Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
1969-07-08 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
• • • . . . . ; ·~ .. --J.. . :..-~ ~ ..... :::..-~~~~~--:-·~-~so~s~ep~e~ve ... t" .... ·:.,-.-... • • ' '·' :;::_·~e~"~:·~At~i:d~ts · .. p.Uari:tt_F~r ~heft - .. . """" -· ...... ....,... ........ • • . -' . -. . .. •• \ --, I -" .. . •. ' . --... .,...,.. .,.;.;;. • . ... ·-•"'i • _;-,~ • ..,., • . _ .. -. . =~-,;-· . •' --. ~ _...~ ... --·· ~ . ~· . • -.. ' • . . ' • ~"""iot Mo.~h Roo1n at Tep fl Unmarked ~odyEyed For Clues DAILY PILOT ~I , A youth Involved In ·• 1968 shooting episode with a Stanton police officer slip- ped from unconsciousness i n to fnysteriou! death Monday in t h e emergeocy room cf Stanton Community HOspltal. Coroner's deputies today are examining the unmarked body of Jerry Naranjo , 19, o{ 10692 Court. St., Stanton, in an attempt to determine what caused his death. The ·dead youth was with "' Paui Aguilera, 11, on Feb.· 9, 1~, when AguUera~was ·snot and killed by a blluet ! nfrom ;~ M of a Stanicni rp&Uve '.P,ticeman. Officer~AU!Q Christian, 42, or Hun--: • .., * * * 1oc * * * tlESDAY .AFTERNOON;--JtltY-8;-11969~-~- VOL. '2. NO. tU. I IKTIONI. M 'AG£1 ·1st TrQops :fly ' • I ' ' Home :From ~ar .A • ~ ...... ....., ' Ungton .. B~, was lat.er acquitted ,of , F~li'iiiafuujti~liiai'ig~eisii'iilie'ai?.iiiiiif'::......--:J'.lceHOR97dR-l'ORCE~ASE;-ll'a:m---'l'llieu;"VicM'r<!idenHiguyl!lF<lao~K Ponce said Nar8.ni·o was brought to the CAP) -The' first U.S. troops to be pulled and Oetense Minlstef Gen •. Nguyen Vin out of 1Vi:etnam by President.Nixon wing-Vy. • ~tal by an older brother, Daniel. He ed homeward in nine.jet transports_today ·· Thieu and Ky w~.e surp~ last diek without regaining consciousness. after a sendoff marked by ~tary fan-minute arrivals, just before the soJdi~s: Thei'e were no marks of violence on his fare and the thanks of Saigon officials. marched to their waltiilg C141 Slarlifter body, ofli~rs said. Gen. Creighton w. A!Sfims, . cpm-aircraf_t •. They passed ~W!l the rllfl!a of · The brother told police he saw two mander ol American forces in Vietnam, the fatigue-clad Americans, shaking UQknown men ,bring Jerry home un· told the 814 men in the first contingent of hands and thanking ·them for their 25,000 U.S. tr09P11 beihg.wlthdrawn : '"You services. Conscious and carfy· him into the · hollse occupy, a signifi cant moment in history." Addressing the ·departing battilion. shortly before noon Monday. .. A gala welcome awaited the jn-Thieu said : ''Together we have repelled One way lo get clos·e to ·Linda Isle, swank Irvi~e Co. develcipment in Newport J-larbor, is to fly over it. l:lorsesboe-shapecl island, last of 'six in· lbwer bay to be developed , has 108 Jots, all of which already have be'en leased.-.lsle dwellers will pay between OAll.Y PILOT ....... 1W Dlll "-kw $56,-000 and $250,000 over 75-year life of lease for privilege af residing in.exc;Jusive digs. Irvine Co. dfficials figure most expens'ive house built on island so far cost $400,000. Th't doesn't include' price of The coroner's office is conducting en fantrymen,.almost all veterans o( com· ·communist aggression,.,nUs bas been OW' 8utopsy to determine the cause of-death. bat, at this Air Force base, near Ft. goal and our purpose. A deputy said a report could be expected Lewis and the city of Seattle. Wednesday. Aguilera and: Naranjo were stopped by Army chief of Staff Gen, William C. police for qUHtioning at 2:30 a.m. Feb. 9, Westmoreland, a former U__..S. com- 1968. When Aguilera broke and ran, of· mancfer · Jn Vietnam, flew in from ficer Christian shouted warnings to ha lt Washinston with decorations for five of * * * ·Reds Expected lease· on lot. ~ ·1,3 Hurt, Two Serio~ly ·1ti Two Mesa Accide.nts Thirteen persons were injured In a pair of niultipJe.Veh.ide traffic C?'litions ,~t occurred only one mile· and three hours apa'tt., ~ under almost i d e n t I c a I circwnst.aoces li'i the" Orange County . Airport lrea Monday. Two of the injured remain hospitalized with Jerlous injui'ies today. Six cars an<f a large truck were damaged or demolish- ed., One accident occurred at Bristol. Street and; Paularino Avenue"' inside the Costa Me!a clty lim it.t. Tht seco~d major smlshup t~ee hours later Vi.as, at Red. llill\and Main Street, north of Ora nge comlty1 Airport, in unincorporated ter· rltory. • . Stewart, 11, of 1845 Anaheim Ave., Costa Mesa, drove thf .. third vehicle.involved, but escaped ~njl,ll'Y. Inv~aton for the California Highway Patrol sa1d the accident at Red Hill Avenue and Main Street about 3 p.m., ocetlfl!?d wben ·.8 car driven by an Arizona'viailOr wes'hit broadside. Miss Joann Karnas, 18, Of Tempe, Arli.o wai ,headed .\vest on ·Main Stfett when her cai wa.c; struck· by Mra. Mary J. Jones, "" of-13441 ' Epping ·way. 'Tustin, sending it on .a 1pin into the third automobile. . . Mrs .. Jones is listed. in satisfactory con- (See ACCIDENTS, .Page !) C.Ounty Fliers &ash, Rescued_ SAN DIEGO (AP)'-Two Marine Diers were rescued Monday after their F4B Phantom jet fighter crashed at sea 45 miles northwest of San Diego. Reported in good condition were the pilot, Maj. Charles C. McLennan, 34, of 2114 Deodar, Santa Ana, and his radar intercept .cfficer, lst Lt. Jerry Hiersche, 25, of 21621 _Wesley, South Laguna Beach, both atatloned at El Toro Milrine Air Sta· tion. A helicopter from Imperial Beach Naval A1t Station rescued the fliers who had ejected from the aircraft. A1Marine spokemtan at El Toro said the pilot heard a muffled explosion, then saw warning lights before losing control o( the aircraft. . The flien were taken to the El Toro diSpensary for aamlnation. three times, then fired hitting the youth the retur~g ·BOldle.rs1 of the 3rd Baf.. in the head from a distance of over 50 taµon, 60th Infaptn;, 9th lr}fantry To Boost Attacks yards: Division~ Christian said he meant to fire a warn· : ·On the program ·for the next three days 1ng shot .and had no intention.of killing .. were,.speeches by. public .figures, .. band the youth. • .m,usic, a parade, a dinner, pretty ,gitQI BILL WOULD BARE PARKING FINE FEE SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A bill to ease the frustration of parking violators cleared the Assembly C r i m i n a I Procedure Committee Monday. The committee sent to the lower house floor a measure by Sen. Anthony C. Bellenson (D-Beverly Hills), requiring that drivers cited for violations of local parking ordinances be given a written notice of the amount of ball. Be.Henson noted many Calilomla cllles refuse to give a motorist such in· format!On unless he appears personally to pay the fine or forfeit the ball. and , in many cases, family reunions-. '.'. ~ Among those w"°·.11aw, lM:troops off. at 'Eaq Son N.hut airport Tuesday were 'South Vietnamese President NguyeD' Van SAIGON (URI) -Th•· first of 25,000 U.S. ·soldiers-being withdrawn, from Viet,.. nam left [or home today, Toril~t, two Communist rockets stru~ a V1etnainese shipyard on 1fie outskb1s-11t:-Satgon, .rt.artlng fires ..that ijt up, the. ski~ of ·the caJjit81. · ' · · Allied military officials already were B predicting a new wave of C.Ommunist at-Throng rowses tacks in the coming weeks as the South Vletnames• Army bogins taking up JlO'I· tions left open by the Americans. The Through Store; :;,r;.' or th• ••ta•ks was n•• 1ong Jn com· . , , No . ca.sualUes ~ wete reported ~tm- $4 '7~ 1 ,Coat&. Gon:e 'l'~~~:h1 ;,:.1;~~g·~ 1o'store ,. ' .... -'" f ·1 ....... !la """ ~: ,..., _ . ',,. ( '-~·. 't· ·~ ue "'ff mes,.,...ow~~rnore.__,1'.avu ~N;iagetli :ot,aa :sma_ll .c h• C., w~.en's k,et~.inld.t~\i~s · throwittl out, at Ught wta~P'~~d .C~tal.Mesa pallet:~~ 'that ~as· clearJg ~slble from downtOwn oQk~ .. ~ fur coat thilft,.~ ln· .: , Saigon', three mile~~to the norttM;all\r It =~·tini;v~lng gang ol w~waU yras;the fi(st irocket_:at~a~~, since 1~tur-By"th~ 'lime· the throng of 40• to 50 day when two rockets.dtd litUe damage. wanQered put of Judy's, ~ :SouUt Coast Pl~·~ sf:Ort• a P!'l!r of.If ox 1fur-:ll~ coatsllad vanished with them, accordiiig Cou&·I ' , ' Costa Mesa po\lce satd the 11 :$0 a.m. c0111slon ~W"a s triggered when a ll'uck rumliling south on Bristol Str~t ranune;ct a --car _carn;Jng five .girls . west on Paularlno Av~nue. · Truck driver Isaias G. Vielma Jr., 28, of 1813 N. Bradley Ave., Santa A"na, said the light was green the last time he look· ed but 'Miss Pamela S.-Sbewmaker, 19, oF11$'1'81 Tustin Village Way, TuStin, also '.City Hall~ Loses Th .. is One to the report.. · · • · • · · Pitrobltan·Rk:bard Johnson said clerks kepL a-suspicious watch on the oddly large crowd o[ shoppers, especially a very fat woman with an · Afro-Asian hairdo. Weaqter Falr ,skies will rclln along,the: 1 • Checking. around the premises af~ Beach Co_uncil 'Denk~ Permit for 'Underground' Store =:·:O~~g"f."11~:A~i:: 1 ,. .A · "b11rg, wllo, rePonect the loss to the chain Orange Coasl Wedneoday wJih·tho mercurr ranging~fr&n the upper- 70's to the lower M)'s depending on your proximity to lhe cool sea said she entered lhe crossing on a green By RICUAl\D P. N~ light.· . . Of flit °"" .......... f.olice are sUII investigating fact"? 1n· Vndel'lfOUod. City Hall 1Urfaced in lbil crasb-today. -· , -~T ·--~lllllblglon 8-h-council cham~·Mon·. Wss rui.wmaker, her s1Sfer Paula, lit day nl&lll loni _,gh lo.'!l*' p !lllPWJ ~engers Gail Hartm&ff, J7.,an,d · _Jor'bus~1liceut~Limacfd~pij.N\ t.atrrlil V" ).dams, )8, all of llie• ~ .... r spirited defense. . ';;w - • Vi~e Way address, were. trea~ ti In a H spilt, """"~ upbild Ult cl--collfr-!lt"a -Memorlol Hospthlt-llJld, b';'<lerk and clelli0ct·a'-1tctn.o '•~ the· reieAsed. 1o rt;COf'd, dor9 operaUon at 111-Maln St. The driver of a fourth car sideswiped Coundltnan Htrtry' Kattman dinerlted by .,t ebicles scattered in the collisiori, and Councilman Donald Shipley ,. wu Ka~meen A. St. Louis, ta, of 2141 Men-absent. do1.4 Drive, Cosla Mesa , and her "l can see no r~ w!!f. there lhocM pasSenger. Yvonne E. Del.and, 18, of ~l . not be a record lltore hi jl\lt--cfummy Mission Drive, Cost.a Meaar were Jlso· block,'L-ta.it Newvor;i Beach attorney trea~ and releMtd. i-..;.. Arthur Strock,-referr1ng to~ downtown Offictr James Blaylock said Karen A. bus~ ~il&ht. .. . ..L'__ _·_· -- S~ represented lthe, appll~nts 1or was 'operaµnS, without a business license, &tote'.s h~~rters. , 1·h •· bul-lieerioe, J..,.., T., BllU('r. •he aaid, a·•fgrt appeared ·In tlje window: Her atory ~tched perfectly .with an·in; 26, a·t{aa,.,, 11Ii:1tani:Ja· lnllh Seim,! In "Closed ~Y the man to hassl• you." · • . ,clil!'1f a!,111!:it l.BkeivQQ<I shop 'more !liiD .~-M~,·~StephenA..~~t.3,. -• He~~a-:riato0ttc1r"ilaitr' AM~ a 'Wee\ ago, 'tn ,Whl~-a-ttocty:womap • ... 11'-"~M~~ · ' 1 • ! ~dririi!ng.•·bou.ta, draped window1. aoil .thett Suspe;cl was chued from the store, 'On the bUfli._ol ctftlcal ·wrllten polke .muilc arid lililghter.wlthin. p0llce said. , · ~rta,'he chauenaed Polleecapt. Earle · . The attorney ; cferil,.r any proof ol Descril>id io that . case as .• havlng an Robitaille'• dacription .of the premlae.s narcoUcs use or drinking bouts. ,Afrc>;Asian }\ail'§t):le, ~ 119rt.ly woman ., "compJetaJy ~Y·"-' "\\thin," he asked, "would an urbane, managed to escape her pursuers, drop-Rob~ y wbo bad parapl'\rued, isopbbticat«I commtqtity such aa Hun-ping a fox fur·lincd coat e;U.cUy like became more opectlle; H•·.lild· "In-;tlngton Beach "cen.or mU8lc, laughter, !hose reported stolen cMooday. ·- •eotflltlg alflctra found cockroaches, :~th and drawn blindl." • Unable lo describo any .others among lf<llch,alrt·aoi! mlct." . Strock >also dented a -repor1 of com· ·the 40 lo lO J><lSOllll wl\O allegedly the police c1pta1r\ told ol a recording 'murl4l bathing. He aakt there Is no place • covered for the obese 1boptlfter, etore pla~ through a pu~li< adctress syatem ·on Ult preml.., for bathing of any kind. clerks said only they were natural· look· at the store whfcb~be delcrlbed as "filthy Butler, a history teacher at Esltlncia ing. breezes. \ .... ~ ' . "'\ ~ ~ .. m'SiDll ToDAY . . and foul.'1--• ' . -.llil!h(Scliool and ll~blweiilll•btiketball -some of tbe -· U..y added, wore-:no .• ' Alter _police ·closed the premlaes , thal .. ,(flee STORE, Pip I) lh!rta. '------------' ~· .... (.'' ' . .. • DAILY PILOT Slaff,_ .. Sidewalk Superintendent • Christopher Columbus Wyall, 4, Huntington Be~cb, tak_es i.t easy while watching sk.iploade~ in action 1----ccU,Ollday in-downtown-Huntington Beach. Workmen were clearing 1!>1 al 629 Main Sl. alter knocking down old building which, until recenUy, housed laumlry_llilll nniform supply company. N~on Urges ' Expansion Of Insurance WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pruldenl Nl>oo today u'l'd Collp<u to tll]>llld coverage ~~gymen!_ insurance to --.:IKKl~OOO more workers and to increase tienellts. Jn a special message, Nixon said that while over S7 million workers are oow covered, almost 17 million are not- mor:e than half of them employes of it.me and local governments. The President said the additlonal 4.1 million workers he wants covered "are Jn real need of protection against unempJoy. menl" (He asked lhlt the followin& be brought .dnder the lnsuran« wnbrella: '-400,000 on large fanns employing four or more workers in each of 20 weeks. -200,000 in agricultural processing ac- tlvillea. • -1,800,000 ln nonprofit organh.atlons. . -eoo,ooo in state bospilals a n d universities. 1 -;ooo saJesmen,-de--Uvery-vadesrnen and ~en not cumntly defined as employes. Grove Motorist Killed in Crash INDIO (UPI) -Author!Ues are seek· ing the driver or a camper truck involved in an accident wblch killed one motorcy· cle rider and seriously injured three olhers early Monday on Interstate 10. The California Highway Patrol said the dri ver was sought on felony hit-run charges. Officers said Marvin Currier, 46, of Garden Grove, was killed when the camper hit his cycle. His passenger, Jean Stoicu, 25, ol Santa Ana, was seriously ln· jured. Howard Olson, 22, and Audrey Patrick. 21, both of South Gate, were Injured when their motorcycle fell as the camper 1werved In lront or them. Minnten1an Launched VANDENBERG AFB IUPl)-Tho Air Foree launched its :50th Minuteman missile today from this coastal Strategic Air Command base down the western test range. DAIL\ PI LOT .....,.., ..... 11 ............... MillM.... .........,...,. ._ .... CAUIOUI ... ~NfGI CW1 lllUM.ISMIMO CCW.N.H'r l•\•r'I N. W••• •"911111\t ... ....i .... J•~• •. Cwl.y n. ... 1: ... 11 ·-n ..... A. .... ,,hint ~l.tllW • ' 7 Syrian Jets Grounded By Israel in Air Duel -· -. ilouoot PnA lllteru~ Iaratll Ogbttli 1plant1 abot'-dnn 1even Syrian MIG21 jell In-a »mlml1e air bat.. Ue today, an llratlJ army s119.Gmmn.J1.~ ~-iilTel Aviv.---iie said lhe Israelis suffered no losses. It was the fourth air battle wilhin a week. In previous engagement.a dlll'.ing lhe week hraell jeta shot down five Egyptian jels in dogfights over the Gulf ol Suer and the Red Sea. Today's battle was the biggest aerial baUle between Israeli and Syrian forcr,s since end of the 1967 six-day war and brought to 3& the number of Arab planes Israel has reported shooting down since then. · · The fight represented another major escalation cf the Mideast conflict that United Nations Secretary General Thant told t.be Security Council Monday had turned into "open warfare." The Tel Avlv military spokesman said today's dogfight took place above the llraelk>=pied Golan heights along the Israeli-Syrian bonier. The spckesman said the battle began when Syrian planes penetrated Israeli· cootrolled air apace. He said all seven of F r om Page l • STORE ... coach, said he was disappointed at so much controversy and was anxious to cooperate with the community and police. Mayor Jack Green a.sked why he had chosen a blighted area to start a recOrd store. "Lets of young people and cheap rent," said Butler. The mayor aaked if he knew that 1 large record stori across the street had gone out of business. Butler said he did not. Councilman George McCracken said he passed the building last week and saw perscns drinking beer in the store win-- dow. , "lt seems like you would know you have to control your business," said McCracken. Strock llkened the situation to college fraternity beer drinking. "Haven't you advertised in the Free Prw?" asked Green. Scblnner said they bad not. The mayor asked about the name "Underground City Hall." Strock said it had been plagiarized fro ma Texas store now cut cf business. He 1ald It was not meant to needle the city but to be witty. Councilmen seemed unamused, the Syrian planes shot down crashed inlo Syrian te.rritoey. The situaUoo was so seriOUJ that .,\rah diplomatic sources in Rome reported Egypt was calling up reserves. Earlier today Egyptian commandos stabbed across the Suez Canal and reported killing 30 Israeli soldiers and destroying military equipment in a Sinai Desert base. Israel said It repulsed the raJd, lost no men of it!: own and killed eight in the attack force. The air battle coincided with new nareups cf fighUng along the Jordanian bordera and the Syrian borders. There were reports the anned forces chiefs of staff of Iraq, Syria, Jordan and Egypt were meeUng in Damascus to plot strategy against Israel. DamMCUs is barely 40 miles from the site of today's air battle. flroM Pa9e l ACCIDENTS -. • • dltlon today at Hoag Memorial Hospital, Newport Beach, with multiple rib frac- tures, culs and bruises. Mrs. Audrey L. Hill, 34, of 2320 Clay St., Newport Beach, was also listed in satisfactory condition with rib fractures, cuts, bruises and a possible concussion. Mrs. HJll and her children Richie, 9, and Kelsey, 6, v.·ere passengers in the Jones car. Treated for minor injuries and released were Miss Kamas, her passenger, Shella Sayewicb, 18, also of Tempe, the two Hill children and Mni. Ruth H. Young, 45, of 624 Seaward Road, Ccrona del Mar. She was the driver of lhe third car involved. Soviet Squadron Will Visit Cllha 1.IOSCOW (UPI) -A Sovie naval squadron armed with nuclear weapons steamed across the Atlantic today headed for a visit to Havana in what a Soviet newspaper said was a mission to strengthen relalions between the two na- tions. The Soviet force includes a rocket cruiser, two screeWng ships, two sub- marines, a mother ship and a tanker, the Soviet news agency Tass said. The squadron will vlsit Havana July 20- 27 following training aercises in the mld· Atlantic, Tau said • The NOSE Knows Newpor t Attacks Siva mp G™ S_mell By JANICE BERMAN or "'-0.111 , • ._. ft111 There's something in the air in West Newport. But by the end of summer, it may be &one, thanks to Project NOSE. The ac1'0nym stands for "Noxious Odor Seepage Elimination." It wa1 coined by the llafl of City Attorney Tully Seymour. 'Ille men from NOSE hope to brtng on end to the noxious porill of swamp 1as e.manatlng from wett of lhe Arches Bridge. 'Ibe smell ls Iamlllar to any traveler of Pacific CoaSt Highway. NOSE represent.I the cUY of Newport Beach, the Balboa Coves Community Association and the Unlon Oil Co., whlCh has a gas station at 3939 West Coast Hlghway. 1be three groups will aech kick in roughly one.third of the 110,soo required to build 1 burner to get rld of the rotten· egg aroma that comes with unburned 1w1mp gas aeepage. The city's part o( the cost will come out of the general fund, ond the money is ex· peeled to be approved as soon aa the plan ls presented to lhe councU, within u-ie next three weeks. But first it must win the approval of Uruon Oil 's legal ataff ln San Francisco, according to Phil Bettencourt, city ad· ministrative assbtant. Union Oil will hire a Jinn to begin the construction as IOOll as the agretment is reached by the three parties. Sharing ol the cost is neceuary, Bet- tencourt explained, because "thtrt reallr, isn't any cfear municipal respons.lblllty ' for the smell. "Tho direct bentllt wtll be to people ol the Balboa Coves communUy and the operators of the service station," he said. 1be homeowners' aMOClation wUI pay for Ill &hare out of its own treasury. The miJslon ol the men from NOSE wiU be to beef up an eJ.istin& network of under1round SCl\.~na:er lines by inst.ailing two more, plus 1 burner, on a small piece of property owned by Balboa Covu 1d- jacent to lhe gu atation. Then, lnste&d of the gas being sucked Into 1 stack en top of the 1as station, as Is now tho case, ttie smell Wlll be burned off before lt reaches the atmosphere. • • • r ' .. Space Monkey D·ies-~-( '/ Deat h Sur prise s NASA Officials ~ASA offldolo said U autopsy WU "hil hearlbeol lo II per minute ad I ' From · )Ylte s.iv1cet ' · _ HONOLULU -Aslr-olt Bool11 dJM early today 12 hours after lhe monkey put down in the PacUlc Ocean following 130 orbits around earth in a space c"""1<, \!IO· u.i. 1poco 1111ency rel)Ortod,- O(dered lmmedWt!Y Jo.Jiii .bloul•llll• mady... . la.l)oratory traller where the monkey hid Charle,, Wilson, projett managu rar I been under intensive care ainoe -the N~a Am~I Research Labori\tory in touchdown. Sunnyvale~ Calif., said the '92 m!UIOO ex· .'!.ll was-Sudden~ Brad-Evans.,. public information officer for the Na· tional Aeronautics and Spaoe Administration. "He.had been in fair con· <'We ~ 1111 ldu thll heJai lhal eloM ~ perlment wu ended ali<r the mOl)key to:..ieath, ' addod-Evan1. "fleC..]°"" llUd-Ullal.JoJupond.Jo ilgnall_aboard .the denly fell off." space c1psuler NASA officlals scheduled a news coo-11Hls lack of response was interpreted ditlon just belqre.I' • - fereoce to dilcuss the unexpected climax to indicate a stuggiahness which lf allow· of the aborted space mission. • · ed to continue, could have led to aerlous 'Ille 14-pound monkey, ,elhauated and bored, was brought back lo ear(h' mare than three weeks early aod, aplalhed down in his J;i'i.osatelllte 3 some 25 mil~ off Kauai, Hawaii. , · Evans said it was llUll too early to call deter!m:aUon," Wllsoo said. the mJss.ion a flilure, aayhlg "it depends Boony WU launched from Cape Ken- on data already received." , ned)' June 28 into wel&hUess orbit 225 to "We bad been hoping for a minimum t46 miles above the eirth. Observers deacrltied America's space monkey as limp 00' allve when flown by Air Force helicopter to W:wall's Hickam A1r Force base. 14-day mission for suCct_,; .. he said. The monkey'a performance on uslgned Before death, a team Of 15 doctors, taaka declined rapidly during hiJ first veterinarians and . technicians worked week in orhlt and his metabollc state - over the llttle primate to ·1 pa~ble cooveralon of t'ood into energy -dropped medical van, and a doc~ bad rtparted to a lower level. Laguna Hills Firm Pleads Not Gajlty 'Windward' l(eeping-Vp Record· Pace in Transpac SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Robert LOS-A:Nc·EtE$1AP) -A -judge-set--.Johnson's Wlnd.,,ard-Passage-sliced July 22 for trial of an Orange County through light seas at a record--tireaking housing development firm that pleads in-pace P.1onday to maintain the overall lead nocent to federal charges cf making U. in the ~th Transpacific yacht race to I 1 !'ti I lg co 1 ibuti ns Honolulu. ega po 1 ca campa n n r 0 · The 7S-footer from aI.ahaina Yacht Robert Rosenwald, vice president of Club of Hawaii was rl'i.aking about nine Rossmoor Ccrp. of Laguna Hills, entered knots and was 700 miles from San Pedro tJJe plea Monday before Judge Albert ~et in the 2,225-mile nauUcal race. Stephens Jr. in U.S. District Court. 'Illis wu cornea-red to 640 miles ou.t !or Rossmoor lawyers said they will ask the same time m l~ when the Ticorr · deroga, also skippered by Johnson, set ror a delay-to-prepare arguments on corr · the record o1 nine dayr,13imtttrl1id st.2. stitutiooal Issues. minutes. The company was Lodicted June U on Blackfin, wblch reported generator and two co_unts cf violating the Comipt·Prae-radio troubles earlier, said the difficulties tic:es Act, which prohlhlta corporations were cleared up "lnd the vessel wu bl .1e- f makin trib lo UU } cond place. M!r WU third. c:dJdates. g con ut m ,to Po ca No report was a~a11able on the distance It is one of several tndictmenta between Blackfln and Wlndwatd Passage nsuJUng from a three.year, natk>nwide because of poor visibility. investigation by the Internal Revenue Service. One count charges Rossmoor gave $2,041 to a 1!164 candidate for the 27lh Congressional District seat in the House of RepresentaUves. The other charges $5,000 was given to a 1964 U.S. Senate candidate from California. Neither candidate wu named. Marine General Hit DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) -Maj. Gtn. William K. Jones, cwnmander of the U.S. 3rd Marine Division, was wounded ln the hand by a bullet Sunday .near bls bead- quartera at Dong Ha, Marine spokeamen said. Become ·a ' TWelve knot winds were reported witli Jour.Joot aw~el~ls~. ___ _ The class standings were, in order.: A: Rascal, Concerto, Wi ndward Passage, Blatldin (tle for third). B: Jubilation, Salada, Starling II. C: Esperance, Argonaut, Numse II. (lie !or second). D: Valkyrie 11, Hetaera, Aventura (Ue for second). ln the handicapped standings, Esperan- ce and Argonaut were the overall lead era. (Transpac hi&fillghts via direct radio reports from the nett are presentict dally on KOCM, 103.1 FM l!l 3 and 7 p.m.) Cypress Holdup Men Wound Store Manage1· A Cypress store manager Is in serious coodJtlon today from 1 gunshot wound in· fllcted during a holdup Monday nlgl>t of the Tic Toe Market, 6021 Orange Ave .• Cypress. Police aaid Donald Earl Ames, 47, of Cypress, crawled to a telephone and call· ed olllcers after being mot In the upper portion of the right leg by one of two men who robbed Ilia store. Healthier, Happier, Thinner • You at Holiday Health Spas ESCAPE to a private luxury where sophisticated w1ight reducing meth ods make embarrassing pounds vanish" ~uicktY, an d gently. INCOMPARABLE ••••••••FREEi FREEi FREEi•••••••• FACILITIES • • • He1'9d Rom1n ! Special· loin 1oday • • . ~1"9 Pool • • • tnM ...... • • • REalVE YOUR PRIVATE • Conditioning F1clllries • • • • • Rom•n Steam Rooms • SWIM CLUB MEMBERSHIP • • Eltetronic Ml•Att • • • • • Flnnl1h Rock Savn1 • • ·-· • Swim In a Btavtifvl Outdoor • • • • Floirid1 S• Tan l ooms • Olymplc Size Htaltd Pool • • • • Whirlpool l •th• • • • Offer Good For Limited Time Only • • Conditioning Faclhtle• • • • • • Swiss fMl•I MlchlnH •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COMPUTE FACILITIES FOR MEN & WOMEN Coll or Stop by Today For Your fNe Tour H@lu&©\~ HEALTH SPA ! . " '' I I' • --- ' • 1 4 I I '1 I • . ' .. J • • Boutin I VOL 62, NO;'l62, 2 SECTIONS, -26 PAGES • ~ Sidewalk S11peritatendent ' ' • • • . .. Today's Fin~ ORANGE"'COUNTY, CAUFORNIA TUESDA 'i, JULY t, '1969 " TEN CENTS Boy 0 Stanton Youth Involved in Shooting A youth involved ln a 1968 lhooUng from the gun of 1 Stanton rtserve episode wlth a Stanton police officer slip-. policeman. • • ped from unconsciousness I 0 t 0 Officer Allen Christian, 4%, ot l:lun-~ · nda lington Beach, wu later acquitted of my:ner10W1 death Mo y in t h e manslaugbler charges in the shooting. emergency room c:r Stanton Community Police JI.id Naranjo was brought to the Hospital.. hospilal by an older brolber, Daniel. He Coroner's deputies today art examining died without regaining coMCiouaness. the unmarked body of Jerry Narapjo, I&, There were Db maria of violence oD his of 10691 Court St., Stanton, in an atlempt body, officers aald. to determine what caused his death. The brother told police he saw two The dead youth. was with Paul unknown men bring Jerry home un- Aguilera, 18, on Feb. 9, J968, when conscious and carry him into the house Aguilera was shot and killed by a bullet 5hartly before noon Monday. Zone Chatage Asked DAILY •1LOT llatt ...... Huntington Central Park ·The coroner'• offict ts cond~n autopsy Co d~termine the cause /"dea A deputy said a report could be Vtedneltlay. , Aguilera and Naranjo Were stepped by police for questioning at 2:30 a.m. Feb. e; 1968. When Aguilera broke and ran. of- ficer Olristlan shouted warnings to ,halt thrie" times, then fired hitting the youth in the head Crom a distance of over 60 yards. Cbriatia.n said he meant to fin a warn· ing shol ana liad no intenUon ot tUl1Dg the youth. TAKE A BUNNY TO LUNCH TODAY Citizens of Huntington Beach have bee~-:. exhorted to "find suitable meam to further the care and special needs of lhe rabbit' .. by Mayor N. John V.V. Green in a special proclamallon issued today. Christopher. Columb~3ott, -4, Huntington Beach, takes it easy while \vatching, skiploader in action ~1onday in downtown Huntington Beach. Workmen were clearin.: lot at 629 f..1ain St. after knocking down old building which, until recently, housed laundry and uniform supply company. Negotiations Begin Soon Mayor Green, noting that "since lime Immemorial the rabbit has been of benefit lo mankind and that-the tender mild tasting rabbit ha! loaned Jue~ readily to a 'Ylde variety or cookery," of. ficlally cleclarN Jhe week of July H aa Rabbit '!_eek in HuntinjlOii""Beach:-Teen Culture Week Set By Huntington Council Ewel'I said the concert will be the ftrSt eveilt of the Teen CUiture Week. Sunset Beach Anne~ Petitions OK'd NegotiaUons are to begin immediately -~be~tweenJJWJtin&l!>.tlJle~cipaLof· _ ffclals and owners of at least part of the land and water to be included in. the .new HunUngton Central Park, the Clty Coun- Proposed annexation of Sunset Beach to its big neighbor Huntington Beach toot a technical step forward Monday night but could still ~ped by a majority cil ordered Monday . . The order came after Joseph Fenn told the coonciJ ~that he inlel}ds to build a mobile home park" on 15 acres of property on Gothard Sltttt south ol Slater Avenue. ne Ferm property and another 15 acres belonging to Rollo McClellan ii within the area that the city intends to buy for the central city park. purchase of the Fenn property "as soon ~." auggested that the aame negoiliUons fieOffered to othet-p1opecty- owners near Golden We.rt Street and Talbert Avenue. 1•1!111@ ' 1st 'Nixon Withdrawals' Leave Vietnam for U.S. • 1; .-· I Enthusiastic councilmen Monday ap- proved a Teen Culture \Yeek for July 1:1 through Aug. 2 in lluntington Beach to begin with a "pillow concert'' at Hun- tington Beach High School gym with an evening ol leen tnUlic furnished by the ''Canned HUt" and two Other teen bands. COllJlclJmeD agreed to pot up the $2,000 bther activilies planned incltlde a teen art show July 28, a car show·July 29, art show judging JuJy 30 at Lake. Park, a ~drama b7 youth c.il!ll ''The ~ T'mted Glass" on July 31 arid'i local surf.. ipg contest on Aug. 2 to end tht week. •• Ew ... lold the "!l'!"'il tha~"lhl• will be oom<illlng that Will bring attmtioo lo needed" to reserve the bands for the teen the cily and do something for the youth." bash at the gymnasium arid agreec!"'the ~ city would pay any losses should the event fail to raise the $9,250 it is expect· • protest of R"'IJU'.li ~ lnvolvod, . COO-If. Jll!iltllilloo 'JI IC h scbedu1'd • puOl!e liwtnc Aug. 1 at a p.m. to record prot .. ts. . City Clerk Paul J-told the eounclJ that anneutioo petitions signed by 152 of the 531 qualified electors in the an- neution area l'l!present more than the one.fourth electora\e requirement. · Cwncllmen imposed a "holding wne" on the land to insure that then would be M comtruction before the 18.1>4 was l"ln:hale4 A II million .&eneral "!>!jg•· tJoo." bond Juue was approved bJ . Uie l'Vters oa ';J°1.LDe 3 to buy \he lfiG.plus acres lo be ineluded tn the park. "This is a good way lo bankrupt clllzens," Ferm said lo the council. 11All the Ume taxes are rising and this puts a stigma on die property owner." - · McOllORD AIR FORCE BASE, \\:uh. (AP) -The llrat U .~ troopo lo be poll<d out of y1e1nam.by ~ent Nilon '!Ina· ed homeward In lllne jet .tranaports lodaY after a Bendoff marked by. military flll>- fare and the thanks of Saigon official!. Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, com- marider of American forcli in -vletnam, told the 814 men in the first contingent of 25,000 U.S. troops being withdrawn : "You occupy a significant momerit in history." communist awession. Tb.ls has been our goal and our purpose." lk ~id the South Vietnamese must begin to assume a greater share of the fighting and the replacemen~ of rallied trocps. "this Is only_ the begi.ruting of tb.b pro- cess," Thieu said~-He-noted the losses of the U.S. 9th division in South Vietnam - 1,855 killed in action -and said, ''Our duty is to make sure this sacrifice was !)Ot in vain." ed to cost. • Trustees of Huntington Beach Union l ligh School Disti;ict will be asked at their 7:30 o'clock meeting tonight to approve use of the gym by the sponsoring Recrea· tioa and Parks Department and the city's Youth Coalition Committee. Police Capl. Earle Robitaille told the council that "all precautions are being taken to control the crowd of youngsters expected for the first event put o~ by the youth committee. He poinled out that nearly all similar events in recent months have ended in r iots of some so rt in other cities. Fire Chle( Raymond Picard said the gym will hold 2,915 persons and Youth Coalition Committee Co.ch a Irma n ~ard Ewers said his group plans on• selling lhat·many lick.els at $S.50 each. Mayor Jack Green, who said he has been involved for some time Jn the plan· ning of the !:plllow e<mcert," aaid the event will be advertised locally ·only and that he felt pcili~ would take adequate prtcautions to prevent trouble. Neighborhood Vote Dooms 'People's Pad' BERKELEY (AP) -The South Berkeley Model Cities Neighborhood Council v9ted unanimously Mondty night againsl establlilhment of a summer youth hostel ip an empty Navy ho149ing unit. The Berkeley School District, .which owns the unit. had considered leasing it for two months to a group of Berkeley "street people" for a "feople 's Pad,'' to care for an expected summer in!lux of youopte.rs. Ambulances Now Legal, But Must Pick Up License Huntington Beach is going to make it legal (or ambulance companies to pick up patients and transport them to hospitals -something they'd been doing all along. City Councllmen Monday approved first reading of an ordinance which will make legal the operaUon of ambulance com- panies which pick up private paUentl at tht! call of the patient or doctors. lt·will ,require every ainbulance doing business In tho city lo buy a business lioel1!e, oometblng U.. ambulance com· panles coold not do befon: -they were operating illegally anyway. On1y one firm can operate under CWTtDL law. The ordimmce requlrea any ambulance campany wilhlng lo hluxlle polioe and fire department calls to obtain a certificate 'Of need and neCe.ulty, but ex- cludes all other ambulance ·compules from Ulil prov1sl.on if they are not on police and fire calls. ' • The. cuty Is r.s!"Uy served by Seal'• Ambulance CO. 41 Costa Mesa. This iiom- pany receives £be police and fire callll, but the city Is allio IOlVad by-..bout a dozen other crmpantes Wbo make private calls lncludlng military anibulancea. . The ordinance, ftpeded to become law in. about . 40 days, is the ootcome of sev~'of ·ambulance problems in tile cff:J"ivhicb have included charges of raid!nl for puiengers by companies outaide the city having no need and necessity oo1.lficate.s, but picking up private calll. If protests are filed, he said, the hear- litg must be continued at least ten days to receive 1upplementaJ· protests. U these should amount to 50 percent of the ownenhip -measured by assessed valuation -the annexation wOUld be legaUY hatted for at least a year. Obsirven have pointed out that thls could be aecompliahe(\ by a scattering of involved n&ldentl in the indepeodent.- minded community and Southern Pacific Railn>ad. The railroad owm a strip ao feet wide, one. mile long through the heart of the waterfront 1sland of. uniocorporated ter- ritory. ~ The proposed annexation includes: -3.5 acres on tile eastern edge of Sunset Beach adjoining Warner Avenue. -as acres between Warner Avenue and Andenon Street. The proposed annexaUon rec~ed the blesalng of the county's Local Agency FormaUon Com.plission In March. Anaheim Girl Drowns During Camping Trip A one-year-old girl from Anaheim wandered away from a campsite on the Colorado River last weekend and was drowned 11 the family slept, It was learn- ed here today. Katia Lynne Wadman, daughter of Mr. and Mn. M. Lynn Wadman of 852 N. Clementine St., was found in the river about 12:45 a.m. Saturday. She was prcr nounced de.ad at Palo Verde Hospital In Bltthe, according to a Riverside County depoty coroner. Fenn indicated that he believes the property to be worth "In excess or $29.000 an acre." He has indicated previOUlly that he would be willing to sell the land and water area of his 15 acres. Councilmen denied Fcnn's request for a zone change on the 15 acres, but acknowledged that negotiations to buy Ferm's . land could be ordered if there wert: a hardshlp involved. Councilman Alvin M. Coen, agreeing that the city should negotiate for Beach's Building Permits Reach Record in June . Building ln Huntington Beach hit a recotd high during June, CI t Y Administrator Doyle Miller revealed to the city council Monday night. Pennits totalling $20,36&,284 were Issued by the city to exceed the old rteQrd set in April, 1963, by more than $350.000. The increase has been attributed primarily to burg~ing apa~men' and single dwelling unit construction. Ronald Slade, asslslan'l city planner, said the overwhelming portion of permits issued were those for single family resldents, representing a value of more than $13 million. The remaining pennit1 were issued for smaller apartment units and varied commercial and industrial construction. Average building months ln the city range around '5,250,000. Underground Record Store Denied By RICHARD P. NALL Of Ille Dt/b' JlllM Stiff :l)qderground City Hall surfaced ln HunUngtOn Beach council chambers Mon- day nlght long enough lo loee Its appeal for Dusines11 license legiUmaey despjte a spirited deCen11e1 · •• 1n·· s-1 ap111. cooncllmen vplleld ·the c1- i' "S •:nled a li<ol1!e to the >j '.Jl!Aft a1ion at US Maln SL ,.. · ..a..;. ~man dissented • and Councib¥n J)ooa}d Shipley w11 absent. ~ .. , can tee no reaaon why there should not be a record store In Utat crummy bleck," aid Newport Beach attorney Arthur Strock, referring to downtown business bli&hl. Strock represented lhe applicants for \he business llctme, James T. Butler, 26, a IWbet at Eslancta High School In .. Costa Mesa, and Slopbeo A. Schirmer, 23, a graduate busiMsa student. On tile basis ol critiCal written police reporta, he cballtnged Police Capt. Earle Robllallle'1 delcripllon oi the premi8e& • IS .. completely filthy." Robltallle, who had paraphrased, became · mort . apedlle. He iald "'Jn. ·ve&UgaU& ottlcers bln4 cockroaches, -. dirt and mice." The ~ lold ol • recoNlng played ~ a poblle addml syllom a1 the otori wtiiCl(h< ilelcribad u "lllthy and foul." Alter pollee closed tbO P"""iw that was ope.rating without a buainea llceolt. lie said, a stgn appmed In the window: "Clooed by the man lo llwle 700." He montlooad a narcotlcl party, and drinking bouts1 draped window• and music and Jauanter within. - The at10mey denied any proof of a:one out of business. BuUu said he dld narcotlca -or drlnklntl 11a1rt1. l "When," he llked, "'would an urbane, no · aophiaticated community tuch as ,Hun· Councilman Georce McCracken said he ttngton .. Beach ''cenaor .music, laughter, passed the building last weet·and saw youth and drawn bllnda::" persona drlnklng beer in the store wln- $trock aho denied a riport of eom· dow. munal bltltlbg .. He aid lh«e II no-plact "It seems like you would know you oo the~'" baihlnl ol any1dnd. have lo control your bUJiness," said BuUer, •'bbµry teacber,-1t_.~ McCiacken. Hlih jicbool llild • liPtw')llit ~_\ball S11(1Ck likened the sltuaUon lo college CO& , aald lie.wil1dlaiippob>l<il •il so lra~lty beer drlnkfng. much ......,._-Jnd~:.,..,lo ."H~ven't. you .adverllledr ln !lie Free _..te.wlth u.....,.....,., olod.poljce. -J'ress?" asked Gr-.Schlonu aafd U..y l\!111« Ja¢1< G~uked Wit¥1le l$d • bad.not. : • cholen a bliCbt«l area to start a record The mayor uked about the-name llOrt. "Underground City HalJ.J• Strock saJd It '1.otl or YOW\I people and cheap rut.," ~ad been plagtariztd fl'tl ma Te1ls·store aald aitler. • now out of builn<SI. Ha aald It wsa not The mayor uked If he knew t!Jat a ' meant to needle·the city l:tut to be witty. latp ncorit !lore ......,. Iha. llroet ilad • Cooncllm<n ..,med uniintlled • '\ A gala welcome awaited the in- fantrymen. almost all veterans of com· bat, at this Air Force base, near Ft. Lewis and the city of Seattle. Army chlef of Stall Gen. William C. Westmoreland, a former U.S. com· mander in Vietnam, new in from Washington with deroraUons for five of the returning soldiers of the 3rd Bat.- talion, OOtb Infantry, 9th Infantry Division. On the program for the next three days were speeches by public figures, band music, a parade, a dinner, pretty girLs and. in many cases, family rewtlons. Among those who aaw the troops off at Tan Son Nhut airport Tuesday were South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu, Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and Defense Minister Gen. Nguyen Van Vy. Thieu and Ky were surprise last minute arrivals, just before the, soldiers marched to their waiting C141 Starlifter aircraft. They passed down the ranks of the faligue~lad Americans, sbaklng hands and thanking them for their services. Addressing the departihg battalion, Thieu said : "Together we have repelled Teen Ouh Owner Gets $200 Fine • Gilbert Covell, controversial young night club owner. was convicted Monday in a protracted legal battle of allowing minors under t& in his HunUngton Beach dance ball on two occasions. Judge Fenton jones ordered Covell, 32, or 142(11 L«ust St., Westminster, to pay a flOO fine on each misdemeanor count. The violations were on Nov. 17 and Nov. 2. Covell, who has been in a running: feud with police and the city generally, is co- owner of Syndicate 3000, a teenage night club that bu. been much Jn the police eye. It has been closed for several wee.ts for "'remodell1111." Qon Bonfa, c.1,ty attorney, told coun- cilmen Monday that the road to con- vlcll~ was a long one including sue~ legal· tactlcs u a demurrer and two wrlll al prohibition sought by the defense, one at the-district Court ol Appeals levol. II was denied. "We fully realize that the primary responsibility of the struggle sbouJd be ours," the f6..year-0ld South Vittr1amese president said. He added that' hls nation would stlll need combat support and sup- plies but would have "less and Jess need for the blood or other nations ... * * * Reds Expected To Boost Attacks SAIGON (UPI) -The firat or ~.ooo U.S. soldiers being withdrawn from Vlet.- nam left for home today. Tonight, two Communist rockets struck a Vietnamese shipyard on the outskirta of SaJgon, starting fires that lit up the ak.it! of the capital. Allied mUitary officials already were predicting a new wave o( Communist at- tacks in the coming weeks as the South Vietnamese Army begins taking up p>Si- tions left op(!n by the Americans. The first or lhe attacks was not Jong in com- ing. No casualties were reported im- mediately. - The rockets hit a building used to st.ore fuel and flamea billowed more than 300 feet into the skies, throwing out a light that w~ clearly visible from downtown Saigon, three miles to the northeast. It was the first rocket atlaclc since Satur .. day when two rockets did liUle damage. Orange Weather Fair 1kies: wW relgn 11ong lhe Or&ni• Coast Wednesday with the mercury ranging from the upper '10'1 to the lower 80'1 depending on your proximity t!) the cool sea breezes. INSmE TODt\Y J(ll'n rate sn 1tcond in choos· in.g a mate, bu£ women~ Tcm1" It sinh -which iJ ioh~ 75 percfflt of Amuican marriages ar• a bwt. Paa~ 21. I )· •• I H Israel . Hits • 7 Syrian ' :---MIG Planes Nixon Requests More Coverage .For Jobless WASHJNGTON (UPI) -President Nlxon ti:>day urged Congre&S to expand d)Verqe ol. unemployment insurance to 4,800,000 more workers and lo ~ease bendlu. In a special message. Nixon. said that while over 57 mllllon workers are "MlW covered almost 17 million are not- more than ha!! of them employe:i of -----state and local-governme'llts. The President said the additional 4.& mtllion workers he wants covered "art In real need of protection against unemploy-. ment." He aaked that the foOowlna be broua:ht under the insurance umbrtlla: -tOO ooo on large farms employing four M more workers in each of 20 weeks. . -1)(1,000 in agricullural processing ac- tivlUes. -1,800,000 in nonprofit organlzaUons. --&00,000 In state hospitals a n d t"niversitles. -200,000 salesmen, deUvel")' tradesmo?n and othel'I oot currenUy defined as employes. \ Four Children Drown In Iowa Stor1n Sewer KEOKUK , Iowa (UPI ) -Four children playing In a park creek here Monday afternoon were swept into a storm sewer and drowned. Other chlldren in Rand Park said the four were floating in the rain-swollen crtek, when they were caught by a su~· den swirl of water, The wttnesses ~aid the youngsters were hurled through a &lx- foot opening and Into a concrete sewer. OAllV PILOT ••••'* N. Wee4 rmi..nt -l'lllllWllf J•c .. l , C.rtt y Vkl .......... -0.-al """" .... 11\•111•• K11,ll ••w Th•''"' A. M"'rphl~• '"'"'"ifl9 l!el ... >J~t1 W. &1111 Willl1111 111• .... _ .. ,. """'""'°" ~ l!fl!W Cit, fflr., H•...._... .... OMM JOt ltli Streit tr.f1Hi11f A•t111u1 P.O. a.. 7,0. ,1641 --Jt._t ... "'. 1tll ""'"' ..... lwlMI,.. c.I• MtM: -wtt• ..., 11'"1 l.IWM flw;ll1 m "_,,-' ·- Windward Pas sage Holds Record Pace in Transpac SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Rob er l Johnson's Windward Passage sliced through light seas at a record-breaking pace Monday to maintain the overall lead in the 25th Transpacific yacht race to Honolulu. The 73-footer from the Lahaina Yacht Club of Hawaii Was making about nine knoll and was 700 miles from San Pedro in the 2,225-mlle nautical race. This was compared to 840 miles out for the same time in teM when the Ticon- deroga, also skippered by Johnson, set the record of nine days, 13 hours and 51.2 minutes. Blackfin. which reported aeneretor and radio troubles earlier, said the difficulties were cleared up and the vessel was ln ~ cond i>lace. Mir was third. No report was available en the distance between Blackfin and Windward Passage because of poar vislbillty. Twelve knot winds were reported with four foot swells. The class standings were. in ord er: A: Rascal, Concerto, W i n d w a r d Passage. Blackfln (tie for third ). B: Jubilation, Salacia , Starling II. C: Esperance, Argonaut, Numse II. (tie for second). D: Valkyrie JI , Hetaera, Aventura (tie for second ). In the handicapped standings, Esperan· ce and Argonaut were the everall leaders. ov Schools Add P ersonnel Ma n Ktnneth Eilefson, 36, has been ap- polnted to the personnel commission of the Ocean View School Olatrlcl. He replaces t.ielvin Duvall, who re!lgn~ ed from the commission recently when he moved out of the school district's bou!l-' darles. Eilefson, a re.eident of Huntington Beach since 1964, was an unsucceslful candidate for the Ocetn View board ol trustees this spring. Per sonnel !\feet Se t The Fountain Valley School District Personnel Comn1isa1on will meet In regular teSSlon at 1:30 p.m. n1ortday In the Curriculum Materials Center, 1 LigbtbouJe Lane, Fountain Valley. (Tran$pa c highlights via direct radio reports frOm the neet are presented daily on KOCM, 103.1 FM at 3 and 7 p.m.) Summer P arks Agenda Topic Summer months mean a busy agenda for the Huntington Beach RescreaUnn and Parks Commission when it meets at ]:30 p.m. Wednesday in U~ city council chambers. Among the items scheduled for discussion are Youth Coalition Committee plans, the city-sponsored U.S. Surfbo111·d Championships and summer plans of the Recreation Activities Association. The commissioners will also hear statu s reports en current park plans, in· eluding the future Huntington Central Park. New Building Opens July 20 Seal Beach will open 'the doors of Its new $342,000 administration building for the first time in ceremonies, July 20. The new facility, containing 14,362 square feet, will houSt? all city tid· mlnlstrative offices as well as lhe offices of the city engineei:, public works, city manager, shipping and receiving, person- nel and the new council chambe,u. Located at 211 8th St. the new buT!ding features Spanish-style architecture and si1 levels. It is topped b yan observation deck. Bauer lleacls Trustees For OV District Or. Ralph Bauer, newest member on the Ocean View School Di.strict board of trustees, W'U elected board president Monday night. · T h e governing board also decided to c<nllinue through the coming school year · wllh Ill prtsent schedule of meetings at 7 ;30 p.m. en. the first and lhlrd Mondays n( each month in district effices, 7992 Warner Ave., llunlingt.on Beach. , Surea::lse to NASA ...,..- Bonny-,Succumhs! . , . . After~Big Tr ip 1 School l\iect Canceled Trustees or the HunUnglon.Btach Ctty School District will not meet tonight as normally scheduled. District personnel said the only meeting this month will be July 15. Become a John Hamilton New May or of SB Seal Beach City Councilmen Monday night elected John B. Hamilton , 38, to a one-year term as mayor. .. · He_replaces Lloyd Gummere, who held the city's top post during tbe pest year and also in 1966 and 1967. Hamilton, who bas served on the Seal Beach City Council for the last three years, was appointed by a unanimous $-0 vote. The council also appointed "Mrs. Veda Dreis as vice-mayor and Terry Qarton and Mike Knapp to the city planning commission. Healthier, Happier, Thinner You at Holiday Health Spas ESCAPE to a private luxury where sophisticated weight reducing methods make . embarrassing pounds vanish quickly a nd gently. INCOMPARAILE FACILITlts ••••••••flllEI FllEEI Flllll•••••••• ~ Speciol ·Join Jodaj · • Heatff RoNn Swirnm1:5!:°1 • Ultra M Conditioning F•tllitles • Roman Stearn Rooms • EIKtronk Massage • Finnish Roc:k Sauna Room• • Florida Sun Tan Rooms • Whlrlpool l artts • : RECEIVE YOUR PRIVATE SWIM CLUB MEMBERSHIP Swim in 1 , Beautiful Outdoor Olympic Slit Heated Pool Offer Good For l imited Tirrie Only • • • • •• • • • • • • • .. • • • Condi tioning Fatilltits • Swiss Facial M1thln11 • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COMPLETI FACILITIES FOlt MEN & WOMIN Call or Stop by Today for Your FIH To,.. H@tnd©\~ • HEALTH SPA • I .\ l I • t ' 1.' 1) ,, 1 • r,.141r, ~ s. 1969 ·~-MEETiNGS--u~ 'Irvine Given Research Grants · to Get us~ • ' DEATU NOTICES GRANVILLE E!111beoffl B. Gr1nvlllt , Ah n , d 11•7 B•r11<1e ·orJve, Cor(llll d•I !<Mr. Dile ol auTh, Julv ~. SurvlvHI DV IOft. Cli.rlH J, 1'1"1!>Kk, He"""' &ttdl, s .. ,.ket ~·• n.1<1 s.rurdaY. Jul1 s, II AM, Fore•! LIWll. Glffl.-d~le. F1mll y J"9111'•'• ltloM! wlt~ll!ll IO mM:1 mrm«lll ton!rltoulianl, PINN tOl\triM t lo l'M Hltrt Flll\d. !11 lir Monvary, JS:io II!:. '°''' HlthWI)• Coront dill ~" OlrllCI°", TRIPP Re<Jlntld lllll'ICIP Tripp, J2l,) .lrlHIN L•M, Co1t1 Mew. 0•1'1 or dffm , J ul'I' J, Survived bV w11t!, Llrtl1n IC. 1 «PO: ltlll•r, 011¥tr Ellloll Tripp, of Poll<>d Se>r!nt, Mllln1: Jll!er, Aldlnt · •· ··.......e. Polt'ld S..r!n1, MtlMJ 'brolllfr, Oontld Tr!Plt, NM"ltl Lftlh, ,. S.0.vlc1J tg01y, T~'411Y, I PM, Pttlfic V~w C1>1ptl. lnrermet'll, ~ "'':c v .... M""""'l•I P1rti.. 01,.c1-t51 by 5't<lflc View Martu1ry, PINDER v1r11n11 IU<hmond Ptnoer. ,,.._Stotrtt Ori••. Si n P..,rtl. Otll! of dee1h. JVIJ 6. SUrvlvtod 111 lluJW.nd, llilkfl c. Pltlder, M.0 ./ d1111h!er1, Ct1h1r!111 II. tnc:I Ctrolyn II. PlndlM't Pl•tflll, Mr. tnd Mrl. Etrl L. ltlthmonc:I, lltUlll llNCll; btvlh..,, E1rl L, llldlmond. Jr., of Tor,.nce. S..rvlcet, INednndtv. 2 P'M, MIUSOiewM af I/It PO-Clflc. 11>- twnnenl, PtclHc vi.w "'*"'Oflal Ptri;. Oire<led bv P1ctfk View Mort\ltrY. F·mllv 1111~11 lt!Olle wlll'l;nv lo m1kt memorltl con1r~IH0011, •'"''' tor>1rlbu!e To !lie (1ly Ill Hooe M,,. Ital Cen1er. TO RB ET Racert N. Tort>tt. n11 Fordhu" Cal State Fullerton Illegal? FULLERTON -Ten ye.ars after Cal State Fullerton Wai establlahed._ci.IY-D · i IS diicovered a municipal ordinance prohibiting colleges and universities in the city. The oversight was quickly corrected. The application of the Los Angeles School of Optometry, which has purchased property in Fullerton and wishes to become affiliated with Cal State, brought the o d d ort:linance to the attention of the city council. Research revealed that Cal State had not broken the law in locating in Fullerton , however. When the state purchased the-college1s site it was no looger subject to local laws, the city attorney ruled. Grant Given To Chapman O•lv•, CDI!• M.111. 011e al ONfh, RANGE Ch Julv '· 1urvlvtO by •ooi, 01vlcl Tor· Q -8 p m a TI btt. o1 11o1u. 1<111>o; .,..,,,.ttn. Mr1. Col1egc President John L. 11.obertt .mntt, P~; Mt1. L,.. ced that <Ille Olive Dt«•ot1. 11.1.,.,.~; brtlfh.. l>avis has announ '" Hinim w. TortlP!. PDrt11nc:1, o,. t of ISO 000 from the •"": "'"'· Mrs. v1c11 1111-11, Farell gran • Grove. oreaon; 1nc:1 ,.,,,,. ,,,-.,, James Irvine Foundatkln will PrlVllf luriert l s..-vlus, Wt'dntW..v. b ed f nSl"On Of the P1c!llt View Chte>el. lnltrM~!, Pt· e US Qr expa j. c!ic view MemOl'"11t Ptrll. 0 1recr..:1 campus facilities. I Dv P1cl0c Viltw Mort111rv. "The ....,...,..hase of addition al NORR ., ........ P11r1ci. M. ,..,..,, ,._ 1s, 111 u 1' 0o1-land which this grant makes 1>h!n Orlvt, HunUnt•ooi 9UCh. 5.,,. possible is Of VitaJ importance Glendale .federal guarantees. 30°/0 growth on any amount · over si.ooo · DEPOSIT 5-YEAft. 61\0W't\\ $1,000 . $1,3\\\\l\ 2,500 5,000 6,f)6\\l~ I ,..,....., b'1 l>u'>b9IWI, HUVll P. Norr llll --I p1r-elTl'l", ""'"· '"" Mn. w11~.... 11. to lhe realization of our J Frer.t11; 11•11r. ~11t11 L. ~~nc111 mastef plan," Da vis said. trltl'dm<>lhttr, Crctlla W. Frtnth, 111 ----'---------\ ef S1nt1 ....... F1mllv IUllllfltl !tloH ,,.;•hi09 lo mike memo•l•I cor1Trlbu- tloois, JJlll1se con!rlllute to Ille 11<',,,.. r•ill• ~Ollfl<l8!1on al SOOJlhern (tlllor· nit , 1371 Mec:y SI., L1 Htbr1, 90631. l<t~l1•11on of Ike Holy ll0111ry, le>- nithl, Tuesd8V, 1:>0 PM, 51. Crcellt 'I Church, T111tln. lltoulem M.u1, WtO· "'""'"'' 10 AM 51. CK~lit'I, with In. 1 rmc;nr 1o11owlna 11 Halv $1'PUlc11tr 1 (e~1erv. !•own Co!onit l Mortllt l"l", s.tnlt Ant. Of..ctor1. GALLOWAY ......... "•~~ r.111ow1.-. l.tt 49. Formtr re.. l *"' ot' COJll Mtlt. Dete ol dtt!h,to Jll•V 1, In S.n Ftrntnc:lo Vt l!rn'. Slit· Vlved b1 wilt, P1ul11 1on1, JIJ·Dff alWI Wllllem; Nfln11. Mr. 1nd Mrs. John 9. Gonlt~U 1l1ter1, Mrs. Jttn I WHI, Mri. NI"" W1tltr1, Mrs. Mll- dreO Lt llorde, Mrs. Ire"" Howell, '"" Mrs. MIClrlnt Smlttl. S•,..,lttL Wecll'll!~1y, 1D AM, t i tllt L1111t COUn. Irv CheMI al Plettt llrolhtrs Mert,.. erv. lDlo)l VIC1«Y 11 11/d., Notlil Hally. ...... STARK Gtio1111 J. M. $Itri<. 1190 Tem~lt Ttr· ••ct, L1911n1 11 .. cn. llorn O<;lolltr S. 190~, ln sccrt11nc11 dltd. J111Y 1, nu. Survived by wll1, Emllv1 '°"• l1n1 llff trollwn trld two 1111..,1. krvl..,.,, W'11nesd1y, JwlY '· 1 PM. Shlffff' lt9Ul\I llttcll Mprt111ry ChtPtl. ARBUCKLE & WELSH Westcllff Mortuary '27 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa 616-1811 • BALTZ MORTUARIDl Corona del Mar OR S.1459 Costa 1\-fua MI 1-UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Cotta 1'1esa u 1-3433 • DILDAY BROTllERS Hu.ntlngtoa Valley l\fGJioary 17111 Beach Blvd. Hu.ntlngton Beacll UZ.7111 • J McCORMICK LAGUNA I BEACH MORTUARY ) 1715 Lagana C11nyon Ro1d I Lagu n1 &1ch f <H-MIS I' • PACIFIC VIEW t 1\-tEMORIAL PARK t Cemetery e M...-Y , Chapel . '\ 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Buch, Calllondl 84UJOO I • r PEEi: FAMH.Y COLONIAL FUNEJIAL I HOME I~ '7801 Bolu Ave. Westmtuier n34SZS Whit Does The Bible Say About MIRACWI Some scoff at REAL mJracles tif the Bible and seek to EXPLAIN A WAY these, thus showing a WEAKNESS in th eir belief in God's POWER. The Bible por- trays a God who is ALl.rPOW· ERFUL. Any other concept would displace God ·from his throne . Jesus believed Old Testament MIRACLES! -J c;inah and the whale, Matt. 12 :40; Healing of leper. Lt. 4;27: Miraculous food supply aod raising dead. Lk. 4;26, I Kings 17;9-24 fAre some moderni!ls wiser lh1n Jesus, thinking to explain away these miracles?) JesUJ performed miracles:! - Raised dead, 'Jn. 11 ;39-45.: Walked on water, Matt. 14:24· 31 : Turned water Into wine, Jn. 2:7·11 : Mai1y others, Jn. 20;30- SI. Bible miracles give us FAITH, Jn. 20 ;30-31 ; Acts I;~. Your funds grow 30% when our new guaranleed annual rata cl 5~ % ts compounded dally and earnings are retained In the account for 5 years. Tllars equivalent to a 6% average annual yield. Ask for our S,YearGuaranteed Growth Account And guarantees 5ifia0/o on new a 10.5 Year Income Accountl You receive a guaranteed annual rate of 5Y4 % with earnings compounded daily, paid quarterly for any period from 36 to 60 monlhs on minimum deposlls of $1,000 or more. I nlerest Is paid quarterly or may ba added· to !he account. Ask for our Guaranteed Income Account GLENDALE FD>lllAl SAVINSS--- • cosla Mesa 1833 Newport Blvd • H8WPOrl Beach 2333 East Coast Highway NATION'S SECOND LARGEST FEDERAL WITH ,l.SSETS OVER ONE BILLION DOLLARS• 22 OFl'IC!S 5% :~=~~T 5.25% ~:ACCOUNTS 5.25% :~~ACCOUNTS" 5.21" ::=:IO VISIT THE ------........ \ I • j SHEFFER MORTUARY t-a-Beacll Of..1111 &a Qemea&e aMdt I e MODERN MffiACLES are not needed ror faith, we have thOle of the Bible, Jn. 20 ;30-21 - "THESE are written lhat ye might betie-ve-". satan can do SOME mlracleJ (lllotJgh limited) to deceive the gullible, E:r. 7;11)· 12. E1. 8;14-19, I Cor. ll;lS-15, 21heu.; ~12. If you have Bible quasUoM, wl1te or phone Church of Chrtst. 187 W. Wilson St., Coot• M .... Caul (9$27). Phone 54U711. MS-2141, 1146-5783. Vltit, wonblp and lb.Id) the Bible with UJ. Sundays 9:45 A.M., 10:45 A.M., 8;00 P.M.; Wednwla)'S, 7:30 P.M. ''POUGE a ·aaCTYLOSCOPY -EXHIBIT'' • I SMITHS' MORTUAltY ' 111 Male SL 1 HuUngtoa BuU NOW THRU JULY 15th ·AT BLENDALE FEDEUL • - l l •• ) 8 DAii. Y ~!LOT H Your Money's Worth Age of 'Aspi rations'. Ahead 1050 oceanogra~~ic fun~iK. A mutual lund investin1 in ttie de'ttloprnent and use of the ocean and its rtsourees -----------Midtm Dl1ttllMINn. hie. If lrNlll Sll"Mt "IW Y1'11, N.'I'. lllOM ,,,,,, 1.,.c! •I'll I Pl'OIPKtlll Ofl ti" '""'l'>Ot'lphlc fund, Inc.. ••• kid···· Citt '" . Firm to Buy Swede Subs STOCKHOLM (AP) -A California firm, Y..1 a r i n e Resource Consultants of Santa Y..1onica. will buy three sub- marines from the Swedish Navy. a Navy spokesman said Tuesday. The submaries will be used ln search for oil beneath the Arctic ice outside Canada. They will be rebuilt for their new task at a Swedish shipyard be r c re. being dClivered. A mixed crew of 22 Swedes. Americans and Candians ·"·ill ' handle each boat. los Angeles & Oakland! Every 00 minutes! Pr ... nting rht gre111at lllghl schedule on e1rth between 7:15 •m i nd 1:•5 pm. Bolh ••r•! More on wHkends\ Wt!y WOtf'f •bOUI 1 reseNat1on when PSA has over 1100 lliglils • wHkt Soeh 1n ee•y·IO-f9lnember scNd.1le you c1n c1try II 11ound In yourhe1d. Wfly remembe1 lowest t111t1!1 ? Or 1lt Jela? Ot Cl'''' urvlce lo S111 Fr111e1aco, Sin Jose. Sen Oieoo. and S.Ctamento? Or The! kid' under 12 lly PSA (with lht111 p1r~nls) torh1ll l1re.? Stilt went 1 ftserva11on? Juli 1lmef'1ber -'l'OUr lravel 1gentor wt11lli1ttn1me 1lr11nes.:-';l5i:z::> .. PM.,,._,.,..• lift. Phone Rates, Servi ce Go Together LOS ANGELES (AP) - General Telepho:ie Co. may hike Its phone ratea by $4.4· million annually when ii im- proves customer service, the Public Utilities Commission says. The company s o u g h t authorization to impose rate increases totalling $1.1 million for business phones and $3.3 milllon for residential phones . The company, however, was granted permission to boost by $12.2 million charging for other services. The commission ll a I d General must show it has 1nade customer service Cf!.ual to that offered by Pacific Telephone in its areas. The decision came after 60 days of public hearings in \\1hich many persons com- plained of poor service. The $12.2 mill ion increase means hikes in directory advcrlising, phone iruilallation and changes, and o t h e r ser\'ices. General lnilial!y asked the commission to approve service a net phone rale hikes of $41 .6 million. B onJb Co ntract .. , \\'ASHl'NG'i"UN (UPI) llont'ywell, Inc., has obtained a S9.3 million Navy conlllfl.cl lo provide component:; for the Rockeyc II bomb. l 'I • i . 1 ' ,' [ 4 'I: I ' I 11 :(1 I. I ,I • ' • • • • • DAltY P!l.OT J] American Stock Exchange List r I .. • ' J ! ·nAllY 1'11.0'T • .... ,_...,.. I " -~ ·MR.MUM I .. • I ~ II 11 ~ ~ fiA1 Rancher Loses His 'Top Hand' in Storm By RALPH MARSH Associated Preas Writer Severe thunderstorm warnings were out." When he got the pickup leveled orr, RoundLree turned to check on his boys and screamed. ''My God, Momma , I've lost It was starting to rain hard lbe camper!" and thew~ was gusty pretty r"The:re goes my life," he good, .so Colorado rancher thought, but he made no Clarence Roundtree slo,,..ed sound. the pickup to about 40 and l!~ i,y~i(led the pickup truck glanced into the camper on around i>n the highway, flag· the back to be sure his two lit-ged a· truck and started hun· ' tie boys were still safely ting his boys. asleep. . -J_ didn'.1 tleJ t dowp bec~use "Top Hand," a boisterously it took three of us just teeter- happy th ree-year-old, and his ing the thing ~ load it. I had quiet two-year-old b r o t h e r the tailgate up. Audie were sleeping soundly, Without these kids your life resting from lhe rigors of don'I amount to a heck of a Fourth of July at grandma's. lot. I thought about tying ii Roundtree turned back to down, but it seemed absurb, his driving and consoled his like lying an Angu5 bull to the mother, Mrs. p e a r I e n e ground. I was so ·sure o[ the Roundtree. She was holding thing. the year-old baby, Shella, and "The three-year-old boy, I worrying about the wind and found about three feet from whatever it was that had the camper.;, made her suddenly decide !he Top Hand . He's my Top should return from Oklahoma Hand. I have a ranch in City to Pueblo, Colo., with hfr Colorado. He's my top hand. ts-year-old son. "The tw~year-old, I found T h e four of them him at the edge, of the -Roundtree and his children blacktop in the edge of the grass." -had logged 700 miles , . . •:nether sl e lea intt ~ • He s 8: different k1~d of cat ~ nc . V-~ _ =lWlre .mward. deflmte ideas ranch near Granite, ~lo., affil about who he likes, Hard to they had been good miles. get to know. "We just had a ball. We Everybody was nice. The stopped everywhere." truck drivers, the Highway But on the western edge of Patrol troopers, the minister the 0 k I a h o m a Panhandle, who helped get the boys to a going home, things got' rough. hospital. The lightning started and But there wasn 't too much the wind came up. they could do for Top Hand. "It sounded like a JG-ton Audie had severe lacerations tntck hit me broadside " said around his legs, arms and Roundtree. "The pick-uP truck body , but they sewed him up heeled over so it looked like it at the Beaver ho.spite land Jct was going to lip over. Then him go by Sunday afternoon ._ Lhere was this rending crash." T h e n h e a n d ~ 1 s 'The pickup just went up grandmother lefl for Amar11lo, and down," 5aid M r 5 • where Roundtree had taken Roundtree. ''It was like you Top Hand in the ho~ they had gone over a rock or could do something. there somethlng. I can't figure out abou~ the damage .to his head. why it had to happen. 1'\erc Hes such a friendly !lttle just must have been a fellow. Yesterday my sister whirlwind hit u.s. Something picked up a s~ck of toy~ in on.: told me to come home with of the stores tn Oklahoma C1· him. Now J can see why." ty. ~ifty-nine cents. H~ show- " Possibly he hit some high ed it to everybody 1n that velocity -winds," said the s~ore. I co~ldn 't have ~ght Highway Patrol t r o o p e r . h1~. anything betler with a "That country is hilly, rolling. m1llion dollars." Roundtree spent Sunday at Nearly Everyone the Northwest Texas Hospital in Amarillo, notifying relatives, waiting, thinking. 'Listens' to Landers "These kids," he said, they 're about the best crop you ·11 ever raise. "But, Top Hand , .. I don'I think he's going-to m'.ake it. "I figure pretty much v.·e'rc going to lose the boy .•. " i***'***A******************"***************-; : YOUR PROBLEM: -i that you no longer need but : J You Want to sell some item : someone else c1n use for ~ • NOT OVER $50 ;i ! ?????? i ! YOUR ANSWER: -: • You ci ll THE DAILY PILOT, 1sk for : f Cl1ssified Advertis ing, artd place • : j PILOT ~ PENNY : " PINCHER CLASSIFIED AD AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RA TE . " " LINES TIMES DOLLARS AND YOUR CR EDIT IS GOOD I DIAL NOW DIRECT! • i : i --~ 6 4 2 • s 6 7 8· : tlel ,._ ,....,. c""" l40-1220J : .................................. ~ •••.. ~··~·~·~· ................... .; \ • ' soft pa stel bikini s with delicate lace trim fJshioned in ~heer nylon tricot. 1hese lillle bi~inis give a ... n1ooth i ii. Deli cately trin1med ,ind ;ippliqued in lace. Coo l and comfortable for sun1n1er. Buy siX and save, they're the perfect ·addition lo your pJnly wardrobe>. Choose from a group of pastel color s. Sizes 5·6·7, \.du<' 1 .UU 6 for 3. 99 rna~ co day wear lingerie 28 ( • ----' • . ··~ • r ·:r • VA Ll!ES FOR YOU, YOUR HOM E, YOUR 'FAMILY ~ " ~ ' double layer bra gown in soft pastel colors ' A preUy, filmy doublie. layer gown. It's gentle support molds you wlii~ you sleep. Delicately trimmed with _ / ___ _,la.,c""e an ·1 asti sir ps for comfo!l.Jn..RinJ;,..111.ue_ . .,.__' _ ' white. Sizes 32-36. Also reg, 5.99 to 9.00 bra gowns in ' · pastels at 3.99. They're all of softest nylon tricot. reg. 5.00 3.99 may co robes and loungewear 10 tailored taffaknit slip is perfect under knits --- Baronet brings you the non.cling taffaknit slip. Won't cling or ride up _under knits or jerseys. Trim and tailored,'· for a smooth comfortable fit. Coo l eno.ugh fo r summer j fashio n. Of Ant,ro n• nylon laffak nits. And it's propor-~ lioned. Sizes 32-38 shor~ 34.40 average. White on ly." 3.99" may co daytime l ingeri~ 28 may co south coast pla za, san die 90 fwy at bri stol , costa mesa : shop monda y th rou9h iS at urd ay I 0 a.m. fo 9:30 p.m • 546 • 9321 MAVCC>· • 1 ·I ' ' I '· I l I I I I I I II I 'l " I .... ·r j I I 11 r I I I _, ~' ,11 11 ' 'f ' 11 :11 11 ~ t ii! I I I I I .. - ·Fountain \. -· -! VOL.6_2, NO. 162, f SECTIONS, 26 PAGES Sid etvalk S11perintende1at · ChrisUlpher Q:llnmhu&..