT EDIToRLu, PAGE l
Laguna's Flood Menace
We've been warned.
Engineer~ from two governmental agencies laid it
on the line for Laguna Beach councilmen and a .hand·
lul o1 spect8tors last week .
They described th e very real flood hazards that
face Laguna Canyon and the downtown basin.
Engineers, tor instance, pointed out that the recent
lloods which wreaked canyon havoc. were only one
fourth the volume of a flood termed "Intermediate Re-
gional Flood" that could arrive any time -like next
"'lnter.
The candid conversations were the upshot of a
study of Laguna Canyon. its eight-square mile water
shed and its i•fiood plain" from about ~ mile upstream
of El Toro Road to the sea.
The U.S. Army Corps ot Engineerio' ~tudy-a first
in Orange County-showed many things. ,
It showed inadequate flood checks. The existing
drainage channel didn 't cut the ntllstard this time and
it certainly wouldn't in a bigger flood .
\Vorse, the flood plain (path ot drainage and flood·
Ing) is populated with pe6ple and businesses.
Not only are the lives and property of occupa~ts on
the line in a bad flood, many of the structures m the
canyon actually hamper drainage.
For instance, one man's tence might force water
through another man's home. One man's bridge m ight
Jet go and cause a drainage obstruction that would
build a destructive head of water.
Oddly enough, a U.S. Army Corps ot Engineer~
study to come up wi\h recommended solutio~s was au·
thorized by Congress after World War JI . '1111s was ap·
parently due to nagging by persons hit in· floods of the
1930's.
But the authorized study was never tunded. It may
be now, with some more nagging. The: cost is onJy $30,·
000 to find out what Is needed. We need lo know.
The Orange County Flood Control District has rec·
ommended an up-<:anyon dam to serve as a water
check.
Better flood control ls essential. Until better solu·
tions can be tound, It may even become the moral re-
sponsibility ot concerned governmental agencies to rig.
idly control ri(ld limit building ill the Oood plain.
Money is one problem. Twice in recent years fiood
control bonds have been defeated on a county level.
Despite the ~Ort-sightedness of those who voted
0 no," money must be found for solutions. Growth in
the area is going to add to' runoff and increase the mag·
nitude of the problem.
'Time to Take a Stand'
"Perhaps we should not have been as diplomatic
and caretul and should have taken a strong stand tor
what we really believe in. Perhaps it's time to take a
stand."
Former Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
president Tom Johnston was speaking to fellow board
members about a new role for the chamber, a stand~
up..and·be·counted posture, instead ot kid.glove diplcr
1nacy.
This would be desirable when a consensus of the
chamber govt{rning board feel s a position is cailed for.
'rhe problem has been one of not biting the band that
!eeds since the chamber receives $35,000 from the city
for adverti sing and promotion of the city.
It's tough to blast one's financia l benefactor even
if the criticism seems deserved and the money has been
earned.
•
.. -' ~~I I-:.
L "SIC 'fMI wHoAI SIC 'EM / WHoA' .. . . ~ . . .
Truth-in-Lending
Vs. Buying Habit
lmproprie~y
Question Has
·Been Removed
6a11ies of Senatorial Cat-and-Mouse
Busineases wblch offer credit are gear·
ing up -with new printed forms and
t1alesma.n training -for the Consumer
Protection Act of 1968, which takes effect
July 1. Popularly tagged truth-in·lending.
the Jaw is designed to let buyers and bor·
rowers learn clearly and unequivocally
\vhat they must pay for merchandise and
credit.
Much merchandising In recent years
haa been carried on, for example, on the
$1-down-$1-weekJy basis, with the option
left to the tnzyer to cumpve the total
weekly insta11mcnl$ with the original
purchase price.
NOW "REGULATION Z," a Federal
Reserve Bo1rd publicaUon of rules to
lend and sell by, has been dispersed
across the nation to acquaint affected
businases with the law, whose en·
forcement is the responsibility of nine
federaJ agencies, chiefly the federal
Trade Commission.
''Finar;ce charges" and ' ' an nu a I
percentage rate" must be printed more
conspicuously than surrounding material
fin conlrast to the sometimes .. read the
fine print" caution). Finance charges
i . -~ -·-· . ,,
Guest Editorial '
must list "the works": interest, loan fee.
credit investigation fee. cost of life or
other insurance associated with a tlmc
purchase, and any amount paid as a
"discount," service or carrying charge.
BUYERS ANO borrowers not gifted in
the "higher math" for discovering the
full price of an item or money acquired
"on time" may raise eyebrows momen·
larily when the whole cost·picture stares
them in the face. One effect may be to
prompt shoppers to hunt around for the
"best financial deal," since final cost
answers will be available for easy com·
pari son.
With the national habit of living on next
week 's or ne.xt year's paychecks well in·
grained by now, we seriously doubt the
r.ew truth·in·lend!ng disclosures will
permanently divert many Americans
from their buy·oow, pay·laler way <>f life.
Tbe Times-Picayun'J
New Orleans
Just to Stay Even ...
IF YOUR
1958 INCOME
WAS···
$3,000
$5,000
$7 ,SOO
$10,000
$20,000
$50,000
$100,000
·IN 1969 YOU
MUST EARN, JUST
TO STAY EVEN·-
-$3,8~6
-$6,332
$9,~17
$12,543
$24,888
$63,160
A PERCENTAGE
INCREASE OF··
21,.;
27%
26%
25%
24%
26%
-24%
The effects of inOalion and taxes are illu.str1ttd In lhis chart. A married man
with two children who earned $7,500 in 19~ must earn in 1969 ab<>ut 26 percent more
to be u "well oil."
.--------Bu Geo,.,e ---------
ow Gforp:
I met thll ltllow •I ~ offict and
be ...... perleetly nle<, hannl"'
llld courtooua. SOme of ti>< other litil lnlllt ht to an awful wo~. How
can l find i( It b true be la a wolf!
I've teeepttd l.D lovl&.al[on for 1
candlellght dinMr 11t his apart· ment.
WONDERING
Dear Wondering :
What are you writing mt for? I
can 't think of a better way to find
oul
To the Editor :
Please be advised that 1tr. Arthur
Strock has removed any question of im·
propriety th.at may have arisen in con-
nection with his conduct l<> which you
referred in your June 7, 1969. issue
regarding the O'Donnell case .
CLAUDE M. OWENS
Judge of the Superior Courl
fl.fr. St rock, while acling as altor.
nc11 representing Dr. f.1errill <.:. O'·
Do11ncll in Judge Owens' court, dren1
a co·mp /aint frotn tile judge that he
. . Mailho~;
appeared io bt f loutiiig Ca no n 22 of
tlie Cauon.t of Professia11al Ethics
1vl1e11 lie cited a previot{s/y rejected
de cision during law and motion ar·
gu1ne-111.s. Judge Owens ' letter reports
the r esult of /.f r. Strock 's response
to the judge's request to him /or com·
men l.
-Editor
itloral Aspects, Too
To the Editor :
Recently critics of sex education pro·
grams hav• voiced I.heir opposition
dramatically and emotionally. Their ma·
jo~ objecti<>n is that their children are
being influenced away from the mor-.Jjty
<>£ church and home and being in·
· doctrinated into the "new immoraUty"
taught in sex education programs.
Statistics show that there has been a
r ise in unwed pregnancies and venereal
disease in America today. This is an in·
dication that the youth of today are im·
properly instructed in the m<>ral aspect of
sex.
WHERE DO THE.!E children get their
misinformation! If parents cannot <>r will
nol teach their chlidren about sex, and in·
still in th~fn a healthy attitude, the
children w!ll look for inrormation
elsewhere. Ttleir whole knowledge about
sex will be derived from discussions with
their equally uninformed, or worse yet,
misinformed peers. .. Children .me curious by nature, and
they will seek out the forbidden in·
formalion so lhat they can satisfy their
curiosity. They will read as many filthy
b<>oks as they can find and they will
eagerly accept the moral attitudes of
their "more experienced" friends.
ANAHEl1t1 JlAS A four-year-old se.:<
education program taught in the seventh
·through twelfth grades. This course in·
tegrates the bi<>logical, psychol<>gical. and
moral aspects <>! sex educnti<>n. It
emphasizes that the sex act demands the
knowledie, trust, security, maturity and
Ule Jove found in marriage.
Once the need for sex education has
been recognized, what must be done to
ensure that there Js a sex education pro-
gram taught In tne community thlit Is in·
formative, moralistic and relevant to
society?
IF A SEX education program exists in
your con1munity, investigate Its aims and
methods. Talk to the teachers and to the
students. The students' attitudes arc Jn-
dicaLive of the succeu of the program.
If a sex educali<>n course does not ex·
1st, study the programs taught In other
communltles and write to SIECUS, Sex
lntonnalion and Educatklti Council of the
United StaLts. New York, N.Y., for in-
formation rt:8arding organizing and in·
ilia ting a program In your community.
FRANCES 01,DENBURG
Student at UCl
More Tarnish on Congress
\VASHINGTON -President Nixon,
who has been slow in filling top govern-
ment jobs, is now having some of his ap.
pointments delayed by games of
senal<>rtal cat.and-mouse.
Senate leaders of both parties are in·
volved. The result is a little more tarnish
<>n the lack·lustre facade of the current,
9lst. Congress.
The Senate has always been zealous in
carrying out its constitutional responstili·
ty to "advise and consent" on presiden·
tial nominations. In the past, however,
rather precise criteria were applied in
considering presidential appointments.
The old formula, as the late Sen.
1~obert A. Taft, R-0 .• <>nee explained it,
gave a president wide latitude In selec·
ting top aides, provided that an appointee
<I) was not clearly incompetent to do the
job assigned, and (1) had not been guilty
of an <>ffense involving moral turpitude.
THERE WAS another· proviso. A single
senat<>r cou ld block a presidential ap-
pointment on grounds that the nominee
was "personally obDO'li<lUs," but such an
objection could only be applied t<> a
nominee (rom a senator's own state lo a
federal position within that state.
Now a nominee can be oppQSed on
grounds of prejudice, personality, or even
pique. This is bow things have been going
for President Nixon :
DR. JOHN H. KNOWLF.S -President
Nix<>n hadn't even nominated Knowles.
his choice to be assistant HEW secretary
for health. when Senate Republican
Leader Everett M. Dirksen, Ill., an·
nounced weeks ag<> that he would figh t
Kn<>wles' appointment. With the post still
unfilled, Dirksen restated his opposition
last week.
Knowles Is the director of the
prestlgloos Massachusetts G en e r a I
Hospital. The American Medical Associa·
lion opposed his appointment to the HEW
post because Knowles has supported
' -Alleµ;~olds..00.ih ·
f.' • J I .,. J
compulsory health care plans and other
liberal social welfare projects.
Dirksen, who professes great ad·
miration for Taft, has not real\y ex·
plained his opposition to Knowles.
Dirksen has noted that the AMA is op·
posing Knowles and he was reported to
have described the doctor, a fello\v
Republican, as a ''radical" at one closed·
door meeting.
O'M'O F. OTEPKA -He is the f<>rmer
State Department Security Officer who
was dem<>ted alter he privately slipped
some departmental data to the senate
Internal Security Subcommittee in 1963.
His' cause was quickly espoused by a
number of right wing groups, and he then
became a targat of the left wing.
At Dirksen's~ behest, President Nixon
nominated Otepka <>n March 20 lo be ·a
member <>f the nearly defunct Subversive
Activities Control Board. No one testified
against the nomination , and the Senate
Judiciary Committee approved it 12 to 3
more than a month ag<>.
Since that time the nomination ha~
been stalled and in a sort <>f limb<> on the
Senate calendar. The S e n a t e ' s
Democratic leadership. which attends to
such procedural matters , simply has not
scheduled the Otepka nomination for
floor consideration.
Eventually, the nomination will be ap-
proved. The word now is that action may
come this week after a few opponents,
mostly Democrats, air their objections.
which are keyed to the old secu rity mat·
ter and to the way Otepka raised money
to fight the long legal battle which
ensued .
CARL J . GILBERT -Tw<> Senate
committee chairmen are in a jurisdic·
tionat battle over Gilbert, who was
nominated by President Nix<>n <>n April 14
to be the U.S. special representative for
trade negotiations. a j<>b with am·
~sadorial rank.
Gilbert's nomination was approved by
the foreign Relations Committee, since it
is a foreign policy post. Then Chairman
Russell B. Long, D·La .. c<>mplained that
his Finance Commlttee, which created
the job. should have a say in filling it.
Long and Chairman J. William
Fulbright, D·Ark .. of the Foreign Rel.a·
lions Committee , have now agreed that
the Finance Committee can study the
nomina\ion for-up to 30 days. Then
Gilbert too, will probably be confirmed,
and he can get down to the rat.her im·
port.ant job of tariff negotiations.
\Vhile the President's nominaUon <>f
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger wa s
quickly and overwhelmingly approved
last week . by a vote of 74 to 3. the
reasons advanced by the three Burger
opponents fell far short of the old Senate
·formula.
SEN. STEPHEN M. YOUNG, D-0 .•
complained that an attorney wh<> opposed
Burger's nomination was not heard by
the Judiciary Committee in its hearings
and could not even get into the hearing
room. Sen. Gaylord Nelson. D·Wis .. said
he kne\v "nothing derogatory" about
Burger but had not been afforded a
chance lo examine his credentials.
Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D·Minn .. the
third nay.sayer. said Burger campaigned
against him in 1952 in a manner
ca!culaled to elicit "an em<>tional if not
prejudiced re sponse." McCarthy did not
attempt to employ the old personally ob·
noxious tradition <>n a broader base. It
was. as usual. just the lone McCarthy
voic!!, unheeded by his colleagues.
By Robert S. Allen
and John A. Gold1mltb
Pot Is Calling Kettle Black
11 has always amused me to hear
some p<>mpous business <>fficial stand up
in public and upbraid "the guvmenf' for
its massive bureaucracy and its absurd
spending policies. For I have teen enough
of private business establishments at
first-hand t<> know when a Pol is calling a
kettle black.
The ~hesis o£'these public denunciators
Is the "govment11 should emulate private
enterprise -but in the cases 1 have
personally observed, there is scarcely a
shade of difference between the two, ex·
cept that business is designed lo make
money, and government to provide
service.
THE BlJREAUCllACY IN a large and
thriving corporation is n<>t to be believed .
The wastas• is immense, and the level o!
-Dear -Gloomy
t Gus:
Our sharp-tycd Laguna B e a e h
parking meter men are able to
spot a red "vlolaUon'' at 100
paces, but always mlss seeing the
big delivery truck5 which park
UlegalJy in the alley between For-
est and Ocean Avenues, blocking
Jt off to the poor harassed motor-
ist searching for an honest parking
space.
-M. L.
,.,,.,.. ,,_,,_.., ... _.,, .. ·-· '• _...._-.. .. '""' . ·~
I • ~ , • . ~i'1g~y J, ff ar.ri~ .
I tJ"' 11 11,.•.._
'., ''-i,~.,..,J~ ..i.:, __ '$
competence not very high. l l is only the
essential viability or .:apitalism that
keeps some of these firms an°'-t -they
succeed despite their slogpy manage-
ment. -
Most of them are penny·wise and
pound-foolish. They will alienate their
minor employes by instituting some petty
economic refor1n (dealing with something
as ine<>nsequential as pencil·sharpene.rs),
and then squander millions on some
foolish scheme that tickles the vanity or
the .top executive -but which any un·
derling could tell him is a waste of funds.
IN FA.Cl'. one of the best argumenl-1
for capilallsm has never been advanced
in it..i; favor, for it Is too embarrassing to
mention -and that ts the lndispuLable
fact thal the system w<>rks so well, in the
business area, that It can withstand even
the mediocrity and mismanagement of
its custodians. It's hard lo lose money In
an expanding econ<>my.
The clostr one gets to the seat ot cor·
porate power, the more obvioos it
becomes that the system is irupportln1
these people, rather than I.be people the
system. Many of them ha vtn't even had
enough savvy to keep their own com·
panles under control -which accounts
ror the appalling number Of cotporate
takeovers and flcUtlous ''mergerg" ln the
last few years, The corporate
bureaucracy gets m top-heavy that its
legs arc amputated before its head begins
to know what is going on .
TIOS TS NOT meant to be a defense ot
lhe indefensible practices in government,
\\'hie~. should be m<>re tailored. efficienl,
and responsive to public needs -it is
simply to suggest thai. all bureaucracie:.
are pret ty much alike, no matter what
their professed philosophy may be. It's
just that the idiocies of government
becom·e a matter of public record, while
the in eJ)liliRlff of -business-am
camoufl aged by profits that are almost
impossible n<>t to make.
When businessmen take over an ad·
ministration , as in this Nixon era. they
will spend as much as their Democratic
predecessors ; the difference is in the
speeches, nat in the acti<>ns .
-----
Wed nesday. June 18. 1969
Th< tdltorlol page of the Dmlv
PUot sctkJ to inform ond 1tim-
tdott ,.,adtf't by pre.senHna this
ntW$p(lpn'I opinions ond com-
menlary on toptct of interest
and 11anificanct. by providing c
forum for the ezprc.s.sicm of
ou,. rtad1r1• op(nlon.t, and b.11
presenting th1 d.Wtr1t tliei!-
pofnts of fnJornttd ob1tnitr1
and rpokt"""' on topici of the c1av.
Robert N. Weed, Publi•her
' •• •
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I
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I
1
• Saddleba~k:. •
YOI:. 62, NO. ·145, 6 SECTIONS, 72 PAGES OR.+NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEONESOA Y, JUNE ·11,' 196t
Down the
Mission
Trail
San O emente
Up to 17,050
SAN CLEMENTE -The city of San
Clen'l!nte now l\as a population of 17 ,050
-·an increase ol 450 persons since April I
of .last year, according Lo an officia1 state
estimate.
The increase of 2.7 percent \\'ill mean
an additional $6,750 in revenue to the city,
which receives shares of state-collected
license fees and gasoline taxes based
upon the current population.
POpulaUon of the seaside resort has
nearly doubled since the federal census of
19li0 which llsted 8,527 residents.
·• Girls Win Whigs
MISSION . V[EJQ -Ten airline
stewardess students have won wings at
Saddleback College.
The girls, who served as hostesses dur·
Ing campus functions, are Peggy Barret
of Newport Beach, Cyndee Hendrickson
of Laguna Beach, Terri Hennan of
Laguna Beach, Pali Laney of Dana Point,
Joyce Leonard o( Tustin, Pat M<-:CarthY
()f Tustin. Kathy Scofield, San Clemente,
Debbie Shea of San Clemente, Debbie
Smith of Laguna Beach and Wendy WeW
of Tustin.
The college will add a second year to
the program in the fall
;e .Te.eller Gets G....t
MISSION VIEJO -Robert W. Olson, a
Saddleback College drafting • n d
engineering instructor, has rpived a
National Science Foundation grant to at-
tend a summer conference for engineer-
ing and social science instructors.
The conference, to be held August 11-22
at the University of Santa Clara, will in-
clude courses of study involving future
technology.
Olson was a project englneer for the
U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and
Atomic Power Equipment Department
engineer for General Electric before
entering education.
·• Photo Contest Set ' ffiVINE RANCH -Irvine's "Pathways
To Progress Week," June !i through 22
will feature a photography cont.est for
children under 12 years of age.
Youngsters are invited to take pictures of
&ites and activilies on the ranch.
Application blanks for the contest are
available from Irvine I n f o r m ._ t i o n
Center, at the Island House in Fashion
lsland, and the Irvine Gardens at Myford
Road and Irvine Boulevard.
.• Big SplflJlh Slat ed
MISSION VIEJO - A giant water fight
promises that the Mission Viejo Recrea-
tion Center will be wet and wild Thursday
and Friday afternoons.
Grades sj)t and above will fight it out
Thursday beginning at I :30 p.m. while
five and under will meet Friday at I :30
p.m. Each participant should bring an
empty hall gallon milk carton.
Hobi e Cat Maker
Sued far Di~orc~
Millionaire surfboard manu(acturer
Hobart Laidlaw "Hobie" Aller 1s charged
with "extreme cruelty" and "grievous
mental sufrerlng" in a divorce complaint
on file today in Superior Court.
Seeking an end to her 15-year marriage
to the Laguna Beach 11portsman is Mrs.
Sharon Diane Alter, 1073 Gav iota Drive.
Jn a complatnt that Seeks division er con·
siderable corrununity property a n a
business Interests, she asks for an
allowance of $50,000 a year plus monthly
beoerits of f100 ror herself and each of
her three children -Paula, 1 t, Hobart.
11 and Jeffrey, 7.
Mrs. Alter asks that the court restrain
her estranged husband from disposing of
any oC the sub&lantlal business hoklinp
and lnterells lhe palnstakln&lY dela!IJ in
her tJ.page filing.
She cites Alltt'1 control of surlbo8"!
ond catamaran coostructlon laciliU.. and
na1 estate in san.Jusn C.plltrallo, Dana
Poin~ Lake Elsinore and -1evtral out.of·
counl)o locations.
Alter Ill known In Orango CO.st boating
clrcles aa the dealgner.bullder of "Hobie
Cata" -the popular If.foot e1tamarans
that have triumphed In aeveral coastal
r-. He allO controlt Hobie Surlboardl
Inc.
0 oun ' ' --~-
La1aa's 7th' Hubby
Dante Escapes . .
Death, Not L~w-
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tM O.llY Plllt Stiff
Jet set hypnotist Dr. Ronald Danle -
Harbor Area entertainer and confidante
or stars -today faces a theft charge in-
volving $18,500 worth oC boats at a Costa
Mesa finn, after surviving a mysterious
murder atlempt Tuesday.
Santa Ana police recognlzed the name
in news rePorl.'i of the five-shot ambush
and tippff'. on Hollywood detectives who
arrested the ill-slarred sevenlh husband
of actr.ess Lana Tumer about '"llidnight.
The attack by a mystery gunman wear-
ing a rakish Australian bush hat earlier,
as Dante drove into his fashionable
office-apartment on Doheny Drive, left
him with only a cut on the face.
SHATTERED GLASS
The barrage of bullets shattered the
windshield of his car and be was nicked
by nying glass as he dove for lhe
floorboards during what authorities said
was the third attempt on his life.
Once before, a jealous lover who claim-
ed the hypnotist had alienated hia
girUriend, fired a .45 caliber pistol shot
at Dr. Dante during a San Dieio
nightclub performance.
He was not hit, and lawmen did not
elaborate Tuesday on the third alleged
murder attempt.
Dante"lras apparently aa shaken by hls
arrest•u • had been by the· murder at-
tempt earlier, telling authorities he knew
of n0 r~nr for either, until the boat
case "Wute:1plained. ·
"I don't know anyoile who woold want
to kUI me," he said, "unless tt would be
someone who is jealoUs about the woman
I just·manied. '1
6 OTllER HUSBANDS
Dante followed six other husbands
down the aisle with Miss Turller Jn a Las
Vegas wedding chapel six weeks 1go,
after they met at a fashionable discothe-
que three weeks earlier.
Tbe alleged attempted theft or sev'?n
motorboats belonging to the Marlin Boat
Co., 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, oo-
curred almost one year to the day before
Dante's marriage to the blonde star.
Miss Turner, 49, and her daughter
Cheryl, z, were present . when the
Singapore-born nightclub hypnotist WttS
picked up at their Sheraton-Universal
Hotel suite.
He listed his age as 49 during the book·
lng process and told police he has a doc-
torate in psychology from Singapore
University.
The former entertainer at the Villa
Marina nightclub in Newport Beach -
(See DANTE, Page Z)
..
ESCAPES MURDER TRJ·
. Star's Hush.nd Dante
'ElToroMan 1l
Held ·in. Shootout
Over Ex~ib.if e
. '
An El 'Toro man ls ·rn ·orange County
Jail f.oday charged with assau1t with in·
tent to commit murder after he allegedly
shot "out the tires of a car Tuesday night
in wh.ich his ex-wile and a companion
were riding.
Donald L. Winslow, 26, of 24172
Birdrock Drive, also threatened the pair
and fired five shots into the air from his
.36--caliber rifle, sheriff's deputies allege.
Sheriff's Capt. James Broadbelt said
deputies were alerted by El Toro service
station attendant William Maas.
Maas said a man, later identified as
Winslow, drove into the station and asked
him to "go up the road a piece and fix
some tires I shot out."
Winslow was captured shortly by the
California Highway Patrol while parked
behind a supennarket in J..eisure World
Laguna Hills.
111"1 ••'911H
'
IJarbor Tilkirag s-...pe
Dr. Ullom
Hits .State
TaxPlam
Laguna Beach Unified School District
Superintendent William Ullom warned
Tuesday night that passage or a proposed
state-wide school tax would ha\;'e "a
dev'°stating effect on our commynity."
Ullom and Laguna school trustees urg-
ed · that Laguniins write ·their state
a=blyman (Robert B.adhanU and
senator (John G. Schmitz) to urge defeat
of an assembly bill which would set up
such a t.u structure.
Board members were speaklni of
Assembly Bill 1878 which attempt.a to
equalize educational finances throughout
the state by imposing a slateWlde tax in
lieu of locallft'Oper1.y laies.
lt.s passage would mean taxpayers ln
Laguna Beach would pay higher property
taxes, and yet leas money would eo irito
local school ooffera, they said.
Opponents ol the bill also maintain ~at
ll will eventually destroy local control of
e~ucatlon. ·
'I don't d.lsqree chlldrtn In other
areas should have equal opporturrlUes,
but lhert are other waya ol financing
this. For o:ample, there is sales tu,"
said trustee Larry Taylor. He added,
"Every tUpayer in Laguna Beach lhould
be concerned ...
"For our community, it would be
devastaUng," ·0r. Wllllam .Ul l om,
super!nlmjent.ol J4una. Beach Unllled
School District, Uld of an assembly bW
~ ....... ~~ tM~ m...,.'tupayeri !Ownte
their repreoentatttu In !he ll!ate capitol
to tell !hem to vole agail!JI 1111 bill. •
Board mem~ were speaklnJ of
Assembly bill 1878 which 1ltein:pts to
equalize eaucatiooal flninces throughout
the state by lmpoeN a ·statewide ta:1 In
lieu of lot:al 'ph:iper1y taxes.
· Its· pawge woUkf mean ta:1pay.ers in
· Laguna Beach wooJd pay higher property
'taxes, and yet le• m<liey would go Into
local achoo! coffers, they said.
Opponents of \hf bill a1ao maintain that
it will eventually destroy local control of
education.
"l don't dlsagne chltdren tn .other
areas should have equal opportcrutJes,
but there are other ways of ftnancing
this. ·For example, there Is !ales tax,"
said tru~ Larry Taylor. He added,
"Ev>ry tazpayu In J.,aguna Beach lbould
be concerned ....
Stock M•rkets
NEW YORK (AP).-The stock market
closed almost even today, after an early
sharp advance, parUaUy buoyed by
bargain huntine;, slowed in I a t e r
trading. '(See quotations, Pages 20-21).
.. _ ......
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Work progresses on Dana Harbor. Orange County's
newest amall crart refuge. This ts aerial view look·
Ing east along coesUine toward ·san Clemente. Land
jutting into se& at extreme upper edge of photo is
Cotton's Point, site of President Nixon's White
House west. Work ,on harbor Itself involves con-
struction of temporary coffer dams w1thln bruit·
waters, pumping oUI If& water, lhen scraplng-ch'y
surface to make harbor bot.tom< . /' ,
,
'
. " : • . . f. -I . . \ t . /
'
DAILY r lt:oT SWI Plllfe
CHRIS HANCE CASTS OPF
Summer In the Swim
~. . ~ . . t ~~··+; 8 ~:~.~·1:',1··. . ' ' •• ' t •.
Slated· Along
South Coast
Fof tbe di;n~ of,the Orange County
southern coastal irea, swimmlng seems
to be almost as necessary a means. of
locomotlo1: as waUdng. '
To eMUte that swimming aklU ts ac•
quired by all who need It, several com-
munities have lnUiated IWimmlng 1n-
st'ruction in their summer recreation
p~ms ..
Jn Laguna Beach. Mlasion Viejo, and
San Clemente, organized swhrunlng in-
struct.ion programs are now wider way
and wlU be continuing lllroughout !he
summer.
In Laguna Beach, five ae,salons of nine
dally haU 1bour claues: are'1otng cm, but
the classes for lt)e summer are now full.
said Mra. Mary Wormald, chief lifeguard.
By the end of the summer, nearly 1000
youngsters will have been taught to
swim.
At Mission Vlejo, a full slate or cla1ses
ts offered for mothers and tots,
youngsters and. adults in begjnntng, In-
termediate, and advanced levels .. at the
Mission Viejo' Recreiltlon Center.
~i:1 sessions will be held 'through Stpt.
S. Adult classes ·will be he.Id durir1g even-
ing hours. Fee ii f5 for memben and '15
ror oon-manbers.
In San Clemente, • joint city.'
C.pistnno UnUied School Dlstrlct ··f>n>.
gram \\'Ill ![lake llW!mmin1 lnllfucllon
available to all who live wtthhrthe actioQI
dtstrlct including Dana Paint, San .luan.
C.pbtrano· Beach ·anc1 piita of lluuna
Niguel ,/ I -·
Three lh----1or11 ·"!'.'-day
cl.mea will befald 11 the ·SU Clejtieitle
l!IDlllCljjil ;p6oL ~· iiliidiiii\ swlinmerr'must be ·at· least' siI·Years cir ~Ffrst ..,.100 , starl.d · Monday. meet from I a.nyio noon. Fee ii
11. .
:
T,.Uy's FIUI
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
• ·I Ve
Breath Stops
During Trip
To Hospital
SAN eEilNARhmo CAPl - A f.ytar-
old boy miaalnir In mountains since Satur-
day was found today tying in a .snow
palch. Aulhor!Ues uld he stopped
breathing while being taken by bellcopter
to a holpital and' wu given moutb-to-
mouth resuscitation.
Upon arrival, a team of doctors worked
over Matthew JO&eph Zimmerman.
said.be wu in serious cood!Uoo su11·~~,
from exposure, >-'<&-c
Two youths, volunteer searchers from
San Bemardino,. (ound !he boy aboul •
a.m. at an altitude ol more than a mile
near Barton Flats, where snow still
lln'gers Jn patches from a record winttr
!all.
At first the lad's condition was reported
as good, and tears came to the eyes of
men at a base camp for a four-day
search. Lat.er, however, came unofflclal
word hl9 condition was "not good."
Sheriff's Sgt. Ollie Gray, traveling In
the copter with the boy. gave lhe moulh-
to-mooth resuacltation in the copter and
continued unW he was taken to a clln1c 01t
Norton Air Force Bue.
The boy wandered away Saturday from
a campground where his family wu on
an outing. During a search, by 200 men at one time, trackers foll!J'ftd bis footprints
but couldn't !Ind llatlhew.
lVben. he was clisoovered lhia morning
be "11 about a mile and one balf upbll1
·Iron! 1lle eampgrouod. "W• lmow" be'.s mmed blacktop Route
31 at least twice," said Sgt. Gny. "The
little lllY la .. gotlatlng terrain you just waoldl\'I' bel!M."
'l1>e IWCb area lncludea heavy timber
anct wicler!>ruah. 10111e open areu and
fuWnovtni mountain 11.reams With an
OCCflional cabin alOng !he banka.
Some P.eQple live tn the area, deputies
said, but moat of the cabins are unoc-
cupied and unatocked with food.
Five Arrested
On Narco Counts
Three juveniles and two adults were
picked up Tuesday by Laguna Beach
police on a variety of narcotlcs charges
Including pouesaton of heroin.
Of the adults, Eugene La Force, 34, of
Long Beach was booked on • charge of
possession of heroin, and Timothy Eric
Wiley, 20, of Arcadlti,, WU booked on
charges of possess.ion of dangerous drugs
and marijuana.
The arrests were made at 190 McAulay
Place after a sherifrs deputy and Laguna
Beach Sgt. Norm Babcock wen t to the
residence to terve a warrant· charging
unlawful possession of dangerou.s drug!!
by Alfred,James De Stefano, 20, or that
add,reas. Ta•en Into evidence were a variety of
pilll believed by oUlcera to be llUcil =.:a ci~~~ua~ ~ve~~~al~
packages of heroin, Police Lt. Franlr:
Scbopen uld loday.
La Force remained In police custodJ
lhls.mornlng. Wiley put up 1311 ball and
!he juvenlla were releued In !heir
porenll, Lt. Schepen said.
Cou&
Weadier
The sun wW make lie· perfuno.
tory appearance Thurllday after--
noon,1 but otberwile lt'll be moitly
cloudy wllh temperatures In !he
high 80'1 a1ona !he °""8• Coast.
' INSIDE TODA~ ' 'TIDO of the falell flGCM•
•!loot tonoI• tlll# .... ktnd .,
WindlOOrd PC1114d1 lnffl< Blaolc·
fi• for Ill< CaUfomi4 C•p. BOC!~
ino. Pagt 29.,
-)w ~-J n
-l"'r " ~ .... It• -.. 0111 .. b ij: .. " ... . ... ... • .. ·--1,:::. •
........ 1•· ... a...,.,_ • ....._ , .. -.. --. ..............
--11 -----Dr .......... It ._....,..,.INI -. -.... -. WttN -••
\
. . • J ClllY PMT L W..,,,.U.lM, '1 .
Ullom Will Uolltinu e El "
Morro a'raffic Fight . I . . ~ t,l:;: . . '
=...,.. --tal&1 .,.. •to push their llgbl for reduc-
ed llm1ts near. El Morro School to
....... blyman Boben E. Badham (!l-
Newport B<adl) and the Irvine C<>mpeny.
:. Sc;bool Superintendent William Ullom
-. Wicalod at 'llJUday ni&hl'• school board
• ..... that he WU moll diasappoinled in
: refuaal by state officials to cut back
speeds on Pacific Cout Higbwt.)' near
"
, Soil Report
On Can yon
:'Due Tonight
Councilmen tonight lake up a soil
enginetring and geologic report on poten-
tial terrain hazards in the Laguna Can-
yoo area. The report, expected to play a part In
the city's current general plan study.
details suspected problem areas and
recommends: r
-C:onsideration be given to restricUng
improvements on property subject to
poteriUal tmain hazards unUl remedial
action Is taken.
• -Soll engineering and engineering
geologic lnvesUgaUon should be required
'of developers) in order to ob ta In
building permil3 ln the Canyon Acres
Drive area.
-Storm drain Improvement of the can·
yon bottom and it.s major tributaries
would reduce the flood hazard and benefit
ttrrlan stability conditions.
-Fear vertical cut slopes In colluvtal
materials (porous alope washlnga) at the
rur of many residences are subject to
mudslide and should be lmpro-red by pro-
perly designed retaaining 1tructures.
-Excavation ot cut llopu and place-
ment of fill In the project area should be
accompll5bed only under supervision of a
.. qualified soil engineer and engineering
. 1eologlll.
The report by . W. A. Wahler &
• Aaaodates states that development of the
Canyon """' .,.. bu happened wilboot
• adequate iancf.use planning ID allow for
' ulating and potential l<rraln hawdl.
'"Ibe suspected old land.slide areas may
be actJvaled if a strong earthquake were
· to follow a long wet sea.son," it stat.el.
A map shows the two slide area.a
localed between Skyllne Drive and Can-
-yon At:res Drive. 'Jbe narraUve of the
· report describes them as b a v I n g
. llUspeded landsilda dlmemlons or 500
and t,000. feet.
~ The study is an aftermath of the winter
• atorm.s, including the Feb. 24 Ind ZS
ortonn which destroyed tl1tee Canyon
Acres residences and caused heavy
damage to oC.be:rs. The cJty1 evacpatt;cl the
area.
The clly ha.s In pMt week1 laced a
series of clalma from property owners
for Oood damage. Such cla,ima often are
a technical prelude ID lawsuJts. . . .
.~r 1• , 1 •
tlllocbool-Dlll'lhaltl!odlY. ' \lllamllld•=lltl .. alllltllalo ~·lillll \11!11 lo -.... -.... · YlaullJ, bGOn1 -..llld -DMilll! al '.Pd Cll1IGftlla •'Tllatlwo. la we Of an acoiaent. the
lo tllanl -with U.--II! JMlw. ....,. illlllil i...i tlaal tho drilW' QDUld never legally ban been in bUlhlni a lra!llc dpal lh "°" tllo -.cliOll -illotrtci .amte: iM drl'irnr Ill tho rlllhl until alttt h• completed Illa turn ~rnil~per-hour traffic to 15 milts when the school so bus drivers and other-onto lhe highway. I
El Morro School II In ....too. motorisll would have a bett<r view ol the In olj>er' bul~ Tueaday night,
Since. Ullom hu been advlled that highway. • Lquna lltll6ei:. • ·
tbey were mistaken in beli<ving that traf· BecaU!O the ochool drive la a private -Adopted a reoolullon !Or esvendlture
fie past the school coold be legally slowed drive, a buJ driver entering Cout of additional income which alk>w1 them
14 25 mites per jlour. Highway lro111 lb• elemelltary school bu lo lake 145,000 worth OI IW>ds nol
• . '
SCHOOL'S OUT -Dr. Norman Browne (left) bids
farewell to lh""' Laguna Beach school teachers
and a school board member who are retiring after
Browne are (lrom•left) Mniia. Margaret Bumbera,
Jean Tutue and Rulli BilllDglol) aDd board mem·
ber Robert Turner. -
•ervilli the district far a total of_5_9..:;y_ean_._w_tlh _________________ _
Three Teachers,
Trustee Leaving
School District
Three teaclten and one trullee from
lbe Laguna Bead> Unified School D~trict
retire this month.
Leaving the school district an QiJstee
Robert Turner, Mrs. Margaret Bumbera,
l\lrs. Rulb Blllingtoo, and Mrs. Jean Tut-
Ue.
Turner, a local realtor, has volunteered
hill time to the school diJtrict as .a trustee
for the past 13 years, serving as presi·
dent for one year. He has spent cin
estimated ten hours a week on the ~licy
and budget-making board.
Mrs. Bumbera, who worked with A1iso
first graders ln reading, has spent 22
years ~eaching. ?rtrs. Billington. with 1 t
years teaching ~ence, lnslrucled
first graders at El Morro, ~·hlle Mrs.
TuUJe, who worked wipi seventh grMers
at Thurston lntermedi81t\ has 23 years'
eiperlen<t In the ~m. . : . .
. . ' . .
Free University Plan
Before Council Tonight
A proposed r ... unlvenlly In Lquna
Beach that would minister to cmnmunlty
ills as well as educate will be back before
councilmen wnight in the form ol a legal
evaluaUon.
Public Comfort
Cost May Rise
For Lagunans
Will Lagunans stand still for a hike ln
pay toilet rates! Councilmen t o n I g h t
are to plumb the soc lo· economic
ramiflcaUons o( p proposed hike in the
cost: of publlc comfort.
Wllh the council agenda cornea a three.
page report from city attorney Jack
Rimel on the university proponents' re·
quest that the coundl recognize, endorse
and give financial aid to the project.
Dr. John Wallace, a UCI associate pro-
feMOr, had requested city assistance for
the project at a May 21 COW1cll meeting
and that the matter was referred t.G
Rimel.
The attorney said the university is just
getting started, that articl!!s of incorpora·
tion were filed with the state March 21.
Rimel said the city could acknowledge
this· fact but said he did not believe the
city could acknowledge that a "going
university" actually e1ists without lurth.
er invesligalion.
. .
~ .... ;.,...a;-..1111o · _;.... wm.;,.;wU..,;..,.,jll(n.Jane
the generll 'tutm. -. , BQyd. Wllco1e:n ,wu not present Tuesd1y
"We are Ulnarerrlng a\btt l'llOJ'ti'.,~ evening and Mn: Boyd will be absent •t than netdtd," said Edward1lbtd, dbtrlct ' . business manager. lie .said out 61 the the next. gat.lierlnc.
money. ~.000 would go ~~en -Approved hirinl of 19 summer 5Chool
salaries and $2{>,000 would 10 ·!Or other teachers and seven 1ubstitutes at a rate
aalariel of tnstructlon. -----or $8 per hour to teach 19 courses which
-Delayed to July l the swearltlg In or range from elementary and intermediate
new. board membera or,. '.Norman chorus to intermediate art.
C.oll~ge Aid Bill
• I
Cl~ars Assembly
A. bill that ~ould provide $6 million in
&avmgs for South Orange Coast tax·
payers of saddleba<:k JwUor College
District has passed another hurdle in the
at.ate Lea;islature. ...
With Supt. Fred Bremer and board
Trailer Park
Expansion. Set
At El Morra··
'
B&JTtng any last mlrn.ite appealJ today,
the Et Morro Trailer Park will begin con·
slruction this year on an additional 96
trailer spaces just north of Laguna Beach.
Although the El Morro Investment Co.
has the bleiising of both the Orange C.Oun·
ty Planning Commission and the Irvine
Company, the Laguna Beach City Coun.
cil has written to the county commi5s1on
requesting denial of the application.
The addiUon lo the 203-space p a r k ,
the city council wrote, would me.an in-
creased problems in both traffic and sew-
age.
The county planning ~ion de-
nied the city's request, and S p.m. today
1s the deadline for any further appeals.
The Laguna Beach Planning Commis-
sion A-tonday night sent a Jetter.., to l h e
city council requesting the counCq appeal
the decilion due to "the Lremendous traf·
flc haiard occurring al thi! location."
But when the councU officially receives
the letter al tonigjll's 7:30 mtellng, it
will be too late for effective action.
In addressing the county planning com·
mission, J .W. Peyton of El Morro said
t he pa,rk could handle triple the sewage,
and that the traffic problems are created
by general condition of the blihway and
are not related lo the park.
When constructed, the park, woold ex-
'ist on an interim basis. 'The t~year lease
from the Irvine Company ia not renew-
able.
CondlUons laid down by the county com·
mission stipulate that the El Morro Tn·
vestment Co. will be required to build
acceleration and deceleration lanes onto
Coast Highway.
member Hans Vogel looking on, Senate
Bill 508 Monday cleared the Assembly
education finance subcommittee and was
sent lo the ways and means committee.
From there the bill, if still alive, ge>es
lo the full education committee and then
to the Assembly floor. It previously pass--
eel committees ol the state Senate.
The trip tG Sacramento Monday lo
\\.'atch progress of th e bill was the fourth
for Supt. Bremer. Saddle back represen·
tatives have not yet been called oo tG
speak.
The legislation, introduced by State
Sen. Donald Grunsky (R·Watsooville),
woold make funds available lo new junior
college districts establlshed after 1964.
based on student enrollment projections
five years in lhe future.
Because allocaUons are now based on
current enrollment, new junior colleg~
districts with low initial enrollment
because of limited course offerings do not
receive much state aid.
Saddleback waa orie of three junior col·
Jege districts in the state that did not
receive a sbart of the statewide junior
college bond issue passed last June.
The expected cost of construction and
equ ipment purchase for the next five
years for Saddleback is $14. rnillioo. Uthe
Grunsky bill passes and tbe slate con·
tributes $6 million the local taxpayers
share wilJ be $8 million. That much is
covered by the $9.S million bond issue
pwed last year.
From Pagel
DANTE .••
still shaken by the murder attempt -
spent several hours in the West
Hollywood sheriff's station belore release
on $12.500 bail.
Dante, who rented a Costa Mesa apart-
ment during hJs booking at the baysido
spa, told Los Angeles Sheriff's Sgt. Ray-
mond Gott he believed the theft cue had
been dismissed.
Ron Snyder, of 2320 College Drive,
Costa Mesa, said he caught Dante in the
act of supervising theft of the fleet of lS.
boats May 5, 1968 at a now-defunct Sanla
Ana boatyard.
Laguna Goodwill Victim
Talk about lhe vanishing flve~nt
·cigar, the Pacific Nik.Q.Lok Co. -for
years the city's public comfort turnkey -
·has recommended that pay toilets join
the inflation 5plral.
Not.lng U:at the city Is having new steel
partitions installed at one comfort sta·
tion, the company suggested by JeUer:
The city attorney also su ga:ested that
the council might wish to detennlne if the
free university ls carrying out the pur·
poses stated in its articles before giving
endorsement to the project.
Rimel stated that the ctty could give .
financial assistance ln cert.tin areas such
as community health and recreation.
Another condition demands the detailed
1andsca:~ plans be approved by the plan·
ning comini~ion. The other eight condi·
tions deal with building codes, parking
facilities and underground uUUtles.
Snyder 'and hJs brother Paul are
partners in the Marlin firm, which
markets the boats at Mesa Boat Center,
!SSS Newport Blvd .• and had been trying
to work out a deal with Dante.
"He was an elu&lve character," said
Paul Snyder today, "he'd call us from
Las vega il and try lo get us lo ship then1
to him C.O.D., which of course we refus.
eel to do." Ashes to Be Scattered
. • ? • t •.
The ashes of popUl1r SouUt' Lagunan
Gerald Comstock will be &cltf.eied at aea
-the sea that cost h~ life abbatd the W·
fated yacht Goodwill.
The body of Comstock, 47, :a· hulbaPd
and father, has been crematid. bl
EMenada, Me:i:., the seaport that the
Goodwill didn't make. The ashes are to
be r9turned to SheiOer Mortuary in San
Clemente.
Mr. Comstock. 32202 Vlsta de Catalina,
Upper Three Arch Bay, was one of nine
aboard the Goodwill on a trip !rom Caho
San Lucaa to Ensenada.
The vessel dled on the reel Sacramento
about 200 miles south of San Diego. The
reef was named for an historic wreck
DAILY PiiOT
OIWf~ COUT '°"M WllMCI ~y
a.Hrt "· w • ..1
t-. ..,......., .......... llfllr
J1clr •~ Curr.., Vici_~ ... 0.ntl'~ Mtnntr •
.about 1DO years ago.
'nie oaly other body '!0und . lro!n lhe
.wrecked vessel was that of Tim Smith,
1~ or · 18842 Senta Marina, FOWltain
Valley.
Mr. Comstock, an eledricilln, was a
caplaln in the Marines in World War II
belore he wu 21 years old. Soon pro-
moted tG major, he was the youngest
Marine major in World War 11.
He was a member of the Second
Marine Division and led his men in the
bloody landing& on Tawara and Salpan,
serving from 1941 lo 194.5 in the bitter
South PacllJc fighting .
A rtsldent of the area a1nce 1959, Mr.
Comstock was born ln San Francisco and
was graduated from San Mateo Junior
College. He was 11thletic, known for his
==-~ of volley~l, and was a good
Mr. ~ ls survived by his wile,
Barbara ol tllojamUy)lome. a teacher at
11-t&rCD Forster Jupior High; a son, Nell,
S: and a daughter, Qfu, IS.
".,.Now would be an ideal time for
you to give consideration to having all of
·the new equipment which will be installed
designed to operat.tt QO a ten-cenl rather
than a ftv~rit com." ' '
· '"l''oe city of Newport. Be.acb made this
· changetOver severaf years ago •M ha!
Rising costs or publlC comfort ls ap-
parently an international trend.
The annptny Jt.ates It hal been going
on tn the U.S. and Canada for the ·past
ttve or lix yean. "We YetY seldom
receive requests today for a five-cent
coin lock equipment," the letter states.
Road Decision
Delays Complex
In Boat Canyon
A propcsed 44-unit residential complex
above Riddle Field in Boat Canyon wW
have to remain just a proposal until the
county and city come up with a defb:Jite
future location for Campus Drive,
Laguna City Planners decided Monday
night.
"Ccr.tain olher activities, however,
Stich a! general education, legal services
and draft coomeling would not in the opl·
nlon or this office be incloded within
allowable activtUes which a city could
subsidize out of public funds," Rimel
wrote.
If the city should chose lo subsidize the
project, Rimel recommended that the
university segregate on a trial basis the
services which the city could legally help
finance.
At the earlier mteling, councilmen
agreed that they would want considerably
more infonnaUon about the project
before loosening the pu rse strings and
gi\•lng endonement.
The expansion will be on the ·northeast
side of O>ast lllgbway and approach the
sGulheasl boundary of El Morro SChool.
2 Captured, 2 at Large
SAN BRUNO, Calif. <UPI) -Four
prisoners at the San Francisco County
Jail slid down IS knotted blankets Tues·
day night In an escape attempt, but two
wer e quickly apprehended.
Still at large Wednesday were twG ·
fugitives identified as Joe Jojolla, 25,
!!harged with armed robbery, and Claren-
ce Galindo, 18, accused of petty thelt.
BLACK STAR SAPPH IRE
Truly •11 •ll'lfulsi .. !1wt l , •• "0111 •f
• kind."
Sp1c.i1llv d11i911'4 plt t111•"' 111eu11+-
l119 '"'Dr1c.H witll ~ .1.,111c.t •f
d!1rnonth. '
$1200.00
The· Costa Me.a boat company ex·
ecu Uve said Dante was a secreUve
person and it is unknown why he was
trying to buy the seven motorcraft.
Earlier, Ron S11yder told authorities
Dante had given them a worthless check
for $17,460 ln payment for the boats, but
promised to deliver the purchase pric.e in
cash when the paper bounced.
A surprise visit lo the Santa Ana yard
v.•here the boats were built for the Costa
11esa firm early J\.1ay 5, 1968, led lo
discovery of the alleged theft in progress,
Snyder said.
•• .. n, ••• ic • ..,11
Mr. eo~·s suhrlvors also include
hi•-lliOtW, AUoa Comatock _of LajJuna
Beach, hli father, Nell of Redwood City
and his sister Mrs. Paul Eaton of
The. (our-lo six--lane highway, which
would link the inland frteway with coast
H~ay, will wind lbroogh Boat Canynn
on 5Ull undetmnlned route. The county
h , oflettd lbroe lupe&tlonl for the
route, and the clly e~ depart.
meal baa come Ill' l!ilb a IQU!1l\.
D..1911.4 "•ft~ yo• 111 '"i11d • • F,.11t
... •u, ,..,flllflc111t .~oll1etio11 ot4fniol!d•
,., crt•f ilJfllt, .,.., ...... th11 !~· ,, ••.
lnu"' ll'I01~+.cl 4.JO c1r1t y101w
i f1molld, witlt 1t1ttic~lo111ly 1ppoh1t.J
«li1111trtd1 I• tilt ro11N.
• ....
TA'"''' A. M1rplti1•
"""""'"' •dilat
l i1lt1r4 P. N1R ·--(~ ··-
Cupertino. .
· Attorney Rich~ Miidge Is bandlini a fuDd set up h)'"fiiends·or the ComstocU
to search the area. lt has included 19
hours of hellcopler search of the vicinity
and use of a diving team.
Friends 11ald that Mr. Comstock bad
been recently Involved in electrlca1 !ft.
stallations for . the new Laguna·Pl-toult.on
Playhouse that is ntarinl CO!DPl•Uon.
' ':
Council Studies
Art Show Plan . '
Given city council 1pprov1T, Park
Avenue between COast Hl&hway Md
GJ..,,eyr. SU..t·may bO 1h< scene ol·an art llhc>w July 4.
CooncUmtn IDnlght will tsl<e up lhe ,..
quest by Chamber or Commerce Prtsl·
dtnt Hany Lawt1'.11C't to bold a one daJ
Jrt fesllval, alm.Uar to the , auccasful
Memorial D.,-Sidewalk Art ShOfl, 1
U approved, tho chamb'!-r.d
abow would .ha ltqed from 7 un. ID 1 p.m.
Until the proc:IJe alignment b .,labllsh-
cd, the 6.21 acre development proposed
by arc:i\ii.ct William Blurock and engi-
ftlll" Bernard Syfan will remain on the
drawing boalds.
In other 1ctlon MCN>day nigh~ tbe pl ...
lllng c:ommlulon :
--Oefemd action .., a PfOl'O'AI by
'Lynn 1. Muir Auoc:._19-eonstruc:t a pl ...
ned resldenUal deVelopment for five
slnll• cl,I~ on aeven undeveloped R-~1' al! Iola in tbe ~
0
block of.
'PlaaMn will lnve!llcate tho, _.1
In a ltu' session wbltt enci-n determine Sonora can be -over
lh• steep a ~I ol Ardi -.Rlfllilb. -AJfowed 1'. arufMri. l.auence lloyd,
1Ms Sk)'llne r., to canUnue tllelr china. ~~a..M' roe_ 8l\Qtl1er yoar, whtn ;.rl&I-.~ni.iOat~ ~·~ ~W the
g~or':~ :=titor~
a1 I &S\lt does not include overnight
kenneling of pets.
L
$3750.00
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N~Y. S~
,.
YOL. 62, NO. l~S. ~ $ECTIONS, 72 PAGES ORANGE COU WEON~SDAY, JUNE It, 1969 • TEN CENTS .
•
Lana's Mate
, • I
Faces Mesa ' -'
Theft Rap
By ARTlllJR R. VTNSEL
0t 1111 o.11r '1111 s""
Jet set hypnotist Dr. Ronald Dante -
Harbor Area entertainer and confidante
of stars -today faces a theft charge in·
volving $18,500 worth of boats at a Costa
Mes~ firm, after surviving a mysterious
murder attempt Tuesday.
Santa Ana police recognized the flame
In news reports of the five-shot ambush
and tippe<'. orr Hollywood detectives who
arrested the ill·starred seventh. ,huaj>ahd
of actress L.ma Turner about :ntdnight.
The attack by a mystery g(inman wear-
ing a rakish Australl11n bush hat earlier,
as Dante drove . into his fashionable
offil.'e·apartmept on Doheny Drive, left
him with only a cut on the face.
SBAt:FERED GLASS
Th'e barrage of bullets shattered the
windshield of his car and he was nicked
by fl ying glass as he dove for the
floorboards during what authoriUes said
was the: third attempt on his life.
Once before, a jealous lover who claim-
ed the hypnotist had alienated his
girUriend, fired a ,45 caliber pistol shot
.at Dr. Dante during a San Diego
nightcllib performance.
He ·was not hit, 811d lawmen did not
elaborate Tuesday on the third alleged
murder attempt.
Dante was apparently as shaken by his
atrt$t as he had been by the murder at-
tempt earlier, telling authorities he knew
of no reason for either• until the boat
case was explained.
"I don't know anyone who would want
to kill me," he said, "unl ess it would be
someone who is jealous about the woman
I just married."
t OTHER HUSBANDS
Dant~ followed six other hu ands
down the aisle with Miss Turner · a Las
Vegas Wedd.in& chapel sJx ks :tgo,
after they met at a fashiona discoth·e-
1ue three weeks earlier. /
The alleged attempted theft or ~v-en
motorboats belonging to the Marlin Boat
Co., 1595 Newport Blvd,,1Costa Mesa, oo-
curred almost one year.10 the day be.fore
Dante's marriage;: to the blonde star,
Miss Turner, 491 and her daughter
Cheryl. ZS, were' present when the
Singapore-born nightclub hypnotist w»s
pic~ed up at their Sheraton-Universal
Hotel suite.
He }.isted his age as 49 during the book-
Ina: .procesa and told police he bas a doc-
torate tr; ,,sychology from Singapore
University.
The former entertainer at the Villa
Marina nightclub in Newport Beach -
a;tlll shaken by the murder attempt -
\ spent several hours in the West
' Hollywood sheriff's station before release
I Dn $12,500 bail
Dante, who rented a Costa 1t1esa apart·
ment during his booking at the bayside
spa, told Los Angeles Sheriff's Sgt'. Ray·
mond Got~ he believed the theft case ha d
been dismissed.
Ron Snyder, of 232.0 College Drive,
Costa Mesa, said he caught Dante in the
act of supervising theft of the fleet of 16-
boats May 5, 1968 at a now-defunct Santa
Ana boatyard. Snyder and liis brother Paul are
partners in the Marlin firm, which
markets the boats at Mesa Boat Center.
1595 Newport Blvd., and had been trying
to work out a deal with Dante.
"He was an elusive character," said
(See DANTE, Pace 2)
Board Postpones
Move to Probe
'All Land Deals
Consideration of a proposal by the 1969
Oi'angt Count)'-Gi'aild JUry-Ular••filture-
land transactions of the county, whether
buying or selling Gr leasing, should only 1 • take place arter holding a public hearing"
was postponed by the Board of
l Supervisors Tuesday to July 1.
Board members belt that holding public
hearings GR all land transactions '"could
be very costly." They asked the county
Real Property Services department to
detennine "advertising and GUier costs lf
such a procedurt is followed ."
The jury also forwarded their recorn--
mend1tlon to the eounty11 legislat<irs in
Sacramento asking that c;onslderation be
given lo enacting legislation "that wUI
ensure that pubtic 1hearlngs be made
mandatory for all future land transac·
lions."
Some obscrvon. sew • ttfcrence to 1he
highly<!ebated abandonment of Uie Sell
Creek Road In the South Laguna area in
the GraJ'ld J\ll')''s acUon.
The action revives recent charges by
Laguna Beach attorney WIUiam WUcoxen
that aupervlton consented lo abai ..
donment or Ule road"Way in March 1968
wlthoul holding a public: hw1Jlg oo !be
rnaUer. '
. .
ESCAPES MURDER TRY ' Star's Husbarid Dante
Police Nab Pair
After $3,500
I
'Mole' Burglary
Two men who police said burrowed
through several fences Tuesday before
stealing $3,SOO worth of b u i 1 d i n g
materials at Newport Beach's Harbor
View Homes were arrested later in the
day trying to unload their loot.
Nwef>ort burglary detectives said the
pair, residents of the Lynwood area, were
arrested by police there as they tried to
unload a van jammed with Qoor locks,
plumbing hardware, copper tubing and
other costly construclion items.
The two in custody in Newport are
James Samuel Allman, 27, of Paramount,
and James Weldon Higgins, ~. of
Lynwood.
The;: face grand theft charges. .
Police ~d-lhe-lhe!ta ~d ~rjllc
the night or morning hours TUesday fal
the corcitrucfion site al:love 'C.Orona del
~Jar. •
Officers '814 several contractors at the
building site re~ boles in thetr
fences. and garage and shed locks cul
f\.1ost of lhem reported nothing stolen,
however.
The t~ firms hit by thie'.ves were the
Donald E. Bren Co,, which lost $2,880 tn
materials, and the Taylor Plumbing Co.,
which lost $725 in plumbing hardware.
Officers said the stolen merchandise
"'"ill have to be inventoried be[ore it is
returned to the victims.
That task might take up lo a full day,
they added.
Discussing Time
Results in Time
A Balboa resident who allegedly told a
•lass in astrology that the subject was "a
study of time" did some time himself
Tuesday night -in Newport Beach City
Jail.
Police said the alleged astrol~y
teacher was arrested at 9: 30 Tuesday
night after lecturing to a class of 17
students and one plainclothes detective at
the Sun Sign Book5tore on the Peninsula.
Burton Wentworth Morse, s:r, of 2141
Seville Ave., was arrested on charges of
violating a city code forbidding astrology
teaching in the city.
Police said eacl1 student was charged
$25 for the cl.ass.
The detective a,Iso paid tuition. He got
his money back.
Stock Markets
NEW ·YORK (AP) -The stock marke\
closed almost even today, after an early
Eharp advance, partially buoyed by
bargain bunting, slowed in· I a t e r
tradin1. <See quotaUons, Pages Z0..21), .
~ f • ~-
,S'c h oo ls Sla~h 13 Jobs
/ , .... '
-"Trustees Boost Tax8afe Above Planned Increase
·By THOMAS FORTUNE
OI' tllll O.llY Plitt Ii.ti Newport.·Mesa school trustees Tuesday
night cut out 13 new non·teaching posi·
Uons, decided to boost Uie ta1 rate
another penny <r penny-and-a-half above
increases already contemplated, and
came close to balancing next year's
8Chools budget.
The total net tax rate increase for
Costa Mesa would be about 24 cents ana
for Newport Beach about 28 cen\O. '
Police s·lay
County Youth
In Gunfight
A Garden Grove youth inside hi!
grandparents' closed liquor store with
their pennisslon was shot to death by
Cc.mpton police late Tuesday night wheo
he unexplainedly opened lire on them.
'-Arthur G. Laramie, 17, was dead on ar·
rival at Harbor General Hospital as the
tragic climax to a trip to the store to get
so1ne cookies and milk for a midnight
snack.
The victim accidentally triggered a
silent burglar alarm ln the shop, leading
to a dispatch of one regular patrolman
and a reserve ·officer to investigate.
Compton Police Lt. A. M. Thomas iden-
tified the pair involved as George Keaton
and Ralph Reeves.
He said Officer Keaton wtnt to Ute rear
of the liquor store while the reserve
patrolman .ccwered ~ fron\, spottina:
young Laramie through the back door~
Offiair Kea!rio;lboule!l al. the: fl&ure \II·
side, ·Lt ')'bamu said: at · whidt time
Laramie fired a ~ caliber plalol &!Id
4ar1od baclc.as lhe.palfolmlll'-bacil<.
Both bullets In the exchai>ge m!Sled,
but Keatt'.ln fired apJ,n and struck
Laramie tn the head.
11le victim'• v.&ndparerits &aid he was
in the store with their penn.lssion but
they were mystified as to why he had one
of the two gwis in the store and why he
used IL
•
Susan Mazze
Suffers Relapse
Susan Mazze, Ule 17-year"ld Santa Ana
girl who received Orange County's first
kidney transplant on June 3, has suffered
a relapse and is In critical condition in
Orange County Medical Center.
Dr. Ronald Miller said her new kidney
Is functioning perfectly but other
postoperative complications have
weakened Susan and made It difficult for
her to breathe.
The doctor declined to disclose details
on the complications.
Susan's mother, Mrs. Florence Mazze,
was released from the hospital las\
Wednesday, a week after donating one of
her kidneys lo her daughter.
U.S. Personal Income
Rise in May Reported
WASHINGTON <UPI) -Personsl In·
come of Americans rose $3.75 billion in
May, the government reported today.
The C.Ommerce Department said the
May increase equalled April's advance
but was abt'.lut $1 btlllon less than the
average monthly gain in the first three
monlhl of !be.year.
A mo~ firm decisloo ;,,.y,,i;. made al
a special budgel ~!led by the school board for next •
Cuts approved y nl~I Include
eliminatic:. ol .#Jr custodian, three
groundsmen,):bl"ee bus drlver1, two full
time a?)d,. three part Ume clerk·
secretatial positions for a savings of
'8I ~v:x> in salaries. ·
Other cuts totaling about $150,000 were
made in purchase of equipmeht, main·
tenance, travel and consult.ants.
Board members would not buy cut,s
recommended by the admift1straUve 'staff
in a hot idea fund or building repairs.
The best estimate Js .that. the $25
million p!us budget ·remainl about $50,000
out of balance.
Board members also approved a
resolution stating they 8J'tl reserving the
r l g h t to increase salaries during the
school year after the budget is adopted.
The resolution was seen by observers
as a sop to teachers who f o u ib t &
* * •
$23,880 Sliced . . .
From City Budget
By JORN VAL TERZA
OI' lllt °""' ... ,, ...
' Newport Beach Councilmen Tuesday
Jumped head-firsl inll> the city's $10.11-
million proposed budget and came out
he.!f way through with" $23,880 in· cuts
which they hope will go toward street and
alley improvements.
Before councilmen adjourned after the
tedious session they set their final study
meeting on Ute huge document (or a:t5
a.m. Saturday wh"1 !"'1..W·Jnl lo find
more areas to cut out of _pub~ works,
general services and several minor -1ec-
tions.
At the outset of the meeUng. Mayor
Doreen Marshall said .she hoped to see
the budget cuts added to the fund for
street and alley . lmprovemenls, ad~,
"It might be a hope and a dream, but Im
sure we •• .. in.. agreement that Ult: taX
rate Jlbould stay lhe same."'
\lli ··audilltoe> i~· was..-...., lh~ the evening. ' • 1
Coundlmen unanlmous!Y •acreed lo the
followinfl. llljdpl ~: . -Cul ool the uell by jlarbor
Coordinator George awefi f.or a new
boat ""'ling $8,800 and inallad, qteed lo
allocate about $1,250 for refurblsliing and
maintaining a boat to be -retrid by
lifeguards. The cowicll also denied
Dawes' request for an engineering aide
with a n,• annual salary. DaweS
wanted the aide for ·clerical and public
contact duties to give him more ume in
his field work. 1
-Elin\inllled the proposed post of Clly
Development Coordinator from the city
manager's budget, amounUng to a sav.
ings ol $8,595. 'nlal job, councilmen
agreed. could be handled throogh exlsllng
sWf in the plaMing department. ·
-Erased proposals for an outside con.
suiting fihn's study of salary acheduJes.
'nlal look olf·$3,ll00 out of the per~
department sect.ton. .
-De<tucted $1,160 which Will not have
1o be 'pald·m1o lllo ·employ"' rotlmnenl
IW)d becau;e Oi'Jlhe cancellaUon of the
I l .... ' • . .. WO Wv~ · • ~·n!\:ouiieir"·alio;-.. ~f nil'i:;r
amounts in -... ·?.t;~--saOO~tor
-· -~·,., the dly elerk'•·oftice; l1;211 ill adilid 'premiums
for fal1e arreat tmuflDCe:, and "50 for an
extra lramc:rlber !or the city al~rney'1
office.
'Bargain for City'
Council Def ends Buying
Ad in CofC Brochure
A $1,oOO budget 1"'11 lnV1>1vlng a city
or Newport Beach ad in a publication
sponsored by the Newport Harbor
Chamber cl Coolmerce was hlt last
night by the Corona del Mar Chamber
of Commerce.
The money, which councilmen and
city aides agreed· was "a bargain for
the city," involves a large, compreh"1·
sive brochure on the Harbor Area which
is being prepared by Windsor Publica·
tions under direction of a committee
composed of city officials and members
of the Newport Harbor chamber. In a resolution to the council Tuesday nigh~ the Board of Directors of the
Corona del Mar Chamber objected to
the action as a deviation from a long
1ta"1llng policy of not donating public
funds to organizations. "'nle board of directors ls unalterably
oppooed to any change in the , long-
establlshed pol.icy,'' the commumcation
aaid. ·•
the city lo dlspeM< lo lnieresled per·
sons. He dls<ounled the theory that the
money was a subsidy or a direct dona·
tlon to the chamber.
"This will benefit the whole city_ of
NewPOrt Beach," Mayor Doreen Mar·
1half added. "I'm sure Corona de! Mar wlll hen.
efit greatly from this document, too,"
said Councilman Ed Hirth.
n.e Jlem stayed inlaet in !be budgeL
CdM Girl Hurt ,
In Auto Accident
A COrona de! Mar girl suffered bead in-
juries 1'\lesda)' in • headon colllllon at a
busy co.ta Mesa intmectlon near
Orange Co\lnly Airport. •
Bonny R. n.eoe. 17, of !024 Breakeri
Drive, wu treated tor a bead JaoeratlOO
and o:amiaed ' for concuuion at COila
Mesa Memorial Holpltal, bul releaoOd \o
strenuous batik !Ci" higher salaries than
they were given.
Board members also refrained from
cuttin1 into salary side beneUts -giving
teachers a 50 percent pay boost for arter
school duty and allowlnl them to advance
on the pay scale without requlring a
masters degree.
The board adopted a non-teachlng
employe salary ecale baaed on the aame
5.8 percent pay boost given teachers, but
(See BUDGET, Pqe I)
Missing Boy
Found, Fights
For His Life
SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) -Six-year-.
old Matthew Zimmerman was f o u n d
mo&ning and half-frozen today -huddled
behind a log in eight inches of snow a mi.le
and a hall from the .campsite he wander--
ed away from last Saturday.
He was taken by helicopter and ambu·
Janee to St. Bernardine's Hospital here,
where he was i11 critical condiUon, auf.
fering from exposure and dehydration.
The copter was from El Toro Marine Air
Slatton.
OepuUes said lhe little boy" heart stop.
ped beating in the heilcopter and rescu·
ers applied external heart massage an d
one wrapped his own body around the
your1gster11 to keep him warm.
He, had been the object of a massive
search by 250 men on foot, by horse, jeep
and helicopter since noon Saturday wben
he dlnppeared durll\i a weekend camp-
ing lrlp 'With hla mother and sister.
lmprlnta irl.n hJa 'temilx shoes w or e
sighted Monday but no lra<e bad beeti
seen of i1iiJ1 since,
W~, W~ Brennen, I!, and
Willter f ........ 17, both ol San Ber-"""1111o,.• out "I' lbelr oWn lo look for
)'datllleii alter Ferguson lokt: hJa m-Olher,
"l lhllik I kno'W where lo find him."
Ferguson had often hiked in lhe area
.£fle1T De Bonneville cam9 grounds in the
-fSan Bernardino National Forest because
his gr:andpuents bad a cabin near there.
Matthew was cooscious but incoherent
when they found him , his orange plaid
shirt and Ian slacks aoaked. The boy•
stripped bls wet clothes and wrapped him
In jackets. Smoke signals were used to
guide a helicopter from El Toro l\1arine
Air Station into the rugged area.
The chlld's father, Stanley, a Loa Ange-
les engineer who had· been aiding In lhe
search, was notified by bullhorn and
reached hJs 90n before the helicopter did.
"'T-hey told me be wu alive, but when
I saw him ·he looked dead," Zimmemian
said. "I carried him lo lhe hellcopter,
and 'for the first lime in my llfe, 1 pray-
ed."
Sheriff's Sgt. Oliver Gray sakl the
child'! pulie !lopped u lhe belicopUir be-
came airborne and he and Walter Walk·
er of the Riverside Search and Reacue
Team applied hear( massage.
Whtn the chopper aet down at Norton
Air Force Base, military doctors worked
over the l(ttle boy in the helicopter for
about ten minutes before transferring him
to an ambulance to be taken to the bospi·
tal.'
"1 lhjnk be'• got a Jood chance of mak·
Ing I~" one of them said.
Gray, aald the area where Matthew was
found had been -searched Tuesday morn-
ing and hJa foolprinta ledlcated be b ad
•l'!'"bled inlo the area during the after.
noon.
Or ....
~Uy Manqer Harvey L. Hurlburt, a
member of· the pto~·, .st.eering corn·
mlltee, stoully delendOd the Idea. He
oaid lhe suin either ""1!d _go for •n ad
in lhe 'T ~'":or 'IJllld, lnltead, be used ~ .copia for =~----~-~~=~
her family. . . .
TrattlC investigator• aald .Mia llee!e W81-drivlnf'W•-P1-'8oad-li1'4i~I~~-=-=~~
Thieu Government Rapped
p.m. rush hour trafiic when her am.all car
colllded with an eatlboUnd vehicle tun.-
big left onto SaMa Ana Avenue1
The other driver wu klentlfled u
RObert c. Reed, 21, of 2516 Dute Place,
Costa Mesa and invMtlpUon it con-
linulng today lo ddtnnlne which
motorist wu at fault.
Weadaer
The sun wlll ,;,... Ill perfu»
lory ·--Thunday alter. noon, but olhenrlae It'll be moatl1
Clifford Calls for Reduction of Vietnam F.i~hting
NEW Y<!RK !AP) -Former. Defense
Secretory Clork. M. Clifford .. ys the
United Sllles should order a ttduelll>n ·o1
fighlll\i in South Vlelnam and l'tlDOlle llf
!ls ground combat troops by lhe end ol
1970. '
ln a rtmarkably c>ndid alah!Dltnl Clll·
lord blislers lhe South Vlelnu>ue
a:ovemmeat, ptcr.uring tU: 1~·" bav·
ing a big slab ill coollmied war. He
says: ·
"A> the SaiCon author!Uea oaw I~ the
Jongtr the. war went on, with the larg"°
'scale American involvement, the rnt'.lre
stable wa' their regime and the fewer
conoeaslons they would have lo make lo
other po!IUcol lllWPinfls." -
Clifford. once rqanted as a "hawk,"
r
't.
served as. Pentqon chl@f fGr the last
)'"r ol the Lyndon B. Johnson ad· fhlnllt.ratloo. H11 statement, appearing in
F9reign Affairs, quarterly of the Council
• M Fortlgn Jtetatlons, )s the most
.wt.spoien comment on the Saigon regime
~to come from a rectnt U.S. government
olllctal at this level.
The arllclt Is llkely lo play an Im·
pottant role in thei continuing American
debate on the war.
He makes U-proposals:
t. Al a first e,tep, the United SlatH
sht'.luld •nnotlllC'!e lt will witl'ld1 '"" 1001000
troops belo"' U., end ol this year.
President NixOJ> alrUd)' bu aD110Unced'
an ln!Uaf wllhdrawll ol 2$,000. 1be Cllf·
lord article wu wrillU before Ibo .
eire'..::t1 .:m~n1 but relealed Back Bay Trade
2. "'We should ll!O make il cl>ar that T • ·CH .CRT this i. nol an llOiated aellon, bul th• ' opr.c at . ~
beginning of a pivceu under wbich 111
U.S. grUlllld combat forces will have betn A pair of prfncl~ls I~ the ~
wlthdi'awn from Vleinam by lhe end of Back Bal land IWap,wtll be -lo a
1970." • dialogue ThundaJ at a CHART Cott:a
3. "Coi""1'ftntly with lhe decision lo Mesa breUflll meeting n.nsay,
begin wltl1dra,..I, orden obould.be Issued The ....ian will bt al 7:IO a.m. In the
1o oo.i: military commanders lo dlKOn-Coltit Meaa. Ccunlry Club "1"1 Otqe
tlnue effo"I' lo ·apply-mulm:nn military C-y A--kl,.haw an d
pressure on the enemy and lo ,..k in-Mn .. Ft~ Jlob"-llCheduled on lb•
1tead to redUee the level of combat.'' Pf'Oll'im .. •
4. "Wbll: our combat troqps are being Mrt. Roblnlon ts' one of''• group of peo-
wi-, we could ,coollnue lo•provld<. ple. whom~ ·tb ·ICh!eve coorl-in·
the armed forcol of the · silgon govern· ttrv•pllon ID the proj>oted dul -ten
(Seo CLIFFOllD, Pl&i I) , .Ille _ltvine Compaey llld Or~e ~·
cloudy wtth temper•tura in the
high 80'• iIOl1J the Oranp CoasL
INSmB TODAY
Two of Ille f4!~1 ,,...~" ojloo< langlc lhil •weelcclld a1
Wjnd!DG'll P4!IOQI ...... Blaclt-
flll fcrr the Cali/omio C.p. Boo~
ing, l'cQe J9. ,__ .. ,.... ......... -" -.... ........... --.. or-. c.-, 11 ... .......... ·--Dr.~M1tr1,.. ll .... -... T• ......... ~ Ii -.... -. --..
-
JI: DAILY PILOT
'Nttdie' Dancers
I 1' ."" \ -,., r" ~ l
·Fined ..
Six Ruled Lewd, Slapped Wit~ $1,500 Le'.Vy
I . ' ' I t
•, Sb:morenudeta\lerndlncers .. iefin.. Those fined were : . bwrt jury. All of .the otben ln\lolv·~ in
,«Cl "',tolll of fl,500 Tuesday following Arlene Whalen, 34\ of Va}lndl'!, Calli., Tuesday's sentencinis submitted the.Ir
':their convicUOft on lewd conduct and $12.5 and two years _probation. cases to Uie judge on the basis cf af.
· 1ndeolftt. eiposure charges Rose Re~p, 24, Burbank, $350 and fldavlts .
1.. 1 · . four years probation. Miss Zimmer, convicted or eight counts
" Centra Orange County Municipal Patrl~ Cottins, 30, Non'h Hollywood, of lewd conduct and indecent e1posuri,
Ou<fBe Eugene C. Langehauser orde~ $125 and two ~ars probation. will be sentenced Tuesday •
.P't'Obation for all sentenced. Senfencing Betty Vicken, 15, Garden Grove, $375 Others continued to Tuesda) were
..._was delayect .~ four other cases, one and four years probation. Ethel Mae Sooter, 22, of Fountain Valley,
l.C'.woman was nrud Innocent "-charges and PrileUla Blackwell, 22, Sant.a Ana, $125 Joan Thompson. Ontario and Llnda Rae ~ .
, a wammt illluec;I for another who failed and t_wo y~~bation. Ciark, Santa Ana.
:}"Al•ppeab dr lnbeencourt. . NaJui.te. W 1 28, Brea, $400 and two Charges against Beverly Vlerira, 2:S, ol
. l bat . arrested 1n recent weeks consecutive two-year probation terms. El Toro were dismissed.
while perfonnmg at two Sant.a Ana beer Miss Wheeler and Jackie Ann Zlmmer, A warrant was ordered issued for bars. the Apartment A-Go-0-o and lhe 26, of Santa Ana, were found g\.llty of the Esther Pike, 27, of Cypres,,, when she
Apartmeot. chal'a:es late last montL by a municipal failed to appear.
f:Cookie Crew Cooks Up Rock~ Assured _
DAil Y l'llOT Stiff ,._.,,
Welcome Home .GI Plnns Brazil H~ading , . "~"" ila11 tn N.;..,~ · ' B k l N aJ · It's summer. (It says here.) And school ls out. 1lut · Newport Pier. It seens the sun is taking the sum· 3C 0 Orffi ' you'd never know· it by beach crowds, which baye 'Iner oft, too. In old sol's absence, beach goers are ~ ScOrts of 'ttarbor. Area clttzen1 wbo, She is enll!Ung the aid of all Harbor ""-been ;Something less Qian overwhelming as in4i". ~ 1eftkii!' ·p1enty of goose bumps instead of tans.
baked and otlwrwl&e teamed up in the re· Area families and friends of servicemen RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI)-A govern .. ' ., 'tBted fn 1Jrls view of shoreline looking east fronr . ---~,
· cent We Care CooldeUft are cooking up a back or soon to return from tbe war 1.0ne, ment spok.esman disclosed today that ---~. ,----:c-,--------...:..---------''-----------------
: mass heroes' welcome for Gls soon to for a giant welcome·home celebraUon ln New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller has
\ .. return from Vietnam. September.
~ The latest project grew out of a remark First step now ls to obtain a roster of
by U.S. Anny S/Sgt. Joe Hooper, one of these men, including: name. length of
.• the flrst tlu'ee Vietnam veterans to Vietnam tour, branch of service. family's
·receive the Medal of Honor from Presi-local address and telephone number and
·:·dent Nimn. estimated honle arrival date. •
' Now assigned to recruitment duties ln This information may be sent to the
' the San Jl'emando Valley, Sgt. Hooper Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce, 583
. vlsited the cookielift campaign head-W. 19th St., Mn. Dorothy Dietzel, city
quarters in lite April and cqmmented persoonel office, Tl Fair Drive, or Mrs.
that every Vietnam returnee l! • hero. Ollver herself.
"He's right," declares Mrs. Darrllyn "The men are dead Ured when they ar-
.Ollver, of 3IJT1 Yukon Drive, Costa Mesa. rive, so we'll be contacting them a week
... ortibiator Of the cookielift project and ar so after they return," says Mrs.
~)lrtmary forct behind the oewest idea. Oliver.
~Escapee Facing
. ~Robbery Trial
: , Nicholas Wayne Picke tt of Costa Mesa,
: known to the law as Charles T. Dee when
_.he punched ano~er hole in the brand new
. ;Orange County Jail's infant legend of In--
.. vtoclblllty, must face a jury trial oD July 29: ' · • · But that trial will be on the armed rob-
bery and kidnap charges which put him
in the COUDty lockup in the first place.
' Proceedipgs on the escape charges whicb
-are sure to be filed have not yeti been set.
· "Pic~tt bolt.ed to freedom via a long
est•hlisbed bole-in tbe Jail fence and a
rope. of knotted bedsheets last May 31. He
· followed the route used by three
prisoners who fled frPm the facllity'a
fifth floor exercise yard last December.
· Pickett, 21, ol !!"! 111•»1! st.. was
111blequently arrei!W at a COnsrus
Street addreu by eight deputies. He put
up no Rl!istance.
He Is accUaed ol laklilg l800 at gunpoint
last Dec. 11 from the Tie Toe IJllrket.
191S Pomona Ave., Coeta Mesa.
' I • ',;·
Of fi eers Elected
At Shoreclif f s
1be Shoreclllfs Property Owners's
Association today announced its new of·
fleer& ror 1969-70. ,
El«ted pres ident at the group's annual
· meeting was Ed Jacklin .. ·He succeeds
John Killeler as bead of the assgciati~
which represents mkitrnll t>f .the , 140r
home coastal subdivision .l:ft Corona del
Mar.
Viet pre&idenl is William W.·DoOLlon;
secretary, Mrs. John Killefer; trea8W'er,
· Mrs. Ed Jacklin. Other board members
are Mrs. Isabel Pease, Killefer and Hans
Lorenz. Ex-pres1dent Killefer will also
serve BJJ liaison to other homeowners'
a!SOCiations.
.. , ., , . •• ., ...
~. .. .. ~ ~ -·· •
•
She saJd ~gt. Hooper will join the initial
heroes' welcome program, date of which
ls not yet set, then subsequent
ceremonies will be planned on a smaller
scale.
Messages are still being received from
mllit.ary units whose men received
cookies and other goodi1 malled In the all·
volunteer cookiellft effort which con·
tinued throughout the month of April.
Col. Gerhard W. Hyatt, command
chaplain, recenUy wrote her from head·
quarters of the U.S. ~llllt.ary Assistance
Command, Vjet.nam. to say cookies had
been delivered to the mo5l remote,
isolated areas.
He said they were sent to Green Beret
advisory teams of five and seven men
each and enclosed a copy of a Memorial
Day addre!!l8 by Gen. Creighton ·w.
Abrams' USMC Vietnam "s commaOOing
officer.
From Page 1
DA NTE ...
Paul Snyder today, "he'd call us from
Las Vegas and try to get us to ship them
to him C.O.D., whlfh of course we refwi-
~ to do." · .
• The, Costa M•Sjl 'boat ~mpany es-
tcutive said ~· was a ·secreUve
~ii. and it ill. unknown why he was
trying to buy the seven motorcrafl.
Earlier, Ron Snyder told authorities
Dante had given U1em a worthless check
for $17,460 in payment for the boats, but
promised to deliver the purchase price In
cash when the paper bounced.
A surprise visit to the Sant.a Ana yard
Where the boats were .bUilt for the CO!!lta Mesa .lirm early ~Y .5, 1968, led lo ~ of the llleg<d. theft In progreS6, ~-sald. '
2 Captured, 2 at Large
SAN BRUNO, Call/. (UPI) -Four
prisoners at the San Francisco County
Jail slid down 15 knotted blankets Tues-
day night in an escape attempt, but two
were quickly apprehended.
t I t • f •
(;fir .~•""fl .. on the B ea111
been assured Brazil intends soon to
return to constitutional rule.
"We are on tbe way to a return to
(constitutional) normaJcy," Foreign
Minister Jose de Magalhaes Pinto told
foreign newsmen. He referred to the ac·
tion ol President Arthur da Costa e Silva
in closing Congress last December and
persooal assumption of decree power.
~1agalhaes Pinto's remarks were made
while Rockefeller was engaged in a third
round of discussions with Brazilian of·
ficials who have pla~ down the
goverrunent's military backing and
played up the country's economic pro-
gress.
The foreign minister left no doubt the
government intends to restore con·
stltutional guarantees and reopen parlia·
ment "shortly." It was believed evident
he echoed what Costa e Sliva told
RockeCelle.r In their la.lks Tuesday in
Brasilia .
The day brought discussions with
Interloc Minister Cosla. Cavalcanti on the
impoverished northeast and with Educa-
tion Minister Tarso Dutra, business
groups and intellectuals.
F rom Page 1
BUDGET •..
held off for a week doing the same for
admlnistrator5.
Supt. William Cunhingham said he
hopa:I thos e teachers who feel there Is
money around not being used would
realize the board had to make severe
dent! in worthwhile progra ms and cut out
people in their effort to square budget in--
come with oµtgo.
Board member Mrs. Elizabeth "Bet-
ty" Lilly asked if high school staffs
couldn't be cut back further to save
money. A previous cutback reduced the
ratio from one teacher per 19 pupils to
one per 20.
Three high school principals present
said they would have to drop their new
remedial reading programs if their staffs
were further reduced .
: ~oard mem"oUi did not ask why lhe
r'eading programs· .would' hive.Jo be the
<mes to be cul
The projected tax increase for Newport
Beach next year is higher than for Costa
Mesa -28 cents to 24 cerits _: but Com
Me,sa 's school 1ax. rate would remain
more than Newport's -$4.51 to $4.24 per
$100 or assessed valuation.
Both the existing dlfference and the
variation in projected increases are due
to indebtedness on school bond issues
pa.ssed in each city prior to unification.
•
" : f :cf.uc1ia" ~·· '15,' of Pacifica, wound up in Ui!s !:: ~~--.. Potlli~stl!~ an l l·b~am over a 150-
off-ramp tn San !"rancisco. Fll't!Jlftl',...CUecl her
from \h• car and 1atd• 1he aillto~ed coetusJolll.of the forehead arid •••cmoL\onal upset.*''• •. •. dMp IOIUVI""" • ., ... , she !Illllsecl a freeway •
'
Es~in High Ra~S-Top . . . . . . --
With Accrediting. T ~am
Estancia Hlgh School has been given
top rating and a number of compli·
ments on Its flrst report card .
An accrediting team from Western
Association of Schools and, Colleges
Insurance Pool
Bill Introduced
Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R·
Fullerton) has introduced legislation to
set up a slate.wide insurance funding pool
to protect insurance policy holders
against the inso lvency of an insurance
company.
'The bill, AB 1!10, which is sel for hear·
ing on June 25 by the Assembly Finance
and Insurance Committee, will establish.
a California Property and Casuaity
Guarantee Association.
Briggs noted that the legislation will
•.•relieve the Insurance buying public
from suffering losses rrom the unex-
pected bankruptcy of their insurance
company."
Commuter Line
Chan ges Name
Aero Commuter.Catalina Airlines t<r
day announced the change of its name
lo Golden West Airlines, Inc.
The change was made to renect the
statewide operations of the airline. The
name Catalina Airlines will be retaineQ
for the amphibian air service to Cata·
Jina Island from Long Beach Airport.
Golden West Airlines ha.s flights from
Orange County Airport to all point.!I in
Southern California, including Catalina.
Solons Call Laird
\VASlflNGTON (UPI) -The Senate
Foreign Relations Committee plans to
summon Oelense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird to discuss differences between his
estimate of Soviet first strike missil e
capabilllles and that of the U.S. intel-
ligence board, it was learned today.
It l IJ JI
recently reported OD three days spent
earlier this year poking around on
campus.
They gave Estancia, four years old,
a maximum five-year accreditation.
Some of the good thinp the visiting
educators had to say about the school:
-Principal Fl61d Harrfniarf is to be
commended ror 1niliating\a systematic
evaluation of his role ahd offiee by
teachers and staff employes .
-There is high morale among non-
teaching employcs wno have rapport
with the administration, teachers and
students. .
-Most teachers are willing to con-
sider curriculum changes.
-The entire staff bas made efforts
to promote good relationships between
students. teachen and administrators.
The accrediting team al.so gave some
recommendations for improvement.
Among them:
-Expansion of on-the-job training pro-
grams for students should be investi-
gaLed.
-The staff should work on developing
long and short t8Jlie teaching aims and
objectives.
-Periodic follow.up studies should be
made of all fonner students, including
drop outs, to determine if the school
is satisfying their needs.
FUil five-year accreditation makes
Estancia graduates automa11cally ellgi-
ble for acceptance to just about any
college in the country if they meet en-
trance criteria.
Harbor -Official
Get s New Tiile
Cil;o 11arbor Coorditlator George Dawes
v.·on a longer title Tuesday niill.t.
Da,,.es, who has served tn the relative-
ly new city post since last fall, hence-
forth will be known as the city harbor
and tidelands coordinator.
The action, by agreement of the City
Council, was added because Dawe!' du-
ties have expanded more and more aloog
the city's ocean beaches in recent
months.
Remarking on his work d u r i n g the
sewage coordinator most of all."
shoreline, Dawes told councilmen, "In
the past few months it seems I've been
sewage coordinator mOl!lt o fall."
BLACK STAR SAPPHIRE
Tru!v •n 1tquhita i•••' , , , "0111 or
• \'inti."
Sp1tilll'f ti•1i9111tl pl1ti>1Ulft fl'IOMlll•
;.,9 •"'brtt•tl with th• 1l19t1iro• of
tlitn'10...d1 •
$1200.00
' ;· D.11i9'1d~!h .,.. i11 "';"' • , Frolfl
our lll.lfllific:111I c:ot11ctloitjf'~11"'a"d •
, •• c.1•1tlli11C,--11 .... thil' ,.,. ,.,.,_
in•lft fftOllflf1tl .(,)0 c.r.1t yellow
tli1"'o"d, with ln•liculow1IY •1'POi11tocl
tli•montl1 in th1 roufltl.
$3750.00
• •
From Page 1
CLIFFORD •••
ment with logistic support and with our
air resources."
Clifford contends that a polley of ap-
plying maximum military pressure has
resulted in continuing high . U . S •
casualties "without any discernll?le im·
pact on the peace negotiation lo Paris.''
He :says a decision to shift the combat
burden to the South Vietnamese "would
confront North Vietnamese leaders with
a painful dilemma."
"Word that the Ameercans were begin·
ning to withdraw might at first lead them
to claims of victory," he wrote. "But
even these loltial claims could be U:•
peeled to be . tinged willt apprehension.
There has, in my view, long been C<lO·
siderable evidence that Hanoi fears the
possibility that those whom th e y
characterize as 'puppet forces ' may, with
continued but gradually r e d u c e d l
American support, prove able to stand off
the Communist forces."
DAILY PI LOT
n•AHOE Ct)l,51 PUlkllHIMG cOMPAWr
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a...lllM .Ww1t..,1 MJ."11
C.1r19M, !Ht, Or-CMll l'Wlhll"-t-"1' .... -...... • ..... u ..... ·•••1~ -"'' "' ~"" .,.,,. .,.., 09 ,_ .... ""-·-... -""'"*' 1111 Cllfflllltt -· ~ ~--..... ~~ -· ,._, SUcfl ,,. Colle """'· C.lllwN. ki.11->1.., b"f c1rrlw u.• rn.n1t1tr1 _., -11 u .. -ll!fl m1m1ry 111es11na11on1, U.ot llWllfll"f.
' I
---..
QUEEN!! By Phll fnterlandl •
''Well, at leaat the theater manager 1s honelt.,.
Prisoners' Families
Get U.S. Reassurance
The most recent official
casualty report listed 341 U.S.
servicemen captured er in·
• • I
Pentagon and Stale Depart-
ment officials are holding
meetings with families o!
more than 1,300 captured U.S.
servicemen in a widening ef-
fort to assure them they have
not been forgotten .
terned and 987 missing. Mostll ·------------of the missing are believed to
Two sessions already have
been held and more briefings
are planned in the next four or
five weeks ta inform the
relati ves about the
government's efforts to free
the men and ease their can·
diUons of captivity.
Another pu~ is to make
sure the families of men miss·
ing or captu red in the Vietnam
war are receiving all the hel p
to which they are entitled.
HEADS TEAM
Richard G. Capen, deputy
assistant secretary of defense,
is head of the team of officials
arranging the 1ncetings as
part of a new Nixan ad.
ministration program.
Sessions a r e tentatively
planned in San Francisco, Los
Angeles, P h o e n i x, Ari.z.,
Denver, Colo., Kansa s City,
McGuire Air Force Base, N.J .,
Westover Air Force Base,
Ma!s., and an undertermined
location in the. soutbeutern
United Stales. •
Capen uid the new effort -
which has included a series of
statetpents by Sec reta?'..:.-. of
Defense Melvin R. Loiurd
designed lo focus world ~pi·
nion an the side of U.S.
prisoners -represents a
switch from ihe last ad-
ministration's policy.
"The policy in the past wa s
not to say anything publicly
for rear of reducing the
possibility or release af the
meD ar release of information
by North Vietnam an the ir
status," Capen 11aid. "It seem·
ed to us the time was now for
u11 . to express deep concern
about these men."
be prisoners in North Vietnam '---pilots captured when their -~ .. ~
planes were shot dawn during
the air war.
Laird sent key Pentagon of.
ficials a memorandum last
March 3 stressing that he is
"deeply concerned about the
welfare" of captured and
missing servicemen and their
families.
"I want to be assured that
the military services and the
office of the secretary of
defense are doing all that we
possibly can for the next-of.
kin," Laird said at the time.
Later that month, Capen
held the first private, Informal
session with about 75 wives in
the San Diego area. He and his
associates followed this up last
week with a similar gathering
of about 100 ne.xt-of·kin from
the San Antonio and the Fort
Worth-Dallas areas of Texas.
CLOSED DOORS
The sessions are behind
closed doors, Capen said, to
preserve the privacy of the
families •.
In adpition . to. p u b Li c
statements by L8ird deploring
North Vietn"1'l' trealll\eril o!
U.S. pri.5o.& there have ~ beh~the-scenes moves
.by the defepse secretary in
this area.
In one such move several
weeks ·ago, he briefed U.S.
ambassadors in Belgium and Britain so they could solicit
help from European countries
in bringing pr~ on North
Vietnam f o r humanitarian
handling of Americans fn cai>-
tivity.
So far, Capen acknowledged,
Hanoi's response has tice.n
disappointing.
Ex-price Control Chief'
Asks Volu11tary Controls
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
man who called lhc shots
when price ceilings were la st
clamped on the nation thinks
it is time for the government
to try controls again -but
voluntary, this time.
Mich&el V. DiSallc, Korean
War price boss, suggested the
Nixon administration might
try for hold -the-line
agreements with the 500 big·
gest corporations, or with ma·
jor Indus tries.
That would mean aban·
donm e nl of the ad-
ministration'.s Polley stand
agalnSt price-Wage cobtrols or
guidelines, OISalle said in an
interview, but he added :
"The adminlstraUon docsn ·t
ha ve many options left now.
"If they keep pUttlng it arr.
~ this inflation is just going to
keep on accelerating."
DiSalle, former Democratic
governor of Ohio and mayor-of
Toledo, dire<;ted the Office ot
Price Stabilization from 1950
to 1952 and in the latter year
admin istered wage cu~bs also,
as director of economic
stabilization.
~DO NOTHING
"I didn't th.ink the JO per-
..... -.•• cent surtax would do anything
to slow things down, and it
; hasn't," said DiSalle, now
practicing law in Washington.
, "I da think some kind ol
, quasi-voJuntary system might
, work." Voluntary controls fail-
ed ln lhe Korean War, he con-
ceded.. Tbe economy was still
...,.Jiding on the .Wgth ol
consumer demlnd pent lip
dur11ng World War U. Price
O!llllngl Had been removed -
Jl"tbably prema lurely, I n
bis1Ue'1 opinlon -and
bulinessmen, fully ezpecting
Olat ceiUngs would b e
I" .
restored, were marking up
price tags· to be in an ad·
vantageous position when the
anticipated "freeze" came.
Prices claimbed 8 percent In : P.
the six·month period o f '
military escalation preceding ;t·
the clam pdown in January ~""
1951, even though some in-
direct controls were still in ef-
fect.
STILL PREVAILED
"Credit restraints were In
use, rent controls still prevail-
ed, and the excess pro!ita taz
was still in force," DiSalle
said. "Yet none of these seem· l
cd to ,slow up the spiral.''
The situatiOn is similar now,
the lawyer said, with the
surtax having no mo re
dampefting...er!ect than-the· old
exwis profJts tax, and with
businesses borrowing hand ~
over fist fn spite of record ~ >
high interest rate.s ..
Tl#ening the m o n e y ~crcW. br1ngs inequltii:ble cf ·
feels, with hardships on small "-
firms, on marginal businesses •
that n~ Joans to eJ"pand, and ~ on housing, DiSallc said.
And a wrench violent enough ·
lo cause a rapid d'eDatlon 'i•
causes s hutdowr.s· and•
unemployment "which hurts
thD.$e whom you want most to
protect" -the poor, the slum
dweller1 and minority group11,
and the lower-skilled workers.
1'IUED BRIEl"L y
The Idea ol indusl!y-wide
bold-th&-Une agreements "'' trted biieOy Jn the Korean
War. A steel pact was made
which worked, DiSallt recall·
ed, OOl the idea fell apart
when It proved frnJ)Olllib~ to
bring Lbe auto industry into
a~ent. It nilgflt wort thl1
time, DiSalle suggesled.
-Ill_
ANAHEIM
.«{ N. Euclid . .5l5-8 I 2 I
Mon .. thru ·Sot.
I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m.
NEWPORT
~7 Foshion Island 6+!-1212
Mon. thru Fri. 10 o.m. to 9:30 p.m.
Sot. I 0 o.m. to 6 p.m.
-.
wtdntid.r. Juni 1s. 1969 DAILY l'ILOJ I
-''
SWIVEL ROCKERS PROMISE
DEEP COMFORT
99.95 reg. 139.95
•
We solute the tell end handsome swivel rocker ••• in
cotton cut velvet imported from Belgium. Bollom tufted
bock, deeply comlorteble seot cushions with polyloom ·
wrapped in Det:ron polyes ter for snap bock resilience, '•
non allergic qualities. A final cus tom flourish • ~ •
out line welting in solid color.
Furniture, 38
"VAQUERO" ••• COORDINATES
MEX I CANA, SPECIALLY, PRICED.
FROM MORRIS OF CALIFORNIA
Re9. 39.95-129.95 34.00°116.00
. •
•
Plan e young bedroom or family room around this rustic."
rugged series in mellow brown woods.
llf.f5 6 dr .~ ... l llW lt•1•
Jt.tS 1t1•fchint 1t1irror
94.tl 1t11 d1nt d11k
I It.ti hi ch.it, I Jr1w1u
<:,6t.f.5 lo cli1it, .l Jr•w1r1
'6t.t5 lo c11pbo1rd
St.t!i corn1t d11k
39.95 11!1ht 1t111cl
42.tS JG" boo•ih1Jf
Fu'rniture, 92
101.00 .....
'':" 101.00
64.ot
64.00
14.00
J4.IO
lt.00
154.tS 44" lieo•1h1lf II.Ii
st.ts twi11 '' full ii1cl 14.M
't4.t5 4.c1 ••••• "······ ~ 2t.95 miner 27 ..
b111 enly lf.M
129.tS bun• beef, 9u•r clr1ll •
l1dcl1r 116.11
109.tl5 trundle btcl, ',
b1cklln9 bell' tt ...
125,fl rn1tr1M, pl1tform1
for trundle b1cl lot.ti
•
2001 MATIRESSES AT THE LOWESl
PRICES OF THE YEAR
Twin size 59,95;99,95
All ore Simmons ·fomous. qual ity -in
'ssorted sizesl including twin, fulls, extra longs, queens
ond ~ings. Choose tufted or quilted styles in firm or
extro firm tensions. All reduced os loost 20%
Full size. 89.95-99.95;
Queen size 119.95 •
Sleep Shop . 69
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7777 Edinger Ave. 892-333 I"
Mon. thru Sot.
.I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m.
'
-
'jDAJl,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGEj
Safet y in Diver·sit y 1
Ti.s the J)Ort of a wist 111cui to lretp lllmself today
for tomorrow, and not venture oil his egg1 in one bas·
ktt -flfiguel de CtrvanUt
1541·1611
Don Quixote's autho r no , dou.bt was not the orlJ·
inator of the idea of safety 1n d1versiftcation, but his
"eggs" analogy is by far the most frequently quoted.-
especially in the modern field of financial investment.
lt applies as well to the economics of a munlcipaJi·
ty and a region.
Huntington Beach found itself-not by de1lgn-\11ith
too many eggs in one basket last week. '
McDoMell Douglas Astronautics Corp., a prime
contractor in the f\ianned Orbiting Laboratory Project,
announced that some 3,600 jobs would be affected by
the Air Force's decision to shelve the $3 billion MOL
program.
So illstead of employing more than 10,000 eventual·
ly. and approaching 8,000 now . Huntington Beach's giant
industry will drop well below 5.poo as the tesult or can·
cellation of a single government contract.
Managements of defense industry suppliers from
General Motors on across the board have worried ever
gince World War 11 about lessening their dependence
on government contracts for survival. McDonnell Doug·
las is no exception, but its concentration of space in·
d ustry in Huntington Beach, which lacked :and still 1
lacks much of any other industry besides oiJ , made for
a severe jolt to the city in case of such a cutback as
MOL. _
The Harbor Area, like much of Southern California,
has a deep economic interest in government contracts.
But this area also has diversity, at least to the point
where no sin.~le industry could have such impact on
the area as McDonnell Douglas has in Huhtington
Beach.
I
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa have such diverse
manufa~turing operations as bpat building, plastics,
electrorucs tor civilian as well as military use metals
fabHcation,. medical items, sporting goods. d3ta pro·
cesslng equipment and ball point pens -as well as a
variety of aerospace items -among 'their more than
350 manufacturing firm s.
To avoid the risk of too many eggs in one basket flar~or area business leaders should, and no doubt will'.
continue to search for even more dJversl!ication -for
the sake of tomorrow.
Defining 'Temporary'
The removal of a high-voltage power pole from
a new area of Corona del Mar last week symbolizes
the increased interest in community aesthetics.
The offending pole in this instance was located in
an area where residents had understood that the mas-
ter plan called for underground utilities.
The "temporary" pole was, it turned out, intended
1o serve the area only "until the freeway goes through."
T~~s. "te1nporary" .in the view of the developers and
ut1l1t1es translated into perhaps. five years, perhaps
lon ger, for the homeowner. A vigorous protest got re-
sults.
. \Vith the increased public awareness of the value
of aesthetics in our everyday lives-not to mention the
cash value enha ncement to th ei r property-it seems
clea r that develope rs and utili ties are goi ng to have to
place even greater emphasis on undergrounding.
Chances are th ~y'll find that a lot more people un-
derstand that the bill for thi s ;icsthetic gain ultimately
mu st be paid largely by the benefiting property O\vner
and are prepa red to pay their share. '
CNl "S ic 'fM! WHOA.! S! c 'EM! Wl-loA !"
Truth-in-Lending
Vs. Buying Habit
l1npropriet y
Question Has
Been Removed
601t1e s of Se1intori nl Cnt·n•id·lH011se·
Businesses which offer credit ar e gur·
tni up -with new printed form s and
salesman training -for the Coll5Umer
Protection Act o[ 19M, .which takes effect
July 1. Popularly tagged Lruth-in·lendlng,
the Jaw is designed to let buyert and bor·
rowers learn clearly and unequlvocally
what they must pay for merchandise and
credit.
Much merchandising In recent years
has been carried on, for example, on the
S1-down -$t·weekly basis, with the option
left to the buyer to aimpare the total
weekly installments with the original
purchase price.
NOW "REGULATION Z," a Federal
Reaerve Board publication of rulei to
lend and sell by, has been disperJtd
acro51 the nation to acquaint affected
bu1inesse1 with the law, whose en·
forcement ls the responsibility of nine
fedrral agencies, chiefly the Federal
Trade Cotnmiulon.
"Finar.ce charges" and ' ' an nu a I
percentage rate" must be printed more
l'OOSpicuously than surrounding material
nn contrast to the sometimes "read the
lint Jlf:'jot" caution). Finance charges
Guest Editoria l . '
musl Ii.st "the works": Interest, loan fee,
credit investigation fee . cost of life or
other insurance assoc iated wilh a lime
purchase. and any amount paid as a
"discount," service or carrying charge.
BUYERS AND borrowers not glfled ln
the "higher math" for discovering the
full price of an item or money acquired
"on time" 01ay raise eyebrows momen·
tarlly when the whole c06t·picture stares
them in lhe face. One eUect may be to
prompt shoppers to hunt around for the
'"bt!l financial deal," since final cost
answers will be available for easy C<Jm·
parison.
With the nationa l habit of living on next
week 's or next year's payc;:heck11 well in·
grained by now, we seriously doubt the
r.ew tfuth·ln-lendtna: disclosures will
permanently divert many Americans
from their buy·nov.·, pay.later way of life.
The Tlmes·Ptcayune
New Orleans
Just to Stay Even .•.
IF YOUR
1958 INCOME
WAS---
$3,000
$5,000
$7,500
$)0,000
$20,000
$50,000
$100,000
-IN 1969 YOU
MUST EARN , JUST
TO STAY EVEN-·
-$3,846
A PERCENTAGE
INCREASE OF-·
21%
$6,332 -27%
-$9,417 26%
$12,543 -2 5%
$24,181 24%
$63,160 26%
$123,566 24%
nie effects of inflation and taxes are Illustrated In this chlrt. A marrl@d man
wlth two children who earned $7.$00 in 1968 must eam in 1951 about 26 percent n1ore to be as "well oU."
DHr Geor(t:
I md t.hJa fellow at the office aod
lie .ant perr.ctty nice, harmless
and tom ttous. Some of the olher a1r1' lnliJI he II Iii awful ••U. How
can I find U ll 11 true hf Is a woU~
I've t«tptld 111 lnvltalloa for 1
candleli~t dinner at hi! apart·
ment.
WONDERING
Otar Wonderin1 :
What are you writing me for~ t
can't think of a better "'ay to find
out.
To the Editor :
Please be advised that t-.1r. Arthur
Strock has removed any queslion of im·
propriety that may have arisen in con·
nection with his C(lnduct lo which you
referred in yo ur June 7, 1969 issue
regil.rding the O'Donnell case.
CLAUDE f\1. OWEN S
Judge ol !he Superior Court
~1f, Strock, tolnlc actin9 ns altor·
ircy rcprcse11101y Dr. ~1eTritl C. O'-
nouncl/ 111 'J udge Ou;e11s' cot1rt. dre11J
c1 con1p/ai11t front the ]lldge that lie
i\1ailhvx
appeared to be flou ting Ca11on 22 of
tlic Canons of Professio1UJI Ethics
whc11 he cited a previously rejected
<lecrsioii d11ri11 g law and 1notion or·
giunents. Judge 01vens' letter re por t.i
tlic result of Jll r. Strock's Tespo11se
ro the judge's request to him for com·
ntent.
