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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-07-28 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7 ·' . . -. ---~ -~---~.-~------~·~~- ron • .. • !Mereha:Dts. Protest Hippie. Influx At Newport Pie~ :. .. ~ ' 0 . MOoti Over Houston ' •r • . T • UP'I Tt_,..,. A week ago, A.Si.ron3ut Neil Armstrong ptaCed h1s siie nine and a haJf boot on the surface of the moon. A short time later, he was joined by fellow astronaut Edwin Aldrin. A week later, when this photo was made, both m~, with astronaut Michael Collins, were housed in NASA's Lunar Receiving Laboratory with the moon riding high overhead. Westminster Man 'Guilty' " Ill Firebombing Newport Pier ~erchants Protest Hippie Influx A Westminster yruth has been found B E F COUJNS guilty in Superior Court or charges that 1 ~ :>~! ~ .... $t.ft . he was a member of a trio which DUrled A ifO\lP o(' angry merchants today peU· a 1 blazing Molotov cocktail at ~ • Santa tioned N_ewport. Beach city councilmen lo Afta home. crack down on the Jnflux,of hippies ln the ~ Newport Pier bUs:lness dlatrlct. , udge Robert Rickles ordered .Antonio , The petitlon<n, led by Lorne J. •• ony" Ruiz, 20, of 6431 Wa1t St.,· to re. .Georie, owrier ·ot. the ·e1g Geor~e dress tum to court Aug. 8 for sentencing ar\d • shop, sa.\d \he arta near the pier "can vlOOadoo be•rlll(. RUiz and Richard' • no;. )>e con&idere<f a ~ew 1lum. ,,. l:llrtilon Grant, 24, cf Garden Orove and ~r ~sked 1he ctty,,to rtfuse• licenses PiiUI Dale Sutliff, J2. or Santa Ana, race to .. h1pp1e businesses. " . . possible state pri50n terms af one to two . Within a two-block aru, 1aid·Ule IO-~" and/or a .$1,000 fine. ~gnature pe.Ution, "there are .at least A jury retum<el the gullty verdict Fri· five, hippie establllhmelJll which .-.late dty 1fler L Il>hour . deUb<raUoji. onl=to ,that-eltment., ~ .<ll."\101• - Police arresQd Uie trio lm Nov. 4 ar. 1111 t Jitpple-it!d thiy ·•r< .only In ttr the three men drove. slowt; pa.St the ' 'by th1I type of people." · Btwley Street home of Ernem-c. Moreno €ouocilm>n wlU be pmented the' pett. and tossed a firebomb at tho residence tion 'todty,•Oitf. Clerlt· baura•¥gios said. after hurling a wine botUc through the · Dress ahop owner GeOrg~ who window, prepared tlie peQUon, Aid miey of the ' •. youQg people hanging around the pier reptesent a new ICU)d ol bum. He ex~ pialned : "Often when l drive to Los Angeles through the garment distrlcl I notice the bums standing around the streell and now I notice the same thing in Newport ~ach: the loot is the same, but there Is a different·reason for lheir actions. "In the Loi Angeles.&lllllll I usume they are alchoUcs. In Newport Beach they are ~ addicta,..,.of the tWo, I am syre the ·doJie addle! would'l>e oonajdend much wone." ~ . .Ile ,uld ll" their appearance were• the 09ly dialuteful aspect allout thtm, It would be no problem. "But unfm;tanalely, 11 many ottban aie on d'.ruis, they b*"ve lo aupPori tills costly babil and ont of the ways IJl•r. do this ls by sboplliUna and paiibaiidhog on the 1treets. ·. " e .nne ' ' Wesi1ninster iMan t • . • • ' ' . . Found Gnilt1· . ' • •• .. In · Fireho111:hlng . ' Pals Mal{e . . . . ~ ·Futile Try At Rescue Treacheroua riptides and CWTent! claimed the life of a non-awimmer off Huntj.Dgton ~ach Saturday a.s·his friends dived vainly to tocaU! hlm. Oiarles W. Darensburg, 22, ·Downey, was missl.ng and presumed drowned to- day in the surf that kept West Orange Coonty lifeguards hopping over the weekend. Darensburg, who could not swim, was apparently l't't,ept by currents into water that was over hiJ head. Friends, Fred P. Capaldi of Downey and Gary L. Cervantes of Lakewood, said they swam to Dare.nsburg when they saw he was in trouble. The pair related that Dareasburg panicked and broke flee of the grasp oe ·capaldi and was carried under. The two said they dived several times to try and find hlm, police report, and then called guards who -with the city helicopter -joined the vain search. Darensburg was last seen wearing yellow Sl'im trunks and a Blessed Mary medallion, police said. DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * MONDAY ;t.rnR~N."Ju~f ·2a,:"19~9 VOL .. "°"'""·I SIC'TIOHt,: J4 rMI• ... ' .. .,,.I,....... ' HIP-PIE HIGH PRIEST LEARY COMM.!NTS ON ARRIST 'Scand1lou1, Ghoulish, Dirty •nd Polltlcally MOll•.at..r Dr. Leary Fa~es 1Iearllig., In· Death of Lagnna .. ~ii.1 · ·, ,· • City guards in HunUngtoon Beach said the surf peaked Saturday at about six feet but wu sUll up Sunday. 'They rescued 93 on city-beaches Sunday and another 55 on Saturday. ' .. State guards in Huntington Beach estimated they rescued about 70 over the weekend while Seal Beach guards, where the surf was more moderate, hauled five to safety Saturoay and 11 on Swxiay. Huntington Beach guarda were plagued with both rlpUdes and strong latera1 cur· rents as ~ IWl~ themselves, Sllrled and lrollcked In the waters. Kennedy Cheered . . By Neighbors Outside Chm·ch HYllNNIS PORT, Mau. (UPI) -Cries of ''We're wtUt you, Ted," greeted Sm. Edwanl 111. Kemtdy 11 be entered St. ~-Cllurch her•, bis third (lllbtk: •P. pearaDCe 'since the .fatal accident last weekend which caultd the drowning of pretty blonde -.iary Mia Mary Jo Kopecbne.~ . ~.accom)>anlod by bli pregnant. Wife, Join, and !WO of hll three childrt1J sat mot10nlea In hll pew SUnday u MJgr. Wlttlam Thompaoo rMd from•U.. eplltole of S( Paul : · "No test has been aent you that does riot.come to all men. Morever. God keepe blo promile. ff< will not lei you be te&1ed (See KENNEDY, l'op I) -.".\ ...... Dr. 'Timothy Leary, ex-Harvard pro-· lessor t\l"'ed blgb priest of hlppledom,_ Thursday faces arrailnment th Riverside County on charges of 'conbibuUng to the dellnquency·ol a minor in the.drowning of a Laguna-Btlitll. teeiiaged' glrL The girl, 17-year~d Charlene Rene ' AlmeJda, drowned July 14 ·while .WJm- mtng nude in a pcind 'at· MountAjn Center Ranch where lhe bait been IJvJng ·Jn I '. Cci'nmui)e ~e1 to whltp · Leatt,. ,was considered to·be the '!fl~ 11illdtt. I • ' • "• J ' !Uvenlde autliortt!es hilid"tlle J!rl .;,, , under the Influence of LSD at the t1me;or her death. Leary .. fn .. a prtsl C:OafeJ;ertefl .~V!r-the' weekend, labeled. 1hls; latest ~· with the law u "scandalous,· &houllsb~ dirty and politically motJv1t.ed." · The Iii fear old fonner;~';Fo! denied gtvtnf !He' strL any' of ;the hallu~. drUJ .and,,pld •Ile. clldn'I ' even ~!WOJrilt..-·•ae· ·' • • ,• · "· Lear)I "*'he~;d'~,,~li!lil 'i oetgbbor" In the ranch commune·..mtge. "My wile and I don~ Olmthll ~. We ·baWI 1no :cootroJ. 'We're• jliat U'flrig there as memben of the camuolty," her added, ., Leary aald he·-·1n11fi ~,wt1lf.IJll wK• wbeo Mill Almeida d-. He &aid be used "every · phJalOll 111111 splittual device tnown ' .. to tevlte tM llrl• 11ili Included, he Mid, chlrit.lril Dodd.lat prayer1 over heJ"· body. · · Leafy: ducr.lbed• Miu Almeida aa •ial J F , ' young glrl,'1·-~~ who ' c~m~ to .aur ·vIDage ~'..clkt her ·owa thing." • 1 The 1.aguoa gtrL bid. Uved· ht u,_;._ mune about 10 d;uis prior to her d'8th. ' ' ... ·- ----------------------------------l DAILY PllOT s What Happened to Riot -Beach Bcmd Concert -Peaceful., -But Not Profitab'le BY RIJOI NIEDZIELSKI Of!M ........ $!tff Three Now Gener1Uon ba1'41 'f.llled -t r!ot In H11ntl111101.-Btach Sunday Diglll. The three top n1me band.s •11assed" do!t to l,GIO ~ at Ille Hllntlngton Beach Hlgh llcbool pmnulwn wllhoot the riot that 90mt predicted, without in- cidents, without arrest.I. About l,:IOO local youth> paid IUO to see and bear "Fuslon," "Cat Motber and the All·Night Newsboys" and "Canned Hu.t" jam on the smaU stqe ueded on me aide ol the huge gym. Jt was not quite enough to make the event a financial success, though, since an attendence of tpprolimately 1,700 wu Died«! .. break ..... This means that !be city of Huntington Btacb. which undei wrote the Youth ~ Committee "'°""""" concert to the tune of nearly $10,000 faces a Io.u in th6 .... of ss,ooo. Yet despite the loss, Mayor Jack Green was plea9ed by it all. "I know some or you think that tbe eslabll.shment is all bad," ht told lhe cbeerina crowd. "But this should be proof that every once in a wtlik ,.. do ~ l'llJ>I." "I am not overly concerned with the finances." ~e said after the coocert. There wW be a ml,Jor upeiwe to the clty but 1r1 really no dllleront than the aurf- lng contest Md Ille Foor\b of July Parade which cost the city money." • "I thought it \\'ent of( beauurully, lt was really quieter than moal k.ld-get totethers and I think it terved well to etiabllah commurucaUon wJt.b the tkls.'' Hundreds of cars paclted the parting lot for the concert whose electrified soonds soon baad the youths and a con- siderable number of adults gyratln&' to tbe pulsating beat. Unitonned police as we.U I s plainclothes detectives who were. out en mas.st bad an easy night and did oot f.ave. to be called in to quiet any disturbances. Wblle'tl>e throe bands were playing oo the sta;ge a light show of cosmic pro- portion played on an enormous white &beet bung behind the stage. P.1ost of the audienct was content lo dt on the hanlwood Ooor Md just witch Ille lint~ "Fllaion," whldl ~ o lllir-' Jy ...,"""' Md dlgnlfied set as Car u roe~ bllldl go. Bul when "Cat Mot.her and the An. Ntahl New&bo)'1" launched Into tbelr .. ~ 1 fairly large group unable to contain the vlbtaUorui gathered nt the left of the. stage for impromptu dancing. "Canned Heal," aa expected, literally tore them up aod had them standing on ~ feet, ecstaU~ally moving with the music. Aboot 500 teenagers wit.bout the finan- cial means who were gathered out.side. cal.chiag snatches of sound.s through the open. dooa:s were let tn for the "Heat" aftei the intermis.slon, bringing the au· dlenoe up to 2,000. Mayor Green sald that he expects a lot ol parents will be in "hot water" over the "Canned Heat" Ul1s morn.inc f« not let· tlng thelr youngsters attend the concert Many or them had voiced cooncern ovu the possible violence which didn't maleriallze. 'Wma't Abandon AUles' Nixon Pledges Thai Defense • . . BANOl\Olt CUP!) -~I Nial plo4iod toolPl Ibo Utillod Stalol -1d defend Tballond agalrut any allack from any sources. He did IO in • 1pecial statement Wued sbartlJ aft.er b1I ~val to make It clear that whatever the United States does in Vietnam it will oot abandon its alll~ here. He said the United States was U· trezoely grateful (cg U!c_ help o( 'I'bdand's troops in Vietnam and said, •r.n,e Tbaf contribuUM io tbt llrugle to pmm>e Ille lndepeodence oC South Viet- ""'" bu been of greot llgntncance." He linked tbla wltb hll plodge to defend 'lbllland and said, "we and the natiorui of Southeut Asia share a vital stake in the Mute P<""' Md proaperlty oC this region." Msoo Daw to from Jakarta an Iha tblnl Ju ol bla seven nauon tour. Stcurlty m~ were unusually heavy at the railHtrenched airport, possibly because guerrillas attacked a U.S. Air Foree base 400 miles northeast of Bangkok hours before be arrived, wounding: a .sentry and damaging two planes. NJJ:on said in the special statement that "our determination to hooor our com· mitmenta is fully consistent with our cot Rep..--rt of Prts.ldent'I lltd6DeM8 Vlllt.-Page 5 victions that the nations of Asia can and must i.nclUIUy s h o u I d e r .. the responsibility for achieving peace -ud progress in the area." :::. ..:: He opened Ills statement by spea~r American detenninaUon lo bonor..:tts commitments ln As.la and the PaciDC._2 * * * * * * Guerrillas Hit U.S. Base-- In Thailand; Sentry Hurt BANGKOK (UPI) -A band of 111er- ~:4 into a U.S. A.tr Bue in ' Tballand today~~ aboL aad -iD Alptrlan. oenlty. dalnli«I two ·tarp planes llld dl.snlpted opera- Ucm with upJoslves about 2"2 hours be- fore Praldent Nhoo arrivoo to Bang-tot. The raid 1t Uboa took place about 2 a.m. Nir.oo;• Air Force One Jelllner IMCIOO to Bangkok, 400 milea to tbe soutttweit, about 4:30 a.m. The 11.s. EmbaslQI reported the attack and described the raiders as "intruders" believed to be Communist guerrillas. UboD Hes about 75 miles west of the Lao- U1111 province o( Oiampassal, where both North Vletnamue and Pathet Lao Communist troops have been on the o!- f ensive for the past month. '!bes attack was the second agaiMt U.S. air bua to Thailand since Ameri- can w8Jl)lane:s were bn:tJght in four years ago to bomb North Vietnam and sup- port allied troops In South Vietnam. For Nixon, here lo review U.S. com- mitments in Thailand. It underll.ned "'hat American and Thal officials have described aa an upsurge in guerrilla ac- tivities in the oorthmtt.rn provinces. The embassy announcement said an Air Foret security poller.man was patrol- ling with a senlry dog when he spolled the five guerrillas inside the wire fence . He challenged them and they opened fire. sllgbtly wounding him and his dog. Officials idt!ntified the sentry as Ken- ne.th D. O'Dell, 20, or Mount Prospect. DI., and said he was . in good condition DAil\ PIL OT ............ , .............. ----c..- CAL.-OllMA OllAMI CMs1 ..-.m1 .. COMMN"t l •'-t N. W"4 ~--·..w. J•c.• L Ctrt.y \'b ~ -°"'*' .. Mlntftr -...... .... n ..... A. M•1". __,., ..... -c... ... , -*'-!.., ,....., ~~~mi""'' ......... .._.. ~ ...... 121,. ...... .._ 11Alkaa ...,.~--~ with a minor leg WOODd. The guerrillas then scattered aDd set oU five-·.acbe.I charge! of dynamUt. damqing two C47 planes and knocking the fleld'• ground control approach sys- tem out of commission for almost three boors. All flve escaped, apparmtly un- harmed. Smoking Linked To New Diseases By U.S. Report WASlllNGTON (AP) -The federal government today reported new evidence linking cigarette smoking to an assort- ment ol distases and commended the tobacco industry for offering lo end broadcast advertising. "Cigarette smoking continues to be confirmed as a serious health haiard to the people of this country, one which is the cause of much unnecessary disease and death," said Secretary Robert H. Finch of the department of l:lealth, Education and Welfare. Finch commented in a lelter ac- companying a new Public Heallh Service report lo C.Ongress. The 13$-page rtporl. enUtled "Health Consequences of Smoking'' -1969 Sup- plement," reported new evidence linking cigarette smoking with c o r o n a r y disorders. chronic bronchitis, pulmonary emphysema, throat and resplratory cancer and -for the first Ume -non- cancerous diseases of lbe mouth. 'fhe report ai.o -briefly earlier studies compiled by the federal government which linked smoking lo a wide variety of cancers, cardio vascular disorders and other maladies and said no evidence has been uncovered in lbe past year "to refute the judgments." As in pa.st reports, cigars and pipes were largely absolved, except in the case of throat cancer and noncancerous oral disorder. Newport Stops Speeding Youth Police this momlng arrested a 19-- year old Costa Mesa youth Clfl reckless drivln1 charges after he allegedly drove for more than a mile ln Newport Beach exceeding 100 miles an hour at one time. Kenneth Micllael Burger, 1451 Deau- vi/lt Ave .• wu booked on the. charge and held on $186 ball. Officers said the llltged rec.klm driv- ing &tarted at J2Dd Strttt and Newport lloulevard. By the !hp• Ille auto cro.Yed over the Arches overpas!I northbound it had hit the JOO mark. officers ellece. Burger was stopped And ln'f.d.ed at Newport Md lndustrtal Wi.:y at 2: 15 a.m. l · "'Ve will honor those commitments - not only because we consider them solemn obligations, but equally Im- portantly because we fully recognize that we and the nations of Sootheast. Alia 5hare a vital stake in the future peace and prosperity of this r~" Nixon will be in Bangkok lot three days and the war in neighboring Vietnam and the Communist threat t-0 'Iballand will be the main topics of discussion. It was generally believed he might take ad- vantage of an eleaslic schedule here for a quick visit to Vietnam. In Thailand be faced considerable dissatisfaction over his plan enunciated in the Philippines and Indonesia to provide arms and supplies for Asian countries so tl\ey could work for peace without the United States being involved with American troops as It is in Vietnam. Frona Page 1 KENNEDY ... beyond your strength. He will give you with the test a way or emerging from it successfully, and you may be able to en- dure it." The Miwachusett.s Democrat wa~ mobbed and applauded as be entered and emerged from the white clapboard church while thousands ol telegrams con- tinued to flood the Kennedy compound urging him not to resign. Jn bis dramatic television statement Friday night Kennedy had sal~ that his admission or guilt to leaving tbe scene Of the fatal accident had caused him to ponder the possibility of resigning his U.S. Senate seat. At that time he called on the people of Massachusetts for their opinion, advice and prayers to help guide him in reaching a decision about his political future. Rene Page of Marshfield, a regional supervisor of the Western U n i o n Telegraph Co. office in Hyannis, said Sunday somewhere between 25,000 and 3:1,000 telegrams had been delivered to the Compound since Saturday morning, a figure he described as comparable to the number last summer urging Kennedy to seek the Democratic presidential nomina- tion. In Booton, Western U n i on Asst. Operations Manager John Annand said Sunday, "They're still coming in pretty heavy, but nothing like Friday night." He estimated the number of wires ad- dressed to Kennedy al either Hyannis Port or Boston -all being channelled through Hyannis -at "very roughly 35,000 to 45,000." and said extra help was still on duty trying to clear up a large backlog. A Kennedy aide said on Saturday the messages were running 100 to I in Ken- nedy's favor and the Senator "obviously was moved" by the "overwheln1ing" favorable response to his televised plea for advice. The committee to Keep Sen. Edward P.f. Keenedy in public life. dubbed KEEP for short rep:nied Sunday it had received about 10,000 letters, telegrams and telephone calls urging Kennedy not lo resign. 1'trs. Rita Salk, New York chairman ol the committee said lhe messages came from "almost all 50 states." She Nported branch commiuees were being formed in Los Angeles, Detroit and St. Louis. Speculation mounted as to when Ken- nedy woltd return to Washington :since the Senate was expected to vote later this week on the Safeguard antiballlstic ml9sile system to which Kennedf~ is op- posed. But the aide said the. Senator "had no immediate plans for the future." The aide also said Kennedy sUll was "very fluid" and has set no deadline to d~cide whether be would resign his Senate seat. For the second day ol the cloudy, damp v.·eekend, the 37-year-old Senator Cl"Ui&ed on the family yacht. the P.farlin, for near· ly two hours and beached the ship at a cove ln Nantucket Sound to picnic with his wile, his sJstu-in-law Ethel and several of the families' children. Cardinal Richard Cushin1 of Boston, 1 long time {amJJy friend, visited the Com- pound briefly. The Sunday alternooo quiet on the three-lined 11.reets adjacent to the com- pound in this mid-Cape Cod resort com- munlly was shattered b)' a oolsy, hour· long demonstration when 20 coUese-agtd youth& protemd Kenned~"• explanatlon oC the accident· Touchy Beesness It didn't hurt a bit, said Gratiot, Wu., beekeeper Lawren<e Gans- hert as he stuck his hand into honeycomb and came up with a band· ful of bees. None of the bees stung him, be said. 3 -Astronnuts 'Chipper' As Soil Probed for Life SPACE CENTER, H""-'IOll (UPI) - America's Apollo 11 explorers were reported in good health today -one week after they left the moon -and sctentists began a sludy of their lunar soil samples to look for traces of extnterrestria1 Ufe. Ne.ii A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, feeling chipper after a b~akfast of eggs, bacon and grits, plung- ed Into a second day or recounting for the S&.ory, Pbolo on Laur Reeb, Tremon-Par S reoord book! the moon orbiting portloo of their epic mission. "All personnel appear In &ood health," said space agency spokesman John ~fcl..eaish, one of the 17 men living In the a!tronauts' quarantine facility. In the laboratory portioo of the same building, scientists opened a cylindrical sample or moon dirt co11ected in a hallow tube by the a1trooauts and prepared it for a study o( possible organic material. One problem wa1 reported. Bryan Erb, deputy manager or the lunar receiving laboratory, said the cumbenome black gloves used by technicians worltlng wtth the soU and rock samples in vacuum cabinets were tearing and might have to be replaCfd. Jr the decision is made to replace them, the study of moon rock will "" delay«! 60 hours. From the first week ol results from the night of Apollo 11 mission, scientists said: -At least one of the dusty black rocks Armstrong and A1drin brought back from their two-hour walk on the lunar surface was igneous -formed by hot liquid or pully·Uke material which later cooled. -Several sizeable tremors hive bee.n recorded on tbe moon's surface since the astronauts set out a UtUe moooquake meter during their walk, including 14 in the last two days which are believed to have been moonslldes, and one belleved to have been a five--minute moonquake, proving the mooo is not de.ad. Armstrooa. Akim and Collins spent more than ail: hours Sunday taping thtlr recoll ections of their journey, covering the flight equipment and the trip from the earth to the moon in two sessions. They resumed today with the actual lan- ding, moonwalk and their return to earth still to be covered. Tbey Wert visited Sunday by their Camili,. wtio talk«! to them lhroagh a window. After a dinner btut and a final debriefing se&slon, Armltrvng and Collins played a game ol pln1 ponc and Aldrin watched a movie before retiring. Mountain Lion, Cubs Appear C.Orona de.I Mar's aging mama moun- tain lion appeared near Pacific View Memorial Park cemetery this weekend with ber cubs, but animal control of- ficers aren't alarmed. The large cal, Officer Ray Johnson said, comes down out the hills about ooce: a year, perhaps to give her brood a glimpse of civilization. "She'll probably take her cubs back up in the hills pretty soon," he said. Several residents have called to report her appearance, he nld, but the cat is elusive and thus far hannless. "She's so smart you can't even get out or your car with a gun ln your hand and she di.sappears,'1 he said. Jack Bidwell's July clearance sale all this week! I've n1arked down my entire aloc.k of e;pring and e;a.mmer mercl1andise, except for <:et'* ta.in staples that I reord e r throughout the year, 15Uch aa while shirts, black &0eb, etc. All from regular Bidwell stock. No special purehuea or any ouch hanky panky. S7 5 •port eoaih redaeed to 160 170 •port .... redueed '° 156 '65 tport eo11te ftdueed to 152 ··60 t port coal.II redueed to 148 SSS 11port coata reduced to 144 150 11port 4»1!b redaeed to 140 Men'• MO lllleb n!daaed to t32 Men.11 '35 .JKh nidaeed to 128 Mm'• f!2.50alar.kanowal f26 Men'• 125 lladl. redueed to 120 ftlmm '• 146 cardlpa eweaten, '30 Men's '3Smble eardlpntat 120 Men's 118 ,r.:ulloTer ewuten. 112 Other Dlftll e twMten red11l'ed 250/0 l\len'• '16, Sl7 .. 18 !m.tuhlru, •12 Mansfield Says Surtax May Expire . WASIUNGTON <UPI) -Sen a le Democratic Leader Mike MansHeld rais- ed the ~bility today that Congresa might quietly bury the 10 percent income tax surebarge this week by Jetting peycbeck wlthholdlng of it expire. ''The aurtu uplres at midnight Thur1- d., ,'' Mansfield told repoorters, refer. ring to paycheck withholding. The surtax itself ei:pired June 30 but Congress ex· tended wUhholding for a month while conaiderln1 President Nixon's plea to ex· tend the surcharge another year. "If it goes out or existence Thursday It would be very hard to revive it in \liew ol the deep undercurrent in this bodJ'," ManafJeld aald. He referred lo opposition by soome seaators toward Nixon's iUrtax proposal, under \1;h1ch the IO percent levy would apply for the remainder of the year, then drop to 5 percent Jan. 1. Mansfield said last week that Se.nale opposition to the surtax was increuln,. He said the. administraUon was caWna 1t a vital anti-inflation tool but had oo evidence it had slowed inflation so !Ar. The House passed Nixon's surcharae proposal a month ago, and the Senate Finance Committee approved It. But Mansfield 's Democratic policy committee has refused to pul the bill on the Senate calendar until coupled with a tax reform measure. House tax "Tilers aare working out a series ol reforms, the lalest of which would give the middle-income taxpayer bigger exemptions. Laird Says U.S. Must Keep Srock Of Gas W eapo1is 'VASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense Stt- retary Melvin R. Laird said today the best way lo make sure the United States i.!J not the victim of chemical or bioloiil- cal we.spans is to maintain Its O'\\'O sucb weapons as a deterrent· He said the Soviet Union had a "much greater'' capability in this area. "This deterrent is important il we want to see that these gases are never used in our time," Laird declared. The secretary defended the need for a chtmical and biological warfare (CB\\1) program during a 45-minute question and answer session with a group or summer government interns. A number ol the approximately 100 college youths participating politely but penlslently peppered Laird with a series cl questions on most of the controverslal issues with which he IS CUJTelltly coping. Asked whether he wou.Jd be willing to strike a compromise in the Senate ovtr deployment of the Saleguard anUballl..,. tic mlsslle system, Laird Indicated he would not He said the adrnlniJ:traUon had 51 senators finnly committed to vot- ing for the proposal as submitted by President Nixon. But he said that if it lost in the Senate, a compromise, if there was to be one, would be worked out in the Senat~House conference that would follow certain HOU!e passage of the administration propooal. British Geographers Honor Ne il Armstrong . LONDON (AP) -Neil Armstrong, the first man to set fool on the moon, today joined a select group of explorers honored by Britain's Royal Ge<igraphical Society. ' Armstrong was awarded the society's special gold medal for leading the Apollo 11 mlssJon. It was the society's flr1t award for space exploration. ftlen'• 115, SJ3.50 knit •hirta, 110 .ftlen'• 19.50, 110 ~pt. 11hirt&, $6.50 ft(en'118 &:.1911port ahirtsal $6 Men '116 & S7 11port shirt. at 14.50 Men'11 T•ylor Made, Spalding Shoea, hroken Jot., ~ pricel WOM&~'S STUFF REDUCED: IJ5 Bermudatreduoed to Ill IJ6 Bermudatreduetd lo 112 114417 Bermudas. 250J0 oil? 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An acre of free parkl1111 at rear of thio •to..,. Copyri@ltt 1969, Jack Bidwell. .. ' • -r.-:-:-~·~., • .,,.,..,.""'"""""'""'"'"..,,._,,.,..,,..,,,.,.,,,.~•~•-------r•o---·-··•-·-•...,.,-,_·-•·•-·-·-·-·...,,-0-'7/----·-·---------~r------·-·--·-·--·-·-··---~~----~-----~ _____ ,,,_ I -. "' . ., .. • . . . . .. . . ... .. . • ... .. . . .. • ... • .. . . ..... .. .. . . .. . .................. ~ ~----~,.-.. ..~ 11 • \' I· I I I ' I I • Bnnting!oD Beae : vot:. 62, NO. '179, 3 SECTIONS, H PAGts ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA' < • • I es WAILING MIKESIDE Sights, SoUnd• Electric Astronauts Fine One Week Af te1· Leaving Moon ... SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI) - Aqierica'1 A.poDo 11 explorers were re(>orted in gOOd health today -pne week 1fter they left the moon -and sctenti.Sts began a study of lbei.r lunar soil samples to look for traces of extraterrestrial life. Neil A. Armstrong. Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, feeling chipper aner a breakfast of eggs, bacon and grits, plung- ed into a second day of recounting for the Story, Photo on Lan1r Rockt, Tttmon-.Page S reeord books the moon orbiting portion of their epic qiisslon. "All personnel appear in good health ," said space agency sixikesman John ~fcLeaish, one o( the 17 men livin"g in the astronauts' quarantine facility. In the laboratory ixirtion of the same building, scientists opened a cylindrical sample of moon dirt collected in a hallow tube by the astronauts and prepared it for a study of po.uible organic material. One problem was reixirted . Bryan Erb, deputy manager of the lunar receiving laboratory, said the cumbersome black gloves used by technicians working with lhe soil and rock sam ples in vacuum c1blnets were tearing and might have to be replaced. If the decision is made \() replace them. the study of moon rock will be delayed 60 hou rs. From the first week of results from the flight of Apollo 11 mission, scientists gaid : , · -At least one of the dusty black rocks Armstrong and Aldrin brought back from their two-hour walk on the lunar surface was igneous -{Mmed by hot liquid or putty-Uke material which later cooled. -Several stieable ·tremors have been recorded on the moon's surface sinte the astronauts set out a little moonquake meter during their walk, incluiding 14 1n the last ·two days which are ·believed tq have been moonslldea. and one believed . (See APOUh,.P11e ~) • ' • DAILY I'll.OT",..._ 11ir .... ......_. SOUND TECHNICIAN FOR 'CA~NED HEAT' CATNAPS DURING VIBRATING PERFORMANCE • In Huntington S..ch, 'Onf t In • Wh llt the E1t•bllshmtnl Doe1 Someihlnt Rltht' What Happened to Biot? . 8.e~h ;~c! C9nc~rt Pegp~fY,_l, ~µt No~: P.rofif,af,le . BY RUDI l!jlEDZIELlllU Of .. °"'"' l'ltlf S?afl' -rt.r.. N.., O.nmtlon bands walled without riot Jn lfunlipltoo Beach Sunday night. The three top name bands "gassed" clOJe to 2,000 teenagers at t~ Huntington Beach lDgh School gymnasium wJlhout the riot that some predicted, without in- cidents, without arre.18.. About 1,500 loc1l youlM paid $3,.M to see and hear "Fusk>p," "Cat Mother and the All-Night Newsboys" and "Canned Heat" jam on the smlll stage ertded on one side or the huge gym. It was not qulta enough to make the event a financial success. though. since an attenclence of 'apptQXimately 2,700 was needed to break even. This means that the city of Huntington Beach, which 'underwrote the Youth Coalition Ccmmi ttee sponsored concert to the tune or nearly $10,0IXI faces a loss in the ana of $.'l,000. Yet despitt the loss, Mayor Jack Gretn Missing Plane Seen Near La guna A private plane carrying four penioM, mi!!ing ·for more than a month, was spotted In mid·rporning bf a helicopter pilot in rugged terrain about two and one· half miles northeast of Scotchman's Cove in the Laguna Beach area, the Orange County SherHf's Office reported. A sheriff's spokesman said the Cessna 182 plane Is reported lo have left 'Rio, Wisconsin, June %1 and was last seen in Yuma, Ariz. on June 24. The pilot is believed lo haye ~a Richard Olson. He took off from' the Yuma Airport en route to' ·the ·Us Angeles area but filed no flight plan the sheriff's office reporled.. ... ' ~ A~slrerlff. was "flying lnlo' tha rugg by Marine hellcopi« .lhls mo check tbe crash stte. · ' WU pleased by ll alt "I -..... -~' ' Ibo· ..... a.llpt· -.r -~ .,.... JOU think that tbe estllbll.ol>ment lJ all .._.,_, ~\,,n .. eoonioul wbltO Md,"'ht told the cbttzing aowd. "'But ~ n1·61hUid~ -· · Jhls should be proof that every ooce In a illntl !be itaae; while we do something right.'' ,, MoR tJ the audience wu COl'lltnt;to sit ''l am not overly concerned wlth lhe oa the bardwocid floor. af!d just wateh ~ flnances,11 he Wd after the concert. fint bud, "Fmion.'' wlilch played a fair· There ·will be a major expense to the city ly reserYed .and dJcnWed set u far u but·it's really no different than the surf· rock bands .,... Ing contest and the Fourth Df July . • .... Parade wbkh cost the city money." But wbtn: "Cat Mot.bee and the All· "l thought it went off beautifully. It Nl.gbt Newsboys" launched into their set, was really quieter tban most kJd-get a fairly large group unable to contain the togttbers and l think Jt served well to vibraUons gathered at the left of the establish communication with the kkis." stage for impromptu dancing. Hundreds · of cars packed the parking "Canned Heat," as eipected~ literally lot 'for the cOncert whose electrified tcre them up and bad them stancHnc on sounds soon haad the youths and a con-their feet. ecstatically movin&)wilh the siderable number of adults gyrating to music. ., the pulsating beat. About 500 teenagers wllliout1 the fins. Unlfonntd police. as wen a s ciat me1p1 w~ Wert taibered outaide plaiDClothes detectl.'(es who were out en catching snatc:hts .of sounds .through the masse had in easy Right and did' not have open doors were Jet In for the "Heat" lo be caUed in to qWet any disturbances. after the b\tennlssion, bririling the au· While the three bands were playing on dience up to 2,000. Nixon Vows U.S. Ready ToHelpDefendThailnnd BANGKOK (UPI) -President Nixon pledged tonight the United Stale.3 would defend Thailand against any attack from any sources. He did 80 in a special statement issued shortly after his arriva1 to ma,ke it cie!r that whatever the United States does in V.l~tnam It will· noi abandon lia ·allies -here. He said ' the United Stales wa s ex- tremely grateful for the hetp of Tbailand's troopa in Vietnam ·-and said. f 'Dte Thal cmtribution to thtt struqle th preserve the Independence of South \old,. nam bu been ~are.at &i&nificanCe." He lln)<ed tbi• wltllhb pledje lo defend Thailand and said, "we and the nations of Southeast Mia share a vital stake in the future peact. and prosperity of this region." Nixon new In from Jakarta on the third leg of his seven naUon tour. Security measures were unusually heavy at the · rain-drenched' a~port. pi>!gibly because guerrillu aUacked a Q'.S. Air FarCt-bise Repopt, of Praldat'1 · llldmeol~ Vlllt.-:Poi!"' . Ji'atnily Attemh Church _ 40C mile! , northeast. of . Bangkok hours . before he arrived, wound.in&'• seutry and damaging tWo planes. · . Nison said in the spec la I statemtllf that "our detenninaUon to honor our com· mitments is fully eol11istent With our con- victions Uiat U)e nations o( Mi~ ctn and must U>creully sh o u I d·e ·"" th.e responsibility · for achlevtng ptace· and Thron.gs Ch~~r. Kennedy HYANNIS PORT, MIJl.'~UPI) -·Criea ot ••we·re'.with you, T~.'' greet.eel Serr. Edward M. l>enne<IY as he entered St. Xav,ll!r Qlurch here, his tllird Jl<lbllc Of>' pearsnce 11~ the fatal accident last weekDI whlcli caU8ied the dro'Wniog of 11'etty .• blonde oecretary Mias Mary Jo Kopeclme. Kennedy, accompanied by his pregnant "ife..Jo:.n, and two of his three children aat motionless In his pew Sunday as Msv. William 'Ibompson read [rom the epialole ol SL Paul : ''No test has been sent you that docs not come to all men. Morever, God keeps his promise . He will noC lel you be tested beyond your strenf(h. He will give yoo wld'I tbe le!t a way of emerafng !tom It I ' suc~ully, and )"OU· m•r·be eble·to tot · durt IL" -'• The ·Massacbuaetts., .D.noCrat wa; mobbed and· applouded.ar ht.entered ajid emerged fmm ·the wl\Jte cla~ chlltth while tllouaahd1.ol telqrams -tinued ·to flood lhe"Kennedy compound urging him not to ruJgn. Iii hill dramatic Wevlsfon ·natemeot Friday night KennedJi. had ~Id Iha! hiJ admiMion of guilt lo lea.mil tbt ac<ne ol the latai acddent had ca....i him to ponder the f>OM\biU\f of mtcnJ)oc bil U.S. Senate seal At thal lime be called an tha pilople of Massachuael\I l0< their oplnlop, advlc:t and praym to help culdo him In reachini , decislao •bout hu·.,.uuw 1Uturt. .. Rene ·Page: of Maral\fleld, ·• re;tonal supen1soc_ of the.· .wtitem . .Un·lo.n "r~'\llr~ Co.. olllce .~ Hya~a, said &m<!aY· oomewbe(e · 11e-. 20,000 and 311,alo. 1e1..,..,.; had -. ddfv...,i lo the Coml'OWlil 1lllce&11Jrda1 ~-. Jlgure ht described u c:omporoble1to tha l1UJl\b1r Jut ""'l'!'i!r Ulllnc x.nn..,1 1o ...i: the Democrat1Qires1c1mt1a1 nomiJ1a. !loo.. ' In ~ Western union Assl Operall<m Mtn1Jet Jolin Annand said Sunday, "They're allll coming In iretty heavy, oot ooWng lite Friday n~t." He ~ma~ the number of ,,.,,.. ·ad- drea<d to Kenoed1 at either By,annil Port or Boston -all b,el'!ll clliiu>elled '(lee UNNEDY;Pirt tf · 'I · progi'tu bi. the area ... .Ile "ll'D'd·his lliteinent'l>Y,~ .r American de~Uon 1o .l>mor Ill COftll1\flmenlJ In Mia and.the Paclllc.. "We will ~p :t.ttose• comn:llbntnts .... not only because · we consider them solemn ,~• but -1\\', im· 'pO!Uotlj lbeoauae we lulif ~lh" ... and the ....... or SouihMst Alla 11<ire 'l vital o)ake Jn 'Y,.'luture ~ •net prolP'flty of thll'~" • Nixoo will{be'ln Ban(~ lot three days and the war Jn neilhborlol VJ tnam and the c..uniailst tlnjet.'lo:TbJW>d wjll be the main &oplCI qi. dilea.m. It• WIS 1en~'1 bellev• i., oillCM take ad· , vqlflt of<&n ~-~·here for 1 qlllck-v)lil.lo VlolNm,, ' • • Totfay'•. F l•al ' N.Y. Steeb •• TEN CENT'S • • wimmer ' SOME FURIOUS DANC ING Music Moved Her ., Valley Council . Will,.R~:vel°&f(. . ~tand on ¥l ,FWnl:olJl VaDq t\11 ~ wfl1 OIJllll'OliUI rev.no ---to.,. •• Cltr Attm>ey E<IWilt MardD aeel ~ Clltioa 11atns1 alleged ll'llildul<nt ..,..,. Uca tn the cltJ'a heated recall cami>alin. Liit week the c<iuncil voted S to12 - wilh Cciuncilmm Jobn Harper and Ed· ward Just strongly opposed -to have Marlin • prosecute recall peUtionen If pollllble. Jor all•1ed frauduftat practices. But now, Mayor Robert, ~dtfq:er his lnd;.,.ted to City M._ Jamea Neal tliit perha~ the cily• ojiooild lollow C.Unclhiuto.Jull'1-·...i- Orange CciulllY Dllti1ct Alf<!niey• Cecil Hicks to lnveSUpte the eiitJle recall campalsn. " llurillf IMI 'l\Jeoiday'1 council'~ Schwmljl<1er and Vice 'Mayor Donald Fregeau had both blasted HJckB' appar· enl Inactivity when nquested by them lo look lnlo the actlvlt!es of recall SUf>" porters. Acconlini lo them, Hicks had said he prelemd not lo bt<oa>e Involved In a "political mailer.'' Just said he had also apiroached Ricki wttll complalnlt 1nxn both mdes of tha recall battle and received tbe same an· swer. "1 don't believe the -district at· torney Is belni unfair lo either aide," added Just. · Just mggested that the council, acting u ·a body rathci'·than as -individuals, re- quest lnvestigaUoo of the recall cm both Jides. . The Mayor has now expressed agree- ment wltb Jhat plan. NEW YORK (APl ->Tb.,.ioct matl'et wujolted IO another aharp 1 .. today," Ill• clowni lnnd wtlicl> cirried'oll •to.new Iowa last week conUnued. (See ~UOna P'*'°'Ml " Huntington Rescue Try Failure Treacherous riptide!: and. currents claimed the life of a noMWimmer aff HWllington Beach Saturday ai hls (riends dived vainly to locate blrn. Charles W. Darensbura:, 22, Ommty, was mbslng and presumed drowned to- day In the surf tllat kepi Wm 0r...., County lileguards hopplnfi OYer !be weekend. Darensburg, who could not swim, was apparenUy swept by CWTtnLI into water that wiu over hll bead. Frienda, Fr..! P. Capaldi ol Dpwney and Gary L. Cervantes of Lalce.....i, uld they swaril to Darensburg when they llW he was ln trouble. The pair related that Darensburg panicked and broke free of the grasp ~ Capaldi and was carried under. · The two &aid they dived several Umes to try and find him, police report. and then called guards who -wltll lhe dty helicopter -joined Qte vain aelfdl. Dare.nsburg WU last seen weartnc yellow ...un lnlnb and a Blessed Mary medallion, police said. Qty guards In Huntlngloon Beach laid the surf' peaked 5aturday at about lia: Jeet b<Jt ·"" aUD 'Up' S,unday. ~ rescued 93 Oil dty beadles SuDday and anotlM!t IS on'8tuniaY. Stale ...,.... In _fflllitlng\qn Buch estimated they -alloot ft over the weekeod whlle Seal Beach guards. wbera lbo·IUl'f .... _.-. haalod liVe tot,:;:-.=.-:.:r:~ wJ!h both rlFCldis aod ...... 1*il cur· ma u thoduncll lllUlej:I tbemlelYN, our&d' and lrolJcked Jn Ille Woten. ' Youth Convicted Of Firebombing A Westminster youlh bas been lcxmd lllJJlJy In SUD'rl•r Court ol chorl"S that be wu a member ol a tr1o wblcll' lmled • bluing Molotov cockJaJI ai a ·Santa Ana home. Judge Robert R~" ordered An\oolo 0T~" Ruiz, 20, of &431 Walt st., to re- turn to COU!'t Aug. I !or sentenctnc and pnitildon heerinc. RulJ and )llchord H-Grant, 14, DI Garden Gme and Paul Dale SUWH, 22, of Santa Ana, bee pollllble state prison terms .r -to lwo • )'t8rl and/or• 11,000 line. · A jury, relurned tlll! guilty nrdlcl Fri- day after a Jo.hour dellberatlim., Pollce umted the trio, Jut Nov, 4 al· !er the lhree men ·drove alowly pul the Bewley !!!reel honui of Ernest c ....... and tOaed a flrtbomb at tbe rmldeace alter hurling a wine bottle tbnlugb the window. The fiery mlJslle landed atop MClmlO'I car but was qWckJy doused by membenl of the vlcUm's fam11y. Officers aakl the aulo was ooly sllgl>tlr damaged. Police said Moreno r 11-)'U!"Old 80Tl punued the fl~g car and fired five shoUI at the speeding wbicle, all of which missed their mart. They described the incident as being another IMtance of violence in what was said to be a long standing feud between the accused meo and Moreno. Weadler- Clear 1kles and -continued warm weather are In dote for the cout for most of the week, with. the usual mornlni: ind evenJng overca.sL Temperatures to 1tay Jn tbe upper 70s, INSmB-TODAY . Sdlmographlc Tepotll 41ld tdntificattol\ of a lunar f'ock orr hclpfng 1cintilll to vft!ot{r; ,..,.., of. lht myat.n<i, of,.14f ')loon'• ~porillon. SC. .~.5. -· H c....... ' (........,.. U.Jt C.kt 11 =:--..-: -" .""""' ..... . •llhrf ' 111 ,, -... -" '"'-._... II -~ 11 =---" ............ ~': __ ,, --.. .... ..... ,,...& =--1:.. -11 -" :::• . -.. , •.... ~~~~~ ....... --~ .................................................................. ,... ........ "" .......................................... "!"~~ ... .,...~ .... ..,..,,..,,,,.,,,...,,..,....,,..,. ........ ,...~ ..... ~ ...... -·..,~~. F • + • 0 . -. .... . .. . ..... ~~··· :e DAll.f rnor " -·"""""" Guerrillas Hit Base Timi Attack. Precedes Nixon· by 21/2 Hours . • BANGKOK (UPI) -A band ol IU'f· rillas allpped Inf<> a U.S. Air Base In noMJ>eutem Tballand today, shot and wouoded• an American sentry, damaged two ca110 planes and disrupted opera· Uons with explosives about 2\l hours be- fore President Nixon arrived in Bang- kolc. . The raid at Ubon took place about 2 a.rn. Nll:on's Air Force One jelllner 1-In l!anikolr, 400 miles IA> lhe IOC.ltb'ftlit, about 4:30 Lm. 'Ille U.S. ,Embuly ,.ported the al tack Md deicribed tbe raiden u "inlnldera .. beliel•ed to be Commuolst guerrillas. Uboll llel lboUl 71 mllel wal ii Ult IM-Alf~ -ritY·po~ WIS paU.l• Uan -illce ol Q>am_.)<. -llo& wltl> • otnlrf 4ol wlle!t be spotttd bolh North V-and P1u..t Loo the five guerrillH Inside tbe wil'll fen«. Communbt troop& have been on the d· He challenged them and they opeged tensive for the past month. fire, slightly wounding him and bis dog. 1bes attack was the aecond against Officials identified the ,,entry fill Ken· U.S. air bales In Thailand s.ince Amert-neth D. O'Dell, 20, of Mount Prospect, can warplanes were brought in four years Ill., and said he was in good concUUon ago to bomb North Vietnam aDd sup-with a minor leg wound. port allied troop:i: ln South Vieuwn. The guerrillas then scat~ and .set For Nixon, here to review U.S. com· off rive satchel charges or dynanute, ml~ in '11\alland, 1_1 underllneil d-~ '"° C47 planea and knocking what American and 'Miai OUiclall have thfi field a ground control apprOach sys. described u ' an up!Uree 1n guerrllla ac-tem out of commiaslon for almost tbree tJvlU~ I.ft the northeastern provlnce.s. hours. AU five escaped, appanntly un.- The embassy announcement sald an banned. Laird Says U.S. Needs ·Gas Stock as Deterrent New Evidence Links Smoking To Diseases " W ASHJNGTON (UPI) -llelense Sec- retary Melvin R. Laird said today the best way to make sure the United Stales Is not the victim of chentical or biologi· cal weapc>N b to maintain its own such weapons 13 a deterTent· He said the Soviet Union had a "much greater' capability in thlJ area. "1'11.s deterrent is Important if we want to see that these guea are never used in our time," Laird declared. The secretary defended the need for i chemlCll and bloloiJcal warfare CCBW) program dw'lng a 45-minute question and answer seasion with a group of summer From Page l APOUO ... to have been a five-minute moonquake, provinJ: the moon ls not dead. Armstrong. Aldrn and Collins spent more than sil hours Sunday taping the ir reco11ection4. or their journey, covering the flight equipment and the trip from the earth to the moon in two sesaions. They resumed today with the actual lan- dlni. moonwalk and lbelr return lo earth stflf to be covered. They were visited Sunday by their famllJea: who talked to them through a window. Alter a dinner break and a. final deb<lellnC session. Annotrong and Collins played a &am• ol ping f>Olll and Aldrin "'tcbe4 a movie before retiring. . . governaE:nt Interns. A number of the approDnatety 100 college youths participating politely but penistently peppered Laird with a aeries ol"queetioN on fDOit of the controverah1.l luues with which he ls cunemly coping. Asked whether he would, be wlllin& to st rike a compromlse in the Senate over deployment ol the Saj'eguanl· antlballis- tlc mlssile. sflltem, Laird indicated he would not. · He sald the administration had 61 senators firmly committed to vot- ing for the proposal as submitted by President Nixon. But he aald that If it lOl!lt in the Senate, a comproml!e, lf there was to be one, would be warked out in the Senate.House conference that would follow ctriain Houae paasqe of the admlnlstraUoo propoeal. • - Heroin Smuggling Suspect Arrested NEW YORK CAP) - A New J_, hairdresser has been arrested and 8c· cused of smuuUng into the country $2.5 million in heroin hidden in tile hollowed shafts of skt poles, federal authorities an· nounced toda y. William Durkin, regional director of lhe U.S. J ustice Department's Bureau of NarcoUca and Dangerowi Drop, iden· lilied the man a9 the French-born George A. Roupinian, a naluraliud U.S. cltiuo from Middleau, N.J. WASHINGTON CAP) -The federal government today reported new evidenc. linking cigarette smoking to an 8SIOJ't.. ment of diseases and commended the tobacco lndu.stry for offering to end broadcast advertising. "Cigarette smoking continues to be confirmed as a serious health hazard to the people of this country, one whlch is the cause of much unnecessary disease and death," said Secretary Robert H. Finch of the department of Health, EducaUon and Welfare. Finch commented in a letter ac- companying a new Public Health Service report IA> Congreao. The 135-page r!p:ft. enUUed ••Health Consequences of Smoking" -1969 Sup. plement," reported new evJdence llnkina: cigarette smoking with c o r o n a r y dbonlers, cbronlc broochilill, pulmonary emphyaema, .throat and respiratory cancer and -for 1he -nrst Ume -non- cancerous dlsealle.! of the m9Uth. The report also 1W11marl%ed briefly earlier studies compiled by the federal government whlch linked smoking to a wide variety of cancers, cardto·v~tar disorders and other maladies and said no evidence has been uncovered in the past year "to refute the judgments." Al in past reports, dgars and pjpes were largely absolved. esctpt In the case of thrOat cancer and noncancerous oral disorder, DAILY ,ILOT $!•ff 'l'lttt JERY KOONCE (LEFT), RON FORSTER !RIGHT) PRACTICE FOR BEACH SHOOTOUT F•st Draw Artists to Converge on Shopping Center for Friendly Competition ' DAILY PllOI R1\Mo1I N . Wttd Pm00.111 tN '~bll"t J1tk R. C~rl•r \'la ,rt110fnl •Ml "'""'' MIN9U The"''' K11•il f.d•IOr Tho"''' A. Mw•phi111 /M1111i111 [Ol!Or ,il.lherl W. I•••• .,,._1 ... t.itw H111t~ 1-111 Offlc.t lG' 5th St•1•I M1lll111 Add rtu: P.O. l o• 79G, '2'4' ottitt 01n1n J\11_..1 kH~ 11\1 W••I 111!1>'11 lleu-i • Ceo•t Mtu n ll Well 111• !trttl LH~lll It.ell. Jll F9"1t A•t llllll OllLT ,_ILOJ, ""'~ """kl! •1 uitn111"'4 "'• ...... ,., ..... • .... II ...... •l ilt ••Ct'OI ""'"" .., .. -•1t1 Mll-.... H1111t .... ..,. ~ ,,_,..,.., Vfllcy, booll ,,., .... - ,..,. ltKfi .... ~ ••Kii, •lontl ...... ... ""llo\lt ffll....._ Ol'I .... CM•I J'Wll..._ .... c.i.t11r •lntlott ,_n. .,.. II m1 V...t • ..,.. Bl.,..~ Hr.._t k•cll. • .,. i» Wiii fin Slrfff, (Mt• lolrtt . ,..., ..... t7141 ... 2-4Jl1 ,,.. .. w..,....,..i! .. ' 540.1210 C~ A~ert41t "42·1671 <"••'-""· , .... Or-~· ,. .... ltlll ... ,_"" .... -• , •• ' ... ftliltll•l'-IHllltrltl ITWOI'-'• .. ffttrllM-11 ,,.,,m -1 I» •flttM. .. •'"*" H•ttl.tll "1""1uiWlt -~ ..... -· ku ... C'-ll -·· tr•• •I Hr_..r ...... •1'4 Cc111 #fw. c 1mcr..i1 ~IA.1.tl'll'"'°' t• ,.,.~ U-'* -"'IWJ It\' -II Jf.Jf "*"""' nulll.,y Olt•IM•IOtlt. not .,..~tll!V. From Page 1 KENNEDY. • • through Hyannis -~t J:very roughly 35,000 to 45,000," and said extra help was still on duty trying to clear up a large backlog. A Kennedy aide said on Saturday the mes.uges were running 100 t.o 1 in Ken- nedy's favor and the Senator "ob.-iously was moved'' by the "overwhelming" favorable response to his telev~ed plea for advice. The commllttt to Keep Sen. Edward M. Keened,y in public life, dubbed KEEP for short reported Sunday it had received about 10,000 letters. telegrams and telephone calls urging Kennedy not to resign. Mrs. Rita Salk, New York chairman of the committee said the messages came from "almost all 50 1t.att.S." She reported branch committees were being formed 1n Los Anatlet, lletroll and SL l..oQU. Speculation mounted as to when Ken- nedy would return to W aahington since the Senate was expected to vote later lhis week on the Safeguard antiballlstlc mlss\le system to which Kennedy is op- po.sed. But the aide 1ald tht Senator "had no immediate plans for the future.'' The akle alao A.Id Kennecty at.ill WIS "very fluid " aOO hu set no deadline to decide whether he would reliln his Senate seat. For the oecond day ol lhe cloudy, damp weekend, the 37-yur-old Senator cruised on lhe family yacht, the Marlin, for near- ly two hour! and be.ached the ship at a cove in Nantucket Sound to picnic with his wife, his sister-In-law Ethel and several or the families' children. Cardinal Richard Cushing of Boston, a long time family friend, visited the Com· pound briefly. The Sunday afternoon quiet on the three-lined !treet! adjacent to the com· pound in this mid-cape Cod resort com· munity was shattered by a noisy, hour· long demonstration when 20 college-aged youths protested Kennedy 's e1plaoatlon ol the accident· ~t Naramore, 18, of Rochester, N.Y., lhe leeder ol ihe group, said the members were "dlsguaud, dismayed and shocked" at the speech "because it ap- peoled strictly IA> the emolloos." 22-year-old Completes English Channel Swim OOVER, Englsnd (AP) -Margot Orford, 12-year-old EOlJllsh poodle clip- per, plowtd thJ'0031! oil and jelly fish Mond•Y and became the first woman to swim the EnjJllall Channtl thb year. She made the swim from France t.o England ln l~ houri, 53 minutes. DAILY PILOT 1t•fl '"'"' STRATEGY SESSION -Salvation Anny is laying plans to expand services in Fountain Valley. Pqlice Chief Charles Michaelis (left) is chairman of a local committee helping wilh plans. Meeting with chief are (from left) Wayne Lane, committee treasurer; Mrs. Shirley Pulford, committee secretary, and Paul Kugler, local field represen~tive for salvation Army. Salvation Army Expanas Fountain Valley Efforts The Salvation Anny has increased It! activity in Fountain Valley with the formation of a service extension unit composed of 11 leading cili:zens of the community. At their flrest meeting last week, Foun- tain Valley Chief of Police Charles Michaelis was selected chairman of the gervice ertension committee. Other officers include Wayne Lanr, manager of the Bank of America as treasurer and ~rs. Shirley Pulford, president of the Chamber of Commerce Women's division as secretary. Committee members include Don Gam- mell, Fountain Valley postmaster; Mrs. Doris Dick ; Mrs. Lee Na.sh : Dr. Paul Berger, principal of Fountain Valley High School; The Rev. Ken McMillan ; and Lieutenants Raymond Laginess and Fastest Gunmen To Gather Aug. 2 ... Some of the fast.est gunmen In the West will gather at Huntington Center Satur· day for .a big shootout in the mall and parking lot. About 30 gunslingers are e1pected for the competition, which will include walk and draw, timed and women's event s. The last draw experts will begin their show at 9 a.m. and continue eliminations until 6 p.m. Held in conjunction with the center's Sih•erado Days, the fast draw com· petition as well as pony rides and square dance exhibitions beginning Wednesday are open t.o the public without charge. Leslie Rowland of the police department. The service extension unit acts on behall o( the Salvatio n Army in the absence of a resident facility or uni(onn- ed personnel, according to Paul Kugler, field representative for the Army in Orange County. Several services provided by the Salva- tion Army include : emergency di..sa..ster relief, home and hospital care for unwed mothers, day nurseries. family counsel- ing, ~r camps: and many others. Valley Citizens Now at 29,194 Another 270 persons moved Into Foun· tain Valley during the month of June. }umping the city's total pupulation as of June 27 to 29,194. City officials estimate the city's growth each month by the number of ap- plications for water permits, said City Manager James Neat "We've averaged about 250 new residents each month this year," said ad- ministrative assi!lant Jim Hollywood. If the city maintains its present growth rate it should hit the 30,000 mark - halfway to saturation -.sometime this fall. Ultimate population of Fountain Valley is figured at 55,000 to 60,000. Storm Anna Nears ~11Al-.11 (UPI) -Tropical storm Anna, first of the year, blew up in the central Atlantic with 55 mile an hour winds today and weathermen said It should become a full-blown hurricane wtthin 36 hours. Jack Bidwell's July clearance sale all this week! J',-e marked dol'·n my e ntire stock of 8pring a tt(l euntmer 111t:rchan<lise, except for cer. tain 11taple1 thal l reorder throughoul lhe year, &uch as wWte sbirtA, black M>cks, elc. All from regular Bidwell 1tock. No special parchaaes or any •oeh hanky panky. S75 1p0r1 eoalA redul'f!d io S60 S70 1port coat1 rcdu~d to 156 S65 11porl eo.uta reduced to $52 160 1porl coata fttlueed to 143 $55 1port cot1ta reclaeed lo 144 150 11por1 eoalll ftdaced to 140 ftfcn '• 140 Al.ack• reduced lo S32 ft1en ,, 135 alack.1 reduced lo 128 Men '• •32.SO tlacb now at 126 Men'• 125 elack1 red need to 12.0 Men'• 146 cmrdlpn aweaten, l30 Men'• '35 cable eanllpna at SIO Men.'1118 f.:ullo•er-awuten, Sl2 Other men a sweeten reduced 25cyo ~lea'• 116, U7,U8knltohku, •12 Mansfield · < •• Says Surtax May Expire WASHINGTON (UPI) -S e n 1 I • Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield rais- ed the posslbllily !<>day that Coogrus might quietly bury the 10 percent income tu surcharge th.ls week by lettlni paycheck wltbholdlng of it expire. "The ~ expires at mldntght Thurs·· day," Mansfield told repoorters, refer· ring to paycheck wlthholdlng. The surtax Itself expired June 30 but Congress ex. tended withholding for a month while considering President Ni1on's plea to el· tend the surcharge another year. "If it goes out of exislence Thursday it would be very hard to revive it in view of the deep undercurrent in this body," Mansfield said. He referred lo opposition by soome senators toward Nl.J:on's surtax propo!al, under which the 10 percent levy would apply for the remainder of the year, then drop to 5 pereent JaJL 1. MansfleJd saJd Jut week that Sena!~ opposition to the surtax was increuing. He said the admlnilltraUon was calling it a vital anti-inflation tool but had no evidence it had slowed inflation so far. Merchants Blast Hippie Influx At Newport Pier By JEROME F. COLLINS Of 1'111 ~ ,1111 Sl•fl A group of angry merchanta today peti· tioned Newpart Beach city councllm«i to crack down ~n tlle infi11.1 of hippies in the Newport Pier buainess district. • The petitioners, led by Lorne J. George, owner of tbe Big George dress shop, said the area near the pier "can now be .considered a new slum." They asked the city to refuse licenses to "hippie businesses." "Within a two-block area," sald the 10- signature petition, "there are at least five hippie establishments which relate only to that element. Their clientele are 90 percent hippie and they are only in business by this type of people." Councilmen will be presented the pell· lion today, City Clerk Lauri:. Lagios said. Dre.!! shop owner George, who prepared the petition, .said many or the young people hanging arounC the pier represent a new kind of bum. He ti· pl;.ined : "Olten when l drive to Los Angeles through the garment dlstrtct I notice the bums st.anding around the .streets and now I notice the same thing in Newport Beach : the look is the same, but there is a different reason for their actions. "In the Los Angeles !lums I assume they are alcholics. In Newport Beach they are dope addicts. Of the two, I am sure the dope addict would be considered much worse." He said ii their appearance were the only distasteful aspeet about them, it would be no problem. "But unfortunately. as many of them are on drugs, they have to support this costly habit and one of the ways they do th is is by shoplifting and panhandling on the streets. British Geographers Honor Neil Armstrong LONDON (AP) -Neil Armstrong, the first man to set root on the moon, today joined a !elect group of explorers hono~d by Britain's Royal Geographical Society. Armstrong was awarded the society·~~ special gold medal for leading the Apollo 11 mission. It was the society's first award for spact e1ploration. Mm'• SIS, 113.50 knit ohirlA, SIO Mea'119.50, 110 tpL 1hirtll, 16.50 Men '1 18 & 19 sport ahlrtl at 16 Men 1116 4 •1 1port 11hi.rta at $4.50 Men'• Taylor Made, Spalding Shou, broken Iota., * price! WOMEN'S STUFF REDUCED, 115 Bermudureduced lo Ill 116 Bennudu reduced to 112 •14-117 Bermuda., 2S% off! 1181tralght panta now Sl4 •11 •trafgbt panll DOW 113 Sl3 blon9H reduced to SIO I 9 bloueee reduced to I 7 17 to $30 blou~ 2So/0 off! 128 lenuie .ir...e. ....ru...i lo $21 126 lennls dreNe11 reduced to Sl9 S18-133 tenni.11 dreMCS, 25o/o orf? $;'10 dre11M'J.11 redutt:d lo $22 S28 d.._. rodu..,.J lo '21 '26 d....-rodu..,.J to 119 123 lo S90 d.re11ee., 250/0 ofl ! 119 sklrtt reduced lo 114 118 1kirta reduced lo $13 1161kirt1.reducedto112 US lo 133 oldrto, 2S% off! 19 Dan.it.in tep1 redaeed lo 17 18 Daa1kln. tops nlduced to 16 17 Danofdu Iopa rcd--1 lo SS Wemen'sS12 Top1ldcn now S8 Women'1 Sl4 Bernardo 1uedu. S7 Men's SI65 •alts redueed lo Sl35 Maa'sl145 aoli.redaced to •116 Mrlll'• 1140 aulta redattld. to Sll2 Men'all35 tulla redaeed lO Sl08 Men's 1115 1ulla reduced lo I 92 Men'1lllO.Wtareduced1ol 88 MMt.'1SlOOauit.redumdtol 80 ~lien'• I 95 1uita reduaid to I 76 1'len'1 I 90 aull• reduced to• 72 ft1f!n,• I 8S 1uJlA reduced to I 68 S 120 •port eo11tt reduced to I 96 1110 sport eoatl redaeed lo I 88 1100 epert ooaLI reduced lo I 80 S 90 •!""" <00ta rodurod lo S 75 Jack Bidwell , 3467 Via Lldo nex110 Richard'• Market and the Ll<lo Tbealn! at the etltnnee lo Udo lole. 6734510. An •ere of free puking at rear of thia store. Copyright 1969, Jack Bidwell. -. ' . ... _,, . ' ' . ' r I I, \ Falcons,. :Pirates ieFoes The Embee Falcona and ' Ward'l! Pirates were ap. RJre:ntly reading ·the same script Satur~ay and Swiday as they both tied the Metro baseball league leader La Fonda Juniors and also lost narrow one-run decisions to 'too second--place Douglas Jets. • A bases-full single in the itxlh by Ed Washko sparked the Pirates to a S-3 deadlock with the Juniors in 10 innings. A trio of fielding gems by third baseman Bob Leavy in the last two frames halted a pair of Junior rallies. Against the Jets, the Pirates lost a 2-0 lead 'as Douglas' Jim .Leibeclc slugged a grand-slam . homer in the fifth. ' A dramatic rally in the ninth fell short for the Pirates. as they spanked six hits, in· eluding a two-run home run by Barry Wallace and a triple by Mike Paul. The rally ended when Jet hurler Darrel George fanned Bob Wickersham and Don McNealy. Steve Robertson was the hero of the Falcons tie with the Juniors, as he clouted a two-run homer io the fourth, and then scored the tying· run in the last inning. Embee scored the run when Robertson singled, Vince Moll and Bob Elder walked, and then Noel Paulson delivered a single to left to a c o r e Robertson. Em~4'1oss to tl\e Jets was a heartbreaker as the Douglas squad SCQred the winning run in the lasl inning on a bases-- loaded walk. Ron Richardson got the Falcons off to a great start by clobbering a three-run homer in the first to cap a five-run inning. Robertson a d d e d another two-run homer in the filt h. Elder collected three singles while driving two runs. ,JU.TIS Ul .. • • " McNMly, ti • • • • KIM , cf ' • ' • C!1rt:, 11 • • • • L .... vv. lb • 1 • ' Wk:kenl'l•m· " ' 1 1 • R'ntrow. " 1 • • • P1vl. 1" • • 1 • Currv, ' 1 • ' • Wt-(!, It ' 1 ' ' Rvder, c • • • • ' Plnlfor, • • • 1 • T0!1ls " ' 1 , klll't w 111rt1nn • H' Plrille$ 000 003 000 1).-l ' ' Juniors 210 000 000 0-J ' 1 ,lltATlS 111 .. • • " 1(1"'!. cf ) 1 ' • C~rt:, u • ' 1 • Peul. " ' 1 ' , lNV'I" :Ill ' • 1 1 Wld<enham, " • ' ' ' Rt'f\lro•<. •' ' ' ' ' MCNHty, 2" ' ' ' ' WasNt<:t. C: , ' ' ' Crltlo, • ' ' • ' Pl"'""'· rill ' ' ' ' o~. ' 1 1 1 1 Ryder, c 1 ' • ' W11t11«. cf 1 1 ' ' Tollll ~ 1 " • scon by lnnlnn . ". r1-~1,1 001 ()(II) OOS-1 11 ' Jets 001 oa io~-t • ' l'ALCONS fU .. • " " P1ul1on, 1'b ' 1 ' ' .. ,.....,, " ' • • • Mu,.._v, -• ' • RlthsrdloOf', "' ) ' , ' P~r10l'I• If ) • • ' R ot>e<'l 10•" 1 b ' ' , ' Moffl, II ) • ' ' Mon, c ' • • ' llulh • • ' • • ' ..... , • • • ' E~r, Pft • ' • ' Toll~ ~ • • Sc-., ... lnlllntt . ". Ju..,lors 101 002 1).....1 10 ' F1lcon1 100 200 , ..... • ' l'ALCONS 10 .. • " " Pwl90fl, 7b-1> ' 1 , ' "l...n, " ' ' 1 ' Murrw, d ' 1 1 ' It IChltdsOl'I. 3b ' ) ' ' Pe-r!1m, t , ' 1 ' ftctlerfson, ,. ' 1 1 ' ~ .. , , ' ' ' Eldtr, II • 1 ' ' cnv11, " 1 ' • ' Bl1~1. " 1 ' ' ' M<>ll. lb 1 ' • ' Tot1ls ~ • " ' Scott '1 111nl!'ltf; . ". Fl it-JOG 010 ,_ • 11 , "" 102 370 1-llt 10 , SOFT SELL SAM •I/, • Baseball, QoQ,lllg Wlt/t rnold Palm'er Polo cag~ THE HOOK AND HOW TO HIT IT Standings · The techniques used to hook shots inttt)tionQJly ore actually 11faulfS II Of sirip dnd sfCnC8 that ~ny golfeis inodvett«itlyopply in their normal game •• WATIR Jl!OL.0 H•--1 HttW E1tti•ief1 ~o:s ·~ ~ltll'I VIUIW L! OIJlnt1 IOl't Gr1nci. .. L •• • I 1 I l" • ' 1. ' 1 • • • ' • To hook intentlonall.y, you can apply either or both of two alterations. In th• full-figure chowing, I a"'oddr!!llSlngthe ball in cs clased stance -rrt'f right ltftMll A Olvltillll W L O• ·IJQU-.. , • • -C:osll MtM PO!"=• ' ' 1 Rlc:Nirdl Lldli Mt;t, • I I Jt. AnO.-. I ' ' ,.,,.., C.t '''" j • &Rcodl: c-• • Htrrnco M1tlrlel1 • • • StfTNU I OIYl•ltio w L 01 AMm ' ! 1 kulh Coe~! ' • DoVlll•• 11\IU ' ' • 6'" J~ • • , I N t.· ' l 1 J . c . 1n.r ) I t:"~' sr.i;1111fv , , .curtly 1t!llr; , • ' !7l1·V1J • • • Ok-.! 1 • 1 Pl'l(.l'lon C11llnt1 ' ' 1 L~hr'lao.t -' • ' ltll'*ll Cllvfdl L1H11t W L .. • 1 •foot is pulled bock. This causes the ~lub to iwing towards •right field• and apply a eountetcfock~ ·wise (hook) 1pto to the ball, catSing it to Curve left. Flr;:J•f,llf H1 rlnllV • Gl.O Tldlrt$ ' Chureh ot 1111-nt ' Harbor As'CmtllY l 'Cnurf'l ltl ta&ll'Ollds ~lirl1t ulherl"' 1 llurth of N1ur-I aASK9TULL COSTA MIUA o,l!'N 1 , l ' ' • ' ' • ' • ' Thedrawtngof myhaods •hows. them turned too for to rtrf right. This ~II caul• me to ctose rrrt c:lubfoc• In the hitting orflCJ so . it wiU be looking to the leh - in a hook position .... at impact. W L Waod'l's W~rf ,. ' ~'°" Ford • , OOMlc!I ltm • • Wiomart lnMJrallCI • • luuv•, ' ' occ ' ' ~111s Astrw. ' ' Biii &1rry Pon!i1c • " OltAHQI LIAGUF.. w L •• , • • ' ' • ,. •• Mtrln1 " ! Lowell • ' Ktte111 • • • Or1nqe ' • • P1tlHc1 ' ' ' Trow • ' • ""'" , " • Anetlclm • " " . ..................... : . .,.,, ............ , ..................... .,, ................. """ FOOTHILL Lf.AQVE W L .. Mater Otl ' , Los Alamitos MIUion Vltlo • • ' F001n111 • • ' S1nll1pa ' ' " TYslln I • , CM·I STANCIA. Ll!AGUI ••• W L Oa Buen• P1rk • 1 E:mntia---~ .-Miler 0.1 • • ' Co•la M~ ' ' • , ' ' 11w;y 1QSE •,=:maPw .. gm.*'F"'*"*''u z •ru• $iddte~ LOii Am ot ' " • '°" ""°""'"' JllfY 2l. 1Nt-»tll 01r CIHr & 1"111. l"lr11 '°"' 71U l'.M. Oeull ..... 111 & tnd lt•ca Q11inelll .., Nini~ lt•C.. l'tRST ltACI!". l50 tird$1 ~id!!f! 'l V@lr old$, Cl•lmlnt. Purse $1700. Ct•lmtng Price SUOO. Soo:llt!Y Mic ($mltnJ uo TtlPlt B•r Tom (Lll>htm) 170 M•cl'looo B•~ ($.ln<;httl 170 Miss MK $tft !O 81nksl 111 Toledo's P•lleo (W1'bl.ir9) 120 ,l,tull ReQ\llSt fll:lievl 1!1 Mldwtoy Tam (Ad.lit) 120 Wl...,lng Hour IR 111f!k1) 120 Lolsl !lux (Slr111ss) l\1 81111>' Bir Sln1r 1w1"'°") uo SIECONO l:ACL BO Ylrdll. ' Vtlr Olds •rod UP "" G~~ A Mlnvs. Puts• Sl~. Connie's v1nllY (P11~1 11' H~ryll!l'I 0.0... (Ll~tm) 116 ROl'ln'f's Litrk (Smlfh} 111 Sprint's Promill& CK1n!s} 114 Rockln B•• Mante !R B1..,ksl 111 Riot Miker {$!r1tUSI) 116 Mr. T. Radtoel (Ad1;r) 116 O~s•w Ridt 81r 111 1nc11>er1tor jRldl1rds) 116 Goade'I Twit 116 THlltO R•c•. olOO ~•rds. Me~n ' v~tt Dll!I. Pvroe S1190. Thi Wr:JJP (Marr1'l 120 Youth Swim Honor List With the Orange County Swim Conferena! at lhe hal f way mark in league dual meets, the following is a list of Orange Coast area swimmers to make the conference honor roll: 819 1C•nol1 l lrinkl•Yl 110 Scol11nd Cinders (Rlcl\inbl 1111 Vic.kl Nl9~t (~ndl•O no Sir LOVlt (1(1nl1) ,~ Nol1f1t Fore Ladv ($!r1uu ) 117 R,,_n S1'11n {Htf l 170 l'OllltTM RACE! . ..:io v1rds. ! ve~r 1tld$ •nd ..... In Grltdl e PIUS brtd In C1!!f, Pvrw IUOO, S~•ti> eartNrt (H.,·t) 117 ~ny Clla111er (0 81nllsJ l!S FltSllY HQl!lll (,,.,.llUIHI l ll C!ovl1' BlbY l l: (WllJ.On) 113 ~rln• Fill!!! (RI~! Ill Tllo Otndy (It Binks) 116 Go Rl'IOd1 (Or<1.,..r) 111 Mr. Lon1t Sr>ot 117 Jodle't o~v aar (llrl..,klevl 11f Cl-y Tani (.t..Nlt l l ll l'll"'TM RACE • .5'9 y1rdt. J V~tr eldt ltnd UP. Al1ow .. 1o:es. Puru $2000. P~1'1 Prldt !AdtlrJ 111 fted E19le Ber (L1Dholml 111 $1m11>on'1 Sltl•r (llrlnltley) 111 T"" Na!w !It 911*.I) 117 TOP Todd (Hll"!) 11• Cl~r Rfd Roell (Morri•I 115 T~ Poltroon !Wrl!lhlJ 111 S1ndv Ci>lc (H Cro.ti<l 120 ~~'I Reqvesf ($!r1tun) ,,, Ltundlef" (Wt!-) lU SIXTH RACE. J50 v1rd1. ' 'Yelf old•. AllOWOl'ICH . Purw 12100. Tl..,y HOP ( K1ni•l no Marbl• Min CAPCllHCI) 110 Lltt1e Cont".. 117 Mol1h Gtvle fW llionJ 111 Rlct'I (;okf' (Rlc!>&rdl) 170 Ml••r C~11'9e 170 Ftsl Eddie (AdllrJ no °""'' To Go (L~ml 111 Ki.tn111'1 Bl>be (Smltn) 117 A WM Afl1lr (~rtl HO s rveNTM RACe:. v""" Sr. CourM! _.XI vtrd•. l v~·· olllt Ind UP. Cl1lmln;. Pur$1 snoo. Cl1lml1111 prlt1t ..... Plalt Murllcl (l!ph1tT1) 11' B1rred'1 Bl1cuil c1Wrsonl 111: Ml11 Wt'Nlilnl fAllOdltct) \15 U-rstudy !ltkherdaJ 11• Hvrrv John (H•rll 111 Bill'• ll:P<>Ul'$! Pt Binks) 111 Bl1~ng Htrf'I' fAd1irt 111 SANTA ANA Le AGUE w ' •• Newpert H1rbOI' ,. • Mater Del • , , $~n•~ An~ • ' ,.. E! Modtnt • • • 5•r'' •~• V1111Y • • • ~~l~~ , ' • • " "" Deep Sea Fish Report SAN CLl.Mf:NTl!-'69 -lers: 1,,0 bonlto. 2lG bin. • he!lbut. 3 bttrec:uct1. SllAL llll!ACK-167 ,.,.lors; n bar· r1cuct1. n ba<>lto, 196 bfl11. ' ha!lbut . Blrte. 15' 1"91ers; 1$ bflrr1cud1, 1'23 bonllo, 10 bin. 1 llallbYt, so meckerel. LONO 91!ACM l '•dfk: LuMll"tl-ISl •"9ler11 l 1lbac:ore, $ vellowl1l1. 3 he!lbut, 950 btH. IOI bonito. (ltlment P l..-)-lot 1nvfert; ~°' b1u, lol ba<>lfll. 1 h1llbul. 1 bllrr1cuct1t. ll1rve. 11 1"9le•s; 27 bonlte, 3 btu. I htllbul. (PlitrJOlllt LtndllHll-300 11>0ler.1 1 Mrr1cuct1, 1,"11 blu, 7S bonito, 3 nallbul. OXHAltD-107 11111ters1 1,.ns bl51, 360 rock tod, J1 bonlle, 11 ht!lbul, 1' borracudll. NEWPORT (Ol,,.r'• l.Kkerl-345 tt11len.1 11 1tlblcelf'e, 1.221 bonito. w bfln, I rock cod. T 1'11HIM.it. IArt'I U flo •t11tJ.-203 1rwlen1 11 111Mocono. ' cloll>Mn, 1 bluelln 1-. I v111owt1IL lJ btrracvda, 1,123 bonllCI. U bin. 'AU.OISE COYl!"-172 1ngl1rs: 1,0A bin. lU bo<>Jto, 12 b1rr1cuoe, 10 hllltNI. SAN PlDltO (DIMI St. l•fldlMl-123 1119lert 1 5 b1rr•cucta. 1$ e11Hco ban. 1 h1llbul. ).17 bonito, (Norm•1 Lll'- •lnt)-nt angler11 20 Ytl!owllll, 11 twlrr1cvdt. MS bonito, 1U ct llco bin, 1 n1n11u1. MORRO IAY !Vlrt 'I L1ndlnt l-l1l '1~;1ett; I t ll,.,,.,", 16 ~•llbut, :U0 JIM cod, l..172 r<><:ll cod. (Pl. Mtr,.l-15 EIOHTH llACI.. AOO Vttdl . Vter 1"91en; "6 tock (od • a•os •l'<I UP In Gred• 4AA M!nus. l'OltT HUENEME-199 t"91f"; 1.5•1 Pur11t IJOOll. Tiit Arc!ldl1. ulka b.111, 11 bonito, 11 blrrK<Jdt, 15 Watctl Ell !H Cro•byl n1 h.tllt>u!. ' 1114 Unckr Glrlf; !!lobby Cller;er (A~Cll 1') MALIBU-US ,.,.ltrt; 1.J77 c1l1cp ;J Yd br~111: K. W!"lrey (Hu..,11"91on Admlr1I Red !1(1nll) llJ b.e u . '°' bonUo, t blrr1cvt11, 14 Herlx>rl 11.1. Oavld J1n1t (Slft~nJ 1'l f'l•llbuf. 7! vii back: K. Wl~frrf (HHl 16.9, Sweetie II•• Ml•• (R links) ,,, M4lllNA bEL ltEY--4f •1111lers1 '3! 7J yd 11'1 : I(. wi ... frtY CHH) 71.1 Etr1en's Htn<:odt {W•~l 111 Mnd blu. ~ lx>rlllo • Tl .. Glrls IC l Cll NINTll RACI!. 150 Vlrdt. 3 'Ifft Olds OCEANllDE-ltt In 9 ! • r 11 17 15 yd lrltl: . LIWrtnee De• I"' t lblcori , '" ~ •• ,,~ ..... m ''''· J,'1> ~rl) 16.0. .,,., UP In Glad• A Ml ....... Purse Sl100. .......,.. ---75 vd beck: T. lawrlllClt (CC) 1'.6. Truckle Rou (Sl•IUU) 1!6 ...,., • 2 whlle Stl l>fiU, 2 Yllk>Wffll, II 15 yd t!r: T. L1wren" ICC) 11.l. W1r Cherub IW•!lonl 112 llallbul, ,.,. Glrll Sir Bllhltrl..a (P•lll'l 11~ HUNTlNOTOff •e:ACH-11 lf>'lltrl; 50 yd blc.k: 0aVtd90l'I CCCI ~-·· Delfctte MlSI {Wrlthl) 170 11'0 bcmlto. 45 b111 ... , __ 101 lflllllt1: 11·12 Olrh Mor>lerev GYPtv 112 30S bonlte, 125 ban, i tltllbuf, 1 50 vd, bre11t : T. B!<kwlfll ICCJ :U.5. Mr. OICll<!V {Smflhj 116 berrecuct1. 50 yd !Iv: T. 9K~Wll~ (CC) lCl.6. !ll!lv MltklV 80'V (A:itmrd1) 116 Rll!OOND0-411 .... ltl'll '1$-1 bi·- 11-12 kJI N~1sh1 tAd1lr) 116 r1cude, 1,:UO bl1t. ru bonito, 1 ~allbut. 100 vii lree: B. L" CCCl .ff.I. M1tk1v'1 TroutJ-. (H1rll l\l I "IUllln "'"'· Tll•f:e 80111t1. '111 50 yd bre11t: It. Smith CCCI 31.2. ,~--::::::°'::'::":":::'"°:::'::'"::'===:'::"::::-:::':":'::' :":':"::":·:':":::'°':::":"=:::; IJ.14 Bt1s ltlO Yd brtl~!: S. SPant;le (CC) 1:1 1.1. 100 Yd fly: M. W1l~llclt (CC) 1:&1.7. 1.1·11 Olrll 100 vd frtt: K. Ktllv CCCI Sll.5. !00 YO. blc.k; K. Kt!IY (CC) 1:01.1. U·l1 h'I'• 100 rd Ire•: R. Ml1lolell (CCI !1.1. 100 rd brt~1t: J. iPannlt (CC) l :Ol'.1. 100 yd ba~k: It. M!1lolek (CC) 1:00.1. By Marvin Myen l\lowl. PSA jets ~hoiir ooihehour to San Francisco! 7 •m to I pm. Both nys. 7·1·9·10-11 •m·12 noo,..1·2·M-54-7.g.I pm. More on weekende. Plus flights tiOur oo the 11· hour to San piegtt! 1:15 am to 10:10 pm. Both w1y1. I :15·1:30·9 :30.10:30.11 :30 om-12 :30.1 :30·2:30.3 :30· 4:30-5:30..&:15·1:30.7:30·1:30..10:10 pm. More on weektndt. Why worry about a reservation when PSA he• ovtr 160 lllghta 1. day? Suclt an eas~to--remember •chtdule you can carry It eround In your head. Why remember loweat fares? Or all Jata? Or great service to Oskl1nd, San Jose, and S10- l'9lllent9? Or that klde under 12 flY PSA (with their parent.) ror he tr fare? Still want a "NiNE' MORE CUllES Sl!lW lX> IT, !)tAR. , ,, reservation? Ju1t call your travel 1gent orwtlolll-•lrlfn"' l'S\9'-,....allL ' M01d11, July 28, f969 • DAIL V PILOT f :;. r • 'Jn . Legion Tourney Oil City Winds Up With Win FV, Ne:wport Win By DAVE CEARLEY Of ~ ... llJ Pllll tllft Fountain Valley and New· poti Harbor advm<ed to th• second mind of lbe Anaheim American Legion base b a 11 tournament Saturday and SUn- day, Fountain Valley ·downing Rancho Pacilioa, 1--0, and Newporl blinking [.(Ing Beacll Jordan, 4-0. Fountain Valley, which dld not play a regu.lar schedule because or ll.!l late entry into the league, came through with a single tally in the ninth to win tbe contest. Mike Shimaji scored the sole run when he doubled, stole third, and then crossed home plate aft er the throw went into Jeft field . Fountain Valley hurler Mike Grimwood allowed only four singles, while striking out eight and walking one. Second baseman Rick Wen· nenkamp collected a pair of singles and a double. Fountain Valley enters the second round o( the tourney Saturday against Anaheim Kohne at Boysen Park in Anaheim . Game time is at 8 p.m, Tournament co-favorite Newport made quick work of Lollg Beach as Ibey tallied three runs in ~ firs&. The Harbor•Dodgers scortd the fUll8 when Bob CUrry led of/ the lil:t.-ne with a walk,'Jeff Mallnorf followed with a 1lngte. and Billy Powell tripled to drive '" the two. Steve .King then followed with a single to drive in the lhird tally of lhv frame. The Dodgers scored an In- surance nm in the sixth when 1Job Leavy singled, stole se- cond, went to third on a wild pitch, and scored when Bob Stafford singled. Pitclier Deney Bean allowed two bits in six Innings, and fanned eight while walking four. Newport meets the rugged Long Beach Rockets Saturday night at 6: 30 at Boysen Park in the second round. Also the Dodgers launch play in the Fullerton legion tourney when they engage .. yet-to-be-named opponenl at 6:30 p.m. in Arnerige Park. . ". R1tldl11 P1clllt 1 000 000 (!00....<I 4 l f0Ynt1fn Vitlley DOO ooo llOl-1 ' o ltANCHO PACll'ICA (t) ''"'"· u KISiing, 11 Ntlwri, d A• It M II ' 0 ! 0 J 0 0 0 ' 0 2 0 kltlr.,, rt a.Ilk .. , Ut J-. 1b LI Pol11I,, .Jb SheU..,..!d, ' lmltrl •• Tot1l1 , 0 • ' J 0 0 I J 0 It 0 l 0 0 I l 0 0 0 J 0 It 0 tt 0 ' D 'OtJHTAlN VALLEY 111 -·" H1mllton, 111 NllnWlll ... ~lmwood, 1 Willl11tc1t1. ( ~ ........ " HI~. rt ''"" rt V1nwv. cf FOii. 1• To/Ill Al A N •I • ' • 1 ' ' • • • ' ' ' ' , • ' ,, • • • • ' • ' 1 ' ' ' ' • ' 1 • 1 • ' ' ' • • • ' ' lc.tl")'IM1$ . ". NolwP«I Hart.or lOO 001 t-.1 10 I L. II. JOtdtn 000 000 0-0 2 0 HIW,OltT HAltlOlt 141 Currv. c M~!ll'IOI!, lb Powell, :lb L~vr. n 51.illord, If 811no;h1rd. !I King, rl V1lier<1, lb Piii, d Bt1n. P &t ,,,,.,t!tr, • tot1l5 1.• It t+ II 3 , 1 It ~ l ' 0 4 l 1 2 l I 2 I J o I I 0 0 It 0 3 0 ' 1 J 0 ' 0 l ' It • l 0 0 0 0 • It 0 l't 4 10 ( LDHG ll!ACH .IOltOAN UJ A•9'Nll 01.i. 2tl Rll'ltd, rf J11M1. It Corin. • Ma<Jllol1. tf Narll;on, 10 01Vlf, H s11n1nnr, ll> Scerlaos, •·II Kl..,lev. c Tor111 J 0 1 0 J 0 0 • 1 It 0 0 0 0 It 0 2 0 0 0 l 0 It 0 ' 0 It 0 l 0 1 D l 0 0 G 2 0 It 0 23 o 2 e Huntington Harbour's entr:' In the Anaheim Summt" Baseball Lea111e Unbhed II.I season with a victory Friday night that enab_led.Jbt club_\q finish the campal11n with an I· 9 record. Behind the three-hit pitching of Gil Bana~, coach Don Walker's ream tiiit--x;-o s Alamitos, :J.O, at Westtrn Higl1 School. • The Harbour team, com· posed mosUy of HuntingWn High players from last seuon, scored twice in the QUrd in· ning and ()nee in the final In· ning, the sixth, to wrap .UP lhe summer season on a wiMin,g note. Bilnagas, in addition to his shutcut pitching. logged a three·for-lhree night at the plate. HUMTINOTOM MA•tovR en McK11owr1, lb ~ ~ ~ '11 ~ln,11 lt •• Mflllh, ( J 0 I I ~r;:nt~'' f ~ t • G&ll1,C'I 2 Dctl W!l!lfiltld, 11 l t-• 0 POll1t, rl 0 0 0 I Mllr~hy, 1:tl 1 I It 0 B1ng11, • S 1 ' I TOlll$ Scart "' lnnlfl,!l J -, 1 ' las Altmltoa 000 O'lO-O 2 l Hunll~t!on 002 11111-3 ' 1 Beat The Heat! Auto Air Conditioner FITS MOST CARS 511 and. 311 Espert In!lailadon Available Was '249.95 _Models $'l'lM'9 A.k About Sean Convenient Credit Pia.. • Claaie black, Cl'lllh padded, ~ _, hae1 • Fully recessed controla for added afeay, , • 3-epeed control (or wMlo nnge oelecdoD et air volume e Convenient slide eon11111 ftgl1)dee depee of coolness •Dual blower whed for muimum efJioieney E:cpert lmtallation. Amilab1e Having Transmission Trouble? Sears Remanuiactured Automatic Transmission "The Nut Beal T1iing to a New Car'' Buy No~ and Save '25 • A Sean Remmufactored Automatic Tranamitaion will make 7our cu seem like new! • Come in £or a Cree autmnatie tnne• miSllion ~on Sale Ends Saturday, Anra•t 2nd, 1969 Sati.sfaction Guaranteed . or Your Money Back ·Sears " Aok~ s .... Colm:ntent Cndi& Pia .. Shop Monday thru Sal...U, 9:30 A.M. to 9:30 , ... !!f DAILY PILOT H Yo111' Money's Worth BuyingUsedC ar? Look For Traps By SYLVIA PORTER In 1991 alone, we wilt spend $22 billion to buy .some 20 million used cars. We will pay peak or near peak prices -an average or $1 ,029 per used car ($880 after the trade-In allowance). We will try to enhance our choices b y tradlng up lo later models. mo~ options, higher prices. Millions of us afso will become tho victims of one of the slickest groups of h I g h - prts.sure promoters in the land. Americans have gone on a used car buying binge. The spree is spurred by the fact that the World War II "ba- bies" are now becoming this era's young married; it's prop- ped by the necessity of a se- cond car in many suburban homes ; it's fed by the need of millioM of young men for temporary, in ex pensive transportation. You're an easy target -unless you are aware of the pitfalls. Specifically: ''DOPING." Yoo are told that the used car you want has been comp I e te ly "recon- diUoned'' and your test drive seems to confirm this claim. But within a few days, it develops a host ol mechanical Problems, for tbe dealer has used a variety of methods which temporarily disguise the car'a faults. To protect yourself, deal on- ly with a reputable, reliable used car dealer -and try to ge~_a·~aY. warranty, with 'the dealer responsible to pay in full for all needed repairs. The warranty ·should spell out what reconditioning has been done and whether the car is guarantee1 to pass state in· spection. THE "ALMOST NEW'' CAR. Thia may be a bargain late model "leftover car" which may have been used as a demonstrator. Or it may be ·advertised on a mail order ba- sis at the unbelievably low price of, Say, f199 for a '68 model. The catch wiOt mail order cars sometimes advertised as "below cost" or "below wholesale" -is that the cars may actually have been driven tens of thousands of miles (although y o u wouldn't know this from the odometef). And mail order First i-hase . of Airport Industry Complex Ready Co~plei~New York Stock List 'tt:.> "'_. "-c ... l:. I.Cl Clck .311 ltKll AU ,,S e,r(~ 18 ill»~~ imim"'=~1:~,~ .~ J n.... ,,IN ~;: ~ ~,:111·:~ tH f1 .. ~"11 ~=i~~~.6CI ... ~l 1114 1l\.'I -"'e::rl "pf', 'tt r ... mt m: :j°"' Benllr pl~.tg ~ IJ."" ,.~ 3M' ...... t:!itrn.so ... m., 17 17 -1 .""""' ffl i1 » ._ M\lio'...J"' 8..rtiPho JTI .SI~ 1171'1 11~ •.• ..,,,_ ciorP m '" •:: • ..... -· a•~·f It I.to , ,, 16la ,, • R. ·~ 1.20 .. ~ "Vo fl:-' w· ~ ... 118 1» 25 241'J ' 4'111 -8 llJolll\ 41 41 tll't ~ I · -1\lt aru,:.L111si 1 P, lM ~ ·~ -r H IJO ., 4.1 '4 ~~ Irks ii :141 ~ ,, .. ,. ~~ l:i°sti 1 J7\oli 2'VI U'I -l'i IOtMI Slrt 1 ~ H 'H -1 8..,._'11 1.21 J 11• r,• Ji,,-• ~ ... •r 1i L I: nu. =1 y, °"'w~~ · .~' TI lS 14\.'o I'"'° -~111,:CDI 20 2•l4 1~ 24V. -!i'iU.t.lr .SCI "O 14~ ~ lS\lo -2 $1 t~ ~ ~ lMlo f;'li.-15 MY '1.20 I 22 'h 21'19 21:. =I la!MY pf 2 2 :it•· ~ X9i ... 1, 1 • ,-'~A' ~ !l'lio JO\to .!01\ -l l~nUG 1 7' SS 107 11).1 1~ Co. ~ i!~ 1lj$~ == Co "f ,, lR• 1 15\1,--rf 111 :>1'4 v. 33"" -" ·"° 1" Sil\lo ~1~ 5?Vt .0711 t.i #"' 4.'I..., .,..., _ 'Ir. r l.~ 11 21'\ll 27 27 -.... Co .IO 1\ k1'A \\n \\n -u :::,: ~0 .f.J " ~ ~ 20 -.. e::m:-1 '" ... , "'"-~ , ... = .... l111wra..1·1• ~ 26)')1 ~ '"" * ._ e""* 1tlmo l1 r.~ l~ f?~ .::" 811nktl pfl.$0 151 I~ ~ j1"" + " Burl Ind 1.olO ,. t:I"-30• ,._ -""av,'"", ·>:'l. .., :iov. ,,,. 2fli6 -... tr'llh ·-,, ,,_~ 2.!'llo Ul.li -11'1 ShUnv l.nt 4,.1 21v. ~ ~ -1~ lulisr..Sll .le .. , " 311'1 ,,"' -1~ 3l 1"" l:W. •'·'< • .. ' Cabot CP 60 ~ :r.r. ~ r =\.1.i Cal Fln11!l ' Ut j!' 3.1•1, ~.14 _.., C1llti!M .nr ,5 m 11•4 frr. -""c • .,,,,..L .~ 1tt 10 1m ''~ -'4' C1mpSp J,10 n " 'I $1i -Vi Cdl! II~ w . .to sn "" '4 1•4 -111 Cdn Pac J.~ 'J l<I'• U\4 )I•& + CdPa<: lnl.10 ,. 11n1 10"" 10•.ia -'l'o ca ... 1J1d 1.10 r. '""' JtO lfl'I -3\lo C111 C Bdc.•I 4\4 •7 47 ·-2 Clrbrun 1 . ..0 ll 7l'"" ?1"' 2•U -1'~ C•r!l\le .t.O l6 :IC 19 19\'• -Vo Cero C&OI\ S 'J "714 27'1> l'" .. CoroPLt LO 71# 4.'lllo '1\4 1"" ~ .. C1r1>Tth 1.60 11 .15 .t7\lo •~ , C1rrl1rCp .60 'I'~ :v;u '~ :u -1\lo C.r~rw • .io. 10 1~1 101 101 -2 Ca:.e JI 1.1 ,..,~ 2~ 21'.\ -""'C1se ~AL•• I ;q, ~~Vo ,~, .. -'l\ 1•1lll'Ck1 60 ? 10 10 10 ... •lerTr J Xi 1610 S1\I• !"~ s~·· -~~ Cl M1rcio1 1:10 11•~ 11 11>1' + \.\ICCIM 111125 i:lM '"'" 1~... I,,.. ' Ceco CP lo 1M 17tll 11 111\ + ~:. ce11nesec· P2 1510 7'"11 2?Vt ?'illlo ... ce11,, llfM SO '1 7'IJ. '"" '1~ -'" Ctnca fn1 '30 3°' ?.11~ 2"11.l n>4 -V. CtnlFdv 'iod 1$ $11'" ~ ""'"'° -.,, C..i H~d i o11 1" ?~ r. ?'T\"' -lfo Cen lllLI 1"32 3~ ~ .... ~~ riv.=;:::, c 111L1 11u".so '' .,. .. 111~ ,.,, _ ''· CenlllP5 Ll2 • i••'t i•v. ioi,4 _ ,,_ CMILaEI .II SIS ~ 31'1 30 'Ii Ctl!MPw 1.12 7"I .,.,, ~,., ""'\ =11., Cent SW l.IO 10 33,,., "tl'h n•1t _ v, Cen1 Sov1 .eo ~, ,.,~ ,... ,,, -"'" ~rr!o'1V.'60b" ~ ~;:7, ~l': :Ult -1~ Cer'!·lef'd .aa 91 lllll'h " '9V. -l\'r Ctrl·ttO Ol.911 0 ,, , ,.,,, '"' -l'lt Ctt1n1Alr .IO >c6J 2~,. 2~,,_ 2~"' CF! Sii .tel ,., ,...,: ,... ,.,~ .:..:r · c11aow,, rnc lU 211111 u-. :u~ -IV! C"'mll! 1.HI 2 ~•'It ~"'''* f "~ _ "· Cl\arltrNY 1 63 31 36...., 35111 -l'r ClwosoMn 1.to l:J'I ~l V. 6,., 6,,~ + '" C'111Ck•r Mo! I 41 .tO¥o 41)1'-.\t O..m.!n 1.IO ?II ?"'< ''"~ rl~ = v-CflemMY 2.60 10 26'.'o 26'/t 26" + V. C"'mwe~ .10 191 3'1'1'> ll\'o 37""' -l~ Cllts Ve 1..0 * 11 1n11o 1n"' -,·11 8:r~~10.,~ 1~ "3\4 G"'-Al'li -C'1JtE1s1 Ill ' 31 'i :Jl'l'r. :>• -1 Ct>IM;I SIP p ,1 131'1 12 11 -1'\i !fllMStPP ti 1! ?I ?<\Ii ?>4-V. nMSPP Df S I 102 102 102 +1 MSP of t1 s -;12 ID~\'i 103 11"1 -3 Clll MYt!t I 1110 51 56\lo si•t. -~ Cll!Pnc~T 2 • 1711 11"·> 17<. -~'~ Cll! ~I Pat Sl 73'4 70'h 701/t ~'Mo C~R!P ct UP Ill 2•'0 1lV. 2 ...... -l'I ChR!P dNW ~ ,~il 1~11. 1~11. = ~ ~~µ~112.~ 117 l•lll 1~ ll'h-1 Chrf, Ctt ·~ 1!.I 1~<~ 15'.~ l~'Mo -lO CCII c"pf )Od 2n 1s11. 2"" 75 -Vo CClt D•Dt' I ll 51>\~ J..l\,r. SHll _,.., Chrcm•ll •4 1~ n•.r. !1 51 -1.,.. ch,....•ltr i 115 !J 12'11> l?'llo -''< fln~GE 1.•0 :IC.I hi"' 1-"'1i 147"' -1~~ ln(;E': PU.)5 lOI 1311 12¥. l:W. -1.._ In GE': of 4 -B-. ~i~~V.1 1 ·~0 M n ,, .. '2Vo -'Ai CITl'tn 1 110 •l 1'._ })<t 17'.lo -llo CIT F PU.SO 1• l3\'o 32'Mo l3~ + 'Mo Cltln Svc 1 111~ HV, ~1 61 • - . CllY lf!V .:lf)I) ll 2l'AI 21 21•.;, + '-' Clfylnv DI 117 2 3'11/o :U ).11/J , . Clhlfl Pll.ll 1• SIVt 51'4 SI -~'lo City 11rs .411 12 !'"'" 51.., s<,,_ -2"' Cl.Irk " 1..tl'I ~ •tYJ a y, a.\W --lll Clllr1t 011 _.10 16 16 U'h 1~ -'It ClevC!lfl 1,6(1 tlOO •2 ., ., -1 cr.,,E1111 2.IU I 11 l'o 1°"4 1~ -V> Ciw/le 1.7G ~. "t'o ~ ~ -1-lll ciev 1, Pl'.50 11\lt M\lt td'lt -1''9 Ctoro~ .7SCI 216 5''/o 5'\4 Sl\li -IV. ~11.NtlPff .90 u ~ "5~ 46 •. , kitttP llfl 9 12'.'o 1)1.\ UV. -"' NA Flfll .!II t 35 33'11 3.1•.~ -Ho NA DI Al.lo n ~~ 31 "Vo -iv. c.,.,,, SI G•• 95 ~ .. 4,.llil .U\lt -'" CDCeCol 1.n CDCe8!19 1.10 The first phase or con- struction has been completed on the airport industrial com- plex, a partnership develop. ment on the Irvine Ranch. cupancy e r e multi-tenant facilities of 15,000 square feet, 18,000 square feet and 21,000 square feet. A 10,000 square foot office facility also has been completed and will be OC· cupied by the developer. Her Ex penses Deductible 11"'•••••••m•••11<j~J co111 P91 i.10 Collin• Alk 1 Collif>Red , .Ml Colclnttt l 60 Finance Colo Sov DI ' Con I/Id .~ Cot! In pU.)3 Cell If! pt!,.O CftS 1.«lll CBS Pl 1 Col\IGu 1.60 co111Plct .•'• ColSoOfl 1.16 Cotnl!En 2.MI Comtsolv .•a CornwEd 2.10 Com E llf1..t! ComwOll . .O ComP111 Sd Th& complex is being built by Don Koll Co., Inc. and financed by Aetna Lire & Casualty Insurance Co. The announcement w a s made by the building firm 's president, Donald M. Koll , :ind Coldwell, Banker & C o . , Realtors, leasing agent (or the development. Located on a 25-acre site at the junction o( MacArthur Boulevard and Red Hi 11 Avenue, the development is planned In four stages with total completion in 1970. The comple:ii: will include 20 mult i- t en a n t buildings totalling 330,000 square feet and pro- vide industrial space for 1.1p- proximalely 100 tenants. Completed and ready for oc· Koll indicates the con- struction cost for the flrst four buildings t o t a 11 e d ap- proximately $550,000. He in· dlcates the industrial buildings will be occupied by clean manufacturing, warehousing and research firms . Koll es t imates ap- proximately 20 percent of the land occupied by the facilities is ulilized in landscaping. Construction began in ?.1ay on four more multi·lenant units with occupancy slated for October, 1969. Third and fourth stages of construction will each include sil. mul li- tenant facil ities and will he scheduled as market demand nlaterializes. LOS ANGELES (AP) Planning to take your wife along on your next business trip? Her expenses, whether directly related to your work or not, may be tax deductible, a judge has ruled. It depends on whether you can reasonably claim th at your wife, joining with you in social-business c on t a ct s , enhances your business image. That was the ruling of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Ap- peals recently in the c1ise of Roy o. Disney, head of Walt Disney Productions, vs. the Internal Revenue Service. Disney sought to deduct $3,154.09 from his income tax bills uf 1962 and 1963. The money went to pay his wife Edna·s expenses for travels Grape Growers in Trouble Depressed Prices, Union Boy cott H1,trt Small Farms The uniun maintains lhat its activities are not primarily responsible for the long.tenn difOculty of the small growers but contends, ralhcr, thal ~rape shippers have been forc- ing such growers into dis11;d- vantageoos contracts. Federal mediators .say they have been in touch with both sides and that talks could resume but lhey don't know when. There was initial pro- gress. The unioa agreed to stop boycotting growers who signed, marking boxes "'union label'' and asking consumers to boycott only unstamped boxes. They agreed, too, not t() strike growers at cn1cial harvest periods. The growers agreed lo hold elections to see w h e l h e r workers wanted the union, and to consider hiring workers lhrough union hiring halls. How much wpport the union has is one of the mailers at issue. An aide of Chavez says the UFWOC has a year-round membership of 10,000 and that there v.•ere 17,000 members during the peak or the 1968 har\•est. But the growers say the membership is much lower, that lhe. union does not have general support of the \\·orkers and that nu_ny nonu- nion workers have remained In the fields. The talk.s broke off .July 3 after two week!! because of en unexpected snag : the Issue of pesticides. The union, which has long said certain pesticide prac- tices endanger botll Ueld v.·orkers and consumers, asked for a voice in which pesticides should be used and how, 'rhe growers would agree only to comply wilb all lavrs. saying the government is the best judge of practices. They also argued the consume rs would be wary of buying any grapes if they think union- sanctioned f{rapes are safe and others are not. Agreeing to union proposals, th('y said, would amount lo admitting that some growers produce contaminated grapes. After the talks ceased. Sleinb«!rg held secret talks with the UJllOO and agreement was reached on all issut!I but wages. He offered •t.7S an hour plus 25 cents a box plus 10 cents in fringe benefits lo be paid to the union. The union demanded $2 an hour plus 25 ccnlll and 10 cenls. Current Wtl((l'S vary. starting at $L6S an hour. the lcial minimum. abroad, he said. Although Mrs. Disney didn't attend any business meetings or perform any secretarial functions for her husband, she did arrange parties and make goodwill visits to people In the entertainment i n d u s t r y , Disney said. The Circuit Court ot Appeals upheld a ruling by U.S. Dist. Court Judge Thurmonde Clarke in favor of Disney. In an opinion written by Judge Frederick G. Hamley and concurred in by lhe' two other judges on the panel, the court said: Briefs ST LOUIS (UPJ) -Wet-corn•er ' t-Miiis 1 terau Foods, Inc,, wil l build an c~,,'f01: ·f'ao automated factory to make ~:~~\: : \ I bak. ··•· II con ""°"' 1 rozen mg g........uo1 on an . -COlll'"d o1i.50 . ConFreron• 1 acre site in St. Louis County. c,,.,N•tG l .'6 The plant will be operated by ~:f,.."'• "!:n; Wetterau's recently acquired ~:~ :l!:r2 Galeway Bakery C o r p . ~:::~;; ;~ subsidiary. ~~~·2~ .. ji Con! CD 1.10 • Cl CP p!A.2.~ MIAMI (UPI) -Shell's C1-c1 CD P18i.'° t I 'JI . ft Sh II' Cl Mlot J,70 "The critical inquiries are 5y, nc.,51w1 sp;n ° 1 e .ts ~:_:MgJ1 ·/~ whether the dominanl purpo~e uper ores, nc., o 1 s COtlt 011 pl 2 of the trip was to serve her shareholders on the basis of~:;:: l~11 16, husband's business purpose m one lihare or Super Stores c~J;r1 J>.8.\; common for each share of'°""'"" 1.10a making the trip and whether Shell's Clty held. ·:~1~1 1 :la she actually spent a substan-Shell's City, Inc., henceforth :,,.,-Ji~.1~ tial part of her time im· n will confine its operations to c~~""•• ~ assisting her husband c ....... the g~m's liquor stores and C0Dw1s11 i 10 fulfilling that purpose. ""'YY <:ar1n1~e .n, "Jt is true lhat, on these Mr. Winkey Cocktail Lounges. :,-;_";111" 2._~· trips, most ol Mrs. Disney's Leaving the supermarkets and l:;~c •.• so .JO activities in helping her bus· drugstores ~o d~•-lbs?:~fHl~f ~~!7,,!"'~ . .Jti70 band fulfill some of his company, 1ue i.:tu UuuD IS cron11~1<" .to subject to obtaining· a c~~!!!l1~s1~ purposes in making the trip c "'"" were of 8 kind which she favorable federal tu ruJin&. t=or~or!.r CrwnZtll 1.40 would normally engage in , c~n z 11u.10 th both horn SANTA MONICA, ca I Ir. CTS Corp . .0 while ey were at · e. (UPI) -Le a r Siegler, lne., l~t..m ..1r.7s "But lhe added factor here c 111 79 is that the husband has, has obtained a $92 million Alr c~m~1~ '.8t1b Force contract to provide f~~ri~;%1•7~ because or company policy, aircraft and aerospace )Y,•,:.,.wr. A' 2 been put to the additional ex-C loi " •u pense of paying his wife's sy~s mai n le n a n c e c~'i.r:s'M 11~.o travel expenses so that she semces. The total value or the could assist hitn in this way on three-year conttact could run Dg:~ ~1; 1 ~~ tl d to $28 milllons. art lrrd .JOb 1e roa . J?¥' lf!d pr 1 ''It is this distinction which 15:~~: lj• accounts tar lhe fact lhat. ..,.,.,.·et o~.,1nPL 1.60 lf.A ,..; DPt p!A 3.7S under the circumstances of 01> jo '·"' DMf'I et this case, her travel expenses S l'lei-r 1.ot bl nil d 1/mLof• Dtl"'''PL rT are deducti • u a nary an U ,. '"I"'" '·" ne¢essary business expenses, 8:~1·,,,.• whereas her llvin& expenses al Ir! "'lf.. ""!r:.,,. .::_:..,"" ~~ ~.~: rittf home are not." T ... "'-,,.~, I''.~ -.-.i... uiru tit!!! •ll(;r l.lt ~·::,!·r.., • .,..,, f-:'"~·"=·i:: , =~ W II D ill d iiOO: !l!!ri."!... 1Mfi, ~11'!1..._ ~ 1>'-.ii ~Jn e r e :. ~!<l...-.;;; ';;"::.1:'.,1'..l... "!.'::' •' ~·,~ .-hid .llltl VMr ~OKlltwd ot Nia StNI .to •tltr •todl dlY\otftd « •Ill "'"· ~!I' ·'' BEYERL Y HlUS (UPI) -t-'*''"" ., ,.. .. 111~· • * o;::.,:~it" fii . . ~lit!"'-"'"" wrttri I" ,,. , Call!orn1a Time Petroleum, ~""':. "'",i:t~&:... .. ~ ~1:r~~ h"° l~c., ha:s brought in e 'if:' ~~fvi~n.r,:;: J! ~j·~~ 0 :~ d1sco~·cry well in t h e ~!'.4·"'9. .. 1t.f"'c'.w. .,..,. ':.lt. g1 ,_111.• E!peranu ll•ld In Orange !:._ ~"'""""' '"" . gl ::,-"; ;f. County, c.urornia. It bowed ~!~h ~ Hll-h Rl.Ss. ~ at a rate ot 122 barrels a day •11tr1t1u11M. xi-t:x r19111a. .ww-w1111wt &:-\r: -:Job or 27 degree gravtw oil in a ~~':;~w ~:!,,' ~~ ::g 300-foot area at a deplb of m'nr=":::i::· t11ot " "' Act. : is:;.;~~ ·1.t bo t 2 000 leet "~" dtlf>IHV -.;w,"*" --•a 10ar1c c~ n a u . . Derr 0!!"1r t • I I • *"'!'j, • ' t4•c¢;p PIAW•>""'*'i\MllCf j Up -f 4 S F P P"• ••t=• ' . • r -DAil y Pll OT IS Mondlly's Closing W,mplete Prices-New York Stock Exchange List .• Stocks Take Dive - Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange Lia!· I I \ • I U DAll.Y i'ILOT Moodq, July 28, 1969 I S•n Diego StJmtner Regatta • • Harbor Boats W.in Top Laurel~ llall>or Area 1tlpptr1 .,...~....,...,..,.,.,,.,,,,.,,...,..,,,,.,,,,_,..,.~'"'!"'!l",..."P!P!"!F"~~-:::o--"17:::":'?""""':'!'"'~"':"~,..."'I"'.~~..,.~~ b rou1ht heme a aoodlJ llWt ol the hat<lware from the SCVA-PCYA Summer Regau.a held in S&b Diego Fri· cloy, Saturday and Sunday. Local winners we(t Roser Welah's white T or n a d o , Voyagers YC tn the lntema· tionaJ.lb: Bob Kettmbolen or . llalboa · yacht Club Jo Ille -Finni; Oiad Tll'lchtll of BYC Or Jo the Lldo-14Aa; Colby Smith, BYC, iD Sklrnmel'I;· Nina Nielltn, Newport H 1 r b o r 1, Yacht Club in Junior Sabot A; Ken Brown, NHYC, junJor Sabol B; Goldie Jos.pll, LIYC Jo Pees. Forty.four classes totaUlng 374 J•cbts showed up on the Startin& lines of five San Diego ya~t clubs which cooperated in staging the midswnmer evenl The relatively light turnout .. wu attributed to the fact that many yachts which \•ould 1), have ordinari1y participated 11r were ln the Honolulu race. ~ 1 1 Tran&pac also takes many • ..crewmen · out of actioll who would ordinartly appear in I " local regattu as 1klppers. Llght winds prevailed for r..11 ,. three d'l's, but thi8 didn't pr<- vent 1 number of collisions - =" at lea.st one of which was ttrlous. A Columbia-29 had a 1 1 large hole stove • in her bow when she was hit by a Dragon. The crew wrapped s a i I s around the fractured hull and made H back to port without • &inking. San Diego bad 41 entries in nine classes; Coronado YC ~ ~ in siJ: classes; Mission Bay YC 167 in 16 classes; Silvergate YC '5 in seven clasaes and .• • Southw'liun YC lMI Jo ail< OUT IN FORCE -The 27-foot Soling, new Olympic class sailing sloop, turned out in force for the South- ern California Yachting AsSQCiatin Summer Re- gatta at San Diego. Over-eager starting maneuvers as shown above, caused the class to be recalled t\vice Sunday before getting an even start. clUatS. Followin1 art.. trophy wln- ner:t in all classes: ... Otroude Yadtt aub SNIPE (10) -(I) Flower ; Power, Dave Peterson, Y' MBYC; (2) No name, Jerry Thompson, ABYC; (3) Yellow Bird, Dave Timmer, St. BYC; (4) Rampage, Dan Goodwin, MBYC. P.CAT (17) (I) El Tiburon, Pat Carriker, Ariz. J YC; (2) Turtle, Bob Baker, , CBYC; (3) Turkish Delight, Alts T!Chaibwsti, MYC; (4) Sun Devil, Rick carrii.er, .. " AYC: (5) No name, Tomas Omohundro, BCYC. INT.