\\(yaU, f, Huntington Beach, . takes it easy while-watching .skiploader in action 1.1.onday in downtown Huntington Beach. Workmen • : Valley DAILY l'IL.OT llltl l'MM were .clearing: lot at 629 Main St. after knocking down old building-which, until recently bOused laundry and .un.Uorm supply company. ' · -T een Culture W ee ltSet Sun~et Beach By Huntington Council Annexation P etitions OK'd Proposed anne11tion o( Sunset Beach Enthusiastic councilmen Monday ap-Ewers said the concert wiH be the first '"'to its big ne.i"'hbor Hun11 .. ,...,.,., Beach took proved a Teen Culture \Veek for July 27 event ot the Teen Culture Week. llY' ..ua ..... t Other activities planned include a teen a tcetrrucal step forward Monday night through Aug. 2 in Huntington Beach 0 art show July 28, a car show July 29L art but could 11Ull be slopped by a mai· ority begin with · a "pillow . conc.ert~ at Hun-show ju~lng July 30 at Lake Pars., a protest ot prop,erty owners involved tlngWI> Beach 1ligll School ll)'m Wilb an spe<Jiat drama by youlb ~ '"lbeJlo<e . • evenii\g of t.li musk~ bJ the 'llritalllliu" '"'July ll anh'loca! $1af. 'lo ~ o!, ~;I ,• e ~ , -~= ,_ ,. d 1· th •-ban'· r me c:onlelt Oil All(. J to-end ,,,. wffk,-, ICbeduJlid..io :!'"bile bearlni Au(. -Acal I 'Canm:u neat an · JlO 0 er._... ~· ._ Ewen. tolcf the Ct,&Jlt;.ll Jt "thla will p.rq, to reco~ protests. Cj)W!Cllmen agreed to put up the $2;000 be sometBing that will brilig attentlon to City Clerk Paul Jones told the couocll needed Lo reserve lhe banda for I.be teen the city and do something for the youth." N.Y. Steeb 'TEN CENTS uy Beath___cProbe • Skinton Y outh .In volve d in Shooting , A youth Involved In a 1968 ~ng epi!ode ~th a Stanton police officer lllp- '-llliO-'-.Jrom unconscl~ness I n to mysterious death Monday in t b e emergency room Of Stanton Communily lloopilal. Coroner's deputle1 loday are uaminlng the unmarked body of Jerry Naranjo, 19, ol 1Qf92 r.ourt St., Stanton, in an attempt to determine what caused his deaLh. The dead youth was with Paul ·Aguilera, 18, on Feb. 9, 1968, when Aguilera was shot and killed by a buUet from the gun of a Stanton reserve policeman. Officer Allen Christian, 42 of Hun- tington ~. wu later ~ultted of - manslaught~ charges in Lbe 1booUng: Police said Naranjo wu brought to tbe hospital by an older brother, Daniel. ·He died without regalnl.og COMCiou:mess~ There were no marU oC violence on his body, officen aald. - The brother told ,POiice he saw lwo unkoown men bring Jerry home un- conscious a.nd carry him into the house shortly before noon Monday. Zone Change A sked I Huntington Central Park ·Negotiations B~gin Soon The coroner'• office II coniducUnC an ' autopsy to determine the cause of death.' A deputy said a report could be expected-:' WNMM~. • Aguilera and Naranjo were atOPPed by:~ police for quesUoning at 2:30 a.m.-teb. t~; t968. When A41ullera b"'1<e Ind. -of •• fleer Christian shouted warnings to bait . three times, then fired bitting the )'OU.th . in the bead from a di.stance of over 60 yards. . · ChrisUan said he meant to fire a w·ltJ)o : Ing allot and had no lnientlOll ol kUlllll; the youth. · ; T A.KE A. BUNNY TO L UNCH TODA.¥ CiUzens of Huntington Beach have been exhorted to "find suitable means Lo further the care and s~l needs of the · rabbit" by Mayor N. John' V.V. Green in a special proclamation iasued today. . . Mayor Green, noting that 11stnce time Immemorial Ule rabbit hu been of benefit to mankind and tbat the tender Negotlatiops ere to begin immedlal<Jy purchase of the Ferm prop<rty "u soon . mild ·tasting rabbit bu 1oanod lllel! between HurlUngton Beach municipal of· as .. possible," suggested that I.he aame readily to a w1de vartet}r of cookery," of. fidall and owners of l_east Wirt of the negotlatiom be ollered to other ~rty flcially declared the weet of JuJy 1f .u land and water to be included in lhti new--ownersliiir Goiaen weirStre:el aiid---Rabbit Week in-Huntingtoa-Beach.-- Huntington Central Park, the .City Coan-Talbert Avenue. ell ordered Monday. The order came after Joseph Fenn told the council that he intends to build a mobile home park on 1$ acres of property , on Gothard Street south of Slater Avenue. The Ferm property and another 1$ acres belonging to Rolla McClellan Is within the area that the city intendli to buy for the central city park. Councllinen imposed a "holding zone" on the land to tnsure that there would be no consttucUon befo~ the land was ~. A $11 mllliOp general obllga-'llao •lJCloo\--was approved i>J the vOters on Jime 3 to buy lbe 150-plus acres to be lncluaed 1n the J>•tlt. -1st 'Nixon Withdrawals' L.eave Vietnam for U.S. McCHORD AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. (AP ).~ The first U.S.~ to bo pyW out ol Vietnam by Pr'!ldent Nixon wtng. ed bomewaid in 'ftine jet jransporil t.odat •fter a stndoff marked bJ milltary fan- fare llJd the thanks of Saigon officials. -munlal aqresslon. Tblflm'1-l 011r IQll Ind our putpGll'." • 11• Hid the. Sou1b Vk<n•--~ to assume a greafer th1r1 of the l1gfltlnc 8"" the replacement ol allied' lroops. • i baSb-al the gymnliStum and ·-agreed the that annexation petitions signed by 162 of -the 531 qUaliDed electors in ~Mn city would pay any losses should the event fail to raise the $9.250 it is expect-Ambulances Now neuuon area represent more than the cd to cost. one-fourth electorate requlremenL Trustees or Huntington Beach Union Le I B M If protests . are filed, he said, the hear· "Tills ts a good way to banirupt dtlzens," Fenn said lo the council. "All the Ume tue:s are rilling and this J>Qts a stiiiiii oa-the property owner." Fenn indicated that he believes the property to be worth "tn excess of $20,000 an acre." He has indicated previously that he would be willing to sell the land and water area of hls 15 acres. Gen. Creighton W. Abram.'!, com- manaerof-Amet!Bln fcJrces -in Vietnam. told. the 814 men in the first contl111ent of 25,000 U.S. troops belng withdrawn: "You occupy a significant moment in history." ''fhia b only the beglnn.;g cl tliia ·cess," Thieu ll&id. He oofid !he~ <== the U.S. 9th dlvlaloo In South Vietnam -I 1,855 killed in action -and sajd1 "Our I duty is to make sure lhill sacrUice w-.u High School District Will be asked nt.thelr ga ' Ut USt lng must be conUnued at least ten days to 7:30 o·clock meeting tonight to approve receive supplemental protests. U these use of 01e gym by the sponsoring Recrea· p 1• ck Up License should amount to so percent of the tloh and Parks Department and the city's ownership -meuured by assessed Youth Coalition Committee. vaJuat.1911 -the annexation would be Police Capt. Earle Robitaille told the Huntington Bea.cl) is going to make it legally halted for at leut a year. council that ''all precautions are being legal for ambulance companies to pick up Observers have pointed out that this taken to control the crowd of youngsters patients and traDSport them to hospitals could be acoompHshed by a scattering of expected for the first event put on by lhe -something tbey'.d been doing all along. involved residenta ln the lndepefident- youth committee. City Councilmen Monday approved first minded community and Southern Pacific He pointed q.1t that nearly all similar reading of an ordinance which will make Railroad. events in recent months bave ended in legal the operation of ambulance com-The railroad ·owns a strip 80 feet wide riots ot·some sort in other cities. panles which pict up private paUents at one mile long through tht. hurt al th~ Fire Chief Raymond Picard said the lhe call of the patient or dGCtors. waterfront island of unincorporated ter· gym will b9ld 2,91$ ,persons and Youth It 111 -1r bul' d In rltory. Coallllon Committee Co.ch airman w requ e every am ance 0 g Tbe proposed annexation includes : business \n the· city to buy a business ~ 5 Leotiard Ewers said his group plans· on be bul -· acrea on the ea stem edge of selJina Uµit many Uckets at $3.50 each. license, something t am ance com· Sunset Beach adjoining Warner Avenue. --o panies coukl not do before because lbey .., Ma~or Jack Green, w~o ~ he has were operating illegally anyway. Only -acres between Warner Avenue and been involved f~r some time m ~ plan-_ one firm can 0,......ate under CUIT'f!nt law. Anderson Street. • ning of the "pillow concert.'' said the -. . ,.-. . The Pf'l)posed annexation received the eVent-wlll be advertiJed•Jocally orily and The ordinance reqwret any ambula~e blesaing of the countf1 Local Agency that he felt Police would take adequate c.:«"P8DY w'5hlng to handle .police and Formation Commfuion in March. precautions to prevent trouble. fire . department calls to obtain a certlficate of need and neeeaslty, but ex- Neighborhood Vote Dooms 'People's Pad' BERKELEY (AP) -The South Berkeley Model Cities Neighbor~ t.:ouncll voted unanimously Mond1')' night ·against esl.a bli.!lhment of a summer youth hostel lo an empty Navy housing unit. Tbe ·Berkeley School District, which owns the unit, had considered leasing it for two months to a group of Berkeley "street people" for a "People's Pad," to care for •an expected summer Wlui of yOU11gsten. • , cludea all other ambulance companies • f:rqm UUs provision 1f they are pot on pobce and fire calls. · The cuty la prmntly served by Beal'• Ambulance Co. of c.osta Me$1. Thia com- pany receives the police and fire calls, but the city is l.lao serv;.ct by about a dot.en other companies who make private can. Including military ambulances. The ordinanct·, expected to become lalf In about ~ ~aya, )s the ootcome of several years Of ambulance problems in the city which have included charges of raiding for passengers by companies out.side the city having no need and necessity certilicates, but picking up private call!. Anaheim Girl Drowns During Ca1nping Trip A one-year-old girl from Anahelrp wandered away from a campsite· on tbe Colorado River last weekend and Was drowned as the family slept, it wu learn- ed here today. Karla Lynne Wadman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. Lynn Wadman of I.SJ N. Clementine St., was found In the river about 12:1$ a.m. Saturday. She was pr~ nounced dead at Pa1o Verde Hospital in ~Blythe, according to a Riverside County deputy coroner. · eouncumen den!~ Ferm's request for ·a zone change on the 15 acres, but acknowledged that negotiations to buy Ferm'• land could be ol$red if there · we~ a barmhip Involved. Counctlman Alvin M. Coen, agreeing that the city should negotiate for Beach's Building P ermits Reach Record in June Building In Huntington Beach hit a record high during June, C I t Y Admlntstrator Doyle Miller revealed to the city council Monday night. _ Permits totalling $20,366,284 were Issued by the city to exceed the old record set in April, 1963, by mort than !350,000. The Increase has been attributed primarily to burgeoning apartment and single dwelling unit construction. Rona1d Slade, assist.ant city planner, said the overwhelming portion of pennita Issued were those for single family residents, .representing a value of more than $13 million. Tbe remaining permit• were issued for 1maller apartment units and varied commercial and induslrjal construction. Average bull_dlng months in the city range around ~,250,000. Underground Record Store Denied A gala welooine awaited the in- fantrymen, aJmost all veterart..!I of com· bat, at this Air Force base, near FL Lewis and the city of Seattle. Army chiel of Stall G<n. William C. Westmoreland , a former U.S. com· mander in Vietnam, new in from Washington with decorations for five of the returning BOldiert ,of the 3rd Bal· talion, 60th lolanlry, 9th lnfll')iry Division. On the program for the next three days were speeche,a: by public figures, band music, a parade, a dinner, p~tty Jlrls and. in many cases, family ~unions. Among those who saw the troops off at Tan Son Nhut airport Tu!sday were South VielDIJllese President Nguyen Van Thieu, Vi~ Pr~ident Nguyen Cao Ky and Defense Minlater Oto . Nguyen Van Vy. _ Thieu and Ky were surprise last minute arrivals, just before the BOldlers marched to their waiting C141 Starlifter aircraft. They passed down the ranks of the fatigue-clad Americans, shaking hands and thanking them for thelr services. Addressing the departing battalian. Thieu said: "Together we have repelled Teen Club Owner Gets $200 Fine Gilbert Covell, controversial young night club owner, was convicted Monday In a protracted legal battle of allowing minors under 16 1n his Huntingt9?1 Beach dance hall on two occaslcins. Judge Fenton Jones ordered Covell, 32. of 14201 Loc\llfSt., Westminster, to pay.a StOO fine on each misdemeanor COW'lt. The violatklns were on Nov. 17 and Nov. 2. Covell, who has been in 1 running feud By RICHARD P. NAIL • DI ffM o.lW ,llllt S"" --Costa ~feu, and Stephen A. Schirmer, 23 The attorney denied any proof of gone out of buJJness. Butler said he did with police and the city generally, is co-a graduate business student. narcotics use or drinking bouts. owner of Syndicate 3000, a teenage night Underground City Halt surfaced in Huntington Beach council chambers t.1on- day night loog enough to 1ose· Ill appeal '!or b.,._ lieen&e iegiUmacy despite • spirited dele!JI". • ~ tn a i. t split, councilmen upheld the cl< ly clerk and denied a ~n&e to the TeCOrd store -atloa al lJf, Main Sl Councilman llWJ. Kalllman dl&&enled •"!! Cotllldlman Do1a1a Shipley .... absent. . "t can set no r~8aon why lhere shoukl nOt W:t rtcotd" riri :i1' thit crummy block," said ·Newport Stach attorney Arthur Strock, referring to downtown business blighl Strock repretented the applicants far th e bu5inea ~ Jama T~ Buller, 28, a tucber .i Eltancla 1ligll Scbooi In ------- Dot. club that has been much In the polke On the bull ol critical written police "When," he uked, "would an urbane, Councilman George McCracken.said he eye. It hu been closed for several lfeeks reports, he challenged Police Capt. Earle 80phisticated community 1ucb u Hun-bui fCll ''remodelhi~." RoblWlli'1. description of the premises tlngton Beach "censor music, lidghter, passed the l<iing last week and uw Don Bonfa, e1ly attorney, told coun- as .. ~~tely fUt.by." r;ith and drawn bllnds." per80DS drinking beer in the. store win-. cilmen Monday that the road to cOn-Robl~re, who had paraphrued, Strock alto denied a report of com-· dow, vlcUon waa 1 tong on«"" including' ~h became JDON: -.pecWc. He l&fd '1in· munal balhlDll He aaid there ii no place "It .seems like you would know you legal tac:t.ks as a demurrer and two writs v..uotif ollicen foond cockroach<a. on the~-for bathlng ·ol any kind. have to contn>I ·your i1.Lslnesl. ," '.&id of prohibit' bt b th def sten<ih, cilrt and ,mice.•• Butler a•~ teac'IW at E&lancia McCracken . . . ion sou1. . Y e eme, one The,polin caplaln told of I"-dinc· High~ ad lilblweliht ~Jboll • s~ Jlkened:iJie .&ityUon to college . at the~lol .Court o1 Appeala le~el II pJay;d throuih a pu~ addres& l}'llem cooch,.. lllid ·be wu dfAppolnledf at to ~afd11itt lie« cliblklng, . "° · ,.i. · · · · · · at the 1Jore wltlch he desc:rilied u "llllby lllllCh ~· arid wu .-~ · "illvti>'t yoo ' id\'erµsed ·.Iii the· Ftee· · . · and foul." ' '~. ~ ·'1' :Cilo~ '>fttholll8 . .....,.,.J!f.,aJOl'policek · PfiM?"' •iliei! Green:'Sdlirm¥ &fl~ tbty "SJoek , llfarket• " After police elooect'-he' prenii*I• thef" )l.itilt·Jock!9riib<'Utcoil Wiiy 'I)<. had ·biid Gol~' , · ----'---~---.- was operating wllbout a bmlneu ttcense, chosen a bllgtiUd area, to ttart • r~ The mayor uked abo\lt the n11me he said,.jl sign appeand In lbe window: atm. • , ' , "Under-•"" CUy Hall." Sir k said' ~ "Clooed by the 111811 to hwle yw." "Lola of young people and ch<ap'..,1,-, had be<'ii'Pialfar!ied lrll .ma T':'iu atore lie -lone<! a narcotla party and said BuOer. ' '·· • , ~ oul ol ~l<*t H• said It •*' not drlnltlng boull. draped window• and TJie mayor _~sked U he kn"!~ ~" ~~·Ilia 'cl~~ wttt1. mUsic and lau&hter wJtbio. tarae record alore acron Ibo ~}1:1<! . · ~ · · 1op.1'" 1l~>j _,.r . ' 'I ' . "" . . . ' ' .. .. . . .. " .M ,.;. J •• ' ,. NEW YORK (AJ')-The &tock market ...malned alla..pty lower In moderately active tr,ldina:' thb: aften1oon, · with brokers ftport1ftl aeYe'raJ a d ' e r 1 e developo>elltl a,...ren1Jy weJlbing'"' fie marliOI: (S0e q!IOlitloM, Papa lo.II). ; . ' ' I not in vain." "We fuJJy realhe that the PrimarJ responslbi!Jty of the struggle should be ours," the 46-year-old South Vletname. president said. He added that his naUoo would still need combat support and sup. l plies but would have "less and le&s need for the blood of other nations." * * * Reds Expected· To Boost Attacks SAIGON (UPI) -TJie flpl of :15,000 U.S. soldiers being withdrawn from Viet- nam left for home today. Tontcht, two Communist rockets struck a Vietnamese 1hipyard on tbe outskirll of Saigon. &tarting flr(S tha~ lit up the akies of the capital. Allied military officials already were predicting a new wave of Communist at- tacks In the coming weeks u the Soutb. 'Vietnamese Army begins taking up pml- Uons lelt open by the Americans. TJie first of the attacks was not long in com- ing. . Ne. caauaUtes were reported im- mediately. ' ·. . The rockels hit a bulldlng used to atore fuel and flames billowed mo~ than 300 feet into the skie.!1, throwing out a light that was clearly visible from downtotrn Saigon, three miles to the · northeast. It was the lint rocket attack •Ince Satur• day when two rodcets did litUe dam.,.. Orange Weatller Fair· 1kieJ wW rtian aiona the1 Orang• Coast -Wedneoday with the mercury ranging lrom the upper! 70's to lhe lower llO's dependlnl on your proxlmity to the cool aea breezes. INSmE TODAY Men rate its 1econd in choof. .lng ci mau, but women fltM ft •f#k-which fa toJlv 1S pcrmat ~of A {1atrici1n mo:tTioOtr ar1 II bust. P<JQI 21. =:::-•i ,~ .. ;_. ·~ .. t i..·:n..c. ,:..: 0.... ~ ' ,,,..... """' ,. ~ '"' • MC:IM ..... 1•11 ......... , ' 1t ....,. , .. ,, -,.....,. 1 .. 11 ,.._ ._,..... »II """""" II ,.......... .. AM ~ 11 ft&llWI tt -. -........ f ....... i _' •J ~LY ,!LOT H Israel Hits 7 Syrian_ . . ,MIG Planes Sur~se ~o _! AS1 : _,.,-J ~·~Bonny Succumbs . ·-... After · Big Trip . Ullfttoll Pren lnterntloeal From Wlre Strvlctt Observers described AJl\erlea'a spae• HONOLULU. -Altroroonk Bonny died monkey as limp but a11ve when flown by taraell fighter planes shol down seven SJrlan MIGll jet! in a ~inute air bat• tle today, an Israep 'JfY spokesm1n an-aaunctd tnTelAv v. e aafd the~lsr'"'' .,,_..~ early today 12 boura alter the ~ey Air Force hell.copter tQ HawaU's Hlctam put down In Ibo Podflc ocean folloiwlnl -llO orl>Urorouod-eorth-ln-a-11POce-Alr.1'nr<e.bale. eapaqle, the U.S. ap.sct'qency re~. NASA officials aald an autopsy was IUl!trednol...,. II w11 the fourth air battle within a IJIOk. In prevloul enpgemenla during the week Israeli jets shot down five EgypUan jets in dogfights over lhe Gulf f!1 SU.. and the Red Sea. · · Today's battle was the biggest aerial . battle between laraeli and Syrian forces ilnct end of the lwt lix~y war and brou&bt to JI the number of Arab planes Israel has reported &booting down since then. . · Tbe fl&ht represented another major ucli.tlon ol the ·Mideast confllct thal tJni10d Natlool 6ecr<W')' General Thant -lold the Security Cow>cll Monday had turned mto •1opep wu(are..'' The Te1 Aviv military spokesman uld Soday'a dotfllht toot place above. the broell«cupled Goltn heigbla along the lsraell.Syrlan border: · ' The 11pokesman aald the battle began When Syrian planea penetrated Israeli· : control1td atr space. He sajd all eeven of the SyrJan planes ahot down crashed into • f)yrian territory. • 1 The altuaUon waa l!IO aerioua that Arab .~plomaUc IOUl'(:el in IRome rtpOrttd Egypt wu calling up resuvo. EarUer today EgypUan commandos stabbed acroA the Suez canal and 'reportff tilling 3G IJratU aoldlers and deotroylng military equipment In a Sinai ·t>eeerl but. Ia:rael aald It repulsed the . raid, bl no men of U1 own and killed eight in the auaci force. • .; 'nli aJr battle coincided with new .IJareupe of fighting aloni the Jordanian .~era ond the Syrian borders. There .were report& tht armed forces cbiefa of ataff of Iraq, Syria, Jordan and El)'pt were meeUng in Damascus to plot etratqy against laraeZ. Damucus ls ·-y--·mlleo-!Nm the •!le·•f· today'• air batue. Nixon Requests ·More C.Ove rage ' .F or Jobless WASHINGTON (UPI) -President )li:z:on today urged Congress to expand "llOYerqe of. unemplayment insurance to -4ol00,000 more .,,,riera and. &o iDcreue beodlta. • ln a spectal messaae, Nixon aald that .f,.hi)e over. t7 million workers are .'lOw covered, almost 17 ml\lton are not- .more than half of them employa of atae-and local governmenll. The Pruldent saJd the addlUonal 4.8 mlllloo workers he wants covered "are In reai need of protecUon against unemploy- ment." t-~-...,.,nsked-thaHhe following be-brought- under the insurance umbrella: -400,000 on large farms employing four or more workers in each of 20 weekl. -200,000 1n agricultural processing ac· uv111 ... -1,800,000 lp. nonprofit ora:~ni.r.aUoru. -800,000 in state hospitals · a n d universities. -200,000 salesmen, delivery tradesmen and others not currently defined as employes. Four Children Drown In Iowa Stor n1 Sewe1· --..,:;;._. l\EOKUK, IOwT(UPJ1' -Four children playing Jn a park creek here Monday afternoon were rwept into a stonn sewer and drowned. Olher children in Rand Park said the four were floating in the rain·swollen creek, when they were caughl by a sud· den swirl of water. The witnesses said the youngsters were hurled through a six· foot opening and into a concrete sewer, • DAii Y PliOI OUNOI COU1 PV•Llt.MIMO COMrAJft fl:eMrt N. W.-4 ffruWllot W "'911ftir J••• ft. C.rley ~ ""*"' .... o-• IMflt ... n ••• , 1t •• ,;1 .... Tlu11r1a1 A. Mvrphil10 Me-m, IEdilW >J••rt W. I ott• W.1111111 i t.4 At..U.lt Hllfll .... klfo 1-.11 Efl* City ldtlw " ............. OMce Jot Ith $tr11t M1m111 A"''"' r.o. ••• l•o. •?641 --....,., teto. "11 *•' ............... ,. e.M MIMI ut '#tll kJ 1"-I L....,. loMdl• m ~ ,,.,...,. ' ' OAIL Y PILOT ,Mitt '1 Ol lt hl'l'lfW Where Liv in' Is Ex.pensive •i1t wa1 ulden," uld Brad Evana, ordered Immediately ln tbe blosatetllte public lnf"""'Uon offlcet for the NI· laboratory trailer Where the mool<ey had tional A 'r on 1 u t 1 c • and Spece been under intenaive care s1ncl the AdminlltraUca. "He bad ·been 1n fllr coo-touchd dltJon juat. before." • own. ·Tbe 14-pound monkey, exhauated and "We had no idea that be was that cloae bored, wu broulbt blc-to earth more to death," added Evans. 11He Just llld· than three woeb eor!y ood oplubed deftly fell oft." down In bis Btosatelllte I some J.1 mllu NASA olficl&LI scheduled a newa con· nil K1ual, Hawlll. fannce to d1scuas the unerpected cllmu f'olic y Changes Studie'd by OV School District Of the allorted -· rniallcn Evans aaJd lt wu atll1 too early to call the m1lllon a failure, aayina "it depends on data already received.'' "We bad been hoping for 1 minimum 14-day m1a:sion for succas," he aald. Before death, a team o.f 15 doctors, veterinarlana and technlclans worked over the little prima.te in a pcrtable medical van, and~Ld~tor had reported "his heartbeat is 68 per minute and atudy." One way to get close to Linda Isle, swank Irvine Co. development in Newport Harbor, is to fly over it. Horsesfioe-shaped island, last or six in lower bay to be developed. has 108 lots, all of which already have been leased. Isle dwellers will pay between $50,000 and $250.000 bver 1:;.year life of le_ase for privilege of residing in excl.uslve digs. Irvin~ ~· officials figure most expensive house built on 1slan<I so far cost $400,000. That doesn't include price of lease on lot. TMtees cl the Ocean View School District will consider adopUng a new lremework of scllnnl board peUey at their Jul~ 14 meeting. ttie new culda wu introduced Moni:!ay night by Tru&tte R. Jama Shaffer who aa1d the long tenn objectives were ad- vitable but added that ulhey woold be ..of the type that would require oome 1trelch- ing to attain." Charles Wilson, project m1na1er for NASA'• Am.ea Re.search Labolatory in Sl!!lllml!, Calif .. aald !ht_1!3 million ex- perlmtnt waa ended after the monkey flllld to reapond to ilgnals aboard the space capsule. •iffis lack of response WI! interpreted to Indicate a llua:isbnw which U allow- . ed to co_n_unue, .. could have led to .serious deterioraUon," WU.sou &aid. Newport Man Cleared Of All Fraud Charges Cleo Marvin Johnson of Newport BC:ach has been -cleared of all charges invO!ved tn a Gr3nd Jury indictment on Insurance sales prior to the ca:;e going to an Orange County Superior Court jury. Previously, it had been incorreclly reported that Johnson, 51, of 1901 Kings Road, was still Involved in the case when it went to the jury June 12-, and as the jury's deliberations continued through June 16. The ·District Attorney's office rested Its case on June 5. Johnson '• attorneya lm· mediately entered a motion before Superior Judge William A1urray, seeking the entry of a judgment of acquittal for tht Newport resident. The defense motion was granted, and the jloklge ruled Johnson iMoctnt o( all charg~ at that polnt. The motion or directed order of ac· qu11~1 -came under Section 1118.1-of the California Penal Code and was placed before Judge Murray before any In· trocluctlon of defense or defense evidence on behall of Johnson . The D a i I y Pilot regrets the error In arlicles of June 14 and June 16 in which it was Incorrectly indicated that Johnson's case wu still before the jury. The ac· count of Jl.D"le 16 was, in fact, an effort to fairly report that Johnson had been ruled innocenl and cleared of all charges. The error was made because of er· roneous clerical Information supQ,lied to the newspaper. There was no intent on part of the D a 11 y Pilot to offer in· correct, defamatory; wicomptimentary or unproplUous information r e I a r d I n g Johnson's acquittal in the insurance mat. ter befou the court. Willdward Pa ss age Hold s Record Pace I n Transpac SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Rob er t J ohnson's Windward Passage sliced through llabl seas at a record-breaking pace Monday to maintain the overall lead In the 25lh Transpacific yacht race to Honolulu. The 73.footer from the Lahaina Yacht Club of Hawaii was making about nine knots and was 700 miles from San Pedro in the 2,225-mile nautical race. This was compared to 64-0 miles out for the saine time in 1965 when the Tlcon· deroga, also skippered by Johnson, set the record of nltie days, 13 hours and 51.2 minutes. "' • Blackfin, which reported generator and radio troubles earlier, said the dlfflallties were cleared up and the vessel was in se- cond place. "iir was third. ~·o report was available on the distance bclween Blackfin and Windv.•ard Passage because of poor visibility. Twelve knol winds were reported with four foot swells. The class standings were , in order: A: Rascal, Concerto, Windward Passage, Blackfln (tie for third). B: J ubilation, Sal8cia, Starling It. C: Esperance, Argonaut, Numse JI. (tie for second ). D: Valkyrie II, Hctaera, Aventura (tie for second ). In the bandicappe<I standings, Esperan· ct and Argonaut were the overall leaders. OV Schools Add Personnel Ma n Kenneth Eilefson . 36, has been ap- pointed to the personnel commission of the Ocean View School Di.strict. He replaces Melvin Duvall, who resign- ed from the commission recently when he moved out of the school district's boun· daries. Ellefson, a resident o( HunUntton Beach since 1984, was an unsuccessful candidate for the Ocean View board ol trustees this spring. Personnel l\leet Set The Fountain Valley School Dlslrlct Penionnel Commission will meet In regular session at 7:30 p.m. n1ursday In lhe Currleulum lotaterials "'Center, 1 Ligbthouae Lane, Fountain Valley. (Transpac highll&hts via direct radio report! from the neet are pmented dally on KOCM, 103.1 FM at 3 and 7 p.m.) Summer Parks Agenda Topic Summer months mean a busy agenda for the Huntington Beach Rescreatlon and Parks Commission when it meets at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the city council chambers. Among the items scheduled for discussion are Youth Coalition Committee plans, Lhe city.sponsored U.S. Surfboard Championships and summer plans of the Recrealion Activities Association. The commissioners will also be ar status reports on current park plans, ln· eluding the future Hunilngton Central Pafk. New Building Opens July 20 Seal Beach will open the doors of its new $342,000· admlnl.rlration building for the first time in ceremonies, July 20. The new facility, containing 14 ,362 square feet, "will house all city ad· mlnlslratlve offices as well as the offices of the city engineer, public works, city manager, shipping and receiving. person· nel and the new council chambers, Localed at 211 8th St. the new building features Spanlsh·style architecture end six levels. It is topped b yan observation deck. Bauer Heads Tn1stees For OV District Dr. Ralph Bauer, newut member on the Ocean View School Dlslrlct board of trustees, wu elected board president tilonday night. :r h e governing board also decided to continue through tile comlng school year with lls .present schedule of mee~lngl al 7:30 p.m. on the first and third Monday! of each month In dl1trtct officeJ. 7992 Warner Ave., HunliDit.On Buch. • Park Upkeep Di sc ussion Set Here is what he has odered for ctn- sideration : .Maln1enance of private park.4 in Foun- tain Valley will be discussed at a SJ>tt!_al meeUng or the Parks and Recrea tion Commissl~n at 8 p.m., Wedcesday irt city council chambers. -A district program whlch would mobilize local governmental bodies to prevent rezoning of commercial and in- dustrial properties for residential use, thus lowering the tax base for the Ocf:an View District. --- -Improvement o f communica:Uons betwetn the district and the public. -A program designed to identify and correct :e<tucational problems which have shown up in results of statewide testing progr~s. John Hamilton New Mayor of SB Seal Beach City Councilmen Manday night elected John B. Hamilton, 38, to a one-year term as mayor. He replaces Lloyd Gummere, who held the city's top post during the past year and also 1n 1966 and 1967. ... Commissioner Albert Holliden re- ~uested n report from the city staff ex- plai ning just who has the responsibility of maintaining private parks built for specific developments. School Meet Canceled Trustees of the HunUngton Beach City School District will not meet tonight as normally scheduled. District personnel said the only meeting this month will be J uly 15. Hamilton, who has served on the Seat Beach City Council for the last three years, was appointed by a unanimous 5--0 vote. The coup.ell also appointed Mrs. Veda Orels as vice-mayor and Terry ~ton and Mike Knapp to the city planning commission., Contracts signed by residen ls of these traclli will be Inspected to learn how the private park concept functions. -~ Become a :-nealtllie1,Happie1, 1'1inner You at Holiday Health Spas ESCAPE to q priv~t• luxvry where sophisticated weight reducing methods make . embarrassing pounds vanish quickly ond ... gentty. INCOMPAllAIU FACILmES • Hn ttd lffttlft S""""'l"I l'ool • Ultn Mtdtm Ctndltlonlng Ftdlltt1s • l orn1n StMm Room• • t1tctronk Mlssagt • nnn lsh Rock S.un1 ...... • ftorWI Sllft TM looms • Whl~pool 111111 • Concfltionlng f1clfttt11 • Swi11 Fact.J Mtchlnn ••••••••n.DI • • • • • • • • FIEEI FIEll ••• ..... • Special· Join Joday .RECEIVE YOUR PRIVATE SWIM CLUB MEMBERSHIP Swim in 1 Beautiful Outdoor Olympk 5111 Helled Pool Offer Good For Llmi1ed Time Only • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COMPLITI FACILITIES FOil MEN & WOMEN Callar $t~p by Today Far Your r 1M Tour • • " ,. \ _\ ... -~ •----~~~~--~~~~~~~ I I ' .. •• I 1 ' ' . . • , - Beaeh f -.. Today's Flnal N.Y. S~Ki VOL 62, NO., 162, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES TUESDAY, ~ULY I, 'J,69 TEN CENTS ... -traguna 'l'axpayers __ royp-,--'-crQ mizes Laguna-J!.e·ach Taxpayer! Association, dorihatil-~veral years, has 't!_een ~ac· tivated to study and weigh the. Laguna Beach city budget that proposes an 18~· cent tl'i rate increase. Gera)t Linke; new president of the asSocjalion, said the organization will take a public stand in a~t a week. The retired Navy CA.Plaut met Monday with Chamber of Commerce Executive Manager Warren Morgan and went over DoWn the M •. ISSJOD Trail Laguna Hills PO Site Selected LAGUNA HILL.5 - A site has been selected for a new Laguna Hills branch of the La na Beach ~ Offi~ys an aii'OOUricemen from ol£ice oru:S. Poslmasttr General Winton Blount. The poSt office will be located al the northeast comer of Calle de la Magdelena and Paseo.de Valencia. The 77 000-square-fool post office will be built ~oder lhe department's policy of a private owner building the post office to specific,a.Uon and then leasing it 'back to the po$lal service. . . . Advertisement for bids 18 expected 11\ the near future. e ~ports Site Studied LAGUNA NIGUEL -Capistrano Unified School Dillrid• -\"Giiday nighl ruponded io ·a request they otudy ways, lo UM ·jclloql _property in Llguna Nigue1 (O'l' junior league baSeball and football. Board members Fred Newhart Jr. and TomJlingeLand Asalota~pt. Joe Wimer were appointed to a Niguel Recreation Committee. The request was made by Frank Wllbar representative of N i g u e l Homeo'wners and Community Associa· lion. e Youth f'1111d StRrted MISSION VIEJO - A fund has been set up in behalf of Donald Bondi, 18, a June graduate of Mission Viejo High School, who was left paralyred following a May automobile accident in which his best friend , Dale Kennedy was killed. Donald, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Robinson of ;.43$1 Chrisanla Drive, has been under intensive care at South Coast Comnnmity Hospital before b e I'll g trsiisferred to the Rancho Rehabililatlon Hospital in Downey. When he comes home tn four or five monlhs he will be in need of an electric wheelchair, bathroom facilities, a special bi!d. ramps leading to and, lrom his house, an4.:-ol\)~ neceB_!iti~. according to Mrs. WUliam Gatdner. · Contributions-tO help defraf I.he f~a financial burden can be sent to the DOna~ Fund, United California .. Bank;a&J6t lSPaz,f\ciid, Miasion Viejo. e S~~-Clem;;..te, Used? CA!>lSIRANO PALISADES -Mayor Wa~_..has ~ed that the city: of San CI~mente~"used" by renfBlts --of the northern PaUSAdes area outside city limits .1n a tight' thri--t.Q... halt a .house trailer park. ... - Some residents of the . area had re- quested annexation by the city which has stiffer mobile home zoning requirements than tM county, but then dropped tbe an· nexat.iori move when the county di5ap- proved or the trailer park. e _lert>icnnen Cited . ~ Et TORO • .:-The 33-member El Toro- Laguna HilJs-~Exchange Club b a 1 pecsonally welcomed-over 1$,000 return- ing servl~en on lheir-a.rrlval at El Toro Marine ~s Air Station since the project's beglnrung in December, ac- cording to spokesman Al Blais. The club, whose motto is "Unity for Sentice," meets incoming servicemen with refreshments in conjunction with otJier Exchange Clubs throughout the cauitty. • Beek E~Jalblt Sei LAGUNA HILLS -''An Ari Book Ex· hiblt.'' complete with chamber mu1ic d•tinll to tbe 18th ctntury,.will be •ta(ed ~ W~a~t I, p.m. in·· ll1e· Leilure World'CI SC Two. ~ , • - Fina a books showing -palntlnp. erienta1 print.•, and mu$ical instruments og all ages have been..silected·lor dis· play by \M..Special Projects Department of the Orange County l'ubllc Library. .. We know there ban-oever· been this • many rare, off·print. old bookl of a'r.t Utiiltt ""' roof in orange Count)'," said dlr,«{or Leota Petmon. ~ - l ' ' the chamber's record $48,975 request !or city promotion. Mayor Glenn E. Vedder, who hat: heard of Linke's investigations, said he doesn·t see how it is going to be possible to cut anything aubstantial out of the budget "unless you would try to reduce aome personnel." Councilmen, who-'have ha~ the ~ posed budget in their Hands more than a week, will take their fiist licks at it iri a budget otudy ....ton Wednetrlay If. temoon. Linke satd he will be prisent, Q an obsefver. The IU mil)ion budget proposed by Ci- ty ~aQJW ~James Wheaton callJ for a tax increase. from $1.74 per flOO of assessed valuaUon to almost $1:93. "!'he proposed 181k-cent hike easily would be the largest for the city in many a year. Las~ yeir the tax rate lncruse was eight cents, the year before·~ve.n .cents, and for four year• prevlou,s to that\he ci· ty held the llne witbou! tax incre.i.ses. City M•JJaaer l\'healoll. said his past record hu been rather consistent:,ind one he is . personally proud of. City c0u.n- e;i1men haven't made ritajor change.a in the . five previous years when he bas presehted the~ budget. "'They',ve made only minor change!. TbeY haven1t eliminated pers-0nnel, equipment or changed service level a~ proaches," he said. " At least one councilman 'ti\lght bt uneasy about the size oC this year's pro- posed tax increase. He Is CouftCllman Charlton Boyd, who has suggested that city planning co~n:ers be Sent a copy of the budget "for their enlighten· ment and ~le amazement." Boyd indicated he wa_s reacting to criUeaJ comments by plannets on the length ol Ume it might take llle-elljl to put utllltlo.s undttgr<und. "C.pitaJ improvementa mean -nothinc l_>ut mopey," he said. Wheaton, in an interview, said be did not ~are to tell bow large budget request.I Crom city departmenla had been before he whittled them down. · _ , · But then he did remark that Jnitial t• quests . w~d llave required .a tu fn. crease approximately equal to the SI ~nts residents turned do~ in. the April 15 Laguna ochool election, L«fr11nagrins By Phil lntorlandl 1st· Gls Come Home ----- 814 Veterans .Start of 25,000 Pullout · ,.---' ~ - McCHORD AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. Thieu said: ''Together we have repelled not In vain." (AP) -The first U.S. troops to be pu.lled communist aggression. This has been our "We fully realize that the ·primary out of Vietnam i>y President Nixon wing-goal and our purpose." responsibility of the struggle ahould bi ed homeward in nine jet transports today .He said the South Vietnamese must ours," the 46-year-old· Sou:th Vletnameae af~ a 11endof! marked by military fan· begin to. assume a greater share of the president said. He added that bis paUon fare and the thanks of Saigon oliicials. fighting and the repl.ii.cement of allied would a:Ull need combat auppori and. aup. . Gen. Creighton" W. Abrams, com--tr~ps: . . . plies but wou1d have "less and leu Deed mander of American forces in Vietnam, This is only the beginning o( this pro-for the blood of other nations." told the 814 men in the first contingent o( cess," Thieu said. He noted Ute losses of . After his speech, Thieu presented a gilt 2S,OOO U.S. troops being withdrawn : "You the U.S. ·1th division in South Vletn4m -to the unit and individual glft.s to its of.. -occij)y a s.ij:iiillCaiit momentifi History." ~ l ,855~ki1Jed-·in ·acUon-and-said.-'..!Our. -1icer:S-and--&e~ .nancommieion~ A gala welcome awaited the--In· duty Is to make sur~ ~ sacrifice was ficers._ fantrymen, almost all veterans of com· • ''WE MUST !IE ·NEARING LAGUNA AND IT ~OOKS LIKE IT'S THAT TIME OF . YEAR" ·'N'q,'t Turner~ -l)iScussion · , Delayed by Capo Board A scheduled discussion of textbooks and specifically of "The Confessio9s of Nat Turner," a story about Negro slave, was shelved Monday by Capistrano Unified School District tru&:tees. Supt. Charlts F. Kenney said he is reviewing· the procedure of textbook selection -"a procedure which will eliminate as much cont.roversy as possi· ble in text selection." "The Confessions of Nat Turner'' was requested as a supplemental English text. Several trustees took exception to language used by characters in the book. Tbe book was omitted from the ap- proved list oC books, but trustees were to read the book before this Monday'• meeting. Laat November trustees discussed for £1.genfla Light iO minutes tbe language of J. D. Sal· inger's beat seller "Catcher in the Rye" before deciding lo leave it on the bookshelf for 11th grade literature classes. In the end trustees agreed the book is realistic and reflects what teenagers are experiencing. - Kenney said that under his new system, bo91t requests by teachers would first be rev;ewed·by 1 high acbool com· m1ttee aod 'then by a distMct curriculUm committee. Tbls would be done to "develop greater understandin&,'' Kenney said. Pros and COOJ Of the book in question couJd then be determined prior to public debate, be said. Planners Give Plant 01{ F9r _L~a Canyon Site With oiily lhree ol five ·members present, the Laguna Beach Planplng Commission took on a relallvely non-con- troversial agenda Monday night. Planners conditionally granted a varlance requested by Gordon Str11.Lil:1n to conduct air conditioning, heaUng, elec- trical and refrigeration contracting. and retail sales of appliances at 2245 Laguna canyon Road. Strachan, who currently does business a ~ 310 Glenneyre, giust revise his parking layout plans, and obtain approval from the city for his signs, before making his move. In other business, planners: bat,. at this Air Force base, near Ft. Lewis and the city of Seattle. Anny chief of Staff Gen. William C. Westmoreland. a former U.S. com· mander in Vietnam, flew in from Washington with decOrations for five of the returning soldien of . the 3rd Bat- talion, 60th Infantry, 9th Infantry Di.vl&lon. On the-program for t.be·next three days were speeches by public-figures, band ,...ie, ~ Pi'!ade• a <lilm.", pretty girls and. ln manf ciles, famtty reuruofts .• ,\mO~ those who saw the tro0ps ott at ,..,, <Sliii • Nhal airport Tuesday were South Vletnamese President Nguyen Van Thieii.. Vice Preli.dent Nguyen Cao Ky and Defense Minister Gen. Nguyen Van Vy. - Thieu and Ky were surprise la:st minute arrivals, just before the soldiers marched to their waiting Cl~l Starlifter aircraft. They passed down the ranks of the fatlgue~lad Americans, shaking .hands and thanking them for their services. Addressing the departing battalion, * * * Reds Expected To Boost Attacks SAIGON -(tJ}>J) -The first of 25,000 U.S. !Oli:l.iers being -withdrawn from VJet,.. naJJl left for home today. Tonight, two Communist rockets struck a Vietnamese sllipyard on the outskirts of Saigon, starting fires that lit up the skies of the capital. Allied mililary officiaJS already were predicting a new wave of Communist at· tacks in the coming weeks as the South \.1etnamese Anny begin:; taking up posi- tions left open by the Americans. The first of the attacks was not long in com· ing. No casualties were reported im· mediately. T.he rocket.ii hit a building used to store fuel and flames billowed. 1I10re than 300 feet into lhe skies, throwing out a light that we clearly visible from downtown Saigon, three miles to the northeast. It was the first rocket attack since Satur- day when two rockets did lltUe damage. County Takes Up Dana Rezoning -Deferred iction to July 21 on a re· quest by Margery.T. Miller, 281-213 Wave St., to expand an existing duplex wlthc1.1t providing the required setba<ks and off· street parking. In the interim, the cil~ · A rezone of county-owned area al Dana Annual Laguna will investigate. another vattarice request. Point Harbor to a Planned CommWlilY -Will conUnue a ~bile hearing to July Development designation goes before the tt on a request by .arans Auto Systems to county Board of Supervisors Wednesday. S f · T · ney conduct an auto rentaJ ~ leasing •Jen-ne proposal, developed by the county Ur ing OUr ,cy at 946 S. OoaA Highway. 11 appbcant PlannlOg Department and approved lasl Jack Conlon finalizes hil lease by~t.hen, May , 28 by the county Planning Com· D adl• N the hearing will be continued. mlssM>n, pennits 122 uses of leased pro--e lUe ears -Ap[in>ved a one-year dancing ·per-perty In the harbor area. ' mit requesfed by Jim Vreeland, owner It encompasses more than 500 acres in· Deadline is Thursday tor entries in the of the Sandpiper Restaurant. eluding water areas inside and outside of tith annual Laguna Beach Surfing --Retnforctd their posltlon to city the breakwater . Tournament '11-be .st.aged Saturday at the council on_ two.._prevlou1 denials. Both. The . plan, it approved, .relleve1 the. .. Broou Slleet beach. Emest L. Schroeder, 2St Lower Cllff Dr., CO\UltY Pia-••• ComnJ1.<Sjon ol the _Entries for the e•ent, open to Laguna and the Calvary Church, 7'10 llil!s1~'1 . ' i!i!lli'' ""V' \\tllt;l'al~deveto -aurien.on)1, must ~l.ll"11':\1 n a Cl Y deciri,. 'Oas o(r"t&e PlaM;.... . ·• . -,I! •1 w .....,,,.. - -be •-·• I I 't Dr., have~'1Jl>elied ·to cit~IM '~"I'!' ' · ,i" "' ··~'iio• •· -!!° hall wftb U:ie "1 tee. Entry blanks are ...,.. . • · ~ · · -.: ~ 1~ ,. if.... · ' available af ell)' hall and the Oak Street .. , ~ • , '.I · · • · 1 , •l\lllltCC to ap-l~eguard wwer: " M • p . R. proi)I liy'-tre*Oi ~-o.,.director of There will be six ucnls In the contest, eat rices Ille har~. i;..cbe. a~ " ,:lhe ,!la!bor to befln at a a.m. '!'bey Include <enlor , llevlCw lloar~:;a~lthe ty Ra~r and 1unlor mens surlin&, oenlor and \l\'ASIUNGI'ON (UP!). -The IJ,a'i'f lloinnu.sl\)11 .• JL: c ·' , , ' junior mens board ,..,ing. body aur!lng IJefiarlmtn.t reported today ;u.,11 ::~~linr~: ... Olt ntzon!ngOf (any ap), and skid -• (II ind ' wholesale P1ceo or .. meati, pou= lhe.l!iJW . ·~~ c~ !a and,~. Under). fish me U percent in June, ~' ~14'.1.~,i ~fi ·sWfe .Individual lropbiCJ will be awarded to •lgnalin, !Urtl>er bikes In food '!':T.~,r' I.' '<!!w.\!S:· ';'il!!'U.r )'\'h the·top !ourflnlsbera in eacb event. prlct lip allead. ;-'f· ti,'~ . ' .. I.I l~ I . -~ ··-_ ._.._. ---.__ __ ~-.~ -·~ . , _ Not Responding Laguna Boy Still in Coma After Escaping Sea-Death . ' . J err WU.on. tjii . II-rear-old ,Lajlllla Bfacl> boy who wu brought baclt to IJta Friday after breaking his nedt wbile div- ing oft a rock at Wood's Cove, remalDs m a comaotoday at -South Coast Community Hospital. Doctors say the blond-haired boy hasn't respooded to treatment since bttng ad· mitted after the Fourth of July accident. " Wilson's doctor, Dr. John Hazen, said the youth \vas unconscious in the water Crom five to sil minutes as girls watc.hed nearby, Utlnking he was pracUcing underwater endurance. When he was finally brought to shQrJ: by i;wl(nmen, his breathing J n d . heartbeat had stopped. Lifeguard John Cunningham and Dr. Vincent Carroll, who was on the beach at the tinle of th"! incident, administered mouth-to-mouth re$utcitaUon a~d ex· ternal cardiac mas.sage. The emergency trealment was con· Unued en route to the hospital, .where Beasley Elected • President of Capo Trustees Dr. Robert P. Beasley was unanimous· ly elected president of the Capistrano Unified School District Board of. Trustees Monday night. Dr. Beasley, a San Clemente veterinarian, was formerly board vice- presklent and has been a member of the board 1ince 1964. Nofie Famularo, of Capistrano 8each, was elected vice-president. Oaths of office were administered to new board members Bob D. Hurst of Laguna Niguel and re-elected members Thomas J. ·winget; of Dana Point and Fred L. Newhart Jr or San Juan Capistrano . Harcourt Bull of San Clemente was elected board clerk. Newhart w'as named as the board's representative to the Coun- ty · Committee on SCbool 0 i s t r i c t Reorganization. BILL .WOULD BAR~ ' PARKING FINE FEE SAcltAMENTO (UPI) -A bill to eaae the iiiistroUciii ·of pifklilf '10llton cleared' the • Assembly Crttnlnal Procedure· Committee · Mqnd~. · The·committe~rsetit to the lower house floor I meosute , by Seq, . ~tlioll)' e. Beilenson (IJ!lieverly HlllJ); requiring · lhaf driven Cited !Or' vloil!Jona ol lodl • porlting' ordmanee~ be gtven'·• wrtflill notiee of the amouOt of ball. · stall -llnal1y 1tllillulatiilr 'lim\ --: back IDto action by ·~· Hll parents1 Mr. and. Mrs. Richard Wilson, 646 Ramona Ave., were at thf hospilal-tbis-lllGl'1tlni-lloping-for-• - change for the better. Scotchman's Cove Blaze Scores Quarter Acre . A brush fire at Scotchman's Cave Mon- day afternoon scorched less than an acre before being put out by Emerald Bay volunteer firemen. No one wU injured In the blaze. Cause of the fire may have been children playing with matches, accordln1 to county firefighters. Scotchman's Cove Ui located between Laguna Beach and Corona del Mar. An Emerald Bay volunteer fireman, Reginald B. Tripp, 49, Dana Point, was killed in a traffic accident Friday while responding to a fire call at Crystal r.ove near Scotchman's Cove. That fire also is believed to have been set by children playing with matches. Stacie Jtfcrlceta < . NEW YORK (AP)-The· stock mamt remained sharply lower in mQderately active trading this afternoon, with brokers reportirig ~al adv er 1 e developments apparently weighing on the market. (See quotations, Pages 1~11). The Dow Jones industrial average .at 1:30 p.m. wa• oU 11.64 at 871.57. Orange Weedier -· Fair okies will reJin along the Orange· Coast Wednesday With ,lhe mereury ranging from tbe upper 70'• to the lower 8()'s depending on your proximity to the cool aui breezes. INSmE TODAY Mm ~tr-sf': H00ttd·tn e.llGM-1 ing a mau, b1't womtn. fOnk it. rizlh -which if whv 1~ ~cent .of Ame¥j•-~~fl · 4 bust. Page 21. · ..• ,~• ; 1, C•I"'*~ <""'"" ~:::.i.:..... ---· ... ' ............... ·-=-=... Bellenson noted' 1'Wly> e11J1ornl1 clUn refuse to give a "molor~llt such In-form Udn ~'bf' . " ' J '/f> ·pa)"~llh6'or~ • •'. ··• '• '• .· .. J~j/ ~{,'? ~ __ ,._ __ ....;;;;:....:..:...:..:...:·:......:. -. . ._ _______ ....;;;;;..;;_;i :.-:,,\ .. - ---T - f DAILY PILQT L Israel Hits <1 -· 1an MIG Planes . u-mu i.1e .... uona1 Israeli fighter planes shot do"M:J seven St1rrrt1e to JYAS,A -. . '• • Bonny-Succµmhs . . M ter 'ff.ig Trip -. From Wlr.·s.me.. than three wee.lea early and aplaahed Syrian MIGi! jets In a 30-minule •Ir bat. --u.-tod.r,lll-lmeltanny-spokeBmlnn-- ~ In Tel AvlY. He aald the ilrHlla ...-.. 1 ...... HON'~ULU -Astrom.onk Bonny djed down in his Biosi.tellite 3 some 25 miles early tOday IJJ>olll'I atter ~ lllO!lk•y -. oil Kllual; Hawaii. • ~do~"ilr'::J.f~::' folloirlng Obseivers doacrib&I America'• space ca~, !he U.S. •POct 1'ieaty .:~".° l)lookey as_ limp but alive w~ llowo by "'It w1' audden,'' ,Aki Brad Evans, Air Force helicopter to Hawllt•s Hickam It waS the fourth air battle within a week. 'tn prevfous ena:agements during U.e week Israeli jets shot down five EopUan jets in doefights over the Gulf of Suez and the Red Sta. Tod.ay's batUe was the bicaest •trlll hltUe betwee11 Israell and Syrian forct:s lince end of the 1987 six-day war and, brought to sa the number of Arab planes l1r4el has reported shooting down aince then. The fi&ht repre1eqted another major •ocalaUon ol lhe Mldeul OOlllllct !hat United NaUona Secrtlary General 'rbanl told lhe Security Council Monday had turned into "open warfare." The Tel Aviv military spokesman said today 's dogfignt took place above lhe Israd.k>ccupied Golan heights along the Israeli-Syrian border. - 'l1>e 1POkesman aalcLlhe baWe bqan when Syrtfn planta penetrated Israeli· controlled air space: lte said all seven of 1,,..---.•·e-Syrian-,>la~-cruhed int Syrian terri\ory. • The situaUoo was Sl) serious that Arab diplomatic sources in Rome reported Egypt wu callina up re.serves. Earlier today Egyptian comrriand05 ~tabbed across ~he Suez Canal and reported killing 30 Uraeli soldier& and destroying military equipment ln a Sinai Deeert ·bue. Irrael Bild it repulsed the raid, loot no men ol lta own and killed ellht in lhe atlaek force. Tbe · air battle coincided wilh new IWeupe ol llahtlnr aion1 the Jordulan · borden and tfie Syrian borden. I 111ere were rtporta the arm.ea forces clliefs ol •WI ol Iraq, Syria, Jordan and Egypt were meeUni; ln Damueu1 to plot atratea -against Israel.-Damascus is barely 40 miles from the site of today'1 air batUe. Youth, Involved In Slaying Dies; Mystery Probed oA youth Involved In • 1981 abootlng episode wJth .a Stant.Do police officer aliP- ptd , from ~ unconsciouaneas i n t o myst.e,rioua death Mooda.y. in th e emer'6nci> r0om or' Stan Ion Coll1Jllunlly Hoipltal. Coroner's deputies today are e1;1mlnln&. lhfllilllf_.l!Ody ol Jerry Naranjo, 19, or 1069l Court St., Stinton, in an attempt to determine what caused his death. The dead youth was with Paul Ai;uilera, 18, on Feb. 9, 1961, when Aguilera waa allot and killed by a bullet from the gun of a Stanton reserve polioeman. Officer Allen ChrilUan. tZ, of HW1- lington Beach,. was later acquitted of manslaughter charges in the shoot.in(. Police Slid N1ranjo was brought to the hospital by an older brother, Daniel. He died without regaining consciousness. There were no marks of violence on his body, offtctrs said. The brolher told police he saw two unknown men bring Jerry home un· conscious and carry him lnttl the house oborlly belore noon Monday. The ct>roner·s office ls conducting an autopsy to determJne the cause of death. A deputy said a report could be expected II odneaday. Aguilera and Naranjo were stopped by police for quuUonlna: at 2:30 a.m. Feb. 9. 1918. When Aguilera brOke and ran, of· ftcer Christ.Ian shouted warnings to halt three limes, then fired hitting the youth in the head from a distance of over 00 yards. Chrls~id he meant to fire a warn- tna: shot liirhad no intention of killing the youth. UAl lY PllQI 011_.fJll~ (OAlt l'Ul l lSHI ... ~NY a.Mrt N. w.n ,,...._, _. PlllMW. J••• a. c,r1.., Vice~ 9llf o.-ar MIMft• Tiit••• K1pl1 ..... DAILY •1LOT Sl1ll 'ltt'- public inform4Uon officer for the Na· Air Force base.· tional A e ~ o 11 au tics a~d .Space NASA officials said an autopsy was Administration. "He had been µi fair cc;inr . . . dition just before.•• ordered imm~1ately In the b1011atellite The 14-pound monkey, elhaualed and laboratory trailer where the monkey hid bored, was brought bfck to earth more been under intensive care since the Lagun~ Hills Firm 'Pleads Not Guilty . touchdown. "We had no idea that he was that close to death," added Evans. "He just sud· denfy fell olf." NASA of,ficials scheduled a news con. ference to diacwJs the unnpectecl climax of t,he aborted s~ mission. Evans said it was still too early to call the mission a failure, saying "it depends on data already received." "\Ve had been hoping for a minimum LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge set 14-day mi ssion for success," he said. July 22 for trial of 1tn Orange County Before death, a team of 15 doctors, housing devJ!lopment firm that pleads in· Apri l Is n Met•:tnnid. April Johnson, 8, urges t_earnrnates on prior to taking her turn in run and swim relay race staged Mon· 'day on Laguna's Main Beach by girls in city life· guard Mermaid program. Girls 8 to 11 can still nocent to feQeral )Charges of ma~ ii· veterinarians and technicians worked -------------.-------legal-political-campaign c.11ntributio,ronsr. -~ovcr.....-the-llttle-pr'lmale--in-a-por'lable--- sign up for .the program. 1'.1ermaidS meet every . .Robert Rosenwald, vice president of mfdical van, and a doctor had reported Pines Appointed . To Board Eying Laguna ·Library Public relations consult.ant Mark Pines has been appointed to replice Jori :Baughman on_the ~guna Beach board to plan a new library. Baughman, an accountant, is going to work oversus for the U.S. St.ate Depart· ment. Other members of the board are Mrs. Anthony Demetrlades and attorney James Leddy. In making the appointment, Laguna ci· ty cOuncilmen asked about progress of library plannlna: under the non-profit cor· poratlon. · City Manaa:er James Wheaton reported that not much financial progress · bas been 'made in lhe last 45 days because both clty and county personnel have Men buay with budgeting. 'Board members, however, have been visiting other libraries and screening arcblteclJ, he said. Grove Motorist Killed in Crash INDIO (UPI) -Authorities are seek· tng the driver of a camper truck involved iu an accident which killed one motorcy· cle rider and seriously injured three others early Monday on Interstate JO. The California Highway Patrol said the driver was sought on felony hit-run charges. Orf Ice rs said Marvin Currier, 46. of Garden Grove, was killed when the camper hit his cycle. _HiJ passenger .. J ~n Stolcu, 25, of Senta Ana, was seriously in- jured. Howard Olson, 22, and Audrey Pa!~r-1~. 21 , both or South G~. were injured when their motorcycle fell as the camper swerved In front of tbeW'!. Four Children Drown In Iowa Stor111 Sewer KEOKUK, Iowa {U PI ) -Four children playing in a park creek here Monday afternoon. were swept into a storm sewer and drowned. Other children In Rand Park said the four were floaUng in the rain·swollen creek, when they were caught by a sud· den swir l of water. The witnesses said the youngsters were harled through a six- fool opening and Into e cencrete sewer. Monday and \Vednesday for six weeks to develop Rossmoor Corp. of Laguna Hills, entered "his heartbeat is 68 'per minute and water skills and ·safety consciousness under :super-Utt• plea Monday before Judge Albert Lee steady." vision of lifeguards. St~phens Jr. in U.S. District Court Charles -Wilson, project manager for l(os!moor lawyers said they will ask NASA's Ames Research Laboratory in , for a delay to prepare argwnents on con· Sunnyvale, Calif., said the $92 million ex· stitutional issues. perlment was ended after the monkey, The company was indiCted June 1.2 on failed to respond to signals aboard the two counts of violating the Corrupt Prac· space capsule. - tices Act, which prohibits corporations "His lack of response was interpreted Botanical Lab S tudi.ed • from mak.ing contributions to politica l to indicate a sluggishness which if allow· For San Clemente Hign candidates. . ed to conUI!:ue, could have led to serious It iS one of several indictments deterioration," Wilson said. ~ resu!Ung from a three-year, nationwide investigati.on by the. Internal Revenue Service. _ CyJ>ress _Holdup Men Wound Store )\l a.nager • • Plans for a privately r-1 fl i ff c e d- arboretum to b:e entirely designed, built and run by studcnt.s of the San Clemente High School were unveiled Monday at a meeting of the Capistrano Unified School District board. The botanical and environmental laboratory envisioned in the plans in- cludes a 400-seat amphitheater, several Jot.h houses for plants, a 1 a r g e greenhouse, a 160-foot long pond with waterfall, a weather ataUon and trees. The project would be located on five acres of land on the athletic fleld.- PlaM were explained by students Phantom Bicycle Rohlier Strikes l n Count y Again The phantom bicycle robber &truck t1onday morning in fhe parking lot of the Bank of ~eric.a branch, 2001 S. Main St. in Santa ~a. - Police reconstructed the details rrom witnesses' accounts this way : Patricia Brown, 20, a grocery clerk of Santa Ana, was in the bank's rear park· ing Jot when a man described · as a Mex- icarl·American about 5 feet , 8 inches tall and weighing a alight 130 pound!, grab- be d her purse cont.lining her employert'J reeeipts and sped off on a bicycle. An unidentifled bank customer chased the robber three blocks to the 200 block of East St. Andrews Street. There the thief stopped, pulled 1 band 1\111 and threaten-. ed the pursuer. The pursuer thought better of his taalt and backed off. With that, the purse snat- cher abandoned his bicycle and ran south on Orange Street. Jn the 2000 block of that throushfare he stopped Olegario R. Pinzon, 37, a la~r, stole his bicycle at gunpoint, and rode off. Pinzon and a friend jumped into a car ill hot pursuit. They reported they caught •r with t'he elusive thief in the 200 block o East \Varner Avenue but he jumped off the stolen bike and escaped into the neighborhood this time again on foot. Minuten1 an Launched VANDENBERG AFB (UP!)-The Air Force launched Its 250th Minuteman mtsalle today from this coast1I Strategic Air Command base down the wesllrn test range. 'Phil Dana and Jeff 11itchell. lt is expected the M. N:sherman Foun· dation, headquartered in Corona del li1ar, will finance the arboretum project. Plans for the weather station are com· plete and. the foundation has provided $7 ,000 for material for Us construction. A final determination l:Sased on the students' plans could be made in Sep- tember or October. Ed Migg, foundation spokesman said. Cost of the total project was not disclosed. Completion would tU:e two or three years, Mlgge said. _ _ <>n_e count charses Rossmoor gave, $2,041 to a tH4 candidate ror the-21th Congressional District seat In the House of Representa tives . The other charges $5,000 was 1iven to a 1964 U.S. senate candidate from California. Neither candidate was named. The House race was between Democrat Tom Bane and Republican Ed Reinecke, now lieutenant governor. Reinecke won. In the Senate race, Democrat Pierre Salinger Jost to Republican George Murphy in the general electi on. A Cypress store manager ls in serious conditio_n today {rom a gunshot wound in· flicted during a holdup Monday night of tt\f! Tic Toe Market, 6021 Orange Ave.,. Cypress. Police said Donald Ear1 Ames, 47, of Cypress, crawled to a telephone and call· ed officers after being shot in the upper portion of the right leg by one ..if two men who robbed his store. Become a Healthier,· Happier, Thinner You at Holitlay Health Spas ESCAP! to a private lu xury where sophisticated ~, weight reducing methods make embarrassing pounds vanish quickly anCI gently. INCOMPARAlt~ FACILITllS ........ fllll FREEi .FREii ....... . • • .J Newport Man Cleared • Hn tM Rtlftlft Swimml:S.:,.tol • Ultr1 M Conditioning Fatll1~11 • Rom1n Ste1m ltooms E Special. Join roday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • RECEIVE YOUR PRIVATE SWIM CLUB MEMBERSHIP • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Of All Fraud Charges Cleo Marvin Johnson of Newport Beach haa been cleared of all charges involved 11). a Grand Jury Indictment on insurance sales prior to the case aoina to an Orange Counly Superior Court jury. Previously, it had been incorrectly reported that Johnson, $1, oC 1901 Kings Road, was still involved In the case when it w!!nt to the jury June 12, and as the jury's deliberations continued throuch J une 11. · _ The District Attorney 's office rested its case '" June S. Johnson'• attorneys im- mediately entered a motion before Superior Jud.go William Murray, seekiruf the entry of a judament ol acquittal for the Newport rtlldent. The deft.nae motion was iranted,, and the juJge ruled Johnton innocent of a11 charg.s al lh•I poln~ The moUon of directed order of ac· quittal came undll' StcUon 1118.t of the California Penal Code and wu placed befor'! Judge Murray before any In· troductlon of defense or defense evidence on behalf of Johnson. The D a 11 y Pilot regret.I the error In articles ot June IC and June 16 ln w~tch it was· lncorrecUy lncllcated that Johns;on 's ca:ie· was still bltore the jury. The ac- count \'.If June 18 w111, In fact , an effort to fairly report th8t Johnson had been ruled Innocent and cleared of an charces. The en·or was mJde becaUJe of er- roneous clerical informaUon aupplled to the newspaper. There was no intent on part of the D a 11 y Pllol lo oiler In· correct, Gefaniatecy:. uncompllrnentary or unpropltlc.us information r e .. a a r d I n g Johnson 's acquittal in the IMiaance mat· ter before the court. • • • Eltctronic M111191 • Fi nnish l ock S.vn1 I toms • Fltrld1 Sun Tin IOOMs • Whirlpool llths • Condltfonlnf ftclfttt•• Swim in a Beautiful Outdoor Olympic Size H11tod Pool· Offer Good For Limited Time Only • Swiss flClaf Mtc.hints ··········••e•ee••·················· COMPLm FACILmrs FOR MEN • WOMIN Call or StoP, by Today For Your FrM Tour Hcl_nd©\t -- HEALTH SPA • • • ' I ' - I Ii ; • T...,,.,, Jufy I, 1'69 L DArl Y Prl.OT 3 U.S. Ra te l .Art ·Takes Over Of Jobl ess -- Tak~s ~ip 1-n Lilguna B.~ac __ l - WASHINGTON (UPI) -The nali<¥1't unemployment rate dropped slight!)'! IA.. June, to 3.4 percent, despite the Ont re:at:slinsot a slackening ia""the"demand- for worken, the Labor Departrpent reported today. · ' ·'the unemployment level last month was down one-tenth of one percent 'from ?ifay, with S.4 million persons reported looking Cor work. ' Considered more significant. however, w~ a comparison of employment gains in the first quarter of the year With those in the second quarter, which en<l· ed June 30. · Employment during the April-June period registered -the smallest increise • rince the second quarter of J967. Harold Goldstein, assista'Dt commi> 1ioner.of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1ald the second quarter figures showed a definite &lowdown in the growth of industry demand for labor. Goldstein coneWed that part. of th is might be the result of record employ· meot gains during the first quan'er of the year and not necessarily the result • of any anti-inflation moves by the ad· 1·1inistration. ,. DAILY ,ILOt Sl•ff ..... Th e ave rage work week for fac;J..ory '"°rkers-opo ol li\t key economic indi-HOWARD_ 'HAP' GRAHAM, VOI CE OF LAGUNA'S PAGEANT OF MASTERS;-AWA ITS OPENING NIGHT "tators-in the-montllly employment-rta·----51tarting-Friday, the-Art-Eo~y I.I ves Up to Its N.me •s -ThrM S.p.aute Art Shows Open ti.sties-held steady at 40. 7 hours in June. The work week figure is one of the Jeading indicators used by economil!!ts to aauge speedups and slowdowns in the economy. It remains three.tenth s of an • Gour below the 1968 peak reached last Jep(ember. Joblessness among while workers in June was three percent while the rate !or' ~nwhites rose one half of one per- t~nt t'o seven percent. • Goldstein said the month-to-month in-n-ease was not particularly significant •tatis tically, but pair.led out that at iteven percent the jobless: rate for .non· whites was up significantly from a IS. :.ear low of 5.7 percent reached last •tbruaey. P olice Seek . Tie 'f o Coed Slaying, 3 Other Killings Bottomless Bar Owner Sentenced To Jail Term I\. Santa Ana bar owner, 'ound guilty last Thui-sday in contempt of court for failure lo comply with a cburt order ban- ning bOliomless d8.ncing perfonnances, will apend most -of the nut four weekends in Orange County Jail. Superior Judge Claude Owens first 5entenced Robe.rt Brown Jr., owner of the Apartment on South Main Street, to 90 days in jail, fined him $500 and placed him on probation for thrte years. The 90-day sentence was suspended on condition that Brown spend 10 days on weekends in the jail, pay his fine and not violate any law for lhree years. ~NN ARBOR. 