HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-06-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesal .
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JHURSD#. Y' AFTERNOON, JUNE 2&, [1969
It"s
VOL. 6L MO. 10,. .11 l•CTtoMI, K rM•I
Tight Turn . . ..
55~000
-. . '
a · se
I
Coin~ Jewel Theft
' . ·.~'·i Diseovered • ID Newport
1} ~ '~ 1
l ~°';t;1t;:,:'l._;_; -~~:· \_1'~:~,41) ;:"\~... J; • '"~~~~~r· ~ ·~
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1-; "'.: I .' , •• ~"'°¥ I I ;.t •;• •. ' } 1 • t!°'l''J~-;;.-..... ' I ~t'-# '--;< it,~ t I ' .. t "'•·• ~ ·-,\~: ···,f' 'I~ -.. " .<11.u11~">' •. -,'~ •1 ,..,. .-.J'...-j:. ., OAILY PILOT..;.. W .~ KMlllW•ti
Young surfer runs paralleJ to beach as be makes hard left along face
of Wave during early morning session et 22nd Street and Ocean Front
in Neivport Beach. Surfers -and photographer -were up early·to
catch 7 a.m. action .
Cuha , lte'l@aSes , llijacltetl
(
South Vietnamese Open
Lifeline to Sieged Camp
LA Jet for U.S. Return •
SAIGON {UPI) -South Vietnamese
troops-and tankers reported tod&y· they
had .pupc,hed through the _C?mmunlst en-
circlement to Ben Het, killing 214 North
Vietnamese and opening a new lifeline in-
to Ole besieged camp.
The estimated 2,000 Reds in the hills
around the 700-man allied garrison
answered today with 60 more rounds of
rocket. artillery and morl.ar rounds into
the CBmp.
Monsoon wealher closed in around the
hig1llands outpost and shut orf the runs
by cargo planes that drop supply loads by
parachute, but it didn't limit B52
, N.~Y PILO 11tff ,_..
I fiefff'••r'• ,,,.,_," ,, ..
Mra. Nancy Rea&!lJl df,!Crib<!s1
her first date wiOl the 1 gover· ~l'i.>-be in• DAIL 't(: PILOT
writer aean Cbx's ,sldi'y on the.
cover 1'•~• of the Wonlen's · Section In today'• eilllion. ~--.. _ -.
<
\
bombers. In three strikes they dropped
270 tons on the outlying Communist posi-,
lions overnight.
The Soutll Vietnamese said they lost 17
men killed and 94 wounded In their drive
into the camp from Oak Mot, four miles
away. U.S. warplanes and helicopter
gunships helped them blast away heavy
Communist resistance en route.
Their spearhead drove through to the
camp and opened the way for more con-
voys like the ones that arrived from Oak
To, eight miles to the east, Monday and
Tuesday willl supplies enough to
overcome the lack of parachute drops.
There was no ground fighting around
the isolated Ben Het Green Beret outpost
in the past 24 hours as the Communists
seemed content to extend their 51-day
siege with rocket, mortar and artillery
barrages.
U.S. Army pilots reported killing et
least 1S North Vietnamese in two gunship
strikes within three miles of Ben 'Het, but
the CommWllst forces showed no signs
Wednesday of ea.sing artillery attacks .
that have laid more than 5,000 rounds in·
to the camp aince May 6.
About 100 rounds o( 8Smm artillery,
mortar and recoilless rifle fire burst
within Ben Het 's perimeters, causing
light casualtif! among the U.S. and SOulh
Vietnamese defenders.
.
'Mechanical
Difficulties'·
Cited in Delay
MIAMI (UPI) - A United Airlines
jetliner, hijacked while on a flight from
Los Angeles to New York and detained in
llavana 13 hours because or "mechanical
difficulties," was finally released today.
The airliner was cleared at I :06 p.m.
and took off on its 33 minute flight back
to Miami lnternaUonal Airport. The
1-~eder<il Avialion Ag~cy said it had been
unable to determine the · nature of lhe
mechanical problem.
The FAA official said U1e eight
crewmen and 50 passengers who arrived
in Havana about midnight were taken to
hotels for some sleep.
The United Airlines DC8 was com·
mandeered l 1 minutes after takeoff from
Lo.11 Angeles Wednesday afternoon and
arrived at Jose Marti Airport in llavana
at 9:01 p.m. PDT Wednesday. The 2,5()0.
mile flight was the second hijacking of a
transcontinental airliner within eight
days.
Radio Havana said today the jet was
hijacµ<i by an individual armed with a
(See mJACK, Page ZI
Weekend Theft of $5,000
In Newport Discovered
Newpbrt police today reported the
weekendLthefi of more Utan ~.ooo in gold
coins and jewels from the Back Bay
home of a retlred food packing firm vice
president In the •third large burglary in
the city In two weeks.
The k>a of-th< U.S. and (Otelgn gold
cQlnl and jeweis was discov~ tuesday
pi8)1\1~ G<orp C. ~ . ~'Sonllago
Dr\ye. 1 r
Scoll. who hOfl been oq a 11!4y vaca·
lion, said .fie and hls wife relupitcitl>ome
that evening to (inQ their paUb -J.idlng
glass floor pried open and lllelr home
ranaacked.
The thleves,,police said, evtn overt.um--
'
ed mattresses to search for loot.
Jncluded in the loot was a large col-
lection of British Sovereigns ind gold
mooey from other European coontries.
Mrs. Scott's collection or jewelry also
was stolen.
Police said the theft o c c u r r e d
sometime over the weekend. since the
victim'• brotMr had checked the home
last Friday and found everything in ord·
er.
Neighbors told office.rs lhey beard
b a n g i n g and lhunmplng noises Sun·
day night, but thought it was a minor
traffic crsh and didn't Investigate.
Scott is a retired vice president of t.be
Cireen Gla~t Compan1.
l
.. E F'i.. __ . . • J Lo' .· ... ' · · x-c, lmmpl()n·· · -Oe · ; ~
HELD IN TUSTIN SLAYING
Murder Suspect Vick
i •
l
Murde1· Suspect's
Suicide Attempt
Halted by Police
By ARTHUR fl., VINSEL
Of l"9 0.llJ Plllt Shff
Rescued as he was about to join his
sv:eetheart In death by auto. gas asphyx·
iatlon in a lonely orange grove near
Tustin, a young Washington businessm~n
loday waits to1>e arraigned for .ber pillow
suffocation murder.
Geor1e A. Vick, 29, wall JRriled from his
rented car by two laborers who tound
him lying: on the IC<J.t about 5 a.m.
Wednesday, a »-foot garden hose running
from the elhausl pipe into the auto.
Tustln Police Detective Jack Terry aaJd
a complaint charging lhe paint conltactor
with murder -the city's first i11 J7 yeart,
-1111ould be obtalne(i from the Oran1e
County DJstrlciAUorney l•ter today.
An anol'()'mou'I telephone tipster 11:nt
(See SUSPECT, Pa&• J)
Stricken· Condii1on 0~ ' . '
NEW YORK (UPI) -Legendary
heavyweight champion Joe Louis was
rushed to Beekman Downtown "Hospital
t.Oday suffering from what was described
as "physical collapse."
Louis, who reigned as champion fro1n
1937 until 1949, complained of stomach
pains to his attorney, Leon Charney, who
was driving him from a telev~n in-
terview. ·Charney lnimedialely "dr'?"e the
55-year-old Louis to the hospital, and he
was rushed Into the emergency room for
an examlnaUon. His condition was
reported as '1good" by the hospital.
Louis' wife, Mittha, and ·Abe Margoles,
a business associate, reinainecf with hitn;
at the hospital and repcrted that he was
Huntington Girl
Found Dead in
Long Bef!.ch Motel
Long Beach police today are conducting
1 massive search for 1 poss.Ible mystery
wllness to lbe death ol an ,IS.year-old .
Hvntington Beach girl who was found
dead In a Long Beach motel Wednetday.
The man, Who was described as 1 mile
Negro, approximately six.fodt three In-
ches, about 30 and weighing 170 opunds,
was seen leaving the motel, located at
1021 E. Pacific Coast lllghw1y shortly
before the body was found .
Sgt. David A. Bauer of the Long Beach
police homicide division said the girl,
PatriCla M. Buscaglia, of 10102 Crailet
Prive, was dlscov,ered at 1:30 p.m.
sprawled on the floor of one ol the rooms.
A hypodennlc syringe was round near
th< body. aald Sgt. Bauer. oot lhe con-
tents have not yet been 8J\l.lyzed.
He added that ;here wm marks on
fi.1i11 Buacaglla 's arm which CQUJd have
been caused by a needle, oot nnal
dotermlnatlon Js pending 1 coroner's
autopsy later ~.
conscious and in good spirits.
The attorney said that Louts probably
didn't suffer a heart attack, however, a'nd
would be release~ in a few days.
Earlier, a police department
spokesman had said that Louis had •P-
parenlly suffered a heart attack.
Louis and ex-boxer Billy Conn an.
nounced Wednesday that they have set up
a ·Joe Louis Food FTanchlse CQrp., which
they hope will franchise ~uranl! here
and abroad. Louis heads the firm and
Conn is vice president.
The· first francliised restaurant In lhe
chain is expected to open '"~ 60 days.
It will have an interracial administrative
staff.
Louis was heavyweight champion
longer than any other bOxer, ri:tirjng ift
194-9 after 12 years as 'iWst. He foulht 71
professional bouts, won M by knockouts,
made $.1.8 million and wound up owning
back laxes of $1.15 million. ,
Orange Cease
Weii&Jaer
)f<'ll get • 'loocl\ more -lhan we re ace~tomed to Friday, whife
the mercury holds fast to the low
70's along tt)e Orange CoasL ..,
~SIDE TODAY
Pick a wife who ho.s o. sem:e
of lnimor -that's th·r odtti«
gWtn in todat1'& 'Checking Urf
column on Page 7.
'! Ull'Un.DT-S T~ • .Juno U , 1'169
U.S. Asks Co ffi pronrise
' A ppeal at ·Pa r-is T alks Falls on Dea f Ears
PARIS (UPI\ -The United Stales lo-
fiay Cllled OD lbe ColnmWllsls ln vain to
lteCOllate In a spirit of compromlJe to end
tho VioWm war and briJ1I -lo
.... --· The -I by U.S .. chld negodalor l!W'f Clbot Lodi• al tho 23rd oeaaloo al
the Vlllamn peace talb fell oa dell ean.
I rWblle 1.-0dge sought to lhow the 11COID• '* groond" the United 11 a I e 1
lllani with allied and Codlmunlol peace ~.~lldeNisoo'• troop wlllldnwal ~
mLses u a maneuver to prolong the war
and called for adoption of the Viet Cong's
JQ..polnt plan as the only starting point for
ollatioos. neg ..
"Ou couaU'y will uamlne every
..... tbat my lead to peace," Lodp
said.
But the other side's answer to the allied
search for "common ground ... must be
described as negative," he said.
"To us. common ground 1nvolvea negotl.IUool and comp r om I 1 e, ei-
amJnaUOn and exchange of riewa," t,.odge
Aid.
"It b unlortunate, that YOW' 1ide
pe111ikoUy dlltorts the .,...ins al our
words and d. our actloas. ll la Un·
fortunate that, while we sean:b for com-
moa p-oUnd; you reject -as you did last
week -efforb to build a base for pro-
gress in these neJof.iations."
Lodge also said the U.S. delegation
would continue "lo search for common
ground 00 the key issue or seJf.
iieLermination of the South Vietnamese
people."
Lodge deplored the Vie.t Cong and
North Vietnamese refusal to negotlate
points bolh sides appe!!red lo be agreed
on, such as restoration Of Ute demilitarii·
ed tone (DllZ), the eadwlge al war ""'°'1en. -p!Wa wllh put ln-i-tloaal accords on Jndod!lnl and
~lion of Vietnam. -·''Jn.stead al a pnuiDe effort lo achlew
freedom al dlolee for tho people al ~
Vletnii.m, your llde unfortunately eon-
u-lo -the ~men! of the iqfllmate govemmenl lo S...th Vletum
before aerlool De1ollatlooa can btilo."
Lodge said.
"This cannot be described as a sincere
effort to find common ground or
negoUate -il is an effort to
predetennlne the ~tcome Qf tbe oeaoUa·
tloo before lt bu begun.'"
Girl· Raped
Before Death,
Doctor Says . ' .
Beoton 1lllCOOSdous and now cooflrm-
ed faped. a pretty Claremont teenager
may ha~ drOwned wtten left wi1b her
head in a remote canyon stream by her
ravlJher, tawmm revealed today.
Evidence of 1U1Jal brtercoune wu
discovered during a detailed autopsy on
_ the body al Virginia L. Smith, IS, the Lot
Angeles County Coroner's ~ said
Wednesday .
•
Death was originally listed a!I due to
seve~ head and n«k Injuries, but the
_p.retty young.s~·a ~gs contained wale~
1• and the beating Wounds were not as
ievere as first believed.
·-;:~ • U,I T .......
&;OOKINO FOR A LITTLE SUNSHINE IN IOWA
Los Angeles County Sheriff's homicide
Investigators theorize the La Puerta
Junior HJ1h School student leader'll death
may have resulted from what 1he ex-
pected to be an Innocent motorcycle ride
wllh a friend. · 'Timothy LHry and Unidentified Hipple Friend
•Let Sun Shine In~
But R ain Greets Lear y in Io wa
IOWA cm, IOO'a (UPI) -Dnll u -
perlmenler Tlmothy Leary greeted a
band o( hippie type followtn at the 4-H
flllryulnds Wednesday lo JYI>•• '1 am
ali¥&-and weU in lowa." -'
"Lei lhe IWI ahJOl ljot.lt ~ '*"--""' 1 In the lky above," f.eary said. '
A short time later 1 bllodbq rain drove
the gathering to shelter in nearby hog
and catUe bam1.
Leary, a self-proclaimed candidate lor
governor or Califomia, said the "Iowa Ci-
ty Awakening" ~·as a "political meeting
to start a happier way of life."
The approJ:imately 300 followers gave
him a smattering ·of cheen but most of
Paid to Attend
them jull .. ~ huddled In blanke~.
A rock singer, identified only as
"Harpo," foUowedJ..eary to the stage and
~•)•armer rectpUon. . -
Earliir ln the day, Leary ~eel
~tei••-r gi~~~ hit mattt and'told them preStdent Ni:ron
could "solve the problems of today" with
three.actions. He said Nixon should end
the Vietnam war, "the kids want life ":
end the draft, "they want freedom"; and
legalize marijuana .
Ltary, wearing a red and orange blouse
and bell-bottom trousers, Wd, "I am
happy to be here in the green grass and
pure air of Iowa." ,,.
Miss Smith was found Mopday by two
hikers in an isolated section of Cobalt
Canyon favored by dirt-bike eqthusiasts,
horseback riders and hikers.
Her clothJni bad been forcibly llripped
from her -although sticked neatly
nearby, apparently afterward -and
evidence showed she fought biUerly to
avoid her fate.
Voted moot popular girl by her
classmates just reeeatb', the victim may
have aceepled a ride from some.one ahe
knew the afternoon before she wu raped
end killed.
• 'A J7·y~lil7boy'°1wn to the family
had dropped off Virginia, the step-
daughter of a Los Angeles County pro-
bation oftiei!r at a girllriend's house
earlier in the afternoon.
The youp.gster was not home, so
Virginia started walki'1g back to her
family 's own residence two miles away-
but the isolated death scene is several
miles beyond there--and indicating some
type of tran1portaUon was involved.
OCC Gives Dropouts Help
DAILY ,l~OT "'ff"'"" SIMON ZEL LER TUNES UP HIS HAM RA DIO RIG
H1•dM for t he Desert With •Ton of Equipment
Beach Teacher to Lead
Ham Emergency Network
Simon Zeller, a HunUngtoo Beach
teacher, will lead a team or local ham
operators out into the hills of Escondido
Saturday morning to participate in an
emergency communications exercise in-
volving 100,000 amateur radio fans
lhnJUl)loul the United Slates.
Approximately one ton of equipment,
ranging from a teletype unit to a 1,000
watt transmitter will accompany t.hem
during the :z+hour exercise in which they
will attempt to make as many contacts
with other hams as possible.
According to Zeller, "the intent of the
nationwide effort is to test the response
of hams who ml1ht be called on to pro·
vide emergency communications in the
event of a disaster."
Manning the mountains of electronic
equipment along with Zeller will be Tom
U.S. Oka ys Grant
Of $1 Million
For utI Building
Barker, Jim Ford and Terry Neal, all of
Costa Mesa.
Each of the men are expected to take
two hour shifts on the equipment and will
be awarded points by the American
Radio Relay League for the number of
contacts they make.
"About two hours is all you can handle
on the rig," says Zeller. ''Especially if
it 's morse code. The beeps can really get
to you."
Part of the problem confronting tile
\Yirebugs will be in setting up the equip-
ment in a remote location within three
hours and to keep the portable generator
and radio equipment operaUng without
failure during the test period.
"There have been unexpected pro-
blems, too," sa.id Zeller such as leaving
vital parts at home or being attacked by
insects of all kinds to the point where
continuing the operation would have re-
quired medical aid. The idea is to learn
how to adjust to these une1pected pro-
blems."
All or the 100,000 hams jamming the
airwaves beginning noon Salurday tnd
endlng noon Sunday will be on the honor
system on the number of contacla: they
report.
"Since there is llCI money Involved, t
A $1 million grant available to UC don't think there will be any cheating.
Irvine for use toward coru;truction of an The only prize you get is satisfaction,"
administrative 'Office building was an· said Zeller.
nounced today by the U.S. Ofijce of When queried about what the trans·
Education. American ham jam would do to television
Releate of the federal money is con-receplion, Zeller replied, "it should do
Fro• P .. e J
' SUSPECT •• •
police lo a modem Spanlah·sll'le aparl-.
ment house at 15491 Pasadena Ave. eartJ -"
Wednesday, where they lound Susan C.
Adams, 20, murdered.
Tbe vio:lla\ bad beel1 bludgeoned on ll>t
ildo Gl'U. -wllJI • bea¥1 balbt• E',
Chen ...,,.... -• "aifl olljlol, pos~bly. a p!Jlow, ""'"""~ depuUenald. '!'UsU!t Poll<t Chief Glean Slss<I ... .
tlli_ l"'lllMf Onngf Cout C.Uete •latl!D! :
... .,np1= ~~=~ ~~1':-~ •. ~ ...... •bt!ID:lln-~ r:;JJ:-I Ip~ ~.:---1:.t.'":. .... :
Jrvtne ·8'1111;"'1 ... lf4frf1 !f!ifl .;.
listed the sam• address. · '
Miss Vick ~u at fl/>I. t!J<>usht 1o be •
go-go ~r Wednesday due to confusion
over her sister's occupaUon. ,
Sheriff's deputies called to the orange .
grove about 5 a.m. arrested Vick on .
suspicion of murder, and he was booked
also on an Oregon warrant charging him .
with auto theft
Investigators said when they found
Miss Adams' body, there were lraees of
flesh and hair under her flngemaila, in·
d!cating llhe tried lo fight off her slayer.
The investigators al.90 said thal Vick
had nail slashes on hi! face and samples
taken from Miu Adanis' body were being
analyzed by the Orange County Sberifrs
crime lab Wednesday.
No precise motive bas been offer~ fur
the. tragic killing, but Chief Sissel said ~
day the pair met six months ago and at
appeared to be a l?vers' quarre~. . 1 Dressed in a n1ghtbown, Miss Vick s
blood·spatt.end body had been covered by
a spread a.a she lay at the fool of the be.d
in the two-bedroom apartment she shared
with her sister.
Mrs. Sireika, estranged from her hus-
band was working at the time her
younier sister wu slain.
Authorities said today Miss Adams had
planned to go to Australia to try op-
portunities in that t'Olllltry and already
had her passport, but apparently changed
ber mind recently.
Neighbors said both the murder victim
and her older sister were attractive girls.
but quiet tenants who promptly paid their
renl and rarely mixed with others. "
The body was taken to SaddlebacW:
Funeral Home, where arraneements will.
be made by the sisters' parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Adams, 1431 Cypress Ave.,
Santa Ana.
Authorities said today the Medford,
Ore., auto theft charge against the
murder suspect. stems from his renting
the 1969 sport coupe in which he iit.
tempted to commit suicide Wednesday.
The car was leased or rented but not
returned on time and authorities said it
seems doubtful under the circumstances
lhat he will be prosecuted for the lesser
offenst.
Tustin police said Wedne:wtaY while
Vick was being questioned prior to book·
ing al Orange County Ja.il that they
believed him to be the telephone tipster
in the murder case.
Boy May Solve
42 Car The fts
tingent on approval by the California nolhing at all."
Legislature of the remaining $3 m~ll~on ''Most of the experienced ope rators will Anaheim police stopped a 15-year-old
toward the slightly over $4 m1llion be out seck.ing higher grOund for better boy Wednesday for a minor traffic viola-
building. transmission and reception but there are lion and now think they have solved 41
The $3 million is included in Gov. a few kids who doo'l have cars and cases of car theft.
Reagan's 1•10 budget now before :. .. e couldn't move their equipment. They Ofricer Wayne Durtz, while questioning
Legislature. might have to set up in their backyards the boy, became suspicious of his story
ff the appropriation Is approved, con-and this could conceivably interrupt that he had borrowed the car from his·
struction will begin this fall witb com· television recepUon, but it's no t too like-father. A check with the owner revealed
pletion slated for mid 1971, a campus ly." the car wu stolen.
spokesman said. . Zeller, who teaches mathematics al The boy then told the officer a dust
UCI administrative ofrices temporarily Westminster High School, has been a covered car in lhe Ball-Knott Shopping
are located in the library building. radio amateur for the past five years and Center, the scene of the interview, was
A group of high s c b o o I dropouts,
di5Cipllne-problems all, iJ being paid to
attend Orange Coast College.
Thµty-tv.·o hours a week the former
dropouts I e a r n to do anything on an
automobile that CJtO be done ln a aervtce.
staion : brake work, aligrunent, wheel
balancing, lube and oil changes, minor
tuneups -you name il
Most of the young men were not "tum-Vacated space would be put to library holds an advanced license, which is ooe another he had stolen.
ed on" the first two weeks of clau. But uses. step removed from the highe st honor a Gradually the boy revealed 40 other car
There the drop ouls learn to become
service station mechanlcs and take a new
int.ere.st in school, partly becaU9e they
are being pajd fl.60 an hour to learn.
The n young men ln the program who
were referred by the Neighborhood Youth
Corps of Santa Ant have several Utlngs in
common; they hive had discipline pro-
blems, dropped oul of high ocllool, and
moat are under 11 years old.
Wqes art bel.Dg pa1d to I.he. ltwienll
with federal Manpower Detense Training ~ Tbe inlltructora' salary ii paid
/ by orqe Coat Junior College Diltrict.
DA IL' ~!LO I
............. Mst1klf1e ..... --_,..., --CAltfOlU
OfWtOI CO.U1 P\IM.tamMt ~,.,....,
I•~ N. w.11 .,..,,.. ... "'*"""'
J•c1i a. c •• 1 • .,
Ylct ~I ... 0-.rtf IMMIOI•
T~NW• ...... a ...
lk•111•• A. M•rpllln• ..._.,.l ... -
When they have learned what they need
to know -and more Importantly, when
some attitudes have been changed, ao that
they will ~e able to gel a job and keep it
-the college 'helpt them find those badly
needed joba. For a1niost all of them , it
will be their [Inf: gainful job, one which
requim il 81!:01. With that comes a sense
of pride.
Pat Emard. a tan tilonde from the San·
ta Ana brancll of the Nelghborhood Youth
Corpll, .Bets an obvious aatls!acUoo from
helpiri&'tbese YOUfli men get a start.
"'Wi try to teach \hem to have a sense
or. responsibility and good work habits
and atUtudes," she said. "Be(ore they
came here, most of them had absolutely
no motivation . Some of them have great
troubles with EngliSh, and tT\Clit. of them
felt they really had no reason to try."
From P age J
HIJACK ...
pistol. It did not give llls nationality.
It waa the 20th h1Jac1dng of the year or
a U.S. airllntr to the Communist Island.
The jet was hlJac~ed IS miles west of
Ri>1mkte, at t :20 p.m. PDT alter taking
off from Los Angeles, the FAA said.
The pilot, Capt. Edwerd Nibur, 59, ol
Bernadsville, N.J., radioed uklng for a
rOltbtg to Havana.
United olJlclals uld there w a t" no
further contact w:ltb the pilot after hiJ
tene mes.sagt..
"We knew ii waa hij1cked then and we
don't ask questions under tho 1 e
circumrt..ancff." said an FAA spokesman
In l<o Angel ...
The plane's roote lo lhe Communist
Island look It OV<r Albuquerque N.M.;
Fort Worth, Tex.: Ale11ndria, La.:
Talia~ and Key Well, Fla.
A Trans World Alrllnea )el one hour oul
of Oakland bound for New York WA
pirated June 17 and diverted 2,700 milts
to Cube, lht longest hlJ1cklng an recant.
A Newark•to-MlamJ EA1lC11J Alrllnu
Jet was hijacked to Cuba Sunday.
i
when they actuaUy began working on Site of the proposed administrative of-ham can receive. lhefts in a. mile-square area near the
cars and trucU in the third week, in-rices buildlng is a parking 104. just east of H i s hobby is driving him out of the center. He is being held in juvenile hall
terest came quickly. the Commons Building at the main en· house, so to 11peak, since the morse code on suspicion of grand -very grand -
Faculty members brought their can 1i"tr;;anee;;;;;;';;';;th;;e;;c;;am;;;;pus;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i;i;gnals;;;;;;';;r;;re;;nd;;;;lhe;;;;le;;nd;;e;;r;;e;;a;;rs;;o;;f;;hi;;s;;w;;if;;e.;;;;;;th;;el;;;l;;a;;;u;;;l>iii.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ over to let the youlhl work on them. ti
They paid for the parts and the young
men supplied the labor.
Len Schreiber, the instruct.or for the
course, ls as turned on with lbe program
as lhe students.
"Working with these kids has betn
fun," Schreiber aald. "I really mun that.
Once they get going, there was juat no
holding them back.''
Schreiber sees only one drawback -
and It's not the fauh of the. students.
"We are turning out trained young
men," he aakt, "capable of holding down
a Job with any organlzaUon. Bul a good
share of. thtm are under II yean of 11e.
.Thi4 m1kes tl bard for them to find a job,
and if they ha'{e to wait six months or so,
l'm afraid they'll drlft back to ·their old
habits.
''If people will only hire lhem, they'll
do a job for them . And they'd like the
chance."
How about hiring them? If somtone
does. \'Jill they stay on the job? According
to Mias Emi'lnt, lhe it8tistlcs shaw that
these boy1 Jut longer on the job than
others.
"One rta&On is that they have been
turned down so many Urnt.I Jn tht ~st
that when they do get a job, they value 1(
and they kctp it,'' she Wd ... They want a
job badly."
RFK Widow to Attend
Grapepickers' Party
lltW YORK (UPI) -Mrs. Robert I".
KtnntdJ' will make one of hor "'"' publlc appe1r1nces Saturday when she attends a
fWMH-alsloa party In Southampton, !l.Y.,
on behall of the calJlornla grapeplcken.
The United Yann Workt11 Union are setklnl lo Of11ni? table grape ol<ken In
Calllonila ovtt tho oppos!IJon ol viney1rd ownen. The party Mil, Kennedy will al·
ti::nd will be at the Mntner home of
Aatemblyman Andrew Stein, a Manhat-
tan Democrat.
.JJ. J. (Jarrell~
14th SEMl·ANNUAL
Now lta Progress With Substantial
Reductio1as 011 S11c la F a11aous Brands A s •• e
e HERITAGE e JAMESTOWN e HECKMAN e TOMLINSON e CENTURY e BRANDT e KINDEL e KARGES e HIBRITEN
50 0/0 ALSO REDUCTIONS UP TO /C AND MORE
ON MANY FLOOR SAMPLES, DISCONTINUED PIECES AND-
WAREHOUSE ITEMS • , ,
H.J.GAl\R.ElT fURNrJURE
-..
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR OES16NERS Open Mon., Tt,ur1 ., & Fri., Ev11.
COSTA MESA , C>.llP.
2 2 I 5 HARBOR IL VD.
646 . 0275 646 -0276
j
'I
j
Duntjngton Beaeh
voe. 62, NO. 152, l SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
--
T ... y's P .... . -.... _ -. -
N.Y. Stoeki
I' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY,' JUNE 26, '196t TEN CEt-ITS
" . I
Beach Girl Found Dead l
Syringe Near Body; Police Seek Mystery Witness
OAILY l'ILOT SllH PlltN
SIMON ZELL ER TU NES UP HIS HAM RADIO RIG
Headed for the Desert With a Ton of Equipment
Beach Teacher to Lead
Ham Emergency Networl\
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of t1M1 Delly 1'1191 Slaff
Simon ZeUer, a Huntington Beach
teacher, will lead a team of local ham
operators out into the hills of Escondido
Saturday morning to participate in an
emergeocy communications exercise in-
volving 100,000 amateur radio fans
throughout the United Slates.
ApprJlJ.ipiatell' one ton ~ equipment,
ranging from a tcletyJJe untt to a 1,000
watt transmitter will accomp~y them
during the 24-hour exercise in whikt' ~
'v111 attempt to make as many contitl8
\l'ilh other hams as possible.
According to Zeller, "the intent or the
nationwide effort is to test the response
of barns who might be called on to pro-
l'ide emergency communications in lhc
event of a disaster."
"There have been unexpected pro-
blems, too," said Zeller such as leaving
vital parts at home or being attacked by
insects of all kinds lo the point where
continuing the operation would have re-
quired medical aid. The idea is t.o learn
how to adjust to these ~pected PJ"O:'
blerns."
All of the 100,000 hams Waml.ng the
airwaves \e~·SatUrday r.ncl
ending noon Sunday will be on tbe ho~r
st'~leul .oa the nwnber of contact& they ~ ':•
""Since there ts no money involved, I
don'I thlnk there will be any cheaUng.
The on1y prize )'OU get is satisfadioo,''
said Zeller.
Long Beoch police today.,. cooductlng
a maasive aearcti for a possible mystery
witness to the death or an 18-year~d
Huntington Beach girl who was found
dead in a Long Beach motel Wednesday.
The man, who was described as a male
Negro, approximately six-foot three In.
ches, about 30 and weighing 170 opunds,
was seen leaving the motel, located at
1021 E. PacWc Coast Highway shortly
before the body was found.
Valley Officer
Tells His Story
Of Ship Cr~h
Lt. Cmdr. George Lee McMichaels. of
Fountain Valley, the executiYe officer of
the destr.oyer Frank E. Evans .. tufJfied
today before joint Australian.u.s: in·
vestigatlon board on the crash of his ship
and t h e Australian carrier Melbourne,
wb:'.e his family wail! for his return.
"We're waiting patiently ror the end of
the inquiry and his return," said Mrs.
McMichaehs, 9065 Columbine St., Founain
Valley.
McMichaels hasn't been home since the
Julie 3 collision which killed 74 membel'!
cf the 273 officers and men aboard the
&hip.
Testifying before the investigating
board at Subic Bay, Philippines, today
McMichaels said the Evans had more
than enough life jackets aboard the abip
when it collided with the Melbourne.
Sgt. David A. Bauer of the Loog Beach
police homicide dlvlslon sald the girl,
Patricia M. Buscaglia, of 10102 Crailet
Drive, was discovered al J :30 p.m.
sprawled on the floor of one of lhe rooms.
A hypodermic syringe was found near
the body, said Sgt. Bauer, but the con-
tents have not yet been analyzed.
He added that there weni marks on
Miss ,Blltcaglia's arm which could have
McMichaels, 34, noted that the ship has
70 inflatable life jackets and 24.S U,pok
W. jacket> iln· the •hip for a ~.ti•
-42 more than the ship's m olficth
and men.
He said there were aboUt ltcl, fo-i5' t
jackets aviUable in the •f1'r ~µ.!1:1,E!
\ht ~ Whl<h remained illoat ...-:-
dellrO)'er was sliced in hro. ' ..
Olb:V l'l\.OT Stiff ....,.
GO llerttor'• )i..111 In other i.stimooy, M a c h I n er·y
Repairman Donald A. E.'.lkken, 30, BtoOJn..
ington, Minn., said lightl In the port
passageway were not on, but that ii·
lumination in his comp,artipent was "ade·
quate.
. . . -
been caused by a need.le, but final
detenninaUon is pending a coroner's
autopsy later today.
Her unidentified companion left the .
Patio Motel two hours before the girl was
found, police said. She was dressed lo a
T-shirt, blue jeana and was wearing no
shoes.
When leaving the motel, the man told a
deaning woman that his wife was pack·
LA Jetliner
Freed by Cuba,
Flies to U.S.
MIAMI (UPI) - A United Airlines
Jetliner, hijack!Jd while on a flight from
Lo:: Angeles to NtW York and detained tn
Havana 13 hours because of "mechanical
dilficulties," was finally released today.
The airliner was cleared at 1:06 p.m.
and took off on Its 33 minute. flight back
to Miami IntunaUonal Airport. The
Federal Aviation Agency said it had been
unable to determine the nature of the
mechanical problem..
· The FAA official said the elght
crewmen and 50 passengers who arrived
In Havana about mJdnlght we~ taken to
hotels for some sleep. ·
The Uoited Airlines DC& was com·
mandeered 11 minutes after takeoff from
Los Angeles Wednesday · aftemooo.-and
arrived at Jose Marti Airport in ·Hlvana•
11,1,orp.m, PD'I' Wednlld~~~IQG. .... fll&lllowai the ....... 'ii•
transcontlnenW •~liner wHl>ln . etaht
~= ' ' ' • I ·~"•"!""• Radio Havana 11ld toda.. ' u ~ ecked b an lndl vldu.j · : ' • , p~1il>I. II~ not ,tve h11 na . • '.
It wu"U>e IO!b hijacking bf the yw ol
a U.S. 1irllner to the COmmunlit 11land.
'11ie jet was hijacked 15 'miles west ot
Riverside, at 4 :20 p.m. PDT after taking
oU !rom Los Angeles, the FAA said. .
1be pilot, CapL Edward Nlbur, 59, of
Bernad11vllle, N.J., radioed asking for a
routln; to Havana. Manning the mountains or electronic
equipment along with Zeller will be Ton\
Barker. Jim Ford and Terry Neal, all of
CosLa Mesa.
When queried about what the trans--
American ham jam would do to television
reception, Zeller replied, "it shoWd do
nothing at all."
"Most or the experienced operators will
be out seeking higher ground for better
tranSmissioo and reception but there are
a few kids who don't have cars and
couldn't move their equipment. They
might have to set up in their backyards
and this could conceivably interrupt
television reception, but it's not too like-
ly ."
Seaman Robert A. Codemo, 19, said it
was "pitch black" in his own com·
partment at the moment of impact.
Mrs. Nancy Reagan describes
her first date with the gover·
nor-1 .. be • in DAILY PILOT
writer Jean Cox's story on the
cover page oi the Women's
Section in today's edition. United officials said there w a s no
further contact with the pilot after his
_ terae message.
Each of the men are expected to take
two hour shUts on the equipment and will
be awarded points by the American
Radio Relay League for the number of
contacts they make.
"About two hourii is all you can handle
en the rig," says Zeller. "Especially if
it's morse cod!l -The beeps can really get
to you."
Part of the problem cOnfronting the
wirebugs will be in setling up the equip.
ment in a remote location "'ithin three
hours and to keep the portable generator
and radio equipment operating without
failure during the test period.
Zeller, who teaches mathematics at
Westminster High School, ha:i: been a
radio amateur for the past five years and
holds an advanced license, which is one
step removed from the highest honor a
ham can receive.
H is hobby is driving him out of the
house, so to speak, since the morse code
liignals offend the tender ears of his wife.
McLaughlin Wins
College Title
SEA'M'LE (AP) -A s trong
performance in the final three races
\Yednesday gave Tom McLaughlln o! San
Diego State a victory in the Ncrth
American Intercollegiate Single-handed
Sailing Championships on n e a r b y
Shilshole Bay.
Balloon Kids
Ready to Shoot
For Moon Frtday
Hundreds of brightly-colored balloons
are expected to dot the skies ever
Westminster Friday afternoon as c J t y
youngsters launch t h e helium-filled
globes during the aMual "Balloon to the
:P..1oon" contest.
Tustin Murder Suspect
Saved From Suicide Try
The victory gave the CalUornlans a
sweep In the regatta. McLaughlin and Ed
Butler of Southern Californla earlier won
the team championship and the district
team racing event.
Harvard's Robbie Doyle, who had been
leading going Into the final day of races,
fell from contention with 7th, Bt.h, 11th
and 9th place finishes .
Stoek Marken
The event, sponsored by th e
Westminster Progressive Lions and 'the
Recreation and Parks DeP.artment,
begins at 3 p.m. at each neighborhood
playground.
Each child will be asked to fill out a
card. bearing his name, address and
telephone number and attach It Lo the
balloon when · it is released.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 9119 Diii" flli.t Slaff
Rescued as he was about to join his
1r.eetheart in death by auto gas a11phyi:·
laUOn in ll looe.ly orange grove near
Tustin, a young Washington business1m1-n
today wails to be arraigned for her pilklw
suffocation murder.
George A. Vick, 29, was pulled from hts
rented car by two laborers who found
him lying on the se:.t about 5 a.m.
Wednesday, a 5()-.foot garden hose running
from the exhaust pipe into the auto.
Tustin Police Detective Jack Terry said
a "Complaint 'charging the paint contractor
with murder -the city's first fn 17 yea rs
-"1ould be obtained from the Oranae
County District Attorney later today.
An anonymous telephone tipster sent
police to a modern Spanish-style apart·
ment house at 15491 Pasadena Ave. early
Wednesday, where they found Susan C.
Adams, 20, murdered;
The victim had been bludgeoned on the
aide of the head with a heavy instrument,
then suffocated with a soft object,
,ossibly a pillow, coroner's deputies saJd.
Tustin Police Chief Glenn Sissel said
the former Orange Coast College student
and unemploye<I bank clerk shared the
apartment with her sister, Mrs. Msry
Slreika. 23, a bar hostess.
Authorities sa id Vick -who hadn't In·
hilled enough automotive fumes to afrect
him when rescued from suicide nur
Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road -
Uated the aame address. •
Miss Adams was f1m' thought to be ll
go.go dancer Wednesday due to confusion
over her 1ister'11 occupation.
Sberlfl'• depuU.1 called lo \he oran;o
' "
grove• about 5 a.m. arrested Vick on
suspicion of murder, and he was booked
also on an Oregon warrant charging him
!See SUSPECT, P11e I)
NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market
was a loser again today, although some
selective buying reportedly helped it trim
s h a r p early losses. (See quotations,
Pages 26-27).
The balloon returned to the Department
office f r o m the greatest distance will
win a prize for the youngster sendin& #le
balloon and the person returning the at·
tached card.
Industrial Land Use Urged
V alley Planners A dvis ed to Hold 700 Acres
By TERRY COVILLE developed are.a is south of Talbert and other light uses. No further sug-
Of 1t1• 04i1" P11tt st.tr' Aventre. gestlons were made . on possible tern·
Fountain Val ley curr«tU1hfs700 1cre.s 'Planners were told that land 11 develop· porary uses, but mobile homes were
of land zoned or ~~anned for in-lng fast In-Orange County, and Fountain definltely ruled out.
dustrial use. That tota1 thoUld •not be Valley is losing out because of its image The city ws.s advised to set..k an lfl..
reduced and npld 'developmt'nt must be as a "bedrobm community." dl.Llilrial realtor and better publicity with
eneooraged. "You have to get out and sell industrial the Industrial community to sell itself to
'Jbese are the concluaions reached by developers on the Jdea of an industrial lndustry. ,
Lampman and A11oelat.e·S· and ~.·parkorpackagehere,"saldStapleton. The report also gives ·sketct\es of sur~·
Urbanomics Research1 Aa9ociates ··in · a · Two reasons were given for main. rounding Industrial gl'O'Nlh and pridic-
report.presented Wednesday night,di.uing taining the indLl!trial land and devetopiog tio1J~~f9r Juture development in -Orange
a special JeMion of the Founta.ln Valley it for thlt use.. Qxmty.
PlaMing OommlJsion. First, the avallabl~i:~ of Industrial It toot • quick slap at a proposed in.
ChgrJl!s Stapleton, verbally hitting the land is needed to u te the futuni duStrtal , alrp,ort OJl Ft\lntaln V1lley'a
highlights of the 30-page report, urged the economic 11"0\rth of the community1 . acrellge, saying the alr facility would use
city to adopt a genuine "marketing Second, healthy industrial development up about 100 aettS of the city's remaining
system" to help property owners develop will bolster the future fiscal base of the acreage, and dodbls were eipressed
their land for industrial uses. community. •· about the; actual dri.wlng.power iC would ·
The area generally planned for light In. Two problems mu~t be dealt with by have lo llght.'lndustry.
dustry i9 bordered on the east by the San. the Cit)', explalntd the report. An Interim · Stapleton, admllt~. hQwever, that the
ta Ana Rivtt, en the south by Garfield use must be found for the land while pro-report had''not had time to make a
Avenue, on the north by Heil Avenue, and perty ownen waiflQr Industry to ventui-e ~ ~1ef an~!M.&striai ilr i)lrk
on the west by port.iorui ol Ward Street, forth and the dty must BCtlve1y lry to t f~Uf\. / , '
Euclid Slrttt and Newhope St""'t. sell the Idea of Founlain Valley OS U '(n. • i ' PfMOel'lJ ..,..i.abauf .... holJr llJtenlog
, Currently lot acres are developed, In--du strial community. to the report. then !let July IS, during •
eluding the land used by the Orange Interim uses no _employed include regular planning commlsa1on meeun, (or QJwJIJ S.nllallon Dlolr\cl. Mosl of tbo fannln,(, a1ab11J1i of borsea and catlle, • public hearing oa the report.
.. , t
"We knew it waa hijacked then and we
don't ast questions under t h o 11 e
circumstancts, '' said an FAA spokesman
in Los Angeles.
The plani;'s route to the Communist
Island took it over Albuquerque N.M.;
Fort Worth, Tei.: Aln:andrla. La.;
Tallahuae< and Key Welll, 1la.
Police Arrest 2
Robber y Suspects
At Beach Tavern
Gilligan's Isle, a little bar on Sth Street
in Huntington Beach, proved to be no
paradise for police early this morning as
three officers made two arrests there on
charges of strongann robbery.
Officers were flrat called to the bar on
a report I.hat a man inside was carrying
a weapon.
Two officers entered the bar while one
went to the rear. lnll\dc, police said, were
seven or eight members Qf an "out11w"
motorcycle gang, and a. transient named
Robe.rt L. Souza, 25, no address given.
Souza wu taken out&lde, searched and
found to be carrying a .22 caliber revolv-
er. fie was booked into Hunllngton Beach
City Jail at 1:3o a.m. today, on suspicion
or armed robbery.
Arresting officers are 'Investigating lhe
possibility or a connection betWeen Sour.a
and three anned robberitll committed
between II and 11:30 p.m., Wednesday , in
Garden Grove, Santa Ana and Costa
Mesa.
While Souza was being searched, tt,e
third Huntington Beach offioor beard a
rustling sound in the alley to the rear ot
the bar. A quick search by flUbllght, \he.
omcer claimed, aboWed Jciin R. Keenan,
31, of 319 14th St., Huntington Beach,
d.raging an old m•ll througb the alley.
Police lm!oted and booted Koenen Into'
HunUogton Beadl City Jail o• 11W1plclon
of• atroogann1.robbery. The alleged vk>
tim, Harry D. Hyde, 73, of 2111 5th• St.,
Kuntinlloo :Beadl; 1<>14 police he wua't
!lire What hap~ and that be might
have been "rolled."
He wu found with cuts aiid brul.ses
about U>e face, bot nol leMooJaly tnJurtcl,
said police. · • ,
Oflicers Indicated that.the .. molorcyole.
gang'' lnslde G\1Ugan'1 l1le may have
been Ute same one rtpOried earlier lri \he
night ., -cWllnc trouble at two other
il\Ullln&100·8'och ban. . • .
&th 8ouu and Ktonon -re,...lo-lie 1r-
ratgned Ulb alttrni>on 0.. Frid.; lltorilirlg
tn Well Orange Colmly Munldpal Court, w .. 1m1nsur. · •
• No ...
Ing and that he would return later to .pick
her up.
Deputy Los Angeles Coroner Arthur
Bustamante said investigation of the
case, Including the inquest is: coot1nulng
and that a N!port staUDg the cause cf
~tiss Buscaglia'a deith wOutd be illued
later today.
Miss Buscaglia was 1 Junior at Hun·
tington Beach High Sc11ool until Jlb. 10
when she dropped au o( ber clJ.wl,
. \IPI T.1~.
RUSHED TO HOSPITAL
Ex-loo~•r Joo Lovl•
Ex-€hamp Louu
Collapses, Ruslied
To NY Hospiml
NEW YORK (UPI) -Legendary
heavyweight champion Joe Lo\rls was
rushed to Beekman Downtown Hospital
today suffering from wha~ was described
as 'jph)'sical collapse."
Louis, who reigned as champion from
1937 until 1949, "complained of stomach
pains to his attorney, Leon Charney, who
...,.as driving him from a televison I~
terview. Charney lmmediateiy drove-the
55-year-old Louis to the hospital, and he
was rushed into the emergency room for
an uami.JlatJon.. His coqdition . was
reported as "good" by the llo5pital.
Louis' wife, Martha, and Abt Margoles,
a business as.sociate, remained with him
at the hospital and reported that he was
con!!<:ious and in good spirits.
The attorney said that Louis probably
didn't suffer a heart attack, however, and
would be released In a few days.
Earlier, a police department
spokesman had said that Louis had ap-
parently suffered a heart attack.•
Louis and ex-boxer Billy Conn an-
nounced Wednesday that they have aet up
a Joe Louis Food Franchise Corp., which
they hope will franchise restaurants here
and abroad. Louis heads the firm and
conn is vice president.
The first franchised restaurant in the
chain is expected to o~n within 60 days.
It will have an interracial administraUvt
staff.
Louis was heavyweight champion
longer than any other boxer. retiring in
1949·after 12,Years as dtllst. ~e fought 7L
professional bouts, won M by koociouts,
made $3.8 million and wound ·up awning
back taxes of $1.2$ million.
Orange Coast
Weatlter
' We'll get a touch more sun than
we're accustomed to Friday, while
the mercury holds fast to the low
70'a along the <>range Coast.
INSmE TODAY
Pick a U!ift who ha.s a semi
of ·humor -that's-· th~, odvfc:c ~
(fivn in toda1''S :Chtckffto 'Up' ~"
column on Page 7. '
. !
,,
' '
.
oi..PuiJf~.~~lk~ F4'!1 on. ·Deaf ~ar•.
• PARIS (UPI) -Th< Unlled Stales t ..
.day Cllltd on U)e. Communlst.s In vain lo
114 ,..._in a .,UH of compromise to end
Ille v-. ., aDd brio& poaco lo
"Sc>uthWt Alla.
_ 'lbl ·1ppeal by U.S. chief nego~ator Jfemy Cabot Lodge at the 23rd seaion of
'the •lli&DarD peace talks fell on deaf ears.
lllllle Lodp ....... Jo -the "com· m. pmd1• the UDUed S la t e s
ahlnl 1'WI aJW ud CommwUlt peace
plans, the Communist side denounced
President N1J;on '1 troop withdrawal pro-
mises as a maneuver to pRIGng the war
and Cllled IDr ....,.... ol Ille Viet ()q's
11).polol ploo n 'the 11111 &taltlog point for
negotiations.
''<klr COi.Dry wW eumlne every
....... lhat -lwl lo peace, .. Loclge
HEl.D
0
IM lUSTIN SLAYING
Mu ..... Suspect Vick
,.,.._P .. eJ
SUSPECT ...
with auto theft.
•
Inveotlplors aid when lboy found
Ml.tJ Adams' body, there were traces of
flesh and hair under her fingernails, ;n-
d'.caling she tried to fight OU her slayer.
Tbe' investiptor1 alio aaid~t Viet had 11.0 ,._ • 1119 ,_.. ..,..
taken from Miss Adm' bbdy r.·l>Ofril
onalyuxf by the Orange O>unty Sbaill'a
crime lab W-y.
No precise motive has been offered for
the lr•&lc killing, but Chief Slue! said .,_
day the pair met ah months ago and it
appeared to be a lo~rs' quarrel
Dressed in 1 nightgown. Miss Vick's
blood-spatWed boay bad been covered by
a lpr<ld u she lay at !be foot ol the bed
tn the hro.bedn>om apartment she !hared
with her giJter.
Mr!. Sireika, estranp!d from her m.
bml, wu working at tbt time ber
YOWl&U sister WU slain.
Laser Scientists
Plan Beach Meet
-, luer <xpuf.I from American
univenWet and industry are expected to
_. lo illlntingtm> Beacb Monday lo
participate in a three-day conference at
the Douglas Advanced R e 1 e a r c h
Lalloralories.
The •)'lllposi.... carrlu the theme
· .. LaHr Applications ln Uie Geosclencez"
and will concern tt.ttlt with lhe use of
laser1 to conduct meuurement.I of earth
stra.iu. aeologk:.11 sU'Ucture.a, atmospheric
characlerlllb and otbe.r phenomena..
Orp~ of ~' sympoglwn are Dr.
Joleroy ea..,., and Dr. Fretmao F. Ball
ol the ~ l.Oboratories ..
t11M11 cmat ......... C:C--AIA
l.M+ N. W ... _ ... _
J•c" I . C..lw vtce..,.,... _ _. ___
n-•• •-11 -lit•""•' A.. M•r!Jlil11t -·-IJNrt w .•• ,.. Wltll1111 ···' 4uoc:lelt twnl ...... ,..,. e.ilM Cl.., €d+llr
HM!lkl•• ...... Ofilc9
Jot .... StrMt
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~-.o. .... c... ......... c-....... , ........... -.....
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...., .. ,. F 'f-~-...... ·---............. ~_. .. .._. ...
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<11ut·•e111or·--wlllo-N-Ylotnan\eoo -lo --seareh for "COlll\!IOll ~ ..• mlUI be points both sld.., appear<d lo be qrttd
~scribed as MPliW. ' be sUd. on, such as restoration of the demilitua.. • .,.. us, ........, groond lmoifts ed ...., (DMZ), t!le ........ of _,
negotiations and c om p r o m I s e , ex-prisoners, compliance with pe..sl in·
aminaUon krid exchange of views,'' Lodge temational accords on Indochina and
said. reunification of Vietomt.
''Jt is unfortunate, that your aide "Instead of a genuine effort to achieve
pentst.mtly dlltorts the me1r11oc of Our freedom ol ~ ror1he people of South
words IDd of our acdor& Il ls un: Vietnam, JOUr lk1e unfortunaW, coo-
fottuuaae tbaf.. while we .earcb fer com-tlnues to demand lhe replaoemeat of the
mon groWld, you reject -as you did last legHimate government tn South Vietnam
week -efforts to buUd a base for pro-before serious negotiations can begin,"
gress in these M¥otiltlons." Lodge said.
J..odle allo 881d the U.S. deleg1Uoo '"l'hil eannot be dtscribecl as a sincere \fCMlld con.tmue "to .IN.f'th for o:xnmon effort to find commo111 iround or
ground on the key issue of self-negoUate -it is an effort to
determinilion of the South Vietnamese predetermine I.he outcome of the oegoUa-
people." Uon before tt lw bqvn."
Dropouts Ge1 Help
Paw to Attend Courses at OCC .
A group of high 1 ch o o 1 dropouls,
discipline problerrui tl1. ill being paid \o.
attenrl Orange ~llep.
There the dro~ learn !o become
service station mecblfi\cs aDd take a new
. intareat in -icbool; ~Y beelUle they
are belnt poicl 11.60 an bollr to learn.
The 22 young men In the program who
were referred b7 the Neighborhood Y~
Corps of Santa Ana haw several tblopia
common : they have had disc:ipllne pJ'O.
blems, dropped out of high school, and
molt art under .18 yean ttld. w., .. -being paid lo tbe -wttll l-11 ·Man-o.f .... Tralnloc
Act lunda. Tbe instructors' saiu,. ts paid
by Orange Coast Junior College Dlstrlot.
Tblrty·two hours a -k the lonner
dropouts 1 e a r n to do anythinr on an
automobile that tan be done In a service
&talon: tnke worl, alignment. wheel
~. lube and oil cbanceo. ""-
tuneups -you i:wne il ,
When they have leqrned wnat tbty need
to know -and more importaA\Jy, when '°""' aUtludes have been chuied so tha\
Ibey will be able lo get a job ,and keep ii
-!be college helps them Ond thole badly
.-i jobo. For olmo<t all ol lbem. It
will be their !int gainlw job. one whkh
requires a KW. With that comes a sense
ol pride.
Pat Emard. a tan blonde from the Sa~
ta Ana bruch ol the Neighbor-Youth
Cu<pc,.~-obvious ·--from be!~ young men get a starl
.. We trf lo ~ ~ Jo have a Fil!"
r,j(ftioiiii1Wij\and¥>if "'i; lMlb anraittiuOeis, ... she said.-"Before they
came here, most or them had absolutely
DO motivation. Some of tbem have great
troubles with English, and most of them
fclttbey rq bad no reason lo try."
Moot ol Ille--... DOI "tum·
ed oo" tbe ~two -ol dul. But
when tll<y 1101uaDJ. becu workinC on
can aDd ~ In tbe tlllrd week, In-
terest came qiulcklJ.
Faculty members bnlucbt their cars
over to )et tbe youths wort oa them.
Tiley poic1 lor tbe parts ml Ille young
men supplied the . labor.
Lei! Schreiber, the lostructor' fer the
cwr.1 la U turned OD with tbe program
astbeatudenb.
"Woning wttll tbeoe kids bu been
fun ,'' Scbreiber aid. "l reallJ me111 ·that.
Once tl)ey aet loill& there was jUlt no
holdlng them back. ..
Scbr<iber .... onlY ... --and It's nol tbe l1ull ol tbe students.
"We are tumlng out trained younr
men," he said, "capable of holding down
a job with any organiutlon. But a aooct
share of lbem are under 11 ~ of qe.
TblB makes It blnl for them lo !Ind a job.
and ii they have to wait Iii: mcmtbs or so.
I'm alralo they'll drill back lo tbelr old
habits.
"II people wW onlY bin them, they'll
do a job lor them. And they'd lll:e tbe
chance."
How about hiring them! II -
d ... , will they stay 00 tbe job! Acconllng
lo fdlu Emard, tlll! 'llatisllcs -thlt
tbeoe boys last i1111er on tbe job thin
others.
'"One -·~.!Pt they have been ' thed1w.;;;:.,. inYJ times in lhe past,
that when they do set a job, they vaJue it
and they keep it," she said. ''They want a
job badly."
LOOKING FOR A LITTLE SUNSHINE IN IOWA
TlmOthy LHry· incl Unidantlliad Hipple Frlancl
U'I Tei.tltlt
•Let Sun Shine In~
But Rain Greets Leary in Iowa
JOWA CITY, Iowa (U PI ) -Drug ex·
puimenter Tintothy Leary greeted a
band of hippie type followers at the f.H
fa irground! Wednesday to prove "l am
alive and well In Iowa ."
"Let the su n shine both down here and
in the sky above," Leary said.
A short time lat.er a blinding rain drove
lhe gathering to shelter in nearby hog
and catUe barrui.
Leary, a self·proclalmed candldate for
governor of California, said the "Iowa Cl·
ty Awakening" was a 11polilical meeting
&o start • happier way of life."
1bc appnabn.ately 300 followers gave
him a smattering of ch8rs but most of
them just 11t. huddled in blankets .
A rocl singtr, idenlified · only as
Douglas Employes
Display Art Work
Art w o r k 1 by 42 employes ol the
McDonnell Douclas Alrcrafl Co. ire now
on diaplay at the Long Beach Museum of
Art, 2300 E. Ocean Blvd ., Long Beach.
The exhibit of olls, water colon.
acrylics, drawings •nd 1eulptures will
~ontJnue through July 20.
"Harpo," followed Leary lo the stage and
drew a wanner reception.
Earlier in the day, Leary called
newsmen to an ouldoor gathering behind
his motel and told them President Nixon
could "solve the problems of today" with
three actions. He said Nixon should end
the Vietnam war, "the kids want life":
end the draft, "they want freedom "; and
legalize marijuana .
Leary, wearing a red and orange blouse
and bell-bottom trousers, sa.id, "I am
happ7 to be here in the green grass and
pure air or Iowa."
RFK Widow lo Attend
Grapepickers' Party
NEW YORK (UPI) -lllrs. Robert F •
Kennedy will mike one of her rare public
appearances Saturday when she attends a
fund-raising party In Southampton, N.Y .,
on behalf of the cautomia arapepicken.
The United Farm Workers Union are
~tekl.ng to organhe table grape picken in
California over the opposition of vtntyard
owne.ra. The party Mrs. Kennedy wlfi at·
lend will be at the summer home ol
Assembtym•11 Andrew Sttln_. 1 A-tanhat·
tan Democrat.
• .r
Hard Left Off Newport
Young surfer runs parallel to beach as he makes ha~ left along face
of wave during early morning session at 22nd Street and Ocean Front
in Newport Beach. Surfers -and photographer -were up early to
catch 7 a.m. action.
South Vietnamese Open
Lifeline to Sieged Camp
SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese
troops and tankers ,..ported today they
had punched through the C.Ommunlst en-
circlement Lo Ben Het, killing 214 North
Vietnamese and opening a new lifeline in·
to the besieged camp .
The esUmated 2,000 Reds lo the hills
around the 700-man allied aarrison
answered today with 60 more rounrui of
rocket, artillery and mortar rounds into
the camp.
Monsoon weather closed in around the
highlands 1Ntpost and shut off the runs
)Ol:.c:au.b plallel lbat drop IUPRIJ !~~,1 by ifafltf!Wite, bUt it didn't' ;1lintt'-' B5Z
bombera. In three strikes they dropped
270 tons on the outlying Communist pooi·
ti.oQ.; overnight ·
The South Vietnamese saJd they lost 17
men killed and M wounded in their drive
into the camp from Da,k Mot, fou~ miles
away. U.S. warplanes and hehcopter
gunships helped them blast away heavy
Communist resistance en route.
nieli' spearhead drove through to the
camp and opened the way for more con·
voys like the ones that arr ived from Oak
To, el&ht miles to the eaat, Monday and
Tuesday with supplle! enough t o
overcome the lack of parachute drops.
There was no ground fightinc around
the isolated Ben Het Green Beret outpost
in the past 24 hours as the Communists
seemed content to extend their 51-day
siece with rocket, mortar and artillery
barrages.
U.S. Army pilots reported kilting at
least Z5 North Vietnamese in two gunship
strikes within three miles of Ben Het, but
the Communist forces showed no signs
Wednesday of easing artillery attacks
that have laid more than S,000 rounds in·
to the camp since May 6.
About 100 rounds o[ 85mm artillery,
mortar and recoilless rifle fire burst
\\'ilhin Ben Het's perimeters, causing
light casualties among the U.S. and South
Vietnamese defenders.
Boy May Solve
42 Car Thefts
Anaheim police $lopped a l5-year-<1Jd
boy Wednesday for a minor tr•ffie viola·
lion and now think' they have sol\led (2
cases of car theft.
Off!C1!r Wayne Durtz, while questioning
the boy, became suspicious of his story
that he had borrowed the car from his
father. A check with the owner f'f!vealed
the car was stolen.
The boy then told the officer a dust
covered car in the Ball-Knott Shopping
Center, the scene of the interview, was
another he had !tolen.
Gradually the ~· revealed 40 other car
thefts In a mile-square area near the
center. He ls being held in juvenile hall
on suspicion oC grand -very grand -
theft auto.
Japan Hit by Rains
TOKYO (UPI) -Winds a;ustin& up tD
146 miles an hour and torrential rains lQ:
day lashed Japan's main islands, leaving
at least six persons dead, scores injured
and millions of dollars of damage.
.JJ. J. (}arrefl ~
Girl Left . ·t
To Drown -
After Attack
Beaten uncon.sc:loul!I and now cOnnrm.
ed raped, a pretty Claremont teenager
m-.y have drowned when left with her
htld in a remote' canyon 1tream by her
ravllbe.r, lawmen revealed todly.
Evidence or .MXUal tntercour°" was
dtscovered durln1 a detallod 1ulop11 '"1
the body ol Vlrslnil L. Smith, II, Ille Loii
AnpJea County Coroner'• office uid
Wedneoday.
llolth was originally lilted u due !o
,.vvt held ml neck injurlu. but the
pretty younc1ter'1 lunp contained water
and the butinc wowxil were not as
llVert U flrat believed.
Loi Anfeleo CuunlY 6herllf'1 homldde
lnveotlpton theorlae Ille La Puei1a
Junior lltih School atuclent laader'a death
may have reaulted from what lhe ex·
pected to be ID innocent motorcycle ride
...(th a friend.
llltss Smtih w11 lound Monday bf t,wo
hikers In 1n laol1ted teetlon of 1Cobalt
Canyon favored by dlrt·blke enUiualuts,
horseback rlder1 ind hikers.
Her clothing had been forcibly atripped
from her -althoulh 1tackod.;J1eatly
nearby, apparently alte:rward -and
evidence showed abe fo'llbt bitterly lo
avoid her fate.
Voted most popular elrl by her
claJ-Sltlates just rteently, the victim may
have accepted a ride from someone she
knew the afternoon before she was raped
and killed.
A 17·year-old boy known to the family
had dropped off Virginia, the step..
daughter of 1 Los Angeles County pro-
bation officer at a airllriend's howe
earlier in the afternoon.
The youngster was not home, !O
Virginia started walking back to hlr
family 's own residence two miles away..._
but the isola ted death scene is several
miles beyond there-and Indicating some
type of transportation was involved.
Questioning continued W e d n e s d 11 y
among friends of the savagely murd ered
girl, whose parents said she would never
go willingly with a stranger.
U.S. Okays Grant
Of $1 Million
:for UCI Building
A $1 million grant available to UC
Irvine for use toward construction of an
.administrative office building was an,
nounced today by the U.S. Office of
Education.
Release of the federal money is ccin·
tlngent on approval by the Callfomia
Legislature of the remaining $3 million
toward the slightly over ff million
building.
The $3 million is included in Gov.
Reagan's 196g.70 budget now before the
Legislature.
If the appropriation is approved, con-
struction will begin thl! fall with com-
pletion slat.ed for mid 1971, a campus
spokesman said.
UCl administrative offices tempora1·ily
are located in the library building.
Vacated space would be put to library
uses.
Site of the propostd administrative of-
fices building is a par!·ing Jot just east of
the Commons Building at the main en·
trance to the campus.
'
14th SEMl·ANNUAL
Now l1a Progress With Substantial
Red1retions On Suf!la F a1nous Bratads As • • •
e HERITAGE e JAMESTOWN. e HECKMAN
e TOMLINSON e CENTURY e BRANDT e KINDEL e KARGES e HIBRITEN
ALSO REDUCTIONS UP TO 50% AND MORE
ON MANY FLOOR SAMPLES, DISCONTINUED PIECES AND
WAREHOUSE ITEMS •••
H.J.GAI\I\ETf fURNllllRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thun., & Fri., lve1.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
2 2 I 5 HARBOR BLVD.
646 -0275 646. 0276
' r
J
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ThU<ld1r. June 26, 1969 • )(: ' OA!L Y •ILOT 7,
"-1-r ..... ·CHEC -Demacrats Claim Ni xon Has 'Hie-lie.l's Disease' G+~1A; GTON \AP) '
lb's d 'flmly !
•U FN1tr1\lct ·Demo er .. t I c
leaden tiaw -come up w I t h
the term il.ff1CteJ'1 diaeise" to ..._ ________ ....;;....L -~be l'r<sldent' Nixon's
· National Chairman Fred
Harris complitns !O C.11<.....,
that evtry, . t I m e the
Democrats set up a good
tssue;-Nlxon comes along and
carts it away -~ay, by
personally vlsitiilg a ghetlo ·or
checking Wuhlngton traffic
jams from a helicopter. Pick Wife With
Sense of Humor . ' .
By L M. BOYD
BELH!VE the most
dang 11;,. o us domesticated
animal ln the world is the
hostess w)lo continually pjl;t-
wealthiest working' woman In
the United states. Believe
·Jean Kert. tn. wrlter lady,
might be 11 capd)dtte for Jhal
l!lle. '
ters 111bout the room filling u:p . 1'$GARDLIS& of age at ex-
half-empty cocktail glasses. perience, tbet lady PbD earns $1 ,000 a year less on the
AN INFANT SPECIALIST • • a'fel'age thf.I\ the gentleman
contends ·OOblel left overlong PhD; , ·
~lllity •t ljlrnl\11 Issues lo his
on lldvanttp;' ' _,,_. ArOund ~"""National
o om m·ll i •:-' ~;adqUarten
"Hlckel'i ~·· means pre-
empting the Other fellow's
thing belore he gets a chance·
to do It hhn1elt.
The allUiioo · ls to the
transformation of the image
of Secretary of Interior Walter
J. Hlckel from that o1-. hi>n!-
noeed bulineuman into that of
a conservationist of the first
water after he took office.
\
It's not so much whaL Nixon
says that Harris is com·
plaining Bboµt, It's the lma1e
the President 11' crelUng tor
himself. ·
~ an example, Harrl! told
a groop-ol rtporlers Tueoday
that while the: President ta1b
a good civil rights program,
his advlsers have backed the
administraUon off from ex-
in thdr playpens tend to stand . •
up too much. This, he avers., 11 . BAVE.~RD Hu.nganan lS ....
apt to make them bow-legged the meet djifficult European
or knock-kneed. language tof speak. Is lha1
right?
THAT AGE" AT l!'ilICR •
divoired tMn -is·most •pt to
remarry, l~evi!r; is:32, J '
OF TH°"E COUPLES who
have been married at least 20
years, one out of every 100. will
get divorced, say the statisti-
cians.
IN JDS ADVICE to young
fellows on how to select their
wives, that great Love and
War man William Thackeray
said, "Above all, !el her have
a •sense of t.umor, for a
woman without a laugh in her
is the greatest bore In et·
istence."
.NOTE Levi~cus 11:20 me~ .:!.~t~ t1ons blrds with four feet, bu)· .; ,
names them n o t , wt-_,
ON A STONE in a
fortunately .
DO~ VENEZUELA still
charge only half-postage for
love letters in red envelopes?
What is a turken? Do some
people really get addlcted to
chocolate?
THE MARTINI ranks No. 2
among those executives who
like to take·• nip.-wlth lunch .•
Scotch and water ranks No. 1.
AT ANY GIVEN MOMENT,
graveyard at Oxford, N. H.,
can be seen the following
epitaph : "To all my friends I
bid adieu .•• A more sudden
death you never knew ••• AJ I
was leading the old mare to
drink • • • She kicked and till-
ed me qulcker'il a wink."
Rare sentiment.
36 percent oC aft teen-age girls 1
COfll<ncMhey't& in love while 1. f
only 25 percent of all teen-age '
boys contend likewise.
Q. 11WHAT'S the mQSt
popular jelly" A. Grape .• , •
Q. "How long is the
President's olflcial vacation?"
A. It's up to him .... Q.
"WHAT PERCENTAGE of the
stolen cars are recovered?" A.
Just 89 percent.
YEAR ROUND RES!·
DENTS on Cape Cod refer to
vacationers as ''summer com· ' ·
PRO~ABLY the m o I t
remarkable characteristic of
girls called Anita, says our
Name Game man, is their
ability to put former
gentlemen friends completely
out of their lives to start all
C1ver aa:ain.
plaints."
Your questions and com-
ments are welcomtd at1d
will be used wherever pos-
1ible in "Checkina Up."
Address ma i l to L, llf
Boyd, in care of the DA ILY
PJLOT, Box 1875, Newport
Beach, CaUf., 92661.
Picnic Set
'
AM ASKED lo name the J:or r~les '.,·"
4 in Newport "~~ ·~··r&'ausage,"·r<saUeikrallt ahd
Given Degr~es
Four Newport B e a c h
residents were among over
l,200 students receiving
bachelor of science degrees al
California State Polytechrdc
Co 11 e g e, Kellogg-Voorhis,
Pomona.
'80\lnds of Dave Miron's real,
live . polka baiid · will be
featured at the COrripton Hun-
1ing and Fishlni: Club net ~
Sunday at the POlish National
Alliance Picnic. · '
Scheduled from· 10 a.m. · t0 ·'1
p.m., site of the extravagama
will be at 1825 Sportsman
Drive, off At,lantic Avenue •
south of Alondra 'Boulevard in
Compton. : ·. Local students and their e<1l·
lege majors were: Richard J .
Coble, civil engineeri ng: Ken·
drick Eilers, accounting: Di·
ane Irene Gerlardi , applied
scien~; and John A. McAnHs,
history.
The Polish National Alliance
Council No. 73 invites &11
Southlanders including PNA
members and non-members ol
Polish extraction to attend.
Coming June 28 In
Family ~ekly
What Our Gls
in Vietnam
Are Really Like
1J CIAPLAll (CAPT.) AllGELO LlTEIY
a llld 11 lnla V. Imm
>. illaminating acxouat by a Raman Catholic
priest, awarded a Cotig ressional Medal of H0tt-
., d1ring his toar In Y11tnom, and his faith in
oer American you th. ·
Coming Saturday in +fie
DAILY PILOT
.. .
•
'
•
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546-7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9 to 5:30
SUIDAY 10 to 5a00 . "
'
" BIG BOY
BAR·li'i!Q';'.
O H•r•'t • bov W~a·fi ;;ork
for po11111it 1. •
D Complottlv 1notori1t4
with Mil11•ttblt 9rilt.. , , ..
\.'_ •• > ~ ' •s. iR1auns
'{ :
D Utt for 011y tilt, 1tvlt
b1rbtcuo.
D Hi ht tf, 1~9 burni..,,
m1kt 1 1vtrytltil'l9 t11t1
10 good.
0 Grt ot oclor too. you'll
91i11 lt 11 pouni:h ju1t
br11thi119 flit 1ir.
69c
WEBER BAR·B·Q
•
0 Cov1rtd b1rb1cu1
coo~i"t i1 ;.,, I m1111
out. olt, you kl'l ow whit
t rn••"·
0 Uitt 1011 ch1 rcool.
compl1t1ly porc1l1ini11d
lo 9u1rd 090;1111 ru1I.
0 In 1vocodo for 1dd1d
1l1tu1.
3995
5 YEAR ·GUARANTEE
WATER
HEATERS
0111 of eur haH1tl 11l1 i119
it1m1, lmy, th1t'1 cl1vt r.)
fDlly ·1ulom1ttc, 9!ou
li11ed, 011to 1hul off, ond
ropid r1oep.
; 30 GAL ............... 44ts
40 IOAL. .............. 49"
.,,,,,.. '"'-'
GRAVITY GATE LATCH
J '
0 ~otf9td I for Jtc 11 9ot1
latch cotcJ.1, out1111oti,olly
wh111 ft11c.1 ii '"'""9 •h11t.
0 Now, n• c•ll q,it
h•ll1rl119, "Joh1111., yov li ft
11ie ,,,, o"" .,.111."
0 I lit lio'll ri!!;d •11111thiltf
1l•o lo 110•• .,,,n.I
39c
---------------------
lendln( the)llS Vollllg lll&hl>
fod W1der which llprb said
there bad been a "treme0o;
doul" regtstratlon ot Ne'groes
ln tbe sou_1b for the first time._
up.
The eouncir o1 about :zo.
pmumably repmenlloa all f-In lhe l)lrtf, Will be JJ!a~ by H\\l>Ort H. Hum-
Dbrey. It won't be named unttl
Humphrey returns fh:m a cu~
rent ltlp lo Europe. cturln1
wbich be will visit the Soviet
Union.
11 Ix J>*l)le Uijt tdilia
M.~.-t-le Democrlu, Leadel-, mamec1
._ a'lelldhlf'-..ser' for lht
lfTtlom!NlJon,"'1Jl1becomeJ
member of Uio cooacl!, U he
does, be wW ibt Jbe <>Illy Jo.
.JI ............. !!!!!ii!!-·~-iii .. know., . ._ .........
to cur u.. pa-WI •
10 tha' /ft 0\11 ~ &
fl!oadl1 -........
He said the adrti~ation
.wu trying 'to curry ravor in
lhe SOUth •wblle maintainini it
wants civil rights f.o r
everyone.
to-blcolM arr!-' r d
'
•
'9.~ . .,.. aftlG» "rr
ell~ "'"' 't h ~ c:oo-gresalOnal leadlnllf~ lo aecept SO.· <.-Ylsllor
As for the Democrals, Har~
rls seems to think they are on
the road lo party unlly despite
some flareups here and there.
lie bas reached an un~
derstandlng with Democratic
congreulona1 leaders that he
will not step on their toes with
pronouncerilents of a party
policy council he Intends to set
•
•
an lnvlUitioo to particlpate.
Campus to Use MissiJn Inn
> I
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The University of Olllfomla cam-
Mlssion Inn, where Pruldent pus hert.
and Mn. Nb:on spent their Vice ChaqceUor _st~ r ~ 1 Edmund11 ays the University honeymoon, will be used this will ltue part of' the Inn to
fall to help relieve a student provide ll\llng space for both
housing shortage at t h e male 1Dd female students.
494.057'
"
Today's Final
Stocks Today
BRING YOUR JU'G
•
•
We'll Have A Grow~in
0 Aclv1rti11d tpt cio1r 9ood tllru July 2, 1'''· ••ti ll1w1 • wond1rf1,1l
fourth •f July ltol idoy !look far m1, I'll be down 1t th1 pior.I
•• I' r
20 INCH ROTARY
MOWER
0 lf yo11 w1nt •·91ad
OllD, tJ.i1 ft it.
0 luill to loit far y11n,
witt! up top confral1,
0 F11ll ed91 to trim
1clju1tment, bit •
c.ycl1 1n9i111.
39••
MARBLE LIKE PATIO
TABLE
'
SWIFT'S' LlQUID
PLANT . FOOD '
0 A. llith 1ntlyti• cornpl1t. 11! 'urpat•
liquid pl111t food.
O G,re1t for •ll,9rowi119 thi1191. j11cl11llli119. tho
mo11 yell 9ot 9rowi119 Ort Yt•r 110•• fr•M
f-0119 1outlt w1iti119 f.t Y•1t1t •lti' t•,
come i11.
0 U1e 011 flower•, t'ow111, tr1et, 1hrubJ,
011111 v.gt'tobl1i ••
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Tllo oW 1119914 cl11t9er
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will 1till be 9oi119
1lron' wh111 TV lllinMrt
ft ov1 b1tn r1,loc14
with food •
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0 Gold •nd while rnorbl1
Ii•• toJt with unique ·'•t dylin9 . !Uni~u•,
lh•t'1 1 toctful w1y of
•oyil'lg funny lookln9.l 279
CARPENTER'S APRON
0 U11ful ltttn for tftt
hom• h1ndvm111 wi th
m1rry poc•1h oncl
h1tJU'l'l1r foo Jt.
Of ru99td whit1 due~~
!Nt .-t w11k. we 'll
d11cribe lh1 thr11d.I
0 St••• your cloth1• 1rid
ke1p1 tool1 1nd 1tuH
J.011cly.
Colored MINDING TAPE
1 D Str1tclty self.Jtic~l119
fop1 h11 hu11dred1
af u111.
0 ~1,1ir, books, lu99e91,
choic1 of m1ny colon.
~ .... 120" .......... I 5c
1 •1t"xl20" ........ I 9c
AUTO DRIP PAN
' .
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911chol'lic1, Iii•,. fh1
lllriv1w1y oflll flt•ft
fr1• of oil 1llc••·
a 011 ••concl tho119ht.
fo191f It, 1111yh you'll
9ot 111 offtt from
St•11tl1rtl 011.
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0 Co111pl1t• with 114.
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HOUSE PAIN'l'
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GLIDE·OR
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IWl.V I'll.OT
I 'Air Crash
I In 0 ' -,: "' _qJ.!!07_ -
I ~ . f • 1 ·m~s, Snag
RIVERSIDE (UPI) -An
attorney for two air con-
' lrollers said Wednesday they
would Dal 'festt!J at 1 lederll
inv..tl~ Into a plallt
era.ab that k1lled five Calllor·
I m.. uBJea they w e r e
granted immunity f r o m
crimb!al 2rooecutlon.
Safet1 er.perts suspect ~he
twi.Hngine Cessna 310, which
crashed Into CUcamonga Peak
at the 6JOl'.I foot level, may
have been guided into it by
traffic controllers.
'
,\ . ,~ '
I The plane was on a flight
from Palm Springs t o lj.I
Rlvenlde when jt struck the J
peak 12 miles north of p ~ Ontarlo, April U. killing the !I ' ·
pilot, Robert Klopfenstein, S7, ii
his wife Anne, 53, of Palm J:::::'.%:"":••============::::::::'... Springs; Robert McMlllln, 54, ~
his wife Ruby, and their
daughter J .U., 24, of (lorona.
· Louis M. Thayer, chairman
• of the !nqulxy by the National ! Transportation and S a 1 et 1 Anti-smut Law Covers
Sales to Minors, Ads
Slekfled Vote N.eetled
BuClge _ Ie Broken
SACRAMENTO (AP) -two-thirds mojority of $1 In
Assemblyman Don Mulford's the Aa&embly and 27 In the
painful trip from the sickbed Senate.
to the Capitol has crushed a And Assembly Democratic
Democratic budget roadblock Ltader Jesse M. U. n r u h
and given Republicans a reiterated the Democrats. will
crucial victory in t h e not vote for the bill unless
legislature's fiscal battle. Reagan supports more aid to
"I don't think it endangered local schools and &5IW'e8 that
time out since a 3!A-bour
operation May 18 for a detach-
ed reUna lo hls rlght eye. A
few days later, l\lf'&fOOS
repalr..i a bole In his left eye.
"lf an issue han1s on one
vote, you shouklobe bere tf it is
humanly J)OUlble," he l&ld.
my health but I'm totally and a tu: refonn plan is scheduled M h H'
thoroughly exhausted," the ror a vote. urp y it
Piedmont Republlcan s a id Thirteen Democratic votes
alter casUn1 the •ote that sent are needed for the two thirds On Boycott back to the Senate the em-majority in the lower house,
battled $6.19 billion budget late controlled by Republicans 41-
Wednesday. 39. SACRAMENTO (AP)
He had been home for weeks "I'm not optimistic at all Assembly Democratic Leader
recovering from the latest in a about gettil}g \he ~u41tt owt," J~ M. Unruh accused
seri., of eye operations. MMl!llllf li!Uktf . lill!llt T. "41111"ldlll U,I, ~C.Orge
The Senate recel•ed the blU Mll!'llln, (11-'l'racy), to Id Murphy today el lit block
following a 41·27 vote an• newsmen. a satisfactory e the
prepared to help set up th• Mulford traveled 85 miles in lengthy grape boycott in
two-house negotiating COR\lt a hlahway patrol car to the CaUiomia.
mittee that put together I Capitol, his eyes protected by Unruh praised the small
fl.na1 version of the state's big~ dark glasses. He Umped on ad· group or table grape grvwera
gest budget. -mlttedly rubbery legs wh'en he who have begun oegotlJ,tions
TAIE !IT ·WY -TAlf IT ~.--1-
KODAK MOVIE CAMflA SALE
Super 8 Instant Load
' 'M-12
M-14
M-18
&ctrk ,,. .... c......
·1~•Mtt•rt.. .... 14.10 s3r
z... lll9cttk. ,,. ...... c.... s5ea •!,..., '"'·"'•a ...... ~ 0 .........
Kodak. Super 8 M..i. "';.,. .... s2n
Processing Mailer .... .... 5119
Film & Processing Mailer ~ s3st
V ANIMAN CAMERA
HJ1 ADAMI tLYD .. HUNTINGTON HACH. CALIP. '2'41
1714J t62·Sflt
Nat hi ......._ Mtrbt.
Assembly Democrats refus. wu helped into the Assembly for a settlement with the
ed to vote for the budget twict chamber by Rep u b 11 can United Fann Wo r t er s
in two days, demanding actio't Leadei w. Cra1g Biddle of Organizing Committee, AFir
fir11t on more school aid a.n4' Rlvetalde. His nonnally loud CJO. •
tax reform. voloe ,was low and quavering He sald: ''More growers
If conferees fail to agree by when he cast hla "aye" vote. would be willing to partl~ipate
the time the fiscal year endJ The ve t e r an 53-year-old in the negoUaUons if it weren't
Board. W8! told by Dinny
Jones, watem regio nal
couoseI for the ProfealQnal
Mr Traffic Controllers
Organization, lllat the two
controllers would invoke the
fifth amendment against aelf·
incrimination if they were not
granted immunity.
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Gov. Ronald Reagan climued
a three-year legislative battle
Wednesday when he signed
bill! making it harder for
smut merchants to peddle
pornography to children.
midnight Monday, the stalf legUllator sald It was his first for the false hopes they have 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~/~~~~~ marked the first revision of will enter the new fiscal yea~ been given by Sen. George1;;
the state's ·anti-smut laws unable to pay its bills. Murphy that they can expect
since 1961 and the first major Rep u b Ii can governor TURN ON legislation favorable to them
strengthening 0 r obscenity Reagan and GOP Jegislatoii TV WEEK ~11p1 you t~ned coming. from Washington." The Great
No.
Orange Coast's
1 Paper!
Thayer said he would have
to rule on the request for im-
munity later but added that
••granting of immunity is not
something I can do or the bOard. c8.ll do but is a matter
of board opinion."
lawa since their orioinal enact-stUJ raced their greatest to whit'• hipptJ'lint behind thh• Unruh said such legislation ment In the gold r:sh days of budget teat -a flnal vote°" ~!iLY-,1~0( S1turd1y in t • has virtually no chance this ~the::_~con::'.!1p:romlse:::::::_·_::::Tha:t~ta:k:es~:.=·==================:!...2Y~•M::_. ______ ~ 18511. c , _______________ _
The two, Kemlelll E,
Jockson and Noblo C. Clnl-
U.ll, were Fedel! Aviltlon
>,aeney eon1rollen at Mardi Afr Force Base near here.
A witness, Air Force Major
Glen York of Granada Hills,
Calif., telli(ltd be flew over
the Riverside area In a Cessna
150 ~ about the time of the
crash.
Tuere bas been unotficial
speculaUon Ulat York's craft
and KJopfensttin'a may have
IQll'ged into a lina:le blip OD
the radar screen and confused
the controllers.
The governor's signatures
Color Book
Repudiated
0 Tbia landmark legislation
will rightly return to the
par.qls the ability to protect
their cbDclren frolll obac<nlty
by strengthening significantly
Lhe punishment of smut ped-
dlers who are guided solely by
the enormous profits such
BERKELEY (UPI) -The materials can bring," the
Black Panther Party has · governor sai~. . . . , The two-bill package 1s a re~diated a children s col· legislative triumph for Reagan
or1r1g book that preached and is viewed as one of the
violence in words and pictures major pieces of legislation to
against police and white come from the 1969 session.
merchants One law establishes a
The coiortng book was separate standard for judging
uunauthorized" Panther Par-what is obscene for youths un-
ty Cbalrman Bobby Seale and der 18. .
Chief of Staff David Hllllard The second incorporates a
T lk alld Wednesday. "pandering" concep~ ao the Smuggler a 8 They said ~rry Clayton method or advertising can be
Powell a party delectfl' who used u a legal tool to Against Werber · l<stilled before tbe Mctlellan :,'=is 0~.!,h • r th•
Senate 111bcommhtee. prin~ed The new law will become er-
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -1,000 copies of the coJonng fective sometime this autumn
An admitted marijuana smug-book to use a~ the party. 90 days alter the Jeglslatur~
gler has testified that . Frank . A San ~ police ~f-adjourns.
N .. Werber, former King!l~n ficer toJd tbe ~te In-"Well, they're law now,''
Trio tna.Mger 1 was one or his ve.tlaaton: the coloring book Reagan said with satisfaction
custome,rs who demanded was diltrf~ at breakfasts at the signing· ceremony in his
"quality stuH that would be the Panthers IJ>O!lSOftd for office. "By golly it's been a
sold to qual~ty people.''. ~It. · lint pr! ·~ . 1968 JOng time comm;. Werber lS on trial on was nKU m
charges of conspiracy to by • young P,UtY member MWr1--.1
snwggle marijuana from Mex-from the Sacramento chapter. FAT OVERW£1GHT
Jco into Marin County. He WU not pollUcally mature A .... 111i1:11t to vw w1r11ou1 • doctor's o,. and was not aware of the class scr1P'llwl. ow Ol'(llklct u11111 Od ri-. -•uon of ,,__ Panthers" Yow roost 1o11 uo1y 111 or your -v B Ch k Du ? .....,. un:; • bl(k. Odrln1x II 1 tfny t1blet •rid 111lly US ec e • seaJe said. 1 .... llowed, Git rid OI lll:elll 111 Ind u ...
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Striking Greyhound Bui lines
mechanics are asking the
Highway Patrol to make safe-
ty cheeks on Greyhound buses.
"When we ••·--ed I• we ~r. OdrlMX o:tlta u.oo •t'ld • new, ~v·~ "> tarot -v 1111 fOI' 15.00. &olh '" ••-......t lb printing. We only IOlll w1111 11111 ""'"'"tit: 11 l'Mll Nll111rc1 ~~-· 2S The for •nr ~ i.t !'11\!l'll 11111 Pl<~ ... saw auuut • rest were 11 \'OU!'" drvgglif 11111 '" .,_ ru11 montY copied later by Larry Powell Midi:. No q,MtJont 111c1c1. Odrtnu 11
' llOkl wllll ""' 8111•1111'11 11y: w h 0 p r l n t e d 1, 0 0 0 CRAW.CID l:IXALL PHAIMACY
without autborizaUon." 1 .. ~ •Ml.-Maft ON•~ Fin.-
WINNERS
IN SOUTH
COAST PLAZA'S
ANGEL
CONTEST
first plact wlnntr DAVID DI.Alt ind his dtd wltl fly Air C.lifom ia to join fht
C~liforni1 A~tls in fhe dugout for ""9tmt writs 1t1rting July JI. All•xpenu
tnp ll'!Cludes •fl'f tf Hyatt Hottl'1 beautiful Edgtwattr In Otkland. O!h1r winAtri
belaw rteeived bin, mills 1nd autogr1phed btsebtUs.
tollRT ADAMS SffEU.Y DFt
VICICIE GllrNLU.F lllCWY MAUffiE
J(ff HEGGmoM JUF lOWl
DON KAID JAMU MIUAN
MARK COVA CINI.IT MIYllOWITZ
TEDI McDONALD MlatlUI IANOCZI
JOYQ SHlMOMUU Pnll HISl'f
DEIORAM ST AUMAN D0NMA 1tOSA T1
TAMI GUY scam CIAIGHUD
CHUOC LUIEI TAMMY UMDIR8
CHAD UCXHAM. M1C1 -
IOI TUT -X*e SA-.s
Miki fUUWI MARION McUYMOlDS
IOU SCOTr UTllll IADB
LTill GlUll MAITA POU«1
ALllRT MARRISON
TIMMY SPE$SARO
CAROL McCORMICK
TAMMY MERRY
MAIY WARD scon PARIS
YVONNE AIARCA
GREG WIWAMS
PAMru. llHTUT
JUUl HEFFR
KENNY LUCAS
TIUSA MIWl
DOOl:AK GlllHWOOO
LORI FUUNO
RITA 10SS
MALL-WIDI SALi STARTS J UNI 30
DUHi IUGOY Will II tfYEN AWAY
SATURDAY, JULY 5th
REGISTER AT ANY OH! Of OUR
14 STOl!S -Or!H NIGHTLY TILL 9,30
5oufb f oast ?Iaza
•
BltlSTOl AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA
Nur hall a century of . ..mce /Near half a bllllon dollan atrong
1%
4
ANNUAL
RATE
. 6~ Average annual yie!d through daily corilpi:iundinc when principal an~
1ntcfut r1m1in for 5 years. Minimum deposit $J ,000, In ttte event of hardship,
funds may bt withd~wn 1t the end of any qu1rttr with full Interest to that data.
These nevt ttrt!f1cales art ottered in addition to retUlar Passbook snd
Bonus Accounts.
YEAR
CERTIRCATES
More Interest Than Banks, More Certain Than Stocks. e
W118T AlllCADIA oeow .. 1 Dl:MrteAoad T11-phont4*CJ11~e
CORONA DEL MAR
28117 bet C08lt Hlghny
'Telepl\one 97~10
COVINA
200 NoflJt Cffru1 Aveni» T_,_71 OL•NOAL•
-331 Nomi Bl'lfld •outeward
Te1ephofte 241--4140
•
MUTUAL SAVINGS
and laan usaciatlan
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AH.UNCOfCOlllOf'tAI. MONCJ·~ 4UAAANTU
STUCCO AND MAS.OtiRY PAINT
LASTS 8 Y.E:AlllSI
CAN ALSO IE USED FOii All Ei'lmlELT OUR l'lllCl · DURABLE llllEllOR JOI . ·
.• SeNbbobie • I """' diy • Cm'.!\ 450 It. 3 9 8· • Ciean-up'wlth water• lrulh '& .• r l . :
'• Pure White and •II colors ·~ · 1WJ.oN ~ COMP. "ETA1L: U:f
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LEGAL NOTICE
I
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~ • .,,,,. 2', 1!6t
LEGAL NOTICll
)
Oii Broadwa" West
Eine New Talent in Revue
~
&'t'.''t ,.,,,,
By TOM mus
ot -. o.•tr ru.t , • .,.
There's a triple thmt at
Anaheim's new Off Broadway
West -an eye-catching and
ear-plea.sing trJumverate of
talent offerlng: a mOlt en·
joyable to minutes of aongs,
dances and snappy patter.
lt'1 tiUed ''Revue: Phase n," and it'll be around for
three weeks at the Grand
Hotel. Aside from being
hi&hlY entertaining, the show
offers some fresh new talent
to West Coast audiences.
with some frtsh, stinging
sallrt.
Stone concentrates his social
barbs on the modem day bat.
tie of the sexes, drawing rap-
port wllh every puoch line.
Especlally efftctlve ls his
depicUon of an all-nude socl·
ety -It's a trifle rlsque, but
you don't have to leave the
kld!I at homt. No four-letter
words in thls monologue.
The curtain raiser is a
precision dance trie> called
Black, White aod 14 -the lat-
ter in reference to a girl's
name, not her age. Fourt~n
Smith (honest), Bert Woods
and Joe Tremain present an
eye-eatchlng song and dance
act, hampert:d only by the
Grand's sound system, wblch
garbled their words on open-
ing night.
Two shows are slaged night·
Jy, Tuesday through Saturday.
at 9 and 11 p.m., while one
performance is given at 9 on
Sunday. Bud Cross and bi.s
Orchestra capably back up the
onsta:ge activity.
'Water' Runs Too Long
HeadJining the bill Is a
gorgeous young songstress
whose nawless (Act and figure
nearly make you unaware that
she bas a voice. But Jeanine
Napoleon delivers vocally with
a captivating style reminis-
cent of a young June Christy.
Miss Napoleon ts second HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The picketed the theater Tuesday
generation show business with title of the play at the Gallery night carrying p I a cards
the stage savvy '6l one bom j.n Theater is: "You Know I reading, "Big title unfair t()
a trunk, and her perfonnance Can't Hear You When the actors" and "We want our
is polish personlifed. Her Water's Running!" names in lights."
repertoire ranges from an up. And you can't see the ac-The protesters said they col·
tempa rendition of "It All tors' names on the marquee Iected $3.42 from pedestrian:'!
Depends on You" to a throaty because the title is so long. -a small start toward a fund
treatment or an unfamiliar. but Five of the p r i n c i p a l s for a bigger marquee.
SONG STYLINGS AND SEX APPEAL
Jtt1nin1 Nepoleon at Off Broadway West
unforgettable torch song, "Nojjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
M~~~~lying the laughs in the EDWARDS
second slot on the bill is c I N E M A Stewie Stone, a Jewish comic
For Barbara Werle,
Really West
who at first glance looks like
little more than a Jewish com-THEATRE
ic. But Stooe has some fine "PREMIERE PRESENTATION THEATRES" material at his command, and
East's
By VERNON SC01T
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -One
of the advantages of living in
Hollywood is the plethora of
beauUful girls, Another Ls that
a goodly proportion of same
are delightfully wacky.
Barbara Werle is a sample.
She is the feminine lead in
"Krakatoa, East of Java," the
UUe of which throws her into
something of a tizzy.
"I looked it up on the map,"
said tbe shapely bonde, "and
jt turns out that Krakatoa is
rtally west o( Java. Can you
imagine the Cinerama people
making a mistake like that?
"I think they found out
about it too late ; the title song
wu already recorded and they
didn't want to go through the
expeme.
"Anyhow, east of Java
sounds more mysterious and
oriental than west of Java. I
mean there's nothing
mysterious about west. It
could even be West Los
Angeles, you know?"
Clearly Barbara t.alks while
she thinks. Sometimes she
gets ahead of herself, but that
bothers her not at all.
"We did go east to make
'Krakatoa,'" she said. "We
went all the way to Spain and
spent five months there mak-
ing the picture. But we didn 't
Three Plays
Set at CSF
A Pulitzer Prize-winning
play, a comedy hit and a new
work written and directed by
Dr. Alvin J. Keller promise a
varied "Summer Theater 5."
beginning July 2 at Califomi::i
State College, Fullerton.
pass Java and we didn't COT·
lect $200. You know, like in
that game, Monopoly.
"To tell you the truth we
didn 't even see Java."
Barbara looked around the
Brown Derby sus piciously and
added, "We never even got to
Krakatoa.
"ll blew up in 1883 !lo it isn't
lhere anymore. But somebody
told me that a new island has
formed next to it and they call
it Arak Krakatoa which means
son of Krakatoa. ~1aybe we
will make a sequel to this pic-
ture and call it 'Son of
Krakatoa.' TOO.se things hap-
pen out here."
Barbara Mid she h a d
received mi:xed revi ews.
1 "They called me frilly, not
tpo •smart, not too talented or
too virtuous," she contesaed.
"Most of thrm weren't loo
kind about my singing voice
either.
"I was doing the best l
could, but there went five
years of singing lessoru; right
down the drain.
"But that doesn't discourage
me," Barbara babbled on.
"The next picture I'm going to
is a musical.
"One critic described me as
a derelict and I had to look
that up. I always thought a
derelict was a drunken bum
who needed a shave. I couldn't
imagine why they called me
that because r never shave.
''People misunderstand my
acting. When I fi nished a very
serious dramatic picture -
'Man Without Mercy' -the
director, Barney Gerard, told
me I should do more ('()medy.
"That doesn't bother me
either. Can I help if it I play a
part one ·way and other people
see it another way?"
Barbara's press agent stop-
ped eating his lunch. He didn 't
look \\·ell.
once he wanns bis audience to
his brand of humor, he Jels fly
Helen Hayes
Opting for
Happy Plays
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP)
-Actress Helen Hayes say1
she's casting her lot with
playwrights "of affection, not
despair: those of compassion,
not protest."
Miss ! Hayes, 68, drew ap..
plause Tuesday fr<p the 800
persons attending a luncheon
session of the American
L i b r a r y Association con·
vention when she proudly said
she would do "Harvey" thlt
fall with James Stewart.
"I'm going to give the
theater a little solace,'' she
said. "I'll never again try to
invade the now, unUI the now
is a little more sensible."
Not so long ago Miss Hayea
joined a young acting group
and starred in several off~
Broadway productions, despite
being, as she termed it, "the
great white goddess of the
EstabU.shment .''
''We did a European play
that could be followed by
great thinkers or great liars,"
she said. "We did another
play which no one even un·
derstood at all."
She said if she were to act in
some ol the revolutionary new
stage plays she would get so
"depressed, l would end up in
the madhouse."
''It would be so depressing
to play tbem eight times a
week." she shook her head
with conviction and adjusted a
pair of born-rimmed glasses.
"They come out with nothing
on. This is the height of
boredom for me. T do so like
pretty clothes," she said, smil-
ing.
on-m leod Mldioel J, Poll-4
.... , .... "'* ... ._...,~~· -· ..,.., ...
Direct Crom
Plfhtl• Cl.n
T1111My ltHI• f,.; .... ,.,,.
reserved seat
engagemenll
ts l3> 111JC111 ______ ARts-:
~:;-.::,~ Premiere-Wed., July 2
_,.._
"SOUTHERN
STAR"
"Goodbye, Columbu1''
Jrd W..t
hclulve PNMMf• Rn
~·
~J ~
Evening performances of Archibald MacLeish's award·l;:::=====================.11
A fllt11 ffOlll tile No••ll• br
PHILtr ROTH
winning "J.B." are scheduled
for July 1-6, while Neil
Simon's cOmedy. ''The Odd
Couple," is booked in the
Arena Theater for the even·
ings of July 21-23 and 26 plus
the Jltemoons of July 16-%7.
Concluding lhe season will
be Keller's "Earth in J.!y
Hands." It is set for the even·
in&s of July 24-27 ln the LitUe
neater.
Ticket information ls
available from the theater box
office, 87o.3371, which is open
daily except Sunday from noon
until t p.m.
Benny Gag
Writer Dies
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Comedy wr i ler John
Tackaberry, 56, a longtime
associate of comedian Jack
BeMY, died Tuesday ot St.
Joseph's Hospital in Santa
Monica.
Tackaberry Wrote for the
Jack Benny Show for 12 years.
He also wrote for comedians
Jackie Gleason , Garry Moore,
Joey Bishop and Bob Newhart. I
In 1943 ht went wlth Benny a.s a to;i gag writer. He alio1 " r o t t numerous teJcvlslon
IP'd•IJ. I
STARS
Svtl11ev °'91•fr h 0111 of tf11
wo1tt1·, 9r••t ••tf•lo91n. Hi1
co lu111t1 11 011• of th1 DAILY
PILOT'S t'•>t f1th1111.
Dixieland • • • • • •
free concerts on the mall
COMI HIAR THI SWINlilN'IST GROUP IN TOWN
FRIDAY:
SATURDAY:
1 :JO to 2:JO P.M.
7:15 to t :lS P.M.
1 :00 P.M. to J:OO P.M.
FASHION j ISLAND
NEWPORT llACH
Ju.st freewo11 mi11ute1 to f ASH ION ISLAND on Pad.fie
Coa.st J~lgh.111a11 between Jamborei an.ct MacArthur
Bo11l11'0rd tn Newport Beach.
I
Tllo A•rfl•r of , ...
Now a..t Soller
"Port11oy's Co,,.,.i1tt"
Prtwnts
MATINEES DAILY Wlnnle,..11\oeh '"'-'" w..-.. 111.rs.·frf-1 '""· •Mitt...._., Slltvrffy-10 0 .111. ......._.
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(Except Newport Cinem•)
I I WALT DISNEY I ;.;·,Ill ~!"
Can Herbie, a clean1Ninr.
hard-Yforking small c.ar
·;..a. .. find happiness
·VO'.· • in today's I •• "tr."
' <Si : · • heCUc world?
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•
Fountain Valley 'foday.,~ Flnel
~ -N.Y. Stoek.11
YOt:. 62, NO. 152, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TH URSDAY; JUNE 26, '1969 TEN CENTS
·Beach Girl · Found Dead
Syringe Near Body; Police Seek Mystery Witness
DAii. Y l"ILOT Iliff "'9t9
SIMON ZELLER TUN ES UP HIS HAM RADIO RIG
Heecftd for the Deurt With • Ton of Equipment
.
Beach Teacher to Lead
Ham Eme1~gency Network
By RUDI NIEDZIF.1.SKI
Cll llle Dal" .. llot Sl111f
Simon Zeller, a Huntington Beach
teacher, will lead a team of local ham
OJ>6'lors oot intc> the hills of EscondidG
Saturday morning to participate in an
emertency cooununications exercise irr
j
vo!vlrlg 100,000 amateur radio fans
Ihn>\ll)JOUt the United States.
ApProxlmatelf one ton of equipment,
_. ran,gi.ng tram a teletype unit to a 1,000
• waU transmitter will aCCQmpany them
I during the U.hour exercise in which they
wtU -attempt to make as many cont.acts
I ,vlth other hams as pGSslble.
