HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-08-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa--------·~-~--------------::----~-----,.--=~~~~
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ixon~s Vacation Oliicial:
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e ~11 Visit Coast Saturday TUESDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 5, ·1969
Ul"I T1l1"1t'lt
Ho Halts Assaults,
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May Let War Fade
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces in A ranking U.S. officer said Hanoi, for
South Vietnam, responding to current the present time at least, seemt1 content
American military withdrawals as an to "more or less sit back and watch us go home."
Allied concession o( defeat, h2ve can· "North Vietnamese goa.is• remain
celled plans for new offensives and may unchanged," he said, "and Hanoi now
perntit the war simply to fade away, believes these goals can be fulfilled in a
military sources reported today. low·keyed military effort."
Basing thelr report on intelligence com-Another source said North Vietnam and
muniques, the aoUrces said North Viet-the Viet Cong may simply continue the
nam apparently believes it can achieve seven·week old fighting lull indefinitely
its goals Jn South Vietnam without and allow the war to "fade away."
further military efforts of major pro-Americ.an troop withdrawals from
JXlrlklns. South Vietnam increased to about 12,200
A North Vietnamese army officer ca~ Tuesday with the departure of another
lured last week told Allied interrogators 150 anny lroops, who had been assigned
he had bten instructed to infonn his to quartermaster and postal unit!. the
troops that they appeared to have won cutback began July I WKl.er 1 Nixon ad·
~ tht war "because tbe American1 are mlnl1tratlon program:
go111s-. .. -°'"'"""~Mid; ~ ·~ ll:inl baJ;i'.itn off
to little more than scattered skinnisheti,
American 852 bombers are continuin1
daily raids over suspected Communist
positions.
In overnight raids Monday, the
bombers hit targets in the northern sec·
tor around the abandoned Marine"outpost
at Khe Sanh and also struck against In.
filtration corridors from 45 to 88 miles
from Saigon.
J\iilitary communiques on ground
fighting of Monday said Allied troops
made "light but continued contact" with
Communist forces. They said at least 208
North Vietnamese and Vie\ Cong troops
were killed in the skirmishes. American
casuallies listed for Monday were one
dead and seven wounded. SWlh Viet,.
namese casualties were described 11 "light..,
Youna SW'fer Beats 'Timetable' ~
Comedian 11illon Berle, surrounded by Ringling
Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus clo"1ns,
displays his fa ce-making style. Berle presented
diplomas Mond ay in Jn gle\VOOd to clowns graduat-
ing from official Clown Colle~ of circus. College
trains clowns to bring happiness to all people of all
ages.
Cheats Death
~~li~e~i~~~~lwo
100,000-man Pullout
Planned by Presi,dent
Neil Celebra tes
Birthday; Rocks
Give Sola r Hint
FBI Joins Nationwide
lifeguards Monday afternoon !aved the
llfe of an 1&-year-old body rurfer found
floating face down in ~acberous surf off
the Balboa Peninsu1a wedge. •
The two guards. one of them an off~u
ly Los Angeles County lifeguard, restored
the breathing and heartbeat of Steve
J\leyers-, 18, San Oigeo, who broke his
back and nearly drowned after going
"over the falls" on a wave he was riding. Hunt for Co ed Slayer
SPACE CENTER Houslon (UPI )
Neil A. Armstrong ' celebrated his 39th ANN ARBOR. 1\1ich . (AP)
birthday in qu arantine today c.nd scien-Aulhorities inves tigating the slayng o(
tists reported the gray dust he brought seven 1\1ichigan coll ege coeds and teen.
back from the moon niight tell thein a age girls pressed a nationvdde hunt today
great deal about the sun. ror Andre\v J\1 anuel, 25, last seen in Sa-
Armstr ong's birthday fetc was a 1vhitc lin as, Calif.
cake with white icing and 26 candles _ The FBI entered th~ invcstlga1ion for
all the candles availab1'.'.in the isolation the first time when a federal fugitive
area In which the first moon landing crew· \\1l rrant \\'as issued against J\ian uel Mon·
and moon sainples brought back are day in connection with the theft or a
quarantined. house !rai ler in Michigan.
A geochemist who vaporized bits of the J\lanue l. tall and heavy , w i I h a tat-
<'hRrroal-colorcd lunar dust, 'Dr, Oliver A. tooed left forearm, was beli eved by
Schaeffer of the State University of New authorit ies lo have journeyed lo
York. said today the large amounts of Ca liforn ia in June with John N. Colli ns.
"rare gases" released by the dust in-22-year-o ld· college student cha rged with
dicated the lunar surface may prove a the most recent of the se1•en girl killings
fertile bed for solar sludies. in the Ann Arbor-'l'psilanti area, a series
The gases were part of the so-called \\'hich began in August. 1967. J\ianu<!l and
'·solar wind," the fast-moving atoms that Collins lived in the same Ypsilanti roon1·
boil off the surfa L'e of the sun and speed ing hou~.
through space. A surprising number were The traUcr was found O\ er the weekend
trapped In the moo n dust, Schaeffer said. near the Sa I i n a s hoinc of
"There's such a large an1ount or J\1anuel's parents.
hellum and neon and argon In this' Three California girls nl'urdered thi.<i
material that definitely comes from the summer-two nea r Salines and one near
sun that one could start looking for other Los Angeles -were simil ar in some
rlrments besides rare gases," he said. respects to the se ven in Michigan One of
"One could look for polassium. perhaps, the Ca lifornia v1ctin1s was wearing only
and in this way learn the com1>asilion of · one earring. Seve ral of the 1\1 ich igan girls
the sun.'' . also had an earring miss ing when thei r
50 COIUPETE .
IN FOTORAMA
The Fotorama Camera Contest, which
~fers more than $500 for the one pictu re
hat wins the grand prize, drew SO entries
n Its first week or competi tion which
losed at noon last Thursday.
The! top th ree photographs are publish·
today on Page 5. Entri es for judging
the second week of the three-week
ve nt are be ing accepted now at all DAI-
y PJLOT offices (see rules, Page 4),
and prize wlnnt r will be scloc ted dur·
g Fotorama at Fashion Island Aug. 2~·
bod ies were found.
A fourth woman was killed in
California but federal and st a I e
authorit i~ have not included her in the
present investigalion . They said the death
of Susan M. Hennessy. 17, of Seaside.
Calif., occurred before the time Collins
and Manuel were reported to,have reach·
P.d the Salinas area. Her body was found
June 17.
Edward Carlbom, 22, a recent graduate
or eastern J\fichigan Unive rsity in
Ypsilanti, whose stolen motorcycle wa5
found in th e garage used by Collins, said
Monday a State Police officer told him
there was evidence one or two girls had
been elain in a trailer, State Pollce
declined commen t.
A sh.erifr's spokesman In Salinas said
Sgt. Ken Christensen and Detectiv1
l
Thomas Nasser of t11e Michigan State
Police were making complete laboratory
check or the trailer for possible clues.
Collins is charged with the murder of
Karen Sue Beineman, an Eastern
J\.1ichigan coed.
AuLhorities in Michigan declined to
answer ques lions about Manu el, known
also as llichard Diaz Jr. and James
Skolak, but Sgt. Christen sen said in
Sa linas JXllice know Piianuel was there
"as recentl y as last Thursday."
Ita lian P olitical
Cri sis Ovcr-l<'or Now
ROME (UPI) -Italy's n'IOnlh old
government crisis ended tod ay -for the
tilne being.
Acting Premier ~1ariano Rumor an-
nounced he has succeeded in forming a
mino rity government or his own Christian
Democratic Party which lacks a majority
in Parliament and that it will be sworn in
\Vednesda y.
Meyers, whose heart stopped breathing
three times during the surfside revival
efforts, was in serious condition today,
lloag Memorial Hospital aides said.
Credited with saving the youth's life
were Craig Coffin, 21, of 128 Via Havre,
Lido Isle, the off-duty Los· Angelts
lifeguard, and Newport Lifeguard Lt. Al
Irwin, who was on routine patrol near
"N" Street when Meyers was brought in·
to shore.
Three other body surfers, all from
Riverside, fir st noticed the victim
floating face down 70 feet from shore,
lifeguards said.
They brought him into shallow water
and suminoned aid from Coffin, who was
on the beach.
Coffin administered mouth-to-mouth
resu scitation and heart massage on the
victim while the three youths went for
more help.
They found !rwin patrolling in his
lifeguard jeep. He called for an am·
bulance , then relieved Coffin.
A lifeguard rescue boat also arrived on
the scene lo assist the guards on shore.
Lifeguards identified the three swim·
mers who discovered Meyers as Tom
Carroll, 19, John Langley, 17, and 1John
Jimenez, 17, all of Ri"."erside.
Nixon Hits Coast Saturday
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon and his family will fly
lo San Clement this weekend for a month·long stay at their new hilltop
house overlooking the Pacific.
The Nixons are scheduled to reach their San Clemente home Sat·
urday and will not return to \.Vashington until Sept. 7.
Tricia Nixon, 23, and Julie Nixon Eisenhower: 21 , accompanied by
her husband, David Eisenhower, 21 , also will spend the month at the new
Spanish~style San Clemente villa.
Young Eisenhower has quit his summer job as a researcher for a
Senate committee. He will return to Amherst Cullege Sept'. 16 for bis ~enlor year. Mrs. t;lixon said she expects to be busy next week with pre·
porations. !or a dinner Aug. 13 'in Los Angeles, hOnoring the Apollo 11
astronauts. \
,WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon Is expect.ed to announce a pullout
of 50,000 more American troops lrom
Vietnam in late August and may schedule
AOOlher withdrawal of S0,000 fighting men
in October, It was learned today.
This means Nhton will try to withdraw
12.5,000 lroops by the end of the year and
fulfill his expressed hope of beating
former Defense Secretary Clark M. Clif·
ford 's timetable of 100,000.
An administration source sa id Nixon
and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of staff , have agreed the
withdrawal of 50,000 more Gls is reasib!e
now. Nixon wlll announce it later this
montb .
On the basis of Wheeler's on -th e-spot
survey of the Vietnam militia and Nix·
on's own talks and observations during
his round-the-world trip. they reportedly
have set another target in the fall of
50.000 troops in the phased withdrawal.
Nixon ann ounced an Initial troop cut of
25,000 during the June 8 J\1idway summit
meeting with President Nguyen Van
Thieu of Soulh Vietnam.
Nixon was considering a broadcast to
the nation from , Los Angeles in late
A1,1gust on the ne.xt pullout of fi ghting ·
men in h.is campaign to "Vietna.mize" the
\\'3r. ·
\Vheeler pre~ented his evaluaton of th~ 1
war picture and OQ11linuing militar)o lufi
to· Nixon on July 12, a short time before ·
the President embarked on his world
tour.
Religious ·Riots
Flare i11 Ireland
Nixon said In Guam he was reviewing
lhe possibility of further t r o o p
withdrawals and would make his po.slUon
clear in late August. The de-escalation Of
enemy activity -an evaluation of
whether it is deliberate or not -is under
intensive study in the White House and
the Pentagon.
Senate Republican Leader Everett M.
Dirksen told reporters Monday there Is
"evident belief" at the White House •
further U.S. troop withdrawal from Viet.
nem -beyond the 25,000 men now being
brought home -could be announced
before the end of this month. He declined
to pinpoint the number.
Ron ald .Ziegler, White House preu
secretary, said today the President con·
sidered the military situation in Vietnam
improved hut there had been no firm
decision on withdrawals beyond. the. initiJI
25,000.
"The President said he felt the military
situation had improved," Ziegler told
reporters. "I have no elaboration on it
beyond that.
"There will be an announcement on
troop replacements later in.August but no
decision has been made at Wlis date."
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Orange ·c:oas&
e! ........ ,
Weather
flazy, sunshine, dthe . w~thu·
'.man's etfphemlipn 1 fQf'.foggy .,do.Jt1,
will prev-ail -through···Wednesday
aloflg the Orange Coast, with our
high of 72 more appealing than
the inland a~ea 's 91.
INSIDE TODAY
BSbF-AS't', Nortbem.•lrelend'\fURl} ~ ·: · ··,,_ ....-~---· 7--t -, . .
Police dashed U\rongh 41ames 20.feet ·hlgh , llf~~MUG.:.1-fmast · .p,rom1~11t
earty tbday ' tn "piJrsi1it ofl ri\11IJ CathoWc tDe]"'Ocitil, ~?!,s~e ·~nr!'-1:'.savs. i;'•
and ·Prot.estaht gangs whmt.fltiboml)lnl& QOt.:er~T 0"1XOt"-1,nq1iflui TU?JI
, and street 'Warfare ·cbfiUntad'~ri(cJ tts IG.t'.;pll~~ bnd.. tHa t;i; li#'1~net J""'
fourth straight dliy: • : • I. ..-.1 . te~tStid ; in .• chbilPwihg, sm:
Pollceit.rYing to st.Parnt.t I.he mobs, bat-George ~fut-p11y. Page B. · •
tling over ancient rellglous ha£1'edS, were .. ,',""' l • ,, • Mii~ ,111111,
irtruck b) loaded garbage cans flung: from c111 .. "'11 1 "11-.1 """ ~
doorways and upper windows. Gasoline 1 c141u1ft 111 "''1 °'"'" ~ n ..-C&mlc• .U • SrlYI• ""* ll , bombs burst In thelr paths , someUmes ,c,..11_. ' 1te1e1· """"" ,,.,1., •
W nll nns bl ""~ ""kn 11 .~. ' ,..,... • sc ng u o a a:r:e. ,1 . ritt', """ .. ' .. s)9dl. ~r1(•b 1•11,
At leasi four building.!' were ln .n8.mes 1• ''""""' • T~ u, 11
Monday night from Orebombs.· :They =:,. .. · ·Y-J: "'~~ ' ·:
burned uncontrolled because firemen .t.1111 L.....,. u · 01t1111 w1111t ,, Mtttlntt 11 ...... """ ., were aff3 Rllcd by more Molotov cocklalls """v"• ' '
..00 chwtb of paving ilones.
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-~ OAl\.Y I'll.OT , s ,
·Synd1caif:e' . W oes -e-ontinuing
~1.V lllLOT lttfll ,......
FIGHTING CITY HALL
Club Owner Covell
Sen. Kennedy
Blasts ABM
As 'Follv' •
\VASHIN.GTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward
~I. Kennedy fD-Mass.), denounced the
Safeguard antiballistic missile (ABf.1)
5)'11te.m today as a folly.
Kennedy, a longtime foe of the ~l\t
i;yslem proposed by President Nixon to
protect U.S. offensi\'e missile sites, made
the 1tatement in his first Senate speech
&ince the July 18 auto accident which
resulted in the drowning of a :secretary
and clouded his political future.
Kennedy said on the eve of a crucial
Senate vote on the coptroversial issue
that both the United States and Russia
Soon rnay have enough \Yarheeds with
enough accuracy to wipe out each other's
Underground missile silos, regardless of
defenses.
The Kennedy speech came as Sen.
}\like Gravel (0..Alaskal, formafly added
his oppo5iton -already counted on by
ABf.1. foes -to the Safeguard.
Kennedy joined Gravel in urging the
~nate to support legislation to bar ABl\.I
deployment for a year.
Kennedy said in a prepared text it
would be ''a clear signal that the United
States. far and Yt'ay the world's most
powerful nation, was seeking to slow and
e\•entually stop the otherwise perpetual
inotion of the arms race."
lie said it wou ld be "folly to spend
billions conslructing an I n e f f e c l i v e
l'lefense around missiles which may
themselves soon be obso lete."
Other ABM opponents said Gravel's
vote gave them SO vtites -one short of
the total needed to assure victory. But a
leading ABl\.1 supporter, Sen. Henry t-.1.
Jackson (0-Wash.l. predicted I he
safeguard would be approved by ·a 51-49
\·ote.
The White House said President Nixon
was doing no eleventh hour, background
campaigning for the ABfl.1 fron1 his
retreat at Camp David. 1-ld. Asked if this
meant Nixon felt he had made his case
for the Safeguard, press secretary
Ronald Ziegler said :
"The indications or support from the
people and Congress indicates th'at the
case has been well made and aceepted ."
Senate Democratic leader P.1. i k e
l-1.ansfield, an AB~1 foe. said even if the
Safeguard is approved the margin will be
so narroy,· that "we will win in the long
run" because he said it would show that
the Senate now intends to carefully
scrutinize all military projects before ap-
proving them.
DAILi PILOT --"--a..,....... .......,... ,....,. ---CAUPOINIA
OAAHCa COASl f"\.llL\SHINO (OMl'.t.N'f
···"' H. ........ Prn1111m Miii Publi#!tt
J.cl1 a. Cwley
Vkt l'th ....,. -0..11 ~9"
Tht 111t1 lt••,.il ....
Tht111•1 A. """'"'liint MlllH .... 1.i .. -C•I• ...... : ~ W.11 ltv l llWI H,.,.,, 1ffc111, nu """' .. _. ..,lfWI'• L-9"cllr m.'-• •-~"""':.,Xii, .....
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Club, License Refused in Bitter Squabble
By RICHARD P. NALL
Ot 1'M CNllY P'lltf Sltlf
"ll there's another outburst you're
golng to be cleared out of here ••. we've
got lJOlleemen hei-o t.o clear you out."
11unUngton Beach Mayor Jack Green
ralaed Ills voice to regain control of a
tense sltuaUon in counclJ chlmbers f\.1an-
day Diaht.
Youth Jn the ovtrflow crowd had come
to back Cllbert Covell, 32, in hls running
feud with clty hall. The latest con·
frontatioo was over renewal of Covell's
businC$S license to operate Lhe teen-age
nltl>tclab Syndlcale :iooo al 30I PacUlc
Cout lllcb•~.
Co'lf:ll11 runnlna fire at poUce 11nd city
ollicials apparently fueled the emotions
D( the )'(>Uni 1 persons in the overflow
crowd ot mare than 130. In regaining
order, tbe .mayor (eferred lo pla1nc1otbea:
• polle< mlngUns wUh the crowd. Duthie I b e emotion-charfed con-
aldtraUoo of Ucenae renewal 1n the aglng
downtown area, Covell maintained he had
spent more than 111,000 al city urflni lo
brmc 111' bWldl., up 10 aundant.
Couhctlman Ted Bartlett asked why the
operation in the past had encounlered so
many problems. Covell said the nighlclu b
had never had a fight, served no alcohol
and welcomed parents.
Police Chief Earle Robitaille said there
had been not only fights but an
unreported shooting. Covell jumped up
from his seal at this. Mayor Green said,
"Now Gil, you sil down."
Said Robitaille, "Just a cursory glance
at the nareotics violations would be
enough to convince anyone lhal it is not a
normal business."
Robitaille labeled the club a refuge for
run1n•:ay use and center for disruption by
covell's own adml!slon. A police memo
on ,lhe matter listed 70 names of
narcoUcs arre.sl ln Ule club or its vlclnlty
from January 29, 1968 to April 7, 1969. It
also contained two pages ol remarka
usertedly made by COvell in lhe
presence of police officers.
Councilman Bartlett said lo Covell,
11can't you have a clearer image!. The
place l! always djrty. If you keep the
place neat and clean , I think it would im·
prove the image 1,000 eprcent. You 're a
nice clean guy, you're a pretty handsome
fellow."
COvell said he had spent $18,000 in legal
fees and court costs fighting harassment
and had been too busy to keep the place
Udy.
He said it had also been necessary to
have private investigat.ors check on bank
accounts of councilmen and other city <lf·
flclal s.
Covell said he had been smeared in the
press by insinuations of police. He said no
person arrested afte r an ''alleged gang
Soviet Vessels Off
U.S. Shore Head Home
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Soviet
nav al vessels which have been maneuver·
ing near U.S . .shores for nearly a month
were reported today to be steaming
eastward, apparenUy headed for home.
The shiPs left the GuU of Mex1ca
through the Yucatan Channel Sunday and
are in the Caribbean.
PAUL , MARGO, BRENT UHLAN SAFE AFTER SIDETRIP
The family Dachshund Was In th• 8199191 Compartm•nt
Laguna Skyjack Victini
Says Cuba Flight 'Scary'
"A man has stepped into the cabin and
directed us to ny to Ha\'ana , Cuba. Do
not be alarmed."
Those v.·ords, ultered by the captain of
a Trans \Vorld Airlines Boeing 727 over
\\'ichit.a, Kan., last week. began an unex·
peeled adventure for a lt1ission Viejo
n1inisler and his famil y and the president
of a Laguna Beach manufacturing girm.
•·The scariest part of the trip was Jan·
ri!ng at Havana . We came down during
the tail end of a large storm. The plane
as ii came through !he clouds suddenly
tilted and \vas burfeted like a ping pong
ball,·' the Rev. ltlr. Paul Uh\ar said to-
dav. ~lr. Uhlar, his wife J\targo and their 3·
~·ear-Old son. Brent, along Yt'ith Donald
Barda, president ()f Telonics Industries,
\1•ere four of 131 people aboard the flight
hijacked last Thursday by a prisoner who
held a ra.ior blade lo the throat of a TWA
stewardeS!.
The man was described by t.1r. Uhlar
a.s a "middle-aged, clean-cut" man who
looked "like a businessman." Uhlar saw
the hijacker only as the prisoner wa s led
through the plane by armed Cuban
soldiers in Havana.
The 30-year-old minister is associate
pastor of lhe !\lounl of Oli\·es Lutheran
Church in 1'11sslon Viejo. lie and his
family Ii\~ at 26622 Carrotas Ori\'<',
Mission Viejo. The family arrlvtd 1n Los
Angeles F'ridiiy.
Barda, 38, UvtS Jn Lagun; Blach at
1074 Van Dyke Drlvt. He heeds: the
Laguna-based Telonic& firm -·hich
manufactures micro-"'ave components.
'\'hile in Havana, the passengers were
gi\'en ham sandwiches. the only thing
they had to eat for 13 hours. The hi·
Jacking had interupted lunch aboard the
plane , 1'1r. Uhlar said. They were in the
Cuban capital for five hours,
He said that the Cubans \\'ere "\'ery
nice and very courteous." Soldiers took
I he names.-add resses and occupalions of
all the· passsngers.
r-.tr. Uhlar said that during the Ha\•ana
slay. it rained continuously. No special
problems came up. he added.
The minister did not know what hap-
pened lo the hijacker.
Transient Held
In SA Robbery
A robbery at knife point by a hitchhiker ·
was reported to Santa Ana police Monday
evening and Roger Lee Smilh. 20, a
I ranslent, \\'&i arrested a short time
later.
Police said John Boy,·ennan. 21. of
Paramounl, reporttd picking up Smith
and ha ving $2f0 stolen Yt'hen Smith pulled
a knife on him.
Smllh, char&ed Yl'lth suspicion of strong
ann robbery, was apprehended by the
California HighwRy Patrol In Corona
afltr Bowerman got the licen!<! pl111e
number of a car In Yt'hich Smith allegedly
esc::aped.
rape" had ever been brou&hl to trial.
He said the local prtss "don't have the
guts to print.ii."
He cited comments J.SSertedly made by
a judge critical or Huntington Beach
police and made accusations against
Chief Robitaille. He said pending sen-
'tence of him {Covell) Wednesday for not
leaving the scene or a rlot wW be ap.
pealed.
Covell claimed that he had offered to
pay the city for a police officer to alt in
his premises bul had been denied. He
said persons under 16 were a\Joy,·ed at
another establishment and uid the city
had not observed its own curfew law dur-
jng the recent city·backed rock concert.
Covell referred to martial law in the ci·
ty and said "the press doesn't seem
obliged to print my side of the story."
:P.1ayor Green asked, "ff we've been so
horrible wh,Y is it Yt""e allowed you to open
your bu~iness in the first place."
Covell said it was because he had ob-
tained the needed 93-off·street parking
spaces. Green said, "don't you think it
would have been simpler if we wanted to
harass you, just to deny the WC•
variance."
At one point after emotional outbursts
from the audience, 1tayor Green cut in
on Covell with a comment, "I'm sorry,
Gil: thi! Is not pertinent at all."
Said Covell, •·1r I'm supposed to be
such a big gangster or dope pusher, why
don't they come down to arrest me?"
Councilmen agreed unanimously not lo
renew the license and at the city at·
tomey's recomendalions included written
records about the business in official
hearing reC<lrd apparently for a future
civil case in defending the action.
Huntington Dog
Goes on Trip
Witl1 LSD Dose
Toby, a little mutt belonging to Pam
Bone of 307~l: Main St., Huntington
Beach, took an LSD trip Monday.
The dog's first experience with the
drug did not serve to expand his con-
sciousness. He became very. ~ick.
Janice Shaffer, also a resident of the
same address, a downtown hotel, told
police she was in Miss Bone's room Yl'hen
an acquaintance entered and told her the
dog was going to die anyway and that he
was going to "let it get its head" before
it expired.
He took a gold-colored tablet from a
tinfoil package, police said, crushed it
and fed it to the dog with water.
Miss Shaffer told police she heard the
16-year-old boy, a d1shwasher in a local
snack shop, tell ot.fiers in the hall that he
had given the dog LSD.
Police officers who later examined the
dog said it was so weak it cou1dn't stand
up and appeared to be sletping most of
lhe time.
The boy may face a charge of cruelty
to animals, if the Sociely for the Preven·
lion of Cruelty lo Animals (SPCA)
decides to seek a complaint against the
youth, police said.
Fl;ying Debris
Killed Nurse
A nurse "'ho stopped to help at the
scene of a Dana Point traffic accident
and was killed Sunday in a resulting
crash was fatally injured by flying
debris, investigators explained today.
Mrs. Evelyn J. Connors, 43. of 27042
Calle 1'-taria, Capistrano Beach, may have
been struck by a whiplashing guy
'vlre from a downed power pole whe.n it
was snapped in two momfnts later by an
ambulance.
Accounts of the tragedy l\fontlay gave
lhe erroneoos impression that the South
Coast Community Hospital nurse and a
second injured vlcUm were hit by the La
Paz Ambulance, headed north with an ill
person.
Fred Molina Jr., 37, of 1965 Sherington
Place, Newport Be.ach, had his left leg
amputated in surgery folloy,·ing the ac-
cident which occurred on Pacific Coast
llighway just north of Dana Point.
Practicing fo1· Ca1·1iival . .
1-luntington Beach lifeguards test their balance 1n pr:epara"...100 for
chariot race which will be part of 4th annual Ocean Lifeguard. Sum-
mer Carnival Friday at Huntington Beach Pier. From left are (first
row) Hal DeJong, Bill \Velch , Jobn Mattos and _(second row) Doug
Kirk and Ray Bray. On top is Brian Gerold. Carnival gets under way
..: 7:30 p.m.
Utt Foresees No Trouble
On Federal Oil Santuary
By J EROME F. COLLINS
01 TM earrr P'lltt 11111
Rep. James B. Utt {R-Tustin) 'said to-
day he anticipate! "no trouble" with
legislation that would spread the Orange
Coast's offshore oil sanctuary lnto fede ral
waters, even though lhe measure has
been bottled up in a Congressional com·
mittee for more than two months.
·The bill {1-IR 11226) was introduced by
Utt on May 23. Since then, it has been in
the House Interior and Insular Affairs
Committee.
The congressman, In a telephone in·
terview from Washington. this morning
explained the delay in action.
"This involves public policy." he said.
"So it has to be cleared with the Budget
Department and the White House. I wrote
to the Interior Depa'rtment about a
month ago, and I emphasized that quite a
bit of the area involved includes the
beach in San Clemente, where the Presi-
dent u·ill be staying."
Utt said he also has \\'J'itlen the
chairman of the Interior and Insular Af·
fai rs Committee, Rep. \Vayne Aspinal (0-
Colo.), asking him to prod the bill.
"It's very slow to get a report on a
bill,'' said Utt, ;'especially ""hen public
policy is invol ved . Budget, for instance,
must express an interest or no objeetion
to it."
The measure 'vould prevent oil drilling
on the continental shelf bolh inside and
outside the three-mile limit, with certain
exceptions.
It would allO\¥ Interior Department oil
leases only if all three of these conditions
are met : .,
-It is established that there is a
"probability" of gas and oil deposits.
-It is established that those deposits
are being drained by other -state and
private -oil drilling operaUons.
-It is eslabllshed that the leasing
'vould be in the "best in terests" of the
United States.
Utt said as soon as an Interior Depart-
n1ent report on U1e legislation is received
by Aspinal's committee, a hearing date
will be set. •
.. I expect that will probably be
sometime in September." he said. "It
should be out of committee by October at
the latest. I anticipate no trouble on it,
largely because the waters off the
Orange Coast aren't oil bearing. The oil
industry won't buck it."
Utt's bill, in effect, would be similar to
the present provisions of the state's Shell·
Cunningham Act. Adopted more than a
dozen yaars ago, Shell.Cunningham
creat!d an oil sanctuary south of the San·
ta Ana River jetty to the Mexican border.
Lilt's legislation covers the same area
beyond state--0wned tidelands.
The Congressman said \Vhen the
Interior and Insular Affairs Committee
sets a hearing on the matter. he will call
on Victor C. Andrews or Laguna Beach to
round up Orange County witnesses.
Andrews is president of the anti-oil
Coastal Area Protecti\'e League.
.,
Bo ys on Bikes
Struck by Car
T\\'O boys riding bicycles on a sidewalk
in Santa Ana were struck by an out of
control car Monday evening with one boy
suffering an apparent fractured back,
Santa Ana police reported.
Twenty-one-year Marine Sgt. Robert
Eugene Harless was arrested on a charge
of felony drunken driving Yt'hen he lost
control of his car traveling at 130 miles
per hour. according to officers.
Reported in critical condition at
Riverview Hospital today y,·as 10-year-old
John Kenneth Opsal. of 2129 S. Salta, San·
ta Ana. The second boy, Josh C.
},avolorR. 12, of Santa Barbara, was
treated for cuts and sc rapes and releas·
ed.
Sgt. 1Jarlcss. who suffered a broken
shoulder blade, was booked. into the
Orange County· Medical Center arrest
\\'artl.
Valley Recall Electio1i
'
Candidates • Ill Violation?
Eight of lhe ten candidates in the Foun· with City Attorney Ed :P.lartln this af.
lain Valley recall election SepL 23 may
ha\'e violated the election codes in
\'arious Vlays pertaining to designation of
"principal" profession, vocation or oc-
cupation and other code pro\·isions.
But no one ls certain today that
anything Yti ll be done about it.
The Orange County Voters Registration
office is aware of the code provisions and
possible violations but has passed lhe
responsibility on to the Fountain Valley
City Clerk's o{flce.
"It's their election and we have nothing
to <lo with It with the exception of pro-
viding the city with an u~to-dtte list of
registered v o t e r s • ' ' uld Ed
Arnold, dtputy registrar of voten thls
morning.
City Clerk 1'fary Cole is on vacation
and her deputy, Mrs. E\'elyn Grippo, said
today, ''I ha\·en't checked the ballot
de1lgn1Uons (deadline for candidate fiJ.