111ich. I~}. ,-Police Judge Owens told Brown, "I feel you Chief \\'alter Krasny says 1t s a 50-50 should do some jail time to impress you V-i~nce". the shoo~n~ deaths of three Y(ith the fact that this court m?115 t!n1ver~1ty of ~higan . coedJ llnce "'" business and the fine is to ~e-~~ 1-farch u~ere C02,~· . ~ ""-. aware tha'-this sort of th,ing'c&i bis\ yOU Accµ.sed on ·~mg ~tbltd gfH ;:' qM)DCJ. -. ...,,. . "" ever Qie weekend is Ernest L. ~ishop Jr., , Brown• l.uUtelJi !»•Judge~ that 'there '8, a .C<llvicted rapist freed from prisort Would be no more bottomless dancing list Deccmbe.r'.. performances tn his bar -that his POTKi sOUgbt-lOTecOver a+.22 ca.Uber ·-rather, Robert Brown-Sr .. woold be on t·stol they said an acquaintance or hand to police the place. ishop told them was thrown in to the uron River. The la test coed victim, Margaret Phillips, 25, and the two other students all were sbot in the head with .22 caliber bullets. Nixon Readying Schmitz Sex Education Measure Faces Delay SACRAMENi'o'~Al') ..:--A-setja e.plss-anQprnctsses are described, illustrated ed bill to .a110w· Parents to preview 1ex or discussed." e:rcept for science, health ed ucation material aOO keep their or hygiene classes. children out of such cl~sses w11s stalled in . -PermH parel)ts to request In writing the AssembJy_ E:®cz.ID:m. £o..mmlllee to.. that ther c.bildren not attend sex educa· day. . Uon classes. ----- After several committee members Ob-When objections were volced on a pro- jected Monday to &eetions of the already vision ma.klng It a miademeanor to know· heavily am~ed bill, ~publican Sen, lngly and willfully violate. the bill, Jolut G. ~1lz of ~m. said he would SchmJlz agreed to amend it to subject a~ .u again and bring it back for con· violators to possible suspension or sideraUon next week. revocation of teaching credentials. '1be m~asw:e would: . He also said he would specify ln the bill 7~u1re ~at parents be notifltd ~n exactly bow pattnls W".luld receive writing If t~ir children were enrolled In notificaUon. Ass em b 1 y man John a sex edu_catiort cla.51 in a public elem~n-va,concellos (0.San Jose), said schools tary or high ~hool. would resort to registered letters, -Make available to parents, prior to resulting in an annual cost to the state of the start of ruch classes any "material to $600 000 be used .tn~a..;.cl~ JQ . ~ch hu~an V~cellos called It "a dangerous reproducb""._e organs, and theft' functions bill ••• which gou against progre&f." 1 ; t .. -;"\., And Aaemblynian John r. ~ (D- ' " •1 · Napa), added it was "cumbersome" and Hijacker Refuses-;!'!,';'.?."'-ily Ue the handJ of To Returit Chila- To WifeinCuha • HAVANA (AP) -'!be estranged wife • For the -&Ix WetM th< city of Laguna Beach will more than live up to its iUckname of Art Colony. Three art festivals· will beglh thell" summertime run Frkiay and conUnue to Aug. 2l Near1y-:;o iffiill wUOit "" hiblting their works at the Festival of Arts, the Sawdust Festival and Art-A· Fair '.69. ln addition to the ·art eihlbitions, Laguna's unique "living pictures;" known more formally as the Pageant of the Masters will be presented nightly at 8:30 o'clock in Irvine Bowl. One-time nasty splits in the Laguna art scene are responsible for the trio of festivals. Things now seem to have set· tied down to healthy compeUUon among the artists' groups, all with their own place In the summer sun. The Festival of Arts offers 180 artisll, sculptors, ceramists and other handcraft arti5ans displaying their works in the Festival exhibit booths. The Festival grounds a~ located at 650 La~a ~on Road at the mouth or Laguna Canyon, as one leaves the City of Lagilna Beach. In addition to the professional artlsls, paintings and drawings of 100 Orange Count)! school childreD will be on display at the Anna Mary Beck Junior Art· GiDery Iii tlle Fe!tivaI-or Arta--Porum building. Festival grounds are open dally , In· cludl.ng Sundays, from noon to midnight. Admission is 50 cents for aduJts and 10 cents for children under ll years. Also at the Festival art free art classes for children and, on Sunday afternoons, there are "On-The-Green" Programs. These feature the Laguna Beach C\vic Ballet Complny for the first three Sun- days (July ll. 20, and 17) and the FesUval of ~~-lli.11h the Ballet Company for the last three Sundays lAug. 31 10, and 17) The Festival of ArU' 3t-year-old Pageant of. the Masten will recreate with live models 20 painting.s, five aculptur.u. one photograph, three artUacts, four carved Ivories and two murals. The cast involved in the Pageant totals 29C acton. In addiUon there ue makeup personnel and stage hands, plus Producer Don Williamson and Narrator Howard "Hap" Graham. Original music com· posed by Dlr<ctor V I c Schoen will be presented by a 23-piece orchestra. Tickets for &Orne seats for weeknight performances are still available and late cancellationa open up some Last minute spots, Sally Reeve, Festival spokesman .said. The Sawdu.11t FesUval wu started two years ago after some more avant-garde art11t.-exhibltors apllt with the FesUval,of Arts. The Sawdust Festival will bold forth at ' Laguna Canyon site acrog,, from and about a block past the FesUval - --·-----· Art r estivah ,_ ' At a Glance ' • FESTIVAL or ARTS. Groftddaddy • o/ the other two. Locottd a.& LoguM • Canyon. 180 exhibitors. Hour• noon, to midnight~ iev.n da111 a week. Ad.o miuian SO cents for adulf.6, 10 ccnu , fo~~~~~;T~;';;~J:J.L. It's th Ir d ' summer run. More avant-aar<U. Also at Laguna Canyon. JOO phu e.zlUbi• . tori. Hours JO a.m. to m.tfi:nfght Ado mi.Trion free. ' " ART·A·FAIR '69 (forrntrl11 Splintr.r Fe1tiooJJ. lt'1 1econd summer run.. Looot<d ol 846 N. Ccxul HlghlOO'tJ, 70 t zhfbUor1. Hours 10 a.m.. to midnight. · AdmU1i<m 25 cent1 for adult!. /_re1 • for children under 12. · 1 . of Arts grounds u one travels away frcm' · the ocean. · •.• Mor. than 100 artists will he dllelaylng their varied works. A-II fr<e-l<r• all. Houn are Crom 10 a.m. to midnight. ~ Sawdust Festival. ao namedi', becaase~e-1awdust-rpt!8d ~ grounds, Is sponsored by tba LqaDll Artist& and Gallery Own<rs Aaoclation. • It is starUng Ha third fesUval ltllOQ. . Aft.A-Fair '69, in I ts second sumintt but with a new name, will feature the • worts of 70 artists and craftmlen presen-·. ting diverslned schools of ar .. The abow:•. has 50 eihiblUon booth! and will -have : daily art and crafts demonstrations. Formerly called "1'.be S p I i n t e 1" ' Festival" because Us artists iplintered away from The Sawdust F~.aL..lbe af. · fair will be located again at S46"N. Cout · Highway. Art·A·Fair is optn daHy from 10 Lm. to midnight. Admi!alon Is 25 cents f(!I' adults and free. for children wider lJ y~s. _ Nixon Welcomes Haile Selassie •' • WASHING TON (UPI) -Preoldenl· Nixon today welcomed Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia to the White Houe as part of a four-day state visit. A group of African students, apparently !Orne of the same youths wbG stormed the chancery of the Ethiopian Eml>wY• on Selassie'& arrival Monday, conducted a deulonsltatlon in --Lafayette . Pa:rl<,, ICl'OI& th< -ln>m th< White &u.e, while the emperor was being greeted iDo side. ' ' Four other girls have been slain in the Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area since August. 1967, all stabbed, bludgeoned, strangled •nd, semally abused. Bishop, recenUy i iarbage collector and r e f r i g e r a lo r 1 -paii-rnan, was in prison when two of tnese deaths occurred. Miss Phillips, a sociology student who knew· Bishop, was fatally shot early Saturday in her apartment. Bishop was arrested the following day. Anti•nafCOllC, of an American hUacker seeking custody of the daugtlter her husband brought with C • M e him to CUba. nearly six months ago was nme essag surpr~ed Monday night to find him and WASHINGTON (AP)_ President Nix· lhe child waiting at Havana airpOrt to on may soon send Congres& a message on meet bet· narco!.ies and crime. But minutes before his wife arrived, TOMORROW ONLY Meanwhile Dr. Thomas M. Mayer, a sociology professor who l n t r o d u c e d Bishop and Miss Phillips, described Bishop as t1a warm personality" who seemed "capable of leading a better life." Mayer met him in jail. Con!Beted at. his home in· Boulder, Colo., Monday ni8ht. 'Mayer allowed Co lo., Monday night. Mayer said he aJ. lo~ Bishop to 'ti.ve -at 'his home in Ann Arblu\J\t three months this yaer 8fter his r~ .f:rom SoUthetn Michigan Prison.'~ '. _.. • :: • ... ~ .. . .... .... . ~:' -~ ~ Thant~ Has · siitg_~ UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - Secretary..&!neril ·~ti Thant un~t surgery today · fOr a~fJTtorrl'loidal con- dition, a U.N. 3P.0kesman Aid. . . ' . -' ' Th.ls was reported today by House Tbonfas · George Wuhingt.on told a · Republican U:ader Gerald R. Ford of new5man he would not give up the ohlld. Michigan, following a breakfast meeting After hugging her daughter, 3-year-old with ~dent Nixon at~ed. by Republican ~ooal leaders and Al-Jennifer, Mn. Joanne Wuhingtoo, 25, of Philadelphia, said she wanted to speak ty. Gen. John N. MitcbelL personally with Prime Minister Fidel Ford said the message could be ex· Castro tjy telegram. peeled possibly within the coming week. Mrs. Washington arrived on a Cuban He sa.id Mitchell .d1scussed· what ,cOOld · Nation31 Airlinea flight from Mexico w1tb 'be done about the co~uences of drug a.. 30-day. visa ~•rt_anged tl}rough the traffic in relation to cfhne increBses. Czechoslovak Embassy · in Washington. Foid Wd NixOn passed him a·note dur· The embassy represents Cuban interests ihg tHe disct.\S8Jon wbich .pOlnted out that in the uruted States, Which has no official · ~·sa percent of all criQles in New York relations with.the Castro regime. and N~W Jtsrey ar.e ~year were.conr ~lrs. Washington said seeing her hu~ milted by peo~le· aotnehow connected band was a surprise but sbe declined to with drup•lfid JW'COUcs.." say whether she would lea Ve Cuba Among 'the recOmibendatims,. Ford without her daughter. A SwW Embassy aaiit the attorney gederal talked about representative wu present to meet her, Import .C011trob, control of distrjbuUon o( but she Jett Havana's Jose Marti Airport drugs aM '-nircotlcs ' and greiter Oa-with Waahlngton, her daughter and a · ibUitY oa penalUea for t.boee ·OCID.Vlcted, -. Cuban official for an undiscloaed destina• tion. 'lbe Swiss Embassy-represents U.S. Secretary Hickel Shares interests in CUba. • Washington, a 27·year-old Negro chemist, appeired nervous but aat pa· tiently with his daughter on his knee u his wife passed through Cuban customs. Newport Concern on Oil The u .S. Department of the tnterkir shares with Orange Coast cities the con· cern that an oil blowout could occur off JGCal waters, a spokesman for Interior Secretary Walter Hickel said today~ Hollis M. Dole, Hickel's chief aide, Qnuity Flie~ Crash, Rescuea SAN DIEGO (AP I-Two llarille Oien were rescued MonQay aUet thflr F~B Phantom jet fighter crashed It sea 4S milei northwest of San DlegG. Reported in good condition were the pilot, Maj. Charles C. McLennan, 34, of 3114 Oeodar, Santa Ana, and his radar Intercept ofOctr. lit Lt, Jerry Hterocht, 25, of 21621 Wesley, South Laguna Beach, bolh staliooed .al El T0n> Martnt Alr Sit· lion. spoke in response to a resolution from the Newport City Council opposing any ex· ploration and drilling for oil in federal wattta btyood the thre«nile limit south . of th< Santa Ana BIV<r jelly. "The outer continental shelf in the area of rour inlett;lt." be Wd la a JeUer to Newport councilmen, "has never been of· fered for leasing. We are glad to have your expcessiln oPJ>O!!linl any erploraUm for ml.nera1 fuela in this area ln pe'rpetul· fy:" ' { Dole Aki the yiews.of the city wU be given ''lbe .erioUI cooalderaUon they deserve" should Interest in this :uu develop in the future. He staled that ' "we share tour con- cern" over repeUtlon of the Santa Barbara Channel dlaaster. Dole added: "We a~ contlrtulng our tn- teMive review of previous iouiiut and ~ uptoration practices to auure that the energy resources or tbe counlt')· be <leveloped In lho aalest pouible way.._ .. not to damap the marine environment.'' Tee n Club . Owner Gets $200 Fine Gilbert Covell, controversial young night club owner, was oonvkted Monday in a protracted legal batUe of allowing minors under ll!i in hlB Huntington Beach dance hall on two occasions. Judge Fenton jonea onlered Covell, 3%, of 1001 Locust S~, Westminster, to pay a $100 fine on each mbrdemeanor count. The violations were on Nov. 17 and Nov. z. Covell, wbo has been in a running feud with police.and Ute clly gen~ally,Js.s:o-, owner of Syndk:ate SOOO, a teenage night club that has been much in the police eye. It .hu been closed for several wteks for "remodeling." Don Bonfa, clty attorney, told coun- cilmen Monday that the TO&d to coo- viction wu a !Ong one, lnclud1ng 1uch · legal tact.ks as a demurrer and two writ.a of prohlbllloo sought by Ille def..,., one at lh<-tllllrlcl Court ol Appeal.I level. It .... denied. ' Wednesday, July 9th All Bu ff um st stores will be open at8:00 a .m. Take adv ant.age of the biggest values of th_e ·yea-rl Palos Verdes open until 6:00 p.m. Lakewood and La Habr a open un t il 9:30 p.m. All ot her stores open until 5:30 p.m . • --u mS' ' • LONC l!ACH UK900Q SANTA ANA llAftlllA POMONA •ewroar cnna PALOSVfRtU LA HAlllA I I I ' - Shed a sad tear for the passing of an era. No more ts there a pen- ny arcade at Coney Island -Ira a nickel arcade now. Operators at lbe New York amusement area replaced their las! penny machine, a mechanical fortune teller, with a similar machine that costs a nickel. • • • Senate Linkin ------- Surtax, Ref_or-m WASHINGTO~ (UPI) -Treuury Secretary Darid M. Kennedy tried and lalled..toda1 ID~J<LQialmwi lluuell B. Lq ol the Senate Finance Commili.. to speed through the H~ inc:ame 25 Still Lost In Wake of Ohio Storm surtax bill without add.lfta tu ntonn amendments. Long told Kenned1 !ho -mltteo would eonstder nrorm propoua--sub- mitted by any tenator before a~ oa the blll to continue the suGU for a y1ar. "Our tax reform hearings are going·to ht just as broad avd comprebensive u the senaton want them to ht," the Louisiana Democrat said. President Nlion and his fiscal aides have urged Congress to approve the surtaJ bill with a minimum of delay and take up re.fonn proposals separately, con- tending tha.t the tu extension was vital to slow the mnsuon spiral. KeMedy said today that the td- mln.lstra.Uon, which -promised tax reform proposala this summer, as a means of Cl.tVELAND (UPI) -The U.S. Coast getUng !ho surtax through the House Guard lll1d today nine pleasure boats without a string of tax r e for rn with 25 perlOM aboard we.re still unac-amendments, would make gopd on lhe counted for in the wake of a FoUrlh of pledge. July storm which slaabed across Lake "Unldng these two problems may Erie.. mean that we fall in both our obJectiVtl," The Coast Guard aa.ld earlier all but 10 KeMe<ly told the committee at its op1n· or the 200 persons orlgiJJally Rported ing hearing. "Even delay ·poses serious missing bad been located. However, a rlsb. spokesman said today the count had to be "Delay contributes to a loss of ron· ~vised up;ward because of addlb~ f~ __ QUJ' people in...the_dete.rminr.... elep~one calli lrom perspns seeking tion of governme nt to bring an orderly relatives who were on the lake at the halt to inflation. Delay feeds lnllaUonary time of the stonn. expectations and thus makes inflation The killer storm took at least 34 1iv~s even more difficult lo control." and injured 250 othen In. northern Ohio. Before bis scheduled appearauce, Ken- Towlng the area Monday, Gov. James A. nedy conceded the administration µ'llY be Rhodes called it "the worst in Ohio faced with a •'credibility gap'' over its history in terms of lives lost, in· detenn.ination lo take measures lough CQnveoJeoce and total damqe.." enough to cool the overheated economy OJa9' Guard ships and aircralt con-and hold down rising prices. tlnued combing the lake for signs of the Kennedy tried to convince 24 of the na-- lut unreported boaterL A spokesman lion's ~i.ggest bankers Monday when he • Napalm by Freeway Anny personnel operate a forklift to pick up seven napalm bombs that fell off a truck as It approach- ed the Long Beach freeway Monday. The Artesia UPIT ........ Boulevard on-ramp to the freeway was blocked · while the l~gallon containers were loaded onto the truck. Alcohol, Drugs I.inked in Death Prison Horror Sheppard Tell,s of 'Hole' Treatment Of Rolling Stone wAsHINGToN <UPI> -nr. sam Sheppard told a horrifying tale tod1y af Maury) Mr. Koblentz's her l tag e whereupon I was placed between the doors for three more days. ' ,... Work on a mio Coos Bott (Ort.) Moll project apparentlv 00. ftl ups and &>ums and alao its ~· Tf~hone company crews wor1c:iftg on an ttndt'raround cab It s 11 s. t t m bloclud..,one-larnr of traffic with thU confusing tnilfic st<>pp<r. said be hid "no idea" U they were lost or urged them to reject some big loan! in- iMt..1<~-.l·ftlldl<d abcn aalely and just stead <ii resorting to addlUonal Increases EAST GRINSTEAD, England (UPI) -being placed in the "hole" during bis 10 Brian Jones, former .member of the Roll-years in prison. ing St.ones pop group, drowned ~hUe "I was chained wilh Jog chains, hand under tm! influence of alcohol and drugs, cbains, chains around the neck and I '!Whett--1-came -out my ank!es bl-11~ - swollen so large the shoe strings had ·split • When Alde!'11bot, England r .. ~ · denta of the AM Hill GoverDJllent_ Holl.sing Estate turn on their kit· cben taps out comes something thal loob like beer. Trouble ls, they say, it not only doe1n 't tasle like beer it taste vile. Water works officials say ruJt in the pipes may be causing the water to come out r~h-brown. But they can't ex- plain the bead of froth it produces. • • .not mUfied authorl.tits. . In the prime interest rate, now at a · "Wt accounted for most of·the missing record 81h percent. on Monday," the spokesman aakl. "We Kennedy said he-neither sought nor sent out appeals over radio and te.Jevislon received a promise that tile prbne rate and peQple •tarted calling ,Jn.~' woold not he boasted again. · Heavy ra1ns Which' struck the: lake But he indicated be made il clear dur- crealed riven and flooded .many com· ing the tw<Hiour private meeting that the munltlel IOUtb o( hen. About half the administration would consider further UJ. stcrm.'1 Tictlml drowned in th e ~ues in the price of borrowed money floodwaters. to ht unwarranted. Stennis Says -ABM Loss Would Hurt U.S. Sklnd • a coroner said Monday. don't know where all else. I was placed Dr. Angus Somrnerv.ilte..oiled the dpth between two doors for six dil.ys. The two otthe 2a-year--0I.cJ IW~~idenqb.nd doors were-less than ll ioches apart;" - Said: '"fn mY opinion:. Jtwas due: to Sheppard said in testimony prepared for drowning by immerJIOD ·.in fresh water a Sen<1te subcommittee. associated with se.Vete liver disiu:nCtion Sheppard, in what 'was called the trial due to fatty degeneraUon ind lngest*t of of the decade, was found guilty in 1955 ol alcohJI and drugs."-· ~-having murdered hi!J pregnant wife, Jones was ·tound at ~;,)ottom QJ a Marilyn. 31 , in their Bay Village, Ohio, swinuntng pool at hltJJpm.e after a ntid· home. In 1964 he was freed by a Cecleral night swim Jut Thuraday. judge, and in a retrial he was found in· on my shoes. "I spent nine days in the 'hole' slrnply because I wooldn't call off <AUomey F. Lee) Ballej and Dr. Steve. my brotbu. "Had I done that, 11-1r. Koblentz told me that I would probably make parole. But that if I didn't do this there would be trouble, trouble, trouble." K&lentz, contacted at Columbus, de- nied Sheppard's allegations. '"Ihat's an out.right and absolute lit," Koblentz said. "I am satisfied that he drowned while nocenL under the Influence ol alcohol and "There was no Iood,'" Sheppard said in Cosa Nostra Leaders drugs," Sommerville said. his testimony. rill d h Janel Lawson. a nurn> and lriend ol "There"" no nght and little air and I G . e y Senators Jon.es. told the coroner's inquest that the ·felt I would suffocate. guitarist was in no cond.iUon to swim that "I couldn't sleep, I would just pass out. TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -A baker's night aod that she had tried to dissuade "I was allowed to wear iny shorts, doiet;i of repul~ Mafia leaden, headed him. She aaid Jones 'disrelarded ·her sh~ .and socks. · · by Simone "Sim the P 1 umber' ' C•rol z-•rdelll ol Detti>it,µld • .:- "J'm the hippiest girl In tbe world'·~ alter hustling 440 yards with four· glasses of champagne. Carol beat all the other waitresses in the 15th atiniial Waiters and Wa1tfesSes Race at Detroit, but it was waiter Roohy Naubash who claimed mo~t of the glory with a world r&ord Ume of three minutes, 28 seconds fo.~ the event. Naubash beat the old rec,"'rd by 12 seconds. " . ' ... WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. John C. wamlng. __ S • "I had no 'Rllet privileges and iusl · ~I~, ~ped before a state in.. • "He had been drinking ," Mas LMnon stood in my own ei:cttment. vest!iatin('i&eocy today. stnalcn know abOul the ABM, the more said. "He.was a bit unsteady on his feet. ''After six days they removed me from Most of Cht U Witnesses subpoenaed by Stennil (().Mass.), uid today either a compromise or rejectioo of the Safeguard antiballlstic missile (ABM) system In the Senate would weaken President Nixon's position in arms negotiations with Russia. senator1 will oppose deployment." I au.em~ conversation, but It was litUe the doors and asked me what I thought. l ·the State Investigations Commission There has been an alt.empt in the garbled. Jones·said it was because he had made a rather unfortunate comment were tight-lipped as they reported for a preliminary skirrnlshing over the ABM. had bis s~ws.'' about (Ohio Corrections Commissioner -closed )lea_ring. Gore said, ''To spread an aura of ~ecy ----'=:;_---'-------------------------.:...-------- -win by .secrecy what cannot be won in • The Britilh Army h4.S decided 1 to use pop music to lure new ll recruits into the service. Mobile recruitment teams will tou r t1ie country broadctl.!ting a ta~ of ~ pop tun ts interspersed with ~- martial m~ ":'Al ~~I ~ "',.,..,-,_: j • ln Bar Mills, Maine the Spring· vale Fire Co. entry at a Fireman's Exhibition apparently thought the crowji of spectators needed a cool· Lni off. Without. warning, they opened the hydrants and turned their hoses on the spectators drenching hundreds. Stennis, chaim1an of the Senate Armed Services Committ~. made the statement to reporters as the Senate began con- sideration of a $20 billion military pro- curement authorization bill containiDg f759.l million for the ABM . Stennis predicted the Senate would ap- prove dtployrnent of the ABM aa re- quested by Nixon. Stennis served notice that it would be necessary to conduct much of the debate-. public debate. The Pentagon thrives on secrecy." The latest UPI poll on the Safeguard. completed Iii.st week, indicated 48 i;cnators_favoring deployment, 48 opposed and four undecided. The debate was expected to change some votes -possibly both ways. on the ABM in secret Senate aession~ • St t• B b d because of the sensiUvity of the military --n.aulO 3 IOU OW e issues involved. "This debate will greatly affect and in a large measure determine our natl.onal security for years to come," Stennis said. Senate Democratic leader M i k e 1.lansfield (Mont.), called it the must im- portant debate of the session. He urged full attendanc~. predicting the issue will not be resolved until the last of the month at the earli~h' Sen. Albert Go.-. (0.TeM.), the first ABM opponent to take the fioor late Mon· day. decried the secrecy e:zpected to cloak much of the argument. "Nothing will be withheld," he said. "The more In Racial Disturbance ANDERSON, Ind. (UPI) -A firebomb was hurled into a radio station Monday night, causing an estimated $20,000 damage, in the latest In a series oI in· cidents with racial overtones. The firebombing of radio station WHUT "-as the only Incident reported Monday n i g h t, shortly after pollce agreed in a meeting with Negro leaders lo send only rtgular patrols into the area unless more trouble broke out. East No Vacation Place Midwest, Atlantic Coast Wet and Cold CelifOf'llltl SeufMffl (.ellfam\. Wll ll"IOl!ly f1lr todlv win. -low tlauOt 111 cG111t1! •An. II Wfl 11i,i.11y -l"l"l'ltf 11111"'9, lm A-'U ..,. -"ci11!tv lll>d "~ .,,1w ftlr '"" •llthtlv .. .,.,,.. --wlti. fhe 111911 "''r II). Th• ..m1cmi loW ""11th! ••• n . T... A.Jr .. o!lu!lOIO Co'l!rol 01\trl<I Nill "'-• Wll tltM I~ ltl Ille LOI A""'4H l11ln tooi.v. ftMd>h wett clllliOY 1 .. ff\I mo<nl"" ""1'11 Norv 111ftl/olne 1 .. fl\!! 1tter110o<1. · ,. ................... , n tl'ld tlll w1ftr ""'1-lhlfl Wll II U. Maunltlr>t """'' 1unny. T11, l\itll• 1! rHorl IPtv-el• -· ....... 70t. SOUTHERN OltFOllNIA -N'9'>1 I nd ""'"'""' lew tlau0$ Ill Ci)Ultl , t '1'n """"'"""'-INJlflv ltlr throwll -' r~y, Wtrmet" IN"f' 1"1•11d Mt· !IPl'fl'llTll[R FOtO~IST'!' LOS A"'GEl.ES AllE4--"'itfll 1'ld "'"' ...,.nl"' -Cloudt etNrwl~t l•Jr IN 1llolltlv WI~ "''*1911 Wlidnnon-. I.OWi lunU-, lllthl 4 Hlolll T~y •· co .. tel • Cloudv momlnt. ,,.ly euMhlfll '" 1lltrl'IOOll. Wlnok towtflrly I ta U (OrUTAI. VAl.ll!VS -Nltllll tl'd ffrlY IMrfllllf lei-c1Dud5 bKoml"11 f1lr Ill Ille ,,,..,lllft Ind •lfl""°"I tMelNfl w.dMMIY. I.OWi TUl!Wy llltfll aJ ,. '1. Stl,,,fly W1fll'ler OIYL H""9-T1;1911n n 1ci a.. kt!Ots. H1911. toc11y nr1r n. Y~l'l'I -1tur. rlftled f"9f'I I Mtll ril loll 19 11. l"le!IOI ~fl· II/rt ••ntt Wis Sf lo 1t. W1ttl' him· Prrtrurt w11 t6 lk•r"i. ' llPllTllltM&OIATI V41.L£T5 -1.- doudt M i..1 1C11 HtlT T""'°"v llW'lllN ~ ITICllft' ti" 111...,...h ttlPdl'lftdl,, Lowl Tuond•T "Ith' 5? ·~ ll llltMIY .. ,.,.,.,. 4.t"f'. H1t"1 '=ri:11,."' ... ':w....,.es • ._ 111•. Sun, /tloon. Tides TUISOAY ,, -1M .we. Tutld.., IMl"ft1"' ""' .......... IY*llY l•lr "'niwlo l'lrtl hi"' •:• '·"'· J.J w ...... r wHll ...... ~ C!ClvCll \IVIDNl!tDAT 9Wf' fll~ rat11a. ••"""'" O.YI. ,.-1.,1 low ... , .. , l:M '·"'· O.l .n-ltlOtt AHO Dljlltl 1111!.COIONS 'l"I hl1h , .. l ·O. '·"'· ).? _......,,., fllr """""" ....... flrllf I«" lo# • 111111 -!.J ~ ..,. ..,. !flt "*""•""· lecCINI 111111 ••.•••..•.•• •.a '·"" s., Nlff'llOllll ...... ...,., IS .. 2' -"· .__ ,.......,~ ........ " "'"'" ... 11en n " ,. n '-" ""'""°' W•r'IMI' ~ Hlfhe, ,,_.., 17 ft' n flllilltf'" v•"'" 1!1111 f7 .. 1111 In .....,. wtllft'lo ' I 11"1 ...... I:" I.I'll. $ttl l~t7 I"'· ~ It .... l1U 1.tfl. ltfl J!M 1.lft. I'~• C..n o. 'int •· Ht• Jull' 2t A11t1, a Jw!y 2a Julr I~ ll .S. Sumntar11 Muell ril h 11tlloro 1nlovn 1111111r ... 1thtf tadlv tlUI It Wll c&ld. "11"° yllrly !" l!>e Hortllff$1, Ind It w•I r1ln, Oil "'9 Alllnll( sNm-"' tnd 11<11rt1 of "'9 M~I. 1Ww E11tllnd c""'"""'ltitl .-t9d IOl'f\e Ql'CO•d IMllK"etttr!"' tow ~ per11Ur.1 lot 11111 d1te •!INlutll Ille (ojdel,I lDClt Ill ltw CO"lifllOUI 5l•lfl lhll "'<ll"lllrtt WM JS 11 Ev .... lllr'I, W'fO, II WIS I cflHI 3' ti $1. Jati .. llo.t/"Y, ¥.....-oM: e et Clll'lalf'd. ,,._ H•"""" .i.lr1! • .-Ill IYrllllflOfO, Yem'!CW'll ind 111 ~ Y(lfll ti Wiil l) 1t -'lii.t!Y •""' .. ti 5YrKUH, ••nos "' cklvdl"'1• w1111 tMw•rt dtm~ M'lt Ufllr1I Atlt"!tc 1!1M 11\t '"'"""' 19 h -MlwlHll>PI Y•lll•. A llff.,,., l!Wfldtrilonn fra""4 11111 Ind lwo-t'l'lll'(li ff •" ll'Cfl ff rtl" ti ADlrGMll Ill SO..lh Otiklll1. Wll'Od tu1!1 uP let U mlltl an lle\lr WI•• c•octo:td furl"' 1 lflllllcltt" 1rorm 11 W1!trlOIW'l\o 1oi11t1 p.ir;$ • " Temperatures ·--. A11t"'• !•k•""''" !llmertk !ao!Oll "'-Clnc!"M!I Cll.,,.l•nd ...... OH MolMI .,...... IEurtlc• Forl WClrttl ·-...... 1-i_lo,llO l-ICIO.lllOfl K-1 Cr?v ~= ~:%!. _;.;;,,;r--· Mllwtuk" Ml"""J'ICl!lt N-Orle1,_ ... v .. Nor"' Pliltte ""'""' ...... "'Jl1M1 ltob!K P"ILlllM!>l'I!• Pllile"I• l"lthbu .... Portland lhold crtv lttd tllrft ·-Sttr•IM"Olll St lao.o1' i.1lfl.1 S.lt L,tq Ciry '"' o .... s.,. f••fltllu .$tnl• !•rNr1 k1ttlll ....... T""°"tl wMftfntllll Hltll Lnt ,rl'C. tl ., .. " -" ., " '' S4 1.1' " " ~ " 61 J1 Tr • n 70 .S6 ·°' " .. 11 ,. ·°' " .. .. ~ "' " ., ., ,, "' .n 11 7S .01 tl IO .H "' r' 2.,s 100 ,. " .. . " 61 J7 .. "1 "'' 95 ,, ,, 62 ,,. rr 1l II -7' J2 11 J1 " ,, ·'' ·~ TI " 61 .u n " .. " .... .. " '' 57 ., 15 .u ., " n • " " ., ., " " " " II 57 " TI a " .n We guarantee to hold your interest for up to 6 years. Take a look at the figures below. They show how $500 can gtow for you through our new MoneyMaker 5.% Savings ' Plan. By daily compounding, 5% simple interest becomes 5.1267% even if your money is held for just one year. No matter what happens to other interest rates, your Mo~eyMaker savings are guaranteed to earn a full 5% for up· to six years. · AIL it takes to be a Money Maker is an initial deposit of at least $500 and the willingness to leave it with us for 90 days. After that, you can withdraw your funds at the end of any calendar quarter, or upon 90 days' written notice. And you can add to your savings at any time in increments of $50 or more. Get with the MoneyMakers who save at Southern California First National Bank. Just stop in at -1 ......... "', .. -... . one of our 50 convenient ' offices. We have a l 5 % savings plan that's , guaranteed h Id . -··--to o your mterest. ' I 5% compounded daily. Adds up to a real MoneyMaker. < ,. ' \ ' -. -------------· -. ·"---'--'-• --~---~-------.----------·-·--·--. -. --___,.,..,. .... -'-==o:~ • , ' . .. -- • I . ' ·~·~~~~~JE~A~N~.;c:ox:.~4:MJ~;:;~~~~~~~;._ Tfflf9)1 .llfr I. Ifft L .... II The Laguna Line Diversions Offered To· Stay at Hornes ~y JEAN COX Of JIM 0.llJ Pllott llllf It's a typical suminer. The\soutbbound freeway is packed witll dtter- mined m.otorists making their ways to the Art Colony. The north~und freeway, on ·the other hand, is filled with Lagunans breaded away from town for their own v~catio.ns. _ _ _ Since so many resldents are in far away places, most clubs do. not lan-activities-dnring-tbe-surilmer:--However-this--does--not--mean-~guna_ Beach is a sleepy little town during July, The month began with a bang when South Coast Community Hos• pital Auxillarx offe red its loth anniversary luncheon last week in the New- porter Inn to honor the hospital's original supporters . . INDEPENDENCE JJAY festivities included an eye-pleasing event - a bathing beauty contest -the ninth consecutive spectacle to be presented by La'guna Beach Lifeguard Department. I.,.a~unans not present incluaed · Bafff;r Mixed for 200 Hungry Pancake Eaters Mrs. Frank Hunt. She was in Palm Springs Choosing one of 30 reigning . qu~ens from Southern CaU(ornia to win the1970~tiUe of - Miss. Tramwayland. A model, MJ:s. Hunt just completed an assignment with .Ford Motor Co. posing for their 1970 advertising cam· paign. Thre ·Arch Bay Women 's Association will flip pan~akes for about Lynch and the Misses Jane Rethlefsen and Glenda Acorn. Prep. ~-people""1-its alinuaLPancake.BJ:eakf.afil.JtexLSunda;'..Jltady_~i9os areJ>.e\~lrulde-1ly.the.Mlnfs...Eritz .Austermuehle, .. GOl'·- NEXL WEEKENI> a several--..ctivl· ....,,tl,.,.es~to offer. Friday ·will be especially im· to serve as \vaitreSses at the 8 to 11 a.m. gourmet event in Three don Dahlquist apd William ·Weed. · portant since it marks the firs t performance of the 34th annual Pageant of the Masters in Irvin~ Bowl at 6:30 p.m. Both the pageant -and Festival of Arts will remain open unttl Aug. ~. The pageant will be performed nighUy at 8:30 p.m. and the festival exhibit grounds wlll be open from noon to midnight. Arch Bay Community Cl1:1bhouse are (left to right) Mrs. Harold . .. - Summer will be full of plan- ning discUssions for the com- ing year as far as new officers of EJ Camino Real Junior Woman's Club 8rc concerned. Mrs. Leslie Williams, who has taken her second term as presiding officer, is assisted _by' vice presidents the Mmes. David LaRoche, Norman Clow -inC Robert Cmelak, Other executives are the Mmes. Charles H a y d e n , recording secretary; Hu g h Scallon, co rre s ponding secretary : Edward Kopp, treasurer; Edward Russell, audit'o.r; Patrick Hayes, press and communications, and David R o b b I n s , federation · development. New chairmen working on theii projects for the fall in.. - elude the Mmes. Russell,· Americanism ; Larry Buran en., health : David Robbin s, historian; Warren Allan, ifl. _J spirational ai'id Kopp, ~ tematlonal affairs. Mrs. Robbins also t s membershi'p, ethics an d amenities chairman and M"rs. Hayden will put out a· newslet- ter with Mrs. LaRoche~· Mrs. Cmelak also is s o c i a I chairman and Mrs. Charles· Hamson is in charge of youth projects. • • The 15th annual Surfing Toµrnament will take place on Brooks Stree~ next Saturday, · and Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Co. will gi.ve • · the first of three performances of Dancing ' JEAN COX _ on the Green at 4.....p.m. next-Sunday on-the_ festival grounds. Additional Sunday performances are scheduled for July 20 and July 27. ON THE DRAMATIC fro nt, "White Liars Black Comedy" by Peter Shaffer, directed by lam Brown, will be presented in Laguna Playhouse beginning next Th ursday and continuing through.Sunday, July 27. Curtain time is 8:30 p.m. and perfonnances take place on Thursdays, Fridays, Sat- urdays aJl(l· Sundays. ---·- VISITORS TO Laguna Beach Art Association Gallery, which is open daily from noon to 5 p.m., will see the All California Show b~ginning next Saturday and contiiluing through Aug. 24. The gallery will offer ·a Rodin prints display and sale Saturday and Sunday, July 26-27. ASSISTANCE LEAGUE'S Friendship-Club for people over 50 is meet· i g every Monday evening this summer at 7 p.m. in the League House, 526 Glenneyre. FOR THOSE look in g for entertainment tor _their offsPring, there are several courses to take. For instance, preschoolers, kindergarten children and first grad'ers can be packed off 4> La guna Beach Library every Thursday morning for a story hour conducted from 9:30 to 10 a.m. · In addition, the YMCA is taking youngsters of junior high school age and over on a one-week backpack trip to th e High Sierras Monday, July 21. to Sunday, July 27 , and are scheduling a Yosemite Boy's Caravan for sixth to ninth graders Thursday, July 31, to Wednesday, Aug. 6. Those are not all the activities \v hic h will give mothers at least a few hours qf peace and quiet. Take the arts and crafts classes. There will be one in room 90 of Laguna Beach High School from 9 a.m. to noon Mon- days through Fridays for 6 to 12-year-olds and classes at Bluebird Park and Top of the ' World Elementary._School from 1 to 3 p.m. Mondays to Thursd~y~. .• If that isn't enough , how about an instructional s\vimming course in the high school pool from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. There also will be two recreatiOnal S\Vimming classes - one Saturday and Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m. and the other Monday, Wednesday and Friday, 7 to 9 p.m. The Boys' Club will offer movi~ at 7:30 p.m. every Friday and daily arts and crafts, l!iOCial games and ph ysical fitness programs Monday to Friday from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and 10 a.m. to l p.m. on Saturday. Spe- cial events coming up include a sleep.-in for junior boys from 8 to 13. BRIDGE PLAYERS will gather in Treasure Island's recreation hall every Monday and Thursday at 12:30 p.m. and every Tuesday evening at 7:30 .. Ooe of the major concerns for club . members is con- tinuance of Project DAFFY which. stands fo r d e n t a I assistance -fund for youth. The project W_J!S conceived several years ago by Mrs. Robbins' and has been the group's nfa. Jor philanthropy ever si~:) 'MlrOugh this project, ma ny area youngsters have had necessary .dt!ntal work done. Support .coin's through the club's vai':ious fUnli=raising ef- forts. In add ition several area dentisl.3_, donate their services tor DAFP'Y Clinics. . ~ BRUSHING UP. -Providing a dental assistanc e fund for youth (Projeet DAFFY) is one of El Ca- mino Real Junior Woman's Club's major pbilan· thro{>les. Brushing up on the project, Mrs. David- Robbins, who iaunched the idea ,. visits-Dr. Gary V. Davis, one of the denti:Sts who .don3tes hiJ services, with her daughter, Tina Robbins . Laguna Beach Woman's Club will offer a dessert and card party tn the Woman's Clubhouse at 12 :30 p.m. Thursday, 24, and the public is in· vited. The clubhouse also is the setting for bridge games every fourth Sun· day from 1 ~.m. to 6:30 o.m. I . Heroic .Senator Awakens Mom's Interest in . Affairs of State ' . · .. _, DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am 31 and t mean 24-u.i4~ caa. DEAR READER ' Give the Padded ·brts are OK for ,filling-wt my · · have four children. My husband it a fine provider and that's the sum and substance' of his qualities. I've been.lee!-• ANN LANDERS form when I wear swe,.teri or knit DEAR ANN LANDERS: I ain 10 years dresses, but 1 want lo fetl like a woman old and 1oing steady with a boy pamed again. Is there aomettftriJ · tbat can be Billy. Weil, I gues:; }'OU woukl call it llandkercblef· back to BJJly and 1uue1t that be buy yoa .-vaJentlne nti:t year If ht 1UJI 11 lllttloc you during recess next Ftbntary, ing especially sorry for mysell lately , . betai~n~;~fe ls so ~nromanlic. There • ~ wer 1~1Jeil ~•Ill .er~·~ ~-~· r.: -• ..., ill.I up. N~~il/m i!!1'm t '(_rocke¥. magatthei'~ a~eep them.(;. a 15~at ~ f~,~ ago: aw a certain place. Yesterday, I saw my hero on TV Rnator orta'Y. lie loolflt so hand some and nearly fainted from excitement. I &fM' spoke ftitfi such ~Vlclion that I \vas never like U1is Oyer any movie star. w.rote him [note. of ii~. He sent a ls this a sigrr of lnsaqlly!. What Should l ' J)f!rsonal le . of lharll,and I've been do? -FLIPPED OUT - ) ,plain goory 'e &ince. f· . ' DEAR FLtPPED: You dti MIMI a tri· ' ''I've gone , lo the bdl$:1lorc and am ne batty, but so -lone as Jt d9Ctl'& la- rf.ading up ol'l his stale. I ~it the library te1·[ere with your everyday Urt, don1t 4 eyery ,day \0 chetk~"'the · COngressional worry about u: Should you reacll -the Rec:Qr<l to see U he sild anylhihg. I cut r:1n1,~~01'evr t that you. .cai't do y~ lils pictUre.s out or newspaper• and seM·ori: er, btayen forbicl, U you coo- ' . . done surgically -S9Jnelhlng,reallf safe? going steady although we don't go · ' ~· -""'leaser·• m'e ;..0·w,·-HOPEFUL. "a.nyplaceJ 1 know Billy likes me better ff you have trouble getting along with alder a irlp to Wa_!bl.nat.on, tb~ t'd sug· r " "" gest psychiatric help. -DEAR HOPEFUL: see a plaatlc than any other girl because be h.its me. a · your parents . , . it-you can'tgd thmrto surgeon about aillcone Implants. Note, 1 lot during receu. Jct you live your own life, send for Ann · DEAR ANN LANDERS: I know you said B1PLANTS, oot lnjectlou. This . Yesterday Bll!Y gave; me a pretty lace Landers' booklet, "Bugged by Parents? have access lo thibeSt ffiidlcal brains in tperaUon 11 upeaslvt:, but It 11 lqal and h&ndkerchlef. He said it was a late llow to Gtt More Freedom." Seod SO the country. Please give the&!\ answer. Valenline'1 Dau present. 1 showed the cents_ In coin with your rMuest and a I am a --married ·woman with three salt, lftd. can product excdltnt re111ltt. _i!a ~. • .. ~" _ children. Before the bables,came l ha~ a And' now, lo.all yoa glfs '•t tbert w~o haoo~~~~er to, my mother a~d &he·sald long, stamped sel(-acfareSSe<I envelope.', good figure . Nothing spectacular, but my tnvltloa yourlttve• 11 prO.Pt,CUvt ~· l 'Should give ~t bi:ick because d has been Ann Landers will be glad' to htlp measurements were 34-24-34. tort..--dtta't ,mite Udr'iik..for 11imtt Woshed ·and irohed attd probably.. belonga_wllh\lOUI: problema.. Send them. lo-her-kl fiow I'm U flat u ~ ifO.ll!nc_:board. -~"! _p_l1s~ 1iµ-geon~ 1 cu.aot recommend to bis mother. What should I do? --care~ the O!JUY PIL01'... enclosln& •: wlien l •~Y my li\G!llile !Szero, liffij;-I opecHIO iiiCt«r,""1iil 7.....-llliillJ -~ARUEN'CJTY'l\EADER AGE 10 long, a)amped, sclf.addrWecf envelope. • ' -'+ ·--- . ~ ----------""------~---~--------·~ ~----- I • .· • Pair Exchange Vows ' Los Angeles Tempie Chosen for .Wedding _, Double Ring Ceremony Afternoon Rites 'R-ead · .--. ' Wearlnf her niolber'1 bridal vell caught by 1 ~ of orqe blOISOJlll a n·.d a lace gown Susan Lynn .Robrer ex· changed wedd!JJ& v0ws with ' The Los. Angeles Latlet~ay S&fnts TemPJe pro\·fcled tM·1'""1~~1! -cbel"E. Varvll li>S( Jiibri the Divine Episcopal Church. setUng Ior riles uniting In marriage Judith Parktr and . Larry GunMll. Patriarch George L. Hoggan officiated for the ceremony, which was followed by a ll.ll'lcb!on in the Santa Ana home of the bridegroom's parents, Dr. and Mrs. Don C. GUMell . The bride, daughter of Bishop and Mrs. Wallace L. Parker of Costa M~a. ware an original gown of white peau de sole. The erupire bodice wu appliqued with alencon Jace roses and hand beaded with seed pearls. Her chapel train was attached with lace r~es quilted on satin and a headpiece of quHted satin, Ued pearls and Crystals held her bouffant veU of imported French illusion. Olficlating !or tlie double ring ceremony befcre an al· w an arrang~ ment of white gladioli, dallies and fern was the &v. John W. Donaldson. · The bridegroom Is the son ol 1itr. and Mrs. F. E. Varvil or Costa Mesa. She ls the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allan J. Rohrer of santa Ana. The bride's gown, fashioned of illusion net and lace, ez: .. tended into a chapel train. She carried a bouquet of white daisies, white roses and baby's. breath arranged with fern as she was escorted down the aisle on her father's ann. Chosen to attend her as matron of honor was Mrs. , """'""'"""""'""'"-"'""'""•-"•~3u-"'"'~-"""'----} ,., Robe.rt Mueller. Her,gown wanllas "' A..-PMle O( yellow saUn and )ace MRS. BRUCE H. LYON Coron• del Mer New Home she ·wore a headpiece of yellow net and seed pear'!!. Yellow daisie! arranged with fern formed her_~!t. MRS. MICHAEL E. VARVIL Honeymoon In Sequoia She carried a bouquet or talismaruoses and stephanotis centered with a white orchid. Couple Takes European Trip Walter Waril S~ed as best man. Craig Rohrer, bother of----------~~-------~ ~ !~~s.•nd Mueller were Lone Parents Select For a reception iD the Pamela Parker attended her &ister a1 ma.id of . honor. Bridesma i ds were the bridegroom's sisters, RaNae and Ronda Gwinell, and Julie Caine from Ogden, Utah. church a yellow and white y d s F theme was carried out in a r ,· e U mm er a re daisy decorations atop the All wore yellow gold empire floor length gowns of peau de sole and carried colonial bou· quell of white _d a I s y cbryiantbemwm and baby's breath with yeUow g o 1 d Jtrtamers. The bride's sister, :it ~ Debbie Parker WllS junior 'llftlfHI' ....,. bridesmaid and carried a MRS. D. LARRY-OUNNELt- To Reside in Ut•h · --flowered basket-and wore-a: wrlstlet corsage of yellow carnaUons. Ronald Gunnell served as beat man for hla brother. Ushers were Brent Parker, Allan Asplund, LeRon Olsen, Charles Roper and James Ut· tie. • Bruce H. Lyon arid his bride the former Kris Marie Nohr are taking a 10-week honey· moon trip through Europe following their ·wedding in the Jt'irst -Presbyterian-.-Church, Fullerton. The Rev. Ralph T. Haas performed t h e candlelight ceremony li:iking the daughter or Mr, and Mrs. Max W, Nohr of Fullerton and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon Lyon of Linda 1s1,. three-tiered wedqing cake. Bridal pair figurines were the A busy summer week ol ac- same ones which trimmed the tivities iJ planned by Orange . , . wedding cake of the bride's Coast Chapter of Parents Bndesmlllds,. dre~ Iden· parents. -· Without paftnen: be 'Min ' tically, were Miss Linda Lyon, Mrs D J studabake"r ' gt .g the bridegroom's sister along . ·d ·'th th. l book next Thursday when the ir ·th Sa d K . as:nste w1 e gues , d. . .11 w1 n y \'{agon, athie f th b .d h . fifth groups 1scussK>n comm1 ee Artukovich Rene Starr and or e. ri e'. w ~ 15 a . · meets at 8 p.m. LiibeUl ~b. the br.~a ~gel}_~atio!1..C~hfom1an. S~1al topics-for Aug trs t cousin. · . gUeSls pfesent were h e r discussion gr"!JUPS, Wt\ich take The bridegroom asked his gra~mother, Mrs. L. G. place twice weekly, will be brother Curtis Lyon to be Hewitt of Balboa lslatid , and chosen at the meeting in the best m~n. Ushers we;e Mark he~ l grandfather, J 0 5 e Ph Co.st.a Mesa home of Mrs. and Eric Nohr, the )i1dj!s Ro~r of Corona de! 11ar. Jean Gaspard. broChers, Craig Deener, Den· The newlyweds both are A general meeting of the nis Freidenrich an d Steve . graduates of Coro~a del ~ar group ls planned fqr next Fri- Wheeler. High ~ool. He will conhnue day at a p.m. in the Costa Flower girl w Diane' hls stUd1es al Orange Coast Mesa Golf and Country Club, will be the setting for-a noon until dark family picnic on Sunday, July 13, with ad· mission 50 cents. A tea dance is plMned In the Newporter Inn on S,und1y, July 13. from 7 to 11 p.m. Admission will be SJ: · Single parents interested in .. further information may con- tact ~frs. Beverly Rush, niem· bership chairman, at 673-0473. Custody is not a requirement for membership 1n the group. and the membership fee is $12. BEST Organ m~ic wu played by Andrew ~yslip. Mr. and ·Mrs. James Carmon, sister and brother·ln-law of the benedict from Salt Lake City arrived for a reception in the Newport Beach Stake Center. · For her wedding the bride chose a white embroidered organza gown banded with yellow ribbon and a floor· length vell. She. carried a basket of multicolored spring flowers. Fredericksen, cousin of bride, College. and a family trip to San and ring bearer was Gregory Follo~·ing a wedding trip to Diego's Sea World will get fh, DAILY PILOT alf1r1 101T1• Jones. Sequoia National Park, the under way at 8:30 a.m. on of the be1t f11ti1re1, bv edu1I Following the c ere m ~ n,Y couple plan to make their Saturday, July 12. 1urvev of re•d1r1, ev1il 1hle h1 Mrs. Gene DuVal, the brides _:h::o::m::e_:in::.:San:::::la:_:An:::a:_. ____ _:Pr_:.::•n::U:;:ce:_:.Par:_:k_:in'.'....'.'.Sa:'.n:ta~An::a:..:,'="='="='"='='=''="='"="=·='='=ti•=•='· cousin, circulated the guesti- A five-tiered wedding cake was decorated with doves and topped with miniature bride and bridegroom dons dtessed In wedding attire. Sculptured likenesJ _oL the new Mr. and Mrs. Gunnell for the dolls were created by the bride's father, who also carv· ed a 300-pound ice sculpture dove centering rec e pt Ion decoration.s beneath a lattice archway. Miss LyM Smith, maid of honor, wore a yellow and white gingham gown overlayed with white orgalllB and carried a natural wicker basket filled with white and ~e 11.o w mar g u_e.r .1-te_s. chrysanthemums and baby's breath.. book among the 350 people at-i r-"Tmrr~rr tending a reception I n Fullerton Ebe.It Clubhouse. Others asslsUng were the Misses . Sue aDd Chris Lyon, the bridegroom's cousln.s. Following the wedding trip the newlyweds will reside in Corona del Mar. The newlyweds will reside in Provo, Utah, following a wed- ding trip along the coast of California. Talk Gives Glimpse Of Historical Fiction Ancient History as Seen meeting ·preceding the Through Fiction will be the cheon, for which the Mmes. Talk Concerns topic of Christopher Creely's Gene s1<aw1n and Ronald talk before Mesa Harbor Club Taylor are in charge of ar- B b F d · members on Thursday, July rangements. 0 Y ee Ing IO, in !be Mesa Verde Co\intry A social hour will begin al Advantqes of Nursing to Club. 10:30 a.m., when members Mother and Baby will be the The CoN Mesa book dealer and guests will be greeted by topic for the tint in 8 series of will give his audience tips on the Mmes. Bud Banbley and lectures sponsored by the haw to choose interesting and Nick Hanson of the reception Costa Mesa Chapter of La enjoyable reading material as COJll.fTliltee. MRS. STEVEN L. CAVANAUGH Former Susan V•n Tuyle Cavanaugh , Van Tuyle Names Linked at Altar Leche League tonight at 8. he discusses his favoritejc;;;;;;:~;;;;,;..;,;..;;;;;;;;;;~ The discussion meeting will category, the historical novel. ta~e place. in the Newport Cree_ly, who will be in- Beach home of Mrs. Paul c. troduced by Mrs. Marshall Bernhart. Cowley, program chairman, Exchanging wedding vov.·s in SL Andrew's Pres~yterian Chureh were Susan Van Tuyle of Balboa, daughter of Mr. and Topics scheduled for coming comes from four generations months will include The Art of of booksellers and rare book Nursing, Baby's Birth and dealers. He also has been Family RelaUons and Nulri· employed as a juvenile pro- of illusion. 1. d bation officer in San Diego and ion an Weaning. o Co and chooJ M'•s Gretchen Van Tuyte range unty as as "' Those Jnterested in further teach and ·a1 J w00 maid of honor for her er SOCl serv ce ..., information about La Lethe worker sister, and bridesmaids in-League .may call Mrs. H. W. Mrs.· William Holmes will eluded Janet Colby and Debbie M cJc J~'""' Mrs. J. T. Van Tuyle of Flamm. They Wore printed oore, ~. preside at the bus in e 111 Honolulu and Steven L. dresses of white and pink with1f=====:::::;=:::::;=:::::;:;:::;::=======;;;;::;;1Jl Cavanaugh, son of Navy Lt. . tiny puffed sleev~ and pink • 8 X 10 PORTRAIT W Cmdr. (<et.) and Mn. M. E. sashes. Pink roses adorned • • Cavanaugh of Garde n Grove. their ha ir and they carried • IN NATURAL COLOR • The .Rev. Dr. Charles H. pint and white roses in their 95" Dierenfie.ld otriciated for the nosegay bouquets. •• I' •• double ring ceremo~y before La'rry Beebe stood as best an altar~rated ~·1th an ar-man for the bridegroom. • r~ngen1 of ~·hi.le carna· Ushers included HOf!·ard Situ'· • PLUS lAI Uons, stoe gladioh and ba· ble and Bill Brown • a ... 14.tl Veh•• • . by's bre~th . , . A reception follo~ng t he • e Choice of Poses • The bride, given in marriage afternQOn ceremony took place by her father, wore a go~·n of in the Ne"'•port Beach Ebel\ • • One Speci•il • \\·hite silk organza with a full Club. • to• F1mily • ruffled hoop skirt wh ich ex-The nc~ Mr and Mrs e 50 " ·1· • tended lo hed t · " · • • C MIO '"9 o • a cat ra tram. Cavanaugh both graduates of The fitted bodice featured tiny Newport H~bor High School, • H1ncUin9 COAST • puffed sleeves, -end a flora! plan to make their first home Ch•rge COLOR • headpiece caught her tong veil in Anaheim. '················· • Group to View Africa Slides YOU KNOW YOUR CHILD A m .. Ung of Orange Sho~s WILL LEARN MedictJ Ass1ttanlJ AS10C1at1on • tonight al I will feature an IJ. TO SWIM AT Ju.str1ted talk on Afri ca by O. w, Pi1ce ol Llguna u .. ch. BLUE BUOY For !be galberlng, which · wW Uike place in t h c American Legion Hall in AH le Wiii ''' Hewwrt 8'ach. Prier will • ....._. .. , 1oi-.. bt...ti, .,_ color .Udcs or South and ._,. .... Tntl• Eut Altic• wHJeh II< took °" i 546-1800 '°"' oljllt C91orful ...... I FAMILY GROUPS NO EXTRA CHARGE Harbor Center -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa THURS·f1ll·SAT, JULY10·11·12 HOURS: 10 to 5 .. THE N-E·W LQQK malAe'.1 for HAIRSTYLING * * by the area's TOP STYLISTS! Compllment1ry M.ke-ups • F1ci1ls • Eye Tebblng Manicures and Pedicures By Appointment VIVIANI WOODARD cosMn1cs mat&~~ WIG & BEAUTY SALON 541-3446 21 .. D l•f 11t\ S""' HllA.6lEN SQu'AllE COSTA MISA R8BlNSON'S . ROBINSONS NEVvroRT • FASHION ISLAND • 64428()() . ( ( ) ( ' ' -' • 7 ------• ' '· Satldl.;h~~k . . Teday's Plaal N.Y. SCeek• ' bag-utta--T-a~pay-er~Grou-p-&~tini-tes Budge Laguna Beach T&xPVUS A.sSoclauOn. dorm1nt aeve.r1l years, has been reac. tivaled to study and weigh the Laguna Beach clly budget that propose& an ll'h:· cent tax rate increase. Gerald Linke." new pre&ident of the association, said the organization· will take a public stand in about a week. The tetired Navy captain met.. Monday with Chamber of Comine.rce Erecutive. Manager Warren Morgan and went over Dowta ·tfae M •• JSSIOD Ti· ail ~ chamber's record $'8,975 request !or· city promotion. --.. ' li-!ayor Glenn E. Vedder, who l'taf heard or Linke's investigations, said he doesn't see how it ·Is going to be PQAible to cut anything substootial out m the budget "unless yoq would try to reduce 90Dle ~nnet.•t Councihnen, who have had lbe pro- pos<d budget io their hands more than a week, will take their first Ueki at it In a •, .. budgel study aewon W~y at· ternoon, IJnke sakl be wW be prtM!Dt u ID observer. The IU-mllllon budgel propooed by Cl· ty !lanager Jim<! Wbealon can. for a tax lncrwe lrom IL74 per 1100 m assessed valualioo to almost 1u:1, The-pr<>pOHOI • 11\kent hike ...Uy would be the.largest lor lbe city to many a year, By Pl)ll lnlorlandl Le.r. year the tax rate lncrffle wu e4ght centa, the year before seven cents. and for four yeai.·s previous to that the cl· ty held the line without tu increases. , City Mai1111.r Wheaton said bis pa.I "'f"rd ha.! been rather consistent and one he la peraonally proud of. Cil)' COUJl- cilmen haven't made major changes In the five previous years when he bas ptt3<11ted tbe budget. '1bey've ·made only minor chantes. They-haven't ettmtnited personnel, equipment or changed st.rVk:e level 1p- proaches," be u.Jd. At least one aiuncllroan iplght be uneasy about the size of lhls year's pr. posed tax lncreue. Re Is Cauncilman O>arllon Boyd, who has suggested that city planning COmmi4Sionen tie lent a copy of the budget "for their enlighten- ment and possible. amazement." Boyd indicated he was reacting to crlUcal ccimment.s by plannen on the leogth of Ume U mlghl take tbe city lo put utilities undergr9und . "Capital im~ementl mean nothln.s. but money," he iilif. - Wheaton, in an interview, said be did· not Care to tell bow large budget requeats frorq city departmentl had been bdore he whittled them down. But then he did remark that. inJUal re-- questa: would have required a tu Jn-- crease approximately equal lo tbe !IS cenla ruldents !urned down to the Airll 15 Laguna school electlon, • 1st Gls c ·ome Home ·: 814 Veterans St.art of 25,000 Pulwut ~ ' • Laguna Hills PO Site Selected McCllORD AIR FORCE BASE, Wuh. (AP) -'Ille llr>t U.S. lll>oPo to be pulled out. of Vietnam by President Nixon wing· ed homeward in nine jet transports today after a seodoU mtl'ked by mi!ilArY Ian- fare and the thanks or Saigon Qfficials. Thieu:said: "Together we have repelled not In vain." communl.n aggression. This has been our "We fully r"'1iu that the primary l goal and our purpo&e:." responsibility of the struu.le should bl He said the" South Vietnamese must ours," the 41-year~ld &Uih VletnameH . . . begin to assume a _gr:eater s~ of the president saJd. He added that .hJJ:..naUon. fighting and tbe replacement of allied. would sUIJ need combat lfQPpori. llld sup- trocp1. plies ltut would have "less and leu need . 1 "This Is only Ille beginning of lblu>ro· for tbe blood of other natlooa.'' , LAGUNA HILLS -A s1te-has been selected for 8 ~w Laguna Hills brancb:of the Laguna Beach Post Office, says an announcement from the office of U.S. PoStini!fct""General Wlnton·B~oun,1-~--1 The post office will be located at the northeast comer of Calle de la Oen. Creighton -w; "Abrams, com· mander of American forces in Vietnam, tolOthe 814 men JnltiTfti'st-Contingen~ of 25,000 U;S. troops being wlthdrawn: "You occupy· a significant moment in history." ~-1'Yila ~Jcom:e awama-llie in- fantrymen, -almost all veterans of oom· bat. at this Air Force base, near Ft. Le"-'b and the city or seatUe. CW!," ·Thlen"'lald. He noted the ~ of After his s~, 'P\ieu presented a gift the U.S. 9th division in South Vietnam -to the wllt and indlvidµ"a1 &lfts to it.I of-- 1,SSS killed \n action -and said "~SUI .ind. ajmiQC' noncommJaalaned.....of.~~ duty-lna"'111lte-'lllfnJiii sacr te WU ficeri. - ~fagdelena and Paseo de Velencla. . The 77,ooo-square-foot post ,offl~ will ht built undu the ·department s policy of & private owner building the post office to t..tieeltlcaUon and then teasing it back to file pos\al service. . AdverUsement for bids is expected m ~he near future. e Sports Site Staled LAGUNA NIGUEL -captstrano Uoilied )ch<!<?f Dlstrlcl •trustees Monday nl&ht riip«ided to a ....,,.. they llUdy ways to use sm>ol pnrpe1ty in Le114M Niguel f~ junior Jeagtie baseball .and foothill. · "WE MUST BE NEARING LAGUNA AND IT LOOKS LIKE IT'S THAT TIME OF YEAR" 'Nat Ttirher' DilellMmn Army chief of Stall Gen. Wllllam c, Westmoreland , a former U.S. com- mander 1n Vietnam, flew in from Wa!hington with decorations for five of the retumin1 10ldiers Gf the 3rd Bat.- talion, eoth Infantry, 9th Infantry Division. · On the program for the next three days were speeches · by pubUc figuret, band music, a parade, a dinner, pretty girls udl ID iiliilJ -· famitJ~mmiool. · Not Kespm&ditlfl Laguna Boy Still in Coma After Es~pingSea·Deaih ' . . ( ' . ' Je(f Wlllon. --11;Jc4~1 ..... ataft dla&ors..lnlll1 ,tllmpleltd~llll ,lilw\. back Into action by elect...oock. Board members Fred Newhart Jr. and Tom Winget and Assistant Supt.. Joe Wilner Weft appointed to a Niguel Recreation Committee. . Delayed by c_-apo Board ~ ·-1 111liie,....,_theVwl!lofrai Tau SOit Nhur airport Tuesday were Soutb Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu, Viet: President Nguyen Cao Ky and Defell!le Minister Gen. Nguyen Van Vy. • Thieu and Ky were surprise last minute arrivals, just befo~ the soldiers marched to their waiting C141 'StarUfter aircraft. They passed down the ranks o( the fati1ue-clad Americans, shaking hands and thanking them for their services. Beach boy who .... broughl 1iocli "' we Friday after breakioi hla neck whlle-dlv· ing off a rock at Wood 's Cove, remains fn a-anna--today-at South Coast·Oxnnuinity Hospital. Hla -pareola, Mr. and Mn. Rldwlf Wilton. 648 Ramona Ave., were at the h011pilal-thla -morning· hoping f<>l'-.-- change for the better. 11te request was made by Frank ifilbar, representative of. NI g u ~ l ~:meowncrs and Community Assocta· ~··y011t11 ·Fund Started MJ'IJSION VlE.10 -A fund h~ been $et up in behalf of Donald Bo.nq1, 18! a June graduato of Mission Vie.JO ~h School, who was leU paralyzed fo~low~g a May automobile accident in which hill best friend, Dale1<cnnedy was killed. Donald ·son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Robinson' of 24351 Chrisanta Drivt, has been under lnt.ens!ve care at South Coast Community Hospital be.fore b e I n I transferred to the Rancho Rehabilitation liospital in Downey. When be comes home in four or five monthl be wili be in need of an electric wheelchair, balhroom facilities, a speci~l bed, ramps leading lo . and fron:i hi& house, and.other nece.uit1es, accorchng to lifrs. WllUam Gardner. • Contributions to fielp defray ·UJe family's fil'lanclal burden can be sent to the Donalc! Bondl Fund, United California Bank: 261Sl La Paz Road, Mission Viejo. •. Sa1t Cleme1tte llsed ? CAPISTRANO PALISAD~ -Mayor \Vade·Lower has charged lhat the city QI San Clemente was "uted" by residtnts_of the nonbem Palisades area outside .city limits in a fight there to bah a house trailer park. Some residents or the area had re- quested annexaUon by the city which bas 15liffer mobile home zoning requirements than the county, but then dropped~ an- nex.alioo move when the county disap- proved of the lralle~ park. e Servlrenaen Cited EL TORO -The 33-mcmber El Toro. Laguna Hills Exchange. Club h a s personally welcomed over 15,000 return· 111g servicemen on their arrival at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station since the project's beginning in Dece~ber, ac· cor'dlng to spokesman Al Bhus. The club, whose motto is "Unity for Sef\!lce," meets incoming servicemen with ·refreshments in conjunction with ~ Exchange Clubs throughout the county. - e Boek . Exhibit Set LAGUNA H!Ll.'I -"An Art Book Ex- hibit," comptete with chamber music ••Una lo lho !Ith century, w!U be Blaged Wednwlay i i I p.)11. Ii! ~ Le!Jure World Clubbousf: Two. Fine art books showing painUngs, ciriental prints, and musical instrument.a og· all IRH haft been &elected lor di&- play by i'he Special Projects Department of the Orange County Public Library. "Wa know there have never been Ulll many rare, off.prtnt. old books of art under one roof In Orange County," aaJd · .1 dlredor Leota Pcter1an. A scheduled discussion of textbook$ and specifically of "The Confessions o! Nat Turner," a story about Negro slave, was sheJved Monday by Capistrano Unified School District trustees. Supt. Charlea F •• Kenney said he Is reviewing .the procedure of te_xtbook selection -"a procedure which will eliminate as much controversy as possi· ble In text selection." "Tbe Confessions of Nat Turner" was requested as a supplemental English tex:L Several trustees took exception to language u.>ed by cbaracton io the book. The boot was omitted from the ap. proved list of books, but tnutees were to read the book before thla Monday's meeting. Lui ·November trustees~ for Agenda Light 40 minutes the languace of J. D. Sal· Inger's best sell~r "Catcher in the Rye" before deciding to leave. it on the }>ookshelf for J IU:I grade literature classes. , In the end trustees agreed the book is realistic and reflects what tet.naiers are experienclnl. Kenney said that under his new system, book requt8ts by teachers would first be nviewed by a high 8cboo1 com· mittee and then by a dlstrkt curriculum commiltee. This would be done to "develop greater undemanding," Kenney said. PrOI and cons of the book in question could then be drletmined prior lo public debale, be said. ~ Addressing the departing battalion, * * * Reds Expected To Boost Attacks SAIGON (UPI) -The first of 25,000 U.S. soldiers being withdrawn (rom Viet- nam left for home today. Tonight, two Communist. rockets struck a Vietnamese shipyard on the outskirts of Saigon, atartlng fires that lit up the skies of the capital. Doctors say the blond-haired boy hasn't responded to treatment since betng ad· mlUed after the Fourth of July accidenl. Wilson .. S-doctor, Dr,,John Hazen, said the youth was unconscious in the water from five to six mlttutcs as 1irb: watched nearby, thinking he was practicing underwater endurance. When he was finally brought to shore by swimmers, his breathing J n d heartbeat had atopped. Lifeguard John Cunningham and Dr. Vincent. Carroll, who was on the beacft at the time of th" tnddent, adminl.!te~ mouth-to-mouth resusQtation and ex· temal cardiac massage. ~ emergency treatment was con. tinued en route to th& hospital, where Planllers Give Plant 01( Allied military officials already were predicting a new wave of Communist al· tacks in the coming weeks as the SOuth Vietnamese Army begins taking up posi· lions left open by the Americans. The first of the attack! was not. long in com· Ing. Beasley Elected President of Capo Trustees For Laguna Canyon Site No casualties were reported Im· mediately. The rockelJ hit a building used to store fuel and flames billowed more than 300 feet Snto the ski~ throwing_ out a lig_ht that wu clelilf vl!fble from downtaWn Saigon, thrtt miles to the northeast. It was the first rocket attack since Sabtr· day when two rocket.I did little damage. Dr. Robert P. Beasley was unanimous- ly elected pre&ident of the Capistrano Unified School District Board of Trustees Monday nighL With only three ol five members pru<n~ tbe Laguna Jliach PIBMlng Commission took on a relatively non-con- troversial agenda Monday nigbl Planners conditionally granted a variance requested by Gordon Str\lilnn to conduct air conditiooing, heaUng , elec- trical and refrigeration contracting. and retail sales of appliances at 2245 Le.~ Ganyon Road. Annual Laguna Surfing Tourney Deadline Nears Deadlioe is Thursday for entries In Ule lSth annual IAguna Beach Surllng Tournameftt (0 be 5taged Saturday al tbe Bn>ob Sir<et beacb. Entriet lor the event, open lo Lquna IUrien only. must be turned in at city hall with· Ille fl fee. Entry blanU-ar• available at di)' hall all!i th• Oak Street lifeguard ttiw«. The.re wlfi be six eventi In the contest, 1o 'begin at a •·II\ They Inc¥• aenlor Mid junior m.n. 1utllng, '1enlor-•and junior mena board radnl, body surf!Jig (any ·,.,.), aod aldd boarding (12 and uncltt), lodivldual-lrollblu-will bo-awarded-lo Ille lop fO\lt lioloh<t• In tach evenL Slracban, who currently does bus1ne.ss a' 310 Glenneyre, must revise his parking layout plans, and obtain approval from the city for bis signs, before making bis move. In other business, planners: County Takes Up Dana Rezoning -Deferred action to July 21 on 1 re- quest by Margery T. Miller, 2.81-283 Wave St., to expand an existing duple• wltbwt providing the riquirtd sitbiCks and off. &treet parking. In the interim, the cit~ A rezone of county~wned area at Dana will investigate another variance re1.1ue1t. Point Harbor to a Planned Community -Will continue a pu!>lic hearing to July Develapment designation goes before the 21 on a request by Trails Auto System:i; to county Board of Supervisors Wednesday. conduct an auto rental and leul.Dg agen-The proposal, developed by the COW)lY cy al 941 S. Coast Highway. If applicant Planning Department and approved last Jack c.onlon finalires bl.I leue by then, M•Y 21 by the county Plapplng Com· the hearing will be continued. mission, pennits 22 Uses oflleased ·pro. -Awroved a ..,..year dancing per· perty io the had>cir area . mit requested by Jim Vreeland, owner It encompasses mart than 500 acres m. of tho Sandpiper Reataurant. eluding water area. ioside and outalde of Dr. Beasley, a San Clemente veterinarian, was formerly board vice- president and has been a member of the board since 1164. Nolie. Famularo, of Caplstraoo Beach, was elected vice-president. Oaths of office were administered to new board member9"'Bob D. Hurst or Laguna Niguel and rwJected members Thomu J, Winget, of Dana Point and Fred L. Newhart Jr. of San Juan Capistrano. Harcoort Bull of San . Clemente wa' elected board clerk. Newhart was named - .as the board's representative to the COUD· ty Committee on School D 1 s t r I ct Reorganlz.ation. BILL WOULD · BARE PARKING FINE FEE -RelnforCed their position to city the breakwater. council on. two previous denials. Both The plan, lf . approvtd, relieves the SACRAMENTO CUPI) - A blll to we Ernest L. SChroeder, 259 Lower Cl!fl Dr., county Planning Comrfilssion of the the frulttation o( partln& vlolaton and the calvary Cburcll, 770 Hillcrert ~ necessity· of having to rttiew all develop. cltared lhe Assembly Cr i m J n a I Or., ~ave appealed to ctty council the ments within the marina priof to coo-Procedure Committee Monday. dcctslOOS of '!!._ Planntni..Commlsllon. muctlon. The committee aenl 1o :he lower ..,... Instead. they wtU. be Sllbje<I to •P' 1loor ·a ,mealW'll by s..i, 'Anthoo~r., M P • n: ' j\1'Jvat 'byKen-·Sampoon;;dll)'ctor ol BeilenJOo (0.Beverly Hilla), roqu eat r1ci;s ;&l"se, hart.on, li!acha and p&tQ,.the f!.olbo!' ,Illa• drtvel'I oj_~,r~ Yio!JUona of 1oc • •1, • :.,.._,,. " ' ~V!.,. .'9olnf aod tlit C!IJl1ty«.l&il>of parklol GCdlniOOa JI' ·itv""'a wrlu.D "~"""'""' (UPI) -'The Labor i Con11nlaslon~ •. ' It ' • nQ!lce ;oi Ill. ~Im ball. Department reported today t h a t· · · The pion ...inovea Ibo """'1~ninfok lleilenson noiecl mallf',ca!Uornla cilia wholesale pdca of !null, poultry alld ~ ~he!bJ•fl,aroa, clllf l•<eand•'l!altior. ~'!"