· ACcording to Zeller, "the intent o( the
nationwide effort is to test the response
Of hams who might be called on to pro-
\ide emergency communkalions in the
event of a disaster."
Manning the mountains of electronic
equipment along with ZcUer will be Tom
Barker, Jim Ford and Terry Neal, all 9f
Costa Mesa. V
Each of the men are expected to take
twi> hour shifts on the equipment and will
be .awarded points by the American
Radio Relay League for the number of
aiotacts they make.
"About two hours is all you can handle
on the rig,'' says Zeller. "Especially if
it's morse code. The beeps ca n really get
to you."
Part of the problem confronting the
winlbugs will be in setting up the f!QUiP·
ment in a remote location within three
hours and to keep the portable generator
and radio equipment operating with oul
failure during the test period.
"There have been unexpected pro-
blems, too," said "Zeller such as leaving
vital parts at home or being attacked by
insects of all kinds to the point where
continuing the operation would have re-
quired medical aid. The idea is to lean;a
how to adjus~ to these unexpected pro-
blems." • , ,
All of the 100,IJOO hms !ammlnc the
airwaves beginning · noon Safurday r.nd
end&og noon Sunday will be oo U. bDnor
ayslem on the number of cootacts they
r<port.
"Since there Is no money involved, 1
don't think there will be any cheating.
The only prize you get is satisfaction,"
said ZeUer.
When queried about what the trans·
American ham jam would do to television
reception, Zeller replied , "it should do
nothing at all."
"Most of the experienced operators will
be out seeking higher ground for helter
transmission and reception but there atf:
a few k..ids who don't have cars and
couldn't move their equipment. They
might have to set up in their backyard!
and this could conceivably interrupt
(elevision reception, but it's not too like-
ly."
Zeller, who teaches mathematics at
Westminster High School, has been a
radio amateur for the past rive years and
holds an advanced license, which is one
step removed from the highest honor a
ham can receive.
H I s hobby is driving him out of the
house. so to speak, since the morse code
signals offend the tender ears of his wife.
Tustin Murder Suspect
Saved From Suicide Try
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of IM Dlltr P'llft llaff
grove · about 5 a.m. arrested Vick on
suspicion of murder, and he was booked
also on an Oregon w~ant charglng h1m
(See SUSPECT, P•rt Z)
Loog Beach police today are c:ooductlllJ!
a massive search for a ))OSSible mystery
witness to the death of. ·an ta.year-old
Huntington Beach girl who wu found
dead In a Long Beach motel Wedotsday.
The man, who was described as • male
Negro, approximately six-foot three in-
ches, about 30 and welghlng 17il O(>U0<1',
was seen leaving the motel, located at
1021 E . Paclfic Coast Highway shortly
be.fore the body was found.
Valle y Officer
Tells His Story
Of Ship Crash
Lt. Cmdr. George Lee McMichaels, of
Fountain Valley, the e:xecutlve officer Of
the destroyer Frank E. Evans, testified
today before joint AU!lralian-t l.S. in-
vestigation board on the crash of his ship
and t h e Austr.ii.lian carrier Melbourne,
wl:.:::? his family waits for his return.
"We're waiting patiently for the end of
the inquiry anti his return," said Mrs.
11cl\1ichaels, 9065 Columbine St., Founain
Valley.
McMichaels hasn 'l been )Jome since the
June 3 collision which killed 74 members
of the 273 officers and men aboard the
ship.
Testifying before the investigating
board at Subic Bay, Philippines, today
McMichaels said the Evans had more
than enough life jaCkets aboard the ship
when it collided with the Melbourne.
McMichaels, 34, noted that the ship has
"10 inflatable life jackets and 245 kapok
life· jacketa. an the lhiP. for a WtaJ. of m
-41 ..... than lhe ihtp'• 1'13 oflloo<' and men. · .
Re said there were about 140 (o 150
jackets av~!fble ffi the "lfter section ol
the lblp ~ i;<mained ailoll alter the
destroyer 'wu sliced in 1 ....
In other testtmony1 Mach Iner y
Repairman Donald A. r ikken, 30, Bloom·
ington, Minn., said Jighta in the port
passageway were not on, but that ii·
Tumination In his rompartment was ade·
quate.
Seaman Robert A. Codemo, 19, said It
was "pitch black" in his ow n com·
partment at the mome::t of impact
McLaughJin Wins
College Title
SEA'ITLE (AP) - A strong
performance in the final three races
\Vednesday gave Tom McLaughlin of S3n
Diego Stale a victory in the North
American lntercollegiate Single-handed
Sailing Championships on n ea r by
Shllshole Bay. .
The victory gave the Californians a
sweep in the regalta. McLaughlin and Ed
Butler of Southern California earlier won
the team championship and the di.strict
team racing evenl.
Harvard's Robbie Doyle, who had been
leading going into the final day of race.s,
fell from contention with 7th, 8th, 11th
and 9th place finishes.
S tock Markeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
was a loser again today, although some
geleclive buying reportedly helped it trim
sha r p early loMes. (See quotations,
Pages 26-27 ).
Sgt. David A. Bauer of the Long Be.ach
police homicide division said the &lrl,
. Patricia M. Buscaglia, of 10102 Crailet
Drive,. was discovered at 1:30 p.m.
~rawled on the floor of one of lbe rooms.
' A bypadennlc syringe was found near
the body; said. Sgt . Bauer, but the con-
tents have not yet been analyzed.
lfe added that there were marks on
Mi.ss Buscaglia's ann which cOuld have
601'-itr'• 1Ad11
Mrs. Nancy Reagan describes
her first date with the gover·
nor-to-be in DAILY PILOT
writer Jean Cox 's story on the
cover page of the Women 's
Section in today's edition.
Balloon Kids
Ready to Slioot
For Moon Friday
Hundreds or brightly-colored balloons
are expected to dot the skies over
Westminster Friday afternoon as c I t y
youngsters launch t h e helium-filled
globes during the annual ''Balloon to the
Moon'' contest.
The event, sponsored by t h e
\Veslminster Progressive Llons and the
Recreation and Park! Department,
begins at 3 p.m. al each neighborhood
playground.
Each child will be asked to fill out a
card, bearing his name, address and
telephone mimber and attach it to the
balloon when It i.s released ...
The balloon returned to the .Department
ollice from the greatest distance will
win a prize for the youngster sendin& the
ballOon and the person retumlng U:ie ·st·
tached card.
been caused by a needle, but final
determinaUon ls pending a coroner's
autopsy later today,
Her unldenWied companion left the
Patio Motel two hours before the g1rl was
found,.J>ollce said. She was dressed in a
T-shirt, blue jearu and was wearing no
shoes.
When leaving the motel, tbe man told a
cleaning woman that hi.s wife was pack-
LA Jetliner
Freed by Cuba,
Flies to U.S.
MIAMI (UP!) -A United Alrllnes
jetliner, hijacked while on a flight from
Lo: Angeles to New York and detained in
Havana 13 hours because of "mechanical
difficulUes," was finally released today.
The airliner was clea.reCI at I :oe p.m.
ind took off on ll!J 33 minute flight back
to Miami International Airport. The
Fed~al Aviation Agency saJd it had been
unable to determine the nature of die
mechanical problem.
The FAA official said the eight
crewmen and 50 passengers who arrived
In Havana about midnight were taken to
hotels for some sleep.
The United Alrline11 DC8 wap com-
mandeered 11 minutes after takeoff from
Loa Angelel. Wednesday. afternoon and
arrived at 'Jose Marti Airport In Havana
•1.t:Up.m. PDT w~.MJG-IU~'!l'J:' ~· daya. · '
118dlo J{a'v.., laid tOday .lhf ·Jet W:ll
hu.eied ·110 lndivtd!lll aflllOd· irilh •. pOOJ: II _ .l1CI llve bJl-~lf·
II WAI IOth Dljackln1 OI Ute year OI
a U.S. a.lrllner to the Communllt lsllnd.
The jet was hijacked tS·rnOet west of
River&fde, at 4:20 p.m. PDT after taking
off from Los Angeles, the FAA uid.
The pilot, Capt: F.dward Nibur, 59, of
Bemadsville, N.J., radioed as.king for a
routin;: to Havana.
United officials said there was nG
further contact with the pilot after his
terse mesaa.ge.
"We knew it wu hijacked then and we
don•t uk queatlons under t h o !I e
circumstances," laid an 1 AA spokesman
In Loa Angelea.
Tht plane's route to the Communist
Island took it over Albuquerque N.M.;
Fort Worth, Tex.; Alexandria, La.;
Tallahassee and Key West, Fla.
Police Arrest 2
Robbery Suspects
At Beach Tavern
Gilllgan'a Isle, a llttle bar on 5th Street
in Hun Ungton Beach, proved to be no
paradise for police early this morning as
three officers made two am.U there on
charges of strongann robbery.
Officers were first called to the bar on
a report that a man inside was carrying
a weapon.
Two officen entered the bar while one
went to the rear. Inside, ponce said, were
seven or eight members of an "ouUaw"
motorcycle gana:, and a transient named
Robert L. Souza, 25, no address given:
J\e:!CUed as he was about lo join his
S\'.'8etheart in death by auto gas asphyx-
iation in a lonely orange grove near
Tustin, a young Washington business.m11n
today waits to be arraigned for her pillow
suffocation murder.
George A. Vick. 29, was pulled from hig
rented car by two laborers who fou nd
him lying on the se~.t about 5 a .. m.
Wednesday, a SO.foot garden hose running
from the exhaust pipe into the auto.
Industrial Land Use Urged
Souza was taken outside, searched and
found to be carrying a .22 caliber revolv-
er. He was booked into Huntington Beach
City Jail at 1 :30 a.m. today, on suspicion
of armed robbery.
Arresting officers are investigating the
possibility of ·a connection between Souza
and three armed robberies committed
between 11•nd11:30 p.m., Wednuday, in
Garden Grove, 8anta Ana and Costa TuJtin Police Detective Jack Terry said
a complaint charging the paint contractor
with murder -the city's first In 17 yeari:;
-wou1d be obtained frorD lbe Orange
County Distrid Attorney bier today .
An anonymous telephon< tipster ..,,t
police to a modern Span\sh..tyle apart·
ment house at 15491 Pasadena Ave. early
Wednesday, where they found Susan C.
All•~. 20, mun:lered.
The vlcilm had been bludgeoned on the
side of the held with a hea vy instrument,
then suffocated with a soft object,
')OS!Jlbly a pillow, coroner's deputies said.
· Tustin Police Chief Glenn SlliSel said
the former Orange Coast College studeiit
aod uncmployect bank clerk shared tho
~ent with her sister. Mrs. Mary
Sitclka. 23, a bar hostess.
Authorities said Vick -who hadn't In-
haled enough automotive fumes to affect
hlm when rescued from suicide near
Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road -
IPled the same address.
Mlu Adami wu firSi thou.gbt to be a
cOi,o dancer Wedntsday due to confualon
ottr her ailttr't OC<:Upiillon.
Sberilf'• deputies Cllled to Ille orange
,. '
'
Valley Planners Advi.sed to Hold 700 Acres
By'TERBY>.OOVIILE
ot tM DellJ .. ,..,.
FountaJn ·valley cunully has 700 acres
of land zoned or muier-planrled 'for in·
duslrial we. Tllal loUI -!"'! be reduced and rapid ilevelopmeftt must be
encouraged.
nie.. .,.. Ille -conclusions reached by
Lampman and As1o c;l~tes . and
Urbanomlo Research .AUoclates Jn. a
report presented Wed~ nlgh\ di\(l"i
a special session of the FOuntain Vitley
PlaMing Commi.Aion.
Charles Stapleton. Yerbally hltUng thf':
bighligbla o( lhe 30-pag_e r1port1 urp~ the
city to adopt "a gel\ultJe • marketllig
11ystem" to help property owne111 develop
their land for industrial w;e.,.
The area generaUy planned for light ln-
du.st.ry tS bordered on the. eas,t'by the San-
ta Ana ruv~r. on the touth by Garfield
Avenue, on the north by Hell Aven~ and
on the west by portions of Ward Sttttt.
Euclid Sl"'el ond Newhope SlreeL
currently Ult a.crtS are developed. In-
cluding the land used by the Orange
Counly SanltaUon District. Moot ol Ille
V'
developed area is souUt o{ Talbert and other light uses. No further sug· Mesa.
Avenue. • gestions were made on possible tern· While Souza was belnC aearched, the
Plannera were told that l1nd ls develop-porary uses, but mobile homes were third Huntington Beach officer heard a
Ing last In Orange County, and Fountain deHnildy ruled ouL rllllling IOlll1d In the alley to the rear of
Valley ts loslog out becauae of Its tmare The city waa advised to seet an In· the bar. A quick search tiy flashlight, the
as a "bedroom community." dustrial realtor and better publicity with oUlcer claimed, sbowe4 John R. Kee.nJn,
"You have to get out. and sell industrial the tndu!b1al community to sell itseU to 31, of 319 14th St., Hunllnlton Beach,
developers on the idea of an industrial lodll!Jtry. drallinl an old men tbrougl:i the alley.
park or package bere," said Stapleton. The report nlso gives 'Sketches of Sur·· POfice-arrested and booked Keenan lnto
Two re&IOJll were given for main.-rounding lndu1trlal growth and predic· HunUnston Buen City Jail on susplciqn
taining the lodustrtal land and developing lions for fui.r. <l_<Ve!OP1Penl,J11 ·0f:-d 1 Q-(-ly' 'fbe ~ f'°I
It for that Ule. ' <*#il1. • ' .. > ' . -·'· ._ Um, HarN Ii: ff1<!i,.'11;fol-p '~lh· SI.,
Firsi, the available supply of indurtr'..: · , • lt "'\iiok -a ~ulc~ skip ~I ~ ~ropcoed' I~·' !Ill(!~ !BoOdi. IOI~ oOlf<j.. be wm't
land is needed to underwdl<! the !ulllra dustQil : alii>ort J•\' ~OlJ!l""!l · -Val1'f I' sdre what hiPJ>OQid and)h•t·he migbl
CCOllOl)llc growth of the cQIJmlvl\lty, , ~' saying Uie a'jf, (acillty WiAil~ jlse ·~IV·· bteJ\ "rOIJed:"-' I
Seeilnd, healthY lridu'!lrtil~~ht' ll~'atiOut 100_,.,,... of Ule city'a·remalf!ln& He . wu. !oufii! wllli eula. •n<I> brullCI· wm bobler the future fiscal base ol •1Jio . acreage. and doubb weno ·"'P~ ~bout 1111> lace.-,J>Ut~ seiiously.b\Jured,
community. • about Ule actual dra\\'lng power It wou!a' sald police. • ;"'.
Two pn>blems must be dealt with by '• haie to.11ghl lndualry. : Ofllcior1ltod1i9ted 111.t IM"melorcyclo.
lhe city, .. plall\<d the report. An !•terin> ' Stapleioit, adinltted,·bowtyer, thal lllO · :gang'! tnslcie Glllll!ll''I hie 'll•Y haV~
use must be found for lhe land while ~ 1 report .. _6Ad no( bad time. 'to OlBke a '• .betn the ~ me ~ed e.-jle.r,.la,J.be
perty owners wall for Industry to venture ) tbOncil> .IU!cly of an IOduotilal 111f ;iotli ~liio -IL 1...., olMl:
forth and the dly must actively try lo , f-aeUlt;J. • • , ~ ' -.. · 'bent ,, · · ~ ,
aell the Idea of Fountain Velley u IJ!•ln--Pl-·""'1('about 0oo ~ '• -· ~ ...... io'tit if"
durtrlal communll)'. _ --'ID the report, iben ;.i luly I!, dllrinl a ralped this on.moon or Friday momlng
Interim uses "°" employed Include i-ecular planning commission meelill( lot In Wiil 0r..,. Counly l't!unldpa! Court,
farming, stabllni of borm and CjllUe, . • J!Ubllc hearing on the roportv · ,., , Weslmlm~r. • • • •. • . ; ... ·
Jng and that he would return later to ptck
her up.
Deputy Los Angeles Coroner Arthur
Bwtamante said iDvesUgaUon of the
case, including the inquest Is continulug
and that a report $lating the cause of
Miss Buscaglia'& death wi/tlld. be 1s.sued
later today.
Miss Buscaglia was a Junior at Hun-
tington Beach High School unUI Feb. 10
when she dropped all of her classes.·
RUSHEO TO -HOSPITAL
Ex-boxer JM L"'11•
Ex,champ Loui.s
Collapses, Rushed
To NY Hospital
NEW YORK (UPI! -Legendary
heavyweight champlon Joe Louis ws.s
l'U!Jbed to Beekman Downtown Hospital
today suffering from what was descru.J
.as "physical collapse."
Louis, who reigned as champion from
1937 until 1H9, complained of stomach
pains to hts attorney, Leon Charney, who
was driving h1m from a televi.son in-
terview. Charney immedlatelr. drove the
SS.year-old Louis to the hospital , and he
~as rushed into· the emergency room for
an examination. His conditron was
reported as "good" by the hospital.
Louis' wife, Marlha, and Abe Margoles,
a business associate, remained with him
al the hospital and reported that he was
conscious and in good spirits.
The attorney said that Louis probably
didn't suffer a heart attack, however, and
would be released in a few days.
Earlier, a police department
apokesman had said that Louis had ap-
parently suffered a heart attack.
Louis and ex-boxer Billy Conn an-
nounced Wednesday that they have set up
a Joe Louis Food Francht.. Corp., wbidt
they hope will franchise restaurants here
and abroad. Louis beads the firm and
Conn i! vice president.
The1irst franchised restaurant tn the
chain is expected to open within tlO days.
It will have an interracial administratit•e
stall.
Loui11 was heavywdgbt. champion
longer than any other boxer, reUring in
1949 after 12 years as tltllst. He fought 71
professional bouts, won 54 by knockouts.
made $3.8 million and wOUJ1<1 up owning
back taxes of $1.25 million .
Orange Coast
Weadt1u•
We 'O get a touch more sun than
we're accustomed to Friday, while
the mercury holds fast to the low
70's along the Orange Coast,
INSIDE TODAY
'Pfck G .,.f,.._iQ¥i-';1t'll .. d-.,,ltii;' • .,o of.'h~ . ..;. lflli!'•;illii/«llleo-.. ·-
gt11en "" today'.s 'Chccklno Up'
column on Pagt 7.
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Pali:s. T-alks Fai"libn:·IT~r
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PARIS (UPI) -The United States to-
... day called on the communists in vain to
.. r112eW. lo a .spirit of compromise to end
t the vtetni.m war and bring peace to
lioulhu.st Asia. a.. appeal by U.S. chieJ DfllGtlat.or
.. HWY Cabot Lodge at the ISrd s•ion of , the Vietaam fll*'I! Uilki fell Cln deaf ears.
"'11• ""lie aoulllt to show the "com· , maa (llO.Ullf' the United states
Mitts wtth allied and Communist peace
plans, the Communist side denounced
President Nixon's troop withdrawal pro-
mise& .as a maneuver to pn:ilong the war
and ClllM lar sloptioa of the Viet 'Cong's
lll-Polnf plan as the only starting point for
negotiations.
MQur country will uamiDe e,ery
avenue that may lead to peace," Lod&e
M&&frc:tll TusTIN SU. YING
... ~-Se•pact Vick
SUSPECT •.•
with a~ UM?fL
•
InvesUrators said when t.hey found
Ml::J Adams' ~\11lere were traces ol
flesh and hair under her fingernalls, !ft.'
d:caling she tried to right fff her slayer.
Tbe ilmltipt<n --thlii ~ had nall.•llll>tl-Ol!lli•;f..,. nt ~~ taken from Miss Adanu:I body were belng
onalfJed by Ille Oranae Couoty abeclll'1
mmellb-""1.
No precise motive has been offered for
the tr · killln&. Im Chief 51*1 &aicl to.
day ~par met siz: moo&bs ago and it'
appeared to be a lovers' quarrel.
Dn!lsed in a nfgbtgon, Miss Vd's
bloockpolle""' boay bad been covered bf
a l!><tool as Ille lay at lhe foot of the bed
tn tbe two-bedroom apartment she shared
with her s!stu.
Mrs. Sireilta, estran,ed from her' ll• bmJd. _ _...mng .. ot4he .time ber
JWDCel' sister WU ilaiJl,
Laser Scientists.
Plan Beach Meet
Slwenty 1a9ef' experts from Amertcan
anivemties and industry are expeded to
come to Huntingto:-Beach Monday to
participate in • &hree-day conferftlte at
the Dwglu Advanced R ea e arc h !.Obonteri ...
The l)'mposfmn carries the Iheme
u1.uer AppHcations in the Geoaciencts''
and will o:mcera itsd with the me of
lasers to condDct measunnu:nb fl eartb
&train. pol'lieal strllClllrts, almolfberic
cb&raderillUca and~ pbenameoa
(qeniMn Gf U:ie 5)'mpollium are Dr,
Jolenly Gou&« aod Dr. Fr ...... I'. Hall
ol .\!>I Do.,.iu Labcntories.
•.W.W . ._ ...
"'™"""' ... """''*'
Jtcli R. ~~!l:T Vkt""9 .... ..., -
1'11011'111 W:11wil -Tho.,,11 A, Mutploi111 ~111,Edllor
-'1H.t w. ••t. wun • .,. •··' <ll-1111 -iftt!Ofl 9ffCll fd!IOr Ci•v Edllar
............... OMce
Jtt .. Str..t
fl,t1 lli111 M4r111: P.O. 111 7t0, •Z441 --......, a..ai. 1211 -· .... ._ ...... ~~-._....,.,.. '--8'lOll m....., .,._
8lld. ' ' Lcldlt I ....... ilio ':Ji °"!J •f. But the otb~ slde's answer tO the allltd North Vlftnamete refli• to negotiate
search for ''.common sround ••. must be points both sides appeare to be agrW
described as neg1tJvt," he aald. on, such as restoration of the deqillitariz·
"To us, common ground involves ed zone (DMZ), the excllange of war
negot'8tions and c o m p r o m l s e , ex-prisoners, compliance with past in-
aruiAation and exchange of views," Lodie ternational accords on Iodgcbjna and
said. reunification of Vietum,
"It ls unfortunate, lb.at your aide "Instead of a 1enulne effort t9 achieve
persistently distorts the meaning or our freedom of choice for the people el South
words and of our ac:Uona. It is un· Vietnam, your aide uorwtunately con·
fortunate that, while we search for com· tinues to demand the repla<*Mnt of the
mon ground, you reject -as you did last legitimate government in South Vietnam
week -efforts to build a base for pro-before serious negoUalions can begin,"
aress in these negotiations." Lodge said. Loda• also 5aid the U.S. deleg&Uon "This cannot be described u a 11.noert:
wouki contlDue "to search for oommon efrort to find common gremd ot
ground on the key issue of self-negotiate -it is an effort to
dd«minatioo of the South Vietnam"• predetermine the outoome of Ille ..,.ua.
people." tlon before U mi. begun."
Dropouts Get Help
Paid to Attend Courses at OCC
A . group of high school dropouts, troubles with English, and most of them
discipline problems all, is t;etng p&id to felt they really had no reuon to try.••
r....u.. Most of the youna men were not "tunt-attellll Oranae 09ut~lt· ed on" the first two weeks of clue. B111t
There the' dropOuts learn !o beeomc when they actually beian workinl on
service station mechanics and take a new cars and trucks in the third week, 1n·
interest 11'1 set.xii, partly becau.e they ti=rest came quickly.
are betng paid $1.60 an hour to learn. Faculty members brought their cars
The 22 young men in the program who over to let the youlhs \\!Ofi on them.
were rererred by tbe Neighborhood Yootb They paid for the part.I and the young
Corps of Santa Ana have QVeral tblrcs in pplled tbe I bor
common: they have had discipline pro. men su a • ., d Leo Sc:hffiber, tbe tnstructor for tbe y>ems, dropped out of high iCOOol, ill coune. la ., turned on with the program
most Bn! under 13 years old. as tbe students. Wqft are beh:Jg paid to the students
with -.1 Manpower Def.,.. TrU!tng "Workln& with theae kldl bu been
Ad -. ne ;-· Diary 11 pold fll!I," Schr<lber said. "I reaJ1y mun thll.
by Or-Coul Juolor Collete District. Once Ibey 1et '°""· there ·WU jUJt DO
Tbir b • lhe f h•"''"" them bac'." ty-two ours a wee.. cirmer .......... •
dropoill$ 1 e a r o to do anything oo an. Schreiber Rea only one drnblck -
automobUe that csn be doae in a seMce and it's not. the fault of the students.
.WOn : brake work, alignment, .tieel "Wt are turning out trallled young
balaneing, rut.. and oil c:banges, minor men," ht aald, "capable of hold.in& down
Wne:aps -you ume it. a job with ariy or1anizaUon. But a cood
When they have learned what they need share ot them are under 11 ye1r1 ot a,..
lo bow -and m<n tmportanUy, when This makes it hard fot them to find a job,
same attitudes bave been dlanaed ao that aad lf they have to wait Ill: rnontJu or to,
tbe:Y will be oble to &<! a job OOd keep ii I'm afrlid they'll drlll baclt to their old
-the college helps them find thooo bedly h1bits.
,_ jobs. For almolt all ol them, It "H ~1e will only hlro them, tbey11 will be their tint ....... , 1·o11, -which ~·r .-~ --do a job for them. And they'd like tbe ~ires a skUL With tblt comes a sense chance.••
GI pride. How about hlrina them? u· 1amecme
Pat Emanl. • i: blo~ from ~San-doet, Ifill they •W: cm tbe jobt Accordto& -~:!Jw!l,~!m tl!ill •tt>,Mlal l!ltswd, tlie 1taUstltl lbow lhat • gt19•an • moowu from these boyJ last longer "' the job than
helpin& theie young men get a start. • others. •
''Waip!"Ch tbtpl to have a aensef ; "One ~SOil 1a that they have been oJ rtSpiilllbllt,. and ~ 1.wf 'titlbita urn!d"down so inlny times in the put,
aod a1titudu," she said. "Before they that when they do get a job, they value tt
came bere. most ol. them had al:rrio)rtely and they keep It," 5he said. "They Wlllll a
DO motivation. Some of them have""'' job badly."
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LOOKING FOR A LITTLE SUNSHINE IN IOWA "''' .......
Timothy Leary and Unidontiflotl Hlppl• Friend
•:Let Son Shine In~
But Rain Greets Lear.y in Iowa
IOWA CITY, Iowa (UPI) -Drug ex·
'perimealet Timothy Leary greeted a
Nnd of hippie type followe1' at lhe 4-H
fairgrounds Wednesday to prove "I am
alive and well In Iowa."
''Let the sun shine both down here and
in the sky above," Leaiy said.
A short time later a blinding rain drove
the plhertll( to obelter in nearby hog
a!ld C11ttle barm.
Leary, a self-proclaimed caodidate for
pemor of California. said' the "lowa Ci-
ty Awakenlll('' was a "political meeting
to ltart I hapPer Wiil' of ftr.."
The approsimatetY SOt followers 1ave
him a smatterq ol che<n but ll10ll ol
them just Ill. huddled In blankets.
A rodr lllDPt-tdenllfi.d mly II
Douglas Employes
Display Arl Work
Art w O'C k S by U mDloya ol the
McDonneU Doualas Aircralt Co. are now
on display at the Lone Beach MllltUm of
Art, 230!.E. CX.an Blvd., Long Buch.
The exhlbh ol oi\1, waler colors.
aceyllts. dr11'ings aod aculpWr.es. wlU
continue through July zo.
"Harpo," followed Leary to the stage and
drew a warmer receplion. ·
Earlier in the day, Leary called
newsmen to an outdoor galherlng behind
his motel and told them President Nixon
c;ould "solve t,be problems of today" with
three acUons. He. said Nixon should eod
the Vietnam war. "the kids want lUe";
end the drart, "they want fretdom"; and
legalize marijuana.
Leary. wearing a red and orange blouse
and bell-bottom trousers, said, "I am
happy to be here in the green grass and
pure air of Jowa."
RFK Widow to Attend
Grapepickers' Party
NEW YORK (UPI) -MrJ. Robett F.
Kennedy will.make one of her rare publk:
apptarances Saturday when ab• attends a
fund-raising party in Southampton, N.'V .,
oo behalf of the C111fornla eraptplcken.
The United Farm Worktl'I Union · are
stekint to orwantze table srepe Dicken in
California over the opposition of vineyard
ownen. The party Mn. Konnody will at.
tend will be at the summer home of
Asatmblyman And~w SttJn. a Manhat·
t:.m Den1ocr1l.
,
Young 1Ulirr t'UDI parlllel lo beach as lie,,...._ wt~ lace
of wave during early morning sessicm at z:t.118tniet aal Ocean Front
in Newport Beach. Stufers -811d pllGlop If er -W8'e ap ~ to
catdl 1 a.m. a<Dla.
South Vietnamese Open
Lifeline to Sieged Camp
SAIGON (UPl) -South Virfnamese
troops and tanms ,.,,.,'1<11 tO<lay they
had punched through tbe Communist en-
circMtmeat kl Ben Het, k.Wina: %14 North
Vidnanll!le aod ape.amc a oew liftliM: in-
to the boliepd ·--The estlrn&l<d 2,1!CO Reds io the hilb
aNUDd the 7tO-m&D allied pnilon
-t.uy wi!tl IO .... ""'°"' el
roc:ioet, rillelf a -.-•
the ctmp.
MQDIOOJI weather closed iD around the
h~la .... oui,o.t tnd;oll& oil lbe Niii
.., -lj.-thotdrGp ..., loods by par8chute, but Ii didll~f~flmjt BSZ
bombeni:. In Ulree atrikel they •opped
2WI -<11 the outlyq (AOwruM!W pooi-
-overalllhl. '!be South Vietn..,.,. uid they IOI! 17
-killed OPd ti -..<led in tl>eir ., ••
into the camp from Dak Mot, four miles
away. U.S. warplanes and helicopter
IUQtbips helped tllem blast away heavy
Comrrumilt rt•tance en route.
Thtir spearhead drove through to the
camp ~nd opened the way . for more con-
voys like tbt ones that arrived from Dai
To, ela;ht miles to the east, Monday and
Tuesday with supplies enough t o
overcome the lad; of parachute drops.
There wu no ground fighting arow'td
the isolated Ben Het Green Beret outpost
In the past 24 hours u the Communists
seemed content to extend their 51-day
sie1e with rocket, mortar and artillery
barrage•.
U.S. Army pilots: reported kiIHne at
least 25 North Vietnamese in two gunship
strikes within three miles of Ben Het, but
the Communist forces showed no signs
Wednesday of easing artillery attacks
tl.t ~ laid Sl(ft 1an 5,000 r«mds ~
to the camp since May 6.
About 100 rounds of 85mm artillery,
m.ta:t' llld NIOOillesi ri6e fire trlmit
-lien Hot'I ... -. .-.
l;&tt-ies ..,"'I! lhe U.S. and Sauth vw.ame.e drJaideri.
Boy May Solve
42 Car Tlwfts
Anaheim police stopped a l~Ye.ar-.kl
boy w-.i., 1tr a tnioor a-tfflc: ..,...
tioo ... -UW.k Iller U.e IO!vm a
cues 411. car tbeft.
Officer Wayne Durtz, While quesUerAng
I.be "'· beoamt: 8111fic:iCJW1 .r bil littry
tllat lie llad --... --hi• lid.her. A ct.de will Ole -G•aer revealed
the car was stoler. .
'Ille """ -Wd Ille -• dist OOfflled ear ill .. e BaB-KmU S~HflPirc
Ceater. the cme oi Ole iDtervieW~ wu
-hlrlleUisllleo.
Gradually ta Oo~· .revealed ti) otW car
lbeltAI in a milNqware area .uear 1.be
01111•1'. He is tw.iag beld iot jovOjlilo hall
"" ........... of gr .. d -very ...... -theft auto.
Japan Hit by Rains
TOKYO (UP!I -Wonda l!"lling up to
146 miles an hour and tOtTentill rains to-
day lashed Japan's main islands. teaYing
at \eaA sil: ptnCW'll dead, llC'Of'eS injured
and millions of dotlars of d~una~-·
JJ. J. (Jarrell;
Girl Left '·
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To Drown
.
After Attacl{
Beaten unconscious and now confirm·
ed raped, a. pretty Claremont teenager
-hi,. <tr......i wl>en ldl with' her
.... la 1 ft!CDOte canyon stream by her
raVbber. lawmen. revuled today.
EtideloE ol 1txual tntereourae ·was
dilcovered duriQ& 1 detatlfld autopsy on
tbe ""1 ol Vll'giala L. Smith, ll, tbe Los
~ County Coron«'• office &aid
w~.
Deoltl was orlclnllly listed as due to
_.. bead OPd neck lnjuri<B, but the
preQy ,......s hJnO-contained w1ter
.. tbe .... ~-...... no1 ... -·fire-. LAia Mceles 01antjr Sberifl's borillclde
~ thwiae tbe La Puma
.hlllior mat Sdlool·-t lelod<r's death
-hlft l....itod hm what die ex-
pod>d to be • -moton:ycle ride
-• friend. Mias Smith was found Monday by two
bikers in an bol1ttd section of Cob1 l~
Cln)'oo rav~_by dirt·blke en~UJla5ls,
bontback ridel and hUters.
Her clo<ltinc"had been forcibly stripped
!run bet' -althwgh stacked neatly
nearby, -.pparently afterward -and
evidenct sbqjled obe fou1ht bitterly lo
avoid her Cale.
Voted most popular girl by her
classmates just recently, the victim may
bave accepted a ride from someone she
knew the altemoon before she was raped
and killed.
A 17·ye<Jr~ld boy known to the family
had dropped off Virginia, the sle{r
daughter of a Los Angeles County pro-
bation olficer at a girlfriend's house
earli?r tn the afternoon.
The youngste r was not home, so
Virginia started walk)ng back to her
family 's own residence two miles away -
but the Isolated death scene Is several
miles beyond there-and lndtcallng some
type or transportation v.·as involved.
Questioning continued W e d n e & d 8: y
among friends of the savagely murdered
girl, whose parent.s said she would never
go willingly with a stranger.
U.S. Okays Grant
Of $1 Million
For UCI Building
A $1 million grant available to UC
Irvine for use toward construction of an
adminislrative office building was an~
nounced today by the U.S. Of(ice (If
Education.
Release or the federal money is con·
tingent on approval by the California
Legislature of the remaining $3 million
toward the slightly over $4 million
building.
The $3 million is Included In Gov.
Reasan's 1969-70 budget now before the
Legislature.
If the appropriation ls approved, con·
struction will begin this fall with com·
pletlon slated for mid 1971, a. campus
spokesman said .
UCI edm lnlstratlve offices temporat"ily
are located in !he library building.
Vacated space would be put to library
usee.
Site of the proposed administrative of·
fices building Is a parl·lng lot just east of
the Commons Bulldln1 at the main en-
trance to the campus.
14th SEMl·ANNUAL
Now In Progress Witla Substa1itial .. Bedtictions On SUC!h Fanao11s Brands As •••
e HERITAGE e JAMESTOWN e HECKMAN e TOMLINSON e · CENTURY e BRANDT e KINDEL e KARGES e HIBRITEN
50% ALSO REDUCTIONS UP TO AND MORE
ON MANY FLOOR SAMPLES, DISCONTINUED PIECES AND
WAREHOUSE ITEMS • • •
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR• DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thur1., & Fri., Evt1.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
2 2 I 5 HARBOR BLVD.
,646. 0275 646. 0276
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Laguna B ·eaeh
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' :VOC. l.2, Nb. ·152, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY', JUNE · 26, 1969 TEN: CENTS
Trustees to Tacl{le Coaches, Budget Tonight 1·
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Trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified
School district meeting tonight in special
&ession at 7:30 p.m. again will face
budget problems and coaching resigna·
tions.
It appears likely trustees will adopt the
$2. 7 million tentative budget. The figure
js about $200,000 more than the budget
total for the current fiscal year.
The tenlative budget calls for $J .2
million to be expended !or teaching
eat
Down the
M ••
ISSIOD
Trail
Contract A warded
For Water Plant
SAN CLEMENTE - A $2.4 million con·
trad for a water reclamation plant was
awarded Wednesday by the San Clemente
City Council to Weardoo Construction
Corporation.
· Weardoo's low bid or $2,464,600 was a
I quarter million dollars above the
I'· -engineer's estimate for th.e job. The new
' plant will be able to treat 4. million
gallons of sewage a day.
e Flood /lleetlng _Set
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -A Joint
meeting between County Flood Control
officials and San Juan Capistrano coun-
cilmen and planning commissioners will
be held Monday at 7 p.m. in City Hall to
discuss city flood CQntrol.
ln a letter to the council suggesting a
meeting be held, George Osborne, district
chief engineer, said that the winter
flooding along Sa'}, J uan and Trabuco
Creeks have reemphasized the need ror
planning and construction work.
:e Blood1iaoblle Due
EL TORO -The American Red Cross
Bloodmobile will visit the Saddleback
area for the first time Monday from 2:40
p.m. until 7:2() p.m. at Olivewood School,
23391 Dune Mear Road, El Toro.
Reservations should be made to ensure
no wailing, however they are not re-
quired. Appointments may be made by
calling Mrs. Stan Berman at 837-1302.
e Grid Signup• Slated
SAN CLEMENTE -Registration for
the Junior All America n Football League
(formerly Pop Warner Football League)
will be held at 7:3() p.m. July 8 at the San
Clemente High School Cafetorium.
For boys eight to IJ years n( age, the
football program will be explained to pa·
rents and youngsters at the registration
lime. Fee is $2. Plans for junior pee wee,
pee wee and midget football teams will
also be discussed.
Stock /llarkets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock marl:ct
was a loser again today. aJthougll some
selective buying reportedly helped :t triln
1 harp early losses. rSee quotations,
Pages 26-27).
Trading slowed near the close. The
Dow Jones industria l average at 1:30
p.m. was off 4.46 at 869.64.
salaries nerl school year, an Increase of
about $1.29,000.
That increase includes about $49,000 of
';new money" moved into lhe teachers'
budget section from another section deal-
ing with salaries for teachers' aides -a
procedure just authnrized by state
legislation.
It also includes a six percent overall in-
crease over this year's budget allotment
for teachers salaries. This figure U: sub-
ject to change before Ule final budget ls
approved in August.
The budget is based on an eslimated in-
crease of about $5 million in the district's
assessed valuation. Howe ver, the exact
amount of the assessed valuation is not
firm and will not be known until the
assessor's figllrfs are complete in July.
Following budgetary action tonight,
trustees will retire to a cl~ executive
sessWn to discuss the coachlna situation
us ect
at Laguna Beach High School.
Four coaches hnve resigned their
coaching positions or have requested
leave of absence from those po&itic:-:s.
Seven of the High School's coaching
staff members are to appear at the
meeting for what is billed as a discussion
session with the trustees and LBHS prin-
cipal Bob Reeves.
The coaches are objecting to teaching
assignments which require them to teach
•
five periods In addition lo the coaching
duties. Coaches have betn teachlng four
periods.
The threat o! a curtailment of the
school's alh1etic program was laid aside
by Trustee Larry Taylor. Taylor said
that it would be normal to continue lhe
athletic program in as outstanding a
manner as possible.
Sch0ol offJcials have indicated that a
number of persons have applied for.the
coaching jobs, although the dlstrlet has
not' advertised for coaches.
Coaches who have resigned their
coaching positions or asked for leaves of
ab.sence are Norman Borucki. b,aseball
coach; Jerry Newmann, lightweight fooe,..
ball and basketball coach ; Warren
Walkins, lightweight football and basket•
ball coach ; Jack Lytbg~ varsity ·track
coach; and FA Bowen, ~lstant varsity
football coach:1
• • ries UICI e
Man Pulled
From Auto
~ By Laborers
'Power Pole Alley'
Residents all along the Orange Coast are becoming more and more
concerned in the campaign to underground public utilities but none
more So than Laguna Beach residents who allege new "marching
poles" up Thalia Street have added a new blight to the .A.rt Colony
hills.
Church to Appeal Denial
Of Plan for Pyne Castle
Calvary Evangelical Free Church has
appealed the Laguna Beach Planning
Commission's split vote denial to convert
historic Pyne Castle into a Christian day
school and church.
Councilmen next Wednesday are lo
schedule a hearing date for tl1e appeal. It
\vould take four council votes to ovc:·:·ule
!he planning commissioner's J to 2
lurndown.
Residents of the area protested the
church-school use of the 64-room hillside
fortress -once strongly believed the ap-
ple of President Nixon's eye as a possible
Californ ia home. It presently serves a;;
an apartrncnl complex.
With the President out of the picture,
the church bought the castle.
In a sense, it was their drea1n site. But
neighbors have objected that it would
generate traffic and noise in the rcsiden-
tla l neighborhood, destroy beauty and
lake the castle off the tax rolls.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 tM' Cltll'f 1"1191 St11f
Rescued as he was about to join his
sr·eetheart in death by auto gas asphyx-
iation in a lonely orange grove near
Tustin, a young Washington businessman
today waits to be arraigned (ot' her pillow
suffocation murder.
George A. Vick. it. was pulled from his
i'~ted car by two laborers who found
him lying .on lhe ·~t !\.bout 6 a,m.
Wldpeaday, a ...-P p.rden·bpse ~
'from the ·exhaust pipe l nto the auto.
· 'I\l!tin Polie:e Detective Jack Terry .. Kl
a cotnpla1nt charging the paint contract.or
with murder _.the city'! first in 11 years
-would be obtained from the Orana:e
County District Attorney later tod ay.
HELD IN TUSTIN SLAYING
· Murder ~I Vick .
An anonymous telephone tipster sent
police to a modem Spanish-style ape.rt~
ment house at .15491 Pasadena Ave. early
Wednesday, where they found Susan C.
Adams, 20, murdered.
The vicUm had been bludgeoned on the
side o( the bead with a heavy instrument.
then suffocated wlth a soft object,
"l05Sibly a pillow, coroner's deputies said.
Ex-Champion Joe Louis
Stricken; Condition OK-
Tustin Police Chlef Glenn Sissel said
the former Orange Coast College studtnt
and unemploye<I bank clerk shared tho
apartment with her sister, Mrs. Mary
Sireika, 2.1, a bar hostess.
Authorities said Vick -who hada't io~
haled enough automotive fwnes to affect
him when rescued ·from suicide near
Jrvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road -
listed the same address.
Miss Adams was first thought to be a
go.go dancer Wedneaday due to confusion
over her sister's occupation.
Sheriff's deputies called to the orange
grove about 5 a.m. arrested Vick on
suspicion of murder, and he was booked
also on an Oregon warrant charging him
with auto theft
Investigators said when they found
Mi~~ Adams' body, there were traces of
flesh and hair Wlder her fingernails, !n-
d:cating she tried to fight off her slayer.
The in vestigators also said that Vick
had nail slashes on his face and sam}>les
taken from Miss Adams' body were being
analyzed by the Orange County Sherill's
crime lab Wednesday,
No precise motive has been offered for
the tragic killing, but Chief Sissel said to-
day the pair met six months ago and ii
(See SUSPECT, Page Z)
NEW YORK (UPI) -Legendazy
heavyweight champion Joe Louis was
rushed to Beekman Downtown Hospital
today 'suff"1ng .Irom What was ·described
as "physical Col1apse:"' ·
Louis, who reigiled as champion from
1937 until HM9, complained of stomach
pains to his attorney, Leon Charney, who
was dr~ving ~im from a teleyisoo In-
terview; Charney immediately drove the
55--year-old Louis to the hospital, and he
was rushed into lhe emergency room for
an examinaUon. His condition was
reported as "good'' by the qospital.
Louis' wife, Martha, and Abe Margoles,
a business associate, remained with him
at the hospital and reported that he was
conscious and in good spirits.
The attorney said that Louis prnbably
didn 't suffer a heart attack, however, and
would be released in a few days.
Earlier, a police department
spokesman had said that Louis had ap-
parently suffered ~.heart attack.
Louis and · ex-be• Billy conn an-
nounced Wednesday that they have set up
a Joe Louis Food Franchise Corp., which
they hope will franchise restaurants here
(See JOE LOUIS, Pa1e Z)
Gov. Reagan Reveals Plan
'
For Off shore Oil Controls
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The Reagan
' ( •
'
Ul'I T""""9
RUSHED TO HOSPITAL
Ex-boxer Joe Louis
Orange Coast
One Who Eseaped
Commissioner Robert French, who
moved for the denial at the June 17
~~ting, said, "We're putting more traf.
fie into an area already difficult because
of the topographf."
Dr. John Wheaton, chairman of t~.e
church congregation, said today, "But
our plans encompass new entrance and
exit driveways and we cou1d restrict the
administration today announced a plan to
tighten safety CQnlrols on offshore o i I
drilling.
The aim is to prevent another Santa
Barbara Channel disaster.
ta Barbara run.away oil spill on a federal
lease last winter.
The submerged well, owned by Union
Oil Co., belched thousands of gallons <if
raw petroleum which washed a.shore and
coated miles ,of Southern Ca1ifornia
resort beache.s.
Weatlaer
We'll get a touch more sun thM.
we're accustomed to Friday, while
the me.reury bolds fast to the low
70's along the Orange coast. El Morro Curve Victim Recovering
Sam Prieto Is doing fairly well at South
Coast Community llospital considering
what he lived through .
He can walk and talk now but when
alone he still lapses into depression. His
head is injured.
Prieto, 24, has been under the care of
neurologists since the terrible night of the
crash. He was the 'Sole survivor of the
most recent El Morro curve tragedy.
~fay 18, that killed four other men, In-
cluding Ronald E. Diehm , 39 of 385
Locust St., Laguna Beach.
CalUomla Highway Patrolmen in-
vestigating the two-car slaughter at first
thought Prieto was dead too. Then some-
one beard a moan at the bloOd-spattered
scene. For days, he was unconscious and
then semkonscious ln his intensive care
bed as the shadow ,of dealb hovered.
Bur the Los Ang·eles man has escaped
the deadly roster "Of the curve in Coast
Highway just north of Laguna Beach. It
includes 12 names since January 1965. ,
Thert were young men in the car with
Prieto. Diehm 's ca r struck a guard rail
and became airborne into the on~ming
\rafUc lane like a deadly projectile.
Sam Prieto waJks and talks now and
sink$ back into whatever dark thoughts
his mind conjures.
"He's doing as well as can be ex·
pcctOO," they say at Ille hospital.
'
exiUng tra!Uc to no left turn." State officials, at a news conrere[)Cf,
He est.I.mated wjth ride sharing and said Gov. Ronald Reagan had approved
you ngsten1 walking there might be only 40 recommendaUons, Mmt of. which re·
50 cars going to 'the facility dally. quire legls1aUon1! • ·' ·• ~
Wheaton, twin brother of City Manager Alt.hough sUggesti~ tighter t'estrlclions·
James D. Wheaton, pointed out that the On oft5hbre dfllling,1 a · S~t "lid·.
proposed use is permitted in an R-1 ministration committee identifl~1 ece.n·
(re!tldential zone). It may be allowed by going tankers as "the most likelJ future
conditional ui;c permit (and controlled) source ordisastrous oil 6'pill.$.'' • ,.
or denied if plann,...rs find it not good for TtJ.! committee called for •;. thorol{it!
nearby property and the communil;y study: of We.1t ·Coast tanker traffic ind genera~y. safeij procedures. 1'
Dr. Wheaton, a veterinarian, said, ") TM·. committee included represent
felt the planning commission was vefy · taUVes of several ~le aaencte1rtl11Cj.ed~
hasty in its decision. I felt there sho~ L ~'oil and~ps driU1ng. . .:.,,•J :!.i;
be a study session, when we could come ·...;;1:._Thii coti)f~littee, beaded ,iq~;_1-"'PjUy,.
back with the details. I felt they were too ~servatlon Director John M. Mayfield,
concerned with traffic which we coUld undertook the :ttivestigation of existine
work out.•• state safety nil~ in the wake of the Sin-
The comtnlttee's recommendations
propose tighter state r"i1J]ation of drill·
ing under ita: jUrlsdicUon, beefed up ad-
ministrative pracUCts, ie&islaUon, Im·
plementation of an oil spill ·~disa!iter
plan" and cooperaUve efforts wtth the
petroleum induatry.
Mayfield' aod Conservation Dlrector
James Steams told 11 news conference
that the Western OJI and G11:s Association
"reviewed" the recommendations and ~
jected to an exchange of iriformatlon·
plan. M~f;eld Indicated the industry
feared that proposal might jcopaidlze
trede secrets.
"they feel we're • little testricUve in
sonic Qf our ttqulre~nta," be aaJd, 0 but
they do ,nqt obJeC! to tbe princielea em· bodied In them."
•
INSIDE TODAY
Pick a wife who has a. ·SU&ft
of humor ...:... that'$ th.t: ~adiifte f
Oiven in today's-'Checking · Up'
c0Lum1i on Page 7.
C1ltf9twlfl • Mtvlt.1 ... c.t .. ill1tll .... Mlllloll ,..,.. ..
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l'llltil<.t .. ,, --" ••rl e1111t1' " Tl'IHll" .... -" -· • AM L....,, .. """" Wl'tffl;
.. ....... • ... ....... .. _,,.,. •
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LAGUNA TEEN ,CORNER
"' , ... u= .. . . ' -· ~ ,..i,., • .,..,, -. 'llffQM~-. . •
·-~ ' ,
' ~PEOPLE WOULD have given up
~ \,y ncnJ._Susan Mane hf>jll't, and won't.
Susan's current battle against death is
being •Laaed now at lhe Orange (.ounly
• lledicaJ Center. But while thi5 is her
' most inqlortanl battle, her life has been a
-lliege. ' Tbe 17.,eu okt blonde, a past student
at Villa Part Hiah School, underwent the
county's first kidney transplant several
weeks ago. Her mother donated the
' kldney.
But now Susan hu conl racled ~la, in addition to general
lyllemic problems. She hu -placed
beet "' dWysil, meaning the -•lioo wu in essence ln vain.
Susan's problems began at birth. She
WU bom with three kidney&., but doctors
dido 't know it until she was two yean
old. By that lime the nlra kidney had
diseased another. When she wu 1hree,
the extra kidney was taken out in an
opeFation.
From -then ·un i" 1957, SlAn was under
,.
medication.· In that year, her aecond
kidney ceased to runclion, and was taken
out. Her remaining tldncy was only 70
per cent functional.
As a result of the lnfectioos kidney,
Susan had lo undergo a bladder operation
in 1958. Am le.st December, wheo un·
dergoin& blood transfusions, Suaan went
into convulsion!. She was rushed to Palm
Harbor Hospital, the only hospital in the
area with a kidney machine that purifies
the blood.
"While l was In the hospital, I con-
tracted viral pneumonia," Susan told me
rteveral monlhs ago . ''1 was placed in the
intensive care. unit. and I cooldn'l be
treated. l had to fight on my own !or nine
Cy&."
Since December, Susan bad been un.
dergoing dialysis (blood-purUylng) treat-
menta twice weekly. teo hours at a time.
A "shunt" which allows a tube hook-up,
had been placed in her left arm. "Jt
doesn't hurt-I get used to it." she said.
"But twice I've bad convulsions, along
with 103 temperature."
-UfltT...._..
LOOKING FOR A LITTLE SUNSHINE IN IOWA
Timothy Lo.,y ond Unidontlflod HIPfllo Friend
•Let Sun S.hine 'In~
IOWA CITY. Iowa (UPI) -Drug ex-
perimenter Tlmot.h1 Leary greeted a
band of hippie type followers at the 4-H
fairgrounds Wednesday to prove "l am
alive and well tn Iowa."
"Let the sun shine both down here and
in the sky above," Leary said.
A short tlme later a blinding rain drove
the gathering to shelter in nearby hog
and catUe barns.
Leary, a self-proclaimed candidate for
governor of California, said the "Iowa Ci-
ty Awakening" was 1 "p)litical meeting
to start a happier way of life.''
The 1pprosimaltly 300 followers gave
him a amattering of cheers but most of
them just sat, huddled in blankets.
A rock singer. identified only as
, "Harpo," followed Leary to the stage and
drew a wanner reception.
Earlier in the day, Leary called
newsmen to an outdoor gathering behind
his motel and told them President Nixon
could ••solve the problems of today" with
three actions. He said Nixon should end
the Vietnam war. "lhe kids want life";
end the draft, "they want freedom"; and
legalize marijuana.
Leary, wearing a red and orqe blouse
and bell-bottom trousers, said, "I am
happy ·to be here in the greo grass and
pure air of Iowa."
Hijacked Plane From LA
Finally Released by Cuba
MIAMI (UPI) -A United Airlines
jetliner. hijacked while on a flight from
Lo:-~lea to New YOrk and detained in
Ha'fina U hours becluae of "mechantcal
diff1c!ul1iel," wu finally reJeased today.
Tbe-ilrllner 'ft'U cleared at l:OI p.m.
ao4 loot oil on iii JI minute fllild bock
to llllainl lnletJl'Uonal AJrport. The
Federal Avialion Afency said It had been
unatMe to Qet.trmine the nature of the
mechanical problem.
The FAA official said the eight
crewmen· and 50 passengers who arrived
in Havana 1bout midnight were taken lo
hotels !or IOble sleep.
The United Alrllnes OCI was com-
mandeered 11 minutes after takeoff from
Loi AngeJea Wednesday afternoon and
arrived 1t Jose Marti AJrport In Havana
at 9:01 p.m. POT Wednesday. The 2,m.
mile flight was the second hijacking of a
transcontinental airliner v»ilhin eight
days.
Because of her condition (before the
operation), she had been limited in her
ai::tvftles. She had been a model, and she enJoys sewing her own clotbes and play-
ing the guitar.
But her other activities -swimming
golf, mode"! dance-wtre "fill Umlts.':
Now everything l! oil llm.itl.
The cost ol the operation and now
post-operative care, is enormOOs. Laguna
Beach High School and the South Orange
County Y Council have .sent' a check for
li.!23.25 lo ~ fund headquarten.
The money came from It donations the
two organizations collected In a local
fund drive. 1be mooey was forwarded to
Home Savings and Loan ol Santa Ana,
1300 N. Main, the drive headquarters. As
of this morning, there was IJW'ly $23.000
in the fund.
But that will only cover about half the
Initial cost of the operation. No one can
project the total cost of lbe hospital care.
And no one can mtmate Susan's will
to Jive. That too is enormous.
Susan has the will to win. And know-
ing her, I say she will.
County Rushes
To Preser ve
Beach Access ·
Proceedings are moving ahtad today to
condemn a 13-acre strip in the heart of
Sunstt Beach far a parking Jot aauring
public beach access, following a 3 to z
vote by County Supervisors Tuesday.
The action must move ahead with all
speed, county officials noted, in order to
tlock construction ol a major apartment
complex on lhe old Pacific Electric
Railroad right-of-way .
Carlton Builders Inc., Of Beverly Hl\13.
already ha. one building under con·
st ruclion in t~e narrow, sandy strip
between Pacific Coast Highway and
Pacific Avenue.
• Voting ~fter a one-hour hearing climax-
lni a series of discuuions spanning the
past year, supervisors authori1ed county
Parks Director Kenneth Sampson to ap-
ply for federal financing funds.
Supervisors David L. Baker, Robert \V
Battin and Alton E. Allen approved th~
condemnation p~ings over denial
votes by aupervbdfi William H. Hlrateln
and WiDiam 'J . PhiOips.
Deadline is Ju1y 1 in the application for
l . loderal 1""'4 In ~· purchase ol the biocll'· 1>~.'" while County
Administrative Officer Robert E. 'lbomu
has offered OW supplemental plan:
-A one-cent increase in the Orange
County· Harbor District 8-ce.nt tu nte
for the coming fiscal year.
-u .. ol 1427,500 In Road Department
Gas Tax Funds. ·
-Diversion of $912,SOO In Harbor
District Funds to be used for dredging
Upper Newport Bay and for proposed
construction of 1 by-pus channel Jn
Sunset Aquatic Park. ·
The 1,130-<:ar parking lot •Ill brir!I
money back into co0nt7 cotfen. noted
Thomas, and this could repay funds bor-
rowed to_ get the Sunset Beach project
moving.
"We shoukl use evttt means pos.1ible
tc. maintain our beaches," Argued
SupervJtot Baker. "this ii not a local
Sunset Beach matter.
"ll M parking is provided, lhf 6,100-
foot county owned ~ach worth te million
is in eff@Ct a ·private beach available only
to local residents," he concluded.
Old A-1 Chugs
To End of Laguna
School Bus Line
Without much f1nfare the Laguna
Beach Unified School Di!trid is trying to
sell old A-t.
"We hope to get $'100 or $b> for It,"
said busint3s manqer F..dwin Hind. The
aging bus, listed u -"A·l" in the district's
rerords, is a 1951 Ford JO.passenger vehi-
cle wilh 95,221 miles recorded. OAAH'G'! CO.Ut P\llM r5H1ffG COMl'Wf'r
ReMrt N. W11of -.. --Jeck •· C.rl., -
VD rn.11111t -CfeMr.r Ml""''
Radio Havana sakl---today .the-. jet .waa
hijacked by an individual anne<twllh a-
pistol. It did not give his nationality.
It was purchased ln 1965 from the San
Clsnente Stagt-Lines, and uaed for SDlall
fleld 1Mp;i.1twTsJl6f Umt to Its ful
potential, Hind said, so the district has
decided to sell. Old A-1 must chug o!f. Tlo.11111• ac,,,;1 ·-Tho11111 A. M•rplo.in•
IN"'"l"f E'I!"'
1t1d11r.I P. ,..,ti ·--"' ---...... 211: Fe••ll A•t.
MelU11t .Mll•-t P.O. a.. !66, •Z•SZ --c..t. .... -#tit ..., "'-' ....,.,, 9-dl~ m i .,.., .. _ ... in.N
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It was the 20th hijacking of the year of
a U.S. airliner to the Communist bland.
Tbe jeL Wat hijacked 15 miles west of
Riverside. at 4:20 p.m. PDT after taking
off from Los Angeles. the FAA said.
The pilot, Capt. Edward Nibu r, 59, of
Bemadsvllle, N.J., radioed a!li:lng for a
roulin; to Havana.
United officials said there was DO
further contact with lht pUot after his
terse message.
"We knew it was hijacked lhep and Wt
don't ask questions under t b o s e ~lrcumslances," said an FAA spokesman
10 Los AngeJes.
The ~plane's" route to the Communist
Island look it over AJbuquuque N.M.;
Fort Worth, Tex.; Alutndrla, La.;
TaDahasset and Key We.st, Fla.
Douglas Employes
Display Art Work
Interested parties may call the
transportation department or tht: district,
494-8545, for details. II wlll be sold to the
highest bidder.
From P llfJfl 1
JO E LOUIS .•.
and abroad. Louis heath the firm .and
Conn is vlct pres\denl
The first franchised rest.aurant In the
chain la expectld In ..... within IQ daya.
It will have a.n lnterraclal ldnUDistn.Uve
stall.
Laub was hea'YWtilht j:llampian
IOllitr lhan any oilier l>Oxtr. reUrill( In
1049 afttr 12 yeirs as lltll.at. He f~ '71
prnfe.sslonal' bouLs, woo 54 by ~la,
ma.de N.1 million and wound up ownlne
back taxes ol lt.21 mlllloo.
Italian Strike Ends
.
1 · ' .
Touring Enapty Grounds
Bic.ycling boy.s take a spin tllrough Laguna's vacant festival grounds,
which soon will become a veritable beehive of colorful aclivity as La-
guna artists set up shop !or 34th Festival o! Arts. Oates for this year's
festival and accompanying P ageant of the Masters are July 11 to
Aug. 24.
Alioto Issues Warning
On ToughCampusAction
By TOM BARLEY
Of ftM 0.lly ,.llltt Shit
Bayonets, buckshot an<i gas attacks can
serve only to further inflame student
unrest on California's campuses, San
Franctsco Mayor Joseph Alioto warned
today.
The Bay City's civic leader quickly ad-
ded in a speech before the Town Hall in
Aoabeim that "(inn, tough;minded action
is needed to prnent the 'alsmtegralion of
our fine university and college systems."
But the action taken by police and na-
tloool aua-In quelliog the rocent
Berkeley disorders wu very far removed
from tboee principles, U>ei mayor added.
"Whit is needed," ht said. "is an
oboolutely clear headed and resolute
respome founded on two iodtvisitile prin-
dplea: S'trlfl control ol violenco and full
respect for student vlewpoinls. ''
Mayor AIJoto warned that students
••must. have a ereater voice in our
democrllle IOCiety and must sit on the
caundlo ol dedllon."
He uiJed Californians to "welcome the
lid thlt sl.udeots are no longer silent and
to applaud lheir impatience f o r
democraUc refonn on the campus and in
the community.
"No longer are young people to be seen
and not beard," he said. "Much of what
they hive to say," he added "ii worth
listening to and It is high time that those
of us who have ao much to say about
them &at clown and did some hard lislen-
ing."
Alioto stressed that he was speaking of
the "vast majority" of students "not the
handful of rabid radicals who yearn for
nothing less than the decomposition of
our democracy."
But effecti\le police action, he sakf,
would quickly "sort out this hard core of
com, narcolic peddlers, Black Panthers
and assorted hoodlums who are be.hind
much of the unrest that we have seen at
Berkeley .''
Mayor Alioto lauded t.hc present rela-
tionship between students and ad-
ministrators at San Francisco Stale Col-
lege as an example of "what can be
achieved with a sensible, civilized ap.
proach to students, many of whom seek
common sense answers and sympathy for
their legitimate grievances".
"We are oot the parents of a generation
of young radkals," Alioto said. "We are
the parents of highly intelligent
youngsters who are receiving the benefits
of the finest education ever offered. to
young people ln our history a~·we must
not look the other way when tbeae same
young people demand answers to
pertinent questions. _
"We must give them the vote at 18
years of age," Alioto said. "And we must
meet these youngaten mort than half
way if we are going to arrive at any kind
of solution to the problems that beset
us."
Those problems are not going to be
solved U we "closely adhere" to many of
the solutlons offered by Governor Ronald
Reagan, Alioto sald.
He blamed the goveroor f o r
"considerably enlarging" t b e eon-
lrov~rsies at Berkeley· and "other cam-
~s" by his "outdated com..'epl! or t'.ie
methods in which we should de.al with the
legitimate grievancts of young people."
Alioto re.fused t.o comment on the
possibility that he may be Governor
Reagan 's opponent in the I 9 7 o
gubernatorial election. "I can't answer
lhal now.'' he said, "but I can say that if
anybody needs an opponent it's Governor
Reagan, if on}y in the light of bis attitude
toward! student unrtst."
JJ. J. (Jarrell;
Frott• Page 1
StJSPECT .. ~
:t!"peared to be a lovers• quarrel.
Dressed In a nightgown, f!.tiss Vick 's
biood-ipaltered belay bad been covered llll
• spnad u she loy It the-I..! of the lied
fn-the two-Dei.irOOln apartment she Shared
with her sister.
. Mrs. Sireika, estranged from her hus-
band. Was work ing · at the time · her
younger slste'r was slain. ·
Authorities said today Miss Adams had
planned to go to Australia to try op.
portunities in that country and already
had her passport, but apparently changt.'d
ber mind recenlly.. .
Neighbors said both the murder victim
and her older -sister were atlraclive girls,
but quiet tenants who promptly paid their
rent and rarely mixed with others.
The body was taken lo SrdQleback
Funeral Home. where arrangements will
be made by the sisters' parents. P.1r. and
Mrs. Chester Adams, 1431 Cypress Ave.,
Sl:nta Ana.
Authorities said today the Medford,
Ore.. auto theft charge against the
murder suspect stems from ·rus renting
the 1969 sport coupe in whic;h he at·
tempted ·to commit suicide Wednesday. The car was leased or rented but not
returned on ·time and authorities said it
seems doubtful under the circumstances
that he will be prosecuted for the lesser
oHensc.
Tustin police said Wediiesday while
Vick 1·as being queslioncd prior to book·
ing at Orange County Jail that they
believed hlm to be the telephone tipster
in the murder case.
They refused to confirm this today, but
noted the call was later traced to a p;iy
telephone booth near the orange g.rovc
where he attempted ta lake his life.
DAILY PILOT 1!11! f'ho111
Go vernor'• Lad y
Mrs. Nancy Reagan describes
her first date \vith the gover·
nor-t~be in DAILY PILOT
\vriter Jean Cox's story on the
cover page of the Women's
Section in today's edition.
J apan Hit hy Ra ins
TO~YO (UPI) -\Vinds gusting up to
146 n11Jcs an hour and torrential rains to-
day lashe? Japan's main islands. leaving
at least six persons dead, scores injured
and millions of dollars of damage.
14th SEMl·ANNUAL
N ow In Progress With Substa1ttial
Reductions Ota Such .Fan1ous Brands As ••• -e HERITAGE 9 JAMESTOWN e HEC KMAN • • TOMLINSON e CENTURY e BRANDT
KINDEL 0 KARGES e HIBRITEN
50% ALSO REDUCTIONS UP TO AND MORE
ON MANY FLOOR SAMPL ES, DI SCONTINU ED PIECES AND ---·--. WAREHOUSE ITEMS ••.
H.J .GAl\l\tfT fURNlTURE
Art w o r k s by 42 empfoyes of the
McDonnell Oou1Jas Aircraft Co. are now
00 display at the Long Beach Ftluse1.1m or
Art, Z3gO E. Ocean Blvd" Long Beach.
l\OME CUPll -A strlke of 2511,0llO civil COSTA MESA, CALIF.
servant> eodO<l at da"11 today with · PROFESSIONAL O M Th & F I E 2 2 I 5 HARBOR BLVD.
The ~uhlbit of oi ls. water cotol'!,
agylfcs, ~wlnp and KUlpturu •Ill
contJnue throogh July 20.
I
... "' un on n •a• • or 1 .RI R c iGNERS 646 . 0275 6<6 . 0276 •-em-ent and i 1 i t I INT• 0 o•s pen on., urt., r ., ves.
ruchini a new waa•·•.,....,.nt m .,._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._._.J
nlfi>ilonf Jalks. '
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T-, """' 26, 1969 · L · DAILY PILOT 1
'
County Budget: Where It Goes -
$190.3 Million Expenditure Plnnned for 1969~7'0 -
A breakdown of Oranae •P>unlY'• pro-
posed 1911-711 budaet o111ao~·m11Uoo, up
$17 million over the current year, but not
requiting' an increase in the present $1.68
laJ' rate reveab the following figures:
(Tbe 1190.3 figure lncludes special
diatricll and service areas governed by
the Board of Supe.rvl.!lors including tho
Harbor and Flood Control districts which
have separate tu rates Harbor: 6.5
cents:. Flood Control, 35.5 cents).
Community Safety, $31 million, up $3.8
million ; Health, $24.S million, up $5.5
million; Education, $1.8 million, up
$387,983; Home and Community Environ·
ment, $24.1 milUon, up fl.I million;
Economlc Asslslance, 151 milllon, up IU
millJon ; · RecreaUon and C u 1 tu r a 1
Activities, $}3.88 million, up $1.9 mllllon;
Transportation, $17.9 million, up $1.I
million, General Administration and Sup-
quired tD maintain an acceptable level of
aervke.
"2. A best estimate of the do 11 a r re-
aource1 which could be 1lloc.ated Witbln
the framework of an overall financial
plari for the county."
Thomu reported tfial 15 out of 72
operatln& budgeta were at or below
target. "Of these 15 budg<ts, nine are
below the current year, four ahow slight
incrtues, and two remain unchanged."
Thomas further explained : "The p~
posed budget for the county general fund
totala $141.8 million, ncit including a
reserve for salary increases. At this
figure, the proposed budget exceeds the
curreol year by $18.4 mllllon, or 15 per. I cent, compared to ~n average increase of
13 percent per year during the alxt.les.
"SGme $13.1 mlllloo, or 7~ percent •of
the recommended l.ncrtue i! for
Wellare, the Medical Cenle< and M .. tol
Health budgell whicb account for about
50 percent of the tot.al 1eneral fund, Of
that tl3.a milliDn increase, only about
11.5 million, or 11 pereent, la financed
from property tut.s wlth the balance
coming from state and federal funds."
Thomas added : "Personnel costs ac·
count for about 50 percent .of tbe total
general fund. The recommended bud&et
lncludes 752 additional positions.
"Tbe Medlcal Center, 312 jobs, and
Welfare, 209, re_present about 70 percent
of the total increase. Coat Df the Medical
Cent.er and Wellare pos.ltions are largely
offset by t!ate and federal fUndl."
The CAO told supervllort th a t
California Taipayen A I • o e I at I• n
ttpotled budeet 0-for &7 Calllornta
counties revellt that ln Or~Cap'U budaet nqulrem<nlz per ca _.
l l1U51n 196Mtl, loweat"ln the t!ate.
"Moreover, the county ranked leCond
lowest in the state in property tu: re-
quirements per capita with $41.41. This
means that the Orana:e County property
taxpayer pays less In county ta1e1 per
capita .than he would if he lived' tn any
other county µi cawornta eJ:Cf!pt one -
Solano Coonty.
"Based oo the rtcommeoded budget for
1911-70, the county's statewide nnkllll t.s
~ tG remain uochanged.."
·\ port, $24.7 million, up '2.l mlillon, •••• • •
DAILY PILOT Pllefol llr llldle"' lc:Mlllt~
Bard Lett Ott Newport
Young surfer runs parallel to beach as he makes hard left aJong face
of wave during early morning session at 22nd Street and Ocean Front
in Newport Beach. Surfers -and photographer -were up early to
catch 7 a.m. action.
:Coast Girl Found Dead;
Mystery Witness Hunted
Long Beach police today are conducting
a massive search for a possible mystery
witness lo the death of an IS.year-old
Huntington Beach girl who was found
dead in a Long Beach motel Wednesday.
The man, who was described as a male
Negro, approximately six-foot three in·
ches, about 30 and weighing 170 opunds,
yas seen leaving the mot.el, located at
1021 E . Pacific Coast Hlgbway shortly
before the body was found.
Sgt. David A. Bauer ol the 1-Beach
police homici(le divl!ion said the girl,
'Patricia M. Bus~ of IO!OI Crailet
Drive, was dlscovefed at 1:;, p.m.
sprawled on the floor of. one or the rooms.
A hypodermic syringe was IOUJkiaear
the body, said Sgt. Bauer, but the con·
tents have not yel been analyzed.
He added that there were marts on
Miss Buscaglia'& arm which could ha ve
been caused by a needle, but final
McLaughlin Wins
College Title
SEA'ITLE (AP) -A s trong
perlonnance in the final three races
Wednesday gave Tom McLaughlin of San
DiegD State a victory in the North
American Intercollegiate Single-handed
Sailing Championships on n e a r by
Shllshole Bay.
The victory gave the Ca1ifomlans a
sweep in the regatta. McLaughlin and Ed
Butler of Southern California earlier won
the team championship and the district
team racing event.
Harvard's Robbie Doyle, who had been
leading going into the final day of races,
Jell from contention with 7th, 8th, 11th
and 9th place finishes.
determination ls pending a coroner's
autopsy later today.
Her unidentified companion left the
PatiD Motel two hours before the girl was
found, police said. She was dressed In a
T-shirt, blue jeans and was wearing no
shoes.
When leaving the motel, the man told a
cleaning woman that his wife was pack-
ing and that he would return later to pick
ber up.
Deputy Los Anaeles C.oroner Arthur
Bustamante said lnvestlgaUon of the
case. including the inquest b continuing
and that a report stating the cause of
Miss Buscaglia's death would be Issued
later today.
Miss Buscaglia was a junior at Hun-
tington Beach High School until Feb. 10
when she dropped all of her classes.
Civil War Buff
Finds Own Theft
PlilLADELPHIA (AP) -Anything
connected with the Civil War era in-
terests Manuel Kean, a 54-year-<1ld
archivist who has accumulated more
than 300,000 items dealing with life in
America a century ago.
It's a labor of )ove· that's occupied
mDre than half his lifetime.
So when he hears about stuff of the
period he goes looking.
A friend told Kean that an antique shop
in South PhUadelphla called "The
Canary" had lots of Civil War papers.
Kean went to the shop Wednesday.
There he discovered he was looking at his
own material -about 3,000 Items stolen
from Kean 's warehouse.
Given 'Good Chance'
Cigarette Advertising
Ban Passed by Senate
From w1,,, Servi---
The State Senate hllS passed a bill ban-
ning all cigarette advertising 1 n
California and its sponsor believes the
measure has a good chance to become
law.
The 21-7 Senate vote left the bill's
.author, Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson (D-
Bevuly lUlls), optimistic. "If we get it
Gut of committee, I think it has a pret.ty
good chance, it should do well on the
Aaaembly floor," be said.
The bill's restrictions on cigarette ads
a.re ao far reaching, that, if it becomes
law, local television staUoos will be re-
quired to sutmitute local non-clgarette
commercials, for cigarette ads oo na--
tional network programs.
It alJD applies to newspaper• and
mapzinel published In C a 11 f o r n i a .
Claarttte adverti1in1 on radlo also would
be forbidden.
Sen. John G. Sclunllz (R-Tustln), the
measure'• chief opponent, objected that
the ban would Impinge on the rlgbts of !J>-
dlvlduab and buslnea.
"This: Is a step toward further
governmental control, which, If carrled to
tls 1oiica1 txlreme, will le.ad to a
totaUtarlan reglmt," he said.
The only hitch to passage, according to
Bcllen1011, Is If the bill IJ sent to the
Assembly 's Commer<e CornmlU...
He sakl the-bill woul<tpus the Health
a n d WeUare Committee, b u t the an-
ticlgarelte measure would face a tough
fight in u~ Commeree Committee.
Assembly Speaker Robert T. Monagan
(R-Tracy). who assigns bills to com-
mittees, has not decided which com·
mlttee will get the leglslaUon.
Beilenson., responding to the pres.sure
of some colleagues, bu softened his
stand for cigar and pipe smokers. His
original bill prohibited the advertising ol
all tobacco product.I, but he amended the
measure to bar cigarettes only.
The Beverly Hills Democrat, who quit
smok1ng Jul year, explained his bill as
follows :
"The bill Included no restrictk>na: on
smoking. U a person wants to smoke,
th.at U his business. But ir be want.I to
delug.e 1m1U children with 1 constant
barrage of advertising that auggeats
smot.ing is glamorous or appealing ..•
then tt becomes my business and your
bu&.ine$S."
"Sclloola and pmnts are forced to
combat a multlbilll<>n-dollar Industry for
the Jile and health of their children," he
added.
The senator pointed out tbat cigarette
advertising has already been banned In
Britain, Canada, Norway, Denmark,
Sweden, SWllwland, 1111¥ and France.
Provi.siDJl for Contingencies, $1,065,0001
doWn $6C,OOO.
Special district comparisons are:
Harbor District, $3.9 milHon, down $2.2$
million o.r YT percent; tax rate 6.5 cen1't
down 1.5 cents; Flood Control District,
$18 million, up $6.8 million or 61 percent;
tax rate, 33.S cents, up 7,5 cents becawie
of special rate increase for repair of flood
damage.
Public Library, $3.45 million, down
$80,664 or 2 percent; tax rate 17.4 cents,
down .3 cents; Structural Fire Protec-
tion, $1,025,5.13, up $562,CKl, or 121 per·
cent, tu rate 16 cents, up 9 .cents.
County Administrative Officer (CAP)
Robert E. Thomas offered supervisors
"the first program budget fCJr a
California county," which "empbasl.zea
what-the government dGeS rather than
what it spends."
"Program budgeting also emphasizes
function Gr service rather than organlza·
ti on," Thomas explained. "For example,
Adu1 L Law Enforcement, Juvenile Law
Enforcement, Civil Law Enforcement
stand out rather than Sheriff, Probation,
Dislrict. Attorney."
Thomas emphasized that adoption of
the proposed budget Wednesday by the
Board Df Supervisors "is not to be con.
strued as an indication of the board to
approve any part Df tht budget on a final
bmia prior tD public hearings and final
approval." Budget hearings will be held
from July 16 throogh July 25. .
"FDr the second consecutive year, the
CAO's oUice issued budget target figures
to all department heads," Thomas ex·
plained. "These targets were prepared by
our stall analysts and your (board's) ex·
ecuUve assistants and represented two
basic themes:
"I. A best estimate, considering past
experience and probable f u tu r e
developments, of lhe dollar resources re-
Lodge's Appeal
For Compromise
On Peace Futile
0
PARIS (UPI) -The Unlled States tn.
day called on the Communists in vain to
negotiate in a spirit of compromise to end
the Vietnam war and bring peact! to
Southeast Asia.
The appeal by U.S. chief negotiator
Henry Cabot Lodge at the 23rd session of
the Vietnam peace talks fell on deaf eal"!I.
While Lodge sought to show the "com·
mon ground" the United S t a t e s
shares with allied and CDmmunlst peace
plans, the Communist side denounced
President Nixon's troop wtlhd.rawal pre>-
mlses as a maneuver to prolong the war
11nd called 1or adoption of the Viet Cong's
l~point plan as the only starting point for
negDtiations.
"Our country will examine every
avenue that may lead to peace," Lodge
sald.
But the other side's answer to the allied
search for 1'common ground ... must be
described as negative," he S8ld.
"To us, common ground Involves'
negoUations aod _comp..r.omlse, ~
amtnation and exchange of views," Lodge
said.
"It is unfortunate, that your side
persistently distorts the meaning of our
words and of our actiGns. It is un-
fortunate that, while we search for com-
mon grDund, you reject -as you did last
week -effort$ to build a base for pro-
gress In these negoUations. '' Lodge also said the U.S. delegation
would continue "to search for common
ground on the key issue of se1J.
det.ennlnalion Df the South Vietnamese
people."
Lodge deplored the Viet Cong and
North Vietnamese refusal to negoUate
points both aides appeared to be •areed
on, such u restoration or the demilitarli·
ed zone (DMZ), the exchange of war
prisoners, compliance with put I°"
te.rnatlonal accords on Indochina and
reunillcaUoo ol Vletn.am.
"Instead of a genuine effort to achJeve
freedom of choice fqr the people of South
Vietnam. your side unfortunately con-
tinues to demand the replacement of the
Jegltlmate government ln South Vietnam
before serious ocgoU.tions can begin,"
Lodge said.
"Thi.ti cannot be described u a 1lnctre
effort lo find common around or
negoUate -it ii an eUort to
predetermlnf! the outcome of the negoU&·
Uon before it bas begun."
)
•
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• • •••••••
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Plant prelly ...-and celoala by tlw trayful
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Dahlias, vinca, marigolds, ageratum
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Double begonias in
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Wax leGf privet, Agapanthus Peter Pan or
MMyer lemon in 1 gallon container 6tc
Planter Mix ••• 2 cu. ft. bag -... 1.09
UnlV9rsily Compast ••• 5 cu. ft. bag 2.1 t
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MCa..ne's front throw mGW91'
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Picnic grills ••• y-ch!>ice
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NEWPORT BEACH
!
!
•
'•
I~.-.. Dt'lr .. llillt ltefQ
W•mer von Braun, developer of
the Salum rocket scheduled to launch lbe Apollo 11 astronaut. to
the moon nell:t month, came to
Greece to pay homage to the Greek
god for whom the moon flight pro--
giarri is named. Returning f-rom a
visit to Delphi, Von Braun said that
since the space program is called
Apollo, "I !bought it would be only
fair to come to Greece and pay my
respects to the god before we make
this last crucial attempt." •
It's summer. bvt it'1 o IDft OM in
Portland, Ort. A 1t1Ws of dotmpour1
thtrt thil week proved more than
ttreet gutter1 ond drai1t.1 could handle
in manv pcrta of the cit11 1uch ar this I tood<d apol, • The water skier surprised Mrs.
Gerald Hides, but not as much as
the pickup truck doing the towing.
The unu1ual hookup went zipping
past the Hicks home in Salt Lake
City when knee-deep water sloshed
across Lehi Drive after a storm in
suburban Granger. "'Ibey were
having a ball," said Mrs. Hicks.
"Except, they bad to slow down
once in a while for the kayaks." • T•rrence Spinka of Wymondham,
England kissed bis girl friend three
limes and it cost him $2.40 per kiss.
Spinks was fined $'7.20 in magis·
trate's court for not having proper
control of his automobile. •
11 The counet1 of Great Snoring,
' England, complained about the
noise from Litt«!! Snoring. The
council wanl.J Little Snoring to '~ do something about . a flyi!lfl
club th~e which crtates noise
on weekends and interrupt! tele·
', vision re ceptio n.
• An attempt by four men to rob
the First National Bank of La Jara,
Colo., didn't get oil the ground -
literally. Police captured three of
the men following the robbery
when their getaway plane bogged
down on a muddy runway. The
fourth was arrested later. They
had gut away with $24,000 from the
bank. • A fertilizer company moved into
a new building in Johannesburg,
South Africa five years ago and
had to demolish a wa11 to get a
computer in. Now the firm is mov-
ing again and workmen had to ·rip
the wan down again to get the
computer oul
Warren Re fleets on
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ead Warr.n
saya lbe moot Important Supmne Courl
rulill&s ol hll 11 ,.aro u clllel j1'l(Jce ti
tile United Slates """ those doclarlnf
lhlt one man's vote should mean as
much as any other man"&.
Jf the people have equal repre1entation
in government, they can sotve most pro-
blem1 "through the political Pf0Cf:S5
rather than through the courts,'' WarTen
says in an interview broadcarl today.
'nle 78-year-old Warren, who reUred
Monday, chose reapportiorunent decisions
over the more widely known school
desegregation ruling of 1954 as probably
the most far reaching or the Warren
Court years. He said he likes to think of
tho8e years u the era of the "people's
court."
Rea-1ioomeol rulings lrJuered a
Surtax Bill
Healthy Again ,
Nears Passage
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Arter a
miraculous overnight recovery, President
Nixon's Income tax surcharge bill is
healthy again, and on the road to House
passage Monday.
The $9.2 billion tu package, which ex-
tends Ibo IO percont 1urtax beyond Mon·
day's expiration date, was almosl given
up for dtad TUesday when House leaders
postponed a vote on it for two weeks.
New life wu pumped i n to It Wed-
nesday after GOP luder Gerald R. Ford
promised 170 Republicans would vote for
the bill -to more than the 130 he had
predicted the day before.
On the basis of the new count. Speaker
John W. McCormack rescheduled tile
measure for Monday, alnce only 47
Democrats are needed to assure passage,
aauming all members are present and
vollng.
1be Monday vote could work to the ad·
vantage of the bill's su pporters.
Abaenteemn is high on Monday when
many EMtern Congressmen take off fcrr
long weekends. 'nlese O>ngressmen in-
clude Democratic liberals wbo have been
wagJni the prlnclpal lill't agawt the
bill, pressing for commJtments on a
1weeping bW.to cl.,. tu loopholes.
Passage Monday, and Senate approval tater, would atend the tax for lix
montha at 10 percent and another six
months at five percent through June 30,
1970 wbm it would expire.
The bill also would repeal, relroact.ive
to April 18, 1969, the seven percent in-
vestment tu credit for b u s I n e s s
machinery purchases; relieve 12 million
low income tupayen: of iOD'lf:, or all, of
their Income taxes ; and postpone for a
year the scbeduJed reductkln of the 10
percent telephone and s e v e n percent
automobile excise taxes due to go lo five
percent each Jan. I.
'Ibe Senate is not expected to approve
the measure until S()metime alter Mon-
day's expiration. As a stopgap measure,
the Senate Wednesday approved a onc-
month continuation of the present
withholding tax rates on paychecks.
revoluUon in makeup ol 1tate legislatures
.llMI other govemmeat.al bodies.
ln tht aru ol dvU rlgbt.11 ~ lilver-·
haired Warren expressed frustration at
what he called ems ol ootrlght Oaunlin1
or de::islon.s or slowness in implementing
them.
And Warren called a definition of
obscenUy one of the toughest court pro-
blems. He defended obscenity rullngs.
He denied allegations that numerous
civil libertie:1 dtclsions resulted in .. cod.
dllng" criminals and made it tougher for
prosecutors to convict.
It was Warren's fir.5t public comment
on many of the sensitive issues before lhe
nation's highest court during his term as
chid justice. He was apPointed in 1953 by
lhcn President DwJght D. Eisenbowr.
Warren formerly was Rep u b I 1 can
Friendly Visit
governor ol Calllornla. w...... t.ool< JIOt~co(-grnt problmlS
America faces.
''1 don't have answers ror Ultm." he
said. But he 6pressed faith that the
ConstJtuUon ·and Bill of Rights woUld
survive the assaults of a c:banglng aoc:le-
ly.
In the area of pomogr1phy, Warren
said tbe court had lo billance two con-
stltutlonal rights agalnst each other: the
right of government to create a dtcent
society and the speech and press
freedoms guaranteed by tbe first amend·
menl
" ••• And when you have those two
things coming together. you find it very
difficult to write a verbal definition of
what obacenlty is,•• he said.
Warren used reapportionment as an a·
President Nixon and Rep. Carl Albert, (D-Okla.) share a big laugh
during the President's visit to the House Gymnasium Club's annual
dinner. Nixon made a brief visit \Vednesday to the informal gather-
ing in the cafeteria of the Longworth House Office Building .
lsrae'l-, Egypt Conflict
On Latest Plane Hits
Dy United Press International
Israeli and Egyptian warplanes tangled
ove r the Gulf of Suez today and both
sidc.s claimed hits. In old J erusalem
Israeli police evicted Arab families and
seized thelr homes in a security move.
More Viets"'
The dogfight was the second in three
days over the gulf and just south of Suez
City. Each side said their jets returned
safely from today's battle.
An Israeli military spokesman said
Israeli pilots had shot down one of the
Arab M1G2ls it encountered while on a
•·routine patrol" In the Israe li-controlled
air space. Senate Asks Congress Role in Poli.ey
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A masage to
the President of tbe United Stites: the
Senate wants Congress to share With you
the decision to make mllltary and
monetary C1>mmilments to r o re I 1 n
powers.
Please.
Frustrated by the Vietnam war and
seeking to assert its constitutional role in
foreign affairs, the Senate Wednesday
adopted a "sense of the Senate" resol u·
tloo asking affirmative ~ctlon by
Congress befort commllments or pro-
mises of commitmenls are made.
The resolution was passed by a
bipartisan vote of 70 to 16.
But the resolution -strongly opposed
by President Nixon -ls in no way le1ally
binding on the chief executive. He can, if
he wishes, ignore Senate sentiment and
go ahead with commitments on hls own.
The resolution defines a national com·
milment as "the use of armed forces on
foreign territory, or a promise to assist a
fnreign country, government, or people
by the use of the anned forces or financ·
ial resources ol the United States. either
immediately or upon the happening o[
certain events."
The Israelis chased the Egyptian
planes and saw one crash in Egyptian
lt>rritory, lhe spokesman in Tel Aviv said.
In Cairo, an Egyptian spokesman gave
an opposile report. He said the Soviet·
built ~flGs had scored hits on at least
two Israeli aircraft and sent the rest
fleeing. All Egyptian planes returned to
base, the spokesman said.
Jn ground fighting, six Israeli soldiers
were wounded , one seriously, when an
armf patrol vehicle hit a mine in th e
Wadi Paran in the Arava Desert 50 miles
south of the Dead Sea.
No One Stealing Thunder
Jn the old city or Jerusalem, Israeli
police and soldiers evicted 88 Arabs from
their homes and offices and confiscated
five buildings adjacent to the Wail ing v.·an.
The move was made for "security
purposes" after a series of eJplosions
near the Wailing \Vall, a government
statement said \\'ednesday night.
It Stays in Mi.dwest; Rain Falls Mainly on Pwins
Frontiers Main
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'" Mideast Peace I
.,1 WASHINGTON (UPI) -Soviet in· -~ sistence Israel return lo the exact fron-
tiers held prior to the June, 1967 war with
·05 the Arabs constitutes the m a j o r
roadblock to Russian-American agree.
ment on ·a Mldwasl peace formula, ad-
1.11o1 ministration ofCicials said today.
The Soviet UnJon, in plans presented to
1.11 the United States last week. disclosed it
had won from Egyptlan President Gama!
Abdel Namer significant consessiorui on 1
:: some important points. Jfowtver, officials ·°' here said, the Soviets made it clear the
Sov\et Union and Its Arab prote~ wtre
.u determined Israel must pull completely
back to the f~e.rs that existed before
·'' tht one-week war In which the Israelis
overran the Sinai Peninsula and western
;:; Jorden and stlud the Golan Heights on
lhe Syrlan side of the border.
The United States has agreed Israel
should give up most of the conquered ter·
rl!ory so that the peace settlement
"should not renect the weight of con-
que.st." but contends 50me adjustments
·'' must be made In the interest of "sccurt·
ly.''
Court Career
ample In roplylof to t:requenlly voleod
crilidm> tllat "the-Wunn Court'I
decb:iona have usurped atatH1 right&.
"Whal -ro1pporilonment do but
establish statee• rJ&ht.a?~' he asted. "It
establishes in the ltlteti" tbe power to
govern themselves ••• "
Rural ioterestl no longer dominate
legislatwu, Ignoring the problems of the
under representfld clLle11, be said.
W&rre11 said be believes lhe rulings af.
lectlns rlghb ol tile ·~ and com:troom guidelines 0 bave in no way ad-
~raly allected the proaecuUon of
~--" ~·=· ' Tbe ootUme district attorney and
California attorney general said everyone
Is entitled to have his r:lghl.s protected in
the courtroom, whether he be a Com·
munist. Fuc..i5t, or a member of the Ku
Klux Klan. •
Throughout lJ.S.
"If bis rights cannot be protected In the
courtroom, the ri&hts ol no one can bo
securt,'' he sald.
Warren admitted to being impatient 11t
times with noncompllance with the
court's school desegregation ruling.
"In aome parts of the country , yes. One
couldn't help being impatient when It
would see the orders of the court flaunted
and just not obeyed in any sense or the
word •••
"Of course, one feel! frustrated at that,
but there are so many things that have
happened to encourage one who has been
Jn this field that 1 think on the whole,
much progress has been made," Warren
sald.
Black people sliU do not ha ve equal op-
portunity with whites in school facilities.
voting and jobs -both in North and
South, the jurist said.
Nixon Asks Ban
On Literacy Tests
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad·
minislration asked Congress today to ban
literacy tests for voting throughout the
nation in place of a 1965 law whicb ap-
plied to only seven southern sates.
Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, presenting
the long-delayed plan to a House
Judiciary Subcommittee, said a simple
extension oi the 1965 Voting Rights Act
would be unfair and unrealistic.
He also called for a nationwide ban on
state residency requirements for voting
in presidential elections.
Mitchell said: "We have come to the
firm conclusion that voting rights is no
longer a r~giona l issue. It is a national
concern ... which must be treated on a
nationwide basis."
He said there may have been ample
reasons for Congress in 1965 to pass a
Jaw whose provisions applied only to six
deep south states where Negro voter
registration was low, "but I do not
believe that this justification exists any
longer."
Mitchell testified on a bill to extend the
1965 act for another five years beyond its
1970 expiration date. He said in a five-
times-delayed appearance that the ad-
mlnistralion proposal to make the
literacy ban applicable to all states offers
all the advantages or a simple extension,
with none of the defects or regional
discrimination attached lo it.
The 1965 act was applicable, under its
terms, only to Alabama, Georgia:,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Sooth Carolina
and Virginia, and 40 counties in North
Carolina.
Thirteen other st.ates have con-
stitutional or statutory provisjons for
Ten Argentina
Markets Ablaze
BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP)
Ten supermarkets of a firm owned by the
Rockefeller family were set ablaze here
Thursday morning, despite beefed-up
security patrols to protect U .S, com·
panles. Some of the buildings were
destroyed .
The attacks apparently are linked to
the schedu led visit or Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller. who is expected here Sunday
on the fourth lap of his fact-finding Latin-
American mission for President Nixon .
From Argentina the New York governor
will go to Haili, the Dominican Republic,
Jamaica, Barbados and Guyana.
voter literacy tests, however, or one sort
or another.
They are Alaska, Arizona, Ca.lifoml1,
Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
York, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming.
In addition, according lo the Justice
Department, Idaho has a so--ca.lled good
character requirement whi ch is con-
sidered a test or device within the mean-
ing of the 1965 act.
As outlined by Mitchell, the Nixon ad·
ministration's proposam -probably the
only major ones it will make this year in
the civil rights field -contained fve key
points:
-A nationwide ban on literacy tests
"until at least Jan. 1, 1974."
-A nationwide ban on st;tte residency
requirements for presidential elections.
-Authority for the attorney general to
send voting examiners and observers
anywhere in the nation where he feels
they are needed.
-Nationwide authority for the attorney
general to ask for a freeze on any voling
laws deemed to be discriminatory.
-Creation by the President of a Na-
tiona l Voting Advisory Commission to
study voting discrimination and possible
corrupt practices.
Chemical Fumes
Spread in Cairo
Warehouse Fire
CAIRO, Ill. (UPI) -Fire today In a ,
warehouse near a Mississippi River levee
released noxious chemical fumes and
caused evacuation of 8 126-block area. No
injuries were reported.
About two and a half hours after the
fire broke out the evacuation order was
lifted and citizens \Vere told It was safe to
reti..;~;i to their homes. The fire was
brought under control at 7:30 a.m., abou t
two and a half hours after lhe flrst alarm
v.•as sounded.
Officials said the chemical involved
probably was ammonium nitrate.
Cairo, located at the confluence of the
Mississippi and Ohio ri vers, has been the
scene of repeated racial violence. A num·
be.r of fires, believed to be racially con-
nected, have broken out and at one point
the National Guard was called to t he
community.
You., Judy"'
Hundreds Pay Last Respects to Star
NEW YORK (UPI) -"We Love You
Judy" said the Inscription on a rainbow
shaped spray oi multi-colored carnations
that stood beside the glass-topped steel
coffin lined v.'ith blue velvet.
It was because Judy Garland's fans
lov'ed her that they came by the hundreds
today under lowering skies to Campbell's.
the. elegant east side funeral chapel
where --,Wdolf Valentino, Arturo
Toscanlnf, Diana Barrymore, Gertrude
Lawrence, Judy Holliday, Montgomery
Clift, Bert Lahr and Tallulah Bankhead
have lain in state. Some had been in line
10 hours v.•hen the chapel doors opened
for the viewing of the star's sligllt body
dressOO In dark grey crepe.
The occasion was heavy wllh sen·
timenl. Paul Ambrose, 21, brought a bat·
tery-powered record player and Garland
rttordings and the strident yet haunting:
voice mixed with the traffic nolses of
Madison Avenue at the morning rush
hour -"Somewhere Over the Ralnbo•. ''
,._1ost of the fans believed that the rain-
bow had not eluded Judy dl!.'lplte her
tragic death from accidental sleeping pill
poisoning In London last Sunday.
"Judy was beautiful , no matter how ug·
ly people talked about her," sakl Norman
Che.If, 21, a male model. "She had a sad
life almost up until the end when she
found klve, and I think that's beautlful.''
Miu Oarland's husband of thrte
month!!, fonncr night club manager
~tlckey Deans brought the remain• home
early today by jetliner. 'l1MI only jtwelry
viewers of the body could ate was the in·
ttrwovtn rlng m111de of t.hrte circlets of
gold whi ch Deans cave her when they
wert married in London, her fifth trip to
the altar.
Among the earliest visitors lo the
funtral home •·ere singer-author Kay
I
BRINGS JUDY BACK
Husb.nd Mickey Deans
T'hompson and Miss Garland's son-ln-ls1',
singer Pttcr Allen. Allen's Wlfe, Liz.a ~flnneUJ, had made all the arrangement.
for the funeral ~rvice at the chapel Fri-
dl\y aflemoon. 1'1e simple Episcopal rites
will be pelormed ag3hl!t a bacll:ground or
favorite Garland songs played on the
organ by the singer's accompanist, Jack
f'rench.
i»
I
11
I
~I I I
)
' I
7
•• '
I ,
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7
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-
Saddlehft~k Tod~y's Flilal -·--~ . --. -
-·--"'I N. Y. Steell8
YOI:. ~2 , NO. 152, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUlilE 26, 1969 TEN CENTS
Trustees to Tacl{le Coaches, Budget Tonight
Trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified
School district meeting tonight in special
session at 7:30 p.m. again will fa ce
bud&el p(oblems and co:-ching re.signa-
tioiu.
It appears likely trustees will adopt the
$2.7 million tentative budget. The figure
is about $200,000 more than the budget
total for the current fiscal year.
The tentative budget calls for $1.2
btillion to be expended for teaching
eat
Down the
Mis~ion
Trail
Contract A wa1·ded
For Water Plant
SAN CLEMENTE - A $2.4 milliOn con-
tract for a water reclamation plant was
awarded Wednesday by the San Clemente
city Council to Weardoo Construction
Corporation.
'Weardoo's low bid of $2,464,600 was a
quart.er piillion dollars above the
engineer's estimate for the job. The new
planl will be able to treat 4. million
gallons of sewage a day. e Flood llleeti119 Set
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -A joint
meeting between County Flood Control
official! and San Juan Capistrano coun-
ci]men and planning commissioners will
~held Monday at 7 p.m. in City Hall to
discuss city flood control.
Jn a letter to the council suggesting a
meeUng be held, George Osborne, district
chief enginetr, said that the winter
flooding along San Juan and Trabuco
Creeks have reemphasized the need for
planning and construction work.
e BloorJ1nobile Due
EL TORO -The American Red Cross
Bloodmobile will visit the Saddleback
area for the first time ftfonday from 2:40
p.m. until 7:20 p.m .. at Olivewood School,
23391 Dune Mear Road, El Toro.
Reservations should be made to ensure
no waiting, however they are not re·
quired. Appointments may be made by
calling Mrs. Stan Berman at 837-1302.
e Grid Slg1n1ps Slated
SAN CLEMENTE -Registration for
Ule Junior All American Football League
(formerly Pop Warner Football League)
will be held at 7:30 p.m. July 8 at the San
Clemente High School Cafetorium.
For boys eight lo 13 years of age, lhe
football program will be explained to pa·
rents and youngsters al the registration
time. Fee is $2. Plans for junior pee wee.
pee wee and midget football teams wili
also be discu ssed.
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
was a loser again today, although some
selective buying reportedly helped :t trim
th a r p early losses. (See quotations,
Pages 2&-27).
Trading slowed near Lhe close. The
Do\v Jones industrial average at 1:30
p.m. was off 4.46 at 869.64.
salaries next school year, an increase of
about $129,000.
That Increase incl udes about $40,000 of
"new money" .moved into lhe teachers'
budget seetion from another 5ection deal-
ing with salaries for teachers' aides - a
procedure just authorized by slate
legislation.
It also includes a six percent overall in·
crease over this year's budget allotment
for teac~ers 6alaries. This figure i:: su~
•
ject to change before lhe Cina! budget Js
approved in August.
The budget ls based on an estimated In·
crease of about $5 million in the dis:. ii.:t's
assessed valuation. I lowever. the exact
amount of the assessed valuation is not
firm and will not be known until the
assessor's figures arc complete in July.
Following budgetary action tonight.
trustees, will retire to a closed executive
session to discuss the coaching situation
us ect
•Power Pole Alley'
Residents all al'?ng the Orange Coa'st are becoming more and ·mere
concerned in the campaign to. underground public utilities but none
more so than Laguna Beach residents who alJege new "marching
poles" up Thalia Streel have added a new blight to the Art Colony
hilJs.
Church to Appeal Denial
Of Plan for Pyne Castle
Calvary Evangelical Free Church has
appcalert the Laguna .Beach Planning
Commission's split vote tienic.: · convert
historic Pyne Casile into a Christian day
school and church.
Co'Jncllmcn next Wednesday arc to
schedule a hearing date for the itppeal. ll
would take four council votes to ovc __ ·ule
the planning commissioner's 3 to 2
lurndown.
fortress -once strongly bclievcc1 lhe. ap-
ple of President Nixon's eye as a possible
CJlifomia home. It presently serves a;i
an apartment complex.
With the President out of the picture,
the church bought the castle.
In a seng, it was their dream site. But
neighbors liave objected that it would .
i:;encrate traffic and noise in the residen-
tial neighborhood, destroy beauty and
lake the castle off the lax rolls.
Commissioner Robert French. who
at Laguna Beach 11igh School.
Four coaches have resigned their
coaching posiUons or have requested
leave ot absence from those posit!:::-.:;.