-l::ditor
1llor nl Asp ccls, Too
To the Editor:
Recently critics. of sex education pro-
grams have voiced their oppOsition
dramatically and emotionally. Their ma-
jor 4)Jjection is that their children are
being influenced away from the morality
of church and home and being in·
doctrinaled into the "new immorality"
taug~t in sex education programs.
Statistics' show that there has been a
rise in unwed pregnancies and venereal
disease in America today. Thi!: is an in·
dication that the youth of today art im-
properly instructed in the moraJ aspect of
~ex.
\V.ilERE ~ THESE children gel their
1nisi,nformat1on? If parents cannot or will
not &sch their children about sex, and in·
still1 in them a healthy attitude, the
chllaren will look for information
elsewhere. Their whole knowledge about
sex will be derived from discussions with
their equally uninformed, or worse yet,
1nl1lnlormed peers. •
Children are curious by nature and
1hey will seek out the forbidden in-
forn1aUon so that they can .saUsfy their
curiosity. They will read as many filthy
books as they can find and they will
ragerly ·accept the moral"";:;;at<udtl of
'heir "more experienced" friends.
ANAHEUI HAS A lour·year-old sex
rducatlon program taught in the seventh
through twelfth grades. This course in·
ltgrates the biological. psychological, and
moral aspects of sex education. It
emphasizes that the sex act demand5 the
knowle<lge, trust, security, maturity and
the love found In marriage.
Once the need for sex cducallon has
been reCognizttl , what must be done to
ensure lhat there Is a. sex cducaUon pr~
gram taught In the rommunity tb;:t Is In·
formative, moralistic and relevant to
society?
rt· A SEX education program exists in
your community, investigate ils aims and
tnethods. Talk to the teachers and to the
students. The studenlS' attitudes arc ln-
dlcaUve of the success or lhe program.
If a sex education course does not ex·
isl, study lhe programs taught In other
communiti~i and write to SIECUS. Sex
Information and Education C:Ouncll or the
United States. New York, N.Y., for ln-
fonnatlon ttgardlng organizing and in·
iUati n; a proaram In your communily.
~-RANCES OLDENBU RG
Student at UCl
More Tarnish on Congress
WASHINGTON -President Nixon,
who has been slow in rilling top govern-
ment jobs, is now having some of his ap-
pointments delayed by games o(
senatorial cat·and·mouse.
Senale leaders of both parties 11re in·
\'olved. The result is a little more tarnish
on the lack.Justre facade of the current,
91sl. Congress.
The Senate has always been zealous in
carrying out its constitutional responsiili·
ty to "advise and consent" on preslden-
11al nomin ations. In the past, however,
rather precise criteria were applied in
considering preside ntial appointments.
The old !onnula, as the late Sen.
Robert A. Taft, R-0 .• once explained it,
ga\"e a president wide latitude In selec·
ting top aides. provided that an appointee
f 11 was not clearly lnaimpetent to do the
job aS9igned. and (2) had not been guilty
or an offense ~volving moral turpitude.
THERE WAS another proviso. A single
senator could block a presidential ap.
polntment on grounds that the nominee
was "personally obnoxious," but such an
objection could only be applied to a
nominee from a senator's own state to a
federal posilion within that state.
Now a nominee can be opposed on
grounds of prejudice, personality, or even
pique. This is how things have been going
ror Pre sident Nixon:
OR. JOHN H. KNOWLES -President
Nixon hadn't even nominated Knowles,
his choice to be assist.ant HEW secretary
for health, v.•hen Senate Republican
Leader Everett M. Dirksen. 111., an·
nounced weeks ago that he would right
Knowles' appoint1ncnt. \Vilh the post sti ll
unfilled . Dirksen restated his opposi tion
last week.
Knov.·les is the director of the
prestigious Massachusetts G e n e r a I
Hospital. The American Medical Associa-
tion opposed his appointment to the HEW
post because Knowles has supported
Allen-Gol dsmith ' .
compulsory health care plans and other
liberal social welfare projects.
Dirksen. who professes great ad·
miration for Taft, has not really ex·
plained his opposition to Knowles.
Dirksen has noted that the AMA is op-
posing Knowles and he was reported to
have described the doctor, a fellow
Republican, as a "radical" at one closed·
door meeting.
OTI'O F. OTEPKA -He is the form er
Slate Department Security Officer who
was demoted after he privately slipped
some departmenta l data to the Senate
Internal Security Subcommittee in 1963.
His cause was. quickly espoused by a
number of right wing groups, and ht then
became a target of the left wing. .
At Dirksen's~ behest, President Nixon
nominal~ Otepka on March 20 to be a·
mcm1'-er of the nearly defunct Subversive
Activities Control Board. No one testified
against the nomination, and the Senate
Judiciary Committee approved it 12 to 3
more than a month ago .
Since that time the nomination has
been st.ailed and in a sort of limbo on the
Senate calendar. The Se n ate 's
Democratic leadership, \vhich attends to
such procedural matters, simply has not
scheduled the Otcpka nomination for
floor consideration.
Eventually. lhe nomination will be ap-
prO\'Cd. The word ndw is that action may
come this "'eek aft er a fe\v opponents,
mostly Democrats, air their objections,
"·hich are keyed to the old security mat·
ter and to the way Otepka raised money
to fi i;ht the long legal battle which
cnsuell .
CARL J. GILBERT -Two Senate
committee chairmen are in a jurisd\c.
tional battle over Gilbert, who was
nominated by President Nixon on April 14:
to be the U.S. special representative for
1rade negotiations, a job with am·
bassadorial rank.
Gilbert's nomination was approved by
the Foreig n Relations Committee. since it
is a foreign policy post. Then Chairman
Russell B. Long, D·La ., complained that
his Finance Committee, which created
the job , should have a say in filling it.
Long and Chairman J. \Villiam
rulbright, O.Ark ., of the Foreign Rela·
lions Committee, have no\v agreed that
the Finance Committee can study the
nomination for up to 30 day s. Then
Gilbert too, will probably be confirmed,
and he can get down to the rather im·
portant job of tariff negotiations.
While the President's nomin ation of
Chief Justice Warren E. Burger was
quickly and overwhelmingly approved
las,t week, by a vote of 74 to 3, the:
reasons adv~nced by the three Burger
opponents fell rar short of the old Senate
formula .
SEN. STEPHEN !'ii. YOUNG, 1).().,
complained that an attorney who op~
Burger's nomination was not heard by
the Judiciary Committee: in its heatings
and could not even get into the hearing
room . Sen. Gaylord Nelson. O.Wis .. said
he knew "nothing derogato ry" about
Burger but had not been afforded •
chance to examine his credentials.
Sen. Eugene·J . McCarthy, D-Minn .. I.he
third nay .sayer. said Burger campaigned
against him in 1952 in a manner
calculated to elicit "an emotional If not
prejudiced response." McCarthy did not
attempt to employ the old personally ob~
noxious tradiUon on a broader baae. It
was. as usual. just the Jone McCarthy
voir.r.. unheeded by his colleagues.
By Robert S. Afle11
and Jobn A. Gold1mttb
Pot Is Calling Kettle Black
t\ has always amused me to hear
some pompous business official stand up
in public and upbraid "the i;uvment" for
its massive bureaucracy and its absurd
spending policies. For I have seen enough
of private business establishments at
first-hand to know when a pot is calling a
kettle black.
The ~hesis of these public denunciators
is the "govment" should emulate private
enterprise -but in the cases I have-
personally observed, there is scarcely a
shade of difference between the two, ex·
~pt that business is designe<I to make
money, and government to provide
service.
THE BUREAUCRACY IN a large and
thrlving corporation is not to be believed.
The wastage is Immense, and the level of
Dear
Gloom,· ·' Gus:
It's not that RX education Is
wanted or not "'anLcd in our New.
port·Pt1e.'la schools, i1's that lt't
NE EDED. So1neone has to ltll
c:hildren the fa.els before It'! too
late for lhl!m. I'm 14, and a friend
who's 10 knows more. Or does he?
-J. A. T.
"flllt .. .,.,.. rt•llfa'I ,.._,.. ·-... --•111'¥ "'"' .. tl'll ---· ..... "'" nt _.,. M O"-"' ..._ O.lfr '"9t
-' \
l
Sidney J. Harris'
competence not very high. fl is only the
essential viability or capitali11m lhat
keeps .iOmc of these firm s anoal -they
suceeed despite their sloppy manage-
ment.
Most of them are penny·wise and
pound·foolish. They will alienate their
minor employes by insUtuling some petty
economic reform t dealing with something
as inainsequential as pencil·sharpenersl,
and then squander millions on !Ome
foolish scheme that tickles the vanity or
the top executive -but which any un·
llerling could tell hiln is a waste of funds.
JN FACT, on e of the be.~t arguments
[or c:apitalism tlas never been ad vanced
In il.3 favor, for it is too embarrassing to
mention -and that Is the indisputable
fa ct that the system ~·o·ru so well, in the
bus iness area, that It can withstand even
the mediocrily and mismanagement of
its custodians. lt 's hard to lose money in
an expanding econom y.
The closer one gets to the seat of COr·
porate power, the more obvious it
becomes that lhe sy1tem is supporting
1hese t4'0Ple, ralher than the people the
system. Many of lhcm haven't even had
enough liavvy to keep their own com-
panies under control -which accounts
for the aripalllng number or corporate
tRktavtrs and flcUtiout .,mergers" In the
last few year1, The co rp o r ate
burtaucrrcy get1 $0. lop.heavy that tts
legs are llmputated bef<re 11.S head bt:tlna
to know what ls going on.
THIS JS NOT meant to be a defense or
the indefensibll! pr~ctices in govemmen{,
whic~ should be fuore tailored, efncient.
and responsive to public needs -It is
simply lo suggest that all bureaucracic~
are pretty much alike, no matter what
their professed philosophy may be. It's
just that the idiocies of government
become a matter of public record, while
the ineptitudts of business are
camouflaged by profits that are almost
impossible not to make.
'\Vhen businessmen take over an ad·
ministration. as in this Nixon era, they
will spend as much as their Democratic
predecessors : the difference is in lhe
speeches, not in tht actions.
-...iW-
Wednesday, June 18, 1969
Tiit editorial page of tltt Dailt1
Pilot seek.a to fnform <1nd tttm-
ula:tc re<1der1 bt1 pretmting thi.1
newrpoptr'1 opfrt.tON and com-
meniarv on topics o,t ·fnttt11t
ond signtficonce, ~&I provkUng a
fOTUm for the tzprtuio" of
our reader•' o~nWn.r, and bu
pretentina the diwr1e view-
points of informed observer1
and spoketmn on topics Of ih1
do~.
Rl>bert N. Weed, Publisher
(
I
I
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I I
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•• , f -
• f;osia · Mesa -Toay.'~~-
·-~ t-: ---;-~~c. ' N.Y. Ste&s -
V~~2. NO. 145, ~SECTIONS, 7,2 PAGE ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JU~E '18,' 1969 ' . TEN·CENTS
. '\' ... 1 •
' ,, •
ate aces ana .s
Missing Boy, 6 ·' '
Heart Revived in Drama on Toro Rescue Copter
SAN BERNARDINO (UPJ) -Six-year-
old Matthew Zimmuman was f o u n d
moaning ind half.frozen today huddled
behind a log in eight inches of snow a mile ~d a h'alf from the c&mpsite he wander-
ed away from last Saturday.
He was taken by helicopter and ambu-
lance to St. Bernardine's Hospital here.
where he was i't critical condlllon, suf-
fering from exposure and dehydration.
The copter was from El Toro Marine Air
Station.
County Bo y Slain
After Shooting
At Policemen
A Garden Grove youth inside his
grandparents' closed liquor sto~ with
their permission was shot to death by
C<.mpton pol.Ice late Tuesday night when
he unexplainedly opened fire on them.
Arthur G. Laramie, 17, was dead on ar-
rival at Harbor General Hospital as the
tralfc climax to a trip lo the Mort to g~
aome.. cookies and milk for 1 midni&ht ' llllCk. ' • ; I
nie victim accidentally triggered •
silent burglar alann in the shop, Ie&Qing
to a dispatch of one regular patrolman
aucLa reset\re officer to inyesUgate.
Compton Police Lt. A. M. Thomas iden·
tified the pair involved as George Keaton
and Ralph Reeves.
He said Officer Keaton went to the rtar
or the liquor store while the reserve
patrolman covered the front,· spotting
young Laramie through the back door.
Officer Keaton shouted at the figure in-
side, Lt. Thomas said, at which Ume
Laramie fired a .38 callber pistol aDd
darted back as the patrolman fired back.
Both bullets in the exchange missed,
but Keaton fired again and. struck
Laramie In the head.
The victim's ~randparents said he was
ht the store w1lh ttie!r permi~jon but
they were mystified as to why he had one
of the two guns in the store and why he .
used it.
Police Check Bal's
But Fail to Find
Ditch Deatl1 Lead
Wherever Hennan C. Everett went
lll!l Friday night, he should have stayed.
home. The Redondo Beach machine shop
employe found deed In a Costa ~esa
Irrigation ditch last Saturday morning,
victim of a bizarre drowning-murder,
was not seen in his usual tavern
haunts. Homicide detectives Gerry Thompson
and Arnold Appleman toured Redon-
do Beach bars-favored by the 35-year-
old homicide victim Tuesday night. but
could find no one who saw him last
friday. . --· A similar vlsil Monday mght turucu -
up no lead5 in the odd killing, but many
regular bartenden and barmaids we.re ·
off, replaced by reliel r.rsonnel. . , Mrs. Dolores Everet , the victim s
wife of a year, said earlier she knew
of no 11ne who would want to kHI her
h'usbi'pd, whose funeral was held Tues-
day ln Cosla Mesa.
She .said he left their home about 9
p.m. Friday, supposedly on ~ brief
errand and that was the last time she
saw her husband alive.
She also told investigators a few ol
the spots he was known to frequeut In
the SOuth Bay area and poUoe say they
are bafOed about why he was fOCIDd in
Costa Mesa.
Convtnienet seems so far to be the
only rea.wn. since he hid 1a~t1y been clubbed .-u shcrirn b7
tht severe bNise and lump an bis fore-
head, then taken to die clealll ..,... by
c:.or. Coroner's deputiOI lilted dftltll IS due
to asphy1lallon by drowninl, cauaednch •
when he wat dumPtd into the 11-1
deep lrriga\l_on dltch along . Talbert
Avenue near tbe S.nta Au River.
No motive hu been develooed IO far
and some conjecture hit Involved ·aont·
land style uecut1on, while. ~LMt.ec
tlves 1uggest he may have ~ the
victim ol an 1111planned bar dlipute.
••
Deputies said the'llttle boy's heart stop-
ped beating 1n the helicopter and rescu-
ers applied erternal heart massage a n d
one wrapped his own body around the
youngster's \o keep him .wann.
He bad been the object of a massive
search by 250 men on foot, by horse, jeep
aJX1 helicopter since noon Saturday when
he d~ppeared durin~ a weekend c.amP.-
ing trip with his mother and sister.
Imprints .from his tennis shoes w e r e
sighted Monday but no trace had been
seen of him since.
Wednesday, William Brennen, 18, and
Walter lierguson, 17, both of San Ber·
nardlno, set out on their own to look for
Matthew after Ferguson told hls molber,
"I think 1 know where to find him."
Ferguson had often hiked in the area
nea r De Bonneville cam!J ground! in the
Sar. Bernardino National Fow.t because
·his grandparents had a cabin near there.
· Matthew was conscic.us but incohererit
when they fOWK1 him, his orange plaid
School Jobs Cut,
Tax Rate Boosted
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of t1M1 Deity l>lllt Sll ff
Newport-Mesa school trustees Tuesday
night cut out 13 new non-tea ching posi·
lions, decided to ·boost the tax rate
another penny· or penny~and-a-half above
increaMS already contemplated, anl1
came-dole ~ to baiancfu,, nex\ yur's echooli-litd,et. ' 1 1 · ~
The total n~t tax rate incrt:ase for
Costa Mesa wClllld be about 24 cent& and
lot Ntwport'~9ch about 28 cents.
A mo~~s~ may be made at
a spb;:ial bUdaet session called by the
school board for next Tuesd8y.
Cuts approved Tuesday night include
eliminatiOn of four Custodian, three
grciundsrnen, tliree bus driVers, twO lull
time and three part ·time · tlerk-
secretarial poaltlons for a savlnp of
$81,000 in salfuoies.
Other cuts· totaling about $150.000 wert
made in putch8se of equipment, main-
tenance , travel and consultants.
Board members would not buy cuts
recommended by the administrative staff
in a hot idea fund or building repairs.
The best estimate is that the $25
million p!us budget remains about .$50,000
out of balance.
Board members also approved a
resolution stating they are reservina the
r i g h t to increase salaries during the
school year arter the budget is adopted .
The resolution was seen by observers
as a sop to teachers_ who fought a
strenuous battle for higher salaries than
they were aiven.
Board members also refrained from
cutting into salary side benefits -giving
teachers a 50 pereent pay boost for after
school duty and allowing them to advance
.• .-l1le , p'ay· 11C81o ·.witl)oul 'OCJU!rinl •
misttrs ·degree. ·
1'.he board adopted a nqri-leaching
employe salary scale baled OD the same
l-1 -t,pay boos!_ll~ teachers, but
held off for a week ~~ Jhe same for
administrators.
Supt. William Cunningham said he
hoped those teachers who feel there is
money around not, l:ieing uaed would
realize the board had to make !eveie
dents in worthwhile programs and cut out
people in their effort to square ·budget In-
come with outgo.
Board member Mrs. Elizabeth "Bet..
ty" Ully asked if high school staffs
couldn't be cut back further to save
money. A previous cutback reduced the
ratio from one teacher per It pupils to
one per 20.
Three hiah school principals present
said they would have to drop their new
remed ial reading programs H thelr stafJs
were further reduced.
Board members did not ask why the
reading programs would have to be the
(See BUDG~,. Page Z)
/-./ ,. •• I
Swinging Swinger· ••
'
sturt and tan slacks ~aked. The boys
stripped his wet clothes pnd wrap~ him
In Jackels. Smoke signals were used to
guide a bellCO[lter from El Toro Marine
Air Stati90 lnlo the r\llied area.
The child's father, Stanley, a Los Ange-
les engineer who bad been aiding in the
search, was notified by bul~ and
rear.bed bis son befort the helicopter did.
."They told me be. w~ alive, but when
I saw him he loot.ed ~ead," Zimmerman
(See FQUND, Page !)
!
Clifford -r;Ji ges
Cut in Fighting,
Blisters Thieu
NEW YORK (AP) -Former Defense
Secretary Clark M. Clifford 11ays the
United States should order a reduction of
fighUng in South Vietnam and remove all
its ground combat troops by the end of
197tl.
In a remarkably candid st.atemenl cur.
ford blisters the South Vietnamese
govemmeIJt, p)cturlng its leaders as hav·
tr!( a blC itaU tn epot!nued war. He
;II.JI'.,. ,· ... , ,-;.;
"A< l1le S.ip ·authorities saw 1~ the
longer the war went On, with the large-
scale Amer'ican JnvoJve.ment. the mote
stable was lheir regime and 1he fewer
....,,.,. ... tlley irould ~.·io -to
other political grouping~·: "
Clif!ord, once regarded as 1 i'hawk,
served as Pentagon cblel. for the last
ye.ar of the Lyndon B. Johnson act.
minlstraUon. His statement, appearing in
Foreign Affairs, quarterly of the Council
,on Foreign ~lations, is the most
ootspoli.en comment on the Saigon regime
to ·come frOm a recent U.S. government
official at this level. ·
The article is likely to play an im·
portant role in the conUnuing ~erican
debate on the war.
He makes these proposals:
1. As a first step, the United States
should announce it will withdraw 100,000
troops before the end of thi5 year.
President Niml already has announced
an inlUal withdrawal· of 2$,000. The Clif.
lord article wu written before the
presldenUal announceme:nt but released
Wednesday nliht.
2. "We should also make it clear that
(See CLIFFORD, Page%)
D-'ILY l>ILOT,..,. 'J ~ ,.,..._. . ,
For the sheer Joy of II, ll>~re Js nothing like Ille
free, wind·in-your.face feeling generated by a good,
old-fashioned swing In tile park, observe1 tw~year
old TimDtb,y Stechman of Costa Mesa. It is especial·
ly nice when dad is back there ready' to push when
things get too all)W, or 'to catch you, when things
get a bit scary. Even In, an uncertain world, some
things never change.
es·a
Dante Fired
On, Held
For Theft
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ... O.llY. 1>1111 '''"
Jet set hypnotist Dr. Ronald Dante -
Harbor Area entertainer and confidan\t
of stars -today faces a theft charle in-
volving '18,500 worth or boats at a 'Costa
P.1esa finn, after surviving 1 myateriOUI
murder attempt Tuesday.
Santa Ana police recognized the name
In news reports of the five-&hot ambush
and tipper' off Hollywood detecUves wbo
arrested the ill-starred seventh hUJblnd
of actress Lana TUrner about :nidnighl
The attack by a mystery gunman wear-
ing a rakish Australian bush hat earlier,
as Dante drove Into his fashionable
office-apartment on Doheny Drive, left
hhn with only a cut on the face.
SHA1TEllED GLASS
The barrage of bullet.I shattered the
windshield of hls car and he wu. DI.eked
by flying glass u he dove for the
floorboards during what authorlUes Aid
was the third attempt on hla Ufe.
-.../
.a
ESCAPES MURDER TRY
St1r'1 Hu1bend Dint•
Experts Launch
Drive to Stop .
Pool Drownings
Once before, a jealous lover who claim;.
ed. the hypnotist had alienated hl1
girlfriend, fired a .45 caliber pistol shot
at Dr. Dante during a San Diego
nightclub performance. He was not. bit, and lawmen did not A grc>UP .. of. safety exper\I ~!I a:a&ng
elaborate Tueadlj' "' l1le lhlrd a1t~1ed where ·lfte actioo la -tlie tragic ~
murder attt!ltpt. -thia wee~. 1n a unique edbc.atlorial
Dinte wu ap~lly u llhaten by bis program destgned to .prevent backyard ~-' awlmmht( pqol -lllS ~ ll'rt$ U be bad -·_"!_~I l"'N The' • .0:0.L --I.:;jJ , _ _,~' temp{ wller tdllnl aut.awes · . npa;loa are guaug ~ r.i-., •
of no rtuon' f« either, mit.ll ·tbt ~ )'aril pools. '
case wa1 explained. • • Claqea will be offered by appolotment
"I. don't know ~CIM who would want thr~ Friday from 10 ~.m. to e p.m .•
to k1U me," he !:lid, "uni.._. It ~·u!it.be ft'lll!ini ,llOQl ~<II'_ •. IQl~IOI\ ~ '°meone who ii ]ealoul •boot thf wOma. deinOlliti'aUOiio of teoM lei:lftilcjll'41, -
I just marrl.ed." . ' A minimum of. 12 :adulll 'arid• 11helt
chlldren :are, requiJ:ed ti> schedult' .ane
6 OTHER HUSBANDS of tlle at·home clwes ·conducted joinlly
Dante followed she .other hu!baflds by the .AmerJcan Red Cross and ·Coita
down the als~e with Mlsa Turner In a Lis Mesa Recreition Department. .
Vegas wedding chapel 11~ weekll :go, Pete .Buzzard director Cf water Afe-
after they met at a fashionable dlscothe-ty Rrvices for' the Red cioss• of&Ni:e
que three weeks earlier. County Chapter, notes 14 eounfy back·
The alleged attempted theft of ·sev'!n yard drownings occurred iut year, mO.t
motorboets belongJng to the MarUn &at of them children.
Co., 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, oc-"It is imperaUve that parenta •nd
curred almost one year to the day before backyard pool OW!Jera receive thlJ in·
Dante's marriage to the blonde star. structlon to prevent more tragic Joss
Miss Turner, 49, and her dau&:hter of· life this summer,". aii)'I Buzzard.
Cheryl, 25, were present when the Nothing will be charged for the spe.:
SingaporH>om nightclub hypnotist W»S clal Servite and appointment.· may ·be
picked . up al their Sheraton-Uo.Jveraal made 'by tekij>Mrilng··Tom· Dutwie"&t
Hotel suite. 8344103 the Costa Meu. RecreaUon
He lilted hll age u ft during lbe bOok.. Oe~ent office.
Ing process and told police he has .a doc. • •
torate in psychology from · Singapore
University. -
The former entertainer at the Villa
Marina nlgbtdub In Newporl Beach -
still shaken br the murder attempt' -
spent severa hours in the West
Hollywood sheriff's staUon be.fore release
on $12,SOO bail.
Dante, who rented a Costa Mesa apart·
ment during his booking at the bayslde
spa, told Los Angeles Sheriff's Sg(. Ray-
mond Gott he believed the theft case had
been dismlssed. '
Ron Snyder, of 2320. College Drive,
Costa tw1esa, 1aid he ·caught Dante. in the
act of supervls.ing tbelt of the fleet pf 16-
foot boats May 5, 1968 a__t a now defunct
Santa Aha boatyard. ·
Snyder and h1a t>rotber Paul ' are
partners jn the Marlin firm, w!Ucb
markets the boats at Mesa Boat Center,
IS95 Newport Blvd., and had been.tcyln&
to work ouL a deal with Dante.
"He wa! an elusive: character," llid
(See DANTE, Pase ZI
Escape~ Facing
' Robbery Trial
Nicholas Wayne Pickett of Co!:ta Mesa,
known to the law as Charles T. Dee when
h~ punched another hole In the brand new
Orange County Jail's infant legend "Of ~
vlnciblllty, must face a jury lrial on July
28.
But lllat !rial wm be "' lhe armed rob-
bery and ltldnap charps which put him
In l1le county lqckup In the !Ira! place. ~'"'the -chir ... which are ,... lo be liled have nol 1"1 been ..i.
Pickett bolted lo freedom via a Jtnc
-bli.lhed hole In lhe Jail fence and a
rope of ktiolt<d bedsheets tut 1111,1 JI.~
followl/d. Ullo 'route uted by lllroe
prisoners wtio lie.I from ihe fadlity•a
fifth noor exerdM yard last December.
Plmll, 21oi of 1111 1'1aplo SL, wu
subsequently ~"'1 al a Oaos-
Slrftt •dilrea by'ef&ht depuUes. Ht put
up no re•islance. •
He Is aCCIUed or tokln& !IOI) 11,.'"fu1
last Dec. It from tit\ 'l'lc Toe;. INtile~
1913 Pomooa Ave., Com fll"A· •
' -' ' I
Susan Maz ze ..
Suffers R.elapse
Susan Mazze, the 17-year.o_ld Santa Alia
girl 'fh~ received orange County's first
kidney transplant on 'Jurie 3, has suffered
a relapse and is in critical condition in
Orange Cow\ty Medical. Center,
Dr. Ronald Miller 18.ld her new thi1'ey
ls 1 tuncttoning perfectly but other
postoptratiff· comp Ii eat Ions have
Weakened SUsan.and made it dUficult for
ber to breathe.
The doctor decllned lo disclose details
on the compllca.Uons. t
Susan's hlOther, Mn. Florence Mazze.
,raa' re)eaaed from 1the h08pltal 1 laft
Wedn'!Sday, a week after donating ooe of
her kidneys to her daughter.
Oraage
Weatller
C.Ut ' I
The sUn Will mak~ Its perfunc-1
tory appearance Thul'!day alter-J
noon, but ol1lerwlae 11'11 be mos\ly 1
ctouctY with temperaturu in th• 1
hlgb IO's a!OOJ_·llle Gr&1111e C...L I
JNSWE TODA 'Y ,
TIDO of U.. /mtc!I 1/0<W: !
afloat . tangle th6 wee~; ,,
l\'tndtDOrd Pa11aae ""'" .ll~lt.fin for fi" Cclj/omlG C,.p. Boa~ •
tAq,-Poo1 29. -" =-~~-', <-... """" . .. = .. .. .. • 'WI I .... ........... ,..,._. »II ·-. .._.._ N ... -. Mtime.e ,,
\
. '
:_Rilii ng
!(""""'°""' """' a •Pleca of <V6clnt stafe land as their style of People's l>arlt ~ ~ !fA8a Verde vlillantes with the
law ao their Bide may tum the 4\IO\y
c..ta 111 ... "hlllJlde Into -City ...... Actlo& within the curttolly ubtlnc
• legal handicaps poHd by no olllclal slate-
• dele11tod authority, p0llct will bellln . = th•reycJlni: center by jMp W.
• ,,.. tell la up to ....idenla annoyed by
·· .. bl_, dull and Iba ·~ of hlab-~ mec:hlnos penetrating their
$tCl,000 homes downhlll lrom the popular "°"""· '"lbil will be strictly Oil • cltiiens'
CJQIDpUblt bull,.. Colla ,... Police
DiJ r rtara"1t Patrol Capt. Robel'.l Moody
. Mid ,.....,. lo out1ln1oC lhl "'""am. ': llotltlnl can be done to comet Iha pro-
•• """' ..... tndlvlduala ... wUUoa to ~ a -~t cbal'llnl• a t1d1lt '111111 dllturbkll lhe .....,.;.lloOdy
~oocb' said lawmen at the ec111e
wlll lalro motorcycle tlcenae numben and
·;· I 1¥ !e. ft ~'!' · .
·showdJ.w·n · l o
'
••
V ~rsus V ertk Vig!,.la111~s ,
l Mi.~ la_..,. -.. _ .. lllalt-•" 1
to permit proeeeuUon, U an~ Mtaa Ver--Sign." posted originally on lhe property
dean1 agrtt to acL sUll prohib,1\ trespasalng, but local
WamJ.n&s Of P<>Nible criminal action lawmen no lon&er have the authority to
wDJ first be Issued to motorcycllsta using Jnvoke California Vehicle Code provisions
the a.tea Wblth la wtst Of Eltancla Drive on the property .
and adja~t to the rear of homes alona: Disturbing the pet1ce, however: is .•
Swan Dr1ye. misdemeanor crime under the California
Complamts have been rqlatvtd that Penal Qxle and appliea to the st.ale pro-
c'teflng Uilek lirlvtn even pull ~Ir perty, baJe(fon. the alleged vlctlms' will• niobUe Junchfooms up to MU coffee, IOlt ingneas to prosecute.
ddftka m>d aandWlche1 to motoreycllata. Lawmen would ddinlttly have the
A concerted effort by homeown~ ln power to act In cue of a felony offena
the ~tng area br~t a aym-being committed, or an accident of any
pa\hmc response by police. who ~d 50rt involving threat to life or limb.
they can do llttle as a result of existing ha ... 6 _ t 1 lhe Depar~ legal technk:aUUes. A request s u=i1 ":" o .
The property beJonis to the state bllt ment of General Suvu:es asking that tt:ie portion med by the mot'oreyCUsts Costa Mesa police be aUowt.d to resume
tmderwtnt a change in jurl.5dlct1on from their fonner powers of law on the pro-
the state Department of Mental Hygiene perty 1n quesUon.
to the l>!partment of G<neral Services ..A. ..A. _,, anti Estancia Drive WU constructed. H H H
Costa MMa pollce ha4 to reapply as a M p }i ''l'"lt for authority to enforce anti· esa 0 cemen trespassing laws alter Estancia Drive
aevered the total land parcel and lt went
COoktellft I.aded
Take Fairview
Traffic Control
City Councilnien Honor
Citizens' Achievenients
Acldemnenll .. the local and -
Uooal lnmt-In two hemlsphenl -have
--by the Costa Mela ctly
c.uncJl. Tbe city lladf a1ao bu .rocelv.d
~ a cltaUon.
-Best known recipient, perhaps, w a s
Mn. John Oliver, wn Yukon Drive or· · '*"llel"· ol the ·Harticr Arta'a We Care
• OooldeHlt program in which goodl<s • -were sent lo Gls at war. Durin& MondaY's cOunctl see:aJon, Coun-
cilman WW Jordan gave her a plaque b<orlnl her orlalnal ll City Hall rental
cheok1• Plus a !00.plaator South Vietnam·
ese buf.
,\fltr objoctlons from llOlllt quarten
to the use of vacant civic center floor.
•pace foe lhe month-loog project lo Ap-
Iii, Mn. Ollwr pleged lhe $1 rental,
which lllayw Alvlo L. Pinkley refu!ed.
Special attelilion a1ao was focused on
lhe Cost. M,..·Newport Harbor Lions
Club, for Its humanitarian trips to En-
senada where children were tested and
fitted for eyeglasses free of charge.
John Saint, coach and 1Uldlns force
behind lhe Costa M-Cornela semlpro-
f esslonal baSeball team alsb was clttd
Monday for his effort.a In alble.Uc:s and
charader building for yooth:
Councilman George A. Tucker-as a
former Jaycees' vicO presl-...pre-
oented the city wi1ll a commendatory
tt90lution fTO(D. the Costa Mesa Junior
Chamber cl Commerce. The resolution
cited the city's interest in Jaycee pro-
gram1.
EstaftciaHighRates Top
With Accrediting Team
• Estancia lf!Ch School hao been 11ven
top rat.iq and a-innnl>tr ol eompli·
'""'Ill on 1111 fin! repori card.
An accndltlog team from Western
Asaoclatlon of Schools '1!d Collegn
recemly n!poried 00 three days lpttt
earlier thlS year poking around on
campu1. • •
They' p ve l!:slaneia, . foqr yoon . old,
a mutmum 'fJv&jU?' aredltatlon. Some ol the gOOd tblnp. the vlaltlog
educators bad to say about the school :
-Prindpol Floyd Harryman ii to be
commended 10< tnltlat.iq a 1}'11ematlc
evaluation of hil role and office by
teachen and staff employes.
-There ls high morale among non-
teacblng empl.o~ who have raJ>P011
with the administ.ratlon, teach~ and
students. ,
-MOit teachers aie ~ to COP-
older curriculum cht!IPI.
-Tbe entire staff has made efforts
to promote good relat.iomshlpa between
students, teachers and adminlstraton.
The accrediting team also gave aome
recommendations. for improvemenL
Among them:
-Expan"10!1 of ""'tll•lob tralnlns p~ gnnlla for atud.,111 , ahciuld be lnvesti;.
gq,d. ·: ~The '·ataff shCll11d work on developlru!:
lq and ahori range tuchlng alms ana objic:Uves. •
-Periodic follow-up .tudlts should, be
made ol all former atudents, Including
drop outs, to determine lf the school
i.. salisfying their needs.
Jl'ull live-year accredltalion makes
Estancia graduates automatically ellal·
ble for acceptance to just aboUt any
c:oil'I• In the counay It they meet ,..
-criteria. . .
Suspect With Moustache,
Tattoo Sought in Theft
.•. .. . ' ..... -· .. :.
~=~ ..
.• ·:. ;:-. ' ·-··
A mouatachloed man Wlth laltoood 1..-e-
arms Is 90Ulht today u a suspect ln t.be
fllO dayligbt burglary ol a Costa M ...
DAil'!' 1'1tOT
~ CQUt P\191. Ml"-~ltJtt
l e'-t N, W-4 l!'N ... .,.. .......
Jee\: a. Curl.y
Yb,,_~ IM 0-.. ,.,._..,
T\t11111 IC1evil .....
Th•M•• A. Murphl u -·-e.---))0 w,., ''' sm.,t , u.m .. , A44!,. •• : r.o.'" •* .. :11•a• --. ..,_, tudl: nu ""'' .. ,.. ...._. .....,.. ~'" m ,.,.. ........,.,----
l'll#lh .. , ..... , .... .,.... . .
home Tuesday, one of sevuaJ Jobs re
pon.d to poll ...
Investigators 1 a l d a record player,
radio and two portable tt]evl.slon set.a
were taken from the residence of James
B. C1art, 1116 Carson St., apparently
without forced. entry.
lnfonnatlori riven t.o Patrolman James
Farley llsted the tattooed suspect as tn
his mld·twentlea, with a bushy moustache
and a mtdium build.
FtefUgio 1'-f~ Leon 1799 Kenwood Place.
told police a burglir broke lnlo hb home
-for the third _Ume In a year-taking
a $300 guitar and $15 worth of spare
strings.
Design enfinter Michael F. Doyle 111,
264 BoWltng Green Drive, told investiga-
tors someone prted open his kitchen door,
taking a $115 coin oollectlon.
An intruder also entered the Mtrbv
home of Dolores E. Handwerg at 287
Hanover Drive, left a dead cigarette In
.an ashtray, but took nothing, police said.
Back Bay Trade
·Topic at CHART
A•patr ol irtnctPa1J In lhl ""'ltOYmlal
Bact Bay land rwap will be featured In a
dlalOllle 11iunday at a CHART Coct.
Meaa breakfut metUnf 'Miutsday.
T1>e swlon will be a 7 :~ a.m. In the
!:Ollll Mtsa CounlJ'Y Club with Orange
Caunty Aaoetsor Andrew RIMhaw a n d
t..,~Ml'Jir~ Robh-acbedllled on the
... • Roblnlon ...... el • -Of ...... • pl•· ..... !O )c]llo~• court in--111-u.. prOp6ii!4" deal' bet• ... \.,-...,,.;'-.;.;._ ...... ___ _. lhe lrv1no·Comp&i\7 and Orab&• ~-
Tralfic control on prfvate streets at
Fa.lrview St.ate Hospital will soon be
assumed by the Costa Mesa Police
Department, after completion of neces-
PO' legal docu.ment1 .
City Attorney Roy JUl)e wa.s ordered
to draw up an ordinance covering
erlension of Police service, after a
request ·to the Cost.a Mesa City Council
by Fairvn Superintendant and Mtd-
!cal Oirec:ll>r Dr. /,nthooy M. Toto.
1'le new jurisdiction will kave no
effect on a brewing controversy over
use of state lands by dirt track and
hlll~limb enthusiasts riding motor·
cycles. Police are awaiUng permlasion of the
st.ate Department ol General Services to resume traffic and t'respuaing en·
forcoment oo tbat property.
6 More Nudie
Dancers Given
Fines of $1,500
Sb: more nude tavern dance.rs were fin-
ed a total of l l,lOll Tuesday following
their conviction on Jewd conduct and
indecent exp:osure charges.
Central Orange County Municipal
Judie Eugene C. Langebauser ordered
probaUon for all sentenced. Sentencing
was delayed in four olher cases, one
woman wu l'leld innocent of charges and
a warrant lsmaed for another who failed
to 'fpear Jn court. Al had been arrested In recent week5
while perfonning at two Santa Ana beer
bars, the Apafi4nent A-Oo-Go and the
Apartment.
Those fined were:
Arlene Wbalen, 34, of Vallnda, Calif.,
$125 and two yeara probaUon.
Rote Redman, 24, Burbank, $350 and
tour years probation.
P•trlda Collini, 30, Nonh Hollywood,
$125 and two yean probation.
BeUy Vltken, 25, Garden Grove, $375
and four years probation.
Prltclll1 Blackwell, 22 , Santa Ana, $12.5
and two years probation.
Nannie Wheeler, 28, Brea, $400 and two
con,JeOJUve two-year probation tenn1.
Miss Wheeler an4.,Tactie Ann 1Jmmer,
II; or &ant. ,.,.., wire -..,Uty ol the
charles late Wt monUr tiy a municipal
court jury. All of the others involved In
Tuesday'a: sentl!lncings submitted their
cases to the judge on the basis <lf af-
fldavita.
Miss Zimmer, convicted. of eight counts
of lewd conduct and indecent exposure,
will be sentenced Tuesday.
Others continued to Tuesda)' were
Ethel Mae Sooter, 22, of Fountain Valley,
Joan Thompson, Qntario and Linda Rae
Clark, Santa Ana.
Charges against Beverly Vlerira, 28, of
El Toro were dismissed.
A warrint was onMred issued for
Esther Pike, 27, of Cypress, when she
failed to appeu.
From Page J
CLIFFORD .••
this I! not an isolated action. but the
beginninc of a proceu under which all
U.$. ground combat forces will have been
withdrawn from Vietnam by the end of
ltTO." ,
3. "Cooc:umntly with the ,decldon to
beilo wlthdr•wal, anlerl s!iould ti, Issued to our military Colnmanders to dtscon-
tlnue effon. to apply maxlm;nn military
pre1sure ~ the enemy arKi to seek in-
stead to reduce the level of·combat."
4. "While our combat troops are belng
withdrawn, Wt could cootlnue to provide
the anned fortes of the Saigon a:ovem-
ment wtth logtaUc auppon and with our
air resources." '
F rom P .. e 1
BUDGET •••
ooes to be c:uL
The prol<ded In increase !or Nawport
BeAch next year ls hlaher th~ for. Colta
Mesa -21 cents 'to H·ctri!l -buCCosta
Men'• ~hool x rate would rtmaln
''"'"' than New 's -IUl ·to $U4 per lllO ol , io1ilatlon::.: .
Both lhe u~ dlflel'erlct ·and the vOl'l•tio!1 lo Jll'!I Oil.~"' A1',l due to trtdebtl-dntu · achOOl bond tssuu
pw<d lo each city prior to unlfkation.
•
DAILY PILOT PMt. ff 1><1111 la!Mlt_.
MAN AND MACH INE ROAR THROUGH CYCLE 'PLAYGROUND' ON STATE LAND IN COSTA MESA
Wetkend Showdown Due as Homeowners Fuss and Bike Exh1ust1 Fume ..
Cookie Crew Cooks Up
·Welcome Home GI Pl,ans
Scores of Harbor Atta citizens who
baked and otherwise teamed up in the re-
cent We Care Cookielift are cooking up a
mass heroes' welcome for Gis soon to
return from Vietnam.
The 1atest project grew out o[ a remark
by U.S. Army S/Sgt. Joe Hooper, one of
the Urst three . Vietna1n veterans to
receive the Medal of Honor from Presi·
tlenl Nixon .
Now 36signed to recruitment du ties in
the San Fernando Valley, Sgt. Hooper
vlsited the cookielift campaign head-
quarters in late April and commented
that every Vietnam returnee is a hero.
"He's right," declares Mrs. Darrilyn
Oliver, of 3077 Yukon Drive, Costa Mesa,
originator of the cookielift project and
primary force behind the ne"•est idea .
She 1s enlisting the aid or all Harbor
Area famWes and friends of servicemen
back or soon to return from the war zone,
for a giant welcome-home celebration in
September.
First step oow is to obtain a roster of
the!le men, Including : name, length of
Vietnam tour, branch of service, family 's
local addrtss and telephone number and
estimated home arrival date.
This information may be sent to the
Costa f\.tesa Chamber of Commerce, 5&1
\V. 19th St., Mrs. Dorothy Dietzel, city
personnel office, ti Fair Drive, or Mrs.
Oliver herself.
"The men are dead tired when they ar-
rive, so we'll be contacting them a week
or so after they return," says Mrs.
Oliver.
She said Sgt, Hooper will join the initial
heroes' welcome program, date of which
Is not yet set, then subsequent
ceremonies will be planned on a smaller
scale.
i tessagcs are still being received from
milita.-y unlts whose men received
cooki!!S and other goods mailed In the all-
volunteer cookielift effort which con·
tinued throughout the month of April.
Col. Gerhard W. Hyatt, command
chaplain. recently wrote her from ~ad·
quarters of the U.S. Military Assistance
Command, Vietnam, to say cookies had
been del ivered lo the most remote,
isolat&I are.as.
Council Stands by Elderly
Home -and on Sidewalk
A home occupation Is a home occupa·
lion whelher one is buying or renting
Lhe premises, the Olsta Mesa City Coun-
cil has ruled In connection with a guesl
residence for elderly women.
A zone exce.ption permit allowing Mrs.
Beulah Baber to take over the guest
home at 391 La Perle Lane, from Mrs.
Harmle Blls!, was approved Monday.
Neighbors had objected because they
relt the house originally opened by Mrs.
Bliss wasn't well enough maintained al-
Utough the Babers pledged to spruce up
the residence..
One of the conditions attached to the
permit Is Installation of sidewalks in
front of the home. There are none in the
surrounding neighborhood.
"I'll be danged if I can see them put-
ting Jn sidewalks In th e middlp of no-
where," said Councilman WilliatQ L. St.
Clair, whose motion to delete that clause
failed for lack of a secood.
"They can have the privilege of being
the first with a sidewal k," commented
Councilman Willard T. Jordan.
''And they 'll have a place where the
elderly people can ride their skate-
boards," quipped Mayot' Alvin L. Pink-
ley.
Residents of the immediate area had
complained that ft1rs. Saber's home
amounted to a commercial venture be·
cause she was only renting there Instead
of buying.
Two members of the Costa Mesa
Planning Commission agreed last week
in a 3 to 2 vole in favor of the permit.
"'Everybody has to have a home and
this is Mrs. Saber's, the same as it is
for the elderly l&die.s," said Councilman
George A. Tucker.
BLACK STAR SAPPHIRE
fn1ly 111 •wqui1il• J1w1I • • , "o .. •f
• lti11d."
s~.,;.tty d11it11.d pl.ti11u"' ... 11111-
1119 .,,.br1c:M with th• 1l.,111e.1 of
di1111011ef..
$ 1200.00
O,.ltnMl-wfth y.v 11 ,,.111<1 _,. ''•"'
••' "''f~IGc .. t eolt1c:tl&11 ef ;i1111111d·
11f cr1•tiont,.,... )t, ... thl• '''' pl1f· 1~""" '"ount.cl •.JO e1,..t v•tl•w ~ll1111o!ld, wl ... 111•tic1tlo111ly 1p,.ol~19'
llli•mond1 I~ th• ''""'·
$3750.00
Fron1 Page 1
DANTE •••
Paul Snyder today. "he'd caU us from
Las Vegas and try to get us to ship them
to him C.O.D., which of course we refus-
ed to do."
The Co3ta Mesa boat company ex-
ecutive said Dante was a secreUve
person and it i! unknown why he was
trying to buy the seven motorcraft
Earliu, Ron Snyder told authorities
Dante had given tqem a worthless check
for $17,460 in payment for the boats, but
promised to deliver the purchase price in
cash when the paper bounced.
A fiutprlse visit to the Sanla Ana yard
where the boats were built for the Costa
Mesa firm early May 5, 1963, led IG
discovery of the alleged theft In progress,
Snyder Eiald.
Dante was arrested on a warrant June
3, 1968, bul one of the principal witnesses
was unavailable for court appearance
and the case was dismissed prior to the
suspect's July 11 preliminary hearing.
A second bench warrant was signed by
J udge Leonard H. McBride on July 10
however, but the nightclub hypnotist had
apparently departed in the belief be was
absolved.
"He was never picked up because we
just didn't know where he was," said
Santa Ana Police Sgt. Kent Reesor after
Dante had been taken into custody in
West HoUywood Tuesday night.
Miss Turner's ex-husbands Include
bandleader Artie Shaw, Steve Crane, Bob
Topping, actor Lex BarKer, Fred May
and Robert Eaton. whose divorce was
fipaJ only two months ago.
One suitor, Johnny Stompanato, never
quite reached the altar, stabbed to death
10 years ago by Miss Turner's then 15-
year-old daughter Cheryl in a spectacu-
lar case.
From Page 1
FOUND ••.
said. "I carried him to the helicopter,
and for the first time in my We, I pray-
ed ."
Sheriff's Sa:t. Oliver Gray saJd the
child's pulse stopped as the helicopter be-
came airborne and he and Walter Walk-
er of the ruverside Search and Rescue
Team applied heart ma ssage.
When the chopper set down al Norton
Air Force Base, military doctors worked
over the little boy in the helicopter ( o r
about ten minutes before transferring trim
to an ambulance to be taken to the h~pi·
tal.
"I think he's got a good chance of mak·
ing it," one of therr.. said.
I
-
!
t
I
•
•
QUEINI! ti fnterl1111dl
"Well, &t lea.st the .the•ter manager la hODMt.."
Prisoners' Families
Get U.S. Reassurance
The most recent official
casualty report listed 341 U.S.
servicemen captured or in·
Pentagon and State Depart·
ment officials are holding
meetings with families of
more than 1,300 captured U.S.
servicemen in a widening e[·
fort to assure them they have
not been forgotten.
terned and 987 missing. Most -------------of the missing are believed to
Two sessions already have
been held and more briefings
are planned in the next four or
five weeks to inform the
relatives about the
government's efforts to free
the men and ease their con·
dition.s of captivity.
Another purpose is to make
sure the families of men miss·
ing or captured in the Vietnam
war are receiving all the help
to which they are entitled.
HEADS TEAM
Richard G. Capen, deputy
assistant secretary of defense,
is head of the team of officials
arranging the meetings as
part of a new Nixon ad-
minislration program.
Sessions are tentatively
• planned in San Francisco, Los
Angeles, P h o e n i x. Ariz.,
Denver, Colo., Kansas City,
be prisoners in North Vietnam ~
-pilots captured when their ~
planes were shot down during 11'
thr. air war.
Laird sent key Pentagon of-
ficials a memorandum last
March 3 stressing tha t he is
"deeply concerned about the
welfare" of captured and
missing servicemen and their
families. •
"I want to be assured that
the military services and the
oUice of the secretary of
defense are doing all that we
possibly can for the next-oC-
kin," Laird said at the time.
Later that monlb, Capen
held the first private, informaJ
session with about 75 wives in
the San Diego area. He and his
associates followed this up last
week with a similar gathering
of about 100 next-of-kin from
the San Antonio and the Fort
Worth-Dallas areas of Texas.
McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., CLOSED DOORS
Westover Air Force Base, The sessions are behind
Mass., and an undertermined closed ·doors, Capen said, to
locaUon in the .sou~~Wa · ·~· the privacy el the United ·states. rBmilies.
c;apen sa.idthencweriort...-, In· a.ddition ~ publ\Jc
which bas included a seri(!S'Of ~-~t~ 11y;J.ariti deplormg
statements by Secretary,;of t 'Nei(th 1'4etnllil1s tieatrnent of
., Def~c Melvin R. ~d .U.si pi'isonirs. there have
des.igned to focus world opi· '~ behind-the-deenes moves ,
nion .vn the side of U..S,... bY the del'ense seCretary in
prisvners -Tepre.sents 3 this area.
switch from the last ad-Jn one such InOYe several
ministration 's policy. weeks ago, ho briefed U.S.
"The policy io the past was ·ambassadors in Belgium and
not lo say anything publicly Britain so they could solicit
for fear of reducing th~ • help from Europe.Si countries
poss)billty of release of the in bringing pressare an North
men or release of information Vietnam f or humanitarian
by North Vietnam on their handling of Americans in cap-
slatus," Capen said. "It seem-tivily.
ed to' us the time was now for So far, Capen ac~leda-ed,
us to 1~~ess deep concern 1-Ianoi's response 'has 6tcn
about mese men.'' disappointing.
Ex-price Control Chief
Ask s Voluntary Controls
WASHINGTON (APl -The
man who called the shots
when price ceilings were last
clamped on the nation thinks
it is time for the government
to fry controls again -but
votunta,ry, this time.
Michael V. DiSalle, Korean
War price boss. suggested the
Nixon administration might
try for hold-the -line
agreements with the 500 big·
gest cori>orations, or with ma·
jor ind~tries.
That. woukl mean. a ban·
donment of the ad-min~stration's -J?Olicy st.a.ad
aP.i!lat price-wage contrvls or
guidelines.. DiSalle said in an
interview, but he adcted :
"The administration doesn 't
ha ve many option! left now.
"If they keep pUWng lt.vff,
this inflation is just going to
keep on accelerating."
DISalle, fonner Democratic
governor of Ohio and mayor or
Toledo, dired.ed the Office of
Price Stabilization from 1950
to 1952 anjl in the latter year
administeled wage curbs alS<l.
as director or economic
stabilization.
DO NOTHING
"I dldn"t think the 10 per·
cent surt.8x would do anything
to slow things down, and it
hasn't," said ·niSalle, now
pracUclng law in Washington.
"I do thi:nk some kind of
quasi-voluntary system might
work." Voluntary controls fail·
ed iu the Kore.an War, he con-
restored , were marking up
price tags tD be in an ad·
vantageous positicm when the
anticipated "freete'' came.
Prices claimbed 8 percent In · ,,__.
the six·montli perlod of '•
military escalation preceding f?-·
the clampdown in January ~"'
1951, even though some in·
direct controIS were still in ef·
feet.
STILL PREVAILED
"Credit restraints were In
use, rent controls still prevail·
ed, and lhe ex~ss profits tax
was Ifill in force ," DiSalle
s8id. "Yet.ttone of.these seem-~~
ed '9 slow up the 1piral." .
'I1le situation is similar now,
the lawyer said, with the
surtax having· no m o r e
dampening erfect than the old ·
excess profits tu, and with
businesses borrowing hand
over fist In spite of record
pjgh interest rata. ·
Tightening th' m o,n e y
screws bfing! inequitable ef.
fccts. with hardships on small
firms, on marginal businesses
that need loaru: to expand, and
on housing, DiSallc said.
And a wrench. violent ~gh
lo cause a· rapid defiaUon
causes shutdowr.s and
unemployment "whJch hurts
those whom you want most to
protect" -the poor. the slum
dwellers and minority groupl,
and the lvwer-skitled workers.
TRIED BRIEFLY
The Idea of ln<!us!t'y.wlde
ANAHEIM
Ill_
... ceffd. "J'he ~y 1WU stiJI·
eJ;)J!lndlng Oil the strength of
O<IJsmntt demal)d pent up
durtng World War If. Price
c$1lngs had been removed -
probably prtm,turely, In
DiSaUe'1 opinion -a n d
1bu1Jneumen, fulty expecting
that ceilings would b e
ho~line a~!ml ,...
tried . bl'.ieQy 1n ·the 'Korean W•r~ A steel pact waa rncrde
which •orked, DISIUe recall-
ed, but Lhe idea fell apart whon i l p<0"'1 lmpouible to +4+ N. Euclid ·535.s121 . H Foshion lsl•nd IM-1212
bring the auto industry Into
agreement. It might Wort th11
time, DiSalle suggcat.ed.
Mon. thru .S.t,
10 o.m. lo 9:30 p.m.
'
Mon. thru Fri. I 0 o.m. lo 9:30 p.m.
S•I. I 0 o.m. lo 6 p.m. . •
)
' .. ••
·, ,
'
•
DAILY PILOT S
;
"
• SWIVEL ,ROCKERS PROMISE •
DEEP COMFORT
99.95-reg. 139.95
We salute the tall and handsome swivel rocker ••• in
cotton cut velvet imported from Belgium. Bottom tufteg
b•ck, deoply comlorl•ble se•I cu shions with polyfoam ·~
wrapped in Dacron polyester for snap back resilience, ·~
non allergic qualities. A final cu!t9m flourish • • • ~
out line welting in solid color.
· Furniture, 38
"VAQUERO" ••• COORDINATES ·
MEXICANA, SPECIALLY PRICED.
FROM MORRIS OF CALIFORNIA
Reg. 39.95-129.95 34.00-116.00
•
Plan a young bedroom or fomily room around this rustic;
rugged series in mellow brown woods.
,.
I l t .tS 6 Jr .fl,.,,,, ••••
Jf.95 '"•tchllit '"1rror
94.95 •hHle11t Je1lr
101.00
34.00
19.00
101.to
14.to
64.00
14,00
34.00
J9.00
54.95 4~" bool:,h1rr Jo.0.
119.95 hi cht1f, 5 Jr•w•r1
69.,5 lo chMf, ] Jr•••fl
69.95 lo cupboerd
lif .95 cor11t r cle1k
]f.95 11i9hf 1tend
42.95 JO" 1Kiok1lttlf
' Fu'rniture1 92
.
St.ts twi11 or full btd 14,0:0
94.95 4·drewtr dre11er •
29.95 '"irror 27.11
bes• only ff.II
129.95 bu11k btd, guer drtil •
l1dd1r 111.8
109.95 trvrtelfe btd, ;,
b1ddi119 box tt.ff
125.95 '"•tr.11, pl1tfer1111
for trundle bed llt.91
.
'
2001 MAITRESSES AT THE LOWES1
PRICES OF THE YEAR
Twin si~e 59.95-89.95
All •re Simmons fomous quolity -. in
~ssorted sizesl including twin, fulls, extro k>ngs, queens-
•nd kings. Chooso tuftod or quilted styles in firm or
extra firm tensions. All reduced as least 20°/o
l'U11"slzo at:9s.99.95;
Queen size 119,95.
Sleep Shop, 69 ...
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7777 Edinger Ave. 892-3331
Mon. thru S•t.
' I 0 •.m. to 9:30 p.m.
·-
•• [DAILY 'PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I
Safety in Diver·sity
'TiJ the part of a toiit m.an to keep him!elf today
for tomorro1c. and 1tot venture all hU egga in one ba.s-
ket -Miguel de Ceroontt:s
1S41·1616
Don Quixote's autl1or no doubt was not the orl,.
tnator of the idea of safety in diversification, but bis
"eggs" analogy is by far the most frequently quoted-
especially in the modern field of finaoclal investme11t.
It applies as \Veil to the economics of a muni~ipalia
ty and a region.
Huntington Beach found itself-not by design-with
loo many eggs in one basket last week.
McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Corp., a prime
contractor in the Manned Orbiting Laboratory Project,
announced. that some 3,600 jobs would be affe<.:ted by
the Air Force's decision to shelve the $3 billion MOL
program.
So instead of employing more than 10,000 eventual·
ly, and approaching 8.000 now, Huntington Beach's giant
industry will drop \veil below 5,000 a1 the result of can-
cellation of a single government contract.
Managements of defense industry suppliers from
General Motors on across the board have worried ever
since World War It about lessening their dependence
on government contracts for survivaJ. MCDon nell Doug-
las is no exception, but its concentration of space in-
dustry in Huntington Beach, which lacked and still
lacks much of any other industry besides oil, made for
a severe jolt to the city in case of such a cutback as
MOL. .
The Harbor Area. like much of Southern California,
has a deep economic interest in eovernment contracts.
But this area also has diversity, at lea1t to the point
\vbere no single industry could have such impact on
Truth-in-Lending
Vs. Buying Habit
Buslnesp:s which of!er credit 1rt gear·
ing up -with new printed forms and
1aleaman training -(or lhe Consumer
Protection Act of 1968, which takes effect
July 1. Popularly tagged trulh·in·lending,
\he law is designed lo let buyers and bor·
rowers learn clearly and unequivocally
what they must pay for merchandise and
rredit.
Much merchandising ln recent years
11as been carried on, for example, on the
Sl-down-Sl·weekly basis, wllh the optton
left to the buyer to compare the total
,,.eekly installments with lhe original
purchase price.
NOW "REGULATION Z," a Feeler al
Reserve Board publication of rules to
lend and sell by, has been dispersed
!cross tile nation to acquaint affected
busi nesses with the Jaw, whose en-
forcement is the responsibility of nine
Jcderal agencies, chiefly the Federal
Irade Commission. ,
"Jl'inar,ce charges" and ''an nu a I
percentage rate" must be. printed more
conspicuously than surrounding material
I in Cflntra&l to the somelimes "read the
line print .. caution). Finance charges
--
Gues t Editoria l
must list "the works": interest. loan fee.
credit investigation fee, cost· of life or
other insurance associated with a time
purchase, and any amount paid as a
"discount," service or carrying charge .
BUYERS AND borrowers not gifted in
the "hlgher m~th'' for discovering the
full price of an item or money acquired
"on time" may raise eyebrows momen·
tarily when Lhe whole ~t..-piclure stares
them in the face. One effect may be to
prompt shoppers lo hunt around for the
··best financial deal ," since final cost
answers will be available for easy com-
parison .
\Vilh the national habit of living on next
week 's or next year's paychecks well in·
grained by now, we seriously doubt the
r.ew truth·in·lending disclosures will
permanently divert many Americans
from their buy·now, pay-later way of life.
The Times-Picayune
New Orleans
Just w Stay Even ..•
IF YOUR
1958 INCOME
WAS---
$3,000
55,000
$7,5 00
$1 0,000
52 0,000
$50,000
$100,000
-IN 1969 YOU
MUST EARN, JUST
TO STAY EVEN··
-$3,1 46
-$6,332
$9,417
-$12,543
·-$24.188
$63,160
A PERCENTAGE
INCREASE OF ··
211':
271';
261':
251':
241':
26%
Tbt: effects of inllallon end W:es ere Illustrated In this chart. A marritd man
t•WI two children who earned $7,500 in 1958 mulit earn in 19&9 about 26 percent more
to be as "'well off."
.--------B11 Ge orge --------·
Otar Georce :
I met tht• fellow at tht office and
ho _,,. perfectly nice, lurml111
.11111 ""'"'°"'· Some ol the other 1lrl1 inlist he la an 1wf\.ll wolf. How
can I nnc1 If ll 11 true he I• 1 wolf!
I've accepted an tnvltatlon for' •
candlelight dlnntr at his apart-
ment.
WONDERING
Otar Wonderloi :
What are you llTitina me for~ r
can 't thJn~ of a better way to find
out.
the aroa as McDonnell Douglas ha s in Huntington
Beach.
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa ha~e . such dive_rse
manufacturing operations as boat bu1ld1ng , plastics.
electronics for civilian as well as military use, metals
fabrication, medical items, sporting goods, data pro-
cessing equipment and ball point pens -as well as a
varJely of aerospace items -among their more than
350 manufacturing firms.
To avoid the risk of too many eggs in one basket,
Harbor area business leaders should, and no doubt \\'ill.
continue to search for even more di versification -for
the sake of tomorrow.
Fisl1 Fry's Good Works
The budget ha&n"t been drawn up yet, but nearly
$30,000 will soon be dished out to deserving agencies
by the Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club, which
served up nearly 9,000 dinners and lots of entertain·
ment at the 1969 Fish Fry.
Based on last year's impressive budget, more than
a score of bene!iclaries are destined to get a Lion 's
share of the the $74,000 gro~ receipts Crom the three-
day community event. !:
Top recipient in t·erms1 of income \\rill be the Boys '
Club of the flarbor Area, granted $7.000 last year, and
Girls Club of the Harbor Area (given ($5,~Jess be-
cause it is smaller).
Funds will be channeled also into cancer research,
aid to the blind or v~ually handicapped, college
scholarships and similar pfojects.
"It's a wonderful thing to work with," said Lion ii
Club President, Or. Ron ctaig. "It allows us to help out
a lot of people and a lot offfojects."
I cc)
Impropriety
Question Has ·
Been Removed
Ga111 e s of Senato1•ial Cai-a1td•ltlotise
To the Editor:
Please be advised that Mr. Arthur
Strock has removed any question of im·
propriety that may have arisen In con-
nection with his conduct to which you
referred in your June 7, 19G9 issue
regarding the O'Donnell case.
CLAUD!-: J\l OWENS
Judge of the Superior Court
filr. Strock, IQhi/e aclhig ns nttor·
ncy rep rcse11tt11g Dr. f.ferrill C. O'·
Dounell in Jud.g t Ott.1ena' court, dre111
11 cornpLaint fron1 the judge tliat lie
Mailho~·
appeared to be flouting Canon 22 of
the c:ano11s of Jlro/essiu11at Ethics
u;l1c11 he cited a preuiously rcjectecl
decision during law and motio n ar·
g11me11ts. Judye Owe ns' letter reports
tile result of ftfr. Str O<!k's response
to the judge's request L-0 him for com·
ment.
-Editor
1Uornl Aspects, T oo
To the Editor:
Recently critics of sex education .pro-
grams have voiced ~ir opposiUon
dramatically and emotionally. Their ma-
jor objection is that their children are
being influenced away frcim the morality
of church and home and· being in-
doctrinated into the "new immorality"
taught in sex education programs.
Statistics show that there has been a
rise in unwed pregnancies and venereal
disease in America today. Thii is an in·
dlcation that the youth of today are Im·
properly instructed in the moral aspect of
sex.
WHERE DO THESE children get their
misinformation? If parents cannot or will
not teach their chlidren about sex, and In·
still in them a healthy attitude: tho
children wlll look for information
elsewhere. Their whole knowledge about
sex will be derived from discussions wilh
their equally uninformed, or worse yet,
misinformed peers. ~
Children are curious by nature, and
they will seek out the forbidden in·
formation so that they can satisfy their
curlosityoo-!hey will rea~ as many filthy
books as they cen find and they will
eagerly accept the mofal altitudes of
lhelr "more experienced'' rriend s.
ANAllElftf HAS A four-year-old se."
education program taught in the seventh
through twelfth grades. This course in·
tegrates th& biological, psychological, and
moral aspecU or sex education. It
emphasizes that the 11ex act demands th~
knowledge, trust. 15ecurlty, maturity and
the Jove found In marriage.
Onct the need for st:x cducaUon has
been recognized, what must be done to
ensure that there Is a sex education pro-
gr:im taught in the community that ls In·
formative, morallsUc and relevant to
society? •
IF A SEX education program exists In
your community. lnve1tigale it! alms and
melhodi;. Talk to the teachers and lo the
students. nie students' attiludes art ln-
dlcaUve of the success of the program.
If a sex education course docs nol ex·
Isl. study the programs taught In other
commun.iUes and writ.6 to SlECUS, Su
Information and Edutatlon Council of tht
lini led Statts, New York. N.Y., (or In-
formation regardlna organizing and In·
l!Jating 1 proaram In your communlly.
FRANCES OLDENBURG
Stud~nt al UCl
More Tarnish on Congress
WASHINGTON -President Nixon ,
who has been slow in filling top govem·
ment jobs, i.s now having some of his ap-
polntment5 delayed by games of
senatorial cat-and-mouse.
Senate leaders of both parties are in-
.
Allen-Gol ds1ni th
volved. The result is a liltle more tarnish compulsory health care plans and other
on the lack-lustre facade of the current, liberal social welfare projects.
91 st. CongreS!. Dirksen. who professes great ad·
The Senate has always been zealous in miration for Taft. has not really ex·
carrying out its constitutional responsiili· plained his opposition to Knowle~.
ly lo ''advist and constnl" on presiden· Dirksen has noted that the A~lA is op.
tial nominations. ln the pasl, however, posing Knowles and he was reported to
rather precise criteria were applied in have described Lhe doctor, a fe llow
considering presidential appointments . Republican , as a "radical" at one closed-
The old fonnula, as the late Sen. door meeting.
Robert A. Taft, R.O., once explained il,
gave a president wide latitude in selec-OTI'O F. OTEPKA -l·lc is the former
ting top aides, provided that an appointee~ State Department Security Ofricer who
( J) was not clearly incompetent to do the was demoted after he privately slipped
job as.signed, and (2) had not been guilty • some departmental data t~ lhe . Senate
of an offense involving moral turpitude. , Internal Security Subcommittee 1n 1963.
Hi.s cause was quickly espoused by a
number of right wing groups. and be then
became a lar~et of the left wing.
THERE WAS another proviso. A single
senator could block a presidential air
pointment on grounds Lhat the nominee
\YBS "personally obnoxious," bul such an
objection could only be applied to a
nominee from a senator's own state lo a
federal position within that state.
Now a nominee can be oppo.sed on
grounds of prejudice, personality, or even
pique. This Is how things have bttn going
for President Nixon:
At Dirkseil s behest, President Nixon
nominated Otepka on March 20 to be a
member of the nearly defunct Subversive
Acllvities Control Board. No one testified
against the nomination. and the Senate
Judiciary Committee approved it 12 to 3
more lhan a month ago.
Since that time the nomination ha~
been stalled and in a sort of limbo on the
Senate calendar. The Sen ate ' s DR. JOHN H. KNOWLES -President Democratic leadership, which attends lo
N.ixon ~adn't even _ nominated Knowles, --fiuch procedural matters, simply has not
his choice to be assistant HEW secre~ary scheduled th e O\epka nomination for
for health, when Senate Republican !loor consideration.
Leader Everett f.1. Dirksen. 111. •. an· Eventually, the nominalion will be a~
nounced, week~ ago that _he would flg~t proved. The ,.,.ord now is that aclion m:'ly
Knowles appornlment. \V1lh .the posl.:-.1111 come this \veck after a few opponents,
unfilled, Dirksen restated his oppos1t1on mostly Democrats. air their ob.ieclion~.
last week. . which arc keyed lo the old security mat-Knowles Is the director of the ter and to 1he way Otepka raised money
prestigious Massachusetts Gene r a 1 to fight the long legal battle which
Hospital. The American Medical Associa-ensued.
t.ion opposed his appointment lo the HE\V
post because Knowles has supported CARL J. GILBERT -Two Senate
committee chairmen are in a jurisdie·
tional battle over Gilbert, who was
nominal.cd by Presidenl Nixon on April 14
to be the U.S. special representative for
trade negotiations, a job with am·
bassadorial rank.
Gilbert's nomination was approved by
the Foreign Relations Committee, since it
is a foreign policy post. Then Chairman
Russell B. Long. D·La., complained that
his Finance Committee, which created
the job. should have a sey in filling it.
Long and Chairman J. William
Fulbright. 0-Ark .. or the Foreign Rela-
tions Committee. have now agreed that
the Finance Committee can study the
nomination for up to 30 days. Then
Gilbert too, will probably be confirmed,
and he can gel down to the rather im· •
portanl job of tariff negotiations.
\Vhile the President's nomination of
Chief Justice \Varrcn E. Burger was
quickly and overwhelmingly approved
last week, by a \'Ote of 74 to 3, Lhe
reasons advanced by the three Burger
opponents fell far short of the old Senate
formula.
SEN. STEPHEN lH. YOUNG, D-0.,
complained that an attorney who opposed
Burger's nomination y,·as not heard by
the Judicia ry Committee in its hearing,
and could not even get into the hearing
room . Sen. Gaylord Nelson. 0-Wis., said
he knc\v "nothing derogatory" about
Burger but had not been afforded a
chance to examine his credentials.
Sen. Eugene J. f.icCarthy, D-Minn ., the
lhird nay-sayer. said Burger campaigned
against him in 1952 in a manner
calculated lo elicit "an emolional if not
prejudiced response." McCarthy did nol
attempt to employ the old personally ob-
noxious tradition on a broader base. It
was. as usual. just the lone McCarthy
voice. unheeded by his colleagues.
By Robert S. Allen
and John A. Gold1mltb
Pot Is Calling l(ettle Black
It has always amused me to hear
some pompous business official stand up
in public and upbraid "the guvment" for
its massive bureaucracy end Its absurd
spending policies. For I have.seen enough
ol private busine~s estabhshments at
first-hand to know when a pot is calling a
kettle black.
-'J!hl ~hesis of these public denunciJtors
is the "govment" should emulate privale
enterprise -but in the cases I have
personal\y observed. there is scarcely a
shade of dlffen!nce between lhe lwo, ex-
cept that business Is aesigned to make
money, and govemment to provide
service.
THE BUREAUCRAC\' IN a large and
thriving corporation Is not to be believed.
The wastage Is Immense, and the level of
.
Sidney J. Harris
' \
,
'
competence not very hi'gh. It is only the
essential viability of capitalism that
keeps llo me of these firms afloat -they
succeed despite their sloppy mlthage-
mcnt.
ti.1ost of them are penny-wise and
pound-foolish. They will alienate their
1nino~ employes by instituting some petly
economic reform (de a Ung with something
as inconsequenti al as pencil·sharpeners),
and then squander millions on somt
foolish scheme that tickles the vanity of
the top executive -but which any un·
derling could tell hlm is a waste of funds.
IN t"Acr. one of the best argument_,
---------, 1 for capitalism has never been advanced
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus:
It's not that RX educaUon Is
wanted or not wanted In our New·
Port-Mesa schools, il'~ that It's
NEEDED. Someone has to lell
chUdrtn lhe. facl.I before It's loo
late for them. I'm 1-4, and a frltnd
\\'ho's 10 kno .... ·s more. Or does he~
-J. A. T.
T~I-... IY" lfnteft tM9"'1' Wit*" llet
fltttutrlty ,,..., "' ""' MW°ll'.,..· I..,.
-Hf -n i. •1M111w Oil .. O.Hf ,Ii.I.
In itlJ favor, for lt is loo embarrassing to
mention -and thal is the Indisputable
fact that the syStcm \\'orks so well, in the
business area, lhal it can wllhsLand even
the mediocrity and mismanagement of
Us custodians. It's hard to lose money in
an expanding economy.
The cl~r one geti to the seat of cor·
porate power, the more obvious it
becomes that the system is supporting
these i-cople, rathe r than the people the
system. Many of them haven't even had
enollih savvy to keep the.Ir own com·
panies under control -which accounts
for lhe appalling numbtr or corporate
takeoven a.nd fictitious "mergers" in the
last few years, The corporate
bureaucracy gets so top.htavy lhat its
Joas are amputated before Jts head begins
to know what Is going on.
TRIS IS NOT meant to be • defense or
the indefensible pra ctices in government,
whic~ should be more tailored. ef£icient,
and responsive lo public needs -it is
simply to suggest that all bureaucracies
are pretty much alike. no matter what
their professed philosophy mey be. It's
just that the idiocies of government
become a matter of public record, while
the ineptitudes of business are
camouflaged by profits that are almost
impossible. not to make.
When businessmen take over an ad·
ministration. as in this Nixon era. they
'viii spend as much as their Democratic
predecessors; the difference is in the
speeches, not in the actions.
------
Wedne sday, June 18. 1969
Th• tditonoi pag1 of th1 DaU11
Pilot strks t.o inform and •ti""'
tdate r1adm b11 pre11nUn17 'tMI
n1101paptf"s optntoni and eom-
mtnlary on topfu ot intfr1rt
and significonct, b11 JWOuidtng a
forum for th1 1%J)r111ion of
our readers• oJ)tniotU, and b11
prestntin g the dfHrse vie'°'"
potnt.1 of in/orm~d observtT1
0:11d spokrtmefl on iopk, of thl
da11.
Robert N. Weed. Publisher
I
l
l
•
f
--------------------,--------,----------------.,-------------~..,,.. .............. ~'""'!"
Board Cool
1,o f rotest
Of Audito1·
.
County Audltor.pontroller .victor A.
Helm's letter to the county ·supervisors
advising them that he could "not com-
ply" with their order to cancel tai:es on
467 acres the Irvine Company has
,'deeded" tO the county in the Upper
Newport Bay Land Exchange pact failed
to stir the board members Tuesday.
The yvoted to refer the missive to
County C.OUnsel Adrian Kuyper. Kuyper
has stead£astly maintained that the tax-
es should be canceled as "the county
now owns the ~ny."
'Hein1's letter puts ·him in County
Alsessor AIK!rew J. Hinstiaw's pmp.
Hinshaw has consistently refused 1o lake
an action loward cancellation of the tax-
es, saying he will not do so until so
ardered by a court of law.
Heim noted that "the re is litigation
pending between the aud itor-controller
and the comp any ... dictating that I not
comply with the board's orders."
Heim referred to a Ja"'suit in which he
questions the validity an d the con·
situtionality of the transf:?r of title of the
457 acres of Irvine property for 150 acres
of county-owned tidelands. The case has
been pending for more than a year and is
not expected to be settled wit hin three or
four years.
• Wednttday, June 18, 1%9 $ DAIL'( PILOT ~
Blind Tee11 s Sunset P arking
For Drivers
Sixty-five bUnd teenagers and younc
adults will lead an equal number of rally
drivers £rom Los Angeles to Huntington
Beach this Saturday.
Impossible? Not quite. The blind
participants will act as "navigators" for
the drivers and will read their In·
structions from route sheets prepared in
braille.
The three hour event will begln al 9:40
a.m. in the parking lot of the Braille
Institute ln..Los Angeles, 741 N. Vermont
Ave., and will end at the Hunllngton
Harbour Beach Club 1during early af·
ternoon.
During the event the drivers will be
virtually as blind as their navigators
since they will only know the course from
tt'!e navigator's verbal instructions. Win·
ning depends not only on the driver's skill
but also on the navigator's proficiency in
reading braille.
several name drivers have been Invited
to ~i>rticipate in the rally, including Dan
Gumey, Sam Hanks, Alan Johnson,
Scooter Patrick, Richie Ginther :ind actor
James Carner.
A De Tomaso Mangusta v.'ill lead the
entry of exotic sports machinery, which
is expecled to include a Ferrari and
several Lotuses and Porsches.
Or. Karl Knapp, a prominent Southern
California race driver and automobile
dealer Bob Challman will officiate as
rall y master and as rally chairman.
According to course master Dan
Patrick, the roote will involve freeway
travel. surface streets and many types of
driving challenges.
.
Again-Delayed
BY I ACK BROBACK ·t 1 .. o.11.,, .........
AcUon ·on development ()(. the "bodly
needed" parking area fQr,the county.own·
ed Sunset Beach was delated ag@Jn Tues.
day by 1the Board ()(. Supervllors.
Despite I warning from Second Plstrict
supervisor David L. Baker that "we-can't
afford not to move now." the board voled
to "continue \b:e matter unUl nett Tues·
day at to a.m." .
The motion by Supervisor Robert W.
Battin also Included a notice to all af-
fected county de partments to gather
needed information and lhe admonition
that talks be held at once with the cUy of
Huntington Beach.
In delaying, the supervisors are
fighting two deadlines : ·
l. Local cootractor Mel C h a s e
presently has one duplex apartment
building un<ler constru::tion on the mile·
long, SQ..foot wide former Pacific Electric
right-of-way, and :
2. 6ipplication for federal and stale
funds to fin ance the $1 ,695,000 purchase
of the property must be in before next
July I If. the money is to be received in
the next year.
GAS TAX FUNDS
Use or county highway gas tax money
for the acquisition, widening and im·
provemenl or Pacific Avenue on both
sides of the strip is possible, according to
hd McConville, assistant county road
Commissione r.
l.v. I have lo consider the develripers,
Carlton Bullders of Beverly Hills an d the
Southern Pacific Co., 01vners of the pro-
perty. Delays so far have been very cOOt·
ly to them."
Huntington Beach is iJJ the process of
attempting annexa tion of the enti re CQffi·
munily of Sunset Beach. Bud Belsit.o,
representing City Administrator Doyle
Miller, said the petitioners already have
the required 25 percent of r:?gistered
voters signatures but are shooting for 5()
percent before proceeding with the an·
nexatlon mo,•e.
PARKING AUTHORITY
He t.old supervisors of the Huntington
Beach Parking Authclrity through which
the city is developing 2,500 parking
spaces, bordering the city beach property
so1,1th of the pl er.
"\Ve ran a feasibility analysis before
proceeding with tile project," B~lsito ex·
plained , "and found that parking fees are
very important. This way out-of-county
residents will pay most of the cost, they
ue the spaces."
Belsito also estimated th at it will be at
least four months before Huntington
Beach can complete the annexation.
Dickason reeommended "immediate
aclion " by the supervisors on a four·point
program : .
1. Adopt a resoluti on staling a fir1n in-
tention to acquire the approximate IS
acres of right-of-1vay bellvecn \Varner
Avenue and Anderson Strc!?t as soon as
possible for a parltjng fa cility as shown
on Plan Cl of the report.
PUltCllASE PLAN I
When Heim rel~ased his letter last
week, Assistant County Coun~~I H.obert
Nuttman said the supervisors and the
company have two alterna tives in l'iew Of
Heim's ultimatum-they can go lo court,
jointly or either of thcn1. or the !r\"inc
Company can pny the taxes under pro·
lest
FIRST LADY HAS A BIG SMILE FO R ANOTHER PAT
Pat Nixon He lp$ ·Patsy Muni gi a wi th Paintin9 Du ring Vi1it
Object of the rally Is to arrive al pre-
rlelermlned checkpoints at the proper
time and winners "'ill be those who come
through "'ith the leasl amount of Ume er·
ror.
"1! we widen the streets to 32'r~ feet
(now 15) we could possibly spend about •soo.ooo on right-of-way acquisition and
$90.000 on improvements," McConville
said. But he warned that uslJlg_the money
for that project would result in "about a
21·month delay in overall county road
projects."
(Pla;i Cl calls for purchase of the pro-
perty for an estimated $1,605.000, witb
improvemenLs to cost $589,200 to provide
1,130 parking spaces). •
Involved are about $130,000 In taxes for
the 1969-70 fiscal year. Hinshaw assessed
the 457 acres iit $1.53 million last year
and says they arc worth more now. Pat Nixon Fits in Well
The tea1ns will pau.se al mld·point at
the Portoflno Inn in Redondo Beach
where drivers and navigators will be
where drive rs nad navigators will be
treated to lunch by the management.
Planning Director Forest Dickason
presented his department's program for
acquisition and development of the park·
ing area, .approved by planning com·
missioners last Wednesday.
2. Direct the County Administrative Of.
ficer to immediately take necessary sleps
to hnplement the plan , including fine n-
cing arrang-:mlents through the establish-
ment of a Parking Aulhortly.
Heim contends in his letter that "the
circumstances under which the county
agreed to the recording of the cor·
poration grant deeds indicates only that
bare legal title was transferred, and that
this was apparently accomplished for the
purpose of providing property tax relief
lo the Irvine Con1p'1ny while the curren t
litigation is pending."
A t W atts Service Cente1·
After the cars arrive In Huntington
Beach, the teams \\•ill be guests of the
lluntington. Harbour Beach Club
He said "there is no doubt the project
will qualify for matching state funds.
With the state providing half the finan ·
clng, the road department three-eights
of the balance it leaves only one~lghth to
3. Direct the Planning Commiss ion to
Initiate an ~mcn1!mcnl of the Sunset
Beach General Plan to replace the
residential use on this property with the
parking and related facilit ies.
Heim fi.rther contends the county does
not have the normal indices of ownership,
f. e., possession , the right to make im·
· J)rovements, anCI the right to alter the
physical characteristics of the property
(to dredge. i,t). -: ... r. ,
"Tile cooLracts between the parties
clearly indicate thal there has been no
consideration given the con1pany because
the county property being used as such is
still in escrow ," Hei m con tinues.
The supervisors ordered the 457 acres
removed fro~ the tax rolls last May 27.
Previous -Objections by Hinshaw to the
action were termed by County Counsel
Kuyper as "without merit.''
LOS ANGE:LES (U PI ) -Pat Nixon,
taken in as an "honorary volunteer" o(
an inten acial settlemen t house on the
ed ge of \Vatts, says "l do Jove and l an1
concerned. so I fi\ in very well.J'·
The First Lady and ,he:r .dcMAghter, Julie
Eisenhower, 20, were presente<I their
"volunteer" pins depicting the black and
'"="white han4clasp of "eteml b~erhoocft'
\l'hen ,they t.ourfd, the Wesley ·Soci!I
Service Center Tuesday night,. '
They drove to the Watts black com-
munity buoyed by a telephone call from
the President telling. them he had heard a
lot of "good reports" about their current
lour of volunteer projects. ,
They had three more on tap today,
planning to vi sit a public school, a (pun-
dation for the blind and a clearing house
for those who want tf) "do something" for
R egents to Consid er come from county general funds_"
othe rs. Parks Director Kenneth Sampson
r-.1rs. Nixon and Julie were ~ho,\11 the People's Park Issue warned the board that funds for the en·
center by its founder, the Rev. \Vllliam tire project must be available)f the coun·
Rollins, and his wife, Janet, an in-BERKELEY CUPtl -The board of ty ls to be reimbursed for 50 percent or
terr.Cl-al couple-ts ol t•· U . It f ~-i-r . less by Jederal-state funds. regen ·~ mvers y o ._ 1 om1a
11 - -Id th y -d th -• u -th Builder Chase, in answer to questions. Jlo ins, a Negro m1ruster, to e irst opene a re~ay mee ng on e said he bad applications In for Pzrmits Lady their theme was "love and concern Berkeley camJ>Y:S today, with the
in the Inner city~· and s~d lhe volunteers "people's pa"rk" cOntroversy ,high on the fo11 18 more duplexes and it would take
received pins alt~ WGrking with the agenpa. three to eight months to complete the
center for .three y~s. . t : , . -The committee on grounds and project, half in ·four month& end ,the
Walking over to a mlcropaone io an off. buildings planned to continue its con· balance following. ·
the-cuff response, Mrs. Nllon said "i>ui I sideration this afternoo n of alternative Supervisor Baker a,,ked Chase if he
also am one of you in that I am con· uses of the university-owned property "could withhold application for the ad·
4. Estnb1ish that tile use of gas tax
funds £or the road widening adjacent to
this f~cility will receive very high priori-
ty
Dicka~on had previously warned the
board that ··the urgency in moving now
to acquire this land cannot be stressed
enough, inasmu ch as constructiog is
already under ""ay.
"The dt.veloper has decided to exercise
hls legal right to develop thls property
under the exls,tlng R-t zoning. As of June
13, one building permit has beqn issued
and application has been made for 19 ad·
diUonal permits, containing 38 more
unit.!." cerned and I do love. So l really· fit in near the campm. ditional permits." The reply: "Not hard·
very well, and I'm proud ·of this· pin ... ,,. -----'-------------'------:....;.------------------
and I think I'll have to come back to do
my three years of duty to ea:rn jt,"
f\1rs. Nixon . and he!,' ·daughter also
visited weightlifting, n1usic and drama
classrooms.
Now al ATLANTIC MUSIC only • • • SAVE $83.00 (LIMITED TIME!)
"These lands are now O\Vned by Orange
County," Kuyper emphasized, "and the
California constitution specifies that they
are therefore tax cxen1pl." E va11 s Officer Tells Radio
NEW 80 WATT
SOLID STATE
NEWEST 80 WAn SOLID STATE STEREO COMPONENT SYSTEM! Ca r Ba n Planned
For Stockliol1n Foulup Before Collision
, IU/jlNG
""''(~
STOCKHOLM 1 UP!l -Cars will be
banned from the city of Stockholm for SUBIC BAY, Philippines (UPl l -A
one day later this year on an ex-young American Navy officer testified tcr
perimental, basis, lraffic ~afrly and day that there was a "potentialit y for
tourist organizations announced todily. confusion" in the USS Frank E. Evans'
They proclaimed Aug. 24 -a Sund11y com munication systeni on the night it - a "carfrce day" and prornised dancing
in the streets, conce rts and olher ac-collided with the Australian carrier
tivities for all Stockholn1crs who lea\ c Melbourne.
their cars al home. Lt. (j.g.i T. E. Bowler Ill , 24, of An-
Organizers , sa id the ba n on cars napolis, Md., told a six-man U.S.-
bctween 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. 1vill be volun -Australian board of officers investigating
tary · lhe cras h that there were two task
"But we believe most people will foll ow grOups operating on the same -tactical
our proclaroatio n and use p u b 1 i c radio network that night.
transportation," orga nizer~ so id. "When two task groups operate on the ----------
•
(
t'
• ..
• .JJ ~ REMAIN ING
net, there cert.einly is potentiality for
confusion." he said.
Seventy-four U.S. sailors \vere killed in
the June 3 collision, which occurred while
---
both ships were · particij>atir.g In .. .,.'llr-'1--..,--+--~--+~•ill"""'~ Southeast Asia Treaty Organization ex-
ercises in the South China Sea. Sll'IA"llt '"' I lt'IAl/j {JllltA I AlA'"Cl
IW"Clt -lit l OUOflllSS !•ill{ Bowler testified after the board con· .. ~ .. °"llONts
fcrrcd for four hours in c:osed session on •""MIKADO AM/FM
the refu s al or Lt. (j.g.)' Ronald C.
Ramsey. 24, of Long Beach, Calif., iii J.M,Lll-111 SICTIOH
testify. Ramsey. officer or the deck on
the Evans at the time or th~ crash, asked
fOlAl l!IU5t( '°Wiii I 0MM
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11 WATTS
SEN~ITIVllY • Ull MAJC.
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-COMPLETE SELECTION OF SONY TAPE RECORDERS
PRICES ST ART
AS LOW As
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....-.:
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A Loodon book publlsber doesn'l
like tbe spare tire around bis mid·
die. He. plans to trade bis vest and
striped tie one day a week for
dungarees, a pick and shovel and
72 centS an hour laborer's wages.
Chris West, 30, an Oxford grad·
uate, took out tbi• ad in tbe Lon-
don Times: "Publisher with pugil·
iltic and soccer:background o.v~r·
weight. Progressing toward early
coronary, he seeks: heavy manual
labor. ~stic work please :
· heavy portering, 1ard.ening1 etc." ~ .
Sllal Sponcor Griffin has spent
more tbal1 hall of his 55 years be-
bind bars. T\lis week he stood
before a Portland, Ore. judge for
senteocing on rus· fifth felony con·
vlction -armed robbery. "If ~ou
had your choice between life "in
91i50D and a ~year sentence,
··wliicb would you choose?" asked
tbe judge. "I tliiiilr:l wouJa ·prefer
life, your honor," said Griffin. "Jt
would keep me out ol trouble." He
got bis wish . •
Tricia Nixon and Susan Eisenhower,
both "'at home" iti preridmtiol iur-
roundings, woich the w,Jcoming <;ere·
monie1 for W h i t t H o u a e fellows.
Susan i.s a granddaughter of the late
Gen~ Dwight D. Eisenhowe r. .. . .
~The North Carolina Hous.e ap-
r 1.roved a bill . to inake tbe gray
;lguirrel the oilicial state mammal.
During the d e b a t e, state R•p.
_,. • n r y Bo1hlllm•r, a Democrat
:jrom Carteret County in the ea.stern
l>a.rt of the state, quipped : "l
:wOuld Jike to say that an animal
that can bury nuts could be dan·
gerous to Utis General As sembly." • ·~--;a.,;;; ~
t Thirty.five cars went down at ~I
stG oft the coa!t of England
near Jtam.sgate. The cars were
aboard Ute: Ceman freighter J,
Aphaia: wllt'n it beacllt'ci on a 'i
mud bank. The automobiles 5tip-J
ped Clff the dtck and sank. \·
""1~'"""'""'"~""'""'!:f.:t..:-. .-..~i11:.: ;:··
••• • ~ Cindy is having her toenails ~Ehecked today -with an x·ray
· zhachine. Cindy is an elephant, and 1Jle x·ray machine was the only
·way attendants at the Dudley Zoo
in \Vorcester, England could fig.
ure to check her feet. "Long or in-
growing toenails can cause, an
elephant great discomfort," a zoo
£pokesman said.
--
Wfdottdoso, ~ 11, 1969
Lindsay Loses, Will Form · New Pa;rt~
DEMOCRATS' CHOICE
M•rlo Proc•cclncr
'I NY'~ 'GOP Solons Pledge tO 'Sup,Jo~t Mayor\
I -
NEW YORK (APl -May.W Jolln V. that any Republican LA<!B wbo0upt>Clria a flv""'on Democr1UcJ1eld. Ht won' with
Undsay, defeatlld in hla bid !er the Marchi in the ,;;,;;.r.~ ;,.mpalp) ool)' aboul l!lhlrd ol lljt ""\!'· •.
rtepublican mayoral nomination, said t~ ''b~d better look, v!P.' cartfully.". B~ . Borough Pr~t · ~
day he will fonn a P"W "urban party" LlndSay, asked if be wu relerriQ& to Badlllo,: Who wu bc:n m Puerto: Rico, ,_, ' -• ran a~ third. Author Norman Maller ?nd appeal to "."l•""1<1•nl& 'nd liberals New Y<l't Gov. N~ A. Roctdtlltr, aoil Rep. 'Jame1 H. Schtuir lrailid. ~
111 lhe Democratic and Republican parties who had uld he .. ,l"ou1d aup~ the 'Ille Vote wu· Procaccino 252,213 •
;, the !all mayoral elecl1on. prlmaey winner, replied that tr tt rtt,. WaptJL a11,I05, Bldll!Q· 115,311, Maller
Undaay, who said he would remain a "Well, thal'I the cue." 41,138~ Sc,beuer 31,UI. . .. 1
Republican, said that Slate Sen. John J. New York's lwo· Republion senators, Llodaa7 usaUed the .. .forcea of rucUon . • and '!ltkl•sh" lbat ht saJd hod taUn Marchi, who oelealed him, had been Jacob K. Javtts and Clwles E. Goodell, "lemporary" co trol ol both part! .. rl
"captured by the forces o£ the ultra right. have iaid they ~.support Lindsay Jhe city. 0
, es 1
"He slanda for negativism," Lindaay even Ube toat. f ''There is a mood of 'hostility in this
said, "a~ appea~ to the forcu of hatred 'Ibe same conservative trend that bit city and nation,'' LincJsi.y'akl, "but be-
and dlv1&lveness. _ Lindsa a18o k-..1 f Demt>Crati .fare Novembtr the Jriood ol reuon will
''My Uleme in lhc campaign," bl!: said, Y wrec ... ~er .c retarn."
;,will be 'a mayor for an lhe city.' We Mayor Robert F · Wagner s comeback bid ~.The-GOP defeat was a severe blow lo
'will create an independent line for a new Tuesday. ... the party prestige ol Lindsay, who last
urban. party." The final unoUlcla\ count for Lindsay year .Was considered a possible contender
The mayor said no name bad. been was 106.351 agalnA lbe 111,725 for for the national ticket,
cbolen for the new party. But. be is Marcbl, a HtUe-~ state senator from However, It did not ~II: the 47..,.ear-
already on the ballot as the ctndidate t:1f Stal.en Wand. -r ~.. old mayor out of coa~nlion for re-elec-
the Liberal party. W•-lost to Itauin-born City Uon to a second term tn N.ovembet. In a
L.nd h I t at Im -v-·-· city that ls 7·2 J)emocratic in Voter 1 say. w o os in a mayor pr ary Comptroller Mam A. Procaccino, who registration he ·n be the oil liberal
that echoed the results of recent elections rejected the label rot "law-and-order can-candidate u; the :hr n"Id in Los Angelea and Minneapolis, warned d.Jdate" but wu Uiii most conservative ia ee-man e ·
'
'" ... ' >
GOP WINNER
Sen. John Marchi
.-
~DS Convention •
Opens Behind
Senate Investigation
BlackPantl1er Party Aim Liberals Still Outweigh
To l{ill Policemen Told
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senate in-
vestigator testified today that Black
Panther Party leaders said in broadcasts
originating in Havana that their aims
were to kill American policemen and
government officials and destroy fac·
torie11, airports and other facllllles.
Transcripts of broadcuta, read al a
Senate hearing, Included praise for Negro
militants for the deaths of policemen In
Cleveland, New York, Chicago, Pec:iria,
Ill., Little Rock, Ark ., and Seattle, Wash.
John E. Drasa, a Washington, D.C.,
police captain who has bee.n on loan to
Sen. John L. McCleJlan's Senate in-
vestigaUon subcommittee, read excerpts
from the transcripts at the third day of
the group's hearings into the relationship
be\ween · city disOrders and campus
unrest.
Drass has been working for the sub-
committee since \January, 1988, to con-
duct an investigation of the Black
Panlher Party, one of four milltanl
organizations which McClellan Is in ·
vestlgating.
Drass said the radio broadcasts were
m~itored by the U.S. government and
included statements by Bobby Seale iden-
Ufied as chairn1an of the Black Panthers;
Huey P. Newton, "minister of defense,"
and George Mason Murray, "minister of
education".
"Murray spelled out u.e Black Panther
Party's intention to fight the United
States through guerrilla warfare," Dress
testified.
"Murn.y further staled that by guer-
rilla warfare the BPP means: 'To
organize the black people In twos aod
threes and fours to assassinate the police
who kill us.' "
Drass further quoted Murray as
saying:
"The U.S. government has guards that
can be killed. They have bridges that can
be blown up, ractories that cap be burned
to the ground, airports that can be blown
up, people walking the streets. mayors,
senators, governors, whose lives can be
taken in exchange for the lives of black
people that they have taken."
Draa said the Black Panthers are con-
nected with the Black Student Union and
has an alliance with Students for •
Democratic Society (SOS), which has
been sparking many of the demonstra·
lions on college and university campuses.
'
Reds on Hamburger Hill,.
Fire on Support Copters
I SAIGON (UPI) -Communist gunner:-:
entrenched on Hamburger H.111 in lhe A
Shau Valley opened fire today on U.S.
helicopters supporting a major new allied
drive in the area, informed America ··
military sources reported in Saigon. They
sak!. none of the copters was hit
._several thousand U.S. paratroopers and
SOU\.b Vietnamese infantrymen a r c
sweeping through the valley 375 mtles
northeast of Saigon and two miles from
U1' border or Laos, but there were no
·reports of any American attacks In the
Immediate vicinity of the controversial
height.
The 3,000-foot peak was captured by
U.S. paratroops In an 11-day battle that
cost the Armricans more than 50 dead
arid 300 wounded. ll was abandoned as
''useless" and wSs promptly reoccupied
~y the North Vietnamese.
The U.S. command announced Tuesday
t had launched a new multi-battalion
sweep through the A Shau Valley, Opera·
lion Montgomery Rendezvous, b u t
spokesmen today steered clear of th!
subject of Hamburger Hill. The hill had
been captured In a similar operation call·
1·d Apache Snow.
The Communist gunfire from the hill
ramc as American spokesmen reported
stepped up Communist drives ranging
from the demilitarized ione to SaJgon's
defense perimeters had killed S 7
Americans and wounded 114 in fighting,
Tuesday and today.
The cost was heavy for the North Viet-
namese and Viet Cong -149 ~ad.
'Security Wall'
' CHICAGO (UP)) -Students !or a
Democratic Socieiy opened their national
convention today behind a wall of sell-im·
posed security anii io ferment over which
ideological direction the radical student
movement. should take.
SOS marsbala ffere posted at all doors
of the old Chlcqo Coliseum, the con-
vention site. All 'newsmen were required
to register along with the delegates.
Cameras and electronic media gear were
barred from the hall.
An SOS spokesman said one resolution
to be voted on would exclude coverage by
lhe New York Times.
The "undergro.j.od press" would be ex·
empted from the restriction, he said.
Right Wing in New York
NEW YORK (UPI) -Republicans may
have overthrown Mayor John V. Lindsay
in their primary but he's hardly ready lo
be counted out of the general election.
The comervalive trend in the
Republican and Democratic races that
brought State Sen. John J. Marchi and
Controller Mario A. Procaccino to the
fore, still fails to outweigh the liberal
vote.
In the unofficial returns, the liberal
vote for Hennan Badillo, James H.
Scheuer, Nonnan Mailer and Robert F.
Wagner adds up to more than 500,000.
Marchi's unofficial tally is 111,725.
while Lindsay finished up with 106,358.
Many of the Democrats who voted for
liberal candidates can be expected to
start looking for a liberal in the fall, and
their only choice in the three-way race is
Lindsay.
After the mayor <:0nceded his loss, one
of his advisers expressed relief at the
Democratic outcome. ''At least they did
us the favor of nominating Proc.aceino,"
he said.
ln the headquarters of all the
Democratic candidates except Procac-
cino, many campaign workers "conceded
they would probably vote for Llridaay in
the fall . ·
Hail Blankets Amarillo
,.
Most of Nation Enjoy·s_;__Mild Spri1ig Weather
C.UfoM1i•
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Hltfl \.-Prtt..
u .. .. ..
u " ., ., .. " 15 f1 " .. 11 II ...
n " ~ ;: .ft
11 'Jt
" st Tr " » tJ '' .ol " " ....
.. H " " tt It I.OJ " .. " . " " ·'' J1 • ,II
76 JI • .Mi .. u
n " " . . ..
n " n • !; :;
n· " " .. " .. u .. 1J .a ,,.
n • " r, 1.14 11 Joi .1• u ... " .. " .. n " .. u " .. " .
·E~hour oo the hour!
Los J\ngeles & San Francisco!,
Presenting the greatest flight schec;lule on earth
between 7 am and 8 pm! Both ways! More on weekends!
Why worry about a reservation when PSA has over
1100 fllghts a week? Such an eaay·lwemember
sche~e you can carry it around in your head .
Why remember lowest fares? Or all jets? Or great
service to Oakland, San Jose, and Sacramento? Or that
kldt under 12' fly PSA (with their parents) for half, ~ fare? Sllll wa nt a reservation? Just remember
to call your travel agent or wtialsltsname airlines.
•
QU•• By Phll fnterlanclt
\ ..
<' ,
Prisoners' Families
Get U.S . Reassurance
Pentagon and Slate Depart-
ment .officials are holding
meetings with families of
more than 1,300 captured U.S.
servicemen in a widening ef·
fort to assure them they have
not been forgotten .
The most recent official
easu•lty report listed 341 U.S.
servicemen captured or in·
t.med and 987 missing. Most:l----------
of the missing art believed to
be prisoners in North Vietnam '-.... _
-pilots captuted when ,their
Two sessions already have
been held and more briefings
are planned in the next four or
five weeks to inform the
relative s about the
government's efforts to free
the men and ease their con·
diUons of captivity.
Another puryose is to make
sure the families of men miss·
Ing or captured in the Vietnam
war are receiving all the help
to which they are entitled.
HEADS TEAM
Richard G. Capen, deputy
a5.5istant secretary of defense,
is head of the team of officials
arranging the meetings as
part or a new Nixon ad·
ministration program.
Sessions a r e tentalively
planned in San Francisco, Los
Angeles, Phoenix, Ariz.,
Denver, Colo., Kansas City,
planes were shot down during
the air war.
Laird sent key Pentagon of-
ficials a memorandum last.
March 3 messing that he ii
"deeply concerned about the
welfare" of captured and
missing servicemen and their
families.
"I want to be assured that
the military services and the
office of the secretary of
defense are doing all that we
possibly can for the next-of-
kin," Laird said at the time.
Later that month, Capen
held the first private, informal
session with about 75 wives in
the San Diego area. He and bis
associates followed this up last
week with a similar gathering
of about 100 nen-of·kin from
the San Antonio and the Fort
Worth-Dallas areas cif Texas.
McGuire Air Force. Base, N.J ., CLOSED IXMJRS
Westover Air Force Base, '11le sessions are behind
Mas., and an undertermined ' closed daws.,... Capen aaid,. to
Joe~ In µie southeutefn 1>"¥rY• Che privacy of Ille
l!MW ~-i' " lamilit.!z. _' ~~'. lM'~.f~:-" )A ... Jud.) p :bl Jc ~ ~~ hided a .Jtries ·or· statements ~Laird dej>lorini · iiiaWDenls· by' Secretary' ol . J'lortlr Vletnam~.,,.eatment ol
Defense Melvin R. Laird U.S. prisoners,. 'there have
deslined to focus world· opi· been behind.th~nes· moVes
nioo on . the side or U.S. by the deferik. secret111ry· 'I.ft prisonefs i -represents a this area. ' , '
ilWitch fri>m ·'the last ·ad· ln one such'. QlOVe !several '
mln!stralion·s policy. · weeks. ago, ht briefed U.S.
"The policy in the past was amba1Sadors in' Belfium 8nd not to say anything publlcly Brit.sift. so they could solicit
for . fear of reducing the help. from European countries
J)OS;al'bility of release of the in bringing pressure on North
inen or release of information Vietnam f o r hilmanitarian
by North Vietnam on their handling of Ametjctns in ctp-
statu&," Capen &aid. "It seem -tivity, · •
ed to us tbe tilpt was oow for So far, Capen acknowledged,
us fo . exPresa d~p concern Hanoi's response-i'has. beeo
aboUt these men." disappointing. ~
~·price Control Chief
Asks Voluntary Controls
WASHINGTON (AP\ -The
man who called the shots
#hen price ceilings were last
Clamped on the nation think s
il ~time for the government
W try controls again -but
Voluntary, this time.
4 ~Michael V. DISalle, Korean
War price boss, suggested the
NixOn administraUcm might
bl)' for hold -the -l ine
restored, were mirking up
price lags to be in an ad-
vantageous posl'tloq when the
anticipated "freett:" came.
Prices claimbed 8 percent In ,
the six-month period o f '
military escalation preceding f-·
lhe clampdown in January ;
1951, even tbough some in-
direct controlli were still in ef.
feet.
agreements with the 500 big-STILL PREVAILED gat l'Ol'Plfations, or with ma· JO!: hxlUICiles. "Credit restratnls were In
woukl mean ab¥-use, n!:nt eontrols ll!U prevail-
' • of tbe d ed, arid the ex:C98 prof.its las: • I'• t '
8
-was still-in forCe," DiSalle •• Uoa's JIO!!<Y !la'!'I -, li!lt jiric.~·oonltcila or said. •.l'et-none..of lhese .:11...... · Aid bi an ed to slow. up the spiral."
I _._, 0Tbe1situa0orr;il similar DOW • .. rfie'f, bUt bll ' 1 ~ •
• . '°'111' -lnlstratlon doesn't Ill!' 1...,.... said; wltJi · Ille
..