Jngs v.'as last Thursday, July 31). If they
are wrona: 1 ·wW hive to cbtck them out
temoon:•
Amold said it \\'as not clear whether
legal action would be taken against can.
didates who filed incorrect designations
of occupaUons.
"We 'll have to check Yl'ilh the County
Counsel," he advised.
Discrepancies cited Include using more
than three words to designate a can·
didate's "principal" profession, \'OCalion
or occupalion and falling to use the same
occupation that appears on the can·
didate's affidavit of registration.
AddiUonally, according to Jlm Mayer
o( the county elections' olfl~. most can·
dldates vtolattd "lhe spirit of the code''in
filing their list ol qualifications for Uie
position.
The code states that the statement ot
qualification "may Include name , age,
occupatio n and education of the candidate
11nd ii brief description of not more than
1~ "'Ords of the candidate's quallflca·
tions.''
!\tany of the candidates reportedly, In
addition to career and civic organlzatlon
credits, indulse din campaign promises and philosophies.
This, according to Mayer. is not In ac·
cordance '"ith the electioo code bu~ he
quickly added. "It's up to the Fountain
Valley City Clerk. \Ye have nothing to do
\\'ilh it in this election,"
According to law, candidates have
three days lo make corrections afte.r
notification by lhe City Clerk and Mrs.
Grippo was not certain today when that
notification '4'0Uld be given. "It's up to
the city attorney," she lita ted.
Typical "violations'' of the electiaa
code included listing more than one
designation of occupation. For example..
John G. Ginos regJstcre<l as "oil company
representative," aod gave his deslg:n1llon
for the ballot ai "PrOperty represei>
talivt , Standard Oll Co. of Callfomla.''
The latter is Incorrect. in two Instances:
lt doe! not conform Yt'ith the vot4P
regist ratiQn listing and contairui iuut"ci
tl1an three words, officials said.
,
---.----. ···---•
• •
' Bun~ington Be~~h
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks --•
voe. 62, NO. ·1s6, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA T.UES DAY, AUGUST 5, 11169 TEN CENTS
CAil Y PILOT Sltfl l"httt
FIGHTING CITY HALL
Club Owner Covell
Hanoi Cuts
Plans After
U.S. Pullout
SAIGON 1UPI) -Communist fo rces in
South Vietnam, responding lo current
American military withdrawals as an
Allied concession of defeat. hcve can·
celled plans for new orfensives and may
permit the \var simply to fade awa},
rriilitary sources reported today.
Basing their report on intelligence com·
muniques, the sources said North Viel·
nam apparently believes it can acbievc
~s g<ials in South . Vietnam without
lurther military efforts of major pro-
portions.
A North Vietnamese army officer cap-
lured last week told Allied interrogators
he had been instructed to inform his
troops that they appeared to have won
the war "because the Americans are
going home," the sources said.
A ranking U.S. officer said Hanoi, for
\he present time at least, seeffil!i content
~ "more or less sit back and watch us go
home."
"North Vietnamese goals remain
unchanged,'' he said, "and H~noi ~ow
believes these goals ca n be fulf1Jled 1n a
kiw·keyed military effort."
Another source said North Vietnam and
lhe Viet Cong may simply continue the
;even-week old fighting lull indefinitely
and allow the war to "fade away."
American troop withdrawals from
S:>uth Vietnam increased to about 12,200
ruesday with the departure of anothe r
150 army troops, who had been assigned
to quartermaster and postal units. The
::utback began July 8 under a Nixon ad·
mlnistraliva program.
Although ground fighting has fallen off
:o little more than scattered skirmishes,
~merican 8 52 bombers arc continuing
laily raids over suspected Con1munisl
positions.
In overnight raids Monday, the
>ombers hit targets in the northern sec·
:or around the abandoned Marine outpos t
1t Khe Sanh and also struck against in-
'iltration corridors from 45 to 80 miles
!rom Saigon.
Military communiques on ground
~ighting of Monday said Allied · troops
~lade "light but continued contact" with
:ommunist forces. 1ltey said at least 208
~orth Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
k-'ere kiUed in the skirmishes. American
:asualties listed for Monday were one
lead and seven y,•ounded. South Viel·
~amese casualties \Vere described as
'light. '1
* * * Nixo11 Planning
To Pt1ll 100,000
\VASHINGTON (UPI) ~ President
'iixon is expected to announce a pullout
1r 50,000 more American troops from
V'ietnam in late August and may schedule
1nother withdrawal of 50,000 llghling men
n October. it was lea rned today.
Thi.s means Nixon will try to withdraw
125,000 troops by the e.nd of the year and
'ulfill his expressed hope of beating
'onner Defense Secretary Glark ~f. Clif·
'ord 's timetable or 100,000.
An administration .!IOUrce saUI Nill"on
ind Gep •. £arlt G.,\Vheeler., chalrman·of
he Joint Cbierl of staff, have agreed Ule
\'llhdrawa1 or &o,000 more Gls is feaalble
1ow. Nlion will ·announce it later th is
non th.
On the basis of Wheeler's on-t~e-spot
-1rvey of the Vietnam militia and Nl11:·
qfs own talks and observations during
• 1L, round·thc·world trip, they reportedly
~ 1ave set another target in the fall or
i0,000 troops in the phased withdrawal.
.
Syndicate Club's Troubles Continue·
By RICHARD P. NAl.L
Of .... Ol'll'f l"llitl Sltll
"If there 's another outburst you'~e
going to be cleared out of here .•• we've
got policemen here to clear you out."
Huntington Beach Mayor Jack Green
raised his voice to regain control or a
tense situation In council chambers ~1on·
day night.
Youth in the overflow croy,·d had eoine
lo back Gilbert Covell, 32, in his running
feud with city hall. The latest con-
frontation was over renewal of Covell's
business license to operate the teen-age
nightclub Syndicate 3000 at 302 Pacific
Coast Highway.
Covell 's running fire at police and city
officials apparently fueled the emotions
of the young persons in the overflow
trov.•d of more than 130. In regaining_
order, the mayor referred to plainclothes
pollct mingling with the crowd.
During t h e emotion-charged con-
sideration of license renewal Jn the aging
downtown area, Covell maintained he had
spent more than $15,000 at city urging to
bring his building up to standard.
Councilman Ted Bartlett asked why the
operation in the past had encountered so
many problems. Covell said the nightclub
had never had a fight , served no alcohol
and v.•elcomed parents. .
Police Chief Earle Robitaille said there
had been not only fights but an
unreported shooting. Covell jumped up
f_rom his seat at this. Mayor Green said,
''Now Gil, you sit down."
Said Robitaille, "Just a cursory glance
at the narcotics violations would be
enough lo convince anyone that it is not a
normal business."
Robitaille labeled the club a re(uge ror
runaway use and center for di sruption by '
Covell's own admission. A police memo
Practicing for Car1aival
Huntington Beaclf 1i1'egllards test their balance in p~epara··~on for
chariot race which will be part of 4th annual Ocean Lifeguard Sum-
mer Carnival Friday at Huntington Beach Pier. From left are {first
row} Hal DcJong, Bill \Velch, John Mattos and (second row) Doug
Kirk and Ray Bray. On top is Brian Gerold. Carnival gets under way a-: 7:30 p.m.
Sanitarium Wins Okay
With Beach Council Split
A 152·bcd sanilarium to care for elderly
persons received split Huntington Beach
coun<:il approval this morning despite op-
position of area residents including one
who referred lo ''crazy. people." .
The protracted hearing appareri,lly sap-
ped the last of council energies as it eMd·
ed at l : ID .,-rt. Remaining items were
bundled ovW to another meeting. Coun·
cilmen began at 4:30 p.m. ~1onday.
The 4·2 council .split overruled a 4.3
planning commission split denying th~
application of ~tajor D Corp. The "Type
•
L facility" is to he located on 3.36 acres
on the south side of Holland Driv~ orr
Beach Boulevard.
The R·S (office-professional) zoning of
the site allo!il'S the facility bul the ap-
plicants had sought an easement or park-
ing requirements from 102 spaces to 70.
A petition bearing 77 signalures in op-
position to the facility had been presented
1h1rlng the planning commission phase
despite corporation efforts to ease pro-
perty owners' objections. . , •
Nixon Hits Coa st Saturday
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President NL,on and his family will Dy .
to San Clement this ,veekend for a month-long stay at U1elr ne'V hUltop ,
house overlooking the F3cilic. 1 T~e Nlxons are scheduled to rea~h ~heinSan ·C1emcnte home Sat··
urday and wiU not1retui:n t1> Washington until Sept. 7.
Tricia Nixon, 23, a'nd Julie Nixon Eisenhower~.21 , accotnpanicd by
her husband, David Eisenhower, 21, also will spend lhe month at the new
Spanish-style San Clemente villa.
Young E!Jcnhower hes quit his summer job as a researcher for a
Senate committee. He will return to Amherst College Sept. 16" for his
senior year. Mrs. Nixon said she expects to be busy next week With pre-
parations for a dinner Aug. 13 in Los Angeles, honoring tbe ,f'\,pQ)Jo 11
astronauts. ·
•
on lhe matter listed 70 names of
narcotics arrest in the club or its vicinity
lrom January 29, 1968 lo April 7, 1969. It
also contained two pages of remarkt.
assertedly made by Covell in the
presence of police officers.
Councilman Bartlett said to Covell,
"can't yoo have a clearer hnage? The ,
place is ahvays dirty. If you keep the
place neat anti clean. I think it would im-
prove the image J.000 eprcenl . You're a
nice clean guy, you're a pretty handsome
fellow."
Covell said he had spent $18,000 in legal
fees and court costs fighting harassment
and had been too busy to keep the place
tidy.
He said it had al51> been necessary to
have private investigators check on bank
accounts of councilmen and other cily of-
ficials.
Covctt·said he had been smeared in the
press by insinuations of police . He Mild no
person arrested after an "alleged gang
rape" had ever been brought to trial.
lie said the local press "don't have the
guts to print· it."
lle cited comments assertedly made by
a judge critical of Huntington Beach
police and made accusations against
Chief Robitaille. He l'ald pending sen·
tence of hin1 (Covell) Wednesday for not.
leaving the scene of a 'riot will be ap-
(>Caled. -
Covell claimed that he had offered to
pay the city for a police officer t.o sit in
his premises but had been denied. lie
said persons under 16 were allowed at
another establishment and said the city
had not observed its own curfew law dur-
ing the recent city-backed rock concert.
Covell referred to martial law in the cl·
ty and said "the press doesn't see1n
obliged to print my side or the atory."
~tayor Green asked, "lf we've been so
horrible, why is it we allowed you to optn
your business In the first place." ,
Covell said it was because he had ob-
tained the needed 93-0ff-street pai:klng
spaces. Green said, "don't you think it
would have been simpler if we wanted to
harass you, just to deny the use·
variance."
At one point after emotional outbursts
from the audience, Mayor Green cut in
on Covell with a comment, "I'm sorry,
Gil : this is not pertinant at all."
Said Covell, "If I'm supposed to be
such a big gangster or dope puSher, why
don't they come down to arrest me?"
· Councilmen agreed wianimously not to
renew the license and at the city at·
tomey's l'et{)ffiendations included written
records about the business in oCflclal
hearing record apparently for a futurt
civil case In defending the action.
Cycle Riot uelled
Valley Policemen Stoned; 10 Arrested
Several Fountain Valley police officers
1vere stoned by a barrage of decorative
rocks Monday night when they attempted
to break up a noisy party o f
n1otorcycli&ts.
Nine adults and one juvenile were ar·
rested In the midnight melee on a variety
of charges ranging from prowling to
~ssaull with a deadly weapon.
Sgt. William DeNisl said Fountain
Valley police urUts were originally sum·
moned to 8911 Martin AvP.'at 1!:30 a.m.
to alfSwel' a complaint of excessive noise.
Police said they found' a 1oud party In
progress at the residence, ~t of its oc·
cupants wearing motortycle g a n g
regalia.
Officers said they saw a man and a
\1·oman running around the front yard
and attempted to a r rest them for
prowling.
Valley, Mesa
Studying Best
Place for Bridge
Studies to determine the best spot for
another bridge spanning the Santa Ana
Ri ver between Cost.a Mesa and f'ount.ain
Valley are under way, but nothing
definite is expected for two years.
Under current development patterns in
the west Orange County region, the loca·
tion would appear to be a linkup of Sun·
llov.•er Avenue on the east and Elli s
Avenue on the valely side.
Fountain Valley City Council members
will discuss the matter in study session
pr ior to their regular 8 o'clock meeting
tnnighl. •
Cnsta Mesa City Engineer Geo rge A.
l\ladsen said officials on the J\.1esa side of
lht> river and county authorities have
prelty well agreed in theory on the
r.ewei.1 proposed location.
Costa Mesa City Councilman Willard 1',
Jordan said Monday he is delighted at the
news that a crossing further inland from
one originally P£0P0Sed and hotly pro-
tested is planned.
Representatives of the Mesa Verde
Homeowners' Association bitterly fought
lhe plan four years ago when a crossing
wa! suggested at Gisler Avenue, mat·
ching up to Garfield Avenue In Fountain
Valley.
"All we're trying to do now is study the
alignment so we'll know where to go -if
and when v.·e do -but the plan for a
bridge is · at least two years away,''
r.tadsen explained.
No cost eslimate has been made, but
Costa Mesa and Fountain Valley will pay
for the eventual bridge approaches, ll-'hile
the county wHI pick up the cost ot the
span itself •
Funds for the job will cone from state
gasoline taxes and the county's arterial
highways financing program.
One of the primary considerations in
picking a new site Is determination of the
future Orange Freeway route roughly
alonF the river coo.r:se -if the· s t a t e
doesh't end It at lt;le San Diego Freeway.
"The brldge projed. wlll come up when
lht .dcm3(1d ts there," Madsen continued.
''but We're not cilrlying th&t much lratflc
on nearby Talbert Avenue yel."
ltlarkets
NE'V YORK (A -The stocR market
closed 1lmos\ even tod•y, aft.tr moving
n11rrowly throughout the seasion. !Sec
qL1.ol,Jltions, P1iges 10-11 ).
The Dow Jones lndustrial average at
1 p.m. WIS oil 1.81 al 820.77.
Officers managed to cha se down the
woman, 18-year-old Barbara E. Martin of
6212 Picket St., Garden Grove, then clos-
t'd in on her companion identified as
~1ichacl B. Tolin, 19, of 411 Alabama St.,
No. 2. ~luntington Beach.
Tolin v.·as taken into custody for
prowling, resisting arrest and for posses·
ion of possible dangerous drugs.
Miss Martin was placed under arrest
for prowling. ,
Officers then entered the home to quiet
the party but faced a hostile gathering.
One of the policeman, office r Edward
Parker. was physically assaulted by two
of the partygoers, police said.
Jack W. Hawkins, 18, 8911 Martin Ave.,
f''ountain Valley, occupant of the ·house
and Daniel A. Campbell, 19, of 8852
DeVille Circle, Huntington Beach , were
arrested by officers and booked on
charges of assaulting a police officer.
As police units hauled the pair away,
the remaining members of the partY.
began hurling rocks at the policeme n,
Sgt. DeNisi said, striking but not injuring
several or them.
Police, strengthened by several units
from Huntington Beach, \hen moved into
the house and arrested six more persons
on charges or assault with a deadly
'••teapon.
Police Chief C. W. J\.tichaelia said the
adults taken into custody on su!pidon Of
assault with a deadly weapon are:
Christopher A. Gray, 19, of 8372 Bryant
Drive1 Huntington Beach; Larry G.
Rowe, 23, of 17301 Ward St., Fountain
Valley; John L. Myman, J9, of 15542
l\1aynower Lane, lluntington Beach; Jon
C. Lsmberg, 23, of 12012 Laureleen St.1 Garden Grove, and Mark T. Dewdney, 18,
of 5902 Terrier Drive, lluntington Beach.
Actio1a Vp to City .
. Election Cocle Violations
In Valley Recall Studied
Eight or the ten candidates in the Foun.
lain Valley recall election Sept. Z3 may
have violated the election codes in
various ways pertaining to designation or
"principal" profession, vocation or oc·
cupation and other code provisions.
But no one is certain today that
anything will be done about it.
The Orange County Voters Registration
office is aware of the code provisions and
possible violations but has passed the
responsibility on to the Founta in Valley
City Clerk's office.
"It's their election and we have nothing
(() do with it with the exception of pro-
v'iding the cily with an up-to-date list or
regis tered v o t e r s , ' ' said Ed
Arnold , deputy registrar o[ voters this
, morning.
City Clerk Mary Cole is on vacation
and her deputy, ~1rs. Evelyn Grippe, said
today, "I haven't checked the ballot
designations {deadline for candidate fil·
ings was last Thursday , July 31). If they
are wrong I will have to check them out
with City Attorney Ed Martin this af·
temoon."
Arnold said it was not clear whether
lega l action would be taken against can-
didates y,·ho filed incorrect designations
of occupations.
"We'll have to check with the County
Counsel," he advised.
Discrepancies cited include using more
than three y,·ords to designate a can·
didate's "principal" profession, vocation
or occupation and failing to use the same
occupation that appears on the can-
didate's affidavi t or registration.
50 COM PETE
I N FOTOR.AMA.
'The FotOrama Carnera Contest, which
offers more than $SOO tOr the one picture
that.. wins the g~an<l prl2c, dr~ SO cnJrlM
In Its ti:·st week of compeUtlo'n which
closed at noon lalll Thursday. '
The t.op lhi'ee photographs arc publish·
ed today on Page S. Entries !or judging
In the second week of the three-week
OYMt arc being accepted now at'all DAI·
LY PILOT offlcrs. (seti rules, Page 4).
Grand prtie winner will be seleCtcd dur·
Ing f'otorarna at Fashion Island Aue. 21·
23.
Additionally, according lo Jim Mayer
Qf the county elections' office, most can-
didates violated "the spirit of the code''in
filing their list of qualifications ror the
position.
The code states that the statement or
qualification "may include name, age,'
occupation and education of the candidate
and a brief description of not more than
150 \vords of the candidate's qllalifica ..
lions."
~1any of the candidates reportedly, In
addition to career and civic organization
credits. indut!e din campaign promises
and philosoph es.
This, according to Mayer, is not in ac·
cordance with the election code, bu( he
quickly added, "It's up to the Fountain
Valley City Clerk. We have nothing to do
with it in this election,"
According to law, candidates have .
three days to make corrections after.
notification by the City , Clerk and Mrs.
Grippo was not certaifl today when that
notification would be given. "It's up to
the city attorney," she stated.
Orange (;oast
Weather
Hazy sunshine. the weather.
man's euphemism for roggy days,
will prevail through Wednesday
along the Orange Coast, with our
high of 72 more appealing than
lhc inland area's 93.
INSIDE TODAY
Colijornia'1 most promtnent
Democrat, Jt.sst Unru1t soys fC'1
governor or 1iothing-if lie runs
i ot,oU r-and 'tf¥it .h~'.i ·'tol ln·'.
f &ert!ted it• ~~llttffl'i11g~. s~n ..
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CleUHIH lt-11
Ctfl'>kt U '"'i-.1 ' Dltlll Nellttl II
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W.l'Ql-It A~8 Ll"lftn U Mttf\llft lt ,,...,... '
I
Mtll••• '"'"" ,, N1!1tMI Ntwt "1 °"'"" c......., '' S•fril ,...,,., 11
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PAUL. MARGO , BRENT UHLAN SAFE AFTER SIDETRIP
The Family Dachshund Wes in the 8199191 Compartmtnt
Laguna Skyjack Victim
Says Cuba Flight 'Scary'
"A man has stepped into the cabin and
directed us to fiy to Havana, Cuba. Do
not be a \armed ." Those words, uttered by the captain of
a Trans World Airlines Boeing 727 over
Wichita, Kan., last week, began an unex-
pected adventure for a ~lission Viejo
minister and his family and the president
of a Laguna Beach manufacturing girm.
"The scariest part of the trip was Jan·
ding at Havana. We came dawn during
the tail end of a large storm. The plane
as it came through the clouds suddenly W1td and wa, buffeted like a ping pong
ball," the Rev. Mr. Paul Uhlar said to-
ll1y.
Afr. Uhlar, his wife Margo and their 3-
year-old son, Brent, along with Donald
Bandit Dernands
Cash , But Gets
Punch Ins te ad
A gunman entered the Mall Liquor
&tore at 16369 Bolsa Chica St., Hunlinglon
Beach, Monday night, but instead of col·
lecting I.he day's receipts he received a
punch in the eye from the store manager.
Police said the man, wearing a neatly
trimmed beard, walked into the store at
10:20 p.m. and told store manager Harry
Straczynski, "This is a sllckup. I want all
your bills."
When the banclil hesitated at emptying
the cash register, apparently lost heart
and decided to flee , Straczynskl followed
him out the door and struck him in the
eye with his fist, police said, knocking off
the gunman's prescription sunglasses.
As the bearded robber ran across the
parking lot lo a waiting car with a
getaway man. the store manager said he
beard two shols fired at him.
Police found no expended cartridge
cases which could be used in tracking
-down the criminab but will examine the
&unglasses ror fingerprints.
DAILY PILOT
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Barda, president or Telonics Industries.
wjre four or 131 people aboard the flight
hi acked la)\ Thursday by a prisontr who
held a razor blade lo the throat or a T\\' A
stewafdess.
The man v.·as described by Mr. Uhlar
as a "middle·aged, clean-cut" man who
looked "like a businessman." Uhlar saw
the hijacker only as the prisoner was led
through the plane by armed Cuban
soldiers in Havana.
The 30-ye.ar-old minisler is associale
pastor of lhe Maunt of Olives Lutheran
Church in lrii.ssion Viejo. He and his
family live at 26622 Carretas Drive,
Mission Viejo. The family arrived in Lo!
Angeles .Friday.
Barda, 38, Jives In Laguna Beach at
1074 Van Dyke Drive. He heads the
Laguna-based Telonics f I r m which
manufactures micro-wave components.
While in Havana, the passengers were
given ham sandwiches, the only thing
they had to eat for 13 hours. The hi·
jacking had interupted lunch aboard the
plane, fl.tr. Uhlar said. They were in the
Cuban capital for five hours.
He said that the Cubans were 11\'Cry
nice and very courteous." Soldiers look
the names, addresses and occupations of
all the passsngers.
fi.1r. Uh1ar said lhal during the Havana
stay, it rained continuously. No special
problems came up. he added.
The minister did not know \\•hat hap-
pened to the hijacker.
Police Follo'v
Beach Mailman
A Huntington Beach mail carrier
delivered an innocuous looking while
package to the home or Tim T. Timmons,
!5821 Sherbeck Lane, around noon Mon·
day.
But even before he opened ii. narcotics
detectives stationed around his home
assertedly knew the contents: fi\'e
packages, each containing 10 hand·rolled
marijuana cigarettes. •
Police allege Timmons mailed the
package to himself from Vietnam. They
were informed of its contents through a
U.S. Customs agent from San Pedro.
Timmons, who was back at his Hun·
tington Beach home when the goods ar·
rived, signed a receipt for the parcel,
then took it in.side and opened it, police
said .
Detectives sy,·ooped inside the hou se
and claimed they caught Timmons with
the package as he allegedly fled through
a rear bed.room window.
'Nmmons. 29, wa& arrested on suspicion or illegal transportation and possession of
n1arljuana.
La,v E11f orcen1ent
F u11ds Received
Good police standards netted the City
or Hunhngton Beach a $5,209 check lo
lieep up the good wQrk.
Police Chief Earle Robitaille pre-
sented the check to the clty ~1onday
nighL It was the city's &hare or the 1969
allOcation from tilt California Peace
Oftk'trs' Training Fund.
The prime objective or lhe training
program, uid Robitaille, Is to raise the
level of competence of law enforcemtnt
officers.
During the fl5C'1l year endtd June 30,
lluntin1ion Beach Police Department
trained 11 new off1cen1 and two strgtant
5UptrVisors. Funds for the statewide
training program arc tollf'('ttd io local
<'ourtll 11nd forwarded to the slate
1rct1surer.
FBI Enters
Searcl1 for
Coed Slayer
AN N ARBOR, Mich. CAP)
AuthorlUes investigating the slayng of
seven fi.ticlUgan college coeds and tetn·
age girls pressed.a nationwide hunt today
for Andrew ~tanuel, 25, last seen in Sa·
linas, CalU.
The FBI entered the investigation for
the first time when a federal fugit ive
warrant was issued against fi.1.anuel lt1on-
day in connection With the the[t of a
house trailer in Michigan.
Piianuel, tall and heavy, with a tat·
tooed left forearm, wa:s believed by
authorities to have journeyed l o
California in June with John N. Collins,
22-year-old college student charged with
the most recent of the seven girl killings
. in the Ann Arbor·Ypsllanti area, a series
which began in August, 1987. Manuel and
Collin! lived in the same.. Ypsilanli room-
ing house.
The trailer was found over the weekend
near the Salinas home or
fi.fanuel's parents. ,
Three California girls murdered Ibis
summer -two near Salinas and one near
Los Angeles -were almilar in some
respeets to the seven in Michigan. One of
the California victims was wearing only
one earring. Several of the Michigan girls
also had an earring missing when their
bodies were found.
A fourth woman v.·as killed in
California but federal and state
authorities have not included her in the
present inv~ligation. They said the death
or Susan :r.1. Hennessy, 17, ·or Seaside,
Calif .. occurred before the time Collins
and Manuel were reported to have reach·
ed the Salinas area. Her body was found
June 17. •
Edward Carlbom. 22, a recent graduate
of eastern J\iichigan-1 University in
Ypsilanti, whose stolen motorcycle was
found in the garage used by Collins, said
Monday a State Police officer told him
there was evidence one or two girls had
been slain in a trailer. State Police
declined comment.
A sheriff's spokesman in Salinas said
Sgt. Ken Christensen and Detective
Thomas Nasser of the Michigan State
Police were niaking complete laboratory
checl: of the trailer for, 119SSible clues.
Collins is charged with the murder of
Karen Sue Beinetnan, an Ea.stem
fi.11chig8.n coed.
Authorities in Michigan declined to
answer questions about Manuel, known
also as rucbard Diaz Jr. and James
Skotak, but Sa:t. Christensen said in
Salinas police know fi.fanuel was there
"as recently as last Thursday.''
Huntington Dog
Goes on Trip
With LSD Dose
Toby. a little mutt belonging to Pam
Bone of 3071h: Main Sl.. Huntington
Beach, took an UD trip Monday.
The dog's first experience with the
drug did not serve to expand his con·
scious11ess. He became very sick.
Janice Shaffer, also a resident of the
same address, a downtown hotel, told
police she was in Miss Bone's room ~1hen
an acquaintance entered and told her the
dog v.·as going to die anyway and that he
was going to "let it get its head" before
it expired.
He took a gold-colored tablet from a
tinfoil package, police said, crushed it
and fed it to the dog with water.
fi.1iss Shaffer told police she heard the
l&-year-014 boy, a dishwasher in a local
snack shop, tell others in the hall that he
had given the dog LSD.
Police officers who later examined the
dog said it was so weak it couldn't stand
up and appeared to be sleeping most of
the lime.
The boy may race a charge of cruelty
to .animals. if the Society for the Preven·
lion of Cruelty to Animals !SPCA)
decides to seek a complaint again.st the
youth, police said.
-Uf'I T,.._Mll
Clmv1ain9 It llp
Comedian Mil ton Berle, surrounded by Ringling
Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus clowns,
displays his face.making style. Berle presented
diplomas Monday in Inglewood to clowns graduat-
ing from official Clown College of circus. College
trains clowns to bring happiness to au people of all
ages.
1st Speeeh Since Wreck
l(enned y Hits Safeguard
ABM System as 'Folly'
WAS!IlNGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward
:r.1. KeMedy (l).Mass.), denounced the
Safeguard antiballistic missile (ABM)
system today as a folly.
Kennedy, a longtime foe of the ABM
system proposed by President Nixon to
protect U.S. offensive missile sites, made
the statement in his first Senate speech
since the July 13 auto accident which
resulted in the drowning of a secretary
and clouded his political future.
Kennedy said on the eve of a crucial
Senate vote on the controversial iSStJe'
that both the United States and Russia
soon may have enough warheads with
enough accuracy lo wipe out each other's
underground missile silos, regardless of
defenses.
The Kennedy fipeech came as Sen.
fttike Gravel CD-Alaska ), formally added
his. opposlton -already counted on by
ABM toes -to the Safeguard.
Kennedy joined Gravel in urging the
Senale to support legislation to bar ABM
deployment for a year.
KeMedy said in a prepared text it
would be "a clear signal that the United
Slates, far and way the world's most
powerful nation, was seeking to slow and
eventually slop the otherwise perpetual
motion of the arms race.''
Fl y·irlg Debris
Killed Nurse
A nurse who stopped to help at the
scene of a Dana Point traffic accident
and v.·as killed Sunday in a resulting
crash v.'as fatally injured by flying
debris, inve1Ugators explained today.
~1rs. Evelyn J. Connors, 43, of -27042
Calle Maria, Capistrano· Beach, may have
been struck by a whiplashing guy
\Yire fron1 a dov.·ned JXl"'er pole when it
\l'as snapped in two moments later by an
ambulance.
Accounts of the tragedy ~fonday ga ve
the erroneous impression that the South
Coast Communily 1-lospital nurse and a
second injured victim were hit by the La
Paz Ambulance, headed north \Vith an ill
person.
Fred Molina Jr., 37. of 1965 Shl'Tington
Place, Newport Beat'h, had his left leg
amputated in surgery following the ac·
cident which occurred on Pacif ic Coast
lligh,v•y just north of Dana Point.
He said It would be "folly to spend
billions constructing an I n e f f e c t i v e
defense around missiles which may
themselves soon be obsolete."
Other ABM opponents said Gravel's
vote gave them 50 votes -one short of
the tot.al needed to as5ure victory. But a
leading ABM supporter, Sen. Henry ~1.
Jackson (0.Wash .), predicted the
safeguard woul$1 be approved by a 51-49
vote.
The White House said President Nixon
was doing no eleventh hour, background
campaigning for the ABfi.1 from his
retreat at Camp David, Md. Asked if this
meant Nixon felt he bad made his case
for the Safeguard, press secretary
Ronald Ziegler sa~:
"The indicalions 1of support from the
people and Congress indicates that the
case has been well made and accepted."
· Senate Democratic leader M i k t
1'.1ansfield, an ABM roe , said t ven if the
Safeguard is approved the margin will be
so narrov: that "we will win in the long
run" because he said it would show that
Lhe. Senate now intends to carefully
scrutinize a11 military projects before ap-
proving them. ·
l11dians Pow Wow
111 Hunting ton
Saturday Nig ht
About 250 Indians, representing 16
tribes, are expected to gal.her al the Hun-
tingon Beach Recreation Center Saturday
night for an all·lndian oul.door pow wow.