Seven of the High School's Ct>achlng
staff members are to appear at the
meeting fo( what is bi~'.!d as a discussion
session with the trustees and LBHS prin·
cipal Bob Reeves.
The coaches are objecting to teaching
assigrune11ts which require them to teach
•
five puiods In addition to the coaching
duties. Coaches have been teaching four
periods.
The threat of a curtailment of the
school's athletic program was laid aside
by Trustee Larry Tayklr. Taylor said
that it would he normal to continue the
athletic program in as outstanding a
maoner as possible.
School olDclal.s have indicated that a
number of persons have applied for the
coaching jobs, although the district has
nat advertised for coaches.
Coache~ who have resigned their
coaching positions or •sked for leaves ol
absence are Norman Borucki, base.bill
coach; Jerry Newmann, lightweight foot-
ball and basketball coach; Warren
Watkins, lightweight football and basket·
ball coach: Jack Lythgoc, varsity track
coach: and F.d Bowen, as.sl.stant vanity
football coach .
• • r1es UICI e
Man Pulled
From Auto
By Laborers
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 IM 0.!IY l"lltl Sllff
Rescued as he was about to join his
s1~eetheart in death ~y auto gas asphy:<-
ialion In a lonely orange grove near
Tustin, a young Washington businessmo:1.n
loday wails to be arraigned for her pillow
suffocation murder.
George A. Vick, 29, was pulled lrom his
rented car by two laborers who found
him lying on the se::t about 5 a.m.
Wednesday, a 50-fool garden hose rurudng
lflllll lhe ~uJt~lpe · the auto. , ·'
!lallii""'"-,, J "~-'-, ~~ . . """'ftrfX ~,;.. a Cirmpliln~ c}Wit~g Ule palm contra"'w1·
with mur.det ·.:_ tfie'City's first m ·~t years
-•11ould be oblaioed from the. Orange
County District Attorney later today.
An anonymous telephone tipster sent
police to a modern Spanish-style apart·
ment house at 1$491 Pasadena Ave. early
Wednesday, where they found Susan C.
Adams, 20, murdered.
The victim had been bludgeoned on the
side of the head with a heavy instrument,
then suffocated with a soft object,
'"Xlssibly a pillow, coroner's deputies said.
Twitln Police Chief Glenn Sissel said
the former Orange Coast College student
and unemploye<l bank clerk shared the
apartment with her sister, Mrs. Mary
Sireika. 23, a bar hostess.
AulhoriUes said Vick -who tiadn 't in·
haled enough automotive fwnes to affect
him when rescued from suicide near
Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road -
listed the same address.
Miss Adams was first thought to be a
go-go dancer Wednesday due to confusion
over her sister'6 occupation.
Sheriff's deputies called to lhl'! orange
grove about S a.m. arrested Vick on
suspicion of murder. and he was booked
also on an Oregon warrant charging him
with auto theft.
Investigators said when they found
~Ii.::~ Adams' body, there were traces ol
rlesh and hair under her fingernails, :n-
d:ca ling she tricJ lo fight off her slayer.
The investigators also said that Vick
had nail slashes on his face and .sam13les
taken (rom lt1iss Adams' body were being
analyzed by the Orange County Sheriff's
crime Jab Wednesday.
No precise rootive has been offered for
the tragic kUllng, but Chief Sissel said to-
day the pair met six months ago and it
(~SUSPECT, Page%)
• HELD IN TUSTIN $LAYING
Murd!r Suspect Vick
Ex-Champion Joe -Louis
Stricken; Condition OK
NEW YORK (UPI) -Legendary
heavyweight champion Joe LouUI was
rushed to Beekman Downtown Hospital
today suffering from wliat was described
as "physical collapse."
Louis, who reigned as champion from
1937 unUI 1949, complained ot stomach
pains to his attorney, Leon Charney, who
was driving him from a televlson in-
terview. Charney immediately drove the
55-year-Old Low.& to lbe hospital. and he
was rushed into the emergency"room.!or
an ~amlnaUon. His CO{ldi"1on' , was
reported as "good" by the hospital.
LQuis' wife, Martha . and Abe MargoJes,
a bqpiness associate, remained·W~ hh"n
at t~e hospital aod reported that hf was
conscious and In good spirits. ~r
The attorney said· that Louis probably
didntt suffer a heart attack, however .. and
would be released in a few days.
Earlier, a police department
spokesman had said that Louis had a~
parently suffered a heart attack.
Louis and ex-boxer BiUy Conn an-
nounced Wednesday that they have set up
a Joe Louis Food Franchise Corp., which
they hope will franchise restaurant& here
(See ,JOE LOUIS, Paae l)
•
Gov. Reagan Reveals Plan
For Off shore Oil Controls
,· Uf'IT~·
RUSHED TO HOSPITAL
Ex-boxer Joe Louis
Orange Coast
Residents of !he area protested the
church·school use of lhe 64-room hillside 1noved for the denial at the June 17 SACRAMENTO (UPI) _ The Reagan ta Barbara runaway oil spill on a federal
nieeting, said, "We're putting :norc traf-od •• I 1 leas' last winter.
One Who Es~aped fie into an area already difficult because administration t ay announccu a pan o
of the topography." tighten safety controls on offshore o i I The submerged well, owned by Union
Or. John Wheaton, cha irman of the drlllblg. Oil Co., belched 'thousands of gallons vf
church congregation. said today, "But The aim is to prevent another Santa raw petroleum which washed ashofe and
our plans encompass new entrance and Barbara Channel disaster. coated miles o( Southern Cilifornia
Weather
We 'll get a touch more sun Umn
\ve're accustomed to ·rrlday, while
the mercury holds fast to the Jow
70's along the Orange Coast. El Morro Curve Victi1n Recovering
Sam Prieto is doing fairly well at Sou!h
Coast Community Hospital conside1ing
what he lived through.
He can walk and talk OO\V but when
.. mtm'"'ht mil lapses ii'lto depression. llis
htl\d Is lnjuttd.
Prieto, 24, has ht.en under the care of
neurologlsls since the terrible night of the
·crash. He was the soh! survivor of Ule
mogt recent Et Morro curve tragedy,
May 18, that killed four other men, in·
cludi111 Ronald E. Diehm, 39 of J85
Locust St.. Laguna Beach.
Calllomia Highway Patrolmen in·
vt&UgaUng the two-car slaughter at first
thought Prieto was dud too. Then some-
one heard a moan at lhe blood..spaUered _, '
-·-
•
scene~ J!'or days, he was unconscious and
then semi-conscious in his intensive care
bed as the shadow of death hovered.
But Ute Los Angeles man has escaped
the deadly roster of the curve in Coast
l!ighway just north of )...agu.qa Beach .. 11
includes 12 names 1Jnce .T~ry 11165.
There Were young men in tlle car with
Prieto. Diehm's car slrt1ck a guard rail
and became airborne into the on-coming
traffic lane like a deadly projectile.
Sam Prieto walks and talks now and
~inks back Into whatever dark thoughts
his mjnd conjures.
'·He's doing as well as can be ex-
pected," I hey say al the hospital.
cxlt driveways and we could restrict the resort beaches.
exiting traffic to no left turn." State officials, at a news conference, The 001\lmlttee'•·· recommendations
lie estimated ~ith ride sharing and said Gov. Ronald Reagan had approved propoee tighter state regulation of drill·
youngsters walking there might be only 40 recommendations, some of which re-Ing under lt.s jurisdi.cUon, ~•up, a;d·
fKI cars going lo the facility daily. quire legislation. . . mihlslfdUVe praCUCet• legJ.sliittOo,.'f;m:.
Wheaton, twin brother of Clly Manager Alll}pugh ~gtie'Stlng t!gtiter rCstfictlon11 pleinent.afioti'. of,~ iln .' oil 'iplu· \'di~er
James D. Wheaton, ."°Jnted O'lt that the 11n d(fllh~re drU.tlng,' 1 '5~al ad-plan" .and Cooperal1ve e:ffort!· wI~ i.he
proposed use is permitted in an R·l tninUlttallOQ. cmnmi\(ee 'tdenttf~ ocean· petroleum lndtskY. · · r. · (rcsid~tial zone). It m~ be aHc>;;:ecl b)' iolng J.8;f'llen as, "tht ~ llkeli ,rµture MaYfl8ld · ·incf ··.tonRrvaUori Dlrecto11
condftionaf tlae eermil (a!"1 corilrolied) I "'""'"' d1S111lrous oil~·-". James Steanill JOkl a ""WI conltrtno~·,
or dtlnied .If plaTiners tlnd ft not good for Tile committee ~&Jled for a thorough ~t 1h9 Weaiem OH arid ~,.A•-'111tlon
nearby property and the community lll.idy of West Coast tanker traffic' and "~lewed" the reComrnendi&~ 00: ~
generally. iUfetJ. proctdurts. jeo1ed ~~ an uchana• ot'. inlonnalion ·
Dr. Wheaton. a veterinarian, said, "l fhe, commilfee Included \ repruen. y,iau. maytield !tidlcated t~~-.lndilW'Y
felt the planning commission was very ~Uv• or &e.vcJ'&l'fi~te q'"enclts affett.ed eaf.~ that p~1lmitht!'J~ ,
hasty in it.s decision . I felt there should 6volrand 111~n. ·' •• '1 tr~secref& ; ... , ''"'" :1
be a study seasion, when we could come ~The , ' '-i.: ' .i..~ • •"rbt ' jf;el'wt!'re itii.f6-rr~ti¥i>ift
back with the detaUs. t felt they were too "· · · " ~~11'{.J M:;-.M'iytJiMf; lioane.f OUP reqditt~tiits,,. hf~ll.ld, "but ~med with. traffic which we could " ;tli .''1ft!(J· t 1if .. Utatlng ' lhey do not object to the prlnclj>lea em-
work out." tta e safety rules In the Wake of the San-bodied ln lhem."
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. .. 'JNSIDE TODAl'
: .'PlcJ: df, totf.• J6~;¥;11~)~.,,-of Simw .w.. ·thll!fl ,~ ... ~~
Oh><!\. lil todav's 'Ch<ektllfl U)>'
~"!"" cni Page 7.
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Thurs&lr. Junt H; 1'16' "
: -,.,,,. I • From Page l
• . -LA~UNA '(EEN co• SUSPECT' ...
n!"pear~ to be a lovers' quarrel.
Dressed In a nightgown, Miu Vick's
blood·spattered bOOy had been co11ered Wt
• spread 11 Ille ~ 111 ll14J4ol o1 ~ bed
Iii Ille too-bed!'oal• apertmtnl ille shared ·~~ I."
MOST PEOPLE WOULD have given up
~ by;Jlt!. Sau Mazze hwn't, and won"t.
$.Ulan'• current battle against death is
btinl staged now et the Orange Counly
Mtdkal Center. Bul while lhis is her
tnQft lrnP.OftLrU battle, her Ufe hu been a
l!lldlcil ... ,..
The 17.,ear old blonde, a pal student
at VUll Part Hilb School, underwent lhe
county's first kfdney transplant several
weeka ago. Her mother donated the
kidney.
But now Susan ha• contracted
pneumonia, in addlUon to ceneral
ll)'llemic problem<. She baa been placed
back oo dtalysil, mu.nm, Ole operalioo
WN in essenoe In vain.
Susan'• problems began at birth. She
w11 born wJth lhree kidneys, but doctors
dWn't know it unUI lhe wa.1 two years
okl. BJ that time the extra kidney had
dittued another. When she was three,
the extra kidney was taken out 1n an
operation.
From then uni'" 1957, Susan was UJ\der
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medlc:atlon. tn that year, her second
kidney ceased to function, and was ta.ken
out. Her remaining kidney was only 70
per cent functional.
A! a result or the Infectious kidney,
Susan had lo ul}dergo a bladder operation
1n 1958. And last December, when ~n·
dergoing blood transfusions. Susan went
into convulsions. She was rushed to Palm
•!arbor Hospital, the only hospital in the
area with a kidney machine that purifies
the blood.
.. While I was in the hospital, 1 con·
tracted viral pneumonia," Susa'n told me
several months ago. "l was placed In the
intensive care unit, and I couldn't be
treated. J had to fight on my own for nine
<!:ys."
Since December Susan had been un ·
dergolng dlaly.sls {blood-purifying) treat-
ments twice weekly. ten hours at a time .
A ''shunt" which allows a tube hook·up.
had been placed In her left arm. "It
doesn't hurt-I get used to it." she said.
"But twice I've had convulsions, along
with 103 temperature .. ,
• ~ U,_T ......
LOOKING FOR A LITTLE SUNSHINE IN IOWA
Timothy Loory •nd Unidentlflod Hipple Friend
'Let Sun Shine In~
"
But Rain.Greets Leary in Iowa
JOWA CITY, Iowa (UP.I) -orJg CX·
perimenter Timothy Leary greeted a
band ol hippie type follow ers at the -f·H
fairgrounds Wednesday to prove "l am
alive and well In Iowa." .
"Let the sun shin e both down here and
in the sky above," Leary said.
A short time later a blinding rain drove
the gathtrlng to shelter in nearby hog
and cattle barns.
Leary, a self-proclaimed candidate for
governor of California , said the "Iowa Ci·
ty Awakening" was .a "political meeting
to ttan a happier way of life.''
The approxlmately 300 followers gave
him a sm1tter1n& of cheers but most of
them just sat. huddled in blankets.
;. rock singer, identified only as
"Harpo," follol"·cd Leary to the stage and
drtw a wanner recepUon.
Earlier in the day, Leary called
newsmen lo an outdoor gathering behind
hiS motel and told them Presiden{ Nixon
could ''solve the problems of today" wilh
three actions, He said Nixon should end
the Vietnam wa r, "the )dds want life'';
end the draft, "they want freedom "; and
legalize marijuana.
Leary. wearing a red ¥d orange blouse
and be ll-bottom trousers, said, "I am
happy to be here In the· green 1rus and
pure air of Iowa."
Hijacked Plane From LA
Finally Released by Cuba
MlAMJ CUP!) -A United Airlines
jew.r, hijacked while on a flight from
Lo::i-Anjelea: to New York and detained in
H1""8 l3 hours because of "mechan ical
dlfflcalUes,'' was finally released today.
The t.lrJlner wu cleared al 1 :08 p.m.
and took ort on Ila 33 minute. flight back
to .Miami International Alrpott. Tbe
l•l\IJY 1'1101
~ COAl1 l'WllltftNO CIOllW.llt
Roffrt N. W11I
,m»tnl.,.. PVM"'*
J·~· •. °'''"' VICI ,,_ldWll -Getlfrtl Mt111"r
T••,,.•1 IC'.11•il .....
Tli1M11 A. Mvr,\lft t ......_ ... 1;,;1er
~id11'11 '· ,...11 L_ ....... ,. '"' ...... .._ __
2!J F1•11t Ave. M1lll~t A'4•uH P.O. 111 416&, 92&JZ --C~I• Mai; J3f Wftl tt¥ S'~I
......., "'""' '111 #91 ......... ._..~ Hllllllfllrltll .. 9'11: Jlf Jrti S"hl
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Federal Avlation Agency said it had been
una ble. to determine the nature of the
mechanical problem.
The FAA offic:ial said lhe eight
crewmen and ~ passengers who arrived
in Hava'na about midnight were taken to
hotelB for some sleep.
The United Airlines DC8 was com·
mandeered 11 minutes after takeoff from
Loa Ange\e1 Wednesday afternoon and
arrived at Jose Marl! Airport in Havana
at 9:01 p.m. PDT Wednesday. The 2 500-
mile flight was the l'lecond hijacking ~r a
transcontinental airliner within eight
days.
Radio Havana said today the jet was
h\Jacked by an individual anned wllh a
pfstol. It did not give his nationality.
It .was the 20th hijacking of the yea r ot
a U.S. airlirier to the Communist island .
-nre-;el was hijacked f5 Tniles west of
Rh•er.slde, at 4:20 p.m. PDT after tak.inQ:
off from Los Angeles, the FAA said.
ihe pilot, Capt. 'Edward Ni bur, 59. of
Bernadsville, N.J., radioed asking for a
routin;; to Havana .
United official5 said there was no
further contact with the pilot after his
terse message.
"We knew ii was hijacked then and ~·e
don·t ask questions under tho s e
circumstane«!s," said an FAA spokesman
In Los Angeles.
The pl1nei1 route to lhe Comm!Jl'list
Island took It over Albuquerque N,M.;
Fort Worth, Tex .: Alexandria, La.;
Tallahauei and Key West, Fla.
Do ugla11 Eu1ployes
Display Art Work
Art work s by 43 employes of thfl ~fcOonnell Douglas Alrtrafl Co. are now
on dl~play at the Long Beach MusttJm of
Art. a:JOO E. Ocean Blvd., Long Beach.
Tbt exhibit of oil.t.. ~·•ter color&. :,r~ucs, dr11wln1.s and aculpturu will lnue lhrougti July 20.
•
Because of her condition (before the
operation). she had been limited in bet
activities. She had been a model Jnd t:he
enjoys sewing her own ck>thet ind pity..
ing the guitar.
But her other aclivlties -swimming,
golf, modern dance-were "off limits."
Now everything i.s olf limit&.
The cost of the operation, and now
PoSl-operatlve care, ii enonnous. La~na
Beach High School and the South Orange
County Y Council have sent' a cheek for
$1.823.25 to the fund headquarters.
The money came from 64 donations the
two or,anlzatlons collected in a local
fund drive. The money was forwarded to
Home Savlngs and Loan of Santa Ana,
1300 N. Main, the drive headquarters. As
oC th is morning, there was nearly p.1,000 .
in the fund.
But ihat will only cover about hall the
initial CG.'lt of the operation. No one can
project the total cost of lbe hospital carie.
And nO one can' estimate Susan'a will
to live. That too ls enonnous.
Susan has the will to win. And know·
ing her, I say she will.
County Rushes
To Preserve
Beach Access
Proceedings are moving ahead today t1>
c~ndemn a 13·acre strip in the heart of
Sunse t Beach for a parking lot assuring
public beach accus, following a 3 to z
vote by C?unty Supervisors Tuesday.
The action must move ahead with all
speed, county officials noted, in order to
tlock construction of a major apartment
complex on the old Pacific Electric
Railroad right-of~way,
Carlton Builders Joe., of Beverly J1ills,
alrea~y h~s one building ufl4tr con•
st ruction 1n the narrow, sandy st rip
between Pacific Coa.st Highway and
Pacific Avenue.
. Voting ~ter a o'*11our hearing climax-
mg a a;er1e1 of discunlOflJ 'P4nninc the
past yea r, supervisors authorized county
Parks Director Kenneth Sampson to ap-
ply for federal financing funds.
Supervisors David L. Baker, Robert W
Battin and Alton E. Allen approved th;
condemnation proceedings over denial
votes by supervi$0rs William H. Hirstein
and William J, Phillips.
Deadline is July 1 in the application for
federal lunda to .finance purchase of the
beach property, while C o u n t y
Administrative Offic:er Robert E. Thomas
has offered thJa supplr.mentaJ plan :
-A one-tent· inftt.ue ln the Orange
County . Hari,or Di.Wict kent tax rate
for the coming fiscal ye1r.
-Use oC $427,500 In Road Department
Gea Tax Funds.
-Diversio n o( $112,500 in Harbor
Dlstricl Funds to be used for dred1lng
Upper Newport. Bay and for propoacd
construcUon of a by·paaa chaMel in
Sunset Aquatic Park.
The J,130-car parklnt lot will bring
money back Into counfy coffers, noted
Thomas, and this could repay funds bor-
rowed to get the Sunset Beach projtct moving.
"We ahould use every means po.ssible
to maintain our beaches " argued
Supervi1or Baker, "this is Rot a local
Sunset Beach matter.
"If no parking is provided, the 6,100-
foot county owned beach worth M million
i1 in effect a private beach available only
to local residents1" he concluded.
OUl A-1 Ch ugs
ToE1idof Laguna
School Bus Line
Without much fanfare the Laguna
Beach Unified School District Is trying to
sell old A·l.
"We hope to gel $700 or $800 for It,''
said business manager Edwin Hind. The
aging bus, listed as "A·l" in the district's
records, la a 1951 Ford 30-passenger vehi-
cle with 95,221 miles recorded.
ll wa& purchased in 1965 from the San
Clemente Stage Lines, and used for small
field trips. It was not used to Ila full
potenUal, Hind said. so the district has
d~ided to sell. Old A·l rnusl chug off.
_Interested .parties may call -~ the
transportation department of the district,
494-Mfe, for details. It will be sold to the
high est bidder,
From P .. e l
JO E LOUIS .•.
and abroad. Louie: heads lhe firm and
Coan is vice president.
The flr1t franchised restaurant In the chat~ is expected to open within to days.
It w1U have an lnt.erracial adminil5tratl\•e
start.
Louis \\'IS heavyweight champion
longer than any other boxer, retiring ln
IH9 alter 12 years a.s tltUst. He foulht 71
professional boutJ, won S4 by knoci.outs,
made $3.3 mllllon and wound up ownina
back taxes of $1.Z$ mllllon.
I talian Strike Ends
·.~,,, ~ J
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h-. ' _,...-,·:.r.-1" • --JI/:!;', , ' ' ' -.. -~ ~. -.. ~.·---·--~· . . . ")," OAIL Y P'ILOT ilttf l"lltlt .
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Touri1a9 Etnpty Grounds
Bicycling boys take a spln through Laguna's vacant fe stival grounds,
which soon will become a veritable beehive of colorful activity as La-
guna artists set up shop for 34th Festival or Arts. Dates for this year's
festival and accompanying Pageant of the Masters are July 11 to
Aug. 24.
Alioto Issues Warning
On ToughCampusAction
By T0~1 BARLEY
Of tllt Dal" l"ll•t Stiff
Bayonets, buckshot anci gas attacks c•n
serve Dnly to further inflame student
unrest on California's campuses, San
Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto warned
today.
, The Bay City's civlc leader quickly ad·
ded In a speech before the Town Hall In
Anaheim that "rlnn, tough-minded action
is needed to prevent the disintegration of
our fine university and college systems."
But the action taken by police and na-
tional guardsmen in quelling the recent
Berkeley disorders was very far removed
£rom those principles, the mayor added.
"1What b needed," he said, "Ls an
absolutely clear headed and resolute
response fourided ·on two indivL!ilble prin·
ciplea: 1wlft control of violence and ruu
respect for student vitwpolnl!."
Mayor Alioto warned that student!
"must have a 1reat.er voice in our
democratic IOCiety and must sit on I.he
councils of decision."
He urged Callfornlans to "welcome the
. fact that students are no longer silent and
to applaud their impatience f o r
democratic n!fonn on lhe campu15 and In
the community.
"NO longer are young people to be setn
and not heard," he said. "Much of what
they have to say," he added "ls worth
listening to and It Ls high time that those
or us who have ao much to say about
them sat down and did some hard listen-
ing."
Alioto slmaed that he was speaking of
the "vast majority" of students "not the
handful of rabid radicals who yearn for
nothing Jess than the decomposition of
our democracy ."
But effective police action, he said,
~·ould quickly "sort out this hard core of
CQOS, narcotic peddlers, Black Panthers
and assorted hoodlums who are behind
much of the unrest that we have seen at
Berkeley.''
Mayor Alioto lauded the present rela-
tionship between student! and ad·
mlnistrators at San Francisco State Col·
Jege as an example of "what can be
a~hleved with a sensible, clvlli.zed ap.
preach to students, many of whom seek
common sense answers and sympathy for
their legitimate grievances".
''We are oot the parents or a generation
or young radicals," Alioto said. "We are
the parent.I of highly intelligent
younpten who are receiving the benefits
of the finesl education ever offered to
young people ih «lr hi.story and we mwt
not look the other way when the~ wne
young people demand answen to
pertinent quest.ions.
"We must give them U1': vote at 13
years of age," Alioto aaict •·And •·e mU5l
meet thest younptera more thin half
way If we are going lo arrive at any kind
of solution to the problt'nu that bestt
us."
ThOJe problems are not. going to be
solved If we "closely adhere" to many of
the solutions offered by Governor Ronald
Reagan, Alloto said.
He blamed the governor f o r
"considerably enlar1ing" I he con·
troversies at Berkeley and "other carn-
puses" by his "outdated concepts of !'1e
methods in which we should deal with the
legitimate grievances of young people."
Alioto refused to comment on th e
possibility that he may be Governor
Reagan 's opponent in the I 9 7 o
gubernatorial election. "I can't ans\\•er
lh&l now." he said, '•but I can say that if
anybody needs an opponenl ifs Governor
Reagan, if only in the light of his attitude
towards student unrest."
.JJ. J. (Jarrell~
w r s s r .
Mrs. Sireika, e.i.ranged fro1n her hus-
band, was \\·orJ..ing at the time h~r
younger sister "'as slain. M •
A·ulhorltlea·sald today Mlss Adams had
planned to go l.o Ausltalla to try op-
portuniUes in !hut country and a\rea1ly
had her pa ssport, bu t apparently l'hanged
her mind recently.
Neighbors said both Ole murder vlctirn
and her older sister were attracti11e girls,
but quiet tenant.s wbo promptly paid their
rent and rarclv mixed with others.
The txxty Was lakcn to S<-.ddleback
funeral J-lon1c, where arrangements will
be made by the sisters' parents, Mr. and
t.1rs. Chester Adams. 1431 Cypress Ave.,
&nta Ana.
Authorities said tcxlay the t.1edford.
Ore.. auto theft charge against the
murder suspect stems fronl his renting
the 1969 sport coupe in which he lit·
tempted to commit suicide Wednesday.
The car was leased or rented but nol
returned on time and authorities said it
seems doubUul under the circumstances
that he "'ill be prosecuted for the lesser
offense.
Tustin police said \Vednesday while
Vick 1·as being questioned prior to book·
ing at Orange County Jail that they
believed hitn to be the telephone tipster
in the murder ·casc.
They refused to confirm this today, but
noted the call 1vas later traced to a pay
telephone booth near the orange 11rOvc
1vhere he attempted to take his life. •
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Go cert1or'• f,ad11
Mrs. Nancy Reagan describes
her first dale 1vith the gover·
nor-to-be in DAILY PILOT
1vriter Jean Cox's story on the
C'OVer page of the Women's
Section in today's edition.
J apan I-lit by Rains
I
TOKYO (U PI ) -\Vi nds gusting up to
146 miles an hour and torrential rains t~
day lashed Japan's main islands, leaving
at least six persons dead, scores injured
and millions of dollars of damage.
14th SEMl·ANNUAL
Now In Progress · With Substa1atial
Reductions On Such F a11aous Brands As •••
e HERITAGE e JAMESTOWN e HECKMAN e TOMLINSON e CENTURY e BRANDT e KINDEL e KARGES e HIBRI TEN
ALSO RE DUCTIONS UP TO 50% AND MORE
ON MANY FLOO R SAMPLES, DISCONTIN UED PIECES AND
WAREHOU SE ITEMS • • .
H.J.GAf\1\ElT fURNITLJRE
ROME IUPll -A otrlkt of IS0,000 clvll COSTA MESA, C~LIF.
strvanll ended , ol dawn loday with PROFESSJONAL "-"--Th • F I E 2 2 1 5 HARBOR BLVD.
a nm n 3111.1 unrv11 neg o a or a INTEllllOR 0-.. I rsi;R 6~6. 0275 646. 0276 •over e 1 -• ... I I I I •s 6 ,,. S _,....n JTIVO.o, ur1., • r ., v••·
reaching a new w a 1 a aireemtnt. In "--------------------------------------.J nlehtlofli lalka.
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Newport Barbor Tod~'s ... Fhi•I
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N.Y. Steeb-
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vot:. 62, NO. 152, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALI FORNIA TH URSDAY, JUNE 26, 1969 • TEN· CENTS
Annex Vote· Ma y E nd Newport, Me ·sa Battles
Annexation wars between Newport
Beach and Costa Mesa in the Upper Bay
county corridor sometimes known as
';The Gaza Strip" may be a thing of the
past today as a result of a county ruling.
Orange County's Local Agency Fonna.
tlon Commission (LAFC) late Wednesday
set the stage for hoped for annexation
peace by selecting Tustin Avenue a!!!I a
border between the two cities.
The LAFC also had three annexation
proposals be.fore it for consideration, one
from Costa Mesa a.id two from Newport.
Cost.a Mesa's so-called Back Bay AMex
No. 1 :stayed on the proposed "Mesa side"
of Tustin Avenue, so it was approved.
Newport's two proposals, however, both
crossed over to the LAFc.proposed
"Mesa side" of Tustin Avenue, so both
were disallowed ·in the LAFC action.
The latest nufTY of annexation p1'0-
po5<1Js eeem related to the ultimate desire
of both cities ot annex the Irvine Com-
pany 's new industrial park 8lU westerly
of Orange County Airport. It ha..'. .i:-high
future tax potential.
Action Wednesday by tile LAFC now
appears to have blocked Newport access
to the industrial park -known as ~ old
McDonnell-Douglas property -and left
its annexation open to Costa Mesa.
Newport holds large indu:slrlal acreage
known as the old Lockheed property in a
triangulated parcel on the opposite
easterly flank or the alrport.
The pl'OpQSi] for the north south truce
line along Tustin Avenue in the ct1rridor
came from LAFC Chairman James T.
Workman, mayor of Villa Park.
The pennanent divider would run from
21st Street aproxlmately two mUes
northerly toward the airport to a point
north of Pali.Sildes Road .
An exception was made of 6.8 acres of
Orange County Airport-owned clear zone
property north of Mesa Drive and west of
Tuslio Avenue where that street curves
eastward to Palisades. This land will re-
main county territory.
That decision out of the way, the LAFC
unanimously:
-Approved Costa Mesa's 4G-acrt Back
Bay No, 1 annexation between Tustin and
Santa Ana avenues, nor1h of La Canada
Way and north and south of bisecting
Mesa Drive. ·
-Denied Newport Beach's West Santa
Ana Heights bid, an 89-acre secUon
between Palisades Road op tb~ north,
Orchard and Mesa Drives on the south,
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Santa Ana AvenUe Avenue on the we•
aod a point west of Acacia Sreet oo the
east.
Before denyillg this move, the LAFC
chairman gave ~ewpcirt Ptanntn&' J>ireC-
tor Lawreace Wilson .Ule OpUoh of
withdrawing the proposal and revlalng It
to conform with tile newly-adoP'fed Tustin
Avenue line, or having it rtjecleG._ ~~1~
asked the commissionen for a ~ar cut
(See ANNEX, Pap ,IJ·
Assessor Bails Out OCC I .•
Trustees Erase Deficit , Slash Ta x Incr ease
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of 1111 Olllf P'/1111 Slnt'
Good news from the County Assessors
Office has erased Orange Coast Junior
College District's projected budget delicit
and permitted trustees to chisel away at
a proposed tax increase.
The late word from the assessor may
also imply a pleasant surprise for some
other school districts and cities. The
junior college district takes in the
Newport Harbor area and much o! the
western part of the county around Hun.
lingt.on Beach.
Junior college board members Wed-
nesday night approved a preliminary
budget for next year that calls for a 25--
cent tax hike. Previously, the tax boost
had been projected at 27 cents and the
budget was out of balance the equivalent
of another nine tax cents.
Then County Assessor Andrew Hinshaw
called this week to advise junior college
officials to revise upward their projected
Reagan Approves
Curbs on Drilling
SACRAJllENTO (UPI)·-~JlilAd
administration today announceifl:)lll.~
tighten safety controls on of!shOte o! 1
drilling.
The aim is to prevent another Santa
B.arbara Channel disaster.
State officials, at a news conference,
said Gov. Ronald Reagan had approved
-40 recommendations, some of which re·
quire legislation.
Although suggesting tighlfr restrictions
on offshore drilling, a special ad-
ministration committee identified ocean-
going tankers as "the most likely future
source of disastrous oil spills."
The committee called for a thorough
study of West Coast tanker traffic and
~afety procedures.
The committee included represen·
tatives of several state agencies affected
by oil and gas dri!Png. '
The committee, headed by Deputy
Conservation Director John M. ~1aylieid,
~ undertook the investigation of existing
state safely rules In the wake or the San-
ta Barbara runaway oil spill on a federal
leas~ last \\'inter.
The submerged well, own~ by Union
Oil Co .. belched thousands of gallons of
raw petroleum which washed ashore and
coated miles of Southern California
resort beaches.
Tb e C<Jmmiltee's recommendations
Ash·ologer Hits
Legality of Law
Used in Arrest
Balboa's systems ana1yst-aslrologer
fla-s filed a document in Municipal Court
alleging that the city ordinance that
&parked his arrest for teaching aslrology
last week was unconstitutional.
Burton hlorse, an aerospace systems
analyst and ov;ner of the newly opened
Sun Sigh Book Store on tile Peninsula, ap-
l'Cared with more than a score of su p-
porters at the court earlier this week.
The demurrer which his lawyer
Seymour Fried of Los Angeles tiled with
lhe court st.at.es that the ordinance
forbidding teaching of astrology Jn
Newport Beach violated the State and
U.S. Constitutions.
He was arrested early last week after a
detective attended an evening astrology
class in the shop.
Morse. who last week admitted he
knew teaching of the class was against
city codes, has vowed to make the IS!.ue a.
test case.
lie face!! mi~demeanor charges for
violating the ordinance passed in August
ol 11167.
It forbids fortune telling, tea-leaf
reading. card readings, claitvoyonl prac·
lice and aslrology teaching in the city
limits.
Morse's challenge to the code cites the
1st and 14th amendments to t be U.S.
Coo!ititutlon and t•·o secUons of ft1e
Cali!ornia Constitution.
Judge J .E.T. Rutter will conduct a
bearing on the. dl!murrtt July 24.
Ul!lle~. r~atlon al c1rm. , ,'It* '· beefed up Id· Y' ~ p · · , legislation, im·
plementation of an bi! spill "disaster
plan'' and cooperative efforts with the
petroleum industry.
Mayfield aod Conservation Director
James Stearns told a news conference
that the Western Oil and Gas Association
"reviewed" the recommendations and ob-
jected to an exchange of infonnation
plan. Mayfield indicated the industry
feared that proposal might jeopardiz.e
trade secrets.
"They feel we're a little re.strictlve in
some of our requirements," he said, "but
they do not object to the principl~ em-
bOdied in them."
South Vietnamese
Open Lifeline
To Sieged Cam p
SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnamese
troops and tankers reported today they
had punched through Uie Communist en·
circlement to ·Ben Het, killing 214 North
Vietnamese and opening a new lifeline in·
to the besieged camp.
The estimated 2,000 Reds in the hills
around the 700-man allied garrison
answered today with 60 more rounds 0£
rocket, artillery and mortar rounds into
the camp.
Monsoon wealber closed in around the
highlands outpC)St and shut off the runs
by cargo planes that drop supply loads by
parachute, but it didn't limit ru2
bombers. In three &trikes they-dropped
270 tons on the outlying Communist posi·
lions overnighL
The South Vietnamese said they lost 17
men killed and 9f wounded in their drh•e
into the camp from Dak Mot, lour miles
away. U.S. warplanes and helicopter
gunships helped them blast away heavy
Communist resistance eo route.
Their spearhead drove through to the
camp and opened the way for more con·
voys Uke the ones th.at arrived from Oak
To, eight miles to the east, Monday and
Tuesday with supplies enough t o
overcome the lack of paracllute drops.
Tlw:re was no ground fighting around
the isolated Ben Het Green Beret outpost
in the past 24 'hf>urs as tfle Commuhists
tieemed content to, extend their 51-day
!'liege .wMh ·rocke.t.. mortar and art.Ulery
barrages.
U.S. Army pilots reported killing at
least 2$ North Vietnamese In two gunship
strike5 within three miles of Ben llet, but
the Communist rorces showed no sign!
Wednesday of easing artillery attacks
tflat have Ill.id more than 5,000 rounds In-
to the camp since May 6.
About 100 rounds of 8Smm artillery,
mortar and recoWess rlOe tire burst
within Ben Het'a perimeters, causing
llJbt cuua1u .. am°"' the U.S. and South
VIetnamese defenCJers.
,-
--'-
assessed valuation {tax pasel lncrca~
for next year from five percent to 10 per·
cent. ·
The new projection ·gave orange Coast
Junior College District a lot more money to work with.
Hinshaw said today he made a check Or
property revaluations within the junior
college district to come up with the ne«
figure. He said he found the greatest in·
creases were in the Newport Beach area.
The assessor said it could be assumed
other taxing jurisdictions that fall within
the Orange Coast District will follow a
s.imilar pattern of 10 perctnt increase.
lJe said his office COtJid not make
similar prelimiaary checks for each
jurisdiction, but agreed to look into it for
Orange Coast because the junior college
district (ekes in about one·fourth of all
county valuation. The lnfonnation was
useful to his office. he said, as indicating
a trend of the way things are going in the
(See ASSES.S, Page J)
TUSTiN MURDER' VICTIM
Susan C. Adams
HELD IN TUSTIN SLAY! ...
Mu rde r Sul pect Vick.;.-
Jewel Bm·glar
Get~ $5,000
I .Gold Coins-
. .A;.
.T..us.tin Mu·rder Suspect .
N•_port police today reported the
weeUiid lllert of more than IJ,000 hi gold
com. .nd jewels ·from tlie Back Bay
home o( a retired food packing firm vke
president in the third large burglary in
the city in two weeks.
Saved From Suicide ~Trri
,,
OAIL '( l'ILOr 11111 l'llttl
Gollernor'• LaiflJ
Mrs. Nancy Reagan describes
her first date with the gover·
nor-to-be in DAILY PILOT
writer Jean Cox's story on the
cover page of the \.Vomcn's
Section in today's edition.
Omaha Rioth1g
W reeks 6 Blocks
OMAHA. Neb. CAP) -Business build-
ings along a six-block stretc h were
smoldering or in ruins today after a
nighi of burning. looting and snipl:'!g in
th e predomi nantly Negro Near Nonh
Side of Lhc city.
_ No s_erious injuries were reported ,
ll wa s the second consecutive night of
disorder touched off by the fatal shoot-
ing of a 14-year-old Negro girl by a white
policeman -James Loder, 30, identified
in hi s city personnel file as the adopted
son of film actress Hedy Lamarr.
Vandalism and looting were reported
by police in an area SS blocks long and
24 blocks wide.
'M1e .Joss of the U.S. and foreign gold
coins and jewels was discovered Tuesday
night by George C. Scott, 10« Santiago
Drive.
Scott. who had been on a 10-day vaca·
tlon, said he and his wife returned home
that evening to find their patio sliding
glass door pried open and thelr home
r ansacked.
The thieves, police said, even overturn·
ed mattresses to search for loot.
Included In the loot was a large col·
lection of British sovereigns and gold
money from other European countries.
Mrs. Scott's collection of jewelry also
was stolen .
Police said the theft o c c u r r e d
sl)metil'llt-over the weekend, since the
victim's brother had checked the home
last Friday and found everything In ord-
er.
Neighbors told off icers they heard
b a n g j n g and thumping noises Sun-
day night. but thought it was a minor
traffic crash and didn't investigate.
Boy May So lve
42 Car Thefts
Anaheim police stopped a JS-year-old
boy Wednesday for a minor traffic viola-
tion and now think they have solved 42
cases of car theft,
Officer Wayne Durtz, while questioning
Lhe boy, became suspicious of his story
that he had borrowed the car from his
father. A check with the owner revealed
the car was .staler..
The boy then told the officer a dust
covered car in the Ball-Knott Shopping
Center, the scene of the interview, was
another he had stolen.
Gradually lhe boy revealed 40 other car
the(ts in a mile-square area near the
cent.er. He la being held in juvenile hall
on suspicion of grand -very grand -
theft auto.
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tltt Otllh' 1'1111 Stiff
Rescued as he was about to join his
s'"eetheart In death by auto gas aspbyr·
iation in a lonely orange grove near
Tustin, a young Washington businessm11.n
today waits to be arraigned for her pillow
suffocation murder.
George A, Vick, 29, was pulled rrom his
rented car by two laborers who found
him lying on the se.::t about 5 a.m.
Wednesday, a 50-footgarden hose running
from the exhaust pipe into the auto.
Tustin Police Detective Jack Terry said
a complaint charging the paint contractor
with murder -the city's first. ir1 ~7 years
-"'OUid be obtained from the Orange
County District Attorney later today.
An anonymous telephone Upster sent
police to a modern Spanish-style apart•
mcnt house at 15491 Pasadeoa Ave. early
Wednesday, v:here they found Susan C,
Adams, 20, murdered.
The victim had been bludgeoned on the
side of the head with a heavy instrument,
then suffocated witti a soft object,
~ssibly a pillow, coroner's deputies said.
Tustin Police Chief Glenn Sissel uid
the former Orange Coast College student
and unemployec' bank clerk sbar~ lite
apartment witb her sister, Mrs. Mary
Sireika, 23, a bar hoste.!s.
Authorities said Vick '-who hadn't lr>o
haled enough automotive fumes to affect
him when rescued from suicide near
Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey ·Road -
listed the same addre&s.
Miss Adams was first thoUght to be a
go-go dancer Wednesday due fo confus.lon
over her s.ister's occupat.io!l .
Sheriff's deputk>s •called-to the-orange
grove about 5 a.m. arrested ViCk on
suspicion or murder, aOd he "was ,booked
also on an Oregon warrant charging hin1
with auto theft.
Investigators s~dd wflcn they fflund
Mi~ l Adams' body, there were tracea of
Oesh and hair under her fingernails, !n-
ct.:cating she triet.1 to fight off htr slayer.
The investigators also said ·that Vick
OCC to Get Sailing Center
T.tustees A pp~'?~e ~r~jec!, Qr:t Neu;por~ ,Ha~bor
' •' t~f. $"-t .i,J,. ', I~, ·. . \ ~'~·:1.:. I • .. · .. ? :·
Go ahead lo develop a collegilde"sa~ I'~·· ~ Beacb Slate, USC and · . Horbot Dlsltict laM!Dtc:el)Jber)Bly C1u1'
cent'er on· Ne*Port lt11rlX>P .. ~li\bf~l~ t kl'f'.:~ -'·' ·. Gentr''1¥"1•&~r1otCk·S"'1:ent-I"•~
was given Wednesday night-by Orange "' 1 e. colTdtes 1r1 expected' to share in thatlKX:l~· wand a.8Ufha1Meda:.cou1d be Coa.~t Junior College District trustees. the '73,00l l!'COnd·Pha8' cost, a tak~n ca ~
Property now used as a crew ba:e will i]ke1man tOrfnangeCost.College Mid. i Orlinge · ·supt. 'NorMan Watson Us-
be dredged. bulkheaded and graded to a J he 300-fooJ strip <JI water!ront.ne'Xt to ed an argument that Stevenl''couldn't
lo•'er level under an estimated $54,000 ' highway l1 leased 'from1the county of Coul'ller, OOwevu ..!:. the open w1ndow ·to
contract lo he awarded la te next month . : ' gc for-$1 a year by the.Junior college the bay.
In a second phase of lhe project, lhe~. -trlt'ttt Orange . q,ast Colltg~·s two racing
crew boalbouse. will be repositioned so. Mw out of lhe pltlure Jg ,the Balboa sloope: now are inoortd' O(fs'hbrt.
motorists on Pacific Cost •Ughway can ~·which has coYeted the OOC pro-Plall$ cab for -continued '-'se,bf the OCC
look over tbe top of Jt. opening up a win-. "Ind adjacent Sti'Scotl\•Ba1e fOr $2. faclUty bY cit; qf 'Newport Beech Parks.
dow to &he bay. Sllpe: will be-installed for lnlllion apartment add!Uons. Beaches and Reert11Uon Dep&rtmtnt (Qr
Shields r1clng sloops owned by OCC, UC Jn a presentation lO Orange County pubDc aailing lessons. .
( P,
--~-
•
tiad aail slashes on his face·~-pff..
taken from Miss Adams' body W~ being
analyzed by the Or.ange County _.,,, ~"i crime Jab Wednesday. ~
No precise motive has been offertd,b
the tragic killing. but Chlel Sisaef Bald,to.
day the pair met six months ago and U
appeared to be a lovers• quarrel.
Dressed in a nightgown, Miss Vick's
blood-spaUered body had been covelld by
a spread as she lay at the foot of the bed
in the two-bedroo1n apartment ahe shared
with her sister.
Mrs. Sireika, estranged from her hu~
band, was working at tbe time her
younger sister was slain.
Authorities said today Miss Adams had
planned· to go to Australia to try op-
portunjties in that country and already
had her Passport, but apparenUy changed
her. mind recently.
Neighbors said both the murder victim
and her older sister were attractive girls,
but quiet lenant.s who promptly paid their
rent a"nd rarely mixed with.others.
The body waS taken to SP.ddlet,ack
Funeral Home, where arrangements will
00 made by I.lie sisters' parent.a, Mr. and
Mrs. ~hester Adams, 1431 Cypress Ave.,
S£n.ta Ana.
Authorities said today the Medford.
Ore.,• auto theft charge. ~ the
(See SUSPECT, Pop I) ,
Stock Jlfarke C•
' NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
was ·a',Joger again today, alth(lugh eome
selective buying reportedly helped :t trim
s h a r p early losses. (See quotations,
Pages--26-27-).
Trading slowed near th e close. The
Dow Jones industrial average at 1:30
p.m. WaS off 4.46 PJ 869.64,
Orange Coa•t
WeatJaer
We'll get a touch more suit than
we're accustomed to Friday 1 whlle
tile mercury hold& fast to the low
70's along the Orange Coast.
P-~---....--_;_;~-------------== ~-~-~ ----.. -... --~---
•
.
a,;~LV PllO: N ~. Wal, H'9
-.Boat :slip uit County Ol{s
_Park" g _Lot
A Bay tat.and rtsldent who hu waged a
contlnullla battle against Bay Island Club
~p and administration of boat
!l!J! ,Ofl the tiny colony has filed suit acmt lhe city for its latest decision on
OM Controver51.
Peter VerHalen, 21 ·Bay Island, Tues·
tltr(iJ«I a Superior Court suit seeking a
~ .. of mandate ag·aJnst the city, which
lilt April 7 decided to revoke hls pier
license and reissue it to the Bay lsland
Club.
The months-long battle over the boat
pier' ownership issue on the island ·came
to the council chambers first Wt spring
-Ytlfi~. complalald lllat Ult d•b had no right to allow more boats' to dock
at the pier in front of hil home.
Directors of the club, which holds title
to the land on which the island homes sit,
has requested VerHalen to allow more
boats to dock on the pier in front of his
home. To own an island house, one
purchase!I membership to the club.
Six of the island's residents at first o~
posed I.be plan to transfer the pier
licenses, but all bul VerHaeln later
relented.
The club, because of tight condi tions on
piers on the island, wanted to add a third
space to tv.·o e1 isting docks o n
Mesa Hails A1mex Ruling;
~ewpor_t :Will Cooperate
Subdued in e1pre65Jon but obviously ded Newport Beach Mayor Doreen
jubilant, Cost.a Mesa M;ayor Alvin L. Marshall, "the council Indicated should
Pinkley toc111 hailed Wedneaday'6 an-the LAFC ar,1prove a whole new bound-
ne1at.ioo deciaions, while his Newport arl, we wou d conform to il."
Beach counterpart promiied to abide by "l'hls is lhe position we should take,"
the rulln&. ~MAyof JA!lrabl.11 added, "the annexations
He said estJblilbment of TUstin :;_~ye • the subject of conlr:oversy and
Avenue as the·'geographical bow:ldary bf.,;:t,;:<tiickeriftg for the past two years.".
tween the Harbor Area cilies is I mile-• '~added that MY furthfr atinexations
atone on the road to duling Wftb other to Newport Beach would be subject to re·
city prob:lem!!l. , ~ queat,s of residents and the city would nol
"I ~ thtl . has been kl1I, long initiate any new annei:ations.
overdue, ~ayor' Pinkley llJd. &e.a~ The city wi.U be recepUve to any ~ter·
praise on the ·two cilies' emlulrits who requested annei:ations on the east" side of
wotked ouL .. tbe Uae, as well ..V LAFC TuaUn Avenue, she added.
cOunlel and acUo6 Wednesday • .:--Mayor Pink1ey said individual honor
"11. atlll .,ma people a little Choice on should go to Costa Mesa inter-city boon· wbedlet'lliif Ila)' in the county lerril«Y d4fY c:ommitt.emen, Vico ~or Robert or jota ....,~Colla Mesa on the west Wilson and Councilman Will Jordan, as
&ide Of TUIUa Affnue and vice l'el'lll," be well as the Newport Beach represen•
aid. · · · tat!ves, Vice Mayor Llndsley Parsons and
"lii ~line ~tb,...recommendatlons from Councilman ·Robert SbeltOn. and also
the ~ ·relations committee," ad· LAFC Executive Officer Richard Turner. v • • •
* * * * * * From P .. e l
ANNEX DECISION ...
decilfe-acceptance or rejection.
-Dcle.d Newport Beach's i.,. Canada
anne:r,..&1,,,1cres west of Tustin Avenue
betweenUchard Drive on the north and
660 feet mh of Universily Drive which
overl1ppec1-t¥a Mesa 's merger on its
eastern hair aJong Tustin.
In approvtnr: e.ta. Mesa's annexa.Uon
and denying the two Newport moves, lhe
LAFC followed the recommendations of
ita execuUve oler, .Jli~~arl . _Tu;tner,
who had met., !dt~e...f
cihnartic comm.I rectntly and ham-
mered out the Tu!tin line.
Jn prole1t1111 fhe commission's
decilimt, 'RlWm tald "There are
att.emative boundary Jines (to Tus\in
Avenue). My c;lty doea not conCW' with
the TusUn line. "
He was backed by Fred Scott,
representing res\de.nts of Newport's pro-
poaed La Canada annn; 0 r vi 11 e
Reinhardt, pmident of the Pegasus
Home Owners Asaocialion, covering the
am east of the Santa Ana Country Club
and north of Mesa Drive, Kenneth
Lindbergh. a resident of Mira Loma
Place in the La Canada annex and Mary
Andrews, 20132 Redlands Ave., in the
Pegasua area.
Bad;ing Costa 1'.fesa were James
Eberhardt, of 20271 River!ide Drive In
~ Pegasus area. and Harry· M. Brown,
f<l"tJ)ef' manager of tht Santa Ana
Heights Mutual Water District, of 1582
Mesa Drive.
Left up in the air was the future of
1'usUn "Avenue Itself in the disputed areas: The commluioners urged the two
cities to decide which community would
take over the roadway, as required by
law.
f'iut move i• a vote of the people in the
40-acrt Cogta M~ annex to either ap-
prove or disapprove the Jlroposal. This
will take several months before con·
clusion.
Costa Mesa , in tt. presentation lo the
LAFC. claimed thaL proptrty owners
OAILJ t'!tOI
••Nrt H. W1*4
•re.i.tnr .,.. """twr
·•exceeding 68 percent oC the 86.sessed
valuation of the area'' favored the annex.
If all anns of local government -both
city and county -now .hew to the
_LAFC's Tustin Avenue peace line, it
could bring an end to annexation haggles
in the Ba<* Bay arc.a ll)aLi have, rubbed
poliUcal nerves raw in both cities for
more than a decade.
.. Real estale ii} queJJion1 Jhe _s_oun~. cor· riil!I'~ af th• Cau'li&,; iull .,..t
of hapPened over the years.
It is a long column of land !yins
roughly between Orange Coun!y Airport
to the north and a:lth-Street to the south.
It is bounded by Santa Ana Avenue to
the west and Tustin A venue to the east.
Today -on a map -it's a jagged.
toothed appearing sector because o( past
annexation nibbles taken by both
Newport and Costa lt1esa.
The corridor area is a mixture of uses
ranging all the way from ranch-like
homes with horses lo plush estates serv-
ed with modern streets and utilities. This
made annexation proposa.15 all the more
verjng.
One city or the other might like to an-
nex plush sectors of the corridor with
,high tax valuation but in the past shied
away from the more b u c o J I c
neighborhoods with narrow sub-standard
roads and a mind-boggling array af
special taxing districts.
Kidney Machine
Fund Raiser Set
A patJo sale will be held for Mrs.
Colleen Randall, V(ho is in need of a
kidney transplant 'this weekend at Anchor
Trailer Park. 1527 Newport Blvd., Costa M.,..
Mrs. May Maxwell of space 34 who Is
heading the salt:, said rtsklents of the
trailer park are trying to collect articles
for the sale.
"We nted donations from anyone in-
terested." she noted. "Nothing is too big,
nothing too small ."
The sale ls slated for Saturday, from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
-J .c1" i. c.,1.., ---~trs;--Randatt;-of lio&-Pamclt-Placr, vio.,......... -c;.w.-11 ¥tnat1r Costa Mesa. is suffering from a kidney
Tille••' ••nil . I!~ ...
lkt..,•t A M111p!ril"'
Wftn"'t l!tllQI' J,,,.,,, ,., c,11;111 N._, -....,~
City Etllet __ ......
1!11 w ...... ~ ••••• 1 .... ,,
M1111Rt AiltlrHtl P.O. lt1 1171, •2•&! ·--
\
~
disease.
She will be seeking a transplant next
year. but must undergo expensive
hemodialysis tests first.
t-.frs. t-.laxwell added that anyone
,.,.ishing to help, especially with ar'tl cle
donations should contact her at the
trailtr park. Her home phone Is ~9.
From Page J
SUSPECT •..
murder suspect stems from his renting
the 1969 sport coupe in \\'hich he at-
tempted to commit suicjde Wednesday.
The car was leased or rented but not
returned on time and authorities said it
setm1 dooblful under the circum1tsnces
that ht will be prosecuted for the lcssu
offense.
Tustin poUct sakl Wednesday while
Vick ~·as being quettioned prior to book·
l.ng al Orange County Jail that lhe-y
believed him to be the telC'phone tipster
In lht murder case.
They 1efUM!d to confirm !his today, bill
noted lhe Cflll was later traced to a pay
teltphone bo01h ntar the orange grove
where he attempted to take hl5 life..
. vor-·1 pier.
He refused, and shortly alti r that both
he and the club asked the city for a
decision.
Last April 7 th& cUy decided to grant
the club jurisdiction over the piers.
VerHalen, ln his suit, alleges that he
was not notified of any hearing on 1µte
transfer and complains he was not given
a fair trial or the chance to argue h!J
case before the City Council.
About 20 piers are affteted by the
change of license to the club.
The suit sttks court action to prevent
the city from implementing their April 7
action.
From Page J
ASSESS ..•
whole county.
Hinshaw indicated the percentace in-
crease within the junior college ~ct
probably is skewed upward toward
Nev.'port Beach where his assessors have
been al work reevaluating commercial
and induslrial property and vacant Irvine
Com pany lands.
A look at a few propo&ed budgets in-
dicates some foreknowledge of this . The
city of Nev.·porl Beach has budgeted for a
14 percen t assessed valuation increase;
Nev.·port·l\1esa Unified School District for
9.7 percent, and Huntington Beach Union
High School District for only five percent.
Based on what Hinshaw said, any or all
could be estimating on the low side.
Firm assesi;ed valuation figures will be
announced Ju1y 15. A few weeb after
that date school district! will adopt their
-final budgets for t.b4ffiscal yw beginning
July l. ·
:~\Newport ~ch City Finance Olrector
George Pappas said he picked 14 percent
as a figure because he thought Newport
would ocme in a little higher than the 10
lo 12 pecent increase predicted for the
county.
Walt Adrian, Newport-Mesa budget
director, saii:t he made compilations in-
tl l'.'pendcnt of the assessors office ch;lrling
IO years past experience and checking
building permits_ .to come up with his 9.7
percent.
IIuntington Beach Union High Supt.
!\·lax Forney said five percent is the ad·
vice they got from the assessors office
several months ago and that last year's
actual increase was 4.2 percent.
Dapper ' Bandit
Takes• $!1.,200
At Liquor Store
A handsomely-bu)lt bandit In a trim
summer suit and his casually-dressed
bagman are sought today, following the
Sl,200 holdup of a Costa Mesa liquor store
shortly before midnight Wednesday.
Jonathon K. Hein, clerk at Hi-Time LJ..
quors, 495 E. 17th St., said the
athleticaily-built man browsed around at
11 :30 p.m., until all other customers had
left the store.
Standing 10 feet from the checksland
he said. the bandit showed a chrome:
plated handgun of unknown caliber and
demanded that he turn over the cash
regi.s~cr money.
Previously unseen. ltein added, the 3f:·
cond 1nan approached with a bag for the
loot and he was then force<! to open a
rear door for their escape.
They ordered him to go into the liquor
store walk·ln cooler, he . told in·
vestigators, but he slammed the back
door instead and ran to call police.
A cook in an adjacent restaurant and
another liquor store employe not Inside
the b~ilding at the time of the holdup
described l\vo cars they saw driving
away.
Trustees Honored
By CofC Women
r..1rs. 1'.1arian Bergeson and 1'frs.
Eliiabeth Lllly, members ol lhe Newport-
Mesa Unified School District board of
trustees, have been honored by the Costa
t-.fesa Chamber of Commerce Women 's
Division.
They we?'! given -awards fOl'-outstan-
ding community service, the first such
awards. whicli now will be given by the
Women ·s Division quarterly.
Dr. Hilda P.fcCartney, W o m e n · s
Division president and head Newport·
Mesa schools librarian, hosted the
luncheon at which the women trustees
were honored.
U.S. Oka ys Grant
Of $1 Million
A SI million grant avaj lable to UC
lr"lne for 111e toward COMtruction of 1n
administrative office building was an-
nounced today by the U.S. Office of
!:ducat ion.
Releqe of the ledtral money is con-
tingent on approval by the C11Uomla
Legis lature ol lhe rematnlng i3 million
toward the slightly ovet '4 million
building.
'T'he 13 million is included In Gov.
Rea~1n 's 1969-70 budget now before lhe
Legislature.
If the appropriation Is approved, con·
struction will begin this fall with com·
pletion 1lated for mid 1971, a campus
tpokesman said.
DAILY P'ILOT, 5t1ff P'll9ft
WORK BEGINS ON ROCK GROIN AT 52ND STREET
Engineers Move on, Though First Stone Finger Incomplete
Dig New Newport Groins;
Engineers Start 2nd Site
Digging has started on the second ot
four sand·saving groin sites in west
Newport Beach even though the first
stone finger hasn't been completed yel.
High tides for the next few weeks
prompted the delay in finishing the first
groin, Anny Corps of Engineers aides
said.
To keep equipment woi-king they
ordered the contractor to start work on
the 52nd Street groin during the delay.
'n>e first structure, at the ocean end of
seth-Street, will be completed in lbe ne1t
few weeks as soon as rocks hauled in
from Corona can be dropped out to sea.
City Ha rbor and Tidelands Coordinator
George Dawes said that a series o( lower·
than-a verage tides is needed to drop the
rocks for the first groin.
In the meantime the crews will start
digging a pit at sind Street for the se·
cond promontory,
Other groins -which are expected to
wind-up Lhe Corps' $600,000 sand saving
efforts in the area -will jut out from the
beach at 48lh and 36th streets.
The four new groins, combined with
tv.o steel ooes built last year, will bring
the grand total to six in the western area
of the city's beaches.
lnry IndiC·ts 3 in Heist '
_,
Three men accUled of the $5,000 ro~
bery of Bertahlrea Restaurant, Newport
Beach, have been indicted on grand theft
charges by the Orange County Grand
Jury.
District Attorney C«IJ !lieu got the
panel's backing Wednesday for the
charges filed against Anthony Umbefto
Rossi, 33, of 31371 Monterey St., South
L3guna, H~nry William Willmio&. 30, of
2139 Republic Ave ., Costa Mesa and John
Italian Strike Ends ·
ROME (UPI) - A st:ike of 250,000 civil
servants ended at dawn today with
government and union n e g o t i a t o r s
reaching a new w a g e agreement in
nightlong talks.
GP.roge Fili.uola, 46, ot Las Vegas, Nev.
WUlming has been identified as a
bartender on dutY '..et Berkshires at the
time of the burglary last June 5. Police
believe he masterminded the robbery.
Rossl and Filizzola were arrested at
the Monterey Street add rWJ on the same
day by Newport Beach police officers.
Willmt!lg was arrested at Berkshires,
3450 Via Oporto, later that day.
Officers estimated that the three men
took . nearly $50,000 in cash, checks and
credit charges from the restaurant safe.
Four cash boxes were later found in the
trunk of Roost's car, investigators said.
Hicks went be(ore the Grand Jury to
avoid long municipal court procedures in-
volving the defendants. The trio WD!
scheduled to appear Monday in Harbor
Districl Judicial Court but will now be
arraigned Friday in Superior Court.
.JJ. J. Garrell~
. .
For Sunset
Proceedings are moving ahead today ~o
condemn a 13-acre st,rip in the heart of
Sunset Beach for a parking Jot assuring
public beach access, following a 3 to %
vote by County Supe.rviso:n 1\Jesday.
The aclion must move ahead with all
speed. county o!licla.ls noted, in order w
I lock construction of a major apart1nent
complex on the old Pacific Electric
Railroad right-of-way.
Carlton Builders Inc., of Beverly Hill!,
already baa one building under con·
struetion in the narrow, sandy st.Mp
-bc(ween Pacific Coast Highway and
Pacific Avenue.
Voting after a one-boor hearing cJim&l'· in& a series of discuDiona apannihg the
past year, supervisors auUaoriud' county
Parks Dittdor Kenneth Sa.mp.son to Bp-
ply for federal financing funds.
Supervisors David L. Baker, Robert W.
Battin and .Alton E. Allen approved the
condemnation proceedings over denial
votes by supervisors William H. Hirstein
and William J. Phlllips.
DeadUne ls July 1 in the application for
federal funds lo finance purchase of the
beach property, whlie County
Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas
has offered this supplemenlal plan :
-A c·ne-ccnt increase in the Oran.i::e
County Harbor District lk:ent tax rate
for the coming fiscal year.
-Use of $427 ,500 in Road Department
Gas Tu Funds.
-Diversion of $912,500 in Harbor
District Funds to be used for dredging
Upper N~wport Bay and for proposed
construction o{ a by-pass channel in
Sunset Aquatic Park.
'Ole l,JJO..car parking lol will briog m~y back into county CQffers noled
Thbmas. and this could repay fwids bor--
rowed to get the Sunset Beach project
moving.
"We ~hould use every means possible
to · matnlaln our beaches," argued
Supervisor Baker, "this is not ii local
Sunset Beach matter.
"If no parking is provided, the 6100.
foot county owned beach worth S& mlilion
is in effect a private beach available only
to local residents," he concluded.
Agnew Urges
Ba11 on Panthel'
'Coloring Book' '
WAS!fJNCTON (UPI) -Vice Pres!· ~ent ~piro T. Agnew called. today for ,1 J~eal .. ba_p 9n "inflammatory propaganda"
sUdt is the "Black Panther coloring
bobk"'" given to Negro children in San
Francisco. •
In a letter to Sen. John L. McClellcin
!,[).Ark.), Agnew called the Panlh~rs a
completely irresponslb!e, anarchistic
group of criminals."
He enclosed a copy of the coloring
book, which already had been presented
to McClellan's i n vestigating sub.
committee by a San Francisc o
pO~iceman. The book urged Negro
children to kill white policemen a.ad
merchants.
_''If. there are no laws prohibiting
distribution of this inflammatory pro-
paganda, there certainly should be,''
Agnew wrote McClellan.
M~le_lian, whose subcommittee is in-
vestigating the Panthers and other
radical organizaUons, read excerpts fro!ll
~gnew's letter at his subcoinmittee hear.
1ng t.oc!ay. McClellan said he was in com·
plete agreement with Agnew "presun1ini:
It can be done within the framework of
the Constitution."
14th SEMl·ANNUAL
N''W In Progress With Substantial
Reductions On Such Famous Bratuls As •••
e HERITAGE e JAMESTOWN e HECKMAN e TOMLINSON e CENTURY e BRANDT e KINDEL e KARGES e HIBRITEN
ALSO REDUCTIONS UP TO 50% AND MORE
ON MANY FLOOR SAMPLES, DISCONTINUED PIECES AND
WAREHOUSE ITEMS • • .
H.J.GAR.R.tfT fURNll1JRE
PROFESSIONA~
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thurs., & Frf., Ev.s.
COSTA MESA, CALIF,
2 2 I 5 HARBOR BL VD.
646 . 0275 ·~·. 0276
\ •
•
., I
7
.. f .
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Costa • •
v.oi:. l.2, NO. 152, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
. .
Mesa
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
.. .. --~.-.... --.. .--• -
Today'.s Fhlal -
THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1969 TEN CENTS
Annex Vote May End Newport, Me ·sa Battles
7
Annexation wars between Newport
B~ach and Costa Mesa in the Upper Bay
COi.inly . corridor sometimes known as
"The Gaia Strip" may be a thing of the
past today as a result oI a county ruling .
Orange County's Local Agency Fonna.
Uon Commission (LAFC) late Wednesday
set. the stage for hoped for annexation
peace by selecting Tustin Avenue as a
border between the two cities.
The LAFC also had three annexation
propoaals before it for consideration,' one
from Costa Me58 and two [rom Newport.
Costa Mesa's so-called Back Bay Annex
No. 1 stayed on the proposed "Mesa side"
of Tustin Avenue, so it was approved.
Newport's two proposals, however, both
crossed over to the I.AFC-proposed
"Mesa side" of Tustin Avenue, so both
were disallowed in the LAFC action.
The latest flurry of annexation pro-
posals aeem related to the ultimate desire
or both cities ot annex the Irvine Com· pan,y'.s new indwtrlal park area westerly
of Orange County Airport. It bu a high
future tax potential.
Action Wednesday by the LAFC now
appears to have blocked Newport access
to the industrial park -known as the old
McDonnell-Douglas property --azJd left
its annexation open to Costa Mesa.
Newport holds large industrial acreage
known as the old Lockheed property In a
triangulated parcel on the op~l!e
easterly Dank of the airport.
The proposal for the north sooth truce
line along Tustin Avenue in the corridor
came from LAFC Chairman James T.
\Vorkman, mayor of Villa Park.
The pennanent divider would run from
21st Street aproximately two miles
northerly toward the airport to a point
north of Palisades Road .
An exception was made of 6.6 acres of
Orange County Airport-owned clear zone
property north of Mesa Drive and west of
Tustin Avenue where that street curves
eastward to Palisades. Thia land wW re-
Assessor Bails Out OCC
Trustees Erase Deficit, Slash Tax Increase
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of ttt. De.llY Pllel 1!1rl
Good news from the County Asseasors
Office has erased Orange Coast Junior
College District's.projected .budget deficit
and permitted trustees to chisel away al
e 1pri>posed tax increase.
The late word from the assessor may
also imply a pleasant surprise ·for some
other achool districts and cities. The
junior college district takeii in the
Newport Harbor area and much of the
Dapper Thief
Sought for
$1,200 Heist
A handsomely-bunt bandit in a trim
Nrruner suit and his casually-dressed
hagmnn are sought today, following the
ll .200 holdup of a Costa Mesa liquor store
shortly before midnight Wednesday.
,Jonathon K. Hein, clerk at Hi·Time LI·
quors, 495 E. 17th SL, said the
athletlcaJly.built man browsed around at
11 :30 p.m.,.until all other customers had
left the store.
Standing 10 feet from the checkstand,
he said, the bandit showed .11 chrome-
pla/.ed handgun of unknown caliber and
demanded that he turn over the cash
regis' ;r money.
Previously unseen, Hein added, the se-
cond man approached with a bag for the
lOot' and he was then fore~ to open a
~ir door for their escape.
They ordered him to go into the liquor
store walk·in cooler, he told in-
vestigators, but he slammed the l>ack
door Instead and ran to call police.
A cook in an adjacent restaurant and
another liquor store employe not irmide
the building at the time of the holdup
described two cars they gaw dri ving
away,
OAllY PILOT 1111! l'1lltw
Go Der11or'1 Lad11
Mrs. Nancy Reagan describes
her first date with the gover-
nor-te>-be in DAILY PILOT
wriUl:r Jean Cox's story on the
cover page of tbe Women's
Section in today's edition.
western part or the county around Hun·
Ungton Beach.
Junior college board members \\'ed·
nesday night approYed a preliminary
budget for next year that calls for a ti-:
cent tax hike. Prevl9u1ly, the. tax ·boost
had been projected at 27 cents and the
budget was out of balance the equivalent
of another nine tax cents.
Then County Assessor Andrew Hinshaw
called this week to advise junior college
officials to revi6e upward their projected
assessed valuation (tax base) Increase
for next year from five percent to 10 per-
cent.
The new ttrojectiWl gave Orange Coast
Junior College District a lot more money
to work with.
llinshaw said tOOay he made a check of
properly revaluations within the junior
college district lo come up with the new
figure. lie said he found the greatest in·
creases were in the Newport Beach area.
The assessor said it could be assumed
BLACKPOOL BOBBY TAKES AIM IN COSTA MESA
Sft. Cordeiro Offers Pointers on Firearms to Viaitor
• Bobby Ill Town
Law Problems Same as England
Constable Colin Ryder carries a
truncheon !... bUly club to the police ln the
"colonies" -but he and a Co&a Mesa of.
ficcr rode lhe beat together Wednesday
night, lawmen who face the same human
problem throughout Christendom : people
v"ho t1n't get along with other people.
The 24-year~ld officer from lhc
seacoast resort of Blackpool , England
was preparing fqr a guest shift or
busman's holiday before going back to
duty Monday after a four.week visit with
Harbor area relatives.
'V ASr DIFFERENCE'
"We were just discUs.o;ing the vast dif·
ference in departmental operations, yet
the common problems we nm hlto," said
SgL Sam Cordeiro, after conducting
ConstabJe Ryder on a tour of the modern
Costa Mesa Police Facility.
"Domestic quarrels and pub brawls,"
.added Ryder, "they're a waste of time."
"People are people," Sgt. Cordeiro
observ<!d phU"'°Phlcally.
The basjc police philosophy is diUerent
In Britain than the U.S., In potential deal·
ings with their people, however. and
Constnble Ryder carries onl y h i 5
nightstick and a pair of handcuffi;.
EQUIPMENT'S BETTER
"( think the most outstanding dlf·
fertnce here Is lhe carrtage of guns, and
of course the equipment here is better
>
than back home," said Ryder. a member
ol the 7 ,000.man Blackpool constablllary
five years, counting cadet or reserve
status.
Does he consider weaponry advisable
for the Bri t ish bobby, a t e rm in-
cidentally, which has been replaced by
the more contemporary copper.
"I can't even hold a gun long enough to
aim," he joked, as Sgt. Cordelro's heavy
. 38 caliber p:>lice speeiAI wobbled in hii1
hand while he faced a target in the sta·
lion's basement «ring range.
One reason is that English lawmen
rarely need guns.
"In the London area, there are quite a
few robberies with firearms. but the
farther north you •go,-the knife Is more
common and of course easier to deal
with,'' Constable Ryder explained.
In comparison to the Greot Train Rob-
tSee BOBBY, P•ce ZI
' Stffk Markel•
NEW YORK CAP) -The stock marret
v.'al'I a loser again today. although some
sclectlvt buying reportedly helped 't trim
1 harp early losses. (See quotations,
Pages 26-27),
Trading slowed near the clost . T~
Dow Joneii indumria.I average at 1:30
p.m. was off f ,f6 A.l 869.14.
• ..
other taxing jurisdictions that fall within
the Orange Coast District will follow a
similar pattern ol 10 percent increase.
lie said his office could not make
similar preliminary checks for each
jurisdiction, but agreed to look into it for
Orange Coast because the junior college
district lakes in about one·fourth of all
county valuation. The inCormation was
useful to his office, he said, as indicating
a trend of the way things are going in the
!See ASSESS, Pag< ZI
Hijacked Jet
Returns After . .
13 Hour Delay
MIAMI (UPI) - A United Airllnu
jeUiner, hijack'!d while on 1 fl ight from
~Angeles to New York 1i:id detained in
Havana 13 hours because of "mechanical
difficullles," was finally released today.
The airl.iner was cleared at I :06 p.m.
and took off on its 33 minute flight back
to Miami International Airport. The
Federal Aviation Agency said it had been
unable to determine the nature of the
mechanical problem.
The FAA official said the eight
crewmen and 50 passengers who arrived
in Havana about midnight were taken to
hotels for i;ome sleep.
The United Airlines DC8 was com·
mandeered 11 minutes after takeoff from
Lo.s Angeles Wednesday afternoon and
arrived at Jose Marti Airport in Havana
at 9:01 p.m. PDT Wednesday. The 2,500-
mile flight was the second hijacking of a
traMCOntintntal airllner within eight
days.
Radio Havana said today the jet was
hijacked by an individual armed with a
pistol. It did not give his nationality.
It was the 20th hijacking of the year of
a U.S. ai rliner to the Communist island.
The jet was hijacked 15 miles west of
Riverside, at 4:20 p.m. PDT after taking
off from Los Angeles, the FAA said.
The pilot, Capt. Edward Nibur, 59, or
Bernadsville, N.J., radioed asking for a
routin:; to Havana. -;..--
United officials said there w a s no
fur ther contact with the pilot after his
terse message:.
"We knew it was hijacked then and we
don't ask questions under those
circumstances," said .11n FAA spokesman
in Los Angeles.
The plane's route to the Communist
island took it over Albuquf.l'qne N.M.;
Fort Worth, Tex.: Alexandria, La.;
Tallabassee and Key-West. Fla,
Kidney Machine
Fund Raiser Set
A patio sale will be held for Mrs .
Colleen Randall, who is in need of a
kidney transplant this weekend at Anchor
Trailer Park, lUl Newport Blvd., Costa
A1esa.
Mrs. May Maxwe ll of space 3f who I!
heading the sale, said residents of the
trailer park are trying to collect articles
for the sale.
"We need donations from anyone in·
teresled." she noted. ''Nothing ls too big,
nothing too small."
The sale ls slated for Saturday, from 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
ti,frs. Randall, of 1206 Parnell Plact,
C05ta P.lesa, Is suffering from a kidney
diseue.
Sbe will be seeking a transplant next
year, but must undergo t1ptru;lve
hemodlalysls test1 fint.
Mrs. M11xwen added that anyone
wishing lo http, .,peclaJJy wllh article
don1tlons 1hould contac't her at the
trailer park. Her home phone is 6~. •
'
main county territory .
That decision out of the way, the LAFC
unanimously:
-Approved Costa Mesa's 40-acNi Back
Bay No. l annexation between Tustin and
Santa Ana avenues, north of La Canada
\Vay and north and sooth of bisecting
fl.1esa Drive.
-Denied Newport Beach's West Santa
Ana Heights bi.d, an 89-acre section
belween Palisades Road on the: north,
Orchard and Mesa Drives on the south,
TUSTIN MURDER VICTIM
Susan C. Adams
Santa Ana Avenue Avenue on the wtsl
and a. point west of AC.eta S~ on the
east.
Before denylng thll move, .the .LAJ'C
chainnan gave Newport PlanniDc ~
tor Lawrence Wilson the optJoa of
withdrawing the ptop0841 aod revllJnC it
to conform with the newly-adopted Tustin
Avenue line, or having it rtjecfed.. Wilson
asked the commissioners for a c1ti_U cut
(See ~I P•1• Z)
HELD IN. TUSTIN SLAYING
Murd•r Sutpoct Vick
f~W tin Mu1der Slispect
Saved From Suicide ·Tr.y
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tlll 0.lll' Plitt Ill"
Rescued as be was about to join his:
11r·eetheart. ln death by auto gas asphyx·
iation in a lonely orange grov e near
Tustin, a young Washington buslnesstMn
today waits to be: arraJgned for her pillow
suffocaUon murder.
Geor~ A. Vick, 29, was pulled from his
rented C.11r by two laborers who found
him lying on the se:t about 5 a.m.
Wednesday, a 50-foot garden hose ruMing
from tbe·exhaust pipe into the auto.
Tustin Police Detective Jack Terry said
.11 complaint charging the paint contraclor
wilh murder -the city's first !n .17 years
-"'Ould be obtained from thfl Orange
County District Attorney later today .
An anonymous telephone tipster sent
p:>lice to a modem Spanish-style apart.-
menl house at 15491 Pasadena Ave. early
Wednesday, V.'here they found Susan C.
Adams, 20, murdered.
The victim had been bludgeoned on the
side of the head with a heavy instrument,
then suffocated · with , a soft llbjecl,
'."OSSibly a pillow, coroner's dep1,1ties said.
Tustin Police Chief Glenn Sissel sa~
the former Orange Coast <;ollege,s!udenl
and unemploye<l bank clerk shared the:
apartment with her sister, Mrs. Mary
Sircika , 23, a bar hostess.
Authorities said Vick -who hadn't lo--
haled enough automotive fume.a to affect
him when rescued from suicide near
Irvine Boulevard and Jeffrey Road -
IiS!ed the same address.
Miss Adams was firs( thought lo be a
go-go dancer Wednesday due to confusion
over her sister's occupation.
Sheriff's deputies called to the orange
grove about ~ a.m. arrested Vick on
suspicion of murder, and he was booked
also_on an_9regQn warrant chargi_ng.JiiJn._
with auto theft.
lnvestigators said when they found
Mi: 1 Adams· body, there were traces of
flesh and hair under her fingernails, !n-
d'.cating she trieJ to fight off her .&layer.
The investigators also said that Vick
had nail slashes on his ra ce and samj)les
taken from Miss Adams' body were being
analyzed by the Orange County Sheriff's
crime Jab Wednesday.
No precise motive has been offered for
the tragic killing, but Chief Sissel aald t~
day Uie pair met I ii' months ago and it
:i!"J)eared to be a lovers• quarrel.
Dressed in a nightgown, Miss Vick'•
blood-spalter..t boay had been cover«! by
a spread as abe lay at the foot of the bed ---
Man, 28, Killed After
Shooting Policeman
LONO BEACH (AP) -A Long Btach
p:>llct officer killed a 28-year-okt man
who crilic1lty woontled the offlcer·s
partner In a shootout early today, police
uld.
Donald Eugene Nowak was f'llt by 5ll
bulleta as he fled. from the. Royal CUctoo
Club bar where, officefl laid, he f'lad rob-
bed t palron ol 1100 l1ld lbrealened le
klU anyone who lnterftred.
In the tw~bedroom 1parlment she shared
with her sister.
Mrs. Sirelka, estranged from her hUJ-
band, was working at the time bet
younger sister was slain.
Authorities said today Miss Adams had
planned to go to Australia to try op-
portunities in that coontry and already
had her passport, but apparenUy changed
her mind recently.
Neighbors said both the murder victim
and her older sister were attractive girls,
but qu.iet tenants who promptly paid their
rent and rarely mixed with others .
The body was taken to Saddleblclc
Funeral Home, where arrangements wUJ
b::i made by the sisters' parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Adams, 1431 Cypresa: Ave.,
Stnta Ana.
Authorities said today the Medford,
Ore., auto theft charge against the
(Set SUSPECT, Page Z)
Tot Survives
Crash in Mesa
Toddling ti long beside a bu 1 y
boulevard, a Costa Mesa tot Ral'l'O'lily
escaped serious injury Wednesday when
clipped by a car whose driver swerved to
miss the boy's pet dog as it ran into the
strtet.
Franklin L. Watter, 2, of 3174 Pacific
Ave., was treated for cuts and bruises at
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital after the
4 p.m. accident on Victoria Street and
Canyon Drive. \
Deni!e A. Cavin, 16, o( 1827 PitcairTl'----
Drive, Costa Mesa, did everything possi-
ble to-avoid the-aecident;-sai<tPatrolman-
Chano Camarillo and the young motorist
was not cited.
Orange Coast
Weadier
We'll get a touch more sun tht1n
rt'e're accustomed to Friday, while
the mercury holds fast to the low
70's along the Orange Coast.
INSmE TODAY • Pi.ck a wife who ho.s a •tnH
of humor -that'! the adtrlcl1
giVtn fn today'ii 'Checkfng Up'
column on Paae 7.
Ml•i.. .... --.. _...._. """ .. , --. lftwl........, .,.
19dil ,.._, l).IJ --... '""" ""'"' •n ,....,..,. n --·-. ·--.. ..., .........
I
-
·--·
I OAll y l'ILOT c
'f.e!"I Overfl~ • . .
Annex Decisio·n
ail ed by ·Me sa
hbdued In npreoolon bul ob'I001ly
jubitani, Coata Me3a Mayor Alvin L.
Pinkley toda y hailed Wednesday's an·
MXIUon declJlons, while his Newpl)ft
llOoch,OOll(ierport prom1oed to abide by
lhf l'U!lnl:
"" ·--blls-nt of Tullln Aven'Ue 11 the geographical boundary be-
tween lbe Harbor Area cities is a mile-
1toM on 1ht road to dealing with other
city prob!...,. "r · lhlslk thi• 1w 1>een loaa. toaa
ovtrilut," Mayor Pinkley sald, heaph\1
praiae on the two cities' emissaries who
worlrtd out the line, u well u LArC "°'"*' ud ldlon Wtdnmlay.
"It llUl «Iva people a little choice on
wht<IM: lheJ stay In lhe county lerrilarY
ot join a city -Co.ta Mesa on the west
alde ol Tualio Avenue and vice versa," he
Aid.
"Jn line wUh recommendations from
the inter-city relaUona committee," ad·
ded Newport Beach Mayor Doreen
t.1arshall. ;'the council Indicated should
the LAFC approve a whole new bound·
ary, we would confo rm to iL"
"Thil iJ the poaitlon we thould teke,''
Mayor Mltlball added, "\ht 1nne1ations
have been the .subject or controversy and
bickering for tht past two years.''
Sbe added that any further annexations
to Newport Stach would be subject to re·
quests of residenls and the city would not
initiate any new annexations.
The city will be receptive to any voter·
requested annual.ions on the east side or
Tustin Avenue, she added.
?rtayor Pinkley said individual honor
should go to Costa Mesa Inter-city boun -
dary commltteemen, Vice Mayor Robert
Wilson and Councilman Will Jordan, as
well as the Newport Beach represen·
taUves, Vice Mayor Lindsley Parsons and
Counellman Robert Shtlton, and also
LAFC Executive Officer Richard Turner.
From Pqe l
ANNEX DECISION •.••
declllm -_..,."' .. J«Uoa.
-Denied Newport Beach'• Le.c.nido
anner, 2S 1cra, west of TutUu Awnue
belwotn Ordlard !)rive oo U.. nort)I and
660 feet ICIUth of Untvenlty Drt•e wbJcb
ovtrlJpped c.o.ta Meu.'a merser ·CO its
umrn hall·ll«ll Tustin.
Jn approrinc Colla· Meta'• annep.Uon
and denY1nl U.. two Newport °"""• the LAFC lellond tbe recomm-.1>1
Ill e...UU.. olll«r, Richard Turoer,
who bad 'JIMI. with U.. two-<lty coun-
dlmanlc --r<COtltl)' and bam· mered oul lilt 'l'ulllll llne. In~ 9'1 comml11lon's
dee~. L""°".' uld "There are altematm bouJ1Clary 11.., (lo Tullln
Avenue). My city doa not concur with
tbe TUlt1n One ...
He ,.._, backed by Fred Scot!;
repre ... UJll. Noldtnll of Newport'• pro-
poud · i.. caoada anna; Orv 111 e
lldnbardl, preslilenl ol U.. Pquua
Home OwnlrJ ANociaUon, coverlng the
area east of. the Santa Ana Countrr Club
and north oC Mesa Drive, Kenneth
Lindber&tt, a resident of Mira Loma
Place in lbe La Canada annex and Mary
Andrt!ws, 2013% Redlands Ave .• in the
Pegasua ana.
Backinl Costa Mesa were James
Eberhardt. or 20271 Riverllide Drive in
the Pegasus area, and Harry M. B"°'!D,
Sonner ~er Qf the S9ta Ana
Heigbll Mutual Wafer Dli!rlc~ of i$G
f!.feaa prtve.
Left up in the air was the future or
Tustin Avenue ttselr in the disputed
artaa. The commiasloneu Yrged the t~o
cities to decide which communtty would
take over the roadway, as reqidred by
law.
Nert move is a vole of the people in the
40-acre C05ta Meaa annex to either ap-
prove. or dlupprov1 tht proposal. This
Will take sevual months before con-
clusion.
Costa Mesa, In Its pruentalioo to the
LAFC. claimed that property owners
·•exceeding 61 perc.enl of the usessed
v:1•1aUon oI the area" favored the annex .
Ir all anna of local govermnent -b:ltb
rity and county -now hew to the
LAFC'1 Tustin Avenue peace line, it
could bring an end to annexation haggles
in the Back Bay area that have rubbed
poliUcal nerves raw in both ciliei far
more 'than a decade.
P.!81 eatate in questlon, the county cor-
ridor known as the Gaza Strip, just sort
of happened ovu the years.
It is a Jong coklmn of land lying
roughly between Orange County Airport
to the north and 20th Street to the south.
II is bounded by Santa Ana Avenue lo
the west and Tiutln Avenue to tJie e1iit.
Today -on a map ·-it's a jagged-
loothe<;l appearing sector because of past
annexation nlb&lea taken ·by · both
Newport and Costa 1'fesa.
1be corridor area is 1 mixture of Ull<!S
ranging all I.he way from ranch-like
l.l tdl'!11LOT
oiw.GI C0A.'"f PUil *" .. CCllW.utl
t•rt M.W, .. .. ,..... ...........
J•d. .. c.r..., * Pr-*-1 _. o-........
T\-n 1Cff't11 ·-,,.,,.,., A. M1r11hl111
~lflll!"•+ ....
c ......... OHke
)JO W••I a., Str••f
M1lli111 A44r1u1 •.o .... 1161, '1616 --... -r.':' kK111 ttl I ... , ...... 9Wie¥ttl l.•twM ....,,, ,,, ,....., ... _
"Ulllll'lflWI """'l Jtf 1111 ....
-·with hcnn te pl1iih wt .. oerv·
f"' wHh modem tlreetl •nd uUUUe1. This niadt 111111•21!100 propooa\f in the more
v..ui,.
one city or the other miJht like to an-
nn plulh HCtoni Of the C1>tridor with
hisb tax v1luatlon but in the put lb.led
aw11 from the more b u c o I J c
nel&bhorhoodl wlllt narrow suHtandard -··and ·a mlnd-boUJlnl array ol
lpecla! lulni dillrlctJ.
From P .. • I
SUSPECT ••.
murder suapec:t ttema from hla renting
the Jiff ,port CO\lpe In which he at·
tempted lo commll aulcldeWedneaday.
The car -wu Jeued or rt11ted but not
rttumed on tlm1 and 1utbortUet aid it
seems doubtful under the circumstances
that he will be prOlleCUted for the lesser
o!fense.
Tustin police said Wednesday while
Vick \;as being questioned prior to book·
ing at Ounge County Jail that they
believed hbn to be the lelepbone tlplter
in the mW'der case.
. They reflJSfd to C1>nnrm this today, but
hoted the can was later traced to a pay
telephone booth near the oran~e grove
where be 1ttempted to take h1' life.
Agnew Urges
Ban on Panther
'Coloring Book'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Vice Presi-
dent Spfr<i T. Agnew called today for a
legal ban on "lnnammatory propog1nd1"
such u the "Slark Panther coloring
book" given lo Negro chlldren In San
Francisco.
In a letter to Sen. John L. McClellan
{D-Ark.I. Agnew called the Panth!rs "
"completely irresponsible, anarchistic
group <Jf criminals."
He encloa!d a copy of the coloring
book, which already had been presented
to McClellan's Invest I gating sub·
committee by a San Franrlsco
policeman. The book urged Negro
children to kill white pollcemen and
merchant!.
"1£ there are no !awl! prohibiting
distribution <lf this lnOammel<lry pro-
paganda, there certainly iibcluld be."
.Agnew wrote McClellan.
Costa Mesa Sued
In Repossession
Understandably upset by repo!isesslon
of a 1969 auto, a Co!ta Mesa woman has
filed a $25,800 claim against the city
because. police refused to lnterven' in the
ci·..U matter.
Mental suffering alone acrounts for
$20.000 in daniag's asked by 'Mrs. Mar·
jorie E. Ludlam , of 246 Rochester St ..
'il'hile $5,300 was listed for the car and
$500 costs for temporary transportalion.
The communication received by Costa
J\1esa City Clerk C. K. "Charlle" Priest
contends police who ~·ere contacted June
17 by !he plalntUf merely explained that
Newport Beach altomey John C. Salyer
had already advised them lhc \'Chicle
would be repossessed and they could not
prevent such a non-criminal matter.
The claim was sent from the law of·
flcts of Harwood, Soden Adkin90n; 550
Newport center Drive, Newport Btac.h.
Time Trials Open
For Hyclroplane Race
DETROIT (AP )-The fir5l boat out to-
day in the first day of qu11ifylng for Sun-
day's world championship Unllmittd
Hydroplant Rece came close to brtak.in1
the Detroit River course record.
Notre Dame, drlvtn by Ltlf Borgeson
of SeaUJ,, \Vu h., turned the c<1urse al
120.$35 miles ptr hour. The record of
120.1 m.p.b. la htld by the now-rttlrtd
Miss Bardahl.
Race <Jfflcials reported near perfect
water f<Jr the opening of Ume trials. ,
·=-.. --
'
DAii. V Pl~.,. ttlff ll'Mlt
'
Count y OKs
Parkin Lot
PrOceedints are movtng ahead today !o
~dernn a 15'acre '!trip in the heart of
Sunset Beach for a parking Jot assuring
·public beach access, following a 3 to 2
vote by COunty Supervisors Tuesday.
Thi actiOR muat move· ahead with all
speed. OCMnty ott.icfals noted, in order to
l lock Comtructlon of •a rTiajor apartment
complex on the old Pacific Electric
Railroad righk>f-way.
Carlton Builders Inc:1 _of Beverly Hills,
already bas me buikllng under con~
struction In the narrow, sandy strip
bc~weta Pacific Coast Highw1y and
Pacific Avenue.
Ota l'o1ir Marks • • • •
Voting l!t'er a one-hour hearing climax.
ing a seriel <Jf dlscuulnns spannl.ng the
past year, supervisors aUthorlied county
Parka Director Kenne.th Sampson to ap-
ply for fed!ral financing funds.
Joel Todd, 10 ; Gary Robertson , 10; Debbi Winier.
9, and David Smallwood, 11, line up their entrie1 in
toad race at Balearic School in Mesa Verde section
of Costa Mesa. Impromptu races take place almo1t
daily becau&O 01 large to<id pl>pulallon ln neighbor-
hood of school, which lo a center of activity lri city's
summer recreation program. Supervisora David L. Baker, Robert w.
B•ttin and Alton E. AJJen approved the
condemMllon proceedings over denia l
votes by supervisors William H. Hirstein
and William J. Phillips.
F rom Pqe 1
ASS ESS ...
whole county.
1-Jinshaw indicated tl1e percentage in·
crease \1:ithin the junior college district
probably is skewed upward toward
Newport Beach where his alStSIOl'a have
been at work reevaluating commercial
and industrial property and vacant Irvine
Company lands.
A look at a few propoM!d budgets in-
dicates some for~knowledge (lf this. The
city of Newport Be.arb bas budgeted for a
14 percent asaeued 9aluation increue.;
Newport-Men Unified School Diltrict for
9.7 perctnt, and Huntington Beieh Union
High School Dl.slMct for only five percent.
Based on what Hlniihaw uld, any or all
could be e.stlmalina on the low side.
Firm asses!ed valuation figures will be
announced July• 15. A few week s after
that date school districts wilt adopt their
rinal budgets for the fiscal year beginnln&
July 1.
Newport Beach City Finance Director
George Pappas said he picked 14 percent
as a figure because he thought Newport
would ocme in a little higher than the 10
lo 12 pecent increase predicted for the
county.
\Vall Adrian. Newport-Meiia budget
director, said be rMde C(ll'Qpilatlons in-
dependent of the assessors office charting
10 years past experitnce and checking
building permJts to come up with his t .7
ptrcent.
Huntington Beach Union Hi&h Supt.
P.1ax Forney said fivt: percent is the ad-
vice they got from the assessora office
sCvcral months ago and tha t last year's
actual increase was 4.2 percent.
Police Arrest 2
Robber y Sus pects
At Beach Tavern
Gilligan's Isle, a little bar on 5th Street
ln Huntington Beach, proved to Qe no
paradise. for police early thiS mom Ing as
three officers made two arrests there on
charges of strongarm robbery.
Officers were first called to lbe bar on
a report that a man inside was carrying
a weapon.
T!il·o officers entered the bar while one
went lo the rear. Inside, police uid, were
seven or eight members of an "outlaw"
motorcycle gang, and a lramient named
Robert L. Souza, 25, no address given.
Souza was taken outside, searched and
found to be carrying a .22 caliber revolv-
er. He was booked into Huntington Beach
City ~ail at 1:30 a.m. today, on suspicion
of armed r<Jbbery.
Arresting officers are investigating the
possibility of a Ctlnnection between S<xJia
and three armed robberies committed
between ll and 11:30 p.m., Wednesday, in
Garden Grove, Santa Ana and Cost.a
Mesa.
While Soot.a "''as being searched, 1he
third Huntington Beach officer beard a
rustling sound in the alley to the rear of
the bar. A quick search by naabllght, the
o[fictr claimed, showed John R. Keenan,
311 of 319 14th St., Huntington Beach,
dragging an old min through the alley.
Police arrested and booked Keenan into
Huntington Beach City Jail on suspicion
of strongann robbery. The alleged vic-
tim. Harry O. Hyde, 73, of 20I 5th St .•
Huntington Beach, told police he wasn't
sure ~·hat happened and th1t he might
have been "rolled.''
He \vas found v.·ith cuts and bruises
about the face, but not seriously injured.
said police .
Officcra indicated that the "motorcycle
gang'' lnsJde Gilligan's l!le m1y have
been the sanie one reported earlier in the
night as causlng trouble at two other
HunUngton Stach bars.
Both Souza and Keenan were lo bt ar~
raigned this afternoon or Friday momlng
in West Orange County t.tunidpal Court,
Westminster.
Douglas Employes
Di splay Art Work
Arl v.· o r k s by 12 empjoyes of the
~fcDonntfl Oougl.u Aircraft ~-ire now
<Jn dlsplay ar the Lons Belch Museum of
Art. 2300 E. Ocean Blvd., Lon& Stach.
The ~h•blt or oils, water colors,
acrylics, drawings and ICUlpturu wlU
conllnue through July llJ,
'
South Vietnamese Open
Lifeline to Sieged Camp
SAIGON {UPI) -SOuth Vietnamese
troops and tankers reported today they
had punched through the Communist en·
circlement to Ben Het, killing 214 North
Vietnamese and opening a new lifeline m.
to the ~leged camp.
The estimated 2,000 Reds in the hills
around the 'TOl).man allied garrll()n
answered today with 60 more rounds of
rocket, artillery and mortar rounds into
the camp.
Monaoon weather closed ln around the
highlands outpost and shut <Jff the runs
by car10 planes that drop Eupply loads by
parachute, but it didn't limit B52
bombers. In three !trikea they dropped
~70 ton& on the outlying Conununist poi;i·
lions overnight.
The South Vietnamese said they lost 17
men killed and H wounded in their drive
into the camp from Dali: Mot, four mllea
aw17. U.S. warplanet and hellcopter
guulilpa helped them blut away heavy
Commtmla ralltance .. noute.
Tbelr ,..-drove through lo th<
camp and apened the way fer more con-
VO)'I Ute the onet that arrived from Dak
To, •!pl mJJet tO tbe wt, Monday and
TueedaJ ·with -enough lo .,.,..... U..·lack ol i>eracbute drop&.
Thtre ,. .... ground n,titln1 around
the llolated Ben Hit Green. Beret outpost
in the put 24 hours u tbe Communi!ts
seemed coateat to extend tbeir 51-day
siege with rocket, mortar and artillftoy
barrages.
U.S. Army pilota reported killing at
least ~ North VJetnamete in two gunship
strika within three mJlea of Ben Het, but
the CommuniJt forces showed no sign.a
Wtdneaclay ol euq artillery alllcu
that have laid more than 5,000·rounds in-
to the camp since May 6.
Abool 100 round• of 85mm artillery,
mortar and recoWeaa riOe fire burst
within Ben Het'1 perimeters, ciusing
light cmWUa amona lbe u .s. and South
Vietnamese defender1.
Ben Het ia bullt atop three bills within ,
a few milea of the point where the Lao-
tian, Cambodian and South Vietnamese
borders .._ It la defended by a hindful
or U.S. ~pecial Forces adviff:n, an
original f()fct of about 180 U.S.
artillerymen and hundreda of South Vlet-
nameae mercenarlea.
MWtary aourcea aay the daily abelling
attacka alnct May • have tilled 34
persons inside the camp and wounded $0,
of which 13 dead and 31 wounded were
Americans. It was not clear whether
civilian dependents of the mercenaries,
who receive $43 a week and can quit
anytime, were among the cuualties.
Trustees Hono red
By CofC Women
Mrs. Marlin Bergeson and Mrs.
Elizabeth Lilly, members of lhe Newporl-
~tesa Unified School District b<lard of
truslees. ha,•e been honored by the Costa
Mesa Chamber of ConunercC Women's
Division.
They were &iven awarda for outatan-
ding community eervice, the first JUcb
awardJ, which DOW will be sivtn by the
Women'J Divilion quarterly.
Dr. Hilda McCartney, Women's
DI-preoldfnt and head Newport· M.,. ICbooil librarian, boated lhe
luncheon at wblch the women truateea
..... flmoted. ,.
Reddin to Speak
At Mesa Luncheon
Tom Reddin, former Los Angeles
Police Chief, will be guest apeabr at the
~6th Annlversary LuDcbeon for the City
of Colla M ... July 11.
The luncheon, honoring the 16th an·
niveraary of the city'a incorporation, will
be held. at the Meu Verde Country Club
at 12 noon.
Ticket& for the luncheon can be
purcbaltd from !ht C...la Mqa Cbomber
oI C.ommerce.
Italian Stri ke Ends
ROME (UPI ) - A atrike of 250,000 civil
atrvanta ended at dawn today with
government and union n e i o t I a t o r s
reaching a new w • g e a,reement in nlgbllong lalk1.
.JJ. J. Qarreff ~
Dudline is July 1 In the application for
(ederal funds to finance purchase of the
~ach property, while C o u n t y
Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas
has offered this supplemental plan:
-A one-cent increase in the Orange
County Harbor District 8-<:ent tax rate
tor lht coming li~al year.
-Use of $427 ,500 in Road Department
Gas Tax Funds.
-Diversion of S912,SOO in Harbor
District Funds to be used for dredging
Upper Newport Bay and for proposed
construction of a by.pass channel in
Sunset Aquatic Park.
The I.l~r parking lot will bMng
money back into count7 coffer1, noted
Tbornu. and this could re.pay funds bor·
rowed to get the Sunset Beach project
moving.
"We should use every means poeaible
l.o maintain our beachea, '1 argued
Supervisor Bak tr, "thla Is not a local
Sunset Beach matter.
F ron• Page 1
BOBBY ...
bery, spectacular crime in England runs
more to the paperback pages of Ian
Fleming's Jame.a Bond novels, with an
occasional offense worthy ol headline
coverage.
"What we would call notable at home is
an everyday occurrence oYer here," said
the young lawman, who has been hosted
for the past month by his brother Joh n
Ryder, oWner of Newport Beach's po~·
Jar \\'bite Horse Inn.
''I can think of some strange assign.
ments l'\•e had though," said Constable
Ryder ~·hen pressed, "like mixing cock·
tails for the prime minister."
British lawmen frequently iierve in
capacities one might rind filled in the
U.S. by commercial security guard
services.
Normally, Constable Ryder would
cover an assigned patrol beat, but when
he returns to Blackpool duty next week.
it will be back to clerical police records
work.
Just 17 when he was enrolled as a cadet
or police reservist. Ryder put in his time
until 19, after wh ich he unde~·ent routine
police training for three months and was
assigned to full duty.
The ne1t 24 months are <lfficially pro-
bationary, until the rookie bobby proves
himself capable or handling the job and
Constable Ryder, with four years in,
de.scribes the future in typically British
style.
"After the two years, you just carry oo
and on -and build a career."
14th SEMl·ANNUAL
Now In Progress With Safistantial
Reductions On Such Famous Brands As •••
e HERITAGE e JAMESTOWN e HECKMAN • • TOMLINSON e CENTURY e BRANDT
KINDEL e KARGES e HIBRITEN
ALSO REDUCTIONS UP TO 50% AND MORE
ON MANY FLOOR SAM PLES, DISCONTINUED PIECES AND
, WAREHOUSE ITEMS • • .