• have many options left now. surtax having no more
• "II they keep putting it off, dampening effect than the old
.! this inflation is just going to exct:ss prolits tu, and with
businesses! bQr'rowi.ng hand s~:s~ ~ keep on acce1erattug. '' over fist In spite cl recdrd ~ DiSalle, fonner Democratic high lnter,st rates. I• ""rnor of Ohio and mayor of T; ... ~tenin the
f. ~. directed the 00it"C of ..,. . g m ~ n t y
• Piie• Slsbllizatlon from 1!1M· _.,. bdnp laeQ9ltatilo ef. '
'i t01't62 and In the latter year .• reda,_ wW. hard_shiP4 ~ lll'lall
l admbri!tem:I wage curbs a!IO, lhui, on marginal businesses
as director of e c o n o m I c that ~ loans to expand, and
stabilla.tioo. on bo~s1n1, DISallc said. .
r And a wrench violent enough
DO NOTIUNG to cause a rapkt deOaUon
, 1 ~·J rdJdn't ~k lhe 10 per-CllU91!S shutdown·• aod
' cent surtax would do IJl}'thing unemployment "wbicb. hurts
• to alow things down. and it those whom you want tn0st to
, hun'~" said DiSallc. now protect" -Ille po\)!" Ille slum
i! practlcln& law tn Washington. dwe)Jers and m.lnof1iy groupe
"J do think tome kind of and the lower-skilled worttn' quuJ. .. hmury l)'atan mipt ·
I wort." Vol\Qltary coatrols fail· TRIED BRJEFLY
1 ed in the Korean War, he con-The idea of indwitry.wide t ceded. 1be economy was still hol<Mbe-Une agreements was
•'-Ille otre•m• I tried bri"'-ut' ·~ ~---•I t ·• OD ''6"' O -•1 "'-= ~ I donf!lod pen&, up w.r. A .lll<j_J*t.,.u tnide
' W"ld °lar
0
11. Price which wmed, biSalle r'ecalJ.
• hid -"""""" -ed. bu! Go\! • kl<!a , fell ' opart proma\urely. l n when ii proved. l.._tble ro
opinion -1 n d bring the Oto" illc!Dltry Into
........... folly expeclln& agm0>ent. 11 llilghl W«k this ~~l cellinp would b. tim•:rle ~
>, I
I
ANAHEIM ' · r '
'!# N. Euclid , s3s.a12 f ·
Mon. ihru S~t.•
I 0 o.m. to 9:30 p.m. f.
..
' .
..,.
'
f
NEWPO~T
'r 7 Fashion \sl•nd 644-1 212
Mon. thru Fri. 10 •.m. to 9:30 p.m.
J Sot. ~O e.m. to 6 p.m .
l /
. . '
)•
I I
' . , ..
~rJ _. ·,, • ..
• I ~ 1 ~-1
.;~•1 •.... j.
• 1!'!>1.lt
....
• ...
~ ·r . -.
' ·-; . ..
' ;
•
MILY flLOT I
'
.
'
. •
• • • • •
:
,S'f{IVE~ R~KERS PROMISE ·
DEEP -COMFORT J
99.95 · ,. ··",•g • .139.95
We s•lute the tel\. •nd hondsoma-swive\ reeker ••• in
cotton cut velvet imported from Belgium. Bottom luff~
beck, deeply comlortoblo soot cushions with polyfoem
wrapped in Dacron polyeste r for snap back resilience, 1
non allergic quoliti~s. A final custom flouri sh , • , ~
out line welting in solid color. ·•
Furniture, 38 _.
' "VAQUERO" • • • COORDINA1"ES.
' .. .-.
,•
. •
. • • ! • • >
•
< '
I
MEXICANA, SPEIC:IALLY PRICED.
FROM MORRIS OF CALI FORNI A
Re g.39.95-129.95 34.00°116.CIO
Plan. a young bedroom or family room aroun"d this rustier
rugged series in mellow bro~n woods.
h "" "
.
I It.ts ' ,., -'r••••r ••••
Jt.tlli ll'l •fchhtt 11'11'1•r
94.91 1t11cl•11f '••k
119.tl hi cha1t, I clr•w•rt
69.91 lo r.h•tf, l dr•w9r1
6.9.91.. lo c,11pltoe!11 ,
59.95 eorn•r cle1k
19.95 11l9ht '''"'
4Z.911i JD" ltoolo:1helf
Furniture, 92
......
J4.00 .....
JOl,M ..... ..... ..... ..... .....
14.tS 44,. ileo••t.." JIM 59,91 twin or full W 14.H
'"·'' 44r•w•r dre11.,-Z9.95 mlrr•r 27.lrl
l>e1• enly ltJil
11t.t1 i1111111i l>ed,, 911•r irell .r
ledcler 11 ...
rot.t i tru!MU• Md, i.l
beddi119 bo. ""' 111.95 fl'l•tr.11, pletforlft• ~~
for tr11Hle l>ed 1M,tl •,
·'
..
2001 MA TIRESSES AT THE LOWESl
PRICES OF THE YEAR
Twin siz e 59.95·89.95
All ere Simmon~ femous qu•lity -in
~ssorted sizes, i'l,cluding twin, fulls, ixtra longs, queens
ond kings. Choose tufted or quilted sfyles in firm or
.•rlr• firm tensions. All reduced es. lees! 20% -
Full size 89.95-99.95i
Queen sim-119.95.
Sleep Shop, 69
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7771 Edinger 'Ave. 892.3331
Mon. thru Set.
.I 0 •.m. lo "60 p.m.
I t
I I
I
)
I.: I
--~
1 ·o~Y Pu.OT mrmBIAL PAGEi + 1.1
Ne e d e d : Diver ·sifi.catio n ' ' ' ,,
' 1·
'!'be uncertainty, confusion and probable lOI of
Jobs for hundreds, B not thousands ot employes of tho
McDonnell Douglas stronautlcs Corp., after announce-
ment of the cancell tion of the Manned Orbiting abo-
ratory Project last week offers an inter,sUng tl.100.. ·
Officials of the company announced that some a,..-
600 jobs would be aUected in Huntington Beoch by .jjle
announcement by the Air Force $ec::retary tbit the.-S
billion job was being shelved.
The company is the largest industrial employer JI)
the city. In the five years of its exiatence lea~ers have
pointed with pride at th e huge plan~ u the backbqne
of the industry of the city and have encouraged more
of the same, sometimes at the expense of other pote&-
tial industry. t
The mighty plant was suppised to employ in excess
of 10,000. But as it neared the 8,000 ·mark, a sudden
change of plans by the federal government -a single,
drastic decision wholly outside the power oj the em ..
ployer or the community to infiuence or negotiate -
has dealt "l»tnpany and community alike a hard blow.
This is not the 'first time that hat happened on 'Ibis
scale in Soulhland aerospace ind.Ullcy', nor will it be
the last. That doesn't make the situitron any eesie' for
anyone involved, but it does underscore the lesson.
The picture is sWl clouded. Many of tho<• who
must be laid off. will find other. jobs elsewhere . in the
county, or nearby. For many, however, ~· probable
answer is to move on. Homes may have to be aold and
furniture moved, children will be upr'091ed and plans
for the future shelved.
For the commllnity, tht · drastic ' layoff means a
reduction in buying po-wet", lessenilig tit sales ind gaso-
line tax revenue to the city and loss Pf those talents
which have m"ade the nei ghborhoods and small organi ..
zations strong and beneficial.
There are those who have argued that space 1n:
dustry alone is .enough to keep the city's economy
strong. Much time and effort bas been expended to
Truth-in-Lending
Vs. Buying Habit
Bualnesats whJch offer credit are gear·
Ing up -with new printed forms and
salesman training -for the Consumer
Protection Act of 1968, which takes effect
July I. Popularly tagged truth-in-lending.
the law is designed to let buytts and bor·
rowen learn c:learly and unequivocally
what they must pay for merchandise aod
crodll
Much merchandising In r.eeent years
has been carried on, for example, on the
Sl-down-$1:.weekly basis, with the option
left to the buyer to compare the total
weekly iMtaUlDt.IJUJ with the oriJinal
parcbue Pf"'"·
NOW "REGULATION Z," a Federal
Reserve Board publication of rules to
lend and sell by,,' Jw~ ·been di!pened
8Cl'08I the naUon to ·~uaint affected
bn•l"".sse:s wlth the .law, whose en-:
forcement is the roaponsibillly of nine:
federal a~a,· .c.fii'1Jy the Federal
Trade Commission.
"Finance charges" and ' ' an n u a I
percentage rate" must be printed more
con.!picuously than surrounding material
fin contrast to the someUmes ''read the
fine print" caution). Finance char1cs
{
' 't" ., . ·~·· •
must Wt "the works": interest, loan fee,
credit investi&ation fee, cost o( life or
other in.!urance associated with a time
purchUe,. and ~·amount paid as a
"diJcouftt," servic;e or carryin& charge.
BUYERS AND borrowers not gifted In
the 1'hicher math" for discovering the
run price of an item or ~Y acquired
"on t1me11 may raist: eyebrows momen·
tarily Whef!: the whole COii-picture stares
thtm in the face. One efftct may be to
prompt shoppers to hunt Bround for the
"best financial deal." 1tnce final cost
answers will be available for easy com-
parison.
With the national habit of livinc on nei:t
week's or nert year'• paycheckl well lll-
grained by now, we seriously doubt the
new truth-m.lendin& diJcloaures will
permanently divert many Americans
from their buy-now, pay-later way oI life. ne Ti.Jnes-Plcayuoe
New Orlemn
Jus t tO Stay E ven • • • ••
IF YOUR
19 58 INC OME
WAS···
$3,000
$5,000
-57,500
$10,000
$20,000
550,000
$100,000
·IN 1969 YOU
MUST EARN, JUST
TO STAY EVEN··
-$3,146
-$6,332
. $9,417 -
$12,5 43
$24,ala
$63,160
A PERCENTAGE
IN CRE ASE OF••
2ar.
27Y.
26Y.
25%
24Y. ••
26%
24Y.
The effects of Inflation and taxes are illustrated In this chart. A ml1'fled man
with two chlldren w?io urned f7,500 In 1958 must cam In 1919 about 21 perceot more
to be u 11well off.''
...--------Bii George-------~
Ow G<ori•' I met tllil fellow at the offiet and
he ,...., perlectly nice, h1rmless
Ol1ld courteoo1. Some of the other
girls insist be 11an11wfo.l woU. How
tan I (Ind If It 11 trot: ht lJ 1 wolf!
J'\'t. accepted en lnvJtaUcrt for 1
I
candle.Jieht dinner at hls 1part-
ment.
WONDERING
Dur Wonclerln1 '
Whal an you writing me for ? t
can•t think of • betttr way to find
ouL
secure space lndllllry ~ qtber defense conlracll, hut
!Wtunalely Ihm are thOse Jooldll1 ol11where for the
Deeded pmperlty. . \
Of late thll. Chamber of Comm<rce, bullness\nen
and city •officials are beJlnnlnJ to nalize that cllv~tty
8Jld lndUllrial hallDCe are •• Important, perhaps even
more .0, ·iJian lnduatrlal volume.
The po11lbl\ltY )llat even a 10lld leader In the aero-
space lnduatry u fhe McDonnell DouJI" A-utlcs
Corp. certai~'nl ls, can be hit so hard by one contrllCI
being drop should In iuelf be a warniDe to thole
charged attraction of lndut!ry to HunUniton
BUch. Diversity mutt be IOlleJrt ao that the communl·
ty ne\rer is at the mercy of a single 8DllOUDComcnl In ·'
Wulllngtoa 'or at the whim of a polltle91 decree.
Cities surrounding . HuntlDtton Beach certainly
have been succeuful In oblalnlnJ clivenillcaUon. Wlth
llO!De effort Huntington Beach can obtain the 1111110 pro-
l«:tlon against OC0110mic upset. '
'Fountain Valley Days'
Each year ••Fountain V'8lley Days,'' the celebration
of the city'• birthday, grows a Hiile, just u the city
~rows. This year the,FounWn Valley Jaycees brought
10 a prelesSlonal carnival Ollllif u an added birthday
present for the young dty.. ·
. "Fountain Vjllley~" can play an important role
10 drawing a rapidlY-rtowlDg city to1ether, Jivinl it a
senae of: identity • .\?.atby is the erntest roed blocl: to
a city's progress. While a three-day htrlhday party
wo~'t fill the city with commerce, it can achieve a small
feeling of "tog~~esa" among residents.
. ""'!CW~N:> --
The Jaycees sliould be applan<!ed for their recent
effort. But they ,'realize l!ley can't stand on their !au· ~·· Plamiinf~begln eedy for a bigger and better
'Fountai.n Vallex Dllya." e.eleltJ.uon to serve a erowlne commuruty. '" " s .. Sic 'fM/ tuHoA I Sic 'EMI WHoA 1 " . . . . .
Improprie ty
Question Has
Been Removed
To the Edllor,
Pleue be advised that Mr. Arthur
SlloCJ< hu mnoved ony , quesUoO al im·
propriety thlt may ti.ve arisen in con-
nection with h!a conduct to which you
referred in your JWJe 7, 1969 issue
regarding the O'Donnell case.
OLAUDE M. OWENS
Julf&e of the Superior Court
!tfr. Strock, while acting cu att,or.
ney representtng Dr. Merrill C. O'·
Donnell in Judge Owens' court, drew
a complaint from t1Le judgr: that ht
appeared to be flouting Canon 22 of
the Canons of Profes1iaool Ethics
when he cited a pre viottllv rejected
decision during law and motion ar·
gumentl. Judge Owem' ltttu report.!
th e result of J\fr. Strock's responsl!!'
to the judge's reques t to him for com-
ment.
-Editor
1Uor•l MpecU, r-
To the Editor '
Recently critics ,of Jel eduCIUOn pt"0-
11'11111 have volC<lt: their opp9eltlon
dfaDlallcally and emotlooollJ, 'liiilr'Jnt. 1Jectlon la that lheir' dilldNn .,.
· lnnuenced away from'"' t.bl morality
and -e and beinl in-doctrinated into the "new lrnmofality''
taiflbt in an education Jl'Oll'llDS.
StaUstics show that there has been a
rise in unwed pregnancie1 and venereal
dlseue In America today. Thla ii an in-
dlcaUon that the youlll al toda,y are Un.
properly lnsllucted in the monl upect of ....
WHERE DO THEIE cl1ildrea Ill their
mlalnlonnaUon? H -cathii or will
nol teacb their children about .... and.in-
1tlll ln them a bellthy attitude, lht
chUdren will look for information
et.ewber~. Their whole knowled&e about
.ez will be derived from ~ wilh
their equally uninformed, or worae yet,
mllltlw ... peers. •
Childron aro curlGUa •Y nature, ·and
they will tttk out the forbidden in-
formation so that they can aatilfy their
curk>eity. They will read u m1ey Ulthy
boolil u they con find and ·u,q wW
..,...1y accepl Ille moral attitudes of
their "mort esperl~" frltnds.
ANAHEIM HAS A f'our.year~ld 1e.t.
educaUon proc:ram t.auabt In the ttvtnth thrw&h twelfth arades. Thil courae Jn.
tesratu the JjJolocJcal. psycholO(lcal, and
_. upocta of an edUcatlon. It
emphuhea that lhe ... act demands the
tMwtedie. lrult, security, maturlJy and
the Jove found tn manta'"
Once the need for 111 educaUon his
been recocniaod, what m1111 be cJooe to
ensure that there la a an education pro.
gram taUlhl In ibe community that la Jn. ·
formaUve, morallstJc and relevant to
soclety? '
IF A SEX educaUon procram exists In
your community, lrrve.U,.tt tts alm1 ud
method1. 'Talk to the teachtra and to tht
ttudtnta. 'nle. atudtnta' atUtuda ,,.. lD-
dlcaUve of tM auccess of the pt0tram.
If a &u: tducaUon course. does not ez-
lst, lllldJ the procr1m1 talllht tn other
communltlu and wrile lo SlllCUS, la
lnform.odon Md EducaUon COllndl al the
United statu, New York, N.Y.1 for ln-
lonnatlon ttlardinl or1anldng and In·
iUatin& a proiram in your community. P'MNCES OLDENBURG
Sludcnt at UCI
Games of Senatorial Cat-and-Mouse
More Tarnish on Congress
WAill!NGTON -Prt~dent Nil<on,
who hu been 1Jow 1n filllng top 1overn-
ment jobs, la now havinJ aome of his ap.
pointments delayed by games of
anatorlal c•Wnd-mouse.
Senate leaders of both parties are in-
volved. The reault la a llttJe more tarni.Bh
on the Jack·luatre facade of the current,
llst, Conarus.
The Senate has always been z.ealour in
carryine out its camUtuUonal respongiili·
ty to "advile and comeat" on presideflo
tial norninaUom. In the put, however,
rather predse c;!lterta were applied in
conslderln1 ·~entlal appointments.
·The old fonliu!a. u lhe lale Sen,
Robert A. Tait, •M>., """ uplained i~
gave a preaideqt wide laUtude in telet-
linl top aides, provided that .. aJ>POintee
(I) -... dearly ~to do lhe
job l!lilned, and (I) hid "°' been guilty
of an off.-11\volvlnc moral turpilude.
TllEllE WAS another provl!o. A slncle
Hllltor COUid block a prealdontlal IJ>'
poln-Oii ....-that tbJ -was "penonaD.y obnoDoul," )at web an ·
objection could anly be applied to a
nom1nee from a aemtor'1 own atlte to a
federal pooltton wtlhln that stale.
Now a -can be~ on aroundl of prejudice, penonaUt;, or even
pique. Thll ii bow thinl9 have been loin&:
for Preddtnt Nlt'on:
• DR. JOl!Noll. KNOWLES -Prosident
Nixon hadn't even nominated Knowles.
his choice tf be lsaiat.ant HEW secretary
for health, when Senate Republican
Leader EvereU M. Dirksen, Ill ., an-
nounct!d neka q:o that he would fight
Knowles' appointment. With the post still
unfilled, Dlrben restated his oppooition
lut-.
Knowles Is the director or the
preattpous Musachuaetts Gen e r a I
Hospital. The American Medical AISocl•·
don oppooed his appointment to lhl HEW
poet becau,. ~I.. has supported
compulsory health cal'f: plans and other
liberal social welfare projects.
Dirksen, who professes great ad-
miration for Taft, has not really ex·
plained his opposiUon to Knowles.
Dirksen has noted that the AMA is op-
posing Knowles and he was reported to
have described the doctor, a fellow
Republican, as a "radical" at one closed-
door meeting.
OTJ'O F. OTEPKA -He is thO former
State Department Security Officer who was demoted after he privately slipped
some departmental data to the Senate
Internal Sewrlty Subcommittee in 1963.
Hb cause was quickly es~ec:i by a
number of right wing groups, aad be I.hen
became a ta.get of the left wing. ·
At Dlrben's behest, ,President Nixon
nominated Otepka on March 20 to be a
member of the nearly de.funct Subversive
Ac:tivtUes Control Board. No one testified
against the nomination, and the Senale
Judlclary Committee approved it 12 to 3
more than a month ago .
Slnce that time the nomination ha~
been stalled and in a sort of limbo on the
Senate calendar. The Senate 's
Democratic leadership, which .iittends to
such procedural matters, simply has not
scheduled the Otepka nomination for
floor consideration.
Eventually,.the nomination will be. ap.
proved. The word now is that action may
come this week after a few opponents,
mostly Democrats, air their objections,
which are keyed to the old security mat.
ter and to the v.·ay Otepka raised monry
lO fight the long legal battle which
ensued.
CARL J. GILBERT -Two Senale
commiUee chairmen are in a jurisdit·
tional battle over Gilbert, who was
nominated by President Nixon on April 1•
to be the U.S. special representative for
trade negotiations, a job with am·
bassadorial rank.
Gilbert's nomination was approved by
lhe Foreign Relalions Committee, since it
i.s a foreign policy post. Then Chainnan
Russell B. Long . D-La .. complained that
his Finance Committee. '"·hich created
Lhe job, should ha ve a say in filling it.
Long and Chainnan J. William
Fulbright, D·Ark., of the Foreign Rela·
tiOflS Committee. have now agreed that
the Finance Committee can study the
nomi~lion._ for up lo 30 days . Then
Gilberl 1~· will probably be coofmned,
and be can get down to the rather im·
portant job of tariff negotiations.
\Vhile the President's nomination or
Chief Ju stice Warren E. Burger was
qWckly and overwhelmingly approvt;cl
!;tst week .. bY a vqte (Jf 7( 1'0 i. t~
rcaS<lns acNanced by the three Burger
opponents fell far short of the old Senate
formula.
SEN. STEPHEN l\1. \'OUNG, D-0 ..
complained that an attorney who opposed
Burger·s nomination was not heard by
the Judiciary Committee in its hearings
and could not even get int.o the hearin~
room. Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., said
he knc\v "nothing derogatory" about
Burger but had not been afforded a
chance to examine his credentials.
Sen. Eugene J. ~1cCarthy, D·Minn .• the
third nay-sayer. said Burger campaigned
against him in 19:>2 in a manner
calculated to elicit "an emotional if not
prejudiced response." McCarthy did not
attempt to employ the old persc>nalJy ob-
noxloo~ tradition on a broader base. It
~'as. as usual, just the lone l\.icCarthy
voice, unheeded by hi.~ colleagues.
By Robert S. Allen
and John A. Gold1aUth
Pot Is C·alling Kettle Black
lt bu always amuatd me to hear
10m• pompous businea official it.and up
in publk:1and upbtGd "the iuvme!ll" for
ill maoalve bonaocrlcy and Ila -.t
apandlnf pollclol.·ror I b1ve,........,.
of prlvale bu!li!eli estabtlihmenta ar
lint-hand to know -a pol is callln( •
Mttl• bl1ck.
The thesla " the_oe publl< denunclalon 11 the "rovment" lhoald enulate private
enterpriae -but In the cua I bave
penoaally oboervad, Ulan is ecamly· a
ahade ol. difference between the two, ex-
ctpt that bullntls is dellped to make
mOMy, and aovernment to provide -Tiii I UUA\ICllACY IN a Jar1e and
lhrlvtn1 corporatloo is no! to be belltved.
The wutap Is Jmmeose. and the level of
•
Dear
Gloomy
Gui:
')')lat motl vocal of opponent& of
HuntJncton B<ach ldlool' booda
didn't oppooe the parks bonds.
Coo1d tt be becaUlt lhe park Ill•
ta _. hit JWOPllV! N""° be would mppolt acbool booda H a
IChool were located near hil P"P'
erty. Jllll a lllousJil! -F.M.
TMt """"" ...,_ ,....,... .,... .. _,,, ....... ·-·"'· ..... ,.., .. r .................... .
i .
competence not very h.lgh. It is only the
euenU•I viability of capjtalism that
keeps some of ~ firms afloat -they
succeed despite their · sloppy manage-
ment .
Moot ot them are penny-wise and
pound-foolish. They will alienate· thei r
minor employes by lnstituUng some petty
economic reform (dealing with !lOmething
as Inconsequential as peocil·sharpeners),
and then aquander millions on some
foolish ICheme that tick.Its the VJnit)' of
tht top esecutive -but which any un·
derllna could teU him is • waste of lund!!.
IN FACT, one of the best arguments
for capltalllm has never been advanced
ln ill favor, for it ts too embarrassing to
mention -and th•t I• the lndi!putable
fact that the system lfOf'ks sO well, in lhe
bullneu area, that It can Withstand tven
the mediocrity and mismanagement of
11-custodians. It's hm! to lose money in
an expanding economy. ·
The closer one getl to the seait or cor·
porate power, the more obvious It
becomes that lhe system is supporting
I-peopi<, rather than the people lhe
l)'sttm. Many or them hlvtn't even had
"""lh .. .,., to ktiop lhllr ""' com-
panies undtr control -which accounts
for Ute appalling number of corpor1tc
taktoven and (lct.ltloqs "mergtn" In the
last few yean, The eo rp orale
burtaucracy gets 90 t~he1vy that it.s
l•1• ore amputated betOR )ta head bfllnl
~
to know what is going on.
THIS IS NO'T' meant to be a de(e~ of
the inde!ensible practices in government.
which should be more tailored, efficie.ot.
and responsive to public needs -U. is
Ji implyio suggest that all' btrreaucraeieit·
are pretty much atike, no matter what
their profeS9ed philosophy may be. Jt'.li
ju.st that the idiocies of governmen'
become a matter of public record, while
the. ineptitudes of business are
camoyflaged by profits that are alm~t..
impossible not to make. · -
When bu.sinessmen take over an ad-I
ministration. as in this Nixon era, they I
\\'ill spend as much as their Democratic
predecesS<lrs: the difference is in the
speeches. not in the act.Ions.
--~--
\\lcdne sday. June 18, 1969
The tdltoriol paac of tht Doau
Pilot sctks to in form and 1tim-
ulote 1'1!!'adara by prsstnttng thiJ
tlCW$paper'f opiniofir and com-
me ntary on ~ict ;~of inlt1'Cft
and signf/icancf, bf providing a
forum f01" l1at eiprtstio" ot
our readers' opinim&. and br
1 prtrenUng OU dfberse vie'°"
points of fnfonnfCI. ob.server•
and spokennt" on topfc1 of thl
doy,
Robert N. Weed , PubUsbcr
----------------------------r----------------~~:----...,-~--~---.----~--~~--.---.-,____~-. --.
A~erage Gir.~ Has :1
. ' "' .. .. .. ' '\ ,. ' -.. '
Exactly 42 Moles
87 L. M. BOYD
laENTl8TS now aay the
averqe woman hu a moles,
but lhey do not uy how lhey
found out . . • IN THE
m.EPBONE omcE at San
Bernardi.no, Cal, I'm told,
works a genUeman named
Buzz C'urrwlt, whole two aons
are 1cnmm by lheir ln!Uall •. A.
C. and D. C. . • • WELL
HERn a CJYH war scholar
who Insists Abt: Lincoln's mid-
dle name )''IS Thwpas.
muC..noN1-At hand 1.
. a nole from i San Antonio
youth who asks: "Can you tell
me where J can•flnd a couple
o( books called 'Your Future
in Aeronautics' and 'Sane
Sex'? Ir you can ~nly find one,
I sure hope ,. it's 'the
Aerooautlct. I intend to take
lhat up."
OUR NAME GAME MAN
says a g\rl called Naomi tends
to be particularly gifted In the
art of making one man happy,
although she is rarely the type
who can deal adeptly with t,ro
or more boyfriends at a time •
• . NO TRICK lo sayillg tpe
following sentenc< just oace.
But try saying It twice.
Swiftly, swiftly: ••SI n f u 1
Caesar sipped hla anlfter, &elz.
ed his knees and meezed."
REDHEADS· Th a I
redheads are temperamental,
whether they be men or
women, h widely balleved.
Can't disprove this theory
wllh hard fact. Nooethelw, a
seasoned official of t b e
Nevada courts who has
presided over the dlasolution
of. many a marriage say1 he
hu never wltneaed t b e
divorce of a ~ad from a
r<dbead. 1111 hll llated baliel
that redbtJred men • n d
women tend lo get along wllh
one .another even when they
find it dllllcult lo 1tt along
wllh anybody elae.
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q.
••wJµcb state bu the most
fertile IOU?" A. Years ago it
-ul~ lo he Iowa. Don't
thlnk It mallm muc~
"-• -·what wllh
all lhal'I .... in ferlllfl<n • , .
Q. "WHAT THE ARG\llli!:N1
b all aboul hue at· lhe mo-
me"nt ls whither Jt wu l!'.ddlt '
Cantor or MatirlCe Chevalier
wbo lDit<>duced ¥·-'One
Hour Witll· Y<a(i' "' • Caotor took lta "I' blf , illeiie
song, but Maur~ Clievall
introduced it in • rum witb t. same name. , .
TBE DOLL -'The w.
"puppet," it comes from. thie
Lalin "pufl'!." Our Langua1e
man says that'• what tht old
Romans called a ~ doll '
which was made m Che I.mace
of ihe Emperor Nero's wile, 1
lilUe lady named Sabjoa Pop.
pea. Everybody was wppo!led
lo worship lhe dolt Nero
demanded ll!aL No doulJI •
because he felt gullty. Al lout
he should have felt guilty. He
was short-tempered, that man.
Sabina Poppea annoyed him
one afternoon, so be kicked
her to death. Much too abort
tempered.
PUZZLE -U you're tlnd
of lh<>oe malh JIUllle•. alclp
lhll lt!m. Alter a Vietnam
skirmish, a ragged leaderiea
platoon of Viet C9nf sol~ ,
reallzed Ibey woit loot. pne
fiflh of lhem walked norill.
One third walked south. Three
times the difference of the
number of soldiers in the two
aforementioned group! walked
west. And one dilconlolate
soldier walked ust to rtve hlmse~ up. How many Vial
Cong soldien Urted out from
the sklnni.sb 1
RAPID REPLY: Ya, Mn.
J., cost of railing one c:blld to
the age of 18 is now Aid to
run about $Z7 ,000.
Your que1tiom and c:om-
'7Wlt.r are welcomed and
will be wed whtnoet po.
lib le in "Chtckino Up ... Addres1 mail to L. M. BOfld, in-. bf U.. 'DAILY
PILOT, BO% 1875, N<VlpOrl
Beacl1, CaUf., 92660.
•
TooMu~hVodka
Russ Worry Over Drinking
M 0 S C 0 W (UP!) -A
Rwslan loves his glass of
atraJibl Yldka. He throws it
<!own an 111 one neck-popping
swallow. 1be trouble is he
d:r1nb too much of It, • pro-
minent Soviet criminologist
uld today.
Prof. Aleul A. Gerllemon,
wriling in the government
newspaper Iivestla, said it
wu time to create a govern-
ment agency lo f I g h t
alcoholl!m.
Gertlenzon said vodka ac-
counts for a third of the na·
tioo'a alcohol consumption.
"not counting home brew" and
for monumerUI financial lou
and u:ceulve clime.
"The central statistics office
aMual report shows th1t con·
'"'l'ptlon of alcobol 13 In-
. creUlng," he said.
• • D 111 erenl IOdolOifcal
ttudles teatify tO what a &reat
moral and financial kJ8I is suf·
fered," GertRnzon 1 a Id.
.. 'Ibey include loafing, vlo\a-
Uon of industrial s a f e t y
measurea wilh serious mn-
sequeoces, accidenU, wute
and Bick leave ••. "
"In quite a few crlmbW cues oC murder, rape,
boollpilbm, the!~ robhery
llbd -· (In 111'1·111&8) there n.18ted the provocative
role of alcohol," be Yid.
Gertsenzon propooed the
government create a "state
committee coordinating the
activities of all branches tn-
vol ved in the struggle apJnat
alcoholism."
He "Id It would dlncl Iha
acUvlties of ppllce, dodon
and economlstl to control the
consumption ol a I'~ ob o 11 c
beverages In tile Soviet um.
Scientists, be Aid, 11can Jn.
troduce anti-aJcohollc acbooJ
programs, pbyslclana will lab
up the problem! ol. 1eneraJ
and forced treatment o f
drunkards. People tn trade
will determine the norma of.
sale of alcoholic drinb."
He aJso suggested a "YOlun-
tary organization" to figM
alcoholism.
"Some people ovetestimate
the effectiveness of repreuhe
measure!! for eradlcaUon of
drinking,'' he said. ''No doubt
these measures are bnportant.
but they become elleotlvo aol7
In comblnatioa With prntn-
live ODel."
"It b Ume lo ~ -meamtet apJnR alcoholiml," c..-aald. ''The fact
lhat ..-comumpllon ol
ak:ohol doea great hann lo the
state and lhe lamll7 b un-
qU"1Stlooable."
I See by Today's
Want Ads
•
·-"'-' 4 -· u.t IL • .anllquo pool ta.
.... slate lop, ....._., -
• hr • dlJtrtnt ana an.
UIUll pet; BaJ:.i, ()pJ&IDtl clean and unlquo. .
'
\_
. .
,f ••
\ '. .
,j._ ......
,. '. •
'"-
lfHB PBNNBY
••
Can a sh 1
play foot e&
. -stay fresh
By ROBl!RTA N)j!IH
Everyone knowa hat
happen• to shoCJ a ou
wear them, and pc ire
into them. lt'1 been ug·
ging our shoe people for
ycan. "We wanted tol'<cp
our shoes fresh even ltter
we sold them," one !hoe
man told me.
"Today we've go\ it
The iasidcs of all 1ur
Penney shoes are imp ' g-
natcd with •o.me S i·
tizcd 1tutf that'• mu er
oa ·ba~lcria.~11.d.tu . i,
fighll mold ana mild •
protccll against athle '•·
(001 fungi while, u . ' wall<. ' ··
"How many pain
I oell you, Roberta?" o r
oupcrshoe man c:ontinu •.
--
,
. ~ " • '
., • ..
•
-.
,
I . ' ' . '
'
"
c.jo
•
I_,. -.. . ' ... ·
. ~ .. ~ •I
I• I ' . -
:1 ••
• .. 1. •
.·
•
' '
Pric·es 1 reduced on summer
I . -
sand Is •.•• buy 2 pairs anc:I ..
SAVE THRU SATURDAY!
Skip right clown! SM thil ~g,beautlful llllldal •lectfon,
' all safe.priced for buylne In IWOI and foun to IO 'wllh
ev.rythlng you11 be w~ this IUlltmet. hy mlor
under the 11111, and then I W• haw lea!Mn and . .
vlnyfi, shiny or smooth • , , strap,~ and
REG. 3.99 PR.,2 $7
NOW... PRS.
.tid•. , • flat or ll!He.clty 11 • , • trlml !ti dMitM or \ . .
hardware, Just Mil'-yol!r ' head to fPlnil!ng to
think what's waiting for at P.~ C'-down
t flnt !hlnq lamo!1ow for a warlhbel ~
. REG.'5.99 1PR.,2 •10
NOW .'.. PIS. ~ ..
'"·'
LIKE IT ••• CHARGE ITI
I
i -.I-1 1 ~·
l •
DAILY PD.OT 7
•
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~-.. ,. ... ......
• • .• ... -· ... .. ... ,,. . "•
···" ·~'
•• .. ,..,, .
J'h
••• ....
.,,.
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• •• • " • • • • ' . • • ..
" .. .. •• I ' .. • • '· I• •• . :
' •: •• '· ,,
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'· '
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'l t
I
' I
I I DAll.Y PllOT
~ I
w-. Juno 19, 1969 , ! t I
---ft•;~_: -~-~ .. ~ • •
-co~st · .A~efl :Men .j'1 Se,:vlc~ Around the W,ntl~: .. • '
,,,. lllDd Mobile Com-rle w. J-, USN, ... of Mr. ftcen Trllnlnl C«po -II Mn. -R. Holme of l!S 'Ibey ore Codd CaH!dllo Jeflft7 w. FliN,, IOll of Mr. and att...i<d Oranae c...t
--Squid, Air Na• · and llrl. Tbomu Joneo of Ill Ille Uofvtni\1 of · Soutbern 1111 A .. ., eo..a, dtl -: -·....,..,IOI( of Mn. ad Mrs. l"re-S. Field of COl!ego• b'efcn entering Ille
tlonil-' Guard of ISO Coot3 Walnut St, Newport -II Cllllonll&. . -"-· --P. Amie lllhaylo of~ aierenne l40t Bruce ~ N<wpOl:t aervlce. • . , N-men will portlclpate In oervlnc aboanl Ille uM Kitty -'l; ~ ..0 of M. Hon of SI.. Coot& jlleu;, Cadel CU-Blad! ind I •*'• M* ..._ tho~ uen:be, Western Hawk off Ille cout of Viet-tf~· 4, .._,'21, -11131 PraU Cli<Je; Honllncloo ..... G117 M. 'PiblO, IOa of l.C. ~ W. =· ""'it . .l'YI.--· :11, 11111
=A ~trol System nam. of J1¢ ~ ~.' 1Q1iio, 151 , ~ ud Alr:mMWllllUa·P. ~"andMn. P:if.J'Wlee! :,-,~~-Gr~ of l\lr,andl!l'S-1Jlal'Pltd>i:r,
, ug. . Tills Is !be f""'1li conlbal Vlcfiria It;. c.lla.Mou, com-""'"t"~ '°"of Jack Jloeel'" ! ..... ::~. '1 .:.....-,.,. Drl "::!~.. •· '14 ·ar..;.. ~.. H~ 1beexerclaewillbeheldln deployment for the car-,,-.• ~~"'!U!"' I07Acadl,Huntln1t~n --·~-.. ....,.... '('I,' . ...,... f .~. wlll graduate .tioai -~ portloa <i Ibo ri<r. Upoacompletlmof'nlilit .. lt•.,llii ; ~ Pr)mary Boch.·• :'!!:'~Hlsh ,ldiool· llld '' " ... .-..... U.S. Army bulc tralnlnj
Vatted: States under the com· operation the KJtt;,Hi.wk1.wll ,_.llcoPter~.'f't. Wolters, 1 , ~, --,.J... Cide\, c.·='3 ~ a.. tAlrw 1 "D'••1la1 J.. June· I at~tt.. Ord, CaWomia.
mand of Brig. Gen. Wllllam R. return 1o Ille U.S. f« a nilie 'l'a. . . j!lM ~ o .. Alen Jr.. a-.,• of COi. (~) 'Gllleqloi, iao 'of Mr: and Mn. On ~une t he Is sch<dU!ed !I>
Sefloo. moolb yard p!l'.iod: 'Be jiu,beon·~oaip;.!'lo ·a.i.,-UIN, -of ClpL (iet) mi .,,cl Mr>. Jut D. Blanchard of T. 0. GlllftPle <( 11511 l';dilb reporl~ FL-Gonion, Georgia,
The lllDd will join la aip-. , . • ·....,,...,. 11!11\! lrllinlnl . at ~,.,., 'Ollllea Alen o! llltl .!qi Alta VllW Drtve, Newport Ave., We&tmllllter, ba1 been for tralninl u a µilllWy
partm 0 boll I !bee cexoerwem m. ·-~-~ ,' Spee. I. a,.Y ll· -,., It,. H~ ~ Afrlleld, Ga. ~ 'llkled On:1e.,~11un-lleach. __. , ~ lo a W1lt of !be Tac-p.Hc.ma... . , · . ~~~ oon of Mn. Neva a...,. of ~, . · Boacb. -1111 olflc<r's t1£a1 ~ Command. ,GeorJe Pitcher ls married lo Bever· mun''I"~..:... onefll""t~lef-·';"!" 154 JOlllll St.r ~ · .._, , FM ~· •.i:<lljDIY men ,'. ~ lo, Ille U.S. Navy Pv1. l.C. -_ A. a;..., AFB,.Callf, 'n!e · alnqao, :an Jy PltcheT <t Sten ton. He a~ ~-~ ... ~~ ..-ralr received .Ibo Army• ()om. .,.,iervini lil>otnl ljle uss . ~11tlcie 1-0fllcer 23,..,of~'Bnmoof251 aircraft -mechonlc, Is • tendedllunllngtonBeachHfgh
tralllc control and navtg.. mendallon lledal wblle ... ··Tlcoade!oP oil 'd)!t cout of .. , te Sdlool at Newport ~ q;.ialo· :l.Mljla,,· ,_.bol~been ~of Wella>imter !Dgll ·School and wautudylng poll«
Uonal fllgbts. lng with 'tbe' 4th 'Jbran.try Vletnani. · ·~' : :(LI. ·. . . -""" 1111 • sCience at Orange Coast
J!:ach m ob 11 e · com· Dlvilloo near PWlku. Vlelnam. They ·ar, ~ ~a. . ,:... Aken Is a gradUltt of Brigade In Vie · u I · ' • · · Colltge ,.hep he enjlsttd.bi ti>., mof'::!capp~~ :u°':{•~ J.~tr~i 'Spec, 1. Heriry earned !be Davis, 000. o1 ,Mr, and ·Mrs.• Yale Univtnlty, New Haven, telHe~~ "!!".!° .. ~~ ... .:_. .~ Gory MocM....., Army. ; ' · · 1 •u,.~ --award f0< merit«!Gut llel"lke · HowF<! "~ Da9fs·: rt' *9 \:Oan. · · • g l1IOUIOI' > ....,. -·of llobert A. M>cMeelln
fie control requlr.-.and , u a rifleman wllb Compony PhaJaropO eo.at; ~ Meea: " ' · :-";-' Talley, lives lo , of 1330 Pall•-Road, Santa Airman Undo A. Dove, ~lions needed lo B, Ind BaUallon " Ille -~ .-..i s. T1'1'!0 Onnp•CountJ men · -.,. Ana,; hu beee ulgned to dau~ of Mr. and Mrs.
an alt bue that bu Dlvllloo's ltll lnlanley. lt••M-ofNr .. and Mn. ~V. .,....,alodll""" 'Ille U.S. Two Oruct c.iitl,. !ft Emrr)' A1'B. Colo. for<ra!n;,,g )loli<tt, L. Dove, 13471 lmtlllpemiinelitflcl~tt1e1. Hllfatber,JobnHeory"lives Rol:lert ·.s:,Bt1nnut ,of 1J:r1 Alr Force A-c1rdemy sentng ·~· 1bt USS inthemunftlc:mll)llweapom: Ana'YQO:d Way, Westmimter,
Alrm1:9 a-..,L.,·~r,
... " Mr. and Mn. COllo L.
Brtww of 13970 Nenda ,St.,
W-1nster, hu'be<ii uilp-
ed lo Georae APB.
The airman ii an aln:raft
mechanic with Jbe Tictlcal
Air Command.
He la a graduate o f
W-1Nter High School and ..-aranae Coast Colleg•
bel<n entering !be Air Forte.
In Stockton' · · • Somene! ~ ll•wport "-'°'Y SCbool: !bat Comtellatlon off111!'!.COMI of "1aintonaoce field. bu ·~·Uslgllod In a unit of
· ·" · • Beach; ,Airli;a .. -'•1r••. qualifies the candkl1ta for California. · i ' The.airman ii a graduate cl. the Aetolpact Defense Com·
Sgt. Marl< s. Calp, 19, IOll ot: .~ F ....... ..., of lppollitin<ot lo Ille AcadOmy. 'llley ore -... A....... ·Huntlncloa Beacl>'fU&h SCbool mand on McChord AFB. Wash.
Mn. Jeanne B.'l!(e~'of }'191 · -· •
Pomona Ave., C.O.ta Meg "ls
servlna with the 41b Infantry
Dlvil)o!I, Company B, Id Ba~
taJioil of the divlsion'l i 9th
Armor near Plelku, Vietnam.
He Is operatloo!I oerpanl
for tbe c<mpany. His father',
O. D. CUip lh"8 In ()c<am ... '
. " . '
. .. ,.
• •
> ~ • T .. re.,re •
'Co*. . l~j·1 ·'~sld111i;.:
CapL • Rpjierti-W\1-liams. llSN. been
tninsterred ·to · · attle, ,
Wash .,· where • .. will
be Dlstric.t ~~Of.
ficer of the lll!h ~aval.
Districf .. lt_1rS. ~bi!i.c
two sons, Robert Jt.
and .,Biil,. boih•studems
al E .st.anala -Hlgb .
Sc)iool . and • diugltter
Mary-Frariees .. :wbo' at.
tended St. Jahn jhe
BapUst Scl!ool,< wtJl)l~ .
the . caplaln In SiatUe
• • • .. • •
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JI ~ Cj
GI
Sb
Jo
H< c.
P1
R
LL Jama E. Bauea, IOD of
Mr. and Mrs. Han'y E.
Hansen ol 13751 Edwards,
Weetmll11ter, bu been Ulign-
ed lo a unit of Ille Air Wealber
Service, "TIChlklwa AB,
Japan. •
Alrmu MlcUd s. ~
... of Mr. and Mn. Sieve
Gelet of 19871 Potomac LIM, ~tlnglon Beach, ba• 'beeii
aiilp<d lo a unit <i Ille Air
Force CommUnki1Unp1
Pay, le~s, enpy ~ummer more • •• w~, ~ci
' .
v..p ..... .w-'"~.
tloomu JUdiard Lnls, USN,
10D. of Mn. Roland Becker of
:IOO Colton St., Newport Beach
la ltl.Uoned. at the U.S. Naval
Statloo. Midway Island.
President Nixon met with
South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van 1bieu on the
hland where 1300 Navy and
Air Force men and their
families live.
8'«dleoper 3.C. Mlcbad J, Dalef, USN, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald. Daley of 1 fOS
Skyline Drive, Laguna Beach,
ii serving on the staff of Com-
mander U.S. Naval Forces,
Vtelnam.
~Costa Mesa. r •
The "1nnan. a ...,.
munlcatloos sj>eclallot. a~
tended Huilttngloci Beach !Dgll
ScbooJ and Orange Co8ll
College before enterlna: &be
service.
U. Steven Hollltter, USMC,
son of Mr. and Mrs. 1Jbmt. H ..
Hollister of 467 2Znd St.,
Newport Beach, Is oervlng
with Training Squadron 21' at
the Naval Air Statio'n ,
Kingsville, Tex.
Ll Ralpla E. y_.., USN,
son of Mr. and Mn. Ralph E.
Yeomans, Of 1367 Galuy
Drive, Newport Beach, Wu
designated an aviator at the
Ne:val Air SlaUon, Corpus
Christi, Tex. when he received With Headquarters In
Saigon, Commander Naval
Forces, controlJ v.irtuallY aU
U.S. Naval force& in the
,.public and advises Ille Viet·
namae Navy oa phases ol
hl1 "Winp of Gold" after
completing his a d v a n c e d
training course as Naval 1
aviator.
operalion." . -.AJaa c .. -. · -U<N l'.I•,..,., Driva, u.w_K:_, ...... ~ , 'fk"....ma
LI. Col. 'tJSMC (let~ and .,.,;r. ;~ ' ', ~USS w~ ll'elhe·;of' 480.·M;'riW'"-..,,lt', . ,; " · 1
st., Liguna Beach, bu been ··~~~· In graduated from o ff I~ •T lilppqd of;~ ·-•ilt1 trolnlng llCbool al Lackland and 'pi:ovl~ii/of~~
AFB, TeL In lhe l\'estJIU!UlllC! ;_-.·
The lieutenant-ls a graduate · ·--~'
of Lquna Beach'Hlgll School ~olol' lllUo ~ -· ... and received 1111 B.A. degr.. of Mr. :mi' Mil Ill'!!" A. fr!llD Prinolfia College, E11a11, Martin i>I ~u .. ·Et Dorado DI. -. J>rjft, .iiunuiilt9n Belch, hllS
-been.~ .. ,.. ""'tan-.
Dental T-a.c. llar-dine Air' """" Riierve' Of.
Laguna ~er,viceman ·: :.
Gets 2 ·Bro~:Stars
A Laeuna Beac)
oervlceman, Army Sp. 4
Gregory L. Huggins, son of
Mrs. Hellen Huggins of 412
Shadow Lane, has b e e n
awarded two bronze stara for
heroism a n d meritorious
service 1n the Vietnamese
war.
The first medal was given to
Huggins for his valiant act.iool
whUe serving with Company
E, 1st Battalion, 27th Infantry.
Huggins subjected blmlelf ,to
an intense rocket, mortar a(MI
small arms fire u 'hil com~
pany was attacked. to fire ii-·
Jumlnation and cowiter mortar
You call THE DAILY PILOT, ask for
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~ Otlnge Co a 1 t IOCill. ldeoce.• t\ ~) -.r. among 1,eoo Frma)" FJ 'hn: Jenme ..;J.
June lriduata ot Caltt"'11ia Oriol!,. mut.r ot -1n 61111 Oolle(e, ·Hayw~. They matbemaUC..
are: . · Fnm. Newpwt\·Jleld: Judy
Fnm Caplsl!>!oo: Chari., Gillbpie, mast.. ol 1eleoce In R. KeiU>Oy, ba~or ol am Jn ,_, • ·
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hiddl~• cl;tt,on. ·
knit pOfo .itlrts
2/•1'"'
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shorts ~ally
prlcwcl ,_ Ul(niMr
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.
Honor Roll
Newport Girl
sCt. fqr Efu.1>pe
Katherihe A. Wits.on,
Newport Beach, will be at.-
tendiqg the Univei'slfy ol Aix.
Mlirseille In fl'1nce next fall.
She is oiie Of 19 -students
chosen by Callfomta State
·eonege, Fu'1'1erton to
participate In study-abroad
programs. Miu WatBon will
itudy llngulttlcs.
· Gets begree
Judith ~attY of Dana Point,
has received a Bachelor of
Science degree · tnm· Pacific
Ow CoJlese,
OPEN ff.otJSE TOURS
of the IRVINE 'ltANCH ...
J~ne l51h't1\ru JJrie 'iind·" ·"
. • -\~"•'···~ l ,,
51.n1,.·Po1a1< '
~~!:;" .. ~~~~ Unler \._ ..... _ ol T""")
W..:.-~ ~·f.lhj;,n~~"' Newport a.DJ ,
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It llolll.Y I'll.OT
Hqpn;r . Graduates
Coast Man
At Chapman
Saddlehack
Honors 'is
At Banquet
Elehteen tap atudenU at Sldiltbac:k O>llep ...... hon·
_.r at the oi:hool'• finl
SchoW*ip Awanh Banquet
re<OD117. 1be banquet honored RVe!I
-rectp4ema of spl'lnf quar· ter awards along with 11
!all and -oCbolars. · April Mysliwy, ol Tustin,
r e c e i v e d the outatandlng
adlolanhip awm!, w b 11 e
Brod M.-_ also ol TuJ.
tin was awarded the "diri-,iOO scholanhip award."
Bruce Anderson, of San Cle-
~ and Damis R. Frank·
""· of Laguna Beoch, re-
"ved -· conurus-... -'11o1>v-.
slclll ....nts, -~ 1':"' ~ i;;;:u;:;
nan!. Fred TilmbuD, ol Tultin. ... honored db ,. ''Out-
~= °i.~ s.nc-wu awarded
the Sin a..neme OJtlmlot
~-.:.... IChoianhip
-indude: Tim Butler, Heollert Heary ml Oilrlea
Rnn ol Son Cl-; Diane
de Ford ol LICum Beodl;
Mn.Jan -Harril and ~ Pattenon ol
Do!IO Point: SUND Vuiln,
Poul eo.. Linda Wbllacft
ond Eva Plmllt of Tuttln ond
Mart W!cllllm of Jrvloe.
Jack It Guewelle of ~boa
111m1 11u been appointed an Harbor Grad
lnllluclor ln hlltory al Chap-
man Collqe. Given J)egree GUlewell, who will join the
Chapman faculty In Sep-Rooemarie Ebey Reed of
Wnber, bu been a teaching San Clemente. baa received a
aulltant for the past two bachelor o( arts degree in ------'y"ean""'"111'!C.:C:trvlne, wlierrht-Y--ndlih---rram--P-e-m-b"r-o-k-'e
received his master's degree Colle1e, Rhode Island.
and has betn working for hit She ii a graduate of
PhD. Newport HIP .School and at.
He l! .an alumnus of Chap-tended Mills College i n
man, where he 1P"aduated' OUJand before tramfen'ing to
magna cum laude in 1963. Pembroke.
l\nne••1 Mlllll'l8 IWT QU/IUN ..
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... .... n'F'a • .._.. ..... •I ta ' . l·111r. ..... -,..-. ..... CB<lni If AJ YOUlt l'INNIY'S
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HUNTIN•TON RACH
Hwitll'lflOn '""' '""""' ., s...o....,.,..,.,
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WE'VE ALL KIND·s OF .Pl
REDUCED THRU SATUR
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Q•••n 20i40 Reg. •a NOW 6.50
King 20x36 Reg. '10 NOW 8.50
Dacron• polyester fiber fill around a polyure-
thcme foam co,.._ Solt, medium or firm with
becMiful floral ticking.
~' fluffy Dacron-poi,.ter fiber flll pll·
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Imagine such luxury at a saYingsl Ca.wed in
doWnproof cotton ticking in le~ wid.
~~""'*· . 'TI s1anc1an120x261 .. $11Now .... : ...
IClnglli:e 20xl6 leg. $20 NOW .. .' .. 17.50
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-l . -• • --,· Panther Hi1ac1£s
Plane to Havana
MIAMI (APJ -An armed
Negro carrying Uterature or
the militant Black Panthtrs
forced a Trans World Airlines
jet with a crew of sev~ and
80 passengers to ny to Cuba.
The gunqian, tall, well
dressed and beo>eetacled, took
control of the sch e du I e d
Oakland-to-NeW York nonstop
flight 'l\lcsday over Wilson
Creek. Nev.
Except to describe himself
as •·a despti'ate man who had
lo iet to Hlvan.i, ·~ be gave no
·reason for bis action. Eldrldge
Cleaver. , Black Panther.
leadeJI who ts a fugitive from
U.S. justi~on a parole viola-
tion cliarg~ is reported to be
living in the Cuban capital.
Panther."
He was not ldenWied, b u t
LyM Bell. of P~, Calli.,
a passsenger, took movtn1 WC·
Lures of him u he left -the
plane ln Havana. Bell said the
fllm was taken from him by
an FBI agent when the plane
reached MiarnJ.
N<ira Hamplon, f a a h l on
editor of the Oakland Tribune
and a passeqitr • aboard, the
Boein1 m, i'ald the litJster
, le't hls lua:aaP at his seat
after being admitted to the
flight deck at iunpolnt. •
In it, she said, "be had·JOme
of the Black Pantben' 1'>.lny
, black suits, an Atrican shirt,
and two black sweat.era: also
a sheath knife with a slx-lnch
blade."
.. ·,
Wldotsdlr, J.nt IS, 1'169 ' . DAil. Y I'll.OT J.
"Solon's Protests
I.
Bring Gas Review
WASHING TON (UPI) -
Seven weeks ago, House GOP
leader Gerald R. Ford atood
on the steps of the White
House and denounced Rep.
RIChard O. McCarthy (0.
N.Y.J
•·Do they want to
stewardess, said the hljack unilaterally disarm
America'?" Ford asked after
began when the man showed ~icCarthy had cr!Uelzed the
her a run and politely ordered Pentagon's poison gas pro-
ber to have the plane diverted gram.
to Cuba. But on Tuesday, at the
Capt. George Behnke opened White H o u s e • presidential
the. door of the cockpit and press secretary Ronald Ziegler
allowed the man to enter. He pnflrmed President Nixon
remained in the cockpit for -..iad ordered a study of the
the three-hour flight . at times government's chemical and
dOMi.ng a crew ma n ' 1 bloloilcal warfare program.
creasional protestl -such II
McCarthy's -were "o( coune
•.. a factor involved" in
ordering the review.
As.•ii1ned the job were the
Defense Department, the State
Department and the U.S.
Arms Control and Disarma-
ment A.gericy. Zlealer 1ald lhe
rev i ew was ·ordered
"re«ntly" and no time limit
had been set on tu completloll.
Ziegler also told newsmen It
could be assumed the National
Security Council had dlacusl·
ed the subject.
McCarthy's relatively un·
noticed campalan to curb the
teatinl of t:bemlcal WClpGM
College Head Killed The hljacker carrled a copy
of Cleaver 's book ''Black Nan Schwa1er, a earphones And he acknowledied con-
and ban the testinl of '"'" agents burst Into natianal at-
tention in early May
Charles E. Johnson, acting president of the University oC Oregon, was'kiµed in
this crash Tuesday between a sn1all car and a logging truck on Highway 126
east-of Eugene... --'' fi! . •
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3·9 Senators Opp~~
: r
U.S. Missile Tests,'·
W~lllNGTON (UPI) -SoViet Union. • ~:
Twq-fifths of the Senate is on
record opposihg the testing or
1nultiple warhead miss iles by
the United Slates and the
Labor Party
Ma.y. Ca use
Irish Crisis
Twelve Republic·~ -and 27 '
Democrats -001¥ 12 votes
shorl or a Senate inajority -
signed a resolulio,o Tuesday
urging President Nixon to seek
an immediat'! moratorium
with Russia on fhe testif18 of
the multiple independently-
! argeled re-entry v ~ h i c I c
(MIRVJ.
The ~11RV is a single
rnissilc containing 'P ejv c r a I
\Yarhcads which . cpn .}I e
separated be[ore impt.ct a·nd ~ guided to dif ferent largets. D BLIN (AP \ -Th e Backers of U>, ~ rJS(lluUon •.
shou ing stopped and lhc drafted by Sen.. Eaward W.
\'Otirig began today i n Brooke (R-Mass. l, Said MIRV
Ireland's national elections. had the capacity of increasing
Observers predicted the Labor U.S. and Soviet nu c I ear
party v.•ould sap some of the arsenals tenfold, prtpically
ruling Fianna Fait party's overnight.· ~
~lrength , \vhich could create a There we re differing in-
polltlca\ crisis or a period or terpretations on what the
1ni nority rule. strong show o[ support for
Ireland's 1.75 million volers Brooke"s resolution meant -
v.·ill 'elect 143 or the 372 can-particularly in the current
didates running for seals in fight to stop deployment of the
the Dail, the lov.·er house of safegu ard antiballistic missile
ParUament. The Oail 's I44 th I ABM ) system. 1ne~ber, the house speaker, is The resolution itself would
uno!fpOsed. not be binding but !!I s"'lrn ply an
Vql.ing is by proportional expression of "the sense of the
representation. a complicated Senate." syst~m in which voters list the But if a vote is taken on lhe
l'andidates in their district in ABM later as part of an
urdcr of preference. The total at.ithorization bill, a vote
,·ote · for each candidate is against 11t Would be a binding
determined by weighioS the vote to stop work on \he
nun1ber of vole.s he , ttceived weapon. '
as a fi rsl choice, S!Ctlnd Some senalors who · backed
choice, lhird choi~ and so on. lhe MIRV resolulion, however.
Thus, in Ireland, pre-election may not wish to vote against
polls, .don·t work. , the ABM.
Israel Jets
Attack Ar.~bs
In Jordan
1ylhllt.11,.,...IJ11WN._.I
Israeli jet planes anned
with rockets and machinegUN
today attacked an Arab guer-
rilla unit which had tal(en
cover in an orange grove on
the east bank of the Jordan
river 21 mlles below the Sea.«
Galilee.
An Israeli m ilitar y
spokesman in Jerusalem said
the two jets silenced th e guer-
rillas who had opened fire on
an Israel i patrol, touching or
.an hour-long duel near Tlrat
Zev i, a .01ile west of the river.
The Israeli patrol called ,[or
air support and the jeb
streaked into attack tbe ~Atab
positions in the Wadi A.I· •
Yabess. a fertile area across
the river. Jordan said there
were no casualties and that
Jordanian forces fire<l -back al
the planes.
The last Israeli air attack on
Jordan was May 28 near
Kureiyima , midway between
the Sea of Galilee and the
Dead Sea, but Jordan s¥d
Israeli planes had violated
Jordan air space three times
this month including Tuesday
when they new over the Dead
Sea . resort area where an
American tourist was killed.
The air strike followed a
night in i,ybich an Egyptian
military spokesman s a I d
Israeli a1kl l Egyptian artillery
engqed lnJ a "violent" es· ch&n&e. of fire along the entire
lengtll Of the 103-mile long
Suez Canal. Egypt said its
guns "silenced" the Israeli
artillery.
. '' .... .:,.,
.WANT INTEREST oN· YOUI\ :BAiot
CHECKING ACCOUNT!
YOU CAN'T GBT J.T
---BtJT WITH PA-eu'le'
SWITCH 'N SAVE ACCOUNT
You can do almost as well by k11ping a lat las mon1Y in
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'evert dollar •••• eveq daf lt 11 la
J'OUr Paelllc Accoant-
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&" 1nnuolly oa P ..... ot Acc•llll _,..llllH Ul1y ... 114" •
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Sni111 ii, .. , ICClllll It •11rt1(1 1d 11n fro• 1•1111 ,, .. ,
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Reg. 229.95 NOW'208
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Penncrnt-Imperial '"",.,..;""miner · '
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·L()ST AND
' ·'fQUNO
I
Wtdntsdat, June 18, 1969
t ' ' i . .f1:eagati' s
. R'efund
·B~p~an ~i(ht
).i. .· , GOP Wins· Contr,ol . . . ~ ·Sm1ls ·Borrowh.ID ~ .
Fram, &M Win Sen1ce1
·SALIN~, Calif, -A special
Assembly · election. haa put
Gov. Ronald Reaglft and his
Republlc1n party in control of
both houses of the Callfornia
Lqi.llalure for the flf'St time
since 1956.
The victory Tuesday gave
the Republicans 41-39 control
of the Assembly. They already
held a 21-19 margin in the
Senate.
Monterey County Supervisor
Robert G. Wood, 53, a farmer,
Vote Slated
On Fiscal
Worth Bill
'
S::":.a~ ~~ !~.~~ ·:.~~~~ ~ D~nied sot'~ ci~-. f•~~ J:.~
famous by ftovellst John Stein-f 21, 0 0 0 ·a· y tar 'ob as SACRAMENTO (AP) r~ rnountln&: flninclat prob)ema the ate will bl"ft no m41Je1
bec:k. coonllnalol' ·of ·the federal ~•· are lllallid fll lbe Alaembly to.• 111 pay for $281.! inllo.; In
Wood tallied 2U74 votes to highway l\OMltlflCaUon pro-Reogan has flied for 1 flt Jlf.'0-clOy II)' Ill lilcrusfllg1Y bUter • ll(Jlod coootruetloll ~
ll,&51 tOr Democrat Fred gram to nm for tbe seat. . pet(y tu refund oa his Paclflc n,bt between a bipa:rtlsan 1'i.e object ot the maaetlftl'w
Farr. 1 former state senator Wood ran ~Y in tracli-Pallsldet home bUt Lo s eo11Woa of \eplators · and Jo& Poroe .Relpf _ ~ ~
ho f t•--h d lionaJly Republican areas of Angeles County Asses i or Gov. ftellan. Jbme4ehft withlpldlDC or
w or 1"-yean. was ea the diarict composed enUJ:ely Phi Up E. Watson says be can't 1tie •adloct d e e Pe n e d state l"Ii&me tal"-t be
ol the naUonal h,1 ~·b w a Y of Monte~y O;iunty. His have It becaU¥ ~ law re-r~·· ln aft.em9on ,of leglalltors say the new syattm
:£·cation . procrltn. The popularity as a co u ~ t y quire.I the governor to reside ~vwtng in the Aasanbly of tu colleC'Ung would provide
1 .e'l~ect f<O'D , was supervisor appar"ntly helped in Sacramento. Rev~, and Tuallon Com· 11 ... uc1a.u-m1Dto:n.ayear
italed by -l)'Illlll lilt him to vicloef: R<ogao In a.Wng for 1 be mlttee Tuesday. 1or'U.. .,..,.;;;;u.. beclUJe of
A1an PatLee11 dealh t w o Farr bad cowlUid on GOP money av'allabie under 1 Iiea 'Democrats and Republic;:ans speeded up tu collediom.
months ago·'tn 'an auto crash. cross-<>ver ballots wblch failed property tu re~ , I 1 w.. ~ I o ck e d key adm1n-Reqaa dislgreeS.
It was the third straight to materialize ahllooib fl: per-~ .m q-~•iC: ~~,, 11ttatioq • backed measures '"Ibey are pqt;ttng_ me in the
special election victory of cent of eligible vbtm birned Wiltaon's office. that Ult "pre-to ~h the stale to sell iniddle of 1 Croufire," said
Republican candidates this out. ,. perty wa1 "hiJ prlDclpaJ place $1.S4-blll.kln ln consti'uction Sen. Gordon Cologne, (R·
year and give• Reagan a But Democratf', who hold a of residence.~' bonds m the tight money lndlo) who is spontOrinl the
working majority in the St percent tb 44 ~rceht voter A spotesm, an ~ ln Reagan's · mw•',~·t the ,..., .. -~ !...._ bond 'sales measure for the ad-legislature as it wresUes with registraUon edge, apparently f .. ...,.. .... ~ ~ his proposed '5.a.blllion budget were unable to tum out thelr 0 flee said that even thou~ raising the maxlmwn interest ministration.
and a tu refonn plan that voters in 'the oo.mtieb · ~t · the governor rents 8 b:Ome m rate the state i.-ys borrowen The act.loo drew the bond
could mean a multhnillion-GOP precinct workers did. Sacramento he ~ 0 0 5 1 d e r s buying Us bonds from s to 7 crisis into the same con--
dollar break for property 1bree minor candidates who PaclOc Palisades bis home. percent -Cllllornia will not troversy that surrounds other "That is where he votes" he · crucial "--·• p.....l.Jems. owners. appeared on tbe ballot ran added ' be able to obtain money from u-.a luw
Wood, -an apricot grower poorly, totalling only 1 percent · borrowen to complete lhe Assembly Democrats refuse
250 to C t • H t SACRAMENTO (UPI) -from Greenfield in the first of the vote. Republlcan Thespokesmansaidthatthe Slate ,Water Projectandolber topennltadlon onanyoneof on lllfLe un Assemblyman Jess Unruh'! partisan race, told newsmen Mitchell Bedfonf'eoUected 359 law apparently says that public worb, unless rates the items until Reagan airees
bill requiring virtually every al his victory celebration &hat VQtes, ~blicen Bertram Sacramento ls the residence of d to with b 0tdjn 1 public official in California to he intends to vote bis own Rudolph llO and . American the chief executive bJt that rop. •
bare his fiscal worth headed mind in the Assembly. Independent Party candidate doesn't mean the man who is
for a vote in the Senate today "I don't intend to be a rub-Allon Ogborn, 1a governor has to be a resident
after clearing a crucial test. ber stamp Republican," said Wood said he Wu surprised ol Sacramento.
For Lost 6-year-old Are You Troubled With Problems?
T .... .._ ._. wtttl • C1111lfM .., .......... SAN BERNARDINO (UPI) on a weekend camping trip In But ' in approving the Wo04, who described himself by his wide margin of victory More than 2.5 m 1111 on
th S B a d·no Nati'onal measure, the Senate Govern-a1. •.moderate. in a race that furthtr un-homeowners were m a i I e d - A force of 250 searchers
gathered at Barton Flats in
the San Bernardino Mountains
e an ern r 1 ment Efficiency Commh.t.ff Farr, 58, -who waa defeated deracored Republican voting refunds last Friday. Call DIVERSIFIED COUNSELORS Today
Forest. rejected the n em o c rat I c, _fll~a~l~ll&~Se~n~a~te~ ... ~.,~lectio~~n~b~id~trencfs~~~in~C!'.:al~li~ornlo~~·:_ __ ..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The searchers, u s l n g leader's appeal lb.at it bel-
H...: 11 .. I -671-IJH -1..,.,. App1l1t1!••
today to hunl for a 6-year-<>ld
boy missing in lhe rugged
country for five days.
Sheriff's Inspector Eugene
Majors said the huge base
camp will be kept in operation
until little Matthew Joseph
Zimmerman is found.
But privately, officials said
the chances of finding Mat· ·
thew alive were slim. There
was concern over night time
temperatures in the low 40s
and the possibility that the boy
might be injured or too weak
to move.
The tow-headed youngster"'
disappeared Saturday' while
he, his mother and sister were
helicopters, jeeps. horses and amended to prevent pouible
bloodhounds found Matthew's invalidation la~. · _
footprints along Calilornia 138 · Two other bills af!ect t__he same govemme.pt cOde sec--
Monday but on Tuesday they tion. If either measure by Sen.
found no other traces of the Richard J. Doi wig ( R :
boy. Atherton), and Aasembl)tman
"He's found "°ater l 'm George Mi Ii as (ft.Gilroy),
sure." said Lt. Phiriip L.. ...were signed after Unruh's,. tt
Pounders. "The streams are ,w_oµId void his bill.
runnin~ but he doesn't have The . comm~tf:ee ref~ to
any flOd and by now he's pro-adopl • prov151on ~t would
bably toO weak to walk." eliminate that poss~bllity.
Matthew's father. Stanley, a AJmosl. every official -
Los Angeles engineer, is from a city c o u n c 11 m a n
separated from his wife, but through a date supreme court
he assured her at the base ju.st.ice -would be~eqaired to
camp: "Matthew Is rugged. disclose publicfy an Y int
He's wiry. It makes me feel vestment over $10,000 lo ·1
better to know that. I know business regulated ·bJ •& state
he's alive." or local agency,
~ ..
• ,'rr.,"
FOR SUMMER . ENJOYMENT
Outdoor Lifing is
a way of life in
Soutlrern.._Calil.
ENJOY IT NOW
CALL US TODAY!
The NEW LOOK
for '69
CANVAS AWNINGS
VALANCES
CURTAINS
Nothing decorotes like can¥as.
Beautiful new colors & new fobrk1.
f or homfl ••• tor business , , ,
for ll"oilen ••• for compenl
MAIUflCTUllD • lllSTIU&
FREE
ESTIMATES
HO OlllGAf lOH
WE DESIGN
WE MANUFACTURE
WE INSTAU
.,.
ALUMINUM
' SCREENED PATIOS
Pkmned for lorge, smoll .w mobll•
-·· ••• _. ... ly ... proof.
WINDOW
and DOOR
AWNINGS
Many 'styles & 18
stunning decara!ar calars
for your selection
SAJiJ,.\ANA TENT ·'& AWNING co.
FACro.Y SHOW~M ..... ----.. 120,2 'So •. Main . . '";:,,:.~
Sanhl ... •.• 545-0491 .. =.::..,
l
,,
,.
"1
\
II "'
"
,. .
"
11.
ll '
Save 41.95 on our Incomparable
Penncrest lmperia.1 zig-zag now!
' ,_ 2 "*" .....J inab1in9a... ' . . .1 gi ...... 1obott ... ~~ .. ,,....,. Reg.:199;95 NOW
~ ...,_ so,.,.._ .it doesn't run away, 24 inseft. =~\ lble ~leloot~.but-$158 tonhol• with tM ponh cif • . ....,..,,
I double needle far t ai!Or ·1ftio;, ·' I pus1i bunoa far ,., • .,,, --., ...,n1.
I:"' """""'· "'"*" • Pay as llttle as 7.YJ pll' -'h
,,
I ' '
.
"
..
S.w·31.95l Penncrest '42 D11ign'
zig.zag that weighs only .28 ·lbs.I
Reg. 149.95 NOW
s11a
'
See our l•d-
cle•onstrati.sl
Ye1'R be sold H
, •• Knit ligoa11
"
I I . " NOMONIYDOWN· .. USl··~ftmM'YMINTl'WI I CANOGA PARK HUNTINGTON BEAGH NEWPORT BEAa-t
FUI 1 ER I ON LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR VENTURA
I \
I
'I
I
' ' . '
' " ~ .,
,,
·l
.,
'I ... , •' ' .i • M~· ~
----~--
lfl•d•fldof. ~ ... 18, I '169 I e I • • f
Coast· Water Boost Co tint Gas Tax
• • South County Ratet U ped by 30% -
SANTA ANA -An avera..:e
30 percent incrt:ase in water
rates char1f4 by Orange
County Water Works District
No. 4 w,bich aerves lhe
Capistrano Bet:ch-Dtnl Point·
San Juan Capistrano area has
been approved by the County
Board of Supervisors.
In a Jetter to lhe. board sup-
portllllJ lhe · lncrtue, counly
FIOQd Cop.trot E n g I n e e r
Georga Osborne Aid the.re bas
been no change in the rates
since: 195'7.
"In l!Mij t!)e dlslrid clian&«I
from 100 percent tfOOnd
water, costing •1& an acre
toot, to 100 percent · Colorado
ruver w~~ .. COlllng pe an
acre foot," Oaborne related.
"A KS per acre foot rate is
effective July t." he added.
"In 12 years the district has
lncriUed from fGO custoihers
to 1,500 and the asseGed
valuation ha's jumped from
$1.S million to •11 million.
'/
A-ccused Ski.ill Killer
_Said High on Drugs
RIVERSIDE -A Sanla Ana
youth accused as the ex-
ecutioner of a would-be mari·
juana buyer in the Riverside
County skull murder case was
high on drugs when the victim
was slain, tuUmony has
revealed.
of jnsanity to the killing or
Kent D. Davis, 21, a f
Haywud, about 15 months
aco.
· Psychlatrl1t s and
P,1.Ychololista wbo evaluated
the rnental state ot the defen·
dant after his ln'e9t tesified
Manday, Tuesday and were
expected to finish today.
"Tbe increase in customers,
sale ·or bonds, d e v e l O-ii e r
charges :a'nd propert)" • t.ues .
have unUr' new offset the need
for a rate increase," Oii borne
said. "But if the rates art 1at
raised now tht properj;y tax
rate would have.ta be ui)ped to
20 cents. ft ts now 10 cenls."
The engineer said the new
rates compare favorably with
those cha~ged by utilities
serving surrounding a.~as.
Rapist Gets
23 Years
For Spree
-'
Win• AU...-a
SANTA . .\NA -Distribution
cf $13 t million In highWwy
users tues and $5 mlllion in
cigarette levies w a s an-
riaunced t<ll'.lay by tctate Con·
trotler Hooston I. Flournay.
Orange County got $611 ,111
hi the highway taxPs derive~
from gasallne t.Ax, motor vehi-
cle \ransportaLion lAx fund ,
and mator vehicle funJ.
Shares ror Orang~ Coast
cities in the !\.I • y ap-
portiorunent include C o s t a
Paul T. Attner, West~ ~1esa, $-42,SS!I: Nev.· p 0 rt Beach, $25.974. · f!untlnstoo
minster, bas been prer e ch ·~"' 1 •·"cl ea , _,.._; ..aguna ~ 1,
sented both the Pres». $3,325 : Los i\lamltos, '9,001 :
dent's a nd ·Friends of San Cle1nente, $10.292: Seal
the C 0 11 e g e. servic~ Beach, $14.122; Fol· n ta In ,.. VaUey, '~6,J40: &ln Juan
awards from California Capistrano. ~ 2 . o 9 a, and
State Callege, Fullert \Vestminster. ~:l.1,435.
Anyane wbo thought that ton . Attner, who gra~-Of tl!f Sl3t million In
Ronald Hall was lucky Tues· uated from CSF with highway users taxer. $11
day when Superior Court million went ti> counties; $8.7 honors, was editor of niillion to citie~. i.nd SIIO
Judge Howard C. Cameron the student newspaper, million for state highway
dropped. six of the 10 felony The Titan. work.
counts cf which the Santa Ana -----------Controller Flournoy also an·
man had been convicted just nowiced the M a Y ap·
didn 't know whal they added T k Ok J portianment of U1e state rue . "ayet cigarette lax representing !l'J
up ta in the Penal Code. percent or the revenue ~I·
Judge cameran made sure SANTA ANA ~ P\lrchast of lceted during April.
Beach, ,$;4,681 ; HunUngl.:fl
u .. c11 ...... , i.acuna Beacb,
17 ,Oii; i.o. AlamllOS, f<,131:
San Clemente, S&,113: Se41
Beach, $7,239: Jo' o u n ta i n
Valley, $8,781h San Juan
Capistrano, $ t , 4. 6 0 , and
Westminster, $20,'35.
New Irvine
Deputy Due
IRVINE Carl F .
Hartman, c urrently an
associate profes5<lr of English
at Michigan Slate Univer1ily,
will become deputy v l c e
chanceUar far ac&demic af.
fairs at UC Irvine July I.
Hartman will serve as deputy
ta Vice Chaocellar Roger
Russe ll, wha is responsible
under UCI Chancellor Daniel
G. Aldrich Jr. r or academlc
administration of the campus.
Nearly Everyone
'Listens'
THOltOUflllMIO • IBt:I.
now! •
I 818 RACd DAILY
Tuet. Thru S.t. ,..,.
• tl(;9 ... W..dty.1:45
S1turdlp•Hoidaya 1 :1 I
ORDER YOUR
Ai.SERVED SEATS HOW
THROUGH·
COMPUTICKET
Hollywood l'.n, .........
C9f'ltuty Blvd. me..,..,.
. 'Fhe extent-ol UUs influenc•
-in terms or diminlsbett·
mental capacity to determine
right from wrong wt1s beillJ~
argued Tuesd41 in Riverside
Collnty Superioi COurt, Witb
proceedings ei~ed to wind
up today. I I I
Rowland J. Berry, 21, Of 734
Toland St., has pleaded in·
nocent and innocent by reason
Davis' animal-gnawed bones
and bullel-timashed skull were
found last Nov. 11 In the
Railroad Canyan Dam area
near Elsinare by three Costa
Mesa rabbit hunters.
Dental work and a watch
engraved with the iniUals
K.D.0. helped identily the re·
mains, which y,·ould have been
swept inta oblivion b y
floodwaters from heavy winter
rains a few weeks later.
that the reinaining charges -a $79,000 crash truck for the Orange County r e c e I v e cl
rape, burglary, anned robbery Or1nge c:aunty Airport !has Jl9,866. Distributian ta Orange to landers '\~b<e~n~a~p;pr~o~v•:d~b~y~lhe~~Boaril:::·~,~r_jc~-0a~s~t~ci~tl~es~~in:cl~u~d«l~~Co~~~·1__~~-=~:=.::.:.:.. __ ~~~~~~~~~~~ and assault -.added up lo Supervisor.i. Mesa, $40,397; N e w p o r l samething substantial by mak-
County Picks
Park Group
Three Seek
OC School
Board Post
SANTA ANA -Th1t:e can·
didates will compe!e Aug. 26
Architects and engineers far th e posiUon ~of Faurth have been selected for the $1.26 million Fullerton Dam District Trus~ on the Orange
Regional Park. The 12&-acre County .Beard or EducaUon,
facility adjoins Imper i a I tM county elf'Ctlans office an·
Highway just north cf tbe,. oounced tOOu. . \-
dam · "~ · · '
The pr<lleCUtian has rested
its case, charging that 8erry
murde~d Davis for $800 he
\\'as carrying ta make a mari·
juana buy, posing as • sup.
plier a n d perhaps acting
with accomplices.
Three others arrested on
warrants issued as a result cf
detective wark by ~ h e
Riverside C a U n t y st)eriff:1
Department in De c e,m b e r
were later released for lack o(
evidilce.
Psychiatrist \eSUmony sa
fJr In the lrial indicates Berry tiled· to -commit suicide' with
an-overdose of barbiturates,
apparently around the time
Davis was slain.
ing them consecutive. And his
ruling could mean that Hall.
27. Yl!ill spend the next 23
years• in state priS<ln.
Had·s countywide c r i m e
spree ended last Oct. 5 wben
he was captured in the apart-··
ment of a Westminster palice
officer who was returning
home from duty. He was 'coil·
victed by a Superior Cour
jury twa manths later cf 10
felony counts, faur cf them in-
valving rape.
/utl~I hif_ victllm., _were
We:st:mlnster .. nd Hunilnston
Beach haU'stwive~ who
tesWled that Hall taped their
bands and mouths, ra-ped them
and lhen ran,.ck«I lhe homo.
One pregnant tvjctiJn \Old the ·i
caurt that Hall'laughed and ig.
nored her plea she was ju.st
days away from childbirth.
N~mcd by the Board 'of -·~~ pa~rs bY ta.~t ~upervisors were C h a r I e s Fnday s dt:adhne 'NCI E Ph1hp
\Vicketl and Associates of Alan Ramseyer. tt! Anaheim,
Fullerton. archltects; Janes an educat\lr; Richard L. Acton
and Peterson of Anaheim1 .{£.• Orange. an cxeciJtive ad-
landscape architects. an,. Bli d Child , . c· -McLean and ScllUU.,. civll ~:;,•,nd, Ooph\~ci~~--n.Araujo;_o[ fi ren S amp -.t engineers. cf Fullertori. Lf"' · Vl"ll·o.e .. , ..
State recreation fUDOI are The trustee'i:i poi.ition was ... ,
being sooght to,\" rlnlftee 1tbe . · ·vaqited in Mity b)' Lyle o M d • ~
_P_"'_g_r•_m_. __ · ... ;'~'"",,,_.,'-' .:;·-"-,~~:~'(¥).;has rn0ved io sens on,. ay, m .~rove '-
D EATH NQ_TJCES .. T!ie Fourlh-Oistrt<I Is the GARDEN GROVE -Blind r .. 1ure hiking, e o k o u 11 , '·~ . • lil.l'.'lf'I( iO area of the EOUnty's children h'om Orance County crafts ind base\;u games for
HUTcm$its' , ' uVt . school .board districts are invited to the Braille the 8.Ightless youppieri from ~~:;·~~~~ 0~~1e~'":'.at~ .. J=' 1~ wbicb corresPoDd to county lnstltute'I summer day camp, · 6 ·t 11 e. Id l'
Private •••vlt\>$ WHI ~llC!fod 11 sd~rvlsorial distnd.s. . w~ch CP,r:M Monday al Euclid . 0 y ara (l -l. \ !!~: ~o:,~··~1 3:,.e. '°"'..vftl"r'::, It covers abou(two-tb:irds et .Park he~. J ' • • ' ·A ~i,lar. ptop-aQ\ for .blind · SCll~110r ., Anaheim, most cf Oran.ft. The s1x·week program will teenagers and y<M.lng .adults
""•l•d• Scllmldt. "'' n, '°'""''~ .,,.. 1\lSlin tUld · ~'1lb1 l'ark, \be,,.. will be held starling June 24.
L•eufll ee1ch. G .. w11de ""'~ ... 1• r f1.11t•growinri' -El Toni pea, •' ' Paren" can enroll "cir Ttwrlod1v, , PM, PKltlc ""'"' . -~ , . · ·R K 1 • ~ u> morl1I P1rk. 11111 Mortut rv, uai £, rr SDlall .port10n or ·M1sa1;«. Vlej~ ] n ge1· bl1"nc! cru'·~•1n the p-~am
to.11 Hl111w1,, o1r1tf9t1. .,.nd alL ·of the mountain.areas'. • ----KJ.'I"' '"IY
HALL _ ..':....J' of "e ...... ..n. ,i;;A .. ..;\of .~ by contact"-.; Mrs. Shirl'"" J•1111\t. Mlrlt Ht!I. "'" '· of """ u1 ._..,.u~1 SOUu~.u• u~ ,,.. ~,, H~ si .• w r.1m1n1itt. survived bw Santa Ana RJvtr. • Wm' S HollOI' Grove at the Orange County Plfet1!1, Mr. Incl Mro. Brr!! H1lf1 1wo ,1.iers. s11<, loe ,,..., Nod oe afficc of the Braille Institute,
ll,1y, ~rvlen. s..1urdtv. 10 AM..
Smilll1 C.MPtl. lnt~mtnl, GGOd Sii~.. A·-•-,~" r~ N' a' med AN'llEIM -Robert Kl· telephone SJS.1221 n•rd (t!Tlt!ei-v. Smltns MortutrJo lllJ:t; I"\ -
o;ree1oo. HAHN ' \ .. • . . Jnger o( }nahcim~.,has ·beefr
c.orv GO!'O••• H1hn. 1111 w. 11111o1 •
1 To Hear' t Po•l . named fl'aihtr of the Year by Bl~d.. Btlbo.. Sorvi~s pelldlnt t i . c:i
We51ehlf C.h•Pe! Mortu1rv. .......... the Big Brothers al Orange
LIGGETT SANTA ANA -Llo".d L. ·County. JCl\n W11tu LIH~n. :IJO Emertld • 1.
11v. t111una 8"1cn. 011r or ~ 'Aubert cf Ceroni' del Mar is Klinger, who i! an in-
June 11. ~rv1ved bv wn, i 1me• J. the chairman Cr. the Or"nae stallatlon foreman for Pacific l lt11tll. llllnc;11 two d1wthter1, M,.,_ "'"6
M1rv E. wuoon, Emer1kl 11y1 ,..,,., C<lUnty Board (lf th,e Ce.Ufomia Telephone and Telegr3ph Co ..
Jttn F. Htl>\es, Lt C1n1d11-:' •!• H rt • I ti h SI hlkl ..n · roQ!l~hlldren ind 1welvt t•ttt.,'rtnd· ea: nSSOC 8 On. 85 X l: ren ra.-&.ng. M
cnlld•t n. F1mllv requt1rs ""t110.·1-wi111---Or. Vincen -y: Carroll of ages Mmrl to 19. 1"11 to ma~e memo•lt! contrlt111!1on1, 01t1.., coo1r11iu1e io the Amerlt1n l.aguna Beach will serve as He was selected because of
t1neer societv. ~vien. Thurid•v. the president of the local his devotion to his family and 11 AM, tommwnllv Presbvltrl1n
c.nurtn Par1or1. w1111 Rev. 0111.. Heart Association chapter. his civic work. T~rnor o!He!tll!>V. Prlv1te ln!ermenl
11 Roo.evelt Mtmor111 P1rt.. sn~l!cr
LOllWfll Bt1th Mor1w1rv, Dl~crori.
ARBUCKLE & WELSH
Westcllff l\lortuary
C7 E. 17th St .. Cn\I Mesa
lf&.<aBI
&ALT'l MORTUARIES
Corona del l\1ar OR I-Nit
Costa l\lesa _ _ l\!1 f-!424
J~ELL BROAO\VA\I
~10RTUARV
110 Broadway, Costa l\1esa
I.I 1-3433
on.DA v BROTHERS
HuaUn&l .. ·Valle1
•-,Mo~ry
-' j1 8ii~di J!lv•. -
. ~ II ~9'll
, ~~1·'<, ~ T."~ -r • •· ' •
&vfl!lC <VIEW"
'lEMORl.U. r~ •I rf'JTJ!eler1~~~ N:opo~·~· ,~··" t,
PEEi " ~ LY COIAINVJ. NEjW.
ROME •
7801 Uolu A.\le.
Wettmlnster ~~
SHEFFER MORTUARY
Laguna Beacll U4-IW Sliding at Dohen11
Picnic Slated
FUU.ERTON -Alnerlge
Park he~ will be the'9Cene or
the 31th Annual Arkansas
S~te ,Picnic slated' fo/ July. 4 ..•
'!l'he-program, starting at·~I
p.m., will feature eounlry,
\\"Cstem, modern and gospel
music.
Su ctemeate 411WlllO
SM ITH'8 MOR'l'\JNIY
8!'1, l\11ln ${.
lluoUn~lnn BeaCb
LE Ml3t
Or&llge County surfers rarely !Ind waves like these !... small as they are -
at Oober>~ .Beach Stale Park anymore. But when they do, they take advantage
of them. 06he.ny, once a mecca tor surfers: has been vtrtually dormant since
the construction of breakwaters (background ) £or new Dana Point small craft
harbor. Now, only an infrequent south swell provides waves big enough for the
r surf~t art. I
PUWRlON
171-410 .
I
..,. . ·,;.. •. ••
b Looking~
for floor
clrama •••
'
Penneys
has it!
YOUR CHOICE
'
8 ·49 SQ
•. YD~
Plu1 ""'•ll•tion
lhe.,.ood™ I • '
You wouldn't expect this exciting, new
. : ;,:i,.i d,uign to bo priced'° low-but
, -.Jitreit-ial Muhi-cotor vinyl ''.lecMs"
' In mottled tronslueont vinyl. In gold,
J white, grftn, rust and beige.
.'.c \.i.-Apn-™
':;! ,.1'fh1';ftel" chipatone dolign i1•a ha.ii·
-:tg-.~e jCiroe-scol~.off;~ciln"'9rit ' ... :.:'hi~ ·gotcl, Whitt , nreen, rust anc:f V°I" .,,.~ •• ' • ,. ! '6.!~· Striking ,witli p<ovlnclal 't· · '. or co~temporory decor.
Like it ••• Charge it!
-· COMI Ill OI CA1A '°"'" -HUNllNOlC>ll RACK iAklwooD ' NIWPOllT HACH 'en.n71 • .....,,.,. --,
l
l
J 4 bAI\. Y PILOT Wol ·1 3'11•• tM ,.. ....
Vital Str~isties
'Marriage
• . ' Licenses 111.,.
WOOOALL·DOUO -e;q,, C WGOlll ll,
"· Ind 11ve<l'I J. ~w. ,1, Gltn c.
WOOIMll, .,_, 11111 lliln•IT J . Douet. "· bo"' ol WflfmlnlffW,
JONES.SENOR -•~se l , Jonft. U. ot Hunllnt1111'1 8•trll, 1<'<1 (1to1Yn K.
SeNI', ». ol SHI Blad!
HOLLOWAV·PETEll50H Clt'tus
Ge••ld HOl~rt. n. lfld TM•"t
Mltl.t PtlWSQll, )), boll! o I
Wntmlnster
•TJIOOl·WRIG!o!T -JooM E, Sl•odl,
)}. ol LAI ... "''· Nev .. Hid Pl ll'k:I• .t,. Wri9fll, n. ~• Hunllneton BeKll
r.HElLSOt<t-TOll:Ef,DAHl -ltltMrd A.
l)lell-. )0, 111J Sl'>lror< L. Tot~•lll,
:It, bclti ol Hrtntl111tlotl 8e1t11
tJEAHAGEt,...GAltR!SOH -sre .. e-1 ...
TIN-I. 2,2, tnd K1t"'rlM Elll!W
G1rrh.oro, '"· botlo ol COlll Mew GERALD-Mr.C.A.Jlll' E•nest N,
Gllftld. 1~ '"" Donni McCtrly, n.
beth ol Hunllf'l9IOll ''''" WEDLEJl·JIOHNSOH -OutM' S.
Wmdle(, n, o1 Sllwr-(~"vc~. tnd
Lo!1 J•Jt>ntOl'I, n, nl wrstmln•trr
•tSHOP-JOHNSTON. Peter W. )I, ol 11:10 vi. Slr1llo tM Je•nnt C . 7l, ol
166111 ~ti L•roe, Hunllf'll!Of\ 6••t~.
l"INMER-Jo\NTZ. Ra<!l!Mlo<1, ,., ol
lt171 lt•flll~' l.•ne. !"'''"""""" Be~<ll • ..,, Mu·• E., lJ· ol JOO-I Re<1er1I SI .. ,
Cl>Stio. Meil. OARR~ON-MtOONAl.0. ll:on11a l..
11, of Ml Ctnl•• SI., illpt. !I. Co1111
Ml!'Slt '"" M r•llvn {.. 10. of IU 01hf\a, Coron• 001 Mn
SHAJ>tR0--11.\KE, P•ul s .. 11. d 'u 1'"" !I. '"" Ger•ldlor ill .• ??. o! ~;t!
Nes1u""' ""I. 111, ""'"' or Nr••PMI 8t'ts· V€Go\S, Nr• -r1rri•9t
nr.-• luveti Mre ,,,.,""''
Jur• I Cir¥ Wllll•tn Ho•'c;lll ... ?I ,..., r~1rlll'n
\.11111$1 Har••lf\, tl, !Xllfl or Hull•
tlo!ttoo ~c~
Ju•• 1
Mlc:Ntl T. Loc~l•f 11 ll"d Slfllllf
N...O.ue•. 11, bolf\ ol Hunllll'!I!.., 11,..,,,
Wiiii•"' J""" a~1r a, J•, •l. ol rr:11 Mes-, 11'1d Ntrlflll H (llCrl. 11. ol co._ d•I 1111.r
01rold ll1e P•P<l'U-. ?J. o I
W1!$ltnln•ltf. Ind l'•f'C•I II 8ulkU>.
11. ol G1rorn Ci•c,..
Ju~t • o\rlf\ur T uortrn1n !~. or Ne••l>Orl
8e.tn, '"" """' ~ l>t' J1mi:.01'. ••. rl LI Pwnlt,
Ju·"' J l(e~ Hood1. ~J. ti llunT·~vll>n 8•1rh,
1nd Shi9~ Mlyraa, fl ~• Stnl1 ""' J1c~ 0 , Oerno•"· 11, 1l. ll'ld Melil<>I
Ell••brlll kho•!. 11. l>r!lll ol Founllofl
Valley
Mlc.,ltl R "lotob•. '" 11nd J•·~··
Polrlci1 C1no-. 11. bc1n ot tlo'r .. •>r•I
Ce•cll
flllo!I Eftolon l}<i~:O:n n, ol P .. u"d' '
""" Edna M$"~~r. 61 . cl w~::n1h1~!rr
JUM • $1•ven Ktl111 R•lr.llt<1, ?'.. or Co'!"
M~u. ftn<I Lindi Kev 8aur, ?I, cl H~ntlng!'tl et1cll Jee., P lt•r1 Llt\'lnm••lt V1n!i•Me. 16 ...cl /1111ry Keth"'" Wllkotson. ~. II<'!"
o1 L-.u,.. e ,1c11
J~•· 1 1'-~lC W. C•1!1, 15. ~ntt Jo'tl '" l•t'" C•ewtor.s, '71, tr.1111 o1 r11-·11 t" ~
It•~ Ci. s ... 1111, l•, -.,<1 K111lw
:fto.tll1111, ti, Ila! .. ti H1mt"•"ICfl 8tM~
Sltnwl Ron1lcl P,r.r, 14. ot l !I'
Ai.ntllos '"" P11dc.1 "' S1'ndlt'r. ''· of W'ts!ml"~"'
D1<111' ll1Y "'°"'lN;lcn. 1•. of S•nl•
..._,.., '""' l-ltlen "-· 11. of l h'~ ll"f far! !f~rll
Rlc Dard G .. C11rlt'. 1J. ~r~ J~·"rt ~' ,.._ .... '°· IY;" Ill l'r•l-;fl""'
ltq111d 8 .. Glf''u, Jl, •ftd Crb·•A IJ
...... COMbet. lJ. bGm t i l .,.,,.,~ N t <'"'
0..'1f>l1 C1rt1e<, lt, ol Wnlm!1t1ltr. '"° TQl>l llft GHrri.rt, 11, ol WMU~r
Wllll1m G. CtOWleY. 11. and Kl"""
Mhotro Joll"-1. U. !'DI~ Ill LIGUM
!Nell
ThClml1 Cr010ln, 31, ''"''"~ Ool"•tt (rpnln, JO. llollt ol MvnllN•'cn Pr,·c"
Atbfd II .. Onl!:l'/, ll. and C~r.11 le.
k ln70M, 11. IX>I" or Co•1• I ·il'S'O •
lle>t•fl N. Pell•, loO, cl Hunllrg•o~
fltltf\, a'ld ln11•1d A .. S<l>e•~•I", JJ,
of v~n•ce R0011lcl Mtlk•I Porttr. ?6, nl Analle'm,
11nd 81rb1r1 Irby', ?9. er Hu~tlnqll'n
8c1c.1>
Lew"'nce Ge,.. LllMm. l~. o! wc11tnln•ler. •nd R1mon• 1C.y fnt• ,
31, of ~•nit "''"· C~rl1rlc Ch1ri.t Anlh~nv l'riw11. 11. 11\d
~l'ldre1 L. K~•'<" :1, llo:h ol Weslml.,,l•r
ft ob-"•1 C. Pa,.y, ~~. nl •""dw1v C!!v,
1>nd (f\c"'I 0 CtitO. 19, ~I
Wtoltnln:cr
lklb P. ~Ith, l~. of ·~··! t rf'''• r~<I Edn1 L. Rcmm11~. ll. ~I Hue '"' • 8e1cll
H1rolcl J. Butlt, If, <tm on ·1 I '"'''V
Ht""' 8uc•. JI. bo I> tr """'•'''' B•1ci..
C~•-Ho,,.~. Jr ... '•. ~r 1,,.,1~wordo~n<I
~ ... Wllt!<,OI" ~wdc•, H . of '"'""" llflltlcn 8t<<"
lli1•tlu'
ST. JOJE"M MOS ,IT ~L
JUM I Mr ,.,,, Mr$. Monr.,.. Grol <y, 1145
illn1f\e•tn A•c .• \1-0, Cc111 M·~1. v•rl ..
Ju,.. 1
M• •nd M•> Ooue111 H. R"'lrn>:'<tr.
11-491 Vu1•rru1. Ml11lan Vleio. boy. Jun• I
/\I" ond MrJ J"~ t:.1nno. 1'811 8~wcn ~1 . We51mlMl:r. ~cv
M•. 1na Mn. (•1<<1 l . Stcc~IN. 1IO
W, E11<1l"""1 •5. Sin ClrmcnlE.
'"'" bo•• ..
lHI STUHOI WOILD ..
MR.MUM
Divorces
D IVO•CE~ "ILED
rici.o~. Dl·n• K .. v• M?rtc• r: Duneev, El'<"n J. vs Jerrv D.
RIM"'r JC"~ P. VS .\n,,. 8.
(IJrlo., Sf\olbv Jc1n vs WIUi1tn Pliclltr
" ou<YI•. Lucllle ., Slrion M.
M1n~. Sv:v11 A .. vs WIUltrn C:.
1-t11c!M, s .. 1r1ev w. •• 0 1•ld M P~tr.,, S1111n"1' V1 R•''h
$•n·•51•~an. G:·•lavo •• C:•"i<'l'"'"
<w'h-rd, l.-l'e la~~-v• Lin'• F'?v
H,~,-11. Yvc:t-C .. •• lh~tn·o o\.
Fl:~!. Lirn~I 11. "' 11.uln A"n [nnlh.,, L• Vern~ II. YI. Trey W.
Hll lf\l!UJ,, Sf\•rry Rulll VJ Jc••:>"
F•ll•
Mutr•v. J•1nn!e l. v• 0•·•'11 .I.
8•'1 81rbJr1 1'•n" "' H•rclG ~1·1. !'-:.. P~•k'r, M"Ch-"" t' " "r'•r• (.
C'ul·r .. 0 1""" f. v·. r··~·-1 "·
PBUn!r. J•tlUO~ (. v· H· "" •1 /'
Quinn, limit "~ J ~, Jr:··~
Cllnedln1t. Nelli• Jun• •• PA"I
lf!IJ Ran'\frU, illtl~u• A •• '"'Y W.
01 $•1'1dro, Ron11<1 "' J•·•
L1M•lP. Norene E. Y• T• rm 1n
"' No•~oco. Hoitn •s Jol\n A.
Fcllfnlllff, G~ry l. '' Sviv"• J.
Slulll>'., P•ul C. v• Mii dred N.
$rn!t~. Hltl'ef Wllli1m v1 Mldtyn
M1n11rt1
Fletnlnq, Narw:• S. v• Oon1'd £
'"'-l!U. Coro.'l!' J .. YI P1ul w.
Al'·n Linea v• Rot!rl J.
F::">•i-i.. Li"ll• J-in-:•i. .,. o,~n •
G:n·
C~•. WI"'~"' !-•of'!IOll Ir• H•'ti J.
810clt, Florerw:e C1nill"9 •1 Wfttiim "-· C•1•'diu1. Suell..., M.. •• Dtllol G .
WM ;:, C•tol O. •1 Elmer L.
8r1111. Ann l . V• Donald (.
""'•a:•, Enrkl....:ta vs Me1:k>ct M1r-11 .... ,
S1•1•1>r!, Juli• A. "" OlllaNI C"ur~n!
~~-rl:e, 8e111 "· v• Robert O. C ··~. Jr~n ll:CO!:-rl \I\ Jo.tn LG"'>•
J i 'vn, S11'1d,. 11.e:llellt YI r~berl
Jr~n
I( •··. I:.•• luclll• .,... 11:0~-r1 F
M ~· ··• C•r.,.~n 5. "' A.Hr'~~ Ml•· !'···· Ron:n,Ji, Su~in v• Ro,.1~ Ra~e
~': .. ~v.J0~:1h~;;,::e1 ~~ .. " v:~•l•voo•d'""
8•u<e
M1n1tleld. Corolt L . ., P"t~•rd "· Voc.hal, E. E1rlene l'I E""'~~1
Al!et, S"1ron Ol•r>e I'S H -~:rl L •"!· ...
McHu~ ... B•verl• Je1n ., r , .. ,, r •. ,,
M~n1C•I. Flcl•• Our•~ l'I F'•1i'" .. ,,,
MtC111, C•n "ii Alll\ "~ T"•,·.•1
Jnm•1
H•ll. Eu11 Ny!""" ¥1 J1mr> 1' r ·?''
S!f!'t. J1me1 W11tor vi Cot~·d"' F~v
0'1en. Nnncv H. vs Geo<~e ~·. C·cv,e, Mot'Nr.!! J1ne I'S Re" ... rl l~r
G1llen1lne, Vlrp!nl1 8. u1 C · ' •.
VlldDso!l, Sherle!• L, •s C'-··r L
Rtlnl'l1r1. Selm1 •• Jcf\n 0. Cu"'u~ Lucille 8. ¥• R:c~:•d W.
. '
MtOanlt"I, Sel'ldr1 Je1n •• t il'y Advwt!Mlftef'I
Vl\l;cn, Madne E. •1 Wesl:v H I
L11t111 .. .,, Jovce M1rle •• J~y o~ H I y O
Groll. Martin Wllti1m VJ Judllll l e ps OU vercome Lvnn«ll
Wllllatnl, JOY ClrOlv" YI~.·~ .. , Fred · F.'ALSE TEETH lttnDlt lcn, M•<Y Ann vs 0 vi~ E•rl l Cris!, Su~I~ M. YI O~nnl• N. .
w1111.111:0f\, Lwis.e ., 8 n •-1• LooseRess and Worry DU"91!l'. C•rolyn E .. I'! GllY w_
Cct"r•n, C1•ol~ J•~~I• •• r> t111r'1 No lotipr be 1no01ed or feel Ul·•t.-
L....., u.1e becaute ot loose, wobbly f1to:e D~w. Oline LVM •• J•m« "'"' teetll .. PA8T&ETR , I.II lmpro•ed Prn~. Jun~ Oolort,1 vs R lc~:rd Atlt n llbllue PQwdet. tlolds plat.ea llrmu
L111tcn. E~lvn M. "' C""~' N. 11e1 !.her feel more comfon&b!t . A'old
SI And••· M•<Y """ VS Ftrd f.lllbilITIMmtnt caUMd b7 IOCIH f&l.e:I
Hour.e. 0~11• Ann YI C••vton Hon,..,. tttth. Oenturu t.h&t A\ ire e.tee:D-tltJ Edmoru~n. Cll••lcs L. vs Ocro:llr J . to he11th.8e1 7out dtotl1t 11!Sulll')f.
Moore, Sharon l.. vs Erne:t F. I Ott PA8TZ!:Tll 1.11,U dfur count.en $mltll, C;.iol•"" M. YS Chari•• I!.
SAYE S3QOO
15 YR.
l M.\TCHING BOX SPRINGS
Flq'-1. flEAUTIFUL COVER REG. 115911 U NCONOITKlNAl.. GUARANTEE.
EASY FINANCING
HEADBOARDS
YOUR
CHOIC[
Of COlORS
INSTANT CREDIT
IWIM Sill
MATTRESSES
""MATCHINGPO)( s39so S"'RINGS
' YR. OUARMTEE SET
Kini) Size
SPREADS
8t1utifully qulltH In your cholc1 of
color.
Llmite<I Offer. $1299 Hurry While
They L11tl
Coast _Mea
Why ·Pay Higher
Prope~\ l~,ce,s?
See Our Vinyl P•ols
SEcARD POOLS
11 Years lxperlence ·s locations
' 100%
fin1ncln1
LAZY L .SHAPE
Only $150.00 more SIZIS I ll[l
WEDGE SHAPE $90.00 --·~-· AYAllA~ • !
SECARD POOL
1 S'•lO' inside w1t1r line m11swemtt1t. In-
cludes pool s1.1rf1ee slrimmtr, center dr1ln1 fll·
ltr, 20 mil vinyt llher, bull nose coping. Como
pletely fnstalled in ground less m1lnten1nce,
less chemkals, less heating. Needs no costly
.icid b•ths or upkeep. OpUon1I 30 mil life-••
Sounds ridiculou s, do es n't it '!
But wha t if eve rybod y in thi s
country were to throw their
hands up in despair and say the!
don't give a hoot.
Ind eed, th ere "·oukl be no
to1norrow.
But fortunately, A1nericans
have a way of solving their
problems.
And that's just what's going
to happen in the se troubled times.
Simply because it's always bee n
an An1erican tradition.
Now, how can you, as one little
ole citizen in this big, \vide
country of ours, be of any
help?
Well, take a m~ute and
think about a U.S. Sav·
ings·Bond.
323 S. Main St,
Orange • 532-1992
HO"'RS: 10..9, 7 D•ys i;m, 9"'~'"'"· light, Only $1595 board, 1hde, decking.
No, it isn't an iinmediate
rc1nedy for all our ills. But it helps.
If everybody 'vere to buy
just one '25.00 Savings Bond
(cost 118. 75 ), your country \vould
be stronger economically to
wipe out some of tho se scars
we've been sporting.
Of course, every body would
.be helping themse lves, too. If you
were to sign up on a Borid purchase
plan where you \vork or bank,
you'd have quite a ni~ nest egg
for your self one of these days.
You'd have a lot more dollars in
the kitty f o.r things like college
education s, that ne'v home, or
a secure retirement.
So think about' a U.S.
Savings Bond today.
And then go out and
buy one. T)iat's right, a U.S.
1 Sa0ngs Bond. ir tw ......... """"'· Tomorro,v. ... ..._.,..,,, -"Pi.•··-
Take stock in America
Buy U.S. Savings Bonds & Free.dom Shares
'
..
~ ' f •• ~ ;. ,. .. ..
•' < ~ ~ •. ,
~ ..
' s
PILOT0AOV!'.RTISER 3
~ vince her it is juSt as bad to
~ be an undereater. I tell her
-: she n~s energy to study and ~ take part in school activities. ,
•: UPON ARRIVAL she In·
:· fonned me she wouldn'l be ~ eating breakfasts. She takes a
~ can of one of the liquid diet ~ foods for lunch.
~ I admit she does eat a fairly
~ good dinner of meat, potatoes,
; vegetables, a salad and fruit.
~ She never touches but.tt.r or f. margarine, mayonnaise.
·: breads, never eats a dessert
·' nor partakes of any of the ~ carbohydrates. Takes only one
; glass of milk (skimmed) a
Z day.
~ In spite of it all she seems
~ to have a lot of energy. does
:: well in her classes and seems
) to have sparkling health. Am I
~ wrong in being concerned? -
~ Mrs. C. . .
i COMMENT. Ealing pro-
~ bl ems! They begin when the
~ young1t.cr rushes out to grade
j school without breakfast and
seemingly never end. Your f niece is a case in point. Get-l ting to college is no parantee
; that an eating problem will be
\ solved automatically.
; However, if she hasn't Jost
t any weight lately, if she con-! tinues to be healthy and full of
! vim, my suggestion is that you
• Jessen your concern abou~ her
: eating habits.
' Although evidently not an ~ overeater, my guess is that
!she is getting sufflcieri t
• nourishment: milk, proteins,
I• vegetables, fruits, some rats,
and the vitamins usually found
: in the canned liquJd diet i. formulae .