A variety of dances, including buff&.lo,
wa r, hoop and eagle dances will be
presented beginning at 8 p.m. on the
center·s baseball diamond, 17th and
Orange Streets.
John Knifechief. president of the
Orange County Indian Center at Stanton.
said tribesmen from all over Southern
California will participate in the gather·
ing. including Pa"·nee. Cheyenne, Otoe,
Pueblo, Navajo, Blackfeet, 11opi, Sioux
and ~1ission Indians.
Admission is open to the public without
charge.
Knifechief said the pow wow w i 11
becon1e a n1onthly event at llunlington
Beach si nce it is one of the few location'>
"'here the drums used for the tribal
dances do not disturb the neighbors.
Other pow woy,•s will be held at 8 p.m.
on the first Saturday of the n1onlh
throughout the \\'inter.
Young Surfer
Cheat s Death
At Bal We dge
Frantic reStJscitation efforts by two
lifeguards Monday afternoon saved the
life of an 18·year-cld body surfer found
floating face down in treacherous surr off
the Balboa fleninsu!a wedge.
The two guards, one of them an off-du-
ty Los Angeles County lifegua rd. restored
the breathing and heartbeat of Steve
l\lcyers. 18. San Qigeo, who broke his
back and nearly droy,•ned after going
"over the falls" on a \Vave he was riding.
!\-!eyers, whose heart stopped breathing
three times during the Surfside revival
efforts. was in serious condition today,
Hoag Memorial Hospital aides said.
Credited "'ith saving the youth's life
"'ere Craig Coffin, 21, of 128 Via Havre ~ido Isle, the off-duty Los Angele~
lifeguard, and Newport Lifeguard Lt. Al
Jndn, who was on routine patrol near
"N" Street when ~feyers was brought in· lo shore.
Three other body surfers, all from
Riverside,:-first noticed the victim
floating face down 70 feet from shore
lifeguards said . '
They brought him into shallow water
and summoned a.id from Coffin, \vho v.·as
on the beach.
Coffin administered moulh·lo·mouth
resuscitation and heart massage on the
victim while the th ree youths went for
more help.
They found Irwin patrolling In his
lifeguard jeep. He called tor an am·
bulance, then relieved Coffin.
A lifeguard rescue boat also arrived on
the scene to assist the guards on shore.
Lifeguards identified the three swim·
mers \Vho discovered 1'.feyers as Tom
Carroll, 19, John Langley, 17, and John
Jimenez, 17, all of ru verside.
Dropouts Drop
In Valley's
Stunmer Scl1ool
F'or the first lime in the history of 01e
Fountain Valley School District, a
dropout r<ite of less than 10 per cent has
been reached in the summer school pro-
gram.
During previous summers up to 30 per·
cent of the youngsters who started the
voluntary programs failed to finish. ac·
cording to Dr. Dale R. Coogan.
He credited the increase in the percen·
!age of voluntary attendance to several
fac tors:
-The subjects presentetl to the
~l udents were incor porated in ''high in-
lerest" unit s of "·ork , designed lo impart
basic skills to students.
'No Trouble' on Oil Bill
-The establishment of a reading im-
provement cla ss at each of the district's
12 schoo ls.
-An adjustment allowin g mus I c
students. both vocal and instrumental. to
enro\i in only their specialt y.
Utt Explains Dela y i n Pass ing Legis lation
Coogan said tha t lwo of lhe mo5t
popular high interest units offered this
,·rar to the 3.100 students attending the
i11ur·"·eek sessions v.·ere space «:l·
p!oration and oceanography. Ry JF.RO~IE F. COLLINS
QI 1111 Dtllr ,!lei Sitt!
Rep. James B. Utl +R·Tustin\ said lo·
day he anti,ipates "no trouble" with
legislalion (hat ~·ould spread the Orange
Coast's offshore oil sanctuary into federal
waters, .even though tht me,asure has
been bottled up in .a Congressional com-
mittee for more than tl\'O month!.
The bill (HR 11%26) was introduced by
Ult on May 23. Since then , it has been In
the Hou&e Interior and Jnsular Affairs
Comm1ttee. ,.
The congressman. ln a telephone in·
terview from Washington, this morning
explai~ tht. delay in action.
"This ln,·oh-·es public policy," he said.
"So it hlils to be cleared with the Burl1et
Department and the White House. t wrote
to the Interior Department about a
n1onth ago, and I emphasized that quite a
bit of the area Involved Includes the
heach In S11n Clemente, where the Pre.I·
dent will be st.aylng.''
Ult said he also has wriUen the
chairman of the Interior and Insular Af-
fairs Committee, Rep. Wayne Aspinal (D-
Colo.). asking him to prod the bill.
"It's \·ery slow lo gtt a report on :i.
bill." said Utt. "espct"ially v.·hen public
policy is involved. Budget. for instance,
must express an interest or no objection
to 1t."
The measure "·ould prc\·ent oil drilling
on the continental shelf both inside and
oul51de the three·mUe limit, with certain
cxcepUOns.
It would allow Interior Departmenl oil
leases only i! all three or thtse condilions
are met :
-It is eslablis.hed that there is a
"probability" of gas and oil deposit s.
-lt is t atabllshed thAI tho8e dellOsils
are being dralntd by other -state and
private -oil drilling operations.
-It is t stabU&hed that the leasing
\\'Ould be In the "best lnt~rests" of the
Untied States.
Utt said as 500f1 as an Interior Depart·
ntent report on lhc legislation is recCi\ td
by Aspinal's committee, a hea ring date
\1'il1 be set.
"! extect that \\'ill probably be
s:>metime in September ." he s:iid. "It
should be out or committee by October at
the latest. I anticipate no trouble on it,
Panther Granted
Delay ou 1-Icaring
largely because the waters off the 1 . Orange Coasl· aren't oil bearing. The oil A Black Panther accused o lt1\ling a
industry won't buck it." police offcier today \¥On a 24-hour delay
UU 's bill. in effect, v.·ould be slmilEir to of his preliminary hearing in Santa Ana
the present provisions of the state's Shell· Pilunicipal Court. 1
h A t Ad led th Judge Paul G. fi.1ast appointed attorney Cunning am c · op more •n a Robert Green to represent Arthur Dewitt 1 dozen yuirs ago, Shell.Cunningham Sa .. _ 1 h ed created an oil &anctuary south of the San· League, 20_. nta Ana . L.A:ague s c arg
ta Ana River jetty to the fi.·texlcan border. _ ~r\th the ihootlng last June 4 of Santa
Utt'!! legislation covers the same ·arta-Ana police officer Nelson Saascfl'.
beynnd slelt-ewned tidelands.
'the Congressman said when the
Interior and ln5tJlar Affairs Committee
sets a heoring on lhe matter, he l''ill call
on Vi ctor C. Andrews or Laguna Beach lo
round up Orange County witne5ses.
Andrewi; 1~ president of the antl-()11
Coast cal Arca J>rotccUvc League.
lhunphrcy Undecided
ClllCAGO I UPI\ Hubert II.
Jlumphrey said Tucsdoi y he has 1101 ms.de
any <lerlni te plans abou t running for the 1
Senate in fi.linnesota ne1t ~\ar. 1 ,, -••
. . . -
A Real Dingalin g
'B ig. Al' Sues Nutty Off Camera Too
By VERNON SCOOT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Alan Sues is the wacky
aportscaster of "The Rowan
and Martin Laugh.Jn'' who ls
dedicated to remaining single
alter a short·lived marriaa:e.
his meals at a smal l
restaurant around the comer
or at parties.
Sues is also a prominent
ma n wilh the ladles.
"I've been &oing with two
girls simultaneously," he con-
fides. "I try very hard not to
mention them to one another."
evening to pursue girls and
otherwise enjoy the good life.
This summer be wlll tour
for sis: we6.s with Rowan tlod
Martin and such o t h e r
members of the cast as Ruth
Buui and Henry Gibsoo.
Sues is a leading exponent of
mod Clothes.
He feels well dressed in a
..
Kaplan Joins Cast
Marvin Kaplan bu been set
I'll Telyegln and Daniel Ades
u Yefim to complete the cast
for the forthcoming prir
ductton of "Uncle Vanya,"
opening Aug. 21 as the fourth
and final producUon of the
current Center Theater Group
~
subscription season In the
Mark Taper Foruhl.
BoUI Kaplan and Ades wtte
recently seen In productions at
the Mark Taper F o r u m .
Kaplan appeared as Etienne Jn
"Chemin de Fu" and Ades
was featured in "Camino
Real."
NAnoNAl.ObCJIAL~TIOI I
DAILY PILOT, f
Sues is as una bashedly nutty
off the air as he is ringing that
litUe handbell on the show
and reporting fictitious sports
events.
His dates usually consist of
a movie, dinner and dancing
until closing time at one of the
dl.scotheques in Hollywood and
Beverly Hills. He enjoys, too,
taking his girls to ice shows
and the theater.
sports shirt, scarf, vest (M· -===========II jacket) and flared trousers .. •
Fiii~.!!!! .
'-D6itll ,,_,It ....... • ....VII
He lives in what h e
describes as the last of
Hollywood's slum areas.
Home is one enormous room
in an apartment house. Ile
decided to live there when a
friend pushed him in a window
to look the place over and
discovered he was locked in-
side.
He spent his first night in
his ne w quarters sleeping on
the floor.
Since then Sues has acquired
a television set, a divan with
fold-out bed and li ttle else.
He's made a kitchen out of one
small alcove and, of course, he
bas his own bath.
But then Sues requires littl e
in the way of comfort because
he spends almost no time at
borne.
Whenever he's not working
on the NBC-TV series Sues
hits the nightclub circuit.
His miniature refrigerato r is
empty. Alan eats almost all
Weekends find Sues dri ving
to San Luis Obispo up lhe
California coast. His brother
O\l,'llS a restaurant there and
the local beauties find a
television pe r sona l i t y a
refreshing change.
A native Callfomiali, Sues is
a beach buff. He sum, swims
and bakes in the sun. And
while his sports gags en the
"Laugh-In" are strictly for
humor, Alan himself plays
tennis almost every morning
to stay in shape.
Jle is able to play every day
because rehearsals for the
show are usually limited to
afternoons.
On Tuesdays and Wed-
nesdays he reports t o
rehearsal headquarters i n
beauti.ful downtown Burbank
at 2 p.m. He is free by 6 in the
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
l Frel'lth
sr1porl
) ' Elarised il'I I me JO State of
uneasin ess I 14 Carfrnter's too I 15 Mountain:
Comb. form I 16 A~froachln g w Ir or
!"' 117 ''" 18 Gambling
game
19 Vrrdl productlol'I
I 20 Stron~ tough lndiv duals 21 New Yorkrr
or NOVI
Scotl1n 21 Great
warmth of
frelln9 j 25 H l~hest note 26M1ea1"1 effort
27 Put on
'29F lre . 31 Pitching
statistic:
Abbr. 133 "Gone with
the Wind", e.g. 15 Kind of
'""'' 37 Relative of a poke
41 Caterer's
groduct 42 ressed
~·'~ '44 lac• for dt liverles
•
"
l
0
45 Bring dowl'I
upol'I Ol'lrself
Yeslerday's Puzzle Solv•d:
47 Straw ballot
48 Charitable
deeds
Al9 Conve,ance 51 Instil In offic e
53 Dwelll"J. unit: A r.
54 Statue
57 French
pronoun
59 Servlc r club
members 61 Ch.aracltr In 8/5/69 Shakespra1e
64 WHhln --· 5 Drifts 38 F1rnch. or: Z words 6 Las Vrgas rxplorrr ln b1 Painter's exchan ge Canada & 1cc essory: medium: USA:
Colloq. 2 words J words
68 W0tld Series 7 Grogr1~lcal 39 Enilishman's figure: S!1ng region um rell1 69 Mexican 8 Faculty 40 11'1 the pas t revolullonlst 9 PJ1y a 41 Oe!J'lvt 70 Sear flute of I lie
consltllalion 10 Box wltl't •6 Kind of
n Just Oflt light blows roast
time 11 Traer of 50 Neptun r; .
72 Fanfare dishono r 2 words ~ 73 Sir Robert 12 PresbTitef 52 Br one of.
s;iiish 13 Sufltr ng the Jet Set
fro111 rmul 54 Work I statesman 22 Oesrrve imp roperl y:
74 Rral estate 24 f orm1r7 2 words
contract affirme 5S Srctlon of
75 English statement Ireland
''" 27 -tasse S6 Sri ef i nd
28 Kind of ~'"' DOWN letter 58 arble,
JO Praise f« one I Germal'I J2 Distinctive 60 In I Stilt
composer appearance of readiness:
2 Regulatloo 34 Jrts or 2 words
J Yrry self. Mapl e 6Z Gem
crnlered . Leafs lil Contnt
person 36 Entrusted 115 Atti red
4 Cul lo another 66 Food: Slang
"
BALBOA
673-4048
HELD OYER
2nd WEEK! OPIN
6:41
7tf l.l•t11M This Summer'' Big
Fun Showllf ...... ""'""''•
1 'm Europe, baby.
I ""' ''"' Dutdi ~ Ditulc, G.MM 'Mutla llld
ltussiml Roulett<.
''"' -... w..td-W'm VlllliaftTow 1225.,
Mowwmeven.
PLUS
'i OUWll-MICH*" J.NU• ..
'HAMMIBAL llllOOICS'
Not infrequently he'll dash in-
to his one-room home -the
walls of which he has pain
dark brown -and change ou
fits before going cut on · .
"I'm not the kind of guy who
likes to have his date drop by
and fix diMer," Sues says.
Mii~ Dtlry •I 1111
M .... 1111·1 Tllurs. e~n.
I ... m.-rl Sil. l 'M
SIHI. 1 '·"'-
IEST PICTUIE
OF THE YEAR I
Sp•ti1I. Childr1n'1
P1ie11
14 l Undir-$1.50
3 BIG HITS
... _,...,,Wilt Dl9nes ----
TICHNICOl orr ..... -........ ~ ... -
-ALSO-
DEAN JONES
BUDDY HACKETT
w~>_.,, ."S·
"THE f -
IMatEDlllU ~
JOUllllEY. L
-AU O-
WALT DISNEY'S
''WINNIE
THE POOH
AND THE
BLUSTERY DAY"
CONTINUOUS bAILT
FROM 2 ,,M.
IT'S HERE
MOST FA NTASMAGOl lCAL
MUSIC AL ENTERTAINMENT
IN THE HISTORY
OF EVERYTHI N~!
-SHOW TIMES-
Efflll11g1 7:00 & t :JG
M.t. Sat. & S11. 1:00 & Al:JO
~R.&TXO:ll
. 'Dick'Van '.l)yke
Sally Ann 'Howes
'Lionel Jeffries
-1111~
"Chittt Chif!>.'. "BaQg" 'Baig'
-· SUPER·PANAVISION' TECHNICOLOlt, [fiJ lhlad APlllll
\Vhat do we supply?
We 1opply women hlsb 1e:boo1 padaatn with Sptte·A1e
opportQ ni1i,,1. Eterytbing from 1dminl1tretl•e to 1p1ee
wee1her IJ)tt.i1litt.
Whit et.er
We ,;iTe yon prmise '' 1 Woman ill the Air Forte. W1ntmore? u .. about 1 rkh toeial life? F'llll and twied. Bow 1bou1
tn•e11
Now .ii'• roar ta.m.
Yoa 111PJ1IJ • reel desire lo meet tbtl world .. m tttmn.
pli1hed. m1t1U"&, eh1rmln1 woman.
Thl1'1 the mo.. imponm& t.h.lns lbt Alr FOf'Ctl dema•d1
It( JOa.
It'• ju 1 limple Cite of mpplJ ~d a-...a.
Conl•<I M. Sgt. Al Torr••
(11 ch111rt• •I Or•llf• Cent •rff rMr•hlql
USAF Recruitin g O!lico
116 W. Third Street
Soni• An•-Phone 547•228 8.
-------------
----·-·-MTlll!ll ---' -Oll90 ,., .. *MATINEES DAILY* ,.. ... Y":' • } ' ' '
i
Jack Lemmon and
I Catherine Deneuve '
I "The A~Ji Fools"
Ttch~ Mca
ACinemaCAnter fllnw ~A National Gent:ra1 l'lllurw ~
Plu,
•lllEWEIT" ~ TICHHICOlOI cdiil '
From the
ACllS OF fRll PARllNa
O,IN AT 6145
SHOW STAITJ 7 P.M.
NOW SHOWING
"STILETIO"
Wl ..
Alex Cord Britt Ekland ., ..
Ja,on RobardJ
Britt Eklan d
'" "THE NIGHT THEY
RAIDED
MINSKY"S"
Ends Tonight
Jock LltnlllOll
'" ''THE APRIL FOOLS"
5tovo Mc 9 11H11
'" "THE THOMAS
CROWN AFFAIR"
StarfJ WtdneKlay
PREMIERE
ENGAGEMENT
Burt Lancaster
Peter Falk
"CASTLE
KEEP"
outspoken novel
where soldiers
talk like soldiers.
And fi ght like hell!
A GIANT OF A MOVIE
COLUMBIA PIC'l'IJRB8 PR8 8BN'l'8,
llllDIT I DMll1 •
. PICI. I lllllr
ENDS
TUES.
CARL FOREMAN'S •
MICllRl'l IGLD
,...t. Jri.A\
-PLUS-
James Garne r in "Su,,...'°"' Locel Sheriff•
CO~OI 1or Dolo~o -~ ~
5th Wook
s:
If tti1 Cllalr111• d1n•'t kill h!111 • , , U.S.·lrht ... l-.A•
l1i.ll ..... wHll
20th Century-Fox presents
GREliORY PBH
ABBE HEYWOOD
An Arthur P. Jacobs Production
"IHE DIAIRDIAll''
l'OTMCVllUll'HO• l'lllfS£~1S nrnI3:I ND flAT URI I CHAmON HESION ~2 ., IOTH
WEST COAST PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
!:
IUdl~TAlli ~ ················-·
I
Gloomy Gus is Your Kinda Guy
,,,./
oddball heroes
10th-Century castle!
~ l ratriclC O'Neal · Jean-Pierre Aumonl .
SCOTT WILSON • TONY BILL • MTRJO HEEREN • Al FREEMAN, JR. ·.JAMES PATTERSON • BRUCE DERN elld
llwc\T .......... -.. ~ B.. IL -• t1-·-• lllH~l TIRIOOll .. Ol~D RAYffi ·....,,.. ,...,..Vtlll.llM W1UKE • E_L...,
.., ....... -·S!DfjfY POl.l,ICI( • ....... N!Rl~ RAJISOHOFF .. JOJ!N CIU.£Y • ,......,.. n-~ -' ' l•l-=.:1:-00 I
.-.---star1s TOMORROW!----
~NEWPORT BEACH· u t tht'
entroncc to the fobulou~ l ido l\le OR J·8JSO
DAILY
' I Continuous from 7 :00 PM
Saturday and Sundoy
Continuous from 2 :00 PM
Tickets at CompuUcktt Outlet•
Including Bullock'a, Ralph'a Marketa,
Wt llicka or 1t the Box Office.
.
·'
•• •
• -'.'
•
'· ' ,
.
·' • '!.' .. ,
..
"
J 0 DAil Y PILOT H
Economy
~
Up Again
l1i July l
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Listing• fo r Mond1y, Auguat 41 1969
.,,,__.,, .. , ... ffll•,... .. ~ *"'l•lle11t •f '""'°irlmallty t A.M. t-NASO. l"rlt• Ila ... IMWM , ... 11 '' ,,_.,_.,., ,...,..._. ar c•llll'l'lln....,
Complete-New York Stock List
Alie<~ 4"
-~: 1'Wo"..~...!~ol ~-J~~ '!1' 1P. till ,:~~·J fl14 ll" ,'~1!'-J>'I ~·~ ~~I,, NI ill~ ""' 15ktd o •· •w ~f v. 1Yr N'11 G o lk r i.i n Ac • 1 «It liOllJ. wc>Olit'O nkln n· jllll Ht! l. I> \oi f !O A 6" \'o Acmt ~I fb
..._ ltif Nll!On91 4'MIC • •lrijl \'; 6'11 a" !'£:' 'u f DI I~ I \lo "'i'ml 1 $1q ~ JIOJ---J---f---f---f---f--l· •!loll 111 ~wltln Pini • ZS •I «II ii:: U mo ti j• A M. Ill 20 •L. 0.•l•" Inc ••• ••• iJB '~ •I ' llVf 1•14 914 A clrtn IJM For ute sixth time during ~· '!ij" 1r•111•c g,n 1.. ,,.. ..,,,,. ~1101 ,,., tv. "'"' ~ 1 t2V. Adl'l'llr•1 !loM I •re •-E~b I \'i 2'V. NE!\ GE !'Us lttli l'lto HI •t,, r.50,, A•IMlll 1.0 lhc n!list seven months, 0. c. I ....... ,,Vt 1 .. ,.,., 1!6"'1 .... NJ N11G ~~ 1•'h l-• n''"' ... ~·,!~ •• '. 'c'rr.•' -1'0 Ge• .. • otl(••l •• °'I P11E l>lo 1•1-. Nklin F )I o P•o .. ,,1. Adams. manager Or •··ur1"• i aoM'O.-lfMltlY J N!tt 1n.o IJ\li Niel A \4 >0'4 •I Wtl ~V. Air Procl .,.;\; "J om •I .,.hlch !MM Nuc ,..,. i4 g11s 8 'E )l'h E Tel 4 d~ Ar Pd 111• S
P.c"•< Nati'onal Bank'• Costa r. •11r1u.. , could c1cov '"" 1 A 11~ ,,. n Gi fl"' 2tll Alrll.1d11 ,t!G ll o .. J---f---h•vt Mtll our Ir~ 4\11 1 Cir In w GtCo l'o 1'\li AJ lnd\1$l•let
Mesa branch, has reported Mid · 1w i "m e " '° NP G•1 1'"' uv. 11•ctt¥ Al~"oe » ch•ncl i:""I M I ... '1 ... S14 Nl':xr 0 ••• •"4 w E15YC ,,., "• Al• G., I
dellfr mttkll• E I , 1'1f. FW N11<i lt\4 10\'i II lleall 26 ,011 A cinAlu I 10 another -rd hl•h for t•· -• --4 '""new tt1rOU<1h I K ''I '' 21 NW p sv 21\t t.11'1 td Scrw u AlcoS'•l'ld :io • .,..,.., e '"' _... ou1 1ne cifY Prlc" mos o 1 '' 19:tl. Noxi ~., 2t 11 1111 HPd j', ,2s, ... ~1,•,~ '.,', "'
oca economy. re1111 ..... , • ...., Ener• 11.1 5'111 '"' 10 w •• """ 29w 11b?;c Tv ~ 1~ Al'-<ituo '«1 I I do ftOI lncllldt ntl'Q¥ C $1 '' IMo Ari 11"4i ltV. lrlW Cl 2., ., -~ 60
A •• ~.mated On the bank's m.,kOOWn Qr C-E11n ' • U. I• ! Scf" 6' 6i1 lllld•I F 111"4 l lrtl Allea uO of )
AAA t:nl 'l\!J f4'4 on tll'y • s !Ir TP 1, .... lfl'I •m11• 113 116 A tf.OCll 1 to ~• mlolo!'. 111tw1Jt 1•~~ 11"' moni 1\l t llllo Fd t '"' Al"'°""' l n
bu'ln." Ind •• (1957 59 100) AAI tOl'O d ouJl O! ll 11\lo NA I ~ 1>111 T1na1r 7~ • A!IO Mii" l!I 4 • -1 AF.it.Pr $ I! rlt 11C V. •• "c.t 1011) 11'1> T111(11n It!',! 1t'h AHf,aM.111 75
).'t month's economoc activity AvM c11 i. j\!J ''erl~ ''?fl,(, eC 1vr 11v. 1J•1. T1u111 U\Oo '' .i1.111fd Pd "' Acme l:t 11'1> I ~ B ~ 5\'J ''• Piblt Br l(I 31"' T1v1: W ': 't AUIKIStr 1.AO
reglStered at a record 202. 3, ~~' mtc, :.: l',1:, lt ~.:Wi11d T J:~ ,:,:~ ~:~ct·c~ lJ ~~ ~~.~A} 1,1,~ lr.J~lt :w::i~~Pof J
l'p 0 6 per-nt Crom • prevtous JOO Alrt>rn F '"' • Fe(IH Ml m 104 PtWY ois 17 i1 Tlttnv 111 .. • " •c -C~::!::;~~=;!;~::;;;::;;:!::;.;:!::;;~j I "r ilitlu, 1 •rr na •v.,. P11nco1 11 11\i. T!lf11~ C~ 01,7 •"' Alhl ·C~•'"' " 'll>lrls 10'.'o 11\lo Ff! !lo\! S! ~ Piy!l" p U'4 13, .. T !In G11 1110 ljllo ,.1 1v """ high Of ~, I in June and up Au IN: 10\'o 11\.'I F $G RE 21 ?.! .. " ··~ 10'> Tr1n1C I •'·1 Al(o~ I IO 4.V 0 ll>U 1"3 lJU IMS "" "" '* 1969 A (0 1.~a ,, ., F•IM Inv 1 Ii) XIV. P!e~ ff T 1'"' 11 ' TrtlCnl G 11~ 11 Am115u9 '60 12 7 percent from 179 !) 3 year Al 8e11 IV, 6~ Fii Re-ou 5'4 6V, Ptn DllL i ..... TrN:nt 0 •14 5 AM8.AC ~ '"?. Pto 6!ro 1~ !f' WFl11 sc .. ~ P• E110ln s" 6 T•encl 111 201./i 2Jl'o Am•rE1 i ?0 ago Previous monthly 1ndeic An Ae•o •'• •, 1Jckno j1'-" 1~ "' G•w 26 ,,,, Tr k:o Pel ,•, .. m;'•'•"• ~mm,•~·H",','," l •------------------------------• !All ed E11 114 IQ!lt S1f 4 JS Ptnn RE 1114 1J\, Trlllllt ..,. " • re&d111gs for th s year are Alon Giro u·~ 1ru. F'ood PP 1" 1•. Pto$! W• '" 1,,,, Trool<• 241/t ArneH ... u \G
93 2 f A I Am~ t 1011) Forst Oil H t.o 1':11'1 Per Int 1~ \Oi~ Tv'°" Fd l)!A I!\'' AA!rF!llr IO 200 1 for May. 1 or J)l'I. Am OTel 20 71 F~I G111I 25V. 21 Pttrlt $ t '°'' •1v. Unite<; 1j 1 '!:. Am ,t,lf!ln 90
189 6 lo' M.rch. 191 7 for A, El L•b 7>' ··~ Foto<;hr l J\I) PP•rolll 1'\11 ' UnAr! 'r:h ' ~ ..... Am e ... er I
f ' lt' h Am Ewr 6.1 UV. Frnl(I Cn 10 1/ Phil~ of 41 n U" Polit' ~\II 23 .... AmB11: Nole I
February .nd 190 0 f 0 f It. --e11 S ort Am Fur" '"" f l , Frnlcln E 10 1 Phil Sub n D\11011 ltlum 'I.I UV. Am 8r•nd5 t V•W. 4 Gre-et 361/t 17'h Fulv"" '"" 1"• Photon lt 70 U" McGH Ito l'llo AmB"<:ll I 60
J Uary Every month Of 1969 Am H.,.11 '•\.; 'I G1rffli;! 17 l T'h Pie Pd •14 , ... Un Reio 141? IS Am (111 2 :IO &n ' Am lru.O lt .... 1 I i Svc IJlo\ 16 Plnkrln Sol U V. UI Bknot 10\!J 11 '~ AC1tn of I l:'i ··-pt March brought a new • Am M.a1 21~ 1''111 Alr<tt 114 • Po,.ir HK ,.,, JI u c.,.,.. ~ l'"' ""' ctm 60 ~-' w ' J b Am Ploe 11 11 Ofv!ce 1l~ 3"• Pro Golf U'4 1' U EiW•I l' 2 A C~•ln 1 60 record N A 5t Gob '"" 5\li " IC!ne!lc 5 ,,, PrO<I Ant •" I"• u Si>o1r ., " •m<:rO!;llt 90
Among 1nd1v1dual economic Am 11111 1!"" u 1t1 •i,r, 5>1 Pub NM 151~ 2s~. u11 PenP 25 2.w, AmCY•" 11s egro Omen S 0 A$1 G ol 9'1:. 11 ltl £11 8 ... ~"Pub! NH 711~ 2 'lot. S TrkL 36V. JllV. ACrtSYt 1 ~
d """"' Co 1 VI l)M, ,111en 1'14 "u PubS N(; 11~ l)t(,, Ullll 5Ld I JV, ADllllVI 12~ Indicators, seasonally ad1uste ~~":~'ca 6i 'Ii; g:~:tt ~1., n:;; =~~~~,' '1 '~"" !111 ~!)<' '~'1 tx:~ ~~i·i~:' 1~ Ju ne·t<hluly unprovements G J 111 • 111c111 N l21'l 3J\li GI•~•" w •l'~ •l p l\~....i 27 ,. Vil\Ct se 21 11v. Am Enk• 1
have been made ln ••part· • t Ar~ Ind lli 11 Glob ll llD 61'> 1''f Purity $1 16'~ 11 V WodW'd 22.lil.i 1~\li Am E•P ll'>d ~ ams us USIOD Arden M !1 1 \Ii Gorlri's ffi 101. PO...O CD 6'"' 6'1t •0"" Pl " AE~lnd pfM men\ 'tore .ales. 3 6 percent, A.r<len of 1 .0 r.reoh Cn l&l'I 11111 Putrims 1414 15\(o 1.oe l!'i t11o AGe"lll$ 50 Ark ~ 1"6 121/o Gr•Dl'I Sc 55 !t Rad O""' 11~ 'l\I W 11 It AGnlri !>11 10 real estate Sa\es 2 6 perce nt ~~~y:'1 H 1lv. nv.. g~~r f'J i!v. lr' ~',",',! 0E01 'l'h"2'\fW11h NG 11"-II AmHol•! hl • A1CC eat 2• 25 f;rlnnel 112 111 II. " 111 2'l W•sh RE 11'* U\I, A Homt 1 '° and bank clearings 5 percent. By SYLVIA PORTER Smee 1t s quite likely that Auto sci 1v. 11'. Grovt Pr :io ,, 11~:, ~ ll:i U"" ~=~b T'R, :m ::~ ~!'°'n:,J'' J
Construction declined 1 8 StatJetlcs on pay and JOb you'll be reading ettravagant ~:1it."n'1° l;~ 1~ g~::0 t~ 1!.,. ~"' ::r c~~ 1a•h 191" we!"''" 10 11 Am1nv11 i 1Q