-14 (14) -(I) Whitt Tornado, Roger Wd!h, NHYC; (2) Zumba, Peter Gales, BYC; (3) Varuna, Dick Hendrick.son, MBYC; (4) Jack Wills, SS.SC. LIGHTNING (4) -(1) Now or Never, Fred Knauer, MBYC; (2) Naineless Terror, Myron C. Lyon, MBYC ; (3> Mayday, Monte Ke 11 e y , MBYC. FLYING DUTCHMAN (3) -(I) Blue Missile. Tim Bentley, MBYC; (2) Binky Ill, Bob Shanner, MBVC; (3) Vor, F. H. Tilock, MBYC. FINN (13) -(I) No. 113, Bob Kettenhofen, BYC; (2) No, 184, Buz Boetcher, Lahaina YC; (3) TNT, Tom Diamond, MBYC; (4) Luftrnelster, Fred Miller Jr., sssc. Mlsaloa Bay Yacht Club Y·FLYER (3) -(I ) Olppity Do. H.arry fl1cKinney Jr., SDYC ; (2) Wanderer II, Frank Towle, BCYCi/(~) No. 2105, Harold Jones, PV'SA. LI00..14A (18) -(1) Little Twitch, Chad Twichell, BYC; 12) Wood Wind, Harry Wood, . ABYC; (3) One For The Road, Jim Tyler, BYC; (4) Viva, Frank Marshall, ABYC; (5) Pheemers, Merlin Gayman, ABYC. LUJ0.1413 (13) -(l) No. 681, Jack Pierce, MBYC; (2) Fang, Dan Stoughton, BYC; (3) What II, William Hunrichs, MBYC; (4) Oum Dum, Hal Bro"wn, MBYC. SKIMMER (4) ( 1) Chinook, Colby Smith, BYC; 12) No. 118, William Movious, MBYC ; (3) Flea Forth , Barney Wamer, MBYC. CORONADO-IS (17) -I I) Shillelagh, Battie P u r c e 11 , Ariz. YC : (2) Duz, Warren Moers, MBYC; (3) Sharock, John Thoma!, MBYC; (4) Tortuga -Tardon, Ro b e r t Goose Holds Slight Lead In SF Races Yachting Vet Speaks Out ' ' !l Transpac Dispute Growing SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -11 it can solve San Francisco Bay'3 tricky currents, lhe I. Seattle sloop GOOle should capture a challenge serie:t I over an Austra11an boat, saya • the Goose's skipper. I!. Tbe Goose, from Seattle's Corinthian Yacht Club, g~s into lhe sUth race today with a 3-Z edge ln the best-of-seven series over a 12.t-mlle course. The Toogooloowoo IV of Sydney's Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club won Sunday's race by 3~minutea: as the Goose got caught by an incoming 1• tide, pu!ihing it backwards. 'I At one point, said the : • Goose's skipper, B r i a n I ' •• ' ' I ' I I . ' ' I I ' ·I. t ' I 1· I'. )• I I Wertheimer, his boat was "heading toward 0 a k I a n d faster than we were going to the Golden Gate Bridge," and lhe finish line. The mistake occurred, he said when he decided lo go in toward :thore instead of follow- ing the AU!Sie boat out towards lhe center of the bay, arter rounding a buoy. The Aussie got off from the starting line flrst and led at\ the way In light six·knot winds. Peter Ficker, veteran sailor, race committee chairman and staff commodore of Balboa Yacht Club jumped into the controversy over the penalty of Windward Passage with both feet Sunday. Windward Passage w as penalized two hours on elapsed time on a protest by the yacht Esprit claiming contact of the two yachts at lhe start of the race July 4. Ficker called the whole af- fair "outrageous" and called on Bob Johnson, uwner·skipper of Windward Passage, to counter·protest Esprit f o r wh.at Ficker called h e r unseamanlike manner of car- rying her man-overboard safe· ty poles protruding over the stern. "Johnson owes it to yachting to file a counter protest against Esprit," Ficker said. "On a crDWded starting linr, skippers are on the lookout for other boats, but in the heat of :ttarting cannot be expected to see gear protruding out over the hull. If this sort of thing is allowed, the next thing we'll hear is that someone is car· rying a spare boom lashed acrOS! the bow and sticking 1· •• t• ! CUP Dl,INDERS -Andy Rose and his Balboa Yacb Club .crew cros1 the finish line in one of nine races in the Governor'• Cup match race series. BYC dtleutlod Iii• cup willl a record of nine wins and no looet. The series was sailed in CaJ-25s. I out on each side of the bull," Ficker continued. "Carrying poles In the man- ner of lhe Esprit Is not only unseaman like but Is an in- vitation to a fool by an unsu.specting s k i p p e r o( another boat.'' he added. Ficker also said the penalty of two hours assessed against South Wins From North The South rose again Salur· day and Sunday when Southland Rhodes..J3 sailors outmaneuvered their rivals from San Francisco Bay in the annual North-South Te a m Race. The regatta was sailed oul of Balboa Yacht Club. The sailors from the souwfti scored l5 1f.: points on the reverse scoring system against 26 for the northerners. Skippers from the south v.·ere Blair Barnett. Gayle Post, Maurice Walsh, Bill Taylor and Paul Marx from BYC. The north team was com- posed of Jim Lucas. Tom McCarthy, Ted McCarthy and Hans Wlnkler. Windward Passage'.s .elapsed time was wrong , adding that "Johnson should not accept it. .. The penalty against elapsed time -rather than handicap time -cost Win d ward Passage the honor of being first to finish with a new elapsed time record. The trophy for first to finish and the new record went to Ken DeMeuse's Blackfin of San Francisco. Licensed yachtsmen from San Diego to Newport and Los Angeles are investigating the possibility of appealling Windward Passage's penalty to the North American Yacht Racing Union, the highest U.S. authority oo yacht racing rules. Danish Strike .To Hatt Power? COPENHAG'J;N (U P!) - More than two million Danes will be without any electricity the night of Aug. 31 unless the government intervenes in a strike of engineers at two power stations. Negotiations between the Engineers Union and the employers association broke down on the engineers demand for higher wages. BYC's Rose Defends Teen Governor's Cup Andy Rose of Balboa Yacht Club successfully de(ended the Governor's Cup, teen·age mat· ch racing classic in a nine- race series sailed Friday, Saturday and Sunday off Newport Pier. Rose. with his crew, Rick Jennw, Gordo Johnson and Jay Lawrence scored 1 9-0 victory, but not until they overcame a protest from Doug Ra.steUo and lhe crew from Long Beach Yacht Club. The protest came as the result of 1 luffing mat.cl! Jn the first race Sunday as BYC and LBYC locked in a head-to-heacf baltle with the score tied. Raste.Uo ln!Uated the luffing mat.ch against Rose ao11 the eve boat started 10 pa1111 to weather. Rose finally broke the overlap with meat abtam. but Ra1teUo clalmtd lhal the .. - ' ~ ·- \ Fo .. ntain '*' Vq • . • ; EDITIO~ voi:. 62, NO. ·11~. 3 SEcTIONS, 34 PAGES MONDAY ·:JOtY 2f '196'9' . ' . ' . ~ ' I . • • . . • _J es aim on~· 1,. '' ......... , w WAILING MIKESIDE Sights, Sounds Electric Astronauts Fine One Week . After I ~~vip.g ,~oon . SPACE CENTER, HlalS\on (UPI) ' Amertca'J Apollo 11 .explorers were rePorted in good hecllth today -one week after they left the moon -and scientists began a atudy of their luoar soi.I samples to look for traces of extrlterrestrial life. flleil A. Armstrong, Michael Collins and Edwin E. Aldrin, ·reelirig,chipper aft,r a breakfast of eggs, bacon and grits, plun'g- ed1int0 a second day or recounting for t~e Story, Photo on Lunar Rocks, Tremors-Pa~e i record book! the moon orbiting portion of their epic mission. · "All personnel appear Jn good health .'' ga\d space agency spokesman John MclJeai.Sh, one of the 17 ftlen UVing in·the astronauts' quarantine fp cility. Jn. the laboratory portion of the same building, scientists opened a· cylindrical sample of moon dirt collected in a hallow tut>e by the· astronauts and prepared it [or a study of possible otganic material. One problem was repQ'fted. Bryan Erb, deputy manager of fut lunar receiving laboratory said the cumbersome: black gloves used by technicians w?rking wi.lh the soil and rock samples 10 vacuum cabinets were tearing' and might have t() be replaced. Jf the-decision is made ~o replace them, the study of moon rock will be delayed 60 hours. From the first week of results from the flight of Apollo 11 mission, scicntisll &aid : -At least one of the dusty black rocks Armstrong and Aldrin brought back from their two-bout walk' on the luna.r. su~ace, was igneOtts -fonned bY hot hqu1d or putty-like material which tater cooled. -Severi! sizeable tremors bav1 beet:' recorded on the moon's surfate'sl~·~e Mtronauts set oqt a little moonquake meter during thelr ~lk, includ.lng ·14 in the last two days whlCh are ~Tieved to hive been moonslides, arid one believed (ll<e APOLLO, P11e !.) · OAl&:Y Pit.OT hltll· IW a... .. ......._. SOUND TECHNICIAN FOR · 'CANNED HEAT' CATNAPS DURING VIBRATING Pl!RFORMANCE In Huntington Beech, 'Once in • Whilt the E1t•blilhment Does Somethin1 Right' ' . What Dllppened , t.o Riot~ ' . ' , Beach Band. Concert feaceful., But Not Profitable ' ; ,' '" • • • . • I · "' -.iiYr.lUJ!JI~ , ...,·p11-·'\f·•*!f.·t11mow _.,., u..~rlilJll &how' f!·~in-ot•.,....""" lftllf you tlb\k-tblt,tbe'eitabli&hment is a1l portion. ~ on an enomog ftlte "Thrtt ~~ ~neraUon band• wajled ~" he toli;._~cheenng crowd. ·~eut lheet bun&.bihJDd the at.qt. . wllhoul qot ~Huoltnglon llelch Sunday Lhl& lhoulllbi f!illl~-Ii> • -GI...,_....._ wis ...i..t to Ill rught. wlillo "'I!!!-~· ~.,-· . • The three top name bands ''gassed" •'1 mn n0t overly concerned with the on the bardWood J!ioz' eel just Wlitch tlMI close•to !,OIO l.teplgers at the Himlington finances," he said after the concert. ~band, '~Fullon." wh1cb played a fair. Beadl High spl)ool gymnasitm"! wit~t Thez:e will be a m~or expense to the city 1y· rettntecf and ~ed tet as· far as the riot that ao.me predicted, without 1n-but it's really, no different lban the surf· rock bands 10 ·,. ckients ·witholjt-arrests.· ' ing contest .and 1he Fourth of July , • A.boui l,SOO ·local youths paid $3.50 to Paradewblchcostthecitymooey." But when 'C•t M<itber ,and the All· sefi and hear "Jl'u&ioit" "Ca\ Mother and "I thought it went off beautifully. It N~ht Newsboys" launched.Jnto their set, the AU-Night .NewsbOys" and «Canned was really qv,ieter than most kid-get a [lirly large group unable to. contain the Hea'" jam en ,the amall stage erected on toeethm and r ~k it ~rved w~ll .~G vibrationlll gathered at ~ left of, the one side of the huge gym. establish commurucatlon with the kids: ~.ge for Jmprom,f'U dancU,rr,. ~ • It was not quite enough to make the Hundreds <1f CliJS packed the par~1ng Canned Heat, as expected .. li~y event a linandal succtSS, lb~gh, since }qt , [or the .~ whose electrified ~ them up and had them standing on an aUendence of 8.pprGxirnately 2,700 was sounds soon haad. the youths and a con· theU' feet, ecata.tlcally moving •with the needed to break even. sldtrable number Of adults gyrating to music. Th.is means that the city of RuntingtQn . the pulsating beat. \; About 500 teenaaen wittiout-tbe finan- Beach which underwrote the Youih tfniforln«i poilce as well as cial me.&D11 who 1we:re gathered • laide Coalitkm, Copunlttee sponaored concert.to · plaincfoth'3 detectiv~ who were out en ~~ ana~ of ,llO\lndl throul!,h ~ the.tune ot nearly fl0,000 faces a loss in masse had an easy•n1ght and did not have open doors were· Jet ln [~ the "Keat' the area of $.1.000. to be called in to q¢et any disturbances. after the tnter;ml~ioo, bnnging the au-Y~t despite the Joss, Mayor Jack Green While the three band! were playing on dience up to 21,obo. Missing Plane SeenNear.[aguna A private plane citi11ng (6\ir persons, m.issing [or more than a month, was .spotted in mid-mom in&. by a hellcopt.er pilot in rugged terrain about two and one- half miles northeast oJ: Scotchman's Cove in the Laguna Beach area, the Orange County Sheriff'a Offlce'"l"tpJrted. A sheriff's spokesman said the Cessna 1112 plane is reported to have. left Rio, Wiscm.sin, June !1 and was last seen in Yuma, Ariz.. on Jur>e 24. , The pilot is believed to ha"t;e . been a Richard Olson. He took of£ from the Yuma Airport en' rotite to ~the· LOs Angeles area bul filed no night plan, the sheriff'• oCfice,ritpcirttd. · · A deputy sheriU .. w&1 '.flying tnto the rugged area by Marine be.ticopter ~ morning to cbeck the cr•b me. i~.a:. Nixon Vows U.S-. Ready ToHelpDefend Thailand BANGKOK (UPI) -Pr~sident Nixon pledged tonight the United Slates wouJd defend Thailand agilin.st any attack from any sources. He did so ln a special statement lssueit shortly after his an:ival to· make it clw that wl)atever the Uni1'd .States.doe1 lfl VJetnam Jt will not. abandon . its allies here. 'He sa id the United Stateg was er· trtmely grateful for the http of Thalland'I troop; ,fn Vietnam and said, '"The Thal contribuUOn to ·tbe1ltruUle to preserve the independencti •of South Vie(.. DIJD bas been of grea't algnlliCance.'' _,j He.linked thla with his pledge to defend Thailand and said, "we and the Di.tlona,or Sootheut Alla sliare a vital stake in the future peace and prosperity of lbLs region." NiJoo flew in from Jakarta on the third leg of hi.I seven nation tour. Security measures were · unusuaUy heavy at the · rab>drentbed ' •fii<ort •. p0salllly' heCau,. guenillu aU.acked:a U.S,,Alr Foree b~se tt.port "' -··· lad•ala Vlslt.-Pq:e .r Fa11afly Atte1ids Church 40C m11.. ~. of ·Baiigllok hoyrs before be arrjved, wounding 'a aeolry and damaging two planes. Nixon said in the 1peclal statement that Ch Tf d ••our determhurtion to honor O\ll'. Com· Throngs . . eer, .1.~en .. u. ~.··.·. ·y ~:=11~1'W:~:~:~f'.~::t ~ D"?Wl incr~ I b 0 U) ci-e !': the • • • •• 1 " ' resPolllibWty for .achieving peace · anCI llY ANNIS PORT, Mass. (if Pl) -Ctles of·~We're with you, Ted," ereeted Sen. Edward M.. Kennedy as .ht entered St. Xavier Qiurcb here, hit thlrd public ap- pearance. sjnce tbe fatal accident last Wlftend which caused lhe drowning of pretty blonde secretary Miss Mary Jo Kopechne. Kennedy. al'tompanled by his pregrlant wife, Joan, -and two of his lhr.ee children dt motion~ in hls pew SuOOay as Msgr. Willl«m Thompson read hym tb6· eplslO!e of st. Paul : "No test has bttn .sent you Olat' does not come to all men. M~er, God keeps b~ proinl&e He win ooL lot you be tested beyood.y~ strength.. He will II" y<JU with the test a way of emer&lnl from lt I successfully, iDd'Yoo may·be·able~ en.! Rene Page 1 of M.-shfltld. ·• regional · progrne:~ln· the' area:.. ' dur• IL.. . · ouperv\sor of the ~it<m u., I o n . He oi>ezl!d his •~temenl by •pWil>lf of The M8suchusetl5 Democrit w1s Telegraph Co. ~ Jn ~.Hyannia. said Am~an d~~inaUqn to. ~ Jtl. mobbed and applauiied _, he enlcrod Ill<\ Sunda,r IOfll'!l'here belw .... , 21,000 . and coninlltmentl Jn AJI~ opcl the Paclllc. emerged from the white clapboont; J0,000 l<l'IJ?.ll1'.had been·dcll•..-.d IO "We wW honot·thOoe 'commltml!nl&"" church while thou41nda of t~gr'llD-' ~ the ~~r~~turday morning, a not only because we ~dtr : them unued 'to Oood the' Kenn<dy coll1]lOllnd f~I • ;,~:ll-l'fl11!Nll;~~!a.llJ! • , ~!1 .•r:1•~. i~~~"l'Ml. ;t uraing him not to resign. .n · ian~~e&\:'fr&lJ!c~"'~ .... ~-! w ' ,....,..u. ~ lUH we ...,~ . In hil' c1rariiaUc television stalernrnl the pemocriqc·li!',#JdenO~l>ljlillnat! 'I• ~~ the · niUons'.~ . ~·c~•· ·.w ~-~· 'h-'"'aald'\hat hlf .. >I" "' ;.,,, • . ' I -~~it i lvllol1~th'!D,'l'."_.:f~e,.P!iC" FrlijaJ m.,.,"" .. _, ' . ·W~v·~1,, ... •-.·. UN pros'ptrtty ~ ~ ......... 'a'dmlnl0notpntw vtng~~·"3 "' ,.... f I .·.:....-nt •·• .~ hllli 1. , .Ml,n . .'-'Anoond .aafd · Nllc>n, wW beln ~lcr.-'dfys the ' ota -~"' "-· .,_ • ·~·r~ ·;.;a, comln( Jn pmty .and the ""',IA nelgbbo<=Vlollwn,Md · ponder the l'>Mlblll!Y al resi&nlhl hil ho!~~--""'"'"lfthl'rlday~,\.!' . ,the'--•M'"'thrt>t!o, .l'inbi ' u-~ . ~~ --~ At 'lhaLl1mebooe1ll«l •Cl'lthepeopleol . ted~~o( mldo ,the .,.Co .toolc• ol .,...,""'"'"'IOooo ,n wu ~.-~ I ,._, _,_,,_ dri<t · to K · it~ Hyannl& g~ llOllO\'.i ho/'1111111 Ilk• ad-Maaaap~lf,' !I< • ..,r .,..._., ' Poof Or' Bolltoo~lii· ...._ • .._,,ed ,••= ~ eleolllc ......... boro fer• and praym to help guld.< hbn In roaching ,~.,.,,.-.. .....,. a decision obout hit pollllcal MU19o • (S.. ;·P.1&91)" qui ·V L 1o·V .... ": ' > ;-,. ·J.. t • ' • • SOME fU.R!DUS DAtfCINCi Music Moved Her Valley Council 'Will Reyef8e ' Stan(l OJI, ;Suii . ,,,-. .r..-. ,::ii.:Ji1b~ l!ftinM __ _ . ditlOo 'allqed --1a11f~ me. ~ ctty·• b .ne.e1 t .ne.u • .... ..:..1-' .. c ... u--.... . Last week the councB •dt<d 3 \),ls,- wlth •Cooncilmen Joho Hafper ond 'Ed· Ord Just' atrongly . oppooad -to ha•• Mutin proeecute recall petlUor>en {I pouJblt [or alleged .fraudulent prac,tJ~ Bui now, Mayor Robert SChwerdtfecef bu tndjcaled IO CHy Manager J.,.., Neal tbfl. perhaps the city abould foDow CooncJlman Just'• suggestion one! nque>t Orange County District AttonM!y Cecil Hieb to lnvelllgate the entire recall campaigft. ' IJIJrlnf lut Tu<od1y'1 council .... 1on Schwerdtfeger and Vice MayOt-Doneld Fregi.au had both tiluted mck:a' appar· ent tnacttvlty when requested by them to look Into the ..UvtU.. ol 'recall oup- po<ten. According to them. Hieb had llid he Pf'(ernd ooL lo . become ln•ol•ed Jn a '1p>llUcal matter." . Just said he had also approacliod Hicks with complaint.! from both ,1rdes o! the recall battle and received the nme an- swer. "I don't believe the dJttrlct at· torney ts being unfair to either aide,"' edded Just. · .• Just auggested lhal the council, acting as a body· rather 'than as-individuals, re- quest investlgaUoo of the retail oo both sides. The Mayor has now eipreaaed agree- ment wt\Jo that plan. * * * Now Frank Enters ' ' I • • • ,' • ' ! Valley Contest . · ., ·. ··,;~ :.~ ... . . I . ... T,Uy'•. l'b9e1 N.Y. Steeb •TEN CENTS mer Huntington Rescue Try Failure Treacherous rlpUdes and currents claimed the life of a DOJWWimmer oU Huotlngton Beach Saturday u hil filends • dived vainly to locate him. ' Owles W. Dareuburg, 22, Downey, ..... m\a!ing and presumed. drowned ... day in the surf Iha\ kept WOii Orange Coon\y !Ueguarda hopping aver the weekend. Danmsburg, who-could not swim, wu apparently swept by currents Into water that was over b1s head. Frlenda, Fred P. Capaldi o! Powney and Gary L. Ca"ant<a of Lakewood, Slid they swam to Darensburg when tbej' saw ·be was ir. trouble. The pair related Ulat Daremburg panicked and broke he of' the grasp of Capaldi and ,. .. carried under. Tho two said they dived eevml times .to try and find him, pollc:e report. and then call"1 guards who -with the clll heUcopter -joined the vain search: ' l>arensblD'g was last seen wearing yeUow ·swim trunU and a Blessed MuY, medallion, police &aid. City-guards Jn Huntlngtoon Buch Aid the ataf peaked Saturday at. about lis feet but was still up Sunday. 'Ibey r""'11ed Ill on cl\y belches Sunday and another 5' on sab(nlOy, Stal< ·guards · Jn Huntlngtqn Beodl estiinated they relCUed about ?i> Ovtr·tbe wttktnd while Seal Buch guords, !Vhen IJ>e,l!ltf .... """":'t! .... llwl lo iofe!i' Sol(iNIJ... . .-.,. ltla---guonll-Jllqaed WjlllblO~tlllllltrqlolonlClll'" . :%d~ ai.=:tbl,1111.:r.,12•11, . . Youth. Convict-ed Of firebombing A Westmlost.r youth has been found gull\y In Superior Coor! of charges that he wai a member of a trio whlcb bw1td a bluing Molotov cocttlil at a Santa Ano bome. Judi• Robert Rickles ordered Antonio "Tony"' 11u1i, 20. of 6431 wa11,st., lei,... tum to court Aug. I lilt aentendn( lllld • probation . hearln(.. Rull lllld IUchoid ~ Grant, Sf. of Gorden G...,. and Paul Dale Sutllfl •. :a, Of Santo Ano, 1- pouible atale prtion lenns of cxie 1o two years and/or • fl,000 fine. A l"'l' returned the guilty wrdiot Fri- day after • llHlour --Pollce arrested the trio tut Nov. f af. l<r the three men drove alowly pat Ibo llewley Slreet home of Emal C. -and tossed a firebomb at U>e; residence after hurllnlf • wine holtle lhroulh the window. 1be fiery missile landed atop,Moreno's car but was quickly doused by members of the •lctim'• family. ornc.rs said the aulO was only sllghUr. damaged. Police said Morebo 1 11·ye&r-old IOn punued the Oec\ng car lllld fired fi•o shots at the speeding vefdcle, -ah of which mi~ their mark. They described tbe jncident as belng another iilstance of violence in wbat waa .nld·to be a Jong standing feud between the accused men and Moreno. Ora•lf e Weatller Clear 11de1 and continued warm weather are In store for the coast for molt of th• week, with the UIUal morning and evening overcatt. Temperature• to atay in the upper 701. INSm~ TODAY Stlsrn<>prophfc "'ports . and fdlntifkaticm of a lunar rock .;., helplna ode•lllll to .mi.ct aomc of the · muatfrltSi of the ~·· ~posftfon...Sre ~~So ! ....... '~""~~,, c...... ',_...--; ,,,, " ::.-~ ~ :=, .. ,: (,....,. .. " :=-....... ,. ........... , .......... ,,.,, otwM 11 "'"' ... ......................... .... ,, .• ,, ,......... . ,..... .. ,,...,, " ......... ,. ....... . ......... ti ............ .. -~ ti • I I .. " W I u I Guerrillas Hit .• Base . Thai Attack. 'Precedes. Ni~n by 2112 -Qours • • t ' ~ BANGKOK (UPI) -A band of guer-Uboft Ilel lboul n mllll wat,ol Ult 1--. Air r-MCUrllY ......... w .. poltol· rtllu slipped into a U.S. Air Base In U.. pmlnco ol Cblm.11UHll. where lln( .wttb a -111 dot! wlioo lit -both North V~ and Pathet Lio the five CUtrrillas lnside ibe Wire lenC!. northeastern Thailand today, shot and Communist troops have been 00 tbe of.· He challenged them ~ they opened wounded ID American sentry, damaged tensive for the pl.st month. fire, 11llghtly wounding bun and hit dog, lwo _cacao plane.& and disrupted Ol)era• Thes attack was the se<lOtld agalruit Officlats ldenUfled the sentry as Kt:n- Uons wtth explosives about 2lk houra be-U.S. air bases in Thailand since Amerl-neth D. O'Dell, 20, of Mount Pros~, fore President Nixon arrived In Bang-can warplanes were brought in four yeara Ill., and said he was in good condiUoa tok. ago to bomb North Vietnam and sup-with a minor leg wound. 'Jbe raid at Ubon took place about 2 port allied troops in South Vietnam. The guerrillas then scattered and aet a.in.. Nbon'1 Alr Force Doe jet.Uner For Ntzon, bere to ~view U.S. com-off five catclld charges of dyrwnite, landed to Bangkok. jQO mu.. to tha mllmenu in Thailand, it underlined darna~ two C47 planes a,nd -g 60Uthwtlt, about •:30 e.m. wbat American and Thal officlals have the fields ground controfl approachthsy1· The U.S. Embassy reported the atl.ack deecribed as an upsurge in guerrllla •c· tern out ot commission or almost rte and detcribed the raide:rs 1s "lntruden" tlvities m tht northeastern provinces. hours. All five escaped, apparently un- believed to be Communist guerrillas. The embassy announcement said an harmed. Laird Says U.S. Needs Gas Stock as Deterrent WASHINGTON (UPI) -Delense Sec· retary Melvin R. Laird u.ld today the best way to make sure the United States is not the vicUm of chemical or biologi· cal weapons is to maintain Ila own such weapons u a deterrent· He said the Soviet Union had a "much greater" capability in this area. "This deterrent ls importlnt if we want to see that these gases are never used in our lime," 1..llrd declared. The secrttary defended the need for a chemical and biological warfare (CBW) program during a 45-minute question and answer :session with a group of summer Fro• P .. e l , gOVemtiiitUt Interns. - A number of the apprnlmately 100 college yootha parlldpallng l'Jlltely but penlstently pepperetfLa.lrd. with a aeries of questions on most of the controversial i.sSueJ with which ht ls currently coping. AUed whether be would be wtllin1 lo strike a ccmprom.ise in the Senate over deployment ol the SafelJ!lal'd antibollia- tic missile system. Laird indicated he would not. He said the administration had 51 llell!'ton firmly committed to vol· Ing for Ult proposal u submitted by l'rlsJdent Nlroo. New Evidence Links Smoking To Diseases WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe federal government today reported new evidence linking cigarette amoklng to an assort. ment of diseues and commended the tobacco lnduatry for o(fering to end broadcast advertising) "Cigarette l}nOking continues lo be confirmed u a aeriowi health buard to the people of tb1s oowttry, one which Is the came of much unnecessary disease and d .. th," &aid Semlary Robert H. Flnch cf !be department cf Health, Educat!on and WeHG'e. Finch commented in a letter ac- companying a new Public Health Service report to Coogesl. . • APOLLO ... to have been a five-minute moonquake, PfOvina the moon is not dead. Armstrong, Aldrn and Colllns spent more lhan iii hours Sunday taping their recoUectlons of their joW"Oey, covering the flight equipment and the trip from the earth to the moon in two sessions. They resumed today with the actual Jan· ding, moonwalk and their return to earth 1tlll to ht covered. But be said that If it IOl!lt lo the Senate, a ~· lt there was to be one. v.•WJCI Warted out ln the Senate-House conference that would follow certain ~ge or the administration Heroin Smuggling Suspect Arrested NEW YORK (AP) - A New Jersty hairdreuer has been aJTested and ac· cused of smuggltlg into the country $2.S million in heroin hidden in the hollowed shafts of ski poles, federal authorities an- nounced today. The ~page report, entiUed "Health · Conlequencea of Smoking" -1989 Sui>'" plement," repart.ed new evidence llnklng-~ dcarette smoking with co r o n a r y d-chronic broochltil, pulmonary emph~a. thioal and ..._.p1ratory cancer ,and -for the first time -nao- canceroua dlleuea of the mouth. They were vlaited Sunday by their families wbo talked to them through a window. After a dinner break and a final debrl<llng ...,ion, Armstrong and Collins played a game of plnJ pan.a: and Aldrin watched .a movie be.fort retirina:. William Durkin, regional dir~ of the U.S. Justice Department's Bureau of Narcotics and Dangeroua Dru&s, iden· tified the man as the Frenc.h..OOrn Geor1e A. Roupinian, a naturalized U.S. citiun from Middlesex, N..J. The report also summarized briefly earlier atudlu compiled by the federal government which llDked smoking lo a wide variety of cancers, cardio vascular disorders and other maladies and said no evidence has been uncovered in the pa.&t year "to refute the judgments." As in past reports, dglt'I and pipes were largely absolved, ucept in the case of throat cancer and nontancerous oral disorder. DAILY r lLOT Slaff rri.tt JERY KOONCE !LEFT), RON FORSTER (RIGHT) PRACTICE FOR BEACH SHOOTOUT F11t Or1w Artists to Converge on Shopping Center for Frltndly Competition DAILY PILOT lab•rl N. W11I Prnidet\I lftlll Pvlilltlltt Jtl~ R. Cwr1ty VkA Pra>Oml tnc:I GcMr .. ,,...Natl' Etllot T11olflt'""' Mw1phi~t Mt"ffl"t (tllgf ,t..11.trl W. ••••• Al-It•• f.dl!llr H1111I""" IHc~ Offltt 109 5111 St•••' Mtlti11t Aid••1u P.O. I •• 790, •l64t Othtr Otrk•• Nl'fl'llOl'f fkec:ll. ~t11 wn1 ••lb<'!• e~i.ver4 Cv•lt Malt: .U0 \\lt1I ltY £!rte• L•lllN 11.c~: 1?1 F•r." '"•tll\lt ., C.t.tl.., I'll.Of, •1111 ""'It" 1. "°"''"'"" 1"' H_ .. ITN. It ....... -'*' O•llY fll(t'Jll ~ •UY 11t -11\9 H ll"""' lw H111t!M111~ loNdl. il'"-1•111 Valllf. OUt Mftjl, Htw· _, a..o .... u..-~ •11111 Wll!I -,.....,.. ... lltlOM. Ot9fttt CM•I ...,...-,,.. "'9 CMIJl'tnY ....,, ... ,_ .,. ft \ltll WHI a.1tw llTt , .,._, IHdl. .. ..,. WO Wf&f "•t Mrwtl, C.. ... '9\fl>f, r••••• 11141 M2-4J21 "'-W ...... C..I H0-1120 CMMHW .U.1W.t MJ·Nn C-•1111t, W.t. Or•,,... (M.t , .. 11 ....... c-"• Ht -11•r it1. flll"lr•l-MIW'-1 -11¥ Dr ,..,...,,~ lltl'flfl ""' bt ..... ~ ... ,_, Nllf(irol ,., ..... d a..1--. s.Kt~11 ci.•1 -·~ .,,ti 11 .,,.,....., .. Mii .,.. CC.If• Mtaa. c.111i.,.1e ~~~u1i.t1C~ ~· c.•ttltr U .00 -lfll)'I b• 1ntll illl -llllfl f'l'lnl!My lll.lllM1*'4t. 11.('f ..... lfl'Y. • Frem P•fe l KENNEDY •.. through Hyannis -at "very roughly 35.000 to 45,IKKI," and &aid extra help wu still on duty trying to clear up a J1r1e backlog. A Kennedy aide said on Saturd1y the messages were running 100 to 1 ln Ken· nedy's favor and the Senator "obviOU!ly \\'as moved" by the "overwhelminc" favora~le response to his televised pita for advice. The committee to Keep Sen. Edward M. Keenedy in public life, dubbod KEEP for short reported Sunday It had received about 101000 letters, telegrams ~ and telephooe calls urging Kennedy not to re!llgn. '-'lrs. Rita Salk, New York chairman of the committee sald the meuaaes came rrom "almost all 50 stales." Sbe reported branch cornmlltees .,·ere Mini fcrmed in Loi Angeles, Detroit and SL Louil. Speculation mounted 11 to when Ken- nedy Vi"OUid return to WuJUnaton since the Senate was expected to vote lat.er th.11 week on the safeguard antiballl!tlc missile system to which Ktnnedy is op- posed. But the a.Ide said the Senator "had nG immediate plans ror the future." The aide also 1aid Kennedy 1Ull waa "very Ould'' and hu set no deadllnt to decide whether he would restrn his Senate geat. For the second day of the cloudy, damp ~------- weekend, the 37.year<ild Senator cruised on the family yacht, the Marlin, for near- ly two hou.rs and beached the ship at a cove In Nantucket Sound to picnic with his wife, his alsler·ln·laW Ethel and several ol the familiet' children. Cardinal RJchard Cushinfl of Boston, a long time family friend, visited the Com- pound briefly. The Sunday afternoon quiet on the three-lined streets adjacent to the com· pound in this mid.cape Cod resort com· munlty was shattered by a noisy, hour· long demonstraUon when 20 college-aged youths protested Kennedy's explanation ol the iKddenl· Robert Naramore, 18, or Rochester, N.Y., the leader of the group, said the members were "dlslf\lsted, dismayed and 1hocked" at the speech "because it ap- pealfld .trtcay to t.be emotions.'' 22-year-old Completes English Channel Swim DOVEi!, England (AP) -Margot Orford. D-)'tlHlcf Englilh poodle clip- por, plowed throulh oil and jelly flah Monday and became the flr1t woman to awlm the t'ncllah O\annel th1s year. She made the 1wtrn from P'ranct to England In I& houn, IS minutes. 1 DAILY PIL.OT ll•lf rMtt Mansfield Says Surtax May Expire WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen a le Democratic Leader f.>flke hfansfleld rals· ed. the PoSSibllity today that Congress might quietly bury the JO percent Jncome tax surcharge this week by Jetting paycheck withholding of it expire. "The surtax expires at mldnf.ht Thurs· day," Man.sfield told repoorters, refer· ring to paycheck withholding. The surtax it.sell es:pired June 30 but Congress ex- tended withholding for a month whil e coruidering President Nixon 's plea to e1· tend the surcharge another year. "If it goes out ot existence Thursday it wouJd be very hard to revive it in view of the deep und«urrent io this body," Mansfield said. He referred to opposition by IOOme senators toward Nixon's _surtax proposal, under whJch 1he lG percent levy would apply for the remainder of the year, then drop to 5 percent Jan. 1. Mansfield said last week that Senate oppasttion to the surtax was incrwlng. He said the administration was calllng it a vital anU·infl.ltlon tool but had no evidence it had alowed Inflation so fw. STRATEGY SESSION -Salvation Anny is laying plans to expand services in Fountain Valley. Police Chief Cha rles Michaelis (l eft) is chairman of a local committee belj>ing with plans. Meeting with chief are (from left) Wayne Lane, committee treaaurer; Mrs . Shirley Pulford, committee secretary, and Paul Kugler, local field representative for Salvation Anny. Merchants Blast Hippie Influx At Newport Pier By JEROME F. COLLINS Of fllt Dtl'1 rUtl Stiff Salvation Arn1y Expands A group of angry merchants today peti· tioned Newport Beach city councilmen to crack down on lhe influx or hippies in the Newport .Pier business district. The--petitioners, led by Lome J, George, owner of the Big Geor1e dress shop, sajd tbe area near the pier "can now be coosidered a new slum." Fountain Valley Efforts They asked the city to refuse licenses to "hippie businesses." The Salvation Anny has increased its activity in Fountain Valley with the: formation of a :5ervicc extension un it composed of 11 leading citizens of the community. At their firest meeting last week , Foun· lain Valley Chief of Police Charles MichaeliJ was selected chairman of the service extension committee. Other officers Include Wayne Lane, manager cl the Barut or America as treasurer and Mrs. Shirley Pulford, presldoot of the Chamber of Commerce Women's dlvlaion as aecretary. Committee members include Don Garn· mell, Fountain VaJley postmaster; ~frs. Doris Dick ; Mrs. Lee Nuh; Dr. Paul Berxer, principal ol Fountain Valley High School; The Rev. Ken McMillan ; and LJeutenaota Raymond Laginess and Fastest Gunmen To Gather Aug. 2 .... Some of the f"""'l gunmen in the West wiil gather at Huntington Center Satur· day for a big shootout In the mail and parking lot. About 30 gunslingers are expected for the competition, which will include walk and draw, Urned and women 's events. The rast draw experts viii! begin their show at 9 a.m. and conUnue eliminations untll 6 p.m. Held In conjunction with the center's Silverado Days, the fast draw com· peUt.ion as well as pony rides and square dance exhlbiUons beginning Wednesday are open lo the public without charge. ' "Within a two-block area," said the 10- Leslie Rowland of the police depart ent. s!gnat1:"'e. petition: "there are. at least . . . m five h1pp1e establishments which relate The service extens.1on unit a~ts on ~ only to that element. Their clientele are behalf of the Salvation Anny 1n the 90 percent hippie and they are only in absence of a resident facility or unifonn· business by this type of people." e,d personnel, according to Paul Kugler, . Councllmen. will be presented ~he pe.ti- f1eld representative for the Army in hon today, City Clerk Laure. Lag1os said. Orange County. Dress shop owner George , who . Several services provided by the Salva· prepared the petiti~n, said ~y or the· tion Army include: emergency disaster young people hanging arounc the pier rtUef, home and hospital care for unwed represent a new kind or bum. He ex· mothers, day nurseries, family counsel· plained ; ing, SWDJil!r camps and many others. "Olten when I Valley Citizens Now at 29,194 Another 270 persons moved Into Foun· lain Valley during the month or June, jumping the city's total pupulation as of June 27 to 29,194. City officials estimate the city's growth each month by the number of a~ plications for water pe:nnits, said City Manager James Neal. "We've averaged about 250 new residents each month this year," said ad- ministrative <mist.ant Jim Hollywood. Jr the city maintains its present growth rate It should hit the 30,000 mark - halfway to saturation -sometime this fall. Ultimate population of Fountain Valley is figured at SS,000 to 60,000. Storm Anna Nears MIAMI (UPl) -'rropical storm Anna . first of the year, lilew up In the central Atlantic with SS mile an hour winds today and weathermen said it should become a full-blown hurricane within 36 hours. drive to Los Angeles through the garment dlatrict I notice the bums standing around the streets and now I notice the same thing in Newport Beach : the look is the same, but there is a different reason for their actions. "Jn the Los Angeles slums l assume they are alcholics. In Newport Beach they are dope addicts. Of the two, I am sure the dope addict would be considered much worse." He said if their appearance v.·ere the only distasteful aspect about them. it would be no problem. "Bui unfortunately, as many of them are on drugs, they have to support thls costly habit and one or the ways they do this is by shopllfting and panhandling on the streets. r' British Geographers Honor Neil Armstrong LONOON (AP) -Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the moon, today joined a select group of explorers honored by Britain's Royal Geographical Society. Armmrong was awarded the society's special gold medal for leading the Apoll o 11 mission. lt was the society's first award for space ex ploration. Men'• SIS, 113.SOknitsbirts, 110 Men'i 19.50, 110 apL ahirta, 16.50 Men'1 $8 & $9 •portthirta at •6 Men'• 16 & 17 •port eh.Jrtaat '4,50 Men'• Taylor Made, Spalding Sb~ broken Iota, ~ price? Jack Bidwell's July clearance sale all this week! WOMEN'S STUFF REDUCED, US Bermudu ...tuoed IO tll 116 Bermudq reduced to 112 U4417 lknnuclu, 2S% off! 118 atraigbt pant.now 114 117 atraighl panb now 113 ll:t bloaeet redueed to 110 • 9 bloutea reduced to S 7 17to130blo11~ 25o/o orf! $281e.nula dreues reduced to 121 S26 tenni• dre8eeto reduced to 119 118.133 tenni1 dr?.AM:g, 250/0 off! 130 dreeee11 reduced lo $22 ,,.,.e marked down my entire etock of epring and summer n1erehandise, except for cer- tain etaplee that I r e order throu'ghoot the year, 11uch u whJte ehirt&, black sock11, etc. All from regular Bidwell otock. No special pnrchuet or ony 111eb hanky panky. Mftl'• 116S 1aJt1 redueeci to 1135 Men'• 1145 1.iu reduced to 1116 1'fen'• 1140 1alta red•ced to tJ 12 Mm'• llSS 11lita reduced 101108 Mflll'I 1115 taltl reduced to I 92 Mm'1 lllO ..Uh ndaeed In I 88 1'fm'11100 1alta redaeed to I 80 M~n'a I 95 11alta redaced 10 I 76 1'1n '• I 90 nita reduaecl to I 72 !\fen'• I 86 1nlta reduced lo I 68 tJi01porteCMtaredubtdtol 96 •l lOeport.,,.11red...,.d10• 88 HOO •port-" reduoed to• 80 • 90 apmt eooll reduoed IO. 75 ( S7511porl coal1 redattd io 160 170 1port CO•I• reduced to •56 165 •port eoatl reduced to 152 160 •port «>all reduced to 148 $55 1por1 co.ta .Wueed to IM 150 1oport COllb redacied to HO Men'• 140 1l1ek1 reduttMI to •32 1'fen111•351laU11 reduced to 128 Men'• 132.50 1l•ek1 now at 126 1'1en '• 125 daek1 redueed to 120 Men'• 146 cardigan 1weaten, 130 Men'• ISS a.hie eudlpn1 at S20 MM,1118f.alloYU1weaten. 112 Other mf!ll • •-·e.tera nidueed 25o/0 Men'••I6, •11,•1e knl1a1U...., '12 f28 dreMet reduced to S21 126drneet reduced to Sl9 123 to l90dre11ea, 25% off! 119 •klrte reduced to 114 ll81klrt& re<luted to 11.1 116 1kJrt.11 reduced to 112 SI S to '33 1kim, 2So/o oil! 19 O.ntltin top• reduced to 17 18 O.nakln topa reduced to 16 17 Dan11dn top• reduced 1o •s Wornen'1112Top1ldtt1 now S8 Wo~'• 114 Benlardo 1uedu, 17 Jack Bidwell 3467 Vie Udo next to Richard's Market and the Liclo Theatre at the entrance to Udo lole. 673-4510. An acre of free parking at rear of lhia store. Copyrighl 1969, Jack Bidwell . • J I I I Saddle hack. 'fel y'• Flw•I voe. 62, NO. 179, l SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFO,R:NIA TE,N CE,NTS 7-point Critique Laguna's Budget A seven-page, seven-point critique of Laguna Beach 's '3.44 million proposed fi.9Cat budget, charging inaccuracy and inconsistency1 was delivered today by an organized citizens' group. Tbe report. was requested by city management from the Laguna Beach TaXPilyers' Association, prior to a City Council budget hearing Wednesday at 7:30 p.m., to guide any final action. .. We got our copy lhis morning but t baveri't had a chance to go through i! yet," said City Manqer Jama D. Whea- ton. reservtn& commtnl To start, the report released by Association President Gerald Unke branda lhe 1969-70 budget package u In- accurate and inconsistent, requiring a complete and doubl&dlecked 1 t a l f - review. _ Then it get.I critical. Reorganization of city ,government to separate Wheaton's posts u both city manager and city clerk is suggested, pl.1.11 appointment ol. a citilen commi.U. to map the Art ColonYa future. "'Ibe bulletin& ~laUon and planning and ICR.lng activities appear to be un· derstaffed when considered under the same departrhent· head," the report aays. Among other polnt1 ralsed In the ta.z- payen organiuUOn's suggestion paper are these: -Two liWe specific identification or funds for special cootlngepeies and con- tract services . -Vebicle purchase. rental, and allowance funds, as annual cosu when It woodl seem cheaper lo establish a con- solidated pool of cars with a 50,000 mile trade ln ba!l.s. -A lack of any mention of prloritla or a program involving the future of the community. -FiUure to sbow any ~al.led ef. ficiencle.s, apparently In reference! to methods or culling municipal operating costs. -Suggested plawllni now for ne.it Leary Claims Illnocence In Laguna Girl's Deat.h Family Attends Church Throngs Cheer Kennedy HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (UPI) -Cries of "\\'e're with you, Ted ," greeted Sen. Edward fl.1 . Kennedy as he entered St. Xavier Church here, his lhird public ap- pearance since the fat.al 8'CCident la.st weekend which caused the drowning of pretty blonde secretary Miss Mary Jo Kopechne, •Kennedy, accompanied by his pregnant wile. Joan, and.hvo o( b.il tbrFe·children sat moUonless In his pew Sunday as Msgr. William Thompson r ead from the epistole ol SL Paul : "No test has been sent you that does not come to all men. Morever, GOO keeps his promise. He will not let you be tested beyond your strenglh. He will give you with the test a way or emerging from it Dow1i the Mission Trail Viejo Tract Wins County Approval MISSION VtEJO -A 117.3-acre tract with 491 tingle family homes and a two- acre park site has been approved for the Mission Viejo County by the ~o.unty Planning Commiaion. with 20 cond1lions. Included in the conditions are adequate sewage systems through the Moulton Niguel Water District Improvement District, proper flood control, ad~u~te screening aloog Trabuco Road, dedica~n of a right of way for Los Absos Boolevard, and landscaping ol the park site. Location or the new development Is on the north side of Trabuco Road, west of Los Alisos Boulevard in the northwest section 0£ the Mission Viejo Planned Community. successfully, and you may be able to en- dure it." The Massachusetts Democrat wa."i mobbed and applauded as he entered and emerged from the white clapboard church while thousands of telegrams ctin- tinu.ed to flood the Kennedy compound urging him not to resign. In }liJ dramatic televiaion statement Friday n!lht Keenec!Y <Md Slill that bil admission of guilt to leaving the scene of the-fatal accident had caused him to pooiler lhe poaaibillly o( toslsnlng bis ·U.S. Sena.ta aeal At that time he called on tbe people o1 Massachusetts for their opinion, advice and prayer• to help guide him in reaching a decision about his political future. Rene Page ol' Marshfield, a regional supervisor of the We.stern U o i o n Telegraph Co. office in Hyanni!, said Sunday somewhere be\ween ~.000 and 30,000 telegram& bad been delivered to lhe Compound since Saturday morning, a figure he descrP:>ed .as comparable to the number last summer urging Kennedy to seek the·Dcmocratic presidential nomina~ ~ ... In BoolDn, W..i.in .. U n I on AsSt. OperationJ M•nager John AMand said Sunday, ''11ln're It.Lil coming in pre:tty heavy, but ..W.g like Filday night." He estimated 'the number of wires ad· dressed to Kennedy al either Hyannis Port or Baston -all being channelled (See KENNEDY, Pap ZI Nixon Vows U.S. Ready ToH elp Def end Thailand BANGKOK (UP!) -President Nlron pledged tonight the Unlted States would derend Thailand against any attack from any source!'!. He did ao in a special statement issued shortly after his arrival to make it clear that whatever the United State1 dou In Vietnam It will not abandon its allies here. Report of Ptttldent'1 Jndonnla Vlait-Page 5 lie said the United States was ex- tremely grateful for the help of Thailand's troops in Vietnam and said, "The Thai contribution to the struggle to preserve the independence of South Viel· nam has been of great significance.·• He linked this with his pledge to defend Thalland and said, "we and the nalion.!l of Southeast Asia share a Vital stake in t~e future peace and prosperity of this region.'' NiJ:on new in fnim Jakarta on the third leg of hi.a aevep nation tour. Security meallU'eS were unusua!Jy heavy al the rain-drenched airport, possibly because guerrillas attacked a U.S. Air Force base 40C miles northeast of Bangkok hours before he arrived, wounding a sentry and damaging two planes. Nixon said in lhe special statement that "our determination to honor our com- mitments i.s fully consistent with our con· victklns that the nations of A!ia can and must increasily s h o u 1 d e r the responsibility for achieving peace and progress in the area." He opened his statement by speaking of American determination to honor il! commitments in Asia and the Paclfic. "We will honor those commitments - not only becauu we consider them solemn obligations, but equa1ly im- portantly because we fully recognlie that we and the nations of Southeast Asia share a vital stake in the future peace and prosperity of this r~gion." Delinquent Hearing Thursday ~ Or. Timothy Leary, ex·Harvard pro- fessor lurned high priest of blppiedom, Thursday faces arraignment in RJverslde County on charges of contributing to the delinquency of a minor In·the drowning of ,•~~~··~eel BlrL ' . 'J1ie cfr1. 17:XW"<>ld Charlene Rene Aimetda, drowned July 1• wbUe swim-- ming nude In a pond at Moonlaln Cenlu Ranch where ohe ~ been llvlhg in a commune village In which Leary was considered to be the 5piritua1 leader. Rlv:eraide authorWes .ruled the girl was under the Influence or LSD at the tlme of her death. Ltary, !n a press confereflce over the weekt.nd, labeled h1I Jatelt encounter with the law as j 1scandalous, ghoulish, dirty and polltically motivated." The 49 year old former Harvard prof denied giving_ the girl any of the hallucinatory drug and aajd he .didn't ev~ know her Dame or age. Lea,ry said he con.sldered her "like a neij:bbor" in the ranch commune village. "My wife and I don't own·thi1 property. We have no control. We're just living there as members of"the community," he added. Leary said he was in hls tepee with bit wife when !\flu Almeida drowned. He said he used "every physical and spiritual device known" lo revive Uie girl, This Included, he said, chanting Buddist prayers ~er her body. Leary describt:d Miss Almeida as "a young girl, 11 slight acquaintance, who came to our village and did her own thing." The Laguna girl had lived in the com- mune about 10 days prior to her death. , Stoek Markeu NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market was jolted to another sharp loas today, 1s the down trend which carried Jt to new tows last week conLinued. (See quotaUons Pages %4-2.1) e 801,.ing OK Sa11ght MISSION VIEJO -Tentative tract maps for developments boasting 4?3 sing'~ family homesites on 1.582 acres m the Mission Viejo, Laguna Niguel and El Toro areas are before the county Plan· ning Commissioners Wednesday for ap- proval. Skipper~s a Top Athlete Jncluded is a Mission Viejo Co. t'racl betwtcn Jeronimo and Trabuco roads east of Mantilla Lane COn.!isting of 57.7 acre.s and 218 homes in th e north Mission Viejo area; a Security Fore Corp. Ira ct 1t lhe east end of La Plata Drive, east ~ Crown VaUey Parkway com1J!ting of 58.1 acres and 215 homes in Laguna Niguel. aod a Soulhwest Contractors, lnc. trad. on the southerly corner of Mulr- lands and Los Allsos boulevards In the east·El Toro area consisting of 31.t acres .tnd 140 homes. e Water Taxes Do1mt LAGUNA ~~GUEL -A 12.7 mi!Uon budget for 1969-70. permitting a lax r<ductlon of 85 ceolJ per 1100 asses>ed v1luiUon has been adopted by tM Moulton-Niguel Water Dlttrld, Geoeral MaMger Carl Kymla has announced. The district Includes six areas in Laguna Niguel, Capialrano Highlands and Mia.Ion Viejo. Laguria Handicapped Y outli, Winner in Coliseum By TOM GORMAN Of t111 O.llY ''"" Stiff Skipper Is now a summer Olympic medalist. He ii a champion. "I was thinking of Laguna Beach an the Ume I was on the winner'• stand,'' the champ declared 'toda.Y. Skipper Can111o Is a 30-year-old t.. gunan -hand1ca.pped by mental retard- ation but still an avid athlete to whom runnJng in the (.os Angeles Coliseum al· way11 seemed just a dream. Not only dkt Skipper participate In the Special Olymp&ca held lhere over the weekend but brooght home a sUver med· al for second place in the 3()ftball throw. "! wanl<d to bring homo •IOl!lejhlllll. I want~ ,to mW""t11111 eet<h proud o1 ,.._ Now r .. ~ hal>t>i<Ot boy ID the ' world," Skipper gald today. Approxlm1ttl1 IOO handicapped com· pe:tlton e1me from as far 1way as Colo- rade and HawalJ lo compete In lbe Weat- em 'Region Special Olympic•.· &ponsored bf the 'Kennedy Foundallon in memoey of Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., it was I.he first !UCh meet. "The theory behind the mttt u lo show that the idea of a mentallf retard· ed child must also be i;>hysica1ly retard- ed 18 all wrong," explained Collie Wells, Fullerton parks and recreation director who organized orange County partici- pants. In his utegory (lB yean old and over), Sk!pper captw'ed second place in the so{Jball throw, tossing the ball IU. feet ; ln a prellmlnary meet ht\d ti\ Mar:n, Buena Part, be lh...., tl>e •ball. US· . ' t• lht,.a!IO ~~ Skl.w;r look !rst; l'i"F'l""hit. . bOol wjllt•;11.I, ieOrid ef!Olf. !Mfosl, .. .....: 41.4 -~eel while ' COi! at lhe ~ -Hlll)l Sdiclol . n. Skipper took riUi'Qi-· !n t !oo-yml run -jlill a rr-. of l • 1econd away from i bronze medal. There mre four other events Jn the Olympics, a IQ.yard dash, l\anding loog jump, and I> and IQ.yard swims. A par- tidpant--may only run or swim in two events. In the prtllminary meet, Skipper ran lhe SO-yard duh In 7 .2 seconds - good enough for a third place. Now' the 'Olymplct art OYer. And If it's ·pot:s.lble, Skipper's life wlll return to normal. La1Unans know him as an umpire for Babe Ruth and LHtle League booebaU pmeo. He's been ....,., ing lJle· blaoli' cop whlle ahirt· and ,tie for1 IQ HMOD& r Durlni. tlfe ~I year,. Skipper Is lhe Atgh .sebooli tratn.rl• ·right ; htocf .. man. stelJli"'. ----'lCenet tuts. . ' '!'bf <omili\l"lty hu •'1!•Y• -ic1eted '\lpptr • diamp. Now be hil lbe ....W. .lo pioveJt. ' • year's budget, since· intemt and prin- ciple on bonds whJch paid for Main Beach purchase wlll be due. The report delivered to the city and the A.rt Colony's news media ruhher charges I. 1plicatlon in lhe preliminaary budget or .0,33: for certain departmental ap- / .i'oprialions. Under the personnel• section, the association says the clty manager, dlrec· tor of public works and city englneen' in- creased salaries reflect a higher . rate than the general f.& percent raise. Tbey suggest cutting these, a U. 7 ptr• cent pay hike Jn Uthe city manager's case, down to'tlie naf, one !Cep incruae. Curs are aleo 'u~eitelf ln tr8v~J and telephone costa, wltti a 50 percent choP in the juncke junketing tenaUvely shown al $8.012. and a 15 percent slice out of the $19,999 telephone bill. . Adding up thelt fi&Ur~. life gioup tug- gtm 'a total nd reduction l)f $11&,79'7, while urging an Increase of $3,714 In pro- jett net amount ol property tax *wn. . ...,..,.,. .. , .. . ' ? HiPPIE 'HIGH • PRIEST .LEARY COMMENTS ON A'R'llEST ' 'Scandal.Us, GfioJllslt, 'Dlfty.'oncl Polltlcally Motlvet.ocl'' . N ewp,ort Pwr Merchan.t,s Protest Hippw Influx By JEROME F. COLUNS Of i-. Dellr l'J?lt Jltff A group of angry merchant.I today peU- Uoned Newport Beach city .councllm.en to crack down on the influx-of hippies in the Newport Pier busineis 1 district. The petitioners, led by iLorne J. George, owner -Of thF Bl& George .dr~s shop,' said. the area .. near tfJe pier "can now be.considered a new sh.~m.'" 1'll!y asked tbe cify to ·refuae· llcenses' to ''hippie businesses." "Within a twD-block area," said the I~ aignature . petition, "there are at least F otir Arrested At Sleepy Hollow On Drug Ch~rges Lawmen weren't dozing on duty In the Sleepy Hollow ·area of Laguna Beach over the weekend where nareoUcs detecttveS" · on stakeout arTested four men, con- fiscating a qua,ntlty of alleged· I.SD and mescaline .. Sitt. Nonn Babcock and Dc(ective Neif Pureell said ' two suspects: were arrested t.Qf{elher S.ttirday •night In a market parlring .lot at 700 ,South Coast Highway, after one alleged transaction. Dennis'H. Maltz, 118, ol Caldwell, N.J,, wu booked on chafges of ule o( dangerous drugs. William J-. Monroe, ~.of st•CalleJLa.!I Flores, San Oemente, wu booked . on suspicion o( poMHSk>n or dangerous drugs: a couple of su.spected LSD tablets. Sgt. Frank Dillon said the t~m.observ4 Ing activities iD the parking lot also ar· rested Chwles A. Bec:ier, 11. of 1 Mon- tebello, Friday night on !lL&plclon of ~of dangerom.driugs. • 'l'l1e 'IUlj>ecl . allegldly )lid ~ •uRply •f pills ,thoil~.l<>'be u;o, plllS the ........ pound 11ii11e<11e1!' cl ""'~ · lhe• hallltu41tn ~· ........ ' Almoit '14 n.un· lo lhe ml~ul. late, Babcock and Pur<en artesl<d David B. · Cooley~ ti, a tranaloi>~ at tho l&lfle. loca· tlon on 1 the same' c¥r.ae. but. lrivolvin~ only auspected LSD 18blels. five hlpple establl!hmen'i.s which relate only to. that eJetneoL<"nleir;'cllenlele ire 90 percent lilpple' and ~~y are onlj bl' business by this type ofipeople." · Coun<llmen .will be -lad the pet;. tlon today, City Clerk' !Autt La'.giol''aold. °"" shop owqer G<orge, who preplred the' petUlon, said m~D)\of·the yOung people hingipg, at~mc{ J,he.,plS represent a new kind• ol. bum.-. l19'1U• plained: • • · "Often when 1 drive to 1..os ADge1et lhrouih !he garmeol dlilrid J nollee the bums atandlng around !be -and now I ooUi:e tJie same jhlng In llewpo/t Beach: lhe look•ll !be lame; but th<ft II a dUferenrreuon fcrUlelr actionll. "f n tbe Los Angeles slums I assume they are alcholJcs. In Newport Beach they are dOpe addicts. Of the two, t am sure the dope addict would be considered much worse." Cou&, Weedier · Clear akle1 and cbntinued warm weather are In store for the coast tor most or· the week. With the usual morning and evening overcail Tempenturea to atay in the upper 70s. , INSIDE ToDAY - Sei!TnOQrophfc rtpOTta and idtntifiaition of n luM1' rock arc htlping •Nn'Utl to uMoclc , 1ome of the m.11Jttric1 of the moon'• compofition. See Paqt. s. -..tfllt M Mim-US-n ( ....... , ....... ,, ~ . "'?: :==. : ' ~ ..... :;r •!'i!5'E1' "' r OI--,, ' " ........ ~;........ -...... ,, 9 l• ~ .. ..... ,... ,,.....,.... " I :::-r._ u =:-..... ' . .: • .JM ........ II ' i • .. .. ' ' !·----- I DAll.Y Pl\.OT l Hit Base ' . Tlw.i .Attack frece~s Ni~n ~y 21/a Hours . BAMllCOI( 'tUPI) -A band ol l\IOT• rlllu alJpped Into a u.s. Air e ... In -.... 'nlalland today, shot and -rC'd u American sentry. dama1ec1 lft c:orp planes and db rupi.d opera- l$Gnl with explosives about 2\11 houn be.- fore Prutdent Nl100 a_rrived in Banc· hi<. · 'l'bt r•ld at Ubon lnolr. place •bqul 2 Ua.. Nlloa'• Air Foret One-leUh~r ,1"*4 In llaQ&kok. 400 mllu to the l(llUtbwtlt, about 4:30 a.m. 'Ille U.S. Embassy r<p0rted the attack and dHcribed the rtiden as "Intruders'' bdieYld to be Communist iUerrillu. UboO --t n ~!~I.a-. Alt ~M!\'111-= ~ e litO --el-. wMrt •Uo( ,..iJI a IMl\!7 .... 1 -llollo "4rllt v~ 11111 aillol Lio tM llYt llll!'llll&o hialile Ibo win . Commuolit t.._ h•ve batn on the el· He cflalfensed them and they opened ftnslve for the put month. fire. 11lghtly wounding him and ht• doc· Thes attack was Ute aecond qainst OfUclala identified the tenlry u Ken- US alr bases in The.lland 11.nce Amert· neth D. O'Dell, 20, of 1'1ount Prospect, cin°watplanes were b~ght in four years 111., and Aid he W&! in good condition a,o to bomb North Vlelnlllll and 5Up-with a minor leg w()llnd, port allied trooP1 in Soulb Vletiwn. The guerrillas then scattered and Mt For Nllon. here to review U.S. oorn· off five satchel ch4Jl'es of dynamite, mltmenb In Thllan4, II llndfrllned dama~ two Cl7 planes and knacklog what American and Thal offlcla11 hive the field s ground control approach sys. deKribed as an upsurge In guerrilla ac-tern out ol commls.!ion for almost three U\•lties in lhe: northeast.em provinces. hours. All five: escaped, appare:nUy un· The ernbusy announcement llld an harmed. iaird Says U.S. Needs Gtu Stock as Deterrent Measure to Aid College Over First Hm·dle WASHINGTON (UPI} -Oele ... S.C- rttuy )felvln R. Letrd aald today the beet way to make sure the United States ta Mt the vlctlm of chemical ar blolof!I· cal weapons 11 to malntliD lta own 1ucb waponl u • detenent· He said the Sovie! Union had a "much .,..i.r· capabWty In thb aru. ''Thia dettn'tnt 11 important if we want to ate that theae 1uu are ntvtr uaed In CIW' time," Laird declared. 'I'ha oocretary defended Iha need for Kennedy Can't Drive for Year llYANl!l8 PORT, Mua. (UPI) -Sen. -.,,r M. Kennedy (0.Mw.), bu loot hla driver'• llcenae for a year because of hll plaa nl cullli to leaving the 1<011e o1 .. -~ IUcha1'I F. McLaughlin, Muuch111etta nptrar of motor vehl<:J.,, .saJd Sunday the one-year autpenakm wu mandatory under ltlte 'llw becauae of Ktnnedy'• IUlllY plea. ma uo:eNe bad been auapend- ad lemparari4' for al< monlhl pendlna a. ~ oa Aue. I because of a prellminary rqillry llndlni of "aerloua fault" In the accident July 11 In which Mary Jo K-1in<, a tenner campa1111 worker of K'enn.ad1'• late brotller, Sen. lloben F. Kennady, waa klllad. Ktllllady plaadad ruJJIY to the charge o! la"°I the..,.,,. el the accident lut Fri- day. Another B-...sy Beach Weekend Jt wu another busy weekend for Lapila Beach Ind San Oamante lilel\letd• pulling ®-ol nimmars frcm a tllfte.to..ftve-foot turf. Laiuna euardJ estimated Sunday's crowd at 20,000, with 15 rncue:s . Saturday's attendance was e.sUmated at 11,IOO, with 17 IW!mmm pulled to lllety. San Claneote l'Ulfds reported 57 rescues Sunday. None were 11ttlous. Crowds wen estimated at 25.500. 'l'ht:re were: 21.500 btach&oeri Saturday, with +t .......... ~larine Charged In Auto Burglary A Clmp Pendleton Marine: who was allqedly Unkutng with a parked car wound up in jail Saturday when In in-- qulrlD( Lquna Beach policeman learned the vehtele belon&ed to 110meone e:lle. Pvt. Gary W. Omo. 21, wa1 arrested by Patrolman Riek KOUl.n arter being que:s- Uoned Jn the 300 block of CUff Drive. He was booked on suspicion of attempted Iulo burli<ry. • • a chemical ~ biological warfare (CBW) protram durlna: a 4~minute (iutsUoa and anawer aeasicm with a group of summer govunment interns. A number of the appro:Dmate:ly 100 college yootha porllclpol!ng pollialy but penJstently ptp!l"'ed Laird with I &Ori.es fi questions on most of the cot1lrove:rs1al luuea wUh which he i. currenUy coping. Asked whether he would be willing to 1trite a compromiH: in the Senate over deployment ol the S•IOl!Uerd ontiballls- tlc mlaUe system, Laird indicated he woUJd not. He said the admln.lstration had st senators flnn17 committed to vot· int for the proposal u aubmltted by Prealdent Nixon. Bui he said that II It loat In the Senate, a compromiae, If there WU to be one, would be worked out 1n tbe Senate-House conference that would follow certain ~e of the admlnlJtration San Clemente Picketing Set DENVER. Colo. (AP) - P .. ce demoiiitratora w1ll be at Preeiifent Nix - On.•1 San Clemente summer White House whenever he la there in August, a California woman 11y1. "We're Soin& to tell Mr. Nlxon that it is his war now and what happened to Mr. JohnlCll can happen to him," Mary Saylin nl Mlral-aald S.turoay II a panel~~ thO western coo- fmnce ol the-New DemocratJe CoallUC11. "The · Pea<o Action Coullcll w Ill coordinate the demon.straUon, ahe said. The New Democratic Col.UUoo is • pollUcal Int.rest llfOUP comprising many people who lllpported Sen. Eugene McCarthy or the lak Sen. Robert Ken- nady I<>< preoldent Emerald Bay Boy, Robbed of $80 An Emerald Bay boy and hia l80 • bankroll were soon parted Sm!ay, the victim told Laguna Beach police, after two men who gave him a lift forcibly stole hiJ wa.lkt. Paul N. Spalding, 15, of 1103 Emerald Bay, wu plckad up by the pair on North Coast ffi&hway and driven to a spot be believed to be on Canyon Acmi Drive, where the sltongarm robbery occurred. Sgt. Frank Dilloo said Sp<lding, who reported the incident about 7:'6 p.m., was not inJured in a acufOe with h1a rob- berg. Trustees Study School Finances English as a HCOnd Janiuage concept, and financing for new buildinp will be considered toniJht when Clpiltraoo Unified School District trustees meet. The 8 p.m 1ession will be in the serra School board room, 26121 Victoria Blvd., Capl:strano Beach. Beside.! the ''Engli.sh as a second language" program and replactment of cild structures at Las Palma• School In San Clemente, a list of Oct. 7 tu OVtr"· ride ele:dion ofrlcials wW be approved. Woman Survives Chain Collision Elaine R. Sofer, 24, ti Queens VIiiage, New York, suffered minor abrallonl Fri· day when the rtar end of her e1ir was i::aved In by a chain-reaction colllaton on North Coast Highway In Ll1Una Bed. PoHce M1d the victim w11 stopped in afternoon traffic at Aster Strttt, wMn a car driven by George P.1. Copell, 24, of >02 Calle Seville. Sin Clemente, struck one driven by William F. Allen, 47, of 850 TTe:atW't 11land, l..liuna Btach, inockJn& It Into lht Sofer cir. The "fctim IOU&ht trtatment from a private physician. A State Senate bill that could mean as ml$Ch as $3 million in coo:itruction funds for Saddleback Ju,nior College has cleared the Aaaembly Way1 and Means Committee aitd ii due fOf° floor action 800!1.' The bill, S. B. 508 by Sen. D o n a I d Grunsky (R·Watsonville) woukl provide: funds for the new community college olhe:rwlle not eligible under $65 million JunJor Collq:e Construction Act. Michael T. Collini, president of the Saddleback College Board of Truitees, represented the college: at committee hearings last week·. The: bill has already been pa.sud by the State Senate aOO was a p p r o v e d unanimously by the Auembly committee. u the blll Is approved by • vole ol the A&IClllbly ond pwad on by Gov. Ronald Reagan, Saddleback's share: would be us- ed for c:orui:truction of a permanent facili· ty due to start. in 1971. From Page 1 KENNEDY ••• through Hyannis -at "very roughly 35,000 to 4.5,000," and :said extra help WaJ •till on duty trying to clear up a large: backlog. A Kennedy aide said on Saturday the mea1q:ea were running 100 to J. 1n Ke:n-- nedy'1 favor and the Senator "obviou1ly wu moved" by the •'ownrbelmln1" favorable ruporiae to hif televised plea for advJee. - The committee to Kffp Sen. Echt•rd M. Keenedy In public !lie, dubbed KEEP for short reported Sunday it had received about 10,000 letters, telegram1 and telephone calb urging Kennady not to re:algn. Mrs. Rlla Salk, New York chairman of the committee llid the me:ssqea came trcm "almost all &O 1tatea." She reported branch commltteea were being formed in Loi Angele&, Detroit and Sl Loois. Spe:culaUoo mounled u to when Ken- neey -.Ad return to Wublngton •Inc• the Senate was expec:ted to vote later this week on the Safe:auard 111Ubal111Uc missile l)'ltem to wblcb Kennedy Is op- po&ed. But the aide saJd the Senator "bad no Immediate plans for the future." 1be: 1lde also uld Kennedy 1Ull was "very fluid" and has set no deadline to decide whether he would reslcn his Senate seat. For the second day ol the cloudy, domp weekend, the S'l·year-old Senator crulsed on lhe: family yacht, the Marlin, for near- ly two hours and beached the MUp at a cove in Nantucket Sound to picnic with hfs wHe, hfs aisle:r-ln-law Ethel and several of the: familie:a' children. Cardin.al Richard Cushina of Boston, a long time family friend. visited the Com· pound briefly. The Sunday afternoon quiet on the t.Jiree.llned street1 adjacent to the com· pound Jn thill: mid-Cape Cod resort com- munity WIS shattered by I noisy, hour- long demomtraUon when 20 college-aged youtN protested Kennedy's uplanauon nl the accident· Robert Naramore, 18, of Rochester, N.Y., the leader o( the Jroop, aald lhe mtmbera were "dlagu!ted, dl!mayed and shocked" at the speech "because it iip- pealed stricUy to the emotions." Missing Plane Seen Near Laguna A private: plane cat"Tyiftl four persons, missing for more than a month, was spot r.ed in mid·mornJna by a helicopter pllot In rugged terrain about two and one-- h1lf mlla: northtut of Scotchman'• Cove In the Llguna Beach are.a, the: Oranae County Sherlll'1 Office noportad. A sheriff's spokesman said the Cessna ID plane is reported to have ldt Rio, Wi.scomln. June 21 and wu list aeen in Yuma, Aril. on June 14. The pilot la believed to have bt:e.n .a Rlcherd Olaon. He took otr from the Yuma Airport en robte to the Los An,.res erea hilt filed no fil(ht plan, the sllertl1'1 office ra!)Orled. A depu\I' 1herllf 1'U fiylng Into the nia&ed area by Marine htllcoptu this m0mln1 to check the crub Ilk. SherU1'1 Deputy Gerald Horton, who flew to the crub sctne, uid there were four bodies -two male and two female. No ktenUncatlm was I m m t d I a t e I y available:. • Bath Salts Dou~ Rowe, director and star of "Ladies Night in a Turkish Bath," operung Aug. 7 at the Laguna Playhous~, appears unnerved by ~e attentions of other cast members. Ladies include (from Jeft) Jill Carter, Julie 11aas, Blanche ~tickelson, Chris \Veatherhead and Debra Trudgen. New Police Chief Quits Position in Union City Laguna Beach·s newly appointed Police: OUef Kenneth H. Huck today gave forma1 oot.ice of bis resignation from the Union City, Calif. department be organii- Laguna Visitors Theft Victims Two Laguna Beach vi.sltors nturned home over the weekend. leaving behind vuiow: valuables woth $ISO, according to burglary and theft reports logged by police. Mark E. carlson, 22, of Fullerton. lost a suitcase, contents and record player totaling $130 to a bura:Iar who visited his unlocked vacation 1partment at 253 Pearl St., police sald. And a roaming thie f relieved Stephen J. Wajdik, 16, of Glendora, of his bermuda shorts, a ring and wallet amounting to '30, left on a towel while: he: frolicked at the Ma.In Beach. Whoever also broke in through a win· rlow at Bentons' Jr., 133 South Coast Highway, ransaeked the restaurant but Mthing teemed to be missing, in· vesUgators said. Storm Anna Nears MIAMI (UPI) -Tropical storm Anna. first of the year, blew up in the. central AllanUc with 56 mile an hour winds today and weathermen saJd it should become a full·blown hurricane within 36 hours . ed thrff years ago.. The W.year-old lawman will t.alte over the post vacated by Harry Labrow's re:· cent retirement on Aug. 11, following his July 16 appointment. Fonner Chief La.brow retired earlier this month after serving five years. His successor organized and headed the 20-man Union City police tn quaint Sausalito on San Francisco Bay. Chief Huck was one of the top lhrt;e candidates among 42 men who applied for the chance to follow Labrow u top cop on the Laguna Beach police force:. Mountain Lion, Cubs Appear Corona de\ Mar·s aging mama moun· tain lion appeared near Pacific View Memoria1 Park cemetery this weekend with her cubs, but animal control of- ficers aren't alanned. The: large cat, Officer Ray Johnson said, comes down out the: hills about once a year, perhaps to give her brood a glimpse of civilization. "She'll probably take her cubs back up in the hills pretty soon," he !aid. Several residents have called to report her appearance:, he said, but the cat is elusive and thus far hannless. "She's so smart you can·t even get out of your car with a gun in your hand and she disappears," he said. Jack Bidwell's July clearance sale all this week! I'-..e marked do""' ruy entire 1toek of 1pring and summer merchandiae, e:1.cept for ee..,. tain staple8 that I reorder throughout the year, 11uch a1 whlte ohirU, black ooeke, etc. All from l'08"1ar Bidwell otock. No opecial pw-dtuea or any mch hanky panky. $7511port coats redattd lo 160 170 •port eoata reduced to 156 165 epor1 eo•ta reduced lo 152 160 •port eoa11 reduced to 148 155 aport eoata redueed to 144 150 1port eoata ftldatied to f40 Men's 1401laek1reducedto132 Men'• 835 al.ckt ndattd to 128 Men'• 132.50 tlaeb now •t 126 Men'• 125 .i.ka redueed to 120 Men'• '46 eard.ipn nM~ tao Men's 135 eablo ~·st tao Mat'• '18 l'allo ... .....,_ •12 Other men • 1we11.ten ndaced 2So/0 Men'a '16, •17,'18blt ohlru, •12 No Trouble At Beach Rock Fest · BY RUDI l'i!EDZIEUliJ ' Of'" 0.1,, ~"" ,, ... Three Now Generation ba001 wailed wjtholll riot in Huntington Beach'SUriday night. 1 1be three t09 name bands .''gassed" close to 2.oio teenagus at the Huntlngto1 Besch High School gymnaslum withoul the riot that some predicted, without in· cidents, without srrest.s. About 1,500 local youths paid $3 .50 lo see and hear "Fusion," "Cal ~folher and the AU-Nigh t Newsboys" and .. Canned Heat" jam on the small st~ge erected on one side of the huge gym. It was not quite enough to make 1hC'. event a finaneial sueces.s, though, 1incl',, an atteDdence of approximately 2,700 wa:.. needed to break evel'I. Thia means that the city of Huntington Beach, which underwrote the Youth Coalition Committee sponsored concert to the tune of nearly fl0,000 faces a lo:!.S in the area ol $3.000. Yet despite the loss, Mayor Jack Green \\'as pleased by it all. "I know some o! you th ink that the establishment is all bad," he told the cheering crowd. 0 But thts should be proof that every once in " while we do something right." "I am not overly collC6ned with the fina nces," he said after the concerl. There will be a major eipense to the: city. but it's really no different than the surf- ing contest and the Fourth of July Parade which cost the city money." "I thought it went ofr beautifully. Jt was really quieter than most kid·ge~ togethers and I think it served well to establish communication with the kids." Hundreds of cars packed the parking lot for the conctrt whose electrified sounds soon haad the youths and a con· siderable number of adult! gyrating to the pulsating beat. Uniformed police: as well 21 s plainclothes detectives who were out en masse had an easy night and did not have to be called in to quiet any disturbances. While the three bands were playing on the stage a light show of comtlc pro- portion played on an enormous \\'hite sheet hung behind the stage. Most of the audience was content to sil on the hardwood ·floor and ju:st v.·atch the firsl band, "Fusion," which played a fai r· ly reserved and dignified set as far as rock bands go. But when "Cal 1.-tother and the ATI· Night Newsboys" launched into their·sel, a fairly large: group unable to contain the vibrations gathered at the left of the stage for impromptu dancing. "Canned Heat." as expected, literally tore them up and had them standing on their feet, ecstatically moving with the music. Aboul 500 teenagers without the fman- clal means who were gathered outside catching matches of sounds through the open doors were let in (or the "Heat" after the intermission, bringing the au· die:nce: up to 2,000. Newport Seeking Biting Canine Newport Beach police: animal control officers today issued an appeal for in· formation on a I a r g e:, re ddish-brO\\Tn dog. possibly a doberman pinscher. which bit a 12-year-old girl as she walked on Ne-.i.')>Ort Pi~r Saturday. If the dog is not found, Melanie Sue Belk of Riverside, will have to undergo the Pasteur treatment for rabies. Melanie received a two-inch shoulder cut from the bite: which occurred without provocation at 1:45 p.m. She told officers the dog was on a leash held by a te:e:n·age youth with a beard. His girl companion was wearing long yellow pants, she sald. Anyone with pertinent information can call animal control officers at 673·2211. Mm'i 115, 113.50 knj1 ahirta, $10 Alen 1119. 50, 110 11pL &hirte, 16.50 Mt111'•18 & 19 a port 1hlrb •t 16 ~fen'• 16 &: 17 1porl shin. •I f4.50 Men'• T1ylor Made, Sp.Jdlng Sboea., broken Iota, ~ price! WOMEN'S STIJ}T REDUCED, 115 Bermudu redbced to 111 116 Dermudae reduced lo SJ 2 114-117 Bermudas, 250/0 off! S 18 •tnight pani. now 114 117 •traiabt pant.now 113 113 blonaes reduced to 110 I 9 bloo1e11 reduced to I 7 S7lo130 blol1Ae9o 250/0 o(f l 128 lennis drnses reduced to 121 126 tennl• dreue1 ftdueed to 119 118-133 tennf11 dreun, 25o/0 off! 130 dreMet reduced to S22 128 dre&1e11 reduced lo 121 •26 d,..... reduood to •19 $2.ll to 190 dnoe11e11, 2So/0 off! '19 •klrta mlucod to Sl4 '18 oklrta reduood to •13 '16 okh11 reduood to U2 HS to '33 okim, 25% ol!I $9 DanHln to pt reduced to S 7 *8 Demkl'1 tops reduced to $6 $7 Du11dn t6pt Nductcl to 15 Women'• 112 T op1iden now f8 Wommr.'1114 Bernardo 11uedf!11 S7 Mm'• '165 .w .. reduced to •us Men's 1145 •lll red•oed to 1116 M ... •, '140 ml,. redoeod to •112 Mm'• HSS .w .. redaoed to Sl08 Mu'• 1115 IQill reduecd to I 92 Men'•lll01aJtarednC!ledtol 88 Meo•• 1100 ealll reduced to I 80 Men'• t 95 1ultt reduced tot 76 Men'• S 901all1 redueed to I 72 Men '1 I 85 1ult1 ndueed to I 68 Jack Bidwell •1201port ... 1>redat<dto• 96 SUO 1port ..... mlucod to S 88 SlOll oport..,.,. reducod to S 80 • 90 oport ... It mlaeed to• 15 t 3ol67Vla Udo nut to Richard'• M&l'liet onrl the Lido Th .. ire at the entrance to Udo I.le. 673-4510. An. •ere of free parldnfJ at rear of thi1 store. Copyr!pl 1969, Jack Bidwell. I I I ·1 ' I, I I ·7 ' I. \ Lag -a ·Beaeh •• • EDIJ~ON VOt:. 62, NO. ·179, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE, COl,ll'fTY, · CAllFORNI~ MONDAY, !JULY-2i, "1969i 7-point A 1evtn·page, seven-point 1 critique of Laguna Beach's $3.44 million proposed fiacal budget, charging inaccuracy and incorultslency. was dellvered today by an organized citizens' group. 1be report was requested by city management from the Laguna Beach Tupa.yen;' Association,. prior to a City Cow>cil budget hearing Wednesd1y at 7:30 p.m., to guide any finaJ action. "We got our copy thls morning ·oot ·y ha""'t bad a dwlce lo go through ii Leary Criii-que ·Assails yet," said City Manager Jama 0. Whu· , map the Art 0t1tn1'1 ·ruture. Ion , merving comment. "The building rqulltlon and planning . To . start. the report released by and zoning acUviUes · appear to be un. Assoc11Uon President Gerald Llnke brands the 1919-70 budget package 81 in. derst.a!Ied when ~ldered under tht1,. accurate and inconsistent requiring a 1ame department ht~d," the report aays. complete and doubte-cblCked a t a J r Among olhet points raised In the tax· review. payers organizatioll'I suggestion peper "nlen it ctta crilical are these: ReorganizaUon « dty (OrtJMw=nt to -Two little apecillc identifk.aUon or separate Wheaton'• posts u both city funds for special cootblgtncles ~ con- ITUllllgef and clly clerk Is IUlf!esl<d, plus tr•ct services. appoinlment ol a citizen committee to -VebJcle purchue.-re.nl&l, and allowance funds, u annual costa: when It woudl seem cheaper to establish a con· solidated pool of cars with a S0,000 mile trade in basis. -A lack of any mention of priorities or a program involving lbe future of the community. -Failure to shaw any so-called ef~ ficieocles, apparently in references to metbodJ of cutting municipal operat.int costs. -Suggeated planning now for next Cla-ilns Innocence ' In Laguna G. 1·' . Ir S Death Family Attends Church Throngs HYANNIS PORT, Mase. (UPI) -~et of "We're with you, Ted," greeted Sen. Edwin!· M. KEllllOdy 1$ lie enter<d St. Xavier Cburcll here, hls lhlrd publlc ap- pearance since the fatal accident last weekend which caused the drowning pf pretty blonde secretary Miss Mary Jo KoAeehne.: K'iiini!i!y, accompanled by hls pregnant wile, Joan. and two of bis three children sat motionless in his J1W Sunday as M.!lf. William Tbomponn. r .. d from the eplstole of St. Palll: "No test has betn senl you that does not come to all men. lo1orever, God keeps hll promise. Be will DOt let you be tested beyood your strength. He will give you with the test a way of emerging from it Down the Mission Trail Vie jo Tract Wins County Approval MISSION VIEJO - A 117.3-acre tract with 491 .single family homes and a two- •cre park site has been approved for the f\Ussion Viejo County . by the ~ty Planning Commission, with 20 conchhons. Included in the conditions are adequate &ewage systems through the Moulton · Niguel Water District Improvement District.. proper flood rontrol, ~d~~le screening along Trabuco Road. ~atton of a right of way for Los Alisos Boulevard, aod landscaping of tht park site. Cheer Kennedy !UOC!'l!fu11y, Ind yoa may be able to en· dure it." Tbe Maaachuaetb Democrat wu mobbed and applauded ·aa be entered and emeried from. the white clapboard church while thouqnda ol telegram.s coo- Unutd • lo Oood the lt..-Si compound urgln1rl!im p\>t ~ ~ · tQ ~bb dfa11.atic "lete~ alatement Friday, nlght Kennody bad Aid 1ba1 bis admission ol gulll )!' leavini the acone of the fatal 1<tldedt had camed him to ponder the -lblllty ol resignin& m. U.S. Senate seat. At that time he called on tht people o( Mas.sachasettl for their opinion.. ad vice and prayers to help guide him In reaching a decisloo .•bout m. political future. Rene Page of Manhfield. a rtgimiat auperviJor of the Wutem U n i o n Telegraph Co. office in Hya~, said Sunday 10mewhere between 15,000 and 30,000 telegrtJM.. had been delivered to the Compound aince Saturday morning, a fiiure 1le deJCribed as comparable to the numl>er lallt -·11111ng ~j Jo -lhe'Dcmocral!e pm!donUll ii6mlzia- tion. In °"'Ion• · W'flern U n I o n irsst. Operatiool ¥•nagu John Annand qld Sunday, ''They're still comina: in pretty heavy, but uotbfng like Friday nigbl .. He estimated ·the nwnber c! wires ad- dressed to Kennedy at either Hyannis Port or .Bo!ton -all being channelled (See KENNEDY, Pap I) Nixon Vows U.S. Ready To Help Def eml Thailand BANGKOK (UPI) -President Nixon pledged tonight the United States would defend Thailand against any attack from any .sources. He did 1a· 1n a .special statement Issued shortly after his arrival to make it clear that whatever the United States does tn Vietnam it will not abandon Its allies heMt. Reperit of Pnaldent'1 JDdonala Vl1l&-Pa,e 5 He said the United States was tx· tremely grateful for the help of Thailand's lroops in Vieloam and aald, 1'The Thai contribution to the struggle to preserve the independence. of South Vie t· nam bas been of great significance." He linlted this with his pledge to defend Thailand and said, "we ml the nations er Southeast A.Ila share a vital stake in the future peace and ~perily of this Nixon flew In from Jakarta on the third leg of hl! .seven nation tour. Security measures were unusually heavy al the rain-drenched airport. possibly because guerrillas attacked a U.S. Air Farce base <or milea north...t ol Bangkok hours before he arrived, wounding a aeotry and damaging two planes. Nixon aaid In the special statement that "our det.ennlnation to honor OlD' com- mitment.a ls fully coosi.stent with our con· victiona that lhe nations of Alia can and must increasily s h o n 1 d e r the responsibility for achieving peace and progress in the area." He opened hi1 statement by speaking of American determination lo honor ita commitments in Asia and the Pacillc. Location ol the new developmeat ls on the north side of Trabuco Road, west of Loil Allsos Bou1evard In the northwest section of the Mission Viejo Planned Commdnlty. • region." "We will honor tbo8e commlb'l)ents - not only because we consider them solemn obllptions, but equally im· port.antly because we fully recognize that wt and the .nations of Southeast 'AaJa share a vital .stake In the future peace and proaperlt)' ol this recion." Delinquent Heafing rhursdaJ: .. Dr. Timothy Leary, H·Rarvm! pro. '"""" tllmed bip prielt.of hlppledom, Thursday faces arralgrunent in RiVfll'lkte Cow!IY·on char&il I" <0ntnliuUn1 to 'the ci.uncjuency ol a nlliior In the dloWnin.I of ·a Laguna-l!elch tuna god girt. 'lbe girl, 17-year-old Charlene Rene Almeida, drowned Ju1y 11 whlle swim-- ming nude In a pond at Mountain Center Ranch where the had been living In a commune vWa,e In which Leary wu CONidered lo be the splrltuaf!eader. Riverside authoi1Ues ruled the glrl wa1 under the Influence of LSD at the Um.e of her death. Leary. In 1 press conference over the weekend, labe.led ha latest encounter with the law as ''scandalous, lhoullih. dirty Md pollUc.ally moUV1i<d." 'n>e U year old former Harvard prof denied gtvlng tlle girl any of the hallucinatory drug and Wd he dkin't even know her name or age. Leary aaid he considered her "like a neighbor" in the ranch commune village. "My wile and I don't own lhls property. We have no control. We're just living there as members of the community,'' he added. Leary 1ald he was In his tepee with his wife when Miu Almeida drowned. He said he llled "every phyalcal and spiritual device known" to revive tli:e girl. This included, he aaki, chanting Buddist preyera over her body. Leary deM:ribed Miss Almeida as "a young girlj a 11lght acquaintance, who came to out village and did her own thing." The Laguna girl had Jived in the com- mune aboul 10 days prior to her death. 1 SCoek Marke ta NEW YORK CAP) -'111e stock market wu jblted tO another sharp loss today, as lbe down trend which carried It to new lows last week conUnued. (See quotations Paga 24-25} e Uouah19 OK So119ht MISSION VIEJO -Tentative tract maps for developi:nent.s boasting 4~3 single family homes1tes on 1,SB'l acres Jn the Mission Viejo, Laguna Niguel and El Tero areas are before the county P1an· ning Ccmmissioners Wedneaday for ap- proval. • a Top Athlete Included ls a Mission Viejo Co. tract between Jeronimo and Trabuco roads east of Mantilla Lane conalsting of 57.7 acres and 211 homes in the north Mission Viejo area : a Security Fore Corp. tract at the east eod of La Pl.ta ·Drive, east of Crown Valley Parkway conoitling ol Sl.6 ICn!IS and 215 homes in Laguna Niguel and a Southweo\ Cootracl<n, inc, tract 0n the scAAherty corner of Muif.. lands anil Los Alisos boulevarda in tl1< eut FJ Toro area consisting ol 31.t acres and 140 homes. e Wa ter T4%e• Do""' LAGUNA NIGUEL -A SZ.7 million budget for !969-?0, pennitlin( a tu reduction of 85 cents per •1~ asse.ssed valuation bu been adopt.ed by the ~foullon·Nlguel Wai.er Diltrid. General Manager Carl Kymla ha.r lllDIU'ICed. The district includes 111: areas In t.oguna Niguel, capi.uano HJahland• and Mlalon Viejo. Laguna _Handicapped You th Winner in Coliseum Bf TOM GORMAf'I Of "" Dlllf ,. ,..., Skipper if now a summer Olympic medaliJt. He ls a ,champion. "I we thtnklng ol Laguna, Beach all the Ume 1 wu on the w\nner'a atand,"' the champ declared today. Skipper Cantllo is a 30-yeer-dd i.. gunan -handicapped by ~I retard· .atW>n but 1Ull an avid athlete to whom running In the Loo Angeles Collsellm al· w•)'I seemed ju.st a dream. Not Clll!y did Skipper parUclpale In tl1< SpeCfal Olympics .held there over the weeltend but brought llotne a allv1< med- al foe -tuce In the loftbalLlbrow; , ....... od "' ~-!Cllnetlllng. f'-l<d· to mate Lagana Boacb pnxid ol me. Now I'm the happiest boy In the -"!;" stfpper aald today. Approrlmaiely lilt handicapped com- !>ellton came f""1 u !ar 1111y u Col .. rado and Hanll to compele In the Wut· em Reiion Special Olympics. Sponwed by the Kennedy Foundation In mtmory ol Jooopb P. Kennedy Jr., it WU the fint such meet. "'.l'lte 11-y behind the ljleet la lo show that the idea of a mentally re\1lrd· ed cbil~ must also be 0011Jcally reta•1- ed la all wronr, • .xpJa\n<!<f Collie Wells, Fullerton patu and recreation dlrec!o< -orianlud Oringe Cooni1 parUcl· panl'I. In hl! category (11 )'t8Tll ota and oyer}1 Sit!-captured O<C0!1d p~ •1n ·tht MiftbltU -· tooslng the ht!! 141 .feel . In a ]>rdiminary meot b<ld 'ln-~ hi Jlbena ntltt•l!e;tlriw 1llO' lloU US t..il In' Ille 1111 yard toit. Slif]lpll'tlW !Int place In bis lndMcNal hell.~ a IU -effort. HJo faaielt lfma WU 4'.4-recanled wtJle ·•~the l.elW\l Buch Hlgh Scbooli;.;~~~' ~· Overall, Skipper 1ool< f:-; Ute :..ymt nm -Jun a fr ol a . second away from 1 bronze medaJ, There were four other events Jn the Olytnplcs, a 60-ylll<f dash, Slanding Jong jump, and I& and SO-yard swims. A par- ticipant may only run or swim In two eveiit.1. Jn the ~Uminary meet, Skipper ·ran the SO-yard 1da!lh in 7.2 ~ - good e""'llh foc a •third eiac:e. Now. the Olympics are over. And If It's pou:lble, Skipper's life will Mum to normal. t.ogunans "'°" him .. an tfm~ lot" Babe Rulll'l!ld '1Jille 'Ltactie bUiball gam<t." JWs Jieei1 ,...,. Ing the bla.ck cap, ·while shirt ·anc1, tie "°' 10 i.-. . . • · lluilllC the school ,.ar, Stlppi<r' la tho hip ochool trainer'• right hind man, 'oe<\nfl 1o·· -~ -tat.b. ' I • ,. .~-unltfbu'lhrlYJ­,l!ldppa'.a dlamp. I ' ,llliw hj ra the medals lo provo Jt.,; • • year's budget, alnce tnterert. and prfn. ciple on bonds which paid for'Maln Beach purchase will be due. The report delivered to tbe city and the Art Colony's news media further chariea duplication in the prelim.lMary budget of $40,332 for certain department.al ap- proprtaUons. Under the per9aMel aection, the association ays the city manager, direc- tor of public works and city ~-l~s· m. creased salaries reOecl a bJgher rate Budget than tlle.generl) U per<tt>t rilae. They auggest cutUng these, a 12.7 per4 cent pay hike In thhe chy manager '• case, down to the natrone •tap lncrulie:. · Cull· are Ibo wggtiiid m tra:te:I ad lelephone ""'"'· with a so -c1iop 1n the juncke junketing ttnatively shown at $8,0U, and a 15 percent slice out o/. the flJ,999 lelepbone bill' · Adding up1helr.flgur'es, the -q. gesta a total net reducfian of f1Jt,7't, while urging an increase of '3,114 in pro- jed net amount of property tu-lhowb. ' .. . Ull':l-r..,... HIPPIE MIOH PRIEST LEARY COMMENTS ON •AllRl·ST 'Scendaloua, OHoullsh, Dirty end Polltloelly Mollv-· Newport Pier Merchant;S Protest Hippie Influx By JEROME F. COLUNS Of 1119 Dtlll' 'Ult llaff A group of angry merchant.I today pet.1. tioned Newport Beach city councilmen to crack down on the influx of hippies In the Newport Pier business ,dinrk.-t. The petitioners, led by tome J. George, owner of the Big Otorge dress shop, -said the area near the pier 0 can now be considered a new slum." They ask~ the ci.ty to fefuse licenaes to "hippie businesses." "Within a two-block area," said the II). sign ature petition,. "there are at least Four Arrested At ~leepy Hollow On Drug Charges • Lawmen weren't dozing on ·dut)l.'tn the Sleepy Hollow area of Lagui:lA Beach cver- the wetkend where narcotlcs detecUves on stakeout arrested four men, con- flsc:atl.ng a quantity of alleged ,LSD and meectllne. Sgt.. Nonn Babcock and Detective Neil Purcell said two suspect.a; ~re amsted together Saturday night ln a market parlting lot tit 700 'Solilb c.o.st Highway, alter one alleged transaction. Dennis H. Maltz, 18, of Caldwell, N.J., was boOked on charges of sa}e cf dangerous 'drugs. William J. Monroe, 25, of 511 Calle Las Flores, San Cle!nenti, 'wu tiooked on .suspicion of Possellion of danjfel'OUI drug1: a couple~ .. suspec~ LSD tablets. Sgt. Frank Dillon uid' the team observ· tng .ctMUes in the parklng lot a\JO ar· rule<! Cha•let ·A. ·Bocttf, II, of Mon-tei:>+llo,. "Fridar:tilght On r -auspidlott 'cf, poOeoall>n .i dang......, drugr. '.'!'be l!lspect-aJJeted!Y·had • l\ll>PIY'<lf pllll \llou&l>I "'1.be I.Sf>\ :pluo lhe com-j>06nd .~ of bein( the haUl<ugen me!cllJne. . AlioW ZI Jlicn torthe mlnuto .laler, Ba-II! and .Put:<oll arm!,ed Darid B.· Conley, JS, a ttanslall; at lhe-·loca-. \loo od lfle ..,.:.,.,._ but iJIYOJvmf ®ly auspected.LSD llfllotl. • ... fi ve hippie establlshments l'fddi, rel.ale oaly to that element. Their cllentele are 90 percent hippie and they ire Ooi,'m· business by this type of people." , Councilmen will be presenl<d the pelt-. lion loday, City Clerk Leun i.qloo ... ld. DreU &hop owner Gec:rge_ who , prepared the peUtion, aald many 4t"the young people hanging arounc the · p&er represent a new kind ol bum. Ht U· plained : "Often when I drive lo Loa ~e& through the gannent distrkit I notJct ibe bums !landing around the" trtreeU an<! now I nolloe the same thioc in Newport Beach: Ille look ls the-. but then Is a dWerent rouoo for tbmlr act.ions. "ln the, Los. Angelel ahons fl .-nne they •re al~lics. ~n ~e,vpOrt Beacb they are dope odd)cti.: Of f!ip, two, I am sure the dope add.l"ct wOuld·be conaldered much worse.'.'· • • Oruge Weatller Clear skles ' and con..tlnuld warin weather are J~ store tor the coast for most (If .tbe week, with the usual· monlng and evening overcast. Temperitures to rt&y in the upper 70.. -INSmE TODAY Stbmogrophlc reporta Gl"i fdf!ntification of a lunar '°* d.re helpttig icientiltl to ""~ some of tht mt1ttriu of llM!I' moon'1 OQmwrition. Sac Paqc S • .a ... lllt ; , H .-....tu.iii-~ · ., . I C....,.!IJ • 1 ...,, ~ •• ,.,~ .~...... . '1 ~· ....... ~,. ~ •• 19 ....... ...... • ~ ........ '' ............ ,, DI-. 11 ...... •• llMtwtal ,_ • .. ......... ·~ ,, ~"::" . . :=:,. ~ ....... • 1: "'"' ..... u ........ .. ""-,.......,. ,. ,. . • I ) ..... ,;;;.,. .... ,,,,. , I DAILY PllOT L · Guerrilla·s , Hit ·Base T'"4i Attack Precedes Nixon by 21/2 Hours llANOKOK (UPI) -A band ol IU'!r· rlDu slipped into a U.S. Alr Base in aortbeutern Thalll.Dd today, shot and ,..,... ao American sentry, damaged lwo eup planet and dJsrupted oper•· tlonl wt.th explosives abaot 21h hours be-'°"' President Nixon arrived in Ban&· kQll. . 'Ille nld at IJboo look place •bolll 2 a.m. Nbmn'1 Air Force Orte jetliner lloded In Btl\Pok. IOO miles lo the ICll1thWMt. llbout 4,11) a.m. Tbt U.S. Embwy reported the allaek and described the raJders as "lntruder5" believed In bo Communist 111err1Uaa. IJboo Ila lb«ll 71 l!llla ..... ~ t.&6- uan· ~ of ai-u, ....,. both North Vietnam,.. and Jalllet Lio CommunfJl U'oOp# have been on the ol· tensive for the past month. Thu attack waa the aecond agaln1t U.S. air bases in 11\ailand slnce Ameri- can warplanes were brought in four years ago to bomb Norlh Vietnam and sup- port allied troops In South Vietnam. For Nixon, here to review U.S. com- mitments In Thait.snd, II underlined what American and That officials have described as an upsurge in guerrilla ac- tivities in the northeastern provinces. Tbe embassy lllDOUllcement uid an Laird Says U.S. Needs Gas Stock as Deterrent WASHINGTON (UPI) -DefenM SOc- retary Melvin It. Laird said today the bell way to tpke sure the United Stites la not the vicllm. of chemical or blologi· cal wu,pons Js to maintain its own 1uch wup>n1 u a deterrent· II< said the Soviet Union had • "muoh 11taler" c1pobUlty In thla area. •'ftls dttm'ent is Important if we want to aee th.It these gases au never used In "" Ume," Laird declared. '!be -etaey defended the need for Kennedy Can't Drive for Year R'(ANN!S PORT, Mw. (UPI) -Sen. Echmd M. Kennedy (D-Mua.), hu lool hil drtVf!''l lictnse for a year because of hit plea of ruJlty lo leovlng the acene of anacddenL JUcbard F. McLaughlin, Muaachu1ett11 rectstr11 of motor vehicle.a, 111d Sunday the coo-year tuapension was mandatory under atate law becal15e of Ktnnedy'a Jlllilty plu. IDs license had been SUIJ)elld· eel lempororlly for lix months pending a hwtng cm Ana:. I because of a pnllmlnuy rqt.stry flndJq of ..... 1owi !lllllt" in the llCddent July 11 In which Mary Jo JCot>eclme, • former campaign Worker of Kennedy's late bn>lher, Sen. -F. Kennedy, WU killed. Keomody pltaded IUiity to the chorge of leafli!I tbe ICeiie of llle •c:tfdmt lul Fri· day. . , .. , . . Anotller ·Busy Beach Weekend It wu another bu.sy weekend for Lquna • Beach ahd. San Clemente iilquards pWllng dom1o of swimmers '""" • lil!<e-l<Mive-loot -· Laguna guards estimated Sunday's crowd at 20,000, with 1& rescues. Saturday's attendance was estimated at l&,SOO, with 17 swtmmen puiled to safety. San Clemente guards reported $7 rescues Sunday. None were serious. Crowds were estimated at is.SCIO. There W'ft 2&,500 beacha:oers SatW'day, with 44 ...,cues. Marine Charged In Auto Burglary A Camp Pendleton Marine who was alleged1y tinkering with a parked car wound up in jaU Saturday when an in· quiring Laguna Beach policeman learned the vehicle belonged to someone else. P.vt. Gary W. Omo, 21, was arrested'by PatrG!Inan Rick KoWn after being ques-- tioned In the 300 btock of Cliff Drive. He was booked on suspicion of attempted auto burglary. ~ CD&l1 .......... ~ •·Net M. w.-l'rnNllil· ........ J•d I, Ctrt.., V'b ""'-*"' -'""'-' .......,., t~ ••• , ic .. ,;a ·-n. ... A. M.r,t-r~• -·-ll .. •"1 P. N•ll .___ '"' -........... Of\111. 122 f.,•tl A.,.. t.41111119 A.441• .. t tp. a.1 ••l. •2•1z --c... Mtu1 -... an-... .... ~ '-'di:"" *"' ....... ...... '"n ....... , .. ..... a chemical and biological warfare (CBW) program during ·a ts.minute qu~on and answer aeuton with a group of ·summer goVemment Interns. A number of the approximately 100 college youths particlpatlng politely but. peniltently peppered Lalrd \rilh a aeries of que$UoM on most of the controveralal issu8 with which he is currtnlly coping. Asked whether he would be wlllln& to strike a compromlse in the Senate over depleyment al Ille Sa1e111ord anUballis- tic mlasile system, Laird indicated he would not. He said the administration had 51 senaton firmly commttted to vot· in1 for the proposal as submitted by """1dmt Nixon. Bui be said tllal If 11108! In the Senalc, a compromJse, if there was to be one, would be worked out in tbe. Senate-House confermoe that would follow ctrtaln ~age of the admlnlstn.tloo San Clemente Picketing Set DENVER. Colo. (AP) -Pea« demonstraton will be 11 Pmldeol Nix- on'• San Clemente mmmtt White House whenever he b there ln August, a California woman s.aya. ''We're going to tt11 Mr. Nixon that it ii his war now and what happened to Mr. Jobnlon can happen to him/' Mary Sa)'lln of Miralrate Mid s.tunky at a panel di>cvussion during the -em COO· ferenco of the NIW Demod'ata: CoallUon. ·'nle Pei.ce Action Council w 11 l coonilnate the demomtraUoo, she 1ald. The New DemocraUc CoallUoo Js a poliUcal interest group comprising many people who supported Sen. Eugene McCarthy or the late Sen. Robert Ken- nedy !or president. Emerald Bay Boy Robbed of $80 An Emerald Bay boY and bia !Ml bankroll were. soon parted Sl\l\day, the Victim told Laguna Beach police, alter two men who gave him a Wt forcibly stole his wallet. Paul N. Spalding, IS, of llOS Emerald Bay, was picked up by the pair on North Coast Highway and driven to a epot be believed to be on Canyon Acres Drive, where the strongarm robbery occurred. Sgt. Frank Diiloo said Spalding, who reported the incident about 7:30 p.m .. was not injured ln a scuffle with hls rob. bers. Trustees Study School Finances English as a second lanauage concept, and financing for new buildinp will be considered tonight when Capiattano Unified School District trustees mttt. The g p.m session will be in the Serra School board room, 26126 Victoria Blvd., Capistrano Beach. Besides the "English as a second language" program and replaec:ment of old structures at Las Palmaa School in San Clemente, a list of Oct. 7 tu over· ride election o!Ocialll will be approved. Woman Survives Chain Collision EIAine R. Sofor. 24, of QueeN Village. New York, suffered minor abraalons Fri· day when the rear end of her car "a• caved in by a chain-reaction colllalon on North Coost Highway In Laguna BOach. Polict 1aid the victim wu stopped in artemooc"I trafUc at Asttt Street, whtn a car driven by Georg• M. Copeli, 24, of 20i Calle Seville. San Clemente, struck one driven by William F. Allen, 47, ol. &50 Trwure !Jilnd, Llgun1 Beach, knoctlna it Into the Solar car. The vicUm aou.abt t.re.almenl from 1 private physician. Air t.;.t lt<U!I\, JIOllotmln ,. .. i>!trol· 111\1 Wltlt a llt(11t)'I dot ~ be spoUed the ftvo fUtn1 lu inlfde the· wtr< lenlt. He challenged them and they opened nrr, 1llghUy wounding bim and ht.s dog. Ofllcial> idenUfied the sentry as Ken- neth D. O'Dell, 20, of Mount Prospect, Ill .• and IAld he was in good ooodition wlt.h a minor leg wound. 