H.J.GAI\l\ElT fURNrJURE
,ROFfSSIONA~
INTUIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon., Thura., l Fri., Eves.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
2 2 I 5 HARBOR BLVD.
646 . 0175 646 . 017l '
• '
I
I
• •
,
County Budget:,Where It, Goes
~~8i--'--------,$l99;3-Mill~on-Expendit~u-re Planned .for 1969·1~-:--
~Power Pole Alley'
Residents all along the Orange Coast are becoming more and more
concerned in the campaign to underground public utilities but none
more so than Laguna Beach residents who allege new "marching
poles" up Thalia Street have added a new blight to the Art Colony
hills.
Slow Arm of Law
Wins Point A fte r 28 Months' Pris on
It cost a Santa Ana machinist 28
months in state prison instead of only six
months in county jail, which he was
once promised, but he has won hi:; point
in the area of negotiated justice.
The U.S. Supreme Court Monday
overturned the conviction -0r Ted S.
Chime!, 36, in effect, ordering him freed
from the California Institution for Men at
Chino.
Deputy District Attorney James G.
Enright, chief prosecutor, says he doubts
the state bas any case left ._against
Chime!, a coin enthusiast convicted in
1966 of two coin shop burglaries.
The high court Monday ruled several
coins found jn Chime.J's garage afler
police searched for 45 minutes -without
an actual search warrant -were il·
legally taken as eviden ce.
Officers present had a warrant for
Chimel's arrest, but the court's fl to 2
decision Monday said this alone was not
sufficient authority t'o take the coins
from the home.
The coins were the key evidence and if
the state cannot use them, Enright said
Tuesday, that spells the end of the whole
thing.
Chime! told authorities at the time he
bought the coins at an auction, but later
agreed to plead guilty to burglary
charges when Enright promised only six
months' jailtime and three years' pro-
bation.
Chlmel, however, said he couldn't help
out when probation officers asked for
details of th e two cases -because, he
expl ained, he was innocent.
This resulted in the case being sent
back to the judge and Chimel's change
of plea from guilty to innocent, but he
\vas convicted and sentenced to five
years to life in prison.
Chime! spent 22 extra months, but
proved police had no legal grounds for
the conviction he could have paid off in
six months.
Given 'Good Chance'
Cigarette Advertising
Ban Passed by Senate
From Wire Services
The State Senate has passed a bill ban-
ning all cigarette advertising i n
California and its sponsor believes the
measure has a good chance to become
law.
The 28-7 Senate vote left the bill's
author, Sen. AnLhony C. Beilenson (0.
Beverly Hills), optimistic. "If we get it
out of committee, I think it has a pretty
good dlance, it should do well on the
Assembly Ooor," he said.
The bill's restrictions on cigarette ads
are so far reaching, ihat, if it becomes
law, local television staUoos will be re-
quired to substitute local non-cigarette
commercials, for cigarette ads on na·
t.ional network programs.
It also applies to newspapers and
magazines published in C a I i f o r n i a .
Cigarette advertising on radio al.wwould
be forbidden.
Sen. John G. Schmitz (II-Tustin), the
measure's chief opponent, objected Ulat
the ban would impinge on the rights of in.
diViduals and business. "This ls a, step toward further
governmental control, which, if carried to
its logical extreme. will lead to a
totalitarian regime," he saJd.
1be only hitch tc pcKSage. according to
Bellenson, Is if the bill is ~t to the
Aseembfy's eommerce Comnuttee.
He said the bill would pass the Health
and WeUare committee, b u t the an-
Override, Bond
Vote Step Taken
A proposed tax: override and bond elec-
lloo for the Huntington Beach Union High
SChool Dl!trlct came one step closer to
Miiiy Tuesdof night o district trustees
aded the adnunistraUon to recommend a
cletinite date and amount. Admi.niJJtration representatives will
place lbeir suggeaUons before the aovero-
lng boanl 11 1 July 8 meeUog.
ticigarette measure would face a tough
fight in the Commerce Committee.
Assembly Speaker Robert T. Monagan
(R-Tracy), who assigns bills ta com·
mittees, has not decided which com-
mittee will get the legislation.
Beilenson, responding to the pressure
of some colleagues, has softened his
stand for cigar and pipe smokers. His
original bill prohibited the advertising of
all tobacC<l products, but he amended the
meesure to bar cigarettes only.
The Beverly Hills Democrat. who quit
smoking last year. explained his bill as
follows;
"The bill included no restrictions on
smoking. If a person WMts to smoke,
that is his business. But if he wanL.o; to
deluge small children with a constant
barrage of advertising that suggests
smoking is glamorous or appealing •••
then it becomes my business and your
business."
"Schools and parents are forced to
combat a multibillion-dollar industry for
the life and health of their children,'' he
added. ·
The senator pointed out that cigarette
advertis ing has already been banned in
Britain, Canada, Norway. Denmark,
Sweden, Switzerland, Italy and France.
Blues Set Tone
For Teen Dance
"Sweet and Sour Blues" will set the
musical tone Friday at the teen dance at
Marina High School sponsored by the
Hunttnglon Beach Recreation Depart.
ment..
The band will play from 8:30 to 11 :30
p.m. as a part or the swnmer dance p~
gram which includes dances every Fri~
day night except tor July 4.
On Saturday nlght the band Is the
"Rapp" at the same time at Huntington
Beach Hish &hool where six more
danetl'l are scheduled during the summer.
Admission lo the dances is Jt.
A breakdown of Orange County's pro-quired to maintain ao acceptable level of JS percent per year during the slJ;tles. offset by rtate and federal funda."
posed 196t-7G budget of $1~.3 mllllon, up service. "Some 111.8 mUUon, or 75 percent 9f The CAO told su~lson I h a t
fl1 mUllon over the current year, but not "2. A best estimate of the d o 11 a r re-the rerommended Increase Js for Calltotnia Tupayen At 9: o c l a.-t 1 o n
requiring an increase in the present $L68 soUrces which could be allocated within Welfare, the Medical Cei)ter and Mental reported budget· figures for 57 California
tu rate reveals lhe following figures : the framework ol an overall financial Healtb,budgeta which account fOr aboiit counties reveals U:Utt in Oraoce Coun~
(The $190.S figure includes special plan for the county." 50 percent of the total general fi.U\d. Of budget requirements per caplta were
districts and service areas governed by Thomas reported that 15 out of n that $13.8 million increase, only about $112.95 in 196U9, lowelt in tbe atate.
the Board of Supervisors inchldlng the oPUating budgets were at or below SLS million, or lt percent, is financed •1Mort0Vtr, the county rahked teCOl}d
Harbor and Flood Control districts which target. .. Of these 15 budgets, nine are from property t.aJ:es with the balance lowest in t.be state in prqperjy tax re-
have separate tax rates Harbor: 6.5 below the current year, four show slight coming from state and federal funds." qulrements per capita w)th $41.49. This
cents; Flood Control, JS.5 cents). increases, and two remain unchanged." Thomas added: "Personnel coats ac-means that the Orange County property
Community Safety, $31 million, up $3.8 Thomas further explained: "The pro-count for about 50 perctnt of the total taxpayer pays less in count)' taxes per
mUlion; Health, $24.5 million, up $$.5 J)OSed-budget for the county general fund gtneral fund. The recommended budget capita than he would if he lived in any
million : Education, $1.8 million. up totals $1f1.8 million, not including a includeli 75J additional positions. other,county in California except one -
$387,983; Home and Community Environ-reserve for salary Increases. At this "The Medical Center, 312 job!, and Solano.1County.
ment, $24,l million, up $7 .8 million: figure, ·the proposed budget exceeds the Welfare, 20t, represent about 70 percent "Based on the recommended budget Cot
Economic Assistance, $51 million, up $8.5 current year by $18.4 million, or 15 per--of the total increase. Cost of the Medical 1969-70, tbe county's 11t&tewide rariking 1'
million ; Recreation and c u I tu r a 1 '~cen-t,_:c_om_:_p•_r_ed_lo_an_a_ver--'ag:.•_tn_c_r_•as_• _of __ ee_nt_er_and_W_•l_ra_;_re:_pos_ili_on_:s_are __ t•~r::.g•_:IY:__•_xpecl<d.:.._ __ to_rem_a_tn_u_· n_ch_an_.:;ged_.'_' __ _
Act.iviUes, $13.88 milllOn, up $1.9 million; r
TransportaUon, $17.9 million, up •t.6
million, General Adm.inlstration and Sup.
port, $24.7 million, up IU million,
Provision for Contingencies, $1,065,000,
down $60,000.
Special district comparisons are:
Harbor District, $3.9 million, down $2.2S
million or 37 percent; tax rate 6.5 cents,
down 1.5 cents; Flood Control District,
$18 million, up $6.8 million or 61 percent;
ta:1 rate, 33.5 cents, up 7.5 cents because
of special rate increase for repair ol fidod
damage.
Public Library, $3.45 million, down.
$80,664 or 2 percent ; tax rate 17.4 cents.
down .3 cents ; Structural Fire Protec-
tion, $1,0'1.5,533, up $562,041, or 121 per ..
cent, tax rate 16 cents, up 9 cents.
County Administrative Officer (CAO)
Robert E. Thorilas offered supervisors
"the first program budget for a
Calllornla county," which "emphasizes
what the government does rather than
what it spends."
"Program budgeting also emphasizes
function or service rather than organiza.~
ti on," Thomas explained. "For example,
Adult Law Enforcement, Juvenile Law
Enforcement, Civil Law Enforcement
stand out rather than Sheriff, Probation,
District Attorney.''
Thomas emphasized that adoption of
the proposed budget Wednesday by the
Board or Supervisors "is not to be con·
strued as an indication of the board to
approve any part of the budget on a final
basis prior to public hearings and final
approval." Budget hearings will be held
from July 16 through July 25.
"For the second consecutive year, lhe
CAO's office issued budget target figures
to all department heads," Thomas ex·
plained. ''These targets were prepared by
our staff analy sts and your (board's) ex·
ecutive assistants and represented two
basic themes:
"I. A best estimat~: conslder\ng past
experience and probable I u tu r e
developments, of Ute dollar resources r&
Wayne Woefully
Undercharged
For Arm y Help?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Newport
Beach's John Wayne, producer, director
and star of "The Green Berets," rented
equipment and facilities at Ft. Benning,
Ga. for 107 days. He was charged '18,000.
Rep. Benjamin S. RO"Senthal, (0.N.Y.,)
contended today the Army woeluUy
undercharged Wayne's firm, which in J>ne
year has grossed $10 million domestically
from the movie and expects to gross
another $6-$8 million from !oreign show-
ings. Production', distribution and other
c o s t s reportedly reached about $10
million.
"You can say that the message of the
movie didn't sit well with me, etiher.''
Rosenthal said. It glorified a losing
escapade.''
SHORTCHANGED
Wayne's son Mike, an executive of Bal·
jac Productions, the Wayne firm ,
disputed Rosenthal's contention the tax-
payer was shortchanged.
"All that we did was use the real estate
and we paid for all the army personnel
used,'' the younger Wayne said in Los
Angeles. "We put in $150,000 worth of im·
pro vements at Ft. Benning. We used
equipment as it was available. lf It (the
equipment) used gasoline, we paid f o r
it."
Rose nthal. at a news conference
scheduled for today, was expected to
spell out some of the equipment the army
provided for Wayne. He said Tuesday a
still·secret report prepared at his request
by the General Accounting Office (GAO)
he planned to make public would back up
his contention.
One scene in thf: Um, excerpts of whlch
Rosenthal planned to show to newsmen
depiclll about two dozen um.. helicopters
landing, taking off or in the air. The GAO
repon.dly found that 85 hours of flight
usage were logged. Rosenthal maintaiM
that helicopter rental alone would eat up
the $18,000 fte.
SPECIAL FORCES
· Location filming at Ft. BeMing took
place between early August and late
November 1967. The movie opened last
summer.
The movie deals with the Anny's
!ipeclal forces, dubbed the Green Brets
because of their dlstlnctive headgear.
Specially trained In counterinsurgency
and created by Presidi;nt John F. Ken-
nedy, memberi of the Green Beret.a ha'le
a long record of serv1ce In Vietnam,
some ol which Is portrayed tn the lllm.
Several weeks ago, Rep, John Murphy,
(0.N.Y.,) criticized the Navy for pro-
viding Darryl Zanuck and 20th Century
Jo'ox with men and equipment for filming
"Tora! Tora l Tora l,11 a movie depicting
the Japanese viewpoint or the attack on
Pearl Harbor.
•
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Werner von Braun, developer of
·the Saturn rocket scheduled to
launch the Apollo 11 astrooouts to
)he moon next month. came to
.Greoc.e to pay homage to the Greek god for whom the moon flight pro-
gnm ts named. Returning from a
visit to Delphi, Von Braun said that
since the space program is called
Apollo, "I thought it would be only
fair to come to Greece and pay my
respects to the god before we make
this last crucial attempt." •
It's nmmn, but it'• ,4 tof1 OM in
Portland, Ore. A. aerier of downpours
there this toeek proved mort than
rtrett gutter1 and drain& could handlt
in man11 part.s of tht dtt1 such ai th.ii
flooded apot • The water sider surpriled Mrs.
G•r•ld Hk:k1, but not a.s much as
the pickup truck doing the towing.
The unusual hookup went zipping
past the Hicks borne in Salt Leke
City when knee4eep water sloshed
across Lehi Drive after a storm in
suburban Granger. "They were
having a ball," said Mrs. Hicks.
''Except. they bad to slow down
once in a while for the kayak!." • Tor...,.. Spinka of WYDlOl!dham,
England kissed bis girl hiend three
times and it cO<t him $2.40 per kiss.
Spin.l<s was fi ned $'7.20 in megis-
trate's court for not having proper
control of his automobile. •
The council of Grtat Snoring,
England, complained about the
·noise from Littlt Snoring. The
council wants Little Snoring to
do something about a flying
club there which creates 'PIOist
on weekends and interrupt& tete· l.J
Mon Tecrption. 0
• An attempt by four men to rob
the First National Bank of La Jara,
Colo .• didn't get off the ground -
literally. Police captured three of
tile men following the robbery
when their getaway plane bogged
down on a muddy runway. The
fourth was arrested later. They
had got away with $24,000 from the
benk. • A fertilizer company moved into
a new building in Johannesburg.
South Africa five years ago and
had to demolish a wall to get a
computer in. Now the firm is mov~
ing again and workmen had to rip
the wall down aaaln to get the
computer out.
Warren Befle~ts on
"SACRAMENTO (AP) ~ Earl Warren
1&y1 the moal lmj>orlaol SUIJl'.<m• Court
rulings ol hll II ye1r1 u chld justice <I
the. United States were lhote declaring
that one man'• vote ahould mean as
much u any other man't .
U the people have equal representation
In government, they can solve mOlt pro-
blems "through the poUUcal Jl'OC<llS
rather than through the COW'b," Warren
aya in an interview broadcast today.
The 78-year-old Walttn, who Mired
Monday, chose reapportionment decisions
over the more widely known school
detegregaUon ruling of 1954 as probably
the most far reachina of the Warren
Court years. Re saJd he likes lo think o!
those yean as the era of the "people's
court."
Reapportionment rulings triggered a
Surtax Bill
Healthy Again,
Nears Passage
WASHINGTON (UPI) -After a
miraculous overnlg1it reeovery, President
Nixon's income tax surcharge bill Js
beallhy again, ond on the road to HOUM
puaq:e Monday.
'!be '8.2 billion tax package, which ex·
tends the 10 percent surtax beyond Mon-
day's ttplratlon date, was almost given
up for dead Tuesday when House lead ers
postponed a vote on It for two weeks.
New life was pumped l n t' o It Wed-
nesday after GOP leader Gerald R. Ford
promised 170 Republicans would vole for
the bill -40 more than the 130 he had
pl'Odicted the day before.
On the basis of the new count. Speaker
John W. McConnack rescheduled lhe
measure for Mond ay, since only 47
Democrat.! are needed to assure passage,
assuming all members are present and
voting.
The Monday vote could work to the ad·
vantage of the bill's supporters.
Abeenteeism ill high on Monday when
many Eastern Congreumen take off for
long weekends. niese Congressmen in-
clude Democratic liberals who have been woema the P"inclpal fight against the
bill, prming for commitment.! on a
sweepm, bill to clo!e tu loophole!.
Pa.wage Monday, aod Senate approval
later, would e1tend the tax for six
months at 10 percent and another six
months at five percent through June 30,
1970 when it would expire.
The bill allO would rtpea], retroactive
to April 18, 1119, the. aeven percent in-
vestment ta:r credit for b u s i n e .s s
macblnuy purchaaes; relieve 12 million
low income taxpayers or some, or all. of
their income taxes; and postpone for a
year the scheduled reduction of the JO
percent telephone and s e v e n percent
automobile excise taxes due to go to five
percent each Jan. 1.
The Senate is not expected to approve
the measure until sometime after Mon-
day's expiration. As a stopgap measure,
the 5eri1te Wednesday approved a one·
month continuation of the present
withholding tu ratea on paychecks.
I revolution in makeup of· state le latutta
&'Id Olhtr aovemmen taJ bodies.
In the area of civil rlght.s, th silver·
haired Warren expressed fruslJ!8lion at
1'hat be called cases of ootrigbt Oaunting
of dcc:isions or slowness ln implemenliag
them .
And Warren called a definilion of
obscenity one of the toughest court pro-
blems. He defended obacenJty rulings.
He denied allegations that numuou.s
civil liberties decWons resulted in "cod·
dllng" criminals and made It tougher for
prosecutors to convict.
It waa Warren's first .public comment
on many ol the sensitive isSues before the
nation's highest court during his Lenn as
chief justice. He was appointed in 19S3 by
then President Dwight D. Eisenhowr.
Warren formerly was Rep u b Ii can
Friendly Visit
governor of Clllfoml1.
Wan<n toot oolt ol veat problems
America laces.
"I don't have answers for them," he
said. But be expmsed faith that th•
ConaUtuUon and BW of Rtghta would
survive the assault.I ol a changin& aocfe.
ty.
In the area of pornography, Warren
said the court bad to ba1ance two con-
stitutional rights against each other: the:
right of government lo create a decent
society and the 1peeeb and pm11
freedoms guaranteed by the first amend-
ment.
" ••• And when you have those two
t~lngs comlng together, you find il vtry,
difficult to write a verbal definilion of
what obscenity is," he said.
Warren used reapportionment as an ex·
"'' ,, ....... i.
President Nixon and Rep. Carl Albert, (ll-Okla.) share a big laugh
during the President's visit to the House Gymnasiwn Club's annual
dinner. Nixon made a brief visit Wednesday to the informal gather-
ing in the cafeteria of the Longworth House Office Building.
Israel, Egypt Conflict
On Latest Plane Hits
By United Press lntemeliorial
Israeli and Egyptian warplanes tangled
over the Gulf of Suez. today and both
sides claimed hits. In old Jerusalem
Israeli poltce evicted Arab families and
seized their homes in a security move.
More Viets~
The dogfight was the second in three
days over lhe gulf and ju.st south of Suez
City. Each side said their jets returned
safely !ram today's battle.
An lsraeli military spokesman said
Israeli pilots had shot down one of the
Arab MIG2ls It encountered while on a
"routine p&trol " in the Israeli-controlled
air space. Senate Asks Congress Role in Policy
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A messsge to
the President of the United States: the
Senate wants Congress to 1hare with you
the decision to make mllltary and
monetary commitmenls to f o r e I g n
powers.
Please.
Frustrated by the Vietnam war and
seeking to assert its constitutional role in
foreign affaln, the Senate Wednesday
adopted a "sense oC the Senate" resolu-
tion asking affinnatJve action by
Congress before commitments or pro-
mises of ct>mmftmenta are made.
The resoluUon was passed by a
bipartisan vote of 70 to 16.
But the resolution -strongly opposed
by President Nlxon -is in no way legally
blndlng on the chief executive. He can, if
he wishes, ignore Senate sentiment and
go ahead with commitments on his own.
The resolution defines a nallonal ct>m·
mitment as "the use of anned forces on
foreign territory, or a promise to assist a
foreign country. government, or people
by the use al the armed forces or finan c·
ial resources of the United States. either
immediately or upon the happening of
certain events."
The Israelis chased the Egyptian
planes and saw one cra!h in EgypUan
territory, the spokesman in Tel Aviv said.
In Cairo, an Egyptian spokesman gave
an opposite report. He said the Soviet-
built MIGs had SC1lred hits on at least
two Israeli aircraft and sent the rest
fleeing . All Egyptian planes returned to
base, the spokesman said.
In ground fighting, si x Israeli soldi ers
were wounded. one seriously, when an acmr patrol vehicle ltit a mine in t h e
Wad Paran in the Arava Desert 50 miles
south of lhe Dead Sea.
No One Stealing Thunder
Jn the old city of Jtrusalem, lsraeli
police and soldiers evicted 88 Arabs from
their homes and offices and confiscated
five buildings adja~nt to the Wailing
\\'all.
The move was made for •·security
purposes" after 1 series of uplosions
near the Wailing Wall, a government
statement said Wednesday night.
I t Stay s in Midwest; R ain Falls Mainly on Plains
Frontiers Main
Obstacle in
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'" Mideast Peace
.'3 WASHINGTON (UPI) -Soviet in-
.sa slstence Israel return to tbe exacl fron-
tiers held prior to the June, 1967 war with .~ the Arabs constitutes the m a j o r
roadblock to Russian-American agree-
ment on a Midw ast peace formula, ad--
t.M ministration officials said today.
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'·" the United Statea la.st week, disclosed It
h11d ...On from Egyptian President Gamal
Abdel Nasser signifiCIUlt consessions on
I.It " is ·" !lome important points. However. l){Ucla
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.ot here sald. the Soviets made it clear the
Soviet Union and its Arab proteges were
.u detennlned Israel must pull completely
back to the rrontlers that existed before
,,J the one-week war In which the tsra~lls
,,. overran the Sina.I Peninsula and western
.O' Jorda n and ~!zed the Golan Heights on
the Syrian side of the border.
The United Slates has a.greed t1ratl
should give up mOlll of the conquered ter·
rttory ao that the peace settlement
"ahould not reflect the weight of con·
,,, quest." but contends some adjustments
must be made ln the interest ot "accuri·
ly."
(
Court
ample In replytoa to lr<qutnUy V<llc<d
crltkilm that 1he Warren Ccurt'1
declslON have usurped states' rights.
"What doel reapportionment do but
establith ai,,tea' rlghta?" he uked. "Jt
estab~ to tile sl«tes !be power to
govern themselve1 ••• "
Rural lnterests no longer dominate
legislatures, lgnorlnf the problems of lhe
under represented c1Uu, be 11.ld.
Warren said he believe.a lhe rulings af-
lectlna rights of the accused and
courtroom ruidelloes "have In no way ad-
vmty affected the prosecution of
abne."
Tbe onellmo dlltrict attorney and
Calllornla ottomey _.-a] aatd everyooe
Is entiUed to have h1a rl&hta protected ln
the courtroom, wbe1J¥r be be a Com-
munlat, Fucisl, or a member of tbe Ku
Klus Klan.
Throughout IJ.S.
areer:
" r his rights cannot be protected In tht
· room. the rights o! no one can b9
sec e." he .said. W..ttn admitted to belng impalleat at
Um wlth noncompUance wltti the
cour 's school desegregation ruling.
"In aome parts of the country, yea. One
couldn't help being impatient when it
would see the orders of the court fl11unted
and jwt not obeyed in any sense ol the
word ••• "or course, one feels frustrated at that,
but there are so many things that have
haJ>t>ened to encourage one who baa: been
in lh1! field that 1 think on the whole,
much progress has been made," Warren
said.
Black people still do not have equal op-
portunity with whites ln ~I facilities,
voting and jobs -both m North and
South, the jurist said.
Nixon Asks Ban
On Literacy Tests
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon ad-
ministration asked Congreu today to ban
literacy tests for voUng throughout the
nation in place of a 1965 law which ap-
plied to only seven southern sates.
Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell, presenting
the long-delayed plan to a House
Judiciary Subcommittee, said a simple
extension of the 1965 Voling Rights Act
would be unfair and unrealistic.
He also called for a nationwide ban on
state residency requirements for voUng
in presidential elections.
Mitchell said : "We have come to the
firm conclusion that voting rights Is no
longl!r a regional issue. It is a national
ct1nce rn ... which must be treated on a
nationwide basis."
He said there , may have been ample
reasons for Congress in 1965 to pass a
Jaw whose provisions applied only to six
deep south states where Negro voter
registration was low, "but I do not
believe that lh1.s justification exlsts any
longer."
Mitchell testified on a bill to extend th e
1965 aet for another five years beyond its
1970 expiration date. He said in a five-
times-delayed appearance that the ad-
ministration proposal to make the
literacy ban applicable to all states offers
all the advantages o! a slmple utension,
with none of the defects or regional
discrimination attached to it
Tbe 1965 act W83 applicable. under its
terms, only le> Alabama, Georgia,
Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina
and Virginia, and 40 counties in North
Carolina.
Thirteen other states have con·
stitutlonal or statutory provisions for
Ten Argentina
Markets Ablaze
BUEN°OS AIRES, Argentina (AP)
Ten supermarkets of a firm CJwned by the
Rockefeller family were set ablaze here
Thursday morning, despite beefed·up
security patrols to prote(t U.S. com·
panies. Some of the buildings were
destroyed.
The attack!! apparently are linked to
the scheduled visit of Gov. Nelson A.
Rockefeller. who is expected here Sunday
on the fourth lap of bis fact-findiAg Latin-
American mission for President Nixon,
From Argentina the New York governor
will go to llaiti. the Dominican Republic,
Jamalca, Barbados and Guyana.
voter literacy tests, howe ver, of one sort
or anolher.
They are Alaska, Arizona, Californla ,
CoMecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
York, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming.
In addition, according to the Justice Departmen~ Idabo has a so-called good
character requiremen t which is con·
sidered a test or device within the mean·
ing of the 1965 act.
As outlined by ~titchell, the Nixon ad·
ministration's proposals -probably the
only major ones it will make this year in
the civil rights field -conta ined fve key
points :
-A nationwide ban on literacy tests
"until at least Jan. 1, 1974.''
-A nationwide ban on state residency
requirements for presidential elections.
-Authority for the attorney general to
send voting examiners and observers
anywhere in the nation where he feels
they are needed.
-Nationwide authority for the attorney
general to ask for a freeze on any voting
laws deemed to be discriminatary.
-Creal.ion by the President of a Na·
tional Voting Advisory Commission to
study voting discrimination and possible
corrupt practices .
Cliemical Fumes
Spread in Cairo
Warehouse Fire
CAIRO, III. (UPI) -Fire today In a
warehouse near a Mississippi River levee
released noxious chemical fumes and
caused evacuation of a 126-block area. No
injuries were reported.
About two and a half hours after the
fire broke out the evacuation order was
lifted and citizens were told it was safe to
ret\;..-n to their homes. The fire was
brought under C1lntrol at 7:30 a.m., about
two and a half hours after the first alarm
was sounded.
Offici als said the chemical involved
probably was ammonium nitrate.
Cairo, located at the confluen ce of the
~1ississippi and Ohle rivers, has been the
scene of repeated racial violence. A num·
her of fires, believed to be racially con·
nected, have broken out and al one point
the National Guard was called to t h c
community.
You~ Judy~
Hundreds Pay Last Respects to Star
NEW YORK (UPI) -"We Love You
Judy" said the inscription on a rainbow
shaped spray ol multi-colored carnations
that stood beside the glass-topped steel
coffin lined with blue velvet.
It was betause Judy Garland 's fan!I
loved her that they came by the hundnds
today under lowering skies to Campbell's.
lhe elegant east side funeral chapel
where Rudolf Valenllno, A rt u r o
Toscanini, Diana Barrymore, Gertrude
i..awrence. Judy Holliday, Montgomery
Clift, Bert Lahr and Tallulah Bankhead
have lain In state. Some had been In line
10 hours when the chapel doors opened
for the viewing of the .star's sligllt body
dressed in dark grey crepe .
The occasion was heavy with sen-
1iment. Paul Ambro,,e , 21, brought a. bat-
tery-powered record player and Garland
recordings and the strident yet h11unting
voice mixed with the traffic noises of
Madison Avenue at the morning ru sh
hour -"Somewhere Over the Rainbow."
Most of the fans believed th.It the rain·
bow had not eluded Judy despite her
tragic death from accidental sleeping pill
poisoning hl London last. Sunday.
"Judy wa.s beautiful , no matter how ug-
ly people talked about her." said Norman
Chelf, 21, a male model. "She had • 18d
life almost up until the end when she
found love, and t thin); that's bHutifUI."
1'11.ss Garland's husband of three
month$, formtr night club manager
Mickey Deana brought the remains home
c1rly today by jetliner. 'l1le only jewelry
viewers of the body could see was the in·
terwoven ring rnade of three circlets or
gold which Deans a•vt her when the y
w«e m1rrled In London, her fifth trip to
the altar.
Among the e1rllest visitors to the
funeral bome were 1ln;er•uthor Kay
' I
BRINGS JUDY BACK
Husband Mickey D•an1
Thompson and Miss Oarltnd's ~ln·l•••
!Inger Peter Allen. Allen's wire, Liu
Minnelll, had made all the arrangtmentt
for the funeral service at the chapol P'rl-
day afternoon. The simple Episcopal rlttS
will be pefonned against a bac::kground of
favorite Garland 11on11 played on th1
organ by the al nger't accomponllt, Ja~k
French.
••• -..... 4 -· • ; •• ' ...
FTC Plans · QUEENIE 1y "'n im.tfanc11 --~~~~~~-'--~~~~
Cigarette
Hearings
W ASlllNGTON (AP) -0...
plte plel!I from the tobacco m.
duatry and over the objection
of Its cbalnnan, the Federal
Trade Commission ls going
ahead wllh hearlnp on a
tough, new cigarette smoking
warning.
The FTC Wednesday reject·
ed, by a S-Z vote, a move to
pootpone the b<ar!ngs until af-
t.er Congress takes some ac-
tion on the amokl.ng-he&:th
controversy.
The vote paved the way for
the FTC to open hearings nut
TUesaay with testimony from ·
antismoking witnesses, led by
Surge<>n General William S. --...J.--/J A I 0 ~'-~ ..._ ,,.,. Stewart and his predecessor, ~,J..,t41'"~ b-?. ._..,...__._
Dr. Luther L. Terry. &...:..:;_;,_...;.._;:..;...;..i;~~-~;.;;;==----i
Rejecting the postponement -It'I all "fffr1 nice, but don't you think the old wer Commissioners Philip El· method of dictatiD£ worked better?" man, Mary Gardiner Jones--~=~------------
and James M. Nicholson.
FTC Chainn.an Paul Rand
Di:lon and Commi.<isioncr Ev·
erette Macintyre favored a de.
Jay.
The bearings will deal with
a proposed trade regulation
requiring all cigarette adver-
Using in newspapers and mag-
azines as well as television and
radio commercials to state
clearly and prominently:
NY Man Slays Wife,
Four Children, Self
"Cigarette smoking is dang·
erous to health and may cause
death resulting from cancer,
coronary heart disease, chron-
ic bronchitis, pulmonary em-
physema and other diseases."
Purposely, the FTC ftt the
beginning of the hearings as
soon as possible after the ex·
piration of the 1965 Cigarette
Labeling Act.
That law, which expires
Monday, required the relative.
ly mild warning -"Caution:
Cigarette Smoking May Be
Dangeroos to Your Health."
The House, with the support
of tobacco slate congressmen.
already has passed a bill that
proposes the label, "Warning:
The Surgeon General HM De-
tennined that Cigarette Smok-
ing is Dangerous to Your
Health and May Cause Cancer
and Other Diseases."
KE!UIONKSON, N. Y.
(UPI) - A "pleasant fellow
who always lipped hls hat''
shot to death his wife and four
children Wednesday then kill·
ed himself at their one-story
house in a middle class
neighborhood in the northern
Catskill Mountains.
Reynaldo Perez, 54, shot
him.self in the bead with a 12
gauge shotgun after using a
.22 caliber semi-automatic ri·
fie on his family. Police sa id
they_ could give no definite
motive for his actions, but
neighbors said Perez had a
"problem'' with his wife,
Shirley, 34.
The Ulster County coroner
said he would release ~suits
0£ the autopsies today, giving
official cause and time of
death.
The dead children were
identified as Reynaldo Jr., 12;
Shirley, ti; Rolando, JO and
Plane Crash S11rvivors
Rescued; Three Dead
CEDAR CITY, Utah (AP) -
Three survivors of a weekend
plane crash which killed three
companions h a v e been
rescued from the wild Cedar
Bre'aks mountain area of
southern Utah.
Volunteer ground searchers
Wednesday found David I ..
Watson, 44, who was trying to
walk to civilization for help. A
helicopter picked up Oswald
Simon, 38, and Robert L.
McCord Jr., 31, who had spent
three days and nights at the
scene of the crash.
The dead were John Bury,
42, the pilot; Clarence
McLean, 60, and Charles
Straumer, 33.
The six, all Californians,
came to Utah to film episodes
of the "Death Valley Days"
series. They left Cedar City in
a rented plane Sunday for a
sightseeing excursion.
Florence, 9.
"He was a gentle fellow, but
a defeated man from a pro-
blem with his wife," said Mrs.
Rose Hoffman, a neighbor of
Perez. He was a good worker
and the neighborhood thought
the world of him.
Mrs. Faye Feinsllver ,
another neighbor, said she
"had no inkling of trouble."
She described Perez as a
"pleasant fellow who always
said hello and tipped his hat."
She said "The kids were all
weU behaved."
* * * 'Mad House'
Fears Led
To Murders?
JERSEY CITY, N.J, (UPI)
-A groctr charged with the
club-and-stab killing of hiJ
wile and seven children was
depresoed by his pendlng trial
on ~ murder charge and
"'' poss(billty !bat he """'' be returned to a mental
hospital
Raphael Torres, t i, tpent
some time under observaUon
in Trenton St.ate Hospital after
he and a 28-year-old brother,
Victor, were charged I n
February with the murder of
2&-year-old Jose Ortil in a
family feud .
His wile arranged h I s
release early in April, against
the advice of hls lawyer and
his psycllialrist.
Morris Plan's S5.000 Invest·
ment Certificates earn 5.5%
interest yearly-no lengthy
holding period required.
• Certificates purchased through July 15 earn
at the full rate from July 1. Interest Is pald 'tJy
cheek at the end of each calendar quarter.
• Since its founding in 191S. Moms Plan has
promptly met f!Ne ry request for withdrawaL
Assets exceed $100 tmllion.
OR: !ARN 5.11% INTEREST P!ll Y1A11 Oii
PASSllOOK THRIFT ACCOUN!'I
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placed by July 15earnImm July1.
Morris Plan ·
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. ' . -.... ---~ ~ ----·---·------
•
DAii. y Pll.OT I
Moon Countdown Army G~ts Word
. No Chemical. Sea Buria'l Begins Tonight \ WASlllNGTON (AP) ·_ the Anny and "of>Pl'OPl1*
ScJ,enUlt.s have recomm~ . ad!on" aboWd be tabm, aaMI
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -
Ground crewmen made fl.Dal
preparations today for a fuli·
dress countdown to clear the
Apollo 11 spacecraft and
booster rockeL for a July 11
takeoU in America's .attempt
to land the first men• oo the
moon.
The countdown, 1 rinal dress
rehearsal to check every part
ol the 36-story .space machine,
ls scheduled to begin at mid-
night tonight and last for near·
ly a -1<.
The first stage of the Saturn
booster was loaded w l t b
kerosene TUeaday, and pro-
pellants will be pour<d into the
other two stages or the booster
for the final phases of. the
countdown, which will atop
just short of Igniting Saturn'&
powerful engines.
Ast r onau t s Neil A.
Armstrong, Michael Collins
and Edwin E. Aldrin are spen-
ding most of their time at the
spaceport practicing ln dum-
my spacecraft which 1imulatl!
the feel of flying their Apollo
command capsule and spindly·
legged moon landing crafl
Wednesday afternoon they
rehear....S the lunar deacenl tbe Anny deltroy 27,000 tom Secttlary of o.re ... Melvin
and takeofl phasea of tbelr ol oboolete dlemlcal munitions R. Laird., Ao aide aald thll
eight-day mission. Amutrong on government installations means ~ wants the Army
and Aldrin al!o cUmbed Into rather !ban haul the material to follow the ccmmlttee'a SUI·
tbelr extra vehicular suits for across the country (or burial gestlom.
~ final fitting and then put on at sea. A storm of coqresalonaJ. opo
for a checkout the bulky back· A lZ-man committee of the pasitlon wu n1led when It
packa they wlll wear Wben National Academy of Sciences wu learned the Anny had
tbe st to the said Wedneaday some of the planned to transport nerve gas
Y •P on moon. lD to Chane:e agents could be dumped Into and other dlemlcal warlare Collins, who will pilol the .... the sea If there were no better agents by rail from the Rocky
command spacecraft in lunar WASHINGTON (UPI) _ means. However It sucesttd Mountain Anenal In Colorado
orbit while hill teammates are chemical means. burning or to the Naval ammunition
on lhe moon, went over the The Defense Department ls demoliUon as better methods. depot in Earle., H.J., then shtp
checklist of his duties. changing Its way of idenWy. T b e r e co m mendations it out for burial in the Atlantic
While the astronauts kept up.,_tn-;g;:::servf::::"'::::m=en::::by;:::numbe::;;,.',.·::..;:';:hou;:::ld;:be;:::e1=ref::::ully;:::otudi=;:.·ed ... by;&:;"Ocea ... n.;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;::;;::;~-• their rigorous training schedU1
le, the Air Force launched a
multlple warhead Minuteman
3 ml!Slle on a test flight aimed
BOme 5,000 miles down the
Atlantic missile range. The 60-
foot miasile bolted out of an
underground aUo at 1:30 p.m.
PDT and streaked into a clear
sky, leaving a white smoke
t:all curling In the breeze.
The Minuteman carried a
dummy payload for a mu1Uple
independenlly targetable re-
entry vehicle (MffiV). The
MIRV amounts to t h r e e
warheads ln one, eacb of
whlcb can be directed at a dif-
ferent target.
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• I DMLY PILOT EDITOIDAL PAGE I
I
• Keep Local Control
• I I
I
, A pertMlal legislative proposal that seems IQ crop
up evecy session tn Sacramento is some sort or blD to
IevY a statewide school tax. This year it Is Assembljt
Bill 1678.
The Idea Is to replace local property taxes, which
vary greatly among communities, with a unitorm tax
that would insure schools throughout the state cf equal
finaocing.
The implication for communities with few school
children per capita like Laguna Beach is clear. Tax·
payers there would pay more and their children receive
less. The same ~oes for another relatively wealthy
school district -Newport-Mesa Unified.
AB 1678. a Robin Hood measure, y;ould take from
the rich and give to the poor. But it also would take
away any opportunity for taxpayers of a community
to do something more for their children.
Better the state increase its contribution to cost of
local education above the present 36 percent. Fifteen
years ago the burden was shared almost 50-50 between
&tate sources and the local taxpayer.
Tbe need is to give the property taxpayer a break,
not to take away the essential basis for local participa·
tion and local control. '
' A Long -overdue Reform ,
C-alifornians may soon be able to see divorce court
battles and bitterness only on a TV show dramatizing
practices in less enlightened states.
A bill designed to overhaul th e state's divorce law
has passed 'the A.Ssernbly. Forecasts are that it will
pus the Senate and be signed into law by Governor
Reagan.
Although subject to compromise by a two.house
conference committee, the bill as it stands provides in
its principal features:
-Elimination of the traditional grounds of extreme
mental cruelty and adultery to obtain a divorce.
-Only two grounds for divorce would remain: In·
curable insanity for at least one year and irreconcilable
differences between man and wile.
-Divorces would be subject to a court finding that
the legitimate objectives of the marriage had been
destroyed.
-The court, in awarding alimony, would have to
C<?nside~ the ability of the supported spouse to work
without adversely affecting the interest of minor chil-
dren.
-Duration of the marriage. would be another ali·
mony factor. It's understood this is aimed at preventing
large payments to short-term wives.
-Fault would be removed as a basis !or g1 ving
more property to a so-called innocent spouse, with the
courts required to divide community property equally.
-Courts would have greater discretion in award.inf
child custody.
. -Voluntary conciliation courts existin& in 13 coun-
ties would be maintained, and othet Counties could
adopt similar courts at their discretion! .BUt there would
be no !118ndatory referral of troubled ·couples· to these
facilities. . .
. -Final decrees would be issued after six months
J.llStead of the present one year. ·
Adve~ary proceeru.hgs in ~vorce courts have Jong bee~ a ~light on society. Perjury, acrimony, slander, Ia~~ng bitterness and psychologically-damaged person ..
aJ1heS have all been associated with the historic court
procedures. And those hurt most have almost invariably
been the children of marriages broken by such harsh
and cruel means.
This long..(!Verdue refonn should be hailed by all
who r~ognize that all marriages aren't necessarily
made in heaven and that ending the !ailed ones should
be a peaceful and fair proceeding.
,
Getting Out of Vie ttiana
~· t r Man Brought
To .4 larming
Impasse
Is There a Hidden Factor?
WASHINGTON -1'~ormer Sec. of
Defenst" Cllfiord's proposal for a scaled
withdrawal of combat ground force3 in
Vietnam cootemplated a "prolonged and
substaatial presenct of American air and
Jo1istle1 personnel in support of South
Vietnam's combat troops."
How king this prolonged and substantial
presence weuld cooUnue was ool stated
but it only can be concluded that Clifford
was speaking in terms of years beyond
the end of 1970 if there is no negotiated
&etUement.
It is this timetable that President Nix·
on hopes to beat by a substantiial Iqii&in.
However, in responding w:itn"' plque t6
ClifCord's propo.sal, Nt.on has un·
doubtedly raised expectations at a much
earlier t.erminaUon of the war than he
may be able to accomplish.
A PROLONGED AND substantial
presence of American air and logistics
personnel could run into 200,000 with a
continuation of B-52 raids and the ex-
J>O!ure Qf supply operations to continulng
attack and heavy casualties. One military
view is that, if maximum pressure is not
kept on the enemy, American casualties
would run higher. We could thus be
heavily involvetl ·in Vietnam for a Jong
time, or at least on Cllfford's timetable
rather than Nixon's.
Neither Nixon's timetable nor CWlord':i
Is one which ta likely to satisfy king the
overpowering public sentiment to get out
of the war. Th.ls senUment may again get
out oC control as fl is more generally
realized that under either timetable
many thousands more AmerlcaM wW be
killed.
NIXON MAY THEN be trapped by the
ambiguity of hi! position and the !ri.ghtlul
dilemma of how to save South Vietnam at
the same time we beg out of the war.
President NiJ:on is committed to both
Richard . '
"•
'
Wi_Js on
1
tbose ·objectives within a Orne scale
which is constantly being compressed by
American opinion and the obduracy of .a
Hanoi government which sees in this
circumstance its last chance to win.
The least that can be said for either the
Clifford or the Nixon timetable of how we
get out of Vietnam is that they offer '
more than has been offered by the p-iti~ .
who have wholly undermined suppart"rGr ,.
a war for the first time in AmericaD
history. This new and shattering ex-
perience will unq'uestionably have a long-
range effect on American poilcy which
cannot now be measured but does not
bode wtn for continued American world
leadership.
GETJ'ING OUT OF Vietnam is likely to
prove lo be an agon izing an~
humiliating experience which m a"'J
magnify the sense of disaster. The ex-
perience will be prolonged because there
is no other way under either the Clifford
or the Nixon timetable. Durlng the ex-
perience there will unquest ionably be
misgivings and possibly disastrous events
such .. as the collapse or the Thieu Rovti-n·
ment or lhe army of the Republic of Viet·
nam, and tnsuing disorder which will ei·
pose American forces lo incrtiased enemy
attack.
Nixon exhibits full confidence that this
is the right thing to do and he desires full
credit for it, not willing to share honors
with Clifford whom he demeans as hav-
ing been unable to act on bis convictions
while secretary of defense.
ONE 11DNG COULD save the Uniled
States from a good deal of its humiliating
agony and it must be upon th at which the
Nixon administration is relying. The
government in Hanoi might conceivably
res~ to the American withdrawal by
lower1ng the level of combat and moving
toward a political · settlement. Jf Hanoi
has any intention of doing so its intent
has been well hidden.
The whole atmosphere of the Nixon
move lo liquidate the war has been that
the Nixon people know something the
public does not know, The impression is
~reated Lh<4 Jhere is some ~dden factor,
or some new approach, or new at-
mosphere which would cause Hanoi to
s~ttle with Nixon when it would not do so
with Lyndon Johnson.
NOW THE TEST has come on whether
this is another illusion about the Vietnam
war which will be dispelled by Hanoi 's
jubilation that it has got the Americans
on the run.
One other :point stands out about Nix-
on's sudden and surprising vow to ouWo
Clifford. Up until Nixon spoke, members
of his administration were extremely
reserved about the meaning of the Initial
withdrawal of 25,000. Absolute1y no
decisions bad been made on the next in-
crement. There was no fixed schedule.
Nothing would be done untU this govern·
ment was sure the South Vietnamese
could take over where we left off, and
much remained to be decided on that. In
any case no new decisions would be made
until August.
THEN, ABRUPTLY, as if all that was
being said were mere bunk, Nixon
de<>lared that there was, too, a schedule
and a timetable. It would amount to
100,000 men withdrawn th.is year, and
more than 200,000 before the end of 1970
lo outdo the Clifford plan'. The de-escala-
tio n of the war is thus proving just as un-
predic~able as Johnson's escalation of it.
Foreign Aid Is in Trouble
WASHINGTO~ -Presldenl Nixon's
$2.7 billion foreign aid program is en·
countering seriou:i bipartisan opposition
in the House Foreign Affairs Committee.
It appears highly doubtful the com-
mittee will approve anywhere near that
amount. In fact. the indications are the
President will be lucky if he gets $1.75
billion -the total Congress voted for
foreign aid last year.
Significanlly indicative ot this adverst:
sentiment is the pronounced disapproval
being evinced toward the Overseas
Private Investment Corporation (OPIC)
-the $100 million government cor•
poration the President proposes to
establish to promote and ensure In·
vestments abroad.
Jn the committee hearlngs now in pro-
--WWW-
Thunday, June 26, 1969
TM •clltorl41 JlllO• of th• DaUv.
PUot ieeb to inform and 1tim-
utat1 rtodcr1 bu pr1stnting lhi1
MIOIJ)Opn'I opintmu and com-
'"""~ Oft topici of intn-11& and lfgnfficanc•, b11 poWJing a forum /01'. the t:iprtssfo" of
-nod...,, opfnlom, cmd bl/
prfffflt.i.llO tile dhtff1t tti1io-
poillll oJ ln/otm<!d '0!>1.....,.1
OllCI rpo/c"''"" on topfa of lh< d4f.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
••
("'"
'
~ --
,t AQeu~olds111i t h
I • . '
gre.ss on the foreign aid budget, OPIC has
been assailed by both Republican and
Democratic committeemen as "window
dressing" and a "sop to save the foreign
aid program."
JOllN HANNAH, new foreign aid direc-
tor, faced a barrage of critical questions
on OPIC in his appearance before the
committee.
Illustrative were the tart commenls of
Rep. H. R. Gross, R-lowa, loAgtime
outspoken oppon ent o! large-scale foreign
aid spending. The veteran economy ad-
vocate caustically a s s a i I e d the
President's $2.7 billion budget as ex-
orbitant and unwarranted in view of
domestic conditions.
"Wilb the federal debt at around $3iS
billion, requiring the appropriation o{
more than $17 billion lhl! year just to P'IY
lhe interest on the debt ," thundered
Gross. ""'rith inflation chewing U'p the dol·
lar and the clllkns of our country faced
with eootinuallon of the 10 percent fed-
eral surtax. I am utttrly amazed th•t de-
mand $hould be m~e for another mulU.
billion doflar foreign give-away program.
1'CO~tlNG HER!: and 1sklng for 11 con·
tlnuatlon of this kind of foreign hand-out
1pendlna 11 comparable to raiding' the
.,0Cktl11 of American t11xpayers. 11 this
could be put to the vote of the people, I
haven't the slightest doubt It would be
11unlt without a trace. We have lav1$hed
\
$172 billion in aid to foreign countries,
and I know of none that would come to
our assistance if we get into a crisis here
at home."
Pointing out President Nixon had an·
noun~ he would name 'a special com-
mission to study and report on foreign
aid next year, Rep. Gross demanded of
Director Hannah ''why.not wait until then
before establishing OPIC?"
"After all." declared Gross. "this com-
mission might not think this was such a
good idea after all. Personally, I consider
OPJC as window dressing; a device lo
save~rogram that is fast golng down
the drai ; a scheme to give foreign aid
som . appeal. What's the hurry; why
the rush? Wouldn't it be well to wait until
lhis presidential commission reports?"
By Robut S. Allen
and John A. Goldsmltb
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Would whoever took the sun away,
please bring it back. We're getting
gloomy. Cu.s!
J. and 0. \V.
,...~ ...... ,. ,.""" ,.. ... ". """"" ""
-..-1111 ...... "' l1'lt -·-· ~ -Mr Hlft .. .,._'"' Ov1. 011rt "!"'
I. '
To the Editor:
Re : The Environmental Quality Cooneil
whid;I shall coordinate attacks on air ·and
wa•·)>oHution and all side effects Or
modern technology~ encourage scien-
tific developments which will help us to
protect our resources.
M a resource, man himseU should be ·
in first place. However, our fine scientific
achievements of the past have brought us
to an alll'l!1ing impasse. Since 1957, lhe
U.S. Treasury bas received $4.4 billion in
bonuses, rents and royalties from oil
revenues In the outer continental shelf.
Last year, several oil companies spent
$600 million for exploration rights 'in the
Santa Barbara Channel. Union. Gulf,
Mobil and Texaco paid $61.4 million for
their lease on 5,400 acres off Santa
Barbara.
IS IT ANY WONDER that the
Administration seems cool to any ban on
oil drilling in federal tidelands! Isn't it
odd that Dr. OuBridge's scientific group
has , suggested that more drilling be
pursued at the oil leak site -as many as
50 new drillings U necessary. (Union
originally planned 56 there when the
unlucky 4th well blew on Jan. 28.)
Hundreds of thousands of oil wells ex.isl
In our country and along our shores, and
now, what may be the prize, Alaska. All
thGSe billions in revenues pouring into our
pockets -if you assume that the
government's pockets are OUR pockets,
too. Who am I to disparage free en·
tcrprise'!
BUT JIOW ~1UCH does this pursuit or
\~·calth trul y benefit us? Just how much
filth can we dump into our rivers and
lakes (the ocean, too)? Between inha~ing
monoxides and DDT residues, avoiding
polluted bays, etc., trying not to hear the
whine and roar of the jets above, and
washing the dishes with a detergent that
I know will give the sewage plant a real
challenge in disposal -I wonder at our
wide-eyed simplicity in act.,epling any
more "advancements" in technology.
There must be remedies: and they
i;hould be applied as rapidly as possible.
We should eliminate future oil drilling in
federal tidelands -our knowledge of
geologic problems lsn 't quite up to our
ability In reaching the vii.
ALL OIL DRIWNG should conform to
the mGSt rigid specifications. The 27.5
petctnt depletion allowed the minerals
industry should be lowered. Special in·
terest groups and lobbyists should be
limited to fixed, identical expenditures.
Sewage and waste disposal in all bodies
of water sbould adhere lo a national safe-
ly code, with heavy fines f o r
transgre.530rs.
The use of DDT and related pesticides
should be abolished nationall y. And
lastly, a percentage of our mineral
rt!venues should be directly applied to an
environmental hou11 ec leanlng, in
particular the ultimate replacement or
\he internal combusUon engine. And
NOW -before our number one resource,
that dear U«le ex-caveman. IOl'.3 un·
der11round for good.
MARY R. WUJ,IAMS
Letters from. reader• art welcome.
Normally writer1 1hou1d conve~ thd.r
mesaoge1 in 300 wonU or J.e1s. The
right to cundc·nst lettlr1 to fit .spooe
or eliminate Ube( U rt1enied. AU ltt-
ttrs rn11st hu:lt«U .cignoturt and mail·
ftig addres1. but Mmt.c ?natl bt WfUt·
htk.I on ·rtqutst If sufficifnt reMon
~s apparent.
'·
-.
'Curse you Siioopyi'
What Did These
Originally Mean?
lt's been a little while since we played
around v.'ith v.·ords, and a number of
readers have asked for anOther word-
quiz, which l'm always happy to provide.
This time the answers may be found in
any good dictionary, in Funk's "\Vord
Origins," or in Herbruck's "\Vord
Histories."
1. When we say someone looks "hag·
gard," we are using a lerm from
falconry. What did it originally mean ?
2. The phrase "stark naked" has
nothing to do with the ordinary word
"stark.•• What did it first mean in that
coniiection'.'
3. Ih ancient times, neither a "tyrant.,
nor a "derhagogue" was considered a bad
person; what kind of leaders v.'e re they?
4. WHAT KIND of ''law" are v.·e refer·
ring to when we speak or a "mother-in·
la\v" or ''sister-in-law"?
5. The word "patter.'' as a kind of idle
gossip, has a religious background. just
as the word "gossi p" does. Where did
Ulese two \vords come from in the early
church vocabulary'.'
6. The adjective "cowardly" refers to
what part of the body?
7. When men·s lies we re first in·
lrodu~. they were called "cravals"
because they came from where ?
3. THE \VORD "belfry" has nothing to
do with bells; how did it come to be
associated with the chimes that ring oul
in a church steeple?
9. When you "bless" someone, what
Si dney J. Harris
'
pagan rites are you paying homage to?
10. And when you pay "homage," what
medieval riles are you invoking?
lli Why was the old-fashioned covering
thrown over the top of a chair called an
"antimacassar"?
12. At one time , the vast majority of
English-speaking people were described
as "lewd." What did the \\'Ord mean in
those days?
13. WllEN \VE SPEAK or an object as
'·brand-new" whal does the "brand"
coine from'!
14. \Vhat is the military origin. or the
niodern "boulevard"'!
15. Why do we speak of a "forlorn"
hope, and never use that word in any
other connection?
16. We have a "prelude" and a
"postlude·· and an "interlude," but no
"lude" in English. because v.·hat other
"·ord does it signify '.'
17. "T\1inialure" now refers to size, but
v.·hen first used it meanl "'hat specifi c
color?
18. \\"hy did people used lo cat "con-
fetti "'.'
19. Why is it called '·noon'' when it
means the "ninth hour'"!
20. \Vhat docs "delirium " have to do
witb o:iren and plowing?
Damages for Shock
While watering the fronl lawn, ~1rs.
Jones watched her little Suzie at play. All
at once Mrs. Jones heard the screech of
brakes and the rumble or a runaway
truck. She screamed as the truck struck
Suz.ie down.
The truck company paid for Surie's in-
juries, but ~trs. Jones herself had suf.
fered shock. Every time she heara lhe
screech of brakes or the rumble of
trucks, she thought or her daughter near
death. She feare<:I to Jet her out to plaj.
Now and then she cried for no reason at
all. f\.frs. Jones sued the trucking company
for he.-own personal injuries due to her
shock, and the resulting men ta I
disturbance.
TtnS KIND OF case Is something new
in California. For the court ruled that the
molher could recover damages.
For years courts had hesitated to allow
damages for mental shock since it was
loo hard to measure, too easy lo fake, too
hard to find the cause, and the shock was
too remote from physical cause.
Some 50 years ago a court held that if
:someone scared another or tried to cause
him anxiety or grievance oe purpose, the
court would make him pay if the set
resulted ln physical Injury. l...ater , cour1JI
also found tiabllity although the victim
had no physical injury.
BUT UNTIL recently d11mages for
shock and mental disturbance by some-
one's negligent act harl no legal basis.
Quotes
Frank 8. Caprlo1 LI Jolla -"Our na·
tlonal direction should be away from
threat.a. and towardJ ltusl and honor .....
a positive Bnd cre11tive direction rather
than a negative one based on fear."
l law in Action
Suppose a person looking through a spy
glass miles away saw a truck running
over a child. Where could you draw the
line? The coum drew the line to include
only thoSe who an foreseeable victims of
shock -those (I) located near the. scene,
(2) who directly observed the accident,
and (3) who are closely related to the
victim. ~ot everybody.
l:IO'V FAR should such liability extend?
Al first !he courts said that suit could be
brought only if the negligent person also
endangered the vic tim of shock. and then
only if he touched or actually hit the vlc-
tinl .
The jury must now decide U the event
"closely and directly affected foreseeable
victims." If so, then the victims can
roco~·er damages for their emotional ln-
juries no matter whether caused by
nep:ligence or on purpo6e.
Note: CaCifornia lawyers offer thi1
colunrn so 11011 may know about our
ln1os.
1~~-By George~~~
Dear Georgt:
I reel out or fashion -I don't
belong lo a minority group and
can't think or who to call bigots.
Can you help me!
WASPISN
Dear \VflSpish :
Certainly. Join G<!Orgt't llatelom
Club. For a small rec. I'll have two
of mlmv experts outnum bt'r )'OU •nd
dlscr inate against you on
alf~r::naJc Wedntsday a!ternocms for
two hours ,
,
_.,. ·-. ·-· . . ...
n.ur...r. Mt 2" lM · ljl · DAILY I'll.OT 7,
.CHECPKING Dem<icra-ts Claim Nixon Ha8 'Hickel's Disease'
• u '.
Pick Wife With
Sense of Humor
By L. M. BOYD
BELIEVE the most
d a n g 1~ ,. a u s domesticated
animal in the world is the
hostess wbo continually pa.t·
ters a.boul the room filling up
half-empty cocktail gla!ses.
AN INFANT SPECIALIST •
contends btlbies left overlong
in their playpens tend lo stand
up too much. nus, he avers, is
apt to make them bOw-Iegted
·or knock-kneed.
wealthiest working woman In
the Unit.ed States. Believe
Jean Kerr, the writer lady,
might be a candidate for that
tit1e.
REGABPLF.SS of age Or ex-
perie.u, the lady PhD earns
$1,.000 a year less on the
ave!'agt than · the gentleman
PhD ..
HA VE BEARD Hungarian is
the most difficult European
language to speak. Is that
right?
THAT AGE AT WlDCR a
divorced man is ·m.o~t apt to
remarry, if ever, is 32.
WASHINGroN {AP) ' -
Fl'Ultl'ated D e m o .c r ,· t J c
leaden have come up ·w Ith
lbe term jjHlctel'a dlsease" to
describe President Nixon's
agililY. at, tumln; ~ues to his
own advan'Hc.. ·
Around Demf:>craUe National
Comm l.t tee headquarters
"Hlck,1l's,~·· mea111 pre·
empting the other fellow's
thing be£ort he gets a chance
to do tt hlm..U.
·The aJluslon ls · to the
transronnaUon of the image
o( Stcretary of Interior Walter
J. fflckel from that of a hard-
nosed businessman Into th3t of
a conservationist of the first
waler after he took office.
NaUonal Chal(mon )'red
Harris complain.s to colleagues
that every · t I m e · tha
Democrats set up a good
issue, Nixon comes along and
carts it away -say, by
personally visitln& a ghetto or
checking W ashinglon traUic
jams from a helicopter.
It's not so much what Nixon
says that Harris is com-
plaining aboot, It's the Image
the President ls creaUng for
hlmsell.
AJ an ewnple, Harris told
a group or reporters Tuesday
that while the President talks
a good civil rights program.
his advisera have backed the
administraUon off from tx·
OF THOSE COUPLES who
have been married at least 20
years, one out of every 100 .wi~I
get divorced, say the stall.Sh·
cians.
IN HIS ADVICE to young
fellows on how to select their
wives, that great Love and
War man William Thackeray
said, "Above all, let her have
a sense of J.umor, for a
woman without a laugh in her
is the greatest bore in ex·
istence,"
NOTE Leviticus 11 :20 men· ..
lions birds wilb four feet, but
names them n o t , un..
fortunately.
ON A STONE in a
graveyard at Oxford, N. H ..
can be seen the following
epitaph: "To all my friends l
bid adieu ... A more sudden
death you never knew .•. As I
was leading the old mare to
drink ••• She kicked and kill-
ed me quicker'.1 a wink."
Rare sentiment.
Q. •lWJIAT'S the mos t
popular jelly" A. Grape ..••
Q. "How long is the
President's official vacation?''
A. Tl's up to him .••• Q.
"WHAT PERCENTAGE of the
stolen cars are recovered?" A.
Just 89 percent.
PROBABLY the m o s l
remarkable characteristic or
girls called An ita, says our
Name Game man , is their
ability to put I o r m e r
gentlemen friends completely
out of their lives to start all
over agaiD.
AM ASKED to name the
4 in Newport
Given Degrees
Four Newport B e a c h
residents were among over
1,200 students receiving
bachelor of science degrees at
Ca lifornia State Polytechnic
C o 11 e g e, Kellogg-Voorhis,
Pomona.
Local students and their col-
lege majors were : Ric hard J .
Coble, civil engineering ; Ken-
drick Eilers, accounting ; Di-
ane Irene Gerlardi, applied
science: and John A. McAnll s,
history.
DOES VENEZUELA still
charge only haU-posta&e for ..
love letters in red envelopes?
Whal is ·a turken ? Do some
people really get addicted to
chocolate?
THE MARTINI ranks No. 2
among those executives who
like to tak'e a nip with lunCh.
Scotch and water ranks No. 1.
AT ANY GIVEN MOMENT,
36 percent of all teen-age girls
contend they're in love while
only 25 percent of all tee~age
boys cont.end likewise.
YEAR ROUND RESI·
DENTS on Cape Cod refer to
vacationers as .. summer com-
plaints."
Your questions and com·
menu ore wetcomtd and
will be used wherever J>OS·
1ible in "Checking Up."
Addr ess m 11 i l to L. Af
Boyd, in care of the DAILY
PILOT, Bo: 1875. Netoporl
Beach, Calif., 92663.
Picnic Set
For Poles
Sausage, sauerkraut and
sounds 0£ Dave Miran's real,
live polka band will be
reatured at the Compton Hun-
ting and Fishing Club ne:rt
Sunday at the Polish National
Alliance Picnic.
Scheduled from 10 a.m. to 7
p.m., site of the extravaganza
will be at lQS Sportsman
Drtve, off Atlantic Avenue
south of Aloodra Boulevard in
Compton.
The Polish National Alliance
Council No. 73 invites all
Southlanders including PNA
members and non-members of
Polish extraction to attend.
Coming June 28 in
Family ~e.kly
What Our Gls
in Vietnam
Are Really Like
., CllAPLAll (CAPT,) umo LITEIY
• l9W to lnla J. Inn
An illuminating ac<ovnt by a Roman Catholic
priest, awarded a Cooigreniollal Medal of Hon-
or daring his tau HI V'11tna1W, and his faith in
aer American youth.
Coming Saturday in tfte
•
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546·7080 COSTA MESA
WEEUAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9. flt 5:30
SUIDAY 10 to 5:00 •
BIG BOY
BAR·B·Q
OHer.'1 • Oov who'll w•rk
for pe1111iet,
0 Coll'!pletely fl'IOt•ri1•tl
w;~jiii'lll.
10 LBS. BRIQUUS
' .
0 U11 for e11y ti1e, t+yle
berb•cue.
0 Hi k•et, 10119 Our11i119,
m•k11 •v•rytki119 t•1I•
to 9ood.
0 Gr•el odor loo, you'll
91i11 +111 po11nd1 ju1t
br11tki119 #ie 1i1.
69'
WEBER BAR·B·Q
D Coveretl 01rb•cu1
coo~l119 i1 i11, I m1111
out, oh, you k11ow whet
I "'''"·
D U111 1eu ch1rco1I,
compl1t1ly porc•l1i11i11d
lo 9u1rd 191i111! ru1t.
D 111 1voc1clo for 1clcl1cl
1l1lu1.
399s
S YEAR GUARANftE
WATER
HEATERS
011• of •ur li.ott••* 1elli11• a,m •. !my, th1t'1 cl1v1r.l
Fully 1ulom1tic, 91111
1!111cl, 111!0 1hut off, 111cl
repitl 1111p.
30 GAL. .............. 4495
40 GAL. ..... _ ..... 49"
GRAVITT GAn LATCH
D R,u99•d l f°' i•c1l ,,,,
letch c1tch1t 111t•M•llctll¥
wh•11 fe11ce i1 1wu111 t hut.
0 N-, ye11 'c111 11111lt
h•ll•'iflt, "J~'"'" v•11 l•f• th. 91fto °'"" .,., .....
0 I let he'll flH ''"''thl119
,,,,to '''"' •p111.I
39'
I '
lendlni the t~ Votlq Rights
Act undtr wblch Hatril said
the~ had been I "lfemen.
dous'' rtglstraUon or Negroes
in the south ror the first timt.
He 5411d the admtn1stration
was trying to curry favor in
the South while maintaining il
wanu civil righl.!: f o r
everyone.
up.
The coondl ol 1bout 20.
.,.._,umably re ... ,.ntlq all
!actions In the Plft1, w!U be
headed by Hubert H. Hum-
phrey. II won't be named until
lfumpbrty returns rrom a cur·
rent trip to Europe, du.ring
which he wW Visit the Soviet
Union.
•
It II~ !hit r..Iftrd
M.K<~.--i.
D1mocnlle 11tldtr, reganlod
11 a tucltnr Contnder ror the urn nomlnalloo, ,.rn boc«ne 1
member of lhe counclL U he
does be will bi the only 11)-
dtviCLaI · !'I'"' ii It e cpo-
,.....1onal leiderthl~ lo accepl
an lnvllltlon to pll'tlclpete.
u,.. ....... Mfctt .. __ .. _ ......
to ... .,.. P-.tlll•
eo tblt we may otml • _ .. .,. ... ..
tbllD to blcomt ... ....
la u.tr-n-amcm._.
So. C:~i
As for the Democrats. Har-
ris seems to think! they are on
lhe road to party unity despite
some flattups here and there.
Campus to Use Mission Inn llirtior Visitor
He hu reached an un·
derslandlog with Democratic
congressional leaders thal he
will not slep on their toes with
pronouncements of a party
!>Olicy council he intends to set
• ..
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The
Miuioo Inn, wbtre President
and Mrs. Nixon spent their
honeymoon, will be used this
fall to help relieve a student
bou&ing ahorttge at t h e
Universll;y 'of Calllornia ca~
pus here.
Vice Chanctllor S t a r b I
Edmundt 11)'1 tbe lllivvsity
will leue part of the inn to
provide Uvinc space for both
male and female lludents.
I
494-9Ue
Today's Final
Stocks Today
BRING YOUR JUG
'
. .
We'll Have A Grow~in
0 Adv1rti11cl 1peci1l1 9oed thr11i" J111y 2. ''''· •11d h1"'• 1 wo11cl 1rlul
Fourth of July holidev Ho1k. for "''• I'll b1 lllown 11 th1 pier,)
20 INCH ROTARY
MOWER
U you w1t1t 1 90.tl
0111, thi1 i1 it.
0 luilt to l11t for yo1n,
witfi up fop cot1lr011h.
0 Full 1d91 to lri"'
1dj11t1mot1t, bit <4
cycle e119i111.
39••
MARBLE LIKE PATIO
TABLE
0 Rell out the 1111rble1,
w1'1l l11¥1 1 t1ble. 0 Con¥e11i111t ch1 irilcl1
h1i9lit, '' i11cll cll1t111t1r. 0 Gold i nd whit• fl'!erblo
like lop witll 1111lque
119 1tyli119. !U11iqu1,
th11'1 1 tectful wey ef
11yi119 funny lookit19.I 279
CARPENTER'S APRON
0 U1eful It•"' fo r 011
kome h1t1clY"''" wi th
m111y pock1h 111d
"''"'"'•r loop. O' rw991d wh ile •we•
! Next w•••. w1'll
dMcrib1 tke tkre1d.I
S1v11 your clotk11 111d
••1p1 10011 ind stuff
h111cly.
59'
Colored MENDING TAPE
0 Str1tchy t1lf01tic•i119
t1p1 h11 hundr1d1
1f u111.
0 Rep1ir, boo•1, l11991t1,
choic.1 of f1'1111y col•n.
y .. ·.120" .......... I Sc:
11/2''>120" ........ I 9c:
AUTO D~IP PAN
0 U11l111 for h-•
111och111ic1, •••Pl tlle
clrl¥1w1v ,y 9 1r•t•
fre• of oil 1Uc••·
0 011 11co11cl th•11tht,
for11t It, M1y" yeu'll
t•f 111 offer item
St111cl1rcl Oii.
I
SWln'S UQUID
PLANT FOOD
D A higll 1"11.,.;, t0Mpl1t1 11! , ... ,,. ••
IJqwid pl111t food.
0 Gr11t fot 111 9rewit1J thi1191, hiclutll119 ttio
mou you 91t 9r~wi119 '" Y•-r .... , f,_
f1cin9 1011th w1itl119 fer ye111 thip t. •
COlfte in.
O U11 011 flow1u . l1wt11, tro•1, 1llrub1,
111cl ... ,.t.bl11.
c
GAL.
....................,
3 CUBIC FOOT
WHIELBAR~OW I.
""""''"""' D St11Nv 111on1ter thel'n
wh .. IY ., ... , ti"'' 1114
1n1r9y,
0 Give up 91rde11in91
Ute 11 1 pl111t1r.
.. •
20 GAL. GALYANl.ZID
TRASH CAN
rt.. 114 rvnM cl•"91f'
it 1till the fl'lett
pep1;1lor.
Will 1till ... t•int
11reftt wtt.11 TV di11111r1
hew, bte11 r1pl1c1tl
wi#i f..tl. 0 Compl1to with lit!,
1•
GLIDDEN ENDURANCI
HOUSE PAINT.
0 0111 COit C1frlplet1lv
• COVlfl "'''' uirf1c11,
0 l:io l1y, &lldd111 1i11't
11111 "'Y heu11.
0 Tough oil b1t1 p1i11t will
keep your hot11• cl1uli11t
while for y11r1,
679 GAL
GUDDEN SPUD
GLIDE·ON I
I
j
•
•
I DAILY ,JLOT Thu~, Junt 26, 1969
Air Crash
' Inquiry
Hits Snag
RIVERSIDE (UPl) -An
attorney for two a1r coq·
trollers said Wednesday ~
would not tesUfy at 1 federal
investigation 1nt.o a plane
crash that killed five Calllot·
nians unless they w ere
granted immun!tY t r c m
crtmlnal prosecuUon.
Safety operts suspect ~e tw~ngine Cessna 310, wtuch
crashed into Cucamonga Peak
at the 6,200 foot level, may
have been guided into it by
traffic controllers.
' ' ---
The plane was on a flight
Jrom Palm Springs Io II
Riverside when It !II.ruck the l
peak. 12 miles oorth cf U ~
, 0nw1o, April' u, killmg lhe 'I '----1 ' · , pilot, Robert KlopfeMte1n, 57, i ''u...
his wife Anne, S3, of Palm 1::::":-.,'~'::::::::========::====~ Springs: Robert McMilla~ 541 .:
his wife Ruby, and thelr
: daughter Julie, 24, of Ccnma.
'. Louis M. Thayer, chairman
of lhe inquiry by the NaUonal
' Transportation and s are t 'J
'. Board, was told by Danny
'Jones. western re gional
' counsel for the Professiooal
Anti-smut Law Covers
Sales to Minors , Ads
Sickbed Vote Needed
Budget Tie Broken
\
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Assemblyman Don Mullord's
painful trip from the sickbed
to the Capitol has crushed a
Democratic budget roadblock
and given Republlcar..s a
'
two-thirds majorJly of S4 ln
the Assembly and 27 in the
Senate.
And Assembly Democratic
Leader Jesse M. Unr uh
rtl(erated the Democrats will
crucial victory in t h e not vcte for the bill unless
legislature'a fiscal battle. Reagan supports more aid ·to
.. I don't think it endangered local schools and assures that
my health but I'm totally and a tax reform plan Is scheduled
thoroughly elhausted," the ror a vote.
time out since a 3'ii-hour
operation May 11 for a detach·
ed retina In his rlgbt eye . .A
few day a later, surgeona
repalr<d a hole In his Jell eye.
••tt an Issue hangs on one
vote, you should be here if Ii is
llumanly possible," be said.
Murphy Hit
On Boycou
Piedmont Republican s a i d Thirteen Democratic votes
after casting the vote that sent are needed for the two thirds
back to the Senate the em-majority in the lower house,
battled $8.19 billion budget late controlled by Republicans 41-
Wednesday. 39. SACRAMENTO (AP)
He had been home for weeks "I'm not optimistic at all Assembly Democratic Leade.r
recovering from the latest in a about getUng the budget out," Jesse M. Unruh accused
series of eye operaUons. Asseml\fl llJIHHf Nlllll T, ~ \i,§. Sen. George
The Senate received lhe bill f111111igaJ>, CR· Tracy), to Id Mlirphy tiiday ii 1it11inJJ block
following a 41-27 vote ant newsmen. a aallsfactory end · lit ·the
prepared to help set up th1 Mulford traveled 85 miles in lengthy grape bo~t in
two-house negotiating COO\' a highway patrol car to the Californla. .j ·
rnittee that put together • Capitol, his eyes protected by Unruh praised the small
final version of the state's bij. dark &lasses. He limped on ad· group of table-grape growera
gest budget. mltted1y rubbery legs when he who have begun negottaUoflll
Assembly De mocrats refu!$J was helped into the Assembly for a settlement will\ the
cd to vote for the budget twlct chamber by Re publi ca n United Farm Worke r 1
in two days, demanding actio1 Leader W. CraJg Biddle of .Organtziog cOmmittee. AFl,.
first on more school aid an~ Riverside. His normally loud CIO.
tax reform. voice 'was low and quavering He said: ''More gl'()wen
If conferees fail lo agree by when he cast his "aye " vote. would be willing to partl~ipate
the time the fi sca l year end1 The ve teran ~year~ld in the·negotiations if It weren't
............... ·-~ ... ~.-.. , ..... -
TAlll · n WY -TAKE n AlONG
KODAK MOVIE CAMERA SALE
Super 8 Instant Load
l 0 ' M 12 M••S. ~ 1tf1t
• w/fll• • lt.tt.ri.a. bt· 14.SO
M-14 I DKtrk .... M...i. c--
w/fll• A Mtfe,i., .... 54.10 s3911
M-18 z... m.rnc ,.,. MewW ~ s5au
w/,.... <ptp, fll• & Mtt•ri.. 0 let. M.SO
Kodak Super 8
ProcessinCJ Mailer .... 2.11
Film & ProcessinCJ Mailer ~ 5359
V ANIMAN CAMERA
8'21 A~AMS II.YD,. HUNTINGTON 1'-'CH, CALIF. 92646
f7141 962·5919
Hnt .. Albemo• Mmtet.
• Air Traffic Con troll ers
. Organization, that the two
controllers would invoke the
fiftb amendmenl agaimt self·
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Qov. Ronald Ru.gan climued
a three-year legislative battle
Wedntsday when be 1igned
bills making it harder for
smut merchants to' peddJe
pornography to children.
midnight Monday, the statt legislator said it was his first for the faJse hopes they have[~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ marked the first revision of will enter the new fiscal yeaf been ii.ve n by Sen. George1~
the state's antl·smut laws unable to pay Its bills. Murphy that they can ~pect
· incrimination if they were not
granted inununity.
since 1981 and the first major Rep u b Ii can governot TURN ON legislation favorable to them
strengthening o f obscenity Reagan and GOP legislatorw TV WEEK •••P• yo• tun1d coming from Washington."
la-since !heir orilrin~J enacl~ still faced their greatest to wh1f1 h1pp•ni"9 L1hind th• Unruh said such leglalatlcn ""' o-1. .... ...,. 6.-..f r I 1 otl hlla -•v•ry 51t11rday I• th• has virt"-" -•·· .... ment in the gold rusb days of uuua .. ~ ~· -8 ma voe DAILY PILOT. w:wy no ~ice ..,_=
The Great Orange Coast's
No, l Poper! Thayer said be would have
to rule on the request for im-
munity later but added that
"granting of immunity is not
something I can do or the
board can do but iS a matter
of board opinion."' ~
the comprom,ise. That takes I year. 1858. ~=-=::::.=::::.:..:=:;_:::::::~==============='-..:.:::.:...~~~~~1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
The two. Kenneth E •
Jackson and Noble C. Cant·
trell, were Federal Aviation
Agency controllers at March
Air Force Base near here.
A witness, Air Force Majer
Glen York of Gra nada Hills,
Calif .• testified he flew over
the Riverside area In a c.euna
150 at about the time of lbe
crash.
'Ibere has been unofficial
speculation that York 's craft
and Klopfenstetn•s 'may have
merged into a single blip on
the radar screen and confu.sed
the controllers.
Smuggler Talks
Against Werber
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
An admitted marijuana smug·
gle:r has testified that Frank
N. Werber, former Kingston
Trio manager, was one of his
customers who demanded
"quality stuff that would be
sold to quality people."
Werber is on trial on
charges of Cilll!piraey to
smuggle marijuana from Mex·
lco into Marin County.
Bus Check Due?
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Striking Greyhound 8111 lines
mechanics are asking lhe
Highway Patrol to make safe-
ty checks on Greyhound buses.
The governor 's signatures
Color Book
Repudiated
··This landmark legislation
will rightly return to the
parents the ability to protect
their children from obscenity
by sb'engthening significantly
the punishment of smut ped·
dlers who are guided solely by
the enormous profits such
BERKELEY (UP[) -The materials can bring," the
Black Panther Party has governor said. The two-bill package is a repudiated a childttn'1 coJ-legislative triumph for Reagan
oring boot that Preached and ia viewed as one of the
violence in words and pictures major pieces of legislation to
agaimt police and white come from the 1969 session.
merchants. One law establishes a
The colorin& book waa separate standard · for judging
"unauthorized," Panther Par-wbat is obscene for youths un-der 18. ty Chairman Bobby Seale and The second incorporates a Chief of Slaff David HUUard said Wednesday. "pandering" concept, so the
They said Larry Clayton method of advertising can be
Powell, a party defector who used as a legal tool to determine w h e t b e r lhe tesuoed before the McClellan material is obscene.
Senate subcommittee, print.ed The new law will become er-
1,000 copie1 of the coloring fectlve sometime this autumn,
book to use against the party. 90 days after the legislature
A San Francisco police of-adjourns.
fice told the Senate in-"Well, they're law now,"
vestigators the coloring book Reagan said with satisfaction
WU distributed at breakfasts at the signing ceremony in his
the Panthers apomored for office. "By golly, it's been a
children. long time coming. "It was first printed in 1968, ___________ ,
by a young party member u-ti-1
from lhe S.cramenlo chapter. fAT OV£RWEIGHJ He was not. politically mature ftU Av•ll9Dle kl Yau ~t • doc:tot'• !W't-and was not aware of the class KTlp11o11, our product c1u..i ocrrllllll. "ti J ,._ P••lh s " You fnll'lt lose 11111V 111 or 'l'Oltl' ~ po5I: on -ua ..,.n: _, er • ~. Odrl11111 11 1 tint taDtel .,. 11111~ Seale said. •-now..i. Git rid of ncwu 111 i nd 1m
"Wheo we "--vered ,., we "'"'8•r. ocrrlna eot.ts u..oo •nd • -· w;i.o..v "' i.,.. --.nr 1ltt ter 15.00. l!lolll •~ stopped its printing. We only 10lll w1111 11111 ..-"""": w "°' w11111ed for 1nr ~ llltl r11vrn !tie ~ saw about 25. The rest were "' yavr dn101i1t _. ..i 'f'llll' Ml .._., copied later by Larry Powell bide: •• No Q""'tlonl 11111.i. Odrlnu 1s • Mid w;lh lrltl 9111r.,,'" br:
"h 0 printed It 0 0 0 CIAWJOlD llXALL PHARMACY
without autborizaU<ll'I.." 1-4 M...-t 11...........,..11 °'"" "'""
WINNERS
IN SOUTH
COAST PLAZA'S
ANGEL
CONTEST
firs! place winnt r DAVID DIAll tnd his did will fly Air Ulifornit to loin !ht
Ctliforn11 Angel• in lh1 dugout for 4-g1m1 uriu 1!1rling July 11. All-expenst
!rip il'ICludes sl1y 11 Hy11t Hotel's beautiful £dgew11er in 01kl1nd. O!her winners
below received btls, mitts ind 1utograph1d bt~hllls.
llOIEIT ADAMS
VICIC!( GlHNLIAF
JEff HEGGSTIOM
DON KAID
MAllC COVA
T(lll McDONALD
JOYCE StllMOMUllA
OEIOIU.H STAUM.AN
TAMI GUY
CHUCX uun
otAD lACXMAM
IOI TAFT
MIKI flllMAN
1111 scon
LYNN GIUll
SHfllY DR
alCJCY MAlltTTl
JIFF LOWE
JAMES MIUAM
(lNDY MIYlaOWfTZ
MKHBU IANOQI
PETfl NISIY
DONNA ROSATI scorn ClAIGHIAD
TAMMY UNlllll&
MIQ MOllS ,__
MAllOM MtllYNOlDS
ICATHll UDR
MAITA POUoa
Alllll HAllllSON
TIMMY SPllSAlO
CA.lOl McCOllMICI(
TAMMY MEkkY
MAkY WAID
scan PAllS
YVONNE AIAICA
GltlG WIWAMS
PAMILA llNTUY
JULll Hlffll
KINNY LUCAS
TlllSA. ~Wl
DllOIAH GlllHWOOD
LOii FUKANO
llTA ~SS
MAU·WIDI \.tu STA.ITS JUNE 30
DUN! IUGGY Will IE lfYIN A.WAY
SATUIDAY, JUlY 51h
llGISTll AT Nfr Olll OF OUR
14 STC)JUS -0'91 NIGHTL T TIU 9,30
&ad Coast ?laza
BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA
N11r half • centvry ol 111'¥1ce / Nur hall a bllllon dollarw atrong
1%
4
ANNUAL
RATE
YEAR
CERTIRCATES
6% AYWlp annU1! yield throo1h dally compoundinc when prlnelPll ind
lnl•rul ram1in for 5 years. Minimum deposit $1 ,000. In ti\• Mnt of hardship.
funds may be withdrawn 1t the end of any quarter with fun lnttmt to that date.
Thest new certificates •rt offered In lddltion to rtfJl•r Passbook •nd Bonus Accounts.
More Interest Than Banks, More Certaifl Than Stocks.
• CORONA DEL MAR •.
. 2K1 &It Cout Hlgtlwsy
Telel)hoM175-6QIO
W118T AlllCADIA
880 W•I DIM rte AOld
Tellphone4*Q1M
COVINA
200 North Cltn.11 Awnu.
Tel~3»6471
~UTUAL SAVINGS
and laan a1uciatian
I •
'.
•
I
-..
•
Tbursd1y1 Junt 26, 1969 DAIL V '!LDT 8
Muter Plannlttg Hypnoiie Class
Airport Meet Slated UCI Seeking Volunteers
SANTA ANA -A day-long
conference on muter Plannina
airports bl.! been scheduled
for July 10 in Los Angeles by
the Southern California Avia-
tion Q>upcll lnc. (SCACI), ic-
cording IO Orange County
Supervisor William J . Phillipa,
(SCACI) president.
Conf,roverslal i s s u e s af·
reeling local airports will be
discussed by local government
a nd aviation Officials in both
afternoon and m o r n i n g
itSSions, Phillips said.
Luncheon speaker will be
John H. Shaffer, newly named
administrator of the Federal
A v i a t i o n Administration
(FAA).
The morning panel will deal
wilh planning and ad-
ministering a Hkounty airport
1ystem. Phillips said.
The afternoon panel will co-
For The
ver recently proposed plans to
finance airports.
"The liming of this Los
Angeles conference is
particularly fortunate," said
Phillips, "because it coincides
with the launching ol a IG-
cou.nty Southern Callfomia
muter plan o( airport s
study.0
The study is being conducted
by Airporl Systems Plonning I
Group, a joint venture of
System! Development Corp.
and William L. Pereira and
Associates of Corona del Mar.
It Is being financed by a
feder•I grant and con-Joins Board
trlbutlons of S o u t h e r n
Calliomia counties and cities. John F. Bishop ol Fut-
The July 10 sessions at the lerton, president ol
Proud Bird Restaurant near Dana Laboratories Inc.
L . .\. lntematiooal Airport, ·are o( Irvine, has been
open to the public, Pbilllps elected to the board of
said. Tickets are $15 for the directors or Uie Big
full day, or $10 for the lun· Brothers of Orange
cheon meeting only, and may County.
be obtained by writing SCACl ----------
al 4667 MacArthur Boulevard,
Nepwort Beach.
2nd Airport Mural
Now Being Installed
Artist Lecture
Set for Irvine
IR~ -Re5u.rchen al transfereBCt ) and hypnotic ap-
UC Inlne are seekl.og 400 titude.
volunteers for experlmenta in Research will be conducted
telepathy and hypnoels. under a $55,IMXI U.S. Office ol
Spokesmen are guarded In Educ1tloo grant and portions
telling exactly what they are of a National Institute of Men·
trying to show for fear tal Health grant lo Hart's col·
preknowledi'e of the research laborator at the University of
desltn would bias t b e Southern CAU!ornia, Dr. 'ferry
perfo'rmance of volunteen. London.
But it bas to do with Applications from vol~
training subjects to product a will be taken until July 16.
certain k.lod of brain wave im-No risk is involved in having
pulse called alpha wa ves. electrodes taped to the scalp.
' Dr. Joseph Hart, assistant Partlclpanls will be paid a
professor of psycholofY. is smaU amount for some ti·
directing the expenments periments; no payment will be
which will be carried out by made for others.
ten student research However, the esperiments
assistants. themselves are interesUng and
Electrodes will be taped to instructive, according to Dr.
the scalp of volunteers and Hart.
brain waves amplified by a Volunteers should call 833-
polygraph machine a n d 6335 or m.MOO.
recorded. uplalned Dav Id p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Gould, 24--year-old graduate
student in social sciences.
Subjecls will hear a tone
when they prod uce alpha
PUT CASH IN
YOUR POCKET
Dixieland. • • • • •
free concerts on the mall
COME HIAI THE SWIN!O!N'IST !OIOUP IN TOWN
FRIDAY :
5ATUIDAT:
1 :30 to 2:30 P.M .
7:15 to 1:15 P.M.
1 :00 P.M. to 3:00 P.M.
FASHION ;; ISLAND Record
IRVINE -Art teacher Dick waves and through this feed-
Swift ol Sunset Beach, will back hopefully learn lo put
present a discussion of his themselves in a mental state
works at the "conversations characterued by n!laxatiQn,
with artists" lecture series, receptivity and openness to The second or four mosaic several potential donors are J 1 3 t UC 1 · · · I d · 1. 0 u Y a rv1ne. exPo"!'!encmg. mura s epic ing range interested. The extension course lecture Jn a normal mental state
Sell unwanted Items
with a DAILY PILOT
Clusllied Ad.
NEWPORT IEACH
Meeti11gs
THUllSOj,Y
H11nllnt!On INcll l lon1 Club, H~~
tl119ton S.•cllff Country Club, 3000
P1lm Avt., H""t!ntlOr! .. Kii, •:JO P.m.
COJ!I ~ G•lllG'9 Ai 11c l 1!IO f!,
GrA"'I H1U, 'l'-' Thur111 Ave,, C~i, Mau, 1:3f •.m. f.1-rt H1rbcv Elt.1 Club, Elki lodDe, 306 v11· Oporto, N1wport INCl'I. I P.m.
ll.$. Ntvlt St• C1d9I Corp1, 23.U &lr-
r1n<1 Rolld. S1nll A111, 1 p.m.
Try1ve Lie LoOte No. fO, Sons of
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W, 11111 SI .• Co1t1 M.u, 7:)0 p,.,,_
l'rllley
Hunll"'flDn 8t1C:ll Rotll'l" C I 11 b ,
Sllt••I"" 8e1c11 1nn, Hunllntlon
811d'l,12.:10 P.m.
M1rlMr'I Llons Club of N~
H1lgl\!1, S!U!t Slllrt. fUJ w. Coest
l11IPl\Wa\', N~P0!1 8Ndi. l?:U p.m,
Births
lT. JOSl!PK MOIPITAL
.111• u
Mr. l 'ld Mrs. M!d'latl 91rtlett. lOMt G~td>en LIM, Wfftminlt1r. btY
Mr. 1nd Mri. Jam11 G. 8111<1, 1n52
8rl!d1 Lant, Munlll!flon 81acll, 1rr1
Ju.,. ll Mr. Ind Mrs. $at0<u N/111, 5032 Alco"'
LIM, ll'VIM, bci'f
M r, Ind M,., Oenn!1 J, O'ltltn Jr .• l:JllO Nottlngllam Rold. ,....._.,
8e1c11. 11r r .,1.,.,. II
Mr. and Mr1, Robert L, Mor\r!M, 14JI
M""'"" LIM, Wt1lmlnstwr, tin
DE ATH N OTICES ' CARR
,l.nn1 Mlorle c.,.,.. un Fem Clrtte,
HunTl1111tan Beach. su,..,1...eci by !IWl>ew.
J 1tnes c..-r. S!t!'Vlctt wm be hefd In
New HIYtn, CDrlnectlatl. Lout '"'
'"""''""Ml 11'1' P"41 F11"lly Colonloll Ful'ltr1t Heme.
I BRJ STOL
Ltt F-8rl1!oJ. 21:rt s.vm1, 81lboe. 0.Te of de,1111, June 2t, 511rvlved br
wile, Lo!1; d111ellltr, M1rlorle Fl~
cf Otn~er; brother. Plllll• 8rlilol,
San11 M1rl11 1l11tr1, H.Mn Ale••'""'•
of Vlrglnll; 1nd E11!otr 8rMI, s.ii
Olevo; two 1r1ndd\lldrtn. Sl'rvlaf; will
ti.. Mid Frld1y, I PM. P1d llc: View
Cl\111111. ln1tr~I, PKlllC View M~
mori1l P1rt1. Olrectlld b'f P1dflc View
Mortu.ry,
SCOTr
H1rry E. Scott. AM n, d 71llO L1rn11-
..,.., G.rdtli Gro....,, 0.11 vi oe11t1.
Ju1>e 2~. Survived by w~, AAftl Mle
Scat!, of llloe hllfN. $"'"'/Cfl, today,
T1'1Vr5Cl•'t'· t PM. Bell BrOlldw•v Cll1°'1, wllh lh v. Clllrle1 Smlll'I 11111c1111no. Entombment, H1rbllr R<!sl
Memorlll P1'11. DlrK~ 1IY It!!
er111.dw1r Morlu•rv, 110 Broodw•r•
Co.11 Me$1.
WRIGHT
Neille M.. Wt!tht. A11t: 11, of $10.,.,
Center Sr., Cosra Mflf. O.re ol ~l!h,
Ju""' 2•, Survl'fed by two 1.,.,1, H1r·
Did w. $!-. •"" W!ll1rd H, Wrlgl\I, bl>lll "' c ... 1. Mt!w ; 4-u11hter, Bt11v G""'"•
k1<1H11 4-ll9ll~r-1 ... 11w. M". ~orrr M iiier, S.nra Ana; seven 11r1nddlll-
d~n; Z1 t rNl·91'1l'ldctllldrtn; Incl two
t~l-vt~t•nddllld~n. Servlc:e1 will
be hf:ld S.l'llrdlv, 11 AN., kU 8r<»d-
Wl'f (/'llpei. Enlombmenl, ~A~ Matl1°""'m. 01~~ br Bell e r11aow1r Morh11ry, C111111 Mew.
MINNIS
Sadlt A. Mlnnl1. AM IO. or '!7 Llncoln,
HoJflllnglon ltldi. Olll' al °"'th' J une 26. Sltrvlftd by 111111>1,nd, winer l.
Mlnni1. Mt1. MIM IS W•I • member ol l'tll Fin.I Unl!ed Ml'llladlst Churcll 11f
H~nlil!flClll ~1ch. .k-rvlce1 MonC11v,
11 AM, Smllll Cllapel. Interment, Gllod
St..<>M1'd c-itrv. O!rec:!ed br Smln'll Mott\11ry.
ARBUCKLE & ~H
We1tcliff Mortuary
127 E. 17th St., Colla M ... .. ~
BALTZ MORTUARIES
Coro11a del Mar OR 3445t
Co1ta Mesa l\U f.IU4
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cotta Men
LI J..!'3J
DILDAY BROTHERS
Huntington Valley
l\tortuary
17111 Buell Blvd.
Hu.atingtoa Beach
UZ..7771
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMOlllAL PARK
Cemetery e Mortuary
Cllapel
3500 P1clflc View Drive
Newptrt Bt:tcb, Califontl1
"4-%711
PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 BoJaa Ave.
Westmluler tt:W5lS
SHEFFER MOtmJARY
Laguna Belclli 4M-IQS
San Clemnte 411-tlM
SMITR'S MORTUARY
&rl Mill S<.
Hunlbtgtoo 8eacti
LE Miii
County history is being in-It takes Rudi.ck ,.,, months Ill be led t 7 30 · ~''°"' produce bela brain stalled at tbe Orange County V.' presen a : in w~aves. Airport. lo complete a mural as all col-Physical Sciences Room 101 .
The murals by artist Martin oring of the mosaic stones is by Swift, a professor o{ art at Gould said experiments will
PHONE Ju3t /rttWO.ll minuets to FASHION ISLAND on Pacific
Coatt Hig/Lwa1J bttwten Jamboret and MacArthur
Boultvaf'd in Newport Btach. done by hand, Thomas ex-California State College, Long relate brain wave mental
Rudick of Temple City are lo-plained. Beach states to telepathic (thought I'::===================: cated on the east exterior wall1 ..!~~:._-------~~~·--------~~~.'.'.'.....'.::~'.'.'.'.'.~~~'.'.:.!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~ '--or the airport term in a I
642-5671
building. They are 16 feet by
13 feet.
The first mural was in-
stalled last ytar. It was a gift
or the O'Neill family, county
pioneers. 'Ibe county is ~g
the $6,500 cost of the second
mural until a donor is found.
County Administrative Offlce.r
Robert E. Thomas 11 I d
Joh Corps
Camp Eyed
By Count y
SANTA ANA -Steps
toward acquisition of the Los
Pinos Job Corps Camp from
the U.S. Department of Labor
were authorized Tuesday by
the Orange Counly Board of
SuperliJors.
County AdministraUve Of·
ficer Robert E. Thomas ursed
that the move be made to ac-
quire the 480-acre camp which
is being abandoned by the
federal government July 1.
He said possible uses include
a regional park plus 1 Proba·
tlon De p artment &iris
rehabilitation c e n l e r , a
teacher training facility, a
conference center, a con-
serv1tion camp, or a camp for
underprivileged youth.
Annual maintenance costs
for the 15-buildiog facility just
off Ortega Highway near Lake
Elsinore are estimated at
$20,000 to $50,000 depending
upon the use.
County officials wert ad-
vised by U.S. Forest Ranger
Clifford Stevens, in charge of
Cleveland National Forest, to
apply to the U.S. Forest
Service and tbe U.S. Depart·
menl of Labor for a special
use permit for the facility.
'Join Hands'
Fiesta Tlieme
SANTA ANA -"Let's Join
Hands" is the adopted theme
ol the SanUi Ana Chamber of
Commerce-sponsored
"Chamber's Centennial
Fiestl" luncheon July I.
The pit Bar-B-Que luncheon,
complete wllh music and short
talks will be held et .he
triangle of 4th and Ross
streets in the downtown Civic
Center area.
Clubs and other oraanlza-
tionJ whole meetings occur on
the same date are invited to
join the celebration, according
to Ben Paschall. chamber
manager.
Tickets are now on sale at
$2.50 each al the chamber of·
nee, 1111 E. tth St.
Fire Pact
Given OK
SANT A ANA -Approval of
1 state-county Fire Prntection
Agreement wbich will cost the
county fl.I million in the t•
10 rllCal year was given Tues-
day by the Board o f
Supervlws.
County Fire W anlen Elmer
Ostmnan told supervisors
that If the county attempted to
provide the same meesurt cf
protection to unincorporated
areas on its own the cost
would be Jl,337 ,000 mort a
MULLEN BLUETT
OPEN A Nn QRODlllS CHARGE
Up to 12 lftOn1hl to PIJI
BankAmericarcl or
Muter Charge, welcome!
Sony .•. No C,0.0.sl
•NO DEUVERJESI
•NO MAIL OR
PHONE ORDERS!
ALTERATIONS AT COST!
• 0P•t1 01ily 10 '·'"· fo •:OO p.m.
r
Broadway-Anaheim
GRODJ:NS1
We couldn't turn this slack maker's offer down!
Center,
You'll be glad we didn't ••• when you see
Anaheim •
' these never-before buys in this
r..:
Featuring a prestige maker's
custom edition models
Reg. Now Reg. Now
$20.00 $10.00 $29.95 $14.98
21.95 10;98 35.00 17.50
23.95 11.98 45;00 22.50
25.00 12.50 55.00 27.50
Certainly we're clea~ng out our entire Mullen & Bluett stock.
But Wiien Callfomla's foremost maker of custom quality slacks \
offered us hla entlni stock on hand at neveM>efore clOS<H>Ut
pl1C91, w couldn't tum him down! Now we're passing the fan-
lastlc -Inge on to youl Add llJese custom "beauties" to hun-
dreds of Mullen & Bluett slacks and you have the "alack sale of I
the century.• Every pair ls In today's leading styles ... tab-waist,
top pocket end belt loop models. Select from ell wool worsted
reverse twists. bengeline1, baratheas, sherl<sldns, hopsacka,
flannela, pluo dozens of other fabrics. Still ee!llng el-.. at
$20.00 to $56.00. Youi. MW at 1/2 pl1cel Come pt_..,i lo
buy _.. pairs-but huny, lhfy'1I go rat at u-pimr
South Coast Plaia, Costa Mesa
yur. !-~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ••
It '
DAll.Y PILOT
I
For The Record
Dl"orces
0
i;.~, R-IO Mt'rf"lll w .JOe-
"'"" ~l'Ywlollo. RIMI J. 'A O.vld ,~, Nal'CY Lea vt IU<Nrd ·-· .......... Hoel """"' 'fl ltldlard °"""" TMNll. ltOl:lfn• 'n Wl'fnt
l.•lofl, 1"tl!lc:la Htllll "1 Alltoo J1v
V•lenl..,.i.. D1v1e1· Fr•nl! v• JeMv ... ri. 111.~1. 1t11h.,_. Rlllll 'A L9el'llrd Jolln
.. 1nlr1. MOlllU 'fVI"" lklrlrt L.tV•rl
FreMlll'I. DI-~119 YI &OCibV """" R19111NM11, "t h1cla C. VI "'-111 J. SI-Mn L 'fl >e1'lll T, swi ..... ,..,. •• ""~ w.
L1111, ~ M. \II Liiii M. Md>1n!wl, Cl"""' JIM 111 Rober! _._
Blduir, II.11th I, vs l-rlnC'I L
ltt llr, YI"'"'' M. YI Mowar11 M. AllloM, Jorcti JNn n Mlllofl S.
l"IC!UefM, Matlin L.. .,. It*"! P1ul
Hvdl""1', Judllll D. YI 0.00..ld D.
C.1t1~, RtYmond Robert "' A(W\I ·-· Ltrkln, O.-:en M. .,. Ll•n' J.
F1rr11!, J1Mt ~rllVn 'fl PhlUP Artllur
'De 81un. ""'"" 8•111 v1 'WUll1m A. Sorrtlk, Vtcttl V. "' Muoi! Lee RvtlMr. Wm! .. fl A .... Flot'nc9 •,
INTl!ltt.OCUTOltY Dl!CIEES
Hm, E"-•nl G, viSNrln< S.
hmet, (""'let. E. YS JICCIU""" M.
kllmvdl. Edlfll It, v1 Cl'llrla G,
e.tltr, C.rol VI ltonlld
Gr11'11m, Juelv L. VI Wiiiard A. ' Slicktl, Oelcre1 vs Jahn F. Smith. J1«1ueu ... J, v1 OprMld D.