percent during the month. " ctaoms ba·•d on 1 he e1rro A• n~ ll~ Gu!d rec 1!.l ,,,.. Rll~ s1o ~·~ f,1" w:1!~ ~ 'f" 2~~ AmM.Fov to level always can be tailored tG .,.. Bll<er 19,. 02•11 Gv11 1n1 '"' t v. R<11td E~ ,~\(, 'l"" ws1cs1 P ,~,,, 11~ AM11Cl• 110
Since July, 1968, the percen.. mislead, if not tG he That's m1sleadtng statistics ('ve ptn• B~lu:,•i;: 1~ '~ a:~OCICOI ll:Z 1,.,., =:~7 .... M " :ll'l Wsln NA, 10.\lo 11'"1 !iZ°N~~:;·,
tage gains have been 23 4 per· 1 1 poonted on this column let me l1n1s•• c io:i 11 H•nd \IQ • '"' Ro• C•s• '~: '}" ~~\~ M~o 1 1 I~~ AmPllOt 09• one of the U"Sl essons a · sarwc~ ";i 11...., Hanovr s 25 11 Rus s•ov ?I\~ ,1,,.. wt"" w11 1~1. M• ARel)"c~ •I• cent 1n clearings. 169 percent senous reporter of economics-give you the story-straight. g~11~.: 1;~~ \~~ ~~r;en~ 1l~ 1Jt: ~v31~ Ho ~ ~l ~1~~1~, ~;131,, :~ 5-;.c,ti ,w1
In construction, 16 percent 1n bke•Il•IS must learn I've JOSI -In terms Of lnC(')me, the l:~~':'sie ~J'°' ~Vt ~fi('h~ F f~ n ~~~;ti 1~ 1(~? l~'IJ W~';fiwp~ ~i! 2rn ~m~\r 1':o department store sales and 4.4 re·leamed it 10 a new Census Negro \\ooman 1s st1U at the se1m 1n0 m,,, 1112 Holm EP !' \7 ~c1 M8~ 36 31 wv•r'ld c '''" 2• AmSoA!r 10
percent In real estate sales b ( th I dd M d 8e1wc1 ,,,. 10 k09Yer 2511r 26 sci (gm., llo '~' runv E ,,, 11t. AmSA!r I"' Bureau Study tracing the Prog-ottom o c a er e tan 1••k H~ ~J 311 Hou•• Fl/ 2i:. • Am SM
E I t d l d •11 L~b so S2 Hutk M 10Vt 1 l'll •• AmMd 1>11 J! ,mp oymen ec tne on a '"' of Negro women and of fam ily income (half of lhe BlllUQs w '"" • H11d PP 11," n0 Am s1~·11 •9 II d led ba Is du' h If Rlrd S.... 37 40 HIXI G15 A n Sl'J A Swt• l 60 seasona Y a JUS s • Neg ro men 51nce 1960 fam1\Jes earning more, a BlrT(hr •Vo 1 Hu"' " 13 l• AmSU<I ,,, ••
J th
''test month (or I ) f N I t h d s11c~ 1-<1 l4 Js HY•n Co n 30 MUTUAL AmT&T ''° 1ng une, e .. f 1 h ess or egro am1 1es ea · R0<111e e1 • '"' ~"" G11• 2•111 25 AmWWks 56 11,hich figu res are available The igures seem o s ow db tod 13 270 11011 au 1~~. 11" 11\d Nwcl O'Olll 211• Aw 1re1 11s
th f e y a woma n ay IS , a-th• c ''"' ~~·~ 1n101ec. '"' st.11 •m o-f ht f th lo lhat e Negro woman, or -•• 1 ,~ Statistics or e1g o e decades at the very bottom of a year, less than hall the :~..J•t rl ll /~l'·t:.,1 1;~ '°~ ~~f~~~"' utci
Southern Cabfornla countie!l $6 778 tncoine for Neg r 0 l!rwn A• "'" ,,..., nc11 Svs 10" 11 FUNDS AMK: CP :io show a loss of 6,600 1ll total the US. economic ladder, 1s • Br~•h 81 ij\.'J 'l~ tntrm 1n ' 10 ~~~l"tor!' fmally moving rapidly ahead families headed by a i.:nan. I~~~,: ~ l1v. /~ 1~t ~'11t" 2!v. 2i.;, Am••~ 1 40 c1v1han employment -from a JI 8u•11tt F 11 '" 1n1 Ne r u1t. 16 Amtel :n
d h h f 4 617 loo M and that she 1s even pu ing 1·1 w sv ,, t~\.'J 111 svs i1~~ 20v, A"scond 1 so recor 1g o , in ay -THE JOBLESS rate for •mce '' ?6 1111 sv ot isv. u A"thHOOI to
t 4 610 500 J Sl!lce June ahead of the Negro man • 1noro M 6' '' 1n1 r1oe '"" t•n A11corPN5v 1 o , , tn une Negro women 1s 6 7 percent. 1nnM B 61 ,, 1111e11 70 21V1 AIMIY•I, 10s f!<ll • 11 s" Arid ci ... 1 :10
f las' Year employment 2 f N Canr1d 11. S\41 l()l'lt• 24 16 NEW VOR.t( (AP\ MYI 1010 11 09 A,p.chtC1> '° o • FOR INSTANCE !960 agamst 4 percent or egro c111 S&w 1~11. 11 •• SoU!ll 26'11. 21v. Th• ... 1 ...... 1_ -.. -. Pr11<1 • ,, s " A1>eoo11 1 ,,1 h ed b 2 9 percent 0, • since , 3 6 1 h 2 C•o tntA 11•1, 12•1, •• ,...... F s !Vt -"'"'ft ··,·,.-, so-,, ,, 21 ,, • <"•m as 1ocreas Y men, or w ite women, c1orc11 5'li '"" J,"'--;;; c ""'• 12'\ 1~11on• •u<><>I Y "'ie<' JQs 9 n Aii.'t s..:<-M 128 000 Past Year percentage the proportion Of N e g f 0 t f h Carie flt '"" 7\4 Jim Wit 12\" 11V. 1111 Nellon-I A'se<I V p' J 6i I 11 Arct>O•n 1 loO , • . •women In white collar clerical percen or w 1te men C1rtr <.11 1?1JJ 21\'i i'G:'bv 1211) 11 ~on or IS~urn1,., Inv '°R1J11 • •1 ~ J2 ArliPubSve 1
increases have bttn 3 3 per· and sales )Obs in bog ci"es has -In our biggest city slums, ~=~~ .. NG ~'Ii ~~ K1111:,,F~~ 6f141 J'~ ,.,/1:i!,.,, ~ • ..,.,,~~ 1,1111, 21 ao n '' Ariens os '° th h t C 11 rnla and w ti N • c1n VP$ 11'-'I :n K• sSI of '0 211~. thew •KVrlllH Yl!'I "•l JS " Armcosr 1 60 cent roug OU a Io )Umped from 13 to 23 percent 1e average egro womans c11,,1 0 10"" l1'& K•1,,8r HJ 271 ~".., ~eve b<'f'11 Iv¥ ':~ ~~ ~i~tc:"ii '?os 2 2 norcent nationally. ful l time w-kly pay envelope C•rn Le• l• 14\lo 1(1v1m 5 5 h Miki l~•dl or bo\ltht 1J _,_HM,"' " __ 11 Armc~ ,.1; is .. ~ In cont rast, the proportion of ,..., <"h~ml<l i•'o 1~ k••• T 16'• u t••~e<11 Mo""~¥ ""M" F• ,;.;;v ArmRun 1 60 June's average unemploy· h contams $75 vs $106 for the Chi>• '"" s'" ''n K1t1ett 61. 6'• e11 •n Kf"0<>81 1912 206, Aro cor~ '°
t .. , II Neg ro men 1n t IS category • r11., u111 1~ 11 Ke!lwd 19 71' A"•"d" '.., '<< cu• ~1 2" 19 ,.. 7~ Ar'"" lod 1 ment ra e ..-as a season a Y man Chi fir& 1 11 14 KtYrt F 1v xi Advil,, ' is 111 • , •• ,, ,, A•llkl or1 i 111 dj d 41 t Up has remainedatl2percent .-11r1<1 s 11~11• l(eveFIO 11v,H•·A•r<111d ,..,~,, Cu•B' ,,-,,,.11,11011 .,11 •0 a uste percen -\Vhe'e Negro famol1cs are ~h•l•• 01 101 106 K111• cus 2• 21 Alu!" ~'° 980 ,.u, o:t "'' , I d Ag am, the proportion of -r:1•1<k1 ''" ~·~ K~vsl pc 1 , .. At'*~ Fd 11 ., ,~ ~, Cus 1<.2 5 16 5 64 As~d r•w from 3 9 percent in Apr.i an headed by women the chances ch1i u A j•Vi '"'~ Kl""' El 1Vt 11' A"''"" J llO , J• rv• \! "''~ n •n As•d DG 1111
f '4 t Negro women 1n professional • r1111 v 6 "~ 7~'4 K nos Pr 11 ,. A"' 11u• l ,, 1.,., Cus s2 1Q to 11" A.IO~no 1 tGto May, down rom , percen a are the family will be hving 1n ~1ar1r M1 :n1,,, ,,,,. ~1r1r co , 1c Am ov1n 1n 1, 11 oe Cu• ,, 1 •• a"' As~dTr•n •Q
R to s for June and managerial JObll IS up .-1~v1.,.. • .,, s n10 vot ?~~ '~ Afx ... 1 9 n Cus !-4 • 86 5 ll ~l!~~1e1of; fl year ago a O • t ti poverty In the under..$2 ,000 a c11n1 Me• 71., l'h ~t:•cc 11 1111 Am Gr111 , ,. 1 n Pol•r • n • •1 At1 R clllld , J969, v,•ere 3 4 percent (or the f r 0 ffi 8 to 11 percen 10 1e year IOCOme range, lhl ee out §::;.:on COO ~.; k~ La°~e or~ 2:~~ 2~~ ~:::: 1,::,~I ; 3! 1~ ;i ~~l~b GI 1~ ~ I~~~ A11Rth Dll 15
nation and 4 6 percent for past decade. 'l'he rise for o( love families are headed by ro1..., E ·~ 7Vt L•nd• in '"' •>~ Am'" Gi~ ,,., 3 32 Lexrn,,1 10 10 11 c.. :::R~1~" 11?l .~ Negro men has been from 6 tO t'.olllns I'" ''"' '' L~OW! Wd 17'-11 Anchor Grou1> L•x RK.I! I•,. 1~ 7ll Ali•s (llem 1 Cahfornia. a \\Oman and In the $2 ~ ro1on Str 1•1.< 'S\4 Lan.on ''~ I''> r•oll ~ 6~ • •s Liberty 6 09 '66 Ana1 coro
Subsidiary Sued
NEW YORK (UPI) -DWG
Corp bas sued its !h percent
owned subsidiary, Southeast·
em Public Serice Co to com-
pel Southeastern to call a spe·
ciaJ stockholders meet1og to
elect new directors Chairman
Victor Posner of DWG said the
Soulheastern management had
ignored his request f o r
r ep r esentation on the
Southeastern board 1n spite o[
OWG's large holdings
Southeastern sought fut1lely lo
merge with Eastern Gas &
Fuel Associates of Boston to
aVOtd a takeover.
uceanograpMc
fun~ inc.
A mutual fund 1nvestrng ir1 the
development and use
(If the ocean and its resources -----------Mldtot• o .. trlb11ters. Inc.
llO ·-~""' Ntw Yl<'k, "Y 1-
Pltn• $•nd ,., •• J>"'09l>'CtUI Olt t"• oc••nocr•phlc lund, Inc.
om•
City Sb-I• flp
3 mere 9 percent ' ~omctt JJVt 35 ltl> Coe! p , •"• Grw!~ 12 4S 13 M ll!e Stk • 11 i l~ AlllCO r>! !41<
od h $4,000 range, women head over ~~ ~~' J: J;~ t~•1ur T~ ,t'h ~~·~ e.w '" ~ 10 Liie '"" 6 «) '" Aurora Pl•s Jn the same pen 't e pro-half rom '"" ~,,. su.1.~wr, eF 11'' 19•1, .!:.1ln¥ ?~ti~!~ t::.iis s.vf.!' 661 :~:~~~~ ,:~
portion of Negro women ~::;:: ~!1' ~~~ 1~ t~~YB .. eu '1" 'j:~ A~tr(H\ 6 2' 6 11 f!~~d tt ;: n ;~ ~:~g ~?l ~ 10 ·-ployed as private household ~om Hl!h 11 11 i..011 C.f!or '" '" A•• '"'o0<1Mn~ M 1 14 11 Pd n '-''' WHAT THE FIGURES ac· romo A ~ 6 LOCI Elrn 11\~ !~ ~u~ ; ; ~ ~ 3~ M1M111 ';5 ,;; ~:~~ l"I: «1 workers has fallen from34 to . cm11Cm :'Ill ,, LYn<hC. 31 "' ~ 6617 xiMauF~1 n~?1161 AvoroPd1•c
20 percent While the earnings tually are underllnmg IS that r"mo 1""1 1~ 11 M•d GEt "~'"' 51?'k, ,., 1 ,1 M•11 at~ 1113 1171 All..: 011 G• Cmo M!h ..... ""' M8olc c~ 16 ~1 ~' D M T I ft\,." Prestcent1al adviser Daniel rmn r.c 1•1~ 1si~ M11 1tn¥ 10 10•) a,•,',-., 1 51 1s1 ~" ' • o( year-round Negro women 1n be gh .-no1mr , '"' M•ll~,1 ""'" .,. '\> • • ~ • ~1 1~ \• Mates • •• 4 19 ~ w 1 :.1 Moynihan has en r1 t Ill 10· ,.°" RO<:k ,. Jn•"' Mom! •• 511 s·~ 8onOsttc '50 110 .,...~·~ • .., 1' 1111 " g:~our .u c1lleshavecltmbedfrom59 to h h N r1 51,,111 6,4 ,.,,M•~Qu• 14.,15 "o"nn st 9'11nmMtD"" •ol tto E 1M
13 per'ent 0( the earnings Of s1st1ng t at t e e g r o c .... ••1'1 •'• ,1, y,1~1n M .1>0 ~ flo~ton 111 1 •1 ~~ M,', 01• ,", ,,' ~ ~::~G of!U so
t h t t t k d Co"!/811 ~ '> ~ M 8rowr 36 JI llr~'<:I SI 14 IA l<.Jl , • ....,.... '" B~noF'unt 60 white women. The earnings o( ma narc a soc1e Y is 1n e c~r L 11 1<•, Y.d s~1,, lll''> n eu1kld. 1' •5 1131 Moociv • 11 •9 u '' eanoP 011
Negro men. though, have only directly lo Lhe Negro broken ~~~rl ; ~'• ~~O~v o ~S,,. ~!., ~~ ... ~~ 1: ~ 1;r; M~;:;h Fyfl<l~n~v~11 g:~:oTi' 11~j
home and in turn linked !"re•! M~ 114 t•~ Mltd!c ~ 1~ 11 (•"I! 1.~ 1•~ 1n• lncom unav•ll esrd \' " Inched Up ('om 70 to 7J per ' l°'O'<I (n "'" ""'~ "'edtr11 J.I''> 37 CaPll S~r 6 6.J I ?1 lnwr '"~""" 88"t '' 10 • directly to tt:e problem of r"ro1rh R lJ>, 1,.,. M~lo•r ! t r"•nt s~r •oo<1ottMIF Fd 910 '" B•Tes Mio cent or White men':. '•n••• C l"'•H •'M"rlf No 11 'f ll''I Ch•n11,"v Fund< M!F r,i~ SA<; •11 Bat" !Md poverty fl&"lfl In ?1'~~" Moen G•n 1,, 7'• n•••ri Jl <n1,"1Mll OmG •tJ 540 l'lful~~lb '° Paychecks • ... ..,iv M '"\'. '"~Mldld c1 11 n ~ corn st 11'1 191 ~u Cl"lln 1n?~11M l'l~••rl1b u But Negro hon1es aren't 1"1111 O•Q 1' l~ Mldt•• ' t'" 1ncom 1u 161 Mui Shrt Jiil 111• a1vu~c1a so fl•vl• I'd 1"1,11••Mldw GT 7l ,. ~""ti '''JO!"''' l•s• '"~ ?71 ee~rlno' I
BUT WHEN You look behi nd being broken because the DAv Mir 1,., ,.,u; Mnl• G•< ll 311. c~.s~ GrouP NEA M~t 10,1• 10 •} Q••' F"' 1
be '""'r'lr I" 1''•1"~Mlu VIG 11°'i U F"d 1•1on?•NnlW~~c1"<11ll-'8tAl l'ds t1fl j b "oman 1s coming a star tn .,..,r1anc ~·. o Mo 1t1•• ~ ''' Frnt .:i 19 H 11 Net 1no:1 10 '' 10" • ~ • lhese tmpress1ve pay • 0 th I bo f F" f It ~•hi A" -1. ••· ohwk R 7''""'' s"rMI 1,,6,,"N~• l•v•t 7•< '" flt~1 01c~ 31'!
Statlsl'cs. a fa r different tale e a r orce ar rom · r.e1u• c" 4~ ,. Monm P~ 10•1 • ',,', cnemri 17 11 19 '.ld Nat Secv• St• I ( "t \OO"\~nT 1"'>1"•MooreP • '(e'l""' ll•ltn t"'~ll:in n sum, rom nex ~' l'lr ?1 ~ 111~ Moore s 11 • 1'~· EQUtY , Jl , 03 Bond' 5 4' 5 "I
emerges nothing'' to "a httle" may be ~~~-.·~. 1~:.: 1:;, ~0.~'"<1~ ,, , 1: ~ F• "" 11 •1 n" ~~-",. '• ·,0, •, •,•, To illustrate, the white CQI· ,.,.ft~ G-w!h ~70 611 v•n n a giant stat1sttcal step But In ~/::" ,;; ~:~ 1;a ~~~;~".,' c ~~;~ ;~, v•"' • ,, • ·~ Pf s·~ ~ •• 1 • Jar category, as far as black I lil It' a baby's crawL ._u••' ...., ~· N•• 11,n~ ,,; 5,; commc 11 S6 n 51 ~ncom s •e 5 H women are concerned, 1s 1 ea e, s 0onv Md 10'1f'21~ N11c1r rt 1'"' I~ .-oms 110 '11 \ 21 N ;fKv') 1 i ~~ : ;; c~'.!"';:-1"'ofsd,so'1"~L G~ •••in"~ made up largely of typists, tile 1,.~om , 1.1 10 51 Neuw111 7l s2 2J s1
clerks and retail s a I e s M s l l J ;1~' ; ~ ;~ J; ~;: ~: ,5 j31~ ;;
workers, among the lowest aCCO € S 11.lereSt ~:;;~ ~; lU ;;;~V'"v~~r l ~~:l~~
Paid workers ,-~..,,, A• 1• ,, 1...._,, Nfw•ori 1• "911 "' Com~t e U 9 to Nore111 16 ?7 16 71 As Mrs Dorothy Newman. a """'" Pd" o ,, •n 1 • "'"0 "h ~ "' • ~·
top Labor Dept expert 1n this l f ~~!'.kFd :~'~!~~"t~ 1!~1~~
I kd 'Ah t 1 JR J C • 'a cD1>Cordu1s111s101Fd ,,jlO•• foed remar e ,' Woe CO • n anc ~o a ~ orn~ """'"' ,0 """"' O•• "mS """" I I I k t I; I< I< Co"•U In 4SI 4960'Nell 119!11.ltl ar on a mae cer IS no ~~-o 1,, 1,,,.,. .. ,,.,D~"~ ,,, w•1
nearly as impressive as a blue cn•¥ Cao 1111 n 1s Pt"" s~ • 01 • c1 ro ~nw ,.,,v~·0•Mut ••1to:i collar on a construct 1 on Macco Corp, New p ort proxl1nately 200 acres, a ,.,"w 111 un1v111 PllH• 1A Tl 1614 ),V~~ M ~· ''A\ •• ., •o•lm ~ •• t 1• craftsman -Ill terms of hts Beach real estate development thoroughbred horse lrainmg oec11 tnc 11 'f ll °' Piiot ''7 111 ,.,.,,wr• ii •o l• '' "In~ SI 10 •~ 10 I" paycheck as well as his subsidiary of Great Southwest facoloty en-oniiassong 3,000 oe111 Tr 114 1 s1 P'"""r 1111 "oo
h k 'fl th >-v ,,~1~ s~r 3 ..., •"'"l•n l•v ''•••?" status "S e as s, ' ow many Corp, Friday announced e ocwT 1n , !3 714 Price TR n ,. '1 o11
Jn en -black or white -want sale of tis one-third interest in acres, an 18-hole golr course ti~;;, F 1; ~ 1;; :~g_:,ur><l '~ ';; 1~ ':::
to becorne typists?" the 87,500-acre Rancho under cons t r u ct 1 on and n•-•l • "·~ 1J '5 P•ovd nl '1• s :n E~l11n&How1rd P "l!•n • oO IQ 10
AND WHILE it's true that
Negro women have made big
strides 1n the category of
"proresstonal and technical '
\vor kers (a vague Labor Dept
OCC\lpat1onal catch-all), lhe big
gains have been as low paid
elementary school teachers
and low0pa1d medical techn1-
ctans
Cahforn1a development var1ot1s sch ools. s ~ opp 1 a g ~;;:;;, ;; ~S ~; ~: PvJ~~tt' F~~";, 11 ""'
M ' t \ f 11 d h h th '~'n-n <&~ ••• Gto•• ll9'1S11 aero s 1 n e r e s was ac1 1 tes an c urc es on e soeci 10 91 11 91 r."" 11 ·~ 11 .,
purchased hy a partnership property. F~!";;~ :;;;-;:: I~~ ~~tr?
comprised of Aetna Life & r~'"' 1•"" 1• ,, Vist• 1D 34 11 :JD Em•o Sc 111 s•• Voy·Q ~ ""\ "" Casualty Co and subs1d1aries "•··~v 1~.__,. •• §"'Tedi 191 111
Of Ka.SC' Alum'num & Entor.. t 1> t ro ev..,_ l• 'i 1• 11
B l "o••IJ onM., Ra<en111 112 !"
Chem i cal and Kaiser llt•1•011g IS ~:!': .. Gfh ~~~11 •5 ~~~~~. F~:..J:.1 25
Industries E"vent 1" 141!1$•7 Onl lrov 11no1\"U --~ ~r "" •i •1 Socl lS lJ 35 3l F~Trld IOUll•l ~·I H<Oi.\t G t P l "'~·m .,, 1n••1n•• Com SI 10,1\Q'1 e S ac Feel Gr!fl 11tll ll19 ~t( ll!v 117•1'1\ ,..~ ~-~ 1,,.,...,secE<iull J$7 3to F•~ Fund UJ417U ~•• tnv 1i~ A'1!
Sensitron
Forms
Company
:·················· ................................... j
: YOUR PROBLEM: -~
ln a statement issued by
W1lij.am C Baker, preside nt o(
Great Southwest Corp, the
purchase price was disclosed
as $19 million cash
Macco had joint.ventured
the properly with Kai.Ser
Aluminum & Chemical and
Kaiser Industries as eq u a I
one-Uurd partners tn 1964 The
total purchase price fQr the
parcel 1n 1964 was $21 rn1llion.
which required a cash in·
vestm'.!nt by Macco o[ $2
million
The Army has awarded Bur
·roughs Corp. a conlracl lor
nine medium-sca le 83500 com·
~·~ T••>'I ••;•1&15 St1&1; Am 97610!4 1>1~a~t111 Pr09 <•1 ~~•rs '' '''" •~ l)~•m ~ ·~ 6 '' Pl 0•1" 21 t i 21 .. lndu1! 4 SS ~ti ~·~t ~ <> •n ,. '"'"Ml ~ 11 in Sl1m1 9 1t 10 70 Vtnl INtto ~lt lnV ll"lt'• B f p
:£ You w•nt to 1•11 som• lt•m i
• that you no longer need but _.
: someone e lse c.an use for
: NOT OVER $50
i ? ? ? ? ? ? t • • •
YOUR ANSWER:
• • • • • • : i :
i ia
You call THE DAILY PILOT, ••k fo r
Clas.1if1.d Ad..,e rti1in9, end place •
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
·' CLASSIFIED AD
AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE
LINES 2 T IMES 2DOLLARS
ANO YOUR CRED IT IS GOOD I
DIAL NOW DIRECT
: •
I • •
I
a
I
642-5678 :
fTeH f,.. Notttll c._ • ., 140-l llOJ ; 1 ...................................................... ;
•
· r-.•acco has r<'aliied an ag.
gregalc profit of $17 1n1lhon on
its Rcincho Callforn1a ln-
\Cstn,ent," B11ker s1ud
He aridcd that as a land and
re~I estate developer, one of
Macco's diversified acUvttles
ts to acquire and, develop 1i to
stimulate land af>pr«'clellon
l'lnd cash flow and to sell at a
substanbal profit
"On th is P3J'?cu1ar p3rcel ol
land , we: did• JUst that," said
Da:ker
Rancho Cahforn1a, located
tn Rive.r~ide County ne11r the
town ft( Temecula. Is a
de.velopmenl '1ffer1ng 1t com·
plcrncnt of com rn u n It y
f11c1l 'tl es 1n c luttln g
;igrtcultural. (.'Ommerclal and
lndustr1al a1nenll1es
fn addlllon lhere
than 250 horncs
under construction
uon vcluclc resort
nrt more
cumntly
a recrea·
of ap·
"••F V• 1~·•11 .. s...1111 n •1• ,,, 0 A ays 1"11 l~Glh t06 99;! ~ .. l~ve•I ~·1 .,, puter Systems, \laJued at $6 \ "'' Ir$": ~ " 172 S.Wer Inv 1~ f3 15 41 01n Riv 1 :10 "'' Mull! t 17 t 31 '!F"M '" \ '~ • '' • Cana CP 11~ m1\hon, d e s I g n e d and r:;; 51;~. ~"' ~ ~· StAt! .S• 41 oo 49 oo A regular quarterly d1v1dend Dart 1.-.d >Ob
engineered 1n Pasadena. ,[•,,• ,"!!: ~':011 5'A~m,';,d ft'6'ii1 u of 55 cenlS a share on the&:~~~ 1':1l ,.., 41! Fl">r 1" 1" 0 U1S 'l'he systems w11l include "1~ c.. ~ •• 1 •• Stien • 11 i,. capital stock of BankAmerica 8:~f~p(' , 60 fnd Giii S lt S 16 S!~'~ Roe "'~' pi,_ 10 l TS ltlagnehc tape units and disk "ou~d" ~1• ••< fl•• 19161t" Corporationhasbeen authro1i· pi,_ :1014 flies ~lmlJ3r to those tO bf'.l pro-~~~~I~ Gi~!~ n 61 s~k OP ~; ~~ ;; ;: ed by thC COrporat10fl'S board g:r;ar~o l(Jf
duced at Burroughs' Mission c~ 51 ~ 17 1 '1 ~uQ "G' • '" 1 '1 of directors ~1 Mnlt 1 io
V1e)o facility v~i~~ 1J~l 1l :: ;;;~;s;;j,1 l; ~ ;; ~ The dividend, whlch Is at the 2~!!t~:~"f:
The 835-00s will be 1nstalled FrQdm 1 'l • 10 .... ~C'I'" 1" ·• 1n " annual rate of ·~ 20 per share, EM,,••,, o~! "•d A'l'I !~l'1 led\fl(I 60! ~58 ~ ·•~~· _ In the US Europe and the Ot11 sec 11 c1 .1 01 T-...,v·• • "~ is pay3ble Aug 29 to 0"1,a1v 1 '°"' ' r.111""' II 9J 11 9J T•tllf'l<)I 7 70 f )9 h h J f d !')pnRC.r I 10 Pac1hc to provide 1hc Army Grou11 s.c ... ..,n r"i• • ..,., • 1 s are o ders o recor Aug I R~rtto "'A • J ""'O •t ''~ •"-lowr MR 700 76$ '"" With UCrCased Capab!hfleS to Com $1 1/:!0U64 .. ,~~ l'·e i'"' •<" rs~~~!"( ff
t t I , r,, •~ 1•••~<lr•v E• t1,!0 'J '"IP!Fdls ,,o opera e 1 s personne reporting r.r1h 11'1d 11 ,311 •1 ~ ...... "'" 1~' i· •• Jt.farket "''Ed 110 '° t d "' d ;;,,.~~ ... 1<<1 1•6'T .. ~c GI •70 IJ9 f'lt! si.e1 60 sys em an m.~or comman Gu•rdn 1501 u QI Tw..C ~e • .~ • 1 ~ 1 "
1nfornlatlon ~ystems Fi r st H;;F 111ot0 ••s 5 ~('~l!dMut :~l#U g,~fa~1"1:i3
co111puter v;ill be delivered this ... ~"·:.r ~~ r" u'1~ ... "11"'t~h •M S'·······ols g'/:ih~7'ol·~ fall H1r1>or IM 9 61 Jneorn ll tt 15 II U U cl80hon It ,,.,.,,,11 1in1'"' ~r1~~ fl!~,, D'riil" ..
l\'Jarvin Nilsen
Witte Joins
Hf.( Ltv 10 M II 91 UFI Co" un•v1!1 Tiie !fhlowlh• It t ..... TO li;:>bo!S llM'l'l DOOO •01:,f,O""m ;:"' ...~~ Gw • 1• ~ 1' v~• •• l •ne F~ r tto r• Hrdvf 12.26 11 IQ V•I I.I!\ 1 $0 • :n ~a~ • •fll<k ll'llr Ill ,._ OP-lie l'llllon OI '
.. ,.110~ 1 ,, j '' 11\(r I..., \ ,. kin no-... uP!Otf'~'•" D~t1ub so '°' Me~n ,, .. i ao So!SU 1•111 Al 1 ~ raD1~~"" ">b>,..'I 1 •~ o Vr>t•( 1111 1 •1 o\I. I 'j9'1~!: '1 Of' ""..!' n~u H Olt.llflHI I .~ tSt Giii s 12 '60 V&ndrOI 11$ • 41 o~ Nfll ta ,:~~1:1 ... n:r,it'l-~Y~~~ ,,,,._ .., '"'' '"' ••n•v• v~~ ~ '' 1"' tlock du•lllO ltM, n11m11td r•ft 11lvto =:Miii llO l"'n t:..,, 10 01 10 ti V4r llldP '·l' j JI tlo<:k Oii'::= 0.:.:0.<11rr,: o; c1ill v•lue I'd t ,,.. l"'o lit~ 1'6 ino Vl~lfWI _. 4 \l ... O ~ ........ ,.. I""' l.o
!fl( l'V'IO ll IA 11•• WI. More '"° tu tll' ...., ... y '"" tll' t• ~""'""''" di ... Dork Ca :r? !"I(" ~"8 f ~I .. Y~llS! 1~ 1 cii 1• .... t-P110 ::A! .... ~rt It-l1r..i r. Mld tir.ntM ''°
!I NII I I T 11111,ltnd ' .. 10 tel ""''~ Mu 11 «I 13 S5 ·~ 11 ll!Y ~""" (II' "'' "" Derr Ollw• Marvin . scn,o E oro 1~ .. r,nd 11};1,••u,i•qtn 1 ,~""~"°inu~1,irP11::1o'wth"'~~Yy11r •i:: ~now•cQ t'
I • ed th L 8 h lndtlrv ! lj 6 lt Ntil IJ\d 7.ll t Oii $ 11 ':..11 01Y'f!!'!I} • !!ltd n..wc"m ? '" 1a~ JOtn e agun" C:lC ·~•e \'' , • ~t•u ... 11-~u '''\!\n ~;~,~11r1"° ,,:''iet.,;-"'1"11..°t"'oivi "''•""~ ••~
broke.rage offlce of De11n Wit· \:~ ~o".i 1J !l 1~ it ~!~~ ! ~~ 1? U :c' ""'"n":: r,.!'8:rt_r+11 or b'\:'11n ::l ~~ ~' ~
!er and Oo as an aCC<111nt ex· 1nv 11111.c 11 'I "'I w11cori 1 °' 1 1J ~~iJ~ 1;,n~+..ci C::.t• v•!ut." J 111 ~l"f'l~c", ~ '""" P<r 11. iJ ~ or•h l O• J,, OIYIO'~" Of' f.ll-c!IU!"lb\ll!ori d•I .. Y-L.\. f'lunft ... 1 10 e<-utive au ld•l!:r, d!vllll'l'ld n, ... r..., c" Nil~n Is accrtdltrd by the Let TV WEEK ~i~c'.~:i "ii1i-e. dfyiotnd x·dre-.•• :.i.~\ ?,;.~ Nl'll' York Stock ExchRnge <:11,111but!on. iir-£• 11thB •-w11i-1 '"uPe"I "','Al -u~nh -~II .,,,.r111 t• 1"11111} lu <'Ind will handle ind1v1du11l ..,,_Moc,,.11''' • ;•ue11. 110-Nn1 ri~ '°"" 1t
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Tuesday's Closing .... ..1-----------1 (Wt.) ~ L• C ... Qt
Prices -Complete New
Market Finishes
On Mi"Xed Note
NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks staged a late
comeback to finish mixed Tuesday in light turnover
The news background was a bi". more opt1rrus
ti c, but most analysts viewed the late improvement
as 1 just another rally in a bear market They
noted that there still 1s lhe prospect of reduced
corpora~e profits 1ater this year
On the bright 11dc was House passage of the 1n
come tax surcharge -1l s now on Its way to the
\Vh1t e House for approval announcement of
further U S troo p Withdrawals from Vietnam taler
Uu s month
The UPI n1ark~\\tdc Indicator held aboul
changed on 1 527 issues on the tape Of these
declined and 631 advanced
un
634
The Do\v Jones indusl11al average was off 1 35
at 821 23 near the final bell Volume of 8 5 m1lllon
sha res \'.as about a m1ll1on shares belo\v .l'vlonday s
pace
Among the heavily traded issues were Feddera
Corp Natomas Pan American \Vorld Airways
RCA Co1nputer Sciences and Anaconda The Jal
ter reported increaser.! second quarter earrungs but
reduced the divi dend ra"e
Tut5d•Y Augu1l ! 1969 H
Stock Exchan ge Li st
W•V•u 110
$U'"°•0 I 1 <IO .\llPl'lt.~ .r.o ~ ~vFd 10t \wrolt ...604i
$WH(O 60 .,,.. nt .cl
l~b OflC• 60
UA.L 1'C I UA.lltCO I ~X..ccr...:11 xin
Una (O '° Un I Lid UQ Uni NV ~ Un NV In 1'9 u .. ca ... o Un(a bd• t nl"" Co<D Un E •t XI Un E P!l 50 u .. El ol• UllO Cel oO
UO('& pt~ :Kl
DAIL V PILOT J J
Doll y Piiot d1llver1
ev1ry d1y
Co111plete Closing Prices -American Stoel{ Exchange List
--------------
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PUT CASH IN
YOUR POCKET
Sell unv.-an tcd llfms
with a DAILY PILOT
ClusUlrd Ad.