1be gutrTl.llu then scattered and set off five aatchel charge. of dynamfte, damaatn&: two C47 planes and tnocklna: the field's ground control approach sys· tem out ol. comml.sston for almost three hours. AU five escaped, apparentJy un· harmed. Measure to Aid College Over First Hurdle A State senate bill that could mean as much as $3 million in construction funds far Saddlebaclc Junior College has cleared the Asaembly Ways and Means COmmittee and is due foc noor action soon. The bill, S. B. 508 by Sen. Do n a 1 d Orunsky (R·Watsonville) would provide funds for the new community colleae otherwise not eligible under $6$ million Junior College ConJtrudion Act. Michael T. Collins, president of the Saddleback College Board of ~ represented the college at committee bearings last week. The bill has a!re.a.dy been passed by the State Senate and was a pp r o v e d unanimously by the -""mbli committee. JI the bill is alefOved by a vote of the Awmbly and passed on by Gov. Ronald Reagan, Saddle.back's share would be us· ed for construction of a permanent facili· ty due to start in 1971. l'rom Page 1 KENNEDY ... through Hyannis -at "very roughly 35,000 to 4$,000," and aaid extra help was sW1 on daty trying to clear up a large backlog. • A Kennedy lide said on Saturday the meuagu were runnh:i& 100 to 1 in Km- nedy 's favor and the Senator "obvioualy wu moved" by the "overwhelming" favorable ruponse to 'hii telev.i&ed pita for advJce. The committee to Keep Sen. Edward M. Keenedy in pubUc !Ue. dubbed KEEP for short reported Sunday it bad received about 10,000 letters. telegrams and telephone calls urging Kennedy not to re11lgn. Mrs. Rlta Silk, New York chairman ol. the committee said the mesuges came from "almO!t an SO atates." She reported branch committees were beina: formed in Los An1eles, Detroit and St. Louis. Speculation mounted as to when Ken- nedy wWld return to Washington since the Senate was expected to vote later this weelt on the Safeguard antiballiatlc mi!.!lle system to which Kennedy is op- posed. But the aide aaid the Senator "had no bnmedlate plaM for the future." The aide also said Kennedy still was "very Ould" and hu aet no deadline to decide whether he would resign his Senate seat. For the second day of lhe cloudy, damp weekend, the 37-year~kl Senator cruised on the family yacht, the Marlin, for near· ly two hours and beached the ship at a cove in Nantucket Sound to picnJc with his wife, his sister-in-law Ethel and several of the families' children. Cardinal RJchard Cushing of Boston, a long time family friend, vWted the eom. pound briefly. The Sunday afternoon quiet on the three-lined streets adjacent to the com- pound in this mld..C.pe Cod re8ort com- munity was 3hattered by a nolry, hour- long demorutratlon when 20 college-apd youths protested. Kennedy's uplanatio.n ol the accident· Robert Naramore, 18, ol Bochester, N.Y., the leader _of the jll'OllP. said llle member1 were"~, disJJlayed and shocked" al the"speech "because it ap- pealed strictly to the emotiom." Missing Plane Seen Near Laguna A private plane carrying four persons, missing for more than a monlh, was spotted in mid-morning by a htlicopter pilot in rugged terrain about two and one. half mile.a: northeast of Scoldunan's Cove in lhe Laguna Beach arta, the Orange County Sberi/!'1 OHie< reported. A sheriff's spokesman said the Cesana 1112 plane t.s repon.d to baY< WI ruo, WlscoMln, June 21 and was last seen in Yum1, Arb. on June U. nae pilot is Mlleved to have been a Richard Oltoa. He look oil frnm Ille Yuma Alrport e.a route to the Los Ange.lea area but fUed no flilhl plan, the 1herif!'1 olllc< rtport<d. A deputy shulff wu fl>'lna: into the ruued aru by Mulne helicopter this momln1 to chec.t Utt crash lite. Sherifra D<potf Gerald Horton, who new to the crash setne, aald there were four bodies -two mile and two ftmtl~ No kfentlncaUon wu I mm ed I ate I y available. • ... .! • ::; "" ) c ·' \fE1)'i!U" '¢P:::t '* • .,. """,.., • Bath Salts Doug Rowe, director and star of 14 Ladies Night in a Turkish Bath," opening Aug. 7 at the Laguna Playhous~, awears UMerved by ti_le attentions of other cast members. Ladies include (from left) Jill Carter, Julie Haas, Blanche Mickelson, Chris \Veatherbead and Debra Trudgen. New Police Chief Quits PositTn in Union City Laguna Beadi's newly appointed Police ed three.years ago. Chlef Kenneth H. Huck today gave The 40-year-old lawman will take over formal not.lee of his resignation from the the post vacated by Harry Labrow's re- Union CJty, Calif. department he organiz-cent retirement on Aug. 11, following his July 16 appoinbnenl Laguna Visitors .Theft Victims Two Laauna Beach visitors returned home over the weekend, leaving behind various valuables woth $160, according to burglary and then reports logged by police. Mark E. Carlson, 22, ot Fullerton. lost a suitcase, contents and record player totaling $130 to a buralar wbo visited his unJocked vacation apartment at 2$3 Pearl St.. police said. And a roaming thief relieved Stephen J. Wajdlk, 16, of Glendora, or his bermuda short.a, a ring and wallet amounting to '30, left on a towel while he frolicked at the Main Beach. Whoever also broke in through a win· dow at Bentons' Jr., 133 South Coast Highway, ransacked the restaurant but nothing seemed to be missing, in· vesilgators saJd. Storm Anna Nears MIAMT (UPI) -Tropical storm Anna, first of the year, blew up in the central AUanUc with SS mile an hour winds today and weathermen said it should become a full.blown hurricane within 3& hours. Fonner Chief Labrow retired earlier this month after serving five years. His sucCi!S:sor organized and headed the 2G-man Union City police in quaint Sausalito on San Francisco Bay. Chief ,Huck was one of the top three candidates among 42 men who applied lor the chanee to follow Labrow as lop cop on the Laguna Beach police force. Mountain Lion, Cubs Appear Corona del Mar's aging mama moun. tain· lion appeared near Pacific Vie\" Memorial Park cemetery this weekend with her cubs, but animal control of· ricers aren't alarmed. The large cat, Officer Ray Johnson said, comes down out the hills about once a year, perhap! to give her brood a glimpse or civilization. "She'll probably take her cubs back up in the hills pretty soon," he said. Several mildents have called to report her appearance, he said, but the cat is elusive and thus far harmless. "She's so smart you can't even get out or your car with a gun In your hand and she disappears." he said. Jack Bidwell's July clearance sale all this week! )'Te marked do1''D n1y entire atock of 1pring and summer merchandl.se, e:r.cept lor ur- tain staple• I.bat I reorder Lhrou#aout the year, 1uch as white 1hlrta, black 10Cka, elc. All from regular BidWflll 1tock. No •P""lal purchuea or any aach hanky panh. 175 •port coata reduced to 860 170 tport coatt reduced lo S56 S65 sport eo.11 redoeed to 152 160 1porl C011t1 redaoed to f48 •SS •port cotita reduced to S44 150 aport c:oaU reduced to 140 Meo'• 146 dack.1 reductd to '32 M""'o'35 ...... redoeedto•28 Men'• '32.SO 11.bnow atl26 M""'''25olaebred.-ltoS20 Men'• 146 cardis-awe11.ten. 130 Men11 S35mhle eudlpn1n120 Men'••1a~..u--..,n2 Other mm 1 •~ten nidaced 25% Mm'• SI6, '11,SlB lmil ablrla, '12 No Trouble At Beach Rock Fest BY RUDI NiEDZIELSKl CH tht DallY iilloll l!•lf Three Now General.ion bands wailed wJthout riot in Hunlington Beach 'Sunday night. . The three top name bands ''gassed" close to t ,OIO teenagers at the liuntlngton Beach High School gympasJum withou~ the riot that some predicted, without In· cidents, without arrests. About 1,500 local youths paid $3.50.l'l see and hear ''Fusion," "Cat Mother aM the All-Night Newsboys" and "Cannt'd Heat" jam on the small stage erected on one side of the huge gym. It was ,not quite enough to make the event a financial success, though, sinl'f'. an attendence of approximately 2,700 wa :. needed to bruk even. This meam that the city or Huntingtoi'l Beach, which underwrote the Youth Coalition Committee sponsored concert. to the tune of nearly $10,000 faces a loss i11 the area of $3.000. Yet despite the loss, Mayor Jack Green was pleased by it all. •·1 know some o! you think that the establishmerit is all bad," he. told the cheer1ng crowd. "Bu : thi s should be proof that every once ln il while we do something right." "I am not overly concerned with the finances," he said after the concert. There will be a major expense to the cily but il's really no different than the surf· ing contest and the Fourth of July Parade which cost the city money." "I thought it Went off beautifully. 11 was really quieter than mO!lt kid·ge~ togetbers and I think it served well lo establish communication with the kids." Hundreds or cars packed the parking lot for the concert whose electrified sounds soon haad the youths and a con- 5iderable number of adults gyrating to the pulsating beat. UnUormed police as well a s plainclothes detective! who were out en masse had an easy night and did not have to be called in to quiet any disturbances. While the three bands were playing on the stage a light show of cosmic pro- portion played on an enormoos white sheet hung behind the stage. Most of the audience was content to sit on the hardwood floor and just watch the first band, "Fusion," which played a fair· ly reserved and dignified set as far as rock bands go. But when ''Cat Mother and the AJl- Night Newsboys" launched. into their set. a fairly large group unable to contain the vibrations gathered at the left of the Stage for impromptu dancing. "Canned Heat," as expected, literally tore them up and had them standing on their feet, ecstatically moving with the music. About 500 teenagers without the finan· cial means who were gathered outside catching snatches of sounds through the open doors were let in for the "He.at" after the intermission, bringing the au· dience up to 2,000. Newport Seeking Biting Canine Newport Beach police animal control office.rs today issued an appeal for ln- fonnation on a I a r g e , reddish·brown dog, po.ssibly a doberman plnscher, which bit a 12-year~ld girl as she walked on Newport Pier Saturday. If the dog is not found , Melanie Sue Belk or Riverside. will have to undergo the Pasteur treatment for rabies. Melanie received a two-inch shoulder cut from the bite whic h occurred without provocation at 1:45 p.m. She told offi cers the dog was on a leash held by a teen·age youth with a beard. His girl companion was wearing Jong yellow pants. she said. Anyone with pertinent information can call animal ~ontrol officers at 673-2211 . Men'• JlS, 113.50 kru1 abirla, JIO Men 'a 19.50, $10 1pL 1him, 16.50 Men'11 l8 & 19 sport 1hirta at 16 Men,, 16 & 17 11port .Wm at 14.SO Men'• Taylor ~lade, Spalding Shon. broken Iota, * price! WOMEN'S STUFF REDUCED: 115 Bermudas reduced to 111 116 Bermudas reduced to 112 114-117 Bermudas., 250/0 off! 118 alnigbt pant& now 114 $17 1tn.fght pants now 113 113 blou.ee reduced lo 110 I 9 blou.e& reduced to I 7 17 10 130 blouse..., 2So/0 ol{ ! 128 tenni• dreue1 reduced to •2t 126 lt!nni11 dresiteS reduoed 10119 118.t33 tennl11 dreMea., 2So/0 offl 130 dressn reduttid 10 122 128 dresae1 redueed to 121 '26d,......Ndueod toS19 '23 IO •90 ""-a, 25% oU l SI9oklrtaredueod to'14 SIB oldrta redoeod lo •I3 U6 11d"' redomd to Sl2 '15 lo '33 oldru, 25% oUI S9 Danoldn lope redoeed to •7 SB O...oldu top• Ndueed to S6 17 O.n.11dn 1np1 redoeed to 15 Wo19en'1112TopUd~ now 18 Womea.'e 114 Bernardo 1utdu, $7 M"''' •165 ..U1a redooed to '135 Mm'• •1"5 oolla redoeed to •116 Mn.'• tl40 tultt redaeed to 1112 Men'• tl35 aaJtt redllCl!d to Sl08 Ma1't 8115 tui" reduced to I 92 Men'11110 IU.ila reduced to I 88 1'lm'11100 1aJll ndaaid to I 80 Men'tl 951alt1reduoedtol 76 Me.n •,I 90 pll9 Nlhteed to I 72 Men'• I 85 au.Ill ndactd to I 68 •120 oport coola redoeed to• 96 •HOoport_,.Nducoclto• 88 1100 oport ...,,. redoeed to I 80 S 90 sport coolared•eed lo• 75 Jack Bidwell • 3"67Vla Lido oext to Richard'• Market and tl1e Lido n. .. tn> at the eatnnee to Lido hie. 6734510. An •ere of free parking •I rear of this store. •C..pyrlpt 1969, Jack Bidwell. . I. I 7 ' I 7 . . . . • • • • • JIAN ~X.. 4'4-'466 .................... .. ., ... '* Parties . Push .__, .... Sale ·· of Cards ' Q!leen of 'Hearla· Gl!11d members, Children's Hospital of Orange County,' who earned $10001..t year by aelling Cbiiatmas cards, are·ready to tJy the project again dilriDg a series ·of August parties. ' The gatherings, hosted by var.ious guild members, will offer .guests the OJ>P.Ortunlly to loaf tlirough Chfutmu card ieleclions over coffee or cocktails . According to Mrs. &bert Ru ssell, of Monarch Bay, chairman, a widt variety of original holiday greeting cards are available at discount prices. She is assisted by Mr s. James Delariey of' Laguna Niguel, co-. cbairman. Mrs. Russell will highlight the series of gatherin.e;s with a cocktail party for about 10 men and women which she will c~host with Mrs. Francis Fabian, guild president, in Monarch Bay Beach Club, Tuesday evening, Aug. 5 from 5 to 7. The other parties all are coffees and the first will be· given by Mrs. Macauley Ropp in her-Three Arch Bay·h<>me Thursday, July 31, at 10;30 a.m. Mrs. Delaney will have a coif~• in her home, assisted by Mrs. Bar· bar& Grat,. also•_Of Laguna Niguel, Thursday, Aug. 7. _ Mn. Harlow Boyle will have a morning coffee ftorit '10 :30 a.m. to noon in ber Emerald Bay home Saturday,. Aug. 12, and Mrs. Neil Nelson of Irvine Cove will host 8!K>lher coffee Aug. 20. ' ... -... -.... ----... -~ -4 ... I -. ' ' Potential buyers also will .be thinking· about Christmas cards over coffee in the Em.erald Bay home of Mrs. Dewight Smith. Aug. 25, and in the Monarch 'Bay home ol Mrs: Thomas F1eming. Aug. 26. SEASON'S GREETINGS-Yes Virginia, Santa Claus is alive and vacaUoning on the beach of Mona rch Bay. However his work is never done. He looks over the selection of holiday cards sold by Queen of Hearts Guild, Children's Hospital of Orange County with guild members (left to right) the Mmes. James Delaney, Robert Russell and Jack Fromm. Mrs. Russell is chairman of the project. The Laguna Line New P'OSt Brings ;New Challenge ,• . ~ Champagne Luncheon, ; --y;JttA.fWILLIAMS Of .. o.llr ,, ... ,..., ' ''People· are most important," aaid Sisfer Frances Dunn , :now in the process of relinquishing her· po.st as administrator of Children's Hospital of·Oran1e County to takl up a new and far flung challenge. · De-emphasis of the institutionalized aspect of the-nuns' lives and a tblft ·to Ille person-centered approach ls Ille concern of the dynamic, youth·. fuJ-apPearing wom!lll elected to a !our-year term as President ·o1 the Con· cregation by tlie Billen of St. Joseph of Orange. Her adniintstlative duties will ehtail supervision of ,eight hospitals In Califol'!lia, 32 grade schools and high schools from Eureka lo San Diego, a hospital and lchool In Lubbock, Tex., a youth hostel in Australia and f0ar.1Chool1 'Oil· the islands of Buka and Nissan in the North Solomons. Penonal visita to the various locales will please the nun, who Is especially looking for.ward to a first hand view of the installations on New Guinea. St. Josepb'1 ·nun1 began work there as assistants to the Marist falllers before the advent of World War II, she explained. Forced by the Japanese to abandon their wort, they were evacuated by submarine and only retu~ after Ille close of the war. . lmjlortapt Utese dars is the teacbini: of sewing to the island women, who make clothing not only for themselves and their familie s but also are able to market their handiwork. Nursing care is given the sick, and well baby clinics are established. The teachers and nurses on the islands travel to ·lheir patien.t• iii the villaget by means of land rovers and jeeps and children c;ome to school via canoe. ~entinf on the work she is leaving as administrator of Chil· dren's Hospifal in Orange County -where St. Joseph's sisters are under contractual agreement with the board Of · directors to act as directors of admini!itration and of nursing -Sister Dunn said the medical facility there is ''a whole new world" where 1pecial care is given the acutely ill child and the one in need of special diagnostics. She has been administra- tor there. since 1964, arriving one month before its opening. .Children's Hoopital, Orange County Medical Center and Long Beach Memai'ial Hospital all are part of one training program,' she said, and now the hospital Is affiliated with UC! for pediatric training in connection With-.tJie ·11.w Medical School establjshed recenUy on the UC! campus. 'fit's 'flOOderful to be part of a teaching program," Sister Dunn commented further. ''It seems to kee_p everybody on their toes to be part ol. the teaching profession.'' Again she empha!lzed the imporance of plac· 1ng n~w nuns in the order ln the jobs-they are most qualified to fill, in a new effort to deal with each "person 88·8 person" in tbe St. Joseph's order. ' _.... .... ~-.,.,,..-(It. ...... ·'"1 ' .. • ~l ' *i j ! .l Beach Party ~ Reported By JEAN COX Of the Dally Pilot Staff TWO EMERALD B A Y couples, the Howard Hinrichs and Jack Carneys had quite a beach. party for t h e J r geighbors last Friday evening. About 125 people romped on the beach, where instead or the usual beach party fare, a Mexican dinner was served. Background music was pro- vided by a mariachi band. MRS. ROBERT YOUNG of Mission Viejo was honored al a baby shower wh.ich her neighbor, Mrs. Toby 'Thurlow, hosted (or about 26 guests. Relatives of Mrs. Young en- joying the champagne lun- cheon included the Mmes. Ch.ristine Palmer, her mother o[ Newporl Beach, Richard Young, her mother-in-law from Placentia; Eden J a Young, h.er grandmother from La Habra ; and Gera ld Marcanel, her sister from Jrvioe and Jack Young, her slster·in·law, also from La Habra. _"'another sister, also of Los ·AnseJes, and Mrs. L .. W. Th_urlow, the hostesses' mo- ther-jn.law of Escondido. llt-'<.1-Mission Vie- l~ Jo gu"ts in- ·' -e luded the Mmes. Larry Almquis t, Ed Moskan, P a t Getchell, John Rinaldo, Dan Protant. Max Miller, Eugene Pingle and Dennis Mummert. Others attending were the Mmes. Robert Fox of Hun- tington Beach, Eugene Heard of Laguna B e a c h, C. A. Breckenridge or Los Angeles. Oink Bunch of Tustin. THE RUDY BURTONS or Catalina Street, members of the World Affairs Council, recently hosted Ram Narayan Pradhan of Nepal, during his stay in Orange County and his first visit to the United SI.ates. During the visitor's weekend here the Burtons took him to the Towers restaurant for din· ner before a performance of the Pageant of the Masters wh.ich was followed by a backstage tour. Embassy, USIS Kathmandu. waa Disneyland. He also wa:; lhe guest of ,Col. and Mrs. William Roley,. Who drove him to the Los Angeles ·Interna- tional Airport at t b e weekend's close. 11\e Burtoni recently celebrated the 21st birthday of th.eir daughter, 'Mrs. Arthur Neville Jones ol Inglewood. with a dinner party in their home. Guests Jncluded Mr. and Mrs. 6eorge Mohl of La Mirada, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Johps:on or Whittier, Mrs. Roley and' her daughter, Miu Susan Roley oC Laguna Beach. and Miss Iris Hiesenbuttel of Washington, D.C. MISS ZOLJTE Scott, 11 graduate cf Laguna Beach High. Sch.ool. has b e e n representing the city of Santa Barbara's merchants as Miss Downtown during construction of a new plaza on the town's well known Slate Street. Miss Scott, daughter cf USMC Brig. Gen. (ret.) aod Mrs. Wallace T. ScoH, is a junior at the University of California where slle is con- centrating her studies an urban planning. 'Ibe native Cafifomian~ Who was born in Monrovia and went to acbools ~there until 'she attended r.tills College where she rec~ived her de-- gree11'tfas wearing a modern blue two-piece suit as she talked within the mother houae of Ille· Sisters of St. Joseph in Orange. (he-NEW CHALLINOE, Pa .. IS) MULTIPLE DUTIES Sliter Frances Dunn Mrs. Thurlow. whose hus· band wa s a varsity football player for the University or California and whose brother· in·law, Steve Thurlow, plays for the Washington Redskins , also had severa l relatives present. Among them were Mrs. Donald McLarnan of Los Angeles, her mother; Mrs. Wa yne Thomas of Los Angeles, her sister, w h o brought her daughter. Lisa; Ml.!sRoxanne Mc La r nan, Col. and Mrs. William Bn.ig- gere also threw out the welcome mat by entertaining. the guest wilh a luncheon in their Monarch Bay home. Mr . and Mrs. Peter Fulmer joined the group. During her reign, Miss Downtown will answer qu es- tions and otherwise spread a spirit o( £riendliness and courtesy. Sh.e has been 'Sta· tioned on State Street daily until the reopening of tbe corn. pleted plaz.a next month. 'The construction of the plaza ls the first major change i n downtown Santa B a r b a r a since the 1925 earthquake. Next stop for Pradhan, who is cultural advisor of Nepal and from the Amer ican Coffee Date Gives Drip Grounds for Sleepless Nights ' : DEAi\ ANN LANDERS: Sb ,.an ap l1mat • llrl tllniaP mutual lrlenda. 'l'iie ..... w,at<d 14 co 14 a movie I hid llreooly --,,,. gtrl _, partlclllarly ~·in 1lle -and --l!lat we j1lll walk ·Of)IQllll town. We hid • l!leuanl ..-, .... eoded up at a c:ollee h• Wben tbec:llack·-K w• •uo. !,Wu• eent1 "'1arl. l ~ in.everJ ~ lmoWinl I w•.oldn'rind"any ....-. ......,_ J'inolly, tbe'P-1 made. Joh ol11 pd Mid, "Let mt trulJW." I qnod. } I effa" AW .her after that · beCaUle ft IQOVed oot ot -• few -later. l'v• thouCht •bout her ....., u--ind I'm ""Y I didii' t.ep in touch. I bow whtre Ille livu and I'd lib 14 oend ~ tbe IUO plus lnlerdl, but I'm afraid . - A NN LANDERS ~ the'• pt me down aa •heel. 'Wbal do you lblnt? -DEBT Ulll'AID OSAll tJN: Daa' --· -· ........ a ••• .ef n.wtn. a Im tf eaodJ W: a .... t. A-a -fllnldaJ .., , ..... -... apolotbl '" ...... .. ,... ..... DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our retmled IOll, A~ il'o.,.rly 11. Hil mentaUty bas been at tbl!: three year level for the past five year1. Al ls large for h.is age and getting atronger all the time. 1 can't handJe him 11 l once did. This psst year he ha.! beaten up his younger brothers several tima. They are not permitted to strike him. My hulband gets furlqus and h(ts Al wfih a btlL,I can't bear to iiee thia; yet I realize tom'.'eth.ing must be done, I Three , doctors have told us to In· stitutionaliie th.e boy but r can't bring myself to do it. My mother says GOO has sent us this child to tesl our Christian metUe and we must bear th.is Cl'08s and not seek easy answers. 1 need your advice. -SLEEPLE.55 NIGHTS, TORTURED DAYS DEAR SLEEPLESS .-'ND TORnJRED: You II.ave 1\rudy 1otten advice from three 1utbortUu wbo are much cleter to lite 1ltu1Uon dlaa. I am. J .bope 100 lite It. Aad pltue lell yoor mother that 181tllatloqalbtll11 cldld It H "e11y answer." It 111 dUOC'IU move, but often Ule be1t 1ol11Lloa for td coacemed ... DEAR ANN LANDERS : Some time ago you printed a letter from a young man who was heArtbroken beca"5e be and his girl friend bad gone too far 8.nd her parents would not let her see him again. Th.e one.sentence Iii his letter that I was struck by went something like this : "I'd give anyfhln& 1f I could live that part 0£ my life over, again. I would be perfectly content just to:hold her hand." I wish you'd reprint that letter, Ann. So many young girls today feel they must be seiuallf permissive in order to keep their boyfrkl\ds loteresled. The truth II the boya would gladly take "no" for an answer. tr: fact they'd prefer it. ' We have a love!y daughter who reads your f:Olumn rel\ll&rly and this not.Ion is on·e which she and tome of her tfrl friends need. to get through their heads. Please? -CONCERNED M<Yl'llER DEAR MOTHER: Your letter eerved the purpose._ Tbaakt for wrtLlnr. Too many couples go rrom matrimooy to acrlmony. Don't let your marriage flop before it gets started. Send for Ana Landers' booklet, "Marriage -What to Expect." send your request 14 Ann Landers In care of your newspaj>er enclosing 50 cents in coin end • loo(, stam'j)ed. seli·addttsled envtlope • Ann Landers will be Clad to heh> )'OU with. your problem-. Sfncl them to Mi in care-of the l>AIL Y Pn.m, enclolini a self-addressed, stamped envtlope:. •• • ! J Horoscope Sagittarius: Avoid Efforts ' I Scattering "TUESDAY Jl!LY 29 By SYDNEY OMAllR • Lutr poolUoo ~ .. 111- fattiable for, fllbJ•t· · GRQOMING TIP' C.lvOI, ankln are accenlfd. Kaow lltb ud -Uoole appard ac- tonlla(ly. ARIES (March 2t-Aprll 19): St.renathen Ues with fritnds. Do not let dlstance become a barrier. Key ls to enlarge horizons and contacts. Some art more than willini to help you fuUill wishe5. TAUl\US (April 20-May 20): You now get chance to gain added recognition. Some who may have dpubted y o u r capablUties revirse gear. Be calm in deallnc with, those in authority. Don't throw away major opportunity, GEMJNl (MaY it.June 20): Apply oriclnal melhods. Don't be taken Jn by thole ,.vlth old stories, methods. Be percep- tive, creative. Your Influence spreads -favorably -if you- write and advertise. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Take stock of inventory. Be aware of credits, debits. Make financial plans. Be factual, frank -especially with yoursell. Your intuition is fine. But don't fee.I you caii by-pass essentials. Obtain hint from Le e message. Be moderatt. Avokt extremes. Cement rel1Uonil 1 wilh reJaUves, netgbbora and . <.'i>-WOrkera. Be careful when It comes to signing papers. UBRA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 22): Personal magneti:lm rating is high. Opposite sex is at- tracted. Creative urge is strong. Express y o u r s e 1 f ; communicate ideas. 0 a y features change, travel and variety. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Emphasis on family, home, domestic relations. Key is to seek harmony. Avoid dispute over money. Purchase or lux· ury item can be intelligently plannett. SAGI1TAR1VS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Avoid scattering ef· forts. Concentrate on one thing at a lime. Be veraaLile without being foolish. Means con- centrate on task at hand. Steer clear of neighbor, relatlYc, disputes. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Financial gain Indicated. Income potential enhanced. Accent on what you possess and can gain. If you act in responsible manner, definite advantages accrue. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Appeal spreads; your cy· cle cootinues high. Many are drawn to you. Some seek ad- vice, profe ssio nal and otherwise. Time to <.'Onclude agreement. Not wise t o tolerate further delay. Smart ' )1 ./I ,/ I n Simple I I ot.ma;,.. ~3 c:. Police Wives Plan Party Potpourri LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 22): You do best by playing waiting game. Offers come your way. Be sure you have expert counsel. Be versatile. Look beyond immediate indications. Don't panic. Take time to evaluate possibilities. PISCES (Feb. 1g..March 20): Ir you don't know, ask. A1eans . . . , . don 't permit pr ide to stand in Contrasting colors \v1th top-stitching is the story by Newport Beach Police Wives Auxiliary is planning an annual potluck dinner on Tuesday, Aug. 12. and Offi cer .Jon Schorle seems pleased to accepl a second helping of a tempting chafing -dish concoc- t.i on from his wife. who will be hostess for the Former Miss America . . event. Looking on in approval is Mrs. Wayne Con- nolly (left) who is assisting in plans for the affair. The couples will add extra fun to the evening by dressing in children's clotlling. VIRGO (Aug. 23.Sept. 22 ): Las Olas way of progress. Mudi that Charles Le Maire. occu rs today may be hidden or . . . behind the scenes. Be The large pointed detachable coUar is set sl1gbUy creative, but avoid ag-a~·ay from the neck. The center front band is top- gressiveness. stitched in place and enhanced with decorator button!. lF TODAY IS v o u n The cuffs are closed by link buttons and are detach· BIRTHDA Y you are sensitive, able too. The shape is an easy A-line -can be worn I intuitive; you could write and with' or witllout a sash. The center back zipper opening ' teach. Much of what you want makes for easy construction to do comes about next year, • Consumers Treated Royally Seats New President but may start as early as 1'1ake it in mediumweight cQtlons and blends, cord- October or this year, uroy, lightw eight tweeds and woolens. raw silk or wool To 11~d °"' w11o·, tvckv ,0, vou '"crepe. 61119 is cut in Misses sizes 10-18. Misses size 12 rnonev 1...i lovt. o•d•• svonev omirr·, requires approximately 2 318 yards of 54" fabric with l>DG<lol. ..Sec.r•I lil"ll lo< Mff! 1nd ,, . women:• ~"" t.1.1~1. 11111 '° c•nta 314 yard of 54 fabnc for contrast. NEW YORK (UPI) -The i;eUing seems a strange one for ' a former ~l iss America, slanding behind a man-Sized desk wih a battery of NAOMI ROBINSON August Wedd ing telephones ringing constantly, the I.all beauty grabbinS a bite of an ordered-in aandwich and sipping a soft drink as she lakes calls, asks her staff to c.b:eck out this and th.at pro- blem and talks heatedly about how the consumer constantly is bilked. But there she is, Besl tlyerson Grant . who as Bess Myerson won Ure beauty and talent title in 1H5, now the watchdog for consumers in the nation's.·largest city. Pitrs. Grant is New York's Commisaioner of Consumer Affairs. She and some 300 employes are the clearing house for consumer com- plaints, check advertising and packaging claims for validity, regulate city markets and ad- minister city licenses. \Vhen Mayor John v. Lindsay, a Republican, ap- Shoes Te ~I Storv Well , poioted Mrs. Grant, a Democrat, to the $25.000 a year post in February, he call- ed it the "first ol its kind to be created by ' local govern- ment in the n.a.Uon." Mrs. Grant hopes that her agency can become a pro- totype for others -"every ci- ty and county around the country should have a place where the consumer can seek redress," she said. "We'll make available all the. guidelines we've developed." One or her goals: "To pro-- mulgate legislation to target in on the man who<theats, vic4 timizes the innocent." She wants to broaden the scope of the agency so that among other things the city might sue merchants who deceive the customers and return the damages to the victims. At present, she said, the dishonest businessman can defraud, knowing the et1n- sumer usually cannot afford the lawsuit lo recover damages. "We are not locked In eom- bat with honest businessmen," she said. "But I do think h> Om1rr Astnlo!lv s.«relt, l~r OAILY • She's "ampa1'gn1'ng lo r Mrs. Marie Fouts was In-PrLor. 80~ n.o. Gr1111t C•n1••1 511· To ord e• 61119 tale · · I d · dd ... t•Ol'I· New vwt, H.v. 10011. ; s size, inc u e name, a ress regulations which would re-stalled president of Las Olas and zip code. Send $1.25 plus 25 cents for first-class Toastmmress Club of Hun-ta d h dlin quire retailers to label pro-t Ing t 0 n Beach during r:is ge an an g. Send orders for books and pat- ducts with the cost or each ceremonies in F ran c 0 is Mesa League crns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Milford, New ounce. or pound or root so the restaurant. Jersey 08848. Te!: 201-995-2201. sh "kn La ~he League meets the Opper ows Pre c is c I Y Theme for the upcoming second Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. This pre-cut, pre-perforated Spadea Designer Pat· wha t she is aetting for her year i's S t a 1' r wa y to t · d e Mrs. H. w. Moore, 56-4359, ~rn comes in ~ea y-to-wear sizes that produce a better money. 'The economy size Isn't Leadership : Today We Train-w_ ill answer questions regard· f1_t and are easier to make. Order normal ready-to-wear always the best buy." She then -Tomorrow We Lead. I I d mbershi nd all k f read the fine pr int on the con-Other officers are Mrs.i-::'=ng=oc=•t:::on=:::,an::::::'meC.:::::::::::::P=·::=':::IZ::•=:::•:::::::::::o::w=:::o.::•::e=w=e::e=:::,,:o::r~d:e:l::_iv:,:e::ry::._. ------ tents of several supermarket Rollo Weit, first vice presi- items in her office to prove dent; Miss Joya Sexton, se- her point. cond vice pre1ident; Miss The nation already has a Marge Dewey, secretary, and fa ir labelling act, but Mrs. Mrs. William Va I I u tin i, Grant argues it is not enough. treasurer. In 1968, she said, Consumers Further 1 n f o r m a t I o n Union sent a group of women regarding visiting a meeting shopping and found that they'd may be obtained by calling made 38 wrong choices in gel-Mrs. CJarence Hendrickson, ting the most for their dollar. 897-I023. What can the consumer do11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;; Immediately? Piirs. Myerson offered these suggestions -Educate yourself in so far as possible on reacting contents of can or box. Steer clear of weights or measurements in h a r d. t o. translate fractions. Jf a box says "JO cents off" or "20 cents off regular price," de· mand to know, "Off"'What?" HAL AlllSCHIR HEARING AIDS Custom Aurel Am,nfh:.1tlon NO SALISMEN 3409 I. COAST HWY. CORONA DIL MAl Betrothal Disclosed BURLINGTON,Vt. (UPI ) -business for its own image ''Pulling your best foot ~~~d war on the problem forward" means wearing the' 'jiiiiiiiiiii right shoes when applying forrl "The consumer has forgot· ten how powerful she can be,'' said Mrs. Grant. fiM' A,polo-t 675-3833 The betrotha l of Naomi Alexandra Rob i n s on to Charles Anthony Ramsden of San Francisco has been an- nounced by her parents. Dr. and Pi1rs. Robert F. Robinson of Corona de! Pi1ar. The son of ~tr. and 1t1rs. C. A. Ramsden of Alameda is at present dolng graduate work al Stanford University in business adtninistration while he serves as a lieutenant in the Navy. lie was graduated frotn Stanrord. The bride ·elcct ~·as graduall~d from the t:n i\'ersity of Callfornia. Berkclev and has done graduutc. wiirk ttl t;CI. She is a senior 111 llaslings Law School, San 1''rancisco. A wedding is being planned for Aug. 30 in the Newporter lnn. -- a job. Clothing specialists in the Extension Service of the University of Vennont say that potential employers can tell a lot about a prospective employe by the cut of his or her shoes. The specialists offer these. tips to job hunters: -Women should we ar simple1 low or mid-heeled pumps. ties or ~lingbacks. -Men should check shoes for necessary repairs to scrat· ches, rundown heels, dirt marks and lad: of a shioe. Sneakers are two-prong sore spots -they're definitely ''oul'' for interviews and can hurl feet on the job because 1 they norm ally Jack proper support. Tri1n, neat and well-polished fool"'ear is a plus. No matter how dressed otherwise, a job hunter looks sloppy with ir.hod- dy or soiled shoes. IT'S A FACT! If you spent 30 seconds looking et each of our shag samples, it would take you over 9 hours to see them ell- so come early end bring your lunch. DON'S CARPET SHOP 426 SO. MAIN 12 Blk1. No. of Bullock's) ORANGE HOUIS: f ·l :JO OAILT CLOllD SUNDAY Shoe Sale BUI ONE 2 FOR ONE <Special Group) GET ONE FREE "Here's How It Works" You pay the highest retail price on first pair • get the second pair of equal value or less -Free. It's fun. Bring your friends & neighbors • Buy together. VALUES TO $29°0 • HEMPHILL'S COSTA ME$A 1131 NEWPORT AVENUE TELEPHON E : 541-9744 CURLS 'N' COLORS AHEAD, 17.!50·1.il.!SO SHAP£D AND PEftMtD BY FASHION-WISE F'INGERS. OUR P'£R1" CONCEP'T OF THE \.ATEST HEADLINE FASHIONS AT A BEAUTlirUL. SALE P"ICI:. THll:N0 THE FINl5H1NG TOUC!-1, ... WONOER-WORl<INCi f'ANCl-P'ULLe1 'TME INSTANT HAI~ COLOR RINSE THAT'S A CONOITIONlft AND WAVE SET, Too: OU!lt "ECiUU.R 35.00-lO.oo VALUE, HOW ONLY17.!50AHD 14.50, IEAUTY SALON0 ROBINSON'S NEV\IFORT • FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 I t I I 7 • • • • Newport RarLor ...... --. • N.Y. Steeb ' ... , . . voi:. 62, NO. 179, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ORANGE COUlllTY,. CALIFORNIA MONDAY, :JULY 2t, '1969:. . ' TEN CENT$ . ~ Pier Merchants Ask Action on Hippie Influx By JEROME F. COLLINS Of tM O•fb' l'JIDI Sl•ff A group of angry merchants today peti· · tioned Newport Beach city CQuncilmen to crack down on the influx of hlppies in the Newport Pier business district. The petitioners, Jed by Lome J. Ge9rge, .owner er the Big George dress shop, said the area near the pier "can now be consldered a new slum." They asked the city to refuse licenses to "hippie businesses." '.'Withln a tw~bloclt area," said the 10- signature petition, "there IJ'e at least five hippie establishments which relate only to that element. Their cllentele are 90 percent hippie an~ they art only in business by this type of people." Councilmen will be presented the pell· lion today, City·Clerk Laurt LaglOI said. Dress shop owner George. who prepared the petition, a-1d many of 'the young people hanging arounrl · t)Je pier represent a ne.w k1nd of bum. He llx· pl•lned: "Oflen when I drive to Los Angeles lhrough the garment district I notice the ~s standing around the street.a and oow I notice lhe same thing in N_ewp6rt Beach : the look ,is the same, but.there·l.!S a different reason ror their actions. "Io the Lbs Angeles slums I· assume they are alcholics. In Newport Beach they are dope addicts. Of the two, J am sure the: dope addict woufd be·consldered much w"orSe.'' · , ,1 r .. CAILT l"l~OT """ 1W l'nb'11 S,..,.... Pluggi~ig for Old ·uarbor High • Newport Harbor High School cheerleading team won Spark Plug Award for . its display of spirit during annual cheer Jeaders camp at~ Redlands· University. Four of -~~n are--(lrom_ left) Vjc]p Brown, Chris ROOanl, Paula McGowen and Jody Schwarz. Other team members ·are Susie Mc- GinJ,ey,. Terry~ Amies, . .Jan· Kawamura, Sandy Te- desco, Jennie Farber and 1Marly ldoore. Leary Insists He's Innocent In Girl's Deatl1 Dr. Timothy Leary, ex-Harvard pro- fessor turned high priest of hippiedom, Thursday faces arraignment in Riverside County on charges of contributing to the delinqu.ency of ~ minor in the drowning of a Laguna Beach teenaged girl. The iirl, 17-year-old Charlene Rene "Almeida, ·drowned July 14 while · swim- ming nude ip a pond al, Mountain Center Ranch where she had been living in a commune village In which Leary was considered·to be the spiritual leader. Riverside 'authorities ruled lhe girl was under the influence of L.SD at the time of her deith. Leary, !n a 'press conference over the weekend, labeled his latest encounter with the law as "scanda lous, ghoulish, dirty and politically motivated." Tl1e 49 year old former Harvard prof denied giving the girl any of the hallucinatory drug and said he didn't even know her name or age. Leary said he considered her "like a neighbor" in the ranch commune village. "My wife and I don't own this property. We have nG control. We're just living there as members ()f the community," he added. Laird· Says U.S. Needs Gas Stock as Deterrent WASHINGTON (UPI)-Defense-Sec· ratary Melvin R. Laird said" today the best. way to make sure the United Slates is not the victim of chemical ·Or biologi· cal weapons is. to maintain its own such Mo~ntiiin lion, Cubs Appear Corona del Mar's aging mama moun·· lain JiGn appeared near Pacific View MemGrial Park cemetery this weekend with her cubs, but animal control of- ficers aren't alarmed. The large cat. Olficer Ray Johnson said, comes-down out the hills about once a year, perhaps ·to gi.Ve her brood a glimpse of civilization. "She'll probably take her cubs back up in the hills pretty soon," he said. Several reSident.s have called to report her appearance, he 'said, but the: cat is elusive and thus far Mrril.!'w. "She's so smart you can't even get out of your car with a gun In your hand and she disappears," he said. weapons as a deterrent· He said the Soviet-. Union had a "much. greater" capability in this area. "This deterrent is important if we want to see that these gases . are never used' in -our time;" "Laird 'declMed. The secretary defended 'the need fot'" ;, chemical and biologic81·warfare (CB\\') program during a 45-rillnute question and· anStver sesSioo with ·a giof.Jp of summer government Interns: A number of the approximately· 100 col!Cge: youths participating politely: _but persistently peppered Laird with a series of questions on most of the controveMlial issues with which he Is currently coping. Asked whether he would be willing to strike a compromise in the Senate over deployment of the Safeguard anUballis- tic misslle system, Laird indicated he would not. He said the administration had SI senators firtnly committed fo ·vot- ing for the proposal ·as aubmltted by Prec;ident Nixon. 1 But he said that if it 106t in the Senate, a compromise, if there was to be one, would be worked out In the Senate-House cooference that would follow ceriitin House passaglf!-of the administration propooal. Fatnify Attends Church "My problem has been that of lhoplil· ting· in my store." All the petitioners claimed the same problem. If b,usinesses catering to the hipp3 trade were refused business licenses, they r.-ed, "the city lll'ell wou1d not be so glamorous to the bipp~. "We abS(llutely must do IOmething about thJs situation," GeOrte d~lared. ''Th<se people.are beginning lo feel that whatever they want. they -ean just come In and Ille. They !eel that u long u they can overpower me lbey can steal anytlllng." He emphasized that Newport police - who recently put a man on a walking beat in the area -have been very helpful. "But they can't be eveeywhere at once." c.-ge's peUUon said refusal of bua1ness license to ' '.h l p· p.I. t • t y p e <Stabllslunenta would .belj> tremendQUJIY "'in clt.lning \IP our beach fDf' firnllies IOd children and ooce again give our .town 11\e reputaUon It ab<lul!l de...,.." ' But that WCM!ld be cinly tbe. fJnt ....,, according to the petition. '~ nat etep," it dlld, ~~ls to unite .tbe PliRertf owners and educ1te them to the foci Illa! they should nqt rent lo lbi!H _.. "Other than delaclpg the pNperly and lowering th•ltlodaril of UYhrcln CM' cHy plUI the dope ~ol!lcm wbicl! !)ley )Iring wlJJJ them, they. 'l<eep •way !he people (See lllPPIE8, Pap l) Nixon Renews VOw Pledges Thai Defense Against ~ttncks BANG/SOK CUP!)' -President Nixon pledged tonight the United Statea .would defend Thailand against any attack from any IOUl'CtS. He did 90 Jn a speciaJ 11tatement issued shortly after his arrival to make it clear that whatever the United States does in Vietnam it will not abandon Ha allies here. He said the: United States was el· tremely grateful for the help of Thailand's troop.II in Vietnam and said, "The Thai conttJbuUon to the struggle: to preserve the Independence of South Viet- nam has been of great significance." . He.linl<ed this with blJ pledge lo dclend Copter Pilot I SightS Plane Lost Month A private plane carrying lour perSOlll, mlssing for more than a month, was spotted in mid-morning by a belleopter pilot in rugged terrain about two and one. hair miles northeast of Scotchman'11 Cove in the Laguna Beech af'f.11, the Orar11e County Sheriff's Office reported. A sheriff's spokesman said the Cessna 182 plane is reported to have left ruo, Wisconsin, June 2ljind was ·last teen 'in Yuma, Ariz. on June 24. The pilot is believed to have been a Richard Olson, He took off from the Yuma Airport en route to the Los Angeles aiea but filed no fiigh.t plan, the sheriff'• office reported. A deputy shert(f was flying into the rugged area by Marine helicopter this morning to check the crash site. Sheriff's Deputy Gerald Horton, who flew tO the cru:h scene, said there were four bodies -two male and two female. No identification was i mm e d I a t e I y available. Drowned Man's Body Recovered Newport Beach lifeguards on patrol ln a boat Sunday found the body of a Placentia man who fe!J from a canvM raft July 18 In surf near Newport pier. The body of Javier Alarcon, 25, Placen-- tia, was £oand floating face down past the IUrlline near the pier. " · Alareon's body was clad in blue swim- ming trunks. He dTowned eight days ·before In heavy !W1 before Ufeguarda could reach him from shore. Alarcon, lifeguards saJd, had been floating on the nft and was having trouble staying on. Companions helped him back on once, then he fell off again and disappeared in the surf before lifeguards could -reach him. Thailand and said, "Wt and the nation.! of South.east A11la ahare a vital ·&take In the future peat< and prosperity of Ulia region." Niz:on flew ln from Jakarta on tbei third 'l\epele" of Pnthkat'•. -· Vllil-Pep i leg of hli seven naUon · touf. Security mea11Ures were: unusually heavy at the rain-drenched airport. poss.ibly because: guerrillas attacked a U.S.~ Force hue 4or mil~ norttleast of Bangkok hOurs before be arrived, wound.lng·a aentry and damaging two planes. Nixon said .~ the ipecial atate:rQeot ·that "our detennination· to. bonor' out..mm· mitme:nta ill fully ccmistent with.our CCXJ. victioos that the nations of Asia CID and must increaslly 11 h Du Id' er · the respoMlbillty for achlevloi peace and progrees ih the area.'' He ope:ned bis statement by rpeaking of American determination to honor ltl commitments ln Asia and the Pacific. "We will honor those commltmenls - not ooly· beca~ we consider them solemn obllgaUon.11.. but equallJ im- portantly because we fully recognize that we and the naUon.t of. SOutheast. Asia abare 1 vital stake ip the future peace ' (See NIXON, Pase Z) • Plas.tl~ .. Planted . ' ~- ' Evergre.en 'Grnts' Cqvers Median Strip . . • I. . ' DAn.'f' PILPT II., ....... ROLLIN!) OUT PLASTIC . Jack McElmMI 'Pienta' Gr••• Gardena Surfer Hurt at Wedge By ~OUN VALTERZA or ,.. c.ft1 '"*" ,.... 1t bu 1 lush, BJ'ffn look with lbort· cn>fl!ed -&imllar to tbe turf of • good basellall di-..!. - But the 1,000 lquare f .. t. or •gnu" which city cteWs have "planted'' on two ' median atripa in Newport Beach will never feel the blade: of a ·mower. Its plastic. Tb• turf, commercially tnown u ~·0uro Grasa" b an experiment 1n beautWoaUon wtth minimum main- tenance. "We'll wash It o!f every three months and ~ a VJCUum CJeaMr over tt,.. 'lbat'11 about all," said city P1rb DJ.rec. for Cal, Slew.art. So far the workmen hav~ glued (held until hardened by besvy bop) the blight green turf at the median atrlp at !2nd Street Ind Newport Boulevard In fronl ol City Hall and other s!riJ>I! at Finler Avenue and .Newport and .l:itb Street.- At the latter location the grass will get Its most severe te.st -auto traffic. Stewart uld the 30th Street strtp does not have-curbs, so durability can be eva· luated easily. The material, which costa '15 cent& to Install (25 cents more than real grass) should save money, instead, m inafn .. tenance. Real grass costs a dime a square fQOt to maintain each year. Plastic grass cost.a a penny. Besides the cost aspect, the substitute is nearly indestructible, Jll manufacturer aays. A match can't get lt burning and van- dals can't u~t St ~(It's bound to the pavement with a otroilf glue). The turf ~ Is c:rownlng median atrips for tbe city of Lakewood, wti.re ij ba. been highly llUCCeMful; Stewart said. Several areas of · tbe San Fernande. Valley have l~ too. CoSf.t M ... is begi1'- nlng a similar program. Cout Weat,her Child Ci·itically Hm·t in W reek A Newport Beach child remained in critical conditioo at Cost.a Me s a Memorial Hospital today after suffering head injuries in an auto accident Satur· dO)'. Throngs Cheer Kennedy A loooe bellyboard struck the leg of a Gardena .body surfet1 Saturday at the tWboa Penl118Ula Wedge, severing a large tendon bel\ind IS knte, pOl!Ce said. Steve D. Ishlinoto, 18,, told police be was hit by, the . sm1JI,. •\J/UD4(Uled 1urfboard at 11 :20 a.m. · He . WH treatOd 11 Jl\>W ·M>imiK;,j ~l\i,iJor,'a five.inCJ, &!wi\~h;. Jcl! ~and Jhe•leV ..... teQdotb • •' Clear 1kle1 a1id continued mrm weather ·•re In store for the coast for moat of the week, with ·the 11sual morning-and evening overcast. Temperature& to stay in th& upper 7011, George D. RoberlS. Jr .. 2, or 2312 Aralla SL. was injured when the car driven by his father, George D. R<>berts. l\'U hit broad-side at the intersection or Paularlno Ave. and Red HUI Ave., Costa tifesa. Robert and his wife, Andrea. were treated for minor-ipjurfes and released by tli<ir doctor. Fred R. Foister, 22, Garden Grove. driver of the other car was arrested by Costa Mesa Police fGr felony drunk driv· log. Police sald Foister wa, driving south on Red Hill Avenue and failed to st<>p at a i top.aign at the corner of Paularino Avenue. HYANNIS POJl'r,'Mua. (UPI) -Ctles of "We're with you,· Ted," greeted Sm. Edward M. Kennedy aa he enttred St, Xavier Church here, bis third pubUc ap- pearance since the fatal accident Wt weekend which cauaed the drownina of pretty blonde secretary Miss Mary Jo Kopa::hne. l\'""edy, accpinpo!ll<il by his prognant wlte, "Joan, and two of hil three cbildttn sat motionless In his pew &mday as Msgr. Wllltam Thompson read from the epistole of SL Paul: · 1'No· test has been sent you that does not come to all men. Morever, God keeps blJ promile. H& will nOt let you be !Uted beyond your strength., Ht will 111ve you with the test 1 way of emerging from it • '1t1cceasf'ully, and you may'be able to en· dure 1t. ·~ The Mauachusetb Democrat wu, mobbed and applauded as he entered joo emerged from the wtiife clipbo&nf. Chtu'Ch While thousandl o(~cCJn. tfnued to flood •the Ken • i · ' ' urging him not lo regfgn. • • 1 ~ , · In 'his dramaUc teiev!Jlon std~ Friday night Kennedy had sald that his admission of gullt lo leaving the _,.bl the fatal accident bad caused Jllhi . lo ponder the poalbllil}' of ..w..,llifcollJ.t u.s~ Senile seal. • At that time he called on 1he ~ ol Malsacbusetts for tbtir .optnton, ad~ce and prayer1 lo help guide him In reach!llC I doc\3ion about blJ political fUlun. ' Rene Page of Marshfield, a regional wpervisbr of the Western U n I on Telwapll ·co.. office In lf)lanni•. said SundoY ...,...here berween 25,IJOO. arid ~.ooe 1 telegrams :bad ·11eeit ileliveted 'lo the,Compounct'linC:e·~ morttinil, • filU?'.I lie detcribed .. comparable to' the nwliber lost 'llUDIJller urging Kennedy ·to aeek the DemocraUc presidenUal 11omtna. tlon. ,l.n Booton, W'8lem Unlo'D Assj, Operations Manager John Annand said SundoY; "'llley'ro itll! comlni In prtlly heavy;bbt nothlilg UR t)'ld1y lilghl." . He ~t..i thO nilmber ol lflies acl- d'resied lo'' Iterined1 0l< ellller fftannla Port or lOSt<>n . -an bf.In.-~ · '(Seo KEllNl!IIY, taio If Steele Markets ' • NEW YORK CAP) -The *lock market wu,Jolted to another llhorp looo todly, •• II!• down Jmd which cartied It to - Rlwa<la>t Weell·contfnued. (See q\IOIOUOlll a..'· '".iftit) • ' ' .-.ges .~ . · 'l'r~i ·wa•.l•lrlY, 1ctlv~. ~ !I-. clooo; Decllnts'•ran up a leed cl 11iou1 11100 issues aver advances. • JNSmE TODAY Sei~: .,t:ipotf.t Qlld , fdemj~~on, ~ G fluft# ·foe*, 1 orli Jillplng icltnlisis to unlock ·~· of tht my1t..U1 at , IM moon•1 composition. Ser Paot .s. ' ........ ,. C•IMnltt 1 ~-ar.r. Cl!MftlWli .. 1f ~ ....... 1• DMfWil • ,, ·== . . " . ......... ,,..... t• ............ u Nlll U.W. UI J . 1 .-----------------------~--------..,,.,...,.._.,,.......,~--·· -.. . .. . ----. -"""'- " N • . UPI le....,,.,. CROWO GATHERS AT POST OFFICE HOPING SEN. KENNEDY WILL CALL FOR HIS MAIL In Hyannis Port, Busy P01t•I Clerks •nd a Ri1• in the Summer Tourist Trade From Page I KENNEDY •.• thrOugb Hyannis -at "very roughly 35,000 to 45,000," and uid extra help was lltiD en duty trying to clear up a large backlog. A Kennedy aide said on Saturday the messaces were running 100 to 1 in Ken- nedy's favor and the Senator "obviously wu moved" by the "overwhelming'' fa vorable responSe to ht• televised plea for advice. The committee to Keep Sen. Edward M. Keen<dy In public llie, dubbed KEEP for abort reported Sunday it bad received about. l0,000 letters. telegram11 uid telephone calls urging Kennedy not to resign. Mrs. Rita Salk, New York chairman ol the committee &aid the messages came from "almost all so st.ates." She uported branch commttlffl were being formed in Loi Angeles, Detroit and St. Louis. Speculation mow:ited as to wben Ken- nedy would return to Washington since the Senate wu erpec:ted to vote lat.er this week on the Safeguard anlibaltistic mWile system to which Kennedy ia op- .iposed. But lbe aide said lhl Senator "Md no Immediate plans for the tutu:re . •• 1be aide also said Kennedy still wa' ••very fluid" and has set no deadline to decide whether be would re!!llgn his Senate seat For tbe aecoocI day of Ille cloudy, damp week.end. the 31-year~ld Senator crul.sed on the family ,yacht, the Marlin. for near- ly two boon and beached the ship at a cove in Nantucket Sound to picnic with his wife, his slster-ln-law Etbel and i;:everal of the families' children. Cardinal Richard Cushing of Boston, a lona: Ume family friend, visited the Com· pound bri.tly. The Sunday afternoon quiet on the three-line:!. streets adjacent to the com- pound in Ulla: mid-Cape Cod resort com- munity was ihattered by a nolsy, hour- long demonstration when 20 college-aged ywtlu protested Kennedy's explanation of the accident· Robert Naramore, 18, of Rochester, N.Y., the leader of the JfOUp, said the mem~ were "disgusted, dbmayed and shocked" at the speech "because it ap- pe.aled strictly to the emotions.'' Storm Anna Nears MIAMI (UPI) -Tropical storm Anna, finl of the year, blew up in the central AUanllc with 55 mile an hour winds today and weathermen said it should become a full-blown hurricane within 36 hours. • DAllV PllOl CJU.NGI COAn "* rltt~ c:CMPANY S:t~ N, W1M ~Wirf-~ J.,~ I. C11rl" Vlu ...,......, 9IMI °""'_, .._tn Th-·• kH•l1 ..... Tht"'•t A. M1rphh1t _....,,u.,. . J•,.1'11• f, Cotl+•s --Cltr a:•IW ---1:.111 Wttl l.tM1 11111 .. er.I M1lW111 M.lttiu P.O .... 1111, 91,6) --Qlll ... : • """ '" ,.,... L-'-"' m ,_, ,.._ ---IMdll • ltll 111'•1 -- No R~k Riots ' -2,000 Beach -¥ ouths Enjoy Concert BY RUDI NIEDZIE!.'ilil Of ... °""' '""' ll*" Three Now Generation bands walled withollt riot in Huntington Beach Sunday nlghl The three top name bands "gassed" close to 2,0IO teenagers at the HunUngton Beach Hfgb School gymnasium without the riot that some predicted, without ln- Ci<rents, without ar~t.s. About l,SOO locaJ youths paid $3.$0 to see and hear ''Fusion," "Cat 1>fother and the A1l·Nlgbt Newsboys" and "Canned Heat" jam on the small stage erected on one side of the huge gym. It was not quite enough to make the event a financial success, though, since an attendence of approximateJy 2,700 was needed to break eve.n. Thia means that the city of Haotington Beach, which underwrote the Youth Coalition Comm ittee sponsored concert to lhe tune of nearly '10,000 faces a lo.ss in the att• of $3,000. Yet despite the loss, f\-tayor Jack Green was pleased by it all. "I know 80me or you thil\k that the establishment is all bad," he told the cheermg crowd. "But this should be proof th.at every once in .a while we do ~etbing rlghti'' "I am not overly concerned with the finances.," be said after the concert. There will be a major e:rpense to the cit{. but It's really no dUferent than the sur • ing contelt •and the· Fourth of July Parade wbicll coat. the city money." "I thought it wtnt oft beautifully. It was really quieter than most kid-get togethtra and I think It served well to establish communication wllb Ute kids." Hundreds of cars packed the parking lot for the concert whose electrified sounds soon haad the youths: and a con- siderable number of adults gyrating to the pulsating beat. Uniformed police as well a s plainclothes detectives who were out en mll.S.!le had an easy night and did not have lo be called in to quiet any disturbances. While the three banda were playing on the stage a light show of cosmic pro- portion played on an enormous white sheet hung behind the stage. Most of the audience was content to sit on the hardwood floor and just watch the first band, "Fusion," which played • fair- ly reserved and dignified set as far as rock bands go. But wben "Cat Mother and the All· Night New1boy1" launched into their set, a fairly large group unable to contain the vibrations gathered at the left of the slage (or impromptu dancing. .. Canned Heat," as ezpected, literally lore them up and had them standing on their fett, ecstatically moving with the music. · · \ Abolrt 500 teenagers wilhout the Jinan· ciaJ means who were gathered out.side catching snatchu of sound• through the open door, were Jet in for the "Heat" after lhe interm.i&sion, bringing the au· dience up to 2,000. Valley Council to Drop Fraud Suit Over Recall Fountain Valley city councilmen will apparently rtverse their decision to have City Attorney Edwin Martin seek prose- cuUon against aJleged fraudulent prac· ti<:es in the city's h e a t e d recall campaign. La.st week the council voted 3 to 2 - with Councilmen John Harper and Ed- ward Just strongly opposed -to have Martin prosecute recall petitioners lf possible for aJleged fraudulent practlce.s. But now, Mayor Robert Schwerdtfeger has indicated to City Manager James Neal that perhaps the city should follow Councilman Jusl'a suggesUon and ~ Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks to investigate the entire recall campaign. J)Jrlng last Tuesday's council session Schwerdtfeger and Vice Mayor Donald Frtgeau had both bluted Hicks' appar- ent inactivity when requested by them to look Into th& activities of recall sup- porter1. According to them, Hie~ had said .he preferred not to become involved in a ''political matter." Just said he had also approached Hicks with complaints from both sides of the recall battle and recetved the same an· • From Page 1 HIPPIES ... that would be an asset to our com- munity." George explained that many people who come into his shop have told him that they used to rent summer homes in the area, but they don't do it anymore "because they're •!raid for their children lo be near thia crowd ." George, who opened his dress shop a year ago, concluded that if the com· munity were to unite and publiclze the fact that "we are not interested in tum· Jng our city otter to this group , I am sure "'ith.ln a year we could rid ourselves or this elemtnt.''- Other signers or lhe petition included Francis Ursini. of The Surfer: Ramonoa McClincUct, Tm: CtUc Fashion Wigs · lA~nce Soot, Scotty's Fish Fry; Q. F: Fredericks, Henry's Groceries; BUI Bush, Newport Tackle Store : Harry Slegfrled, stag Biii' It Uquo.-Start: Nicholas Ur- sini, Ocean Front Hotel : and 1-tic:Nel Hurst, Fatso's BW"gets. , -··---~-.....__.__ swer. "l don't believe the district at- torney is being unfair to· either aide," added JU&!. Just suggested th.at the council, acting as a body rather than as individuals, re- quest investigation of the recall on both sides. 'T'he Mayor has now exprustd aa:ree- mr:nt with that plan. Ne,vport Stops Speeding Youth Police this morning arrested a 19- year old Costa Mesa. youth on reckless driving charges after he allegedly drove for more than a mile in Newport Beach e:tceedlng 100 miles an hour at one time.. Kenneth Michael Burger, 14$9 Deau· ville Ave., was booked on the charge and held nn $186 ha.ii. Officers said the alleged recklesa driv· ing started at 22nd Str«t and Newport Boulevard. By lhe time the auto crossed over the Arches overpass northbound it had hit the 100 mark, officers allege. Burger was stopped and arrested at Ne\vport and Industrial \Yay at 2:1S a.m. Fron• Pqe 1 NIXON ... and prosperity of thia region." Nizon will be tn Bangkok for three days and the war in neighboring Vietnam and the Communist threat to Thailand will be the main topics of di8cusalon. It was generally believed he might Uke ad- vantage of an eleuUc acheduJe here for a quick vl!it to Vietnam. He said H their appearance were the only distasteful aspect •bout them. it would be no problem. "But unfortunately, as many of them are on drugs, they have to support this costly habit and one of the ~·ays they do thil Is by shopliftlng and pe.nbandllng on the 1treets. In Thailand be faced considerable di..s&aUsfactlon over hll plan enunclattd In the PbiUpplnel and lndonella to provide ann1 .nd auppllt.1 for Allen countrlu so they could work for peace without the United St.a.lei be1n& involved witb American troops u 11 la In Vldoam. ' ' Guerrillas Hit Base·: .. Thai Attack Precedes Nixon by 21/2 Hour$. · ~Q!\OK .lvPIJ -A band of 111<1' rjllu sllppld Into a U.S. Air II... In' northtaslern Thailand today, shot and ~ an American Hlllty, damqod IWO catlO ~ and dlaruplod opera· tlons with e:rp!Ollves about 21h hours be- fore Pt<Sjdent NIJon arrived in BOJ!i- kol: •. 1be raid at Uban took plKe aboul 2 a.m. Nlion's Air Force One jetliner landed in Bangkok, 400 miles to the southwest, about 4:30 a.m. The U.S. Embassy reported the attack and described the raiders as "intruders" believed to be Communist tuerri.lllia. Measure to Aid College Over First Hurdle A State Senate bill that could mean aJ much as P million in construction. funds for Saddlebaci: Junior College has cleared the Asaembly Ways and Means Committee and is due lor floor action soon. The bill, S. B. 50ll by Sen. D o n a 1 d Grunsky (R-Watsonvllle) would provide funds for · lbe new community collea:e otherwise not eligible under $6S million Junior Colle1e Construction Act. Michael T. Collins, president of the Saddlebaci: College Board or Trusteu. represented the college at commiUee hearings IUt week. The bill has already been passed by the State Senate and was 1 p pr o v e d unanimously by the Assembly committee. If the blll ls approved by a vote of the Assembly and pa.Sled on by Gov. Ronald Reagan, Saddleback's share would be us- ed for co111truction of a permanent raclli· ty due to start in 1971. Newport Seeking Biting Canine Newport Beach police animal coolrol oUlcers today lsaued an appeal for in- formation on a 1 a r g e, reddiJh.brown dog, possibly a dobennan pimcher, which bit a U.year-0ld girl as ahe walked on Newport Pier Saturday . If the dog is not found, Melanie Sue Belk of Riverside, wlll have to undergo the Pasteur treatment for rabies. Melanie received a tw~inch shoulder cut from the bite which occ111Ted without provocation at l :45 p.m. She told officers the dog was on a .leash held by a teen-age youth wltb a beard. His glrl companion was wearing long yellow pants, she said. Anyone with pertinent information can call animal control officers at 673-2211. Agriculture Goods Signed to Saigon SAIGON (UPI) -Amer I c .a n Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker today signed another $18.2 million worth of agricukural aid over to the South Viet- namese government. This brought to $800 million the amount allotted to South Vietnam from the Unit- ed Stale!!! since 1958 under the Food Ior Freedom Program. American mission olficials said the im· port purchase order sJgned today waa the fourth for 1969 and was made up of col- t.on. dairy products, wheat flour, tobacco and grains. \ Ubon lies about 75 111lles Wt3l of the ~ Uan province of Champusak, where both North Vietnamese and Pathet Lao ~uni.st troops have been on the of. fenat\re for the past month. Tha attack: wu the BeCOnd against U.S. air bases in Thailand .since Ameri-can warplanes were b~l in four years ago to bomb North 'Vletn&m and sup- port allied troops in Soutll Vietnam. For NlxcWi, ..... to review U.S. eoqi- mltmtnt.I 1n Thailand, It underlined what American and Thal officials have described u an upsurge in guerrilla ac- tivities In the northeastern provinces. The embassy IMOWlcement said an ' Touchy Beesness Air Force security policeman was patro'I. line with a sentry dog when he spttttd the five guerrillas in.side the wire fence. He challellied illem and they ope!l4tl fire, BlllhOy wounding him and Ms dOf. Offlclats tdenWJed the Stntry as l\~si­ neth D. O'Dell, 20, of Mount Prospect, m., and aald he was In good condillon with a minor leg wound. 1'tle guerrillas then .cittered and set off five satchel charges of dynamite. dama~ ·two C47 planes and · knocktng the field s ground control approach sys- tem out of commission for almost three houra. All five t!caped,_ apparently un - hanned. ""· • ' .. U'I TtltllfllN It didn't hurt a bit, sajd Gratiot, Wis., beekeeper Lawrence Gans- hert as he stuck his hand into honeycomb and came up with a hand- ful of bees. None of the bees stung him, he said. Reagan Reyeals Proposals To Cut Government Cost SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today announced a 1970-71 elec- tion year economy plan aimed at rolling back the rising cost of California state government. Reagan unveiled the proposal at a special news conference attended by his top advisers and. secretaries of the.four sltte super agencies. The Republican chief executive said that in drafting the budget for the next fiscal year, •·we will allocate specific sums to each agency and department of the state g<1vernment, and that sum will be below the amount the department or artncy is DOW receiving.'' The budget for the current fiscal year Is $6.2 billion and reflects an increase or about $500 million over the previous year·s budget. l{e identified further economy as the No. l goal of his administration and said the second goal was to "hold the employ- ment level in the eiecutive branch below the levels ol employment we found when we took over in 1967." Asked direcUy whether he was planning lo seek a second four-year term next year, Reagan replied, "that's one we don't answer fellas ." Press secretary Paul Beck outlined at the start of I.he news conference that questions would be limited to the governor's economy proposal. llfen"t 115, 113.SOknit tbir-t&, $10 l\fen'• S9.50, 110 apL &birt&, 16.50 i.te.n '• 18&:19 •port ehirta at 16 ,.Im 'a 16 &. S7 1porl 1birt.A at 14.50 Men'• Taylor Mad~ Spalding Shoes, broken lo'"" ~ price? Jack Bidwell's July clearance sale all this week! IV OMEN'S STUFF REDUCED, 115 Bermuda1 reduced to Ill t16 Bermud .. reduc:ed to$12 114-117 Bumod•a., 250(0 off! 118 it.night pante now 114 117 •tn..ijlll:ht pant1now113 11~ blouses ttduft!d 10110 S 9 blouvs rednet!d lo$ 7 $7to130 blou11ee., 25% offl I've marked do"TI my entire etock of spring and mmmer merchandise, C!Jxcepl for cer- tain •taplea that I reorder throupoul the year, such u "·bite 1birto, black IOCb, etc. All from reJ!Ular Bidwell otdU. No apecia1 pu...ia-or any 1ocb hanky panky, 1'len •11 •165 111lt. reclaeecf to 1135 Men'1'145..al .. roda-'io '116 Men'• 1140 nib ftldaeed to •112 Men'• 1135 •ult. redu.ced to 1108 Men'• •us.,.,,. rodaeed 10 • 92 1'leo'alllO•ufbredaeedto• 88 1'1ea'• •100 .wi. redattid to I 80 1'1en•a I 95 tali. reduced to I 76 Men'• I 90 Rlta ndueed to I 12 Men'• I 85 eutu red.aced to S 68 •120_. ...... ....i • ...iio• 96 •Uo 1port coata .....tneed 10 • 88 uoo.-icoa1e....ia-i10• so • 90 1port cootueduood IO • 75 ' 175 aporl eoaia redue.d IO 160 170 1port CMts redueed to •56 •65 tport coata reduced lo 152 160 •port C(Nlla redu~ to •48 •ss •port cot1ta red.aced to 144 •so sport cot1ll redaoed to 140 Men'• 140 11.aeb reduced IO '-'2 Men'• $35 •lack1 redueed to 128 l'lea'1 l32.SO lladu now at 1%6 M..,•, •25 alaebroda-' to •20 Men'• M6 eard1pn eweaten, •so Men'• '35 cable dl'dfpm •l 120 Mm'••l8 r:alloftl' nreaten, 112 Other men •...,.,en reduced 250/o Mtn'••l6, •17,U81mlloblm, 112 128 tennl1 (lreeee1 reduced to 121 S26 lenni11 dtt!l&e1 redueed to 11.9 gJS..S33 tennis dttMe&, 25% off! 130 dreNel reduced to 122 128 dresee1 reduced to 121 126 dttne•rcdnecd to 119 •23 to 190 .i......., 25% oil! 119 altil'tl redueed IO 114 118 •klrta reduced to S13 11611drt.ttdueed to 112 U 5 to tl3 oklrte, 25% oil! 19 Danaldn to pt !'educed to 17 18 Danddn topt redueed to 16 17 o.n.11dn topt redu«d to 15 Women'a 112 Topaiden no• $8 Women"• •14 Bernardo suedee, 17 Jack Bidwell 3467 Via Udo next to Richard'• Muliet and tlie Lido Tb .. 1rea1 lheentrance to Udo !ale. 6734510. All acre of free parkina •t rear of thi11tore. Copyrlpt 1969, Jack Bidwell • ' Celebrations are In order for 1700 Costa Mesa chll· dren who have been traveling Magic Miles through books this summer. On the reading program's concluding day, Satur· day, Aug. 2, parties will take place in Mesa Verde and Costa Mesa branch libraries, which have sponsored the seven weeks of excitiqg voyages through printed words. In keepillg with Mesa Verde Library's theme of See America First, two folk singers with their guitars will entertain the children with authentic American folk melodies in a program et 10 a.m. Youngsters also will be enthralled by the m~gic tricks qt "Mysterioso the Great" before they are served refreshments. Costa Mesa Park will be the scene of tbe Costa Mesa branch party, also to take place on Aug . 2 at 10 :30 a.m. Performing for the oceasion will be the Ta Tanka Clan, Order 'Of the Arrow~ of Boy Scouts. The roii.sing mllsic of lhe Scots also will fill the air, when Dr. Donald H. Cavanaugh o! Santa Ana tunes up on the bagpipes. • The program will be followed by refreshments, served by Friends of the Library. At Costa Mesa branch library, where children have been traveling the yellow brick road of Oz land, each cb_ild who completed 10. books received a certificate of achievement and a wrist compass. Further 10 volumes read entitled the children· to receive blue paper cars and ride instead of walk. In Mesa Verde library branch, a giant United States map which highlighted 10 national monuments encouraged children to read still further. I AMERICA FIRST -In keeping with the theme See America First, a program of American folk songs wlll highlight the party Saturday, Aug. 2, ending the summer reading program at Mesa Verde Library. Enjaying a preview o(.tbe folk music presented by guitarist John Cannady are (left lo right) Manny Velez,.,Jane Halloran and Julie Huffer. · .. BEA ANDERSON, Editor ,,_.y, J\lly lt. Ifft M ...... U New Post Brings Ne~.1 ,Chal tenge . ' • By JEAN WILLIAMS Of "" O.ltr Pllet Sl•ll ''People are most important," said Sister Frances Dunn, now in the process of relinquishing her post as administrator of Children'• Hospital of Orange County to take .up a new and far flung challenge. De-emphasis of the institutionalized aspect of the nuns' lives and a shift to the person-centered approach is the concern of the dynamic, youth- ful-appearing woman elected to a four-year term as President of the Con- gregation by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange. Her administrative duties will entail supervision of eight hospitals in California, 32 grade schools and high schools from Eureka to San Diego, a hospital and school in Lubbock, Tex., a youth hostel in Australia and four schools on the islands of Buka and Nissan in the North Solomons. Personal visits to the various locales will please the nun, who is especially looking forward to a first hand view of the installations on Ne\v Guinea. St. Joseph's nuns began work there as assistants to the Marist fathers befoie the advent of World War II, she explained. Forced by the Japanese to abandon their work, they were evacuated by submarine and on1y returned after the close of the war. Important these days is the teaching of sewing to the island women, who make clothing not on1y for themselves and their families but also arc able to market their handiwork. Nursing care is given the sick, and well baby clinics are established. The teachers and nurses on the islands travel to their patients in the villages by means of land rovers and jeeps and children come to school via canoe. ·Commenting on the work she is leaving as administrator of Chil· dren's Hospital in Orange County -where St. Joseph's sisters are under contractual agreement with the board of directors to act as directors of administration and of nursing -Sister Dunn said the medical facility there ts "a whole new world" where special care js given the acutely ill child and the one in need of special diagnostics. She has been administra- tor there .since 1964, arriving one month before its opening. Children's Hospital, Orange County Medical Center and Long Beach Memorial Hospital all are part of one tralning 'program, she said, and now th' hospital is affiliated with UCI for pediatric training in connection with the new Medica1 School established recenUy on the UC I campus. "It's wonderful to be part of a teaching program," Sister O_unn commented further. "It seems to keep everybody on their toes to be part ~f the teaching profession." Again she emphasized the imporance of plac· ing new nuns in the order ln the jobs they are most qualified to fill, in a new effort to dea1 with each "person as a person" in the St. Joseph's order. • Fren ch Fash ions . A·dmiring some o( the nearly new French raCk de.Signer fashions to be offer- ed for sa1e on the first· Thursday of each month, beginning Thursday, Aug. 7, in the Newport Beach Assistance League Thrift Shop are {left to right) M~s. O. l-f. Calhoun, provisional; Mrs. J. Robert Lawson, treasurer, and Mrs. Vic- tor Yack, another provisional All are members of. Las Reinas Auxiliazy. The French rack v.rill be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The native Ca1ifomian, who was born in h1onrovia and went lo schools there until she attended Mills College where she received her de- gree, was wearing a modem blue t)Vo-piece suit as she talked within the mother house of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Orange. · IS.. NEW CHALL ENGE, Pago Ill MU.LTIPLE our1 ~s Si1t1r Franc•• Dunn Coffee Date Gives Drip GrotJnds for Sleepless Nights DEAR ANN LANDERS: Six years ago l 1T1et a girl through mutual friends. The ging wanted to go lo a movie t had already seen. The girl wasn't particularly interested in the movie and iiuggest.ed t.l}at we just walk around town. We had a pleasant evening and ended up at a coffee bous ~. When the check came il was Sl.10. J was 60 cents short. J searched In rwery pocket, knowing I wouldn't find any more money. Finally, the girl made a joke of it ~said, "Let me treat you." I agreed. i never saw her •Iler that because we n\oved out of town a few montM later. l'vt thought about her many time& since and I'm 90rry I didn't keep in touch. I ltitow where she lives and I'd Uke to send htr the $2. 10 plus Interest, but I'm ali'aid "ANN LANDERS she'1 got 'me down as a heel. What do you think? -DEBT UNPAID DEAR UN: Don't tead money. Send, ln1tead, a bouquet of Oowen, a bt• of candy or a book. Att.lcb a note thanktnc her for tM coffee and apoktcbt for belns 11.s yean late. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our ret.arded son, Al, ii nearly 13. Hb mentality ha.s been al the three year level for the past five yean. . Al ls large for his are and 1tlting slronger all the time. 1 can•t,handle him as· I once did. This past year he ha1 beaten up bis younger brotberl stveral times. They are not penntUed to lltike him. My husband gels furious and bit.B Al with a be.IL J can 't bear to~ thil, yet I realize somtthin& must be dohe. Three doctor• havt told us to ln- at.ltutlonallze the boy but I can't bring myself to do It. My mother says God has 11enl us this child to test our Christian metUe and we must bear ·this crtm and not seek easy answers. I need your advic<. -SLEEPLESS NIGIITS, TORTURED DA VS DEAR SLEEPLESS AND TORTURED: Ytu llave alrudy couea advtce from thrff authcrrWet wbo are m,a~ dOMr .. tbe lftaallol ~ I aa. I loope Y" Illa IL Aod pleoM lell 1"< ........ ~ 1oo11..---. ·-·" "n11 uswer." It 11 a •unc.i1 DMVt, lla1 ellea Ille boll IOloUoo lor ,ii - DEAR ANN LANDERS: Some time ago yOu printed a l~ter from a young man Who wa~ heartbroken because he and his girl friend had gone too far and her parents would not let her see him again. The one sentence In his letter that I wu struck by went 10methln.g like this: "I'd give anythln1 If I could Uve that pa.rt of my life over qain.. I would be perfectly content just to hold her hand ." I wish you'd reprint that letter, Ann. So many youn1 1lrls today feel lhey must be tuu1IQ' permissive In order to keep their boyfri.octa interested. The trulll II the boyt would 1ladly lake "no" for an answer. In fact they'd prefer It. We have a lovely daughter w..bo, reads your column reaulariY and lhiJ notion is one which she and some of Mr glr1 friends need 1o 1et through lhelr he¥!s. Please? -CONCERNED MOTHER DEAR ~10THE1t: Your letter 1UVl!d lb! purpose. TUnks for wrtlla1. Too many couples go from matrimony to acrimony . Don't let your marrla1e &p before It gel! •tarted. Send far AM Landers' booklet, "Marriage -What to Expect." Send your request to ' AM Landers In care of your newipaper mclosing flO c:enll ln coin and 1 lone, 1t1mped, aeU-addrmed envelope. Ann Landtts will be 1lld to help you wllll your ptOblems. Send them tcr her Ill caro of lhe DAILY PILOT, enclosina a &elf·addrwed, st.amped envelope. ' I Horoscope Sagittarius: Avoid Efforts Smart 'n Simple ·' Scattering TUESDAY JULY 29 By SYDNEY OMARR L1&nar poeldoe coaUnue1 f1vor1We for fllllla&. GROOMING · TIP: Calvt1, ankJti are 1cceoted. KltO• OrlJ ud cboote apparel IC-- con!ID&IY. ARIES (March 21-April 11): Strengthen ties with friends . Do not let diJtance become a bmler. Key is to enlarge horizons and contact!. Some are more than willlng to help you fuUill wi!hes. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You now get chance to gain added recognition. Some who may have doubled y o u r capabilities reverse gear. Be calm in dealing with those in authority. Don't throw away major opportunity. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Apply original methods. Don't be taken in by tlKl6e with old storlet, methods • .Be percep- tive, creative, Your influence spreads -favorably -if you write and advertl!e. CANCER (June 21.July 22)' Take stock of inventory. Be aware of credl1.s, debits. Make financial plans. Be factual , frank -especially w I t h yourstU. Your intuition is fine . But don't fee.I you can by-pass essentials. Police Wives Pla r.i Party Potpour ri LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' You do best by playing waiting game. Offers come your way. Be sure you have ei:pert cOUMel. Be versatile. Look beyond immediate indications. Don't panic. Take time lo ev1luate possibilities. Newport Beach Police Wives Auxiliary is planning an annual potluck dinner on Tuesday, Aug. 12, and Officer Jon Schorle seems pleased to accept .a second helping or a tempting chafing dish concoc· tion from ,his wife, who will be hostess for the Former Miss America event. Looking on in approval is Mrs. Wayne Con· nolly (left) who is asslsting in plans for the affair. The couples will add extra fun to the evening by dressing in children's clothing. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22 )' Las Olas Consumers Treated Royally Seats New President NEW YORK (UPI) -The telephones ringing constantly. id.ting seems a strange one the tall beauty Jfabbinj: .a bite for a ronner Miss America, of an ordered-in. sandwich and sipping a soft drink as she standing behind a man.sized takes calls, asks her staff to desk wih a battery of check out t~ and that pro- NAOMI ROBINSON Augutt Woddlng \ blem and talkl: h•atedly abQut how the consumer constantly ls bilked. But there she i.s, Bess Myerson Grant, who as Bess Myerson won the beauty and talent title in l!MS, now the wa~dog for consumers in the nation'.9 largest city. Mrs. Grant b Ntw York's Conunissioner of Coruumer Affairs. She_ and ·some 300 employe1 are the clearing house for COMllmer com - plaints, cheek advertising and packailng claims for validity, regulate city markell and ad- mirWter city li~. When Mayor John V . Lindsay, a Republican, ap- Shoes Tell Storv Well ' pointed Mrs. Grant, a She 's campaigning ro r :P.1rs. Marie Fouls was lir Democrat, to the $25,000 a regulations which would re-stalled president of Las 018.ll Toastmlltteu Club of Hun· year po1t in February, he call-quire retailers lo label pro-1ln 11 0 n ~ch during ed il the "first ol its kind to ducts with the cost o! each ceremonies in Fr a n co is be. created by a local govern-ounce, or pound or fool so the restauranl. ment in Ule~nation." shopper "knows preci s e I y Theme for the upcoming Mrs. Grant hopes that her what sh · tu' f h e IS ge ng or er year is Stairway to &"ency can become a P'"' mone Th · I 'l • y. e economy size sn Leadership: Today We Trai.n- totype tor others -"every ci· always the best buy." She then _ Tomorrow we Lead. ty and county around the read the fine print on the con-Other officers are Mn. country &hould have a place tents of several supermarket Rollo west. first vice presi- where the consumer can seek lie · h ff' t ms in er o ice o prove dent·, Miss Joya Sexton, st· redttSs," she said. "We'll h · make available all t h e er point. cond vice president; Mis.s The nation already has a Marge Dewey, secretary, and guidelines we 've developed." fair labelling act, but Mrs. Mrs. William Va 11 u ti n l, One oI her goals : "To pro--Grant argues it is not enough. treasurer. mulgate legislallon lo target ln .1968, she said, Consumers Further information in on the man who cheats, vie· Union sent a group of women resarding visiting a meeting ti.rnizes the inllCant." She shopping and found that they'd may be obtained by calling wanl.S to broaden the scope o{ d h the agency so that among ma e 38 wrong c olces in get-Mrs. Clarence Hendrick.!on, th ting the most for their dollar. 897-8023. other lnss the city might sue What can the consumec do·p;;io;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mtl merchants who deceive the '11 customers and return the Immediately? damages to the victims. Mrs. Myerson offered these At present , she sa id, the suggestions -Educate dishonest businessman can yourself in so far as possible defraud, knowing the con· on reading contenl.S of can or sumer usually cannot afford box. Steer clear of weights or the lawsuit to r e c 0 v e r measurements in h a r d - t o • damages. translate fractions. If a box "'We are not locked in com- says "IO cents off" or "20 bat with honest business1nen." cents orr regular price;• de- she said. "But I do think mand to know, "Off-what?" HAL AHISCHER HEARING AIDS Cw1tom Aur1I Ampllflcatlon NO SALISM!N 3409 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR Betrothal Disclosed BURLtNGTON,Vt. (UPI) -business for its own Image "The consumer has forgot- "Puttlng your bett r 0 0 t :::.~}d war on the problem ten how powerful she can be," For AppohtflfteRt 675-3833 forward" means wearing the j""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'i'iidi Miini.iGicianiti. i right shoes when applying for The betrothal of Naomi Alelandra Rob i nson to Charles Anthony Ramsden of San Francisco has been an- nounced by her parent!, Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. Robinson of Corona del Mar. The son of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Ramsden of Alameda Is at present doing graduate work at Stan~ord Univer~lty in business adm inistration wbile he serves as a lieutenant in lhe Na\'y. He was graduated from Stanford. The br l d e-e\ert y,·as graduated from the t:n1vers1ty of California, Berkeley and has done graduate y,•or k at UCt. She is a senior 1n Hastings Law School, Sa n Francisco. A "'·edding is being planned for Aug. 30 In lhe Newporter Inn. A job. Clothing speciall!t.s In the Exteru:lon Service of the University of Vermont say j that potential employers can 1 tell a lot about a proapecti\'e employe by the cut of his or her shoes. The speci•llsts offer these tips to job hunters: -Women should we 11 r simple, low or mid-heeled pump~. 00 or sllngbacks. -Men should check shoes for ne<..'eSSlry repairs to scrat- ches. rundown heels. dirt marks and lack of a shine, Sneakers are two-prong sort spots -they 're definitely •·out" for interviews and can hurt feet on the job because they normally Jack proper su pport. Tr im, neat and well-polished footwear is a plus. No matter how dressed othenmt, a job hunter looks sloppy with shod- dy or soiled shoes. IT'S A FACT! If you spent 30 second• looking at each of our shag Hmples , it would take you over 9 hour• to see them all- 10 come early and. bring your lunch. Shoe Sale BUY1 ONE 2 FOR ONE <Special Group) GET ONE FREE "Here's How It Works" You pay the hi9hest retail price on first pair • CJet the second pair of equal value or less -Free. It's fun. Iring your friends & nel9hbors • Buy together. VALUES TO $2900 • HOUU: f·lill DAILY 416 SO. MAIN (2 Blk1. No. of Bullock'tl ORANGI CLOllD SUNDAY j ~!~!:~JLL~T~EPHONe~=:~ DON'S CARPET SHOP ------- Obtain hint from L e o message. Be moderate. AVold extremes. Cement relaUons with relaUves, neiahbors and co-workers. Be careful when il comes lo sJaning papers. UBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 2%): Personal mqnetism ratlnB Is high, Oppoaite su: is at· trscted. Creative urge is strong. Express yours e If ; communicate ideas. D 1 y fealures change, travel and variety. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Emphasis on family, home, domestic relations. Key is to seek harmony . Avoid dispute over money. Purchase of lux- ury lletn can be intelligently planned. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Avoid scattering ef- forts. Concentrate on one thing at a time. Be versatile without being foolish. Means con· rentrate on task at hand. Steer clear of nelehbor, relative, aispules. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): l''inancial gain Indicated. Incoml.! potential enhanced. Acce nt on what you possess and ca n gain. If you act in responsible manner, definite advantages accrue. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Appeal spreads ; yoor cy- cle continues high. Many are drawn to you. Some seek ad- vice , profe ss ional and otherw ise. Time to conclude agreement. Not wise t o tolerate further delay. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): ' I I I .L.mai .. \ ~::3 c:'.... / .... \\ If you don't know, ask. Means don't permit pride to stand in Contrasting colors with top.stitching is the story by way of progress. Much that Charles Le Maire. occurs today may be hidden or . . behind the scenes. Be The large pointed detachable collar is set slightly creative. but avoid ag-away from the neck. The center front band is top- gressiveness. stitched in place and ~nhanced with decorator buttons. lF TODAY IS you R The cuffs are closed by link buttons and are detach· BIRTHDAY you are sensitive, able too. The shape is an easy A-line -can be \VOrn intuitive; you could write and with• or without a sash. The center back zipper opening teach. f.1 uch of what you want makes for easy construction. to do comes about next year, but may start as early as Make it in mediumweight cottons and blends, cord- October or this year. uroy, lightweight tweeds and woolens, raw silk or wool Ta r111C1 °"' w11a·1 iucw 10, 'ltlU '"crepe. 61119 is cut in Misses sizes 10-18. Misses size 12 ::..:1:"!!~V:i ";:'1~';. sr;i;-Y ,!,,,,..~~requires approximately 2 318 yards of 54" fabric with w_.._ .. s.nc1 blr~i. 1nc1 so Uflt• 314 yard of 54" fabric for contrast. ta Omlrr ..... 1rai.n Sl(r1ft. Ille OAll. Y PILOT, k• !:I.cl, Grind Ceiilr1I St1• T d 61119 l · · I d 11on, N,,. Yo•k. N.Y. 1ao11. o or er .: s ate sLZe, inc u e name. address and zip code. Send $1.25 plus 25 cents for first-class postage and handling. Send orders for books and pat· Me•a Leogue terns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept. CX-15, Mi!lord, New Jersey 08848. Tel: 201-995-2201. La Leche League meets tbt-second Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. This pre-cut, pre-perforated Spadea Designer Pat- Mn. H. w. Moore, 545-4359, tern comes in ready-t<>-wear sizes that produce a better wtll answer questions regard· fit and are easier to make. Order normaJ ready-t~wear in& location and membenhip. size and allow one week for delivery. · -- CURLS 'N• COLORS AHEAD, 17.!10·!4.!50 SHAPED AND PEPtMED BY FASHlotf-WISE FING~S. OUR PEJl:T CONCEPT OF THE LATEST HEADLINE FA$HION5 AT A 8EAUT1,UL. SALE P1'1CE., THEH 1 THE FINISHING TOUCM•• 0 WONDEft-WO .. KING "'ANCl-P"UL.Le, THE INSTANT tlAlft COL.OR RINSE THAT'S A CONDITIONER AND WAVE. SET, TOO~ OUR REOUL.AR 35. 00-30. 00 VAL.UE0 NOW OHLY17.50AND 14.!50. 9EAUTY SAL.OH, ROBINSONS NEWFORT •FASHION ISLAND • 644-2800 ' --·· - " .......... ,.,. ... 1 • 4 • ··-·-. ' • • • Costa Mesa Today's l'IMill , I voe: 62, NO. 'I 79, 3 SECTIONS, 3~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAtlFORNIA MONDAY, ~UL Y 21, 1969 J~ CENTS • UPI Te_.... CROWD GATHERS AT POST OFFICE HOPING SEN ... KENNEDY WILL CALL FOR HIS MAIL In Hy•nl"!I• Port, Busy POlf•I Cler.ks •nd • RI M ln.ehe..Sur;niner Tourist Tr~• Family Attends Church Throngs HYANNIS PORT, Mass. (UPI)-Cries of "We're wilh you, Ted.'' greeted Sen. Edward M. ·Kennedy as he entered SL Xavier Qlurch here, bis third public ap- pe1r-ance since the fatal acekl61t last week'!l(I w~ ca!.!sed the dro.wning of pretty bklode secretary Misl Mary Jo ~·· . /. Keiinedf,.ICcompanieil bY lliiiftllllnt wife, Joan, and two of his three children aat motionless in his ~ Sunday JJ Msgr. William TMmJ>SOll read from tbe tpistole of St. Paul: "No test has been sent you lhal does not come to all men. Morever, God keeps · his promise. He will not let you be tested beyond your strength. He will give you with the te&t a way or emergln& from it Laird Says U.S. Must Keep Stock Of Gas W eapons WASHINGTON (U PI) -Defense Sec· retary Melvin R. Laird said today the best way to make sure the United States Is not the victim of chemical or biologi· cal weapons is to maintain its own such weapons as a deterrent· He said the Soviet Union had a "much creattr" capability in ~Ls area. "This deterrent js important if we want to see that these gases are never used in our time," Laird declared. The secretary defended the need for • chemical and biological warfare (CBW) program during a 45-minute question and an!lwer !les!lion with a group of summer government intern!!. A num~ ~ tbt approximately 100 college ycinM participating polltely but persistently peppered Laird with a series or questions on most of the controversial issues with which he is currenUy coping. Asked whether he would be willing to atrlke a COOlpromise in the Senate over deployment of the Safeguard antlballls· tic missile system, Laird indicated he woold not. He said the administration had 51 senators firm1y commttted to vot· Ing for the proposal as submitted by President Nii:on. Cheer 'Kennedy succeMfully, and you may be able to en- dure ii." The MIDI~ Denocrat -wu mobbed and opplauded u be artered.and em!fied !nm the white d_apboar<I cburdl. while tbousanda ol telegnma coo- tinllOd to Boo.I tho .Kenl>ed1 compound ur&l!!iblm~~~ ttnW 1hatili& y,&i.i6~itatement Friday night J\tnneclJ had said ·that his adlnlqion ol llli1Jt to l'ilvjng lhe scene of the fatal acilllent haa <auiOd him to ponder llie j)Oislbllity of reai8nJng his U.S. Senate ual · Al that time be called '"' the people ol Massa.chuselts for their opinion, advJce and prayera to help guide him ht reachlog I declsioo about his politlcal. l\/turo, Rene Paae of Mf?Shlleld, a regjonal supervisor of the 'Westem U n 1 o n Telegraph Co. olllce in Hyannis, said Sunday aomewbere between 25,000 and 30,obo telegrams , llad been ddlvered lo ri~~i:·;;;a~":":ti! -!pt aimmet ilriliit ~ '"' ..,_ tllo.~allo'inaldeirt141~ '""" .. In Bootoo. Wetlmi Un I o n Asst. Oporallolll Mlmqer John Anbancl aald Sunday, ''Tbtf'r• lllll coming In pretty heavy, but n., like Frlday night" He estimated the number of wires ad- dressed to Kennedy at either Hyannis Port ot BostOn -all ~g channelled (See KENNtJ>Y, Pap I) Convalescent Hospital To Get Troub"ledPatients A cOnvalescent hospital soon to open in Costa Mesa will speclallu in care of cer- tain troubled patients, under Its Depart· ment of Mertal Hygiene liceme, It has been d1sclosed. Builders of the 112-bed facility at 2570 Newport Blvd., expect the $378,500 struc- ture to be ready ror operation by late fall Announcement of the development granted a conditional use permtt more than a year ago in a west.em states realty publication lists it u a light mental l1o~ital. Palm Springs Investor Mark Wallock, who recently bought the project and was granted a new condiUonal use pmnlt as the other was about to e:a:pire, referred quesli-Ons to bis builder. · "It is designed ror patients who requITT more atteraion than some others," said Joe Stabler, or Stabler Construction Co., Loa Angeles. · "This is an age or specializ.ation," he continued, aaying the Newport Boulevard facility will house patients who8e in· dividual problems tend to disrupt opera- tiom of post-turglcal and other t'OOVales- cent homes. • "What we are doing is taking them out of other placea and putting lhem together In one place,'' the builder and real tstate brokerage company execuUve explained. '.'They're just like patients in arly other convalescent home," he continued, "but they're • , , well, a liUJe 'dotty'," Therapeutic programs to be conducted at the: facility on the east 1lde of the boulevard near the Costa Mesa Civic Center often work major behavioral change, Stabler aaid. No mention was made of any psychiatric care asf>ect when the con- valescent home went through planning commi.!lsion and city council hearings under the original application. Stabler, however, said the licenaing provlskms explain lhe type of patient and needs which will be served at the home, one of aeveral hit finn has built in the Southland~ The !acUity wm be leased and operoled by David Weiss, who maintains several others, according to the bulkier. It will be a one-storY 1tructure or 25,S~t. according to plaAs prepared by Arcltitect R: R. Kearney, of Los An&eles. . NiXon Renews Vow P"ledges Thai Defense Against Attacks BANGKO.K (UPI) -Preajclenl Nixon pledged lonlghl•tbe United States WOuld defend Thailand aplnst any attack from any llOUl'09. Thailand and sakl, "we and the naUona of Southea>t Asia sbare a vital llue In tbe lulure peace and prosperity of this region." Nixon flew in from Jakarta on the third He' did so in 1 special statement l!sued shortly after his arrival to make it clear· that whatever the Unltetf stalel does in Repart of Prahknt11 Vietnam it will not abandon its allies lndoaala. Villt-Pqe S here. leg of h1S seven nailon lO\li. ~tY He said the United States waa ex-meuurea. were unusually heavy at the tremtly grale!ul !or the help ol raln<lreDched ilijlort. ~bly because Thailand's troops in Vietnam and said, guerrlllu attacked a U.S. Air Force base "Tb• Thal contribution to the struggle lo 40C mile/I' l>Orlhwt or Banlltoll boors preserve the inclependeoCe of Solltb Viet.-· before be arrived, woundlna a aentry and nam bu been ol -t alinlflcance." daifiqlng two planeo. He linked lhll wllh &la pled(e lo de!°"f Nboo aald ID lhe special llltemeat !hat ' . "our detennlnation to honot our ·Com. mitment.s·is fully consiatent witp our COit'" vicqons that the naUon1 of Aafl can and must increaslly i b o u t d er the rtsponSibUity for achieving peace and progress In the arta." He opened his stalamenl by speaking ol American determlnaUoo to Donor ill commilmenta in As.fa and the Paaific. · "We will honor those comnutme.ota - no~ only because we consider them. solemn obligations, but equally Im· portantly because we fully recogniie~ that we and the naUons o( Southeast A4!a share a vital staie in the future peace (See NIXON, Pqe II ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Tucker Pushes For Review Of Golf Club COola M ... C"y Councilmen Georgi: A. Tuckt.r today called for a legal and flnan· cial review oC the municlpally~ed c .. ta Me."" Goll ~ Country Club. H~ also took Issue with City t.Janager Arthur R. McKenzie's budget statement to the council and said he felt it lacked Integrity. Tucker detailed hi1 complaints in -. ... three-page "poslUon paper'' delivered to t tbe DAILY PIWI' lhll morning.' He did not say if be l.nteild.s to· pursue the' l.Uuei when the councll meets nert Monday. But it wu clear tn biJ-llat.emeats tut 'l'ucl;er ii aorioully· quialioolilg;lhe'"n""' ner in wblch the tn:tpt· wa\pnwated' !le· objected> t<>·.