MEDICALETTES (Replies
! lo Readen) :
• Dear Dr. Steincrohn : What i Is your opinion of a copper
•• bractlel In the trtalment ol. ~stubborn arthrttll? -Mrs. T.
I' COMMliN1'. lt'1 a waste. 111 Uke bt!nc oold ll1e Id .. (and l paying !or It) that sltUng In an , t
t abandoned uranium mine once
~a week 11 good for arthritis.
I too. But quacks wW promise
t1ufferin1 bumanily anything
-and Uve off their tal&e pro-
W~ntsdaY, Junt 18, 1969
· JOHM$0N
"Crew'' ,
' • t •
hlln••Clewt Jlst sinf.tf, wt,. tll!.
Ml riul11111H•!
lf 0%. Silt !
"Just
Wonderful" .
HAIR SPRAY.
C-. th• *" flnll1l1s ••• h&ll1r. llaf•:t.ffDIC
1111 Um11trl.
121 OZ.SIZE
.oi<o~no Station.ery
·choose from 4 uilortlll floral deOgns.
Uch box COD\Jins a pad ol JO ggc .Witint sheets and 20 en·
_'i'tlopes to .matdt. · •••
.•. , ... , ..
"iOXIIMA" MEDICAtfD~
. · • Skin Cream · !IDX!!lll ~ Sreaullss -Cleans ~ Olrt.i l ~ up dfy·sKin bltmisbes. Ht!Ps ·
= "' htaf, soflln Qmag!d hiW!ds. .... 1.1111 u. ISlll---·-
5gc PH-MOIST
Disposable Towelette
11r Tranl-TidJ·•P-At M11ls-01 l~e Joi
ror tlll 1111icbit. cooles:t cle1ft-11p •hen
• P11etratin(
Foam
For Relief of Athl!te · s
· foot
w1!rr is llOt n tlllble , •• air drie$ in uconds
after u1t , •• no IDwel naedtd.
lie 11·1 tk JZ's 1.41 4D'I 47c 77c 1.09 I
DIXIE
Batllroom Cup
lllP!Mlll •ltl II et11
Plilt 100 l o01. Sin 77 C.0S FRIE ... Asi.o• C ·
5ip i• litvlr ¥14 wlrlla.
Eau de Cologne'1>· .: ..
• • • ®"L OX· 3 00 • ~i1"1W&l .. I IL a
Bath Gel
•• , bubllHnt ~ittllilnt!
'11. IJ 11.
3.00 5.00
-COLONIAL DAMU
Glycerine & Rosewater
'
Help! to 1111 !M&h1 rid,
c;1119Ped blr4s lfld U1n tile! .
11t1tu, --~ wen . <Ired lot looi. T°" M· • l'll'lllCe If tllest special
. low prices now.
.... 1.11 lq.1.11
• u . . '1111.
UC 1.49
It JllJllS Plfllll· 1'orlllr. lllo lltl tin! ~ ......... 22 ..
.
We4"""1, Jllne 18, 1'169 1 ~ I . QAILV PILOT Jlf
CHARCOAL ANTIStrT1C
Briquets 'Listeriiie'
"HOT-CHAI" for OIAL HTOllNl
f11t 1t1rt1 .. , .... . •ins , .... 't •On.ts " .... 1., ... . ltltKt! ... ,.. kllta
with HICKORY!
10 LI. BAG
SUPIR
"Secret"
lrtdi! .
17 O?. lltl
UQlllD
"Prell"
SHAMPOO ANTl.PllSPllAllT
ho4at•t
PrttKtl11 ter ''' w11ti11 t1•11r1
lltrl lid ••. """ .,.. •air sett IU rallllt -'"' ,, .....
1 .Jt 5 OZ. SIZE 1.ss 11 ~ ot.1111
l 1• 14 lq.IJI 0\:~ r.~~~~rt~.~~! 2. 69
pall! dresses are great for today's 1 88 acti'fe 1lrls. tiltal for camp th11
sU!Mlef'. Sim 2 to 6X. 111. 1.91 1
01w· 2-Piece Sets
,.0111· Shells
1exluied nyloo krlit with jewel ~eek,
7" zipper. Assorted 2 69 coron~1wee11 prints .
'> M-L a11. 2.11 •
ed111ed nylon, "turqbl!ut'' eolllf,
nylon 1lwer. Assllft· 1 49 (d $1llld iiaSltl co!-
ors. S.M·L a
BAUER & BLACK
"Sernit" 1u111c
Stockings
fer lADl[S
r ull ~upport, seamle<.~ .
lwo WiY '!retch n1lt1A
I~ tlllp rtlieve pain and
d1$COll'lfort of vancose
Vl!lns and clher lei:
d11Gfdef\. AbM' knee, lull loot lftd oPlll 10~ ~tyll . i~ S-M·L -~!Its.
"" , .... ,. l .11
2.99
El !tiiltlm
WHU' Casual Slippers
Styled to COfft!lletnenl the latest in
fashions. Luiuntus slip-'
pm in assorted colors n 1 88 materials. All bve heel
lift S-M-L. e
GOUIMIT Grater's n' Bin
Plastic -r.of11lsh cf bin ln NIMY rol4
cotor, Irater. 11icer and 1 69 s~1ed er-strln1er in
colors. •
"Ant & Roach" llMI
RAID -Spray whtl'Mr crawlin1 in·
MCI& 1r1 lound ••• rtlidual tc:lion
~l!IS Mn weeks 1ftM IP• 77c phe1\ion.
lhz. Sko
"L ol" ys TOIUT
IOWL CLIAMll
liquid disinfectant Is betttr and faster
than aystal1.,. Conm1t11l3gc: plaSllC sqtl!ele bl!tt!e.
a11. 4k Si11
~~~---;;:;;;:;;;:;:;~;:;;~~ Paint Brushes
>' 'Y llEAl -108% "fl T
bl'is!le 1n J-IYi:·Z •nd w· ~ 2Y," size~ for all your
needs. u.
9" Paint Roller 1l~~ a££Jtl .... ass·t cCvers I lor fill. oil b.ise, •10µ. &lie ~em1-gloss 1.~imtl$ tnd '1'" e1 DroPcioth .. · :~ 9•12 lt clear plastic protects Ole:
....... from paint spills alld splatters, uu-.
Miili T .•. "Slrlf-11"
II : -""~ J '"""' . ~3t-: .; ~. . Pl..,.
J-ON
"61orj" •oAM
IUtSHAMPOO
Thi "'~ ,., "1 1 39 lodNIOpl
2411, Sin 1
Pilnid ·colDr Film·
I
1 '
f
~EN,AllJol~~~~~!l~l~ •
: NlwPORT BEACH
1120'1..,NI IN WftlCLIPP PLAZA
JTP!lll -7111111
~!Plott -·t!olloljs!Pl!nil
pk;twrcs wi~ I*·
clllse of J rollt of
hlm~t ... ' ,, t1 ·.:H: HUNTtNGTON BEACH .':':':.:~~ • -·
HUNTINGTON BEACH •••M• •"" llOOIM"'f ~.3 .
mJsea. l call quacks human
Wlturea and -• but plwe ~,Y~' get sta"'!'· • ~ 't" _
"--~JL~~~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~~~-1.--~~~~~~~~~~~'~~~~~~~~~~··"--~~~~~~~~~·-"-~~--
i• DAILY PILOT
:·60 Honor Students
\
_In V alleJ Grads . ·
Sbly honor sludeots head
the 1st ol. 1989 gra~ from
Fountain Valley !Ilgll'School.
HOnor graduates who"'receJv·
.ed 1 B plua grade average or
better. are John A,lmquist,
st.ephen Beverley, .Denise
Bra«on, Llnda Calhoun, Linda
-Carlson, Adele Caw>, Phyllis
Chernow, Gerald Clements,
John Collins, Valerie Corna by,
Kathleen Crozier, Peter
DeQuoy, Wayne Dor band,
Kent ,Dudrear, ~f i ch a e I
Edmood8on, Steven England,
at'eDda Fillman, Rooda Ford,
William Fowler.
Al.so, William F r e e m e n ,
Anthony French, Jacqueline
French, Martin Full-On Ill,
Greg Gocal, Douglas Godbe,
Marcbelle Hammack, Eric
Hammer, Carol Harris. 1..iane
Heyer, Amy Honda, Sandra
Hunt, Nancy Hunter, Arlene
Kato, Vera Khun, Cheryl
.. Langner, Susan Lee, Woletta
·.Lindo, Charles Mayo, Ramona
:"Moore, MichaeJ Nix.
·: _ Robin•Novlck, Nancy O'Con·
:'.flell, Lorene Otsuka, James
::Palmer, Christine Parker,
·Laurel Parnell, Mary Pal·
: t.erson, Tim Rasmuas e n,
·.Ronald Ross, D avid
Schoonover, 'Jlleresa Sheeley,
Deirdre Shiu, Joane Spencer,
Patricia Stanley, Ch a r 1 es
Vaughan, Bradford Veach,
William West. Wayna
Williamson, Virginia Wil90n
and Dorothy Yim.
Other studenls graduated :
-.,.. Pftbltt f$0CltffM1tl. lf'* ~.
,..... Pefel, JMll't Pettl'Mfto Joflll
Ptelftf', NIMI Pf!Jllppteft, 0.Ut Pl+l1'1 ltabert Plett., J•"lcl l"olll, o.vi.
PoUodl., Pfirnfi P--. DoMI p,... levko. Ina Pft\111, Mlnh1 ' P11M11r,
S/ltlltv Quine!':"· ~111 Oull>li\r\.
O.leo ltld. Gery Ridn'.iond. ,511lrley
11:1111, Elllln R11t, ~-r11r, DOwln Rellll!', c.crti. 11111'1.
J-ttllOdt$. 9 rfftl RldleNJ.
1rlllit Rldwnll. Gw.MIOlvn Rlcho"'-' Nikki RIOl.lrds. Tlmollly lti<'flA/'dlOl'I, CYnlfll.I Ri.mer, DI-RUclllt. ,,,...
"lllM ltlv11. O.nie! ltOlrk, Fred
R-..IMlfl Ill, KM! RoWrllOl'I, Cr1l1
Rco/son, D1Nel Rodie, Gery RoclWo
1e .... TerrlMI ll;O(l'lele-.o, O.vld RoO-
ttkk. Jdlnfll9 ltollw, Debi• It-. ~Ill• It.,,.,., ,.... 11-. $,._
11-111111. MlcM;olf llubl-. OWVlti
......... Lindt 11111111 DoNld Rusi,
Clt'I S.lldllloori\. Elllebetri S...tengete.
ltoDtrt S.rtt Jr-Lotl'•l"f Sel<«I.
tut'le s. ........ Potrkll Sc1UUH, ROI'·
-$ct\mL 1(1~11 Scn.ul, APrll Scl'IHM. Ll...,.1_ $<tlkll:Hr, JHM ~. Git'*' Sd'>Orr. ~nl
Sd'llltl. Del>lon SdlUJtt. P.ul Sd>uSIH.
ll-• 5"1'W, Jr •• Lor"I~ ktteff, Jo51t Selhent, Dllllel $Mffef, Rtt>et
Sfltw, RIC!wlP'O $11hr, Jr .. Vicki S-
rlrl. Brltn Slleltirr, ,_Hip !Ill~.
Ml.:t>eel Sllll}lb:ll/ Charlot~ Sr.ott, Ll...S. 51'1«~.WUll""" Simone, C1rol $1~ ~ ~ C~rl1t)n.
SIM11lr.
VldOrl.I SOltOf\, P1ul Slt~orc 11,
,\..,. Smlllo, ChrlM!M Smllll, Ooutlll
Smilll, Frlderlclt Smith, Gtill Smllh,
LYM Smlfto, RCICM'lie Smllll, s .. 1dr1
SMl!11, s1wen Smilll. Mlldlell s"~"
Ull(I• Sonia. J1ml'$ Sollel, Nell SHfn,
Merk 5~fty, 81r1>1r1 SPon, Julle
Speir, 0-ld Splc.r, P1lrlcl1 SPu•·
-· G1vle St1pledofl. Niki stHhuk, Marv $It 1 n tr. Gill
Stl~w1lt, S1ndr1 Slirllnv, lltc:Mrd
$todle, S1111n Stoddard, Rudo!Pll
ltolr, f'lc Stone, Rebert Slr1ckllnd, w.,... 51r1nter. Mlr941~ SUdtH'lnll,
ShlileY Sullln.
Detorn S~lltld, K1t11,..n Swn-
tieJ (MrFe-rrAn). Mldlle Tlldoltoto,
Eiieen T-kl, MIU'"'1 T~!ff, Mo<>-
ICI TrtWl!ft, Pllrktl Tesale-r, 51fl
Tllomn. Jlo'dy Tllllf1ton, ""'41no.
Tiiton. .Mnnlfe< Trollt. Tlt'T)' TllOll"·
le1lle Urm .. Ofl. SI""°"' V~, Demrllf'I Yl'llouftte, Teor... VIMI.
SlndJ Yll>Clt¥f, Deelrl Y1mtY, II.on V1utl'llfl, Ylvl1n Vt11, S... YtrH11r,
Lorr1lne Yttrllt. WINI..., Virden. ElelN Varl1, Jomn Wildt<!, Pllricl1
W1111e11. Doullla• Wolk«, J~
W1U, Jlll\Q! W1llrko.
P.....to W1rtorlck. J!ltvn Wardlow,
P1lrlcll W1!Slll'I, GllY WN...,f, Donl\a w-.. Lilld;e Wein-It• LI-wm •.
Jim w .. m. Lindi WelJoK",, 11.onakl
weir. O.vlct Wl!ltft>INI, J11lle Wllne,
SHpl\11\le W~I~ CSe>!tl'lden), Mariarle
Wllca•, Rabfr1 Wlllllnlon. ll1rtie ..
Wiiiiams, J~M W1llJ1m1, K1re11 WK-
ll1m1, l(evln WllHarru. Det>or1~ WI~
so"' JudJ Wll'°", Corol WllllM, C'l'lrb-
llM Wlntan. 1G<J Wo!lonl, Detlre
Wolny, J1mes Wood , Robert WllOll,
David Wor6m, Sam W"'1•b1d\fr, Sle-ven X1n1t11kls, Liiv Yameolr.1, 51..,nen
Y1nt1, Robin Y1rtlroug.h, 1(11uko
Y1i,ke (l(ell<>11vJ. J1r Yolr.oY•ITlll
(All!x1Nlerl. Mltllm YOl.lnt, Eric
Ztlll'ldef, S.lldr1 Zri,
2 on Coast
Nelv Doctors
Two Orange Coast residents
are among 75 new medical
doctors graduated from UCI-
Califomia College of Medicine.
Edward Bradbury, of 266
Brentwood St., Costa Mesa,
will intern at Sacred Heart
Hospital in -S p okane,
Washington. He previously at-
tended UC Berkeley.
Allen L. Mosley, of 8211
dianapolis Ave... Huntington
Beach, will intern at Santa
Clara Valley Medical Center
in San Jose. He came to
medical school by way of Cal
State L-Ong Beach.
Othe r· CaWornia ·college of
Medlcine graduates from the
county are John c: Clark and
Harry R. Webb Jr., of
Anaheim, Donald C. Guenther,
of Santa Ana, and Wesley E.
Root, of Fullerton.
UCDA,vards
Five Degrees
Five Orange Coast residenls
are among 1,200 J u n e
graduates of the University Of
California, Davis. They are:
From Costa Mesa : Gloria
Bosque, Partica Kell and Dale
W. New.
From Newport B e a c h :
Pamela Butler.
From Seal Beach: Celestine
B. Ash.
Cdl\1 Girl Wins
School Honors
Jane Ann Gepfert of Corona
de! Mar, has graduated wiU1
horion from tht \ffi.iventty of
Denver.
She was amof\g 40 seniors
selected during her f~an
year for academic potential.
She . participated in u ac-
celerated program and main·
tained-a "B" average in the
college of arts .nd sciences
during her four yean·at OU.
Get8 Doctorate
Chester J. S\ablnski of
Newport. Beach has b e e n
awarded a ·doctorate ln elec-
trical engi(>eering lrom Cue
Western Re9el"Ye UnJvers.lty,
ClevelaDd, Ohio.
'ANAHllM CONYINTION CENTER
~-•1.n-.!!JNIOll fl~ -II -
------·••"!'" i
I
'I 1
. ...
..
' '·
' Si mmon s Hide -'a-ed,witn . l" ,.: a ma zi ngYecfr~--;, co,~r.s.·.
' ' ~ ' ~ •·..... . Simmon~ fa.~.~~-~ Ms conVenj..'
ence, comfo(tAand Vtctra"!EJ olefin fiber
upholsl~ry ••. all at sale prices. Vectraill is
rugged, tough. Bright colors are locked
right into the fiber with built-in resi~ta nCe
to fading and mois!ure. 'Contemporary style.
1eg. JOO.DO '.2 59.00
. may co sleep equipment 145 •
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' .
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' '
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•
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our Aristocrat nylon pil e
especially sale priced :
Exclusively al Mi1y Co. Nylon pile shap
broadloom in sixteen fashion shades,
tweeds and solids, installed over choice of
rubberized waffle or sponge rubber pad·
ding. It's soil resistant, Ions wearing.
f08.11.99!Q.yd.instaUed 9, 99
sq.yd.
nidy co floor coverings 32
•''
•
all our Simmons
mattresses are now
at special prices
Rqul.1r super or exlr•·firm, flor.:rl print covers; twin
or full .tizes; quilted covers; mattresses and box
springs. All pti.ces have been. reduced (euept fair
trade items):Select a Simmons, and sleep rn comrort,
\
• ;.
\44. oo-6·9~9696i
~ may co sleep equipment 1•st
,J
• •
may co south' coast pla'u1, 1an 'diego fwy at liristol , co.ta mesa; 546. 932 I'
•hop monday through saturday I 0 a .m. to 9:30 p.m
I
J
i
I
MAVCO
•
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f
PILOT ·ADVERTlSER (j
·, ------,.
/ . • •·•:.:.I•-~
......... I"
,/ ,,.,, 1
THIY
NIVll
NllD
IRONING
MIN'S PUMANINT PRISS
TEXTURED SPORT SHIRT . .
:A. .... 36'91 PERM.AMENT PRESS 2.99 value
aport 1hlrt with regular spread cc>llor I'' and short 1leeves, tingle neitdle
tailoring. Slub te:idu red polyester• ·
~tton In blue, gold, olive; S,M,l.xL
NO.IRON NOVELTY SLACKS
I. I••• ~6,_I Stripes, ploid1 and
chMb add %1111 to traditiOflol Ivy
1tyle 1lacks. No-iron cotton-polye1ter
S.99 value
' in blue, gold, olive, whiskey; 29 to 30.
•OYS' WALKlllG SHORTS
A. hn J6'611 Bright &01ii:t color
cotton walk: thortt fastback 1tyl•-
llue, lol'd, loden. 6-16 1.ff Y11l11e
LmL1 BOYS' SHIRTS
L kwe 40"'1 Mock hlrtle "'9Ck
thort aleeve 1hirtt in combed cotton
knit. llu•, gold, white, 3-8. ·
1.2t nl••
LITTLI BOYS' SHORTS
C. k•• 40'611 Cut off jean tlyte
1horts. Blue, gold cotton; .C te 7.
t.s .. .-..
3''
121
. . ~
IUFFLED TllCOT
WALTZ GOWN
&IAIYDOLLS
~·-
Save 26~1 Fr_pthy. sheer
acetate tricot baby doll pj's
(shown) and waltz ,length ,,,
gown1 feature shlM-eJI~ ny1on
ruffle neck and hemline and
dainty bow-and-rosette trim.
Blue, .,ink, hot pin It or orange
in sizes S,M,t.
•
,
••• ••R"I' su~ER DR11111 •
Value• to ' .. , .• , :2~~
A. •ftil L . .-• .,. 42 .. l Spe;ra1 Purcha1e af nationillf aifv.rt1 .. c1-~aiicM.MO\iir 1irtl" dresaa brln91 you a th1y gr~ngt )iricel
. One find two-piece 11...,.r ... print 1hlff1 Wiiii Match Jn~, ntfffed
pant cl,.... ..:d _d,...., Docron• palpster •nd cotloflJ ........ 4 11 ...
The n ...... ' ~ .. aAil~colon includi111 ~u., pl11k, ffft•, 'ftovy,
;rftn, hlf11""9(7 to 12. '., ~
~ITTLI GI.LI' llA•IHIJjf
2.99 It
value -. -. '
.Ll•.l llACll . • SAllTAAllA
' .
,.
lOI c0Tons. ....... aw1a1aun N. OU. AYI. Af 1 ml RWIR
' w......,, -18, 1969 DAILY "LOT J7
COOL, SUMMER FASHIONS
BAllD&llA PRlllT YOIU BLOUSE
A. l•v• 1a,.11'~l'9Clt •portlWear look at g...at JO¥o a.99 v•I••
in91I Polntitd collar.,...neck with y1k• 1tyling, wid• 1•7 wff long 1IM¥n and in-oraout overblouse hem. Sheer
cottonvoll1 In a110rt1d colon; I to 16.
WHITI PLARI LIG SLACKS 4.9tnl••
I. kv• 44,.1 Sharp 11,1mmer white cotton 1lock.s 277 in hop1acking wea,..., No-&and woi1t with fly front
and 21" leg opening. White in sizes 6 to 16.
LIATHIR•LOOK JACKO
C. I••• 44'611 f.ashlon'• rich, mellow leather·look '·'' ..... 111 a jod;1t ~f ea1y·car1 vlnyll Zipper closing, high 277 neCk bond collar and long dHvet. lrow.n, bloc~.
bei9e, trten, rtd. 6-16.
. PLAID PLARI UG SLACKS ··""'•• D. l•Ye 44"1 lri9ht and col~rful tlacb of smooth 277 Avril• rayon and cotton In a•ortitd flare plald1.
Fly front with 21" 1-o opening, sizes 6 to 16.
COLORPUL PRlllT PAllT SHIPTS 277 I. S.ve JO"'I Perky O'lt!rall flower. print cotton pont
shlffi for cool Cofllfort. Bermuda collar, button front,
sle9'Yeless. AMOrted colon, I , to 16. 3.99 .. iue
RUPFLID DOITID YOIU DRESS ,.7 f, S•ve JD'611 •Cool, tleevelnt, ruflle·colla~d, but·
ton front dreu In Dacron• polyester and cotton in
black, brown, green, navy; 12·18. . ...... , .. . . .
YlllYL llRAW SUMMER BAGS
O. I••• Jl'611 fa1hion handbags of shining, wipe• .327 clean pla1tic vinyl in a strew texture. Large attach•
•styles ha .... leather and novelty handle1. Nol!'ral, . white, lilack. • •••••••• •
/ ... ••
.......... ·-~· -CMUMJI a-..OO«R ... T NN rl ........ MM. M IWUMC
.
I
'
:. ..... a._. •• AT ZODYl.MOIL , ••• IAT.10 A.M. TO t P.M.i IUnAr 10 TO 7 ••• LOTl .OP fUI PA•K•• '
• r
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•
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.. . ' ~ .. .. . . . . ......... • . .. . . -...... .. • . ~ -. ,,... ... . .. -. -. . .. .
JI DAILY PILOT Wtdnttdq, Junt 18, 1969 Wedllfl<i'1, June 18, 1969 Q PILOT-AOVEUISER
•
t'ff,fhi.J!Jij.Jti ......... ZODY~COUPON I 11.1.s+·''''·'N I J 11.1,1511·'''9·):' I
COP ... TOlll
·~= 4·9.:
wtTMCOUPON
CHILDRIN'S
•AYIR ASPIRIN
•••19c sl.a•
Number 1 Mii·.
ln!il brand of
diild'1 aspirin&.
SAVI 20cl aottle of 36..
BRECK HAIR
CONDmONIR 2.2s 127
1ia:•
Basic texturi·
zer for f int,
wispy or li mp
hair.
SAVI 9&cll
COLGAD
SHAVE CREAM
~9csia:•29c
N9W, improvoad
instant sha¥•
cream. Regular,
menthol or lime.
11-or. siie.
SAVI SOcl
PAKOFB
COMBS
3tc YGl•e
Unbreakable,
lifeti111e combs.
Pait of 8.
SAVI 20cl
LIP .. LIKI FALLS
Ill "MIRACLE" FIBIR
•A quic~ COfft·up for today'1
multlfa'*'-«I woma1t
• Chooae from owr ..0 aha des
19.97 ""1 ...
9'7
IYnASHll, llatk or lraw• 97c
2.ts ••'•• ••••••••••••.••••••
SIYIO HIADS 2.00 value,.,"•• 5 7~
-. ' ,,
PAPIUIATI
•LAIRPEN
.:r:.27c
Nylon tip mul-
tipurpo1e pen
by PafMtmote.
Assott. colort.
JA.VI 22cl
SO••SKINHAND
LOnON 7S•39C ii••
lich in lanolin,
for honds and
body. 10Y2-oz.
bottl•.
SAVI 36cl
RUBBIR
GLOVES
_,,...."n' welu• 39c
Protect your
hands from
honh deter·
9tnlL Sntafl,
med., large.
SAVI 30cl
1.2~59c ••••
Extra dr( cf•
odorant 1prc:i)'
that 1topt 'Wl'lt-
nsu effecri.-.
ly. 6-or. size.
IAVI 70cl
SUAYI SHAMPOO 99c 1la:e 39c
Choice of egg,'
o°'den or con-
ditioning 1ha•
. _poo or creme "-'WJ rinse. 16 oz.
SAVI 6Dct bottle.
PIPSODINT SUDDEN •EAvrY
. OR IPANA HAIR SPRAT
1.os 111:•
· T oothpcute lo
brl9hten your
amile. 6o/.t-oz.
SAVI Slcl
ffc 1la:• 39c
Super-hold, Ng·
ular or unKent·
1 ed. t.av.. hair
SAVI 60cl noturol looking.
SAVE 38% ON DYNACHRO!llE FILM
DYNA(HROMI SUPIR 8
COLOR MOYll JILM '"' ••'""
INSTANT-LOAD 264
INCLUDES PROCESSING
DYANCHROMI COLOR
SLIDI FILM ""' .. , •• , .. 20 EXPOSURES.
INCLUDES PIOCESSI NG
t .... '". " ~ ·•'
DYllACHROME COLOR
PRINTJILM •
INCREDIBLE LOW PRICEI
IURPIR ALL SPORT WATCH
Zodys leg. 12.17
Handiom• Di¥er·SPort watch wi tlt 8 8 7 Painless-steel bock. Acc1trate,
Sw!11 made. Preuure tested! ·--CALINDAR I
IELF·WINDlllG I
SKINDIYEI WATCH I
Campare . 88'J I at I
29.95 t
Tiie 1kindiver watch thot
ne¥er need1 winding bet:a;i1e
it's fully outornoticl
I
I
FU.TURI
PACKIDI
• tn. boring, daring
IOGt for HIMMtrf
•Do41ble bond, twin
T ..... p
• Chvnky little hffl
•s.ooth ·wtiif•· flniah; --=--• Sizes.5-10
FAJllJLOIJS SAV1Nf;S.ON SPORTING GOODS AT ZODYS LOW PRICES: ::::;
FAMOUS llAMI BRAND Hl•RISER
.. .,. ..
GARCIA·MITCHILL ~--:
aon' 01 GIRLS'
MODILS
BICYCLE
34,17 :val•• 2787
• Durabl• 5e1fe-1top comttr l:ira~ .
• "°"'Y purittuft.proof
typr Ncir tire
• Stwd, frame
•Flamboyant fini1h
24.95
value
•Plastic cover.cl dllCI will not
rust or mar flocrs
• lnclud•s disc, barb.II bar, d"""b-
b.11 ~n. ccllan, sl...,.. aftd
exercise course
SP,NNING REit:>
14'~: 42.00 value r: ,.1331.1
ROLLER DIRBY
SHOESKARI
8.95 value 4 87
•Boll b.arlng
wlieel1
• Stning Mtal
ch•i•" "•.shmf1. long
wearing shoes
•For both fresh and solt water use
•Full ball pick-up arm
• P01lli¥9 anti-reverse
•Quiet 1en&itiw drog
•Counterbalanced head
• Durabl• corTosion-resistant baked-cl\.
' finish •Two spools inc;luded '·:
•"Service guaranteed" •' •.
OUTDOOR FU'111
TITHERBALL 511
7.95 value
4 4J .. ,
•Fun for all ages
EXTRA· LARGI l•LB. SLllPllllG BAG
• lntlude• prp~•
slonal tet~r·
boll ·
7.17 411
value set
•Btavtiful
and aturdy
dinn.,s.t
•3 pattern&
•2·yeor
9uarantee
I\ PLASTIC. llOOM er
ii. .SPONIE MOP
... . 1.17 991
,\ t\ values . ...... . ... ...
18.95 9'7 value
• Pradicol, handSOMe extra-large 36xH-with h9C1~ flap
•lhiggM $anoll poplin cowr, cotton flonnel lln1ng ·
•O..p 5-lb. acrylic fiiiing for 1atra wan11tft
•Heowy dllfy 100 lrtch zipper ·• ·
PYREX MIXING
BOWLS
• Otenproof ptrtx
glaes bawlt
•For ottn-to-table
seMce
• Auorttd 1lzn
IAlllEIR IAI OR ·
PWUC SHOE IAG
1.17 value
97!
• 5-4., garment
bag
•Shoe bag
holds6palr
of 1hoet
14.17 ,.,
value
•full 1u1pension
lntarlock;ng chain
llnlc 1pring1
• Co"'fortable
padded matfreu
COlOIFIL 10.LI. fill
CHAISE l,OUllll-'AD
5.97 2'' value
AMAZINIJ
DISCOUNT!
• Co111fortoblt
MWchalae
lounge pad,
10.lb. cot·
ton fllltd
•Heavy duty_
9.ft. pol• :
•Groundsl8"¥9
•Tetherropl!
•Co111ple1e·'l(itt, .
storage ca1'~n
~7: _.
AUTO ROOR MAT,
•Full size I 9'
•Assorted colon
SAVE A FABVLOVS SGS QFFI
PRl-RICftDID
RllL-TO.RllL
Values
to 7.95
TAPIS 3'7
LIQUOR -YOUR CHOICI
CantJllGr•at 2'' 3,99.5.20 flf1•
HOOLD ITAi." ILINDID WHISKIT
Ught, lftlocth, mellow. C•mpere at 3. 99
1 :ZODYI ''%" VODKA 01 GIN 4
c .... ,.,.. •• a.19
:ZODYS CALlfOINIA llANDY
Zodys own tmocth and mellow brondy.
Com,_,. at S.29
IEGAL SEUCI LAIER IEIR 1
•ltfl"tlh1111 • tROVlttClin olr I C
• Jltr1ded UpNMty for Zodys
• 12-oa:. o.b.r battle CoMp. ot 19c pl••
... WALK llOllTM L .... BIACll ANA•IM•BftllA PAD .ANA .. M......u.t•
.., .... " MWY ••• ITUlllAtn• L IOUTM ITtm AT atnn IUCM ""' • UNCOl.M OUMITMOIN ., LIMON
WIST C9YlllA Nl•TH•IB•I 111B0190 a1&C11 .. •
AIUIA Aft.A' PUllln ......... Af ........... NAWTM°'"" •We.ATM UY •Vl1fl
fOUllTAIN YALLIY . L .... al&Cll •lnlNITOll BIACll
'""'" AllA ·---CA .... A •A•K·. MAllltOl 11&.W .. AT llUMll LOI COYOTIS, '" .... & wooettun 90t .. fll wttf a ........ N. HANe &'ii. AT 11Tlf lrlllf ... Jlll&.MM aft. At IVllAN• tOJA ... o\ CA"1'0M .... .,..., ll«l(OI
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; PILOT-ADVERTIS ER 7Wtdnesday, June 18, 196' ' I ' •All.V PR.OT I•
9.95 value
PORTABLE 4-SPEED
STEREO PHONOGaAPH
49.95 value
3'' 29''
r: 311s1 ..
•Soli d 'tale circuitry
with 8 tran1i1tor5
•Dynamic speaker
•Personal listening
earphone and jack
•With carrying strap
• lnclude1 9-volt battery
IMERSON SOLID STATJ;
AM TABLE RADIO
RMtlid state circuit for improved 15095 value
·_'·.performance and high reliobilily
I : '~kk·oo p,o,;d., ;"''•"' · 8 87 · l1sten1n9
~tomotlc volume conlrcl J ~ ~~~sh·~ull output for I EMER SONj
.... s periorsound --
AM·FM SOLID STATE
PORTABLE RADIO
• All·tron1i1tor dual chan•
nel amplifier
• Aulomotic -'·sp•ed r•cord
changer
• M11lti-speoker sound
1y1t•f.1 in detac.hable lid
•Variable tone·
control
31 LS7
EMERSON SOLID STATE
AM CLOCK RADIO
•Accurate self·startin g clock 19.95 value
wakes you to mu1ic
•Easy-to-read fu ll-vi1ion diot 12'' •Solid state-, instant·on lOund
•Beautifully molded SlimH,.~
de1ign cobinel-
IEIEHH.i SAYE OYER $71
AM·fM·POLICE & AIR BAND
'TWIN SPEAKER RADIO
49.95 value
."i•I \l,I , \1•1•1 .1 \ \('J.'."i \"f' ~tlll\ ."i I .ti\' l"lfl('l .. "i! ~
IMMERSIBLE DILUXI BUFI!"
SQUIBB BROXODENT
AUTOMATIC TOOTHBRUSH
19:95 1087 value '
•Recommend ed by more
dentists than all other auto-
matic toothbrushes combined
• lncludet -4 ind i~dual
color-coded brushes
GREAT GIFT!
FAMOUS MAKI HAIR
DRYIR
9.95 value
4''
Hl·DOME HOOVER FRY PAii
• !~i!~ 10''
•Big 12-inch size electric f!J' P""
•High dome cover for extra caped.,
•Removable temperature coritrol·
•Pan immenlble fo r eaiy clpc:ining.
WATIR PIK~ ORAL
HYGIENE APPLIANCI . .
24.95 valve
16''
•Recommended by
th®Mlnds of dentiiti
•Wot.r Plk•com .. °"
the cleaaing job .,Our
· toothbrvsh begins
•Cleans Inaccessible
placet your br1r1h
cannot NOch.
Mffel Jt
AUTOMATIC 4-ILICI
FAMli. Y SIZE TOASTIR
19.95 valea ,.,
!:i;:,12'' 281
'
• 2 position tempera•
t1.1re control switch
t Handy stand leaves
I • TCMllb four •llCAo• •
hands fr•• '
•5!-ufta11eously for I
family breakfasts .
• Adjuttoble color cot1trol
•Beautiful chrome•.fini1h ~' " . • Big;·vertkal style luggag•~o
•AC·DC with built-in line cord
•Earphone, pe_nlite boHeries
•AC and' DC speaker
•Twin spea~ers for
fuller sound
•AM, FM, polic;e l:iand
•Base can aho L'e•.
rerROved
•Fast spof drying
MeftlJ4121
1•YIAI OYll·THl.COUNTll IXCHA NGI MMkl ru 110• and aircraft band 12·CUP STAINLISI
~OFFEEMAKIR
STEAM 'N SPRAY
TEFLON®•COATID IRON . 1·YIA• OYll·1Hl·COUN111 IXCHANOI
: . . . . .
: : ::~ ... ..... :.
z ~ .::: .• -:
..
UHF·YHF·FM COLOR
ANTENllA'KIT
12.95value 10''
~ ./... .... ~cei'lesall 82
channels
•Range up to 120
miles-VHF
•Range up.to 60
miles-UHF
• Rcinge up to80 mlles-fM i
• •Pole, 50-ft. twin leod, I mollel 9GSIM
'
•@\. WESTINGHOUSE TY CONSOLES
~ WITH AUTOMATIC FINI TUNING
,
~' ...
~: ,.
5&8.87 vaJues.
YOUR CHOICE
I SAft OYER $1001 I
$488
•World'• largell bright TV
pic,ure (295 sq. inches)
•Automatic fine tuning ~frolt ,
•Seporcrt• VHF/UHF cho11nel
selectors
• lxcfnM "Chassis 22"
• Jnstant automatic color
~~~i~i~i~~f 1id.11tywi1h fingertip control "
• Fhte fumiture cobinel1
includifttJ a few Italian
, and FtfftCh pl'O\'lnclal
i'"""' , ......
mode It' . .
AS ~OW:.U
NOMONIY
DOWN.~;
TAKl·MONTH5
TO PA'fl .
SOLiDSTATE
WAi.KllTALKIE
15.95 value
~ 2:1•7
•With vol ume control
•High sensitivity
•Telescoping onlenno
Motlel W11DC
1.9,95 value
•Fully automatic
coffeemakff
• Eosy-to·pour,
non-drip spout
•large handle protects
fingors
21.95 7'' value ·
•Teflon~·coo~ lale
for eaq-glide Ironing
•Dial for all fabrics
• Pnh·bi.rtton •pray
• 1 yr. vnconditioflal
guarant.e
, •• ,.,.. •t yr. over-the·CC1J rl ler LADYWOliH
M•"•I 4JID01 guarantee StD7/J3ttl
\l·YEAR ON·THE·SPOT UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEJ;
ON ALL TRAFFIC "A PPLIANCES AT ZODYSZ '.
WISTiNGHOUSE 12"* JET SET
INSTANT•ON® PORTABLE TY
WISTINGHOUll·UHF 19"*
JET SET P.RTABLE TY
$109
value s79
• lnstan .. ona-nn wait1 no warm-up
•Front mounted seeabi:
• Pop-v;,· VHF-UHF
chan~I numbers
•Softer, cl.arer,
easier to wotch
•Teleteoping VHF
anln1ta
•,UHF loop antenna
WESTINGH..,l SOLtD STATI ITiRIO COlllOLI
Ill CHOIQ OP ·i PINI FURNITURE CABINITI ' .....
' I '•H'/fM/f'NrSt«8o multiplex 'With FM tuning meter
· "•T~ lnpul••ll* Jacb and external speoker jacks
•·3bo watts peak Music power for lit-.nlng plea•ure
'91ln1C..-.Mponl'1 Walnvt, Sponi1h Pecon, French
P,lol Frultwood
''''~~. v•l•a s124 ·
• leautifvl off and beovtifvl '°"
•IMtant-On, "waiting,·
no walk-back
•Illuminated UHF/VHf
channel numbers
•Full 19',. diagonal
pictvr•
•Walnutgrain fini1h
(Net .. ,,, ••• .,
I SAVI $a471 I '
$795 VALUI •
• tN .. 111 P .... •t . .. HURIYI SOMi.QUMTITllS UMITiD ••• SOME MODELS llOT lYAI~ AT AU no1n1
• I I • • ~··sitOP WITH ZODY-I COllYlilllll!T CRIDITOR YOUR BANllUDllllJCARD ••• SATllPACTIOll GUARAllTllD ALWAYll . ~ ~ ., '
:.·-·•HOP & IAYI AT ZODYI MON. TllllU IAT.10 .A.M. TO t P.Jll.7SUNDAY10 TO 7 ••• LOTI OF l!illl PAR~INOI . . . . ' .
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I
•
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'
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Do\llY I'll.OT
'
~. Junt 18, 1169
b ) t . 'I TU DI! oa CUPATION
LEGAL NOTICE
•
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'
I
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'
[
• ' :
r 7
Tuesday's Closing
•
Prices-Complete New
r
' I
=·· a 0 •••a a a acsssssoo a
DAILY l'!LOT
York Stock Exchange List ·
list
l
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' •
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U DAILY PILOT w......,, -111.1'69
Ll!(IAt. NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
ITATI 01' CALll'ORNIA
Dl,ARTMINT 01' MENTAL HYGIENE
l'A1•v11w 5TATI HOS,ITAr..
NOTICI TO CONTRACTORS
SEALl!D P•DJ>OSAl5 "'1\1 be r«tl'<'Od by ltlt FAIRVIEW STATE HOSPITAL, ~SOI Hertlor II~~ Colli Mtu, C1Hforn!t ""!It 10:00 A.M,. Frldty, J11t1• 11,
, ... ti whlc:ll !Im• •lld P4k• ltlty WIH be pvO!kly opeMd 11'd r•ad 1or ll!t !,.,_ ,,.1!9tl0fl ol' H1rdl>Dlrd W1lnscolll'19.
In ttfMrtl, thl1 P"'IKt <On>!1ll OI: Furnhl! aflCI install t~Jlmt~ly f71! ~ f'I
of J/I" !tote-"nDYGlll't'" Olrt r•l•rdotnl Ptrtlclt botrd -O.ll lllmt: 'Pf•&dl With
melll trim llld IPpnul""l•ly lall 1111111 fe.t OI rntltl bll11. 111 11 f'lerelnt l!tr tc>«Hltct.
lld1 '"""' be wbfnlUtd for !tit tt111,. wotll m crlN<S ftl'l•tio'I. 0...111""'" '""" ,.1."' •1'14 •P1Clllc:1llon1 "'Ill na1 be com!cltrtd •nd "'"' be c•i..• rar ••l«llon of llfc!•.
T1141 .. .., Sii .. Agtnq ,.,,..,..., ttlt rlP! t.. rel.er lfl't' or 1!1 bids.
In ICCOnltM• wllh ,.,. P'O't'l•lonl &f SKTIOll 1}1l "' lht L•bor Codt, "'' wokt
Sith-At-Y l""'rdlrit 11111 ton!r1ct M1 l lClrltineod 11111 11\t a-r•Uy pr1v11i"'°
r•l't of ""'-IHI lllflllub!9 ti lllt -k lo be done Is 11 fol~;
,..., • .,..,. Ptym..,ta ttr
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Hl!ldty
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Doublt: Tl-
1 ,,1'-5
LEGAL NOTICE
6-17-4t
Succeeds With Standards Ka ye Joins
Don's S~o-,v 'Iony Bennett Survives Music Trend
Kaye Steveru will be Don
E:D11'0R'S NOTE -l·lis tie
a.tkew, coUar open, t?!ICrl>
phone in hand, TcniytJe~
11ett hru survlvtd success·
fv.lly, by stnging the stand-
ards. Bennttt goes with. "l
Left My Hear& f,1 Stu1 Frail·
risco" as much as the pro-
ve rbial ham with eggs. But
tl1e er1tt::rt<tiner is l1oping
to bra11cl~ out into other
areal now, rrwvies tn pa.r·
ticular.
By NORMAN GOLDSTEIN
NEW YORK (AP! -In th~
age of turbulent change and
raucous revolutlon, It l s
somewhat comforting to know
there is still Tony BcMett.
An island of calm durability
in a churning sea of song,
Bennett continues to sing the
standards, with the same
romantic style he's u11ed in
recording and night clubs for
the past 20 years.
• The more music changes, so
to speak, the more Tony Be~
nett stays the same. He's
survived rock 'n' roU, electric
guitars and protest songs to
remain a solid-selling record-
ing artist and a consistent
night club an'd conccµ-l attrac-
tion.
Whether it be London or
Cherry Hill, N.J ., Seattle or
the Copacabana -or Apollo
10 on its way to the moon -
Tony Bennett is there. When
the astronauts were ewakened
one day during their recent
Apollo 10 mission, it was with
a Bennett recording of "The
Bowl T ickets
on Sale Going
Best Is Yet To Come" -
because its lyrics Included
"You think you've flown
before, but you ain't left the
ground."
Bennett, a q u I e t , in-
troverted, businesslike singer
who has manai;::ed to stay pret-
ty much out of the public eye
when he's not working. was 6
when he first got the singing
spotlight. He sang at the
ceremonies opening Ne w
York's Triborough Bridge,
with Mayor L aGuard ia,
sir.gb1g . "~1arching A Ion g
Together."
"That was it. I decided show
business was it for me." he
recalls. And sh'ow business it
has been.
Bennett says he was the
first pop singer to make an
album -"Cloud 7" -back in
the "pioneer days,'' in 1951.
"Now any group CGmes along
and right away they cut an
album."
He isn't overly impressed by
the quick success of young
rock groups, nor does he feel
he has to change his style to
keep in the running. "A good
The Hollywood Bowl box of• song will last no matter what
flee is now open daily except the changes in style," he says.
Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. "It isn't old time if it's good
for sale of tickets to au music."
performances of the 1969 "I Left My Heart in San .season of symphony and Hollywood Bowl "pops" CGn· Francisco," which he recorded seven years ago, still is his ce~~ season opens on Tues-biggest seller. "It's just one or
Rickles' special guest atar at
Upon a Time." "LAve Loot .. ln movlel. you have to be McJodyland "ben lh1 Insult
Aw~,'· "The Shadow of Your carerul in the selection of comic presents his nlght club
Smile" -all still favorites, at films -u you are wllb act there June 27-29.
least of an over 30 generaUon. tunes." He turned down a part The vivacious slncu-eom·
"l sing love songa,..not ~ in "The Dirty Doien," he edienne will appear In all five
test 800gs," 1ay1 Bennett, says, but he h83 confidence performance?! with Rickles 11t
born o -)'WIJ'S qo lo A.sW(la, he right ones will come along 8:30 p.m. opening night. 7 and
Long Island, as A o t o n I o fot'1Uln.. 10 Saturday night and at 5 and
Benedetto. One of the "rljht ones," If ft 8:30 p.m. Sunday.
His conversation Is peppered ij eVcr dOne, will be with Tickets for the Rickles show
with references io 11tn1ers he 1-ctor·dlrector John are available now at the
admires: Frank Sinatra, Peg. Cauavetell, "Canavetes says Melodyland box oUlce, by mail
gy Lee, Dionne Warwick we're gQMa make a movie and at all agencies.
among them . togeUle,r someday. l believe·===========:::
Thert baa beto a change lo we w1U. For five years we've -Bennett's career, but It's one been talking aboot it, piectng
of expansion, rather than dlf. it together in conversations.
ference. "I'm still learning, "It's a takeofr on 'Crime ~."'""
st.ill developing," he says of and Punlshmeot,' with music. ~
his singing, but "I'm putting It'll be updated and the starv-
irons in all the fires" -clubs, iog writer changed to a starv·
recordings, television, movies. ing singer. Dream sequences
p;1lST lUNI
C..tln•111 Doll., h••
Frod A.t1iro 1•-
He has even taken up painting. of lvanovitch will be done with "FINIAN'S RAINBOW"
"Crosby started it; putting Dali paintings and Duke EU-Pl~1
irons in all the fires. You bear ington music. It makes sense. "HANNIBAL BROOKS"
a musician on the radio -"I figure by my fourth film Mtch••I J. Po ll••"
Dionne Warwick, Ray Char\esl=I~'l~l~re~:i~lliy~be~w~ailin~· ~· ~g~in~lilmgs~:~· ~~~~~~~D~~~ -you want to see him at a
club. It's a way to 1et rans.
T~levislon, movies, concerts, COMING SOON ..... OLD PA¥1UON
irs ai1 inlerw•V<•. The way TALE of the WHALE each artillt approaches each
medium detennines hi s NEW SEAFOOD RESTAURANT
artistry." :l:~'.!"'~~-~~·~·-~~~QQQQQ~~~~~'"'!._!~,~~!~'~'~'!.: He began the painting hobby
with sketches and he's now
doing oils, mostly of scenes
from the spectacular view he
has from his 32nd floor East
Side apartment. "I'm just
learning; I've got a Jong way
to go. I've started with this
Japanese-style painting. It's
like jazz; you just sit lhere,
wait for the moment, then
when it comes to you, quickly
indicate and go into the details 111owr1•s ,,,o uo 110 TIU.-ur. later... SllMDtT AT ,,,. lllT
His movie career has been GRAND HOTEL 1n.nn 1,,..._ • .,,......,
limited so far to a small part'I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"~'~"~·~·~·:":-:::-::""::; in "The Oscar." ii
Big Shorty IALIOAJ
HOLLYWOOD I UPI)
0 n e t i m e heavyweight con-
tender llal Baylor (6-foot 4-in-
·ches) will play the role of
Shorty. a petty racketeer, in
"A Hall of Mirrors" starring
Paul Newman and Joanne
673-4048
o,..
6:45 '"r. •n.. SllllM Pniln-'•
those standards. It's a good day evening, July 8. ~'ith the music song." And "It Had To
Los Ange I es Philharmonic Be You." "I Can't Give You O~chestra conduct~ b Y Anyth ing But Love •• "Once
Richard Bonynge. ·with the1....:.::::.::::~...:::::...=:.:::_• _ _::::1;:::==========.11
Australian soprano, J 0 a D C:lldl• ,AClnC COAST mGHW'•T • '"' n NATIONAL G!:NIEAAL C°'"'°"ATI()toj
Sutherland, soloist ~! fiJ"jij[H~
Woodward. ~
MCC2UEEN
AS
NOW
PLAYING
·--OMARSllAlf ·---·· -~-JACK PAlAllcr
•~CAITM
ColorbfDfl111e
PLUS
GEUGE llllEI Rall PEPPllD BTMDS Im 1e
NtwPOllT IEACH
"THE
PERFORMANCE
THAT SHOULD
HAVE WON THE
OSCAR FOR
VANESSA
HEOGRAVE !"
-Yinc1ntCoroby,
N. Y. Timei
I s.. ._. ,_, • ...... • -.uu
1 .::·~
HOW TO COMMIT
.MAlllUAGr.._
·1n ...... -IRllll
lllllM
~
IHI .
llollllllllllED•I
COLOR -R•ted M
tl1e-rnesa T· -3+rt:"' '): F1~l"" ~ •• ::"\'-Ar.1-,.:.,1"t .... _:-qt~
NEWPORT ANO HARBOR IN COSTA MESA
TUEPHONE 548·1552 FOR INFOIMATIOlt
The Big Disney Combination
fl)UI 1111 ~
' I llefecfiw U. frank
13ullitt--§()file
vfher .l<lnd vf wp.
iJWIGtittO IOll WA1\.ftl' ,l\AJltHCU)O lUJlllLal fm ..... am llJl ti
-PACIFIC-jo!~li:!j;~
1'1r out AGun C•mtdy
CHRllTOPHElt JOHES
"3 IN YHE AnlC"
"THE BROTHERHOOD"
PERSOHS UNDl!lt If WILL NOT II' AOMITTl:D UNLESS
ACCOMPANIED IY PA•ENT OR TDULr IOUA•otAN
JAPANESE MOVIES EVERY TUESDAY HIGHT
SPECIAL NOTICE TO OUl PATRONS
THE l'ICTURES LISTED IN THIS IOX MAY 11! CONSIDl!R(D
IT SOME TO IE UNSUITAILE f'O• CH1LDRIN ANO YDUNQ
REQUl•E PARENTAL OISCRETIDN,
"MICHAEL & HELGA"
"J IN THE ATTIC,"
CONTRAIY TO .l.DVE•TtUNG IEYOND OUR CONTROL ANO
APPEARING ELSEWHERE YOUHO Pli:O,LI' UNDElt 11 (NOT 1')
ILL MDT 8E ADMITTED TO PACIFIC THEATlll!S TO 51!1!
THE PICTURES LISTED IN THIS ID)( UNLESS ACCOMPANll!D
IY PAllENT OR ADULT GUARDIAN:
-. . ·······-·········-
Riie• .. Ille Tt, OI lh<I W1rkt
ROCK HUDSON ERIU!:ST IOllONIN'I
"ICE STATION ZEBRA"
JIM IROWN
''KENNER"
............. ~'i'f'ii~·······~· ...
'~ •
M~lt !Mini 1'91ky
IDI HOPI: JACKll! GLl!ASON
"HOW TO COMMIT MARRIAGE"
R06 STl;IOl!R CLAR'I I Ll>OM
"TH6 ILLUSTRATED MAN" •«•rn-.,. "'Multi
C:ll(fl 11\t Rtlft!Mlw
'ltlD ASTAIRE PITULA CLARK
"FINIAN'S RAINBOW"
MICHAIL '· POLLARD CONMlll RIED
"HANNIBAL BROOKS"
RATIO 'M"
~ ......... ".*''''• .. ··········· 'ltrZflr-./fllrMAIDllE.,,_ llE 11111
OMAR SHARf :.:.1• IXCLUSl\rl! ORIVl ·IN
l'RIMllRI P•li:Sl!NTATIOlol
T"41 Trw !.ltry II' 0..
OMAR SNARIP JACK PARLANCI!
JACK FWllCE """'""" ,, .... ~~ ..... ~ CUIM~ UITtCCGll JIX.llW'mta .... UM
"-"11w.nm-.. ~~--"-...-""11wnm~ .. 1TW1.£11""••
.. ~·-.. U1.0IOl'lll-i..~11i... l!l•
' I
Also
Willer Brennen-Tom Lowell-Karen Dotrice
ln the Comedy
"THE GNOME·MOBILE"
Continuous Dally from 2 p.m.
"CHE I"
PLUS
"ONE STEP TO HELL" .............. ~·········••994
L.oft"I Tno S"IY
"MIC HAIL & HILOA•
'1•1
T• Yll\lflt, T" T ......
.. HILL'S l lLLU"
I ,,
~~~~~~~~~...L~~~--~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~----l-
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Che ·FiJm
Premieres
In Orange
11Che,'1 the movie version of
·Che Guevara's revolutionary
exploits, wUJ benefit t h e
scholarship fund of the Orange
Friendly Center in lhe film's
Southern California premiere
tonight at the Cinedrome U
theater in Orange.
Tickets are rive dollars pt!r
person, which includes a
champagne party ·prior to the
movie.
':Pro c e.J!d s from the
premie.tt will help finance the
college educations of young
people who come fr om an area
where only four year11 ago no
one had even graduated from
high school," said Mrs. Jan
Menge, president of th e
Friends of the Friendl y
Cent er.
Mrs. Menge hopes to raise
$4,500 from the premiere,
which will be pooled in a
reservoir fund from wh ich
scholarships will be awarded.
Already, 12 eligible center
area students have applied .
Orange Cou.ntians can sup-
port the scholarships by call-
merce at 538-3581 and reserv·
ing tickets for the premiere.
C. Neustadt
New Leader
Of Players
t . r The R a n c h o Commuruty
Players have announced their
officers for the 1969-70 season,
with Carole Neustadt elected
president of the Mission Viejo
litUe theater group.
Mrs. Neustadt succeeds Art
Gordon who resigned earlier
in tbe' year because of ill
health. She has served as in·
terim president for the past
three months.
Other board memb e r s
elected at the players' gene ral
meeting were George Shultz,
first vice president ; Ross
Stanfie ld. second vice presi-
dent; Carol Stanfie l d ,
treasurer; Colleen Us n er.
recording secretary ; Gloria
Newton, c or respo n ding
secretary; Linda Longfellow,
membership director ; Jeannie
Hirsch, production director.
and Sue Farrell, t i c k e t
chairman.
The Rancho Players cur·
rently are in rehearsal for a
summer musical,. "Once Upon
: a MaUress," which opens July
, 11.
---· '""'--.. --·-----·-------------.----------------------... ----
UPI Ttlfftto ..
Strother l\fartln
'C ool Hand Luke' Warden
Among Best of Bad Guys
By VERNON SCOTT remembered a.s the unsym.1 ..,
HOLLYWOOD {UPI) £~U:,Hc warden in "Cool Hand stage, or away from
Nothing enriches a movie or microphone range on location,
television so much as the "I love playing dirty oid when he's playing one of his
character actors who persist men," Martin said the other patented cringing, id I 0 t Jc
!n making the star, director day, ''especially a sure-fire roles. The crew ls terrified of
and writer look good. role of the inept guy W!\11 gets l,a,•ughl.~,g aloud and ruining the Time v.·as when JioUywood one big chance in hiS life, take
could count on Zasu Pitts, makes a heroic effort, and No finer compliment can be
C. Aubrey Smlth, A 11 en then blows it. paid an actor, The crews ha ve
OA!lY PILO' f#
Jenkins, Barton Mae Lane. "The public loves to see a seen 'em all, and making them
Edna Mae Olive r, Frank wily c~at who ge~.lleeced in laugh is almost an im-LOVES LOSING
MCHugh, Henry Stephenson, the end." possibility. Strother Martin
Eugene P a 11 et t e, Gene Martin, who er.eels as an,;==============;========• Lockhart and a h u n d r ed Itinerant tgnoram11s in the old
CitherS. west, is a graduate of the
HOLLYWOOD'S SUPERSTARS FORM PRODUCTION COMPANY
Paul Newman, Sidney Poitier, Barbra Streisand Discuss Pact
In recent years UJese grand Q'niversity or Michigan where
Clld performers have died off he i was one of the country's
or have been overlooekd by finest diving stars in in·
producers. tereollegiate Competition.
But there's a new breed o[ 11e's made 16 appearances
character players · c om i o g on "Gunsntoke,'' unfailingly
.along, and one of the best of playing • lying, cheating
th em is Strother Martin, who coward ~ho plays host to a
usually plays a whisky-soaked fusillade·of .45 slugs before the Stars Form Co:mpa1,1y desert rat )>Creft '' a single final retl.
redeeming ·virtue. "l'vf perfected several ways
UI ....... -You've seen hlf sad-eyed of dyklg," Martin said, grin-.....
Merger Recalls United Artists Birth face in 25 or 30 movies and in ning.
500 television show!. He is one Mirtin gives a thousand
of history's great losers-and dolla rs worth of performance
1111•
.:ln ... a MIN
0
1'anessa Redgrave ,
.. """""'""""'""""'"*"""" The Loves of Isadora
By BOB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -The
formation by Paul Newm an ,
Barbra Streisand and Sidney
Poitier of their own comPany.
First Artists, quite naturally
evoked memories of another
amalgam of s up e r s t a r s ,
United Artists.
Last week's announcement
included explanations by the
three stars of why they are
joining together. Newman:
"The purpose of this company
will be • . • to put film pro-
duction on a more efficient
basis." Streisand: ·• ... We'll
have a teamwork situation
based on mutual respect and
understanding." Poitier: "'We
have opted fo r leadership."
Rough translation: They
aim to get more money.
If it's independence they
want. tha t can be acbeived at
any film com pany. Any of the
three can pick his or her own
properties, dlrectors and co-
stars, a nd collect a million
dollars pe r picture, plus a hef·
ly share of the profits,
But their own company of-
fers the opportunity not only
for indepe ndence, but a
chance to share profits with no
one.
Almosl exactly 50 years ago,
United Artists was formed
with much the same idea. The
founders were the big four of
the day : Mary Pickford,
Douglas Fairbanks, Charlie
Chaplin and William s. Hart. Unitc-d Artists proved to be loves it. for eve ry frame of film. He
plus Uie most important direc-best able to withstand the At the moment there are it1proves tremendously with
tor, o. \V. Griffith. Film four or his p J c t u r e s f.Very picture he's in.
l!I 1'1CH9COLOR"MIUMllON" Cit_ his torians can a/gue over sweeping changes in the fihn unreleased: "The Ballad of Crew members have been
whether members of the 191 9 industry because it lacked the Cable llogue." "1rue Grit," know to run outside the sound
quartet were bigger stars than heavy burden of a st.ll.dio. The "The W i Id Bunch" and,l-------;;;;;;;i;;,;i;ii;i;ii;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
t 0 day's Newman-Sl.reisand-company merely contracts for '·Butch Cassidy and the Sun·
Poitier. They probably were. films which are made in rent· dance Kid." ed studios. He is probably b e $ t
Chaplin described the starti1================='i"==;;::: :~,,~~~~adphyAru~:, inr i ~i; ·k GALA WEST COAST PREMIERE *
founders had beeTi hearing TUESDAY, JUNE 24 -I r'.M.
rwnors tha t the majo r fi lm
companies planned to merge
into one giant organization
that would control the industry
-and hence dictate terms to
stars. The quintet joined for
dinner at the Alexandria
Hotel, then the meeting place
of the film industry, and
revealed their plan to form
their own company. They in·
tended this mere!}' as a gam·
bit to head off the merger.
"The next day the heads of
severa l production companies
offered to re sign their posts
and become our president for
a small sala ry and an inte rest
in the new company," Chaplin
wrote. "After such a reaction
we decided to go through with
our project."
At: Edwordi Clntm-Horbor ond AdalM-Costo Ml'ICll e IENEflT e
Lant hadl Jewish Con1rn1111hy C~ampenhip Fund
for Youth Sumnier Co111p Fund
A GIANT OF A MOV
COLllMDIA PICTllRBS PRESENTS
lllllDRI/ DMIR
PICI 11111
CARL FOREMAN'S
. MIClll111'1 GD D
Its ready to color your world with happin ess.
Direct from
reserved seat
engagement!
'TOMMY STEELE ~.:-e y llARBIJRG':d rREO SIJOY· d:HA'Raiilis. BURrONC LANE
""" sm RVJsro BY SCl'lffNPl..AY sv PApOUCtO sv 0 1/llCTEO 11v I oru&A1.SC1.11D111AC114lh ore f . Ray Heindort· E. Y. HARB URS & FRED SAIOY· JOSEPH LANDON· FRANCIS FORD COPPOLA--·"""~""""",
Crossword Puzzle
United Artists experienced
storm y days almost from the
beginning. Doug and ~1ary
were angry at Charlie because
they provided the pictures
wh ile he was working out an
old contract. for another pro-
du cer. D. W. Gri[fitt. and Bill
Hart lost their vogue and
dropped out of the comp any.
Charlie objected when Doug
and Mary brought in Joseph
Schenck as president. ••••••••••
ACROSS
l Emperor's !Ille
5 Okefenokee, , foe one I 10 Man's
• nickname ! 14 Shoreline
indentation :115 Less severe ~ 16 Trombonis t's
acce ssory
; 17 Open space within a : buHdlng
; 18 Iron rust
' e.g.
119 Leave the l stage ~ 20·Noted US
t lawyer ·
: 22. Inanimate
1 24 Sprinter's goal
; 26 Mint
ptOdocl zi w;doly sptiktn
language:
1 Abbr.
30 Symbol or qulelne!ls
3Z Stirred up
36 Atmosphere: Comb. form
37 --shooting
39 Slyly
disparag ln1 40 Relatlve o .., a valise
ii 4Z Made I
'I wrong -1tattm1nt 1 44 Foolishly enthusiastic
. •
"
' •
45 "·--Little
Movem mt" ~7 Have a
han kerirtg •9 Necessi ty for
volleyball 50 Tak e on oil
52 Sm all group
53 Tree 54 Kind of
platform
56 Card3••• 58 Slate 62 Military
uniform:
Colloq. 66 Anlmal
color
67 Periodofno
hosti lilies
69 Tapering
solid 70 In the height of
fashion n Duck: 72 Feminin e
name
73 Golfer's target 74 Fl owets
15 Deserters
DOWN
1 Tropical
fl"' 2 Israeli dne
J Declare
4 Organ · 5 One moving sluggishly
6 Do a house·
ho ld chore 7 Ang le of
leafstalk ,
---------
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
" ' ~ "' c ~
8 Doctor: lnfcwmal q Like better
10 Metal·
lurgical
precess
11 Oe-
12 Disease:
Suffix 13 Shea Stadium ido ls 21 Equ int food 23 Mr. Slaugittt
25 Abrasive
material
27 Al l set to go 28 Part of
. a too th
29 Unhappiness
31 Head cover·
Ing of some soldiers
33 Woody vine 34 Borders 35 Taxes•
partner
38 Rents
• '
6/18/69
41 Discretion
43 They should be nondri vers
46 Tim e per iod
48 Fathe r in
the Bible
51 Park
employee's bugbear
55 Serious: · Comb. form 57 Kind of running horse 58 Braodenburg Gate,
for one
59 Londcn area
60 Put to sta
61 Clothes:
Inform al 63 Source of e;i.fftlne
64 Current
mortth : Abbr. 65 FreedDlll
of the -68 Letter
Fairbanks' death in 1939 lcftl'==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~=====i only ~1ary and Charlie among Ii
the founders. They were at
odds most of the lime.
NOW AT POPULAR
LOCA.L PRICES!
~1i.ss Pickford wrote in he r
autobiography that she wanted
to modernize United Artists,
but "no matter what I pro-
posed or how I proposed it,
Charlie \\'Ould aut omatically
flatly turn it down. As we
1 were 50-50 partners, I was
completely stymied.'' I
The situation continued until
t lie co 1n p a n y near ed
bankruptcy. Finally in 1951,I
Mary and Charlie so ld out to a
new management that put the
company on a profitable basis.
W,,~~~!.H
"011e of ltt. hst pictures I'••
lffll in years."
-Rt K Reed, Womtn'l Wt•< O•il'f
~~
~e J
Killin ~ Si.mg eorge"
Beryl Reid ®
Susannah York
Coral Browne
An American nuclea r-attack
sub sets out on a mysterious
mission •• , carrying a spy!
~·c~ !'..:&<fl IJ1p~ Mr'~
"Ice Stati
DlrKt fr Its Record
ll'fflll ood·Show
Eng eme111
END5 M DA r NIGHT
'
..... Rock Ernest · 'ck Jim
Hudson Borgnine M Goohan Browi 1 ....
Tony e;g lJoydNoian ·-~-_..,~ ... U.r.t , ...... ...,~ ... -dnaedt,J:m5:1tssJl*t,j · Rndrlt1·ir.._._.""',...,,__
(!]su.,..t..t1,,nifllm&.audi•"C-. · lAIT TIMI$ MONDAY'
XCLUSIYI PIEMllJ.I IUN
SKond Outttandl11t Hit Ollfff' R .. d Mldloel J. Pollard
EVERY FATHER'S
VIRGIN! -
.,
DAUGHTER
OR IS SHE?
IS A
You Musi See the
Orailge County Pr~miere
Presentation of
''GOODBYE
COLUMBUS''
A FILM FROM THE
NOVELLA BY
Philip Roth
THE AUTHOR OF-THE
NOW BEST SELLER
"Portnoy'•
Complaint"
e WHATIVER YOUR AGE, YOU WILL ENJOY THE ACTING OF llNJAMIN
AND THE STUNNING MOVIE DHUT OF ALI McGRAW, THE FRANKNESS
OF THEIR LANGUAGE AND THE TENDER AND GENTLE RELATIONSHIP
BETWEIN THI TWO •
"Genuinely Intimate Love Scenes" -Tt .......... .
"Refreshing to See" :..Tl ...........
"Memorable!" "Irresistible!" -Hew Yori! .... -..
I Rated RI r11s0Ns UNDER 11 NOT ADMlmD To THI ORANGE
DRIYl·IN; UNDER 16 AT THI HUNTINGTON CINEMA UNLW WITH PAUNTI
-"--tff ,. ... ,..
the e11lhor of tht J~n• Fond• •nd 9' lotll "'-"" :
ID • ! now b•tt 1tl1tr Robttt Rtdfo rd 111 J•n• Fonclt a koiit. ttdfotd ftMWIJllQlpllMi
bllSfbt -.11•BOM111t1111Jt.-Sl'ftlalfl li1oi-".Po•rt-no•y•''-C•om•p•l1itl•n•1•.j.••.•.•.'°.o•T•l•N•T•H•l•'•A•1•rlll!I L---------;.;.i;.,;;..;,;..;.;._.·.1A_ll•FO-o•T•tN-TH•l-P•.•.•.·---·-·.··.··.~.?.~ •• !.!.•.•··.·:--~
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e UJL17•1r.-C... ..... ll; ;1l 1C..W,C... .....
• IU7W..rw' ta •...._w.t-W• ' a
Wtdnndq, June 18. 1'169 JO PILOT-ADVERTISER
.
e 14MW ...... _. ..... IL-..... C.-•S-.A•
• ,,... ........ St •• ,...,._._..c..,,......,.,..,
• , ...... F t ..... w .. t ,._ • ...,..c:.t.J ...... ,... ·• 11142~ ......... _ •• ,, ••• ,,, .. ,c-._ .... .....
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ell'*-•••i•
EN-FR£SH [!
d Bags ~
Cookies t&
lft1 Yptletln c ~
33 ·1
2"" 6k
AnJmal. Lemon, ... ~ gar, oatmtal 1c· Old Fa.shloned Coconut •
CooJUea! F Jg Bani
Chocola te
VanUl& ud ~ D u pl e x
Bandwtchu!
Try thetn all--at ~l~ ..
[:
.. -X,.'•"(• ,,, ...... :::::x::::·: Y.:::::~ .
I Cbmamon, Lemon, lJco-.....
rice and Spearmint Ila·
VO!' hard candies. 7~~-«'0o;-';
reu11able jars. ·:~:::
1:~:.*':~~l~~
1:.:.-.·v······ .· .. :·:-.·z::
Reg. 98C Plastic .
Cold Drink Cups
PACK
OF 100 77'
Popu1ar 7 as, 1iz6 JllMUe in
choice or popular colon. Re-
U!J8.ble ()r disposable! Great.for
boroe uu, patio, plcnlcs.
111, 2 aid Sna $2.9& .•.••
Machine wash & dry!~:;::
. Permanent PTess \\'1th::;;; ··aou Release. 80% ray-......_.l
Oh; 2or.. Polyester .in .
White, Colon. 52 x 70 Y:!I.:
ln~:::::;:::;?;::: ~:;:::::;:::::::::~~~~j
% ply ho5e in Green mirror
finlah \\ith braSlll couplings, ~·:-: performance-teated material& .;::::
tor Jong Hfe, Fully guaran-:;:~;
t~. . .... t'::;:::;:::::::::::: f::::;~:::::;::: 1::;:;:::;:~
~,v·~ .. -<\ .... ._..... ~··• ... -.·.·.·-;: r.:·~·:::.:~~ ~::~~:~::::~:;:;: t::~::::::::::::.
Full Quart
DUNCAN SINCLAIR. @\\
Scotch Whisky ~:
=1~~~ $448'tl tnr Boot.chu. ~ ,...,..
ttUed and bI•nded
ha 8ooU&tld, save ..... ~ 50c m special offer. }.:~ ~ ~~ ~Y.~
.
General lledr&
AUTOMATIC
Percolator
<aoammg -$119 fln.Ub. on coppw
bod,y.U o l,· .....
cup lllze. Brew ·
Sdector, "'K e • p wain .. umt. p..12
$1.49 Famous Make
Disposable
Flashlights 771:
Inata.nt u,ti.t tor
12 month• or
more under nor-.
mal hou1ebold
use. No batteriea
()r bulb replace-o mont. .
$1.59 -Value! 3 Piece
C:hip & Dip Se'ts nc
8" bowl wtth '"" dip bowl In A~
c&d o o r ,G old
glM& with .mu.
tone fr&me.
Reg. 99c Plastic
~ce Cube Trays
• •4.29 Penetray
CORDLESS
Light Control
wa.u .. ~=Uc·$ 2 27 ~·"'"' ··-1 0 0 k. Protects In . ;roar-.
$1.98 Value ea.!
Patio a T.V.
' oorCu1hiom
4"" $5
' eolon. l"Olllll nib-bfr core. 18.sl8x3"
MCAYV YIH'l'l. t i.EGNIT INDOORS
• U1£,IN PLAYROOM OR AT
IDE . ASST. TIIEEO COLORI .
$5.00 Value! .Glass
Party Perk
$231
$3.981 al.I Swing A Way
Wa Can Opener
$236
l •JtO•ltloa wail bradet. I J" e & r ....,... .. ,,.. ....
nm., oUtrl J:&Q" to
'"•~•m $498
1 :Z 'wJl~t• pet•1 • tram• • sunny yel'-.
f low face.
• ............... -c.... .... '
S1.95 Value!
•. 10 0.. 01 ,,,. ......
Cut Crystal Look
Plasticware
•Ill'>·-·
. Matching 36 ozffi
· Pitcher 69c ~
98c VoJue! Now
$9.99 Value! t
PADDED
Bridge Chair
..... y plated $6 93 =~a~:! , . B1&cJc Vinyl cov-
end ••art and ..... .
29c Plastic
Dai1Y Dau:ler '
Utility Bowls ,,,,. ......
4'°' $1
Reg. 98c Plasti~ .
Grater & Bowl
Set 59c
Shre4!1,. g rates,
lltringl! No mess. rtneea clean. Avo-
cado, W bl te or •Goltt. .
•1.99 Bo
Bru1h
H!:r$131
Cholce or A VO·
cado or GaZ4 wtt.b
Whit..
99-12~Compartment
~UtllityBo
66c:
~ ., ... ~==
Regvlar •5.9R
El,ECTRIC
Can Opener
Boot buy!>,..t· $ 4 44 Ing e u tting
wheel, m agnet
holds lid. Opens
any size. llhape
can. #VW'7·E
Van Wyck.
NEW!
"' · Ulfra Dry ,. __ ,_
Spray
' Deodorant
$1.98 Cosmetics or
$>1.00 ea. Everyday Jewell'J Boxes
Greeting Cardi ~
·t& !7-:o!.~. \.-·~ z . •v• n.oo. All ........ --monl
'
$ 00
Your
Cboiu ,
Sparkling va&e!f,
tray.s. bowls, com; """-
potts, cookie j ar11, :·::~
others with the ';:;:;
look ot apenaive :;:-$
crystal. Some over !;~
R foot bight Buy ••
for ycUr.ielt, fur
gifb! ~ .., ·:·:·
SS.95 Value!
WONDER. WHEEL
Exercizer Slende. wh"l $299 for waist watch·
eni! Heavy duty
ni.bbber tire s,
at.eel re.lnforctd
grip handles.
Reg. 69c
Aqua Net
Hair Spray
i:: •· 4 9 c
$1.29 Cosmetic
Travel Kits
by Sirls
Reg.59c
Windex
).____..._ ............. .....:.,;, i ............. • ............ W b~'"'C •~• •' '--1• 'L-1 ~---'-'--~} -~__._J ______ _ I
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• 1NI ............. H ............ c-Jiw, C.t.t. ' , I e tl1J1 IMO u.4 . .t A....,._ H.I. •
R99.49tWwn's •1.91 ea. Little Glrls'
Lavishly Trimmed
Acetate Briefs
Gowns and Pajamas
FAULnESS JOURNEY-AID
lottlti ~
oflOO s119
·79c ea. C•ity
... of 275
Cotton B@dl~
2 for 99'
BuYI 2 and Save 69c
For ba b YUUMJd makeup u1e. Get 7oun:I
$1.89
Glory
1111 c1 .....
. Dhcont $147
t"rletd .
HOUSEHOLD LINED
Vinyl Gloves .
:~..::::.·::::. 57c I htN f ... 11
• A-ff·SllP s.My •
°"' • c.i.r Chic•
Reg. $1.91
J&J
1st Aid Kits
r .. , 99c c .. , ..
Bow.flan& • h 0 • • • (II'
aleep cap. lilelp l'l&lr
. neat17 ta place! "Jl[ust'•
fr. miladJI
n-44c ........
~$
R
• Ji:
•4•• Hi·l=ashion Girls' Cotton
PARIS IMPORTED .l~ICA
Sunglasses Play Sets
:r~"".:'~:$2. 97 ~.~;,""'~=·$1s9· cludlna' -. new' blome, m. •-'ch t n I'
Ugbt U..! All belt. Pm.ta, PWda. I with.optical . aoll.d•I I eoliar
hlnpl. . , . · . sf.J1• f to IC. _ . :·)
$1.98 Women's ·
. Fa1tey
StrawHall
~ .. ~144
Bott, cruah·
· able woYen
atr&ww. with ..
lace klOkl In
IUDUPV'• bell: ~!tuhka
Girls' Wet 'Look
· ~Ion Jackets (~. D=:' $198
....-~--11,flm taffeta tn
populat' coton. .....
T to lib Baya p for
them,*'
Women's c-1
Folding Sllppell'I D;:::'"'
Myi., eolor1
p.lir91 w .......
dom'8 or ou.t • .......
. l•11 •11r
HG.LI •12 .. ... , ......... ---,. ----~--· 8&ft dollar• at -·
$12.00 Vahle!
WORTHINGTON
Goff Ball•
... .;,n : $4"·
lachillnton Seta ·
$1.19•-'4 Raellu
I .,,~.
' ,,.
1079(& 'fl& ....
Sleepl•1 . lag
59c Dl1111y
·p I a •r .. ••z -.. ·Ml-. ·?,i•,1=1: 44· I lt•rd&.':-. ... .. -.
e 111u~1t.•W• · ••• w--...c..r.• ... e 6U7 W1••lnU• • ...... Wiit; w..tml PM
• 11t61 • ..,..,.a.,.-.................. .
• H-'* lh4. • ....... ~ ,...,
S29.95 Value!
BERKLEY SPECIAi.
Spin Rod & Reel
Pvt"''ll' .,,.,, · BOTH fOR ~~*'$19·95 dut, n.1. and
r 200 yd& Hne.
$2.79 Value!
MONOFILAMENT
Fl1hi119 u ... '
~ 9f
• 1$ l.0.-916 Y4. .....
• JO Ut-UI Y41. .....
• JI Ut-4H Y41. .....
119 5-ft. x 12" Poly
Wading Pool
s499
Molded blue
pluUo with i.W
pUOn c&p~citf.
$23. 95 2·Burner
Colema• stove
'7" Double
Hibachi
....
•• ~
MajOt' labeo1. 12"
L.P. ~ -~ •
lJbety, United.
. Artiab, World
Pacmc. Dot f•·
turing' Gary Lew ..
is, Bll1y Vauf)m. ~
Jdll:my River.,'
Cller, mu:y morel
·Johnny Ca•b,. Jur, Rhythm 4-.
"" Blues, Country,
Bft<M.
~.=iJ"::$.19a· t~ .••
5&'19 , • .52 1n lim-
ited tlm1 ofter at your nearby : -· w.~~~t: ~f?::%~ ~ .
PACK 84 OF l ·(
12 flaallea • • • • .blue coated
tar IU}>er per-
formance!
,
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' .
-l_~----------'l__
I I
I
1 '
I
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-.-~-------
;ilf ....
DAILY '°ILOT ,._. W O.i. S..........
ANOTHER CONTROVERSY -Sen Jose State Colle~e sprinter John
Carlos says he'll run in NCAA champtonshjps desp!te thr~ts from
the NCAA. NCAA says Carlos and other athletes com~ in Orange
C0tu1ty Invitational and another meet that were uncertified.
Five Finalists Named
Yardley Banquet Honors
Top Performer Tonight
Bruce Chapman'! BiU Jenkins'! Mike
Martin? Steve Shedd? John Vallely'!
Which of these will be awarded the
Yardley Trophy tonight at the Newporter
Jnn '!
Festivities begin at 7 with e:1-Later
coach Bill van Breda Koll£ the guest
speaker.
Then the coveted award will be
presented to the outstanding male athlete
vf the Costa Mesa-Newport area.
In 1968 there were ~winners as Phil
Spiller and Bill Voss ..• a couple of ex-
Newport Harbor High aces who made
Laver Rates
Top Seeding
At Wimbledon
\lllMBLEOON, England (AP) -Defen-
ding champion Rod Laver of Corona del
Mar is No. 1 in the men's division and
Mrs. Margaret Court is placed ahead of
Billie Jean King among the women in the
seedings for the Wimbledon Tennis
Tournament next week.
Australia has two of the top six seeds
In the men's competition. with Tony
Roche following Laver and then Tom Ok-
ker, The Netherlands, No. 3; Ken
Rosewall, Australia, No. 4; Arthur Ashe,
Richmond, Va., No. 5, and John Newcom-
be of Australia No. 6.
Clark Graebrier of New York was seed-
ed seventh in the list of 16, with Cliff
Drysdale of South Africa No. 8.
The last eight , in order, are Roy
Emerson, Newport Beach : And r ~ s
Cimeno, Spain; Fred Stolle. Austraba ;
Pancho Goniales, Los Angeles; Ray
Moore, South Africa; Bob Hewitt, South
Africa ; Dennis Ralston , Bakersfield, and
Stan Smith, of Los Angeles.
Back of Mrs. Court and Mrs. King in
the women's singles are Virginia Wade,
Britain, No. 3; Ann Haydon Jones. Bri-
tain, No. 4; Nancy Richey, San Angelo.
Tex., No. 5: Kerry MelvUle, Australia,
No. 6; Julie Heldman, New York, No. 7,
and Judy Tegart, Australia, No. 8.
good in pro football and baseball.
Now it's five amateur aces who are the
finalists shooting for the trophy, named
for its donor , George Yard~ey Ill, the ex.
Newport wbli who stirred Jn the National
Basketball Association.
Chapman was a sparkling basketball
player at Costa Mesa High and Orange
Coast Colleg'e. The past season he stood
out at Nevada Southern and led the
Rebels to a finals berth in the NCAA col·
lege division regional playoffs.
Jenkins prepped at Huntington Beach
then came to Orange Coast College where
he was an outslanding football and
baseball player for two years.
Although drafted by the Pittsburgh
Pirates, he'll attend. USC tbis fall.
Martin's aquatic exploits at Corona de!
Mar High and now at UC Irvine, have
made him a finalist tonight. In the recent
NCAA swim championships he won five
gold medals and broke meet records in
three individual events.
Shedd prepped at Newport Harbor and
is now a member of UCLA's Pacific 8
Conference baseball champions. The out-
fielder made second team all-circuit
despite being sidelined early in the year
because of eligibility.
Vallely, basketball virtuoso at Corona
de! Mar and Orange Coast, brought
UCLA off the carpet in the NCAA
playoffs. He hit 29 points in the NCAA
semifinals at Louisville as the Bruins
held off Drake, 85-&.
YARDLEY TICKETS
; ON SALE AT DOOR
Tickets for tonight's Yardley Trophy
awards banquet will be available at the
door at the Newport.er lnn. The banquet
st.am at 7 p.m. Tickets are $6.50.
Highlight of the fete, which is open to
women for the first time this year, will
be Uie presentation of the Yardley
Trophy to the Orange C.oast area's male
athlete of the year.
Former Laker coach Bill van Breda
Kolff is the guest speaker tonight. Also on
the program is Johnny Lindell, the
ronner New York Yankee who's now on
the Callfomfa Angels' front office staff.
··~~~~~~~~-
Now Moody's a
CHARWITE, N .C. (AP) -For the
first time in bfa: career, Orville Moody ts
ranked as oDe of the prtrne contenders
for a pro golf crown.
'fhe touch. stooky former Army
aergeant who made last week'• United
States Open -th• -111·1 mosl
prtsllgious tiUe -hll fil'lt lollt victory.
was one of tile late arrivals for the
1150,000 Kemper Opon.
Th• Jong-Open cbamplon dido~ get
fn from Teu.s 1n time to take a practice
mmd on the Jong, lush Quail Hollow
Country Club course, a rolling, 7,205
yard. par n layout.
But the ruddy.faced guy, a 14-year
Anny veteran who came on the tour less
than two years ago, wu scheduled to
participate in today's pro-am event that
precedes the 'n!W'5day start of the 72.
hole event.
Among the missing in tht chase for the
!30,000 top prlu .,. Ja<k Nicklaus and
Billy Casper, who flntshed well back ln
the national champkmshlp, Gene Littler,
who misled the cut (or the final two
rounds of the Opeo, and Miller Buber,
lht< third round leader who blew to a 78 In
the flnaJ round. •
·-;:;:::::;:;,;'-~ ... .. ------;:;-... --....
IVCAA Threatens Ove "tiCounty Meet I
'
Carlos: I'm Legal, 1~'11 Run
KNOXVILLE, TeM. (AP) -John
Carlos, controvenlal sprinter counted on
by San Jooe State to carry It to the NCAA
track title, says he lsn'I -.ied about
challqers over bis ~lllgibtllty In tbe·na-
tional champiooahips wfitch start 'lbura-
day.
"I'm going to run," Carlos cootebds,
'1J'm legal
••Somebody doesn't want me to race
here -but thal '• just IOiDi to get them
whipped worse than they would have
been."
However, the exploaiVe sprinler alSd he
had doubll aboul ~-of oettlng •
world record of nine -Dal lo !be NCM meet on lbe T.-lr11<k.
"I've got nine . raca to nm here,"
Clrloe said in a interview Tuesday. ••vou
can't upect your body to do a nine Oat
when you have to nm nine races."
Carloe, booted. out of Olympic Vlllage
lalt fall because of a black-Slo•ed ractal
demonltri.Uon, will start trial races
11iunday ,la the meet wblcb winda up
Saturday.
He and Olympic clwnploa Lee Evans
-favare<'. lo lllo HI-yard daah -make
San Joee St.ite a top favorite.
Tl'! Calllomlua and Kanau are tx·
J)eC'ted to1 battle for tbe teem' tttte, b.ut
lot a whllO Tuesday H appeoitd thal San
Joee. State WP out of contention. ,
The NCM cbarpd that San Jooe state,
UCLA and seven other llChoola: violated
track rulel by parttctpallng lo uncertllled -
, The meell In queellon were the Or111111e
County Invitational and Houston Striders
meel.
The NCAA said that the twO m e e t s
questioned were sanCUoned by U.S. Track
and Field FedeniUon but did not f'I
certlfica~ from the NCAA. Both meets
were AAU-affairs, indicating that the
NCAA Ind ~ MV may he renewlog
thflr tract feud.
Hearings wW be held to determlne if
they are guilty, bul the schools could hold
albletes out ol the NCM champlonablpo
to bolster their chances of teepin& oU
probaUon lo !be fulure.
Robert Broman, San Jose State athletlc
director, said be wa& confident his run-
ners would compete anyway. Meet ol-
flclall aald they lhoughl UCLA -wblch
bu two ol the 10 defending champions,
with ahotputter Sleve Marcua and pole
vaulter John Vaughn back -would also
compete.
Coach Jim Bush of UCLA was en route
to Knoxville and not available for com·
ment, and Athletic Director J. D. Morgan
aakl 'n Loa Angeles he thought only one
or two athletes were involved.
LOu.lsiana State, al.so on the NCAA 's list
of violators, said 440 flash Al Coffe,
whose 45.I clocking is the best thia year,
would rur.: in the meet.
The charges by the NCAA could result
-if uphekt -in the forfeit later of any
team points scored by the nfne schools
charged plu.s the track teams being plac·
ed on probailon next year.
Will Meet With Rozelle Kosco Ends
Slump, Rips
Padres Twice
Namath:
NEW YORK (AP) -Joe Namalb, the
co ntroversial New York Jeb
quarterback, bas agreed tc> meet with pro
football Commissioner Pete Rozelle but
whether there'll be a meeting of the
minds remains to be sq!n.
T h e meeting will probably be next
week. Rozelle is fishing off the coast of
lower California and Namath will be out
of town tmtil next week. too.
Namath and Jets Prelident Phil helln
had their flnt face-to-face meeting Tues-
day since June 6 when Namath tearfully
announced he was quitting football rather
than follow RozeUe's orders lo give up bis
half-interest in a Manhattan restaurant
allegedly fr<quented by undellrable
characters.
News of an imminent Rozelle-Namath
confrontation wu the only item. to
emerge from the ~ meeting
between Namath and lHlln. There was
no word on who's calllng the plays.
In another development, Namath ·said
on television, "I'm going to try and play
football again."
The swinging quarterback, who led ~
Jets to an upset victory over Balttmore JD
the Super Bowl, conunented on the pre-
taped Mike Douglas show originating in
Philadelphia.
Douglar asked Namath, "Are you going
to play football this yW?"
Namath answered, "Yes, I'm going to
try,. It was a big decision to make bu~ I'm
going to try and play football again.
Rozelle haB said Namath must sit down
will> him before he will iie allowed to ploy
What's This?
Angels Have
Laugher, 13-1
ST. PAUL -MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -
Andy Messersmith was detehnlned to
tasl pasl the first Inning Tuesday nighl
against the Minlluola Twins.
The last time Messersmith started
against tile Twins, he gave up pve runs
and failed to retlre a man in the first as
the Angels fell 13-1.
The teams meet again tonight with Jim
Angel Slate
t 11nt 11, Ant1t11 •I M1nnesot1. $;.SS '·"'-• KMPC l7J~~I 20, A1"'1tll Vi Cftl("° (21, !:ll p.m., KM.PC
C 11 D)
McGlothlin 5-5, of California starling
against Jlnl Kaat, 6-5.
But it was Messtrsmltb's and the
Angels batsmen's turn to show their
artillery Tuesday night.
The 23-year.old Messersmith pitched a
three-hitter and the Angels bombed five
Twins pitchers for 13 hits and a 13-1 vic-
tory. '(' t .. "d "Messe rmllth was magn11cen , aai
Manager Lefty Phillips of California.
Messersmith, only 2-5, struck out nine
while Bill Voss swatted a thrft-nm
homer and Rick Reichardt a two-run snot
and a run-scoring aiogle.
CALIPOlllNIA MIMNSSOTA •• , .... 1 •• ,,, ...
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Favorite
Besides Moody, other late arrivals ~ l
eluded Arnold Palmer, t b e 1lnlggling
dynamo whole Jut victory was in the
Kemper Jut yw, -tt was played in f
New Englllld, and Lee Trtvloo, !be
deposed Open champ wbo WM bo&hered t
by an aching left knet. ·
Both Palmer and Trevtno rank blgb
among the challengers, alon1 with Deane
Beman, tbe liUle man from Bethe~a.
Md., who flnlahtd in a tie for second at
the Open, &llllllling Muten champ
George Archer and 49-ye8Nlld Julius
mtros, the PGA tiUtholder.
I Want
a&aln even If he sells bis interest In the
restaurant, Bachelors Ill.
In Toronto, meantime, Jake Gaudaur,
commiuioner of the Canadian Football
League, dismissed a report that Namath
mlghl ploy lo Canada.
Gaudaur told the Toronto Telegram
that there was no way a CFL team could
Sports In Brief
to Play
deal with Namath snce he is under con.
Lr act to an American team.
The Telegram quoted an unnamed
personal friend of Namath u saying in a
telephone interview from New York that
a CFL team had Invited Namath to play
in Canada "but he 's not saying which
one."
O.J. Wants Insurance
To Play for All-Stars
HOLLYWOOD -All-American O.J.
Simpson said Tuesday he would like to
play in tbe Coaches' All.Star football
game in Atlanta June 28 -with one large
provision.
"Some sort of insurance against possi-
ble injuries have to be set up," said
Heisman Trophy winner Simpson. "We'll
be talking to the Atlanta people in a day
or two to see what can be set up."
•
NEW YORK -The New York Nets of
the American Basketball Association
have called a press conference today at
which they are expected to name Lou·
Carneaecca u their new head coach.
Camesecca currently is coach of St.
John's University of New York, which
won 2.1 of 29 games last season.
•
DENVEF~ -Russia's 7-foot-2 Vladimir
Andreyev scored two short jumpers in
the last two minutes of Lhe game Tues-
day night to lead the touring Soviet
basketball team to a 75-72 victory over
the rookies of the Denver Rockets of the
American Basketball Association,
Over 1,526 fans saw the game, which
was played under lnterna.Uonal rules.
•
PRINCETON -t>efencting champion
Southern California 8nd rival UCLA kept
all four of their singles players and both
their doubl .. teams wtdelealed in NCM
teMls championships played here Tues-
day.
Both California schools have 16 points
In the tournament.
One point behind is Trinity University,
Teic., led by Bob McKh\ley, brolber of
former Wimbledon champion Chuck
McKinley.
•
SAN DIEGO The San Diego
Chargers of the American Football
League signed Tuesday quarterback Mar-
ty Domres of Columbia, their No. 1 draft
choice, and end Skip Orszulak of
Pittsburgh, No. 5.
'Ibe 2l~pound Domres, who stands 6-
foot.-3 ~2. was third in the nation in tot.al
offense in 1968 with 2,404 yards and
fourth in passing with 1,133.
Orszulak caught 50 passes for 725 yards
and four touchdowns in 1968.
•
SAN FRANCISCO -U.S. pairs cham-
pion iceskale!'s Ron and Ciody Kauffman
have turned pro and are under a three-
year contract to Shipstads & Johnson Ice
Follies, it was announced Tuesday.
The brotber.-sister team placed first
this year in the national senior pairs,
first in the North Americap. competition
and fuurth in world competition. They
have been skating together for 13 years.
•
NEW YORK-Bialra's Dicki-iger was
named Fighter of the Moo.th by Ring
Magazine Tuesday for his upset JG-round
decision over middleweight champion
Ni n o Benvenuti ol Italy in a non-title
bout. Benvenuti suffered a broken bone of
his right hand in the May 2S fight.
nger beat out light heavyweight cham-
pion Bob Foster for the hoilOl'. Foster
stopped Andy Kendall, the No. 1 con-
tender, in the fourth round of a title
defense on May 24.
•
NEW YORK -Baseball fans have long
memories.
Joe Cronin, Tris Speaker and Rogers
Hornsby , all members of the baseball
Hall of Fame, were named to All.Star
teams in two cities in a recent vote by
fans in major league cities.
Cronin, now the American League
president, was picked as shortstop for
'both the Washington Senators and the
Boston Red Sox.
Speaker was in the outfield for both the
Red Sox and the Cleveland Indians and
was selected as Cleveland's greatest
player ever by Indian fans.
Hornsby was the second baseman for
both the Chicago Cubs and tbe St. Lou.ls
Cardinals.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A disillusioned
Andy Kosco went home Monday nlght
and reed the riot act to himself ,
searcfling ror the answer to end a week·
long batting slump.
He decided to take the advice of some
of his Los Angeles Dodgers teammates to
open up his batUng stance.
Tuesday night he opened up a few
wounds on the San Diego Padres as the
Dodgers swept a twi·night doubleheader
7·3 and 11-0.
Kosco slammed his: 12th home run of
tbe year in the first game to cap a sev en-
run uprising in the seventh inning, then
went four-for-five in the second game
with three runs batted in.
"I really needed those," he smiled,
"especially after last night. J was so
mad at myseU I didn't want to go
home."
Monday evening Kosco personally left
eight rull!1ers stranded as the Dodgers
dropped a 3-Z verdict to the Padres in 13
innings.
"I was becoming too much of a
defensive hitter, so I decided to open up a
Dodger Slate
Ju~ II, Doclotl'S Vi S.n 0 1190, 7:$5 p.m., KFI June 10. Dodtotrs .tl Cfncinr1e!I, $om .• KFt (6-tOl June 21. Ooc!vera •I ClndnnB!ll ':1$ P.m .• KFI !6-0lll Jo.mt n, Doclvt•l •I Clnclnna! !2), 10:10 a.m., KFI
little and attack the ball. After all, that's
what a clearu.ip hitter iS supposed to d0."
The teams conclude their four game
series tonight with Dodger Don Sutton (9·
5) sdleduled to duel ex-Dodger Johnny
Podres (f>-5).
Alan Foster hurled his second straight
complete game shutout in the nightcap
and ran his consecutive scoreless innings
streak to 21.
Foster struck out seven and \valked
only one while effectively scattering
seven hits.
Pete Mikkelsen collected the victory in
the first game, relieving starter Bill
Singer in the sixth.
Singer left after yiekling a solo homer
run to Ollie Brown and a two-run shot by
Van Kelly which gave the Padres an ear-
ly 3-0 lead. Kelly 's homer was his first in
the majors.
In the last 30 innings which Singer has
pitched, the Dodgers have produced only
one run.
,lllST GAME
SAM 01!'.ac> LOS AHGEL!'.i
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llATING IT IACK -Ed Sptezio of the San Diego
· Padres dives back to second base just abttd o!
pickoff throw which Is being handled by the Dodg-
Ul"I Te ......
ers• Maury Wills. Dodgers swept doubleheadef,
7-3 and 11--0, to break out of hitting slump.
i ................ ,l & I .. _........._,___....._
--' \'{fdnttdt)', June 18, l~ OA:LY 'lLO? 27
Bannister, Balan·ce
Make North Choi ~e SAND TEXTURE ANf HOW
IT AFFECTS YOUR yAME
Tho fll<lur• of the ......... a
groat dlff.,.nce In the action tho!
tho clubhlCld and boll wUf tab on
lnlp .......
5 Orange Cou nty Spike1·s
To Compete Aga·mst City
If U Wll football, the North
would be a tw~own
favorite.
·it '1s, how!Ver1 tbe aecond
annual Kiwanll Oi'ange OOUnty
Aii.Star Baltball game. · u's
billed for Thursday nl&ht ot a
at La Palma Stadfum in
Anaheim.
What maktl the North so
Imposing is It's gnat overall
balance p1ui a young man
named Alan Bannister.
Bannister, from Kennedy
High School, Is so bJibly
thought of he was recmtly
drafted by the California
Angels in the flrst round.
He hit .554 in ltllidlng the
Irish to the Freeway League
championshJp and that fig\lre
included siJ home runs and 21
RBis.
More on Bannisttr: He led
his team with 3' hits. six
triples, nine stolen bases (in
nine attempts). 16 walks and
ocored 19 Um ...
Pethaps hll lllOll lmportont
stat lies in reaching bue safe.
ly IS ti~ In Ill trips to the
plate. That's a .883 perctnt·
aae.
Another fmposlng figure on
the North roatet is Andy
Di•laru!ki.
Bielanald (drafted by
Oakland) was the co-player cf
the year in the ClF AAA in
1911, pllchlng and batting
Savanna High to the CIF title.
The dooble-play combination
of Dan Hansen and Gary Mack
of Western -a tandem that
turned in 20 double plays dur-
ing the season -ia there and
Loara High's Keith Marshall,
a .500 batting outfielder will be
in the lineup.
Coach Andy Smith and his
stalf, however, have a few
HB Blitzes Baron Five,
8144, fu Cage Opener
By STEVE ANDREWS
Of flle Dll11 """ .,..,
Defending champion Hun-.
tington Beach stormed to its
first win in the Huntington
Beach s u II) m er basketball
league Tuesday night troun-
cing Fountain Valley, 81-44, in
lhe Oilers' gym.
Ehner Combs' club, which
dumped Marina to win the ti-
tle last summer, took an open·
ing step toward the same goal
as Jt blew open what wa1 a
tight game, 32-24 at halftime,
with s 25-10 advantage in the
third stanza.
Lee Walters topped the
Oilers in the scoring depart-
ment with 16 markers. He was
followed by Wes Thomas 14,
Curt Carlson 12 and Tony Cate
10.
In other action at Hun-
tington Beach.fi rst -ye a r
Edison High School narrowly
missed Its initial victory losing
to Garden Grove , &J..58.
Westminster topped Villa
Vike Spike
Boss Quits
Jack Rowan, who has coach·
ed varsity track and field for
the past 16 years in the Hun-
tington Beach School Di.strict
and for tbe put four 1easons
at Marina High, has tendered
his resignation as track coach,
the DAILY PILOT learned
exclutively today.
Rowan, 45, will continue
coaching only in cross coun·
try.
"This is something I've been
thinking over for the past cou-
ple of years and now is about
as good as time as any to
make the move," said Rowan.
"I made the decision aome
time ago but didn't wlllt to
make any public an-
nouncement until after the
track season was over," he
added.
Rowan's varsity «O relay
team made It to the state
prelims at UCLA before
fin.ally falling out of com-
petition.
While coach at Hunilnaton
Beach High for 12 seasons, he
managed the highly successful
Southern CounUes Invitational.
The past season was the
Vikings best~ver year in
track with the varsity
finishing third In final Sunset
League standings and the Ct:es
second.
Culver City
Trips Cards-
Fountain Valley's Cardinals
dropped a 12-6 decision to
Culver City Sunday afternoon
at Los AmlgOI High.
Culver City broke open a 2-l
lie with aeven runs 1n the
fourth inning •
Mike Bailey led Fountain
Valley with three RBis.
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Part, 8$-57, In lhe nightcap at
Huntlnrton Beach.
Marino Miah School I s
hosUng the second ball or the
league and the Vikings fell
just short In their bid (or vic·
tory. Marina rallied to win the
fourth quarter 1~9, but lost a
67..SO decision to Rancho
Alamitos.
Newport Harbor and Corona
del Mar notched victories over
La Quinta and 8-0lsa Grande.
The Sea Kinirs ,:>osted a 49-2•
win over the Matadors.
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Langrill Signs
Jim Longrtll of Slddlebact
Collqe, who was draJted _b1
the California Angels In the
recent major tel.pt draft, hu
be<n glgnod by the Hofog,
LafllTiJI, •ho wu an All-
Crtalvltw League pitcher for
TU1tln High School In 1961, will
be essigned to a Class A club
in Lbe Anlel Farm s11ttm.
nq.aets of their own in the
South camp.
Salltiago Higb's B er t Blyieven, a fire -ba lling
rlgbtbander, waa picked by
Mlnneaota in lhe third round.
Blylevtn chalked up a 10-3
mart and to compliment him
are a couple ol Orange Coast
ma pitchers -Steve Schoet-
tler of Newport Harbor and
Adrian Witt of Mater Dei. Schoettler ( I 0-2) led
Newport to the CIF AAAA
playoffs and was M:lected as
Player oC the Year in the
Orang~ Coast area and was
. Whon the tcmd II wet, JOU should
mob o th.U-cutundor!MbolL
You should ploy the ohol oo tho! tho
dub c:ontods the sond doMr lo h
boll Ilion normal on<! !hon lust
shav.. a thin 11iC;e of sand.
named to the first team AU. 1,~~~
Orange County team. ri
Witt was selected for third-
team All-County honors. He
posted a 10-4 mark for the
season including a 6-4 mark in
the rugged Angelus League
that included the eventual CIF
AAA champion (Bishop Amat)
and tbe runnerup (St. Paul).
New additions t'o the roster
are Eltaocla High's Chuck
Loseth and Howard Hoyt of
Foothill.
Both teams will be guests at
the Disneyland Hotel Thurs-
day morning for a breakfast
and will vlslt the children in
the Orange County Children's
Hospital later In the day.
All players will receive
certificates, all-star jackets
and tickets to an Angel game
at Anaheim Stadlwn later in
the season.
The North, fa vored last year
in the inauguration of the
event, lost 3-2.
Mater Dei
Holds on
Wet sand wlll re1l1t your dub-
hood mo<e than wlll-dry sand.
Whereas your dub might cut readily
throug!t cl!Y 1!J;nd, It wlll 1low_ down
comidtrably In wet aand-unlt11
you mob o shallow cut. I .
WET 5ANP
°""""''-~ ........... -""'' you ... molcing .,... flnt "" whon pooling an -Don, <vi
too doeply or R wlll oquirt al -
your hands.
Glenn Fires 87 4 Set
To Retain Elims Lead
Dale Glenn of West Los
Angeles restored a litUe bit of
sanity to the hoUy contested
West Coast Match Game
Elimination at Kona Lanes in
Costa Mesa by becoming the
f!rst bowler to hold on to Uie
lead for two consecutive
weeks.
of El Moote Is third with 3,389
while Foy Belcher, who had a
916 set Monclay, is now fourth
with s.m.
Oe£ending champion Lamar
Keck of ResMa is another 22
pins back with a 3,357, ~
for the fifth spot.
After the lead bounced
around for the first three
weeks, Glenn came up with an
Mater Del withstood 8 last-874 effort for four games f\.1on-day night to keep the top spot
moment flurry by Buena Park in the qualifying round. Glenn
For Win Highest Orapge Coast area
bowlers in the standings are
Fountain Valley's Dick
Braasch and Westminster's
Fred Rlccllli, who are Ued for
13th with 3,269 scores.
to hold on to a 4+43 victory took the lead last week for the 1!?'"'S'ra. cia,~.;11t~'roai.111~ v1u~
Orange County entrants OQ ternoon, will pit the recently
the CIF southern seCt!on cop.. '°aduat.ed atus of the two
tlngent that will meet • .a areas against each olhe:r.
1im1lar eggregatlon from Los Slated to represent Oranae
Angelea City 1<hools ·are ' Counly Bfe Clyde EnJ•ry of
.limited to five lndi\'ld~. Santa Ana Valley, Isaac CUrUs
The meet, to be h.el~ Jll Ctr-of Santa Ana, Mike Sampson
rltos Colle1e Saturqty · aJ. and RPben t,fejla of La Habra
the stale finals !or sixth place
whlle Sampson baS a btst of
14.S In lhtl Pole vault .
Murray made it to Ute stall!
prelims. HiB best e!(or{ has
been 57~~.
The meet will benefit the
Suna ir llome for AslhmaUc
Ch ildren in Tujunga .
Three Bs
Top Area
Fish Action
."and Pat MurTay of Lowj!ll .
' Curtis will compete Jn bOth ~"'"""T--,,..,.....,,.-~.., hurdlei races and the long r
jump while Emery goes in the
Music lovers qaJte note, the
three Bs are still hot items.
Not Bach, Beethoven and
Etrahms. but bau, bonito and
barracuda.
The, three Bs continue lo
dombiate the Oran1e Coast
area deep sea fishing picture
with quite a few limits being
taken.
JOO.
Emery went to the state
pre I i ms before being
eliminated in a heat that saw
his three conquerors ltlt tbe
tape in 9.7. Emery's time was
identical.
Curtis was injured on and
off almost his entire senior
year at Santa Ana Jilgh.
His track season was at a
near-stand still. As a junior
Curtis racked up Santa An~
school record marks of 14.0 in
the 120 ·high hurdles, 18.6 in
the low hur'1Jes and a 23·3\f.:
mark in the long jump.
,l(/GHT
'fMCING ;•u,
~St•rts Tool~~' · "Gn.vl R(lt:R l :U ' •
I
f'LIJS. Al:AMITOS La Habra's one·two punch flf
Mejia and Mike Sampson will
provide good depth for the CIF
Operators at D a v e Y ' s in the 2-mile and pole vault.
Locker and Art 's Landing in Mejia ran a 9:06.4 2-rnile In
Wa~qf ~j,.odwiK~
Newport Beach. rtport Jopi and'1r;;iiiiiii;~~:;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ lots flf th e bass and bonitoll
with the barracuda now run-
ning over the legal limit.
The bass are running up to
four pound!, and Lee Clarke of
Davey's said they were biting
like crazy Tuesday mflrning.
'J1le bonito are mostly four
and five pounders, with a few
in the six-pound class.