PHONE
6•2-5678
DAILY PILOT .
For The
Reco1~d
Jtleeti1tgs
TUESDAY
H1111tl~ kt<l'I l•tr•Ck5 Na. ?:WO. v~"" or Wo<l<I "'"' l, V.F.W. Hfll, l 1' Y~-. H11nllflt!Ol'I
fl1Kn. J p.m. Ro11ry (lub of Nowparl-IUTbCll, lrvlM
Coa•T Country (II.Ft• 1600 £. Coa1t
Hlonw•Y. Corona oel Mar, ''JC P.m. (""I ~ Mt11 · N1wPOrt Harbor Licor•
Club, Me11 VfrO• Coun1r1 CkJb.
(oilf "-le ... 6:'-5 o.m.
Sral !letcn To,u1m1.iori Club. lD!
Rtnch -e. tt.<'ll P•CltOC (oa>I
H19hwfy, Sf:1I llt1cn, I P.m.
Btltio1 lhY Llonl Club, Vllllo Marini,
IOd 81y1lff Drive, New-I 111«1'1,
1 1.m.
Hun11n1t"" I••"' El•• Loci... E.._,
Club, I&" OCtfn Av• , H1mlln91on
BNCl'I, ,,31 <>.m.
\lf>trtn1 ol World w~r I u>d New
Mf1f Burick• tl49, Amffic•n
l011iOll Hill, S4S W. JI!~ ~!., (Diii
M...,., 1 3' Pftl.
Slt"f Club, S1nt1 lln1 Publk; 1,lbrffY,
r..nt• Ana, I p.m. /
t1 o•tlot' Ate• Yount lhDub!lc1n,,
NtWPCfler In~. ~ .. oort B••~n. I
P.m.
tl1lbQ1 Sill Club, NP.wl>Orltr Inn,
"""""''' BNch .• D.m. 000 Ft l'°""' LO<lgt No. lll, Odd
F•ll-• TemPlt. 716 M1ln St"et,
Hun1•"9lllfl BtKl\, 1:00 p.m. L 0.0 M. Moo~ No. 1151. •JS E. 1/lh
Sir-eel, Cos,, Me.1, l:IS p,m.
s.xi.tv fQr "" Prt..,rv1tlc<I 11\d
El\Cou•1g•mt't11 of 81rblr S-
Ou1tte1 SlnQl"ll In A1T,.rlc1, Ca•1•
MtSI CNIP1••' Colleo;ie P••~ Sclloctl.
lJIO Noire Dime, CC'>ll M1w, 1:•5
P.m. Ctli!ornl1 $0Cietv ol Psvchlllrle
lechnltl1n1, f1lrvil!w Ch 1D11 • ,
F1lrvlfw Sll!t How!11I 1...altorlum,
J;JO P.m. , '°"'n (ORJI Ac!lvt :1C·30 Club. Vlllto• Inn, 119 Mlflfll', 811111>1 hl•r>d, /;JO
p.m.
WEDNESDAY
Blut Fiim• Tou•m••1tn Club, Mt'"-"
V1rdc: Country Club, CC'>li /l.\e:1. J
1.m.
Cos!• Mt .. O!>hm"t Club, Cos1• Mo••
Goon '"" Coun1ry Club. lllll Gootl
Courr.e Or•""· co,11 Mt••· 11 "°°" t1U<1li1>9IO<I llo1dl E•Chll\\>O (lull,
Shttllon 8tac11 tnn, Hun!l"9IO..
8e1ch, 11 noon.
w~tmlnslor Oo!lmh t C l~b, 1(1"11'•
l 1ble ll.nt111r1nt, Wt•lmlnsltr. 11
~· ..:01!n Mt .. Ro11rv Club, Co,11 M"I
Goll anrt Counlr~ Club, Co>l• Ml .. ,
11 noon. • r ouM1ln V1lloY ElCh1n10 Club. Fr1n-
tOIJ' 11e1t•u"n~. 18151 11,•th a1.a.,
H11ntinglon 8e1c,., n·u p.rn,
DEATH NOTICES
All.EN
M1rv E. Allen. 219J El 11.0 Clrcit,
CO!oll Mt11. Ag! .... , Oil• of dOAlh,
A1111u11 J. 5ervlct• t nd intt•menl w•ll
ti" ""'d In S•. P1tdck'S (emnl•rv, F1l1 11;ver, M1.sac11usell•. 811!1 Mor-
lulfY· 1/41 5uPttlor, CC•I• Mew, tar-
"'•nl•fti dite-<!Ofi.
SEABORN
Edyl~ £. SetbOtn. 104 l!tn 51, Niw·
"l'fl BtlC!I Ai• U ; 01le cf dc:llh,
A.au" 1. !</tvivt1<:1 b• "usl>lnll. Haw-
1rd; ,.,0 SCI"•. L•rrv ~aQ<ll"n, Al1P.1;
•net Or. 110blt1 Se•born. Ntwi>Crt
Bco.ct" dau91\le•. Judi~ 5e1t>otn. Ma.in•1ln V<tw, C1lil. Service•, wea-
neia1v, 11 AM. 81!11 Ch1l"!I, 1i.1 s~
Pt rklr. COOl11 MtH, wllh P111cr Geo•~•
J. ll11•dl•t~'' ortlco•"""· 1n10rm,n1, F1or,.1ven Mtmor.11 P1r~. 81111 MO•·
IUl fl'• Ot-•on.
'\'RIGHT
ARBUCKLE & \VELSH
\Ytstcllff !\lortuary
"27 E. 17th St .. Costa J\.lesa
646-4888 • BALTZ J\IORTUARIES
Corona de.I l\lar OR 3-9-150
Costa l\1esa All 6-Z424 • BELL BROAD\VAY
l\IORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cost• l\Iesa
LI 1-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS
lhmtlngtoo Vahey
IUortuary
17111 Beach Blvd.
Huntlngtoo Beach
ltz..i771 • l\1cCOR~11CK LAGUNA
BEACH l\IORTUARY
1795 Laguna Canyon Roa d
Laguna Beach
494.9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
l\IE.\IORlAL fJARK
Ctme..ttry e l\tortuary
Cha pt I
3SOO Pacific Vitw Dri\·e
Newport Be•cft, Cllilorni•
IU.!700 • PEEK t'A~flLY
COLONIAi. FUNERAL
HO:O.IE
':SOI Bois• A\•C:.
\\'e11mln1te.r 113.JUS
• •
SHEPFER ~fORTUARV
Llipnl Bt.e~ •»-lW
Sa.a Oemetle •H.flM • S~UTHS' MORTUA/IY
tt7 IUala St.
llu.nlJnglon Bcacb _,
Tuesday, August 5, 1%fl
Mesa~s Plaza
Honor Platoon
Induction Set
dignitaries and a nlass enlist-
ment oath .
-~--~
I
• ' I
Narcotics
Violator
Sentenced
SANTA ANA A
\Vestmlnster men fa c Ing
Superior Court trial on escape,
burg1ary and re~lving stolen
property chargc!il was ruled
Monday lo be in danger of
becoming addicted to
El. TORO -They will get
togethe r Aug. 19 and
togetherness will continue to
be a way of life for about 80
Orange. County youths -from
peeling potatoes to pulling
triggers -and maybe even
rem iniscing about c e r l a I n
recruiters.
Brig. Gen , Henry W. llise,
con1mander of El Toro MCAS,
will deUver a talk during the
hour-long ceremony, before
the young recurits sey their
goodbyes to families and
girlfriends and depart.
! narcotics.
They will comprise a speeial
Orange County honor platoon
of young U.S. fitarine Corps
Inductees to be feled i n
ceremonies at South Coast
Plaza, Costa Mesa, prior to
embarkation for training.
Scheduled to begin at 11 : 45
a.m. in the plaza's Carousel
Court, the inductio n aremony
\viii feature band music,
prayer, addre sses by
Togetherness will continue
for approximately 10 weeks of
basic training at C a m p
Pendleton, after v.·hich each
n1an will receive orders send·
ing him u'herever he is need-
ed most.
The program is being
organized by the Corps and
the Orange County Chamber
of Commerce military affairs
committee, according I o
Chairman Gene A. Robens.
Regiottal Co11rt Goitag lip
1,000 New Irvine
Stude1its Orie1ited
First of four buildings in the North Orange Co unty
Regional Civic Center in Fullerton is scheduled for
completion by next January. The $1.5 million struc-
lure is designed to house six courtrooms. It is
located at the corner of i"larbor Boulevard and \Vest
Valley Vie\v Drive.
Dl'ug Rap
0l'a\VS T erm
Cou1ity Jf'.' onict1i Dies
After Bur1iing Self
Man Said
Addicted IRVINE -One thousand in·
coming students \\'ill be in-
troduced to the UC Irvine
campus during the month of
August.
Students and parents will be
taking part in the orientation
program designed to acquaint
lhe familles with the academic
and social life at the universi-
ty.
Each v.·eekend a different
SANTA ANA -An El Cajon group of students and parents SANTA ANA -A Costa
v.·ill come to the campus, live t-.tesa trucker who invited his
in the dorms, eat in dining prosecution on drug charges ORANGE -fo.lrs. Judy v.·as burned \1·hen he al-man accused of the armed
halls, attend sample lectures 1vhen he invited narcotics ~lontgomery, a 25-ycar-old tempted to put out the flames robbery of a Dana Point bail
agents into his home has been Orange housewi.fe ivho set lire 1vith his bare hands. shop has been found by a and attend several planned sentenced 10 90 days in Orange Superior Cour t judge to be in
social events. County Jail. to herself last T hu r s d a y danger of becoming addicted
This weekend. the first Billie Ray Kilgore. 31 , of 341 following an argu nicnt v.·Hh J ~a J-f clbra ~39 to narcotics.
group of 280 students and E. 16th Place, drew that he r husband , is dead. Judge Wil!iai n Sp e i r s
relatives arrived. jail term from Superior Court The woman suffered third ordered the comn1ittal of
They will be given tours of Judge William Speirs v.·hen he degree burns over 80 percent Clc1ss to 1\·(cel Ralph E. Lemke, 24, to the
the campus, special group pleaded gµilty to possession of of her body when she doused Ca Ii for n i a Rehabilitation
Judge William C. Speirs
ordered John Hill Miller, 21 , of
88%2 St. Andrew·s Ave., to be
committed to lhe Califomia
Rehab ilitaUon Center at Norco
for an indeJlnite term.
Miller and anolher paticnl
escaped from the psychialtic
"'ard of the Orange County
iledical Center last Dec. 14
and were recaptured three
\\"eeks later. The \Yesuninste.r
man ll'as being held on ac-
cusations thaL he was a
member of a burglary ring
\\"hich conce ntrated on the
theft of dru gs and business
equipment from the officell or
lluntington Beach physicians.
Miller's only apparent con-
cern Monday 1\·as to get an
answer to a question that he
claims Lo ha ve asked
repeated ly during his long so-
journ in Orange County Jail.
~1iller complained that the
prison chaplain had refused
many limes to allow him lo
read •·The Aq ua rian Gosptl of
Jesus the Christ" liJ. the
grounds that ihe "~aplaio
sa id he didn 't believe in it."
~1 iller got his book. Judge
Speirs didn't commi l himself
on a matter of belief but he
did give !he p r is oner
permission to read the con-
troversial volume. Countian's
Death Said
Accidental
discussions on the campus life dangerous drugs. He was also her clothing with paint thinner LA JIABRA -The 1959 Center at Norco. Armed rob-
and a spe«h by Chancellor placed on three years pro-an d turned herself into a graduating class o( La Habra bery and drugs c h a r g e s ;============~
Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. balion. human torch on the fron t lawn High School is planning a 10-against Lemke will be
This is the third year UCI Kilgore was arrested Jul y 8 or the family home at 18831 year reunion to be held on suspended pending his release.
has introduced new students to v.·hile federal narcotics agents Vine St. She died Saturday at October 4. Lemke \~;as one of fi ve
the campus. The student and were serving him with a copy the Orange County Medical Members of the t9a9 class persons arrested by sheriff's
parents are charged $21 for of an indictment charging him Center. are asked to contact the Re-deputies last March 23 shortly
room and board and during with smuggling marijuana into Authorities sairi r.1 rs. union Con1miltee, 3042 t-.faple after the holdup of Phil's Fish
ON THE TUBE
For ih1 D•1l 911idt to wh1t'1
h111p1nin'll on TV, r11d TV
WEE K -d;11riDut1d wah th1
S1l11rd1y edition of the DAILY
PILOT. the weekend program. this country from r.1exico. ~fontgomery·s husband, Pau l. Ave .• Fullerton. and Bait Shop. SANT A ANA -Oransc1-~~~~-'--=-~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~-=-~-'-~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~~~""==================c=
County Coroner's deputies
have ruled the dealh of a 15-
yea r-old Cypress youth found
in the v.•ater off Surfside an
accidental drowning.
The body of Gregory C.
Smith, 6790 Tahiti Dr ive, \vas
spotted at 6: 15 a.m. last
'rhursday by Seal Beach po.
lice, 152 feet east of Anderson
Avenue.
Nude except for a calendar
\Vristwalch stopped at July 23,
he "'as taken to Smith's llu n-
tington Beach mortuary where
the autopsy was performed.
The red-haired youngster
was last reported to have been
seen early Tuesday morning
\\'ilh four fri ends at llun-
tington City Beach.
Police officers arrested his
juvenile companions for being
drunk and violating curfew at
lhal timr.
fhry theorize that Smith
1nay have seen the officers
corning and fled into the surf
to avoid being arrested.
The other four boys have
been released to their parents.
SANTA ANA -A Santa Ana
nu1n accused of murder \\"hen
officers found the savagely
beaten body or his wife has
been sentenced to one to five
years in state prison on a less·
er charge.
Superior Court J u d g e
\Villiam Speirs handed that
jail term to Donald Joseph
Brackelsbery, 34, with the
defendant's plea of guilty to
an amended charge of in-
voluntary mansl aughter.
Brackelsbery was arrested
last Feb. 3 when pollce
discovered the mutilated body
of his v.·ife at the couple's
home. Bracke\sbery·ll first ac-
count or the death was that he
found he r body v.'hen he
returned home from u·ork the
previous evening.
Murder charges were filed
when it was discovered th:it
Brackelsbery had called Santa
Ana police the previous even-
ing lo report a <1uarrcl '''ilh
his \\"ife .
Man O eared
Of Riot Rap
SANTA ANA -A Superior
Court judge ha!! cleared a
Norwiilk youth of charges filed
agai nst him follov.•ing his
alleged participation in a Hun-
tington Beach riot last April
20.
Judge Raymond Vincent
treed William F. '\'right, 21.
itfter a jury filed back lo court
to re•cal that It was hopclrs.11·
ly deadlocked follov.·lng seven
houri or deli beration. Judge
Vincent declared a ntistri11I
and agreed to rule on the
charaes from the bench.
\
•
,.... ef J/ {)--"
'iVhen we se nd a telephone Install er to put in a
new telephone or an extension , he'll do his best
to see that you get what you wa nt. Put the tele-.,.-A
phone where you want. Give you the model you
want. The color you want. His main job is to see
that you're satisfied. That (ii;\
way we 'll be satisfi ed. ~ Pa cific Telephone
We're here to help.
• '
I ;
i ' I
I
Fountain Valley Today's Final
N.Y. St.oeb
VO~. 62, NO. 186, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, '1969 TEN CENTS
Syndicat·e Club's Troubles Continue
, DAIL T P'ILOT Sti ll ,,..I•
FIGHTING CITY HALL
Club Owner Covell
Hanoi Cuts
Plans After
U.S~ Pullo11t
SAIGON (UPI) -Communh,l forces in
South Vietnam, responding to current
American mi!ltary withdraY:als as an
Allied concession of defeat, tui.ve can-
celled plans for new offensives and may
permit the war simply to fade away,
military sources reported today.
Ba:;ing their report on intelligence com·
munique:i. the sources said Nor\h y1et-
nam apparenlly believes it can achieve
jls · goals in SOUth Vietnam without
furl~r military efforts or major pro-
portions.
A North Vietnamese army officer cap-
tured last week told Allied interrogators
he had been instructed to inform his
troops that they appeared lo have v;on
the war "because the Amcrican.s are
going home," the sou.recs sa_id. .
A ranking U.S. officer said Hanoi, for
the present time at least. seems CQntent
to "more or Jess sit back and watch u.s go
home." .
.. North Vietnamese goals remain
unchanged," he said, "and H~noi ~O\V
belie\·es these goals can be lull1ltcd m a
lqw·keyed military effort/' ..
Anoth'er sowr-<:e said North Vietnam and
the Viet Cong may simply c?nlin~e. the
seven-week old fighting Juli 1ndefln1tcly
and allow tile ")Var to "fade away."
American troop withdra"'•als !rom
S:iuth Vietnam increased to about 12,200
Tuesday with the departure of anolher
150 army troops, "''ho had been assigned
to quartermaster and postal units. The
cutback began July 8 under a Nixon ad·
ministration program.
Although grou1:d fighting has fallen of!
to little more than scattered skirm.ish_es.
American B52 bombers arc conltnwng
dally raids over suspected Communist
positions.
Jn overnight raids Monday. the
bombers hit targeL~ in the northern sec·
tor around the abandoned Marine ~utP4?5t
at Khe Sanh and also struck against .1n·
filtration corridors from 4~ to 80 miles
rrom Saigon.
f\.1ilitary communiques o~ ground
fighting of f\.1onday said Allied troops
made ••light but CQntinued .contacl" wilh
Communist forces. They said at least 208
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
were killed in the skirmishes. American
casualties listed for ~1onday "''ere one
dead and seven "''ounded._Soijth-Viet-
namest casualties were cmscribed as
"light. ..
Nixon Plan11in g
-To Pull 100,000
\\'ASHINGTO N !UPIJ -President
Nixon is expected to tinnounce a pullout
Qf 50.000 more American troops from
Vietnam In late August and may schedule
another Wllhdrawal of 50.000 righting men
in October, it was learned today.
This means Ni.~on will try to withdraw
125,000 troops by the end of the~Year and
fulfill hi's expressed hope of beating
former Defense Secretary Clark M. Cllf-
lord's timetable of 100,000.
An administration source said Nixon
and Gen. Earle G. \\'heeler, chairman of
the Joint Chief11 of sLaff, have agreed the
with<trawal of 50,000 more Gls is feaiible
now. Nb:on will 11nnounce il later this
monlh.
On the basis of \Vheeler's on.the-spot
5urvey of the Vietnam militia and Nix-
on's own talk• and observations during
his roond-thc·world trip, lhcy rt:partedly
h1tve m. another target In lhe fall of
I0,000 troops In the phased withdrawal.
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of HM O.llY !'lllt ltltf
''lf there's another outburst you "·e
going to be cleared out of here ... we 've
got policemen here to clear you out ."
Huntington Beach f\1ayor Jack Green
raised his voice to regain control of a
tense situation in council chambers I\1on·
day night.
Youth in the overflow cro"'·d had conic
to back Gilbert Covell, 32, in his running
feud with cily hall. TI1e latest eon·
frontation was over renewal of Covelrs
business license to operate the teen·age
nightclub Syndicale 3000 at 302 Pacific
Coast Highway.
Covell's running fire at police and city
officials apparently fueled the emotions
of the young persons in the overflow
crowd of more than 130. In regaining
order, the ma yor referred to plainclothes
police mlngllng with the cro"'d.
During the emotion-charged eon·
sideration of license renewal in the aging
downtown area, Covell maintained he had
spent more than $15,000 at city urging to
bring his building up to standard.
Councilman Ted Barilett asked why !he
operation in the pai* had encountered so
n1any problems. Covell said the nightclub
had never had a fight, served no alcohol
and welcon1ed parents.
Police Chief Earle Robitaille said there
had been ~not only fight s bul an
unreported shooting. Covell jumped up
from his seat at this. Mayor Green said,
"Now Gil, you sit down."
Said Hobitaille. "Just a cursory glance
al the narCQtics violations 11·ould be
C'nough to convince anyone that it is not a
normal business."
Robita ille labeled the club a ref!.lge for
runa1vay use and center for disruption by
Covelrs own admission. A police mem:>
p,.ucticitag f o,. Cur1aivul
.liuntington Beach Lifeguards test their balance in prcpara~.1011 for
chariot race \Vhich will be part ·of 4th annual Ocean Life,i;;uard Slnn·
mer Carnival Friday at Huntington Beach Pier. From left arc (first
row) Hal DcJong, Bill \Velch , John Mattos and (second ro1vl Doug:
Kirk and Ray Bray. On top is Brian Gerold. Carnival gets under \\'ay
a".. 7:30 p.m.
Sanitarium W ins Okay
With Beach Council Split
A 152·bcd sanitarium to care for elderly
persons received split Huntington Beach
council approval this morning despite op-
position of area residents including one
"'·ho referred to "crazy people.''
The protracted hearing apparer.lly sap·
ped the last of council energies as it end-
ed at 1: 10 a.n1. Remaining items \\'ere
bundled over to another meeting. Coun-
cilme~ began at 4:30 p.m. Monday.
The 4·2 council split overrul<!d a 4-3
planning commission splil denying the
applicatior. of Major D Corp. The "Type ,. ,.,_.:,. .. -
t, facility" is to be locatrd on 3.36 acres
on the south side of Holland Drive orf
Beach Boulevard.
The R-5 (office .professional) zoning of
the site allows the facilitv b~t the ap-
pl icants had sought an eascmeAt of park·
ing requirements.from 102 spaces to 70.
A petition bearing 77 signatures in op-
posilion to the facility had been presented
during lhe planning com mission phase
despite corporation eHorls to r.ase pro-
perty owners' objections.
Nixon Hits Coas t Satu1·day
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon and hi• family will ny
to San Clement this weekend for a month-long stay at their ne'Y hiUtbp
house overlooking Lhe Pacific.
The Nixons are scheduled lo reach their San Clemente home Sat-
urday and will not return to \Va shinglon un'ti1 ·sept. 7.
Tt.icia Nixon, 13, and Julie Nixon Eisenhower, 21, accompanied by
her husband, David Eisenhower, 21, also will spend the month al the new
Spanish-style San Cle1ncnte villa .
'r·oung ·Eisenhower has quit hi s summer job as a re5earcher for n
Senate committee. He will return to Amherst College Sept. 16 for hi s
senior year. Mrs. Nixon said she cxpcct5 to be busy next \Veek "'ith pre·
parations !or a dinner Aug. 13 In Los Angeles, honoring the Apollo ·11
' ' \ astronauts.
---------L--------
on the matter listed 70 namrs of
narcotics arrest in the club or its vicinity
from January :9, 1968 to April 7, 1969. It
also contained h\'O pages of remark!.
assertedly made by Covell in the
presence of police officers. Cou~cilman Qarlletl said to Covell,
"can't you have a clearer image? The
place is always dirty. If you keep the
place neat and-clean, I think it would im·
prove the image 1.000 eprcent. You're a
nice clean guy, you 're a pretty handsonie
fellow."
Covell said he had spent $18,000 in legal
fees and court costs fighting harassment
and had been too busy to keep the place
tidy.
He said it had also been necessary to
have private investigators check on bank
accounts of councilmen and other city of·
ficials.
Covell said he had been smeared in the
press by Insinuations of police. He said no
person arrested after an .. alleged gang
rape" had ever been brought to trial.
He said the local press "don't have the
guts to print It."
I-le cited comments assertedly made by
a judge critical or liunlir.gton Beach
police and made accusations against
Chief Robitaille. He said pending sen-
tence of him (Covell) Wednesday for not
leaving the scene of a riot will be ap-
pealed.
Covell claimed lhal he had offered to
pay the city for a police officer to sit in
his premises but had been denied . He
said persons under 16 were allowed at
another establishment and sflid the city
had not observed its own curfew law dur·
ing the recent city-backed rock concert.
Covell referred to martial law in the ci-
ty and said "the pres.s doesn't seem
"
obliged to print my side or the story ...
Mayor Green asked, "If we've beer\_ JO
horrible, why is it we allowed you to ope:n
your business in the {irst place."
Covell said it was because he had ob-
tained the needed 93-off·slrett parking
spaces. Green said, "don't you think tt
would have been simpler if we wanted to
harass you, just to deny the use-
variance."
At one point after emotional outbursts
frotn the audience, Mayor Green cut In
on Covell with a co1nment, "I'm sorry,
Gil : this is not pertinant at all ."
Said Covell, "If I'm supposed to be
such a big gangster or dope pusher, why
don't they come down to arrest me?"
Councifmen agreed unanimously not to
renew the license and 11t the city · al·
torney's recomendations included written
records about the business In 'official
hearing reeord apparently for a future
civil case in defending the action.
Cycle Riot .uelled
Valley Police1nen Stoned; 10 Arrested
Several fo~ountain Valley police offie<?rs
1vere stoned by a barrage of decorative
rocks Monday night when they atlempted
l11 break up a noi!iy party o f
n1otorcyclisls.
Nine adults and one juvenile· were ar·
rested in the midnight melee on a variety
of charges ranging from pro"'·ling to
~1ssault with a deadly weapon.
Sgt. William DeNisi said Fountain
Valley police units were originally sum-
moned to 8911 Martin Avr. al 12:30 a.m.
lo answer a complaint of excessive noise.
Police sald they found a loud party in
progre.Ss at the residence, most of its oc-
cupants wearing motorcycle g a n g
regalia.
Officers said they saw a man and a
1\·oman running around the fronl y11rd
and atlen1pted to arrest them for
prowling.
Valle y , Mesa
Studying Best
Place for Bridge
Studies lo determine the best spot for
another bridge Spanning the Sant& Ana
River bel"'een Costa f\.1esa and Fountain
Valley are under "'ay, but nothing
definite is expected for two years.
Under current development patterns in
l!ic west Orange County region, the loca·
lion would appear to be a linkup of Sun-
llower Avenue on the east and Ellis
Avenue on the valely side.
Fvuntain Valley City Council members
11·iH discuss the matter in study session
prior to their regular 8 o'clock meeting
tonight.
Costa f\.tesa City Engineer George A.
~1 ::idsen said officials on the Mesa side of
tb,• ri ver and county authorities have
prrtty well agreed in theory on the
r.e"'·est proposed location.
Costa f\.1esa City Councilman Willard T.
Jordan said Monday he is delighted at the
news that a crossing further inland from
one originally proposed and holly pro-
te~ted is planned.
Representatives of the ri.1esa \lerde
Homeowners' Associ ation bitterly fought
!ht plan four years ago when a crossing
\\'!'! suggested at Gisler Avenue. mat·
chlng up to Garfield Avenue in Fountain
Valley.
.. All we 're trying to do now is study the
alignment so we'll know where to go -if
and when we do -but the plan for a
bridge is at least two years away,''
f\1ndsen explained.
No cost estimate has been made, but
Cu!ila Mesa and Fountain Valley will pay
for the eventual bridge approaches, while
tht county, will pick up the cost of .the
span itself. .
f'unds for the job will corie from sta!P.
ga!'olinc taxes and the county's arterial
highv.·ay~ financing program.