·MCK°"*'s diilee 'o! .,..,..., ~. J'l'!'itl -· ·~pt -.nt's declanitioo lllat. c.;i. Mila bas 00 deficll Iintndtil. Tucker called bond Jll)'Jtlll!Dll on the llQll1ll'olll corporallona lliat row.:. lhe city hall and the mnnlclpal goU course deficit spending. He noted th a t McKenzie's lta:tement declared tlie city had "no deficit rinanclng" and caJled it ••tack of intq:rity." . · Tucker said tblt when he voted for ap. prov al of lhe I-. budget of tbe municipal golf course, he requested the city finance director tell the council if flicaJ r<porta dlscloaed any budget devla· tion of more than three-percent. lle: &aid be was-never notified that. any·figures U· ceeded this amount .. Yet the city now finds itseU operating the golf coune, the contractor in bankruptcy and the restaurant, cocktail loonge and pro ahop being operated by a reCelver," Tucker u.Jd. "It is my opinion that although the original concept of the golf course and the: councll's objectives were good in theory, the project has proved to be one of constant problems and cost to city tax· payers." Tucker failed for a review of all Jepl transactions since the golf course flan was formulated and for an audit o all bookkeeping comec:ted w)lh tbe opera· tion. Gar dena Surf er Hurt at Wedge A 1oooe bellyboard atruck the leg of a Gardena boctY surfer Saturday at the Qalboa Penin!Ula Wedge, severing a large tendon behind la knee, pollce said. Steve· D. lablmoto, 18, told police be was blt by the small, wunanned .surfboard at 11 :20 a.m. • He was tttalt.d at Hoag Memorial Hospital for a five-Inch gash behind his left knee and the 1evered tendon. Repairing let Robert Blunt (left) and Bill Keith had no notion wllen they~ oo as maintenance men· with Costa Mesa's Parks and Recreation De- partment that they also would be required to serve as jet mechanics in order•to spruce up the old jet that is a fixture in city'& old down- town park. Dr. Leary Faces Hearing 111 Death of Laguna Girl Ot. Timothy Leary, e:a:·Harvard pr°"' r....,,. turned high ·priest of hlppledom, Thuniday faces arral.gmneqt ln RJverside County an cbarg'" ol CGIHrlbuUng to the delinquency of·a m1nOr in the drownlnrof a Laguna Beach teettaced girl. Tbe ;Jr~ .. ll·ydr<!1<! Charlene Rene. Almeida, drowned July It w~le swim-- ming nude ln ·a pond at' Moilntain CE!nter Ranch where she had beeft living in a commune village Jn. whlch ~ wu considered to ~ the aplrlµaal leader. Riverside 1utborl:Uea ruled the girl was under the lnfluenct of I.SD at the time of ber dealh. Leary "'1d he "" In hi/I. tepee with bis wife when Miss Ahbeida drowned. He said he used ·••every pbj"sk.a1 and splrllnal devtce ""°""" to revive Uie glrL Thia included, be aid, -··· Buddisl prayers over.her body~ Leary de9cribed Mia AlmCida u 4'& yourc girl, a slight .l<'qUl.i:ntance, who carhe to our· village and did her own thing." The Laguna girl had lived in the ~ mune about 10 days prior to ber death. 1 But he said that U it 1061 in the Senate, a compromise, tf there was to be one, would be worked out in the Senate-House conference that wooJd follow certain House passage of. the administration proposal. Mer~hants . Protest Hippies Leary, fn 1 pro.a C®ftreDCfl over the weekend, labeled hla latal imcounler wlth lhe: law as "scalidalObl, lhOuilsb, dirty and pollliCally inotlvated." -Weadler •Clear air.lei I Qd ' continued warm weather are Jn store .for the coast !or most of the week, with tbe u1Ual morning and evening overeul Temperatures to atay In the apper 70a, DroWned Man's Body R ecover ed Newport Beach llleguards on patrol in • bolt Sunday found the body of. a Placentia man who fell £rom a Clff'"U raft July 18 in stirf near Newport pier. The bddy of Javier Alareon, 25, Pl1cen. lia, wa1 found floatin& face down past tbe aurfline near the pier. Alarcon'• body was clad In blue 8'rim- mlnl tnmkl. Ht drowned eight days be.Eore in heavy aurf before lifeguards could reach him from shore. Alarcon, lifegtiardl aakt, had been noaUng on the raft l.Dd was havln& lrOUble staying on. Companions helped him back on once, then he fell off again and dluppeared In the IUJ"f beloi'e lifeguards could reach him. Ne wport Cou1ic il Petitioned' on Pier In vasion By JEROME F. COLLINS °' ... Dll" l'1llt ...... A group of angry merdlants today petj- tioned Newport Beach city coundlmen ta crack down on the inDux of hlppia in the Newport Pier bualnesl district. The peUtloner1, led by Lornt J. G<orge, owner al tbe Big George elms .shop, aald the area near the pier "can now bl conskiered a new slum.'' 3'bey asked the cl~y to refuae llcensei to "hJpple bull~." "Within a two-block area," said the IG- lignature pettt.ton, "there are at least five hippie establishments which mate nnly to that element Their cllentele an 90 percent hippie Incl Ibey are only in bualntaa by lhla type of people." CouncUmen wlll -be presented the pell· ijon today, c~, Clerk Laur• Lail .. said, Dress shop owner Geor1e, who prepared Ute petition, uid manY of the young people banging arounC the pier represent a ne• ttnd of bum. He o - pl&lned : "Often when I drive lo Loo Anp!l.,, through the g......,t district I nottce the buma llalidlng m>Uncl tlie .u.eta Incl now I nollce the ume thing In Newport Beach: !he look II tbe aeme.'bul !here-ii a different f'UIOll for theJr ldionl. "In tbe Los Anpl'" 11uml I ....,,.. they are alchollca. In Newport ' Beach Ibey .,. dope tddicta. or tho two, 1 am sure the dope tddlct wonld be conridered much worR." ..... "My probltln bu beon that al lhoplll· ling In my store." All Ule peUUoner1 claimed the ume problem. U bualn,..ea caterln& to Ibo ' hippie trade were refused buslMM licenses, they reasoned, "the city l1seif would not be so glamorous to the hippies. "We ablolutely must do aomething about. this altuaUon," George declared. '""-people are bellming lo lee! that whatever they w~nt they can juat come in · and take:. They feel that aa long ·as Ibey canr overpower me they can. •teal anytbtzw." He empllulzed lhat,Newport>pollce - wbo recently put' a man on a nlklng btat tn the area -hlJe bHn verf helpful. "·Bui they Olll'l be eY!'Y"bere al once." Geor1e'1 petition aald refusal ol bualneu nee... \o "hippie-type ..tablilhmcnla would help tremend""'1y "hi cleanln1 up oar !l<ach !or lamlllill .IS.. HIPPID, P11e I) • • n,e 49 )tear ·Old former Harvard pror denied giving lhe ;Jr! aQy of lhe halloclnatory drui and uld he didn't even know her name or age. Lury said he consldered her "like a neighbor" In ~ rancli commune vtllage. "My wile and I don1 own lhll property, We have no· cootrot We're tuet Uvlng there as members ol the commun.lty,11 he added, NEW YORK'(:Y,) -1lle' llaCk martel WU jolted to inolher Wrp Iola Inda¥, U the down trend wblch carrled It lo n.., 1on lut weet canllDUed. (See quotationa Pagea 14-IS) Tradtng wu lalrly ad.Ive· near the clMe. DtcllJ>eS ran! up a lead of about 1,100 blues Over i dvaoces. · ~SIDE TODAY S•ilmographic nporti and Jdtnll/kotlon of a lunar N>Ck ara helping 1ci111tUti to . unloqk 1 """' ot th• m1111·~· 2L 111. moon'• compq1ition. Sei n111e '6. · . . . . ........ ~ ,...... l.~ 11 Call..... J ,._... • 1t tlllllfllll U.Jf 11 ............ •f CIMkl 11 ..... ~ It C........,., . , It I"* """-° M Olll9I ,...._ 1• ,..... ...... 1•1r ~ ,, ....... 1141 """1lt ,..,.. ' ,.._ .,_. IWI ............... ltT...,.._ 11 AolMcit M-U ~ It ....._... 14 ........ 4 """9 •lldlle II WWW ...... W ,,_ UllfWt It ' t • J -· I CAA.~ 1'11.0T c Surplus Boosts U;S. WASlllNGTON (UPI> -The govern- -I Monday cloled Its boou on ·u;. ttacaJ 1ear-ended June 30 ~with a surpriJ.. Indy hlah II billion aurphu, mirklng the flrst Ume in nine yearS 1he sovc:rnment Weuad ., In the black. Tht ...,,i,. wu II.I billion hllller than P.tol1d.,t Nlson esUmat.d In h~ ravlMd tJud&et list April. Receipts were it.a bilHon above the April 1 estimate while outll)'I were $100 million below the April fiiure. The Jut Umt the government wound up wilb more rtceipts than ezpenditutta wu in tteO. ~ there wu a thin surplus al 1140 mUllon. '"'' aurpl111 '"' the lllll lilcal,.., .... unapectedly hip. A month belcn the yoar ended, buqet bwua officials bod estlmat.d the '1U)llus .....,1c1 be 1 .. lllaa It bllllon. ' • •• Guerrillas · 11it Base Th.Qi Attack Pret~des Nixan by z 112 Hours 8ANqKO!t CVl'li -A band of guer- rjllu aUppad lnlo I U.S. Air Baal In 'nOrtbtuttm Tballand tod~, shot and '""'nded an American .ltl\try, damaged two cargo Plane.1 and dJnpted opera- llons with eq,losives about 2'1Ai hourt be- fore Prelident NIJon arrived in Ban&· kol<. The rald at Ubon took place about 2 a.m. Nixon'• Air Force. One J~r landed in Bangkok. 400 miles to the southwat, about f:30 1.m. The U.S. Embauy reported the attack and described the raiders as "intrude.ra'" believed to be CoOun~t guerr!Uu. f'rom Page 1 KENNEDY •.. Ubon lies about 1$ ml~ west or the ~ lian province of Cbampassak, where both North Vielnamae and Pathe.t (..po Comm.unlit troopJ hove been on lbc of· fcnsive for the pa~t month, Thes !l~ck was the ~econd against U.S. air bases in Thailand since Amert· can warplanea were brou&ht In four years qo to bomb North Vietnam and aup- port allied troops In South Vietnam. F~ Nixon, here to rtvlew U.S. com· mltmenl.J in "nl1lland, it underlJned what American and 'Illa! offlollls have duc:ribed ·u 10 UJ1S1n1e in guerrtlla ac· tiv1Ue.a in the northea.stem provlnoes. The embaay &MOU11ctment aaid an Air Force .security Policeman was patrol· Jina with a sentry dog when he 1potted the live guerrillas fn51de the wire fence. IJe dllllfenie<I them •ad .th~y opeaecl fire, 1ll1hUy wouDdlng him .. nd hi• <!of. 'j)Uiclaa Identified the sentry as Ken· nelh D. O'Dell, 20, of Mount Prospect, 111 .. and $a.kl he. wa"s in good condition wllh a minor leg wound. , The 1Uerrillas then scattered and set off five satchel charges of dynamite. damaging two 00 planes and knocking the fie.Id's ground control approach sys· tem out of oornm.Lsston for almost th"e hours. All five. escaped, 4J>parently un· harmed. Plastic Planted Evergreen 'Grass' Covers Median Strip. By JOHN VALTERZA Ot .,. 0.llY 'II" Sl•ff '!'ht '1U)liUS '!II the largest lince the · - govemment had a ye1Mftd balece of through tjy,.,,U. -at "very rouahlY 35,000 to G,000," arid aatd extra help was stiJI on duty trying to clear up a large backloc. A Kennedy aide said on Saturday the me.ssagr:i were running 100 to 1 in Ken· nedy'a favor and lht Senator "obviously wa.s moved" by the "overwhe:lming" favorable reaponse to his televised pita for advice. It has a lush, green look with short· cropped blades similar to the turf of a good baseball diamond. f.1.! bUHon1or fl1etl 1967. • The final bud~et fifuru· ahowad r~ of 111'7.I blUlon and oullay1 of ftlU bUllon. Income tax receipts provided moat of the h\Crtue OVtf the April eltimate. The Individual Income tu ylllded II.I billion men thOn utldpoted wlltle airpontioa tu rtcopU tllllled 11.1 blJUon below the April Mllnlale. ~!\Ires f..-the llepartmenl of H.,.lni and Urban Development ...,. 1110 mlJllon below the April estimate, mos'uy becauae CCl'lvenlon of urban renewal projects to annual PfOif&mS resulted iD deferral ot p r o I r e a 1 payments. Net outlays of the Airkulture Cool· medlty Credit Corporatioa were ll7S mlJllon below the April eetlmate and net oullaYJ for the Department o I Tronlpcir!lllon were roduced I i I i mUUon, mainly because of eurlailed apen- dll1( lo< the aupenonlc trwport pro- gram. 8ut Interest payments 011 the nallonal debt wore 131S million IUaf>er thin the April ea:Umate while the net bud1et of the Department of Health, EducaUon and Welfare wu 133.1 million higher than the April fjglue, mainly becaUU of lncreuu in the ""' of the medlcare """'""'· Olitlay1 for the deparmenl of def..,. .. e<edecl the April estlmat. by l37f mlllloo. N1son 'a budfet for the pr-I llacal yeor, wbld> bqan J uJ,y I, anUdpalel a 1U111i01 cl IU bUlloo. Newport Stops Speeding Youth Police ~ momlng amsted a I .. yeer old Coota Mau yooth an red<iels drlvbl& ma,.. alt.r he allegedly clnwe for "'°"' than a mile In Newport Beach qceecUnc 100 miles an b!Nr at one time. . Kermeth Michael Burger, 1111 Deau· ville Ave., wu booked oo the charge and held on 11111 ball. Officin aald the alle1ed reek.Im driv· Ing started at 22nd Street and Newporl Boulevard. By the time the auto crossed over the Arches overpass northbound it had hit the 100 mark, officers allege. Burger was at.opped and arTelted at Newport and Ioduatrlal Way at 2:15 a.m. Israel Hits Egyptian Positions Along Suez •1 U111ta111 ,_ lfrt-etlMll Israeli warplanei struck Egyptian artillery positions on the west bank of the Sue:i: Canal k>day for the sixth time in nine daya and Cairo reports said Israel had moved a large number ol plane11 into the occupied Sinai Desert. Israeli jets also attacked a Jordanian military post early today in a raid th1t Jordan aald killed three 0£ Its lroopl aod wwnded a dozen ~ers. OIWfOlt QW.t eot.1• ....... ~.,, 1.Mtf M. WeH .,......,..w,,..... Jttk LC....., vi.,.,.....,. IM!llr .. .,....., T\Mfft:: ..... il ••* n .... A. u.,..,i.ii.e -- U,ITt ........ The commltll:e to Keep Sen. Edward M. Keenedy !ft public lije, dubbed KEEP for ahart reported Sunday it had received about 10,000 lettera, telegram! and telephone calls urging Kennedy not to r'aign. But the l,000 square feet of "grass" which city crews have "planted" on two median strjps in Newport Beac.b will never feel the blade of a mower. Its plastic. The turf, commercially known as "Duro Grass" is an e1periment In be.o.utlficalion with minimum main· tenance. It didn't hurt a bit, said Gratiot, \Vis., beekeeper Lawrence Gans- hert as be stuck hi• hand into honeycomb and came up with a hand- ful of bees. None of t.he bees stung him, he said. Mrs. Rita Salk, New York chairman o! the1 committee said the messages cam e from "almost all 50 st.ates." She reported branch committets were being fonned in Los Angelu, Detroit and St. Lou~ "We'll ·wash it off every three months and pass a vacuum cleaner. over it. That's about all," said city Parks Dir«· tor Cal Stewart. Reagan Reyeals ~roposals To Cut Government Cost Speculation mounted as to when Ken· nedy would return to Washington since the Senate was expected to vote later Uiis week on the Safeguard antiballistic missile system to which Kennedy is op- posed. But tht aide said the Senator "had no immediate plans for the future." The aide also said Kennedy still was "very fhrld" and ha11 set no deadline ta. decide whether he would re.sign his Senate seat. So far the workmen have glued {held unUI hardened by heavy b8gs) the bright green turf at the median strip at 3200 Street and Newport Boulevard in frontof City Hall and other strips at Finley Avenue and Newport and 30th Street. At the latter location the grass will &et its most severe test -auto traffic. Stewart said the 30th Street strip does not have curbs, so durability can be eva· luated easily. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan today annoonCecl a 1m11 elec- ti<tri year economy plan aimed at i:olllng back. the rilin1 . cost of California mi. a:overument. Rtapn unveiled the pro11011l at a 1pedal news cmferenct attended by b.1s lop advllen and oecretarta of the four statesuperqendes. 'lbt Re~bUcan chief ueeutive said that In drlfllnl the budpt lot the nut filC&l year, "we wj.11 alloCate specWe -lo ea!!luieocy and deparlment_of • the .llali.Pvmunen~ and lllal 111111 will M below the amount the department or agency b now receiving." The bud(et for the current liJc:al year ls .$6.2 billion and renects an Increase of about $SOO million over the previous year's budget. lie ldenUfied further economy as the No. l aoal of bis admJnistraUon and said the seccnd goal was to "bold the employ- ment level in the executive branch below the levela of employment we found when we took over in 1917." Asked dtrecUy whether he wu planning to seek a second four.year term nnt year, Reagan replied, ''that'• one we don 't answtr fellas." Presa: sacretary Paul Btct outlined at the 1tart of the news conference that questionl would be limited to the 1ovemor's economy proposal. For the s~ day of the cloudy, damp weekend, LP.t 37·year-old Senator cruised on the family yacht, the Marlin, for nur- ly two houri and beached the shtp at a cove In Nantucket Sound to picnic· with hil wile, his alltu·Jn.llw Elbtl and aeveral of the familles• children. Cardlnal Riehm Cushing of Boe1on, • Joni Um• family friend, vbll<d the Cool· pound brlefiy. The SUnday afternoon quiet on . the three-lined street.a adjacent to the com- pound in ~ mid-Cape COd r-i com· munity wu abat.t.ered by a nolay, hbUr· long demonlttatlon when 20 collr:g~.._ed yout.ha protested Kennedy's etplanation of the accident· OAIL Y ,ILOT Sfef'I P""9 ROLLING OUT PLASTIC Jack McElmeel 'Plants' Graas The material, which costs 75 cents lo Install (25 cents more than real grass) should save money, instead, in main- tenance. Real grass costs a dime a square foot to maintain each year. Plastic grass costs a penny. Besides lhe C03t aspect, the subat.itute is nearly indestructible, its manufacturer uys. A match can't get it burning aod van- dals can't uproot it (it's bound to lhe pavement with a strong glue). The turf already is crowning median strips .for the city of Lakewood, where it ha; be-en highly successful, Stewart aa.id. Several areas of the San Fernando Valley have it, too. Cost.a Mesa is begin· ning a similar program. No Ro~k Riots Robert Naramore, ta, of Roche&ter, • N.Y., the leader of the group, aald the memben were 0'dlsgustecf, dl.smayed and shocked" at the ·speech "bec•use it ap- pealed strictly to the emotions." f'rom Page . J .. HIPPIES PROTESTED . •• 2,000 Beach Youths Enjoy Concert Two Mesa Trips Plan Water Fun ind children and once again give our town the reputation it should deserve." .. because they're afraid ror their children to be near this crowd." BY RUDI NIEDZIEUIKI Of 1119 DellY ""' 1'911 Three Now Generation bands wailed without riot In Huntinaton Beach Sunday ni1ht. 'Mle three top name bands "1aued" close to 2,000 tetnagen at lhe HuntJniton Beach High School gymnasium without the riot that some predicted, without in· cidents, without arrests. About 1,500 klcal youtha paid $3.50 lo see and hear "Fusion," "Cat Mother and the All·Night Newsboys '' .and "Canned Heat'' jam on the small st11e erected on one side ol the huge gym. It was not quite enough to make the event a financial succeas, though, since an alttndence of approximately 2,700 was needed to bruk even. This means t.hat the city of Hunlin(ton Beach, v.·hlch underwrote the Youth Coalition Committee sponsored concert to tht tune of nearly fl0,000 fices a leas in the arta of ~.ooo. Yet despite the loss, Mayor Jack Gretn was pleated by it all. "I know aomr: of you think that the establishment ls 111 bad," be toki the cheering crowd. "But thia should be proof that every onct in a while we do something right." • "I am· not overly conceined with the finances," he said aftr:r the concert. There will be a major e1pense to the ctty but it's really no dtff~nt than the· surf· NIXON ... and protptrity of this rea:ion." Niron will bt In Bangkok: for three days and the war In neighboring Vietnam and the Communist threat to Th1iland will be the main topics of dlscu.uion. It was gtnerally believed he might take · ad· vantace of an e1easUc acbedul~ here for a quick visit to Vielnam. He· said if their appearance wtrt the only di!Wteful .a6ptci. about them, it •ould bt no problem. "But unfortunately, as man1 of thtm are on dNgJ, they have lo ouppirt this coatly habit and ene of the ways they do this is by lhopli!llnl and pal'lhandlln1 on lhe 1trte:l!. Jn Tl\alland M raced conaldet1bl1 di161tltraction over hll pl1n enunciated In the Phillpplne1 and Jndonuia to provide arma and supplies for A1i1n countrlet so they cou1d work for peace without the United Slatu being Involved with American troope u It 11 ln Vletn1m. ( Ing contest and the Fourth of July Parade which cost the city money." "1 thought il went off beautifu1ly. It wu really quieter than most k1d·1et tocelhers and I think it served we ll to e!t1blish communication with the kids." Hundreds of cars packed the parkin& lot for tht concert wboae electrified IOUnda soon haad the youths and a con~ aiderable number of adults CYTalilll to the pulsating beat. Uniformed police as well a s plainclothes detectives who were out en mane had an euy night and did not have to be called in to qulet any diaturbancel. While the three bands were playing on the stage a light show or cosmic pro. portion played an an enormous wlllt.e sheet hung behind the stage. Most of the audienct was content to sit on the hardwood floor and just watch the first band, "Fusion," which played a fair· ly reserved and dianifled set as far as rock bands go. Staring into saltwater sound intriguing~ Or i.s llCOOUng across fro:ten freshwater your own particu1ar plea.sure~ The Costa Mesa. Recreation Depart- ment bu scheduled two field trips, one Aug. 4 to Marineland of the Pacific, Palos Verdes, and one Aug. ti to Glacier Falls ice skating rink, Anaheim. Youngsters m., register at city parks and achoo! recreaUonal faclllltes, or ob- t1in further infonnalion by calling department headquarters at the Co!ta Mesa Civic Ce.nter. But that would be only the first step, according to the petition. "The next step," it said, "is to unite the prop~rty ov.•ners and educate them to the fa ct that they should not rent to these people. "Other than defacing the property and lowering the st.andard of living in our city plus the dope problem which they bring with them, they keep away the people that would be an asset to our com- inunity ." George e1plained that many people who come into his shop have told him that they used to rent summer homes in the area, but they don 't do it anymore But when "Cat Mother and the All· Night Newsboys" launched into their Ht, a fairly lqe group unable to contain the vibrations gathered at the left of the sta1e for Impromptu dancing. "C1nned Heat," as espected, literally tore lhem up and had them standlna on their fr:et , ec3t1Ucally movin& with the music. About 500 teenagers without lhe fin1n· cial means who were gathered outslde catching matches of sounds throuah the open doors were let in for the "Hut" after the intermission, brlnlini tbe au- dience up to 2,000. Jack Bidwell's July clearance ·sale all this week! Ne,vport Seeking Biting Canine l'Te marked down my entire 1tock of •pring and summer merchandi&e, t1J1c:epl for cer· uin ataple1 thtt I reorder throughout the year, 1ucb u white 1hirt1, black M>Ckl!, etc. All from replar Bidwell Newport Bt1ch police anlm•l control 11ock. No 1peelal po.rdia9U or officers today lMued an appe1l for in· any 1oeh hanky panky. rormaUon on a I a r I e, reddish·brown Men'• S165 111119 redaeed to 113S dog, poqlbly a doberman pin&cbe:r, which Men'• S1'5 1\lltt red.aced. to 1116 bit a 12-year-old Jl.rl u she walked on Men'• 1140 1aita rMllCed 101112 Nawport Pier Saturday. llf•" tlSil ..tto ...i....i so '108 Jf the doa Is not found, Me1anie Sue Me.a'illlS..Jt.1red90edtol 92 •751port cot1b redaClld to $60 t70 •port-• ..duced to t56 S6S 1port eoatl reduced to 152 $60 •port C'!CMltl reduC'!Cd to 148 •SS 1port coat. reduced to 14·~ tSO •port eo8l8 reduC'!tld to 140 !\Jen'• '"° al.Kka redueed to 132 ft.fen'• ISS 1laek1 reductlll to e28 ~len'• S82.50 dac:ka now •t $26 M<11" US .tock• ...i.....i 10 t:IO Men'• $46 ea.rdipn twe11&en. $30 Men'• SSS cable cardJpn• at 120 Men'• tl8 itullo?er tWMten, 112 Other mflll.11 awntcn reduced 25% Mea'a*16, U7,tl8knlt shlrU, •l2 George, who opened his dress shop a year ago, con cluded that if the com· munity wtrc lo unite and publicize the fact !hat "~·e are not interested in tum· ing our city over to this group, I am aure within a year v.·e could rid ourselves of this elemenl." Other signers of the petition included Francis Ursini, of The Surfer; Ramono.t McClinctick. Trts Chic Fashion Wl&s ; Laurence Scot. Scotty's Fish Fry ; Q. F. Fredericks, Henry's Groceries; Bill Buah, Newport rackle Store; Harry Siegfried, Stag Bar & Liquor Store; Nicholas Ur· sini, Ocean Front Hotel ; and Michael Hurst, Fatso's Burgers. ~len'a 115, 113.50 knit 1hirt.a, SlO ~1en'119.50, 110 apL shirt&, 16.50 Men'• SS & 19 •port ahirta•t •6 Mea 'a •6 &: •7 aport sbirta at 14.50 1tfen'1 Taylor Made, Spalding Shoet., broken lot&, -% price! WOMEN'S STUFF REDUCED, 115 8f!MJ)uda1 redueed lo 11 I 116 Bermudu redueed to 112 114417 lkrm.uda1, 25o/" off! 1 18 1traisht panb now 114 117 straight pantl now 113 $13 blouee. reduced to 110 I 9 blouees reduced to I 7 S7 to 130 bloulf!t, 25o/o off? $28 tenni• dreMe• reduced to $21 126 tennis dre;Mee reduced to $19 118-$33 tenni• dreNH, 25o/0 off I &30 dre11e11 reduced to 122 128 dreuet reduced lo 121 126 dreMieS ~aced to 119 S23 to 190 dreueA, 25o/0 olf! 119 ak.irta rcduC'!Cd to 114 $18 11drte redueed Co 1)3 116 skirt• reduced to 112 I 15 lo $33 .i.;n., 25o/o off! 19 Dan11do ta pa reduced to I 7 SS Danokln 1ope ,,,.Juood 10 •6 S7 Ou•kin tops rednttd ta SS Women'• 112 Toptlden now 18 Womco.'1 $14BUnan:loIGedel,17, B<lk of Rlvenlde, will hsve to uoderlO Mee'• '110 aeltuedaeecl to t 88 lhePutturtre•tmentfornblu. Mea'•llOOllCllt.redDOtdtoS 80 J k B•d II Melani• ""'"'"' a two-Inch -Ider Mea'•. 95 aelta ...i....i lo. 76 ac I we cut from the bit. which oc:currad without Mee" a 90 iofta Ndaced to • 72 provocatlon at ''Iii p.m. Men'• t 8Saelta Ndueed tot 68 3467 Via Lido n""t to Richard'• Market and the Lido She 1old ofllcer• the clo1 wu on a leash tlZO 1port eoa" ""'""""to• '6 Theolre al the entran.., to Lldo hle. 673-4510. held by a tttn-age youth with• beud. lllOtport-ta..daee41ot 88 His alrl companion wu wearlnl Ion& llOOiportcoabredaoeCI tot 80 An aare of free parklnA: al rear of I.bis 1lore. ytllow panll. •he aald. a 90 •port ..... ,..Juced to• 75 Copyripl 1969, Jaek Bidwell. Anyone with pertinent information can I L __ ....:,-----------------------------------..J call animal C011trol ofllcera at ~II. .. '· . ------------~----------------------------------------------------------------,-- , OAJLY "LOT 3 Head · Star·t. S~el{ing Answer to Who Am '.I . ., . . The question, the answer -both are 11n Inseparable core of the summer Head Start P<OCl'llU ln Huntington B<ach, Most indlvkluals might UUnk a five- year-old tot doesn't need to worry abouL hla Identity, but a strong araument would be heard from tbe 15 Head Start teachers, U!lstants and volunteers at tt)e Community Melhodlst Chureh. They have 75 little ones uniler their care. AU ol them reaclllng out for in- dividual JdenUUes. The chlktren are all pre.kindergarten anti they come from some of the finan- cially lea fortunate attas of Huntington Beach, Foontaln Valley and Wesllnlnster, Utt Oaims Tax Reforms Go Too Far WASHINGTON (AP)-The House Ways and Means Committee has dribbled econ- omic poison into its tax reform bill. the committee's second-ranking Republican from Califomia said today. Rep. James B. Utt (R-Tustin) served notice that he will rile a minority report and "oppose ihe bill at every step." "I started out vlry enthusiastic about lax reform," Utt said in an interview. ''We need to rern<Jve inequities and catch untaxed Income. "But as we v.'ellt along, the L'tlmmlttee got completely carried away. We bit off too much." Utt said he supports about 80 perrent of the bill t.ent.alively drafted in clOISCd.- door meetings ci the committee. "If there's eitiugh arsenic in the water to kill you. I'm not going lo take a drink. l think there's e--..igh arsenic to hurt business in this bill." Ult served notice o1 his opposition in a statement in the Congressional Record. "T am for tax reform," he said, "but not at the expense· of economic sanity." "So far," he added ... we have succeed· ed in killing the municipal bond market, and in removing the incentive for phil· anthropy. We have staggered the pe- troleum industry. We have near I y wrecked the farm operation and we have killed capital cperations by eliminating any aJt.ernative capital gains tall.'' Utt said the committee's r$iuctlon of the oil depleticm allowance from 27~ to 20 percent "goes beyond the breaking point." He said he had supported a re- dueion to 23 pe.rctnt, but It l05t on a 12-13 vote. Twenty percent, he said, ts "loo tow until we begin to see the effect. I'm not willing to plunge all the way unti.I I know how deep the wat.f'.o:_ is." The committee "went too ·far," Utt <"Ompla.ined, in providing that deductible farming losses cannot exceed gains. He said it will force fanners to g1> on the accrual basis in.stead of cash basis and "require a Certified Public Accountant for every farm ." Adlusting the tax-exempt status of per- sons drawing municipal bond interest, he said. will raise interest charges for local governments and result in local tex in· crease!. Limiting fc>r certain high income la:it· payers the advanlages of giving away appreciated property lo churches, L'tll- leges and libraries, he predicted will cut such contributions by 50 percenl Utt complained also that the committee passed over an opportunity to correct what he called a "raw deal" by giving widows, widowers and bachelors ''head of household" deudctions. Thm·sda y Date For Entries in Ph&~-0 Contest Amateur photographers have until noon Thursday lo get in on the first week of three weeks of competition for a total of $650 Jn prizes for their pictures. A grand prize worth $500 Is offered in !he Fotorama Camera Conte5t which is the curtain'(lpener for a giant show to be built around photographs. The show - Fotorama at Fashion J:iilancl -will be staged Aug. 21 through 23 at U1e Newport Center shopping center. Weekly prizes of $25 worth of girt certificates for first place, SIS for second and SIO for third are offered. Tl\tY atteod Heall Start to catch-up m the gtMral p<ocen ol learnJna about 1llc w<lrld lj'ound them. '"tt!eae kids ~ to t.am.:.who am l!',"' says Mra. Fr~a Harper, direclor of tho H1acl Start project at Community Methodist Chun:h. ''The first seven years or their lives are tile most imp0rtant," she continues, "and they n<Od tbe opPortunlty to learn." Critics ot Head Start complain lbat or cost ol educalJn&_one__under,ptil<ilqed child in Head Start is en0nn9Us. CQJJl-o pared to the normal cost ol. ~ucation. The govenunenL pays I percem of lhe cost while the spoJ190ring ~agent -ln this cue the church -pays 20 percent, usually by providing the facilities rent !ree. "TI>!>Se cr:IUcs don't se:em to reallu the medical benefits In Hud Start," countors Mn. Harper. Head Start tots are enUUed to a com-- plete physical exeminatlon and dent.al WO!~· If any major ~eficlen~ies are discovered they wUI he com<:tod at government expense. . Because of large families. amt low I~ c{ime, many of these children ml8ht not have &een such medical care unW &hey were enrolltd in Head Start. The baalc. philosophy · of teachbig In Jlead Start Is to allow ~ children to learn by the use of tbeir five senses. "First we show them what a goat ls (they haVe a live one at the church), tbeo DA,ILV f'ILOT Stiff nett 'BALLOON TO MOON' MAKES IT TO KANSAS WHEAT FIELD Contt1t Winntr Lamar, Lions Club's Jack E1aex BoY.'s 'Balloon to M·oon' Entry Trave'ls 1,500 Miws Hundreds of balloons filled the ski~ over Westminster June 27 but cmJy one rea~ the moon. Not exactly the $223,000 miles to the biggest earth s<itellite, but to a field in Lamed, Kansaa where farmer Floyd C. Rishel picked it up. For a.year old Kenny Lamar, 13691 Pool Complaint Due in Court A Huntington Beach couple's battle against a swimming pool L'tlmpany ac- cused of unlawfully attempting to build a pool in their backyard is now OD the Superior Court docket. Harold and Shlrley Hoff, 20732 Allcante Lane, want $5,000 damages from Anthony Pools in an action charging the defen- dants with carrying out excavation work at the home last Dec. 26. The Hoffs accuse Anthony Pools, through the finn's salesman, of falsely Tepresenting thaL the property owner. from whom the couple lease the home, gave permission for installation of the pool. Swimming Oass Slated by YMCA Another tw1>-week swimming class will begin Monday for children in the three-lo- six age range at the Orange Coast YMCA, 2300 UniVel"lity Drive, Newport Beach. Class size in the program is lirniled to four youngsters per instructor. Classes run M1>nday through Friday for two weeks and are held from 9 a.m. to 3 pm. Further information can be obtained by calling tbo YMCA at 642-9990. Palomar St., Westminster, winning the annual "Balloon to the Moon" contest sponsored by the Westminster Progress- ive Lions was a big evenL "I won five dollars and my falfler said 1£ I would be good and clean up my bedroom next week he'd give me another fi ve," said lhe blond, freckled y0W1gster. "Then I'm going to buy a fishing pole." The balloon, filled with helium, must have caught a favorable air stream in order to cover the 1,500 mlle distance in e:itactly one week. Othen did almost as well and were found as far away as the ColoradD- Kansas border, Yucca Valley and Ban- ning. For his efforts in retrieving the lunar probe from Westminster the Pawnee COWlty fvmer also received a '5 check. Fire Destroys House Trailer Firt of unknown origin early thJs morn- ing destroyed a 45-foot aluminum house trailer at the Huntington by the Sea Mobile Village. The mobile home, valued al $6,000 to $8,000 was a total loss. Two engines, a truck and 13 men directed by Battalion Chief James Gerspach extinguished what was left of the trailer in 14 minutes. The sole occupant., Mrs. Winnifred Tober, a private nurse. wa1 oul on a case 'When ~ fire erupted at 3:31 a.m., firemen said. Motorists driving along Newland Slteet during the early morning houri apotted smoke pouring out of one of the trailer windows and woke up her neighbors_ who in tum alerted the fire department. Investigators are trying today to determine cause of the blaze. we explain 1llc various benelits ol a MethodL!t Cltardt, under the Jin. ll<lcer SOil." says Mtl. Harper. Betnrorth, actJna U spoalOI' each JW. Trtpa are a major part of the lltad Cumntly the cburtl> baa ID aPJ>Ucallon S\art experience.. PlaMed escursiom this tn to make Jtl Ht.Id Start. program a summer include lletllngs FanM In year-round project. Gmlm -Grove for a peoo al dairy ('h1 aoother ye...,we bope lo he able lo animals, 1llc U.S. Marina C or. p s handle about 30 ~ 1JvouP-tile helicopter staUon In Santa Ana, the winter/' erplained MrL Hatper. Jtiibt Orange County Harbors and Beaches now the chW'ch; fM?P1l'.:9te from Heard Dep~ment, fire 1taUon1, the beaches Start, oll'I'• special scbolanhlp1 to •~ and-various e•rks. ten<{ winter manery tchool ror IOIDe of After the visit to the M 1 r 1 n e tbt Head Start chUdrta. helicopters, children were taught how to Qlildren involved receive the clear make paper helicopters and given lhe beoeflt ol. a better becqround. when &bey chancil to watch tbelr own whirlyblr<!J -enter the general educt&14m procas. soar five feet In the air. · But what about tucbtn. usistantl Head Start b ln Its third .year In the •nd volunteen who llJll ao 1,1l11Ch lime an,i local area, wltb the C o m m u n I t y effort Into something tbal lw ooly House Group Blames Bra8s In Ship Loss Mesa:Anti-smoke Docfur WASHINGTON (UPI) - A House arm· ed services subcommittee has unanimously approved a report which puts much ol. the blame for kl5lJ of the USS Pueblo not on the crew but on military brass, it was learned today. 1be special investigating subcommittee reached its verdict after 1 four-month t1tudy of the event! before, during and after capture of the American in· teWgence ship by North Korean patrol boats and aircraft on Jan. 23, 19$8. The report Is slated for clearance by the parent committee today and is to be made pubUc shortly thereafter. The sub- committee's invesUgatlon dlffered from a Navy court of Inquiry which also looked into the Pueblo's seizure ln that the con- gressmen concentrated on questioning the men in charge, not lhe crew. The Navy board, compo11ed of ofiicm, recommended that the Pueblo's skl"pper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, and other members of the crew be court martialed on charges of allowing their ship to !all into the hands of the Communists. Navy Secretary John H. Chafee on May 6 of thb year overruled that recom- mendation u well as a recommendation from Adm. Thomas H. Moorer, chief of naval operations, that Buc;her and the others be served wilh a letter of repri- mand. .. They have IU!fered enough," Chafee aaid at the Ume. Unlike the court of inquiry, the con- gressional panel headed by Rep. Otis Pike (~N.Y.)1 dld not take testimony from the crew. Instead, it concentrated on what lhe milltary calls the "command and control" aspect& of the case. It zeroed in on the top commanders, such u retired Adnt' Ulysses S. Gran! ~. at the time commander of U.S. fof.ces in the PaciHc and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Jolnt' chJefs of staff. According to those who have tieen the report, the lawmakers hammered away at what lhey felt were the poor lineJ of communication wlthln the military in· telligence community and 1 lack of prec- aul;ionary steps taken before the lightly armed aod une3COrt.ed Pueblo sailed on ber last mission. Owner Fires On Fleeing Robbers ~ men who held up a Garden Grove liquor store proprietor Sunday night 00. viously didn't know their adversary. John ltchanday, 46, of Santa Ana, ~ nwner of Bo John's Llquor. 10664 Garden Grove Blvd., fired two shots from a 30-30 deer rifle at the fleeing !Uspects. One fell down but a witness said he was not struck, just tripped in the excitement. The holdup men, described as ma~. white, escaped with $1,200 from the liquor atore safe. Eleven yean ago. Itchanday using the same deer rifle, according to police, shot and wounded 1 fleeing holdup man. That ooe was captured. U.S. Housing BomJ>ed . ATHENS (UPI) -Explosions today destroyed one car and damaged seven others in Athens suburbs housing U.S. military men and diplomats. Police source.'I said the. blasts apparenlly were intended as protests against alleged American support of Greece· 1 military rulers. ' ToHelpTownKickHabit- ' CIAILV rtLoT 5tatf Pllltt HELPS IOWANS KICK HABIT Coat• M•ui's Freedl1nd , Beach to Select New Personnel Board Member Huntbigton Beach· coonolbnen mM ht adjoUmed aess1cm tonight in an attempt to select a new member of the city 'per· SOMel board, The council ls lo meet at 7:l:J p.m. Coun· cllmen wW go into executive session to Interview seven or eight applicants, In a field winnowed down from · about 15. Mayor Jack Green said the applicants have been narrowed to peno111 wllh per. sonnet or management backg(Ollnds. The new board member will replace Dr. Ralph Bauer, high school district trustee, who re!igned recently. The board handles any city employe appeals from administrative decblona and makea·the final decision. At the adjourned session tonight, coun· cllmen inay act on matters juaL aa at a regularly scheduled meeting. However, Brander Castle, assistant city admlnb-o trator, said nothing of consequence be- sides the appointment is scheduled for consideration. By EVELYN !HERWOOD Of ,,. C>.ll!f f"llff ..... On Augu.st 8, every smoker amonc the 2,500· resident.& of Greenfield, Iowa. will start \iylng to Jdct !lie batill And v... Morton Freedland Or Costa Mesa will lead them. The Harbor Area physician will !ly 5000 to the small midwest town In anner to a telegram from from lls mayor, Who asked Fleedland to conduct amoldnt clinics ~Ore lhe commtmity'1 bundredl of tobacco·pu!fen. Dr. Freedland Is head of the National Anti-Smokin1r COuncll . The idea· came· to the mayor of Green- field as· an off&boot of plans to film the :iotb Ctntury Fox Dim "Cold Turkey" ln 1he 1own, Dr.: Freedland uld, "We decided to do the thing In reality," Mayor Dale 'Yount reported, "When we ~ we are really the town in the film, ·eofd Tur·key' ". Smokers tn the community will tbnnr. cigarettes, cigars and pipe tobaccO into a gipnt bonfire, Aua:. 8, the day filming begins, he &aid. Started as a liealtb project, churd>o, youth organlzaUona, women'• and merchants clube are behind the effort, accordiog to Dr. Freedland. Tbe community will help tbemselYtt while requestlni prnlesslooal belp In kicking the &abll VoJUnteer 1t\rten wlll mount a ca~ paign complete with bumper aticken, road slglil, b'ahdbllla and newpaper f:da: to preven~ weak, b u t well-intenUoned clliuns from falling , oU tbe 1101,.ll!loldnJ bandwa"on. Dr. Freedland · 11ld he has ..-rched the smokinl prnblem and can condlifon the subconsdoul mind llln>q!l automa- tion lo stop I -... • Wllllin 1eD dl;ya of ~taUon.· "I rucceed en 1 aucceas 11ttem.,. be explained. Woman Perishes Protecting ~g A. La Habra woman dJed in an early morning fire Sunday aa Ille trkd to Jl'O- toct her small dog, polloe reported. • Fire capt. Olla west.aald Mrs. Franldo Sue Thomaa, 32, of Mf1ti Highlander SL, was found crouched on the bathroom floor, her body shleldlng the small do& which also perished. The r,,. waa dlacovered by an oil duty policeman, Robert Balley, who llvu nearby, but he wu unable to reacoe the woman as namea had alrudy enveloped the small' home, firemen roparted. They said the blaze was a~ Nrted by .a clgareUe ln the bedroom. The coroner•• aWce placed lhe tlme ol death at,4 a.m. The gifL certificates can be spent just like cash at any ol the 58 stores and restaurants al Fashion Island. Gr.;Jnd priie winner will be selected by popular vote of Folorama vl111lors and will receive the additional $500 worth oi gilt certificates. His Thing Is Youth 1 ~"vane w11o Is Mt • P!'ofet•laMt lll'lof1:'r•llhv• •n ' tm1tl0Yt ol {or -111bl• o• tM ltm rv e! •n e..,l!IOY9 00 lfte DAILY Pll01. 1"111>\0l! ltll lOCI Merd'I•""' A1-l•liell or t F•lll'lloft t1ll"od ,,...rt!Mnt I• e!klft!W lo ..,ter !toe (Onffsl. t. Dnl• blllcl! trod wt.I"' ~ b it•" 11...:e Jin. 1 ot this w•r "'" be 1«e1t!H for 111c11111,,.. I. Pldvrn ~Id ba """"°""''" •IOHY ..-Intl ,, lenl J ll J Int"-1t11!11, ort.19<.vl• I • 10 llld'>e_. ,. 4. N-liva of f;O!lMI llflo"" """"' Ill •Yllllltt>MP M ,,.._, ~ un be INclto fol' l>Vbllt1tlllft Mid tot dlwln 11 Foior.""•· 5 "•lllh tMKorne"" pr-Iv ot IN DAILY "'LOT ind aot1flOI w I''""..,.,· !N""'I,,. wl! M "'"'""°' 1n.r Fotor·•ma. 6. E"'llll'"s!s In 1llb!tcl ,,,_11tr .tloukl ba ""<PllldrMI 11 ,.,..,, _,. 11'.flvfllh. fll'fl, flOodl. lr1Hk K-<~h, tio.11010 1rod IMlodlft or 01ri.r ~ ,.1111 d••""''" J..,p,ttl, umn,.·1 "mood" QWlllY or locel hwnln In..,..!. 1. 1!1dl or1111 l'P!llll Ill K(OINlllllW by "" "'""'t lldll!'t'H lllCI ifll'fl"M 1111~ ,......... ot thl tnlt"•m 1111111 , cw11tl0n or "1orf dnc•llltlw "'"'""' tll• D11!11lnc1 ,.,.. '"'" lo!<! br .... .... •• ... ..---If I COfllftl """8 ll'IOwS lrodoent n• flO!I....,. e ..-11. !tit desc:rlPtlYI ..,.1opr11t tl'IOUld Inc:""" - ""' •I'd IHI ... -.. "" 1uttl«I or nlllJKfl •nd ""'' """ ..... """"' llCllll'"tlSfl. f fl .. auymed Ille !lfMllOOrll!NI'" Ind .ult!K1 OI'" 1U!M.cft. ••...t ...... ~lloll fOr lll,lillkllloll eflll ,wi!C •IMlll.'!' _el Ill\' l>hOtot subnlllfld ="--... l•. Wl!!Mn OI l!ot 1'0ll tltrft 111 be llllbllillfd durlflll fl'll ~I "" A-. S. II .... u. ( it. 0:.ldUM fer ""'"' tadl ....... II '*"" Oii IMI "TllWlld•Y prtcld!llO lllt wnk ot oublktl~••!":! entrl ... ft'llll! Ot dtll~ Ill "'19'1. C!f llf ,.~ "' '"'DAILY P1iot olll« br , ... ,.l!fN. U. c .... 11.st ploolOs "*'Id lie dlrteMcl to l'etenim1 c.....,-1 c..trttsl, Publk StrvlU 0.•f"l'mef'I. Or- -COid CIAILY "ILOT loltl(S Mll'ftt WI/), .. ' Beacli Preacher Sings Song of Lord to Teens By TERRY COVILLE "I'm just doinrwiy ttring."~aays P.1ark Forsyth, Huntington Beach's preacher on the pier. His "thing" involves strolling along beaches up and down the Orange Coast 1inging song& or the Lord to teefls and preachlng salvation through Christ. At lhe age of 65 and dressed in white gloves and an old straw hal, Rev. Forsyth present.. an odd sight leaning over the edge ol the HW1Ungton Beach Pier and singing out in a loud voice, "· Jesus Savea." But rklicule hasn't bothered him In sit . iean of beach evangelism. "This ls the onlJ "&'1 1 can be out wtth the kids," he uplains, "and J have a great compasskln for the youth." '"nlere an11 millions of young people not helnc reached by the churches and God / told me this was the way to do It." "I've had trouble at times with the teens,'' continues the preacher, who lives at 217 ChJcago St., Huntington Beach. "Onee in Seal Beach my life wu even threatened. But since I've started ain&Ine, the crowds just gather. Th&y can see I'm happy with Cbrisl and they marvel at tt.'' When does he sing? "Whenever the Lord tuml me on,11 he replies. "! enjoy smgtng because 1 know It's Christ ainging through me." conUnues Huntington Beach's "Save-a·youlh- mlsslona.ry ." He uses a Billy Graham approach -prr:achlng Christ without argulng phi· losophy -and doesn't come with plate in hand 11lking for donntlorui. "f ux a tbrce pltue olj)proach con- sisting ol. telling the youth about Qrut, pas,,ing out tracts and Bibles, and turning the youth toward a church if they want," explains Rev. For1yth. His mission on the sand usually carries hlm from as far !OUth as Laguna Beach up to Los Angeles County beaches. But he also likes to tell about the crowd of hip- piea he gathered while 1trolllng and Aingtng aloni Market Street ooe summer ln San Francisc:o. The white gloves ind odd hat are part of hit costume because of JeVfl't skin disease.s he contracted about two years ago. His strong voice com., from yean o1 evangelism. "I'm an ordained minlater," he gya, "but God has now called me to come to the V01Jth hero on the b<ach." "I'm Jus1 dolDi lll¥ tbln&." be aa1c1. PREACHER ON THE Plllll WATCHES OVER llACH"'LOCK Whl"' G""'9a, • Straw Hat •ncl a Mtaai.. ., the s.ncl ' I • r i I _, --.,_ --·---..;-,..---::---..... --.... DAlt.V Pilaf Coed Murder Stymies Officials Missing Freshman Found Strangled;,(;ase Similar to Others ~ ........... lllltO . People and monkeys may make }t in outer space -but a chicken .1Yould lay an egg 11 an astronaut, ;ay Michigan Stale University 'P<>ultry experts. The problem is ¥.ini<lng. "A chicken lakes a. gulp J c water in its bill, bolds its bead 'up in Ibo air and allO)l's the water -to run down its throat," says Dr, How11rd Zindel, chairman of the aniversity's poultry science de- partment. "It has no swallowing mechanism." And in apace the"te'1 no gravity to take the water down. • The Washington Convention and Visitors Bureau bas named Wil- iiam P. Goodwill as manager of press and publicity. • Thtrt'r nothing like keeping up with the new fn the . old hom.t town. Fort.at Latht,r•~ 31, oJ Ludington, Mich., who tlaJ committed to Tnrotrrt City State Hospital after rlaying hit toift. in 1981, irrcoptd /UM 14 1nd is still 101toht. The L1;fdino· ton Daily Nftos raid ft had f'e· ctioed a letter from Lathtrr uking that hit 1ubrcription to the paptf' bt rent to him in care ,, Qentral de lit1tTJI at ·Windsor, :mt., irultad of th< riot< harp!. lat • Marien Harrod of Leicester, England unwrapped a parcel from a cigarette company's coupon gifl. department, expecting to find a beach bag Inside. The, bo• con- tained 102 vials o! anti·lelanus ser- um, the result of a post office error ln relabeling broken parcels. • Thieves in Wichila, Kan. made NUDE BDDY FDUND Keren Beinem1n Stransltd U.S. Suffers Big Aircraft ' Losses; ·16 Die SAIGON (AP) -The Uniled Slates sufered heavy aircraft loses in tht. Vie~ nam war Sunday. The Viet Cong shot down a big heUcopter that was evll)CU.atlng a wounded U.S. Marine and a wounded prisoner from a batUefleld Sun· day, and a B5% btmber crashed as it took off from Guam to bomb Vletnam. All 10 men aboard the CH46 helicop- ter-nlne: Am er I can 1 and the primner-were killed when it crashed in the Que Son mountains 25 miles soutbweit ol. Da Nang alter machine-gun (ire bit Jl The 1lx·man crew of the BS2 and two others aboard were declaared mW1nc after the bl& bomber crashed and burned at the end of a runway at Andersen Air Force Bate. It waa taking off for Viet- nam with a full Joad ol bombs. In the ground war, the U.S. and Sooth Vietnamese command8 reported scat· tered cluhes in wblch 105 enemy troops were killed and at leut 1.2 enemy lht.U- ings, during the night. bul the general lull in. ~y..uutiated actions COlltioued in it& aixth week Spokesmen at Da Nang said the down- ed helicopter carried a crew of fiv~ Marlnes, a wounded Marine rif1eman, the wounded priaoner, a U.S. Marine guardUc him, and two Navy medics . They said the twin-rotor, 50-foot beUCopter bad just taken off from a jungle landing pad and wu beaded for a hospital when it was shot down. YPSILANTI, llllch. (AP) -SlymJed I autborlUe1 today hunted the strangler of an lS-yt.ar~ld coed whose beaten, nude body was found in the area wttere six olber young women have bten slain. "All I know is I've got aeven unsolved murders," said Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey of Washtenaw County. He sald the killing of Karen Sue Belneman, a freshman at Eastern Michigan University, bore 1 • m a n y sinUlaritit.1" to six other slayings in Ypsilanti and the neighboring college town of Ann Arbor wilhin the past two years. But autito1 ilies reported "no hot leads" toward the tiller -or klUers. Or. Robert c. Hendrix, rated the foremost pathologist ln the area, was called back !rom a norlbem Michlgan trip Sunday to ex'amine the body of Miss Beineman. He reported that the pretty browflo" haired girl was strangled and beaten "sometime Wednesday." • He wd • lull auloply would.be - ducted later to determine whether she had been sexually assaulted and to establlah a more precise time of death. Proaecuwr William F. Delbey of Washtenaw Coumy said the s!ayibg of Mi4s Belneman "#ould appear to be se.1- ually moUvattd." · A man 'and wife walking from their home to their mailbox Saturday evening found Miss Beineman'• body lying face down in a wooded ravine just oU a smaU dirt road at the northeastern outskirts of Ann Arbor. Harvey said she appartntly had been thrown or dumped from a car. She last was repotred seen Wednesday afternoon. Two clerks in a wig shop said she bought a wig and left on a motorcycle with a young man wearing a green and )'ellow striped T-shirt. A sketch ol the young man cl06ely restmbled a composite drawing made in 1!161 of ooe of three youths in a red car, with whom another coed accepted a ride btf<re be:lng killed. Wives Greet Astronauts Bodies of all the vlcllms were louod within a IO.mile radlut, and most had been aei:ua1J3 molested. Two of the other vlctima were stabbed to death, two were &hot, one wu rtringled, aod ooe died of a •kull fracbJ?, ' Anothu bizarre almllarlty among the a!ayings WU feYealed by Harvey, who said that at lt.ut five of the victims had pierced ean, aod at ltast one earring was missing when each qf lhe girls wa.s found. · Authorities said the gold, snowflake- type earrings worn by Miss Beineman when she was last seen were not on her body. Harvey declined to say whether the earTings were ntar tht. body, although he said 11a few articles" were nearby. The latea tllling rtruck new fear into uri. ....... dty coeds and townspeople. EMU 0,.Uiclals said they were con· sioenng placing stringent resbictk;loa on the 540 girls living In dormllarlu this aummer. Marine Dies Of Gang Fight Head lnjm·ies ' PORTSMOUTH, Va. (UPI) -Marine Cpl. Edward Bankston, 20, of Picayune, Miss. died Sunday morning in the U.S. naval hospital at Portsmouth , Va. where he was being treated for head wounds received in a beating by about 30 assailants al Camp Lejeune, N.C. July 20. Bankston and another ~farine, 19-year- old PFC. James S. Young of Roanoke, Va ., were taken to the hospital early last week . Young is reported still on the serious list but is improving, according to ho.spltal officials. A hospital spokesman said an autopsy was scheduled today to determine the e.1· act cause of Bankston's death. About 14 marines were reported to havt been attacked by the predominantly Negro group o( assailants in a series of assaults on the M~e base. Five of the ilants have been positively identifi -4!0nfined. Others are still being inve · aled. · Rep. Mario Biaggi · D-N.Y.}, visited the camp Wednesday in response to telegrams from members of Lhe 6th Com- munications Battalion of the Bronx who said they feared for their lives after 14 Marines were injured in assaults. l>fl with wbat appeared lo be nine brand new air conditioners in crates .. Bui. official~ at the West. lnghouse Service Cenur. said the · ~oDdltioners . were aetective ana wete crated for shipment back to lhe factory. The lhefts occurred during the night The prlloner had been captured In a cla~ ahortly ~ore. Military sourcea said· tudl' pri9ooa'S """11y are flown bact to' headquarters for interrogation as soon u poaaible, partieularJy wheil no in· terpreter is available in the area. Biaggi said he believed the racial fighting at Camp Lejeune was spark.ed by a combinaUon of "subveralon" and racial animosities. He said eight Marines had Wives greet Apollo 11 astronauts on return to Hous-\vin Aldrin while in window the order of the astro-been arrested in the investigation and ton Space Center SUnday. From left are Mrs. naut3 is Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins. three of them were members of the Witnesses to the B52 crash said they heard no explosion before the plane went doWll but Ilia! flames from the burning bomber could be seen for miles. A spokesman for the Strategic Air Com- mand said the crew wu from Pease Air Force Base, In New Hampshlre, and was on temporary duty with I.he 4133rd Bomb Wing. Michael Collins, Mrs. Neil Annslron.;;gi.iiandiiii;~M~rs~.;iE;iid~---------------------ii;Bl;;;iac;;;;k;;;;P;;;;an;;;;;;;th;;;;er;;;;s.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-, • Ktl"1 Rlchor~son o! Kansas City Air Controllers Urge FAA Chief To Quit Post who started collecting Armnboul- aer patches as a Cub Scout in 1939 noW bas 2,000 of them sewn on ;beets of sail cloth, including what Richardson says is an example of Ibo first one -thal originated by the Bisi Division in 1918. Richard- son,.~ schoolteacher, gets many of them by talking servicemen into giving theirs away at bus stations and allJIOr\s . , U.S., Saigon Demand Progress DENVER (AP) -Tht. thtt:at of mass resignations by the nation's air traffic controllers might be eased by the resignation of Administrator John H. Shaffer of the Federal A v I a t i on Admlni!tratlon, leaders of a controllers' organization say. • It should be a patriotic Novem· her in the Louisville, Ky. suburb of St. Matthews. Betsy Roat is running for councilwoman on the George Washington Party Slate. The George Wa shington Party is a local party \\•hich held power in St. Matthews for a number of years. P ARfS (UPI) -'Ille Communist 1id< at the Vietnam peace talk.I can expect no rilore conceSsions from the United States and South Vietnam without some prog- ress toward settling the war, Allied of- ficials uld today. Official sources said the U.S. and South Vietnamese delegaUons had gone as far as they were going with their offer of Viet Cong parUclpaUon in elecuoos in Sooth Vietnam. "We reluctantly conclude that your resignation would be In the public ill-" terest," officers and directors of the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organiz.aUon said Sunday nJght in a ~ page letter they sent to Shaffer over the FAA's own communicatlon& facillties. The talks' 28th llWioo will be held Thunday. It was the latest voUey in a running dispute over demands by PATCO for more controllers and better equipment to control air traffic patterns: more safely. 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Pilot Pete Se%: 'Vacant Rental Units Make Vacancies In Your Bank Account' Here's How Big The 'Vacancy' If Your Monthly Rent1I Every Evert Price Is; D•y Woo • 75 '2.50 117.50 90 3.00 21.00 100 3.33 23.33 120 4.00 28.00 130 4.33 30.33 150 5.00 35.00 175 5.83 40.81 200 6.67 46.69 225 7.50 52.50 250 8.33 58.31 ,( 81sed on 1 30 -day month) And the "v1c•ncy" In your bank account gets even blggt:r when you t•k• into con1ider1tlon the coat of mainttlnlng thoae empty unlta. Summertime Is aictlon time for DAILY PILOT r1ntal ads. Call 642-5678 for the dlrect line to reaulh. We've got some space to rent, too, and the price is elways right In the claaslfied 1dvertl1in9 section of .the Is . . . Every Two Weeki I 35.00 42.00 46.67 56.QO 60.67 70.00 81 .62 93.38 105.00 116.62 . .. --..... " DAILY PILOT Moonslide Evidence Revealed SPACE CENTER, Hooslon (UPI ) -The . proetss by , whk:h lreih moon cratm are transformed to old is believed to hJve Wen obaervtd in re- cent days by sclenUats. They call them moonslldes. UPI Te ....... Space Agency oHiclal! said Sunday they bave reeorded 14 "unusual selsmlc events" on the seismometer left on the moon by Apollo 11. 1'1e events have occurred "simultaneous- ly," alnce Jiiiy 25, the noport said. SCIENTISTS IDENTIFY LUNAR SAMPLE AS IGNEOUS ROCK NASA S.ys Lt's Similar In Af>"P"r•nc• lo Much of Earth's Malorlal • Liquid Beginning! "The cha1cter of the seismic slgnall art simllar to those which occur on t.be earth during landslides," Dr. Garry Latham, head of the moon· quake detection experiment foc Apollo 11 said. "The seismic event.! are believed to be the first stages Moon Rock Key to Secrets by which fresh new craters SPACE CENTER, Houston moon and 1t was made Sun- are be!ng transformed told." (UPI) -'Ibe first piece ol the day, one day after the opening Latham said the signals, moon studied in detail bu of the !Im of two boxes of whicl\ he translates as been fdenlifJed as an igneous rock samples brought back by for detailed study, much of the dust fell off. Indonesia Well Led, 1 Says Nixon .. JAKARTA (UPIJ -Pno!l· dent Nixon left lndoneala tGo ®y oonfldent the future of th6 country ts In good hands and Oew to Thailand. Nixon stopped al M a n 11 a and Jakarta during t h e weekend. The President's ZZ hours In Jakarta we.re a mixture of in- lc.nslve talk& and old.fashioned barnstorming. He talked and he mlng\ed with cheering crowds. ln a brief farewell state- ment, Nixon told President Suharto the United Statea was ''glad to work with Indonesia." He invited Suharto to visit the United States. No date was set . • ' ·-· -~-~----~ ~ ..... ~-------.. VPI Tello!Mll9 DAil y l'llOT I Mcintyre ' Joins Foes ·of ABM WASlllNGTON (UPI) - Oppoilt!>t. ol the Sa!quard -11111lballlsllC' mlalle l7ltenl boasted aoewmembertn their rahk1 today a.a the Senate resumed . lta three- week..id debate oo 1 mWtary procurement 8fll providlaJ fund& !oc ABM deployment. Sen Thomas J. Mc intyre. (D.N.H.), wllo hid been one ol a handful ol , uncommlttt<d lawmaken, announced duftnl the weekend that he would vote to bar depi"7"'ent lor at least a year, HU anouncemmt bolltend the anti-ABM campAJp In the Senate and opened the way lor I JKH:Ompromlae showdown vote on President NboD'I Saleguard proposal. moonsltdes, are occurring rock peppered with glass-lined the Apollo 11 astronauts. about the same tJme as the pits -an "exciUng" fJnd After the OO:r was <>pened in Lunar noon, which arrived at which may help res<>lve some an airless dlamber inside the Apollo ll's tranquility base at lunar mysteries. Lunar Receiving Laboratory, Dr. Elbert A. King, curator of the LRL, said the rock was 31h inches long, 114 inclles wide and an inch thick. It was described as a dark gray, fine-- grained lgnt'1l.US material with some evidence that some mineral surfaces split among planes. "I leave confident~tha:t the future of this country is in good hands." Nixon said. "The chances for a great economic breakthrough for Indonesia are better than e.vef before." At his meeting! with the army general who ousted Sukarno and stopped Indcnesia's drift toward com. munism, Nixon pledged full cooperation toward heJping the v.·oeiul Indonesian economy. When the vote would come wa.s atill completely uncena.ln since the Senate Diaarmament Subcommittee Is slated &o begin a new set of bW'ln.gl We dn ea d ay on com· munlcaUons problema with the AB.M. PRESIDENT WATCHES INDONESLAN WEAVER Nixon Toured J1k1r1• Anniversary Fair Sunday ~~-'-~~---'-~~~~~~~~ 2 a.m. PDT Sunday. An lgneoos rock is one fonn. but before the rocks were h ed by the c o o 1 i n g and removed from the box, four l-le also reported l Cl solldif1cation of a hot liquid or scienUsts said a blackish seismometer, which has putty-like material, and the d hid ~ k I th m,,....,.,,red the moonslides and pow er IJ.le ma eup o e .,..._. glas.5y pits may have resulted rocks previous!)' reported "moon· from the high speed Impact of ' quakes," has a heating pro-But the rocks were removed tiny meteoroids while the rock blem but he believes it will lay exposed 00 the moon'• from the sample box Sunday <>perate for the next few .surface. by technicians wearing black weeks. It was the first positive pressure gloves and when lhe Latham speculated the heat identification o{ a chunk of the first was placed on a platform from the ex haust of the lunar _:::::::::::::::::::..::..:....:::::::.:..:c.... ____ .....;. _____ _ module's blastoff may have · caused a change in the chemical composition of the radiator which cools the 25- pound machine. The additional heat has caused a change in the electrical components in.. side the seismometer, he said. Last Wednesday wriggles in a chart detected what Latham believes to have been "moon· quakes." If such moonquakes do oc- cur, they would ind\cate the moon is an active body somewhat' similar to the earth. Mariners' Mars Photos '. Due Tonight ' PASADENA (AP) -Scien- tists expect to begin receiving tonight their best data ever on a centuries-old puule; Does life exist on Mars? I -' Mariner 6, one or · two spacecraft zooming toward the :.. ..,,,,. mysterious red plaf!et after . a uri T••'*- five-monlh journey, .ts. to beg.in SEN KENNEDY GREETED ON LEAVING CHURCH transmitting telev1S_1lon pie· Senefor and Family Attended Servic11 et Hyannis Port tures from 771,500 m1 es away just before midnight. Mars is nearly SO million miles from earth. Kennedy's Swin:i Story Brings Disagreement "There .are numerous small pils in the surface of the rock wbiCh some observers here believe may have resulted from the Impact <>f micrometeoroids at very high velocities while this rock was expostd on the lunar surface," he said. "These pils are coated on their interiors wlth a glassy lining, and some of the glass appears to spray out of the craters, overlapping the sur· rounding mineral grain." "This has created quite a deal <>f excitement here in the laboratory, as you can im- agine," King said. The rock was later placed in a stainless steel can and transferred to a radiation couiitiiig laboratory, There, King said, the gamma rays emitted from the rock will be measured to tell how long the rock , had been lying oo the surface and exposed to gam. ma radiation from deep apace. Because the rock was tine grained, igneous, and had glassy pits, iL could be a valuable clue for scientists trying to determine t h e makeup and history of the Sea of Tranquility where it was picked up. "We want to be with you, we want to assist you In any way that you thlnk is appropriate," Nixon said at a state dlrule.r in Negara Palact. Privately, he told SUharto the United Slates would con- tinue Its $129 million annual assistance to the country, fifth most populous in the world, ~hich has a per capita income <>f $82 a year. Suharto questioned the value of man's "giant leap" with the landing of Apollo II on the moon when there ts so much to be done on earth. This leap ''has not taken place in this world of ours.'' Suharto said. Nixon said he knew Asi"an countries would strive for t.he day when they could take larger steps toward peace and prosperity. lt was the first. public criticism of the moon landing that Nixon ran Into on the II· day trip wbich began with the Apollo ll 11plashdown. Tax Sharing Assured The size of a rock's grains SEATTLE (AP) -The Nix4 generally reflect its history. on administration plans to Rocks with large coarse have the federal govemment grairul solidifying slowly deep assume a greater share of below the surface allow coarse welfare costs and hand over crystal growth and fine grain· some of its tax revenues to the ed rocks generally cool quick· states, Vice President Spiro T. ly, on or near the surfact. Agnew said today. Extremely rapid cooling of a "Although neither proposal liquid material causes glass has been f!nally approved, I and that led to lhe cooclusion offer you these assurances," meteoroids pelted the rock Agnew said in an address with enough force to melt prP.pared for the opening some of its material, which session of the annual Western then cooled quickly. Governors' Conference. Many geologists h a v e The vice president said the Pat Promises Return Visit To Orphans JAKARTA (UPI) -Pal Nixon, visibly touched du ring her tour of a bome.-for aban· doned children, has promised the youngste~ and the First Lady of Indonesia a return visit. "I'm going to come back and see you," the Fint Lady told women leaders Sunday at the Sajap Foundation for Orphaned and Aban d oned Children. The women directors of the orphanage beamed. "Your very short visit, even leas than 24 hours • , , and yet you gave us your generous lime to visit two child welfare lnsUtutions.'' cine of her hostesses said. "You in America g l v e children a place ln the sun ••. and help the handicapped to live a projecUve life,'' Mn. Nixon was told. "You will noti~ Indonesia mothen are like mothers in America, they care about their chlldren ••• and the children want to he loved and useful whether they are normal or handicapped:" Mrs. Nixon, a diplomat In her own right, was told she had strengthened the already wann friendship between the Unlt°ed States and Indonesia and "given us courage and strength too." At one of the schools, the First Lady broke out in "Oh, wasn't that cute" when the children broke out In "l'm a Yankee Doodle Dandy" •nd ended the 1erenade with the lndonesian-style "Auld Land Syne" and "My Boonie Lies Over the Ocean." thought the moon's sem were adminlltration's revenue shar· ;:::==================:;! formed by vast oulpouringi of ing plan will "reward the ac-LOCAL lava and it appeared the first tive state government," Jen- By the time 1'fariner 6 flies within 2.000 miles of Mars on Wednesday, scientists hope it will have sent up to 74 pic- tures, some detailed. enough to pick out possible n.nns, canals <>r geometric patterns. i tariner 7. <>n a more equatorial Mars route, is to take the first of ils 114 pic- tures Friday from 1.14 million miles away and make a 2,000- mlle pass on Moaday night, EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI) -Residents of this Martha's Vineyard town disagree on vthether Sen. Edward M. Ken- nedy could have swum the 150- yard channel separating Martha's Vineyard f r o m . l. I A U II ' d. ed to ~. "·l NCJ other 11•w1p•p•t t•ll1 V•11 ry back." examma ton o po o s 1ng er ence repo.w w&e1 1r1or•, ev•rv d•y, •bout wh•t'• Police Chief Dominick J. samples from the Sea <>f Tran-the proposed allocation <>f 90;119 011 ;11 th•"'•••••• o. .... ,. Aug. 4. The closest pictures will show features as small as 900 feet across. The Mars probes were sent off by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory here for the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration. Dr. Robert B. Leighton. California Institute of Techno logy physicist· astronomer and chief in- vestigator for the project. said there was little chance of seeing earth·like features on Mars. Photos taken on the Mariner 4 flight in 1965 showed a bleak, crater-pocked surface resembling that of the moon. No mountain chains, ocean basins or continents appeattd. The cameras and scientific instruments on Mariners 6 and 7 are intended to measure temperatures, pressures and atmospheric densities. and seek details of the planet's polar caps, clouds, canal·like lines and other s u r f a c e features. l\fadera Fights Race Trouble MADERA (AP ) -One man was wounded above the ~.~art and another hit on the head with a bueball bat in what police called a series ol racial clashes. Patrolmen said they did nol know what touched off the fights starting Sunday af- temoon 1nvolvtng Negroes and Mexican Amerlcan!I on 11-iadera's south alde. Trouble conllnued today. " Chappaquiddick Island. . Kennedy said in his televis· ed speech Friday night that afler unsuccessful attempts with two friends to rescue Mary Jo KOJ>eChne, the 28- year-old secretary who drown.. ed in a sa\t.water Chap- paquidick pond last weekend, he impulsively swam across the channel to F.dgart.own, nearly drowning in °lhe pro- cess. Richard Hewitt, skipper of the barge-ferry which makes the trip in three minutes, &.aid, "I'm not saying it was Im- possible to make the swim, but t don't believe it." He said he bad seen four teenagers try so far this sum- mer and "each time they were so exhausted tbey look the fer- Mine Firm Expanding SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - New Park Milling Co. has acquired two Nevada steel fabrlcaUng ttrms for more than $MIO,OOO worth of com· pany stock. Prttident Gforge W. Day of New Park announced ac- quisition of Great Basin Steel Co., Jnc., Sparks1 and Taylor Steel CO., lnc .. Lu Veg11. Ht! said both firms fabricate reinforcing a n d atructural steel, with substanUaJ sales to the mining industry. 'fbey had agregate gross Wes of" $3.3 million Jut year. New,Park purchased Taylor St.eel fM" 29,557 lham, worth '238,000. Arena, who requested the quility added support to that funds would be based on Co••t th•11 tllo D4 1LY PILOT. complaint on a charge of teav· _theo~~ry~. ________ _i:po~p~u'.'.la~U~o~n.!p~l.,.~ta~x~efJ:'.:o~r_:t·_.....!'=:===================j Ing the scene of an accident to which Kennedy pleaded guilty, did not doubt that Kennedy could have made the swim. "The senator, despite his back, looks healthy to me, and I think he could do it. I beUeve his Story• II Lumhe1men Set Mark ··WASHINGTON (AP) Timber sales from natlona1 forests · 10 13 BOUthem states exceeded a billion board feet for the first time during the year ended June 30, the Agriculture Department said today. Edward P. Cliff, chid of the Forest Servi~. said the sales record wss particularly grati- fyi ng sin~ lhe South ls com· paratlvely new as a Umber product.Ing arta. He said most or the national forests ln the region have been created from cut-over land which was acquired ln the ear· Ly 1930s. Convict Hangs Self in Cell SAN QUENTIN (UPI) Oiarles Earl Partin, serving a life sentence for flrs\ degree murder, hanged himself in hl! San Quentin prlton cell early today. AT EDISON'S ELECTRIC LIVING CENnR A SPECIAL PROGRAM FOR THE T&NAGER Com• for •n adv•ntur• with th• ATOM lnc;lud lng an introduction of it1 discovery. Also, a tour throu gh a nucltar powe r ••hibit. To compl••• the plctur•, you'll ••• foo d cooked in 1ecortd1 In th• FABU LOUS ELECT- RONIC RANGE. Hun tington Beech Electric l iving Center 538 Main Streat Hu ntington Beach, California Tu•1dty w.dn•sday Jhur,dt y J,Jy 30 July JO July 30 10:00 a.m. I 2:00 p.m. 10:00 a.m . &: 2:00 p.m. I 0:00 1.m. & 2:00 ~.m. EdiPl's home emoom.im wat aMW'tt qnm:iom and show yoa. trchojqoct ,~ lhrilrf, W.....•mg ... -.r modem <kalJc 1pplimccs. Brio& aftimd-mW:..., lti<ods, aoddiscmcr ..iu.bi<,,.,. "°""""king hlms. Another community setvlc• of ..r1: .::t-::U,.,,, C.lifoml• EdilOll Compony Partin was round by guard& hanging from a strip of a blari'ket which had been at- tached to the ventilator. A dummy was found ln the cell'' bed. :.__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • Now-a new HFC office for better • • • money service in ,Newport Beach NEWPORT CENTER 2087 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD PHONE: 644 45U Need up to $5000? Wilen you need money to pay bms, baJ• better car or meet other lmpcrtant 1110MJ needs, you may arrange for It right In your own hometown office of HFC, Hou~hold finance. The HFC manager wUI explain evetything you need to know about~ leer.; What's more, he'll ten you what ~r loin will cost, In dollars and cents, before you borrow I And at Household, there's a convenient repayment plan for fNer/ budget Each year, more than 2'n mllAon people trust their money needs to Household Finance. Why don't you? Stop In, call or applJ by maU to HFC's newest office today. "OUSEHD .. FINANCE ------~i&- COftA UIA OHIQS H....., llYd. ai 191h SI •••••••••••••••• Ml 6-4CTI South eo.t Plaa, Lower Lewi ••••••••• 5404'1Q:I ll•llllllOTOll lllACll Ofl'ICI Flw Points Shoppln1 C.-.. ,. •.• ..••.• YI 7~ IAIRA AllA - 204 w. '°"""St ...................... 547-5491 Make a Sharp Deal; Use Dime-A-Lines I I • I l • I • I DAD,'Y PILOT EDITOBIAL PAGE I Wrong Me~ns to an End ' With tho possible oxc.,,uon of a b~ of Vir&inla to1!lcc9 !armers, the van m.aJor!ly of Amtr!can.s mu1t 'be convliiCia by now that clgaretlAI sm<>ldn& can harm health and shorten Uves. The cigarette and tobacco Industry attempted for a while lo relulAI the analytical and ltaU.UcaJ teats • ol leading medical exper\I -malntalnl!IJ ~ that con- chwvo proof ol clgarett .. • health evilJ bad not been proved. Now even ther, concede that those who puff on • cigarettes are' more likely lo have heart and clreula· lory problems, not to m e n t I o n a grooUy lnc11!81ed chance of lung ~er. · Now, with 10ine very obvlow govemment pruauro being applled, the nine American cl&are!U manulao- turus say they are willing lo slop all adver!Ulng on television and ndio, provided that they can continue to advertise In magazines and newspapers. ·Both the Federal Communications Commission (which controls the radio and TV airways) and the Federal Trade Commission (which iJ responsible for health wa!:ulngs Oii cigarette packages) applied the mwcle to the cigarette industry to obtain th.is oiler. From one view, any move that miglrt lessen the op- portunity for young people to take up dgarette smok· Ing Is welcomed. Certainly the harmful potenUal of lobecco can no longer be overlooked or shrugged oU. But from another view. the federal_government js entering dangerous ground when it -direcUy Qr in-. directly -coerces any industry as it bas the cigarette manufacturers. Jt is dangerous for, until Congres~ or the courts ruJe otherwise, cigarettes are a legal pro.- duct. If they are not illegal, and if the advertising about them is not n1isleading, the cigarette manufacturers h ave a right to stay in the free enterprise stream of American business. The manufacturers have the even more fundamental right of freedom of speech. • Some Americans believe that if cigarettes are as dangerotlll ·as all the statistics Indicate, they should be made an illegal producL Considering the notable lack George Wallace Getting Ready RICHMOND, Va. -The Orst thi111 a Hparter notices about George Wallace Is that he hu a face rather like a cat. The hands are catlike, the ~short fingers tapering &harply inlo the llUQfSloo al claws. The eyes are unbllntin&. aod lbe walk is a quick, sure ICUUle, like that of a cat in a hurry. The second thing a reporter notices Is that George Wallace is a rather friendly cat, full ol earnest conversaUon and ad- vice -like the Cheshire cat in "Alice's Adventurn in Wonderland." No man is an ogre once you get to know him, and George Wallace l5 no exception. The third thlni a nporiu notica ls that Gear&• Wallace ls watdllng - cal!Jke, ready lo pounce II there ls somethlng to pounce on but carefully :.paring oC energy, unfrenetic. twitching jtl5t a UUle as he watches Richard Nixon. "'l'l'E GOT ONE eye on him, and be'• got one eye on me, and we two are watchlng each other, and he knows that U he tbi't do whit he tokl everybody he was gonna' do, then I'm gonna' catch him. just as sure as abootin', and thia time he knows we'll be a lot more ready for him than we were before." It ls tnteresUng to watch Wallace get- tinc rudy. There ii, nm of all, the theme -the likely theme of a Wallace camp&lgn, if there Is to be ont in 1972. Here in the capital oI the Old Con· federacy, he had addressed a coovenUon of hil American Independent Party, or, •as Wallace now refen to it, "the American Party." He bad doqe it without a text. IDd he o(fe.red the reporter the noteis (!'om which he spoke: "THANK PEOPLE. Iceberg. I pray Md hope. Our po11ilion not radical. POEii· Uon of Jeffe?IOl'l and others. Law and order. Vletnam. InfiaUon. Taxe3· Poverty programs. Foundations. Foreign aid. Murder of the middle class." From these notes, the Wallace theme is readHy discernible. But the key word wu "Iceberg." Wallace bad drawn a circle around it. "All be aaw in the final returns," \Vallace u:plalned, referring to Mr. Nix- on, "was the Up of the lctberg. People went to the polla to vote for me, and they said, 'No, I'm afeared a Hmnphrey, SiO t gotta' vote for Nixon.' Now H Nixon don't bring •bout an honorable peace, and H be doa 't cure Inflation, and If he dOO 't 1>rtng about law Ind order, and II he don't do a lot of other thing!!, he's gonna' tee the whole iceberg. I hope and pray be does a good Job, but I'm a-waitin'." (He deliyers the keynote speech at the J t th annual convention of Christi.an Crusade in TUisa on Aug. 3) WBD..E WAITING, Wallace h 1 s reorganized his staff. Gone are what he calls "the koob," and in their place Is a group of brjgbt young I a w y e r s , personified by a member of the Alabama House of Rep-eaentatives named Sage Lyons. He wW not agaln make the mistake he made in the last campaign: "Those big crowds. Here's a little girl a·listenln' to me, and some extremist is &bouUn' foul language over her head , and her daddy can't stand it Do longer, and he picks up a chair, and so that's what the news media tells about, and not what I said." HE IS A Jevel-headed man, George Wallace, far more level-headed than his movement and far more objective about himself. He seems almost afraid of his movement. and he warm It not to put up candidates with no chance to win. "What we gotta' do is to change the natklnal policy. tr we can change it wilhout run- ning, that's fint. If we can't, we'll run, and that's fine, too." Wallace Js ready, twitching with readiness. But Wallace is smart. U he can force Mr. Nixon to move in his direc- tion, he is ready to vanish. like the Cheshire cat, "beginnlng with the end of lhe tail and ending with the grin, '1 wblch, as everybody knows. "remained some- time after the rest • , . had gone," Tom Bradel ud Frank Muklewlcs Fast Rouw to Safety Every generation manufactures I~ own dreams and Its own mamories. They chanee with each aeneratlon, of coune, becauae time lnevltably changts everytbln1. And lheJ contribute to the widen1IJI of the generation gap. One wonders whit memories this present generatlon will \find up \tith. when Jt comes to the end of the road. Wiii they be better, worse, or more bit- Dear Gloomy Gus: '11111""" oo lhe .-·11u1f m•k,. I fine TV ~ but tt'll nt'9r 80 Al I ltl'la. ! tersweet lhan our own? No one can tell. But one thing we do know. Today's youlh won't be able, as many older folks now can, to look back and rtmember when- EVERY SMAIL TOWN hotel k•pl a coil ol rope be<lde tho Gideon Bible so that, I.a cue of firt, you could Ue il lo a bedstead and shinny down from the ne&r"efi window to safety. When a man wu considered worthless, people aaid of bim, "He ain't worth the powder It'd lite te blow him te hell." ne ambWon tl eYUY small boy was to l>e able lo buy a chup metal rlnr emblazoned with a snake wrapped around a human &tun. Among the girl&, only tomboys dartd to wtar one. Men people WGl'Tied abWI pn>porty ta111 than income tuu. 1111.\T FRIGHTENED kids about tltrtlng ttnderaartcn wu .the letend spread by older children that tht prln- clpal kept a 1pankin1 machine In bis of· Dee. ' '·• of succass In th.is dlrecUon during Prohibition, ll ls hot llltely tbal such a mov~ would succeed wllll tobai;co any better1:1Um Vllllr alcohol. · The an!wer probably liei In a continlllng education program. The rne.dlcal profession baa taken an increas. fog Interest In the qull-smoklng campaign lately, and- th• 1taUstics are beg!Mlng lo show r .. ulu. Whatever the answer, It does not lie Jn tbe exceed· !ngly dangerous a r e a of trampling Oii tho F I f s t Ameudment. We Greet the Elite What are you doing August 13? I! you are among the select, among the creme de la creme, a diplomat of. the highest order, a governor Or an astronaut -you will be in Los Angeles for a dinner with the President. · Southern California probably never bas entertain· ed a more select group ttian those who will join Mr. Nixon at a Presidential dinner at the Century Plata in honor of the three-returning astronauts on that eve- ning. The President told the astronaut.! aboard the USS llornet that the banquet guests would include the gov- ernors of the 50 slates and all of the ambassadors now in WasfJington, so that should give some inkling of the beady 1one of the slate banquet. Considering how much of Apollo 11 was planned and built in South em California (not to mention the fact that Columbia will be under surveillance a few miles away in Downey), it is entirely fitting that Messrs. Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins will be paid tribute .here. · • Particularly so since the President himself ts now ~ summer resident of Orange County and will be driv~ Jng up from his home in San Clemente for the affair. Certainly we are pi:oud to have_ them. Is Instinct lust a Kind Of ESP? ·This War Game lt'1 bttn ·nearly 90 years 11lnce the British Society for l'lychlcal S...arch was founded at Cambridge, and only now fOl" the first time is the idea of "e.x- trasehsory 'perception" -or ESP -ac- quiring a flavor of scientific respec-tability. _ . We .know that the serious science of astronomy grew out of p r i m i t 1 v e astrology ; that the modem marvels of chemlatry developed from tbe alchemists or lbe Middle Age,,; but we are reluctant to admit tbilt such stuff as dreams and "hunches" and "tntuitioaa" may be .pie precursors of a new psychology J,hat goes far beyond .anythlllg yel appnobended by man. ONE OF 'nlE MOST interesting of re- cent eiperiments was reported this spring ln the journal, "Medical World News." In the tenuous field of what is known as "precognition" -that is, an- ticipating future events -a professor at Newark Colle1e of Engineering in New Jersey, conducted an unusual test with the aid or a computer. He had 67 president:. of engineering firms -hard-headed men who would normally have no truck with the occult - try to predict through an IBM punch-- board what numbers a ~ter would print, at random, hours later. By pure chance, the execuUvea 11bould have prtidlcted correctly only one number out or 10. IN A PRIOR INTERVIEW, two-third~ of tbls group had already told lbe testers that a kind of ESP seems to operate in lheit important deciaionll -that "they had consistently been rtgbt with huoche.s, against logic, facts, a n d recom· mendations of operaUon reaearcbtra." The findings conflnned their feelings about themselves. 1bose presidenll who had done best with their business hunches :--wboae companies bad doubled profiU m the past five yean -picked tbe richt number about one out of eight Umes. But execuUves with weaker protlt profiles (some oI whose firms had gone into the red) coukl: not even equal mere chance - they averaged about one out of 12 correct choices .• "THE lllGHER YOU go ln business the more decisions are made on in: tuition," said the dJrector of the ex- periment, "and the top men apparently have It workJng for lhem.'' Card playen have known this for cen· turles. The lop players in any game seem to have an extra sensitivity that goes far beyond card lechnique -bridge experts know which fineste1 to taJc:e and which to avoid, and have an uncanny skill in "placing" the opponents' cards that ii not a mere matter of. logical inference or probability sealel. What the elptrtl themselves call "the feel of the table" la the most decillve In. gredlent in tournament competition: and what can this "feel" be but a form or ESP! .----•11 6 ...... --- CONFIDENTIAL TO WESTERN UNION: 0.K., here goea, built 11111 roundJ pretty silly lo me: "ff•Pl>Y Birthday te you, ~ 1Mnhdly te you, H•ppy lllrllid&y; W ta 1- umnnMn UUUUUlJ.)'lm! Ra·ppy Birthday to you!" Now leave me alone, will you? No Longer Fun Undoubtedly the most 8erious problem a nation faces today is that war is no longer much fun. . Gone are the days when the young marched gaily off to do or die for this cause or that -banners fiying. buglers blaring and preuy girls fluttering handkerch!els. Today'• generation looks on war u boring, stupid, dangerous and a down- right drag. When lt comes to fun, a grow- ing number of ,young men are taking five years in Leavenworth. Obviously, U young men won't go and ):;ill whomever their leaders tell them to kin, the very foundaUons or our civiliza· tion are imperiled: When a leader, of- fended by llOUle sight, pounds his fist and shouts, "This mearu war!" people will just chuckle, Make their heads and go about their b05Jness. Then where will the nations be? FORTUNATELY, TO meet this threat, The-Potomac Institute for War Analysis has been engaged in a three-.year study for the Pentagon on the subject, "Making War Fun Again." The results, thus far, have been encouraging. The institute's director, Dr. Hemon Kahn. author of that popular work, .. Megadeaths Don't Count," feels the pro- blem Is one ol inadequate training of the young. "We must give little boys war toys at an early age," he says, "so lhal they may pretend to shoot their little friends. Th.ia wW teach them the pleasure of kill- Ing a fellow human being. But al the same time it will show them no one really gets hurt In combat, elsewise they might grow up wltb a neurotic !ear or war. "TO INS'IUL romance and adventure we need cantlc books and war movies in whlch handsome· heroes are rewarded for their courage on the batUefiekl with fame, SUCctllJ and beauUful women. "And we 11imply must have a few television series showing what fun war can be. One called 'McHale's Navy," for example, might tie about the hilarious duties of a PT-boat crew in the Pacific Theater. Or another, entitled, 'Hogan's Heroes,' might depict how life in a Gennan POW camp was nothing but a barTel of laughs. "This way, our young will grow up knowing war for what it is -satisfying, romantic, rewarding and full of fun.'' DR. KAHN'S SOLUTION is opposed, however, by other staff members who feel the public will never accept such conditioning of the young. His own brother. Chengis, blames modem con- cepts of warfare for giving war a bad name. "The Vietnam war is a bore," he says, 1Gead Rews, Joe. We 've llktfl !lit hill • ., JOI?' "because no one knoY.'S why we're fighting it. To be fun, war must be fought for a reason." He advocates "returning to time-tested ideals" by overrunning Vietnam, annex· ing the country and enslaving Its inhabi- tants. But serious objections to taking over Vietnam haVe been Hi:ised "Haven't we got,"· as one staff rqember p.it it, "'enough troubles already?" THE IMPASSE now appears re.!Ol ved by a subsequent report, which notes that the most fun wars in history were those for rapi ne and pillage. The institute has thus recommended that we withdraw from Vietnam and in- vade Monaco instead, oor goal being to rape Princess Grace and plunder the Casino de Monte Carlo. "One, brief, fun·filled war would qu ick- ly restore the fighting spirit in our apathetic youth," says the report. And several Pentagon generals hve privately agreed that Monaco sounds like much more run than Thailand. The report concludes, however, with the ghm warning that haste i11 of lhe essence in implementing this plan, as Princess Grace isn·t growing any younger. Draft Laws Won't Change The outlook for any major changes in the Selective Service Act this year is srowinl dimmer by lhe day. There isn 't the 111Jghte.sl cha nce of the House or Senate doing anything on this long controversial issue before the start of the three weeks' recess in the middle of August. And the prospects for action are little U any betlef' when Congress reconvenes after Labor Day. There are several controlling reasons for this backstage situation. (1) ne dnft law doesn't expire for another two years -June 30, 1971. As a consequence, there is no pressing urgen· cy to do anything about it. There is de- mand In and out of Congress for changes. but no compelling pressure. With Congress facing a heavy accumulation of unfinished bu siness, there is DO in- cllnaUon to tackle anything that can wait. IZ) Two months a10, President Nixon proposed six important revisions -the most notable a lottery plan. A week later, the administraUon's bill was introduced in the House by Rep. Leslie Arends, Ill., Republican whip and ranking GOP member of the House Armed Services COPlmlttee. But since then neither he nor the White House has done a thing about IL (Z) 111 ille Se.ate, the situation ls even murkier. The adrnini!:traUon's measure still hasn't been submitted there. Ap- parently, none of the et1ht Republican memberl of the Senate Armed Services Cornmiltff bu offered to sponsor it. This would ind1cat.e no lntention to do anything there until the House has started moving. Jn tht! liouse the Prtsidenl 's Sil' recom-- mendaUons are going to remaln firmly pigeonholed a11 far as a key member ls concerned. WHO ANO WHY -!l<p. F. Edward Hebert (0.1.8. ), chairman of the Hause Armed Services Subcommittee on the , furores. ,AJleJJ.·Golasriiii:h . Hebert. one·Ume star New Orleans ; newsman and editor, is the fir st i Louisianan to serve 25 conseeutive years in the House . ( _.,.; ,,., Dralt, has no intention of doing anything about them for a blunUy 5imple reason. He contends there is no reason tor that. It is the veteran legislator's emphatic view that everything the President has proposed can be accomplished by ex· ecutive or administrative acUon. No new legislation is necessary. Says Herbert: "Of the President's s i 1: recom- mendations, five can be aceompllshed within 24 hours and need no legislation. The one reCommendaUon wtuch would necessitate a change in the law is the S<>- called 'scrambllng of birth dates.' This opens the dahgers to a so-called 'lottery by human error,' whereas a 'lottery bf sed on birth dates' could be ac· complished without legislation and would provide a lottery by Divine Providence. "l SUBMIT that Divine Providence is much more preferable than human error. Thus, l! the President wants a 'lottel}'' of the youngest first. all that is ne.cessary is that he utilize the mechanism of the present law. It is a.s aimple SJ that. Frankly, I was surprised that he. sug· gested this mechanical change since l don't think it provides any greater equity or any greater fairness 1n the selection proceq," Unless overruled by the 4G-mtmbtt (23 Dcmocrata, 17 Republicans) H<ltl$f! Arm. ed Servlcea: Committee, Hebert does not plan to hold hearings. He Is wlllln& to conduct what he calls "briefings'' by mUJtary and other authorlUes. But ht la against public hearings because of the belle! they would be used b1 radical, pacifist and other opponents to ill.age publlclly~e&klna; demonstrations a n d l\10RE THAN 40 bills have been offertd in that chamber for a wide range of changes in the Seleetive Service Act. 1be most massive was sponsored by Rep. Frank Thompson, 0-N.J .• and 20 other members. It consists ol 86 pages and Thompson informed Rep. L. Mendel Rivers, D-S.C., chairman of the Anned Services Committtt, that he wanted hearing s on the measure. "I will certainly consJder that," said Rivers pleasantly. "And in order to eJ- pedite that, I would like very much to have you and all the co-sponsors ol this very large and important bill to prepare for me a detailed explanation of every one of U1e revisions you propose." Robert S. Alt. •nd John A. Gold1mlth --ml-- Monday, July 2B, 1969 The ediimial page of the Dailu Pilot seekt to infprm and 1U'n- ulate readeft bu preintUng thir netotpaprr'1 opinknu and com- mentary on topics of fntfreat and ~gnificance, bu prOtridlng a fOt'um /Of' t.11.t t%prluion of our readeri' opfniorn:, and bit presenttng thf df1'f1'tt "few. points of htfM"f7Wl obttrvera and fPOke1mrn Oft iopb of tht day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher I I ' ' ' ·~-~-~---,.·,....~---.... .---....--·---------.......-------.....------,.,.-~,,....,= 'Aid te A81Qs PresUlent Plays Remarks Cooly JAKARTA (UPI) -Prest. by rectifying aome ol the pro- dent Nlxon ii t&klng a very b1ems and procedurel whlch cauUoul appruch to hls have leuefte4 the vahle of dlscusaionl with Asian leaders American· aid in the pmt. to avoid llvlol them the idea Nbon and Presldent Suharto that ltr1e amounts o f ~ of Indonesia talktd about what American aid are 1oing to be Southeast As.ia. is going to ioot forthcoming u a result ol his like after -the Vietnam conflict lrlp. . Is ended. . ToP lortlp office officials Suharto, although he tries to M:e and \n Manila complained steer a nonaligned coune, wu mildly and privately that they regorted by American oUiclalJ have bttn unable to pin Nixon to have told Nixon that he down on wbat. lJ anyt.hitig, the understands U.S. policy in United .States plans ln future Vietnam and hopes t h e economic asslstance be)'{lod American withdrawal there that already committed. eventually · can b e ac- NIXON TECHNIQUE complisbed in a manner whlch ' Solons In Fi'nal Two Weeks Spec tr es of Major Iss ues Hau'fl.t Lawmakers SACRAMENTO (U PI) -Democrats re1llu t hey Spectres or several major can't 1 top adjournment. issues containing p o l 1 t I c a I Republifans routrol t be repercussions haun ted Assembly 41-39 and the 5e.mlt.e 11wmater1 wbo began today 21-11. The Assembly wants to what they hoped was a two--go home Aug. 61 the Senate week homestretch lo the fln1sh ha& voted for Aug. a. Une of this session. The Democratic strategy Is The As9e:mbly and Senate to Piq failure of tax reform C1n sUll faced cruclal votes on the GOP for ammunition ln such iUUtt as tax reform and the l970 ,· .... :on. reblte, state aid to schools, Reagan said he still was automobile smog and con· "optlmb:tic" bls tax plan servatJon of San Francisco Bl)'. would be approved, but in the With eacb passing day it same breath said it could w:i :t crew mote doubttul whether a until next ye.ar. comprehensive tu refonn A comprdtensJvi tax refonn r<bote bl!IJ on whldl the Stnate rellloed lo make up ill mlQd, '[he l!l'l'O'. ~~ both. Ont la a Dem o crat I:· ·--b"' h1bcllag back io perctnt of I taxpayer's bUl of 'Iut Ap··· The Reai.Jn· sponaored GOP v~kM:i would relum 10 percent . The Senate faces a thorny problem wllh a watered-down bay conservatkln· and develop. ment commlas1on bill . . . . will not leave the region open 1111~ cs bec~use N • x o n to anarchy. 