· to '11"•1• "lllO\orilll '""'h Jn.. llsh """ H -t lo June, probablf l ...........,.. to tll(:.!l'hli!I -.mp, 1i!"'\lilRn "'l'.'"l ~~_.wsoolllY i, •lanallnl-flitlber hlkll 1n.fooc1 marUt.., naldeoll<l, c1up1et. ~,m:ut.1.vl-1*1th!llne'prlor1t1111¥lbi:it; · , prlca tap ll>ead..-','aparlmetq, plul'.""'1•~ ----... ~_,......,.....__·_·_~-- "' , ' . I ' ' . , •1·~ .. 1· •• 1•;r ~"' f'' (• I '•t I < •• ! ~.':I\ ·' • f "i~ .... " ..... ,.,, . , . . .... " . " 'I . •• ' I• ' ' 11 ...... 4 .~: " ' . . ~ • Scotchman's Cove Blaze Scores Quarter Acre A brush fire .at Scotchman's Cove MOil- day afternoon scorched leas than an acre "before being put. °"' by Emerald Bay volunteer firemen . No one wu injured in the blaze. Cause of the fire may have been cbUdrtn playing with matcher, accordinc lo counl)' firefighters. Scotchman's Cove ia located between Laguna Beaoh and Corona del Mar. An Emerald Bay volunteer firiman, Reginal~ B. '!'flpp, 49, Dawa. Point, WIJ killed in a. traffic accident Friday whllt responding lo a fire call at Cry11tal Covt near Scotclunan's Cove. That fire also is believed to have been set by children playing with matches. NEW Y0RlClAP)-11ie'"stock marl<el remained ahal'J)ly lower in moderately active tradtoi Ibis aflemooo. with broken reporllng several a d v e r s e developments appartotly wetgh1ng on the marteL (See QootaUons, Pages 10--11). 'Jbe Dow Jones.. lndusf,rlal average at 1:30 p.m. WIS off 11.M ai 871.57. Orange • Wea~r Fair skies will reign alone the Orange COUt Wedntlday with tl\e mercury ranging from the upper 70'1 lo tbe lower !O's dependinf on your proximUy to the cool sea -INSmE TODAY Mn rot41' 1u 1tcond in chooJ. ing 4 matt. bu& womt• rank ft dztll. -which U 1tthV 75 pcrcfllt •f A..-morrfoou CITI a b"'~ Pog• 21. ... J DUV ~ILOT l Israel Hits 7 Syrian MIG .Piaues tW PnN htf.nialloa•I Isra<ll llcl>ter plants shot down oevm 6yrlon MIGU jeb in a 16-minut_e,~ bat- Ue way, an Israeli army spokesman 1rio- • __ .l!!~~~·~Wte to\O..the lsrMlla.- 11111...i no io-. it wu ttief oui1h atr battle within a- week In pteYioua: engagements during the week Israeli jeta shot down five Egyptian jeta in do&U&bU over the Gulf of Suez and Ille Red Sea. Today's battle was 1be big(est asial ht.We between Israeli and S)'rlan forces since end of the 1911 llx-day war and brOlll)lt to 3' tho ~ ol Arab planes lsratl has re~ sbootlna: down alnce lben. . 'Ille fight repre1<111ed IDOlher major eacalotton of tho Mideast conlllct that United Nallonll Secrelar)' General Tbanl told the St<urlly COunci1 Monday fiad turned.into "opm warfare." Tbe Tel Aviv military spokesman said today's dogfight took plact! above the • Jsraelk>ccupled Golan bel~ll along: the Iarae.11-5yrian border. Tbe spowman Aid Ille battle began when Syrian planes penetrated tsraelf.. coritrolled air space. He &aid all teven of the Syrian planes shot down crashed into jyrjtn territory. The situation was so serious lhat Arab diplomatic sourcea in Rome reported Egypt wu calliflg·up reserves. ElrUer today Egyptian commandos stabbed across the Suei · Canal and reported killing 30 Israeli soldiers and dutroying military equipment in-. Sinai Dt<¢ bau. l!rael oaid it r<plll!ed the raid, lost no men of .it• own and killed e"J,ht In the aitoct force. Tbe air bottle coincided .willl n,w flll'e_upa •I filhlln1 a!Ong Ille Jor1fanlao bordtrl and I& Syrion borders. Tbere ,..... reports Ille armed lorcts -~rs ol sl.111 of ltaq, 81flo, Jordfn and Bc1Pt ~ meeting In 1'.>amlUClll to plot strategy 11alnsl Israel. DamUCUJ js .,__ barel3LI•Lmlles from-Ille llt.-ot.today" air batUe. ' Y outli Involve d In Slaying Dies; • ¥ y§t-ery Probed !/I yOutb Involved in a 1911 shootjng ~ J'lth a Stanton police officer alip- ped • from . unconsciousness I n t o m~ death Monday ln t h 9 ..,.,...., room ol Stan~· i:<>mmllnlty Iloapltal C«oner'1 depuUes today are examining the unmarked body ~!erry_Naral)jo, li, on0692Tuiirt St., Slinlon, In an attompl to determine what caused his death. The dead youth was with Paul Aguilera, 18, on Feb. 9, 1968, when Aguilera was ahot and kllled by a b\lllet from the gun of a Stanton reserve policeman. Ofllcer Allen Chrislian, t2, of Hun· tington Beach, was_ late.r acquitted of mamlaugbt.er char11es in the shooting. Pollce said Naranjo was brou&)lt to the hospital by an older brother, Daniel. He died without regaining conaclousness. ntere Wert no marU ol violenct on his body, officers said. The brother told police he saw two unknown 'men bring Jerry home un- conscious and carry him into the house shortly before noon Monday. .._ The coroner's office ls conducUria an autopsy to dete.nnlne the cause of Qeath. A deputy said a report could be expected \~ednesday. Aguilera and Naranjo were stopped by police for questioning at 2:30 a.m. Feb. 9, 1961. When Aguilera broke and ran, of- ficer Chrilt.lan shouted warnings to halt three Umts, then fired hitting the youth in the held from a distance of over 50 yards. Christian said he meant to fire a warn- ing, shot and had no intenUon of killing the youth. {Jf11I Y t11JOT CWlAHCi~ COAl1 P\l•l IMllNG tOMHJ111 tl•Mrl N. W••• .,. ...... """ ... llllW Jae• I . c.,1ay Vitt ............. .....,., ,....u T"M•1 11,wil a•• n,,,.,, A. M,,,i.;,, .... '*""" .,1.., ~ichanl P, Nill ·--'"' ...... --Of ... 2tf F.,11t AYa. MaHl111 J.44•au1 P,0 . l•ir •••. t265l --Cwtl ~: iat #fl! Say'''"' ..,_, -.0.: "'' ....,.., .......... ,.. ~ ...,., • Jiii '""" -·<ri.-. Mil~ ... L01 ..-....,_ It QIM_. .... ,...,..~ .............. 111:11111 ._ ..., .. -.. .._ -l-llMctl. I 1 7 I I ti' ..... f'""'9 t.k.11.. C.la .............. •ttOt ..... ,_,.111 1/11-... -"'" -.... _.,, ............... al,.,, ........ ... ........... ~ ............. , ...... c.-.--. .. TJt gl t I ITI 4t 4Mot414 0 111 .......... "41-4Jlt ~.: ... °' .... '-! ........... ~ ,. -'""'"· -It•!"""' ................. " """1---..... hi ....,.~....__...._ ...... ..,,.,.._. ..... 0.:-~ ~'""' =-~·:.~ ' DAILY P'ILOT $11ff P'httt April ls a Mermaid . ' -. -.. . Bonny Suecu~mbs · . Aft:er Big ~r-ip ·-~ Fro \!.ire~ HONOLULU -Aslromonk Bonny died early today 12 houra aftP" the monkey put down in the Paclllc Ocun lollowmg ---:-"llt':"'orbll:I' arwnd-:-eartJrJl · apace I ca~ule, the U.S. space aceoty rtpormt. • Jt was sudden,'' aUl Brad. Eyans, publl c information officer for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration. "He had been 1n fair· CDn- diUon just before." The 14-pound monkey, exhausted and bored, was broua:ht. back to e.artb more Laguna Hills ··------- Firm · Pleads Not Guilty than three weeks e.arly and spti.ahed down In his Biosatelllte 3 soriie 25 miles off Kauai , Hawaii. -Ob&el'ven-described America's spac-. monkey u limp but aUve when fiOW!l by Air Force heUcopttt to Hawall'a llkkem Air Foret base. · · NASA officials said IJ1 autopsy was ordered Immediately in the biosatelllte laboralol7 trailer where the monkey had been under intensive care since the touchdown. "We had no idea that he was that close to death," added Evarui. "He jl.1$t sud· de.nly reu off.". NA~A officials scheduled a news con- ference to discuss the unexpected climax of the aborted space mission. Eva111 said it wa.a sUJJ too early to call the mission a failure, saying "It depends on data already received." "We had been hoping for a minimum 14-day mission for aue:cess," he aaid. Aprll Johnson1 8, urges teammates ~rior to tak ing het turn in run and swim relay race staged Mon- day on Lagun a's f\.1ain Beach by girls in city life- guard Mennaid progr;,:1m. Girl s 8 to 11 can still si gn up for the prcigrain. 1'Ie.nnaids meet every Monday and Wednesday for .six ·weeks to develoi> water skills and safety consciousness under super- vision of lifeguards. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A judge set July 22 for trial of an Orange County housing development flnn that plead~ in· nocent .to federal charges of making U- legal political campaign contributions. Rebert Rosenwald, vice president of R06smoor Corp. of Laguna Hills, entered thr plea Monday before Judge Albert Lee Sto:?phens Jr. in· U.S. District Court. Before death, a team of 15 doctors, veterinarians and technicians worked over the little primate in 1 Portable medical van, and a-doctor-had reported "'his heartbeat is 68 per minute and steady." Charles Wilson, project manager for NASA 's Ames Research Laboratory in Sunnyvale, Calif., said the $92 million ex- periment was ended after the monkey failed to respond to signals aboard the' space capaule. Rossmoor lawyers said they v.'ill ask for a.delay to prepare arguments on con- Pines Appointed To Board Eying Laguna Library Botanical Lab Studied 5titutional issues. - The com\>any ·was indicted Juile 12 on two counts of vj_olating the Comipt Prac· tices Act, which prohibits corporatlons from making CDntributio.ns to political candidates. '1His lack of response wu interpreted lo indicate a sluggishness which U •llow· ed to contlntfe, could have led to 1erious deterioration," Wilson. aald. For San Clemente High It is one of several Indictments resulting from a three-year, nationwide investigation by the Internal Revenue Service. Cypress Holdup Men Wound Store Manager Publlc relaUons consultant Mark Pfnes baa been appointed to reph1cc Jon B!Ughman on the Laguna-Beach board-t.o plan a new library. Baughman, an accountant, is goin& to w.ork overseas ror the U.S. State Depart· ment. Other membCra or the board are f..1rs. Anthony Demetrlades and attorney James Leddy. In making the appointment, Laguna ci- ty councilmen asked about progress of library planning under the non.profit cor· poraUon. Clty Mana1er James Wheaton reported that not much financial progress has been made in the Jut 45 days because both city and county ~sonnel have been b~ wt~ budgeting .. Board membera, h6we\1er, 'have 'been visiting oth'er libraries and screening architectJ, he 11aid. Grove Motorist Killed in Crash • INDIO (UPI) -Authorities are seek· ing the -driver of a camper truck involved in an acclde~hlch killed one motorcy· cle rider seriously Injured three others early ay on Interstate 10. The Califom Highway Patrol said the driver was sought on felony hit-run charges. Officers said Marvin Currier, 46, of Garden Grove, was killed when th! camper hit his cycle. His passenger, Jean -stoicu, 25, of Santa Ana, was seriously in jured. Howa rd Olson, 22, and Audrey Patrick, 21. both of South Gate. were Injured vrhen their motorcycle fell as the camper swerved in front of them. Four Ch ildren Drown In Iowa Storn1 Sewer KEOKUK. Iowa (UPI ) -Follr children playing in a park creek here ~1onday afternoon were swept into a storm se1o1·er and drowned. Olher children in Rand Park said the four were floating in the rain-swollen creek, when they were caught by a sud· den swirl of waler. The witnesses said the youngsters 1o1·ere hurled through a six· foot opening and into a concrete sewer. Plans for a privately t I n a n c e d arboretum to be entirely designed, built and nm by student! of the-Sin Olemente I-Ugh School were unveiled Monday at a· meeting of the Capistrano Unified School District board. The botanical a n d environmental laboratory envisioned in the plans in- cludes a 400--aeat amphitheater, several lath houses for plants, a I a r g e greenboose, a 1111Hoot long pond with waterfall, a weather alaUon and tree,,. The project woltld be loc<ited oo five acres of land on the athletic field. Plans were explained by students Ph~ntom Bicycle Robber Strikes In County Ag ain The phantom bicycle robber struck Monday morning In the parking lot of the ·Bank of America branch, 2001 S. Main St. ln Santa Ana. Police reconstructed the details from "witnesses' accounUl this way: Patricia Brown, 20, a grocuy clerk of Santa Ana, was in the bank's rear park- ing' lot when a man described as a Mex- ican-American about 5 feet. 8 inches tall and weighing a slight 130 pounds, grab- bed her purse containing her employert: receipts and sped ofr on a bicycle. An unidentified bank customer chased the robber three blocks to the 200 block of East St. Andrews .Street. There the thief stopped, pulled a hand gun and threaten-- ed the pursuer. The pursuer lhought better of his task and backed off. With1hat, the purse Slfat- cher abandoned his bicycle and ran south on Orange Street. tn the 2000 blatk of that throughfare he stopped Olegario R. Pinzon, 37, a laborer, stole his bicycle at gunpoint, and rode off. Pinzon and i. friend jumped into 1 car In hot pursuit. They reported they caught •r ~1th ihe elusive thief in the 200 block o East Warner Avenue but he jumped off the stolen bike and escaped into the neighborhood this time again on fool Mi nu ten1a n Launched VANDENBERG AFB (UP!l-The Air Force launched its 250th Minuteman missile today from this coastal Strategic Air Command base down the western test range. Newport Man Cleared • Of All Fraud Charges Cleo 1.tarvin Johnson of Newport Beach has been cleared of all charges involved ln a Grand Jury indictment on insurance sales prior to the case going to an Orange County Superior Court jury. Previously, It had been incorrectly reported that Johnson, 51 , of 1901 Kings Road. was st.Ill involved in the case when it went to the jury June 12, and as the jury's dellberotions continued through Junt II . Th• Distr)ct Atlomey's office rtsled Its caM! m June 5. Johnson's attorneys lm- medlate.ly entered a motion before Superior Judge William Murray, seeking the entry of " judgment of acquittal for lhe f';ewport resident. The defense motion was granted, and the JuJge ruled Johnson Innocent of all charg .s at thtt point • The motion of directed order of ac- quittal came under Section 1118.1-ei Mte Callfarnla Penal Code and was placed befor~ Judge Murray before any in- lroducUon of defense or defense evidence an behalf of John!oli. The D a 11 y Pilot regrets the error in articles oi June 14 and June II in which it was incOrrecUy indfcated that Johll50n·1 case was sUll before lhe jury. The ac- count uf June 16 was, In fact, an effort to folrl y report that Johnson had been ruled innocent and cleared of 111 charges. The error was moide because of er- roneous cleric!), information supplied to the newspaper. There was no Int en\ on part of tbe 0 a 11 y Pilot to offer in· correct, t.ffam1tory, uncomplimentary or unpropltltu• lnformatlon r e I ~-r.J i n I JohnsM'1 1cqultt1Lln the in1urr mat· ter belor• tht court Phil Daoa and Jeff ~Utchell. It is expected the M. N. Sherman Foun· O'aUori,1leaOquatte:rea In Corona del 11ar, v;ill finance the arboretum project. One count char11es Rossmoor gave $2.041 to a 1964 candidate for the 27th Congrwslona! District.aeat~ln the Howe al Representative~ \ The other charges $5.000 was given to a 196i U.S. Senate candidate from California. A Cypress ·store manager b In serious condition today from a gunshot wound in· flicted during a holduP Monday night of thf! Tic Toe Market, 6021 Orange Ave., Cypress. Plans for the weather station are com· plete and the foundation has provided $7 ,000 for material for its construction. Neither candidate was namtd. A final determination based on the students' plans could be made in Sep- iember or October, Ed Migg, foundation gpokesman said. C.Ost of the total project was not disclosed. CompleUon would take two or three years, Mlae Wd. The House race was between Democrat Tom Bane and Republican Ed Reinecke, oow li!utenant governor. Reinecke won. ln the Senate race, Democrat Pierre Salinger Jost to RepubUcan George Murphy in the general elecUon. Police said Donald Earl Ames, 47, of Cypress, crawled to a telephone and call· ed officers after being shot in the upper portion of the right leg by one 11f two men who robbed his store. . '(I Become a -Healthier, Happier, Thinner You a_t Holiday Health Spas ESCAPI to o privoto luxury where SOP.histicoted weighf reducing methods moke embarrassing pounds vonjsll ~uickly onO gently. INCOMPAU.ILE FACILITIES • • Nt1t-M ltiMn • • Swim':!::' • • Ultra ! (ondltltnint fKlntSts : • lom111 Steam loem1 • • llectronic M1111gt : • Ftnnlsh Rock Sa un1 : looms • • Fforlcla SUft Tan 1""'1 · : FREEi FRIEi•••••••• . . -Special· Join Jodar RECEIVE YOUR PRIVATE SWIM CLUB MEMBERSHIP Swim in 1 Bt1utiful Outdoor Olympic Size H111ed Pool • Whir1pool. htM : • Ctndlflon"'t FtclRtltt • Offer Gcwxf For limited Tfme Only • Swi11 ftclll MKltints : 1 • ••• • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • ••• • • • ••• • •• •,: COM'UTE FACILITIES FOR MEN & WOMIN Call or Stop by Today ForYourfl'M Tour Ho~ilda~ HEALTH SPA 1t ( ' • > ' • • ' •• -Newport Da r h or_ . EDI Tl-ON - voi:..:62,.Nq. _J 62, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ... ~ ---......... ORAN GE Cf.>UNTY, CALIFORNIA .. , • l;'oar BometoWD Dally Paper . · • TUESDAY, JULY-a, ·1949 •• TEN CENTS • op. ers Marine ;, Navy Brass Okay Crackdown Py JEl!OME F. COLLINS Of .. .., ,.,... ..... Newport e,ach .may· not be havln1 mueb Juok cbUlng the bl( jels oul ol ita sides, but II ia winning Its ba!Ue against Iow'flYbli bellcopten. Aaststant City Ma-nag er James DeChalne • diaclOsed loclllY lbal.M'!flne and Ntavy officerB at Loa Alamitos Naval Air StaU,pn have agreed to .instruct their chopper !!1lots to do· as-much of their flying out at Jea as ~itilC"- . Col. Harry G. Robinson, 1!farine Air Resen•e tralnlng commanding officer, told.-DeChalnt that helicopters in bis commalid Crom now on will stay at Jeut a mile from the Newport coastline when they Dy lower than 1,<m feel The pllota elso have been directed by· Roblnaon to take no sh<lrt cuts blfcic to the ba..~ \IVer the cit,. "He aafd It may take longer to aet from point· A to point~. but In the long run it wouia-be worth it beca111e of tile p u b I t ~ relatloos heac!llcbes," De- 0.aloe aplliined. One of the bellcopters under Robln!oo's command dropped a hatch cover on the beach in West Newport on Jllne 21. 1be • incident triggered a series .of riieetlrigs between city officials and rnlUl4rY authorities. -DeChatne-harbeen the prlnc.lp'a.t-ctty representative at these seWons. He iaid Navy Capt. Lloyd Ruth, commander at Los Alamitoe, advised him that bia ellrnpter personnd seldom hav~ to Dy in the Newport area. A~ they do, they have been "esaenUally" adhering to proceduret ltimllar to tho.le In Col. Robinson's directive. , u1t is a graUfying directive,.. 18.id DeChaine. Las"t week, El Toro Marine Corps Air I , Station authorllles agreed to crack down" -on chopper pilota who had been veu:z. from tNe llO<alled "Palisades Route,_ whlch carries over Big Canyon Reservoir and out to sea at Cameo Shores. They ~ - milted lbere had been in the part some\ violations of 'requirements Uiat t h • aircraft stay within the route arid at a height no lower than 600 · feet ·above ground level. ......, -"Slpee then," sam Deehaine. ''th-e situation has improved markedly." Ooe more problem, however, remain!I'; It' involves helicopters-based-on ablpa under the command of the_JJth Nava - District, headquartered ,in San D go. · DeChaine said man)' I o w -f 1 y i n g helicopten over Newport recenUy hav~ been idenUDed as Pacific Fleet aircraft. "We're going to have to have a meeting with ·the San Diego brasa next,11 the cify aide concluded. Space Monkey Bonny ·Dies_ · After Return The NOSE Knows DAILY ,n,OT f'tltlt ID' O.lt 1.-ur Whe t•e Livin ' I s Higli One way to get close to Linda Isl~. swanlt Irvine.£.Q.._ development in Newport Harbor, is to fly over it. Horseshoe-shaped island, last of six in lower bay to be developed, 1tas 108 lots, all of which already have ~een leased. lsJe dwellers 'vill pay bi;:tween $.16.llll!Land. $250,0QILQ.ver.JS.year life of lease for _privilege of residing jn exclusive Gigs. li'Vlne-CO:-- officials figure most expensive house built on Island Newport Attacks Swamp GUS; Smell so far cost $400,000. That doesn't include price of lease on lot. Froin Wlre Servlcet . . 1st 'Ni xon Withdrawals' Leave Vietnam ft;Jr U.S. ... ,.,, ""' McCHORD AIR .FORCE BASE, W .. h. (AF)'..... Tlie Orsi U.S. troops to be pulled out of Vietnam by President Nixon wing- ed .home.w:ardJn• jet ~ports today_ after a sendoff marked by military fan- fart and the thanks of ~aigon officials. Gen: Creighton W. Abrams, com- mander of American forces in Vietnam, told the 814 men in the fir.St contingent of 25,000 U.S. troops being withdrawn: "You occupy a significant moment in history." A gala welcome awaited the in· faatry nien, almo.;t all veterans of com· bat, at this Air Force base, near Ft. Lewis and the city of Seattle. Army chief oi Staff Gen. William C. Westmoreland, a fOrmcr· U.S. com- mander in Vietnam, flew in from W~hlngtori. with decorations for five of the returning soldiers Or the 3rd Bat- talion, 60th Infantry, 9°l, Infantry Di'islon. On the pl'X>gtam for the ne•t three days· were speeches by public figures,#~ music, a parade, a dinner, pretty girts and. in many cases, family reunions. Amo'ng~ose wbo saw the troops off at 1'an Son Nhut airport Tuesday were Soutfl Yietname¥; President Nguyen Van Thieu. Vice PreSident Nguyen Cao Ky and Defense Minis'ler Gen. Nguyen Van Vy. . 'Jbleu. and Kf were surprise ~ast minute anivals, Just before the soldiers marched to their-waiting C141 Starlilter aircrafL They passed d~ ~ ranks of 1 the fatigue-clad Am¢1'1cans, sba'dn.g hands and thankin& thtm for their services. · ' Addressing the departing battalion. Thieu .Uld : '1'ogether we have repelled commubiSt a~ression. Thls has been our goal and our purpose." cess, .. 'I'fi?t!U said: He-noted the losses of !Mll.S,lth division In &>!lb·Vietnam- 1,SSS killed in action -,and said, "Our duty is to make sure this sacrific~ was not. in vain.!' "We fully realize that the primary responsibility of the struggle should be ours," the 46-year-old South Vietnamese president said. He added that his nation Would still need combat.suppon and sup- plies but wowld have "less and less need for the blood of other nations." After his speech, Thieu presented a glft ·to the unlt.and individual gifts to ill of· ficers and senior noncommissioned of· ficers. * * * Reds Expec ted To Boost Attacks SAIGON (UPI) -The first of 25,000 U.S. soldiers being withdrawn from Viet- ruun left for home today. Tonight, two Communist rockets struck a Vietnamese shipyard on the outs~ of Saigon, $rting fires that.lit ~ skies of lhe dpltat. . Allied military officials , already were predlcUng a· new wave of Communist at· tacks in the com4ig weeks as the Sbuth "Vietnamese Army beJins taking up posl· lions left open by the Amerlcam. The first of the attacb was not long in com· Ing. No casuailita were repor\ed lm· -mediately. 1be· rockets hit a building used to store fut!l ana names billowed more than 300 feet into the skies, throwing out a light that was clearly visible from downtown Sa\gon, three mile! to the northeast. tt was the· nrst rocket attack since I Satur· dily when two rockets did litUe damage. Planners Endorse Centet· Site Near Fashion Island .,·1 . .., ~ . NewpOr\Beach city councilmen Mon- d•Y will Teceivtt a unanimOul AC<lm- mtudation from the Plahnln& Com· mission that the new civic center be con-- slructed on a 19-acre site .&OlJlheiat-Qt FuWon Island at Newport Center. · Endorsement of the site had to come from lbe planners because it invulved amendment of the city's Master Land Use Plan adopted by the city council in January 19$8. Commissioner Alvan C. Clemence noted that "A cithens' advisory groop recommend~ that thLs area be con- sidered asi' site for a civic center some years back." In 11168, the city commiasloned con- sultiilg fir.ms Welton Becket a n d Assoclates and Economic Research Associates to evaluate three sites as potential locations of the civic center faclliUes. They recommended the Newport Center site, and received the backing of the city council early in 1969 on that location. In an analysll of. the Newport Center spot, Pl~g Director Larry Wilson said his staff 11.1pported amending the JI.laster Land Use Plan because : -The proposed site will be close to lhe. future geographic and population centers of the community. -The site contains adequate Jand,are.a for the services to be provided. -Excellent access will be pr:ovided from freeway and local street l)'lte.nu. ' -The civic center at this location will be conipatlble wi\h the existing and pro-- posed surrounding uses. -The economics 1nvolved tn thlJ site have been shown to justlly this site oVer olh~r sites considered. HONOLULU -Aslromon.lt Bonny died urly today 12 houri after tbe monkey put down in the Pacific Ocean following 130 orbits around earth ·in a apace capsule, the U.S. space agency reported. ''It was slMl.den," s~d Br.ad Evans, public lnfonnaUon officer for the Na- Uonal Aeronautics and Space AdminlstraUon. "He had been iii fair con· ditioft just before." · 'l'lie· l~]lclilriil · monk!y, -..I and bored, wu brough~ back to earth more . lhaa three weoa early and . .ptaabed down In bis BIOAteilll•I aome :zs ·mlla off Kauai, Hawaii. Observen described America's apace monkey u limp but ali\>e,.OO,-f1""11 by Air Force be.Ucopter lo Hawaii's Hickam Air Fon:e ba!e. NASA officials said an autopgy w41s ordered immediately In the bioaatellite laboratory trailer where the monkey had been undtU" intensive care since the touchdown. "We had no Idea that he wu that cIOBe to death," added Evans. "He just sud- denly fell off." NASA officials ICbeduled a news con- fereoce to dlscuss the unei:pected cUmu of the aborted spa.Ce ffiliilOn. - Evans said it waa aUll too early to call the mission a failure, saying "it depeads on data already received." "We had been hoping for a minimum 14-day mlasion for suece,.,;'' be said. Before dealb, a team of IS doctors, veterinarians and teclmicians worked over the littlt primate in a portable medicJ11l van, and a doctor had reported "his heartbeat is 61 per minute and steady." Charles Wilson, project manq:er for NASA'• Ames Research Laboratory in Sunnyvalt, Calif., 18.id the $92 million eJ:· perlment was ended after the monkey falled to respond to signals aboard the apace capsule. ''His lack of re!pOnSe was interp~ted to indicate a 1lugglshness JJhich If allow· ed to continue, could have led to la1ouJ deterioraUon," Wilton aid. · Bonny was lauocbed from Cape Ken- nedy June 21 iAto welgbUeu orbit 225 to 245. miles above the earth. The monkey's perfQnllance on assigned tasks decOned rapidly durin1 hil first week in orbit and his metabolic state - Conversion of food lnto ener&Y -dropped to a lower level. · DAIL.Y PILOT Stiff l'Mtl TESTING NE WPORT Allt S'.rv lce Station'• Thff Pfister ' Throng Browses , . Through Store; $4 75 Coats Gone Managers of a small ch I c, women's wear shop told Costa Mesa police Monday oC a biurre, $475 fur coat theft case in- volving 1 brows.ing gana of wall.to.wlll suspects. He .~ .. Kt the South Vietnamese must begn; to assume a greater s~are o1·~ fighting and the replacement of allied trocps. . "Tb!S is only the beginning of thlS pro- 1· ·of 3 on Bike For ·2 l n:jured Newport Man Cleared Of All Fra·ud Charges ' Grove Motorist Killed in Crash ~y the time the throng or 40 to 50 wandered out of Judy's, a Soulb Coast Pl8za chain store, a pair of fo1 fur-lined coats had vanished with them, according to the report. Patrolman Richard Jol'in5on said clerks kept ·a · suspiclou. watch on the oddly large crowd of shoppers, especially a very ·fat woman with an Afro-Asian INDIO {UPI) -AuthorlUes are seek· hairdo. f Ing the drlVer of a camper truck involved ctiecklng around the · premtses -af· in an accident which killed one motorcy-terward, the two coats were diseflVercd cle rider and seriously injured three mis6ing, according to Unda A..Scbulen-, One or three youogsters on a bicycle Cleo Marvin Johftlon of ~ewport Beach biillt for two sufferfd leg lhjurics in has been cleared of all char·ges involved N....rw"t. Beach Monday when the bike . at~ed into an opening car d~r. in a Grand Jury indictment on UllW'ance Police aaia"Palricia Ann Horak, 12, of aales prior to the case going to an Orange 1162 Center SL, Costa Mesa, was taken in County Superior Court jury. • t;qu.:l car ,to.Hoag Memorial Hospital Previoutly, it bad been Incorrectly wthe decto<• olosecl the foot,,long gash In. reported that Johnson, 51, or 1101 Kines t,( .tea .• The •cc:id.eot . o:ccurred OJI Pia-_ Road, wu still ~nvolved in ~ case when Cfl\ll~ Avenue near .F.lagshlp JJ,oad .J.. It went> lo the Juiy •June JS, and u f&e allottlY belon• llOOll. . . • jPrY'• dtllberatlons tonllnued throalil> ' Meat. Prices Rise WASHlllGTON (UPI) -The Labor Departnwlt reported loday t h a t wholesale price• of meals, ptlllitry and flab rose. U pe(<Ont In June, probably lipling futl)ter -hikes In food market price tags ahead. t J\uie 11. • .. .• • The DIJtrlcl Atlemey'a ol!k:t rested Its case '" June 5, John1Dn'1 atforneya im- mediately entered a motion before Superior Judge Wllllam Murray, 1ttking the entry of a jud-t of ocqulttal tor the Newport resident. The .defense moUon w~ granted, and the ju.l(e ruled Johnson innoccnl of all Chart :1 at lhat point. ' ' The motion of dlrtcted order ol ac·.1 oth~s early Monday on-l:Dterstate 10. 6urg, who· reported the Joas to the chain . 'lbe Calllornia Highway Patrol 11id the h quittaJ' came under Section 1118.t QI 1be driver was sought on felony hit-run &tort's eadquarters. CaWornia Penal COde and wu p"laced char Her story matched perfectly with an rn. J be! I ~ . before udge Murr-r «t: 81\1 I 0:-Officer• Wd Marvin Currier. 46, of cidetlt it theii Lakewood shop more Chan trodudion.ofdefenscordefen&e.evideiice. Garden Grove, waa killed when the a week ago; in whiCh ,a stocky .woman on behalf of Johnson. ~ : ·.. camper hlt 1"8 cycle. H1s passenger, Jean - The D'a 11 y Pilot regrela the error tq Stolcu, 25, of Santa Ana, was seriously in· .theft auSRtCt was. chued from the s~. articles oWune lhnd June 11 ln,~h,ll jured. , · · · poJice.aaJd , • • · • · ha' · 1 ·· · • was lncOrrectty indicated that Jorm,on'! ·l!ollar4, bllotj, 12, and Audrey ·Patrick, Qeacrlbed In Iba! case as "'"11 case/. wu ltill, llelore the Jury. Thi ·•<> JI~ ,-both of. &oath· G•t.ei Wer'e -inJUitd ';Af~lialistyl1~1~ .. wotrian· l>oont <If J~ll.waa,.ln la~ ., Mlbrl·i. ..,...,!heir moto,.,,clt 'ell u ·the cam}ier ma~ 'Jo '·escape· her 'purt\lerl ;cirqp. lalr17report'lhet.Jolu}lonlii411+,i rill<d "'erv!'l~n tront·oNb<m, · P\i>', a laz · 1ur-Uned .coat ~;,tiy, Ill<• Innocent and cleaiod of.au dlarat'·" _ ·~ ............. •--<-..,.,., , , The ett-or was made bees .. ·el • .,.. , ·-..... -·.--.,_...,, _ '°"""' clerlcel Information suppl!ed to . l\jin'u~ipi 1' .:.unehc:d _U>able to deicrtbt.,.y• o111tr1 am~'IC the ..wspaper.·Tbere wu no lnt>!lVon · , t-11"1 . 40 to 50 pe""" who aJW<diY part of .~e Dllly Pllbl to aflir:,ln-: .V,\N_DEllfliERG·AFJl'(UF!)-Tho,~lr ~er1d lot tbt 'obelt "~IHler, - corr..,., Wfa1ll1tory, ~ncompil-or r-lftlndiid 'ts ·llOth · Minl\lmian clerb.•..W f"!lY' Ibey w1ro·~1cx11t· unpropitltus 1nrorm1Uon re_ I*£~ I lnlioIJ(tOdjy ·!ll>to-,!lili <i>otlarllltlltello · Jq.! •. , •;, : · · . ·· ·.i Jolwo1t"1 aCl}YJtlal In the lniil: \'J'!"~ ·' ,(IC'~~ ilo)!l lhe>-:eotom; tilt , • S<ill\ al'jth(Jllal, :llltJ·'iftldld,1....,... ter bercn the court. -· 1 • , rdi'-· ' · · 1.. .. • • • 1 •• • 1hlt&. - ' '· By JANICE BERMAN Of tll;t-0.lly ~Stiff--• There's something in the air ln wes. --- ·Newport. But by the end of summer, it may be gone, thanks to Project NOSE. The acronym stands for "Noxious: Odor seepage Ellm.inatlon." It was coined bJ. the stall of City Attorney Tully Seymmr, The men from NOSE hope to brinC 1n end to the noxious perils of ·S:WllDP gu emanatlna from west of -the An:bet Bridge. The smell ls familiar to any traveler of Pacific Coast Highway. NOSE represents the dty of Newi>!!rl Beach, tlle BelbOa C..U Conunuii\iy AslOclation and the Unloa OII'Co., ·whlcb bu_ a. pa 1taUon at 3939 Wes\ Co'Ut l!~ay. , ' The three gl'Oupo w 111 each lllck In i'ougl>ly one-third or the 110,lOO required to" buUd a burner to get rid of the rotten- egg aroma that comes with unburned IWai'np p.1 le.t!pql. The ~ty's part of lbe cost wlU come out of the 1eneral fund, and the money Ls ex· peeled to be approv<d 11 -i.s UJe P!tn . is presented to the ·council, wlthln ihe next three Weeks. But nm It J!IUsi win Ibo ippmyal pj llnloli Oil's legal alafl In San Francieco, a=rdin1 lo Phil Bettencourt, city ad· inlniatraUve assistant _ Unlon on will hirfl a firm to be&in tJ!e construction as soon as the qreement ii reached by the three parUes. : · .Sharing of the cost is necessary; B(i· tencourt explained, because "tbere..realty isn't any clear municipal responsibility." for the smell. ' : · "The direct benefit will be to people !( !he Balboa COves community and i1I< operatora of the service station," he said. The homeowners' association will pay for its share oul of lta own treasury. The mission of the men from N~ will be to be<! up an ulsllng network QI underground scavenger lines by JNtaliinl· two mOre, plus a burner, on a smill piece of property owned by Balboa Coves alj.. jacent to the gas station. Then, instead of the gas being sucked Into a stack on top of lhe gas station, a is now the case, the smell will be burned. of! before it reaches the atmosphere. Steele Markets NEW YORK (AF)-The -k matiit remained shlrply lower in moderately active tradln'g this afternoon, . with brokers reporting ttveral a dv e r 5 • developmenti apparenUy weighing on the mar.ket. (See quolatiOM, Pages IG-11)., The Dow, Jones industrial averqe 1t 1:30 p.m'. wu off 11.64 at 871.57. Coan Weadler Fair skies will reign along the Orange. Coast Wedneaday with the mercury ranging ftom tbe upper 70's to the Jower llO's depending on your proximity-to the cool ou breez:es_ ' INSmE TODAY Men rate sez 1econd bl choo~ ing a mate, bUt womtn rank it • •lz'J':-r wltlclt, ls Wllv 7S ptr®•I · · of·' ~mericri'" mm+iagt11 ·'G'i~ , a &U..t ·J'Qqe' JI. . ' · ·-. ~ "-: -" --. ............ ...... -.... ,, ...... ..11 ·-.. """ LIWln ,, -· . -.. ' . .I ·-" ,........, ...... tt --.. or-.. c.-tr-' • IYflril,..... It ...... ,.... ,,,,, '""' , .. ,, ........... 11 ,_ . -.. -. ...... """ -.. -' " • i o.111. v Pi~o; Probe ~ms at B~Y'~ Dead Fish; Sli my Moss l ir jOUll VALTE~ """fl'aovenimeut oaenciu. " Of!,.lano-Dow11!>, llMD itle !'ffd ~· · !>i'I'!' ~Ibo m"!I £ P!lliU r on Dlwu They m atortlng to •m•I. =~-=~---•~Ill'~"""'..._ =-"' ' Or .. "'ColllllJ-"H-Dlaltlcl:""Oli,..__ h's 11--dl!tladi-ihlq:lo ~-......... DilP&' lie ID "!~ "'!~=i~·:=-:" -:---Iili'I OCiriilll a! all'-. -.. -...~mou=:-- · --..o1--11nclblsaanclclumpsol fldalP,""°ba"rectlvedllCW&I~ mlnor11'1lldl/1lif.l~'l>i.ul' nccinf wldter alo!ml ~" •• ~ Tlie dl...rl, a~s to IJIOrlllll\lq hon," aald one dock owner who h11 •~ ... -"'-· mosa ••• ·-dot"•• .Ria'-'' f1..,J'lewpotj'wldents~ ': ilL lilil.-.dllilliUit ~-~-ol_gaJlons ol fr$lh w--en I di I ~---'ti ~· 11-'f ar=-' -worked on the wllerf>ont fonnore·lhln -·---~·~-·v --·-· -. dar"li:.tspecifn<ntol'the'deed flab j,o!lutarill can t.0 .do!&diy·IO,'lllh .··The •)ih fll'lil!!ers from dey land In~ Ille an 111gs q u~ •·~r, asn ·-40 years. tho 1urface ~ quieter areas ot lower game que~•-n ol pollution In ... •--bar, bav. sand bass fisbln& at all. ' 1 and mou have been taken by lhe depart. "uv wftl ~ / S k f Art' Lat¥1' ~ Tht moss uems o gather and flourl8h Newport b9 iq •·natural myat~ that ment of fish anct game: · bowaver-,-bu bffo di9collnled by Kllnw. -1~ ~-rase1Jf mitltenls po esmt!n or 1 ·'i; " In the confined areas of the barbor, mltbt life mon_tbs lO aolye. ~ Harbor Diitr1ci AdmlnlsttaUve Anis-who ~d County Heall~ Depart~ent being dumpea Into~ harbor," he 1ajd, ~1:a~t.b~ :::. :'tb&t ~ ':: obsenation showed.. I The bus, ducribed by ont Department tant Chrli Klinger said the moss. In vary-crews check the harbor water each "The blggeit•problem here," he added, till t the d • tcb Klinger aald that the moss is normal, ol Filh '1td Game biologist is "a quite Ing deo:ees, ls normal for early summer, month ror pollution. "is the 'may and might' that ts inherent •r;~Y =~ec! n the. ~ca thai the however, and that Udal acUon will num hlrdy IPteiE:;t" seem to be the hardest hit but the 'kll! of fish isn't. "The pollution rate bu stayed relaUv~ in convenaUOJll on water coodiUom ln ~bf._111..~ a..aedOql.~,.!em~-tbe_bm!gr._lD _1.b9\lUbe aame..manner....aa ~tn Ibo diwlf ln tho harbor. Prelimln•!1' emn!natlon of the dead Iy lbw," ·he.l!Old. the bar\>O<.-" -"In flCI,.. haven't even seen rmy," a it dlifWflli-lOlll of dobrll that choked the 1'tle~ ltaritd bobblnf: up tot.be B\ll'face fl5b wlb be coftducted by the DFG 1aieanwhlle, on the othtr side of the Thus f~!? one qepcyd cut of IC!Ores cl aource there said. waterway after the serlea: of bnvy j late INl weet u the moss, which IO~e Terminal tiland laboratories, spokesmen bay, City Harbor Coordinator George boards, "'41'Caus and ~partments con-But on the leeward eldt!'Of the harbor's. winter storms. , (lfficlala \el'm "norm1l for this time 6f thm'e said. Dawes has tecetved many complaining ducts definitive atudJea on water quaUty channels the story Is dJffettnt. Meanwhile, bolt.ers ud doct vlaitors )'tar," btgan Oourishln,. Department biologist Jack· Schott said phone caUs, too. of the bay, he said. Cheeb at aever1l dock areu along will have to hold \heir breath alotlg some Sourca said analysis ol the dead fish the death ol the fish could be blamed on "We get this mou every spring, but it His newly Cleated city department will Mariner's MUt on Pacific Coast Hlahway slips. and the slimy green growths Is s~re to a "heavy planktonlc bloom" in the water, seems that this year it has grown in an \ probably get the job as soon as Newport showed an average of a dozen dead, rot-"Maybo it'll juat 10 away.'' said one take months and become emh-roiled in which loses oxygen when microscopic excessive amount," he said. I Beach'• City COuncJI J!pproves. That tolng bass for every 20 bodts Ued up. visitor .. Mystery Dea~h Qairns Youth From Stanton • A youth involved in a lNI 1bootin1 episode with a Stanton police officer allp. ped from WlCO-Int o m)'lterk>us death Monday in t h t I emer11ncy room "f ·Stanton Commwllly -~. Coroner'• deputies today are examining the unmarked ~ of Jerry Naranjo_, !9, ol 1-Coort St., Stanton, In an allempt to determine wba1 cauaed hiJ death. The dead youth wu with Paul Aguilera, 18, on Feb. 9. 1968, when Aguilera was shot and killed by a bullet from tho l\lD of a Stanton reaerve polleeman. Officer Allen Chrlatlan, 42, of Hun- ttngtoo Beach, 'WIS lat.er acquitted of manslaughtu chargea In the shoollng. ·Police said Naranjo was broulht to the hospital by an older brother, Daniel. He died without ruatnlill CQJUIClousne.:i:s. --rtitte wet! no marks of violence on his body, olllcera said. - ...... The brother told police he aaw two W1known men bring Jerry home un· CO!llClou> and carry him Into the boll3e lbortl7 befm noon Mood07. The coroper's office LI conducttna: an .utopoy to cletennfne the cause of death. ~a report could he upe<ted ... AgWlaa and Naranjo were stopped by police for queaUoning at 2:30 a.m. Feb. $, 1118. When AeuUtta breb and ran, of. r-QirllUan shouted warnlnp to hall -u-. ;tllel\ fa..! hltllnj Ille )'OOi!b In the bud llOln a dlslance of ovtr 10 1ard>-Cl1rl!!'f• Slid Ile m•llJlt to ljrO a warn' big 11"1 and liBd no lntenlioti ·of kllllnl Ifie youth. Judge , Sergeant · To Testify Against Driver When James Ruasell SChumacher of Balboa lsl4nd 1ppem In court on reckleas drivtna charget he'll f1ce an im· presslve pair of wltnessea -Loi Angalu Superior Court Judge Thunnond Clark and an off-duty sheriff's ae.raeant. The juri!I ancl th• officer watched Monday night as Schumacher allegedly 5-ped along dark streets in Cameo Shores with the lllhts out on his motorcycle. Police a.ld they received a call from the off-duty sheriff's officer about the ex· cmlve speeding and noise. Police said Schumacher waa first seen fly Newport police with his Ua:hts out, budlna directly for a poilce car. He nerved, officers ct.Id, and p&W"olmen pve chase. Schumacher wa1 arrested at Brighton and Cameo Shores roads. He save his ad dress a1 20fl Cl'ystal Ave., Balboa Island. President Nixon &tayed al Judge Clark'• Cameo Shores home di.Iring th campa!Jn in Orange County laat year. ~AllY PllOT CJM.HO• (OiUl '°"&l l""IHO COMPAM'Y ••Mrt N. W1M .. ,. ...... ,..... J•c.11 I , Cvrley vi. ,,,....., -0.-11 """"'"' tlri•"l•t 11: ..... a ·-Th ..... , A. M,rplii•• ..... ""' ... 11411W . J,,.,,., F. c.n;., --"" .... ---1311 w ... l•llt•• 1..i ..... ,. M11'lr11 M., .... P.O. a.. lt7J.o.'246J_ ...... -CAiie Mful Ill ..... 1..., l"1ilt ...... ......,, ttt ,.,." .. ......,. ~ hlcfl: -"" l!O"Mt \ Blackfin Second 'Windward' Holding Lead SAN PEDRO (UPI) -Rob or I Johnson's Windward Passage sliced through light seas at a record.breaking pace Monday to maintain the overall lead in the 25th Transpacific yacht race to Honolulu. between Blacklln ancI Windward Pwoae (U• for aeconcl). becaUJe of poor vWblllty. D: Valkyrie U, Hetaera, Aventura (tie Twelve knot winds were reported with for 1econd). four foot awells. In the handicapped standings, Espere- The class standJnp were, in order: ce and Ar1onaut -were the overall A: Rascal, .concerto, W t n d w a r d leaders. -~Th.,-.o~7.3:fDOlerJrom....lhe...Lahaina Yachl · Club of Hawaii was making about nine knots and was 700 miles from San Ptdro in the %~mile nautical race. Pasuge, Blackftn..(U...for-&hlrd,.h ----•(!J'ran&pac hi3hll1hts via dir:ect....radJo B: Jubilation, Sa!acla, Starlin& n. reports from the neat are presented dally C: Esperance, Argonaut, Num&e II. on KOCM, Ul;J.l FM at 3 and 7 p.m.) tttttt *** DAIL V PILOT 11111 l"PllM Setting lfp Art Exhibit Ann Phillips, 10, helps set up art exhibit featuring work of Japanese school children at Newport Beach City Hall. Two large murals by children from Harper and Balearic Schools in Costa Mesa also are included in display, which can be seen at city hall through August. Couiiiy to Decide Fate ----· -,. Of Richard's Tustin Bid o. w. "Dick" Richard'• bid to ealabllsh a supermarket a.lmtlar to hill Newpori Beach Lido area establishment in the north Tultfn area la before the uo,rd of Suporvlior1 WedM!day. He eeeka to rezone more than al1 acres on the n~east corner of N ewporl Scotchman's Cove Bla ze Scorches ' Quarter Acre A brush fire at Scotchman's Cove Mon· day ~ftem~n scorched less than an a~re before beine put out by Emerald Bay volunteer llremen. No one was injured Jn the blaze. Cause of the fire may have been chlldren pla ying with matches, according to county firefighters. Scatchman's Cove is located between Laguna lltach and Corona del Mar. An Emerald Bay volunteer fireman , Reginald B. Tripp, 49, Dana Point, was killed In a trafrtc accident Friday while responding to a fire call at Crystal Cove near Scotclunan's Cove. That fire also Is believed to have been set by children playing with matches . Avenue and 17th Strtet, a proposal reaimmended for denial May 21 by the Orange County Planning Commission. Richard proposes a $2 million second ruchard's Market for the property, now zoned for mldentlal ust. Arrayed against the Harbor Area com- munity leader are hundreds of residents or the plush rtsldential communitle11 of r .emon. Cowan and Panorama heiabts and Peacock Hill . At the Mey 21 commission hearing, Richard told commJssloners, ".People come from as far as 40 mllea distant to our Udo store. We need to expand and It has been my dream for years to est1blish a fine market In the Tust in area ." Planning Commluion members , before recommending denial of the proposal, cited the fine res1denth1l development in U1e area and feerad tha~, "lf _ _!Ve grant this, other pe:UUons-wlll be suDrilitted for rezoning to commercial · u!e along 17th Street." Newport Beach attorney R. S. "Sam '' Bar.::'!I, representing Richard, said, "A 1961 planning study &tated that com- mercial development would be needed in the area within six to sevtn years to serve the f8't·1rowlng community." Opposing the chante were petitions beflrtng 1,600 -e:Jinattaes and a hostile hearing audience of about ISO persons. Sone protest.ors pointed out that there were several othtr m1rket1 within two miles of the propoaed tile. 13 Hurt, Two Serious,ly In Two Mesa A·ccidents Thirtce.n persons we.re Injured In a p.alr ol multiple-vehicle traffic collisions that occurred only one mile and three hours apart under aln1ost i d e n t I c a I clrcumstancts in the Orange Counly Airport area 1'1ondly. Two of the Injured remain hospilali1ed with serious Injuries today. Slx cars and a large truck were damagtd or demolish- ed. One 1ccldenl occurred at Bristol Street · and P1ularino Avinue 'inslde the Costa f\.1na city limits. The second major &mashup thl'ff hours later w11 at Red Hill and Main Street, north of Oran1e County Airport, in unlncorporated ter· rltory. Cos ta Me11 police &aid the 11 :50 1.m. collision w 1 1 triggered when a l.n.lck rumbling IOUth on Brlstol Strttt rammed a ..car carry ing five 1irls wesl en Paularloo Avenue. ' Truck drivtr Iula& G. Vlelm1 Jr., 28, of 1813 N. Bradley Ave., Santa Ant, said the light was ll'ten the list time he look· ed, but Miss Pamela S. Shewmaker, 19, of 15701 Tustin Villa1e Way, Tultin, also said she entered the crosslna on a p-een light Police are still tnvestlaatlng facton In the crash today . Allla Shewmaker, htr sister Pauli, II, passengers GaU E. Hartmtr1, 17, and Laufin V. Adams, II, all of the Tustin Village W1y addre1a, were treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and released. The driver of a fourth car &idesw\ped by vehlclts ~attered in ~e colllllon, Kathleen A. St. Louil, 18, or 2748 Men· dou Drive, CO.ta Mesa. and her p111tnger, Yvonne E. Del.and, 18, of !171 Ml1sion brivt Costa Men, were also treated and released. .... ----C"'ftl!J;-;;.. .•. +..-··- This was compared to 640 miles out for the same time In 196S when the Ticon. deroga, also 11kippered by Johnson, set the record of nine days, 13 hours and 51.2 minutes. Blacltfln, wbJch reported generator and radio troubles earller, 18.id the dlffJcultles were cleared up and the vesael wu ~ se· cond place. Mir was third. No report~at-•v•llable on the distance Four Children Dro.wn Ju Iowa StOffil Sewer KEOKUK, Iowa (UPI) - Four children playing in a park creek here Monday afternoon were swept into 11 storm sewer and drowned. Other children in Rand Park said the four were floating in \be raln·swollen creek, when thf'y were caught by a sud· den swirl of water. The witnesses said the youngsters ware hlirled tbrou1h a 1i1- foot opening and into a concrete sewer. Now It~s Downhill Transpac Yachts Catch TradewindS Through .tlie facilities of Neurpcrrt Beach resident Carroll Hudson's ham radio statio1l WB 6RhfA, the DAILY PILOT Mle this morning monitored the following Tran1pae report from Gordo" W e•t aboard the escort VU· sel Bon Homme Richard to Honolulu. "The winds have changed from north- west to northerly. The we.atM?' ia quite warm, 70 degrees. The sea temperature is warming to 66 degrees so we know we are in the trade winds and on our way to Hawaii. "All the yachts in contact seem tc be plagued with minor problems. "The American has a broken steering quad and is sailing under emergency measures. "The Windward Paasage and the. Blackfin are battling it out for fir.st place. "Md speaking of pursuit, the Pursuit has lost its rudder and is greatly handi- cal>J)ed, wing a jury-rigged rudder. '"the Maestro has engine problem!!, flooding the electrical equipment. "The Nimble has battery trouble. "The Simoon is now back tc a yawl, havil\g repaired the broken mast. "li;inally heard from the Val 0 Van, which has not been in contact. We received only partial transmission, but at !wt we know they are in the area. "The wind is II to 10 knol5 from the north, some blue sides, but a lot or rain squalls. "Hawaii here we come!" Become a Healthier, Happier, Thinner You at Holiday Health Spas ESCAPE to a private luxury where sophisticated weight reducing methods ma ke embarrassing pounds va nish· q uickly and gently. INCOMPAIAILE FACILITIES • HHtN lomen Swimmlftt Potl • Ultra MMem CoMIHOftlot h dl!Hu • lomM Sf'tlm looms • llectronk MaQlft • Finnish lock Stt1n1 Rooms • Fterhll SUft Tan 1: ..... 1 • Wit;~,..i ...... • Clftdltitftlnt Faclftttn • Swiss Faciiil Mach;..s ••••••••FIBI FIBI FIEE! ........ • • ~ Special· loin foday • RECEIVE YOUR PRIVATE SWIM CLUB MEMBERSHIP Swim in 1 B11utilul Outdoor Olynipic Size Ht1tad Pool Offer Good for Limiled Time Only • • .................................... < COMPLm FACILmls FOi MI N & WOMIN Call or Stop l:iy Today ror .Your,,... Tour Holida~. HEALTH SPA • '· --------;----.... . ' • • ' ' ,,. ·r ,.. • .· ~lii . '"'I .,,__ ' • • . . ' I 1-----~.cc· --~ -. -· -' " BEA ANDERSON, Editor T_...,,'Jwtr•L•'1Nf M , ... \I New _Ham·ds .. . . . . Grip . ·c:lub . ,. . . •. M~sa._:Vertte Women's . .Goll :Cllub)3 m_ore than. 130 . . .,..,,.._ .. "' members will follow a new ll!ader· -Mrs. William En· trikin -who took office amid' a rainbow of festivities ·-" rec~ntl~-i.n Mesa· Verde Country Club. --T,he-installation luncheon-followed-a Tijuana Tour--· a:r.wia._--'-~~~~~~~~ Continuing tbe· South of the Border mood: Mrs. Eugene K'aliher and her committee member:; centered lunch'eOri t8.bles · with handinade flowers of brilliant colors. Following the installation, golf-enthusiasts ad .. journe<t for an afternoon o1 card games arranged by l\1Irs. Bart Mumma. Other Ouicers installed by Mr s. John O'.Brien were the Mmes. John Adams, vice chairman ; William DaY•· son, toµrnanient chairman; Gerry McPeek , .treasurer; Dean Ols'on, secretary_; Fred ·smith, publicity, and Le~ter Ohanes, handic'ap chairman. , -The -luncheon also provtcteti-a---mom-ent-of-glory--{or'--- lvlrs. Robert Kinder who received a medallion for being the -club's most improved golfer of the year. GOLFERS ·SERENA.PE-Senora William Entrikin (right) is "una Rersona muy importante" amorig Mesa Verde w_omen 's Golf Club officer at the recent Mexican Juncheon . Festivities included ·a • The grotip, whiC:h. remains a¢tive during the sum· mer, meets every Tuesday and Fricfay at 8:30 a.m . for goll games. Club meetings take place each month on varying days .. · members -whom she· wtll-Jead aS" chairman.--She i ! sere·naded by Mrs. W. S. Ronaldson (left) and Mrs. John O'Brien, installation . Benefit Draws Support Tijuana tourna·ment and an afternoon of card games-cOn<luct'ed ' by ·Mr!o Bart-Mumm"'· · · · · · · · • Kappa ' Delt~s Sort restive .-Party Plans JuJy is the monf.ll oLKappa Delta sorority's biennial present~~ tion of a fe stive event for a charitable cause. Among planners for a buffet supper to benefit the sorority's Charities next Thursday·in Malaga Cove Plaza, Palos Verdes Estates, is Mrs. James E. Palmer of Newport ~aC:h. Mrs. Palmer, newly elected president of the Southern California . C&uncil of Kappa Delta, is joiriing others in coordinating details for . Ut~ fiesta style buffe~, which will feature a variety of colorful Mexican dr,"X>rations. The supper, to be served from ·9 .to 10 p.rn. will be pre-. s:?ded by a social hour ,Starting at 7 .. KD charities benefiting from-the-event will include on-the na- tional level, the Crigpled Children's Hosfilal.in Richmond, thre·e $1000 awards administered by the Atnerici:tn Acaafply of Orthopedic Sur- geons, and a Kappa Delta student loan fund . .In the Orange County area, the Newport 'Harbor chapter s~nsors . monthly parties in the" Child--Oevelopm~nt C~nter. of_ Uni led· Cer~ral ... P.-alsy in Garden Grove ... OffjcerS for the Newport Harbor chapter of approximately 30 members in~lude the Mmes .. Robett Har.riqgton, president: Keith Johannes, vice president; Frank McKlbbin ; sectetary ; Ralph Hans_ St:hmoller, treasurer, and Miss Penny Waldorf, editor: t ' ~ ' j-. The gioup draws its meni.bership from Newport Beach, Costa Mesa , J_,aguna Beach, Laguna ·Niguel, Laguna Hills, Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster. . . Mrs. Harrington is coordinating· another-ben·efit"for the Garden Grove cerebral palsy center to take place.in early August. Mrs. Wil· liam Fortner's Balboa Island home will be the -setting for a bridge brunch, to which Long Beach .chapter members are being. invited as special guests . " . Other alumnae associations which are represented on the South· ern California Cou ncil includ e Glendale, Long Beach, Orange County, Pasadena, Pomona. Riverside-San Bernardino . San • Diego, San Fer- naildo Vall ey , Soutb Bay. Southwest Los Angeles, Ventura, Westside Los Angele s, and Whittier. SOUTH OF THE BORDER -Brilliant colors anll iloral decora- tions in the manner of Old Mexico will keYnote tlie fiesta style buffet dil)ner served to members and guests of thl!. Southern Cali· fomia Council of Kappa Delta -sorority next Thursday. Members of the Newport Harbor alumnae chapter lookin g forward to the • event are (left. to right) the Mmes. Ralph Hans Scbmoller, Robert Harrington and Frank McK·ibbln. H·eroic Senator Awakens Mom's ln·terest • Affairs of. State DEAR ANN LANDERS' I am '!! arid me11n U.24-i4. • eaa. have four children. My husband is a fine provider and thars the sum and "' substance of his qualities. I've been feel-ANN LANDERS Padded bras are OK for filling out my form when .t wear 1wea~e1s or ~nit dresses, but I want to feel. like a woman DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I ainl 10 Y•l!'s old and going steady ~ilh a boy n4mfd ing especially sorry for myself~ lately because my life Is so unromantic. There ·were times when 1 thought I was crack· -, i!lng up. N~.l'm surt l'J.11 of/~ !_Obker .• ~ m~il:flMl,~a.~ ~eep ttiem .Ui • 'tpeelal A 'f~ moot.ha ago,-l saw a certain place: -¥esterday., I s-aw my hero on TV nat'Of ho TV .. He looked-'80 hand some and nearly fainted "from excitement. l nd spoke with such convict.ion that I was never like this over any tn1;1vie star. him •. note of prai!e. lie sent a Is this a slgn of insanity? What should I sonal letter ' of thanks""'and 1'\•e been do-7 -FLIPPED OUT - ain goofy ever sinet. DEAR FLIPPEJl: You clo 11quiid .a trl· I've gone.,10 the bookfitore and am ne batty, but 110 long as it doe11'l ln- adlng up on_ bis st.Ile. l 'fi~it the library ler:cre wllb your everyday life, don't ery day to · check the Congressional worry about IL Should you reach Ute tliecord lo _see if he 38id anything. I cut pj)lnt, bowever, that yoa can't do yo11r lila plcturta out of newspapcra and · housework er, heaven forbid, ll yo11 con· again. Is there aomething. that Ciln be Bill)!. Well , I gues:o you ,would call it done surgically -something le.ally safe? going steady although we 'don't go titler a trlp~"'Wa'i&ington, t.tien I'd iug-' Please let me kndw,.:... 'HOPEFUL • ·, anypla<;t .• I know BIJly likes me better 1esl psychialrit htlp. DEAR HOPEFUL: Stt. a plasttc than ·any...olher girl beca~ he bits me. a DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I know you have access" to the best medlc11I br«tns-ln th~ country. Please give me an answer. I am a married woman with three child ren. Before the babies came I had a good figure. Nothing specta~lar, ~t my me11surements were ·34-24-34. No_w J)'.n as J lat a~ an iroiiirlg board. When I ,.y my buiUine is ztro, AM. I · surgeon about tlllcone imp'lanU. Note, 1 lot during recess. 5ald L\fPLANTS, not lnje'.'cumw. 'This ·Yesterday Billy gave me a pretty laae operation 111 expens1ve, bul It lt..Jegal ind handkerchief.-He said 'i~ wu .a la!e safe, and ca~ prlod~ce ef celleat reiulti. Valerillne's Day present. I showed the And nlnf, lo aQ you. cal1 .0ut•thert wlM handkerchief IO mr mother ~~ she .S,ld envision YOUfttlves 11 ,....,eellve Stpbfa l should ,8lve It ~ack bec1;u~ 1t has ~n \.Oront -dotl't write llH _,. !or ·-H wash«! and Ironed and probably belon.-~f pl11t!c 1Urgeons. t' ~-~oun"~ to hl1 motlier. What 3hotJ)d 1 do? ..... ~ ipeclli< -o,-HI 7••r.'1Nil11 dectoi -dAlwliN CIT'i -MADER AGE 10 ' " ' DEAR . RE AD E'R' Give Ille bandtercbief back to Billy and 1ugut tllat he b\IY yoo 1 Valeall .. nut yeor H he tdll Is blUinc yoU darlnc recto Hit February. __ • • Ir you have trouble getting along with your p,arenta l__. if you canl -1et them. to Jet you Jive' your own life. ·send for Ann Landers' booklet, ••Bugged by Parents? How tb-Ge;t 'M,Qi-e Freedom." Send 50 centl in c0l11 With. your request aiid a - long, s'taltlped .&elf-addressed envelope. 'Ann Landers will' be glad lo help with yoitr problems. Send tbem lo her In <;pl'l! oJ )~e-DAll,Y. PlbQT, en£lostng .!_ long, stamped, aell·addressed envelope. ' ' ---A---- I DAILY PILOT Till>laJ;Ju~ 8, 1!69 Los Angeles Temple hosen lor-WedCJfng MRS. D._LARR)' GUNNELL-1.-- To Re1ld1 Jn Ut1h Talk-Gives Glimpse Of Histor-ical Fiction Ancient History as Seen meeting prereilng the Through Fiction will be the cheon, for which the ~hnes. Talk Concerns t011IC of Christopher Creely's Gene Skawln and Ronald talk before Mesa Harbor Club Taylor are in charge of ar· B b C" d" members on Thursday, July rangemenl!. a Y ree Ing JO, ln the Mesa Verde Country A social boor will begin at Advantages of Nursing to Club. 10 :31) a.m., when membtt! Mother arxt Baby will be the The Costa Mesa book dealer and guests will be greeted by topic for the first in a series of. Will give his. audience tips on the Mmes. Bud Bardsley and lectures ·sponsored by the how to choose interesting and Nick Hanson of the reception Corta Mesa Chapter of La enjoyable reading material asjj;;. cornmi;;;;;;;;;;t;;te<;;;;;,. ;,..;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ MRS. STEVEN L. CAVANAUGH Former Suaan Van Tuyle Leche League tonight at 8. he discusses his favorite Cavanaugh, Van T uyle Names Linked at Altar The discussion meeting will category, ~historical novel. take place in the Newport Creely, who will be In· Belich' home of Mrs. Paul c. troduced· by Mrs. Marshall Bernhart. Cowley, program chairman, Topics sclleduled for coming comes from rour generations months will include The Art of of booksellers and rare book Nurslng, Baby's Birth and dealers. He also has been Family RelaUons and Nutrl-employed as a juvenile pro- Ezchanging wedding vows in $t. Andrew ·s Presbyteri8n Church were Susan Van Tuyle of Balboa, daughier of Mr. and h1rs. J. T. Van Tuyle of Honolulu and Steven L • Cavanaugh, son of Navy Lt. Cmdr. (ret.) and Mrs. M. E. Cavanaugh of Garden Grove. The Rev. Dr. Charles H. Dierenfield officiated for the double ring ceremony before an altar decorated· v.·ith an ar· rangement of white carna- tions. stock, gladioli and ba- by's breath. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white silk organza wilh a full ruffled hoop skirt which ex· tended to a cathedral train. The fitted bodice featured tiny puffed sleeves. and a floral headpiece caught her lwig veil Group to View Africa Slides of illusion. t " and W bation officer ln San Diego and 100 eaning. 0 "A"-ty and -~ 1 Miss Gretchen Van Tuyle Tho6e interest-' in fu ... \o~r range......,...., 85 8 ;,uiOO was maid of honor' for her in!ormaUon. 100:: Le ~ =~:. and social service sister, and bridesmaids in· League may call Mn. H. W. Mrs. William Holmes will eluded Janet'l'h Colby and Debbedle Moore, ~. preilde at the · b u 1 l n e a I Flamm. ey wore print -==========='=======:::::::= dresses of white and plnk with1r tiny puffed .1 .. ves and pink •• 8 x 10 PORTRAIT •• sashes. Pink roses adorned their hair and they carried • fN NATURAL COLOR • pink and wh.ite roses in their 9 5 ,i • nosegay bouque~. •• • I' • Larry Beebe stood as best man for the bridegroom . • Ushers included Howard Slru-• . PLUS tAX • blc and Bill Brown. • 11 14 fl y I A 't" f II . th .,. . ••• • rccep ton o owing e • e Ch · f p a[lcrnoon ceremony look place oice 0 01•1 • in the Newport Beach Ebell • • One Special Club. o a •mi y • t f I • The new Mr. and h1rs. • • 50c Malling & • Cavanaugh, both graduates of H di. Newport Harbor High School, • 1" ing CO AST • plan to make their first home A Ch1rg• COLOR • '" Anaheim, •••••••••••••••••• YOU KNOW YOUR CHILD FAMILY GROUPS NO EXTRA CHARGE A meeU"g of Orange Sbor" WILL LEARN )ledJci1 Assistants AU<Jie1at1on ¥ tonight at. will feature a" 11-TO SWIM AT 1ustrated talk on Africa by 0 . W, 1'rlce of Laguna Beach. BLUE BUOY For the g1the:rlng. which wlU lake place in 1 h e American Le~on Hall in .t..4 Se WIH ''' A.,tJdni, hlbff blad, Jlewport Btac , Price will s-,. A••· tnthi thow color allde• or SOulh and l:J~1aoo !!:oat Attica wblch he look on a ir'IV- tour of the colorful area. Harbor Cent.ar -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa M11a THURS·Rll·SAT, JULY 10•11~l2 HOURS:. 10 to 5 ' THE N·E·W LQQK ma!Ae~ for HAIRSTYLING * * by the area's TOP STYLISTS! Complimentary Make-ups 9 F1c:l1l1 • Eyo Tobblng Manicures ond Pedicur11 . By Appolntm.ont YIYIANI WOODAlD COSMETIC$ malhe'6 WIG & BEAUTY SALON 541·3446 210·0 l•t 17ttt SffM f.llLLGll:EN SQUAll:E COSTA MISA.- -Afternoon Rites Read ·- Tlit DAILY PILOT off•n 1om• of tht bt1! f11!11rtt, by tclu1I t1trv1y of rttdtn, 1v1il1blt in 1ny new1p1p1r in dot nttion. ROBINSON'S NEV\roRT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 -1 • , • ' • Mesa~ Today's Fhlal ·. N.Y. St.eeks • '. " ' ' voe. iz. NO. '162, 2 SECTIQNS, 26 PAGES ORANGE (;Ol:INTY, CALIFORNIA .TUESDAY, JULY'&', ·1969 TEN Cems-, ~ . . Qrange r-reeway Runs liito cm.Iision 7 St . Clai r, Bergeron in Bitter Clash By ARTllUR R. VIN~EL Of !Jlt, Oii!)' Plitt ttetr TJle proposed thoroughfare won't be built for another decade, but a section of the Orange Freeway potentially dividirig four coastal cJUes had its first headoo collisiQn· Monday night • Politics and j>ers.OnaUUes poured out in a c.lash between the_chiel of two leparate freeway study committees and Costa f\1esa City Councilman William L. St. Clair after a·report-on-the-present status. rr:MMt · raa:ih11 h•1•• •tl'!I Eugene Bergeron bitterly charged the freshman counc1lman wllh what he term- ed complete misunderStandin& of the dem~ratie proceS!, h!lsed on recently published remarks to Mayor Alvin L. Pinklty. The st. Clair n9te suggested intentions by pei:wns in posltlon of local leadership to ' use, political presftUre to . get the freeWay's propased southern segment along tbe Santa Anil River droj)ped en--- t~ly.' • Reading e:rceJ'Rts from ·the letter, Bergeron asked if it wasn't likely St. Clair had been lraJe when, it was written. "That's about right," St. Clair replied cooUy. ·Bergeron he.ads the mlyor·s special Blue Rib?xt Committee on the Orang~ Freeway, as: well as leading a Mesa - Verde Horpeowners' Associat.ion panel whose · purpose is: also to explore the ' (See FREEWAY~ P11e %)- 2,IOO~MESA:·N ... s-----Get-Saigma-'naanks:------ 'Ml.SSING' ~ F' The offlcial ·populallon of Cosla ·Mesa irst Troops to .Leave today is 72;900, but it was a bitter pill to swallow .and coU[lcilmen 14qnday blamed the lack of municipal multiplication on v 0 w H ·~?t~~~f;~\~t i~" quipped Coon-· 1etnam on ay ome cilman William · L. St Clair when the figures from slate Finance Dlr¢tor Caspar WCinberger were announced. Councilmen had hoped to pass the 75,000 mark during 1968-69, thus quali- fying the city for a larger share t>f cer- tain--taxe5 r.elunded by-the.state. "It may be the fault of some _of tjl~ pharmacists that we haven 't got more people," declared Mayor · Alvin L. Pinkley. The veteran local druggist'.s summation was just a capsule comment. Throng Browses .Through Store; $4 75 C.Oa.ts Coile Managen of a small c bJ c, wtmen's wear shop told Costa Mesa police Monday of a blr.arre, lf75 Tui coat thirt case ii). volvlng a br,owsing gang of wall-to-wall suspects. By the lime lhe throng o! 40 to 50 wandered h ou.t or Judy's, a South Coast Plaza chain store,· a pair of fox fur-lined ,c::oals-Aad vanished with t.l]em, according to the_l+eport. Patrolman Richard Johnson said clerks; kept a suspicious watch on the oddly large crowd of shoppers, especially a very fat woman with an Afro-Asian hairdo. Checking around the premises af. tcrward, the two coats were discovered missing. according to Linda A. Schulen- burg:, who reported the loss to Ule chain store's headquarters. Her stimr matched perfectly with an in- cident at' their Lakewood shop more than a week ago, in whidt a stocky woman theft suspect was chased from lhe stot'f', police said. Described in'--Uiat case as having an Afro-Asian hairstyle, the portly woman managtd. to escape :ber~pursuers. drop. ping a fox .fur-lined coat-exactly like those reported stolen Monday. Unable to describe any others: among the 40 lo 50 persons who allegedly covered for the obese shoplifter, store clerk& said only they were natural-look ing. Some of the qient they added, wore nu shirts.. - l\l inuie~an Launched VANDENBERG AFB (UPl)-The Air Force launched its 250th Minuteman missiie·todaY. from this coastal .Stra~tegic Air Comman~ base down the western test· range. McCHORD AIR FORCE BASE, Wash. (AP)'-The firsl U.S, lrool" to be·pui!ed out of Vietnam i>y President Nixon wing· ed homeward in nine jet transports today alteto-a-sendolf-marked-by....militacy..fan- fare and the thanks of Saigon officials. Gen. Creighton W. Abrams .. com· maoder of American forces in Vietnam, told the 814 men in the first contingent of 15,000 U.S. troops being withdrawn : "You occupy a significant moment in history." A gala welcome awaited the in- fantrymen, alm~"t all veterans or com- bat, at this Air Force base, near-Ft. Lewis and the city of Seattle.~ Anny chief of ,Staff Gen. William C. Westmoreland, a · former U.S. com- ndhder 1n Vietnam, flew in from Waabington with decorations for five of lh"1"1ifnin1-tioldlwa of lhe 3rd IMl- talion, • 60th Want.ry, 9ih Infantry Diyision. <>n the program for the next three days were speeches by pubHc figures, band music, a -parade,--a-dinner., preUy girls and. in many cases, family reunions. Among those who saw the troops off at Stock Markets NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market remained sharply lower in inoderately active trading this afternoon, with brokers reporting ~eral a d v e r s e developments appartntly weiglilng on tbe1 market. (See quotations, Pages 10-11). Tan Son Nhut airpOrt Tuesday were South Vietnamese Presidenl Nguyen Van Thieu, Vice President Nguyen Cao Ky and Defense Minister Gen. Nguyen Van Y~·---. --Thieu and Ky were surprise last minute arrivals, just before the soldiers marched to their waiting Cl4l Starllfter aircraft. They passed down the ranks or the fatigue-clad Americans, shaking hands and thanking them for their services. Addressing the departing battalion, Thieu said : "Together we have repelled communist aggression. This: has been our goal. and our purpose." He said the South Vietnamese must begin to assume a greater share or the fighting and the replacement of allied trocps. ~ "This Is &ily !ht begh\nin g of thi! pro- cess," Thieu ea.Id. He noted the losses of the U,S. ttb dlvlalon In South Vlttzwn - l ,855 tilled in action -and said, "Our duty is to make sure this: sacrifice waa not iq vain:'·' • "We fully realize that the primary responsibility of the struggle should be ours," the 46-year-old South Vietnamese president said. 