One of the primary considerations in
picking a new site Is detennlnation of the
future Orange Freeway route roughly
along the river course -if the st a t e
doesn't end it at the San Diego Freewey.
"The bridge projctt v.·ill come up when
tho demand is there," A1adsen..conUnued,
''but wc'n not carrying·that 'mu~ traff\c
on nearby Talbert Avenue yet.''
Sloc k Jtlarke u
NE\V YORK fAP) -'Mle stock market
closed almost even today, after moving
n11rrowly throughout the swlon. (See
quotations, Pages 10-11 ).
'nle Dow Jon 1 fndustrlal avtragc at
I p.m. was oU Ut a\ 820.77.
Officer!i n1anaged lo chase down the
"·oman. IS.year-old Barbara E. Martin of
6212 Pickel St., Garden Grove. then clos·
cd in on her · companion identified as
f\.1ichael B. Tolin, 19, of 411 Alabama St.,
No. 2. Huntington Beach.
Tolin was taken into custody for
prowling, resisting arrest and for posses·
ion of possible dangerous drugs.
ri.usg Martin was placed under arrest
{or prO\\'ling.
Officers U1en entered the home to quiet
the party but faced a hostile gathering.
One of the policeman, officer ~dward
Parker, was physically assaulted by two
or the partygoers, police sald.
Jack W. Ha"•kihs, 18, 8911 Martin Ave .,
Fountain Valley, occupant of the house
and Daniel A. Campbell, 19, of 8852
De:Ville Circle. Huntington Beach, were
arrested by officers and booked on
charges o! assaulting a police officer.
As police units hauled the pair away,
the remaining members of the party
began hurling rocks at the policemen,
Sgt. DeNisi said, striking but not lnjurin&
several of them.
Police, ~trengthcned by several unit!
from ~luntington Beach , then moved into
the house and arrested six more person5
on charges or assault wtth a deadly
weapon.
Police Chief C. W. Michaelis said the
adults taken into custody on suspicion of
assault with a deadly weapon are :
Christopher A. Gray, 19, of a:rn Bryant
Drive, Huntington Beach; Larry G.
Rowe, 23, of 17301 Ward St., Fountain
Valley; John L. Myman, 19, of JM42
1t1ayfJower Lane, Huntington Beach; Joo
C. Lamberg, 23, of 12012 Laureleen St.,
Garden Grove, and Mark T. Oewdney, 18,
of W02 Terrier Drive, Huntington Beach.
Actioti llp to Citu
Election Code Violations
111 Valley Recall Studied
Eight of Lh e ten candidates In the Foun·
lain Valley recall election Sept. Z3 may
have violated the election codes in
various ways pertaining to designation or
"principal" profession, vocation or oc·
cupation and other code provisions.
But no one is certain today that
anything will be done about it.
The Orange County Voters Registration
offi ce is a"'•are of the code provisions and
possible violations but has passed the
responsibility on to the Fountain Valley
City Clerk's office.
"Ifs their election and we have nothing
lo do with it with the exception of pro-
viding the city with an up-to-date list of
registered vote r s. ' ' said Ed
Arnold, deputy registrar of voters this
n1oming.
City Clerk f\.1ary Cole is on vacation
and her deputy, f\.1rs. Evelyn Grippo. said
today, "I haven't checked the ballot
designations (deadline for candidate fil-
ings was last Thursday, July 31 ). Jf they
are wrong J will have to check them oUt
with Cily Attorney Ed 1.1artin this af-
ternoon."
Arnold said it was not clear whether
legal action would be taken against can-
didates who filed incorrect designations
or occupations.
"we·11 have to check with the County
Coun~l." he advised.
Discrepancies cited include using more
than lhree words to designate a can·
didate 's "principal'' profession, vocation
(Ir occupation and faillng to use the same
occupation that appears on the can-
didate's affidavit of registration.
50 COIHP.ETE
IN. FOTORAMA
The r·ororama ci.mera cOOU!sl. ~·hich
offers more than l500,(Qr the One Plclurj?
that wlnl lhf: gr&nJ prLte, drew.Ml entries
ht Its fl!'st week of competition which
closed at noon last Thursday. ,
The lop three pbotogniphs arc publish·
. ~ ~~~~or!;a~e!k ~~t~:;: 'llirJ~!:~~
event are ~Ing aetepted now at all DAl-
1.Y PILOT offices (stfl rules. Page 4).
Grano prlzt winner wnl be. selected dur.
Ing fotorama at Fa,hkln l~ind Aug. 21·
23. -
'-
Additionally, according to Jim ~layer
or the CC1unly elections' office. most can-
didates violated "the spirit or the code"ln
filing thcir list of qualifications for the
position.
The code stales that the statement or
qualification "may include name, age,
occupation and education of the candidate
and a brief description of not more than
150 words of the candidate's qualifica·
lions."
Many or the candidates reportedly, In
addition to career and civic organization
credits, indul!e din Campaign promises
and philosoph es.
This, according to Mayer, Is not In ac-
cordance with the election code. but he
quickly added, ''It's up to the Fountain
Valley City Clerk. We have nothing to do
with it in this election,"
According to law , candidat«:s .have
three days to make corrections after
notification by the-City Clerk and Mr~
Grippo was not certain today when that
notification would be given. "It's up to
the city attorney." she stated.
Orange Coast
Weather
!lazy suns,hine, the weather.
man·s euphemism for foggy days,
will prev,ail through Wednesday
along the Orange Coast, wllh our
high or 72 more appealing than
the inland area's 93.
INSIDE TODA V
Californill's n1ost promintnt
Democrat, Jesse Unruh .!G!J.! It's
governor or ttotlaing-lf ht rlOll
qt au ....l an~ ·that, he's ttot ln:-
'trested in challenging Sen.
George f.1krphu. Poge 8.
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1 DAILY "LOT H
DAILY l'ILOT S!llf l'INiho
PAUL, MARGO, BRENT UHLAN SAFE AFTER SJDETRIP
The Family Dachlhund Wat in the Bag9a51• Compartment
Laguna Skyjack Victim
.
Says Cuba Flight 'Scary'
"A man has stepped Into the cabin and
directed us to fly to Havana, Cuba. Do
not be alarmed."
'Those words, uttered by the captain of
a Trani World Airlines Boeing 727 over
Wichita, Kan., last week, began an unex-
pected advent.ure for a ~1ission Viejo
minister and hill family and lhe president
of a Laguna Beach manufacturing girm.
''The scariest part of the trip was Ian·
ding at Havana. We came down during
the tall end of a large storm. The plane
as it came through \he clouds suddenly
lilted and wu buffeted like a ping pon&
ball.'' the Rev. Mr. Paul Uhlar said to-
day. Mr. Uhlar, his wife Margo and their 3-
)'ear-old son, Brent, along with Donald ,
Bandit Demands
Cash, But Gets
Punch Instead
A gunman entered the ~1all Uquor
r;t.ore at 16369 Bol~a Chica St., Huntington
Beach, fi.tonday night, but instead of col·
lecting the day's receipts he received a
punch in the eye from tile store manager.
Police said the man, wearing a neatly
trimmed beard, walked into the store at
10:2tl p.m. and told store manager Harry
Straczynski, "This is a stickup. I want all
your bills."
\Vhen the bandit hesitated at emptying
the cash register, apparently lost heart
and decided to flee , Straczynski followed
him out the door and struck him in the
eye with his fist, pollce said, knocking off
the gunman's prescription sunglasses.
As the bearded robber ran across the
parking lot lo a waiting car with a
getaway man, the store manager said he
beard two shots fired al him .
Police found no expended cartridee
cues which could be used in tracking
down the criminals but will examine the
iunglasses for fingerprints.
DAILY PILOT
01.lNOC COAST f'lllLISl'llNCi (QMl'AN'f
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Barda, president of Telonics Indust ries.
were four af 131 people aboard the flight
hijacked last Thursday by a prisoner who
held 'a rawr blade to lhe throat of a T\VA
stewardess.
The man v.•as described by Mr. Uhlar
as a "middle·aged, clean.cul" man who
looked "like a businessman." Uhlar saw
the hijacker only as the prisoner v.·as led
through the plane by armed Cuban
soldiers in Havana.
The :ID-year.old minister is associate
pastor of the Mount of Olives Lutheran
Church in Mission Viejo. He and his
family Jive at 26622 Carretas Drll'e,
f.Ussio n Viejo. The family arr ived in Los
Angeles Friday.
Barda, 38, lives In Laguna Beach at
1074 Van Dyke Dri l'e. He heads the
Laguna-base d Telonics f i r n1 which
manufactures micro-wave components.
Whil e in Havana, the passengers were
given ha1n sandwiches. the only tfting
they had to eat for 13 hours. The hi·
jacking had interupted lunch aboard the
plane, 1'-lr. Uhlar said. They were in the
Cuban capital for five hours.
He said that the Cubans were "\'ery
nice and very courteous." Soldiers look
the names, addresses and occupations of
all the passsngers.
ti.fr. Uhlar said that during the ifavana
stay, it rained continuously. No special
problems came up. he added.
The minister did not know "·hat hap.
pened to the hijacker.
Police Follo'v
Beacl1 'Maihnan
A lfuntlngton Beach mail carrier
delivered an innocuous looking whlto
package to the home of Tim T. Timmons,
15821 Sherbeck Lane, around noon f.1on·
day.
But even be.fore he opened it. narcotics
detectives stationed around his ho1ne
assertedJy knew the contenL~: five
packages, each conlai'ning 10 hand·rolled
marijuana cigarettes.
Pol ice allege Timmons mailed the
package to himself from Vietnam. They
were informed of its contents through a
U.S. Customs agent from San P@dro.
Timmons, who v.·as back at his Hun·
tington Beech home whf!n the goods ar·
rived, signed a receipt for the parcel,
then took it inside and opened It, police
said.
Detectivts swooped inside the housf!
and claimed they caught Timmons 'A'lth
the package as he allegedly fled through
a rear bedroom window.
Timmons, 29, was ;rresled on suspicion
or illegal transportation and possession or
marijuana.
La'v Enf 01·cement
Fm1ds Received
Good police standards f'elted U1e City
of ltuntington Beach a $5.209 check to
keep up the good ""ork. Pollce Chief Earle Robitaille pre·
senl.ed the check to the city t.1onday
night. Jt wae the dty11 share o( the 1969
aliOcaUon from the C.lifomia Pe.act
Officers' Training Fund.
The prime ob}edive of the training
r.rogram. said Robltallle. is to rai~ the
e\·el of competence of law enforcement
offictrs. During the fiscal year e:ndtd .Jurie 30.
Jtunllngton Beach Police Department
trained II new officers and l'A'O IStrgeant
supervl$0!'S . Funds for the statewide
training program are collected In local
courts 1.t1d for"'arded lo the slate
treasurer.
•.
FBI Enters
Search for
Coed Slayer
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP)
Authorities investigating the slayng o(
iseven Michigan college coeds and tetn·
age girls pressed a nationwide hunt today
for Andrew f.1anuel, 25, last seen in Sa·
llnu, Callf. ~
The FBI entered the investigation for
the first time whe.n a federal fugitive
warrant was issued against fi.1anuel Mon·
day in connection with the theft of a
house trailer in Michlgan.
Manucl, tall and heavy, with a tat·
tooed left forearm, wa~ believed by
authorities to have journeyed to
California in June with John N. Collins,
22-year..old college student charged with
the most recent of the seven girl killings
in the Ann Arbor·Y1>5itanU arf!B, a series
which began in August, 1967. Manuel and
Collins lived in .the,same Ypsil anti room·
ing house.
The trailer was found over the weekend
near the Salinas home of
Manuel's parents.
Three California girls murdered this
summer-two near Salinas and one near
Lo.! Angeles -were similar in some
respects to the seven in Michigan . One or
the California victims was wearing only
one earring. Se\'eral of the Michigan girls
also had an earring missing when their
bodies were found.
A fourth woman was killed In
California but federal and s t a l e
authorlties have not included her in the
present investigation. They said the death
of Susan r.1. lfennessy, 17, of Seaside,
Calif., occurred before the time Collins
.1nd Manuel were reported to have reach·
ed the Salinas area. Her body was found
June 17.
Edward Carlbom , 22, a recen t graduate
-0f eastern Michigan University in
Ypsilanti, whose stolen motorcycle was
found in the garage used by Collins, said
J\!onday a State Police officer told him
there was evidence one or two girls had
been slai n in a trailer. State Police
declined comment.
A sheriff's spokesman in Salinas said
Sgt. Ken Christensen and Detective
Thomas Nasser of the 1t1ichigan Slate
Police were making complete laboratory
chec!: of the trailer for possible clues.
Collins is charged with the murder of
Karen Sue Beineman, an Ea stern
l\tichiean coed .
Authorities in Michigan declined to
answer questions about Manuel, kno"·n
also as Richard Diaz Jr. and James
Skotak. but Sgt. Christensen said in
Salinas police know J\1anuel was there
•·as recently as la&:t Thursday."
Huntington Dog
Goes on 1'rip
Witl1 LSD Dose
Toby, a little mutt belonging to Pam
Bone of 307 1~ .. ~1ain St., Huntington
Beach, took an LSD trip MoQday.
Tiie dog's first experience with lhf!
drug did not servf! to expand his con·
sciousness. He became very sick.
Janice Shaffer, also a resident of the
same address, a downtown hotel, told
police she was in Miss Bone's room "'hen
an acquaintance entered and told her the
clog was going to die anyway and that he
w1s going to "let it get its head" before
it @x.pired.
He took a gold·colored tablet fro m a
tinfoil package, police said, crushed il
and fed it to the dog with water .
Miss Shaffer told police she heard the
lli·yea r·old boy, a d1shv.·asher in a local
snack shop, tell others in the hall that he
had given the dog LSD.
Police officers who later examined the
dog said it was so v.·eak it couldn't stand
up and appeared to be sleeping most of
the time.
The boy may face a charge of cruelly
to animals, if the Society for. the Preven·
lion of Cru@lty to Animals (SPCA)
decides to seek a complaint asainst the
)'Outh, police said.
--
Clotv11ing It Vp
Comedian Milton Berl e, surrounded by Ringling
Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus clowns,
displays hi s face-making style. Berle presented
diplomas Monday in Inglewood to clowns graduat·
ing from official Clown College of circus. College
trains clowns to bring happiness to all people of all
ages.
1st Speech Since Wreck
l(ennedy Hits Safeguard
ABM System as 'Folly'
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edward
~1. Kennedy (0.Mass.). denounced the
Safeguard antiballistic missile (ABM)
system today as a folly.
Kennedy, a longtime foe of the ABM
system proposed by President Nixon to
protect U.S. offensive missile :sites, made
the statement in his first Senate speech
since the July 18 au to accident which
n:sulted in the drowning af a secretary
and clouded his political future.
Kennedy said on the eve of a ·crucial
Senate yote on the controversial issue
that both the United States and Russia
soon may have enough warheads with
enough accuracy to wipe out each other's
underground missile silos, regardless of
defenses.
The Kennedy spee<:h came as Sen.
~tlke Gravel (0.Alaska), formally added
his oppositon -already counted on by
ABri.1 foes -to the Safeguard.
Kennedy joined Gravel In urging the
Senate to support legislation to bar ABJ\I
deployment for a year.
Kennedy said in a prepared text it
would be "a clear signal that the United
States, far and way the world's most
powerful nation, was see king to slow and
eventually stop the otherwise perpetual
motion or the arms race."
Fly ing Debris
Killed Nurse
A nurse 'A'ho stopped to help at the
sctne or a Dana Point traffic accident
and \\'BS killed Sunday in a resuJting
crash was fatally injured by flying
debris, investigators explained today.
Mrs. Evelyn J. Connors, 4S, of 27042
Calli? Maria. Capistrano Beach, may ha ve
been struck by a whiplashing guy
\\'lN! fro111 a dO\l'ned po"'er pole v.·hcn it
\l'as snapped in two moments later by an
an1bulance.
Accounts of the tragedy J\londay ga1·e
the erroneous impression th at the South
Coast Community Hospital nur~e and a
second injured victim were hit by the La
Paz Ambulance, headed north "'ith an ill
person.
Fred ~tolina Jr .. 37. of 1965 Sherington
Place. Newport Beach, had his left leg
amputated 1n suraery following the ac·
cidcnt which occurred on Pacific Coast
iligh"·ay just north of Dana Point.
He said It \\'ould be "folly to spend
billions constructing an In e ff e c: ti v e
defense around missiles which may
themselves soon be obsolete."
Other ABM opponents said Gravel's
vote gave them .iQ votes -one short of
the total needed to assure victory. But a
leading ABM supporter, Sen. Henry M.
Jackson (0.Wa~h.), predicted t he
safeguard would be approved by a 51·4~
vote.
The \Vhite House said President Nixon
was doing no eleventh. hour, background
campaigning for the ABM from his
retreat at Camp David, Md. Asked if this
meant Ni.zon felt he had made his case
for the Safeguard, press st<:retary
Ronald Ziegler said:
"The indications of support from the
people and Congress indicates that the
case has been well made and accepted."
Senate Democratic leader M i k e
~1ansfield, an ABM foe, :said even U the
Safeguard is approved the margin will be
so narrOV": that "wf! -will win In the long
run" because he said it would show that
the Senate now intends to carefully
scrutinize all military projects before ap+
proving them.
l11dians Pow W o'v
In Huntington
Satnl'da y Night
About ~ Indians, representing 16
tribes, are expected to gather at the llun·
tingon Beach Recreation Ce nter Sal¥rday
night for an all·lndian outdoor pow V.'O"'·
A variety of dances, including buffr..lo,
v.ar, hoop and eagle dances will be
presen ted beginning at 8 p.m. on the
center 's baseball dia1nond, 17th . and
Orange Streets.
John Knifechicf. president of the
Orange County Indian Center at Stanton.
said tribesmen from all over Southern
Ca!!fornia '1·i ll participate in the gather·
ing, including Pawn~. Cheyenne, Otoe.
Pul'blo, Navajo, Blackfeet, Hopl, Sioux
and t.1i ssion lndians.
Admission is open lo :he public without
charge .
Knirechief said the pow wow w 111
become a 1nonthly event at Huntington
Beach since it is one of the fe1v locations
v.·here the <lrums µsed for the tribal
dances do not db;turb the neighbors.
Other po'' wo"'s will be held at 8 p.m.
on the first Saturday of the n1onth
throughout the winter.
Young Sm·f er
Cheats Death
At Bal Wedge
Frantic resuscitation ef£orts by two
lifeguards f.1ond ay afternoon saved the
life of an IS.year-0ld body surfer found
floating face down in treacherous surf off
the Balboa Peninsula wedge.
The t'vo guards, one of them an off-du·
ty Los Angeles County lifeguard , restored
the breathing and heartbeat of Steve
1\1eyers, 18, San Digeo, who broke hit
back and nearly drowned after going
"over the falls" on a wa ve he v.·as riding.
ro.1eyers, whose heart stopped breathing
three limes during the surfside reviva l
efforts, was in serious condition today
Hoag t.1emorial Hospital aides said. '
Credited with saving the youth's IJfe
"·ere Craig Coffin, 21, of 128 Via Havre ~ido Isle, the off-duly Los Angele;
lifeguard, and Newport Lifeguard Lt. Al
Irwin, who was on routine patrol near
"N" Street whe n ~feyers was brought in· to shore.
Three other body surfers, all ~from
Riverside, first noticed the victim
floating face down 70 feet from shore
lifeguards said. '
They brought him Into shallow water
and summoned aid from Coffin, who was on the beach.
Coffin adm inistered mouth·lo·n1outh
resuscitation and heart massage on the
victim while the three youths went for
more help.
They found lr\vin patrolling in his
lifeguard jeep. He called for an am·
bulance. thtn relieved Coffi n.
A lifeguard rescue boat also arrived on
the scene to assist the guards on shore.
Lifeguards identified the three swim·
mers who discovered Meyers as Tom
Carroll. 19, John Langley, 17, and John
Jimenez, 17, all of Ri verside.
DI'opouts Drop
In Valle y's
Smnmel' Sc hool
For the first lime in the history of the
Fountain Valley School Distr ict, a
f.lropout rate of less than 10 percent has
been reached in the sumn1er school pro-
gram.
During previous summers up to JO prr·
cent of the youngsters \Vho started the
voluntary program's failed lo finish, ac·
cording ro Dr. Dale R. Coogan.
He credited the inc rease in the percen·
tage of \'oluntary attendance to several
factors :
-The subjects presenteti to the
students "'ere incorporatM in "high in·
terest" units of work, designed to impart
basic skills to students.
'No Trouble' on Oil Bill
-The establishment of 11 reading im·
provement class at each of the district"s
12 schools.
-An adjustment allo"·ing m us ic
students, both ,·ocal and instrumental, to
enroll in only their specially.
Utt Ex pla.ins Delay· in Passing Legislation
By JERO~IE F. COWNS
01 l~t O•llf Pli.t $l1ff
Rep. James B. Utt (R-Tustin) said to-
day he anticipates "no trouble" wi1h
legislation that would spread the Orange
Coast's offshore oil sanctuary into federal
waters, even thou&h the measure has
been bottled up In a Cot1gresslonal com·
mittee for more th•n two months.
The bill (HR 11226) was introduced by
Utt on 'Pt1ay 23. Since then. it has betn In
the ljouae Jnterlor and Insular Affairi
Comm11tee.
The coogreurnan, in 1 telephone: ln-
ler"iew from Washin&{on, this morning
explained the delay in action.
"This tn ... olves public policy," he ~"id.
'·So it has to be cleared "·ith the Budget
Department and thf! White House:. I wrolt
I<> the Interior Departmen t about ~
month ego. and I emphasited that quite a
bit of the 11re1 involvcd Include' the
~ach In Sin Clemente, \\'here. the Presi·
dent wlll bt •taylng.''
t
t:U said he also has writltn the
rhairman of the Interior and Insular Af·
fairs Committee, Rep. Wayne Asp\nal (0.
Colo.), asking him ta prod the blll .
"It's very slow lo get a report on ~
bill."' said Utt. "especially \\'hen public
policy is involved. Budget, for instancr,
must expres!I an interest or no objection
to it."
The measure "·ould prel'rnt oil c6nting
on the conUnental 5helf both inside and
out.side Ule three·mlle limit, wllb certain
exceptions.
It "·ould allow Interior Department oil
leases only If all thrtt of these conditions
are met :
-It Is established thut there is 1
"probability" of gas and oil dtposits.
-It is rstnblished lhat those dtposlts
are being dra ined by other -state and
private -oil drilling oper11tlons.
-It I~ established Iha\ the leasing
v.·ould be In the "best interests'' of the
Vnlled State~.
Utt iaid as $OOR as an Interior Depart·
f.
ment report on the legislation 1s recei ved
by Asplnal's committee, a hearing date
v.·ill be set.
"I expect that 'viii probably be
son1etime in September.'' he :said. "It
should be out of c:ommlllte by O:.:tober at
the latest. I anticlpa~ no trouble: on it.
largely ~cause the waters oft the
Orenge Coast 11ren't nil bearing. The oil
industry \\"on't buck it."
Utt's bill, in effect, v..wld be similar lo
the present pro ... isions of the state's Shell·
Cunninaham Act. Adopted more lh!lln a
dozen years ago, Shell.CUnnlngham
created an oil sanctuary south of the San·
ta Ana River jelly to the 1'-1cxlcan border.
Utt's legislation covers the same an:a
beyond sh1lf!-0Wned tidelands.
The Congreuman &aid OA·htn the
lnlerlor J1nd Insular Affairs Committee
st~ a he:ir ing on the m11tter. he will call
oo Victor C. Andr@ws of Laguna Beach to
round up Orange County witnesses.
Andrtws is pre~ident of the antl -011
Coastill Area Prolecu-.-e League.
Coogan s.iid that 1\1·0 of the 1nost
fl()pula r high interest units offered thi~
vear to the J.100 studenti; altrnding the
fvur·\.\'tek sessions were space ex·
ptoratlon and oceanography.
P a nther Granted
Dela y on Hearing
A Black Panther accUied of killing 11
police oflcier today won a 1t-hour delay
of his preliminary hearing in S1nta Ana
r.tunicipal Court. .
Judgt Paul G. Mast appointed attorney
Robert Green to represent Arthur De"'itt
League, 20, S1nt.a Ana. League is c:haraed
"·;th thc shooling last June 4 of Santa
An& polict officer Nelaon Sanetr.
lJu1nphrey Undccideil ,
CHICAGO !UPI) lluhert II
llumphrty said Tuesday he has not made
any definite plan& about running for the
Senate in Minnesota nex.t ~tar.
J '' .....
.,...
. --~---=--•># ... ~--.,.-.. ~ '
Laguna . Bea~h
EDITION
.
N.Y. Steeb
voe. '62, NO. ·1a6, 2 SECTIONS, H PAGES ORANGE ·COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I
TEN CENTS
Nixon Starts Clemente Rest Saturday
OAILY l'ILOT Stiff l'holl
THROWN FOR A LOSS
Peace Group's Sarnoff
Dotvn tlie
Mission
T1·ail
Capo Trustees
Approve Budget
CAPISTRANO BEACll - A $5.5 million
budget for lhe Capistrano Unified School
District wa~ apprO\'ed Monday by
District trustees .
The spending schedule is based on a
district assessed valuation of $134.6
million and a general fund tax rate of
$3.66 per $100 assessed valuation. Total
general and bond interest and redemption
lax rate Is $4.29 per_ $100 assessed valua·
l[on.
e Trncl• Okfl!I So11gl1t
Four tentative tracls in I he
syU theaslern part of the county spreading
over 176 acres with 709 single family
homes are before the county Planning
Commisson \Vednesday for approval.
They are:
-Laguna Niguel. 58.6 acres with 215
lots at th e east send of I.a Plata Drive
east or Crown Valley Parkway in the
Klug 1 Planned Community, by Security
Fore Corp,
-El Toro. 31.9 acres wlth 140 lots at
the southerly intersection of Muirlands
and Los Alisos boulevards, by Southwest
Contractors Inc.
-Mission Viejo. 57.7 acres with 218 lots
and one park site between Jeronimo and
Trabuco roads, about 2,300 feet east or
Mantilla Lane, by ~liseion Viejo Co.
-Capistrano Palisades. 27.7 acres with
146 Jot.s south of the San Diego Freeway
and easl of Via Sacramento, by Presley
De\'elopment Co.
e Budget Considered
IRVINE -Trustees of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District will consider
adoption of a $4.44 million schools' budget
at their meeting \Vednesday at 7 p.m. in
the Ir vine School Multipurpose Room,
14736 S\V Sand Canyon Road, East Irvine.
Saved at lf effg e
Surfer
'Frainlic resuscitation efforts by ' two
tUeguards Monday afternoon saved the
life of an t8-year-0ld body surfer found
floating face down in treacherous surf off
!ht Balboa Peninsula "'edge.
The. two guards. onc'ot them an arr.mi. -
ty Los Angeles County lifeguard, restortd
the breathing and heartbeat of Steve
~1eyeMI, 18. San Olgeo, who broke his
back and nearly drowned after goitlg
"over the fall s'' on a \\'ave he was riding.
f\1C)'Crs, whose heart stopped breathing
three times during lhc surfsidc revival
efrorts, was In seriou1 coodilion today,
lfOJg Memorial Hospital aides said.
CredllM with saving the you th 's Ute
President Nixon and his family picked
the dates for their Southern California
vacation today. They'll reach their new
ocean view hilltop home in San Clemente
Saturday and will not retwn .W
Washington Wltil Sept. 7.
Antiwar Protesters Await Arrival distributed throughout the state,
He said "lesll than 10,000. but more
than 1,000 demonstrators" were expected
to arrive for the Sunday afternoon pro-
test.
While the rest of Orange County was
preparing for a warm but quiet welcome
for the President, protest groups have
begun a statewide effort to drum up a
protest gathering in San Clemente Sun-
day, Aug, 17. They are advertish1g the
protest of American foreign policy IS far
away as San Francisco.
It is unlikeJy the President and his
family will be directly touched by the
protest. The President -along wllh Mrs.
Nixon, Tricia Nixon , Julie NI :x o n
Eisenhower and her husband, David
Eisenhower -will be comfortably
esconced behind the nine-foot block wall
surroonding the sprawling Spanish villa.
Trustees of-the Capistrano Unified
School District ~'londay denii!d a plea by
At Leai·y's Ra~h
the Peace Action Council (PAC) for use
of a San Clemente school field as a foe.al
point for the protest rally, They said the
field already had been reserved for a
youth football gathering.
Ir ving Sarnoff of Los Ar getes, PAC
representative, told the trustees that the
Sunday a!ternoon protest would proceed
without a specific gathering p!ace if need
be.
Jn San Franciscp~ an underground
newspaper -the Red ~fountain Tribe -
said the Vietnam Committee for Solidari-
ty with the American People (VCSAP) is
·~cor~ially inviting eve r yon e to
participate in a march" on San Clemente.
Said the newspaper :
"San Clemente Is a mere 9-hour drive
from Berkeley, and thousands are ex.
peeled lo make it, 5:0 it should be easy to
hitch down. (They can bust you unless
both feet are on the curb.)"
In the Peace Action Council's ap·
pcarance before the Capistrano school
board, Trustee Harcourt Bull a5ked ,
Sarnoff if he was a member of the Com·
munist Party,
"That is not germane to Lhe discussion
here," Sarnoff replied.
Bull then asked Sarnoff if he thought
the protest woold help the President ob-
tain "rest, pea ce and quiet'' in his ·5um·
mer White House.
"That depends on how you define
Ex-Laguna Man~s
'
Death Natural
Riverside County coroner's deputies
said today that one·time Laguna Beach
resident John ti:lurl Griggs, 26, died from
olher than natural causes at Dr. Timothy
Leary's now deserted hippie ranch.
Griggs died early Sunday in Hemet
Valley Hospital after becoming Ill and
collapsing in h.is teepee.
Investigation into the cause or his death
is continuing, said Riverside authoriUeS.
GrifliP ...00. his wife., Carol Jean, 14,
moved f r o m Laguna about a year ago,
shortly after-their five·year-0k1 son, Ger·
ry. sv.·allowed the hallucinalory drug STP
and was hospitalized.
On June 23, 1968, the youngster alleged·
Jy found the pills in a yard near the
Griggs' hon1e at 1215 Roosevelt Lane in
L2guna Canyon. lie complained that his
hands were burning and he collapsed,
going inlo con\lulsions. lie was released
fro1n South Coast Community Hospital
after several weeks treatment.
Griggs and his wire Were arrested al
the time on child neglect charges, "but
\'le couldn't make anything stick," said a
Laguna pol.ice spokesman today.
Griggs, wbo. while he lived in Laguna,
w 35 employed by the Mystic Am World,
a psychedelic shop, was lht seco!ld mem·
ber of Dr. Leary's mountain communtty
to d~ in less than a month. On July 14,
Charlene Rene Almeida, also a lonner
Laguna resident, drowned in f pGftil on
the property while under the Influence of
LSD.