1.:'.:~~~=:::::::_ _________ ...,::..,;:J tec~ntque def~nltel~ . w a s Nixon has found Suharto pack.qe would pass this year or tax Wit program would re-The Senate rejected' the but the apparently doomed quire c o n s t I t u t I o , 3 I Assembly's ADO m i J 11 1 n program sUJl 4P1tked inten.se amendments that couldn't be pollt1ca1 Wighting. pieced on 8 regular eleclion package and sent back its 9"VD 'nle Senate Finance Cum- mitttt str:~--e<t from toe bipartisan com pr om I •e measure a se<:lion giviJ:la: the comminion authority over development of a strip o( shoreline around the ~ bjly, a provistoo already ac- e<pted by the M&embly. The bill on the Senate noor stllJ ex- tands the conunlulon's ver.o power over bay filling arid dredginl{ ,,. .. ,..;-ts. designed to avoid ra1s1~g a~y concerned about Chinese Com-••What are you di~ ~~~o::~ner tonight? ••• fa!~ hopes Ir, accord with his munist plans in Southeast --------=-=:...::...==--------- Assembly Democrats, led by ballot until next June. $95 million progr~m. Under caucus cbainniln G e o r g e The Assembly ts expected to the bill, sthoo!s could spend up Zenovlch, Fresno, said they act Uils week to send a bill fur to $120 mfllion, afl ' that woo't vote for adjournment state aid ,to scbools to a joint Reagan insists he'll approve belief that the future economic Asia development of this area must · be accomplished on a regional · ltlORE AWAJU: and cooperative basis. The Indonesian leader is The United States Is willing more aware of the perils of to offer • con,,lderable amount P e king-directed subversion of help but only after it is than most neutralist leaders in satisfied that Asian leaders thia area. lt was an abortive are aoing to lake the initiative Communist revolution which She's Either 112 or 127 LOS ANGELES (AP} Tatzumble DuPea 's friends agree that she may not be the oldest woman in the United States but she's indisputably the old"t actress. "Today," she told newsmen at her birthday party, "I um 112 years old." "One hundred twenty ye8.rs old," said her son Edwin, 67. "Yeah, I'm pretty old," she replied. She ~n't Ile about her age, her son said, but she forgets sometimes. Records show that Mrs. DuPea, a Paiute Indian, was born July 26, 1849, in Lone Pine, Calif. Moviegoers saw her weathered face in many Western films. President Nixon was among those seM.ing greetings to her Saturday at a convalesce nt home in Los Angeles. P a ir on Trial For Slaying LOS ANGELES (UPI) Two brothers charged with the bludgeon murder of silent screen Ramon Navarro in his J-lollywood Hills mansion went on trial today. Jury selection was schedul- ed to begin in the case of Paul Robert Ferguson, 22, a house painter, and his brother, Thomas S. Ferguson, 18. Both are from the Chicago area. he put down when he came to power in 1965, ousUng Prtsi- dent Sukarno, who had believ- ed he coo.Id do business with Peking. Suharto, U.S. officials said, agreed completely with Nix- on's as,,ertlon that China poses the greatest threat to peace in th.is area. Nixon is understood to have found Suharto's attitude toward Russia somewhat am- bivalent. The Russians have a large investment here dating back to the 1950'• and early IMg's when they gave Sukarno a Sl billion military establiab- ment as Well aa mulive konomic aid. Suharto needs to refurbish his rusting military equipment but he wants to be very careful not to mortgage Indonesia even more deeply to the Kremlin. Ship Adrift Off Coast SAN PEDRO (AP) -The Grace Lines freighter Santa Addia was undergoing repairt today after an engine room fire set her adrift oft the Southern California coast. The 10,000 ton freighter was only 40 miles out of Los Angeles Harbor when the fire broke out early Sunday. Some or the 46 crewmen managed to extinguish the flames, but the ship lost power hallway back to port, harbor officials said. There wer:e no injuriC! among the crewmen. A tug Y.'aS dispatched to help the Sant.a Adella lo port. Driver of Tour Bus Has Nightmare Trip HOLL VWOOD (UPI) -The driver of a sightseeing bus became lost Sunday In the serpentine r0ads thlt wind through the Hollywood hills and provided residents of the exclusive area with a show like an oldlime comedy. The Continental Trailways bus, filled with 34 tourists from New York. lumbered through the narrow streets un- til it crunched to a halt about S p.m. -stuck fast on a hairpin curve. The area is packed with $200,lm homes, I n c I u d i n g those o{ Raquel Welch. Danny Thomas, Fred Astaire and Mary Pickford. The unldentUied driver, who !Ives in New York, telephoned for heJp from the home of composer Maurice Jarre. win- ner of two Academy Awards. Two tow trucks arrived at the acene and hooked on to the bus. When lhey began to pull, however, Ule oi1 pan of the bus ruptured and gallons of the black stuff flowed down the steep roadway. Neighbors responded to the plight of the passengers, who y.·ere chauffeured to their hotel in Rolls Royces, Cadillacs and Porsches. Fire Capt. Martin Bullard arrived in a city fire truck with its siren wailing and red light flashing. He quklly de· ·ctared the scene an emergen- cy and authorized the UJe of a huge fire department tow truck equipped witb a boom to free Ole bus. The driver climbed back in- to his vehicle about 7:IO p.m. and coasted it about two blocks to the bottom of lhe hill. He was obR:rved about 10 p.m. still sitlin& inside the b ... D R f S unles!I acUon I.I taken on Gov. confertnce committee -the for added a.id to sdlools. ;Vorce· e orm ure Ronald !Uagan's tu Shift pro' l r a d It ional end .. £-session Also before the lower house &t gram. handling ot school finances . are a pair of income tax Jt was, anUdpated an effort would be made on the floor t11 restore shoreline cOntrol!. -"~~~~~~~~~~..::...~~~~~~~~-'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 0 f Senate Approval SACR*MENTO (UPl )-Se,, Donald L. Gruns k y, (R. Watsonville), today predicted euy Senate approval of the first major overhaul or divorce law in California hJJtory. Gnmsky and Aue:mb1yman James A. Hayts, (R·Long Beach),~ are 1ponaon of the compromise bill, already ap- proved by the Assembly . They SF Woman I Begins 2nd 100 Years SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Fannie Maxon began her se- cond 100 years today, thanking the "big boy upstairs .'' awaiting the nut San Fran- cisco Giants game o n television, and keeping her "thou ghts clean." Mrs. Muon, a widow for aJmost 50 years, celebrated her lOOlh birthday Sunday with a 1lp of champagne and a bit of advice. ''Try to keep your thoughts clean," the P!ano, 111., native warned- "Every thought and every deed is registered 1n the book of life. If you don't keep them respectable, they'll show up." Mrs. Maxon was born when Ulysses S. Grant was Presi· dent. She says she can remember seeing flames of the great Chicago fire from 50 miles away. A st.rict vegetarian who neither drinks nor smokes, Mrs. ~!axon says she likes to read •·metaphysical things." Fontana Man Ai.Tested in 3 Sla yings FONTANA I UP I ) Douglas Lynn Roy, 26. was held on s~plclon of murder in the shooting deaths of three men aft.eT a two-mile car chase. Police said four witnesses saw the shooting!! Sunday which occurred at Roy 's home shonly art.er a party which the swpect and all three victims had attended. Dead on &rTival at Kai!ler Foundation Hos pital w I t h wounds rrom a .12-gauge shotgun were Frankie Roy Hubka, ZS; Daniel Rodriquez: Machain, 16, both of Fontana, and Michael Dean Cobern, 26, San Bernardino. Police said they responded to i telephone call reporting the shooting. feel it will remove hate and recrimination ( r o m the courtroom process or dissolv- ing a marriage. Gov. Ronald Reagan said be favor!I the bW. Reagan earlier wured the authors he would sign the measure de!ligned to prevent ''SClfl'ing" a( chUdttn when a family breou "!> The new la~. which tiould become effettlve Jan. I upon Reagan's signature, also is ex- pected to hurt the flour,iihing "quickie divorce" mills in neighboring Nevada and Me1.- ico. Last year In California, there were 2111,000 marriagu. But there were 111 , o o ~ divorces and if ii predicted there will be 130,000 divorces granted this year. That doesn't count those Californians who can't wait the one-to-two-year period it takes to com plete the divorce proceediJl&s jn c'alUornia Ind go to Ws Vegu or Rtna, Nev., fot slx-)IPltk;divorce1, di to T1j-..na, Mexico, for an even quicker !!Pl.it. Reno attorney H o w a r d McK.ilsick, s p e a k e r of the Nevada assembly, .said pasaage of the California divorce reform bill woold cut Nevada's Jucntive divorce rate "to a ttribble." He Wd SUnday hall the 220 practicing attorneys in Reno are divorce · lawyen inakinl: $18,000 to $30,lm a year and "many o( the older lawyers can't do anything else." "We will have to find something legitimate to do," he joked. Here are some ways the far-reaching changes will affect~ divorces : -Adultery is eliminated as a ground for divorce and to Is the old catch·all "mental cruelty." -The only two ground! for divorce would bt lncu.rable in- sanity and "irrecoDcllble dif. fe rences." -Community p r o p e r t y would be divided ''substan· tially" in hair unless one spouse had squandered or embezzled holdlnp. -A wife's ablUty to earn in- come would be COMidertd in · granting alimony. ' -Divorces would be granted In siJ. months instead of a year as at present. The residency requirement would be cut to six montbJ from the preleDt year. --Coonties could pr o v 1 d e conciliation services if they wished, but they are not re- quired. -Evidence gathered b y eavesdropping would not he admitted in court. -Divorce: would no looter bt called "divorce." It wwld be "dissoluUon ol. marria~." Two Drown At Harbor e \ i • • 12 oz. • CANS • • • REFRESHING! ""' • • • • -. . •· . . • • • •• • • • • • ·-. •· ., ' •' :/ •· •: • • ··: •RfGUUR •OR LO CAL! .~: • • " ZINGY •• . e : • Rerular or Jo-cal! ••• Each tantalizing flavor 10 refreshing and full o( !lparkling delight! O'Boy Pina ............................ 89 ¢. Miracle White Bleach ........... 39" Package o[ 2 big 16 oz. piz;us for l low price. 16 oz . pkg. at this price! • , , or 26 oz. pkg ••• 59c Biz Pre-soak . . .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . .... 59¢ Bathroom Cleaner .................. 59' Now ••. get rid ot all those atain.a ! Gt. pkg. Dow makea it eaey ! ... 17 oz. aerosol can. Kraft's Mayonnaise ............... ~~v~ .. ~~.~ ....................... 39c Summertime calls for salada and sandwiches ••. and that calls for savinge at El Rancho! .... . Eniov the re1uctrdl of au1n11itr ! Nectarines ................ .. .... ~~~~ ... s~ .~'~': ...................... 4 tor s1 Sweet and juicy ••• summer fruiU! are at their best at EI Rancho ••. now! First of the week ideaa frm,i El Rancho's Butcher Shop! Stuffed Bell Peppers .................... ~;~.~.'.~.~~ ..................... 39:,; P lump aweet peppers ••• f resh from our Garden Patch ••• atuffed and ready for your oven I ' 1 ' , ' He Did His Thing SAN PEDRO (AP) -Two J5..year-old women drowned whal tllelr br bocl<ecl Oii a Los Aqielet Harbor pltr' ponce said. Loin End Pork Chops .......................................................... 89~ Lean ••• and value trimmed from the finest grain-fed Midwestern Pork! Delicioug summer supper. Spare Ribs ............. .. .. . .. . . . .. .. .. 79i. Pork Cutlets ........................... 89~ " Minister's Last Days Rewarding Dtad are Pew J. O'Brien of San Pedro and Brenda He died Sunda y at the age of Roach of Loq lieach. ~lice SAN BERNARDINO £AP) -The Rev. Wybufn A. Skid- more said he was grateflll. he knew he was going to die within alx months. "Some doctors !lttm to think S0111e people would just give up," ~e told new smen recmt.zy . "&t in lormet d1y1 t lelmed people "ould make mix:h more out of their rt· malnlns d1ys lf they knew what waa comlns." So when a doctor told him lo February he wa11 3ufferlng rrom terminal can«r, he ask- ed himself what to do. "The answer came like a voice. from Qod . You hive all tbe. time to do the things you . have to do, but not an hour to 11pare. Love the family . Serve the church. Write lbe book. • "The next morning I pulled a table over to my bed and started writing." He arranged for hi.a church pens:ion and Social S!'Curity benefits to go to hi.a wife, Bet- ty. Their three children were !"Own. lie continued preachlng in his church, St. P au I ' 1 Me<hodist. until forced lo enter a hospital . He finished a draft of "Ste.pt of a Good M11n ," a book about his view of life that he said he had wanted to write for 20 years . 51. &aid tile -dn> .. onlo the A few weeks before the Rev. pier Sunday and aslled to IN a Mr. Skidmore bad 88.id be tuna boat ca.ptaln early Sun· wasn't bitter. day. WbtD be couldft't be loca- "J shed some tears,'' be ttd they pt tmo Mr 1 . said, ''but they wert not tears O'Brien's car wil.b Mn. Roach oC sorrow. They were tears of drlvln&. 1?alltude f(W' the love, com-omeen al.Id Mn. ROid! •P- passion and prayen of my parenUy didn't rtaJile tbe friends. , vehlcle wu in revcnt. "Life suddenly b e c a m e Fire Dtpertnttnt d I 'f 'e r 1 more meanlngf\11 and fUl!lll· recovered the bodler. 1111. I had e11ouib Ume lo do -=======::;:=;I what I had to." Funeral strVicts wlll be Wednesday. Mrs. Skidmore said she hope1 the book will be publi.h- ed. THE BEST l\••tl•F1hip ".11' ,, ..... "l'••11wtt" h 011• •' ti•• worlcil't "'''' populor col'llc 1trlp1. !\••' It .lolly 111 tt,, DAILY ,llOT. Lean f armer a tr le ••• so much meat I C Alread~ brtaded •• , simply cook 'em I ' Summer is for cnttrtainiw.g ••• and tM.t call.I for fun. fooda! Pen & Quill Dips for Chips .............. ~.'.'." .. ~.::.:.~~:.'.".'~ ................. 3,. ~1 I Pricu i~ effect MO!l., T.,,., W1d., Julv u, 19, 30. No 1olu lo .u.i.r.. . ' ' AICADIA: • • s.Not and lfualliwton llr, llJ lmlllo Ctnll~ PASADW: 320 Wld C°'1nao Blvd. SOUTH PASADW1 f-and IMltfolllll llr, HUWllllTOI IDCW: Wamor 11111 ~ID '9Gl!Mll< Ctntl!) NlWPOIT llllCll: 2727 Newport Blvd. and ~-EIMD!aff Ill'.~ -Call4 I i I I • I I - 1 • DAILY PILOT 8 Hours Sleep. ·Too Much? Doc Thinks So • LONDON (UPI) -Dr. Mloplort Pal believes aonna1 people can lhr:lve M only five or 11J: houri of sleep a night and the cbildren of the year 2000 wlH probably cut thll down to three hours. war," be writes in his new book," Se-arcbligbt oa Sleep Dhordera", "ia lltely to be of gre{lter' pracUcal value than coDclu&DI drawn from laboratory e1perlmeots whether on anlmalt o r bumlnl. "This knowledge Indeed may rlghUy be.. claimed as the great.a nellroPIYchlalrlc galn of the Second World War." wm l<I ulde when war broko out f" the apected avalanche of a er v o u 1 breakdownl. Inslud, delpile no sleep or broken aJtep nlpl .itu nlghl. the menl&l health ol the capllal actually Improved. Thia Jed hlm into rtsearch on w~ the eight hours sleep a night theory was an old wive. tale. He decided that day are atfronler 1 m o r e room lncreuet JDUJCle tension ·regularly and thua pr~t the capable of endurance and they and prevents relaxaUon. He blood prmure from rising un. mature earlier. Tbt1r brains say1 snorinJ can be controlled duly can avoid tbe premature or reduced by e 1 e r c J s e s ~ of the arteries and &re more active and they designed to strengthen the resq!Uni tendencies to C:OJ'o ..... rerllesa In their pursuit •·-j -·-I atta·•· ~-k I ot bowled8'. BecaUle of a rnµac~ of the aw. UW1 s a onary ~. -..v CJ e • cootimlous upsurge lo mental long range treatment More cetera. and phys.ical activttles It ls in.. immecilately ''a piece of old "The nap will enable one not evltable they shouJd spend motor Ure tied to the back of only to work efflclently for more Ume in wakefulness. lt the paJamaa 11 very helpful as hours longer daily, but also to is a healthy sign. ii prevents the aleeper from live a fuller and more active Not all ecltntlsts agree with Dr. Pal bul he likes to point out that those who think he ought to modify his theories did not have the biggest , laboratory Jn th e world -ln whlch to d~velop them -U>n~ don during the German air at.- ticks ol World War Jl.· And what ls that knowledge? Dr. Pai, a sprightly, good humored man looting muclt younger than his Vis, sJys that, in short, it is that we need far less sleep tban we think we do. itwu.· .. ••it ii an uj>ect cl man's evo~ ·Proceu that he &bouJd" lleep (eq and leos as the world pU older aod older/' he aafd. "Some ti the other manff"1allom ol this revo2utlooary trend are the iQ. cruae in the avenre htlght aod welgllt. utenslon .of the sexual span, and increue io upeclllloo of life. '"Man needs less: and less lying 00 his back. Jlfe which is perhap.t the best sleep 81 be dlacoven more He ls a creat advocate of w8Pa 1 y 0 .• ?f prolongin& the Ille the after lunch siesta u was and more redODI for at.aylng practlcM by nonegenarlan Sir Dr. Pal can't watt li}l 2000 aw• 'Ibe brighter the in-Wiostoo Churchlll. A.O. 2000 man may be ·averag· door flhunlnaUoo, the fewer the houn spent in ileep. If the __ "'I'h_ose~_wh_o_1a_ke_lh< __ .,...:P'--ni.::gh_1_n...:·g11;_1 _no_w_. ___ _ Syphilis Vaccination May Be Near Reality NEW YORK (UPI) -A public health dream began taking on reality today -the dream of a preventive vaccin- ation against syphilis. A scientist told t h e American Medical Associa- tion's convention he had suc- cessfully vaccinated rabbits. He is now facing up to the prime question : Can it be done in people? Dr. James N. A~iller began with a radlatioa technique whidl seems to kill the ~ fectivity of the causative microbe, lreponema pa11idum, without killing its antigens. Antigens rome the body's chemical defenses by pro- ducing antibodies. But for u long as tteponema antigens were locked in with lnfectfvJty their use in a vaccine would have caused the disease. ; Miller challenged his rabbits 37 weeU after they were vac-- cinated with mu1ive in- jections of virulent microbes. So far, after 94 days, they've shown no sign of syphllil. The readily det.ectlble m i c r ob e seems to be absent from their tlpues. In abort, theJ',. Im· mune. But for how long? Miller wants to know and to nm other uperimenl.S ln his laboratory at Ule Univuai.ty of California, Los Angeles, before he begins thinking of ex- perimenta 1n human volun- leen. Syphilis and other venmal di!casee: continue on the rise and in some public health and other drcle.s it is blamed on increuing ''permissiveness'' in suual mores. To some moralists, parU c ularly membus of the Christian erus.de, Tul&a, Okla. apd Ille John Bird! Society, such "permissiveness" i s en- couraged in stl edueaUon course. in public schools. Members of the AMA'• rul- ing house of de.legates have recdved hundieds of anUsu education letten. What ever the effect, the house dealt adroitly with the elforb of South Carolina and Indiana members to 1et it to coDdemn the COUl'RI. The house referred both pro- posed resolutions to a com· mlttee which dmr up a resolulloo Ille boose passed by overwhelming voice vote. lt aaid "the right kind of 1e1 education io schools i s desirable.'' By "right" it meant ••.tnstruction t o strengthen famUy life, to iDcreue tell un- denlandlq and sell mpect, lo develop capacities for good human ttltUomhips, to build 1e1ual and 1 o cla l r e s p o n aibillUes. IDd to enhance competency f o r respomible pmnthood." Bu~ the relOlution speclfled, "It ts not CODCUDed wJtb IUUal Changing Habits Nuns Try New Dress FALL RIVER, Mas.s. (AP) -To go modem or not to go modem -that is the quutlon that a religious coogrq:atiOP cf nuns is trying to resolve this summer. Because they a r e ti· perimenting, Sisters of the Ho- ly Union of the Sacred Heart& may be seen at dinner in at. tractive suits with colored veils, walking sedately along Highland Avenue in tMir tr~diliona1 black habits and veils, or on the tennis courts at Nanquaker in casual allire. Unlike most crders which are making some adaptations in their mode of dress, the sisters cf the Holy Union are conducting a full·scale ex· periment which r1nge1 from completely secular dress with no veil or religious symbol, through modlficaUons of the familiar habit. And they're testing their own reaction as well as lay persons' to the four different ways of dres!. The 250 sisters involved in the experiment are in the ea.stem province whose head- quarters are here and which extends from New England to North Carolina. The nuna. participating in U1e group of their choice, are to give their personal evalua- tions by Aug. 15. The decision about the future attire oC the nuns will be made b y delegates to tM provincl1I chapter here before the open- ing of &ebool in the fall. Novlces, students, editors, businessmen and housewives. of 111 faiths are being Wed to lndic1t.e their preference m the num' mode or dress •nd their reasons for it, u well u their reacliom to the chansa. Reaaons for the modenllza. tion in dresS are based on recommendaUons of Vatican n that religious habiu should be simple and modesl and suited to the circwmtancu of lime and plact. .Slstera who have made the rounds o( various stores, searching for apparel or materiaJ, and beauty parlors to have their hair cut, art e1· perienclng headaches that are new to them. However, like women everywhere they are learning to adjurt and mike necessary adaptations. A group of alsttrs i!: learn· ing to sew this summer, mak· ing A·line dresses and jackets for the fall. The color or their new outfits i,, to be "bulc black." Harvard ROTC Pr ograms Over WASIDNGTON (UPI) - The A.Ir Force 1ay1 it ls going to end Its Reserve Offl~r Training Corps programs at Harvard Univenlly a nd Dartmouth College oo June 30, 1971. Both schools had noUtied the Air Force of their in- tention to end ROTC but had aet no date. The Navy previously announced It would end its ROTC program at Harv1rd, and the Army aa.id it plans to withdraw It.a pro- grams from Harvard and Dlrtmoutb but ls not ready to make a fcnnal announcement. .w-tll ...... ' Now Possible To Shrink Painful Hemorrhoids And Promptly Stop The llchinc. Relieve Pain In Moot C-. of Ute fafl•mod ttmonhoido .,..,,_ Tbo-l&P,,,puatioaU-. There'• 110 ot.h•r fo1'mula 111r:e ltl l'reparatl•n K alto aoot.he1 trrlt.ted t.1110 .. 1114. MlPI pnnnt fUth«r Infection. Jn ointmsa• or 1appo1lt.r1 tom. l Dr. Pal had Ille opportunity of at.udylng disturbed sleep ovtr a period ol months and yws. ad>ong huodrods of thousands and even m11llons cf subjects -Ille mldenu of the capital. "'The knowledge thus glean- ed from the cataclysm of Recently relired .., con- s u I t a n t in psychological medicine at Belmont Hospital where he set up Britain's first sleep clinic Dr. P1i recalled that hundr..ia of boopilal beds "For Instance, children ~ lnlemily of Indoor lighlingl,.-----------------. -on lncreaalng the Ume apent In aletp will go on decreuing and I reckon by A.O. ZOO man may be averaf· Ing only tbr.e hours a nlgbt.' Dr. Pai recommends Bleep- ing in a warm room - a cold EVERYONE 'S FAVORITE ly •cf11•I r••cl•"hlp pell•, •n• of the 11t101t pop11ler 11ew1p•rt f••ttlre• ltt Americe It ttte Mn Lend•" col11rnn. It'• • cl.Hy ''r•9ul1r" U. th e DAILY PILOT. Sears. '------" ... r.vi: ROOM FOR OUR NEW F W£.MUST~ • I • 5 . I . ; i· i .µ . ar ,,.,~n...esses • swunwe rJ:ll • Costume Jewelry • Sportswear • Handbags ~off : o/o to I ~ l ~,, .. _ ... ;ii': I I I I ' ~------~------------------------------------------• IUIHA PAIK EL~ lONG llEAOf • rKX> ot .._ POMONA SOUllf COAST P1AZA ~ CN40GA ,,_ GllNOAlf OLYMPIC a. 5010 SANTA ANA TOUANCE I I OOMPTOH HOllYWOOO OAAHGE ~ SANTAfESl'lllNG$ VAU.EY COVINA INGI!WOOO PASAl>EHA SANTA MONICA VE1MONr ot -I '-------------------------ears--------------------' "ScdWacliea~er~Mol!'l~ ·=· •"' _ Sbop6Niabb llloadortlwuah~9-.30.A.M. to9:30f.M. ' j • • • \. Oi'ILY PILOT I ' AL!!s~!!!'11 OUR SUMME& WHIT~ GOOPS EYeNj ts HERE! Attention!· All our Fashion Manor sheets are now reduced for a limited ~i ·nle ~only I Penn-Prest• bleached percale sheets Ne1ter iron polyester/co llon bleoched while i.heetJ. 72Xl04 sheet or< 'twin fitted bottom sheet Reg. 2.99 •• NOW 2.47 81 X104 shee t or foll fitted bottom sheet Reg . 3. 99 .•. NOW 3 .47 Twin fitted lop ~heet ' Reg. 3.59 .................................................... NOW 3.07 Full fitted top sheet Reg. 4.59 ................................................... NOW 4.07 42X36 pillow COieS Reg. 2 for 1.99 .. ,............. .. ............... NOW 2 lor 1.77 Penn-Prest • snowy white bleached mus.lin sheets Never iron polyesler/cotlon for o more pleosonl wo1h doy. 72X104 sheet or twin fitted boll om sheet Reg. 2.59 •. NOW 1 ~87 81X104 .sheet or full fiited bottom .sheet Reg.' 3.59,., NOW 2.67 42 X36 pillow co~es Reg. 2 for 1.69 ............ NOW 2 for 1 .3 7 Penn-Prest' percale solid color sheets faf.h;q.11-M1Jcu.1 ia..hona.y..gald. pin.Ii ordi.id, mo•• or._1.Wlbec:un. _ c-, _ 72X 104 ~heel or twin fitted bottom sheet Reg. 4 .19., NOW 3.6T 81X 104 sheet or full filled bottom sheet Reg. 5.19.,. NOW 4.67 42 X 36 pill ow coses Reg. 2 for 3 .19 •.......•••. NOW 2 for 2 . 77 Penn-Prest• muslin solid color iheets Pen n·Pre1t" muilin sheel5 i11 honey gold, mo•s green Of' Siam pi11k. 72X l04 sh~et or twin fitted bottom sheet Reg.:2.99 .. NOW 2.57 81 Xf04 sheet orfull fitted bottom sheet Reg . 3.99 ... NOW 3.37 42X36 pillow case Reg. 2 for 2.29 ............. NOW 2 for 1.97 Penn.Prest' percale prints Penn-Pr,~1· 'Componionette' pri11!i in 1unbeol!\ or pink orchid. 72X104 sheet or twin fitted bottom sheet Reg. 4. 99,. NOW 4.5.7 ~l X 104 sheet orfull fitted bottom sheet Reg. 5. 99 ... NOW 5 .57 A2X36 pillow ca,.s Reg . 2 for 3.59 ............ NOW 2 for 3.27 Penn-Prest• muslin print . . Penli-Pre11 • 'Rock Garden' pri1ttt i1t sunb'eam or celeste bl.,., 7~X 104 sheet or twin fitted bottom sheet Reg. 3.69 •• NOW 2.99 .81X104 >heel or full fitted b9ttom sheet Reg . 4.69 .•• NOW 3. 99 A2X36 pil low cases Reg. 2 for 2.69 ............ NOW 2 for 2 .29 LIKE IT ... CHARGE IT! T HE PENNEY STORY Why.J!Ulke such a big deal out of quality? By ROBERTA NASH I asked 2 Penney store manager the question once and when he f inall y de -' cided 1-'\Vas serious, }le said, 111 f I could use on1y one \\'Ord to describe the phenomenon of Penney',, I'd pic k the \Vo rd, quality. "Mr .. ,Penney has al~ \\'ays been a fanntic·on the subject," he continued. "Th.ey say the only thing th at still makes Mr. Pen• ncy angry is when some· one liuggests we compro- mise Penney qual ity to 1n:ikc a to,ver price." •• • " \ . \ Penn-Prest• muslin striped sheets Penrt-Pre1t" 1111utlift •fripe• i" honrt 9old or Sial'fl pink. 2 99 72Xl0.C sheet or twin fitted bottom •heel Reg . 3.69 .. NOW • 81Xl0.C 1heet orfull fitttdbottom sheet Reg. 4.69 .•• NOW 3.99 42X36 pillow«>,., Reg. 2 for 2.69 •. , ......... NOW2 for 2.29 Penn-Prest ' percale super sizes Penn.Prest" bl•ached •hite polyelter/cotton 1he•t1. 90Xl 15 queen flat a< 60X80fitted sheet Reg. 6.99 •. NOW 6.37 108Xll5 kihg flat or 72X84 fitted sheet Reg.1.99 .. NOW 8 .37 42X46 king coses Rog. 2 for 3.19 .............. NOW 2 for 2.67 42X40 queen cases Reg. 2 for 2.99 ..•......... NOW 2 ,for 2.47 Penn-Prest• muslin super si1es Penn·Pc.11" mv1li1t bleached whil• polyeller/c'cittort 1hee1 •. 72Xll5 long twin flat or 39X80 full fitted shMt ir:99. 3.79 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..•..••.•...•. NOW 3.47 90X115 lang queen flat a<60X80 fitted .shnt . -r.g-:-4:-4'9----::::-....•. -.~ .....•.... : ...... 7:".:·;::;::--••• ::7.-NOW-4.07- 100X11 5 lol\g queen flat or 72X84 fi tted sheet Reg. 6.49 •. , .............................................. NOW 5 .97 42X46 king cases Reg. 2 far 2.29 .............. NOW 2 for 2.07 Penn-Prest• per.cale super size prints Pen1t·,r1H1° 'COMpo1ti•n1tOe' print 1h1teb in 11i1nb•orn or orchid. 90Xll5 quetn flat or 60X80 fitted sheet Reg. 8.49 .:NOW 7.87 )08X11~ king flat or 72X84 fitted 1heet Reg. I 0.99 NOW 9.87 '' 42X46 k;ng case• Reg. 2 for 3.99 .............. NOW 2 for 3.67 • " '• . Penn-Prest• percale super sizf: solid colon : '•l'Wl·P'rell' percale in honey gold, pink orchid or mo11 gree11 . _.. 90Xll5 queenflator60X801itted sheet Reg. 7.99 .. NOW 7.37 108Xll5 king Hot or 72X84 fitted sheet Reg. 9.99 .• NOW 9.17 4.2X46pillow ca ... Rog. 2 for 3.59 ............ NOW 2 for 3.27 ...-:' I Nation Wide·• white cotton muslin 133 c:•"'"' .. , .. ~ •11d finislrff u ......... lo~g lo1ting! 72XI08 flat or twin fitted bottom Reg. 1.99 •••..•.•. NOW J.37 81 X108 flat or full fitted bottom Reg. 2.29 .......... NOW 1.65 42X36COits-Reg,21 .. 1.09 .................... NOW 2 for 83c 'Pen:ale bleached white cotton sheets Ctitp and cwl and •n9WY···'•"t lasting w•orl 72x1oa flat or twin fitted bottom log. 2.39 .......•. NOW 1.77 81 XIOS flat or lvlt fitted bottom Rog. 2.69 .•..••••• NOW 2.07 42X36 -.... 2 f0< 1.39 .................... NOW 2 for 1.07 reduced 1 week only! • Save on Fashion Manor 100% acry- lic "Fashionaire" thermal blankets I Twin 66X90 Reg. 6.99 ••••••••••••••• NOW 5.88 Full Reg. 7.99 ......................... NOW 6.88 King Reg. $13 .................... ; .. NOW10.88 Stay cool in summer, warm in winter. Machine washable in warm water. In deep lime, honey gold or white. 8 Big savings on Fashion Manor com- fort fitted supernap acrylic blanket Twin fitted ' Reg. 7 .99 ............... Now6.88 Full fitted Reg. 8.99 ................. NOW 7.88 Queen fitted Reg. $12 •.••••.•..••. ;NOW 9.88 King fitted Reg. $13 ............... NOW10.88 All acrylic blanket with nylon satin binding, super- nop finish. Beautiful color" gold, mou or aqua. Lush Fashion Manor ''Vellux" blanket for lightweight warmth and comfort Twin 66X90 Reg. •10 ................. NOW 8.88 Full Reg. $12 .......................... NOW 9.88 Queet1 Reg.· $15 .................... NOW12.88 • • King lies· $18 ....................... NOWlS.88 \ Nylon bonded to foom polyurethane base. Wadi ' ' shrink, shed ar pill. Lime, honey gold, blue· ar orange. l I r • I I I ' . ' I j I 1 • DAttY PllOT M-. Jvty 211, 1969 .JI. Newest Ani11aal Visits to the zoo are supposed l<l be fun ·anct most o! 'all quite' doWn to earth. When 17.montbs-0ld Lisa· Feagle ·went to the Jacksonville, Fla., zoo, she was scooped up in the arms of this "Moonman." The "Moonman" was JJ8Ssing out candy and "moonrocks" to the children, but Li sa didn 't like fhe space treatment at all. Laugh Gas Girl to Eat And Walk LA JOLLA IAPl -Thc 1 nightmire of June 2 is ending sl<>Wly for Nora Ruffcorn. At l~, she is learn ing all over to1 eat and walk. The devil she! met was laughing gas. Wbe.n police f<lund her, she tfas ~aving convulsions in thej front seat of her boyfriend'! car. . . . . The boy, Brad HunJer, 17, was outside, sick to hisJ &tomack. Inside \\'ere Clnre Jlcrrick, 18 and Peter Strada. 17. Wilhin h<lUl's, OOth would be dead. An, empty hospital-flized tank of nitrous oxide, aboul four feet high, was in the middle or . t.qe. car. 'lbe couples ap- parently had rolled up the l car·s winOOws and opened lhe. valve of the tank, full-blast, lnvuligalors said. Where they ' got the. tank 1Ull isn't kn<>wn. Hunter has pleaded guilty in juvenile court to lwo counts of manslaughter. In a Scripps Memorial Hospital intensive care unit, N<lra Ruflc<lro Jay in a coma lhree weeks. shive ring between tw<l tempersture-con· trolled dleels which kept her fr<lm a fever. Doctors expected her to die, then said she W<luld be a vegetable the rest <lf her life . But a strong will and physical therapy enabled Nora tel go home with her mother . who takes her back daily for three hours . of work on muscle coordination. The nighlm11re, says Nora. began as a lark -"ll was just a high, like marijuana, l guess." The gas which dentists formerly used to kill pain is always lethaf-if inhaled in1 pure form f()r m()fe lhan 10 mJnut.et, a Sart 0 i e g o anesthetlst said. ''The abseOce of oxys:en, or ano:xia, <'.&U&eS death much like Chst ·of drownlng," said. • '1Nitrous <lXide or laughing gas: is never ' ad- ministere<t medically in a Tatio of greater than BO per cent, ·with the remaining 20 percent being port <lXygen. 1be r.at.k>,... b usually 50-60 "Oen'l tty \1." Nora told • newlDlan TbW"5day -"tefl the.m wtla\ It 'i: like and tell them not to try anything. I don't nm smoke cigarettes lll}'JDOl't •• "Now tbe hardest thing ror me to &: II write. I likt . lo write, but I can't do it now. But I can tat by myself. and dr ... I 1IJld .10 lo I~< betbroom." . ~ II mail from people .,_. the United states. who '1111 ~1 are praying fo~ Nora. 'llte 1um, dark-haired girl 1ltneeef at her mother. "We 1'.ft a cry every ~ olten," Me Aki. "It helps." ( I LAST 6 DAY.SJ ~· Your child's photograph can win a spectdcuwr s2,soo.oo SHOPPING SPREE IN OUR .STORE! ' And that's jwt one of IM hundredJ of valuable prizes and .gifts totalling $25,000.00 in t.i/.e. 35u. National Children's ' PHOTOGRAPH CONTEST! YOU CAii !llM 011£ Of TIIESE NATIONll PRIZES: First p,;,, •. , •2,soo;oo Sli_opping Spree Second Pri:.c ••. s1,500.00 Shopping Spree Third Price •• s 1,0oo.~o Shopping .'lprec . f'ourth Prize' • , .. •500.00 Slu111ping Spree 50 Fifth J>rizes, •a. 1100.~0. Shopping Sp re" ·OR ONE M H!M'DltEDS Of U.S. SAYINU 90NDS U •MOllKMtUU MPITtON l'lllUSI J{1vfl 'fou'raell a Shopping Spree .•• )'C'I, 1 pairl- up charge abcounl that lcta you huy wl111le\''r ynu \\·ant! It's aanap lo enter and euy lo·win. Let U8 pb<ltogi-aph your child and Wf'U enter a duplicate in the C<lnte5t at no extra charge. C<lmplcte de- tail! and rules in our Phot<lgt11ph S1udio n<lw. Big baUoon will be given lo e•ery" conteet.anL. JUDIU; 111\!b ...... ~--·--· w ................... Sprc:ial p,rku on IDOll .iu. ud plwtoi"pb 6nlalrea. Ftu aa•plt: ' MlfTl[OT 7 4•s 0.. a.10 C...... SHCIALI portraits and ail: w.Ud..U. (lllAT'S -11WI 1/J .-m llUllt,<1 l'llC[I) n.,..,.,11 lhtlff9 19' ''"' M1111tl"f'" IHch ...... ltl.JJJ1 ht. 21) I Arctic LONOON -The center of gravity ol ezploraUon for oil. in tbe worldJ of Walter Levy, doYen of world oil consultants, Is shifting from the Middle East to the • .\retie. The Canadians and the Ruasianl share thil view. Ericour.aed by'blg oil lincla al Prudhoe ·Bay in the north slope of Alaska, they are both launching large scale ex~ ploraUon proarams of their own. Britain has a d~ stake in the Y<11ture lhrou&h BrtlJJb Petroleum. 'Ibis ~l'.O'. which is almost hall owned by the government, bai made one of the iargel! discoveries. Al present no other European company ts involved. But in Canada the French state own- ed Erap, Petrobras, and Aquj· taioe groups bold le&SfS. Companies which tre sue- cesslul in the searcl! can ei· peel large profit.. Tb<ae In • lurn will benefit their parent counbies through the repatriation of dlvldendJ. But W1tch'em scoot on tho "Tjko_bo1co" Orig. 5.99 NOW ·4.99 Tomed for toddla11 : •• no. hi. rise l\andlebon, rugged frQf'l'I•. Rida'em cowboy.,. M1rvel Mu1tan9l Orig. 13.99 NOW 11.99 He gallops on hiddtn springll Complete •ith saddle ond spun. Foremost 20 inch convertible bik1I · Orig. 29. 98 Now24.98 For bo,, or glrJ .. oon bar conv•rts to either styl•. Sove nowl Penney's six way dolly 1trollerl Orig. 8.99 NOW 6.99 tom.rtl to cw .at or corrier. .._ motch-<lhop. piOQ bat- S1w on our stylish doff coochl Orig. 11.98 NOW 7.88 Oil a Threat to· Mideast? Ibero is no quellion of North Amerkan ArdJc oU cUIPlldne aupplles trom tbe Mlddlt East and Nor1h Alrlca In European markela. . An:Uc oil will find r<ady buyera much nearer to hand in N ortb America, and unless the fields turn out to be va.sUY lar1er and more prqlUic than even th• mo.t starry~yed speculaton suppose, lb• oil will bt too experuilve to com- pete with the Middle Ea.st and Nor1h Africa lo Eurnpe. If, however, tile prbent ex- perlmenll tb ah.Ip oil by aea· going lanker tbroo&b the northwest paaage tum out to be. 1UCCeSSfu1, the Arctic ~Id become a useful reserve when crl.st.a . occur in the Middle East, or lhe Arabs try to use their oil In order to blackmail lbe West. At th1J stage it is impossible to say how mucb oil lbe Arctic cootalns. It 11 possible that Prudboe Bay is the only place whue it exists, and that nothing else w i 11 be. discovered. But th1I ls unlike-cttaalng conctrn. At the end Jy, of 1964 United States proved ~en the Prudhoe B a y ttSUVea were down to st.3 total is difficult to lorecut. bllllon barrels, while Canada's PrelUnlnary estimates pul It stood al 10 billion barrels. at 5 billion to 10 billion bar· So it can be seen that eveo if rel.I. In most Industry circles only the most COll5en'ative th11 ts now thought to be much esUmates of the Prudhoe. Bay too low. Some u n o f,f I c I a I ~es are correct the North· estimates go aa b!gh as 40 American tNl!!rve totJJ wW biillon ban~. reCelVe I fusiful boost. li the The Canadian estimatu are · npa1b slope really contains still more problemaUcal, and four ·times as inucb then th~ ~Id for the Ume being at United S£ates reserves w\11 be least be treated wllb great al>pul doubled. U the Canadian caution, Some Canadian u-Ol1!imisl ue right North perts believe , that tbe Cana-America's oil outlook will be di.an share may amount to transformed. more than two-thirds ol. the According to present plans Arctic total. Tbe1 think this the north slope should start ·Could mean that Canada will production in im. By 1975 find 150 billion barrels of oil, output is expected to be run- and 900 million cubic feet ol nlng at one mtlllon barrels a natural gas. day, and by 1900 al two m.iUion All these estimates must be barrels a day. This last figure seen in the conteit of the is slighUy larger than the present reserve position of combined total for Iraq and North America. In the last few Abu Dhabi ln 1968. years the ratio of ruerves. to A5 a proporUon of total production in the United United States consumption States has been causing in-they look quite small. Last JULY Foremost 20 inch Swinger bicycles at bargain prices! Orig. 59.88 Now49.88 free wheeling wild ones for boys( 360° steering wheels • •• slicks and iron skid treodsl Drag brake consolos, 5 speed gear shifts and 111Uth rnorel year United States demand rose by I~ percent to just over 13 million barrels a diy (com-- pared wllh about 10 million barrels a day for Western Europe). But when compared aga!Mt the rising level of Im- ports into the United' Stales, the significance of AJaska becomes strlkin,ly apparent. Jn 1968 the United States im· Ported 2.8 million barrels a day, of which 470,(kX) came from Canada. D e s p I t e the stringent import restr:lctloos imposed in 1959 the average annual r a t e of growth In shipments of foreign oLI en· tering the country has been above five percenL The Canadians regard the rapid development of Alaskan oil with mixed feelings. On the one harld they realize that the discoveries provide plenty of encouragement for their own Arctic search, but on the other hand they fear that A!Bskan <lil will prevent their exp<>rts ·t<l the United States from ris- ing as fast as they would like. Huge savings on J.C.P. deluxe H.O. road race set!' Save • big 15.07 on this Penncrest" sewing m•chine! Orig. 94.95 Now79.88 ' Timt--saViftg, modem, easy to use, with buih-in cam for blind stitd\ing, forward or reverse, buih~n avtomatic buttonholer and many ,moro featvresl Orig. 25.88 Now16.88 Triplt tier climb and suicide corners ••• 29 feet of track with big 20 voh power pack, Make this a super buy ot Penneysl By Auror.a. CANOGA PARK F\,111 EQfON HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH LAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR VENTURA DAILY PILOT UC Irvine Picks Dean For School IRVINE -Anllltopologlll Kimball Romney, who Is known for his work on the malhematlcal analysis o r human relatloDJhJpt, has been named dean of the School of Social Scieoces at UC lryJne. Coming from Harvard University, wherl! he was pro- fessor ol JOC:lal anthropology, Dr. Romney joined the faculty of the School of Social Sciences at UCI a year ago. lie sucreeds James G. r.larch, the school's first dean. ,vho asswne.s full-duties as professor of social sciences and administraUon. Dean Romney assumes ov· era.It direction of the school which. four years after Its founding. has 40 faculty and degree programs leading to the bachelor of artl ln social sciences and the master's and doctoral dearees in social science, polltlcal science, and psychology. Prior to joining the facult y at Harvard, Romney taught at Stanford University and the University of Chicago. He completed hls undergraduate work and earned the master's degree at Brigham. Young University and obtained the PhD in social anthropology at llarvard in 1956. Or. Romney currently serves on several advisory committees at the national level, including the National Research Council, the Research Advisory Council ror the Office of Education, the Committee on Basic Research in Educa lion, jointly sponsored by the Nalional Academy of Science and the National Academy of Educa- tion and is consultant to the National Jnstitute of Mental llealth. J1e ls also a consultant to the project on nutrition and in· tellectual growth in Guatemala. spoo.wred by .the National Institute of Child Health and Human DeVelop- ment. DEATH NOT ICES FOX ttowi A, flllf. llU HIH'fll'tfton Aw., Houfttlntten ~. S\lrvlwd b<I-Mutlt-.. r, Mn. 11*'1 I. 511lll¥1n1 Ill,.. ,,...l'ddllld,..., Incl •ll ,,..,.,r1P'lddlll- d ....... 5-kn wlll 1M Mid In Phoel'lll. Ari~. LOU! 1rr1-1'1 b¥ P• Flomlly Cctlanlel fune11I Hlll'l'W!. YOUNG lei• f , Youl'tf, tll 0.~ 51 .• Co.II MeM. Survived b¥ IOll, Llfry 81~1 sltttr, AJkl J~1 t1!tlff, H•rm1n Sr.terln1 mothff, "'"· II!.;,.. C-1 •1'111 i-1r1n«:11lldr..,. $1f"/lc11 wllt 1M ~ In o.tw1r, (.olorldo. LKll 1rr-""' b¥ PM F1mll~ Col• nlll F-•i H~. ARBUCKLE & WEI.SB Westclllf Mortuary 4%7 E. 17th St., Co1ta l\!esa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR l-N50 Co1la Me11 HI 6-UU e BELL BROA~WAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Cost.a Mesa LI 8-3433 • DILDAY BROTlll!RS Haatingtoa Valley Mortuary 17111 Beach Blvd. llu.ntington Beach BC.'1771 e rt1cCOIUUCK LAGUNA BEACH h10RTUARY 179$ Lagana Canyon Rold · Lapna Buell 114-Ml.I • PACIFIC VIEW ~ID10RIAL PARK Cemetery e ~fortaary Ch1pel 3500 Padflc View Drl .. ·e Newport Beacll, CaWornia 64t-!7ot ' . , PEEK FAM.IL Y COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 71111 Bolu Ave. \Ve1tmlmter llWW • SHEFFER MORTUARY LaJUlll Bueti 4U.153S San ae.menie 4tz...G100 e SMITIIS' MORTUARY IZ'I Milo S• BuaUn .... Buclo - ON THE TUBE For th1 , .. 11 twhf1 to wlltf1 htpp111iftf en TV, 111d TY WEEI( -dl1ltiaiut1d with th1 S1turd•y edlfion ef tli1 DAILY ,ILOT. -----... ---------------- Mondly, Ju~ 28, 1969 •. .. f ~-J "''~. ) SE RRANO ADOBE IN EL TORO F RAMED BY TREES AS OLD AS IT State La nd mark Overlook1 Hii ia, Grov11; Tracts Moving Clo11r , Adobe Shows History NY Minorities Other Si de of 'Strike To'ld . -I . 87 THOMAS FORTUNE Oc~•· ,ll!'owftaVWe -I• OD llrike. . Of ""'! Oeltt """ Jllff bea uutLnc trllllttt of 1be un10l'1 .struck the tntlre IRVINE -'11iey felt their to oiber paris ol lhe city. "Thia poor tlnluapectin1 children wertn't being taught clfl' McCoy said. "That didn't communtly (of eJ&hl -) In lhe public 1Cbool1. '11iey If! well with lbe unloa." wunl really wned into wb&l were just being baby sat. He stld 40 to 50 petttnl of WI• hlippenlnc," McCoy,..sd. So per'IOOI In a New York the puplll each year Wer9 not In the strike sttUemeF, two ghetto threw out the .. baby even remal.nlna ·1t the aame blact prJoclpall-tnd ~~uto slttua" and trained , some level but actually regruslng !Ucan principal he ~ i... persona to be teachcni. on rqdlng telll. ataJled were put o&tt ·in the But the teachers union sa:id Ooe fUcber. be Nld. told 1treet, MCCoy 1afd. He h1mlelf they cO\lldn't do that and blm, ''When I come to ocl>ool loot bis job. struck all of the city schools. every ~r you OUjht to be But, be uy1, "ni. title And the poliliclans backed lbe lhanklul. doeln t mun anytllln(. My union. But he saJd, 0 Never yet has community lmaw1 I'll bt there 'ISSUE IS POWlll' That is the penpecUve ol ooe teacher io New Yori City when ICbool oprns." lduc:ator McC-Rhody 1.1cCoy de P 0 1 e d been tlrtd tor incompetence." Nevertheleu the un"anted ~, superintendent 'ot New York And he added with acarcasm, teacbe.rs were removed from City's black-brown school "That'• a glowing compllment Ocean Hlll-Brownl'Villt,. 29 reading ability hu improved d 1 1 1 r 1 c t , Ocean lWI-to every ~cher ln1UtuUon in more lut year, McCoy wd.. on the averaae a arade and a B own.sviUe America. Two tuchen were put m half, although he aald "they The New York City teachers Speaking of teacher colleges every cJusroom, one ct whom (e.stabllahrnent educaton) can strike got lots of print and he saJd they are training new 1peab Soenlab or Pcrtuguese. do staU.Ucs lo prove tblt'1 much aifing .in the national teacher for a dr~am world and The teaOhing staff wu built not so." news media but Ptf c c 0 Y when they get mto the ghetto up to 72 teachers more than He suuested that the power believes his ~Ide of it wasn't school tbey are overwhelmed. the dlJtrlct normally would be structure doesn't want the widely told. So Ocean Hill·Brown1ville, allotted. Oceen Hlll-Brownsvllle a.. PtfcCoy told how be saw it McCoy aald, beaan to reque.a:t Relults, McCoy l&id, were perlment to succeed becluse. happen at 8 recent ses.si.on of a that teac;hers 1.ocapable of an Jncreaae from 63 petcent "What an indictment H would UC Irvlne Extenaion summer t.eachlng in that environment averqe dally attendance to 90 be for white schools that class tn '"The Minority Child and in effect reduced to baby and 93 percent. 'Jbe number of haven't produced any IUC'" and the School." sitters be tran&!med. New pupll 1uapenalona ln a year cess." It began two years ago. With teacpers were hired who dropped, from 828 ~o 12. H11 told hls a u d I e n c e , • New Tr acts Sidle Up to Old Hom e Ford Foundation help a hadn't met ,the formal re-In ~t.J:l.t' 1!,tter instance, there "You1ve iOt to understand the demonstration achoo! district qulrements .or a teachiDg were no longer so many is1uance toddy la: not educa- comprls.ing eight g h e t t 0 credential. teacher• In the district who Uon, lt is about power and the. schools was formed to test the M a result 45,000 'of the ·couldn't understand their· own· ··TfdJstribution·of·potrtr1·WhJto ....... concept of decentrallz.allon. A 60,000 teachers in New York shortcomings and blamed it on Amerka ii not about ready to n~ghborhood school board City , members of the United the students, McCoy auerted; cba.nae and let the mimritr, By JACK CHAPPELL to the public are not yet barbed wire and an electrified was elected. McCoy, with 22 Federation of Teachttl, went He clabned It u dents members be educated.'' Of "-DlllY l"llol Stiff formulated. However steps to \\'ire was recently installed as years experience as teacher EL TORO _ Not tar from protect the place from vandals was a burglar alarm -pro-and principal in New York Ci· the shiny new houses at the have been taken . tection for a century-o.ld dwell· ty schoolt was hired as An encompassing eight-foot ing from the ravages ()f superintendent . Lake Forest devel()pment here chain link fence topped by modern society, The trouble began when the stands a home that once --------''---'------'------------''---- belonged to Don Jose Serrano a man whose Spanish rancho sprawled across 10,000 acres more than a century ago. The stout mud walls of the well preserved Serrano adobe, restored in 1932, .stand in ~rked contract to t h e wooden frames of houses now springing up at Lake Forest. Situated above Serrano Creek just off Trabuco Road, the adobe commands an lill"!"!ll awesome view or rolling golden hills and orange groves ~-"- huddled in small valleys. The home is one of several adobes built by the Serrano family and ~ only one still standing. It is believed the house was built in 1846. The old house was part Qf an $11 rpillion purchase of 811 acres made recenUy by the Ckcidenlal Petroleum Corp .. parent company to Deane Brothers, developers of Lake Forest. The land was purchas- ed from V. P. Baker and Associated ·of Los Angeles. Chain of title extends from Charles llJ King of Spain, who acquired 1he land under the laws of the Indies during lhe Mission Accoiraplished Spanish occupation o{ California begun in 1769. f\.1ike Dicks of Mission Viejo Future Farmers of America (right) ts all smile.s The land became Me.1ico·s after seHing his grand champion lamb to restaurant buyer James Palmesino. after the revolution of 1822. Mike's prize market lamb weighed in at 100 pounds and sold for $11 per pound Serrano received his grant In at annual Junior Livestock Auction at Orange County Fair. UW2 frofu Governor Juan 8. --------------------=----'----------1 Alvarado, supplemented by a later one in 1846 s r o m Governor Pio Pico. Subsequent exchanges of ti· tie brought the land into the hands of a grciup of Los Angeles businessmen headed by V, P. Baker. He restored tbe abode and used il as a weekend retreat. Allhough largely furnished ln contemporary furniture. history lingers in the adobe, with its time-worn thresholds and old adobe brick floor .. Designated as ''California Historical Landmark Number 199" by the state, the adobe house will be preserved as a historical monument by its new owners. Plans for opening the adobe Countian Faces Dr ug Sente nce CBS Apollo Film Shows Lagunans A Columbia Broadcasting Sf!lem television special on what A1nericans were doing the moment man stepped ·on the moon may include sceries from Laguna Beach. The special. to be called "A Day in the Life of Americans.'' will be aired sometime in September. according to CBS officials. Filming was done in 30 cities. A five.man film crew took shots in the Art Colony of a girl surfer Mari Newman, 14 , or Laguna Beach stepping onlo the sand at the same moment the astronauts landed on the moon, and or the Pageant of A Los Alamitos men in one of four persons today awaiting f\1a sters audience watching Superior Court arrDlgnment on ''living pictures'' depicting drugs and qarcotlcs charges astronauts preparing (or a following their indictment by space voyage at the time the the Orange County Grand first steps were being taken on Jury. the moon. Lynn Dale Fisher IT, 21. of The CBS crew under pro- 11952 Martha Anl'\ Drive, faces ducer Irving Dranln kept to an charges of s e I I i n g am-agreement to use their glaring phelamine and cocaine, both spotlightl only 15 seconds dur· felony offense.,. l~e is awatting ing each of two "living pie· setting of a date fur his higher tures" said Festival of Arts ~t!o ap::ce.in the ln··.-pu_b_llcll_t_Sa_ll_y_R_ee_v•_. ___ , dictment handed down Thurs-....,,.,1_. ~ • ··-.'[-- Specially Priced Thru Sat. La Maur "Stylette" PERMAN ENT WAV E 8.88 Scissor wissor haircut ........................ 2.~ rlay were Gregory Laurence Robbins, 25, of La Habra, Geoffrey Charles Graydon, 21. of Anaheim and Larry David Wilson. 22, of Fullerton. Helps Solve 3 llggu t FALSE TEETH Wo _,,,.~!ho,.,.,,''"""' - Ull YO UI PINNEY CllAIOI CAlll -Worrles and Problems NO Al'l'OINT-T NICISSAlY .. U\U• PA.l'l'a"l'B ~tel oo 1.---------------------, 1"\a CWD\W9 Oot11 .Ut!IV: (1) Relpe. bcM4I ,.... "9Rtl •oni llrmlf laplaol: 'VU.lltTOll Orlflfff•lr c;..,i., w n.or, m.oo MllNTINOTON llACll H1111•1t1tter1 c ... ttr hi floor, "1·mt MIWPOllT l•ACJt """Ion hltrid '"" rio.•, u+nta Shop at home! • Fr•• consultation I • fl'ff •stlmatel • No obligation! • We bring samples! Call collect (714) 523-6511 Fabric and labor for the price of the fabric alone ... 6 smart fabrics! 2.99yd. FABRIC ANO LABOR Choose from a beautiful collection of a ntique satins, slub weaves, homespuns, jacquards and textured fabrics, Included are, Off Shores, Cloudlands, Sabra, Del Ray, Mustang a nd Aria. All at one low price including labor. Hurry, limited quantities on some fabrics .. LIKE IT ... CHAR GE IT! District attorney's officers sought the Indictment to in- sure speedier processing of charges against the four defendants, All four men were awaiting preliminary hearlngs in municipal court. 171 11°'4111 Ulem -oomtcrlablf; I) Leis JOU bl .. up kl~ barder WlthOU\ dlteamrorl. PA.TllTH Powdllt M aJUU"e 1 aon·1cid). Woa '' MIU!'. l'IO l\llrlZQJ', __,., JJMl.1 taste, ti.n\u,... tl\At nt ire -ntlal to J•l\b.BN:rourdsnt~\ fl'!IUIUIJ,l~'.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~)----------'-----------;'-------------QM•ABTDTHtl all drv& oountca. • • I I ' • .--..,,,.r -~---~-------------~-· -~ . --. ------------ Monday, Ju~ 28, 19!>9 DAILY PILOT For The Record I i 1 Circus Paint-in With some dabs of paint on her cheek twc>-year-old Jeanne Louise Harvey of Manhattan Beach is hard at work during a paint-in for youngsters. With the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus in town the theme was "what the circus means to me." The winners received tickets to the circus. Russians Step Up Jam of VOA Marrlag~ Licenses JULY 11 ' W~Wa~T'J:=.i:..~ $'==~4 ~ ""'••r C~ 0 . ol tU" Pol11Mtll•, Fount• n V1llev. ENGLHARO--FULLElt. It-Id P:., ll. ol 20011> A9111 ,.,.,_~ B1lllu bland ind ~lh'(!r, H., 24 ol 150:! sI~~t~'-CRUl. Rllb«t V~ 211, ol '321 W. McF«IOen, $.lnt1 Allll ll'ICI LH A., \I, ol 1002 Shall SI~ Fo•nlaln V1lley. CHANDLER-WYCOFF, DoNld E., '°· ct 632• San A:tnelao Clr<i.. a....,.. ::_·~.~~ ~,~io:vl!1o~ urn Ch•LM HMflll:'b.,~0~~,~::,, "I: Ji.odllh K., 11. of 20U Cor-.t, AnatMlm, ICING-ESERHARTI Tllomn l .• 5'. or 3T~J Humbo!cll Or Vt ind ltuth l ,. G, ' ol lftSl E1tu1rY L.arie, both of Hu,,. WASHINGTON (UPI) complelely blotted out the despite the Jamming, s still ,Ji~~if:.~· oivld A., '·°" :n. Nearly a year after the Soviet Russian, Ukrainian, Armenian succeeding in giving it pie-~'!':C~'L. 11.~, d'"t),;Vt ""c~~ and G e o r g i a n broadcasts. tu re of world events with the Ave .. N...,._., l'•Kh. b 1 0 c t n v 8 5 i 0 n ° ( Thus the United St a le s, Soviet Union . c~r,W~!~!!~'t:~r·,(:1~.:1v'!n.C·~ Czechoslovakia, Moscow is t--------------------,f--------------1 jamming with Increased In- tensity broadcasts beamed in· to Russia by the Voice or America in the Russian and Ukrainian languages. U. S. officials say an In· crease in the jamming started ln mid·?t1.arch. The Russians had resumed Jamming of the Voice of America broadcasta Aug. 21 , 1968, almost simultaneous with the invasion or Czechoslovakia which began the night or Aug 20-2L Between 1963 and 1968 the Soviets did-not-jam-the foreign broad;:asts toward Russia of theXoice of America and that policy was viewed by U. S. of· ficials as a gesture improving mutual understanding. Officials are puzzled as to the signilicance of the recent increase in jamming. However, they are not inclined to view the activity as car- rying political overtones. They speculate that the increased jamming r e s u I t s from "bureaucratic momentum.'' The official! explained that jamming may ha ve increased because of new equipment being used by the Russians, or possibly g r e a t e r con- scientiousness of w o r k e r s employed at jamming sta· lions. U. S. officials report that jamming of Georgian and Armenian language broad- casts to the Soviet Union have varied. The jamming does not appear to be of the same high level wh.ich the Russian and Ukrainian broadcasts are suf. fering. The Russians and Ukrainian language broadcasts are now being jammed at an intensity comparable to that of the pre- 1963 years. The Voice oi America broadcasts in Russian IG the European part or Russia about 56 hours a week and about 21 hours a week to the Soviet Fer Easl The VOA carries aboul seven hours a week of Ukrai· Dian broadcasts. In addition, the voice carries about 100 hours a week ol English language broadcasts to the Soviet Union which are not jammed. · Soviet citizens have found that lhe jamming bas not Probe Set On Crash WASHINGTON (AP) -A bearUlg la tel for Aug. 13 In Santa Monica on the craiih or an airlintr JI.I'!.. 11 which took 38 livtS, the National Transponotloa Safety Board annouoced Thursday. Tiit l.lnlled Airlines Boeing 7r1 went down in Santa Monlcl &ly shortly after takeoff from Los Angeles lntunatlorull Airport Jt was the second crash of a J1rge commerehtl jet near lhe airport tbal week. l\nne111 AUTO c•11n1t Major surgery or just·an aspirin? There's !!Q guesswork at Penneys Auto Diagnostic Center. Either there is or there isn't something wrong with your car ... and we'll find out scientifically! MONTCl>JA In less than one hour, we put yOur car through a series of sci- entific tests (212 of them, to be eitact) that pinpoinl any eitisting problems-and warn of potential ones. Steering. Engine. Brakes. Transmission. Electrical and cooling and fuel and exhaust syslems. Expert analysis of everything from headlights to tailpipe. ·vou watch the results come out on an eJeclronic typewriter. A skilled diagnostician goes over the report with you. II you wish, he'll give you an estimate of any necessary repairs. You'll be able lo take care of small problems now, before they d~ velop lrlto big problems costing big money. And, If you wish, Penneys wlU make the repairs--quickly, ac- curately, economically. Repairs lhat could prevent a needless highway breakdown. . If you prefer, you can take lhe report anywhere you like. Th• cost? Only 9 .88 Pretty reasonable for a doctor; these days. I I Penneys Auto Diagnostic Center Tht Scltf'ltlfic Troubleshooters FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEAOf NEWPORT BEACH . • Prompt, courteous TV service • Factory trained technicians • Fair prices on all repairs • Top quallly RCA 'picture tubes and receiving tubes non *STAR TV* SALES & SERVICE 275 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA 642 -9742 DIMES TO DOLLARS Sptnd dlll'I••, m••• doll•rt. C11l '42·5671 for .htlp with '" 111• ••p1111i¥t , tllrt.firt DAILY PILOT Dimt·a-Lln;, •d. AUTO CENTER 3 DAYS ONLY! • New points, plugs, rotor, condeaser ond distributor cilp • Exp1rt adjustment of coia-dw1ll, timing ond corbaretor • R1111t ••• more ,.p, bett1r mllHge • More e11joyoble driving I FOREMOST UQUID CAR .WASH MIX this high powered cleaner with waler then wosl'I your car. Removes built-up rood film, dltt and grease with ecne. lea¥•• your ca r bright and ahiny, ,Scjc . -- Extr1 11199 si11 whole skin chamois cloth 13.88 Volkswage~ 15.88 6 cylinder 17.88 8 cylinder · GREEN JADE LIQUID CLEANER/WAX Cleans and waxes your car in one ea1y application. l eaves a deep, luslrbc.ls wax. finish tha t knps its thine month after month. 1.29 Penney's own green jade chrome ind metal polish 3.99 .... _.,... 69c , .. ..-~ BU ENA PARK ("':~':/::M) HUNTINGTON BEACH CANOG A PARK CHULA VISTA FULLERTON MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTUR A • I ' .. ' :.-;r • ' ., JODEAN HASTINGS, 6'12.4321 MlllNY, H1Y M. Ifft S , ... U .CofC Women Sport Togs . Sporting smart navy bJue blazers which they earned are four members of the Huntington Beach Women~s Division of the Chamber of Commerce. Out of 72 active women in the division onJy the, Mmes. Jake Stewart, Edward J, Casey Jr., Ray Morehouse and Charles Bauer can don the jacket. Each bas logged 500 hours service. Adorning the blazers are a gold key to the city with the official city crest which can be attained after 100 hours of service and the official chamber emblem with the city's new logo which is available after 300 hours of work. Visi tors to the Orange County Fair were offered a preview of the official outfits as the four were hostesses in the welcome booth. The division is fortunate because the chamber purchased the jackets for the women, making this the only chamber in the state taking Its own monies for the presents. The women will be called upon in the future to serve as official hostesses and are honorary members of the chamber. . , -· . - . --.-. -.• FASHION J\WAR ENESS -Chalking up 500 h~urs of service and earning new navy blue blazers are four members of the Hunting- ton Beach Women 's Division of tbe Chamber Q! Commerce. Wear- ing their new jackets are (lt'ft to right) the Mmes. Jake Stewart, president; Edward J. Casey Jr., vice president; Ray·Morehouse, beauty contest chairman, and Charles Bauer, beautification chair· man. \Vhcn the state president. Mrs. Phyllis' H.arrison visits this area on Sept. 10 the division will show off the new jackets duMng a luncheon in her honor. The new clothing again will be the subject of attention when rep esentatives from Huntington Beach journey to the state conven· tion in Lancaster during October. • I New Post Brings New Challenge By JEAN WILLIAMS 01 t11e o.llf' l"lllfl Slaff • ''People are most important," said Sister Frances Dunn, now in the process of relinquishing her post as administrator of Children's Hospital of Orange County to take up a new and far flung challenge. De-emphasis o! the institutionalized aspect of the nuns' lives and a shift to the person-ct;tntered approach is the concern of the dynamic, youth- ful-appearing woman elected to a four-year tenn as President of the Con- gregation by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange. Her administrative duties will entail· supervision of eight hospitals in California, 32 grade schools and high schools from Eureka to San Diego. a hospital and school in Lubbock, Tex., a youth hostel in Australia and !our schools on the islands of Buka and Nissan in the North Solomons. Personal visits to the various locales will please lhe nun, who is especially looking forward to a first hand view of the installations on New Guinea. St. Joseph's nuns began work there as assistants to the Marist fathers before the advent o! World \Var II, she explained. Forced by the Japanese to abandon their work, they were evacuated by submarine and only returned after the close of the war. Important these days is the teaching of sewing to the island women, who make clothing not only for themselves and their families but also are able to market their handiwork. Nursing care is given the sick, and well baby clinics are established. The teachers and nurses on the islands travel to their patients in the villages by means o! land rovers and jeeps and children come to school via canoe. Commenting on the work she is leaving as administrator of Chil· dr-en's HospitaJ in Orange County -where St. Joseph 's sisters are under contractual agreement wi th the board of directors to act as directors of administration and of nursing -Sister Dunn said the medical facility there is "a whole new world" where special care is given the acutely ill child and the one in need of special diagnostics. She has been admtnlstra· tor there since 1964. arriving one month before its opening. Children's Hospital, Orange County Medical Center and Long Beach !\1emorial Hospital all are part of one training program, she said. and now the hospital is affiliated with UCI for pediatric training in connection with the new Medical School established recently on the UCJ campus. "It's wonderful to be part of a teaching program," Sister Dunn commented further. "It seems to keep everybody on their toes to be part of the teaching profession." Again she emphasized the imporance of plac- in,I! new nuns in the order In the jobs they are most qualified to !ill, in a new effort to deal with each "person as a person" in the St. Joseph's order. Christ t)'las Giving Comes ·Early In recognition o! their hard. work during the Yuletid e season members of the Huntington Harbour Philhannonic Committee were presented another $1000 check to add to their treasury. This year's boat parade thairman f\ilr s. Ar· thur Knox '(right) watches Mrs. William Eckberg cap E. E. Tague, executive vice president o! Huntington Harbour Corp. The native Californian. who was born in Monrovia and went lo schools there until she attended. Mills College where sh~ received her de. gree. was wearing a modern blue two-piece suit as she talked within the mother house of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Orange. IS.e NEW CHALLENGE, Pege 15) MULTIPLE DUTIES Si ster Fr•nc•s Dunn Coffee Date Gives Drip Grounds for Sleepless Nights DgAR ANN ~NDERS : Six years ago t met a girl throOgh mutual friends. The 1ang wanted to f110 to a movie I had already seen. 1'14 girl wasn 't particularly interested in the movie and suggested that we just wall(around town. We had a pleasant eventna).nd ended up at a coffee hou?. When the theck came it was $2.10. J was 60 cefill ¥iqrt. I searched in every pocket, knowing ~woukln't find any more money. Finally, Ult girl made a joke o( it ud said, "Let me treat you." I agreed. I never uw her after that because we movm out of town a few months later. J've thought about her many times since and I'm sorry t dkln·t keep in touch. T know where &he ltves aod I'd like to send -ber-lbe $2.10 pl .. 'lnleres~ but I'm afraid ' ANN LANDERS she's got me down as a heel. What do you think? -DEBT UNPAID DEAR UN: Ooe't ae:rtd money. Send, lutead, a bouquet of Howen, a bo1 of candy or a book. Altaell • note lhanktn1 ber for &.be coffee and apologlu for belng 111 years late. DEAR ANN f,.ANDERS : Our retarded son. Al, is nearly 13. ills me.otalit,y bas been at the three year level for the past fiv~years. , Al is large for his age and< getting stronger aU the time. I can't handle him as I once did. 11lis past year he has beaten up his younger brothers several limes. They arc not permitted to 11trlke h!m. My husband gets furiOUI and hils Al with a belt. I can't bear to see this, yet I realize aometbing must be doae. Three doctors have told WI to If!\ gtitutionallze the boy but 1 can't brinl! myself to do It. My mother say1 God has sent us this child to test our Christian mettle and we must bear tllil croa and not see.k easy answers. I need your advice. -SLEEPLESS NlGIITS, TORTURED DAYS DEAR SLEEPLESS AND TORTURED: You II.ave alrtady 1ottn advice from t.hrte 1ut.borltles wbo are mucb cloltr te dM! 1lt1aUen dlu 1 am. I hope Y"' .. ,, It Aid pie.,. tell ,_ mother tb1t ln1tltul10111lldti1 a child II 110 "ea1y an11wer." It Is• dlffk1H move, but oflen the be1t solutlou for all couceraed. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Some time ago you printed a letter from a young man who was heartbroken because he and bis girl friend had gone too far and her parents would not let her see him a11ain. The one sent.enct In his letter that I WU struck by went IOmethlng like this; "I'd give anything ii I could live that part of my life over again. t would be perfectJy content jlllt lo bold her hand." I wish you'd reprint that Jetter, Ann. So man,y young &iris today reel ~y m.ust be oe1ually perml8Slve In order lo '°"' !heir boyfriends Interested. The lruth Is the boys would gladly t.ake "no" for an answer. In fact they'd prefer it. We have a lovely daughter who read s your column nlU]arr, and !his noUoo is one which she and Mime ot her glr1 : lriends need t.o gel through their Mads. : Please? -CONCERNED MOT'HER 4 DEAR MOTHER: Your letter 1trved : tbe purpose. nanu for wrlUn1. • Too many couples 10 from matrimony : lo acrimony. Don't Jet your marriage Oop : before it gel! started. Send for Ann : Landers' booklet, "Marriage -What to ; E1pect." Send your request lo Ann : Lande.rs in care of your newspt,per : enc.k>elng 00 cents in coin and a lon1, • stamped, self-addressed envelope. : Ann Landers wUI be &lad to help you. : with your problems. Send them to her Jn ; care of the DAILY PILOT, tneloalna • : 1eU·addrwed, llamped eovelope. : -• I 1 l I ' ' I I I I • 1 ' .. Horoscope Sagittarius: Avoid Efforts Smart 'n Simple Scattering TUiSDAY' JULY zt " •1 IYDNl:'ll OMAlllt Llaeu poeltloa etoUaue1 f1Yonb11 for rtPlq. 01\00MINO TIP: C1lveo, aaklu are •«eaied. K.aow illll .., choote 1ppard ... CGrdlDllY• Allll:S (Much ll·Aprll II): Slttnlthen Ue1 wtth hiend1. Do 11111 let dltllnce become 1 barrttr. Key ii to enlarae horlaonl and contactl. Some are more th•n wlllln1 to htlp you fUlfill wl.ahe1. TAURUS (April JO.May IO): You now 111 ch.,,.. lo 111n lidded rocoplllon. Some woo may have doubted y o u r c1pab1UUt1 reverie a•ar. Be calm In dtll~ with lhooe In authority. Don t .throw away mtJ« _,iunlty. GEMINI IMty 11-lune 20): Apply orlJln•I melhodl. Don't be taken ln by t.hOH with old 1torl11, methods. Be percep- ttve, creative . Your Influence spreldl -fevorably -lf you write and advert.lie. CANCER (June 21-luly 22): Take stock of Inventory. Be aware ol credit.!, debits. Make financial pl1n1. Be factual, frank -e1peclally w I t h youraell. Yaur Intuition ii fine. But don't reel you can by-pass euentlalJ. Police Wives Plan · Party Potpourri LEO (July 2J.Au1. 12 ): You do best by playina w1lllng aame. Offers come your way. Be sure you have expert cotmtel. Be ver1aUl.t. Look beyond immediate iodlc1Uons. Don't panic. Take time to evaluate poaslbllltles. NC\\•port Beech Police Wives AuxilJary is planning an annual potluck dinner on Tuesday, Aug. 12, and Offi cer Jon Schorle seems pleased to accept a second helping of a tempting chafing dish concoc~ Uon from his wife. \vho will be hostess for the Form er Miss America event. Looking on in approval is l\lrs. Wayne Con- noUy (left) \Vho 1s assisting in plans tor the affair. The couples will add extra fun to the evening by dresaing in children's clothing. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Consumers Treated Royally Las Olas Seats New President NEW YORK (UPI) -The :o;ettina: lleems a slran1~ one for a former ~llss America, slanding behind a man-sized desk. wih a bauery of NAOMI ROBINSON Augu1t Wedding Betrothal Disclosed The betrothal o( Neomi Alexandra Rob I n a on to Charles Anthony H.amsdcn o[ San Francisco has bctn an· nounced by her parents. Dr. and Mrs. Robf:rt F. Robinson of Corona de l Mar. The son of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Ramsden of Ala med11 is 111 present doing graduate work al Stanford Lniverslty In busi ne ss adn1in1stral1on v.hile he serves as a hcu1cn11nt in the Na\'y. lie Y:as graduatrd from Stanford. The b r id t: • c I cc I 11·as graduated lrun1 lhc l:111\'ersitv of Cellfoml11, Uerkclcv and has done graduate 110rk <'It UCI. She 1s a S<'111ur 1n }lastings Law School. San Francisco. A wedding 1a bcu1g planned for Aug. 30 in the Nc\\·1xirter Inn. telephones rln&ing constantly. the talr beauty arabbinjl a bite of an ordered-in sandwich and slppihg a soft drink a1 she takes C'alls, ask.! her staff to check out Uris and that pro- blem and talks heatedly about how the consumer COll!ltantly ls bilked. But there 1he 11, Bes.s Myerson Grant, who as Bess Mr,erton won the beauty and ta ent title Jn 1945, no 1v the watchdoa for con1umer1 in the nation's Iar1e1t city. Mrs. Grant la New York"s Comml1aloner of Consumer Affairs. She and some 300 employea are the clearing hoo1e for col\IUmer com- plalntl. checlr. advertiJlng and packaain1 claims tor validity, reaulaie city markell and ad- rnlnilter city llcensu. When Mayor John V • Lindsay, a R1pubUcan, ap- Shoes Tell Storv Well ' BURLINOTON,VI. (UPI) - "Putting your belt f oot forwa rd" means wearing the right ahoes when applying for a job . Clothln1 apeclall1l! In the Erten1lon &!rvlce of the Unlveralty of Vermont say that potential employtrs can tell a lot about a pto1pecllv., employe by the cut of his or her shoes. The spec\allals ofler these Ups to job huntera : -Women should wear simple. low or mid-heeled pumps, Uet er sllngbacks. ' -Men should check shoes for necessary repairs to scrat· ches. rundown httls, dirt marks and Jack cf a shine. Sneakers are two-pT-ong sore ~pots -they're definitely "out" for interviews and can hurt feet on the job bec!l.use they normally lack proper supporl. Trim. neat and well-polished footwear is a plus. No matter how dressed otherwlff, a Job hunler looks sloppy with ahod· dy or soiled snot.s. IT'S A FACT! If you spent 30 seconds looking at each of our shag samples, it would take you over 9 hours to see them all- 10 com• early •nd bring your lunch. DON'S CARPET SHOP 426 SO. MAIN <2 alkt. No. of lullock'sl ORANOI Houa11 •••••• DAILY ~LOSID SUNDAY poinled Mrs. Grant. a Democrat, to lbe $2S,OOO a year po3t in February, he call· ed it the "first of Its kind to be created by a local govern. ment in the nation." :P.1rs. Grant hopes that her a1ency can betome a pro- totype tor others -"every ci- ty and county around the country should have a place where the consumer can seek redre11," 1he 1ald. "We'll make available all the auideline1 we've developed.'' She's campaigning to r regula tions whlch would re- quire retal\ers to label pro- ducts with the cost or each ounce, or pound or foot so the shopper "knows pre c is e l y what ahe 11 ae~ting for her money. The economy alze isn 't always the best buy." She then n!ld the fine print on the con- tent! of several supermarket Items in her atflce to prove her point. P.lrs. Marie Fouts v.·as In- stalled president cf Las Ola.s Toutmlllrtss Club or Hun- t i n g to n Stach during ce remonies in F r a n c a I s restaurant . Theme for the upcoming yt.ar i1 Stairw a y to Leadership: Today We Train· -Tomorrow We Lead. Other officers are Mr!. Rollo Wett, first vice presi- dent ; Ml!I Joya Sexton, se- cond vice pre1ldent ; Miss Marge Dewey, 1ecretary, and Mr1. Wllllam Va\luti n i, treasurtr. Further Inf orma t i on regardln1 vialllna a meeting may be obtained by calling Mra. Clarence Hendricklon, One oC her goals: "To pro-- mulaate Jeaislatlon to target In on the man who cheats, vic- Umlze1 the Innocent ." She w1nta to broaden the scope of the agency 10 that among other thlngt the city might sue merchant• who deceive the cu1tomer1 and return the damages to the victims. The nation already has a fair labelling act. but Mrs. Grant argues it 11 not enough. In 1968, she said, Consumers Union sent a grou;r of women shopping and foun that they"d made 38 wrona choice• In get· ting the most tor their dollar. What can the consumer do,100;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiOiiJ Immediately? 897-1<123. At pment, she said, the dl!honest businessman can defraud, knowlna the con- sumer u1ually cannot afford the \awaull lo reco ver d1m11e1 . ''We are not loc ked in com- b1t wit h honest bu.sine1amen. '' she •aid. "But l do think bualnw for its own image 1hoold war an the problem too." Mrs . Myerson o!fered lhue suggestions -€ d u c a t e yourself In so far a1 possible an reading contents of can or box. Steer clear of wei&hl! er meaaurementa In h a r d • t o. tranalate fractions. If a box says "II} cenl!I off'' or "20 cents aff regular price.'' de- mand 1o know, "Off-what?" "The con.sumer has forgot· ten how po\verfu\ she can be, .. said Mrs. Grant. HAL AlllSCHER HEARING AIDS C111t•m Aural Am1tlltlc11tl1n NO IALllMEN l40t I . COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR ftf Appololftl..,t 675°3833 Shoe Sale BUYI ONE 2 FOR ONE (Special Group) GET ONE FREE "Here's How It Works" You pay the hl9hest retail price on first pair • get the second pair of equal value or less -Free. It's fun. Iring your friends & nei9hbors • Buy to9ether. VALUES TO s29oo HEMPHILL'S COITA MISA lUI NIWPORT AVl!NUI! TELIPHONl t l#-'744 • Obt.aln hint rrom L e o m011ae. Be moderate. Avoid extremes. Ctmenl relallon1 wJLb 1'111tlve1, netahbor1 and co-worlter1. Be careful when lt comes to 1l1nlng pipers. IJBRA (S.pl. 23-0cl. 22): Perional m11net11m rattna: 11 hl&h. Oppo1lte aex 11 al· tr1Cted. Cre1Uve urae. ta 1trong. Expru1 r, ou r se If ; communicate dea1. D 1 y fe1turea change, travel and variety. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-NO'. 11): Empha11J on family, home, domullc relatlon1. Key 11 to '"k harmony. Avoid dilpute over money. Purctlue of lux· ury lttm ~an be lnteWa:enlly planned. 8AOmARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): Avold ac1tterln1 ef· fort1. Concentrate. on one thing at a time. Be versatile without be.Ina foollah . Me1n1 con· centrate Dl'I ta11t at hand. Steer clear of nela:hbor, rel1tlvt, dlaputea. CAPRJC<JRN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Flnanclal f 1ln Indicated. lllcom1.1 potent al enhapcld. Accent on wbal you po11e1s and can 1aln. If you act In respons ible manner, definite ad vantages accrue. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Appeal spreads: your cy· cle contlnue1 hlah. Many are drawn to you. Some tttk: ad- vlct, prof eas Ion a I and otherwl.e. Tlme to conclude 'l"tement. Not wile . t o tolerate further delay . Pl8CES (Fob. It-March 20 ): ' , I 61119 I J ( /! / ,, 11 you don'l ltnow, 1111:. Mea ns :\_ don't permit pride to at.nd In Contrastlng colors ,,·ith top-!!titching ls the swry by way or progress. l\-1uch that Charle& Le l\-1aire. occura today may be hidden or . · behind the scenes. e e The large pointed detachable collar is set slightly creatl\"e. but a v o Id aa-away from the neck. The center front band is lop· gressiveness. stitched in place and enhanced '"ith decorator button!i, lF TODAY JS VO UR The cuffs are closed by link buttons and are detach· BIRTHDAY you ar e sensitive, able, too. The shape is '10 easy A-line -can be worn JnlulUve: you could write and wlth or without a sash. The center back zipper opening leach. Much of whal yoo want makes f"or easy construction. lo do comes about next year, bu t may start as early a.it Make it in 1nediumweight cottons and blends, cord- October or this year. uroy, llahtwelght tweeds and woolens, raw sil k or wool T• t1M 1111 w11o·1 Ne~• ,0, •o>u 111 crepe. 41119 l.s cut In l\1isses sizes 10·18. J\'lisses size 1:? =,.·~s!:!i 0~1~~. •11~•1,,.,<:"•~~ requires approximately 2 318 yards of 54.'' fabric with w.,....~." """ .•1,1hd.i1 ...... ., ce11113/4 yard of S4'' fabric for contrast. to OrNrr All,,,liMY a.tr.ii. lfl• DAil Y ~ILOT, l oJ H ... Or111d (.,,lr1I Sit · llOll. H•w Ytrk. H.Y. 1110,,, To order 61119 ; state size, include name. address and zip code. Send $1.25 plus 25 cents for first-class po1ta1e and handling. Send orders for books and pat-Mesa League toms to SPADEA, Box N. Dept CX·l5, Milford, New Jersey 08348. Tel : 201·990.2201. , La Leche Leaaue meets the aecond Tuesday al 7:30 p.m. Th.ls pre-cut, pre--per!orated Spadea Designer Pat· Mr•. H. W. Moore, 545-4359, tern comes in ready-to-wear sizes that produce a better will tr11w1r queaUons re11rd-flt and are easier to make. Order normal ready-to-wear Ina locaUon and membership. a lie and allow one week for delivery. CURLS 'N ' COLORS AHEAD, 17.150·14.150 SHAPED ANO PERMED BY FASHION-WISE F'INCERS , OUR ~E"'r CONCE~ 01" THE LATEST HEADLINE FASHIONS AT A IEAUTl,-Ul.. SALE PRICE. THtH, THI: 11NJSHING TOUCH •• ,WONO£ft-WOAKIMG ,-ANCl-f'"ULL•, THC IN8TAHT HAIR COLOR RINS[ THAT19 A COHDITIOHCR AHO WAVC ll:T, 'roo! OUft ft!GU\.Aft 35, 00-30, 00 VAL.U E, NOWOf'fLY 17.!S0AND 14.50. B!AUTYSALO!'I, ROBINSON'S NEWPORT • FASH :;::N !~I.AND • 644-2800 by :Jy •P· 15. :h- rn ng ·d- 101 12 .th •SS "' •1- ?W •1-er ar ·, • I • -MondAf, July 211, 1969 DULV '!LOT J:; I Huntington Beach Pair Exchange Nuptial Vows Septem.ber Wedqing · Planned From Page 13 • • • . ·New Challe.nge P.fodern ·b•blts are a ·"mat-chaDeoae. wu one .he wutd te.r or pe1'QMI preference" meet with joy, band atladed she commented, with 30llle in wann We1Cllll1e M d she ntembtn preferrl.ng to wear mectt in her trawls.. On her 20th birthday, Susan Lee Rothert became the bride of Jeffrey Alan Seybert in an evening ceremony tn the First Christian Church of Hun- An early !all weddlnc la be1ng planiied bylGay Eisman, daughter ..ol M.r. 1nd Mrs. WUUam, G. Eisman o! Coota Mesa. and Ou1stopher Meado( now serving with the Ahny irl Fort Riley, Kon. the tradlUonal nun's garb. A After aU, she wW 1&y1 *'pea-- larger number W'tAr a ple -are.-theoaeawhocuunl." MRS. FRED FORGIE Northern California Home tington Beach. The Rev. Thomas W . Overton petfor.med the dou ble ring ceremony for t h e daughter or the Charles E. Rotherta and the son of the Robert A. Seyberts, all of Huntington Beach. Escorted by her rather down an aisle lined with blue candles, bows and streamers, the bride wore a gown of organza and d:iantllly lace. Pearls encircled the neckline, and a pearl crown caught her elbow length veil . She carried a white Bible and a cascade of white roses centered with a t white orchid . Mrs. lioward Keuler o[ Colo rado, matron of honor, and Miss Laura Richardson, maid of honor, wore blue dot- ted Swiss dresses and blue veiling headpieces trimmed with daisies. They carri~ nosega,>'s of daisies and baby 's breath. Wearing Identical outfits were the bridesmaids, the Misses Jill Seybert, sister of Lhe bridegroom , Sandra Ran- <'OC!k and Daryl Ogden. They also carried daisy bouquets. Carrying a basket of daisies was flower gi.rr Rebecca Crumpler. whose dress match· ed those or the other al· tcndants. - The former Costa Mesan 11 the son of Robert L. Meador or Fullerton and Mrs. Robert L. Meador of Santa Ana. BoU1 the bride.elect and her fiance were graduated fron1 Corona del Mar Higb School and Orange Coast College, wtiere she was affiliated wlUt Phi Alpha Mu. Sept. 11 bas been selected as the date ror the wedding, whkh will take place in Pttk Family Wedding Chapel. Today's News Daily Pilot Way mo<1wec1 &s. ""' said, oon-_ r-..1ay's Fi·nal slstlng of a street lengtlrdark ..,.. dress with white veiJed head k tocJ covering. SIJe and others who Stoc. s . ay adopt modem dress when, "at home" also wear modified YOU KNOW ouUits with veilt when ap- pearing In. formal capacity YOUR CHILD as representatives of the order. Nursing nuns have adopted reKUla. """"'" wbite Will LEARN uniforms, adding white veil! to . iiidicale 'heir onler. TO SWIM AT Before coming to Orange ~~yo:.::~i~i:~~; BLUE' au'oy for St Luke's Hospital in , i Pasadena and 8anta Rosa AIMI S. Wll y" Memorial Hospital.. , AMllel-. ..... w-1, Her new position will cer-s.... Ma. ,_. lainly be a challenge, Sister E:Aii!llM Dunn said, but with .a gleam .....-UW' In her eyes that indic•ted the BIGGARS 86TH SEMI-ANNUAL Wedding Solemnized In Lutheran ·. Church Robert Rufer of Fullerton was best man. Ushers in- cluded the bride's biother, Steve ltotherl, Dan Moss, Lynn Arnold, Dave Caffrey. Jeff Archer and Dwayne MRS. JEFFREY ALAN SEYBERT San Francisco Honeymoon Exchanging wedding vows and rings in Christ Lulheran Church were Paulelle Kay Danielson and Fred M. Forgie. J\1cTieman. Rathburn who came from San Sisters o! lhe bride, the Antonio, Tex., for the wedding. Orange Coast College and Golden West College and he attends California S t 1 t e College at Long Beach, work- ing tow~rd a peychology degree. Following, a wedding trip to S:in Francisco, the couple plan to make their home in Hun- tington Beach . FURNITURE, CARPETS, LAMPS, ACCESSORIES The Rev. L. V, Tornow of- riciated for Lhe e v e n i n g ceremony, when the bride was escorted to lhe altar by her father. Misses Wendy and Marsha Approximately 375 guests, Danielson were bridesmaids, I n c 1 u d i n g the bride's wearing gowns of chartreuse grandmother from S a n t a and carrying bouquets of Barbar·a, Mrs. Myrtle Howard, white daisies to match their attended a reception tn the headpieces. fellowship hall following the Best man was Carl Glasgow. ceremony. Miss Jo Seybert, A 125 ooo t th Music Goal Furthered J.t1~";1evs. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman II . Danielson and he is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John 0. Forgie, all or Costa itesa. The brl.degroom's brotber, · gran to e the bridegroom's sist e r, pbo A · · 1 Ken Forgie and William Dunn circulated the guest book. Sym ny ssoc1allon o served as ushers. Both the newlyweds are Orange County to help assure The bridal gown was empire styled in silk organza. A head- piece of lace and pearls caught her elbow lengt_h ii· lwion veil and she carried a bouquet of white carnations, pink roses and baby's breath. Approximately 200 guesls Huntington Beach High School its future succw has been attended a reception in the graduates. She attended presented by the James Irvine church social hall following FoundaUoo. the ceremony, whtte Miss Kathy Hill circulated the guest Emblem Club· J . Simon Fluor, representing book. the foundation, turned ovier The-newlyweds both were The Elks Lodge is the set· the check in that amount to graduated from Costa Mesa ting for meetings of the Duffern H. He.I.slog. president fligh School and Orange Coast Emblem Club 201 of Laguna or the association and James College. The bridegroom Beach. Members gather the F. Helfrich, vice president of presently serves with the first a~ third Tuesday at a finance. Dressed In a yellow crepe and lace gown and carrying yellow daislei; which matched her floral headpiece was the ma.id of honor, Miss Susan Coast Guard, and the couple The grant will enable the plan to make their first home1l p;;:.mm;. ~ii~miiii!:rlr;;:if.;jr,jT in northern California. I ' Crusade Speaker Luau Luncheon Draws Area Christian Women ~tuu-muus, Hawaiian shifts by calling eilher Mrs. Jlarold t1nd sandal'i will be preferred Fischer at 962-1129 or Mrs. dress lor those allcndin~ Uie William O'Brien. 545-3070. Newport Bei:Ch Christian Preschool nursery care will \Yomen·s Club luau luncheon _ be availeible and will be $1 for the first child and 25 cents for on Tuesday. Aug . 5. each addilional ch i Id . The Ne~·porler 11nn wilt be fte!'•-rvations may be made by the setting for the gathering ca!Cng ~9-2631 or 646-2865. from 12 to 2 p.m. fashions from the f\fiss Hawaii shop v.•111 be modeltd in a special showing to fu1her carry out tile Island theme. Mu sic will be provided by baritone Lyle {~ordon. Guest speaker for the oc- r.asion is Robert IL Jones. Crusade Associate for lhc Southern CaUrornia B i 11 y Graham Crusade. Reservations for the $3 luncheon program may be fade before· Friday, Aug. I. Silver Sands The first and third Tuesdays al 8 p.m. members of Silver Sands 286, Native Daughters of the Golden West gather for me e lings. Lake Park Clubhouse in Huntington Beach is the meeting place for lhe first session. Mrs. Jack Wilson, 548-1479, will furnish location information on the se- cond meeting date. ·~ ~~~~~~ .r~ ,, Jl:th$toifu' ~ The Restaurant ~ Ex traordinaire ~ I 'Ii block 11.,rrfl of l11t•neerlo11 e( Mac:A rttu1r & Cocnt) l 2325 l::a sl Costa Highway-(714) 67~267 Corona del Mar 's--\ .rl W'hy Fight The ~ ~ \V eek cud Crowds! ;"--:. ~ Leisurely-Relaung :ff .._,~ . 1 nti111.f1.tP Dining TUi,;sDAY. WEDNESDAY'-THURSDAY AN D SUNDAY EVENINGS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY BY RESERVATIONS • ~ ~ Dinners Ex traordinaire G$. :.:.~ Tuesday thru Saturday from SIX P.M. ~ ~J SUNDAY from FIVE P .M. 1~.f) ~~~'U!..~~~~~ Elizabeth Arden face treatment is much more than just a facial An EllZ<lbeth Arden expert in Buffllli!s' Red Door Treatment Room will help yoo discover delightful beauty setrets. You'll have a face ~eabltent and emerge with a luxurious new makeup as Wl!tl as a radiant feeling. Complete treatment, with 1113keuP., lLH Beauty Sludio, Downtown long Beach, Pomona, Newpo1I, la Habra ManitUTes, peditt11es, !atialS'ITid eie<l!ofy~s Buffums· lllewpor\ C..tir .i falftl• lat• • 544·2200 • -'""' ....... -.. ,,.._..,.. _ .. ,.,. association to take a giant ste p forwar d toward establishing Orange County's own major symphony orchestra, its foremost go.al. Other activities of t h e association, for which it seeks support from area industries and businesses as well as in- dividuals, are the annual Youn~ Artist Audit\ons and the hstening experience for children or a live symphony orchestra playing in their own area school. PASADENA: Colorado at El Molino POMONA: Holt, east of Garey SANT A ANA: Molo ot •~-· Discover our L'OrealofParis French fros 1tin·g ' 15 . 0 0 reg. 25.00 (shalll!OO and set ex~a) Highlill)lt yoor hair with summer sunshine. Add glamour and exciremenl lo your coiffUTe (and !he way you feel!) COllllllele your new look with our saucy killen cu~ a.50. Beauty Studio, all stores except Mari na J e hltt-. AH SteN 0,.. M ... , 1 .... 1.,.. --• I u mS' Newport 'Celle!: 11 Fasbi111 l$1and • · 644-2200 • ~ .. Thm., Fri. 10:00 till 9:30 ODler days 10:001!11 SJa ' i I I \ ••• ··-·· ................................... ,_ ................ '• ..... . --~-. -. -. - -• -.... ---...-~ --............ -----·-;"-:;-;:-;;-:;-';"'7~"';"";:'l;;!';'"="'O;l"" ... """""""' ___ ...,l"' .......................... ,,..,..,,..,,. ...... "7 .. ' .. .. . . .. .. ............ " ·~ . ... . .. .. .. -.. . '· .. ,, ... . ................. ....-. Jlllond<oy,Ju~ 28, 1!69 Huntington Beach Club Blooms With New Officers Santa Ana Settirig Wedding pledges were made by Rosemary Castano of El Toro, a former MW TusUn, and Rotiert Joseph zaricki of Costa Me!la before the altar of Waverly Church, Santa Ana. The late aftemoon double ring rite! were read by the Rev. Donald R. Longenecker for the daughter and son of Mr. and Mrti. Henry Castano of El Toro and Sidney Zarlcki of Miami and the late Mrs. Zaricki. Escorted to the flower bedecked altar by her rather, Ute bride chose a gown or sllk organza wiUl a modified scoop neckline, short sleeves and empire waist. The bodice and skirt front were appllqued with venise Jace and daisies and the chapel train was trim· med with matchlng lace and daisies. I Her shoulder length illusion veil was caught to an organza and lace headpiece and her bridal bouquet was an ar- rangement of white flowt;.rs accented y,•ith m!Xed colored flowel'9 and baby's breath. MRS. ROBERT ZARICKI Home in Laguna Standing with the bride were Serving as best . man was itrs. Vance Sallee of Tor· Zarickl and seating guests was ranee, her sister, and Mrs. Thomas Zaricki of Buena Sallee. Vance Sallee Jr., Park, sister-in-law of the nephew of the bride, carried bridegroom. They wore Jong the wedding rings to the altar. gowns of pink organza, ap-A reception in the church pliqued with daisies around hall followed the ceremony the neck and wrists of Uze loog where 250 guests greeted the sleeves. Pink flowers accented newlyweds, and a buffet din· with colored blossoms and ner for family members todk Don 't try to los e weight .:J. alone. 11~· WEIGHT ®.. WATCHERS. baby's breath formed the.ir place after the reception in the ~ ~ , Elected to serve the Women's Club of Huntington Beach ""' (left to right) the Mmes. Earl Dettra, president; Frank Pound, first vice president; Theadore Scultz, recording secretary, and R. C. Conant, parliamentarian. Other leaders are the Mmes. ~artin Campbell, Carl Rauckman, Louise Jenkins, Elmer Addison, Sam Schiloff, Albert Hagler, Mamie Seltzer, Charles O'Donnell and Arnold Posade. bouquets. home of the bride's parents. Preceding the bride to the The couple a·r e honey· Some talking, som• listeriinr;i end altar was the flower girl, Deb· mooning in northern California a program that works. t• bie Farrell, who wo_re~a:,::Jig=h~tja~nd~w~il~l ~e~sl~a~bl~is~h~l~h~ei~r ~f:ir=st~• f~R~E<~B~R~O~CH~U~R!~-~CA~l~l ~83~5~·5~50~5~ JUDITH BAER Woddinv Plans Rite Date Announced A dinner party for close rr~s and relailves hosted by th~ 'J. Peter Barrelts of Newport Beach was the oc- casion for the announceme~t of the betrothal of Judith Belle Baer to their soo, Steven John Barrett. The announcement w a s made by the future bride's parents, Mr. and Mn:. Harold L. Baer of Newport Beach. The engaged palr both were graduated from N e w p o r t llarbor High School and he is serving In t h e Naval A l r Reserve. A weddlng Is being planned for Sept. 13 in St. Andrew's Presb)'lulan Cburch. Mesa Rebekah Every rirst and third Tues· day or the month members of Mesa Rebekah Lodge assemble in Odd Fellows Hall, Costa Mesa, at S p.m. Have a Spare Pair? Cool Lost With One of the most frightening feelings in the world is sud· denly flnding that, one of your contact lenses is gone. You may be standing before Ute bathroom mirror in the morning, sunning beside the swimnUng pool (we never swim wilh our lenses on) or making the last pult in your golf game, but the feeling ill the same -sudden and com· plete panic. "Don't move, anyone, '1 you yell , and the frantic search begins. First you check your front pockets and look in the bathroom sink (let's hope the Minutes pass, and il still hasn't turned up. Your vision is lopsided (wonder If I could wear just one tense today?) and you start to get a headache. Suddenly, a gleam of light flashes in your eye, and you look in front of yoor foot. There it is, the innocent litUe culprit. Into your eye it goes and in· Grades Raised Cam pouts Lense to the car you go, straight to the doctor's to order a spare pair just like you've always promised yourself you would do. The swetit reeling of blessed relief settles over you as you drive down the street, and your contact lenses become a pair of rose colored glutes. The world i3 a wonderful place q:aln. Motivate stopper was closed). Next il's TURLOCK, Calif. (UPI) -attempt to reach him in a way down on the hands and knees. For some • 'prob I 'em ' ' impossible for teachers with maklng sure that lhe spot youngsters having difficulty large classes. where you kneel is not where with their grade sch o o I "f think it 's the sincere the lens could be, and then studies, a weekend camping desire to try to help that wins the careful searching begins. trip with an older college stu· the youngster," said BUI You put your eye .to the dent may make a world of dif. Ozuna or Hollister, rounder of ground or floor (you're bUnd ference, the Stanislaus County pro. as a bat without your lens) Sponsors of a voli.tnleer gram. and hope it didn't bounce far tutoring program involving Chief coordinator Bill Parb away. 130 st l f L I "-The sweat breaks out and some young ers repor o a Se va Beach said u141t that an experimental program his 1a.year--0ld pupil jumped your fingers tremble (why designed to booet self con· from a second grade reading didn't I buy a spare pair, you rtdence and raiae sch o o I level to a fourth grade level ask yourseU ) and you try to grades is having a large after a weekend camping and Collect your lhought.'1. degree of success. fishing trip. Be logicaJ. you tell yourseU, Under the program, ''The stimulus was the it ha.a to be there. Every nook volunteer tutors from thing," Parks said. "With a lot and cranny is searched, every Stanislaus State COiiege come of these kids, what they really blade of grass bent aside or into the student's home and need is altention." every fold of the beach toweli1-----:;;~----1r;i;;;.;;;;;;;:;;.:;...;;;..;;;"" I turned over (why didn't I get\ easy-to-find tinted lenses?). You've had close calls before, you tell yourself, and this time you'll find it too.1,_ __ _ Remember the time it was un· der the soap in the soap dish , the Ume someone threw it in the trash voith a tissue, the Ume it was under t h e typewriter at work and the 1 time It was floating in a pud· die or water on the bathroom floor? THE N·E·W LQQK malAej for HAIRSTYLING by the area's TOP STYLISTS! Innes WE HAVE EVERYTHING TO KEEP YOUR NEEDLES CLICKIN ' SHOES NOW . THEY. A.RE e YARNS Compllment1ry M•ko-ups 9 F1clal1 • Eyo Tobblng Meinlcure1 •nd Pedlcurn 1h PRICE e SUPPLIES ' e CUSTOM KNIITING e DESIGNING e CHARTING By Appointment VIVIANI WOODARD COSMltlCS ' WOMEN'S a CHILDREN'S SHO.ES SOUTH COAST PLAZA .Srlstol •I tho S•n Diogo Fwy. Costa Meta The KNIT WIT SOUTH COAST PLAZA l ri1+ol •t +~1 5•11 Ditto F""Y· Ca•I• M,,., 541-1111 .. ma!Ae'4 WIG & BEAUTY SALON 548-34<16 JIO·D Int 17ttl Sttwt HlllGkEN SQUARE COSTA ti1'DA pink dress. = . . !tome in Laguna Beach. ',l'bia weelr, Mot\day, July 28 tlun 4 i'M Satm- d,ty, August 2nd, all 28 Gloria Marahall Joca- tlons in the West offer Ji l'rice on your choice of Hips or· Waist or Tbig\ul or Upper Alml when """'1 in conjunction with any Gloria Marshall ~gram. Why GLORIA MARSHALL is No. 1 28 LOCATIONS IN THE WEST Gloria Marshall's didn't "jud happen" to beoome the v;mld's leading Figure Contzol System • .