'He added that his nation would still need combat suppon. and sup- plies but would have "less and less need for the blood or other nations." After bis speech, Thieu presented a gift to the unit and individual gifts to Ill of· ficera a·od senior noncommissioned of· ficers. ' Newport Man Cleared Of All Fraud Charges Cleo Marvin Johnson of Newport Beach The mot.ion of directed order of ac- has been cleared of all charges involvecJ, quittal came under Section 1118.1 of the in a Grand Jury indictment oq insurance California Ptnal ~e and was placed befor? Judge Murray before any in-salea piior to the case going to an -Orange troducilon of defense or defense evidence County Superior Court jury. on beball .of Johnson. PreviOUs1y •. It had been Incorrectly. The D at I y Pilot regrets lhe error in reported ~t Johnson, ,51, or 1901 KJngs articlea oi June 14. and June 16 in which it Road, wu still involved ln the case •hen was incorrectly indicated that Johnson's it ;rem to the jury June l:Z, and as the case was still before the jury. The ac- jury's deliberations conUnued through count of June 16 was, in fact , an effort to June .16. fairly report that Johnson had been ruled The Dilltrid Atton:iey's office rested its innoc_tfil._Md cleared Of all charees. cue an Jtffie 5. Jolinaoli'a atW1nef1 iiil--The error .... s made because of er- mediately entered a moUon before roneous clerical tnforinallon Supplied to Superior Judge Williif11: Murray, seeking the n!Wspaper. There was no intent on the entry of a fydgmeot of. acquittal for part of ~ .D a i J y' Pilot to Offer tn- the Newport resident. corrP.Ct, <1tfamatory, uncomplimentary or The defeiise motion was granted, and unpNlpiticua: information regarding the juJge ruled Johnson innocent of an Johnson'• acquittal in the insurance mat- charg :1 at that point. ter before Ute court. Surprise to NASA Space Monkey Bonny Dies . . . From Witt Service1 HONOLULU -~romonk BOnny died early today 12 hou after the monkey put down in the Paci Oceari foJloWtng 13Q orbits -around ta°rth in a fPICI caP,.SU)e, the U.S. space agency. r~rted. "II -wn sudden," said Brad Evans, public information otttcer for~ the Na· llona1 Aeronautics and SP"Ct AdmlnlstraliOO. "He had beth' in fair con-' dition just before1!.' T1'e 14-PQUDd monkey 1 exhausted and bor'ed. '!i'rbroughLboc:k 19 e#flb m.,.. lhan three weeks early and~ splashed 4own In his Biosatellite. 3 aome.25 milel oil Kauai, Hawaii. - Observers described fenerica's space monkey as Ump but 'alil'j when flown ~ Air Force helicopter to 1Uwall'1 HJckam Air Foro«ha,.: ' NASA offlclals said an autopay was ordered Immediately in the biosltellite laboratory trailer where the monkey had been tinder intensive care since the touchdown. "We had no ldea that he was that close W death,'' added ~vans. "He just 1ud- den1y fell off." NASA offlciah scheduled a news cmJ. l~ to dllcUM the unexpected climax of lbe aborted space mission. Eva.ns aald It wU sUU, too earty.to call the 111ISBi~ a £.ailure, saying "it depends on data aTready received." ":We had been hoping for a minimum lH!ay mission for success," be uid. Before death_, ~ team of ti doctors, vei.rtnarLw and -leChnlclans worked over the little primate In a portable medical ~lft, andTdoctor had ~ "hi& beartbeal ii li8 per minult and steady." Charles Wilson, project manager for NASA's Ames Research Laboratory In Sunnyvale, Calif., aald the $92 million ex· perlment was ended after the monkey failed to respond to signala aboard !ht space capsule. 11~ Jack of response was interpreted to bldlcate • aluggtshness wblcll U allow· ed to conlinut, could have led t.o serious deterioraUon," Wilson uid. &lnny wu11aunched from Cape Ken- nedy June :ia into mightie11 orblt·DI to 241 miles above the ·earth. The monkey'• perfi>nnance·~ assigned tub declined rapidly during bls firll week In orbit and hit metabolic state - convenlon of food Into energy -dropped to a lcnm level. ' ·~ Where Livin' Is High CAILY "ILOT Pllltto IW OIJt &....- One way to get close to Linda Isle, swank Irvine Co. development in Newport Harbor, is t() fly over it. Horseshoe-shaped island, last of six in lower bay to be developed, has 108 lots, all o! which already have been leased. lsle dwellers will pay be~ween $56,000 and $250,000 over 75-y0ar life of lease for privilege of residing in exclusive digs. Irvine Co. officials figure most e xpensive howe built on ialUd so far cost. $400,000. That doe•n't include price &f leaae on lot. ..:...;---., . ' Hearing Slated ·o ii $5.-gs Million . . Mesa Budget Copies of a $.5.98 million Cost.a Mesa mWllctpal budget were o f l J c i a I I y dislributed Monday, with three separate divisioM totalling $1.58 million under separate cover in the package. No tax increase is Involved. A public hearing was set for July 21 on final adoption of the preliminary docu- ment, which is up $55\713 over last year's total package, but down slightly In certain categories. A separate public hearing is scheduled at an adjourned meeting next Monday on ·an $85,525 police helicopter patrol budget section proposed by Chief Roger E. Neth. City Manager Arthur R. McKenzie not· cd in his foreword to the $5,978,115 city operating budget that income is expected to matc:ll expenditures without need for defit:it finance or tax increaS&. "This budget is: based on continuing the city council's program of pay-as-you-go fiscal management and we feel the necessary plans and programs have been included," McKenzie said. Citizens in the general law city are limited. to a $1 per $100 of aase:ssed valua- tion lax , but separate assessment districts may be set up to finance other needs. Largest separate-cover budget shown in the thick document -available to the public on a checkout basis from City Clerk C.K. "Charlie" Priest -is for the pa_rks and recreation district. Total budget requirements · for that deparyment jlmount .to $756,000, while the city street llghting district. shOws • a $452,000 budget requirement for the fiscal year. The 1969-70 city golf course fund Is . listed at ~1.900, but it is not compared ' to la.st year's appropriation, since the city took over' course management only last March. Property' taxes in the city are expected to bring a total 'Of SI,63!,000 into the treasury, a healthy $188,000 increase over. last y~ar's land tari!r income. Burglar Takes StQ,rs and Flags · A btirglar who broke lillo a Costa Mesa elementary school .jot a gold star · -a ' boxful ih (act, for his efforts -campus employes told police Monday. · ~vtr visited Wilson School, 801 Iv. ¥.'Uson St., stole a box of gummed stars and a· bor of American Flag tUckers~ worth · 30 cenb, leiving more villualile ltema behind. • ,. ' 1~ Hurt,'Two Seriouslx, In Two Mesa Accidents Thirteen persons were tnjurecfln a pair of n1uJUple-vehicle traffic collisions that occurred onJy one mile 'and three hours apart under almost id e n t I c a I circumstances in the 0r{l.Dge County Airport area Monday. Two oI the injured remain hospitalized with seriOUJ injuries today. Si:r cars and a large truck were damaged or demolish- ed. One accident occurred at Bristol Street and Paularino Avenue inside the Costa Mesa city lim1l3. The second major smashup three hours later was at Red Hill and Main Street, north of Orange County Airport, in unincorporated ter· rilory. Costa Mesa police said the 11:50 a.m. colli!lon w a s triggered when a truck rumbling south on Bristol Street rammed- a car carrying five girls west on Pau larino Avenue. Truck driver Isaias G. Vielma Jr., 29, of 1813 N. Bradley Ave.; Santa Ana, said the light was green the las:t time he look· ed, but Miss Pamela S. Shewmaker, 19, of 15701 Tu!Un ·Village Way, Tustin, also said she entered the crossing on a green light. Police are still tnvesUgatlng factors in the crash today. Miss Shewmaker. her sister Paula, 18, passengers Gail E. Hartman, 17, a n d Laurin V. Adams, 18, all of. the Tustin Village Way address, were treated at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and reliased. The driver of a foµrth car sideswiped Three •Stabbed In SF Hashhury; Wonian Arrested SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A young . woman, cartying both a baby ·Md· a 10- lnch knife, stabbed·111ree J>OI'.-Monday · evening In !ht Hajglll-Asbbuiy hlppie district. I Police whO followed'. a. ·trail of' wi~ , nesses, 3rre'sted Mrs. Silvia SmJth,' 20, at her h9me f?!d .booked her, for · three at- tempted' mur'der tnvesl!gatl6n•. They said .a woman lnfticttd severe sc-alp wbundS on Mn: Charlotte Young, 50~ Who WU folding her laundry Jn 8 laUn• dromat, attacked TbQmu Harper, 81,, as he walked by on a street, and then 1lash- ed William Davl11 53, WbO was walUng for a bus at Flllmon and llailhl ""'""· No t'N80l1. .U liven for the altacka. Mn.'.Yoting and .ijavta were In' oer!OUI • condlilon·ln hoopltl1a; ' by vehicles scattered in the coJllalon. Kathleen A. St. Louis, 18, of 2741 Meno doza Drive, Costa Mesa, and her passenger, Yvonne E. Del.and, 18, of !'11 Mission Drive, Costa Mesa, were also treated and re leased. Officer James Blaylock said Karen A. Stewart; 18, of 1845 Anaheim Ave., Costa Mesa, drove the third vehicle involved, but escaped i!ijury. Investigators for the C a l I l 0 r n I • Highway Patrol said the accldent at Red Hill Avenue and Main Street about I p.m., oceurred when a car driven by an Arizona visitor was hit broadside. Miss Joann Karnas, 18, of Tempf!. Ariz., was headed west on Main Street when her car was struck by Mrs. Mary J. Jon<s, II, of 131U Epping Way, TustJ,n, sending it on a spin in_to ~ ~ automobile. Mrs. Jones ls listed in satisfactory~ dilion today at Hoag M~morial Hospital. Newport Beach, with multiple rib frao. tures, cuts and bruises. Mrs. Audrey L. Hill, 34, of 2.UO C1ay St., NewpOrt Beach, was also listed in satisfactory condition with rib fractures. cuts, bruises: and a possible concussion. Mrs. Hill a~ .hF children .Rlchie, _f , and Kelsey, 8, were pautnger1 in the Jones car. Treated for·mlnor injuries and·releUed were Miss Karrtas, her passenger, Sheila Sayewlch, 18, also o[ Tempe, the two Hill children and Mrs. Ruth H. Young, 45, of 624 Seaward Road, Corona del Mar. She was the driver of the third car involved. Weadter Fair skies will reign along the Orange Coast Wedn<Sday with tho mercury ranging from the upper 70's to the lower 80's depending on your proximity to the cool sea breezes. 1 . ' INSIDE TODAY Men rate 1ez S4!Cond in choof.. tl').g a mat4!, but wom4!n rank 'it . si.ith -which ts wh~ 75 percent of. Amtricafl marriages or1 a bust. Poot 21. • ' ..... .. .. ' • .. .. II .. .. • • 1 - I I - . . . ---.-·---· . . ~ . . . ---..--·-·-· "'::[ ...... --.,;:-_ ·----...... • Jt DAll.Y PILOT C Tll<>di1, Ju~ I!, 1'169 Probe Aims at Ba~'s Dead -Fi~,h,. .S ·Iimy ~ M~s·s -~-~Ir JORI'! V~LTERU ... .,"' l"!•""!!'•l agenclt!_ - .. • -'"" _--O!'a ... -Counly Ratl>or Dlmlct Of• ....., d dead -baas &lid clumps ol lldilJ. wbo have received ICOm of oozn. bt!~n. !llmy moos ore now dotting plaln~-)lewporl.J:'31den~ '"'-* day that 1pecimt111 of lbe dead 1amt!lsh the surface ln quieter area! of lower and moss have betn taken by tbe depart· Newpott til:Y' In a l'latural mystery that ment nf fish a.nd lllJl•. mtcht t.tke months to solve. Harbor Dlstrlct AdmlnlstraUve · As11i1- 1be bus, described by one Department tant Chris Klinger satd the moss, In vary· of rt&h and Game biologist as "a quite tng degrees, Is normal for early tiummer, hardy spocl"" ... m to be the hardest hit but the kill ol lilll Isn't tbe"llie'Off brtbe harbor. -· Prellmlrttrry-examlnatlon of the dead 'Ibey ltlrt.ed bobb ing up to the JW'face fiah will be conducted by the DFG ~lfi lQt Week as the moat, which IOfllO Terminal lsland laboratories, spokesmen olliclall term. •·normal for thl! Ume of tbere said. Yttr.'' be1u flourlshiq. Department biologist Jack Schott said Sou!'Ct-' said analysis ol the dead fisb the death of the fish cool~ blamed on and the slimy green growths is sure to a .. heavy planktonic bloom ' in the water, like montb5 and become embrdlled in "''hich loses oxygen )"hen microscopic The NOSE Knows Newport Attacks Swamp 'Gas Smell B7 JANICE BERMAN Of .............. .... Tllere's •ontelhlnl In the air In Well Newpofl. . Bui by the end vi IWIUller, It may be 101)1!, t1wtb to Project NOSt. The acronym it.ands for "Noxious Odor Seepqe Ellininatlon." It wQ coined by the tWI of City Atton>ey Tully Seymour. 1 of 3 on Bike For 2 Injured OQe ol thrtt younpten on a bicycle built for two llU!lered leg lnjurtes In Newport Beocb Mooday wben the bike 1lammtd into an opening car door. PoUce aaJd Patricia Ann Horak, 12, of 862 Center St, Costa Mesa, "'1as taken in a squad car to Hoag Memorial Hospital where docton cl~ the foot-long guh 1n her leg. The accident occurred on Pla- centia Avenue near Flagship Road ..Jiortl,)Lbe!0111 noon._ _ _ Anaheim Girl Drowns During Camping Trip A · one-yeir~Jd elrl from Anaheim 1'andered away from a .campsite on the Colorado River last weekend and was dr9wned u tM family llept, it was learn- ed here today. Karla Lynne Wadman, daughter al Mr. •'4 Mn, 1'f. Lynn W.adman of 151 Ii. Cl~e SL, wu found ln the river abeut ll :ti a.m. Saturday. She was pn> nounced de.ad al Pi.lo Verde Hospilal in Blythe,· according to a Riverside County depul] IO!l'-'llU. • ... The 1M11 from NOSE hope to bring an eJtd to. tfMi llorl\UJS perils of IW4mp &as emanailiig ftOin. west of the Arches Bridie. The smell~ familiar to any traviler of Pacific Coast Highway. NOSE represmts th,e city of Newport Beach. the Balboa Cova Community Association and the Union Oil Co., which baa • ·au-6tatlon-at-ae5-West-Coast- Highway. , The three sraups w 11 l each kick ln roughly -third of the i10,soo required to build a burner to get rid of the rotten- qg aroma that comes with unburned 1wainp gas seep1te. The -clty'1 part ot the cost will come out of the general fund, and the money ts ... pected to be approved as soon as the plan is presented ·to tbe eound.I, within lhe nn:t three weeks. But first It must win the approval of 'lJnton Oil's legal staff In San Frandleo, according to l!hil 8et~rt, city ad- ministrative assistant. Union Oil . will hire a firm to begin the construction as soon as the agreement ia .!Y.k~ the three )>l!rties. Sharing of the coSt Ii?i~ Bet· tencourt esplained, because "there really isn't any cl ear municipal responsibility" for the smell. "Tilt direct benefit will be to people vi the Balboa Coves community and the operators of the service station,'' he said. The homeowners' association will pay for its share out of ita own treasury. The mission of the men from NOSE will be to beef up an existing network of underground scavenger lines by installing two mOn, plus a burner, on a small piece of property owned by Balboa Coves ad- jacent to I.be gas station. Then. instead .of the gu belng sucked into a stack on top of the gas station, as ls JlOW the case, dl~-smell will be burned off bdore ii nacbes lhe atmOJphe~. No._lluntitiflton License 'City Hall' Loses One; Record Store Scratched By RICHARD P. NALL Of tM D11tY ,ll1t lt1n Underground City Hall surfaced In Huntington Buch council chambers Mon· day night long enough to lose its appeal for business license legitimacy despite a spirited defense. In a 5-1 split, councilmen upheld the ci- ty clerk and denied a license to the record store operation at 116 lifain St. Councilman Henry Kaufman dis.se.nted and Councilman Illnald Shipley was ab5ent. "I can see no reason why there should not be a record store in thal crummy block," said Newport Beach attorney Arthur Strock, referring lo downtown business blight. Strock represented the applicants for the business lictnst, James T. Butler Dhll1 PllOT OllAMOI Q)t.SI' PUil i'"'*' COMl'A1" l 1M ri M. W1'4 ........... ..,. "*11111' J111t •· C;irley \llcll .. ,........ -ae-.. ..._.... 1~'"''' ii:: .... a .... Tl11,.,1t A. Mwr,,lli11e Ml"""" lflllw c .... w..OMY JJO W11f llY $!11•l M1ili~t A44•111: P.O. 101 1160, t!6J6 ..... _ ~""°'' ...,., ,,u ......... ....,..,...,. 1.--111 ,.,..I._ """'''"'*' "'91111: -ill\ "'"' ( 26, a teacher at Estancia HJgh School in Costa Mesa, and Stephen A. Schirmer, 23, a graduate busine.s.s student. On the basis of critical written police reports, he challenged Police Capt. Earle Robltaille's description of the pre.mises as "completely filthy." Robitaille, who had paraphrued, became more specific. He said "irl"' vestigatig officers found cockroaches:, stench, dirt and mice." • The police captain told of a recording played through a public address system at the Stori! which be described as '4fllthy and foul ." After police closed lhf! premises that wiis operating without a business license, he said, a sign appeared in the window : "Closed by the man to hassle you." He mentioned a narcollcs party and drinking bouts, draped window! and music and laughter within. The attorney denied any proof of narcotics U$e or drinking bouts. "When," he asked, "would an urbane, sophis ticated c<>mmunily such as Hun- tington Beach "censor mUJ!c, laughter, youth and drawn blinds." Strock also denied a report of com· munal bathing. He said there l!!! no place on the premises for bathing of any kind. Buller, a history teacher at Estancia High School and lightweight basketball coach, said he was disappointed at so much controversy and was anxious Lo cooperate with the commuf1ly and police. Mayor Jack Green asked why he had chosen a blighted area to start a record store. "Lots of young people and cheap rent,., said Butler. The mayor asked if he knew th1t a large record store across the street had gone out of business. Butler said he did not. Councilman George McCracken said he passed the buUdlng lut wet.II: and saw persons drinking beer in the st.ore wln-- dow. "It seemz like you would know you have to control your businesa," said Pt1cCracken. Strock likened the situation to college fraternity bttr drinking. "Havtn'l you advertlled In the Free Press?" 15ked Cret.n. Schirmer said they had not. The mayor asked about the name "Underground City 11•11.'' Slr<cl 111d it had been plagiarized fro ma Te1as store now out of business. He said It wu not meant to needle the city but to be wlUy. Councilmen aeemed wwnuaed. or<lllllml flourish, lhmdl& and decay. •n•iT<lllllCiiJrtlilqlo.oelehnlne;t1tts minor ltsh till Ji'obl<m," be aald • .l!f,. ..W : 11\U MUI! t'!'!'U~s or pollullii!S ciADe aeialy lo Ill&. The question of pollution 1n the harb\rJr, however, has been discoutlted by Klinger, who said County Health Department crews' check the harbor Water each month for pollution. "The pollution rate has stayed relative- ly loW;" hnoidc-- hfeanwhile, on lbe otjler side at the bay, City Harbor COorditlator George Dawer has received many complaining phone calls, too. "We get this moss every spring, but It seems that this year it ha.s grown in an ezcessivt amount," he said. .. DAILY PILOT Sl1ft•f'llll9 TESTING NEWPORT AIR Service St•tlon'• Th.a Pfister From Page 1 FREEWAY .•. freeway_issues and alternatives. This Is apparently where the point of contention began. In hls ca~city as chief: or the COsta ?.lesa City _ Council ad.yisocy __ pane.11 Bergeron sits as a liaison agent, while he has organized a discussion July 31 at Estancia lligh School, featuring city, county and slate authoriti~ in the other J>o<I. Remarks in St. Clair's JeUer, as published in one county newspaper, In- dicates bringing legislators .into the pie. ture at this point Invol ves an unhealthy political tairit. Bergeron said he could only interpret the criticism, which he branded as being without basis, as a blast at members or the Mesa Verde Homeowners Association it.self. "If I have quoted you and understand you correctly, you have a complete lack of understanding of the democratic pro- cess," Bergeron mapped . "I feel the same way toward you that you feel toward the mayor," he con- tinued. Protesting lhe remarks, Councilman St. Clair asked If he could direct a few ques. lions to Bergeron to try to clarlry points underlying the simmering situation. "Rather than gel involved I n personalities, perhaps you could set a date to meet with me and discuss ll Inter," Bergeron replied, "This isn't fair. You give me holy heck, then you want to cut me off,'' St. Clalr answered. Bergeron again suggested a private meeting, adding that·St. Clair might then choose to write another posfiion paper on the whole matter, "You're good at that," added the mortuary executive in cold tones. Turning the dialogue toward Mayor Pinkley. St. Cl&lr conUnued to try to establish the role of each committee Bergeron heads and whether an attempt is in lhe works to drop the freeway's Wt link. The mayor replied that Bergeron'! freeway committee role was suggested by Orange County Road Commissioner Al Koch as a step toward solidarity among 'cities to be affected. Mesa Verde Homeowners' Association Prcsldent Norm French then stepped to the podium to say he appointed Bergeron Some time ago to the second post, In ""hlch he organized the July 31 meeUng. "Thi! wearing of two hats is con- tusing,'' St. Clair said. He had said earlier that the promin ent land-developing Segerstrom family asked the state last year to end the Orar11e Freeway In the area or their SOuth Coast Plaza and Town Center project. "Segerstrom want. the state to build a road through his property and pay caJh for his land," St. Clair cttargtd. "and that'• just good busine.sa. but where will eight lanes of traffic go?" The idea behind dropping the coastal tnd of the Orange Freeway Is b&5td on the concr.pt that the network ol the Red Route of the Newport Fret way, the COrona del Mar Freeway and the exlsUn1 San Diego Frtieway ylll make It wt· nettUlf')'. Da.,.. aid the moss 1~d 11111rty .,.1er ohoulcf ""!'.' lalot lhll IJIUl\ll, J>uts --!'l'bey'fiii•ii"~':;:lltll~i:ljto~nnijtll.f.';~iili jin>bltm mlslilYlll 0!!111661 ll0ifs1!i0 aw. -.'11111 laD' -.1 aD .. tb1t "\:, :::.. ~II= fte~ ... :=-Tbe dl&oll, aC<Oldtq ·lo ~ :ik'~ ~ t11e°':~~:;;' ..:': ~ with !!flllliers from cJiy 1Jnd·1D1o the -landings .J~ Ille harbor, .bun Lalfodod. 40 years.-- bay. . -bass lllhln; at all. ''Thl• ... inht be 1 cue ol nutrients Spokesmtn far A.rt.'• Llndlng, wblCh The mO&S seems1o gather and nourish being du~~ Into the harbor," he iaJd. r~nts runabouts a.net moton for 6i.M ~s~atfu:~~w~~eaa of I.he harbor, "'l'he biggest prebltnt here/' be added fisherlllmen In the bay, qild t!':al th~ fJSb Klln~r sild that 11·e rnou l.s normal, Ofs the 'may and mlghi' that ls tnhe.reni ares 1 common in the day's catch. av U} . in conversations on water condiUons in They discounted the theory that the however, and that Uda1 action will nuah lhe hlrbot .. dead bass stem from a aerloua e!!!!lem. the harbor in about the same maMtt as · 'liffac we-havep't tven seen any 11 a ltdld }ftth"lO\lJlttdebrls that cbO{'ed Ule Thus far no 9ne a1~ney ou~ ol JC9res of aource there ia1d. ' waterway flfter the series of Heavy boards, ~·us and departments con-But on the leeward slde of the harbor'• wln(er stonna. ducta: definitive slud!es on waler quality : chamel• tbe story Is dUfertnt. • Meanwhile, boaters lnd doc!: visllqrl of the bay, he said. Check• at aevera! dock areas alone will have to hold their breath along aome •!is newly created city department will Mariner's Mile on Pacific Coast HJghwi.y ,.slips. probably &et the Job as soon as Newport showed an average of a dozen dead, rot-"Maybe it'll just go away," said one Beach's City Council approves. That toing ba!s for every 20 boats tied up. visitor. Mystery Death Claims Youth · Tied to Shooting 'Passag e' Holds Lead in Race To Honolulu A youth involved in a 1968 shooting episode with a Stanton police orficer sli p- ped lrom unconsclousneSJ j n t o . mysterious death Monday In t h e emergency room <;f Stanton Community Hospital. ~oroner's depuUes today are examining the unmarked body of Jerry Naranjo, 19. of 106112 CourfSI ., Slanton, in an attempt to determine what caused llil death. Grove Motorist Killed in Crash INDIO (UPI) -AutbOritll!S are stek· in.g the driver of a camper truck Involved in IDr accident '9t!lch "tilled on~ motorcy· cle rider.......and serjousl)'_injured-three . others early Monday on Interstate 10. The Calllornla Highway Patrol said the driver was sought on felony hit·ru11 chargea. • . Officers slid Marvin Currier, ~. of Garden Grove, was k1lled when · t~ camper hit his cycle. His passenger, Jean Stolcu, 25, of Santa Ana, wu seriously in· jured. Howard Olson, 22, and Audrey Patrick, 21, both of South Gate were injured when their motorcycle feil as the camper swerved 1n front of them. The dead youth -·WU with Paul Aguilera, 11, on Feb. ti 1988, when Aguilera was !lbbt and killed J>y a bullet from the gun of a Stanton reserve • policeman. Officer Allen Christian, 42, of Hun· lingtOif Beach, W as-later acquiitedOC- man.!llaughter char1es 1n the shooting. Police said Naranjo was brought to the hospital by an older brother, Daniel. He died without replning consclOt1Sne11i. There were no marls of violence on his tody, officers said. The brother told police he saw two unknown men bring Jerry home un- copscious and carry him into the house shortly before noon Monday. The coroner's offld!: ls conducting an autopsy to determine the cause of death. A dep.ity said a report. could be upected \~ednesday. Aguilera and Naranjo were stopped by )JOlice for questioning at 2:·30 a.m. Feb. 9, 1968. When Aguilera broke and ran, of· fleer-Christian sliOu~ warnings ·to halt three times, then fired hitting the youth in the head from a distance of over SO yards. Meat Prices Rise WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Labor Department reported. today t h a t wholesale pricu of meal!, poultry and fish rose 4.S percent ln June, probably signaling further hikes in food market price tags ahead. SAN PEDRO CUP!) -Ro ~ er t JOhnson·s ' W'mdward Pusage 1lleed throu1h light seas at a record·hreakifig pace Monday to mairitaln the overall lead in the 25th Transpacific yacht race to Honolulu. The 73-footer from the Lahaina Yacht Club or Hawan was miking-about-nine- knots and was 700 miles from San Pedro in the 2,225-mile nautical race. This was compared to 640 miles out for the same time in 1965 when the Ticon- deroga, also skippered by Johmon, set the record of nine d"Ays, 13 boura and 51.Z minutes. Blackfin, which reported generator and radio troubles earlier, said the dUficulUes were cleared up and the vessel was in ae- cood place. Mir was third. No report wu available on the di.stance between Blackfln and Windward Passqe because of poor visibility. Twelve knot winds. were reported with four foot swell!. The class standings were, in order: A: Rascal, Concerto, Windwa r d Passage, Bl&cklin (tie for third). B: Jubilation, Salacia, Star)ing II. C: Esperance, Argonaut, Numse ll. (tie for second). D: Valkyrie II, Hetaera, Aventura (lie for second). · In the handicapped standings, Esperarl"' ce and Argonaut were the overall leaders. (Transpac highlights via direct radio reports from the fle et are presented dally on KCX::M, 103.1 FA1 at 3 and 7 p.m.) Become• Healthier, Happier, Thinner You at Holiday Health Spas ESCAPE to a pri vate luxury where sophisticated weight reducing methods make ernbarros.sing pounds vanish quick ly and gently. INCOMPARABLE FACILITIES • HNtecl lomtn S>Mmmlng Pool , llttr1 Modem Conditioning f1c.llitlts • Roman St11n1 looms • Eltctronlc. M11stgt • Finnish Rode S.lftl . ..... • ftori41 SUI Ti• Rooatt • Whirlpool ..... • Condltlenlnt Fdftn • Swiss Fae.Ill Machines ••••••••Fllll FREEi FREE!•••••••• • • Special· Join Today RECEIVE YOUR PRIVATE SWIM CLUB MEMBERSHIP • • • • • • • • • • • • , Swim in 1 Buutllvl Outdoor : o Al o : ... ymp;c Sitt Ht1ttd Pool : ! Offer Good For limited Time Only ! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COjllPUTI FACILITllS FOR MIN & WOMEN Call or Stop by Today For Your f,.. Tour I 11UNT1f4r,TON BEACH 111 CO fiJA M(S A . . ". . "' .. ~, .. 1 .,, ""~'"" ··~, rt -ll 1•lS1 549 J.l tl~ I I fl"4l\H(IM I \ ORANG( .. , ,,,eo · •• ' ~A'l"f '' :· nl60J81 6J0.144 I Ol'fH 7 DAYS A WEIK-10 to 10 ' I \ I r U.S. Ra te Of-Jab less,~ Takes D~p. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The nation's unemployment rate dropped stlghUy In June;-to -3.4 ·~cent, despite-the-fl,,...~ real signs of a slackening in the demand for workers, the , Labor Department reported t'oday. The unemployment Jeul last month"' was down one-tenlh of one perctnt from 11,fay, with 3.4 million per50l'IS reported lookini for wot1<. C'.onsidered more significant. howeYer, was a compariSOD of employment gainll in the first quarter of. the year wnh those in the second quarter, which end-. ed June 30. Employment dltring the Apnl.June period registered the smallest increase since the second quarter of 1967. •Iarold Goldstein, assistant commiJ..· gioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, said the second quarter figures showed a definite slowdown in the growth of industry demand for labor. '. DAIL-¥ P-ILOT Sti ff Plltiol DAllY l'JLOT II -··- Art Takes Over . In tagu_nR" B~ac -r • For the neit al1 weeks the clly of Laguna Beach will more than live up to It. niclauune of Art Colony. ' -art feaUval1 wW begin: thelr. summertime run Friday and continue to Aug. 24. Nearly Z50 artlsb will b8 e.x• hibitlng their worka at the Festival cf Arts, the Sawdust Festival and Art-A Fair '6'. Jn additJon to the art exhibitions, Laguna's unJque ''living pictures," tnowtl mQre formally as the Pageant of the Masters will be presented nighUy at 1:30 o'clock in Irvine Bowl. One-time nasty apjits in the Laguna art scene are responsible for the trio of festivals. Things oow .seem to have aet· tied aown ·to healthy competition among the artists' groups, all with their own place in the summer sun. The Festival of Artli offers 180 artists, sculpters, ceramists and other handcraft artisans displaying thelr works in the Festival exhibit booths. Art 'F e~tivals • Ai a Olance· ........ -1 -• FESTIVAL OP ARTS. GNlflddaddl/ of the other awo. Located a& Laguna °"· 180 ezhibitor1. HoKrs noo,n to night, seven dat1s a t11eefc, Ado missWn. 50 cenu for a.dulu, JO c:eKU for children under 12. SAWDUST FESTIVAL. lt'1 lhird tummt1' run. /.fore avant-garde. Also at Laguna Can11on. 100 plJU c:chibi• tort. Houri 10 a.m. to midnight. A~ milsion free. ART·A·FAIR '69 (/orm.,iv Splmtn Ft&tival). It's 1econd summtr nin. Located at 346 N. Coast Highwav. 10 e:z:hibitor1. Houri JO a.m. to midniQht. Admi&.tion 2S cents for adults, frtt___ for children u'l'lder 12. ' t The Festival grounds are located ·at &50 Laguna Canyon Road at the mouth of Laguna Canyon, as one leaves the City of cf Arts grounds as one travels away from Laguna Beach. the ocean. In addition to the professional artists, More than 100 artists w1ll be displaying: Goldstein conceded that part of this might be the result of record employ- ment K'ains during the first quarter of the year a9d not neeessariJy the result of any ant1·inflation moves by the_ ad· ministration. The average-wOff w-eek-forraaijry workers---cne of the key economic indi- caton;. in the monthly employment st.a· tistics-held steady at f0.7 hours in June. HOWARD 'HAP' GRAHAM, VOICE OF LAGUNA'S P.AGEANT Of MASTERS, AWAITS OPEN ING NIGHT SfiitTngFridiY, ftle-Arttolony lives Clp to fts Name as· Tb'"" SiP1Jr•t• Art SliOws Open paintlnia and drawings or JOO Orallj:e their varied works. Admlnlon is free to County school children will be on dis lay all. Hours are from 10 a.m. to midnleht. at !fie--Anna ~ary -Beck JUruor e-sawdu!t-P'r!liv~ namea· The work week figure is one of the leading indicators used by ecooomisl.5 to gauge speedups and slOwdowns in the economy. It remains three-tenth! of an hour below the 1968 peak reached last September. Joblessness among white workers iJ1 Jurie was three percent while the rate for nonwhites rose .one half fi ooe per- cent to seven percent. Goldstein said the month-to-month in- crease was not particularly significant stalisticaily, but pointed out that at seven percent the joble$.S. rate fQf · m.n- whites was up significantly from a IS. year low of 5.7 perceot reached last February. .Police Seek Tie To Coed Slaying, 3 Other Killings ANN ARBOR, ?i.1jcb. (AP) -Police Chief Walter Krasny says "it's a 50-50 chance'' the shoolltli deaths of thrte University of Michigan coeds since ,..larch 21 were. connected. Accused of murderini thi' t.hln1 girl ever the weekend is Ernest L. Bishop Jr., 28, a convicted rapist freed from ptisotl last December. Police sought lo recover a .22 caliber pistol they said an acquaintance of Bishop told them was thrown into the Huron River. The latest coed victim, 1'-largaret Phillips, 25, and the two other studenls all were shot in the head with .22 caliber bullets. Four other girls have been slain in lhe Ann Arbor-Ypsilanti area sinct August. 1967, all stabbed, bludgeoned, strangled and sex:ually abused . Bishop, recently a garbage collector and r e r r i g e r a I o r repairman, v.·as in prison when two of these deaths occurred. ~1iss Phillips, a sociology student who knew Bishop, was fataUy shot eady Saturday in her apartment. Bishop was arrested the following day. ro.1eanwhile Dr. Thomas M. Mayer, a sociology professar who introduced Bishop and Miss Phillips, described B.ishop as "a warm personality" who iieemed "capable of leading a better life." Mayer met ·him"' In.jail. ' · Contacted at his home in &ulder, Colo., ·Monday night, Mayer allowed •':"ilishop to live al his hQme tn Ann Arbor for three monlhs this year after his release from Southern Michigan Prison. Thant ll.as. Snrgery UNfTED NATIONS. N.Y. (AP) - Secretary-Gene.ral tJ Thant underwent surgery today for a hemOrThokial con- diUon, a U.N. spokesman aa.i!f. Bottomless Bar Owner Sentenced To Jail Tenµ A Santa Ana bar ofner, found guilty last Thursday In contempt 0£ court for failure to comply with a court order ban- ning bottomless dancing performances, -will -spE!nd most of the neit four weekends ln Orange County Jail. Superior Judge Claude Owens first sentenced Robert Brown Jr., owner of the Apartment on South Main Street, to 90 days in jail, fined him $500 and placed him on probation for three years. The 91klay sentence was suspended en condition that Brown spend 10 days on weekends in the jail, pay his fine and not violate any law ror three years. Judge Owens told Brown, ''l feel you should do some jail time to impress you with the fact that this court means business, and the fine is to make you aware that this 10rt of tblng can cost you 111oney." ..,-Brown · assured -the judge that there would be no more bottcmless dancing •performancts in his bar -that hi~ father, Robert. Brown Sr., would be on hand to police the place. • Nixon Readying Anti· narcotic, Crime Message WASHINGTON CAP) -Prtsident Nix- on may soon send Congress a message on narcotics and crime·. This was reported today by House: Republican Leader Ger ald R. Ford of Michigan, following a breakfast meeting With President ·Nixon attended by Republican Congressional leaders and At~ ty. Gen. John N. Mitchell. Ford said the message could be ex- pected possibly within the coming week. Ho said-Mitchell discussed what could ~ done about the conseque!ices of drug traffic in relation to crime increases. Ford said Nixon passed him a note dur- ing the discussicn which pointed out that "58 ptircent of all crimes Jn New York and New Jesrey are last year we.re com- mitted by people somehow connected with drugs and narcotics.'' Among the recommendations, Ford said the attorney general talked aboul import conlrol1, control of distribution of drugs and narcotics and greater nei- ibility on penalties for ~ convicted. Recreation Activities Slnted in Westminster fhc Westminster Parks and Recreaticn rtment bas announced Us achedule o cUv!Ucs for the remainder cf the . rlher information about the following iuv1dlable by calling the department at ~;u. i• .TUESDAY t*'30 a.m. -Women 's Volleyball, Sigler Plrll 30 a.m. -Senior Fun Club, Civ)C ~'' NO p.m. -Boys 11-13 year Ttn Inch e Baseball, all play areas m. -Adult Fast Pltcb Cham-- » p, Stg1er Park WEDNESDAY 10 a.m. -Eight and nine year old All- Ciqr Softball Tourney, Sigler Park t p.m. -RccreaHonal Swlmmln1. Westminster and La Quint.a High School poob « p.m. -Family Swim Night, Weslminstt:r and La Quint.a lligh Scbool llj>ols - \ THURSDAY ~ a,m. -TOPS Ye Early Risers, Civic Center Noon -Senior Fun Club, Sigler Park 1 p.m. -Recreational Swimming, Westminster ond La Quinta Hlgh School pools FRIDAY 1 p.m. -Special Events, all pl&y areas 1 , p.m. -Recreational Swimming, Weotminster and La Quinta High Scbool pools 7:30 p.m. -Junior Tftll Club I>Gce. Civic Cen~ "' SATURDAY 10 a.m.-ll'eglstratlon for third swim session at La Quinta and Weslmlnster ~gh School pools a p.m. -Westminster Teen Club Dance, Civic Center SUNDAY t Nooon -Art E1hlblt, ctvlc Center 2 p.m. -5tb MN"ine Division Band Concert, Ovit: Center - • Gallery ln the Festival of Arts Forwn beeause cf the sawdust spread on the building. -grounds, is spomored by the LquM Festtval grounds are open dally, in-Artists and Gallery Owners Alloclatloa. eluding Sundays, from noon to midnight It la starting its third festival aeuoa. · - Admi.sslon is SO cenl.!i for adults and 10 ~A-Fair 'ti9, in I ts second IURUllft' cenl.5 for children under 12 years. but with a new name, Wlllleature till Schmitz Sex Education Also at the FesUval are free art classes works of 70 artists and craflmlln ~ Measure Faces Delay for children and, on Sunday afternoons, ting dlvenified schools ot art. Tbe lhoW there are "On-The-Green" Programs. has 50 exhibition booths and wW have These feature tbe Laguna Beach Civic daily art and crarta demonstrations, ,,. Ballet Company for the first three Sun-Formerly called "The Sp 11 n t t f' dayw--(Juty 13,· !O, and -21) and the Festival" because Its artist.a splintered .SACRAMENTO [AP) -A Senale-1>=- ed bill to allow parents to preview sex education material and keep their clllldren out of sudu:lasses was &Lalled In the Assembly Education Committee to- day. After several committee members ob- jecte? Monday to sections of lhe already l'leav1ly amended bill, Republican Sen. John G. Schmitz ~f Tustin said he would amend it again and bring it back for con- slderation ne:d week. The measure would: -Require that parents be notified in writing if their children were enrolled in a sex education class in a public elemen- tary or high school. -~fake available to parents, prior to the start of such classes any "material to be used in a class in which human reprociuctive organs and their functions Hijacker Refuses To Return Child To WifeinCuha HAVANA (AP) -The estranged wife of an American hijacker seeking custody of the dallihter her husband brought with him to Cuba nearly six months ago was surprised Monday' night to find him and the child waiting at Havana-airport to meet her. But minutes before his wife arrived, Thomas George Washington told a newsman be would bOt give up the child. After hugging her daughter, 3-year~ld Jennifer, Mrs. Joanne Wa.sfllngtcn, 25, of Philadelphia, &aid she wanted to speak pe.rsona:IJy with Prime Minister Fidel Castro by telegram. Mrs . Washingtan arrived on a Cuban National Airline& flight from Mexico with a 30-day visa-arral'tged through the Czechoslov&k Embassy in ·wa·shil'lgton, The embassy represents Cuban interests in the United States. which has no official relations with the Castro regime. Mrs . Washington said seeing her hus- band was a surprise but she declined to say whether she would leave Cuba without her daughter. A Swiss Embassy representative was present to meet her, but she left' Havana's Jose Marti Airport with Washingtcn, her daughter and a Cuban official £or an undisclOSt'd destina· lion. The Swiss Embassy represents U.S. interests in Cuba. Washington, a 27-year-old N e g r o chemist, appeared nervous but sat pa· tienUy with his daughter on his knee as his wife passed through Cuban custOO'IS. He readily admitted to the newsman that he had hijacked an Eastern Airlines OC8 jet last Dec. 19 on a flight fr001 Philadelphia to Miami. But he called it a "mercy mission" and "really nothing." Junior Temris Players Compete Youngsters from an over Fountain Valley will prove \heir skills with tennis rackets tills Saturday as the city hosts Ila third annual junior tennis t.ournament. First matches begin at 8 a.m. on the courts of the Fountain Valley High School campus. This year's tournament wlU be played Jn four dlvi&ion1, lncludlng bo)'1 14 and und", boya 1$-18. boy1 17·1!, and pb II and under. High School tennis team members will be allowtd to compete only In !he boys' 17·1! y .... a;t"1!0l1'· Registration for the tournament can be made at the Fountain Valley Civic Center between a a.m. and 5 p.m. through noon :Friday. A 1.. of 11.611 wlll be charged for registrillon. ... and proceues are described, Ulustrated or 4iscussed," except for science, he_altb or hygiene_ classes, -Permit parents lo request. in writing that ther children not•attend les: tdu~a tion classes. When objections were voiced oo a pro- vision making It a misdemeanor to know .. lngly and willfully violate the bill, Schmitz agreed to amend it to subject violators to possible suspension or revocation of teaching credentials. He al.sa said he would specify in the bill exactly how parents w'ltlld receive notification. Ass em b 1 y man John Vasconcellos (0.San Jose ), said schoo\J would resort to register~ letters, resulting in an annual cost to the state of '600,000. Vasconcellos called it "a dangerous bill ... which g~ against progress." And Assemblyman John F. Dunlap (0. Napa), added it was 0 cumbersome" and would "unnecessarily tie the hands of teachen." Festival of Arts Chorale with the Ballet ,way from The Sawdust Festival. the af. ccifflpan,Y for the last three Sundays fair will be located again at 346 N. Coat (Aug. 3, 10, and 17) Highway. · · The· Festival of Arts' 34-year~ld Art-A-Fatr Is open daily from 10 a.m. to Pageatit-cf the Masters-wilt recreatf'·wtth midntght:-·Admisslmri1-t5 cents for adultl'- llve mOOel! 20 paintings, five tculptures, and free for children under 12 years. . one photograph, three artifacts, four carved ivories and two murals. The cast Involved In the Pageant total! 290 actors. In addition there tire makeup perSC1nnel and slaie hands, plus Producer Don Wllllamson and Narrator Howard "llap" Graham. Orlfinal music com· po.sed by Director V c Schoen will be presented by a 23-piece orchestra. Tickets for some seats for weeknight performances are still available and late cancellallona open up some last minute spots, Sally Reeve, FesUval spokesman said. The Sawdust Festival was started two yean ago after some more avant-garde artlst-e1hiblton apllt with the Festiyal,of. Arll. 'Ille Sawdust Festival will bold forth at a Laguna Canyon site aCf'061 from and about a block put the festival Nixon Welcomes ' Haile Selassie . IVASHJNGTON (UP I) -Pmid<nt Nixon today welcomed Emperor Haile Selas!le of Ethiopia to the White HOW!i4 as part of. a four-day 81.ale visiL A group of Africa.a students, appareMty M>me of the game youthl wbo ltMme4I !he cbanc<ry " th• Ethiopian Emb¥17 on Seluale'• arrival Monday, coodoote4 a demonstration in Lafayette · Part, acrw the lltT..t from the Whltll -, while the emperor wu belnJ ~ lao aide. TOMORROW ONLY • Wednesday, July 9th All Buffums' stores will be open at 8:00 a.m. Take advantage of the biggest."value1 of the Yt'1fl Pa lo s Verdes open until 6:00 p.m. Lakewood and La Habra open until 9:30 p.m. All other stores open until 5:30 p.m, L..ONO IEACH LAKlWOOD U. .SANTA ANA llAKIKA r \ mS' I' OM ONA MnroUCCHTU . PALOS YrltOIS LA.HAI~· ··- .. I ~ I 1 -----·------·"--· • • · 4 IWlY I'll.CT " . . . . .. , . . --- • . . . . ~ . ·-- . . ··' I --Se-nat~-Linkm~~ ' t~ • "" °'"' Pllll Statn Shed a sad tear for the passing of an era. No more i.s there a pen· ny al'oade at Coney Island -11'1 a nickel arcade now. Operators et the New York amusement area replaced their last penny machine, a mechanical fortune teller, with a similar machine that costs a nickel. • Surtax_, Reform WASHINGTON (UPI) -T"'°ury secmaiYDaiid M~ Kinnedy ~ tin~ failed todt.iy to get Chairman ·Russell B. Long of the Senate Fina,nce Committee lo opeed through the House-passed Income 25 Still Lost In Wake of Ohio Storm 6Urlu blll without •cldin& 'tax nlorm amendment•. Long told-Kennedy the commlltee would consider reform propoaala au~ mitted by any senator before actlni on the bill to continue the surtax for 1 yur. "Out tu mono hearing• are golf1(i to be just u broad and cmnp~miVe as the Hnatora wlnt them to be.'' the Loolsiana Democrat uld. President Ntzorr and h1I f:t5caI aides have urged Congrep to approve the surtax blll with a minimum of delay and take up reform proposals .eparately, con- tending that the tu ext.naion WU vft>J to slow the l.nflaUon spiral Kennedy sald today that the ld- mlnlstration, which prombed tu refonn proposals this summer, aa a means of getting the surtar: through the House without a . string ol. tu re f or Jn amendmtnts, would make good on the pledge. U•I Ttll!thllt CLEVELAND (UPI) -The U.S. Coast Guard a.a.id today nine plea.sure boati with 25 persons aboard were still unac- .counted for in the wake of a J'eurth of July storm which slashed acrosa: Lake Erie. The Coast GUard said earlier all but 10 of the 200 persons originally reported missing had been located. However, a spokesman said today the count had to be reYUea upwifi:rbeeause of lfdi:l:IUon.al lelf'Phone calls from persons aeeklng relatives who were on the lake at the time of the storm. "Linking' these two problems may mean that we fall in both our objecUveo," N annlm .... Freeway Kennedy told the committee at !Ls open· r-., II , ' ing hearing. "Even delay poses serious Army personnel operate a forklift to pick up seven Boulevard on-ramp to the fi-eeway risks. napalm bombs that fell off a truck as it approach· while the 10.gallon containers were was blocked loaded onto "Delay contributes to •-~~con· eel-the -Lon g-Beach free-wa;)l-Monda.y.-The-Artesia the truck.-• naence by our peoplilDUie diti~-----"'-----'-....:..---=------------------------~-~~ tion of government to bring an orderly Tbe killer storm took at least M lives and injured 25<1 others Jo northern Ohio. Touring the area Z.fonday, Gov. James A. Rhodes called it "the worst in Ohio lli.story ln tf!rms of lives lost, in- convenience and tot-1 damage." Coasc: Guard ships and aircraft con~ tinued combing the lake for 'igns of the Work on a new Coot Bay (Ore.J last-unrey,;~~N~ ·A~·tpokesman. .&fall projt<;t opporently has itt UJIS ~d he }l,ad "no idea" if they were IOS!-or. and downa: and also its upside-downa:. 1£ they ~~d reached ~r.e safely and JUst Telephone company crews working -llOt notified authorities. .. on an underground cable sys te m "We accounted for most of the missing blocked one lane of-traffic with this . on Mor!day,"· t_he_spo~esman &!!Id .. "We confusing traffic stopper. sent out appeals over radlo and telev1slon and people started calling in." • · Heavy rains which struck the lak~ crested rivers and flooded many com· munities south of here. About half the storm's victlm.s drowned in th 1 floodwaters. halt to inflation. Delay feed! inflationary eipectaUom and thus makes .inflation even more difficult to control." Before his scheduled appearance, Km- nedy COD.ceded the administratlco may be faced with a 4'credibilily gap" over its detennination to _lake measures toueh enough tG cool the overheated economy and hold down rising pricel. Kennedy tried to convince 24 of the na· · lion's biggest b4nken Monday "when he urged them to reject some big loans in· stead of resorting to additional increases in the prime interert rate, now at a record ·a~ percent. ~ennedy said he neither 1ought nor received a promisi thlt the prime rate · would not be boosted again. But he indicated he made it clear dur· Ing tbe two-hour private meeting that the administration would consider further in· creases ln the prl« of borrowed money to be unwarranted. Prison Horror Alcohol, Drugs I.inked in Death Of Rolling Ston~ Sheppard Tells of 'Hole' Treatment \YASHlNGTON (UPI ) -Dr. Sam Sheppard told a horrifying tale today of EAST GRINSTEAD, England iUPI) -being placed in the "hole" during his 10 Brian J ones, former mflllber ·of the RoIJ.. years in prison. · ing Stones pop group, ·drowned 'fi'hile ''I was chained wilh log chains, hnnd under the influence of aleohol and drugs, chains, chains around the neck and I a coroner said Monday. ~... •""' don't kno'lf where all'else. 1 Was placed Dr. Aniul.:!:ommediUe-:iuled tl'ie•th between·two doors-for six days. The two of lhe 28-year-old guitlr1't accidental'llnd doors were less than 12 inches aparl," said : "1ln my oplnlon, ~..jt "was d'ue. to Sheppard said in testim ony prepared for drowning by lmmersien 00 fresh water a senate subcommiltee. usoclated with sevefe liver dis!unCtion Sheppard, io what was called the trial due to Catty degeneraUon an.d ingesUon of of the decade. was found guilty in 1955 of alcohJI and drugs." . having murdered his pregnant wife, Maury) ~fr. Kobleniz's ·her l lag c whereupon I was placed between the doors for three more days. "When I came out my ankles had swollen so large the shoe strings had split on my shoes. "I spent nine days in the 'hole' simply because I wouldn't Call off (Attorney F. Lee) Bailey and Dr. Steve, my brother. "Had I done that, Mr. Koblentz told me that I would probably make parole. But that if I didn't do this there would be trouble, trouble, trouble." Koblentz, contacted at Colwnbm, de- nied Sheppard's allegations. \Vhen Aldershot, England resi~ dents of the Ash Hill Government Housing Estate turn on their kit- chen taps out comes something that looks like beer. Trouble is, they say, it not only doesn't taste like beer it taste vile. Water works officials say rust in the pipes ma1 be causing the water to come out reddish-brown. But they can't ex· plain the head of froth it produces. Jones was rowKI at She bottom oJ a Marilyn, 31 , in their Bay .Village, Ohio, ,... -swinuning pool at his.home after a mid-home. In 1964 he was freed by a federal night fiwim last Thursday.. judge, and in a retrial he was found in· "That's an outright and absolute lie,"· Kobleotz said. • -~ Stennis Says ABM Loss Would Hurt V.S. Stand "l am sali!fied that he drowned while nocent. under the lnf1uence of alcohol and "There was no food," Sheppard said in drugs," Sommerville µId. his teslimony. Janet Law90n, a nurse and friend ol ''There was no light and lltUe air and I Jones, told the coroner's inquest that the fell I"would suffocate. Cosa Nosl.ra Leaders Grilled by Senators £1,lilarist was in no condiUon to nim that "l couldn't sleep, I woold just pas:s oot. TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - A baker's night and lhat :she had tried to dissuade •·1 was allowed to wear my shorts, dozell of reputed Mafia leaders, headed him. She said Jones disregarded her shoes and socks. by Slmone "Sa.m the PI umber ' • wamlng. • "l had no toilet privlleges and just .DeCavalcante, trooped before a state in- Carol Zacc1rdelll of D.etroi.l said, "I 'm the happiest girl ln the wotld'' afte~ hustling 440 yard.> with Jour glasses of champagne. Carol beat all llie other waitresses in the 15th annual Waite.rs and Waitresses Race at Detroit, but it \Vas waiter Roohy Naubash who claimed most of the glory with a world record 'time of three minutes, 28 seconds for the event. Naubash beat the old record by 12 seconds. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. "'J'olm C. Stennis {_D-Mass. ), aald today elil\er a Compromise or rejection of the sire.guard antiballistic missile (ABM) system In the Senate would weaken President Nixon's position in arms negotiations with Russia. "llll bad been drinking," Miss Law.sof\ stood in my own eJ,Crement. 1· vestigat~ a,_gency today. 1enat.or1 know about the ABM, the more said. "He was a bit unsteady On biJ .Eeet. "After &ix days they removed me f~ MoSf.,.of the 13 'fitnesses subpoenaed hy , senaton _will _qpppse cleployment.r• I 1Uempted conversaUon, but It waa little the doors and asked me wlfatTUioughf:"""{""-lhe -Stile-Investigations Com,mlsslon There has been an attempt tn the garbled. Jones said lt Wal because be had made a rather unfortunate comment were tight-lipped m they reported for a preliminary skirmishing over the ABM, ha.d his sleej>ers." about (Ohio Corrections Commissioner -closed hearing. Gore said, "To spread an aura of secrecy ____ ....;. _____________________________________ _ ~ -.. • Stennls, chalm1an of the Senate Armed Services Committee, made the statement to reporters as the Senate began con- sideration of a $20 billion military pro- curefn.ent authorization bill containlng · $759.1 million for the ABM . -win by secrecy what cannot be won In puJ>lic debate. The Pentagon thrives on se~.·· The laJest UPI poll on the Safeguard, completed last week, indicated 48 !eflators favoring deployment, 48 oppo&ed and four undecided, The Brit.isl~ Army ha.5 decided Stennis predicted the Senate would ·~ prove deploymenL of the ABM as -re- quested by Nixon. Stennis served notice that it would be ne<:i!SSary to conduct much of the debate on the ABM in secret Senak 'essions because of the sensitivity or the military is:sues involved. The debate was eipected to chan1e some votes -possibly both ways. to use pop music to lure new t recruits into the service. Mobile l recruitment learns will tour the ; country broadcasting a tape of pop t 11 n e .~ interspersed wit/~ martial music. "This debate will greatly affect and In a large measure delermine our national security for years to come," Stennis said. Radio Station Bombed In Racial Disturbance ,_ .... .-. I -..1-.. _ _......... ANDERSON, Ind. (UPI) - A firebomb was hurled into a radio station Monday night, causing an estimated $20,cm damage, in the Jatest in a series of in· cidents with racial overtones. • Jn Bar ~lills, ~J aine the Spring· vale Fire Co. entry at a Fireman's Exhibition apparently thoug,ht the crowd oi spectators needed a cool· ing off. \Vithout warning, they opened the hydrants and turned their ho ses on the spectators drenching hundreds. Senate Democralic leader M l k e ~tansfield (Mont.), called it the most im· port.ant debate of the sess.ion. He urged full attendance, predicting: the Issue will not be re.solved until the last of th~ month at the earliest. Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn.), the first ABt-.1 opponent to take the floor late Mon· day, decried the secrecy eipect.ed to cloak much of the argument. "Nothing will be wlthlleld," he said. "The more The firebombing of radio station WHUT was the only incident reported Mond~y night, shortly after police agreed In a meeting with Negro leaders to Stnd only regular patrols into the area unless more trouble broke out. East No Vacation Place Midwest, Atlantic Coast Wet and Cold Callfanda Seu1'1191'11 (111!-la Wll motfly lllr tod.lv wlllt same low Cloudt 111 eo11!1I • .., ... II w11 1lltl!1lv Wllrmr< lni.nd. LOI All9e'le. Ind vk!nllv hid " .... • .,...u., 11lr •I'll 1!!01\Uv ,..,..,..., -t!M't' wllll tl!f high nt1• IO. TM predlct.-1 low IOl'lltt!! Wll IJ. Tiii Air Pollu!lOl'I conuol Oh!rlc! uld lhere w11 ll11nl 1moo In 11\t LOI A~I ll11in !odtv. 61KPW!1 W.•1 tloudv 111 I~ mornl"9 w11n ,,,.,., 1un1hlne In no. ••h'•.._.. Tiit hlvtl Wll nHr 11 1!>11 Ills Wlllf te<T!Pf:f'elv<I Wll II U . MC!llf"l1l1>1 _,, funn.,. Th~ hltlll 11 tHor! _.,rl1 ~·• I~ thr 70o. SOUTKEIUI CALIFORN IA -N•OM encl mornlnt '°"' tloudl l" u>11111 lrNI fllt>t""l'll mol!IV lt lr !nrllUllh Wednnd1v, W1rme• dl'fl lnl1"" a.et• II-. LOS ANGELES AltEA-#llthl tnd ~ rnornlM i-doucl1 o!Mrwl•• .. Ir 11111 1llwllllv werlT!ff 1T!l'OUlh w.lnttdl'I'. Lewi T .. 1c1.1, nlthl •1. Hltfl T"""'" .. COllUTAL VALLEYS -Hltlll Ind eer'h' """"1"' -Cllucll be<.-lr!1' fllr lft .. ,. rMnl.,_ Ind .,,.,,_,, flwiolMll ~. L-T--"r fll'lllfll SJ Ill U. Sli.tlttv ..,,,,,_ dlVL HlfM T!Mldn 11 to lol. INTlltMl!OIATI VALLEYS -LIW dDudll end leul fOOI etrl., T._.:!1v -""-~ """"" lelr Ill~ ,,..~_.1.,. ~ T.......,. 111M11 12 111 & tllRh!I., .. rmlr lll'fl, Hlff11 T"""*1 • to 17, MOUHTAIH Afl:EAl-f'OI tlont low-ff' a.ii.I tlailn T~ 1Mn111119 ""' """""-IMl!tr ''"' fll<Wlfl w.clMIOlr """' IOITlt tf,.,_ cleudl ~ Ill"*' r1>1111t. WlrrNt' ..-,.. 1Nrl 1UOfl: ANO Olfl!ltl fl:IOIONS --M#lt, fl tr fl!nWll w~., Mot eile!'Nlllll ,,...,., ,.., ... mount1t111. ~ ..,. .,..,. 11 ,. " -"· l.-TllttdtY Iii.I'll M 11 63 11P"1' nl..,, ilM .. ,. n !OW..-VfJlty._ Wenntt ....... Hl,rtt Tllftdl., tt le '1 ....., nlltn end fl .. IP 111 -.. -' Caa•tal Cloudv ,,,.,,,lnl, ,.,.,., WllM'llfltl In 1lli!r-. Wlndt. _..llrlt" I lo I• knoll-Hllll ~y r111r 71. YH"tl'G.,..I '"'-1'.iut'I ,.....,... '""" • ,,..., of .. to 74.. lflllnd ""-"'" turt •-Wll Jt lo 1'. Welw lwm- .. r1tun -• " Mt'Ml- SMn, Moo.n. Tldu TUISDAY Flrtl llltll .. •!IO'·'"· i.1 WIOHllOAY l"ln l """ . 1 :• '·'"· o.s Fin.I hr.II 1:0. •.rn. l.J ieCOMll""" """"" .•• 11:00-1.1 5ec'.llnd hfth , • .,, ....... t :41 '·'"· S.1 ""' •1-114" •·"'· Sil• i:ot •·"'· M-..... HU •·"'· Slit 1114 1.rn. 1"¥1 Lttf 0. l"lrll 0. N- Julr n Avot. I Jutr 12 Jul., *' V.S. Summar11 Mlldt fl lllt n11'1on fftlrt'H IUllllV -tlolr ,.., but II Ml coi4.. """' ui.rty 11'1 "" Norft!NH • ...,. " •• no lllv en 1119 ATl1n1k ...-n1 Ind •1rf1 .. "-"M'"'"'· '"w E,,.1..,. commurllttn -""' ·-,_., 1"!11-cNttlrlnt ~ ~ "''""'"" tor 11111 11111 1lfholllll 1111 ca40ftt,, IPVI if\ Ifie COO>liw.u. 1t1fn 1T!!1 '"""'1"9 Wll :IS 11 1•11'111111\,. wye. n -.1 1 e11111 » 11 St. Jot1111bufV, Vf1'..--h • 11 ~. Hf"' H1~ .,,,,,, Ind •11rll......,, V-11 1fld In N.-w Yorti II WU •l •I Alblnr .... .. l'f ,.,,1( ..... l1IMll fll cllUdl-• wllll .,_.,.. lllmJMnell 1111 tl!'llrl l AU1nlK ,, .... end -tw••• to !flt _, Mh1t11lopl V11i.v. A hHVV tl'llln*r11wf11 d"-6 ht!! end '-llllrd1 II '" ffltll II •II" el 1'111~ lfl IOlrfll Dllltotl. Wllld tvl1t up lo 61 111ltt. .., i-vr .,.,, C!tdi.td durl... I ttw....... JliOfll\ 11 W•~ 1111* 04il011, ' ll•~tn.lleld ll!1rn1rtk 10111 . ..... Chia• Cl..c:lnl'lltt Clewl1nd -· 0..1 Mo!nn -· Eurrtr.1 FOl"t . Worth ·--~ Honolulu -~ ... Klllfll C1tr LtJ V"°'1 ,._... Mlfl'lf MllWllWH MIMUlo!~ New Orlee"5 ....... =l>ll"~ttt ...... ..... ·~ l'ttlieOllPlllt ,.._,. Pllhbllrlll Potll1nd ll:1Dkl (tty llil'd l luff ·-SK!'t,,_lo St. Loui. !111111• Sell LekJ CllV S•n Ortto s.~ F••nclou 5..,,, lerbt•• "'"" ' .!>oOlil l>e ,_. ""ft""'IOlt " u .. M "' n n " " '' .w 1.u n " " ~ .. " .. " " M " " " .. " .. .. M •• n " " " • " " • • " " •• .. n .. .. " .. " ... .. .. " n " n " " .. " n " n " " ... " .. .. n A .. .. ,. .. .. " .. " " " .. " " .. " .. .. " " A " " .. " .. " a .. ... .N .n ·" .N ... ... ... •• ... "' •• ' We guanyttee to hold your interest for up to 6 years. Take a look at the figures below. They show how $500 can grow for you through our new MoneyMaker 5% Savings Plan. By daily compounding, 5 % simple interest becomes 5.1267 % even if your money is held for just one year. No matter what happens to other interest rates, your Mo?eyMaker savings are guaranteed to earn a full 5% for up to six years. All it takes to be a Money Maker is an initial deposit of at least $500 and the willingness to leave it with us for 90 days. After that, you can withdraw your funds at the end of any calendar quarter, or up on 90 days' written notice. And you can add to yo4r -savings at any time in increments of $50 or more. Get with the MoneyMakers who save at Southern California First National Bank. Just stop in at ...,._I ......... one of our 50 convenient "' offices. We have a 5 % savings plan that's ' guaranteed to hold your interest. /: ,_ ............. -.. =; I , / • -J'9MA. ' ' !. '"' ' -~r, I l.J~ !. ~~~ • ~sao .w~ t'&i • .,, • Pf~ ~,,~ o;-f9 '{16). ·on . '·'~ • S% CODIP,.Ollnded daily. Adds up to a real MoneyMaker. - -~-----~~·-~-~ ---------~~·----------,----------~---- • .--~ -. To1 llla1or A. L. PWd"1 P.O.-l200 C..ta M-California ?2626 • l believe Police Chief Neth and ld111len. should l>e 1>1cked up by tho lite111 ud b .. I crlm&fightlng weapon1. I retpectfully urge you and Coit• Maa'• City Coundl to give t.he moit careful ~1t1ider ali0J1 lo hclieopler p1t.rol. ' • fUt!UJ, J<IY 8, 1969 ·' ·Name·---------------~--- • These cities laced the same crisis Co1la Me1a doeo today: a ateadily inCreulng rate of crime and violence. Traditional law enforcement me th• ode weren't enough. They had to 1tack the odds again1t the lawbreaker. To make crime le1111 rewarding. Th .. e 18 citieo all turned to a new ·concept of crime controL The one Police Chief Neth now recommend.for Costa Mesa 1 helicopter patroL Whirlybird officere cover a oquare mile a miit11te. They have ·oeven t1m .. the ob1ervation range of ground police. They hover over roadle111 areu, play• grounde, 1cboolyard1, the beaches, harbon, .and induolrlll llile1 • •· • Obviously, they see mueh that other police can't ob1erve. And then· work clooely with ground uuito In follow·up inve1tigation1. Thie new kind of aeutry task {orce eometimet nah1 the crook red.handed. Or makes hl11 escape attempt futile. Often, too, the quick little 'c_opter 11erve1 a1 a positive crime deterrenL Seeing ii can make the would-be law• breaker ehange his mind in a hurry. · Suece11 1torie1 crowd the file• of eities uaillg helicopter pa!rOL It doeon'I ju11 oound good. It red11ce.o crime.. No wonder Chief Neth, after careful study, Wa!lla helleopter patrol for Costa Meea. It will make the work of other Hughes Helicopters I I ·. • . police.so farther. It will alrelch your tax dollan farther. In fact, mueh of the coot wW be met ·with aavings. A two-helicopter 1y1tem has the 1ame elfectiven ... u 15 patrol can-but co1to only u much u two. Helicopter patrol can help solve the crime crisis here ••• juet &1 it ha1ln Kan1a1 City, Missouri, and 17 other citle1. Will yOa il)veol a 6¢ stamp to make It po11ible? Mail the coupon today. Let Mayor Pinkley and the City Council know you're behind Cb,lef Neth and his helicopter patrol reeommendaUon. Hugheo Tool Company, Cubei: City, Call!omia 902so. .• I I DA!~ Y ;iLOT $ • AOVIATlllM!NT ' ---- - .. • G 0 J r. ai,111 Fisc:ll (·it:ios nc::nlv brour,ht st::itc opcr::it·ons lo a •1 t , , • 1 '._ 'l-' \ .,::. ,-.\·rrt:;d c.11 y 'vh~n A .. tii:· t ~~·r.i> :; f. v ,,·:c·J:L.! Lheir ~jJ\..1ll~~.l1c'd ['T\ l.u•l"l't th ~ · 1i ~ oiJ:lc:t it bcc..:111e tt·chn1··;1:!~ 1!1<·· t: ir fi1u i..i1h• 1>1 p. y JIS l11il·· or its t•n1pluy('. .._.tll!' l<"'ndinr1 up In 1~11;.deadJcrk nddcd no Ju tro "-----~__:b;J;•t: :"1ht•tr-:.lil.;.:1•·I j 'l!Jdjd.u .):...as...)±1 unn11no;1pc,"l~ cl_:__ l. 1 1,. [J1 •rii:-r t · 11 t11l~r ,Je;ss lTl\r11b <b·ln · • ... • (1 I ·- • ··"\• ·~I +i1 •• i1·rl !t · 1!.o iln;·tbing to polish the rr'J I f, f' r1',\Ttn'1r J:t...;iv.:;n -- r I' ' ~ 1;' •"11 1' 1f''f !It~ \•·i(!f'S'I fi j 'T I. l. \'.n" 'rr:> ir·1"-"'1 ' .. ,..•1'1" 1-\.,,,!., r.(J·-·uri·1.~ • , !•·cl•- • \ '-;r· ~:ol c1ilfir,., at ti1c _ \,,;_.. I I d l : ~ 1 •\'t•rru;r C<"L\ 1 , :,• 'l in t' 1 :- 1 • :t1r. T ;;~ -, r., ,._,1·~L·dly 1 rr t-.c: 1r" r"· 1~~""4.'b~it:" ··~ ifl t'..P ~c~ " { ., " ro ·-er-"'"~ r ~,. t th~ c; ,. 1 l.'""":~r~• 1·,1· ltiµ;"t'I • ]1 ii I"' b"~·:1 r-1''" ! I ! r1• • j '1 I ·11 "'11.\ I 'n r r I JC ' ' . ' ' ( ,) ( ' ' ~ ........ ; .. r ". ~ ..... .. ! I :•.: '. . ·- u J :· 1 , ·1 y •~ , .-1 {. :c' IL t , 11',. ti ·.·1. ~~:11 1-~ .. 1 ;, ,_ I •" ; l d l I' -' " ]! 1!1 ! 'd l · ,-·r;r.--- 1, 1,t(d'l'l(L !1 _1, l l. J l f \, ,.11 t!11· \ 'I' ' •' 1• u!f tL·i 'O~Ufi ;.:;it.'; •·-· •• ii ~ 1 t '1!' Or:i.n-:re roast" coll!'f•-· t::'.'!n1pt! . 1 ' • 1 t ·1:dcnt1fied l'. omru1 lnotori. t . . ' 7 ·ut it \! ti;> 1 ac- ~yn- .1lf- l \ .I\' ~ ~n I, I ~dJ '. hi' 1;.-.~ire 1·1 >e~011 \Vho kil'J te. lw;c, or sell- ~1:1 C:l' ( i.; ~; ..... ~t-:~r. l',, \1 cak. r:?ther .u.... t'l fl"fl t ]1i'> . arUr.1 5 -1'"":''.:JUge ·:!:'n ~·~1 h.~ 11·. 'true> IC,.,I~. c O.,wv1 ! ;1nrl J:~"k ·h.'lll anU .J mos 1; rl ~ r · ·· r 1. t'.I f'r{1 I il I' j r I.le~ J..L ..; tu.I r ~Jt:~1r ' 1 \ .J \, • .i''t,·•t -,·c·.nr L' ! \\;!'.'/ ,\ I 10:\ , fl' (:•p- 1~• Ir ' IS ;,,J • . " r ., _1/fi lni, Gi el." .. , ., ~·, ~ • ''I J Tf:i 1 ;, l..!~ili_ -!'·: d•, ~~ it \'t~rl', 1,y lhl'~I llll· varying nicdus operandi, or t'\l•n by dr~ ~ping t;ieir l\':lllets and ercdit-ca1 t's. ' d. artt?r the ,·rime. I ·rose same tu 1: p 1\'l' crimin als eann't rerrain lr•·1n b. ,,,\ng their loot in niglit club~. bu~ 111.; 11 w c::irs, p$tronizing ·ga1n1Jllng '>j>ns, ;11~d ~ r.:nv c ·ng r>\-er~lh1n~ p ·:siblr In e 11re lhat 11t•~ p~licr have an easy l11r:r• Li :i·+.inl! \,1 '1 q 1 n. A, \Vil'·on ~1i'.'.l'111·r onl·e saffl. '·-A 1·:~·n1nal 1!' scmC'bo:ly-so i:.~l:nid t 'J\ l ·, L.1 ,. <lctct"livc t:1n catch !':0. " IT JS NOT r.tE;ur ~h1p1dily. of I..' ir <' -ii LS an en1oi1011 .. J b!indnc . Jn • ''rives nnd rn ·ti1 :1tions, a l I '> /, 11: ighl i11to 0·:1•s j'Ctluir.t> It '1 I:' t r r1i:c·);i tl1c1n cvntinuc to act 1 t' c 1fiil' fut;Ut . Fti~ ti.e 1·-i• •i·: s 11 t'.1e .add~t ;;r.d tb1· g.1r.• ·r :i ,. t I 1•:5 oy,·n . ')',Clit'_.. <l>l'! I .I ~ (t I · · "\r,fit.:-l'' uni ! tic is r :l'fi~·· 1 ~1~ ltl" ; t • 111u~1 , rJ in \up< r I the f-'~" 1' ·r \'.i~I n.11 ·'.fl ur I hr· i I .r· \ • I'• I I ' I' ,, ,, ! ' ., I I ' • , , -) J'•·• r1 • ·~ 1! I' ' ·Irr 1 l'\ .>!l.<•l'l"J!•':ll• ·• ; 1 ;;· J 1. J~ 1•r t• ·;1 I I I ' ' 'r· /( I fo I ! S I ·~/I•«/ 1~ -r, ;··rd 'II I • {; .-,·~~. b •' I 11•, !1 / UI' !·, I l•L 11 ~~·.1t J II . ; , 'f i <. -.. I li!l ' ' • I I 1 : l • I I,·'\ , 1 I I ' .. r. l le•\ .. 11d ij· 'J',(t'!> .. r,· 1,i I l l •f•1t.:1 '1 ! I· - C clusion_ ' passing by. Ad111ls in beach areas have bee n shaking their: he.ads for u long Li1nc o'ver the risks taken by , girls ~tand.ing Curbside \vith thei r thumbs· in the air. The ch.le.ks ' &'lf>parently haVe · no idea \Vhat" troUbl,s' they're inritlng. • WhHe ~he yotmg girbi may ·be hitch-h1king-iccord-~ in•: to tl.l'e rules, it 1vould seem reasonabte pfolectiQ!l: , fur UH m if po li ce 1nade it ll practice to take the names -• :·n'.J addresses of ~'oung hitch-hiking girls, then query 1'1,..ir parent<; to see if they have any idea of the risks U1!:ir daughters are taking. l~ou11st Commercial Health Co1ninercial enterprise in Orange County continues I 1 IJ~ in robu~t heal th. • T.:ix ... ble s:Ucs in the county in the first quarter of l~~·· f:l·'. i.l ne\v record a l $580,512,000, uv 15 percent from IJ. ! 