Leary "'as later a•sted on charges of
contributing t.o the delinquency of a
minor. Miss Almeida was 17.
Five days before Griggs' death, his
,,·ife gave birth to their second child.
ti-1eanwhile. the 100 persons who lived in
teepees on Leary's settlement land, own·
ed by an organization headed by the drug
exponent, have moved out. "It's a bad
seene," one of them was quoted .
Dr. Leary's son, John, was arrested at
lhe Griggs' Laguna home a year ago on
drug charges, since dismissed.
Laguna Coach Hal Akins-
Does As Well on Canvas
One ca n tell that Laguna Beach Tligh
School football coach Hal Akins is an
artist. At the end or the season he pre·
senled his players individual . oil ~nd
canvasses he pa inted of them 1n action.
One can also tell that artist Jl al Akins
is a footb all coach.
At his Fest'ival of the Arts booth he
quietly sits. dra"•ing next year's foot-
ball plays in a small notebook. . .
And one can tell thet lial Akins 1s
successful in both fields.
His Lagµna Beach High School foot·
ball team; the smallest team in the
league, captured the championship last
fall. He has ne\ler ended a season lower
than third place. Likewise, he's the story or success at
the Festival grounds, where he 's been
exhibiting for sevel} seasons.
Depending on what }'.OU want him r.o~.
Akins can be found either at the hi gn
schoO\'s coaching office designing a gri<l·
iron attack, or ln his gallery-the fam ·
ily gara ge-attacking a desi$"·
"You have to attack with inspiration,"
he said . ''That's what I tell my students."
By the way, he's also an art instruc·
tor at Laguna Beach Iiigh School, wh ich,
'Dies' 3
were Craig Coffin. 21. of 128 Via llavrc,
LkSo Isle, the off-duty Los Angeles
lifeguard , and Newport Lifeguard Lt. Al
Irwin, who was on routine pa'"'' rK!ar
"N" Street 111·hen ~1eyers WAI brought in-
to shore.
Three other body surfers. all from
Riverside. first noticed the victim
floating face down 70 feet from shore,
lifeguards said.
They brought him into 1h11llow water
and summoned a1d from Coffin, who waa
on the beach.
Coffin administered mouth-to-mouth
resuscitation aod heart massage on the
victim while the three youths went for
more help.
'
with his painting and coaching leaves
little time for anything else.
Akins describes his work as a con1bin·
ation of abstract, non·objective and
contemporary action. Some of his most
popular pieces are foo tball and beach
sce nes, whether .a sea of umbrellas or
big surf.
But like any progressive coach who
changes his plans to stay with the times
or confuse his opponent!, Akins is a
progressive artist. He doesn't, however,
want to confuse his customers.
"It used to be that aboul 90 percent
of the people rejected my art. Now,
maybe only 80 percent," he chuckles.
"People now are more knowledgeable
about art. There's no doubt about that.
There a real renaissaoce in art -
people are more tolerant."
Akin's own personal rena issance has
lately evolved into the field of three·
dimensional wood sculpture. lle's even
considering selling his panel wall where
his paintings are hung. of which wood
sculpturing plays an integral part.
His largesl wood sculpture is named
(See AKINS. Page %)
Times
> They fouod Irwin patrolling In his
lifeguard jeep. He called for an am·
bulance, then relieved Coffin.
FLOWER POT IN THE SKY
W•tering 11 • H•ngup
Laguna Parking
Meters May Get
Flotvery Touch
A twelve-fool high parking meter? With
flo\vcrs on top?
Only in Laguna Beach.
"It's only here on trial. If we find it's
feasible and desirable, the merchants will
be asked to buy more or them," explained
Chamber of Commerce r-.-tanag!!T'""Wdl'ren
~1organ.
The parking meter in question towerll
prou'Cily in front o! the Chamber office al
280 Park Ave. ~parking meters go, it's
an Impressive piece of hardware .
Sitting atop the meter, 12 feet into the.
air, sits the flower ·pot. But lhe flowers
have had a rough summer. The green
A lifeguard rescue boat also arrived on flowers are plastic. The browi vegetation
the scene to assist the guards on shore. was at one time alive. • . ·
Lifeguards identified the three swim· Now it's not. "It wam 't .wattred:to 6·
mt>rs who discovered Meyers aii Tom plalntd Jack Eschbach, ffower c!on.suh.ant
Carroll, 19, John Langley, 17, and John lo the ch8mber. · 1
J imenez, 17, all of Riverside. The chamber \Vould like' se.
Lifeguards said LOO waves at the downtown mcrchants .b~ lhe t~er pots
Wedge, the Newport area's best ...., and to plact on the meters In front .O( thelt
most dangcrOWI -body surf Ina spot, stores. The going price ts $50 eacb. That .
were very steep. doctn't lncludc the cost d the Oowtni.
Six nooswlmmers were ' rescued rrom "We'll probably. "1'se Lantanas, j said
the water there .tprougq f1o~y1 Eschbach , "They're about• live to-t1x rei~
llfesuards .. 111. • • ·' ' 1see METER, P11&• II _
. ..,
' ,,
------------
'peace'," Sarnoff retorted.
ACLU attorney Phillip Chronis ,
representing the PAC, said the district
and the city would have to accept both
the benefits and burdens of the Presiden·
tial presence.
lie said the-· peace group, the same
organization which organized the Century
City demonstration against then·Presi·
denl Lyndon Johnson. was planning a
reasonable protest.
"The human beings are going to be
here whether the city council and board
of education cooperate or not. They will
either have a place lo go or they will be
shuttled back and forth ," Chronis sald.
Sarnoff said that more than 25,000 leaf-
lets promoting the prolesl ha ve befn
No Netv Attacks
The Presidential J>Arty is expected to
arrive at El Toro Marine Corps Air St.a-
tion in the Presidential jet, Air Force I.
Jf normal procedure is followed, the
family will travel by Marine helicopter
from El Toro •lo a new landing pad across
the street from the Nixon summer home
in the Cypress Shores section of San
Clemente.
Yoong Eisenhower, who with wife Julie
is expect(!(t to spend the entire month in
lhe San Clemente home , has qui t his ,um.
mer job as a researcher for a Senate com·
1nittee. He will return to Amherst C:Ollege
Se pt. 16 for his senior year.
r-.trs. Ni1on said she expects to be busy
next week wilh preparations for a dinner
August 13 in Los Angeles, honoring the
Apollo 11 astronauts.
Hanoi Letting ·
War Fad~ Away
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces In
Soutf1 Vietnam, responding to currenl
American military withdrawals as an
Allied concession of defeal, have can·
~lied plans for new offensives and may
pennil the war simply lo fade away,
military sources reported today.
Basing lhelr report on intelligence C9'"1'1-
muniques, the sources said North Viet·
nam apJ)artnlly believe• It-can achieve
its plls in South Vietnam without
* * * Nixon to Bring
More Gls IIome
By Late August
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon is expected to announce a pullout
of 50,000 more American troops from
Vietnam in late August a1Mfmay schedule
another withdrawal of 50,000 fighUng men
in October, it was learned today.
This means Nixon will try to withdraw
115,000 troops by the end of the year and
fulfill his expressed hope of beating
former Defense Secretary Clark r-.1. CJif.
ford's timetable of 100,000.
An administration source said Nixon
and Gen. Earle G. \Vhecler, chairman of
the Jolnt Chiefs of staff, have agreed the
withdrawal of 50,000 more Gls is fea sible
no1v. Nixon \\'iii announce it later this
n1 onth .
On the basis of Wheeler's on·the-spot
su rvey of the Vietnam militia and Nix-
on's own lalks and observations during
his round-the-world trip, they reportedly
ha\le set another target in the !all of
50,000 troops in the phased withdrawal .
Nixon annqunced an initial troop cut of
25,000 during the June 8 Midway 6ummil
meeting with President Nguyen Van
Thieu of South Vietnam.
Nixon was considering a broadcast to
the nation from Los Angeles in lale
August on the next pullout of fighting
men in his campaign to "Vietnamize " the
war.
U1heelcr presenlcd his evaluaton or the
war picture and continuing ·mllitary lull
lo Nixon on July 22, a short time before
the President embarked on his world
tour.
Nixon said in Guam he was reviewing
lhe possibility of fu rther troop
withdrawals and would make his position
clear in late August. The de·escalation of
enemy activlly -an evaluation of
whether i~ Is deUberate or not -is under
intensive 1tudy in the White llouse and
the Pentagon.
50 COMPETE
I N FOTORAMA
The Fotorama Camera Contest, wh tth
offers more than $500 for the one picture
·that wins the graOO prize, drew 50 e11trlcs
In itl fi:11t week of competiUon which
cktled' at nbcMl last 'l:htiriday.
1'he top three pbotolfaphl ar11.pubU111\.-
ed today on Page 5. Entries for jlldging
In the second week of the three-week
C"Vent are being actepted now at all DAI·
J~Y PILOT offices (SCI'! rulel, Page 4).
Grano prize winner will be sefeeted dur·
ir'fl )otora.ma ati Fashion Island Aug. 21·
23,
further military efforts of major pro-
portions.
A North Vletnami?se army oflicer cap-
tured last week told Allied interrogators
he tlad been instructed to inform his
troops that they appeared to hive won
the war "because the Americans are
going. home," the sources sa1d.
A ranking U.S. officer said Hanoi, for
the present time at least. seeJM content
to "more or Jess sil back and watch us go
home."
"North Vietnamese goals remain
unchanged," he said, "and Hanoi now
believes these goals can be fulfilled Jn a
low-keyed milltary effort."
Another source said North Vietnam and
the Viet Cong may simply continue the
se\len-week old fighting lull indefinitely
and allow the war to "fade away."
American troop withdrawals from
South Vietnam increased to about 12,200
Tuesday with the departure of another
150 army troops, who had been assigned
to quartermaster and postal units. The
cutback began July 8 under a Nixon ad-
ministration program.
Although ground fightinf has fallen off
t~ little more _than scattered 11kirmi!he!t
American 8S2 bombers are confinulns
daily raids over suspected Communist
posilions.
In overnight raids Monday, the
bombers hit targels in the northern sec·
tor around the abandoned Marine ootpost
at Khe Sanh and also struck against In-
filtration corridors from 45 lo 80 mile!
from Saigo n.
Mili'-!lry communiques on ground
fighting Of Monday said Allied troops
made "light but continued contact" with
Communist forces. They said al least 208
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
were killed in the skirmishes. American
casualties listed for Mondav were one
<lead and seven wounded. ·South Viet.
namese casualties were described as
''light:"
Stock ltlarketa
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed alm06t even today, after moving
narrowly throughou t the session. (See
qu9lations. Pages 10.J 1).
The Dow Jones Industrial average at
2 p.m. was off 1.81 at 820.77. "
Orange Coa•t
Weather
nazy sunshine. the wea,her--
man 's euphemism for foggy days,
will prevail through Wednesday
along the Orange Coast, with our
high of 72 more appcaltng than
the inland area's 93.
INSIDE TOD/\ Y
Colifornlo.'• most promintnt
Democrat, Je sst Unruh so:111 ii'1
gouer11or or nothi11g-if ht TUMS
nt alt -and iltot hr's noc ln·
teresied in challtngi11g Stn.
George /.lurph11. Pagt 8.
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2 DAILY PILOT
. l'"*'fo; ~" .
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Two Issues
Bog Down
Plan Board
•
It was a long, warm night at City Hall.
The Laguna &ach Planning Com·
mission labored over a seven-item agen.
da .at it s Monday night meeting.
After nearly four hours of hulhed
discussion, the meeting was adjourned.
Five Items were left undecided.
Throughout the meeting, shout! or
''Speak up, we can't hear you," \\'ere
directed at planners as the public hear·
ings evolved into private ta lks bet\\'een
the commissioners.
Decisions u·ere reached OQ two matters.
\V1th relatively little discussion. the
commission approved a request by Yvon-
ne L. Crowshaw to add a bedroom and
bathroom at her famlly home at 1030
Temple IU\ls Drive without providing ad·
dilional off.street parking .
) DAILY ,JLOT Slaff ,hm
The commission also directed Assistant
Planning Director Al Autry to forward a
letter to the City Council recommend.Ing
modifications of the parking certificate
program.
GERALD HUNTER, FERNANDO HUERTA TALK THINGS OVER DURING YMCA EXCHANGE PROGRAM
In L•gun•, Whites, Black• and Brown• M1kt an Effort to Understand Each Other
una CJ ltural Exclaan e
By TOM GORMAN
or tM 0111J l"ll•t is1•tf
s,
The people looked my 1way, but they
"·eren't looking at me.
Their eyes were falling on my two
brothers. That's not so WlUSUal, except
I.hat one is black and the Other brown .
They were my brothers, but just for the
weekend.
1l wast was the first half or a cultural
exchange, sponsored by th~ South Orange
county YMCA.
Fourteen Los Angeles teenagers -
black, brown, and one while -were
guests of local teenagers in an attempt to
understand and appreciate each other's
feelings. J Organized by the Y1s Y uth Council, it
wu a start of a dialoeue lbetween three
cultures. An open and frank dialogue it
wu.
"It was one step on the road towards
better understand.in&," aaid Fernando
Heurta Jr., 111, of Los Angeles.
"There'll be curves and det.ours. We're
going lo"have to be strong to stay on the
road Ind make it straight. This exchlnge
wu good. But whit \\'e really need is an
adult uchange."
Fernando was my brown brother. The
black ont was Gerald. He had a natural
haircut, but not too long. \Vhen I first
saw him, he was wearing bool!:, blue
jeans, and a tee shirt. I didn't know what
J was getting into.
But then Gerald started talking. He
wa.s the student body vice president at u,., Angele.s High School. He was a start·
er on their championship football team.
And he 'll be going to Syracuse University
in the fall on a full four-year scholarship
for athletics and scholastic achievement.
J(e'U major In electrical englnetring.
Well, so much for first impression s.
Even if a guy i.s black. I learned that
quickly.
1 took my brothers on a tour of the art
festivals. 1 figured that ir this Is a
cultural exchange, I'd better show them
some culture. Gerald. 17, liked it. And
he's bringing some of his friends back
next week for a second tour of the
festivals .
But, being black , he drew some eyes.
''If they look at me, I look at them," he
gaid lattr.
I had never hosted a black person in
my home before. I wanted to make sure
my actions were natural, not put on. not
pla1lic. 1 don't think they were. But how
do you tell a black that I'm acting the
way I usually do -that my actions were
honest'!
"You gel the Idea that everyone ill
going out of their way to be hospitable."
Gerald said. But he wasn't concerned. "I
\\'IS a guest in your home, so naturall y
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Browns-
you'll go out of your way to be
hospitable."
"I'd like to come here aga in. But t
want to stay longer, a week at least," he
said. And my home is open.
Fernando had different things on hi.s
mind when he talked to me. He agreed
that it was hard for him, as it was for
Gerald, to come cold into a white's home.
"f .was treated good," he said. ''I liked
your family a lot, because thty were
human ."
\Vhile Gerald wants to be an electrical
engineer. Fernando has his sights on
other things.
"I want to be a revolutionary. I look.
and r Set people who helped others. Look
at Cesar Chavez, Marlin Luth er King.
They helped their people. I want to he!p
my people. J v.·ant to revolt against the
things we face now."
But Fernando has had his problems. He
had been expelled from two high schools
before going to Hamilton High.
He reailze.s that an education ls a
necessary tool for a leader. He wants to
be a leader, and now he wanu hill educa·
tion. "I'll have to struggle for my educa·
tio11. But.I want it so very badly."
"You have to have educated people to
lead. 1'11 educate myself first. Then ~
pie will look up to me. I don't mind being
a lool, as Jong as it's used in the right
ll'aV."
Fernando has great respect and love
for his father. "J look upon my father as
Youth Takes Over
Plane as Dad
Dies at Controls .
PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. (AP) -A 20-
year-old California youth with limited
flying experience took over the controls
of a twin-('ngine amphibious aircraft and
landed it safely here Monday after his
father died at the plane 's controls.
The plane carried 12 passengers.
John Dorr Jr., of Santa Monica, Calif.,
a student pilot, moved to the pilot's chair
lvhen hi! father, John Dorr, Sr., suffered
a heart attack. _
The younger Dorr radioed a mayday
signal which was picked up by Siu Spurr.
plloting ·a B. C. Airlines plane, who found
the distressed aircraft and shepherded it
to Prince George airport.
There. the air traffic control to"~,.er took
O\'er and radioed instructions to the
youth. He put the aircraft do\vn In u•hat
was described as a fairly smooth landing .
The younl{er Dorr's experience \\'BS
limited to single-engine aircraft and he
\vas not licensed for flying twin-engine
planes.
The plane was on a flight from
Trembler Lake, 115 mlles northwest of
here, to the Northwest Territories when
the mayday call went out.
Trio Swimming
In Pool Caugl1t
Laguna Beach police late hlonday night
arrested three young boys as they swam
in the high school pool. With them In the
pool were a picnic table and a bench.
The arrests re!lulted from stepped-up
police surveillance of the pool, which has
had to be closed 1everal tfmes ln the past
!ew weeks because of vanda\lsm.
Children taking swimming claMes were
forced to go home Monday when glass
\\'as found in the pool by'li!eguards.
Police, reportedly using electronics
equipment, have the pool area under 24-
hour surveillance. · -
'Sin' Not Grounds
For Taking Child
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The State
Court of Appeal has held that a child may
not be taken away from hls mothtr slmp.
Jy because she is "Uvlng In sin."
The court Monday reversed a rulina by
a lower court that "A. J.," a IS-year-old
boy, mu.st be plac:ed In a foster home
because hl1 mother was "cohabltlna with
a man not her husband."
Brothe.rs
a saint. He's a source of pride for my
family. When we came to this country
from 1'.texlco I was \'ery young. fo.1y
father was a baker. but when we came
over he got a job as a janitor. Now he's
foreman at the company where he once
cleaned the bathrooms.
"He came from nothing to something.
And that's a hell of a lot to do. He's
!'hown me that if I work hard enough, I
{·an get somewhere."
"I want to help my people. I want to
hnprove the general standing of the Mex-
icans. We need pride, unity. The blacks
have the Black Panthers. We have the
Drown Berets. They help our people. I'm
thi nking about joining that organization,''
he said.
In the meantime, Fernando's wor1cing
lvith the YMCA as a counselor. He loves
\\'orking with children. "See these beads'?
One of my boys gave them to me. I love
these kids."
If the purpose of the weekend was to
cenerate a meaningful dialogue among
thr ee raceS, it was a success.
When Fernando and Gerald left my
house, they left a note of appreciaJ.ion for
my mother. They signed it, "Your fr iends
alY:ays."
They will be.
As it stands now, businesses unable to
provide the rflqui red off.street parking
must pay a flat rate of $1.000 to the city.
The money would go into a parking fund.
The commission has recommended that
a formula be used so the ra.te is equitable
for the businesses in the different
do\\'ntown areas, based on the as:sessed
valuation of the lane . Overall, the prices
of the parting certificates . \\·ill go up,
perhaps several thousand dollars per site.
In other matters, commissioners defer·
red :
-A request by Carl Benson and Victor
LaPo rte to redu ce the required number
of off.street parking spaces at a new of·
fice building at 473 Forest Ave. until a
parking lot is completed. .
-Recommendations to the city council
on amendments to the building code in·
\'Olving RI . R2, and R3 (residential) lols.
The pl anners will look into the proposed
.amendments by three local architects in
study session . The proposed arnendments
dea l with height restrictions on hillsid_e
residences, side yard setbacks and dens1·
ty.
-Action on a request by \Verner E.
Ehrenpreis to develop a 12-unit apart·
me nt complex at 607-till-Sleepy Hollo\v
Lane. Ehrenpreis asked for the con·
tinuation so that the City Council might,
in the meantime. relax building code
restrictions. Those restriCtions are the
same ones the planners will look into in
study session.
-Approval of a request _by Richard
Burt to add n units to the e,xisting eight
units at The Shoals apartment complex.
1601 S. Coast Highway. Planners will look
into the traffic circulation before con-
sidering the request for the third time
Aug . 18.
OAILV "ILOT SllH "~'ft
LAGUNA'S AKINS COMBINES FOOTBALL , PAINTING
On the Field, the Art Is in the Coaching
Frona Pnge 1
LAGUNA'S HAL AK INS • • •
"Man-\Voman." 'J'he shapes of a man .
:ind woman were carved out of separate:
sheets of plywood, then lied togeth er by
y1m.
'"Notice the gaps," he says.
f\iost of Akins' "·orks are some\\·hal
ablltract.
··1 paint for a particular effect'. and
use the subject matter 111 a tool. rather
than let me be the tool and the subject
111atter lhe end result,"' h.e. explained.
That attempl to convey a feeling-
rather than COlll'ey any particular scene
-rl!sults in lhe final abstraction.
"TI!.at'11 what I try to tell my students,"
Akins said. "I want my students to bt·
come thinking artists. not just cameras.''
Akins ha!! previously 111ught in the
state ol Washington and, closer to homl!,
ln Fontana. In those and ottltr areas.
he said, students often take arts and
crafts classes beliel'1ng it's an easy
cou rse. But boyi tend to stay away from
those classes, he's found.
At Laguna Beach Jllgh School, it's a
rilfterent story. Boys have no reserva-
tions about taking his classes-In fact.
some of the football stars are his best
studen ts.
"And the students aren't taking lbe
classes because It's an easy course \\'lth
no home\\'Ork. They're genu inely inter-
ested. There's a built-in lnterest in this
town," Akins said.
"And there are a lot of kids with a
lol of natural talent. It's llk~ football.
The better the kids •re, the more fun
It ls to coach them.''
DAILY PIL01 Sti ff .......
PAUL, MARGO , BRENT UHLAN SAFE AFTER SIDETRIP
The Family Dachshund Was in the 81991ge Compartment
Laguna Skyjack Victim
Says Cuba Flight 'Scary'
"A man has stepped into the cabin and
directed us to fl y to Havana, Cuba. Do
not be alarmed ."
Those word s, uttered by the captain of
a Trans World Airlines Boeing 727 ovtr
Wichita, Kan., last week, began an unex-
pected adventure for a Mission Viejo
minister and his family and the president
of a Laguna Beach manufacturing girm.
"The scariest part of the trip was lan-
ding at Havana . We came down during
the tail end of a large storm. The plane
as it came through the clouds suddenly
tilted and was buffeted like a ping pong
ball," the Rev. Mr. Paul Uhlar said to-
day.
Mr. Uhlar, his wife Margo and their 3·
year-old son, Brent, along with Donald
Barda. president of Telonics Industries,
were four of 131 people aboard the flight
hijacked last Thursday by a prisoner who
held a razor blade lo the throat of a T\VA
stewardess.
The man was described by Mr. Uhlar
as a "middle-aged. clean-cut" man who
looked "like a bu!llnessman." Uhlar saw
the hijacker only as the prisoner was led
through the plane by armed Cuban
soldiers in Havana.
The 30-year·old minister is associate
pasto r of the Mount of Olives Lutheran
Church in 1'.1ission Viejo, He and his
family live al 26622 Carretas Drivr ,
P.tission Viejo. The family arrived in Los
Ange les Friday.
Barda, 38. lives in Laguna Beach at
1074 Van Dyke Dri\'e. He headll the
Laguna-based Telonics f i r m \\'hich
manufactures micre>-wave components.
While in Ha vana, the passengers were
given ham sandwiches. the only thing
they had to eat for 13 hours. The hi·
jacking had interupted lunch aboard the
plane, Mr. Uhlar said. They were in the
Cuban capital for five hours.
He said that the Cubans were "very
nice and very courteous." Soldiers took
the names, addresses and oceupations of
all the passsngers.
Mr. Uhlar said that during th e }iavana
stay. it rained continuously. No special
problems came up. he added.
The minister did not know what hap·
pened to the hijacker.
Venezuela Visitor
Laguna Girl Exchange Student
\\1hen Leigh Kiesselbach goes on a
\'acation. she goes on a vacation.
The 16-year·old Laguna Beach High
¥!190).s!!nior left this morning for an 11·
hour fl ight from Los Angeles lnterna·
tional Airport to 1'.liami, Florida to
Caracas. Venezuela . And that doe:lln 't ;n.
elude any unscheduled stop overs en
route.
Leigh. \\'ho has ne ver ventured outside
of Southern California, will spend a
month in Caracas staying at the home of
Diana Baralt. a 17-year-0ld who just
recently returned to her home after spen-
dinga year in Laguna Beach as a foreign
exchange student.
1'.tiss Baralt was the guest of Mr. and
1'.1rs. Jerome Linenk ugel, SIS El Bosque,
where Leigh also lives-full time .
Leigh made the promise lo herself lo
go lo Diana's nati ve home last
December.
Flying from 1'.tiaml to \1enetuela
doesn't faze Leigh. in the sllghtest -even
if Cuba is somewhere in between .
"No, I'm not worrJed at all. As a mat·
ter of fact." she said. "I kind of hope \\'e
rlo get hijacked. It \VOu ld be kind of ex·
citing.''
Munich Bishop
Won't Quit Post
~fUNICH (UPJ ) -In a gurprise ap-
pearance on West Gennan televlslon, the
Roman Cathollc auzillary bishop of
~funich vpwed to remain in office despite
his admitted invol vement in the warUme
execution of 17 Italian hostages.
P.isar. P..1atthlas Defreg1er said 1'.fond•Y
night he would not re1i1n In ''the present
pe:rlod of uproar and excitement."
Defregger was a captain In a German
infantry unit billeted In the Italian town
of Flletto di Camar1da In JU1le, JH4.
\Vhile there, Dtlreq:er has admitted he
paiised on the order for the execution of
17 hostages but only after arruina: 1gai111t
the mawcre .
•
TRAVELING SOUTH
Laguna's Kiesselbach
Frot1a Page l
METER ...
in Y:ld th, and they hang about fi ve or siz
feet. And they only need watering once a
'ol'ttk."
The maximum cost of the plant \l'OU!d
be $S per pot, according to Eschbach.
No fonnal proposal to the do'ol'nlown
merchants has bttn made yet, 1'.1or1a11
said . "We're just trying lt on tor nn.
The Idea came froin one of the ladles in
the beauUficalion committee, \\•ho saw
them In a town in Maine.
"This project shows that the beauUfica-
tion commlttet Is really "·orking.''
t.forgan said.
,
I
I
I
I
' I
' \
' I •
•
. . .,. ' . '
~. -. . '
Freed Prisoner Reflects ' A
Unhealed Inner Damage
B1 ARTJIUll 11. VINSEL
Of * oeBt" Pl* SI'" .. Morale and equipment art better than in 01111 other war in hi&· torv. l've bi:m htck11 ••• "
Robert F. Frishman
Long Beach, Nov. 27, l*
"About lhi~ fact, th.at this is a bad war, I have no doubt ... "
Robtrt F. Frishtn41\
Ha11ol, Date Ullknown, !Kt
The gaunt (ace was pale; thinn"';, since the stateside interview three
nianksgivln& holidays before. No insignia marked the rumpled &wtater, issued
to Hanoi's prisoners of war.
H1s floppy, boneless ann lay hidden under a ~
white table in the grainy, blownup ~millimeter magazine
photograph. He also kept it bidden in letters home, if they
were ever mailed.
One could see in the dark eyes an unhealed, Inner
wreckage.
1 had forgotten U.S. Navy Lt. Robert F. Frishman
and would have skipped on after a glance at the emaciated
POW interviewed by Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci in
the mid.July Look magazine. but saw the namt.
Freed Monday, LL Frishman 28 is coming home to America, but life
will never be lhe same. . * fie was just a young carrier-based fighter pilot home for the holidays,
with !IG-plus missions Over the North and si~ Air Medals, when [ WaJfi sent to
interview him. His father, publlc relations director for the Long Beach school
district, dominated the discussion.
The pl'@tision bombing of a big oil depot and resulting fireworks might
have-been a spectacular_ play in ·a football game between crosstown enemy
high schools. Lt. Frishman said little. ' •
He was easy to forget.
Lt. Frishman said much In Miss Fallacl's Look magazine account. He
talked hungrily after reportedly not saying a word to anyone since being shot
down Oct. 24, 1967, on a mission he had described as the worst kind.
* "It's safer in Vietnam ," he explained, comparing his planned combat
air strikes to our driving the freeway to work, the~ suffering the physical toll
of job slress all day when his assigned work was momentary.
"The worst ones are when you ~ust go out hunting supply barges or PT
boats." he said , ''it's easy to drop your guard."
"I wasn't even diving when they hit me. I was flying. Bad luck ," he
tolcl l\1iss Fallaci, showing a shrunken arm, shattered so badly that eight
inches of bone. was removed.
Time and silence, as well as a surfact"to-air rocket have le.ft marks on
a man who loved to fly and chose that way to serve, based on his comments
and the wounds mirrored in nis eyes.
"God, if only I had a book," he said in the magazine. "But staying there
in that nothingness, all you can do is think ••• but thinking isn't enough for
a man Is U?''
* The story tells much by Lt. Frishman's failure to answer many questions.
What is that nothingness?
.. I did n't know much about this war. Just what 'They' told me that
North Vietnam was Ute aggressor against the South and if America didn't
sl11p I.hem •.• "
One must stop lo consider that "They" are authorities who control what·
ever a man in a society or specific set of circumstance is allowed to know.
* ''They" were present, watching and listening carefully as the under·
wcigh POW talked of excellent prison food, peace negotiations, and learned
for the first time that Americans were about to land on the moon.
Lt. Frishman, released for so-called humanitarian reasons, was also
quoted as condemning U.S. involvement in Vietnam and saying he hoped some-
day to come home and work against any such future ventures.
And whether one shares his earlier qeliefs or what the young flier told
Miss Fallaci as a high-ranking prison official stood by does not matter here.
* "War·s a horrible thing ; now I know it.," said Lt. Fril!lhman whn then
hoped to be home with his wife by Christmai, based on what authorities told
him of peace negotiations.
"'Not many of u11 know what war means, de we?'' he continued.
No matter how impersonally Lt. Frishman asked that question in the
dim interview room in Hanoi, r could give a personal -it only partial -
answer to the young man so easily forgotten lhree Thanksgivings ago.
The answer is on Page 31 of the magazine.
It is in his eyes. •
13·8 Decision
Warren 'Praise' Vote
Squeaks By in Senate
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The State
Senate today reluctantly adopted a
resolution praising former Chief Justice
Earl Warren, a one-time California
governor.
Only 13 of the Senate's 40 members
voted in favor of the resolution.
Ii received eight no votes. A simple
majority of those voting was required for
adoption.
The opposition was led by Sen. John G.
~itz, (R-Tuslin), the legislature's on.-
Jy member of the John Birch Society.
"1'd like lo filibuster all day on this
one," said lhe Orange Counly legislator.
''l happen to agree with a Republican
~enator who used to be a Democrat:
Sl;r001 Thurmond (of South Carolina). Let
me quote him .••
Boys on Bikes
Struck b y Ca r·
Two boys ridin& bicycle11 on a 3idewaJk In Santa Ana wert struck by an out· or
control car Monday evening with one boy
suffering an appartnt fractured back,
Santa Ana police reported.