-qiriclc, ..Co results :made it that way. At Gloria MarshaJl's you'll lose more inches and pounds for ~eas money tl\llft through. any other l'ro,...,.,~ I Loee pounds and incb"' f"1m IUps, waist, thi1hs1 tummy and B.l'ln3. .1 Spee~al machines are designed to Y banish every comictablo figure fault J :e.suJla CXlDle quickly, without pills, drupi, strenuous exercise or starvation (!jets ••• el!ortlessly, pounds and inches "!all away."' J Nodiarobinf. Wearenotagym. 'While IYJDllftBiuma can build healthy rouscles. r in .alm~t every case, 1be ewrise tends to build big appetite!; thus, in· atead of losiat~ the patron actually pina......,t ./ FI.e cihild eare. Call now for a he sample visit, where you •ctualIY 1lS8 tbe.spetjal maehines far ftd,uc:ing llld eJec:troniC Facial Con-toaziDr. No ~ ••• no obligation, SANTA ANA - 18~ Wost 17th Stroot -543.9457 ALSO IN A11ai..l111, hwtty Hiiis. Covh10, Creuhaw, Dow.,.y, G$etldal•, Lo ... Wffd, Lo11t lo«•. N1wpott a-.1, N, Hollywood. Ontario, l'-dett•, So11 Oi..,e, Soiltti A1MJ. Santo larbara, Su11la11d, Tona11•, Wlllrrler, Salons ab. 111 Frftllo, S.Croll'leflto, So11 Jo.•, $t111Rpele, W•IRut Cr•. • I I I • • • ' ' .. ' Mondi)', July 28, 1969 DAllV PILOT Jf Approach Fall ' . ·---iS tyle --a • 1n Afternoon Ceremony HB Vows Exchanged f· I I This pants look ls jusl right for early fall. The shaped, baCk • vented jacket a n d •liihUy flared pants are detail- ed in a lightweight fabric that looks like wool but isn't. (Actual- ly is a fine rayon blend.) In heathery brown pheasant colors, the herrln1bone pat- tern is complimented with a silky print scarf shirt. A perfect en- semble when it's too late for summer but too early for fall is the sleeveless jacket over a swishy double !ront- pleated skirt in crisp half-and-half Polyest- er and cotton in misty tones of rose or blue. \Vorn with it is a silky checked shirt in light- er shades of the same colors. Both outfits are part of the Country Set collection which may\ be found at May Co., South Coast PlllLa. I '~~-,...,.--:: The ~mmunlty Melhodl!t Church of Huntington Beach was the setting for the af. temoon double ring nuptials 1inkJng In marriage Kathie Severson and Bob Clark . The Rev. Roger Betsworth pertonned the ceremony for the daughter of the Miiton B. Seversons of Huntington Beach and the son ot Mrs. Rita Thompson ot \\'estminster and Roy Clark of North Carolina. Following the rites a recep- tion ror -~ guesll took place tn the bride's parents' home. Special guests were Mr. and Mrs, Sever Sever!On o f lcglewood, lhe b r I d e ' s grandparentJ and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cicconi o f Brooklyn, the benedlct's uncle and aunt. For her wedding the bride selected a white saUn dress with a jacket made of im- ported French lace. lt was gathered in baCk to form a long lace train. Attending their· sister as maid of honor and bride.smaJd were Miss Llz Severson and Miss Robin Severson. Other attendantJ were Lhe Misses Sherry Morse or Inglewood, MRS. BOB CLARK Former Kathie Severson Allllnt l"llM'I • Cyndi Smart and Jenna Wnd-making their home in Garden School and her husband is an quist, both of lluntington Grove'. alumnus of Westminster High t Beach. The rormer Mis.s Severson is School and attended Golden The entourage was gowned a graduate of Marina High West College. , in pastel shaded A·line gowns ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ • with lace bodices. T h e y II · R • carried mu1ti-co1ored carna-AWARD WINNING SHOE SE VICE Allison and Tracy Schmidt, Llons. ~~ flower girls, . donned yellow frocks and carried yellow and white carnations. COMPLETE SHOE e L\JGGAGE Gene Draper of Westminster e HAND BAG REPAIR stood as best man. Ushering ALL WORK GUARANTEED guests to their pews were Anthony Gallo, eousin ot the TO YOUR SATISFACTION benedict, Ron Brim low. Bob Adams and Tom Schsritz. .--s CONVENIENT SHOPS --A.!ls.lsting during the recep-• .)4(1, E. COAST HWY. .,,. lll;VIME AYE. u Co,_.,. dtl Mir, 17).4'4t win1cl11r l"ltou won was Mrs . Joyce Bergusoo •Mn vi.a. 1.100 H•WOOtt a .. c11, MMO» of lngelwood, the bride's aunl. N"'"" 1ueh, m.u11 •11:oa1H10H'1 .,4 J'AJHIOH ISL.A.HD "••Mon t1lend The newlyweds will honey. Hrwi-rt 111c~. '44-FJsi ""lllP•t 1 .. m Lz""'""'""'>llld~"°""""""7.::'-"';i::,""'""'""'""::::.i:'°'""'°"'""'""'""' .. .,""'..,.,.,...., ... .,,,...,~""'""'~~.aEa<:a..'~""~~:ot:lco;::l:•~~~:O.::::-::...:·~~':::.:'::,:_.::::::o::._~m~oo~n~in~Ml~~~io~n~B~a~y!p~rl~or~to~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ No Monkey Business A sure scene-rtealer for !all is Norman Hartnell's offering, shown \Vil h hi s newest collection. which is a white JeaU1cr suit wit h hat and vest of brown monkey fur. Titled Ton-Up, the unusual combina- tion is n1odeled by l\1i'l nncquin Myrtle in London during a sho\ving of thr designer's autumn-fall creations. M ON TH END a1 •• ,...,, SUMMER STYLES AT DRASTIC REDUCTIONS LADIES' AND CHILDREN'S SPORTSWEAR ows 3404 VIA LIDO-NEWPORT BEACH 010NI Of THI llPO SHO'i'" 673-9434 NB Fir~ Auxiliary · Seats New Officers Outgoing president M r s . Tom Dalley acted a1 instilling officer when the lAdies Aux- iliary of the Newport Beach Fire Department seated new officers for the coming year. Those lnsta lled I n c I u d e d Mrs. Richard A. Ellerman as president, wilh the Mmes. Frank Anderson, D a n i e I Vedetto and Don Richards serving as vice president, secretary and treasurer. Presented with pins were the outgoing officer group, the Mmes. Charles Babbitt, Allen llaskell and Richard Ellerman who had served with Mrs. Dailey. The auxiliary, which rneetJ the third Wednesday of each ONCE A YEAR month at various n1embers' ho~. has for !ti main proj· ect the Orange County Bum Unit al Orange C o u n t y 1'-1edical Center. A benevolent fund is main- tained by the group lo help hurt firemen or to assist burn· ed out families, and the aux· iliary also donates lo the scholarship fund of I he California State Firemen's Association. Grandmothers At noon every second Thurs· day the Newp;ort llarbor Grandmothers' Club meel.!i in the Costa hfesa Golf and Country Club. Sale FAMOUS PANTYS ' from BUY 3 AT I TIME DIVIDEND SALE N~,~~~ $~~~~~. NOW ................. 3 ~ $4.65 N~~~~ '~-~~1~1. NOW. . . 3 ~ S4.25 c~~~~1.0~~1 ~: No~ . . . 3 ~ $2.70 ~;.~~T$~-2~~'.~FNOW_ ....... 3 ~ $315 PHONE 642·11 97 Veta's l lTNAn APPlllL --··•&---- • WE FLATTER.YOUR COLORFUL SIDE °"'e ishape your hair in the new · sofl·curl look.' We colo r your hair with Fanci-tone for beauty and lustre. We color· jfylc for your 1 ntlJ.~t flatt.cring /ooh-. l;our Fanci~ · lone covers all the gray, high. lights natural t.'olor, maka even dull hair look 'ibrant and - healthy. Spe<i•l color5 to tone bleached bair, loo- or to gi' c your Ii air an ultr11 ·high·.fa shion hue., Corne sec tltCm ! CREAM HAIR TINT, SHAMPOO AND SEl $6~45 Anytime -?.lost Cases NP,.rt ...... e.IW. )111 ""''"" .... . M1rttt1 l1P.ef ~111•1 l'lltM 611-Ull CMte M ... , c.tlf. 1n 1. 11111 ,,, .. , Mlytllt' C..,I., ,Mttl ~1 Beauty .•. . ... .., . C•N M••· Cellf. tttt M1"'9r 11¥t. l(.Mlrt 'llll en.n1 UMtM Salons CnN M ... , C.llf. ,.. w. lffll llntt l"llc.,ill1 I IHI! "'*" ..,.~ A"""' c.tlf. H)ll l"ltM9<" Or91tte, C.llf. 1$14 W. Cll•IMMll Vlcl'fr C.rtter l'hent Stl•ttU •••11••ht v.11,, ,c.11r. Hftl M1111MH1 v1111111 crnlor '"-ti• •U·JIOI SM•• A11•, c.11r. M•"'tt llt•.-t (tllftr 1""-"J->114 M(!'llklt~ & Sl1ml1nl 1"1!m C•.,••< • l .... ' ' ~ ~ • .. .. .. ~ ' " ) • .. .. ' • . ' . ' .. ' I i • ' • • • l l \ .. I .. HARLEM FESTIVAL -"" hour program, taped June 29 in Harlem, shows a portion of the third annual J~arlem Festival. Appearin~ on Channel 2 at JO p.m. will be The 5th Dimension (part of the group is sho,vn in photograph), James Earl Jones, George Kirby, Abbey Lincoln and her drummer · husband Max Roach . • TELEVISION VIE\1'S Catcl1 This Show Tonight By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPl)-An hour special entitled "Harlem Festival" airs on CSS..TV tonight, and the music and comedy of this outdoor affair in New York City are worth your attention. The broadcast was prescreened by this review- er under CBS-TV 's ne\V policy of permitting ad- . vance publlcation of critiques of the network's pro- ; grams. It us~ to be the usual procedure for tele-~ vision to allow prescreening only if there were no advance reviews. The underlying point was that 1C one tried to make a practice of advance reviews, he soon would be denied the opportunity to see shows ahead of time. NETWORKS depend on ratings for their suc- !.cess, and the risk of having viewers told that they shouldn't watch such-and-such a show is a poten- •'tiaL audience~killer. NBC.TV and ABC-TV still have not gone along with CBS-TV's move for various pOlicy reasons. At any rate, "Harlem Festival" is indeed worth seeing. It isn't the best sho\v you'U ever catch. but much of the music is lively and moving, and the comedy antics of George Kirby are a delight The program is a tape of a concert given by Negro artists at the third annual Harlem Cultural ~Festival, an event staged on Sul)day afternoon in : .,. Mt. Morris Park in Ne\v York. It is, in effect, an ~aJl~black s how , and even the commercials by Max- :: \Veil House coffee carry out this theme. . :: . J\N EARLY PRESS release by CBS-TV said to- ; nights broadcast would ''depict the role of the black artist in the entertainment world " and would also include "dramatic excerpts fror:i the works of noted black American authors and new and ris- -ing young writers." : As it turns out, however, the show doesn't real- ; I}' go heavy on much of this -being basically an :·entertainment entry which comments on the black condition chiefly through the choice ol music and humor. My personal favorites on the show are the Ed- \vln Hawk ins Gospel singers an exciting superb rollicking aggregation. ' ' ' ; T~E FIFTH Dimension is on hand too. and so .. are singer-actress Abbey Lincoln and her drum- L mer husband Max Roach, and the Chambers S.rot.her~, a very gritty and emotionally effective s1ng1ng-1nstrumental group. And then there is Kir- by. as ingratiating a fellow as ever came down the pike. J:Ie recalled how he went to Hollywood and ask- ed h1s old pal Sammy Davis Jr. to help hin1 p.eL •'I- to all those famous places he bad heard about. He r~called. how he appealed to Sammy by telling h11~.: You ~now . how it is -''you used to be color- , ,, ed. At which line the black Harlem Festival aud.i-~ ence roared with laughter. .. ~IRBY THEN noted that Davis. a convert to .Tudaism, told him: "Join the Jewish faith." And Kirby said be replied : . ' I• l "f can't afford to be segregated twice.'' The plumpish Kirby also did imitations of Louis ;\rm.strong, Pearl Bailey and Bill Cosby, as well as s1ng1ng and dancing .. And be is just a fine feUow to have around. as you'll note if you tune in tonight. Denta~s the Me11ace ~ , ' I LIKE lllESE SU00EN S~ 'IOJ GET CAUGllT IN NI' <:»rT l)O ~ING AllOUT ! • '· ' IJ • ---~---~~-~~-----~--~_........_..._._.._--------~ ------·--~---~ ------ JUDGE PARKER As SAM PRIVE~ RETURNS TO :rne LE6AL "'" m:FIC.E FROM COURT, HIS 5ECRET"ilV OtVES HIM A Mi3SA6E! SHE WOULD LIKE YO!! TO CALL AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! TUMBLEWEEDS ® THIS MONTH, THE COVETED, BLACK FEATHER GOES TO THE TRIBE'S BOOKKEEPER! ... THAT LOIN CIDTHED LUMINARY OF THE LEDGERS! THAT CROSS BOSS OF PROFIT-AND-LOSS! MUNIWIE MOUSE, I NAME YOU INPIAN OF THE MONTH! MUTI AND JEFF ......... ~ .......... . ... ., "'°'"'" ··-"' ...... . GORDO MISS PEACH •. MO! SHE ST-'YEI> IN MEit CAii:! I TM.KS> WITH THE . c.H,A.llfffllK! WELL.MUN NY, HOW'S THE OLD BUDGET MUCH BETTER! LOOKING? ? WHATS 1'115? WHO AR.E vou? . • • By Charles M. Sc:hulx By Harold Le Doux 'NHV WOULP A~SEV 5PEMC.l!R W'-NT YOU TO C>.ll HE-£. SAM !" O~VIOUSLV, MY F1'ME A.5 AA -'ITOfNEV IS SPli:EAPlt.tG INTP THE MINT"ERLANPS OF THE RICH! By Ferd Johnson i<AYo! You STAY OUT OF MY COURTSHIP L~TTE'RS 1'0 I.ADY ff PLUSHB'OTTOM-. ... "" ,.-, .. ,_ ,, , _ By Tom K. Ryan i'M USING A BRIGHTER SHAPE. OF RED INK By Al Smith Yoll MllST BE KIDDING ' ... "• , .. '" ' . . . ' -, .. ··-.. . .. •.. . . . . ' ..... . • ... !~ I O!ONIT GET.SO HIJN8R'if By Mell A~THUR:, HOW COME YOLJ'Re NOi 5 MARf, LIKE I HATE TD SRA<;, !>UT' YOU A~E rOll.(/NG ME ro ... IN M'I ROOM AT HONIE IS A WELL:ikUMSED 1-18.RARV·OF CL.ASSIG U TER.ATURE, PL.US BCOKS ON EVER.'I MJE.'T KNO'NN 1'0MAN, iOMESOfll T~E SUM !OTALOFHUMAN K><>W•m>E, AND T.HE Gf'C.AT l'lf-QSOPHJCAl. l'ORKS. THE REST OF U'i 1 :/ ..... ~- "fl<ESE' 8"0KS ARE MINE AND MINE AlllNE! I MAVC° SPENT MAN'{ THOUG~TFlJL. HOUlitS WITT< TM£M, AND SCME DA'/ I PCAN To ~-£"-"O ONE DR.r11N:::::O:.:·:.:·,r----' MONDAY I .. r I 1:0081" "' -(CJ !60) ""' :Dunphy. 1 II ID Hoo..,. .. _ CCI ~°' U stM Al~ Slll9 CC> (90) ltw!n C. W1bon, Evle S.Dda. Chtrlta Ht!IOll Raitty, Terry Mllltt 111d Scot1 Mit(hlnJ luesl D Si• O'a.4 Morie: (C) "Mr. Hibbs Tllis a VacatiM"' P11t I !comedy) ·u -J1mu Sf!w11t, Maureen O'H111. 0 I "' tC) (60) m I Lt~• lueJ (60) GJ latlu• (C) (30) !ill (l) ••• -u (C} (90) fJ!) Wbd'• Newt (30) Film• or the Northwoods countJy of WlsconJln 1nd of th~ history of mltltl1 1routtt. f!) Jmntud DMnt Teaoro (30) (!) Ntn (C) (60) Jack Hickey. uoa.,,..-. CCI 1&01 IE VOJlll ti Iii htlotl tf lt11 S.. (C) (60) ~ (6) tl1ntifJ·lrii kllJ' (C) (30) fl!I Twl1 CWdt HNdll1111 (C) (30) IHI Cll m-CCI <30! Ill -.. (C) (60) 7:00 I! CIS Evtninc N... (C) (30) Wafte1 Crcnkitt. o wur1 "' u,.1 <C> <JO> w.11, 8run« 1nd Arlene F1u1tis 1fflcom1 1uest panelists So!Jpy Silts. G1wn ' I ·--tC}tl~ D Ii}) Gl 1!!11" llU ol '"' Sill.a (Q (lb) "OM ~lllfl Juni1.• Wm e111SU • 6'1dkd when "• 1US9eci1·• dtlt~•llt Is Mint t1ll· '1"" """' • 1"'1 -1'1 ·-, .... (C) (90} m •u• hr , .. Utt (C) (60) t:DO 1J Ml_,..,, IFD (C) (30) Mi~t '"d lli1 lrltlld Htrold h1v1 1 boy- hood ilffllll'llnl. tD th• menfolk l•k• lht111 011: • e1mpin1 trip 11 1ho• thttr1 how 1dulls 1•t 1lon1. (RI en. ''''" <Cl (60) "So D•'' lht HiaM." Thi 811on finds In· lri&ue, ll)U~1 1nd 1n 11templ 1t tlYellft (11 II tld cauntry hOUSI. 0 @@19 Tito 01tc11t1 (C} (60) ''Tiit Gloiy W11Gn." Whl!e 1s- cort1n1 1 priaoner, E1rl Core'I ind km1! °'ftcl oontr1ct ta deliYtr • !Gad of nlbodycoria ta 1HI trlpptd miners. (R) tD "6d" JNffl (C} (60) The p1&. 1r1m b dtwlld to cultur1 ind In. eludes lntenletri with slnaer S.rat\ V1qhn, ICt&:ll WUll1m M11sh11l, plqwriahl ld Bullini llti!1 John Blaam. compoMr Roaer Dfc~erson •nd otheu. IHJ001"•-oo (C) (JO) tit c.-.. , C.Kil11• (3Cl) 9:l0 8 F••ilJ Nt.ir (C} (30) Uid uo by I brok1n It& U~1 8111 Is onr· \lll'helmld by tllo hndtr lotin1 e1r1 tti. chlldrttt ihtlst on lfvln1 tllm. (R) 0 lftlll (C) (30) TN Mty.,a., (!) hN"s IA• (60) 9 (j) MeHt11'1 ""' {3Cl) ID RIWhtl llllllul (3Cl) Gr1ln.aer 1nd l'llyllla Newman. . lO:OO fJ QI()) riiiem'f H.trle• C.I· m ...._, (C} (30) Jack C1JSidy tu~ Ftltir~) Tht Cham- 1nd Donn1 Dou&111 1uen btts Brothors, th1 Fifth Dimension, @Ci) M111ct.r Mowif (C} (90) "Biii· Cdwin tt1wk1111 Siiaeu, Abbey Lin· J'f tor 1 B1dman." coin 1nd Mu Rciitlt, GecirC• Kirby @) f.lsten Wisdo• slMI Moiter11 lif• (30) ''Th• Tio In Chilu." Alan W•ttJ prestnll objects ot Chinese art to itlustr1!1 1111 T1olst's f1elin1 for n1tur1. ~ (j) F•M~r Affait (CJ {30) m Culr'1 World (t) (30) aJ DrM• Ho• {C), (30) ·7:30Btit!(j)'UnSflloko1C) (60) "Rt· prisa!." Marsh•I Dillon wounds 1n cut11w in sell·defe1111, 1nd Doc 111ust decid1 befwffn 1U1in1 to t1e1t th• Injured man or le1vin1 to dellwr 1 btbr. (R) D @nl I 'Dfll• If S..1111111 (C) (30) ~Jeannie, tilt G<Nernor's Wlff." B• caust of Jeannie's maalc. To11J b•· ccmes a t1ndid1t1 for Gowrrno1, de~ilt his p1otms that hi wm bt thrown oul of thll Air Force. (R) ind The Olil11nil Alrlc.lln '4!1ncers •nd drum~ 11:11 Iii 1 t41tci1I thtt dtpid.' ~· role of tht bllck artist in th• ent.rbinment world. The Fi1st Hirlem Cull11r1l FestiY1I was t1ptd it Mount Morrll Park In New York't ·H11J,m. 0 m -I (tJ (601 0 @(]) Q»Dic.k C.rtH (C) (601 O Dl!ltl (tj '(60) Werlllf Kltm· ~rer, J1ckl1 Kahent, Pat McCor· 111ick 1uesl I fJl) frri•I Lin. (C) (GO) "Thi Clm· pus De.stroyert • At C.Di> ind Mr. Willia m f. lidlty dlswss th• l•ctits of thrfrlew left ind' th• f1ihJ1tt ct Intellectual um- munit)'. Ui) M• All•· ,11 Nutrie (C) (30) g Itek hn111 (30) O.nny Thomis 10:30 (D tte., (t) \ ) Biii .lch111. 1uufs. cm flllute (30) fJ ~@ m The Awen1m (t) (60) 'Htver, Htvet S.~ Die.'' Steed ind Mn. Peel investi11te th• case 11:00 II DO of 1 man who 1pparenll~ ctnnot O "•·' .~-· die. (R) "' '"" •-t O llllillioll $ Movie: ''lu1ru" (drl· ma) '39-Paul Muni, Btltt Davis. m Trvtti "Con1e~uenc11 (Cl (30)1 m PtrlJ Ma~n (60) £E) lnntv1tions (30) "l'lew Pipe. lint Technology." Or. Ric.hard Brin· nem111looks11 lht uses of Teth\!1, 1 filament relnlorct<I plastic mortar developed from u~ in m1nuflctur· ing roc~el casinas. @II Dullo de P1slonn (30) O Morie: "At1r1bl1 Ju111• {com· edy) '63-lll!i Palmer, Charlu ~· (Dl11dd1 n's fi1ll1r1 (C) Huth o·e111n, Chit1 RM!rt. Scoe1 Mitchlll 1uts1. Word port11Jt la of Kit• Do111l1s. IB Movit: "Adm 111d Sill'" (dra· ma) '53-EdlWd G. Robin!llft, Ed· dit A!b1rt, 11:3011 Novit: "Th• toll Momenf" 1:00 0 m SftEAA PREVIEW Doe (C) (dr1m1) '47 -Robert Cummlnp. (30) Tor1est Tucker afert IS 111 In· SUSlll H•J'#ard. dls1>mS1bte small·lown doctor whost • patlenls won't lit him rellre. Mir· B @ (I) m Ton11ht Sltow (C) a11et il.nn P1tenon and Ric~ len1 au est. 111 Z..111 Crtf (30) m Hiztl (C) (30) fr) World Prtu (C) (60) UJ Hit P1ndt (C) (f.O) 1:30 O ~ (jJ H1r1'1 LuCJ IC) (3Cll M1. Mooney rdusts to finantt 1n old liahter (Don Rickles) who wan!s to open a !lower shop. so Lucy cit· 0 Mowir. ''fll• Iii Wne" Cdr~· ma) '61-Sessut H1y1k1w1. Mick1y CurtiL 0 lft) (f) (£) lttf liiho11 (Cl Regis Philbin, .1cKt1 tnnouJltlr. is host loniaht. 1?:30 m Cilc'o Kid ID Actio11 Thnlrt: "Sttana1 Ad· ~enlU!t." cides to msnaae him in I prize·rint 12:45 D MoYit: "Ordtrtcl To Lora" ldra· comeback. (RJ m1)-Mui1 Perschy, Mtri!ll Mtll. 0 t:fi 00 m NBC Mond1J Ml'fit: (C) "Somethinr Wild" (d11m1) '61 -Car1oll Ba~er, Ralph Meek,r, Mil· 1:00 0 D News ~C) drtd Ounnock. Charles W1t!1. Hav· Ing stopritd 1 teenaae 1ssault yic· tim from committing suicide, 1 D Com11untt, l~Httin lo.1rd (t) young min aUempts 1o OYercome his lonrlinelS br imp1isonin1 h"tl l :IS fJ Movie; ''f1r1ntul1" (horror) 'SG ln his dreary apaltmenl (R) -.lo!ln Aau. Leo G. Carroll. TUESDAY DAYTIME MOVIES 1:00 0 "lltdl M111t" (mrst'fy) .,._ .i.klm Trmlroff, Ormn Welles. o "Wtolllel m r11111r" (com· acfy) '52-Ytn Hofli1, P1trlclt Meal. 0 "'Ct!lckt!I £»f1J ·S.nd•,... (com· 1dyl ·•1--0111 o.n.,, ee1ts11 1to1111. t:XI m "Actlo1 ill Ar1bf.1• (tdYel'lturt) '4'-George Slnders. Gt11t lec~­ ll11t. 112:00 0 ~Weddillf l'r••nl" (comedy) 'JS-Cary Gr1nt JOlln Benntn. 12:30 m "I Know Wlllfr 1'111 'lint' (rO· m•Mll '47-Wendy Hill!r. """"' Or1t1nt Alltf Duk" (mysttry) 'SS- Stilcy Hanis. 2:DO (8 ''ilret• luddll•" (~d~enturel 'S!.-W&ynt Morris. May Gum1tne. 3:00 B (C) "Ro111 Scand1! .. {tomtdvl •iS -t1nut1ll Ban~he1d, Cll1rlts Coburn. •:JO fJ "Ltvt ~1pP'(' (~!dyl 'SG-- Tll1 M1rt Brothen, Ver1·E.!!e11. ANDY HAS ANSWERS I ..... I"'!~ • ..,.~."';\'. ~ • ...,.~."'l!.-~.~ .... :.-.,1'1" .... "" .... ~.~.~ ........ ll"l ......... I"'!..,. ... .,.,..,. .... ""' ...................................................... ~ .................. ~~~~~~~~-~~~ ' • I )l'lvld Eleflle n t I t ~ ' j J nes I Belts Ou t Songs With Zest HO!.LYWOOD (UPI) -A strapping, big -voiced Welshman named Tom Jones has imporleCI something new, or at least revived a forgotten element ln European a:inJera -virility. " ln contrut to the 1h•11Y· halrt<I, pot·blowln1, uhen-lac- ed kldl tourlnc the countrr with electric tultars to am.other th1lr quaverlna volce1, Jone• belts out son11 with the zeat of an early Elvll Presley. Diep or cheat and broad shouldered, Jonu a f r e c t s women of all 11e1 the way Slnatr1 ll!l'ned on teen·11er1 II> Iha IO.I. Durlna a allnt In Lu Ve1u. Jootl hid thie lldl11 1tandlng in line most of lhe d1y for re1erv1Uon1, At bis shows t.het 1cre1m1d. JontJ, who wears till curly hair shorter than any· Brltlth :dn&•r ln recent memory, air peartd for 1 week It the Los An11le1 Greek Theater and packed the place to capacity every night. Females from pre-teens 10 dowagers dashed lo the foot o( the stage between songs to of· fer thelr handkerchiefs to the sln1er. "Thank: you, dear lady," Former Prof Gets Control Of 'Barb' OAKLAND (AP) - A tem- porary court order has transferred control of the anti· establishment weekly newspaper Berkeley Barb to a former profeuor. Alameda County Superior Court Judge Lewis E. Lercara \Vednesday ordered Ba r b OY.'ner-founder ~1ax Scherr to relinquish Barb operations and equipment to Allan Coult pen- ding an Au1. 4 he1rin1. Coult, a ont·t!me University or Callfornia anthropology pro- fessor. purchased the paper July IS for $200,000. The order also forbid! Scherr fnim publishing a Northern California p a p e r under the Barb banner. Lercara p.it a freeie on an funds involved In the ca~e to "protect Scherr in case he's right" in claimin1 Co u It violated the aale contract. Both fllod aults Tuesday against each other for breach of contract. ACR OSS 44 Tightened up 1 Prolong'd 45 Spread a1ound hissing 47 Marsh bird sound •S Mounla ln Et Hit In G1l il rr 10 En um eralr 441 Suppllcate 1• English 50 ·--avis; A coins rare person IS S. Amrrlc.an 54 Not put into republic .office lE. Length unit 57 Oaoqrr 17 Convey 58 Mobstr•'s 18 Variety or ltffnd llYPSU!ll s• Lisi ol 20 Amount or prrsons su1f;ict t.0 Sling up mtlSUfe t.l Dogs and 21 Furl cats 22 Shorth1nd b2 3t.S1• tak er sol ar days 23 OalrJ bJ Of I by110nt bull fnl) '" 25 Usfd tiH dralt1's DOWN ~IHI It: 'll'OfdS l Hum ane 27 -·-·-llr1ch group: AIJb r. )0 Kind ol 2 Have upon l medicine lilt ptrson 31 Glo1ify l Concrrnin9: 32 ··---a11d dmtd 2 words .3 3"1":G erm~n 4 Word g1mr 3& Cows or old 5 Shout to J7 Wrs\rrn attract US city 111,ntlon JI To 19r11trr 6 'r111tt1s detrtt neighbor 39 Gtrrk vow el 7 Water SQIHC' 40 Fixes 1n thr 8 Fo61b1ll • memory tOICh • 41 Doomed Psrst~hlan person: 9 Plumb1n11 Slan9 item 42 Did carptnlfy 10 "Pay ••• 11t111llon1" .. ' SOMETHING NIW Singer Tom Jonas Jonca told each one. Then he·d mop his p<irapir· ing brow with the lacy frills and return them to the enrap- tured girl or woman. Jones gyrates on stage, snapping his body around like a man beset by hornets. Each contortion sets up a howling from feminine spectators. in· eluding bejeweled m1toru: wh.o haven't had 1n ldol since Va\cnlino departed this vale. Jones' instant popularity in the United States may mark a mlleawne in contemporary pop mUllC. A return to soloists who are neither soul singer1 nor acid rock advocates . The Welchman bOoms out his 1on11 -some ba1l1dl, some rock, some standarda -witll an enormous voice. In pl ace of the Indian suits. Jove beads and acne worn by the fading rock groups, Jones comel on stage Jn 1 tuxedo and vest. And unlike many British imparts he does not aJr pear to be dying of con· liUmpUon. J ones \viii tape six of l1i1 syndicated television shows in Hollywood before returning to London to tape another 20. ''I have to be out here lo get cert1ln guelt! llke Sammy Davis Jr. ~·ho won 't be in Lon- don when I am," Jones said ju&t before going on stage at the Greek Th ester. Singer Jones doesnl al· tem pt to analyze his appeal to the gentler sex in this country and in Britain. He'! content to !cl them scream ind make him 1 milllon1ire. But after a Jones concert the rock groups pale. Jones is a man. He doe!n'l try to put a name to the false tto screamers. 11 Alms lZ Unit of a drama!I(; production ll P!lch 19Posrda qutllion 22 Mt\11 24 Htlght 1bo't ,,. lt'(tl: Abbr . 25 Narrow passa9rways 211 Dttail of inlormalion 27 Canine: Informal 28 Fire e5CJPt 29 Arta with J w1rm cll111 1te: 2 words 30 Put on top of 1 heap )2 Do a garde n· ln!I job 34 North Amtrlcan lndl1n 7/Zllt.9 JS Company of animals 37 Only 38 Sl it of Man and Hfs World 40 Potassium nltralt •l E1rth: p,,nJ 41 R ln9-shaptd rttls 44 Dress up 45 Confoun d 4E. WJlrrc1alt ~7 -···· shakts 49 G1 eek !rttc1 51 Parched 52 El,vatlon Sl 01t1l1h meas1.1re or lrng!h 5SRtactto ,,,, 511 Fcrmtt hackt)' teach Bla ke 57AFlorNFL ptiyer I 11 ll Patty Duke No'v Looks To F11t11re Who's Getting Vp'! J\oladeline Drake waits for either Randy Keene (center) or Bernard Simon to relinquish their seat \vhile Carol Jones watches in this scene from 1'Sunday ln New York," the current prcxluction al the Long Beach Community Playbou11e. Reading s will be held Su n· day at the "Barn ", 2110 r-.1ain St., in Hunti ngton Beach for the Hunllnglon Beach Playhouse's next presentation , '·Pools Paradise" by Philip King. "Poo\1 Paradise'' i1 a farce in three acts. The vlcar of 1n English church enters a football pool • SCR Offe1·s Bonus Plays at 31·d Step Soutb Coast Repertory 1ubscrlbers for the 196~70 season at the Third Step Theatre In Costa Mesa will reeeive two bonus plays if the.y aub1erlbe th\1 •ummer. .a,c:cordlng lo SCR Managing Director, James dePrlesl. In pelt telllONI, South Coasl Repertory h&J &IVen early ductlo n during the 1~·70 season are two musical• -A F'unny Thing flappened on the Way to the Forum and Cabaret. Also on the list of plays to be produced arl'l Rosencrantz and Guilde!lltern Ari'! Dead, Spoon R ~ v e r Anlhology, Joe Egg, Yoo Qtn't Take It With You. subtc'libers 1 bonu1 summer1----------- productlon at no eatra cost. 'Ibis policy hu always been lnltrua'lental I n promoting telUlar SCR patrons t o sublcrll>e early. AAlde from two bonus produc t ions for early 1ubscrlbert, a ae11on ticket holder wtll benefit 1Wilh sav. inp of more lhlh 30 per cent over resular tlctet prices . Those p1lron1 who buy su.aon tlckell now wlll be able lo Me the premiere production of JOlf!ph lleller'• We Bomb- ed In New Haven later lhls summer, and a profeuional prOduction of The O 1 a s s Mena1er!e later lr1 the sea!On . The Glass Mena1erie is South Cout R e p ertory's sprln1 olferlna to hl&h scbool student& 11 Delith or a Salnman 1erved lut year. 8chool1 are under contract to bUI their cl1S1e1 to SCR for afternoon performances. In alldltlon. The 01111 Mena1erle will pl1y ev1nln11 for three or four wffks, Thl1 r,r«luct.lon 11 added to the resu ar slx show• of the seuon. Currently planned for p~ SHOllT SUIJECTS 7:00 "G-Witt. T1te Wllllf'' s1ri .......... 7:45 o.i, 1r=fQU~L ~1 p~!9J~If~\ MIWl'OIT llACN • Ol.).C!W)' I ENOS TUIS. ' I HELO OVER .·w1nn1n1· --8_,_ "TICHHICOlOI "TICH!'llX:O,I ~~ and wins. The compllcauon 1-=====================o.ll that arise from this su~1.~ I ~th HOLD.OVER WEEK poseclly lu cky windfall make for a hilarious fituaUori. Howard Solomon will be. the director and will hold rtadlnp Sunday at 3 p.m., and a111n MQnday at 7:30 p.m. Four men and thret women, 18·50 years o( age are needed for the cast. Play opens Sept. Sth and plays for five weekends. A 'GIANT or A -MOVIE COLUMBIA PICTURES PftEIRNTSIT lllHIT/.DMIR\ PICI /JlllRlr \--'~,, CARL FOREMAN'S~ Ml~lllll~l IDLD ', ... ..-l SUP{R PAt1AVISIOH-l£Cl!NiCa.OA 1~} IA .. ,\ ,#, STEJIEOPHOHc: SOONO e oWAR:DS ·" . HARD :: A CONTRACT lllllCll*m.._ ..... ~I I '91111.tl ' 2oth Century-Fox presents 1 liREliOIY PE1H AnnE HIYlllDOD An Arthur P. Jaoob9 Jllroduotlon "IHE IHAIRmRn" •••ma , ""''"' Fili-•OUTH COAST ~'""' PLAZA THllATll• I CORPOOTKIN $an DtMf r,...11t l1fltol • .5 .. 2711 HELD OVER 2nd WEEK! CONTINUOUS FROM 1 :00 f'.M. BOX OFFICE Of'ENS AT 12:30 Witw~i -,,._.; 2901 lost Cact1t Hl9hW'oy CtfDllO Dt l Mor-ph. •7l ·•2•D COM ING TO THE PORT TH EATRE JULY 30th. EXC LUSIVE AR&A lNOAGIMENT "CHlnY CHITTY BANG BANG" EXCLUSIVE ARIA SHOWING BIG ALL FAM ILY PROGRAM I I Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve are "The April Fools" Ttdln6Golotf 119' A CIMMI c.rtt.r 1'111!'11 ""-tlilOlll. A Nailenll Gtntnl Pk:t11rt11i ........ ALSO Sft v• M•Q111111 "The Thom11 Crown Aff1lr" IYI IHOW STAITS AT 1 FRED ASTAIRE .. !._. .,...".,"* .. . ~ 1Directr,,,mr 'i1i . ''""""" ... ' ' , .~ Cftllllme.Jlll • • • • • • • • . ,,,,,_. • , .. , .....•...... -.. --2nd All Disney Show .... ,_ .::.1:. M!llllll --r.=~ ... _ STARTS WEONESOAY I " .~ Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve are "The April Fools" r.-...• s-Ac.~eenttrFl•~.ia A Natiaftlll.lawl'll ~ ~ . . . . . . . . . .. -. --•. --.... -----• ·-...,..--.-....-~ ~--~-~~----.... ------------------------------....... -'!!'!'-~!!"'!~1!!11'!1!9!!111'91!11!111111ll!IJll,. . . . . . . . .. 4. . .. .. ..-• 0 .. ' ... ' .... II ~ ... ... • • , • • •• O O O ~, •• •• • .. • • • o -.. , o , , i o I• I • •, •• ·~ '' , I • o '• o , • • o •• o o . .. -..... -. ' ' .. M DAILY PILOT I . ' • .. • open a charge account • • • ask about May Co's easy terms • save 20% to 50% •.. custom drapery and slip cover fabrics . See our tremendous collection or cotton prints -here or in your home. Over 200 patterns in florals, stripes, Span ish, contem- . porary and traditional designs ••• all pre." sh runk and 'lain resistant For example: a slip cover .for a standard sofa (up to 7 ft.) and -standard chair, using 1,49 yard sale fabric, including labor, would be only 99.00 by the yard, reg. 2.49-5.99 1A9-4.79 yd. shop at1mme ••• call your nearest Ma y Co to see these sample fabrics at home. No charge, no obligation fo r this service. New at May Co! Rain -No-Stain Roe-Lon ® CP .crush-proof insu lated drapery lining, yd. 1.50 liregi~tered tr.tdemark d Rockland Mills may co cu stom fabrics 11 save 40% ..• custom outline quilted king size bedspreads Bedrooms bloom with lavish bedspreads from famed Max Rawicz. The outline quilt- ing is every inch hand guided and puffed with Kodel ®· polyester filling. See these spreads in luscio us prints and shimmering so lids. Although the seledion is grea t, it's wise to shop early as values li ke these are ;ure IQ go quickly. They're wonderful girts: • comparable value 85.00 50.00 ®registered tradema_rk of Te!'ll'lesee ~stman Co. may co draperies and bedspreads 113 • you'll save big during our great SE·Ml-AN N UA·L HOME SALE ~ may co south coast pla1a, san die90 fwy at bristol, costa mesa; 546 -93211 shop monday through 111turd11y I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m . , ' • MAVCO THE NEEDLE IS MIGHTIER THAN THE PEN And th• man who know1 jtut how to turn the phra.se to grt the 1n03t out of the barb U DAILY PlWT colum1l- Ut Sydney Harm. Hr Ml been celled the modern • day H e n r 11 Men eke n. If you're 1'ta.dV for hb USI of tM add adjective and t hought -provoking prrue to alve you the needle .• , i/ you want to f ind sonu:thing to think about in tohat you read ... if you havl! a sense of humor. you b e l o n g with reo<lers toha delight in telling others what .. Syd said .. in ona of tht nation's most • quoted columns. Some Sample Bar/Js Recently Thrown By Sydney Harris: "One of the highest paid fobs tn America consists of standing up in front of a mlc.- rophone, ieparating t.he good records from the bad ones -and l}!rYing the bad onu.'' · · ' "It's sad but true that while alcoholics are the best argument for abstinence, so many abstainers are equally effective ar· gument for a litUe drink now and lhen." ' "Most of the so-called 'incompatibility' iri marriage springs from the fact that tO most men, sex is an act; while to all women, It J's an emotion. And th is differ- ence In attitude can be bridged only by love." 0Tbe sole difference between a 'dedica. ted crusader' and a 'nosy reformer• con- .sists in our agreement or disagreement with his objectives." ''The most explosive combination in tM world consists of sincerity added to Ignorance." 1'\Vhenever J am th e recipient of an ex:· cessively hearty handshake, I suspect li.'lr. l\.1uscles is trying to sell something, hide 60mething, or prove something." ' Check The Editorial Page For This-Signature It'll Help You Find Tbe- Latest Quotables Create'd By 'The Needler' For His Col- umn, A Regular Feature of the DAILY PILOT Your Hometown...Pelly Newspaper I ' l ..., .... -------~.-___..,. ---.-----....--·------------·-----------______ . ......._.... ___ ___..... ___ . ______ -.~ ---.. -.. .,--. -' - Mondi)', Ju~ 28, 1%9 DAILY'l>!LOT _:j! • ., rMaiador ·.Gored I , • ID T·tqwn Blood Bath . .,IC WU I bloody algbtl" That wu U'l8 Immediate reaction of my lO.year-01<1 too Terry Sunday afternoon aflor wt -ry\'!i llllOlher l'IJl!8Dll blood bath. Or r.•hOps I should go with the more popu ar monicker-bullligbt. Word this morning · from UPI reveals that Ruiz ls in critical condition after &hree hours of surgery. Doctors say the ambition of sorta to see the bull come out on top ln II.I clash with man. Sul having viewed lt tu person, J must now C1>noode that cruelty to man is just as savage as cruelty to beast. Ruiz had to t)u(&st his sword into the animal 1lx times be!ore finally bringing the blood~vered vicUm to lls knees. The beast laid down, writhed about lhen Unally died -probably more frOm loss of blood than any fatal blow by the clumsy his sword in the h"'11 with his Orot try. But even then it was sickening lo watch the wour.ded animal. staggering about, bleeding prplusely from lhe shoulders and strangling on the blood that poured ftom its mouth. matador. • Admlu.dly, thJJ parUculil Cot11da had a slJ&blb' dlflerent twist than the me" I gagged through a few years ago. , That Is, one of the bulls got in a few licq Jhl.s Ume around, goring matador F~blai/.lluts and.driving Its horns Into tho neck 9f_ .a picador's horse to draw blood. WHITE . WASH Frankly, it was felt by Uli!I writer that a diff~t perspective ol bullfighting might be rorthcomlng after a thfe&.year layoU from watching the stomach-turniog show. But such was not the case. This memorable light prompted my eight-year"<>ld dauatiter Lita J~re t'o first say:, "I don't like lhem to do that to the bull ," then add "why do they have to kW it?" If this ia entertainment, Ulen ao wu the use ol lhe guillotine in public squares. So was the Bataan Death March. So was hgad hunting. So was the Hindenburg disaster at Lakehurst. ""'···········~······ RUii was twice hurled into the air by the bull'a horns and head and once fell under the hooves of the huge black animal. He was carried out of the Plaza Mon\(Upental arena. eL•Hfi•Hl'ta horns tore several ribs and pierced the right lung. Previously it always was a personal Rult, the-chap who finished runnerup in hi$ secorid Sunday bout with el I.Mo, made me realize that this way of spen- ding an afternoon is more for someone with a few ghoulish hormones and a thirst for suffering: In his first confrontation with a bull, In a subsequent fight -this Ume with malador Eloy Cavazos in Uie starring role -it' took a palr of thrusts with the sword to finish off senor bool. Feature performer Currito Rivera - lhe 11.year-old hero -managed to plant ~ the majorily of people attending Sunday's blood bath appeared to be grin-gos, it's unfair to single out the Mei:· icans for possessing odd tastes. Jn these daya of the ultraspectacular you'd think man could upgrade the way he gets his kicks on a Sunday afte~ Reichardt ,,,,. Built~World - Of Pressure I By tAiL GUSTKEY 01 1M hllr P'lltt s .. rr 'Ibere are times when Rick Reichardt look! ve.ey much like what the Angels ex· peet.d when !hey handed him a $200,000 bQnus in 1984. But those limes come too infrequently for him to be rated much more ~n Just .another solid ball player. SWldaY be had'ione of his greatest days in baseball. He drove in all the Angels' rur\S with two homers as the Halos beat New York, S-4. Afterward, in ·a revealing conversation wtth writers, He told of the world of pressure he liv~ in -but a world he bllllt himself. '"!be boos don't bother me," be said .. "'People pay their money to see us play and 1 feel they 'can give vent to their emotions any way they wish. My problem ~ 1basieally this: I came into pro base- oatl with veey llttle experience. ·:1 never play_ed ~gh school baseball and when I signed with the Apgels I had . only two sea10111 at the University of Wi&Consln behind me. The litUe minor league experle~ I bad didn't amount ta much -the difference between triple-A Angel Slate 1•Sl P.m. ICMPC l'"I 7:5J p,m , ICMl'C 710 1:SS p.m. ICMl'C 710 bal1 and the majors is so great I couldn't begin to tell you about lt. "So I'm still learning the game. Baseball people tell me I'll be a late bloomer and I think they're right. J !.hlnk wben l'm about 29 (he's 26 now) I'll be dcling things like hitting 35 homers a ye;q." Asked if he wduld have rather come In* to baseball without the widespread fan~ fare attached ~ his $200,000 bonus, be ahook his head. 1'1 wouldn't have changed anything. I think all this pressure has accelerated my growing up processes. Ten ye.a.rs from now I'll be a better man for all I've gone through." Reichardt also revealed Sunday that he almost became a Yankee in 1964.. "l had told the Yankees I would sign with them and not two minutes later the Angels called and changed my mind. "I have no regrets. I always believe things work out for the best." . Qn a day when the Angels rewarded .l,996 paying CW1lomers with one of 1heir rare faultless day11, Reichardt shared top billing with Ken Tatum, a 25-year-old MisslS!lppi Slate graduate who, in relief ol George Brunet, hiked his record to 3-0 (O.ff ERA) and retired 19 of the 22 mea be faced. Of Tatum's six-inning stint, manager Lefty Phillips spoke of his future plans for his promising blonde hurler. . "Our plans are for Tatum to be a starter next sell9on. We're going to send him down to the Arizona Instruct.ional League this winter and have him work on his breaking pitches. ••1 took him out in the ninth when he wa1ked Frank Fernandez because he w~ tired -he hadD't worked more than Ulree Innings with us." Phillips summoned Rudy May, who r.U-ed the side. NEW YORK CALll'OftNIA •• r•r11f ••r~..-1 Clerltt, ~ ' I ! f A"""1r. :fb l 1 I 0 w.octs, cf J 0 t I $petl(tf, lb 3 I l 0 W. llobMn, If ' 1 1 1 R~ldl1rcU, If ' 2 l 5 fl!epltone. lb • o 1 0 Fr"9os1, u ' o o o ,emlnOI.~ l210Joh.....,.,cl2010 MUrctr, ·rt 4 I 1 o -You, rt 1 o o o MlchM!· u 4 o• I I MOrfOf!, rt 2 0 0 0 (Olll,.Jb IOIOR$0r,rl 101 0 ic-.lb totoA•odrt•u.ltl•ooo l11rbeefl,p tOfDIEtln,c tOOO $, 'Hem1!111, p 0 0 f 0 Brunet, P D 0 0 0 J, I Hlfl, 11'11 1 0 • 0 I(. T•tvm. " J 0 0 I K. ,John»n, p t o 0 o R. Mio~, p o o o O •Ttriel 32 •1 • Tpfll 7'S7S !ffW '"l'ont _Clll * .11111--" -(.-n!Wrili 003 om OCll-S ' OP -C•ll~I• 1. l.08 -New Yorl< •. (lllf«lll• S. 28 -1'MJr_etr. Cl1rtt1. JottnstooM. HR -W. ltoblMOn J, lttptin:lt 2 (II). $1 -f'.tPOL 1 -WCIDdt. $perl(er. 1,JOSTOl'fi, SEATTLE ao 20 INNINGS By UNITED P~ INTJllNATIONAL All the Boston Red Soz. needed was a titlle Ume to get wanned up. 'fllq had the Ume, $· -· and $2 mmuc.es worth, and a!ter 9COl'ing only m In the fin\ 11 innings Sunda;y lhey came up with ,qol!I run in the 19lh and thret m.,.. In ~ llOtb to beat the SeatUe Pilots,~. ·Joe Llbood'• ~ homu, teoring -ei\Cber Jim Lonbirg in lront of him, was the decisive blow In the. longe$t game or the Mljor Le1gue season. Seattle used 24 P.la,rm and Bos10n II. breaking by one ihoi American Lea&U< record for total pl_,n in -game. ' American Classic Winner Floyd Was Loaded for Bear AKRON, Ohio (AP) -Ray Floyd al· tended a golf clinic being giYen by Ray Floyd, and found out What was wrong "'Ith Ray Floyd. "I didn't Flay any practice round s here," the brash, cocky character said after winning $25,000 top prize in the American Golf Classic Sunday. "I gave an exhibit.ion over lhe Western PenWlylvania, ''.he said. "After playing 18 holes I was giving a clinic ·and talking to the audience about rhythm and timing. don't think lhey believed me." Then he paused for a moment. "Maybe they'll believe me now." He proved hls point in convincing fashion, shooting a final round 65 for 268, a record for the awesome 7 ,180-fard par· 70 south course at Firestone Country Club called by the touring pros one of the toogh~st they play. Host pro Bobby Nichols vaulted past the slwnplng Jack Nicklaus and Bobby Mitchell -who started the final round in a Ue with Floyd for the top spot -and took second with a 67 for 272, four strokes back. ' Floyd, 26, son or a golf pro and an avid sports fan who mo'ml to Chicago to be near hi::: baseball favorite, the Cubs, hadn 't played well in recent months but said the lesson he learned in the clinic set him up for the tournament. "I came loaded for bear," the 205-poun- der said. "I just had a feeling., . ·• The victory was his second of the year and pushed his earnings to $71,000 the best ol his se..-en.year career. Gurney Nips Foe By 50 Feet, Wins • Indy Road Race JNDlANAPOLIS, Indiana (AP) - Peter Revson of New York, in an Australian race car, and Dan Gurney of Costa MeSa, in an Eagle-Ford of his own design, split the two sections of the Indy 200 road race for U.S. Auto Club cbam- p)onshlp cars Sunday. If' Was the first USAC victory for RevGOn, a· veteran sports car racer, and his ·'Brabbam-Repco . was (he first car with a foreign power plant which ever won a USAC championship event Revson won by about a mile over Mario .Andretti of Nazareth, Pa., but AndretU remained far ahead in lhe USAC stan- dings. Gurney, who is ruMing second In the standings, beat AI Unser, Albuquerque, N.M., by a mere 50 feet. It was a frustrating day for Andretti, winner of. five USAC events earlier this aeason. A loose wheel forced him to make an unplanned pit stop in the flrst 100-miler at Indiar.e.polis Raceway Park's 21'2-mlle road course, and he finished ninth. Andrett.i and Roger McCluskey, Tu~. tangled on a hairpin tum on the sixth lap ol the second race and Andretti never could catch the leader. Gurney had fuel tank trouble at the start of the second race, and didn 't com- plete a competitive lap. Al Unser led for 271A miles, then developed an oil leak. Gordon Johncock, Hastings, Mich., went ahead but blew his engine at 67"2 miles. Revson was In command the test of lhe way. Revson, a relative of the Revlon cos- metics family, had the day 's best over· all finish wlth his first and a1 third. The Andy Granatelli team had mixed luck, In addition to the fnu1tratlons of its ace driver, Andretti. One of its ex- Hall of Fame Inducts Four COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) Baseball's Hall of Fame Inducted four more players tooay, two stars from decades ago and two of a more recent vintage. They are Stan Musial and Roy Cam· panella, who sparkled in the 1950s, and Waite Hoyt and Stan Covelesld, who star- red in the 1920s. Coveleski and Hoyt were pitchers, Mu· sial a firs t~aseman-ootfielder and Campanella a catcher whose career end· ed in 1958 when he was seriously injured in an automobile accident. Musial took seven batting titles as the sperkplug of the St. LQuis Cardinals with whom he batted .331 and hit 47~ home runs . Campanella was with the old Brooklyn Dodgers from 1948 through the 1957 season. He set two reeords ror a catcher in 1953, hitting 41 homers and batting in 142 runs. Hoyt, who pitched in six World Serles for the New 'York Yankees starting in 1921, won Z37 games between 1919 and 1938, Cove\eski was a right·hander who won 216 and lost 142 between 1912 and 1928, spending his greatest years with the Cleveland Indians and winning \hree World Series games in 1920 for tbe Tribe. perimental Plymouth engines finished a race for . the fint lime, Sam Posey of Sharon, Pa., taking an eighth in the first 100-mller and a fifth in the second. Art Pollard, Medoi'd, Ore., driving the other STP-Plymouth, was stopped by a broken universal joint in the first race and by a fire in the engine compartment In the second race. He was only slightly singed. Boboy Unse.r, Al's brother and USAC naUonal champion, went out in the first race with broken suspension. Gurney, like Rev son, misses mos' or the USAC championship races to compete in sports car events, but he is almost unbeatable when he runs in tht In- dianapolis-type cars and they hold togeUter. In his last eight USAC starts, he has taken four firsts and three sec- onds in his Eagle-Ford • Drysdale's Win Has Dodgers Talking Flag CHICAGO (AP) -Is Don Drysdal• back? .Drysdale thinks so. Manager Walt Alstpn hopes so. And if the 33-year~ld right-hander has regained his form, the Los A.nieles Dodgers might well win the flag in fhe National League West. Drysdale gave a strong indication that be Js on the threshold of regaining lhe form which has made him one of the top Dod~er Slate Ju v JO Plidlt" •IP! lburt1n JI P.m. l("I '"1 "IY 2t Qod9$'J •I I' tr,bllrti'I 5 p.m, ICFI l"'I July 11 Docti1w1 11 PlttJburWh J p,m, KFl .- winners in baseball when be recorded • '6·2 decision over the Chicago Cubs Surr da)' in his first pitching venture in nearly a month. rt has been a long struggle for the handsome right-hander, who injured his pitching sbouJder: In an , exhibition game last spring. His victory against the CUbs in a stint or less than six innings boo!led his record to s-3 for the season, but gave him enough confidence to feel he can take a regular turn in the Dodger rotation. Drysdale yielded a third inning, wrong- field homtt to Ron Santo and departed after Billy Williams opened the sixth with another homer. "I did!l't feel real strong," said Drysdale, "but the shoulder didn't hurt. Now it's just a process of rebuilding my strength." Drysdale, who hadn't made a start sinCe July 3 and at one time C<lnsidered ... retiring, said he went out lo pitch wondering "hoW painful It might be. 1' was kind of surprised because it really didn't hurt. I'm ready to take a regular tum now."· LOl ANOILIS (:MIC.AGO ••rl'lrlll ••rft,... Wiiis, II s 0 1 0 IC~Ull'Ciler, II s 0 0 0 Cr•W/or(I, II J 0 0 I Bttklrt, 211 ' 0 I 0 w. OaYll, (f 4 I 2 • B WUll•m•. II ' 1 2 I Gabrle!1n, ti ~ 2 2 O' Sanlo, Jb • I l I Haller, c J 0 1 1 W Smltl'I. lb • O I O Sudft•ls, lb ) 1 1 2 HundlW, c )' O O O HUllOl'I. lb s I 3 1 s.ia,,.i.r, rf 4 0 0 • $1zllfn0re, 1~ ~ o 2 1 Qu111~ cf 3 o o o Ory!ldale, p I 0 0 0 Reg1n, • 0 0 0 0 Ml"tl10n, P 1 0 0 0 N. Oliver, pl! f o o o Jirn~!~p 1010 Aber11mv. p o o o It Ht1tn, Pl! 0 0 0 I A.IUlrA, " 0 0 0 0 P-...ldl, cf J • I • Tot1I 31 ' 11 ' Tol•I 34 2 ! Loi Antt1le1 GO! :no 001-4 ChkffO 001 ao1 CN»-4 "Whllt I was talklng"to thein I start>d thinking that's what had been my pn> blem .. I had a good f~ling when I Cilme here. I felt it had solved my.problems. "When' people would ask me how I'm playlng •l1d say l was playing real good. 1 Divorcee Wants .to Be Auto Jockey MIAMI, l'la. (AP) -Women Jockeys are gaining areeptance·qn horsi tracks. But horsepnwe.r Ji what'JntereQI Smokey a1>1et aiid 1he'i.l"ad)'1oifjgbtlto ·P<Jl her feminine s)fid marb oo the lndi&napolis IOO. • "I'll fli;ht the lndlanap0-lis people all the way," the 35-year-old MJami divorcee says. "I want to get my car first, then I'll fight I'll take llieir rules to the highest court. I "If I get a ride, nothing will keep me from that track. The.y can't keep women out of the r•ce. All I need ls a car and a judge and rube there." Mrs. Drolet has already asked Andy 'Granatelli to Jet her driVe a car for him next Memorial Day. One J1f 'Granattlli's cart won U!c race this year: · · In the meantime, though; Mrs., Drolet ls sch«luled to drive in'a rac&at·Da)'.tena Beach Aug. 3 and then she jets off to Ita- ly to race at Mon1.11 in a factory Alfa. "Smokey isn't just a good woman driver, she 's a fine driver periOO ," said Jim Footer, assistan\ to the president of Daytona International Sptedway. Mr!I. Drolet has twice raced Jn sports car championships at the ll Hours of Sebring and 24 Houri of Datyona. She finished 16th at Daytona in Febru&rY, driving 1 Corvette. .. She haa her aim' aet on the Indy Bric)tyard, a. mascu~ plecie where no woman has ever been allowed near U'le pits either In a car or a mectiaruCa• suit. If' she makes tt, the crtsp snap or tradi- tion will be heard for miles. But Mn. Drolet won't sa"criflce her rell\ininity. "Basicolly. I'm a woman. Anybody who stays around me very tong will know that." she says. "But on the track, I'm a driver. "There Is no sex Involved on the track. When I first started driving, it was very evldenl that I was not wanted. The men drivers used to put me up against the fence every chance they got. "So one night I turned the lables and became a driver, not a woman. They "'I' the ones goh)g :Into the ''""""' I never Md any mort trouble.· ' 0 In sport.a cars, it's a different scene. Much more or a gentlemanly sports· I'm always treated like a woman off the track, but on It l'm a driver. or cour11t, wbtD J!n:. beating a man, ~s ego sort of lakes a shattering, but that's nonnat" Mrs. Drolet ls no crusader for bet m, though. ''I dislike r11elng against other lirll. They're no competition for one thing and they 're dangerous for another," she -.y .. "Put it this way: I respect 1-ood drlvera. ' \ ! I .. .. . . . . --·-... ----. ·-~ -..... ~ ..... .......----,---,,c-7"'.l-:::-"'."O..-i:"T~""""'""'"'"""""--."""""""l!l!!""-"'l"Tl .... !!"l!'?.,...l!!'l"l'l'~IP"""""""~Pl!I!!~ .. ,., ..... ,.""' ... ""'"'" .... """' .......................... . ......... -... _ ............................. .. U DIJL.V PILOl Monday, July 28, 1%'9 • A11leseys Do What Co1nes N ac~rally ·-' • f r11q:ov1 R ,i\, 1 ,·,: 1: 1J1~rJ1 ;1 -.i!",lff'-.;f() By EARL GUITKIY OI M O.ll'r '"" ... " When he wQ a competitor, there wasn 't a hurdler in the world who could lnrthfully ctalm he wu better than Newport Beach re11dent Dick Attlesey. That wa1 in the late 1940! , and early 1950s and AUlesey . has trouble now remembering where some of the blg race.s ·were and who he beat. The 40-year-old f o r m e r world reaird holder in the 120- yard highs lives in Baycrest ·with ltis wile, Ann, and their &ix childrtn. And sine< bb oldM! <llf· spring, 18-yW'Old Kim, jusl competed in the naUonal women'• AAU champion&hlp meet ln Dayton, Ob.!o, AtUeaty is Wldtrstandably more i.n· ter"ted in dJscuss.ing her track catter than bis. "Actually. my wife does most di the coaching-I have to drive into LA everyday to earn enough money to feed everybody." The AUleeey l a m i I y participates In more sports than a pentathlon star. At the Balboa Bay Club, they engq:e in swimming, paddJebaU, b.utetboll, bodmln!M ond volleyblll. When they Ur e of thole, they go sailing. And when It's not track •nd field Attluey's two oldest daughten have won prizes in horsemanahlp. "One day I look Klm to her aecond track meet al Golden Weat Colleft and she won the 100. A& noon 1 took bu to a horae 1how in Fountain Valley and 1he won first place in Jwnplng competJUon." Kim, who'll be a junior al Corono det Mar High In September, ha1 p r o d u c e d Umes on the track whJ~ lead Sports in B rief Em erson Get s Hot, • Takes Swiss Title GSTAAD, Switzerland - Newport Beach's Roy Emerson dereated Holland's Tom Okker 6·1, 12·14, 6-4, M Sunday for the 1nen's singles tille at the Gstaad Open Ten· nis TOWTlamenl. Francobe Durr of France took the "·omen's crown with a IH, 4-6, 6-2 vidory over Rosemary Casals ol San Fran- c.i.!Jco. Emerson wore dO\tn Okker Jn the al11X'Ofessional men's final - a 3--bour, 45-ntinute struggle played in sweltering heal. Miss Durr and Miss Casals, both pl'OI, d~led brlllianUy through the flnt two sel!, with the American girl finally faltering in the third after tak- ing the first two 1ames. Okker and American pro r.1arty Riessen of Evanston, Ill., defeated Australians Fred Stolle and Alan Davidson, 6-1, Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Cali!., f9r an 8-6, 6-3 victory over Miss Durr and Britain's Ann Hayden Jones in the women's doubles final. • hIBX.lCO CITY -1'1oises t Solana, Mexican Formula One I and stock car driver, was kill- ed Sunday when his car left a curve and hit a rock during a road race. . . Solana, about 35, was driv~ ~ ing a McLaren-Otevrolel in Valle De Brav~Bosencheve uphill climb, whlch has 72 curves. The stock car burned for l 'h hour.s after the accident, • Despite a fractured right hand, Roger Brown of the Los Angeles Rams f "a m o u s "Fearsom.e Foursome" may be ready to play in the annual Los Angeles TimeJ Charity game against the Dallas Cowboys .Aug. 8. Brown sustained the frac. ture during a .scrimmage on Saturday. He will confine his training schedule to running for the next five days and the cast will rt.main on for at least two weeks. • INDIANA.POLIS -Zeljko Franulovlc of Yugoslavia and Gail Shemiff Chanfreeu of France led foreigners to a virtual sweep of .... Utle victories Sunday in the $25,000 National Clay Court Tennis Own- plonshlps. her lalher Jo bellove &be mlaht someday qualily for an event he was never able to reach-the Olympic Oames.. "Kim has done an 11.a JOO, a a.1 50, a 24.8 220 and a 57.1 440. She's just started wotkina at Ii seriously in the put few months and if she keeps it up she 'll be quite good, I think." Arter Kim comes Llsa, wbo is 13. ''Lisa was more Interested in horseback riding than track until she found out her •liter was going to Dayton, Ob.lo, because of track and now she decides she lli.e..s that." Kim ii 1 membtt of tbe LoJll Qeadi Comei. Jrack club and rao for that team at Dayton. At t I e 1 e y accompUahed every&hing a m.8() c.an in track and field ei:cept become an Olympian. In 1918 he injured a knee and tile mishap kept him from going lo London. In 1952 he missed the Helsinki 1amfl8 becauae or a pulled hamatring. After a standout prep career at Bell High, Attlesey matriculated to USC where he and another Trojan world clau hurdler, Jack Davis, pract!Cllly domlnaltd I h e event. He aay.s hl1 most memorable nee wu a t Fresno'1 !ISO Weal Colli Retaya, where he broke the world record, running JU. "'I beat some guy from Slfnlord In that race, but I Jliit can't remember hit n&Ol"e ...... .. Anolher great day for A~ tlesey ~ame an June. 2.1, Jtsl, -when be beat a Vln\endous field for tbe naUonal MU championship at Berkeley. He rim a lS.8, defeattna Difil and UCLA's stahdou~ Crall Dlllon. Au.lesty held the record uo- tn 1111 whon Dam brake U at an AAU meet in Sacramento. "I helped him do tt, I ebGuld hav~ kept.• mt• mouth abut." AIUesey ret:ail,<. "l 1aw hbn • rin at the Complon lnvl1atl\>Dll ~ wetk before and corrtcted 1 fiUU wllh bla Jrall lfc,flir'hlin." · Bui aoon two dtClides ' will bave pU!ed atnce Dick At. llesey's name wu bandied aboul dally by Jracl< and field followers. SOmehow you gel the feeling that Wltdlln( hil daughter~s _ fl"OC"W: will be more saWlfytng to him. 49ERS GET NEW COACH Pasadena City College tl'afk coach Ted Banks has been appointed 11 assistant COICb under Jack Rose at Cal ·s1a1e (Long QeacbJ. Banks upl&cea W i 11 J e WWJams, who only two weets' q:O wu _hired for the polit.lon.' But Williams was offered the head coaching Jo~ at the University of Artr.ona r«mtJy and &!>' cepled tbe offer. Bowlers In Semis Tonight .'\ \ f I·' I~.( l':>f f_I ')'1'1 Q~W ~ SA N JU\I 1111ir.1 URM11;1 tOU NIY "'R -••-"ORNJA PRESENTS THREE SAN FRANCISCO 81111JBU nonm · 3 bAYS /2 NIGHTS ALL THREE' The tempo or musical cbalrs TOURS INCLUDE: In lonlghfa flnrt round or A irand -ol s .. fllftdlCl'a aemlflnaJ 1ctlon at Kona major attmtlo111 • GoldMI Cit. Lanes! Weal Coast Makli Br~ge • lh"lew fronJ Trln hals Game Elim1nations will be • SUI lads .r. Cliff Hone • picked up -1<Jerably. Mialon o~ons • PtlKI of flol Wllb the lnwtion of a SO-pin Alls • Uncoln Pm • the Pnildb bonus ruJe, current Jeader f M •~ Cliff 6oldto Roland Aluander of West Los • OJI non •.., • Gll1 P111I • Beaillful Woodlands, Aqelea could run away and Famous Rasid,.U.l !1111, - hide wllb bla lead .,. he could l .,., ... lndadil>I fhherjpon'i drop out of sight. Wh1rf and lunch 1t Ttritino't. en~!~wo ~an~~:si f;: • Deluxe Del We~b TownHouse .IC· fina.!Jats, Weitminster's Fred commod1lions (3 dars/2 nithts) Rlccllll and Fountain Valley's • Round trip traRsfers from Sin Dick Braasch. They 3lancJ fr1ncisco or Dl~land Airport to nioth and 10th. ·the downtown' Airline Terminal Action starts at 9:15 this • TaxicabfromtheTerminaltothe eYeninc. Each bowler will roll TownHouse & return ~fltf. tip) four~ one-game matches far Al• OALIFO-IA Mondly Rllions. For each C Rawls' 71 Wins by 4 AtLPGA Eaeh beaJ U.S. pbyen Jn the singles finals, with the 22. year-0ld Yugoslav beating top.. ranked American Arthur Ashe 8-', 6-3, 6-4. Mrs. Chanfreau, who moved from Australia to France after her marriage last year to French tennis player Jean Chanfreau, also won i n straight sets, ovtr Llnda Tuero of Metairie, La .• f-2, 6-2. • CHIP OFF OLD BLOCK -Kim Attlesey works on her start -and aspirations of succeeding in track and field while her father (Dick) and motber (Ann) look on. Kim ls a promising 440 performer. Her dad once held the world record in the high hurdles and •tarred at use. each of !he four remaining REDWOODS &~ game he winl, a 50-pln bonua . ABlllllRT liOLIOOUNY_r . "· will be awarded, making for wholesale IWldlngs ebonies. Tbe field will be pared to the Trawet 1cro1s tht Colden Git• lop lour bowlers alter the through tllt iiorld·bmous loyn ol · KIAMESHA LAKE, N.Y. (AP) -Betsy Rawls, who snapped her putting slump In a brilliant s u r g e 10 nm away with the $36,000 LPGA Championship, wishes she could give .Arnold Palmer her secret. "I wish [ could help hlm ," she said after a brilliant 71 Sunday which gave her ~ riches~ Utle in women's goll by a four-stroke margin. "I'd had putUng problems for the past two years because. of age as much as anything else, and began to come out of it thr~ months ago when 1 111;1tcbed from a wrlst stroke to a shoulder stroke. Now, I think I've got the thing licked." At 41, Mlss Rawls Is the oldest ever to win this cham- pionship, the richest I n women's golf, with a $5,250 first prize . Louise Suggs was 33 when she won it in I!ffi7. Beaty surged in from three strokes back and showed t!i e youngsters a thing or two ¥S she tamed the 6,306-yard , par 73 C.oncord Hotel champion- ship course, which Is nick- named The Monster. She fin- ished wtth a 72-hole total of 293 1fter earlier rounds of 71, 72 and 79. Franulovic's $5,000 victory was climaxed with a come- back the last set. The Virgi- nian led 3-0 before Franulovic won a game on a service: break. Franulovic broke through Ashe's serve again to even it at 4-4, and on the match's final game didn't lose a point. • GARNE'IT, Kan. -Ron La Peer, 26, a former national championship driver from Granada Hills, was killed Sun- day when his car lost a wheel during a practice run for the Lake Garnett Grand Prix. • MONTREAL -Sam Snead and Tommy Aaron have done their bit to set the scene, now it's up to a third-party-the weatherm~o let them get on with the final act Snead, 57, and Aarorr-25 years his junior-are schedul- ed to meet today in an 18-hole playo{f round to decide this year's winner of the Canadian Open golf championship. How Th ey Stand AMERICAN LEAGUE East Dlvl1lon Won Lost Pct. GB Baltimore 68 31 .687 - Detroit 55 42 .567 12 Boston 58 44 .580 121J.t Washington 52 53 .495 19 New York 43 54 .471 21 ~~ Cleveland 40 81 .396 2:9 West Dlv:lllOI Ml-61 39 .!10 - Oakland 56 <IO .563 3 Seettle 42 57 .424 181,~ Kansas City 42 sa .420 19 Chlcago 40 59 .404 20\.'z Catilomi1 38 IO .J88 22 .. ,., .. .,... ll:ftolllh ,._ Yott i, C.I~ I 8el~ J, Ollc>Ne I C ....... &. MIMttole I WHf\ ..... .I, 0.:»M I, 11 IM!M1 ow.II IL K.-Cll1> 2 s.tllt ........ J _...._ Ct!~ I. H .. Y.tt-• •••lmoN 11, ~. M'-MI• I. C~ 1 OM""" 1, Wf.tfll""'°" t "'-• Oty ,, Dttl'lft ' .... " '-"" J, ,. IMflollt _..,_ ,.. ,_ ICftledulJoCI ......... _ Dt1r11lt el MIMtWlt•, 2 hlt.fll"'r Gl'llCHe et Cln'Wftnid. t.' twl·!!lttll ••''""°'"' 11 "-• c11r. 11111111 WelJllP!l'IM et lffffle, 111'911 16dt!I et Cellfor1111, nlM!r H"' Yfl'i., er O.ki.n111, nr1111 I NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Won Lost Pel GB Chicago 62 39 .614 - New York 55 41 .573 41fl st. Louis 52 49 .515 10 Pittm,urgh 50 49 .505 JI · Philadelphia 40 58 .4-08 201A1 f.fontreal 33 67 .330 2.81.rl West Division Atlanta $8 44 .569 -Los Angeles 55 43 .561 I s. Francisco SS 45 .550 2 Cincinnati 50 43 .538 31,{i HouscOn 51 49 .510 fl San Die<o ~ 68 .JJJ 21 r.1.,.,..,.., .... h H.w Ytn ). ClllCJMell t Clll<>ffio 2. LCll ~ 2. 11 lf'ltll11n Moflfl'fel 1. AIW!te ~ 1'11 l'rat1c;ltte 7, SI. l""b ' "ll'lltlu19't •· Ufl D'"• .1. II IMl11t1 ........ .,., ... ""' (11'C!-ft I. H.W 'l'ert; J LOii """"'-I, Cl'llc-J All1M1 &. MOnlf .. I J !ti. lO<tlll I. s.t11 l'rt"CIKI ! ,.,,,.,.. •• S.11 Oltte ' HDVtfoll ). P!!!IMflttllll L 11 l11nlMl T ... t"I 0.-S.11 Dlteo IK.f'llll> •ti 11 S!, LOUii !lfV!ef 2~1l. "~' k~ l'ffllCIKo (H11'11fl 4·1) 11 (~~ C.fff {i'UllCll 11 ·1) T11Hd1r'1 OelMt ~111 Fr11'1CJ~ta el Ckl("e ~IK Al!M!H fl ~lttltl\lrf~, ), Jw~ .... S.11 01'90 tT St, Loul., l'ltlll HeITera Qualifies AtOCffi r.fanuel Herrera quallfied h I s p s y c h e d ellc-painted Corvette for the Aug. 9 An· niversary Race of Winnen at Orange County International Raceway when he defeated J ohn Lombardo's Corvette Saturday at OCIR's lkar open gas supercharged event. Herrera, a Montebello drafl'.sler driver who owns OC IR's track record for gas dragsters, posted an 8.70 ET and a speed of 167.74 mph. He defeated Keith Bush or llayward In the final. Low elapsed time honors went to Skip lless of Temple City who logged an 8.65. Her- rera had top speed with a 166.35. Gary Burgin of Garden Grove Wa! aJ:ed from the compelitlon when 1-1 e r r e r a beat him in the second round. Jay Gage of Wilmington made It a double victory for Corvette! when he secured the injected funny car feature with a 9.72 and 143.08. Second .,.,.as Dean Leavengood of Glen- dale (11.83 and 91.83). This Saturday's program will feature injected fuel dragsters and stock eUminators. On Sunday the spoUight will be on grand prix motorcycle and dune buggy racing. Mission Viejo's Don Enri· quez will drive Gene Adams' injected fueler Saturda y. Two weeks ago the drive r knoc ked R third of a second off his na- tional record by running 7.34 and 203 mph. In so doing he became the quickest unsuper· charged driver in the sport The only driven to ever post a quicker time than Enrique;; at Orange County have been those ln the top fuel dragster class. Qualifying Saturday starts at 2 p.m. with feature ricing beginning at 8. On Sunday, the bikes and dune bu1gjes begln practice al 9:30 a.m. and elimln•t!ON slart al I p.m. The motorcycles will duet ouer OCIR's new 2.1-mlle pav- ed road course white the bug- gies and jeepa bound about QVer lhe track's L5·mll e dirt, of!·road race course. ' College Stars Fall, 6~0 In Battle With Cards Top Soccer Team.sin LA Aug. 11 teu1on and a champ Sausalito, into the lu.ih hills of wW be crowned Sept. l. Muir Woods. Stroll 1monc the The finals field is lmotted Jn fabl!<I redwood>-1,llllO ym aid the u,htest grouping the 1i1nts rislnc more tti1n 300 feet · hilloty of lhe nine-year event. · abowe the for¢!1 floor Only. UO pJna separate Alu· . unforgettable!· ander from No. 16 man Bob 1 .,----;:-;:-;-:;;-;~-""""\ Kennlcutt or Santa Fe Springs. PRICE 5 . The famoul world Soccer Few will be surprised if Adlltl ahrfn& twin Reseda keg]er Lamar Keck btddt4 '"" <••·> · · · ... .$4&.IO CH JC AG o (AP) -'l1le aJ of the classic which began club champion. Eatudlantes de imatcbea .the lead .away from 'Bird N111t college AU Stars, with a taate back Jn 1934. la Plata from Argen11na, wU1 Al~er tontgbt. Keck was <1o11111 rte•> _ ............ -.$31A!i ~e~r~::~ ~~:a!~~~; wi<J,~1r~~Jc!~ make their only United States the hottest man in the house ::.•=.:2 ... ~ .............. $ZJ.n off today for their meetlng egaimt the Cardlnala. ''The aoccer appearance here in Jut Monday, rolling an 884 (AllprkU~lf •lrln) with the New York Jel! Fri-main thing about this scrim-Soothern California at the block.' He'a Jn thJrd, just 13 plnl from runnerup Foy 'AIR OALIFOllNIA day night in Soldier Field. ma~e was to get. on the same Memorial Collseum, Satur-Belcher of Glendale. CHOPSTICKS •• , ·~ The mid-summer football ~~ld. wUh a pro club," he day nlgbt Aug. t . Keck won the Elims crown & SEALIFE dasak, feat u r l n g Jtt Their oppanent will be Mu.. lut year and wants to be the 81111116 Dour quarterback, Joe N a rn a t h, "Now the All-Stan know might draw in the vicinity of they can knock heads with the ico's Club Necan, better flnt man to win It two years 80 000 Pros and S"y wllh !hem In known aa South of the Border in 8 row. • 1n1'd d I J Ch' ~ u ' · ' i . 11oi•111S Al9.ufldff. w~ LA 1.511 " .~1 e our o 1nalvnn. nur The AU-Stars cllmued their the important departments," Giant Killer, for haviog the 2. "ov lt!CMr, 019nde1e 1.S1.1 stories ol the "inner city." DiscoYtr d ·11 S da · · said Gr-•am '· '!m•r k.o;, a...,-. 1·"' 1· h d b Aft n s atur y in a scrim-1111 • reputation of defeaUng some '· c.., N ... in1. Los ... 1am11o11 '·'°' exo 1c s ops en . auars. er mage with the St. Louis Paul Gipson of Houston of the world's most famous ~: ="~ 1":t.~G~~.r.. l~ dark, an 1ulhenlic Chinese dinner Cardinals of the National clicked for a 19·yard run in and powerful 11occer teams. 7• Mlk• IN¥•'· 'Torr*"'• 7.... completes this,· unique adventure. I. Diii Glli'ln. w .. 1 lA 7.-MQ Football League and came off which he nearly broke into the Necaxa defeated such world '· FrM R1cc1111. wei1m1t11tlf ,~,. Marine World 'l'dU introduce you to 'th . bhed lO. Okk Br11oc:lo, F .V. 7_.11 w1 a 6-0 defeat 1n a game open and gra two passes known famous teams as San-11. si .... schw•rtttttr, L• va'"' 1,~111 a fascin1tin1 display of se11lfe h. h h t be I l N D ' r . p I 'l· Bob R9mlre1. >.nlP\elm 1.390 w tc saw eac earn g n rom otre ame s erry tos with e e 4-3 Glasgow t . Jerry H•tkfr. 1:1 Moni. 1.Jrt (with translJ(lrtalion & 1dmlsslon): six series of plays from its Hanratly for 36 yards to lead Celtic ~2 and lately Eintracht i•. eoo Prot:ier•, G1r<1eri Gr<1Y• 1.1n . I!. AJ Cherlh,.,, RJ¥erikl• 1,252 p R I C E 5 own 30-yard line. the All·Star attack. Gene Brunswick 2·1 all three 1ames ,., 11o111<enn1tull, san11 Fe Sl>f'P. 1,io A 43-yard pass from Charley Washington of Stanford grab-in ~exico's famous Azteca fmrnmtUllCl'IMCl'-;.t.,._.'ltlt Mulls Wrlnrtwln Johnson to Johnny Roland set bed four passes for 33 yards. Stadium WI ( K IMddld roo• (u.) -"._$51.G up a three-yard 1eoring smash Hanratty completed six of Estud~tes won the World PICK ~ ~Milt · by Willie Crenshaw for the nine passes for 72 y1rds while Club championship when they BOOKSHOPS <••• 100•> -·"·-.. -.. $31.lS game's on1y score. Greg Cook of Cincinnati com-defeated the European cham-Tlllnlf:rtll ptn1111 "\Ve were pretty good on pletcd four of nine but had pion, fa m 0 u 5 Manchester :::iC:-tl'\w,, C.talllllu. 11-1 "'*' '""' fMll).-.$11.CIS defense and I liked the way three on-targel aerials drop-United of England, in a tw<>-ua ... .,_.. 11.,., Slll&le = ~-·-···$31.DO the secondary was knocking liiipeiiiidii. iiiiiiii""'.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;~g~am;;;e;ol:;io'Ola;;;I ;ig~oa;;ll;i.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-~~~·~·~~~"'~..,~·~•;;;;;;;;;~I cu pricQ odiilM If t1r1 .. ) down p a s s e s." said Otto Graham, head coach or the A... AIR OALl.FO-IA All.Stars. YOUR PROBLEM MAJESTIC •. l Graham, afler a three -year s · • : ~ ICllllJIOAS&RllNBllEr • · ·, tenure a.a head coach of the Washington Redskins, is back You want to .. 11 IOme ft.m at the helm for the collegians. BAFECD th•t you no longer need but He has had expeMence m· 1omeone el .. e1n UM for Travel the Peninsula and 1um! INSURANCE · coaching All.Siar viclorles. N O T O y E R $ 5 O lush Santi Cl111 Vslley. Lunch In Under Graham, the All-Stars for special lol"Glto.\ then follow the spedlc- po!led their last two triumphs GOOD STUDENT ? 7 7 7 7 7 ular caaslline to lh1 buuty oft~ a g a Inst the professlonal famed 17·mile Drive. You'll Yislt1 champions by downing Green DISCOUNTS on YOUR ANSWER.• OldMonterey,Peciti<G""',Ptbbltli Bay 20-17 in 1963 and Detroit your Family 8t1ch,tbe5alinasValliyandmn~ 35-19 in 1958. You call TH E DAILY PILOT, 11k for Bringacanl!!~ Nevertheless, the All-Stars Auto Insurance t Clen lfled Advertt•fna, and place a figure to be somethJng like "9' PR I C ES two touchdown underdogs to PILOT ,.Ill llhlrl~lwi• Jhc Jets and Broadway Joe, ---... -'""(IL) ---.111.75 rulers of all professional foot-1::-=:., ~~'4l3' ball following last season's PENNY ClllW•llftf12' shocking 16-7 triumph over the (~• ••) $.Jl.'5 Ballimote Coils. That decision enabled the PINCHER ---Jets to become the first CM,.,_~llflflof .. J 1 American Foolball League CLASSl'llD AD hf,.._•• --team to qualify for the All ..._ aQ,., tr...l Acnl • .. ' Star Game in !he :!6th renew. I AT OUR Sl'ECIAL LOW RATE • ' Bob Paley Didn't Check •nd A110ci•t•• 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2oo L LAR S AIR , ; AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD ! C*UFORN.._ Shoolor flushed • cov<ry of INSURANCE I; DI AL N 0 W DI REC T I lft.)•:-:: ~<?Jf llS. qu ail, shot quickly without 474 E. llth St. :.:,,: ..(7141 chccldng !he baclJiround or 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 ·---'-C714l..,..., zone of fire. A hunter In Une of COSTA MESA lire was slruck wllh ahol 642-6500 "'" -""" c .. ,., l40-1U t l about Ule face, arm, and neck . ._ _________ _,,,,,.,,.,,.,, .. , .. , .. ,,.,,.,.,,.,,.,,.,,.,,,.,.,,.,,,.,.,,.,,,.,.,,..,, .. , .. , .. , .. ,,.,,.,,., .. , .. , ..... ,, .. ,,., .. , .. ,.,,.,,.,,.,"'-'· • .. ' Falcons, ')·'r~ ' ,•, ... .. • . l ,\ 'p• ~.:.:z.:::.=...:.-=::.~:....; ~ irates :: THE HOOK AND ... ·Tie Foes '!'Ii. Enillet Fa!COllll and Wud'.1 ~'. l't<• _fJ!-~lf ~·the...., IJCl'lpl ~i~y IJl'lSuoday u they boU1 tied the Metro baseball league leader,-La Fonda Junkn a!)d al9o ' lost narrow one-1119 decisions to the oecond·place llOo!ilu Jell. A -\di a!nglt In the Si.th by Ed ~ opark<d the Pirates to • S-S deadlock with the Junlori-ln 10 Innings. A lrio of · fltl41ng gems by third bueman lioli Leavy In the wt two·Jnmei -IWleil .a pair of Junior nm.a. Against the Jeb. the Plrata loet a 2-0 lead u -Douglas' Jim !Albeck stuggeit-1 lfand-tlam homer In the filth. A·dramati< ~In the ninth fell Jbort. for Plralel, u they spanked blti, iJ>. eluding a lwo-<UI) 1>om> nm bY Barry Wallace and a lriple by Mike Paul. Tile rally ~ wben Jet er Darrel George fanned Wlckenbam and Doll Id ealy. Steve Robtrlson wu the hero of the Falcons tie with the Jun!or1, as .be clouted a two-nm homer· in the fourth, and then scored the tying run In the Jut innlng. Embee scored the run when Robertson 11ingled, Vinet Moll and Bob Ekler walked, and then Noel Paulb delivertd a single to let\ l.o I co r e Robertson. Embee'1 lou to the Jet! was a heartbrt.aker N the Douglas aquad scored the winning run In the last l!mlni oo a ....... loaded walk. .Ron Ricb.udaon act the Falcons off to a great start by 1 clobbering a three-run homer in the tint to cap a five-run . Inning. Robertsoo added another twH'W't'bomer in the fijlh, Elder collect.ed thrte singles wJ:Ule driving two runs. '1u.T11 en· McN .. f'r. a I{!,,., et CJ41'11:, II l.H't'Y, Jb Wld<...,,__, tf lleflfrow, l"f ''"'· ,. C11rTV, If Wtmlr.o, II llvdtt. e F"lr>f'fr, ' , .... Aa • M II ' I I f , • 2 t ' . . . ' 1 • • J I 1 I I I I t ' • 1 • I I I 0 ' 1 ' ' ' • • fl ' • l • 35 , 1 ' ,_.., ..... ,_ ••• DOI tm llOt 11-3 1 J tll IOll 000 t-4 J I ,tuT11 171 Al 9: M II Kh'f, et S 1 S O Cl.t!'tl.,• At10 ,Mil, lb 5 t , 1 11.ffw, Jb 5 I 1 I t~'"·" ', ••• """""""· r1 • ' • WdfH!Y, • s l • ' \WHflko.C J t I t ~rJw,e 110t P1"'9t', "" 1 e • • ~~·· 1111 ,9:.,.,...,c 1~:• .w;::; ef ~ 1 II : "-"''""''-• • • .,.,, ooa.ees-1 11 1 001 M !OX-I I J HOW TO HIT ·11 The techniquoo ,.eel lo hook shon int.,ticOalfy or• actually 11fautt1• of SlriP Ond 'stone• that mony pllo~ irloe!vert..,.lyapply in tkeifno1M0~Gomt., -ro hoo,k'lni«1tioriolly, you ·""'apply either Of bolh ·of two ~ oheratlcn. In th.• fvff,-.fiQl,IN dl'Owlna, I omoddr:essingthe l:iall in a clos"' st~• -my riOhf foot is pulled liadl. This ..... lhe cl>i> to"""'·-· "tl&it field"ondopplya-orclodc- ·w~• (hook) spin to the loall, -iog It to .......... Thed,....ogol'"ltad "'- thn lvonod !DO firr to riff tight• Th~ ..,11 ........ to ..... riff clubfou 'lo Iha hlltiog .,.. so It will be lookl119 to thw lat - in a hook pctiti•-at lqwlcl-. Los Alamitos Entries. ,.., ..... y, htr .. tN~ tiY Qllilr a l"elt,...flht P•t 11U P.M. P"'* .. , .. ' .. 11:•- ....... , .. Nlll'lll 9:"' .,. I(~ fl•lf>kl9'l Stoll1MI Cl.,.°' llOcti.ntil Vicki Ml9hl !SlndleJI Sir Love (Kt11!1) HDll(1 l'Ol"I •l.;,o,. (llr-•) 111:0.r> S.t.n. ~Hirt) ' ~ ••• ,,. i(.uir.:.-.,.,. ... Milklllll 1 .,.., okll ... Cl.tlmlflt. l"urM 11100 • Clt lmlnt IN'lot ~ $0Cl<ltr ~ (Srnntll Trt ...... , Tom" (L1PMm) Mactl-kr {klldlerJ Ml11 Ml( Seti (D ltnklil TOiedo'• P1llto (Wlrilll,..l Acvl!t 111-t (lllllfrl· Ml.,,...., Tom (,_..lf). Wlnnl!W HWr Cit lll'lkl) Lotl.e aux CStr111•>.. • , •UIJ .. , SW.r tw•"""I ... •• •• J.17 POU•TM •A'tl,' 400 y1nl;. I """' ollll tr4 .. ill Grtd1 • .P"" btM Ill C1llf . .,.,,,,. IJM. · ~ ~r• f.._rtl • 117 "' "' •• •• "' '" """'"Y 0..1'9« (D ltftttl 111 F~Vl'I' HOii"' {Mltivci.1 113 (IDVI•' ltb'I' Lii .4W1llOll) 111 $,rlrll Fl~ (lllleY) 111 Tiii t>fncty \Ill: ll!...,,J 11' Go lttlodt !D,...,..,.I 111 ,Mt. L-Shot 111 Jtldle'1 DmctY lit (lrf!'* .. rl lit ti.11'1" TOlll (AM!rl . llJ TMt•D •M:L .• ~. IM!dlll t SIXTM ···c•. J50 ... rm. t ,.., ,.,, lllldt. P11rw tl9. · ll!ds. A1iow.-. ,,,.,,. nioo. Tiii W. !Morttll , '<"" • 111 Tlrw .._ f.:.nltl •• •• m Youth Swim Honor List With U!e (!range County Swim Conte~ at the half way mark ·in ltallJe dual -ta. the !ollb)l.ing iJ a lilt of • Mimi• Me~ (Modic•) L!1111 (111'9»1 MDlth Gtvlt (Wl!SOll\ 111:i.:.-1 Gold !llk!lanh) Ma.t.r Cll•ree F•I lddll (Adt1r) --QugM to Go fl~m) 1(1<1nrW1 .... (lmtltt) • W1r Afftlr IH1rt) "' •• '" "' "' m '" Sl!1'«MTM llACt'. v .... 1. Jr. Covr.1 -4111 .,..rlfl. 3 YNr Olds tt'ld up. 'Cl~ml!lll.· Plill'M '2290. Cltlmff19 enc. ...... Plt!t Mvdlo (lholllml" ''"'""' lls(ult ~1Wbonl Miu WI"""""" !APOOIC:a) uncitnllldY' flll<fllrdlJ HUrf"I' John (Htrt) Baseball, Polo Cage S~dings •Atllt NLO ~-"°" ... ,..,. fncfe ' ~-3:V.11tr l~0au1nt1 lolM Ortnff w L tt • ' ' I I ·~ I l~ ' • • • • • W L •I .. -s ,. 1 • • • . ' . ! • • . ' • • • lltftMll I PMl!tll w L H i • I ' : i : • l l • l l l I I I ...... ClliWdl LM~"L Flr.1 ~ml •• • ' harbor r 11 • ' =""rr. • ! ' ~ _,, ' ' w. 'ol'r".:Z.... I , l , ~luthtr111 ' • "'Neu,_ ' • • • UIKllTIALl CWTA MIU. 91"1"N W L .. W~\11111'1' " • Wl-Flli'll • , , Meo-Ids 1ttfl • • • rJ:~ ln.wrel!Cll • • • ~c • • • • l ' ' Oolotth.. .... ,,°' • • BUI e.;,.., POfltle<: • .. " 09:!'NO• LU•UJ L •• ...... " • ~o~ll • ' ' .,, i. • • • <>n:;r:. • • • PKll • ' ' Tror • • • -· , " ' ,,,.,.,. • .. " l'OOTMILl \,U,GUI W L .. tr~m0:1e1o • , ~ • ' Footh II • , Slntltgo I • ' Tu1Un • ' .. CM·HTAM~" llAOUI W l GI ' ' -: 1 I I . " ' l l Deep Sea Fish Report ~ ·: Orange Coast am 1Wimmer1 • • to make the confemict honor Blll'1 11-t {II l1Jllu) &11rlnt Hllrrv IM11T> """" ·- • • • t I roll: • • • • ' . • • • • • • • • • • ••• '" oot ....... 18 t MtJOO I~' ! PALeoMI fPI •t ll M II j 1 ' ' • • 1 • , l 1 .!. s ! 't "3 ' 2 1 1 J 1 1 1 2 • • • ' 1 ' ' ' . ' . ' . . . I e 0 I '°'"' ............... ••a :J11e1ti-•11 1 112 M ,_,, 11 ' "NINE' MORE CU!£S Slim CO n; D~A"-. ,,, l\low! PSA jetS ~hotir on tlie ·hour to San ,_ .. ,,..., .. .,...,.. . 7-1"-11 -12-1.Z·M I 17 .... pm. Men°" ....... Plusn· his , L, onthe If hour to San Diego! ,,,. _ .. 10:10 .... --· ,,, ... ,,....,.1D:M-11*1 -12:ao.1 ""'2:S04='0- 4:SN:ao-1;1M:M-7:IO-l*l-1D:10 pm. ---- Whr worry 9bout • ,_.,.rlon Mtlft PSA h• Wlf" 180 llfgtltl • day? 8ucfl an ~bit ICfiidult ygu cen carry It 11Qlnd fn your heed. Why rtmetnt(et 10wnt f.,..? Or all Jttl? or 9fllt ttMce 1ID Olikland, 81n Joie. ind s~ • _,Or llat •Ide u-12·11y PSA (will '*" pittntt) ror httf ,.,.., attn wn 1 '"9l'Vltloftt ...... ceft )'OUT tra-9 •oent t ·--·•~1-PM.i-,...a } • Monday, July 28, 1969 In Legion Tourney . • . FV,_~Newport. Win 8y DAVE CEARLEY Of ""' Oal~ Plllt ti.it Long Btacb as they tallied three NDI in the first. Fwntain Valley and New· 'f1ltl,Harbor Docfgero SCIOl'ed IC1ller, " at ... -. I~ J-1. 211 Lt Poln!t, -'b $rtfl~. t ""'"'· p lottl• • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • ' • • • • • ' • .. • • • port Harbor adVanced to the the runs when Bob curry led second round ol the Anaheirn oU~the •e.me with a walk, iJe!f Amertea,.. Legion b a s e b a 11 ~allooff followed with a tournament Satliiaay and Sun-amgle, and .Billy Powell tripled • ,O\INTAIM \14t.l.IY (1) · to drlve ,., the two. - d!ly, Fountain. Valley downing Steve KJng then followed Rancho Paaflca, 1-0, and with a· single to drive in the Newport blanking Long Beacb third tally of th •. ·ame. Jordan, 4-0. __ Fc.unlain Valley which did i ua Dodgeni scored an in- ~.,,..~ .. .,,,1t10r1; .. $!11111111. 3b Orlfl\'#0001, P Wflk1nlOll. c Marltr. ,. HI•, rf Frllt, " v'"""" d ·~· " Totei.. .. • • .. • • , • • • • • , ' ' • ' • .. • ' • • • , • • • ' • • • I • ' • I • • • ' • ' • " ' • • . not play a regul;_, schedule surance run in the sixth when because ol its late entry into Bob Leavy singled, stole se· the league, came through with ~Dd, went to third on a wild a single tally in the ninth to pitch, and scored when Bob ktre • ., 111111,.. ••• win the contest. Stafford singled . Mike Shimaji scored the sole Pitcher Denny Bean allowed 1'19-• ti•"-JOO 001 11-1 16 " L. e. Joni.n ......... , • run when · he doubled, stole two ruts tn sir Innings. and third, and then ero5sed home fanned eight while walking plate after the throw went into four. NEWLl'OllT NAltlOll (t) left field. Newport meets the rugged Fountain Valley hurler Mike Long Beach Rockets Sa(urday <!rimwood a_llowed only four night at 6:30 at Boysen Park singles, while striking out in the second round. Also the eight anti walking one. Dodgers launch play in the ' CUrrv~ e Mllll!Off, .. P-n, 1b lt•V"f· " $1tf!orcl. " ll1ncllercl, " IC I no, " ve1i,re. )b Piii. ct 8etn, p kr.otl!itr. o Tolet1 •• • H' 11 ' ' ' • • ' ' • • ' • , ' ' , • ' • ' ' • • • • ' • , ' ' • ' • ' • • • ' • • • • • • • " ' " • Seeond baseman Rick Wen-Fullerton legion tourney. when ne.nkamp collected a pair of they en,g~e .. yet-lo-be-named singles and a double. opponent at 6:30 p.m. in Fountain Valley enters the Amerige Park. lOHG llACM JOllOAN Ill second 11>llnd or the tourney Satu~ay against Anaheim Kqhne at Boysen Park in Aliaheim . Game time Is al 8 p.m. To u r n ament co-favorite Newport made qlllck work of . '. lll1nchg PKlllct ooo ooo ~ ~ 1 D!1I, 2b Reed, rf Jt..,,.t. If C<:W"1n, p Mtv!l<JI•, d Norton, lb FOUti!•lrt V•I'->' 000 000 001-1 6 t lilAMCHO PACll'ICA It) • •• • • ' . . ' lltr~, ss l(i\11,., If '<e!1011. d Dl>'ll, '" H II Sllt•l"911•· 3b 2 o • ~rlooi. P·ll 0 0 l{l"I~. C J 0 To!1ls •I Ill H II ) ' J 0 3 e o o 2 • 0 0 o a a o 2 • 0 0 l • e o 2 ' 0 0 , • ' 0 3 o e o 2 0 • 0 ,3 & ' • DAILY PILOT Z:I Oil Ci11 Winds Vp · With Win ' Huntlnglon Harbour'• .entry In the Anaheim Summer Baatball Leafl' flnlshtd llll season llfilh a victory Friday nigh! that enllbl~ the club IO ' • ! I ' I' finl•h-the-cam~gn with "' lo e rtcord. · Behind the lhr,..hll ~ltcbtng of Gil Banagas, coacb Don Walker's team beat Lo• Alamitoa, U , at Westem High Sckool. The Harbour team. com- posed mostly -Of Huntinlton High players from. last season. scored twice In the third in- ning and once in the Ona.J In- ning. the·!lfxth, to -.wrap ·~p !be summer se'kson on a w1nnuc note. Banagas, in addition to hit shutout pltdling, logged a lhree..for-lhree night at the plate. HUNTINGTON HAlilMKJ• fl) M(.ICvown, lb ., ~ \ ':' StMlln... lf J • • • Moels.C l f> > S>'l>Ml\I, :Ill, rl 2 t ! Cl•rtlll, 3b ,> j •' G~1i., d Wllllfllld. " J • • • Poller, rl f o, '• I Murphy, 11:1 8111Hs. p a I l · t Tol•ll 1114' ,~.., ......... Lot At.mllot ooe 00!).....0 J l Hunt11H11tot1 OCl'l ODl-J ' J Beat The Heat! Ffl'SMOST CARS 511 -1. 311 J;.pert 1 .... nation Anilable . Auto Air Conditioner Was '•249.95 • ModelaS~ Ask Ab01ll Sean Cmnenient Creclit Plam • Cluoic black. eraeh pad~d. die · en!. h-1 • Folly rece88ed eontrolo for a,dded eafetr ••• 3 .. peed COD!rol for wide range eeleclion ol air volume • Convenient elide control regalatM depee of coolness · • Dual blower wheel for mnimum effieiener E.,,,m lnatnllaiion ..4~lile Having Transmission Trouble? Sears Remanufactured Automatic Transmission "The Nut B_esl Thing lo a Nl!llO Car" Buy.Now and Save •2s •A Sea1'9 Renurm1facttued Automatic Transmloeion will make 7onr ear teem like new! •Come in for a fl'l!e a11tom8tic ......,.. miMion inspection Sale Eads Saturday, Anguot 2nd, 1969 \ \ Aok~ . "" $oUs . ft• c 1 ual't91c.lt. "- s , -Shop loada7 au. 'SatmUJ eats. 9:30 A.Ji. .. 9:30 .... Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back • .....,. __ QQ, ,- ' • , •• • ' ' • t " • •, J1' DAllV PILOT S M..t.1, .~IJ 28, 196' • 'Your Mo ney's Worth ' • l B ~iying Use d Ca.r?. Look For T raps Finance Briefs ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Wet. terau Foods, Inc., will build .. automated factory to mak• fi-oien baking &oods on •n 11· lly SYLVIA PORTER t ln 1969 alooe, we wiU spend : ~ billion to buy some 20 ·million used cars. We will pay 1 peak or near peat prit-es -an (average of $1,029 per used car 1<• after the t rad e·in allowance). We will Lry to enhance our choices b y trading up to later models. ',mote opt1om, higher prices. ~fllliom ot us also will become the vkt.ims of one of the 1licke.st groups of h i g h • pressure promoters in the land. ' Americans have gone on a ' used car buying binge. The ~spree is spurred by the fact that the World War ll "ba· 1 bies" are now becoming this era's young married ; it's prop. • ped by the necessity of a se· cond car in many suburban .homes; it's fed by the need of t milliom of . young men , for .temporary, 1 n ex pens 1 v e 1 transportation. You're an easy target -unless you are aware ,1 or the plU"alls. Specifically: , "DOPING." You are lold . that the used car you want has ,been compl etely "recoa. J dltloned" and your test drive ,seellllll to confirm this claim. But wllhln a few days, it , develops a bolt of mecl\anical prob1eml, for the dealer has used a variety of methods • which temporarily disguise the ! car's faulla . · To iwotect yourself, deal on- 1 ly wlLh .. a .feputable, reliable 1 used W dealer -and trj to I get a 30-daJ, warraoty, with · the dealer retPoRSible to pay 1 in full for aij needed repairs. The warranty ahouJd spell out ·whal reconditioning bas been done and whether the car is jguaranteed to pau state in~ .spectlon. • ; , THE ·"ALMOS? NEW '' 1CAR. nlll may be a bargain ~late model "leftover car" which may have been used as a demonstrator. Or it may be Jadv~ on a mail order ba· •sis at the unbelievably low ;prict: of, say, fl99 for a '68 model. The catch with mail •Order cars -sometimes ' advertised as "below cost" or , "below wholesale" -is that ~the cars may actually have 'been driven tens of thousands jof miles (although you wouldn't know this from the ·odometer). And mail order ! . . <'ars aften tum out to be re- painted lu.is. r:enta1. or polic:_e cars, etc., which may have been driven 100,000 miles or more. "BUSHING." Here the dealer bikes the price after you have made a depo&it - by, say, lowering the trade-in allowance. You can avoid this by insisting on a signed state- ment promising a refund if the car is not delivered on specified te rms. "PACKING." This means heaping ~xtra charges - special fees, exorbit ant finance-insurance charge.s - on top of the purchase price. ltlake sure there is no packing before you sign any deal. TlfE 'i BUP.fPER '' or "balloon" note. In this deal, you pay relatively low in- stallments in the start. and a fat lump sum at the end. The only deception here is if the dealer falls to tell you about the "balloon" al the end, and you have to borrow to pay up. G t .. BAIT ANO SWITCH." Can rea au advertised in s u c h Scie11ee lnvestigqtlon ¥,f,;ljlij;,,,--site In St. Loull Count1. Tho plint wlllbe _...,. by Wetterau 's recently acqulrtd Gateway Bakery C or p • "IUboidlary. --- MIAMI (UPI) -Sbtll'1 Cf. ty, Inc., will apln off Shell's Super Stores, Inc., t.o lta shareholders on the basis of one sha~ or Super S~s , common for each aha.re or Shell's City held. Shell's CUy, Inc., ~orth will confine ita operatioal to tht group's liquor store! and Mr. Winkey Cocktail Lounges. Leaving the supennarkets and drugstores to the lflWl'O{I compaoy. The distribution ii subject lo obtalniOJ a f.avorab1e federal tu rullng. tempting terms as "below Sixty pounds of the moon arrived at the Houston Space Center under elaborate cost," "Below wholesale," etc. security wraps for the start of one of history's greatest scientific investiga~ But -and this will be you r tions. The rocks will be tested in vacuum chamber for a month and a half. warning-when you arrive at Once scientists feel sure there is no danger, the rocks will be sliced into thin the lot, you find that the layers -a technician is shown operating a wire saw which will be used. Part advertised car is no t of the samples will he ground up and sent to 1l2 of the world's top scientists available. 1be ad has been us-who w,ill conduct tests in their own special fields. ed as "bail" to get you to the --------------------------------lot, then 11switch'·' you to SANTA MONICA, Ca II I. (UPI) - Le a r Siegler, Inc., has oblained a $9'J mll14on Alr Force cootract to provide aircrdt and aeros p ace systems maintenance services. The total value of the three-year cont.rad. could nm to 1211 millJonl. --- CHICAGO (UPI) -UDlted Air Lines, Inc., has obtalned a $ll million military lransport contract. for n In e months' operation ol l.h.ret Douglaa DCl'1 between the Pacific Coast and ~wa and South Vielnam. 't aaotber dea1. ODOMETER TAM- PERING. While a few st.ates have Jaws against turning back odometers, (Nw Y.o.rt ls one}, enlorcement is dlfficult. To the expert at "picking," it's no problem to crank an odometer back tens o f thousands of miles. A recent investigation in Massachusetts showed an average of 20,000 to 30,000 miles had been .. su~ tracted" from cars displayed on used car lot... Consumers Union recently p:it the losses to the public by UU. siogle deception at $1 billion a year. Until tamper-proof odometers are on cars, your best pro- tection is to be aware that tampering is widespread. Most used car dealers are honest. So stick with those who have reputations for reliability and wbo also are capable of properly _assessing just how '"used" a given used car ~. Auto Dealers Elect Officers NEW YORK (UPI) By CARL CARSTENSEN D•llY ~lltl .,............. lllllttw The Motor •'C,.r 'Dealers Association of Orange County has elected Jim Slemons, Jim Slemons Jmpofts of Sanla Ana, as .tu new~dent. John Conne9.~~'orine 1 1 Chevrolet in Costi Mesa, was elected first . vioe president and elected to ~ board ol director• was "'Jfltl Carver of Roy Carver Poollac in Costa Mesa. . First on the ~a for the new slate of otAOen 11 the An. nual Orange Olonty Auto Show to be ¥.d at . Ille Anaheim Coov.enUon Center -Oct. 8 through Oct. l.l. shortly after it begin.'i 1970 model produclion in the next few weeks. The divl.sion Is only 175,000 cars away from butlding Ol dsmobile's number l.l,000,000. Oldsmobile was formed lo 1897. . Bu.id: also closes out ila 1969 model year production . with a total buildup of. 5.7 percent from last year in markl.g: 0t.:w highs in the producdon of Buick's top of the fine models, the Electra and R.Mtra. , GM BOOSTS KINGMAN TO NEW POSITION SoUthem californla has lost a . Sood one with the ap- OOOGE DEALERS pollllmenl of R. T. KiogmaJ) START HUGE SALE Jr. to the post of inanqer of Orange QJunty Do d g e public affairs ot General Mo~ Dealers have embarked on a ors CCrp. public relations Coo!olidaled -Co. .... in Los Angeles slnct: IM1. nounced tl will enlarge its · In his new posiUoia he will Astoria generating plant on coordinate General Motors the borough of Queens from public rlllaUons activity in the 1.2 milUon to 1.6 million envlrorun ent.al sciences m. kilowatts to help meet the eluding air and water pollu--_ city's power needs by 1974. Uon. safety and urban transit. He joined GM in Jam.1aey". BETHPAGE, N.Y. (UPI) - 1959 after 15 years o C Grummu Aircraft Engineer- newspaper experience and was ing Corp. said it haa bffn also a freelance magarinr notified by the N a t 1 on al writer -mostly on techo1cal AeronauUcs and S pa ct subjects. AdminlstraUon .that the AAP Kingman hu long been ac-LM·A program Cor the Saturn tive locally in the air pollution VI B workshop is b e 1 n g •rli1 tramit probleQlS o f terminated. The LM·A was to SoOthem 'California. have been part.of an iftterlm Appointed to 1 u c c e e d PIJon. Grumman said most Kingman is Thomas L.. Pond. of. the persoone.J involved CUI Pond jotned Geoeral Motors be transferred t.o other i-To- ln 1952 and his most ~ jects. 1 pos.itbt was as n o r t her n f.fidrlgan reg Ion a l 1 PR NEW YORK (UPI) -AUan- manq;er of GM. lie Richfield. BP on Corp. and First Phase of Airport "Fifty M 111 ion Dollar 3taf!. Clearance Sale" of new Dodge Kingman has been we1tern cars and trucks. regional PR managu for GM R. W. Wickes, executive vice t· The western regional office Humble Pipe Line Co. of ijie sez:ves. Southern Callfornla, Esso group . a n n o u n c e d Arizona, Utah and Southern Wednesday they will make Nevada. feasibility studies for an 800- mile 43-inch pipeline to bring • lndu~try Complex Ready : The first phase of con· 4 struction bu been completed :on the airport industrial com- $plex, a parlner&h.lp develoi; '. ment on lhe 1ry1ne Ranch. I! The complex' b being built by Don Koll Co., Inc. and : financed by Aetna Life & ;Casualty Insurance Co. I The announcement w a s , made by the building firm's : president, Donald M. Koll, and 'Coldwell, Banker & C o . , J Realtors, leasing agtnl for the 'development. J Located on a 25-acre site at ' lhe junction of MacArthur l Boulevard and Red H i 11 •Avenue. the development is planned in four slages with total completion in 1970. The ·complex will include 20 multi· t e n a n t buildings totall ing 330,000 square feet and pro- vide industrial spaet for ap-1 proximately 100 tenants. i Completed and ready for oc· • cupancy a r t mulU.tenant facilities o( 15,000 square feel. 18,000 square feet and 21,000 square feet. A 10,000 square foot office facility also has been completed and will be oc· cupied by the developer. Koll indicates the con· slruclion cosl for the first four buildings t ota lled ap- proximately $550,000. He in· dicates the industrial buildings v.•ill be occupied by clean manufacturing, warehousing and research flnns. Koll e s timate s ap- proximately 20 percent of the land occupied by the facilities is utilized in landscaping. Construction began in May on four more multi·tenant units with occupancy slated for October, 1969. Third and fourth stages of construction will each include six multi· tenant facilities and will be scheduled as market demand materializes. president of the d e a l e r s "i. association, sald the figure T k , w • f AJ rep.resented the •• 1,. or. th• a e I e OD ri entire Los Angeles region's e new Dodge car and truck in· ventory. Through a Dodge dealer trade bureau every dealer is literally selling out of a $50,000,000 inventory with the ~·idest possible selection. If a dealer needs a certain 4- door Polara for one of his cus- tomers and it isn't in his stock he may call the trade bureau to locate the car he needs. This type or cooperation should prove fruitlul during Dodge"s clean up campaign. RECORD PRODUCTION FOR OLDS.BUICK The nation's oldest au to ma· nufacturer, Oldsmobile, built a record 679,404 cars during 1969 model production \~hich has just concluded. This total exceeds last year's record production by over 31,000 units. Oldsn1obile w\!1 r eac h another production milestone Her Ex penses Deductible LOS ANGELES (AP) - Planning to take your wife along on your next business trlp? Her expenses, whether directly related to your work or not, may be tu deductibl e, a judge has ruled. It depends on whether you can reasonably claim that your wife, joining with you in social-business c o n t a c l s , enhances you r business image. That was the rul ing of U1e U.S. 9th Circuit Court of At>· peals recently in the case of Roy 0. Disney, head of Walt Disney Productions, vs. the Internal Revenue 'Service. Disney sought to dedu ct S:J,154.09 from his income tax. bills of 1962 and 1963. 'I'hc money went to pay his wife Edna 's expenses for travels abroad, he said. Although Mrs. Disney didn't attend any business meetings or perform any secretarial functions for her husband, she did arrange parties and make goodwill visit.. to people in the entertainment i n d u s t r y , Disney said. The Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a ruling by U.S. Dist. Court Judge Thurmon de Clarke in favor of Disney. In an opinion written by Judge Frederick G. Hamley and concurred in by th e two other judges on the panel, the coort said: ! ; Grape Growers in Trouble ''The critical inquiries are whether the dominant purpose of the trip wa s lo serve her husband's business purpose in making the trip and whether. she actually spent a substan- tial part or her time ifl assisting her husband in fulfilling that purpose. . crude oil from the ArtUc slope of Alaska to Uie Gull of Alaska for transport by tanker to market. WOOOBRIOGE. N.J . (UPI) -Curtlss-Wrlgbt Corp. bas obtained a $17.5 million con- tract from Boeina Co. of Seat· tie to make landing gear beam assembly for 1he 747 airliner. LOS ANGELES (UPl)-Fly- ing Tiger Line says It is uk· ing the Securities and Ex· change Commission to ap- prove formation of a holding COl'f1)8ny into which the air- line would be taken aa a su~ sidiary. BEVERLY HILLS (UPI) - First Charter Financlal Corp. announced that S. M a r k Taper, the association's preal· dent, and his family have withdrawn a proposed secon· dary offering of up to one mJllion shares of the associa- tioo'a stock because of un- favorable market conditions. WINTER PARK, Fla. (U PI) -Florida Gas Transmission Co. wlll cdnstruct a IS.mile pipeline to supply natural gu to the 27,400-acre Walt Dlmey Wonder World being built 15 miles south ol Orlando, Fla. ! • ' Depressed Pr ices, Union Boycott Hurt Small Farm s "It is true that. on these trips. most of Mrs. Dlsney's activities in helping her hus- band fulflll some of his purposes in making the trip were of a kind which lihe PHILADELPIDA (UPJ) - would normally engage in Scott Paper Co. has leased an while they were OOth at home. additional 39,000 acres of i The union maintains lhat its ~activities are not primarily , responsi ble for the long·term ' dUHculty of the 1maU growers ! but contends, rather, that grape shippers have been fore. ing such arowers into di.sad· • •• !e •• vantageous contracts. Federal mediators say they have been in touch with bolh sides and that ta lks could resume but they don't know when. There was iniUal pro- grtM. The union agreed IG stop boycotting growers who signed, 1narking boxes "union label" and as ki ng consumers to boycotl only unstamped boxes. They agreed , too, not to strike growers at crucial harvest periods. The growers agreed to hold elections to see w h e t h e r workers wanted the union, and tG consider hiri~ workers through union hiring halls. •low much support the union has Is one or the matters 11t issue. An aide of Chavez says the UFWOC has a year·rouod membership of 10,000 and that there were 17.000 membe rs during the peak of the 1968 harvest. But lhe arowers say U1e membership Is much lower, that the union does n111 have ijeneral su pport of lh• workers and lhat many non nion workers have remain' In the fields . The union, which has long said certain pesticide prac· !ices endanger both field \1·orkers and consumers. asked for a voice in which pesticides .should be used and how. TI1e growers would agree only lo comply with all la"·s. saying the government is the best judge of practices. They also argued the consumers would be "·ary of buying any grapes if they think union· sanctioned grapes are safe and others are not. Agreeing to union proposals. they said, 'll'ould amount to admitting that some growers produce contami nated grapes. After lhe talks cea~. "But the added factor here Umber lands for oil and gu is that the husband has, exploration to Humble OU & because of company policy, Reftrtlng Co. Scott has a 40 been pul to the addltlonal ex-percent mineral interest in the pensc of paying his wife's Jandl, which are ln Escambia travel expenses so that she County, Alabama. They are could assist tum in this way on near the newly discovered the road. . Flematon gas f.leld. "It is this dlsllncUon which ----':...