DELTA SUPER QUALITY
Tires Cost Less!
e COMPLITI LINE AVAIU.ILI e
WIO E OVALS !Somt l1ber1111u l -SUPER PREMIUM -POL VESTER RAOlAL SPORTS -
SAND BUGGY -CAMPER SPECIALS -a. ALI. SIZE lllUCK TIRES.
IANKAMIAICARO MIASTll CHAIGI Barracuda still aren't of the
big log variety, but six BERG'S DELTA Tl RES pounders have been reeled in.
...,,~!~1~ut T!~~;1t i!r f~~~ 141 E. 17th St.· Costa Mesa· 645-2010
Gabriel landed a 21-pounder on o,,os1._ lob• l lt loy
one of the Art's Landing boats I~=======~===~~~======~ Sunday. I ·
Clark said the yellowtail pie·
ture ia still slow.
Pole Vault
Is Scratched * CHtCK ADJUSTMENT Tuesday night in the feature first time. 1 . Fr..i ll~ wn1,,.111111r 1.2'•
tilt at Estancia High School in His Jead, however, is a it E.~~~11~i.:_w.11~1"'' 1.1u The All-comers track and
the Costa Mesa Recreation rather precarious 32 pins over .w. L. """"' '· 11 MeM field meets at Costa Mesa
*~TUT 1105 * REMOVE .. DISMANTLE * l"SP(CT ALL PAll:T$ * DIAGNOSTK: REPORT
Summer Basketball league. Roland Alexander, also o( fl. ~:~•a'.f.!F.'c~~·J::• j:lU High School, slated to begin
In °th er games, Estancia West LA, the second-week ~1: t~ ';'~ ec.sr. M.,. 11;' June 26 and continue for seven
pushed Los Amigos around, Bl-leader. Alexander fired a 916 Hunt1~1011 &..c1' 3.coi constcuUve Thursdays, will
3S, and Costa Mesa buried series to move into lhe run-?6. ~:,.~~~"v :i.ms oot have the pole vault event.
Saddleback, 84-35. nerup t It dropp'mg to u. Nlct s1kltu1, Cott• Mesa '·;·!I That real1'zat1'on came 1'nto COSTA MESA The Monarchs, led by Tom spo a er ••. J1m c:wi .... '°''' M"' 2, fourth last week. 1oa. ig•u;, "'"'°"'· Hun11~D11 ae.ci. rocus after the pole vault pit
Bomkamr,'s 15 points, broke Sixteen-game totals show l~: W!n.'J'l~· ~ur.& ... r tm at Costa Mesa was burned out 1934 Newport Blvd •...... , , .... 645.0900
a 38-38 t e with 3:37 left and Glenn with 3,470 while Alex· \~t i1~''lt«J,"-. " l111ttr by an unknown vandal last " c11111r1 How Open '' L1t111..i '" c1111. • Fr•n<h'" ,.,, .. '51~144
extended the margin out to 44-. _a~n~.d~e::r2h~a~s~3~«~38.~J~•~'!}~H~a~c~k~er'.......!!!J"~"E"~'~~""~"=1K~'!:!:...._J'~·"';__2Th~u~r~sd~a~~ait~ernoon~~~· ...:._...:.}~=====================!:: 38 before Buena Park came1. 11s. Al Mw11. c..
1
lf ,._. i.u.
alive with an e£fective full· T
court press that almost caught
the'-victora at the buzzer.
Buena Park narrowed the
margin to a point with 11
seconds to go and took
possession with two seconds
left before finally falling.
Costa Me1a's overaJI
teamwork was impressi\te as
the Mustangs had no trouble
with Saddleback. ~
Jim Casillas and R i c k
De1met led Mustang scoring
with a dozen each. Desmet
will be a sophomore in the
fall.
Skip WITiiams was the scor·
ing gun for Estancia, tanking
21 points for the high output of
the evening.
He was aided by Mike
Schaunnessy (11), Kurt
Kersten (10), Steve Butler
(10) and Curt Thomas (10).
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·-., OWrlfl't ' ,_ I"•·-,. 7 'l ~l
Mllff Del 14 J 11 1~
t
Just this once,
don't hire your nephew.
•
This wmmer, there ue 1 lot of kids who wDJ need the job
mOre than he does. Like thil boy. And not for jlllt tbe money -
though he can 1ure use it.
He needs the job for all the ~· that COIM'with urniq
a day's wage,. Things like pride, aelf·respect, 1tlf-00Dfidence:.
And most important, what comea.,withknowing IOmlbody
1 tU3IS him for I change.
Right now all he needs ii a summer job -tomethins to
carry him tluough until M:hool 1taru in the fall. And lt'1
import wt he find one, Important, that ii, if ht'• going to
be able to re tum to school. Tho IWMler job could mean tbt
difference -it could keep him in lthool.
He01 one or the young peoplt lhe sociologi1t1 label
"'disadvantaged ." They don't look any different than your
own kids. In fact, yo:.i probably oouldJl't tell thtm from
the kids on your own stroet. They don't wear 1 labtL
It may rurprise you, but there art a Jot of them in
Orange County. Some haw had previous work experieDCe,
others have not. But they all want to work. They jwt
don't know where to look.
They have no uncle• to make job1 for them, no .irifluM*
tlal relatives, no friend• among the highrr-upa. They h.aYS
no connection•-unlc• Jt'1 yotL
Most of them don't hmi much b>nfldmOl,either. And
that's the worst part of all Their only qualifications: t~o
hands, two legs, suong backs, minds that can think, 1tomleb1
to feed, feelings to eon.iider. Jun like your nephew.
And like your nephew, 100, tbey'te aoina: to be llOVJtd
for a long time.
So, i1 thCre a catch to all this? You bet. ll'1you.-an&
the summer job you can give one of these kids.
You've ccad thi• far , to you"re probably intemted. Why
nfll go the rest of the w1y and pick. up the phone. Dial
632-JODS. We've tc.ied to make.it r.asy. _., __ _
Na_tional Alliance
of Businessmen
.10111
Orang111.County Metro
-
U93 North Miller Street •Anaheim, Californ ia 92803
I
I ,_, __ I
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~ . -~ -· -----~-:v...., •-..;;.... ~
If IWLY PILOT Wednt!daJ, J"" 11, 1969
.. Start
Yo1ir
Engines!
by Deke Hou/gate
The tnteresUng phenomenon of the business-public relation
manager for sports personallties is drawn into sharp focus In 1969
as lam everywhere wring thelr hands over the plight of O.J.
Slmpoon.
Simpson . chose as his manager a brilliant sue alumnll!,
ChuCk Barnes, whose enterprise had been mYslly devoted to
managing auto racing fitures . He handles A. J. Foyt, Parnelll
Jones, Rodger \Yard and Mario Andrettl, as well as Baltimore's
all-lime great quarterback, Johnny Unitas.
1r you watched the closed circuit version of the Indy 500 or
were there in person, you would have been irnprwed by the
popularity of O.J. among the greasy thumb set. He drew tremen-
dous acclaim.
F.veryoot is waiting for O.J. to sign a pro contract, which he
has been unable to do because of the wide variancf: between wh::it
he wanb ($650,000 over a rive-year period) and what the Buffalo
Bills are willing to pay ($250,000). .
The other day a USC oUlclaJ whO la a close friend al Barnes
gave him some advice.
''Tbtre are a lot of people out here. particularly in the sports
writing profession, who are di!pleased with the image O.J. is gel·
ling," the l!sc man said. "It is only due to the great respect they
have for him, and their desire to help him all they can that they
have not yet begun to tee off on him.
'1 hope there ls something you can do about changing his lm·
age before permanent damage is done ."
As &·matter of fact, the Bills' oHer is too low-for a potential
super star like Simpson. He deserves better than SS0,000 a year,
"'Oll!idering that lesser players are commanding that sum. On
the other_ hand, an untried rookie hrui to have a great deal of
confM:lerlCe in' b.i.i own ability to ask for $130,000 a year.
Whal i:l:oes th.Ls have to do with automobile racing?
Simpson has been used time and again by Barnes in his ef-
forts to enhance his own image in the motcir sport world. Barnes
has ~n bsuing publicity to the auto racing press aligning
himseU with Sim, while mentioning such top drivers as An-
drctti·in ·his dealings with the football establishment.
J.n the meantime, he has aUowed his client to be portrayed as
one who will tll>i budge from a contract demand and has gone to
such extremes 8s to suggest that O.J . may play for the minor
leai:ue lndlanapolis team if he can't sign with the NFL-AFL.
Sarnes bas allowed O.J. to be quoted demanding a trade so he
can negoUale elsewhere. That's not the O.J. Simpson who is a
hero to an entire generation of young boys.
So while Barnes parades O.J:. Simpson around the world's
mott important race track and drops names like Andretti and
i-~oyt to footbaJI writers, a tragic end seems at this point to b;e a~
proaching in I.he brilliant career of one or America's all-time
great athletes.
lf it does, Sames will have to take his share of the blame.
Gro1clng lip Pa11• Oft
Bobby llaac Is currently tbe llottet1 sbort lrack driver In
NA.SCAR and formerly I.ht hottest tempered driver la NASCAR.
'Mte oLber day Isaac took time out from a pa.blictty tour of the
WaJhlBp, D.C., area to visit wounded Vtetnam veteran• at w.
alter Reed HOHpllal. That night be dedicated bl1 vldory at
Bell1vl Ue, Md:, to the mea he had met earlier in Ole day.
There 11 a completely new 1ide of line. There was a time
that the most complimentary lhlng that could be said about him
was I.hat be wu "colorflll.''
He started racing at the a1e of 11, wben be was a commoa
laborer at a local mill.
Be quickly developed a code ti eUUcs for radn&.
'1'bere'1 DO cheaters, oaly pys wllo get caagbL"
He also developed a repubtioll for U:vin1 a solid left book,
which came into play after some raca wbea be tboaght be bad
been uafalrly treated out on Ute track.
The "new" Bobby Isaac approacbes bis sport thi1 way:
"A race driver'• mind 11 just a1 important as bow fast the car
will 10 and lhe physical condition of tbe driver," Isaac said. "I
was 1 wild mall when I started racin& and IODDd myseU upside
do¥r'D lot• of times.
,;rttenlal atUtude and emotional maturity, I learned, are so
Important ii you art goinic to succeed In racing. That's why there
~ren't aoy n-year-olds winning race1 on this circuit."
Stars Don't Stay Aro11tul
One of the most underrated racing series in the nation Is the
J'acific Coast NASCAR late model stock car circuit, and lhe
reason may be that no great stars devel oped here have stuck
c1round.
Parnielli Jones got his start with NASCAR. but like most men
aiming at the big Lime he left as soon as he felt he was ready to
tact.le something bigger. So did Billy Vukovich.
This year one driver has emerged who may not follow their
cxrunple. Ray Elder, the husky fann boy from Caruthers.
He is currently leading the Pacific Coast point standings.
Earlier in the season he finished seventh ln the Riverside 500 and
10th in the Daytona 500 -driving a non-factory-supported
Charger. Most recently he won the Sears Point 150 en the new
road cour~ near San Francisco.
What makes Eider's prominence important is that he ap.
parent1y is not going lo leave the West Ccast. If Elder and other
top drivers do continue racing here. it is possible that the caliber
cf Pacific Coast racing will improve lo lhe point that the whole
NASCAR Grand NaUonal ball of wax. factory teams and all, may
some day soon campaign regularly west of the Rockies.
If that happens, NASCAR Grand National stock car racihg
'vi i! become a national rather than a regional sport.
SOFT SELL SAM By Manin Mym
~-
-~--1--JI/ 1,~l
1 11 r'
AND JllIN, FOR CRfAPSXATf5. l JK[ you FOLKS ... 11
\ i -·
'
Once Around Orange Coast Area Greens
~ ~
Ralph, Bob Irwin Win Ro.W,ley Tourney
~· ' • 4
Dr. Bob Irwin and his
father, Ralph Irw in, teamed
up to score a gross 81 to ca~
lure the second annu:.I Frank
Rowley Memorial tournament
at Santa Ana Country Club
Sunday.
It was a scotch b a 11
twOS(lmes event.
Dr. Ernie Ainsley and his
son, Steve, combinell for a net
67 to c,apture the 21-49 division
while William Livinptone and
Bill Jr. netted a 63 for the SO..
59 class, It was the low net of
the event.
Joe Lisle and his son·in·law
Dick Hewiston tied the team
of Chuck Hollister and his son
Dwight for the 6<Hi9 bracket
with 70s.
Otto Jacobs and his son,
Bob, took the 70 and over
flight with a 68.
Ra...,ho SJ
Don Barney and Gerald
Miller won partners low net
honors at Rancho San Joaquin
Baseball
Standings
... ,...., ··-ta .......... , NATIONAL ll!"AOUE
1!"111 Dtv"kHI
Chlcaoo
N-Yorlt
Pltttbur<ih
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6os!on (Ja,...,11 1·2) al Cltvel1nd (McDowell l·el. nigh!
C1illornl1 fMCCik!!!llln S.SI 11 Ml1tnt'-tol1 CICa1l 6'5), nigh!
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Tars Blast
El Modena
•
Newport llarbor opened up
with an impressive 71·29 rout
of El Modena to highlight ac-
tion at the Santa Ana Summer
basketball league M o n d a y
evening.
The Tars were led in the
scoring column by Lee 1-:laven
(13) and Nels Tahti (12 ).
In other league games Santa
Ana trimmed Santa Ana
Valley, 62-47, and Saddleback
disposed of Los Amigos, 43-35.
Maler Dei was idle.
Action continues tonight at
Santa Ana Ccllege.
Huntington 9
Country Club Saturday with a
138 in men's club play.
Second plaet: went to Frank
Smith and Fran Giblan with a
140 followed by the learns of
Dick Boucher and Hal Smith
and Joe Pailoletti and Paul
Runge at 141.
Irvine Coast
Don and Denni! Harwood
won the hanrucap division of
I he Fa th er-Son-Daughter
tournament at Irvine Coast
Country Club Sunday with a
65.
They nosed out Jim and Mel
Keane ~66), Bill McCabe and
Bill Jr. (67 ik ) and Bob Li-
machcr and Mike Smith (68>
for the honors.
In the father-son calloway
division it was Jim Bri1nble
and Jlin Jr. takl cg hooors
with a 70 follo wed ~y· the
teams of Chuck and Roger
Andres, Dick al)d Doug Myers
and Harold and Bill Welch, all
with 72s.
Lew gross winners were
John Helton and Joho Jr .. who
successfully defended their ti·
Uc with a 74.
Last year's winning team in
the father-daughter di vision
was edged by a half-stroke
~·ith Ken and Karen Win·
tcrburn (73) nicking lhe duo of
Jerry and Kathy Halperin
(73 1h).
Third place at 74· was a tie
between Dan Boone and
Barbara Limacher and Paul
Du nlap and Susan Beard .
The 14th annual member-
guest tourney , slated for July
11·13 is virtually filled. Of the
GOODYEAR
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4PLIES
OF POLYESTER CORD
long wearing, srnoolh riding and track
t ested fer 100 miles at 100 miles per hour.
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1.35 l u $,O.t5 ' 1.2.55 ~-ATH TIRE fAEE $2.07 --1.15J\4 ll2.15 I t J,15 FOURTH TIR( ,It([ $2.20 --·· . -. . . ----8,25 I 14 135.75 $101,25 f(lUltTH TIRE fRE E S2.36
•1n1ow1U l~IMIHI
1.35 I H $35.05 110,.15 FOURTH TiRI FREE $2.0I --. -----~--7.7Sl14 137.10 1111.JO FOU•fll l lRE rREE u .20 -----· ----~--1.25 I 14 J-41.55 $121.95 FOURTH llRE FREI "·" ----1----------1.55 • It ...... $1J3.IO fOURTH T!IE FAE[ $2.51 -~-I .IS 114 ~·!! S151.15 FOtJRT14 TIRE nlEE $2.111 f---·-I.IS 1 15 ...... $1 57.~ FOURTH TIRE FREE 13.01
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No ind111try wlde 1t1ndtrds exi st for
Premium llrc1.
3 days· only •••
Offer ends Saturday Night/
GOO
128 openings only two were
ltlt u of Tulsday.
First round or action Is bet-
ter ball or partners with a
scotch ball and combined net
of partners slated for the
following two days of com·
petition.
Last year's winners, Fred
Patterson and Jerry Frick,
are entered .
SeacUlt
Dick ft1 cCammon posted a
net 67 to capt.ure the low net
title over the weekend at Hun·
tinEiton Beach Seacllff Country
Club in men's club action.
Second to McCammon was
WiJ.Jiam Schmidt with a 68
followed by Dan Tannahill ,and
Ernest lli£h,· both with 69s ••
Fourth place went to Ed
BUY NOW ON EASY TERMS!
Allen's 70 and flllh was knot· were the winners In a recent
ted at 71 between Vance partncr1 best ball tourney.
Anderson, Jim ThomPiOn and The tandem shot a low net Of
Terry Adarru. 61 to capture the title.
Second place was tied at 62 Blind bogey honors went to between the teanls cf Charles Pete Peters' 62 . Osborne and Greene and Chet Yula Tollef~n (65) anti l''roude and Ralph Merrill.
Rosemary Ericson (711 were Agnes Gouin won a best ,6
the top finishers in the of l 8 tourney ·with a net score
women's club blind bogey r ..
I Td o~. ourney ues ay. Jn a mixed best ball even!,
El .Ni I the winners were Warren and gue Patricia King 160) with P.ier·
Gordon (Skip) Greene of rill and Isabelle Ellioll second
Monarch Bay recorded a hole--::'t=62=.=======:=; in-one at El Niguel Country ..-
Club in Laguna N I g u e I
rectntly, using a six-iron on l
the 162-yard 14th hole. I
Playing with Green were
Willard McCay, Ron Miller[ and Stu Ebey.
Bill Kole and Bud Loury
MOUNTING!
F-or the Mall
that tun ewcrythllHJ
b11t the right t lrlt.
547-6667
14 Hrs. KKardln9
fuW~ · .
Huntington Harbour opened : SERVING ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA :
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up tile Anaheim Summer t +
Baseball League with a 1-0 win t +
over Magnolia M o n d a y . t +
Pitcher Gil Banagas limited t YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. 1596 NEWPORT COSTA MESA t the opposition to two hits in t Phone 548.9383 t
facing 19 batters in six in· t •
nings. t •
HUNT INGTON KAllllOUJI 01 : • r~n " i1"1·1, ".i • YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. ::!n~~::.~,t,vE. LAGUNA : Srmon1, •I + t 1;~ l 1,· l l i THEODORE ROBINS FORD ~:!~.Ht.~~c?o~:Lvu. COSTA fAES A i f~~ ,, ' 1 • • ktrl llY lllllft!fl
00!1 000 0..!_~5f}R1 "-············ .. •••• .. ••••• .. ••• ........ •. •+•• • • • • ••••• • • ............... ,# OQO 100 ... 1 1. ~
M~ntoell•
H111t1lnt l0ft Ktrtowr
\
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---------------------------------
Coast Crews Score
USC:, SD, State Ca p ture Wood Troph y
Bf:LLINGHAM, Wash. (AP)
-Collegiate sailing crews or
the Pacific Coast region made
it three In a row as they
sailed a~ay with the Walter
0 . Wood Trophy.
However, a sudden Tues-
day afternoon calm prevent-
ed the start of the individual
team competition o! the Na-
tional Intercollegiate Yacht·
ing Championships.
The Individual teams, led
by defending champion San
Diego State, wen to begin
sailin& Wednesday for the
Mom Trophy.
Crews from the University
ol Southern California. and
San Dieao 1State teamed up
for a perfect 4-0 recor~ in
sweeping the Wood com,peti-
tlon.
It was the third straight
Wood Trophy win for lhe
Pacific Coast region.
The N6r1hwest, represented
by host UniVer3lty of Wash-
ington and the University of
British Columbia, took sec-
Eagle Upsets Ondine
In A nnapolis Event
NEWPORT, R. I. (AP) -"I
didn't think we had a chance
to win," said owner-skipper
·red Turner after his con-
verted 12-meter A ro e r i c a n
Eagle was first to' cross the
finish tine In the yacht race
from Annapolis, Md., to
Newport Tuesday.
"It's not a fair contest,"
Turner said of the duel
between American Eagle and
the second nnisher Ondine, 20
feet longer at the waterline
lhan American Eagle.
"\Ve were built to race 12
meters and Ondine was built
to be lhe fastest thing in the
water under 73 feet," .said the
JO-year-old Allanta resident.
He skippered his boat to lhe
finish line 20 minutes ahead of
Stfmner Long's Ondinc and
61,!?. hours ahead of Walter
Gubebnann's 73-foot yawl Win·
di go.
Under a new timing system
used by the Annapolis Yacht
Club, one of four sponsors of
the 473-mile race American
Eagle's elapsed time was
69.4340 hours and her cor-
rected time 61.4473 hours.
Times for Ondine were 69.7825
elapsed and 64.0956 corrected.
Wind1go's elapsed time was
76.2120 and her corrected lime
68.0448 hours.
The U.S. Naval Academy
sailing squadron co..sponsored
the race with the New York,
Annapolis and the 1da Lewis
Yacht Clubs.
American, Eagle swapped
the lead with Ondlne four
times before the boats left
Chesapeake Bay and Turner
said he neve.r e;i:peeled the
smaller American Eagle to
beat Ondine before the wind.
"Ir you hadn't taken your
spinnaker down, you would
have had us," Turner said to
Ondine's crew afler the race.
The beefed-up rlging .. of
American Eagle held fut in a
40-mile-ao-hour squall which
hit both boats late Saturday
n i g h t but Ondioe was un-
managable with the spinnaker
up, according to c r e w
members,
Both boats IOiil spinnakers to
the fierce gusts up to 45 knots.
American Eagle replaced a
shredded light weight spin-
naker with a heavy storm
1chute and passed Ondlne ear·
Jy Sunday morning going "so
fast we had to change our
course to avoid hitting her, 11
according to a crew member.
Turner filed a protest with
the race committee agahuit
Windigo for a near miss at the
slart, which he said occurred
when Windigo "port-tacked u,,
with no room, I thought we
were going to hit them."
SC's Hogan Faces Long
Sum111er Sailing Season
A full sum mer of In
terna tional sailing competition
lies ahead this year for Tim
Hogan, captain of the universi-
ty of Southern California sail-
in g team .
Hogan, the son of Mr . and
J\1rs. John Hogan, 1120 W.
Ocea n Front, Bal boa, will
skipper the USC team In the
nationals now in progress on
Lake Washington, Seattle, and
then leave immediately to
become a crewm an aboard
Kialoa JI , Jim Kiiroy's entry
in the Transat18.fltic race.
Hogan will be a member of
Kilroy's 13-man crew which
\viii sail the 73-footer from
Newport, R.l. to Cork,
Ireland.
Long accustomed to the
rigors of sailing, Hogan -
senior next year In USC's
school of business ad·
ministration, will serve on
four hour watches aboard
Kialoa II as she plows across
the Allantlc In search of in-
ternational sailing honors.
The voyage aboard Klaloa 11
will serve lo get the young
Newport sailor lo th~ United
Kingdom where he will be the
only one from USC to sail with
the U.S. intercollegiate sailing
team of nine members who
will be competing against an
all-British team in saili ng
matches during the late sum·
rher In England , Scotland and
Ireland .
Hogan has led USC's sailing
team lo top honors dW'Jng the
past year. Last ()ctobtr he
skippered the USC conUngent
to win the Douglas Cup -na·
tlonal match racing cham·
pionship in Long Beac~ -.and
high, point scorer 1n the
Midwest intercollegiate cham-
pionships on the Great Lakes
early this year.
Bo th the use learn and
Jtogan earned trophies in the
Southern Intercollegiate
championship -the Sugar
Bowl in New Orleans, Jan. 1.
In the Kenr.~y Cup com·
petition at Annapoli!!, Md .,
Hogan capta ined the Trojans
sailing a 44-foot yawl which
finished second in a field of 11
schools.
In the Pacific Coast Cham-
pklnlhips, Hogan wu regatta
high-point scorer for USC as
the team finished srcond in
the series.
Jn 1966 Hogan plactd second
In the North Amer~an Junior
Championship for the Scars
Cup; in 1968 he was seventh in
th.e 5.5 meter Olympic trials
BUSY SUMMER
SC's Tim Hogan
and won t.he Area G finals of
the Prince of Wales Cup, sym-
bolic of the California match
racing cham pionship.
USC's sailing team Is con·
sidered 1he finest such ag-
gregation in the nation today,
Hogan stands a good chance to
win the Sailor of the Year
award -sailing's Heisman
Trophy.
Outriggers
Slate Race
• On Weekend
Completion of final exams
and high school adjournment
is expected to almost double
part ic I patio n when lhe
Kalifotnia Outrigger Associa-
Uon stages its second regatta
of the season Saturday in Loni
Beach Harbor .
The even t will include a
series of races for both men
and women teams, by age
group, on a quarter mile
coorse paralleUng the Cherry
Avenue Beach area in sil-man
outrigger canoes m o d e I e d
after the traditional Clnoe! O(
ancient Polynesia. The cran
are 40 feet Jong and weigh up
to 400 pounds.
Clubl from Marina del Rey,
Newport Beach, Balboa and
Huntington Beach will com·
pcte. The Marln3 del Rey
team Is favored to win overall
point honor~.
\
---------J__
ond with a 3-Z mark.
Crews from the Midwest
were tie<! with w; follow«!
by the Mid-Atlantic ..: 1-2 and
the SoutheNtem and North-
east.em crews at 0.1.
The crews were sailing two-
man, 11-foot C-Larks.
'Ille I.et.ms entered lnclude:
·Navy and Princeton from
the Mid-A t 1 a n t i c, Notre
Dame and Indiana from the
Midwest, M.I.T. aod the Coul
Guard from New !:nlllnd,
and Tul111e and GeoraJa Toch
from the ~hell.stern.
Two Fast
Sailboats
To Tangle
' Two of the world's fastest
racln&-:eruislnl sailboats start
compeUtion Friday off Marina
del 'Rey for the Calltoni!a CUp.
The event, sponsored by the
pallfomia Yacht Clllb, is con-
sidered by many to be a
preview oC the flnit-finilb
yachts in the Honolulu race
whlch gets under way rrem
Los Angeles July 4.
The eonla>dtra will be Bob
Johnson's 73-foot ketch
Windward Passage and Ken
De Meu.9e's n.foot ketch
Blackfln. \V lndwartr Passage
will ny the colors of the
Lahaina Yacht Club and
Blackfln will carry t.he burgee
ol the St. Francis Yacht Club.
Both yachts are of radical
design. Windward Passage ls
a beamy (20 feet) flat-looking
boat which boating writers in
Florida have dubbed the "sail· m, platfonn" or the "strttch·
ed out dinghy". The yacht
fillilhed first and set new
elapeed Ume records in five of
the seven races she sailed
earlier this year in Ule
Southerr. Ocean R a c I n c
Conference off Florida. Tht
yacht was designed by ~year
old Alan Gurney of New York
and was built in Johnson's own
shipyard on Grand Bahama
Island.
Blackfln was designed by
Bill Tripp, noted New ' York
de.signer, and built by Abeking
& Rasmussen of Germany. In
her first two e.ppearances in
Los Angeles Yacht Club's
Whitney Series she set new
ell!psed Ume records.
The two-boat match race-for
the California CUp will get
under way Friday at noon off
Marina de 1 Rey. Five races
will be sailed, Including two on
Saturday and two on Sunday.
It will be the seventh sailing of
the California Cup.
Previous winners wtre the
late Walter Podolak's IO-meter
Coquile in 1963; Don Gum~
perU' Cal-40 Tangent, 1964;
John Kilroy's Kialoa II, 1965;
Don Haskell's Chuba!!CO, 1966;
c.omdlus Bruy n zee l 's
Stonnvoeel, 1167 and Charles
Hathaway'& Gtm, 19111. -
Chris-Craft
Makes Boat
Fine Dinghy
Aristotle Onassis, G r e e k
shipping magnate, Is well
known for his Insistence -
among ot.her things -t.hat his
325-foot yacht Christi na be
kept in Immaculate, ship
shape and Bristol fashion.
And like mmt boat owner!!,
he is usually shopping around
for acceuortes that will make
things m o r e comfortable
a boa.rd.
Onassis' latest accessory for
the Christina is a dinghy -a
27-foot Ch rl s -C raft Com·
mander which will bt carried
on board the larger vessel.
It wam't that ()nap.ls was
short of skiffs ro.r getting
ashore or away from the big
yacht. He also has as 1tandard
equipment aboard the Chris·
tina a small sailboat, two..
outboard boats and an older
Chris Craft mahogany
runabout.
Douglas Cup
Ra ces Slated
Fourth annual sailing or·the
Dougl1s Cup' Intercollegiate
matoh race serie11 will take
place Oct. 31 to Nov. 2 off
Long Beach Harbor, It wu an-
nounced today by the lponsol'·
Ing Long Betlch Yacht Club.
Host 1ehool will be California
State College at Long Beach.
Eight leading college teams
from all over the country will
be Invited to compete ln a
seven-race series In which
t:ach tt:am sails against every
other team over a 2•,'J-mile
course. Identical Columb1a·28
Mark U sloops will be used:
'
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Seminar Set
On Quality
"What's Nexl in Quality
Assurance" will be the topic of
the third annual Q u a I I t y
Assurance seminar slated for
Orange Coast College Satur-
d•e· .H. Hutcherson , divisional
director of quality assurance
and logistics, Aulonetic s
Division. North A m c r i ca n
Rockwell Corp .. will deliver
the keynote address, "Quality
Assurance in the N e x t
Decade." I-le will speak at 8:30
p.m. in the OCC Science Hall.
After the talk by Hut-
cherson, the seminar will
break into ri ve discussion
sessions.
Finishes Class
James C. E1nling, 17361
F o r b e s Lane, Huntington
Beach, is a recent graduate of
the Southern California Edison
Company's s ub s tat io.n
operator's school. Em Ii n.g
works at Edison's Hamilton
substation in Hunting ton
Beach.
LEGAL NOTICE
1All·17't
NOTICE TO Clll!OITOJIS
SUl'l!ltlOI. COUllT 01' THI
STATI! 01' CALll'OIHIA FOR
THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE
No. lli·'31_.
Etl1!e of HENillETTjl, M. THEISEN.
p.ctlstd. I
I. "IOTICE 15 HEREl!IY GIVEN lo
JI'' crt<11ton cl ~ •l>ovt n1me.r me-
Cltnl tt111 •II "'"-h1vln1 cl1lm1 • .,.1 .... 1 the uicl 11e<eaen1 1r1 reciulrd ~
l ilt 111ern, wlltl the ~«s•1rv vouc:llen, 1.,
""" ollice ol !ht clolrt: of !tis 1bove en-lllted c-1. or IO preHnl tt>em, wlltl 1t11 1>Kin.ury _ ...... IO 11141 uno.n.lgnecl 11
1h!' Uw OllkH of EDMUND F.
11 .. RICER, l.iol -ltllor 111....t •• Montebello.
C1lilornl•, wrilcn It. tilt p11c1 of butlM'S~
or Ille Ut1Wrtl9"9d in 111 ma!le•1 per.
111 .. 11111 ht '"' "''"' or 'l.Aicl Cl«t'd~t. within lour m<ml'"' 1!1tr 1he 11•<1 1>11blic:1. ''°" 01 1t1;. nonce. J. WHley Tht"en
And Nlllllt Duin+1n
Co-Mmlnlt1•110•i
of lf\t E1t111 ol 1"" •bowt n1med dtceoeni
EDMUNO F, •AllKl!ll. 1!11.
llitMrney II Llw
lqJ W~lllltr llvti.,
MtnleMllt, C1U"""l1
Ttl; UUI 1U·l24J
AIM1'""1' IOr Co·llidmlnlllrllon
Put>tllf\t'd 0!'111111 Co.111 Dilly Piiot,
Juiw 11, 1S Incl Ju!y 1, t, lfH 1164·69
LEGAL NOTICE
Cl!llTlll'ICATI! 0111' IUSINESS
l'ICTITICWS "AME
Tht unc:l1ulg111<1 doe~•ctrtltv ht II c-
d11<llng I Duilnt• II 17~' LO•tnio Avt .. C~ll Mell, C1U10rni1, ur.ot• tile tic:.
lfllOlll llrm rllmt ol R. E. WALL ... ND
.11:$SOCl ... TES 1r.o !Not 11ld !lrm 11 com-
Poffd of !tit IOllowlng pe....,., -e
n1..,. ln tull tnd pltct ot ·~i<11r.c1 I• •• IOllows:
RICHAllD '· W,t.LL. 1161 Lotu110
Av1., Coot• 1\1~1. C1lhornl•
Otlecl J...,. II, lN'
Rle"'1rcl E. Will
~!tit o! C1llf0rnl1,
Of'•~ CounTY :
0.. J-11, 1Nt, bt-lort me, 1 t.1011ry
Publk In •ncl tor s.ood $!•tr. P'!""•"""'llY
IP~rN Rlcl'Mlrd E Viti!, -nown to
..,. IO be 11\r perilOn -· n.ornt ~ 1utii.cribecl to "" wllh!n lmlrumem • ....,
•c-now!edlled llt t•KUred !!It 1111'\1.
tOFFtC1AI. SE>.1.1
M&ry I(. Htnry
Nollry Pulllk·C•ll!ornl1
Prlncl,,.1 Otllct In
o r1ne1 coun•v
My Commlulon E•pir••
Nov, 1.t. ltn
Put>ll1ht'd 0r•l'9t Co.Ill 0tr11 PHot.
,lu"' 1•. :u 111<1 Julv '· t. 1H9 1161-49
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI" TO ClllOITOllS
SUPl!IUOll COUllT OF THI
ST ... TE OF CALll'OllNllli 1'011
THI" COU"TY OF OllANOE
Mt. A4J1lJ
Etlalt ol HAROLD I . WINICELMAN,
tltCfffftl. NOTICE 1S HER El'I" GIVEN ta the
<•ed•IO<"t of '"" ll>ovt n1~ dtc•<kn1
th1t 111 ff''°"' 111v11111 ct1lms 1g•ln1t IP\e 111<1 <ltcfdent ••t reaulre<:t ro lllf' tl'<em,
wltn the M<tut•Y VOllCll•"· In lh• o!llct
of !flt ell!•• of lllt 1bo\lt 111111~ CDllr1, or
lo Pf'ttorH llltm. wlln Ille necttu,.,.
\IOUdW!fl, IV f!w unclf!rl•9ftt<l 11 llw DI·
,,,,of G1tvln R. lt;NfW, llil!Ofl'll'V II Llw,
414 Korttl l<ltWOO•I 8ovltv1rd. NtWl'O•!
BeKh, C1Ulorni1, wl\Jcl\ It tht plf Ct pl
bu1lt1ts1 at lllt unclf!•1lgnfd in 111 mllltr\
H•!•lnlng lo !he tll•lt ot ••IO <lecfllMI,
wl!ftJn lour ..-ltl• tltt• •"• 11 .. 1 oubllu· hon of tt1l1 notice.
Oiied JufM1 t , lNt
E-lt S. V111t1....,re
E•Kulrl~ of Ill• Wiii
or lllt 1bo..,. n1me<1 drce<lenl
Gt lYln 11. K-
All-y 11 L1w
4U Mori~ ,..._..., loultY1r~
New,.11 l1K~, C1lll1rn11
,. ..... -., "4+-1211
All......,. Mr l"lkUlrb
Publlll>ed 0rtl'llt (01>1 OIOIV Pilot,
J une 11, 11, )J, July l, 19'9 11 1•·49
LEGAL NOTICE
IAll·114t
NOTICE TO CllEOITOltS
5UPElllOll COURT OF THE
STATE OP Cllilll'OllNtlli POlt
THE COUNTY OF OltA"GE
""· lli-41US E1llte or GRACE H. SMITH, -~· C.ltACE H08S0"1 SMIT H, 1t1 GRACE V,
SMllH, Otcetttel.
NOTICE 1$ HEREl!IY GIVEN lo the
crHl!Oro or Ille 1b0vt n1med dtcfdent
lh1t 111 11t•IOl'll n1v•1111 cl1lm1 1911nol tne
111d Ot'Ceclent 1rt re<111ortd lo !lit '"'"'· wltll r~ necn11rv wvuchtr1, In !tie office
of lht clot•• of tllr 1bovr enlltlH covrl, or tO Drt"<!I "'em, Wilfl !flt MCtl~lr)'
~oucht11. to 1111 u...,.,.;,...., 11 ttie Low
Otllctt of PHIL H. CUii.RY, E1Q., l U3 ~"""' llvo , La1 Ansrlt" C1llf<lrnl1, wnlc~ 11 IM Plltt ot bl.l1•n•u of tll•
11ndt rtltnt<:t In 111 ml!tel'I <>e•tfln!n1 lo
•ht •111tt 01 uld 0-tt'd•nl. wUllln tour
l'nO'lttl1 •lier tne !Int 1>11bllc1t10<i cl 1h'5 ll<llltt.
01ltd M1w 7', 1'6t
JO!ln W, JICt""'
E••cu1or or !he w 111
o! tne lllave n111'1t<l Ot<.t<lfnt PNtL H. CUltllY, E.11.
llillwiwJ ti ltw
SIU Sll!IHI llY~ .•
Lti An1r1t1, c111twnl1 tttll Tth U1U "6·1'4j
"'"''"'"' tor E.a1cw11r Publl1he<I Or1nge Co11t D111v Pllo!,
June j , 11. 11. n, IHt 10}1"69
LEGAL NOTICE
•11i1t·1'tl
"DTICE TO (lllOITOltS
$UPElllOll COUllT 01' THE
STATE OF ClliLIPOllNllli POii
THI COUNTY OP OlllliNGE
Ne. A·6:lt4t
fllll1! of WILLIAM SHERM.-." PJIN.
DAi,LL, 1t1 WILLl .. M S. RANDALL, 1t t
W. S. llANDllilL, Otttllfd.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the
c•HJlor1 of ltlt> 1bo¥t 111med a.t<t<1~111 ,.,., 1 11 _._, h1vln9 cl1lm1 11111,.,11
11\t uld <!Ktdent 1rr ._Ired lo Ille "*"'· wlttl t1'le ntetowrw ~ ... In the
offlc;e ol IM cllt't of IM 1bove f'ntilled court, .,. lo ..,.,,.,., lhtm. wllll !he
-<Y YOUCflln. lo lf\t Wndt!'ll'IM<I 11
tht oHlu ol lllt 1ttornon, ICNUPP 1"°
KNU .. P, '1J.4U fltnll; of "'""'It•
Wldlftl, UIM E. PhJlldtll>lll1 Slrtf'I.
W'Jlllller. C.llfoml• toMl, wt>lc~ 11 '"" ~ o# b!IJir.. ol 11111 unoersi.n.o In 111
lftlltten ...... lftl .. lo "" tsll!O of 1t i0
lflc.tdent, w JltllR fo&W "*'"'' •Ur• "" first Mlllllulloll ol 11111 tllllkt.
0.ted ""'' n. !Hf.
"...., L. "'"'*''I E11tcufor ti "" Wiii ol tllt ....... Mined dec~I
l(NVl'f' ....... u .. ..
.. ......,. .. lo-.
'""" ...... AftWtcl ...... 1-. L ,... ...... Srrwtt,
Wllltflw-. C..WW.rt .... .
T111 ttUI fN41tt
A,..,..., ftt SltcllW ~lllMd Ortl'llHI eo.11 Dilly "110!,
Mii¥ tt. J\IM I , II, II, 1Ht 10'11·•1
·-~ --., --
Ftfo llopl&tHIOOnl -If th• ,;,. I• undu ... ,..,. ... ,..1 ••.
•~Ir f•r •n1 ,. .... tll•rlnr
th1 firol ti tlo• •fltt p•r·
th•"'· 1t •ill H npl•t HI •I n• ........ .
• Jl•MI H••••" -An1 tall••• lhll otrll<• cl110 le <Old h .. -
01d • .,..,It ho upla.:rd on e
pre·ro<•tl b••• of ••rronl
o•·orr4ar "'llinir Prl<• <>f 1ho 11ro, •! t i,., •I adJwo!-
"''nt. •rrordlnir lo tr•od
,...,.1,.ln1. with •JH1rifle4
numbor of •onllt• 11ur1n-
1 .. d.
e \\'nrk .. onlhlp ond M'1!ui1I
-l·:••rr dt1 told lor •• lo
1u•r110IHd 11oln•t 1n f•ll· utn •t oltlttto I• .,..,k111a11•
>hi p utl. "'"lfrl&I le< 1ho
lifo of 1111 ori1r1nal ln•d. Ir
oho 1lu hih duo 10 d•frrto
in nt•l•ri1I 1nJ •or~"'""' ohip, lh• lito .. ;11 Ito , ...
plocotl, clou1rin1 ""'' lor lh• ......... 1 •f ... 11 •••• ,,....
«i•tcl. Al,I. ADJ U~TMf:l'ri'T!'I ARF.
RAtlF.11 Olli CUHRF.ST
"''f;ll.YDAl' $F.l,LI NC
PtllCf;. A'f THK TIMI: OP'
ADJUSTMF.ST -N"OT LIST
PJtl C E OR J\iO ·TllADt>
PitlCI::..
G••,..nleo ...... noli•1t·wi"•
TWIN JET AUTO AIR CONDITIONER
13995
Pl~I
luUll•lltl
• T\l.ill Sqt.1trrcl·C11ge f\lo1to.:r~
• l·amou~ York Comprcs.sor
• )60" Air Voluf!'e Control
• Aulomalic f'Julch Provide' Low (l'<t Or~r~t1r1 ~
AUTO Alit·CONOlllOMll J11v1cr . ~. $5.87 ., .. , ....... , .. ..
•.;
ATF FLUID
~.:re .. :~-~:" i;~,;: 2 r' ti> .~'t f,., ~·~' .,
'""' ,j .. ,c. : l·1•Hl>j
-.
-1 -~ ,':.-: ·>. .\. :" ., /'
'y22 ·:. 26 ~ "". ,.
I .• '"' • .. .., ..
CHAMOIS •
f·,11~ t 11JI. dura.
I-It , •• \\oil IUll
II>•~ "' \tl'llTC ~
!~~ f'."~'" ~~ l•"•r a• ... 10.,
' I?.~
TRUCK MIRROR
l'or Ooubll -.k· ' ····· ·-911 ,.,,. lru~I;. ..,;r.
""'· l·tltriin11e" J l lf I~ .. h\ind 1pot",
l l-:1110
-1
i
PRESTONE Oil MISER
•.
Stops oil tt.o,.._
Ina. N•loo'cl io.t
~o .. rr 16 111-
11,.1, alHI cult
~·~1~1 1....ir.1rit.
'l·110?
4 .7e
\t.N 0
·~CHROME
• ,
REVERSE WHEEL
13~~
•
DE LUXE CAR RADIO
;;:~.:;:; ··2411 •/12 •alt. crn
Y.1l•lll 11iial!lcd lltllM
'" nir.-. , ............ A••il•lrll•
THESE SPECIA LS GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS ONLY
WESTMINSTER BUENA PARK BUENA PARI COSTA MESA SANTA ANA
15440 BEACH IL YD. 188} LINCOLN AYE. 1301 HACH ILYD . 1200 HAHOR ILYD. 1400 !DINCOR
Al Mcfoddc11 At Valley View .. , luitwic-lff' At Wllsoo .. , lrlstol
892-1081 826-~00 52l·l040 548-2082 54'-7112
\
I
I
I
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' 8.25-15 {1.15)
-•
•
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.. ---~--------------
WE ONESDAY
•
, .
NlioM1 IWl!ds lfld l*folnd II
..ao!at .;iui mOr1 11111 SS llr?ftPhOnY
oichutr•s.
JUPll 11 "-"" ~ ..... ....., """""'(Cl (10) AlnW 1 ••Iii
''"' II Tllo lie "'"' (CJ !IOI ~ Dunphy.
D ·--lCl llOl B ..... .a.1 ti)1 C2'A h1l
Calif. Allttl• vs. Minn. TWln1 I
Mlnn1$0ll..
0 Sil O'Cl.a Mtvlt: "'TM Dtrif
MIMI ..... (liamlJ '52-'en
Ke!l7, ~ Aft&1ll
01 ... !Cl (IQ)
m I ... Liiy (IQ)
m"-m <"I
01J (I) Mm liiritfil (Cl (90)
m...,.. .... ~·<ti <30> ""'
El1hU1 Wender." Camtr11 fo!klw 1
yc11npter •round tllt Aatrodorn1 In
Houstoft., whtrt hi ~drums lbout
oper1tlq lhl ICO(lbq.ard 1ftd Wd-
c1stina 1 baebi11 1un1.
(EU11Cellr hr1 &ti PW {30)
GIKPUI !kn lCl 1601
1:30 0 Mic: .._nice (C) (60) • m-vONt • t11t eono. " t111
Sea (C) (60)
tD Cl) Hulltl1J·lrlt1kl1J (C) (30)
Eli) lel'I Tilt AMiil THiil (30)
•·our T11111 Get ln'l'GIYed." M11lon
~M Ell! u., -""!' I> {loo •
Lwttr t1om Grun Ami) •1111 .,
posit lht Clflmllfft fortune 111 SI•
Ot11ek1r'1 {ft•nk.. tidy), 11111 .. Mr.
Oiy&d1le conviiqt morit tttr Dash
'lp1odl .(Leny h1111tll) to ""•
ciutr•de •• 1 co1111tty bey 11111 colrtl
EflJ..-MU. (R) ,
D 9 ll'J m _,., """' "'' CCI (60) Sm:llu & Yaun1 end ~
,C.rne welalmt 1uest1 frank Gallhln
Ind ~Orman Wlldom lrom l.oft4olL
&1 ...... (CJ (SI)
0 @(1)'8 AIC We41t1dtJ
M•lt: "'Co•Plllit11" (dr1ma) 'Sl-
Otvn Will«. Oiallt Y11al., Dten
Striwtll, 8r1dford. OUh111rt. M1111
Lll'fn'<1 1a:ount of Chicaao'• In.
fl fl'IOUI Mctime of 1111 Clntllry,"
when two law stllOtnll 1t 1 111ill-
wu1:~rn wn:Nt111ty plan •nd tuc:Utt
1 xlllllw crlmt. (R),
m-• -iCJ '"' "Tile Crisis lrl 1111 C.tllollc Cltllftb."
,.,. Yolk Times rallalo11 edttoJ Ed-
wa1d B. nm, DI. Jarosln Jin
f'etlk1r of tht Yalt Divinity Schoo~
ind edllct Philip Schlrptr of Sllltd
Ind W1rd l'ubllllle11 dlSCllU tlll
current probltms If the churth. !ll-' ....... (IOI
M1rsh1H llMI !Oms. rol1 pltJln1 9:3tl 8 QfJ ())Gr'" Acru (C) (30)
ind lnttlYll'llJ to &how t1e11111 p10-lh1 Doual11 houa1hold b tllfown
1r1ms 111¥01Yinr tht communilJ. lnkl clllos wl11n , • Hunpfl10 irDo a (i) m""" (C) (30) m!r.•nl (Wolf• Bamll), •• ,.
£E Notldn 34 (C) (60) Pl lflt/y sned the ifl ot U.'t
7:00 1J Cll Ennln1 flm (C) (30)
Wi llet Cronkite.
0 WW1 MJ tine? (C) (30)
m•-<CJ <30J
ID (I)YM Asbd '"II {30)
uncle durlni the Wtl', atrivu ind
lriu lo entrench himatlf IS 1 th•
In h1ndJm1n. (R)
0 lkws (C) (30) Tef lky11s.
m u O'tloct ""' <601
"''° 11 9 (I) Honl .,,.. <CJ !IOI fl' f11twt1 (C) (30) "Between tht SllYe McGtfl rtt 1nd his ipecil\ \11-
Tides." vestlt1llve tum 111 t1llld In wlln
9 (I) lmrlJ Hlllbilllu (C) (30) • wlnnlnr lk:ktt in 1 numbtrs pme'
tull\S Olll to be 1 loser and 1 YQUl'IC m W~llst (C) (30) Arm~ corpo11I (Johnny C11wford) b
(!) Drll• Kollll (C) (30) ICCUstd of i crlml. (R)
a 9 'll m"" •·-tci 7:30 II Tami (C) (60) J1l 11 doulil•· (60) "for JJifftbtrs Only." Prt.rlt
crossed br 1n 11nscrupulc111 tripper lnveslla:1tar Dlvld Ross prob11 Into
who 1sret1 to help tJ1t boy 111.U his 1xd1111Vt mt11'1 d11b In hope1 or llllCO'lltlllf clleith!f lfttl I ~
pt! leop1rd '° it can't 111 llJI• ol unusual hta:h lows 1mon1 Cini· .
to 1 zoo and then plot• to ltlll lh playina membtrs.
leopard Ind sell II lo tht hl&Mst II m WINI (C) (60)
bidder. (R) D hlll (C) (60)
O @CIJ mne Ylrrlnflll CC> IPJ)Sp1cu11t111 (60) ~eut I
{90) ·~a Crm •f Socom:i Crnt. N WOuld1't Wtnl To Livi Tho11."
l he Ylr1lnl1n ferrets cut wspects l<tllh Be/Wick wtlcomu authcr
ruPoraib!t !or th1 tyncllfn1 of in ftorm1n Corwin ind 1ulhcl" Ricftard LriiR$0n lot 1 spi rited dJscusaiDf old f1lend. Steve Ihnat. Lanny of 1111 reltli'll meriU ind demerits
Chapman. Elltn McR11 end Oevln ol 1111 In Los Me:elas 1nd In Hn
Coua:hl!n runt (RI Yott.
O (J!CIJ GJ)Her• C11111 tll Q)Mtri1111 (30)
Irides (C) {60) '1111 fire maker.~
h son't lucl tOPPlf, Rtdmond Bin, 10:3tl ID Nm (C) (30) Bill Jahl'ls.
la 1ecued of 11ttln1 lottsl flrn by IE Fiii• CoruN (30)
limber ow111r Mitt B1ltw. Mont
M11kMm runts II Bau, •rid [.d. 11:00 II 0 0 IE m m " .. {C)
Wlrd Alnlf ruuts IS 81llM. (R) 0 Alfr .. Hitdlcecll
0 MilllH $ Movlrl: "lntlftl Te 1111" 0 Mowlr. "1111 Lut MMI" (dt1·
(dr1m1) '9-Rlch1rd Todd, BetJJ m1) '59-MlclleJ Rooney, Don 91rrr. ,,.,.. m HUMPHREY BOGART
mTrutl II Co111qMnca (C) (30) * Film Festival 11 PM/KTIV
ffi PtnJ 111•11 (60)
ED JOJh ChlR CeoU (30)
ia Cl) lat " KtllJWOOd (2 hi)
U1 o-. 111 Plliola t30)
''"' m -ici (!OJ
m ffamplu" lo&lrt r~111 felltnh
•'ID1ct L11ion'' (1937), co-sltrtlllf
Alln Sheridan.
Q) Movie: "TN fllfl .. 1 Wtllf ta
Fr1nce" (dr1ma) '42-Robtrt Mor·
11r, eonsunce.tummlnp.
llll rn rD CiJ a m -«> ED Spfch• (C) (30) "Abu Sim·
b1I." A dotumenUIJ .. the
tflort of UNESCO that SM4 the 11:30 II Mowit: '-'Cit In 0. flllM"'
ancient llmplas ti R1msu II from ~~st~~57-RIJmond 8111r, Nt-
lh• wltm of the Nlle Rlw1 when D ~Ci) Im TMJPt .. (C)
the Aswln H!th 01m waa co~
atructed. II Movie: ""' ,._.. Uttr' (fllJ*lery) '44-franchot Tone, lilt
R1!au. £[J Milrcolel Maiul (30)
l :lS 0 An• Wrlf'illl (C) o l!ll rn m"" -m -
1:30 e n. , .. C111t (C} (30) An lZ:JO m n SUrtstt Strip
1!derly G11ek 'ffOrkm.an (lilot Y1t1· OJ Actlo1 Thntn: "Thuodu Onr
dis) offe11 to do odd )obi 1round T1n1ie1."
Bert's Pl1t1 ind knps hl111111f b1111
fixln &: the thlnp he iccklifltlll1 1Z:40 D Mowlt: "lftllde • Mlflt-' <elf ..
b • (Di m1) '59-C1muon Mltch1H, Eune
1e1 S. "' Edwards.
O Win m lh stirs (C) (30)
0 (HJ CD m TM ltin1 flll'lib' CC> 1:00 DD NINI (C)
(30) MW11kln1 Hippy" b thl open· 0 C..111r11tty lllltU1 IOI~ (t)
ln1 IUfll. (R) 1:15 8 1M1r. -rtw" atpn 111 thl m Mn Crtnlll (C) (90) SUn" (dr1m1) '55-Aldo R17, Die~
ID Ru11 hr Ye• Ute (C) (60) Yatt
ED lnslpt (30) A looli II Ille mllll-1:30 m AIJ.flliM Dor. "Th• C.1111 Dan
ul talent of Cndra B1loflt, 1 14-j Pitch," -oononn'1 Brlln." 111d
ye1r-old vtollnlst, who h11 won two "Th• Amnlslltd H ... rt."
THURSDAY
11:00 a "Sona " lndla"' {dflllll) ., ..... j S.bu. T11th1n l ey.
1Z:30 m "Quartel" l•nlholol)') '41-'
Jack W1tlln&. lrtnt Brown, Mervya
.lon11, Ctcll P11'ku.
DAmME MOVIES ~ ... m ................ ("1)1111))
JUDGE PAiKER
I <All'r allOB!m!IP '!'IE CHAllOE
IN lA.™ElnNI!! ff MIJ5T IE ™AT
~E "S &KOIAE tNnr&llW lN
5(>ME()Nli et.SE!
.. -
MOON MUWNS
~AIRPORT_.
.JUST ~l!l»AT MY
Pl;t.N FOR >Joi U~l'R·
<;IOOUNI> AlllJ'ORT ... •
TUMBLEWEEDS
'49-John C.lwfrt, MJrl'll Din. j
t :OO ... T•""' (mystify) 'SS-John 3:00 Q "Unlaltld'..., Ylllrl" (COflltd1) , ...... ~
lrtlaM, Honor l ltck1111.. '4S--.u: Hllfbo1, Unde DerMll
D "FlllM 11-· (d111111) 'M-.ro-.~ !Mlle. FMUI fucUr. 4:0011 "SlrllNd ........ (llhtntull)
t :SO 0 "Datt Yldlr(' (4l'1mtl 'JI-'47-0olllf,a, f~ t .. M1w.R
GICflt 1nnt. Geraldltll Fltzl'l'll O'HlrL
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
1111·111;11""''
By Jbhn Miles
Harold Le Doux
r....,;;;-;....,;;;;;;'\·WON;;;;;;;;.rc;S!<;;;;E .... "::ir;;; .• ~"':;;':;.-::o;;'t:;cLOC;;;;;,:;:, r;;;•" -~."'n,..,,.wor='to~tAE SACK lO eeP! PERM -'P!J
PISC.U5S Jf WITH M!?; &ETTB: UE POWW IN M.Y HE'5 Tl.LKING TO HER OM THE PHONE! t
' •• WE'VE l.lWl.VS STUP't' I.WP TllV lO GET A. 5MOllLP LISTEN MERE ON TME EXTEW510N!
I EBI .HOWE5f COtJPlE OF HOUK5 SLEEP! .wo •• I WOtfT liEt:>RAPE MYSELF ••
, WITH d.c.H OTHE'R! l 'VE A. 816 PAY IN ti----,~>--:;
C.OURT' TOM.OUOW !
By Ferd Johnson
'/OIJ'RI! Ill 1M~ fl.'l'IHG
8USINSSS, '1tl<J .SAS~
,Hill<; --)'OU GO
FL'f' Oil~.
By Tom K. Ryan
'C/>iJSE. HE'S A SHE! &OU: J.XA CAN'f CALL
A SllE A HE NAME!
SHES AIITT HOS!
I ~ '-----'"-~~~·--~---...... ·~~·~·---·--~-~·~···~·-~·-~-~~~1MLM~~L•~-~·~~---'l._ __ ,~,--~~~C~·~·--~·---~~----~~-~~~.~-~~-"'-'"""~~~~~-~~~.._..~
RELATIVE GUILT -Dean Stockwell, lefl, and
Bradford Dillman argue over their re1 ative guilt
in the motion picture, "Compulsion," showing to-
night on Channel 7 at 9 p.m. Orson \Yelles, Diane
Varsi and E. G. ri tarsba ll co-star in the movie.
TELEVISION VIEWS
Censorship
Disc11ssed
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOu (UPI) -Televislon censorship
is lbe subject or the latest issue of the journal of
the Producers Guild or Ame rica. And one of the
articles , "'ritten by no velist-producer David Levy,
a former NBC vice president, deals 'vith censor-
ship, politics and the new comedy.
A moderate man , Levy notes that "what today's
generation finds refreshing, challenging, and ir-
reverent these days on televison , an older one some--
times fi nds sophomo ric, cliche, old hat. If there is
one human characteristic on which all generations
tend to agree it is that each generation must relive
the experiences of past generations."
MENTIONING such show s as 0 Laugh-In" and
the canceled S1nothc rs Brothers hour, Levy points
out the vast political and social satire that bas gon e
before -"the debunking o! pretentious quacks 'and
the deflation or pompo us cOlonel blimps; the poi nt-
ed ridicule and sharp jibes that reveal the some.
time amoraJity, v~nality, and cupidity of elements
of big business, of Con gress, of the professions."
He lists such popular satirists as H. L. Mencken,
George Bernard Sha\v, Will Rogers, Henry Morgan,
Oscar Levant, Fred Allen, Sid Caesar, Jack Paar,
Steve A1len and the cast of NBC-TV's "That Was
the Week Th at \Vas."
LEVY RECALLS how "CBS, In a shrewd an-
alysis of its Sunday night schedule, slot~d the
Smothers Brothers opposite •Bonanza,' a program
in which the virtues a nd the moralities of tradition-
al America have been symbolized by the character
and homilies of the Cartrights for nine years . , .
their success helped prompt NBC to launch 'Laugh-
In' against another of the symbolds of middle-cl ass
llle, Lucllle Ball ."
Asking why the Brothers later slipped In the
ratings, Levy says ; "Their decline may have bee n
a result of the difficulty of doing topical humor
with a heavy emphasis on politics ; it is the kind or
comedy that is vulnerable by the very fa ct of Its
topicality. It tends to become repetitious. It tends
also to require constantl y escalRtiri g barbs whi ch
can alienate viewers as well as induce ti ghter edi-
torial scrutiny on the part of the adverti sers and
networks."
LEVY GOES ON : "The decline of the Smothers
Brothers may be, in part, due not only to the rnr-
midable competition of 'Bonanza' bu t al so the
emergence of 'Lau~h-ln.' which managed to cover
everything the brothers had to offer plus a lot more
by the fla shy style of its presentation.
Not only does the speed of its form allo\V for
mu ch more comedic material , but that very speed_
itself guarant ees more freedom. since something
that can fl ash by in seconds can be mo re acceptable
to censors and public than the same subj ect handled
in a lon ger routine."
LEVY NOTES thal the impact o[ social and poli-
tical humor "ha s within it the seeds of a dan gerous
boomerang. There is always the possibility of tight-
er network censorship when matters tend to get
out of hand -an internecine strugj!le that does all
participants more hAnn than good. Excesses in try-
ing to get a1vay \Vith more. in repeating and es-
calating the nature of diS?S and sallies (fonner P res·
ident Johnson was already in this 'overkill' position)
may backfire and eventuall y lead to public rejec-
tion."
Dennis the Jtlenaee
1'
1
~
• . ,, w.iMsdai, J;.,. 1a, 1%9 • DAil Y l'!lOT
OPEN SUNDAY. 9 P§
'
-:~f?!WTE>
OVER ll;ooQ Rtri.i; ond Sl:IQlGUNS ON DlsU\'I :'
GRANT'S GUH DPARTMIN1 ·lol1t1fft4 lly 11q11Pls In tholr 'llild of oho01iiit. Who~
evif you m1y wlnt In '"''• lipm 1 $20;GO 22'11fle to 1 $3,500.00 5holp/t, Gnnrt ·
. har It 'In 'ttockt CtM1 In u4i Mt fof yourutf one of tht ltrgut st•b ·_of '""' lrt s.u·ttttm ,(lllfomill . t.
SH 1'llUI AU
Oii DISPlA YI . . ' • WllKhesttr • $mltll I
W.ISOll • lt..U111to11 •
U•m• • S.kt • l1r1tt1
• INWnllll • Wt1thtitiy
•Ch1rl·11 D.lly •Celt
• H & I • lu11r • Arm1-
Ut1 • W11th1r • S.v1p
• ttMCI.
;
J!lilOW)llWD, "
... nr& ~..:....; ,
l 2, 16, 20~ lc.3"J4aignu111 l2'""1: 20. . . ' ' . . ._ s1141s
-llUIO
" ~ , 1411'11'0AD\W9-
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And Lowest Prices, Too!
HIGH
SIEQ4:$? I . wr-111v.· 1,c1n1ptEt'e ~ltc•
t!eii •f l00% Oown·fiHt.d•
~· fw th• . mt~• pie-lt•sion" of cint,.nl
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'smiAL ~ D1ci on, full 1111 '
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fP,m $J9.95
IU, f--.r ilHiti..f Ht• wltlt confldenc•
1(,Gtiint'1 ••• ·wt h1v1 111 of. th• ~!l·i;iifftl• l••ttck ..• "' ~·ltlnt
• •• .;.-..h ~tllYVJ • , , WI Vt fJI . it~,.. uff ltl . •; .
•
The
"Vagabond"
by
lftil.}8
~#.GAION~ftough, tlfht 1n•; f!o-
rliWe. Floor• 'ff•r clry with ntw ... It
'Vinyl-co1t1d iiylon flMrl ·tNt 1xtt11•
10" 1bort 1rt11nd Nrtl. Off·wkltt fOPI
reftect tht h11t-l1t1 ln tht U,htl
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Nationally Advertised
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ind 1olid col ors. Ptr·
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$495
li!htw1i11ht 100•/. 11l·nyWin for
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SPORT SHIRTS
THE LATEST new styles just 1rrived
in Pl1ids, ChKlu, Solid colors ind
Stripes. Button-down lyY styles, per·
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Small, Medium, L1rgt i nd Extr1
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s39a All
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SHIRT STYLES
BT THE DOZENS!
WE'VE GOT 'lM-1hlrt1 of 1r1ry ties. criptlon inti tvtry slyl1I S.1 Gr111t'1
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FAMOUS BRANDS at BIG SAVINGS at GRAtlT'S
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al BRANT'S
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.. J 1t.: .::..:.....:.::......:.:.1.:__..:..'.,L__: .. ,; .. · -· ' ' . , __ ·-~
-----------
•
I
" "
. . ' Colnjlllll
_,..whit
llgsl
'
.
PRICES EFFECTIVE
Wednesday, June 18 'til •
Tuesdoy, June· 24
BE~ aonoMs $7
LEVl'stt Orlaiilel lh.11 Jt1n1 •• "" loHOl'l'I
with the f11UC.11 cut, tl1teillnt1 1M XX ff11l111,
·. NUYO® FLARES $9
. HEW Fltrtd vtnio11 •f l1vl'1e '°'ul1r Sii·
Pn1t& 1l1ck1. Hopsact J11n1 In meny ntw
tol•ta.
. , DJpSSY STllJ,IPE~, . $8 .
< lM'S& lett1t In ttrlpet~Wt Wf'Y ;rtf , -:-
' itrlpt '•r Grl'J witli thl• MKk 11.;,t. ....
.OVfR 20,000 PAIR LfVl'S®·
IN STOCK AT GRANT'S/
*All Sires '*All Slylh * All Colors
I ' \ I '-
' • • . • __ , ___
...
Hliio(a
iAdC
P4C~
r~ ••• ,~.
• '0 ...
·,
2·MAN •••• , $U.9,5
4·MAN • • • • • $44.95
6-!U!f ·, .. . $St.ts
'FAMILY TENT"
Nlw •Gitt...,.. ..... , off h111, Jtt1 i11 '"ort Utht, •11 pldurt wl•~. tW..Wl't Dutch 4oor provi4e1 /ltnt.,
of Yttltll~ ,5fil.W.•ft1ppecl 1na ii.,lon 1cr1tn1 . Out•
. "' • ' ----
CATJLYTIC
HEATERS · n.. -' pntllul •••Fl• •I
...... ~1. lwff· '" .. , ,.,,.. .. .... u .....
\~ s21•s
GRANT'S RENTS
EVERYTHING YOU
NEED FOR CAMPING!
LEVI'S®
for
GALS!
~ NOW~YOU ~ Statct ......
111 1f thf ihw.fttw 1lytti
., ltvl'1:BI Slat.lit inti J11M fer
1/1 you tal1f'St1 Grent'1 for tht
••rftct fill
from $6
''FLAlt'''' ~ $1.00
• I '
• . ' • • ---------•
•
,
•
,
•
. rtaofe ,s·no.rte n'.e.d.
' . ' ' . ~ • • • ..r.. . ' . 1 )' ance of the U, S. Food and Dnii(.Aw'l'Plstratlon,a ' llU'lh," he claimed. •
'.pretty, falr jqb •·<l!tlng done Ip qWllWnlbg· nu!rl· · ,; S>'ndietle· vllamlni and . !Ji~ are o. reality, he
, foods from Iron pots and skillets 'to maintain 11111
• lf'lll 'a11owan~." · ' \
I 8¥-BEA .~DE RS.()N ~ > ' ~ ""'1!'· .....
!
F.~ 1)loment · .::1ooe1 product is haf.'lHied or sl,pgh ered II ltarti, l'"rlshing. '. • , ·
So Dr. Kenn~ Morgareillie, -vice. pi:esl-'
dent ilirector , of !lie cbemk:al lliYaiOn, Food
tional NBluei i'~lll ai.ld. > . · J. said! and pr.,ed1ct~ that more will be done with syn-
• -. . . ...!fi. • • thet1cs and addltive1 •. •• •
1 W1~ 11!tfo111cre!'e of !roun foods,:productswe t Dr. LeRoy Voris, executive secretary, food and
reachlrij thtJ~ns~er wflh lu,,p~ve loss'than • .nutrition hoard ol the National Academy of Scien-
He claimed the only pro&lerA In taking\ Iron pills
as a supplement would be the abuse In taking too
much.
and Drug \Research Labs, New Yo~"••• )le dft·
dressed mo.re than 600 home economists; dieticians
and. IOO<I editors' at UC! during a •"'!'I -up-
dating nutrWon edlJcation. · t
_All ~Is ~ble. he r,~. "!!>Phaslz·
ing Q>i4 ll •s a-long, long trjliJ from the farm to the,.
dinn~,t.abl' "-1-enUy there are less detours and bypas~t' '<xlay llocaise many of the food proces.s'orl hav':~moved'~\j~ts clos'er to the fann so that pre-
we have a right 10 expect, he a'ssi~. . ·_ "ces, Washington, D.C. discussed .t&e recommended
• 111ea1 preparatlc>n has been rel~lited to a minor dietary aUowances.
chore be· as's~ clai!Qinr~· -;i ~ ;t becau$e the ;,_ ·; . 0 1t's hardly pracUcal:tO put a computer 1!1 every -
' h / .i. '·-.~ "'tk' >1-.:J•<t. I th b h rl! th' rsk,ilchen so ·the homemaker CllJl l>e sure she 1s serv-. ou.e.-ue Wu .. •"."" uas esa ", er ~ , er 'lng a lull quota of dletafy allowances to her family,"
or grandmother ~d. . • . ~ . _ j. ).>e noted . -. .' -. . "
In discussing dietary supplements, such,u , ln-
1tant breakfast, Dr. Voris contended. they bJvo
some nutritional value and they have W,J>lace·tn the
diet II put in the proper place'. Jil o(b(r words, use
them as part of and not the w1iole dieto
semng, ,,._ " star\ed sooner. • •
viyven so, u;ienus nee<t not k41bMiJig, thanfl to ~ The max1m~m calor1e Intake to m8111t8111 weight
? the v,ari~tr ,of. lri>;en and ~~ OOds av~llabJe /f.; as been ~ing down over th.e pa~ t.wo decades,~be
in supe1'!11aH.et5, >I( the familY,t111e.Qu, tendf to be<i aid, pol~lfng o~t that sametunes 1t" hard to. me~t
rigid it is because of family'~;s, such ·ssV '!Je proteln r~qtiirements·while k'ei:>lng 1n the h.qiita~
Both Dr. Voris fnd Dr. Morgareidge agreed
that synthetic vitamins are more readily ~blorbld
_ ()lan the natural form , and joldpgl) susgeru.il tblt
in .time we IDight be eating Qur ~ed meals,
prepared synthetically, out of atcan.'• " •
. "Th_e. sceparlo about the vlllalns bcing ,tbe food indti~ll'l"!tiong PBll," he said, although ~e admitted
a m1oot1t:i oJ processors, some of which service
vending machines,'· snack bars and Plant cafeterias,
do n~ed, to upgrade their st;andards._
NUTRITION VALUES.
religious, cul toms 'and t'be locale w h may , be : , lion of cal?r1es.. .
Jimitecf to variety of available fooc;l.Sf ' ' ~ · The b1gges,t. pro}llem 1.n dietary allowa.nces ~s
Thefe is'.,~t enrichffienLiftltobd today tha!".ks . a:etting e~ugh iron, espec1all~ for women m their .~ .. tc :JJii 1 , , reproductive y~rs. He expl.~m~ that this is be-t& add/tlVes ~d synthetics, h•:'S.~·t ~ ... }) ,,., cause of the high variability of'tron in foodi and the
. . I · MVTH DISPIU<'io , .' ;} wide vailabifity of man's absorptiO'I of iron.
Points in favor pf this ••practical but 1nbt I>&>-·,
lar" method wouta be th' elimination of all-'l'V
f09d .commerctals, cook 'liooks, marl<ellng !dad
sections in newspapers aod board meetings( !of the
speakers).~
•:s~t, th•nks to' keeri competition and Iha vigil-• .... -r-·l\.. .
"People who think all food<must be from natural i IRON ALLOWANCE
products ~o-be wholesome ar~ Jll•relr _upholding a ; He suggested that cooks reverl to preparing
11This would even appease the Heart Assocfa·
tlon," Or. Voris concluded.
! r •
" • ~ • • 40> .... 1 ' ~elestial l m sR .tt~~.i.9n
;, . I,~, . ...,. :>'-~-.,~..;·~· ' ' -l!y JOHNA BLINN
wAiulNGTO~. p.c~"All
foods 1are associated with the
zodiac;,", Jeane Dixon said,
•· , the cosmic rays-
the Sun, or example. -give
lifu to~ ants and animals.
Plants haVe to have \hem in
order·' to ! grow, even • mush-
rooms. thaf. grow in caves."
~ rtnowned astrologer
and ,~etess, who ameog
other'?rijictions fore.tqld the
assass1n~1ons of Prwsldent
Jchn F. J(ennedy and 'of his
brother, 'Sen. Robert Ken-
nedy, "Jives in a quietly elt-
gan~ Washington, D.C., town
house. ReQ roses, her favor·
ite flower. graced the table
in her dining room.
PSYCffIC· POWERS
•·Ceitain Io o d s Interfere
with Y.our psychic powers,"
she said,,. drinklnf somt or-
ange jaiCe. Coffee~ tea oz: bQt
chocofate ' interfere-,. .With _her
poweN of concentrltlo"n, she said. ~ 1
''I belie\re in eating what
suits hie". personally." She
nu~n~~n.e,1-?her rrlimd, AQele
Flctdler. Who sufrered trom
severe headaches after eat·
ing Seat~ "When she elUn-..
inated that food from ~r diet, she felt much better. '
Jeane explained ihe re:ta-
tionshjp belween food and as-
trolo&r. HW~.Jjve in a psychic
world} ~fOlogy works irtto
al! our Jiv«;1.\~strologY,. ~a
SCU>l"i'!-<1~" 0 a ~I~ ez~1 1 , It you j.'en ~ diet Di . things about ·-,a ·.~ . ~ ,
person, ifagnooe allergies add ~ -. -• eveq telf what foods are good o11... • '«
or bad for tbat person, b\11 , · ~ fi '~ji .iii .1 not al"l'iU's. Here's where tfie "', . ~ ~, ~
matterr of your own b~ ..,, • ·•· ~ ~ • ,, chemi~ enters the picture1' HEAVENS ABOVE I "EATING Hi'iBITS PREDICT ED sh~:: you get Ot<tet, yodr , ..: '. .. ~&fl~er Jean9'bixon • .,.; -,,
body chtmi.!try changes arid · .f. '. *
Ingredients, stirring Jus t
enoagh to dampen the flour.
~ -The ~er sbouJd be lumpy.
Heat ungreased· griddle (or
Jry pan) over n$derate heal.
Griddle ls bot enoUgh wtien
few drops Of · cold ws:ter sldd
across Ute griddle. Pour atiout
3 lablespoons of batter fnr
each cike onto gridd~. Cook
until cakes are bubbly and
nicely browned. Flip oyer Lo
brown on other side.
Serve at unce with butter,
strained honey, apple sauce
(oraose m•rmala~e 9r
strawberry preserves), fresh
UV;ija ; in season (crushed
: -s~ed strawberries or
blueberries) and crisp bacon,
sausages or grilled h a m
steaks. Serves 3'"4.
1EANE DIXON'S
CANNELLONI
For die pasta
• t<-: 11)11il'f itut\a wafer ., ")~it "'"' . '
·1-'t•ounces iTiatllC6t.U
:i :·f Jho\ng sfilted water to rolling
; ,.-!; ti>j:J;• add' !!-' ma~cottl at ·a
: -til!!e:tC.OOlt .,bq_ut alx mtnut~s
· Jor i tnttn··· -"'a J i11 ban:ly I • ~· ~ • "tender).~PluQ«t in cold .e.ter ~; · to rlri!te. Con'tlnue COQking un-
\ ·tu all ,the·~ is cooked.
·t • ,.~,J·· ft.r 1'e" ~
1 poun4,.{lcott8<1:1>i.,• . · •
} cup C<ll!kedi_ )ined, 01191> ped J)iinac • '1
j.bor~d ked gg minceit,
atiGUtl\' cup g r a (of: d
~. Pa chet!e -
111.i: tatiltspoons c h o p p ~ d
· ·~ (f:·Wa~ress) ~--(e~QJ:tneg / .. 14 l~pbc>n· salt
fresbly,.;. ground pepper
ta~· ,
.. N-'. ti0tb1._ ends of the
•• \ -.
,.
" ..
• " .
-you ~u.st change your ro~-tlon fl the cosmic bocties, 'the ·for duj1llcating d~ by feel
tine 1i>d diet to be in har-sun, moon, the planets atid ·.and.: ;r1 , !net, she .. s·.' d. She mony ..... the univert1e," she • w
Coni~e all .ingredients;
, •• ~l~ welt Set as.ide.
gredienls." wb1firung. or •e dtffle sa uce , Sher likes to make S®,ps, ~u :3 tab~··butter 'MUsHROOM EGGS NllTH MA.DEIRA FLAVORfNa ~ . . . . .. ' ..,.
decla:t "~aUed bra i p the stars. Their positlOns c8.n Jmtl, . '.h¥-SbaiKI', James L. art she earned lp ~ h el'~ ·;,~~-nour . .... .
food is n™-e ~Ult pr,aG.-affect people,. tbeir»-behavior1'. .Dilof1: ~lners in.their \Vasll-
tice ol -'Un thoSe'-foods thit how plants ptw aii1 every. _'ingtOri /Ulty company, have ~i:/'in~lJ~'l.:~i:,;'~~ funo; living thing.' B , "'° children ol 1be1r own, but
RELA ~ '8&.')'ENS 'icr ce~~ied 'U;' C:: all ~the earnings from her
mother's )louse. She and ~er ' • ·i eU~tnlWu-"
brdther: e1-football star Emy' SaU .~ to taste.
Plnckert, grew up in th.:..f10me 6 · 't88ieSpoonJ • g r a t e d ?' :German-Amctican. parent$ Parme~an cheese ·
m Santa Rosa and Los · I ' , bl · fl
.Versatjle : ·wine . Noted
• ; . I ' ' •'
f Ear~ly astrologers r~a~ mlc effect$ ori . 0yseen/ A>y !~~e ~~~1f~n,to c~il~ ood t9 e heavel'llli believing-reiitcwlng · ;lttel;n' m:im Long ~1 ~hat . I movements were • lslalld· Sound .Jt» a "JaboratOry ·(ten t'o 'Chlltlreh, tile. ·
1n som,:way related to the in Evamtt>rr, Ill'., ~ed· In '· "When l w•s .. in lt.aly, I earth,ly rheoomena that ruled darkened containers. "'I o"r 'didn't partlcularry 'like th,c f~nn1ng"' health and the ~ -nearly two weeka, the Oysters ~bicken .cacciatore.~ she said.
c1al oroer. ~fany of . their .ned and closed the J·t 1"l'm 'not mvch. 'OI one for
beliefs •e SI.Ill found In al-shells to the ·rb'Ythm ·of the 'highly seasooed· fpods, bu~ I
A getes She ften make hag" e ; Met outter ,. end m ou r, n · 0 s , stirring. Cook over low heat Pots of soqp to carry .lo ~-• few minutes. Add mi I k
valesclng friend~. ., • . cradually. add seasoning! to
She admittedly ls .,,_fiplSY Wte and four tablespoons
about the presentation or fOid • ..:cheese· cook until miooth and
Recipee ··rrom tJ:le COSD!lc ' thick, Stirring.
A !llcdium-dry Madeir:l '1s:a ' In a IWge frylna P,an. alowl)' Madelra and about% teaspoon
mosl versatile wlne;r it can be cook oruon In l tablespoon of -sail.
· h · ·r the butter !!lld 2 tablespoons (I[ rig t as an aper1ti • as a soup-U1e Madeira , s>lrring {re-
course accompanimen t, with a quently , unuJ onions arc light
!irst course, with dessert, or golden brown and slightly
Melt repialnlng 2 tables·
poons buttq Jn frying pan
over low heat, add egg mix·
tu.re, and cook eus. Hftlng
gently with a w.ide spatula as
they begin to set (do; not
stir). When eggs are barely
s~t. still mofst.J(J(Mdng on ~top,
serve:
cOQk folk>w : 1>.. •• Grease a Oat ba1dng dish -' after cfesscrt. crisp. (This will take at least
lt1USHROOM EGGS, 20 minutes.). manacs. t · ~-sh· , _,.,. 1 ·1anc1• · dia llk:e \he P.nne!loni. ·J malle "There;s a time for plant-es \Va ing ~ s s the filling with .Wt\at~er-I
ing and.411 lime for harvest-re. On the lSth d~, th~ have-around ," she aaid , ·
JE,\NE\ 00.0N'S with butter. Spoon few table-
BUTl'ERMIUt PANfAKFt spoons cheese sauce over the
1 cup all-purf)ose flour . , · bottom of baking pan. Lay
l't1ADEIRA Tum onions out of pan, salt
ing. Yoll~ave on ly to Consult . oysters · altered Ulei_r. ythm "P'•e'• ps' yc•c, as well , a>. lh teas~n baking soda 'I. stuffed noodles Catefully in
I large whlte onion, very lightly to taste and keep
thinly sliced warm. Melt 2 tablespoons but-the almanac for this kind of of .opening and closlhg to con· ~· •i advice,'"' Jeane said. A well f~ t'l the ~age of_ ~he !Ogle PISys -'an impar!anla~le
known al[=ac advises the !1190'1 over the IOcal meridian in developing recipisf' , !he
11,!J teasf!Oons bakloi powder baking dish, aPoon remaining
l tablespoon siigar ' sallct over all: Cover loosely
5 tablespool'l.'I butter ter in frying pan, add 2 tables-For supper : S,OOn
fanner, r example, to plant m Evanston. asserted. "We Joye buttennilt: I egg beaten with cover Oi 8lumlnum foil.
5 tablespoons Madeira poons more of the Madeira mushrooms over top ol ~.
and make a border· of the
onions; serye from J rying pan.
For flrllt t'OUl'Se : Spoon •w
onto warm plates, galnillh
with toast pointl\'~nd dicfate
with mushroOinS and dfiion
rings. Makes, J,' .,~ ...,...
ings or ; f~Aervl!>P·
Salt and the mushrooms: cook
t b th light of th coov• 4e y EAR' _ pancakes and t tn!ke them for ~ Y e 1 e ..., breakfast or .Sunday night sun.. 1...2 tabltM>oons mcl~ butter Bake In pretieated 3SO degree in 'pound small wh o I e quickly, stirring. u n t r 1
mushrooms or J a r g c r mushrooms are u·ghtly brown·
mushrooms cut into halve1 ed and liquid evaporates-. ..,
'or· quarters Turn mumrooms out of pan
2 tabletipoons finely chopped and keep warm. Beat eggs
moo!l, Thei-e Is Jess myatery when -t' (a t room temperature) F. oven ~t 20 minutes.
2/3 cup bu"ttermfik. ~ Sprinkle fetfi&ining chee!!e The effect or the moon on Jeane takes to the kitchen to per. I kept changing the rntlo
the tides Of '!llrth Is a v.·ell ii&Sirt her eulinary talents. of flour to bUttermilk until it
known scientific fict, Je(nt "ln! my cooking J'm like a seemed to make sense and ad-
said. "M u c h astrological piano player Who plays by ded just a ttttle baking soda to
thinking is bSled on the posi· ear." She has a great talent harmonize ay· the other ia-
Sift tOgctlfer flou r, bak.Jng ' over top of POOdles. Bake 10
soda, baking powder ud 'mini. lontU or until the sauce
1ugar. C.Ombkie eg1, but~r k nicely biowDed and bUbbly.
and buttermilk; add to the ?y Serves &.
fresh parsley slightly to blend with parsley,
• 4 egp 'the re~ng 1 tablespoa11
• -.
En ticing Adver1.tisements, Ba:r§ai hs. Often . ·Big _'Come . ~
' . ~ROTHY WENCK ..., .• ,... ... hamburPr or ..atew meal A hi.ridquarter
c..tY ..._ ¥,¥1.w H ~ N ' ' d v • )'lelda mOre steaka and roasts and will
Have YOU Ileen !<Jnpled lo in-ome • ews Qfl fews cost 15 to 2!,ceots mqre per pound Utan a
vetitlgate a good-to-be-true bargain • • . . loreqtl. uartet •• f;.htcti»c0
1
n ts. ins rewe, r' tender arter ~ n enUcinc ldvertisement *u
such as "Sfde of beef -Jull 39 cents,• else, with a much mianer cut11.,,. ioss'. • illabl~ deal and old ng like a pound -IeaS j.than you PIY for ham· u"• re ers, · •v 1 1 4. Buying!a aide or quarter of beef is a
burger." . STORY CONTINUES .pia,ue lhe freezer-rout dealer who -'btg investment. Uthe meat turns out to
This: happen<;tl to an qpe,rienced, well Bvt ~he 1tory doesn't eM ~rt. Upon advertises prices YOU know are not )e poor qualµy you're stuck with a lot of
lnfonned ,couih redefl01: They had Jlictinl•P _...,IBJtlt.tlte~1 ~·.~™~.--< ~--i.: ... --~'--~ing."oDl-,Jay-io&~reor'quiµfy
bought meat for tb~r !""""" oo reverat bloody ~... wllirll llai tb•ioulY< · _., crs · • . ~ . "'"· b SD occaslom' from a reliable delfet. n.ey • ttl)Od ~·a Mi d!Q,t~ "8Jlrl; ~·~ENA ··, ,. ,., ~ ·:. .~ii &o/!"!1' y USDA grade. U A
knew ~t glades, culUnK Joss aJfd . fl."-1M7 -·1,..en. 6"' 1Pfii!'i6ffi· · "lree\ilirblllld'J!><oe ·I•, ~bOil~buy~ .gra~ ellolcc!:)"Jll be the most tender ~lid
yields. Anet they kne" that a ·sldo of ·~-w~•f ~ jltNj , .. ·-u , ..... ohe · ID¥,I for Yoyr freezer< "" · • II yoolr l!!;ot ~ lor freezing.
selling tor at ctnts a poti(!d--muat 6e • · liW ~ ,..,_ ~ ~ "'akl !,roni Uie . 1'i)'ou Usuiillr. do iot save money when · ~,, ·~ , · ' com~~"bd" advettisomait. · lolo IMI~ )ilil ~ho prtvlolt -.a1 "1uf1hii..e1 by ljle ild~or~ COii\· SUEn'IONS~ ARE ASKED •
lo rupture, due to formation of Ice
crystals.
It might be more re¥sible for you to
have a Iarae meat purchase blast frozen
by ~. commerc~l free¥Pg . .-com~y.
rather than to freeze it yourself.
Howevet, limaller an:iountJ of ·meat -1
to 3 powx1I ptr aiblc root ol freeze,r
capacity -.can ~ .d~ ~f. efficfCnUy
at home. Set yop:r: frieaer lit it.!I lowest t~pei'hturc• -ft'' should be about -10
de~s. Don't overload' the. freezer with
wirfoien food as this slowe down the
freeiin,g unle . •
And ~wing 111this,11\ey couiaA~ '-tM~·'9"'f ' '. ·· .. 1 ; ', · ~,lj> ,mat Y~,-'kl .m.,191'rlll<lie> q. S-:illiei· .. 11eo 11ea1<1 or routs
N!Sist g lo Ille ir-er meot dftlet '-' .~t lhlr. Ji<llitt the· e, ,~ Oiu. wfie"t sold i 0•. oped'!. a~ lhe '"' oa~)it-!t< lo boy i quanUly Old· .Q.'We',. cOnfuJ<d by Ille dllft,..t :'~a~tb .:;i::~.~-:-.:U f~ =C~ 11;,.~ ~."Jrort k•~, ~~ro·rk~~ed ~Pti°"'' Pe < ik;J· Ii ,.. ~-. flinds told •• 111at: .-'•~Im• m•de. by fr«<er meat .r.11<rs.
their e-nco~ lmo'l'.f>nt th<!' 8'* hadatgnoo no 1iist'1ilm~ l'qlita , whlctt' mis~g'becnl1'e:• jb~.qtiarter oi .... fl • c! :P 11-, becau1< olir "<Jil< ma•'~•• • Pri"' consld<ra,bly
ed ups fOl'a •Ide of.bed p!ul W\)Uld haye,~.rnucb, ""¥'f ,al(flc:ult to. , ~fit SCll~ ~~ ill•'1i~· ~1111"'"4 . 1 ....... fM ~ eo""1 .to,lreeu 111e~ .111per 11\8-' 117 ?tber but said.If •wls a
Join, st~ • cnu:r~. . . """"''· H!llldtnl , tlley refiol'{<d tblJ · __ not Jri<\lude"tbe "C'111inf Llou'.' .~ .. i, ..U ltve7 ' , flelf<r dnl,fieOlase be .. kl onl)' Vteld
Yes, 1" 1(lcilml·OI "~I and iNefy operator.lo bOth the Or11141c Coun-(bones, fs~ wlSle) which averages '5 A. It 11 ,lr\leothat meat that Is f~ Gncle I ..... ~ lled O!lly !O perceot · .. I·
switch" • s1111. Tiil 3t'oents ~·JIOWlll 1, 1Y 'Beller Business '.Bureau anti the percenl Add ooe-lourth tnore lo the <111lckly will be '°Iler quality, particul•i· !lo.Ii loo• iD•,lead of . 10 percent 'thot
beef wa illcb P!t»r aaalll)' lb.at lio ...e ..consumer F"ud Dlvi$1on of the Orange q~ot-1 price for a more reaU.Uc r'1<:• Jy moro juicy, than meat that Is f....,0 •Oiiier dealer ba6. Doe1 WI oouad
would Wint 10· eat lt.'llut 19' cent lletf, Coun ty District Att6rni'y's office. .' ' P<T !!OOnd· ~. .' ~ ;' " · alowly. This Is beceu;. q11lck fretllng .,...Ible?-'
ela1med the supersalesman, was far bet-The lVho\e point or thL'! 8lO!'Y Is to 3. A side or quart.er of beef Is not all allow11 cells In the meat fiben to re1nain A. Yet. this could be possible. USDA
tcr than beef you would buy aey~·hcrt tmph3Slze the importance or buylfla Crom &leaks and roNta! At least a lh.lrd will be whole, while slower lreeilng causes Ulem has live Yield Grades wiU1in srade cholco
~-----------
which measure the yield of \oneless,
closely trimmed retail cuts fl'\Wit a liven
carcass. These are wbolesa,._ 1rades
which the consumer does not. see at the
retail market. '
Yield' Grade 1 will yield 79.8 percent or
more in retail cuta; Yiel4 Grade a -75.2
to 7J,7 percent: Yield cfrade s..-7,D,I to
75'.1 percent: Yield G:iaet -... at '1'0.5
percent and Yield Grade 5-&r.1 ~t
or less. So you see there ii a JS ~t
difference between lhe. loweat and bllbat
yield grades.
Q. We bought • side or bttf and ·Wn:
ahtned at aD ,lbt bamburaer we 1~'J'h
b1mbaiger tasted pod ~ , ..... , few
m.ontbs bat recently rt•1 'been &Mu.a
awful. Co11ld thty bve stvea 11 ,_.
poor quilt)' b1mbvger la allll"9 to
U.at from our .ide of beef?
A. It'• posstble that ·OU,. ha~ But
It'• more Ukely· lhat the h8n!liU!ll"lw
been in yocir free:ier too long 'Ma tbt fat
has become rancid with age. lt'a IWJ lllt
.to eat, but not as tasty.
--1.
I
l
I
'
:U DAllY '11.0T '
Arrowhead
,
Wedding Trip . lawn R~kit
Ne.wport Bea~h Couple
Take Marriage Vows \·
Afternoon Rites 'Read '
At 111 ~ cer....., In
Comm u a 11.J PnlbJtarl,an
Cbmdl. 1--
Judllh Elllat -ol Balboa IJlaod became the
bride of Mlchad Xenneth
ilrboch ol Colla -
I
MRS. JOHN ROBERT VIALL
Morning Nupti1l1
We dd ings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories \\1ith black and white glossy pbo~
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart·
1ne nt prior to or within one week after the
IYCdding.
l'or engagement announcements it is
suggested tfiit the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be
submi tted early. If the betrothal announce·
ment and wedding date are six weeks or less
apart. only the wedding photo will be ac-
cepted.
To help fill requirements on both \red·
ding and engagement stories, forms are a~·ail
able in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by Social
Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466.
June Bells Ring
Double ring nuptials tn Christ Church by tbe See
united. in marriage Virginia Lee Noga and Robert
Bruce Bennett Ill. The Rev. Davi d Di Profio per-
formed the riles tor the daughter of the Be rnard C.
Nogaa al GUI, Ma'5. and the son .ol the Robert Bruce
Bennelll o! Costa Mesa. The bn de attended Boston
College and UCI and her hu sband is enroll ed at Cali-
fornia State College al Fullerton.
Our La4y Queen ol Angels
Church WU Ule mornin& set-
ting for lbe wedding of
Brownie Sue Brown and Jo.'m
RdJerl Viall, both ol N"1'0ft
Beach.
, The Rn. \Vllllam llolph
Ha""1 olllclaled •t ttie -
ble ring cemnoo.y for the
dioghteT ol Mr. and Mn.
Warren A. Brown and son of
Mr. and Mn. Jobn \llall, 1111 of
Ne•'PQli Be.ch.
... ,M _ __,,,.
,Glveo Jo· mairllge by ber ~ or;
falhe:r, Ibo bride wore a full ·;., l~
skirted floor lenatb gown of .~ .. , •.~
Engfisb Dd and puu d'ange t
lece embroidered with ~ced
pearls. which swept into a
princess train. 1be b:idlce
ftatured a mandarin
1
collar .. -.-·~"""""...,,. and bell sleeves, trimmed with
satin bows.
A shoulder Jeng..h illusion
veil was c.aughl to a matching
MRS. LARRY FRANKLIN BROOKINS
Chapel Woddi ..
lace headpiece and f u I I
cathedral length train vei l.
She canied a cascade of while
roses and baby's breath.
Malron of honor Mrs. Rudy
Malik of Cosb Mesa wore a
full length apple grttn gown in
empire style with a ruffled
boat neckline. Her flowers
y·ere a cascade of carnations
tnd baby's breath.
Carrying simi lar colonial
bouquet! a n d wearing iden-
tically styled goWN in pl n k
were bridesmaids S a 11 y
1'1artindale of Newport Beach
a n d Irene Holman of H~
Unit.on Beach.
Pair Exchange
Pledges, Rings
In St . Andrew 's
Pre s byterian Chapel,
decorated with white daisies
and summer flowers, Patricia
Margaret Me"r exchanged
wedding VO\\<S with Larry
Franklin Brookins belore the
Rev. Dr. Cbar.1.•s H. Diereo·
field.
The bride was given in mar-
riage by her father for the
double ring ceremony o:t·
tended by members of the ii n-
mediate famlJics
'Ille daughter of f\t rs .
short sleeves '!lnd A·linl!' skirt.
Her cap was ol pink :.ll!~ies
and sbl!' also ca1·ried a co!on'.cl
nmeaay of pale pink eleg11..nce
carnalloos.
The bridegroom, son of ?-Ir.
and Mrs. Frank1in Wllson
Brookins cX Lona: Beach, asked
Leo Allen Battle· of Bellflcw\!t
to serve as best man.
The Rev. ~ Dallu Turner = f:"the ~rinJ
Lawrence E. nr-rt Santa
Ana and Mrs, --ol Santa Ana. The bridegl1lom II
the ... of ldn. 51e,. Tvpallu
• Balboo l!land and the We
Harry K. Orboch.
Escorted on her {au.r's
arm , the bride wore a Door
length empire style gowo ol
white organza trimmed with
blue ribbons and vmile lace.
A htadpitte of blue flowers
caught her short Uered veil of
illusion and wlPte daisies.
strawflowers and brhekt'a
buttons made up her bodquet.
\V earing full length blue and
white gowns of empire sty)e
and carrying bouquets of
daislea trimmed witb blue ril>
bons were the bridal .at.
tendants Mrs. Charles Cam>D
or San Clemente. a.nd tbe
Misses Carol Grinder o f ~
Irvine, Saodi Mord of Palm
Springs and Jennller lllapir9
olLagunaBeoch.
Kort Orbach of Balboa
hland was best m:ii for his
brother. while Denn Is
Campbell ol Newport Beach,
Jeff Jarvis or Laguna Beach
and Jobn -Jr. of lnlne y.·ere usbus.
Appn!Dmaldy 150 guests
attended the ftdding rece~
tion on the church lawn.
Amonl those pttSeDl were the
bride's grandmother, Mrs.
lfeleo -ol Santa Ana, and the grandmother ol tbe
bridegroom. Mn. M.a tl lda
Orbich ol c.r-dd Mar.
The bride WU grJduated
from Newport Harbor IUlh
Scbool and Orange Cout College. Sbe plans' to furlher
her educatlou as an mt major
at California Stale ColJep at
~ .
• " ,
MRS. MICHAEL KENNETH ORBACH
La9una Nupti4l1 ' J
Fullerton.
The benedict Is a graduate
or Corona del Mar Hlgh School
and UCI, where he receive4 a
BS degree Jn economics. He
shortly will enter officer's
candidate school for the U.S.
Coast Guard.
Following an extensive trip
:iround the United States, in-
cluding visits to New OrleanJ,
Florida, New York 1 n d
Canada, the couple wlll make
their home in Costa Mesa.
Bruce Brown, brother of the
bride, wu best man, wbJJe
James Viall, the bridegroom 's
brother headed the ushen.
Also seaUng guestl wen Don
Sutherland of Wesbnbuter;
Greg D r y de n, Huntlngton
Beach; Nat Brown, Newport
Beach, illd Malilt.
Appro!1m.ately 120 guests
attended the receptioa follow-
ing the cemnooy at 'Ille
Bluffs, where Mn. Jack
Barcus of Newport Beach al-
"'1ded the guest book.
Margaret Jones ~1eier of
Newport Beacn and Frank B.
Meier Jr. of Costa Mesa wore
a street length white lace
sheath drea with a long sleev-
ed coat of i.llored lace. A
3hort \'ell trimmed her halo
hat of wbite st.:aw, and she
carried a colnoi.ll nosegay of
pale pink and white elegance
c.amatioos, white stepbaoolis
and baby's breath.
For a family luncheon
reeeptlon at the Stull Shirt
following the ceremony, the
table centerpiece f e a t u r c d
summer f I o w e r s including
pink and white elegance
carnations, while and pink
sweet peas, rosebuds ;.nd
stephanotis.
June Wedding Told
The bride, a graduate of
Newport llarW High Schoo~
attends Orana:e Cout Colleae.
Her new husband w a 1
graduated from lllarina lflib
School.
Fol.lowing a trip lo Lake Ar·
l'OWbead, tbe couple plan to
reside in Costa Mesa.
Kathleen Meier was maid of
honor for her !!.!fer, wearing a
pale pink street lengtli dress
or organdy Ofer taffeta with
The bride WU graduated
from N"'J>Ort llarW lllgh
School and atl<nded Orange
Coat.t ColJtCe. Htr l1tW' hus-
band ls a graduate of Millikan
High School la Long Beach
and alt<nded Long Beach Clly
College. He received a
diploma from Ft. Belvoir
E•gineeriDI School.
Tbe couple plan to make
their home in Torraoce.
First Baptist Church
Setting for Ceremo11y
A double ring ceremony in
the First Baptist Church oJ
Midway City united In mar-
riage Kathleen B e a t r I c e
Henderson, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Homer C. Henderson
of Huntington Beach, and
James Ray Hathorn, son of
Mr. and Mrs. James B.
Hathorn of Shreveport, La.
For her wedding, at which
the Rev. Harold H. Coble of·
ficiated, the bride wore a
gown of white sllk orgall18
over satin featuring a
longsleeved bodice covered
with appliqued lace and seed
pearl.I.
A cathedral !rain was a~
tached with app\iqued lace at
the shoulders and h e r
cathedra l lengt:t veil was
ca1:3:'t by a nosegay of
orgnnia rosebuds. She carried
a bouquet of v.·hit.e roses as
she \¥as escorted down the
:iir.le on her father's ann.
Mrs. Frank Bennett, matron
of honor, wore a noor leqth
gown of deep plnk crepe. A
headpiece of pint roeebuds
held her matchina: short pink
vell, and ahe carried a bouquet
of pink carnations.
Bennett served 81 belt man
for the bridegroom, and Davkl
Henderson, the b r I d e ' a
brolhtr, ushered.
A reception took place in the
garden of the Hendenoo
residence, where white tables
were placed beneath a areen
and white canopy decarated
with white wedding bell1 and
white spr1y1 of flowen. 'n1e
bride's cousin, Llz.a D'Aurin,
took charge of lhe guest book
11 nd Betty D'Aurin, Dorl!
t~ischcr and Glenda Wholley
MRS. JAMES RAY HATHORN
R•1lde1 In Loulsl•rui
served 1t the punch bowl and -------------------
burfel tables.
The bride is a graduate of
fliarlna High School and I t·
ttnded Golden West College . A
graduate of Perryton Jllgh
School in Te1as, t h e
bridegroom attended Colorado
State UnivtnJty and Louisiana
Polytechnic InsUtute. He allfl
hu served with the UnlteJ
States ~iarlDe Corps.
Following a btie( wedding
trip, the couple wlll make
their home In Algien, LI.
Betrothal
~tr. and Mn. Jay Waumuth
of Colla Mesa have announced
the mgagement of t b e I r
daughter, Jayde Waasmutb to
Darrell Hancock 0: Huntington
Beach.
~Jlss Wassmulh Is 1
graduate o f Downingtown
Revealed
High School, Penlll)'lvanla and
attended Or1n&e C o a s t
COll.ge.
Her flance, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wade Hancock of Pico
Rivera, ls a graduate of El
Rancho Hlgh School and serv-
ed for four years with U.S. Air
Force.
Newlyweds • Mexico
Slollnl for their leacber'1
,.-. were e1lht Madrigall
from Foothill H1gb School,
when Judy Heaton ol Balboo
Ja&ind became the -ol .
Craig Alu Weightman rt 1-Beach.
'1\e couple achanged vows
and rinp before the Rev. Dr.
Karl Christ in T u s t I n
Pmbylerian Church. Their
parents are Mrs. J a m e s
Heaton Jr. of Los Aogelea: and
the late Mr. Heaton and
Herbert G. Welghbnan of
Hollywood and ldn. Clintoo B.
Cary of Pasadeoa.
Given in marrlagt by htr
-er, James H..ton 11~ the
bride •ore a gown of AU5trtan
lace with rote motifs in long
vertical rows. A fabric bow
caughl her long train, and she
carried a oosegay of white
roses and baby's bre&lh.
Pink embroidered "'i"""
over taffeta gowns 3 n d
nosegays of pink and white
daisies and carnations were
aelected for her entmrace.
Maid of honor was Marylou
Gougeon of Tustin, a n d
bridesmaids were M r s •
Marlborough S. Nichols II of
Mission Viejo, Mrs. Nonnan
Varnen of Encino and Miss
Anita Elduayeo ol Lo 1
Angeles, the bride's cousln.
Attending as best man was
Douglas R o drigues of
Camarillo, and serving as
ushers wtre N e 11 S.
WellOltman, the brldeJ!l'OCl11'' brotlior, Fred Wood of
PboeniX and Nichols.
A n<epl1oo follow<d In
Irvine Coast Country Club,
and assisUng were Joyce
RudbeTK and Diane Hardison
of Dallas.
Aller 1-Jmoooinl I n
Puerta Va ll a rt a, the
newlyweds wtll reside Ill
MRS. CRAIG WEIGHTMAN
Tht Former Judy Heaton
Newport Shores.
Tbe bride is a graUu~tc of
the University of Southt m
Califomla where she earned
her secondary t e a c h i n g
credential.
Her husband a t te n ded
Oregon State University where
he affiliated with Delta Oil
and ts a graduate of San Jose
State College where he ma-
jored in industrial englnee~:
Engagement Disclosed
During Dinner Party
Navy Cmdr. K.. W. Carlton
of Mlsaloo Viejo, chaplain at
U.S. Marine ColJll Afr Station,
El Toro, and his wife hive an-
nounced the eneagement ol
their daughter, Karin Rhea
Carl-. to Jooeplt Qiarlts
HewtU.
The betrothal WU dilcloled
duriDI I IUrprUe buffet dilmlr
for Ill close lrlendl and
r.i.Uves from Laauna Hllls,
Long Beach •nd Anaheim
which the Carbool bolted la
the~ borne.
The bridegroom, ""' ol Mr' and h1rs. J. L. Heweu or
aiehalls. Wuh.. new to
California for the wttkeod to
be present for Lb e an·
nounttment.
Lutheran Chureh of the
Crou, Lquna Hllls, will be
the set.uni ror the wedainq
which Will take place Sept. IZ.
Miu Carlson, and her flance
both are. graduates of W. ~,,
West High School in C.'hthalis.
The bridH:lect a t l e n d e d
University of Pu&<l Sound,
Tacoma, where she aUlli.ated
wUb Kappa Alpha nie:ta soror-'·
lty and served u pledge class
~ She also was a
member rl Spur1, IQPbomore
women'• hooorary . Presently
she: ls a junlor nisjoring ln
Ena!lsh at UCLA. .., Cl"I ,._.
KARI N CARLSON •
S1pttmbtr Rlt11 ~
lft'ftlt attended Unive rsit)'
of WUhioatoa and w 11
grldulted from Wa:;hlngton
State University where he ar-
fillaled with Kappa Sigma
fraternity. A hittol')' major, he
WU ICUvt ll! a D in-
ter<ollqlale Knight a n d
played rugby and fl'tllualn
baseball. He wu the reclplenl
of his fraternlly·s Junior Man-
of-lhe-year award.
h
"S
Wf y,
sa
3
lh
F
D<
B'
Cc
pr
in
la
' l -~------__ · _; ~ ~---------~-J ____ . ____ 1 -----------------~~---\-..a....__;,
------------------------------------------~---------·--------------------------------....----.. --
Air Moms
Lift Off .. ~~
r • ~ •
New Plans • . " BUly aummer plans and an
overvMw of past eve:nll will be'
on lhe age:nda wbe:n U.S. Alt
, Force Mothers, Flight 12.
. meet tomorrow at 7:• p.m. ln
California Federal bulldlRa; ..
Mrs. Walter Hurtado will' ~Jwtjlde and tt:U of the quarttr~· ~ly president's I u n. c h 9 on
• meeting she atteoded ·. whh 'Mrs. Forrest OIH' a\1 r ,.
treasurer of tht group, _
• Uppennost on the club's
qlendar will be plans for en--
try In the Huntington Beach
Fourth of July Parade ard
;· parth::lpat!On in Santa Ana 's
• 'CeoteMlal In October.
' Participants in t h e Costa
Mesa Fish Fry parade in-
cluded Kay Hemmer, sign
bearer, along wllh Mrs.
ijurtado and other members
from Flight 12 and Flight 19.
Ail mothers of Air Force
personnel are Invited to aUend
the group's meetings.
DAILY I'll.OT
library Hour
Costa Mesa Library Is the
scene Of a library story hour
every Thursday at 10:30 a.m •
BLdSSOM TIME -Summer. benefit luncheon planners for Col. Wi1liam Cabell
Chapter, OaughJefs of the AmeMCa'n Re"'.olution, are tlef~ to right) the "Mme.!I.