11<!£J.l'. 'fhis compares to $34.2,972,000 in 1964. l'ol' Hll or 196&. four Orange Coast cilies landed in I' ' l'C0tu11v·s top JO in total retail sales. Costa 111esa 1 !ll::i 1,,1Jy Sonta J\na and Anaheinl \Vith $169,887,000. :, '"rinrt L~<ich \ras seventh \Vi th $) 11 ,1#,000, J-lunting· 1 "1 f'c:ich \';:1s l'ighth \\'ith $102,892,000 and Westminster \ .,;) tP:ith \l'ilh 854.971 ,000. 0~'.1rr r il1l'~ in the lop IO included Garden Grove, 1'"'"'1 PJrk. J."uJlcrton and Orange. . · l'."·~,ifl:l:Jl ~IJoppin•~ CO!nnJeXCS \Vithin Six Of the ci ties -i•L '11r:111~ Co sta ?11csa, lfuntington Beach and New· ~rt--t~r!:rcrr-..:.... ~nzas ffiflfiOse cities. One pc1·c"nt of the state sales taX is returned to the treas· urir~ of t!u~ ciUcs of ori gin. , l)rC.flC'rty t;;x payers_.._in these cities should rejoice ; t IJe burden-sharing this "outside" tax money repre-- :;rnt~. • I • ,• •- S(' 51;;. Co,lleg es . S~feg1iard -Slio~down Co11ii1ig ----;__ [f t:e Fac ilities T tr• • l 1 ;-:,(!ITl!f:IilBRt Y Cy JAn.fES E. \VllETl\10RE Ser a tor 35th Dii:.lrict C.'licges are unt'er increasing pressure !11e~e r!:iy~ 10 admit n1ore students. \Vith hiRh rt·l·"•ils turn111g out better' qualified liitfrf'I'> in t'ach :-.ueceed ing year, the 1Jood ol cnlll'"e applications rises. The clri~:;1fied help wanted ads in ne1\'srapcrs indicate that n1ore college graduates c-ould be absorbed in business and industry 1iro\ ided thr eolleges could r T"(1rJucc 1he1n. 'i he colleges den1and more buildings. more facully fi nd. la st but not least, more nloncy. At any suggest.ion that the budget tnr ll' ';lie col!<·r~cs iind universilies i>e r':!:IUi:r·I b€!01v lh" req uested figures . the ! ~~t c ·•t1ar::ition 1.; "\Ve must then reduc' l ·.c llU11<hcr o( ~!udents \lie tan iiccept.'' T \~~l'A \'EllS 1'HL~I\ !here must ix' a ~· '"iion. They fee l they ha\'C bcco "rr,u~ ':y P1·r~tions ar1'' How efficie ntly are I ' I r '; llc1ng us~? ·0o buildings 1·1 .n1s i:.ctand l'acant during 1 r 11.!cn 111c1·ks dw·1ng the year? r •ICCup.:inty ra te during the t' l [ is in :1's~ion? Assun1i ng ' ,,f ·collt;~c ~1ge should be .1 1 L:" courses at <in~· hour fron1 8 1 l 1 p 111. the nu1nbcr of vac:int 1· :11~ :11•d uf!ic~s during ·this period · I 1 •· ( .n1•.»l 1 1.1 unl' colle.<;l' \Vht·rc a can-.. 11;,1 dillt!S shO\\Cd 35 pcrL'Cnt OC• I .. :! 011 an c1·t•n ~hol'l cr th.1 v. '1 11 111is colll'gc 1hcy 11 cre usi rig 1'• N !·1li1i1il's only onc·th1rd of t!1c ti111c. i' v I( 1 !h1· 1:t<'d of more buildings if ' 11 IH ;:c~t>pt n1ore students. No be su~·ccssful!y oµcr;itcd 111 ,, f1'1''' ... '.""l T 'l'l~E c[ficicnl use nf ' ' \ I\ ,,rt"CI unive rsity profes!'ior .i.:·r I t.:liit!r casually in a , ·r :ir:1cl!' that for son\e 3cars ,. 11· !l 1rcn:cnl he taught a ~inglc 'l l ;s 1~ 1 o: an isolated inl'1dcnL .• ut n1c <.:i:o. I attended a high1•r .. : .. 1 .on t1r ,1~ 1 t1l''<' in \\'hich llli o coHe.c:c ;.:1· ,n " v (re gi•·eu citations as U1c .'"· brrs 1>1 \Ill' Yea r. Or.c taughl :i 1 , .111:1l " s1•1:11nar 11nd the other a eourse 1.1::1 nut 111rr<.' hours a week. ·n1i!! •• <·u.1y i~ 1hi• ult im:'lte towerd 'vhich 1:1.' lt.•W•:r profe~~rs sf ril e -lo teach 1 l\'t'r ll<lU! s <!H(l I c1vcr students! Heavy lnves~ment ~ --· -----f ' -• • Ill ABM WASlllNGTON ---Wllat:wlth ·one thing and anolher, lhe Pentagon has alreil.dy spent "sLightly und~r , $5 billion"· on d<!veloping a defense agains{ missiles. - That is the staggering p'Mee tag which ls being supplied privatel y to interested congressional committees.<> lt represents research and development e.x:pendttures. over the years, by the,Anpy, Navy, Air Force and the Defense Department's Advanced Research Projects Agency. This heavy developmental investment which has led 10 ttie Safeguard ABM system is, in itself, orte of the reasons why military experts want lo begin a thin deployment. They want to start getting a bit of a bang for the many, many bucks ~pended on. research. • The heavy development costs are also one ' of the reasons 1.hat Defense Seety. Melvin Jt Cfilrd tsoppO!lhgall ·tallr of compromise as the first of several Safeguard sholli'downs approaches in the Sena1e. l l is important. however, to distinguish between the proposed com- promises . ONE CO~PR0~11SE plan, the one most publicized, would provide for deployment of the Sareguard's com- puter!, its irilssile site radars (MSR) and perimeter acquisition radars (PAR) on the proposed sHes in Montana and North_ Dakota. Tl would bar deployment, now, of the actual deh!nse missiles, Sprint and ~part.an. · Approval ofJ.hat plan, pushed by S~ns. Edward \V. Brooke, R-Mass., and Thomas J . Mcintyre, D·N .H., would be a bloodless defeat for Laird. Work need not go forward on missile deployment yet. according to the current Safeguard ,. .,,, .... •• Alleu::Gol~smith . .., ti metable. ' • ' -- Another proposed compromise would provide a full "pilot" Safeguard deploy- ment -with missile tests -but on one of the islands in the Pacific missile range. That would further swell the development totals withoul d o i n g anything to augment the natioo's de· fenses. IT \VOULO, IN SHORT, pour many millions of dollars into providing a lhin antimissile defense for an uritargaed . piece of coral in the Pacific . In soon to be published testimony, Laird has said it would be •·a mistake to build one or these PAR radars at any site where it would 11ol serve a useful purpose." Safeguard supporters disclosed last week, without comment, that Dr. Jerome B. Wiesner, a leading scien tist-opponent of the presently proposed ABM deploy- ment, had favored an anti-missile system in ·the late 1950s when the missile race was just beginning. \Viesner, professor and provost at the · Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was one of the experts recently com- missioned by Sen. Edward f\t Kennedy, D·1'1ass .. to prepare a book-length attack on President Nixon 's Safeguard proposal. WIESNER'S FOIL'1ER vie1v \l'tlS disclosed with the publication of a pro- Safeguard slate1nenl by 1iohcrt C. Sprague, rounder and chairnu111 ol the Sprague Electric Company. Sprague su c- ceeded H. Rowan Gaither as director of the so-ealled GaiU1er Comm ittee \vhich studied defense posture in 1957. The Gaither Committee, after an e:<:· ha ustive study of deterrent forces which invo1ved n1ore than 100 full and part-lune participants, made a top·secrct report tll J>resident Eisenhower and the Nationa l SecuritJ Council. Sprague stressed that the Gaither f1!port l\'as the unanimous product of an ti-man steering con1miuee. "It is particularly interesti ng at this time that one or U1e highest priority recommendations was for an AB~i system lo protei;t our SAC (Strategic Air , !Corrim;iJld) ~ ba9es at::ainsl a possible future Russian ml~ile attack -in other words, a 'Safeguard' missile derense system!" said Spr<igue. SPRAGUE1S STATEMt:NT, asserting that the Gaither Committee's position ap- pears to be "even more valid" tod:~y. diU NOT stress Wiesner's participation. The MIT professor was listed in-an appendix, h'owever, as a member of the unanimous steering com mittee.· Oddly, Wiesner's reversal_ re verses th at of Or. Edlli•ard Teller. the physicist who is often described as the father of the JI- bomb. In his own pro-Safeguar d statements. Teller ha s staled that he op- posed an AB~1 system until 1t~ proieclcd cost s czme dolli'll to a point 1\here they y,·ould not he 1vholty out or hnc with the cost of au"gmenting offeases. 1;y Robert S. All~ and John A. Goldsmith The Right to Eavesdrop More accurate than any dialogue writ· ten by John O'Hara is the record of ac- tual s1>eech caught by eavesdropping devices of the Federal Bureau of Investigation . A sample line: "I donl lhink Joe Bananas will ever turn up again. !l's been a year since he went." "\Vent'' in this sense tneans disap- peared fore\·cr from public vie"'· and it :i pplies to a prominent member of the ~fafia. Collectors of idiomatic Americana "·ill be endlessly indebted to the FBI ror U1eir t.lafia and other wiretaps. The government is no1v asserting that it has the right to eavesdrop on bl2ck 111ilitnnl groups and other radical clements "'itllout going through the pro- ctdures established by the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act -the mosLcxteasivc anticrime legislation in the nation's history -adopted. Editorial Rese~reh one year. Among lhese oHenses arc: violations of the Atomic Energy Act: es- pionage; sabotage; !reason ; rioting: unlawful payments or loans to labor organizations; murder; kidnaping: rob- bery: extortion: bribing public officials or witnesses; sports bribes: wa gering of- fenses; influencing or injuring an officer, juror. or witness; obstructing criminal investigations. be searched, and U\e persons or things lo he seized." ONE OF PRESIDENT Nix!'.ln's fi 1•sl n1<ijor changes of national policy upon taking office Jan. 20 was lo order federal agenlS ' use of electronic surveillance a~ainst crime under the aulhority or the 1963 law . This reversed President Johnson's announced policy [ronl 1965 lo 1969 restricting eavesdropping to cases involving the national security. J" \ 1' , 11,r j' I l fill l\'. TltE .l l''IOn rollt>ges on the other It 1!1•1. I It 1L:1u1;! load is norn1ally a [ull , , li·lUr; I'll' 11ct~. "Lh1;;, to~1,elhrr \Y ith 1 1·1··', .its prL•[laral1011~. st udc11t , '''r l1r1 '. nn<I faculty comm i It e e THAT ~fEASURE authorized the At- torney General to apply to any federa l judge for a warrant approving wire or oral intercepts relalin• to a wide range of specified federal orfenses punishable by death or imprisonment for more than Also: Presidential assassination. kid- naping, or assault; intcr rerence "'ilh comnierce by threats or violence: racketeering offenses; unlawfully in- fluencin g an e1nployee benefit [)Ian : theft .from interstate shipmen!: embezzlement fron1 pen~ion and 1velfare f11nds: in- terstate transportation of stolen prop- erty; coun terfeiting; ba~kruptcy fra ud: narcotics violations o r extortionate credit. Prcsidenl Nixon ·declorcd al his June 19 nC\\'S conference lhat his administration's attitude toward electronic surveillance 1\•as ''that it should be used very spar- ingly ... having in mind the righL~ or those who might be involved -but very ctfee!ively to·prolccl the internal and ex- ternal security of the United States.'' Three days later 13 professors from ma- jor law schools jnined in a letter lo Alty. Gen. Mitchell "firmly condemning'' the Justice Department's new buggin~ po!lt·y <is one that would "gravely lhrcatc11 some of oUr most fund ament.:il llbcrtle~ as well as the rule of law itself.·• . ' . ' ·• r ' I • r • f • ' I ' J l I L, ! I !1 l .. _,.. 1 , ' ~ . . . •• : r I ' .. •.1 :. I '1 f I of ,I I' I I I r 1. .1. ' i> ll ,. I' ,\ . ' ':. h' .',Lit \~I t ,.,·,, J'r ~•'~I y ror h 1·1rn~ l' i,l·io l fl, .• t 1 {" I 1.1 u,it. t _) ·-;>i ! " > ,. , • ! r. I t I ~ .1 '"11'" ·1 I" " "'' ti I .l '~"''tl1 r II 1 I 1 ,, 1!1 ! l,.;r• I 1tie l'r• "'l ::~'"i' ~.1:t: , u:i ;in~ 1•7\nt C'ilil \ ------------- 11.r:1:uts secnis a reasonable \\'Ork t ; uf cd11catin~ Cl"llle:;c sludcn1 ~ 11 rJ;,ir1r c,1l\c;.(e is often [{'SS than I II · r<.'l 11f 1nndueti11g \he s<une · ::1 ;1 1u111 rrs11y. \\'h:itevcr the 1.1 ,1 '"tin 11 1111 lh1• flll:er hnlf of the 1 l:U rr:.-ci\c f'fl11lrl 11r!l be the ! ' l 11i1"rl lhc brll tightening 1s ·~·l. 1 • •l !>lllT \! t' laxna~ t•rs ;1rr "'ilhng 1o J th_• lT l 1 f l't.:IJ.:"31111!1 cf <J~ n1any ' !•:.'' ,. .i:s t:u1 qu.:ilify. Prrhaps lhr · r•f II~· 11rr1rr;.rn ~hould Le funded II m oU!Or ~aurc;cs, or ttJrta1!cd. ~· .r ,,, r· .1. 111 •'..:t, c:•ula Vtsl'a, "" r er; 1'i < 1 ,~, C ic>1 -"One ~olutu1n .J~ 1·1 '"i\r H, ,t f'l,·:J our i::e11t 1n lhc U.N. .;,,1,J LI lhc L..;~. uut o! Ilic t.:.£.!" Dear Gloon1v , Gu s: I'd be glad to M'nd nonnie back the ~iO to put Into the Educat ion Fund but l'Ye already spent it for my chi kl '!I educalion, -U. K . TlllS MULITTUDE of sins would seem to offer enough ju.stifidation for federal bugging. But In paper! filed In federal Oistriel Court in Chicago on Jline 13, the U.S. Department of Just.Ice said it had the legal pc>Wer to eavesdrop wllboul l-ourt :.pprovul on n;rmbers or organiul- tions that 1t belie to be seeking to at- tack and subvert the govemmC11,t by unlawful means. This is b t o 1 d enough to rangel fro1n the American Nazi Party to Students for a Dc.mocPelic Society al\d all tqe lli'aystops in between. The Fourth A~dmenl atates: "The right or Lhe ~le to be secure In their pcrsohs, -J'iou.scs, bi;pen, and . effects, ngalnst unre~nDle ftarcftes' a n d !ein11'e5:, sriatt ngt be violated. and no warrants shAl Issue but upon {>l"Obciblc cause, supporlcd.by oath or affi nnatlon, and particularly describing the µlace to i:uesday, July 8. 1969 The editorial pooe of lllt Dail y Pilot sctks to infonn and s!1nf. 1tlate readers by presenti"f1 tl1i3 n~wspqper·s opin i.o,1s and can1- n1en.taru 011 -topics of interest !ll&d stg11i f1canct, by providn1g a for un1 for Lht. ezpression nf our reade r.~' opi11ians. 1tnd b!I prl"set1t111g the direrst-t1ie11•· pohtts of htform~d observer.• and spoke.rmen on topics of the c1av. . Robert N. \Yecd, Publisher . -.. . • ' ' • CHECKING ~A.-t-•-· ~ -U.R • . Russians Holding . ·u..s:Ffier Artnstrong Deseribes I~ ·How it ·Will Be Made! • ·Moon :De~cen·t: CAPE KENNEO'f, FI a , rehearse the launching rro1n ' right area much earlier· by aignlfic'ant down cloie to 1'le ~-(AP) -"We'l!J!a.Y~ a vJew of Ca~ !!~1· . _ __chaDgiD&. the lrajectori at i. jUrfl\~1 ' , .._ 40 Men Proposed · •• MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet~ Unioo · ls holding an American and a West German whose plane • made a n emergency tandlng near the ffie landing area rrom about ' As we come down t~w~r higher-alllll.Kk. ,. . When Armstrong and Aldrin 81000 feet, two to three and lower," Armstrons said m -.. 111 rendelv m In u t es , be r ore ·I.on an lntecvlew last wttk, ''we'll "The tuel penalty for cba,ng~ lift off, they w ous dil18 ,. • we'll be. conUnqously be able to eva\u->lending Jni lb< !Lildmg \><!"11 ·IB much wllh Collins, w\io wW orbl(!h• observing it ·for Its suitability' site better. If required..., we wilt less _!t higher. alUtilde," he ~:· . mcwr w:;~e-his companiona namely a smooth touchdown alter that landing point. eithCr plained. "H beconies qbl\e exp ore OVf. point and absence of large farther ahead or off to the left • Marriage__:_to Her_ _ __'l'utiish iviuter.. during -craters." or right, or pethapa a little Th8t'lti0w stroriaut~ellshornif wh-ere-tbe1t1achlhe IJ A, Armstrong describes the being directed automaUcally. final moments of the daring "Then, as we come through descent to the moon he and the 500 foot level or Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. are to thereabouts, we'll probably Dy L. M. BOYD AT llAND IS a com- 1nunic<:lion from a 30-year-old ~ingle secretary who says she has received an average ol four proposals a year since her twentieth birthday. That's 40 proposals so far. Our Love .ind \Var man will be in touch \1'ith her shQrily to take detail- ed notes on how she does it. .. TllE WELSH \\!ORO f o r the clo~h rrom w·h i c h children's pinafores once were tn:idc wns ''brattach." And it \vas from that word says our. L1n_.::uagc man, that soi:nebody ~orne\vhere someti me fir61 referred to' children a s ''brats." 1,t ARK Sl\ol A NSHIP llragonfties, those little swif- 1ies, catch bu~s on the wing. If · y:;u shoot a Ii -B gun at a drag:onfly, said fly will make a sad rniscalculat1on of pouncing on the B-B in flight, thus get- 1 'ng its head knocked off. Ji:nO\\'ing this, a wise lad with :1n ai r pistol C<1n make an im· 1nense impression on his ac· quainlances by taking them into the twilight fields. draw· ing from the hip, and shodting liragonf!ics one after another out of the air. PH ESIDENT NIXON i:; said" to drink Jack Daniels Black , ;1'tho nol in sufficient quantity t'I make news. . . OUR r\Ai\IE GAfl.1E !\>IAN avers g_!rls called Cla_relwd..to+.spoil 1:1cir gentlemen friends. Rot· ten ... AVERAGE P1\ Y of the policemen in the big towns na· tio n·>vicle no\11 runs a little les.<> 1han $14~ a week. . . TIIE \\'ALTER REED lNS'rITUTE <1f \Vashington , D.C., employs 2.000 anls a month in l'lassificd space work .... A!\I 1'\0~'E TOO reliabJy informed it takes an cight-pbund blow to break an egg. !\IUSlC DROPOUTS -Did vou ever Lake piano lessons? i<'o r hO\'I long? If you lasted n1orc than one year, you're the exception. Maybe you ought to take il up again. The music men who put out those piano instruction manuals say they sell H> times ·as many first-ye3.r books as second- Y<'ar books. 'l'hey s8y they sell 100 times as many first-year books as third-year books . CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. "\Vhafs the first, second and third most commOn bl09d types?" A. 1. 0 . 2. A. 3. B. • Least common is AB .... Q. "WHO POPULARIZED the s:>ng "Rudolph the Red -Nos-, ed Reindeer'?" A. Gene Autry, I think . . . , Q. "CAN YOU TELL ME a dog's normal temperature ?" A. About , 101 degrees. AN INSURANCE AGENT says he'll issue an accident policy that will c o v e r everything but the lad'yfriend 's salaOs. Thp.t's unkind. , .. AS TO THE LARGEST TOLL ever paid fof passage U1rough the Suez Canal, am advised that probably was about $50,000 for a floating drydock shipped in Hl33 from England to Singapore .... HOW CAN ~OU call yourself an authority on the old Wild \Vest if you didn't ellen know there wasn't.- any such thing as a left-hand· ed arrowhead. ------· FASHIONS -Why do we cling to the notion' it is the clothes designers of Paris who dictate .. :fashions? +lLisnl. Bri~ lain starts more trends than Fraoce. Didn't the Mod lead to the Mini? Incidentally, it is a fact that until 1574 A. D .. the men of England wore skirts. Mister, if that style is revived, will you go along with it ? Thought not. Your questiOfLS' and ccnn- rnents are welconied a11d will be used wherever pos· sible iii "Checking Up." Address m a i l to L. 1'f. Boyd., in care of the DAILY PILOT, Box 1875, Newport Beacll, Calif., 92663. 3 Souther1i Districts . . -. Get F ederalFu1ids Cut )VASHINGTON (AP) -The Nixon administration, which l.'.lsl week relaxed deadlines for ending public sc h o o I rc,;rt'galion. has ended federal ;_1id to three southern school districts and f i I c d an· tiscgregation sul~s both above ;.ind belo111 the tilason·Dixon l1n~. In announcing the deadlines 1rotild be cased. the ad- n1inistr.:ition said last \Yeck it ;1:ou!d accelerate court su"its :1 gainst segregation in schools ;ind cont inue to cut off govern· rncnt funds to districts still i:;ep;iratlng studen ts on a racial b.:isis. GRAFFITI by Leary ·-· Even \'lith Monday's action. only eight suits have been filed in the first six months of President N i x o n ' s ad· ministration s eeking desegregation . All told. 125 court actions came in the~sl year of Presidenl Johhson's term. Losing federal money under the Monday announcement y,•ere the Flagler County, Fla ., I board of education. the \Vayne County, Ga., board ot. educa·' lion and the· Orangeburg' School District No , 4 (Edisto) in Soulh Carolina. '-'1n the suits, the Justice Departmel).t attacked a freedom-of-choice plan In Barnwell, S.C., and the .1nethod of placing faculty members in Madison County, Ill. - Sirhan's Judge Suffers Attack LOS ANGELES (AP) - Superior Court Judge Herbert Walker. "'·ho presided at the thial w h e r e Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was co1;1victed of murdering Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, has suffered a heart attack. Officials at Queen of Angels Hospital said Walker, 70, was in an intensive care unit. He was admitted Thursday . wa:lker is to retire Aug. I. rally, the U.S. Embas.sy reported today. J,. spok~Sll)an said ule SovieL Fbreign .Ministry told the em~ bassy the plane Vio18ted Soviet air space and the case is being investigated. He said the Foreign Ministry described the' ·flyers .@s safe and uninjured. They ·were identified as Lt. CoL George ,Pa~terson of Chani~lee., Ga., an aviation of- ficer With the 3rd Infantry Division in Wuerzburg, West. Germany, and J;>r. Karl Sichelstiel of West Germany. Under normal international u•1 , • ......., .. HITS INFlATION HEW Chief Finch Finch Raps Inflation In Medicine pra,ctice the flyers and plane WASHINGTON IUPJ) will be released il the in- make July 20, four days after take control of the attitudei.=========::;;:::"i"::::"=O: Apollo 11 is launched. manually and Oy it to the The planned landing a~ea is precise touchdown po:in~," the a three-by-seven-mile oval in Apol1oJl command~ said. _ the Sea of Tranquillity. ''As we reach the hover ln pracUce this \Vee.k, the point," he contin~ed, "we'll two moon-bound men are con-probably have a mmute and.a cenlraling on the critical and half or so of fuel which . will dangerous landing and takeoff permit us to go a relatively in a lunar modu1e (LM) -good distance, ,perhaps 1,000 trainer, while fellow astronaut feet if we choose. I wouldn't MiChael Collins works in the anticipate thai we would do command ship simulator. that. I would hope that "''e They also planned today to would generally get into the ·* * * * . * * Borman Sees Siberia 3.651. ACRES At the site and time Indicated below Wednesday, July 23, 1969 CITY OF FOUNTAIN VALLEY ~ Zone Al ·l.651 Acres 11 :30 A.M. vestig;i.tion shows they strayed HE\V Secretary Robert It. lhto the country by accident Finch said today "galloping On an innocent flight. The inflation in mi;i<iical costs" SoViet government usually must be iirou ht under con· acts:slowly-in-such-matten;---trol. The White House pro--ot Space Center North side o( tbe San Diego Free,vay, west side . Ward-StreeL...--City-of...Bountain-Y.alley_=~-----+ Minimum Bid $67,000.00 ; Depqsit $5,850.00. J{enyatta's Car Stoned At Funeral mised an important an· nouncement on the subject Thursday. "Of all the problems af- fecting healt.h services in lhe U.z!ited States. perhaps the greatest problem -the focus _ol all the others -is the NOVOSIB IRSK, USSR rest home, and a Crimean (UPI) -Soviet officials show-winery where Dorman corn- ed American astronaut Frank mented diplomatically "I hope Borman through this· Siberian the day will soon come when Thomas Guide Page 27, Al. BaJance due 11·2..S9:- I SKETCHES MAY BE. OBTAINED AT ~ J ~ --uo -&o<llol -..... -e--w •1.1 (1111-•• metropolis today but~e him well away from t top-we can drink that wine in my ~ I own city.'' • secret space center in .,.1tra -=====================.,.=======;:;:;==. Asia. · 1r Bonnan flew from Yalta galloping inflation in medical and Simleropol on the Black r Sea to Novosibirs.k. Monday. -NAIROB I, Kenya (UPI+ ..... ,~-rosts;"-said Finch. head of the The city's name means "New I Angry black Africans pelted DepartmenLof HeaJth,_Educa-Siberia" and....w.ith...its million-Pres~d~n\ J.omo Kenyatta's tion and \Velfare. plus population, it has become car with sticks, stones .1ond shoes_today~w~ ~ .MrlYed He _ said health care costs a symbol of the Soviets' for the funeral · of assa·ssinated are ruriiiing ne8rly 2~ tfnleS-determination~lo-d·e V e Io P political leader Tom Mboya. b~gher ~the over-all rate of Si~!ia. , . 1 11 Police Used .... gas _Lo . PVrman s a1rp ane ew n~ar N -01-LC E -THE-MERGURY~UPER--SIX~· .. __ _,_; ........ increase in living costs. th t f Ba'k r disperse about 100,000 weeping e space cen er o 1 onu The secretary made the en route here. But whether his and wailing Africans ouside statements in a speech he in-hosts planned to Lake him to the Holy Family Cathedral in the center_ 8 combination of downtown Nairobi. tended to make in Boston but Tear gas seeped into the canceled at President Nixon's Jtouston's space control center 'church while the Roman and Cape Kennedy's launch Catholic funeral service \\/as in request. pads with recovery facilities l Nixon asked him to con-thrown in -remained a progress and Kenyatta and 1 t '"' k secret. members of his cabinet put cen ra e ""'s wee on pro- handkerchiefs over t h e i r posal~ for dealing with the \Vestern diplomats said it f t t · 1 high cost of healt.h care, as was unlikely that a trained aces, ears s reaming rom spaceman who could recognlre 'he'·r eyes well as other domestic Jeuisla- A' · · t • d th tion -on welfare reform , and assess what he was one po1n 1• appeare e shown. would be allowed to in· funeral might have to be social security changes, and halted. It continued amid hiRl\er education. speet the extensive Soviet in· Finch and Nixon met for 90 stallations at Baikonur. mMuboch c.oughinil. g, thend wleeping of minutes Monday and planned The only p r o m i n e n tj ya s w e a our sons more rfieeUngs ~fore the westerner to see the center across his coffin and the high-Th ·•··· w.as !ormer Fre""h_ president pitched walling of o t h-e r -ur._,--arlQOUncement.-. .. .. relatives and f e 11 0 w Luo Finch 'made public the text Charles de Gaulle, who is no l tribesmen. of the Bostorl speech being technologist and is n earl boy f I given for him by Dr. Roger 0. sighted to boot. heM hea Swas datalby shbotl in Egeberg, selected as the new Borman, his wile and sons, t. c st atur ay y a ack t t h l\h o11·c spent ·~Air la st day in Y.alta African gunman who escaped op govemm..en ea I er "IC in an automobile. The assassin in place oC Boston's ffi. John visiting ·a Soviet children's was still being sought in 1-Kjnowiilesi.iiiiiiiisiwnimieiriciamipi, ai coiailimiiineir_'s·11 Ken ya's biggest manhunt. I 1'1boya, 38, was KenyatLa's minister for economic plan· ning and one of modem Africa's fastest rising and most respected p o t e n t i a I leaders. He was expected to be Kenyatta 's successor. IAHA·i' CENTER 6.46-3.489 OIL?· OIL? NOT ON ·OIL?· OIL?· OIL? OUR BEACHES! The Coastal Area Protective Lea9ue NEEDS YOUR HELP Please Complete & Mail· Us This Coupon PURPOSE: The preservation of coastal weter1 end beeches from the SANTA ANA River to the Mexican border. N1me ................. -.-· Address ............................ . Phone ................................. ··-· ..... ·-..... --··--·· Membership: Regula r 1.00.-.............. -.. -.. .. -Susteinin9 5.00 .................. _ .... . Donation ................. -......... -.- C011tal Ar•• Prot.ctlwe Leagi..e • P.O. lox 3\2 • Corona clel Mir, C11tfornl1 '2625 IS NOT AN AUTOMOBILE IT DOES NOT HAVE WHITE SIDEWALL TIRES, VINYL TOP, COME IN TWO DOOR OR FOUR DOOR MODELS. CANNOT BE OBTAINED WITH A RADIO OR STEREO. DOES NOT REQUIRE SEAT BELTS, AIR CONDITIONING OR POWER STEERING. • THE MERCURY SUPER SIX IS A NEW TYPE OF SAVINGS CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT, GUARANTEE.D YIELD, FIXED TERM, WHICH GIVES THE DEPOSITOR THE HIGHEST YlELO ON INSURED SAVINGS HE CAN OBTAIN IN THE ENTIRE UNITED ST ATES OF AMERICA. WHEN HELO TO MATURITY IT GR 0 W S 30% AVERAGE YIELD: 6 % I 5.25°/o INTEREST COMPOUNDED DAILY -5-YEAR-BASIS GUARANTEED -FIXED TERM - MERCURY SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Buena Pllrk 8814 Knoll Ave . MEMBER;Jederel Home Loan Bank Huntington Beach 7812 Edinger Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation T,t.! ,L t~ 0 "de th t t f This means the Mariners people and their proven ~~"'""»;;,i..,;.1.!i S W1ia ;:5 lllSl · a COUll S. pro1essiona1isminmatterso11inance.1 1means ' I • • . l . Mariners people·to·people interest [ijyour ·security •.. and Mariners wise investmentofyour money in the progress of our community, Join your neighbors and open a Mariners savings account, today. Remember: Federally·insured savings with the nation's highest rate of interest,. from day in to day ·out. Also free Travelers Cheques and tree safe dePQsit boxes, (with minimum $5,000 account). { ' .)' i ' . ~----..___ -"'---- , ! I I' • .. Q DAILY •ltDT T"'-"'1, Ju~ I. 1'69 •• QUEENIE By Phil lnterland l Dems Back Reagan;' Bag1:ey €alls_!f-oul~- SACIW,IENTO (UPI) Gov. Rooald Rt11an today found himttU in • alrange alUance wit.ti A11embly Otmocratl backing his tax reform plan. Caupt in the middle and teylng to brea~ ~ · .force1 apart w a a Assemblyman new1man. Amendmtnta to the con- 1tihttion are neceqary to· im·' plment portlona of Rea1an'1 tu refonn program. If the 1mendment1 are approved by the legislature thq will re- 4ulre a vote of the-people Hayakawa in Controversy SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -: 27,000 grad .. Ieo queried toid. the negaUve feeling• o1 rome The 5a:t'l"Frtifttl!Co -Sta e they liUpported Hayalawa. members of lht faCultJ w~ Collece AJumnl AsaQciation The exact. number iupporting ret:ard to Dr. Hayakaw. said Monday it want1 Dr. S. J.. .fl1y.akawa wu not announced. However, we stronaly bellewe Hay aka w a appointed 1n a letter to GleM S. that this ii • small but•vocal perm~nt prealdtnl of u1e-Dumke, cha~oellor .of tJ'ie •~te group, and th•t ttie greater .. -Hege but teilchers u·n1on or-collea~ Miu Hendrick1-aa1d~ &ood o! the aille~ ll"lbe:para· -.. • "We are not 11nmlndful ,.f mount issue to be considered :' ficlals warned of cainpus -·· ---- turmoil if he Is. The C1llfomla Sta~ Colltge S]tlent"~tees--..m be een- alderlng the st.tus o I ~ WUllam T. Basley (R-San Rafael), chairman of the Revenue al]d 'Taxation Com- mittee. # the November 1970 ballot wben Reagan is ~\'Ci to run for re-elec:Uon. "If the governor la told on il · let the governor take It to the people," 1.enovich aald. .....----_ J:Jayakawa, now ac;tlng pres!~ half of UlOH ln Clllloml1 .-to dent of SF St~te. pt a tw!Hiay hold a p e c I a I ta~ override meeting openlng Tuesday in electioru:, Basley 111d. Los An&eles I See by Today's "Oh I'm sure we've met before. I never ' forget IA ogle." P1·ayers Worked S9n Recovers From Wound SAN BERNARDINO (AP\ -They all pray.e:P for Bobby. Neighbors, family friends - evcn1 strangers -stopped by the 4Champ Pryor home \l:ilh the big sign , "Pray for our Bobby, wounded at Ben Het." ··we bless them all," said Mr!. Pryor. It began three weeks ago when the Pryors wer~ notified their son Robert, a 26- year-old Green Beret, was tot- tering between life and death alter beln& criUi:ally wounded in the battle of Ben Het. A fist of fear squeezed their hearts and they prayed. Then almost in a desperate measure they put up the sign -10 feet Iona: and 4 feet wide -on the fence in front of their modest frame house. Soon t h eir neighbors dropped by, lhen passersby -all expreaaing hope that young Pryor would pull !hough. There was a steady stream of letters, too -the writers saying their prayers were going for Bobby. -. ....-._ On MonCiay, the Pryors \Vert 00\Jll•d l>Y~ their son wu _out of danger and makln& a good reco•ery. Sonoma Trustee Quits; Blisters Mental Hygiene SANTA ROSA (AP) Thomas J. Farrell resigned Monday from the board of trustees of Soooma state llospital with a bllatering at- tack on the State Department of ~tental Hygiene . Farrell, a Santa R05&. in· surance salesman and a Republican, wrote .G o v . Reagan that he had been "participating for eight years In an intolerable situation" as a trustee of the hospital where 4 Witnesses Delay Trial Of VS Trio LOS ANGELES IUPI) Four missing witnesses con- sidered essential to the pro- sccution·s murder c ase against three members nf the black nationalist group US resulted Monday in a postponement of the trial ur.tit J uly 16. Deputy DisL Atty. Stephen S. Trott said the four, at least two of whom are believed to be member• ot the ·rival Black Panthers. could not b4' con- tacted for service of sub- poe nas ordering t h e m to testify. 'The defendants in the case are Ga>rge SUner, 22, bia brother, Larry, 21, and Donald Hawkins, 20. They are charged "'ith the murders of two Black Panthers at UCLA last Jan. 17. Phunhers Meet LOS ANGELES (UP() - Negotiators for s I r i king Southern ci lifornia plumbers today were expected to submit sca led down wage and fringe benefit demands to the Plumbers Employerli Council. his IS.year-old daughter la a patient iD "an understaffed and overworked ward." The f i v e trustees of t h e hospital are eppofnliif"by--n-e governor to four-year tem.s. Fanell, whose daughter has been in the hospit.al 11 years, said his second four-year term e-xplred April 1 but said ac· cording to policy, b o a r d m~mbers serve unUI they are replaced. Dr. Josepi1 E. 0 'Ne i I , Sonoma St.ate superintendent who becomes superintendent of Mendocino Stilt Hoapltal next month, could not be reached. · Farrell, who aaid he has been trying in vain for four months to talk to O'Neill about hospital problems, said he talked to ward personnel and concluded there aren't enough. people working with t h e hospital's 3,153 patients. The hospital, he said, is ''top heavy " with administrators "'ho "are too busy filling out reports and attending endless meetings." Home Fire KiJJs 3 Tots LONG BEACH UPI ) - Three children, all under the age of 4, perished today in a predtwn fire that en1uifed their home. The one-story stucco house was a mass of !lames when firemen arrived and neighbors said they heard the children screaming but could not gict close enou&b to try to save them . Fire Chief Jack Heaa said lhe blaze coold have started from a smouldering cigarelle on a sofa. An arson in· vestlgatlon was In progrt!ss. 'Ille children's mother and 3 soldier friend escaped Irom the blazin1 home. New "Sleep + Aspirin" tablets .help you pop right off to Sound 1Safe Sleen I ..... ·., ... " ........ llU~•· " ... I (S,..i&J) ... A Nn 'itrk ekmil\ f r• .. 1lm•I• '''''''' 11r•111 ku pertect..i 1 "91ukP""4e"r-u n1io11t. 151"11" f1nn!ll1 whlclll 11111\ff I•,,,. (J} l.N\ Mt ••I ilatt. u,.,. 1 1maU t.liltt I taft 1141 &e aa111•, llHp ff1ttd111 11111 ... lf:, ••In.,.. refredtlnr 1lttp. N1 other tltfpl"r Jl1•t111 uplri1, Ti! 1 t.1frll1 ~111l1- t1bJet1 offn "''" , .... ,,,, •• • ''' 1rl1t of to11••11 h11db lr.M, eold1 '''not hablt·fom1l11rl •~d 111l11or t rthrltlt, rll1am1U1111 N'"'-' Mfort 1111 tbtrt bMt 111tll 1111tc1l1r 111d m111.1tnial 1ttl" ail la comblr"tlo11 t. lltlp r•• r•ll••• p1h11-to ht ll 1•11 •lffp •lr.U t11111 llllot probltlfl of 1\"p\111nfft-t• 4't1t11rH•m1"11...,1a11011ftllt. llri111 fftU'ul ""' wlthoui titbit· St r n 7nr .i .. , i.11!1llt wittl-fon'lllnr dnip. N• Prt•criptlo1 la .. , &.-e .. , ..... 1111 a&r-dtrtl tt ....... _Jatt ·~~_!pr•;..,.,...i.,, Hllll-ltni 11 .,. ....... ~,_., T•.,lftt"', 'Pn lOO'Jli tdt tlNp taM .. wu 11 M~Wr1• Y .. 'It ... ,...... . tr ta •*•· ••Ill: ., ~""'"',.. I TM,...... fM, us f1 U a.tlMt tt 1114' 1Ha1ll7·Ull .. 1114'all 1r41oH7, r...i 1M ..... llM a 1tr 11 tUt Duri111 tllt •ifll' 1111 t it "W: .. .... A,,_.~ """' .. ldlldM Jtt ,.,. .. 1" \I ... ,,... •• ..... (I ) I-•• ~\t i I ..... (I , -, ..... ~ Ifill 11 V1 .... I Ai • &tit · ,.WI!,. ,.. • ••ptr·I 1111_ ,, J11 !'' ll•tJtr, 1 ""' •1 fftttrt) '""' u •nr: laa'fr ,..., u..a ''~"'''' "'~ """ .. II itHI .... ., ""'1Mh I· '" ,.. Ila•• "'" u ... "''"' lfl~t·1ft..~llW ii 11IN. Iii •· U. ptrUJ .... Mt 1114 ... •II 1-O, 4 ... tiff wit~ ftlll• lfflll• '"' •lfff kfli, Al frw .\•,.... .Jal ,,_,.,u. -.. NlJ 111 rel.Ai l*t a.MIM at 4lnlfll.U. IH. t'J'm trying to protect the people from the (tax) package and protect the 1overnor from his own progr11D," Bagley said Monday. Ile aald Democrat.a would help Reagan put the package on the ballot bul would not guarantee to urge voter ap- proval. The special elections would Erwin K~lly, president of be neceuary because the Local 1352, American Federa- Reaaan constitutional arr.end· tlon of Teacher1, said a ment would set a mai:imum telegram baa been aeat to tax rate of $4.60 per $100 trus~s waf'llin& H1yaka,,:a's assessed val!!ction, he said . It ~ retentlon·would violate lhe re· would taie 1 tax override to cent student-faculty strike sel- ralse it blgher. Uement and "quality educ.l- "( can't under1t1nd if Ba1ley'1 so intereited In help- ing the governor why he hasn't helped him before," replied Assembly Democratic caucus chairman George N. 1.enovich. Other Democratic sources have flatly slated they believe the protrtm la so bad ii will hurt Reagan 's chances for re- election. Tbe 501 districts would need Uon and a peacefu l campus a tax rate above the M.60 te will be jeopardized." maintain current achoo I Jo Ann Hendricks, Alwnni Zenovich and Reagan want to place the governor'• tax reform program on the 1970 ballot. Bagley d~n't. "There's· no question the DemocraUc lead1r1hlp in the Assembly wants this whole package on the ballot in order to uae i~ against the eovernor ne.it year," Basley told a Bagley cited an ei:ample. One of Reagan'• con- stitutional amendments would impose a 1tatewide uniform property tax. Now o,nly local government levies the prD- perty tai:. service levels, Bagley said. praident, said a majority .,f TRANSPAC HIGHLIGHTS Direct Radio Reports from the flHt 3 •nd 1 p.m. Pally • --.-~- \ Re'agan 's statewide property lax immediately would require 601 school dlalrlcts -aboul KOCM Radia 103.1 FM PLAN #t• R'9ultr- Thla pl111 It fc< '"11"!.,.peOpl•- regul•r aaltriel: who haw deact.d to a ave regular •"'IOUnUI anywhere from $5 a week up, but who went thtk' money wotWng for them. They eleo want It to be tome pleoe tt'8)' CM get their hendt on It If dwy need t In• huny. If thty can le8Y9 It 11ont for • yur or mof'e, It will gNe tt*'1 the Big Annual 5.130/o yteld. Ate you one ()I the regular people? Thtn moytio • REOU!AR ACCOUNT It tlio one,.,,..,. ftm.!IM~T .~ ... ... , ... ...... ... "°' ... I Vr. .. ... 1,23:1 ov ... .,. 1.204 2 .... 3y,., .,, ..... 3,892 4 Vr'" ..... 2,"62 5,324 SVra. ',707 3 ... 15 ..... t OVra. 3,000 7,801 t &,eo2 15 Vr1. 1,71$ IS,<432 ...... 20 vri. •om ''"'"' ...... W1'19 lillilll et Jll! ~Pl 112• IJl•1-PI'" . - Thlo It fc< pooplt who""'°•,... of money they would like to put at/de •nd woyld like to reoef'I• tha lnt.ltat "'""11 "'°""' bvt not 10\ICh lhe principal. Perhapt you 1nt1nd to leeve the money to your helrt. Sn ltK• plan the original ini.eltrnlnt ii r.talnod for a lifetime and you heYO a reguW ~ 1r1eome evwy month. Are your futwe plane for yaur children'• futur97Then maybe tho UFE INCOME PLAN •HI tult you. UFE-PUH ---.•CllMI< t 12.oro 1')!00 , 20.000 25,000 ...... $ 50.DD P., "'°"lh l!I0.00 Per Month IS.OOP.r ~ I 04.«J Per Moflth 2tll!.DD ... -. _. ........... 1.taa ......... .,,..,,. .................. --,. .. " 5.to,., -... -....... -......... -...... 1.IJ,..)1" _,..~ ,..., ""'- 11111 • t11111 ........... • ................ ........... ~ .. PUN #3' Mondily _,,._,ft,.17 -·· -Thle ltfc<-lewho...,..,.lump eum of money but who know very well t,hat if theydon'tputit w.1y eomowtlere out of sight, they will spend It They know it would be much better to haw 1 cettlln amount of money coming in every month aver• given period. And in d\11 plan not only will they get back a lot moie than they put In, but there will ttiU be a neetegg le~ over to RNtlrd themaelvee for not blowing It all at once. Are you one of the tman onee? Th°" the MOf>ITHL Y SECURITY ACCOUNT it for you. IHVUT $10,DOO.DD AN!r. )'Oii _...... w you ,.. eed'I fl'IOflUI for 11t1 •atate of• • 50.(Q I 0 yearti t 8,67S:OO $ S0.00 115ye.... • 7,725.00 $ 75.00 10 )'tllrll $ "'.115.00 $ 75.00 15ye•... $ 1.«X>.00 ,100.00 10)'9.... ' 875.00 llMST $1Sll(IO.OO ANlh )'CMI ~ ...ct )'!),I Pltaln ..eh fltOtllit for •n •""9 ot- $100.00 toyarw *25.mo.oo t100.m 1s .,.... $2t1.cs.oo $1!50.00 10)1MrW $1 7,800.00 $200.00 10 ~ $10,000.0) $Zl5Q.DO I 0 Y'M'1i I 2,200..CQ Be In on the hot action of tit• big. big ytold yoii wlU get from thot moneyyou •et aside for youroelf at Newpgrt Balboe Savlngo. Set your 1Ighla on .one of th.ese 4 boom ing 111Ving1 plane 'llld •tort. aome rNI montl'f growing wftil. out having fo worry about tho fluctuating ma rut your ca eh.I• •.lwayo - able at par value •hould you need It In • huny: Ind y<111'U rellly got I bong out of lhe My your money keepo on Hmlttg oompound -WWI clay. Celebrate OUT lllldibonal independence by getting oome fg, )'OU!fflf, wi1fl your ve ry own savings prognim. V9u will f&el very Arnericen belfiO·eo thrifty and 10 prosperous all 1t the SIMI time. So ~ke aim and zero in on 1 1avlng1 target 1t Newport Balboa Savings. Our friendly offJ.. cers will make aure you shoot In the right direction with your investment And you'U hear the repa~ every quarter. Here are 4. aavings plans, designed for 4 different type• of people or eavlng situations. Read them and see. whic~ one suits your savings personali ty. The charts will give you an Idea of how e1ch one works, so look them over: the n pick 1 number from 1 to 4 and come in and let one of our experts get you etorted on . your •pec;iellzed savings or inYaltmtnt program. And if non• of th1N l1 uacllywhatyoii hod in mind, we have many others, sure we do. . ..,,,,., ................. ~ "'.,,....,.. •!On ol a..tion llCM of the Cellt~a f~ Codf undarwiHotl I Nwtngl ft !OM ........ lion mq '* w1i¥t Ill nghc kl '9QUlre up to alic month& notice of lrltlN to wittOaw. Newport 0 1lboa Savinga M1 tnet • .,..,., wtthdra_.. requeet p011CJttt .._. dl6IJ 01 ~ IO N" entire 33 ,..,... • •, ... Wan! Ads I e Time on YoUr band•! .4.n. tique clacla tor aalt, work· "" <Ondltlon. e For the 1entlemen: lAuia Roth SW.ti ill 1iu: 42 rec· ulu. e Available 1 \V1ntM1 a full trnte Akippor tor ~ tor yachl, as o1 AU&uat 1. l'lAll #4' Guar.-.d ~Rm k~•••~ Thlt pl•n It for--'"""'° elretdy h•VI a aum of mon-v to Invest and arewllling towaJt1 .. wtllle few a good return on their money. The mlnlmLHl'I depoett le $< .ooo '""'"' 11 youwh, o1 ...... i In exchertg• forwhk:h you receNe • certlflC9te wh~ guaranteee • 30'/o growth if '-ft untouch9d for s yeara. Ar• )'Otl one of the patient one17 Then the GUARANTEEP ANNUAL RATE ACCOUNT lo for you. YOU STAl!T wmt $ 1,000 $ •.OOll $10.oao $16,000 ~-.. Y•ld au • .-.. Ciooth YOU WR.I. llfCEYf .,. ..,. ......... 3,._. 4,... a,... $ 1,170 $ 1,233 $ 1,,300 ···~ , .. ,. ,....., s11 ,7Q5 s 12..m i 13,001 $17;iSI $t8,61H $Hl,502 5.S',4 5.840/. 1.00% 17% 23"/o 30"/o SAVINQ FIGHTS INFU.TlON J, ' ' ' r . ' ' .. . ,•' ,r.::".::"'"''1.::' ,.Mi:;:..::B.::, ::1"'"''---------0'-Al-"l'-Y-m=o'-r -'9" " . ' MEETINGS UC h·vine ·Given Out to Get'Us'1==== 1 UJ'S BE fRIBIDLY . ·1 Resem·ch G1·a111s celimitz..P.£atests V.N. Day 0-.bservarice-U )'OU hayt MW Nlchbon ·or know .t ~ ......,L to our aru. plH.M ttll Ui1 10 that 1" D\U •xtmd I trltndJL.welcom_t &Dd belp them to becom• acqualnUd in thtlJ' MW 1 urroundln.p. Dl:iAcTB-NOTleES GRANVILLE l!.tl11be1t't e. Gr1nvlllt. At• ''· of lld lhvtlOe Dr!Yt, Cci.ron. Otl Ml•· D•lt OI clfflh, Julv 1. 5urv1vlHI bl' "'n' ,,,.,.,. J, FllllMdc, N9w-1 e·~dl. ~~ .,...,., Miii '-111,...v. J11IY J, II AM, Forti! Ltwn, Gltn- 0111. Ftmltv •-'• thoot wlllllnt IO ....... """-111 CG111tlour1-. •IH~ CO<\lrotiutt lo 1M f.le1rl Fund. B•l•t lilorlu1rv. l!70 I!. ,.,.,, Hl1nw1,, C:oron1 dll ~r. Ol<tc!on, TRIPP l!•Ol .... ld (llslloJI Tripp, 3213 .. ri111N tf"t, (OJll Moe•t. Dltt OI dNll'I, Julr l. Survl'ted by wl(c, LUllu K. ' '"PP. !tlhrr. Oll"r Ellloft TrJp1, Ill Poltnd SPrJ,,.g, MillM; 1llltr, AldlM ., ,, .. t rve. P011nd SoflM, Milne; brother, 0-ld Tripp, ""''h L~l. -~•rvlct1 toOty, TUMOty, I PM, P1,;11c View Chu•ct. 1n1erm~nr. I •< tit View M""°'ltl Ptr•, Dlrtd- ccl 1ir PtcHlt Vltw ~u1rv. PINDER VlrQln\1 Rld1mond Pinder. '23C So1rt1 Or>ot . Stn Pf<lra. Ot1': o! -lh, July ~. Sl/rvlv" tiv hu1~n<1. Robtrt (. Pl...,.,., M.O./ cllv91'11trl, C1lft1rlt11 I. •nil C1rotvn R. Plodtn Pt ...,nll, Mr. tnil Mr1. E1rl L. Rlchmonct. L1gun1 B .. (h; bt'olher, Etrl L, ltktlmond, Jr .• of Torr1rtt1. Strvlcn. wtc1 ... 1111v. l PM, /Mu1oll'lim ot lfte il'tclflc. In. ~r-n!. Pt<llk Vltw ~Ill Ptdr.. Dl>tt!ed t1r P.c:lllc vi...o Mortv.rv. I F-.... 11, •~9•etU lhote wlir.11111 Jo m1lr.1 rn.morltl cOl>lribl!I-. •'"'" COl"'tribu~ 1<1 11\t Cl!v DI HWll MN- 1C1( Ctf'lltr. TOR BET 11.obtrt N. Tc~r. JJ!7 l'"w<#I•"' Cal Siate FulCerUJn Illegal? FULLERTl:iN -Ten yem afte!'-£el-6tate-FuUerton-was - e!tablished, city o f f i c i a I a discovered a municipa l ordinance prohibiting colleges and universities in the city. The oversight was qulckly corrected. The application or lhe Los Angeles School of Optometry, which has purchased proputy in Fullerton and wishes to bc:come aftiliated wilh Cii.I State; brought lbe o d d ordinance to the attention of the city council. Research revealed that Cal State had not broken the law intoclilffiglll Fu 11' rt on, ·however. When the state purchased the college 's site it was no longer subject to local Jaws, the city attorney ruled. Grant Given To Chapman Dr!Yl!, C0111 H .. w. O.!t "' oetth, RANGE C b Jul v '· S11rvlved tlv 11.1n, 01vicl Tor· 0 -a p m I n bet. at llolH. 1011>o1 01uvn11r .. Mn. College P,resident John L. Ro!>er t1 Jone1, P•wot<>O; Mrl. L~ (h cm1 01iv1 OHcrllfl. 11:1w11Wt1 11r11,,... Davis has announctd at t•· Hirem w. TotW'I. PWTl1nd, Or1-t f •~ 000 from the ,,,,., 1111er. M". v1c11 1twwe11. Fo..-.11 gran () ..,..., . Gro¥,, o.won1 •I'd iwo ,,....,_, James Irvine FoundaUon will Pdv11e 1uner11 ....... i<n. \lft<IMlolilr. be sed f ••1'on of the P1cltlc View Cl'llHI. l11~rmen1, Pt-U Or expa,.., c:Jlc. v i1w Mtmorl•I Park. 01rcc1tc1 campus facilities. bv P1clflc View Nt«1Uflry. · "'the purchase 0[ add\Uonal NOR.!\ P11r1c11 M. Norr. A" "fs. 111 1111 0ci. land whicb-thiS gr.ant· makes t P~I~ oriv~. Hun•IMit°" .Auch. svr-possible is of vital 'importance v1...i t1v huU..nct. H119C1 P. Norr Ill/ t p1N!nh. Mr. 1nct Mr,. Wll+11m It. lO the t~lization Of OUr Fr"'1Cft1 1i1ttr. Mkllelt L. F,.Mhl t r pJan "Da"'J0S S8;d ,.,ndmOlfter, Ctte!lt w. Ftt'1Ch. 111 __ m_as_e_.c __ • --·---· _ ol Sl~I· ....... Ftm!l'f' l\llHIHlt lhclll Wl1hln~ lo mike m..,,crll l CW'llrlbll- lions, PkllM COl'Ol/"lbult lo Ille l*m~ P~l!l1 FOll•'<ltllon of Soulftern (1llfor· ril1, 1J71 MIKV st .• L1 H1brt. 91)631. R<'Cltt !lof! ol the Holv ftot•ry, 10- 111,111, T!Jfld•Y. 7:.JO PM, SI. Cectllt'1 ! Ch11r<ll, T111lln. Rt<Wltrn M111, Wed- llt lC .. Y, 10 AMI 51. (Ktlll 'I, "'1111 if>, r~<rne.~1 1o11-1'111 11 Holy SortUl<"tr CemeltrY. llrown Colonltl M«tu1,..,., S1nt1 AN, Dlret tor1. GALLOWAY n•v• r.,1..,w1v. Aoe 49. For,,.., rn- 111911 of (11111 Mist. 0 1!e O! clN !ll, Ju v I. In 51n Ftm lndcr V1llr'f'. S\lr· -.1 .. ed tly Wiit, P1~l11 1on1, J ll'-Of.e 1...i w111i.rn1 "''""· Mr. 1ric1 Mn. Jollfl 8. Gonz•ltlJ 1ISJ9f1, M"-Jfffl Wt•I, Mr1. NI~ W11I"'' M .... Ml~ tired LI llorlH. Mt1. lrtllll! H-1~ ti '"" Mn.. Mlclrl"' Smllft. Stnlctl. I w1c1 ... >d1r. 11 AM. t i ~ Lillie (lllllt- ,.., 0...MI rA Pl•rte ll<otlltr1 Mort,.. 1rv, 10811 Vlc!Ol"'I 81...:1., Norflt Holl,.. ..... STARK Georet J, M. 5!1rk. 11'1> TflMlt T1r· ''''' L1111n1 8t1cll. 8orll Or;tobtr lo 19IU. In 5<0fl1nct: d ied, J uly '· 1NJ. Survived bv wilt, Emlty; IOI!, 11n; 11,,. l>rolhtn tncl two 1l11tt1. SorYlct" W~t'(, J11tv f, I PM, Sl!rlftt LtlJlll'll &'Hell Mertu1rv Ch11MI. ARBUCKLE & WEU;B Westcllfl Mortuary U7 E. 17th St., Cotta M,111 &46-<381 • BALTZ MORTU ARIES Corona dcJ Mar ()R 3-tCst Costa Mua Ml '-Ulf ., BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway. Costa Ptten u "1433 • DJLDA Y BROTHERS lhmUnp. Valley Mortuary 11111 Buell Blvd. Huallngtool!udt IC-'!711 • McCORMICJt J.AGUNA BEACH MORTUA(!Y 171$ Laguna Canyon Road Lqunalkacb 4M·lf15 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e M"11wJ' Chpel 3580 Pacific View Dr1w Newport BHcll. Calllenli• &4j.,1711t< • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME I '7111 llGIJI Ave. 1 Westmlutn' aa.sm ' . . I SHEFFER MORTUARY Lopna Beec• 41+-1115 8u'Cleme1te a.t1t1 I • ! SMITHS' MORTUARY I IZ! Malii Sl 't lllUIUn,ton Beac• -- ANIMAlogic ' ' ; J (·If Whal Does The Bible S1y About MIRACWI Some scoff at REAL mir~les of the Bible and seek to EXPLAIN AWAY these, thus abowing a WEAKNESS in their belief in God's POWER. The Bible por· trays a God who is AJ.J.,.PQW. ERFUL. Any other concept would displ""' God from his throne . JellUS believed Old Testament MIRACLES! - Jonah and the whale; Matt 12 ;40 ; Healing of leper, Lie. 4:27; Miraculous food supply and r aising dead. Lk. 4;26. I Kings Jl ;tJ.24 (Are -· modernisb wiser than Jesus, thinking to explain awaY these miracles?) Jesus performed miracles! - Ra ised dead. Jn. 11;39-45: Walked on wa ter, Matt 14;24- Sl: Turned water In to wine. Jn. 2;7·11 : Many others, Jri.. ·20;30- !l. Bible· miracles give ll.! FAITH, J q. 20;»31; Acts l ;H . MODERN MIRACLES are not needed fqr faith, we have those of the Bible, Jn. 20;30-21 - "THESE are written that ye might believe-'•. S..tan can do SOME 11\lracleo (though limited) to dective lhe flll]Uble, Ex. !;JO. 12, El. l jll-lt, J Cor. tl;lJ..15, 2 Thess.~ .. i; U you havie Bible qu•Uons. write or obone Church of Chrt.t~ 187 w. W!laon SI., Cosla. J'ol.,., Calij. (-). Phone 5*6'111, MWffl. 6*-5713. ~lsi~ wonhlP. and 1t.udy the Bible with us. &1nday1 t :45-A,M., 10:45 A.M., 1:00 P.M.; Wednesdaya, 7:311 P.M. - Si. Coast Vlsllor 4940579 lllrbor Visitor '494-9361 Uncle Len Offers Prizes Glendale Federal ,guarantees 30°/0 growth on any amount -R8~$1,tJOJ-. DEPOSIT 5 -YEAft OftOW 'l\\ $1,000 .. $1,36\\l\ --~-t~sa1· ~ -s.m\\~1 5,000 6,5\\\\J\ Your funds grow 30% whan our new guaranteed annual me ol 514 % la compounded dan, and earnings are retained In the account for 5 ~ars. Thafs equ!Yalent to a 6% avong9 annual yield. Ask for our 5:Year Guaranteed Growth At:count. ' And auarantaas 5v,0/o on new 3 to 5 Year Income Accounts You receive a guaranteed annual rate of SY•% with earnings compounded daily, paid quarterty !Qr anyfiertod from 38 to 60 months on minimum deposlls of $1 ,000 or more. lnferesl ls paid quarterly or may be added to the accounL Ask for our Guaranteed lrn:ome Account GU~DAU fDl(JIAl IAVINGs--- • Newport Beach 2333 East coast Highway cosla Mesa 1833 Newport Blvd. NATION'S SECOND LAftOEST FEDERAL WITH ASSETS OVER ONI! BILLION DDLLARS • 22 OPPICEt 5% ~~=~ 5.21% ~AOCOUNTS 5,25% :~::.,,,,,.~. 5.25% :=.:::=" VISITTHE '-~POUGE I DACTYLOSCO" EXHIBIT'' NOW THRU JULY fSlh AT IL~NDALE FEDERAL I I I . I I I , ' • j . L " . . • J O DAILY "LOT s Year Money's By SYLVIA PORTER Yoo're a younaJamUy in tbe. $10.000-$15,000 income range.~ You have a couple ot school a,.......kkk.--you lJ\'• in tbe- suburbs and the fa ml l y breadwinner commutes t o work in his-car. Are two can a___hl~ ~~it·~'"-.~-+ Your chlldren art In hJgb scllool and yoo, tile motber, want to go back to a full-time job 10 help finance tbeir col· lege education. Is a household employe, at least part-lime, a luxury or .a oecessity! l t'ortl1 IS HOME AIR conditioning, for those who live in the very :.;,..;.,;;.. hot states, a luxury in this era"!. Is automatic at a record high 36.4 percent. transmission in a car still just Last year our total "disc.re· an apt.ion or has it become •"basic equipment"? OoH any tionary spending'' -de.fined one today consider a TV set an as '4purc.hases resulting troni unqualified luxury"! decisions relatively fret of \Ve are into an era ol. pressure of nect!SSity or force "aspirations" in our economy. or habit" -amounted to an ln this era, we will spend a enonnous ·$230 biWoTi, up 13 steadily shrin,king share of our percent in one year. Jn just 12 income on the traditional months, the share of our total necessities of food: clothing. spending going for necessities shelter and transportation fell from 59.1 percent to 57.4 while we spend a steadily in-percenl. ~ creasing share of our incomes As Dr. Ernst A Dauer, con- for goods and services wttich sumer credit authority, put it reflect our hopes and wants. al a recenJ conference of the -The-implieations--f'Of' our -Natimtal-lndtmrialeanterence economy -looking ahead to Board, "the typical family no the years after the Vietnam longer purchases only what it war -are profound. needs, it purchases what it " EVEN NOW, the proportion would like to have, and its or our total buying power aspirations are continually·e~ avallable for spending on the panding as rapidly as its in· .. aspirations·• rather than the come." nece.ssities of life is estimated As Dr. George Katona, oceanograp~ic f un~inc. A mutual fund in vu tin& In the devt!lopment and use of ttie ocean and its resources -----------. Mldtot-DI~ 1-. M ll"Ncl Strwtt "fW Yor11. M.Y, I~ Pl .. M fff>d me • prospilCtul Cll'I th• ouanoar.pl'lic: tun4.,rc:. om• flp Finn to Bu y ·swede Subs STOCKHOLM (AP) -A California flrm, M a r I n e Resource Consultants of Santa ~fonica, will buy lhrce sub-- marines· from the SY.'edish Navy, a Navy spokesman said Tuesday. The submaries will be used Jn search for oil beneath the Arctic ice outside Canada. They will be rebuilt for their new task at a Swedish shipyard be r o r e being delivered. A mixed crew of 22 Sw&lcs. Americans and Candians wlll handle each boat. losAngeles & Oakland! Every90 minutes! Prn enllng the ;reatnt night schtdule on ••rth batwHn 7:15am1nd 1:45 pm. Both w1p l Mort on wuktnd1I Why wony 1bOU1 1 tnen"llion wmon PSA hu over 1100 lligt\t. 1 week? Sueh tn euy-io-t"emetnbtf ac~ul• y0u ctn c1rry 11 1rourtd in')'OU't head. Why iwmernber k)wetl fires? Or 111 tett? Or grUi MMe.I lo 8an Franc:\aco. San Jou, San oi.oo. Ind S.Or1m1n1oi Of' ltllt J1(d1under1 2 tiy PSA (wilh thtir·_.;-'.,,./ patents) !or h1!f I are? Shll wiinl 11eservat!on ? J11$t ..... ,.iMmblr ~r 1ravel agent or whataitsna!M 1lrttnie:1. • PM.,_ )'illa lll. ,. • • Phone Rates, Service Go Together bOS ANGELES (AP) - Gi!neral Telephont: Co. may hike its phone rates by $4.4 million annually "hen -1L Im· proves.. customer service, the Public Utilities Commission says. The company sought authorization to Impose rate increases totalling $1.1 million for business phones and $3.3 million for residential phones. 11ie company, however, was granted perqiission to boost by $12.2 million charging for Qther services. The commission s a i d General must show it has made customer serv ice equal lo that offered by Pacific Telephone in its areas. '!'he decision came after 60 days of public hearings in y,•hich many person! com· plained of poor service. The '12.2 million increase means hikes in directory advertising. phone installation and . changes, and o t h e r services. General iniUally asked the commission to approve service and phone rale hikes of '41.6 million. Bomb Con h·acl \VASHINGTON (UPI) Honeywell, Inc., has obtained a $9.3 million Navy contract to provide component: fo r the Rock.eye II bomb. • California Production, Employment SAN FRANCISCO -Total manufactures In callfornia in- creased to $25.13 billion in t.1ay, an II.I percent growth in a year, according to a report issued Tuesday by the Bank of Callfortiia . Total employment, up !3,000 from a year ago, reached 1.7 mi\lioo. with payrolls rising to $14.75 billion. Production of durable goods climbed 11 .7 percent in the year to SIS.31 bUUon. Non· ourab!e production totaling $11.82 bill ion was up 9.9 per· cent, with June predictions calling for a-greater rise. Production in the metal con. nected industries, which ac- coont for 44 percent of all manufactures in California, 1vas up 8.3 percent in a year to $!LOS billion. Transportation equipment, primarily aircraft, advanced t:> $3.6 billion as average weekly eariilngs were '16?, an increase of ?.I pertent in a NY Corpora li .. ·• 'f o Buy Bank ROCHESTER, N.Y. CUPl)- Secur1ty New York Slate Corp. said it will buy National Bank of Auburn, N.Y., for stock. It is proposed lo exchange 0.375 sttares of voting convertible preferred stock for each share of National common with a total market value of about $3. 75 million. Administration to Act 5%RateforSavings Bonds? WASHINGTON (AP) Feeling its way carefully. the administration was reported Monday lo be preparing ~ re- quest Utal Congress allow a rise in savings bond interest from 4 'It pereenl to 5 percent. Informed s o u r c e s em· phasittd that the ·proposal may undergo changes before the request is sent formally to Capitol Hill. The administration is anx· lou s to increase the iiteadily deterioratin g sales or savlngs bonds, both as a means of bolstering gov ernment revenue and to absorb tome of the public's excess purchasing power. a key factor in the na· Lion 's continuing JnflaUoo. The Treasury ll<partmont repontd last wcelt that lbc public cashed ln $71 mUlion m6i'e In savings ·bonds than the total of bonds purcbased during Junt. ll was Vie Mivenl.h consecutive month in wh1ch rcdemption..s ootpa~ &alu. The current 4\2 percent in- terest on savings bonds is the maximum sold under a 1919 law for long-term Treasury securitie:i. When the request for raising the interest on sav· ings bonds goes J.? Congress somelime soon. 1t -Is un- derstood the department will ask at the same time for a higher ceiling on o t h e r Treasury securities as well. affecting all bonds purchased after that date. On bonds purchased before June 1 t.he higher rtturn would be pajd on the portion of the bond's life comini after Jtme 1. Market Symbols Because of the low interest limit, the Treasury has been TN unable to do its borrowing on 1n ""~'19 :.~~.., r~:_"'r: the terms that lt~i.e.11w-..,.ii!Sl' Prcfenr-lasuance of bonds -""'° "''::i •~ , .. ~1 "" In 1'M41 • ..,. ' di• "· l!'-~191'11d that take st:vera1 years to orj:f" so ·~ 11 ... ,. ~ ... .,1e "' S. M ""~ 1i.,, t d\11'1,,. lt'lt. e11lim.tH, rti. pJ\11 mature. lnCt ay 1-. ..,.. • di•= ._o.c.~ ~ •• ._ ~partment has been unable lo::,.,~'*:$ -'r~'f.,.,, :If ':.'Td market any k>ng-term Issues ~.:,... ., -i;.~ .. ~· _ .... :. because of the unattractive In-;A -· ,:Oi tenm and has had to reaort to "~'•"-" ,. stlUng ahort-tenn securlUes ::; ~.:'~ • becawie they are not tllected 1W= ~ ~ by the ceillfti tn the 191G law. ".....s.":. •"' """ Informed sourcts said the ti.-c111e1. u-e• •MtitM. ,..,i.-111. • lfi.tri!Mtt'-!. -lfr-h r"hft. ftf-Wl!Mvf request ror • hlaher Jnteresj_::!'~1r:s -==~ w. r,. "J .l rate on sav1np bom\J will be ..,...,1:;rr=::·•w.!i; ~f~ made relroe:cUvc &o June 1.~:r:,.,. --r.J-. ~1.: • -·- .. Briefs • ( • \ :( l: ' • ~t ~" , ... ~· .\t ' .. ~ .... . \\ ·~ ! • ! l ; • • • • -----· -----·--_,.. -, Mon.day's Closing Priees--Complete New York .SJoc~ Exchange List ..... 11'1•1·-----------.. U..J-LNaiaa... l I ------·- : • JZ DAILY PllOT • I ll 11. ii ~· ff,;. ' Rancher Loses His 'Top Hand' in ~torm l'-~----aM•'lln::t:O:-:Tii: fl~I -J1"'" "'-*11111 lbll~, J, -Ill' Cl..--. ............ • G!'Mllt, <•~ fM<Mr. lllllH SwfMln I• ., A1nerll1t> llewl••I. ... Wll• 1111..... Se......., •11111 wlle!I I , __ ht ......,. "' ••• •ltffl"" , .... 1tt 1111 l.tl!lr'1 ~ .. 1r<K11 " U.S. l1f 111 lllt Olcl&llMul PHllMI ... • I i By RALPJI MARSll As1oclated Pttu Writer It wa.s starting to rain hard and the wind was gusty pretty good, so Colorado rancher Clarence noundtree slowed the pickup to about 40 and -· glanced into the camper ·nn the back to be sure his two lit· tie boys· were sllll safely asleep. "Top HSnd," a boisterously happy three-year-old, and his quiet two-year-old b r o t h e r Aud1e were sleeping soundly, resting from the rigors of Fourth ol JuJy at grandnja.'s. Roundtree turned back to hi! driving and· comoled his mother, Mrs. Pearlene Roundlrte. She was holding the year-old baby, Sheila, and worrying about the wind and whatever it was that bad made her suddenly decide she should return from Oklahoma City to Pueblo, Colo., with ~t.r ~year-old son. The four of them -Roundtree and his children -had logged 700 miles together since · leavlng Ute ranch near Granite, c.olo., and they had betn good miles. "We just had a ball. 'Ve stopped everywhere." But on the western edge ol the 0 k I a h o m a Panhandle, gojng home, things got rough. The lightning started and the wind came up. "It sounded like a 10-_lon trw:k hit me broadside," saJd Roundtree. "The pick-up truck heeled over so it looked like it wat going to Up oyer. Then there was this rending crash." 'The plj:.kup just went up and down," said lo.! r s . Roundtree. "It was like you had gone over a rock or something. I can't figure out why it had to happen. There just must have been a whirlwind hit us. Something told me to come home with him. Nciw I can see why."· ''Possibly he hit some high velocily windi," said the Highway Petrol t r o o p e r . ''That country is hilly, rolling. Nea rly Everyone 'Listens' to Landers Severe-thunderstorm warnings -were out." 'Yben he got the pickup leveled off, Roundtree turned to check on his boys and screamed. "1t1y God, Momma, I've lost the camper!"· "There goes my life," he thought, but he made no sound, He whirled the pickup truck around on the highway, flag· ged a truck and started hun- ting his boys. I didn't tie it down because it took three <if us just teeter· · ing the thing to load it.-I had the tailgate up. Without these kids your life don't amount to a heck or a lot. I thought .about ty,ing. ii down, but it '.sttmed ab&urb, like tying an Angus bull to the ground. I was so sure of the thing. "The three-year-old boy, I found about three feet from the camper.'' Top Hand. He's my Top Hand. I have a ranch in Colorado. He's my lop hand. ''The tw~year-old, I found him at the edge, of the blacktop in the edge of the grass." He's a dillerent kind of cat -more inward, definite ideas about who-he-likes. Hard lo get to know. - Everybody was nlC1!. The truck drivers, the Highway Palrol troopers, the minister who helped get the boys to a hospital. But there wasn't too much they could do for Top Hand. Audie had severe lacerations around his legs, arms and body, but they sewed him up at the Beaver hospita land let him go by Sunday afternoon. Then he and hi s grandmother left for Amarillo , where Roupdtree had taken Top Hand .in the hope they could dC . something_ there about the d~ge to·h1s head. -Re's such a D-iendly little fellow. Yesterday my sister picked up a sack of toys in one of the stores in Oklahoma Ci: ty. Fifty-nine cents. He show- ed it to everybody in that store. I couldn't have bought him aQything better with a million dollars." Roundtree spent Sunday at the N<irthwest Texas Hospital in Amarillo, notifying rela Uves, waiting, thinking. "These kids " he said they're about ihe best croP you'll ever raise. •:But, Top Hand .•. I don't lhlni: he's going to make it "I figure pretty much we're going to lose the boy~ •. " 1 You coll THE DAILY PILOT, 11k for Cla11lfitd Advertising, i nd pl1ce 1 PILOT PENNY ~ ........................................................... 11 , ______ ..__._ •• ~~-M> ------..-,;-- -1·7-STO'Rt:s· •:VALUE S FOR Y.ou, YOUR. HO.ME, YOUR .E6-MILY .. . . .· .. . . ~ .. - • -. - dou~l e·-~yer ·bra gown _in soft pas~-colors • I • ' A_pretly, filmy doubje l a.~!l',gown. It'> genl[e support molds yo u while you sleep. De licately trimmed with --------faee;-and-with·clastit su apsiorcomfur t In pink;-blue·or-..::.....;,.. __ _. .. .soft pastel bikini s with delicate lace trim rashioned in sheer nylon lricot, lhese lillle bikinis gi~e a smoolh fit, Deli calely !rimmed and appliqued in lace. Cool and comfortable for sun1n1er. Buy six and save, lhey're lhe perfect addilion lo your panly wardrobe . Choose from a group of pa stel color s. ~izes 5-6-7. \Jlue 1.00 6 for 3. 99 may to day wear lirigerie 28 ' . ' ,-:-. .,.._ • white1 Sizes 32-36. Also reg. 5.99 to.9.00 bra gowns in pas1els at 3.99 •. They're all or softest nylon rLcot. , reg.500 3.99 . . ~· may co robes and loungewear ~ .) , tailored taffaknit slip is perfect under knits Baronet brings you !)ie non-cling taffaknit slip. Won't cling or ride up under knils or jerseys. Trim and tailored, for a smoolh comfortable fit Cool enough for summer fashion. Of Anl,ron• nylon taffaknils. An d it's propor- lioned. Sizes 32-38 shor~ 34-40 ave rage. While only. reH.5.00 · 3 • 9·9 may co day1ime lingerie 28 ' " • ' ' ~ " I "' '" '" l"' ''" . ,, may co 1ou tli coas t plaza, •an dieg o fw.y at bristol , costa mes a; 546 • 9l 2J shop mon'd ay throug h saturday I 0 a.m. to 9: 30 .p.m. MAVCQ /, , ' l 1 ~-~-----~~~--,~~~~:::---,-~~~:-~~~~-:::~~~~~~~.,--:::-:-~~~-,,,.....,.,-,..,,=:c~-,~....,.,.......,....,.~~--_,... -. ---• Y·--··- OU Soaring imaginations in area chiJdren are receiving encourage· ment through the summ·er reading programs being sponsored in Huntington Valley libraries. Blast .OU is the theme being pursued. in Huntington Beach ll· Qrari , nd--fuel.-for-el-trip-tO"'the"'"moon'""is supplied by -reading a re- qµir.ed numbec of books to 'encourage understanding on or ·above the child'.s age 'level during the s\UD.IDer ~ . As ~>h .book is completed, a rocket w\lb lbe youngster's name_ ,.J.-~on-it~moveil'-through lPJl~oward>tbe-moon;-and-allel'-tbe-nqulred; ' reading material is completed, the space traveler is allowed-to land his own "Snoopy" on the moon. All books must be completed by Wednesday, Aug. 13, and !here will be a celebration for contestants the following \.Vednesday, Aug. 20.. • Art work symbolizing outer space has been illustrated by Miss qeraldi~e Mason , and in charge of the program in the main branch library 1s Mrs. Gwendolyli Talbert, children's librarian, assisted by Miss Pierrette Dillon and Miss Mary Wilson. In charge or the programs in annex one and two are the Misses Patricia Bush, Marie Hoban, Kay Caine and Linda Agnew, and chil· dren interested in additional information may obtain pamphlets frOm th~ .book'!1obile staff~ ?Y Miss Clare Moore, Miss Vir~4t Lauer, Wilham Arnold and William Clay. · .-· Young readers in Westminster. and Fountain Vall~y county libraries will travel through another kind of space: they will venture itagic Miles down the Yellow Brick Road with their final destination the Emerald City. Open to both listeners and readers, th~ ~program . is compri.Sed of 10 countries, and to travel through each country youngsters must complete 10 books. As the counlry is completed, young readers progress t_oward • • their goal and receive certificates and a memento upon presentation ~=c....'o"-'J-'e'-'a'-".:ch record c~art !isling liUes of boo· ... ~~~~--~~~-~ ~ fthe end of the program young people-who have comp efed -... ,.. 10 or more books will be invited to parties taking place at both loca· tions . , Any book may be selected, but special emphasis is being placed on "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang," by Ian Fleming, and the •lOz" books by Baum as pleasant reading for summer. Saturday, Aug. 2, "'ill be the ljlst day of the countywide reading program. WONDERFU L WORLDS -Enc~anting young minds ln Hunting. ton Valley is ·the summer reading program sponsored by com- munity librari"es. Young reader;; in Fountajn Valley Library are . (Jell lo rig~t) Mll<e Nichols, Bob Ondrey .and Valerie White, who ' • I. ' ' 'i' '. '• . DAILY l"ILOT 1"i.m ilJ Lee l"eJM wiU travel Magic Miles Down the Yellow Brick R00.d and, when they complete lheir required reading, wind up in the Emerald City of Oz. J JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-1 TllUMy, ''" I. 1Hf 5 I"-U ' ' ' MAGI C MILES -Traveling lbrough many countries en route to the Emerald City are 'card-holders al \Vestminster Library (left to right) Kurt, Kent .and Diane ~chumaker., members of one o! the summer reading ,pro--· grams continuing until next month in area libraries. · SNOOPY ON THE MOON-Readers in Hunt· they complete their required summer read· ing. Preparing to Blast OU, program theme, are Kathleen, 6, and Frank Dowd, 5. ~ . ington Beach city libraries will be able to ·Jand their own 11Snoopys " on the moon when Her,oic Senator Awakens Mom's Interest in Affairs of 1 s·tate : DEAR ANN"LANDER.5 ' 1 am·3t and have four children. My husband is a fine provider and thal 's the sum and substance of his (rualilies. I've been leel- ing especially sorry for m)'.Sell lately because rny lire Is so unromantic. The're • were Umu when 1 lhoQgllt I was crack-• up. N"' I'"' ... 