------II accounts fM the fact that, under the clrcumstanc:es of this case, her travel etpemts are deductible as ordinary and necessary business upe:nses, ltlarket Sgmbols 'Whereas her Jiving eJ.pl!O~ ot If! 1l'lt '9ftoowlti " I II."' 90 _...la _. home are not." Nz:: = =-~· "'"""' •-1 te ... ~-ntr1... ... ~ ~-"::' ~ ~ ·~ti1::.: Well Drilled •;;<;·~---~..no ..... or n41 ., • .. .._ g. _, ~N· BEVERLY HJU.S (UPI) -' ' •1111~"...r.""'~ ': California Time Petroleum, =.i.-~~· M_ Inc., has brought In ' !Er~;; •• 1:.\1.,J.li.! discovery well in t h e :t;:~lM. .. := -ln Esperanu field In Orange ""'~"IL Who R eads the Stars For the Stars? • -···· • It's Sydney Omarr And now this articulate writer who has been called the "astrologer's astrologer" reads the stars for you. Sydney Omarr, longtime personal astrologe r to men~ of Hollywood 's and the literary world's mostfomousstors. is e DAILY PILOT column ist. Omarr's record for accuracy of predictions based on astrological analy sis is emezin9. Whether you reed estrologiul forecasts for fun or as e serious stuCfent of ster-qating, you'll enioy Sydney Omorr's doily column in the DAILY PILOT The tnlks broke oU Juh after two weeks bcc11use or unexpected snag: the issuC' pesticidf;S. Steinberg held secret talks v.ith the lllllon and agrtement "'llS reached on all issues but ·\·ai:ie!\. He offered $1.75 an ?Ur plus 25 ctnts a box plus 1 cents in fringe beneflt.1 10 '? pa id to the union, The uni on •manded $2 en hour plus 25 •nl~ and JO ctnl'i. Current ages vary. starting at $1.&$ .. n hour, the legal minimum. County, C41Uomia. Jt flowed ~ ...... J..b ~ M1t-•• at a rate Of 122 barrels a day 1111111r111u11M. -.a. rtfhlll. .-w"'-' of 27 degree gravity on In a ~i:~ ~~ 300-!ool area at a depth of -'!.tn.. llNlir "-1a ,...,..,er. • about 2,000 feet. "-ccw,_· ... "-.'' 11 ~·--~_-_.w.._~"-'M"'-~=N="•"'"--•---------------------' I I • . ' . •' . f. I ! I ! .. _, ., I DAILY PILOT Monday, July 28, 1%t -- .AMONG TH.E '" I ' '/ GREAT ONES ' .. Here, among some of the great newspapers of the world, is an old friend. The DAILY PILOT looks as much at home on this international newspaper rack as it does at the front door of thousands of 0 range Coast area homes where it is dropped daily. That should tell you something . It should tell yo.u that a "home- town newspaper" can be sophisticated and still not lose touch with what's hap- pening at city hall. Whether it's news from around the w or Id or down the block, the DAILY PILOT packages it best for you . And the simple fact is that, · because the DAILY PILOT emphasizes local coverage, you'll find a lot of stories in it you can't find in any other newspaper in the world. On this international news rack, it's among the great ones of the world. But at home, it's the great- est one in the world (for local news). • '• • DAILY PILOT .. I ' ,, • • • I f I OAJlY PILOT Mond.ly, July 211, 196t ;. --San Diego Su1n1ner Regatta MOTIC• 1NYIT1Mt •lot LEGAL NOTlCE LEGAL NOTICE · Harbor Boats .Win Top ~a~rel·~ T....a ltOTICI! II Ml!lt l •Y OIV[t-.. o~N c:,mTt.~r::.._IA ..,._ '"-ll tnf.t OCllAH VIEW ICHOOl T•ICT ti MOTIC:I t•v1ltff ''" MOTICI TO CllDITOlli Ofl auuc °'"'• COliRht, C:.lltwlllll. w ... T•IUH,-u ltt.,_.,. lb 10Wenilnl ~ NIMfW eel ~~I .:r.;•,:c:t'.,.E':, ~ ':~ ca.. tit! -'1W U.C.C.J rtlrff'lll te u lllf Ol1trlc'l1 •• 1;,111 .. "'°'-tw • ot Collt Ai\$ II .... otlQ of 11'11 (.11¥ Nlltlet .. lllft.er tlwft .. 1'lt Crtflt ...... Ill """ llOll ltMr tt.tll I - CliH'k It 1111 Cll'( w.n n F•lr Or• " THOMAI IT•.U... Tr.....,.... ...... "" ... -........ ,,.,, ........... c.~ ....,,,., .C•lt'-"11, 'unnt tM ._ ot .......... HI,_ " Mn W, C.O..t .., 1111 ...,.,., fl • .,.Kt tor fWl'lltMN ll:tf .,,.,., 41" Molldlo\', M111111 4, lMt, It :::::-· ~ IMdl. C ....... <II IM ... ...,._If_,...,. tor ttlr .. Ill .. Harbor Are1 slt_lppers brou1ht home a goodlJ aha~ ol the hardware from the SCYA·PCYA S um mtr Regatta held to San Diego Fri· day, Sal•nll>' •nd Sunday. Local winners were Roger Welsh's Whlt.e Torn a do, Voyagers YC lft the lnlema- 1!!~· ".','1-14&; Bob Keuenhofen or ~Balboa Yacbt Club in the ~'Finns ; Chad TwkheU or BYC -in the Li~J4AI ; C:Olby Smith, , BYC, in Skimmen; Nina ..,. Nielsen. Newport 1{ arb o r ''7°Yacht Club in Junior Sabot A: '" Ken Brown, NHYC, junior ., Sabot B: Goldie Joseph, LIYC [ , In PCCs. Forty.four classes totalling --374 yachts showed up on the • starting lines of five San Diego ~~"·ya-Jlt clubs which cooperated I -In st.aging the midsummer -..event. ) • ~ The relatively li&ht turnout '"1 was attributed to the fact that "# many yacht! which \YOUld ;:)lave ordinarily participated were in the Honolulu race. The a; Transpac also takes many ~crewmen out of actlan who + "''\would ordinarily appear in local regattas as skippers. .JJ. Light winds prevailed for o..11 1 lhree days, but this didn't pre- '..-a...vent a number of collisions - ---at least one of which was • 0.Uscrious. A Columbia-!9 had a -·large hole stove in her bow when she was hit by a Dragon. The crew wrapped s a i I s around the fractured hull and t :,,., ioade it back to port without .. ) linking. ;.· San Diego had 41 e.nlrles in ..:, ·nine classes; Coronado YC 65 I in six classes: Mission Bay YC --167 in 16 claue!; Silvergate I. , YC 65 in seven classes and • .,._Southwestern YC 36 in sis. 1 classes. • Following are trophy wio- •,":,::>.Pers in all cluses: -Cot'91lldo Yacht Oub -~· SNIPE (10) -(l) Flower 9'01>ower, Dave Pele r s on , -~IBYC; (1) No name, Jerry "Thompson, ABYC; (3) Yellow "•'Bird, Dave Timmer, St. BYC; ~~ (4) Rampage, Dan GoodWin, , ;·~~~T (17) (I ) El 1 ~·:Tiburon, Pat Garrik.er, Ariz. .. YC; 12) Turtle, Bob Saker, ,: CBYC; (3) Turllih Delighl, l•.<! Alex Tschaikowski, MYC; (4 ) .,._ Sun DevU. Rick Clrriker, , .... •' OUT IN FORCE -The 27·foot Soling, new Olympic class sailing sloop, turned out in force for the South- ern California Yachting As$ociatin Summer Re- AYC; (S) No name, Tomas Omolumdro, BCYC. INT.~14 (14) -(I) While To r n a d o, Roger Welsh, NHYC; (2) Zumba, Peter Gales, BYC ; (3) Varuna, Dick Hendrickson, MBYC; (4) Jack Wills, SSSC. LIGHTNING (4) -(I) Now or Never, Fred Knau e r , MBYC; (2) Nameless Terror, Myron C. Lyon, MBYC; (3> Mayday, Monte Ke 11 e y , MBYC. FLYING DUTCHMAN 131 -(I) Blue Mis&ile, Tim Bentley, MBYC; (2) Binky Ill , Bob Shanner, MBVC; (3) Vor, F. H. Tilock, MBYC • f -, 'FINN 03) -(l) No. 11~ Sob Kettenhofen, BYC_: (2J No. 184, Bw: Boe tch er , Lahaina YC; (3) TNT, Ton1 D ia m o nd , MBYC; 14 ) Lultmeister, Fred' 1Mtller J r., sssc. Mlsalon Bay Ylcht Club Y-FLYER (3) -1'(1) Dippity Do, Harry McK~ y,.Jr., SOYC; (1) Wa~~r . II, Frank Towle. BCYC: "(3) No. 2105, Harold Jones, .PVSA. LI D0-14A (18) -(1) Litlle Twitch. Chad Twi~ll, BYC; (2) Wood Wind, Hl rry \Yood, ABYC: (3) One For 'Ille Road, J im Tyler, BYC; (4) Viva, Frank Marshall, ABYC; (5) • irbldl ti1M "*' wUI Ill ...,.. ~ It•• <II Cflllfw'lt!le. thet I Oiulk tdloo .. i lo'ld ,..,, lldl.ltll ... 11\t COllMll tlullPllllll'I =: ... .._, lf ... _. tll SHlltLIY PAalC Vl.W K"°°'--llte N .. ,,, for fiJllNllHIHG ALL LA I 0 ll , I .,.!, ~ M.Alil4 CH. 11 T IN A 1 .... TINlltlll ~ Hi#ltlnltllfl hid! MATflltl.ftL S, EQUIPMlrNT. IPllO... ,....,.._ .._. Mlrltw MEM YIN ICMOOC.. Sift Nt, -TflANSl"OlltTATtOH AHO WCH OTH!t ~ .. .,.. Mflft $1., """"""'°" htctl,. lUOI A-1111 LIM, H(M! ... Nll a..ctl FAOLITfES AS MAY BE •EQVIREO ~t'I' Ill Ol"t11t9. llttt 'ff ~f'orllll. VtnA VllW ICltOOL .lltt-Mo. lft, l"Olt TME Re SUll.FACIHG A N 0 •' ~ '° illll lftlll"1 Ill ttMtll Id MicMW'r ltrwt, Ftwtttlfl \11119\' ~t'C*STllUC"TION 01" CITY ITlltlTI. • An diet: IA ....... fbctMe. ............. ludo ... WI M ,,_..,.. Ill IM Eitf 91 ~ ..... Ile.II-an11 ttlllr ¥111 .... 'Mii el Mt ....,._. """ ~...,._-Olfic. -' "" Ol1lfld at 'rw:t *"<ilrMn" -" i.. llll&lf!H 11 tMlniil ~~ ., NllWt"O•T an mt W1r111r AWl!W. '"""*"to.. ltKtt, ~ ..... Cllv , .. rt..,, l'lllr Orhlt. COl,~U••• w ' ~ ..... , W..t Cl'""~· ....t;"J~ ..... •"'111 _. Mtt1 C.lltvrilla. -I .... It 91 QMI HWIWev N t '""'-~ Mlktt lffM ..... et ' .... tlltlill MS.• A""'" f1I 11.0ll wllt 11t ~ " of~ u.f. :'r.'uflrrlr.. 1~TtNT~~~llOJICT I _, • t. rtilt ~ bl' 11\1111. l'LIEASI MAIL Tht llulll: 1r1M1w wlll 11t CMlllNT\ltfll · ~ 1 li!PA".t:TI Clt(CIC.l. M w .ttw ......... '9Y Ill....,_ '""' 11 W'4Kl _,.,,.. ._ U~ tf """ lid! lllf 111111 lit IMOs lfl llW _, 10:• AM.. at lllO~llAL at1toW 1Nc II• IC.,.,.,,.., ~. Ntl ir .... f.iM Mf lft tllf --r PRVldld 19 IN n Or ~= A I ' , ·• l(lloolt: • -tr.ct cNl:\llM!lh. ll'ICI .... ,,.. ~-CNltY: "si.t....._ C.l=IL .... Al .. ,._. V!ft, !CWNl!tl°f' "'*' e-~ °' I certllled ., c.Mllllen :M f• " u.-.. "" T,.,,...._ I H ~I. "" ~ Ullllllnl ' Klit-(Mdl _, I Md bond for not ... #Woll l°"' _..... MIMI a ......._ ......, b<f ,,,. ..,..,... (....,...... 10 '' t 11 I I, "' ... _, .. "" 1110. ""'°' M.1.... ... tr.,.,.,.. for "" """* --tMt '"" c...,_., kltllol. K. fll • "" I k I II • 1M Cito, .. C0.'9 Mth. ltl; ~llllltnllft lll'M· Liw.,.., Music. JllOTICe IS FU~THER GfVllil ..,., 'lit .... ''"'""IClf· ' mum.wt ,.,.lrlltllonlj CllY ~I of Slid Clh' llm '*....,._ $11,.,. l tie.,_ -. W ~l'Y .,..,, In -11t'6111Mo111 ~ui.... rt• ft taJe 91 Tr_tw.. twdMln wlll .. ,...,.. •11 • ....., Ill _...II« Wltlt llw, •.be •kl Mlrle c. ••-,-_ ,_ ,.-..,"' -"":':i1~ • ""' ~ "' .,., .... ....... Tl"_,_,. ·-. , .. ,., ........ ,-.. Tl'llt •lllll r•te~"llfl ttMll llWllllM Cit"•-c..1 Dtllf' Plltf, IN ._11111 OU• ~ ,-_ 0 1:''1! ;: -...... by tfM Cltr •. .,. J..,,., .. "" , •• llfl'I ~ pr 11:.ollllioto lile. tNt lfl tht 1 41Y tf • 4 IM. """' Utt. l llfif la ... ""' ... ""' otflc:9 .. I l:'I'.. NOTlCE ..... Miii VM!ir, (~ ~ tlfl-11'11 °"" Cltftl "Mkl CllY. fhll MN''"' .o,,.c;un..i., ~· .. ~.._.r .. t Kin-.,., -II la M"lrt rrftfnd te 1t11f ........... 10 •I I I I Ir ........, Ill lfilt Mttei as """""' ft.II"' .W U.• l&l:I eittt'"41 .. okllllc$. .0'1"' I 111 I JI I 11', -i.tllr Ml tortfi .Mrlfn. Mil the! Mio NOTtca Ofl TitutTll'I SA&.e AM)lflllltl'lthtrt .... --··\JW•r'I'· M"'*'- K.111, U adap!ICI 11¥ Mid It~ }I ~ .... .... ~ f ........ i,.tn,Ktiwlll '"'°" 1 JN/1 If rhlt llftlcl 11¥ rtflrlftOI. On MMJfrr, ....,.... ., lttt, ti 11:00 ,,..., .2 r; M,•c........., alMI ov\l:lldl1...,. J The Confl'tdw dwlll. In tlll .\.M,, T.O. S(llVIClf CCIMPAN'I'. 1 '*"' .,.._ . ..,. tce91'"""11 ... ..._ Pllllt 1NI jlerlonM~ of "" Mrt ..... -ICll'llllfl • dlltY ...,.,... T""'" ~ S..Clf"9"'"9 ~ _pr.,...-ltd w -ll!llPtt. ahfonll II' 1119 Labor Codi 11W -...Of te o.H .. Tnnt ...,.. """*" ailill ~ A~IK!s. 1nd -'11 tt1t Stitt-of C1Ufort'lll Md ortier llwt OCtober I, 1-. .._..... 11y GNrM w. OQllOll Ykow .kMof Dlt"1d 11W anv Ad-i/I Thi Stlf1 'Ill C.iltornl1 -llclbll '"*1'"""9 11M Slllrtrr ,......,.,... ......,.,_ dlNll ffllrtt. _.,.. ,,_ to A119ual .. """"' Wl"1 !ht t•cnitlon ontr Ill tUd'I end w"' " hint "'*"' .,. ,_..... INf. v1n.tlant •• 1N¥ bt reci.;lreod llrldlr tlll Oelobtr 16. JMI, .. IN!r. No. 11.._ tn Al .. VW. vttw .. (oiw.truciloll WI" .-111 tt1tutn iwwen1 lo wlllch -booll: l7S4. ...., m. et otflClel ._. lrt t:lllf Ill 1'9NlrW..'"° I P11011lll1), rl'llt ct«ll._. """4.lftder 1r1 !Hell Md whkll !tie Dfl'k.I " ltM C:.U""' R--.r d tdlool -IOlnl I ~in..tnrfln C .. IJroont. ,...... not bMJI • ..,..,MOM aw IM pr. Of"-'°""""' c.~ WILL SELL It ti!tllll' clll.l,.....L 'c I. II c I • v .. IDns '11 rl'll LltlDf' Codi. 'f9ttrt11C1 lo AT f'UILIC AUCTION TO HIGHEST ~!flt, Mn'l'rlllr9tl-• 1re1, In 1c-lllbor .i..11 bl 91....,. onl\' 111 ftlit IMMlr llODIE'll l"Ofl CAIH fNv.bll 11 tln'\I tf Qlr'Nftet W(lh mt ~lln1 1 n d pnwklfd by l1w. .. .. In i.owM -V el !tie Unit.Id tl11ts1 Sl«lflc.t!lllN rl'llf9fot'I 11r.,1rff by Lff The Contractor WU llM onlY wn-.t 1111 (&ilutllJ, front enlrtllU to !tit -I. KllM. Ard'llt.ct, lrld 1119 Oc1111 Vllw IN~td m1t.rl1ll 1roclllCld lft tht fv ~. 20I llock Wat Sbltll St'-1 Olflrlct 1114 811\' All*nd1 lhtr•to Unltllcl Stt1M 111d Ofl~ 111-11*1'~ I"°"' Sanl1 AM, C.llf«'llll 111 ri.ht. ti-IMllllll '°"' te A ...... it. INt. ""ttr'leb 111lllllllaclul'ld In Thi Unrtod Ill lnlll lllllrlll Ctll.,..,H te ll'ICI -Mid AU ~ 111111 M mMll "" 1 bid t&m1 lll!ft, ~i.ntllll\' 111 frtm l'IWltltllls W 1t uncllr .. Id a.. Ill Tnnt Ill ·"" -fumllhlll by f11t Dlltrlct, Tiit form 111111 ,...uud in -.. Unlte+I Sltlft. Ill IN lllrtY •ltueW,ln ulf C-ty Incl Slit. R _,.,.....ltd _,, 1 ctrllntd M llff'armll'ICI of Ille oantrkt. , llacrllllld M : cllhllr'I dltd! °" ttkl lll8o'ld tw $ •erc•llf Ht bid JMll bl CDMMllrllf un...._ n 11 Lit 1, Trld U07, .. -in-._.. "Ille_,.,., 11 IM·llW,,,.... N11b .. to rllldl ... I bltink for111 ,,,,....,,... l:tt ""' Id .... look 11. -IS, MJICllll-"-•rdtr ., f1M1 ~ Vl•w kheol Clly "' CO.II MeM. 111fif Is IMOs Ill ~ M-. ,_. .. Mid Of" ...... ""'""'· Oi.trkl .. Or--'-IY Celllorfl ... corclenal wltft the -1111111 of !tie '~ 111111 Mii WIM M -·· .,.,. wJt!IGVI Eldl Md 111utt c.tMornl Ind M _., l'MUI'-"'· COV9llMt Ill" w1rr1ftl\', ""'"*' .,. lrnloBld, _.... te Ille contrKt docu....nlfo Elc;ft bld.ar lllW .. ~ Mid ·-..... nllN ""'· --., -ciwltt of wllktl .,.. -... flit In "" -'· Pf"'Clu.llfltd •t ,,_Ired by .. w. ambt...as, to ...., rl'le rtrr11Tnl111 .,. .. flee of 1111 Stitt AMI 14.11.,.,.. "'°nllnakw, Tiit Ctflr Council of 11\1 CllV Of C°'ll dNI .um el the l'IOf9 _........ W .... GcM11 Y1tw Sc!-4 Olltmt. 1"12 W1rM1' ,,,._. ..._ l"9 rlllll • nl«t "'' ., D9ld " Tn.iet, tr.wit: u.nui, Wllll I• A-. """'"""°" lfto. C1ntorn11, '"" 1U blch... ""'" 11'.m .,.__. J, IHI. • lft 1111Y 1111 ollt11111d bl' ftpot tll119 T'11 01tltd ~ Jut• 2L lMf. Mid Mte .,.,!did, ...... --. It 1nor, 001i.or1 (tltMI for~ .. 1. This d-11 8Y CMIDEll. OF THI! undtr ""' """' of Mid ~ ., Tnnt, wm .. ,..,.,........ II 1111-4Dcurntft!I II' gatta at San Diego. Over-eager starting maneuvers as shown above, caused the class to be recalled twice Sunday before getting an even start. CITY COUNCIL OF THI! '°"' m.,_ Ind -If fllt Tl'VllM ntuntlld In toOd UOWl!loll wlllll~ ton 116t CITY Of" C.OITt. MESA. llld el tM fnnll ~ 9J MW .,.-U.,.. atter l"9 Md -l'lfrtl . C.1.LIFOltNIA ot Tr11Jt. TM Ol1trl(r -!tit '1:thl II rtlKf C. K. ,lllll'T, CITY Cl.l!JlK Ttlt blnlflcl..-, ....,,..,. Mid OM f11 ln'I' « 111 bkll It" to Wl"'9 1nv Ir· OF TttE CtTY OF C()JTA Ml!s.A. T.,.t, bl' r-If 1 br.odl f/!f' .,tun i. ""'"rtttn _, lnfemMllm. In lflY 1>1111 or CALIFORNIA ""' ollllption. llCUl'l'll 1ri1 r 1 It\' , Ill 11>1 bllkll,.._ p,...,._ Wiii Ill 11\aft In Pheemers, Merlin Gayman, ABYC . Llf)().l4B (13) -fl) No. 681 , Jack Pie~. MBYC; (2) Fang, Dan Stoughton, BYC; (3) What ii, William Hunriclls. MBYC ; (4) Oum Dum, Hal Brown, MBYC. SKIMMER (4) ( l ) Gbinook:, Colby Smith, BYC; (2) No. Jl8, William Movioos , MBYC; (3) Flea Forth, Barney Warner, MBYC. CORONAIJ0.15 (17) -(l) Shillelagh. Battie Pu r c e 11 , Ariz. YC; (2) Duz, Warren Moers, MBYC; (3) Sharock, John' Thomas, MBYC; (I) Tortuga Tardofl, R o be r t Martin Jr., nularis 1111 MBYC. PllblflhM Orll\tll COlll 0.11\' Pllol, IM1'111'11wt fHClllOd 111d dllf'ltrtd tf f11t Iii. IWlnl IOt' C..lllOfllll-fPlldt ....,..11.,, J.;!y 2S, :rt. Ifft 1l1Mt ~ I wrllttft Dtc:t1r1"'" of ""~UI"' It Sictkltw .at II m., lntluJtvl, 1-------------IDlf•IJ!f lfllf Dlmtlld for ..... .,,,,, wrllttft Govlfl'Wllltll Codol. MBYC (') An notkt ot brlldl .,,,, "' ....... ,,. -TIMI Olttrld 1111 dttlrllll,,.., 11111! ltM•ll ; " • LEGAL NQ'I1CE the undlrslt r.d to •H .. Id _,,,, ti iatl"f•lllrt1 r1t. IOt -~ w1.a. In 11>1 Richard Jjauser. utlst)" uld •111111e111, .,,,, 11>1rwft1r,"' 1ocenw 111 wrilell t1111 "'°" 11 to .,. CITT o,-COSTA Ml!.IA AllrH 1, lNf. !tie llrldlnl91'1N ulolMlll Mid llrfor!Mtf fir tldl crl'll er l'l'PI If OAANDl COUMTT CALl,.OllUUA notice .. brudl 111d IOt tltdlon ~ k -110Nfl llHdttl to ••tclrlt ltlt contrtct. NATIONAL ONE-DESIGN NDTIC• tNV1T1tt0 a1os ~ In '-M mt. Hfl •11. of 11ld ~ wm bt ,._,.... " "* 1u<cftllul · • V E I Ol'llcl1I llCOrGt. bl-•, to IM •1 followa: (10) -(1) Joynde II Charles NOTICE IS Hli El GIY N lllllf -. .. •• ' •• '"' CAR'" UYI• 111/ff '''"' • 111 11-11 wm bt rtetl'rH 11'1' lht Cft.I • u • Warnock MBVC· (1) Lemon of Cott• Mtll ,, ,,.. offlc• o1 thl' c~ T. o. SEltVICE COM,ANY '''"'·,•,•~,""• '' •• ''·'' ' ' H ti n F I Ortw .. 11Jcl T""fle' • SOii It l'l't• -Twist Bill Crane ABYC· (3) c1er11; 11 1111 citv ' • 1 • • e w 1c1ot 1t 1-1 ....,_!let T•11n1,.. .011 .ou GMBraYyc' Ghost, ~rge Gray,~~ ·~:~~l;~~ $k~ pu:#~~;;,i:•n.:!:_~ ~:! w•"•,. ' :~i :: • ind< l'fl'd •loud 111 1111 couMfl wmi.ri com ""' • • ........ ..., ' 1ht ti • dllm ,.,,. h 1 HOB1E CAT (I) -(l) sea tor FUll:N•~ING ALL I.A. 0 It. l11dl. Cllffornll, Jul\' 14, 21. ,., .... r .. .... '"'"" e1c 0 MATEll:1ALI EQUIPME NT IHt lllMt , ... "'''-clu1111ett10l'\I el -·k W H SleJgh, Joe Neali:, SDYC; (2) TRANsP01tTAT1oN AND sucH OTl'll!'lli "":' ~ ... ~ '::!~ .. ':uri:ltd';i~1~~~ No name Jim Oberg SDYC · ,..-.c1L111Es As MAY '"' 1tEou111•0 LEGAL NOTICE 111 •ittit 111 1w:111,,. ..,.11 ~11iu1, • • • • FO~ THE PATCHING ANO &EAL d ·._ _.. 11 R I .,,...., toed t I (3) No name, F.<I Malone, COATING'()'p: CITY ITRll!'TI. ,-Md .:::.,, -'-:'.. """~ 11;:.. nn:..": PttBYC A RI of tllnl. SPKlllCllS-Ind other ClllTll"tCATE o~ IU'llMltl tltht II) lltllri Mr ,,1 1111 tt• 111.,.. · OOlllnld Oocu..-h 1111'1' M Cltll1lned 11 •ICTlflOUS lllAMI" _,.. ahl ll M dlfmld t. 119 tt11! 1r1dlon FLYING JUNIOR (3) -(1) Ille olfkl GI 9111' Clfv ct.ril.11 l"•lr 0r1w. Tlil Ufllllnlt'*' .,. Cl#1IV tlll'I' ,,. e1 11i1 -•1tr11..,_.11w11n nl•btMM G · •· Bill u -Cost• MIM, Clllfoml1, ~ • .--11 91 cmnduclll'lll 1 bus..... 1t OI £. 11"1 11111 1111 ftlllllbtr 111 Muri 'Ill 1m111avmtnl avtoLO , •••an n 1 n g er, su.•. " ~, .. 111 11.00 win bt ~ 11 strwt. c.11 "'""' C..lffwll11, .,..., "" Min"" ,..,.1 111 111vn LA YC; (2) WindfloWer Dave "'"'11"' b7 ""n. PLUSI! MAIL fkl tlltw 11"" -" KOTTll!S Md ~ .,,.11 bit .. it ,, "'' t111 fit Hod ABYC . ' . SE,A.,.TE ~HECKS. "'-f Mid flnt1 11 CMlllOMd 111 t1!1 fol-. .,...,, ....... h u.tt 111¥91¥1'11 fol' wo11t ges, ; (3) Big Stiel. Eld! ltld 111111 lit 1111dt • ""-1 lllt --..,_ 1111,,_ In tuN •N --"*' 111 ,_, .i "" rttul.lr div'• Rick Flamson BYC lorn! lo'ld lft the .....,_ 1t0¥1ded 111 "' •llcll. ., ,..ldlr!CI .,.. •• ~: --. wlltk'• work. w "" ilturt1v1. SU• • • '*'~ Oocl.lrnWlh. •NI 111111 .. -PltlSTOH ... scon. 1-.S .. ,. litn •NI llotldln. c:Cft\l'Mlld br • e1rtttltd ..-calll""• 11Nloll oriw. ~ • 1 •ch , 11 wn i.. ,,,..,.,'°"' won ""' ,_ j:l'llO. " • bill bDnd "" no! 1tt1 thin 1.. C1llforltl1. tr1c1tr te """°"' 1 C!Ofllr1d is ,,~Goose Holds ~~ Slight Lead -: In SF Races Yachtbag Vet Speaks Out ot 1J11_,,,elthetlkl.111111111v1111e f1I EAJl.LEN! .. SCOTT, I_, Sl\ll" IWlnlold, and -1n oubcotllr.c:!Wro Y h U ' lhl Ctty II C1111 ~-rllllfon °'""'-~ I 1 I c II, undlr hllll ,. ~ ...,, .... fll•fl .. 1d ac t mon NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN 11111 IN Ctlltollll. -•I .;....,llltil r1lt1 If nr dJetTt • Clfit Councll If wld Cltv 1111 l'll"'tafclr9 OttM J11 ... 1, 1'Mt ...._ '9 111 ~n -joyed 111 11>1 l!JlrtlbllllMod • ,,....,111.,. r111 end Kilt ol Pr..._. •· Satl uecvtllfl l'I "" -!rid. Transpac Dispute Growing Wiit$, In fCCCll"dllltll wltll ""'· .. bl Plld E•rlWll •. Scott C1llfcttvl itltltllllllnt ...... _.. -in tt>e COMITV!;tlon of 11>1 •boYI ontlllld lltllAf Clllforllla .-llcAlllle .. '"" of 1111 ••rt1c1tl.lr trtlltl "\, f!No'°""""'h.. Thi! ulll r1t1 •nd loelll Ot-1"" CwnlY: Nllttno • PtMlrl'I .,.. w1lt1r1 '"'' '°"""" ill' 1111' Cllv COUMll by Oii Jlolho 1, lHf, ............ I Noll,., -~. tr111111fftollM 1nll 1r1wi Rttdutlon No. ~ on 1111 1"11 dW OI Pllbtlc: lft Mid for Mld Shlle, ,.,.,,._llv 111111, .... II .. !Mlvdtt 1rt rtil1 blcl. Thi Mn. lHf, Ind' II on Ille Ill rl'lt ~of ffHlnd l'll•ITON &. SCOTT tlld Corttrldof" 111111 k-hllftMlf tntormfll 11 1111 Cl~ Cltrk of !lie Mid CllY. TIMI Mid EARLl:NI! a. SCOTT·-tll ll"lt le 1111 le inor Che,.._ In rl'lt 1bt¥t w111 riffl. ••'-1nd 1oe1i. la hl'r91n rwt1rm to 1!od 1111 --,,,..._ ""'* lf'I tlllllc:11blil Mtlll! 1n11 wt1f1r1, 1ultt ltl 1n c~. ~ In rl'llS noflct .. ''*"" tuti, 11111 le 11\1 W11111ft lnllnllnltlt ..... .0 ..... tr-llfloll Inf Ir-I rtln Ind dwllf Race Set For July 31 " SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -If ~it can solve San Francisro ~-.,"Bay's tricky currents, the :"'' Seattle sloop Goose should " capture a challenge series : 't over an Australi an boat, says t;; the Goose's skipper. , -The Goose, from Seattle's Corinthian Yacht Club, goes ~-;..•into the sixth race today wit"ti ..,..._"a 3-2 edge in the best-of.seven .. r•series over a 12.9-mite course. .,.. :.. The Toogooloowoo IV of ~':Sydney's Royal Prince Alfred f Yacht Club won Surn:!ay·s race 1"' by 31/i:-minutes as the Goose • got caught by an incoming :!!Ude, pushing It backwards. :~ At one point, said the • Goose's skipper, Br ian •1rWertheimer . his boat was ; : _"heading toward 0 a k I a n d i , faster than we y,•ere going to !:\:the Golden Gale Bridge,'' and 1 •r the finish line. '. 1i.v. The mistake occurred. he ""·· sald when he decided to go in ~ , loward shore instead of follow- •· ~ ing the Aussie boat out 1 "towards the center of the bay, • •· after rounding a buoy. The Aussie got off from the marting li ne first and led an ! the way in light six-knot ,winds. ,, ' . • ... ; •t ' ' •• .. ;... ~·-; ... ... ' .. ' • ' I-' i· , r; ' .. Peter Ficker, veteran sailor, race committee chalrman and staff commodore of Balboa •. Yac.ht Club jumped ioto the controversy over the penalty of Windward Passage with both feet Sunday. Windward Passage w a s penalized two hours on elapsed time on a protest by the yacht Esprit claiming contact of the two yachts at the start of the race July 4. Ficker called the whole ar- fall' •·outrageous·• and called on Bob Johnson, owner-skipper of Wind\olo·ard Passage, to counler-protest Esprit r o r what Ficker called h e r unseamanlike manner of car- rying her man-overboard safe- ty poles protruding over the stern. "Johnson owes it to yachting to file a counter protest against Esprit." Ficker said . "On a crowded starting tin" skippers are on the lookout for other boats, but in the he.al of starling cannot be expected to see gear protruding out over the hull. If this sort or thing is allowed, the nexl thing we'll hear is that someone is car- rying a spare boom lashed across the bow and sticking ~;CUP DEFENDERS -Andy Rose and his Balboa :DI'' Yacht Club crew cross the finish Jine in one of nine ·r races In the Governor's Cu p match race series, !.L.. BYC defended the cup with a record of nine wins ! #and oo la&ses. The series was saiJed In CaJ-25s. • ,_ • out on each side of the hull," Ficker continued . "Carrying poles In the man- ner of the Esprit is not only unseaman like but is an in- vita tion lo a foul by an unsuspecting s k i p p e r of another boat:• he added. Ficker also said lhe penalty of two hours assessed against South Wins From North The South rose again Satur- day and Sunday w he n Southland Rhodes-33 sailors outmaneuvered their rivals from San Francisco Bay in the annual North-South Te am Ilace. The regatta was sailed out of Balboa Yacht Club. The sailors from the south scored 151'z points on the reverse scoring s y s t e m aga1nsL 26 for the northerners. Skippers from lhe south v.•ere Blair Barnett. Gayle Post, f\1aurice \Valsh, Bill Taylor and Paul Marx. from BYC. The norlh team was com- posed of Jim Lucas, Tom McCarthy, Ted f\.1cCarthv and Hans Winkler. Windward Passage's elapsed time was wrong, adding that ''Johnson should not accept it." The penalty against elapsed time -rather than handicap time -cost Wi n dw a rd Passage the honor of being first lo finish wilh a new elapsed time record. The trophy for first to finish and the new record went to Ken DeMeuse's Blacklin of San Francisco . Licensed yachtsmen from San Diego to Newport and Los Angeles are investigaling lhe possibility ef a p p e a 11 i n g \Vindward Passage's penalty to the North American Yacht Racing Union, the highest U.S. authority on yacht racing rules. Danish Strike To lialt Power? COPEN HAGEN (UPI) - More than two million Danes wi ll be withou t any electricity the night ol Aug. 31 unless the government intervenes in a strike of engineers at two power stations. Negotiations between lhe Engineers Union and the em ployers association broke down on the engineers demand for higher wages, aim111t1tlv Ml torttl lllr11"' •nll !hit Mid ldMd fllf'f llllClllM" 1111 -. lflCkldl 1rw rnc,.ltll In l!la bid. , . 1c11t1 M 1doplfd by &11ld RHO!ulloll, II IOF,.ICIAL SEAl) Jrtt ·~ 111o1v wllidrlW !!Is bkl tor 1 E18hteenth annual cruise of "'°a•"".,, 1'1111 ncrtln! ttv •fl•rlftf;•. MAUii.ETTi!' IHAW 1 "''°" 91 fartv-11.,. ~.,, d•Y• ,111r th• "· y b Ra In . f Thi ContrlClor tl'llll, 1n 1111 Pl!"lom!lllCI Not1rr Pulltto-C1!lfoomll 111._ Ml for the -!lit of bids "'"' ac t c g Uruon 0 ol Ille wort. •nll lmlll'OVtmtnb. conlorm Prlncl••• Ol'fkt lit OCEAN Vli!WSCHOOL.C11111'1 CT '-·th Calif · "·· "--to lhl L•bor Codi: GI "" s1111 ol o~•-Countv It J Sllllftr I. 'IN" em onua u= ua:-n c1111orn11 •nd oll\er """ ., 1111 s11tt o1 Mr c-n1 .. 1o11 1irt1,.. cierti 01 111e • • h d led f J I Jl A J (1lllornl1 •Ptolklblt llt~rtto, wlrl'I lhl ••· Mer(I! 14. lt71 Gt¥l,,.,lnl llelrd SC e U Or U Y , ug. , e.r>tlon onlv 01 1uU. ¥1r1111ons •• ,.,.., t11 Puectltl"!ed or1n11 Cttat 01i1v Pllql, Ocean vi-scr-t Olttrkt 2, 3. r~ulrfCI um!•• trit wte!ll 111tu!M .IUI• '• 14, 71, 21, '"' I*" O!"ll'IH Counti, C..lltomli . 1>ursu•nt Ill wl!Jcll proceellll'll!1 hlr~r ~'""' OrillOI lco.111 OlllY ,.lfot, The four-day race cruise Is ''' in... '"" whkh h•"• not been LEGAL NOTlCE JulY 211 1r111 AlllVlt • '"' ,,,,_.. l. . 1..-rstded tw tM p,,,.,t1lon1 ot 11111 l1toor I ---,~:;:::;-;:;::::;,..---J---;-;;~;;-"i;;;;;;;;;;---1m1ted to yacht clubs of the c~. Prtltrtne• ta 11tior 1h11! 11t 11'1en1• YRU which are propeny own-""tv In""' m1nner P•0¥10ed ttv 11w. NOTICE OJI 1NTl"NT TO LEGAL {fOTICE . The t011lr1dw \/1•11 UM only un-MAICI! IULIC TltANS,.l!lt =:1 ing clubs or those operating m1nut•t1u•td 11111tr111, produc:fll !n 1111 (Allt CtMt. A Slcwltv 111tor .. t1 ~· lac.i/ities on leased land Un!tfd Sl•IH .. ,., """' m1nu!Kl1t•ld NOllOI Is ntrlbY •l~n. ll>UfWlnt le SK-ClllTIPICATI: 01" IUSINl:SS · 1Ml1'rl.o.l1 m1nutacl1H"r<I 111 llw Unlllll lie~ If 1t11 U~lflntt ~rdld CeM 11 ,-ICTITKM.IS NAME YR U clubs are Alamitos s111u. subol1n11•ltv 111 ''"" m11,r1111 -Stt11 e1 c1t11orr111, 11111 !ht .,,.. Tiii uncllr•l9"'" dO ctrtttv -., ,,. B Ye B h. C . . o•t>Cluc:ed 111 "1t u11ne<1 5!1lt1. In !hi dl'O"llvnl'd. ""-llvl!neu namt la c-llCll"' 1 llllllflfll 11 1':11 w ... t ay , a 13 or1nth1an YC. ~r'h>rm1nc:e of "'' conlratl. AO-VISORS .,.. wtio.e tiu1~1 ~ corn,._ a.-....., c111fom!1. unClu lht lk-Balboa YC Cabrillo Beach No bid tl'o•ll 111 c0<11kl1rltd ""~" 11 It 11 u u v11 Lido. N--1 llffdl, tttkM 11,.,, 111me 111 Pll.EC IStON ' made et1 • Dltonk tllfm lutnl11>fd bw 11>11 C11!forrtl1 ""° •NI ~ tovst11111 h ENGINEERED OEVICE S COMPANY YC, Coronado YC, Del Rey Ctl'I' of Cost• MH•· •NI 1, m-111 K· rti11 of , Ad"fflltl119 Senrla. l11tenck. ,, fPEDCOI •ncl n.1 Nld firm 11: mm"°11'11 YC King Harbor YC Lido Isle tord1n«1 w1111 "" -l•ltm at ,,._ pre» t•1n1I•""· to 1r1nt1., to 111<* ti Alntrk• e1 1111' to11ow11111 H•IOl'la. ...._. 111,.... lfl • ' ...,..1 rt<1ulr1mtn'1.. N1tlorllt Tl'\!11 Ind S.vJ..,1 A1.1«.l1tlon, !Ult 1M 1llt11 ol rt1ktlnc8 1r1 n YC, Long Beach YC. Los EKPI bldder n>ust !loo t\c'11i.ed •NI 1lto -... tm1n111 Wl•tH 11 1tve.1 htnln h:lllOWI' A I Ye M. · B YC lll't<IU•llt1ed •• •t<iulrtd Ill' 11w. llllow ... tr1n1t.ne. • IKlll'"l!v interat 111 JOWN THOMAS LINKEll:. m SOulll nge es • 1ss1on ay , The Cltv coun,n ot llM! Cltf of c11111 c.n1111 p._f'IY, GI w111c11 1 -r•l Crt!t ori\11, Or11191, c111terni1. Newport Har bor YC, San Mew rHerv11 lh• right hi reltd 1nv er 11e1c•IP!lan i. •• loltowt: MYlllLE VIVIAN CROSS. )111 11n- D. YC d S la B b 11! 111111. AU e~ulPn'ltnt. now ""'"" "' tl•to Or .• ""'"'"'°" lklch, c1111wn11, 1ego an an ar ara 0111111: July :n. 1N•. "•re111t• IC'Q11trM, w 1uc11,,., tout not 011H Jurw 1 1Nt YC ev OltOER OF TME llmlltll to, lttt lollowlntl: Hermn Elec-JtM T. Llnl(tr . CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY Irle Adlltr: Slnllll-Coron1 !t-•lltn M1r• Y. Ctou The cruise schedule inc ludes OF COST,t.. MES ..... CALIFORNIA V1cuum 11. .. 1.i.r lk>lnf• Omttl Stilt°' C1llfoml1 races fro m Los A nge I es c. I(, PRIEST, CITY CLERK F~l•roer1 Dlrllroom C1bint11' $Wlt~h Orlntt COvntv: OF THE C!TV OF Tl....r P11'1111. Ott July ), 1Kt. bl!-lllf, 1 Mt11,.,. JHa,rbo3rl. lOH Ho! wldanLd Ld~nding Pu bll•c;:T ~.:r,~!.A·c~~1L'~~~~1AP!lat, ~1~~ N:;m;.~c11~'1~1~. ~~ ~~~ ::~~c,.::i ~"to.;. ~i~ti':11~ .... ~~~~ u Y • ow an an 1ng to Ju1v a. ll. 1961 1111.ff 111d tr•,,.'-• win bl °"'*"'"'""1111 11 tht v. c11.oss, kno..,. 1e "'' 11 bl 1111 P'""""' Moonstone Cove Aug. J, NeWPO•t BN(h br1nch ., 1r1nmr .. t1 wlloM n1m1t1 1r1 1ubicrlbltd 1e Ille wlfMn D. h ' u LEGAL NOTICE :M44 v11 Ll611 • .,_rt euctt. C:111fornl1, 11111rvm1n1 -1~ ""' ,,.. 1ng y races al w1oonstone on .,.. •lttr tM 1mi d•v of .h.11)', IHt. ecutltd "" 1"111. \ and trophy presentation Aug. .,.,,, 0, .,,,,,,.5 SALi: So 11r •• 1111nown t11"" t••Mltrte, the (0FF ICtAL•'"•" • 1 ' !t1111!1n>r h11 1101 Vied I~\' bo1IMll 11.0 ALI M. MALLAT 2, and the Homeward Bound NO. 1·11-6"'9 n1m1 or 1ddreu 1tl'ler ,,..~ "" iDOw, tto11..., P'llbt1c<1!1for1111 race from Empire Landing lo Ort Wfllt>Hlllv. A,,..u•1 1'· 1161' ~' dur11111 1111 ~ '",. i.tt , .. ,. uc.t: Print'''' Ol'llcl tn tleven o•ctock a.m., 1t !oovlh Ml " N/A Ort"" c-tv Drill ing Island Eva off Hun-Enlr•rM:• on W"t Sllllk SlrH! ol ll!t 0111 8ANI( OF AMERICA My Ccwnmlnlon EJ11lrn l. B h A 3 '°"""" (O\lrl ......... In , .... (11' ol 5~",. NATIONAL TJlU$T AND July,,, ltn 1ng • eac ug. . AM, C..lltorn11, UNITED CALIFORNIA SAVIHOS ASSOCIATION ~bll1llell 0..1np1 Cowt Dir"' Piiot. Ma1or trophies are the Los IAN K. Tr11111or ar 1uc:cH1tr Trust:' av •. A. GOOOWIN Ju~ 1, u. 21, n. 1Ht 1"1-6• A l T. p UNHr II>!! Offd ot Ttutt mllll by llt0<11 Ttl l'llf91"M nge es 1mes erpetual for o. 11.1111nd c;.rr11e1 11. 111111, kusNlld •NI c. H McCLUlll' the LA to Howla·"s race ..rte, -recon1ec1 Oeelrnlltr 31, 11"· in ao1i. Ao-\11,.., . • llU ' 8.ook 8832. p lll ol Olfkl•I RKoroh"' the Alla.n Gabboon for the or1"" cOU111':.' c1111ornl•, olvl!fl ~ "''u"' ,, •• ,,'!:..-0""', •• _ ,_, •AR lNt H } rflllebll.llnnl l 11¥1>1' of M S Cllll "' ,_, .,,_ Ollty l ilfl!, NOTIC« 0" TllUITlll'I SALa O\\' and s to Moonstone raCi!, ~: .. 1 Plrtrttrlh~. bv 1111..in ·111 ""' Ju•' n. tMt 1-.. .... 1»1t and th e West Trophy for the '"Adi t1 cer11111 abll1111ons ..curN °" Mondlv, Alllwt "-lNt. 11 11 :• Homeward Bound race """"'· no11c1 e1 ""'\di bre1cri ••• LEGAL NOTICE A.M.. T. o. sE1tv1cE coMP'ANY, • cor· · te«orllfll Ap•lt 21. 1K1. 111 8oo1I l'Jl.I. ,..,.,llon 11 h 1' ""°"""' Tr1t1t1t unclt• The Wyman p e r p e t u 8 I P•!lf .. el wld Olll(lll RKord,, wilt Hll NOTIC• IMVITI ... ••rt• Ind MWWlfll to hill ., Tr1r1I df'" LEGAL NOTlCE BYC's Rose Defends trophy goes to the overaU \\'in-~~~ ... ~~~toi: .. 1e~:i:r19~~·"" ,~!: ltofhtr= •J-::,.1,,..1,::11~:,: :.;:.~Jiv~~: ~~:;::. :_:-; ."~11!!; ner of the lhree races. unultd sr.1e. "' !I'll 11tM ot Hit. wlthlllll Col'"' ois1r1c1 If °'""• c-w. •!Id r~ ,,,.., 11, 1Nt, " 11111r. Not. E pha . hi . w1rr1ntv • to 11111. _.Ion or 111-C1llil:wJll•, wlM r.etfw 1t1lltl bldl UI le "21, 111 tlttll 1'21, Htl GO of Offld lll. m !'IS t S year Wlll be ct1tnbr1nces, trit l~lt•HI CO!l¥tvld to 11111 11:00 1.m., Tunc11v. AUlust .s. 1Hf, 11""" It~ 111 !Iii olflct ol !tie Ceun!Y on fam ily.type raclnfi and no ,_ i.e1a trv wrd T•"'"'' uNll• 111d °"" Purc11111111 O....rtmtnt 111 111d Ktotol Rtcerder e1 o •• ,... COvn!Y, c111torn11, • . . di Tru1t In lhl lll'DPttlY 1!!u1te 111 0.--lllllrkt kKllld 11 2701 ,_.11fv11W II.Old, WILL S!LL AT PlJILIC AUCTION TO Teen Governor's Cup spinnakers Will be a lowed ID ewntv. C1llfor11l1, dtlerltlftl • ., , ... ,. ,,.,.., C1llfof'lli1 •• , Wl!ICh ttmt HIGHEST •tDOi:llt FOR CASH fPIVlbll any race. Lot '' t1 Trlcl Mo, •Sfl, 111 1111 cny 111d blcll w111 bl lllbtk1' _.., 1nc1 rffll at 11m1 e1 Ml• 111 1•wtu• ~ ot "" el Coste Mn.. Cou"t'I ol Or•"9•· Stilt ft>r: Fk1cir....:lf!I "-"•nnt T11llnl u1111. Ufltt.11 St1tell 11 11'11 Saurti U•onll -ot C•ll!Ornl•. II ow ..... "c.ortll'd In All b!dl .,. ... In ~ wt!ti tl'1lfKt to Jiii' CWllfv CIMll1'hllltl, "'° •loct Boat Ut, """ 3$ Intl )I el !hi' lnstrlldlolll Ind COl!dltlonl alld Wat Sl>C'lll '""'· S.nt• ........ C1lltor11l1 MIKe.flon"°"' MIPI. In the offla at 1118 SPKHIClllMI. wllkh -now lfl flit anct Ill r;,tll, 11111 llld lnt.rtll c.on ...... 119 II CO\ln!y Rfl;Otdtf ol ,.kl eou....... ....y bl HCUflll Ill th• ortlai of tht ""' now hllcl bw II lllldlf Wkl Otld ol Andy Rose of Balboa Yacht Club successfully defendE'd the Governor s Cup. teen-age mal· ch racing classic in a nine· race series sailed Friday. Saturday and Sunday off Newport Pier. Ro.se, with his crew. Rick J enness. Gordo Johnson and J ay Lawrence scored a 9--0 victor)', but not until they overcame a protest from Doug RasteUo and lhe crew lrom Long Beach Yacht Club. TM protest cam' as the r,Sult ol a luffing match in the flrlt race Sunday as BYC and LBYC locked in a head-to-head battle with the score tied. Rastello initiated the luffing match against Rose, as the BYC boat started to pass to weather. Rose finally broke the overlap wilh n1as1 abeam. ·but Rastello claimed that the B'i'C bore orr on him· After a lengt hy hearing the protest was disallowed. Russ Wins ElrCEPT 111 oll, fll .t.n11 olher Purct.111r>t A11ttl di ••Id ldlool lllstrlct. Tn"9 In rl'le Jlr"OOlrt)" 1tt111tld 111 1111' CllV, twdroecorboll wtnt1nctJ 1nd mlner1l1 Eldl ltllkllr "'"'' w!lrnrt wltft 1!11 bid 1 ol N.-1 8ucl\, 111 Mid Cwn!Y lnlf tvl119 bllow • dlltth p1 $00 '"' from 1ne clll'tit1''1 chldt, otttlfltd dlldl, or llld-Stiff del<:rlbtd •" THUN, Switze rland (AP ) -iurfac• ~' ""' •DDvt leNI. llut w111teu1 11.,-•, DoM .... ~ NV•h-11 to"" onler OI Lois o1 Tl'lld No. •111t. 111"" clt'I' el Defe d1· ch · y u r ,. 1111 rlohl ot l!flt,.,. °" 1111 w•IK• ., .. 111 "" Or11111 C011t Junior Col .... Olltrlcl MIWPOrt eeeu., coun!Y el or-. rt111 Long Beach later lost lo _n ng ampio~ . l•nd 1or """ PUl"JIMt e1 ,~Pto•1,,. for. &1r11 e1 Tr"''"'" 111 111 '"'°""' not "'" of <tlllwn11, 11 "' "*' .-did 111 Huntington Harbour Yacht Anls1mov of the Soviet Union ,... .... 111111 111d aubot11\Ce1. 11 rlttr'l'f!d rti.,, Hve lltf'Cfnt fS'll.J e1"" """ bkt ,, eoo11; 1w -11 l'I MIK11i.'*"" I beal ou t lwo Danes Monday 1n deed• 111 '""'"'· • eu.r1ntee 11111 11'11 Dlllcloer wm enlt!r Into M1PS, In ,,,. offl<t .i !I'll cainty C ub and wound up with a 6-2 tor '"'-our...,.• "' 111v111t obl1t•l1-!Ill ,.,__ Contr1d 1f IM t•me 11 rKOnltr of 111• c_,IY, record. for the European dragon class "'°''" "' I.lid o.td. lnckKll ........ IW1"5tll lo hllll.. In 1111 ,...,.,, d l•Uu,. to S.lcl M .. w111 "" "'"'· but Without T h · h" th•rvf!S end flt""'" ol Thi Tru11tt eod· ""'-' lnlll •udt Olrllrld. ll'>t llrotlelh of COVfl'llnt Pl' w1r.111tv, lll'llrf11 tr lt'l'IPllH. The final scoring: sa1 1ng c amp1ons 1ps. •al!Cea. 11 •nv uf!Oer tne "1.m"...11!: • 1o11c1 ""tMct wm bl tortt111d,., "' ""a11 ""'"'1'"' 1n1s, --•· o• ,.,. [---,,.,,.,---,,,,.,,,-,.,,.---IOe-ec1 Infer"'' 11\e,_ Ind ""1i,m;'M 111 of I boNI, fN fult llH'r't lllertof w111 bl ~ll'ICtl. Ill ....,. rl'le -11111111 ,.1,... Balboa Yacht Club, Andy LEGAL NOTICE 11,.,....;, P•lntlNI of 1~ Note u'.tur_, '"'forltllld le 11111 Kheoi 41'1trld. ci..1 """ of 1111 ""' HCIKl'd by 111t Ros • kl °"° wltri Jnlfnfl ""',_ trlllll No bldCllr .,...., wl!Mr11W ~fa bid tor I OHd ol 1rvtt. to-wH: 114.IOl.lt. wllll Irl-e. · F'rt1r11•,.,. ~ 1,., 11 111 111d Mott -Mrlotl of 11111'1'~ 16) div• 11111' 1111 llf'l'lt '-Mardi n.. '"'· as In Mlt Long Beacfi Yacht Club LIO._L HDTICE · ' 111i. 1e1 "°' ""...,1"1 ""'.....,llled, ""IJICft. 11 -· unc11r !ht ' NOTICE ts HEllEIY GIVEN "'•' "'-vidN. I Tttt 9oif'll d ~ "'""'" ..... ltrrm ti Mid 0... ol Tt1r1t '"' dllrtll Doug Rastello, 6. folllWllll ii ..... l'I lollNI or""",,,_,,., 0·""'~~~~E&''o'riFoRN11 IAHK ... 1 .. 11ee1 of Nl-cflnt .,, .ncr Ill 11111$ or 11111 """"' °' "" Trv1~ .nd "' 1111 Alanu.los Bay Yachl Club h1w -.. Mid b• llM POiice 0e111r1"'~' 1 1 ' ,. w1t\le .,,., 1rneu11rtt11s or ~ '""'" c...1..., tor ...,. o... .t Tnnl. • ol trit CllY If C11l1 11\ew for • period in 'VI "' '°""1111111 111 • ..., Md w ,,, rl'IC! llldlllflt'. Tiit blMfklol..., lolnCllf' 11111 OHlf ., Ken Weiss, S tJ'"' 01 11lnat'I 1t01 d•v" ~=o~ s.5i!!,~!" Prle1, llhw:l.1 lfllll _,tty bllrt1 ..... 1. Trvtt. by rtt lln of • llt'ffCtl ..-.,...1111 1tt Newport Harbor Yach! Club' LI"" """ Dike. 1 bl'OWll blll", red I Ul•t • fll"tle<'tncf wlH bt llWll " IM ...wuctl ..... W1111!1onl MCIH'«I I ht r •• '. bllt, OIW 111111, • lll~H -core< 0 ""' t'-• ~. OI' lnldl.tcltl Ill Thf i'ltf'elMort Ul'Clltlcl Md *""l'I" .. M 11'11 p ter p k 4 uni<_.,, WM11r'01 Wildt. lllldt: Wille!, Pllllllshfd Or•.... Colst elf~ I" • Shl!oe at C1tlll>rNI. UllOf+'l)f..... I wrlltffl Dfci.r.11111 of e ar eT". ,, .... Wllltl, ,,,,,., pll-. Cln¥•1 h•nd J.;ly "...,, Au..,.t" 11• ,.., lllO.ff AN maltrl•I• -ldeod ""'""*'""'bid Oll1111f -DIMINI for s.i.. """-"""' Los Angeles Yachl Club, ti••· """ °"""iv """"' 0owrrwntn1 Codi "" no11c1 • 11r .. c11 ,,... di 111ct11n i. Cl""' .. G ·111th 4 NOTIC'E IS ru1tTHElt GIVEN "'•' 11 lions ....,., lnc1Vl!W. lht •flftriltr<ed Ill tetl Mid ~ ,,. l>i8ry rl • 110 _...,. '°""'* 1N 11'0~ ~11 Sltnedl NOii.MAN E. WATSOH. lllllf'I' 1111 olltlt1lfof>I, 1N llla"le1tef."' Huntington Harbour Yacht OWMrll>IP ol !ht ..._ny wlllllll SI"... BOAT BUFFS SKIY .• llOll"CI of TnBtwl Aorll " lNI, Ille lllldtrtltt>ed CIUltll .. l+f Cl b Ra d S yth 3 !11 d1¥t tot-i111 IM 11Ulllk1llOP't el 11111 ~: A119Ull $, 1Mt H:OI 1.m. no!lc:t di tn.Ktl -ti tllct1111 te Ill U • n Y m • HOllU, IN lltll tnerele !.1111! "'' 111 1111 Al111o n loc•1h1y /i !ht 011ly f>ubtl!Md OrtnM Coll! O.qy Plkll. reOlll"Cltt Ill booll: tf1D. lltl la of Mid King Harbor Yacht Club, llnatr, 11 Iller• tit-· ... 111 n.e cr1v 01 1,11•1;-, ,,,11119 •ditor ,..,,1;,9 Jul'!' 11. x. lNf l:fll.Ut 01t1c111 lll'Cont•. C111!• Mtt1. 1~ Wllldt cu. .... ,,,_rty '" Ditti July I, 1•. J ohn Edgecomb, 3 ll>IH M 1111111 11 eutil!< •u<llon It 1 11"" t" 1ny R1w1p1p1r In Q,1n91 T. 0. IEll VICI: COMPANY Lkfo Isle "Yacht Club, IAi.vc Ind dllt le bl 1n-..nc:fll. Cow11ty. Hi1 1xelM1i¥1 cow1r191 Let TV WEEK .. Mhl 1"""'· -OAlE01 July N. Ifft II\' Wtllto ll. HIHll, Riley, 3 II. E Nt!n of bo1t i119 111d 'l'•thti .. 9 n1w1 Vlcit-P...,1lclenl Bahia Corlnlhian ya ch I c~1e1' POiiet '•'1,'o'r'"' f11lurt "' ''" DA ILY Turn You On t~ w~.Z-D!1i:'''~1.N':~~ Cl b E . 01 0 l'ublllilf'd Or111 .. CO•SI 0.llV Pilot, • • l!ltKh, Clllflrllll. JU.., '"' ''· n. u • t ic son , !UI\' , .. '"' lm.ft I INI U1J .. I ---------~----------------- • ' ' • ' • • . ' ' ' • • • r ' ' ' ' ' ' < ' • • ' ' • • • • • • . I • • • ' ~ • • • ' ' ' ' • • ,. • • ' ' • • ~ • •• 0 • • > • • • ' •· ' • " • • • '· > > • • • • • • • • . • • ' • • • • • • ,, ·• •• ' Monday, Ju~ 23, 196? \ DAILY PILOT ,., HOUSES 'OR Lill HOUSES FOR SAL E HOUSES FOR SALE DAIL y PILOT w ANT ADS 1 =G•""$;;;·;~50=DOWN;;;1ooo;j~Hun1~1nt1on~ .. ,h~1400~Hunt1~N1 .. ~....,,~1• MAKE OFFER THE BIGGEST SINGLE MARKETPLACE ON THE ORAt<!GE COAST-PHONE DIRECT 64:Z.5678 ' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I ~SES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE Genor1I 1000 Oener1l 1000 (jon«al 1000 Genor1I . 1000 Gonenl 1000 Oener1I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE 1000 New homes, ready to move In. 2 to ~ bed· rooms , 2 to 3 baths. ~ mile ll'om beach. First payment up to 60 days after move in. VA/FHA Terms. From $23,9'0 House With EVERYTHING I 4 Bdrms plus 3 baths, plllll la!"lc lam. rm., plua ronnal dining, plus impressive livina room . pha unique hillllide I~ cation. Oflered al St&.900, 2126 Cardinal, • )l:i s.1\ :· r~\· ·Jl\· .1(t\1 " 546-5990 $20,200 FULL PR ICE- 1'"1-fA Loan at 5% <;< with t~ la! payments of $123 P.l.TJ. Real sharp doll house with 3 queen size bedroom:-;. Gor • HARBOR VIEW HILLS FINES'T· CUSTOM Hard To Find ,;;;;;;" ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;., lo:la,gnlfleent view born• Pool1 Galorel cu.tom decorations Must* to believe. tru1 hu Easy To Buy I Excttins::; larae cW1tom throughout e~.eythtng: for the rrowtna: ~ etitside I o ca l I o n, blliJ! home closc to t.fe111. 3 Extra aize bedrooms famD,. 5· Bedmom • maid'1 Sbarp 3 bedroom 2 bath Verde C.Ount:ry Oub. Juat""' 3 Full Bath! rm., 4~S baths, 3 frpk:a., family hornfo. tara:e reoce:d duetd a hill $5000 for qulek Ste~own family room form. din. rm., la:e. tam. ya.rd with covm?d patio. sale I story • }Ow &: ramb- wtth wet bar a.nd rm. 314 car praae, Game c.ome ooe eome an FHA Jin&· with tparkllntt pool . red brick tittplact. nn.; lots of die. $139,500 and l'IO ~ G.J. tem:u •· just a:nat for executive en· Spedoua, heated ~ Mary Lou Marion vallable. $32.500 tertalnint. Owneni are movtll&'. ........,. in August. and wan.t action now! cau 1«n< i:,g:Y Colnell, llolter ' Co. R ... 5<Q.38l2 550 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach, Calif. 133-4700 644-2430 VA-FHA ' Huce 5 BR 2 •\Ory with ovenlzied heated Ii. IUlertd pool. Vac:ant · fut po81C&- Von -frflhly redecorated. Lilted at SM.900 but wide- open for ollers! . $41·!1180 ........ \Nitre) WGE REAL'tf. ,.. .. Hldllr.~ Your Own ORANGE COUNTY 'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St., 646-4494 How Does ,This Gnib You? 4 Bedroom Collere Park bome with. an exis~ an. nual FHA assumable loan with annual intettst rate ol S\,IJE1. Low mottlhl.y pay· menu ioclude taxes, Duplexes \Ve have 3 of them. No down to Ve1eran.s or low FHA down • Lei your tenant help you make the payments, -------- IUO 8 UNITS geous pullman bath Anyone l iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'" qualifie1. Huge 25 X 100 lot with double garage. Home hag a b.uUl in vacuum. Sub- mit your down lo NO CX>WN VA. 'Ihree bed· room•, two baths, fllmily room, dining area ll1ld built· in kitc:hcn. Spacious rear living room with fireplace. Qui>e(ed and draped. Large "For A Wise Bu)"' Colesworthy & Co. Private Beach!! The-1000 sq. feet deck pro- vides a breathtaking view of exclusive pool and W'ldy beach. HIJ'h security build· Ina: 1uarantee11 ultimate pri- vacy WUh aubleminean parldng, elevalor tv pool and beac:h, 31' Uving room and luxurious appolntmenls. $46.500. Income • Or Large Family Rest Home S Bdrm home located in East. side area. Ne\v construc:tion and general upgrading of surrounding propertie! - Owner ssys SELL!! You're Kidding? TAKE YOUR PICK covered patio, fenced yard 642-7777 and well landACaped rrontl'iiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiii I and rear. PRJCED TO SELLI• \Ve cet a big 3 BR :l bath family room & kitchen l'al- inr area, custom carpets. drapes &: wall paper in a :! year new Spanisb 1tyle home CAMEO HIGHLA"fDS Executive Home 3 BR, 2 Ba, Fam nn, POOL Shown by appoinbncnt WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 7682 Edinger 8·124455 or SiW-5140 Open Eves . AT $23,950. ACT NOW!: john macinab DOYER SHORES VIEW 5 Bedroom, 2-story borne with room for pool or huae play aru., fam.il.y room with mas. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee A Jim Dandy Clean 2 bedroom hoUSe plu! bachelor or mother-in-law aparln1ent. Oh! Yes. an eX· tra lo! goes with this pack· .... View • View • View Are you looking: for a.n ocean $21,500 NEW CARPET NO QUALIFYING E~ryooe can astume this high FHA Joan. Owner • • 615-6560 in Costa Mellil for S2!1.tol. I ~::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;::;;;~1 Assume FHA loan, $215/MD. I~ P AYS ALL. See this i;reat Lido Isle 1351 one today! 541J.ll5I Herila.ge --------- Real Estate . 4,000 sq. ~- 107 VIA EBOLI view? This lovely 4 bedroom 4 Bdr, 31/s bath, J..car praee, 546-9521 or 1115 540-6631 Collet• Perk • 3 BR 1 % balh, hdwood noon. c:pts / drps. filllc, double 'a r a c e, beautiful fenced ya.rd. $24.500 • WNED for BUSINESS 1 BR cottqe w/1ar $14,500. • $21,000 • no loan charges · StoOO dn • owner will carry. COUNTRY HOME '''• fire.,_, walk-in we! bar & room for billiard ta- ~early 1~ acre with lovely ble. Elevated outside tel'- uniqu.e 3 BR 21.4 bath home race for ddiptful cnt~ in Newport Beac:h. Area that ing. $88,500. ~ Westclill Or. ~ml Open Eves. OPEN DAILY 241 SIERKS, CM Immediate posse11lon, 3 Jara:e bdrms 2 baths, built. ins, FA heat, dlnin( area + brtc:k fireplac:e in liVil'l&' room. Dbl ~. Large fenced yard. 7 yean new. Good tin. Pric:e slaahed ! 1860 Newport Blvd., CM homl!, situated In a quiet crpls. drps, Unurual TU· neighborhood, will 1\ve it to Big Pool + Big tures. Built In 1967. Owner you. Owner ready to sell. Y•rd 5V4•/• (2131 244.JlOl Eves: (213) You owe ii lo yourself to l BR, 2 BA. crpts. $28,000. 246--0700 check thb one out. I ""i'i'i!i'i~~~~:;;"'"J~S<OOo~~·~"·~o~w~no~'·;;~548-~9"~-13 -w=E"'''"R"E~L"'O"A!>=~E"D"lc--·I Oceanview • ASSUME 5l/4 •/o Newport Beach 1200 s Ou~tandlng """'" in tt.e J BR, I* bath, Interior re· ... --------is now bcautiluJ ~rdens • SmoCJ Free. $148 Per Mo. p•yi all SSO.!t1'1 ·Lido's hottest mar. decorated. Vac:, & imme:d. Improved Lot $3500 could ~ used for 2 hollies, (714) '42-IUS Full Pirce $21,950 HAVE TOO MANY? ket! cBu us to sl't!! occ:upancy. NEAR SHOPPING W•lls-McCardle, Rltrs, ' 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. f»S.7129 anytime tennis courts, pool or "'<hat-'901 Dover Drive Sul~ 120 ever your heart desires. Newport heh. • 9uiet Uvin9 3 bedroom, 2 full bath!, 2 ctoae1s! wow! Wilh 5 ea., ·LIDO REAL TY INC. If yau want to be on top of ear garage, c:amcts & 3'Ai ba., pool, Roman kitch. 3400 Via Lido 61'S-8830 -5 - One of the laiit remaining rully improved corner lots in Desert Hot Sprinp. Paved streets, curbs, utili- REAL ESTA TE "" in. Exoeu'"' '"" in· SALES.~AN vestment with Sl.000 Da\vn. "' WE SELL A HOME Excellent opportunity. Phone EVERY 31 MINUTES JEAN SMITH Realtor 646-3255 400 E. 17th St., O:>:Bta Men '°' ··r.~:;·;:.ud Walker & Lee _,,, Cha rles Arnold I =""'-===~=~=~I BUSIEST marltetplac:e l1I town. The DAILY Prtm Oa.ssitl.ed &ectlon. Saw money, time • etfort. Look 38!1 F.. li lh St.. C:0.1 1il6-77:l5 2043 'Vcstcliff Dr. TIIB QUICKER YOU CAU., 646-nll Opt?n Eves. nIE QUfCKER YOU SELL d? MESA VERDE Assume GI Loan 4 BR covered pafio. beautitul iandscapina;. Excellent area, Very low interest. hia:h baJ. anc:e GI Joan c:a.n be L!i· :twned by ANYONE!! Monthly paymenls LESS THAN S175 ~r month P.I.T.I. Fu1l price $28,800, /OJtll,,., co:Ts ~WALLACE REALTORS 5464141- ~ Eftniftll) .everything, I.bis beautlfuJ drapto!!. near school. · Ac:tually, too many erlras to Immaculate 4 bedroom homl" Herr y A. Boggs lis~. Quiet, Westclitt sl.reet.1--------- "'ill put you there. No yard R.r.ally S67·66.TI ~riced for quic:k sa!(< _ Huntington Ba•ch 1400 work, priced right at $36,500 --S.17,500 "'-·· T •--• 4 BEDRM, $20,950 Hal Plnchin & Assoc. "'"'ner rans1.rr- OWN ER 3900 E. Coast Hwy 6lfH39'.! 3 Huie Bedrooms. 2 luxuri- . T RA~SF ERRED *BY OWNE.R. * ous bathii. Entlrc ~ta Patnl a little &: YQU save " ,.._ nf 1,_ . beautifully dee ora ted. Rltr. 646.3921 Eve, 644·1655 Lachenmyer ORANGE COUNTY'S lot! 2 battui, eochanllfl.i tJre ........ -.::a ron~ -.ume, 3 ~R. util Drapes throughout Near Exciting View Home LARGEST place llC?ls off lari::e living rm,,. ,"'wo&ng rm. hv . rm new carpets. Electric: built· I kl' I. I ¥.' rp c oct'an view. in kitchen 11 1potleu. Block Enjoy the tw n nr lihts o 293 E 17th St 646-4494 roo m. Dream kitc:hen 1vlth 0 _ ,., /bti· . • EastbluU and Newport Ce!). -• -., built-in appliarK:es. Prime ,,.,.,my I w ins . wall comple!ely, SeUer N..)11 lcr lrom thia Upper Bay cus-BEAUTIFUL-POOL~ loc·ation. ~Q..l 7'lf'l a~vocado !:lhag c~tg thruout. seU GI No Money Down or lorn home. Three large bed-BEAUTIFUL LOAN !! TARBELL 2955 Harbor front yd w/patio 1: cabana. lo1v down FHA. Low pric:f! rooms, family room, lanai, In c:holc:est Costa to.tesa a~a --· --$64,000. ~ Fashion Shore: home at 2~ baths, all electric: kitc:h-1vith most private lari::c ma!!-LINDA ISLE WATERFR~O~N~T~P-/S-S25,500 Near Hunttncton ~" I Cent<?r. t'n with eating spac:e. ~au· lt'r ......... room, pus 2 mort.'. Orw! of t~ liner bayfront Del\ghUul view of water, san. tifully carpeted and deeoi-at-Gorgeous custom STONE homes: dls•inctive architce-dy bcac:h & lel'1'.; J Bd 2 WE SELL A HOME ed. Front and ree.r 1prink· 1''1.REPLACE in ~paclous furc, ¥.'ell planned 5 bdrm~. "Ba. Lovely patio • rent · in EVERY 31 MINUTES lers, oversiz.e 1arage with friendly llving room. Plulh 41,s baths; priv, pit'r. a ose Aug .• bu y in Sept, $62,COO Walker & Lee automatic: door opener. On. c:arpels and custom draper· to completion, $135,<XXl. Call R. C. GREER, Realty ly S49,750. ies! AU. ELECTRIC for app'I. 33S5 Via Lido 673-9300 li;illl!iW'4fil ,~!~N'~.,;;~_: ~::; ftED ,..n;r BEACM ..• -$16,500 PRICE-AND Sif.iAiiff;: yoro w;th OVERSIZED f1!: LAIU"CJ J"'t one •hort block Jrom llOO -• -••••• • POOL and loads of dec:k· R E A L thil lovely 3 BR. :l ba. home. BRICKS 64&·7171 • 548·231 Ing!! Separate CHJLDREN'S 10,,. \V B 1 .. _ T Y Asking $29,250. 7682 E<:ll~r 8-t2-f45S or S40-5140 Open Eves, FHA Appraisal Make-up the mas.slvc patio!'""'""'""'""'"-"""'""'"" I PLAY AREA!! All this plus ~ '"1 • n uu11. Blvtl .. N.B. PROPERTIES WEST \Vhere-in the world can you 11 11prinkle1-s and water l!ortcn. ~y/N~ht 675-6~ 11128 Bayside, N.B. bfa-~130 $32,950 4 BR, lonnal din nn, elect. kit. lg acp. family rm. Pro· rcss. deeor, unu.sual drape1 &: wall papen;. 8lxll»' cor lot. Owner tranaferTed. find a 3 bedroom, 2 bath EXCITING home, NEAR THE BEACH c1· and offered at NO DO\\'N TWO ON ONE OWNER'S SACRIFICE \\'ilh electric built-ins, exc:f!l. OCEAN VIEW TO VETERANS, FHA terms ~JightfuJ Eastside localion. 4 or 5 BR, 2 ITW). old Harbor lent carpet, boat door to An exceptionally lovely 3 Br. or $4,000 Down to others. 3 BR home with exc:lting 14x Hills home. LR, DR. Fam. ba k nl H'-hland Assume 6% loan al Sl8J per 20. I BR rear uni! on 1he. R with frnl & ba,. 3 Ba. c: ya , and VACANT!! 2 ba. Cameo ,. s month. 1 ~ ., BRASHEAR REAL TY IHT-8531 Eves. 968-U78 LESS TIIAN $2.000DOWN!1 home. 180" ~an vJ,ew, AU andscaped fenced lot. Close Crpts, d~. many Xtras. WE SELL A HOME · WE SELL A HOME to everything. Outliland. val· Xlnt financing. J48-8281 EVERY 31 MINUTES ~f. ~~sc';ng~:: EVERY 31 MINUTES uc st 114.s.;o. Walker & Lee ~.~-'"·"" Walker & Lee WALK TOB EACHf ADULT LIVING Beautiful 2 BR 1 ~ bath Hun- l!ncton Bay C:Ondo. Includea many extras such u built,.. ins, W8.lther, dryer, complete recreational fa c: t 1 It I • a. l\!onthly fen Include all ex- terior maintenance. Price Sli,950 . try $200'> down. 2700 Hari>or Blvd. at Adams 54;.9491 Open 'til 9 PM Barrett Really \ presents ~ Owner Leeving Are• ~lo~ than enourh space for your latte' famUy. 4 Bdrm, fam nn. ~ large play or hobby room. Your choic:e of luscious fruit from five dif- ferent trees. Askinr' $39,000 160.l Wc1tc:lill Dr, NB 6t2-520(I PALM SPRINGS 3 . 3 BR Homes, 23 unit apt bldi • yrly bed, 2 Salton Sea watrfrnt lots. Owner will sacrillc:e or trade 71.f. =· wkends., or 71.f. 2790 J{arbor Blvd. al Adams .... ._ .. _ .. -545-9491 lO ' THE REAL ~ESTATER.S Furnished 3 BR. 2 Ba. Steps to ocean. $25.tol. CAYWOOO REAL TY 5 46·2313 • 646·7171 6.100 W. Coast Hwy .. N.B. ~ ___ o~"'-"-·'-"~'"-'-P~''--0 541-1290 0 IMMAC. OUPL EX ---- 11322 Grcenvalley Tustin * BLUFFS Coln1ll, Buker ' Co . 550 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach, Calif. 133-0700 644-2430 TRABUCO CANYON 2 Bdrn1i;., 2 bath~. Beaut. 3 Bdrm, den. 2 baths. CUs- land.!lcaped s pr t n k I e r 11 ,tom drps, crpls. One lcvtl. Secluded surroundings. n1in. $::5,75() ' • Reasonabl<'. Owner 644-2787 upkeep lot. Beaut. 3 Br. 2 CORBIN.MARTIN BLUFJo""S • 3 br, 3 ba. H/ Ba.. cust. bit.; all con· vcnientts. Patio. Air,'Ond. REALTOHS Bay-View, wide greenlx!lt. Swim You Swimmers Horse lacil. avail. S25.000 -::O::ti J·:. Coast lhvy., Cdi\1' Steps 10 pool. Cus. addtns. $148.00 PER MONTHI Fl'K:d prlv., heated pool w/ Tc1m1. Owner 5 86-7947 ___ •::_::.":.:>..:1::662::·_::• ___ 1:s~'~"~'~'~'-="~""~· O~w-"-'-'~1'_1·42'"=651 Includes FHA Loan at 6%, decking. lmn1ac. 3 BR home Eves. 5 BEDROOM _ 3 BDRM Waterfronl, No. 6'2, taxes and insurance. ;.ey. in Mesa Del Mar. 21' liv·I----------LIKE RENT Bnlhoa Coves. $60 .000 . on-can qualify to buy th'-ts/ 4 BR 2 ha, immac cond, Gre· ·-.:: u. mt, l:rplc: w/w c:p drp11.. c:lan pool htd, outstanding Payments! Bullt-in range, Would trade for acreai'! or sharp :! kingslze bedroom!, Sep. ma111er BR w/pvt bath. dec:or home & ~unds. Has oven & dlshw8.liher. Farnily apts. 548-ml 2 bath home. 14 x 24 covered Bit-in elect. kil. $32.950. C poto'o !•ad• lo h"•• en·•---quif"I charm, Bil-in' ki1. roon1. ustom carpeting & " -. .. IUIHIU P.W.C. :A6-5440 queJlty w/w cpts. Only drapes. Covered patio. Prlc· Newport Heights 1210 yard with ILL<ih creeoet)'. SUNSHINE HOME $33.~ EZ ternis. • <'d below replacement. Double Garae:e with Jaundcy NEW: blt·il'll, garbq:e dls- p:isal, dishwasher. water beater. Water 1oru~ner. l BR, l ba. $21,950. R•nd RHlty MS-2340 04.ILY PILOT WANT ADS! C '··o.~••n 540.1770 SPACIOUS area. Cas buill·inll. SUbmit ~. --do ~ -TARBELL 2955 Harbor J BR&: family rm. J..art::e !Iv-your wn payment on 4 BEORM -$22,500 •'>'!,500 price. ing rm. Stone frplc HW .,.. ... """°,. Uen.' ~·· ,.' oot,ho. r;ro-OCEANFRONT """'· epts. • d'P": WeU WE SELL A HOME P c:e. --...1.e mi Y room. k~t. Pro landscaped. AM· EVERY 31 MINUTES Built-in kitchen. Landscaped 3 BR. home on exc:ellen1 ing S28,000. Wa Iker & Lee to perfection. 54().1720 beach: S54,9:Xl. 0'6ner /Bkr. 646--2414 TARBELL 2955 Harbor George Willia mson REALTOR 7682 E<:lllll!'r 673-4350 Eves. 673-I.564 Dover Shores 1227 842-4450 or Sf0.5l40 -==~==''=--1 --· ---*UNIQUELY HUGE HOME Go _ through your place today . Look for everything lhal. 1...;.G.;;;.-:.:.•.:.:•1 __ _.:1::;000::.:Gei;;;-:::'";;;'•;_1 ___ 1;.:.000:::...;;.Gene=•:.:.•1 __ --'1=000 isn 't needed or enjoyed by your family anymore. The cameras. furniture. sports equipment. a pp Ii an c es, out· grown clothing, toys and other things you find are worth good, hard cash to lo lks w h o need them . . bul really, they' re not worth a thing lo you if they' re nol being used. When you have your list. just dial direct 642 -5678 and give II to the experienced Ad Writer who answers. She'll hew :you word your ad lo gel fastest results. The cosll Surprisingly low! DAILY PILOT WANT ADS S@tt~~-ltt.tf s· So l•t a Si,..ple Scramb!td Word Puzzlt fot a Chucklt •rc:~tr'~:: low to"form four 11mpl. wonb. ITlllAlt 11'1'11 l ~IGAR I . I I I I' . ITORIO I . There'1 0 new game called 14 I 11 I Bowlers' Roulette: Out of sev- ~-------en bowling bolls you roll II' ID l'tl M I down the a llty -Is a -: · I · 0 C-.... tho dtod<I• U.!. I I r I by IUU11g '" ''-rrritSing wordt • • -• you d-lop frM np NI), 3 kiow. SCRAM-LETS AN$WER IN CLASSIFICATION 7500 NEWPORT HEIGHTS DU!erent ''Old World .. O>n· Foo' ''"b ot lwtucy """"'· temporary, Executive luxury 4 bdrm~. 3 bath.JI, lornl&J home. Unoblltruc:tcd ~Y &. dining I.: separate-llllllib' Mtn view Crom most rm!. room on quiet cul*'-<: 5,000 sq. ft. 4 BR. 4~ BA + 11n!et. Pric:ed rl1ht at $42,. maids qtrs. Ideal for enter-!fJO. A.tsume FHA Joan. tAlnlng~ Easy m,_mt rmmed, MUTUAL REAL TY 3 Bedrooms 2 Baths ASKING $33.950 DAVIDSON RHlty 516-5460 Eves. 548-8584 occupancy. Furn Is h e: d. 842•141• anytime Cost• Mesa 1100 U78,000. Good loan. Boltts.12 --------------1_;,N;:·";,,· ;:548-;:12<;:9====i Camper/Tr•ller/Bolt s1;,7 P.10NTH PAYS ALL.I¥ 0\VNER? Herc's YoW' home Nice 3 BR 2 balh honie _ Un iversity Pa rk 1237 with plenty of sto~ area . Glen Mar !; BR. corner lot • cicc:ellent Ea.stakle re-skien-SHARP! Vacant • 11.·alllns for yoo . 11~1,, area. Assume Sl8,600-3 BR's plm atrium. Many tt-All !ht> eictra1 and (Wnor- 6 '" % loan-no Interfft in-fine men ts. Community pools on" tcmis. cr..'ase-no loan feet. Nol tennis Low s.·~rs ' Rex L. Hodges, Rlty n1:\Ily like this at "3.950. 0 R. _, H·u ·R lty 8,., •. 1.,,,~ Ci\ LL S4>3424 South C.OUt .u 1 e• . ~;u.., Real Estate 18068 CUiver Dr., Jrv1nc HALECR&n-3 Bdnn. l "iS OPEN 9 AM-8 PM ~ balh. htd1<o'd fln. fam rm. Corona del Mar 1250 patio. lndlcpd, crpt'd 1tF·==..:.:=..:.:_.;.;;:. clrp'd. S%% auumtible 1oan, CdM: "INVEST NEAR niE SlZ monthly pymt& In-OCEAN. 3 Br. 3% ba. dtn, 2 c:ludifC Wet. S 2 5, 9 0 0 . frpl. din. mr. 3 Gar. can 549--0009 buUd Another OOme on k>I. BY OWNER: F..asl11.ide CM. 3 Some vltw. nr, beach I Bdrm, bltn kitchen, na1ura11,c'"'2 ':;o'.,":;:"';,;.,· m.:ii'-::."'::'"o·.,,-.-.-'°' blf'Ch c:nblnoll. fi6x126' kit F ADULOUS Vicw! O'lookl!'W v.•/ aJley acecu for boet or Liit~ Corona Sch, He11.r lhc ln1iler. 6!i4 9fi !Olln can be 1n1rll tmmac 2 BR. den, 2 Slashed/$22,500 LOW Monthly Pymnts 3 BR 11;;; btiths. lmmao home HAFFDA L REAL TY "llomn to Match lncorms'' 8740 Warner, FY 142-- 4 BDR, 3 bath, l yn ~ JO% down, 5% flt.A Jou.' $35,950 by owner 90-1111 REDUCED 4 Br 3 & OillJO '" nrA. Nr. bchl'llll. Pool& , tennla. •151) 11.ii1umcd. $24,950. 642-4178 61\., Jo'Cl" 1ln1p. Xlnt Jin. THE QUICKER YOU CALL, RY OWNER _ ~1 2~ Loan. t't500 Ownr. 71.f...67$.-5176 TRE QUICKER YOU mA. F.utglde 3 Br, 2 Ba, fam!ly bkp \\'Clcome for Oa1J1 PUot Want MJ room home. * &-12-fflal White ell!phanU:! 01mM-llno Dial 6Q.Mtl ·------~~__,, I ------"-----------~ ------------ --------------------------='--~-...:. ___ _:._.=.."-'"-''"'-""-.:...~--- I l I • " ... . " ... . . . ~ . . • All 1,000 of Us Had a Busy Day Today . I We created and delivered another fresh edition of The DAILY PILOT . ' TEAi\fWORK produces each day's all-new DAILY PILOT. Often special· ists like Thomas Forlune t]efl ), whose beal is education, work with a slaff photographer like Patrick O'Donnell to get the story both in words and pictures. The staff shot 70.000 pictures last ye8( __ to illustrate ~he \aried story of Orange Coast life. Nobody knows how many local stories we wrote. Nol even us. CREATIVITY helps adverlisers tell their stories and sell their goods in the afnuenl 1Tlarket served by the DAILY PILOT. Gordon Crawford reenter) of display adVcrtising department discusses with layout artist Suz.ie Gunderson and DAILY PILOT Staff Artist Bob Noyes an ad which will be ready to appear in the newspaper only hours after Noyes puts final touches on arty,·ork and it is approved by the advertiser, a local re- tail merchant. · QUICK llANDS place lines of type, ads and cuts tlhc metal plates used lo reproduce piclu~cs) into page forms as the day's product begins to lake shape. Compositor Arden Malsbury 1s only one of a platoon of printers 'M'ho "build'' the ne'M'S pages under pressure of deadlines, work· ing against the clock to bring readers the latc~t available information in each edition during the day. r .. ._.' .................. ..,"!"' .. "!"''""'""'l~'r' . .; DELIVERY of the newsapcr is a speed event. too. Conveyor belts carry the papers through the mailroon1 where they are automalically tJed in bundles of 50 and tossed to 'M'aLling circulation district managers \like Blaine RobcrU , shown here, right) who speed them via ~ 43-vehlcle neel to carrim for delivery. Mailroom ' rorcm11n George Araui (left) and h1s crew can move 20,000 newspaper.~ an hour. VOLUME is lhe word at the Copy Desk . DAILY PJL()f. Copy Desk Chief Norman Anderson (right) aided by Tom Titus (bpckground) and other copyreaders every day sills, checks and edits mo?e wire reports rrom worldwide news services than the average weekly news magazine pub- lishes. Edit.ors scan enough telephotos to wallpaper a !iving room every 24 hours. Speed, born of experience, helps them keep it all fresh, too. THE WORDS are read y. Marjorie Jackson feeds them into a $25,000 computer, a DAILY PILOT investment in speed and accuracy, which use~­ a logic system lo hyphenate words as it reads characters at the rate or 1.000 a second and punches a new tape which will activate another machine for automatically setting type al high speed. The machines can set type at the rate of 6,000 lines per hour. "' MACHINES hasten the processes of preparing plates for printing the pages of the newspaper. Here, Charles Haubrick (foreground) and Ed- ward Quinn operate a casting machine which molds curvOO plates to fit o!llO high speed presses. The DAILY PILOT keeps in stock more than 40 tons of type metal which is used, rnelted down and used again in the continuous job of printing 100,000 words a day . fl10DERN equipment helps the aet.'<Hmting department keep up "':ith the "today" pace at the DAILY PILOT. Even as the day's ne'M'Spaper is being sped to its readers. Bonnie Chauvin begins feeding figures into a romputronic bookkeeping machine that helps kCC!p track of billings for ads and sub~riptions. The machine. fore.runner of a brace of computers recenUy added, bandies 5,000 accounts a month. .-l RAPID communication Ls the name' of the gome. Supervisor Juanita Frey and her crew of "ad-visors" handle 1.000 transactions a week by phone, resulting in publicalion of S,000 classified ads -words which help people buy, eell, rent or I ease , .. even find lost dogs. Many of the DAILY PILOT'S 150 phone lines are plugged in here, the classified advertising de- partment, .home of "Want Ads" and Dime-A-Lines. PICTUR&. too, get the benefit of skilled, efficient handling by mast.er crafLsmen who re-photograph lhem and then transfer the images to a sensitized melal plates y,·hich arc used lo reproduce the photos as reart- ers will see them in the newspaper. Here, Chuck Ryan takes a really close look at a negative y.;hlch will be used to etch the image on the metal plate. I f 1-~INISHED PRODUCT is checked by Elwood AOOcrson, press crew chief, even as high-speed presses continue to roar at 60,000 impressions per hour completing the day's run on press unils which represent an investment of $3.5 million. Eleven-man press crew will feed inlo these machines the equivalent of a roll of paper one page \Vide and 110,000 miles long in printing the DAILY PILOT thi s year. ALl\10ST before the ink is dry, the product of our busy day is tossed cleftly on your lawn or porch by one of our 700 ncwspaperboys who are important links in the chain of people it lakes to bring you today 's news and features today in the DAILY PILOT. And as our young independent merchants. like John Melton here. make their deliveries, we 're gearing up for another busy day -all 1,000 of us. The •Now' Newspaper for All The Com1nunities Of The Growing Ora11ge Coast DAILY PILOT ' ---~ . ,, , --""-..... -.; RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTAL.$ <tNTALS RIAL ISTATI REAL !STATE ~·­" . . . . Hou ... Furnl1i...I ~ Fu!~_l1Md ___ 1 -Unfvmlshtd Af!'!: Fum"""". , Aptt. Unfurnltlletl -r•I Gwtel Nowf'Ol'I '!"ch 2100!'1-rt llM<_h 2200 Co....,.. dot Mar 3250 Ii.a-h!aM 4aU Howpor1 lwh S200 -...io1o W....... S~ In-Property 600o j,;;;;:;,;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;,jB;;Rt..-:d;;ln;;-;rm:;;;:-,-:_;;;;;;;,.'"i,1c aEAtmfuL uppl!I" duplex NEWPOJ'tT Beach e ATil!NTION e 12 M-1 Shop.-on Pla.ctntla. RENTALS_ YEARL y dta,pes. Frplc. No pets. $225 Apl Vf't'Y clOM to St. BIJ'. 4 Wate.rfront 2 bdr, l bl.. Ntw Ownt~ i.n thili 1tt°' who CM SISO,<XX>. Trade 1/3 ~o:r R 1 B b • mo. * ~• Bt. 2 i.. $400 per mo. yrly, lwnrry bide. b 11 I I t-1 a•. may have Income property 1n clear C.llt P1'0P· B&1ariQe 1 8 " al • fllmlShed .... • .. · ... '" ....... $150 Sa1J1bw:y Rily. 6'J3.«lll) lul>terano.0 -· boat VIC. oil.A. AlllPORT;-,.. -l TD. Owner 543-00 11r'.i BR., 1 Bath, fireplace ; unfurn ........... $200 Huntiftlfon leHh 3400 BACK&LOR Apt. w/cpt. 1 aUpsavaU. t;IOl\llb!e couple A 6 ,.,., old FANTASTIC f-Plex. X11'1t. 2 BR., 1 :Oath, unfurn .•.•......... , .•......•. $2.00 d S'r&J adult nit 1riY Cari be Balboa dauc:httt (no petal, attic: 2.J cond.. lift new . <:pllfd'P!h 4 BR., JY'J Bath, unlurn, Costa Mesa , .. , ..... $200 ! mt 1 bath hl:lrnt. it.need yd, ,f;· Jm ~ G'75-~· • 310 J'ert\Mdo St. Br. unturn. home (court, cl<>1e to occ A SOUtb Cout 4 BR., 2 Baths, unfum ...............• ~ ...... $275 patio, TeenaEe3 ?~ · · · ~ q:I. dwellln,c or aome apti. Ptua, $58.Vmo. il:~e. ~ BR., 1 Bath~ furn., Channel front., ..••. , .. $300 ~= leue-. 53 • • 1 Huntin,ton leldt 4400 3 BR 3 ti;a Eulblulr atta. conaideredJ, nr. echool. in 1'·our Star ReaJty . 83Mm 33 :~" ~ :'~' ODen, !,Otn .. , ...... ,,. •: ...... SS50 4 n-.t .. 2 BA ,_... crpts FREE Utilitlt&. tum 1·2 BR ·ff45 ~ Drl_Ye) Bnnd ~w::~ ~~~: ';~-~·! BRbl· ~ .... 12l8 ,""°"sa·o' ., a s, en ,urn, ••...•.....•.•..... $850 .... "i , .. rt , ts betdl .... v.up new. cony VM!w rrom bo tal ~ ~· * * I * ,., DAit Y PILOT . * ,. ·-SUMMER -WEEKL y A drpt. Netr ~bee.' Acbooll. ap " nr .,:___, ,....,1w. br;th muter BR &: llv rm. OWi) mtt, to l'OUt. Rn • ~.¢10 dn. Bal TM.'9 l% A ll slie1 & lout&aino from $100 $215. S36.8394. 847-'006 S36-3m 536-·-u.JI>" '.£'.:" aru b'plc, dshwthr, $310 Can pay ll2S O! • 1111 more, disc/cuti. 646--163 eves. ' • • • -• · · · • · · · · · · · • · $225/mO. Ne'lft' 3 BR 2 bath, NEW f.llO tqJ. 1·2'-3 Br. bt~ ·mo. Call Turner ~U&O or bul pleaat submit wlllt you Wheddya Want? W~o ~ SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION fC>a '' BURR WHITE, Realtor oplfldrpo. Ganliner. 1ruh l ............ m; rm. Heil -bavt. ..... of Hawlllome, ausln-Rental 6060 ._ • "'-~-· & Alaoquln Mgr 846-3137 La""6tle, etc.: huaband: em-_'."'."'."'."'."'.":O-:----· I 2901 Newport Div.I., NB 47c .1.1.•11 & water IJllid. ;J.)V"'.l.W'I • OCEAN V~w " 2 Br. 2 b&. PMrtoed ,bY Westem Airlilltt. NATURAL BORN SWAPPlllS" ~ d frla Ci1J BIG BEAR LAKE EVENINGS: '42·2253 or 673-0ISt Ltguna Beech VOS Ortn,. County 4600 't~~ed ':a':: ~ ~ :;; week~: &o.3589, evea/ Lodge 40' froni. l~. ideal Speciol Rar. • , SINGLE .1u1u tux-mo. l.nc1. prdcl'lf!r. Vacant. I,,,===--~=--I for famJly groups, From 4 5 Llnes-511--5 bilcb •ut.fl -.0 MUft, O~ClUOE ~""' """' "'" .. trllM, J...WNt )'Oii ...... ........ HOUSES FOff SAL E S lite. la 2.9lO LARGE l b:1r, 2~ bcl, home. )'OUfll" a'.':' • ]!;tr. Robinson. Davis Rlly WANTED to rent, Huntil)zton to 20. Reasonable rates. umm;er nta !''"' crpta. drps. blt·tna. ury prden apla..___wLMl &42-7000 Beach proper, 2 or 3 bedrm. 5fS.l312 or {11ifl Sfi6.2S'76. a..•ou" ,...,.. '"°'• ~.. ...., .._, f/I ... .,......., ~OTHIHO ~OA SAL i -f llADES OHL't'I Hvntington Harbour " httdmt 1r. t wtJ recreation facilities 4.. COQl.. houle tum. or untum. under * BOAT DOCK * kn mo . ..J'U: "'"''· plot• privacy. South Bay 5242 -oxctl tam. of 3. IYtll• BALBOA ISLAND PHONE 6;42..S6lt 1405 2 BR, encl. sleeping porch, --C 1 u b A pt 11 . 217 So. 1 _Ent __ B_l_uff______ tag Box 834 Hunt. Bch. or Top location 300 + tQ ft, To Pl1ce Your Trtd.,-'s Ptrtdite Ad WATER FRONT '.\ Bedroom, 40' dock, deck, Posh area in Hu.nling:tQU Harbour. Only $74,000 Will consider leaai.e or leuie ~ lion. HARBOUR REAL TY • 847-8595 • • Fountain Vtlley 1410 NEW Meadow Home, 3 BR & den. $31,200. $3700 dn, 71,~,;, loan, immed. pcm. by Meado\v Ho1nl' Sa 11!'! s 962-2760; t'Vf'S 675-4900 170S spotltu, on Channel. $200 L-N'-....J 3707 Brookhunn, Anaheim {1141 p , lo Iii call 529-lll3 4 Yrs remalnin& on lefi.W, FAMILY sile dishwasher, wk. A1ao 2nd door 1 BR plus; I'-·=--=·-.;.;;:.,,....:.;.;;;,__.;.;..;.;, :712-00>=======:;< reshge C 0A •. I 'RELIA==B'°LE-,;--,~,,,.-.. --,,,-0-0.,-0-.d $175. mo, Write P.O. Box' wcrl11 perfeetly. Trade ror " L'"-• ._ _ _._ ..,..: k · BEAUT v..., EXCL 3"· 2 ........_. 15315 Lu Vegas. Nev, ~ ... ualtty Mono-Stereo ~ IUue-«•UCWI .,....... "" , ID-• ...-4610 turnished 1 Br apt or hae (Or 5 ....... " dudes boat doek. -414 381h ha. bltna dabwr. ttP/drps. G•rden GroYe For, leue, deluxe 1888 sq. tt. 3 mos. Start Aug l5. \Vill MARINERS CENTER record pl&¥er. 6'12-«S2 St, NewPorl Jstand. 819-200 fp, $X0 836/5750 5(2.lllS SINGLE YOWll Adultt Lux• 4 BR., 2% ba. Apl, Frplc., give lovinc care: to garden, OUice & store b!dg, rtnt or1,•_ve:--',-·,.,------- NICE, Clean l er. duplex ury garden apla with t.'Oun-drapes. car,,ets, wel bar, elc. Please phone ~ lease .. f75 . 10 SUI per mo. 4 HOUSES in Wilmington, sJp.s. 4; blk. oeean, ba,y. Condomlnfvm 3950 lry club atmospbere and priv. balconies: dbl. &atal'.o? 149 Rivuside Ave, 6464tl4 $33,900 h.lll price. Sl'l.OOO V ' A··" N In SOUTH oft kitch. Diahwashtr, dbl. RENI'AL Of garage with ce-• Dl)n.n:" Retail Loca""An e ""Oily. Income s.340/mo . • '."1 5reas. villi. ow szs. Beaut. 2 Br, 1~ Ba. un-complete privacy. oven. pool. Convenient to ment Ooor for storage o( ~ .. M..<""' '"' "" """ t n....-0 b V'"-BA y CLUB APl'S 13100 Id "' .. " ,. l7X40, Xlnt toot & auto b'flf. Su.bmit local or land. Jri1 W. Balboa 642-1272 ~ ;'.it-U:. For i;: CHAPMAN Ave., 'Garden =:.·g., ICbools & rectea· :1~bo items, .,...,....;il.99 fie. 1811 Harbor, C.M. Smiley, Realtor 64&S666 BALBOA. 2 bdr modern-real to call J13..826-348l or Grove (TI4) 636-3030. OHL Y $22.5 MONTH ==========:: 646-6654 LEVEL lot w/ta.11 pines in clean. tew steps from IX'!!an 341..$451 ••r AMl"ft• WAY * BEAUTIFUL erpt'd ottlce area of exclusive homei;, U B th n1 A L.gun• &..ch 4705 --Rooms for Rtnt 5995 ·1e 1 _. 8' d al . • ava . Y mot1 o y, ug ¥ Newport BNch su1 , a r-co..... st e tn for hon1e or unils, Coi;ta lo Labor Da,y S500 ~Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 RI E LARGE beautifully tum, town. 60-2060 f.1csa llr Tu5tin. Fortin, · · 100 CLIFF D V Mgr. Apt. 9 1 _. "' -~~--======I •·aJto' 612 ~ CLEAN Balboa Beach Units. . TWo bed furnished -new Y ,.,....mt , pnv. :.: '""'" """""'· SI" 2 1 W· lot 2 BDRM. Elec. Blt-ms, ga· room e NEW DELUXE e enll'ance, priv bath, tor one 1 .0l_f_ic_o_R_o_n_ta_l ___ 60_70>l------'----ps 0 • summer Sm • ...i "-........... Adu!•· All Deluxt Features ba qui'ot ·•oft, .,. _ CM 15' LIVE • aboard cruiser; reservations cell 613-9945 ~. :1u • ,_,_.., ...,.. · Be 3 Br. 2 apt. for lease au ___, . 315 E' Bal ... Blvd. Bal ... lOlS.8 American Pt CM Wal!,~ _o~y",'.".i.. '", ........ acb Incl. spat. mastr. 5uite, din NEW Deluze office spaces cntls1ng range 1200 miles. UNJ ......... ......... COLLEGE Park area, prefer 320 to 1200 gq fl at Santa \Vi.JI accept tru1;t deed or CusroM ~. 4 •-. 3 ba, 4 BR. 2 BA_. " blk to beach. MiU2"9 11n. &: dbl. garage, aulo. , .. .a. lad ttO k I '" 0 * VIEW H "'""OC1C •-u 73 ,._ -_., _, & ntiu•ue age y, •• w • Ana Fwy " Crown Valley c ear proper.,,, wner: OME * panoramic view ol harbor & Ocean view. Call eves. ~~ opene.r aNy.;.. cap~holl 6(5....()927 lumoff. &11-1400. "99-4198 714-TJ!l.3400 By OWNER 67$-.1977 K EMTAL~ •~""· area. r. l c ===-,-.-,--,..,.,,-. ';-'""~-""C:C:".i"-'=.i,,,1:::--:::::::;:;:::-;-:-;--,..,:-:-jelty. ne\I' swim P 0 0 I · Apia. Unfurnished Oum:h & school & Corona ROOM For rent or share apt 1 LARGE Executive office 20' CENTURY Ideal bay PERFECT condition! 11.fust $1500/mo. STh-Z'flT q~NTALS de! Mar High. w/ employed, no1Hmoking N.B. Also small office from cruiser. bay rlshlng, boat see interior 10 ap,reciatP! OCEANFRONT HouM': _ 5011 A~. Furni·,a.. • .1 Gener•) 5000 • ONLY $255. e lady, Call 646-4785 aft 6 pm. S45 mo. Owner. 615-4644 hopping, etc, Re.fin. In & 3 BR, 2 BA, lge comer lot. "-N I"''• .--'"'~ A · W N B OCEAN .x-uhort Dr. B. Deluxe -migos ay, . . 600 to 1200-Sq. Ft. out. Beaut. cond, $3,000 VIEW. All elcclric 'net k•"tcho·. ~-mio ~~"-Duplex 211 Cypress, Balboa General 4000 VEN DOME 5".,. Misc, Renttlt 5999 OF1''1CE c ~f .,..., ...,..,. val. Trade: lruck, waa:on, " ''"'" "v" 1213)' 698-0012 -..: Corona del Mar ~ :===:·:::;':·:~=:·~==I·~"'~'"~';"~·~",-'~-:,_,~~~006~1::;-, trols each room. 1\EDUCED St'< 2 ~RAG' G 8/1 ~-• \VATERFRONT. pr iv a I e, ....,, ' Br 4--Plex, \V/W, pool, .::>•v ,.. araret ... w- ro $38,700 with$.!,® do,vn, '"""•' v>'ow, .. ~ .. ~ach. • avtul 811. Broker 534-6980 U.UIACULATE APTS! Jy f'ncl'd, nl. per mo. n35 lnduttrlal p..;,p.· 6080 MOTOR Sail Boat, sleep& 2, 6~"i % interest. Pay balance .. -~ ..... ......, ""'" ., -.:! Eld c M A 1 6 ••• ~1 hend & galley, new aails & th! BR. Avail 1 wk to A""· 4th. Sl35. l Br 4-plex, RIO, end ADULT & FAMILY ~ en, · · P '""'""' 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~1 .,·.-. ~-& cir. T"d' mon y, \Vrite owner, P.O. .... ONS VAILABLE I' • ... r1n: Box 91i Laguna Beach or $225. wk, ~m7 gar, w/w. Broker 534-6980 SECTJ A tl,. . "rf• Storage 1•r• $15. INDUSTllAL for auto or house eq!y call 494-4726 •-·••mo. Close to shoppina, Ptrk 19th & Pomona. CM • ...,,.,,. <=A• •015 HANDY.MAv"N. ·s-Summer Rentolo 2910 Costa Mela 4100 • Spaeio"' 3 Br'•, 2 Ba 8914311S ~ INCOME :;""' ~1* * 2"'Btdrooms ON TEN AatES 1' * WILL TRADE 830 CC daA racing hydroplane in a baa. kel &: 80 CC YllMl.ha w/ get·ldl FOR Ronda 250 or equivalent. 646-S829 lfone Lowrs! 3 BR bonle. ~~·I=~~~~·:~: S37,000 eq, Trade for land. comm. Submit. 642""'87 Blu-. 3 Apll., Palm Sprifl&s and/ or 160 acres N. Dakot.a.ro or 160 acres N. Dakota for income p~p.. Oranai Co. Fortin, Rcallor &U.slXXI 1701-A Westcliff Dr.. NB 6 Apts, well maintained, en- clOl\td ganli:l!S. $635 mp. ror small borne. F'r;irtin. Realtor 1181-A Westcliff Dr .. N.B. 642-5000 '57 BIARlTZ Cad Conv. tops n1ech., needs help top le pa.Ill!. For near new wub· er & dryer value $300.. or )l\Vr mower & ! 646.8113 \Vha l do yoU have to trade? J..ist ti here -in Oranp County't larlest read tnd- lng post -aM make • dnJ, * * * SPECIAL BEN BROWN $30 00 wk S . p ' PuV I • 2 BR. Fum l Unlum 1--------Now 16.000 Ml It indu61dal • up * w1m oo., rreen build''• "'.th ···r -~.-,~--1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!I I lncome units, 120 yd:;. to APT.-MOTEL • * F'tpl Jncl' /lnd fa ·1 Frplcs I priv. patios/Pools. lnco.,_ Property 6000 \.U<IU ....... [.: • Day week monlh • tv ry c s T · Co -· ed orrices. Leased to strong beach. Patios, decks w/ 61, 1 & 2 Br. apt.o;_ Comp. e Stuct'io &. &ch Apis 1145 Antheim Ave. emu.· ntnt'l Bkfst. put. t~nant.s. Priced at $140,COO REAL ESTAlt BUSINE:SS •no ocean view. Nds. peinr , etc. furn. Priv. patios, htd. pool. e Illd Utlls & Phone '5erv COSTA ~IESA 642-2824 ting Zl'ff:t. MR. INVESTOR "'"ilh a 1st trust dHd which Genertl FINANCIAL Should gross $9,000 annual. TV, restaurant, 9 hole go1I •Maid Senrice. TV avail.. i"""""'"""""'""""'l'""" 900 Sra Lane, CdM 6"-'.El.1 can be-assum~ at 7~%. -"-".;.;...;;.. ___ -:'.-:'. ·----1 Price $69,600. Trades coftSid. course. \VaJk to beach. No • New cate & Bar • RENT • (MacArtb:ar nr. Coast Hwyl 112 UNITS interellt only, or 5 Y!'K. Jo'or R. E. W1nted 6240 Bus. OpportunltJes AGO ~~~ioN REALTY 494-0131 traUic noise, \Veekly & 2376 Newport Blvd. 54s.-91"5 3 Rooms Furniture AVAD.. N I 2 further information please CANDY SUPPLY monthly n.tes. 31106 Coastl~=~C-.,~---==o I c>W, 8l'JIC bdr apt. <'11.!l Walter F'riclt, CHARMING Split level \\'ith Jlwy., So. Laguna., our en. DLUX. 1 Bdr., bl t • i n s , $20 • $25 & UP new erpts. painted. blt·irls No1v be \"' built in :.elect Eclchoff & AslOC., Inc. ROUTE ivoodcd &: oet>an view, 2 BR 1rance by Aliso Beach. dshwshr. gar, cent. heat. li-lonth-To-Month Rentals Sa.le or renl at $200, Couple Anaheim area, close to 1818 \V. Chapman Ave. $S MORE CASH SS AFF'TLIATE + sitting room, large panel-2 BR Balboa apf adJ. ~~~v .,..,._., crpts, Adults . S125 \VIDE SELF.cl'ION over 15. 673-0130 trw·~. shopplnf:, recreation 0 Cali {No Selling Tnvolvedl d J'I..,...,.,.,., & traru. Pro...,.fed income range, r. Ex u · c rooms w I beams• beaches/pier .fl'5.$150 wkly.1,..,~=~~~~-~-1 Appliances & TV's avail. f.-100. 2 BR, blt-ins, MO, g. ~.... 541-2621. Eves-wknds 5JS..5747 For Your H~-Equity cc ent rnconle for few fireplace. modem kitchen, 536-39ll 6'Tf>..5810 ALL Util pd, 1 BR, turn. in-No Security Deposit disp, lrpl. tenace, view 7X gross. You can receive Absolutely no cost • • • hours weekly work !Days or office. wall· IO-\\'ail bed. ' div. unils. I mature adult HFRC Fumihtre Rentals utll. S190 mo. 54Q.2'l66 the first buyer's tax advan-to )'OU the Setler! evenlngs). Refilling &: cQI. S32,500. Q\\·ner. <l!M-86U BACHELOR apts, sum~r mo. 2335 Elden, CM 517 \V, !9th, CM 548-3481 ;;;;E=;-;:=-o==c-=== I !ages plus dep~iation. Will lndustrla~ Rental 6090 12 .vears ot paying more cuh Jecting money from coin op-rentals or yrly lse. Stove &:1---,-co.'°'""'====-· I fD AL for Y.'Orking cpl 2 BR accept pre.paid interest w/ ed di! l c.o.t.a --PANORAMIC--refri<>. 67~1292, 644-l<I05. 1 BR FURNISHED 1568 W, Lncln. Anhm 114-2800 + sundeck. Stove / rerri&. low down pa"m•nt. Industrial Spec• !or 01<t11ge County property. erat pensers n ... N Ci Ce • cau the Rest f\fe~ & surrounding area. Ocean view lot; S6.950. Small. BALBOA ,..., ....... · t ear vie .nter. Jntant or * RENTALS* No pcU. G'B-9234 MAY TRADE For Le11e T"·n call • ....._;.:,·, \Ve est. rou!e. CHandlea but level. $1 ,000 Down bal -.._.....,.l""naive 00 · cat OK 646-8226 So 'f · S •c uc ~ · tages. Weekly n tes July, IIOUSES & APTS $100 UP • P\(!8.Se call: Tom De Maio . "a1n t. S.A. Faci ng name brand candy &:; at S70 mllnlh, August, Sept. 543-3158 &-Side 1 Br, w/w crpl15, Blue Beacon 54&-0111 Hunti1!9'on Belch 5400 • REALTOR 714: 675-6259 freeway, S to 8000 sq. fl. Air snackfl) Sl575. Cub Teqllfr-. 497-1021 491-1210 ="==='=====I wood panel, I adult, no pets.1 c120=_--,1--,Br,--.,4-,.p"'le-x:-,-;Rc;/O"°, Furnished or Top Outlity Duplex ~nd., heavy power, abun-~BEVERLY JACKSON ed. For personal interview PANORAMIC VI EWJ Condominium 2950 $115. Lse 613-7629 \\'fw, encl gar, avail 811 Unfurnished New on market. 2 BRs, hdwd. ant office space, 10 Mf· fl. in Costa filesa axea, send ' • r • F'utnillhed 2 BR. 1'~ Ba . AVAIL Aug, 1st. 1 Br ~pts, Bkr 534-6980 prcstig(' location. REALTY name,addresslphonemun. home. Bltos. 01\'Jlet \\'/help LARGE 2 ~r. l~ ~a. studlO $la:!. Studios SUO. 2:135 1 -~~~----~ :? bedroom, 2 bath. cpts, drap. e~·M~~sa:g~s~a:,et~~!~~ The Real Elltaters 646-1171 her to Multi.State Inc., 9015 _a fine. 'Principals on I Y. s'~· blt·lt\S,ul pat~~I. Elden, Apt 6. Costa Mesa $!~~~.3 :!ke; ~ RIO, ~in~uilst~m!~ ;;! ;~so~ units, lg lncd yd~. quiet ;;-;;-;=A"s"k"'l'-'or=Ya_n=-.,-1 8471033 or 54U245 EC. Imperial Hwy., Downey, t" 842-4006 "W mo. Ad ts. GORGEOUS New 1 & 2 Br. =========I 1101 Ellis Apl D, 642.2835 streel S28.500. This won't M-2 INDUSTRIAL apace in alif. 90242 (713) 861-0811 LAGUNA CANYON 2 BR RENTALS Activity nn, pool, sauna. Costi1 MUI $100 or 842-830.1. Ja.~t! Call now! concrete bid&. 31'.XXl aq ft. 746.1!~~~~~~~~~j PIZZI. hou&e S14,500. Fenced yd. n~!H~o;u! .. ~·0:u~·~'~··~·~i~·h~ed~.lj'""'~'.!P~arsoKT."'~·~c~.M~-~..,~,_,.,~,~ I .;;~~==:::=~;;; I ~TH"E"°Po"'n'°1"aJ"'ba-.-.-,,-,-,.,i"'o_u_11. Choice E'side 4-Plex w. 17th, CM (713) 434-5082 If ARTY tntereated in Janet, Zoned industrial. 494--8170 .. 1 BR. Sl45. incl. utUs. Heated CONSTRUCTION ~cludt'd living, extra lge 1 Near 17th St. 3 . :.i BR I b8 f'.OR ~ase-New 2500 sq. ft. 20 acres +, Suitable for All pizia equip for piua Ge I 3000 pool !: 1 • 3 BR 2 bath w/trplc, lndUll~I bl~. 9e fl . 1639 mobile home park. Southern Condominium 1950 nert ' adults, no Pet 5 · br, frplc, closed pr, adulli. All Wlits have blt·ins, cpt5/ Monrovia, Of. 673-9017 vie. of Garden Grove, Hun--bouae, incl: oven. elect 3 BR, 2~ BA, 1J5U sq tt Con· dom . apl Crpts, drps, frpl, palio. Sell, option to buy $300() under preRent mrkl. At 6%i'i'o with $2100 paid rtl'posit for $1500. 642-4414 l'O\VNf-IOUSE, 3 bdr. 21 ~ b~. pool, clubhouse, beaut. small garden. covered patio. S21,750. 545--1933 CM -• B ..... c,,,_ 54!)...2671, 968-1740. $135. 8171 Garfield Ave i =========/ c~se grinder, pizza pans, 3 Bedrl'.wJnu, "' au .... .:>un· JUfl (OMAlfJJNG 96z..7446 drps, p111 palios, garages. tington Sch or City of hot choo_ machine, Sani· shine Home. Completely re--Newport •·och •200 rlr $55,500. Lot1 6100 Westminster. Reply 2903A •·rvo ,·-·,.----•er (,... Painted . inside. Fre11h & --'---------·-NEW 2 BDR. crpt5, drps, "T TRADE" it """ ~ ..... .,...,. Rio bit · 3 bl'·· BARGAIN. 2 apt lots Costa Newport Blvd .. NB. Cal · tcr ·operated). Toutmuter clean. Lcue at S175 with .Ne\vport Beach Harbor Heights Four • -lllS, garage, aa Bob Olson Rltr. ~6-5580 t.i A 19 u it & 55 nit cale lrench-fryer, elc. 95% small deposit. caJ.J Walker COUNTRY CLUB 2 & 3 BR UNITS 10 beach. 400 Sth St. HB 7 TIMES GROSS csa. n 11 u . BUSINESS tnd profil margin. Total Value ~ Le,!i_ 842-4455 LIVING all with fireplaces, SI?5. Mo. 962-4l52 aft 10 AM 6 Unils wHh a good rental ~~31.1~yu~2060 0 r FINANCIAL $5500, will sell all for $2500. W~ SELL A HOME Luxury garden apartments dish\\·ashen & 2 baths. NEW $150 up. 1-2-.J BR. record. Ocean llide ot Balboa ,65 RIVIERA, aU -•Ip., Bus. A::portunit1ff•300 Ca.Ill-I. 925-lll6 or 6S8-l '28 O:ll· E\(ERY 31 MINUTES oUering complete privacy, Rrntal f.Janagu • Heated & sauna pools. rte Blvd. Nr, churches, ocean&: ...... ""P ...... Wa tl='.er & Lee beautifuJ landscaping&. un· ?i.frs. Cbristiensen rm. Hell Ir. Algonquin. Mgr. ba.Y beaches. Good invest· :,~,~~·~body "Tk· HELPll SHARP Small beauty Woo 11\1 paralleled .recreational !acil-3117·A Cinni1mon Ave. 84&.Jl.37 or 846-4144 ment. Asking $120,000. _. National co. needs a distrit> in beaeh area 4 at.a.tiona ities in a country club al· Cost• Mesa 2 BOR apt. choice RB k>c. BURR WHITE utor for your area. Person <could be 6) beautiful mod RENTALS S-~~ ;:i~~t4(1 mosphere. Now lcasin& In Phone ~1034 nr. San Oif!iO trwy &: Beach REALTOR Acreage 6200 &t'lectcd mU5t be able to de-mot.ii with bar-dye room. Open Eves. Newport Beach. """"~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!! Blvd. pho~ 83().-1;,.J!! TAKF OVER PAYMENTS! vole 2 10 lO hrs. per w~k Priced to 11('\J • term11. lbe Houses Furnished Gener ti 2000 =~~='-"'---'---! 1700 16th Street HARBOR GRftM< N"E\=v.-:-M°'od-:-=--:-1-;BR;-;;-.--,,-s=~~!"ewport,i!!v,!!:;.NE.B. 10 ec:res, no down. Near (days or eves) to make very REAL FSI'ATERs ask fer $170. 2 Br, 1~; Ila townhse, Furnished or unfumisJied QU ,,_ u"'N' , cpl!i, ,.........., ,.........,,,.. ves-. Lake & City. 894-4743 high earnings. You may Van $125. 1 Br. duplex, w/w, yd, a\·ail now, child 0 . K. Broker 534-6980 \Vasher, dryer, w/w, avail Models open noon lo 9 pm ... ....,. ava ow. 17 UNITS ========;:-'=!keep your pre:tent po11ltion. now Bkr ~ n4: 642..sJ.70 BACHELOR unfurn l r om · 536-2579 -No selling, No experience OAKWOOD $110. Abo avail l -2 & 3 2 &: 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, pvt patio. Out of St1te Prop. 6208 necesaary but musl be reli-SWIMM.ING po o I main. GARDEN Bclnn. Heatt'd pools, child heated p 0 0 I, newly Older bread & butler ni.orwy 3 BR house on 1~~ acre~. ablr. Company \vfll teach. tenance route for sale. WW care center, adj to shoppirlg. decorated. 9Ei2-8994 makers. on C-2 lot.1 S1420 4 yrs. old. Beaotlful wood-\Ve meet with baMers ap-ttain. Write Daily Pilot Box EAST Side 2 Br, fenced pri APARTMENTS No pets. month income. Call or de. prov&!.. $1650 cash -uired M-336. Cost• Meu 3100 -> 28R, lor2childrenok. Pets ·is ed land. Garden @CL Live ''"" ===-=--~-~-~I Rentals to Share 2005 patio & yard, garage. ~700 Peterson \\'ay tal · creek. Granl's Pass, Ore. (secutedJ. For immediate SELF..SCrvice Laundry &: 11-.-0-----.. -~----A67~ul7t6•29. no pets $138. lse.l's"'IN"G=LE""'"Y"o"unc'.".""-:A-:du"l"""°'Lux=· --;Co-""=="='m==>l6--03~.,'-'-I ~~:..,;~~.ru:i~ng:e " Per.,r:n1mRlty $l$,500. &tZ.226.l interview ln your area hosend Dry cleaning: plants, O.C. MAN \V/secwr:u income "' ury garden apta with coon-* TOWNBOUsfo; * I"=-=-======= i--.,,..,~===--1 ;=========I ~e. address and p ne 11.reas. for further ln.lo: wants lo share her lovely 4 BDR, 2 ba, bit-in range & -.-club •tm06p"·-,... 2 Br. 11 ; BA. l'"'IS, d.....,, 5,.0 15 UNITS Mount & ft-··rt <210 number to: 77•2380 new 2 bdr apt w/~nnie. oven, fam. rm. S230/mo ~~plete privacy,"QsOufH patio. ~tarried ~dults. ''No '!'u•t}~"------~-' .,... " "DISTRIBtrrOR DIVISION" :=~============! Refs. Cosla Mesa ~7-1418 646-2295 BAY a..UB APTS. Irvine al pets. $160. DOWNING APTS All 1 story bldr. No vacan. MAKE your home in scenic P.O. Box. 58. Pomona. Calif, l t O '"lO or 545-V29 4 BR Costa Mesa Home. 2 16th Ne11-wrt Beach. 134 E. Melody Lanc Corner of Wiiiiams r,irs, good return & minutes high desert. See our lux-91769 nvutmen ppor. ~ Will sha 2 BR 2 (TI4\ 64S.0050 6-12-6872 & Alllanu to OCran. uriol.ls Gold Medallion Ha· IT'S A REVEL.ATION the PARTNER WANTED re my ' Ba. frplc. crpts, drps, Only $120,000 . xi I Sky Hru-bo BA apt with studenl or dshwhr 2 Car gar. 54D-1488 LIDO ARE A APT. NEW 2 er: 1 Ba, shag crpts, $185 mo. 15596 Williams FIRST PIONE~R <'le! as n ' r many bargains )'Oil llnd in For So. caJir. reaJ estate \\·orking gi.rl. Nwpt Sch l...&Qi:e, bay view; l·bdm1 ., drpi;, dsh\\·hr. patio Beam Central air conditioning 842-4421 Eves. 8 !7·7176 ~~~!:ne1f~·:~. ~:~~'~lied Ads. Cleek them ~jeciOOO.OOOPro!t t"OOOet u rn, 642·8971 Mesa del Mar 3105 cuatoin furn. Hi·risc bid. ceiling, irplc, gAr. Adult&, Upper 2 BDRM. 2 BATI! -. TRIPLEX·-.---1 II 'I-P•··-••11• • · ....,ooo, · cash Pool I dul 18 Pti 1no ca •• ,,.. -.. T-Y Adln ••·• 1 ,_ .. n...a--' ,_ nly , boat sips. Yrly. $350 no pets. $15;.i. 26j(J Elden. A ts over . vale 673.1328 '6 our ourc1U1"""'"1 requu.,.,.. r •u""4p._ o . Newport Beach 2200 NEWLY Painted 3 BR 2 bath mo. or mo. of Aug. $800, Call 537-0062 aft 7 pm le deck, fireplace &: Pool. PLUS vacant R..J Jot~ Robe'rl Schoen!C"~, lnc. Som':°ne will be lookfrw tot Write Box p 638. ~ DOVER Shores bay r r on I home S2Zi/mo. V ,_cant, Walker Rlty. 675-2676 Sun. call Owner 646-S501 ~~n%r i::~l l~~'Y~~n T;?u.y~'. Contractor, Subdivider It. Dial 60-5678 Pilot home, 6 BR. 4 BA. llll'l:c Agt S46-4l4l ON THE BEAOI l·A"T"T"RA""""CT=1VE=· ~l~Bd~nn-.-,,...-. Coasttl 5700 $55,000 Full Pri~ 56189 29 Palms Highway patio, 70' private clock. College Ptrk 3115 3 BR 2 BA. washer/dryer. ly painted, walk lo stores Ewing Invest. Rei1lty Yucea Valley Avail Sept h;t, yrly Jsc. $1000 --=--------Yearly leue $.325 per mo. $99.50. Phone 646-5951 or D •• h A fs. SU-4323 OR 644-1361 Whit" Elepbanli! mo. 2 1 3: 7.S (}. 5o1 3 or XTRA nice! 3 BR 2 BA F-am. ~ ~mmer $200 wk. 549-3613. Key at 200IJ Maple ·uc;a( p BUSINESS tnd BUSINESS tnd 213:711!Hi333 rm, lge enc. yd. Ooee to vr...-_,,., St. Apt. E. . BEACON Boy mod. 3 BR • .chool• ....... sm. tl33-037t l --:5=-o"'o"'o~N=E"PT=u~N~E VERY sharp 3 BR. 2 "'""" New • Deluxe FINANCIAL FINANCIAL or Xlf'll lg. playrm. Pvl. 3200 Avail l'IOW 3 Br, 2 Ba, deluxe. w/w carpeting, drapes etc. (714) 536-4616 lu1. o,portunllift 63008111. Opportunltlft 6300 beach &-d(l('k $32S or 1N_•_w;;:·po:;.· ·;.;;";;.;;;;B;;u;;c;;h;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,j~cau~~~~~==-=-I Pool &r recreation hall avail. (714) 536-1417 S215/Wk . Aho 2 BR apt I• n 4: 629-t492. NOW $ 2 0 0 Im 0 . A&t. 711 Ocean Aven·ue S?l5/...,·k. 6 7 3.;, o 9 4 or B / I • WINTER RENT AU • 546-4141 (3 blks W. of H .. B. Pier) 642-8839 Wll'llFRED L. FOSS, Agt. I ,2~B~A~0!~----~1 - TOWNHOUSES • 642-3850 e · apts. crpts, 1 rps. LOVELY Twnhse. 2 Br. 2 3 Bed 2 bath. l'I rcfrig. & 1tovt., Sl 10 & SlOO, 5705 Lagunt 8fft'h I I .......... . roonl, .'P I • Bachelor Apt. ocean vie\V, II N .. Ba. pool. patio. I'P c. .......,. 1 1 3 l'I F ctll ut pd, Adul!s, o pe . mo. Uolurn sz;.o. Also 3 Br eve · ~ar carpa · a 11dult only. SUS rno. incl 646--5969 sPAOOUS OW Dr apt, .. " n....., pool. $295 AmLonStOh. ..... ... , utilities 543-0501 ==~~-~~--1 •-be "-• unlurn $175. Agt ,,.....,,,..., .... SHARP Large 2 bdr apt, across uum ac...... • ON ~ BEAOU 2 Bedroom 2 bath. tplit-lev-l .l 2 BR. gpts, fUni & un-drps, crpts, b!t~lns. Quiet park. LoYely ocean view. 2 2 Bdr. 7308 \V. Oceanfront 1 1 ' 1 ~" tum. S1e;i to $a::IO yrly. bJdg. lnlanl OK. $150/mo. Br. 2 Ba. All elec kit. e . garage, carport, .,..., A "-J Rll s~ '210 Baloon• oncl'd 1ar -, 962-9810 month. n.11 .... ones Y· '"'""' 547.J682 alt 5:30 or wknd• .,. • ,,..,.,, mo on yrs lse. 837-4808 Bay & Beach LOWER ocean fronl w. MODERN 2 Br. cptll, drps:, ~ Nowpoct. 2 B,, I~ Ba, GE kit h nc1 ~. Rat Inc c,e .gar,nr"""s. -e y, • F'r]llc Ir pr. avail Sept. l. $138 Ad I u~ 124 E YEARLY'S 901 Dover Or.,..._~-~~e~ winter lAe. $210. 646-51132 . . u ts, .. ..,r. ' j BR. 3 ba. CUJI. home, Incl . 64>2000 r.n:a. ---. 20th _l 2355 • B1lbo.s J1J1nd -REAL E51ATE Gonoral ltontol1Wontod 5990 rarclener; partially rum. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!"~!!!!9I Coron• def Mtr 4150 $95. 1 BR1711row: I l'drie. $600. 2 BR.. 1 bl... frplc. new ---------Ut.il pd, adult no pets. Avall ICOO--L--Roo-m--;-,-.,,..-.-,. 3 BR, 2 ba. cust. '1omc. unf., apts/drpJ. 2 CU' gar. LG. Single apl. $120 mo., 1 ;-;'-ll.;;-;642;;-·3315..,;c. ;--;;;,--,;:-:= 1 home. Kilchl'n privs. phone incl. i;:ardencr ... $425 Catdner I waler pa.id, Elec )'fly. Util pd. U &-F, 2 Bd, l "' Ba. nr in room. 646--USJ 2 BR. apt. ruJly h1rn, .. $175 lllow l n:frig. l..eate. li73-10Ci5 ShoPfl. Bltlns, J*tio, Sl.SO. I,.":=,,-~--,,.,-= Saliflbury, Rta!tor 673-6000 846-4203 CHEERFUL Mod. bach, all 293-C Ogle St. ~2798 1 FURN br. quiet, xlnt NEAR Ocean 3 Jowly 3 BR utU incl. noo mo. 54o.52U& 3 BR, 2 BA 1'ownboule. ;:="· a f 1 er 5:30. Vecltlon Renttl1 2900 homes tor mil at $360. $325., ,_. .. d bit 1 ... ~ .....,.., db MAMMOTH Lalcos Vacation 1375. ca,-11 lt y. lolboo 4300 ;;;,;:~w~ ~ • LANDLORDS • Mobile Home, turn .. •lef!PI SC8--12!1J PENINSULA POINT :BA""LBO=A~"B7A y,,-"'CL=:UB:---.. --FREE RF.:NTAL SERVICE 1, S65 per Wttk. 5314374 Coron• clef Mar 3250 f"cr lmmedlalc QCCUpancy to qui.site 1 Br 11pt. Furn or :-7=-·,.-...,=--:-:,,,,::-::= rr·s WONDERFUL the many ---------'! doitn.bli: tcnanta. Ot-.luxe 2 unf, IM. $400. 642-7633 LADY 4 «nail poodle ~ buys ln appllanct11 you find 2 BR Houle. ~xctllcnl oond. BR 2 BA. carport. $167.50 LUX 2 Br. 2 Ba. frplc, view. room cio.e 1n. ReU>ll8blc. !n the auaifl~ Ad•. Qeck Married couplt• l no Yearly. Adu It• only yrJy. $16.S. mo. 67~1990 or _6'6-_311_•:::"=111=~"1180=:--- thmi t.ow1 ~hildren . .$250 mo. * m.3211 ~13M. 1Mf Mlnun.1r Dr. 3ZI . 271--t220 . • , OURGE rl'I A REAL NICE BUSINESS! WHpLESALE DISTRIBUTORSHIP Would you Jike to own a fascinating business that could give you extra cash in your poc· ket each day, buy you a new car or boat, help pay off the house, etc? IC you c an make a modest cash inventory investment (min. $2750) we can put you in business as our wholesale distri bu tor, sup- plying company established accounts with last-moving, year-round repeat products. You can begin part or full limo. Equally good for man or woman, age no barrier. no selling. If you enjoy dealing with people, have a pleaaant personality, a good reputation & able to begln itpmediately, Ibis bualness may be for you. · U you are sincere and wish an appolntinent to discuss this JOnt opportunity, phone 10 am to 7:30 pm. MR. PORTER (7141 nl-2570 CANDY SUPPLY ROUTE Man or woman t o restock new type coin dispensers wilh high quality package candy products. NO SEWNG! • DEPENDABLE PERSON CAN · EARN UP TO $800.00 A MONTH I Part or full time positions needed ln this area. Requires car, exchange of refe~ces, $1450 10 $2990 cash, secured by Inventory and equipment. Write for personal interview, giving phone number, to; STRATEGIC FRANCHISES DEPT. 25 533 Soutll 2nd West, I Salt Lab City, Utah 84101 ------~-- ,, . ·1 ... .. . -. ~ ~ ... ,,:;. • :-., '· • J I ! ( BUSINESS end P'INAHCIAL } ( J When You Wont it clone right ••• Coll one of the experts listed below!/ CARPETS, IVlndoM. fin. OllOUNDSl,\AN -GAll,DENEll- ete. ·Re• or Comc'L Xlnt $510 to $620 per month work Reas! Reta. !i4Mlll WlNOOWS DmTY! Jotwi,y Dunn )'OU!' 1ocaJ service. Free eat 646-J.445 ' !!!!!._1 .. ~ ____ 67_5~ CITY OF NEWPOllT BEACH ANNOUNCtMENTS I end .NOTICES SEllVIC! DIRECTORY IRONING done in my home, Jut, 20c a pleoo. - Requ.lrtt tbc months e• p!rience In t1unecy, pr. -denirw or eroundt m• ln- tenanoe work. AppUcanta ·•~ted until Thul'Bday, Aup1t T, 1969. Apply to C t Con ret 6600 the Penonnel Office. Cty •men • c • J1nftorlal 6790 Hau. l300 Newport Blvd., e CONCRETE work aJI WAUS, WIOOowa, floon Newport Beach, Calif. 1;ypoa. Pool decka 11 CW1tom. carpet&. Com.merclal l 1 _,,... __ m_<_l_S'B<63.I ___ _ Call 548-1324 rnidential. DeJ.ly, weellcy * CONCRETE Work, bond· and/or Mo. !91-1350 e COUPLES e JANITOR • • • •• ,,_ ............. •~ .. . J. C. PENNEY COMPANY Fuhlon l&land -Newport Be&cb ' HAS ~PENINGS FOii COOK • IUSIOYS Wltb some experience and wutln~ to lelll'n. Top working cond!Uons & enVlfOD· ment. Competitive wages plus meals & tips, and outstanding benefits lncludln& hospitalization and profit sharll)g. Apply In person 10 AM lo 9 PM, Monday lhru Saturday PENNEY'S FASHION ISLANO Equal-Opportunity Emplo~r All student pogtions ar.! tilled. MACHINISTS Hone Operator Grinder Dri~I Operators Operator Press Lathe Operators CADILLAC CONTROLS bl a 2nd Soans far qulck cub. Borrow on )'OUI' pr1> pert)> eq without disturblna )'OID' low Interest lat TDs. Abo buyers n 2nd ros. SfttUer Mortpce Co. Inc. e SINGLES e Tired or Bars, Mail A: Hi Coet computer clubs: JOrN THE FUN! THE IN CROWD - DIV. OF J.M.P. Meet othen with YOUR interestg at our weekly parties or select them individually &. fGALS join FREEi Call IAah 1-9 p.m. 6.15-9320. eel Ii lie. PaUos/drvwys Bny a: Beach Cleariiqf Serv etc. Phillips C e m e n t · Carpets, windows, nocn. ete 548-&80 Res &: ComC'I. ~1401 ~=:==:==:=~.