Kfll1hl, llrllY Je-VI llurl Ofan
Wen-111. Lonnlt c. "' Lind• L.
ltvan, SU!.tn VI Glor" P.
llOC1trs. Gtll VI Edw; ... A.
e'rulfl, 81r<Nrd ""· y( O..rm1i .... Tl>otN1, ll:lc:litrd LIOll VI Mtrg1rel
Ot rll!ne Obrtclll, Nencv Rlt VI Wlnl•m -·" Hartle, Mtry LM 111 ltlf!Ulr<I A.
01v11, M9rv Jo vs Grovtr LM
iv..rllltll. Sllndr• S. VI John 0
Frlu 1n, Oo<ofllY G1rniell Mtrls v1 Clllton GttOY
Mfftdc>f#, Ellle M. VI flOQtllo
CtmPbt!~ 5Nron LH \II Ct!••I•• E. C1Mv)er P"11V Ann VI Ptltr AlldttW
81rt11o....Mw, Carole Jnvtt vs David .,_
l!.l<lt:r. ltowtle Anni VI Lou ltoy
Datt. GH"911 w. "' Therew A. ~1111. StnOra A~ v1 JfffY Lee
Povi11k, 8ettv Gt•n YI 511n1W
w.iklr, Phv1t11 EY• VI WHti.m Gto<t• 5herlln, M1r11.-.1 "1 E-r R,
Mtrll'llll, Oitnl C. vi M1tch4!11 Waynt
Plrnar, Jo Anne v1 Norvtl Martin
8rown, Jean v1 Glor" R. Griff..,, ElllllO! Marlt v1 Garv Jol\n
N1 ... rr11. Sheil• N. YI O.vld
W1rbrl1tor" Mtrv Lou VI Mttlofo c .
Rull9d9f, Oorll A. 111 J-t1,
Fltmlnp, Alwl M. "' Norman l . Hw...., StnO,. Lvnn VI Pl'llHlo v~ Murr1y, Mll'l1•11e Y1 a.art Eow1rd
Roetn. Dorolllv M. VI DwltM w.
Av1rv, Marlll Lindi v1 MIP!ttl LPrlr19 Fleldw, Ml'Y Jove• '(f l l!IY MOMll:
Y1ml1r, N11W;Y L" v1 ltol1nd D.
Mnff, 11111 Schnlld VI U/ylte1, Jr.
l!Hlot, MAlY Ltt VI J-W•lf:V H1111tr. Marv Vlctwlt VI Jollri Wllll•m
Httll, Je,_ld W. VI S"91'11nyM.
MtGowtn, V!rgfnll M. VI JOltP~
• E1>11tl. 8tverlv Mt•lt VI Mld'ltel W•r·
"" Hltvln, Suitnnt 111 llobirrl Mlln!U, Ptul S•. VI Gertrude c.
Carr, Della M..,. Peltr T. Sr.
Holland, Marv L vs NllO'mln J.
Owenbv, Ctrof F. v1 Ctcll C.
HavHr. J1c11Yn Svkts Ill W1vn1
ltltl'I"'' Rouenl'll>r1t, 5hlrlev Ann II, "1 Wiiiiam '· 8evtr, Judv lvnn vi Otvld De1n Clloll. Bonnie M. YI Ollwr L.
FINAL Ol'C•IEES
Klof"""'1', J1d< W, ~Marv J-
Anckl'M!ll. C1lll0!1 Mlrlt YI Doneld "''" Ctnfllld, RGMld E. VI Kttlllf9'1 A.
Mllrkl. B•rMr1 P'IW VI Otnlotl No,
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MAGNAVOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
FACTORY DIRECT DEALER
2666 Harbor Blvd.
6855 Westminster
12116 So. lrookhunt
12191 Chapman
Costa Mesa, Calif.
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EXPERT FACTORY SERVICE
I
546-1691
894-2150
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Should lJC Flunk Students?
Mo~agan, 'If College 'lakes 'l'liem, It Should Keep Them'
Sounds ridiculous, doesn't it?
But what if everybody in this
country were to throw their
hands up.in despair and say they
don't give a hoot.
Indeed, there \vould be no
tomorrow.
But fortunately, Americans
have a way of solving their
problems.
And that's just what's going
to happen in these troubled times.
Simply because it's always been
an American tradition.
Now, how can you, as one little
ole citizen in this big, wide
country of ours, be of any
help?
Well, take a minute and
think about a U.S. Sav-
ings Bond.
That's right, a U.S.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• \Vould you believe ~
for SSS ??? Sleep for cash!
Subjecl.!! needed for UC!
sleep lab. studies thll
summer.
e It you have I.he room,
there's a l\1-0 year old
Great Dane, male lawn
color. AKC. If you haven'!
got the room, there's a
while female Poodle 8
inonths old, with papers.
e tr you have the timt,
there's a Dog grooming
shop for sale, good loea·
I.ion,
No, it isn't an immediate
remedy for all our ills. But it helps.
If everybody were to buy
just one '25.00 Savings Bond
(cost '18.75), your country would
be stronger economically to
1vipe out some of those scars
've've been sporting.
Of course, everybody would
be helping themselves, too. If you
were to sign up on a Bond purchase
plan where you work or bank,
you'd have quite a nice nest egg
for yourself one of these days.
You'd have a lot more dollars in
the kitty for things like college
educations, that new home, or
a secure retirement.
So think about a U.S.
Savings Bond today.
And then go out and
buy one.
Savings Bond.· --tt1'"7 ................ . Tomorrow. --~ ... ..,._._
Take stock in America
Buy U.S. Savings Bonds & Freedom Shares
I
•
••
[
• •
I
Rome Revolt Grows
Thursdtr, Junt 26, 1'69 DAll.Y ~ll!IT -{l. •
14 .Coast Residents Pass Bar Exam '
' . . Vatica1i Denies P ope Mig ht R esign
VATIC~N CITY (UPO -
pope Paul VI has entered the
seventh year or his pontificate
with the crisis that e1ploded
around him in the past 12
months growing deeper.
hierarchy and it appeared
perhaps more mana1eable
than it does now.
On the sixth anniversary of
his coronation last JWle, the
Po!)6 proclaimed a ettdo of
faith 101· Catholics which be
hoped would calm the storm
and which he clearly intended
as one of the major documents
of his reign.
The fundamental dispute
was and ia ovu the very
nal.Ure of the church -
whether tt should remain a
highly authoritarian institution
with an ideology stated in Ox·
ed lerma. Or whether It should
evolve btto a more democratic
instituUon in wbJch the Pope
shares authority with bishops:
and in which widely divergent
interpretations of dogma art
allowed.
Fourteen Orange Co a s t
residents ~· have !AJ~ully
paued the 1969 s:prlng ba:r ex-
aminatioo a,nd will qualify for
admJ.sslon to practice law at
ceremonies on June 27.
The ' exam Is adlnlnls1<1't4
by· th& Commllt~ ol Bir Ex·
amin::rs or the State Bar of
Calllornla and thel'I pa....i 660
caodidates statewide.
1170 Rutland Rd. Apt. 6,
Newport BlBch; Gale Patrick
lllckman, of J7t 8. Dumond
Drive, Lacuna Besch;. Merrill
Guy Hinton, Jr., 18181 Ballan-
tine Laoe, Huntington Beach
and Robert I. Kotob, UO Via
Ithaca, Newport Be.ach.
Beach: Michael T. Mitchell.
20252 Eastwood Circle, Hun·
tington Beach; ~ Bernard
Newton, 24032 La 1aermoea,
Laguna Niguel and John
William Parker, 26891 Via
V!ento, Mllaloo Viejo.
Boxley Tepp er, 17107
Roondhlll Drivt Hunllnctoo
Beacb: Fred ~. ~r.1 • 13541 Santa Andrea St., rw_n.1 4
taln Valley.and Martln ,Jame•
Wall, 2700 Peterson 1'ay.
Costa Mesa.
othen taking part in the,------~-
A year ago, he had only con-
tentious laymen and priests to
worry about. Now the rev olt in
the Roman Catholic Church
has spread decisively to the
ranks or bishops and cardinals.
and the Pope'! assessment of
the situation has become In..
creasingly g I o o m y and
pessimistic.
He has spoken in recent
months of "seU-demolltion" in
the church, " a ferment prac-
tically of schlml" and "a ctr·
lain widespread hick of trust"
in his leadership.
The Pope, elected June 21 ,
1963, is expected to return to
this theme Sunday when he
commemorate s the an·
niversary of his coronation -
a day early -with a mass in
St. Peter's Basilica.
SERIOUS DOUBTS
The events of the past year
have without doubt made Paul
the most controversial pope in
recent years. 'I1ley have ra!s-
ed serious doubb in the minds
of many Ca tholics, as he
himself said, about his ability
to lead the church through the
storm.
There have even been recur-
ring reports he may. even-
tually resign. Vatican sources
insist he would not step down
unless incapacitated by poor
health. But the reports are a
re flection of the uoea11e over
papal leadership that has
developed in a remarkably
8hort time.
A year ago d.i11sent In I.he
Catholic Church was ralher
widespread. But it had not
reached visibly into t 9 e
Iron Lung
Patient
Makes Trip
WELLS, Minn. (UPI) -
11ike Schultz hadn 't had a
vacation in JO years and he
\\'anted to get away. But he
was ~orried. . ;
Mike, 41, has lived in an Iron
Jung for the past decade, a
victim of polio. Eight 0£ those
years were spent at the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester, Minn. The
las t two have been spent htre
'"iLh his wife and four
daughters.
One day early th is month,
Don Pet5chow, a friend he met
during his days as a semipro
~aseball player, called from
Motley, Minn., 210 miles away.
"Why don't you come up
here for a vacation ?''
Petschow asked.
"I never stuck my neck out
quite that far before,'' Mike
recalls. "But I decided t just
won't hold back."
Friends and family loaded
?i1ike and his 800-pound iron
Jung into the back of a truck.
They had to turn back once
v.·hen the jostling became too
rough. But finally they made
it.
He spent nine days before
returning home. And he's glad
he went.
"We met the challenge. We
shipped it and now we 4an
look forward to other trips,"
he said.
40
STORES
TO
SERVE
YOU
But the credo - a restate-
ment of Catholic belief.a in traditional terms _ aroused a
bare ripple of interest and now
seemi largely forgotten .
There followed on July 29
the Pope's decision againsi
<.:hanging the cbureb's tradi-
l!~nal opposition to artificial
birth c ontrol. Th !s dr~i:natically brought t h e
cr1sa to a head and went far
to undermine the Pope's authority,
The clamor in the church
grew louder after that and
some national bishops' con-
ferences even i s s u e d in·
11lructlons to the faithful that
conOicled with the Pope 's
leaching on birth control.
But birth control was clearly
only one aspect of t h e
dissemion, and ·not the most
serious.
3.5 Billion
Populate Earth
UNITED NATIONS (UPI)
-The population of the world
has climed to more than 3.5
billion, U.N. statisti cs in·
dicated Sunday. Of these,
a~t 2 billion live in Asia, ex-
clusive of tht Soviet Union.
E,tensive ffgures on popula-
tion growth, production,
energy. t r ade, com-
munications, housing a n d
education throughout t b e
world were published in a
yearbook prepared by the
U.N.'s Statistical Office, They
covered a IO.year period from
1958 to 1967 and spelled out a
vast ec on om i c expansion,
spearheaded by increased in·
dustrialization in rich and poor
countries alike.
The Pope, Who In brl)(l(f
terms must be raled a
moderate, has taken s n
unswerving, con1ervative posi-
tion on these questiom.
This hu widened t h e
separaUon between him and
the liberals. The Pope decries
dissent in the c b u r c b as
harmful Ind dangerous. The
liberala call it a healthy
development that should be a
permanent feature of church
life.
In the past three months,
defections of liberal blshops
Foreigners
Need Homes
On Coast
Twenty four foreign students
at Orange Cout College will
be looking for places to live.
th.is fall which are within
walking distance of the school.
Foreign student adviser U
Kyaw Win said that the
6tudents will not have cars,
and that all will need a place
close to the school.
Students Uus fall at OCC
will come from Ghana, l-long
Kong, Japan, Iran, India,
T1bet, Australia, Singapore,
and Germany.
Win said that the students
can pay for their lodging or
arrange an exchange of work
for their room. He said be
hopes to fmd rooms for them
with persons of patience and
an interest in students.
Persons interested should
call 839-1682 and ask for Mr.
Win.
Newport Student Heads
Alumni of Cruise Ship
Cro~ the ·Pope have become
more open and dramatic. 'l'wo
in Latin America have resign·
ed and one in the United
States, Auxi.llary B I s b o p
James Patrick Shannon of
Minneapolis and St. Paul, ls
known to have submitted bis
resignation last November in
protest over the birth control
edict.
The Pope has not yet acted
on Shannon's resignation.
Cardinal Leo J. Suenens of
Belgium also made h f s
disagreement with the Pope's
views known in a recent in·
tervlew with • Fre"nc b
<;athollc publlcation.
SYNOD SET
The Pope hopes, as he in-
dicated in a speech to
cardinals • few days ago, to
calm the storm in the church
at the extraordinary synod of
bishops he has called for
October.
But many observers think
the synod will only make the
split in ·the church more
dramatic.
For one thing, the Pope said
recently he plans another
statement on birth control, tn
counsel priests who are troubl-
ed about how to present h!s
ruling to the faithful, and
there are reliable reports this
statement will be made at the
synod.
Whatever the Pope says on
thls subject seems certain to
arouse more controv:ersy.
The syood also will be a test
of the Pope's willingness to
share authority with bishops.
The VaUcan E e um e n i c cit
Council adopted a decree o(
colle.giallty, holding that the
PoJM} ,governs the church in
collSUltatiOn with bishops, and·
this wu expected to lead ta
aome sharing of auth<rity.
Butl It is already evident the
Pope and liberal bishops mean
A N. ewport Beach stud••! at tall dlfCerent things when they ... s members who have safl.. ak r " 11 · 1· Chapman Coll-e has been ed Ith th spe o co eg1a Uy," and U ... w e campus. the Pope shows unwillingness
elected president of the World Major project or l h e to give .ground at the synod
Campus Afloat Alumni Club. association is the World Cam~ this will almost certainly pro-
Scott Acevedo, a senior at pus Alfoat Alumni Fund duce further embittennent, a
Chapman, was aboard the col-which ~rovides scholarshj~ hardening of posl\)OM and
lege's shi pboard campus in the and other forms of financ1al more questioning ol the Pope-'s
fall semester of 1968. He is the aid for students in the pro-ability to lead the church
son oJ · Mr. and Mrs. Arthur ,;;;;&ram;;;;;;;;;;' ;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ithr;i;iou~g~hi;iiilli;;;icr~w~·~s.i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-, Acevedo. 2950 Carob St., 11
Eastbluff. /JfJ~lJtl A~A '/Jl~ Members of the alumni club
are persons who have attended
class aboard C h a pm a n 's
floating campus, the SS Ryn-.
dam, and are still attending
class at the school's main
campus in Orange.
In addition. two Huntington
Beach women have been
elected to the board of direc-
tors of the World Campus
Afloat Alumni Association.
Mary C. Battershill and
Chris Williams are currtntly
serving on the board. The
association is composed of aU
former students or faculty and
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DR. JEPSON ;.~',",',',':
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NfAR EOIN6Ea. -GROUND FLOOR -MODE-N
All\ CONDITIONED OFFICE
MEMBER AMERICAN ACADEMY OF DENTIST-
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Local <:andidat.es ·who passed
tnclucle: James T. C.prell; of
Also admitted to the bar
"'·ere: Edward Lopez, 8831
Cardinal Ave., F ountain
Valley; James Grab am
Merwin, 120 6th St., Seal
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"40DIL NO. 77 '5495 116. S7t,fl
OURPllCI •..•••••
#iWtl 14 Yr. Otlerllllt1
$ a·· 1.9 i
Outdoor lighting
you never thought
you could afford!
A qua lity system you ln-
slllll you rself •• , In min·
utes, with complete safety.
No permits, condUlt or cnatnr
n...,-• .• Nit plur Inf• ut. ·~ proond l2 YOU, qstem •b9ok*fJ
~. clllllt 11111 • n.. ... \lllltlli Mll M ~i.tlt WIUI I•'" -'*' •m lftMa. color ...... (•mber, aretn. clear, pink · ind
blut), WMttltrp(OOf, ~
ablt. Wn•lormw W!tl't on-off
9Wltch or 11t1to1N.1lc tlmtr, sround
1tlika end ..U bNclt-. • UM tttl•
11Ktltln1 nt11J U1htin1 from LlW•
Cllnt in doten• of w1ys th~
thl ~r for *"11b' Ind ........
Mtub'. Four MP•'*t9 .. to c~lrotn. '
' LITE WITH AUTOMATIC TIMIR
$59.95
INSTAUATION AVAILAIU
KRAZY · D,AIE 11 • • II • • STARTS TODAY THRU SAT.
WE'RE NOT REALLY CRAZY, BUT YOU WILL TH.INK WE ARE WHEN YOU COME: TO
OUR ANNUAL CRAZY DAY SALE
I'
Z30Q. ~"!':. SU'll
WILSON _,..
-JfE ~~;M"_E.a
·~ .. I
THURS •• FRI. & SAT.
KRAZY PRICES (Out of this world savings you'll never forCJet)
KRAZV COSTUMES (See our soles help decked out in zany costumes)
EVEflYTHING WILL BE KRAZY EXCEP'r OUR H.LP. . .
FAST COURTEOUS SERVICE FROM PERSONS TRAINED TO SERVE YQU BETTIR.
HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER llOo Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa , I
•• •
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I
DAILY PILOT
ANIMAlogic .........
12 Make
Viejo High
Honor Roll
Twelve honor students head
the list of 1969 graduates from
ltfi ssion Viejo High School.
The honor graduates are
Sandra Bennlttgsdorf', Debra
Brough, Maureen Carr, Roberl
Chrisly. Jo an Griesbaum.
Susan llorsefield, ltf 1 c h a e I
Koski, Judith Lewis, Howard
Mutz, ,Sally Peterson ,
Oiristopher Ricker and Susan
Rowell.
Others who graduated :
01v1e1 Ahum~. Je!lrt1< Aldforson.
a... Andert0n. Chrlst111;1 Andt<Mltl.
S!.111n AnMU, 01nny Arm1tronq,
C1roly" B•k•r, Sttve 8111 nfst1r , P1f>'!c!1 Btrber. S11s1n B1sQ11t1. 8on!lt
llttl, 81rti.r1 8t1slrv. Lindt Btl'>rtns,
Dtwld 8•-· M11lne Be•eer, 8•"Y
BtunlOn, AllM·m1rle Blndolr. J1rn1li
81•1r•. RlcMrd BOPhmtr, Thtr"" 9-Mt, Oon.ld Bor>al, Rover Boni.er.
St.-.1 1..-,,., Vlrglnl1 llo.,.d, Lindi
Br-ield, J&nel Br1dv, JI I I r y
Br•ndftlburt, 01"lcl Brown, Terry
8111'111, EMlt Burns. Mkl>ael a....-n$,
1C11t!IHl'I fhnlflic.., l rl1n C~. Glnw r
C..U, Edw1rd ClmPbell, Don CIHrllWI,
lt•""'U C1r.....,rer.
S1t>1n (•Hiio. Join C11..-,, Don,..
C11frolrr. Mlci..rl C~10;n, ( , 1 I 9 c"'''-••· ltlc~11td ci..vn. c~1fle1 Clfvern, Dl1nne Cor. $tanlew Cook Jr., Sl9vtfl Dlnlorlt!, Annerto Dav]), Drbr11
D1vb, Clvl1U111 Del Gano. Mavrllt!'n
o.....,rs, l1n1 De•tu, M1rk OOfl"" l vl1 Oomint1ut1. GwiM 011rl>!'r. Wend~
D11ric1n, Glorl1 E1nn. Donni EdOY. It-En:, Lavra Eublonk>. T~rrw
Ew1n1, l lf'd<I Ew.,.,.,, Oebf1 FIHlwlct .
-David Fllli., C11fly Fr...,. ... C~ryl
Frlke, S.......,n Fr1u~~. Ooto.aoid F"'''· T~t GardNr, Str.rtt< G1r11, D1vld
G1rr1rd, JONOthl Glbl.on. G1!r11d GIDsl,..., llulflce Gortt.tle!.
Vlrtlnl• Goni•le!, llMl1 Go.sen,
l lnd1 Gowr, Paul Gr1Mm, How1rd
Gr1v, ltO'J' Grl1-ld, Wllll1m Grou.
Ci.ti• Gunnell. s,e...,,. G111loli.on, ll"°•
Hill, Lindo Jo Hill, Rld'l1rd H1....,n,
Ju1n!11 H1rrll. Wlll11m H1rrloan Jr .• P1frkll H1r1ley, IUmbltorlv H1rl1ler.
JHnnt Hiii, Yvonnt Hlrick, Nick Hl"ttven, W11trr Hobbt, C~••ltt Hof·
lir.l1ter, Jim" Holker, Aoaennr Holtbo/", J1me1 Hootln1, Ntles HOPk.111$,
,,.,.rlon ~. llnc1 Huber, John Hvtf,
Ool!ri1 HullM•I. Leo Humtlvrr, Deni~
lf\/Qon, ~r1t1ne tt01, l1w~e
J•I-. Ptler Jf_.,.1, ll I c ~ 1 rd
Jlrnene!, MAll'llltfl Jal\rt}Oll, ...... tlvMI J~. .
01vld Jones. CN•t., Jint!n, 01vid
1Cendr1ck. J•m• Knudwn, Aogt r 1Cf'l.l9, c;,_., l1C1v1, lt.lclcY l1mbr<I,
J...,.. l1t1••• lt ktv lttt. JIC<lu.llnr
LIOfW, Dl-Lulle, C1ltly LI,..
dermlll. J9ns l lnlllrY, T1Mru1 L01ila, Ml,.,IYM l_., T...,,,..1 Luvo, Jalln
l ulkl, Mllrtfn lvltl. J1 .... 1 LUll\I, arvce lvorn1. SMll• lYncl'I, P•t•lc-
M<Carlllw, PJrvlti1 /okCoy, Ce-c,111
Md(lllf~I, Gordon M.:Marfit'I, J1me1
Mletfltld, Nlnc'I' Mltl;Qv1tri., M1c111,t
M111114!ll'r. Jllfft'ltl,.. Met'l~l. Clrvn
Met'11Sr, Sandri Mlnl>lll. F1llll M•llK·
<I, Detlr1 MICML Gill Mk:kel5011,
Si.ot-Mice, D•t11 MIKl'lel
01vid Moorm"". H111d MGr•fot>. IC!m
~. Mlll'V Mv\11!<1, M1..,,11 Muno1.
K••llfl M~n. "'111vr H111el, Theodor• HIK!•t. 11''• ... •l"ll 00.0.. S f m o n e
Ornl!l\nl, Tb,. PlllM, Joy P1I·
1'l!•IOll. JC.1y Prarto11, 01vkl P11vy.
IC I I !I It I~ Ptl'lt. WHlll,,, Pfn·
..CO, Chad Prft<O!t, Bo.llnd.t Prkt.
Con.I.,_ 11'..iler, Debrl A1ndo, Judltll
AawnUUf:ft, W""'1Y' ll11"""'"wn, SUMn ll'IY, MIU AIYM. S..ndrt Re.Kl . G1fl
ANd, Shet'rv llkhlroh, Ch•l•11>1>"" R-, Rodltl• Aozun,o, M1rg1rll1
ll:ulr, tsldro S.ncl>rl. J esus SMCh11,
l1r1!11e Sdol1.
SltWt'i Sh..iM!. WIY"f SllBlff<. Marc
Sll1w, ll1na111 5herod, Ao b ~'I• Shli6folus, Oou<;ills Silber, MlcllMI
Slmldl, Donna Sint.w1Y, GlenMVI
StnOtl, W!lt Seo~. Sn!rll!v Slelnbert .
Kerrv Sw1t11, Aon11d T1vlor. J•r Tr•·
'1'11. P1l•lcl1 Tr.om.s, St..wri Tornsl,,
LY"llt Tvla,.!an. J..r>H u...,...i,,,, 111.
T1ll1n1 Valdf'nben;•o, Cllristy W•""·
Rld,.•d W1rd. a rn w~""'' Sltv"" Wf'bb, PrfHIUa Web5!1r. C II r r •I
WelrNOt'I, S1lvi1 We>lrom. J1ne1 WllcOJ<. E1rl Wllll1rm, Robin Wllili.. ll:k~l•O
WI""' Sv--.. Wf...,,,, Cllrbll111 Wololi;L S..Pldr• Wors.h...,. DorolhY
\',r•l•hl. $1•-W•19~t, Ritl>ll"ll Wr1n,
Lina Yount.
Dead End
Dri ving
LONDON (UPI) -~lrs.
Dorothy May Smith, 38. plead-
ed guilty to drunken driv ing
f\1onday, and v.•as fined $i4
and deprived of her license
for a year. The prosecution said P.1rs. Smilh:
-Ran her car through a
\~Ire mesh fence and broke a
concrete post.
-Put the car into rcvcrSt'
and smashed into a parked
truck.
-Lurched forward and hit a
truck parked in a driveway.
-Put the car into rr\'ersc
again and hit another auto.
-Shot forward again nnd
::;truck a utility pole, then
reversed and hit one or thr
cars previously stnick and
finally came lo a sl op after
hitting the utUity polr a se-
cond time.
Mrs. Smith admitlcd shr
had consumed 31 ~ pints of
stout beCore getting behind \he
wheel.
New Saint Sc L
By Pope P a ul
VATICAN CITY (UPI! -
Roman CalhoUcs had a nc.w
saint today and Proteslant
critia: of the church 's vcoera-
tlon of saints had little hope that the practice would end in
the foreseeable future.
Pope Paul VI proclaimed
F'rench·born nun Julie Billlarl
a aaint Sunday
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13 Honor S~1:1dents Head Mesa High Grad List(
SALE STARTS THIS FRIDAY, JUNE 27th!
THOUSANDS OF PAIRS OF FAMOUS BRANDS ••• REDUCED
All year long S & A: sells v:~ensive shoe~ at disco.unt prices. Twice each yea r thousands of these same shoes are 5 I % 8 I %
offered at fantastic reductions ••• unlike anything you've ever seen! Choose from a huge collection of famous 0 O
brands you'll Instantly recognize .•. names we can't advertise. Women's sizes up to Jl, but not all sizes in all
styles. Every pair i~ of finest quality, in the latest styles and col01s. Come early for best selection! AH sales flna l TO
on sale merchandise. e
t'!'~!':.Jt .. ~.'!!'...'1?U .,•. -· .~ ... 'd .•.. a.~~:IA&Ztt'SN'FfliJV;pA.'R"'~t' MZ"~ .... .::: ....... :: ....... .::!~:crt";;f!4;l,i ~:.'s~::tn;::T!M~2:-..:·~~-.~"'.'..:'.'.:I
NOW ONLY
,
,
values to
~29.99!
$ • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • •••
NOW ONLY
$ • •
values to
$16.99!
••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• • ••
values to$19.99!
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • REDUCED~:803 ~ • •
DOORS OPEN • •
10:00 AM • •
FRIDAY • •
JU.NE 27th • • • • • •
REDUCED~~80%
VALUES TO $30.00
Casuals and dress shoes
including Italian imports.
Sizes 6 to 14, AA to EE,
but not in all styles.
FOR THE
BIG MAN .••
SIZES 13 AND 14
AVAILABLE I
~MEN'S WELLCO
ti OAFER CASUALS
$10 VALUE Comfort and
style plus! Hopsack upper with
suede vamp. In light t3n, white,
beige, green and brown.
Rubber sole. NOW ONLY
$
$3
333 E. 17th Street, Costa Mesa 1464 S. Main Street, Orange
11 SIA SlllJe s~ 'fl>-~ r: •LOS ANGELES •BEVERLY HILLS
•SHERMAN OAKS
•SANTA MONICA •NORTH HOLLYWOOD
•ORANGE •VENTURA
•WESTCHESTER
•CANOGA PARK •COSTA MESA
I
--''---------------------------------------------------------------
Nancy Rea,gan's R.e·f lec.tions
• D•IL 'r PILOT '°"""' lly L• r11M I
ThlH"IMl•Y· Ji.; u. 1fft 1 ,..,. tt
'Dolly' Leads
by JEAN COX
M *9 De1tJ Pllef llllf
"It beats being ui Berkeley," Nancy Rea-
gan commented as she viewed the 400 friend·
Jy faces which greeted. her at a luncheon for
Orange Coast YMCA Monday afternoon.
Prior to the luncheon , California's ele-
gant First Lady said during an interview in
the Barry Goldwater's Balboa Bay Club
apartment that it was a name mixup which
brought her and her husband together.
Mervyn Leroy, she said, played a strong
.supporting role in the roman~c story.
After New York , where she appeared in
the stage play, "Lute Song,0 with Yul Bryn-
ner and Mary Martin, she came to Hollywood
and acted in motion pictures for a year-and-
a-half, although she Insists she ne ver was a
dedicated actress.
"Mervyn and Kitty (Mrs. Leroy ) are
very old friends of my family. Kitty's from
Chicago, too," Mrs. Reagan, step-daughter
of a prominent neurosurgeon, began her
story.
It was while Nancy-was acting in one of
Auxiliary Casts
All-star Company
Stepping into the s.tarring role as president of the Orange County
Medical Auxiliary is a new "Dolly"; Mrs. Laurance A. (Dolly) Mosier of
Anaheim, who was installed during a matinee performance in the Balboa
Yacht Club.
Also acclaimed during the luncheon were members of the supporting
cast incl\lding the Mmes. Philip Winsor, Newport Beach, president-elect;
David MacLachlan, Santa Ana, and Arthur Ho\vani, Tustin, vice presi·
denlsi Warren Kramer, Laguna Beach. recording secretary, and Donald
Edwards, Fullerton, corresponding secretary.
Others receiving: applause from the members and guests in the audi-
ence were the Mmes. John Knauer, Tustin, treasurer, and Frank Kendrick,
Newport Beach; John Evans, Orange; Lewis Ellmore, Santa Ana, and
Dale &ewart, Fullerton, directors.
A thought-provoking portion of the performance was a discussiOfl of
Cam~us Unrest delivered by guest star, Dr. William Teague, vice president
of Pepperdine CollegP..
As an added specialty, fashions from countywide shops 'vere shown
and Mrs. Florence Smales senoed as commehtator: ·
Mrs. Mo sier, while still an· ingenue, contributed a great deal of time
and ~ent to many outstanding performances of the auxiliary during the
past year.
Together with retiring president 11'rs. Kendrick, she recalled
as one of the accomplishments, the first annual Oran·ge County Health
Fair which attracted l0,000 participants last April. It was produced and
directed by Mrs. Loren Jieather and \Valter Yury, and drew visitors from
Ventura to San Diego.
Another successful venture was the Orientally staged bridge benefit
and the medJc31Iy designed Christmas cards which helped to raise $12,000
for UCI's Medical &hooL
Nursing scholarships amountin,g to $5000 were raised during the an·
nual White Cap fashion show and will be awarded to Orange County stu-
dents.
Leroy's movies (I can't remember the name
of it. Shows bow Jmportant it all was to me," ·
she interjected) that she began receiving
mail obviously meant for another Nancy Da-
vis.
You wouldn't believe bo\v many Nancy
Davis' .there are in this world," she explain·
ed with good humor. "Believe me, there are
millions. I found that out during the cam-
paign."
The mail, which offered information
about upcoming Communist meetings, was
unwanted by Nancy, and she complained to
Leroy.
.
"! know Ronald Reagan · (at that time
head of Screen Acior's Guild). He Can
s traighten this out," Leroy assured her.
"I thought it was just a dandy idea," Nan·
cy laughed. "I didn't know Ronald, but I bad
seen bi$ pictures and thought he was V.ERY
attractive. Well I waited a few days, and
never heard anytlling, so I went back to Mer-
vyn and asked what had happened.''
Soon after, Ropald Reagan called Mi ss
Davis and suggested they consider her prob-
lem over dinner.
11He sBljl it would have to be an early
dlnner because be had an early morning calt.
You see, ht. was. protecting himseli. He had
never seen me,''. sht; explained.
"\Yell ,'' she contlflued her story, .,I said
I have an early .morning call too , so an early
dinner would be just fine. After all , I had
my pride too .".
Atter diriner the' actor asked her if she
would like to go "to Ciro's and see Sophie
Tucker for the first ~how. Nancy, who had
never seen SoPrue Tucker, said that would
be fine.
"After the first sho\v,, he said, 'Well,
since you've· ·never seen Sophie Tucker be·
fore, how about staying ior the second show.'
l said, 'Fine, since I've never seen Sophie
Tucker before, l might as well stay for the
second show:
(See MRS. REAGAN , Page 16) '.
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The· mot.her of three daughters, 17, 15 and 12. and a 9-year-old son .
11rs. Mosier also has been cast as chairman for GEMS, a child care and
Safety training program for junior high school students ; recording secre-
tary, i8nd director and health careers chairman.
UNDERSTUDY GROOMED -New officers of ll)e Orange County
Medical Auxiliary were in the spotlight when the group gathered
for a luncheon and installation in the Balboa Yacht Club. Renected
in the mirror, Mrs. Warre~n Kfamer. Laguna Beach (leit). and
Mrs. Laurance A. Mosier, president (right) prepare Mrs. Philip
Winsor,~presidenklect, for b~r .starring role next year. ' I ,
She'd ·Rather Embrace Husband Than Advi ·C:e From Friends
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My divorce
will be final in ~ days. Please print this
leUer and address It to Every Friend and
Relative ef a Soon-to-be-divorced
Woman:
Dear Ones: Please leave me alone. If I
decide to, go back to my husband, keep
your nostS out o( It. We were married for
three years anCI he behaved like a spoiled
brat from the first day, But somethlng
mlracabu 'has hap~ned since I filed for
divorce.. He h• ~finally aeaded to grow
up anl ,ecctJlt m:ponsibUity .. When we
met lt ~k" .,.-the fihandaJ. details he
was considtiri.le, agree.able and yes, even
gracious. t lmow I "111 care ·about him. I
do w1ril to belff:ve he me~ It when ho
11)'1 be has le&med • !ot these past
• •
ANN LANDERS ~
answer ls no. You'd be surprised at the
number or hard-of-hearing people who
could benefjt from a hearing aid but -n:rn. tcr try one. I know because I use
two hearinc aids, one In each ear. I
wouldn't be able to understand 98 percent
of what is going on without them.
several months. So please, 1top telling
me he will never change and if I lake
him back I am cra:ry. U I'm wtUlng to
swallOw my pride and &I\te hll'h another
chance· yoo should help me ·by k'"pllll
your moulhs shut. Thank you very mid\.
-SUFFERED PLENTY
DEAR PL!NTV: W•lcome to tlie dsb.
AltOdlu 11-., •bo ru &o. a dlvwee
llwyer ud tiled wlttl a trtal 1epar1Uol
would II.ave bttl tbe better move.
Never mind 1boat family ud frind1
hi Lbe peuat 1.ikry. If you feel tbere'a a
ebact tht ,.U. aanilp en be aavtd,
lfVe Illa die cUoco .. ub It< •. A
dlv0tte Y• cu ahrlys cet. "
DEAR ANN LANDERS : H1rt'1 a rtply
to the woman who pleoded '"' ..,. derslllndlog bocaU1e llho l• putlolly a.ar:
Does &be use a bearing aid! ru bet the •
The woman listed six helpful hints for
people who must live with someone who
is partially dear. Now may I llst a few
hints for .HER!, , .
I. Go to a !lp<dalisl U )'<JU have nol
already done '°' ao1 a place lh1t Ola aids b1Jt a plly1iclan who will tcll you
IOl'ntthlng about your handicap. ·
2, II lh!o .Jpadalltt "YI ·• hearilltl-•ld
might lielp you, ron, don't walk, lo' lht
nearest hearing center. (Your doctoc can
' .
direct you.)
Bear In mind that each hearing lou Is
different Some aids wort better for cer-
tain hearing problems than olhers.
Remember that any help you get is bet·
ter than no help.
3. Don't npect your hearing to Improve
the rint minute you put on lht. aid i Il
lakes lime to ~me accustomed to il.
4. Take llp rudlng leuons. tr your pro-
blem ii • aerve deafnaa, UU. mine, you'll ·hive. one heck of a tlme
dl111Ntu11btq, between consonanll lll1d
voweli. up reacUng can be • tremendoul
l\elp. ' '. •, >,
, ti. Ch~np your alllluile. Get rlJI of the
oe1f.pl!y. 11 yiu think of. yourMlf ., "out ot It," to will ev"!ryone else. Look '1t it
this way : There's a whole new world out
there, but you must have the courqe to
try to be part o( il. What are you waiUng
for! -L.S.
DEAR L.S.: Bravo. Yoo've-ma&le
)'taneU lleard. Tbad1 for 1pe1kil1 •l.
How far should a teenage couple &O'! can necking be sa!ef When doe1 It
l>ec:orne too bot to handle! Send for Aila
Landen' booklet. "Neckinf and P.ttmr
What are the Limlt.sT" Mail your request tO AM Landers In care of this newspaper
enclosing 50 cenls in win and a looc,
st.amped, self-addressed envelope.
<Arin Landen wtll be glad to help you
with your problems. Stnd tbtrii to hit In
car< of the DAILY PlLO'l'. eoclOllllC a
sclf,.ddrtssed. stamped e, """"'·
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JI OAllY PILOT
Sew Them Yourself
Old ~took, New Mood
STAR OF SHOW -What could be m0re sensational
for the 1.ate, late show than a Harlow-inspired satin
dress that literally is "poured over the fig1,1.re"? The
low-luster acetate' satin which forms the dress is
.available at all Singer Centers and the gown can be
made for Jess than $15, using Simplicity pattern
7951.
Midriff
\ Newest way to get the ohs
and ahs this season ls to loot
as though one bad just stepped
out of • late, late TV film
circa the Jean Harlow, Carole
Lombard era.
Those old enough t o
remember the real tile 30s
grow nostaJ~c over the days
when "women were women
and were proud to show it."
Even the young have ~n
. captivated by the appe~l of
the 30s they see on the late,
late shows,
So lt's welcome back. to the .
allm, the slinky foiclnilloo
Qf fasbioit.s cut to do things'.for
the unlettered figure rather
than to hide it as has been the
way of the last several
seasons.
Women who sew their own
pretties are rushing to their
machines to turn out the new
old slinky Hark>w fashions for
a modicum of what they cost
,in the "in" shops. Fabrics with
slither are the basis · or the~
shaping that points up the real
female under the dress; like
fiuld crepes and liquid satins.
This fluidity or rabric plus
the embel.lisllmenli, beloved itt
the 30s; miles of maribou,
tons or glittering pailletfes add
up to the new evening mood.·
Sewing experts have a few
words of advice for the woman
who makes her own and wants
to stitch up circa 30s evening
fashions herself. Satin should
be handled like a one-way or
napped fabric since it is woven
wi th a sheen that could show a
difference in shading when
fabric is used in opposite
directions, they point out.
To avoid marking fabric pin
only within seam allowances.
Hold fabric taut when sewing
satin or crepe tc> keep both
thicknesses feeding through
machine at the same rate. To
prevent satin seams from
cu rling overcas~ seams with
silk tiu"ead.
. ...... ~ ......... . .-~ . . . . . .
NEW OLD LOOK -Called hoStess pajamas in the
30s; these exciting fashioos still are making the
scene tor the late, late shO\v and spectacular at·
home entertaining. For the 4aring partygoer or
hostess, tlris slither of black crepe that pours down
the body to wide legged pants, embellished with
wide sequin-by-the-yard banding on a stretchable
backing that makes it easy to shape and curve in
sewing, is a wise fashion investment. This exciting
new old look can be crealed for less than $25.
7381 Skq.per.,dt1
Newest fashion, quick and
easy bare-midriff dre ss .
• Paint design (washable)
with felt·tipped markers. Two-
, piece dress takes only 2~ yds.
35" fabric. Pat. 7381 : sizes 10-
16 incl., transfers one about J
x 41;, five 2 x J, five 6 x 6'h",
FIITY CENTS (coins) for
each pattern-add 15 cents for
each pattern for first-class
mailing aad special handling;
otherwise third-class delivery
will take three.weeks or more.
Send to AUce Brooks, the DAI·
'LY PILOT, 105, Needlecraft
Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea
'Station, New York, N.Y. 10011.
' Print Name, Addre1s, ZJj,,
Pattern Number, Giant. new
lNt Needlec:rafl Catalog -
over 200 designs to choose, 3
free pHltcrns printed inside.
Send 50 cents now .
NE\Y! ··~ INSTANT
Glf'TS -fabulous fashions.
toys. decorator accessories.
Make it today, give it tomor-
row! Ideal for all occasions. 50
cents .
.. I, Jiffy Rugs'' lo knit.
crochet weave, sew, hook. 50
ce!lls
Book of It Pritt Afghans. SO
ceals.
Bargain! Quill Book 1 has 16
bHuUCul pat.terns. SO ctnts
'M-QuUI Book Z -pat-terns for 11 superb quilts. SO
cenls Book 3. "~Ult for Today·1
Uring . ., JS patterns. $0 cents.
'
WE FLATTER YOUR
COLORFUL SIDE
We sh1pe your
h air iu the new1
•oft -curl look.'
We color your hair
witlt Fan ci·tone
for beauty and
lustre. We color·
siyle /or your
1n.011 /14lleri ng
look. For Fanci-
tone: covers all
the gray, high.
lights natural
color, makes e\·cn
dull hair look
\•ibrant and
healthy. Special
colors to tone
bleached hair, too-
.or to give your h air an
u lll'a-higb-fashion hue..,
Come oee th em!,'
•
CREAM HAIR TINT,
SHAMPOO AND SET
$6.45
Anytime -~'lost CaSC's
N-rt 1-h, C11il. Cool• Mau, Cali f. JIU ,...,...., •Mf,
M•l'kfl ..... '-t1
~-" ... ",.
111 E. \11to Sir_.
Mayttlr Gt/llw --
Beauty Salons
Cotti Me111 C1llf.
7* H•rtior •l"lf, «<M•rt 1"1111
ftlleM '4&--#ll
__ ,...,... ... ~ .....
l ,,,
Costa MIN, C11if.
1" *· ""' '"'"' l"1tc .. fY a. "111
ft!IGM t4.nH
Artoola, C11il.
lUll "'"'*" 'Ato't.-1 l11M! Qo!tfl'
Orangt, Calif.
l»t W, CM"*° view,_
,.,,.,,. "1·lt4
F011nl1ln V1llay, Calif. ,,.,,, "'"'"" .. S1nt1 Ana, C1llf.
Mf.ll'Hdtt1 .. Jtlnllf,..
"'''"' (Mtfl'
Fou ntain Valley, Callf.
$0'1 l"dl""' fl I WHlf "'''~ C'lfo!W --· \llli.,. c.nw --· ""-$4)>10 l"t!eol• Dl•1Nt
. '. .
·1 ~ I
1 .J .,,
~· i 1 ' •; • u
,; ~ t. c
Birthday Celebrated
A birthday cake and cham.·
pagne punch were in order
when the Huntington Beacb-
Fountaln VaJley DemocraUc
Club celebrated ils first yesr
of activities.
New officers who were
elected to serve during the
coming year include t h e
Mmes. Ronsld Tepper, pres:J·
dent ; Fred Voss, vice presl·
dent; Carl Damron, general
secretary ; Grover Bl a Ir,
treasurer; John Berry, com-
munications secretary and
fund·ralsing c h a i r m a n ;
Edward Weber, public rel a·
tions, and Donald Eggleston,
refreshments.
The club will meet at I p.m.
lhe~irst Tuesday of each
rn lo~ _HJiJ>~ Ha hOme ol Mn;-'!!:i·
gl" and th< public I.I jn·
vlt to attend.
Pl m now are belna·
fomtulated for a \fall •fUndin&
eveni whlcli. will future the
attendance of important peo-
ple lit the Democratic party.
Today's Final
Stocks Today
SPORTSWEAR·
fefli ng ..• soon your
romonfic dreams will
be plans for o brighl
future. The marquise
diamond is o perfect
way lo reflect
special love.
weisfi.elds
JEW£.LERS
1/3 OFF
CELEBRATING THE
4th WITH A BIG
SPORTSWEAR
SHIFTS-CA PRIS
BLOUSES .
PANT DRESSES
:REDIT CARDS WELCOME
3424 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH
673 -1970
Where Pride of Possenion ls Porl of Your PurFhose
SOUTH COAST PLAZA Costa Mesa 540-7187
--
-----~
'
Chapel Rites
Rosas Tell
RACHEAL ROSAS
Future Bride
Betrothal
Announced
Approximately 50 relatives
and fr lends gathered for a buf.
fet in the Balboa l!land home
of Mr. and Mrs. Gregor Seton
to hear them announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Hetty Seton to John-Anthony
Robinson.
Flying from England to at-
tend the party were the future
bridegroom's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. L. C. Robinson of Leigh-
fln-Sea, Essex.
The bride -elect was
graduated from Corona del
Mar High School and has at-•
tended Orange Coast College.
Her fiance, a graduate of
Belfa.irs High School in Essex,
now is studying pelroleum
technology al Orange Coast
College.
The wedding date has not
yet been planned .
"
DAllY PILOT J&
Horoscope
Betrothal
_jVeddlng bella..J!'!!!JjOi .OC!-
4 for Racheal Rmas and
Howard A. Kay Jr.
_ Capri(:_o_rn: __ Be.~ Straightforward a~d Fr~nk .
FRIDAY Persons who pre v lo us I y want recognition so today take know. obscurfid b'tcomes obvloos. adv an ce ment 1n M .
Their betrothal was an-
nounced by Mr. and Mrs.
Henry C. Ro.sas of Qosta
Mesa, parents of the bride.lo-
be, during a party in their
JUNE 27 • agreed now make point of mp1 to 1nJure It. Don't hold SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 'Ill ' Don't play iames. B< frank. organization. You have choice
being stubborn. Your best bet back. Give your all Put You may feel you must have ! Xeeptn1 ~ slmply ia not of moving ahead or 1tandlnr
81 SYDNEY OMAIUl is display of combined humor tinlshlng touches on special what 1you want -hn-p r 1 ct' I t 1 l ( o'd • y • Be ba~ Time to tab tnlUaUv~
and •conllderice. A friend may pmject. medlalely. But unless You take alralgbtlorwllt<I. Tben y o'u E~ air of,conflden<e.
home. '
Among the gue$ls at the fete
were Mr. and Mrs. Howard A.
Kay of C'.osta Mesa, parents of
the benedict~lect.
Miss ~ Was graduated
from Estancia High School,
where she was active in GAA,
and her fiance is an alumnus
of Costa Mesa High School.
Both are continuing their
education at Orange Cout
College.
The nuptial vows will be
recited in the chapel of St.
Andrew 's Presbyterian
Church, Newport Beach.
HETTY SETON
Brid ... elect
SAVE
UP TO
25%
ARIES (M!rch lt·Aprll 19)'
You are ·resUess. But don't
make ~ without first
cbecklnr directions. Belng in
too much of a hurry today is
costly. A call or message con-
lains pertinent Wormation.
TAURUS (Aprll IO-May IO)'
What you have been aaving for
surprise can now be revealed
-coold mean ex:tra money.
Mate, partner exp~ some
concern. Strive for family
harmony. But don't give up
dream.
GEMINI (May 21"'1une 20):
Be ready for opp 01 (ii on .
Colors Can
Cc;imoµflage
The uses and effects of col·
ors are virtually unlimited, ac-
cording to the National Paint, • v,afnish and Lacquer Associa·
Uon.
The right colors can make a
~II room seem larger,
brtgh't.en a dark a r e a ,
1 camouflage unatlracUve con·
tours. visually raise or lower
ceilings. provide a desired
.mood aod accomplish scores
of other visual magic tricks.
When choosing a color from
a square Inch paint chiP,,
remember that the color will
appear more intense when a~
plied to a large wall area.
A small room can be made
to look larger if you use light
tints of such "going away"
• colors as blue and green. It
will help, too. if you paint the
woodwork and walls the same
color lo avoid a cluttered up
effect.
ON THE
VANITY FAIR
COLOR SWING •
PANTY llllf, .... $7.0I
NOW $4.9!i
SHOIT LIQ. PANTIE, S, M, t.. .... St.M
NOW $6.95
"JULIET' TllCOT ...... "· I, c curs Ill. SI.ff
NOW $4.9S
D CUP It•. S7.f0
NOW $S.95
"YAJfTAmC" ........ 'curs llG. II
D cur. "·" NOW $4.95
Veta's
l'llTlllATI APPAIEL
Phone: 642·1197
be ln pugnacious mood. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. D): time you buy pig in poke. gain. ' 18 O UR
CANCER (June Jl.July 21): Domtlltlc decisions surge to Means be paUent where ex-AQUARIUS (Jan. ».Feb. 811i.,rJ:i~1~ attr.J" ~le
You bave mlde .. some health forefront. You have to take penditures are concerned. 18): FrfeDda , are lf'IUIDtB-with· their problems. You hiyt
resolutions. Today you are pul action connected with sptn· SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22-tative. Your role should be a knack Qt aiding those' in ~lfi.
to test. You either keep them din.R habits Of mate, partner. Dec. 21 ): Avoid excess speed. lhat of dlplomal. Don't com· ficulty. CUrienUy, it ia essen-
or act in foolish manner. It · Li.BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Obtain hint from Scorpio uound errors. 'l'b<We who tial for you to ·clW up put
you are intelligent, thia can be Slow1pace. If in loo much of a message. Argument likely U battle today .oould be allies debts, obligations.. ··•
a day when real progress • hurry you by·pus destination. yoo ask for it. Means self~· tomorrow. Refuse to be caujbt
results. One • who plSel as knowing trol is essenUal. Doo't be slave in the middle. ..I:'o.:!:. O::.~d=~ t:;;:."f'3
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): much ls actually confu.sed. to emotiOM. P~ (Feb. tt-March 20): :"""'°'~,::i' J f.1'!!tl'": °'"'"'
Necessary to flnd outlet for · Hold oft on signint contract, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. Accent on progress in pro-..,. .. ,, "" '!r''il'.tt!,LO' . ...,../:...,
basic creative urges. You agreemenL Then more to It): Whit might have been fesalonal area. A1ao good fur ~~~1~';':'" • """" .__ortw
BUY 2 • • • GET 1 F.REE! ~~t.rr~
BUY ANY JWo ·
OUR NURSERY co~F.
ni-ands
DfTap 9uallty
Plcmts ta
Chaose
Azaleas,
Shade Trees
Camellias,
Avocadas,
GIANT
SUMMER
CLEARANCE
SALE
T AINER PLANTS •
GAL -I·
• • • 5 GAL 15 GAL • ' • ANO GET THE 3rd ONE FREE
SPE:C'J'ACIJLAa
SAVINGS!
' .
Vines,
Junipers,
Palms,R-.
Citnas
Buy 2-Get 1 FREE
MAKE THE BACKYARD PRODUCE
PEACHES-APRICOTS-FIGS-APPLES
HANGING
BASKETS
FULL 14 lnc:h
SIZE!
B•st R•dwood -Strong metel bends.
Perfect for Ferns, B19oni11, Fu1chl11, ....
FREE
PINE
TRIES
All '''"'' • 1.,, •• 1'1.C1i11fll,
1111111. 6 r11tly '"h111••• th•
b-111ty •f the 911rd111. REG,
1.65 119
.LAlM 3 c~:r· 1 ••
TreeR-.
Fem
Limited
to Stock
on Hand
NATURE
INA.
SACK
Feeds blade
lawns with
nature's rich
balance of
fertilizers
cind minerals.
Makes dichondra
50 lbs. FEEDS 0 healthy.
2,500 sq. ft. lush carpet
5 95 ~~;:;
• soil pests, too.
BANDIN! IS THE WORD FOR FERTILIZER.
FLOWER ·sHOP
SPECIAL!
BEDDING PLANT SPECIAL
CARNATIONS
FllSHLT CUT
ALL COLORS
GIANT FLOWERING
ZINNIAS
~:~· 3 DOL 119 DOZ:
HOURS: MON. THRU SAT. 9 AM. TO 6 P.M, SUNDAYS 10 A.M. TO S P.M.
.._
I
2641 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
CALL 546-5525
,. '
-----------------------------------~-----------~----------~--'
\1
, I
I
I
. JI ~v l'flOT Tburmy, Junt 16, 1969
-,.1.
I ......... . .
Yosemite Wedding Trip
Follows Chapel Rites
From Page 13
"We got hornt at J or J thal
night, 11 Mn. Reagan coocluct.
ed her story.
,,
•
Hooe~ In Yooemlte
Joo, btfont mUln& lhelr bomo In
... " C.ta MIN are the former
1 1 •. , Jenice Patricia Edwards and
~11 · J&m11 Dari& Keeler, son or
IJ · "Ir· and Mn. James M.
·"·;' X..lor al Colla M ....
I f... WbUe swnmer flower ar· ,,,,;! J1Dll"V'.Oll and two splral
, .. ·~· ct:Ddtiibra decorated Calvary
,:o~ ~1 for the afternoon dou·
·1 • • b1e rinJr ceremony performed
by the Rev. Charles Smith.
The bride, daughter of
lllrold Bernard Edwards 0£
Brlctreton, 1.talne, and Mrs.
J immy L. Huffine o[ Costa
Meu was escorted on I.he arm
of her stepfather.
She wore a Oopr leDlth
ann of -orpnra With remonble chapel train ouUtn.
eel In ""lloped bonlonne lace.
SecNIDed'hice and aeed pearls
trimmed the bodice which
f~ 1 sca£1nped yoke and
. , •• l!>IC ~"· Tur drop pearls ; upped !Ace petela.whkh Jorm·
ed around rosea o£ dlanUlly
lace to crown he( _ short
orpnza vell . Sbe carried a
Du&tb colonlal bouquet of
yellow ,_,, d19°rted wblte
chryaantbemums -and daisies.
Wearlnol full IOMlh empire
gowrp of lime green linen with lbo:rt" 11eeves and venile lace
trim were bridal attendants
fDC]ncllng Mn: Clark Darnall,
matron of ~. who came
from Seattle. 'Miss Anita RlibeW o£ ·Newport Beach
joined her as maid of honor,
while the brldOfroom's slater,
SUun Keeler, was brldmnald.
Dressed .ln similar gowns
trimmed with lime green
.. 1..i ribbon were jqnlor
hrldesmalds, Robin a n d
'·, .J>hiillls HuUloe, the bride's
·~~mtm: ·:;?' Jam;. HUla of Costa Mesa
\. wu beal mn. Ushers tn-
; cJl!dod Wllllam Barr, Ronald i~ stdwell, Scott Keeler, the
·,, ~ bridefa"oom'• brother, and ~{ -"• Charles Huffine, brother of the
",. • bride, all of Costa Mea.
~ Approiimate11 200 guuts
• ·~,::· DA's Talk
For Dinner
" ; ~ Headlined
' l ceclJ Hicks, diJlrlct attorney · t .. 11 <nn&• County, will be lhe
, • ;festured speaker when Orange
Leg a I Secretaries
r n gathers on Thurs-
. ; .,. da.Y. uly 3, In Jacques
, ·Triqle European mlaurant,
Garden Grove.
Did the dinner stop the
unwanted mall? "Most ctr·
tain!y," said Nancy. "Ronald
says he solved my prnblem by
changing my name."
Speaking of her cooceptlon
of callfomia's executive
mansion, Mn. Re6J.an aald
she would.like to see 1t done In
the biJtorical tradiUon o£ the
5tate.
"Although I think we ollould
have a new one, J'm kind of
glad they didn't go thn>ugh
with It in the previous ad·
mi.nisll'ation, because they had
plans for a very modem
bulldlng. I think we lbould
have ..,. In Spanlah lly!e
that abowa tbe tnnuence of our
state,•• abe remarked.
Mrs. Reagan al&o spoke of
her husband'a switch of party
affiliation which she saw u a
"very gradual thinf."
"I was very polllically naive
In those days, wblch is nothing
at all to be prood of. However,
sometimes I read that I was
responsible for hls change.
and nothing can be further
from the trolh."
Reflect.lng, Mrs. Reagan ad·
ded thoughtfully, "Most people
who have changed from
Democratic to Republican, do
so very gradually. It's really a
very emotional ei:pe.rience.
You keep feeling you can
J change tbe party from within
MRS. JAMES DAVIS KE ELER
June Bride
attended a reception In the
home of the bridegroom's
parents, where floral decora·
tions and candles carried out
the yellpw and lime green
:wedding theme. The
bridegroom's aunts, the
Mmes. Robert Pea r so l ,
George Barnell and Robert
Roubian assisted in serving,
joined by his, t:ousln, Miss
Joan Pearse!.
Special guests were the
bridegroom's grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Keeler of
Corona del Mar, h I s
grandmother, Mrs. ll e I en
Oavis of Costa ~tesa, and his
uncle, Harry Davis and family
who came £r9m Sunnyvale.
Special guests of the bride
were her feater parent!, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert P. Johnson.
The bride was graduated
from Cost.a Mesa High School
and Orange CoaJ51 College. Her
new husblnd ls a IP'aduate of
Newport Harbor lDRh School,
Orange Coast and San Diego
State ·colleges •
the party. I think In his cue it
was a gradual awareness lhat
the party then was not the
party he joined as a young
man."
Mrs. Reagan , who says quite
firmly, "I'm not a speaker"
makes personal appearances
every day and follows a busy
schedule which covers one
whole wall of her room.
Wearing a navy woo 1
sleeveless dress wllh a
matching blue wool coat, she
spoke briefly and easily to
those gathered for the Jun·
cheon which kicked on a
Young Americans for Decency
and Order program which will
culminate with a big dinner in
The Tee Tattler Toastmistresses Called
Mrs. Barbara Whitmore will
fEdl!W'1 Noi.: A c.a1um11 o1 ,,_n·• T1pp1,.., 0.1 Htmrr. JDlln o rt11. 1,,.... pre,ide over a San Clemente i.e. 111111 llCOf .. Wiii •ppe1r •6'1l "'"'k c.Ol'ld low n111 SfCOlld 1"1!911!, tl'lc Mmtt. In Ille DAILY PILOT. To ,_, l{Ol'el' Toastmistress Club meeting tor tht ....ic. Pll•M mill """' to P. o . K1y, f7, 11•11 low 9'0AI w1111...,
80ll •5'0. TMv m""r t1e rKalv.i bv Stoeull•, n. 11rst 1ow net: EJ'nt$t c;111, hosted by Atrs. Burke Cochran
Mond•V.J 7f, i.econd 1!1W ntt1 Tlllrd "ll&flt, ltlfl d ,._ Ch I It B · HUNTINGTON •IACH Mm••· Robin-. 105, low t rms: an llU:O. ar 0 e urgess In
TIN WHISTLI -ci.M A. JM Mmes. Wlltltm Frlcll. 75. fl,..t tow ntt; Krn S Cl le Munlcl I G " 1100 v1nde<11r.c1'"' 421 Marr M• ... 3'; M•nlrf, ,., ltOOl'ld low"''· an emen pa o"
Mert1 Moor•, Norm RJq:, loli c11u 11, 11viN• '°"'I Club at 9 a.m. Monday, July 7. ,.,.,.. Stu•rt Dvdlw. Mll1 J'""I'-" TIM WHIJfLI -CIR$ • IM Mmf1 Ttiompson. 'I' ttw Mm'tk. H•lln fill!!' H11i.11,_,.1 w1llctr sm1111, Rotoeri Others participating will in· ~bl.ltt, J. · K1118• Bob K.lflii.. jfi:;:·w~lt. =~· ,,~'ci~• ~: elude the Mmes. Harold Ma rk-
iasT "i\,i' -c 1111 A, 1111 MmM, 1111 Mmn. How1n1 C•rMJ11, »1 Ed..,ard ham, lexicol...av,· I d a May Rte.. :!'2 1 Bud ~lmllltr, VIII· M011m, :YJ H•nfl' JMntan, ~' E D!tlt; -e~ derlindtn:"lj i Allc.e AkHn, lS\lii c 1en lladh1m. NtWill F•lt, :t11 MIH cOrrlne Shomaker, exercise on educa• B,,tfle 9. lrtNt Terry, S'l LIOyd F r1n~Hn. l.51 CllM C, IM M .... 1.
Joh.._. ~ ... VIJIOI! MY'°" ~1rc1, ,., Roni Id w1,,. lion ; Edward H. A r d,
stallation meeting for Counc il
5 Toastmlatresses in the
Escondido Country Club 10
a.m. July 12.
Mn. Harold Markham will
be chairman of Golden Desert
Region Council l, and Mn.
Harry Shafts and Mrs. Gordon
Fleener are appoin t e d
chairmen from tbe S a JI
Clen:ie.nte group. Hicks also has ·Mhed as
ddef deputy dlstrld attorney
before asawnlng his present
post in 1966. He is a member
of the task force oo orpni.zed
crime of the California Council
M Criminal Justice alkl of the
Joint Legislative Committee
1 v 1M H<H. s _ ciiu .1., ,11, Mmr•. '"burn. P•ul 11:vc11o1r, U ; John POY••· toastmistress, and G. L.
J c.oo·-·· ''' E t 3'1 Cl .... O. tti. ~ .... o. 51\ltklll. 31~· L..l;;_-IJ~/,~~1 •;, "11:~~1 ~~so'ri. ii: o'"'' ~31 Tho..ies MM-Johnson, Charles Swain and Mrs. Jayce es
Kltdtf. "' Mlcfu>l·r. 11. »• 111"""' M•uAL '"LAY -c1.,. 1.,"" ""-··· Gordon Fleener, s~hes. ~fllOl\o Mil', _£~1U • !flt Mmn. G1111n11 6t G Llfu '"""" r-~~ ~'.~~"otr:/ e!!n ~';j·FJtr.=.. o~-Y: 11: ~D•N·/'L1;:1 rli Also taking part will be the Huntington Beach Mra .
..
_ for Revision of the P enal
Coe!•.
1be social hour will begin at
11:30 p.m., with dinner al 7.
Raervations for the meeting
may be made by calling Mrs.
James R. Orr, Ml-0842 or Mrs.
Ray Sh>rp, 52>-6478.
Today's News
Daily Pilot Way
Farme7.iif: ci-~c.ll:'MmM. w. G. E~~::..~·,~~~Mw:n~'~!~~ Mmes. Betty Chapin. timer; Jaycees meet the secorxi Mon·
wuu.ms. S<11 P11;11 Rabi,,_, J..1V11 ~Jttdlll'd Plettf1_.,., Mr• "'•""""" 751 Ra d • --ta! • I d w1M1.trn CollMt', FIWtl Porter. is: c. t11e Mm9!. .. ...,1 °'"'lei>, n, ymon ...,..,,,,.., e,., eva ua· ay of the month at 8 p.m.
e-K11Jfl"!i.S1; eurq~w111on. ~. WOOdforel, 111 a. L hi-. tion, and H"'""' Shari'· cl°'" Location informa"on may be Fll!!LO IHOh -Cleti ~tit MmH. 77: Lalle T1rr, Cllenet Mum-.. -·, , ..., W
Mlcheel w-. 0\-\1 "'"' M~•OOI .~•rd· fjl;, c1u1 o, ""' ing Oi.ougtit. · • recieved by calling Mra.
e. Ille Mina. Hor-G"'' "'~1 Jt. E. --""'-' -"-"'~· _n_, __ H_u_".c''*;;o'c:'..c"c.· ___ ~_.....;:_ _____ ... __ .;_a.;_.;_.;_~.::•_,.53::::_!1-_::1022=.--1 ~...:: ::"~ .f\l~·SI"' c ~ =· ihl;lo!E. ltl • 141 ltltll•r1' A. Fu .. ·-e plans include r-Mich el Broo'·
Johllslon. ~1?1 John Ml , '4~wl Budtlell. 1hcm• Lit:,.,_ .f'C ••i otter! Eorint, '11 Cini C. ltMI JllMIS. II $!trll. Sil Wlltl1.,.., Jfl .,,_., lnotln1_6111 K1liMf"~ 61 1 Ii_. $itlOtnon. u\.'11 "7liJ&:1,!dloDA"y~ l"W l'l!lfll, tM """'"· DevlO KtllW. ·11., laW 1rou1 W!UW.. Gresdlner. 10. f rs! IO'W net; Frenk \lflloltl, Dilan Gntn, E111ra p'"" '" ~ ... nt!J __ ~ l'llPI, ~ ~ Dou91•t MCCO'f, tJ,
law 1ros1 i H. w. ,,_.,, 7S. nrsl law
"''I J. 8. SlltNbul"I'. ,.1 Tlllnl ""e· ltMI Mrnei. CMrlu Mi; wr, 1•\ 1rou1 w._ c. Su!lleri1nO. n, llri net: R. i::. MCl111Yrt, 7', ~
""~l!!Mll•I ,LIOlff -"11'11 FHllP!l, t!>e Mmes. OOV9'i1s, 11, io.. ll"lllSI ll:obtrl Mlson. 1l1 tint lcrw nlll R•lllfl '* , . . . ' ' . . ',, .
HEALTHIER BODIES
ARE BUI.LT FROM
HEALTHIER FOODS
Large Sizes TH.A'i';S WHY ALTA-DENA DAIRY'S . ' .
CERTIFIED ENZYME-RICiH MILK
K••p Cool-
Su
'HAlF-SIZE SHOP
For Shift1,
W ifh or
W ithout s1,,._., •.
.... $10.00
f SIIfS
• 41\. 241\
38 ·46
Elfa Nor'sHALF-SIZE SHOP
tl05 Newport Blvd. • ,. Costa Mesa .._, "!\ __ .. , ... _ .•
......... 9:30 to 5:30, ~,
'rld•y to ''°° .._ 114 Or•1•'*' Meff, PtihertH
CAN MAKE,YOUR BODY HE...fL THJERI
' .
Today's doctoR, ed~.otn' the chmtlstry of foods,.!JDderstmd that tbe .enzyme
h•lonao of lood!~~·of ilreatcr importanoC to .. healtl! dUm their anlltble l'itamin
content. They tn.W·tJiah•!thoot enzyme actioo, foods caD11ot be digest..i. There-
fore, \'itamins ·cannot be assimilated.
In1~mcs are protein in nature. But: there arc mlD)" dUl'ermt linds: same work
on fats, others act on starches, and some digest proteins. WbatCTer their job, these
1nigh1y liuJe catalysts each has a ~pecific activjty. Each acts only upon certain
chemically rel ated substances and no otJ1cr.
1:acl1 cn7.yn1e l1as a best temperature at which ft acts with greatest efficiency.
En1yn1e ac tivity can be retarded or completely Inhibited 'by h1gb or JaW lr.mpct•
tures , dehydration , and radiation. This is why AJta-Dena Dairy :begins the scJen...
ti6c produ ct.ion of O:rtificd Enz)·me-Rich lt·lilk at the very beginning wJth the
ccnlIOUcd breeding. feeding and care o£ the dairy's prlzc.winnl.og buds.
Ce r1 ified Enzyme-Rich Milk contains all the mlll:'s natural mzymn in fhelr12iltt1ral
balance. None arc dcst:roye;l by heat._ljoching is added or rmtOftd to chaogc the
n1i1k's natural ly pafcct nutritional balance.
Daily, lhc milk is inspected by the Las Angeles County l\l.Uk Cammimon, 11 part
of ll1e rigid production •tanda:rds Alta· Dena Dairy h•,ld ftr·thls..&nt~llfty,food.
Alla·Dtnt Deloy dtllva11. lrom farm to home 111 onr 011 011 ·coun11. for homa
dthnry call (213) 964.e4D1 ctlltct
.,,_.A1l'i•'bt !:fflmrDAIRY.
THE WESrs LARGEST PRODUCER OF CERTIFIED ENZVME·RICH MILK
...... -------~-~~~~~~~=-~'--~'-"--·=--------------~---------
• Rites Pia nned
.ELLEN
CARTER
LADIES HABERDASHER
'
. .
! I > " ·~~ . . ' \ .
Peering2
Around
22fi MARINE AVENUE, BALBOA ISLAND, CAUFORNIA • 67S·Z870
. '
; :
!·.
DAILY '1LDT 17
.New •
Weddings, Troths Japan :
Swing-ffi~ites Pi lot s Dea Clllnes
Ebell Club Prepares
_bi ve ly Y ~a r Ahe ad
A pleasant and potentially on ·the committee Include thl
,
I:
. ,
t
MRS. STANLEY EUGENE ROHRER
Caribbun WHding Trip
Area Teacher Recites
Vows St. Andrew's
Barbara Joan Phillips of
Newport Beach and h e r
betrothed Stanley E u g e n e
Rohrer selected St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church for their
evening wedding.
The Rev. Dr. Charles H.
noral headpiece.
By SHOT~ VSlµO
TOKYO (UPi) -Wedding
on a beach. Weddlnc ln front
of a railway station. Wedding
alte.nded by the bride and
groom'• child~n.
A former stage actress and
magul.ne writer has gone into
tht' business of producing
unusual weddlne cervnonies
in • naUon long accustomed to
conscrvaUve nupUal customs.
Miss Motoko Yamanobe,
who is In her upper 20s, drinks
her sake (rice wine) on the
rocks and has never gotten
around to marriage herself.
But she runs a wedding
research institute which is
upsetting such time-honored
Japanese customs as the m.iai,
rormal meeting between a
young man and the woman ar-
ranged by their ramilies as the
first step towardll matrimony.
''Most Japanese are married
in dull and uninspired Shinto
or Buddhist rites," Miss
Yamanobe said.
But there is nothing dull
nboul the rites planned by this
slender ligured woman.
ln one Yamanobe wedding.
all the guests were issued
scissors and they snipptd
away at the bride's noorlength
white gown until it became a
miniskirt. Then everybody did
a go-go dance.
For another ceremony, she
dressed her bride and groom
and their attendants in long,
flowing gowns worn b y
Japanese nobility In the eighth
century.
Miss Yamanobe favors out-
door settings for weddings .
"The best weddings are
performed outdoors on a
beach, a hill or on the grass,"
she said. "Brides look very
beautiful against n a t u r a I
backgrounds."
One of her weddings took:
place before dawn on a beach.
A barbecue breakfast was
'er v e d and the newlywed.5
Grandmas
Dash Off
To Races
and guests slipped into bathlnJ
suits fot a dip in the isea.
But she doe! nol limlt
herself to marriages. She has
conducted .three d i v o r c e
~i~. In one, t be
separating man and wife held
1 public /1 auction of their
furniture and used the receipts
to finance separate trl1>5
alone.
"I called the trips bit-
tennoons," Miss Yamanobe
said.
Miss Y amanobe slarted her
professional life when she
dropped out ol high school to
go on the 1tage wilh Shlki
(Four Seasom) Thutrlcal
Group. She later became a
writer for a women's weekly
maguine before opening ber
wedding institute In 1963.
To avoid disappotntmenf, prospecti"9e
brides are reminded to have thell' wedding
stories with black and white ~lossy photo-
graph• to the DAIL'( PILOT Society Depart·
ment prior to or within one .week alter the
\veddtnr .
For engagement announcements it . is
suggested that the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be
submitted early. If the betrothal announce-
ment and wedding date are six weeks or Jess
apart, only the wedding photo will be ac·
cepted .
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are avail·
able in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by Soclal
Notes •tall members at 642-4321 or 494-9466.
I
She and her four staff 1----... ~ .. ..,,_..,..,_... . .,.,,..,_..,_.., __ "'1 workers have planned 1,600 .__"!114 lmt:<
weddings at pri~s ranging
from 3,000 yen ($8.33) to 50,000
($133).
But her big earnings
(amounts undisclosed) come
from mock wedding shows
which she creates for depart·
menl stores and manufac-
turers interested in the bridal
market.
Navy Chapel Chosen
For Afternoon Rites
Mmes. Clayton Thompson, prolitable year ahead was Harry Goetz, H. D. McGregor,
(oreca.st by enterprising mem-Raymond Wood, Jack Cun·
bers of Newport Beach Ebell ningha m, John Lamar. Rober&
Club'• ways and means sec-Pittenger , Charles Edwards,
Uon at their recent meeting. Charles E. Kelley, Robert
Dr. Hilda Mc Cart n e 'I , Allen, James Barclay, Frank
chainnan for the group, Is Merkel, Ray Nielsen, £veret.t
coordinator of instruclional Nunan, Herbert Puterbaugh.,
media Io r Newport-Mesa Rudolph vanasek, Thoma•
Unified School District and Baume, w. R. Dana. Jamel
was recently elected president w. Hines, Richard •lodge,
of Town and Gown for UCI. ·Shelby Gott, s. E. Briggs,
Activities for the year ahead Lester Smlth and Miss Mary
include a.
1
wine .~stlngrdfestivrtal, Ross.
an annua eotwn ca pa y, -'="--------luncheon and card part y,
table-setting competition and a
country fair ,
Ebel! Club members serving ·
Uncle Len
Off ers Prizes
AME!lt!CA'S 0 LA,_GEST l'AM1LY CLOTHINOI CH.Alf't
0,,,.,
':J O
'TIL
t :30
My job is like working in
the theater," she said. "Both
the stage and a wedding have
many things in common -
costuming, lighting, directing
and even writing since I write
the vows for the weddings I
arrange."
Pianists
Honored
Arrangements of pink and
white carnations decorated
Galilee Chaptl al San Diego's
North Island Naval Air Station
when Lind a Jo Pt1iller,
daughter of f\tr. and Mrs.
Joseph E. Miller of Costa
f\1esa became the bride of Lt.
(j.g.) Kaywin F. Carter.
Pttr. and 1ttrs. Floyd Carter
traveled from Normal. Ill. to
attend their son's afternoon
wedding , performed by the
Rev. Clyde Kimbie .
1 Escorted on her father's I
arm, the bride wore a
sleeveless dress of white lacy 1 voile with f!Ued bodice and
tiered lace skin over satin. Al
pearl encrusted bOw held her ·
shoulder length illusion veil
and she carried baby pink
rose s and while carnations in
her bouquet.
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Gror·
ge of San Diego attended the .,,.
bridal pair. She wore a streelJ ,,,.--~~
C I b S k length dress in pink and car-. u ee s ried pink carnations arranged Fi ve o\ano studen ts from with pink satin streamers.
Orange Co.Joly will perform al Fa 11 Togs Assisting at a reception In the Cahfomia State 1tlus1c the Commissioned Officers
Teachers Convention June 29· building were the Misses
July 3 in L~e Claremont liotel. \Vhen you're clearing out Charlotte Insko and Gayle I
Oakland. closets this 1 um mer . Egolf.
Participll.ting in the forn1al remember the J u n i or The bride is a graduate of
Young Artis~· Guild Conrert "woman's Club of Huntington Orange Coast College and San
will be Karen Charleson and Beach. Diego State College, where she
Daniel :P.1iller, and performing Fall wardrobes for need y majored in el ementary cduca·1
for the ~Aa!>1er Class will be school children are being lion.
Viera f'!huml, Linda Taylor assembled by busy c I u b A pilot in the U.S. Navy , the1 '
and Donald \\'iener. members, Yo'hO plan a fall bridegroom was graduated 1 'I
Dierenfield conducted t h e
single ring rites for the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Phillips of Placentia
and the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Glade Rohrer of Wakarusa,
Ind .
Escorted on the arm of her
father, the bride chose a tradi-
tional chantilly lace gown and
a chapel train. Her silk iJ.
Jusion veiling was caught to a
Altendanl.!i were ~tarjorie
Breilo, Rosemary Alien. Susa n
Harris, Linda Reynolds and
Karyn Breilo, flower girl.
They donned aqua chiffon over
taffeta gowns wilh
mullicolored flowers adornin&
their hair.
The benedict select.ed Dr.
Bryce Rohrer to stand as best
man. Ushers were Dan Grif·
fen, Douglas Sch~ider. Royce
Moore and Rjchard Wagner
Jr.
Stud'!r.t:; selected to perform clearing house to assort all from Huston-Tillitson College! .
for the Young Artists' Guild items by Aug. 22 wheJTihe col· in Texas. the NaYal Flight ,
concert will be invited to play leclion drive will end. Training School in Pensacola,
professional concerts . f ~ r Donations may be brought and ea rned h I s wings in I
Off to tile races will be 1t1usic Teachers Assocta bon to the Con'imunity United Corpus Ctlrisll. He ~ill begin a.
members of Newport Harbor branches throughout the state Methodist Church in Hun· six months lour of duly on the
Grandmothers CJub, as they during th~ coming year. tington Beach or to tile Boys Philippine Islands in October.
seek tickets from speeial Orange branch also will ~ Club, Huntington B each . Following a honeymoon inl
evenls chairman Mrs. Paul represeatEd du ring the Clothing should be clean and northern California. the couple
Huffman for tomorrow at materials sessions by 10 usable, ranging from size 5 to will make their home In San I
Hollywood Park. 'iis~t~ud~e~n~ts~. ,_,_,_,_,_,_,__;';;~~·-!~I~. ,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_;iJ~';;;'•,_un;;t;;il;;t;;h;;ei;;r;;d;;e;;,pa;;r;;tu;;;r;;•._,1 The Fireside Room of the
church was the reception sel·
ting where 300 guests con-
gratulated the coup I e .
Assisting we.re Alice and
Patricia McFadden.
Among .summer plans for /J , ,
the group will be luncheon and LEARN TO SWIM games at Lido Traner Park in
N~~~~i~:r:.:~~~2_;.ays AT YOUR ORANGE COAST YMCA
and means chairman ~1rs. 6 4 2 9 9 9 O Class '59
To Un ite
The br@e graduated from
~idenial College and was a
Spanish teacher for t h e
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District.
Louis Spielberger reported •
that $70 had been collectedi~===============================~i toward the club's charitable]·
fund from their No Bake bake
sale.
Her husband was a student Plans for a lO·year reun ion at Purdue Univetsity and
now are being made by received his masters degree Waist Watchers graduates of Rancho Alamitos froni Notre Dame.
High School, Garden Grove. The newlfweds will honey-TOPS Waist \Vatch er a
Seeking 1959 graduates .are moon in the caribbean for two assemble every Thursday at 7
1ifrs. Bud (Donna M<.'Cullum) months before making their p.m. in Circle View School.
Hicks, 541-4558, and Mrs. home in Wakarusa. Huntington Beach. :P.1ichael (Nancy Kakuda ) Ota.1,..;~~~~~~;;_.===...;~;;;;::.:;;;;.;;;;;;.;;;._==jl
893-3036.
The reunion will take place
Saturday, Aug. 16, in the
Palms restaurant, Anaheim,
and former classmates are
urged to contact Mrs. Hicks or
Mrs. Ota for additional in·
formation.
I If ¥011 Wat1 t
And N o t Be
to Score •••
a Bor e .••
RE.4 D!
T he Bookstall l JJ 1. 11t1t st .. c .... w .. 141-4•11
fMlllftf T~t P•llCl ltt HWM)
Our fitters really know
how to pinch.
Prod. And poke around.
That's one of the ir ways lo be certa in o baby's
fool really f1fs a Stride Rile baby shoe. And before th is rifu al,
they check a baby's sfan ce, ba lan ce, weight and
shape of fool. When your baby gels ready lo walk, come
see us. We'll sta rt thin~ rig ht, right from !he very sfarl.
r11E
IR1DER1re
SHOE
.... $10.50
SIZES I le EIE
NIWPOltT IUCM AltAltltM WHITTB RIVERSIDE
shoes at Paul Allan's
semi·annual shoe sa le.
assorted styles,
~ colors and sizes.
llG. TO
De111l11lc R•-11• ........•.............. 32.00
·-·"· ................................. 29.00
MIHl-••••ll.• .....•.........•.......... 27 .00
P11ul A.111111 .............................. 27 .00
A..,. .................................... 25 .00
V1111 Ill ................................. 21.00
I
C.poslo ................. _ .............. 20.00
Ptlul A.111111 ............•..•.•............ 19 .00
Ohl-1110 Trotter ....................... 16.00
Cover Olrl. ...................... · . · . · · · 15.00
NOW
24'0
19'0
1990
19'0
16'0
1690
15'0
1490
1290
1090
.......... , ..................... , .. ORIATLY RIDUCID
I
I , I
I :
•
I
SLINKY
JERSEY!
4.99
CLINGY, CHIC TOP THAT
KNOW ITS WAY AROUND
'"'ear it with your flaring "Harlow"
p;4nts or.with long skirts, for party-ing
or being the glamorous hostess •••
'vear it 35 the unquestionably
fashionable d11.~ime-top for skirt!.
GLEAMING SOLID-COLOR
OR DOnED ACETATE KNIT
sinuous, sexy.Jooking jersey with
a soft-Or-aping way, accenting the
Ruk! l>elted lines and gracefully ihap-
ing the d~p-cuffed sleeves ... tM
neckline, a vampish lo\v·v pl11nge.
MISSIS' SlllS • 10 16
• Open • Sunday
11 10 S
•
' ..
•.
' ' •' • ..
' ..
•
' ' '
'
•
• •
' •
:1 f
'
•
l
.J m • oH sol•• finoll • no eicchang••I • no refund1I
' fO DAY CHAIGD INVITtO, IM-llt.4.MfllCAIO 01 MAim CHAtOI
• •
COSTA MESA, 1601 Newport Blvd., I I 16'11
•GA RDEN GROVE-123n Gardtn Grove lllv4. I 1131 NEWPORT BlVD., COSTA MESA OfMn dolly 10 o,M, lo cJ p.m,1 mon., thut1,, ''i· I 0 'Iii 9130 p.m. •
.. '°"' ,. -·
l
-----------·----·. • ..................... ., ... • • ••• <I ~ .,_ •• ~ ... ..
' 'JI DAf(Y PILOT • Thursd1y, Junt 16. 1%t
DAILY 10·10
SUNDAY 10 . 7
.THURS • FRI • S.AT • SUNDAY ONLY ..:. COST A MESA STORE ONLY.
THURSDAY-FRIDAY1-SATURDAY & 'SUNDAY: ONLJ, JUNE 26, 21, 2a & 29
•LADIES
TENNIS SHOES
93.~
Sizes S.-9 in all the summery colors.
Buy several pair & save!
·, LADIES NYLON
WIND
1 : BREAKERS
I f ~.~-i~l
' Sizes S, M, L.
'
r
' '
r LADIES
. SUMMER t-
f SHIFTS 7 ,,
f' I sl .22 • I ~ .1
I ' I Reg . $2 .00 • ! Your choice of I
' ~ Solids -Stripes
and Prints.
Sizes 8 thru 18.
CHARGE IT !
~ LADIES NYLON SLEEVELESS
SPORT TOPS NO-IRON
WALK Reg.
'
l
I SHORTS :l J,.J.: :~PH W~·f'Wt:WJ:tit&L-tJbj " r'.'""~ .
~I j MEN'S BOA Ti SHOES ~
. In Assorted s2 88 ~
,....,, .•. "" .......... ~.~o--lo_",,,......,......,..,...• __ .,.,.. .• . ~1 r :;fi;: ... --'"""' ~. r·
l .
3 Lb. DACRON
, ...
•' .;, ...
••• ,, .. :·,
~ t ladies lJ f
Easy care wash. dry ~ Wide• leg
• & wear. In assorted ~
l s1.9 7
Req . $2.97
~ l.:•pa""~-~-~ ... ~nG•d E•siz_:;_· ! ...,....,,,,,..._..__..! ' c AP RIS
.':;::·~·. Asscoorlloerdss&elesc1·zleio,no£ n ~;· Z7 rm·•-iiij"<jrnM"E""'-N'S'>'•*',1 r s2 66
l l"'ll•• le lll111lri1l•n · ' M
..f1"i. . ~~ '~••RlL>&GP~Wl'ii!ti $A SWIM ·1 1' • .
~oi:aw.a::xz.:> ~:A~
-Tn BOY'S ~ WEAR ; ~ Reg. $3.88
j WALK r. g 9 ~ ~ I Casual togs for SHORTS ij ' ~ summer fun .
' ,
SLEEPING BAG
• '·· t \V ide selection of
9 9 p R $l 9 fi 1. colors & sizes. ,l SeMg. L X0L 7 _:{ Miow;m;:J!WlW"':!::?l.W~~"":.:-!'""""orJ
.,..~ ...... -..,.... ...... ,......,,...;;;·.,;,;. . . . ' ·-.,. I
t
I
I
Snug, w"m bags sg 46 for summer clmJHIUf5 •
. -. -
110 lb. ;,on.... s10 88 Keep healthy thru
physical fitness. •
-----
ANGLERS SPECIAL I
FISH
HOOKS --. a~
• . Pkg .
In all the s12cs you need for fishing.
' .. Re<;1. $1.66
•
KODAK 124
INSTAMATIC CAMERA k
l Re me'!' be' summe.r s13 9 7 'j fun with photos • r" .~ ., -. . -····-~ .:,. i'flt"""'"::_::_ 1 ~ • • 1
.1
,
ROYAL PORTABLE
TYPEWRl.TER.·. • •
Special! 29.97 (
,Qw • y ••*".........-·'I"; 1 :
BEADED
EVENING
BAGS
20 Ft. ~ . . Mtt. 1.87 l .17
::-;, 15.81 67¢
..
-SHOPPERS SPECIAL -
' HAM SANDWICH •• 11-:_::-._-;r-:-/ I
a •••
,,
I!
f
5 For
SUBMARINE
SANDWICHES 3 For as~
2200 HARBOR BL VD. Corner of Wilson and Harbor COST A MESA
I •
l~
' ·• " ~
• 1
1
c •
I
I
Thursday, Junt 26, 1961J DAn.Y PILl!T Jf . I
DAILY 10 • 10 '
SUNDAY 10 • 7
THURS· FRI ·SAT. SUNDAY ONLY -COST A MESA STORE ONLY
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY & SUNDAY! ONLY, JUNE 26, 21, 2a &-29.
BARBEQUE GRILL
with ROTISSERIE & MOTOR
h1ch11lel llli•ld,
c.ord. Adln .. oi.
trlll lleiflrlt for
•utcfoor cooki119.
TABLE· TOP
GRILL
;7; 1.96
Co111pact llQ Grlll -Tfte It
•l•llf 01 plcwlc1.
HOT-CHAR
CHARCOAL
.... 99¢ 1.47
JO llN:. -hot bunii119 119 cllcir•
coal. luy in~al bcMJi t1ow.
"CHARGE IT" at Kmart!
FLOOR
MODEL
IMPULSE STARTING 22 In.
ROTARY.
MOWER
• • ...,,., llll91't -·-St.m Milly -
C111n 22" whMi
wf .. 3 1/1 H.P
lrlfls & Str9ttH Ntor
Hud .. coeml
45 PIECE MELMAC
1 DINNERWARE SET • J
' THUIS. -f!I. -8 88 SAT. Ir SUN. ONLY •
Reg. $13.84
,
.
CHAISE
LOUNGE
Including
PAD
DELUXE 6' 2" FOLDING BED .,
AND MATIRESS 1 i 4 DAYS 10 88 c..,_,_.,,..,, 10 33 I i ONLY • Al111inl11U1 M4, 27"
wll6e, t.f ...,.,., for _ , ~ Sturdy A.lumlt111m COMtn1ctlM -h1cl.
"UN1'ectff G••n"I I --ll 11 floral ,ff&, rall...t..vt wlrteeh.
.... 12.97 ... ~~· L, i(. a ~~3;4 ISh1tllor ,. llllllfN'tt.1)
1
1\11\ j!il '
I •'::I
-'
E!
-
1 POUND SIZE
1 Potato Chips
:i!· 42¢
Illy M•erol altd HYO!
19" ROUND
Patio Table
93¢
2 Lb. Bags
MOTHER'S
COOKIES 78¢
AND CLOSE· OUT SPECIALS ON APPLIANCES -SOME Cj)UANTITIES LIMITED. RCA -ADMIRAL - G.E. -WHIRLPOOL
• 2 Speed· 3 Cycle for cleaner wash.
• Compare at $219.95
"CHARGE IT" at Kmart!
u.-~ . • REFRIGERATORS • WASHERS
*GE 18" n&8 • DRYERS • DISHWASHERS • * ADMIRAL18" 12476
* :~!T~:.~E B & W TY .................... 1102. 70 88 ;;·'"';~;TOM ;;EZER ' 269; ~ * :~~T:;::E: W TY ................... ,,,..
PORTABLE B & W TY .................... . 15 cu. ft. Refrigerator 0 "'' ~COPPER COLOR .................................. .
te:i:~c!-:0~0~.~~.~~: .. ~~· ........... 25888 !u~~!~i~~~~her , ....... _,,.,,, 17.488
HUR·RY AND SAVE ON THESE FANTASTIC
VALUES DURING THIS 4-DAY-ONLY SALE!
K mart, Costa Mesa Only!
200 HARBOR BL VD. Corner of Wilson and Harbor COST A MESA
' I
,
~
• .
••
•
.. ' ~ . . ... . ' ~
........ ~ .... ---~--....----••• •• • '• .. l •••••••.••
It DAILY PILOT thunda1, June 26, 1%9
-Namath to Sell C.ontroversial Bachelors III
NEW YORK (UPl) -Joe Namath, an places.
easy guy to get alorig wilh, ha.s thought It was in the Teterboro Airport In
the whole U\!'\I out extra carefully and Teterboro, N.J., and Namath was waiting
a•ys, o~. ~·11 sell his place. to board a private plane which would
That's precisely what he'll tell Pete take him to MonU~lo Raceway in Mon·
Rozelle, the football commissioner, when ticell o, N.Y., for a benefit appearance.
the two of them finally get together today Joe was munching on a candy bar and
for their bi& meeting. some crackers near one of the hangars
Namath, who announced hil rellrement and it was rather obvious lie was .hungry.
on June 6 rather lhan dispose of his bar "My lunch," he explaiped.
and restaurant. Bachelors·u·1. as he had "And dinner. too," added Tad Dowd,
been ordered to by Roielle because the who handles Namath's publicity.
pace was found to be frequented by "How do you feel about your meeting
undesirables, revealed he was ready to with Rozelle tomorrow?" Somebody ask·
sell Wednesday in an airport., o! all ed the retired 25-year-old New York Jets' ·~
Salad, Coffee All
Gonzalez
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)
Pancho Gonzalez, 4J -year--0ld tennis star,
woo the lon1est match in W1mbledon's 92-
year history Wednesday on a fruit salad,
a cup of coffee and an hour's practice
between sel.!.
His marathon, 112-game first round
match against Charlie Pasarell, U.S.
Davis Cup star, started Tuesday night.
was called after two sets because of
darkness and went on· again Wednesday
afternoon.
Aller a total of 5 hours and 20 minutes,
Gonzalez, of Los Angeles, won 22-24, 1~.
16-14, 6-3, 11-9. He fought oU six match
points.
Gonzalez, showing no ill effects from
his victory over J?asarell returned to the
Wimbledon tennis courts today and
scortd a 6-t, 6-3, 6-3 second round victory
over Ove Bengtsson of Sweden.
In another match Dennis Ralston of
Bakersfield, also gained the third round
by beating Jan Kuka! of Czechoslovakia
7·S, 6-2, 6--4.
Gonzalez said the fruit sa lad and the
coffee was all he needed Wednesday
before resuming the match.
"If I'm not hungry, I don 't eat," he told
newsmen. "And I don 't gel hungry these
days . Maybe it's nervous stomach from
old age."'
He had his fruit salad and coffee
around 10 a.m. almost five hours before
going out on center court. Later in the
morning he practiced for an hour a.t
Queen's Club, on the other side of the
'Thames River .
Needed
Gonzalez , trailing in sets 2-0, said that
when he came to Wimbledon he recalled
his triumph in the U.S. Nationals at
t'orest Hills in 1949.
Jn that final he trailed Ted Schroeder
by two sets to love and came back to win.
"This morning I said to Madeleine. my
wife, that I was in exaclly the same pos-
ition in this match as I was against
Schroeder in 1949," Gonzalez said. ·•I said
that if I could win then , 1 could win now."
Twice in the final se t Pasarell led 40-0
on Gonzalez's service and had three
match points. Each time Gonzalez fought
him off and stayed in the match.
"I just summoned up a litlle extra
strength and tried lo get in at the net."
Gonzalez said. "I think he got a little
nervous under the tension.
"In the last eight games I had cramps
on the inside of my thighs. I let some
shots go. It would have been crazy to
chase them because I had to conserve
energy for my service.
"Sometimes, after winning a service
game, I felt I had nothing left for return-
ing 'his service."
Pasarell confessed he was amazed at
Gonzalez's stamina.
"I couldn't believe it when he saved
those six match points," Pasarell said.
"He saved one of them with the most
fantasti c angled slop volley I have ever
seen."
Neither Gonzalez nor Pasarell kne\\'
they had set a Wimbledon record until
somebody told them in the dressing room
afterwards.
Fans Ignore Meet
Children's Hospital
Lucky to Get Bandaid
Children's Hospital will be lucky to get
as much as a bandaid from profits
reaped at the recent Orange County
Invitational track meet staged at El
fl.lodeno's Olympic Stadium.
It isn't that promoters toyed with the
books -there were hardly any figures to
be juggled with a paid attendance of
1,900.
simply aren't overawed by having \vorld
class athletes in the county.
Despite the county's fail ure to back the
track meet, television sponsors were
delighted to get a rating of nine on the
delayed national showing of the spikefest.
Roughly, fi ve million people around the
U.S. took in the affair ... or 2.5 percent of
the national population . If 2.5 percent of
Bringing a hall-dozen 0 I y mp i c
medalists and assorted world record
.. holders was not enough. to get Orange
:-, Countians to El Modeno. ~ However. if Anaheim High would have =: been playing football against Mater Dei,
~ * ............ ..
WHITE
WASH they'd have probably had to hold the
;; event in the Coliseum-and even then
~ there might not have been adequate seat·
T ing. Orange County sports lans are a tough
liort to figure .
They also failed to support Anaheim's
:-pro tennis tournament and a reasonably
good fight staged in that same city.
Yet over 1.000 fans turned out at UCI to
. .
' I iset that school's water polo opener.
~ Analyzing the situation is a first rate
,_ challenge.
' ll appears from this side of the fence f that counlians are somewhat provincial r to begin with. And since they've gotten
considerable exposure to top level track,
boxing and tennis in nearby LA, they ' •
, .
'
• I
! I
I
Wi1nbledon
Sumn1aries
'*************tt
Orange County's million·plus populace
had turned out al El Modeno. there'd
have been 25,000 trying to squeeze into
the 6,000 available seats.
One meet ad visor ... who al so ha s
\\'Orked on the U.S. vs Jiussia classics,
points out that in that series you have lo
sweat out whether the Soviets are going
to sho\~.
And in Orange County productions you
have ~o worry about whelhcr the fans \Viii
come out.
PS--Children's Hospital may wind up
\vith a case of bandalds. Larry Arason
endorsed his $50 check for serving as
meet starter to the hospital.
Good show Larry.
1''1•!1 Paaaclaa Bails
One of the great comeback stories has
to be Pancho Gonzalez 's win over Charlie
Pasarell Wednesday at Wimbledon. After
falling in the fir5' two sets, %4-%2 and 6-1.
Gonzalez pulled out victories of 16--1.C, 6·3
and 11·9,
Pancho's ill·lemper-largct of con.
sidcrable fan wrat~an probably be at-
lributed to the frustrations this former
champ must be going through. l1e'1 slO\T·
ing do"" at age 41 and can!t match the
endurancr and speed he possessed in the
by·1one days when bl! wls virtually
unbeatable.
\\'hilt falling victim lo lt'mptr lan-
tnlms on the court, he"s st.Ill a genlle
person awa7 from play. lie confided dur·
Ing last mootb'1 f\ladi1011 Square Garden
toumamcnt that he waa most upset at
having tt meet a commitment abroad ind
tbu1 would not bave Ume to n:tum to bis
l\1alibu tennis 1tbool.
•
"I pNJmlsed the kids l"d make a
pcr5onal appe11rance and now I can't llvf'i
up to my word," be lament.eel. 4'1 bate lo
lei the youn1ster1 down.'' • • '
j
' • '
He actually wa1 considering a qvlck
plane trip to California just lo drop In on
1he kids lot a few houri bf:fore. Ilppln1
off to Europt. but couldn 't work It out. .,..
quarterback.
'"Tired," be replied.
''You 're not gonna be stubborn about It,
are you?"
''Uh-uh." Joe said. "I'm not stubborn. I
don't resent authority like I 'ye ~n it
written in so many places. \ can un·
derstand why there's a need for auth.ori-
ty. Hell, I've obeyed authority all my life
and any time I didn't J took whatever
was handed down to me."
"'You say you're not gonna be stub-
born. 00 you mean you'll sell you r
place?"
"Yeah, I'll sell, all right."
"You will!"
"Yeah, for the right price."
"What) the right price!"
''Seve n hundred and fifty thousand
dollars plus a stock option."
'"Who's gonna give you that?"
''They're ordering me to sell. Let them
flnd me a buyer. l'1n ready."
Joe finished his "lunch," and "dinner,"
and then wa! told the 90-mile trip to Mon·
ticello couldn't be made by air because of
a slowdown problem involving traffic
control.
"C'mon , we'll go by car," said Leon
Greenberg, president or Mont i c e 11 o
Raceway. "The plane ~ill follow us later
becau.se I know yoo have to get back here
by 9."
Namath was mak.lng the trip becapse
he had pro1nlsed his friend, rather
Edward J. Murphy, he would. Father
Murphy Is the treasurer of St. Alberl'ti
Seminary in Middletown, N.Y., and
Namath 's appearance at the Raceway
would raise more than $2,500 for the boys
In the seminary.
"I'm sorry about this," apologized
Father Murphy, who also had come to
the airport to make the trip with
Namath.
·~ , JP\fV .. • u "';:,-, I'" , r w,;u4J I ._;~,
ti 4 -' ~' •""· ""'" ~; "' • •
UPI .Ttle~~o•o
' THE OLD MASTER -Pancho Gonzalez returns a
shot to Charlie Pasarell during their historic first
round match \Vednesday at \Vimbledon. Gonzalez
rallied contiinually to win 22-24, 1·61 16-14 , 6-3, 11-9.
The 112 games set a \Vimb!edon record for the 1nost
ever played in a si ngle match. Gonzalez, of J.,os
Angeles. is 41.
Perranoski
Cools Angel s
For 7th Ti1ne
Ron Pcrranoski says he's pitching "as
·well as ever," and the California AngCJs
believe him.
Perranoski came in with the bases
loaded and the score lied in the. bottom of
the seventh, got the side out, finished the
game and picked up his fourth victory for
Minnesota as the Twins beat the Angels
3·2 Wednesday night.
1'he two clubs met in the last of a fou r·
game series this afternoon, with lefty
Ji1n Kaat, 7-6, going for the Twins
against Jim McGlothlin. 5.S.
Perranoski. who has 12 saves I.his
season, has been particularly effective
aginst the Angels since he was traded to
the Twins from the Los Angeles Dodgers
in a winier trade before last season.
1'he si nker-ball thrower has posted
1hree of his four victories this season at
the expense of the Angels, 7-0 lifetime.
California has scored only one run,
unearned, against him in 18 innings.
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-
Oldest
l larry Le,vis celebrated his 102nd birthday in S..in r·rancisc? \Vcd·
nesday by running the 100.yard dash In 17.3 seconds -bettering ~he
tin1c he recorded for the distance in 1968 by a hnlf second . J·lelp1ng
out the wailer is Caroline Jones. Lewis call Cd lhe dash "child's play."
explaining he jogs six miles a day.
"That's okay, Father," Joe said. "It's
not your fault."
Namath dozed through most of the~
A crowd of ktds and grownups already
were waiti ng when the ear arri\•ed at the
track and there was a great deal of
oohing and ahhing and picture taking as
Joe Narnath, decked out in a lime-colored
suit, dark blue shirt and mod print tic,
climbed out of the front seat and walked
into the track.
Once upstairs. there were t h t
customary interviews.
"Has the press treated you fairly ?" a
lSee N.UtA.TU, Pace Zl
All's Quiet
011 Western
(SF) Front
HOUSTON (AP) -All was peaceful
today between Willie f\.1a_ys and his man·
a~er, Clyde King of the San Francisco
Giants.
f\.fays apologized to King for his
stormy dugout actions prior lo the game
between the Giants and the Houston
Aslros Tuesday nigh t.
King accepted the apology and levied
no fine against the star outfielder.
Mays and King had enga~ed in 1
shouting match after Mays discovered
his name was not on the starting line-up.