S. R. Nord Jr., George 0. Buccola and William D. Rabbitt. The salad luncheon
will take place June 20 in the Balboa hom'e of Mrs. Earl G. Corkett.
••
)1,, =
Happiness Is Having a Birthday Party -usnoopy," "Peanuts" and their cartoon friends will
welC<lme members and guests when the Fountain
Valley \Voman 's Club celebrates its fifth anniver-
sary during a luncheon birthday between noon and
3 p.m. tomorrow, in the Villa Sweden restaurant,
lluntington Beach. Making preparations are (left
to right) Amanda Ryder, RiChard Stev.1n and
Dawn Giesing, children of members. Past presi-
dents and five-year members will be honored along
1A·ith Mrs. James McCalla and Mrs. Williafn Chen-
ney, Orange District president and vice president.
Mrs. Vance Derington is in charge of 1uncheon.
Teachers
For Tots
Rewarded
A variety or a·wards will be
made when members or the
Orange County Association for
the Eduation of Y o u n g
Children host their annual
banquet tomorrow at 7 p.m. in
Grand Avenue Un It e d
Methodist Church of Santa
Ana.
Teachers who have com-
pleted requirements at Orange
Coast College and Fullerton
Junior College will receive
nursery educaticin certilicates
and annual scholarship reci-
pients will be announced.
Benefit to · Bloom
For DAR Luncheon
The Balboa bay front home
of l\1rs. Earl G. Corkett will
be the setting when Col. Wil·
liam Cabell Chapter, Daugh-
ters· of the American Revolu-
tion offer their aMual salad
luncheon Friday June 20.
Ptfrs. John A. Hopwood will
arrange a <lisplay of DAR Na-
tional Defense material, while
Mrs. Gary L. Myers will be
in charge or patriotic station·
ery and flag pins offer~d for
sale along with the group's
Keepsake Cookbook. Je"·elry,
glassware and assorted items
will be available at a golden
elephant table.
Welcoming hostesses for the
tvent. to last from 11 :30 a.m.
to 1:30 p.m., include Mrs.
Selah M. Reber, regent,
Mrs. George BucCQla, state as·
sistant recording secretary
and the Mmes. John A. HoJ>-
wood. Guy Holmes Cherry, M.
VI'. Martin, Hart D. Hickman.
Robert A Speed, Edward W.
Crumley, Dwight M. Roberts,
Edgar M. Cox Jr., Clifford M.
Estee, C. E. Stovall, Neil V.
Willlams, William D. Rabbitt
and S. R. Nord Jr. I
AsslsUng will be members of
the Henry Bowen Chapter,
Children of the American Rev-
olution under the direction of
~fn. Bruno D. Norman.
Proceeds from the yearly
event will support American
history award.!I in the elemen-
tary schools, DAR good citl·
1.en awards and girl home-
maker awards. as W1!\1 a! the
purchase of American na,::s
and history books for schools
and libraries.
Corona de/ Mar Home
Vows, Rings Exchanged
Home in Corona del Mar Special guests attending
Now
Open
EVENINGS
and
SUNDAYS
54LONS
70 Fashion ls!anCI, Newport Center, 6#21 Sr:
95 Town & Country, Orange, 5~1-6641
Floral Theme 'f>,Janted'
Children 's folk songs will be
performed .by recording artist
Mrs. Nancy Raven. Those
wishing to attend the banquet
may call Mrs. Roger Hertzog,
association president, 546-3244.
following a Palm Springs were Mrs. W. P. Wilkin.son,
honeymoon ·arc Richard W. the bridegroom's ·grandmoth·
Wilkinson and his bride, the er and Mrs. Grace Heil, his
former Dianne Buck Flory .wife's grandmother. 1:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r who exchanged vows and Alter a reception Jn the
rings before""the Rev. William Newporter Inn, the newly-
Eller in the Lutheran Church weds left on their honeymoon
of 'the Master. trip. The new Mrs. "Wilkinson
De coration planners for Western Slate .University College of Law's annual Baby
Bar Ball are (left to right) Mrs. James T. Slack of Orange, president of Orange
County Lawyers Wives club, and Mrs. J. Ronald McCain of Huntington Beach.
president of Law Wives of Weste!'n State University. The dance next Friday
in the Santa Ana Elks Club will celebrate completio.n of California first year
law students examinations.
. I
2325 Ea•l Coast Highway
Corona dcl J\lar
673-8267
"BISTRO" or "BISTROT"
Spelled either w1y;
A Blttto ls a warm, COTigtnlal place whe re one dines and wines
A Bislro is something dllterent -not 01lentaliou1, but elegant
without pretense ,
A Bistro is del igned with love ind eare -its cub lne, wines
and b9verage1 an prepared and served with Jovin& care and 11lill
It'•• place where Good fo'ood and Good Drinks are lht 113tls In fact
Jt'1 1 place where Respectability hu 1o &hart 1 ital with love
and Wlderstandina:
Ladlt1 go there to mfft their dreams. Gasltonomu go there
lo be inili1ted lo U.e' Specialties de la •taison. Wine con-
not1seurs 10 there to Imbibe and 1avor fine wlntt. Lovers
all, find Lt Bistro lei leur1 Chateau d'Amour,
Bidroa are becomin& rare -the be1t ones. many world r&-
nowned are In Paris -CHARLES BISTRO will be the fiisl one of ilJ kind in Corona de! ~lar.
PRE VUE
June 18th thru JWle 30th
DINNERS EXTRAORDINARE
Wednesdays thrn Saurday from 5:30 P.M.
Sunday Dinner from Two P.M.
Sunday Brunch lnteniationalc from 10 A.l'tl.
Evening Wear
Elegant fabrics play a part
In at-home evening wear -for
him. · ·
Consider: royal blue nared
slacks of velvet wom with
a blue and white silk shirt and
matching silk scarf. Brocades
also make the man
fashionable.
Attending the couple were attended San Bernardino High
Mrs. Richard Green as ma· School and San Bernardino
tron of. honor-; Tim o th Y Valley College, while her hus-
Thomu, best man;· William band was educated at Char-
League and Gerald Soehlke, latte High School and di e
ushers, and Mark Flory, aco-'niversity of Ptfichlgan.
lyte. -----~~--
Parents of the bridal couple
are Mrs. Gladys Wilkinson o(
Charlotte, Mich., the late Mr.
Wilkinson and Mrs. Lucille
. Buck of Glendale.
GRADUATE TO OMEGA
The Daily Pilot
Covers Boating
From top: In while or yellow 14 karat go ld lilied, $87.50.
Fourteen karat in while or yellow gold, $230.00.
Textured design in gold filled, $87 .50
SLA...VICK'S
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -644· 1380
•• Ytwr c",.. Acc....,. "'"""" -•-•mttlc•f"f, Mttter C!Yrtt• "' •
Optn Mondey, Frid ty until •:lO p.m.
LQQK
AT YOUR SERVICE FOR A ) '
NEW YOU!
A 111w -ncltin9 YOU, from your Yl ry f!tsf visit te eut
Wi9 & l11utv S1lon. Yo11r f1vorlt1 wig -or 'rOUf own cr11w11~
in9 9lory -ttch 111p1rbly 1tyl1d by 1p1ci1li1h -th1 fi11t1f
In their f.eld!
, Drop in, viii! 011r thop -vou'U lo•• the ,..;a, 1eltclion -ind
modern f1 ciliti11, 111 ~1y1cl to 111h1nc1 your 1pp11r1nc1,
.. ---WIG LETS·--..
3'5 6'5
1Vr -. 21/r -.
..,.. __ FALl.s __ ...,.
..... ,, ... , ... Wit ...
26'5 36'5 4995
..---WIGS---..
:.~ ············· ............... , ·····
H .... TIM •••••••.••• , ••••• ,, ••••• , •• ,,,
29" 59'5 == . .. .. .. .. .. . . . . .. . . .. .. .. ......... 6495 .......
H-4 M ... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 15000
20000 . ............. -.......... .
CLEANIN~TYLING-REPAIRING--SIZING
mallie ~
WIG & BEAUTY SALON
250.0 East 17th StrMt
MILL&JIEN SQUAJIE
COSTA MW, CALlfOlNIA
' I
Early Bird Uses the Noo~le
DEAR AllJI LANDEllS: I'm a ,_..
oldmdftlind.IAlllopatfew..-la
,... ... priUf -. Ina P"'Ple -
..... loll nlPt -.,.. .... .,..
_, ofml ........ I bope you'D prb&..
ANN LANDERS [fl
MOST BEAUTIFUL BONNETS -Cboren as wil>-
nen in the parade of lloweT-l>ededed boonet.s wllicb
toot p'3ce during the llDDWll Hau in Bloom lunch-
eon ol. the Udo Isle \.\'oman·s Club were the Mmes.
Lewis Byingtoo, E. ll<><gan Quinn and Martin
Lockney (front row, left to right), and Mmes. Mel-
vin A. Ricl!ley Sr., E. T<mlllCe Moran and Jol!n
WUson (back row from left).
.., -· ........ it...,, -cnzy.
It J!JiPI DOI -lo< He)'ilody but it
-• pum al.I me md 1111 dodor uid
II Im -,... .. 1111' life.
1...i-1t'al!lt_,.._
but -,... ... tlm ........ ,,., -is to I**: In ....... Ilic .......... bun
up die -dJdnc lbe Uy ..... lo
.... " ol&IJl ... lilllt -1 ..,. newr-nmda ol. a breakfast eater,
la fad I bad tlJe -1-\ eat moch
la die mamfag. I mod lo lfAb • cup cl
cdfflt an:t a piece al tout on. the nm.
I dac:idod loll)' lbe .... .-...i it
-oaOn.YalenlaJllQ'-
........ cl• Iara< p.. cl ....... juloe.
'-a pll&e al. spspetti and meat ball&. a ba!f
plat al. ice cram oa a slab cl cba1'} pie. Of couno 1111<r tlm I _, eat moch
-<r dinoer. A l;pt mack msfied -U P"'Pie say to -'"tbot'1 DOI l<r
me. I ... , ... la !ho -.Jnc," t.n
tlJem, Ibey an ii Ibey really wet lo. I
tnM-heca11e i•m doing it.. -
STREAMLlllED AT •
DEAll sntz.UIUll."BD: I cm\ ..... _,__ .. !_\,_
Dysons Honored
_,__, ...... _ ... ,... ..tr __ .. _,..... .... _
... -ti --..... l!Jlioc
t I ----..... die: wl&dtfll .,. ti. ,.,_, ti .......
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm ll!ld at
myoell. asbanwt, dllcJ!sted and upoel.
Can JOU help me?
I'm 11, a girl and the WOfld 11 worst
crybaby. U I go< bnlod out by a teacbtr
I cry. If my le.am kJles I cry, If
•••~y Jells at somebody else I feel
....., ltr the ponon ¢ting yellod al and
I t:ry. It '""'1dn\ be so bad H I cried In
print. bot I doa'l I ay rigbl iJJ froJJ! al
nd)bodJ. A.ad it sbnrl fOI' an hour
aim·. MJ eyes get rod and ....ii.o. One<
a friend came up lo me and uked il
_, bad --1 hale m,.tf for being 10 !ltnlitive. Is
there .. solution to this probiem or am I
going to swim in tears for the rest of my
life? -DAMP HANKIES
DEAR DAMP llANJ(, A«ept t1oo !Id
LILll JGa'rt • a1er ... ya'D •• ,.. be
w. ll'• part o( your emot6-•' paden,
.._,. the lid, too, tJJal 11111•1 Ill .....
Cr)'bl1 ii a be1ldly way 1-releve
&tntloL People •t.. can't cry an la
tettou u.uble. 8-your laablUly to
Mid back u.e waterworks ll em-
barrl.ubac. tlC'lllt )'OW'Mll prompdy
wbta you. feel tbe kan: eom1JJ1 -ud
111,,.-, yORt cry lA prlvak.
CONFIDENTIAL TO WHAT JIAP.
PEi~EO TO MR. D: I thlnk D llandl lor
Detergent. He worked fut and ldt no
ring. Contact the Florence Crlt1enlon
Home in Toledo.
U1t1W'e of yourlflf on datt1? Wbt's
ript? What'• wroog? SboWd. JOU?
ShollldJl't you? Stnd for Au Loden'
booklet "Dallng: Doi and Dft'&I," ucb-
ing: with )'OW' reqaest 35 ceatl ta cob and
a Joni, seU-addre1ttd, 1tamped eavelope.
Ann Lande" Mil be glad to lw:lp you
..Uh your problem•. Send diem to Hr In
care of the DAILY PILOT, eacltliD& a
stamped, seU·addre11ed ravelope,
Selected Six Winners
In Floral Hat
Horo scope Golden Years Feted
Show Displays
Sea and Sh ips
Of Californ ia
The grttn thumbs of Lido
~le residuts were t"\'ldtru.
ounng the annual HalS in
Bloom luncbtoo o( \be Udo
Is.lie \\' oman • ! Club which loot:
place in the na.·er-bedttked
clubhouse.
Ac=dlllg to lladition, club
members create hats using:
fresh fknroen from Lido l5le
gardens, and the headpieces
are judged with the mo5t
beautiful most original and
most hw:norous seltct.ed.
Si:r bats """'"' chosra for honors. 111·0 m each cat~·.
ln the ··most beautiful"'
STEWARDE SS
Lind.a HoffrMn
Far Flung
Hor izons
Ach ieved
Parade
ca~gory. a yellavr daisy crea-
tion •·om by ~In. Mart.in
l...ockney and a cap Of blue
hydrangeas: designed by Mrs.
c..ris Byin&tm -top
honors.
Tbc ;nmt humorous"' bats
11·ere worn by Mrs. John
Wi1'on. who sported a water·
ing can filled with daWes aod
~ with • bwnblehtt. and
I.in. E. Terranct Moran.
~ bonmt was a huge
gTttTI lhnnb enbancrd with
matching blooms.
Judged tho ··.-original''
~ere a tall hat al shtiet mWik
"'1b """ a1. -.... r.mnc
tht lOI\ worn by Mn. £...
Morpn Quimi. and a straw
bat·-with-..... and
tx.u., wsn by Mn. M.el''lll A-
lbclllty Sr.
A o;pecia1 guest ns Mn.
\'an D. Clolhitt ol Lido We.
-impirod the -"""'1 hiit lnncbrtg JD yean ago.
F oUowillg tho porado al
chapeaus a musical play,
.. The Galeratioo Gap .• , by
Mn. Rolph u.-i and Mn.
R>lph Tandoo-sky. was staged
bdore the capacity audientt.
A cast ol 13 prumted the
deligbllul spool on tho nola-
liooship between the younger
gmeratioo and their' dden:
w'ith a polished and pro-
te.ssiooal ueartioo..
Leo: Be Leader
THURSDAY
JUNE 19
BJ SYDNEY O>WIR
AJUEi IMan:ll %!·April It):
Include family memben in
cruti,-t activities. Qilldrm
can brin1 great pleasure. Hold
no grudges. Set fine eumple.
Be diplomatic and loving. You
.,. popular with tho oppooii. ....
TA UR US I April 20-May 211):
Go atw-tht solid; t<nao the
oebulcm:. Yw are romant\c.
But see lhn:lu&b r'05e<OkM"ed
glasses to actualitia Don't bt
fooled by oat who makes big
promisos with nothing lo -pan Ihm>.
GEMINI (}lay 11.Ji.mt. 20) :
Accent 00 how JOU read to
.......... ..,;_.. Short
journey Jrul)' bt 00 agenda. Be
surt oi directionL Yem CGU.ld
...astr time if confmed abou1 -· °'"'* fads. Be pmiti\'e.
CA.>;CEll <Juno %!.July 221:
\~w may havt to git't up
§OIJlething in ordu '° gain.
You cwJd make trade to )"OW"
advantage. Yinish rather than
begin; concentra1e Oil prvptr"
timing.
LEO rJuJy %J.-ADC. 22 ):
Timt to press forward. You
can succiessfully make
demands. Higbli&bt in-
dependo""' al thwghl. action.
Sltts:s tbr DrW". Tab in-
itiali\"e. AttTnt origiDality.
Lead rather 1haD follow.
Vl1IOO (Aug. ~pl. 22):
Loot behiod the soenes for
special information. Meam
what appears oo surfact is apt
to be deceptive. Bt anaJyUcal.
Your bunch is correct. But
follow through in i.nl.elligent
manner.
LIBIU fSept. 23-0ct.22):
$tras OD social acti\•ity, Dine
out. Y w are stinwlated by
Loo indivi&lal. Break from
routine. Pw'sut bobby. Gain
pleasure througb c r e a t l v t
e:ndn\'(r.
S<X>RPIO (Od. %J.-Nov. 21):
Accem. on bow you haDd1r
responsibility. St.anding i a
community can bt elevated..
Pay au.em.ion to dittails. Break
fn:m ttSb'iction is -.. Be
gracious. You are a winner.
SAGnTAIUL'S ~Sov. ZZ.
Ott. 21): Your opm. frank at-
titude is iespec i ally ap-
preciated today. Your long-
rangie ambitJbns rome under
scrutinv. lmpm1.ant to include
family · member. Yoo are not
happy u alone.
CA.PR.JOOR..~ (Dec. %%-Jan.
II): SUivt for ba.lanct. Don't
upset one close to you . ?ifake
coocessian in return for ma·
jor gain. "lessage clear by
tonight. Make nece1sary
domestic adjustme.nl.
Mr. and Mn. Fred 0,... al.
Huntington Beach w e r e
honored Oii tbeiT 50JlJ wedding
.amuvuury during a rueptioa
-by tbeiT dauglden. Mn. Alvia Graham al. Laguna
Niguel and ?tfrs. R o g e r
Graham ol Garden Gr"O\"t..
Touting each Olher with
champagne glasses from tho
.. Queen Mary." I Dyson is
from En&land) the aiuple also
enjoyed a four-Ou wedding
caU made and d<coralod by
th<ir dau&ht.n.
Strviq: rd:t d1•••Wi&b were
gnnddaugbt<n, Mn. Bruc:o
ChriltiaMen, Cynthia a n d
Lomta Graham,. and grand-
daughter-to-be., C J a u de t l e
GranL
Out-of-town guests Included
a mt.er, Mn. Pearl Voigt; •
nephew, Mr. and Mn. Wllliam
Goalby al ~ Pan; a
mter.iJ>.ln', Mn. Luci JI e
Du}'Ot't of San Leandro. and a
........... Mr. and Mn. Ray.
mand lluyOn! "' 5"! Rapl!ad.
Mn. Lena -O!u1a Vista. an old acbool. friend of
Mr&. o,...·1. ud Mr. and
Mrs. Ray DJOl&er of Saa
Di'IO -.. up lo mngr.ilula!e
the couple..
Mr. and Mrs. 0,... met
and married in San Diego but
..... made Los Angela and
Orange counties tbdr bc:me
for mnsi " their married years.
Retired Person s Meet AQUARIVS {Jan. 20--Feb.
ti\: Play waiting game. Let
othen state thtir \iews. Hold
in reserve )"Ollf own int.t:ntiom.
~t continues on mutual
Grandchildren al.lo ilrlude
GleM Graham, ~tanhattan
Beach: Gary Graham of '
Yiestminmr. and Cynlltia and
Denni& Graham. G a r d e n
Grove. They bave ooe gnat· I
grandchild, Sam a nth a ,
daughttr of Mr. aod. Mrs.
Glf)' Graham.
Picnic Fare Elected effo rt s, ma rr i ag e.
'fbe l;wEness agenda wiJ.l be
pactod inside • pkni< baskel
~-ben !\ew-porl Beadl Cllapttt
121 al. American AD:ria.tion of
P..etired Pt.nOOS met.Ls next
Tbunday iD the Costa ~fesa
Park.
Tbr noon gathering ii being
planned by tho p..,;dent,
partnerships Auxili a ry J.Joyd E. '-focrlsoa of Corona PISCES lftb. t9-~farch 20):
dd htar, Mn. MonUoo., :P.trs. Those who deptnd upon you American Legion Rall ln
Holbrook ~1ulford of Costa may be estravagant Be fair Costa ~lesa is I.be settin& for
Mesa, Mrs. ).table Hawk. but sensible . Hold line on meetings of tht Auxiliary to
Cost.a Mesa, and Eua:eoe Hite budgel Esplain \'iews. Dispel Barracks 1241. Veter.ms of
of Huntington Beach. notion that money grows on World War L 1be first Tues-
'Ibose atte.nding shoo.Id bring trees. day of each month members
a pknic lunch, side dish and ..:;..;1~na-:....-':•"t:J~~~~ gather for a business sr.ssion
tabl ... -·-. tlQOll\t'I, "Se<AI Minh Iv NtWl'I ..... at 7:J:t p.m. and the third I...... w-.. Send liotr1l'IOl'9 ..... Ctftlt I --~-· and ~·nn· g the bus;....., .... -.;...... To om... "-"ol09" $f1;1"t'M. "'-Tuesday or a :ll)Ujll Ll\ol u,.. _ __..,., DAii. Y Pt I.OT, &ox l:l~ Gf"..W C-I plans for a.s.sistlng construe· tr.i s1.,1on. Hew v~. H. v, 10011. potluck: at I p.m.
Golden wings ol a Pan Am lion of the new $4.~ millKin l,=:~~=~==============1 1
, ...... -. oow belong"' MJS> Party Toi d g"•ntology c:.ni.r at the Uni· w DISTINCTIVE Lmda HafCma.n. daughta ol ,:enlty ol Sout.hun California m I I l NG
\I .... F•ank °'"'"'Y Holln»n will be diS<USStd and a .... "(;flJ ...Nair e~ HAIR STYLI ~
ol U.guna Beach and the la" A binhday party for "'" book. "The W>ldom °' Dr. MANICURES e PEDICURES ~Ir. lfoffman. aod Mn. ArUmr St.ead, ..-onhy Ethel Pttcy Andrus" will be J JOS Hewpert ltYd .. N....n a..m. 6n-41 16
follo ... -mg ~ lralntt ptnod malroll and palral1 ~ La(wla rt\•iewtd. IACllOU FlloM' CITY HAI.I.I
at the 1 n t e r n a 11 on al Beach Chapter. Order of the The book's author was \';=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::;:;:;:;:;:;;; I st"'ardess collegt m !ioliam.i. £astrm Sw. will take place foundtr of AARP and thel1·
the rww hostess gradualed Fnday. Junr 20. at I p.m. in center under coostructktn 't\ill
from Pan Am"1 colle&e in Laguna Beac:b MaJCIDic Hall bt dedicated to her memory.
Sea.Hit Sht now is on duty lor M.atn:m and pat.nm of Anyone wilbin& information
polar Oighu 10 E u r o p e • other axmty dl..apUrs will fill on the pimic er ~ may
northern tnps lO Alaska :.00 tht stations and ~frs. Arnold call Mn. Ruth Johnlc:a, -.
<icross the Pacific to Ha111·a.iL Yc\tls will host festivities. SllU.
A former English major 11\1.====~~=============.IJ
Rio Honda Jwuor College. she
al.so studied at \\' h 1tt 1 e r
Business College. Her hobbie5
are gounnet cooking Md a
\ariety of rnus1ca l in·
strumenl,. including ,>10.00,
organ, ceUo and 'iola. I
Silver Sands
I
I
The f.irSl and lh.ird Tutlda)'s
at 8 p.m. mefllbe.rs or Silver'
Sandi 286, Nalh·e Daughters
of t.he Golden \\'est gal.her for
meetings. Lake Park
Clubhouse in Huntinglon
Beach ii the meeting place for
the firlt session. Atrs. Jack t
Wilson. 544-1479, wiU rum15h l
locatk>n on the nei:t meelina
date.
MEDICAL REDUCING
W. DUANE Al.BfRT, M.D.
1827 WESTCUFF
NEWPORT BEACH
646-0251
LEARN TO SWIM
AT YOUR ORANGE COAST YMCA
642-9990
,,
s .....
Ceref•I
Trel•l•9 .,
De11ttr•
MONA FRANCES
Sclwol of BALLET
SUMMER CLASSES
Nl~E WEUS -JUNE 1'" ,. AU&UST ""
Kinderb1llet -8eqinner1 -lnterm•di•t•
Advanced DiYiston and Pointe Work
Also Cl11111 in Modern Jett
642-4068
lUN-N..., ..... 11¥4.
)
'OUEEN MARY'S' GLASSES
Mr. •nd Mn. F...t Dyoon
Featured in Santa Ana's
Charles W. Bowers Memorial
ltfuseum from June 20 to July
13 will be Archltedural Pen
Sketches by W. Donald Smith.
Th e exhibit of skelcbe5 ol
historical buildings and sites is
keyed to California's blcen·
tennial celebration and Santa
Ana's centennial.
The artist, now a resident of
Costa Mesa. is noted for bis
accurate detail and perspec-
tivt in depicting boats u well
as buildings in the medial ol
oils, watercolor and int.
Classes
Open Now!
Tlt,..p..t t1ie
H ..... ,._
WEIGHT~
WATCHERS. •
Saint talking, .om1 listening "''
• progr1m tll•t worb.
s ~It llOCMUU-C.W. US.SIDS
Breakthrough In color photography~
1flRSTTIME
EVER OFFERED
AT 99c
* BEllllE FILL IATllAL COLOR POITIAITS!
• Not the old style liDled <><painted black 6. white photos, * SATISFACTIOI CIAIAITEED ar your money refunded.' * FOi ALL MES! Babies, children, adults.
Croupo photx>grapbed at an additional 99c per. subject. * LllllTED OffEI! One per rubject, two per family.
THREE DA ~S -·ONl Y
THURSDAY· FllDAY ·SATURDAY -JUNE 19 . 20 . 21
PHOTOG RAPHER'S HOU RS II A.M. TO 7 P.M.
3049 COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA D EL M AR
OlllY
AT
THIS
LOCATIOIC
I ----------------_L __ _ ·------------------'----·-----------
I I t
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7 ·DAY VALUES giYes JOU the opp0ftunitJ to shop at STATER BROS. any day of the week ••• From
Thursday to Wednedsay you canny selected top value groceries and also enjoy the savings of
our low every-daj prices plus BL~E CHll' STAMPS.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR
ST ATER.BROS.
CERTIFIED BEEF
BEEF LIVER
FRESHLY
SLICED
TENDER
Good Only at ST ATER BROS.
Good Weoeokof JUNE 19-25
ll"'IT 1·COU!'O"" 'l~ I OX r1J~CMA510
~ STEWED OR WHOLE PEILED
LB. ~"
USDA 0401C101 STA.Tit HOS. CUTJID lllf
RUMP ROAST ..................•.......... 89( IASTllHGIA ... FID • ftlDft • tUTI
.. LB. PORK 5TIAK5 ............... . .............. Le.69'
59c USDAOfOtCIOISTATllUOS.arr•110Hl, • s 1 '9
. LB . 5TIAKS CUBE OR SI RLOIN TI P ................ LB.
USDA CHOtCI OI ST A Ta: llOS. an.llD 111'
ROUND BONI ROAST ....
93C AIMOUISTAIUGKT6'D.ulMIAT •29•
LB TURKEY ROAST . 2·LB . 6·0Z.
USDA otOtCI OI ST A TB NOS. llONIUJS SttOUUlfl
ROLLED BllF ROAST ....
99c •••wtLIAN-GIOUNDHOUllY 53'
..... LB. GROUND BllF ........ . LB
USDA OfOtCIOISTATll nos. tallfMJ 119
ROUND STEAK BONELESS
OSCAIMAYlll.QIMQOtUI 39 Dti.IOOUSlYSlAIOfiE> 59' BRAUNSCHWllGIR . .EACH c MEAT LOAF READYTOCOOK ............. LB
OIC.UMAYHl-OUNaCHUll 39 HOIM&'SCOOICID • •llHIOllfllOll&TIDJI S, ••
SANDWICH SPREAD ............ EACH ' CANNED HAM ........................... 1 ll ·LBs.
BRIQUETS ~b~E.1:0~.~ .............. _ 1o u. 89'
POMPEllAN OLIVE OIL -PIS 89'
STA CRISP CRACKERS --· . , u. 29'
NESCAFE ~~SFTF~~~• ,.u••·~·•••••••••••u·-~•·••., 15•0Z, ssc
ROYAL PUDDING INSTANT -·-2 '" 25'
ROYAL GELATIN . -------· 3,oz 29'
RIPPIN COOKIES .. somo ···--···· '" 29'
LICKITY SPLITS ~:~au ....... " oz 53'
DEVI LED HAM PluM,05£ ·······-··-··-·-ooz 39'
DIET IMPERIAL"'""'"'··········--:1.u. 39'
J.PQUND CAH , •• S1 .7S
' s 'i.ICED
BACON
MORRELl'S YORKSHIRE
1-LI. REGULAR
OR l·LI. THICK
59!.
: HUNT'S !TO~AJOES ,
I
$
N0.300 CANS
STATER BROS.
COFFEE 1-LB. CAii .
YAN DlkAMl'S tflF 01 OffUI !!~.~!~~DAS . . 3 ,. . ., 'I
!!.!!§.!J.!!tCE . 4 i~·,• I .~.!~t'K5 iioiiili'xl~~~-··-··-.. , .. 59c I LONG GRAIN .
I RICE .. 3 LB. PKGS.
I • I WtlSHill F•ESH PACK
I CUCUMBER
. CHIPS .
l sMA
0
.AD 39e
! DR~5SING 24f,t . I I . • . I . . -. . ,I • • ' l
i
.$
22-0Z.
lARS
FOUiER'S COFFEE '"''·69' W:I'/ CAN J·ll.~I• Sl.99
10·0l. lfi1S1'ANT ............ 11,3
LARGE EXTRA
FANCY
SEEDLESS
MOITON HOUSE
OVEN BAKED
BEANS 16-0Z •....................
THOIO-FID OflCKIN • UYll • KIDNIY • MU. T
DOG FOOD
MEATBALLS .........
$
CANS
$
REG . CANS
llRDS£YEAWAIC£ 37c 1""'"',10-ri•ri110~1 ..,,M ,_......_.0 --··'oz GINO I PJW ___ 11.oz. 7fe
llRDS EYE CA RIOTS _ ,0 oz. 31c CHic'"•'E'•~ 49' •••011" swEEr.,,,. sou~_ PEAS CREAM 31' "0'0""""~-ou1 ---""''".O'uon 1 c•;•~·-tooz. CHICKEN . ----o.oz.29'
lllDSEYEP£A1 ___ 10.01 31c S0ffOC .i'N'oFF 49'
ICOlDCllJ ·----l ·Ol.
!!!f .. f.TEW :~~'i~, •oz 29c
~.~~TPIE5 6 .. ,•1
HNQllET DINNERS ··--·····" 39' PEAi"ONIONS 31' •co'"" . ---·~-10.oz. EOGO WAFFLES 45c <Mo~"'°'•r··~
.IOHHlrCI< ··-···--·,KC MEAT IALLS """----·''·OZ. 5gc
CHEESEPIE 67' co~11~n 1001 .•,. ·~ .... ,11""'"°" ........ ______ 11oz ONIOPIRIHOS ,_.,, ____ ... 1-oz.2r 1 ~OHHSTOH PIES --.... t 1"" 69C i'Q'Y'SfNK1£JIRY PIE ·-···-· •·IH. 75e
ROD'S ... L 39 ~~~~.~· 79 c TSP ,,NT, 29c WHIP-0 C STAlll LIQUID
. TOPPINCi REMOVER CLEANER
MACARON 'I GOLDEN GRAIN 2 43' WITH CHEDDAR .. , .... 714 ·OZ.
FIG BARS :~~m.~~N .: 2•.oz. 59'
WESSON 01 L .. .. . .......... 4B·OZ 89'
ORTEGA PIMIENTOS WHOLE ······ 4 0Z 22'
HEFTY BAGS JO-Qr.39c 15-GAL.39' SIZE ......... . ..... SIZE
CHIFFON MARGARINE .................. l ·LB.43°
·r~lf.2~ PIMIENTO CHE~!f,f~l.~~\'}o __ 49'
39 SHARP CHEESE SHREDO<O ............... ,, 39'
"·•L ' CHEESE SPREAD ~tlt,'i':~'&z. -····---. 69'
DOG FOOD ~~1£~~~G~LC:RIETY ... 31 5.oz. 27'
CIRCUS NUTS ~i~~~¥;;1~~ •••••••.••.•..•• 12.oz. 7gc
FRUIT DRINKS ~~~[~~·~·············· 3 .s.oz. 95°
PLUMS GULDEN'S MUSTARD B~ri~N ... B OZ. 19'
ICED TEA MIX ~¥~· ... MON ········· ...... 4 oz. 59°
WISK DETERGENT DEA L PKG .......... OTS. 69'
B-B-0 SAUCE ~b~s~~".' ...................... 11.oz. 49'
INSTANT TEA uProNs . . . ...........• e.oz. $ps
CRISCO OIL .. .. 24-0UNCE 48t
• i
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I I ~~ I • l . .,.,__.,..
FANTASTIC ~r~:~rn 22 .oz79'32 oz ....... 89~ CHI LI SALSA 8~irn•.......... . ..... 1.oz. 25'
MAGIC SPRAY SIZING ................. 2ooz. 69' ROLL TISSUE ~~~+~v············ ....... 4 PACK 37'
SCOT-TOWELS BIG ROLL . .. . .......... ,.,.33• VANO FABRIC FINISH .. . . ...........•.... 20.oz. 63'
BRILLO PADS-PACKAGE OF 18 -'· . PKO. 49' SCOTT BATHROOM TISSUE ....................•. ,.,.38'
AQUA-Ill IYI HAil THOllO.RD Gl~lfTIE NlllSPHT SOLUTIOll COLH DOG FOOD ILADIS IAINll~HtNDS NIWDAWNAllT. HOIUMIATC......S_..,
AO.I.AT Am ASlt. 66( $1.'39 "OL$1.79 UYll6.1Uf • IUOMf&_, .... 1 >-01. 4 uc$l •. 87' WASlll' llRADIT DllTUH
CHAM LOTIOI POWHI CARI GIWTTI """''•Cl .lflGINS f.tr,iTHTH
TIOtlAlOll 1V.·OL 59< 11•1a.01. S 1 St :1S·OL53( lllOWY 43c s2'' IA. BUACH II-OZ p.:G
l KAL KAN m'f".''\tt~ ~1'tll.ic1~ltil.~GG2,.,. ' DRY TREND DETERGENT ,,. o< 2,.a.37' SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE 7-FULL DAYS; tiiiJRf thru WEDS. 'UNE 19th-25th llOODLE-ROlll DllllERS
I M.,,S.-TUNA 2 3 c NEWS DETERGENT oc.a.L PKG itt or 5ge 3430 W••t UM•ln A••nu1, An1h1lm 1175 liker Strttt, C.•t• MH1 14212 Mint• ""'"u•. Wtllnltr c;0t.DfN.G1A• l9'
6-0Z. CAT o• TUNA CHICKIN ..................... FOi' SWEETHEART SOAP 4 36' 4 49' 2564 Wt•f .,.. .... ,. Auhtlm 707 w ••• 19th Sh'ttt, c •••• MIN .... Ch1pm1n AY*fliUI , Oar•.... ,,..MUANO
I FOOD HOtl:St:Mt:AT • LIYll • KIDNt:Y J 3ftc ·· AlG IA,ftf 2110Mtw,.rt11¥4., C11t1 Mnt 1900 lut C1llln1 Av1n111, Ortittt 2603 W11t 17th Strttt, S1nt1 Ant ~~~'
I TUNA KIDNIY • TUNA UVIR . fOI ,.,,-SU REX DEODORANT SOAP . . 6 PACK 49c IS22 We1tmln1t1r l l'f'd .• Wt1tmln1l1r 2630 (dlfttitr A'i'tftVt, S,nt• Ant 6162 ldlftl•r A'i'tltllt, "u"tl"'''" lo1ch CNICllN rKG .
•
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3a DAILY PILOT Wedntsd'1, Junt 18, 1969
Hi·C ·Fruit CanclH ·
SUGAR Drinks Granulated-Pure Cane From Hawaii! Rich Fr~! Flavors-Assorted
~01~ 00 c
·cans
Kleenex
Tissues
Cream 0' the Crop
White or Assorted Pastels
pkg.
at •
Wesson
OIL
c
The ''light" Oil-lrs Poly.Unsaturated.
24-01nc1
llattle
· Hunt's Brand
c
Tomato Sauce
Rich, Thick & Flavorlul!
8-oz.$
cans
Large Eggs
• • 1;( Grade "AA"-Farrn Fresh Flavor! ' • .. ~ \-., c
· ·1-doz.
ell.
e Best Food
I . Mayonnaise 1 "The Real Mayonnaise" Creamy·Smoolh!
\ c ~: ~urt
•
c pr
Folger's Coffee
_....,:-:-~._. .....
Mountain Grown-Choice of Grinds
l·lb.
can
c
ALL PRICES II THIS AD GDDD WHILE STORE SUPPLIES UST , , , SHOP EIRLYI
Vine-Ripened
, low In Calories c
' Every Bite A Delight-
Flavor-Rich.
High In Enjoyment' lb.
Ala Mode With Delicious
Cotillion Ice Cream!
Tomatoes 1b. 2 9'
Large Size-Vine-Ripened
. .
~; ,\)Yellow
.. 7· · Mealed , Sweet And Ripe-
, . Picled At P"k IL.
.-• Of Goodness! u.
Oranges
:.:: 8 ·lb.98'
Apricots
Y~enc~ ug
Northern
Roy1r
V1n1ty lb. 29'
Duncan Hines
Cake Mixes
ASSOITID U.Yll YAllnllS
Rtc•l•r '••he•
each
c
Hunt's Tomato
Catsup
Made From Plump Vine-Ripened Tomatoes!
14-oz. $ 00 .....
Purex
Bleach
Rl'b Steaks u.s.o.•. c";" l111e Me1tr Cuts "· SJ 2t
Wtdntsdly, Junt 18, 196'J
SAHWAY
POWEii
99
Gerber's
Baby Food
Strained-Fruits, Vegetables or Juices
Your
Choice c
each
Lighl Meal For Sandwiche s
c
Banquet
Dinners
Frozen-Assorted Varieties
11.S.D.A. Cito/ct IHI{
Chuck Stea ~.
Boneless
Beef Roast
Rell..i Allol Tl..i 89 USDA Choice Beef Chut~
Flavorlul And Juicy Always' lh • .
Ground Chuck
Sirloin Tip Steaks
Top Sirloin Steaks
•·SJ n I
,
For 'Burgers, Meat Loaves Or C Preahlr Greunol 1t·
•. s1n
Pork Steaks
~~:he':" 69c
From Young Grain lb.
Fed Ea stern Porkers
Use In Your Favorite Recipe!. lb. ~,.
~~::-~~~~~---.
Sliced Bacon
Dubuque Miss Iowa. 1 ~1b. 69,.
1
',
Cut from Youn9 Porkers Pk9. ti
Frankfurters
St erling Skinless.
Tender, Leen end Juicy i-1b. 59c Pkg.
Prices Effldivo 1111n. Jn 19 t1wu Son, l111t 22.
211 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa • 1000 Bayside Dr., New port Beach • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Ltguna
136 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach • Santa Ana Freeway al Lt Pai, Mission Viejo • Fairview Ave. & Wilson St., Cost1 Mesa
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' I _________ l _____________ J.~---~-------..&-' ----...;...' ---· _ .. _.......!.\_, ··-· "·•-----~
'
•rt:;----·-· ------··-----w ----·w-·• -:-:----~-------------
I
I
I
~ G PILOT·AQVE~Tl\[R
~~.at; Cool .;
·---.. ::.:t"'" -.,.... ..
.· \ 9;'ll
10*'-lois
In, 1ff.._f.., 11fr..'T' ...
. )jEAT >.NL\ CQOL! • Two ol
fhe nicest things you can say
about a dress nbw. 8191 seam-
ed yoke adds spanklng fresh
toucli lo coatdress. sua now.
PrtntW Pattern IW:' NEW
Half Si.le, lOYi, 121ii; 141h,
l&'ni, 181Ji, 20"1;. Size 14.lh: (bust
37) takes 3 yards JS.inch.
SIXTY-FIVE CENTS I n
~iM for each pall ;-add
15 cents fF e'ach ltffn for first-cl~ ~llillg d ~special ~andling;'1lherwise <k:W. ' tpelivery.1'lll take weeb
or more. 1 Send Maria n
Martin, Ifie DAIL PILOT,
142 Pattern Dept., 23Z West
l!lh St.. New York, N.V:
10011. Print NAM'-1 AD-
DRESS w i t h ZIP, SUE and
STYLE NUMB ER. , 1
Spring SellJl-off! Mo~ fresh,
young, easy.sew styi!a in
Spring-Summer P a it e r n
Catalog. Free pattern coupon.
50 cents.
New INSTANT SEWING
Book -shows )'OU bow to sew
it today, wu.r ft fomorrow.
Over 500 pic tures. Only $1.
~ors Look
Delicious ~,
"G/amoro Js·
When you go to the trooble
to .bake hOmemade cookies, you 1·Y'ant 11\em to be ..Jlly
~·I. '.
These ba" taste as g~. u
they look-you'll want to ask a
neighbor in for tea to show
them oft • COCONUT ORANGE BARS
211 cup Wlll!ted aU-purpo15e
Oour l .
1-2 1 teaspoon double-acti~
baking powder
1h teaspoon sail v, cup buUer f ;up sugar
1 ;lesj)OOll milk i taas:poon grated orange . rilld
t cup cookie coconut
4 sq uares semisweet
chocolate. melted
Mix flour, baldng pot,1•der
and salt. Cream b u l t e r .
Gradu111ly add sugar: blend
well. Add egg, milk. and
orange rind; beat well.
flour ' mixture and
mixing only enough
• Spread in an t-lnch
square van which has been lin-
ed on tioU-Om with paper and
then Jtease<t. Bake at 350 de~ lpr 30 minutes or unlll
lightly Hmwncd.
Remov[ from pan and trim
off edges.1 Spread with melted
chocolate Cool. Cot into 20
ban.
Chili Dish
Wi:ms Oles
If you make lhis chill ahead,
reheat it In a double bOllef.
CHILI CON CAJINE
2 table!poons butter or
marg~ine
2 medi um onioos, finely
chopped (1% cups)
I pound\ lf"OUDil bee( '<!Und ,
I can IA ounces).'~
l!l!Yl• ~ato .. iJce • t1a1p e garlic, ~ed r to a fablespoo111 • chill "~~· .a:min ·t · can • 4 otmcd)
red ans,· uno '
drained
In • l .. nch skillet in the hot
butter l'Olly cook onions until yen-. _
Add beef; crumble With a
fork until meat changes color.
Add remainin1 ingredient.;
cook gently, stirring several
times, for 11.boul 1,~ hour.
Ptfakes 4 servings.
Wednesday, June 18, 1964
FRESH EASTERN PORK
.PARERIBS
COUNTRY
SfYl~ ·9c lb.
Reserve yow set today!
SI ,C)j ilzf ~nlE. Of l6
EXCEDRIN TAI
Imported
"£1191ish ) r
;l>innerwcn
: by Enoch Wedgewood
(Tun1tall) Lid.
S•vo·CI%
•ff .,." l..U """ <Mite ef 4
11 .. ltltt pctHlnll • , ,
21 pi•• •tort•rMt cw 9 piece ~-p\ettr 1et youn for .ftl7
I l kr)oowoy ~rtiflc11t•.,
99 C12~0~
• p~r<t.o1 ..
iioi'AcH'RililiLADES $·~~
$1.09 Sill AMH-l'llSl'IU.NT
NEW SECRET
$1.otSIZE
DESITIN OINTMENT
$1.98 SUNIU•N llllff
NIEWUNIURN
$1~SIZf SUNTAN LOTION
TANYA LOTION
J.oz. aac SIZE
J.2.oz. a9c
TU Bf
•oz. $J . .$9
SlZf ,
/• -
l
STOCK UP AND ' SAYE
W·ITH FAMOUS BRANDS YOU KNOW
Plus ,. " .,.
Blue Chip Stamps
Plus
U.S.D.A. ChGlct Beef
Pfus-
Weekly .Specials
c m1ii'F'
U.S.D.A. fHlflfdlD YOUNG TUMfY
DRUMSTICKS ,
I PftSH flOllH f'tAIN Olt l lUDID
VEAi: STEAKS
fac>ZEN l afADE D TUftEY 01
VEAL DRUMSTICKS
GAllON PLASTIC
.....
DELICATESSEN
..
l lOZfN Sl'lllNG SHOUIDfR CUT
'LAMB
llOA$1
51~ •
CHICKEN, WHOLE LEGS OR n-itOHS ,
FRYER
PARTS
5 ,9~
$J09 a9c '" LEI OF LAMI ... LUER QUALITY PORK .
35, c iiUSHflOZEN SlllNGU.S.CU.tNSPICTfD SM.All $J 19 . LINK SAUSAGE
1•. LAMI CHOPS lOIN IL • . . ,,(~ flUH flOJrNVllNG U.S.0.A.INStECTED 98C 3 s 1·
89._ ~~~~~!CHOPS ''~ 59~ . .. a.oz. . . ~ ~S:K:IN:l:E:S:S~C:O:D:__~~-"~'·=..:.___;:::::::::::::::':KG:s:.:::::::::::::;~
ALL PUJlPOSE ..
GOLD
MEDAL FLOUR
.C
FROZEN FOODS
fOOD OIAllT SUCID .{_
LUNCH . MIA TS
=~*~~~1 3 5-0Z. s 1 • SANDWl~H LOAF PKGS.
•DUTCH LOAF
3 ~·$1
3 ~~· $1
REGENCY ROOM CLH llUCTIQI
STRAIGHT
IOURBON
WHISKEt
CHAMPAGNE A~EX THOMPSON
SCOTCH
MAGIC
SPRAY SIZING
~L 69 C
• ... -; .
HOI DOG; SWEH, HAMBURGER
DEL M.ONTE RELISHES
1r: 39 c
flAVOR SI® WliH.
Al ~AUCE. \
}OL 43c .1~ 69 C B/L , BIL .
DEL MONTE
'"l"' m MEI PEPPCRS PIOOES
14-0Z.. JAR , •. 22·0l. JAA 41 c 75'
HORMEL •
PAM SPREAD
J-01. 25c ciN
HUNrs
SPAGHffil SAUCES •
MEATLESS ; Ml.lSflR0.1lil ~ ,.
MW IU'IOll
l&-OL 49c· BTL
SOUtl PACI(
HUNT'S TOMATOES m 25 c ~~33c
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. IHRU SUH.
JUH. 11.11, 21, U, 1111
2300 Harbor Blvd. at Wilson St., Harbor Shopping Center, Costa Mesa
•
•
\ -----~~~~~··-·-•~·-·-~--·-==-e1w~~~-•ww--~-·~•~w-44~i...wm•,..•-•--·~••.,.9#.-1!U"""""'-'',!l,c""".,._.,.......,..,,,Ul...,..,"-"',ui,~~~;)Ll1}!1floi~~i.:ii~~:.n!~lliliJi!'lf'l~a;;;:lici~!l!?!!ll!!lr!iii111 .. :::!.~iel
------...... -------------------' ff , DAil~ l'llOT Wtd~, .hiM 18, l'l6'
Attention ; Ship Shape . ..
Salad Sounds
Appetite Alarm
. . .~,
Breakfast for Boater5
Boaltn ollj>uld plan lo eat such as paper "°'[\>. p
bfeakfast on board if they cups and plastic JROQM in a
w'l!rh to get an 'early sailing picnic basket. Add to the
ltlri beCore-. their favorite basket individual packages or
waten are jammed with other ready-~at ~reals, regular
On • wann swnmer day, letting some run down between 'craft. · and -presweetened.
wiltlfll appetites snap to ·at-cubes. Sprinkle wllh onion, if It fs ,liJDple to assemble an In the morning it takes only
tenUon when a s l u r d y , d I ed Tl • 1 1 · h adequate b r e a t f a 1 t the seconds to pat k fresh fruit, es r · e oose Y wit previous night and ever 'so milk, a coffee cake or
flavorful chef's salad pops up. string. e11y to tote. . doughnuts (in Jieu of toast and
Even YOl.Wisters, die-hard Place on bak1ng sheet &;nd 1 JuS fcj{low i •,basic 'breakfast f spread) in a lbermal picnic
opponents cl more deUcate bake In 350 degrds F. oven lo ~ PICter:n '1l tr,lt'; ~· ~ 1 bag. (
saJada. d.IC in when the bowl to 15 min4tes. Remove strini iftad' and ~ ~ 1 A vacuum-cuntalner of hot
bowl features strips of meat. and serve warm. Yield: i mended by nutndonlsts. ' coffee or hot water for inst.ant
cheese,bard-cookedegghalv-servi.np. First, p-,.Ct·aee-d0ed 4 coH~ or cereal will un· esandassortedgood~s. ;---~-':~==----~~-===========::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::'.::=::::=~=====~========~~~~~~:.;_..::,_.....;.~~'...:::..:.'....~;::~~';""~pooa~b~~~servln&~,~~~~J~pmen~~~~dou~~~edl~y~he~a~·m~us~l"~,too~.-Wlth the cool main course, I ~
hol chunks Of eheese-loppe<J
bread fresh from the oven de-
mand equal attenUon.
There are almost as many
ways to prepare chef's salad
as there are chefs. Our own
version begins by marinating
halves of tiny cherry tomatoes
in lhe dressing. Into the dress-
ing go a variety of flavorful
ingredients including Tabasco.
To the marinated tomatoes
add crisp green:i, hardoCOOked
eggs, anchovies, radishes and
green pepper. The salad is
topped with strips of ham or
luncheon meat, strips of cheese
and a few more tomatoes. Add
the dressing ... and there you
have a salad that's tops in
flavor and variety.
Cheese Loar° is s I m p I y
delicious. • .and It's easy to
make. Begin with an unsliced
loaf of whlte bread, cut into
large cubes and add a mixture
of melted cheese, butter and
Tabasco. Bake for about 10
minutes ... and that's all there
is to making thiJ fine hot loaf
that tastes like from-scratch
homemade bread.
There you have the matings
of a wonderful family lunch or
supper ... or a sa1ad so splen-
did you can use tt for a com-
pany menu, too. U you are
serving the meal on patio or
porch (or even indoors, for
that matter), by all means
serve on plastic-coaled .plates.
When . the w ea t fl e-r gets
hot, it's just sensible to keep
your kitchen chores t o a
minlmwn. Hearty ~ad and
hot bread are perfect summer
fare the season long.
CHEF'S SALAD
French Dre1stac
I teaspoon .paprika .
1,1a teaspoon dry mustard
'l(i leaspoon sail
l teaspoon suaar
11.a teaspoon curry powder ,
1i2 cup salad ell
1h cup wine vinegar
1h: teaspoon Tabuco
Salad
12: cherry tomatoes
Salad green:i
l hard cooked eggs, shelled
and baJ ved ·
1 can rolled anchovies
in green pepper, cut in
strips
V. cup sliced radishes
1,2 pound Swiss cheese, slic·
ed
11' paant ham or luncheon
meat, sliced
Thoroughly blend all French
dressing ingredients. '\"ash
and cut tomatoes in half.
Place in bowl; add l/3 cup of
the French dressing. Let
marinate 2 to 3 hours.
Wash and crisp s a I ad
greens. Place in bowl with a
layer of eggs, anchovies, pep-
per strips and radishes.
Cut cheese and meat into
thin strips: place on top of
sallijj. Garnish with cherry
tomltoes. Serve with re-
maining French dressing .
Yield: 6 servings.
CHEESE LOAF
I loaf unsliced day-old white
bread
1 cup grated Cheddar cheese
2 tablespoons butter
I/• teaspoon Tabasco
2 tablespoons minced onion,
opUonal
Slice crust from top and
sides oC brtad . Cut bread
lengthwise almost through to
bottom crust. then c u t
crosswise to form 8 cubes.
combine cheese. butter and
Tabasco tn saucepan ; heat,
stirring, until well blended.
Pour mixture over bread,
Scramble
Swiss Way
SWISS EGGS
Swiss cheese give s
de.llghUul, different navor to
eggs .
$ large eggs
I/• teaspoon salt
l/f CUp milk
1 tablespoon huller
l/S cup finely grated Swiss cheese, loosely packed
Beat eus and salt just until
yolks and whites are com.
bined ; add 'milk and beat to
combine.
In a lJ).lndl lldllel heat lhe
butter; add ec11: cook ienUy,
1Craping up mflturl• tt •LI;
do not stir conit.antly.
When whole mixture ls just
about set. remove from heat
and fold in cheese. Serve al
once. Makes 2 large servlnp.
COUNtYFAIR
FROIENPIES
FOLGER'S
COFFEE
14.&. CAN ALL GllNDS
APPU
. ·PEACH&.
IOYSENIHRY
8 INOISIZE
IATURALSWISSCHEESE ~~'::!"SS
REDI SPUDS HASH BROWNS'i,~.'29'
c ·
. .
2·LB. $1 .lJ~.U. $1.93
....... -.... -A~ff'CTL"-~\a
$,
1-LLCM'JOH -· --~-_ ......... , ........... v ..
SKIPPY 8¢ DOG -FOOD
1 S-OL CANS-...;l......----·---·····-·-·--·-····· ..... ·····-· ·-··
HENORIOM
TURKEYS -. SllKT YO.H:l fflOaD4 rutrns. p.__:_,"
W\IJW~lllllllll
Van deKamp's
SP£CIAl$
lliin..S~ ,_ 1•n.
LBS,
.i'rfOREMA YFA !R
MR4L J\'1AKERS
ADVERTISED PRICES Effl<TIYE 7 FULL DAYS-THURS., JUIE 1' tlino WED., JUll 25
\
JUNE is DAIRY MONTH
FEATURING ARD~N FAMOUS
_ DAIRY PROPUCTS
COTTAGE CHEESE
MA YFA• M.Ut llllON STER IEEF-U.S.D.A.. OIOICE
LB.
MAYFAIR ~ARKET -17$ EAST lTrH STREET, COST A MESA
2030 West 1st Street, Santa Ana 9892 Westminster Avenue, Garden Grove
I
I/
• I
l
..
"
J4 PIL
• Once
• c:hati 1"New Y!
a dOlJa
Bee Cl
Thb
d yeas ......
11:ut a:ta
Beca1
now ar
decidec
Cake.
, If yc
'Bee Ca
ol lhe
here's 1
trying.
and we
114 tc
2 tab J,,. t.e:
I le
rin•
1 pac
1/3 c
Y<1:11
2 u ma
I OJll ~
VanlJ hel
' In I.
mixer,
togethE
salt,
dlssolv
In a
low he
and br
warm
to mel'
Grae
ture a
casioru medlw
er,
Add
enough
batter;
casioru
Spi
Thi,,
b lypi
spoons
spoons
s!Joons
reaspo
mixtur
soning
cs and
701
Dre!
with L
open i
Takt
breeze
gracef
stripe!
Patter
FIF'
each J
for ea'
mallin
other.1
will ta
Send t LY F
Dept.,
St.atio1
Print
Patter JKt
over :
free I
Send:
NE\
GIFT.
toys,
Make
row! I
cents.
"11
chtt,
cents.
Boo
cents.
Bar
beaut
M11
terns
cents.
Boo uv1.,
) ~ -~ I -~----------~~~_.,...,~J'-""-~-'-"·~-~---·.:.· • .-·--------"':.-.. ,-. _____ L-L.__._ __ • ___ .... __ .;....._ .... _,/.J~-----L.-~~..:.--.... ""'...J n" ·-·-o--• .. • · -.l -· • -8 • -. e -a m Jt-n£-J
.. ,
• • .. l4 PILOT ·AtvUTJSU Wedn..tay, Juot 18, 1969 • D.\JLY PRDT 4 f WtdMsdlyf JUN 18, 1969 .
Honey of .Bee
I l
•
Ga~e · RerTiains a Confection -" • I .
Onco1upon a time there was S mlnulel. s\Jr baller down: flPrOad In Bake In prtheated 351><1egroe fuc ·uint. Malla 9 aervllics: • Coot over medium hlab beat together t "'P cold milk, 11 'For a Dufner fUIJnl, \ouow 8 chaJn of bllery ahops ln SUr 1n enoustr additJona.1 • greased square cake pan (I ove(l lbour 30 m inute L · <»ccut Topptq: untll buUer and sugar are cup heavy cream, t ~~ above directionl, om j t t In I
' ew Yon-.., coWd buy flour to ·mata a still battu, by a by 2 inchea); k will be . Remoye lrom pon and place Into a llDall saucepan tum melted. ·Bring to a boil, 'then sugar and I ~ v-iu,a.• beavy mam: u.,a wbtp It
a delightful corifecUoo called Coyer~ 1et "rise ·in wir:m bard to spread, but you can do 1.xl wire rack to cool. %/S cup o·aked ,coCo.iut, If.I cup recb.'e heat aod simmer for 1 Add 1 package. (S,. cc.mctil) se~ratelf and ~ Into pud·
B ~-·· drafllree place unW doubted It! Cover, lot rise In warm Spilt cold· cal<o In half ~··ar 11 lllct (II ~·nd) but minute; stir In II le, aspoon al· vanilla Instant N ....... With din• mixture. Yau will hove • ee ~. . I UI doubl<d ~~-~·"•' d V··"" ~ ' ~ . ~-• • 'Ibis consl!ted of two la yen: in bulk -about 30 minutes. \ draftfree p ace un •.-,._......,. .. Sprea UWJ& ter or margarine, 11 table-m o n d e z t r a ct , Co o I rotary beater beat slowly until delectably soft fll.Ung, but we
d yeast-risen cofreecake with S~art at once to prepare ln bulk-'i;~ minutes. Cre8Ql Fl1llng over bottom ipOO(lS hoot.y, 1 ' tablespoon thoroughly'-, blended -~t 2 minutes. must warn you that wlth1t the
1 creamy filling and a hooey. C:ocon••t Topei"~ so it will Carefully ad co o~ e..d ;halt; replace top half. Serve at milk and 1 tablespoon toUted Vnllla Cream FUll.n.g .tet stand foe 10 minutes so it Bee Cake will be barcler io
nut gtaie. . J-b•_••_Um_e_1o_coo_1. ____ cocan.,._u_t ...:to..;.pp:..,'.;:.g_ov__.•r,....,-.,;"'-: :--""'"-'":IJ<_ref__.rli:..era._i._'_unt_il_serv_·_•li_·v_ere_d_almonds ____ • ____ 1n_'•..:ap>all __ m_1x1_n:..g bo_wl.:.., ma_·_w1_.:U:..:;cse::.t. ~--..:.....-__;'="t:... ------
Because the bakery &hops
now are ou~ ot existence, we
decided to make CU' own Bee
Cake.
, If you ·an: nostalgic about
· Bee Cake -it's an adaptation
of Lhe German Blenenatich -
here's a recipe )1)ll may enjoy
trying. Our family loved it,
and we !hint 1'!ts ~ too.
BEE CAX!:
11/4 to l\{ cupg-~ Dour
2 tablespoons sJa:ai!--
1/4 teaspoon sail \
1 teaspn grat .Jtmon
rind ( r 1 pac.kaj! active ,,._
l/3 cup ·milk t
14 cup +r
marg \ 'l 2 tabl~na biittet, or
1 ega:, a m temPe!rtttire
Coconut . opptna. see below ~-...
Vanilla Cre&Jl\ Fill~, see
below'• ~ , ·, · Jn large bow of electric
mixer, t Ito r o u ~b I * '!Ir
togelber ~ cup n~. 1U1ar.
!!!alt, lemon rind 'll"1>-dissolved yeast. . 1
In ·a small saucepan '
Jaw heat, beat the milk, witer
and butter ·until liquids are
warm -butter does not ~d
to melt. ''
Graduallj· add to fiour mix·
ture and, scraping bowl oc·
caslonally, ~at 2 minutes at
medium s~ ol electric mix-er. )
Add egg and in •CUP flour or
enough flour to make a thick
batter; scraping bowl oc-
casionally, beat at high speed
i
Spice1 Blend 1
This is a·. spice blend whl
is typicall1 Freoclt: 5 lei· spoons grouftd pepper, 21h tea·
spoons groond nutmeg, 1 !f.i tea-
SlXJOflS grOUnd cloves and a
teaSpoon of ginger. This spice
mixture is a traditional sea-1 soning for ragout!, wine sauc.
es and rabbit stews.
Graceful . \
Dress up ,1eeveless styles
with th.ls pretty cape -worn
open in front or back.
Take cover from brisk
breezes, air conditioning in a
graceful cape with diamond
stripes. Knit or sport yam.
Pattern 7018 : sizes 32-38 incl.
FlFJ'Y CENTS (coins) for
each pattern -add 15 cents
for each pattern for flrst.elass
mallin' and special handling;
otherwise third~lass delivery
will take three weeks or more.
Send to Allee Brooks, the DAI·
LY P ILOT, i05 Needlecraft
Depl., Box. 163, Old Cb~llea
Station, Ne'lf York, N.Y. 10011.
Print N1me, Address, Zip
P•ttem Namber. Giant, new
19CI Needlecraft Catalo1 -
over 200 'designs to choose, 3
free patterns printed Inside.
Send SO cents now.
NEW!; "50 INSTANT
GIFTS" 1 fabulous fashions,
toys, decorator acceuoria.
i\lake it today, give it tomor-
row! Ideal for all occaslons. IO
cents.
"11 JlffJ Rap'' to knit ~
chet. wene, :s"{, hook. 50
cent..
Book°"" PT1le AfcMa· 50 ce.nl!!!.
·MMJeum Qlllt 1-pat·
I
I
I
' I ,
' CENTER cur-
RIB CHOPS
• .;
FROM TENDER
CORN.FED '
PORKERS
.. I
I
fRESH
LEAN"
&MEATY
•
LOIN.OR
RIB END
-" , . .
FIL~T OF S.O.lE ::~~·.~~:;::.~ ...... lb 8~
S~ICED HAUBUTc'"'"'"· .... , • .,lb.98c
FILlET OF PERCH °'"'''"•"·· .. 1b79'
FROSTED SHAKES 1orc1M·, ... -.5/1.
C:REAM CHEESE:::t:~·:.=:: .. n ..... 3/1. CHIPPED MEATS ~!':.7:;:: ......... 3/1. \1.11ENERS ··"''"""'. AG/ ... , . I 1b.,pkg .................................... ,,,,.
Lu. NCH MEATS '•"""''"'• 59c Sliced 14 or. Pkg.••••••••••••· CHEDDAR CHEESE~:::~!'.;:.,h •. lb .... 109 CHEESE SPREAD ~7~:::~~:: ...... ,.,.;39~
24 OZ. BOTTLE 2 -1 2 HUNT'S '1 C ' CHRIS I'. PITTS )'/ 07 l>R~fN GIANT 1-LB. CHIFFON ZEE
CRISCO Holv~d Sliced B-8-Q NIBLETS SOFT Tropic Tones
OIL PEA CH ES SAUCE CORN OLEO NAPKINS
45c 26< 30< 22< 39< 10<
-
• l -' • ~ • ., >'1-~ ""· • ... ~· .... --.. • '
ALBERTSON'S ,) llDUCIO 36·•~ TAtt.1SKIPPY . ·-a~ AttERTSON'S 48s 48~ ALBERTSON'S '""'" 59~
GAllON BLEACH'"'"' DOG fOOD lltllK1fl5PlaAI~.......... TfA BAGS 1111ummm1........ PO TA.TO CHIPSsrmu -11.01 ..
SHOP and COMPARE NATIONAL BRAND ITEMS at FULL DISCOUNT -7DAYS A WEEK
Save at Albertson's 0111(1 ...
,tlCI ,_I((
'TOMATOES ••• \,.,,, ........ 33 27!
PE~NUJ B,UJTER ;~;~·:: •• l ;, 1"
CORN "flA'KtS •-·· ""·" 39• 38!
POPCORN ''~"M"'"· ....... 43 < 38!
BATH TISSUE ,..,~,. ........ 29• 264
29< 254
4 • • J ~· Save at Albertson's ~ Save at Albertson's 01111
Piia Save at Albertson's • Ofllll
p11ct:
' ...
'"" SALT:-:.::;;..~~ ............. _"_ 15• ,12! KETCHup,..,,.,. ............... · 35< 32! BROWN BREAD ............. · 33< 301
PORK&BEANS ... ,,.,.,n .-· 25 • 221 BROILaFOIL "" ...... , ...... 59• 57! WHITEKINGD 1~.11..., ........ 81• 581
TOMATO SAUCE """''"" ...... 3/3 101 DEnRGENT =~7 .............. , 1'9 1" FOIL WRAP ;.":,~t.~~'!........... 65< 59!
FRUIT DRINK ~.:\:.::'.' .... -.JPc 341 PANCAKE MIX :'.:';.'!~~ ...... : S6c 551 GIANT FAB.1 ~011, .... .,......... &3 • 82!
SPRAY,STARCH .... ,, ...... _ 7,9c 61! CRYSTALWHITE ... L.,.. ....... ' 69.• 591 PICKLES ~;·.;.-::!':: ........... 37• 331
MARSHMALLOWS :;.::~.:_M
SYRUP ., .. -···"'' .......... 59' 574
·DOGFOOD ;::;.';t; •• _ .. _ 93'• 8~ OiiCKEN SPREADu......,,... ll7' 45j ·CLEANSER"'"'"''""'"'"'". /35• 171
11-=.:.::::::...;==;::;.:;=:.:.:.:..:...;;.;.....:-.;:;.;........, "cLEANER ••• ~ .. -·"""'"'".: 79,c 6 ·S1 WINDOW CLEAN£~ ... ,,_ .... :. 5~· 571 .. CltEEZ IT !'::.':::.':':'.1:~ ........... :. 29• 271
STRAWBERRIES '"'"""""·n, ............... 201
ICE CREAM Nl>ori•Ofl'•1 ~Gou.,,11tll!HI •••••••••••••••• 69~
ORANGE JUICE l rtHWHI 601. •••••••••••••••••••• 264 t
ORANGE JUICE ""'"'""" ..................... 521 .. .
Enchiladasv~"'-':' tMm• 344
Potat~s c .• ~ 1.a111. S1oot.111n1••• 34 ¢
Chicken .Pie•~"'''"' 101~ ... 371
RED-VINE
RIPE and
JUICY -LB. '
I ""'" 9c Canta oupe c.,1ft ...... , •.
• l fmh 25< Apr1co S swee1 •••••••••• LB.
bl. ""'""'· 7 (a 1uage Green~~ ••••••••• tit ' ' , 10 Frtsh Re"' C lettuce Leef ............... .
C ol Vefl ~ Kltt!IP Mtocoroni 36 ' asser e ondO.-.llor......... "'
.lUX LI.QUID 10( Off
220L
LIQUOR -BEER and WINE S
'\ FLEISCHMANN'$
l'l~~GIN'°''"'
SAV! t.lOOlD.CROW ]]49
BOURBON lf.,. . .
EDENROC 3''
Tuhorg Danish Beer 6,,.u 22'
Piels New York·Beer6~~ 791
Falstaff.Beer •n2· ... s. .. 16c 1°'
Millers Hi life ...... 12.120 •. 211
~ Champagne .... cn .......... 5!11 17' All WIDO/llG"ClllS
MOHfN Of JllNL
CREST PRELL SECRET . ' Extra large Medium Size . Anti·Pers.
TOOTH LIQUll), SPRAY
PASTE SHAMPOO DeOdorant
59~ 48~ 98~
LEMON
Mill HIGH
MIRIN8U! PIE
IA•GISHUl 59 Ml"IO WllN , (
fAN(;f,IUIHG
SESAME.BREAD; ....... 160,,4/J. £(lAIRS Ch~oloto• ' .
large Sin ........ ,••••••• Ea.19 COOKIES ..... ,.d
loxes·Or ..... o ••••••••• 4/1.
48 ~ I oxvoorG;a2 i1DASH ... ~ ... Gr. 11< .,BONUS ...... cr.82<11vory Bcir Mfo. l 'J<
BOLD ....... or.82< GAIN .•..... or.82< CASCADE2002.42 1 Spic'nSpan cl'31
I -•
-
Barpln ! Qalll iJ.\,i. 1 has II
beauUlul pat1erns~cenUI
terns for IZ sqpe:rb quilts. 50
cenls.
.Book 3, "Quilt• for Today's
Liriq11• 15 patterns. 50 cenLS.
Huntington Beac:h -15~11 'So. Edwards
Ldguna hadt -700 So. Coast Hwy.
, huntain ~alleY ...... !6042 Mognolia Huntln9fOll •h -8911 Adams
Corona del Mar -3049 Coast Hwy •
I
•
•-"'•4' """"'-"---"-J.J.-~--~,....,_ --.~ "''-"-,~ r r i .:t :! : L~-.!Wl1J.,::rkll!.!'-':.llf;l.tl~-~'LA.M~ttlt<!:dti,1:lli.~~~~~5..!.U!L1~2~·.'.l·~~~~~~
::-----......,..---._____,,--.. -.-.----~..--··-·--·........--.-..... -.~--·-~----· -.... "J:.tf'O'!:C:Cb; ....... ~::r • ..,..• ••• -• .¢ .. t-_._,,.,..,.. ~ ............ _ .......... -., ...... _. _ _. __ "' ............................... ··-............ -.. , ............ ··~ ...... .,..,.~ -·
YALU.AILE COUPON
COF°FEE1 69
AXION
PRE-SOAK ·
3 LI. CAN
It .. II• .... "·"
SCHILLINll'S 3n.r BACON-BITS ~;!'.~;:-'"' 7-
TOiLETBOWL Cleaner 79'
s..tlolne Hydro1 COOKllS, l~b. cello ___ ,,_4fc
Nabisco G-CllACKEU, 1-lb. lox .. _.Jtc
Poclllc l.G. Sodo CllACKHS, l·lb. bo1 .. ___ .2Sc
2 LI. CAN , •••••• , , , • ,, ••••••••• Sl.JJ
lU, CAN ''·''
GREEN GIANT ·
. eCutGl'ffn leans
•French Sllcecl Green leans '
• Whole Kernal Com
•Cream Style Cor:n
•Green Peas . ·
[#303
CANS
-IWIN PACK
FACIAL QUALITY
2·PJ,Y
TOILET TISSUE
FRESH
EGGS
Grade
AA
·Dozen
'
· KERNS
TOMATO
SA.UCE
l·oz. Cans
WATERMELON BAR M WESTERN STYLE
SHANK LESS
HICKORY SMOKED
· U.S.D.A. GRADE A
FRYING
CHICKENS
Red & Ripe SMOKED
HAMS
SHANK HALF-CUT UP
Soft Imperial.,
'" .MARGARl~E ~
3 T i.:t PACKAGE •
OF ~snc TUBS
e BURGER ROUNDS
e CHICKEN ROUNDS
e CHICKEN STEW
e PET STEW
Kai K~n
DOG FOOD • ' "
M.P.S .. CHUNK 4 F $1::'.
'#1 TALL CANS ~ •.
· .. ,
Brion -New Enzyme Active :~
PRE -SOAK ...... ·.-;"l•··
"
.
'
GIANT SIZE
REG. 69c 49 ci'. ..
' ·'· ~· -·~ ,
Ajax Laundry '""'
DETERGENT --"· ·
FAMILY SIZE
REG. $2.89
Foremost .
•••
$19~~
··"'''
ICE .CREAM _
1f2 GALLON
Slj)UARE
CARTON 59~
•.J "
HEALTH Ii. BEAUTY AIDS /.,.
MOUTHWASH~;:. 99' "
MINT 4~ ShavinCJ Cream '''.:;:~""' 7-·
'
IODT SIT PIOflUIONAL sftlt '
HAIR SPRAY '"""-'"' 7-...
IOUILOff
VODKA fifth
$2"
LB. LB. SCOTCH WHISKEY 510"
SUGAR SWEET
CANTALOUPES
EXTRA FANCY, SEEDLESS
GRAPES
MILD llllMUDA
ONIONS
Young·N· Tender
BEEF
LIVER
59~
BAR M WESTERN STYLE
BUTT PART HAM
Fresh Lean lar M Western Style
GROUND CONEY·~·:
BEEF WIENERS
49~ XLNT 59c FOR
BAR·B.O lb
BAR M WESTERN STYLE
SLICED BACON :~:~
Bar M Westem Style c c SLICED lb lb BOLOGNA
llNTUCIT TOWN -1tettfuc., Stn1i9ht $399
BOURBON '.:~'"'
ii.ENDE01Wi.isk;y $3" ·
PRICES EFFECTIVE:
Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sunday
.lune 19, 20, 21, 22
Prlcet 1ubJect to stock on hand.
-
"
"
I :.:'.
" ' ,, . .,,.;
"
WI GIVE WE GIVE BLUE CHIP BLUE CHJf STAMPS STAMPS
COSTA MESA 19fh and Placenl,f ..
PLACENTIA 710 W. Chapm1n •
;in it
~
I
' i
I
I
I
• I
' (
• \
(
• t
'
I • 1
(
' t
J
l \
' j __ --__ -__ J_. ________ , _________ .___._ __ ~----------'--~----'----------.......
Win H~rts '
t.yf:l6tt13~
come a June -or
.Ju er any-month baby \Vith
th harming sam'pler.
mom and batiJ's heam ,.,.i adorable sampler story.
Embroider laiy daisy flowers
in multi-colors. Pattern 722tl :
transfer llxtS", 60 names . '
FIFTY CENTS (coim) for
each pattern -add IS cen~
for each pattern for fir~(
class mailing and s~1a'
handling: otherwise th~
class delivery will take three
week! or more. Send to Alice
Brooks in care of the DAILY
PUJlT. 105 Needle<raft Dept..
BOs .163,, Old Chelsea Stall?"·
NeW York. N.Y. 10011. Prmt
Name, Address, Zip. Pattern
Number. Giant, new 1969 Nee-
dlecraft Catalog-over 200 de·
signs to choose , 3 free patterns
printed inside. Send SO cenU
now . T NE\V! "50 INST A.N
GIFi'S'' -fabulous ·fRBh'<!ns,
toys decorator acce!50l'1es.
Mak'e il today, give it tomor·
row! ldeal for all occasions.
50 CtJJt.s. "II JUiy Rugs" to
~kni·• crochet. weave. sew,
holk. 50 cents Bargain! QuiU
Bolk 1 has 16 beautiful pat·
terns. 50 cents Museum Quilt
Book z -patterns for 12 su·
perb quilts. SO cent~ Book 3.
"Quilts for Today·s Llvink". 15
patterns. 50 cents.
Molded
Desserts ' ~· Popular
Molded desserts are popular
because they're do -a h e a d
dialJ_es. d :}tade In the mornin~ an alowed to set all day m the
rifigerator • they can be
bfought out and unmolded at
dflnertime. . eo here's a new recipe for yi.i lo try. It features
cfocolale and coconut flavor~.
jiou might like to try this =rt on a menu . that
f tures fruit in the openmg or
in course. On a men~ of
U.t sort it's not a good idea t~.repeat'the fruit flavor in the
dlssert. That would be too
m\ICh ol a good thing.
a;J!OCOLATE COCONIJT ! SPONGE
t' cup cold water
enve!ope unflavored
gelatin
4 cup plw 2 tablespoons
I sugar
•/, cup cocoa ~4 teaspoon salt
I: cups milk
.• eggs. separated
•h: iuspoon almond extract ~ can (31h ounces ) flaked
~ coconut, toasted
);weetened whipped cream
#>prinkle gelatin over water
lOl soften. stl l n 8 l.quart saucepan r oletber l/4 cup sugar, ~e !:ocoa and salt; 8!°aduaD:Y •i::,
ir,..l cup of the milk ; bring
s•mering temptratw'f. . eea_t e1g yolks slightly ; stir !t~Ul:e~r'!e i:n ~ ~and'r:I.; •< an Cook l mmute ~ tll~e from heat: s~ir in ~ened gelatin until diss<Wv·
c •Add remaining • l CUP ~~~
d the almond e'ltract. . ~Lil partially get. Fokl 10 1
curn °! ~~a~:i~ bowl bekat · until soft pea 1
egg whites . • tablespoooa tonn: wt i~ ~ ta.form . aupr unUI still Pt" bliu GradulDY fold egg ~ 1 lntqcoeoamlxture: turnUI tel.
4 '.Te\IP mold .. ~lhu~hlpped
Unmo\d: 1a:tn11 . . coeonut cream and rema1nm& ·
f!\a\es I servlnP·
Simple Sauce
gor i lllmpte but dei\clou:t
:;auce (or fish. m!1 mellt.d
W&.&er, capers and lcrnotl
Julee.
' f
• • v . .• . ...... ..... , .. -...... ~ ····-· ... -· ........ -··· ........ ~. . ~ .....
• DAILY l'tlOT 0
'f". ,
COl'Yl lGHf 19,t
MARK!T t.t.SK~T
JUNE 11
DllP-CUT DISCOUNT
PRICES AS USUAL • • •
ALL MAIKd 1AsKn S101ES
OPEi REIULAI HOUIS
7 DAYS AWEEK!
Sii~ed Bacon • ~ 6!Jt
Wf tfSfM THI llGHT TO LI MIT QIJANlll!fS: NO SALES TO WHOlfSAl.fU Ot OISTlll VTOIS.
ALL STORES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 'OONUIDllCOUNT WI All PllASID TO ACCEPT :;~~;-;. U.S.P.A. FOOD STAMP COUPONS
IN LOS ANGILIS COUNTY STORH ONLT
NEWPORT BEACH_. ................... St.
• 11111"1" Av•. IW•IKllfl "-tit e SANTA ANA-'.!:.'..'-= ....
e COSTA MESA_..""-e FOUNTAIN VALLEY-'!'~ e HUNTINGTON BEACH-'~!!.~f,;:..,;,..
j
I
1
l1 .I
\l
11
I
I
l
)
• I
ff IWLY•PllOT WtdMSdq, June 18, 1969 · '* , ...
THE STRIKE IS ·OVER!. ,.
• 1
•.•. ~·eoNTI ,uEs 10,
SELL :AT .LOW --· '
. .
.DISCOUNT PR·ICES !
STOCK IS SUBJECT
TO MERCHANDISE
AVAllABlllTV
. "
YOU CAN DEPEND ON LUCKY FOR A COMPLETE SELECTl.ON OF FAMOUS
GROCERY BRANDS, TOP QUALITY LUCKY BONDED MEATS, FARM FRESH
FRUITS AND .VEGETABLES-ALL YOUR SUPERMARKET NEEDS-AT LUC!:KY'S
GREATER EVERYDAY SAVINGS.
lUCKY BONDED MEATS GUARANTEED FOR FlAVOR & TENDERNES~!
SIRLOIN STEAK $ 19
LUCKY IONDID • .. • .. .. .. ... .. •• .. 1 , •.
RIB ROAST 97~ ROUND STEAK
STANDING -LARGE END . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . ·
GROUND BEEF 5 5 ~ FRESH AND LEAN • • . . . . .. .. . .. . . .. . .. .. . .. . . ·
CENTER CUT
LUCKY
IONDID' •
CROSS RIB 89~ ~~r;~~"~c~r!~~ .............. 3 71i.. ·
BONELESS ROAST ......................... :.. · RIB STEAK $) 14
TENDER AND JUICY .. .. . .. . .. .. .. • LI.
: ... ,.:·· ... ; .. ,·:·i :T·BONE STEAK 1 3~ CUBE STEAK $)29
l ·Z CUT • , , , •• , , , •••••........ , , , , ll.
· " · · · , · · TAILS REMOVED .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . . . .. . .. .. .. ·
FAMOUS BRAND GROCERIES AT lUCKY'S LOW EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES!
GERBER'S BABY FOOD DEL MONTE PEAS CHICKEN OF THE SEA CORN FLAKES .... ,... 10· 11.01. 22· Cltu11kT1111• 30< ··"···· 38' 41/a..Oi.Jir , .. 61/1·01. c •• 11-0L lllt
HILLS BROS. COFFEE HUNT'S TOMATOES CORNED BEEF HASH CHEERIOS CEREAl
1 .. 0 1. 68' 21.01. 31' u1i1i, 47c 15·01. 49' Cn '" 1 Sh·01. C111 ...
HILLS BROS. COFFEE CUT GREEN BEANS WESSON SALAD OIL BEST FOODS
JJ·01. $135 01/ M11111t1 2 4 C 24·01. 48' M1y111111ht 5 8 C ,,. 16·01. Coi• Ill. 32·01. Jar
LIPTON TEA BAGS TOMATQJUICE LUCKY SALAD OIL KRAFT DRESSING
4l·Ct. 59' l illllr'• 33c
41.01.ltl. 67( 1000111••• 38 c ... 4~·01. Co" l ·Ot. ltl,
MOTTS' APPLESAUCE HUNT'S CATSUP MPS DOG FOOD BISQUICK
2.S·Ot. 36' 20·0r. 30' ll1lllon 25( 40·0t. 48' '" l tl. 14·01. (11 . ..
DOLE SLICED PINEAPPLE TOMATO SAUCE KEN-L-RATION CAMPBELL'S SOUP
14 \lli.01.(111 24' H11nt'1 19' Oo1Footl 17' TefMt• 12 C 1 .S-Or. (111 1.S\lt-01. (111 10%-01. (111
" fRUIT COCKTAIL KRISPY CRACKERS SCOTT TOWELS GATORADE DRINK
Dol Me11te 25' S11nll1i11t 3 3 c 161·(1, 33' .Sloktl•'• 3 6 c
17-01. ''" 16-01. 101 ••ti 22·01. ltl.
SUNSWEET PRUNE JUICE HERSHEY COCOA KLEENEX FACIAL PREMIUM ICE CREAM
4t.01. ltt. s 8 c 1111t1nt . 79c ll-01. (111
Ti1u11 2 7c 200-(1.101
,,,.. .... 11 79c
l'l·G•I. Ct11.
MOTTS' APPLE JUICE GAIN DETERGENT ZEE NAPKINS BIRDSEYE AWAKE
J2·01. 37' 49-01. 83' Tr111ic To1t1 12 c Drhll 37c I ll. ... 60·(1. ,k •. 9·01. (111
Hl-C FRUIT DRINKS DASH DETERGENT IMPERIAL MARGARINE BANQUET CHICKEN PIES .,.o .. 30' .so.01. 71' 16·01.(!11. 38 c 18' '" ... l ·Ot. Pit
Niii.iT'S CORN JOY LIQUID SOFT MARGARINE FROZEN FISHSTICKS
12·01. 23' D1tertt"I 5 8 C lwck, 29' Cfffl·F,.1h 6 5 C '" 22·01. Ill. 16·01. C111. 14-01. Pkf.
r ' THE FINEST QUALITY BANANAS YOU CAN BUY ANYWHEREI
CHIQUITA
BRAND BANANAS
120 WeJf LI Palma AYe., 333 North Euclid AYe., 19080 Brookhurst
ANAHllM PUlllRTON ttt GA.f.IRD
HUlttll'IOTOM •llAClt
6lf Soul! M1in SI., 100 North Harbor Blvd., 1307f Springd1le
SAHTA ANA 1.4 HAlkA wi•tMIMs~.-:AlDIN GJIOYI
I
c
lb.
2620 E. Ch1pm1n
.. Yo•u . OU.NGI
13075 Euclid
et •ARDIN •aOYI
·'
Sweet /c/ea ,
Pineappl~. F.alls
I ~ Into New Mold
the hard &rainy side after
chilling.
It ~ILOT·AllVQTI.![ft
t
W ITH
JC you're Interested 1n serv.
ing a cool and refreshing but
substantial dessert. you may
be interested lo try this new
Pineapple Rice Mold.
It's substanUal because..,
following the fashion fjl: a
famous French dessert, lt has
cooked rice added lo iU
creamy base. l
It has a pleasant ~g
because the amount ,of sugar
Make this dessert in the
roomt111 or early afternoon
and senie for supper. This
w33 the flavor will be al lta
beit. Although the mold st.ores ·
well ovunight, ill fla vors will
become tangier on overnight
atorage than. when freshly served.
SALLIE
80 HIOI: 'm
CO"f ll01""
TO
Cornmunlcailonet Aren ·i
they ~ moat! Wou.Jd yo11
believe l"ve btt:n up and
owa.y from Newport &arfi.
makinc the rounds ol t~
United States. I fowxl out
thai theft. it a.n Oran1e
County in South Cuofin;,i,
alM a TIP.mine Road, Gon•
zaltz, Louisiana, ia the Jam•
balaya capitol of t~ World.
In the 90Uthem patt: ot Ala·
bl.ma "wild grapes'' practic·
ally ·take over the ~tr)'•
aide. They climb ~s and
rhake a Junrte betw~n
them. Scuppemong i& the
jlotanical name. Bulllsis thr.
'kid's name. and accwdlni.: ro
' those wbo's picked then1
wild, lbey've got a real
called for is low aocf beca1w PINEAPPLE RICE ~10LD
buttermilk ii used . , 1 envelope u n fl a v or e d
And it has refreshing navdr . . gelatin
because crushed plnupple '~ cup sugar ,,. · ·1 1.~ l.e.a.spoop salt s..._.5 m I , •
1 can (B'i-S ounces) crushed A few tips about iU makine : pineapple
Use rice that has been cook-1111 rops soft-cooked rice
eel unUI it i! very soft. The 1 cup buttennllk
mold has to be refrigerated 1 tablespoon lemon juice
for several hours in order to 1.{t teaspoon vanilla
have the dessert set; if you ~4 cup _heavy cream
use rice that isn't soft enough In a medium saucepan
the kernels are likely to ~ ~ tliOrougbJy sUr together the
Pimientos
Brightener ...
For Salad
Molded salads always ate
nice.
For this one the ingredients
are ,colorful and tasty -
bright big pieces of pimiento
highlight the two sha~, of'
green of the avocado and
artichoke hearts.
P™IENTO MOWED SALAD
1 jar or can (7 ounces)
whole pimientos, drained
~z small head (about)
caullOower
1 ripe avocado
l package (10 ounces) fro1e
en artichoke hearts, cook-
ed u directed on package
1 cup bottled French or
ltahan dressing
2 envelopes u n f I av ore d
gelatin
~'4 cup wine vinegar
1 can (12111 ounces) con·
somme madrilenc
Boiling water
I tablespoon capers
1 teaspoon instant minced
onion
To prepare : tear pimienios
Into large pieces; b nee' at
cauliflower into fiowerJets'
then slice into "fans ." '
Peel avocado and cut int'l
slices or ' cubes. C o o k
artichokes as directed nn
package. Place all vegetables
tog:eiller in a bowl; sprinkle
with salt and pepper and 3'Jd
dre5.$ing.
Lightly toss vegetables to
mis: and distribute dressing.
Let stand at room tem-
perature while prep a ring
gelatin base.
Soften gelatin in vinfgar.
Heat consomme, then . add
bolling water to make 5 cup~
of liquid. Stir in gelatin until
dissolved. Stir in capers and
onion.
Chill gelatin mixture: until it
Is \'ery thick and syrupy.
Drain vegetables, reserving
marinade, and fold i n t o
gelatin; spoon in ta 2.quart
mold rinsed in cold water.
Chill until firm.
Unmold on greens and
garnish with a few reserved
avocado slices and artichoke
hearts. 6--1 servings.
Inspiration
Pops Up
ltlatiO. sugar and salt: add
undrained pineapple. Place
over 1 ow beat, sUrrtng coo-
stantly until gelatin dissolves.
Remove from heat.
SUr in rice. Cool to room
temperature. Stir in but-
tennHk, lemon juice and
vanilla. Chill until mixture
begtns to thicken -thi.s may
take only a fe~ minutes.
WbJp cream until sun and
fold into ploeapple minure.
";Turh into 1-quart mold· ehlll
until finn -usually severa1
botm.
Unmold at serving time. To
~ so, .with the point of a par·
mg knife, Joose.n sides of mold
D,ip.mold, almost to the top, ih
warm tap water: remove
from water and shake from ·
side to side.
Invert a . serving plate over
·top of mold: holding plate and
mold together securely tum
over; remove mold. U mold
cannot be lilted off, repeat
dipping and unmolding pro-cess.
If you like, you may garnish
th.e dessert . with pineapple
shces and mint sprigs.
Makes: 6 lo I servings.
See Through
.. :: ..
Sheer nattery for day, din·
ner! Irish roses: in crochet
ring neckline, waist.
Have fashion's new look.
Crochet see-thru bodice of '
string attach .to fabric skirt.
Pattern 7234 : NEW siies 10-16
included. Size lZ (bust l4).
FIFTY CENTS (coins) for
each pattern for lirst~ass
PE AN UT P 0 P C 0 RN mallinJ and special handling:
CRUNCH oth'env'ile third-class delivery
For Snack
J package (5 ounces) pop-will take three weeks or more.
com in foll pan Send to Alice Brooks the DAi-
l jar (9 ounces) dry-louted· LY PILOT, 10$ N~lecraft
peanuts Dept., Bos: 163, Old Chelsea
t cup dark corn syrup Station, New York, N.Y. 10011.
I pound confectioners sugar Print Name, Addrn1, Zip,
sifted ' Patten Number. Giant. new
I teaspoon vanilla IHI Needlecraft Cflitalor -
I 1 a r I e marshmallows ,.'"over .200 desllnl to choose, 3
quartered ·' free patterns printed inside.
Pop com according to Send 50 ct.nl.I now.
package directions : tum into NEW! ••so t N s TANT
large bowl: add peanu~. GIFTS" _ fabulous fashions,
In a saucepan combine ¥ 1oy1 decorator accemrtes
syrup and 2 cup1 of the sugar; .:Make It today, give it tomor: ~k over medium heat stl;· row ! Ideal for all occuJon.s. so nng constantly unUJ sugar 1S cent.s
dissolved. · Gradually add remaining "II Jiffy R11g:1'' to knit,
sugar, stirring constantlr and crochet, weave, uw, hook. so
bring to a full boil. Boll I cenll.
minute Book of 11 Prlae A(pau. 50
Remove from heil: 1dd. ctnts.
vanilla . and maT'lhmallowl; Bargain! O.lll 8tolc t has 16
stir unlll marshmallows me.IL beeutiful pattem1. SO cenU.
Pour hot ..mixture over com Mastvm Quilt Boole I -pal·
and n1us: toss Until evenly term for 12 superb quilts. 50
coated. Sprud on WU popor; c<nls.
whong.
And here's a real iwm) '.
All the way lhru Colorado
and up aOO across Canada
and down to Ne1v York and
Wa..shinaton, D.C., I haun ted
&ift shops looking for 5 Un<
usual, typical of the area
1itts lo bring back to 5 vet)'
speciaJ friends. In the Slut'!
Ridge Mountaill.! ol Vlrg in!A
I finally settled on some Car-
oJina. Pines": Sachet soap.
The heady scent hit mf!
when I \valked in U>e-door,
so I folJ01ved my W and
came across stackii like 1,.,.
do cans In dump bfns ot
these French milled beauty
ban ln the wildest eolorll
I've ever seen. Antique aoJd.
blueberry, fem, cyclamen
aOO tiger lily, al! the more
Impressible because t h e y
were carefully coklr blended
·to 5 of tbe tmost popular
House and Garden col.on.
The box WU no5t:alfic, sa
old faahioned and ..qua.int
looking. I waa thrilled. Htl'I'.
I lhou&ilt, \.\'U somt! tt'al
channing country rtult.
YOU KNOW '
THE ANSWER • Back home, m~ th!!
rouOOs ol the old cohal, I
had to pick my1ell up lron1
a bij: swoon in the · bat~1
shop. You really feel like
you'·ve am~, and ence you
aet in, you can't teat! your.
sell out. C.Omplete new look,
And what jewels a!T' com·
bined 10 happily! :Njii just
towels and !Oll.P dishal and
tisaue boxes, but ~~u.re~,
plaques and magazifte.,rack.1
. . • chairs and fish tO' dan-
gle and mirrors that-;..tand
6 feet tall or hang en 1he
wel! ••• pillows .a.nd11oii:t·~
with drawers to put ih1ngs
in •.• Shter color ~lion,
a regular bathroom lun&l9
of bounteous baubMa !tt
make shower curtai~ rue:t
and wuh cloths more fun,
You iuessed it! The~,
scentfully nested to ~lther
dramatize or hannon!M w it>t
the correct ~me .bottle~. aue« towel holders aii:l ca.~t
Iron frogs, Carolina's iint.•t
French mil!M sachet .oii11
elegantly added the, perfect
dot-0n-the-eye col.or ..
TO 1'tELLOW '
ALONG WITH
THE BLACK,
WHITE AND GOLi)
bath, even Caroli,,. PiM.•
black soap, unscanj.ed !r1
ni~ big man.size(I bani.
Thal b.lack white ~ aolrl
bath is rather natctt;. Evtn
has IOme black aJil while
clocks from Ena:J~ mad"
like cardboard bo~· wit!,
plastic faces. But th@ n!all,v
\\'ind and ha~·e \o\'ofta And.
the whil(' hands go round'
and round on black laces. :
Right now the big p i is on
hangers, Or perha.Pf you'lf
cal.I them hooks to hl.ng on
the wall to hana thil&s on.
Some are wrou1~ • iron,
painted in today coien. or
p~k your deoorafuw, kick
wuh cherries, da.is~ 1em·
ons or bows, Or wh7 <nor a
, V.:hole striq of ~ .. on a.
Pleee of wood • • ~ cotfe~ cups, towels, even POii and
pans. Need a do.set·!~ ..
v.'8.ll ! Hook it all ovfto: and
lilt your mo1t colorful'~hf!s
do your decorattnr ff\;_you.
CAUPO•IA 1!1 TB:"
WONDEI PUU'..EST ~
especiall,y Newport •ach aoo the ~t witt O'lf'
bright ~ carpet 1"" organ music. Where . are
fruit sl&llil 90 p · us.
\Vhat a wondrous ~aion or Jum!Xt apricots • .' ms,
grapes, peachea, pa f'l!d
raspben;e1, nectarl •• ,
even f~h figs, coco and
all the r;reat melons. Mt,.ay8'. the newl~ .... Would Jiu 10
fot· lemon navored ~ "'"
in cans or frfftt.dri14' cot.
taa:e chef:te In a .. tie
packet .• , to empty-1"ntly
into S 07.. ot water •!It and
ld stand 10 ml~ut.., Or
taco fill In the meat ~·
ll')('nt. rtad)' to Jq 4 pop
Into a ta.co lhl'U aJorw'tw\th
lettuce, tomato and new
Undy'1 taco 01n1ce.
. Richard'a. ~ people ,
11 mot'! than " ttOtt ..
_11'1 a "'&Y ot Ut~ .and L..,·-~
lo the fulle.-t. • • "fUli' Cool 1n<t break into pk:ces. Book 3. '<Q11ll11 for Today's
Makes Z~ pounds. Uvln1." 15 patterns. SO c~nta. '-••••-•••
..
,
.. ' .
..
. '
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·~ .,..
,, .r.•
. ·.1•
. . ) .. , . ' ...
• ''f
'
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' ' ..
~L L
.. "
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••
...
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_".""' ___ , -•'·-------~-.,.,..·-------~ ......... ----------------------~------""'Mrl
.,
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'
Wtdnt5dQ', June 18, 1969 DAILY "LDT 4 j
&S!z•za z sJJa•oanzA JU zsaazznass '#s&tswsA Asznmartsaruna HZlsP_s§!lstsssea•zSUs?JJ ar
A
' ~; unds of glistening .&trawberrias ij our
' '''-~Jtrewberry pies, frothy p11terit1 end
claln, 10~ mtn'( fresh baked goodies to
pita•• you.
. ~
CRUSTY ROLL~' FOR SANDWICHES OR WITH BARBECUED f\4EA TS
FRtNCH ROLLS 6 ,.,31c
FLAVORFUL FOR TOAST
Cracked )Vheat Bread 39c
PECANS, RAl~INS ANO COCONUT TOPS THESE
SCRUMTIOUS TREATS
BLONDIE· BARS ".10c
FINTLE FOR A CHICKEN DINNER
CHERRY PIE 1.55
Dilled oniPn rings, corn rtli1h, pickled egg·
pJants encl tomatoes, Senf Gurktn-f'elishas
of all ki~s for summer variety. Plus 30
sauces en~ gle:zes . Try some, for funl
M.J.Boi COFFEE 1 LB. 69¢
M.J.B. COFFEE J·llt. 1.37
M.J .B. COFFEE ).~. 1.98
KNUDSEN LABON
BUTTER 1 LB. 83¢
SUNSHINE
KRISPY CRACKERS v ..... 25c
KERN 'S
Strawber~y Preserves ... ~l9c
KERN'S
GRAPE JELLY IO~L29c
• CRISCO OIL 24-01. 39¢
"46-01. RED
HA WAllAN PU.~CH . O,• 3 ;., 11
HUNT'S WHOLE
~. ;--
NEW POTATOES ... 8 ,.,'1
-~· . ;1 8 ... '1
HUNT'S RED
KIDNEY BEANS
HUNT'S
STEWED TOMATOES
HUNT'S 8 OZ.
...
... ,.
5 ,.,11
Tomato Sauce 12 for $1
HUNT'S
WHOLE TOMA TOES "' 5 '" '1
CH IFFON DELUXE
NAPKINS ....... ,29c
For your .next perty, try • tr1yful of our
imaginative Can•pe1. Stuffed beby tom-
atoes, sli't'ers of cucumbers, a curl of
enchory, pungent spreed1. To orcfer!
ROYAL HAWAIIAN ll/2-01.
Macadamia Nuts
AGED 3 YEARS, NEW YORK SHARP
Cheddar Cheese lb.1.59
'
NICE FOR SALADS, FANCIFOOD
Heartsiof Palm 1 ~·-69¢ •
NEAR EAST RICE OR WHEA,T
. PILAF ;
REESE SEAFOOD .
COCKT A·ll SAUCE
PHONE 673-6360 FOR HOME 'DELIVERY PRICES EFFECTIVE JUNE 19, 20, 21. Q<' •
•
' ' Orgon
Serontdo
For Your
Pleasure LIDO MARKET CENTER
'
"' I by
Bernice Fay .
NEWPORT BlVO. AT·JHE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE
'
THE FIRST WEEKEND OF SUMMER
The air is soft, the house is full of friends ond filled
with relaxed laughter. It's the time we entertain a
little more. Beg in the weekend's fun el Richard's. Stroll
our aisles for provocative food ideas, and enioy the
pleasures of our attentive service.
0
RICHARD'S IS THE NICEST PLACE TO
SPEND YOUR SHOPPING HOURS!
We never compromise on the quality of
our meats. T~ey are always the best to
be found! For inrt•nce r our plump, fresh
California Chickens!
ZACKY FARMS FRESH, CALIFORNIA FRYERS
Whole Body FRYERS Nlceforoutdoorro11ting 39¢Le.
~. "! '/ '
Cul.up FRYERS FRY UP A BATCH, FOR QUICK PICNIC LUNCHES ON THE BOA Tl
•
Split BROILERS Try m1rin1tin9 these
before ro1stin9 ••• m·m·m
FRESH
FRflNG RABBITS
J?otta;°r6fl~
49¢Le.
Fry lightly 2 oz. salt pork, add 1/4 C. olive oil, and I dove crushed garlic. Brown
pieces of..ifrabbit well over med. flame. Reduce heat and cook 25 min., turning once.
Add 6 crushed peppercorns, juice of I lemon, salt & pepper, I T. brown sugar, 1/4
C. tomato p•ste, l/2 C. chicken broth andd l/2 C. white wine . Cover, simmer 10
min. Add l/4 C. raisins, l/4 C. shelled pine nuts !from our Produce Dept.) and sim-
mer I 0 min. more. Add l/2 C. white wine to seuce and serve with rice pilaf.
MARINATED MEAT BALLS
STUFFED BELL PEPPERS
STUF.FED PORK CHOPS
B9c LI.
98C LI.
1.39 LI.
WE ALSO HAYE A .COMPLETE SELECTION OF EXOTIC SEAFOOD ANO
U.S.O.A. PRIME BEEF.
CHRIS CANDY CO • . ~
DIETETIC CANDIES
FOR SUGAR RE'STRICT!D DIET
P'rlced from 1.59
FRESH CUT
CARNATIONS
·ALL COLORS
The fir1't rf•Y ne~teril)e•, b19, plump,
c:hecrie1, royel aptic:o.t1., plums, 111 t~e fr•h
•u,mmei' tasfes' are hete. So beautiful you'll
want fo mound th,m high for a c:enterp.iece.
FANCY, S.WEET, FULL BUNCHES ' . .
PERLETTE· SEEOl'..ESS.. ' ,
GRAPES LB. . 29¢ '
GARDEN FRESH, LEAFY GREEN
BOSTON
Butter Lettuce 2 for 25¢
BUTTERY RICH, FOR SALAD VA·RIETY
HAAS
AVOCADOS
LARGE SIZE, SWEET, JUICY
COACHELLA VALLEY
GRAPEFRUIT
Arn•ting 11 the word for our vor iety of
Frozen Food,, How •bout Hewaii•n
Lychee,, or coconut milk, Weight Watch·
•r's frot•n dinner,, tool
A QUICK HOT HOR D'OEUVRES, JENO'S
PIZZA ROLLS 6~'· 59¢
COME IN AN D TASTE THE
8 FLAVORS, DEMO. FRI. & SAT .
BIROS EYE QUICK THAW
STRAWBERRIES
STOUFFER'S CREAMED
CHIPPED BEEF
STOUFFER'S
BEEF STEW
STOUFFER'S
Chicken & Noodles
STOUFFER'S
Creamed Chic~en
10°01. 3 ,.,'1
11 .... 89c
11 v .... 89c
You 1v8 baen asking for it.
ROAST RIGHT
TURKEY TURNER & MEAT RACK
Fils all standard roasting pans. Hold s
up lo 30 lbs. Cradles meals abe>ve pan
grease. Sturdy design permits carving
right in the reek!
6.95
HE WfEK { 2 FEATURE Of FT
COFFEE
Cl:IP
Thtie l'l\ln·titld tUpt llt tellly I l~ial bUy ll 29¢ tKl'I! Stock up fhi1 "#Mk,
r1mtmberlrt1 yov11 wanl HYlt'll 1xtr1 10 ldd )'tlf5 more plt1sur1 to your stt!
\
' •:ClsZF&SF 7 Sff&U&SU&EF& Jl &•ssealfSC'F • U r -. ·-r --VI pr· -,_p-·z p-, (2 1· _,._ Tl'C a . a no rs f!s SU&ZS4J£_ w w Q ES Ut\QSF ?JSR'$ 'J RS? F•r• nnrur•·ttnrsnv ;., ¥22 r
. "'£~-,MARKET HOME & GIFT SHOP LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS '
OPEN DAILY 9,7, SUN. 9,6 OPEN DAILY 9-6
' -. OPEN DAILY 9-6 DAILY 9-5:lD, SAT. 9-5 OPEN DAILY 9-6 DAILY 9,J0-6, SAT. l :'l0-5
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OAll.Y PILOT
NO SNOW JOB : CALORIES AT A MINIMUM
No Need to Be Angel
When Gelatin's Around
Oscar Wilde once said that
he l'OOld resist anything ex·
cept temptation ..• and that's
how most dieters feel at
dessert time.
No need to be an angel. Try
desserts that teem luxuriously
rich, are in fact stingy with
calories. And that's just where
unnavor~ gelatine r e a 11 y
shines.
Unflavored aelaline provides
dieters with desserts that look
like cheating, but that may be
enjoyed with all clear con-
gcience. And "enjoyed" is a
key word.
A wonderful dessert that
pernY.ts the weight-"·atcher to
leave the table feeling really
!iatisfied i! a boon to the diet
... and a deterrent to snack·
Ing, too.
A meal that ends with a
rousing nnate makes it much
easier to wait until the next
meal for food intake.
And unOavored gelatine diet
de&erta really plet16t. They
look light, nuffy, attractive,
taste m<>!t flavorful.
There's litUe cook Ing
Involved .•.. only the few
minutes required to dissolve
the gelatine. Mosl gels are a
real snap to make.
C l a11lc Lime Snow,
generally considered to be too
high in calories for the diet,
come$ in a low calorie version
that's only 13 calories per
serving ... and just as delec-
table as its richer sister
version.
Orange Gel is a real 11:em ...
It's a sparkling, clear orange-
flavored dessert made simply
by combining u n f I av ore d
gelatine and low-cal orange
soda.
For most adult palates, It
tastes agreat because it's less
sweet than a packa ge d
dessert mix .•• and ju.st as
easy to make.
Applesauce Whip Is a sweet·
tart dessert with all the fine
flavor of apples ... it's bound
to turn up o[len on the diet
menu.
LIME SNOW
I envelope unflavo red
gelatine
1 !f4 cups cold water'· dlvided
Non • nutritive sweetener
equivalent to ~ cup sugar
~'4 cup Hme juice
2 teaspoons gra ted lemon or
lime rind
2 unbeaten egg whites
Green food coloring
Sprinkle gelatine over 'h cup
cold waler in saucepan. Place
ove r moderate heat; stir con-
stantly until gelatine dissolves,
2 to 3 minutes. Remove from
heat.
Sir ln non-caloric sweetener.
remaining o/.i cup water, lime
juice and lemon rind. Chill un·
Health Message Sent
BERKELEY, Calif. (UPI)
-A pilol nutrition education
effort is taking the University
of California's Agriculture Ex·
tension program deep Into
poverty area.s in both city and
country.
The program, aided by
federal funds, is designed to
reach "hard to reach" poor
families lo help improve the
nutritional quality and ade-
quacy of individual and fa1nily
diets withi n the economic
means of the family.
The university has employed
360 women from disad-
vantaged areas as pa ruime
11.ides. They have learned basic
nutrition and t e a c h i n g
methods and are already
teaching others in their ov.·n
neighborhoods.