1•111 ol(2ny"f0Cka •. mllgatilles Ind keep them· In.a .,ed~l rew mont ago, I saw· a 'ttrtaili p1ace: Yestetday, I sa" my hero on TV tor on'.TV. He looked so handsome and nearly fainted from excltemenl. I spoke wlth such conviction that I was never lili:e this over ny movie star. le him oa _note of pralse. He sent a Is this a :sign of ins&Tlily? What should l sonal ·letter. of thanks and I've been do? -FLIPPED OUT In g9ofy ever slnce. DEAR FJ.,IPPE'l: Veu d& HCUld a ki- 've gone to the book1tore and am Oc balty, but 10 long as II doe1n1t In.- ding up on his slate. I visit the library tc1·icl e wilh · yoo.r everyday life, don1t ry day to: check lh• .Congressiona l 'vorry about U. Sbo11ld you rtadl the ~rd to see -if1hc sliid anything. 1 cut P&inl, however. tb1t ynu r1n't d• your .....,,,,. pk:tures out· of newbpapert and· house•'Mk or; heaYen 'forbid, U you COG· ' mean 24-24--34. Padded bras are OK for filling oUt my !Orm wbfo.ii I wear sweaters or knit dressei, but. 1 warit ·lo feel lile a· woman again. 18 there. sometbJng that can be done surglcally -somethintreallf safe? Pie.,. lel !"' ~·~ tl<>PEF\l!o .• , DEAR HOPEFUL: S.. a plQUC 1urgeon about 1Wcot1e Implants. Nott, I DEAR-ANN LANDERS ' 1 know you d IMP'·-I , • ._... Tb! have acCess to lbe best medical brains In 181 ~-.•Iii',' no ""'ll°""""'u. 1 th! country. Pleas:e give Q\C jn answer. operaUoa ii etpenalve, bat ltll ltgal and J Sm a married Woman with three safe, and t•n proclnce excellent ruull.I. chikfren. Before the liatifti came I had a And DOW, to aH yO. 1.ilt' evt tb~re wbo good figure. Nothing ~acular, but my tflvlsloa yourldve1 as protpectlve.Sophla tru;Mllfetnents were U-2441. 7 Lartn1 -, •• , wrUe' a.ad ask~ for ia•e• Now I'm' as tint as an Ironing board. -of plalllc 1rrgeon1. I cannOf.recommtnd When I ~; ~ bmtlipe JI xro, Ann, I 1peclflc doctors, but )'Our family dociOt ··-' can. " DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 10 years okl and going steady with a boy named Biiiy. Well, 1 gues:. you would _call it going 1te.ady although we don't go an)'.lllaet. I know Billy likes me better thah irlt other girl because he hit.I me a lot during recess. Yesterday Silly gave me. • pretty lace handkerchlel. He aald it waa a late ValenUne'a Day present. I showed -the handkerchief to my mother and sbe said 1 should gtve it back because It has been washed and Ironed and probably belongs to his mother.·. Whal should 1 do? - GARDEN CITY REAPER AGE 10 • DEAR READER ' GI•• i._: handkerchief back to Biiiy and 1uuNt &.bat be buy .you a.Valent.lne nelt JUf 11: be 1UU ii h1tt1n1 yoa hrtn1 rttt11 nut; February. ' U yoo have trouble getUng along with your parents . . . II you can't get "them to· let f9U live your own Ure, send for Anft. Land~rs· booklet, ~·uuaged by Parents?- .How W Get Mort Fri!tdom." Send 50_ cenll ln coin with your requell and a loag, slamped Mlr-1ddresaed envelope. Ann Landeri will be &lad to be11tf with your pN>bk!ms. tSend them to her lft .care of Lhe DAILY PJLOT, enciosblc long, ·stamped. aell·addresatd 111vtllo\10. ' . ·~ I ~·-=~~~~~~~=.=:-~-!,:::::::::-~~:;-:'!'~~·.;::.=:~~~··~~~~--;;;;;o;.-.;"'77"~~~===::-~'3:'. .. ~.~.~,...,.~.~.~.!"''""-:"~,~.~.~·""~:'".'!~ ... ~~-~.~.~~,~.~~,.""~~:':~::=::::::::~!:!!1;::~!!!!!~!!'!!~!!!= -'t· • -· • • r .. !da,, July 11, 19/R I . . Pair Exc hange Vows I ' Los · Angeles T em1ple ·~-f--. ·-----· ~: Chosen for Wedding I • Talk Gives Glimpse Of Historical F.iction Ancient History as Seen meeting preceding the lun- Through Fiction will be the cheon, for which the Mmes. Talk Co ncerns topic of Christopher creefy's Gene Skawin and Ronald tilk before Mesa Harbor Club Taylor are in charge of ar- B b F d• members on 'Thursday, July rangement.s. a Y ee Ing 10, in the Mesa Verde Country A aocial hour will begin at Ad to 1 N,._1..... Club. 10:30 a.m., when members van ges o "''""'6 to The Costa M. esa boo. •dealer and guests will be greeted by MRS. S'TEVEN L. CAVANAUGH Formt r S_uwn V•n Tuyle Mother and Baby will be the • .,,_ B d B-~-le ··' tot>ic for the first in a series of will give his audience Ups on the m.111es. u cu-ua y auu I how to n'-~~n inte-.... 1-g and Nick Hanson of the reception ectures SP'.Oflsored by the uWl.l<)C; 1~w1 ·u Costa Mesi Chapter Of La enjoyable reading material as·-,;ro;;;;;rruru;;;;;;";;.;.,· ;;.;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oj Cavanaugh, Van Tuyle Lecbe League tonight at a. he di.!cusses his favorite II The discussion meeting will category, the historical novel. take place in the Newport Creely, who will be in· Beach home of Mrs. Paul c. troduced by Mrs. Marshall Bernhart. Cowley, program chairman, ' I Names Linked at Altar comes from four generations Topics scheduled for coming of book.sellers: and rare book months will include The Art of dealers. He also has been Nursing, Baby's Birth and 1 .... ed j ·1 Family Relations and Nutri-emp .... ,. as a uveru e pro-! Exchanging wedding vows in ' St. Andrew's:• Presbyterian f Church were Susan Van Tuyle ; o( Balboa, daughter of Mr. and r Mrs. J. T. Van Tuyle of Honolulu and Steven L . Cavanaugh, son of Navy Lt. Cmdr. (rel.} and Mrs. M. E. Cavanaugh of Garden Grove. The Rev. Dr. Charles H. 'Dierenfield oJficiated for the double ·ring ce remony before an allar decorated with an ar· rangement of white cama· tions, stock, gladioli and ba· , by's breath. · '! The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a gown of white silk organza V.'ith a full rufOed hoop skirt which ex- tended to a cathedral train. The fitted bodice featured tiny puffed sleeves, and a floral headpiece caught her long veil of 1·11us1·0n. it b'.ation officer in San Diego and lion and Weaning. o Co t and --• 1 · M1·ss G-·-•en Van Tuyle ranae un Y as a ,,...,oo • .. u..:ii 'fbose interested in further teacher and social service was maid of honor for her infonnation -about La Leche worker. sister, and bridesmaids in· League may call Mrs. H. W. Mrs. William Holmes will eluded Janet Colby and Debbie Moore, MS-4359. preside at the busine ss Flamm. They wore printed .:;=::==================::::=ill dresses of white and pink wlthlf tiny puffed sleeves and pink •• 8 x 10 PORTRAIT •• sashes. Pink roses adorned their hair and they carried • IN NATURAL COLOR • pink and while roses in their 9 5" • nosegay bouquets. •• JI • Larry Beebe stood as best man for the bridegroom. • Ushers included 11oward Stru· • PLUS TAX hie and Bill Brown. • 1.,. 14.tl v.1.. • A reception following the • • Choice of Poses • afternoon ceremony took place in' the Newport Beach Ebell • • One Special • Club. .. _ , • to • Family • The new 1'1r. and Mrs. • • SOc Mailing & • Cavanaugh, ,both graduates of • H•ndl'n9 • ' COAST . Ne"'port Harbor High School, plan to make their first horn Charg• COLOR • ;, Anahe;m. '················· YOU KNOW ; Group to View l Africa Sl ides YOUR CHILD • AmeeUngol Orange Shores WILL LEARN Medical Assistants Association tonight at 8 will feature an ii· TO SWI M AT FAMILY GROUPS NO EXTRA CHARGE ~ 1ustrated talk on Africa by O. l)W. Price ol Laguna Beach. BLUE BUOY Filr the gathering, which . wlll take place in t h e American Legion Hall in AM s. Wiii "" Be ch Prl ill .......... lolbff hiloM. !: Newport a , ce w s.ina AH; T•tf• J show color 1Udes of South and 546 1800 EallAfricl which be took. on • • \'. '4>ur ol ibe ·COiorfui area. .. Harbor Center -2300 Harbor Blvd., (01t11 Me11 THURS· Rll ·SAT, JULY 10·11·12 HO!IRS: 10 to 5 • THE N·E·W LQQK mallre~ for HAIRSTYLING by the area's TOP STYLIST!:! Complimentary Make-ups • Facials • Eye Tt bbing Mlinicures and Ptdicu rff By Appointment VIVIANI WOODA RD COSMITIC$ ma!Ae~ WIG & BEAUTY SALON 548-3446 JSD·D l•t I 7tlt Straet ·HILL&REN SQUARE COSTA MESA l)ouble Ring Cerem ony I Afternoon Rites Read Lone Parents Select Varied Summer Fare will be the setting for a noon until dark family piCnic on Sunday, July 13, with ad- R8 BINSON'S ROBINSON'S NE\MDRT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 • .-r ' . .. -~ ~-.. . . .... . ' ' < • t • ' . I • • Touda1.-.Ju~ a, 196' . . -·DAltY Pll.OT JiJ •. I ···. Horoscope . " ". '/' -1-/v . ·o .~ .b.·d·:,._· .. ~r ~.......,_ ~ s~·J_:o U:f;_,_;_~1rt ., .0ria¥Z "'7-_..,_., ,.,.. ,. ,, 1 ·,. '/ • WEDNES.OA Y milmtnts. Know,-this . a.nd lonl1ht. thinking. You do· make pro-ot-re~able·attiWde. •· This Ii terit~r.,.Y. Get, rytng al>out the world. ·' . real 'need"'for ftl.r. Accent oh strike fair balance. Meons elk • .._lliRICO)IN (Dec. 22,fan. gress lhrougb diplomaU. •R-AQU~RIUS (Jen. ,20-Feb. buic ~al 1traiil\L.in ·your . PISCES.(F)b. If.Mardi 111): . belnf' o..lblt. l\'llal ii "'" JULY 9 By _11\'.DNEY OMAR~ GENERAL INDICATIONS: 1-trln& day, there 11 decepUon jOy yourself Without ne~ 19): You aet.novihere tryina to prQa.Cb. You need~moral biack· '18)~ .,One born unde'r Pllcet (" own . maid: Take ' care ot ' Art :&•Wi··' individual could ; :'portattt I is knowinl you ~ ~c duties. Message c~ar by force 1oved one to your \wa)i of int: You"Je~ It tllrough dill:Pl•Y . .' may . •f~o oppose' i9'1· j>ersonaf·maitera before wo~. ~bi.I.-'!~~· f4.Jl9i .. doJAc the ~. thinC:t.lblnt!. ~ .I. µ ( tavoivbi, ftnauCes -_could af. 1---.fecr-cenerat-actlon-~ilted-lf----- 1\ock market. Tonight, many matten are cllr1fle:d a s famous person 11make1 a lu· dla&~nd .~lks . . ARIES (March 21-Aptil 19): Money pressure ·due to be relieved. Y9U -a .!l d to Pofjsessions. M11terlal yoc need is forthcoming. Be confident. ---:And seek more di.plomatif relations at home. - TAURUS (April 20-May 20):_ AVoid fooling .yourself. You don't get something for nothing. If prepared to pay, all Is well. Otherwise, YOll could be in for rude awakening. ey. cle high during most of the day. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Obtain hint from Taurus message. Kn.ow wp~t you want-how much lt will cost. Accent on what happens when you're not -looking. Key is to be aware, alert-and to have CQnfldence. CANCER (June 2l·July 22): Best to finish rather than to begin projects. Accent on frit!bds who ha ve il- lusionr-perhaps of granrleur. Keep your own· reet on ground. Don't go overboard for foolish schemes. 1.1!0 (July-211-Aug. 22): Ac· cent on h0'.11--fOU· accomplish goals. You can do so in sU:aightforward m a n n er . Otherwise, there are detours both costly ~nd disappointin~ -Don'l-see.k.:-easy..,..way.....T-hat is _ way only to self-deception. vmGo (Aug. ~Sept. 22): You could complete a journey. The results may be tiring. Only ~·hen you follow your own inner voice do you suc- C'eed today. There is much to lea rn-and teach. Do both. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Don 't believe everything you hear about money. Do some personal investigating. Bring forth common sense. KQ.ow difference between pie-in-sky tale and realistic plan. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 11): Day to li e low. Do more listen- ing than asserting. Let others make a move , a choice. Your role should be that of keen ·-ooserver. Tlien· wlfat-appears a deficit can become asset. SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 22- Dcc. 21): You wa!lt to make changes, but there are com· . Art Group Directors Plan Ahead I New Officers for the 1969-70 season and directors for the next . three years have been chosen by members _of the Council of Arts of the Orange Counl;y coastal area. Newly elected officers in- clude Edwin F. Steen, presi· dent; Clifford Hakes, vice ptesii:lent,' and John Vibert, treasurer. Others serving will ht Mrs. Edward Whitehouse Jr., vice president and Mrs. J ohn Wilson, secretar.y. 1 •• Directors are David A. Hill • And Edwin F. Steen and Mrs. f Georgr Michaud and Mrs. ~ t Richard Winckler. The group discussed a com- munity arts survey, which will • be directed by Mr s . Whitehouse. t · Evangelislic Servic~s! t July lttt ftru the 12tll ~ fiH Gl•rlous Nltllts -7:10 Nltlltly He1v•n S.nt Gospel Pr••chlng with · Ev1ngelist Rich1rd Cress . Thrill to th~ tinging of "Ir ish-tenor" Dlvid Herron At Jhe Littlt Church with the Big H11rt ind the Blggtr MtsHgel Church of God, 1 S1bbat1rien 7122 WOl'MI' AH. IJ iti.s. W. •f '"'' lfv4.I '"" ... ,., ... , . Patt>r Wllhf D.,.._,.., ' ~ ' • • , .. . \ --> .. DUY . ' .. • imuD1.interest . . . ' .. • j at • The Guara•rl:eed • Growth Plan. Deposit $1,000 or more. When all your money and Interest remain at our guararileed 5.25% annuar rate, compounded dally, :your account will grow · .-~0% i~ 5 __y~ars 23% in-4 years 17% in 3·ye;4lrs The Guaranteed • Income Plan.· .. . . Open Bll account of $1 ,000 or more for 36 to eo rnonlhl. We 'll guullll• YoU a 5.25% annual 111te, compounded_ ciiu1y, with the interest peid oat to you each· quarter. • __ , •• lncaseolhardshlporemergeney,youmaywlthdrawlhenecee sary funda at the end of any quarter and-get lull interest to-that dale. • • The Bonus Plan Here's a 3-yelr account thB! lets your savings earn V• o/o more each year than passbook accounts do. They ~ earn at a 5% annual rate. So l;lonus Plan accounts currently earn 5.25'!> a year when the bonus is credited at the end of the 3-year period. Invest any amount, in multiples of $1 ,000. Interest can be transferred quarterly to a pasabook account and, when held for a ytar and compounded dally, wl1! earn 5.13%. • •The Basic Plan. ' The most fle~ible .plan. You can inwst af1Y '.,notm!,of IOOney and withdraw it whenever you wieh. If you leave all your mqt\eY and interest in your account for a year at our cumin! 5%. annual rate with interest compounded daily, you'll receive an annual yjelil of ~.13%. You earn interest from the. day you deposit your:ino~ 'Iii the day you withd.raw it. And the money )'OU depoait by the 1 oth of any month earns interest from the1st,whenIi1"1111111 unlil quarter's end. For all det.ails on these 4 maximum interest plans, come in and see us now. California ~~deral Savings tad Lea -• II .QJI'-•A-.,.....$1.S Jillioft . NATION'S LARGEsr~RAL ANAHEIM OFflCE: 800 N. EUCWD AVE.• 17&•2222 COSTA MESA OFFICE: 2700 HARBOR BLVD.• 546-2300 ORANGE OFFICE: 3810 W. CHAPMAN AVE. • 6»303a · Head Offici: 5670 Witt.hire. BNcf., tOS' Ang•les · . . " , ' .. . I ... --,. -' '~ j I .. • I ' l t I --· ,.--.-,-..-----, " . /· , -. • J Hurt Siiffer_s Al1Jlost Com.plet,e P ·ralysis ~ t( -~ ) • " o' I • _f " . ~ ~ y ~ ~ure~ ~rtyer. PnferS -Deatlr "~ ... 1 .. ·.' •• .. TQ!IQNTO (~) ~ 11!1rt"1l •1111 of · or ~t.tlley'r~ uM hl(_lljl' <>1111. _ L cl<loiil. U.~ tllreuihOUI 11li1t.eUla-II«" .;iii!. a w"~-o1 · M~ •~II( pllln have ""''Um! lob "I cmow I'm stUI alive, lnd I Imo• bod)'. Hoopllll tn lndlao•poll• 'ind l•l•r wu lf"1 lllct llO'mtl!tt be b<tte\"1>fh1Hd. f h<"'s a chance for me. Butiiter wbal· -''Maybe IMl'rt!ie-beSl tlg,i. It'"''!!'' · tranafernd to a N"' Y~k hospital ftlr uun. alltfered l tmost complett' , • I'm gelling some !etlmc back. 1"e lber1py. · · pJf11yr1a 11111 'Ii. IMI. when his racing Ive: been through the l~st year, ( atlll 1ay nerves are regtneralmg." l!lt bills no are belN:. paid by li:-'->-,--~-mlUllll'JPlnot-1 <Onc:t•t£Will'"it-,tt--1~who-died-are-ihe-luck(" <!Url,lr.Stlll'remtm!i'i'S" • nifiiJSli es uto Club~anc1'"'"l'-"'..,.'~1c":e--..-ne ln(llanlpoUi Motor Speedway at 117 ones." · . which~ ®ring a light rain. orginluUQm Jn Indianapolis have helped I - l mUea • bour. Doctors told Hurt llOOn artu Ole ac-Rb car sk~ out ot control and piled rabe money for him. He bu lptnl.:the 1Mt three weeks in a e!Oent tllat he would never be able to backwards into Ult wall' after It had hit a Despite tht: accident, Hurt says he ~Lii here under tflt care ol Dr. AUan rnoVe anything but ru. 9es. _wet spot on tbe track. 1be e1111ne was would race aa:ai", Gress ot Torooto,-widelr ~ for bis But he now can move his head al roost driven agaiMt h I s back and the c 1 r "'U 'God aeea Hill way to &Ive me back rtl}!biUtaUon work wilb paraplqic: vie-normally !ind hu regained slight move-caught fire. the U$t of my limbs, l'd get back into a tbm'. , ment of his !houJders and arms . Doctors found be:had a broken neck. car tomorrow. It's the. only business I .. Jtve Jost. a couple ~f lritllda this ~ ~. which ~tarted ip his neck both shoul4e!l fraqured and SIJ'iow in-know. J['s my prof~oa. J'd go right yw," Hurt sa)'S. •·And I~ over and whieh was broken and fused after the ac-te.mal injuries. back al it again." • GLENN WHITE Sports Editor µ, ·Atla11ta • Is It for : Real?--6u bs, Mets r Battling in: ~~~ant · <;,ruc~al Ntw YORK CAP) -After seven years of playtna U far laughs only, the New ..l'.otk -MeLs....ba.ve auddenly switched to piayin& seriOw: bup>all -so serious lbal a.., ~ U!e rtn'I crucial llrlos la lhelr hlr!9rY 1pWl U»pti-Cubo !Od>1· l!om•J 30,GOI 81ttoUHDinded hylterioal Met faru are expected to turn out for the three-ga;ne series, hoping lo sec lhe se- cttnd pla~ Mets close.the five-game gap that separates them from the first place Cubs in the National League's Ea.stem Dh·ision. After being rained out of their Mayor'1 Trophy game against cross-city rival, the New York Yankees, Monday night, the ... -~ Mell were reTd)' and ea1er to pfove lhey' a.rt for real. •vnteae-cds are~ lo win jt," aa.i4 \'elerao lhird ~in Ed <;harlea, •ml. be wun'I jQot ~about Ille lfti11. He had lbt pennant ID mind. . I "The P'll&Uitwm be On the Cubs.™* club is u kJose as can be. Chicago will be feelini the heat. We'll just be playing Ollf' natural game." Th~nalural game has put them on a five-game WiMing streak while \ht Cubs bring in a three.game losing string. "They've escaped a b!ld slump so far ," said Manager Gil Hqdges of the Mets. "Maybe losing ~ straight is the first !ndlca~on-:lr you ·cin ploy iOod ball, you can beaj t~ein .'' HocJi"'-who saved -bis three best -~ ...,,....,,.. pitchers for th.la M:rtes, named left-hand- e( Jerry .KOOiman, S-5,-to start today'• (ID!! wtili tllat ID lltincj. lie will be op- paotd -1 Chicago -f!'l'qu>on Jenkins, 11~. -Tom Seavtt,i IS-!, and Gary Gentry, 1- 6, will follow Koomian in Wednesday night's game and Thursday afternoon's contest. K e n Holtzman, UM, and BUI Hands, 9-7, will be their opponents. And it doesn't end at Shea stadium. .The teams move to Chicago next week for another three-game set of serious baseball. P--'---~Crucial -:---:-~-'--.,---.,.--:~-:-~--~~~-'C"C~-~~UPI T~ Retired quarterback Joe Namath clowns with actress Meredith Mac Rae on the s~J of HNorwood, '' a film bei.ng ahot near Lake Elsi- nore. Making .his .!!.lgl 4ebut, Namath's contract calls for $10,000 a day ftir six days, ht above the going rate for quarter'backs during football summer camps. r it_· l f Doubl e Bill • ' LOS .4NGELES (AP) -In Ille 14rly weeks of the season Geor&e St~ Wfl ,\tlanta's best relief pitcher. Now he'1 d\ieling Phil Niekro for the honor of best .-i?:rter. ~To hear Slone tell It, all he dld Monday night was to "gtt my teammate.a in tht • v 1fOper posit.Ion behind me and then let 'F-: other guya hit it." _ ~ Tbt other guys In this case where: the lps Angeles Dodgers and they didn't have a v.·bole lot of success with Stone's di.liveries. Pros· Say Blind Shots l{e y to Britisl1 . Open ~ fact , they were successful OIL 1£.,et: occasions and Stone ~ up with -LYTHA.M ST. ANNES, England '(AP)" Trevino, tbe i968 U;S. Open champion who said : "f'he champion here II the man who hill lrom the tee and putls I. ! Dolige r Slate it:! 8ii: "//:~' u1 j;!.11 :::: K~1 1u:i1 l!l, I ~i· ~ .. ~= ,.11 •.•. ~·11~ ' I n .,. fl Fr1nc co I'" 11.m. KF UI 111'1'" n n Fr• :U 11.m. Kf'I , .. J three-hitter and hls ninth win in 11 decisions, and the Braves wound up with BS-% victory and a I Yi game advanta1e in l.bc National League Wesl ~'fhe Braves and the Dodgers are back at it again lhls evening in a twi-night dOubleheader, Utt fifth twin bill for the .iraves it1 the past five days. UPITt ....... ~ Ron Reed aild Milt Pappas, the latter ~turning lo the rotation alter a lingering back injury, will pitch for Atlanta. j Claude Osteen and Joe'"'Moeller will ¥ow for the Dodger..-wlth Moelltt mak· ~ hi.I firs' start since April 29. HIGH. HA RD ON E -Any resemblance betwe~n Charlie Pasarell and Reggie Jackson. ii purely coincidental. Puarell may foot like he'1 Wait.in& on a ih,ould•rhlgh pitch, bul he's really just •masned a twirhanded backhand return agajnst Bill Brown in the opening round of ~e Washington Star's Inter· national Invitational tennis tournament . PasareU won, 6-1, 6-2. Stone retired the first 15 men In order. yielded a leadoff slnJ&e. \o Jim Lefebvre in the sixth and then was jolted by Lefeb- vre's first home run of the season in the eighth and Bill RUSHll'1-ruth of the)'taf in the ninth. He wound µp wittJ seven strlk~ta and dkl nJI. walk a batter. "I committed the cardinal sin or pitcher a," Stone said in . ollerin& hil e1- planaUoa for the late-innlna Dodger lhun· der. "I had a big lead .a.nd I relaxed . ntey (Lefebvre and Russell) are high fastball hitters and that's exactly what I gave them." • AT\..ANTA ft Aloll cl Glnaler H H .... ,_, r1 C""'• UI c .. ,.,. lb M"len HI ..... ' OlrT ..... ·-. •Ir II M J • • • • 1 I •I J 1 l J • , J .. • I j • • 1 l J 1 I I 0 • I I l ••• LOS AMGILEI Ill r I 1111 Wi iis 11 • • • Mel• II • I I lh1Htll cl • I 1 ICOICO r1 • I I lull"''-311 l •• JMllltrll lll Ld ltMt l'tl l 1 2 T°"'°'ll t l O f Fotttf p I I I Mll(lctftn pllt IC IO'f'tr pti 1 I I P"'111n p t I I Ttltl M S 1J J Talt l JI I l lotllfli. on 020 aoo -J ~• ..... ltl DIO 000 111 -1 -e..rr•. OP-LOS Anoett. 1. LO&-A!lfnl• ,, l , Lllttl"'' Ill. It-II ·Ul. S&-Mlllf~. I.a ....... t . 21-C. la,.r, Miii•~. tOt-H. A•'°" IP M1t•1t l •SO 1"'1tl !W, t.J\ t l 1 I I I Ptstlr IL. ~I • l fl II J J l O M!lk'llltl\ j ti l j • • 0 1 PW111" I 11111 T-#!11. A-IL61J, $200,000 Tennis· Tow·ney -Slated NEW YORK CAP) -Two pro tennis promoters unvtiltd plarui Mond1y fo!' a $200,000 Invitation teMIS tournament on 13 consecuti ve weekends from next mid- February to early May in the United S~tes. -The tournament, which would double the prite money or the $100.000 U.S. Open, the most lucrative tennis tourney, would be coordinated and financed by the National Tenn.is Leagu~. a wholly owned subsidiary of Tenn.1.5 Champions Inc., of New York . Fred Podesta, president of Tennis Champions, said sites. entries and a na- tional televislon contract have not yet been arranged, but the final formal has heen decided. Under it. one player could win as much as $147 ,000. Rod l.Rver. Ken Rosewall . Andres Gimeno, Fred Stolle, Roy Emerson and Pancho Gonzalez, all of the NTI.. would participate. Former Top V.S.Amateur Tries , to Reclimb Ladder WASIUNGTON (AP~ -Char 11 e P1sarell say! he believa he's on the way back to the form that gave him the No. I amateur ranking lo lbe tennis world la&t yttr b u t admits It Will tike a few vie· tories before he can begin to move In on his former teammate, Arthur Ashe . "l feel I'm playing well again," Pasarell said after he breezed through the first rouod of the Washington Slar's $25.000 international tennis tournament. "But I have to get my confidence back. It's really tough, gelling your confidence back. "I'm getting a little more confidence with. each match. It was a tough struggle last year. I was scared to hit the big: shol In Ught situallona. Now I'm geltlna:: more . confidence and will make the shots when I hive lo." • Pasarell, from Santurce, E'uerto Rico, was ranked No. JO at the age of 18, No. I al 23 but as an enlisted man in the Army for 1a monLhs, he is No. 7 at the' aae·or u. He believe! a lay-off last year for Army basic training started his pro- blems. "Goin~ into the Army had a definite ef. lect on me," he s!lid. ''I had a four-month layoff. Now It's a matter o.f getting my liming back, getting my confidence back. It will take time. I wish I could tell you how long it will take . fl.fa}•be a few victories will help." ''I've lost some close ones to Pancho Gonzelez, Rod Laver and Roy Emerson," he 3aid. • Pa!arell's him foss was a marathon to Goni.alez at Wimbledon two week's Jgo, 24-22, 6·1, 14·16. M, t-Jl and lastln, five houra and 11 mlnutet. E x -Yankee Red Rolfe Dies PaUreU 11ys however, hl1 defeat by Gonzalez baa trlgered a r1vorabJe reac- tion frorn the public. _ "I aot a great reaction," he said . "l rteelved nowers rnd people recognile me HANOVER, NJ!. IAP l -Robert A. cbampionship in IP! sod served as the "Red" Rolle, one of the New York team captain the next year be.fore slgninc Ylnkeet' ali-tlme greats who helped the ~'ith the Yankees. clab to ·six American League pennants,. After three yean; in the minor Jea&u•, Clied today. He was 60. he was promoted lo the Yankets and re- Rolfe, whole brtll~nt playing caretr -mained with the rlub until for«id to wl11 1horlened by poor he1llh , died at his retire after tile 1942 se1son. He reecnlly home on Governor '• Island in ntarby was named the Yankees' all-lime third a.Mlrord after • Ungerlng illness. bateman. He re t.t red 111 athleUc director at ftOffe was the Yankees' recular third ~ tMrt.mouth Coltfae bert, bl11lma mat,r, basttnan from 1935 through IHI. He ., Jtlf .after urwleraolng 11urgery f2L!D complied a lifetime averqe of .zat in Wtst.Jnal d'90rder. helplfll New York to the penn1nt. and A native .of Penacook, .N.fl .• the SOft· fh•e world champion11hlp~. rrom J93& to «poktn Rolf• ~l!d •career 11nt"qu;.1Hed 19U under Manlfgtr Joe M(](;arthy. In 1port,. Ht led Dartmouth to the ffr&I Rolfe's btst ye11 r w11s In 1939, wlltn he Eulltll IDClrcoUfillia.JucbaU Lt•lll<. batl!!l..,_319 and led lbe leque ID. bit., ,, •doubles aJ runs scored. Rolfe became head baseball and bukelllall coach at Yale following hls retirement from butboll. In IN, mum. ed to the Ya.nkets ,., 1 coach, "-vine after the suson to coach Toronto in lhe enrly days or the National Basketball As&Ociatkm in the 1946-47 campaign. He joined th t Detroit Tigers 111 farm director in IH& and a )'tar liter became the team's manager. Hi was namtd th<! Amttlcan Leaaue's Ma na1er of the Year for piloting the Tigers to second pl•~ behind Ne'!' York In 1950. and ~mained with the club until replaced 'by the latt Frfd Hutchinson mtdw1y U\roui)l lbt 1111 ,.... .. • on the street. . FIRST TliUE UP AND IT'S AN ACE BVRLINGTON. Vt. CAP! -II was lhe first ti~ Da le Dusablon. 18, of Burl- ington had ever held ·a goU club. lt wu t.he first hole of the Quarry Hill Goll Course, ltS yards Jong, and Joseph Bouti n, of Eucx JuncUon, Vt.. with whom 1he was playing. told ~r: "Spi'ead your fetil anrl hit the ball easy." · Thfl ball popp\;d inJte 8:Jr, landed about 11 foot. ~hort of the teen and rolltd into the tup. -Two top American professionals sized up the 1969 British Open Golf cham· pionahJp which opefis Wednesday as a mighty important prize which will go to the man who getB away with blind shots. "There are a lot of blind shots on this course," said Miller Barber. "I don 't like them but you must play the course you are on." Barber. ex-Air Force officer who played golf with Dwight D. Eisenhowu, wears glasses which haftn't fall!d him in winning $76,000 this y~r oa the American circuit, but be added!' ''They don't help me when I want to 1ee Where my shot shoµJ.d be aoing and J don't see it." Gardner Dlcklnsoll echoed Ille thought and he quoted Ben Hogan with whom he often has been compared. "Ben llid once, 1just give roe the uslarurterit, whatever the course, and I'll try to meet It, but I've got to be able to see it.• " A couple ol buUdoier1 on ptrhaps three or four impor1nt holes of Lytham's l,841·yard, par '11 seaside links would eliminate the "blind" lhotl, Barber said. DicklMoo added; "We could do that and still make this a really tough course ." Barber and Dickinson are rated in the medium bracket in the betUng for the tot.ye!lr old crown, wMle Jack Nicklaus, Gary Player and BW Cuper share 5-1 !avoritt pos!Uonl. Buf either could win. So could Lee Finley Puts Rap On Kansas City's 2-bit P oliticians ~f!L\VAUKEE. Wis. (AP) -Charles Finley, owner of lhe Oakland Athletia, crlUciitd "two-bit politicians" In general Monday night, and said Kansas City has a special type. Finley moved the American League b!lseball team lO Oakland last sea10n lrom Kansas City. "Two-bit politlci!lnS are sickenirtll ." Finley said in Milwauket. where he watched his A's drop a 2-0 game to the Ch icago W}lite.SOx. "Kamas CJty ha11 the nick.el-and-dime l y p e. Tha\'s e v • n V.·orse." "The fans in Kansas City are great,'' the A's owner said. "I think they're juJt like MllwauJtec fa ns -crcat. But I couldn't survi\·e In Kansai Cily wilb lhe leltvlakln and radio contract I had. "My lui year there, 1 got $56.000 ror bolh radio and TI.. At Oakland, I signed 1 nveoytar contract for $5.5 million." Despite beln~ iRri»nlentlon for the We!:\ ·Division title and the emergence or ouLfitlder Re1glc Jack~ as the. major ltU1guc'1 top home run hitter. the A's ha1·e farrd rionrly 111 the t•tc In Onkland. Even the EXptn\slOn 1\oYals In Klfnsu City are outdrawln& lhe l'iDley club. well." · So could the '='WTtnl American Open champ, Orville Moody. Said Moody: "Tbis Is my aort of a course. l'vt been playtng under par b\!!re in practice even lhough I've had bay fever. J find the greens easy to read because they are not uoclulatinj:. I really (ear Player, Casper and Trtvino but I think I have a good chance.." Carelessness Hurts Seattle As Halos Win SEATTLE (AP) -Take It from manager Joe Schultz, who!e s .. u1e Pilots dropped a M decision Monday night to the CaUiornla Angels, a modJcum of carelessness can lead to monumental trouble. That iSn't txacUy the way Joe put tt. What Joe 11aid was: "Hell, yea, he got careless on the weak hitters." Schultz had reference to pitcher Marty An!tel Slate j""~· 1 =: :: ~=ttl~ (2) ,,:1 :::::: ~I~ ·1 j" 01 -·-· '•' 8li"r.= ',' H ••· I ' : ...... J .~•t tnd I: -.i'f'I. Pattin and the fourth inning, which both would prefer tb forget. 1 Seattle had a J~ lead at the time bUt thete were two Ange1s on bue when • Azcue, hi1 batting average just over .29', stepped to the plate and pounded a single into left field to chase home two run1. vf Next up was Aurelio It.odrlauez, hjttiq' a shade. un~r .m. Aurelio homered ovtr left field f8r two more runa 1nd afttr that, Schultz said, "We had no spark. 'tfe hit the ball. but right at somebody." The winning pitcher for lhe Antils, Andy Messtrsmlth, agreed. "My slider was bad but I had good cont.ro1 Md depended on the fast ball. I wa1 lueb that a lot of fly bills were caught.·• ' J . u CAl,l,OIHIA •• r t M .... ,,,.., I'll' J ••• \/-..rt •1 0 1 F~I U ll I I I JaMtt.. (f ) I I I Mortoi> " ll e 1 o L JOhrttoil H I I I I &ittllttt Ill ) I I I Azt-c •J J J " ltod•11r a ~ 1 l ' Mtterllfl ~ •I ll ,, • ,, , -....-~ ... --------,.----....--·-..... ~ ....... ------·---------~------------------~·---------~----.-.------..-· --~ .---. ----~ ---. - • .r-Tritons Contlliiie -~'-~CO -. .. To1ose llCOl'fD fl.tr.Cl. 'Ml 1•rlfl.. S _, olds •nd ""' Ill Gr..i. 8 Plvs. Purse ... , \ M4olilll MMl!t It It a.n1u1 l1rll0mble (SI-I r $UHf Sol'!f ~•v COii! ... \lt1tt"'I Lar, Gin Gln fSmltt'I) ll••s• Lind f.$1rldlu1 Ml11 Su111r. Dur (C';rOGre) C:!IHY Toni (JUdlerdJJ ·Mr. Lono Sr.of Curtain R1l11er (1 Har!) A& .. e:u1i.i. Tfh1 0.ndv (I R 81nkO Siik Vff (llllevl F!Ylnt S!r1w n H1rl) C.1<11 DKl( (LIPii.mJ "' "' 117 ~ Ill SIVflffM •M:ll. V"Mh St. COum TIS -fi10 n1'1b. 3 Y..ir eldt 111111 ult. 120· Clelmt119. Pvrw lllOO. Clelmlng ,nc. 112 1-1600. 11! Mr. Jo W111 (I Allodictl 111 "Anchor lte (2 R lhnk1J lU Crtlll l•l'S 1Ktn11) "' '" '" "' arvc1':J Jtt 111r II H Cfo.lbl 5lr Wlr '"" !Wiiien) I Or\111'1 P11rtr IMerrls) Vlt!o P\>ttllo Nt~I ~ (Ptttlo) , Al"-llll"le '" "' '" '" ... "' "' "' 1111 CMM•~.IUll H 1t•I t hr1s'9nsltl, '• J •' I' l Os.tellbewh, ~ AnO."Oll· ll> ~ I I I• TIUn\11, cf ~ "'\'"'· lb ' •' I I Wr thl. c ' P1r1mo. p -I ' I I Cl Sleltttt• rf I I 0 Cl r:,.~~ 11-t : : : : Ttllll l'"llllfftlll ~I a' I > X'a M Rll THlllO 114CI. 3» yards. ~lllen ' Trig lob 12 A--.:•l )10Wllrd GejtJ_tr (t H C1"by) V0¥1!11'.!r (I Ill ..... ) '" "' 111 • ~"'·!! :l'."J" l I i i l I I , ~:.: z:· ( ~~~) IMOe. !l<lid M_, (W1h011} Tiit lill.l'Mf~ One fA.dllr) Or@l!Wln (II. 81nkt) l ie l(J.i.ol1 {Smith! SW.n Grind 81r (SlePe) Rt Entrv 154..chf:lJ T~al tl!ftd 81r (0 S.nll;I) 8 reffin' AMre-(Wll'IOI') ,OUWTM llACI • .f.«:I v1rds. S ~r Oldt. Clalmlf!S. PUrM $ll'D(I, Cltlmlnt Pri« SlOOll. S1{'dv SIJl'ffr '" "' •» Goklen 1'119b~ IS.tldlu) '" " M('tM"'11. ' cidff; ata l!IOlfTM IA.CL l50 'I'•'"-S .,..., W•1•v, ? okK ~ 1111 In Grtdtt AM Mlftuf, Wh llf!ll, Pu'1t WOO. Tiie eurDaont. • H•ucihn; Quincy A GGc Go fMorrl1) 11J Ji• " Pl!fl Ptl'I 0....,.,. {2 Adlllr) 117 t ll. 0 O 011vld JtM {Sk•llh) 117 llo , u iofoblfftti /1(1nlt1 --.... ,,, T011tr- &1r Little Clecll; (Llc>IMITI) 114 N0911oeli. C&rll'll<levl 117 Jlo.n ""-ce (5mltt.J tn Rqm1n11nd1I HOO (H Crcrstrrl 1!2 I ! I ! j_J ,j Ml11 Parr a.r (ApodK.1) 11' W1r Gtlu:~ !Wftloll\ Ht 5llll• AM i') • M II.II -,_ • , . .. . Tum1y, .My 8, ~'169 TM V1rtet IS1ncMi) Crair Sky CSmlff'll ""'""-" o.iroll (Adair! Mld'oftv Otl'ICI\' IL ll)l•11m) E11t lll(ll.ln C~I Rocket Jn utr {8r!lllcl!'YI l!;!lf1"'"' CRldwirdll ,_, 81rt (1{11111) "' '" "' '" "' "' ... ,.. lll•IMt l 19hlr>lnv IU~ !Htrtl Llltle TOWJI (I AdtlrJ '" '" JOHTM •ACI!. Sit '1'9rdt. 3 ..... r &kh tNI ""'· All--Pune lltrllO. t.lluck 'Em Cll l•nb) l'JO Kh1I Pro (ll:ldl1rdlll 11• f.tD~~· cf , , 1 I r:~tQ.~~ .. , l I '1 M1v«. lb : ,' MtC-n. • j EvellS. 2b l Keu.10 sl !I ·--.,• ... k nkll.I, rt ,o MOUTHFUL OF FISH -Two Mexican fishermen in a 16\-foolt .. dory caught this 1,300-pound tiger shark recently-in the waters near MazaUan. The big fish had to be towed to shore by jeep. Ken Scott of Newport Beach (second from !ell) poses with the huge shark and the men who caught it and 'got it to shore. "'"H ltACI!, 3JO y1rds, olds. ClslmlnJ. Plll'M 11900, prlct USOll. . . _, Cltlmlnv lll.tnnw-81r L" (LiPMm) 114 Tidy W11'dl 115 S-IOl'l·1-Sll+tr IW•flOl'I) 117 Two TwH!fy "lv1 IDl'tWr) Mr. Sut lltr n C1rdoitl ~In Somtln fAdalrJ ChuOt-(0 h nb) 111 Llttle Obi. (Ke11llJ 111 110 ·Cl'l•rlll!r Lee (S~pe> no 117 Yo Qlet'o !Slr'lllU) ll' 12t-Sandy Ollc IH C,_bot) 117 e Race -Results - b. oz -LZ-&aat!!A q • eaxa w• a Mo!Hln. ,,,,.,,. 7, 1Nf , ... , . '"' I' JllST kACI!. l.50 y1rd1. M•lde.i J "°"'' old~ Cl1lmlns1. P11r14 11400. DH·Soolled Devil fMorrJ1l CIH-No Mitt (Stnll!!) Cllllo;>rnlt S.nd\ (SI-I Tltne-11 7/10. 17.!IO ··~ $.Oil '·'° 7.1111 5.00 .... AIM lltan-Nl""°'I Goldy, A.a.tit JI• <1uest, Fist srreem, Anroette Deck, Mls.s (lfnade, Jule"I Giie, Awced<I k il>9. sc,.trhtd -L~ ci.ete, l'"1mo111 0 11e1tion, Sursol11 D•~-M••~r Cherot. DH-ae.dMet f« flrit. 'JECOHO llACI!. "'1) Ylrdl. ) YM' ol<h •nd UP !•. Grade I Plvs. ""'"' 11500. w:~11:!:."::~ · .. , 1.211 J.20 ~-'° -t:w-Owtldw-ltr IA-.etl •A ~.«! Note Book CJl!lct.ards) 4.to Tltne-20 1/10. Also fl111--Sorl• tllve, OQ-Dlsavett, Pr!r>CeM P1rraM, 1'"1•1111' H01les1, Go _ R}IClda. Rlcklor. Sc:r'llched -J~ 11 l t!&. Abl:IV't lt!IY, IYV'I Win~. l KI"• tier DeP!tl. 00-"lnlshed Ind, dltl'luelllled 1nd •lec:ed last. NIGHTLY 00VflLE-1·5"°"9cl 0.1'11 a .. w111ow •-•t fdtedlttln. f'•l<ll lllf.00 t. fflGHTL y oou•LE -:t-N• Mist • t-Wmtrw 1teciue1t. Paid Ul.M. Tt'lllO RA.Cl!. :ISO Y1rd1. Mllde" t l'er> olds. Pu"' 11600. Fnt El!di& {Ada ir ) 10."40 4.00 l.111 L'l!O llaY Dill (Cerl!OU) 2.00 ? . .-) MIN Clll~ ILIPhem) '·'° Tlm~ll '110. .t.li.o R•11-R1pld ""-'•~lie. Shirley Jl!05'tlle, Tw Four k•V. MOOl'I A••ln. '""' For ,t,11, A Goin' Men. Sc:rtl~Slltlil Scene, Seven Grind Bera. lieflry'1 Hos!, TOI> lrue.. l'O\lllTH llAC!". 4'(I Yl rd,, 3 w ar old• ">d up In Grade A Plv1. Pur~ IUOCI. On Watch t:\.ml!ll) OQ-Waldl "'V Treyel co a • ...,, Ooob'-H1sty (A.POdlttl Tlme-11 4110. 1t.OO t.60 4.IO • •.• '·'° •.N ,,1,1$0 R111-Mr. P.tl lllr, P1rt(er'I l mave. sun Gho1t, Th• Pol1roon. !.cem1 L!kely, TOI> Toc:IO, sc ... kl>fd-Go Horntlrt. ltaJ>!d M•· Iii, Jt'tllr-9, S!""11 GtllUnd, Nfflllft'I Hor1'y. DO -l'"tftllhW ht, ~..uetlli.. & pieced 2nd. l'"ll'"TM llAC•. 250 v1rdl. ) 'fftr old'!. .r..11_.ncn. Punt snoo. Oerl M.e !Mol'ri'll -'·"' 4.70 S.00 S.rtorlu1 !Stnl~l 11.«1 5.oe " W1r At11!r Ot1rt) 120 Tl ....... lt $/10, All<> A-..Th ... O<:i'I. c.IM lt01<'- 11e, 0 11.-.y. ~ WIYM. Scnt~t Te Ge. SIXTH RACI". a ye~. 3 .,.., elds •!'W! w 11'1 G.-..:le M Mll'llll """' In Cf,llf. Pur. 11900. Ytllent l'r1nc-t fCe'*4aJ 10.IO J.IMI 4,00 Goll• ltr Toa /JI: lel'lbl JJO J.60 Tlgllt s~" 1sm11111 •-" Tlm.-20 J/10. Al!O lt111-JllSI! N«.01, O!dlwy Oll9 Time, l \lllllV'1 9"f, lt.11 !:Ml It.~, Prlricese Morron. M9o1t °""'9, air ·-Declt. Sueld\ecJ-Ooubt. E,.rHS, Liq A Rockftf, Wiii-Gold, Mr, lemetf, 5EYllfTlf ltACI!". Y'9Wlt Sr. COll"9 410 verdi. ,-.,.., olll'1 e!ld 111. Clllmlll'I. PUr-M! nooo. - Tany'1 ~II (Adllr) JtA t.A J.to Sir 'Niii! (McA:l'l"'OldS) 3M l .00 lunrr('s W1rrlor (Ill 81rb) 4.llt Tl,,.,._., 1110. .-.100 Rl,.__ltrTW'• l !KUlt, ""°'" fM!rou1 Dt-tllt1', '"'"" lrown, Wftlr!r Doo. $01nlsll Lod<tt. S-cr'l~let1 MlldMI. l!"IG+ITH llACI. -,..,.,., $ YMr ol•b •M UI' !n Grede "" l'IUI. TIM ll1lbo9. l'urst IFllOO. ll011n l(lrtkk (Hartl JDH!>hlne Jlll'le f"4tfr) RoUff 1nl1,1n !W•tloll> TlmP---2fl 4/10. 16.to 7.IO 4.40 I.to ._,. "' Also R1n--Jl!lor's Nithl. ll"'*IM (hick, TtXIS TrKtr. Cl'l!ll .. r. P•r· tnl'1 Plan. Fltef Rocket. Scnik'llfd -Geronimo ler, s.Vlfl SPeeds, Otock NolM. HINTN •ACI. 5't r•rdl. I v.tr old• •nd UP. AllO'WltllClll. P11ne UYOll. ll'OKY. Ntr'IC (H (rp1by) 7 • .0 S.!IO 3.IO l&r Ollnllll"' IS.nchezl tt.IO JO.Ml OH·Trv1y HI (SlaM) 4.00 DH·SUP<!r lt~I (WllloOn) 4.111 TlmP---21 1110. Al$<! R1~llo Rodtlt, Hiio s-d. Tl!iJ 1119 Min, $Und!to, Abtt llr'lhdl1t Frotty H1Wk. Sc:r1tc:l'led-Rodlt'I V1n JuMn, OH-()Hdltftl fOr 1tilrd. Trader A llenat Work, Fills Gap With Lang trade, as the two key nasons the 1969 Rams could better their exce!Jent lo-3-1 record of last year. In return for Lang, trader MOl'll!'ll,c S Ot Total• ~ <Q 7 t 4 Sift ('-tl'J:1Ullt. M R&I C!wlmnMn. lS s 1 I I ~"'.?.ft, i ~ t 8 r~i..· ~!'' W=t,c '•It .!lc0.:11~ It i 1' I, 1' Kelr111.-lb I ,..,,.,... rf ~ • Cl =::·~~ ~~ ~ 1-1 : McK1111t1t, rt I J I' o Teteb 15 ~ ktnrr 11'1 IMlaft • M W $1!'1 Ci-"! f'IO '10 O'I0-3 ' s S.nt1 An• 12.1 000 100-7 t 1 Contreras Won't Start Against LA It'• been a l<ng time llnce Mike Contreras hasn't been in • Baseball ~ .. Sl?Ddings NA110NAL LEAGUE East t>tvitlon Won Lost Pct. GB Chicago ' st 31 .627 New York 45 34 .570 5 St. Louis 40 44 .. 476 1%1Ai PitUbUTgh 38 49 . 469 13 Philadelphia 38 43 .456 14 Montreal 26 55 ·.321 25 , _ J. Wett Division At1ama 49 34 .590 i.Qs Angeles 46 34 .575 111 Clncinµtl u 35 .545 ' s. Frapcilco 45 38 .536 411 Homtiln 43 4.2 .506 7 San Diego 29 " .337 21 11 M .... n lt .. tll\ Monll'!NI •' ,.ltt'lbllf'llll. rain a startfn11r lineup but the ex· s1. Lour. tt P11111c1t11•1111, '''" e • Hoo.o.-Oll a, Sen l',.nc:IKO 2 Huntington Beach Hitb cap-~ ""'""' ·.s. Los-"'-'" ' Cl~n.,.11 J, Sen Ollft J whll: wUl bt on the bench for-onry ... tdleCN'lld T....,.1$1"* Wednesday nJght'a Southern o.~ fJfllkl .. n41 •' ""' v.rtt tk-n M J California all-star prep buket.-c1ne1 .... t1 1t1otttnMI" s-111 ,, 1111 •-n I Dino 1s.11tor1nf J.7l. nltht u.il c asslc at The Forum in HouJton (O~r 11·51 11 san FrM- Inglewood. ei;.r ~:en~~' ,, Ph!'-'"' CIF coach Bill Armstrong of "'~~~n::;.., "'~:,ft~'.: ,.11,.,.. •n Compton High has penclJed in .:W-: 1~:' ~~ 1°'7 •rwf a rnimJe of All.cIF'ers hil own .......,... fW-u1 t1 l'llflbll11111 ---r • (fll•u H), l'lltllt Louis Nelson and D-a n Anderson of North Torrance, lo start ahead of Contreras against a Los Angl'9 City School an..,tar aquad . If a player of Contreras' caliber isn't in the starting' lineup, then the CIF has lo be loaded and favored to even the seriea against Los Angeles at o~ game each. Joining Nelson and Ander~ son in lhe CIF lineup will be center Scott Magnuson of Troy at center, Compton forwafd Larry Hollyfield and either Bruce Baker of Torrance or Lee McDougal of Centennlal at the other comer. Los Angeles will counter with Bruce Clark (Jefferson) and DeJJ Pentecost (Jordan) at a double rmt. !Uchlnl Hart fManue1 Arts) and Cbris Marlowe (Pali1ade1) at forwards and Marlo Roju (Belmcmt) at gµard. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division Woa LOlt.Pct. GB Baltimore 56 25 .691 Detroit 44 34 .564 IO'h Boston 46 37 .554 11 W ashingtOo 45 42 .517 14 New York 40 44 .476 17% Cleveland 32 50 .390 2414 West Division Minnesota 47 34 .580 <>akland U 35 .545 3 sea.tile 36 45 .444 11 Chicago 35 45 .438 11% Kansas City 35 47 .427 12 1t, California 30 50 .375 16V2 MMINY'l It••"' M!nnttOte 4, ktnl41 Cll'r I '°'""" 1, Detroll t Wt""lnOtOn 7, C~llMI t Cllk:Mo 2. Oekiencl o Cellfen\11 5, $taltllt l Ol'll1 MIMS lchldYled Tedh"I 01- Clllfrol'nll (Mc:Glothlltl &-1J t i St1tr1t (ll:Oll~rtl: 1·2), rti9111 K¥1111 City (IUnktr 4-JJ el Mfnne- 1al1 (Mlllw t·t l, nllltt O.kltflll 01unlt!' $-7 elld NJ"1 4-~l at ChlcetO fHor1tn S-f •>Id E'dn'IOl!do .,,. l.fJ, 2, tw!-nllht _ Clewtl"d (LAW Ml .i W•ll'lll'IP:ln ("""""'" ).J), "lttll Ottrolt (Lalldl 11·1) .i lotion (N..., 4-1 ), nl(lhl Ntw Ylri: fPete"°" "' •nd lur· bech J.4J •f l•fllmcn {Cv.ll•r ~7 •nd l'hoetlu• 7·21, 2. ~191'11 , , LOS ANGELES -Some in· iiders say the Los Angeles Rams have traded their way 1to a National Football League ;title with the acquisition of ·:rullback Israel Lang from the .Philadelphia Eagles. George Allen, Rim head SOFT coach, swapped John Zook, a SELL SAM By Marvin Myen :a The doubters, after the trade Monday, said it didn 't :happen that way 'the last tlme "21 Los Angeles team made a Illig deal with Philadelphia. ·' • Tbey refer to the trade that bought Wilt Chamberlain of '.>the Philadelphia 76ers to the Los Angeles Lakers of the Na- .. ilbnal Basketball Association. ·"'The Lakers won the Ir division, but not the NBA ciampionship. "r•1he insiders who are touting 1,~be Rams say Lang, weighing ii} at a solid 232, should give orck Bass the running male he's .sorely lacked the past three seasons, especially since Les Josephson's injury a year ~go. : ~They rate L8ng among the · finest backs in the league and ·. 8'Y he's just been overlooked ! because Philadelphia has been . riilied in the wrong end ol the ~~tidings. t ~Lang, at 27, has five years 1 ft{ierlen<:e under his belt with Philadelphia but has a long , lutore ahead of him. . -/ Leng joins All-Pro offensive .lst~le B o b Brown, who th e Rtims also got from the City of· Brotherly Love in an earlier . , ' . . 1 rookie defensive end from Kansas and Harold Jacbon, $- 10, 160, a .swift.young receiver who was with the club last seaiOn. In a second trade Monday, Allen peddled a draft chok:e 1-....,.-""+.~ for speedster ClaudJJ Jame1,.a .• ,~~~'' flanker who was with Green aay last season. James ill f.2 a n d 190 and was one of the fastest of all the Packera. Since Allen became coacn four ~an ago, he has added 41 players to lhe-ilam roster. Twe{lty-five of tbe new LA players involved in. the 41 deals are st01 on Ule club and will report to Fullerton for summer camo which begins Saturday. .. J Here . They Come, Maybe; Snmllit-lbarore-llooked. The firat albacore of the season bav.e been landed by a boat out of Newport, and area sports skippers are keeping their eyes and ears open for signs that longfin schools are arriving ln Southern California waten. A weekend scout boat out of Art's Landing bagged five albaco.re , but George Newcombe of the landing reports that lhe fish were well acatlered. · "The largest fish was a 2Q. P!JW)der .and the others were a~U4f ~JLbut tbls~ guuu I gn, ne said. .iue smaller fish usually preceed big scho01s and 1mall fish .mean · that .the run is JJJllt ieginning." Newcombe said the albacore were taken 37 miles off Pyramid Point and In a ' line stretching from the Cortez Banks ·to the fiO.fathom spot. All were taken on jibs. Reports from other landings fn the San Diego area and from :private boats' reported widely scattered catches of small albaC<lre , although one 32~pounder was landed. "Right now they j u st haven't schooled up yet," Newcombe said. "We don't plan on sending out : another · 5COlll boat tbl&.week, but w:e:ll ~o~bly_ ach«lule our first albacore run --ror---.t he weekend." If the Jongfins Bbould start hitting earlier, boiji-=lrt's [;an- ding and Davey's 'L«ker will send boats out after them. Both landings advlse anglers to call for reservations and the latest information' on the albacore. Art's weekend run Is priced at $2{1 a flead and reservations are required. Fishing in local waters, meanwhile, continues to be good with most of the action concentrated on bass, bonito and bairacuda. Just for spice anglers are hitting on an occasional ball.but and bluefin tuna. 1DorrSklU-of-corona de1 Mar lande!f-it.31 \;-pound barndoor haUbut. last w.eekend and fiSh~men o'i:tt Of Dav~y·s !and- ed lo1Jrblll4!Dn-1n the 26-pound range .. -. . Elims Fiellf , Cut to 60 ~ They cut the field to the top 60 bowlers t.10od!JY, ajght hi the 1969 West Coast matcii game enmincitibns ' at Korii' Lanes in Coat& Mesa and rilost of the Orange Coast area co°" testants got the a:a:. Onty ,five Brea bowlers, headed by the hol Diel( Braasch of Fountain Valley; survived the cut which came after the ftrst 28 games of a<>,. ti on. Braasch moved up three. more notches Monday night into fourth place and he's the only are11-bowler. who'1 cur- r enUy in col\teiltion. ·Former ChampiOii Art Ric..1 · cilli -o'f Wesfminster-stands- 15th while the other three area survlvoz::s' are, JV:ell .bickJnJhe pack --c1yde -La-Chet of Dana Point (42nd), La.Fry Keller of Westminster (44th) and Roy Wilson of Costa Mesa (491h). Newport Rolls, Holds Lead in Cage League Bus and bonito remain the hot itein with anglers pulling in numerous limits on the two fish. '1'1le ·bass are still in the 2-4 pound range withe bonito going as high-as five pounds. Barracuda action is rated fair. Roland A1e:a:ander of Wesf Los Angeles continues to lead the field, but hJs margin i!I a , precarious five-pins over nm, nerup Foy Belcher of Glen- dale. MEN· Let us make you look your very best by oettino one of. Sir Walter'• famous European Razor Cuts. By DA VE CEARLEY Of "" Dallr l'l"!f ,,.., _,- The Newport Sailor1 re- mained in first place 'in the Santa Ana basketball League as play reached the halfway mark Monday night as they annihilated· Saddleback, 69-28, at Santa Ana CoUege. Mater Del stayed hot on thelr heels, one game back in the standings, by routing El Mbdena, ·72.50, In the only other league contest('"· Santa Ana Valley trimmed Los Amigos, 5$-41. Newport trailed briefly in the flr!l: quarter b e fore launching ita barr_agg.~ o f buckets. A 12-polnt edge In the second quarter squelch«l all hopes_ol a Saddleback opset. Four driving · tayups by Sailor guarcl Nela 'Tahti in the first ball sparked Newport's drive that carried it to a 36-15 edge at the halt. Tahti ended the nt&}it with 16 points, while Dave Eccles added ,12 tallies. Area Spikers Place Third The nine-man Corona del Mar Track Club flnlihed a 1lrong ~iiit'over the"Weekend lo .the second aMual U.S. Masters track and field cham- pionships .held In San Diego's Balboa Stadium. Sparked by Dan Aldrich'• first place ln the discus and Nat Heard'• winning effort in the shot put, lhe CdM outfit tallied 139 .pofnts. • The to-man. Loa. Angeles Senior· team won the meet with 190 points, •htle San Diego's 2S-member squad was second with 145. •Aldrich, the ,chancellor o( UC Irvine whirled the discus 138-61,1 v.:hile Heard's winning put measured 49-9. Don Winton led the CdM 1COring with 30 polnta scored In six evtnls. His brother, .lloA li'intoo, -27. • Numerous · rt bounds by Lee Haven and Biil Beckett cleared the · boards for the Sailors and stopped several Saddleback drives. SIR WALTU'S 2052 N..,.,.t ll'td. Cut• Mesa Mater Dei capitalized on •!==================== series of turnovers in the se- cond half against El Modena to.pull-out of reach in the third quarter. Monarch guard Tom Walker pumped in seven buckets in the first quarter lo give Mat~ Dei a 12-point lead· at the end of one period. Walker ended the game with 25 points. Dave Kiley (15), Ralph Chando:: (13), and Werner Raes (11) also finished in double figures. Cbandos was devastaUng un.. der the boards in recording another fine performance. Mater Dei was _ seriously troubled early ln the third quarter with several traveling, doubJe dribble and three..ee· cond violation calls. •L MODIHA U•l ·-J. l- ""' """""" ...., . c. .... T. L-ic:m.+i •. .,,,,, Norm In loll M. JohM«t Tott II I'll l'T , . , . • • ., . • • ' ' • • • • • • ' ' . ' " . MA.Tiit Dll 1711 ""-l(lll!Y ·-·-McM!Mrntll' l"rlll Hem.tllu, W1Jlttr 1'"11 l'T ' ' . ' ' ' • •• ' . , ' . • • " ' "ot•l1 .. " ,_,..,...,,.,, El ModtN 14 M I Mmr Dtl ,. u 11 Tlll'lt1 T1,lol' .. _ '" .. h~ton '"'"' v.,.1 YwM """ Metlrldl' Tollll "RWl'Olt.T l•tl .. PT , . . ' . ' ' . • • • • ' . . ' . ·• , . .. , IADDlllACk fHI ,. l'T . ' ' ' . ' l· ~ • • tl "fi k-,,. °"""' N-1 . 17 It It teddi. l»dl I J 1 •• ,. • " • ' • • • • • • •• ' • • ' ' • • • • • " " ~ •• ,. • " .. " • " ' • • ' • ' • ' • " 17 " ·~· ,._. .. ,. • " • ' • ' ' " ' ' ' • ' • " • ' • ' ' ' " .. •• .. • , • • ' • ' • ' ' I • .. .. "-..... Sze 51.40!Nowthe crow 1h gall()n is easier.'.' to get hold ot: now 511.49 (was '12.89) Now California'I most popu!u bill plloa come:& tO_J'OQ at u. eaay.~pjct. '4i).rlce. -·-~ mOdcroCrow. · • Grtp-j .. bandit. Ped<Ct Irie (or balanced pourina frJ>!" Jin[,.., ....... • Com_-tU... No taller ...... !fib, '"" hotdt •lull 64- • hDMa poanr, Pc:rfoct pourfaa coatroJ .•• ,mootb, driplce, Gow •vet)' time. , Old ·Crow ~"!l*lt~~ls~,.,. ....... •W'"'1aww~•~ ... t1.llt.11tW11t11•,,,. ..... .,.. .. ,_, , ' ·'' . ; •• ' • - .. :t> I I • • I· • • • ,AMILY REUNION -Peggy Lipton, left, and Nan Martin, who.play1 .the role of her mother, will be seen tonight at 7:30 p.m. on "Mod Squad," on Chan- nel 7. The segment, titled "Hello Mother, My Name is JuJie " has the mother arriving unannounced from s8n Francisco to introduce the man sbe is go- ing to marry. to her daughter. TELEVISION VIEWS No Westerns Coming Up By RICK DU BROW HOLLY\VOOD (UPI ) -It is a rather .unique feeling to look at next season's new television series and.find not a \Vestern or p:ivate eye show among them . The anti-violence syndrome. brought on-by re- action to th e assassinations of ~1artin Luther King ; Jr. and Robert Kennedy, is clearly in evidence., - despite .alannist reports to the contrary. · What "'ill there be in~-~ead _of the .,.&-un,_sli'!_g~i:.s_":"' ~and-squar~]awec1lfi'iWte rnvest1ga ors. j _ · . WELL , FOR INSTANCE, there wiU be !Ne new music and varie\f series. .~slie Uggam1 ... Wi!l ha_ve one and so will Andy Williams, and .So will JlJll Nabors. And Jimmy Durante and the hennon sisters \viii share -0ne. And there will be ~ entry called "The f\.fusic Scene," focu sing on h"t records. Situation comedies, thos bread-and-butter staples of tbe networks, will bft' ack irt force again, with no Jess than eight new,.d'nes on tap. Bill Cosby will have o·ne, and so will Debbie Reynold s. Then there wilf be the one based on the works of James Thurber, "11y World, and Welcome to It," and also "The Courtship of Eddie's Father," about a widower and his son. ' THERE WILL BE "The Governor and J .J .," about 41 politician and his daughter. There will be , ''Wberrin Rome~'" ·about a professo-r and his Off- ' -·spring. There will be "Mr. Deeds Goes to Town ," abOut a rich fellow who loves the simple life~ And there will be "The Brady Bunch," about a widow and widower, each with large families, who get married. In the drama-melodrama-film comedy area, about 10 new series will try to make us forget all about cowboys and cops. Well. almost -not alto- gether •.• well, you know ·what J mean. "THE NE~ PEOPLE" will deal with young- , slers who form their own society when marooned ! on an jsland. "The Survivors" will tell us of the trials and tribulations of the ugliest people on earth , -"The Beautifill People" of. the jet set. HLove - American Style" will offer primarily lighthearted tales of contemporary romance. "Medical Center" and "~1arcus Welby, M.D." will deal with doctors. "The Movie of the Week." a 00-minute series, will naturally have a ""ide range of subjects. "Bracken's \Vorld'' is about the behind- the-scene s action in a movie studio. , "Room 222" will focus on a Negro teacher -a • man -in a high school. "Then Came Bronson" will : be about a young ex-newspaperman who sets out ~across the nation on a motorcycle in search ol 1he : meaning of life and all that. "The Bold Ones'' wi ll • • tell about fictional heroes in such contemporary areas as medicine and law enforcement. THAT BRONSON fellow , by the way, reminds me of a young would-be reporter, no\v a network . newsman.owho once came into the United Press Chica go bureau looking for a job. I directed him to the head man , Fran Leary, a very tough fellow to impre~s. "Mr. Leary." said the young man. "I'm pursuing journalism." Replied Fran : "I hope you catch it." Dentais the Menace ·--· .. -.. PEANUTS STIYE ROPER J.UDGE PARKER MOON MUUINS TUMBLEWEEDS i'M VEAlllV SERIOJS, FELLA!-1 DON'T WANNA BE A INDIAN NO MORE! I WANNA BESOOETHIN'ELS£! OON'r BE ABSURD. YWRE NOT QU&JFIEDTO BE ANYTHING El.SE! MUTT AND JEFF ·---... ·---·- GORDO MISS PEACH ' !]! ~t} .. -.'.I ~, :, A<™UR, YoU HAO NO lt.151pJE5' SR•HGINO- YOl,:;i~ OOG "TO CAMP WITH YOU· HIS Plll!\'IOllS OWNER 11W~EO HIMTO STAY Cl.C5E 1'0 Hl.i MA.fT!R. "" r. ·- • 1'.-p • ~ • --·- I . ~ ly Cliarles M. Schiill .---------, RVNNIN6 AR0UN0 IN 'TllE Wo65 Ill IOVR.~ Fm CAA eE VfFll EXCrllN6 .• BllT. MAMA--YOU KNOW WHAT 1'HEY S/,.Y AEIOUT MIC!' WHEN 1'Hf;' C.AT1S /..W~Y- S JJJNAY5 5AV, YOU BUY 60Ma&OP,' !LSE:S TIWU!ILE5 WM!N y0U i&UY A USEI> 0()6, · 11 a -1 By Tom K. Ryan A EX-INDIAN! By Al Smith By Mell 1 111'11-\ I . I • TUE \OAV JULY I • Ill - -,., (30) ~ .. u Ill (I) ,_ ,., (IO) '''""' lanctf flndt ltb lot'•ltJ dlYl'*f wfltn ht lllffb I pt (Su•ll O'Cofl· 11tll) w1MD1 lltt.lr't (Arttlar Hiii) hc1iCI Ill the Cltol bmlnm fllll 4lm111 hi hit.lib al Mll'doc* fl' UJC Ill'* , .... (60) ~11fst Adri1n Ruiz perfonM Softatl h1 I Minor, by Liszt: Thi lll11diM 111111 Thi Nishtinfllt, 117 Gnnldar, Hmm, by Albttllz; 11111 Son1t1, by GinuterL jofri• er.. ....,_ Ill•-(30) Ulltlf IM ltlMI" rlldln. (K) 10:J0m,._ (C) (30) Bl• Jaiu, OQ)<Illll• '"' «I <IOI Ill,_ c.-(30) .. Stiod'• lr11i\." lllr. Siloc*'• lnil 11 sm1e11 Md hasptlnttll to NI ll1IOIJOBIQJ""" (C) 1 llllll9Utsfad ctriU1:1Hoa. (R) . D -.. ,.._. OW-(30) 0-~-.. ••<I 0 !l'!J CJ) (I ...... (C) (1iO') F.._ PriM" (dr11111) '61-stM "Hlllo Mottiw, MJ N1"'! ti .llllit. • Cdttnt. Dl'M Brllll. • J11lll'1 moth• Connie. • farmer m ADie t.cl4n'1 lllery (t) Mii pro.tltutl, •rrfnt Ill Loi Miii• to Fr1dtr, Pit O'Br1111 11111 SUun Oi- llltnldllCll Jullt 1o tht 1t111 lht v.r l\lllt. 11!1n1 Iii llll"J. N111 M11tl11,, Wll· dJ Mf'ric .......... n.,.-(11,.. lilrt Wllldoll ..... (R) m•) '39-thrmptir., lloc•11. wnr1am G 111111111 I ....... (C) -'lllcll WldM" (m,stlry) '64 -Gl!li*l Rotm. ¥111 HtftlL mTrd • c....-(C) (JO) Ho!dm. @marn-!CI 111...., •-i!OJ 11:1So@rnm-«1 ll!l T>o -.... (]O) IRl e-" _ ,30) 1:00B111 ••• CmMI (C) <60) 11:.JOO ....._ •r111r11l1J'I c111111• (comedYJ '43---SlllJ ,,,,_ ~ st1W1rt Gt1n ... o l!llm m..., • ..., ,., m Mull CC> flt!) 11:l5 o ...._ .,.. " " .. ..._. fr) fellm (C) (50) "Wirt rllt RMl (comtely) '4t -RouAnd 111°*11, Nonr111 M1illl' Pl ... St.Ind Upf' Robtrt ClnnminP. DocumenllfJ Oii tilt 1Llfllor al ''lltt N1Md 1nd tfll D11d" 111d "Why 11:45 0 U {i) m TlllllM .. (C) A11 We In Yletnlrnr' ~ Pftlff•m l2:JO O Moril: .,..lftt" (drtrM} 'U- 1hows M1llw •.• I writer, ldof, Rl~nl S1seh1 .. Ill ... Erno. dlftctol' llld lldift protntor. ... ., .. cm Dtltdlli;• • ..... ct> <60) m ""*' CltJ l:lDOQtCIJ., """' (CJ (!OJ Pit C11roll cuetts. When henpecked O.W11 Aflpl_,, (Slltlton) 1tttndt 1 Mi.ml convt11t1o11 et hil )odp, tt1t ROFll Ord!'!' al tht Goldtfl Soe1. bi1 bk:Urlnr wift Cl1r1 (Miu C.r· roll) lollows.-dllculMd u I 111111 .. tnt -. ... f1ltbfulnm. (R) DID <Il !!! ""' <Cl -~ Thourtrt 1 s.w 1 Two-Tilllll'.· .1un1 IPI• 11111 Ml&Mior M1rit W1u• dom'1 hlllb1tld Ill • tlf• l'Olftllldlll ·~ 1l1uli111 blondl '"' bt\1111 tht 11tirhbot lo • IDf h~. CNnlll Hilt II lut• (~ DAmME MOVIES l:lllD°'CllllrltwM•.....,..<.,._ mt) '41 -M1rtlll Scott. W"lllllm ....... m Adllt l1lllltl'I:: "T1rt DtT1 111111 H1nd10m1." 1;00 D C.-•"1 llfllfi• INnl (C) a-,., m ,,.. e. rlllidt 0111 <t> 1:15QN.., ft) 1:18GM•: ~et a.....,. (l!Om:w) '59-£ric Fl9mln1. lrlfl. .... """"· l:JCI OJ All-Jfl&llt Air. '1111 ltlllpf_. .. Kind H•rU Ind ~"' anl "Thi Uri Ill r.otfi n.. lt .. 0-... «••...., ...... Rabtrt MOl'l'J', M tr&trtl: llluthlr- "'4. l~!OID <Cl """'..._.<"'""I '47-Debotlll ll1n, "In 111 111t .,.. (fl'l)'lltty) 'S&-Stwt ltodll. Z:oo m "ltd• " .. a.a" <~ tdy) ••• -Adtll ...... hnl ...... . D '11111 PhW' (l'OllllllCI) ;. l::OO 0 .,...,.. llMrl" !frt1111) '51-·u....e.nt lltl!J, Jur1J ~ P1ul Dou,_ ""911 M G•.ta D ft) "-Mlf Iii "-" 4:lCI II ('C) "'W-. If .. H ' 1 " <••1111> '4.5--Clnt n...,, Con111 Pinet" C.Ofl) 'M-W...a eon,, WAik Mlf'IJ Andtfs. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS Ou1/ity Printing •nd O•p•nd•bl• s.r't'iC• for mor• thin a qu•rl•r of • c•ntury. PILO T PRINTING 1211 WIST IALIOA ILWD,. NIWPOIT IU.CH -141"412l • ~-- • _ ......... . ~isney B1•an~hes, 011t ~ -• • t • ._Walt Gone ," Bm .... Pro]ecls Prosperin~g...--.... -----IBy'\'li)llNO!f!W'l'r.:::;=~~~" ;;;;;:~-wilJ,-;.\ne lili! wmpon.n1- HOI.Lvwooo (UPI). _ openina to Uie Jl!lbllc Ill less lhaa two yeus .• When Walt Dianey died more Th,ia .sanie dftvta.c te1m that than two yeara 4go he )e(t • Walt \\'.elded.has come up with behlnOileifcy Of YOu"niftien still another Disney form of who contipue to direct the entertainment, lhe Di a n e y niyriad Disney enterprises arena shows. "Tba:re ate rr.ore than 200 with the zeat and i:rpaglnatlon major arerias in this country --WJillleUor.th.year1.aao'---'l!.M that-teet·fronrl;OOO·lo~-000 Moat studios suffer ir· persons," Card Walker said reparably when the dynamic during e ~ of the studio and tnen "who build them retire or W.E.O. (Walter E. Di~) pasa on. But Disney ~k his Enterpri.s'8. • own death Into accounT, mak· "These are_naii were built for ins; It possible for th c .spqrts ~vents, ice shows, tP.t: arganlaaUon to continue pros-circus and rodoes. But there is _p{!ring. DISMYla!l!L the H 1 u n t e d phlenty of opportunity for .good There tS no one man at the Mansion. s ows that pre9ent other lilnds Disney helm. SPOOKY RIDE of entertainment. And we hope Instead__ the fortunes of Plans. ror the SIVlll)y ride to do just that with Disney on -........ Parade, Disney m Q v I e s , television, through the house filled with Disneyland, Mineral King ghosts began before "Jn conjunction with NBC winter resort, Dilney World in Disneyland was b~ned 14 we · will put ·together the -Florida and OUi~r ventures are year! ago. The outer~stiall was Disney characters and n\usic guided by a group of men: built In 1961. that are already family to the Roy Disney (Walt'a older The maJlllion will open this public and hit the road. We brother), Card Walker, Dick summer at 8 """I of u1;.. open Christmas Day in lrvlne·, Don Tatum. B_Ul Walsh million _ a '"~~nside~ble Chicago.·-· . . . Dime11sicn ,Loolring-,-H'"" D.llLY 'ILOT JQ FINAL fll..IGHT Tue iinging 5th Dlme111!on "The Sh-of sw•pt the recordlns lnduatry'sl .._ _ Fl-Lerman" Grammy A~ard's In 1968 and 1119 M1 it appears they're headed ror1 -PLUS -• a similar accompU&hm~nt th!• "The Extraordinary year. s-ma"" Set to perform i n i>e:rson at .. __,. "'- the Gree< TbeaterJuly"!MO;lt---•s•TA=R""TS.,.- the young group'• recording of Jim We~b:s "Up, Up and ' TOMORROW Away" won them Grammieal "THI ·LOVl~IU•'' _tor record ot the year, best! AND performance by a vocal group, "WINNIE THI! POOK" best concemporary single and] ~ best contem90rary gr o u P, COMING , , • performance. "RASCALS" This year, their recording of "WINNIN'•'" "Aquauius," tl)e hit tune from "FINIANS UINIOW- "Hair," has proved so popuJar\i~=~~~=::;s ·across the nation that a si!llih1,r Grammy sweep may EDWARDS be in slore. • Ticket! are available al the C I N E M A c'reek Theater box office and ---· THIATRES at all agencies, including Com-PRIMlllll 'NISINTATION putlcket outlets. THIATIB and Ron Miller (Walt's son-in-amount when it ls nOted ihat ·NEW PROGRAMS Les ·Ing1ed1.1e (right) uses a cigare~te ligtiter to -he_Jp him see, but Joel Jennings law ). all of Disneyland cost .$17 The projects initiate~ by and S,aUy Brown remain in the dark in thi~ scene from ."Black Con1ed}'/' op--' Decisions are ~ually reach· million on opening day with 22 Walt have been completed for ening Thursday at the La guna Playhouse. • ed by agre_ement among the~ ~tr!lctiQilk the most part. Now new and---=-----'--------------------------Tcnite At 6:00 & 10:20 men who soon will add the Disney World near Orlando, imaginative programs must be . . Marton I Rl'Ch&nl 53rd major attraction to Fla., is going ahead ni!)idly started, J D ll,,_f' h --=====:::::::.========~Onel such is the movie, "The Zilnb ·,,. t--1-\. b t ~ndo· Boone most !~~~Slu~~j:eey ~!~ ' , • Q is ea . -a e es--I llif"cleliiiTimdlT11"1'1i(t;~ ...... :a::<--f;l~~--~=~-~~·1--t-+-1 . ih many years v.·ith a ptG-· 1 I ' ~ t I I I I ' , ' Stars of •J. Bo'~ Bob Meyer, a Marina High School dram·a teacher. and Costa Mesa ~tudent Lala Fa]Ulhni will play the leading roles in the play "J.B.," qpening a !ive- night run Wednesday at Cal State Fullerton. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 46 I.le Kinley or Logan I Kind or 47 U.N. tobacco member: 5 Big name Abbr. on Bro1dway .4g forwarded '·····macabre 49 Compla ine.:.I: 14 Latin Informal American 51 Talle • -··--: shout 2 words 15 Fragr;mce 57 Kind of lb Malce ve ry house proud 58 Wind and 17 Man's n1mt turn 18 Facts ind S'l Ttst 1igu1es fol •... Er• l'l ·····War &Z Bit o witch 211 Jeopardy doctor 22 Equipment business 2~ Arbitrary 63 Miss sign s Hayworth 2& S1n91 to 6C Well· and fro known 27 Exist theme song 28 Piece of &5 Handle fired clay the helm 2'l Calendar 61:o Hang around entry h 7 C 1rd 32 Kept company DOWN 35 Awaits I bettrr offer: 2 words 37 Sh~rp to the taste 38 Half a sawbuck 39 Bil of fiction CO Give a name to CJ Squar e dance personality CS Ceylon shrub ' J ' ' " • 102 1 Seeks barga ins 2 Cozy 3 Warning <ry ~ Italian general 5 Coal scullle 6 U.S. p1esider1 t 7 List ol person\ 8 Act of pullir.11 ' . 7 /8. 119 'Stllled 34 Coin of something £u1ooe in doubt 31> Canadian 10 "Throw prime me·--·" minister: Z words. 2 words I 11 Hub J!I Horse--···· 12 State of 41 Washingtol) or activity Ottawa VIP 13 like 42 Make a a certain temporary fish abade 21 Space 43 Canin e between ~4 ····now: bird's eye Z wo1ds and blll 48 ~l11ht, 23 E'ltvatlon lot°"' 25 SJiowed 49 Persona( tht way non ••.•• 28 Reflect on 50 Distinctive 1:9 Young horse qual ity 30 Regulat ion 51 M, Zo la J I ft,Jgh t to 52 Put off pass o~er 53 Accounts : andther'~and Abbr. 32NAT0or 54Veryd1y NORAD, e.g. 55 Th in 31 Throbbing 5h Building sign II' in bO Calendar f!ntry ·- jecled gross profit of more than $10 million. c k 1 E 4 w k w~al~h~:g~d ~"i,°~ le:b:::. roo s -very -ee s artisans were sculpting, paint· ing and designing rides and other attractions for Disney World. HOLLYWOOD (UPI\ -The FBI has one sure fire means of capturing the n1en on its "10 most wanted" list : a television show. One man, Yale Gracey , has perfected an original form ol projecting film .on sculpted heads that provides..an..eeric ~r~u~r Quinn ,~1 a rt! n , effect of reality . , ~\!1d1ng The FBI show into Gracey and ot~llJ'S in lhe !Is fifth. yea~, h~s the star. think-tank-th-at-is W!E.(1; have---Efren-Z1mbahst-J~ppear at come up with some ~.711 figures the end of every fourth . sho\v in audlo-animatronlcs to ter-\o announce that a particular rily customers who entt!f the felon is being sought by the Haunted Mansion. Federal Bureau of "At first we were uncertain Investigation. about scaring people " Walker A mug shot of the miscreant said. "But now ea~h of the ls flashed on millions of sets frightening things ii tied into a across the c o u n t r y ac- twist of humor." companied by Zimbalist 's There is a large market for description of the wanted every imaginable Disney proj-man. ect inasmuch as the organi.za- tl9n ii one of the few in show business that produces family entertainment. TEEN AUDIENCE "The object is 'to capture that big segment of teen- agers," Walker said_ "Our research shows that Disney movies do well with ol~r peo- ple and-children. Which means we have parents takinl their youngsters to see our films in theaters. ··with 'The Love Byg' we also touched on the teen-age audience because lt is very aware of automobiles and get- ting around. It has appeal for .1,ll age groups. ''When this group getS tired of provocative pictures, we hope they'll tum more and more lo our films." Rock Show Opens Run ~ COLUMllA PICTUR88 ;JIB!ll:NTB I IRllGRT I DMIR PICI / lllRlr 2 Showt Nlthtly e NOW SHOWING e lxc/1111" lnt•t•nie11t hot11,.._1:20 •11d 10:00 Shott-7:00 ••d 9:40 "DAzZUN&!Once )l>U see ii;YoU'li'never again-picture 'Romeo&Juliet' quill! !he way you did before!" -LIFE ,AU~ '1Cn!llD,.._ ·-·-.. ~ FRANco ZEFFIRELLI ·-· ROMEO <fjULIEI' Ouht11)d ln1 h1turetto: "SKY OVliR HOLLAND" . ' • F·-·-. . '-'"OIW. O'W' SOUTH COAST "'!Ill IA. PLAZA THEATRE CORPDRAllOI( San Dle&o frffWay at 8.titt~I • 546-2711 NOW SHOWING CONTINUOUS FROM 1%:30 P.M. COX OFFICE OPENS AT NOON I 11/I I /;, 1111 '/I/ 1/,'!;11,';'/ I .'•1 / 1. '1 ' !j//1/j /1/1 '' . If,; Also Playing " WAU'D!SNIY ,•1•tta WlnnlelMPooh ........ """"" ... .,, .. HlWf<li' llA(M -9t lk tftlftHt .. I•~··••• ll•• 11i. -01. 1-•1s• EXCLUSIVE Mid Southern C•llforni• Indoor Showing "The April Fools" Trchnicolor.I @!GD· A Cinema c:.nicr t"ilmf. ~n1a1-.. A N•!OONo\Gent"ral l'ictu'" l.eiuw, PLUS SECOND Pl.I.TURI Wttlldi'tl: l!~S · •:IS (ontlnllO~I S1lurfl't '"t lundiJ fNm t tOI '''"' Admluion: •~•. 11111 lun'4.ft ... llUll$ U.H C~llllN<I nc 1 .. 1.11'11.., M~ttn"t Adult1 $2.M C~lklr1t1 Jk UT'/· DI' Pft!l!l s -OMAR SHARIF .. "l:HE!" JACK PALANCE ~ 1.1 FIDEL CASTRO ..... ti:';'''* • Co-Hit 'AUL NEWMAN ••"HOMBRE" color CAIA PRDllERf WEP., JULY 9th ***** THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED MOTION PICTUREr ' .............. 