"Willie called me and said he v.•anted
to talk." King said Wednesday nigh!.
'·He apologized and said he was sorry
for what he did and what he sai d.
"I told him that if he was big enough
to apologize, I was big enough to accept
his apology. I'm very happy the incident
ha s been resolved peaceably and
amicably."
King said he and Mays had a "friendly
talk after that.
''Naturally, we talked baseball. 'This
incident could bring us all closer together
for a drive to the top. The teams at the
top now are sputtering around ready to
be caught.'"
Mays earlier had said the incident was
a spur of the moment thing and said it
could happen on any ball club.
'"As soon as we start back winning,
C'Verything wilt be all right." !\.lays said.
King had said Tuesday he planned to
''let it sit for.~ _day" before deciding
about the poss1b1J1ty of a fine.
!\.1.afs, at 38, plays when he feels in
condition and King said this policy will continue.
"Once again:' King said. "I made it
clear to Willie that I won 't push him
when he feels tired and unable to play.
Hereafter I will check with him daily.''
J\1ays started in center field for the
Giants in Wednesday nigh t's game and
collc~ted a double and a single. Although
he did not start Tuesd ay night, he en· t~red the game in the second inning when
Jim Ray Hart was injured.
Dodgers Tal{e
La st Shot
At Atlanta
ATLANTA (AP ) -Phil Niekro's
knuckle ball knocked the Los Angeles
Dodgers out of first place in the tight
\\lestern Division race of the National
League.
The Atlanta Brave star cut do1Yn eight
Dodgers \Yith his flutter ball as his club
won )..3 in Atlanta Stadium Wednesday
night.
•lis 12\h win, which is the best 111
baseball today. coupled with a three-run
hon1cr by Orlando Cepeda and Hank
Aaron·s 529th and 19th of I.his season.
boosted the Braves back into the top spot
by one·half game.
ln the fourth and final game of thrt
series tonight, the Dodgers will send
Dodge r Slate
bullet Bill Singer, who leads the league i11
strikeouts against Jim Britton. Singer i!I
8-6 and is coming off a 5--0 shutout earliel"
in the week against Cincinnati. Britton,
who was used mainly in relief last year ,
is 0-0.
Claude Osteen, key southpaw in tho
Dodger push for lhe tille, was rocked by
a three-run Orlando Cepeda homer in the
first inning.
The Dodgers will close out their JI)
garne road trip with three gamc.s in San
Diego. All three wil! be televised in Los
Angeles.
Los Angeles returns to Dodger Stad lum
for a two week home·stand ~1onday whcit
the club will face the vastly improved
Houston Astros.
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' '
r
•
•
Whitworth Again Seeking
Elusive U.S. Open Crown
PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) -Kllhy
\Vtdtworth, the lioness of the women'•
profe&&lonal-golf tour, and Arnold Palmer
have somelhing in common.
One major title has eluded both of
them.
For the aging general of Amie's Anny,
ll bu been lhe PGA. For Kathy, il'• the
U.S. Open crown.
"I make 1tupkl mi1t.ake1 in the Open,"
Miss Whitworth uld Iller a practice
round for the four1Say championship
beglnnln& today.
Katby, the leading money winner since
1916, ta making her nth try !or the Opeo,
the most covettd UUe in women'• goU.
22 Pereef&t ltattease
GoldenWestGymnasium
Delayed as Costs Go Up .
Golden West College, which had
counled on its gymnasium bdng com-
pleted for the 1970-71 school year, will
have to wait even longer.
Bids went out and p~s were approved
Jut March but now building costs have
...... ,. .... , ...
EARL
GUSTKEY ............. ,, ..
been found to be 22 petcent over what
wu originally allotted.
The development could delay con-
struction on the plant for ail months or
longer.
The news comes as a blow to the
Sp~rts
Cl~pped
Short
Frem tM Wlrn ef U /UPI
NEW YORK -Richie Allen might not
play another game for the Philad~lphia
Phillies lhis year, although more likely,
he will. But regardless, he does not a~
pear to be long for the Phillies. .
Manager Bob Skinner, aft.er going
another day Wednesday without any com-
munication from his disturbing and
disappearing star. reaffirmed his ,iIJ..
tention lo remain firm on his suspension
of Allen until the young slugger changes
his nonconformist ways.
•
NE\V YORK -Seven ciites in the
United States and one in Canada ~re in
the running for the two new ~rths !n the
National Hockey League which will be
available with the start of the 1970-71
season.
Clarence Campbell, president o( the
NHL named the cities as BalUmore, Buf-
falo Cleveland, Atlanta, Kansas City, San
Dleiio, Seattle and Vancouver. B.C., ~~
nesday after a meeting or the league s
board of governors.
• PROVIDENCE, R. I. -Jim Colletlo,
former UCLA football co-eaptain and star
for the Bruins In the 1966 Rose Bowl
game was named today olfe.Mive line
coach' at Brown University.
• Si\N DIEGO -The Russians are com-
ing to lhe San Diego International Sports
Arena tonight. and the Sao Diego Rockets
have called for reinforcements.
The touring national Soviel basketball
team meets the rookies of the National
Basketball Association Rockets, plus two
highly touted freshmen from Seattle and
Phoenix.
The Soviets, who conquered the La!
\'egas All-Stars. 90·71, Tuesday night In
Nevada, are led by 7·foot..2 center
Vladimir Andreyev.
Golden \Vest coaching !ltarf, particularl1
basketball coach Diet Stricklln, who's
been fighting an uphill recruiting battle
with Orange Coast for three seasons.
The Rustlers must work out and play
their home games at Coast's palatial
pavilion, built In 1981.
o. J. DEPT. -San Fraacl1co
aew1paper1 were aaylag an last week
that 0. J. Simpson was dose to 1lg:alng
wUh Buffaio. One eve n quoted llhn u
..,.tng "We aren't ioo muy doll.an
apart."
Such quotes haven't bten a e e n
anywhere else. but Lbea you dom't liad
mediMTt papen Uke &line hi Su Fru-
clico anywben elte, either.
McKEEVER DEPT. -Newport Beacb
resident Marlin McKeever reports ·a new
era is dlwning for the Washington
Redskins under Vince Lombardi. He just
returned from a week's drills or
quarterbacks and receivers.
"Things have really changed," he says.
1'The whole attitude of the operation is
different -there 's a lot more dlaclpline
and Lombardi let us know right off the
bat who's boss."
BASKETBALL DEPT. -Look ror •
hanner season nut fall out of Newport
Harbor's Lee Haven, who's looking great
in the llu.nUngton Summer League •••
J\.1ike lleckman was working out with tbt
San Diego Rocket rooldes for a week bat
left camp abrupl1y ... Tbe frown 11 gone
fnm the brow of UCI coach Tim TIU - a
couple of bis playen were la academic
trouble bul survived final ezams ••• The
new Servile basketball eoacb, Larry
Walker, was an aU..ieaguer at
Westmia1ter lUgb: and tllen played at
Orange Coast. • •
CROWD COUNT DEPT. -You have to
rate Orange County's future as a major
sports center a8 considerably le~ than
bright after 1.900 paid to see tbe Orange
County InvltaUonal trackrest.
So add track to pro basketball, boxing
and pro football to sports ventures here
which have been sent packing.
DAY·DREAMING DEPT. -WUt with
the new structure of major lequ.e.
basebaJI , lt'1 intriguing to sptt1date on
pou.ible World Serles comblnaUoa1.
With le11 luck than wa1 required Wtder
the old, 1tra.lghl tw~leape setup, you
could wind up with the following matcbea
In October: San Ftuclsco ud OaklaDd,
Chicago and Chlcaao, Atlanta and Boston,
or Los Angeles and Oakland.
BROADWAY JOE DEPT. -What with
Sports Illustrated adding fuel to the fire
with it.s story claiming Mafia types were
shooting craps in Joe Namath's apart-
ment, Joe seems to be in more bot water
than ever.
lf the magazine's story is substan-
tiated, It seemg to us that Pete Rozelle
would have grounds for suspendnig
Namath, as ht did In the Paul Hornung
case.
I "I'm a believer In Jlnxea," the ano
29-year.()ld Texan aald.
"Maybe the Open ta mine. I have trou·
ble coocentraUng· Jn Ulla tournament,
maybe because I want to wln h IO
much."
Kathy has dominated the tour to.Jar
this year, winning five. of 14 toumamectr;.
H~ $24,088 leads Carol Mann, Sandra
Haynie and Shirley Englehom in Ule '
dollar derby.
Although the Scenic Hilla Country Club,
site· oi th11 week's 17th reoew;J of lhe
Open. 16 one of Kathy'1 favorite courses,
1he'1 only ball coo!ident abe can grab the
$5,000 first prize from 100 other hopefuls.
"I'm not awinging properly, and I don't
knOw why. It's a problem that's been
creeping up on me for four year1. Two
monthl ago everything went to pieces.''
"Right DOW I need 10meone to watch
me," she said. "I'm not addre!.sin& the
baU correctly and my cooceotralion has
been very poor."
"Experience js the only thlng I have
going for me. here. I can usually hit the
shots when I have to."
Miss Whitworth predicted St.!!!day's
winner will finish '12 holes on the" tree-lin·
cd 6,308-yard par 73 layout in three or
four under par.
The field of 71 professionals ar.\i JO
amateurs is headed by defending cham-
pion Susie Maxwell Berning, winner of
two of the last lhree LPGA tournamef!!.s.
Mrs. Berning, a peUte 27-year~!".!. trom
Lake Tahoe, has a good chance lo
become the second player ever fu win
success ive Open titles. Mickey Whight
won the Open in 1958 and 1959.
Other contenders include Miss Haynle,
a Uoy Texan looking for her first Open ti-
tle; durable Betsy Rawl!!, who along wl!!':.
Miss Wright has won four Opens; Miss
Mann, whose 6-root..3 frame has been
shadowing Miss Whitworth on the tour all
year, and the consistent Miss E.nglehorn.
NAMATH ...
{Contl1'utd frem Pa1e %01
TV man asked Namath.
"Generally speaking, yes," he said. "l
appreciate the trouble some or the press
y.·ent to in getting the facts, but I don't
appreciate what some of the magaz.lnes
said. It simply wasn't true."
"Have you received any letters rrom
people and what did most of them have to
say?" the TV guy went on.
"I've received a lotta letters," said
Namath. "Also wires and phone calls.
Ninety-nine percent of them agree with
my decision. A hundred pen::ent want me
lo play."
"What about those dice games the
magazine said were held at your
apartment?''
"It's not true. I'm goMa have to look
Into it because if it's like they say, which
l know it isn't, I didn't get my cut."
"Do you plan any legal action?"
"Thal 's up to my lawyers. I think
they'll do the right thing."
"Isn 't it possible for you to place the
stock in your restaurant in trust?" sug·
gested the interviewer.
•·J 1hink It's possible," Joe said.
"Well, isn 't that another way out?"
"I'm not looking for another \\'ay. I
haven'l done anything wrong."
"About thb t.ruJt ••. " the telecaster
attempted lo expand on the subject but
Namalh cut hlm short.
"Look," he snapped, "I don't wanna
hear about any trust."
Shortly thereafter Joe went down to the
track proper lo make presentation to one
of the harness drivers and the cro\\·d
nearly engulred him.
Javelins to Drag
The 32.qiember Javelin-AMX Car :: .. b
of Orange County will take on all comers
at a special drag racing meet at Orange
County International Raceway Sunday.
Prizes up for grabs include a New
\Vorld Trophy presented by H. R .
Lubricants and a check for $50 to lhe lop
eliminatar. Champion Spark Plugs and
Pennzoil will also donate awards.
Spectator admlaion wlll be $2 io the
meet, which startl at 1:30 p.m. Quali-
fying start;s at 10 a.m.
I ' •
' '
DENVER -The Denver Rockets of lhe
American Basketball Assoclatlon an--
nounced Wednesday the sale of guard
Lavern Ta.rt to the New York Neu for
undisclosed amount of cash.
Tart a 6-loot.J veteran from Bradley
Unlve;slty, was with the Nets in 1968 and
was traded to Houston along with Bob
Verga for Willie Somerset and Leary
Lentz. • \YICHITA, Kan. -Elmer Curt Ken-
nedy, 42, a form er professional boxer and
promoter, was killed in an auto accldent
Wednesday.
Police say Kennedy was a pu.senger in
a car driven by Willis D. Ellis that went
out of control an crashed.
Kennedy had 13 professiona l victories
when he bo1ed J°' Louis Jn a four-round
heavyweight exhibition in 1948 in Kansas
City.
He continued his career in California in
t.he early 1950s thtn returned to Wichita
to open a gymnasium for hours com-
peting at the Old Forum.
• SAN DIEGO -Two cornerbacks wtre
1iigntd u free agenl.IJ Wedneld1y by the
San Ditto Chara:er1 of lht Amtrlcan
Football League.
They art Davt Ph.tmp. a g..foot, 195-
pound player lnlm """-State, with the
nrttlsh Columbia Liou In 1967-A, and
rookie J•rry Monti<~ l-1. lllO-pounder
Crom Colorado St1te University.
How They Stand
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
Woa. Lost Pct. GB
CHICAGO 4; 25 .643
NEW YORK 38 29 .~7 5 ~~
Pl'l'l'SBURGH 36 35 .507 91>
ST. LOUIS 34 36 .!M II
PHILADELPIUA 27 39 .409 16
MONTREAL 19 48 .284 24~J wen Dlvl1Joa
ATLANTA
LOS ANGELES
CINCINNATI
SAN Fl\ANCISCO
HOUSTON
SAN DIEGO
41 28
40 23
:i.; 29
36 33
38 38
28 49 .......,.., ... ...,.
A1'-"1• J, L.M A""ltt :1.
(Ille-i. fllltlflliirtll l.
.594
.588 \\
.$47 3i-,
.522 I
.114 511
.347 18
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1M .......... tt 1M o-. 11Wo1.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Dlvllloa
Wo1 Lost Pct. GB
BALTIMORE 52 20 .722
BOSTON <I 28 .594
DETROIT 31 23 .571
WASHINGTON 35 38 .479
NEW YORX 3< 39 .116
CLEVELAND 28 42 .312
Wat DlvfllOll
MINNESOTA 38 30 .119
OAKLAND 38 29 .l54
SEATTLE 3t 37 .4S6
CHICAGO 30 38 .411
KANSAS CITY 27 41 .287
CALIFORNIA 23 43 .341 ..........,..,._ ..
o.trolt t. NIW Ylrt: I
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Ull.Y i'!tOT Jl !
PreppeCI· at Newport
I
-.N.ew-UCI£age-Aid~· :l---____..,
Playing Days Recalled
GLENN WHITE
' Sports Editor
R11nners Get
Spray to Beat
Miafui's Heat
MIAMI (AP) -Distance runners at
the naUonal men's AAU track and field
meet this weekend will be sprayed with a
fine mist to beat the heat, expected to top
100 degreea.
!\feet officials said it will be the lirst
time the mist-cooling scheme has been
used in such an event.
"Runners have been sprayed at other
meel.s but only with nozzles on the end of
regular hoses," said Jerry Iso1n, a meet
d,irector. "It got the runners so saturated
they were uncomfortable."
The spraying is designed for safety as
\Veil as comfort.
A distance runner fainted in the hea( of
the 1964. AAU meet at St. Louis.
'Mle· mist will be tlimed on during the
three.mile and six-mile events. To further
minimize tht: effects of heat , the events
. will be the last of the day.
"It 's ao engineering genius," Isom said
of the spray technique.
Noules attached to J-'h-inch pipes in
eight-foot lengths will be spaced around
the inside perimeter .of the track. There
will be 16 sprayers and the mist will
reach oot over the inside two or three
lanes.
Frtd Wilt, a Conner distance runner
and FBI agent from Lafayette, Ind .• sug.
gested the process after researehing
elements of track temperature and body
temperature of the runners.
Temperature at ground level on the
Miami-Dade Junior College Stadium is
expected to reach well over 100 degrtes.
KIWANIS TO llELP
BARON WRESTLER
Members of the Fountain Valley Klwa·
nis Club have dipped into their pockets
for $50 to help sponsor ClF champion
wrestler GleM Anderson or Fountain
Valley High School compete In an i~
vitallonal tournament this summer 1n
Wyoming .
Anderson and one other star wresUer
from Fountain Valley High will represent
the a re a during Wyoming compc:lition.
KJwan.is members will pay for part of the
expenses for Anderson's trip. . .
Dipping the other hand into their
pockets for sporls, Kiwanis of Fountain
Valley produced another $50 last week lo
help buy trophies and unjform s for
players in the Huntington Beach Union
High School District summer basketball
league.
By EARL GUSTKEY
Of tk 0.llY ,. Slaff
As a basketball player •t Newport
Harbor High School a dozen ye.ara ago
Jerry Hulbert never threatened to caust
the school's hoop followe rs lo forget
George Yardley.
But he was a varsity start.er with a
sound command of the game's run-
dament.a.ls and one who seldom com-
nUtted .mental errots. Hls coach', Jul'4
Gage, now the atbleuC; di!°~. ~
NewPort, recalls that Hulbert was a can-
didate for the coaching ranks rrom the
start.
"Jerry lndic11,ted all along that he was
tntere~ in a coa~ng career. And he ·
IL1111ed out to be • hec\u9a coach, too.
The UCl job Is a greal opportunlty foi
him," Gage says.
Hulbert, 29, was named last week as
UCI's new assistant coach under head
man Tim Tift. Hulbert fills a vacancy
that Tilt created two months ago when he
was elevated to the head coaching post
after Dick Davis resigned to take over at
San Diego State.
And so at the same time Hulbert has
negotiated the big leap from high school
coaching to college, he also returns to the
Orange Coast area where he began his
basketball career.
A two-year lette rman at Newport,
Hulbert matricu)ated to Orange Coast
College where he was a two-year starter.
Then be moved on to San Diego State for
a season of varsity play.
Hts first coaching assignment was In
Needles, where he survived the heat for
two years and planned to find a coaching
post in Orange County at the first op.
portunity.
It came in 1965 when he was named
junio r vars ity coach at Fullerton's Troy
High School.
After a single season as JV mentor. he
stepped up lo tht: varsity levl!I and had
completed his third varsity season when
he applied for the UCI opening last
monlh.
At Troy, Hulbert logged one ol Orange
County 's finest prep coaching records
over three campaigns. He was ~19, in-
cluding a 23-3 last season. He developed a
solid 6-10 center, Scott Magnusson, who
last month signed a grant to attend the
University of Minnesota.
Tift and UCI athletic director Ray
Thornton whlttled away at lhe list of can-
didates and came up with Hulbert. Tift
called him two wtek1 ago al his home in
Yorba Linda and asked him how long it
would take him to pul on a suit and drive
to UCL
"About 45 minutes," Hulbert respond·
•d.
"I drove right doWn and Tim took me
inlo Dr. Thornton's office and tbey told
me I was the one they wanted. I'm reaJly
happy over the opportunity. I'm fortunate
to be able to work for a man like Tim ;
nol only rcrr 'his personal qualities but as
a coach as well."
He credits Gage for playing a major
role In propelling him into the coaching
profession. "t probably listened to hia ad-
vice more than anyone's ," he says.
As coach or UCI's freshman team next
season, Hulbert already has been brieled
on the club he 'll suit up.
"I'm pretty excited about our freshmen
-potentially they're a pretty good group
with about four or five good outalde
shooters. We'll have speed but the boards
wiij be a question mark."
JERRY HULBERT
As UCI Aldo
JERRY HULBERT
As Tar'Player
GRID SIG NV PS
AT WESTMINSTER
Si.gnups for tbe Westrpinster·Midway
City Junlor All-American Foot b a 11
Program will be held in Westminster
beginning Saturday.
The Saturday and Sunday ~ions will
be from JO a.m. to 4 p.m. at lhe Alpha
Beta Shopping Center al 5 9 S 2
Westminster Blvd. in Westminster.
Added sessions will be conducted Jun&
30 through July 3 from 4 to 8 p.m. a.t the
same site.
The program is for boys in the eight·
through·l3 age range and the weight
limits are 55 to 115 pounds.
Boys must :show up with a birtlt
certificate, a 1989 report card and an $1l
registration fee. The second boy of one
family ca.n sign up for $5.
•
TENNIS WIMMI
SWEATERS
TENNIS
BALLS
• RACKETS
• SHORTS
• SHOES
• SHIRTS
• SOX
• DRESSES
• JACKETS • VISORS
(CANS OF 3)
$1.29 -$1.49
$1.89 -$1.99
BASEBALL
,....,, ..
e SHOES
e BALLS
e BATS
e GLOVES e CAPS e HOSE
• Masks • Fins e Sno
• Swim Trunks
•Tank Suits
BICYCLE·S
e PARTS
e TIR,ES
e TUBES
e ACCESSORIES
• HANDBALL GLOVES & BAW '
• PADDLE BALLS • PADDLE 11NNIS
• VOLLEY BAW & • PADDLES
Nm • TABLE TENNIS
• PADDLES and BALLS •
I
-·
. ·--
H DAllV~D~
I
' • l'OINf YOUR KNEES
FOR PROPER FOOfWORK
An easy WIY IO l•l the fnl·
Ing ot proper footwork Hill th•
·golf sWing is to make sure yuur
)(nees point iR the rl&ht place
1t the right tlm ..
In illust~tion #l. we see the
1op of the backswinc pe>siUon.
The knee has turned to the
right and now points behind
•
Qll«IJ'l!QIAI*
the ball. In illustration #2-the
follow·through positK>n -the
right knee has turned so that
it point$ in front of. the bait.
If you learn to move your
legs into .these pOsi~ions, yo~r
weight . will automatically ~tuft
properly dur ing your swing.
This proper weight shift will
improve your balance and your
timing; you'll hit the ball far -
ther a11d straighter.
.. 0 ""' w.n. ._. .s,.. ...
I , ... ,,,. 1414 -
Los Alamitos
Entries
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•
Monarchs
By DA VE CEARLEY
or "" Diiiy .,..., ... ..,
In a battle of unbeaten
leamJ, Newport Harbor's Tars
handed Mater Oei a 71-68 loss
In Santa Ana Summer Basket-
ball League play Wednesday
night at the Santa Ana College gym.
The Monarchs were within
striking distance until 5:25 left
in the rourth quarter when
center Ra1ph Chandos fouled
out. Newport then opened a lJ-
point lead with four minutes
left.
When Sailor center Lee
Haven left the game with five
persona ls and still t w o
minutes to play, Mater Dei
rallied again only to fall short
the last 30 seeond.1.
A basket by Monarch guard
Werner Raes with 15 seconds
left closed the gap to three
points, but two foul shots by
forward Dave Eccles put the
game out of reach.
Raes poured in five last
quarter baskets in sparldng
the late rally, He ended the
night with %7 points.
Eccles tallied 19 for the
Sailors, with Haven picking up
I!.
Newport never trailed in the
game, holding as much as a 14
point lead in the third quarter.
, The victory kept Newport on
lop of the league standings
with a perfect 4~ mark. Mater
Dei, with a 2-1 record, fell to
third place, while Santa Ana
moved into second with a 3-1 mark.
Jll!WPORT 1111
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MATE• Dlil UO
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H•rMllMa 701111
NEWPORT
M.ATEfl 0£1
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GIRL TO MEEt BULL -Edith Evans will fight a
bull Portug~ese style (on horseback) Sunday B;fter-
noon when man duels beast in njuana'::; downtown
bullring.
Blonde From Texas
In T-town Bullring
Edith Evans, the blonde
from Tell.! who fights bulls
from horseback will be a
specia1 added attraction to the
pro,&ram Sunday at t h e
d<$ntown bullring, Tijuana. ·
Matadors Jaime Rangel ,
Gabino Aguilar and Leonardo
Mamano will also appear.
Each matador will face two
bulls. Mlss Evarui will face
one. The corrida begins at 4
p.m.
A native of San Antonio, the
attractive horsewoman began
her Weer of "rejonear," the
Portuguese style 0£
bullfighting from horseback,
four and a hair years ago in
Mexico. She has a sLable of
specially traihed horses t.:1d
has already faced more than
150 deadly fighting bulls in the
ring.
DeepSeaActionGood
In Coast Area Waters
Miss Evans rides three or
four different horses during
each performance. 'Mle 24-
year-old Tenn has made
something or a comeback thls
year, returning to action since
she was pinned against her
horse by a bull and her leg
shattered on July 23 last year. AP three matadors will be
malting their first local ap-
pearance this year. Excellent fishing oul of the
Newport Beach area continues
to' be the big news with bass
and bonito keeping the
spotlight.
Bass in the five to si1-pound
range are being landed.
Monarchs
Mater .Dei Ambrozich (26)
· vtttip~s -rip·--~"'--=-=~ W · Foe, 9>t.59 aces age-·i n
Wilson Ford and McDonalds attack with 20 polttts.
Mater De.I contlnues tu lm·
presslve role In the Tustin
summer l)asketball league,
notching its second win of the
campaign wllh a resounding
94-69 decision over Santiago
Tu<sday nlibl
The Monarohll, with a · M
mark, are the only undefeated
team in the circuit.
Mission Viejo garnered its
first win with a 75-50 romper
over 1)Lstln and Foothill got
into the win Column wilh a 58-
51 decision over San Clemente.
Mater Dei's balanced attack
was led by slx players in dou·
ble figures against Santiago.
Rudy Holmes paced the
Mission Viejo offense with 25
points and was helped out by
Dan Kratz's lfi .
MAT•ll Dfl (Ml
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Seen ~, Ou1r .. r1
19th Street basketball teams Ambroz.lch, a Golden We!t
ripped the opposition Tuesday College standout, tanked 11
night in the Coot.a Mesa Recre-field goaJ1 and four . free
· h thN:iws in collectln1 his 21 aUon Dept. open league wll counl!l'S in tbe Wilson route.
impressive victories. Wilson led by 20 at the. half.
Wilson, behlr.d the shooting1 _____ '-----or ]Jrian Ambrozicb (26J, Tom
Witt (21) and Jim Conklin (20)
crushed Bill Barry Pontiac, 90-
46.
And McDonalds turned away
Orange Coast College, ~.
behind Rich Hardgrove and
Jim Butler. Hardgrove led the
WILSON l'ORtl IMJ
PG l'T "~ Tom Wiii 10 l 1
.Pe~ • 1 1
Jim Conklifl I • ' Auilu1 l 1 1 ltN~ Atnbr111ldl 11 • 2 TJ\orntan I o • T~•~ H 12 14
8tlL UlllllY l'ON11AC 44')
l'G 1'1' '" Stnltto 7 2 ~
l 111eY 0 0 I
El>o!H 1 I l
Chrl1!111i.en l ' 1
WOOdburr s o o Staftnv o o l
M1h1r 1 o 1 11enr1m!n o o 1
StewtU 11 l 0
Tat1l1 lf I 16 "
H1lfflrne l(IH'fl: Wiii.oft 44. ll1rrr ''· Mc:OONAlDS lfTH fUJ
Stev-e s.1.,.r
Fllherty
llrt1¥le1
Ham1ttr
J lrn Sutler
R.idl HitlltrC'/11 ·-TCllll'
H11tflrnt 1t<>re: "·
FO ff l'I' sf 1 l
i ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' . . . ' . ' . ' 11 ll 10 &5
McOa.,.1d1 d , CCC
OCC IHI •• " " Jardin ' • • Bab l~ck • ' • Stldltl.,..ll!r ' • • Turley • • ' ,_, • • ' -·-' ' • J im Klndtlan ' • ' 1'111•1• " I "
ON THE TUBE
for tha b11I ,wida IP wh1t'1
h1ppanin' 011 TY, r e1d T'V
WEEK -d i1trib11t•d with tll•
S•furd1y •dltio~ of th• DA ILY
PILOT.
THOltoutJHU£0 • racing
ROW!
9 •IG JIACEI DAILY
Tues. Thru Sat. Arst
race ... Weekdeys 1 :45
SaturdeyslliHolkkys 1 :15
ORDER YOUR
RESERVED SEATS NOW
THFIOUGH
COMPUTICKET
H~lywaod Pot~ lnglowood
Cenlury 8Nd. at Prairia
~
Sport and '"'port
Car Show
Don't miu ~is dis.play of up to th•
mln ut• sport con . . • th• Hn with al
plum ,,_ °"'"9• County's top diC!lers
• • • frn ht th• •Ir condlrionM mall
tocloy -Satvrdoy, J .. o ZI, HuotllNJIOft
Cent., ot the San 01,.0 frHWay,
on INch ot Edinger.
'OURTM •ACE. 330 Ylrdt.. 3 Ye•r
lid• •lld UP. Cl1lm!"9. Purse noc».
c11im!119 prlc:e s.1500.
IONTM ll,\CE. 441(1 "1rd1. l Yelr akh
Ind 11P In Gr11k A .Pl111. Purw 11100.
Oldct'f'I Con!K {Allllt) 170
SH•nl G•aund (1 W1t11111) 170
Davey's Locker and Art's
Landing report littie letup in
the retent success of anglers.
The water t~mperature, cur-
rently hovering in the 60 to Q
range is chiefly responJ.lble fDr
the heavy conce ntration of
spawning bass on the bottom:
News from Davey's Locker
Is basically the same -ex·
cellent bass and bonito catches
with bass the predominate
catch.
1~ : I~ ~1
T111tln 13 U 1 U-50 Ripped, 11-Q,......:"~'·~""'....v'.:'."~'· __.::"..:"'...'~' .:,._::C"'......!::==============" ,
Pec111 BM IW1twinl
Coo;ll;y Kid (Marr1'1 O.lctldoolle ISmUh!
l11mpl1w {LloNmJ
C-O.ndy (Slt11tU)
llUllll'f'I llH! (Hi rt)
Tiie ("ur1 1•t11jr)
Mir\ It Haw (Klnlll
Fll"TH RACE. l!O Ylt~.
~·tr okh. "'urH suoo.
1(1!11"" f~ll~)
11111 hl>t!Yr CSmlltll
,.
"' '" ,. ,.
"' ,.
"' ,.._'
'" "'
Df!lllm_, (HIM) 11)
Go Hombre (C1rdal1) 116
Nf.~I M-c•11tYJ 1"
51ndy Chic CH Cl'OlbYI 170
Mr. AMIO IMcJteyn<1kh) 116
Getii.•, Jtt11ue1t tStr1unl 111
Aoolla ltocktl If D ll1nltJ\ 11'
Al1rnlto. Do Good (1 511Pf) Ill
.. , .. 1!1l11ttlt
June PPllt Fiii. n W1tsonl
llldty l1rt Joe fl 511Pf1
Dllr••bll f"'•tliol
'"'•tell Mc 7•1vel U ti 111111!.1!
"' "' '" "'
Art 's Landing has had suc-
cess on its twilight trips. The
boat leaves at 5:30 p.m. and
returns at 10 with limits the
rule of thumb for the light
loads.
Race Results
And the three.quarter day
boat that takes off at 5 a.m.
and returns at 2 p.m. is cur-
rently doing extremely well
with the calico and sand bm
off the Huntington flats.
•
WIMl!IH9ly, JllW 15, "'' Clffr & Pt"
1'1R.ST •ACE. HO v•rd,. M1~n 1
v••r 01111. Clollmlnt. Puue 11600.
Ml1111elltl tC..rd()U) t.60 J.IO J.00
~ A r.oti (Morf\1l •.60 l.IO
Trtl Holt !It ll•nk1l • . .cl
Tl...-11 7110.
Ali.G ••n -P1uum llHuest. tl-Y
II<' Trl•lt. Ml"' Gold "'•f'llf, Sunoln
011e. Jt ...... Dia, Hll>Vr HC>ll1, M_,
(1r10.
kraklltd -1!;1p14 M1rlellt . Klc1011
JOY J\llte. lotltlollt, SodlllTome.
SECOND •ACE. «lO y1rct.. J Jftr
01111 11\d \Ill In Gf"llde: II Plus. l'\lrH
llJOO.
Gldter M1y c• 111n1111 •.to l • .O 1.00
Ml;lPnlhlnt ll•r (Ordcial lJ . .O 10.110
Hick( Ot! Mtr !llP111m) 7.40
Tlmt-20 t/10.
AIM! 1t1 ..... Trud\' Truc~I•. SI. Joi.11·,
It~. luml1>1rr. Allmllos Gt !. l~
p.,...,. E•Pttu, G0111 Hulltf'I, Hommtnll
J-11. kr1tchfd-ll..., J1ne, Lid~ Gln Gl11,
lllt O.vld, Gltlby'1 ll1b~.
H!OHTl Y OOUILE -l·M'-4111 &
.. Glill .. t MIJ. Plliil Hl.2'.
• TMIRO JIACE. ~ Yltlh. M11Mn 1
'nlr •kit.. ~Uf'M 11600. Tllr~ Ge'o tC1rdat1J
L-Ta Win (M1lrl
'1:1t Eddie !Hl<1J
Tl,,,_11 1110.
11.70 I.• •.60
JIO l OO , .•
AllO •1n-AC111f! Rt<lltfll, llolll Maon.
Deep Sea
Fish Report
.Hlly 111-,, 0.lllfY'l Ect>o, Thi! ltftlf , ...
krl!c"ed41f<VY•• Ha.I, lotldoe. A
Goin' M111. Go Pl"l Ga. Tlnv Trl11\,
Kl11,un.
POU•TH RACE. 150 y1rll1. J ye~r
ak11 Ind ""' In Gr1dl A Mlnu1. P\lrH .....
O.llcalt Mls.1 fWr19ht) IA J.IO 4.llO
Lfr'I ll ld !A.odK,io) 24.IO 11.llO
(•• .. itlre !Morr!$! 7.IO
11-.11 7/10, •
Ah.a 11t1n -H•ool""• 11. MantrreY G.,..,,,, Ytncllt Lyle, P1rr Slftl, Ml.,. ni. Mis, MIU.1'f'1 ll1r, Tllo D1ndv.
k'lltctwd -TllddV llt1r Too. Ml<·
k1'f'1 Traut.le, Ov!n llt1., Su11dl10.
Pll•7M •ACl. 350 ~•rd!. ' Wll oldl.
Cl1t"'lnt. l'uru ~llOO.
Trvcklt 1111 ccardGl•I 22.00 •.oo J.00
(1111'°" 1 (Lil>h3m) 1.4111 $.60
Leo sc-tHarn 4.111 Tl,,,_.11 7110.
.-,llO R.1n -IP Fact, Gold ll"lnt,
Kl1nne'1 ll1be.
No Ktllc:l>fl,
51XTM R,\CI . .00 y1,ll1. ~ Ytlt oflll
11111 UI>. Cl1lrnlM. ""'"" 1190ll. s1amw 111111 tlll!tl1m1 •.211 1 . .00 7.60
L1 Piii• JH (Morrill 1.00 I.Ill
Allnli1Hc !H1rtl l 20
T imt--1CI 7110.
A1!6 ••-W1r ll!llf, Mr. Olt T-. Gl1~ l.O. On n.. letm.
No Kttkllel.
SIVINTM •ACE. «lO v1rd1, l ~Ir
01111 •l'ld uo !n Gr1<11 AA M!n111 t1rod
In C1lll. Punt S!!'DO.
Moon Ofli!" (51-l llL40 n .20 '·'° r.._..111 lltoc:~.t !Smllhl l .iO 3.IO
M1bt& Cllldl: Too IA-1<.1! J.e
Tlme--)(1 1110,
Al1<1 R1.,.._S.m'1 NI ... ! Ou!, Tklllt S•uetre. ll'tlOld AU.ti. Dickey o ....
TlfM, Wf>o"l!'ll Sl'tfW, lit l lr l'lr\tr.
Sc"ld'>od -s-P1N1ur1, K1rT11
llad'.ei, •-.. Otl lloc:t11, J<111 McCoy, Mt. Pto-llr.,
Leaders Get
Easy Tests
The three unbeaten teams In
the Huntington Beach summer
basketball league all draw
breathers in tonight's fourth
round of games at Huntington
and Marina High gyms.
Huntington Beach, Rancho
Alamitos and Garden Grove,
all 3--0, play Edison, Bolsa
Grande and Corona de! Mar.
Only Corona (2·1) has manag·
ed to win thus far.
The first pivotal game o( the
league season arrives Tuesday
night at Huntington when the
Oiiers take on Garden ,Grove
at 7 .
Tonight's most attractive
matchup pits Newport and
~1arina at the latter's gym at
7: 15. Both are 2·1 and figure to
be title contenders in next
season's Sunset League race.
The game will provide a
rugged rebounding t e s t
between Marina's Kipp Baird
and Newport's Ltt Haven.
STAMtllMOS
MEN· Ltt 111malte11ou 1001' 11our very
be$l bl/ gtlting ont of Sir Woller"$ fa·
mou.$ Europea11 Raz.or Cult.
Sii WALTll'S
2052 ""''°" llitll. , .... _
Lee Clark: of Davey's
reports that in the past week
the following catches hnve
been recorded for I , 6 8 4
anglers:
Bass, 6,928; bonito, 3,771:
barracuda, 897; yellowtail, 14 ;
halibut, 34; others, 1,409.
That's a total of 13,053 and
averages out to slightly Jess
than eight fish per person.
Tuesday's Catalina free·
lance boat brought in several
barracuda -ranging from
nine to 101h pounds each.
SPORTING GOODS
~ -· Jl'O•r IHOl't
Mater Del dropped1ts fourth
test in five oulings ln the San·
ta Ana summer baseball
league with an 11--0 Joss at the
hands of Santa Ana Tuesday
night.
Hi11er. 1t>-1s KM1mn1t, tf.:ltr
Mever. Jb.o WIH, 1b
Mfflonev, rf
MAT!&• tlEI Ill
Al • ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . • • ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . ' . • • " .
R. M1rm1\ld, rl·o
N-1k, <
llro ..... , SI T. l111,.,.rt . .JI.•
A#le!M, cl
Arr<l'fa, 11
S.llz•r, II J . ll11~1. rt
Tol1l1
j(Of'I toy 11111111"
M Rll • • ' . ' . • • • • . ' . ' • • . ' ' ' ' . • • • • ' . . "' 000 000-Q l 1
IQ~ !11•-11 12 I
• IOIN OU1. Pl T
TYfNG CLAHU
•COMITO OUl Mat:
'"CIC JIMINAI
•JOIN OU1
KU.A CU.ISO
alll'lllf llUDQUAITllS
Coleman Sale
~=:~~ ...... 10'5
, ...... 1095
IT::~~:~~ ·~EN1t
'voh • bl"'°" -4 ti..y li'OP Vfl-"
Self ,.,.t.Ji11l11~ '•• -Ml
.. fvllow ""' .....
KELTY
BACK
PACKS ••• -'""'-'• 1" '"le '••It <•mfwt
•Ml '"
• Dry Ptck .... frffn
°'Y ''°' • i;...., Sitto! ......
fr• 50.oO M Denn
I S.h; CMI Ttmpa S1tttm1 "9s-"!f. 14.tS, s.le·9.9S
• Neats OWR ...... Nyltft
T ;nts .. Specltl rrtu 26.SO
SUMMER
SPECIALS
• VOJT DUCK nn
Slitihl 111-1.ti.
llet. I0.9S ••• .• , , ••• 7•t
• HODGEMAN UNY AL
SURf flOTU ................. 19" it.t. ,..ia. .M.ts •••••
• AMIASSADOlt
'JiSHING RODS ,, .... w ... ,..,.....
.... lt .tJ • s,.<W ••• 7ts
$cilt Wfltw Motl~ 11 f5
••I· 24.tJ • Sp.tc:h1I •••
• WILSON'S llST GR.ADI
nNNIS .. AMI ,..,., ,....... ...... 12'5 teo. 11.ts : •••••••••
• WILSON HIAVY DUTY
TIMMIS IAUI 1-t1 >)
1n hf. 1.JS
u ... 1t2 ·•cv ......
• JANTDN NY\ON
ltACING sum 2"
....... 12 •••••••••••
• RUSSIU. SOUTHllN
nH'NIS JACKlf 5t1 .... '·'' .. , ....... .
SANTA ANA
219 ! .• ,.
11 7.S711
FUUfRTON
601 S. JUQID 111.sm
NEWPORT RACH
tr27 fAWON ISWID
'44-tltl
HEY, BOYS •••
. •
·FOLLOW THESE STEPS
TO A REAL GOOD DEAL!
* EARN your own money * GET valuable pmes * WIN Heiting trips
BE A
DAILY PILOT
CARRIER BOY!
For more lnform1tlon, c.all 642-4321 ,
or a e n d the coupon below to the
DAILY PILOT Cln:ul1llon Dop•rl·
ment, Box 1560, Co1t1 MeH, C1.
9Z626.
y" "'"' .. wt ... ~ ,. 'l'N" ... ,. ""' I _.,..... l'Wf9, ·-.. -----------------------------·-··-----; • tam interesttd fn being a DAILY PILOT :
carrier boy. --.
Name ...••...•••..... , ..•.•..........• , ..•
Addreu •••.••• •·. · ·• · • • ·•· •· ·•· ··• · · •• • .••
City .......... · .... • • .. , • • • • .. · · • · · .. • ... .
Phone ...••..•.••...••••. , ••.. Ag1 •....... ·-. -... -. ··-................ _..,,. __ ---. -··-----_ _. ___ --·
--------------------------· --L -------------
JON£ 21
l:JO II DIC lllwllrwic:t (C) (60) m v.,. • t111 1etto11 tt tM
Sta (C) (60)
19@ H1111U.,.!rinkltJ (C) (30)
el!) DEIUT Tiie llMSli11lora (C)
(JO) .. F•cb ind ffluds." F11st in
• ..-!es an MW methods ind besic
trtrnls. in scltnu, Film~ Ind ~em· 9:30 D 9 CJ) m .,... (C) (30)
orutr1t1on rt. tht F.rankltn lnstitult "JuvenH~R-05." friclly illd Gan· ~f Ph!lldelph11 clarify concepts bl· non lhaw how th• JLIVlll!t. Divislo"
•nr drscussed. aperttu 11 tfM7 dnl 'lritll 1n 1b1n· CHJ CIJ fJZl fttn (C) (30) dontd b1by, I Nl\IWfJ bOJ' Ind 1
IE llotldert 34 (C) (60) youth lll&h on • d111prous drur.
(R)
7:1:1 fJ CIS hlnlnc Jim (C) (30)
W1lltr CrGntitt.
0 Mlt't MJ Untt (30)
ID ,_, ttl <30l
o-(C) (30)
m" ....... ""' coo> mw ........ •-<~ <">
$iCJl F~ (C) (30) "EsslJ °"IO:llOCJQJCIJfD 11111 Marlin (t)
OI). (60) Don Rlcklts. The Andiew Si$-
~@Hiatt a&d Wlkl (C) (30) ten tlld L1111 Korne ruest. (RJ
7'30
@I .P'llJ'i111 lit C11bir (30) "'Slafll R9'dinc and Playing." lnstruc!or
ff9derick 1'o&d tem SW6tnts' abi1·
ity to pley 1ifhl m1t1ri1I not for
merlf lntroduOld In the striu. He
also lntroducn 1 new .ilea lritll
li11do.s.
am""'"''' ..., <'~ m Tt• A....,,, (CJ (30) m Ota• ttome 1t> (30>
e ID "'"' <Cl <60l o--tt><60l
D 1>1111! (t) (60) Guest• 111
Dou11!1s F1irb1nb Jr., Phil Driscoll,
Rip T1ylor 111d Les!IJ' Gort.
@ (]) FRtwt (C) {30J "As!fo.
dom&-The EJ1hth Wonder of the
World."
fl) Sundt of S... (t) (Z ht)
"Cinclnn1H 'Pied Piper' 1nd Bos·
ten Pcm Old Timt1s' Ni&ht.• (R)
ID Mari1111 (30)
aJ Passport to Tunl (C) (31)) R ~ (_{) Ani11al World (C} (30) 'fiie ttlebr1ted k1nga100 •nd the
Koala bur, nelivei to Ausbalia.
1rt .lludied. Ont hii!lli&ht or the
&how ls 1 trip to Heron lsl1nd to 10:30 I!) Nlwi (CJ (30) Bill John1.
11isit 1 ~un "Robinson Clu~~ @ 00 ftlturt (C) ()()) "C'mon,
nllMd Vl'i' Byrum, who shaw! VI~· Jet Happy!"
.. ICll"lt tf tlle spetbcular m1nn1 lift of tht Cr•t Battie.-Reel. f!t ftlall Clnzell (30)
o ID oo m """' '''" <CJ m ·-..., <,.> (60) "'Tht Pfa(U1 That C.mt to
ford's Run." Arrivilll In ford's Run
to bur I new (Uit1r, sll11h11 trlppel 11:00. DD• mm 11 ... (C)
.lash Clemtnls (Jimmy Dtan) finds fJ Altrtll MlklM:edi:
tht town d!lerted ucrirt for 1 ftw
hostil1 me11. (R)
8 Jack Benny Goes To * Oscar Levant's Doctor! a J1d: '-nnf (30)
D ll7J 00 aJ"" A7'•1 "" CCI (30) "SUjhtty Hot P1rtin1 Mtlats."
C'.l!lllln Fomtl!tn Ml*ls Sister
&rtrillt of n:ibblnr hi• pa11U111
metrrs. (R)
0 MllVir. "Tl111t U1111t" (dr1m1)
'57 -Rlchlfd Widmark, Richard
B1seh1rt.
m Allen Luddln'I lah'y (t) Rich
titllt . Michael Lindon tnd Lindt
Ronstadt auest.
m Morie: .. loommn(' (mrstery)
'47--01n1 Andr1ws, .IJM Wyatt.
If~ C>l ID (I) ta (I) -tt>
0 Mlffol S ...-.. "'An,.11 W)tl 11:301J Movlr. ~ochlmt" {inyllMY) '46 ~ -f.., (drlfllt) 'J&rJMtel -e.orp fl'!\. ~n ltrL
l!iili!li "' fJi!", .• l'lil. f,.;ij;fi..w ct! ·t~,/-q _TR(C)(30) ............. JaltJamt:I" m ...... (60) (wattm} -John Inland, Ann
B ."°""' ~ •~ "'1 M I °""' I llC·-~""' ""' -"''. a l!ilffilllioor • ..., <Cl
fD ~ .. hsionts (30)
12:Jom..., titr
l:GDU!B(.l)Tllt Prbo11« (t) (60) m .............. ,_ C'.lplors of The Prisontf chanae his n •-tr•. S9oc9 ot th•
1ppe.u1nc1 •nd by to toll'llnc.t him Air.
ttiat Ill is aomeon• ela He 1vtn·
tuallr ,.. throu1h the ruse ind in
1 rttW Htlpe attll'l'lpt, tries to con· 12:45 0 N~ "Optr1tl111 £k:hm1nrr"
vinct hi• captors that h• la nol {dram•) 61 -Wtrnllll" Klemperu,
lht PriaJnM. (R) Ruta Let.
0 Z1111 1'1'11' (30)
0 {f7J (])8 TUI Clrf (Cl (30) 1:00 D MoN: Fw: .. Cuzy Dtslrt.'"
•'fh1Homewrecker and th• Window D ._, (C) Wallie.-." A window wall\lf
Ann M1ril from 1 bul!J, 1nd his
wilt belltYI* tt Wit Im it fi rst m '"" .. ,..,. 011'1 1t1
s.iahl. (R)
ID """ (C) t30l m N£T ~ ('90) ,.A Sont ot
SUmmtt." A doe111111nt111 ·dram•
•bout tllt flul YNl'1 "' Enalis~
1:1511 Mftl« "'lM l•t• Ill Anaei"'
(drama) '59 -Rich11d Burton,
Cf1irti Bloom.
composer Frecleriell OellllS u Setrn 1:30 D c..11nttJ lullttin lo.rd (C) lhrouth ttle eyes of 1 roun1 En1·
lilh 0111nld. who spent lllost ytars m M-NICM Show: "'Sbitld tor
ol bli~ 1nd p1r11ysis with him. Murder, .. "Afon1 the Moh1wk tr1il,"
The BBC Jmduction 1t111 Ma M-•llCI "Wrestlln1 Women "*-i\lle(
ri111 end Qirittophtr C1lll1. Mumlll)'."
/ •'
FRIDAY
DAYTIME MOVIES
12!00 IJ •Hin ClnJOft 011ft1ws" (Wnf·
trn) '57 -0111 RobtrUon, 8'i1n
Ktith.
U:lO m "Captlvt CllJ" {dr1m1) 'SZ-
Joh11 fotqtt1e. ..111 llllfl"' (mr>
tery) ·s~•rtha Vidm.
t:OO o -rra1 " 1111 L ,.,,... 2:00 ID •ait str1111• tad¥tntu11J ·ss-.
• (ICM!lturt) '3& _ "::;' fondi, Rklllrd Oennln1. Glorl1 Jff11.
Fttd M.eMurr..,. J:OO B "f111rc11t 11!11 &try ltltM" 0 (C) •s.it 11 Rollil Hood" (Id· (mulictl) '45-llill HtJWOl'th, Ltt
vonturt) 'S&-Orlld H!diMin. June Bowt111n. 1-kl
B "Tiit Mtr1111ds et Tlbnn" 4:.10 II (C} "'Last If th1 C.11111tlln'"
(dr11111) '62-{li1nt Webber, Geor1•1 (1dventurt) '53 -Brodtrlck Cir•
R11w1. lord, Salbar1 H1l1, llo)d Brldt~
e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
Qualify Printing and Oept11d1ble Service
for mor• then 1 quert1r ol 1 c1ntl.rry.
PILOT PRINTING
.1211 WIST IALIOA Ii.YD .. NIWPOlT llACH -'42·4ln
JUDGI PAIU<ER
All lllGMT, UOE-:!llsr weu.
MAXE 5Ul1'E bl t>C*'f SEE •• NOl"
LUKE l~l1'6@ ALO~E Euau...
•• UNPE:fSTA.NP/
MOON MUIJ,INS
Mun :4ND .JEFF
GORDQ
WHAT
MADE
~?
0!17 YOIJ Q(JYS JIEA!t.~··'i'Y'lt!E PJJ. W(J
70 1. IN
MONKl!!mi:) JIUltL
1rt.s CAL/..EJ),
8!0-
AOTOMA710Nf -GltEN. Sf
.
I
• ly Sallllclers · and Overgarcl
.,.
SN:Jl \lo'W\T WAS THE
MOTIVE~-~?
-·· -~----
•
TELEVISION vmws
News Needs
Weekly Series
By RICK DU BROW . >
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -I lhink lhe lhing that :
I miss most in televisio n's network· prime time is a
series of weekly news programs focusing on fast.-
breaking stories, or at least immediate ones .
There used to be a fine hall-hour CBS-TV series
in prime time called "Eyewitness," and it really •
111oved iQ on stories that were, in a sen se, happen·:
ing ·events. l
THAT WAS in the days when the networks had ·
a group of truly outstanding half-hour news stories
in the prime even:i.ng hours. In addition to "Eye--.
witness," there were. for instance, "David Brink·~
ley's Journal'' and uchet Huntley Reporting" -•
both feature..oriented programs with a very solid ..
news basis, and both highly literate and stimulat-:
ing. When the network evening newscasts went to a
half-hour in length, however - I mean things like
the Walter Cronkite News and the HunUey-Brinkley
Report -these other prime time series went into
oblivion. One of thl reasons, as I recall, was that
Huntley and Brinkley would have to devote more
of their workload to the expanded regular news-
casts.
IN ADDITION, the theory was that these new· .
half-hour nightly newscasts would be able to go into:
breaking and immediate stories at greater length,
and in greater depth, thereby negating part of .the ..
reaso n for the existence of prime-time series serv-
ing the same function .
This was all true enough, to a degree. But to .:
say there is no need, or no attraction, for those
good old half·hour news-oriented prime time series .
is, I think, wrong. ·
THE NIGHTLY newscasts do go into stories ·
in greater depth, but still the natural tendency is ·
to fit in as many stories as possible, so that there
is really no comparison with a show that can tear ·
into every aspect of a worthwhile subject.
And, despite the excellence of Huntley and
Brinkley, th~re are any number of fine network ~
n@w · mIDI · Bil ooma. ttlliiDJ; flfllM llfflt'im c91 .. llie t'Jrid or "tlavid' Brliikley's JournaF' llJI!! "'Chet -Huntley Reporting." · : · . _ t ,.,
SANDER VANOCU~ for .instance, hti ~
given lhe host job oil. NBC-TV's mO!llhlY lll'.6'1\'0iir
prime time news entry, ''First Tuesday,'' and a
very good program it is. But it is, after all, despite
its admirable length, still a monthly rather than a i
weekly series. And because of the numerous fea-
tures on shows like tJils and CBS.TV's ''60 Minutes,''
with Harry Reasoner, the completely personal
trademark of the newsman is not quite as strong
as when Huntley and Brinkley turned out visual
essays.
And agrun, the hard-news orientation of "Eye-
witness'' is nowhere to be found on a regular wee~ly .
basis in network rrime time. Television is at its
best when you fee you are sitting in on something·
that actually is unfolding before your eyi;!s, or at
least is extremely curre..nt. And it is also at its best ·
when you feel you are ge tting one's man's view ·
straight and clear, the 'vay it was in the docu-
mentaries of. the late writer-director-reporter Ted
Yates. and before that with Ed MurroW.
IN THE ERA of the committee, one looks more -
and more for individual and respected and out-.
spoken newsmen to help clear the air and cut
throtJ.gh lhe gobbledygook.
Dentais tiae Menace
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211Mttirle Am11.1t,
)~boa l~wl. Cali(.
CIRCA SUMMER '69
PERMANENT PRESS
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• UM ovtr okl firil$h or on
111nfllllSfltd fur11ltu11 • Lira:• Mleetion of popular colon
COMP. lt£TA1t. I .ts
STUCCO AND MASONRY PAINT
LASTS a : VE'.ARSI
, CAii WO •E USED 11111 All EXiwQIELY OUR l'lllCE DURAii.£ lllTDllOll JOI
• SCn<bboble .1 hour~"' • c-rs ~so ft. 3 98 r • ca.in-up With water • Brus" 'ot .roll
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81 SYLVIA PORTER t:lnandal inctnllves and pro-
For the Ont tlme in the en. trdsa to train t:olire work
Ure hlSWy ol our country,~, forces ii. ~'11 11e.w ~ blc-<111 populaUoo ;, actually · vl>CaliOMI ld>Ools. -~
4'cl!niog. l!J!re .,.. the key ~ ioduStn ba• been mov·
ll&llstlts: : . · '· 'Jnc .,.Yood' tile suburbl inlo
• "-r0r Ibo ,,a,1 1wo ,.. .. ., ! °I'°!' """'"l'dde .. w.u, the. top ur c11ies 1n Lile u.s. •eo'( 1ou ~. .. 1
hav. -losing populiUilo al . • ....... P.wlni ....,.,... "'
Ille nlle ol 311 ,000 • ,.., -... areboulel. -· l•C\Orl<I. 03mpared to an a't'erage ~ ~ 1abl going up iD' 1¥:
ly gain ot !71,000 !rom JtaMG, middle DI oowbere?
-IN 'I'll! PM'f two yu11, Me111whlle, new '' w h' I e
the · numbtt of w h l t t .towns" .Csucb ~· V.J
AmeriCIN '" vllf .. clUef, are suttly ol Ori • l• 1>41 -1¥ i•lld!\.ifll4: Inn trelUlng num r• ol uoet11
"11 ...... , ii; •. I jut. Ill. people ,iid , t Ve I . ••·
I~"" Cl!'., ~rtle of suburbanilet. Alld 1111 ll!UllJI
••.Olp!!ii 'Ull:lf. Al 119 ...,. eo1111nue I• ''" poop II ll'ul time, •tbf-ililltl• ti bllclt both <111 Ind aulltil'll.
Amthew Into ~Ues, mr:-sToftY ~ ltll16il lll lllt
mllnh' -· the -~ C.nsus B.,..a'1 l1loll llll) ti hQ ~ drlm t ~ city VI, ~ ~\km Ne~ ~-ol ll7 -ut1 tt l'llOdl IV oMt,alJ, bia~t cities rOle ooJy.111,000 · 1 wondtr Sor imtance,yhow
• year in lMMI. .agalmt m&n1 ~ Amtricam are
370 •• I year in I~. · , "0decidirii to stay put • lftu
Whtit hu happened? RWI. reading daily front-page r~
racial lerwJons, soartnc crime ports ol riot-tom cities, fOb..
rat.ea ln lhe clU.. are what beries, and rapes and hearing
have h1ppened -~ top of all persistent reports of soaring
lhe olhtr city problemt or property taxes in the suburbs.
pollullon, tralfi& j1m11 rillnt l wooder whetHer-this means
r~U\ falllnc qu11lly ol the we are nearing the end of ·the
SCllOOlt. ·' dedine of the small fann. I
At the statisUcs drlin•UJ.e.. wonder the e.1tent to which
whiles AND blacts ar'! run-older Americans (inclµdint
ning from tht• probltm1 -retirees) are mov~ iD\o what
willl Ule economically sue-was fonnerly their HCOnd
c.<etiful Negroes ia particular home ~ ~ uurbs and l'W'8l-rpovtng to the suburbc and uus _in order to .have elbo~
53lt1Ute cities of the bf& cities room. ind &esh aJr lo breathe.
to lake advantage or the start . H I am wondertn& along the
of integration or resldentlat right Jines ttus, cou14 J>e
housing. A statistical htnt (It's gtnerally rtfreshillg newt for
only ·a hint, for tht 1M1Qb1rs Small ToWt'I, U.S.A., l!-nd for
' • . ' " .. ..
... llDlll) is Ille~" die . ••~rd ·N<wtt: ••~••~i ·•.! to jolmilg ~ bJ ill -could bl 1\tl\11, ~ .• v rd c rt ' 22i .... :rur tn IMMI, more . P'Oll ~ \'IRY ' llOI prol I ~ ove W~S '
lhlll 11 -.. ., '"' " lht portioe or u-m..tnt out .t ljlllj ~ellOral Electnc ~ .
19,tllll year\)' avttll' 1n '*" lht clU" ai:• u,. Ill lllolr jllformat*. ~ales .and 66. young-middle tlnanciallf able , services div1s1on in Los
WHAT RAS. hoppened ,.. 11 and tndlpolldonl ,. ..... ~hip >.natles.
the trtmendous litnu of ln-.,
dUJlry Into lht ,..bwtlo, 'Ille
Southern states, fnrn whktl 80
many ol loday's blc-c!IJ N'll'
oet <'amt, hlvt . beU IUl'!-
cessl\llly lwil>I . tarre cor·
poraOons wUh a wide array of"
TAR. GAZER11 ~ J.!ll;,:;;_:_"1 CL\ Y It PO
LEGAL NOTICE
H Y_Doil,._-. H
"'"r A(cwcl-. I• Iii• Sf•rt. Y
To develop messoge for Fridoy,
mxf word!; c.or~j"9 to runberi
of yo.# Zodtot blT1h Sign .... ,.,
CEITll<ICATE 01' iWttN llt PICTITIOUS IUJlll
The Vnff(llfl'lf<ll doc-\ ct'rtllv ~ 11 con-<luc,, .. I bi.ll1"6i 11 nJ Wftl i.111 51. •
1Jn1! ._ N~PD<"t 9tld'I, C11lforn\1. -· 11\op tl(tltloo.i 11....,, iwmt of M. 0 . Ml'G,
and ,..., Micl flrm 11 ~ of lflt
,.,...,.,...,,. ""'""'· -.. nltM In 11in '""' •Lkt" ·~ ;~ ., ltli9wl: • """ Marcl9 0.11 Correll. 1105 0.YM l n . w_.1 h1di, C..tll.
011411 J""' 11,. IMt,
Mn. M1rci1 0.11 C.rPllB
Stitt" C..lllornil . l?f1Mt COi.in,.,. 0.. "-. II, Ifft, Dtforo IM, I 1+911,., Pul;lll( in Ind for Mid Slalt, .,,_.,.,
--Mardi 0,11 t1,.,.tll ""'1wll lo
mt "' ... lllt "'"""" -... -h wbs<r4btif lo Ille •ltrril' i....1r-• .....
-0.~ olW e•KU!ld 11'>1' Mme. !Ol"Fltl.\L SEAL!
Maf"'f IC. Menty
P@l1rv P11blit . C~U!or,.11
Prll'd H I Olllco In
Or-Co•m!Y ,,,_, Comml11lon Exel•l'I
Nov. J4, 1'n
"~ Otl ... f CNU Dilly l'llot. J,,.,, "· H Wid Jijfy l, ti. ~"9 11 .. 4'
LEG;\!, NOTICE
Crossword Puzzle
LEGAL NOTICE
Acfto s's '5Z'Btlng up to
lht tllp 1 S!ri p or , 54 Crttk "~"
conc1ttt 55 ln•lle
5 lll iss Vtrdon· 59 B•k•r's 'unil
, Kind of nolst fil Young
l • Cut off 1!1 imfl/
15 Optril &3 Casttr ol 1 l• t•~ 11r dtcl~lvt ti'l4llh11~nl 'f'll,91 l word's 17 To bt: Fr. t.5 Mltlllv
18 A.tltml t. JIF[l1•· l' 'ltnt ttffy 1•artl Ill '1tilsl1 &7 Trlltr of
ti;tth ...... " 11ntnilh1
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hold ch1rt sigri
11JPllt! .. #lt·~~ 0' 1'M.J • t• '"'~ In 70 Suptrlatil't sTATI <• \f .. llll"" • crrt,in way 71 Subdue THI c • w ......... ZS •.• ring 72 099 In .
"'-,..... · 26 Co1t1•on . rall\td lllt•ic
NOTICE 0' ".!,Alt•N6 .. t•t1t10,. conttaclloil Strlts ~~:,.;:f't"'s'i\-~"1:,~~Y IU~ •o" 28 Politic.II 7J 'Gavt E111~ -' ••<Ml8Al0 aoSAM'•, J,''" d· r
Dl!ct 1MC1 .... ·..., • "" 3.fl. '!Ulsh 74 Giid~ r NOTICE IS~lll:J'I" OIYIN T~l I llES~I!. £ 11 !CO "9• tlld Mitlot • t OW 7S L.arD•Jll!lrl• ~thloll tor P -·..t Wiii ,trllf fdt Ji Outdid • •1dl')l1 k• •.w~na of Let ~ .. ,., 111 l'etl-34 H••l'g faith · · 11on... •tl•rtnc:. "" wNdl I• IMdt i.; 11 ~ 1~''"'' "''11,111,,.,"" lfll!I ttie iimt • .,.. '40 In names , DOI
pllce ~ ~••tl~~il,*t flt.' t1te11 ..i 41 Sca~INl'lln · •i ,.,.. 1111v 11, n & 11 t 1 •.l'L. 1" 1tltl 11r~n111t. ' l 5-lall,t '•·
cw r1niom 01 ,,..,_J e(•ulll 42 0 f 9r1111r1 ,,.,,.,. o'q c00<r!, ~• 1'00 W ,,....,,. lll"" ., , r
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0r..,.-,: e.•1t-1e · · Iran S 'tt1ui1h11l"d T .. , '"'''*»IN •· 47 llost cut " 11 l'litt!llllH o._, CNt1 Dtlt, P'li.i. •fl~. •,p11 •ne t :
J.-zs. H •NI J~1, 1. 1,.. 1111.ff ,.. words
otlfeis 6' Reasoning ~'Pull, lor one ,eower
Sl H1vln9 7 Chtesr LEGAL NOTICE
grtlltr 8 tl11llhy mari
sagacity 9 Ptonoun
6/2&/69
lG E1po '&7 of 31 CHarat ttt In
Expo '70: 9iakespeau1
2 wgrd1 . lj r,11111 ,
ll i;;..,.. • ""''' ftttplliclt 1ho tliajl~
12 Ooze 4• IJll!I 9f 13 lttvenso.n , · 1pot1s ·ltlt
f,haractrr ~1 l il•I
21 Bannl1IN'1 S Mtmbrr or 1
23 t~~:nthi~. f~r;1rnal .
ilk" bl< • ,j) ff' liD!J.•
27 lomtthl111 'lS tl.iJcr \ ~
one dltt, ' If• ~ ~·" .n ·~ 11t)oira 29 J:due1t1•ett SJ Manlpclll " •• •
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roup: · ~11h lbt bbr. · ~ds , •
·io "'"' J """'' .. il~li 31 umlsh J4 ~ "f,.
33 r;~.'.'!f.I•,~ ,. •I II lo ,\EST" u lllu • s . •t art of a
" y,., '"""' ~··•''" 35 tn of fi'n'11r H Un• . . tam1ge . lllliijS· Allb t 36 reps Tut 6 frenth , ·
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WILMINGTON, Utl. (UPI)
-Pu.Jlman, fn<i.'s. M. w.
'· ~~1ot.cUV18Jon hil:S ob~lned a
.' a:i:nt~act , ~to, de!Ji1n. a n d
~ an . ammonia feed
' pllllt (or tbe Dawood Heicules
Urea Complei near Lah0re itl
West Pakistan.
PllAltMACY
TOPICS
• •
tvery fc;iur yl'ani man Is add-
ing ~ "'4flY people f4 the
earlh 111 \l"t're living Whctl
Christ w113' born. • •
Thl' bolt>' 1em1X'rature h.ll1
durln!J n Of m a I all;fpUme even .Jr the niinon II .... i.. ... I--.-. ' ...,...~
For modern Mil'Vllt -'~·· ruhioned cou · -(f
your. prtscrtpl~ · -•
•A•K LIDO '"*•·.' 3J1 HOl~till"ltMi ~ ..
Newl'ort hath 66.lJit
fr" Dell_.,.
SONY ··
·Th~ world's,,,.;,. o<l;t\lati . .°11
batt1.r.y pow.,..d
VIDEOCORDER
ind hand hold
TV VIDEO CAMERA
ORCO ELECTRONICS
CLOSED CIRCUIT TV SPECIALISTS
16 77 Superior Ave. . Costa Mesa
• (On• \il~k Sovtfl .o' 17th ~t.) ,,,.,,07
NIWPORT AREA INVESTORS
'.De Our·Guest . . .
,'14 y FOUR MONDAY IVENING
TALKS ~BOUf MONEY
(YOURS>
Alti!nd our free series of n1ccting11 on the stock
market, Set aside 7:30 to 9:30 P.M. on Monday
eveni~JI>. .June 30, and July 7, 14 and 21. ·
Come to . . .
THE COfFE! LOUNGE
ll'l'lne Tower :ft t , •
550 Ne:wport Centtt Drive
MUTUAL
FUNDS
TOI' MUT\IAL
fUN• no11aa•
wa~tet1 •• "'•"'''' fer ,,11.:\. li1htd offiet 1• N1wporl l11ih,
Pho"''
147·1JJ5 er 61t -J5)7
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Wednesday's Closing
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H DAn. y I'll.OT
Fine New Talent in Revue
By TQM TmlS °' .. _... ...... $ ....
'l'hert's a triple threat at
Anahehn'1 new Off Broadway
Wost -u ey<-catchlng Ind
ea.r-pltasq triumverate of
t.aleot offering • most m-
joyable IO mmut.s ol soop,
dances Ind 111&ppy pau.r.
It's tilled "Revue: Phase
Il,'" and H'll be around for
three weeks at the Grand
Hold. Aside from being higbJy .. ..........,, the lhow
offers some frah new talmt
to West Coast audience!..
wltll .....
satire. '"F· stinging
Stone concentrates his social
barbs on the modem day ba~
tie or the :sexes, drawing ra~
port with e~ry puocb line. 1
E.speciaUy dfective is his •:;,· -:l"---"'l..il""'.,.."""" depktJon of an all-nude soc.i·
ety -it's a trifle rlsque. but
you don't btve to leave the
kids at home. No four.Jetter
words in this monologue.
The curtain raiser is a
precision dance trio called
Blad<, White and 14 -the i.t.
ter in reference to a girf s
name. not her age. Fourteen
Smitll (honest). Bert Woods
and Joe Tremain present an
eye.catching song and dance
act, hampered only by the
Grand 's sound sy1tem, which
garbled their word! on optn·
ing night.
Two show~ are staged night·
ly, Tuesday through Saturday,
at 9 and II p.m .. while one
performance is given at I on
Sunday. Bud Cross and his
Orchestra capably back up lhe
onstage activity.
'Water' Run s Too L-Ong
Hudllning the bW ls a
,.,.....,.,. young """""" wbooe flawlea lace Ind~
nearly make you una•are that
she has • \'Gioe. But Jeanine
Napoleon delivers vocally with
a qplivallng style reminis-
cent of• yuung Juoe Oiristy.
Mias Napoleon ii second HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The picketed the thealer Tuesday
generaUoo show business wltb title of the play at the Gallery night carrying p t a c a r d s the~ savvy ol ooe born in Theater is: "You Know I reading, "Big title unrair to
a tnmk. and bu performance Can't Hear You When the actors" and ''We "'ant our
is polish penoniifed. Her Water's Running!" naroes in lighl3."
repertoire ranges from an up-And you can't see the ac· The protesters said they col-
tempo rendition of "It All tors• names on the marquee lected $3 . .U from pedestrians
Depends on You" to a throaty because the tlUe U so long. -a small start toward a fund
treatment ol an unfamiliar but Plve ol. the p r i n c i p a 1 s for a bigger marquee.
SONG STYLINGS AND SEX APPEAL
Je1nine Napoleon at Off Bro.dway West unforgettable torch song, "No\j~;;~::i~~==:::::::::::=i Man." supplying 1be 1ausru 1n the EDWARDS
second slot Oil Ille bill is C I N E M A Stewie Stene.. a Jewish oomJc
who al fint Jlance loob like
For Barbara Werle,
West
HtUe m°"' Uw> a Jewish com-THEATRES
ic. But Stone has some fine material al bi1 command, and "PREMIERE PRESENTATION THEATRES"
East's Really
once be warms bis audience to
his brand ol humor, be lets Dy
By VER!<ON SCO'IT
HOLLYWOOD IUPl)-One
of the advantages of U\•ing in
Hollywood is the plethora ot
beautiful girls. Another is that
a good]y proportion ol same
are delightfully wacky.
Barbara Werle is a sample.
She is the feminine lead in
"Krakatoa, East or Ja\'a." the
title of which throws her into
something ol a tizzy.
"I k>oked it up on the map."
said the shapely boode, "and
it turns out that Krakatoa is
rt.ally west ol Java. Cao you
imagine the Cinerama people
making a mi.stake like that'!
.. , lhink Ibey found oul
about it too late: the title song
was alrudy recorded and they
didn't want Lo go through the
upens<!.
"Anybaw, east of Java
sounds more mysterious and
orient.al than west of Java. I
mean there's nothing
m~ious about wesl It
could even be \\'est Los
Angeles, you know ?"
Clearly Barbara talks 'A'hile
she thinks. Sometimes she
gets ahead of herself, but that
bothers her not at all
"We did go east to make
'Krabto&.' " she said. "We
went all the way to Spain and
spent fi,·e months there mak·
i.ng I.be pk:ture. But "''e didn't
Three Plays
Set at CS F
pass Java and we didn't col· Helen Hayes . lect $200. You know, like in
that game, Monopoly.
"To tell you the tnitb we Optin" g for didn't even,.. Java."
Barbara loolted aroucd lhe
Brown Derby suspic~ and Happy Plays added, "We never even ROI i.
Krakatoa. ' It . ATLANTIC CITY. N.J. (AP) ' blew up in 1883 so it iallit _ Actress Helen Hayes says
there anymore. But somebody she's ca..sting her lot with
told me that a new island bas play-..;ighls "of affection. _not l
formed next to it and lbey call despair: those ol compas51on,
it Arat Krakatoa which means not protHl ·•
son of Krakatoa. t.laybe we "''ill mate a sequeJ to this pie-lttiss Hayes, 61. drew ap.
ture and call it 'Son of plause Tuesday from the llXI persons attending a luncheon Krakatoa.' Those things ha~ session ol. tbe A m e r l c a n
pen out be.re." L i b r a r y As3ociation ~
Barbara said she b a d ventioo when she proudly said
received mixed reviews. she wtlJld do "Harvey" this
"They called me frilly, not ran with James Stewart.
too smart, not too t.altnted or "I'm coing to give the
too virtuous," she. confesaed. theater a little solace." she
"'-foiSt of them weren't too said. "I'll never again try to
kind about my singing voice invade the now, until the now
either. is a little more sensible."
"I was doing the best I Not so long ago Miss Hayes
could, but the.re went five joined a young acting group
years of singing !es.sons ri&ht and starred in several o(f.
down the drain. Broadway product.ions, despite
"But that doesn't discourage being, as she termed IL "the
me," Barbara babbled on. great white goddess of the
"Tbe next picture I'm going to Establishment."
is a musical. "We did a European ph11y
"One critic described me as that could be followtd by
a derelict and I had to look great thinkers or great liars,"
that up. I always thought a she said. 1'We did anolher
derelict was a drunken bum play which no one evtn un-
1 who needed a shave. I co.lldn't derstood at all."
imaiine ~·hy they called me She said if she were to act in
that because I never shave. some of the rrvolutionary new
"People misunderstand my stage plays she wouJd get so
acting. When I finished a \"try "depressed. l would end up in
serious dramatic picture -the m.adbouR. ''
''-Ian '14°ithout t.lercy' -the "It would be so deprtssina;
director, Barney Gfn.rd. told to play them eight times a
A Puli.M.... Pri1e-wiDJlina me I should do mare comedy. "'·eek," she shook her bead
play, a ~ hit and a ~; •·That doesn 'l bother mt' with conviction and adjusted a ~wk •ritlen and directed by t'ithcr. Can I help if it I play a pair ol born-rimmed &flSltS.
Dr. Alvin J . KeUer prom1st a part one way and other people "They come out with nothing
\·aried "Summer Theater 5." Stt it another way'!'' . on. This is the height or
beginning July 2 at California Barbara·s press agenl stop-boredom for me. r do so like
State College, Fulluton. ped eating his lunch. Ht' didn 't pretty clothes." she said, mill-
EV..Ung performances oll;:=loo=k=w=ell=.=======ing::.========.I Arebibald ~facLeish's a'lt'lfd.
winning "J.B." att scheduled
for July 2-'. "·hile Neil
Simon's eomedy. ··ne Odd
Couple,.. is booked in lbt
Arena Theater for the evm-
inp ol July 21·2l and 26 plus
the afternoons of July 2&-1'1.
Concluding lht' seasoo will
be KeUer 's •·Earth in My
Hands." 1t is set for Ult' even-
ings ol July 24-%7 in the LiUJe
Theater.
Tld:tt information ls
available from the theater box
office, f11.3311 . which is open
daily u.eept Sunday from noon
until t p.m.
Benn y Gag
W riter Dies
HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Comedy •ritt'r Jobnl
Ta<bbmy. 56. a looglime
utoriate rl C'QfMdian Jack
BenQy. died 'I\Jresday at St.
Jmepb's Hosplta.I in Santa
~bury wrote for thc l
Jack Betta)· Show for 12 )"tar$.
He also """' f,. cunediaaal Jadit G~ Garry Moort.
Joey Bi.!hop and Bob Nm.art.
In ltQ ... -wltll Bemly as a top PC W'rlter. H~ a1ao
w rite.~ tVe'rision
sp«Ws. I
STARS
s ....... °"'-•tt :. .... •' , ... •trl4'1 ,,,.1 11~1_, .. ,, H>t
t•l•r11 It eM •f tlo• DAILY
PllOr!i trt•I f11t...-11-
Dixieland • • • • • •
free concerts on the mall
COM( HEAi THI SWINGIN'IST GIOUP IN TOWN
FlllDAl :
UTVlDAl :
1 :JO ,. J:JO P.M.
7:15 ,. 1:15 P.M.
1 :ti P.M. ,. l:OO P.111.
FASHION jlSLAND
N IWPOI T llA CH
Ii.st frttKOW mlnlfUI ro TASHION ISLAl\rO OJI Poc'ffic
Coo.st Ui91-way bcrtott lt Jcmborte ond Mac..\rthllr
Boltltt:erd h1 N~vport Bt:adi.
•
NOW-ENDS TUESDAY · • .· .,.HAMMIB•L1
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Dittct rrom
rcscned seat
engagement!
' . -m11ca w ~,_....,. lfCS..SEYEN MTS ,
OUN••p. Wd coullll' rem1ere - e ., July 2
H •ATR. ~ C-OWM••• P'lcnrllU -·-,. :=:~ai::=~-=~ lalllllT I n•• 1
Exclusl .. p....,,;are PICI / lllall'1
Engagement / cuu.. ~MA:•i"S(
"SOUTHERN ~li!I~
STAR" ~ --:.-
"Goodbye, Col umbus"
A fil• tre-tk N...tM by
PHILIP l OTH
n. "-*" of ...
N•w a. Sek
..,......,., c.-tMi• ..
MATINEES DAILY
..... n.n...M..-1 p.a.
S.••t It...-.
I t i p 11 N-
• . . . . I!! !!I
Winnie..,,_., ..... ...._ .. -{EX«pt Newport Clnem•l
Can Herbie, 1 cle.in·livll'lg.
hard-working small car
• ~ .. find happiness
• . :. . in today's
· · hectic world~
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...... DUN JOMa • NICMnl UI
I UDIT HACDn --1 DA't10 TOMLINSON
Complete Printing Service
Top Quarity -Fast Service
ii'·''IMl!iil!i
642-43 21
2211 Wost llalboo 81¥d. Newport Beodl
I
' )
r
' j
Ad J,lla King Too -Dry-Film Stops
• Steve Still ,Tops t.10SCOW (AP) -There Jn lhe Soviet Unlon. when weather c I e 1 rt,
was no water at 1 re-eMCI.· Relief c&me 't'Ueldiy wttb a An>ertcan actor Rod Ste.lger,
mtnt of waterklo. so the rainstoml. ' film comJ)lIU' u N~ and IWM lt,000
Italian film crew walked out. spokesman aid. ltuulan tr0ops are '1hn'na:
Faced wilb parching heat With the protest strike ep-openlaa scenes of the' battle After 11 Series
...
By y~oN SCOTl' and Allen clearly enjo)'! a
llOIJ. '/WOOD (UPI ) sponLaneous mot as much as hia audience. Quick, name the performer
and water shortage while patently ov~, shooting at Ule for a jOint Soviet-Italian prO-
making a movie of Napoleoo'•!r"'°"mlhem.,_ .. c11...,r,.1s&d._ueo,to'"'"raume~-.,=--;;;;;,,;U;otled;;,.,"W;;-.;;:;::.;;;:::;;,,"-J
famous battle, the-Italian w· ----
crew at UZ/lorocl Monday ·tag-' ~~,-f NOW SHOwtN• ed one of the few strikes ever ...., Sklney hltler I"
..!~ \?!fl "FOR LOVI OP IVY" ~-·'1~-., .... ~ who bu itlrred on his own He and Red Skelton are
televlaion shows more lhan about the only top comedians
any other. who laugh at lhtii' own fobs. "I laugh at mysell because
Hint: He bu appeared as a some of the things I say I'm
regular in panel and game hearing for the flnl time, jun
shows, audience participation like the audleoce,'' Allen says.
shows, lale olght talk feats, Perhaps more than any
weekly hour variety sUlns other television celebrity, Ed and announced "rest 11 n g
Steve Alltn
matches. S u 11 i v a n notwithslanding, Allen W provided a showcase Amwer: sieve Allen. for newcomers who have gone Show" ls syndicated ln more
Steverino has been on the on to become stars. Sullivan than 50 cities, showing at a
tube in 11 separate Mrles has dooe lib abare, but many variety of Umes from 9 a.m,
since IMS, all but one of which acts that appear on his .show to as late as 11 p.m. (6 p.m.
survived at least a year. Five are forgotten immediately. '-=Joc=all=y=on=C=ha°'nne=I =SI=-===;
of them were titled, not too Allen, for better or worse, rr
originally, "The Steve Allen has presented:
Show." The Smothers Broth~ the "It's a dubious record," --~ Supremes, Jim Nabors, Bill Allen agreed amiably, "but a Dana, Andy Williams, Steve
record nonetheless. Laurtoce and Edie Gorme, A._
"\\'lien I gave up announcing Louis Nye. Tom Poston, Don HELD OVER 1 GI• LoHolNiftM
the Los Angeles 'WJ'e!Wng Knotts, Don Adams, Jackie COlltl .. ..,. Dally '""' 1 P""· SWey Wi.tM
matches I had a local &how Vernon, Elaine May and Mike Frid Alf•ir• i.
titled 'The Country Store.' It Nicbola, Jack Jones, Lou "FINIAN'S RAINBOW" "BUONA SERA
lasted only eight weeks. 1 Rawls and Marlam Makinba Pr~, MRS. CAMPBELL"
might bring it back to prcve -there are hall a hundred "HANNIBAL BROOKS" CONTINUOUS SHOW
you can keep almost anytingl-~o~th~ers~-~~~~~~~:l~=~M~;,~h~ .. ~I ~J-~P~,l~l·~"==~~~·~•~tL~Y~Fl~O~M~J~P-~M~-~;11 on teJevislon for a year." Allen's new "Steve A1len
True, if you make certain
Steve Allen ls part of the
show.
He was t. panelist with "l'vt
Got• Secret'' and "What's My
Line," • pair of long-run hits.
His other shows have featured
Allen iD robust comedy, satire,
slapstick -the entire ramut
of humor.
Most of his work ls ad lib,
No One Under 16 Mmltt ..
~~
THE
IREllTEST
SHOW
VllbDE
IN
THE D.S.ll.
All $Ab 1.50
TO•ITllll -~-· -~
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111'-TOl'lll COllUliUI
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18"1 NMITIIOl-WUf CllllT 1Uf1'
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• • • • • • • • • • IEIEIVATtOllS: (714> 77%-7171 • • • • • • • • • •
""" TNU t ti tt P.M., TIU..UT.
"HOMBRE" """' •r' ....
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,,...._..,. tlww S._.y ff'Oll 5~ P.M. s.m.a.1 Diner froa Two P.M.
SllltCl.7 Brudi l•~llea.ale from 10 A.M.
A 5UAT MUSICAL COMIDY
OPENS MIDAY
"THE THREE PENNY OPERA"
IT
BERTOL T BRECHT
1n7 Ill..,..., tMI., Cnl1 Maa f'fr 1t--.i1tlloltl "'-UU
·ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER
ADllLTS Sl . .75-JUNIOU S1.oo-cit11111111 -. 11 flD
BALBOA
673-4048
OPEN
6:45
71t1Lla ...
....... '"'Insult
N.W.011' llA<M -...... --t. l•lo~t-au. ldo -01, 14SH
f•clllfl" lllCI.., s1r1ow1.,
Mld-s..tlten Cellfonil•
Jack Lemmon
"' Catherine 0.ntuYt
Clt1rln 1.,.., -Pet., L1M1t11
'"'""" '--r
r ... a..-ic Fmtay
"THE APRIL FOOlS"
'. . . --
GEORGE JEAN
PEPPARD SEBERG
, ~l]! T
NOW
PLAYING
WEST COAST PREMIERE RUN
& OIJlN'I' 01' Jl MOVIE
l COWM81A PICTU•ll P1t•••M1'8 I
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Pll:I;./ lllllP
CARL PCIAEMAN'S
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NOW SHOWING
CONTINUOUS FROM 12:30 P.M.
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT NOON
'TECI ••· -, ~J
Also
Playing
.. WAaDllMft ,.....,.
W1nn1ea.Pa1h1 .................... ft-•
PREMIERE SHOWING! ---
JACK LSMMON CATHllRIN• DDmUYs
'THE APRIL FOOLS•
plus co-hit• STEVE McQUEEN
''THE ntOMAS CROWN AFFAIR"
"A?rn Fool1" lhown &:30• 12:1S• ''Crown Affair'" 10.30.
Cocrip&Mtihowos Sat.os \0:30.P.M.
HARBOR BLVD. DRIVE-IN
H.Afl•Olt llVO. ICTWUN UN ormo AHD llAltDEM 'MOYL P'ltUWAft
---PREMIERE SHOWlNGI ---
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WAIT DISNrrs"THE LOVE BUG"TIOIGCCUll
pl1112N ..... "'OIT"•A-f-'Yp1cturoth ...
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~LOAll111Tl 1•111 htr A•lfl
• DAILY PILOT • •
CLASSIF1ED
-
HOUSi'S' l'OR SALi
Oonoral 1000
FHA-VA
TERMS
•
.
SIX YE.AR NEW, completely
redecorated. FOUR BED-
ROOM, family room 1 ~ bath
home with fireplace, forced
air heat and built-In ldtcben.
O>tnpletdy C&11>tled a n
draped. Larse over -mm
double zara.ge with wuhing
facilities. 15'x2>' patio, fenc
ed yard -sprinklers. Only
minutes trom l'l'IAJol" sbopo
Pinc and achool1. A BAJl,.
GAIN AT ONLY $2'1',950.
'
Evenlnp Call 548-3115
SOLD YOUR HOME?
Need 10methtng 1 a r g e r
Make this MUST SEE!
Muter size 'bedtoomt with
vanity nook. 3 Baths. Hup
family room ,,,ilh wall to
y.•all fireplace, Formal dJ.D.
In&: room. Electric built ins
New Ctrpets a: Drape
throUghoul Aaume Io w
FfIA 5~ % loan and $3,000
wW handle. GI no money
•
I
down,
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
'1682 Edln&<r
842-4455 or MMJ.40
Open Eves.
Mesa Del Mor
Low lnt•rest LHn
You can take 0""'" 11o1-~" ,..~
Joan at only $1"9 per mo.
BeautUully kept 3 lA , • . • 2 bath hme. Superbly locat
ed to all achools, church!!
arid mqnliiceot Sou.th Cout
Plaza. Call now!
645..0303 '
B/B
LOOKING!
we'll find It for yool
LISTING!
we'll tell Jt 1or YQU.!
. STOP in and -. ul! Twenty
yeus uperience; to 'New
port Harbor area CUalUY u
to serve you successfully:
lay & ~ch
RNlty, Inc.
901 Dover Dr., NB SWte 126
645-2000 Eves. 548-6966
Ol1tlndiv1 .Addre11 I
LoV'ely custom 3 bdrm with
cheery fireplace &: expansive
patio for entert&ining.
Located. on excl111ive Park
Strfft in area of euatbm
homea &. ~ to all schools.
2 available atartifW at
$32,500 FHA or VA terms.
Pacific Shores Re&llf
SJ6.S89f Eves. 5.16-3240
5 bdnn11, 3\-» bath Baycrest
home built by Ivan \Yells.
Moving: East Make otter.
Amold & Freud
388 E. 17th sr., CM
ReaJtora 64S-7T'aS
4. • 2 BR units 1 mile trom
Disneyland. $48,500. Terrillc
financing. $37,700 bl TD,
$256/mo., 61ii% lnt. & m
acceleraUon cosl Income
S5041mo. 1 nice owner apt.
75xl31' lol Coeta Mesa-Npt.
Rlty. £tS.9666, 642.-2221 •
''BAYCREST''
S BEORM + POOL Exclusive a r e a ! Family
room. 3 baths. Quallly built·
ins. Goraeow contoUr pool
Jr. Eal.ate sized around&.
'40-17l0
TARBELL 2955 Hort.or
2 DUPLEXES
On adjoining fee Iota. 2 BR.
ea. lpt. Nr. ocean 4 bay.
Total price $105,000.
B•lbo.I RHI Eal•lo Cc .
100 E. lll.lboo 1!111d., Balboa
• 673-41. ...
''ANGEL CAKE''
Bread 6: Butter Uoltl Triplex
1.3 m~ &om So. Cout P1ua.
~ lo '°"'' 1132,IOO BOYD RIALTY
3629 E. Clout iuwa,., CdM
m.mt
BEACH DUPLEX
2 Badlelar Unlta
Xlnt locatkln! $29,950
Goorgo Wllll•maon
REALTOR
m-4.150 Eve• m-1564
EXECUnYIS
movirw 10 Newport Beach.
New In• wen.: quailtf
vfow Mmt In DawT Shortt.
LI 4 bdrm• 3 ba tam nn.
See models open daJJy at
1'30 Calaq ""'"· -
HOUSIS l'Ott SALi '
Oonerel 1000
8 UNITS
TWIN 4 PLIXES
C!OSTA MESA
LARGE 1 bdrm unlum. units
Cood carpet, Built Int, hard-
wood cab~ts. 8 Pn&U and
aeneroua private paUol: In-
come SlOOO per mo. Pr!~
at $88,500 Owners will tan
a reuonable down. , .can b9
sold as 4. or 8 unitt.
ALSO AVAILABLE
16 units, 24 unit., &O untta
WALKER AND LEE
MR. LEVINE
Income Investment Dept. ...-
$139 Total
Per Month
$13,100 Total Prlc•
Run. walk or crawl, but
don't mils this 2 bedroom
cutie w1th carpets, dra~.
ALL ELECTRIC KITOIEN
&: OJSHW ASHER. I a r I e
beck yard, N E A R TllZ
BEAOI! Rear bollt door in
garage. This 6 year yoarc eem just WOft't 1ut.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
279(1 Harbor Blvd. at Adami -Open 'til 9 PM
john macnab
DOYER SHORES
BAYFRONT
Charming 5 -home with Large livine room, fer.
mal dln1nc room, encnnoua
muter bedroom: 1 u n n '/
brealdast room with view."
Handtome exterior. Alkinl ;125.cm. can to 9tt,
(714) 642-1235
001 Dover Drive, Stalle 120
Newport Beach
4 BEDIOOMS
No Down YA
Thll ... quality -wllb
cement driven.7 I: lbab
root. On!> 3 ,,.... old. Sell-
er will PQ' all bu)oer'1 clol-
inl cost. A wUl live you
$1001o-
$46.'521 or 54<M6H
J. K. Nichols
R••ltor
Auame 51/J 0/o
4 leclrm. 2 latli
No qu.alif:yl.lw to aumnt o-
istinr Joan, total payment
lncludln& tuts A 1nlurance
only $118.00. Local<d In CDl-
leie Park.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST :m E. 17th St. 141 ON
10°/o Down•
$34,950
Sharpert home in back 1-y
area, Ownen haVe movtd •
Immediate posses!ion • 3
bedroom &: FamUy room.
Beautilul covered patio -in-
tercom thMJout -Pool liu
yard,
O THE REAL "'\.. ESTAT ER,;
NEW HOMES
EuUkfe Colta Mesa, 1'T'Ol'D
128,500. OnlY ' ldll ' Bil. OPEN DAILY
2M8 Santa Ana Ave.
(Bet. 23rd I: Santa Iabel1
642-3960 Ews. llUlOS
No Down GI
f.-bdnn + famUy room, $.1J3
per mo pays all or nlA or
ConvenUonal.
,$21 ,'50
RAND 11.L TY. 145-"40
Pool Homes
1N TIME FOR SUMMER
4. BEDROOMS
$38,500 to 1<6.!ll<I
DAVIDSON RNlty
-EvH,""142
OCEAN VIEW
C.Olce Clo-WcblaJ>dl
BR. 2 8&. You O'l"lll 1bt
land! A bqy at Sif.<OJ.
3
CORBIN-MARTIN
RNllon
J03I E. Clout Rwy., OIM
• mua •
BIACH HOMI
%.Sty. 3 Bdtma. J Badia
CHECK THIS ••·•••·••• lff ~'ii'iA'rr'r
6!08 W. C.Ut Hwy., NJI.
Ma-12'0
•
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....... ..., 11-••• c:a..11 ... 0 "'W ,_ _., te -H ,_ -·i. p1lhh~ lo•~ Oii. fl -oppo• i. _, '; n.r w1t.-. ... 1 ~-167l.m1 f1nm, ....... , .. w.rw11r.w.1o._,_.2 Tidm.ArN.t-""
-...... ,,, ,_ te plot -• ot _, -•oloot llAl.Y PLOT office.
I • --
HOUSES -SALE HOUSIS'-SALt HOUSaS 'Oil SAL.I
O..r•f 1..o..r.. ••ll•••r•I 1a
PROUD? You Bet We Are!
RANCHO LA CUE ST A homes al Brookhurst a. AIWtlo
in Huntington lluc:h opened IJl\'TI' ID OD January 24th
-sold out by March 20th.
On June Isl the last home In UNIT IV w>s sold.
Do Y"" got tho r._.i;"I you hM .. tier hurryU?
UNIT V IS NOW OPEN
Priced lrom $25.995 to $34,200. Sales office open doily
10 lo 7. Phone 963-2929 or 9118-1338.
1000
EJPAllllD
PAWEii ER Bl6 FM MESA VERDE
OwinizW' aimer home, 4
BR. 1'4 b&tba, tlJnib' room.
Interior A-exterkif painted
last yur. lntermm -stetto-
.. ,.
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FO• SALE
-·~-------
Nowport BNch 1200 University Park 1237 Huntintfon Beach 1400
------------6¥1% 4 .BEDROOMS ! >...wnable -. 'u;oo Sq. Ft.
IN NEWPORT BEACH 2 BR .. den, wet bar. Beautt.
FOR m,JGOI 1u11y _,..,... and Wod·
MUST SELL • OwMr tram. scaped_ $32,950
.......,, B!ulb top selling K. eREO HILL REAL TY
FROM THE
PAGES OF A
DECORATOR
MAGAZINE Plan. Xlnt use ol 16fi0 Sq. Ft. l80lil Culver Dr .• lrvine
Private enlTy, walled patio, OPEN 9 AM.a PM m-0870 That's where )'OU'd ex.
frplc., brkfst. area in kitch-!'nd th' i.tand-en. Sleps to pool, l ocean E•lfbluff 1242 pe:ct to 1 11 ou
view from upper bdnru. !--'--'-"-'-----= Ing special home decorat-e NEW BLUFFS e ed by one of America's IEASTBLUff: z Br, 2 Ba split ~vel. Man)' foremost designers, Ham· REAL TY custom featltl'e9, All e!tt, llion-Howe. Tbis brand new 3 bedroom, fomwr Call ~ lot other Shills etc. J..ownt mainL & leiue-model home ii really
t:xclusiw listings. bold. MUST SELL • BY "turned on " with decora•
2414 Vista Del Oro :.OWNER. call Dick Oyer NEWPORT BEACJ-1 533-4456 ext 401 or 673.Sm. tor design eXtras like ex-pensive Spanish t 11 e
"4-1133 644--2626 Eves EASTBLUFF: 180° View. noon;, exclusive wood -=-=-===-2600 IQ. ft 4 Bednn + wall treatment and pan-
WESTCLIFF--study. 8Y owner: 644--0.'in elin1:, built-in bookcases,
CONDOMINIUM BLUFFS ~ 3 hr, 3 ba, w/ w&ll paper with a v.·allop.
2 story in Newiiort's ftnest 88.y·VM!w, wide greenbelt. carpels, draperies, lush
res. area. Near shopping. Sleps to pool. Ols.. addtru. landscaping, sprinklers,
Lovely patio, 2 bdnns, hU1e Save! $44.,500. Ownr 644-4265 and air conditioning. An-
closets, 2i,i baths, tittplace. other added plus: you
encl. 2 car garage, pool, ele-Coron• del Mar 1250 can v.•alk to the beach.
gant clubhouse, Sauna. Own Near everythlng in N!!W--
Land. Assume loarL $195 BAY VIEW port · Balboa· Lido. Ex-
incl . taxes. Owner Bkr. UNUSUAL DESIGN cellent financing avail-
A REAL BUY! $29,500 Love:ly Broadmoor model able and a surprlsircly
lll)5 Dover Drivl' home ~·/beaut. bay & ocean low price of fust $34,990!
Open House Sat·Sun 1.0 vil!ll', 4 Bdrms .. family nn., Won't last long -move
Call &16--19-18 2'h be.tbs, exten&ive land· in now and enjoy the sum-
.,.,; ...... Grand •·i~-, in a mer at the beach. 968-1997 GROWING ROOM ~ '"' You can lost the children national design competition. Bkr.
the home fea.tul't'fl vaulted IL"-"-'""""""'!"""~"""' I and enjoy 15 millutes quiet cellinp w/heavy tM!am con-Grant Bertolet
in this contemporary-styled struction. Just 5 min. from 982 Trenton Way 5 bedroom Baycrftt home
just % block from future the bay & beach, Fashion Coit• Me111
5 large bdrms, formal
dinirc r oom. kitchen
eatirc area + a \"el)'
beautiful fa.mil)· room
..... ·ith littplace. lmmac·
ula1e condition. La~
back yant with ('b:il.
dl'f'n·s play area le room
for pool. Only S.C.950.
EA.STSIDE Costa Mesa. S
bdrm 4 bath luxury bame
-.;th. 2650 aq ft. ~·fed •
fillettd pool with automatic
JloOQI ~ i aulomatic do--
nnator, Reill l ~ this
modem •·ay to lh-T.
$47,500
-...... AM/FM • _... Gttanls-
smokie 6: fire delttton, in-
b"Uder alarm, new bot wa·
ter healer « prbqe dis-
pasal. $33,900. •
HOUSES FDR SALE
Gener11I lDOO
HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE
Gener el I 000 · Mesa Verde 1110
Park & Marina! Transferr-lsland A: San Diego Fwy .•
ed owner will consider S5,00D Mth all of the amenities . . . of the small community down or San Diego home m ,.. .,,,, 000 ,_,1 1 .1 ..... ruea • ...,.,, . \..d1 or app .
ex1.:nang_to. . CHESHIRE REAL ESTATE
H•I P1nch1n & Assoc. e 6r:>-2503 •
You are the winner or
:? tickets to the
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR
Jfia.._ COAn ~WAL~C!
ltEALTDRS
51M141-
l0pon E.o.i...i
laycrest • $65,000
Beautiful 1,1111 \\"db-home
just put Oii the nwbt.. fOW"
huge bl!drooms. -4 bar:bs..
~ FOR.MAL DL'ih'iG
ROOM. plus Wnily room.
Abundance ol to-nnic trees
and shnlb& gM you muntry
almosphl!"re. Owner tnmfer.
~. wants action. SUbmiT
your s:malltt OOmr on oor
ruaran1~ sa1e plan.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
:.iG&3 \\'estcliff Dr.
~m1 Opton E''"-
SEU or TRADE
Horse Ranch
? BR 1 bath home. ~ •
fenced yard.
Wont
3 BR 2 betb home on an tx·
tn. large lot. Can add C'Uh.
U160 Nn']IOl1 Blvd.. Ol
Rill'. 6£392S EYe. 641-1.W
lachenmyer
Ba~~~ .. ~:alty ~~
P ark-like Priv11cy
Immaculate 4 bdnn 3 balh
Baycrest home on a qw<'I
stm:?t. Invitingly light 4:
spacious. t:nusual in.la•··
arn.ngement. \\'di priced at
$6'5,!l'il.
16C6 \\1l'Sldiff Dr. NB SC24...:ioD
Bright & Cheerful
will be this lo\'t'l)' large ~lesa
Verde Colonial hortlrt' in 1.
\\"eek or 90 "''hen romplet~
redecont.ting will be rom-
pleted. 5 bdnns. d1ninr &:
family room. Anthony ~ •
farm i;tyle kttchen ~IC". \·a.
cant abou! 6126. Opion to
of!en·
!145·!1110
fl'ltlf a..., '-tl
OLLEGE REALTY ... __ _
Yest Pocket Rancho
Hot"lk"a Ir: cowboys. EJ:trs nkf
2 BR Ir: family room built·
1nl A dW.wuhf'r. fireplae'.'!,
BBQ hoole •'1th fittplaC.(' -
stable A: corn.1. Exet>llent
location.. Submit termx. ask·
-$31,500. CALL ~1151
Httitqe Rt"al Eltlt• lopl'n
.... 1
RXEl-ll'PEl
~ Jteaport H@ichu
Ii ltlodt -C1IO -l &drooato. ,...., ... +
d<o. Sll,9111l
•1'!ff.!'1 ·~· 0 ....... . ': .1..'.: .. !'
:n . 9 ~
Pwtter
Sound 4. bdrm with need
for nnr deaniilt am
p;ainu~ Al dect. blt-
ins. C'O''fftd l*tio aM
rocmy Lmac am.. Make
nsh ol!tt '11t17 Europa
$34.llOO.
"'"~--· .. ·-. ; .... " " . . . . '
546-5990
JEAN SMITH Assume 5'/4 G.I.
· ' A Sh•k• Roof Morin• Realtor Home al le:sa than rent of
646 ms $173 month total. Soft warm
•'4i:l~:"iF::::~1 ·vocado carpeting; CUstom brick fireplace. MEDAL-4 .... M I fawl LION ELECl'RIC RlTCHEN
Colege Part! PWs DISHWASHER. t.o...