"In the first month of the
program, more than 6,000
California families were
reached,'' says Or. Gaylord P.
\Vhillock, project director.
tll slightly thicker than con-
sistency of unbeaten egg
whiles.
Add unbeaten egg whiles
and a few drops food coloring
and beat with rotary beater or
electric beater until fluffy and
mixture begins to hold ils
shape.
Turn into a 6--cup mold; chill
until firm. Garnish. Yield: a
servings. 13 calories each.
ORANGE GEL
1 envelope unflavore d
gelatine
2 cups orange low-caloric
carbonated beverage,
divided
Sprinkle S'latinc over 1h cup
orange carbon d beverage in
sauce pan. Pl over low
heat; stir constantly until
gelatine dissolves, l to 3
minutes.
Remove from heat; stir In
remaining orange carbonated
beverage. Pour into four 1h·
cup molds or custa rd cups or
into a 2-cup bowl or mold.
Chill until fl rm. Yield: 4 serv-
ings, 7 calories each.
APPLESAUCE \VlllP
J envelope unflavored
gelatine
t cup cold water, divided
Non -nutritive sweetener
equivalent to 1/3 cup sug·
ar
I teaspoon granted lemon
rind
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 cups unsweetened ap-
plesauce
Sprinkle gelatine over 1,~ cup
cold water in saucepan.
Place over lo\V heil; stir
constantly until g e I al i n e
dissolves. 2 or 3 minutes.
Remove from heat; stir in re-
maining \Yater, sweetener,
lemon r ind and juice and air
plesauce.
Chil l, stirring occasionally,
until mixture mounds slightly
\\'hen dropped from spoon.
Beat with rotary or electric
healer until light and fluffy.
Turn into 6 dessert dishes.
Yield: 6 servings, 30 calories
per serving.
• There's a shiver in every sip of fW>oerldae Farrrie Soups. Just ice them down.
Artd seM them up. Glide Into our Vlchyuofse. .1.c.::)~:;;::::::~ Fftlh.,... leek& braised In butter. With tiny snow
.. paUloM. And lots of country crum Or dip "*Jellied ~ M&drnene. M8de with ICfUmptlous stocils of chicken and beef
Spoon In the cool of Pepperidge Ferme SouPs. AnCI ti.Im orf summer,
;
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. ~ __ • J .. ~....:.:..:...:.:-_ I . . .. • - -
10% DISCOUNT
ON A LL CASE .PURCHASES
OF WINE & LIQ UOR
BALBOA $ VODKA
FULL QT.
TROPICAL FLAVORED
WINE $
BAU HAI 112 Gal.
SEE US FOR
FOOD PRO VISIO NS
FOR ALL SIZES OF
BOATS & YACHTS
WE GIVE
29
39
BLUE CHIP
STAMPS
CHIFFON "NEW"
MARKET
''0• t he '' P eniru ula,'
Thursday· Friday
Saturday
ADVERTISED PRICES
GOOD THROUGH JUNE 21
SKIPPY TOWELS SHASTA
CANADA DRY
DOG
FOOD SUN FRESH
CASE-$3.95 GIANT ROLLS
12~:;$1 F $ 0
R
CAMPBELL'S
PORK & STARKIST
TUNA BEANS
HOME STYLE
5 F $1 REG. 37c: CAN
0 $ R F
Ret. 27c ea. 0
R
LOIN END FARMER JOHN
PORK 59c SLICED 69c ROAST · lb BACON lb
SOFT
DRINKS
12 OZ. CANS
12 F $1 0
R
PLAYTIME· VACUCEL
ICE
CHEST
$1 1!.$1 .79
FRESH PRODUCE ---=--------
RED-RIPE & JUICY
WATERMELON
WHITE ROSE
POTATOES
FRESH
CABB·AGE
ON THE PENINSULA -608 E. BALBOA AVE. -PHONE 673 -8310
HOURS: 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M.
I
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-.,.. Juno 18. 1'16'1 DAILY 'ILOT 47
Ins pi ration · for -Outdoor Lovers Booked
I
1tJ' JP.4NNE l.!3D1 deaaed IOUJ)I were quite com-Because mixes still weren't The newer book waa written adulU," aald Mn. Rlvolre. .ent thmi to Amerlcan Clrl totether. U abt •a• bamed by rectpe,, ACh N eggs cooktd
NEW YORK (UPI I -Allcfi moa but not much charcoal widely available, some of the for the scouta but it "We finally deckled to write Magazine, and were paid a the direc:tionl, we'd clean on a stick am Mcon cooked Jn
Sanderson RJvotre, who wu available and alumlnwn recipes were pre Uy elaborale. available to the pub Uc both for outdoor cooks -beglo-dollar for each one Uled." them up." a PIP« bq, lad good aolid
piled the Girt Sc o I 1 ' (loll) had been taken ~I or Ginaerbread gems with apples mall order aod al Glrl Seoul oers, 12-yW'Old>, 17-year..i.t Seoul lead<n and COW!lel°" Wbee lhe boot wu pni-Im that _, take Jong to
cookbook, &ay1 &he'd glv the the consumer market because called for 11 ingredients. In shops and department.. At city glrb and adulta with an. also contributed recipes, abe posed, Mn. Rivolrt ctme cook.••
same advice to beglnnl out· of lhe war." the present book, ginj:erbrud $2.50, it's a real find for cooks e!eclric kitchens. added. Those ae<:ept~ for the about JOO recipes from fUea Professional naturallsla: and
door cooks '\hat the w<>uld to a Mrs. Rivoire said the flnt and applesauce cobbler is of all ages. PAID FOR RECIPa magazine were t~ by Mrs. contalnlng about 1,000. botanlsta were couult.ed ror
young bf~ prtparlng her book was intended largely for made with two ingreditnt.s, a "We had to decide if we "We pic~ed up a lot of lUvolre and a 12\YUl'Old "We trJed for a bl1ance the chapter on edible wild
first d!Mer.•. llCOlll leaders and caunseJon. mil· and canned appleuuce. were writing fOl' tlds or reclpes,.trom Glrl Scouts who Mlghbor, "We tried them between 1immicty, lbow-off foods and their Ulll.-"Slarl sllnpi,. Cook 1..,1-=--------------'-'-'==------"------''--c;;.:.:.:.;;,..;_...:;::c;.,;,;.;;,:.;;,_...;;;._;.,.:: _______ ;_ __ .;_::....:::;:::...:::;:.:-=::.:..:::._:===::...:=..:::::.... __
thing only, a one-pot meal or
hot cocoa or lomato juice and
calT)' the reM of the meal in
ready-to-eat-form, so it will be
both fun and a success."
"Pkk the kind of out.door
cooking you will do for yotu
own personal reasons,'' she
added.
"Some like to do elaboral£'
things because they're fun aod
guests enjoy it. But for
something like a cave. canoe
or mountain trip, remember
that you n~ to eat to keep up
both morale 11nd strength.''
In an interview, Afr s .
Rivolrt1 aald "many firlt-
timers lhlnk everythjng ls di!·
ferent in outdoor cooking."
Not so, she added. Only the
conditions vary. "If you kno\v
how to cook. you can cook out·
doors. You have to know how
to build a fire and you must
decide how many uten!lls you
want to carry."
SIMPLE MENUS
She recommends that the
menu selection for youngsters
It -. ..... v. -·-l'Gliq" ~ ....
~ .. blo9d ......
in tofi quality foods. You'll
firid--~~_,
d.parti-t of v-....
Nit ... fot toddy, but
M/Gfl.r4ry, ........
-kt So .,.,, "'
Yom for~ qdil)'
ond ~ prkel ••• .... ,... ... ... °"" ....
be adapted to their age and.1 ..... --...
experience -"which are not
synonymow." I "Young ooes like Brownies
like lo see a flame, to m
things cooking. They want to
eat right away, 80 you
shouldn't toast thinp over ·
coals. It takes too Jong and the
coals should be gray, not red.
"As kids get older, ex-
perience makes them willing
to \vait for the coals to reach
the cooking stage."
Mrs. Rlvoire, wife ol a
marketing consultant, John
Rivoire, is a city-dweller now
but "we do quite a bit ol pie·
nicking in the suburbs and in
parks." She said she first
became Interested In outdoor
cooking at a Girl Scout camp
near ber birthplace, Ithaca,
N.Y.
She later wrote a cooking
feature for American Girl
Magazine, a scoot publication.
and -along with other pro.
gram specialists -gave
training courses in various
outdoor settings for the na·
tional scouting program and at
scoUt training centers.
FIRST PUBLICATION
"Cooking Out • of • Doors,"
first published in 1960, suc-
ceeded a pape rback published
in 1946 when "mil.es and con·
Slimming
9247
SIZES
I0~-20lS
r.,, 1ff...,;..., lff,...-r ...
SOFTNESS starta at the top
ll'ith a cuU C<11lar and gentle
gathers that lead to slender
lines. Sew this in a single day
to enjoy dly after day.
Ptinted Pattern »247: NEW
Halt Sizes 10~1:. 121/r, 14 1f.i,
161,i, 18 ~, 20~. Size 14 1h: (buat
371 takes 21/r yds. 45-in.
SIXTY·FIVE CENTS In
coins for each pattern-add 15
cents for each paltern for
first-class mall ing and special
handling ; otherwise thlrd<:lau
delivery will take three wee.ks
or more. Send to Marian
Martin, the DAILY PILOT,
442 Patterµ Dept., 231 West
18th St., New York, N.Y.
10011. Print NAME, AD-
DRESS wtlh ZIP, SIZE and
ITVLE NUMBER!
~ ,.
AU VONS S10RES OPEN
IEGUf.AR
HOURS
9Alf.JOPM
'71.uJ. 'II ...•••
for yovr tremendoul support durt1111 Cl.It
re cent lolxlr di1pul• with the n:toil clerb union.
It inoy please ycu to know that m:tel!d.d negotlatlon1
with in. union multed In an m11lcabl111ttl1mtr1 that
will enabl1 UJ to eollllnvll to lrtn'I ,._,wit~ en
t1nremonoble Tnc:11cge in prltfto
W1 tlncettly fiopt you did not -.iITermy ~.-ilt11C:t1
during this fll!gotlotiOTt period, Cl'ICI -will contltr.1t too
1liow cxir si11cere oppreclaliOl'I boy !.T1111r.i )'DU quallty
foods with wrvlee and rrimd11nesa In o llCnltf tld Id
bioeorrm diotod-rhtit of V011$.
('JfO)N/S : ': ~:. :i '
ENRICHED BREAD
~ .JK!lff
VONS, l~l LL LOAF ::::. 3:$1 Scrncl'wkr. I
· Ger••• Clioalat1
CAKE
~89'
Vons Cookies ~ 39'
Rupert'srishSticb ............ -.-W~"J;431
Rupert's Fried Fillets of Sole --~ 8111 _
KOlD KIST QUAUTY fOODS
CKICQH, lllLOlN fll1i, 601. flQ, .. -••••• C lrfll Wml ORAVT, CUAMID 39
Chili & Beans '"°'-JIG. ••·•••••• 25c
Rupert's Frlecl FIDets of 11.m.t -"3171'
Rupll'l'sD1ug111UCrUM11t_~ 111
Shur-Tnlla ltef Flilltn .............. u. I"
'=BACON 11a11111ttW o::~Sr..
Hall c.mr Slcts =--= 'I~
69' •·-·'·-"----ttn ~.-1i.w.-..aa&1. -...
Pllk S.sage ==..-: 5'
....
(.1111
SAVI CASH wmt THl$E Ell1RA VAWIS
FIUH
TURKEYS
J0.121..1.
AVE.t.\GEWECHT
Red Snapper ~-79' -llllllf • 49~ W 0 ~., •• estem rsters _
/V/O/N/S/
COFFEE
,,... 0..,.-1.U. c-
2 IL ,JI 3 LL , •• IAI SAi .
V-8
JUICE COCKTAIL
146 :'.:.I
TOMATO
SOUP
CAMPBB.l'S
._,, .. 4_
Sun-lllponed, Pkk r/ lht Crop!
APRICOTS
11.<VOl·
PACKED •
GOlD£K.
llP!> ••• ....,. ...
0 Del111hl
NECTARINB
llCUl9E
hl ~J..--4 __ ....., -· ... 29~
lllg C .. nles .Z~ 39~
• .,, wa1 .... 1o. = r.
f11cy C11talHp1 :::I 4 i11
Slll!a Rosa Pl1•s :V 29~
Westwood Ice Cream . .:a 59c
Jerseymaid Butter ~w~~ 79'
Johnston Fruit Pies ~f. 69'
Gerber's Baby Food 2f*-10C
ROY AL VELVET
BOURBON
'"°''" ..... ., $419 •M ~~~ • .. m. otO 60C '"'
MIRACLE
WHIPrauArr
KRAFT'S JAR
Smooth, Velvet Ttxtur•
. Froren I" GRE!Nm.5 0
CUTCORH R
ctfOllf'EO Sl'tl>.CH I/
10-CL r•11· 'I
e>.:SWln'S
.r0SMOKIES
]
99
WI
Spring Send-o!fl Mort fresh,
you ng , easy-sew styles in
Spring-SUmmer P a t t e r n
Catalog. Free paUem coupon.
soNc:u·,NsTANT sEwmG 1011 Adams Ave., al Brookhursl, Huntington Beach 5922 Edinger Ave., al Springdale, Huntington Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Velley
21082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach Book -shows you how to sew )J081 Doh p ..&. D ' ( 'sf Be h It today . weJr II tomorrow. " eny l1n llYe, ap1 llllO IC
Over 500 pictures. Only $1.
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• • <
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. You haven't tasted real ham until you've
tasted the ham Super Shoppero enjoy ... and
that's El Rancho's own specially cured ham!
And look at the low prices for this weeks big
Ham-what~msa,le!Come-in, buy, save, drool,
enjoy!
El Rancho
Shank Half
Butt Portion or Whole ....... 59~ ER Ham Slices ...................... 98~
'Tender and ju.icy ••• more fla\'or, because every ham is smoked to El Rancho Specifications!
ChuckStoak
Here's proof that economy
cuts can be flavorful and
enjoyable 'vhen you shop El
Ranchol
Chopped Sirloin Steak ......... ~9~
Finer beef for more flavor ••• each '''eighs Va pound ••• perfect serving sizes!
Ground (huck ......................... 69~
Budget-minded?,., you'll love the quality you get for pennies pe1· serving!
Round Bone Roast .............. 79~
U.S.D.A. Choice Beef ••• for all the hearty goodness you expect from a beef roast!
Clod Roast ............................. $1 19 ,~
For a main course move to win raves .• , and so many possibilities fol' left-overs!
B I B. f D o k . $109 one ess ee 11r1s et........ lb
Kore value ••• hence you get eat.it-all goodness in U.S.D.A. Choice beef!
Super Dup er Grocery Specials
Van de Kamp' s Dinners ....... 49.c.
Enctµlada dinners, American style ••• choose from beef, chicken or cheese I
Stouffer Meat Pies ............. 4 9 ~.
Tender cruat ••• heavy with hearty beef chunks, tender chicken or tasty turkey !
&hrd's Dressing................... 45¢ Jif Pean ut Gutter .................... 49¢
Six n.riet1e9 from which to ch oose ••. 11 Oz. Smooth creamr style or chunky ••• 18 oz. jar
Clfsco ....................................... 61¢
.Bi1 a lb. can at El Rancho .S:lYings
Liquid Jc1 .............................. 59¢
·~dst Oran .. ~ Ju:ce r, 6 ez. s1 ~ CJ;JS
:Cig king-size,,. priced Jo\v for sa\·in.'.:S!
Ch?e;" Kl::> ::rr ............................. s9:
Caliton:Ua'1 finest ••• frozen ••• 12 oz. can 3Dc 1\.ing-sizc package ••• (includes 30c off)
)· • I
. . .. -'---_A_.... "-'. ----~ -----c --
Center cut ••• thick or thin ••• for tempting breakfast delight or satisfy ing ma1n course pleasure 1
Pineapple
F ield fresh •• , pi cked at peak of per·
fection flavor ••• and rushed to you
by fast jet aircraft ••• Compare the
quality!
VIA
AIR FREIGHT
Summer Squash . . . . . . . . .. . . . ... .. . . . . . . . . ... . . . . .. . . . . . . 19~
Garden fresh ••• thin skinned and tender?
Fresh Tomatoes ..................... 25~
P icture pretty •• , ripe ••• yet firm, for slices that add eye appeal to f ine flavor ! '
White Rose Potatoes ..... 5 ; 29c
U.S. No. 1 quality ••• smooth skins and clean ••• your i11Yi t.atio n to better eating!
Big 24 oz. Game Hens
TYSON'S
PRIDE!
Big little birds ••• you'll wonder ho\V
.so much flavor can be packed into a
little hen! ... so delicious barbarcued ! 79~
~"""~~ ~ r.<!
I Pricea in rf/ect Thura. through Sun. · ~-
Ju.nc 19-21 . '/\'o !ales to dealers. ~ ;:::;;
"' l:' Ask the man~ger about our convenient Charge Account Service ~"~/II\~
. JI
HUNTINGTON HARBOUn: Warner Ave. & Algonquin St.
NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village Center)
Also conveniently Jqcated stores in Arcadia, Pasadena and South Pasadena
l ,
Pl -
__ ....., __ -~ ... ;.::;.:;: ... ;::; ....... -----;_ ... --.-_ ---·~--.. -. -.. ~ .. ,... __ -~~-.. -~ .... -.-.. ~ .. -.. -. -·--=·.-.. -.. --. -... -.. -.. --.. -.. -. -.. -. -.. -.-.. -... -.. -... -. ---~.,..--.. -. ----.--·---~----~~-. -~~
-PILOT·AOVERTISU 1 L WtdneidlY, Junt 18, 1969 WtdntsdaJ, J1111t 18, 196• DAILY PILOT 48
•
LB.
FRESH SEAFOOD
NIW AAION
SALMON . ORE-IDA FRO:i!N-12.0Z. PK6S.
PollTIONS. 59~ PIECES TO BAKE SHOESTRING
DOZ.
ctNT•« . $109 9· 8 25c
· · ~.·::::::::.:. 59~ ~ GUPEFnlt r1ju1c:OTATO; ~R. 69c
POREKEASPARERIBS ~~~~~\'.~~: ... 68~ ~~;:·m..'U·.~'.i:~ .. :',r. '1" MINUTEMAID-6-0Z. TINS H:R~EL'; •• · · 9 ~~.R~:.~ :'. ............. ::: 694 ORANGE " SLICED ••• 69f.. SHURE-TENDA-EASY'TO PREP~. JUST HEAT.'N' EAT· 7 C '"'' Rlloh of '" 794 LABEL ..... m
BEEF FRlftERS ......................... _.: lb ~!~~·:::::::::: i~ 9a• JUICE .... 4 ... s 1°0 BACON ~~~ .... 79~.
--11.S.D.A. Grade ••A•• Young Lo~~ Low Prices ·I.
E TURK. YS JERSEYMAID-CATERING 69c H . . ICE CREAM ••••••• Hll:!;r •
. .;,. . • FRESH FROZEN ML.CE.PM. -6-00Z.NTINAS DE. 3 ~R 2 s c
OVEN-READY 12-14 LBS. • • • • • • ·
WONDER "HOLSUM" WHITE OR WHEAT 2 5. . ~
c ~LICED BREAD ••• ~ ... ~~~: ~
DITTRGENT-INCL ISc OFF . 59c.
f AB, GIANT •• • • • • • • • . i ,. . ·
PURR-MINI BITS -61/, -OZ. TINS · . C LB. 10
FIRST OF THE SEASON 2 5 c CA' FOOD. • • • • • • • • • • .
O's MARY ELLEN ' !OPULAR '~S · , . APRIC ·········· 111 20-oz. JAMS ALL · COFflE .. '
POTATOES ... 10•":G69c '
EXCEPT YUBAN, 6 5 ·c · SANKA, MOCHA .
JAVA Ill
Delicatessen Specials
OSCAR MAYER-ALL MEAT OR ALL BEEF
BO LOG
12·0.Z. PKG.
• • • • • DelMonte Dollar Sale
!GiiEN BEAJ45 ..... 5 '0
' •
c i:iuli COCKTAIL 5"" ' . •
GAEAiDEN PEAs ...... s ·FOR
EA.
' ' .
OSCAA MAYl~ll_,,Z. Pie. . • 99c YARllTY PACK ........
' . AMEsaci·C:rt.PKG.5 ·9c'!~lliliuaRN-45'K6.c ., ... oz.OTINS M ••o SA. UCE 12 FOR
CHEESI • • • • l .CHIESE • • • • i -Ml
PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. thru SUN., JUNE 19,, 20, 21, 22
2701 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 13922 BROOKHURST, GAP,,.t:lliil GROV.E e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA' ANA
• · 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH 23811 EL TOR~. EL TORO
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1 ' 110 D.1.ai.v I'll.OT
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'save :'.y'riu s.8.88·:,,
.. . .. . ' .. . .. '
• Tot11 savln&• ·1s computfd.,Clll ·1inaie unit Pllf'Cha&ts. Tht·Jlgure woiild bt in~ hi&her If meat & produce savlncs wert intlu~d
·~'"------•
··at'·
I ·• •
DIS(OUNT .. .
. PRICES/,.
·,-~_., ...
•JUMBO
SJ7.l
4
' • SWE£t • LU5C!OUS .. .
' • •
LARGE SIZE IMPERIAL VALLEY .• VINE RIPE
BING CANTALOUPES • . 00 CHERRIES s
F .. . .
,$ 0 '1 ' R t
" 8 • s
THESE PROOUCE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY lhrcu&h WEDNESDAY JUNE 19 throu&h 25
101Al DISCOU "'lS
l~lRY UAY
IOME IDH-BET~ ITORCS P!SCOUNT CIWIGE />fllCE
'iC'EiiM · :r'01'CE cTRAY 99c9~
JlULTIPLE US!:. rot.Ds FUT FOR ·COMPACT STORAGE
SALAD BASKET 149 971
111 $135
2( ee
SWEETA LIQUID 69c 591
?.OUNCE BOTIU:
YITALIS HAIR TONIC J!I 991
HELEN!: CURTIS . 15-0UllCE Bomi: MORI: THAN 40 APPLICATIONS Pr.R ilOTTl.t
Suave Salon Formula
SHAMPOO tl!TRA RICH 1 '' 791
il'iS'E''ilor LATHER
2-0UNC::: TUB::• SUJITA!I LOTlO:t
SEA I SKI
'-OUNCE Pume llOTTLt I-OUNCE PUSTIC BO"ITU:
)ZS 991
100 791
lllNACA • l/1 OUNCL BOTTLE
. )\15 11 .39
2.SO 12.H
BREATH FRESHENER 79c 63 1
EFFERDEKT TABLETS 14' 871
Xit1S FILAS POJI 3 MOUTH& DOG & CAT • lNCI.. IX orr , PulvuSaperF11aColl1rs111S1 u
SAVE I Sc WITH THIS COUPON ~.ONE ONLY
,,.~ .aox OF 24-•4 Rt0UIJJt •SUPER• VEE·FORM
:,~:~ct~{~~~ . soc
.... Storet Chef• n.·
Ollo CQu""' f!ff r..i~ • Adults Onl1
CNpll .... llrn '"' 25
'-TOTAi IHSCOUl<fiS
(VER~ llAY
$OM£ lLPHA BETA 'ITOR£S PJSCOUNT CHAAGE f'ltl CE
@i~~''ia;ONllAISE . 53t 41 1
TWIN PACJC • S9G Vil: •YOUR CHOICE
ALPHA BETA
POTATO CHIPS or DIP CHIPS 541
~GOLDEN GRAIN • 6-0z. Pka. 38¢ ~FRIED RICE-A·ADNI 49c
1-1.B. PACXAGE •WIDE OR t::i:ii;\ tXTH A VllOE 341 ~Gold Med•I. Noodlu 39c
1·1.8. CARTON • 2lc VJ.LUZ 16' PRINCESS MARGARINE.
~-I !-LB. CAN • REGULAR OR PtRK-0-t.rCTR!C · :~~~:~rg~~E1.~9c !'
PAC!f!C• J.t B. BOX 27' STA CRISP CRACKERS 31t
t:Ji:ij;\ NABISCO • 8-0Z. • B Vo.r!at!a1 38¢ ~SNACK CRACKERS 4llc
~ NABJSC0 °1o:oz. l'ACKAGE 391 ~WHEAT THl~S 4llc
t.LB, CAN • flN"E DRIP• REGULAR iUgANAc~if~E 74c 72'.
--..,,. Z.tB. CAN • REG\JW, DR!P OR i . ll.ECTRA-MATIC 1.41 11.U
l·l.B. CAN• REGULA! GRIND '°'~ ·HUGGINS YOUNG
. MOCHA JAVA COFFE£ 75' J21 a!:' 11::·GALLON •INCL; tc OFF 3"' · -..;::;:;;;;/ YANO Liquid Starch 59c 11'
t::i:W\: PA.CIC or so . PLASTIC IUW' ~ GLAD·STORAU BAGS 69t VII'
/::Ji;;;\ PACK or 10. PLASTIC 64• ~&LID TRASH llAQS 79c .
lY?o1ri~~~~~'f:flN'r 1.aa s 1 T 1
@ ri~~Ccif,~l'crnner 49c 37•
• 19-0Z. AEROSOI. ~FORMULA 409 ~ DISINFICTANT
14·0?. CAtf• lllCL. 2e otP BON AMI POWDER
89c W
tac 14'
@ !JOt.mCt CA~
GROUND ROUND 18' FRISK!! 008 FOOD 2llc . '
ettr OR HOR&EMEAT • ltVJ•Oi. Cn. llMM"
ALPO OOQ FOOD 32c "11;
@:tsSi:or" ,,,a1;I
lllrllll iETI • '24·0UNCE LOAP '!Nt4
FRONTl£1 BREAD ,,. VALUS --
.,..
l
lllrllll lfTI • 18·0UNCE LOAP 211:' FLUFFY IUAO . 270 VA.LUI "
..... 1" ,,._, -· .. --
. . .
... ' ~ .. · . . ' ST.ORE HOURS MON. th'•u FRI. 10 AM. 9 PJ.1
SAT;1 and· SUH; 10 AM to 7 PM:
·\
·~' . ~ .. ' .
'SAVEWITH A~PHA BET A'.S 12,876
"' TOTAL DISCOUNTS -~-I .. sO.·.if even more With
· .. , Ooµb l.e. Discou~ts ,
~ • "Thty mcori .f'drQ sovlng, for
you. MO<f• posil:!le by spKiol pvrchases wiih
the cost reductions pcued on to you, Look
for them .throughout the stor•, ' ~ -•. ,"l ;. { . ~· ' ' ..
'ui~, lil~LlJU NTS
I. w[ RI r:.\ T
~'12. INCHES x 7.S FOOT JI.OU. . ~ALCOA FOIL ,..,.al~
' ~iria'GICswv ~SIZlllG .. ; 69c 571
22-0tmCE l!OTT!.E . CHIFFOll LIQUID
DISH DETERGE~T 49c 391
GOU) rltmi: • WmiE:.• AQUA 3.PACK INCLUDES" OFT
DIAL:BATH·SOAP ' 63c 51'
J.PRlCOT-PlNtAPPLE OR stto1.Eu
...... ...,,. MlRYELLEll
.IAM "'""· 1All 63c sic
~ AIJllA ,RTA h11is WELCOME CHECK
•
TOTAL OISCOUfrj T\
E~fllY OAY
\
ADM£ .AlPtiA'HTA .'STQJ:ES DISCOUNT '(MAR Ct PRICE
.. 11-~. Pack,.11• • AMERICA!: 67f ""i'i KRAFT SINGLES \I<_
;. TOTAL DISCOU NTS
-[VERY OAY .
SOME ALPHA BUA STORES U!SCOllNT
CilARGE PRICE
~~1~~·~ Co~Wf'.UL1AR "Jrn/.TV SPECIAL" l·L!,
~FLEISCHMAllll SWIFT • 4-0UN°cE PACt:'AGE Jlftl! SLICED SMOKY THURINGER 53t 'Ill' '
ffo;'d So\®11 • GenQa • Pepperoni~ ~ lllA!),~~~~!lll? 39c 371
.$3.:i 41•
UNN!!RsAt • ~2-0UNCE PACKAGE JNDlVUlUALt.Y WRAPPED. 68¢ SLICQ"!M£RICAN CHEESE &9c
~f!DLN'S • 3-UI. PKG.• IL!CED $22! IMER{CAN CHEESE 2.49
7 "Qi .• • ,JIEGUUR aft::t;MQXID ;. 83j
N.\TBOO ~ABT EDAM• ... 69t
· ~Vi~fi 1Asr;~ouo1 · .. sic 631
·~" . """" . . 27' )ORANGE JUICE S..z."" 29c . . .
l.2·00NCE CAN S7e 530
. ' ' " .
. . •• JA.Ci::,.a£AN&fALK •303Cll!l
~.cat .or freft.ch Sliced 2 ~~REEN BEAN$ 24c 11 . . . ·~ . . . ' .
@cli"ElM's'r'Yi:E~ ~;"
. WHOLE CORN 22c 171
~TAO: & BEANSTALK • 303 CJJf:'_ · 201 ~SWEET PEAS '23c .
Y0ur AlPHA BETA NeighborhOOd'Butcher'! 11
(t he Man in the Red Apron) Proudly Offers ·
SUTCHEn'S fninB MEATS
MEATS YOU''-' II PIOUDTO SIRYI
• QUAUTY'.&
0
SATISFACTIOH GUAAANTEED
• DISCOUfff -PRICED
•U.S. GOVERNMENT INSPEClED COLORADO BEEF
01EAf
AllECUID · 1 -· ·1AKID· o•
U.S.O:A. GRADE A • FRESH FROZEN
ARMOUR STAR
CORNISH
GAME 20-0Z.
MINIMUM
ff.ENS
ALPHA BETA !UTCHU'S HIDE 8EEF
ROUND , BEEF ,
STEAK ~~~' 99,. SHORt RIBS 49.,
FAMILY ""· $109 STEWJNG 89•
STEAK "" • BEEF ~m-,.
8lARNEY. BRAND .• ·ECOtiOM!CAl
~IUQUI •· EASlERN QUALITY
IOWA . MAID
SLICED
BA COM
IU. PACK.lilt
-'PRIC ES EFFECTIVE IN ALL
, ALPHA BETA MARKEif'S
COSTA MESA-241 t: 17 .. Sr.
HUNTINGTON IEACH-t041 AdcnM
HUNTINGTON IEACK-11411 N, M•• St.
FOUNTAIN YALLtY-89JO Wflrftrlr
'0UTH LAGUNA-JOSU S. c-t HI..,
lAGUNA HILLS-JJ541 Ccrll• 4e la LtlM
IRVINE-11041 C•l•er. U11lftnftr Port
CORNED
BEEF
BRISKET Gfl 81c . IJ.
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W1N!
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FREE1 USE OF A
DELUXE CAMPER
FOR ONE WEEK
DIAGNOSTIC CHeCKS
.. si't'.ic e'.11921 l-' •.
Y ~r generous ,itron~·9~' .. an cf confi ..
Clin.,. in our de'.'l.nhiP' 'Ms made us pr~d lo be • palfiofO'rtn.~C~unty
11)!! it's phenomen1I growth, *Is to
our counttess friends for ·• w"~derful .. .. ' . •:48 "y91rs. · r1
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THIODOllLlOlllll. SLt I•.~ • >. . ,Jh~d !!~bins.Sr. . THJODOU.1¥!!11111.~ ,~, 1':1~···t··" -' ¥ .. ,. .... ~' •. J • • --.'1] ......
WE'VE ·PUtlED THE SJO'f>S~ ~,O.R J'UNE! ·'.~ . -·• ~ r -· FREE' · ._ · ! ' : · • · • lte;llttt ft wllf • comr>lele d'l«t ol' .,_.. ctn CM> "'OT..,j••~O BUYI ·•uSTCOMC ' d1t1on 111 $0!Jtllern c.111om11·1 ""' "°"' 011onosHc '1 ... .... • • ,,·~ · ' ' · P,. ' ,C~IU. '""' I••"<-<*" .. M"ly, 1ol•olll" I~ A'ND' :, l! 1.$. l1S":!,-E·'R. ,P~R!lfl E ~ . ' end '!"'1°'11'191Q. Orl\19 ttlla w.ctllon wllflOul worr,,
'' . ""'·. ~ DRAWINGS · 'EV.£RY. SATURDAY. Ten Checks To Be Givfl! Freel
>i1
,ii: ~~u ~~E~-Nor OVER 30 PRIZES IN ALL!
BE PRESENT TQ, y.'IN. '
SUPER SAVINGS WHEREVER YOU TURN ••• VALUABLE .lR!ilS
F:OR nt£ GROWN·UPs • • • ~EEN STUFF, FQR,1 THE· KIDS •.• '. lljS
OUR Blf.GE$~i . SA~IN~ST BIRTHDAY .P~.,T'( "IN ~M9ST H~iA
CENTU,ltY OF DOlNG B~SIN~ IN. THE .. ~~f,;~REA ! ~~
BIG 8 ,.FT. f.P~L CAB-OVER
. BARRACUDA· CAMPIRr-·
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-.. .,.., Nil." IMlteN .. .aii.trfc ·upts. "'* ...... , ..... ' ' . tioe, .,.. ad clnih1 ...... ...,, .... llfetl-..... ....... 'w. ~. f.ctoiy ~ ............. hr .... ,... ,..,
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ANNIVERSARY
SAVINGS
on
MUSTANGS-BIG FORDS.•TORINOS •
••. ..iltl!R.fDEIBIRDS. ~.FOR~, lJUCKS! .
CtlECK OUR ·PRICES FOR
JUNE BEFORE YOU BUY! .
AUfflORIZED DEALER ! ----· ---'·· Large Inventory-of New '69's For
Immediate Delivery. Six only -New
1968's Now Slashed
For lmmeclia19 Clearance!
$
l • ·o~IVE A NEW, 196,, ENG~ISH FORO!;
ENGLAND'S NO. 1 SELLER, .
FU.U
P!{ICE
AMERICA'S .NO. 1 IMPORT BUY.!. .
: CUSTOMS * GT'1 t( STATION WAGONS.
Large Selectio~ of1 Aut~t1c1 and Four Speeds.
LAST CALL:. NEW '68's!
NO TRUCK PURCHASE NECESSARY I Limited number •t F.in1I Cle1r1nc• Pric11l
RENT :YOUR VACATION
H0ti1E ON WHEELS
LEASE YOUlt CAR .
FOR 6 MONTHS
OPEN
7 DAY S
A .
'WEEK!
IN, HEU' US, ~EµBllt'TE. . , ., 1 "' .·, · ~i
~ ~ . ' \
'67-CH£VROtET ·~ $1' ·7·9· 'S· H.T. lmp1l1 '4-Dr. V;f \ , '.uto., ftS.1 1ir, R&~ :,,
. IOKUl'51l ' .
''1 ~( '~. $1·59 · H.T. l empett Cu1tOm.
Auto.1 PS., Rl:H •. ITl.J •
053)
'6& oMm ·. $:2· 19· .. s·· ~ 165 FORD : . $1 ·3·95
M_1libu 2-0r~ H.T. V-1,' . ' F•irl•n• 500 2 Dr. ~.T. ~ , )
aoto.j P.S., R&H IWPC· · v.s , ·outo., JUH, l!iS,
8,311 · ' ' '" "" , ' .I RHHt25·~ ·,-.. " -' ' ·~ .. . . . .,
'66 BUICK $14 ... ,. ·:5'· . '65 .f~, :'. .' , $139· ·s· ,,
LeS•bre. Full .P.ower, 1 ..; 61lntw'.900 2 Dr. H.T. ·q , '
.-fectory •~r; 2-Dr, H:T,_ "'· • ; P\S;, !~~· R&H. .l ROM .. , : · _-. : IRPM860l 1 87.6J ~ ., _ ~ ., . , . ~ . " .
'66 OU>l F-85
4-Cr. Sed•n. V-8, •uto.
.lll4696M4116111 Oo·
tective c•r.
, I . \. '· .. , ~ ' , . . ..
.. ·.~$ .. ~, .. 5 Gr•nd Prix. Auto., R . J 'l
P.S., P.B'1 i1ir cond.
IJJV9201° ·.
'64 POflTIAC
. VACATION S·PECIALS . -
'64 DODGE ·
. . ' .
Bart 170· 1 Or. Equ;p.·
po.I; 6 cyJ .• I PBY 605 I
$6-95 ;.:630~~~?·~~~~.;··.·:.,:;r~s .
, R&H, .n· yinyl int1r..: '·f : ·7 ,
. ' llH~Q91 • 4 · ., ! ; · 1-......,----~~----...... ~~~-1
·60 lmRNATIONAL . $595;· ~.MUSlA"GS'~·11UUJIANGS! .. · · ' OVER 'A,'...... . !!.'I, 'UTIFUL Pic~up. Extr• cle1n. UV
1sa201B1 · '65's-'66's-'67's-'68's --------~~·~·-..~I TO CHOOSE FRQta •.. '. ,
'65 .PLYMOUTH $39.5. '.. ~s~backs-H~,cttops:-G.~s . ·· .
. Sport fury 2 Or. H.T. 1965 MUST·•NG "''"" wlbla ok ;.+ • ., •.• Example: _ ~ , '
VI, •utq., PS. (YXS4621 -. I jl v.a, pow1r,1teerin9,.eut01Mtic, radio,.hii~t•t
'6!i .MERCURY 1·0· 9· s '. . 1OIOQU9686),5 p.,11.pe c.onY1rt., 1ut~., $ , i,.._ $ t • • ~l/i, ,P.S., P.B., p.,.,,. , . , ·. · , .. 1 .
dt:~1,1factory air. , j
IYCT1201 ·,
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' i HOU~ES FOR SALi HOUlll ,Oil SALE HOUSEi FOil SALE HOUSES FOil SALi HOUSll ,Oil SALi HOUSiS FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
"·'4';::;,;;.:.;;.:..;..;:;;.;..;;;.;=-1000 G.Mr.•I 1000 'o.ner1I 1000 General 1000 Chner1J 1000 'Gener1I 1000 Gefttr1I 1000 Co1t1 Me11 1 • General 1000 General ..--,. _ _. _____ ..;.·1::.::::;:.;;; ____ ...:;::::; 1..;;.:::.:;;;.;.: ____ ..;c;_.;. ••
l ~ · .... 1 .. !'! Offe•I" s .. ,.'J.:.;~~•milr oPuLw~:J!~~N~ COMMEICW
1·'b~1!: .. .~;~ :.Y.~;ll. c::o:° . ~1''!!'.;. ~ts HU-n!~~~~Ls~!t +
1-• Qootl' • fmm aruuous ou1 ot v.·ho nttds lots o! room. S LAW UNIT -PLUS PROPERTY That's part or owning this model condftion. large 3 bf!d-BERT WOOD ••.• $15,960 family rootn, 1'.\ bafhl, ~-•town owner, ao il+• nice hugr bedrooms· i&fll:I' tam-Ooublt 1tud rJegant n1aster ch&rmills &,ycrett 4 bed-~~RA~UCE~~ mime~ opportwiit)' to * M-l l3x300 Ideal I.Or small·' nev.·ly redecorated, ~-In
\ clrftn 3 BMroam D<'n. lly kitcllen with all delWto1 bedroom and 2 baths in A chatmlJll S BR "chip l'OOlft home. Extras pl.ore Ull.lMe T.2% loan. 1112 mo. Ind111trlal UnJts ,. $20,000 Xitchtn. Nrar all tdl«lll.
2 Bath Oona dcl Mar home. bu1Jt.ins. Stone fireplace, beautiful presllae Cos I• ahape" home on l&l'ac 14x 29' baths, fonna.I dinln&: home, comptett1y profession. pays all. 3 Big bedrooms 2 * NEWPORT BEACH: Cor-Only $25,~. Aso FIV,'\j •• 1 ·· A!I 1~ecorated, Vacant · \Y&IJ to 'wait carpetlfV thN-Mesa Prime area! NO 233• Cl lot. May take i 4 room, sepan.te-pool area, ally redecorated 11\Side ~nd baths, forma1 dining, huge ner lot ~ bloclc: from no down VA. CALL 5'10i.• 151
Qu ick Pol#l.1ion and on e"'· out. A big home at • low WHERE In Oranae. County rental unill, Owner wru corner lot with 3 car ga.raie, surrounded by ~ • ~e paneled ~ family rntert&in-R.lvo AJfu Canal, l~ block Heritaa:e Real Elstatc '{~n
teUent t•nru i.s of intere~t sacrlfl~ prict. Only S2995 ca.n you find anything like CUT)' lat TD of $32,000 @ btt&kfut al'ff. in the k1tch-ll'OO'ld• and spac~ patio ment Cftller. Something )'OU from RICHARDS MAR· eves) 1•
: to you. better take a look down and no second lo&nl. it at 1uch a FABULOUS 7~"· Drive by 1919 Ana· en. A IOUnd IJWHtment for In lovely, lovely qwet area. find in mOl't expen,ive ham-KET and 1bopplog $25,000 MESA VERDE mrnet IOt. J
,.,: and get In your oiler. Pric· C&ll today to see. BUY \\'ith lovely carpell heim CM " call to see m. you ~tr. Executive $62,500. VERY PRIV~TE ~STER ea. Only $27,500. Better bur-*BALBOA ISLANO: Comer 11. BDRM, 1'4 Ba, tiQb.lly
ed now f4i'l 141,500. poaibl)' and drapea, and bright aide ' BEDROOM with outside ac· ry there's a dtadline on thil Ruby A. Paril: • IO' on rm. Fully crtd ~ di-pd. 2
;;. 'a lo1v down wHh owner 645·0303 clleerlul XitcM:i and dining , S39 500 C'eSll. ALL ELECTRIC kilch· ~n .• Ca!J flO\\'! Ruby.1,deal toca,:Uon 142,500 fireplaces, covered ~.Uo.
cal1'Vint: the,. 2nd. ~ room~ area with FIREPLACE wall· • en and dishwasher. Water 645-0303 * C-3 75 x 360 HARBOR 3068 Gibraltor, CM. '\. _
·I are . all l!'ood 1i.tt, Uvina; ed living room leading to IOUener: Trade in Y 0 u r BLVD. frontage thni lo $26,900 owner. 5\ff:-2626 :~-:. Rm, has fin!place, also the LOW '9fAINTENANCE back Ntwport smaller home on t.his VERY back. street , •.••. S'r.1,000 * BY O"-"l'OO' ,
\oo,1.·f'r level den has another ·--'and POOL thlt'I btal· at SPECIAL BEAUTY ~!?! * R-1 ( ltrlded) 24~ AC. "'~""""" ..., -
, -fi r'!'Place. You own the lara:e ~';oo filtertd! Priced for W& SELL A HOME ~SIDE Priced ~ BR. crpt5, dl'J:l!I. x.Lrg l;Jt.
,.-; coi'TJCr lot • with play area immediate salt at o NL y Victoria EVERY 31 MINUTES sell at Only is,ooo lot. Low ma*i~~..;,!1".;,500. 1 .and shade. Somtone will ~I $33.500 and your pre5enl 646-tlll ..........,.,,,
'. • irood buy here. \\'hy Not l\tay home considered FOR A (11nytlme) Walker & Lee BY OWNER 3 BR HornJ. 2·
: .• You! Shown anytime. Oor greatest month ever GUARASTEE TRADE!1! UNBELIEVABLE I E. side, 2-W. 8.IC.e. VefY Irr
'' Ovfr Sl4.8 mUUon In Wet WE SELL A HOME 1190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams S850 Down nIA. No cloatng transferable loans 51.41 9f, Bay & leach &VERY 31 MINUTES $17,500 FHA Loan 545--""I' b""'. 3 bodroom, II> Neod ca.n. 54~1059 . ... RNlty Inc R HOMES w lk & L Attumption Open 'til 9 PM bath borne. Look at these 9 RM. 5 BR, 3 BA + .. fool_ 675-3«111 ' fOll a er ee $136 Per Month Totel "For A WI,. B""" ex""'! W"""" dcye" re-and pot hOllH ~j151l .
Cd , ror thl• cozy 2 bedroom Colesworlhy & (O frlaerstM. Built m bar tar Principals only. 646-~. ,.:1.,'.,'.,°'-".· .,c""'.,..1,..".,'~,.·.,· -.'.., on lafl:r corner Ee.stside 2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adami home with CARPrfS AND • IA YCREST entertatnJna-. Complete ster-:Evenings Ca.JI 54!-3'n5 M!l-8333 :r··
-UNB-ECTEVAliL E fl-lot. Privacy prevail• here! M.>9491 DRAPES MU' achoala and JUST LISTED eo and speakers. CUstom liioiiiliiiiiiii ...... iii;i ... iio J,;;;:;;;;~===='±~I
3 BR u.nit1 with garaae1 l Open 'tll 9 PM •bollplna. With Just • lltUe G42-77TI drapes lhrouahout. P I u 1 Mtu del Mir 1, ~05 ·-S&50 Down FHA. No cla1ins private patiQ1. Live in one 4 •--'roolll + ca.sh yoi.a can't aUord to RE SALESMAN Parklike gardens & tall trees thick. like n~w carpeting". MESA VERDE • BR -~·---costs buys a 3 bedroom, 11it & ttnt the other J. ..u rent ANYONE CAN QUAL-WANTED 1urround 1p&.rklinc home & ALL THIS F'OR 0 NL Y • ASSUME , '.
:•:. bath hDme. Look at tbeu $62,000 Upstairs lonus Rm. IFY TO TAKE OVER ntIS Want to n}&ke $2000 yoUr pool, Dlacrtmina.t1na: buyers SlS.900, FULL PRICE. GI Tbla h • s to be the
t"Xtru! Washer, d~r. re-A tinllbed bonu1 room hu LOAN! !I We mean It when fint month! W&nt all the will want thll lovely 4 lxinn. $600 Down. Flnt come, first SHARPEST 4 bdrn1 5 l/4 O/o LOAN: ~'!':t1~~~~~11: (lO"/. Down) Swedllh llreplac.e dividers we say, "RUN, DON'T ready buycn )'OU can ban-3'19 bl.th home w/lra. fam. aer-ve. llURRY! ! home In c.osta Mna! 4 Bedroom beauly with ·~
eo and ipe&kel'"I. CU.tom Newport tor two extra bedroom. ot WAUC" to our ea.ta Meu dle!' Want an &etlVt! fut nn. 4 !orm&I din. nn. WE SELL A HOME Outside you'll find famllyroomwlthniscd,:'Gre-~ drapes lhro1Jihout, pl u 1 OM big den Home is in. ex· office! II!!!! rrowin.a office! The catch!'. f74,500 EVERY 31 MINUTES BL o c K FEN c E, place. Has service poretf'lnd
. ~ thick, like new carpetina. llt cellent eondillon • Alkina: WE S&LL A HOMI You have lo work and like Mn. Hazvey w lk & L p Lu s H LANOSCAP· fenced yard. New out ide
··-
:it900~H~LLro:ru~LG~ ::;: ~:~!~~-~~;. uawne w&VaEIRkYe3rlM&INULTeESe ~e~~.:nE;~JE la....: .. _.. a 7:~1nger ee ~~~G~,~~T~~:CE~ :;u~!s~~·;y: Unbcl :.: b-
5600 Down. Ylrst <.'Orne, first ( ti J 11--.i .., .... 0, ~" n 40 The inside has new UP· •ny mt or Nadine, 962·2421. Oonl.I· ~ .,,..,,...,... GRADED CARPETS ·o ·THE Rr:A··~
"'"\.. ESTAT!~P. 3 scwE· ~l~~~y~ HOME 2190 llarbor Blvd. at Adami 1.::"::"::tial::;,. ====~-(ol .. ell a.k & ( Open Eves. THROUGH0\11', St"r-
,.,..91 EXECUTIVES ' If 0. SQUEAKY CLEAN vi" pon:h, LARGE EVERY 31 MINUTES ORANGE COUNTY'S Open 'lil 9 PM 5SO Newport Center Dr. MESA VERDE BEDROOMS " mob-
alker & Lee LARGEST movini to Newport Beal!h. Newport Beach, Caltf. Ready for immC'd. occupan. washer. Th~ existing
293 £. 17th St. '4'-4494 New Ivan Wells' quality 833-0700 644-2430 cy, J BR + frun . rm,. 1~ loan can be ASSUMED
7682 Edinger
812-4455 or 541)..5140
Open Ewa.
CAREfREE view home Jn Dover Shores. ba't .• db!. pr .• bltln kitch. at 5%% Interest. The
Large 4 bdnn 3 bath tamily • w/w carpet, thruout • . full price ls only $31,450. Pal'lt Lido Condominium
3 Bedrooms 2 Datha
-' .
Met• Vtrde ~b10
·--~~ -· --·-NET 25% ~~ Galaxy 0 rive. Thla lmm&culate 3 BR fam. ~ roof • Ja"e. patio area & BY OWNE~:;
.. ' john macnab
lie.re's a brand new l\1t-
lng: 3 bdnns on a b~
big, lot. The houae i1
clean, the bedrt>Offill are
large & the price or
SZ7.900 is a bargain.
Great rtoor plan. Call
now.
Return on your cash Invest·
ment It bt the proud owner
Near private communJt,y pool
3 Car garaa:e
Cheerf\11 kitchen
Prlvatt" Patio or these large 2 BR 1 bath Sll 950
room. See modela open dally MESA VERDE dl'apet • 2 f>'plct. • hoavy • COATS '"
......... ___ .. __ , ill' home can be )'Olft by • entire yd, btauti!ully tad-WALLACI CUSTO~f REPUBLIC HOME
HIGSON auwnlnc 5"-'9'0 FHA LOAN. cpd .. aprinlden. 1750 aq. ft. ... E·Lro ON BEST VIEW LOT :Orr-A must SH to appreciate. or llvin# am. Priced below R ,. IS CON$"l'RUCTJOK CO. Aai.: .. ~ -lacement costs at • .,",SOl'.l. ---54Ml4 l-ERED. 4 BR, 2 BA. SIHG-"' ~c DOVER SHORES aptl. with private paliOfi. A Call Jack Sc~gy
real money maker. Res. 644-2250
M~-'I'-H ..... ._ .~.. .,,,. LE STORY DESIGN, ..,,.. ..... iun ome $26,tSO To see, call (Open Evenlnp)
Builders CHI LT ROBIN EtT """'""'"'"'"'""'""""'""' l;P:>t~O=N=E=>;'~:':J4:=4. =~;;;I Abll'nlfe owners wish im·
mediate 1alc. 115.000 Reduc·
lion. Perfectly lovtly, c.-:·
1860 NRWJ>Ort Blvd., CM
Rltr. 646.3928 Eve. 644·16,j;j
~ ~ REALTOR ~128 !! Coll~· P•rk .t11s
"' pensivtly dtco~ted home ')1~~$1\\: r~1 ·)~1 1 t '
546-5990 Lachenmyer ~ ~ WANTED WANT A 7% LOAN? Doi••· PERl=ION
'"' . ... . · -"·Ith the finest of dtapt"rie1
,. &-.,..•a)lpaper. Large, beitr•
Four ledl'OOlll$ 5 BEDRM-3 BATHS
All electric bulll·lru. Fa.mlly
room. Formal dlnlna: roorn.
Park like yard. Magnolia,
Barrett Really a •• 1 E1t•te S11l11m•n will finance his lovely:J 'BR * 64J.1n1 Anytime* _ Tired of 1itlin&: on the aide l~ bath home wllh • a Ina cit1"US fn'.!('l! & beautiful
' -role illl'tlen. PriL't'd to aeU
' ' at $99,500. :, -S19.,500 5 Min. to leach
track '''alchlng the main substanlial down ~i!nt.
. presents ~ line run? Join a winner. Has purchased a ncwl¥>me
l .ti Man.I 'MUe more money with less & want! action! Asking U C on PRICE REDUCE DI fMJ11tration. c a.11 Randall $27,soo. All ouers will be
(714) '42-1215 VM!w of Bay & mountains. Owner anxious to sell thit McCanile 5484313 lot ~ considered. Ask for' . aut
901 I>aYer Drtve. SUJte 120
;., Nrwport Beach
!\1ove into this Jarie tam·
1ly home today!! CIOlt to
shopping, s c ho o I a. and
('hw'C'hrs. This one won't
last. Sl~ per month Inell.Id·
1•s taxes and imunnct.
ONLY $700 TOTAL caah re·
l.Awely 3 BR har'ne, double /f!!ll!!!!!l!!lf!!ll ... !!!!!!11111!!!1!111 I star Pine trees & variety ol
fireplaer, laml1y • dJn;nr, -$i0-950-FULL PRICE Inti! ""''· Fin plJ. FoW>
built • In kitchtn. Secluded 4 ~ml 2 full baths. tain. 540-1'72.0
back yard, redwood tenet. Plush ~ts & drape 1 TARBELL 2955 H11rbor
4 bdm>t. extra la.rae livlna Wlltrl\ & frlendl,y Bay<"Test fidentlal lnltrvit'W. 64&-3255 or ~2'.&1 Ai~
ruom, huge recttatlon rm. home on comer. 3 txlnns, ..::;;;;~~:=;~c:-,=,.-
5000 sq ft of comfort, 4 car dining rooni, family room. ASSUME 6°/e LOAN
3 ledroom
_Newport Hei9hts "~"'\ELL A HOME.
'182.00 1otal Pmt. Evi~f .31 MINUTES
Secluded in the height•. 1hi! ~a & Lee
home ha.s hlah beam cell· n c: er
inrr. •toot fireplace, hard-.
wood floors OOat ac«ss 1.0 2GU Westclilf Dr.
"'ar yard,' covered patio. &H>-7711 Open Eves.
Assume high GI loan at DANA PT. UNITS
6% -\\'on·1 lasL I Attr. 1 &: 'l Br. units, ln
Easy upk~p, cJose to s~p. lhrougllout. Double Garqe.
ping. Double garage. Price Cui-de1&C strett. Walk: to
$32,950. Thla plus others in schools. GI no cuh needed.
Newport BHch, SlOO Dc<posit refundable or
JEAN SMITH "'' .,., s~" rn• 1ou
REALTOR with payn1ents of Sl24 per
mon1 h.
""'"' WE SELL A HOME == ----EVERY 31 MINUTES
lmmed. Possession Walker & Lee
7682 Edinger
3 BR 2 baths ,fireplact, <'&r-842-4455 or ~140
pets, dtape1, bulll·lns, dou· Open Eve1.
No Down GI
4 bdrm + family room. $183
per mo PA)'a Ill or FHA or
Conventional.
$21 ,tSO
RANO RL TY. MS-2340
Experienced RE
S11le1m11n
EXCEL. COMMISSION
657 W. 19th SL, C.M.
Rltr. 642•9730 Eves. 543-01'10
garqt. One o1 • kind. Wonderful work sl'lop • dark No cost, no extra cliarae1 10 Newport Bt•ch 1200
Phone for appointment. roo1n -Juxurius built·ins. buyer. 4 BR, fam rm, 2'4 BAYFRONT MOBtu;
Arnold & Freud ""· """ 2000 ,. 1~ ""''"' HOME :-
388 E. 17th SI.' CM llKli WHtcllft Dr. NB 642·5200 fam rm. huge stone frplc, 2 "Br. cabana, l \i ba, h'plc, like new cpt&ldrps. Only · Realtora M&-775S S25.~. HLUTY! , . av8U boat ~ip, adlt section. NO DOWN GI p c -Community cl"b"°""'·'l""I· .W. · game area. ere. \\'ill trade OR fHA TERMS 1100 up., down ,., lum .. u~
Needs paint but has extra 1.C.;;°'=',;;•.;M=':'".::..---'-"" turn Laguna Leisure WOrld
Duplex with pier, all thla large rooms. 2 bathri. FJag. or hillside Orange Co.
for $63,500. Good financing. stone fireplace • and big ' Brm Fixer Upper Home. 546-7111 : :;
1860 N.,..pori Blw .• CM R-2 lot. -Close to "'""°"· Juli """"'"' C·l * REDUCED * Rltr. 646-39'28 Eve. 646-2290 Imn1ediate po111e11ion. Just $5,!XXI buys equity. Rent ;
Waterfront
.. 1win 4.p!exes. ltlonthly Inc.
S9$. Annual taxes $l2till. TG-
tal price S95,5r50. Low u
$1.2.9.l(} dov.·n.
ble r~Je. S23.750. loiiiii..,;ⅈ;;ii;;;ii;;;••• L h S25COO. pa,ytnr off S16,500 ba1 THE BLUFFS :~ ac enmyer fi'.11-1,1111rM· ~~~ ~~~·~ ~~ '"': ~ ',,~:'~~:
, .-ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. -17th It. 646-4494
4 BEDROOMS
No Down VA
RIDDlftl
R E A L T Y
20'Q \\'. Balboa Blvd., N.8.
c.11 Anytime 67s.6000
KEllNEDY W1ll1-McCerdle, Rltra. COWGE PA*"' 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Im.
54&-7'7'29 an)'drne •
S 5 950 OCEAN & BAY Z • Peninsul11. Pl. Altr. 3 BR. 3
FUN LIVING! OPEN DAILY 1-5 ba. home. Spaciou!, sunny
Modem 3 bdrm. 1 block to 2578 GrHnbrl•r patio. $49.500.
oct'an. $23.900. ' (Vac & ree.dy for occupancy) &elbo. Rt•I E&t•te Co.
~I ~ to paved alley In bua:h Custom carpts, drpg, other
&XCLUSIVI ~l!Mlll!lflii!\1!1 ~1kt Center on W. 19th extras. Handy pool Q1inet
MEREDITH GARDENS, HB. S.0·71 • 646-2313 and proba.blJ worth &U--0771 ~
B 'loo II • $26,500 without hOUat'. $41,500 valut • Now "';soo y owner. 1q, ., l 11-
bdrm.s lg kitchen, sepu.nate NEW HOMES Paint ®ti dt, &el '" 200 St-1 To Be1~h-. c or rembdel ior busineait. -..... ,. formal dininr room, panel· Eubide ogta Mesa, Frorn BeauWul 3 bedroom 2· bath
led tam nn with built.in en-$211,500, Only 2 left! 3 BR. Over $600 yr~~ ~it home. dC'ep ahag ,,0 ~•. & OPEN DAILY not as is. A ~ ~· ........ t"'V\ tertainmenl unit Cathedral exposed be a m l.-eU}ngs
living room. Corner lot with ~Santa Ana Avt. . Lytle Re11lty thn:iUghout, 3 lalldscapod,pa·
For Lt•H CAYWOOD RIAL TY 700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa
Neat 3 bdrm 2 bath In al· 6306 \V. Coa8t H .. -y., N.B. Newport 673-4140-~=~
This is a quality borne wilh ~ ce m£'nt driv~ay & 1hake
;: '
. -. -. .,
' ' , ,.
' .
,_ . . ·-,-•
root. On ly :: years old. Sell·
"r \•;llJ pay all buyr-r's clos-
ing L'0~1~ ,\; w!ll i;ti\'P you
lractlvt' Huntlr\gton Beach m12t0 11 t GREAT POTENTIAL
loc11tion. 1 year lease OK. """""'"'""'""'""'""''""'"I Home on 80xl8:"> Jot, I btk.
boat or trailer entranoe. l (Bet. 23rd & Santa Isabt':ll 583 \V. 19th 5t&·!M93 lies, fireplace. all buil.!·ln
mil.. from ocean. $46,500. 642·3960 !:ves. 642-5106 ,., h " d o" b J e •. ,,_
$100 to move 2 -·----Victor I• S2 5/mo. (possible option to N.EWPORT HGTS lo automobllt-row. Parking " LUXURY LIVING 1 c e ' " -1"'·' 6\4 ~ loan avail. 962-7374 $32,500, 642·34M .
Pool Homes 0w~'~·:.~·~~~~'!" -'--=-~B-A_C_K_B_A_Y~--I 9511 or 540-6631 bu.y). $19,SOOll 646-1111 for camper, trailer I: 00.t. OCEANfRONT
J. K. Nichols 5.f6·5110 Spa cious bedrooms, c.bffrful {11nytlme) FORTIN, REALTOR 3 BR home on exceUent
fl'letfciiemathaatrt\ living room. fll'l!pla.Ci!. Qual· 170l·A Wes!cli.ff Drive beach! $54.950 lN l'U.
4
IE
8
EPf'OJIOOR SUMMER
&: aauna beth. 1 Br, &: df'n. Quiet. Cui De Sac· sb:e~t .
Kit. bullt-lt11. FrpJc. See Lovely bomt • Hlate1 ~ze
this own your own and live lot Sp11.c. 3 Br . .tr Wtlily: LLEGE REALTY ity constnictlon. Large pool I~~~~~~~~~~ j NPwport Beach ~ Oeorg• Williamson MS
l5llJ .ti.Mn 11 K.tltlor,c.M. siud gl'DUnd1. 540-1720 DUPLEX-Balboa J s I a n d . Nur1•ry School REALTOR ":1·~0toNl4S,"°I carefl'l'l'. brlck frpl. S49J100. 1l 3-0
-4-BEDRM.-$ifsilo-TARBELL 2955 Harbor Three yean, -rental. POTENTIAL. 3 BR 2 ha.th 673-4350 Eves. 673-lS&t DA Ru ty l..,..;~\!!""":~""'""'""'~541i""'1~-~~~~E~v~"~·;""~-~S~l42 (i)L
PROPERTIES wstr
1028 Baysid £', NB 67HJ30
DUPLEX 4 yrs old . ~~hR
f!nch. Built-Ins. crplll, ~
S32.500 Owner. 646-2'1 O.
0\\1N[ft--. -51,.,-3-bi;. Altracllve brlek patio o,1.•1th
Twnhsc, 11.R. S l O 7 Imo gaa Uttd BBQ. 2 baths, flrt'·
p.1.1.i. blt-111s R/O, T"l'! plat'f', family room. 540.1720
Wsh/dry, t't'C'. laC'il. 147-1067 TARBELL 295S HArbor
\\'OMAN with R.E. Broker'll Want cash/inlel'l!1t in 4-6 home, romer lot, 130xl30'
He, Rfeded, Specltlll)' oMet. ~ti TusHn area. $31,000 all fenl.'l!:d , Ca1 lfor detail!. 51/4•/o .G.I. DAILY ·PILOT DIME-A· ,..,,.,.,
l\'o f');P req. XI.NT OP. tqU!ty. Write C/O Jack 'Battlll "'talfit $119 l\lonth pays all. R-2 tot; LINES. You can uae them
PORT. MS-4900 &ftfr 8 Brewer, General Dellvtry, SI S\ D 2 Br. home. S20,000. for jusl'pennle1 a day_ Dial
llALTY
Near Npt. Po~t Ofc. 8£.2414 pm. Ba.lboa ls. Crt!Y to brkn. 642-&560 Pyran1id Exchangors 6·16-26?9 ~ Princlpals only. . ..
NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646-7711
2043 Wtstcllff Dr. •f Irvine Open Evenirtp
PARTY POOL HOUSE
P'antullc home \\'Ith gorJteous pool and pe.1io 1rea for 1ummertlme parties. AB·
SOLUTELY Immaculate In cvt"ry detail. Hua:e windows over0 lookin1 entertain·
mtnt area. King~Ue masler 1ui tl' Includes drep,lng room and be.th v.1th a
.. Roman" tub. Beautiful l.Xetlon. Room for beet or traJler In over-&tie ya.rd. ·A
mwt see!! $34,950. Submit your smaller hOf'fle on our i:uarantce u.le plan. aaJc plan.
IA YCUST -$46,000
~Ull Dlacx.-d o.n the market, thl~ t xcPptlonal pride of o'vner~hip home: ahouJd bt
llltft lmm4!dia~11. Prlvlll" court yard enlry, beautiful yardl with mom for a larlll ~ and &OCU$ for l>o¥t or trailer. Subrna your smaller home on our auar· ant. ..i. pJl.n.
IA YClllT LOT -n.ooo REDUCTION
Don't mla tht opportunlly to bulld your dl't'am ma ~ion among thf> most f'X•
penelve horntl h'I NN'pOrl h eh. Rl.mbllm;: or f\\'O ~tory. Pool 1b:f' \+.'Ith un·
Jlmlttd garden al'ftl. for outdoor t'nll'rtal nini;: on thi5 Jar.cf'. h1 rae property, \Viii
dt'li&ht YoUr famUr and frlench. Owner I~ off,.rlnll: this one ol a kind, quiet and
goJTeOU& JocaUon on land you OWN lor only $23,950.
CHOICE IACI .IA'( LOCATION
J.rnmedlate occupancy on t1'lil loV"tly la l'J:''" tu~tom built home. Spacloua family
room pl111 dlnll'll robm. H\IJe_ ~. :\ quttn •ltt bllth1. Owner: andow:. Wiii .el> "NO OOWN'" OJ. a.t 133.'00. Submit your tm&Urir borne on OW' l\W'all~
ool< pW>.
.... • ........
'
1000 1000 General
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
COSTA MESA OFFICE 545-9491
2790 HAUOR II.YD. 0,.. '-""''Ill' P.M.
''HELP!''
LAST YEAl WE AT WALKER & LEE ESTABLISHED
A NEW WORLD'S RECORD fOR
RE-SALE HOMES SOLD IN 1 WEEK !
154
lfomn M>ld during Utt It.at WHk 1n June 1968. \Ve have an all out adwrtlsinC
and U1Una camps.Ian from now to the end of thf! month.
We uJd we wtre golll$ to do it la't yrar, an4 we did!
This ,year ,.,.~·re a:olntt to ~at our°"''" n"cord. Ctll ua now tn lilt your home 10
we'll bavt &eme:thJ.n& to 1e:U dW'lna: record week of June ZhM1.
HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE-842-445SI;
IH:Z ltllot• OPHllft '".) ____ ..,;M;;UMT;,;;:'";;,;''";;;,,;;";;"'~';;•;_ ____ o,.. ....... .,,
\14 HOMIS SOLD IN ONE Wlllll A WORLD'S RICORD. STARTIN.,_.
JUNI ll, WALllH & LU IS OUT TO HU.I THAT OLD RICORD. c:A1J. ;·
US NOW TO LIST YOUR HOME. SO IT WILL SELL DURIN• HCOlll-' WDll ... '
'.,
UNllLllYAILI 11 :~
$850 Down FHA. No Closln1 Cotta bu).'I a 3 bedrnom, 1"' blth home. LaoJi \(•:I these extras! \Vaaher1 [)eyer, Rttrlaerator. Built in bar for entertlllnlng. Com .. ,;~
plett 1t.erto and 1peakers. Custom drapes throughout. Plu11 thick, like nttW ta""'~ll
petlna. ALL THIS ll'OR ONLY $18,900 FUU. PRICE. Gl. S600 Down. Flrtit come.i •
fint St"rve. HURRY! '·l
. ~ I
NEiD 5 IEDlOOM5 77 , ,
Here's a Big Family Home with • worklnr man's price ta1: Cloce to 1horip,lf11 :
and IChooh In RnldentlaJ Fountain Vallay. 1.A'lt• of" llvin1 apace for the ·trida to.' f
romp and play. G.L no cuh down. $29,900 Full Price. A <tl for thi1 2,20Q 'tq.,· ;1 ft. home:. 7682 F.dlnpr, 842-445.5. Optn Eves. ... ~ 'l
I
ASSUMI s v.~• •.1. LOAN ,;
Total ptt,Jm•nt1or198.00. A rtal 1barp 3 btdroom doll h,ouM!. l..oll ot room • 'I
to Jl'O'N· Clrpata and dntpta art ntw and beautlf\.11. Modttn t flact·uver kJtdltn ,
tor Mom. Anyone quaJ1fita. Subrnlt your down pa,yment on $21,:500'"-=Sa~ ~°':!,1
-: :;;I: 7:i'
--~----l!l!!!l!!!l!!!!!!ll!!~il!l!!!!!l!--l!!!!!!lfi!!!l!!!!!!m
--------------------..L.----~-~-~_., ____ _.,_._ ..... ___ ..,Ao.:..,...:...,_;,,,.:....-.::.,.;.._;,_ .... ,.
•
:' '.Jf '1LOT·ADV0TISEl
HOUSl!S ,OR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE
Wtdntsdq, Ju1t1 18, lM DAILY PILOT Q
HOUSl!S ,OR SALi ...... , ~ "'~
fflv111 ~nfvntl.._.
f(tN•AL~ .
I Apto. '""'llhetl D~L~~,'9..,,; a•s~'lliDq,,
,., -......... ....., """"-DIAL DlllliCJ' 84%.se7a
OUTSTANDIN01
Wmcutl, ~ VW.,. 2
•tDl')' <nndominlwn. Pres.
die. quiet area. In court
)'U'd. Near shoppU.-, restau.
ranµ.. LJ,kt' new. Luxurlou1
carpeted. ab eQuipl, Weit.
in&'houle kitchen, Beautiful
private patio. 2: bdrma,
dl"tll~ room. hU&e cto.cls,
2',i bathl, fireplace-. Encloi-
ed 2 car Pl'N'e, heated
pool, ~eaant clubhouse,
tema.ce, Sauna. Own land.
. . L ...... -2705 N .. ,..1 .... ~ noo N_.i -.. 4200 ONLY 2 HOMES LEFT 3 B~DIOOMS 0-~~:.="'--... '!'"""-.. -..;.-.'1-.:.i: ~~:..:z.s:.. ~':i Y&ARl.Y ..... .. ""'
nrA or VA .. U\lll S20.000 trffl, Ill' hla'b, school • pool, 2 blkl • oet&D. 3 BR. MOdem 2 BR, .u b£tna.
HOUSIS FOR SALE OP,IC. ISinAI. ,. . ...... ,.tiN
tNDUS"'tAL PaOl'l•TY •••• --
New homes, ready to move in, ~ mile
lrom beach. Fmit payment up to 60 days
alter move jn.
WHAT EUE IS TRERE beach, lPP 1 ac:.Tt, 300) aq ft tncd, qitl, drpl, blb.\I. $300 frplc, beam ctllinp. Aduha.
TO SAY! yr Jae. $400 mo. 494.-3112 mo. MT--0163 no pell. G42-3f90
Rtx l . Hodget, Rtty OUPl..EX avail/July t , 3 br, LARGE 1 BEDROOM Torma VA/FHA. F'"'" $22.9'0. !<7"52> L...,n• Nitvol 2107 2 bo, "'""· Incl dahw.hr. • llSO month, ,..n, C:OMMllRCIAl. •.• . • ......... .. rr,t. l bJock from beach. * * 6"l3-8M8 * *
LIDt.'URY area, • br, 2 bl., 673-1~ or (1l3) 2U-93'1'8 l·BR apt., 1 blk to bbc. Yrt;y.
July, Au.a: or yurly. Walk to lze. $160. Avail. JUb' lJt.
elMllAl-.. _i.•··•••••••·•· .. •• ... tM lllDUSTalAL llWTA&. ••••••··"" CNTA ........................ ~;: i.ors ., •....•.......••.•••••••.•••
MmlA OIL MAR .............. aANCMU ............. -... -•. •IN ~:r.::•::.~~.:-:.::·::. ·.:. ::,:,..::: il"'.·~=·~.~~. '·:::::::::::: .. :: CORAL SHORES ·L19un1 le1dt 1705
M•Wf"O•T ........... ............ LAKI IUIMOlll .............. tat fflWl'OIT MllOMQ .......... 1111 lllOllT PIOPllTY .......... 6111 IAL&OA COVll'.I ............. 111, OUJNI CO. PIOPllTT ..... ....,
1111wp01T IKOlllS ···········'"' DUT Of' ITATI ·~-•••••••• um ~YClllT ·-·-······-···••'"··'m ~MTAIN & o.-sl!IT •...•... All
{on Garfield between Beach & Magnolia
962-1353 THIS
OLDE
HOUSE
beach. 0v.'flCl' e-Mll Newpert _H_!~lhh 3210 Realtor 675-1642
I 's=u=m=.,.=,=R=ont=",=._="=29=1=0• 12 BR, 1 bath, frplc, din nn, 2 2 BDR apt upa~in. tum.
car p.rqe. Yr'• leUI!, $D1 mo yriy, Avail 6121 212%
unMOltU ................... 1m IUIOIVlltON I.AMO .......... tits
DCWlft SHOllS ............... 12!1 ilUL. lnATS SllVIC:I ••••. 6111
WUTCLl,I' ... -· •••·-·••• l DI t.I. IXCKAMel ............. UM
Au mne Joan:. Owntr Bkr, Eestbluff 646--1948. 1005 Dover Or, 1242 Huntington Baach 1400 CLEAN Balboa Beach Un1ta. mo. No pets. S48-6640 orl,lOth=='='=· =N=.B.====='I
BELONGS TO A BYGONE SI .. ~~-2Uol0nalca!O; I~~ ~·1346 Coron I del Mir 4150 KAlll.01 MHIMU.NDS ........ 1111 t, I . WAMTltD .-· ....... .utt
11•1VllUITY PAllK ........... •!» BUSINESS end UlVtMI .......•....••••••..•. 1Uf IA<~IA't' .•.... :.---··-········ FINANCIAL .,.. L.Vil', , .................. IMS •u•n1111s1 ""'°•TUNnllt .• ,.. lllVI • n1uc ............. ,ltu •UllNISI WANTID '* COIDNA OIL MAI ........... lut IM\llSTMINT o,,.rtWl~·-··,,1. IALM>A l'I NINSUL.A ......... lJlt iMYllTMINT WANTID ., .. ,'_''6J1J •IACON IAY ............... .,l:IM MOMIY TO LOAN ~ U.Y ISL.ANDS ................. l»I (llllDMU.L LOAMI ·::::::::::::ma LIDO llLI ·· · ·············••••·1MI JliWI L.IY LOANS ...••....••.. U. ..... IOA ISLAND .............. lW COLLATllAL LOANI ......... l#S 1111\tlfnltlTDM IUCN • ··-···1• ltPL llTATI LOAMI 6Me MUNTOW'IOtll NAllOUI ••• ,.Mm MMITOMIS. ,,... o.t.iij '"""".w ,.OUN1A• V.\LLIY .......... 1lll MONIY WANTID ·:::Qlf SIAL ll.\(N ................ ,l4ll .... LINOUNCEMENTS iUNllT llACN ............... llM """' 0"1ot:N 01ov1 .............. lut and NOTICES LON• l lACN , ..• , ............. 1$tl ~AKIWOOD ··········••••••·••·1111 ,.OUND ,,, .. A•I ••.••....• , 6M )llAH•I COUNTY .............. LDIT ..•.•... , ................ Mil
OUT OP COUNTY ..... M••"•••,.... ,.lltSOflAIA ................... ..... OUT OP $TATI ................ 1 .. .\NMOUNCIMlllTI ............ 1411 ITANTOtll .......•.•..•••.•••• ,.1111 lllTKI .·,:••·········•··-··••··1411 Wt:ITMINSTEtl ................ 1n1 ,.UNlll.\u , .................... 11 MIDW.\Y CITY ..................... ""ID 01nuA11tY .............. Mii SANTA ANA ................. ,.11Jf lllUHllltAL DllltECTOlll ....... "611 IANTA ANA ffeTL ............ 1"9 'LOlllTI · .............. '-111 OIANOI .••. : ............... ,.11.11 (AID 0" THANKS ............ Ml TUSTIN ,,,, ..................... 1141 IN MIMOl:L'M ................ ..eu NDITN TUITIN .•.•....•.. 1MS Cl'.MITlllT LOTS ,., .......... M~I ANAMllM , " .. :::: .•.•..••••. IUI CllM'TllltY CltYl"TI ......... Mlt ltl.VllAoci CANYON , ..•••.•. lt.sS tlMITlllY CllYl'TS _, •• .,,.Mii U.IUNA MILLI , ............... IMI ClltlMATOllEI ............... loOf L.MUNA llACM .•........•••. Im r,llMO ltlAL PAllKS ........... Mii LAOUMA N18UIEL , .......••.• 17'1 AUCTIONS .................... Mll SAN CL.IMINT!l .............. 1711 AVIATIOM llltVKli •••••..... '4» U.N JUAN CAl'ISTllANO ...... 1PM TllAYIL. .................... , •. Mii ~l'ISTU.NO IEACM ......... 1l"U All TlltANSHltTATIOM ., ..... ..... OANA t>OIJ4T .................. 17>11 MIT9 TIANJl"OlltTATION .... , ..... CAIL.SIAD ·····•••••··•••••••••1U• LIO'L. NOTICll ........•.... 6411 OCIAHllD• ................... 1111 OlaMAN & TUTORING .. "911 r;i1t:: coum·::::::::J: SERVICE DIRECTORY., "9USeS TO s• MO'VID 1M ACCOUNTIN8 . . .......... I
OPEN SAT & SUN 1-6 1---------
-:--=--:~-:---1$42,500 DELIGFITFUL 3 bdr C I ·d S' , ... Lu ..... " """"'· .. a . e· ac quiet cul-de-sac. La.11::e feno-
ed yard, fam rm. <Im. rm.
Lot + Back Bay view. New
4 bedroom 3 bath, f;)X.125' lot,
room for boat &: traile r.
Delta Real F.state 646-4414
Ideal home fol' a:rowlnr
tan1ily. Owner ia Pasadena.
bound and eager to sell .
Peter Dobbs, Rell.ltnr
675-5003 OWNER'S NE\V 4 BR. Harbor View Home, 3 ba's, BLUFFS-WORTil $39,50'.;
liv rm, din rm. fam rm, BlIT ~fAKE OFFER! Must sell View end unit "C" bar. le. kit, 2 frpics, w/w I l95IJ f < BR' l apfl drps, yard I: many p an w/ sq. t. s,
extraa! 69. f i n & n c i n g . BA's, .sep. dining. Upgrad-
644-404.f e<l. lmn1aculale! Call 1<1n .
=='°'""--:--=c-~=I White 673-9060 or 675-5764 BLUFFS - 3 BR. 3 BA eves. Owner/a.gt.
w J Bay v I e w on v.ide -~==-.c-greenbelt.St~ps 10 p 0 0 1. e NEW ~LUFFS e
Cusl. additions. s t ea I 2 Br. 2 Ba spht level. Many
SM,500. Owner 644-4l65 custom features, all elec,
~-=-----=-I etc. Lowest maint. & lease. DELUXE Duplex. OCEAN hold. MUSI' SELL • BY
VIEW. .$42,500 • low dn. OWNER. C.all Dick Oytt
A sk for Naomi. Doyle 533-4456 ext w or 673.5m . Co. 548-U68. Eves 675-1977
BY OWNER, 2-story 4 BR Corona dtl Mar 1250 2~ ha., nr beach, clubhse.
1
_________ _
ll000/S275 mo. 646-5616 BRICK & BEAMS CONOOMINIUM , ......... ::::::1tM ~::~.~~~Nl!G ::~::~~, .,..,,,:::
DUl'L•lllll ,Oil IALI ........ 1'71 ''" T .,, ,,,. Adobl•-•·'·k ...... , •-oms A,AllTMINTI 'Ollt U.L• .... 1 ... A AL • s ........... , ... -. , ,,... , "' '-"' ,
RE••'T•LS •UTo 11tll'A111 ....... . .. wt Newport Heights 1210 ne w carpeting and Beliian R' "' AUTO, Jul h ltl. Tt,1, EiC. Ult Houtn Furnished •••TSITTINO .......... wt1----------linen drapes bid you quiet
llNlllAL ..................... ,... :r.JIC.~J.~:~t;K.~, ·;:::::::tl: NEWPORT HEIGHTS welcome to 11 serene ocean
ltllfTAL.I TO IH&lltl ......... -. IU'UNISI l llt\¥(U -·-····· tSd OPEN DAILY view framed by professional CDIT& Ml.IA .......••••••••••. 11!! IUILDlllS . ; ................ 6111 1 • .vi--incr Ad"'! O\"""'"' MIU. OIL .................... 11 .. CA'tlllM0 .. 6111 401 Santa Ana Ave. .........,..,...,....... w y ...... .. PA \IE1to11111 CAllNITMAKIN• ISie Tutetully do-rated --r are Palm Sprinp bound. LLl•I ....... ·•····•·••·••·! ... \IS CAl,INTallHO .:::::::::::::6"1 "v "'"'"" .,.., •IAC'll . ............ CIMINT, ~ ... ............. home in nicest re:sidentiaJ Sug&t!Bt S5.000 down. early
WPOlltT MOTS. ···-··---·····2211 C"ILD CAii!. u, ............. '411 area. This lovely 2 B<lnn posse:61i?'1 ~nteotd. WP'Dll:T s111101t1s •••..•..•• :mt COHT11•CT01t1 . .. .......... ua H I p h & •ssoc AY'SMOllt:S ................... mi Ull,IT CLEAHIHO ......... ..u home is immaculate & has a inc tn "' •
DOVlll SHOIU ····---········2m· CAll'IT LAYING ••• , ..... » lush t:n>l'g. d""', Jrg kitch· 3900 E. Coa51 Hwy. 675-4392 WISTCLI,.,. , ................ zu. OltAl'Ellll!I .................. UJI •r g UNIVllSITY l'AlltK ........... !2JJ Ol!MOLITIOIC ................. ..u en w/ bltns & can be pur·
HtVINI ........................ JUI DllA,.TING SE11tv1c1 ··-·-····.mo cha:sc<I w/ a low down pay· NEAR OCEAN IAIT ILUP, ................... 2141 ILl!CTltlCAL .............. .,...... , ••VIN• TllltU.C:I -····-····· = IOUll'MIMT lllttTALS ......... ,. ment at $29,500. 642-2799 One of the three fine1t hom-COll.OttA OIL MAil •.•..•••••. ,INCIN• .......................... es in the heart of CdM. Steps .............................. -.............................. -FIXER UPPER ~ ' BR •" .. . LIDO llLI! ..........••...•••.. n11 fl'UlllCACI .,,,,1 ... l!k. ·····"" to ........ .,an, • Ill ' U.T ISL.ANOS .............. ,.IUI ,UllHITUll •llSTGlllN• 1' bl-k from Cl •"U On· .. , I• $119 000 (By a-I l IALM>A llU.NO ............•. tHS • llE,INISHIN$ "1S )1t ..,.... ~ " ' ' """ 1A1T •LUFF .................. na oA1tDINING . • ....... Ult excellent area .• Extra laii:;e DtL•ncy Re•I Estete "'CK •AT ..................... H4illl OIMlllAL 5lltVICES ..•...•.. 6'11 lot l Bed , ... -a.. 2828 E o ••• H CdM U.CIC •AY .... .. ............. $U.Ol1te. DIKING .............. • • rooms, ......,_,, • ..........,,t wy,
itVHTIN•TOM •u.•.•.ctt ......... ~ •• GLASS ........................... room & den. $26,900. 67J..3TIO FOUNTAIN \IA .............. Ollaltt THUMa -··--·-·•······''. lt&L •IACM ., .......... , •••. :H• OUN INOI' ...................... 111
LO ... •U.CM .................. ISll HIALTH ClUll ....•••••... ,. 4nl NEW LIS'TING OllANOI COUNTY .....•...•.•. 2Mll MAULING .................. •7>11 SANTA ANA ····-··-····-·······Mii HOUll!CLIANING ·············'"" Corona Higblands; 0 ( e. n '#JllTMIHST•• ................ 2'12 1NT111t101t oe.co1t.t.T1N• ..... ml View; 3 BR. 2 Ba. You O'Nn
\0 THE REAL ~ESTATERS ;, .. ,, . .
MIOWAY CITY ................. tll6 INCOMll TAX ... . .•......• 141 546 2313 · ••• '7171 SANTA AHA HllGHTS ........ 2Uf lllON, Ol'Ml!Tlllnt.I, Ek. ........ '15f • • ~v· f.tie ljUXI. Full P,,rice S«.000.
COASTAL ··········-··-··"····'' .. lltONINO ........ , ............ tJH =========I CORBIN-MARTIN I.A.OONA •EA~M .............. 2105 INSULATING ........•..•.•.... '"' U.G\INA •oovEL ............. 2111 1Nsu11ANc1 .................. •n• lalboe Co\les 1215 Realtors IAN CLIMllNTI!: .............. 1710 INVl!:ITIOATING 0.ttctlYt ... •ne .... ., JUAN CAl'ISTlltANO ...... 27U JANITOlltlAL ";J-:. .. ..... 1 .. ----------3036 E. Coast H\vy., CdM CAl'ISTllANO 11ACM ......... mt '1:we:L1tY Hl'A111, l!tc. .......... WATERFRONT .~ Br. 2 Ba. 6T:>-1662 DANA l'DIMT ......... , ....... 1741 LAMDSCAl'ING ................ 4111 a1v111ts101i COUNTY •......• , .. U>a<SMITN ............... me 2000 sq ft. Pier & slip. No. INCOME, TOOi \l'ACATION lltfNTALS ......•.. tNf MAIONllY, allCIC ....... ., .H>f 51) BaJbo• Cov•• ~• 000 IUMMl!I lltlNTAU ···-····· 2tlt MOVING ... $TOll,lGE ..•...... 1141 ,_ . ....... . 2 BR. home, ocean side of cDttOOMIN IUM ................ 7'$1 PA INTING, l'l~llJI"' ...... wt .$2000 dwn p It f $392 Mo H N I . ,., ,. DUl'Ll!ICES Fl/JIM. ............ ml l'AINTIHG. Si9M .............. 6151 • . . W)', e.w y pain ..,,.; pa JO
RENTALS ,.ATIOS .... .. ··········-···"" or make otter. 529-8100 w/privacy AND lleP. rear H U f l hed l'KOTOGlltAPNY .. . .. . ....... 7' 2 bactl. apt A iOOd buy OIM•:~~---·-~-~~-~--~-.. »H :~:.~~ca. "~'_C:~--~-~~::.': Newport Shores 12 0 Call to seP!
COSTA MESA .................. )\ .. l'IT OIOOMING ''" Gene-Robertson, Realtor ld'IA DIL MAit .............. )lU l'OOL SEltVICI!' ............... .. MllA VllOI .,,._ .......... tilt l'OW'll SWlll'INe ........... 4111 FOR SALE bf Owner 3 675-2440 COlL•OI ,.AlllC ........•... ,l\\I PUM, SlltVICI ............... •nt Bed t' 111wt>01T 111ACK ............ mt t1too,.1No ................... ,.,,,. room, pa'°• garage. CUSTOM BUi l T
NIWt>OllT MONTI. , ........... nit 1,\010, Jt.,aln. lie. ··········'"' c 0 mm unity pool & 2 B<lnn., S""cious den • U-N•Wt>OltT SHOltll .......... mt IEMOOELI NG &. REl'Alll ..... pla.yzround 2 bib tro ..-IAY'SHO•ll ................. 12111 lllMOOIUNG, KITCKINI .... •NI • m brary. frplc., 2 Baths + DOVI• SMOlltlS ............... ttn l(lllOllS SNAlltl'IN .......... "1J ocean Ne\vport Shores 242 0 2 Wl:ITCLIFI" ............... J2)1 SllWING .................... .... '. . sep. house for incom1e. n UN1VlllSITY l'AIK ........... nn Sl!'WIN• MACHIHI JllPAllltS IN! Lugonia, NB 642-3286 R-2 lots. Owner wilt finance. lltVINI . ... . ............. JUI lll'TIC TANKS. Stwa. lk. .. ,NJ ·~ -----C p
ii:vtK• Tl!llACE ....••...... nd TA1L011t1NO ........... .,_,,,. Unt'v•r•t'ly Pork 1237 Orang• oast r operty ce11tONA DEL MA• ........... :mt T•aM1TE CONTlltOL ........... ,11 332 1'.lai~ucrite 673-85)0 IALIOA ....... , ............... .)111 TILi. C .... rnk .....•...••••• .,.4'74 u.v uuttos •....••....•••... mt TILi. Un•'""' a M9rM .••.•. •ns Welk to The S.ach LIDO~· .................... DI! Tllll llilYICI .............. ,,. s.Hl.NY BRIGHT J BR, •••. 2 ... h horn•. LIOA ISL.AND .............. JUI TI LIVdlON, 11.,.n. I.le. ... INS " ~ 'MIWl'Olt:T w1sT .............. :tus Ul'HOUTltltY ................. ,.,. 111 this 1mmaculately kept 2 You w:n 1 .. _ land. Vacant, =~=~::::::: t~~~ua·::::::: j(,8$& EMF•LOYMENT bedroom 2 .bath. townhou_se. quick occu~ . .$42,500
'0UNTAIN VALLEY .......... '4!1 Joa WANTl!O, M9ll ............ ltol Nf!W ~ting U1 the Uvuig LEIGHTON LINDEN RLTY ~'o::"0c:0v.:·:::::::::::::::rs JO• wANT1c, w-........ mt and d1n1ng roo~. Complete-oo.nu or 6n.0372 l:ONI llACH ................. sue JO(I Wlol'4TEO, ly repainted, cablneb and'-====='""""',-"'"'" OllAMOI COUMTI' MM MIN & WOMIN ............... Im 1SH'0RECL1FF 3 BR 2 BA :.. ··-·········· DOMISTIC MIL, .............. ltU doors have been refinished. • . SANTA A "i···-··········-····:~; AGINCllL Mn ........ -•••• ,,, .. Be tlful tio . land Quiet lrtt lined area by the WDTMINST ll ................ » .. tlll,. WAMTIO, Mtll .......... !Ml au pa • nice • MIDWAY cm '"'trii""""·-···SIM AOINCllL ""-........... 11111 Se&Jlng. FP $26.950. sea. F~ simple. Acress lo 2 SANTA AKA Ml!IG ......... "' MILP WANTIO, .._ ...... 14• • eel beaches Under $50 {00 By rnii"AL ••• , • .-·:::::::::::::::"' JO•~ a ~ ......•... n• R H·111 owner. * 'fi'li.3681 L.AOUNA NIGU EL ............. J1t1 AGENCIES. Mtl! & W-.... nst
Wf CLIMllNTI: .... ·-·-··-···rn: ~~~~ .. -...~~v.:~~'.~.:::·~~ $31.500 • 2 UNITS • 1 BR l'ISTllANO · ............. .,,. T'MIATlllCAL .................. ,,.. ho 'lh f'-la-al"d'°' CAl'llTlltAMO •tAC ......... c IS use WI u .. p ....... , u DANA l'DINT ................. JHt MER HAND E FOR REALTY apt. & double garage. Phone ~im~rs'~~,-UliH."".'.:-:::: .. ::,1; SALE AND TRADE 18008 Culver Dr., Ir.tine 637-JO~ or 835-5466
SUMMlll lltlNTALS .......... ms PUINITUltl ... , ................. OPEN 9 AM--8 PM 833{1820 LGE. hilltop •-t. P•rm ... ,.,. RENTAL~ O,.,,ICI WltMITUlll ........ Mii IU • o,&IC• 'loUlfOMllllT ......... •11 of ocean .l hills. 01~~!~ ~~~~~~~~~-····"" i;i\::~VJf:t"'~.:;;:;:::::5l! Realtor 613-2010 ~0J:::.~~ ... ::::::::::::::::::: ::~l~~~=ODOI ·····---.. = DUPLEX. nr. ocean. 2 BR. 2 Nl.Wl'DIT alACM aet ·········-••••·· BA + l BR & ba '•• lol NIWt>OltT HllGNti''.::::::::'.on1t PUlltMITUll AUCTIOM ........ lt1J , • ....., • , NIWt>Ollt.T SHOlllS ........... .mt .. ,l'L.IANCES ................ ,llM privacy. Rltr 6'13-2010
W'llTCLIP,. ···· ........... ·= :;;,11~~1~KINI '""""•··-···:~ UNIVUSITY PAllK ....... :... 7 MUStcAL INSTltUMPif "::::::11U IACIC IA Y ................. ···"'* PIANOI & OtltOAMI ............ 11)1 AIT llVPP .................. an. .. DID ... Lido Isle 1351
LIST your property
with confidence
SELL with profe ..
sional sklll
TH ROUGH
YOUR
REAL TOR MEMBER
Huntlnvton Beach/
Fount1in Valley
Multiple
Listing S.rvic1
8 PAT ·
ROBERTSON
REALTY
16397 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
147-IS53
WANT LOW
PAYMENTS??
Here's a FHA loan witb Jl2T
Total Paym~nts, anyone can
assume and qualify. Sllali>,
older C-!llifornia Home. Huge.
Lot. 3 Queen liized bed-
rooms. Luxurious b a t b.
Doublp GaragL Believe me,
you should sec this o n e!
Priced at $19,500.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
7682 Edinger
842-4~ or 540-5140
Open Eves.
--S~ELLINO??-
La.st year Walker & Lee es-
tablished a world's rt?COrd
of 154 re sale homt!s sold in
one "'eek. This year, start-
ing June 22, "~·re out to
bi-eak our own record. Call
us now to list your home so
v.•e'll have 110mething to sell.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
168'l Edinger
842-4455 or 540-5140
Open Eves.
4 BEDROOMS
A!lsume l Joan $24,440 pay·
able $21};) per month includ·
Ing taxes \\•ilh S4il00 down.
Carpets &: drapes, built-ins
fi~place. super clean!
GL E NMAR Owner
relocated: own laod, 4 min.
lo beach. 4 BR, porch-front,
rear palio, <log run w/
drain. Lrg rooms. Xlnl
lndscpdg &: in~rior. $2,629
down to qualify buyer
S'2'/',500. 9351 Nantucket Dr.,
HB. 962-4657
*LOOK HERE*
ERA. Located fn the heart· _..... Vh~"'""'
land ot l..quna'a Riviera 315 E. Balboa Blv., Balboa Unlvwslty Perk 3237 --------
C.0.1Utne. Sltuatl!<! on tree BALBOA -lnexpen&ive col· COZ'l 2 SR., trpl. G:oand
shaded a:rounds & shelte~ tares. Weekly rates July, 3 !ID~~· be., i::~m, 8oor. Near ahopplnr.
by hlrb brick walls. in patio Auaust, Sept.~158 ~w. ue. fs. ltH Furn., SITS. Adults only, no
prdcn setting that aUords I -~=-"'-------afb!.r 6 p.m. pets. Owners/aa:t., 0c~1i ~~ATHi: RE~:~ UMurnishH lrvlne 3231 HaJ Ptnchln & A190C.67M392
LANDS. Gener1I 3000 SHARP, Ulllv. Parle. 3 BR. 2 lilboa 4300
THE ANTIQUATED 3 Bl).. -----.--BA, carpets, drapes, bullt·l----------1
RM. FLOOR PLAN, is rem-FREE RENTAL BOOK ins. $275/mo. lease. Near l & 2 BDRM apts. $165 Ir
inlsctnt of another time ".l Real aharp 3 bedrooms. 2 UCl.133-2047 mo yearly. Anita, Jones place. Massive llv. rm. 1n Baths. .Electric built inl. ReaJty. ~o "GREAT HALL bESIGN," HAS OOVEO CEilJNGS 6 Carpets, Drapes and refri&· Huntfnston leach 3400 -l~·VY WOOD BEAMS. erator. Leue Sl65 pel mo, 3 Huntington leech 4400 ~ w lk & BR 1%. baths. 22101 \'VHERE SOFT SUNUGHT a er ee Capistrano Lane <Nr 2 BR Furn apt w/lrplc,
IS FILTERED THROUGH Brookhunt & the Ocean). bltns, l~I: b1k to ocean.
TRANSPARENT SKY· 7682 Edl.naer M/mo. <TI4) 492-3285 Ne\vly dee 1: crptd, alto 2
LIGFIT. GR.ANDIOS, LOG 842-4455 or 540-5140 BR lit I I t. -
BURNING ~~~ •CE 3 .BDRM, 1~ ha, 2 mJ from 11p eve crp , , r~l\.LC~ , Open Eves. ...._ h $210 •r 1.. bll C·'· 1~ -framed by tlm .... ac . • ... o. on >-Tv L&e. n1. ~ pre.,.~ ..... ._
l'Olllh bewn • NEAR BEACH 4 BR 2 ba, S36-174f 3rd St., HB. 536--'321 early
hers &: mantle.· FORMAL w/w cpts, toed yd, I; 3 BR. ant.
DINING RM. HAS BIG din/kit combo., 1_ 1 llv rm fam rm, bltins, fncd,l==~-~---~-
B A Y WINDOWS O • ._. '6 nr achoolll I: hleacb. Eves FOR Leue 3 bdnn tum G&en .,.c..rv w/t...lc. Bet 2 s'--cntn, LOOKING THE BALCONY .. ,. 96S-4Mi 536-2004 ?.far West Home.
W/OCEAN VIEW. S235 fTlO· lat. aft. g 3 BR. 2 ba, mi from beach, 963-279!
Remodeled kitcbtn, opens to EL Toro. New S BR 2 st;y, 2: Almost new; 21i\ car gar., NEW $a>o up. 1-i-3 Br, btd
olde fashioned dfUda:ny & 8A. Cpt. Drps. Fenced. Lse near all 11<:hools. 962-1141 It sauna pool•, rte rm. Hell
aewinc room that overlooks $240 mo lsl " last + dep. 4 BR, 2 BA. bltns, frplc, <lb! .l Ali<IQUin. Mar' ~
the paUo terrace. TH I 8 837..(1648 ., I 'R"E"N°"T'°"•"°L'"'S~~---· I UNIQUE, OLDE HOUSE $275. Yrly rental, 3 Br •• gar, l ml heh, S~40 mo. 1st "'
HAS BEEN COMPLETELY dupln , face1 ocean, w/w, &: lut. 842-2936 Apts. Unfurntlhed
RESTORED. Hu new noor ehlldtt.n O.K. Bkr ~ Mldwa City 3616 General 5000
cove.rings, carpetlnc, decor-$225. 3 BR 2 ba, frplc, w/w, y
aUnr. etc. If )'OU have bttn RIO chil~ I: pets ok. Bkr. 2 BR, fncd yd, gar, wtr pd., • RENT •
lookina for an older home ~ New paint. $1115 mo . 3 R F ~-
\v/chara.cter, cons.ider Utl.l I.:;========" I 96l-l96G oomt um"'"9 ;;.,950 FULL PRICE Coot• /Mq 3100 ======:-I . $20 • $25 Ir UP.
L1gun1 leach 3705 Month.To-Month Retail Terms open to offei-1 -~--------1 WIDE SELECI10ll
MISSION REAL TY BIG 3 BR· UNIQUE Lai1Jna .l~id~away. AppUances I: 'IV'i a'ld. 98;) So. C(.)8.st Hwy., Lairuna , • TeITaced 1ardens, tc:reened No Security Deposit
Phone (714) 494-0731 2 baths t: family room. Ex· room, full~ crptd. Exquisite 1-IFRC Funrlture Rentall * EXCLUSIVE * tra clean with full <:arpetll, canyo~ view. S 19 • 8 O ~ · 517 \V. 19th, CM 5tl-3m
BEAlITlFUL PROPERTY drapes & buUt-ln kitchen. 4~351 1568 \V. Lncln. Anbm Ti't-2800
NEVER BEFORE ON THE Great famil y home! $225/ L19una Nl9uel 3707 e BEACH • YEARLY e
1'.lARKET. R-2 landscaped mo. Oilldren OK. CALL 3 Br. 2 Ba, unlurn • ·•• $265
lot fromBlv<I. to OlU Dr. :,.W.llSl lierltage Real E• BEAUT. View EXCL 3br 2 2 Br. l Ba. unlurn •••• $115
Y.'ith ~ubstantially built and late (open eves) ba, bltN dsh..,,T. crp/drp,s. 3 Br. 2 Ba. wide~"'" $300
distinctive 5 bedroom bJme. fp. 1300 836/5150 542--1215 1 Br, 1 Ba. unlunt ~ $200
18 x 24 ~wood paneled !iv. NEW :II bdr apt. East.side 3 Br. ] Ba. rum •••••• $275
lngroom with fireplace. 12 x crpti. drps. btlilt·ins, dHh· San Clemente 3710 BURR WHITE
15 dinlnpoom. Entry. La~ washer. Encl. rar. priv.
kitchen. Furnace. Bricked patlo. 642-62:>7
patio. Only a few Htcps to
Diver'• Cow.
$140.000. Terms possible. e l\fUST BE SEEN e
2 BR Scll-conlainecl unit.
$135. ?.fanager at 2278A,
Placentia A v c . , 0.t.
64~56.17 or call ( 7 1 4 )
l\IARSHALL & ROPP 496-3812
2ll Ocean Ave. t94-1021 1 3~B~D~R~.~~,~~~---,.f, Ba.th. LQ:. Fam.
LA GUNA Canyon. 90" x '100"; Rm. Pool & maint. ne\v cpt.
rustic 2-sty. house; possible & drps. Built·ins, frplc,
C-1 or M-1 mne: $4,000 dn. sprnk1. $300/mo SC-211.J
Bier. 675-6591: 494-TIGI Res.
BEAUTIFUL Ocean view
homt-, 3 BR, 2 BA. loY•er
Temple Hills Dr. by owner.
.$42,500. 49'-2786 alt 6
SUPERB vie1v, newer cust. 3
Br. Sell/trade. $15,000 Eq.
~I 494-Tifll Res.
2 BDRl\f. crpU, drps. Gara1e
no pets, 2 ~~~i;n OK
.~ BR, 2 B11 , cpts. <lrps, bJma,
$2.60. lnl'ludes r 11 rd e n e r .
675;-3131
DELUXE 3 br. home v.•ith 36'
pool. Lease $280/mo.
""""' Duplex" For Sile 1975 NE\VLY redec. 2 BR home,
flUPLEX s,;5,000 6%% I~ !ncd yd, cpt-drp, stv. rtlr.
terest. 514 Fernleaf, CdM.1 ,..~~-~"~·~'-""-"'°=·-""""",..,,....~'cc-
S. of hwy. 6T>-6044 Broker. 3 BR home 1~-1 baths, 2 car
RENTALS garage, covered pat I o .
Hou1t1 Furnished • $200/nio. Agt. 546-4141
3 BR h~, 2 car ;:ar. Great REALTOR
loc, close to 1Chb1, shi>'£: &: ~I Newport Blvd., N.B.
beach. Min. 1 )T lease, no 675-463() 642-2'153 Eves.
pell. 1200 mo. Avail Au:;. $1&:;. 3 SR, 2~· bra lludio,
(1) 4!n-242l. RIO, w/w, tpl. Cbild I.:
fC.CNIAL) pets OK. Bkr. 5J4..alO
A,tt. Fu"'i.W Sl.15. 2 BR f.pl,cx. w/w,
drpe, RIO. Chlldren I: ,et&
0.=n"•"-r;;,•l;,,._ ____ 4c.:000;;;; OK. BKR. S34-69IJ
Single
Young .
Adults
Cost• #Mia 5100
HARBOR
GREENS
BACHELOR tJNFURN.
from $110
ALSO AVAILAJll.E
I.21r3BDRM.
Heated Pools, Qilld Cmt
Center. Adj. to Shopphw -
No pets allowed Au u1ne this 51A ';)) FHA
Jewel for $8000. 4 br. 2 ba
fp. F'AU. Patio & BBQ. Ora~ 11'1., corner lot. boat Rentals to Shere 2005 Newport Be1ch 3200
Luxury single, l & 2
bedroom apartments,
furnished and unfur-
nished, with complete
privacy and landscap--
ed country club at·
n\ospbere lricluding
$750,000 worth of
recreational facilities
designed and operat.
ed just for s in gle
people.
2700 Petenon Way, at ~
bor I: Adams, c:o.ta X.,
546-0370
gate & much more . .$26,500. GAL. 30, share 2 BR, 2 ba
Principles only. 842--1656 apt with same. Pri pat. B / B
NEAR BEACH pool, niceyl tu m. H B TOWNHOUSES
Only $25,950/5V.e•/. loan 968-3193 ADULTS ONLY! 3 bl"d-
Lovely 3 bdrm 2 ba. newly HAVE 5 BR 3 bath house, rooms, 2\~ baths. Split·
painted. Also VA no down or furn. want mature man to level. Carpets, drapes l:.
FHA low down. share Sl65/mo inclucl. util. bu ilt-ins. 3 car rarat:c. P'ac-
HAFFDAL REAL TY 519-2623 or 646--11'.n! e.11 pool. $265/month,
8740 Wamer, F.V. 842-441Xi =========I ALSO
SHORECREST 4 BR, 3 BA, Costa Mtu 2100 AD ULTS ONLY! 2 bed1'00nl!,
lamily room, formal dining ----------1 2 baths. Spllt·levcl. Carpets,
room, }l()ftwater. Childtrn'.11 SINGLE House. Reuonable. drapes le buUt·lnh', 2 car
play area. OPEN DAILY. f.flddle-aged or oldtt lady. iara&:e. SZ25 monlh.
""'"' "' "'"'"'"" Bay & leach
GARDEN GROVE
13100 Oia.1-man Ave,
{4 Blks. W. Santa Ana F\vy.)
1n•1 636-30.10
NEWPORT BEACH
J.Nlne and 16th St cn4> 645-0500
3 BR, 2 BA, den. Many xtras. Newport Beach 2200 Reelty, Inc. Xlnt family home prictd to 901 Dovtt Dr., NB Suite 126 Furnished 1.-todt.ls
CONSTRUCTMI
JUST COMPU1'1116
Harbor Heights Four
Rental Manaiter -
Mrs. Chrbtien11en
3117-A Clnn•.,,.,, An.
Cost• Mesa
(1 bloc)( we1t of ~~ Bltd
2 blocks south ot the
San Dleeo _Freeway>,
Phone 546.11134 ·
coaONA DIL MAil ........... f!JI ··········-··············-U.L.HA ....................... •• ~~~~~"~:1.i:o ·:::::::::::::::a11
IAY ISL.ANOS ••···············= TA,I lltlCOllOElltl .......... 9"1 L.IOD llLI .................... CAMl.llAI a IQUIPMINT ...