='f"'""'""""'""""'""""'""~I Muat be able to work third J . c. ~nney Co, shift, 10:30 PM to 7 AM. Fashion Island STOCK CLERK Division of Ex.Cello Corp. 1868 Whittier Ave .. Coota Mesa 646-2491 StrviJll Harbor Area 3l yn:. !36 E. l'hi. St. sa-nn 56-0611 WIU. loan $25,000 on ;ood lit Tnist Deed. Details to Box No. M-861, Dally Pilot et'USTO?lf PATIOSe coocrete saw~ It removal P•perh•nging Must be abl.e to do 1et>eral Newport Beach plant and oUice cleaning. Has An Openina" An equal opportunity em ploye r State Lie. * 8'2-1010 Painting * CDNCRETE firs, patiosl ---~----- ele. Concrete a: blk top 11.w-PAINTING? iJie. Reas. Don, 6Q.-8514 EX·PAINTER now teacher, I-========== I quality painting wlrencts. va- Cerpet CINnlng 6625 cation. Free estimate. """"" 6150 *live! Mort9190s, T.D.'1 6345 11% J\'ET RE11.JRN! Meet that :special itlmtone CARPET & Fut'n. cleaning; SUBURBAN PaJnting/Dec Emeryency -Sac r It i e e & be&ln to live. for 1 day service: &: quaJif)' Expert Guaranteed Work choice 1st T.O:s, 10% int, ORANGE CO. 547·6668 work, caU Sterllna: tor Free est, No job tao laqie quarterly, 3 yr due date. J--''';',"°~.,"'ociiC"""o"''r'•n<"---·J =b"n,;·•,,h,,.,tnou;,! ~"~..,.=~'°===J"';;•;;;',;'"'~""~all~. ~-~~~ Buyers pay 30% down, LICENSED P-1\,IN In $25.000 ca11b required. Prin-Car1Mt Laying & ;TING I_ & Ext Lo~t U Spiritual Readings, advice Ren.mfr 6626 cont~ pnces. FuUy ins. clple11 only. Box P 638 Da Y on all matteni. 312 N. El ,..-SatWachnn guaJ. Free est Pilot. Camino Real, San Oemente CARPET LAYING Jim Weeks 673-1166 $1,950 2nd TD at f.I> i,·Ionth . 49!-!IJ~:;, 496--9507 C.A. Page 642·2070 INTER. & Exi.. Painting, ind. 10% int .. all due 3 yrs., --.-::-l-:O-:A";cM;:-cc.1-;o,.P':'.M:-:-:.,--========== J Lie. &: Insur. 30 yrs. Exper_ on oce.1.11 ·view lot. ~ Attractiv• Expert Electrical 6640 Free Estimate, Call Oiuck C~di111c Controls Division ot Ex-Cello Corp. 1166 Whittler Av•. Cost• M••• 646-2491 An equal opportunity employer e REUBEN'S e Costa Mesa NEEDS ·DISHWASHERS- Beach. 20% discount YOUNG WOMAN 645-0809 n4: 494-U37 dancer will teach you an ELECTRICIAN, no job 100·1;;;""'=-,,=--.:==--=;;; I Apply Personnel Dept. ss.cm tsr TD on ocean vlew lateSt steps. Call Ardell smaJI. For prompt service EXT/Int pn~. Aver rm. $20 1555 West Adams, C.fl.f. lD , 21.1 591 •o•• l lD PM call 545--4614 , + good pa.Int. neat work, Se I ~;_ ~-iiirlll'!I. YO SEN~ITJV--;; ~ROUP ELECTRICIAN Licensed. Joe reta. Roy, 847•.1358· nlo~J.:!~;•nce {497-10'n ,venings) rtfeeting Thun July 24th. 7:30 bonded. Small jobs Maint. &. ~T. Exp. Painter, no Perform an type1 of intf:rior 296 Wal CM repair ~ drinldng. College: student S pm, nut, . . · Low. prices! Steve M.11-454g and exterior Pt.intlnr, car- ANNOUNCEMENT WANT young lady to ac-pentry, cabinet building, ind NOTICES · Floo~ 6665 PAINTING .Par)ering 16 Yf1 electrical repair, and otber company same driving to ----------i · u-~-K Cl E h tr n<Uun-are.a. Lie. & related duties. E:<cellent F nd (F A~I .&•-ansu ty. xc an1e C t VI I T•I bo-'-' r.•-OU ree --.,u 548-6562 •rpe ny 1 e '""c..i-Re •w:·u. 642-2356 fringe benefits. Salary $633. J;-,;;;;;;:-;:;:~:;;::-:;::;;;; l~n.~r.~.~~~-::=== AU •t.Yle! ".'''Ci colors 1783 monthly. Apply irnm~i-UGHT brown puppy, may be ALCOHOLICS Anonymous Free est. Lie. et:>ntr. Pl•stering. Repair 6880 ately: Huntinrton Beach ~ collie mixture, vie. PbMe su.m7 o.· write to 540-7262 546-4471 Union High School District. Brookhunt &: Adam &. PO n-•~~M e PATCll P' •-ERING . . . _,.... ~ .....,... esa.. --&.no:)I Telephone: 536-9331. Owner pl11 claim at 9602 Gardening 6610 All types. Free estimate.1--~=-=,_,-,.--- F°' P•rt or Full Time -SALESMEN - In our Garden Shop Recent, 1ucces.sful ex- perience pre.ferred. Com. petitive wages and excel· lent benefit pfOinUTI. APPLY JN PERSON lOAM to9PM ritonday tl\rU Saturday I. C. PEHNEf CO. We have an Immediate neM for a briaht amblHous stock clerk with a minimum of 1 year mponslb!f! stockroom experience. Knwlectae ol electronic component parts ls essential and a H i g h School degree ia prefem!d. MU!ll have the ability to a:et aJona: with people. The main responsibil ity will be to 11tore, maintain and is!Ue our electronic stock room I UppJie., MAINTBIANCE EllCTRICIAN "A" High School •ducation plus thre• years ex- perience in Industrial electrical construct· Ion and/o,. maint•n· •nee work. Must be •ble to obtain • Ii· cenM from the City of Co•t• Mew. Good starting rate plus ex-, cellent company bent'fit1 in-Calf for •ppointment to * * eluding 12 days vacation P••• Helfrich 24 Fashion Island An equal opport.unity employer I'!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ durin1 tint year of employ-S•6 8030, Ext, 154 -DIVISION-ment. 3333 H•rbor Blvd. CONTllOLLEll Costa Muo Rapidly Cl:XPQDdiJ1i: micro- electronic manutacturer re- quire• Division Controller. Position. reports direetly to general m&nagt'r. Cost ex- perience desired. Newport Beach location. Contact A. J. Egli varian data machines ?.fissile Systems Division ATLAHTK RESEARCH CORPORATION Help Wentod, Men 7200 EDUCATIONAL SALESMEN Unusu•I Opportunity With lea.din& 11.1.tlonally 11> credited home sludy school. Experience In seUina: home study courses to industry. We have higll-level educa- tional courses for in-plant tninifli". Must have two years experience with .1.blll- ly to setup salea program, develop leads and follow through. Call Irene Hoad 546-7360 NORTH AMERJCAL CORRESPONDENCE -80IOOL.- AUTO MECHANIC IMPOllT EXPElllENCE? To the right man 1•«e offer • Paid Vacations • Paid HolldayB • Paid Ht'alth lns. • Paid Lile Jns. • Pa.Id Trainln1 e 5 Day Week 1 ~C~orn=w~.n-·~'-m~--=~= Announcements 6410 --------o.' -Call 540-6l2S Experienced I LITI'LE Black male kitten ---------• GARDENED · • I w/bJue eyes. vie. So. w. UndetectabJe Men's EXP;T JAPANrSE Plumbing 6890 BROILEll MAN llADIX COllPOllATION 184 E. Liberty Avt!nue A VARIAN SUBSlDtARY 2n2 Michelson Drive Irvine, C•llf. 92664 fSan Dlei.:;o Frwy. to Jamboree oil ramp 1 block S. al fl.fichelson Drive), An Equal Opportunicy Employer M & F A Div. of Susquehanna Corp. EquaJ opportunity employer U you like the fine1t In YIOl'ir- ing conditions, newest equip- ment, a bll8y Bhop, 11. month- ly min. i:uarantee: and woJ"k. ing at the beach call Scotcy at 147-8555. Santa Ana. Uf"i'Clntly nttds CU&tom-made hairpiece from · CJWntt or new home: 546--3566 Commercial Lanih1capJn1 PLUMBING REPAIR transparent artificial skin. f\-lainlenance and C eir:iup No job too small I·. 3 MON'm old, mix. May be Comlortable, naturaJ.Jooking. MIKE INC. e 64Z-J128 e German shorthatr pointer. Orante Co. Flair Replace-CALL 642 5196 Six nights a wk. Starlin1 rate $26.00 a day. Contact the chel. Jntervlews bet. u .4 p.m., Mon.·f'ri. Apply in person onl,y. I Vic. or Peninsula Point. ment Center, 433 N, Tustin, " 613-4827 Orange, (lJ 6l.1-0431 CLEAN-UP Speclalllt! :P.fow-R~_model, Rep.Ir. 6940 FIVE CROWNS I' FOUND S\arrine kitten, BE HAPPY ing, edKini. odd 'jD.bs .BUILD, Remodel , Repair RESTAURANTS Anaheim 879-4360 . PART TIME evenioz \\'tlrk Lart:e industrial firm, expanding to Oran1e County MOTOR HOME e BUILDERS IMME.DIATE OPENINGS AVAILABLE AT l'ILTAIRE CO. 1 female:. Vic Wilson & Na· Be independent, LE.ARN TO Reasonable. 548-6955 Brick:, block, concrete, 3801 E. Pacific Coast u~"'. 193 "~47!6 •-· · b •-all J L;u-ie, international corpor. I tlonal.. Haa collar_ 6-tUi DRIVE. Call for FREE in-lH"* ttpn ... ;, no JO wu ~m Corona de! P.1ar t troductory l"SSOn. Reliablt-Lawn P.1alnten3nce Lie. C.Ontr. ~s 1----------WE ne~ 25 men to y.•ork atlon. expanding to Orange e ASSEMBURS I YOUNG BJue--aray male cat. Gard . nd Cl evenings 6;30 to 10:00 PM. Im.mediate o.pcnings for men Co.mty. Permanent position v-friendly. Vic ~larbor & Astro Drivine School. en1ng a ean-up * Ii', you need remodeling, * DRIVERS * lh ' pl b-~·J 836-5731 Cu Eda: La N11 exp. nee. \Ve train. ~1 • e:q>e:i nee in u~ available in all deparlmenu. I· AdamL 54&-8734 t I: e wn painting or repairs. Call N E . 1ng, electrical, wa.U1, cabin-No experience necessary as I ALL Grey maJe kitten vie. SPECIAL Sale; 7/'19, 30, 31 hfaintmance. Licensed Dick. 642-lT97 O xperience TOP STARTING PAY els and llnish ·or we will we train. Top starting pay BILL MAXEY TOYOTA HUNTINGTON BEACH A1 EC HANICS-Exp' w/ill- boa.rds. o utboard s & sterndrives. Call Anctnr A1arn~ Repair. 644-4545 btwn 9-5 ---·-·:----1 Help Wantad Women 7400 Poppy l: P.C. Hwy, O:lM. & 1/1. MO!'it clothes & 548-4808/64S.23lO· aft 4 r--....-1 60 Necessary! Also opening:. for train you. Must have 10me with automatic raises. FOR I 61>7757 shoes 1 -; price. 1877 Park, J•p•n.u G•rdener _...,,n9 69 Student & Te•chers hand tools .. See Rick, 2135 INTERVIEW CALL ?IION-Personnel Asst to $550 c M Ex 1 rd · , Must have clean California Ca.nyan Dr1vt-, Costa Mesa DAY & TUESDAY. Be •1 MAN'S Wrist watch found · · per. comp Y'!1 service. e DreMmaking -Alterations driving ~rd. Apply F'or interview call 2 9 aut. nt'w ofcs. Irvine area. 1 near Newport pier, Fl"ff eat. M8-795H, 54&0124 Custom De.signs YELLOW CAB CO. ~Jooday &: Tuesday 6-I · 758 774-7251 Top benefits. malute pl. I Thund•y, July 24. 545--6797 SERVICE DIRECTORY JAPA:NESEnd Ga r .den j n i * 646-6446 * 1 186 E. 16th St. 774.7251 Call Edee. 546-!'>410 J SJCK male ora~ cat wear-Bibysitting 6550 ~U: up. maintenance. 25 YRS. exper Seamstress, !---eos_,i.=M=''""---Experienced Experienced Em~l:~~~n~~ency r '"" ...! collar. """"""' al • 5411-257>. alt•raoons & .... ,,. m•ns * KEYS * Production ~upervisor" MECHANIC • BUSBOYS 2120 So M . s A 23rd Urgent 642-4424 COLLEGE Student: Babysit. clothing specialty. 645--0131 . to $700 e DISHWASHE $ . 111n, .. rl ~ ·(i ...... $1.00 hr. Neal" Wilson &.. ALLEN BROS Al • 642 84 Semi ret.ired man to operate 2 3 ml R LITE HOUSEKEEPINO: BEIGE/Blond~ cu Y .,_, .... GARDENERS STUDENTS terations • .5 5 key shop, Costa Mesa are1. -yean g. exp.er. Older woman needs help 1•t· Suntet beAfh area on Coast Harbor in C.M. We: e k working way thru college. Neat, accurate, 20 years exp. Will train nlan with mechan-Independent Personnel To Work •s Engineer ting started mornings.. Vefy,,. Hiway: injured. 847-8870 ~:t:, ~:ire~~ends. Exp. Lie. Reas. 6464203 TILE C • ·, ical ability and sales expcri-1716 Orange Ave., Suite C on Yacht Apply in pel'50n light housekeeping in nice z KI'ITENS. 1 Siamese. l ='7"-=",...,._,,~_,,.,....._,=-I BUSINESS &::: RESlDEN-, •r m c 6974 cnce. F'ree group insurance: 1 __ c,.M., .• • "64"2-0026'",..·"5'>-09""'"'19_ Call 67J.7877 REUBEH [. LEE mobile home. Some meal Tabby. Vic. Harbor View WI.LL Babysit weekdays SI. & paid vaca1ion. Musi be HELP WANTED --E=X"E"C=U"'T"l"V"Eo---1 preparation. Phope: Hilla, CdM. 644-1317 per hr. Vic Cameo Shores or TIAL Gardeninc &: Cleanup. * Verne, The Tile Alan * bondable. 6 days per week. e Boat Carpenters daughter at 673-713.f 1 ''e~LA~CK~Sco~~,0~,-. -=Dal~J,-,-. =r-.,-.' CdM. Loe rets. ~call Dp'd 646-M22 c;:5t.jowobr~. Ins:!i~ rep~-irst ' Mail resume 1vith phone •Boat Mechanics SALES CAREER 151 E. P•clflc Cst Hwy collect AL"S Gardening & Lawn ° 00 .s · ...,. er number to: Box f.1420 The e cab· t Maken 1.1-wport n--ch F/C Bkkpr $600 rable ta1. O>ntact NB poli~ · pa.tch Leaking s h 0 we r tne: Starting salary plus comm. ,_ vee Mpt MOTHER desires babysit-Maintenance. Commercial, repa". 147 1957/846--0206 Daily Pilot. • Journ~ymen First ~·r t-amings no.ooo+ SECRETARY Xlnt oppty with iood COql-. · •-ho ,_._ industrial & residential. lT. -MAINTENANCE 'l•n lo-e Boat Finishers -•-1.... pany, lop benefits. Call Edee FOUND Miniature Poodle, Ung in ,,.,.. me, uuant * 646-JG29 * _ ,. . possible. 3-year ..,..,..., .... pro-546-S4tO silver-brown male. 962--6.516 pret Mr. Hrbr Cntr. U!i TrH Service 6980 work around .1. p 11. rt men t Savann•h Enterprises gram. Business or sales wkly. 646-3897 GENERAL Yard service, bu ildlngs, condominiums, 776 W. 1:th St., C.M. background helpful. F.qual Heavy statistical typing, ad. Jason Best LARGE Orange cat. very EXP. Olild care in my best 11.t lowest n.tes. Free ESTATE Maint Tree Serv etc. 1'"'uU time for property 'EX"'°'P;;;ERIEo;;;;;;N;i;CE;;;;;Do;-:,;,,,..,,-=..i"-,=s-opportunity employer. Call dltlon on calculating ma· J::n1ployment ~ncy friendly. Vic. CdM . 673-9098 home. Vic Beach Bhrd Ir. eaUm.1.tea. (213) 438-1071 Rem<wal &. trimmings, free management com pan y . man. Inquire 245 Forest Aficha.el S. Newton, Equita-chine, general otfic:e duties. I ;;;;;;';;U:;,Orn;Socc.;-Mr"";;.'~·-.s:.,·A=·,,-,::I WHITE kitten on Orange 11fain, HB 536--3190 JIM'S Ga.rdeninj: .Ir: lawn estimate, Call 541-0088. Needa carpentry, electrical, A~ .• Laguna Beach. ble Llfe, 877-1900. l<ofature person wOOse attend-JOIN HAIR & co. -three far Ave. CM 646--5244 =~-=-=---,--,,.,,-mak!tenanoe. Rn. & Com-painting: and p I um bin I ance can be counted on. out hair 1tylistll! ()perMv: Lott 6401 WILL watch 3 or 4 yr boy. mercial. * 548-3411 Upholstery 6990 skills. Salary open. Submit Help Wa_nted, Men 7200H•IP Wanted, M.n 7200 Starting salary $400-$450. Aug. 1st in Balboa Island. Yard, play equip, lunch. resume 10 P. O. Box 1110. ~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~:I Call 540-42U from 10 am to Call sun. Mon, Tues, Wed, Mrs. Johnson 548.-5723 CM. EXPERJENCED Japanese (:ZYKOSKl"S Cu.iii. UphoL Newnnrt Beoch Ca. ~ 2 pm, 714.· s~ 00-or on o"-r gardener. Reliable. 540-7373 ··..-' "'"""' l ==-.,.,"'='=""='7"=~ ·~-"~ $10. Reward for lnform.1.tlon &i:uropean Craftsmanship Ex 'd s•--•-l BOA7 A s s E •t B , E R S days, 213: 449-6967 rtgudini i<>ldllsh taken C1rpenterlng 6590 for f:rtt estimate 100o/o fin! 642-1454 P ,,.,... ~ esman " Lo • • ~ N w t T t Johnson'• c-~ono·n.. 1831 Neu...,.... Bl., C.M. for ladi~ fine: footwear. Sat Interior finish woodworking. Nur1a Aide Training- ""'" ewport ea rac · CARPENTny ... 1.1 .. """"' year round. Guarantee $2.50 Must be exp'd in either Oau scheduled Aug. u. Em. 968--1340 after S. n. Finest equip., expert care. + b' . ?i1TNOR REPAIRS. No Job P'anting, clean--ups. 962--2035 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT per hour commiuion & ca uiet 1nak1ng or l't'lated ployment offered upon com- LOST Male Dachshund. dark Too SmalL Cabinet in Cal'-;;'====="=== P .M. CALCOMP IS fields in wood. Good pay, ple tion. Inquire Personnel red. Mesa Del Mar, agea & other cabinelll. G.n•ral Servicff 6682 Job Wanted, Lady 7020 FIESTA F'OOTWEAit plenty ol overtime. steady Dept. HOAG MEMORJA!.. CM. 5"6-430S 54s.8175, ll no an&Wer leave -31 Fashion Island work. MERIDIAN LID. HOSPITAL. NeWpOrl Beach. S MO, Female IRISH SET· msg at 646-231'2. tL 0. HAULING, General, trtts. DAYWORK WANTED Newport Beach COMPUTER 10920 Hawthorne BI v d' DRESS TER, vie Bluebird Cnyn, Anderson hedges. topped. trlmmt'd. Qy.·n transportalion L.A. based fashon chain Inglewood, Calit. 90304 {213) l...quna Beach. 497-1065 I 'R"E"P'°'A~IR"So-,-,A"L°"T"E=RA"T=l"'O"Ns removed. Big John. 642-1030 • 543-1122 • ~ a .sharp pl who can 1 _61_4-5200_______ OPERATORS e REWARD. Black male CABINETS. Any size job CLEAN UP &: lite moving Oom .. tlc Help wo,•1k with little supclbrvtl &Ion. GRAPHICS Top salary to tho1e wilh lots Labrador puppy. 499-40&3 or 25 yrs. exper. 543--6713 Tree &. &hrub rtmoval. 7o35 Wi be respons ' lor CPA·Acct to $16,000 of experk!nct 16'19 Monti). 492--0369 CARPENTRY, Cabinet and -"='·='°=na=b=I'=· ===54= .. =1.159=I Chinese live-Ins. Cheerful developing full Wes pot en. Fee paid. Recreation back--"':.·a"°'A;c"";;·:;:· ;;Cosa;:;io°""M''"'co'i· -.;;;-I al -Pennane t Ex . need tiaJ of one of our specialty lf'0\11ld. Also fee jobs. HOUSEW nE S ) $S0 REWARD for silver m e Furniture work. 40 ye.an: 730 n. pene 5 h 0 p 5 • Experienced, a.g-• Ind An. ALES , poodle, blk flea collar. Boy exp. 646-6014 Eve:.!;. H•ullng I Far East Agency 64l-8703 grl'lllive applicants apply 10 •pendent Personnel Some experit'.llef' preren"Cd 1_,-==536-3>=='°====-iQ°'U"°ALJ""''°'TY""°n.=,.=.,=---.,= .. ::,.::-. YARD/1ar cleanup Remove George Allen Byland Agency Pcraonne:l Director. 1929 w. 1716 Oranit! Ave.., Suite C Kerm Rim• Hardw•re ! Personal1 tions -New cons!. by hour trees. ivy, dirt." tractor Employer Pays Ftt Pico Blvd., L.A. 90000 C.M., 642-0026, 545-0079 546-7080 or Contract. 646-3442 backhoe, grade 962.-8'?45 106-B E. 16th, SA 547--03951~>.IEN=;;w=on"t..i-:7';;12;;-l.-:l>'=nn::-,. part:::: JOLLY ROGER _:-'666 Harbor Blvd .. C.M. Zfppo Club Adults Only PARTITIONS, Small Remod. HAULING, Oeanup, lots etc. H I W t9d Me 7200 time to average 2 h.n daily J.o by Cook, experienced, good pay, F /C Bookk•eper $600.00 •• • Coi01' pictures & ph no. of A1ove walks, etc. Nile/Day Handyman 11.11Ytime you e P In ' n _ f 0 r ear I y m 0 r n Jn I '-t:;f& iood benefits. permanent, 2 m. 2 exp. to lmil balance. •--> C-'I K uo ---" 64" .,.,.,o full tirne. Apply in po"°n to al l Lo · ~ date:t )'Oii. pre-select. No n.o.,.a. iu en _._..,., ...... ,,,....._,,, COLLEGE nge man • sharp newspaper delivery t o c ra1ne. Merchant11 ~r. • names used until Y'" KO on MASTER carpenter .$4 per DAILY PnDr DIME-A--cleancut -to v.'OJ'k full or homes in Newpor1 Beach. manager, 400 S. Coast High-1annel Agency, 2043 Wnt- 3 0 b C IC Pl It way, Laguna Beach. liU 0 • date1. 637.9644 hour. Remodelih&"-Rep&in. LINES. YQQ can use them part time. with adult youth S200 aven,ee per mo. Musi • y • omp o er c rive, N.B. 645.2no '. 1-:DAJL="y,,.-°"PILOT""'=-::oa.=,..;i;:c.· ;;:.<d::; I 64U409 or 536-3000 for jwt peMie1 a day. Dial leaders •in YMCA. Must have late model cal'..-& be C•ICo'"p h11 111jov1d • 91owth '" 11!11 11ol~m1 Jr Acct to $900 ~fOTHER"S J-fclpcr. n 0 ~ lltCtlon NOW! DAD..Y PIWl' WANT ADS! "'2--5618 have car -~"Ork some dependable. Call L ·A· of '40Q't 1i11c1 19115 i nd h11 b1com1 th1 wodil Fee paid. Construction ex-housewurk. ~lon-Wed·Fri J • • I 1-===~~;:;~~~~~~:::=::::=:=::~~~;:::;~1==='1 n\ghta. Call 494-9431 TIM.ES. 642--4800 l•1d1r ';., comput1r 9•1phic. 1y1l11111. Thir ••m1 ptrlence, Also fee jobs. 5. days &: hn Ocxible. , ~ l•::-Sc'-t.E"'RK;;,;.-_-;N'°""::3'.,:--::.,::.1---;yw;O;;Uo;N;;;G..-;Mw;E;;N.--p1091•11 h11 b.111 r•fl1ct1d i" c•r••• •'••11c1· Independent Personnel 646--1420. l~?IJ? E"K>"C.., ¥. m111t oppo1t~11ili11. : ~ 'f .I STAR GAZ ~,.. . ..,_ • perience:in groce.ryordering for COD delivery, Uta car w, 111.,, immidii l• ni•d fori 1716 Orange Ave., Suite C ACCNTS Ree.&. bliling; girl I' t-==-:;' 111:=...----B, Cl.A.Y L POl'l'J.A ..,_ __ 0 -;-;::;"-; and pricing. See Hllrold, nee. Make $25-$35 day. Ap.• •;;;:;;C,..M,.·-.· "642-0026"' 70 ", 0 54-;>097llc,:--=c-I want«!. Expcr. only, Ac. A .A.UIS M Y. Oaify Adi"*f GoMJ. M: LltU.~ HJ-TIME. 4951 E. 17th St. ply only ll you are neat Systams Oasi9n En9in•ers •JEWELRY SALES. No exp. curante typizt. Apply W. 8 . i ~ ~-~1 , ""r A~dillf,. 1k Storw. Y ~-~ C.!\f. 548-9314 dependable. 230 W, Wa~r. ro p1rfoT'" 1y1t11n1 d11i911 of inl1rf1c1 1quip· nee. Fringe bencrits, rapid Schock Co.~ S. Grecndill l 10. .... ~· . To dewJop messoge for Tuesdoy, ~'·J:iO.:n~ SERVICE STA. SaJesmen. Ste 217• SA m111t lo 1d1pl C1!Com p plotti119 1quipm111t to chance for advancement. SI, Santa Ana • ~~~,....~~ • reodWO'dscon-esp:nt~toruriT-" ~. F'ull limc, swing !hi.ft. Atust 1.-. .... _;;MO'!-';;-;;L-~Oii-~-MAJ(~S-~-~[S-R~S-~..,.;;;;;; th1 n1 w 91n1r1tio11 of comput111. Mu1t h1•1 111· Over 2S. Apply: KIRK ACCN"rs Rec. &: billini Vrl ; f~T.A.Ulin of)U.rZodicx.birthsign. SCOI."° be experienced & neat in p1ri•nc1 i11 il i9it1I lo9ic 111d toirc.ult tl11i9n of J EWELERS, Huntington wanted. Exper. only, Ac::-: ~= . ~z fiL ~t ..... ~-~ l ;;::~;;;':"o,_;;.,.,,.""",.81;;:~;;.;;c,.. .• M::-'.m::-::, .-;;~IF D CONTOURS . estah. 1953 IS •• MS in EE. La~~rl ~~or Mr . ~:~ l~'.sli:mpps~ ~vrft~ , ~ See J " 2590 ~arn put1r 1y1!1rn1 ind 1/0 1qulp1111nf. R1qu lr11 Ce · A I : ~~ :r; ~:., ~~ ~17~-~ EXPERrENCED Se r vi c t! Now in Orange munt,y Pro9rammar Analy1t1 PLATERS. 3 exp. Hard ville SI. Santa Ana F-=='-i 6._ ,.--· 66-, station atteDdat1t full time. Top Men Requited 546-3030 M,·,·,-,. 2 ''''' '" l·' 9, •• ,,,·,00 •o•pul••• chro-•-~ •-cad TYPIST. e ........ fa.st, •CC"-'". i ~~v 21 1Y:-J1H:i;-~1$;. SMITTA&M~ Apply in perM>11 2006 Harbor ~ pro9';~mmin9 ;~ FOR.TR.'::N .~;; .. 1111chin1 or ••· plat~;;· ,~Tr;; shifl' Appl; Shipp!~ ndept. Appl;•in , • •You ll ,._ ",.._ Nt:N,"" Bl·~. CM 64&-55511 MEOIANICS And attendants bl I · " S ,,.-21'• S H tha 1 'cf AM~ tCoM 39"--~9--tee.1' vu '''" v 1n9u191. 1n per80n ll..-.• . Hathaway, ·-n ..-. . a W91. • 4-lL...._"l. 1,0, ,o_... ~. ::0:·, '°n ""'• 1-SfATlON Attendant -day w11.nled: Apply in per Ion SA SA. • ~':!.~ .. only Systems Analysts ; 4iJO.a 1J!t1Aoo •2Y• n N4 ~ v.'Orit mechanical e :<P e r TfilA.N GLE SERVICE ~ 11 W EEKEND Dish'NaShine BI K JN I Barm.1.idldallC'l!r, , ~ . 11J4 ~ ~2'_ n7.~-CAIMCal4 preferred. Matlhew"a UnKin IPhilllpo 6') Mu1t .,, 111p11i111c1~ wil op1retin9 i y,111111. he.Ip. Ste.a""" r...: ~-t • .. n Full or na-+.time. ,... __ ,_ I . .._ -.,...... ., '' ~ 1'11f1r11ic1 t1 tho11 f1111 ili1r wit+! $(: 400 11ri11 'Y r ··~-.:>\! .,..... ' '-"'11<4 »!I" 15.Molri9 ~~ ~~ fE.21 Service: 3928 E. Coast H1'-y, 4~ P&c"'•• ~,1 ll-. NB evtnl" .... See Tenov, 495 E. Mea I .Ur2' 1'T• "6Tod!Pf 7,..,.... _M.,.. CD•l .....,, .... .....,., ··; ~•rnput1t1. ·-··; '-· ,,.... 17th St. CM 548-9314 s.s.nn ' ™'.,t:l ''~ ;!;::.: 1&r.:d it-»-:11~ BOYS J0-14 : u1.-t ltYou .,,.~.... ".,',iµ1 ' 1 r~~~~ ASSISTANT CHEF A sJI. Ol.nfer Route. Open ©@li'\L 4@/U\® STEREO Compont-nt TRAINEES To assemble ! ue 2:1.....,. ,, ID"'t AOUAllll• around cook. Country club, lor \!::J\;P \!!Y ulesman. Knowl. of curreitt rubber \\"et i;uitJJ. No t':o<· ; ~= ~![ ~~ !J~ ±~-~A~;,:S:surano..-e _ Laa~X:~hp~Laruna ~'rt.ee~'::'~/be 21. :S~~11;:e;.s~~· APJ>ly: • -~~~ _. 51A M~ i.t1-JS.» Lead all NB -•"-Ctll er ••ttd rt ium1 to J 1N.'M'n:i:'O~-;;i,.,.,-,;;;-I l~.. 2SMttfls "5~ 1$0wtt. ,... I av • · · ._..._~. ~ SAL&SMAN: f1 . lime. Sell \VAITR E.SS -OVER 12 • -· ~~ 5'0co.ri ,....... 1-1.5 ca 6T:i """" M. t. Sinith, 111 41 6JS·6101 ' .rttr oppt. ~ -"'e"""s"A"'L"E"S"M"'E"N"'e..-IN-DEMAND product. Hi DA)' It Evening Shift • 1 .,,... 57T-,• .,,,._.. rt.SCI$ l OS N. M ull~. A111h1ll'l'I, C11lf. f110l ~ • .....,. ?,!S-.lo•'• ,",~, ,..._ ' .. '~!'.. "'"•" ~ EXPERIENCED Cook. Ap-Esla bHshed tt"1Titory In tJ4:! • pay from st.Art. SlO. Call 5t';...!t86:1 • ~ -" ........... ply davs a l 1400 W Coa sl 111.mples deposit retunda.blc. EXP'D SALES .,.J.22 ,J0Woo1hw•at '°°' '°tw;,,,. """-'·'° · &<>... • t..'<pande:d. Salary plua com· Call &42-4886 ct.AN IND LADY .!" .. !'l!-31 ,..,. '°'Goo! /&l.Adftne {)Ntoutul J:l.4.)...W.6?(i:I lhey, NB. 642.....,,,,,, ni\11..~lon plu~ car 11.0owanc<!. t.ten & \Vnmcl\!I Clothlna li---_!~~~~;:~.,~~===181========!':"':':•:""'=~!..._----J\\-lllle e.lephanta! 01mN.·JUie f\.fr. Bealf:r 642-1352 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! + 543-5J88 • • ' ' . -11 -l)O - !!!!! 200 .,,. """. omo ""'· U<&· Jant two .blli- ""'· -so orl<- ulp. .... Ork- olf> l '/in-• :hor 1545 - IOO .5IO .... pl. a i•t· ·'I> 1ice - '""' ope I iO l'ql· .... ii; .... ""· 'ed, hor >m· "'' AL ch. s "' ro 00 no ]. ''· ... In ... "· "" -I '. " I JOll a IMPLOYMINT JOU a IMl'l.OYMINT JOU a IMPLOYMINT MlltCHANDISI ,Oil MlltCHANDISI Pj:ilt JOIS a JMPLOYMINT ..... w..-1 ~ W-ll!llP W-SALi AND TltAOI IALI AND TltADI ,,., Mon, Worn. TSGO Mondl1, Ju~ 28, 1969 DAILY I'll.OT MlltCHANDISI POlt MIRCHANl51SI POI Mll CHANDISI POil 54J.I ~I> TIWll IALl:.ANO TIWll 5"1,1 N10 TRADI w-7 W-n 74CIO w-74CIO 'umltu,. -PumlluN -l'Uml""9 IOOO l'uml""9 ·• ' ille Ftomlt:w!o IOOO J.c-.eo. Fuhlon hlond Newport Beach NEEDS PART 'riME SALESLADIES * HouMwlves & Mother1 Can )'OU •Pm't a ·few boW"I each ~ ~ add to the family' Income ati the Mme timt! Schedules C'Onvenlent 11.>r YoU. momin&1, .tt1r- noona, eYel'linll:s "'· cornblha- tioos ol all. Work ln store under the finest of concU- tionl a.n.:f ~ ~rvldon. APPLY IN PERSON PENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND 10AMtn5PM ''°""'!' th1't Fridq * INDUSTRIAL NURSE SECRETARIES COLLINS RADIO CO. Check Here ADVERTISING Secretary/ Bookkeeper DKOIATDI em WIClllATIOll R_.._, top lo .. I Of 18 """-•• ,_,..,... .... ltlenfwoharp,tok• WAVM ,.,._,_..,~ - chorp tlrl. Mutt hove s,..1111 & ~ fwlllwt .... 11ont lltlll1 Incl. AU IRAND N'EW lhorthond1 ,,.,.,1. 11te -fli--·-.. Co • I """"'' b1111.,. unc1er · ' 5 :~~~--·-· mmerc1a ::;;,~:. lerboro, 17141 i~ T ;:t~tL_Wl;;f't?i~t-!~=~~;=· SICRITAR'lt .A decora!Or dream house on di$play -3 :..:111i. = compleinU; VEllSATILE <Vol. '"' t ""' of S •-• fu ·1u ( sa1.,.. SZ.40 .,, •"'"'· Roport., 01v. Mr<· rooms gorgeous pan1111 m1 re was ~-5 $ ....,oq. ()ept. Have aale1 tx· ""'· "'· .... 1)Pe .'\l reg. 1295.00 pe<., • know pho ........ ~~:;~~~;lr! SACRIFICE : • • • • • $398 wW::.:. ~:~, •• ., lJon. Call Jim. }fyama DQ1; CAIDfT TSUll AVAIL.AM.I allDJT C&.mAAI• .,.._DIATeLY $15,000 PUBLIC NOTICE WITH Tlll Joh Kings! MALE "2-2400. ""'" 5'&«ll9. II m NITURE Famlliu with all -ot Chi fil1.L~tt!!o.!1~J. RJR ~ :'~iui~tectronic s•a.9660 o,... !"~ Equal -UIUlf empioye' TI .... _,., to $550 S.1M .. M Terms •r. All student positions filled. 19700 Jombo'" ltood Newport Btoch EXPERllNC&D 1844 lewport Blvd • ...:, _,, , .. ~ i~":'snito + ... Boh ..... 1...,""H•'•"'°".,;·...,c. ••• w.,•'i'"'_,-.., .... ..,.E .. -,... .... ,,.He"':'!!m!!!1!!!1ten!!!· !!!or!!!!Bo!!!rno!!!!!r!!d!!!ISt!!.!!' I Equal opportwt1~ employer • • ITT JABSCO COMPUTER CONTROL COORDINATOR lofuat have senior key· punch I verlfyinc experi· rnce. mM. Good working .conditions anci: benefits. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 1485 DALE WAY W AmtESS 0nnge County tmUoey, 2 Cost M-• only ''"" collere. aa!es JOBS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS .&,EMPi.DYMENT Fumltu,. Apply In Peroon I -bac-. Equal opportunity employer -SURF & SIRLOIN 1_,.....,'Tlt-W .... Set.lloo.'Tl6 CndltSal .. TrH• Jo~o-Mon, Wom. 7500 Jobs-Men, Worn. 7500 SPANISH e ATTENTION e 5930 Poe. Cit. Hwy. to $650 ~ MEDITERRANIAN A~=" Newport Btoch JOBS a EMPLOYMINT JOBS a EMPLOYMENT S~~f,_'. ~~•ckaroun newport. Exporltncod Ao Shown In moclel "°"*· Could •i:n •100 _._ BEAUTIFUL G'" 1 ~ • · el 8ooklc~r and 3 Rm• of furn, <dtn· rm, llv you ""' ~ ''"' ,.. n .. Halp w •• ~~ M ... TIOH to $700 nersonn rm, & ""'""' p•ced -each wttk? can you spare shape, for f11ute mode.I. Help Wanted •-Hlr.t hoot d 1 r Gener1I 1'9 Work •J l0.2o hn a week& Worldna Strictly arnat11ur, aenerous Women 7400 Wo.,,en 7400 ,. .. fen:, wo:f: be co~:: &g9ncy Mil', mature. Day ahlft, s where at $895 is yours~ Your own area! Over 21 ! Do pay. 1 afternoon ptr Wffk. ---------1 .-~ da,y week. Apply in person. at Ollly $.199. Eu.Y a-edit you havll! a cu'!' No col-ltlay be married or ainale, OCEAN VIEW * Accounts P•Y•ble ei in man from foreign 833 DOVER DR.NE Jnte~s between 10 AM-Terms. l~ns. parties, deliveries but preftt over 21. Write SCHOOL DISTRICT C&erk "°':try ';1th1 citizenship or NE~T BEACH t PM, Santa AM FUrnlture or canvaasin&'. For In-Box M 869, Dally p;Jot. Experienced only type 60 pe anen " sa. 3870 426 W. 4th St., Santa AM. troductory 1nt.,.,,1ew, Call GIRL FRIDAY ADMINISTRATIVE wpm Technical Acctto$1000 EPF ' FIVE CROWNS 547 .. 7" Mr. Lacey 54U560 SECRETARY *. P~rsonnel A1111tent fmport Auto aale• &: aervtce RESTAURANTS For Newport Beach Marine Experie:nced in intervtewina Q/C Super, fr. $3. hr. background ~ for fine Office Furniture 8010 CREDIT CHECKER " GENERAL CLERK UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK store. Mutt be &harp, attrac-$582 mo. 12 month position. and all phuea ot pe'9Dl1Ml 5 yn expu in Q.C. bo&t in-Beach area Co. 3801 E. Pacltic Coast Hwy. l--------- tive, ttllablt. Uabt typlr.:, Tbree · yn 1ecretarial or .. ,,..,i. r--~ ..... 1--'-'"· duatry, Dreftsmen to $900 EPF liOiiiieo..n.iiiiiiiii"";;.;"'&"O..iiii I wooo oroc. .a.....i. T drawe:r tiling, bookketplnc, public cltrieal e)(Jler. ~· nv -... UUUl.I ..,.,.... ........ M-U .... ~ -- contact. Salary open Mr. Shtnd. 90 wpm, tyJ)lrl&" 50 Good opportUntty in --....,.. Prtftr Civil tngr n:per u FINANCIAL w/gtasa top + wood P'ivd Cooke: &12-9'l01 . wpm. High school Cf'8.d, us fut ~ corn~. Forem. fT. s1 hr. pertains to, w~~e,:,,~tnc:ti. INSTITUTION cb&lr. $100 ooth. 5t5-4849 citizen. Applicants must be' Call for appointntl!nt Be abie to 1Upervise !up F1dd Serv ce ,.., .,. .... F /C Bkkpr to $600 tiled by July 3L Apply Ptr-.POLYOPTICS INC. crew, have boat exper. Mgmt TITIH to IS Gerage S•le lnttte1Unc. dlvenWed du-aonnel Commis&lon Office, 54&-2'l50 We&dtn to $3.75 .... . $650 EPF . mov1n& to HuntinKton Beach. COSTA f\IESA CALIF 92626 2712 W. Coast Hwy. (Il4.} ~ · Newport Beach 646-2431. tiel. Split fee, allO fee Jobs. 7972 Wamer, Huntington equal oppartunjt.)' emploYtr Be able to do arc & burn. Young college 1rad/de(f'ted The beautituJ new offices 3 PlECE walnut liv\ng room Independent Peraonnel Beach, bl!tween 9 & 4 PM. * ACCOUNTING lecelYllHJ l•specter to train with t11.tional firm., nttdt an addition to thf.' st&tf tnbles $25. 2 lamPI $15 6' Exper1enced WAITRESSES 011)' & Night Shift for bully collee shop 1TI6 Orange Ave., SUite C CLERK to $3. hr. no work eiq>er necessary. who bu S&L or Bank ex· green cwcb, &'OOd mn- C.M. 642-00'.26, 545-0979 C~~ ~~'; Opening exists for• pe~, Must mica lt·calipel'I, 6 mos (Wlll pay to S850 for some pertence. Salary commen. ltruction. Scotch cu a r d BEER MAID wtth recent experience tn tn.. to yl-ar exper, ~ ex?ttl aurate with experience. Call cover $15 Set of IOl1' dub Newport Beach. One to two ventory cott, accounta re. Mfillt W.Wfl" fT. $3.21 lw ~: L19el s.cty to Pel'IOTU1el (213) 61G-0150. aJ'Vt"l'S $5 and '10 Set of To Presidenl, cround tl.oor Arcl)'on''"1....,Es : yn:. exp. prtferred, 21..fS, celvable • payable, in our Exper in machinery ,4 111: $750 EPF • MT65 McGre1:or aolf clubs opPOrtunH:y, top 1kWa. No sharp ard willlnl to meet acmuntina: dept. mobile equip, rood "1d11'a .Alual have ablllt7 to Pret>al"f FUIJ.. Time re 1 id en t $50. Set ol 3 w oo cl • bookkeeplng. 436C E,. 1M7th St. ~~:-J~!.~ !..~ GULTON INOUsm.JES lkllls, co. benefit&. Dayt pgtp.~pet1Hona&accoun11. man&ger couple to manage wMa1"':'.',~ft..!~-• .. s_:e,t _~. MISS EXEC AGENCY os • 118 ................. N_.v ..... "-.. ., 1644 Whittler Aw . Hospital Mtllllt. .S•.HY' to $650 1}1: EPF a>on-brbe com P 1 e t e d "' .-... -...: u.......-.: 510 w. Coast HJahway COMBINATION, Sharp Bar a.mall oftice atmosphere Costa Meaa, caut. to $2.50 ,_redrcal or efllr backlround deluxe 123 unit apartment but in Rood shape, just need Exec. Secty Newport Beach 646-3939 Maida &: Go Go O.~n. with beautiful surrounding!. Equal opportwtlt.)' employer Muat haw past ex.per, depen. p~~( ah 100+, typin1 complex In C.O.ta Mesa. new grips $50 P b 11 Co MANNI PilG'S * Instructren I Sales • Top Wlil" $3.QO...$.'l.!IO to Cont a ~ t ~ r • L a P p • I =========ldable. Flex.Ible hrs. 65. Th! O:>. needs a alri ca· Submit l"fsume ·with deaired ttfrl.ie::to;"· clean wt th COFFEE SHOP Holiday Health Sp.a CM. •tart. Ph. for int M5-9983 DOWNEY -SAVINGS & Jobi Men, Wom. 7500 Plant Mclin fr $3.36 llr ~ .. of, working w1th a u.lary, »a• t experience, ~~ent, ;,::: z,e!t ~ 2300 Harbor Blvd SASSY LASSY, 2901 Harbor, LOAN ASS 0 C I AT I 0 N S-5 )'l'I exper, electro-medl ~m~ of 1upervillon A ttfPl"fneel, complete skilb 31.ia .. Sm..ro., Lane. s.6-4lt5 24031 FJ Toro Rd. · c M ~or 837-t9U baclcground. , -a6\Uty .to make dH:l1lon1. and capabillliea ptt'rloua.17 ..=::..:;:::.::c:=::...:.c,..c=" I Lai:\111& Hilla 837·1014 Aggreuive type for sales & ~·=· =~====~ ;;;_.., ............... -.1 Torrat , ~, n..--~~rl F r W.w to $600 CRF applied in ~nttng and MISC. camping equipment, 1-~------1 ph)'sica! Otneu wod<. s.r,. LEGAL SECRETARY ' · ~ -,.... -' k t 1 1•--~ ··'I -·- ACCOUNTING *CLERK* . t ~ -· T ITT JABSCO fr. n 50 ., One·(lrt oUlce, pttfer oon-up eep o Im~ pro~ta table & bullet, f.., & ...... , expenence Pl"f e •• ~ ..... t not Fut, accurate t)'pilt, 1ood , ,1f 1 Do lu ... job .-. """'· itrut:'Hon bk&'md with ability to P. O. Box 1810 Ntwp:ll't mattresa & bCllc sprlnp. neeetMry. Muat have trim on Phoni!, Some lhL'lnd. _ • own It pa. -.-...,. to ,,~ .. own lnitiali~. ah • Beach, Calli. 953 Pool teat kits &: pool figure and be able to meet Small bu 1 y otfioe, HB. ~ ....... '"'1.... •- nd deal 536..ao7B I-__, . ...... typlng requlttd BEAtrrY Operator, full ~ good I e s I ..... ,.a wu -Rapidly oxpandln& msnufac. :.,. In .,':!::'.'."' pul>lic. ~ G °'1 Off8JS.MOO. L V MEC:HANICAl p-l'nu Opor. -Engr Soc $550 CRF part-ti.,., BUI}' lbop, Xlnt numo"""' lo U.t All luring company in the New· Mera Ice $400.00 In UlNDLU • ,___, 1Cr ASSEMILER to $2.SO ... QQod ·ah .i typlnc akllls req, location. Contes&& H a 1 r ttuonable. 14292 Hammon port-Costa Mesa area. has an lookkeeper Type 50 kno"' machlntt, like ~;:: o~'j'...,_ If ca.n do aetup1, mare e.ncr/coaatruc&n bkzrnd, Fuhiol'll 675-3385 Pl ott Weabnlm:ter opening for an l!XJ)e.rleoced Wrstmimta, lfOt typq •. DI children, call i.or.me. Mer-,,,,_, ' money. capable of work1n&: with NEW 1; recapped Urn. accounts payable clerk. Ex· ~ of all books 1: ledz· chants Peraonne! ~ncy, Pnfeto IO!MC!lie w It h Unskilled men tn a fut pacn co, with School1olnstructlon 7600 Casea or 76 momr ofl, break cellent fringe benpfifs and ers no trial balance 20U WelldUf Dr. N.B. mechanical u.ernbly ex-. a heavy volume. nuid. oil Hltera. 'ST R.an- worl<ln& nd!tion • · ~mo """""· Good bend!,. Slllp!llo<I & RecolYI"' .. lO CALL FO~ APPO~MENT MISS EXEC AGENCY S.cty/Rocpt te $515 -condltlom. Clirlt Tr... $l.7 0.. Mrktp Soc to.. ' E<t.....-I Vacation 5th cbero !bo<I>' & • • •' •• J.46.•-. 510 W. Coast Highway FULL 'J'bJwi ales penon for Fee pajd. Top aldUa A man-and Vi EPF irnden ••• Sr Cittzen1 parta)., 3:H Orchid, CdM, -A.:::;::i;;:;-... -;::r;;::~fN::;owport~~;;Beach~;_.=;646-;';';'"39~ new HaU.mart card A: rift agem~t A/or ~ u;. WO train clean cut youne Must M.ve load P/R ability. Q.ilcC*t 10 Jemm eypine 6'13-8804 · At .. mbler Trelnees AMBITIOUS WOMAN •b:lp :In Fountain Valley. perience. Also tee jobs. EQUA~~ man Sale•, mrtts vcper belplul Sch!. Trial tem:in. 113 Del FRIDAY" S.tutday. Elect. $1.65 National company 10 bridal qe 3).35. 83J..1~ alter 6 Independent Personnel All'-:~"'"' to $2 •35 lw Sh 80, typing 60. Mar, C.M. 5t8-2&59 F.dger $10. Baby furn. Sl--6. No experience necessary, market. needs a 'ftll rroom-pm. Mon thru Fri. ln6" Orance Aw., SUlte C 1485 DALE WAY Exec Secty to $540 CRP GUITAR Leuoiu in Your Dishes It hou8ewan?s 25c-$4. · oppty for advancement with ed woman with 10mea sales 21 YRS or older, likts people, C.M'. 642-0(1J6. 545-09'7' OOSTA MESA, CAUF, 92624 FEMALE EJectronlc1 .. ~iqp'ou.. nd help. home. $2.50 a leuon, Call 1318 WatMm, CM 546-5547 , :rapidly srowtnc firm, pleas-exp as ~r trainee. I mo pd vacaUon. Ski Park R.N, SUPERVISOR <71•> 5f5.82Sl fUI, top ,,.,..... appearance Bob at THURS.Fri. 2018 Phalarope, " }a nt worldnc cond. Flexible hrs. so~ eves pre. City, Utah, Work in a tun Full or pert lime. 11 lM!Cftll&l'Y. •548-00fl * (Republic Homnl CM. J ABII.JTU::S f'd, car nee. No P&rtles. cal). bottl, Nov. to · April. Call p.m. lo 'f:30 a.m. Good Office M!'• to 1 _1!21ol Recpt $450 APF TUTORING· Rem e d I a I Bargains for Sl! 546-0855 : UNLIMITED AGENCY vautng or dellverie1, Opp. to Mon, Tues. ~2579 ul&ry .and .frina:e bene. Put exper '" ~.... c, Front ottlce appearance with • .,, <488 E. lTth St., Suite 22' double earnin&:1. Far In~ MOTHER'S Helpu lo live in. fits. know ftp1R'c~~P$400 abWty to.meet• work with r'i!&dtng. Elementary crade Furniture Auction I02S Costa Mesa 642-1470 ductory intervte~, CAD. Mr. Pref. expu W/fll!W baby. P•rk L1do ITT JABSCO "" ..,.. people, type 45+. level. Call 642-9610 · -Typist Hum >44-SS5<1. No othtt chidlttn. priv. Conval""'nt Hospital • Put exper. Keypunch~ to $450 MERCHANDISE FOR e FumHure • Genl Ofc $475 ~both. Start Aua. IB. 1445 Superior Put ~ $400 Mio r~ ~:,i1;;,1~ + SALE AND TRADE App~~~AU~;l~N TV -Will train [lpxowriter, xlnl Beautlful New-Newport ' Newport Beach 642-2C10 In..,.,, C:O.trol Cfi6 &: 059 verll\er. l'ur.,lture IOOO n-n Garden Or'O'WL Blvd. oppty wilh '"''"' .... Co. Be""h office" p1 ...... ,. dl· A~ Woman 35 to Secty/Bkkpr MILL . & DRILL Cl .. $Z.ll .. Mrk'9 Girl Fri to $440 -. w._......, "'· C.G. ,,.,.,, $2. hr, call Kay, 540-5410 V!!~ duties, Call Kay, 2i or aentral o1c &: rttepl, OPERATOR/, 3 yn ex.per in inwntory con. VJ EPF, YJ CRF OVER·STOCKED Tues I: .Tbms 7 PM.sat 6:30 J ... n a~st 546.SilO work. Pl.Int IUl'!OUndlnp., bol •· v-~-· t •-N ~ small oft! ~UU New 0Uioe1, VrW"kin& for SETUP • ~ An excellent oppty ln a top Ea.tale consgrun , '""'t"'• "' Employment Agtncy Jeson Best oe. Central Manager of fa.at RecJ!'ieOfc Girt $2 lw not.ch firm foll' a 1baiP lh1 MUST SELLI 2110 So. Ma.In, S.A. Employment AgPney BABY sitter in my home. growin& company. Good penonalit.)', type with rood typtnr. Beaut. walnut 8-dtwr dzu»-Appllenas 1100 • 212<1 So. Main, S.A. .,., PM to 11 PM. 2 chll. MISS EXEC AGENCY Good benoot•""" <0+, will 1l'aln on 10-Une Typllt te $415 EPF "· two :l<lrwr commodea. :::i:;!;,;;;:;;,:;;;;... __ ..;:.;.;,; Mature. slim, attractive R ti• • dttn. 5'Ai )Tl. il 2 IDOL 510 w. Coast H.l&hway workil\I condlUona o:mBOle, front ofc. Mu.st enjoy typln&-MTST ex. hdbrd I tramed mirror, all GE WASH &: Dr:vw, Avo. n· wumen trom 26 lo 40 wanted Kep OftlSt Q5.7671 N Be •~ -• • ... .a _.. ••50 L.-Jpful but will train for s1n. New 9 pc, corner Refrig/fJ"ee:rtr nrly nu. 21Jl2 tor firurt aa.100, Huntington Good typist. Must he aha.rp, ewport acb ~ EQUAL OPPO'R.TUNlTY t"WC•ll -"'I ~ ~t ';~t opp(J' u; arran1. choice of cln. reg. Brefcn ~. HB (Seabury Beach or Corona del Mar. rood telephone ttchnkzllt! I ~e~~ P~~ :a~~~ LYN & Nanes Aids ElfiJLOYER =~~~ie: an exciting bultne11. $230, now $lf9.50. Be&dbrdat ltomet) . Interesting, varied duties. public rapore, Beautiful fa. quired. New ll'ad welcome. Le.rge pr'Olfttll\te ECF needs t••• DALE WAY material A: inwntory control, Clerk Typist $350 Kinil, $15, Queens fl2.SO. LADY Kenmore wubl'r A J'lo exper. nes11. We train. cillties. Call 543--9919 u Orie taUon provided b.)' 'IO'I Kard real sharp al ''-EPF Full $1.0.50, Tw1na $3.95. dryer, 3 yn. old. U1S or Call Miu Gisi for appt MISS EXEC AGENCY mgr. . tu'n n · a COSI'A MESA, c>.UF. 9'J626 ex, $4001 ' n Sota bed mattreue. $29.50 noo waaher, $15 dr}'er. ·oo· .. -510 w ~--1 "'gh EXP'D SALESLADY timt, in aemce, edlk2o <n•J 54>8251 Seer.,_, (t.eguna area> • • Gl!ne'r'll "·'l•-wav ~s ,, / 1 n n, ••• -1:=~==~~====1~~~~-~~~~~~~w~ay~ tor. Openlnp on all ahlfta. 5 yean paat exper, load 1h il OU!ce bac:Jraround ptt!erred1 """" , ~ ~· NPwport Beach 646-3939 Men"*":,~:~ O*otbinc Dillerentlal pd for •winatft -1--•..111s m""t •"''-' ...... 1-. Uberti spring matt, res. "9.50, now ..=:..::::.._.,--W-ho---1 STOP .-~ ...-~ .. ·• IUlJ •yvs v,. .... 139 EA Eull " t1ee-r--10fa KENMOR &1 r, veey WOMEN • nlte owls, Only,_""° ht•· Socty $600 wod<ln& condltlo .. " Xlnt ~. ' ~ -ndlllon $40 Waslir11t ttme B tw .a-15 & -Barmaid, nl1hta. cw'.'.!. """s.A•P~ !1a!~ w. • CH• M l s T RY LA B Top ahtd, typin1 ak.llll. heavy bene!lta. rq. $239.50, Klnow Sl.!?·~· co* 847-1115. * START • een ......-• ·-Maverick ..... er, . ~ L d1ctatlon worktor•men. P /TGenOfc to New beds: ng """'· • __ ,_;,.,,;.c.;..:;;;::__~-1 Mak1ng MoM)'. need~ for teating ot eltc· 1728 Newport Blvd, .Of. WOMAN To work tn donut TECHNICIAN !!I : S .S. Oni., DeM/GHI ' $2.2S hr APF QueeDI, $89.50, P'ull $49.50,. HOTPOINT ra.nae, Very $2.00 to $5.00 per hr. with Ironic components. Exp. WAITRF.SS Wanted. Night aht!p, tull time morninp. Cbemiltry, bio-cbemiatry or Office $275 5 hn a d&Y Mon tfU'u Fri. Twins $39.50, tun, guaran. larp, whlte, electric. "5 bonus. Go.getter, tull or part pref~m!d. good working shlll Expmenced. 1400 w. NO phone calls pleaae, m 1er0 b 10 Io 1 1 . A . A Type 45 + 1nY 01 c 1n 1 Klna:"'lze spreads, cholce ol sood oondltJon 541)..2'738 time. 730 W. Warner, suite conditions. Pay c:ommenm. Coast Hwy NB U?.ll2"1 Winchell's Donut House 29f6 mtninrum aceeptable. ,..,,.,_, _:_,_ Ph 0 n ,· F I clra reg. $20.95, mw $12.99 G.E .. wuher. Very pxl CCJD-217, S.A. rate wlU1 experience. • · ¥~·. CM. e CHEMISI'S· BS. or MS ................. ..,~...,..., • EP , emp oyel' full 5%. $9.95, SIESTA SLEEP di'"'" no; Electronic Micro Systems PBX Operator. Answering Harbor Blvd,, · • . .. , work pays fff SHOP, 19'17 Harbor Blvd, CM ..._. 7° 847-8115 * ·Legal Secretary S\t9-2295 aervice exp p r e r e r red. MATURE Woman for 3-11 c be mlltry, biodwmlstr)', C~ Typht te $90 wk • APF, eppllcent MS.270J dail¥ 10.9, Sat.Sun .5 )'e&rtl Callf. i,.w. To Sr K ch Hounvary.HB53WSS1 PM•hitt.SAWYERHOME, ~:r!t~~~ OffkefrWIHe$1.1511r pay•fH lM 1110 Partner ol leadin&: group. 8JJllll WANTED: Part time etl• 2619 0nnae Ave., Cc.ta e C H EM J s T: !.l l c ro Rettnt pad, buic shtbd. ty. • CRF, company . § ftOOM GROUP ~ntl~ Top ,.;kflls. --.. nerd Jte•..i.,. to • Wear Mesa .-:1 • ..i-1 f -··']"".ear>-pq pod, sood penonallty, ,.1mburM1 fee • COMPLETE • Lerry Morge., Antltwuet G Ney 1126 ~ -""-= ~·~ ----· °' ,_ v Co atl ~1r1 HIZ+ ••-MISS EXEC A E uu, w.&UI': .. ......,, one saleswoman. Call f!M....M03 I DJtJ 6:G-65'fl 1or RESULTS trol leCtOI. tracu com-~ tc • .-I.Jvin1 rm, bedJ'OOCD, u.u11;:tte EXPANSlON SALE 510 w. Coast Highway yr11n experience. pound lab. B.S. tn1nlmmn. 3 yun ftpt-rrl~,.-n...:-ee. .$297 Unloading 40' \ran In new """'°" s.ach • &16-3'39 MISS EXEC AGENCY Halp Wonted Holp Wonted Call Kanne• Cun1o tor &> Solnlody $2.AO ., ITT JABSCO w-hymenta • • . • • • wattbous•. 00 Roll top r. .... ___ 510 W. Cnaa:t Hiabway Women 7400 Women 7400 pointml!:nt. 133-zm ~need in aalel, H We c.&rr1 OW' own contracts d~ 1S Clllna cablnetl, 20 ~1.-.ury N'"'PC>rt Beach 646-3939 CHEMICAL tunrltun sreat! Van's DllCOUftt Furn Round oak tables, oU chalta, Good skllll. handk! prom(). ORAL Stqery office. JJn. AND NUCLEAR CORP, Hetpltal Hlllpr 417 W. 4th St, S..A, 547·2t12 rockers. hall trees, annolrft. tlonal functiona *"' tup oom· mediate empkryment for ASSEMILElS 2127 Campus Dr., Imne. to $1.IO., CLEANER, Open DtJ.b1 lD-1 • Sat lo.6 300 clocks. You name ill We pany_ Must be ...., ~1th don141 umtant. X-ny ex-ILECTRONIC •-•-· Cenmtl -Pl>W dutiH, • Fumllui'e e hav. Ill .., oto 2380 Now· publoc. poM<nco. call 543-7719 Demo-~ !lox In. DEIURR port Blvd. or 2428 Newport 510 w. cout Hl&bway MAJ.LIE'S w•-ASSEMBLERS TIMI, LIFE 11_,. A_.,.. AppAllOonceK .A•u•cTCliONlo< TV Blvd., CM. ,.._'138l Newport Beach 646-31139 ,. A Beauty WISHES fr ••.zs .. -1----t·----ex.. ......... no•-.......... _,_ dlll-Salon ,._._, H··-,,.,.... .,. .... ~ .... ..,. .. ., '"""'I -o-~-. c-·· m·~. ~u.,~ u•v--• -Bkk F/C $700-...., .. u-.: .... v "'' V O " I " -' ' TO EMPLOY Col-cod•, p/c ~~. "-L--~1 _ _. ''"' "'"""' ~...... "" ot mod 1.1-~-11 • pr to w/ha!r piece exii ula.... • .n... • ..... t c.hln••· tc.•t ... ,,, • fltW t lr Ctnol+i•M• .... _,u pe.-""nce IWUIW ng ....... we-·---., -G.C. ~-eiJ em u.ouwo;: J or commlaaion ~.,,. pl•nt I" tlio lr•ll1t 1,, .. ..,,.,;.1 Compl11: of OrtRt• Cov"ty SALES PEOPLE IOldetina technigue, a 11 all. Good btndtta and ouw.ai ... ·~..,T Cr&il" 1teel Maki chalni "''' tlrlo t lrp•rt, .. ,, ••••r•I imMtdl•t• o,.•l11t1 for Who were formerly workinl pbuea. worldna conditlone. Tutt A Thun 7"PM·Sat 6:80 tbet, table&, etc. ' ' Small CompUler mlgr in dy· HOUSEKEEPER To clean tl•c.tronlc ••1•mbl1n, ltt thlft 17:10 A.M. t. 4100 P.M.I or are currentb' wotkbW lKell' lttspeet Eltate COllllJUlll Repo. New McMA~'S "2"'450 namic growth period. Pref trnall l bdr houle. OIJ&.balf •IMI 2"'6 1Mft 14111 ,.M ... 12141 A.M.J •••Mt .. lt. pt.rt time wttb C!Qlnpanl.. to•• •s... EQUAL OppPRTUNITY JOB ·~loca~ 10' 19r.., 2 1830.. S, Anaheim Blvd., tn light m!i' exp. % Fee pd, ~ day per week. West Newpt Wt wt111I .. ,,.f,, v•• I• k11ow th• c1ltr codo t..d •Ofl'I· web u AVON, AMWAY, or Previous ex:::tn p/c boel'U EMPLOYER law tetta (l'Qld velftl),. 8' Anabttm "(~ SA nti. fee jobs too. Sch. 547-6229 poni .m. JVLLER BRUSH. ._ ·•ec-1.1-~ ~-t!On. llitreo, end t&blel, lampe, Freeway at Katdla) J R Pie /IJ 90e Agency &H4 tlt rti11t rt!• t ..d nc.1ll•11I .,,,.tfit1 l11cl...li111 12 co u v euo .... ,....... ~-D., •WAY b . . ~ s . EXPERIENCED li•Yt ••c•tton 4,,1,,, tll. 111 ,,., of •111 pN>y111•nt. it.ck .trat. our beaultful bookl lo ,_ Tn"' te $1.15 llr 1,..,.,. ..u..:. pool tbL h l de •a• e d, -1185 Newport, C.?.J. 642-6720 Single--nee:dle optraton, Ap-,11rc.h•1• ''"'''"' ••• ho114ty VtC.t fi111 f•tturh•t :rour.tabU1brd Cl.lltomerl. Maey all lhlfU COSTA MESA, ~. m ' 61J..9393 s.wlng MMhlw 112o WOMEN For lhiPPIJW • ply 8Z W. 18th SI., CM H1111 pt141 fH +IMt ftf frtm Chrl1tM1' Di v t• lht M•11· No cb&rp for tntninc ' (nf) ~ R.E:F'JUG. $61J. Rowtd table 19ll SJNl'.ftl\ tcucb-cMDl.tk:, auembly. SmaH mfg. co. MANic;tIRJST JJfrfrdo'a HaJr 4ty f•llOWl11t Ntw y,,, . ., ~~t,:. ~t .tlon,. w-... ~r ho.:.•! ax 29 bl, MO. 4 chatn Sil. 1 ..... buttcm bolH. ..,,. full Of potf't•lime. $1.85/hr Et -• u -"-A n-• If ytu t ft t•lllf +. wtrlr •r •t• Row w.,lrlltf, wliy 11ot .,,.._...,.. "'"' """ ura ,,._ ,,_ ---------I S bl&'o')' walo.it bU' ltools on'• -·t·-Lu~ -to start. Apply momlnp c . .._..... --....... v. DOLL. lln'1Jilt tlt ffit .,,.,tvnltt" •t V.D.M., • t .M plt c• t• JOU St-t to lo I e T CID OM ....... &-11:30 lsl. 6'J5.81i'O ... ,It. RMtO. ltltl/r no e&. ~ $.14.88 or $4.16 mo. 5Z-alll Goldo"' "''""' ww * WAITRESS* °""' 11. lnlenliews Daily p,.,.....,.1 APEX FRY Cwiu QUAµTf ~bed. qull"'4 ~• W J7tll St ~rle---J °"""1cte, uituoed 118 I "·-'ul lntf. 112$ ~ · · ~~ --·-,-· I I AM I 5 PM Em~ -.1ZO.Allft5ar-~ eo. .. M<aa sh!lt. 673-0977 rom • • 0 • • Aeolot•nu Employment ,...,..., Top --~ -MT--currAR. GIBSOtl SAl.E.'WOMAN. _.... * LAUNDRY HELP * Ask for Und• Clorlt COASTAL AGENCY .. ~ .... --HONDURAS v.~ dal<"" -0-1 Claal< 1n la.diet ready to ~-ear. Full tlnw. lml. Ch.bb IA. , • . A Wlnber af * The e11y wly ln ana'1 le:adliW mtaurant. dHk $50, ~-$10. 2llA call Eric, 5tl-023D .n c. °""' 25. """" Mon "'"' Hunl -lM2-Mlll Varian Data Machines Snelllnc • Soenu.. r... 1"k .. why> Apply• ..... s ...... b ,._... ac. -ao ,Fri l!M. APROPOS No. :11, SECIRECPJ' ro. Dental of-:mo Harbor Bl. CM -ILVD tervl<w at * Rl'"'ALS * Pianos & °'1""' II 'Town A Counb'y, °"""" llco In Coate 1.1 .... Expor. A VAOIAN SUISIDIAOY IEAUTY OPIRATOll 1173 HARBOR • ''' trm<I ~ t•• bl k So. of 19111) MANNING'S l!Ou5"S a. APTS '100 UP , WANTED SECRETARY I"" · 2722 Ml cheloon Drift, lrvlno, Coll!. 92664 r.-ble Newport .,_,, " oc Blue.._, ee.olll SPJNm'S a. GRANDS Anmmns only. Tralntt ok. OllLD Care &ftd 111 • • ISt 11 Ol1t• fl'Wf, t. Jt 111t.1roo •ff·r•MP aaion nfldl an nptlitnold COSTA MllA COl'PI• SHQP 10' SOFA and Jo.. .eat, Blue ' ~ Gd. typl~ I: shorthand or hou11tworl( 5 da7I wk. 2 I .. lt•lr S. •f Mlcht lte11 Ott .. , I fUll t1me: operator, Cuar. A $41.3426 24Cl1 El Tero Rd, 1,,_ l ,.-. cid. 21.212 Bttt~ rr•g Be.cb ... time. si filt.noretto requlr«I. 962-6912 clti.ldren 968-1620 A~ IQU4l o ''°•T\JNITY IM,lOYE!t M·f comml11ion, paid vatatfoNL 1..l!.llur9 World lAaur. Hil1I ...:·.~.:. HB. fc...t..-Hotnel) -......... See .. boJnre l pm. Wblte --~·"'~·~'44-!!!:!U!!;l~o.:_.:_ __ JBB••···-___ ;::U;;.••;::IOU;;.;..___ -· ~ -r - ' ' ' l DAD. Y l'IL.OT · WE I PAMPER THE CAMPER ;. ' ' CAMPER TRAILER MOTOR HOME HEAOOUARTERS -0- BOAT & TRAIUR HITCHES WHILE YOU WAIT Phone for Appt. Troll« Hitches 0 u r ~1 .. eu, Not a Std .. Rne ••. Camper, loot Trailer, Pam &: Rtpatr Do-lt·Yoursctf Mater• lals. -·- LADIES Brin9 This COUPON Far FREE GIFT! -·- Campers Tool Kit SHOVEL • SAW • AXE w/FREE WATER BUCKET. ALL FOR s59s -·-2Yz LB. FIRE EXTINGUISHER :.::. -~699 -·-GARCIA MITCHELL REEL Ho. JOO wllti Tw• hfra Spoofs. flll yo•r reM fl!E at fREDSON 'SI $1488 -·-'THE FAMOUS SAFARI LIGHT 110 or l•ttery Op1r•t..t R~. $24.95 $1811 -·-TURNER PROPANE CAMP STOVE Two·l•1119f low ,_.,. rorctlol• Orfp •- Tiiis ,,...,. Im bee wllh11 ft1t S~t.951 THIS WIE.EK ONLYI $2495 -·-COLEMAN SALE ~~·~.~~ ........ 79c j j U.NfllN 200A • s9t1 SlOYI 4ZS. Now Mlt COLIMAH COOlll """ ... 5'• &UllT·IN or 12411 POlTAlll ••••• ••. -·-FREDSON TRAft.ER SUPPLY 815 N. Harbor Santa Ana 939.5555 "l!:""T" y ese;AS1W';:;::;:srs ttw••1wsw 1e w:s as: 0 6 22 & 512$ !QC! 5 PO cs spas uuosac ass a a a a PETS and LIVHTOCIC TltANSPORTATION . !._RANSPORT.t.TION I TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR'l'.ATION Dop ms Power Crvl11ro 9020 Auto Servlca Dune Bu991e& 9525 Imported AufoO -lmporl!d -- MERCHANDISE Foti M•KCHANDl\I l'Olt SALE AND TRADE · SALE AND TRADE 1130 Misc. Wonted •WEEKS * $12 Ors&11 clua rle~na tor I» ctnnrrs. Start1ng Tuttday Jub 29 at 1 PM. Prac~ orpna available. Joln the twt! REGISTER NOW! l6lO ALASKAN Malamult1, (ded 31' HUNTER & Ports 9~00 DUNE ...., Show Sal•-FERRARI ' q pops), AKC, l><>•WW New lw rooi.d )'.f't 116,9911 IUX:ENn.Y ttbl\ < eyt. J,.. Bodies troll) 11<1. ~ colorlna:, (l'tfll famllY dogs, PaCUJe Yacht Sale• f1.3.Ui70 qlne. lncl. Bell houAine A from $249. La 1 Pu OUne FERRARI ~lend.I)', lovlnc, eUY to dutch. $100 or belt ott. Bum-Supumo,rket. 3623 WE PAY MORE CASH train, Perfect llhow dOKs. S--' -'kl a..~ 9030 646--Ul2 aft 8 pm W. Warner. SA. 54fi.....4{K5 NIWJOl't lmplrts l.!d. . Qr. ,.....-.. •• OPEN •• • ""'"~ M Sat • ... , Cowltr't oal> ••-root! !or b r e e d I n g. ;JGU' .. _,,., • Rqlstel'f'd pUteb~. suo 14' SKJ Boat. Oqls, 50 hp Trafltr, Travel 9425 SUn ~;'ERVJCE--PARTS Up. 49'1...1S73 t.jerc, trlr, Xlnt cond. S!m. 3100 w Cout. H HA.\tA!OND In OOR.ONA DEL KAR 2854 E. ())l.tt Hwy m..&930 JWIMOND • Sttlnway • Ya- maha • new It: used planoi o1 all makes. Belt bQYt In So. catu. ri:ht hen!. Fot furnlturt. appliances, caloted 1V, pianos, otr8Jll and antiques, Novicf ~ dus a\i:rt. 6T>T6'8. :r.M Ct il'ld c.n.J, 15' STARnRE tnvcl trlr. fmporfed Autos 9'00 NewPort Bad. Wf· '!"IE Aug 5th. Dog tralnlng w. ~!'dy4. =~c_u~ err; AusTIN 64~~~ MG g:!i.764 Day or niRht ~ show ring & obedience. Alao 1967 16' Glutron, ~ h.p. $695. 1583 Sall 13ernardln4 private lessons available. Mercury. Xlnt aind. $14~. Pl,...,.. or 6t2 .,.,..... _.;,.. ___ ;__;__ __ 1'fartlncrtst Kenncb Call 673-2259 ...... "' ...,,,.J '60 Bugeye Sprite ** 546-«m * * -========= 1966 15' Scotsman Travel !few tlreti, battery, not'da KARMANN GHIA SCHbllDT MUSIC ro .. 1907 N. Main,.. Boat Slip Mooring 9036 Trlr, sleeps 6, in excel cond. 1.:on·rod . besring, $250. or '67 Karmann Ghia, tuned ex- $ WE Buy $ TRANSPORTATION ---'-----';_-$693 nrm. Call 9624518 tn.de .for G cyt A.mer. car ot Must, 35,000 mi; good oond . Santa Ana. DOCK Spaoe: Near pavilion, --='======== 0eq=--""~'~'=·al="~·-· ~64=6-6))37'-:=~~ &U--0290 before S Eves. 1700 Botts & Y1chts 9000 1'ilax beam S':J", length 2r . Trucks 9500 '62 AUSTIN ll&ALEY m:i cl'omono=:;:;::,N:;•;:·:;;';'·,:CM;':::;==-JI Fr•nchise Closeout The laclory has Ol'd<c>red close oul ol 4 Console I< 2 SplDel Pianol on a coat-plus basis. Never agaln piano bargains like tbete! First come -first ....... $ FURNITURE $ 1962 CUstom 1!11A:' Cabin Sl.50·per ft. 673-4300 t.W-k JI. GREAT! ~ APPLIANCES °"'""''--;,,,-,-,----~--1001 G. P.f. C. Pick. up. V/6, MERCEDES BENZ' cru.lser. Claa over \\'OOd, SLIP Space needed Im. low miles, rebuilt elutch & --".,'=--!;;2<",'-=alt=G'°p~m. __ WARD'S BALO\VIN STUDIO 1819 Newport, C.M. 642-8484 HERE! We've landed on the moon & you ran't play 1he Organ or Piano yel Get busy -rent. als from no monthly • \lie teach too. Be the fir.it in your ramlly to solo. Gould Music Comp1ny 2045 N. t.tain, SA ~7-0081 c.1., TV,-Pi•flo1-Stet••• &leeps 2, 3' lreeboard, bow n1edia.tely ror 28' Clui~. 1rans. New paint. $143 or DATSUN I PJec. w HMM ,.II ralla, deek carpeted, painted Pt>rm or temp. 673-1391 l,ocbc~•~t~o":U.~r~._,:968-~'.'1197:"_--,--I-;;;;-;::;:;;::-;;;;;-; CASH IN 11 MINUTIS lhl1 year. Just completely I 's"L"l°'PS""'r".,::-:re=m:-. -c2;;-0=--c-J°'S""', ., ORANGE COUNTY'S • 541-4531 e built 1964 Johnso 1$ h '52 Dodge, 11,i 1 w/utll bed. ----,,--,------I "' boa-' il . " .. ~ ·~· Newport Jlarbor. 112 \V, Value of bed $2000. lst $800 NO. I out ''"'· Bu t-in ~ G:a • Cost Hlway, NB. ~t takes. 543-6.166 DATSUN DEALER Cover all Orange & LA Co's fuel tanks, aU safety .• WANTED oq•lpmool, large wh ee I Botl·\'icht 1957 CHEV I\\ l<>n, VS-, Xh>I DOT DATSUN FURNITURE trailer. $1.250 firm. Sec al Chirters 9039 cond lhruout. Best offer. 188S5 Beach Blvd. Small-Craft, Bayside & ---------:•='6--0TI=='======= Jluntingto.n· Beach TOP CASH IN 30 Minutes Coast Hwy. Call 494...()5.32 * Finest Selection, Power It --=-"='·"778='-c:"'::..::54fl-044==''-- Quallty fUrnlture, color TV's, after 6:30 p.m. and on Sail. Skipper optional. For J _•_0,:_1" ______ 9_S_10 '68 DATSUN stereos. appl.iaoces_ tools, weekend. brochure call S48-4191 oll.ic.c equlp I~==~~~~---=======-"''==I '6-1 Jeep Wagoneer. stk., ovr Big station wagon, auto, ov. · l-1BERCLASS Supply center -dr., 4 whl dtive. Big: Gates ...... d -'Ir xJ -• 531-1212 now in ....... _NB a., a_ Boats Wanted 9050 en1ea cam, u , nt couu, ........ • tire5. Eves 548-2670 Take older trade. To1al WANT TO buy ~·er edger Everything f1lr your boat, W T ==========I price $1599. LB W8J 589. and pG\.\'E'r mower (reel mirfboan::I, car, ' or home. AN to ttt.k; 0 v e r Campers 9520 Ot .111~,· Count•(~ L.ito,-.·~t S1·lec'•"n N""" b. U)<'<I ~\1·1<ec.lt·:> Pienr J im Sieme ns Imps. WJrr,t>r & M;i1n SI 1 S.1nld An.1 546-4114 '60 220-S CooV'ert. Very clean, $12Xl on reblt eng. P.fech perf, new cloth top. SJCKK). 4!14-&19 1960 Mercedes 190. Clean, new tires. fl50 f I rm . 642-4452 ~s. PIANO WANTED (ZlJ) 871-1035 Pvt Party type), Must be in good con-Bo&t resin special now only (payme~~n~u~:~20.10~~C~a~b~l~n I;;;;;=;:;:::::::::=;;;;; I call Vic ~· dltlon and reason ab I y $3.95 g11l retail. Wind an' '-=CruiAer or 1 00 673--0367 '69 bATSUN priced. Phone 644-4687 ~~a.7.,17TJ7 SUperior, C.M. Aircraft 9100 CAMPER Big Sedan, dlr, overhead MG WANTED o-· M hi ·~ S cam, auto trans, r/h, wsw, I---------.,..Wing ac ne. ales• Rentals loaded! Low, low miles! Un. Radio 8200 B U D D Y Tranl!Ceiver 41 Channel w/antenna Exttl. cond. S250. 545-3586 aft 5 PM Very moder.lfely prlef!d. '67 GLASSPAR CI t a t Ion. PRIVATE Pilol wants to join Authorhed Dealer der factory W81Ta.nty, Full 1961 MG Roadster 1600, reblt Portable. Aak for Be<:ky Inboard-outboard. ll> Mere .. tlyina'. club. 600 Hour total Eldorado. Fou.r Winds prlee $1875. Take older :~~:S~~ti:s=u 548-tBn Cruiser with power jet It. tlme. To Hours retractable. Scotsman _ Barnruda trade. LB YN\Vl46. Call \Y ANT E O; OW TOY povr~r trim. Full cover. SelKI Into, to Pierce Gles!ke 8. Cabover Low ~ Vic 494-97'13. TRAINS. Ready lo enjoy. A 11 2195 E. Lemon Heights $799 * Phone 642--0382 * maintenance records. l Drive, Santa Ana, 927!li ?.fodeJ # too '69 DATSUN PORSCHE ol'<ner. KI 6-4444 4 Dr Sed, 4 wd. dlr, front '6.1 !\!GB, hard &. soft top, Machinery, etc. 8700 19' GLASTRON, 221 cu in. Mobile Homes 9200 Theodore bucket seats, 2•900 P.iiles on new tires, radio. wire wheels. Television 1205 RENT OR BUY ----'-'--'-='--'-'-'-' completely overhauled, new ROBINS FORD ipecdometer. \\'ill make ex-Very good colKI. Must seil. COLOR TV Y 0 R K TO w ab I e 3 0'. •Ap • f•ll rov•"" 2 live·ball BAY HARBOR cellent deal to private party. !\1ake offer. 49'i·9808 .., °" ""V 2060 Harbor Blvd. Full price $1725. J B YNW842 I ~;=;""':::;::'---'""'::.:,=,----,:-- • $9 Month Up Long-tilts. Several other sacks, A·l cond. .Mobile Home Sales Costa Mesa &42-0010 Call B\ll ~4. 'GG Porsche. Xlnt cond, nu ALSO fork lll!s. 1.iust sell ~2691 $2825 fi75.6595 CaS& Lom1t Roll . Av.·ay • tires paint Sa.er $1000 "CREAAJ PUFF"! '65 . ' . . STEREO.REFRIGERATORS PETS and LIVESTOCK WANTED_ To rent: Bay Sheraton Manor. Homette • FORD Vanette, Cami>tt type, Da'-•n \V"n. Orig owne•, 776-0018, 637-5905 eves. \" SJIE 0 DR '::c.:.::.::.:=.:::.;:;::::.:;~::_ Boal lB' In good Kit -Prestige · Sahara 6 cyl 3 pd N-· ..._,_ ~ 0 ' ·TA RS R YERS w • m1n. con-ALL SIZES . s . ... .. ui .... es new car \\'alTanty. $975. * '65 CONVERT * OPTION TO BUY Dogs 8825 dition, July &: A u g u s l NOW ON DJSPLA y rebl.t, xlnt cond. Ready $. 673-2430. Xlnt cond. All xtras, nu pnt, 54~539 GERrtlAN Shepherds, 5.1..:6""::..:9087:::.:---.---% block Eut or Harbor Blvd. S42-ll49. ---· top. Must sell. 646-1234 ~·eeks. Beautiful c ha.mp l earn to Sa il Now! on Baker 10' P.U. 4 wh dr. 8 Ip. %T ENGLISH FO.RD '63 Porsche, 366B. A?.1/FM line, Black&: silver.~·· 10 hn of instructions $55. Cost.a 1'1esa ITI4l 540-9470 Wa.rTeJ1 hubs WOO N.T. 21371 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;; radio, chrome wbla, rcblt tan. S60. AKC re ' ' Se1oo School. "642-1424 GREENLEAF K Elden, CM .Apt-3 11 eng. 675-7270 PAR RENT·A·SHELL ORANGE COUNTY'S I_:;;;;,;~~==== 196.~ so4 ~,_:;_tated'~tereo. 4 I =Cat=l~838--0312==~----l18' CABIN Cruiser wl 33 hp In clear, clean, cooJ Costa PAM-TOP 839-I-VOLUME ENGLISH Hi-Fi & Stereo 1210 S!"'· spe<U\Cl· au "'system otIHUAHU.A Popo. '/Jl""· 1 Johnson OB, trlr, fully Mrsa. New 9'2 space adult ow O E SUBARU · at t I T k >!-" I & s 1 1010 So. u.~. •--ta Ana F RD D ALER in '\\' nu ronso e. a e male, l female $20. !her equip. $11!50. 897-6052 park. uue s ales ofJ ce ,, ............. __., ·1 •-1 -• 1 p k o ••• SALES -SERVICE S ba f C l'f over 6mai paymen ... or pay $15. 791 Shalimar, Apt 3 10' GLASS.PAR dinghy· with ocal1..-u a ar . pen 9 IUU u ru 0 a I • c:ash balance of $73.68. Sheltic1, JO wt.-AKC. oal'!I. Good tor children tor to 6 PM. IC-•m...:.Po.:.•;_.cR;_;•--•--l•_l_;,•~_9_S.._22 '69 t.fODEl.S Inc. neta'1I D1'v. Cn.-dit Dept. ~7289 -ACCENT MOBn.E Immediate delivery -n ChtmpM>n .U.~ tho Bay. $150. 6'13--J622 HO>IE SALES * EXPLORER * LARGE SELECTION $12~ POE 3 MUNTZ 4 track atert'O 54~ aJt 6 18' JO!INSON Cab ~ "" Theodo " cllrtridge pla)'en., walnut '"'"M" 1750 \Vhlttier Ave, By week· or month. Luxurf.. re Opt equip $30. Freight $14.50 y,·/amps. $35. ea.: 3 Small P.fALE Germin ~'Bhepherd hp, Evinrude OB, Tilt Trlr, Costa Mesa 714: 642-1350 ous. Sleepg 6. Self contain-ROBINS FORD Jlandling i49. !)el, $1390.50 speakers, "'aJnut cai;es. SJO. puppy, AKC reJ. -!I wlc.s. equipt, $l0:50. 847-461B. BOATERS!! D 0 u b I e Ex· ed. Limited number. Call 2000 Harbor BJvd. + Tax and License ea. Like nc~·. 6'15-3868 wk Black & tan.~ 11'6" Fiberglass Amer Marc "•ndo across from new tOOay. "--•-M ... MlO 1000 \V. Coast lliway, N.8. CC ••• •-•-"· ·-LEISURE RENTALS ,~'!!"!!!!~~., ... ...,,......,.,~...,~I~;":~"'...;~;;;;-';;'-days. 4 P.11NlATURE poodle pup-50 HP die""' °" ulUlCr. Ouna Point Marina. Must 1 , 6'1:>-oo50 * 510. .. ,.J.J NEAR New RCA stereo COfl. pies. 2 males, 2 females. $1400. 642-9712 ml'el management ap-(n4) &f2.661.1, 1n4) 8.11·3809 PLACE your WW>t ad where OlAL direct 642-5678, Charge sole beaut sound. beaut 833-1093 14' SKI/fish, 25 hp Johnson, ="'°"~~·~'-~830--4~~"'-·'--~~ DAILY PllDJ' WANr ADS they ate' k>oking -DAILY your ad, then sit back and Jum. Owner leaving coun-POODLE Puppie1 AK c elect 1tart wttr. $300. or?. BAYSIDE Village Trailer J ==BR=~™;;G::;:RESUL:;:;:TS;;;!=,,.:.,!P,;ILOT:=~""'~~U:;;tod~642;;;·5678;;:;~L;ll;;•;;"~"~";;;lh~•,::•;ho~ne=r;;;og::==!= JI lry, 5-1S-5641 Sa.sa&trau Champion 1tock. 642-4729 or 642-1444 No. 29 Bit-ins-fl-pie. Nr., bay 545-7246 12' NYLOX runabout, 15 llP & club house & lots more. Sporting Goods 8500 2 SURFBOARDS 9'4" &: 9'6. Excellent for learnin&;. $30 each. * 646-3146 TOY PQOdle pup p Jes, outboard, trailer. Xlnt con-P..tust Seu $16,950. 54&-0227 adorable AKC reg, 'Champ dition $475. 644-2676 ANGEL Trailer on beautiluJ lines. Show quality. 646-5650 38' STEPHENS Sedan. space, Penn. New5yrleast, PEKE Puppy. Male g v.-eekl Beaut. rood. ?.lay trade with bay view, $7500. 61>6383 $25. 646-1052 or 646-7372 dov.'11. Must sell. 846-9518 & 675-09'12 Misce!l1n90us 1600 ~~~~~;;;~~~'1~=====~==== J110o;-,-..,f·jp;<aramoonra;;;;;;;0i,-;p;J,1.,;;22-;nn;;; ·--"'===-...:.:;:_;_ FREE TO YOU s.111 ... 11 9010 cabana, """'"· Like now. * AUCTION * Adw1 ..,.,_ 64&-1os1 It you will sell or buy . 26' FOLKBOAT, aux &loop, 4l' MOBILE home. cabana. 2 give Windy a try IF :ou are lu!l"nititious, lnpstrake hull, depend. &'a Br. Bay view. Lido Park. Auctions Friday 1:30 p.m. don t ansv.·er this ad. All boat. 2 sets dacron aalb; & $6009. 673-2319 black male kitten &. grey spinaker. Make o ! f er. 1-i======== Windy's Auction Barn Angora male. 6~2160 aft 646-07l3 6. 7/28lo'-7--',,:C~-~-~~ Behind Tony's Bldg. Mart ===--c=----,,--'---,,----,=. CAL 20; choost> from 2. Of. 2015'.4: Newpoprt, CM 646-86M SI'ANDARD poodle. t.1&1e 18 fer. Isl. 29, Immac. gd. ROTO-Tiller. 4 ,;peed trans. months. Loves children, ex-gear. 201 E. Pacific Coast, Excellent condition. Heavy cellent watchdog. Uve in or NB. 61l-884-0 duty with new clutch. new 0°"~'~-~830-5ll86=-'"-'-------1--~2~7~'~S~O~U=N~G~­drive chains, 25 hors e PURE-Bred, male Beagle, engine, :ror Sale or trade. about 5 yrs old; loves Immediate Delivery (P.1ake offer) 642-5488 children;· to good home. SotOCK BOATS KIRBY vacuum c I ea n e r &14-1008 1128 Nc\\'J)Ort * 613-2050 w/attach, polisher. XI.NT SMAU. Silky Terrier "Di· ONLY $18,188 cond and guar. Pay ofl jie" Sho\V dog, love~ F/G1Alberg35 balance of $39.61 or lake chl l dren, completely LOADED-CLEAN Motorcyclei 9300 over payments. Credit Dept., hougebroken. 546-1587 7/28 Pacific Yichl Sal!'S 6'7l-1570 5J5.12S9 NEED good home for 5 11' Day Sailer. C.omplete 0'67~~BSA~-v~;-ct-o-,.-,-,,-,-.,.-,,.~­ VINYL TILE, Lino I e um. lovable kittens ll ~·ks old, 3 equipment, includes onshore Street &: dirt lic'd, 441 CC. Asphalt Tile -BeauWul col-reel and 2 calico, male & Balboa Island mooring. $625. 847-8381 ors a nd patterns. Free f!'male. 543-4079 7/29 Price now reduced. 5-18-33311 ~=~~~-~-~ ti t Li C HONDA 250, good running ~~1• c. 0 n tr· 5 BLACK and v>'hJte kittens, 17' v·nay Daysailer cond, cheap. $175 or best of- 4 · affeetlonate and trained to a Demo $J.T";i0 -Used $1350 fer. 842-6%.tJ, 9-.U am. .BOYS new bicycle, won in Htlcr pan. 215 Tustin Ave.., 11' O'Day used .. , ••..• $500 I~,_..:.==~~~-~ 'contest. gold. 26" Also, NB 64Z-1.l31 1129 Fun Zone Boat Co. Balboa '68 HONDA Scrambler, A·1 BJ k I ~1 AKC cond. tlelmel & t>xtra pat1s. ac m n ............. e pup 2 Kittens to good homes, FOLDING, 13' co m p . ~~1s "'""' ns1 male. Make offer. 962-8279 ho b " ••~ use roken, one: tiger. one w/sails &: trlr. Use w/ob 18 PCX>L TABLES -Best deal! gray & ~·hite. 64~14o.1 7/29 hp. $950 + new, best ofi'. '6:i BSA 650cc SP i f I i r c N ho •A-" H.ornet. $600, Xlnt c:ond, ew ware use s""""" -SOLID Mahogany & Fir, _537_-7_68_o _____ _ quality slate. 100'7a Jinan-I d ,. --=-5;,:'::.,__....::;:,..~--p y woo a c r a p s ~ 2Q' Catamaran fiberglass lmporfed Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Auto~ 9600 l Law, Law Prices on Thew SPECIALLY PRICED BUGS! HOME OF T·HE LOVE BUG SPECIALS I lt'1 tho cir tllol won't give you onythin9 lo worty obout. We m1lce 111r1 of fh•I. We 9ivo it tho VW I llo·point 11fely •nd petform•nce te1I. It h•1 lo p•n. So "'"' give ii our 100'% 9u1rent10 thet we'll r1pl1co 111 mefor mocJ1111itol p•rh1 for JO doy1 Of 1000 mile,, wh icliovot como1 fiut. hn'I th1t whit• now c1r-ow111t no1d11 A bug th1t won't d,; .. , VOil nuh. '66 PORSCHE '12 COUl"I Ouhl•ndin9, ori9i11•i fi11• drivin9 C•t. f ive 1pee4 tr1n1mi11ion & FM t1dio, Red with bl1ck inlorior. l ie, LG ll4'1 $4399 168 vw SEDAN Aulo"'otic 5tic"·~htlt. R.1dio, he1ler, Ebony with conlr11'in9 h1leri or. l ow miloe91. l ie. No. XEW 61l, $1899 '66 GHIA COUPE Yellow with bl.ck inl1r;or. Econorriic•I 111mm•r f11n cir, R1d io & he1tor. Lie, No. VTU 544. $1699 cing. 54>1775 aft 5 or Sat. &16-2T77 7129 mold. Eslimatec1 v a 1 u e '68 BSA ~ CC. Red & QUALITY King bed, quilted. LOVABLE, beaut. grey &: $1000. Se.u $800 or best oacr. ~m; ~l~ e ct cond. Complete. unused S 9 8: while kitten, fem a I e ·:l~Ca~ll ~Ch~r~~'-'•"'''C' !:'·--'"'.'>-3~1!:83~-1 -===="=====l I ~'Orth $250. Aft 5 or wknds 546-1188 1129 26' T-BIRD SLOOP '67 vw SEOAN '63 vw SEDAN '66 vw .. , ..... 3 LONG ha.ired kitten5, l blk, $3995 NEW Carpeting, 16 yards, ] gray, l caJico. Trn.lned. lo Pllclflc Yacht Sales 673-1570 heavy green Kadel shag, $5. kind home. 543-1932 11'18 10' SABar design. 18' mast. yd. C.osl $7.95. 646-1343 BEAUTIFUL. \Vhlte., long tZ Clu.\hions, tilt trailer. $l!l0 BATTERIES 6 V $4 .95 ex, 12 haired female cat declawed. or oiler. 548-1639 V $5.95 ex, guar. 18 mo. Pay 6'1>1688 7/29 $L40-old be.tt 540-999(1 SNOWBIRD, lg hull, No, 420, ALUMINUM Patio cover. 15, ONE Men SWttt kitten lei!, S27S. r Gla!Shopper Dinghy She needs a good home. $150. 613-1901 X l S', like new, $"200, 3U 54!">-4592 7t'lSl -0C::.:C""'-=~~~-- Robln Hood Ln, CM CAL 20 No. 593. Fully equip. TRESWEET ?110THER cal with 2 kitlens. incl. head&. aux. pwr. $2995. VALENCIAS Xlnt health, gentle&: allect. 5.16-4582. 962-8991 15 lb for $1. ~l!M 642-8806 7!'19 ~· Cal Choy desn. Enscnada Kl'Mi' Cal. while f;e male. 1 Ve1. 3 yrs new. Race, SACRIFICE! Oil Palntingl! blue> eye, l yellow eye. crui!K". Sacr $49j(). 893-1019 bY v•cll-known HarOOr artlsl l~&~l~~2388~~~-~~2'~/28~liiTANiiiiTun~· .-:;;;;;;c $25. 546-3634. 1169 Donc::t STAN ~Uller rac1n&" iiabot, Lane, 01 J \\'HITE Long-haired kit-x1nt cond, dolly, $ 3 7 5 . tens, 9 m06. old. very, v~ry 675-0884. • UNUSUAL Handmade, one rofl hair. &fZ..1322 7/'18 LIDO JO No. ~<• w/""'ver. of a kind massive. S()l.nish • ....., ..... • coUee table. 6'tZ-4689 &ft 4 LONGANESE to good borne, :\1nl cond. $950, WANT To buy fhomel bar. -!' round or L 1baped. ~1ust be reuonable. P h o n e -CARPET Shep, tweeds, hi-lo pile. All cOlon. Fm est. U c Contr. 546-4478. SACRIF1CE -Newport Bch Tennlt Oub membttshlp. Save $. Hany Butler ll05--W--3382 4 ~·k.~ old. 89'7-5480 1'/28 •67S-Zll8* PUPPIES: 8 wks. med. mix· JO' Tahiti Ketch $2,200 ed breed. 842-2396 7128 SAC. AS IS. 669 So. SI. ~1alo, f"REE Cals & k 111 en s. \Y. j:oviM (213) 795-0569 eve 545-1653 call evr~. 7/'18 13' Sailboat, fi~rlaa w/19" GUINEA pig. fem., reddish mast. First $200. takes. color, 962-1653 7129 543-6366. KTTIENS, S wks., Cree. lo good homes. 9&S-6705 1/29 Power Crul1er1 9020 2BLACKkllteM,U wkaold • 71' SPORT l-'l S H ER 494-7354 1129 $5850 • FREE Kittens. 7 v.·ka. old Twin Sc'rew f1ybrid~ romp. 962-ta!ll 1128 f'ltp'd ready to go an)'\\'hert'. DEWALT Trailer mountl'ff Thi• boet has f'verylhlng! cut off u,w, 16" blade, 2 3 CUTE 1 wk" old kltten., F'or more info 673.sBn or HP.l>l0-S48--2367 ~546--0TI-"--'i--.';;;-:;T<'iiii".L_7_l2Sc1;67!>-~3353~-~--~ * KITTENS * 28' TS CRUISON, V-dri'~" '63 FORD ·~ ton brd &'; '"6 Ford % ton nt!d, rlduxc 8', MS--3629 or MG-ru.62 496-3151 7/28 SIS 1anks. SACRIFICE! THE QVICKER YOU SEU. 673-6912 or 54S-:2854 MOTOR HOMES 9215 HEADQUARTERS FOR MOTORHOMES ON DISPUY mr All Nnt DODGE "EXPLORER" 1tr1°c1ai.i.n •ltli n '"'"· tlt,lll , ... NUI •11111 .ai..-... ltkfltll, 11-. IHPl •lL till'" t • 'Ml , n roof. :c ,OOl. J l'lAU fl•••t- t•I •• 41'1'10Wt• C•tOlf, SOCK IT TO 'EM! White with block lnl1rior, r•dio & h11ler. l1111tiful eri9ifl1I c•t. Co"'• ;,. •nd 1111 drive thit cir, lie.. No. IVEO 6611 $1699 '64 vw SU' kOOP SIDAN Oti9i111i 9r1y finish. R1. dio I heeler, low mi l1-•t•· lie. No. IEV 507. $1299 Cot•I with ll\1tchin9 in· torior; tires •r• "ice, ti • dio, h11t1r. Freshtr thin 1 d1i1y, l ic.No.VKP,ll. $1199. '61 vw ~ SQUAii IAClt Reil with blec\ interi1r. Show1 o:l<:ellent c1tt . So t1ico 011 t+ie ro1d. R1d io & he•.-.r. l ie. No , Pl'rl61. $2099 FASTIACI SEDAN Ori9in 1t b1i9• fin i1h; r1- dio l he~t•t. Woekeno:l 1p1c i•I J)tice. l ie. No, RHX,lt. $1549 'SS PORSCHE A c•• of di1tlnct1011 - Gor9eou1 y1llow with contt11+i119 interior. V•rv cl•tfl! l ie. No. SVX 159, $1899 445 East Coast Highway ot BAYSIDE DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH ----------~ • DOT •• ·DATSUN 'Eflei.Of·Mantll CLEARANCE SALE! All S.te .Prices Effective thru July 31st. 1969. • ROADSTERS • '65 DATSUN Road1tet w/HT I PEM012) s1195 "66 DATSUN Ro•d1l•r. IROA7171i s1395 '67 DATSUN Ro1d1ter. 1UlB245) $1695 '61 DATSUN ko•d1t1r. I UZX69S) $1695 '61 DATSUN ll:o1d1let. IWEH7711 s1995 '69 DATSUN i &<!O-Ra1d1t•r. IXVSlQ I) $2195 0 STATION WAGONS • '67 DATSUN Stotion Wo9011. I UEXS91) $1195 '67 DATSUN St•tion w.9. !UQA1711 $1195 '67 DATSUN W19on will! r•ck, •111•"''' ti, tre"1mi1,ion. CUJS4621 s1595 • SEDANS 0 '66 DATSUN Sed•n. !SYEllJl SCJ95 '67 DATSUN s ... d111. !UONSlO» s1295 '6! DATSUN S·d~~. Auto., .;, concli· lio nin.,, IVZM911 J $1795 G PICt<-U!'S •• '66 DATSUN Pitkup. 1~'1,7tl $995 • l>OT DATSUN 18835 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-7781 540·0442 soc '...:.....t..... l. ----.t.-.>-O-·,.::.•:: '-·-·--.... _ 4 .I< .: -!:.. ..l~ _..:.a I ---.I. u .I Co ..... C...' _...I ~---"• ..o _._.___.__.__, --.... ~ ...... -.-'--~~-~------------~ ( ---- --. ---------......_.....---~~-----,.---.-;-.,,..--~-------------~~~ ----..... .......---------.....-.. --....---------~-..--.. ---,. ·~-~="V~~~ "I Mondi)', J111r 28, 1969 O~IL.Y ru..or TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI~ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ~~ ~--~-~ ~--~--~-~ ~--· ~ --~-~ ~ 0 NEW CAR CLEAN. UP, AT JOHNSON & SON OVER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE ONLY :oAYS L·EFT JUST 5°/o OVER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL OUR BRAND NEW MERCURY COUGARS, MERCURY MONTEREYS AND MERCURY MONTl!GOS! THIS SENSA'ltON· AL, BONA FIDE DISCOUNT SALE WILL CONTINUE DURING THE REST OF OUR GALA JULY ANNIVERSARY! 200 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM e CALL 540·5630 DON'T YOU BE LEFT OUT I "WI !AT JOHNSON ;\ND SC>N ARE OUT TO MAKE OUR JULY ANNIVERSARY SALE THE BIGGEST MONTH IN OUR HISTORY, AND TO DO THIS WE ARi PASSING ON THE BIGGEST SAYINGS EYER TO YOU" ••• SINCERELY, CLYDE & DICK JOHNSON. HERE ARE 3 EXAMPLE CARS ••• LOADED WITH FACTORY OPTIONS AND PRICED SO LOW IT'S HARD TO · BELIEVE! BRAND NEW MONTEREY BRAND NEW MONTEGO MX · BRAND NEW COUGAR 4 Door H1r'dtop, Bra nd n•w with popul1r Arctic Whit• with 390 2V, w~eel covers, w.h ite wells, special trims, select 1hift, power br•kes end 1t••r1n9, . redlG, tihted gle11. Seriel No. 9Z44Y57468. Stock No. 2236 4 Door Sedan. Beeutlful medium blue comfort-weave interior, white vlnyl roof, select shift, white sidewalls, power steering, power diic brakes, Coupe. Brend new with air conditionin9, Arctic White, white walls, AM whisper 1ir conditioning, AM redio, tint•d 9lais, head test and deluxe radio, p_ower disc brakes end steering, decor group, tinted glass, guards, wh•el covers, Serial No, 'iH IOFS40902 etc. Serial No. 580335 , Was $4017.80 Was $4091.90 Was $3937.70 ~~~c~~~~.~~~.~.1.~.~-$3 2 7 9 60 ~o~~c~~~~.~~.~.~.~~~ .. '3484 65 :~:~~~~.~.~.~~'.~~ $3 5 5375 SAVE $658.00 SAVE $533.15 SAVE $538.90 DON'T' WAIT TOO LONG U D . •• • . • And During July ••• USED CAR SALE! Our Annlvenary Sale has attracted some of the finest trades in Ora.!l.IJ!t County! And we've priced these fine cars to sell . SEE THEM TODAY • • • BUY YOURS TODAY! '. · . ' ' ,,_, --... -$- 1 ~00 ©UD OOW 0 ©®UD@&rffi ' . • I ' ,__ ~ I • 2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Aut. 9600 Autos Wanted .lt==s=u=N=a=EA=M==, I __ T_O_Y_o_T~A __ , __ v_o_L_Ks_w_A_G_EN_ wE P•(Y ·A·· SH 9700 Uttcl Cara 9900 UMd Cars 9900 UMCI Can 9900 Used Car a 9900 U• e-d Cars CADILLAC l-'--C-HEYR...._O_LET__ COUGAR i--M-U-ST_A_N_G_ . , 1861 TOYOTA Corona 4 door '66 VW CAMPER. MUST see '58 Gadillac 4 dr, hrdtop, 169 Ch•vell Malibu '67 !yterc ONpr, 289-4 gpd, '61 TIGER 289 Conv. Mocli1' $ed,ati. Ex.ceptlOnally l'lean, to appreciate this FINE runs good, looks good. S250. Hardtop Coupe. Local one r&J lnilde It out. nu tires, '61 MUSTANG, V8, 2 plus 2 OLDSMOBILE tied. Disc brake., Immac, 1 owner car. Automatic BUY! 675-6935 548--9900 or 646-6164. 1920 • .......:i -.11 Xlnt oond. Best offer, fastback. Factory air condl· , f __ .,. •· ..... _ .. ~ ...... owner car, " 1l""""'• ...... 0• f I dl h 1 rrv 'SC OLDS, 1 owner, F-85, flair, p/s, bucket seats, 3 sp Door 1hltt. $1300. 968-5256 OLDS 1'85, '&4 Wagon. V.S, r adio, P/S, fact air, Xlnl cond. S98.5 673-1342 r.!ake oiler ~2812 tra.nsmluion,. re.dlo, heater, ,67 vw xlnt cond, low or ...,_, can• .c11uuo ,,..., Fullel:'ton Ave, CM heater, p 0 we r steering, 543-1M7 IOll ~. re o, ea er. Y-. ,. !Ire L' E • call us for free etUmale. 440) $1695 full price, White v.·au s_ 1c UD mileage. $1525. '62 Cad. good condition Im-brand new radial tires, Lie. CONNELL TOY()TA LooK EXAMPLE *'69 CORONA 4 Dr.it \Vhile, 4 speed, heater, white. wa11s, tinted glass. No. 134222'. $1899 81'1. * 673-"'61 * · GRODI CffEVROllT mac. cloan. all power, air, WEWlll9. Doo't m1u thla DODGE $l499 vw BUS • swuwt, 23,000 Will .. ,. 6,,,1763 '"!· ----··---CHEVROLET Ask tor Sala:s Mana;er '"" CAD SDV · l.1 M/ 1 $2399 ' n.-.A .. e Sticlr V-8! 28 Bl 1>1> , atr, m • """""& 28 Harbor Blvd. lB2ll Beach vd. D 100/ 1 Hun"'_._ .. Beadl like new. 750 n mo, C.M. 546-1203 ........... yr 5% pri ply. 837-5155 ""' KI 9-3331 'w MUSTANG, 289 cu. in, 4 Full pwr, dlr, tact aJr con. '61 CAD Sedan De Ville. FA 11pd trM1. Radio/heater, d!Uoning, pwr windows, low, WE PAY WH Good , cond. $495. 642-3850 LCON power steering, very clean. low mUcage. Xlnt condition Days: Eves, 675-2699. nGOO * 642-1104 in and out. Total Pritt! $1399. fOR YOUR CAR '62 a:>NVERTiBLE, ExceL ·~~ck.n;~~izr54-dr, 6-cyl '65 Mustang Convert, Radio, LB VBA 319. can Bill, 549-3031 Ext 66 67 Best Deel• Are At interior, lo-mlleage. $995. ~ heater, PIS. new "'545-0634=~·~~~~--r · or DEAN LEWIS CONNELL 642....,; !Ires. $700. PONT. 'Ga C&lal!M, big eng. 1970~~~~VD. MS.3031. Ext, 66 or 67 or be9t offer. 842--3008 42,000 act. ml. 2-dr, rib, pv CHEVROLET CAMARO 1910 HARBOR BLVD. FORD '65 MUSTANG ply. ""°· 6440345 TOYOTA ·57 Corona sedan, 1966 Harbor, C.f.f. SCG-9303 2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA CONVERTIBLE Sll50 '67 BONNEVILLE Broughm '65 BONNEVILLE HT auto. $1389 like new ln &: '61 Volvo S 122. 4 dr. 4 8peed. Costa M .. 531200 ,67 CAMARO '64 FORD Statton Wagon, V8, e 646-2748 e 1pecloJly ordered for a GM + Tax & License our. Going East. 6 0 6 New clutch &: ~ tires. ========! CHRYSLER factory air, auto., P.S., R&: 1-:;;.61;-M"u"'ST=AN"G"'.""•"'cy'"I.-. -'"..,,,,-cxeeutlve wt every con.- Or Late Model Used Marigold, CdM $450. * 675-3TI!I Auto Lnllr\g 9810 ' SPd. dlr, xlnt condition! 1--------H. COMUSO!I} $995 full prlce. lran.!, xlnt condltJon! celvable extra. Like new EXAMPLE ========l.:.c:::::...::.,.::c,j58fcv~oiiL:Vvoo--r .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J Sacrifice! ww Ind• tor '67 CHRYSLER CONNELL ca11 838-2297 cood. • ltill cov....i by *'69. COROLLA Wg. * VOLKSWAGEN """ "°""· ""clean.I' '°"'1"" "' " 1u1a1 price CHEVROLET tact w"""""· can be .... Best oiler * &'.2--0890 LEASE" RENT $1599. LB UJH 173. can BW '66 Mustang, standard shift, ·at Texaco itation, Bristol A: Radio, heater, 4 sJ>l'!ed, lo :;;-;;;-;;::;;::-;;:;:-;~:;;;;1-='===:-::::::0::0::= ALL POPULAR 494-9773. 2~DOOR HARDTOP 2828 Harbor Blvd. nu tires, lmmac. cond. Aft Baker, CM. week d a'¥ 1 : miles. XDM-180. BeauWul '68 V\V Sedan alao '67 VW A 1 Cl __ , 9615 MAKJ!S l!~~!!'!~!!'!~~l' V-8, automatic," !acloTy air, C;;;:;M~. ""'·=~=~546--;;,;1203::: II ,.',.'~'°o.':;;m_. 0675-634,,,.~';;;;;;-;:;;;;;; 9 am-5 pm CVFN 242) ~ k I t SedM/or trade t-VIV 8"'· nt ques, •-cs P1.... b '68 v.. R H )(In -,-=::"=,,..-,""'=,-,-,.,-1 \\'hite with b,.c n r. 962-2329 ... .. FORD power stee ...... , power ra· '68 FORD TORINO , I , t cond. '69 Fireblrd 400, full turbo $1749 19•• FORD AUTHORIIEO CHEVROLET 1"s, radio & heater. lmma· 14.000 ml. o"' owner. Aq"4, hy(I"""""' full -, t.ct '64 V\V with nc\v brakes, '" LEASING culate (UDE 743) match. lnttt. 847~9941 .. ~. • good tires. Jl.fust &II. going Original Fo~ Coupe, Very SYSTEM '64 CHEVROLET El Camino • $2295' 4 s~, dlr. pwr di&c brakes I -o======== ~~1~':; new! Make otter. Plus tax & li~ense into service S200 & take good condition. G Our Com CUstom, Factory air, P.S., One Owner. S2195, LB WIL OLDSMOBILE =~~~~--~ Over 100 Ne':"'° & Used Caedni ~'.:;r.~~~ents $39 mo. ~.... et Th.=Hve Rates auto., radio, heater, like Sn. Call Ken, 494-9773 or 19&4 Pontiac Bonn. New T~= From For Imm .• ;";;BUS. CoOOd cond ........... '6-. . ROBINS FORD ~~. (U4U001) $1•9S full ATLAS ~Ford F1lrl1ne • ri:. &i ~~l cond. BILL MAXEY Xtru. Apl A. Alamaur 64S.1441 2060 Harbor Rlvd. CONNELL CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH '$595 81==RA===== TOYOTA Newport Aportmeots,I'======--==;:= Colla M.,. W-0010 CHEVROLET 29'l9HARBORBLVD. 2 Door loaded. V8, etc. Lio. MILER Oceanfrool. utot fllontod 9700 COSTA MESA 54Mll34 !RM 9<9. Pbor>e 64>.60'll D~ TORONADO ~~~IVNED """' LEASE '""" 2828 Harbor Blvd. Open Dally 'lil 10 p.in. .. .. W"'V '57 VW Convertible, low ~ CM 546-1203 '63 FALCON 1ta wagon. dlx, BIG SELECTION 1111·1 BEACH BLVD. mile~. eood condition. IMPORts WA.N'l'm '68 cadlllac C.ouPe de Vile, , • '64 O!RYSLER 300 H.T. dlr, auto, very clean. LB '61 nmu '68'1 { HUNT. BE~~ 147-855$ ~ $57S. n.f: 67'"~ ~. = ·~fo:1ir-:9u:'.;.,. ·~~;er atr,lmr~~ ~wer:i::.:. r:u. (~~: g;f;f B:-~ce $599, NEW & EXECUTIVE ALL 1.tOOELS 3 Ml. N. at Hwy, on ~ . BILL MAXEY TOYOTA on. rib, air. ps, $75 mo. auto .. n.dlo, heater, CWAK· ~11) $1295 tun price. I ..O"'>iiffii';"-i~;...-= ONLY 6 FROM $295. ' Beach '6.'.: VW, 16,COO mile11, still 1.8881 Beach Blvd. '67 Chrys Nwpt, l'lr $67.50 mo. 8'J7) Li.ke New. $229S lull C9NNELL '63 FORD XL, HT, bekt • • • • under watTBnty. excellent lL Stach. Ph. 84.7~ SOUTH COAST price. seats, dlr, fact air, ¥Int BJ_tAND NEW '69 $1998 f ' (TIQJ_YlQ. ITl!J coodlllon. •-day1, ·~='="~~~ CAR LEASING CONNELL CHEVROLET •"4 ... new paint. LB ATB TO CHOOSE FROM 492-8482 '"'" CONFIDENTIALLY •Mw "·tH NB"''MM ~. 798. Tolal pr1oe $699. cau BIG SAVINOSI -. ~ ""· -·~ CHEVROLET 2828 H.-~vd. v ,.,..,,. \ DBtE•AI NDool1LAE••wA'1s ·:l;~~l~.d~~~·~·: Fo~fr!''tr ~::~,. UM can 9900 2828 Harbor Blvd. C.M. 546-1203 .. .,,.11c"'FO"°RD;l<"~,"'v ... =,"'.-..,,fo=uy Unive._rsity to ..n $1!00. ""'135 PAIO FOR OR NOT · -CM. 546-1203 CORVAIR · · "1Upd w/alr. P/S, P/8. ·i;a vw . .unroor ..... cond .•• J. SPORTS CAR llWPORTRANSPORTETARTIMONOTCARSonr '55 CHEVY. Xlnt cood. Au1'>. • ~ ::~ d a". Oldsmob"1le 642-6023 1;;;:.;.;=::"'-:~~7"'= I first $400 1a1.... CENTER IU ,,.,,, Two dr. Good tl?e•, '61 CORVA.IR. 4 opd .. 2 d,. =-==~--~-61 •--bl W 6 I 1 ~75 Interior in perfect condition. Xlnt. cond. MR, iood tires. '59 FORD Convert. Auto, naui er agon, cy • '69 VW CAf.IPER 2833 Harbor Blvd. 2036 HARBOR BLVD. Body In good shape. $350. $495. 86-7034 P/S. a~rall good COlld. owner. Clean. $350 or bt1t $3400 Cotta Mesa 54().4'91 COSTA M£SA 546-2342 or ~8 $125. 540-WS 2850 Harbor Costt,.Mesa otter. 546-2076 641>1ll0l WE PAY TOP 5411-5294 or 541-1511 •gg IMPALA "" ''" ..,....... CORVETTE •59 FORD w..,, vs. Xlot 540-9640 '64 RAMBLER STATION Nil BEA~ff BLVD. ,66 vw Futbeck, xlnt cond; DOLLAR FINANCING AVAILABLE 6 wks old, $3395 675-178l ot trangp car, gd. tires, $25(1. • A ~~;~~~~ ~ $400. Hunt. Btoch 147.a.555 new ""'!'. BlaupW>kt """'-~;, ~ ... • '!,:~G=• ~ BUICK 53-1854 '68bl ~. "1n"t'"'' GiS I HP. "°:°',,35F:J • pd • VI :=======~I SmlN.of~l,IW)'.onBch coco rna1.11. $lf50. ~1 -Th:d~ '&bins F~......., '63 CHEVY, 6-cyl, 4-dr. a ue,_ .; pwr. seer., OTtl;•'fl tra111. T·BIRD •• vw Sed tan/blk i 1 good work car. Call alter 5: b1'k-ea, wlndowl: 11t~reo. Radio, S300 or be11t. TOYOTA 'uu an. " : 2060 llarbor Blvd. '67 RMERA, n pwr, fact f).lG...2239 tape. low mlle1. Must sell 64Z-47Zil or 642-1444 REAL Shai:p '66 o J d R&H, top cond. l 9wner. Pri C.M. &e2--0m0 air 11,,.. , __ .,_,, 1,.,,. ~ -13 ~.,..;;.,:..;;;:.,oc.:.;;:...:.:.:;..._ ~.,1..., Hol. "-u-. Gold '62 Landau, full P\\.T, tact Ply $USO. 673-1872 eve11, ' ' .... .-...... -.. , 57 CHEVY 283 "'.,..."" '59 Ford 2 door, automatic, "" "'-" ...-air • ~• W'(I B chrm whlJ Jrnmac cond l I:==='==== V • 'H w1th blk. Landau top, lo ' pvt party, Lie. No. HEADQU~·-** '65 VW Vu** I uy ,;~ . ,· 3 SPEED l450 COUGAR ... ~ . good nmnor. TZ.141.5 54>-5953 M~RE ownt:r ~ pv. P y. Excellent cond 642.--1487 Best otter. 842-4853 mJe, nu whl/wall tlret le ' EL llOO ..;837::;;""';;;,======l•5im:AiRTdc.ili. brks, fl/H, custom blk lthr 'G7 LANDAU, Jaw mlc. fact 67S-532T Your Volkswagen or Porsche '65 BEL AIR 4 dr, air, '69 MERCURY c 0 u gar , * '65 Ford Galaxy 500. HT. int &; bu<'ket seats, C.onlOle air, loaded. Distress Mle, 15300 Beach Blvd, WaUnnstr J.966 VW. Excellent oondldon le. pay top dollars. Paid IDr CADILLAC power, private party . convt, tact air. AM radio, to Excel cond. New Urea. $895 with t&ch, PIS, P/B, P/W, mua:t aell. 96S-40ll Phone 894-3322 f\I u 1 t s e It lmmedlatt}y or not. Cell Ralph ReaaonabJe. 837-sn s ml!, fact "'b', SJ 7 O O. "642-8382""=·c=-,,..,.--=-:,,,-re.ct air.' Must aee to TRANSPORTATION ear..•59 'S? TOYOTA CORON A. ~lllllS~::_· .::;~~tll61;;.,=,..---l\iwrn)i;;613<l!IXl;;J;";;;;"N,:i=. '64 CAD. Coupe de Ville Call efter 6 PM 541~79 • 1966 FORD Galaxy, 7 Uln!. bGI~! Blue booka et $2100 T>-Blrd Convertible.. Needs Autom11.tic. SU50. Privete 61 vw BUG WANTED junk can. No tow· lealher, alt, orig owner, 64Z-5S.'12 '67 COUGAR, XLh"T cond. Power, air, tape deck, real Belt otter. 962..a860 radiator work. $6$. 64&-3632 1 party. 962--4&!3 Sunroof RM $1DJ awt.y <'hal°gt. 546-5106. St690. 642---2013 While elephants! Dune-a.tine $2100. • 646-6921 sharp! M0-6549. !'<r Ddy Pilot Want Adi OIARGE your wlllt ad now. DAILY PfiiTf tVANT ADSl DESI' OFFER! 67J-1556 CHARGE your want ad now. \Vhlte Elcpbant:a? Dial $4.2.567S for RESULTS 1607 Sa.otla.go. NB Wlute r.:lerbantaT DtaJ &U.s&'78 for Rl$Ut.TS Find U·w1tb a wabt adl -------- • , I Ul'I ,.._.... Apollo Cubs Two Siberian tiger cubs born last week at the St. Louis Zoo were named Neil and Buzz in honor of the moon-landing astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz AJdrin. Attendant Dee White holds the two cubs that will be displayed in the Children's Zoo when they are old enough for exhibition. -Backers Shrug Off ' ~ennedy, M~Cart~Y .. DENVER, Colo. (AP) - Tb9 foot soldiers and captains ol the New PollUca who fought the Ul6ll campalsna under the McCarthy and Kennedy ban- ners are taking their leaders' troubles .with a shrug. "Ir McCarthy isn't there and T~ l<ennedy goes down the drain," said one. "there will bt someone else when the tJme comes. We art lssue- oriented. We aren't here-- oriented." This appeared to ~ the view of many Ol. the mo~ than 400 members of the ' N e w DemocraUc Coalltlon-m.t ot Wbom wtn!: ardent IUpport.rn ol McCarthy and the late Roberi F . Kemedy-- gatbered at a Western Stat.es weekend meeting to discuss racism, tbe ABM and pollllcs. Manf arrived Jn can still bearing the McCarthy daisy decal and the Kennedy bwn_per stJcbr. as wen u the more recent liberal battle cry: "'Ibe ABM is In Eljsel." SOme of tbost arriving early Tents Go Up Under Water In Channel SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (AP) -Undersea tents ue blossoming near the ocean floor in the Santa Barbara Channel but tl's" not a part of the man-in-the-sea program. The tents are used to catch oozing crude oil before it suttaces and finds its way lo shore. Since an offshore well drill· ed by Union Oil Co. blew out Jn the channel last January, t11gineers have tried many methods to stop or contain the continuing leak that blocked beachM and enraged residents. The tents-100..foot squaru of nylon covered with a sea~ lng chemical, po I y v I n y I chloride -are stretched over frames mad e Of 20-inch steel pipe and are lowered into place any time divers rind a ~Y aowdefl ·Into •-motel room to l.!Men ·in silence, barely m o v i n g, as Sen. Edward M. K~nn~y told of the events around the drown- ing of a pretgt secretary. About hallway 11\rough, a young man with 1 neat .beard who rang doocbell1 for Mc:Oarthy last. year but said he would have Voted for Ted Kennedy io um, shook hi! head and walked out. "·I thlnk be1s had it," .he: u.ld afterward. "11 may be uofaJr , but 1 ihlnk that's the liay it is." His was not a consensm however (If those wbo lounged anituld the swimn)ing pool or toot I dip between panel ........ -"and gel log•thm with old friends lrom 1168. CUrtil Gans, McCarthy'a tough young organlaer from 1961, ~ there· in atilrt alee'Vea, drinking can 'after can ol pop and talklog abooil ref""" and hoir McCarthy would haave defeated Richard Nizoo 1n -uea u be hid been nominated. NO llEEl.ECllON Now McCarthy has real, firmed bil decision no' to seet re-elec:tlon as senator from Mlnnesota.. "I would be· very unhappy If sen. McCarthy retired from public Ille," Gans said. Gana doesn't think ,Ken- nedy's future as a pres~tlal possibility has been destroytd: "I think !'""Pie should be judg· ed on their public record, not on their private lives ... Anyway, m ,POiitics it de- pends on the tune." Thomas Bradley, the lall black city councilman from Los Angeles who wu defeated for mayor, said he agrttd. Ted Kennedy, he sald, is "one of the finest candidates the Democr.atic party h13 to «· fer" and he was sure. Kennedy would be a presidential can- didate sometime. Maybe even in 197Z. Ted Warsha!sky,, who was ro<hairman of the McCarthy primary camp a .1 g,n in Wlscoosin and a leader of that state's rebellious delegation at the OenlOcratlC ~Gonventlon, s a Id Kt:f\Ded1'1 television statement had an impact at his home : new se.p. BEAUTIFUL SPEECH Each tent Is held 17 feet "My wife said, 'My God, from the ocean noor by a float that was a beautiful speech: and at the peak i! a pipe My da~ter was near tears leading to the drilling plat-ilfe' ~ his !,~'ij!~tht forms. Trapped oil l! brooghl ,._. will ,. __ ~··-blm , to the top and sent to ,....,,. ~..,.. ~ refineries. fair or not· fair, ·that he U lo O'I k Id cracked uhder pri:ssure. Tbey .A. n n 1 !po esman SJ are going lo 11 k e those the tents now cover 60 to 70 wonfl~. « bis, per h 1 p s percent of leaky areas. He. urfairly, .and Olfow them c&l!J that occulonally latge back 1 gt ·htm. · tt~ ' bubbles or natural ga.s co~e . the P,»ters about 1'1.ion-'Do t.ri~.the leaks but they re Ytiu-wapt.thls,man'a,finger on rarely &1g •enough to bowl over the trtgger.j wen, they're the tenla. 1Qltlf lo "" ~ words "'They're nearly 100 percent •Jain.\ Kennedy just 11Jce effective for what they cover' .. , tnat." the Ul\lon Oil opotesman lllld But there wu tittle U any ol the tenl!. handwrlingin& m>Uod l h e COut Guard U. George swimming p;ool in Denver Brown Yid alter • recent about where these Democrallc oblervlUon rugbt, "I feel I DOerals would flnd t he I r wu ...mi jiu oil." leaders lo conlell Prtsldeot 11te well Wew out when Nlton in tm. · .. -P.1 _..., f..-ced "!1"1 the a-ol an tlec· the oil up ihroicP • deep fault tioo" ll&!d Biair Clark, ~ , Into ·a tbaDow oD bed. frac--Coalition's natimal lrtuurer tured "Uh many crack• and ronner camp a I gn ~to the ,OCffn floor. m1nager ror McCarthy. "And An wwt-for F~esloo• they learned bow easy tt Is lo Coetod Faj>rlcl Co., Rldla,,i !al< over , local p ar t y B. -t .. ln..,,ted Ille madllnery. Tller,'re building t«U. H~ Ute kle.a 'WM an orpniuUon. ' • Man Now Can Function Outside World ~~ . . .I By EDWARD It. DELONG Willie and Roger B. Chalfee-1paao program had steeled ·300,o0o mm0 and women work· lotmatlon ...edid lo pick a what oclenilata thi:,:!,r.·• ~· S PAC E C E N T E I\ , gave the~ Uvea In -qul!dl of the tJieqiaelyu to '"""'pl !tu than Ins lo< 2!1•000 -.nlea who smooth ~ ptt. Surveyor moooquake -a 1t 1111 H-(UPl)-"Tbal"s one lunar dream. They died In a 100 percenl IJU<CW '00 the pu\ togethee tlii liaidwm made """ tha, lllriace wu of llcienUflc tnlorma~ 11111 11111111 ltep for man; one giant launch pad fl8'h I~ II Capa lllllar lanclln(. Eve"""' view· le~ lo the landlor. sttonr IP!'P lo support a may·mian the moon la a ... leap for mankind." Kennedy Jan. 17, 19i7; prepu. eel the !llght aa rtaty. 'Fron! 'tlit · throe men In apaceshlp. • tnf, nlhif than dead, cejeollal I\ With u-memor'ab e tnrforthelllibtol'Apollol. Even the lawich dale, J1'4' apace <o Iba tboulandl aup-VE~DBlllGN bol!y. '1 wordt Nell A. Armatron& Bef..-e be died, In' a grim 11, and the dalo' ot' the lunar porttni then1 oo tbe sround, It Apollo 11 vtrliled all the Aldr!Ji, found !hat In "'°""' ~ at.ar.ted man '• first trek '8Cf'9SS 1""0~, Grissom said men landing, Jul1 ~28, Wf;l't ,not a w~ a 1nlr8"le ot. human design, aJI lhe h.~are aod about· lhl· ,Uface: ht hid to · an alien world·-the powdery, wiJuld pi'.'Dbobaly give their cenalnty unW the miuioa waa p¢ormance.. trajectory cal~~. and move •·• a football --· rr" aUppery aurfaceiof Ule 01000:1 JJ\leaf'Y1n8 ~reach I.he.moon.. undet. way~ • 1 ~ ,Tl;le ~Y ,ctoe14. '°19t C~l\'le proved men· can fiy to .. the You hAv~.to aplit oUt-anci cul a ~·, sea of tranqutllly - a W~Jc 1fesa\dlJ;,'f'uWpt1bit "We ·have no fa1et prkle , duttnr lM · aJ)prm'cli fo 'tbe mOOn aiXI lknd~ there .with llUJt'1U .. 11 , ,, ago. tnvestlgalors of the fire ·•bout theJe, •pee~!(!·~· dat .. ," moon .when loo;mucb demand relallve eaao. T•th•i"tbey proved Iha\ In .; • · • · • . , , space agency , Dr. oJ·~.1 th J--.ii.i... • L . • The,moonwalktbatbeand tu£ned up Jl,oppy 1bomu'O . .Palne ' ~·after WaJ 1 t--.."l;:\I~ .e .uu .. >& Jtalsoprov~.thatmen ·are: 1wture ~men can first 'Edwin E. "Buu'"Aldrln loot,• wO.bnanshli>";and utenalve Apollo 10 iq>lasJ>ed ilooin.1.., crafts -pute<-•1111 ~nd equal lo the moon. • take l"1ef exploration ll1ps the lunar lagdJnc arid takeoff tnstancesol poor Judgment in · than two monltui be.fore the controllers bad to belp '·the Befort the fllgbt SOQ'Je of-acro11 the IUl'face, then"',~ that he ,Ud , ~:Aldrin ac-the Apollo program. But once moon mission Wu to ltart. cn!W out. This wu the type of ficlalJ yr-orrled that man'a fJ.rst possibly lift in abelten and'., complllhed, .J>rCl,vecf' that man these errors were-uncovered, . unfpreseen clrcurutanct that ad ~the moon would be io colonies. can funcUon •outaide>the woi-ld steps were taken to correct NOT HESITATE , · , had worried Collinll before lhe fall on hll"f.ace. rHe dlc),•not. Ap;Ollo'lf raised a few <Na·;i he and his ~~ ![ave llv-them. · "W.e will • no1 hesttate lo , fll§h!· , provlns tbe accuracy ol ·the tlona, • and. Ifft m an y I" ed on for ages. postpone this mission if we I guW man s greatest fear ttalnJng that pr e·p a·r e d uoaDIWe'r'ff."f 1 The .flillit U!at .Afmsl'ong MADE SUOCESS , led. we an not ready 1n:au _1' the fear of the llllkMwn. Armmoog and Aldrin for a ·It raised <he quea1ion of , and Aldi'!• -and , Mlcliael Theae lmproveJl\en)a. and Joopects,And,~!h<vaiag• afl!l l'thl~. lhat's true about gravity 1 ..... ooe..ath that of why, after thlnklnr they~; Collin•, wllO circled the nioon th.,. correcUnna, aald Apollo o1 Apollo 11 Is !'eaun. we hive lhls Olght,' Collins ll&!d just earth. solv<ct Iha ~!em-with Apollo i while hli comrad~ were on progr8JJ1 chief Lt. ' Gen. no' pride: that would make ·us before lhe launch. '"lbere seems to be· no dlf. 10, men7still do not kilOW m1· '. the lunar lllriaco '-made Samuel . C. Pbilllps, niode heslllte lo ilri.i; .. bolile... the "lofy grealelt fear la that llcully In moving ~ncl, ias the 'anlwen about . Junar,Jj from earth to the. moon and po6Sib1e the &UCCeD of . the crew irnmedli:tely if we en-there's some detail that has we suspected," Arinstrong navtgaUon and why k .. IO then back safely to earth first manned Apcllo In f;,&f'th counler J>!Ol>lemt " been left uncovered. 1I I knew satd after a few teatative unlike eart)\ navigation. fulfilled the goal thal Presi· orbit, Apollo 7. They ma~e J.J triutned (IUt. this caution w}\at 11t-Were, I'd run out and' steps: Ht and Aldrtn loped like . It raised the que.ltJon of "'1y·: dent John F. Kennedy set for possible ~ elect:lfylng OJght wu iunnecea&aO''· Apolln 11 study lt ~ it wouldn't exist gazelles and-bopPt!I like 1t was so easy . for ' ~ J hls nation May %5, _ 1961. of the 5ef?Dd 1nljrion, Apollo blasted aw'1 .from eape1jcen-any 'f:e. kangarOO!I, the two· methOila--ot astrqnauts to Pfobe be-loW the~j THERE WAS MORE 8, arowid the moon last n<dy Just '724 nillllseconds Ba ·on II!< experience moving about they ball.~ surface w.,. ,.they 'ta!>bed; Chflstmas. late .n.ew.lo the moon with no gain , ·through unmanned ed for the moon's n ·11:aviiv. ot\e experiment In tht moon, B1,1t there was more. The They ma4~ ,poasl~Je the ~ems "at all, 5 en t surveyor a1'd lunar orbiter "I can Pick up tbe !Url~ arid why It' wu ao dlfOcuJt fllsht, the lapdlng and lhe eq~ and .&llmost upQuallfied Armstroog and Aldrin to Uie rnoon1 probes. '11. Mercury with my toe" Annstrong said. nearby where they Wied to walk dispelled doubt!. They su~ ol Apollo 9's• earth-surface and bac'k, and return. fij-ht.S .~ 10 .~anned Gemini "It does adhere in flne-}ayers plant the flag ·and uttlCt a dilproved dire prediclinns~ ·orbiting ·tt6t of ~e ·lunar Iqn:-· ed. home to a· fi:ll!Uess .Paclflc. JJUSslona -and on tJ\e flnt like· powdered charj:o&l -to jhe core tube aemple. Theyopenedthewayforolher dirig craft and Apqllo lO's • lasbdown · · · f~ manned Apollo testt .-sole and sides of my boot. I Ancfi(leff"forlater,fllihUito m~, ·and w«nen, in' future . flight .to'wlthin 'Jess than 10 · PFrom ~ ~ 'ship QJJl!N . and hi& crewm•tts . can set the footprints: 9( my answer the quest.km •f yean to mPe the moon 1 niilts ot tl:ie ' moon whJCh built by Noitti 'Amtf!Can Cover~ m«;t of the bases on boots and lbe treaas· in the whether the Jnoon Nilly II ac- f~Uar place and the planets cleared the way for the sum-Rockwell oCrp to 'the Jiinar' 1 the "u"ninowns." fine sandy partkles. The rocks live, how It wu born and wUt a reaUstlc goal. mer landing. · lander built bf' Gnonman to Gemini proved out the are rather slippery." It iJ like In place1 other than 1'he tra11 from e a r t h ' s They made possible lhe Ian-the food pecked by Wbirli)ool rendezv~ techniques that Z EXPERIMENTS the Sea ol Tr.anquUUty, sutfae1 to an · arid lunar . .lleB 'ding itself, after ·just !our aod the television dalgned by ~ 11'1 command,shlp and He . afl!f Aldrin put out .two .At least ~.,and pq111bly Was a hUd Oile. manned Apollo missions. W~. It tW1s. a jt11:•'lu91'" lat'lder uted to link up e~nta that remained rune, mor.e Ajiollo Jancllop art Threeastronautl-'Virgilt. F.rom the top -down, tr1umph of Americ·an .in moon ortllt after the lan-behind .them, and· one of the plannedtoseektbe.seanswer1. "'Gus". !Jriasom, t;<tward H. • ~tyooe coon~ with the tec~~~'1 ::·: :';~~~.!'?"the cljnS:·'. Orbiter provided in-erperiJ'Mnta-qukkly recorded (Nut: n.~Nat Apolltl) Sears .. ' . WHAT A .. PRI~CE! ' ·-cRUSADER 0 o .. 6.50xl3 Tubeless Blackwall PlosL79 F.E.T. And Old Tire I · c· ' . ltlonday ...., Tues.raw Only AokA,boot Sean Conftllient Credit Plan• I uly 28th mN1 28th • New contour, bmad shonlder ror gre1ter 11Cety ~ •New tread d .. ign for aU-weather traction •New 6/IG-incb white sidewall lo match the width of the white ai!l-aU of aiany new ·can BLACXiW'ALLS ANY SIZE JJSTED Tubele8S BlackwallA SIZE F.E.T . 7.75xl4 2.~ 8.25xJ,4 2.36 7.75xl5 2.21 1·2· ·87 Pl~T. Aad Old 11n ' WllITEWALLS ONLY '3 MOl{E PER111RE , ______ ..;=..;._·--------~----------------~..-------·--------~ r.ul TA S-•400, 521"'530 ll-MOHft Q 3-3911 I.Cit«) IUiOt HE 6-01 21 ftC'O Wf M 262 v.H'l'A.ft! 5'11Q "'4«111 WWCI tlS-"27 " I CN«XJ.A ,,. l•G.0661 Gt.INWl oc s.101U, a "'411 O.YW9C .. 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