178.00 Mo. Total ~"'r~Lii:'T~
Oii dr sac lot with kltai ol Large master ~room plus
fruit trl!es. This house bas 2 mon.>. SpacMlus block ~·all·
4 ~ bedrm. 2 ~ aiz-f!d rear yard. Yours for a.s
ed bl.lbs. Forced a.Ir beat. little as $3.450 Do\vn. Trade
all built in kitchen.. AQ)'Obt' in yoW' Olde!' home.
ca.n assume existinc 5%% WE SELL A HOME
loan, "' qua!~ H"""' EVERY 31 MINUTES
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2t3 E. 17th St. 141 4tM
GoHC.UroeATH
LDvety W. Jot on ~c,
1 block from Oub Howle,
Walker & Lee
2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
~1
Open 'til 9 PM
Horse Country
Bock B•y
Beginners Luck
Vacant and spolless 3 bf!d.
room and 2 bath home Just
waiting lor a new yoU.D;g
coople. S2l(Q) full price.
Large fenced yard, new wall
to wall carpeting. No down
to G.l.s. Existing financire
may be assumed ~·Ith a total
monthly paymefll of only
Sl14.oO per month incl ud~
tu es.
"For A \Vise Buy'•
Colesworlhy & Co.
UDO 4 BR. =. • :::=,. ~ ~
Ke-ep )'OW' wilt' and your
horse haPPY • Over ~2 acre
nestled in upper Newport
Bay. Nn.t and clean 3 bed· iijii!ilii!iii!!64i2i·1771iij•!ijijijiiii!! room do8 house. P1enty o(
PIER & SUP 11~""-"""''
4 BR .. 31i baths. Near new ~ ""'SIOO
vaiu..,.,., O....•tll<,950. CAMEO SHORES
~ on 2 lots.. Walled ,_._..._.
.. 0o """· poo1. sz;, 1or OUEGER£Al.TY
Sdler ~: He will can'Y Custom View home in
a big chunk • if you voant A beautiful tropical setting
a loan! Won'I last. Call Entrance is over ;;o· boaL CU:stom quality m.._1t.,..,r.&
thntoot. ""·""· 1 .. ...,,,,,,,,,,,"'!"~~-""'-""-natural roe~ S\\'imming pool
J,. a..-S~% LOAN 645..0303 Step-d<M'n living room
with high beam ceilin&s .......
C.W.el. .... , c..
550 Newport C-r Dr.
Newport Beach, Col;f.
133-tM --Golden Dpportunily-
G .1, no dtw;n.. fllA mini-
mum down oo lhe ~bedroom
pl05 F'amil>· Room. A ftill
slttpf'f. [)eep p~ CIJ'Ptl'
11-a..ll t 'Qll tltrougbout. ~
per-brick patio oil family
room. Hugr Lot! Many ll'IOt"
r~tras for !hr p~ of
r:!t950. Ht"RRY !
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
DREAM LOCATION
~10\"" in CODd. Spacious l BR.
2 BA: Wmditl shop'c M'ff,
~-nu. 130.!fiO.. ~
TO\TN HOUSE
Huntington Bay, l bdr, 11;
bath, ~-Pool. dub.
!ihop Ct'ntrr. SI9.500, °""""'· ~
111~1 \I I Ill ~II\ ..
BAYSHORES S BR.
Exclusive residential district
5 Btdrooms 4 Baths
$95,000
Call Ken! Kingsley
Res.~
5 BEDRM +DEN
Loan m8,)' be assumed •ilh
payments lea than rent 3
baths. EJt'Ctric built-in kit-
the:n.. Family rm., full dining
rm .. BBQ • tittpit. Orchan:.I
of trtts. ~1T20
TARBELL ms H•rber
5 IR· POOL with private attese: tt> Bal-COMPANY
P'.lus fonnal din rm. Vac.
Gorgf!OU!I 8a.ya'Kt mansion.
~r 2!M sq ft, 3 be.. com-
pletely (!Jlld. Huge kitchen
bit-ins. S73.400.
boa Ba,y Cub. Dad. here's a
great place to raise your REAL TORS
,.,,.. family, """ to th< 673-4400
main Bayshore beach. Pric· "!!!!!!!!!!!!lli!!!ll!!!!llll!!I!!!!!!!!!!!! ed at $18,950. Do your fam-'! ---
ity a r.avor a: hf. sure to Stt 5V4%.G.I,
P .W.C. 5465140 this! S.U9 lllonth pay9 &ll. R-2 Jot;
2 Br. home. $20.000.
Pyramid Exchargors &46-2629 MESA VERDE -RmDIRPif
$23,9511
Hard '° find at Ibis price. 2 R E A L T y
bath.l. Generous aiztd bed· 2025 W. Balboa Blvd., N.B.
moms. Q u I e 1 ft&idential C•ll Anytime 67>6000
Built -in kitchen. Carpet$,
drapes. ~lm L 1 BR Cottage w/pr A-z:on.
TARBELL 2tSS H11rbor ed far business. $14,500
1 2 BR home ' den. large
4 BEDRM -m.511 lot. a.,... + """"""P.
PATIO + BBQ R-l '°""'·
2 pul"man baths. Sechxkd Dl.800.
ttar livinc room with fire. 1. 3 BR home 1% baths. near
pla~. Family room. Excel-shopping, $20, 1SO
lent )CICation. 540-1120 Wells.-McC•rdle, Rltrs.
TARBELL 2tSS H•rber 1&10 Ne?.'JIOl'f Bh-d •• C.?if.
OON"l' JUSr W1Sll !or...,.. "3-7'129 anytim<
"""' to '"""'" '°"' ....,. ""'"'AS~S~U~M~E~5\l,~,'!'%l""'"'. . • rind pu.I ba:yJ in to-
day's a-iOed ....._ LOAN
C\llf!'St 2 BR. hbme on quiet
stttet. Hd\\--d On.. shade
b'ee.!, R·2 ~I .
FORTIN. REALTOR
1701~ Westdill Drh·r
Cort11 Mesi 1100
NO DOWN G.I.
2 B<irm -2 bath on R-2 lot.
Room Jor another unit: Can
be purchued nIA ~·ith klv. ..
1o ..... • dOWn. $25.000.
-O THE REAL
"'-ESTATERS
646 • nn • 546·2313
2479 Fairwa,y Drive
F.aslside 4 BR, 2 BA. Cov.
patio, s hak.e roof,
dishwuher, frplc, crpts,
drps. s~ Ci( GI S186 Pm.
$29,900 •• 646-2819
* BY OWNERrPOOL.. 3
BR, Cll>CS, drps. X-~ LR.
l..olv m&lnl ynf. s:J>,500. * MG-28!15 *
Small classified ads Newport Beach 6U-5(Ql
PALOS VERDE
PENINSULA CONDO
Sale °" be option. l..ra; 3 BR.
3 8A, p&n]d den. Xtra lrl
master BR. 2 patios. Xtra
stcinst. Pool. c I U b h 1 e ,
child'• ~ yrd. 135.950.
Oner. (213) 833-7398
BY O\VNER -l..o'ol· inttres1
5'i4-4:i~% Irr transfcrnblc
k>ans, All 3 BDRM's. 2-E
11kle, 2 w Pde. 5#-1059
doa
bi
J1ing
job.
Try onel
....... 642-5678
NuneryW-1
2500' 9 rm bomt + apt '=
pool SJS. 700. 3XI"' Santa An11.
A~. 646-2544, ~
BY Owner: 4 bdr. enlarged
F'rttdom home. Comer k>C.
P-lovinl, 6t6--9'T1S ews.
POTENTL\L. 3 BR 2 beth Mesa .. Ml ll05 ....... corner lot. 131t<l!O' r
an ,......_ Cal ttor .. 1a11s. ASSUME
llama •~•lf\J Sl/4 °/o LOAN 6<! ..... --==~~=--· I 4 bedroom Mea ck:I f.lar DUPLEXES beaut)'. H\We family room
1 BR.., l BR's. Pricet: nlll· wtth raiitd flrrplace, ser-lrw $21,500 to S!M.000. Alto \ice potth. fencff yard. New
rtntak, aummer I winter. outskle palnr. $31,SOO.
PROPERTIES WEST
SPACIOUS 2 story, 4 BR. 3
BA. Excellent location on
quiet cul-de-sac near new
Estancia park. Beautifully
landscaped ya.rd, designed
for family enjoymenL Large
living room, formal dining
room + lamily room. 2
fireplaces t 11°0uld y o u
believe 1 In masll'r BR :').
By °"'ner. As.~ume 51~'/i
loan. Principals o n I y .
S-11,950. Call :»0--0681
ASSUME S'iol loan on
Pulchritudinous 4 Broroom
home near schools & golf
course. Efficient ki1chen.
family room, trplc, 2
covered patios, sprinkler
system. 5 fruit trees amKl.st
lovely landSC'8ping. Priced
to r.ell at $27,500 by 01vncr.
~J&t2
ASSUt.tE S"<t. ~ ffiA 3 BR 2
ba. bit-in, tam r n1 ,
c,.ts/drps, Imma c.
Beaulilul patio home. owe
2nd TO. submit dO\\oTI.
~
BY OWNER -4 BR. Newly
dee inside & out. New crpts.-
tilf! fir in tam rm. Drps,
frplc, bltns. 1740 sq. ft.
$26,500 Prine. only. • 3253
lo.,.,-a St. ~~S
BY OWNER
Cl/STUM REPlJBLIC l10t.fE
ON BEST VIEW LOT OFF·
E:REO. 4 BR. 2 BA, SING-
LE STORY DESIGN,
PHONE 549--7144.
BY O~:ner. 4 BR.. llnl sq. ft.
J ust vacated, cleaned. 2
Blks. Adams Sc hool ,
library. SALE $32,500 or
lease $270 )lo.
837-9497 or 838-2914
O\VNER. 3 BR 2 bath,
carpels/drapes, frplc, ele<-·
tric bit-ins. $2.i,lllXI. 1598
?.fyrtiewnod. 54S-&t46
5 BDR, 3 be. Republic home
beautiful rorxt. by O'ol'ller.
:.t9--0684. n'iO Phalarope
College Pc:nc 1115
OPEN HOUSE Sat & SUn
25U Duke PlaCt>, D t
A Beauly by Chl.-ner 3 Br. 2
Ba. Excptl Jnd scping.
Assume 6~" GI loan $27.900. --0\\-'NER 5~ f1-IA. l BR. 2
BA. la.rye family room. Co\•.
patio. $27,500. 311 NaS!l.'lu
~2496. Open house Sun 11..S
N•!'port Beach 1200
2 UNITS 43rd ST.
Oose lo beach channt'I. Good
\'acation &· income. Lot val·
uc is near asking price of
only ~.OOll.
"'""'" 9 @
;EAlT'I'
Near \'\pl. Post Ofe. 6-IG-2414
3900 E. Coast 1-hvy. 6T.>4392 l--~-o=::-=:::..7--I * REDUCED * LOVE SALE AN~~11M
THE BLUFFS ~larriage ~ssJla tes selling STADIUM I
3 BR &: 2 BA corner k>t. this "love" of a house. . . on July 4th
view & spacious (celing.
Custom carp!s, drps, olhtor Newly crptd &. decorated 2 Plea5e call 6-12-5678, ext. 329 J
extras. Handy pool, Owner BR &: guest sui!e, Spanish bct1\~n 9 and 1 pm to clairri J
644-0771 _ ho~ an "love"ly Poppy your t1cket.s. (North_ Count}' J
S<IJ.500 vfl.11.1(" -NO\'' $39.500 Ave., S. of Hiway. Neat yard toll-fn.>e number 1s 5-W-122{}11 'FRESH AS A DAISY' 1v/divineokl avocado trtt... Be•utiful Trt-Plex 1
And Ready t~or You PLUS oranges, figs, & Oow· Just oU Beach Boulevard I
J &Inns .. 2~ ba. JmmE"CI. ers. 3 Car parking, .a· lot. close lo shopping. Let the I
possess. 2131 Vista Laredo. LOVELY neighbors. Perlect tenanls make your pay-1
A best buy . S37.950. "home'' or retirement villa. ments. Income Is $365 mo. I
BOYD REAL TY Ov.ner, ~·eekeods or eves, Electric Built ins carpels
3629 E. Coast Jti.,.,·ay, QL\I 673-7151 or Agenl John Mc· throughout. Some furniture.
67>5930 N\b &C-8235 f.or appt. Priced to scll at $35,500.
HARD TO FIND submit your terms to 4-PLEX
200' TD DC EAN
Summer income: potential
''Hi". Parrlally furnished.
559.j()Q · TERt.fS
CANON REAL TY
• 67>3581 •
But "'11rth ~ eUort! Broad· WE SELL A HOME
moor Homes. 1 B<inn., 2~: EVERY 31 MINUTES
""""<>~~DA!LY ,, Walker & Lee i
2700 \VAVECREST
D L R 7682 Edinger • •ncy eal Est••• 8'12-445.'.i or 540-5110
2828 E. (.oast H11'Y. Cd~I Open Eves.
OWNER'S NEW 4 BR. -~-~~613-3Tl!l~~---.l'ifllE:iIT'F.;;-;H<iiill:E<I I Harbor View Home. J ba's, Country Atmosphere GREAT For HORSES
u,· rm, din rm, tam rm, nc the De . ned f AND PEOPLE
bar. lg. klt, 2 frple1, v.'/w f_:ily ~hltd~~ this 0; 60:x330' lot \\'ilh oo!Btanding
crptg drps, yard &: many BR & •-ho . • .. 1 CWltom home. Zoned for 6 9 f . . ~n me is a mus 'ts Out.litandl ...... " extras; . 1n anc1ng. sec" at S42.50J Bill uru. ngoppo,, ... ,.
5-18-8281 hug Joi • you · tl:e 1 :: lty here for home, horse or
TREE SHADED-LEI~HTON ~~EN p]_,.y money lover.
BEACH HOME 6~2-TI41 or 673-D377 Rex L. Hod~!'• Rlty. . . 8~7-2J2J Luxunous shag carpeting, OPEN HOUSE 1-5 .---~
Exposed beam ce.ilinJ;s &:. June Z5 th thru 29th· 3101 J f d
Fittpla"', 3 Bedroom •. 2 O,,, n B'vd, So«i•<Ular rans erre
Baths. $32,500. 642-34(11 ocean & jetty view from this
BAYFRONT CLASSIC CON· luxurious. ocean!ront. 3 BR Leaving area immediately
TEMPORARY 3 BR home Ir den home. FJ nd ho nd M IL 'th · a.nd r ..,...., """ 0 C t p o a u . ust se Wl pier s 1P· ............... r1nge oas roperty Delt1 Real E t t
WALLACE L. NEFF. RJtr. 332 Marguerite 6Jl.85..iO 64&4ll4 s a e
~15!1> BY O\VNER • 3 bdr 2 bath, .
3 BDRM Walerfronl, No. 62. 2 ti.replace house ~!harbor OLD HOUSE BLUES??
Balboa Coves. S 6 O. O o o . view al China eo..·e. Olb. l;a.st year, at this time, dur-
\Vould trade lor acreage or garage, patio _ $65,<m. ing ow-Record "'.eek. .,.,.e
apts. 548-7IT1 538-'391. If no ans. call sold 154 homes. We re going
633-98'.IO to lop that reet:ird during the
J\fOBrLE HO'.\rE $19.000 last \\'ttk in June Call us
Bayfront on Peninsula • OCEAN VIDV • no1~·. so yor r horn~ can be>
6rJ-3808. 675-3226 9 mos. old Lusk 3 BR, 21 ~ on<' of l hr lu<'ky ones.
Owic-e PARK LJOO Poolside B_A. lx>nte. Crpis, bltns. den. WE SELL A HOME
C.Ondo. 2 BR 2 ba. S2S.500 • dining rm. 2 frplcs. Ne?.·ly EVERY 31 MINUTES
S600J dn. Agl. 646-6732 lndscpd. By owner. 6-M-0-lll w lk & L
SHORECLIFF 3 BR, 2 BA. a er ee
Newport He ights 1210 Quiet trtt lined area by thl'
sea. Fee s.imple. Access to 2 i6S2 Edinger
Unde 8-12-4455 or 540-5140 Come See beaches. r sso.ooo. Bv
O'lllTler. * 673-3Ei8l Open Eves.
Our Pretty . ouPLEX. "'" °""""· 2 BR. *CREAM PUFF* NEATER than a pin. Easily 2 BA .. + 1 BR & ha. Large Assume lhia 51.4 S' FHA loan. !he nicest 3 BR: 2 bfl!h home lot, pnvacy. Rllr. 673-2010 Sl50 m PIT! 4 BR 2 B
1n Nev.·porr Heights. Wa ol . . f 0 · • A . heavy shakes and ruo;tic LGE. hillf(lp lot. Penn. view sm nn. F .P .. F.A., drapes,
brick with an extra deep o( ocean & hills. nf'W crp_ts. Bu\lt.ln rarve &
lot and alley ae"a'SS that Realtor 67J...2010 oven; d1shwr. Ouldoor Bar-
makes It perfect for lhe B-QUe on cov palk>. Cor. lot
caniper and boot cro~'d. Lido Isle 1351 .,,./ boat rate. Nicely land-
$33 500 Easily financed -scaprd: Orange trees. $26,950
. . . CASH BUYERS I Bl' 0....'llt'r. 842·!6.16 .. THEREAL
\R_ESTATERS .... , .. .
;;i,<;0 LOANS! POOL TIME IS HERE
Sharp 2 Br. & fam. J.aj,000 lltoaled &:. rlHe1~ Anthony
1$23,iOO Loan) pool. SuJ'l('r sharp S bdrms,
546-2313 • 646-7171 O\a.rm 4 BR. &: den. $69.000 hard\1'0(X'( noorr, ftt.shly
tP-9.600 Loanl painted inslrlc &· out. Be!I
DUPLEX 4 .)TS old. 2 BR LIDO REAL TY INC. area, GT or Fl-IA tttmS.
each. Bullt-1ns, crpb, drps. 3400 Via Lido 6i3--8.'\l0 Ran-buy at S26,00fl.
S32,SOOO....·ner.646-2 5 10 . MUTUAL REALTY
Principal.sonly, IF-YOU-ARER .EADY 812-14111 Any11n1t
Newport Shorn 1220 To move Into beautifully dee--sf43 Per Mo----:-Totel
or_ated Contmipor&Jy l·story $22,500/6% LOAN
FOR &\LE by Owntt 3 "'Ith 3 plUs Bdnn.s. 2 Baths. BatVln p~ on lhis lovcb'
BA\TRONI' MOBILE Bedroom, patio, garage. $69,500. Call w ! 3 BR 2 bath In \"try desir-e-
HOME C' om m un i I y pool &. R. C. GREER. Rnll)' abtf' an-a.
2' Br. cabana, l'i ba. frplc, plaYJ:rOU?"-:? blks from 3355 Via Udo rn-mi HAFFDAL REAL TY
11\'ail bool slip, adll 9tt:tion. = N=2~ ~2 TIRED OF 87..0 \~•a,..r, i-·.v. Ml-f«G
Community du~. pool. . ia. OLDER HOMES? OWNER'S ,,.cant J BR 2
g&JTH! area. el<'. \\'W tra~ \\ATERnU>NT By~-ner.·&-e1his 6yr.okltamilyhomt Nlh. ~r;;. F1fA toen.
u.p or down kr turn or un-S.U.r:i0. 4 BR. 2\t Baths ..... -14 bdnns.., corn•. df!.n I. diJJ.. Sl3>/mo • $22.950. Open to
rum l..3guna Leisure \\.arid Many n:tra.s.. a '2nd SI .. Ina: room. caa for apr>'t. ollcn. .198Q2 Isthmus frr.
ot hillside ~ Co. h'B • 641-.3869 Walker Rlty. 675--5200 Ad."&nL" • J\(. ID 0 11 a )
llome. 5t&-i33l 536-tSM _:;:_~=-Wa tc.tiff 1230 BAYJ'RONT Home + ID-l'°'=-~~~----1 NOW'~ THE -~===;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:1 come. finest bearh loc. 2 BR, 11, BA Condominium.
• Ne•·ly furn.ishtd. Sfale or Lri p:iol, low ma.lnttl1IJlll:a. nME FOR ON A I.owl)' quiet \\'estdlff summer rentals. :\1nl flnc Only 36 unh.J. Cnl'. ~
QUICK CASH SI. In Ma<"°" 0.m. A Npl. ·~-"' corry. 67>3243, ... appt. -o r
lll Dl"L ~ 1lmph!, heavy 573-4.'1,0.'.; 536--300& t\'l"!I !\Ir. SmiUt
1hA.kr mot. ~MllM llv rm. , THROUGH A d in rm. rlfotl. bll·tns. 3 sn. 1 BU~E..."i' m11.rltt"1pliu!f' In BUST.EST mamlplace In
DAILY PILOT '311, rlC'1tn r sit!Vdril!f. 2 town. Th~ DAJtV Pl!.oT t<'ll'n. The DAll.t Pn.al'
. pe~iolc, dog run. SG.500 IJy Oa.ss\!ifd Sll'C'tlon. Ni\ot Classified ~"lion. Save
WA "" AD Oll'ltt. &U-1~ monoy, Onie ' ellort. Loolt. money, tbne 6 ettort. Look n• now~!! now!!!
DIAL--°""' :::~"':::.=. 1#.1!11~1 ,.....i,t1tcos1tt.dloal -witl1to1otomnc1or ......... 1=111=•:::"..:'":....:tlto::...:-=:...::,..~'-~ii.----------=----.1· .. Dial -64&·nn • 5411•23 •--------
'I I
I I J
11
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11 'I
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' . -. • . ... • • .. .-'' ., ' •• •I
·!•Ul1d•y,. -26, 19"9 .D~LY !'!LOT §
HOUSES FOR SALi!. HOUSES FOR SAL& . llHN ... TA ... LSFum11•·• ._,HN!~:..su ~.-.,-.1--·.d RENTALS - - . • ...... Un~-· . ~JALS . _,;-;,.;: r" -~ ~'"" R-~ ...... ,. --rn "' Aph. Furnloheil. RENTA~ • , •• Aoto. Unfurnl-O....r•I O.nerol
Hunll'!lon llt•<!, 14GO!!llll/I., ... ,IHdt 1400 , --· • • ' • •·
_ ' Summer R•nt1l1 2910 Eilt lluff . 3242 ~--M... CIOO CO.!• """ SIOjJ CoNn• clol Mor Sl~ ~lai'.~'1!11 •~~.Laib , 6100
ONLY 2 HOMES LEFT Corona del Mar 7~ ~~~•11'" ~~ m~ull!1m~ $30.00 wk. up ';1!:'N;, .. '!,~1u.'.'.': ~ Z~;i "':i Ol1E or "" last llld moot
BAYFRONT rnacu.tate cod unit: vacant. • Dl.Y. W90k, month.. UARBO_I Adults only no -ta. eii~ 1.Mfy. 56-8878 beautl!ul tee.almple Iott r--
-, " $390 mo.. ~764 or ~ • Studio • Bach. Apia. •• ' .... • -• -ma l n I n a. 1tn DOVl:Jl New homes, ready to move in, 1h mile
lroin beach. First payment up to 60 days after move in.
, Tormo V.A/FHA. From $22,990.
CORAL SHORES
(on Garfield between Beach
962-1353
& Magnolia
Huntington .~ch 1400 RENTALS
TRADE YOUR HOME 1 __ H_•_•.., ... _F_u_r_n_ls_htd __
Regardless Qf how much
equity you have, on this
super sharp two-1tory, witb
winding staircase leading to
4 Master Sized Bedrooms.
Balcony overlooking formal
dining room \Vith thick shag
carpeting. Stunning fire·
place. or try 15,000 DQwn alXI
take over low interest GI
loan. Asking $35.500 Submit.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
7f82 Edinger
842-445.5 or 540.5140
Open Eves.
General 2000
5 BDRM, 3 ba. tastefully
dee,, Jge fam. rm. form din,
elec kit, lge patio, 2 c gar.,
Country Club area. $500 mo.
Lease. 546-1713
Rentals to Sh•re '200S
HAVE 5 BR 3 bath house,
furn. Want mature man to
share $165/mo lnclud. utU.
549-2623 or 646-1058
WORKING girl to aha.re new
3 bdr furn. home. F'l!tn Val.
area. Sil~l until 5, after
7' 968--3782
Second tara:tst lot on &y. S Mn. Wblte •Incl Utila • PhOoe ~l"Y. l:l&l Plllfhin 6 ~ 415-4392 Prlvileps -men SHORF.:S for sate ori ~
BR. family room. 4 batb!. ,_LO_V_EL_Y_3_bd_r_2_ba __ lp • Matd Servb. 'IV avau. GREENS so or l_fwy, 3: BR. cpt,s, ooly. Im Covemor St.. c..M. oua. O'Nner. 547--0991
Dock with snowbird. Sabot fenced patio · ft )'ird, 'weal :,:~~ ~~ ~ .._ ___ •• ·=-::_e, A~~:':t,! ~: &16-5289 or 893-5370 _ . URGE. f<i-2 lot .• 9000 eq ft
• '•urtboatd, Volley ball1 d\lldi-en. AD elec ·bit 1ns. BACHELORi,un.riuN.'!-I ~· · . ·1; 1,_..,fl,c. .. Rtntaft: 5999 ·Can bulld i uruta. centnny
court on larg~ sand beach. $305 mo lnd. garde lier. Avail FURN 1 bedtoom. ctupW. from~ $11 O · -&fL · ; · • · 7' s ~ · located In )111 n t I n 11 o n
Every room in house looks July 2nd. GU.165'1' $91.50 mo, UW pd, l car aar. ALSO AVAILABLE a.·1L.:.-' , , 5-SJ'ORAGE guage for rent . Pe1t.ch. $m. G-0067 by
out on Bay A jetly entrance. !========= 220 Sierks st 548-8341 -"""" 11 car p&rldnr, $2500 per ' · l • t 6 3 BDR.P.1 Alley ICCfll, NJ)I. Heights. owner. •
month.J\lly&:August.Cour. Corona del Mir 3250 Newport Beich Heated Pools, CblJd Can MODE'JUi _2 BR, it Bath, $19. 548"""80aft. 5. =M~~.LEVEL=~~lo~t~.'"'CcIM"'·=--..,-,.1
tesy to brokers. Phone • CAMEO SH.ORIS • 4200 Center, AdJ. to Shoppiefa ...,. ~.r .. t~~i:t!~.~~~an .._~...;.:. .... ~ ~ ,new o'aiml , 4bl , prqe
OR. 3-1865.or Ml i.21n.1 s BR ,+ ClOnY den. 3 BA; SINGLE Youns Adulbr J.ux· No pebr -1lowed ""'J'• -n • .., ~.'l)IJ-1990 ....... ~ ...... ..,...rty ""'""" atttded tor apts. 8)' ()wner
HARBOR IS. Ocellll View. Avail for short ury garden apt1 with coun-7700 Petenon Way, at fJar. 7X GROSS $26,000 cu.h.. 673-.'lOM BAYFRO~T term, long term or lse opt. try club atmosphere and bor A Ada.ms, Costa Mesa. B•lboA l1l•nd 5355 6 Unit• with a good rental Mesa Verde Fai.rnJ
4 Bdrm. & maid's; pier & S375 mo. Box 4001, NB. complete privacy. SOUTH 546-0370 : NEW1 ~BR ~ 1Eiec seU record, ~an at® of Balboa tot. . Cltu.
slip. AVaU. J uly .l Aue. 9'l66t BAY CLlffl Af'TS. Irvine at ---'clein'i: \,oven; d i h w Ii r ~ Blvd. tJr. churches, ocean & 6'.i-4715
$2500 Per month 2 BR House, excellent eond. lSlh Newport Beach. ·TH~ GABLES Wasbt!ridryer: frptc, cri>lll. Day beac.hes. Good invCst.l-:=========I
Dover Shores Bayfront Marti~ couple., le no cn41 &t5-0S50 Availablo July 3rd drps. On Grand Cana1, Ut· ment. Askin&: $120,000. R1nchff 6150
5 B<lrms., pier slip, avail. childrtn, =o mo, * 615-3291 FURN. Duplex, 1 4"S Be4fm. Df~ ~I BR with dgarage $1'3. tie Bal. Isl. Boat docking BURR WHITE ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I
August. $2,000 • ~~ mock ~..TT o cean . le u -~ -c~~.~; wrps -bltpalinsd. privil. No peta, no. cb,i19t'tn. REALTOR. THOROBRED CALL: JOHN lttACNAB Huntington Be•ch 3400 PRospect .._1 or LA nc""' y.,.,,., attr . Refs req. $350 mo. 6'13-3328
REALTY CO. 612-8235 ~-· · • · · 2439 Orang• Av<. . ~~630N•wport !!'.'.!~.NE.B HORSE RANCH
BAYSHORES
2, 3 & 4 Br's. July &. Aug.
''C'' THOMAS
REALTOR
2:24 \V. Coast Hwy. 548-5527
4 BR on the water. sandy
beac.b. Newly carpe t ed,
drapes &. furnished. $300
y,•kly.July ~ Augus t .
673-7449
J S. • * ~ * H ti "' •·-h S400 "'..... "'~ vts. • yer AVAlL. ·JUiy lit. 1 BR.. 1 un n •• on -c INDUS. Bldg. lOO"'o """pd. 160 aetts of buutttul South-
18272 Yellow Wood blk. to ooean. $160 Mo. Util .Sl'At."IOUS. CLEAN 3 Bit Ex ltl U i N 1 Bch 10,.,_ " ........ ern Call.I. land with compltte
Way, Irvine pd. Yr!¥ tse. 67S--16C2 studio. Nu W/W cpla, drps, c ftCJ y ng Pl . . 10 net return. ' . boarding bl'Mdln&
Newport Beach Realty elec bltns, 23.4 ha. Quiet In new apl:s, 1 bedroom, 2 ~:1r~· PhU Su I I.I v a n ~ra= facWtiea.' This ii a
You are the winner of
2 ticket& to the
LARGE 1 BEDROOM area. Nr Fwys. AdWts--no bedroom • 2 bath. • worldn;-hOne rancb with an
$150 month, yearly pets. 549-0412 eves & wnds: $ 140 to $ 19 5 FOR SALE BY OWNER estimated replacement COii * * 673-S<a * • : UPPER ~ BR, rnfria, e1ec 4 units. 2 • 2 BR, l BA & of exlsting facilities , of •Po
FIREWORKS bit-ins, closed ga ra re. Swimming pool, l)1U. sauna, 2-3BR, l~ BA. 54U155 proximately Sl,%;6.000, FuU
SPECTACULAR e YlJNTEI\ RENTALS e Adults. no pets, reduced 1':creatlon rq:>m. . •price without live 1toek
at the ~IFRED L. FOSS, Agt. rent in exchange for ilte G!~~-~c!J1c A~s. •us.Inns R,ntal 6060 $1,000,000. It easy terms.
ANl\HEIM • &Q-3850 • gardening. 646-4224 ...... AdwU' qnly. • 1 · RIME . For more lnfonnation call
RARE: VILLA PACIFIC
4 br, 3 ba, 2~~ car gar, ctd.
rec areas. Assm 6% IBA
962-1540
CHAR'-iING 1 Bcinn. apt.
slt:eps 4, Excel. Peninsula
NEW 5 BR home, adjacent to loc. J uly 5 • Aug. 2. $300.
Mesa Verde Country Club. Family only. 673-2123
Avail now with lease to Sept R ="e'°'N~T,;A~LSC-:'------
Mesa Verde 2110
STADIUM ·Balboo.lallnd · 4355 SHARP W.e 2 BR apt. Lcimpli9hter Apts. ~ ... Xlot17!~"&"':'u~:'°::.:. GE,,MkhThooff. mA"'°A"· I on July 4th . drps I cpts, blt • ins. Quiet 16102 Spru.:dale St. tic. 1871 Jiarbor c M c lll)C., nc.
PleaSe call 642-5678, ext. 329 CtITE Bachelor Apt. yearly. bldg. Adu1ta only. $145/mo. .Pho,ne 59Z.sa1 6f0-66S4 ' 1818 W. Chapman Ave,
between 9 and 1 pm to c.laim $125 incl. uttt. 324 Onyx. 546-4974 aft 6:30 or wkndl. 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH, FOR LEASE store 2Jx42. 541.-7621 o~ni:~~~·54Um
)'Our tickets. (North County Close to North Bay. 1 BR. utll pd, elec bltna, FURNISHED &. Also office l\'18ce. 333 E. l~~!!!~~~~!!!~!I
LI ST your property
with confidenc•
SELL with profes·
sional skill
THROUGH
YOUR
5, 1!169. $500 mo. Call H U I . h·• 633-S393 ext 188 or wlmds ouses n urn1s ..
toll-ftte number is 546.12201 ·· ·· refrlg, rio children or pets. UNFURNISHED 17th St. CM. 6 4 5-2 4 5 O , I·
BIG ho~. beautiful ron-Huntington Be1ch 4400 Nr shoppJng 646-6222 before CP.~ .. dJ:apes,, buUtins, be:~t 5'JS-5508 Acre1ge 6200
dition, hure covered patio, * 1 BR at beach. Adulll 4· 'lodlHon, 1 blk to 5' Point:' LEASE SOxlOO · I :.:.::=='-----"'"'-' boat or trailer storage, n1.. tuRN & unfurn, , bach, 1 1£ 2 shopping etc. from $1.30. • commercia L19Una B•ath 213: 4~2362 Gener•I 3000 -completely built·in, 4 BR. o ... .,. Lease. BR. Mesa di! Mar A"lfl. 998 ?701 Ellis, apt. O. W...2835, bldg, hl'art °!, downtown 7 ACRES W/PE.RMIT
S255 I .mo. Immediate pos. 21915th St., HB ,. 842-8303 C.M. 548-340l 0 54IJ-.32'{0 •· 'TO KEEP HORSES NE\V $200 ·up. 1-2.-3 Br, hid El Camino Dr., C. M. LOWER n wood nl Newport Booch 2200 FREE RENTAL BOOK ~~-~-----
REALTOR MEMBER DOVER Shores ba y fr ont home, 6 BR, 4. ba, large
Huntington Beach/ patio, 70' private dock. June
Fountain Valley & July, $2500 mo. Beg.
Multiple Sept., yrly lse, $1(0) mo.
Listing Service 713: 780-5013 or 2 1 3: e VILLAGE 785-6333
REAL OCEANFRONT Older 4. Br,
Lg Yd, Yrly. S300 mo.
ESTATE .,,._
19142 Brookhurst LOVELY 3 bdr home,
Huntington Beach Westcli.tt, Gardener, y r .
962-4471 lease, refs. Sl50. £46...7645
[;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;, 'LOVELY 3 BR. oceanlront
LQST IN SPACE! home. avail. for July&. Aug.
2200 sq ft of elegant living REALTOR. 675--164.2
We have another beautiful 3
Bedroom, 2 Bath home for
lease at $179 per month. All
electric Medallion home.
Available July 1st.
Walker & Lee
session. Bkr. 546-4141 l ,. .... -•-, -· nn. Hell 546--0451.. CHEZ ORO APARTMENTS ,.....,,, Id "°i ',· d . pa artg, AdjJl.c£nt subdiviaion one CONV. loc. Oean 2 bdrm, ....... t"""'3 ....... • 8234 ""Atlanta ~· ea or al'Clng, mile E. ol hwy utll avail.
hi'dwd fin, curtains thruout, & Al~n. Mgr 846-313'1 1ac1u~e~nly~e~~f pa~~::' New 1·2 &drooms ·Pay 6 achoot, 'tudio. 54l-5691 . S42,plXl51,1 Ca,ah, 'baflst tnut
range. Lge fncd bkyd, Ut & Garden Grove 4610 642-1804 ell!f:tr,ic only Offl R t I 6070 deed. Write or contact: last mo, water pd. ·$125 mo. 536.3971 or 536-2'721. ce en 1 George R. Kress, Box t14,
842-4019 SING.LE Young Adul ts i.ux--2 BR Studio Apt, l child OK, Pool-Wasbe~Dcyen Q LAGUNA BEACH Laguna Beach or phone
4 BDR. home wf. 2 ha, bll·in UTY rarden apts with coun-·~~~29fj0 pets. Sl35. Mo. Private Garages Air Conditioned 1~',...~-"'-·----~~
7682 Edinger S225 First &. I'..ast w/ $50 try club atmosphere and 2 BDRM, 1 level C.on-ON FO~J' AVENUE Take over pymn~. iO Acn11
S-12-4455 or 540.5140 deposit. 534-1382 complete prviacy. SOUTH 3 BR Deluxe, adults, no pets. •dominium. Washer/dcyer1 Oeslc apacet avallable tn no down. $29 mo. Near
Open Eves. LOVELY 4 bdr. +family, 3 BAY CLUB AM'S. 13100 54(µll54, 548-3481 or MI encl patio. all rec. facilities. newest . oft.let buildin& at Lake&: City, 894-4743 Agt.
FOR lease -EI Toro, 2 story ba, all bit-ins. 2 mi trwy. OIAPMAN714 ~ve;;.,'){I Garden 6-6992 fl75 Adutl!! ~1394 prime iocstlon kl downtown;1,;;;;~=~===:§0'I
4 BR, 2 bath, wf bltn $275 Lse. 962-0038 Grove C ) ~ BEAUT lge 2 BR. l1h ba NEW $150 up. 1·2·3 BR. Heat· Laiima Beach. Air condj. Exchange&, R. E. 6230
kitchen, trplc, cov patio, =====-==== studio, pool, adults. $155. ed & &auna 'pools. rec rm .. timed. carpeted, beautilul11---~-
fenced yard. 2 car gar. Fount•ln V•lley 3410 L1gun• k1ch 4705 2310 Santa Ana. 645-2933 Hejl ~ Algonquin. Mgr. paneled partitioning. Two Property Problems?
Avail July 15 at $240 mo. lOO CLIFF DRIVE LGE 1 Br, patio, pr. )'Rl'd. 846-3131 entraiqa:. ~ .on Exc.hange what. you don't
837-2103 aft 5. CONDO. 3 Br. Deluxe crpts Stove. le retrig. Util pd. $125. Forat A.Te., .rear lead.I to want for pf.operty you do "'=========I Two bedroom furnished NEW modem 1 or 2 BR, M ....... ..-.1 ....vt"" iota. Kn Call lo A
in this spacious GLEN MAR
wit11-'1Bx30' den, desired
built-ins, intercom It. much
more. Excellent 6% loan &
only $29,900.
-& drps. Dshwhr. Pool. AU Deluxe Features E. C.M. &73-7469 .. cnts, drps, avail Jilly 1. ............... r:-·--_. want. r ppt. 962-4968, if no ans 646-0474 ., per D>OOth lot space. Desk · 0. D. C'OLE
Walking Dista.ntt to Beach M ... Verde 5110 5364579 end chaln' available for·s.;. 548-4841 Realtor 645-0830
$2Z -Yearly lease ·;;.:;;;...;_::.;::;,. __ .:;_;:.;.:: BUllneM boiur1 answertn1l;========'i
Irvine Terr1ce 2245 Costa Meu 3100
Pacific Shores Realty
847-8586 Eves/ 962-8701
WALK TO BEACH
51;4 % GI, 3 BR 2 baths, car-
pets & drapes, fireplace,
electric huUt-ins. $26,500 full
price ~ submit your down
payment.
---------FORMAL EXECUTIVE 4
bdr 3 ha. over·looklng
Pac.ific Newport Harbor.
Sunken Iv nn, din. rm.
view. Other rooms around
pool. Exquis. furn. $1500 I
mo. July I AUg. or yearly.
675-2717
B•lbaa lsl•nd 23SS
1 BR. YrlY· or wntr Mature
person. 213 I 6n.J3n or
673-STn wknds.,
BIG 3 BR.
2 baths &. family room. E:);.
tra c.lean \vith full carpets,
drapes & built-in kitchen.
Great family home! $225/
mo. Children OK. CA LL
54(),.1151 Heritage Real Es-
tate (open eves)
L-s1un1 Be1ch 370S
N. end charming 2 BR 2 BA,
close in, quiet. Mature c.ou-
ple or lady. No pets. Refs.
$275 lse. 494-8109
BEAUTIFUL View-2 Br. un-
furn year lease. $225 per
mo. 549-2463 aft S p.m.
494-2449 2 BR, w/w crprg. drapes. :;S•::•;:f'::.•.:A:::•"·':_ __ ..;S::6:::::20 aervice avalli.ble tor $10. R. E. Wented 6240
-,,-_-.,-,-A-L-,------I All bltns. Near shopping HIPDEN VILLAG~ Ml. utlllt1e1 Ptld ucep11,;;;;;;,;:,;:,;.-,;:;;;;;;;;;;,;:;;.j
Apts. Unfurnl1htd center.::: mo. Adults on-GARDEN APTS~. . tel~1' 2ll.P'f
Ganer•I 5000 _,Jyc..·-"c.,_ ______ _,$la5 Month pus util.: 2 .Br. Z22 FOR.t.S'T .\VENUE
SnJDIO apt. 2 bdr, 2 ba + furn . or unfurn. AiN»hd., LAGUNA BEACH
lndry rm, pD.tlo, cpt&, drps. forced air heat, heated pool, 494-9496'
Adults $160 ~1554 rec. area, ptiv. patio. ·· -
3 Rooms Fumlture -···-·· QUIET LIVING Prime Location For Your Ho~ Equity
$$ MORE CASH $$ e RENT e
$20 $25 & Up Newport BHch S2ll0 u< lS2S Abwlutely no oost .• ,
L•gun• Niguel 3707 • 1 ===-"-c..;:;.:;.._;;o;;;.;.J ,..,., =d.,..-~-;;,-,;;;;;,,===iLovely surroundings, oftlc.es to you the Seller!
LGE 2 br. house, bit-in stove, Month-To-Month Rentals STUDIO •apt, hear w<f:. · Open on court ynrd. Air 12 years of paying more cash
dbl. gar, lge, fenced yard &: $275 LEASE; 3 Br. 2 Ba., MDE SELECTION Middle aged genUemen oit-· C011t•! •"'-~ cOnd., iood Ughting &: clean! for Orange County property, ··~VACANT
patio. $140. Vacant J uly 6. Din. rm., bit-ins, fam. nn. Appllances Ir TV'a avail. 1y. Pri., patio. $100 mo. on B h Perfect for Adv. Agy., In!., call the Rest . , ,
548-668(1. Gorgeous vle\v, Encl. patio. No stturlty Deposit )'TIY lse. Owner 701 Carna· eac' Apfs. CPA etc. One suite is 460 Then call the Best
cS.:u:;;m;;m:;;•:::•c..:;R:.:•:;;•::;t•:;l.:•_.:29:,::h:, ATTRAC 3 BR, frplc, bllns.1 -A~g_cn_t_4_9'-~2238_____ HFRC Fµmlture Rentals Uon CdM. . .-sqBothft 'n1 •.,ne is 1050!1 o<!M fl.
-fnod, patio, lg dbl gar. E-BEAUT. V~w EXCL 3br 2 517 IV, 19th, CM 543-3481 NEAR w Es Tc LI FF N,w • Deluxe , 0 Y ' • "' · ''" BEVERLY JACKSON WATERFRNT, pier, &: fl t side nr schls., Btwn s.1. ha, bltns dsh1vr. crp/drps. 1568 \V, Lncln. Anhm 774-2800 delighUul, lge. 2 er. garden • .,.. ',wV8:.~ ~?,&.,,!j-Bldg. JJrn
Out of town Owner. 3 BR 1-J4
ba cpts/drps, bit-ins. 70' cor
lot. FHA or VA fin. or caM
to 51A % Joan. Rush~
BRASHEAR REAL TY
847-85.ll Eves. 968-U78
Huntington
Harbour 1405
steps to ocean. 2 or 3 BR, fp. $300 836/5750 542-'"15 t C I f .. .., (714) 536-4616: c•· """"~o-a:rJV 494--0434 ... ap' oup e pre.; ~rry. (7141 s•,1••7 .,
$125 per wk & up. 4010 VENDOME pet.s,nocbildren.S160 Mo. - -' ' River Ave, NB. 673-8229 3 BDRM, 2 Bath, Lg, Fam. 3 BR, new, builtins, drapes, Hal Plnchln It Auoc 6T"a-43!12 711 Ocean Avenue· · BEAtrr.1J'UL 'Private office
OCE Rm. Pool & main!. ne1v cpt. carpets, Lease $250 mo. (3 blks w. of H. B. Pier) with bath, some ocean view, 847•6033 or 54• 0245 ANFRONT, So. Laguna. & drps. Built-ins, [rplc, -~~~~-~-~-IMMACULATE APTS! NEAR ocean, dplx,' yrly, 3 1.n the Glendale Fed .. Sav--
Beaut. furn. 2 Br. Avail. Ju-sprnkl. $300/mo. 642-2718 4 BR 2 ba, view home. ADULT&: 1'AMJLY BR 2 ba, priv pat. bltn11, ~uni Be•ch 5705 lngs Bkl& .. Corona del Mar.
ly, Aug., Sept. $1200 Mo. 5 BDRM, 3 ba. lge. fam rm, Pacesetter area, $250. mo+ SECTIONS AVAILABLE w/w cpt, drps. No pets, ,;;,Jt $75/mo, .''Call E vel y n I
Agt. 4fl9...2238: 499-3403 elec kit., 2 car gar, w/w utll. 673-9541 or 495--4485 Closa to shopping, Park fmily only. $275 mo. ·2 ·'BR., . unfurn., W/pool. Halbakken 675--5444 o rd'CASH~!!''!Q!!U~l~CR!!-need'"""'!"'!3"'~4I
CLEAN Balboa Beach Units. carpets, Country Club area * Spacious· 3 Br's, 2 Ba 642-9485 • Ckean'view. nr. beach. $160 545-3165 ' or
Sleeps 2 to 10; for summer $315. lease. 546-l7t3 Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 * 2 Bedrooms GOLD t1eda1Uon, 2 BR, 2 ~ !do~ ~mt ext. 1 5 2 ;· 3345"NEWPORT BLVD. :~~41gg_~FHA bOllae near
REALTY
reservations call 673-99451 ==-,-~~=~-= * Swim Pool, Put/green cpts, drps, patio. $165 t. $175 ~9!}.:iam eve. Offices 1t1ltable for Com··I,.,===--=----'
DECORATOR'S 2 BR, 2 ba. 325 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa $2:25. 4 BR, 1'!14 Ba, R/0, DUPLEX Unfrn. avail July * Frpl, lndiv/lndry fac'ls Lse. 4232 '11ilaria Way Ph. RE'Al ~ESTATE merclal, Medical, Dental. BUSINESS ano
To\vnhousc w/boat slip. LIDO Isle Bayrront. s BR .. 4 ;k;• ~~children O.K. 1. 3 bdr 2 ba built-ins inc.I. 1845 Anaheim Ave. 2131981-7039. Gerter•I Alr<0nd., crpts, elevator FINANCIAL
Pool, tennis $38,750 R1tr. ba.. home, pier & slip, July dshwshr. firepl11.ce. l block COSTA l.fESA 642·2324 YEARLY ! Br ··2 Ba · t ' 35c PER SQ .FT. ----------1
$130 , BR d I ··~~~~~·.!'':'.'".::!''~··~--l""!'"J'~~~~~~~ ' . . t;rp s, -673-2010 & Aug. $2500 Per Mo. up ex, gar, R/0, _ rom .... ac · JO drps, trplc, m: ocean, $235. ,R~o~n~t•~l!.s~W~•~nTttd~c.~S990~.:;l~~-$11~·~~~· ~9~R~·~"!~~-'j~ 11B~u~s~.~O~p~~~rt~u~n~l~tl~u~6~300~1 BROKER .70 ~JO w/\v, drapes, Children O.K. ... ..... 0 AL... e BEACH YEAR.LY e • 105' ON water, 60' dock, 2800' ~=-----~-~~ .,,_,.. ~ . · Mo. &16-5800. ATTENTION 516 Up¢ 29lh N. Bch.
custom design 3 BR. ·4 3 BR.; rumpus rm., 2 ba. 1 ~B_kr~. ~5.14-6 __ 980_____ Apts. Furnished 3
2 BBr.21 BBa.a, unnffurn • ... 1
1285
2 ~ NEAR Ocel)Hi'pi)er 3 B_R, :I NEEDED BY A''G"ST Artist studio, 2 r oom s,
bath 1105 M 11-'I d SJ lO Lg N' RANCH style 3 BR 2 BA r. u urn ••• • 15 v v rth l'tc bay 175 s. . :i •• own. ps. . e trees. pt. • • • Gener•I ,._ 3 B 2 8 d tu $350 Ba., frplc. $225 mo. Yearly Ea.stem College profes1JOr & no J , near ·
(213) 430-2542 Heights. $500. month. ;~~N~~rt~l~~~6-~~~ --------~'-'--1 B~'. 1 ;.', uelrn~.:: $200 Jse. 400-2128 graduate students, some Schworer 673-2654
BUDGET
RENT·A·CAR FOR. &ale or lease 4 BR. 3 Cheshire Real Est.ate HOLIDAY PLAZA 3 Br: l Ba. fW'fl ...... $275 1 & 2 BR. apts. furn &: un-With famll!es and/or small ~EW deluxe office spaces
BA, w/fam rm. 2900 sq fl. 'Th-2503 3 BR 3 BA, W/W c.pts, drps, DELUXE, spacious 1-Bdmt. BURR WHITE furn. nss to $200 yrly. pet, desire housing ~~ 320 to 1200 sq ft at Santa M ~
213: 592-1005 CHOICE N. Laguna Joe, 2 bit-ins. Upper Back Bay. Furn apt. $135, Plus Utl1. -Anita, Jones Rlty. 673-6210 U.C.I. some will be located Ana F wy & Crown Valley -a1or
BR, lrpl, gar, walk bch/ l "S=285=m=•·="="""='=5====-Heated pool. Ample parking REALTOR in the area approx 2 yrs. turnoff. 831-1400. 4994198. Orange County Expansion
fountain Valley 1410 tow n. Mo or wk 497-1056 eve No children-No pets 2901. Nev.tp0rt Blvd., N.B. Coron•· del M•r 5250 Nee~ 1 to 3 Bedroom u_n. RENT Ofc., ample prkg, Owner-Managin&: Partners
TRl·LEVEL best Newport lk•ch 3200 1965 Pomona, C.M. 67S-463o 642-2253 Eves. l~~ii;iiii;~~ii;;;;;i;iii~ .. I fumishOO apts, duplexes or busy loc .. 2340 Nwpt Blvd wanted
STRATFORD ho . t' 1 BALBOA -Inexpensive cot-THE B\uUs Medltern.nean $75. BACH apt. gar, patio, $127.50, l BR. lower, w/w, . _ houses, Price range $12> to CM $7:5. 646-2544, 548-8333 ' \VIII train• ambitious. dedi·
shape. 4 bdr, J ba. Sunken A t Se t 54g....3158 SJ4...6980 7/1. Bkr. 534-6980 • • $30 more if utilities are 300 Sq. ft. IC• seek a chaUenge & want to meu1 JP·OP tages. Weekly rates July. ViUa. Delightful vic,vof the Avail July 1st Broker drapes, alt util pd. Avail ~~v $150 per month, might go Off' cated men & wome:n who
tam. rm. fonnal din. 2 lrpls. 1 ~="~""='~·-~P-·-~---Bay from all rooms ""hic.h I'~. 2 BR, w/w, •hild,..n • tl,. "re• ""ld. Please contact : COSTA MESA 6'16-2130 invest (financially & --·o-Landscaping, cpts, drps, all BEACH at door. Newly furn open onto 50' sundeck. Pool. $125. 2 BR triplex, w/w, !er-""' ... 347""6640 Huntington Beach -ally) in a dynamic ;;;,";ih
inc.luded. Owner Commuting bac.h apt starting at ~ per Lease l level 2 BR, 2 BA. race. Avail 'l/1. Bk r. small pet O.K. Broker artcr 6 'PM to leave in-Comm1rci•I 6085 business. People who want
"'
k ·~ •~79 Ht Bel "25/ or 2 level 4 BR, 3 BA, """980 534-6980 ON TEN ACRES I<> L.A. Assume e sting low l =w=. ~-=~~-"""'-"''-'.,· ~~ ~ -:O~O:i:=======' I 1 • 2 BR. ~-, "ntu tormation or write: R, to become involved ai own-fllA. F 0 r appt: (213) PRIVATE room with bath, $500 month. 497·1537 or ~ l BDRM apt, QIM. Adults. "w-u " u m Eugene Granger, c a 8 e IDEAL LOCATION. er-working par(ners. Will be
763-7336 Mr. Cutright, owner. sep from main house. 7/10 1 _64_4-083 __ 1______ Cost• Mew 4100 ptly. furn. 646-7693 altei-6 =: ~ ~'t:;.t~=.';.';!~ Western Re!leNe-u n 1 v ., ~ul: s~:~uc~tor~~~d· rewarded with salaty, '69
NEIV, By own<r, 3 BR, 2',' to 9/3, 673-5849 2 BR, w/w, c.pts. ftillc, drps, ODERN pm ttne -n. Cleveland, Ohio, 44106 C'A •Ill, , . i g . co .1 on. car & 25% of profits. Invest-~ M attracllve 2 BR ~--------.~--· U Ft ceiling neon lights Bath, w/w carpets, drapes, BAYFRONT-Newly furnish· refrigerator, range $158. w/w ~lg, walk,_ 11_ 1 4 BDR. 3 ba. !am. rm, 900 Sn Lane-, CdM 644-26ll Development .Blc»ogy he.·.· .,, • .. ~. 2 1• ment returned tint year.
blnc.k fence. Many custom ed 1 BR. Finest beach Joe. Adults. 00 pets. 642-444l child -OK, no pe';;, $iZ.i1:i. rec.reallon area w/ pool I~ Center.) rn:~~·~oo~~~O al~;. Frank v. Blanch1nl
features. $31,0CM). Euclid &. 6'1>3243, 673--0305 646-5961 or 549-3643, Mgr, :"':=0=/-=:.°'"=5-=2815===='1~ ADULT .Couple, -no chU, no . Parking lO cars. Newport 645--021.0
Talbert, ?II' frw)'. 9£2..6479 1T ==·s~ee.c-'o~h'"'ho~u"',.'---um-e.-B=;g~--1 University Park 3237 2'260 Maple St, No. E. Cotta Mn• 5100Cost• Mn• 5100 pets. Lido Isle home sold, Blvd. 11.t Santa Ysabel . .
gen !lil!lection ever! See the 3 BR tam rm 211 ba, Vu, $130 -2 BR, util. tncl. Older ;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~ rental for 6 mo. (July JOHN MACNAB 15) \vhUe bldg. on Linda REAL~ CO IIELPI ! DAILY PILOT Classified Lease, ref, avail July J. lenant i>ttferred. • • N "·naJ '· section NOW! 8J3.01.04 or :113 434-54(8 642-6560 Eves. 645-·2020 tMe. Must have encl. gar. 642-8235 or s.is-Blss a...... ....,. need• a 673-8624 . ....-· _ distributor !or candy and
L•gun• Beach 1705
3V2 ACRES
Undeveloped land. City of Newport Be•ch 32'oo Newport S.1ch
Laguna. 9 mka. lo beac.h. 1---'-------3200 Newport Be•ch 3200 CONSTRUCTION JUST COMPLETING RESPONSIBLE young \vork· 0FFl€ES FOR RENT anackll 1n Costa Mesa or
lnr lady desires unfurnished l.Modcrn, spacious, profession-nearby aeras. p e r • o fl
1 or'2 bedroom apt prefer. al on -monthly b•rls. Avail 5elected n1usf be able tn
ably. if\ N.B. to $100 mo. 8/1/69. Contact Mr. Lapp, devote 2 to 10 houn pet· 0cean views. Should divide --------------------
642-0Cin Downey S & L Asaoc', Mt. week (days or eves) to
LQC..\[;· bu.sinemnan, 3 alon Viejo. 837-4911 mnkc very high carnlf\IS.
grown eons need 2, 3 BR • Y~ may keep ~r rpceent
mto 13 lot" Prio< $10,000; Cllill°il~' '· -/)-C ~a.· 29% Dn. A real sleeper. \:)\!:) J.' l)'.). ~ ):/(/" V
MISSION R.LTY. 494-0731 • HARBOR HEIGHlS ~our
90°/o LOAN
with 7%% Jnlel'('sf on this
beauUtuJ 3 BR, 180' ocean
view home. Call now for de-
tails, A 11teal at 143.500.
PERRON 642-lm
UNUSUAL vie1v, cu51. quaJi.
ty 3 Br. 2 ba. home on ap.
prox. ~ Acre. $48 ,000
Broker
675-6591 494· 7161 Res.
UNIQUE ~ Hkie&.wa.y,
Ttrn.ced gardens. tcftened
room. fully crptd. Exquialle
caeyon view. $19 ,800. -t I
1707
F0Jt alt by OWn«':r, lnuned
occupancy. 3 Bt. t Ba hait.
(1 Br 12x2ll. GoU COU1'tle
viclw. extra Ip lot. 24012
Estancia Avt, So J..a.runa,
~
TllE QUICKER YOU CALL,
TllE QUJa<ER YOU SEU.
apt. Nwpt Hgts area. CaJI lndu1trl•I Rent•I 6090 poa1tion. N~ . .ewog, $1~
OR ,. i.to"' ol lhe -LUXURIOUS 2 A 3 BE DROOi,\ APTS. 548-4561 •""· TRAlLER-bollt -•· 1' ...,, -~red ' (oe<Utodl. ,='c;',,,ll'lbltd words ·~ ~-"ir'j4 """Cl' -_\e c., J'or ·itnnu!diate interview m .,. ) 2 BDR yearly. Married, no 14000 sq. Jt. Bldg. dOCK Of· ............... """ -·-•• low 10 form four almp~ ."" A flc" t "" 1" I ~-" .1v.... ..... ' • ..,,...,, ...,. . ..._ . ., • Flrtplaett •Spacious CA~tb -cl;!~d: ne~r. wale~ $150-$175 e c'. ..,. ~ e .... .,,... dreu and phone numbe r to: ID III RIA LI' r . I I ...... y ! ' • Dlahwul•or • c.u ... & Sattlors ,tnil, funt .. lll>furn. 1146-0ti"ra .... , • ..,, .l)edland• jwy, I 'RO\JTE DEPARTMi!:NT . • • .• -• • "1,, e Mammoth muter gas: built-Ins 8ft· S. ' ~ els. -11.' • Scbworer Bkr. Po Box SS
;1 • ~. • Balanced power Uvln2 DESIRE to lease Republic or 673-:1654. Pomona, Q\llfornia '1'169
• Centrs.t fo'rced • Ehc1cs~ par'klti11: Pacnetter H~ tn Eita,.. UNDER. constnietlon 28,000 BUILDER'S Bua Oil:tom
IVAROF I air beatina e earp.ta a drapes cla Hf ·bo!Jndariel ,1·2-3 yn.1 :sr!!f...M·l bldg wfoUca. re remodel.·~ const. ' .. I ~ Oft 3-8J20 u " ~ sq. llJ unit1. lOc &i.ab. oUice 10 -. .B.lboa : . j I I' I I , 't'.,---1" ' WANTED: t ppn»c 6 tTIOl.il1 fq:. ~~Complete abo\lt July tsie m.-6500. ev;"fn..1551
· • • . • . 1 :;. F.utbluff. 3 BR, 2 BA i5. ~et MS-0681, days ~,O,~-'-i-'. ~~-"';.;:;,;:_I -• HARBOR HBGHlS f•mllyt/, .. ·pet. ( 21 3 ) ~' I , UNIQUE-datrlbuttne oo. •st
IC!OFER I '""'". ' 450SQ. ~'I'. BLOG. ~"i,::~~!,~P.O. . From o CMnese coolcit: •11 OUr E !7tli-!t.1 Qttota Mesa '-·-
I I I
• I · • • LANDLORDS • · · "~R BAR • P'-. w·•· 1n mon get In wrong With his FREE RENTAL SERvlCE • "\<'-_~· """''· -• --
r-----------...., wife, she do not g ive a taPl Rto:ntal J.f.anapr-Mn. ChrisUe:nacn BrokW ~ r ~ tor teoant roole:r. C1oeit to Whitt.front,
I I She gefl __ Instead." ~ ~ · · 1 ' •• ' , 180 Month". $16.~ CM. Ste for cuh. 54$a.l43 ~'-l~E~T--.u ...... L.,.....,.. ..... -1 0 """"'""' ... d.odJo-•.-d 3117-A Clnn•mon A••·· Coota Mes• WANT: 3 Br home, l~ III. FOR Root or Le ... -lot 009 <;roomJnr lhop ~
II I' I I j L . 111 ... _ .. prefn Com. Mua. Will PlY 120Xl40 complet01" ,,:...... 1&$e. Comer BfQad-6 uy ! Ing 111 m. m1.in_o WOl'd• $135. Mo iu.LAJ.43 • T>Y ,......,, • • you dtwlcp from..tttp No. 3 below. Cl bJoclc wut of.Harbor Blvd. 11 -, • :;::=;; .• 1uu. for ston.p. M-1 IOI> Newport B:h'd. cr,J. so.ma
e ~~l~~l:~~~~E~rnE~S I' r r r r r I' I 2 blocks &outh ot th• San Dttao'J'recQ)') .w8'~.\~:~t or
2 ·~~: :::·:.:::: .~~ ~ _ • _ _ _ _ _ • • Gooc1 ttf'•. ~7499 171h st. 3500 tq, it. . eau~ ~ _
.)o!ve a Simple Scramb!~d Word Puzzle for a.·Chuckle
-e_,!,""-... ' ... ';!:!1~ ... Bt.,~-t•_n_•• .... $1 ...... 1 ......... 1 ...... • 1· 1.-I I ·-· P"-546-1034 ~'l'i~· !'OOlne m ... '~""' &15-ll33 E,.. 64~1119 IT'S Buoh..-llnlo, Illa-:::::! :::: ~! . . . . . . . ' rc'~n?:e(.;)@y 1Jt. Up • NEW tnduatrial bltla, ~ 11(1, ~ ~·fwrt ... the _,:S,:C:.:R::A::;M::,::·LETS=.,::.:.._::,A:,:N::;S:,:W:.:.:E:'..:R:....:IN.:.....;~::=LA=SS::l::Fl.::C::·.:A:..:TI:.:O:..:.:N:._:8:=2:,00:_..!.!il!!!!!!!!l!l......,...,. .... ...,J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l""":!!!!!•J!!!!! '..,i,[~:~hl~;,~~!!;1•£!pban==~· ~~-!!!1385~·~-ll!!!!"'I l!M9t: :~1\ 1S39 MolllOVll, ~~ N~:!f" '
0
•-,
-. • 0 t ...... ,.. i ' ' . 1
----· ---------··------· ~'-··-·--------·-· ------~•-~---·---
. . ,
... ..... t . ·-
NUTS
OVER --' MARK UP.
llellable people now being selected in
this area to service routes ot new com
operated HOT NUT dispensers in local
bars bowling alleys et<:. You can get m
QD the ground floor in this high P.n>fit
business either spare time or Ml time.
No selling involved as all accounts ai:e
·established by company experts. Thi>
is not a 0 get rich quick" sche.me but .an
opportunity to become establtsbed with
an eight year old company that sets you
up in business under a bona fide repur·
chase agreement This business re-
quires a minimum cash investment of
$1095 for stock & supplies.
YOU CAN MAKE UP TO
• •
Bric~ Mlsonry, etc.
6560
BUILD, ltemo<kl, Rl!palr
Brick. block, c o b e r c t • ,
erpntry, DD job too ml:aJJ,
Lie Contr. 96U9C5
Busfneu Service 6562
f.l;AMPLE !nJ«tion -· Designing, toolinr I: pro.
ducUon on sample buls.
Prien to help you. 548-2157.
Terry, eves.
• • • • • .. ....... j ........................ . "
, .. . ~
• WhHdyo Wont? Whoddyo Got?
SPliCIAI. CLASSIFICATION POR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spoclol Roi.
5 LI-- 5 limos -S bucb
llULQ -AD MIJ" INCLUO!
·-
~ ... 119¥11 , ti I'"'-1-W!Yt ,_ -.flt aPI tt• ,_,.ou• p1MN •Mier ....... ...., '"" • ......,,"'"° 6-HOTHINO l<OI SALi -TltAOU OHL't'I PHONE 642-5671
To Piece Your Tr1der'1 P1radlse Ad
Six monthl experience u
expedllot' in el~
manufacturing, follow -up
&nd coordinate with prod..
ucUon control, purchasing
and englnettlng on late ......
MASTER
SPKIALTIES CO.
S..lcw Logic Detit• Englnoon
4-5 yean dlaitAI \ogle deaien
experience ~. Gradu-
ate phys.I~ llclenee or Math rnaJor desired.
ProjKt Engineer
f.5 years dia:ltaI lo&k: aDd
electronic project experience
desired. Graduate ell&ineer
desired.
4 BR 2 Bath HB ~.
fLlmlsbed or W1furni5bed.
double garage, paHo. fenc-
ed. Trade tor equal val. r r
6'13-4215
1640 -ro•I• Avo. VANGUARD ~ ... 1n 50xl40 JW 1ot Costa Mo.. DATA SYSTEMS w/gd l"l!nted hie, nrx:t to l.M2 2427
Carden Grove Qvic Dltr I -.. 15 a &rowth .. oriented Pt'"' HS. total val $20,500. Trd An equal ~pporlunlty lpbenJ equipment manUtaet·
for units or T 5tT..&t69 Bkr. emp oyer urer located nc.r Orange
. . . .
MACHINISTS ~
Milling Machine Oper's.
Lathe Operator Senior
own tools and do own setups.
Must be experienced on turret lathe, have
Drill Press Operators
Must be experienced. on alJ types of drill1,
have own tools and do setups. Minimum
three yrs. experience.
Tool Grinder
Minimum five yrs. in close tolerance grind·
Ing ol high-speed and carbide tools.
Hone Operator S250 MONTHLY SPARE TIME &
OVER $3000 MONTHLY FULL TIME
JOB &bop/machine shop,
can handle busy l overload
work. Wood, metal, I plu-
tic work. Jent Ent. 548-2152 .....
F. C. Bookkeeolnl Serv.
Frtt pickup &: delivery.
Refs. Reaa. 847-8202
Retired-don't need tax aheJ •
ter, Want hse m. A cir for
$19 M or $38 M eq In rrl-
plexes. $960. mo, p o o I ,
Have Newport Helghu lW • •·PRODUCTION Coonty AUport. Pleue re·
Lot $17000 clear prime SCHS:DULER -with"'"'""""" m!a WANT duplex, trlplu I"" P .0. Box 1820, Irvine, c..J.
Must have minimum of two yrs. experience
on Sunnen Hone.
Our unique bonus pl•n 1n•ble1 you to
triple your lnltlel route without further
Investment. ========= prime loc. no vac .. 540-60DJ.
Carpent1rfn9 6590 Tax Shelter Needed: trade
Corona del Mar &Ma attn.
MATCHAM RLTY 646-4837 With al leut one year exper-Englneerin&: Department
ience u scheduler in mater· CADILLAC CONTROLS
For interview write to Products Distri·
buting Co., PO Box 1976, C-Os ta Mesa,
(Include phone number).
CARPENTRY $25,IXX> land equity In ,.,_
MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Idly a pprec. area for unU1 or beach prop, OWner 8wl:
Too Small. C.blnet 1n l1lf'. 676 Tustin 544-3666 eves.
HA VE 2 ~ trailer lal or production control
10 x 50, $3980 clear Good binae benefits profit WANT jeep, travel traD-sharing '
"· 1""" tn<om, .,..,....,_ .MASTER MATOIAM RLTY 64M837
COOK
Doyt & Nlghtt
Division of Ex-Cello Corp.
1166 WMttt.r Aw., CHr. M ..
646-2491
agea Ir o t b e r cabinets.
545-817S, tt DD answer leave TOWNHOUSE 3 Br. 2'il ba. Trade 1939 Buick, or -APPLY IN PERSON'
MON TIJ.RU THURS
BE"IWEEN 3-5 P.M.
An equal opportu~ity omployer
ANNOUNCEMENTS SPECIALTIES CO. au.. Opportvnltlo1 6300 ond NOTICES msg at 646-2312. H. o. Beaut, appt'd. Prlv. patio, 1961 Renault Caravdle for
Andel'SOl'I pool; nr. bay, VaL $.12,500, Olevy Panel, Help Wanted, Men 7200
!or TD .. car, camper or !'? $4o0 va1ue 1640 -l A
PARTNER Lott 6401 REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS Owner 64"6St 642.5769 rov 8 Yt. WE ARE LOOKING
CABINRI'S, Any lb:e job Costa Mesa SNACK SHOP MINIATIJRE collie, tri col--~•o rn• Sailboat 38' roomy, fast Rented house, SOxlfO R..J 1. .. 2·2427 FOR MEN WHO ARE ~yrs. exper. ........... ...... --"-. $11.~ val +old-3 lol N c-~ G Cl I -LOOKING •Hr ·D ~~old mm~ now e:t· or, 8 mos, IOl!lt June 24 vie li'UI.... ......., c• r. .... ... en rnve v c An equal opportunity 3444 E C HI h ~ ~
panding. OpenUw of ntw di. Brookhurst & Adam!, HB. ~~ Partilc ·N-lt Smalld Br. Ilse CM, $1S,750 vaL c.enter, $20,500. Trade $9,500 emp•--· C • 00d•1
1 Mii way Let ua train you tor a carttr vision atttes unequaled op. Reward. 962-5116 ~o.. e · e or ~. Want comm'I or indUJL !qly for units or Tr Owot.r/ 1--,-=,.;,,-=~=~~-1 oron• e ar in Insurance. An opportunity
_ .... ,,,; ... for OWNER-MAN-Reu! Call KEN ~ prop In CM. 673-ml7 Broker 547.&469. * DRIVERS * to learn the bua:ineu & earn ....,. ·-.. .., BICYCLE, Pavillion area, AGER. a>MPANY WI LL Tandem, Schwinn, blue w/ CARPENTRY -repaln • Lotus Elite new yellow l&q. 2 BR. doll house w/hd~·d. No E~lence WANTED part -time extra money on a part time
FINANCE UP TO $85,000. ehnn tndn. no q u e s , , Cabinets & Remodel. Quali-new tires, valves & int. floors, on shaded M lot, -,...-. salesman to sell product.Ii basis, before leaving yow-
No uperience neecaaary. 673-t303 ty work. 642-3464 or 645-04.15 Wild looks, performance & FOR duplex or unl.tl. Necessary! never before oUered to the present Job. Berome a full
WlDi.ngness to learn a musl QUALITY Repairs _ Altera-o/30 mpg. Want jeep, carry FORTIN, REALTOR Must haVe clean Califom1a public. Un I t m It e d op-time agent wben qualified
lsl year income should ex· SM Beige poodle. male, blk tions _ New const by bour 1 an'°",7.P_l~Uc-. '~'~' ~""""~~'=,,. 1701-A Westclltt, NB 642-5000 driving "'''""· A ...... i.. portunily for advancement. with a guaranteed income oeed $25,IXXI. 11 )'DUI' &ft ears. Lost last Tues. vie 646-3442 t'l'".I' Truly a chance to get in on per month.
'available immediately and Birch & Ellis. F.V. Reward. ·°'=°"'=tn.=c=l===== I North Tustin Lot, $lB.500. HAVE: Conn Minuet Organ, YELLOW CAB CO. the ground Door. Excellent F•rmers Ins. Group
have SlS,000 cub. call 21l/ 968-5325 • Free &: clear, most excl. original price $!600. WANT: 186 E. l6th St. salary Ii commission ar· Ed l•ni ~1834 Cement, Concrete 6600 area, fabulous view, Tr. for '64 car· <cood cond..), Hobie Costa Mesa t F 1 rthc 1 E'~"';-;:~""'~~·;· ~=~~ ~ ~~r =: :n~=; • CONCRETE nra. patios lnc. property w/spendable. sailboat or?! 675-6969 AUTO MECHANIC ~:~~~ 9~30 r ~: 0r;:~~~~e~est ~ to loin 6320 _<90J565=-='-----.~~·-I. etc. Concrete &: blk top aaw-Bkr. S4?-M69. 28' Fairliner F. B. Ford Se-Busy a.hop o.f new car dealer 642-6861. Now hai opening.s for 2 youna:
'-:le 2nd loanl 1or nnlclc UGtIT blue fender .....,. ing. Reas. Don, 642-8514 Wllltra.de,AUg.Beauthome dan. 327 CUrsader. Want 6 needs light serviee meeh· Construction agre111ive & a table autt> ~· ... REWARD1 • CONCRETE work all ir. Burlingame w/l BR, 3 sleeper F.B. Cruiser, Debel anic. Good working a>nd. S. Admln. Asst. $12,000 mobile salesmen. DI rec l .cuh. Bonow on )'OU1' pro-· BA, den, pla. nn, Spect preferred, cash dll:!erence. daywk.Applyservlcemana. __ , rl perry eq without dilturbirl&'. 54~1240 types. Pool decks A custom. bay view, for aooom. on (n4) 673-6728 a:er. Fee pa.id. Major Beach area -.es expe ence pttferm:I.
•, )'Otlr IO'IP tntttttt ht TDL BRO"'N ol wht male dog, Call 543-1324 BaL 151 N CdM co. Xlnt tutu??, benefits. But not necessary. We wW • ewport, · Small horse ranch 2 BR 1 HOLIDAY SALES r -mcl -n•'· .. _.,,. ~•--train right men. Our top ·Abo buytts fer 2nd TDL doxy body It tenier face. e CUSTOM PATIOSe XJ.nt ref's. (ill) 362-12ll ba -~ W -3 BR 2 A SERVICE \.Al '"" u-e1•• ~ ' • gar, •u<--u. a,., fee jobo, send -sume or call men eam in excess of $25,000 Sattler Jdortpce Co. Inc. Nr. Ellis It Ward. 968--S277 concrete aawing & ft~ wk days. 8:30-5:00 bath on large Jot. Can add 11169 Harbor Blvd.. CM ... Serving Harbor Area Z> yn. State Llc.•842-1.0lii Kay, S4&5-i10. JASJN BE5T a year. 336 £. 17tt. St. n...rsonalt 6405 l<XK> ac., $250,COJ, 80 ml ca.sh. 1860 Newport Bl, CM e FRY COOK e Employment ~ncy. 2120 Apply in flel'30ll to .....,n ......,,~ ·---'------1 * CONCRETE Work, bond-from dntwn I.A., 5 min. Rltr 646-39'28 eve 644-1655 Graveyard shift. 2 yrs exp. So. Main, s.A. General Sales Manager e COUPLES e ed & lie. C.Oncrete sawing. from twy on paved rd. btwn Large house: + income + Heavy breakfast. Good sal· I Id • Bob Longpre Pontiac
ANNOUNCEMENTS e SINGLES e Phillips Cement. 548-6380 Beaumont & Oak Glen, Trd room to build, on IOU ary tor good emplyees. 18 F e Coord•n•tor 13000 Beach Blvd. Wgtmnstr
and NOTICES CEMENT work. Anything for inc. prop'!' 547~ Bkr. course. Trade for free & or over. P1ease. apply In To $13,000 fee paid, Leading:i---------Tired of Ban, Mall & Hi Cost Bea•h 0 -· "· ~-1 oppty you need. Call 842-8157 for clear land or submit pel'IQn. " _._.. \.Al • .tUJ• • found (Fr• Ads) 6400 computer clubs: JOIN THE free est. Lic'd & bonded. 3 Br, convert den, .trplc, 1~ Madge Davis Rltr &42·7IXXI a>TTAGE COFFEE SHOP Comcl constr. Also fee jobs.
FUN! THE IN CROWD -Ba, view. Glendale home. S62 \V l9l CM Send resume or call Ka,y, SMALL l:iatm doc. Magnolia DIV. OF LM.P. Mttt others PATIOS, \VALKS, DRIVE,. $.17,500. $10,700 eqty. For io,. Want free &: clear vacant • h Sl, 546-5410. JASON BEST
'• Adams. Owner please with YOUR interests at OW' WAYS. Free ettimate. cal duplex, home, '!'? ! land anywbere U.S.A. Have INSTRUCTOR Employment Agt!ncy, 2120
identify. Call 962..-0729 after weekly parties or select J. RAY CONST. 642-4210 Myers 613-6756 }ocal, improved. yoUng:, mature male, neat So. Main S.A.
4:30 PM them individually & {GAL.5 MASTER carpenter ,$4 per Madge Davis Realtor appearance. Must be able to iiiiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiO~I
APRICOT poodle-pup, no join FREE) Call Leah 1·9 hour. Remodeling-Repairs. GIBSON Les Paul model; 642-7000 . mec!t and deal with people. e FIBERGLAS e t.~ _! .. '11!,.T~~. Park, p.m. 63.>932Q. 64U409 or 536-mJ ~=; ~~um~v:n: Wiii trade 1961 VW ~~r!~~ 1~~~ ;~~ e REPAIRMAN e ....... ....... ........ ... ,, * Alone? TRADE for boat, motor, or Sedan for Bus or Van. Points Shopping Center), Experlenced, mature, lJ Mr)70 Canwt L1ying & "• 4~ ~·1 ,,_, •-wknd• * "'""~ • H 8 permanent, good pay, • r -Repair 6626 · · "~ ' ... "' · .........:>04i • • benefits. SCHOCK BOATS
EXPERIENCED * COOK *
ApPly In person
REUBEN E. LEE
ISi E. Coat! Hwy,
Newport Beach
Help Wented1 Men 7200
Steven Bowl•
126 Amethytt
Balboa blond
Yau are the winner of
2 tickets to the
FIREWORKS
SPECTACULAR
at th!
ANAHEIM
STADIUM
on JuJy 4th
Please call 6U-5678, ext. 329
between 9 and 1 pm to claim
your tickets. (North County
toll·frec number la: 54()..1220)
Mana~ement Trainee
PART TIME EVES.
$3.50 per hr.
Call 547·7782 Mr. Bond
BOAT CARPENTERS
Exp'd. in high quality work.
Good pay, gte&dy vmrk and
all benellts. H IX S 0 N
MARINE, ISee Ch a r I es
Phillips) 829 Production Pl.
N.8.
BOYS ID. 14
Carrier Routes Open
for
taiuna Baeh, So. taiuna
DAILY PII.Or
642-<321
EXP pa1try cook Ii: YOUNG malt puppy, part ...1. * * * * * \Y•rehounman $365 673-2«i0 * Newport German Shepherd, we 11 INYL ! E " MECHANIC
1 YES IT'S YOUR CARPET • V - T L I !!!!!!!!!l!!'l~!!!!!!!!!!!'~!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!'l~!!!!!'!!!!!i!!!!!! /Mature. service comple1ed. I "~'l"S~~~~~~I . 'trained, houaemtm Brown il FAULT Lie contr. Free estlmntes I' Call Dan Merchant! Person-BOAT ASSEMBLER Journeyman mechanic, ex-
, ~Vic Newport Island. For recorded mnsare that 64Z-1403 540-Tl62 SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVIC& DIRECTORY nel Agency, 2400 westclil! Fiberglas, bonding &: final pcrience Foreign or Domes-
Exp fry cook, part
time. 494-4898
Benton's Coffee Shop
133 S. Coast Hwy. LB 1,,;.~=-------I will change yoor 11fe call PIUmblne 6190 Drive, N.B. &ts.mo hardwatt. Experienced only tic. One ot the oldest For-
6/3/69 yng. pup med. tt. ORANGE co. 547-6667 Elldrlc1I 6640 H•ullng 0730 JANITOR, part time, eves ol need apply. el,gn car aervic.e department'
: near El Camino &: Bushard ~ bJur rtcord~ ;;.;;;.;...""-'------1 ---------1 Sat In Huntington Beach. NEWPORT BOATS in Orange C.0. Flat rate & 1 YV, black w/white mart. =o=R=IVER=--'-'--"C..:.=-~ I ELECTRICIAN, no job too GENERAL HAULING PLUMBING REPAIR Janitor Service, 3644 Bever-1919 Placentia Ave. warranty work $9.00 per · lnes on chest. 962-3248 or passenger of mnall. For prompt aervice No job too small ly Bldv L. A 900l'.M 213 Costa Meaa. 6Ci.5.3n hour. pay based on 50/50%. XKE which entered Bal call 545-4614 & CLEANUP e 642-3128 e ·• · : Excellent working condi.. •~ u ND: Poodle-vicinity Port shop'g center nr Kodak ========= IW per load. 962-6846 =========lc:m=:;--;_:"~"~...,......,.-,--SERVICE STATION tlons, Mu!t have own hand
: 4c Hai: a rd• film &ta from P.Cst Hwy Gardening '6IO HAULING, clean-ups, Iota,. Pool S."lce 6910 Sailing Instructor emplo_: .. ee, wilhf··" ex~rience, tooll. Call Sidney 494-9771 or :'.;;~inst.rt I den 11 f y. apprnx 7 pm Thun 19-June. garages, etc. Lrg truck, ---------SHOCK BOATS wh~h:u ~r '60.i time day 545--0634. ~sro·N ~.,, -·-~ 1--··· Please contact 642--3687 a1t 6 ANTHONY'S handyman, anytime. Call e i.t lofo. Free! Ex-per, lie, 673-2050 HS I '· A,P_Hy : "'-h s,:..,:oast y°'o"u"'N"G,,--m-.-.---~~--~,.~_. ...... uu 11UA~ ........ pm. c.ou.Jd prnve ttwatding BOB 645-225& reliable' Tony Taylor Pool wy., ........,. D<..: • .._.,..,vron • """"'""uuu
· i1pprox. 11A )TL V l c. ==--~-~--1 ' SlGN PAINTER &: LAYOUT Sta. apt. helpful but r.ot nee. 3-1
J'airview Rd. & Wll!Jon.. LICENSED 6AL 1948 YARD/gar,.clnup. Re~ -Sc=""="'=·="'"'=="='====ll.IAN. Exper. only. $4.00 hr days a Wttk, The Earl's , ~ ll 548-mi9 eves only Spiritual Rl"adings, advice -.v• trees, tvy, dirt. tractor baclc -t tart. 2948 Rand 1 h St Store Manager Trn. $500 p I um bing, Inc. ~ ~•"NGNESE--•U block on all matters, ll2 N. ~ ~~sM~alnna more! hoe, g.radina. 962-3745 ~~.!'."odel, R.ep11lr, 6940 ~,::. 0 P ·• Excellent future for rlaht Newport mvd., CM
• --· -.. Camino Rea!, San Oemente ._.,..neut..~ te.nance =-"'"'~""'°"'-~-.-·I m&n, call Dan Me.rcha.nts1=.,,.--,--,--,..,-.,--,,-
EXPO. BUSBOY
Over 18.
SURF & SIRLOIN
5930 Pac. Cst. Hwy .. N.B.
AUTO Salesman, ex-
perienced only. Call tor
app't.
645-0410
TRAINEE Manager • Apply
Royal English Fish &
Chips, 488 E. 17th St., C.M.
WANTED: Man w/ car for
morning newspaptr route.
Phone 846-ZT17 l: white, female, vie. Vle-492·9136. or 496--9507 Budget Landscaping B & G Haullnt Service * IF you need remodcllng, DELIVERY Boy, Part lime Personnel Agency 2043 Weat-While elephants! D~·llne
tbria & Pacific, C.M. Call to 10 AM. 10 PM Graduate Horticulturlst =="'='="'=na=bl=•·="'=·=ll03==· I paD'~ti~., 0
1!..., repairs, call for C.orvan truck, Mon.·Fl'L cliU Dr. N.B. 645-2770 =========-'H=o=lp=W:•:nl==_,,=M:IOft:=7:
2
:00o1
identify 642-4360 SPECIAL $2 READING JU.I'S Gardening It Lawn =-=-=='"='====I ;"";;;;;;;P;;M;;. ;:-"""'901-;;;:;:,;:;::;::::;:-ISERV. srA. SALESMAN. Help W•nttd, Men 7200 .u ~. black dog, cocker * DESPERATE 15 ~ar Maintenance. Residential, Houuclunln9 6'3S Sewing 6960 NEEDED: One Mechanic. Full time, gwing shill. Must
, 'i'hita elephant.II DlmN-Unl WW. £lepbutlf ----~---·
Mb:. Vlc. Sant.a Ana Ave. I postal employee needs Comme r c I a I , working MAINTENANCE .. reslden----"-------1 Salary It comm. Exp'd. be neat in appearance and
Santa tu.be!, CM. 645-0759 financial assistance. At any Newport-Costa Mesa areL tlal & commercial, windows e DreS8lllaking • AlleraUons Own toolJ. l900 Newport handwriting. Apply 2 5 9 O
:KAJE-Polnt Siamese, male. cost. John Irving, P.O. Box 548-8411 our specialty. Xlnt work, Custom Designs ffivd., Costa Mesa. Newport mvd., C.M.
fully grnwn, Westminster 2333. N.B. 980 ALLEN BROS. reas! Refs. 642-9446 •646-M46* CABINET MAKER k Draftsm•n, Design $166
, area. 894-4663 All ct' E rt GARDENERS STUDENTS HOUSECLEANING-========~I MOLDER. Boat Mlg. Plant. 3 I 5 " -• r• ive Xpt TILE, Ctr•mlc 6974 8601 Edi!IOn, lfunt. Bcb. 0 ' yrs. exp. on p.-.ntcu pv...D Ma.le! Dachshund ? YOUNG WOMAN "'Orking way thru college. Beach area preferred. circuits call Dan 1rlerchant& ~ L. .,_ "·'" A""J 536-9563 day or night. Mesa Ve.n:le -Adama &l'f:L dancer will teach you all .......... tc. n.o:as .............. "" Excdlent References. * Verne. The Tile Man * l;,:==='-'-:c=-=,;;-• I Personnel Agency 2M3 West. '45-65.36 latest sleps. Call Ardell JAPANESE Garden f n g 962-4173 543-5038 Cu!!. \\/Ork. Install A repairs. YOUNG MEN. must be 21 & cliU Drive, N.B. 645-2770
Dog, Vic Crahamn ,.,..,,,"=',,' ,,"',,1,_-4S38.,..~l,..-IO,.,.,P,.,M.,...,0 I service and maintenance. CARPETS, Windows, fin:, No job too small Plaster Q~~~;e;.QAsr BEEF YOUNG MEN, willing to
f. Edinger, H.B. Call to lotARRIACE & FAM I LY Also clean up. etc. Rn or O:imc'L Xlnt patch. Leaking shower 2114 W Occanfro 1 NB leBrn trade; Merchandising, ~entity &17--0192 PROBLEMS can be IOlved. • ~2.572 • work Reul Re.fa. 548-4111 repair. 847-1957/846--0206 · n • · · stock cleric, leading to
Kitten-vie. l?th I Call Diveraified Counselors e MOW • EDGE * \VEED. MECHANIC Wanted, Class A purchallng. Military oom-prange ~25l$ 6i5-2300 hrs. lG-5. Pro!. lawn malnl by capable lro nl n@ 6755 Tru Service 6980 Licensed preL Apply in mitment& completed. Call
PORTRAITS .. '4MS41 College studen ts. Reas? penon ?.1esa Tow Service It. 54()..9373 BLUE Parakttt vlcinlly San-Oi.arcoal. water color. Oil • Kalina Brnthers ~123-t JRONINGS done in my TREES pruned, topped & Garage, 648 Baker. CM SALESMAN====iM"""ocJ>an.,-~lc-."'""FuU'""" la Pttaria St., r .v . 84l-7CM4 8 J home. Relerrnces, xlnt. removed. 26 )Tl ex p . SECURITY GUARDS time, "A" cc .......... lice.lllK!.
,tSICYQ.E -Vic. Santa Ana A; Y , R. l\1acMillan Reliable ta ... n service, ""'Orlt. You pick-up I: Paulson 'Im Ser v Ice N-are.a. Call between Know brak~No m""w... eo--ALCOHOLICS •--ous mow, edge, !rlm. .._U ~ia M a ,,...,.. .... ~. "'"rv·· ..._ -...ta Isabel, CM. 645-0759 ~.,,-.. , * 531-141M * vo: wr. "'""' es • _..,...,... 9 am -2 pm &37..JO'TO \\wk, Must be top Phone 542-7217 or write to Newport are.a. $1 per hr. sal 1 See J' ~Olt 6401 P.O. Box 1223 OlSta Mesa. 642-f7li6 64M581 Upholstery 6990 BREAKFAST C.ook ~ -exp. esman, nea . un,
RIDE Wanted OCC to Corona Reliable La wn lofa.lntenanc:e: Appl_y Flying Butler. Zim-2590 Newport. C.f\f.
:eQy Who found t; claimed ctel M&r, eves. Will pay. Gardening and Cle.an-up Janitorial 6790 C2YKOSKI'S Cust. Uphol. mer 673-09772 =~FULL=~°'u"'mec-exp,-,."'d,--,11UV=1co'"-
,!JW11 watch at y. c . Call 675-t2JS aft 7 pm. AL'S Gardening Ser v 1 c e. i::uropean Crafl!manship ruu.. t l me Delicatessen stallion help & one
QJ"Tlival pla return to P.O. Lawn main tenance, Rarden-\VAU...S, \Vlndows, noon. 1ooriti t in! 642-1454 man. Ser' Terry 49S E. 17th graveyard man. No phone
box 2102, Newport Beach. Announcemtnts 6410 Ing & clean up. G46-J629 carpets. Commerclal I: 1831 Newport 81 ., C.J\f. St., c .M. u 8-9314 calls. RICHFIELD at 19th &
Sent value CUI & Ed La rP.sldentlaJ. Dally, weekly JOBS & EMPLOYMENT NE~D driver with clean van. Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa LEARN TO SWIM JN YOUR ge wn and /or l\fo 897 7350 srA. ·-·oNT WATCH for small J\fa: 1 L' nsed . -Job W•nt-', ••-n TOOO Part 'l'.:!e.,.!ellvery. SERV. · • ~., ; metaJ ...... le coins •-...... ,... O\VN POOL! REAS., RED 1" cnancr' tee 8ny & Bea eh Cleaning Serv .u mo. '"'1'0"""' Full time, Airport Texaco.
··-...... , 1<11 CROSS CERT. MRS. BEE 548-1808/645-lllO art 4 .,. __ M'"·. ~78 C&mpu• °'' f. reels of home movie ~At f carpets, windows, noon. etc MAN, 25 Boat Ma.int. job, NO matter what il ia. you _,,. UL<; """ tnms. No "',.stlolll ,,~ 1 ..:~.;;.,l;.;4,;98""==-=-=-CLEAN-UP Specialist! lo OV• nc9 A: Comc'I. 64&-lfOl NB .. ~~ .. ....., tng dgl odd j o b1 l.o:========= exp. Mk for Mike 536-IS.2 can sell It with a DAil..Y · · Rewvd. 67S-4051 C & If OFFSET Printing: ..,; e blng.540 """'~ • '"·twn 6-8 PM PILOT WANT AD' 1 ~Alt 5618 SOCK 1T TO 'EMl i,Wo"="""m"a-.ck,...,Mal~e~La-bn-dot-1 (discount on order 200 & OVtt) .~_.,._ .. __ '·-~----1 Paperhangln9 ,~==·=:=,.;:,· ====".1~~=~==·=·=~£,:· =::~=:=:::o===:":=;"""'.::;:;
lterrieven one 15 mo old, 177 H Rlve.nlde, NB &U-0020 JAPANESE gardener Compl P•intlnt 6850 Job Wanted, lady 7020 Help W•nttd, Men 7200 HelD Want9d, Men 7'200
llOn 2 mo. Reward. COM SERVICE DIRECTORY 11erv. Exper, dependa!W!, l---~-----
673--5450 tree en. stM389 NE.AT. Exp. Painter, II) MATURE v."Oman, capable, r::•• • .... • • • • • • • e • • e • • •: ~ •-·" ~.· blolld alld ;lla:.:.;;bY;c•:.;ltl:.:.;;1"9"'----='::5;:;50 John.son's Cardenlna drln~. College 5hldent. reliabl(!, desires po&. a1 MANUFACTURING ,. • ~nau ........, -Fine Lem· prices! Strw 54&-4549 L .i-1 1 , •• ~"--• ··-•1 ""''p .. export '"'· ·~·,'· "' "'""''" -· PRODUCTION • .,. ... ..,, I~ ...... ..,ss. name WEEKLY Ba'--j{ti .... -r. PAINTING In ~. -· t h NB Ex I ~ 'II u,,-,, ... _ ,.... P\anting, cleaJMlps. 962-2035 t I: ....,. • ...,Y'<u Be or area. ce . ·~•· ermaD; RE\VARO "'"....,or"p'-~-1t.B.1n ~ ". Full•-· Q Ca11~12PM ~78 ;;',,-name:~--Yamaueh.I Carden Servlca contractr;u; P••Cl!lll. Yum. _,wn.,.. tran519 p. "". , TRAINEES t'rff 1.Andseape Consultine SaUslacUon guat. F"rM e.&t. a1;r.£;J
,\UUL.T Altered m •I e , \\'JU. babysit your M(! \& e 673-1ll!6 e Jtm Wee.ks 673-1195 SWEDISH \\"Oman halntylllt ~ lh/brd aolJd blue cat the Wl'l!:k. you f u r n I sh ===~----..,-1 EXT/Int. pot.a. A\.1!r nn. m It ~ colortst. 10 yrs u_.
W..oi!, CM. Rew! 548--8587 transportation. 642-1401 EXPERT Japancll! man-+ aooc1 paint, neat work. per. In 5th Ave Salon ln NO EXPEklENCE NECESSAkY. ~1 lO JS Yf:AkS.
Gnn .l..ed£M Wallet TEACHER wW bab)lsil my teMnce H.B., F.V. aru. loc l"Clf.s. Roy, 147-1351 NY attka pol In NB HIGH SCHOOL GlADUATl ,,. YOU HAYE THE AP· !IJc Brirlol I: Paularlna home 5 ckya; a week, .can....,_Mack __ ._l<l-M<2 __ ,..-,._ PAINTING. Pa_ ... _ 16 .,... aTs-im Redondo. Bch ••• TITUOE, WE WILL TRAIN YOU. PlR.MAN~NT l~-
'Charch. Reward. 61J..TS N-~--64"!1610 Ja-nese Gardner ......... ;1•• =====,....,=-· ---1• PLOYMENT, EXCELLENT OPPO•TUNITY • A • ~~..-· .,.--. v r-1n llArbor are.a. Lie A; bond-EXPERIENCED nlll'IR-COfll-• VANCEMENT. '' hlk/wh fam Cit. 4 BABYSITTING ln my home Dper, oom.pl yard acrvlce! ~. Reta furn. 642.2356 pa!Uon. Cook dteta. Exe& t :::~~ w~~tti:: t:~;.~z= :'·::::· ::::.~. l••~::. .. ':f .... ~ .. mt~ ii. INTESRPVIEWS SWMOeNs. tTeHRrUn FRI.
:blllar. Wbl spot.a front Jca. homt. w/tAkt lntanta up lo ,..__ I ,_ I , •• 2 AJI typn. Frte estimate. ~ ol-'VN"
T.utbluU aru. ~ 2 )'tats. 158 MaamllA. C.M. -n•r• ~'! c" _,, Cail ~ LtC. Prac. muw:s (21 AvaU.
111!./Jukan Husky-male lolt aut.Dcare5dayswcck,my LANDSCAPING and hlunni DON'T etve ll away, ret private home ar -ltaJ. 2701 So. Harbor, S1n+1 An1 ~b • °"""' HB. bame. l4&ttn woman. .. 11 ..wk and plant mattrial quick e8M ror It with 11 Arr/ lhlfllll. ~ i
646-1932 auarantttd. 63&-2341 DallY Pilot want Ad! DAILY PILO'T WANT 4D$1 AN IQUAL OPPOlTUNITY IMPLOYIR
SOCK rr TO 'EMI tca"1t BRI?fG l\ESULTSI 1 e • • • • e e • • • • e • • e • e e • • • • • •
YOUTH WANTS JOBS
If you're • yo un9 per1011 wali119 to work or en adult
looking for • willi~9 worlter, th••• shf Orent• Coe1t
er•• non•profit youth •'"ployment cent1r1 can h1lp yo11,
YOUNG PEO PLE:
Sll!I "' """ ,... C#lflt' lllf"t l tM-.•. .... 19' ,..,,.,.,lttn.
AOULT5 1
Cl'l«ll Wllfl tlMM cllllten ..... .., .. -""" ~-I •h1 tf ,,,. ....
)'9Ur di ........ .,. fwy-.._ ... _
... __ .,.. .... "" u.-
....m11y ~ Ue ......
HARBOR AREA
YOUTH EMPLOY·
MENT SERVICE
ISpa~1orei bv Junior
Eh1ll Club ind 1'ni1°
l•11ce l119ue of N1w·
i>0rt l11cl1.I Offlc11 i11
Central l•a11c.h, loy1'
Club of the Harbor A111
lt4 Center Stre1t-.Co1·
11 M1t1. Op111 9 '·'"·to I
p.111. Mon41v throu1Jh Fri·
day, Ju111 16 through
A11t. II. T1lephone: 642·
0414,
SOUTH COAST
JOB PLACE·
MENT SERVICE
I Spttntot'ed by South
Ot•11t• Cou11tv YMCA,)
Offlc11 1t 491 Fere1t
A••· • le9u111 latch.
011'•• f e.111.-~oon end
I 100 • • ''"'' Mo~d•v•. T11aM1 1Y1, T\undey1 .&nd
Frli a,.... Ph111• 494·Jlll.
MISSION
VtEJO YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE
I S,.1111r.4 .. ., Rancho
Viti• Wtffttn't Club.I
Office• et Min ion V:1/o
Hlth School, 25025 Chrl0
1e11te Drlwo, Mls1lo11 v;.
•I•· Open I 0:00 •·"'· • I :00 P-'"· Mo11d1v thrv
Frl4ty. l'hot1t tl0·1tJO.
HUNTINGTON
BEACH YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE
fSpon1orM ltv Elli1 A.,,.
nu• l epti1t Church.I Of·
fice1 at 1121 Elli1 J..,e, •
H1111!i11lJfon leech. Opefl
t 1.m .. S p.1'11. Motttl 1y
through Frid 1y. Pho~•
147 •• 067.
FOUNTAIN
VALLEY YOUTH
EMPLOYMENT
SERVICE
ISpo~toretl .. V South'
Coe1t Ju1!1or We111e~'•
Cl11 ... I Of.flct i~ Nurte'1
Offi••· Fouftfei" Vellty
H19h S•hool, 17116 l u·
1h1'4 St .• Fou11ttl1t Y•I•
lev. Opt 11 10 a.11t.·t ,.111.
Mo114ev th,.119h ff14ey.
Pho111 t6l0 Z44t .
HUNTINGTON
BEACH UNION
HIGH SCHOOL
DISTRICT JOll
REFERRAL
SERVICE
IS11pe"i1•4 liy kt .. trf
Marti~. 4!r.cfer tf _.,.,..
••ptrlt"fi' e4u•1tlo11,
H1111tl119te11 I•••" U11lt1t
Hl_th Schoel Dlttrltt,t
Offlc11 et 1 t02 • 17tli
Shatt · Hv11tl11tt••
lt11h. Opt 11 I t .ll'l,-4110
p.111, Mo1141v thr.119h Fri·
t11v all 1u1111t1.,, l'h•11•
SJt.tJJ I.
. .
-~-------------
Jmn1ediafe opeftlngs for men
with experience in plumb-
ing, electrical, waJJa:, cabin.
ets and t1niab -or we will
train you. Must have some
hand tools. See Rick, 2135
Ca.11yon Drive, Co&b>. Mesa
642-11758
Help W1ntecll
Womon 7400
*
J. C. ~enney Co.
Fashion Island
Newport Beach
NEEDS PART Tlt.tE
SALESLADIES
Housewives & Mothers
can you spare a lew hours
each dQ and add to the
family income at the aame
time 1 SAhedules convenient
for you, marning1, alter-
noon.s, evening! or combina-
tions or all. Work in a fun
store under the finf!t of
conditions and top rupervis-
sion.
APPLY IN PERSON
MASTER
SPECIALTIES CO.
1640 Monrovi1 Ave.
Cost• Mes•
642-2427
An equal opportunity
employer
for our money room
Recent, auceessful experience
preferred, Competitive wag·
es and outatfndlng bene.l.ilS
includlna profit sharin&.