11ell. 18:ll Parle St., H.B. DOVER Sh ores bayfront ~2000 Eves. 543-6966 Imm~~ ~ipe.ncy AVAILABLE JUNE 25
BIG HOUSE 536-4698 home. 6 Br, 4 Ba, large l~~"!!"~~!!"!!'~~~I * 1110
3,000 Sq, Ft. of real Jamily patio, 70' private dock. NEAR WEST CLIFF South Bay Club * 2 BR with carport IALIOA ISL.AND .............. •ns HOllYJ• , I ..... . MVMTIMTON al&CM ............. . I' I.I I ............ .... ,OUNTAIN \IAUIY .......... 441. ll'OlltTI • GOOOI ......... U ..
SIAL ••ACM .................. 4411 .",",,"'.~.~.·.··.~.o,es .......... Sf LON• lllACM .......... ., .• ,,.IHI ....., "' ............. 1141 , AMII COUNTY .......... ,. .... Ml.C, WANTID ............. .,.111• .,_,ltOIN •11t0\ll .............. 4'11 MACt41NllT, ltc. ........... ,Int M..,$TI& ·•"••••····•• .. 4'11 L\IMllllt _. ...................... 17111
W.IOWAY CITY .................... ~1.~f:e ~tini1Ai.S:'"·"···m: 1..t.HTA ANA , .... i.:~···••• .. ··"· •w&-··::· .. ,,,. llTA ANA HEl•KTS 4'JI ... ···•' "· · -~"" ............... ::::::::: ... PETS and LIVESTOCK .. CDA1TAL. ..................... 11'f l'ITS ,elNlllAI. .............. -LA•UNA llACN , ••..•••••.••. 1191 CATI ......... -......... -.•••. -1.Ae•MA .. 19UIL ............. 410 DOU ........................... -So\M CLIMIN1'1 •.•..•.•••..•. 4nt MOlltSIS ...................... ,lflll
Ot\H&. ,')HfT .................. 4Nf Ll\llSTOCIC ····················-r:..~ .. :---··:.:·::::::::: .. ::: CALIFORNIA LIVING RENTALS NUlltlll•llS ................ ..,. IWIMMIMO l'OOU ............ ... AptL Unfur nished l'ATtos .................. -..... 1t11
roominess. on 50' comer. Fountain V11ley 1410 S1000. mo. on yrly lse. dell1htful, lge. 2 Br. prden *Water P4id
Loads ol bdrms., bas., fam. 213/700.S013 or 213/7§.G333 apt. Couple pref.; SOJT)', no Apartments * Near schoob
AND din. rms., GREAT pa-NEW, By owner. 3 BR, 2',.i BUSIEST marketplice 1n pets, no children. $160 Mo. :::::-:c:::-....-:-----1 2192 Placentia Ave, Apt D
tio • Stl6,00J. • Bath. w/w carpets, <lraPes. town. The DAILY Pnm Hal Plnchln Ir. Auoc 675-4392 $l25. 2 BR 1riplex, w/w, fer-63Ml.2o
R. V; ~ER. Re~ block ience, Many custom Oa.ulfted section. Saw 3 BR., E-Z -walk 10 beach. ~vall July lst. Brk. $115. 2 bdr vie. of Dth A r=:::.,.;::;;,::;<=-=""C:.::::: I features. $31,500. Euclid Ir money, time A effort. Look Cpis, dtpt.. bltns. $250 Mo, I ==-~=---~-1 Anaheim. ranp A retrs. hO
LOT_S OF ROOM Talbert. nr trwy. 962-6419 nowlll Yd)'Jfe. rutr. 5'--1290 fmi. 3 BR upper duplex, pets. call bd<n I pm
Cus tom qUali ty 3 Br., on Sl' I "'="°'i==="'====.t.=="===~===,,_:=::,=::=;:=:::,:=:=::= I facts ocean, w/w. Child 642-C698
street to strfft lot, 3 Cir O.nerel 3000Gtnar1f 30000.neril 3000 ~o,.K.,. =B=lcr=. =5.1:'=998='°====ll;o"UPLEX==""'2'"""1r-.-Crp~-dii8'.;·-1
gan.a:e. L&e. South patio; ----------------------------"'-I ·· 4100 1e151Jnc!/mo~.,!iar,..,1 •IV t.. __ ;
nr. clubhouse &: tennis eta;, CMte Mell zu • • -... ok, 224< A
169.500. Clll for app't. C.tlll'O Jil.,,,, l -·· f)'f1 ~Q.9 $30 OO wk State, 84:1-1472
WALKER Riiy. '7S.5200 \:)~ 1-'QtJ L"tJ..; (b pq• p e Day ;,_ man~., ,-B;;;R,;-,2..,.,&-,-.. ....,,.Uo-, ~fri>lc..;.~.1
NOW~S THE
1TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
OIMlllAI. ......................... :g:;:,s" ....................... = JUST LISTED! wi.·:.~~.·:::::::::::::::::~: TRANSPOR:'TAT10N'' THROUGH A Sharp 3 BR • conv den ':tr"
Solve• Simple Scrambltd WMd Puzz!c,for a Chuckle •Studio i. S:.c11. Apll. crp!J, drpt, newly dee. IZli fi tnc:J Ut11s A Phone MN. Baker. $150. 540-t3SI
===~ ::~:::n:·::::::::::: :..°tt~U°J"ClfTI ............. = 2-Sty. Vacant· see fod~! ' o ·~ ~ cf tha ;,;_.·::-...,,.--...._.,,,._..._, 1111wro11T s111011ts ........... 1211 POW•• cau111iS:'::::::::::::tat LIDO R EAL TY INC. four 100 ,.,,... b.-;,:
e Mald StrvSet, TV avail. 1 BR Duplex, prs., eldariy
•New Calit Ii: Bu Pn:t'~. No dop, dote; .to
2378 Nnport Bhd. 5Cl-S'1"'.i5 Shop I': 5$-2'1':> WISTCL.IPI' . ···-.:.·•··••··•• .Im SPllo-tlCI 90AT ........... tt)t low to form fGW ""9ple 'M:l'fdr. UNIVlllSITY , .... .,; ........... mr IOAT TllA1Llllt1 ... 3400 Vill Lido 61.J.8830 Efi:~-~~:::::::::::::a 5~ .. 9'r.i~5.t·~:_:~jj_:_::~: DAILY PILOT uoo 2 ~R 4 <kn. At. ,,01
1
Lr.
1
ENI ·
1
·
1
, I
t.AL•OA ·•·•·····•··••··· .. -IOAT II.If'. MOOlllfl .•••.••. MM •. an ltLAHDI ................... llQll.T Sl•VICl'S ............. ,,., --- -.. tractive. Owner will CU1'l' • • • LIDO It.LI ...................... --.T l.llfTAU ............... ,. J.arte loan, 7~% $47,SOO. I • ~~:.~~1>1101..:cii·:::::::::: =~~"m'J ········-·····""= WANT AD , Phil Sullivan, ~l 'll'AOI I • 'otntT.t.or •.t.1.1.1:• -........ •o• MAT ,.., .... :::::::::::::;: 1 I
'""" •••CN ................... IOAT ITOlt&ll ""'·-······ ..... H I B h 1.1-. LIM• llACN .................. • H4n WAJfTID .... --......... unt net&n tac __, I I I' I OflAM•I COUNTY •••··--· .. ··Wfl &lltCllAn ..................... n.. :..:%.:..: '
u•o•• 011ov1 .............. w• •Lr.-L.••~· ................ 14·2.aJI R-for loat W'ltTlrollMSTllt ........ -• ., .... ll MCltlL.1 MQMIS ..,. • . t
MIDWAY CITY ................. 5114 MDTO• NoMll :::::::::::::::"'' I GYM u M I IMn'• """ ..................... 11c:YCL1s .................. .,. or Trailer ""NTA AU Niie"'" ............ ILICTlltlC CAll .............. .
T\ISTIN t···-····-··· .. ········jl MINI lllCh ............... _. ms l BR hmne, carpct1, drape11, I I I r coarrAL u················... MDT'OltC'YCl.IS .............. ,. "--"··--" "--.•·-I•--A ~tufted shirt 1, u·.volly 0 ~ l •ACN •••••••••• ,,,.11" MOTOllKOOTlll • ... , ....... ,......,.. .....,.,... -11o., ,,.... • • • -•
u•'"'" .. ,._,.L .......... ··"" 4U"fO 1a1t¥te:11 a ?Am·::::,.. td )'Mf. Priced riabt al very -p:rson. = .fu~:=TWiirit·······ml •uio. TOOU •MUI,., ....... Mtt $21).908 GI or FHA tcnn•. I I 6•11 Ri"AL~inATE; ... ::::::,,. i:iilt.~~::'.'.·:·::::::::; MUTUAL REALTY ~AITNllM1· G Comp leie th• d'lud.I• ~ O..af ~IUI ....................... .,. sa.1m AJlYtime I I by tilling 1n th• m1•no wont
'11" ··· · · ........... tsi• n ~ HUB o1 -~·~ tor • • • ""'' dcJwil...-lrom *•No. 3 Wow. CAMfl'ftlt lltlffTALI . -fib 1i;.. .... u.-oy r-"""
• f.
D""' •ut0•1• .... lf:r'VJol buslnetlel ••• the .. PRINT NUMa£•ED L£TTt•s IN
1
1 r
1
•
1
• r
1 IMS'OITIO AUT• ·••••••••••·'-' CauiOfd Ada, ...... , I!~~ • .. ~ l'H'f CAii o """'"'""''••Hft -_......... r ,.,(JE $QUAl:fS
AffT,OUI .. CL.AISIU. ............ tin of.fer )l'OUi' li!rvb NOW. i~~;;;;ri;;;~~;;:;:;;;;:==~~=~::::=~~ ' :!: HOMES ,... :~: ~'¥ .. ~Aoo~.::::::::::: .. : DON'T ~ve tt .,,,..,, ret .I UNllCOIAMIG.!r l}NASW!ao~E ~EfltRS I I I I I I
Ml lEN'TALI ..... A\ITOI WAMTIO ............. '*1 ... -~~~5:~ ... !!'-~-'-'· I " ' •au~• "fC:.~rr.,·:.:· .... ! iif:tiJ" ···:::::::··:::·=: quK:A cash for u w th •
.. . .... " ................ Jlal'1.l'lloLwant.Adl -'. l .... !Ce•·M-Lm ....... NSWI ~· ·sst-·-oN-wtl U •lflTAL ,.,........ 64Ui61I ~ ,_. ~ """All '-~~~~~·-r-~~~~~~~+--'-~~~~~~~-
BEST V&lue 2 8 R LARGE 1600 IQ ft 3 91t.
dlahwaaher, pool. Quiel W/W cpla. drps, Avail ......
Adults, no pets. $140/mo 6. S6-2'66 •
utU pd, ms Pacific Ave. REDEC 2 BR, ntric. blth,
-, ipll, -. ro pets. 561.)1'.
NEWLY crpt'd 1 Sr. f'l&m. WU10J1, 54$-0760
Lup ""'""'' $130. S23 ~let, Dix. ' l BR. .... Bernard St., Apt B. 548--2TU Adults only, m pets. :
titrore·:s pm or after I pm. lm Santa Ana Aft. -.ea
BAOIELOR • Modlm I: 1 BR, util ·pd, elec "Qm.
dbn, Ill ufil pd. Man retna. ro e)IUtlrea,.. polL
o I 30. 1637 Irvine Ave., ft6.6:m befbre 4.
646-5736 3 BR D~hlXI!.', adulta, no ......
NICE 1 BR Dpll<, Sep by !141).ql54, *3411 or _
pn. Quiet. 1>fdtt ltDt, no ....-
pets. M&-1021 1-,.3 "e"R"'J"bolhL=::--:WOl.,,;;,_,....._,,...-1
LGE tum bf.ch apt. 1123.. Wen..McCardle, IU~
Av .. u July 1st. $&-2896 Mt. see.mt a,,yt1rne
•Smith I BR """ opt. Jpl, DIX. apl 1pac. l BR, Idea) drp1, bltm, paliot Jlllil.
fqc ba.cbelor. $120. 1993 Mlts no pats l1'5. 541 ••
Church St .. 01. 54$..9633. UT lat 2 BR. l'J:
'7S ,,.., Mcholor .... " poo1, -ts. a.
&fen onb'· ~ :mo ~la Ma. IC5!a::s ,
I
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I I
!
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,
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I
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----~ -~ ----~ -r --·-~--•• --•
...
. "
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I :: ""'~ .. ~: ~·· ..
' •! •• , .. ;: ~ .. · Summertime. The living may be easy · ••. but MAKING • living isn't, if you're a teen-ager lookin9 ''""' ' .... ,._., . '
·1
1•-llo , . .:, .. r :~ ... for your first job ... or • gradue!• trying to st•~ • cereer. Anel, if ;yo'ir're en employei; ;:-cir,.•v~n I
t: "'" 1 :'~· .. ' ,n '
e private citi1en with some odd job to be done -you mey ~ot b~ finding it easy either. The two
aides of the employer end emp!oyeble problem might be'illustrefed-by 'the two r~t+.r~ be ow ..
' •t '
. , .~ ... You tell us to get an education,
be impressed with the opportu-: to
' l nities this great nation of ours hos ' . .
: :·. to offer, to stand on our own two
' jr'feet, to make something of ourselves
I
and to quit protesting everything -
including The System ... The Estab-
',. lishment. . . ...
' . I spent the last three days trying
: · to find those great opportunities this
:-··nation offers. They must all be some-..
place else. They weren't where I was
. looking for a iob .
•' .
You told me I didn't have the
experience. You told me there was no place in your business
. Jor a beginner. You told me you were looking for someone
" •·.·.older to paint your house, mow your lawn, clean out your
·garage. Yo;i said was too young to really be a responsible
. ~employe.
·" Where am going to get experience, .where om I going to
• . ., . .
·:prove my sense of 'responsibility if someone doesn't give me a .. ,,
.chance, doesn 't give me that first job? '.
.· Am I supposed to believe what you say or what you do?
"·-
.How do I force your world to give my world a break? I've ......
...
.. ---------------------
Here is Help ... for Both Sides
If you 're •'young person willing to work
or en edult looking for • willing work•r,
t~•s• fh•• Orange Co•1t •t•• non.profit
• youth employment center1 C•n help you. • YOUNG PEOPLE•
·•· ). Sign up with' the center In your area now
.
' ...
, ... for j-Ob opportun.iUt.!1.
ADULTS,
Check with these centers for a boy to
mow your lawn, a girl to care for your
children ... or for young men and worn.
en lookin& for the career opportunity you
can offer .
•
!c· HARBOR AREA !.-,~ . YOUTH EMPLOYMENT SERVICE ,,,.,,
L~ · I Sponsored by Junior £bell Club •nd A11ist1nc•
I' l••vw• of Newport Beech. I Offic es in Centr•I
--lr'J'ch, Boya' Club of the H•rbor Aree • , , 1 ·--.594 Citnter Street, Cost• Mes•. :·~ Open 9.m. to I p.m. Mond•y thru Fridey, June i t~ 16 through Au9u1t 15. Telephone : b42-0,.74.
/~ ·~ ' YOUTH EMrLOYMENT SERVICE
HUNTINGTON IEACH
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
YOUTH EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
I Spon1ored by South Co•st Junior Wom•n's
Club.I Offic e1 in Nurse's Office, Fount•in V•l-
ley High School, 1781 b Bush•rd St., Fount•in
v.11.y.
Open I 0 •.m. -2 p .m. Mond•y through Frid1y
' HUNTINGTON BEACH
UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT
JOI REFERRAL -SERVICE
I Supervised by RObert M•rtin, director of work
experience educetlon. Huntington le•ch Union
High Sc.hool Oi1fric t.I Offices et 1902 · 17th
Street, Huntington Beech.
Open 8 •.m. · 4:30 p.m. Mo ndey through Fridey
•II 1um mer, Phone 536-9131 ,.
SOUTH COAST
JOB PLACEMENT SERVICE
I Spon1ored by Sou th Oreng• Co11t YMCA. I
Office• et 491 Fore1t Ave,\ L1gun1 leech.
Open ' 1.m. -no on •nd 12 :30·4 p.m. Mond•y•,
Tue1cl•y1, Thur1d1y1 I Fridey1. Phone ••4-3])3
. .
got the questions but I don't know how to get to yo'i1 for 'the 'J
answers.
Just answer one of my questions: when and how am I go-:
ing to get a job?
~y discouraged,.
. .A _}~J
;})ear _}~J:
You came to me today looking for a job. But your appear· .
once told me you just didn't have all the qualifications · I'm
looking for .
You didn't bother to wear a
tie; your haircut was at least a
week old; you didn't shave .
You impressed me as just an-.
other one of those kids who wants
to start at the top. Your scholastic
achievements seem pretty impres-
sive, but I wasn't impressed by
your failure to grasp some of the ·
practical facts that make the business world run.
You should check the classified advertising section of the
newspaper before going . out to look for a job. It will tell you
who is hiring, what kind of people they're hiring, what the
" going scdaries are and which jobs are plentiful, which are
scarce .
(That lost item is important. It will give you a hint as to
how hard to please you con afford to be. In fact, many al-
ready employed people make it a habit to read classified ads, :
even when they aren't looking for a job -just to keep them-
selves posted on the job market.)
And I'm going to give you some mo.re advice. Get eager.
Show that you're interested.· Maybe w h'a t ·you kids coll The "
Establishment is more interested in you than you think.
'• Did you know, for example, that there are five non -profit
job placement services in operation right now in the Orange
Coost area, all trying to help you find the job you want? They '
are ready to help you find "one-shot" odd jobs, a summertime
•
j.ob or even the job'i that could start your lifetime career. '
• • But they won 't hand the world to you. You've got to keep :
trying -on your own, through the classified ads and through·:;
th'? employment centers. If you don't "make the sale" the first '
ti~e you try for a job, try again, and again. ~. • '
You may not believe it, but all around you employers ar~ ;
looking for young men and women smart enough to gQ a~~r :
a job in the old-fashioned way. When these em p Io ye rs find .
one, they can't wait to get him on their payroll.
Still waiting,·.; .,
(Tlil~ Page Prepared and Published by The DAILY PILOT as a Public Service)
-· -~ •. -. -
.
,; ; ' . ' . . --.
''J \ . ' ' .
T ..... ~.........-..-· "--------·.....-.............-----_.._..,.~.--------------..... -.... ~--------.·---·-·---
19 PILOT-ADVE~TtSU Wod~, Juot 18, 1969
., ,... llEAL ESTATE RIAL ISTATI
Apt&. Unlurnl"*' · General GeM<al
BUSl~ISS w
flNAHCIAL
Newport I-" S200 It. E. W1n!M '240tl. I . Wantod 6240 ~ ta I.Mn fi2~c1!.~o~R~:~· .. ~·~;;~~-y~;.,-;~;;~~.li ~1,~t.~~iiiifV~:~~-,-~iis ~En~~r._iiiiii4iiiiii .. ~ 1iiiii 1 iii~~-$~ii fJ20,
mo. No chllclten, ao "r,ts. i ~ \:.--ml
84:1-3918"""' :"¥.. ' . -., " ·, ' 0:1'~~ :'' bltot. ~: • • ,.;,;. v,.,r HoiM:' 1 ..,;11;1 ' 615--0753 oi'.fO..«m · ~ . AbtolU..ly M COi t • · • ••
. to you Illa SELLER I
Coron• dol Mor 5250 12 years oi paying MORE CASH !or Orang~
County Property. •
Coll tho Rott ••• Thon coll ttio BEST
.Beath 4pls.
Found If rft Ads) 6400 "'""
R OB'E RT A'S lnleriot'
Dc<:oratinc. __A19oc. tnterion ._ ·.a. ._.S
by Wtnto.d. i< 1>r serv. 6311 * ILECT(!ICI~
E. Katella, Oranp. ""°"' * Ml LL MIN
633-$988 * CARPl!NT I RS l="';;;°=====I* CABrNET ~ERS
Ironing 6755 * WELDERS
Whoddyo Wont? WhHdye Clett
·SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION POR
JAPANESE IRONING * GENERAL HELP
84i>6345 * LINOLEUM MEN
Call alt" 7 PM * CARPET MEN NATURAL llORN SW"'PERS
Spoclol Rohl
5 Line• -S tlmet - 5 bucks
ltUl.ES -.lt.D ¥UST INClUOe 1-Wlltt rou llll'l'e to ffaclt. 1-WIMI ~ wtnl II'! ,, .... ... 'COUit ..,._ Inell., __.. ..... tlne9 t1' MYflf'lilln ..
~OTHIMG F01t SA.LI!' -TltAOl$ Of'41.VI PHONE 642-5671
To Pl•<• Your Trader:1 '-•r..U" M
J•"itorlal 6790 Overtime· Day Shift ::.;;:.;;=;;.._-...::..;.::
\VAllll, Wlndow1, floors. Major medical and lire ~
carpets. Commercial & sun.nee, paid holldll,)'1, pa.Id
l"'Sldential. Daily, weekly vacation and mall)I other
a.nd/or Mo, 897-7350 company benefits.
Paporhlnelng APPL y IN PERSON
LaJt, Arrowhead waterfront ,P;_•;_i;_nt;_l"l,;:.. ___ ..;61=50,1 3011 Newport Blvd. tree Ii: clr; $50,000 vaJ. Pa· 1 • Costa Mesa, Callf. ciflc Paliaadea ocean vu lot INT I< Eld. Painti.... t' •• • --==-=°""~:;:;,~;.:;_;.o_
'"" " c1r. 121.000 vol. .,.; wo-.:n.hl;-:-~:,. DESIGNERS
Want:· Income. Bier. 548-mt Rates. Uc. A Im. Cell &
Newport Heights lovely 2 Chuck 645-0809 CRAFTSMEN
BR ~e in nicest resident· PAINTING Int & Ext Lowest .
ial &rea. Tl'a~ $13,000 co.ntracted prices. FuUy inll. People with heavy ~xperl·
equit)' for income or va· Satisfaction l'Jar. Free est. ence in rotafin& equipment
cant land. 642-2199 Jim Weeks 673--1166 are u~ently needed by
-· progressive aircraft com·
PIODUCTIOll
I' PAllftt '"I.
'" "l!lth' ~ ond 11 ..
years ••perle.tc. .,..
ong oll ty-w sfi-
e1 of spray 9UM,.
pressure pumps .,..
t y p h o n 9t1UIP"*'t
plus full "'-lodte el
thl"nert, ..rventt .-
p1lni. unclor ,...,,r,f
spoclffcotfons. WHI ..
p1fntl"f aluminum
boats.
Coll for oppolnt,,,...t to
Poto Helfrich
-·· Ext.' 154 ~ H1rbor lllvol.
Cotta M,u
M.isaile S)lstfms Diviskia
ATlMTIC
RESEARCH
CORPORATION
A Div, ol Susque~ ,Cotp. '
Equal opportunity tmployer
6 Unit!, Santa Ana, inc. PAINTING, int. I eXl. 2 ponents manufacturer. Ex·
$600 11fo,, valut W.800: tfrii11'ersity senlon;, 3 yrs perience in fuel pumps, e.lec.
want lgr. units or land .. or· t,xp. Resp., neat, depen-trlc motors, and fan9 ia de.
srn. ·honie. SUb. otters. Py. dable. 833-2'J32, 492-4432 &ired. Btg company benefits
ramld Exch~on. &16-2629 INTERIOR Paintini 12 yn with 1mall company "atmos-
h vel lot tov..~ring pine?, on Bay area. tmmed Service. phere. Reply Box M 6.12, the I miii&-•iii•iil0ii9J
exclusive Goll O>une Rd., Call Bob, ~46 DAILY PILOT. MOTOR tlOMf
Lake Arrowhta<t, .P'OR ttl· e PAINTING, reasonable, CAREER •lex ., <·plex, O>ota M•sa
het estimate. • BlJllDERS l teL Fortlp, Rltr 842-5000 * 494-8238 • OPPORTUNITY! . •
Will trade, AUg. Beaut borne IEX=:-r=i"in"o,.., "••°'t'=g.::A;;v-:,:::,-:,=m,-. ""sio Joil'l todays fastest P'DWinl
ir, Burllngame w/3 BR, 3 + &ood paint, neat \\'Ol'k, professlcm-MututJ Ftmd 1ale1 • lfffMBLW BA den, pla. rn1. Spect N --"''" IUJ baY view, ior accom. on !be refs. Roy, 847-1358 o ~,.....""n<» nectasu')'>
Bal. Isl, N'e,wport, CdM. PAINTING, Papering 16 yrs We train . full or part time
Xlnt refs. (4151 J6l.J212 in Harbor area. Lie &. bond· Mutual Fund Atlvltort,
wk days. 8:30-5:00 ed. Refs furn. 642-2356
1603
Inc. lift Gf
3 BR, den, 2 ·ba, pool, cpV e INT EXT ANY SIZE Npt B. Westc . 2-6422
drp, in Np. Downey. Valued JOB. xint wo;k, rds, fret: S.A. 1212 N. Broadway
at $45,000. Trade for 4 BR tit. JIM 642-4669. 547.1331
home in CdM or Nprt arce.. Day or Nit'ht
2J.3.9'l3-ll31 Ple1terlns1. Rep1ir 6110 C1ntone10 Style Cook
;9000 eq. in 50xl40 R.J lot'
\V/id rented hse, next to1
Garden Orove Civic Cntr ~
HS total val. $20,500. Trd
tor' Wlita or ! 547-6469 Bkr.
9PATCll PLASTERING. All
types. Free estimate, C&LI
5!0"825
Plumbin1 '"°
Apply in perS011
Wu Ben'•
·3.13 Bayside Drive
·Newport Beach
Immediate openings tor men
\vith experience in plwnl>
ing, electrical, walls, cabin.
els and finish • or we will
train you. Must have 90m('.
hand tools. See Rick, 2130
Canyon Drive, Costa MeSM
642-9758 •
GRANT'S
GULF SERVICE
SERVICE STATION
MANAGER
!\lust be ~range Co. resident
tor at leut 2 yrs. Major oil
t'Otp.pany training pMtem!d.
Excelent aa.lary &: company
!Jene.fits. Apply in person 2
to6Pi\fat
GRANT'S SURPLU!I:
17j() NeWpOrt Blvd. CM
SPS Western ' •
270 1 So. Horbor, S.nlo Aro1
\
I
'
1 1
I
I • -I
'
I
I
I!
' l:
.
' ,,.
%1 · PllOT·ADVE~nSER -W!d-. June II. 1969 W14"""7, JtJot l!, 1969 OAJlY rtLOT 5£':_'
J"'RS'"ISCrlli...,IMlmf'"'Lo"'v"'Ml"""N"')""J'"O"'a•s "1."IM""'P"LO"'Y"'Mrii"'N"''l'-:-Tf.lltin'11tcHANDIS'1 1'0~ MERCtlANDISE Pait MIRCHANDISI !'OR SALi-AND TllADI' MERCHAH_Qlll FOR pf.fS ..... 1.11/iSTOCk i llANSPORTATIOii L:.
IH'-........ w-.-~----J;;!I; ::;i;. Wom. 7500 .J_ALE AND TRADI SALi AND TRADE 1-:S""A":Ll:;:..;.A:':N"'D:-T'-'llA=D:.:l':':':l l-M~·ll"'C'.-:H.;;.A.;;.N;;;D;.;;IS;.:• ... -'-:''::::-.:::'""A""Ll':'-'A"ND""--"-T~~~~:':ao::-: !!!r . 112$ Spoed-Skl ---
Women • 7400 ~ ---,umlluro -umlturo ''°4!0 tewl"' Ml•hl-112 MllCfllo-uoow .. 111o-· • ALASKAN ?dal&mutu, (sled SKI , boat, Jobnpon . lS; tr\t·• : .. "
e SECTY/l\ECl'l' • J. C. Pemtey Cc.
Fashion Island
Newport Beach
* ri69 SINC!'.ll With zit-11.1' ' do¥ P\tPI), •AKC. beautiful rtmots contrOll; ~I~
I wai...t conoole. Make• but. REPOS.SESSIONS cot....,., "'"' famUy dop, "!In" nbt---. X1nl oJIPt)' lot r lrt w/ ~
cepU penanalll)'. lltaT)'
typl~. lite bk.kpt:, IJfvance
to Eiec Stet)' w/ln 1 year.
To $$00. Clll Mr. Richarda,
=TAL AGENCY
j A member of
Snitllin& • Snelllnc Jnc.
2790 Harbor BJ, O>lta MeMa ee NEEDED
Two Offlc1 Girls
Muat be 21 and able to drive
APPL.Y / 186 !Aat 16th St.
Costa Mesa
SECTY, EXEC TO ADMlN.
Fut ' rnovinr busy ofiloe.
N.B. electroncis firm, To -COASTAL AGENCY
A membt'r of
sne:nina: &. Snelllnr Inc.
NEEDS
FURNITUR E
SALESMEN
F'ull lline tmp~t .
excellent incentive: plan
and outstanding benefits.
A chance to participate
in this company's expan-
:iion prosram.
APPL'{ IN PF;RSON
10 AM to 9:30 PM
l\fonday tbru Saturday
J. C. PENNfY CO.
2190 Harbor BJ, Cclta l\leaa *
INTERESTING Po 1 i t i o n
mee.Una: public. n-29, at-
24 F•thion l1lend
An equal opportunity
e:m~r
*
1 r act Iv~, unencumbered
Ca r turn, galary open.
6f2..6198 *COOKS*
I all ] I r1 ~[I} l r.. ... ton holea,. ~ t:tc., $5~ friendly, loflrc, f:U)' to Make cUe:r. 64J..stl5 ~ :J' L ~ , \!! ' mo •• $36.oo """· -* and * ::; 'i:."tctb ,-:O;d 1~ 1~~1;;!.' .=r. :_:: --• ••••••• t•••-Muslullnot. 1125 UNCLAIMED STORAGE Re•bt•""' purebred, 1125 Nuotr.612-2161
DECORATOR GETS CAMCEUATIOM Guitan e Amps e D.-FRIDAY, 7:30 PM, JUNE 20 up. '92-3$l3
OF 18 LUXU~Y APAl!TMlMTS NEW AND USED SACRIFICE, "''" toy -
12 MAJOR BRANDS Beautiful bedroom sets, divans, love seats, di•. AKC, u wka, female, Spin•-• & u.• .... -.,,., Fumilurt all "'°"· c11~. Also ,... ,,_,...., Al •• 1 1 At dining room !els wiU-CbJna cabinet1, deaks, ~ •LL "••NO NEW a "'1G D""1's~ompouN"Ts · Motht~• ,..... •1J.<1367 "' D""' ;: coffee table11 lamps, upright piano, iwo new
. ....,._$111te11t'K1~ EVER\'THlNG ll"i MUSlC Baldwin oraans, color TVs, bunk beds, mir-ONLY 2 left! Adorable, ~~~~l~:.'';it~~~~::~'.jj " Buch Music Center L":1~ ~:~1·';.g~~~.fo;.';~r;~~i;;.:.~d :'!1::: ::~~. ~~~s .. ,,...ni f;!,f;:ifm~~.~·i·:·;·:·:·:·:·:·::·:::.'ft# 1 • o..Uy 12 ~ llU ,, StJ 9-5 stoves. New carpeting by Lees, and much ~~ ~e :.~; =:
A decoralor dream house on display -3 mot s..et.111..s. 1it,;y: l9l more. AKC. Call .......,
· h I . ( 111~...s, s.n m ... rwy. WINDY'S AU,...TION IARN !RISH •• rooms of gorgeous Spanis urn1ture was 11 Btaoh "4l.8'3fl .. .~1tu, AKC, mare, ro
_ • _L u.. wb old ,cbampicn alttd. reg. $1295.00 UPR CRT piano with btoch ....,Ind Tony's B.,... Mot'! ' .. ,_,.,.. • · $398 tiq •1 1 l075Y, N1wport Blvd., CM 641 Mii SACRIFICE • . • • , • ~ura~ =~ ;ll~v S~~l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!O!!P!!E!!N!!!D!!A!""IL!!Y!!!f!T!!!0!4!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ s:::u."=· mal~~~
HO"'°""' DM. 11.0Ulllftl -WI CAA•Y OUll Owt4 ACCTS 644--0254 I' chldm. 213 .. 592 ... :1541 H.B. mm RJRUITURE 8!'.~~ •• w.:;~';Q= Ml•coll•-l600 FREE TO YOU ~i!~.ffiis. black
" with case, e:xc. cond. $40. PAINTING & KrITENS frff to aood ~
~Ta31 PLUMBING home:1. i male, 2 female. MIN. Schnauurs, AKC ·1144 M t Bl d (at •Spray iUN: •Compres-Habrn 4 weaned. 6 newpor V .Harbof lfvcl.} Planot & 5>'11n1· .130 aors e Elec makes e Plpe 6f6...1403 6/lS $50 ~:ee:,: =4 ' !Hes.
I' t M I U I d R All Vory •IX!clal °"'111•/whlte POMERIAN Pupo Ch '""" ... os a esa on y JUNE SALE!!! n t• •nt semi·loni: hatr.d .. by kit· AKC .... Btaui. lem.r .. :
!'.ry N'-ht 'TU 9 _ WICI., Sit. & S1m. 'TR 6 Factory authoriied clearance 710 W. 19th St .. Cos ta Mesa ten. 1 wks old, hsebroken &: 1111me lw.ve lhots. ~1204
'111 ot overage:, returru: & demos 645-0760 weaned. 333-2795 CHAMPION bred female
Pianos & Ora:MI. Practice MAHOG. Seeretary, lamp, MOTHER Cat &: 4 klttena-, Encllth Bull. 'AKC ft&.
Boot Tr•ll•n 9032 ·.;;..--"..-wAtm!:o TFWLER tr l4'
Allboat. Call after I PM
64&.1027
Boot Melnllnon,. 90U
JACK'S Eloctnmlc S<n1co
Eloctric:al r<palr, -.
new ioltallaUoa. 5G-l329
Boot Sllp -rl'!!I 9036 ·
FREE Uae: of :!O' slip In NB
for occuk>nal u.e of 35 10
53·, power or sallbt 6'D-323S
or 615--T2ST
"WANTED" Side: tie or aljp
tor u• po'llr'ft' boat
Call-
SMITH BOAT REPAIR
Fi""11uin& 6 palnt\rc
Free Eat 847.MM, 541).5556 -:! ~
801t·Y1cht
Ch1rt1ro ~· SALES \VOMAN. Ex·
perW>oed in ladie1 read)' to
~·ear. Apply .Mon thru Frt
trom, 10 • 4, APROPOS No.
27, To\\-n & c.ountry, Oran&.?
HOUSEKEEPER • livt: in,
motheries• h o,m ~: l
tee:naa:e chldrn. \Voman w/
1 un child OK. Pref. u/45.
SU.1223
EXPERIENCED and
NON-EXPERIENCED
posltion.s ope:n
Apply In peraon
•000 pianos, nl'!W walnut sp~t table11, n1atchi"'1: Hotfn1an assorted colon. Free to Loves cbildftn. ~2951 Furniture IOOO Furniture · & · scd Grands --.i ho I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil pianos, ne\v u atcffi>, 42X72 drop.leat din. auuu me:. Call 54&-2981 GERMAN SUE pH ER D I I & demo BaJdwln Or&ans rm. table, china closet, like ail.er 5:30, all day Sat. 6/19 JJ\UIS. AKC Rea'd. Black &
really &: trvlY on money ne:w. 546-9234 lJTJ'LE black ,kitty with tan, 5 ......... -
BLUEWATER CHARTERS
21' 'ITOjan, Power
,.. lbUndtf!>lrd, Sail
Flahina Rod Wrappen
Expe:rle:nced. Tep pay.
Brownlna-Mf&:. Co.
1919 Placentia. C.M. ~un
GIRL FRIDAY, front office:
neat, attractive, 1 h a r p.
?hon.ts &: bkkpr. $373 Call
Ann .Williams, M4)..6ffi5
COASTAL AGENCY
A member or
Snellin& It Snt'llin&: Inc.
2790 }!arbor 81, Costa Mesa
SA.LES It LIGIIT OUict work
in fllabionable Lldo jewelry
atore. Jewelry experienoe
necHlary. can lor ap.
polntment. Pennanent pcsi·
tion. 613-9334
$EA.J4STRES S E S : Ex
perieftced er will train. Full
time. Apply in penon to-.
Jobamen I: Chrilte:nse:n
898 W. 16th St. N.B.
(L'Of711!:!' 16th I: Monrovia)
BABY S ITT E R, l i te
hOUsekeeping; 11-:'i, .,.kday1.
At lt'ast 11 or older. Nr
Baker l: Fairview, 0 1.
540-0,214 all 5: 30 pm.
TEENAGE girl \\•anted 1,1
day, 5 day v1k., for I ?i1os.
old, child c!lre:. C d lo-I .
675-2396
Jobs-:.Men, Wom. 1500
General
Accounl1nl
'
REUBEN'S
COCO'S
1555 W. Ad•ms
Cost• Mes•
TECHNICAL ARTIST
Dynamic Scit'nce: is lookinc:
for a technical artist with
experience in layout, ink Z.
pa.ateup of charts, &:rafts &:
pictorials for p1'0p0Sah &
technical rePort.s. A know·
ledge of reproducticn &
photocraphy is dellirable.
After July 1, we will be lo-
cated al 2400 Michelson
Drive, lni'ine, Cal.ii. 92664.
Send resumes &: salary tt•
quireme:nt.s to:
DYNAMIC SCIENCE
P.O. Bo.\'. 668, l\Ionrovia, Cal
91016. Attn: A.R. OeLelli1.
Equal cpporl\lnily employer
PROGRAMMER
Experience with disk and/or
tape B)'!te:mll. Prefer a
kno1\·ledge of Hone)"\'ell 200
K'rit's computers, with a
knowledge of communica·
llorn; and a background in
K·12 scbool processing, Sal-
ary $785. to $958. NE\VPORT
MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL
DISI'RICT, Oassified Per·
sonll("I, 1901 Newport Blvd.,
Costa l\-1esa. ~
• BOOKSJ"ORE CLERK
Receiving &: unpacking, pric-
ing booak, stocking shelves.
Should have: gen. kno\vledge
or invoicing. Hrs. during
summer 8 to 4:30 pm, Fall
12:30 to 9:30 pm. Heavy Hr.
tin& involved. $481 per mo.
Apply .
ORANGE COAST
JR. COLLEGE DIST.
2701 Fairview Road
Coata Me:sa. 834-:'i'lOS
SALES: all aa;es, botne furn,
" prod. sell discount. na
oompet. may work from
home, your hours. \Ve train.
no exper. nee. Need sales
personnel full or pt·tm. Mr
Swanson ~29
SELLING AVON
saving SALE!! Get 1n en ~ the big deals at: REDECORATING! Get a unusual white: mark Ins• Skipper available 64&-90DO
'5' Aux khOcN•
C. Guard Uc'd, 21 PIA
14 DAYS LEFT!! HIWMI
SPECIAL OPENING SAT. A SUN.
Te•rlng Down Building to
M.ke Room For Our New Stor•
\VAR.D'S BALDWIN SfUDIO free estimate on Vinyl and a:entle 4 habrlm. eve1.
1819 Newport, C.M. 642-MB4 lJnoleum. Lie. Co n t . 548-9578 6/20 ~-====-~---~tSHANE Nttds k>ve, black
BEAUTIFUL Rug: 14 ~ 16 mix Lab r ad c r, wry
lhag, wool, grttn. Top intdll&eht lor 7 m c 1 .
quality. WW sa c r i I Ic e:. 549-1417 6/20
644-ll2S ADORABLE Kitte:lll 16) 8
SALE-Furnlahinp, m i a c . wk.I. old. House trained.
Moving out of 1 t a t e , Will deliver to iOOd homtt.
everything goes! 213 Uth 61~lll2 6/ll
St , HB. S36-3976 VERY Gentle coune hair
SOLD my oil bume:r. but lltill · OacMhund, 1 yr old. RaJ.aed
have17 qt Te:xaco 40 Mighl \11/ small chldrn .
oil. Make oUe:r. 642--7682 546-5846 6/20
Open Sunday 1 ID S
ALWAYS A BUY AT
Gould Music ComJNny
PIANOS -ORGANS
SHErLAND Pony, aood with 1n4} 548-5038, ~ ""'"""· I ========:I
SPANISH ** MEDITERRANEAN
$75,000 CLEARANCE
• Wood game sets from $169.9.5 • guar.
mattresses $19.95 • Spanish dinette set
$69.90 • 3 pc. Spanish bedroom sets $99.95
• Spanish table lamps $12.95.
Remainder of Huge stock al terrific savings?
No down -t•rms to mfff youf' budget -
benk fine ; Mester Ch1rg•, B•nk of Amerlc•.
or Store Ch•'9'·
• This S•lo For Stock on H•nd Only •
APPROVED FURNITURE
]!~9 HAK~OK COSTA ME ')A
' ' > ' I I ' ' ~ " ' ·' 1.· • I"•
O~il) ~.9 e S·.·nd11y 10-S e 548 9M>O
---------
new and Ulled
i\W'&nle:ed fi ne '.:.ttd ora:ans
from $315
Baldwin-Gulbransen-
\Vurt itz.er-O:inn· Thomas
76 pi1nos must be sold
new and used Grand.5-
conliOle:a-spinell
New Wurliber spinell S;.G9
Gould Mu1lc Compt1r1f
2045 No. ?t1aln, SA 547.QIBl
GULBRANSEN
ORGANS
WURLITZER
PIANOS A ORGANS
Pianos " Orran. Rented
EVERYTHING IN MUSIC
alter 6 pm LOVABLE 14 Wttk puppy.
UNICYCLE ti.rzy black l,..abrador to a;ood
$20 home. 6'13-486s or MUOOG.
613-2100 aft 6 6/20
* 54&.0952 *
AQHA. &ta;. Filly, &rnd nat1
chmp stock, $1000 or best
cHer. m.5058
GENTI.E whltt' m a re: ,
perfttt for child's flnt
horse. $100. Phone 646-1'124
TRANSPORTATION
ii;;; & YocfuS 9000
37' F/B Exp~llll '&l
3 PRIVATE
DOUBLES
TS 225'a. Onan, auto.
pilot, TV, etc. Electric
&alley, refrr. H/C shower.
MUST BE SOLD
ePAClFIC YAOIT SALESe
3446 Vla Oport'>, Newport cru> 587-5568 1n•> rn.is10
DIAMOND Sclltaire weddin& NEED food, 1helter for
set. Cost $395, Rll $75 cash. abandoned aklnny yellow
673-3600 manx & malteR Ir. wht kit·
BIG Leather chair & 6' ten. S40-filS3 unUI 4 p.m.
couch bard wood con-5 ADORABLE kittens, takt'
stn1clion. $50. 642-0501 one: or all five. Call Mr. er lleich Music Center ELEGANT Qulttod -·1. , Mn. Trimble, ..... 1910 "" '" '" cHRIS Corin1h1an.
chr dlnette blue chip books LOVABLE 1 yr old Ge:nn. f'Ully equipped, lllc:e new
SALE AND TRADE-
MERCHANDISE FOR
Factory Sales &: Service n\e:n·1 Sch~lnn. 6~ ' Shep. female. trained. Likes $2000 for equity. Call days
G•r•g• S•le 1022 Dally 12 noon 'ill 9, Sat 9.5 S2x31 MIRROR $25. 2 rock.en kidll. 968-3035 6'20 737-o&>l ?.tr. Owen. Nights -~-------17404 Beach Blvd., l~lwy 39} $25, table $30, tamp $15, 3 KITI'ENS. P.lolly, Mule I: [ ;;,""'=""';;-c;,--.,...,~~= fumiture 8000 GARAGE Sa1c-V\V-door, 11,~ mi. So. San Olq;o Fwy. plants $2 . $15. 837-3367 Johnnie. a wks, trained. BOAT allp wanted tor Cal 24' ---~-----wlndo\\'ll. & fendtr. Antique 1-luntington Beach 847-SS.16 CERAMIC KILliS7S 642-3294 6/20 u.ilboat. Contact Mr s.
SPANISH Returned from de5k. tab.te, Al-1-FM-ra?io, ENROLL NOWI 548-:i863 2 ~ ,Cock-a-poo/Ba.uet Carter 83Prfi687 befo~ s pm,
),fodel Hornell on aa.le al round mUTOr, car radios, n .... · cl 1 pupp e k ho'-1 or 837-5519 after 5:30 pm in1ercom, '6:! Chevy~ cyl ....... .,tn1K'rs &ll!i e: 1 so n I, I I, PlC )'OUl' c ....... o
less than wholesale! Group eng. ,63 Ford wagon, chest, learn to play the orge.n .. Sl:< DIAMOND Cocktail ring. litter now. 642--4986 6/lll 17*' Inboard fibt'l'Jlas Cabin
includes beautiful 9 6'' Bicycle. misc. i 1e m 1 , \i·eeks course, 5 tar 11 n e: H67~v.;.:,ppral $675, sell $250.l;3c-;;Kl""'J 1.;'EN;;;;S:',"1""3::"=-7~-=w::;:ht. Crulae:r. Gd cond. Slip avail.
quilled sola It Jove seat, lDam-lOpm. S48--0368 June 17 at 7:00 PM. ~ king haired, 1 wkl. cld. Very Raworthf, fl97 5 .
3 Spanish oak decorator --='~=~=--1 Guaranteed rellullJI, $12. DIAMOND weddin& set ril!I: 642-1322 6/20 673-9361
tl'.bles, swag or table lamps, THE GARAGE Practice organs avallable, set. \Vorth $150, u.crilice FREE K' 15' GLEN L fJsb It ski boat,
wall piacque, kin&;, queen, Used Appliances Ii: turniture. Also classes for more ad-$30. ~83 11tens 8 wka: old .68 model. 50 h u-..-.
or full size bedroom suite B o. r gai n s! Dr cs s er ____ _. l · =====-,,""'==I 673-3065 housebroken. Dil· r•,, -.16 p .......... -". v ........ ..,.. Payers. Join Uie J>ORTABLE 1V, 15" scree. _ "· re,,·t patt-·. 6/~ -compl ete Incl bo,r sprlng11, vanities, dble & snaJ beds, tu , n. · 1 " '"" w -.,,==,--~---.... n. ,..,..g111 er now. VHF-UHF, great condttlon, LEAVING mattress. ll nens & boudoir $.10 gas & elec stove:t, refrig HAMMOND STUDIOS $40 &?3-2706 alt. 6 4. ADORABLE klttena, 7 wks. country • must
lamps, Spanillh oak 6 pc $20 & $30. 1550 A Superior, 2854 E. Coast Hwy, CdM · old. 2 0ranp tabby 2 iell 17', 35 hp ple:uure boat,
d1ninc: set priced else·.vhere Cf\l. 646-9188 673-8930 llOBIE SURFBOARD 9' blk/orangt'. 545--353) 6tl9 good cond, i425. 5.'le-1363 ~Rafj.~~ ~~I·~ d:;;, NiiECi1I'.G:i'.iHiiiBOORRSSTTRASHRAiiii'"'·"':~i·l:HAM"=M"O"N"D;_::·..S:;:::te~ln~w-.,.--, • .,..,-_ I ~:Juan.kl TO WVJNG home, 9 month 12' TRI-HUU. Bay
T REASURES Everythmg maha • nt'li a: used pla.no1 old mixed breed female dog. 2117 s . L,yon, S.A.
$4.9'J per ,,Pek , out of goes. 9-5, 6/20, 21. 22. 534 s. of all make•. •·•t bn ..... ,_ SET of Prestia;e: 1ilver, SU-4986 6119 545-0663
Boat.
Mobllo -'200
GREENLEAF PARK
ln clear, clean, COOi Costa
?.lesa. Ne:w 9'J spue adult
park, Models I: StJn olnce
located at Park. Opeb I AM
to 6 PM.
ACCENT MOBll.E
HOME SALES
lr;>Q Whittler Ave.
Costa Meaa n4: 642-1350
VERY clean 10x47 2 BD,
rup, drps, awni n11 .
Beautiful adult par II: • •
646-2'i32
FOR a new Mobile Home in ..
new Adult Park. Walk to
ocean. sauna and pool Gell
course, 536-71'31
HIGH QUALITY xurl'
cond. 6 clsts Cooler Sp rent
$35 Immed poss. 642-4664
'59 UNIVER&AL 1 Ox 5 o ,
partly furn. Excel cond.
Adult park:. $3900. 646-121'6
10 x 50 FURN1SflED lbdr
very rood rond. ........,
I' TURNPIKE, fully equip-
ped Not OTer/cab. ~
642-7673 au 4 ... ~ --· Motor Homea 9215
NEW Uwide 2 bdr·i; deft 2
bath crptd. draped. Sl0,950.
can finance. HunL by the
Sea. Ne. 127. 53&-1686
Mini Blku 9275
RUPP ·3% bp. Xlnt amd,
almost new. Loaded. $2T5 •
new w/tatt $150. &H-1498 :•, 1tate credit OK. \V 111 Bal I ~ -· •• 1 I lti •AO: Bayfront. s. So. Calif. riabt here. Pace ae ngs, ....,, 1 YR old fem cal, black. ~=e ~~~e9 ~~ ANTIQUES & MISC. SCHltIDT MUSIC CO., 646-1424 Free kittens, 7 wkll old. S•llbo•ta 90l0 Motorcyclff
Garden Grove 8 Iv d., 2012 Commodore Rd, 1907 N. Main, NORCOLD Refriierator • 497-1808 6/20 BOAT Show Excalibur, full
9300 '.'
1968 HONDA Garden Grove n..a .• 10-9, Baycrest Santa Ana Convt gall or t'lec, 4 cu rt., FEMALE ,. Do .. -, race It cruise. 5 Bap of ~<UV $75. 54>J,j()!I aft 4 pm. 11 ..., .... an ~1 Sat l.CMi, Sun U-5 Come GARAGE SALE THOMAS Elt.ebic or E' an German Shepherd, s years u.llll, var1ent w In c hes, ''350''
• . .
1n or call CTI4) 53G-6240 JUNK TO ANTIQUE with di instruction books. KJNG·SlZE loam mattress old, ~381 6/19 dlnctte, 6 HP outboard,
336 A. Victoria, CM in rear SJ.50. Xlnt cond. throughout. arid 1prlng1. $98. Excellent ro GOO many cruiti.ng .vctru. Kl SCRAMBLER ·~ ~=~-~~-~-1 Call "'" -1 • ]q·• co-•'•llo-. •••7513 D home, a11Crted 7 7""" D•"• •••• E·-. .., ..t-BACK Door Sale. SCwing ..,.,,......, .. tv'el '"'w '"'1 "" " .....,... kittem, 215 Oceanvlew NB -._ ~ .,...,,. • .. i : 3,500 actual miles, fll'•-'
n1achinc & misc itenu. 1882 WANTED CARPET all styks and col· 640-3402 6/19 n 4: 639-l22& handle bars, dual carbl. 1'
J\.1onrovia, CM. 646-7249 SPINETS It GRANDS ors. Free estimate. Lie. PUPPI~ all ,_ KITE No. 539. Likt' ne:w con-SS00.00. Phone 962·U87. .
tncludine aJl 1ene:ra1 ac-
countin& functions in 1 amall
m1c. co., audit of account·
ini:: machine runa, journal
entry pre~aUon, payroll
repcrts &: coctrol Cuh dil-
burlleme:ntll, preparation. of
~ 6,tancial &: 1tatiatl-
cal repon. Auist controller
in dept. planning & special
LllliJnme:nts. Related ~per
ience required. Kno1vledge
ol bookkeeping machine op·
uation helpful. IS FUN
Earn a.s you learn. Pay bills,
make-h'iends. Te11'itory
ope:ninp ne:ar you. ;>40-10C1
or 546-6341.
SCRAM LETS
ANSWERS
Tingll' -GraJ)C' -Grun1my
-i\larlin -Ei\IPTY
~3675 ~Co:="!;. ;540-:='llG=l====~I • 1~ mvi; breed, dltlon. Biktni blue, mJst blue 1"'5 Hond '· _ nutty, vane:ty cf color1. d "' • • • · 1 Appliances 1100 UPRIGHT P iano. Beautifully l6lO 54&-7087 6119 eek, black boot strlp. Hard Scrambler, S,300 miles. Good :·:
I 2 re:tlnished, $l50. Misc. Wented TOO ull, cedar nukler. 4 part condition. Aaldfll' $310, or
GE Refr gcrator dr 18 cu ft * 545-7098 * L box Jo~ PU truck, vang. S675. 714/488-7188 best cUer, includlnc Helmet · .
auto def1u t Deluxe IW· O .wide bed. 408 Ford Road, COLUMBIA Oefend~r 29'; with Bubble. Call afttr 4 • ing~ut crispers, & sllelves. PIAN W~NTED WE PAY MORE C,_f after 5 PM 6/19 sleepll 6; JO HP Inboard; 847 n 87
APPLY AT
STACO, INC.
A sruffrd shirt is usually
11. very Ei\IPTY person.
LEAVING STATE
1139 B•k•r St. or pay balance of $149"See: Labrador &: Germa. 64.~.1 4 •• 17,.,, e TRAIL BIKE e
at Henderson's 1877 Harbor, Television 1205 " "'""""' ; J"r o>-1 ~, Coat• Mei•
549.3041
BEAUTY O~alor needed,
deluxe beauty Salon. No. 19
?ofonarc Bay Plaza. Lag.
Bch. Niguel Hair Fashion
49S-222,
Early Americ1tn sola &.
chair. Distressed rnd t11bll',
corfet! table. 2 n1;1tchini;:
la1nps. 9xl2 oval bruidcd
1i.ig. Besl urfrr ~.ll or
separu.le. Call aft 6 pn1
\\'kdeys or all day Sat &
Sun. 536-3968
:r.take payments of SID/me 12131 8n -100:; Pvt Pan y CASH 3 FEMALE p u Pp 1e 1 • full raclna rear & extru. "p_.m_. __ ·--·-----1
Costa l\.iella.. 548--0155 . Shepherd mix. 548-TI42 6/IJ Sp 0 RT y A I< SAILlNG 1968 Honda 90, &Uto. trail 1p., :
==~=~....,~--1RCA Color TV. large screen 2 FEMALE Kittens, white DINGHY, Ail, alum mut, 1300 ml., $:150. CeJl Jt&.'1219 ---:
FRIGIDA IRE elec dryer w/ Beaut. walnut • gralned For furnH~. appliances. wlth blk. mrkp. to iOOd lttboards, cust. r u d 'r ,
An f!QUal opportunity
employer
BEAUTICIANS
BE YOUR OWN BOSS. Rent
space in Huntington Beach
Salon. Reasonable. 847-91&4
WAITRF.SS. C 0 CK TA IL aft 4:30 PM.
WA IT RE SS· C 0 0 KS =s;EA"'UT=l~C!AN=°'.~•"1.,-,t"1><-,-ood-.
BUSBOYS. 1tyllat. Fint cla11." llhop,
appq in penon Corona deJ ~far. Guar. +
Newport Grotto 60%. Call 675-lm, eves.
guar~ntec s, 100. used 2 mo. cabinet l\.1akc P a Y m en t a colored TV, stereos and an-homes. 642-8043 6119 $89.50. MB-6617 ~ . blHONDFuDA 175 c;_,c
Admiral cec. stove, good SlO/mo or take eve r """'am er. wuran..,, cond. $35. 20333 Acacia, San-bala"-ol -.62 •-at tiqucs. LIVE Bunnlea· tree. ~1285 HOURLY h ENTAL.S 600 mi, SSOO or ctter. ...... • .... , ~ Day or nlltht 3153 K i 11 a r n e y Ave, * Rhodes 19's * 642--9'82
ta Ana. Hendenon'1 1877 Harbor, 636-3620 C.M. 6/20 ru:rt Zone Boat Co. BalOOa .=-,,==-,=--:== WASHER/dryer, Frigidaire, C.M. :;u..o155 '&I HONDA 150 CLEAN,
Custom Imperial, mtchd DRAFTED Must 1 e I I ! $ 2 GREY with whllt' and COLUMBIA 29, l/3rd in. LOW MILES. t: LE C .
while. Gd cond. $60 pr. 196S-23" Motorola QI.war, $ WE BUY ~~7 wlty white; ldn:; ~:'dn:r~~~s;=· sr613-AR1037TER $150 PV. PTY.
673--059S complete $Olk! .slf,te bli
• !
• :W \V. Cout H'WY· N.B. 673-78:)1 ........
MOVING: sp. piano, llleno,
asllCrtcd chairs Ir. tables.
living room 1uile. dining
rm. 1uitt". :; bdnns. one
refrig. Other v a I u a b I e
lte:mll. 546-2184 68 FRIGIDAIRE Custom noor model, $400 or be:st of· $ FURNITU RE $ FREE ftmalt's, ColUe/Labra· LIDO 14 No. 2661 w/trlr. '64 Honda B S\lper Hawk.
J m p eril'I ?.1 o bl l e fer. fll 778-3482 APPLIANCES dol' pupple1, Calleo ldlUn, Exce.lle:nt condlticn. 2 )'I'll Seeat1725 SuperlorCMor !
QUALITY Do"'YI and !>'eathcr dish\\·ashcr. Cherry top, C.IM TV'1-'i•J10'.-Stort•'• black ' sold. 491-2362 Silt new. $1339. 545-398:; Evell call 6464022 newport .
peraonnei
agency
TECHNICAL
POSITIONS
Many p~ulcnaJ Ir. tech·
nical po11IUona available.
Call M. Bauirhman, 642-3870.
S3l Dbvef Drlve I
Nt'wporl Be:ach
GOlDEll
OPPORTUIBTY
Schffl .. ln1tructlon 7600
Be Prospero~sl
Good typin&: sklll1 can open
many door1. Inquire abou t
our "Door Openers".
NONA HOFFMA.iV,
N•wport
School of Business
83.1 Dever Drive
Ne"'JIOrt Beach 642-l87tl
Scfa, Casual uphol1tery; I 'loco or Hou10 Full I ==~.~-.,c..;.;;c;;c-~ I ~=~~=-~--" "==~~~--~-knv cabinc1. both Verde front load $130. 646-6888 Hi-Fi & Stereo 1210 CASH IN JO MINUTES FRE,E kittens. 9 weekl old. LEHMAN 10' excl. cond. '67 HARLEY Davidlon 2§0 cc
Grttn. 67>-2113 FRIG~OA IRE Autom~tic KUf Steno lt'ries 24, J . F. • 541-4531 • 6f6..:64l3 al~. 1pan, flbef'ill.SI $&K1 Sprint $450. "'"'=~"-'-'-~~~I wa.sh1ng machine, turquoust. 2175 ~-Pl lS OLEANDER trte1, 5 to 1 aacnfi~. ~21'l4 * Ml-9139 ii 8' SOFA ~ver used. Quilted Box 3ll, "'""'"'tgon ·• WANTED TwJ 11 · noral. Scotch·guardcd, Sl20 needs 1n1nor ttpa.ll' $50. Nt'wport Beach : n stro er UI ft hlgh. pink " whlte. You ~ No. 4144, good cond. 1961 BSA, 650 l.J&btniq:. ~1atchlni love lt'at S7S. 549--0283 aft 6 PM. gooc11 condlUon. Call 837-9682 dli:. 548-J525 f\111 racina: gear ~ dolly Perfect amd. Best offor
S.::7-80.12 REF'RIOERATOR • Stan-Sporting Goods 1500 anyt mt' 13 CUTE puppies to eood incl. l350. 548-ru& over $!CIO. M&-SlSI
BEAlTTl.FUL Teak executive-
. desk-paid S350. NOW S200.
See at 245& ll oa;ar,
Eastbluff, or call 644-4170
ELEGANT Matq. din. set:
Table lo: 3 leaves, 6 chra,
buffet. mirror. 64M834
da.rd, bronie. \Vill sell S40 or -- -homes. 646-7230 :rt' CUSTOM Ra~ Sloop HONDA :m "ScnmbSer"
"'"' •""· 644-1351 Skin Dlvl"I Equip FREE TO YOU USED c1oon from 1., .. e "Dolphin." CCA n tod-19 "'"t. '°""· 337 Ki~ Bornott
REFRIGERATOR $30. Ga.a U.S. Oiver1 tanks fr ... ·· .$j9 TOO m•••h 1.,. tlllo old ••l•. apt. Call 673-4387 6/19 flnt place trophitll. 67l--0512 clutch, $495. $48.-8348 slovc s25 dcublc bod no U.S. Divers regulaton Ir $40 .. lJ'.lO M franw., si. &4&.i57? , ' New Nylon lined Wet &ill &autUul white mothcr cat HALF-Siamese kittens, (4), co yers Manx loaded, t•so low 81 , ............. $39.PS wit h t while and t blk/wht. blue e.yea. 846-1129 6/19 Mu1t Sell. G?'Mt bu.y for on. Motoncooten "
KENMOftE Au I am at l c Cl.lltol'n duck feet fins .. $8.95 kHlen. \VIII PRY for aJt. of FEMALE Beqle 1 yr. old. xlnt cond. 54.S-74U LEAVING (:()Untry • tnU8l
washer. xlnt cond. • AQUATIC CENTER mcthcr if you will adopt. &47-5990 ' 1120 22' STAR Sailboat. Xlnt sell 1geq CUlhman moror
Educational Vacation 5th 1--========; I $3S. * S47·Sll5 453;; W. Ccut Hi&'hway 5"8-ffi!IO S/l9 FLUFFY Gentle: lftY killen cond. Deluxe trailer ICOOler, rood eond. f lZ.
lf'l.dmi , •. St Citizens Offlc. Furniture 1010 \VH1RLPOOL Aulu. wuher. Newport Beach 613-5440 FREE to owner or new S42--0896 61a) $1650 U s.-5982 538--7863 · ; Qi~t .10 le.1.!0n typi11g I Late model, Xlnt cond. $6S. F80 RO home Part male poodle SABOT _ AU. GLASS ' Sehl Trial Lesaon. 113 ........ 1 DESKS Wanlut c.,cc 32x60, S47-8U5 SUR A SALE pup . 2.J rr.onlhl old OLD bike needl l Ir 1 1. DACRGN SAIL NO. 2322 Triller, Tr-
1.1'1' choice or 3. Swi~l de11I: $110 7'6 F1awltu Harbour py, · ~71 f/20 ..... , ~nc!!a~ c~?eer.':: 1itu C.11. 5'8-2859 chrs, 2 black lealher 11lde ~EW dl1hwasher &; d ee ftapler . olhtn. 8t6-i621 ~ • 611& S2!IO 64&-6159 TE::l\'T TRAILER. prop .tv, !
-I -~I
'
' ..
jwid, &0<9477 POOR Gndts! s u m m er cbtl, 6' ao'd nau:;. !ICfR. range, i Ull ln cartons. Make WORKING &irl must find PITS end LIVI STOCK UDO 14 No., 2Tn. good cond. b box. wtr tnk, ~tn. rm. , : , '"!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!'!"'l!!!!~~!'J!!~I Tutori~ DOW avail. Rtmed D&ya 645--4>111 E ve 1 . ofler. 962-456a. ~ Mflcell1neou1 MOO new home for Ione l y ~.IOO NI ndnr Pie" 4 yan1 $400ibnt. 915M61!-~ !·
IWotmmnn, • oppommit1 ttad1rw teacher CUSC creel) 54~79 STOVE Obl:.1 oven, Dtct:io lovcabl~ klttt'n. Ptttian, 3 Pett, Gen.rel dolly incl $1311D, St3-7U6 1 :
Jot ilx auteafve yogna emphula on Pb o a I c • • LEA111ER davenport A 2 etauL <And. Call morns. LAMP. Table, Patio eet, mo. charcoal/white. Aftt'r 1 * BABY bPOSSUMS ; SPRITt, sm&JI f • m 11 Y Tnl-.,. Utllty "50 . ; ' I T
P10f1e to Itani 1 nRW pr. ~-===-~==~~..., I d ub chaltl. Xlnt oondltico. for appt. 96S-t940 Ortucr, Oritntal r u r ' PM. 642-00Sl 6120 aaie A unique a cit ~ ...Ubot.t, Fllfrrllu. Ulm , '• -..on.:1' baor1 ol ~ ORM.NG LESSONS, 1 1 t Call 64&-.3118) Stud~ Bed. 'SI wubet', KITTENS: Gray It white 64~ an pl new, $700. Eves.. flS..2865 TRADE td udllty for amaD ! ;
f:Qrlb31r'a(worklnbaubt lenon fret!•Dual control AntiqtMI 1110 a.: •~.Items Iona-haired male; tl1er LIDO ,4 _ hone:,Utr.OKfoc'Welab ::
~--.Nll · ~ =to:.al=·~m> ~~ Office lqu1pment I011 AnENTIOHi ~!i =: ~T.~!;; ~~e~c ~.J ~ C.ts WO New hand trlr. m.G732 pony. 7'13 ~l
~ fl.all or pt.rt .School 136-6T.U Mdf1uocr&pb , -ElUott Clock dtaltn, eolJ«IOl'I, r&-tinbh. 839-..1)2'J old. 540--113.l SIAP.tESE Chocolate point : I
__,_ flilowlrc ,..td. MONTESSORI ~ .,...,..,.,.. with -""""' pair men. bobby;,i.' 200 NOW"S THI M<m!ER col g ""'· old • kllteno. Rtrbte....,, •how l'owor CrulMro 9020 Trucb 9SOO l!
...,I ahof, Xlnt ' loc. c:bOdrln acoepled )'ear 'l14-3J» :as:,~~ "TIME 'FOI bcrb&bynefdanewhome. quallty. 213/964 .. 124.l ir~SUPER.SpwtFl.lberman 1967 DODGE v~ blc ·a. ...
0wt1n11 ftalr raltdonl . ro,md. Aat• 2~~ to 10. Call: wahe elephants! om..11n1 to iM. a> GrandtatbC!r dock:t, 149 Bay, Apt. a aftf'r 5 PM ew:l/wkndl. "Ottp V" 219 Jntt rceptcr ft.JU. auta. Xbit c:oad.. !
. I m.m llW106, Mt-om DAILY PlLOT wANT ADS ""' '° llll5. All ''°"" ..id QUICK CASH o1. slliiEsr: Kl ..... -· i.. """· '""i.u. A'~· Ne. $11l5. -.. -::
APT ~ tor a.2 p. SOOrii Cout s.w.. -· Dial MUm ,.. RESULTS u u . THROUGH A BLACK m1n1atu" poodle, adoption coll -'""'' OR sc.a "'515-0663 1964 CHEV Pldl \It. 1 ey1. r t: unlta. ~ etl w/ tn.. Warn tt aaU on 2$' Race BUSIES'J' martel»&M» tn LARRY MORGAN housebroken, sood naturtd, pm Debor"ah Seutffrt PLANNING to move! Ycu'll bed, l'(IOd tirt1, racUa. ~ •1 band~• fix·lt b'Pt: llwn I. Sk>op. 64$-W3 town, 'nMI DAILY pJLOT .ANTIQUES-DAILY PILOT llke1 children. Call ~2079 StAM~E kitten.. 7 .wetks. l1nd an amaz:Lrta: number of end. $12T5. flS.390.,,... !
pool tare. ~ SPANISH • prin.te tutorlna Qasstfted lll!:Cdon. Saw ~11-73&3 WANT AD afle11 5 PM. 6/1 9 ScalpolnL S15. Call 842.1339 homt 1 In toda~"• OuslUed •61 FORD Pickup willll ~ • \
E)Cptrtenoed Ottk an • or clult1. 'YOID' home ot money, dme le eNort. Look nt:E QUICKER YOU Q1J... For Dl.lly Pllo Want Ada For DailY Pilot Want Ada. Oieck them now, •nrlftt, pertfd r 11.1aI1 I ~
t 49>ll5l • ml~"" ... 1151 l ""'"' :1 THE QUJCKEll YOU SELL ¥Jldl!!-od ..... Dial -t ltl!:SULTS Dial -SOOK rr 10 ·~n coooJi$125. m.• ~~~-~·~ ................. ~~L 1 ~
SfOA!LV PILO -·Juno 18.1969 iiiJiiPOllTATIOli tliANSl'OltTlTICIW TRANSPORTATION
.1oopo tSIO 1..,..1rted Aulel -li e"rt..i _.um 9600
'" ,,_ Wo91n11r , __ .:.su.:=U...o.+RI-'---RENAULT ' -drive,............. :.~ 1ow mne.1., ....,.,.~,.,. FEltltAltl '67 RENAULT
TRANSPORTATION 0TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
lmeottocl Autot -Imported A"!" 9600 Autw Wonted 9700 .Auto L111lng 9110 Uud c.,.
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN WE-:--:P"'"•Y-.-.-. ----'-= .i=~.,...::.::.::L:::.:EA;:,Sc..!_"'= I
1964 VW New 1"6-built eDI(.
$7$0 Depend.Ible CASH 1969 Olds Delta 88 Royal, 2
BUICK
• • PILOT ·ADVERTIS£!1-
N TRANSPORTATI
CHEVROLET
new. V..S, a~dc ~ N;:wpo1t l.ml)anl Lid. Or-R-10 4 Dr. Sedan. Still lookl
,· mlnkla. power a~ uce O:mC)"a cmb' autbi:Jr new Ser No 58248.. $1377.
power brakn. factory air, I.std dMler. N~ Cat ·Dir ·646-9307 But
'68 VOLKSWAGOI • 646--2944 • !========I '°' -..,. • ._.."""
dr. H'f, 455 e,.., tUJ'hi>.tiyd· 1 ro. air/tntd 11.,, pwr wnd/~
w~ al, labda~ top, S new
'68 Buick Speci11
Sedan, v.s. auto, dlr. fact.
alr, pwr sir. RJght rroni
Leisw-e World. Sl25 cash
del. or take foreign car. Call
Ken, 494-9173 or 54!Hl631.
NEEO A CAR? '
We Can Help Yoo! •
• Jr olhel'a have turned jtou
down e If you have no ddwn
payment. • Jf you are ~· • wa.rran but., M:avy d'ut)< SALES-SERVle&-PARTS ~c..;:~::.;;,;·~'"'-='-~ rubber, overload sp~ 3.JOO W. C.0..St Hwy. '60 RENAULT Caravel.le.
Fil"l!!stone wl llw tn, Lse
lll8 mo. FuUy factory equipped. call ua fat tree mdmate.
GROTH CHEVROl.ET VOLVO
•
''This u~t IOld oricinall.Y NeVo'{)Crt Bef.cb Body .l int. needs work.
tqrappmxhna\eb' $581&.'' 60-MOS SC0.11'164 Mech. good. $450. 8t7...fi817
lJc. No. VLF.ST Authorbed ftfG Duler
$3799 FIAT
Outstandlni Buy! '67 Fiat
850. cpe. Bl°', under 17,000
ml. Sll50 Owner mu.st sell!
""1111
JAGUAR
SIMCA
'65 S™CA 1000 Sed&n ~cl.
cond. i:reat 2nd car. $575.
Ownu 673-2430
SUBARU
Subaru of Calif.
VGZ 189
$1695 VOLVO
ATLAS NE~ 164
' NEW 1100 CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH NOW ON DISPLAY 2929 HARBOR BLVD.
OOSTA MESA . 546-19.14 fl ' l • Open Daily 'til 10 p.m. fan, llDU
.. ., VW1s .
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 111PORTS
Bank F\nancing . TOYOTA·YOL'IO
1969 Cad Cpe de Ville, pwr
Aak tor Sales ~ wind, 6-way 11. & · dr lock!!,
ll2llH; ....... ~~ i:!v;t.; tilt str whl, a ir eond, solt-
.... ""'ti........ ray &lau, Al-1/FM, w/s/w.
IQ . 9-3331 Lee Sl 65 mo. --=-ic11,...4"'y ""w-H-1SOUTH COAST ,.~ r CAR LEASING
• " 300 \V. Csl I-fwy, NB fUS.2182 FOR YOUR ~R FlRSl' TIME!
Lease a New '69 for 6 Months CONNELL ....... with no obU.,tion.
CHEVROLET ~ ~~~ Reid '0
'
'62 LE SABRE cream puff,
Jo niiles. V t-ry fi'Csh. S600 ru·
best. 642-.s584
'65 RIVIERA. all equip.,
yery clean. Nels body \\Tk,
$2100/ best. 642--&584 .
CADILLAC
'64 COUPE de Ville, full
power, air. l\iecb xlnL
$1200. 540-78'28
ployed. .. ...
Ma.ey modola to c~ Jn>m * * c.au Ji.fr. lillliQ', 893-5038 :--:·
* '63 CHEVY II ...,,_
Auto. 6 Cy!. R/H ~:weu.
$450. 675-3000 ..:,.
'69 El c.am.ioo 396, 4 9ftd,
yery low niileage. ~·
.n4-M94 bet 1 &. 4. ~:·
1957 O!EVY 4 DR. :&Jd
oondiLion, clean. $300. : : * &39-Sli79 * -,. ·57 JAG. u "'·"" M;. lnc.-Retail Div.
" S49-30ll Exl 66 or 67 Wire wheels. $3ID'.l. $l2'l POE 1970 liARBOR BLVD. Orig. owner. 4934683
$213 OOWN ""'-· C.M. .....,.,
$44.03 * 36 mos P 1800
Pl115 1 final pymnt for ice of J. All ready to £:0.
2828 Harbor mvd. 642-0010
Costa ~fesa 541).1200 Font Authorlzt!d
'66 BROGHM. ONLY 16,CKXt
!'tll every Cad. extra. ex!.
cond. sacr. $3495. 842-6265
'58 CHEVY. Xlnt tran41etta.
tion. $2'l5. Call 673-7®'. er "b:;-;;,,iCO~ST~A~MESA~~::;::.I ;~~~~~~~;'; 0ptequip$.10.Fre~htn4.50
;167 BRONCO Wqon 4 wb<d KARMANN GHIA ~,:".n.i ~j=.50 • drive 6 eyl, radio, beattr.1---------
title. Full 2 yr, 24.000 Low as CONFIDENTIALLY i..-n::;~•m
ml wfUTallty. Avail only at
T lo M MOTORS $1799 \Ve P8y More For ROBINS FO IZW483 Fo..-;go 0< ~porn Car> RD
548-1940 eyes. : ;J
CAMARO CONTINENTAJ, !~ ,rear 1aeat, Red with white FOR We: Karman Ghia 1000 W. Coast HIWAf, N.B.
• hardk>I>. $1,e. Call 8'IS-d CoJ'.IVL 1958. New tires, runs 645-aliO '* 5-41).2'733 8081 Garden Grove BlYd. 646-9307 Dir. PAID FOR OR NOT 2CIO Harbor BJYd. '62 CONTINENTAL 4-Doi::>R
ONE -OWNER C"AR
fil!OWROOM <X>NDITION.
ALL EXTRAS. $8X>: ~V.
'67 CAMARO ... . eo:xt. $«Kl. 642.-1947 ecre1rft' Vehicles 9515 . TOYOTA 534-~P:_:. ~~DA~1 ''58~v=o"Lv"'o~«""4.-R~u-"'-•""'~-B. J. SPORTSCAR O>sta M•.. 6-IUIJJO
---·"68"'""°'VW=---1 ~;~ $~e~L carbs. CENTER UMd Cars 9900
V8 • 4 spd • Big engmt • All
extras • VAC.::~:i.
MG •
TOYOTA
HEADQUARTERS
ELMORE
15300 Beach BIYd. \Vstnl11litr
Phone 894-3322
Excellent condition inside & ·-2833 1-larbor Blvd. TIRED of SHOPPING
out, honey cream ext., plush Antiques, Classics 961.S Costa Mesa 5104491 BECAUSE OF
black interior. S:l25 Cash WE PAY TOP e &· t ed d • d•t., di<, or trade • take low ~31 DeSOTO. Runs well, CX· OOL LAR lll& w-n own · • No II do'vn payment! • Out oI pyfl'Ults. LB VHJ 194, Call ce ent body condition. t7DO. !or 1ooc1. clean used cars. state credit'!'
:::8;;"'=;;· ,.5<5-0034i"-i=.<====-I'' ="=S-=S404======= I all makes. See George Ray call us !or immediate action
FOR A GRAOUATE 'Rico Cui Rods 9620 Th<Odore Rohm• Fon! * 193-5038 *
$2297
646.9307 011 ..
67 CAMARO SS 11•/R.S.
package 350 4 sp. (X)Si·lrac-
lion. Vinyl roof. $2250.
962-1831
CHEVROLET Tan '66 VW Exel, Cond. ----'-----I 2060 Harbor. Blvd.
Must sell. 21,000 mi. alter •32 FORD ROADSTER C.M. 642-00lD BARRACUDA ·55 CH.EVY· 11 ss, 4 spt'Cd,
6 p.m. 642-5333. Best offer by 6/18/'69 JMPORTS WANTED air~ Best otter.
VW $300 83tJ.S228 aft 5 PM Orange r.oonties '65 BARRACUDA v .s, auto 4944121 after, 6 pn1
TOP $ BUYER Pftllls, many extras real I "'====±7.':-=::c
Autos W1nted 9700 Bll.J. MAXEY TOYOI'A sharp call eYes.. 642.-8996 '62 CHEVY SS Iinpa.la Conv.
642·3407
PTY .673-1037 ~~.
CORVAIR :.
'65 CORVAIR 2 Dr. Pithte
party. $500. ~2537 4dl 6
pm on .wkdar.; :;: .
CORY~:-. ---'64 CORVETl'E. Con\'. P,._fW,
P/B, 327, 4 speed. JltAH.
Best oiler. 6"2-0102 aft C. 18881 Beach mvd. 321 cng. Orig 01\'IIT, S500
W'll 8 cash or best oiler. 642-4834 -·57 vw Sqwu-ebook. bi"" I uy H. 8'ach. Ph. ,.,_.,.. BUICK DODGE --------1 '" OIEV 2 ~, •~top X!ol • radio, w/s/w, new tires. WANTED: JUNK CAR s --""" '"" ----
real sharp! $1650 or best. Your Volkswagen or Porsche TOP $SS. '66 BUICK Riviera AJi.1-f'M condilion SD>. Call 66-~ '68 GIARGER, air, 111t:i;b,
~Di& or 833-2'225 &: pay top dollan. Paid Ior * ~5100 * rad, air cood. like new. Low '63 BEL AIR 2 DR gd. cond. landau top, tape s&no.
'65 vw Bus, '68 Sundial or not. Call Ralph '°T=HE=~Q~UJ"C~KER=~ro=u~CALL.=~ Blue Book. S235D &14-2448 S57S. Call ~1260 $2750. .firm 5 4 6 • 3 $ ! 3 •
Inter. re-built eng. $1900.l,_,=::=='™""'=:=~===~THE:;;:~Q~UI~CKER~~Y;::O;::U~S~El~J ..'.._=~Ol~AR~G~E=l~T~! ==~D~A;;IL~Y~P;;ILOT~~W~A;;NT~A;;D~S~! !='54~0-fil!~'§=====:~ 67"°.>-1865 &: ~ I
V.W. 66 "BUS"
Like new $1500 PriY. Pty
542-5118 Eves & wknds
68 VW Squareback. Ex. cond.
Extras. Warr. 1200) mi.
Make oiler. 646-3307 ... VOLKSWAGEN • '62 VW sunrool, radio,
good condition, $645. Enter·
in~ service. 4!»-1329
..
* P.U1-TOPS * 1teeJ shella. Saln 1' ren·
tali. Jl49 up. Buy factory
dittct. 1010 So. Harbor, SA.
CHEV P.U. 6 cyl w/
Hlway Crui 1 er shell
camper. Good con d .
• !148-5917
Musr aell '69 MG-BGT,
British racing green, VW WESTPHALIA
am/fm radio. 5.DJ mi. Xlnt CAMPMOBlLE P o p · U p
cof¥1. 67:>-2422. Top, like new cond. orig.
1---sc~=c-:-.---I owners wiAh they had tiJne '49 MG Touring to utUiie 4~
638-41Jl9
'64 VW, new 1600 eng., guar.,
new int., stereo. XLN'T'
cond. $1250. 673-5634
9600 Imported Autos 96001mported Autos
MGB ••••••••••••••••••••
: TEMPTED BY :
:[!1~00[0]00~]? : Ji rlu p Ll rt
}I 111 p Ll rt ~' • SEE DEAN LEWIS TODAY! • • • • '69 TOYOTA "ALASKAN 10', but. ref.on 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. • FROM 5 1790.
·ss %. T Ford 1cmpr spec, 642-9405 540-1'1&1 e Ill; SAYINl;S •
EXECUTIVE CAR SALE NOW!
•
cust cab, V-4. au lo .. Authortz~ MG Dealer •
~ $2495. 842-5261 DRAFI'EO! 'li6 -M G B •
9522 hardtop, witf! ,vheels. First • (am~r Rent1l1 $1450 takes. 536-8640 before • * EXPLORER * 11
""' '"'" '·
y week " month. Lux"''" MORRIS ·Dua. Slttps 6. Sell contain-1---------
.ed. Limited number. Call '59 ?o10RRIS MINOR.
"today. $100 or best offer.
LEISURE RENTALS 6-1~2188 ""'·
• • • • •
• • "69 TOYOTA HARDTOP ····-··•-....._·· $lDH 8 '69 VOLVO SEDAN, Automotlc -········ $2975 •
4112 •/o BANK FINANCING
ON AP',RQ\IAL
NEW TOYOTA MK II
NOW ON DISPLAY
Factory Authorized Dealer For OPEL and JAGUAR
CHECK WITH US BEFORE YOU BUY
No Better Prices Anywhere !
BRAND NEW 1969
STATION WAGON
300 turbo·hyd ramatic. Power steering,
power brakes, FACTORY AIR CON.
DITIONING, Sonom1tic radio, whit•
wall1, cuslom seat cushions. NO. 434-
359110946 .
'.1
, (TI4) &G-6611, l714) 837-3800 BUSIEST marketplace in •
• town. The DAll.Y PILOT e DEAN LEWIS
• • • • • • • 53688 , .Imparted Autos 9600 Classified section. s a" e • • 646·tlOJ ALFA ROMEO ::,i; ttm. • •••rt. Look a Orange Count_y Toyota• Volvo Hdqtra. S40.t4'7 •
• 1966 HARIOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA •
FA Romeo 1965 Guil\al-"'==CHARG===:E=rr='===-·~•°"•~•=•=!l=•~·~·=•=:•°"•~•=•=•=•o==•=:=•=•=•=•
G.T. 1600 cc OHOC. 4 wheel _..1 A 96001 -• Aul 9600 dl!ic brakes, radio, elec Imported Autos 9600Jmportsu utos mport1SU ot antenna. Wht wf black int.I,====::.:::::::::::::=:::':=================.
644-1351
AUSTIN HEALEY
' ·59 AUSTIN Healey, 6 Cyl.
O'drlve. wire whla, hard &
aoft tops. 642-3675
DATSUN
'67 DATSUN
SEDAN
4 spttd, Full factory equip-
ped. TUP s.15.
$1295
F R E E AUTO AIR
CONDITIONER
WITH THE PURCHASE OF:
I
ATLAS I
~1
OIRYSLER -PLYP.10UTH
29'J9 HARBOR BLVD.
(DSI' A MESA 546-1934
Open Dally 'W 10 p.m.
'09 DATSUN
Bi& tedan, 96 hp, overhead
caln ena: .• dlr, 4 spd, radio,
hf&ter, ~w tires, !Oflded!
UOO Miles, under factory
wtJTJDtY,. Bal to fine. $1775.
Take $75 cuh dell,'or old~r
e&i. L8D IJ25, Call Bill --. •a -DATSUN Waeon new
mob' $!DO. Aft 6 pm or
~·"1711-
IN6USH FORD
ORANG• COUNTY'S
YOLQMm •NOLISH
11C>llD DIEAL•R
SALIS ·411tVICE
•llOOEU
lmni<dloledellv<ry
1.UICE 8ELECl'JllN
Th11il1r•
IOllNS FORD ----x-ljS"'10
rn ._. -!Imo. llltl-
.-J llTdkm lMtf See rtlt
DAILY PD..oT a•'*°" I __ , I
FIAT 124 FAMILY SEDAN
lrlllCJ b•dr th• fw" af f.rTlilv drivintJ with11111I d111li11'll the f1mify
b11dci1t. Your Fi1t d11l1r c•11 fit yau i11i111 1 l111u•·d111or 11d•11 ar w•tJlllll
.nd kit lo.., Fi1I pric11 wltl l11v1 yau pl111+v af c11h far 1u1T1m1r fun!
Both f1mily Fi1h ••• fully 1qui pp1d: 4.wh11t diu; br•k11, 4·tp11d
ilic• 1hift, CJ••·1qu111in9 111cii1111, w11h•bl1 vinyl i11!1ri111n, r1cli11i119
fra"f 11•h. C111m1 in 111d •1k 111: "How d1111i f it ! da ii far th1 pric11"
FIAT 124 FAMILY WAGON
Complete Service Department With F1ctory Trained And
Authorized Mechanics To Mff;t Your Every Need,
Open Monday Nite1 'til t
I -~ALIFORNIA ~I SPORTS CARS
1IOI L ~ .. ST~ aAM'TA AHA .... ~•eor
901 E. lat ST., SANT A ANA 2-8801
.... ~,~~~~~~~------. .. . .. -~---r---... --------
I
'69 ELECTRA CUSTOM 225 BRAND NEW '69 BUICK
Fully equipped including V8, power stHring.
s2377
4Jl72tz
FULL
PRICE
ElECTRAS -WILDCATS -RIVIERAS-LE SAllES AT COMPARABLE SAVINGS
'67 LE SABRE '66 Thunderbird
C11111p1. C111t111m. Full f1clory •i• cond. full
p111w1t, f•claty •i• cand. pow1r, vinyl top. !XLV
TOZ t04 491 1
$2695 S2695
'66 JAGUAR '65 BUICK
)(JC[ R1111d1!1r. Chrome El1clt1 c11111p•. fu ll pwr,
wlr1 •h•1l1. STH I DO F•clary 1ir cond. !NCI
i "" $3395 $1995
OUR OPEL PRICES
START AT
$1777
IMMIDIATI DILIYllY
'65 OLDSMOBILE '66 YOLKS
4 doa• H.T. F1ct. 1ir. 4 1p11d, 11di111, "······ pwr 1te1tin9 I br•k11, TRH 170 111!0. I MOY 1461
$1395 $1495
'67 MUSTANG '61 CADILLAC
C111nv1rf. 4 ip11d, r1dio Sid. 01Vill1. Full p111w1t
& ~1 1i1r. ITXS 16l l, f1 et. •it. !HXS 742 )
$1995 S795
No Better Prices Anywhere
MAKE US
PROVE IT!
'65 SKYLARK '64 FORD WAGON
4 d r. Autom1tic, p111w1t Cnlry. Squi••· Full pwr, 1+11rin9, r•dia, h11+1r. f1ct111rv •ir. IOQX 71JI IRGV 4141
$1395 $1395
'63 IUICK '67 OPEL
l1 S•bre. F•cl •it con , Sporl Cp1. Oi1c br1\•a,
pow1t 1ie1r & ~11 . 4 1p11d. r1dlo ,h11t1r.
!HYM 411 1 VHS 91•
$1095 $1495
JAGUARS
LARGE SELECTION
Compl•te Sales and
Service Department
Open Mon. thru Fri. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. -Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. -Sun. I 0 a.m. to 6 p.m.
., . (
-----·~...-·..---~-----·--·--·-··-.....----·---·---~-·---------~-·---.............------
1· ••
... • j..-'
' I'.-
•• '
'
l
1969 COJIPE DE VILLE
Full power and ftctory air condlUonlni;.
AM-Fr.t radio, J!'m'er door locks. po\\·er
trunk opener, .yl leather interior and
padded lop. lJ9~)
• .. .. '
CADILLAC 1969 CONVERTIBLE
Full power, factOry air, dual comfort sea.ts, tilt wheel, stereo, power door
locks, cruist cgntrol. twWght sent!Ml.
automatic dimmer, leather interior. A~
aolutel,y loaded. (1'9131493)
SALE PRICE NINETEEN SJXTY-NINE : PRICE
1968 CHRYSLER
9 passenger Town &: Country wagon. r.taize
yellow with saddle vinyl trim. Full power, air
conditioning, luggage rack, tilt steerina: wheel,
· low mileage, (VTP971)
1967 CADILLAC
Coupe DeVille, Phantom blue with blue leather
interior, Full pow~r equipment plus factol"y air
conditlonini:. One owner. (UJA337J
1965 CADILLAC
Convertible De Ville .. Sandlewood \vi th match-
ing leather irtterior. Full po\ver plus factory
air conditioning, tilt-telescopic !teerlng \Vheel,
Si.ereo AM-F!l'I radio. Low miles. <XSP692)
1965 CADILLAC
Flrct<.\•ood Brougham. Black \vlth silver bro-
ende interior. Full i:iowcr plus factory air con-
dltionini;. All options. IR'IT056)
1964 RIVlliA
Pov.·der blu! with matchi~ ''inyl bucket
seats. Full po'1.·er and /aclory aJr condition·
ing, 1nany extras. CHctf836l ' .•
1965 CADILLAC
Coupe DeVille. Royal blue exterior with mat·
chine cloth and leather interior. Full power,
factory air. tilt and tel~cople 1teer1nr, 1h0w1
exceptional low mileage. (PGN683)
ON DISPLAY AND READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY!
SALE SA222
SAVI'
SALE $3888
PRICE
SALE $3666
SAVE .
SAi.i s2444
PRICE
SALE
$1555
PRICE
SALE $1999
PRICE
OVER 80 QUALITY:
AUTOMOBILES
TO. SELECT FROM
1 IN A
1,000,000
1963 CADILLAC
COUPE DE VILLE
Full power equipment plus ft1ctor~ air 'ondition!ng,
AM-FM redio. Thit on• cwner, 30,800 mile! cer is
imp1cc1bl1 thru-out, .INYNI 10)
. SALE PRICID
"
1968 IL DORADQ
Full power, factory air, tilt-telescopic wheel,
AM-FM radio, power door locla, disc brake~,.
padOO top. (8TP094)
1967 CAQILLAC
SO<lan t><VIUO. N...,...,,. blue with black
vinyl root and filue cloth and leather Interior.
Full power, factory air, tilt-telescopic wheel,
pov.'cr door locks, AM-FM, (VIH785)
1966 CONTINENTAL
Goddess gold with c:old top and a:old lc&ther
interior. Full poY,.er and factory air, .:tcrco
tape, loeal, one owner, (SVY710)
1967 RIVIERA
Forest green exterior with black vinyl in·
tcrior. I-las full po\ver t?quipment plus factory
air conditioning, tilt steering wheel. (TSD498)
1967 EL DORADO
Leather lntel'l.or, pedded top. fuU power, fac-
tot"y ai1·, t1lt-tele&e0plc wheel, power door
locks, i;ter.:!d AM-FM, every factory-option.
(WXN646) ' I
'
1963 CADILLAC
Coupe. vs. automatic transmission, radio 111d
heater, power •!1'wlnl and bN.lcec, ftct.Otr llit ~,,~
t"Ondltionlng. Wtili.e with blue cloth interior.
tPEP3411 ~
SALE s5999
PRICE
SALE $3777
PRICE
SALE
s2333
PRICE
SALE s2999
PRICE
SALE $4666
PRICE
SALE $888
PRICE ..
-----------SALES DEPA!{TMENT OPEN----------
•···
'66 Dodge Pol1ra
Conv., dlr. !act air, p1vr \11in-
dows, loaded! $/a Cash tlels
or take foreign car in trndc.
Pypi,nts SJ?.86 mo. LB YN\V ltG .. can Ken, ~-9773 or
:1 545-0634.
.--.
_, :
·-
sALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 1969
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY -9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY
Your Factory Authorized Cadlllac Dealer Serving The Orange Coast Harbor Area
9900
FALCON
·w FALCON Conv. excel
cond. hi-pert. 289, Marina
Enro, 893-9846 $900.
IS YOUR AD IN Q..A.SS".
FlED? Someone will be
lookin& fr it. Dial 642-5678
White tilephanti:! Oime+ll.oe
'
NABERS
2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa
FORD
1963 FOO Fairlane Station
Waa:on, Clean. $700. Prv
party. 548-3875 Cl\1.
62 FORD GALA.XIE
Excellent condition $450 or
oUer. 646-614fJ
SOCK rr TO 'EM!
'
540-9100
9900 9900 9900 1--------i
FORD LINCOLN MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC RAMBLER ---'64 FORD 1967 Lincoln. clean, 28,000 TllE ONE! 1967 Mustartg
miles. Loaded, air, etc. Must 2 + 2 dellL'<C w/ power &
sell fast $3595 613-5180 auto. one own<!r wl only
Galaxie 500 Sedan l'°'========I around 17,000 mi. Must 1ac.
V-8, autoniatic-, JXl\\•cr steer-MERCURY for in1mcd. sale, Pvt. Ply.
ing, radio, heatct'. PDD 157, 847-8144
$895 '63 MERCURY OLDSMOBILE
OLD& ·•e;, 442 Cutlu1 2 dr '67 LEMANS
HT. Auto, Pis, Plb, 37,~ Bucket seatt, factory air,
mi, Orig. own e r • Ex.· pwr steerln(, nu tires, xlnt
ceptionaily sharp! P1X1prty condition Inside &e out, dlr,
642-3374 S17S Cuh or foreign car.
PLYMOUTH Take low pymnts. LB TKR
595, Call Ken. 494-9113 or
>lr.-06.14
ATLAS C t SS 22 '6 J PLYMOUTH SACRIFICE. '65 GTO, HT' ome • • • 389 eng, all ,..., & let .~. Automatk, radio, heater. AM/FM vlbrasonlc atereo
0'1RYSLER -PLY!lfOUTll PMP 528. Fury 9 Pa11. tape, airlift ihockJ. auto
'66 RAMBUR
Am~ssador 990 2 Dr.
Hardtop
V-3. automatic, factory t ir,
powtr 1teer, radio, beater.
SIR 103.
$1495
' ATLAS 2929 HARBOR BLVD. $795 BRANO NE\11 Stetion We•on t & the t
COSTA MESA "'"19'1 '69 CUTLASS • nn1 many o ; x ru. CJ-CRYSLER -PLYMOUTH _,.. ¥ V-8, automatic, radio, heat-Mist gold w/matchit\i la~ a .... n Daily 'Iii 10 p.m. Cl ~ 1 29'J9 HARBOR BLVD .-ATLAS er. eo.n! vv• 921. dau top, Xlnt cond. t.1usl C()gf'A MESA StS-iJ34
DELUXE Ford _ Econol,inc F45 SPTS. CPE. $995 sell. Aaklna:_,s1~a. ~ Open Dtib' 'tu lO p.m.
Super Van; bullt Dec fi6. J_ De1u.'l:e bells front & rear, '67 FIREBIRD PRE-OWNED
Beautiful cu11om l n t; Cl YSLER -PLYMOUTJI padded dul\ fully factocy ATLAS suck sblft. VI. factory air mG SELECI'JON .
mahogany pan'ld, be Ii e 2929 HARBOR BLVD. equipped • PIS. Lookt new • Lie. # 'Sl THRU '68't ~~·t~t~~~.1;i~~~ CO~n ~~~ ·1u 19 S:-m~ $1" DN. $65 Mo. autYUR -PLYMOUTH· Yf'y864 ALL MOt>EL.1
S-tm aft 6 pm. '63 MERC. Wagon. Bli One. $1'lflll mt.HAl\iloR BLVD. 0 Z?o1r. e '':"' ':5-e
'IJFORDWqon,Aulom1tlc, *5'84173* S700 ' /.JJJ CX>S1'A1,IESA -154&.DU need• llOme work ifil 81 • Open Dally 'tU 10 p.m. '85 GTO oflJSi 1,000 ml. Hdrt., BRAND NEW •a $19'11
Ford Wagon .... worl<in• MUSTANG LEAVING country • mutt =~~~ii:.::: e· traftlJ). N t 'II tirt1 Sl-45. Plush Tax & Lie. eell 19$8 Plymout'1 'flllOn, mtir. Xtru. must tee to , W I
548-8991 eves 'SS MUSTANG g auto •_.& .... Paym~ntt Jnclude tax and Good cond m. ---""'""--11000 ••II -11 -._ ::....ii
-· II ··• f'•· -·---·• ' , mu -· ...... _..,. '----. '&5 FORD Slatton wall)n, blue.-wlw, rad»f ed'n81>1•. cense .. ~ .... nee .... -..es Ask for Doua:. 548-6366 . .....,_ P-
R.ii, p/b, p/o •• -tU.o • Good <:0nd. 1995. 541,-~ on 48 monthJ. ApP_. PONTIAC
brakes, xlnt cofld. 8*-2733 '65 MUSTANG 6 cyL ~ credit. SerlaJ No. 331T19Z1J.. ·~,.!:!,~~llTio~ :: ·~ FORD Cialaxle XL•, ta-lhllt. exct. cond. , ' 6351· ..... -=1•• ~ '64 IAMANS -top ~ w df'ck, ~ condition, best fl73-0731 • u • 't nd B "· •• ooo I========== u -n1vers1 y 00 • uc....,t 1eatll, w,
'5.1 NASH 2 dr J-f.T. AUIO. lir1
Good col'ld. SlOO •
, 0 '" ~ '116 MUSTANG, pwr brl<I, mu ... $W25. 813-2957 RAMBLER
1960 FORD. 8i,.tion Wqolt, auto. trant, map • "II nm BUN NEVER SETS on
.. $40--'1i21 ...
1311 or.OPTER. -· C1t1n, 1137-312'1 Q d b 1 Clutitled'• octton -·
.. 541-1913 .. IS YOIJll AD IN P.?Jiil· I smo ·1 e For ... ad ... "" ......i !fit Ford Station Wl\gOn F'IED ! Solnl!One will be 1 the clock, dlal 642-567&
e MAKE OFF£Ft • l for it, Dial 642-56111 DIAL direct. &U-5678, Charge
I __ l;:l'ln:;::le_:~:.'~"f'_:han:;::te:.'c__ i:-..:::~;:P\Wf'-F-:_:_;:W;:A:;NTc:__:AD::::S:;I , ___ :;54:;0!:;:_~0:_ __ 1 listen lo the phone rlnt • • • •
.R,ELJABt.S traNport&Uon
'IT Ramblir < dr. Sta wac,
STUDDAllD
Rill. Oood cond $350. 1D60 STUDEBAKER Lart.
673-4525 ntiCd.I brakes l valve JOb ;
DAILY PILOT \VANT ADS ~-Clean {l) m-.3482 .
BRING RESULTS! 1 White Etepl\antlt
' .......... " . .... ,~~· . . ..
494-5921 · k, etrlclenl .rtsullt. 285(1 Jftrbor jCosla Mesa your ad, then 11t baCW'
~·: • .... • •' f:• .. _ 0 • ......... .._. -···w' -.... ' -· --~
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DAILY PltOT
think • summer.
' •• think Ian. • • • ••
11,.dne!day, Juno 18, 1969 Pit.OT .AOVERTISU
think savings!
SUMMER IS HERE' AND TIME TO GET INTO THAt NEw WAGON so YOU'. CAN ENJOY THE am ,,ART QF ·1969' IN THE CAR QF' THE YW ... PONTIAC!
· · · THREE.-;GREAT ·NEW · PONTIAC ·w A&ONs -.. ·
• EXECUTIVE •
l ·sEAT 'STATION WAGON. EXPRESSO BROWN
WITH GOLD INTERIOR. TURBO. HYDRAMATIC
TRANSMISSION, PUSH BUTTON RADIO, POW.
ER STEERING, POWER DISC BRAKES, LUGGAGE
RACK, TINTED GLASS Alt, AIR CONDITION-
INC>, WHITE SIDE WALL TIRES. l25649Cl2941 II
WINDOW STICKER PRICE $5ll0.5J.
$4603
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
OPEN
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY.
7:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. •• SALES DEPARTMENT
OPEN 8:00 A.M. to
9:3.0 P.M. EVERY DAY
1960 ROLLS ROYCE
Silv•r Clo~d. Thi1 i111!1'11eul1t1 .. door i1 1b1olutely lo1d1d with lulfuty f11•
tur11 i11cludi19 f1dory .air ctultlifioni1111, f i11llh ... i11 Sholl G~y wltlr. ori9in1/
l'l'lofchirtt intorlet, Word1 r11tly e111't 1:rpr111 #11 f1bv101ti conditio1t .. f th·;,
Roll1 Royet. I KAS 000), for fvrthtr inform1tion pit••• eont1et ovr Rolls
Royct Rtprt1tnf1tivt.
s3777
1967 OLDSMOBILE 4-4·2
2 Door H1rdtop. E•pr1110 browrt 11d1rior with "'atch in9 Interior, Fully
t quipped includin.g VI, hydr11111lic tr1n1mi11ion, po••r sl11rin9, power
l>r1k11, r•dio tnd h11t1r, f•ctory 1ir con dilionin9, rtd lint tir11. This lov1ly
•ufomobile h11 only 29,744 mil11 i nd i1 in fl1wl111 eondition. IWIB )bOI
$2677
1968 PONTIAC LE MANS
Thi1 l"1ly 2 d oor h1rdtop ii c oPl'tpl1t11y 1quipp1d with VI en9in1, 1utom1ti0-
tr1n1Pl't_l11i1", powtr tfttri"'J, ttdio 11\d h11l1r, wh ite 1id1 we ll tir11, f1ctory
t ir conditi0nift11. H11 low1ly ~qui 1xl1rior with bl1c1r int1rior. Ve ry 1.;...
mu .. ,. C.4,1ll m;IHI '$2777"" IVTL 6501
~ ' , . ' ' ~ ' . ' . '
IRAND NEW 196f-READY·TO GO l _._ ~-~·-, ~ • TEMPEST CUSTOM •
Station Wagon. Beautiful antique gold with matching gold interior. Turbo-
hydramalic, 350 V-8 engine, power steering, tint.ed glass, decor group,
white side wall tires and tho dual-hinged swing gale with power window,
push button radio. Stoel: No. J..495 J235359Zl25959)
BRAND NEW ·1969-Ready To Go!
•CATALINA •
2 SEAT STATION WAGON. CHAMPAGNE WITH
GOLD INTERIOR. DECOR GROUP, TURBO HY.
DRAMA TIC, PUSH BUTTON RADIO, REMOTE
MIRROR, DELUXE BELTS, POWER STEERING ANO
BRAKES, TINTEI> GLASS, AIR CONDmONING,
WHITE WALLS. l252369Cl228800J.
$4197
•
1965 PONTIAC GTO
This littl•1il,,.1r b11uty h11 white vinyl top, VI 1119i111, hydrtulic tr1n1mi11ion,
pow1r 1tofrin9, rtdio 11\d h11t1r.,whit1 1idt will tir11 ind i• inl.011hl1ndin9
eondition • .You will w1nt to driwt this 0111. I REI 52 ~1 •
1963 . CHEVROLET
Novi 4 door. Sky blue in color with m1lching blut interior, 6 eylind1r on•
9in1, tulomalic tr1n1mi11ion, pow1r 1l11ring, r1d io end h11l1r, whilt 1id1
w1!1 fir11. This ont i1 just rig~! for th1 9r1du1!1 or for mom tnd lht •id1. a. 1ur1 to t1k1. t11t drive tnd ••• wh it Wt 1111111. (LIB -'301
1967 MERCURY COUGAR
l ovely 8rili1h ricing ,r1en 1xlt'iior with bl1ck int.rior. Equipptd with VI
1ngin1, 1utom 11ie +••n1111i11io11, powtr 1!11ring, powtr br1•••, rtdio 1nd
h11t1r, rtdi•I ply tir11 plus mort. lhi1 0111 should Dt ift your drivtw•y 10
hurry in b1for11om1on11111 gr1b1 thi1 ont . (VHC 6561
• ALL CAR PRICES
INDICATED IN THIS
AD ARE, OF COURSE
PLUS LICENSE AND TAX •• . -~.
1965 PONTIAC WAGON
4 Door, 6 p111t1\9tt. VI t ngint, hydr1m1tlc t r1n1mi11io11, power 1!11rin9,
ttdio end h11t1r, whilt 1id1 will tir11, f1ctory t ir eondilionin9. Thi1 bron11
b11uly h11 only '36,652 1ctu1I mil11 ind i1 1b1olut1ly Ii•• br111d 111w.
Mu1t 111 tod•y. I PGW 632 I
$2177
1'965 RIVIERA GRAN· SIPORT
VB 1n9in1, hydr1m1tic i r1111mi11ion, pow1r 1!11ring, powtr br•k,1, r1d io i nd
h11 !1r, wh1t1 1id1 will lir11, f1c lory t it conditioning, r1lly fypt wh11l1,
power windows, lo,,.tly bro1111 11d1rior 1utomobi11 with m1iehin9 bron11 in·
ltrior i1 imm1cul1t1 in1id1 i nd out, (TAY 199)
1968 BUICK WILDCAT
Tht very pop11l•t 2 Door h1rdlop fvlly equipp9' •ith 'hycl'rnnttic tr1111mi1-
1io11, pcwer 1lttrilH) t11d powtr lirtkt1, rtdit llft4 •h.tftt, whit. 1idt will
lirt1 , f1elorv 1ir eonditio1tin9. A lowtly iwory oxtorior wi+fi lilut 'vi11yl top,
h in txe1lltnf likt 111w eo11ditio11 111d just 1potl111. IWAE 531)
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