11 ..... -..... .. -.... ~ li,Wlill ~AllO!" U0..-lo VJt llrlO . * Matine11 Dilly * i .. YOU 'LL LOVE HERBIE ~ the incredible JittJe cl.II C WALT DISNEY •. - Let TV WE~K Turn You On ., I I~ ' 1 I I I t DAU. Y PILOT . , G ....... "···-····~·· .. ~ ~------------'"'--- I T,, Ju)J 8, 1969 ·-t ' ., • •I .. . -·------. --· --··· "! ... _ ..... ,,._. ... . . -·. . ----....... .-;• • I - •• -. --. . ---=~-----..... ~~· .. 7""" Doorkee ·er __ Fl eel Olr~t Radio Reports from the 3 and 7 p.m. Daily Flett KOCM Radio 103.1 Lile-like FULL COLOR portrait *GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR POITRAITS! Not tinted or painted. *SATISFACTION_ GUARANTEED or money refunded. *FOR All AGES! Babies, children, adults. Groups photographed at additional 99c per subject. *LIMITED OFFER! One per subject, two per family. PORTRAIT SPECIAL STARTS MONDAY! 1 WEEK ONL YI OFFER GOOD THRU SUNDAY~ JUlY 13 PHOTOGRAPHll'S HOUIS NOON to I PM DAllY • SUN. 11 to 6 PM glii\( •lt WHllE FRONT t.>lillt.st91Q ·•lkM·lllttw.'f ' r • 3088 BRISTOL AVENUE 11111 Just Off Ntwport Ave. Btiwffn Sin 01190 frwy. & BaklH' Strttt ., FM , f j I ~I ! 1!:!!11"'~ ........ m;;;""-...... --.------...... -..... ...,~:::i;:~.'"'·:: .. ,...,;::-:.~. :-:_:-":".:": .. ::.-:.::._:::;,:-. :'. .. ::_-:-. :-. ::::-:-:: .... :-:-:-:--:.::-."'.'. :-.. :-:.--::.';". -:.-:-. ::~::.:-. :::-:. ~:-::---:-.-., -.. -.-. .. . . . • ... . ...... -. --::· .-.-. -r. . ......... . .. . . ····· ..... ~ • DAILY PILOT f l WANT 'DAILY PILOT WANT ADS TO _""""",... __________________ ,. . . HOUSES FOR SALE l HOUSES FOR SALii ::-:: I HOUSE$ FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi :~ (Lil~ Ge_ntr~.l , 1000 rG•nerol -l~~Mi."tl-.;;~'~-·:.HllJ'!!!!!!!!!l_-=::IJl~=;.f-, -"--+44 Up CHEAPIE-, ,~if@~· , Vacant And Ready oo~~T T~:E~~~lNs ~; Oll , CLOSE IN • . '• -'parkl"« "'"' '"" located r,, th" i<ra• ' bodnlom. ' ONLY SlS.000. Don'! let~ • ~ In the back bay areaw. 3 bath. borM CARPJ;TS prieo root you. This h\'O I ki1'J sized bedrooms all . Uh THROUru16i.rr!J compleie. lx ~roopi. e~antly carpel· 4 BDRM$ i30 950 walk In CI09etl. SpaCJOUs \y tq!todcled nnch 1lzed ed OVCl 11i·oocl Oool'il h.'L, • • famlly n:iom. Eltlstlng low ldtch~!l\vith all ELECTRIC ! been n!modeled rec<>ntly Secluded Jocotlon y.,l In.terest f11µ1ncln1 .available, BUILT.·INS l DISJIWASH· ' a."<\ orr,rs a BEAUTIFUL close: to school, church. Corona del i1ar lhgh School ER. Wann wood burning ' " YOUR BUILT-IN KlTCllEN \VITlf e11. Ubraiy and shop. DiBtrlct. None better at a piece in 1pacW1v !!\line -1-~=~-l-ASH CX!JINETS, brtak!Ml "lifrli· Btia uttrul-rondi--·loW-$29;'°'. room! Easy to WJtt care of bar, di~tte arta and sep. lion with shag carpet-yard wllh double raraa:e and -.. . First Graduates ·For COP.J!..E These nine students are first graduates of COPRE, a private school housed in Newport Beac:;h's old Bal- boa Inn. From left are Laurie Landa, Nancy Ivey, Lee Ann l-legewa1d. 'John Cadenhead, Ian Cowan, JQhn-BQqd, Debbie Payne, Paula Pierce and Kathy Miller. Men, ~Women Differ. on Sex Whicl Is Why Many Marriages Go on Rocks WASHINGTON (AP) -Sex of research. , panionship, home and family, di vorces are obtained within is No. 2 in a man's priorities ''Odds on any marriage communily acceptance ·and, seven years. bemg· a success are shorter · th H ·d t · ' for selecting a mate but No. 6 than those of bitling the s1~. , se1. e sa1 09 many marriages on the woman's list and "th.at's jackpot on a pinb_all mac)line . . So yous~ ~an and_ woma.n are' Jbu nded on sexual com· the reason 71._percent of in Las Vegas." do not see eye-tl>-eye. How can paµbW!Y --or ''body heat." American marriages are a Adams, 66, a consultant for marriages, under _ .:ilh"i's e as-tfel"lj'.ldt-·it --~!!!! J.his js Mt; accordlnf"tOaffemrnt:nt ~ncyclopedla-Orttall.fllca anG Cffci'lTn~tance!,last '.'" . -. ·-disastrous. . psr,chologlst,.. . 11;umerous scienti~ic pub Ilea-Adams s a i d goveFnment . "A good· date does not Wh~n a man. ~azes 1~lo a t1?ns, presented h.1s latest fin-statistics showing that 23 per· ne;cessarily make a good w~ma~ s eyes. with w~at they d1n~s lo the Identity Research • cent of aU marri3ges end ·1n mal.,.. the rofessor added think is. love. a~.devotion they Institute here after studying dil.'o rce are misleading. " ·~ • p · are not see111g the same ~ 6 000 couples. "If 1 k . uJ . Those who marry because of th· " D Cl"ff d R 'Jc.. · you a e IJI ann ments. ---Id la h t d 't 1ng, r. 1 or . ose SulCe the sex revolution and desertions, which &fe not a se~~.:, e c men on see Adams. professor e~er1tus of foll?Win~ World War II sexual ·included, the figure would be I.he r~t-of.lhe pie. These mar- Penn State University. added satisfa~1on has been much nearer 40 percent. Add to this ria~es usually end in divorce." In a report based on 30 years more 1mpqrtant to 11 lhe male what we call the marbidi!y Adaffis $1.id the sex revolu- than to the female , the pro--marriage where a man and t" · pt·• ft w Id w BA NK AD SQUELCHED f "d . . . 1oneru ...ua er or ar es~r sa1 . womap may continue hv1ng , ., . . · FffiST FACTOR 'vilh each other just for ap: II beeause nulhons o f •·eomparuonshlp is the first' pc~rances o r co~venlence servit·em~n, .,.,•ho previously subconscious f a c t 0 r in-while actually . hatmg each might have been inhibited and fluenclng the male in mate other and you find · that . only restrained, coming In mahy ST. LOUIS · (UPI) -A selection. Then, i!! order, come about 25 perctnt ol marriages cases from small towns wilb n ews paper bank ad-sex , love-affectioo-senlimcot are. rta~ happy. strict codes , experienced ver\isement offered customers in a single .category, home and OTHERS BUST women for the first time. free tickets to the Santa Maria family. a ~lpmate_(noe giving "The other 75 percent are a "They came home without for opening a savings or encouragement) and, lastly, bust.'' any inhibitions and some of checking account.-security. -The doctor, v.•hose research them found girls .... ·ho thought ;rtie · vessel, ... replica or "For the woman Ole first included interviews with . col-sex was a dirty thing. Wives Cbrlst.opher Co I u m b \I s ' th ings she seeks are Jove, af-lege undergraduates as far were inclined to be cold. Some flagship, sank in the,~fisSissip-fection and serit.irpent. She has back as 1939, said the bigg~t wives had to experiment v.•ith pl River four ,days earlier dur--to feel loved and: wanted. The di vorce year Is lhe th ird year another man to find proper ing a violent thunderstorm. second Is secu~, then com-after marriage. llalf of all adjustment." •I ' ' DAILY PILOT CARRIERS HO ·.NOR ROLL The DAILY PILOT fs proud of its earJ,s of young salesmrn wh o dtlivl!r the newspaptr to vour door. These 11ou11g men are tlLe cream of the community. Each month, the best of ihenl will be selected for listin g on the Honor Roll. Each co.rrfer listed here Ml obl-ained at lea1t four 11.t'W customers during the past month, had no more than one cust~mer eomplai nt for the mo7ith and must have paid his bill for the newspapers he bought "wholesale" on time. Number of slars (*) in front of his name indicates nurnber of co1~ecutive months tlwt Carrier Ml b'een on the H01lor Roll. ... .. • Mi•• Crow Tom Fowltr ••Dinn~ Cr11lch1r Killy C11ey Mi•• ... ,..,.,. ••p,,,y Moody 01 .. ;d Lo11lh Rob1rf Rudt r ''Di"• S111il h Ji"' P1non1 Scttt Robin1on ••Scott C1rl1on Robbi1 Mc0111i1h 01tnni1 l r11n 1801•id E11I Ronni1 Mc011i11i K1Y1n Nichol1 ••Jolin Sl1fford 01,,e!I S1nfo,d Ste"• Cr•in ''Gtonil• M111ai119 l111c1. l1oui• T •rry l r•en ••ftillJ 1111111 01Yid S1ewlo1ky Mi•• Gutl•rrt1 ••Gl1n11 lyran Kri1 Pet1r1011 l illy loyd ••Jo~n Abbott Rob1rl M1111•th s+e"'" st.el• ••M1rty Klett M•rio l1lj1w Ti'" Mul•ey ''D1nnl1 Pri tt lruc1 H•r11lt . ., How1r ...... , 00119111 John C11d.,.,lt K1 .. ln Whil1l1w ''Cll1rl11 Symond1 John Johnston Ernie S11bo e•11-uct Olir1nder Cody Srn1ll Mi•• Jtuk1l1li1 ''Rendy Ro berh J,ff Pet•~•m M11k Howtr •~•l1rry Wood1rd Miki Meek '" 111<1110 •a•John B11lllolo1111y JohR l l1clr ••c,,;, Mill•• •·•c .... ;d L1111•w arrier of "The Month .· · * 'k * * Bill FRY, 14, COST·A MW illiem "Sill" Fry Is 1 super 1ele1men who h•s won 1ever11 trips end other prites r hi1 WQl'k during the 20 montht he h•s been e DAILY PILOT cerri•r. He puts uch of his ·moA e)' into • sevln91 •ccount, but 1lso u1e1 some of his eern in91 buy hi1 own clothes. His edult supervlsor, Oi1trict Mene9er Frenk Selettl, el1e1 the 14°yt•r0old merchant for "hendlin9 hi1 rot.rte like • bu1ine11 . Hit okworii:, ro~t• list end collection1 ere elwey1 up to d1te." •••Jn G11ti1rr11 ••"Eric. H1rllt •••Lloyd C1rr •••Jimmy C1rr •••Gr1q l o1d1f M ••~0Di11 Tt.ill1n1r1 •••V(eyn1 E11~111 ••••0111 Hl11kt n1 ••••e;u ..., ••••Glen Aldin9 1r •1••Jerry Kl•H •·~~Tony Al11111d1r ••••01nni1 Holm11 '"'"''Bry1n Joh111an •••••Br1d 011F1ult •••""Rick Wh11l;r •••••Mi\e Holchki11 •••••Robert C11l1on •••••Ooii John1on •••••aichJird Menf•r l Cl.UN OUT! FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CAU DAILY PILOT CWS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T 6 4 2 • -. s 6 7 8 lll'alt-1ervke porch. Llve in ing throughou t, handy block wall lanclrw. Fabu- con1!011 and shop only 11~•0 live, porch, large fan1. lously larre ENCLOSED blocks a""'•Y at E. 17th nn. and delightful baek PATIO for sreat 1wnmer S~t Shopplf\I Center. R-2 yard with room for living. ONLY $25,950, toT Ano ANOTJlER boat or tra.Ucr 2854 An-WE SELL A HOME UNIT LATER. d"". EVERY JI MINUTES lilL ll1i Evcnina;1 can MS-~ Meredith Gardens Beautiful and rooiny 4 bed- 1·m, 3. balh--horne,-...2400 !II• fl. o! luxurious appoint- mC!n'3, Including shag car- peti~. cuatom drapes, gar- den kitchen, family room \Vith fireplace, fonnnl din- ing room, servict!' porch, and lull landJCapini:;. , FU L 1. PRICE ONLY $4-l,!P50 - this will go last! /c;,,,., CO.ti TS ~ wAL'i.AcE . 'REALTORS --54"'6-4141~ (Open Evenings} - john macnab \VESTCLIFF "For A W\se Buy'' Colesworlhy &. Co. Charming home \\'Ith beautt-1.,.iiiiiiiiiiii642iiii-7171iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I IU.: landscaping,. Syca1no?\:l 1- & Oli\'e trees S1.1rround 1200 tt. cov:l!J'Od patio. -4 Bed· roon1 s, famlly room. large living room! sprinkle!'!!. In brauliful, move-In condition. Asking $49,950. Call for app'f. 191h N~ar If.Vine $24,500 The charming little 3 BR home in excellent location. JtARO\VOOO FLOORS, Al- ley entrance for garage i: x tc slab !or rec- Newport Walker & tee 1790 lfarbor Blvd. It Adami S'f5.!M91 Opeii 'tll 9 PM OCEAN FRONT Oiannlng Cape O>d JllSt a le.w steps to yoor own sandy beach. 4 Bedrooms, 4 Baths, 2 Dell!! l Olnq: Room. • BeaUl:ilully decorated lhruout even pegged, hardwood Doon SlS0,000 Call \Vally Hallbers ""· &!44111 HARBOR •t Barrell Really ~ :'.;;~ -SALESMAN NEEDED P'Henls ~~ (anytime) ""INVESTMENT BAYCREST· ORIENTCD? Exclusively Oun · -· u; Assume Spa.titling adult occupied 4 IRVINE Tr.RACE You might be the one to help $178.00 Mo. Total bdrn1 3 bath home situ.nted us help others IQl.ve their BAYAOER OR.VE investment needl. Bu9lness 4 Bedl'i"l. Coll.ne Par k on a quiet street wi th park-. ·• J k t · r al ,. · I mm· ••'•I• Occu~ncy i!I great. We're busy and No qualiling, an,yone can. as-1 e !IC ting. onn 1 uung eu r-__ _, -~-' --'il'~ • -··' p t "~ ,,,,·u-4 Bdrm. 4 "·th ·~ ~ P•"""'°'•Y q....., """' 'lM"lc :;..,i!lti,_ low interest room, unu .. ""' se ara. •·=. r...... .... "" t k I In I -.. , "· b ho n ... 111 .. tt l••m'~"--' pc~ o wor n ol.ll' ves • 51,~7t1 loan. \Vith all built in roon1 & ualh com 1nalJ?n. nie. oca.. .. y .. ..,,~, ...lrt'em._deJ!.ll1meD • -~tChcn,Ooubli"j:al':ige,-ore--f'ec &tniple .. CaU-for'appoint..-eJ~ssi:..:;r;h,ttec!~tt.1 ~m--ditlonal information, call Mr. ed uir heal, block w a JI ment lo il'C. ming·""""'"· pec .... cu ar view ~fcCardl • ~2313. fence, brick fireplace, cul or Jetty, ocean & bay. e de sac lot with 11.'Uit trees 16();) \VestcliU Dr. NB 642~5200 Sl89,~. g .... 01'E", you can I miss. ......... ----•. _, • · ,.,_,, 1::::z::=:::::i:::z::: I ?.fn. Raulston ~o·THEREAL '"'-ESTATERS . '· ·. 646·7171 • 546·2313 .. . ' .. .. " .. .. ,.,., COLUGE PARK ~ Located on di!slrable College Drive is this llARDWOO D rt.OOR home. Vacant l: ready to see anytime, Call now! Colr:tYeU, Banket & Co. li50 Newport Center Dr. NcY<'port Beach. Calif. 833-0700 644-2430 TRADE YOUR HOME " ORANGE COUNTY'S . LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 64'"4494 $27,500 (Vets no down pymnt) ·ASSUME 6°/o N~wport at ·Regardless of how m o c h @quity you have, on this super twQ-ltory, with wind· i111; staircase leading ta 4 f.laster Sized Bedrooms. BaJ-oN-iH E-BLUF FS-cony overlook.Ing fonnat din. OCEAN VIEW ing room with thick ,hag Immaculate 3 bedroom res!-carpelina:. · Stun1ting fire- dence only 7 years old, p~ place, or try $5,000 Down fessioMlly landscaped yard and take over low interest and patio, IMlde tlnd an all GI loan. Askin& W .500. SUb- electric island kitchen with ml!. rich \\•alnut cabinets. This WE SELL A HOME ho!Jie is custom built to own-EVERY 31 MINUTES Excellent low interest on e..xliJing G.I.Joan that ANY- ONE can aS!IUme. 4 IA>d· room!!, 2 2/3 hllths, PLUS huge family room with mas- sive stone· flt"t'place. fl~.500 and ONLY $173 TOTAL PER f.10NTH. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Vic.toria 64"811 {•nytime) * 3401 OCEAN* er's spccl!icaUonii: and is at>. Ill.· 1k -.O_:-~ . · _ SOl!JICly beautiful. It's i nl er Cl 1.e'!" must sec! Full price $39,500. Walker & lee 20.u \Vestcl!U Dr. 616-7711 Open Evi:_s. $21,500 Corona de\ Mar Beach &: OOlfln view. Drye of tlK' fi(lest -See for yaurseU. OPEN 1 TO ~DAILY ORANGE COUNTY'S L:ARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 64'"4494 7682 Edinger 842-4455 or 54().5140 Open Eves. OLDE WORLD ' CHARM On The Oceanfront 4 BR, 4 bathll; beam ceil Sharp 3 BR 2 bath ColJ<b. n1in lum In choice local.ion of i\1ontlceUo Complex. \O ' THE REAL ~ESTATEf<S 4 PLEXES Patio,-BBQ h<Justo, Lovely .,. Formerly Orange Q>ast Prop. ?>targucrlte at Coast Hwy. 140 LEXINGTON Open Sa t/Sun 1·5 iiiiiiiiiiiiii673-8ii.iiii5.lllii0iiiiii0• 2 buildings • each with four .. 2 bdrm units, 1000 sq, ft., MESA VERDE b"""'"" •'""' • '"''"'" Cal'. for appointment lo see $500 nm lnco1ne on each this lovely 4 bdrm 2 bath building. ASKING $44.230, !antily room home. Many EXCELLENT TE RAIS extras, corner location, WITH LO\V DOWN. $33.900. ALSO J~AN SMITH, " ""'" eo.t, ""' Realtor 11 "· 000 You Redecorate-OK? Good 4 + fam rm on corner, ?t1csa dcl Mar. Nds paint & lawn l'f'tlOValion. Takr fl look • make an ofCe r • buy fl bargain! Liii ling is $27,950. 5•6·5880 (ne1rtinema tlwtrtl LLEGE REALTY 1SOJ Adana II tt.lrbw,CM. 646-3255 400 E. 17th, Costa Mesa -ON-THE-BEACH- 50· Of sandy ocean lrontage, duplex with 3 BR's, 2 baths, ea. uni!. Land value $70,000 asking only $90,CKXI. Let us shoW you ho\u to live like a prince for llOO QG:r month. "=====:i::i::::i:z=::1 H1I Pinchin & Assoc. ONE BR Cottage w/gar & 3900 E. Coast Hwy. 675-4392 :roned for business. $14,500 MESADEL MAR- T\\"O BR home & dc1., large UNDER $30,0DDI lot. Gnraa:c · + work!hop. P.-2 ionccf. Sl8~800 Luxurious new tarpeting, ter- TliREE Bil homo.' l ~~ baUlli, razzo enlry 'hMI. A1a.sler near ihopping. $20, 'if-0 sized bedroomi>, 2 baths. Wells--McCardle, Rltrs. Fllmily room, fi replace. C I Sliding door to secluded pa-1810 Newport Blvd., .l\ · _, k' "'"" 17:20 S48-TI79 anytime 110, SP•'" ers. ·"'-"" TARBELL 2955 Harbor VACANY-Gov!. Foreclosure 3 BR 2 ba In Huntington Big 2 l'llory bonus rm in Cl\1, Beach. Assume Ill:' 6'.4 Gt $1250 dn. Nr nf'w -lreshly Joa.n at no cost, CUstom 32' redec. Low Cl int. 10 aU heated Anthony pool w/auto- buyei'!I. VaC4llt. Priced to mallc s~per. W/w crpts, sell al $28,950. Call 5'10-1151 drps. Price $36,950. \Valker le Lee 1.lr. Levine Income Inveslmcnl Dept. 545-9451 -..,~~------CORONA DEL MAR Stepg lo beach 4 BR 3 bath home in the 200 block. Ask- ing $46,000. Call for appoint- ment 1860 Newport Blvd., CM Rltr. 646-39'.lS Eve. 644-1655 Lachenmyer $21,SOO NEW CARPET NO QUALIFYING Everyone can auwne this high FHA Joan. r>4&-9521 OI ~ "." .. ': "'.'""'.'. lleritage Rea l Estate (open P.W.C. ~5440 '"'' I ;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii' I ""~~ .................... No Down GI STORAGE ~ARAG£ 4 Bedrooms C 1ilnn +~family room. ~183 ~o-MO NJ H lmmac home close to shops, p.!r mo paya all or FllA or ~£" achls I: trana. Gorgeous Conventional . Eel IUddle rutr. 6~&.58$-~_. $21 9$0 y..,u, new cpts, ~hly garder11. 2 lots. All for the' low price of SlllS,OQJ. Own--1 er will finance. mQDIRPEI REALTY 2025 \V. Balboa Blvd., N.B. Cell Anytime 675-60DO HARBOR HIGHLANDS How about 1 16x26 family room : 4 bedrooms, 2 r~ places, huge kitchen and ta many other features to men- tion! Best Harbor Highlands area -all for Just $.j2,500! \o ·THEREAL '"'-ESTATERS d I '. r 546·2313 • 646·n71 Open HH. U•tll Saldi B ig family home, 5 BR. 2900 sq. ft. Anthony pool, freshly redec, Sharp loe in Mesa Verde. Ibted $54,000 -but all otters invited! 546·5111) (netr~i,_, LEGE REALTY 500 ....... _ --~--~--E! __ _ WATERFALL & BBQ $23,500 Beat the hea l, l~ covered patkl. big bedrooms, fire. place, dull dining room, sfirlnk1en. 540-l'l'JJ TARBELL 2955 H1rbor BEAt!I'lFUL 2-atory La Paz Mission Viejo. Assume FHA at 6%; By owner who is anixOWI to move, and can lake back second. ~1583 CUSTOM 4 yr. old 4 bdrm 2!f bath, 2:DJ 1q. ft. Fie simple. 419 F\lllekon 5f.8.ru79 ' I'::!!!":""":!'!!!!""""""!!! painted, 2 bathl le lg, fam RAN~LTY. 64S-2340 MorRing Sun ... ~· Mkina 131.'50. t.fay ASSUMES%% 3 BR. l'ni -,'ANG~LCAKE" Twinkling Lights lakeovtrexl1tJng5'4%1oan BA, 2~ car g~r +carpi, Cott• Mes• 1100 --= Bn!lld A: Butter Unlll Trlp!ex Ivan Wells' new VIEW homes of $13,~ -$175 mo pays pfs ·•-"~ Pim f I Ba I Dov Shore all. can 545-8424 Soulh "'-~~t c I """"""' .,..... • Why 1.3 ml, from So. Coast Plaza. ac ng 1 n er 1• ~ pay more, call owner now Financing Is easy! $32.500 5 niodcls to choose trom 4 Rea.I Estate. • 1142-182'7 ... BOYD REALTY &: 5 bdrm1. Models open daily liiiiii!'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio ~=~~-----t 3629 E. Coott Hlw.,.. CdM "1430 GoW<y Dr. 646-1'50 OUTSTANDING CONDO. 2-•l<>cy. 1 bdr. 2 bro, Clubhow:e a: pDOl tacit. near -:::--, 67S.S9_3_0 ..,,,.--,--BEACH DUPLEX ·' bdnn '"""" bWJ. w .. 1c1111 "boob. 131.itJO. S<IJ.Cl5 an T• d I th' c· I .. home with d<tlghtfuJ pool ' 5 Ire 0 e lly. I "''""'°' Uni• patio. '"'"'"'' '"""'"'" • ""'""=~--- Sec thls 4 BR 2 bnlh. den, w!U1 pool ilr. view in Laguna Hin,. $38.rioD OAVIDSON Roalty 5~6-&460 E\'f'!. 54;;..6142 Xlnt loci1tlon! $29~ ballt thll one for hlm9el/. BY O\VNER • Low lnlertat G90rne Wllliemson You'll love Ill 5%-6~ic:f lrr transff:m.bk • k1Ms. All S B.DRM:s: 2-E REALTOR Arnold & freud s!Jo, I IV side. 518-1009 li7J.4.1j{) Evc5. 673-1564 381 E. l7J.h Ste, CM Dliil 642.5678 for RESULTS --oc;\Tte Ele-nhllnts-! altora ~ rocK lT TO 'EM! i -----'-"'-'-~ .. ' ... ' I I • I • • C11t• MeN 1100 Hunllogton Buch SY OWNER BRICK FRONT M111 Verde Ntwl'!rl lluch 1200 Pool Season Baycr11t P•rfection Superbly located in 4he tie art or highly ·dutrable Nc"1JOrt Beach. 4 ina.1ttr 1lie 'bed· room1, formal dinlni. walls of 1lu1 ln a tropical aettina: ari>und a huge .famlly room. A wperb ~t1inc tor aWTt mer evenlngL Pool of qu,J- ty-de11ip.......-;{)nly IO~ dowl\· You name I~ tem1, Won't wt at $35.900. can todl)'. 645-0303 I OHi \I I Ill \II\ . . lWf OPTION OPEN DAILY 1-5 2112 Windward La"ne 200 St1p1 To Beach BeautUul 3 bedroom l bath borne, d~p •ha& Cllrpet &: o:po1ed b ·e a m celling Ii throughout, J landscaped pa· ~-fireplace, aU built-in _ k1tchtn, do u b I e 1:arnge.· J32,500. SU-3408 BY' O\VNER Channlnl: OCf'an front borne on R-4 lot. 3 bed Z'mJI + &cwlng rm. Idea] loca tion, nr schools, encl05ed patio, 1hq crptg l~t. Lg kitchen w/blt·inl. $67,COO. .,,...., OWNER 'S NE\V 4 or S BR. llarbor View Home, l ba.'1, II\ rm, dln rm, l11m rm, bar, lg. kit, 2 trplcs, w/w crplg drps, yntd & many. • SALE or lease By a .... ·ner. 3 Ikdroom, 2 1tory, built-int, 2 baths'. F\irn!~hcd or unlurn1sbcd. Via Yella. 675-5974 ~untlnpton &each 1400 • NEED LISTINGS SOLD OUT. Let'1 work to- gl'lher. We l!st only what \\'e. C8fl aervlce properly. Comparable u.les filer; \\"ill assure you top dollar. BRASHEAR REAL TY 84i·S531 Eves, 1168·1171 DOWNTOWN extnis: 6.9 fin an c In&'.· l BR l. fam mi. Great •"· Sl&-8'1111 qe il work1hop on lill'Y· THE BLUFFS Beautiful back yard. $24.00;; By OWflt'r, l level, 3 Elr, 2 Rex; L, Hodgtt, Rlty Ba, cust cpl.I I drps. ln1· 8·17-2.i:!a mac! Other extras, 2 pu------"'-==---- "°'· .. My " poo;. ' '"" Transferred on a:mn belt. Call 10 M:'<'. "'"'119. 131,!500. BLUFFS • 3 br, 3 ba, 'Nf 81,y-Vlew, wide greenbelt. Slep1 to pooJ. CU1. addtns. Savel $44.!IOO. Ownr 644-4& Leaving area immedltlely fJodda bound, t.tUtil aelL Delta Real Estate IJ.16-4~14 -~-ASSUME 6'!. LOAN .. -PERRON -, ,,. ...... ,, "' * 642-1771 Anytime * 3~ ACRES Undeveloped Janet Cl•y of l..o.cunl. 9 Blkt. to Hach. Ocean view1. Should divide lnio 13 lots. Price $40,0Cll; 29'/'o On. A real llceper. i\llSSION RLTY. 4N-07Sl J BDRM Waterfront, No. 62, Pll1boa Cowl. ~ 6 0 ' 0 0 0 ' \Vould trade F acrra.ae or apt1. ~mt $143 per Month Total 1..AGUNA CANYON 2 BR $22,500 houae $14,500. fcnc<:d yd. l..ovt"ly J OR 2 bl.th Zoned Industrial. 494-3170 Newport .!:felghl• _!!fO Oe1tra~ a,..a HAFFDAL REAL TY Rlverolde County 1100 HOLMWOOD Dr. s7:o \Vamrr, t'.V 8l2·tl0.l LAKJ-: J'OR.1'5T Lakctront 2 Coa:)r I d)ffl'ful 2 bdrms .. CO!llJ-"ORTARLE 2 BED!lt-.1 Br home; b} owner. Beo.ut dlnlnc f1'\., frplc. Garage. ~CARPETED, On1pc1, A'flr-vtew. 831~ evt• aft 6 on alley. t..rce ftnecd )'IU'(f. 1un10 5;.'A. loan. Driw by "'====;;;;;;=-I Condominium -1950 .... ----~ ' .. 7 • • .... '• • ·~ .. I RENTALS Hl"llNI Unfv,,.l11tH R•llTALS R•NTALI lllNTALS Apts. '""'h~ Aot.. UnJurnl"*' Apts. Unfurnl1hM RIAL ES1AT1 / o ... ,., ' c .. r. MIN 3100 Gtnerol . 4000 O.nerol 5000 Corona ,..1 Mer 'suo SlOO l BACHELOR apt. me n orey. fom. um. Ind. 1120 mo. HARBOR ~3 & ~3101 . ' 0 l:eamrnge '-Hers of tbe four KFGmbled wocdt be-low to form four 5imple word-I. l'Ef '(I' r 1 I !LU.MA ' I I I . 32SO Li~! Isle '-43S1 NE\)' $axl up. 1-2-3 Br, l\td A .~\llUI pool.1, rec rm. Hell & Af~ln. Mgr .Ms'.-3137 FURN 1 BR apt. nr Beach, pool Vacation., & penn. ~. 536-"82. 536-1'66 4600 I H y KA S j Comment about a c:ertofri 1 ( ) I llar: The only 1lifng 'that kHpa '::'.·=~-::~· ==~-__, him from .btlng a bar1foced GRIENS BAq!ELOR UNTURN. from $110 ALSO AVAILABLE 1.2.llBDRM, Heated Paola. Child Cue Omte: .. Adj. lo Shopplna: - No pets allowed 7100 Peteraon Way, at H~ bor 6 Adams, Costa Mesa "6-0370 CONSTRUCTION JUST COMPLETING PENTHOUSE apt for lse - Balboa Bay Club. Beautiful baf VlC'w, unfurn, $1275. per mo. 642-3451. l If. 2 BR. aplll. furn & un- turn. $165 to $200 yrly, Anita, Jones JUty. 613-6210 BLUFFS D:l'ttlll\'l'-2 Br, 2 Ba, on bay, 50· deck, $400. i\to. 497-1~7 or 644-007 Coron• d•I Mar S250 NEW $~ up. l..J..# Bl\. He~t· ed .l 18Wl& poot,, rec rm. H.U I. Al&ooouin. l\lar. 846-3137 New • Deluxe 1714) S3M616 (7141 536-1487 TU Ocean Avenue (3 blks \Y. ot H. B. PiC'r) REA!. ESTA TE General S990 SIHPER ~ ACR!:S navel~ hi&'h ItO- ducinc oranaa 1rove wl lrl'!· mendoUI l'fl>Wfh pottnti.t. Adj. to Hwy, 60 oU·nt~, lhe main termlnu• lo ~ lake • recreation projcrf PRE • PAID INTERESl D 0 W N: $147,SlXI FUU. PRICE. MAY TRADE --' COMMERC. CORNfR · STORES for lease Vill&ge Shopp\ni Center, cot of ' El C&tnino &. ?ilendo:r.a, c.r.1. Suitable Food to Go, TV, variety, hobby shop, ~tc. See Liquor store for key. Al Wagner 2131981-6510 GARAGE with attached of- f.ice. Total 500 sq tf. ~ Block ..-No. of Cr;t' Hiway nr Arche1. 125 Tustin Ave., N.B. $100. 548-3224 between 8 and 4:>30. ATIENTION NEEDED BY AUGUST BALBOA ISLAND Eastern Colle.re plJlfessor & Tap location 300 + i;q ft, ~duate · stiiilents, some 4 yn remaining on lease. -WJth--familles and/or ·sman $175. mo, Write J:!.O, Box pet, desire housing near 15315 Las Vega1, Nev. U.C.I. !Ome will be located l-~MARl==N~E~RS=-CEN=~T~ER- in the area approx 2 yn. OfliC'fl &: store building renr Need 1 to 3 Bedroom un-or lease. $75. to $120. per furnished ap11. duplexes or mo. 149 Riverside Ave. houses. Price range $12il to 646-2-414 $150 per month, might Ill e PRIME Retail Location e $30 more if utilitie1 are l 7X40, Xlnt loot & auto traf· paid. Please contact: t m "·-bo .. ' ,,....,.. ic. I ~ r, C.M. ...,.,..., Jluntinaton Beach S46-665-4 after 6 PM lei leave in- formaUon or \\Tile: R. • BEAUTIFUL. crpt'd office Eugene Granger, ca 5 e s uite, air-cond. Best deal in ~atern Reserve u n \ v . , town. 66-2060 Cleveland, Ohlo. 44100 (% SPACIOUS otticc1, crp'CI & D • v e I op m e n t Biology drps, air-cond. Sl40 mo. Center.) 546-0584. 703 Randolph, C?tt. Office Rent1I 6070 lnduttrl1I Ren~•I '1§090 UNDER ~natruction iS,COJ !\q. It. r.'i·l bl dg wliJi~,. 12:;o.5000 sq. fl. units. 10c: sq. ft. Completl' aboul,,Iucy 15. Eves 646-0081, dllys &16-0033 ;_, INDUST Bldg in r.1-1, 7iM \ii. 11th St., 01. :'.500 ilq• -.tt S32J nio. 645.-H.33. T'EVCti &42-1179 ,-. Nf.."W industrial blda, 25i()•sq. ft. 9c per ft. Ult ?ttomovia, CM. 673--0017 ·~· ~,. L&tt HUGE fC't! simple ·on Antiqua. OOVER SROJUis. 0\\'Tlt"r. !147--0997 ~I I liar i$ his-. 7· 6 ' H 01 p NI 0 1~ I' I' e Coni_pl.tw tn. diudl• quoftd LOVELY, Lfc. Upper duplex. by fll11no Tl'I the mltllng ..ord • 3 dR. t bl., bit-In t'&nRtl " _ you dtvtlop from .. P No. 3 below.. ovttn. Ocean skit! of Hwy. lNOUS. Bldg. JOO% occpd, & ~:~~:.r~~·f0 I' 11 J• I' 11 I' I' I' . I' I ~~e~~-· 67~ ~:.oc.i~h~~?• s ':~ ,~~u:~ HAL.F block 10 oceiul" 3Qiii>· R·l 125 45th St. J(Bl l\;&JJ 675-0771 ·~ •.:I• NO'r vacant. Aikil'!I S2-f,M.IO. 218 Knoxvlllf', then call Greham ltNlty 646-2414 536-2395. 111.soo. Nur Nawport Pait 016ot VIU..A PACtnc T\\'Nlf!'F, DIAL dlr'tiCt tu4fm. ~ f br ~ bA 21; cw i;:ir, c/d. JOlft' ~~" alt blckoand ,~,1/X!, u.sm.' fi·~1 FIL\. BUSIEST marh...,'"'m Jn .54Ul6=~=l =~~==~· IA __ ,_re_e,.111'----·-~~·/a:,...;..;j)(I 3 nn. 3 BA. v.·fw cpt1, cl.rps, ll ~~etw1AMll1 LE FOtj I I I I I J J J J .,... ron SALE nY OWNER bit 1 u .. h k n.... ""'" _ . . . . . . . . 101\-n. Tho DAILY Pltm · Take ovtr pymnts. ~0 • .i. .. l"e~ ,vn,n;~/opPfi:~. ;;i~ ... UWJ· .. • Claaallled •cOon. Save 1 .. ~~iR."· 12 1; ~.8~0~1~" & n., down . ~. nio,;~h llltsn-. VII ...... rbwt ---------- --,..,..., SCRAM Lm ANSWER IN e . ON money, ttmt. •Uort. Look -.u ~ UA •• __.... 1ttle nr. hUge lakr. ·~43 _.;.SOCK=.:.rr:...ro=·=o"Mc.:1 __ , _____ ·_:.__:.__:._ _ _:._.:.:..__:.__.:;.::L:..A.:..S.::S.:.:IFl.:...!<;.::A.:.:Tl_.:;.::.:....;.7.::5.::Q.:..O__.;!.:no::w:.:.'::"-----wi,;i, el•r"'"'" mme ... 11... '"· • .-•• I ,, 1- ·-----....... -.. "! ___________________________ ·-----. _..._ ---• · • T~.Ju~l,ltff a•A~ 111'ATI · -~'''· bo ~o•s & J!>IP~l>Y!"INT .,Je·~ & I MP(QYf<ll NT JOll & pM~O.Y~NT JOl!_SMM,~OYl)\INT JO!f, & IM~~OYf<l'f:'IT JOIS.& I M;LOYMIN 01 ... Ml'L . • • S~~Hl1oln1trvctlon 76QO Sci-1 .. lnllructlon 7600 School .. lnstructlon 7600 School•ln1tructlon 7600School .. ln1trvcllon 7600Schooh-lnstructlott 7600 ........_INIMllott 7600Sc'-!.1Mfnlftlott 7'00 6200 •c<•• -·-.... .i Acrll .. ' $$MORE CASH$$ BEVERl Y JACKSON REAi.TY 847°6033 ., 545-1245 \ fisH Qut&41 Ot_ 4 Sr. G.J. or nu. ~11.11 ·near h(>re. 49Q..1948 8US INUi -FINANCIAL SPOll'lsllio\N New opPort\lfllty for ·ttit sportsmlnded m a n ~ woman to pt in ~ field ertm tbe rnost: 1ve have a 1im1ttd number ol openings for tht ambitlouz:i person who would like to reap tht rewards or the l!Ver incrl!asing recreation ex· ploslon. ~TRE1\1tLY HIGH EARN· INGS ON THIS AMAZING. BUT FUN SUSINESS. You do nted at Jeaat $l2tlO to $3600 cash to start. Write (riving phone no.) AU.st,ASONS Sf'ORTlNG oaons oo. P. o·. B6x 566 Salt Lake City, Utah, Nl\1 Altil. HELP! ! N't tional co. nted1 a dlstrl· but.or for candy and snac)Qi in your area. Pers6n select- ed mu•t bt able to devote 2 to 10 hours per week (diy1 or eves) to make very hl&b e1u·nin1s. You may keep y"ur pregf!nt po!ltlon. No !tllina . $1650 cuh Hqulred (secured). For lmmediate interview in your Aiu send 11an1e, address and phone numbtr to: Distributor Division P.O. Box 58 This variety of fi ne schools could introduce you to a new tomo1Tow· .. for futtli•r lnformetlon r•gerdin9 the Da lly Pilot . ,...:.achools •nd ln•tructlon Directory · CALL 642·5678, EXT. ~25 CO PRE' on the beach of Balboa COPRE' SCHOOL Anno11nces SP~ING OF 1970 EUropt1n Study Prc>ar1m fo r qu1liftlng Juniors & S•nfoi'I ~n.a: for lall enrollril;nt nOWln pl'orttr• SUMMER SESSION JUNI 21~ ttlru AUOUIT lit • Art • Conversational Spa.nith • Typln1 • Rem~ Math and t:n1Ush 710 &11t Oct1n Fro"'t l1lbo11 Ce llf., 92661 ph. 673°8610 COME SAIL WITH U.5-CHllllS HAROl.O Wlil5 ·92U Poln11l!l0Jln - • E"'ntil11 Y.!!ltfo C!!lfornlo a)"8;196tl-----~1 1-~-0FF-Ol'fAAM1l¥ollATISi-=-'----' Le1rn t" tail on f 4• Sleop• -. CA1oL FOR FOLldNfOl\Mo\ 11011 p,...1choo1-111 Grecle ANN~U"CES . fie llllff for Enltr · Enrollmont ~gllter your UllI• on~ for: . ' e A full (fun) Loarnlnt Program e Muil~ e Ari • 0 '1!•11111 • c,...11.9 Actlvltlff • 1191 Lunfhff l Sn1eks • ..A111 2 througl\. ht grltlo 2110 Thu1ln An, Cost• Mn• SOUTH . COAST .YACHTS • llOQWoltl'odflc·c:-tHlthwoy q. •. ~~. 0Aftlb~ NIWPOIT llACH MS.llU c::§)ll/J& ~ -'{;'_~ "VJ}JJ ti!J ~ Your greaUul pupil: Chrl{ H•t~ld Weiss GJ .JJarre//-. STUDIOlJfCHARM And MODELING Phone for FREE Brocburo. on '4SECRETS Q'.F BEAv'fY" Summor C-Now Formlnt Hom:to..,,rotp.m. Newport Air Auoci1tes Flite . Sch~I & Flying Club UARN TO PLY $5000 :E,;,: Cour" approved I ":::...""' I • lfl1Mficl119 AYOllUlel b~ tht . . f •mpl•!• Cewrse. ~*'~'-"----.011 • ~C.41.if. S~pt.._of PubUc lNtr .• ~ 40 Houri flfght tim• in C•1sn• 150'1 with: lll--*-.-Mt4t1fat.c..U.am.low.---- --'l0 hrt:-d•1t1"11ru <ll...-Cl•b mtm btrsKTj>." * Cllorm & ,_ Oov.....,ont 2 ~onth's fr•• du•s. Individual instruct i•n, * DrtuMtfu4'9Kh.&.lttle ftNtre ·ta il•red' !~'YOUR tbility, * Spoclol C:.W... for HOfnttltclkon OTHER AllCRAFT AVAILAJLI * C.ttf IMrll ' . at LOWIST RATIS IN ORANG! COUNTY FLOHNCI SM.(LU L••rn to fJy now -i nd hev• fun I • Ply Mt1lco end Con<tdo • SpMlol Rain for Coml'\trdol ond l111trumet StHtnh For Cempltt• D1toll1 Cell NOW 673 ·0313 Director of Our State L'ici n.tid Mod<!tng Ag'11Cf/ ·1519 N. Malo, SaolO Alie 5474971 1965 S..oy Ct•I 'Dr. !Satuty Hlb Vllfotol Fullortoo 197°1000 OPPORTUNITY OF A UF"'ME "' . STORE DETECTIVE • • Men ond women desperately needed NOW to holp conlrol shl>pliftlng. * TOP P.AY ' ' * L!ARN AT HOME °'7---/-. Wr it• now for lnformotlon •I no obllptlon• SICURITY TllAINING INSTITUTE, INC. P.O. Box 4127 Anahol..,, C1llf, 92801 ..... ,. Clry: Zip: ...... ...... 111·• ANNOUNCEMENTS ind NOTICES Pomona, Calil. 917&9 ANNOUN<:EMENTS S&RVl_CE OIRECTORY I SERVICE DIRECTORY *a SERVICE DIRECTOR_Y Htl-p w •• ~·. U-.. 00 VOGEL VALUE ind NOTICES .. 'k . * * * '"" ...., t• Smoll Mom & P<>p Cal• onl :;;~,;.;;.."-"'""'---Carpenterln1 6S90 Gardening 6680 TILE, Coromlc 6974 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;! Coast Hwy. Low rent~long Found, (frM Ad1) 6'00 Per1on1l1 6405 • leue. Ideal location. F;.st. . CARPENTRY JAPANESE Garden In I * Vernt, The Tile Man * $ f $"-"' bus. Vogel Co. 2667 E. Coa&t FOUND: rabbit. Please iden-e COUPLES e MINOR REPAIRS. No J ob servlce and tn&intenance. Cll!L work. 1n1tan • rtpa.lrt. ery Ce n1nOD Hwy, CdMar:e73-o2020 tify. 642-9'257 Co.ta Mela. e SINCil.ES e T,,. Small.~C.blllet"' ..,..-o\lao clt ... up .. · -No JobclOO'-onWf,-P.Jamr MANAGER \VANTED u al li Tired of Ban, Mall & Hi Cost ages le ot her cabine~. • MS-.2S?2 • ~te,,. Leakl!'ll •ho w • r With opportunlb' fat run own- : 0 -s e quor \.Git • 6'01 computer clubs: JOJJi Tl:IE .;., &..75 u no answer leave e MO\V • EDGE * Wl:ED. ~~~~ loreipa:=ll';.. ;:;";::':,;-00~::;/!4$-0iii::;:MIG::,," I enhlp, •·•·-· •'U& "-";l license, Orange Cowtty. FUN•. -~ IN Cl\OWD -~ ' _...., ,,. ''"" Call: 64W139 •n.c. msc at f48.237'1. H. o. Prof. lawn mallll by capable percent. REWAR DI' Orv. OF t .M.P. Meet others Anderson Colle&e students. Reas! Tret Service 6980 c.oni.ct Jim Belt lr.tP01tTINC: ·Hone Kong ,, with YOUR int~rtsta at our Kai" Brothe 646-1234 * 142 ..... ~* clothln1. Can be oper. lrom weekl,y parties or select M.ASTf:R carpenter ,$4 per ma ra JJM"S Ga.rdenlna .t: lawn ~ home, part/lull time. CusL for beautilul Golden Red them indtvidl.Nl.lly &: (GALS hour •. Remodellna:·Repain, AL'S Gardening & Lftwn maintenance. R.e1, Ir com· 8'!'"~--"!2-••, list incl. Will train. 546-2374 mixed Iri&h Setter m.ale dog, join FREE> Call Leah 1·9 64Ul409 ot 536-3900 ~ialntenance. Commercial, M&4411 Dr•ft1m1n/Dealp b.1exican/Sp&ni.!h Imports Wt since July 4th. An· p.m, ~-lnduatri;t ~~~de;tlal. inerclal * $800 up, ~Jn• ~ Jmowl, 53IXXl full price, SlOOO do\vn, swen to name of "Coµgar". LICENSED Cement; <;oncret• 66oo ~ ESTATE Malnt 1'1-ei s.rv edge, ... bobby MUiz1c ok. Call \ncludes stock & tixturet. Vicinity of 2543 Orante Ave., Spl.rltual Readings. advice • CONCRETE work all John.llOn's Gardening Wh1ddy• W1nf? Wh•ddy• Got? =· ~ ~,' fret Larry, J5fa.541.1onlO•-~ &33-1293 or 633-1974 CM. Owntr's heart sick. A1· on all rnatten. 312 N. EI type1, Pool decka: & cwtom. Finest equJp., expert care. SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR 8ftT UNIQUE distributing co, est !IO reward for any info lead-C&mino Real, San Clemente Call 548-1324 Plantina, clean-ups. 9tl2-ro.33 NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS U h I 6990 Eni ploymt nt Aatnq ing to whtre-a.boutl, JJ re-492>9136, 496-9507 CLEAN·UP SpteialiJI! Mow· p 0 atery nal So, M&lrt, $.A. ~Tlliri: ~-~t~~· P.O. turned· no Cf,,~~stl71on7s aakect17. IO A~f. IO PM PATIOS, WALKS, DRJV& fn&, eda:lng •. odd j 0 b 1 . Special Rite C2Yk0Sl0'$ Ctat. UpboL JAMAICA INN'. HOTEi, 2i6i 646-36.12 or _.1 ext WAYS. Free e1tirnate. Reuonable. 543-6955 5' Lfnft -5 tlmft -5 bucks • &:uropttn Craftlmansblp r. Cout HJahw~. CcStonl ---. 'Q20 days. 645-1'791aft5 pm. REDUCE Safe A tut wUh J. RAY CONsr. 642-4210 lllUl.£1 -AO MUIT INCLUOI 100% 11111 M~1Gt dtl Mtr, ~ o• Money to Lffn POODLE -Small white ~Bet"' ltaUa~;ew" • 1 E-IVI "1P1 e CONCRETE fin, patios ~:1~_?!4"1'pe ~-... S:Zf~ ::='111 ":wi. Aft!,...~.,''::,..., .... ~ C. ~'1: l8il Ntwport fll,. C.M. GLEIU<. mldnJ;ht to I A.M, . I F h.o Palm wa er p • es c ......... ~ ....u.-wf.&1'6 I-NOTHING l'O• IALI -TJl:ADll ONl.YI J>•v oonuntl'llUl'tte~i ~-· ' lsi & 2nd Joans for qu\ok mm ., name roa...,. Pharmacy, 2043 weatclltt etc. Concrete&: blk top s.w· e 673-ll66 e PHONE 642•5678 , -,.... .... cub. Borrow on yoor P"" ~~ngt c~· ~ ~e~~ Dr. -tng, Jteu. Don. 64U5l4 EXPER.Ui:NCED Japane~ To Pl1ce Your Tr1der'1 P1 r1dl .. Ad Weldlnp 6995 1-•-bJl_l'ily::. ;::c~:-.m:::-- perty eq without dbturblng: r r, • w . ecusro~1 "PATIOS• gardener. Reliable. 540-7313 G p·J-bl ._,I S••••m•n .... )'our low tnterell lst TDa. 54&-2840 RIDE Wanted 0CC to Col'Otla -re ··-'-• ,.---• WELDIN • .,,.I.Cl 1 .,,.., P-..... W1h •W--·•--. d I ' "Ill --·-.; """"'6"' u1<1Vaa for tree estlmall'! 35' Chrl• Roa.mtr, also Tut-HAVE· Conn Minuet ~an m.ent S....,.lal~"""" In •x: L-' ""' -, ....... ., ... Also buye-ra tor 2nd T05. WST: Toy white female e Jo.tar, eves. '' pa)'. Slate Lie. •842-lOlt .. V 1 . v•-. ' ' .. ¥.. ...... . &oocf fUhft, call '~··· Call &r.,....uas &ft 1 un lew ot, all uUJ. Both ortglnaJ price $1600. WJJ'l1': cavattna: equip. Ste v e ....,,'"'""' &\tUer 1Iortgage Co. Inc. Poodle. mue collar. Nttda pm.. * CONCRETE Work, bond· Gun Shop 6710 free & clear. Tra.de for TP'• '64 car (good cond.l, HO. Mtlnyk 53M'1l2 Sun and AU Merchants Ptt,onnel Aitin- S.rvlnf336H.-E. 1~~ 20 yrs, mN~licaBll Adtt'nc. MVtc.n~yard&: BACJ!"s·1:~ see~~-s~ girl e!'I & lie. Concrete sawfn&:. 81\0"~~·c s~~. -G or r1r. BrE SaJlboat or t 11. 4:30 week dl)'I. ~ 2043 Weatclift Dr., &U-• p . V ., .• woW • to <M we '"" • com. Phillipi Ceme.nL 548-6380 ... ,,", '"''""" .., a., 67>3243 or 6'13-03lli 675-6969 4111u. Ml-21TI 545--061l 6.11-5518 or 673-1434 pa.rUonahlp. 493--0386 II. wt. Auto. Vent rib, 2 yn. Have R-2 }ot Newport Beach JOBS I. EMPLOYMINT TOOt. • MAK::Ei '"'0 t.!td. Cray large toy POOD· AU'OHOUCS Anonymoua Electric•I 6640 old' Peri. Cond $-160. 111~1,... nd I W I Wii i tr•d• 1961 VW _ _. 7000 e Experienced In a1--~on1y W1nt8CI u.N..., LE, male. Lost early Sat. Photle 5'2-7217 °' writ.. to 495--5158 duP~ In ~ro~ ~~-M!:_ S1d•n for Bui a:r V•n. Job .W1~t_., "'9n toollni tor vacuum formtnW, \\!TD $25,000 for 1 year. Top vie. 18th & Pomona CM flea P.O. Boa 1223 ~~ Meu. ELECTJUCIAN. no job too Haull r\g 6730 Matc:ham Realty * 548-3'21 * p ART ·TIME bookkeeper. Located llW' «.15 1'fW1 A int + points, sec. by collar tags. REWARD. Sensitivity Gtoup small. For prompt service 155 Rocttester, CM 646-4337 Horse Lovers! 3 BR home. Gen. ltdaer, payroll, qrtrly A1onctra. s100.ooo equity. m-9412 642-ll64 be.fort 4.:30 p.m. 64$.513(1 Or 6-'r>-~Sl.3 call 545-4514 GENERAL HAULING Retired-don't need tax met. Barn, cotTJI, rldlna arena, report • "PIL. 543--mc (213) 8lll),.2401 • -l\.NNOUNCkMENTS SIAMESE Cat named Muriel Floor• 6665 & CLEANUP ler. Want hse free' cir for tafk room, ete;--1%. acre. .. FOUN'Oft.Y- ' i nd NOTICl!S w•!rlng plutlc collar. IMt Announcements 6410 fl2 per load. 962-6846 $19M or S38M eq. In tri-!!,;,~ =b~~i~ Jab .. W1ntld, Ledy 7020 e Experienced alumlmlm 1----------1 seen 715 on Diamond St. Cirpet Vinyl Tilt HAULING, c:lean-ups, lots, plexes, $960 mo, pool, prime COLJ.EGE alrl wW ualat Scru&ezrtr 6 flOor mOuldtr. Found (Frff Ads) 6400 494-TI76 1teward PIANO LESSONS AU 5tylea ,."Id colora garaces. etc. Lrg truck, loc, no vac. 50-6001 Rented hou&e, 5Clx140 R-3 mothtr With beac:h care ot ~ near eo5 .~ " LOsr: Man's H 11 mt Ito n Be1innlng students preL Free est. Uc. contr. h&ndymlln, anytime. Call Filmlnz w/aound, drafting, lot. Nr, Ot.rden Grove Ctvic children. July-Aua. fi13-2WI ~- LONG HtirM., t•male, .black watch. Vic. 30th Strict, U.C.I. Music Major 540.?'l62 546-4478 BOB 6(5..:m6 Spani,b ltNOns, prom~ Center, $20,500. Trade $9,!IOO WILL: b6 HOUSEWOftK (213) ._JtOJ. Cat. 6-2* bet. Iris A: Newport Beach -Re\vard! Call Bruce 546-4478 YARD/gar. clnup. Remove tlona. WANT: C.mptr ~ty,for units or 11 Owner BALBOA ISLAND AJ\EA • Fli&RGLJ\i • H~llotrope, C.dM so. or 546-7817 aner 6 pm. SEiVIC& DIRECTOltY G1 rdtnlnt ~66IO tttes, tvy, dirt, tractor~ truck or make propolll. Broker M7-6469• S4S..1'07 e REPAIRMAN e ~ighway. 61MS7f sMll£. lon1.haired White & hoe ad! 962-.&145 Byron. UZ..1898 1000 .$250000 I mi Expe~ FRIENDLY Block female T'" feml doe· Vic Mesa Bal>ysittlng 6SSO • GARDENER • ' gr ng. K•v• "~ •--and clear from ~rim U.,' 5 o min. kousti\iOlil( SCHOCK BOATS Labrador W/brcwn fl.ea eol• Vord•. Reward. 545--8844. EXPERT JAPANJtS'.t HAULING, Pa Int In &' ~ ... -.a: from ...... on ... v ... .a rd. btwn ,s;.!50 Hr. 6'13-2050 * NewetJrt Falrview/Stgtrstrom, San-MOTHER WUI baby•lt. M)I Co 1_, Land 1..... boutecleaning. You name It, 30 ft Sport Flaher, Want ft. ~ .. ~, .. ~-''"'_'AG'· ~ ~2454 zL: ~ 111 Ana St>-7122 LOST Black shlUY .dog. home. Fenced yard. mmerc u 1eap .. ,. we do It! 642--3398. tmall bollM! or Jneorne uni.ta U'll'&umon • U(lJ( ... n, ·~ r·u1.4o tlmt Skipper tor J =~c:..;:::,_.:.::;;_,.._~~1 white paws "Cinder" lie No. Lunches. Near Harbor Shop MalntenanCe and Cleartup a " G H.ullng Service Mate~ Reall;y for inc .• Pl'O£ r 547~ Skr. l;)omffflc HtilP 7035 motor. )'acht. Avail u tlf F'OUND Black short ~ 1211. Reward ~3 'Center. 9 mo! to 3 yn. MIKI INC. "-aso"•ble .•• , ,..9 &4MSl7 1. ~helttt, <?M NORTH~ ..... Lot s••....,. AQI. 1. For dtWll call nit!~ puppy, has wht on pre..femd. 14 day. 50c hrly. CA~L '42-519' n.<: ·-;rtJo.-, Wbat do )'fJU havt to trade? • w.wi ' .ui,;.iw, Geott• Allen B)lllnd A~ney (213) 58M233,. Mr. Oillfa ~~!s710_: ... ~frp Fro~ tall. c..tl LOdleST ..,,be::1::.m.:i~ ~ Full lime or occuioµal. Ex· AU.EN BROS. HouMCINnlnt 6735 Ust It ~ -In On.np !:, ~~·vt=.'tr~~ .Emplb)'er P~a )"'ee ~ard. ~ ~ '" "" 1. p~~ rewt.rd. 546-2563 peri1nced. ~1395 GARDENERS STUDENTS County'1 11.zxe-1 read trJd· Inc. prope-rty w/apendabl.o. lOC-8 E. 18th, SA 547...o:.'m iil'1o .. l'fUi:itAiUc, part LARGE black A white cat _. t..• • W:"' . n.~.a \;· ii. i55LLicE Student: 8abysil· worklna: way Uiru coUeae. MAINTENANCE • reitden-Ina poll -aM mU:e a deal. Bkr. 5'6MB9. Chinete J.Wt-inl. Cbfer{ul time, Sat. • Sun. Start July w-I AeVen toe• on each foot. M1u·•o audin& ocu""' ti 00 hr N W'\ & _ LI n---,,A., .,_,, tial & cotnme:rctaJ, win4ow1 -~.a 1a.o.. c.oro..i... .a•• 11 •-~ Vic Saota Ana Ave it 16th Shbpp. center. \Vhite gold tjnC $1. , eat· i son ...... SINESs... c. ~-.....__ our specialty. Xlnt work, ..a. * * Permanent. bperle11CEU .&Oli:l, ... _.. e.r. nnoJ 5t. 642-5308. w/ diamond 646-M37 &ft 4 Harbtlr in C.M. Week B\J l RESIDEN· real! ltefa. 6'2--9446 a . * * * Far East Aa"tney:: :~ in penon, 31'M) E. 0..t 1;:~~~--......,..,...,,...l;,ii=i;f.;Jj.i"sf.u;;;._;:;-.i;:-;;,-;;,<0T1 ;:e nights. or entirt. we.kends. TIAL Gatdentna: A: Cleanup. CARPETS w1·•---fir ;;:::;!:;: Hwy. r," Foma1; pup w/c,,,ke A~-"-·-r ' Aak !br Beck)-54S-1871 Exp'd 6<&-6222 • ~.. " SERYIC:E DIRlfT~Y. SERVICI DIRICTORY A...,cl11, Mon 7100 1-"-';;:EXP='°'pu~tey="'c"°oo"'.i."'",-I ch11.in It ft•• coll.!lr. Vic m 1 n I at u re Vic. Vic-BABY§rf my home. exper etc. Rts or Come'!. Xl.nt . - - . ~ Exp fry -. Plrt ~·aii'Vi"w near Tic Toe Mid, toria-H•rbor call 64l-0'1S8 v· H bor 642--4766 \\'Ork Real! Refa. MS-4lll P1pech1ngln1 -Plvmblnt · 6190 Juat out of colltt• with ttme. ..._. C.f\I. 546-3566 Siiifti1AN· h'usky. Black. !;;"ct~!•~· 64;:.1473&.r ' ReUabte LaWn Ma1nteiianct . Ptfntlng 6'50 • • 85 In Actft. $IOO. ' Benton'• C4tlet AfOP ~il!ALL Female. Grey dog;. ·wruie male 10 mos. old. eSABY!ITi'ING my home Cardentna and Clet.n-1.1p lroninl . 6751 PLUMBING R.EP4Ut. rtt paJd,·&110 tet job1. U3 S. Cout HWJ ta \\Tiry Hair. Vic.. Adam• 1 "94--1609 Luablt lawn nJVice, EXPtttENcm tronlna: • PAINTING Int• Ext Lowett No Job too small fnd1ptndtnt P1rt0nntl ,, E c l(x.1x:rtK:..:... ... :Ll M. V rd ~ c M on tlower, Coata Mesa. mow, edge, trim. refs. Alto -plete Jou..-. contracted prlcq. FUlly ln1. 1116 ~~, Ave SW.t4 C .... .....~~;J"l:olli ....... ~ I! a t e Lil". • • .a.afts ft_eJiable, 541-78(11 * 531 lt'.14 • ....,,,. ,..,,.I $atl.afa tkJl'I f'ree • MWU8 • .,..,.,,. " W/in~ OUtblrefds a :'i.\G-8670 aft e p.m. "'*rson1l1 -' senoice. $1.15fhr. 54S.'13:1> c C\&SJ:. eat Cotta Mesa attrndftvte: Call Ancbot PART Bl'!qle • Brown It t rick, MllOnry; etc. EXPEJtt Japancte mJ.ln. IROiJING A alttraUitna.' Jtrn Weeki S73-U~ Remodel, R1fH!ft, 6;40 ~or se-a1l'9 Manne ~. ........ Bh11ck. Vk. Irvine • 22nd. * Al " . 6560 t•nance H.B.. F.V. ar.a. Free pick up .t: d•llvtrY. NEAT, ~ .. Painur. no ~·-. btwn t-5. N.B. 54~!144$. • one F· fall M&ek, -" 540-0075 * -· Coll ... atudenl. * IF you -rimodellna, Help Wonted, Mon 7200 1,==,,,,-,..------1 Iii · • a·-h ·~~~,1 ~-=•-J. 0 "' .,, - -• i-111eee1 "'"" 54M56-... 1.._.. ,...1r1.---bii· -... _ • ........._"""· -· ,... -GER N -"· 'bl~~. . "'""'' n~,~ ' ~·~ oponoso o,.nor JHON!NG MY HOME uo.. ., IOY< 10 14 -dfsltts -•t1ot1 w/ I .,.,..,,""l'J. BrJck, block, concrete, Exper compl yard servictl · · PAiN'I'ING Pall'.lrlne 16 )ft l)jclc, ~l79'T " • ...-. rmale, abt 6 mos. old. El· YES IT'S YOUR erpntr)', no job ll'IO small Fret~ t Ms.'795i 54&-0724 $1.75 per doiJ 6'5·2242. 2029 1 ff~· · LI Is -· Carrier Rtlutn Ope1' fl.1turt, for tnttr. IM Mt., -""' & Del Mor, 64&8l82. FAULT Lie. ~Ir. 91i~ '. . Wallace, CM i:;,Oded. Ilel.o :!: w-'2"e ~"" . 6H0 , '°' ~ Mr. 11'U, 211'1 CHI , " , •• , ....,. CUlll;datLawn " I 790 -,,,. ' ' • ··--·S..•h ... """"' -.or ~ l.D'S rr•acrtptionJ'or recorded me511lge 11& 1 . Uct ted J1nftor1f 6 J;XTl{nL'pni,'.~Avtf"qn.$20 '~·IJtmtkN -:--'DAiLYPJ:LOT , 'Vt'lfifiti:' Cli&if 6 ~:;:z C.M~c&c~s Club "'"b~t ~~ 54~~ call Carpent!'!;'I • 659() ::.;.:iuo. ~ ' WAU.S •• Windows, ftoon, + IOOd paint, aeat work. Cut~ e~ tc.4121 .. ~t Mflt, m FOUND 71, Gl'l1 lemal• _ . 21 .. ., ""'!""" QUALITY Jlopaln • o\llora· Jll<l'S '&i'dtnh\a • ltwn .. ,.,.._ Commerdo! • loc nfl. l\O>, !IT.mt , , * * , 4il0 11ty Conl"'I --llldi.M. llunt. llcll. ·007 • Poodle, vie. tairvi.w • AttroctfY1i Expert d6'1!1 -II<+ c<mst. by "°"' molntenenc:e. 11<J. • Com-Ntldtnllal. Dally, -l1c> Pl 1 1 R 1 4I CO Allttotlons • 142.sMJ r;., . ., Pf0dac1IOll Ullt "'""· "'*'" illl Pl Ila , , _!vec~o ,H&-l510 • YOUNG WOMAN or Contraot. &46..:A441 -... merclal. * 5U-M1l ~/or Mo. nf·~ z I S er n11, *Pf! r . Ht&t •. accura~. 20 ~ _,, 2 )on. ~. call ~L PAii'Fi1fa bt tr ni a ft • Pl\. !ilk i'l'"med iencr1ption dlno<r will ti1ch.Y"" Ill ls _YOUR .\D IN C'L\SSi. JAfiAl!tst &ardt"'\r &;;;pj &;' • lli'ocfi Citanl'i\l StrV t 'PATCH Pt.AmclUNC: P\lai;,our ;nr .. W1'IN Mjj'Cli{rill hrlqnnel AJli&. Eld>~y n11111"f'I; - 'un a:lllllts Vtcol.A4•l'lll* i..test 1teJL Call AnWill nEDt SOmflOne Will M -.erv.~ bper, ~ndaMit;-Cai-oet1;·wtndowt, rloon.1tc All twetl· ~ estimatt. thl7 m Jooldrw-DAILt q , •W11tcWt Dr..-"N ..... ..,.._aft ' ~m. 1'ift "'-"· im. ea.mL "'' !19!-1'10 Pld ,_ ... tt. Dial 6<:i.M1& Irle •• ,. ICMa!t !1.1 • Comc'I. 646-IIOl ca.1 -l'Ilhr ·-~ 11$.:rrnl. ' • TIMtn, C.-clol Mar. • ' ' I "· - " I - • • ,._..,._ ----...... .. -!•••A :t4~ ~'fPIUIT · TUHdAJ, au& s. 1969 , . JOB. iiMl'ldYMINfJOI) • IMPLOYM!NT JOiis & IMPLOYMINT JOIS .. IMl't.OYM!j.JolS &"IM,LOYMENT Mtlt<;HANDISI ~ MEllCHANDISI FOii MERCHAND IS! FOR MERCl'fANOIS! POlt"? Help Wenlod, Men 7200 Help Wentid, Men nOll Help Wenttld, Men nOO Help Wented Help Weni.d • . SALi AND TRAD! SALE AND TRADE SAL·E AND TRADE ' . SALE AND TRADl- Women 1400 W~I\ 7400 Furnltufe IOOOFumlturt ' , 8000 f~·;nltvte -lboO furnttul'9 IOJd * * ·Trevet Agcy Mar l~~~~~S~~~~~~~~~-i~~ .--J, C..l'ENN~'(~llWIY_ .... to $7.50...___ 1cou=.'"'r--: ~ l'Ul•lt>• " 1 •nd -.,, ... ,, ~· h ~;w .. g~ •. c:~~,._oll~ URGENflYNEEDED. • ecre1aries .w __ •ahoUS"" _ rALE ! !-1*'11=-='---"'--='---II••-run um!-•l!!lning• !pr J.Dm'.11~·~1\'j~=c=·ftr=i~~fi~n-t':i·-=;.;;;:==-ir=T;;l'HtfiF=J=-'f.U•'4r ~ -r.-::J== UTOM~IVl!"Sl!RVlct!M!N Juon Best YPI $ · · --~ ' I R~Dl experience In lubrication , brake ad-Emp~"'""' ""'""" • Typists · · Our Huge 6 000 S Ft justment and w h e e l balancing required. 2120 50· "''"· S.A. e I -• -~uar,e Competitive salary arrang~ment, l•P Drght -.:--.F"'R"'Y'"'c"'oo"'."'K"'e.-· I ;S~~r~tar IS ALL OFFICE SKILLS Busting at th• Seams! DECORATOR Gq$ CAN CELLA TIQN -OF 18 lUXIJ,RY APtRTM~S . ·SJ11nish & Medilerr1nt•n Fuini!Vre" worktng condittotis \Yith newest-and fine llt Graveyol'll •hiit.· 2 yrs e:XP· ... equipment. Generous beJJefits including hos· ~.;,.•;1y,;!~ ........ •_'.?s~~::?.: JHJERIM : !::ARN ritoRE \VITH us DON'T MISS THIS, ~~~/~;tioh, employee <llscount and prolil CO'l'l'AGE OOFFEE SHOP PWONNll SERVltt Champagne All BRAND NEW :t-~~~·!Ii:k~i~~.~= ~~t;;.r_a. 1 ___ Ap~g· er.son..1o-Aitto s-P.M, 562 w. '~' s1.. cM . Chance of A Lifetime! Mon a t•·u Sat ~a --l·,==='==;="'=:;.l-44tt. fltrSt. -Jem""rary Help-·-~ un-tiilleva". •tees! . y '" ••• y Help Wenttld Coi le 'Me ... c.111. l'V a • i:ltr• o:ii:-'~'"r. .. ~ ,. ... ~.·.~·~ ... ~".~::.:.:-.:.. .... "Jtji·• k f/14 q .. • .. tNI Con..-T•ll'H ................. g:-i .. •, ..... °"ir'... -•-tMllt ... "'·* ...... """'"-.... • --IHnllll -Int ... , l•~ Ill"· ....,-,,,), .... ,,. ... M I · A decora1or dream house on display, -3 rooms of gorgeous Spanish furnitur• (was reg . $1295.00 PENNEY'S FASHJON ISLAND Women 7~ 642-752S Ler.11111 Sale 'Coste Mo11 Hu Ever Seen Equal Opportunity Pimptoyer . · NEWPORT IEACH * * Inttrviewing lilon.' thru 3849 Birch Str.nt ·Spanish ··Mediterranean Dix l Room furniture Group Helf. Wlnt9d, Men 7200 Help Wanted, Men 7200 Ancient Mariner 301 N. Tustin Ave. Santa Ana Gaijf. Fri. S a.m. to 5 p.rh. S'ANTA ANA SACRIFiCE • • •••. $3981 Equal opportunity· employer 1616-F, E. Fourth K-.U G HES . i42-14A' At Genuine $$$ Quality Value Experience~ Only 541).J3CS. Cl!;IDIT Tlll:MS,AVAIUILI CltlOlt CLIAltlD IMMIOIA1'1LY; mm FURNITURE HUGHES NEWPORT B~ACH bas Urgent 'requirement, for S_WISS SCREW M~CHINE OPERATORS NEWPORT BEACH ELECTRO. PLATERS with a minimum of one year ot eadntjum plating experi- '""'· Please apply in person HUGHES Taking applications for LUNCH WAITRESS Apply betv.·een 1 pin &. 5 pm NEEDED: "Once-a-010.nth", · thorough &: efficient woman for i:eneral cleaning in· eluding. Wa!hing &. waxinr,: kitchen & bathroom f.loors, 6 oour day, -you choose the day. Vic Edwards l: \\1arner, Huntington Beach. ~1~00 for the day. Call 847-6640 atter 6 PNI. ~ton. day thru Friday. References _requlll:d, GENERAL OFFICE Prtfe-r f\!stauralit experience. Apply after 2 p.m, FIVE CROWNS RESTAURANTS 3801 E. PaQ!ic_Coa.lit Hwy. Corona del Mar NO PHONE CALLS Expe1ienced WAITRESSES - Day & Night Shift f~&y-ooffee-Mop-~il.h Torno eXperjcnce . Abil:...-NEWPORl81:A:CH lo/ to do own setups .is de-500 SUperior Avenue WARD Sec. 5el"\li! as a s1rab}e. Top dollars for top Kei~-port Beach, Qllif. receptionist ln a nursing MANNING'S nten. Equal opPQrtunity area. Ute typing. Seeki.t~ COFF.E E SHOP eniploytt . 1.I & F long • tenn, full • time 2'1031 El Toro Rd. ~ning:s on First and See-..,.,..,..,.~~""!~"'l"'I employee. Inquire personnel Laguna Hills 837·10l4 o"' Shifi... MACHINISTS d•pL Hoog M•morial • ATI.EN'!'ION • •tosp1tal, N.B. ATTRACTIVE Relocation assistance LEADING inrurance co. in \VOMEN provided. WANTED Fashion Island area needs Could you use $.1CJ.Sl00 extra H·U G ff £ s-· . .:Jirpe, _ typ!J~ w j th each week? Can you spare wle~dge of shlhnd. Coo-10-20 hrs a week? \Vorking aass "A" i: "8". I'-1ust hav ct 1.fiss Gladstone a t your own area? Over 21! Do NEWPORT BEACH own tools and be capable 644-1230 equal opportunily you have a car? No col- o! making own setups. Good employer }ections, parties, deliveries 500 Superior Avenue Newport Beach, c.m. '~1'rking rondition&, overtime . Per:sQ!UllLGAL ~J: canvas~inq. . !2_r ~ and top benefits. taP 1eve1 position, private lory 1nte1:Y1cw, C&u __ EqualopportllnitY. __ employer • M '= F POLICE OFFICER $711 • ~7t Per month FOR CITY O,f NEWPORT BEACH Current openings requirts high &Choo! GradW1te, mini- nrum 5'9" and .150 Jbs •• 21 to Jo years old 20/30 uncor- ttct~ vision. Written ~sl Wednesdly. July 23, 6:30 R.m., City Hall C.Ouncil TASKE R' 1Nll0STF01'S Radiatronics Div. 18842 Teller Avenue Nl.'wport Beach, CaW, PRODUCTIO~ SUPERVl.SOR Ozit11, the rerogniied lead- er in its !ield, has an op- portunity for a young n1an with some manufacturing !a· cility, Call -635-4131 for de- tail>. EVENING INTER- VIEWS MAY BE ARRANGED. ~bers, /or further in-OZITE CORPORATION forin8.tion· contact the Per· 151.5 E. Winston Rd. sonnet Ottice, City Rall. 3300 Anaheim. CaliJornia Newport Blvd., Ne'>''JX>rt Equal opportunity e.n1ployer Beach, Cal:ifomla 92660• n4 Salts Trainee _6™'633_•"-"-'""_'-'_;:-·~""==·'=-~--1 Expani:ling NatiOnal co, So. * DRIVERS * CalU •re•. 1125 '"''k + No Experience ~~1o~xpenses. Call Larry Neceuary! J•••n Bost f,fust bavl! cli!all Calilornia Employment Agency driving ~. Apply 2120 So. ?>Iain, S.A. Y·ELLOW CAB CO. '186 E. l6tb -st. ·Costa Me.sa t,IECHANIC Joutrieyman mechanic, l!X· perlence Fottign or Domes- tic. One · ot the oldest For- eign· car sel'\!'ice d~partments in Qtalta:e Co. Flat ratl! & warranty \\"tJtk $9.00 per hour Jla)' bued on 50/50';"(,. Exce'tlent working condi· tions. ~lust ha\.'e own band tools. Oill Sidney 494-9m or ~- EXECUTIVE· • SALES CAREER Starting salary· Plus com- mission. Flr~t year eamings of $12,IXQ pita possible 2 year training program, by century old national com- pa;ny. _ Bu1ineu. or 1111.les background helpful. No tra- vel. f,fanageme'nl opportun. im:--Equal opp. emplr, -Roriild A. Smith 827-7900 DINING ROOM -CAPTAIN - Apply in person Stuft Shirt Restaurant ~7 .for int~rview ( MAllmNANCE MEN NEWPORTfR INN Good benefits. Perm•· nent. For interview c1ll: 644-1700 ext 575 Mrina11:emrnt Tr:>lnrr !'ART TIME EVES. $3eSO per 'hr. aUice, Xlnt co. Call Bobbie Mr. Lacey 544-8a50 S!G-5410. _ .SE..CTY l__REc;.:pr.]gnt_adycmt Jason Be•t oppty! Heavy typing, lite Employment Agency bkkpg. To $500. can Mr. 2120 So. ~lain, S.A. .Richards, !>-1().6fAJ. General Office $450 COASTAL AGENCY Exp. good typing & able to A member or handle phones, caJJ Lordine, Sllelling &: Snelling Inc. Merchants Personnel Agen-Z'rnO Harbor Bl, C.Osta Mesa cy, 2043 WestcliU Di"., N.8., 643-2770. \.; tee reimbursed. DENTAL SECRE'J'ARY ?t1ana&ement ability, maturi· ty; good peI"SOnal!ty re- See Betty Broce at quired. Should know dental Agency for Career Girls tern1s. call 847-5690. 11 to 3 .•10 W. Coast Hwy., N. B. PM & 7 to 9 PM, except By appoillL .-&l&-3931 Tu11s. SECRETARY To p corporate executive noo::ls e'xperienced secretary. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS r.tust be free to travel, \veil Apply in Person a:1wmed anct mature. Call SURF & SIRLOIN 645.lmo~Ask.lor.P.flh Ames. 59aO ·P•c; Cst. Hwy. NURSES Aide, part time. 4 Newport Bt1ch hrs. a!te.rnoom. or full time HOURLY TELLER P.r.1. shift. PVt. duty. Exp, M nd & F Id reqd. NO FEES. Apply o ay r ay Homemakers, Inc., 1638 E. Exper:l<?nc:ed or ro!ate<l back- 17th st., s.A. 547~1 ~AfrK 0~~ AMERICA DENTAL Recpl. &. assistant 18691 Main St. for Ne w po r t Beach Huntington Beach Orlhodontist. Stale age, Equal opportunity employer qualilications &: expcrience]---c=""=-~~="='- to P.O. "" 16'6 ,N.B. 92660 OPERATORS • An ZquaJ Opportunity Employer IUFFUM'S NEWPORT Now Interviewing Intimate Apparel Full Time Sales . E.xcellenl company benefits Apply in person only Interviews between Z.S Pif #1 FASHION IS!AND EXPERIENCED e NOTE TELLER e PART TIME TELLER $795.85 ·for $389.95 5 Pc Spanish Din Rm ·~S 8 ft. sofa & love 'seat, 3 heavy ooedit. st'yle matching tables. 5 Pc _Spanish bed- room set .. Don't miss seeing tRis value! Bank Financing, Master·Ch-arge, BankAmericard, Store Chlrge Plan Approved Furniture (Been in Costa Mesa over 12 years) ------HuQe:-f,000:1q. ft:-Wir.enouH-•t: ·2065 Charle St., Costa Mesa Behind "Harbor Car Wash." Enter on Hamilton or Bernard St. A Little Hard to Find But Worth it 1001 Items too Numerous to Mention 1844 Newport Blvd!H.:.llwll ... · Costa Mesa only hery Nitht 'TU 9 -Wt<I., Set. ~ Suo. ~ 6 ------· ------ Furniture 8000 Muslc1I Inst. 112.s -------i\IOOERN red Iv. rm. set. 2 end tables, coUee table, bookcase ! blonde 1 S I O O • 536-4430. 1TI4 Pine, H.B: lJECquality sofa, pr velvet cltn,-----rttliner;-lamps, ligbl tixb~. Blu!Js. 644-1650 t'OR finest home. ln1ported formal dining table, like new. $600. &16-0732 Pianos & Org1ns 1130 JULY SALE .i\11 new & used Pianos. _ ~ Check our pianos first •.•.•• \Vurlitzcre Knabee Fischel'·. Rentals . DO interest temu; Household Good• 80.20 Gould Music Company 548-9660 UNITED 2045 No. tilain, SA 547·0631 CALIFORNIA BANK -Open 9 to 9 Daily-Sunday 10.S SPANISH Style dining table JULY Is hot. but we hati:!: ' w/4 chairs $100 .. 220 Ken-·lhe HO'ITEST buys in tow». ~ 222 Ocean Avr: .. 1..a·guna~B.cb. TJCJtiCnURI.%.......__ ~~~e~;;ic dryer, s75. Spincl, Console & Grand 49 ... 6546 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT ======== Piaoos; nc\v &: tl s'e'd Furniture: . 8000 8022 Baldv.1n Organs -all on Glo.ria Marshall Hilip W1nted Garage Sile sall:' at really Raf prices.'-, the leader in figure control Women 7400 OVER -STOCKED PRICES SLASIIED EVERY· \'VARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO salops', is seckmg--mature;1 _________ THING GOES. Jiall scats, 1819 Newpurt. C.M. &JZ--348.l · :i!.ender, attra1:tive. W?rMn Part or full time lO women MUST SELL! pol be)ly stovl:', annoire, 1'1Ali1MOND. Sleinwa,y. Ya.· to counsel \\'Om~n m firure needed immed. for child Ne1v 9 pc. cor:ier an·ang. chests. tables, chairs, rock-maha • new & used pianoi:I control.-Noexpenertee caN:"'alcr&-Of'COl?fpanions: choice or-clrs.-reg. $230,-eM, ~ks;--mirrors, ~ld ·of all make!io Be-st bUy1 ffi sary. \Ve will_ train. Ple;i.s· ' Age 21-65 now $149.50. Headbrds: glass. china. bric·a-brac. So. Calil. right here. a~t .surroundings & .short Sitting p,_tty Agency Kings, SIS, Queens $12.50, CENTURY HOUSE ANTI-SCHflIIDT ?.fUSIC CO .• , ' v._ork1ng hou~. For 1nler· ,,_fem~t or \\'e Sit Beller, Full $10.:.iO, Twins $3.95. QUES. 2134 Newport Blvd. 1907 N. ?.lain, view phone 642-~·--Inc. Subsidiary o; Gerber Trundle sets (duo riserJ w/ CM (Just beyond 2tsl St. Santa Ana AMBl.TIOUS WOMAN Prqd. Co. 642:3274 inner spring matt. reg. $106, Walch for sign.) Dealersv --0-X-J-,---,--0-,.-.-•• -Li-.kc-.t. N ,,_al , b 'd 1 now $79.50, Roll-a-\\'ay beds v.·clrome. &12-5720 everyday. ne\v. Cost $.300. Will a.....,n con1pany in r1 a e LIVE in hskpr-f& v.·oman w / inn. spring mall,· reg. market, needs a well a:room· alone $100 mo CaU 642·2'l32 •~n 50 GARAGE SALE Sacrifice, goi!l£ to college, ed v.·oman with some sales · · -'· ' now $39.SO. Full 82' tifINK STOLE, beautiful, $50. 847--4078 slecpcr·sofa reg. $239.50, now •·~ ---------•1; exp . as .manager trainee. Jobs--Mtn; Wom. 7500 $1S9.50, New beds: King Kenmore washer, \VOrl\b RARE _ Unusual $ 170 {i Flell:tble hrs. some eves pre··'-------~-199 50 Q 189 50 Full good. $15. Good che~s set in lmpo•·tod "'-~ish Teakv.•......,. r 1 -• , ueens., . , · ·~ X" 1 ~· ~ I'd car nee No parties can-SCRAM LETS $49.50, T1vins $39.50, fully carrying cnsc ~· ,.,n Spirn>t piano. Priv. 644-18.)(l. I va~sing or cieliverif'S. oPp. to ' -books: Technical, C'i<1ssic, "" guaran. l\in;:·size spr.?ads, 2,.2 C I 1 \VANTED double eamings. For intro-, h -1 cooki11g, etc. .Af o ga c SPINET"-& G" .. ,03 c NSWERS c OlCe 0 Ch'S, reg $20.95, k ~ f\JU~ ~~o:~~C\\', Call Mr. A now $12.99 SIESTA SLEEP ~~967f·M· AIJ wee·. 63&36W SHOP, 1927 Harbor Blvd, CM 0 N E e e EXPERIENCED -TELLER- UNITED CAL)FOl\_NIA B_AN~ 6 l\ilonan::h Bay Plaza South LagUna . 1714) 499-1361 ee NEEDED Two Office "Girls i\lwit be 25 and able to drive , l Beauty -Album -Shaky - Poilcho -f.tOUsrACHE Comment about a certain liar: The only thing lhat keeps him from bein~ a bart'- faced liar is his MOUS- TACHE. newport. personnel agency &l5-27SO daily JG-9 Sat 10-S. 42"' SOLID oak coffee tablr. PIAN WA T D 1 claw feet, ~·Iahor,;:. break-(2131 877·l<C5 Pvt Party . LEA VJNG for Hawaii. front, small naug. <'hair. an. Bdrm set complete. 2 naugahyde couches, l:(lld. tique I ables. glasswBajai:e, Hi-fi, ina.rble coffee table. hooked rugs, 2007 a, J::astbluff. Desk & chair; 3 pc sec· ,:;;;;~;-,,.,,-;:-,-:-:----:= tional. 2 pc sectional cornet• ANTIQµ_E _T 11_b I e.J , cotn- couch. Dinctfe set _ nciv, mixks, butter churn, V"/4 gold chrs. \Vasher & secretary, bufiet. love seat, dryer. rcfrig, 2 breakfast oval pie. fran1rs & misc!. chi's. Staulfer reducing 176:11 San Marino Circle, machine. Misc! clothing, 1''.V. 962-5852 or 962-5419 slzes 10 & 8, other mi.sci item~. 962-8730 8100 1205_, RENT OR BUY COLOR-TV 59 Month Up . " ALSO STEREO-REFRIGERATORS \VASl{ERS OR DRYERS : OPTION TO BUY 543-4539 *SALE* N~w \Vashers. Dryers -Dish-_H_i._F_i_&_S_te_r_eo ___ l_2~),..$1 wa.she1-s -Refrige1·a1ors. CERTIFIED APPLIANCE 333 East 17th :;1. Costa tvlesa . 6'12-0240 NORGE Automatic \Vasher, late model, xlnt cond. $65. * 847-8115 G.E. Automatic \Vasher, very good condi\Jon, Sll. * 84i-SUS . • 1969 SOLID State stereo, 4 s1KI. 4 speaker audio system in 1valnut conoo!c. Take ovrr small payments or p<iy cash balance of $73.68. Ct'l.>dil Depl 535-1289 STEREO Cornp. System, So- ny :JCIO Tape. 2--3 \Vay Coral Spiers. Headphones, Pioneer tuner amp. Turn Table $400. 64&-0714 QUICK. 5_porting Goods 1500 SURFBOARD 9'8" good con· dilion $45 call alter ..,-, ti~&-3393 ' ' Miscef11neous .. .. ,,, M SA -Ml - E 11 .. .1 Au Wi !ld Z-071 OZ;\ '"" !bl '"' to Coo OWf \l'Ql Wo St, ;<• DE; •• lyp wai St;, CAi1 ,.. 1~ "• Qj Com 12'1 8~1, Gil "'' ·~ 83tl *11 ~JO' 64~ ~ Sita '" oof tlq .. , TO Qu: ,,, ol 1 I • c. Wt "' Q\ " nl " TR " " c. WI '" ,, 84 \VI ,, p 5--: lot • ' r AUCTION -. - TUESDAY NIGHT . 7 J.M. SHARPll ' ·, 1_,ect EARLY ' As We sttl Q°UICICLYI AOK Commi11l1i G9He~ 7722 GARDEN GR.OVI 'lllkiLt\ti.aD I Block West of'Be~ch Blvdf, Gii Q,Q, 'lrwy. -. WJ; PAY M()RE CASH rot turnilure, appliances, cohil'ed TV, stereo& and an. Uque• Day or niP,\lt 636-3620 ' ' I' ·---------.----·-·~- for Uled can A tntdul full call us for free nttmate. GROnl CHMOIET c~a1c1 \11, automallf~~' power stttr . .-JIP'll"ft' power w~ Mta. . \. er, vinyl lop. SBN '111 $1695 ATLAS I NEO&NLY11VE TO CHOOSE Fl!OM llG SAVINOlf- Untverslty Oldsmoblle • -PURY Ill I poor )lanltop. VS. ..loma· Uc. rldio, beater. ~ ........ """'"' .., tondi· OUTll -· CVRB31>l CHRYSLER -PL YM $2395 2929 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 546-1934 Open Dil!V 'Ill Ill p.fti. ATLAS' ""' .., !laln ~ -ll2ll ..... Wvd. DODli• owrn _ PL~ml ~t.1331-'66 DOOll llO~TA=Rllli m. bpeJI Dally 'tn 10 CONFIDENTIAUY coRON ~l•D.AN · w, P"' Mor• F0r w, ""''"' _ llili; beab IONTIAC Foretp 9r Sportl Ca!' _ e.r..._powl!:r 1 · Jf9r, low --J. i:'AID FOR OR NOT -·(RIG ) ''8 PONTIAC B. J, SPORTSCAR $1395 · CENTER Catalina w~ 2833 Harbor Blvd. ATLAS 3 teat. VB. automaut. fac· C.olta Mesa 54G4491 t9n' IJr. J>OM't •tlfrlng, ....., mkes, radlOJ heat· WE PAY WH FOR YOUR W CONNELL CHEVROLET • OIR~~·vm tti wblr. w"l's. <Vl'Jtll> OOSfA MEM "' ~ $3295 Open Da.Ilf '"' tf i ilft. '69. DOOii ATLAS . , SUPI~ t1•• (!!IR~ -PL'!.'fF' VS, a~tomatle. JWI, po*d eolf.1·fi4:h BL".1934 steenng, P.d., st.ereo tape, Open Daily •tn 10 ~I" red lines, many other ex-H · traa:. Like ~w. (YN\V200) * * <j $2995 Special PurcMise 1969 PONTI.CS -ATLAS >;,~~~w54.:=' CHRYSLER _ PLYMOtml Mort With Faciory ~ 2929 HARBOR BLVD. • THE LAST COSTA MESA • 51&-1934 OF THE YE~lt Open: Dally 'til 10 p.m. Grand Prix e Tem_peslll • Fire· · MUST Sell '68 Qlarger black v1.,i '"· gold body, Ml> BOB LONG•"'E autom. My ~ty $600. bal. rl' 12315. 91 -w. PONTIAQ $4145. 540-0681 13800 Beach • Wes~:~Upsltt '64 DOOOE Polar& SOil Mr Open 'tll 10:00 PM ... M Hdtop, Bucket seatJ, vibra-'68 FIREBIRD. 4J 350~ sonic power $000. 5'M94L stereo, clean $24CXf; Muat ---------· · ---sell, &alng overftaa . FALCON ,_ FALOON FtmJR.A 63 · S-Door Clean • 673-4970 • .,,, • FOJD 'U L'i'n lM hardtop P/S, Pia. J' ... ""' 11111 -Broulham Int.mer, 390 ere. """" clean. low mileage $29915 !Inn. 545-0248 LIKE new 1963 Ford Gal&xie 500, 4 DR. Good tires, fac air, v~. ne" auto trana. $800. Aft. 6 pm or wknds. 84&""35 i ·.;;o.,c;T°'em=po"•t"1.e-,,M".,.:-111t"""'ur""1 Door shift, vet)' ~ Run1 great. $400. ~ RAMBLER ~WNED BIG SELECndlf '61 nmu '68'1 ALL MODELI FROM$295. • • • • BRAND NEW '69 1!119 DAILY l'n..ar WANT ADS OiARGE your "'nt ad now. BRING RESULTS! J"1Dd It with a nnt ..ti . " • I 1 ft 14n.YPILOT .. ' I j ol !' ... ' • • • ~~-~---' --· . . . . ... • TondlY, Ju~ II, 1'169 . . . • . • . . •• .... ' ·~ _, -. ... ~:· ' . ~ "· , . . . . ~. ' ..--• ' l . ' • ' •' ~· • \. ' ! • ,. :i .. ' . DtSCOlitT;_: . . . . . ' . ~ .. Pare AT THE FAMILY . DISCOUNT ·. SAVINGS CENTER~ 1YOU -if[l 0 - -·--flllLIIONEST-TO-~EsS DISCOUIJ-- PRICES. EVERYDAY OF THE WEEK AT . FAD . . . ' 110 STAMPS, 110 :-.8AIES, llf 11M•JS, : JUST mlltDAY LOW DISCOUNT . ' PRICES PLUS 4 STAR SPECIALS STORE HOURS DAILY 10,00 AM TO 9,00 PM SAT. l SUN. 10 AM TO 7 PM FAD'S BARBECUE 'MEAT DISCOUNTS USDA CHOICE OR FAD "TENDERFUL" • FIRST CUT C.HU.CK STEAK 59~ . .. I ·, -• ' USDA ' CHOICE OR FAD ''TENDERFUL" • FULL CUT ROUND STEAK USDA CHOICE OR FAD ''TENl>ERFUL" SJEAKS •TAILS REMOVED T·BONE or CLUB 89~ 13~ DEREND,l(BLE QUALITY • LEAN FRESH GROUND . ,BUF 'USDA CHOICE OR ,FAD· "TENDERFVL" BONELESS SHOULDl;R •. 9' CLOD RO.ST . 1b. ... . . USDA CHOl~E OR fAD '~ENDERfUL" PORTERHOUSE snAK .;:~~\. · .. -· .. USDA GRADE1A I WHOLE BODY FRY.ING . .. . ·••<LUNT CHICdNS -.... :::.,. FARMER JOHN• EASTtRN QUALITY SLICeD ·••••••v PACK · PORK tOIN . 1.t.e . ~Al;.KAQI!: , FAD IUCID UCON 39" lb. 79'. , Ill. 67c 1J~ ., . .. LAROI PUCHIS , , S Ht .. $I tOCTARl .. '5;, •••• 4 lh. $1 PD· o~'. .. • 4 Ill~ fl 1imus1 ·~· •• -i~··· liNO CHDR,U.; ··i 3~~!'· KUN'I e I.OUNCE IUFFff CAN e $Aw 2~ . TOMATO SAUCE GREEN GIANT e 12-0UNCf e SAV! 6c NIBLETS CORN . STAI KIST • UGHT NO. Y, ~ e SAVI k CHUNK TUNA .. -·. -· . ~ -"t S!IRINj:>FlflD e COART IO~ . SAVf lOt EACH e AP.PU CltlfR·Ol APPLE J'11CE . . ~~ :• . --.. , 7' ' 19' • . 25' 29' 59' . 75' l ~-... The next 60 seconds may change your life. Don 't wait f Don't suffer needlessly f Take this first step on the road to feeling wonderful, relaxed, "Alive again f" NO OBLIGATION WHATEVER! NO STAMP NEEDED I Blessed 1~e1i(~f f1'<)111 r11-inor ARTHRITIS· RHEUMAT~·SM , AND BAC PAIN! Comf ort to millions! Developed and patented by Niagara Therapy Corp. Cyclo-Massage has helped millions feel marvelous new comfort, relaxed, "alive again!" Helps bring relief from minor pains of arthritis, rheumatism, lower back pain ... blessed, soothing relief of such pains whenever they occur. No Drugs! . . . . . Cyclo-Massage ... years to perfect, tested and proved by medical research ... combines relief-giving heat with deep, penetrating massage. While there is no known medical cure for arthritis, gentle, soothing Cycloid~ action helps melt away minor aches and pains, tension and fatigue. Your life may become active and full again . . . family and friends will notice the difference. Peace of mind returns with a remarkable feel ing of well-being. Sleep is natural, without drugs or pills. You have to feel it to believe it! Cyclo-Massage could be ~Jur hoped-for answer that could help change your life and that of everyone around you. Don't suffer needlessly! Find out for yourse lf if Cycto-Massage can work its wonderful benefits for you as it has for thankful users, worldwide! Send postpaid reply C11fd 11ow ... no ob/1gat1on whatever I *ask your doctor about Niagara Cyclo -M a11age r> 11 r re co 111111 en.da ti on~ .. CYCLOTHERAPY IN ACTION •.• OUR NEW HOUSE ... I AND I CANT EVEN HANG TH£ iA'?APtS'. I ID BDTER ASK P/37C TO#£LPME i°M GOINGTO GEf THE FACTS RIGHT NOW ... I CANT EVEN GET A GOOD NIGHTS SLEEP MlYMORE BVTWILL IT R€AllY HELP MVWIFE P A FEW Qi\'/$ LATER ... AT A NEIGH80Rs HOOSE I ID LOVE TO HELP YOU HANG YOUR DRAPES MARGE T11ANKS TO N!AGA~S' PENt:TRA71NG, RELAXING M~I F£ElUKE A ~Oct'. (;'.e'., AG4/N PANIC STRtJCK ME/ MY FATHER HAS ARTHRITIS BUT He l.S IN HIS SIXTIES. IM ONL-V Ll'I-! W\AN'f DOCTORS ALL OVER THE COUITTRY USE AND RECOMMEND NIAGARA CYCLD- ~GE. UNITS AND CONFIDENTIALLY, MARGE, Slt-JCE I STARTED USIN~ OICLO-WSSAGE., WERE A HAPPY. REL.AXED FAMILY AGAIN ! HO "1EY, t.{Xj(. AT THIS TV A~NOUNCEMEITT •~ • GENTLEMEN : Please mail me the facts about how •. Niagara Cyclo-Massage may bring me repeatable relief from minor • arthritis, rheumatism and back • pain without drug s. • Mail free, colorful, 16-page illus- trated research book at once! • • Your Name • Address • City • State Zip Code I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ·-• ~· •• PfllOIW"" "'' I .(' * Ir~ ~Good HousekHping': • • • "'' "\'O ~, euu .. 1111 .~ .... *'"' r11•t•u11010 t.~