APPLY IN PERSON"
10 A.M. to 5:00 P .M.
Monday thru Friday
....... ................... ! J. C. PBltEY CO.
abilities
unlimiteo
agencjy
Quality Positions for
Qitalilied Applicant!
488 E. 17th St., Suite 224
Costa Mesa 642-1470
FASHION APPAREL
FUU. time positions
• Sales girl age 19 to 30
• Ass't manager age 23 to 4S
Must be style conscious, re-
liable and prompt.
Relail women'!I apparel ex-
perlenc:e required.
MARLENE
*
24 Fashion lslend
An equal opportunity
emp'c~
J. W . Robinson
Has Openings for :
MILLINERY
DEPARTMENT
MANAGER
and
HAIR GOODS
*
LfGAL TRADIE
Work at Newport Center,
start $400/mo, Requ.lrea sec-
retarial experience, type 60
wpm, light short hand. At-
torney Roland S. Barewne.
64<-0023
School~lnstructlon 7600
Be Prosperous!
GOOd t,ypinc aldlls. can open "i=s::=::=::=!i:===n many doors. Inquire about • our "Door Optoners". See Betty BNC9 at
m66Gxec
"""""'for C...... Glrb ilO W. Cbut Hwy .. N. B.
By appoint 646-3939
.NONA HOFFMAN,
Newport
School of Business
833 Dowt Drive
Newport Beach 642-3870
DRIVING LESSONS
Aa low aa $5.'15 ,per week w/
• SECl'YIRECPI'. Xh1t ad-pay later plan. Free home
vcmt oppty! Heavy typing, plci.:up. Security Orivi.nf
lite bkkpg. To $500. cau Mr. School, 1-526-223.l.
Richards, 540-6005. COASTAL AGENCY e DRIVJNG I.Es.SONS
A member of Fi.rat leaaon tree!
SMiiing & Snelling, Jnc. Women &: teenagcra wr
2790 Harbor BJ., Cost& Mesa • P e c I a l I y ! a • ASTRO 836-5131
""""" ANOTHER LANDMARK GOING
NEVER BEFORE
SEEN!!!
Tearing Down
Building
ON HAND ONLY
TO MAKE ROOM FOR NEW BLDG. SALE • STOCK
*SPANISH and MEDITERRANEAN*
!
PENNEY'S
FASHION ISLAND
1 So. Coast Plaza, Costa ?rfesa APPLY
s. PERSONNEL DEPT.
DENTAL ass~tant/tet'!rl!-;;-.-.,.-,-,-_,.,--..,,-,--,,,,I nuy Laguna Hills • Lei!urt! Educational Vacation Stb
World area. AU phues ma• graders • • • Sr Cittttna
tered, $4'J5..S500 start. Re-ChilODat 10 k1SOn typing
swne, P.O. Box 10915, Santa Sehl. Trial Le&SOn. 173 Del
Ana 92ru. Replies atrlctly ~M=u~C~.M=.~548-~28>9-~~-·•
contidentia.I. MONTESSORI &-Pre-Scbool
roo"'""v"'1".E"E;'-;J;:,.,.=1'"•.-SJOO='"""m' I children aceepted ye a r
f&ahk>n jewelry loaned to round. Agea 21,2 to 10. Call:
10 AM 'to S PM
Z..1onda.y thru Friday
cretari•• $500 to $550 F h" liland
Several secreta.riaJ positions 11 1°" I B · Newport Buch n each area with top Eq al Opport .• ., E 1_ ... companies, good ski1h re-u um.., mp ... J"''r
,• quired, call Lontine, Mer-
chants Pef"90nnel Agency,
All 1tudent positions filled. 2043 Westclilf Drive, N.B.
Equal opportunity employer 645-2770
EXPERIENCED " " •
* *
Temporary Employment
-o~'-~~~=-1 e ESCROW e
SECRETARY General Office $450
Good typist, know calculator.
General ol.l.ice duties. Com· UNITED CALIFORNIA
pany will reimburse the BANK
fee. Call Loraine, Merchants
o u r s t y J I s ts. 3 5 % =~==-'=541_-5'S~~' ~-~• • commission-we train! Part SOUTH Coast Salling &ehl.
or full time. Call 833--0560 or Learn to sail on 26' Race
646--0493 81oop. 645-1133
AT UNBELIEVABLE PRICES!!
No Down, Terms Ta Mfft Yaur Budget.
" " URGENTl Y NEEDED.
e Typists
1 Personnel Agency, 2043 3141 E. Coast Hwy
Coron• del Mar
673-9240
BABYSJTI'ER wanted, your PRV swtm Jeuon.,., also
home, 5 days week, 8 am· water ballet instr. by cert.
5:30, Balboa Pen. or CM W.S.I. in my pool. 646-406?
area. Nr. 0 .C. airport pref. PfANO LESSONS Beginning
675-1511 aft 6 pm. ft.els. re-students pref. u.c.r. Music
quired. ?\fa.jor. Call Bruce, 546-4478.
DINING ROOM WAITRESS-
Bank Financln9, Master Char9e,
Bank of America or Store Cha1'9e.
•. Secretaries
Work when and
where you want I
INTERIM
PERSONNEL SERVICE
445 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa, Calif.
642-7523
Interviewing
Mon. thru Fri.
8 a.m. to S p.m.
Equal opportunity employer
J. W. Robinson
Has opening for: * COSMETIC *
SAlfSWOMEN
(Experie nee preferrtd
Full time position. Ex-
cr.llcnt company bene-
fits.
, APPLY
PERSONNEL DEP'l'.
f ashion Island
Newport Beach
Equal opportunity employcr
BANK ING
Po sit ion immediately
av aila ble for an NCR
450 proof operator, e t
our Newport Center
Branch. Experienced
preferred.
PLEASE APPLY
550 Newport Center Dr.
Ne\vport Beach
SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL BANK
Westct!U Drive, NB. 645-Z'nO
(Also f~ jobs)
SECRETARY, some book-
keeping background. Good v-.a1 ........ -1q ....... ,_ typist, some medica l ~ ....... op_, ..... ......_,,_
kno\vledge preferred. Apply ---------1 in person
Laguna Beach Nursing Home . .....,, ACCOUNTING
CLERK WANTED, clerk for ac-
counting office: operate ac· counting machine, 11 g ht Two rears experience ln pro-
bookkeeping, figure typing. ceMmg accou_nts payable to
Hours 9 to s. S days. d&:ta processing. Ex~llent
548-7040 tringe benefits.
Bookkeeper F /C $500 Cadillac Controls
To trial balance, top com-Division ol Ex~o Corp.
pany, good advancement 186 Wh ittler Ave.
~: Day&: eve. ahifta avail. MERCHANDISE FOR
App m penoon, 15070 Ed· SALE AND TRADE
wards, Hu.nt. Bch. Ask tor Furnltur• 8000 Ralph or Gary .
GIRL Wanlod, Sea<tarta! OVER-STOCKED
RteeptionisL Pref. reeenl
ONE OF MANY
SPECIALS
also matchin9 coffff table
and commade -same price
• • • • • • • • • •
HS grad. Interv1eW11 8 am to MUST SELLI
10 am, CRITI'ERS INC, New 9 pc. come< &tTanS· TOO MANY ITEMS TO LIST ALL
959A W. 11th St., 0.1 choice of cln. reg, $230, now
HOUSEKEEPER. 7:3G-4, no St49.50. Headboards: Kings • Game Sets
exper. ness.. call 9-5 $15, Queens $12.50, Full
Part • Lido Convalescent no.so, Twins $3.95, New , .• Dining Room Sets
H"plta.l 1445 su-rior, NB. round bed wllegs. velvet e B d S I ..... headboard a: spread w/ re-e room e s 642-2410
• Lamps
• Recliners
• Pictures
• Wrought Iron
• Coffee Tables
•'
-' I verse ah.am, custom quilted. • Living Room Sets HOUSEKEEPER &: child $650 $399 I t reg, , now comp e e. e Co U care, live-in, 5% days, priv New beds: King $99.50. rn er nits
call Loraine, Merchants Costa Mase
Personnel Agency 2043 \'r'est-646-2491
clitt Drive, N.B. M>zno An equal opportunity
• Decorative
Spanish Chairs
• Buffet w /ch ina • Commodes ,._,,
EXPERIENCED help i n employer
overlock, blind stitch, &d --==~===:---
'""''' """1e. 5 doy•/Wk. .•• NEEDED
room &: bath. $50. week with Queens $89.50, Full $49.50, • Tables
periodic raJM!S. 540-9212 Twlng $39.50, fully ruaran. tops, MediteM'anean
111) I
• EVEN THE BUILDING!;:, ' . I
day sh ift. hrl)', pay. 1621
Alabama, Huntington Beach.
DREAM Job • Keep YoUl' im-Spanish lo.n& • boy aleeper.
portant job as wile & sofa. hand carved wood, * Groups at T errlflc Savl1191! * < . ... Room
T Offi Girl mo-& ..,.,, a wkly b<aul. uphol. rer. "'9.50,
WO Ce S paycheck. 544-3854, 636-3497 now $329. King-size spreada,
SE W I N G 1'1. AC H I N E Mwt be 25 and able to drive Fishing Rod Wrappers choice of colors, reg. $.."O.~. Ope1·ators, exp'd on power no1v $12.99. SIESTA SLEEP h' • Experienced. Top pay. mac s , womens APPLY BrowningMfg.Co. SHOP, 1927 Harbor Blvd., APPROVED FURNITURE ;•
' " ·".· '
sportswear. Top pay for 186 East 16th St. 1919 Placentia, C.M. 548-1171 Costa Mesa. 645-2760 daily
qualified sewers. 675-2530 Costa Meaa 10-9 Sat 11'.>-6. RR<'E<AL"E'-s;;;1,:i1,;oSa~t;;;.,;;m;;;,;;;,:Cw;;h;;;y;l----sH.,;;ARP;:;;:,,::;G;:AL-;..--LITE Cleaning Bay fr o nt ~10VING -Houseful of 2159 HARBOR, COSTA MESA, PHONE 548-9660'
not sell & be trained In the Looking for a permanent b~~~n!~-~~1 hrs wk. g 0 0 d-quality fumlshlnp. DAIL y 9.9, SUND A y 10-5 -12 years same location
hottest area • Huntington position with the grooviest Must be gold by July 1. •
Beach. Call Phil McNamee boutiqUe in Orange County. PBX answ'g aer., exp'd pref. Piano, new-washer dryer.
962-4471 Village Real Estate Must bf' experienced In hi-Varied shlfu:, steady work. Refrig, stove. Dix liv nn Fumlture 8000 Furnltur• 8000 Gar•p Sale 8022
Sp EC I AL MACH l NE fas h Ion dress e Ii &: HB area. 536-8881 ""~t,~B~R~"~'~· m~isc~·c_!6~l"""°"'~~;lliiiiii~~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!!iiiiiiii!!!!;;;.ii operator sportswear. If you qualify, WAITRESS wanted over 21 DANISH modern turn, in Patio & Garage Sa.le
Sportswear. Top pay. call for appt: THE LOOK, Stttr 'n Stein, ~4 Edinger, xlnt. cond. Walnut hu tch SS" Sat. & SI.in. June 28, 29
642·2666 644-2400 H.B. Apply in penon. I b GI I so 9:D0-4:00 ~=~~C:C.:C,.===I ong y en 1 . Buffet, 309 Poppy Ave., CdM ASSISTANT BOOKh'EEPER GIRL-Friday type, in· EXPERIENCED Single Nee· 45" long $65. Studio couch, COME EARLY!
AIR, AIP, Salary Com· teresting It varied work. die Operators. Apply: 825 brown woven 1itrlp,e w/two Ju!! moved to smaller house
mensurate w/ ability. AP-Requires knowled~ of \V. 18th St., Costa Meaa. bolsters $95. 646-ll24. DECORATOR GETS CANQLLATION & have lot11 lef: over! Lge
-same~q;J !
Furniture Auction d '.
* ZENmJ Color TV, wDJir ; size aereen, remote contrt. ~
Walnut grain. Pay caab $at9 ;
or takt'ovtt payments . :
UO/ mo. See at ~ · ~~~l:r Harbor Bl~ I
ply at 200 Briggs C.M. shthnd. good t Y PI n g , WAl'l'R.ES.S, exp. Apply in Quality king bed, quilted, PARTMENTS custom glaaa top coffee
BEAUTICIAN, full time; no purchas.lng exper. desirable. pel'llOn. Swin Chalet. 41-4. N. Complete, unused $98; \VOrth OF 18 LUXURY A table, round dining table AE'pl1anct1
clientele required; new Willing to learn & grow w/ Newport Blvd .• N.B. $250. After s or wkndl Spinish & Mediterranein Fumiturl w/4 chain, bdr. chaise A ::Z_!:.:!~:=:._ __ _=.:.::;:•1
graduates welcome. Call company. p 1 ea s ant aur--Dental RecepL &: Bkkpr. 847-0406 chair, round pool table, plus * SAL E * l: •
Manager: 548-9919 ~'!':~':::·Ave~ ~J 1 Y 215 Exp. or college, zs..ts. DOUBLE bed, ma p t e All B,RA, N.D .. ~EW many other tlems~ DON'T New Wasbera . [)ryel'9. Dii1fii ,
SEC/Rccpt. AtlTactive girl ~!146-J(XX) bookcase heaclboard $35; ~f.:"~'lH" '"*-ll M ~~ MOW .,.... MlSS IT! ALL BARGAINS-waahera ·Refrigerators. •
· · 1 e FRY COOK e · & tt d bl ... .:is •'sp·;:r~:c,,.,tm a.iltt Sofii ·..-itti ,,,Mi:iililii.L'R'Mr~ • NO JUNK! CERTIFIED ,: : ~~~.co~~~ti~;~~~ne;;.~;c: Graveyard shift. 2 yr5 exp. ~s.y~:X~~~s~i ~&~"!5wS4~~7~~99 ou e, ~Fi~o1r:::r°'~~:·~~or!.:";.::·~~!::':':':':':':':';·:·:~.: Hi'.! 613-7573 APPLIANCE
near airport. 540-3750 Heavy breakfast. Good sal· private school Call 673-8610 TWIN beds wood 1 DlfCOf1tor T.i.i. L•~ (R". ""·951 .............. Ng: M•'.• • TO SETTLE AN 333 Eut 17th St., ~-' --~--.---~• _.....,, for good emplyees. 18 , red , sturdy, .. 1.,, H-1.-$•" LlmN !R•-Mt.tn............ Co
GENERAL OU1ce, type 45 ;;;:• over, Ple"•-app,., in MUSIC • lST GRADE & S35 pglr; chest of drawel'll A decorator dream house on display -3 ESTATE! Giant garage sta Mesa. M2-tl'UO
Ncat & Personable, Pl~h person. _,,, .., DANCrNG teacher needed. $10; mirror, maple frame S 'sh f . ( 5ale. 8' divllll, tbles, 11001111. * ELECTRIC range, Com;;
Olfice, excellent benefill COTI'AGE COFFEE SHOP Call ~1444 SIO. 67:>-2199 roo ms of gorgeous pant urn 1ture was crystal. lamps, wuher, lug-noi.sseur eye-level • t y 19,, I
CaJI Miss Barnard 833-2750 562 W. 19th St., CM MATCHING love s e a t s , reg $1 '195 ()() gage, books, bar ds'~~s, beautiful deluxe mo d e~,, BAR WAITRESS • · crptg, paUo chatra, =ir:S. New. cost $490 ,..., cab
TACO Tio, nio-hts, ov. 21. • HO~SS/CASHIER • •~1ES 436 E Jllh St never u~. quilted DoraJ, SACRIFICE $398 '·· ., V ""'""1 ....., ' ' Some exp prefd. Apply AM, ~·"' "'"'"' 1
' • • Scotchguarded. $75; O i I m""' 1 ems. ery ·~· $200, or take over~ PosiUon open to Coffee Shop. Large deluxe Costa Mesa paintings, 537-8032 • • • • • • Thurs alter 6 p.m. °'"! ~ of $1D/mo. Oiteck Ht1f.
men and women 597 w. l9tb St. C.M. ho~I. Experience required. NO MC*IY OM. REQUl!teD -we CAllRY OUR OW?( ACCT$ 6 p.m., 1227 Marian ._..., deJ"M>n'• first 548-0155 ~~
Equal opportunity employer EXPER. Part time waitreS&, Coritact Jim Demato in Jon-Men, Wom. 7500 MARBLED Formica drop mm N.B. 548-5976 REFRIG Htil P!~: f:r:~~ ~~rW:~~ ~·4~~rll ~':.t~o 5Hp~ pe~~WPORTER INN ~=n:r~i~;R ~~:!8'166bl~. 22 ~x ~nd~~ . FURNITURE *~~~y'~EA~~~~Ep;(r ~ =.~!. ~~'
care, aides or com panions. HAIRDRESSER Needed llO? Jamboree Rd., N.B. LAGUNA BEACH ~ Wing chair, end tables, l&Jnp take over payments 4
Age n.{;S Balboa Island salon. e WOMEN & GIRLS Permanent and immediate CHESt 01 drawers , 1844 •ewport Blvd.Ha~·-llvd.J tables, bar stooh1, atudlo ss.111mo. Stt at ~ Sitting Pretty Agency GT:>-4232 or 675-3701 Pleasant telephone work employment: Hou&ekeepe:n. Designer ntw teak furn: ft ruvr couch, double cover. pull denoifa, 18'17 Harbor, CM:
Member of We Sit Better, LICENSED Shampoo Xirl, from our ottice, no exp. kitchen helpers, relief oook, desk, chairs, 2 drelslne down lamp, bedding, pie-548--01$ ,r;
Inc. Subsidiary o; Gerber asst. needed for busy salon, nee, Full or part time. S2 to janitor (maint), social and tbles & misc. 673-8215 Costa Mesa only lures, lamps, mlscl. 43 Ketch LADY Ken m 0 re auto
Prod. Co. 642-3274 Wed. thru Sat. 673-3820 S5 per hr. Appl)' 6-12 or 21 recreation dlrectot, PBX ANTIQUE while dinette 14!!t. Rd ., Bes.con Bay wuher, turquoise, I a t f young~!,!'~~':1~at ·~ 8:'!t~tiA~~: W~=t to D=: ~~·s2:. w, warner, Suite C:::n~ c~rt:I~~~~;~ f:~leena~:,1e,1:r ~~'. E"'YNlfht1119-Wtd.,S.t.&Svn.'Tlt 6 ~f~~=eii::: ~~i.tsxlnt cond. $3~?·
pearancc. Mutt be able to 54g..1552 & 549--2769 SHOE SALES manager 77~. '94-9458 MZ..1085 box springs, I a mps , 1 -1 a•d d•··' ,,.,.th -pt· -· A · • 1a-1 • ., ~• "-DINING bl 62 , '", + F vacu"m, 8 1,,. -·ck w"-, PIONEER fully auto. Wate m .. ., " ~ .-~v '" _,. WAITRESS •xp'd. ov. 21 ..... 1nee. mer1ca s. ..~.. ~ Llihting UAture nn ta e 'X't\I' urnltur• 8011 " .... uw lllli _ .. I" u-~ I .SOJO
(pert time available) apply fl.YING BUTLER. 6n-09T1. retallen of womens shoes. ahowroom • e11pericnet"d • ~ leaves & fl green upbolst. bicycle, pictures, frames. :"-' u::r,net'· 1 i.;;d c1:~'$6a.
in person: 18~,R:J Main St. (5 Co M z· LEEDS Shoe Store, So. al!JO ....... ru,. for 8. trainee chairs in pr 0 v Inc I a I r ICTAPHONE -.. :" ....... , p 1 a q u (! s. ant l q u e II , .. , :_ ~~ ..,.,,,,; $ " · c 1 J ntact r. 1mmer ,.. ___ 1 p•·-. eon•·ct Mr. v .... • • • SPANISH Retllnled fro1n """""'' se ...,.,., v•.r""""' Points Shoppuig en er • .......... ._.. .. Salary plus commlllslon. FrultwOod $100 548-1256 used one mo. New 9'A1:1: sact. 11urfboard, etc. 280 Cabrillo, · Pril1ii' '
H B GENERAL Howiekee_-" Phelps S4T ""l " . Model Homes OD lale at '""" CM &4 !&TI Fri •· 1' CU Fl Wl rd U ' · · .,.. ~ 2 PC lJl'\'ed ti naJ for $200. Elect. addlng · &-.,....1, • za
J\lARRIEO? TOO ?.1ANY S daya. Swedish. English or WOMAN Wanted fot rectp-BEAUTY' Opera\or Jlffde<I, $SB. s'::~~ roudJ '7z~ aft == ~m:=I ~~~ mach. S2S eves: 646-9516 H 0 USE Sold~verythitlg ~;rer, works perlect, "'
BILLS? Ptrmanent-put Oennan. 494-6170 tion~l A: switchboard, Ute deluxe beauty Salon. No. 19 6:30. 60-0449 quilted IOf.a &: love aeat. days: 642-3l9S muat 11'· Fumitutt, oriental ---_,,-,.,.-,-:,,.,.,--
time help wanted in mack PIT steno to ntn private of-typi?w. Some aalea, pleasant Monatth Bay Plua, So. DOUBLE canopy bed, white, 1 Spall1g.b oak deoorator rugs, klk:hen u ten 1 l l 1 , Coldapot Refrir,
bar. See mana&er alter ?:ll flee as Gal Friday for Stock with public. Pernwwnt. Ap. IA.&. Nlruel Hl\lr Fuhlon .. 1 .... $90 tt.IMJI, cw .. or table lamrw Store Equipment 8012 linens, dresaes 1-4 -16. good cond. rm.
pm. Paulo DtlW: 1 n Invea:tor. 54&-7331 ply 215 Riwralde Ave . NB. 4•222'1 ann_,oc,' · H-n I 1.1..... ...., Fri.-5un. UC A p O I e l'I a, •962-6538*
Theater, 3051 Newport Blvd, * 545-5292 * ........ P acque, .... ~. queen, MARKET equip: dell cue, Ba.lboa Al WANTED babysitter for 1D PENSION!R to live ln to SLEEP tor cuh. Subjtclt BEDROOM _Set complete, or fUl1 atie ~m suite I and. NORGE Gu Dryer. 15 J}'l
CM. yr old boy. Del Cerro CM take care of item\ tnvalld It nffd_cd for u~ aletp Jab. aolld maple, 6 mo. old, call complete incl tm springs, =~~!':S·~i: ~ li-UNING tools. plum.bin&:. cap. 21A yrs, i'JOd ~
Dishwasher, part time. area· )'OUr home. !)46..3835 Ute housework.. Call &flu S studtea IOr thit: summu. all 6 pm 64: _.._.. mattre11, linen& &! boudoir palnt11, barrel, s to v e a , cond. 540--2732. Make offet Call ft J PM tht -.,., .,..,.,.,, price. Call 494-1036 I a er • JIOUSEKEEPER for two pm, 61.-71 Call 63.\-8.193 ext 188. u.t.D 2 ,,_,_ -. Anii-... lamps. Spanl11h oak 6 pc dishes, clothing, m s c. G.E. Auto wubc:r, late
Villa Roma Res~urant, elderly ladies. Live in. lite EXPERIENCED Med I cal THE DOR..,..••t.• ~-.._Ip, ~dl·'•·g ...:::::-,.•,~ •K. H:::::_ dining set pricedn1'0f'lli6w~~ Items. m Costa Meaa St., modcl, xint<.'Ond. $75. ot"5N.NewportBlvd.N.B. _..oR~""°" ~l:JUU'll~ll•: ""' .......... _.. ........... ·--00 ~ HouMholdo.ods 8020 CM ~&11•us * w..,.,... __,.. Trenscriptionlst & fnint of· n ,\ over, mukt. be 1mart s.tC..1909 Federal. CM _ ... ,,.... ' ,;;·;,:;·=:-;;--:--c=-;;;-.; • ~ * Ml 6-4929 * PART Time ~Uonbt, flee girl; Radioloey ofDcc, and cltan. Apply In ptl'IOn FOR ONLY $399. $20 down. A!ttPEX 1rxK) r.tties recorder, GARAGE Sale: June 27, 28, A
••• PBX ••• drapery shop, Sat's. Appb' Newport Buch. &CU4&f 2100 w. Oceanftont, N.B. DANISH teak buffet, new, 54.119 per .. H.k ' out of mac. tapes included. $90, 29. Oinln& room se t, Anti!"'" 111y
Ann.rering Service, hU ~ l.907 Harbor Blvd. CM WOMAN With ttneral fac> F/C &oil.keeper, pt. t m • ISrlO. Too long for room. ltate credit OK. W 111 642-0089 portable. PA ti)lllh!:m, 11tereo THOMAS Ed l ~
lngs on 8-lPM I 1-6PM sr.cREJ'ARY IN LEGAL tary '-autmbl.Y. SPtdalb' Perm. 'Cxper PulR. Ta• s.Ml34 ~~ck aal•g ~ . spe~rs. antlquet, &: much phone 3rd P t'aoyne ~
ahtrta, ~-~ Beach oFTICE. Wtil•: 80JI: 328 Molden TU YorktOwn. HB. R, PAL. Sw. • etr. DREXEL Profile round din. ~en Crow hnB I• d Garage Sal• 8022 more. 2115 ~artOMS. CM. duoed. pat. late 1'Xl'L Pwt
area. . Balbol bl., Calif. e MAIDS • ffobll/MO!ll 60490 NB rm lable, 4 chn. & bullet:' Ca.rden Grow O&Uy 10.9' GARAGE Sale, Sat.23th 10 GARAGE Salt -JUM 2?·28-oond-. wlth horn. PlQt W.1
•RN ~Mane MAlD: Pa.rt Ume. Call tn EXptrience. $1.ts hour. &roP£ES Work ~tbet alao Mile. items: 644-245! S&t 1().8, Sun 12-5 Com; am • 4 p.m. Clothing, toY•. 29 1tldia~ti:1ta, ';11"1~ w/ 5 plt.yirra ~ :;:,ou~n pcnronF.ft; ~ pcnon. Huntlnifon Shmtt . Call &7l-9410 buildlnc 'a butlneu. start MAH 0 d A NY ~a~ tn w ct11 cn4> ~ bookl, jewtlr)', m~. 60f lain.pt. •· too '·c ~ Make otftr, CaU Be~b Nursing 11ome-. Mott:! 2100% C>Cean, H.B. NITE Barmaid, appl~ In part time 4 CJ'OW. We train. :ro.~ate::r c~~~ s:&-9234 ANTIQUf 4 dr chctt, Anti-Marigold Ave.. Cd M . more. ~Cortez St., · ' 645-2069 alt 5. •
494-3075 MOTEL MAID-Part time. ptt50n co The Th. Liule, F'or tnteMtw. f182..4..176 . que eewtnc mach. Naug. ehr 67MM6 GARAGE aale lJ8o Ulllnd KING LOW1 XJV, t pc diA
EXP'D WAITRESS N~ Buth ~St. Oatre ~t. 0.1 APT. Mar. Sflml-ttitittd OOU· LARCE all m~I., ~tail newly upbolat. 9x12 hOoktd NO matte.r what It ls, JCIU Sat I 5'm. June 28th I 29th. rbom Mt. Xlnt COlld. !ID
SURF .-smLOJN f?S..lMl WbtS. ~bantaJ pte pnilttred. P.O. Sox_», table 3S lnehcl . .....,...,_ l'UI· Fotmic& lbl ate, can lelJ tt with a DA!LY 344 Vie. Udo Sood. Ye an. old. Prv p r t t,
50.30 Pac. Cit. ITwy., N.S. Wblle ElepbantaT D~Y Pll.OT WANT ADS? ea.ta Mesa. Cal. 9auT OW\QE m 540-0088 Pll.O'!' Cll\lllflecf ad. 0181 6U-6678 for RESULTS 'fl-4 832-0361 ..
I
• ., .DAJLY.l'ILPJ Thu~, .hl"' 26, 1969
ac;HANDt~ """· .,.,. ""u TA.Au• MERCHAND ISI FOii FREE TO YOU ' TllANSf'ORTi'T~ON 'f11AN~!'()llTAflON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
"
AND TRAD! MlltCHANDISE FOi SALE AND TRA DE Mablle H-.,..._.., '
lotla & Y....,. 9000 S.llboola 9010 -·-u w Mablle H-9200 Trvdct 9500
........ M-1120 Mlscell•-l600 Mlle. Wenled 1610 ~FREEm::A;;doo;;; ... ;blt;;;;•;j1:l17:1.;;.;;.~.1=:::_::::::_.:.:: -BAYHARBOlt --... _
T · blod< A blod< A while. 6 BOAT Mablle Home S.les •l!lllG!:Rwtlh.~a1-------wkl .old. M"" w -*MAST ALIERG 35 ~ Lom&. Roll.A ... ,. E~,~~. ~ * AUCTION * WE PAY MORI! llomet. 1909 Anlholm St, • 5 Witt. .aoJ!o S\i<rotopn "!!""-Homoti. -~ ":"'.~'" CASH Apt B. Of. Hot It O>Jd ahowtr t -tttl-ae -Sal\ara <r$36.lll """" ~ FR IDAY -7:30 P.M. ' FREE Kl ··-lrtl:MDlmr nd·--u..u .. ic. ALL SIZES
---•• U.na, ---~ AMU'lllU;IU -• Ncrw ON DlsPl •y ER -~00 JUNE 27th •-• 2 <u .• ~ • n!888 ~
tall. $5 mo. 1'ree p\clnu> Repopeu'°'1& & Unclalm~ i'b!k'w~~ We.;;, * Finish C1rpent1r1 ePACinc YACHT SAL!!S• 142 Baker St.
dellwry. Ctll 526--Wl6 ~ from Eastern Van Mlrkn, Pll can 6'"..o688 * Bench Cirpentert 3446 Via Oporto Newport ~block East of Harbor ffivd.
Mutical IMt. 1125 ~~h--•-u. """"w ..... ~ ...... ~~·. For furniture, appllancu. CF.uUMuUl NB 6/28 * Bonder 213: 597-6568 n4: 613-1570 Costa Me: ~~fl 510-9470 ....... ,_,.,, JU.I.,.....,. VC"•IU coklred TV, •ttreo. and ~ MINIATURE Doberman f * &o.t A111mbly Men
LIDO Park. L<M:ly trailer l
cab&na 2 bdr, Bay view,
ADULTS, patio S 8, 9 S 0 .
673-3429 " m.M24
l0x55' PARAMOUNT plus 2
rm cabana, carport, corner
IOt"alion, S atar adult S*rk.
$6395. Call 646-1081.
G\altan e Amp& e cruna studio sets, Dinettes, Bed· Uques. xJnt w1th ehlldrtn, Hsbrim, -I COMPANY BENEms (l\MlllDO 23 GREENLEAF PARK
NEW AND USED room sel!!, Divans &: Love Da~ or nl~ht 4 mo1. old. CaJ1 after G PM ./ PROFIT SllARING VKVftA In clear, clean, coot Costa
l t MAJOR BRANDS seats, Dining set.a, Oiina 6J6.l62D 645--0757 &/Z7 ./ FREE INSURANCE J\.fesa. New 92 11pa.ce adult 1648, 2 BDR lurn, awning,
• Also Man.y lmportll At cablnelti, Olests, CoUee & I STOCK OPI'JON f'ree aalling lessons park. Models 6: Sales olli~ 11hed, adlt pk. No pets, 2060
ffJGH QUALITY XLNT
mnd. 6 clBta Cooler Sp rent
S35 lmmed poss. 642-4664
Truck Specials
'61 Ranch ero
Lie. No. ECZ270
$595
'65 Detsun Pickup
Llc. No. NMWW
$1097
'61, 01t1un P ickup,
Lie. No. V\VV $1
$1527 . BIG DISCOUNTS ~mp Tables, 2 ~EW Bald-·w~"ANTED==-, °'Twln=:-:,:::tro"U"e"'r~in l KlTJ'ENS, With tree food. jCllfl::U lhla 'ftt'~nd!t located at Parle. Open 9 AM ,N=•=wport=~";l_:CM~===o. ~D~G 11\ MUSIC win Organs, Upnght Plano. i;ood toodition. Call 837~9682 Pleut p\ck one of OUl"ll, UUln * :! lo choose lmtl * to 6 PM. --fl l.tmi6
f'•""'" • Bunk Beds, Lamps, Pictures, nytime dozens to clloole trom. 645-0810 ACCENT MOBILE Mini I lk• 9275 lllllt • llNcll Music Center Pop Corn madtine, Refri. .;'======= 54~133 6/27 MARINf HOME SALES -
• gerators, \Va.shers, I>rytira, Michin1ry. e tc. ___ 1:;7U;.;OO:.: TIME To lnve mother 5 SUPER deal~ '67 Cal Cat lr:>O Whittier Aw. 3 lf.P Mickey-bike. 1 yr old. J""""'TS Dt"" 12 noon till 9, Sat. 9-5 Stoves & 1'.IUCH MORE!! -~ trained kittet11. take us W/trlr fi-;.. • Co6ta Mesa n4: 64).1350 Chrome fe~. lites, & nn.n.
11,;{ Beach Blvd. (HW)'. 39) COME BROWSE AROUND STEAM BOILER home. T182 Newman St., HB CORP, '69 tais~. h . ~~ NEW 24-wide 2 bdr & den 2 j °""',o•,=:cl;"~'~;·:54H21:=:='== TOYcfrA-toLYO
Ill mi '°· San Die&<> Fwy, WINDY'S AUCTION lnd.,.lrill) Sieatn Boller, ,,.,.. Bl<.lwhlle, and .,.., 6127 .:•':,';":' ,;434->tl63;;::~=== balh <rpld. draped. Make M t I 9~00 11166 Harbor, C.M. .....,, Hiln.tington Beat'h 847-8536 ker 10 b.p. Good worldng: AFFECTIONATE Calleo kit· 235 Fi&cher, Costa Mesa -offer. Terms. Hunt. by tbe 0 o r.eye•• '66 DATSUN 1h TON
ORIGINAL Prototyp 2075•11 Newport Blvd. condition. Woririnc pressure ten, female. 6 wks. box-(neftl' •hi>ortJ Power CruiHrt 9020 Sea No.1Z1536-7686 '68 TRIUMPH Bonneville, Just reworked eng.lne. Xlnt
Fender Jaguar GU it a r Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'ls of JOO pounds, $850 548-5623 tralned, good w I k 1 dB· 5-10.3440 6 ~SLEEP um; FOR OUR NE"'" low mileage, palnt & condition, LocaJ car, 4 spd, =1,.0 61""' ER, 26' Trojan Sed-~..-w/amp $95. Will lake trans Costa t.!esa * 64&8686 afler 6 pm. .--.. _, -ENG. Couple seek worl< ,.._ fo.10Bil.E HOMES. OCEAN-chrome. Private Part Y. dlr. S75 CMh dels. Take 1ow Hamil,.... an, ... .-.:am Puff. 150 W, RT. o,,., . .,...,., Cllf' in trade. 51.5 .... ., OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 If AMMER M I LL 6 x 8 SILVER Persian mother &hare exp, on priv. salJ. Swim step, davits $8750. FRONT ADULT PARK. .,..,.,...,,,..,. pymnt&. $38.86 mo. SIF669 ·
CM. WHAT KNOT SHOPPE gr u end I e r , $250. 3x4 wishes homea fDr her train-Haw!J.il July-Aug 536-6930 21~ 536-8500 ·~ YAMAHA 250 Call Ken 494-9773 or 545-0034
VOX &Uilar with ca s" • NOW OPEN DAILY 1()..4 jawcrusher, $250. Can be ed & weaned k itte n 5 FAIRLINER 25' sleeps 4 BERTRAM Bahai Mar 20, 30 F'T. Trail<.'r & space at $l7S.
SUvtrtone amp. Like new · IIANDCRAF"TED GIFTS se<.'n at She.Iron PIPe &. Steel, 646--5133 . 6/'ll Perl: cond. S/S
1
radkl, gre; $.5600. Includes many ac-trailer park in Newport ----":.::.'"=25::.16::_ __ _
$100,each or 1175 hnth. Wil~ e ARTS & CRAFTS e I ='~"~"'~·=1~7,;lh;cS~l;··:::C;.MO;.'==:.l 2 HALF Poodle puppies, 1 manne eog. 64Z-1883 cessorles. 644-2S57 Beach. Fu.I.I bath. $2,500. ~O~~~! ,58 Jeep, miltry, Chevy pow.
consider o!fer. Call Ro Jtenu; Laken on consignment. femalr. l male. 6 wits., old. Owner <2Ul 790-2705 ("r ,_,_ oall 962-54""' . er, loaded. Show & IO· Must
S42-0910 Br"" In your h•ndiwrk. FR EE TO YOU Free lo -1 h ome. S1ilboets 9010 Speed-Ski Bo~ts 9030 TRAJLER SPACE !or "'35. " •= · " sz195 673-34QJ
JeeP15 9510
3 2622 Newport Blvd., Nev.·· --··-IW7-4261 61'rl Tradwind Trailer Villa~e '67 TRIUP..lPH, brand new see. · ·
Pi1nos & Orgens 11 0 port Beach, near Woody's KirrENS, F1ufly long halted DARLING il bi-· RAWSON l'.I, like new. Ring. TAKE OVER BALANCE: 22' engine. lotll o1 chrome. 150 R••reot'n V•hi'cles 9515 \Vharf ' ver ta .,,. kit· ed mast, custom galley & 2191 Harbor BJvd. CM. _ GULBRANSEN . ones, ready to go home with tens to good homes. 3 Inter, electronics + Xtras Century ,LaPatrake inbr'CI. Adult park-m pets. cc. 646-t.203
ORGANS CH.EVIi RON \Viki \VI k I you 1oday. 4~ 6/26 ma I es , 3 t em a I es 673--669S • • day cruiser. HauJ ed in '68. 27, LAKEWOOD. Frig. oven-'68 BSA 441
WURLITZER Do ars Contest· need parts CUTE Puppies, part poodle 6 839-2406 6/'ll'J;;m,..'-;:--;:::;;-;;--~-Xlnt cone!. SIS rad .. bait stove, w/heater &. moler. $545. 549-1746 3 & 4 on S2.500 ticket & part wks. old. After 5 PM call LEARN to sail. If you buy lank. sirlk, compass. Sleeps
PIANOS & ORGANS 7 on $1.000 ticket. Will split 847-4452 6111 BEAtrr. all black mother my deluxe 12' liber&las:s 2 aboard. 188 hp Fireball slttps 4. Like new Sl.275 1965 YAJ.WlA YRDS 3, 250
Pianos & Organs Rented · W .1 p 0 cat, both long & .short sailboat, y will teach ..,0,, grey ena. Bank will handlo. takes 642-2098 cc, runs good, less than
EVERYTHING IN MUSIC :: ;;rreSY~:; e ,.._;,; 3 KIITENS, 7 wks. old, male haired k It I ens also. how! $398. 642-M97 J " 546-9872... 14,500 ml. 548-5761
• • ~. loog '"""'· whit• & gray. 642-0196 6126'<'·-;;;i;,=,;:;;;;i'-'-.,..,-,.-MOTOR HOMES 9215 ~==~.::;;,:::;;;.-.,...,,...,,
90743 642-l322 6177 126 ENDEAVOR lblgs. 20' CHRIS Craft mabog. ~~~~~~~~~ 1968 BSA 650 Thunderbolt Beadl Music Center l2x28 dark green indoor OU!· FRISKY, Fluffy, f ree . sloop, gd rond. Shock bllilL planked, 431 cu in., 10 hrs ... Brand new J illl '69. 2700 ml
door Ozll~ carpet • cost Sl.54 KITTENS: 6 wk!. Hsbrlm. 2 female grey kitten. 10 wks. Mooring avall $3275 since $2500 rebuild b Y I j I Best oiler 67$-$i94
Factory Sales A Service will sell for ;75. Type~Tiler black, 1 calico, 1 tiger. & trained. Likes dogs. OR 3.5791 authorized CC deal<.'r. Best 11 650cc Triumph Bonneville
Daily 12 noon 'til 9. Sat 9-5 & stand SH>. Oak cha.Ir $5. 897-5944 6126 N545-E 'llD6 6177 CAL 28 M ly eqpd, Spin-otter over Sl500. 642-M68 ' 1960 re-built eng, & new
174CM Beach BJvd. {Hwy 39) C.OUee table $2. 143 Bhlad· 2 FREE kittens to loving ED food, .she.lter for naker, SIS rad .. RDF. must HYDROPLANE 9 ft. long, 7 1111 clutch. Nice. 4gg..2957
113 ml. So. San Diero Fwy. way, C.M. 646-0I8.I. eves. home, white-with blk & gray abandoned skinny yellow sell will consider all reas fl wide, w/lighb & seal 11 '65 TRIU~fPH 500, new eng.,
Huntington Beach 847-8536 646-4.579 stripes. 642--8(WJ 6/28 manx: Ir: maltese &: whl kit· o~~ll Call 846-J7U · Wood roMt. $95. ~ 1T pipes, Bates equip. Xlnt ten. 540--6183 until 4 p.m. J;;;.;;cc·7.=:::..::;;::..:::::,. __ JUNE SALE111 ''Village Flea Market'' UNUSUAL cba.rcoal kittens , VIET Nam sac r 11 ice -oond. $800. 540-3283
. ••• Sun, J Uiy 29 thru July 6 w Ith I r a Y e Yes· 7 MOS old Germ~ n Seaworthy 20' Bay Sailor: Mlrine Equip, 9035 1964 HONDA. Clean, runs t", tory autho~ c~e~ 4 Antique & S~ialty Shops 536-0136 6/28 Shhelldrepherd, male. Xlnclt "".l'h·';;,$850-i;C:''-;"'~""'•:::Uo="'::.· ::.";"-:'.l6:'.'.'3::'... 1,68 CHRYSLER_ h 1 HEADQUARTERS good. $250. o overage, re rn.• emos &rgairui galore-fun for all VERY affectionate, OuHy, c n, need appre ahve110 "-La SN .p. e ec. • 642-4789 * Pianos & Organa:. Practice sot.mt LAGUNA VIUAGE home. 962-2622 6/28 :r J • pstrake, ail fbgis, st.art w/remote & manual FOR
planog, new walnut spinet 2nd Ave. to 41h Ave. gray kitten needs a home. 2 AOORABLE Comp! w/ sail11. Like new controls. Battery, sp.omeler I !SINGLE 11':'1.Ck motorcycle
pianos, new &. u~ Grands On the Coast Highv.'llY &l5--0509 6/28 beige, & blk/wht. ~ge ~ Must sell $375. 548-7448 • & tank, used ju.st 3 hrs., MOTORHOMES trailer, good rond.
Ir. demo Baklwin Organs FREE:-5 puppies, possible food included, to good home. l4' HOBIE CAT SlOOO same as new. Complete $60 646-8014 rully & truly on money MOVING: Refrig, 10. Stove Poodle & Schnauzer 642-3939 6128 Call ID-5 642-833S or $3$. 519-053:>
Javing SALE!! Get in on i ts. Camp Equip. Hair 548--&110 6/28 Anytime l2l3) 439-7667 rr=iso=AR=o'""-&""ou~tboa-rd~---, M ii'!'-••• Trille r, Tr1vel 9425
the big deals at: Dryer $6. Port. Typewrit<.'r 6 MIXED Puppies, females. MUST move • need new HOURLY RENT A'.. & acCT!ssories reasonable. . ~ • · • •
\fARD'S BAWWIN sruDIO $20. Tables $2·$5. floor Free to -.i h 0 m es. home for . cat, 8 mos., ..... Rhod-!9'• ...._'-' Ms-:-0530 '65 AL.JO 23', Twin beds,
1819 Newport C.M. 642-8484 lamp $3. Misc. 621 Acacia, 6 """" female Tiger a: lovable .. "" ,.. .:;::,.::::;;====== ,. complete beth, T an d e.m
4 Wheel Drive
SPECIALS
'66 International
Custom Camper
Air conditioning. Power steer·
Ing. 4-speed, V-8 engine. Lots
or goodies. Lie. No.
?.lust Sell Now!
'66 Jeep
Wagoneer
Big &i.'I:, .stick shift, povver
steering. Ready for work or
p!ay, Lie. No. SVE 368 Must
Sell Now~
'67 Toyota
Land CrulHr
Hardtop, radio, balloon tim ,
Save hundreds on this one.
Lit', No. TYY 988. MUllt Sell
Now!
' CdM 675-1968 96S-l6B6 61'll ~i(i 6128 Fun Zone Boe,t Co. Balboa -~--··-..... _ \vheels. Xlnl cond. $2,400.
FREE . WHlTE naugahyde recliner, KITTENS: 2 lillel'"!I to choose % SIAMESE, ad 0 ra b 1 e , . SABOT Boat Slip Mooring 9036 ' 537-8178 aftt>r 4 pm. Ii""" La...: 1 11 month rental of ~piano. $25, dinette table I 6 chain from. 3107 C 0011 d g e • bewitching black kitten. 7 new sails, good condition "WANTED" Side tie or slip -· ' • ' Lrrn.E Champ redi-cabin, t.WI. UUIO QXJ0Se from KawaL Hallet $75, green damask r.ofa, l8lh CM 6111 wk a., b 0 x tr a In ed. $140 642-3186 far 24' power boat · _. fully eqp'd. 51eeps 4. XL.NT
I: Davis, Stark, Ham mo~, century style, . $50, 2 new AOORABLE flufty kittens 536-9606 6128 COLUMBIA 15, fibrqlass Call 644--0802 cond $1100. 962-5353 t1PORTS
Cable, etc. 6 months f1lllll· tires 7.7>14. All in good e 673--0629e 61..., BLK I wht female cat l~~ sloop, trlr., 14 extru. $1,050. '65 TERRY 181,~• self con-TOYOTA-VOLVO
rnum. l iAMtl10ND cond. 54~7 . 4'Q yrs. old, Very aff<.'ctio~ate, 642-5214; 642-7187 Boat Services 9037 ON DISPLAY TH[ ALL JfEW tained. $2000. Sp o 11 es s. 1966 Harbor, C.M. &lG-a103
In CORONA DEL 1-lAR \VEA VER S Spec:1al Allen 2 MALE purr-balls 1 silver , to good home 646--0338 6/28 LIDO 14 No. 2275, good cond. SKIPPER Available f 0 r DODGE "EXPLORER" c642-~~74;:=:<3.~E='="='~'·==== I 9520 2854 E. C.oast Hwy 673--8930 loom, 36", folding. Swift, 1 blk & brown tiger. PRECIOUS Potty trained Full ~ac'g gear, covrs, ynl crulse or maintenance. .;: 9500 CC1-"m=po'-rs"------t--l-96~9-W_U_R_L~IT_Z_E_R __ , ~~e_c~~lc wind~rd, twarp.ing 897-5480 6/26 puszy cats 7 wks. old, dolly inc. Sl.300. 548-7116 548-3561 :1:!:~:~11:':111·:~.:.':.~· T r ucks '65 V\V Camper, XLNT <.'Ond.
wu-u, extra en• misc. FREE to ,......... home, AKC 7 ., • ., A::17 s-~ "T RACE READ" ~ DODGE V b" 6 C ' bo Ir •bll ••• CONC ERT ORGAN 1·-6= • .....,,, ob........ ~ f'-Q .-~ L ~ncllN, 11efJs 11pt }:;><,11 an. ig • npy, l(.'e x, w • • ~'b· yarn. J..JV, •..........uvu. months old male. German $2495 Bo1t.'f'acht RH Xlnt nd 11675 962-6354 32 Nole pedals. Le. SS than 3 • 'Tis Tropi-' Fish • Sh<.'~ ~1081 6/28 4 OLEANDER bushes, 7' to I LL 1111&. 21 '00'. n l"OOT. I ' auto. • C'O • •
th Id Paid $4995 """' t"'~... 8' hi• h -" 0 u d t g . 642-.3776 Ch1rter1 9039 u 1oor. 1 "'"'"' Ft111111c. 11725. 968-2040 or 5-ID-4006 WANTED: Shell Camper rnon_ s 0 • • OPENS Thurs, J une 26, 3 PSYCHEDELIC Id! J 1111 "" ll"l"llOVfD Cl l Oll. A-'""'n S3250 <:A-at tens. 5-18-3525 Gm LEHMAN 12 Sailboat All * SHELLS *· for 8' bed truck. Prefer ~ g ". ~ : SALE on tanks, fish, ac-545-4592 BLUEWATER CHARTERS
Gould Music Company cessories. 9080 Edinger, F V. 6127 PETS and LIVESTOCK racing equip, coven;, trl. U Drive S&IJ or Power • Sligh tly dan1aged/cheap. Pullman. Good C'Ond. 54>-524!i
aJ45 No. Main, SA 547..()681 &42-t530 642-&197 GROOVY! 1 : ' ' 839-1800 C.\MPER. % cab l'l\.'et,
SAVE •·r! "~'i""" & wh1'te P I ~-I 8800 Skippered local 11port fi.shing ' HAMMOND · Steinway· Ya· WEDDING Gown full skirt '"' ......, "" es, Vlllner• LIDO 14 -llarbor cruises 24 hrs • ' '64 GMC Randi-Van $800 691 l.utane, reh"ig, stov~. sips~
Jnaha • new & ~ pianc;is Jong slvs .!: ~ like new: ~~ · h 1 i r kit 1 ~/';? RABBIT~-c~~~rown W/ New hand trlr, 673-6732 S46-900) •• • Darrell St .. C.1-1. 646-6949 5. $750. 646-1234
rJ all makes. Best buys U1 s-z 8. Aslo veil arv:I hoop slip blk spols, tame, cute pet. I rt•• A
So. Calif. right her?. 646-l097 aft 5 w k d y 1 : 6 CYLINDER Chevy engine $5. 642-0095 ~-~m~po~~-~~u~toiiii1iii~9600~~1m~o~.-~rt~ ... -~A~o~~os~-9~600~~t~m~po~rt~od~A-u~IOt~-~9~600~1~m~""iiiii"•od~~A~u~t~osiiiiiiiii9ii600iiiiiiliim~poiiiiirtiitdiiiiiiiAiiutiioiiliiiiiiiiM00iilj , SCHMIDT t.fUSIC CO., anytime wknds 17373 Palm SL, Ftn. Vall. --
'. 1907 N. lttain, . 842-7034 6/Zl II!!!!!!!
: Santa Ana O'KEEFE & Merritt range Dogs 8825 •------' ___ _ ~ w/grill $25. Ke n m 0 r e TOP Sod di<.'Ondra, free for· I--'-"'------=:.: _
alnut . linl!h. Llk.e new. S20. 2588 Santa Ana Ave. 548-1306 6111 ~ pups), AKC, beautiful
ANO & Bent:b Gulbransen. automatic washer $25. Sota pick up. 548-5002 da,ys, eves ALASKAN Malamutes, (sled ; DO"C
~. LilUeton Pl. , C.M. House E. 642-~. 646-8296 KlITENS, Mixed bag. Have coloring, great family dogs,
-al''°" friendly, loving, easy to A LADIES White gold di&· had he uq & secure start. train. Perfect show dogs, "fULBRANS~ Pa<:emaker mond &. sapphire ring. 646-2388 6128 good for b r e e d J n g .
:•rgan, Leslie &: 0 l her Value $1125-sacrifice close 1 SNOWBALL, 1 brn & blk Registered purebred, $125
'.)peaken, 2 k e Yb oa r d s • e11tate $475. 644--2944 aft 6 tiger & 1 black Calic:o. up. 492-.l573
brand new. $750. 830-2215 PM 836-4493 6126 ,,;,:~c;,c=--~--
""YER p · -o k "--·I~==~=~-~-SILKY Terrier female puPft, ':...,,. . . ia.,.,,.,,tarc · V\M.I RED ECO RA TING~ Get a FEMALE 8 wks old Cocka· AKC reg. Sired by Intern'\ f00di~~l6• Jree estimate on Vinyl and poo puppies. BuU colored, champ. Good w/chldrn. No
• Linoleum. Lie. Co n I . adorable 675-5350 eves. shedding, odorlesa. Call (1)
• WANTED 540.7262 893-7903
; SPD"l'ETS &: GRANDS 1 ~~=~~-~--DARLING female calico kit· ="""'°"""'~~~~~~ ·l 63& 36ll 19 CUBIC foot chesl-type teru; .. tfartially long haired. p RECIO US C.ock-a-Poos
; PIANO WANTED
.. 1213) 877-1185 Pvt Party
freezer $50, needs basket 54S--8S89 6/'ll Black, M&F. 120
Serving cart $3.50. 546-2455 8 MO. Old male puppy. ==~~-"'-"1044=~~
CHAJlTER full fa m i I y Shepherd & Collie mix. ADORABLE male German
membenhp Newport Beach Shots. 546-3955 6/al Shepherd puppie, $25. ~::.i•:_ ____ .c8::2:::.:00 tennis club, 1700. 54&-3803 s p u N K y k i I t e n , , 2 • &15--2920 *
SCRAM LETS GIRLS Bike 26" $111. Sewing orange/\vhite 2 calico. \Viii =r~E~M~AL~E-'..w"-·,"1m"".,..'--.. -,~,~\I
• machine console 120. Older deliver. 5-15-3a20 6/27 yrs old SJO.
type"-Titer SlO. 1513 Orange, CUTE hlack kitten, female, 64~110 after 5 p.m. : ANSWERS Ct.I. G42-566G · part Siamese, 2'x3' Dog \\!HITE female poodle, 9 mos
• SECT'l. sofa, pair llvrm house. 549-3568 6/26 old. Ha11 papers, $35. * 838-~lzard -Favor -Force -chairs, callee tble, Spanish KITTENS, Long haired black 94'/l
tile -FUR COAT rug, guitar. 673-1525 male & ligf'r fem. v.· .. a--• & ~=~~-~--... •...u 2 \'R Gl'f!at Dane, male, • From a Chinese cooki~: "If TENT trail<.'r, sips 4. bltn ice h~brkn. 494-7927 6/26 fav.'Jl, AKC, make offer. &:an ~et in 'vrnng with hill box $195. Honda 90, good
file, she do not gh1e a rap. cond $95. Must sell. 5-18-7448 FREE to good home -pup-c"='..,,..~-=-=~~lhe gets FUR COAT instead." GAS 1 pies, 3 male, 6 wks., mixed ~tusr sacrifice! AKC, Silver
• po.,,,·er awr. mower, reel ,',,_"°"~·'--o"~&-_3.c;955c_ ___ ~ I (emale poodle. 5 4 9-18 2 7
Jele vislon 1205 type. Briggs.Stratton. Ne,v! FREE kilt<.'ns to i o o d after 4. l t:;;'-;-:;:;;'"-;;::::::-'=:7~1;sso';'!:·;'~73-6~2tl3"':':·_~-~ homes. .:::::::...::... _____ _ JtC rv H Miniature poodle puppies. A . enredon cher· DIM!.OND plen:ed earrini;s. 536-2473 Frisky & aJfe<:lionale, $15. ~'OOCI. pumice finish. an-Peri.. llav.·Jess. Cost s-m. YOU \Vill not believe these • 49'3-3420 * ;tique green, 24" Blk &. v.·bte. wll $150 cash. Gr~lll -=.::....:::.:;:::...c __ _
W ~-~ ti'f""·· 1 9 5 k i I I e n II . Extl'llordinary GEfiltAN SHEPHERD :64~24s:z u.:au .....,. · DIAMOND cocktail ring, ap. Heinz 57 varieties. 6i5-5983 Pups, AKC Reg'd. Black .!: ~ praised ITI5, sacrifice $300. 6 f.NTIQUE white, Packard 6?3-3600 3 PRETTY kitten11 looking tan, week. M5-4682
•Bell Color TV, beaut largel;;-;==,-.,,-,'7"-,-,.......,. for happy home, Please call COCK. A. POO puppies SIO
1cabinet, xlnt cond. $300. CARPET all sly~es al'ld ~I· £13-1071 ea. Good wil'i children.
•673-8687 or1. F~ e5Umate. Lie. t.10VING. t.1ust give male 673-5517 " Cont. 54()..7262 fi" RCA Color TV, v."Orkslo-'""'""':_::=.____ Germ, Sh<.'p. to a good OUTSTANDING Lg. Germ. ~aood $150. 6 PIECE Dining room fie! home. 548--J525 6/28 Sh<.'p pups · I Parenl!I en
' •546-48!19 • $25. \\'h<.'cl barrow planter TIGER-striJ>(.>d male kitt<.'n, 9 pttmisea. $30. 847-9936 aft 5
';======:=== $5. 1009 FMeral, 01. k Id 5 .. -l & •· bl Ii -l~====-"'C:..,'-7;-~ ,,. 11. o · · ,."""' ruva e. WEIMARANER pups AKC.
Cameras & Equip . 8300 BA1TER IES 6 V $4.95 ex, U 546-1833. Meu Verde 6/28 champ. sired. show quality.
HONEYWELL P..lovie pro-~.~de~~a~~~· Pay 2 Iv.ALE kiUens, 10 v.·ks old, 545--0878
~·--1125 II ll 1 shy . 1 bold. To rood home ARC n.-g. 10 mo. male nnn... t,~ ... ..,. · onryv.·e .SUJ)('r RU,1'1AGE SALE -• "'° '522 6 ~ ~ " · 00 " Oiuy . .,...,......, '"° d!e. Sac.rif'-. Show q···•i·~'. \-rTIO\'le camera. $1 . J ~ 77 ~ 9 JO.> ..,.. '''" ...... v ·M7..J189 une "'" ·"" : :....., SOFA & matching chair. Call 642-2240 afltt 6 pm.
867 \V. 19th St. C.M. &17..{684 6128 LABRAOOR RETRIEVER
LllllrtJnt Goodt 1500 SEI' 01 Books 30 vol. 4 DARLING while kittens, 1 AKC female 7 mo. $75. r=;i_o;.;""'"'-"-'-='--'.:..:.: E~lopedia Am<'ricano. t.1anx. 962-0J21 64~2798 after 6 pm.
SURFBOARD, 4 months old, t.1ake offer. ~15
:m dinp, 7'10", super fast . BOY'S Stinp:-Ray bike $40. F1tEE Kitten~. wil l de.liver. PUG Puppies, AKC f'l!g., 5 ~ve ae l tin. $70 Of h<.'sl 0r. Excellent CondiHon &t6-IO.lt 673--1182 lilfler 5 6/28 "-'k.'I old. Ca.I Joyoo 54~1301 ?.trr. Call Rob Ml-5910 2 IDENTICAL kitten.• 8 ·wks, or S39-5l36 ~==---,-~--8' CUSTOM &urfboard ATRED L KC :ING equip: Propane pe.rfeel condition: 1 year old &J0...79n. 6111 A E pups. A ' :stow'· c:ookfng ktt. lantern, $50. 8~7~1 HALF .Siamese Kittens, 6 champion sired, 8 wks.
-etc. 28S Del Mar A\<e., CM -"-~.,.-,=-~--~ weekJ old. 675-5016 l=~--"';,.c..·l,_,40-"1:,,...._~~ * 8 PC Maple dining set. 3 =:C::.:c,,;'-7;c.:..=:_--sr "· rd •1 2 • •c
2 OLD 20" bike, ~11 "-"""'1", • oo:rn& • •• • >'" Rn l600 hp PQ\\'f'r n1over, low _... rf breed $300 d831
llt"!•la. 96S-3195 * 673-4671 aflPr 5:~ Ptlt 6111 ~~iJ74, e~: 54~2 :
ltoTPoINT auto ~'Uher. 3 KITIENS and mother. tT __ RA_N_Sc_PO_R_T_A_T-IO~N-~ fuUY auto. dryer. Mite. W1nted 8610 54&-0155 6/'lt
lNorae aprliht ,, ...... $ WE "UY $' CALICO kill•••· lloeto a Yeehh . 9000 •Llcfrlollier ~,. lamp, D Housebroken. 5484i138 6127 ~~~-~-~ = $ FURNITURE $ J Bl.ACK. 4 Slam~. Klllcns BERTRAM f:::'~J ·--APPLIANCES hot1sebroken. 963-5343 6/'lt Exceptlon1I Sav lnss
t IH.,.......... 20' • 1969 MODELS quilt.a C.W TV'1-Pit11••-Sl•r•o'1 FREE Top&0il, will klad, ~1 COMPLETELY EQUIPPED
Qa.llty Id,.-bed._ -~ I 'l•<• •• Hou,• ~1111 e\'!!11. 842-4825 6/'17 Bahia M•r * Spo•-•• pide, unueed '"°; ~': CASH IN 10 MINUTES '..., .. ...,,
After' 6 ot "-• 54 1 4531 • ClARGE your wan1 ad now. J. H. R.ichardJGn Co. . '40 • flnot it wtlh a W•nt ad! 1601 llaysldo Dr .. NB 673-0850
~ .. ~·· -
DATSUN -----•INC.
DEMO CLEARANCE!
WHILE THEY LAST • • • • • • • • •
4 Dr Sedans-2 Dr Sedans-Pickups-Roadsters-Station Wa9ons
MANY TO CHOOS£ FROM .
SAVE •• SAVE •• SAVE •• SAVE
'65 Mustang $1495 '68 Camaro $2095 '63 Chevrolet $795
289 ,119;111, •11tom1tic: +.111,mi1,io11, power Aufom•li" tT1111mf11io11, power 1l11rirHJ, rtdio lmp•l11 111per sport c:onve.+ible. VI , •11lom1fil.
1teeti119. redio, heeler, FACTORY AIR CON. end h1•ftr, FACTORY W•rr111ly. IUUZ564 J power 1t11ri119, power br1k11, redio, h11!1r,
OITIONING, M19 who1l1. ( REJ 112 ) J:'":::"::::;"::':::I':::''::.· .:.":..':::C:::'.:.":..1 ______ _
$1495 '65 Oldsmobile $995 '65 Chevrolet S795
Dvn•mic: 18 4 Doo~ h•rdtop. A11torn•lic, power
11• 111gin1, eutomelic: fr•111min io11, power 1teer1ng, redio, he i l•r, till wheel, IPCR•66) Mon11 coupe. R1dio 111d h11t1r, 4 Jpted lr•llt•
1te•ri114, r•dio, heel•r, FACTORY AIR CON· mi11io11. IRUM7lll
'65 Mustang
:"'ONING. "IY"" '65 Oldsmobile s1295 1-,6-5 -Ra_m_b-ler--$6-95 63 Ra nchero $595 0.1 .... , o ••• ,,., .. ,_ •••••• .,o. , ....
. . . d · · 1!0011119, redio, h1ot~ FACTORY .AIR CON· ""''rlr.111 440 co11.,1•iibl1. R1di1 end h11tor, ~:Z';t,o~lcylowler e1190111,) ipee tr1nu1111111111, OITIONING, tilt ....i..eel. IR.GM756) t ulomellc: tr11umiuio11, power 1l•oti114.
FINE STOCK OF VOLKSWAGENS ••• CHECK THESE VALUES!
1'68 vw t WT•StU s1495 I 1''68 vw !YSCl14l s1495/
VOLKSWAGEN CAMPER ~~~~~~~~ ......................... $895
1'65 VW 1010101 5895 I I '64 VW "9 '4111 s795 I
18835 BEACH BLVD • HUNTINGTON BEACH
842-7781 • 540-0442
---------------------.--------""'!"'_---------~ ,
. ~.
TIHlrsday. Juno 26, 1969 DAILY PILOT
TRANSl'CRTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRA Al'
c_.. . 9520 lmpoflod Avtoo 96qo ~ ~ KOO A-Wintld 97cio ~,.d C•t:1 9900 1,u:::c'"::·>:.d.::C=.•"::;.._.,=..:.:.:; ~~·~od~c~.~~~~~-jJu~lod~~~~.,.~~~~~,~~i:.~~ .. ~~;:;~~i--+~
'UVwcAMP!R GLAS ' J*IUMPH • WEPAY ••• •• CHEVROLET _C~AIR • ..,_..~-,-~N~
Pop.top, apllt '"' with aid• I--------CASH • • -•
equipped. sKD400. Very clean. M u st eetJ British ractna cm. stereo va "'I ditlon, au lama lie. $200. L9adcd. l''&ctory air, ~ l<mt. Low m~ ..... •'till> 1067 GLAS 1100 cc. OOHC. '69 TRIUMPH GT 6+, ' Lf cu""ROUT '61 CORVAIR, good "'"' '66 Country Squlro c'!.811~ ... ~· .'A...,c .~·'.."1 ,:1'1
$2~99 MU1t 8tU thl1 week. (213) ttpe 5 moa new $2800 -==,.;;*;:,!S48-0l32:;s~*fa;;;;;;;,,Lljcond.,. dlr, ,Pwr ateertng, BRAND NEW -.J·. -H!:");;t8fl eve11.~or&tm'" PrlV~te party, M4-1J'Z24--1c1-..a~cuw-1 trucn ju.t -CAPRICE ' ... .~ •PQedooaei,t ... 1--.r.•fallC' ftlft.Arr.
1 'ti: TRlUMPH MK--3 Splttir. call us for tree "t:hnatt. VB, automatic, factory atr, COUG R lloney bt"" extm<ir. match-1 7 'UILA.J.J' ~ \ae&\. \18, ,a.utofDi:l:ic, ao.:. j 'oiXiaJ~A;G;;;U;;A:;R;;;;;;;;,\~-~-.. ~rll;,;bl~·~· ~M~""',,,·,,,Call=Mn.= 6ROJH CHEVROIET powor •teer., ,. ..... beak•~ log fntorlor. Now rtrn l11S '°"' air. eowet ·~· I H";Uon, ~ power wlndo\va, radio, hee.t. '61 COUGAR VS.2!9 Alr. cielt. WW fine prl pl)', LB • P45 SPTS. CPE. po'ftt bnltet. ~.~b
'64. XKE roadster, best offer, Mk" ror Sales Manager er, vtn¥1lop.S8N112 ~~:J;:1or ~nt «>ncl •• T::A:;Y:.::"9::·::."::"'.:f113::.::_ ___ J ~~--.~ ~ •ra:'~ er, wtdle MJ!s. (V!"RW) '!
MU<! Sell. also ""'boao! VOLKSWAGEN 1S2U Be.ch Bl"'1. $1695 '59 FORD SlaUon Wagon, v. •qulppod. $3195 '"' ;:
$35. 6'5-3724 Huntington Beach 8, auto, P/S, P/B, R&li. $l9' ON •« M !MPO:. "'!7~ ATLAS DODGE ::. ~·::'~pp~,.~~ '2399-o. ATLAS i ; KARMANN GHIA Alfred Ftr1go
9431 Molokal Drive
Huntington Beech o c '67 DODGE POLARA Apl B., Alabama, H.B. .I) ,
range oonUYtirs OIRYSLER -PLYMOUTH 536-8714, aIRL,SLER.llARB-ORPLSYVOUTllLVD~
549-3031 Ext. "66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
FOR sale : Karmann Ghia
Convert. 1958. New tires,
runs good. $275. 642-7947
TOP S B ER 2929 HARBOR BLVD. ,fJ4"I BILL MAXEY TOYOTA COSTA MESA 546-1934 Coupe, VS, automalic, factory '60 FORD Galµie, :iew bat-Plus Tax & Lii;. COSfA'MESA 54'6-
Cos'TA.. MESA
LOTUS
You are the wtnner ot
2 tickets to the 18881 Beach Blvd, Open Daily 'til lO p.m. air, po\ver steering, power tery, r/h, '69 lisc, l'K'eds llt-P~nts Include tax and 1 Open Dally 'Ul 10 p.m.
A. Beach. Ph. 847-8555 1950 CHEV, original w/l!l69 brakes, power windows, pow. ·'-''-wo-'rk_._11'Scc_"_""'°""_.c·..c_ __ 1 license and finance charsn DiAFTEDi Mutt U -~ , ,
FIREWORKS Will Buy C~v cng & floor shlft. Ve ... , er i,'l'a1s, radio, heater. '63 FORD Fairlane, excl. Hi. on 4S months. Approved • ~ ·'~ •! CAMPER
S•les • Rentals
Authlrized Dealer
Eldorado -Four \Vinds
Scotsman • Barracuda
8' Cabover Low As
* '62 LOTUS Elite .
Everything n e w. See
trader's ad. * 54&-5387
SPECTACULAR clean. Will tnXe trade si.25. white \\'alls, vlnyl top, tinted pert. 4 spd. ?o.fany extras. ~~Lil. Serial No. 331179ZU. !phoon~:~. ~ 1*1~9 &'. 'i
at the 515 Hamilton, C~f glass, lo.1ded car with bal-·16'>5==·="=""'=086===== """' brand ~ engti'le A ~ • i ANAHEIM \'our Volks,vagen or Porschelc.~=o=o~:..c-~~~ ance of new· car 'va.rranty. ·. u $115. 646-8914 .: "
& pay lop dollars Paid for 63 CHEVY, 4 dr, dlr. 6 cyl. <UIV6n) LINCOLN • •t STADIUM "oot can Ralpl; xlnt coral. IJS. C"h del<. $2095 n1vers1 y '69 F!REBIRD, 35tl' ere'.,
MERCEDES BENZ 011 July 41h • 673--0900 line bal ~ HAJ(B(M, Call 1967 LINCOLN, ·clean, 28,000 vll'lyl top, powJS, wife 1
Plea" call 642·5678, e<I. 329 -y~pji~Tt\'i>"'":tcK~'e:'!n:_'.!~ll>,-063(~~----ovals. '600 mL M11<t .. 11 1199
Model # 600
Theodore 01Jll')~ County'>
L.119l·~t St•lection
N•·v. & U~c rl
f.~<:'' ''-'de-; Ber12
~~e~~k~:d,~:~toQ)~~~ w~i:r.~op ;64 C!ffEV'lml*la. V-8. <j spd, ATLAS ~~:~·sel~~~· a~;~ Oldsmob·11e best otttr. pvt pty. 546<-'IMf."
tolJ.free number is 54-0-12'201 , dlr., pft'f. nanning cond. 19M PONTIAC GTO 3 JPll}, · ;
,69 VW's , for good, dean ,used can. Ta.kt foreiga car in trade. OIRYSL1'~R -PLYMOUTH MERCURY auto, P/s, ~ ~t : ROBINS FORD all makel. See~ kay Wiit fine. prv1 prty. SBR547, 2929 Ht\RBOR BLVD. s~reo t.a-pe. Can ~. I
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Theodore Robins Ford Call Bill -!94-9T73 COSI'A MESA 546-l9l4 2850 Harbor Costa htesa ~Con=la=ct=5.U=·::T4'!=<=°"=~:l:;=:!J ':
Bark Financl"• 2000 Horhor Blvd. 1 --~· ---~ o o ·1 "l 10 '68 MERCURY 541).9640 2060 Harbor mm.
Costa Mtsa 642-0010 Jim Slomon s Imps.
'63 VW Camper, 50 hp, low
mileage, llfW' liftl, Stove,
refrlg, tent. etc. Rtar
vibrasonic 1speaet $1250.
83l-1611 ext 1785 or 675-5538
'>\i "'H'P & ,'.',II!' 51.
S u1t.1 A n 54!, ·i 114
$213 DOWN.. ,c;;·;;:M;,. ====="';;.(J0)::,;;:01191'.5 CHEVY Imp.nl'l SS. ="'"'=o",;;;'~"="~~·~·m::;:. =I RAMBLE. R ·su Q'l 3& 1. R/H, auto, P/s, aiN!ond. OLDS '66 F85, DLX, <kir, _ ,;
Pl ~~ ... ,,. Auto [ffling . 9110 Xlnt "'""· Sl5'jl. ""'3129 , • FALCON .1 COUGAR ~~. Pow•r, st<er. • ..... _ _;. __ ~,.......,."°"'.
us p)'Dlnt , · all 6 pm. '. Vt. eu om.aUc, ta~~h•ter, '4c .• pv; Qt)'. 549--2507 •LI. ftAUIMIB
'59 MERCEDES ., SL title, 1'ull 2 yr, 2'.000 Y" LEASE II"' '55-CHEV 2-dr gUQd ere. M:UST SELL '&ii Faloon V-8, factory i.lr, power •t.erlng,.1"'-""'1;6;.c.,0,!ld.s;::c.C.;.o::c,,.:,.c,c.tibl~e-llV IUU'l-
COQPE. B a: AU T 11' UL m1 "anutv,. A~ooly at 196i9 Cad Cpe de Ville pwt Good ti ~ •9516 alt ·ccnd: $615. or make of-ppy.'er .s. wbHt ,..Us, '1.itb jowtr; A?lf/F~l rad\O Amb~u-.J-~ -j I 0 N E. 0 W N E R C A R. T & M MO I \IRS , _ _. .. w•• t • d '1-ks· res. -vy· ~ ~r 540-9889 ~. lOw lniles, (WlUJ:il6) • ....i._,......, • 4'UVf" •Tif I -G-~ G SI d "'u .... , ""J s ...: r V\,. , eves days: 642-8095 -,.~·======="' -:~ . , • ~ * •or. H1rdtop' ii]"; •. eves. SHOWROOM CONDrrtON. ouo~ ... .-..en rove v · tilt str whl, air cone!, solt-· , -$2595 · 6-'" * PAM-TOPS .,,_ $1fi00 PV. PTY. 673-7037 SU.2284 at Beach 892-S55l ray gla!OS, A~t/F!lf w/s/w. EL CM-UNO, Navy, 67. 133 FORD '&I CUTLASS V-8, auto, V.S, automatic, .tl.ctpey a!JI~ I
All steel sh.ells. Sales &: ren----------1 OPEN SUNDAY Lse $l6S mo ' 4-speed. Xlnt cond. pwr/B po11'Cr steering. buck• t power 1te<>r, ndl0. "tita · :
taJs. $149 up. Buy factory '6l 220 MERCEDES 4 door --=,",=3....:y.::,·."w= •. ;;...-. R&H, $1800. 644-4704 '65 FORD Ctny Sed, V-8, rut-. A. JI Ai.S seats. Excel c:ond. $995. (SIR 103) I :
direct. JO!fl Se. Harbor, SA. =.. 1~·eau•°E':! SOUTH .COAST '59 C!IEVY<I CYL. · to, tllr, xtoJ .,,,.;In""' & • '!' S4""1TI $1395 ~4:
GC-3666 I CAR LEASING 3-SPEED $135 ' out. $15 cash de ll qr forei gn CHRY~lt -PLYMOUTH 1 I
C1mper R1nt1ls 9522 _ _,...-·~· _____ ,Radio &: Heater. Fully fao-300 \V. Cst Hwy, NB ~S..2182 5t8-5084 car in trade uEV: 4.84, call -HARBOR. 8LVJ), PLYMOUTH ATLA'S • ==""---..;...--'68 250-8 (Blg 4 Dr. Sedan} l.orY ~.VGZ 189, --TIME' 1 .55 CHEVY Hllrlt ~-----.a .~en, 494-9'1'13, CO$I'A ?i-fESA 1 548-193f. 1---------", l,
*EXPLORER* Air-cooo,•loowlndow•. $1695 "~' • ~· '="~'-"""'--'-~ ~nDaily'ti!JOp'.nt.~i '66 PLYMOUTH ·r AM-FM. ~.300. 549-2144 Lease a New '69 for 6 Months rebuilt engine 283. Mags & '65 FORD Cortina s!a wag, 4 '"'1"" CHRYSLER _ })LYMOtrm' :,1 By week or month. Luxuri-private party. & retw·n ,vith no obligation. good tires $400. 546-9092 spd, dlr, extra clean, rebll '67 ?i-fERCURY 10 pass t••,,.,.. . ·,m· .,
ous. Sleeps 6. Sell contain-ATLAS Call Mr. Malcolm Reid for ·ss CHEV., needs work, !'ng,$775balancetof.in.NGR Colony Park \Vagon, Auto FURY Ill 29'l9nl'U\.DOR&;.,,,._ ·•,•
·•. Limited nwnber. can Full ~1a11 N 458 call BUI, 5'15-0634 trans. Pwr tilt !ileerin"", P""r cos1'A MESA . 546-1934, I t:U MG vi: s o'v $100 or best offer ''6 4 Door hardtop. V8, automa· Open Daily 'tll 10 p.m. •
today. ---------·I CHRYSLER 642-0010 Call 968-4614 FOR Sale: 1964 Ford Conv. scats, pwr disc brks. R/H. lie, factory air, power steel'> I LEISURE RENTALS -PLYMOUTH Ford Authorized XLNT cond '$695. 1959 El Air-cond. Rack new tires. ing, power. brakes, radio, PRE-OWNED ~~· n 4) MU6ll, (714) 837-3809 MG 29'l9 HARBOR BLVD, Leasing 3ysteni '63 BEL Air 4 dr. 6 cyL Auto. Xln! cond, $300ll 673--0194 heater, ,vhi~ walls. (SMC BIG SELECI'JON !, 1
1 Sales, Service, Parts COSTA MESA 546-1934 Theod Orig. 01vner. 31,000 mi. Nu Camino 6d. cone!. 348 eng. nc.ni '61 THRU '68'1 , ··
B
, 9525 Immediate Delivery, Open Daily 'W 10 p.m. ore Tires. clean. $850. 548-6232 $350. 1961 Corvair 3-spcl. "'1'1 ALL MODELS 'J" t
Duno ugg1os All Mod•I• SALE SALE ROBINS FORD l!J62 IMPALAL 405, 4 ,~. 1200. D&S AUTOMOJIVE, MUSTANG $1495 FROM $295. II l""'-"' 125 Rochester, CM 646-1356 '67 DUNE BUGGY 1967 V.W. IMMACULATE. 2060 llarbor Blvd. positraction, good cond in & '66 MU STANG ooo-0wnr 6-e e e . e
Road & ~ey equipped. AM-FM, Sunroof, 19,000 n1i. Costa Mesa 642.0010 out. $875. 675-4116 '61 FORD V/8 auto trans, P cyl. auto. tran!I. top cond. AT LAS BRAND NEW '69 -$1991 . ~ :, · d · M t JI 61'270~ S. heat. air cond, new tires, Hardtop ,v1th sic curtains. us se, ~ ;). TRANSPORTATION '65 CHEV. Impala p I b, Reas. Must sell by June 30 I
8 'vorking mans wagon $295. Lie. No. UVR4 7 'li6 VW Body, '58 Eng. & P/s, air, lilt ,.,.heel. MS-6997 !'!48-3743 CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH JIUll · ·j
$1995 Transm. Runs good. ;450. Used Cars 9900 *545-6360* '65 MUSTANG 4 spd. 289. 29'29 HARBOR BLVD. ,.,,""· · , .,,,...· .... 0,~. 1,
* 64• ~·• * 66 FORD Fairlane GTA, ,.... !100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. ............... * p H l"d '62 Chevy SS Impala Conv. Jo::Xcel <;ond .. Lnw nii!e&i;e. COSTA MESA 546-1934 re-0 I ay R/H Factory Air, Qoor auto s.Li-84 642-9e 541).l'l&f VW '82, good corid. best offer 327 eng. Of'i&. owner. $500 shlf't _,.,A,., __ Bl , ..... $1450. 58 Eves·, , Open Daily 'lil 10 p.m. I
A .• ~~ MG--·-·-·--.SALE * ·-· 64" ·-· ... ~-~~. u ~ ••• ,... I u..._.....,. ~ LGA-. New tires, recent cash or ...... t. ~ $1920, ma.st &ell $1775. ~,.,., LEAVING country must gel) 642-6013 ·''
ft ~ '62 ~f.G. Midget, b l ack overhaul, 536--8338 CHECK THESE ·513 CHEVY 2--dr vs aulo.64 ·~"'6-'=121"'=~~~-~-'67 blKE new, Tape, new l965PlymouthFuryll 4 =========·.! i .. ~ 0 w/~ int. rlh. ~at cond. 1968 VW'-PORSCHE wheels, VALUES Trans. Gd. cond. 6Th-S983 :i96:3. FORD Country Sedan polyglasa: l.i.tts, 3-spced 6 DR. S'l50. 646-6986 ' T·BIRD ~
' Mfat cond. 642'1898 air, GT grp ........ $2395 CONTINENTAL """· 16'>5 0, be<t olt•r. 546-11699 , __ ..c;P_O:....N:.;Tl;.;.:..A:.;C:...._ 1961 T·Binl conve>;lble. "1fij
•
0
,, 54~1758, a.ft. 4 p.m. special tires. Profbi' built. I '67 c.ougar ·XR·7 Landau, Wagon.. 6 po.uenget, neW cyl .. still i on warranty. .
~-' OPEL '68 VW ,/ '67 Toronado, landau, full 847--0449 '66 MUSTANG, blue, 6 cyl., 1· meeb cond. needs top. WU! ! .. 1---------Call 675-5988 P"T. !act air ...... $2895 '65 ONE-OWNER, lo ml. full-6 r/h, pis. pfb, U,000 miles, '64 4-0r. Pont . Tempest, Full take trade $215. 5 t ? !I ' 2 Ford Country Squire, "-., • .,. I I u~ '66 OPEL Wagon, 2'1,000 mi. U650. R/H, tape deck. I '67 Ford Gala.'l(y 500, 2 DR Jy eqp'd. Mwt sac. $1650. or aood cond. $1250. 54...-_.. pwr. owner, c can. ~-Hamlltor., CM. · L •
54.9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Exceptional cone!. Must sell ,67 vw BUG, ll bl·-w/-. HT,...D pwr, Jact air $1995 best ollt. days: 54~11T4 powilr, ne'" tires. good cond. '67 MUSTANG GTA, mag· 499-2907 or 494-3'.196, 775 Lq. CLASSIC '57 T-BIRD con-! 1970 HARBOR BLVD. b knd 968-1?91 ..... .,,.~ ·1 '66 Bonneville coll"", Ian· eves: 546-.1642 $600 or oUer. !J68.ll32 Cnyn Rd, Lag. B. ·--'-'ble. llOOO _ ~,1 0,.~ I Y w · int. Many extras, must sell! • ,~ whl11, new tires, 1harp! VC>iu ,,,.. ..., un 1 COSTA MESA 1960 Opel Sta Wag, Very Call Chris; 675-7'757 dau, fl pwr, fact air. $1995 1S58 FORD, xlnt ntech cond. $1995, 54~1+19, 96S-437• '62 PONTIAC Star Chief, 4-dt pv. pty. 61v.i891 1
• '6~ BUGGY, stereo rad. clean. Will take trade. $.250. ,68 V\V f d" 14 000 ./ '65 Olds 442 COUP<', real CORVAIR W8ill .1take C traM de Sl50. 515 hdlp. pwr. strng & 'vindows. J I
f\n,\·er top, seat, curtain.;;. 515 Hamilton, CM. . , sunroo, ra 10, , clean at,,, ...... , .. $13991----------1 am1 ton, . NASH Lo n1iles. Make offr. VALIANT ·: !
("-. whl•., aft 5. &16-1310 m;. Xlnt c:ond. one owner. ./ '63 Cadillac convertible, 0 CLASSIC '62 Corvair. Future '68. LTD.Countcy Squire 495-5L19 or 49;....sJJ7 ' I '""'" " '67 OPEL Rallye Kadett xii. 642-2380 aft. 5:30 •68 DUNE buggy. Fiberglass cond. \Vill finance, Don , P"T & air • .. ·· ·· ·· · Sl099 dune bUggy, $250. 675-2758 Loaded air, poWtt !lteeririg & '55 NASH 2 DR 1-fT. Auto, '65 GTO, auto, p/s, 45,000 Late '65 .f.dr. Valil.nl CJPe.,'.
• metal flake body. $1250. Hess 8-5. 642--0943 64 vw .. new 1600 eng,, guar.. ./ '65 t.·Iu.stang V..S stick $999 terrific cond. brakes etc. 546,-4166 air, aood cond . SlOO. mi, all hl'Ound xlnt cond. owner, AIC, radio. , . 1, "'""""======I new int., stereo. XL.NT lo·,,,,. DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! l"'U-'Df!E your want-ad now.l.:=::==:*~54-0-=='"='=*==::=!.:oM~a=•=·~o~U="oo·=·=,,..="="==:':~c:;·~~··========'~§j 1,Camli.I ;54S-400..,;,;;;l.,,,.,.!!!!...... .. cone!. 673-5634 , ,___ ,............... "°"" f
I' ~~ ___ P_O_R_S_C_H_E __ '63 V\V Sedan, new brakes & STATION \VAGON SET U"d Cars 9900 UMd Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900Used C1r1 I'
--''----·----'58 PORSCHE speedster, w/ tires, exce · con ' fact air, 11,000 mi, one imported Autos 7UVV •
1 d 673-ti033 ., ·ss Dodge Monaco, n pwr.lifrl~~g~~§§~s~5$~~§~!~~~~~S~§§g~~~~~~§§~~~~~~§~~~rn ALFA ROMEO '61 eng. gd. shape. Many ex-,.a_f_<o_r_•______ owner •.. , ........ , , $3395
tras. 822 \!/. Balboa Blvd. '67 VW pick-up, recently ,/ '65 Rambler Classic, auto . . j
ALFA Romeo Spider Veloce
'58, very good cond. $795.
642-1507
N~;.'·;.;:;,;,,:::1 Tocga ov<rhaul~:,'~; 1 ~65ai~,j;;,~ ... ~~i;"& 1;: NOW ,•• ! THE FINEST .~LE~TION OF NEAR·NEW. '69 EXECUTIVE CARS! I
Burgundy w/blk int. '68 vw autonu1tic, Sunroof clean •········ •• .... • $999 CUl~tinental Two-Door JOHNSON & SON TURNS OVER THEIR
$5395. 837-6018 Ndio, Extras. Xlnt cond. ./ !1w~e;t~l~~~p;~~~~c~;~~ EXECUTIVE CARS AND DEMOS MORE I ,
1959 PORSCHE by owner, after 6:30. 673-4846 FREQUENTLY THAN .•
good c:ond. Offer. 1966 vw Squareback, R/ll, ./ ·~ Fa.Icon, auto and DOES THE AVERAGE :,:, ANGLIA
1956 ANGLIA Squire \Vagon *675-3673 -k xlnt cone!. $1350. Days c can •.• ., ........... $499 DEALER.
runs good. transportation ;======== 642-9Sll. eves aft 6, 545-6140 special. $95. 675-2273 100% FINANCING OAC
1960 VW w/sunroof MORE TO CHOOSE FR0111!
$250. Pacific Coast Motors
·59 ROVER 90,. 6 cyl,, 1 * * 673-3764 * * 14061 Be•ch Blvd. DATSUN
ROVER
•eg DATSUN owner, 53,000 rnilu, 4-ip, VW '57 CDnv. Needs ltlme Wistrnlnster
alg sedan, 96 hp, overhe~d leather, p/b, toplhape. $495. work. Best offer. Ideal far * 893·5038 *
cam eng., dlr, 4 spd, radio, 545-S9l3. :d:::u~"':..b'.".u~ggy~·.::615-;;c2S38:::::_~-ltt;;:;-;;u;;'UV'<'c:::;-,-:::::o;c:ll
heater, \vsw tires, loaded! SPRITE 1964 vw. Xlnt cond. 1953 CHEVY, 6 cyl, 3 spd fir
3200 Miles, under factory New 'paJnt. R/H. $850. shift, best offer over $250.
Warran!y. Bal to fine. $1775. ---------Days 675-5272 Also 1961 T·Bird. recent
Take $75 cash dels. or old~r '59 SPRITE. Good runnlngU ---""=""'---paint job $500. 540--1634 or
Call Bill nd • .,. Call '--fore 6 pm 1967 VW bus, ""'' at 1064 Co·-~ St., car. LBD 8025, 00
540 0·,;-9 • V<' , • $1800 C-M ·-••
54;r0634, ............ :ll4!438-4142 . '
ORANGE COUNTY'S SUBARU '61 VW SEDAN
NO. I ---Cali 64~7560 BARRACUDA
DATSUN DEALER Subaru of Calif. '63 vw $695 D~ ;>.~'T!~N lnc.-ltetall Div. 1,..;Prl~va:="=P=:art.:=':o· ::'":::mi=.o l ___ B_U_IC_K ___ 111
Huntington Beach $1297 POE VOLVO '61 Buick Special
8·12·7781 or 540-0442 Opt equip $30, :rreight $14.50 1 _________ Sedan, V-8, auto, dlr, fact.
ENGLISH FORD
ORANGE COUNTY'S
VOLUME ENGLISH
FORD DEALER
SALES· SERVICE
'69 MODELS
Immediate delivery
LARGE SELECTION
Theodore
ROBINS FORD
2060 Pla.rbor Blvd,
Costa Mesa 642-0010
FERRARI
FERRARI
Newport Imports Ltd. Qr.
enge CounlY'• onl.Y autbor-
h:l!d dealtt.
SALES-SERVlCE·P.A.RTS
3100 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach 6'2-9400 540-1764
Authotizt'd ?o.!G Dealer
'62 Ferrari 2+2
Excellent ail respecl!I. 64~801 • 673-2916
FIAT
Handling $49, T)('l, $1390.50 VOLVO ab-, pwr str. Right frvm + Tax and Lice111e Leisure World. Sl25 eaab del.
1000 \V. Coast Hiv.'llY, N.B. or take foreign car. Call
645-0050 * 54£1.2733 Best Deals Are At Ke.n, 49~·9773 or s.15-0634.
SUNBEAM DEAN LEWIS
'67 ELECTRA cuslom 2 Dli
HT. Pis, P/b, auto. Air.
elec wndws. landau top, vyl
int. AM/PM ste1m, 11(!,v ....... , '67 SUNBEAJ'\1 Tiger Mark fl l9G6 Harbor, C.M.
289 cid, alum. 'vhecls, call '59 VOLVO
642-4667 artcr 5 pm, $325.
645-2578
TOYOTA
BILL MAXEY
'68 VOLVO 4 dr, auto trans,
R/H, OClOO mis., pr!. pty.
$2500. 493-4186
lil'l'!s, ne\v shocks, xlnt
$2850. 5-19-1969
'65 RIVIERA, all equip.,
very clean. Nd!'; body wrk,
$2100/best. 642--8584
CADILLAC i Antlque1, Claaslcs 9615 ITIOIYIOITIAr ·e.; CAD Courie d~ vrne fore• MODEL T fonl, ooupe body, "' to "'II. Car i• immoo.
11111 BEACH BLVD. fender5 & some parts. iJ:· 30,000 ml. Fall pwr. $2,395.
Hunt. Beech 147"'515 784 Ne*ton Way, ta pv, pty. 968-2840
3 n1i N, ot Coaat Hwy. on Bch Mesa. 1!» 'Nttkd4.Ys '13 Cpl: De Ville ll~. ll"ll,
RED CO.MOBILE. Se' n Jeath Int, full pwr &: alt, ITlnlYlnlTIAI •round N•wpor"Lldo ""'" new tltt" Gd cond Pr pty L &::I I:;:. For Sale. 6'1:>--3638 eves. J1495. 847-.3191
D
BE•Aot No .. 1.LAE••WAl•S Au•" w1n11<1 9100 i,.;s"'s"6'"".~' ""!>1"''"CEPT="'1o~N~w:=1~11 clean "56 Cad. Coo d
WE PAY WH mochanlcally.S..to
1966 Jfarl,)(lr C.M. 646-930.'\ believe! 54~4
TOYOTA FOR YOUR cM ';i.;,~u;~ ~~!W~
' j\jmp "ll.; w. 962-~
HEADQUARTERS CONN!lL'" . .,. CADtL!lAc 'D'.'v'111 ~
ELMORE CHEVROLET convt. :0~:,'1;, ~eqlllp.
'61 flAT l50 ~Pol1 CO\lPC 2828 llUbot Slvd. Xlnt c.'Ond. Brit. raci~ WOO Beach Blvd, W1tm11&tr O:lsta Mt!ll !S46-l200 '62 Coupe OeVllle
700 flolarigold, c d Jo.t.
l3H343 'OC'""iT)oCll)85 grttn. Tan inletlor. Chrome l-~~P:;"°'";::;:_89f.3322~;;~":""-l;;;;;"iiiiii:iiiiii&i:iv ,.,,..i.. "'' ~ """1"'' 1961 TOYOTA CONFIDl!NTlAllL Y
'SB FIAT Convertible ntw d W Pay Mor. For ttl,Jlne, Um, pa.litt. $.'iOG. Her top Cou,. Fore~ Or Sporll Cal"ll
wm ""''""' ..... -$1695.00 PAID FOR OR NOT
'68 Flat 800 2 0.. ""'" !,le. No. \V!FS78 ""3320 Dir I. J. SPORTSCAR
o;roo ml. lllliO '69. FULL """"'· xtnt ,., CENTER * * 81600 * * ptnty no ~sh to bank, Wbt mt QUICKER l'OO CALL. w/ blJc, RH, 11tk. 642-9788 2833 lfa.rbor Blvd. n~ QUICltEJ' YOU SELL tvtt. O:ltta Mesa 54G-Wl1
CA MARO
'!i8 CAMAl'tO 3 speed 1ld, R/
11, P$. yellow w/blk Int.,
Htllrt A1t1ck, mu.~111eu. Prl·
vale party. 6.U-8412
SOCK IT TO 'EM!
' )
1966 FORD
CONY!RTllLI! GAL. 900 1 llTll
Roy1! Bl u• Mi1t mel•llic flni1h with Blick
lop. 4 •P••"' tr11111ni11lon, pow•t 1l•tr.in9,
power br1k•1, r•dio, h11t•r. N•t' new lir11,
tic, Lie. No. TVR217.
$895
1966 FORD
COUNTIY' SQUIRi 10 _rASS. WA•ON
D•t•rt lilt• with 1111fch\ftg lnl•tlor, Lu9•"
9191 lop ••c•, 1utom1lic tr1n1mi11ion, rt•
dio, he•t•r, power •l•erin9, power br1 k•1,
powtr windowi, c1nt1r f1cin9 th;rd Jiii,
f~cloty 1ir, •le. Lie. No. SVX 110
1966 FORD
GAL. 100 4 DOO• HAIDTOP
B••11111dt 81u• mtt•llie fi"i1h with m•tchinq
inl•ri•r. 352 CIC •n9lnt . Aiitom•lic lr•n•·
minion, t1d1o, h1tf1r, pewfr sf1•rln9, f•c·
tory •ir, •le. Lie. No. RTR ~17.
'$1495
,1964 CHRYSLER
NIWPOlT 4 DOOl SIDAN
W11liil'l9io11 Blu• mtltllic finiih with mttcli0
ing inttrlor. Automtlic lrtnimiitio n, 11din,
~.1ter, ,ow1t. 11••'1119, •11.,,.er b'••••· ftt·
lerv 1ir. Ue. Ii•· MQF 611." ,, '895
.' "
1966 CADILLAC
SIDA.ff 01! VILLI
51,1•1119 Arctic. white with bl 1'~ fn11rlor and
bl•ck l1nd•u roof. Fully luxury e111uipp•d,
1uto..-tr•n•~ RIH, PS, PW, 6'·w1y 1e1t, ftc·
tory 1ir cond .. •le. !SMD 853 )
$2995
' l967 CONTINENTAL
4 DOOR
B•tutifu1 Gold B•ig• Miil fi ni1~ with
1•ddl1 l•elh•r inl•rior and bltck 11n·
d1u roof. Fuily luiury •quil'p•d . ..,ulo •
"'~tic fr4n1 mi11i""· ..,M • FM ,,dio,
pow•r 1l•1rJn9, pow1 t br1k•1. i'OWtl
window1, 6 • w•v sent. til t iletring
wh,fll, f•clory tir, doo, loc••. •le.
E1c•ll111t throughout. Lie. No. UUY
000
JOHNSON & SON
IS OFl'ERINc< OVER
200 FINE CARS
fROM WHICH TO CHOOSE!
USED CAR DEPT. 540·5635
• THESE FINE AUTOMOBILES
ARE PRESENTLY BEING OFFERED
AT OUTSTANOING 'PRICE SAVINGS!
..• BUY NOW ANO SA VEI
1963 LINc!OLN
CONTIN!NTAL
4 Donr 1ed1n. Gold Mi1t fini1h with Llonlli
l•ath1r inl1rior, Autom11fc tr1n1111luion, rii•
dio & htel•r, pow1r 1i••rln9, pow1r br1k•1,
powtr window1, 6°w1y 1111, f1cto1y •Ir,
Lie. No . LGP 776
1964 FALCON
•UTUU •
2 door h•rdlol', 160 VI, Arctic Wh!f• 'wltlf
TwrC1uoi1• interior, 1utom11Jc tr1n1mlulonJ
•adin end h••ltr, p•W•r tte•rin9 .. A t•e
good grtd11alion tprcl1I~ llN IJI.
1966 T·llRD
U.NOAU
f1,ili1h Gr11n fiftith wlffl llfo\l~hl119 lllt•·rter
•nd bltck l11'1d1u rotf. "'11llv luxurv tqulp,..d.
..,uto"'•lic tr•ntr11i111•n, t•tllo, h•tltr, power
1t1•ring, pow•r Lr1k11, 6-wty ,,.1, f•clory
•ir. Ljc. No. RTI '124
1964 CONTINENTAL
4 DOOR
fbo11y llaclr fln;th will\ S1tlCJ1 Lt1th•t llll•r•
lor. L11xury •qulppr4, 111to")1flc tr1n1mlt.
1<011, ttdlo, h11l•r; pow•t •*••rlnt, pew•r
bra•••· 6-way •••'· f1ctory .r,, "ow1r wll1·
dowt, lo)" rniltt. Tr1d•d by orl9l11il twn•r'
•1t 1 new Conti11111t1I. Uc. YEP SM.
JOhhSOD+SOD·
·11noom®l!.\ll (gllJl!'lll\ll!Hi1Yil~ • lil6l~IX Jll • UIElllllll\l~J. Olllll\lll6ll
MU H-IOUl.IVAU, COITA MllA
'
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I
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I
I
!
i
I
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t
• •
.-
~ ~!..PILOT' :.. Tllun6q, JuM 26, 1~
:stt1f-ono-r-Students-bead Hu·ntmgton.-High ·Gr-aduates
' '
• • \ '
_,.
CAIJIGlllM = ---
at·
' ' -•
The Guaranteed The Guaranteed
• Growth Plan.
Depo11t$1,000 or more •. When all your money and ln1tre1t
remain at our gulni;st.1115.25% annual rate, compounded dally,
your account win g,ow·
, · · 3.0% .in S_years
.I '\
23% fu.4 years
r 171% in·.3 years
• Income Plan.
Open an account of $1,000 or more for 36 to eo months. We'll
OUM•sll1youa5.25% annual rate, COlnJ)OUllded dally, with 119
1nte1'91t peld ~to you each quarter.
In cue Of hlrd•hlp ~tmtrgency, you may.withdraw the neoet-
Ml'Y funda at lht end of .ttf qUll'let llld.get fUll lntereat to that
date. GuansntMd lnllntt Pllnl MMll lat/ 1.
•The Bonus Plan
Here'• a 3-year account that lete your savings earn y, % more
elieti ye.r than Pusboc>k accounts do. They naw earn at a 5%
ann\lal rate. So Sonua Plan aeoounta currently earn 5.25% a year
when the bonus la credited.at the end of the 3-year period. lnveat
any amount, In inultlplea of $1,000. Interest can be transferred
quarterly to a paaabook account and, when held for a year and
compounded t,lally, wtn earn 5.13% •
•The Basic Plan.
The most flexible plan. You can Invest any amount of money
and withdraw It whenever you wish. If you leave all your money
and Inter~ In your account for a year at our current 5% annual
rate with Interest compolinded dally, you'll receive an annual yield
of 5.13%. You earn Interest from the day you deposit your money
'Ill the day: you withdraw It. And the money you deposit by ttse
10th Of any month earns lntereetfrom the 18!, when It remains until
quarter'• end.
For all details on these 4 maximum interestp)ans, come in and see us now •
•
More than ever, .. the place for the money you can't afford to rllld
California Federal Savio.gs
nd I.con AMCiatloo •II omc... A91dS..., SL.5 Jimoe I
NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL
ANAHEIM OFl'ICE: IOO N. EUCUD AVE.• nf.2222
COSTA MESA OFl'ICE: 2700 HARllOR llLVD. • Ml-2300
ORANGE OFl'ICEi 3110 W. CHAPMAN AVE.• .. aoa3
HNttOtllco: 5970-BMS., l.OIArQelel
At-at••-.. tolU.000 ........ lweC .. -.i"""''1-:41!ti&•a-aQICS1111•111•••4a ... -•-lllllUillll ... 1CGt•• ..
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