~ty-one-ytar Marine Sgt. Robtrt
Eugene Harlm was arre11ted on a charge
ar felony drunken driving when he lost
control ol his car traveling at 130 miles
per hour. act0rdlng to officers.
Reported In critical condition ;iit
Rh1ervll!w lfospital ~ay Was 10-year-old
John Kenneth Op!&I. of 1129 S. Salta. San·
ta An11. The IJeC(lnd bny, Josh C.
r~avolor11 . 12. of Santa Barbara, was
treated for cuts and 1crapes and releas.
<d.
Sgt HarleM. who aufrered 11 brok~n
Jhouldl!r blade, was booked Into the
Orange County Medical Center arrest ..• '
"Warren's decisions are milestones on
the retreat from civilized disorder .•• his
overdue retirement as chief justice
brings to a close a period marked by
growing social disintef?t'ation and chaos."
"What olher possible thing could you
expect Strom Thurm ond to say?" replied
Sen. Walter W. Ste;m (D-Bakersfiekl.)
The Senate, with Sen. Lou Cusanovich.
(R·Van Nuys), presiding, had just re-
jected the resolution on a split voice vote.
Dymally demanded a roU caU and this
time the measure waa approved.
"I consider the 13 to 18 vote a moral
victory," Schmitz told a newsman.
The resolution commended Warren "on
his outstanding record or service to this
sLate and nation." It noted he held "a
special place in the heart! of the people
of California." ha ving served as its :M>th
governor through World War II until 1953.
"The 'Warren Court,' " the resolution
said, ''will Jong be remembered as one of
the moo dynamJc period.!! in the history
of the court"
Voting against the resolution were
former Senate presidenl pro tem Hugh
Burm:, ({);.Fresno): William E. COombs,
(R·Rialto): Cusanovlch; Donald L.
Grun.sky. (R·Watsonvllle), Fred Marler
Jr., (k·Redding); Schmitl; Jack
Schrade, (R-San Diego), James E. Wbet.-mn, (R·La flabra).
Panther Gr anted
Delay on Hearing
A Blac:k PantMr accUJed of killing a
police oUcler today won a Zf.Mur delay
or his preliminary hearing In Santa Ana
Munici pal Court.
Jud.gt Paul G. Mast apPointed 11Uorney
Robcrl Green to represent Arthur Dewitt
League, 20, Santi Ana. Leag~ ta c:harged
with the &booting la~t June 4 of Santa
·AnA ooUet ollictr Nelson S.ucer.
FBI, Police~
J
Link Deaths
In 2 States
SALINAS (UPI) -Polle• Ind FBT
agent! today established a direct con-
nection between the murder11 of aeven
young women In Michigan and slmllir
slaying• In California.
John Norman Collins, the 12-year-<ild
Eastern Michigan University senlCD'
charged with the slaying ol the latel!lt
lilichigan victim, Karen Sue Bei~man,
was linked to the strangling of 17-year-<ild
Rox.ie Ann Phillips here in Salina11.
The nude body of Miss Phillips, •
visitor from Milwaukie, Ore., was found
with a red belt around her neck on a
trash pile near a lovers' lane July 16. She
disappeared June 30 while walking to a
mailbox.
The day before, according to Detective
Capt. Daro! Smith, Collins had a date
with a close friend of Roxie's, Nancy
Albrecht, a visitor from Fl Worth, Tex.
Mil!ll!I Albreeht said-COiiins made 1 date
with her for June 30 but failed to sh-Ow
up. However, she told police she had no
knowledge that Collins k11ew Miss Phillips. . . .
''There is a strong inference that
Collins is involved in Roxie fhUlips'
death," said Sgt. Ken Christiansen of the
Michigan State Police.
Meanwhile police and FB! agents
searched for a husky, tattooed young
man who traveled to Cllifornia in June
with 'Collins.
Sen. Kennedy
Blasts ABM
As 'Folly' •
'
T11tsdJY, Au;uit ~. llH>'J r-t" '. DAILY PILOT :; '-'-------'----"'
·'No Trouble' on Oil 'Bill
Uu Explains Delay in Pmsing Legisl,p.tion
By JEROME F COLlJNS or .. Dlltf' , Slaff
Rep. Jamu B. Utt ( TuJtln) 1ald to.
day he anticipates ti trouble" with
ltglslaUoa that would s read the Orange
Coast'• offshore oll sanctuary Into federal
waters. tvtn &hough the measure bu
been bottled up in a Congreaslonal com-
mittee ror more than two months.
The bill (llR 11126) WU lntnxlucod by
Cyclist Stone Policemen;
I 0 Hel in Valley Fracas
Several Fountain Va y police officers
were stoned by a barr ge of decorative
rocb P.londay night wh'n they attempted
to break up a j,isy party o f
n1otorcyclisls.
Nine adults and one uvenlle were ar·
rested In the midnight ~elee on a variety
or charges ranging trrm prowling to
assault with a deadly ~apon.
Sgt. Wiltlam DeNbl said Fountain
Valley police units wer' originally sum.
moned to 8911 Martin A1vP. at 12:30 a.m.
to answer a complaint of excessive noise.
Police said they founq i' loud party in
progress at the residence, most of its oc-
cupants wearing mo{orcycle g a n g
regalia. . ' Officers said they saw a man and a
woman running around the front yard
and attempted to a r r e s t them for
prowling.
Officers managed to chase down the
Woman, 18-fear-old Barbara E. Martin Of
6212 Picket St., Garden Grove, then clos-
ed Jn on her-companion identified as
Atichael B. Totin, 19, of 411 Alabama St.,
No. 2, Huntington Beach.
Tolin was taken Into c u s t o d y for
prowling, resisting arrest and for posses.
ion o( possible dangerous d~s.
Miss Martin was placed under arrest
(or prowllng.
Officers then entered the home to quiet
the party but raced a hostile gathering.
One of the policeman, officer Edward
Parker. was physically assaulted by two
of the partygoers, police said.
Jack W. Hawkins, 11, 8911 Martin Ave .,
Fountain Valley, occupant ct the house
and Daniel A. Campbell, 19, of 8852
DeVUle Circle, Huntington Beach, were
arrested by ofiicers and booked on
charges of assaulUng a police officer,
As police units hauled the pair away,
the remaining members of the party
began hurting rocks al the policemen,
Sgt. DeNisl said, striking but not injuring
5everal of them .
Police, strengthened by several units
from Huntington Beach, then moved Into
the house and arrested six more persons
on charges of assa ult with a deadly
weapon.
Police Chief C. W. Michaelis said the
adults taken Into custody on suspicion of
assauh with a deadly weapon are:
Christopher A. Gray, 19, of 8.172 Bryant
Drive , Huntington Beach : Larry G.
Rowe, 23, of 17301 Ward SJ., Fountain
Vafle}r; John L. Mym'an, 19, of 15542
Mayflower Lane, Huntington Beach: Jon
C. Lamberg, 23, of 12012: Laureleen St.,
Garden Grove, and Mark T. Dewdney, 11,
of 5902 Terrier Drive, Huntington Beach.
Transient Held
In SA Robbery
Utt on May t!. Since then, It has -In
the Houoe Interior and lnllllar Allalrl
Conunittee.
Th• con-ao, ln a .t.ltpbooe In-
terview from Y('ashtngton, this motnln&
explained tile delp;o In 1ctlon.
•'11tJ.i involv~ public policy," he Nid.
•so It has ·lo be cleared with the. BudlM
Department and the While House. I wrote
to the Interior Department about a
month ago1 and I emplw:l:ed that quite a
bit Of the arta Involved includes the
beach in San Clemente, where the PrKi·
dent wUI be staying."
Utt said he also has written the '
chalrman of the Interior Md Insular Al·
fairs Committee, Rep. Wayne Aspinal (0-
Colo.), asking him to prod the bill.
''It's very slow to get 1 report on a
blll ," said Utt, "especiaUy when publlc
policy is Involved. Budget, for instance,
must express an Interest or no objection
to it."
The measure would prevent oil drilling
on the continental shelf both inside and
outside the three-mile limit, with certain
exceptions.
It would allow Interior Department oil
leases only if all th{ee or the&e c~lions
are met :
-It is established that there Is a
"probability" ot gas and oil deposits.
-It is established that those deposlt.s
are being drained by other -l!ltate and
private -oil drilling operaUons.
-It is establishetl that the leasing
would be in the "best Interest.!" of the
United States.
Utt said as soon as an lnterior OeR1rt-
ment report on the legislation is received •
by Aspinal's committee, a bearin& date .
will be Set.
"I expect that will probably be .
sometime in September," he said. "'It
should be out of rommittee by October at ~
the latest. I anticipate no trouble on it, •
largely beca use the wllers off the
Orange Coast aren't oil bearit1g. The oil i
industry won't buck it." ...
A robbery at knife point by a hltchhiker Utt's bill, in effect, would be similar tG
WASHINGTON (UPI) _ Sen. Edward J talian P olitical \Yas reported to Santa Ana police Monday the present provisions of the state's Shell··.
M K ned l).M I d d th evening and Roger Lee Smith, 20, a Cunningham Act. Adopted more than • · e.n Y ( ass. • enounce e dozen years ago, Shell-CUnningham
Safeguard antiballislic missile (ABM) Crisis Over-For Now ~~~~~.ient, was arrested a short time created an oil sanctuary south or the Sa n-
.system today as a folly. Police said John Bowerman, 21 , or ta Ana River jetty to the Mexican border.
Kennedy, a longtime fot of the ABM ROME (UPI) -ltaly's month old Paramount, reported plcking up Smith UU's legislation covers the same area
le _,.., b ~ 'd 1 N' 1 <'OVernment crisis ended today -for the and having $240 stolen when Smith pulled beyond state-owned tidelandL sys m prol""""-' y .-1 es1 en 1xon o " The Congressman said when the
ff · 1 · d time being. a knife on him. protect U.S. o ensive mJssi e sites, ma e Acting Premier Mariano Rumor an· Smith . charged with suspicion of strong Interior and Insular Affairs Committee
the statement in hi3 first Senate speech nounced he has succeeded in farming a arm robbery, was apprehended by the sets a hearing on the matter, he will call
since the July 18 auto accident which minority government of his own Christian California Highway Patrol . in Corona on Vi ctor C. Andrews of Laguna ~ch ~
resulted in the drowning of a ·secretary Democratic Party which lacks a majority after Bowerman got the license plate round up Orange County w1tnesself.
in Parliament and that it will be sworn in number of a ca r in which Smith allegedly Andrews is president of the anU.oil and clouded bis political future. ,, .. ~. "-·stal Area Protective League. Wednesday. ....."""' ......, Kennedy said on the eve of a crucial
1
.::.::::=.::::;_, ___________ _:_ _________________________ _
Sena~e vote on the controversial issue
that both the United States and Russia
soon may have enough warheads with
enough accuracy to wipe out each other's
undergroQnd missile silos, reeardless of
defenses.
The Kennedy speech came as &en·
Mike Gravel (D-Alaska), formall y added
his opposlton -already counted on by
ABM roes -to the Safeguard.
Kennedy joined Gravel in urging the
Senate to support legislation to bar ABM
deployment for a year.
Kennedy said in a prepared text It
would f?e "a clear signal that the United
State!l, far and way the world'11 most
powerful nation, was seeking to slow and
eventually stop I.he otherwise pef11etual
motion of tbe arms rac:e."
lie said it would be "foll y to spend
billions constructing an In effe c t Ive
defense around missiles which may
themselves soon be obsolete."
Other ABM opponents said Gravel's
vote gave them 50 votes -one short of
the total needed to assure victory. But a
leading ABM supporter, Sen. Henry M.
Jackson (0.Wash.), predicted the
tiafeguard would be ap proved by a 51-49
vote.
The While House said President Nixon
was doing no eleventh hour, background
campaigning for the ABM from his
retreat at Camp David, Md. Asked if thll!I
meant Ni.Ion felt he had made his case
for the Safeguard, press secretary
Ronald Ziegler said: -
"The indicaUaos of .ilfdOort from the
people and Congress fndiCates that the
case has bel!n well made and accepted."
Senate Democratic leader Mike
Mansfield, an ABM foe, said even if the
Safeguard ls approved the margin will be
so narrOY.' that "we will win in the long
run" because: be said it would show that
the Senate now intends to carefully
scrutinir.e all mllitary projects before ap-
proving them.
Flying Debris
Killed -Nurse
A nurse who stopped t.o help at the
scene of a Dani Point lraffic-acci4ent
and was killed Sunday tn 1-resuttmg
crash was fatally injured by nylng
debris, invesUgators explained today,
Mn. Evelyn J. Connon. 43, or 27041
Calle Mari•, Capistrano Bead!, may have
been llruck by a whlpluhlng 1111
wi re from a downl!d pawer pole when it
was snapped in two moments later by an
ambulance.
Account.I of the tragedy Monday gave
the erroneow; impression that the South
Cout Community HospJtal nur se and a
oeCO!ld Injured victim were hit by the La
Pu Ambulanct, headed north with an ill
j)<n()n.
Fred Molina Jr., 37, of 19&5 Sherlngton
Plott, Newport S.arh, had hil ldt lea
amputated in surgery fnUowlng U~ ac.
cident which occurred on Pac:Ulc Coast
ltlibwu Just Mf'lh nl nNi• "'"'"'•·
Thereason}:ou're not
reading this is because
you alrea<Iy know we have
morajng,mid-day and evening
jets goingtoPhoenix.
t
• •
'l'he reason you're not reading this Is because you already kno~ we have new Super
DC-9's with more leg room for all passengers to make your trip mo~comfortable.
So instead of reading any of this, just call your Travel Agent or Air West and go.
Air\\tstis dx wut\awn aidine1•
t
•
"
--------·----------------------------===--:__:__ ___
-
,
4 IWl Y l'ILOT T"""1. •-t 5, 1969
POW s Back, Say Treatment' Adequate'
still have my arm!' VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) -Looi<lng
gaunt alttr montbl ln Nonh Vietnamese
prilon camps, three U.S. prisoners of war
arrived in Vientiane tonight and de.scrlb-
ed thelr treatment as adequate.
Frishman re~rled the main diet of the
prisoners -Aas 'baud around bread, soup /
and pig meat.11
(~ "" .. De!W' ..... "9fU
~ Burbank police sergeant raid-
ed a television antenna Sunday
night after a citizen reported ,..,.
ing long strings of a dark substance
banging from it -looking like
marijuana. Sgt. Ru11 S • n 4 • r 1
quietly placed a ladder egainst the
side of the house, climbed to the
roofsop and tiptoed to the antenna.
Sanders quickly realized from the
odor that be had raided a smelly
-but lawful -rooftop beef jerky
curing operation. •
They landed from Hanoi in an Interna·
tional Control Commission plane Jn com·
pany of an American pacifist group that
went to the North Vietnamese capital to
pick them up.
After huddling with U.S. embassy of-
ficials inside the plane, the three came
out to meet reporters. They seemed
somewhat dazed.
Lt. Robert. Franchot Frishman, 29, a
Navy pilot from Santee, Calif., acted as
spokesman during Lhe questioning. Aaked
about their treatment ln prison camps, he
replied: "l dG not want to jeopardize
(lther prilonel'3 sllll lbere. My treatment
has been adequate."
Frishman, however, praised the treat·
ment be waa given by North Vietnamue
dactors to a wounded right arm 1uffered
when his plane was &hot down. His Jl.TDl
hung limply by his side.
With him were Capt. Wesley Lewis
Rumble, 26, an Air Force pllot from
Oroville, Calif., and Douglas Hegdahl, a
seaman apprenUce from Watertown, S.D.
"The doctors were very busy giving
treatment to their own p e op I e , ' '
Frishman said. "It would have been
eaai~ to amputate my arm but they
operated on me and removed my elbow. 1
"It may not sound very good but they
had a way of preparing it that made it
tasty," he said.
Frishman said he had not been
brainwashed. He added that the treat..
ment of the three prisoners by the North
Vietnamese had been dequate and that
relatives of other prisoners should not
worry. Rumble did not speak during the
in~rview.
Hegdahl said nervously that the ma1n
activities during their imprisonment were
sweeping floors, smoking cl1arelte! and
Ustenlng to the Voia! of Vietnam, the
North Vietnamese propaganda station.
The three looked gaunt and pale but
otherwise well. They wore blue d..mgarees
and rubber HG Chi Minb sandals without
socks. They were escorted by a four-man
pacifist mission from the United Stale!
headed by Rennie Oavb:. The North Viet-
namese turned the prisoners over to the
pacifist mi!lslon Monday.
The lhree met for 40 minutes in the
plane with U.S. F.mbassy officers.
They had spent from 15 to 28 months tp
capUvity. A North Vietnamese !:iro&dcast
said that at the ceremony at wh.icb they
were turned over to the pacifist group
they said they were well treated.
Even the btst of ba.uball
mincb were stumped when t.ht
message board at the Oakland
Coliseum aiked, "Who hold.I tht
record fo1-tht most babes fn a
rinolt season1 -Hormby, Mu.
rial, Ruth, Cobb? When the
crbwd began to howl, the er-
rant w or d was changed to
"bases." Court Certain to Reopen
• • A man and a woman were ara
rested · for hit·run and dnmken
driving during the weekend in San
Jose when their car struck 10
parked cars, a tree and a house.
Police said Edward Galvan and
Helen Zamilpa were taking turns
behind the wheel.
Kennedy Crash Inquiry
•• "The dirtiest t h I e f I've ever
seen/' said Canine Unit Patrolman
Jack Rvppanar after his dog Shep
fiwhed an alleged burglar at the
Venus Jewelry Co. in Chicago. The
suspect, found hiding in a basement
grease trap, was "about as dirty
a.s a man can get," Ruppaner &aid. •
EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI) -The
case ol Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's
automobile accident, whicb a week ag(l
appeared closed, is all but certain to get
a thorough reairing ln the coming weeks.
15 Americans
Aboard Missing .
Chi]ean Plane
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -Foor
Chilean military aircraft began a search
today along the slopes of the Andes
Mountains f(lr a World War ll-"'lnlage
U.S. Navy transport plane that disap-
peared ·and presumably cr"'11ed during a itori:z£. ~ ,. '
· Tbe m.Jsslng plane carried 16 person.a,
.o,:. ooe (If Gem a Filipino woman and the
"' othirs-Ain'"trlcans. 'Mle Flllplno was one
of six women military dependents on
V enfct beachla were the scene of •
a reverse twiat on the famoiu coUep-
iate di~r!ion -t4e pattty mid, Mary
Poma f~w in a helicopter showering
beoehgoers with PQCkages of a dtr-
posab~ pant11 product__,4Wl.9 1"'0fn0o
tional gimmick for the prolucera of
thl undergarment. • '"Who left the beads on the
floor?" Mrs. GRrg• Rutter of
'I'uscon, Ariz. asked as she no-
ticed something near the table as
her family was finishing dinner.
Then the beads moved. That's
when their lS.year..old son Chris-
topher got a hammer and squash-
ed what turned out to be a coral
snake. "I didn't know how to cap-
ture it or we wouJd have." Mrs.
Rutter said. "You just don't go
around your house with a net or
.something.''
-board.
The twin·prop C47, military vers.ion of
the DC3, was on a nonstop 700-mile !light
from Santiago to Buenos Aires, Argen·
lina, Monday night when it vanished afte r
failing to make a scheduled radio chec k
about JOO miles south of this Chilean
capital.
1 Chilean Air Force officials s a Id the
plane was apparently down in an area
near Curico near where it was to have
begun a course taking it I n t o a pass
through the four·miJe.high Andes MOun-
tains, Which line the border between Qtile
and Argeotlna in the easl
NIXON'S SPEECH
ON HOME POLICY
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on's radi~ TV speech to the nation Friday
nigh\ will be centered on domestic issues,
primarily including new weHare policy,
the White House said today,
Presidential press secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said the 7 p.m. POT speech will
alsG deal with comprehensive manpower
training programs, revenue sharing, the
federal antipoverty agency.
Ziegler said messages on the three
topics other than the anllpoverty p~
gram will be sent ta Congress next Mon-
day, Tuesday and Wednesday .
Dial. Atty. Edmwid S. Dinis ls awaiting
only the official word from District Judge
James A. Boyle in begin an tnqu"t inin
the death or 28·year.old Mary Jo
Kopechne, who drown~ July 18 when a
car driven by KeMedy ran oU a narrow
bridge on Chappaquiddick Island and
plunged lolo a pond.
Boyle is expected to authorize the In·
quest today or 'Vednesday, Dinis' letter
or request tO Boyle was received Monday.
and the judge took it under advisement.
Dlsttlc\ court clerk Thomas A. Teller
said Boyle would aci on the request
"either tomorrow or the next day -this
is wilhin a reasonable period."
Under Massachusetts Jaw, Dinis has
the authority aimply to require the in·
quest be held. His request to Boyle Ls a
fonnality following rejecUon of an earlier
request for an inquest by the atate
superior court.
Dinis is expected to explain his
reasons for seeking to reopen the case
sometime this week. -
State Approves
New LA Airport
As Jet Facility
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state
has given the city of Los Angeles the go
ahead for plans to create the Palmdale
InternaUooal Airport as a major jet
puRnger facility by t9n.
Approval of the application was an·
nounced Monday by J oseph R. Crotti, the
state aeronautic! director. The airport
would cover about 27 square miles in a
region northeast of PalmdaJe, about SO
miles northeast of Los Angeles.
Crotti's decision is subject to these con¥
dltions:
-Federf.). Aviation Agency approval of
the proposed zone of aircraft approach
and safe air traffic patterns.
-Relocation or two parallel sets of
runways at least 2,000 feet north and 4,000
feet to the east to reduce noise level
around two local schools.
Jet noise should be cut to a "reasonable
degree" by the time the facility is com-
pleted as an international airport, Crottl said.
Fair Weather Everywhere
But There Was So1ne Chill and Rain Here and There
Calltornla
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PROUD PARENTS -Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Rumble
of Oroville, Calif., proudly show a photo of their
son, Air Force Capl Wesley Rumble, 26, after learn·
ing of his release from a North Vietnamese prison.
The Rumbles bad heard from their son only twice
after he was captured. 16 months ago.
Mariner 7 Takes
'Beautiful' Shots
Of Mars Ice Cap
PASADENA CAP) -Mariner 1 streak·
ed across the Martian SC!uth polar cap to-
day, snapping and storing pictures sci en·
lists said would glue tonight's television
viewers to their chairs.
Preliminary signals flashed o n
monitors at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory were evidence, a spokesman
said, that the photograph!I as finally
transmitted would be "beautiful," show-
ing features of Lhe planet 's southern
hemisphere never seen before.
Commented Dr. Robert B. Leighton,
California Institute of T e c h no 1 o g y
aslronomer, as he viewed the incoming
signals: "Wait until you see the full scale
pictures of the polar cop -Wow! we are
seelng the antarctic wastes of Mars."
Mariner 7'& fly-by pictures from 2,000
miles high were stored on tape for
televising over three hours 5tarting at
5,30 PDT tonight.
A spokesman for ABC said the network
planned to broadcast some of the plctwes
live, but that no time had been aet.
,
Mills to Correct Slip
On Reformed Tax Rates
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Chairman
Wilbur D. Mills said today his House
Ways and Mean,, Committee in·
advertenlly denied millions of middle in-
come Americans a tax break ln just-com-
pleted reform legislation. He called the
panel into sess.ion to remedy the situa·
Uon.
The committee agreed last week in aP.:
proving the m05t sweeping laJ: reform b1Jt
in history ta cut everyone's taxes by at
least 5 percent by 1972.
But, Milli tald the House Rules Com-
mittee, there was a misunderstanding
and it turned out that under rates ac-
tually published, many middle income
people would get little or no tax cuts.
Legislative work on the tax reforms
continued as a compromise six-month ex·
tension of The 10 percent income tax
surcharge awaited President Nl1on's
signature. 'The President had wanted a
full year'.:: extension, with the rate reduc-
ed to 5 percent Jan. 1, but gave in to
legislative le ad er s demanding the
reforms.
1i1ills called a meeting or his commlt~e
to rejigger the rate schedules to give lhe
middle income taxpay ers at least a 5 pe ....
cent rate cut. The House takes up the
reform hill Wednesday, with passage ex-
pected Thwsday.
Mills' announcement came as liberal
lawmakers opened a new campalgn ta
head off a second slJc·month e1tenslon of
the !W'charge.
Claremont Man Set
As Singapore Envoy
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presldent Nix-
on today nominated career foreign serv-
ice ot'ficer Charles T. Cross as ainbas-
sador to Singapore. Cross, o{ Claremont, Cali!., has beell
deputy !or civil operations and revolu-
tionary development support in the I
Corps Area in South Vletnam since July,
1967.
Still One Picture is
Worth More than $500
ORAMA
Camera Contest
RULES
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You Could Still Win
EN.TEA· NOW!
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JEAN COX, 494-9466
T1111i11•11 Altlt~JI Jr, IHI I. ..... U
Giant Roster
Stil I Grows
' Joining the county's ever growing club roster4 is the University
of Southern California Town and Gown Junior Auxiliary, Orange
County, which has announced a get-acquainted day Thursday, Aug.
7, for the ne,vly-formed gr.oup.
The Corona del Mar home of ~1rs. Richard Bertea, 'vho is trans·
!erring from the To,vn and Gown Junior Auxiliary of Los Angeles,
'viii be the setting for the beach get-together.
Also transferring from the Los Angeles Auxiliary \\•ii} be l\Irs.
Douglas Simpson and Mrs. J. K. White.
Hosting the initial gathering 'viii be a steering committee in·
eluding Mrs. Oby E. \Voods. president of th e group. and the J\ilmes. T.
A. Devine, James llewitt, Edward Brumleu, \Villiam Hazelwinkel and
J ames McCunniff.
The Jonathan Club of · Los Angeles will be the setting for the
group's Ch?rter Luncheon on Sept. 25. when they will be honored by
the Los Angeles To"'" and Gown Junior Auxiliary membership.
Dt. Norman Topping, University of Southern California presi·
dent, will be among special guests.
Ne\v members of the county auxiliary in clude th e :tvtmes. Philli!l
Anshutz, Horace Benjamin, Robert Brownsberger, Rene Caron. John
Cashion, Donald Clarke, Craig Combs. Ma son Fenton, Bruce Galey,
Michael Gibb, Paul J-ladley and Edward Halligan.
... -. :.: ...
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I
•
I ... ~~""""""""'""~ ....... Others are the h1me s. Richard Ingle, Bernie Lecky, Derck
Lewis, John LlghUoot, John Miller, Thomas Morris, Gordon Morrov.r,
Friderick Myers, Richard Peckham, R. P. Parker, Richard Ramella,
\VilUam Reed. Dan Rogers, J. M. Rose, Hank Sanford. Dale Stinch-
field, Robert Smith, Knight Sooy, James Tyler and J. P. Ty~e Jr.
CHAPTER BEGINNIN~ -Perusing a scrapbook soon to be Mrs. William Hazewinkel does a bit of rock and shell hunting.
A get-acquainted day for ne\v members \viii take place on Aug.
7 in Mrs. Bertea's home.
r
Art Work
Youthful
You don't have to be an
adult in order to exhibit in the
Festival of Arts, and works
don •t necessarily have to be
juried.
There is quite a Jot of young
-talent on lhe grounds,
although most of it is centered
in one section .
The Free-for-all Booth, n1n
by Laguna Beach Junior
\Voman·s Club, is open from 2
to 6 p.m. daily and provides
the paper and materials
necessary for youngsters to
• · • • -gi•e vent to their creativity,
said ~trs. Carl Manus, club
spokesman.
She said the children·s chalk
drawings may be taken home
as a reminder or their visit or
displayed for their parenls and
other adult visitors to the
grounds.
The booth was conceived
and established about 30 years
ago by Russell Iredell, a
Laguna Beach artist known
for his pastel portraits. Since
then it has been lovingly look-
ed after by Mrs. Virginia
Wooley.
The Junior \Vomen have
sponsored the project for the
past four years and work in
the booth on weekdays
throughout the six·wetk run or
the festival.
filled as University of Southern California Town and Gown Junior
. .\uxiliary of Orange Counly begins its activities are (foreground ,
left to right) Mrs. Douglas Simpson and Mrs. Richard Bertea.
"
DAILY l'tLOT l'hOff DJ Dt lt ll rrltkw
CREATING -~lrs. Ernie Quigley and Mrs. Duane Allen watch approvingly ...
as a young artist, Howard Quigley, 4, gives vent to hi s creativity in the Chil·
dren's Free-for.all Booth operated by Laguna Beach Junior \Voman's Club.
The Laguna Line
Mission Viejo Women
Seen Kicking Heels
By JEAN CO X
01 ltlt DeHJ l'llet $"11
QUESTION : \Vhy do l\liss ion Viejo residents. th e !\•Imes. Pat Get-
chell, Joe Saliba. Gary l\lathcc, Dick Caneday and Robert Kerr get togeth-
er l\vO or three times a u.·cek?
ANS\VER: They arc doing the can can.
By the time Sept. 20 roll s around, \vhcn Mi ss ion Viejo Woman's Club
has Its Las Vegas Night, the dancers \viii be well prepared for their can
can number, promises Mrs. Getchell.
Clu b women, who already have sold all 100 lickets to their theater
party for the Pageant of the Masters. Aug. 23. also are busy collecting
recipes for the dessert booth lhey u.·ill sponsor during Mission Viejo Days
Sept. l>-7.
Th e RICHARD PARSONS of Mission Viejo have returned from a
relaxing two-week vacation in Ha,va ii and have lots of stories to tell.
f"or five days of th eir trip, they took their daughter Karen, 8, who
returned home early \vith her grandparents, l\1r. and J\llrs. Leonard Gowdy
of La guna Beach.
'fhe Parsons stayed in l\laui for a fe \v days. but spent the main part
of their holiday in \Vaikiki. \Vhile in the Kahala Hilton, ~lonolulu Mrs.
Parsons sa\v Mrs. Richard l\1ix on \vho was on her \Vay to meet the Pres·
idcnt after the astronauts landed.
Another unforgettable portion of the trip \va s their plane ride home.
Apparently the Parsons were seated next to an ABC· TV newsman who
had been on the tfornet. the aircraft carrier \\'hich picked up the astro-
na1 :ts \vhen they landed from the moon .
MRS . HARRISON Cha pin from Skyline Drive ·\viJI be entertaining
!\Jr. and Mrs. Wellborn Eslfl' fron1 SL Louis, Mo .. \vho \\'ill be stopping
ln Laguna Beach on their 'vay to flonolulu.
COL . AND MRS. 'Villiam JI. Bruggerc r('centl_v \\•ere treated by
friends from Studio Cilv io a perforn1ancc by John Bro\vning. a concert
pianist. in the Hollywood Bo\vl.
The two also have been busy entt!rlaining his relatives Crom Fresno.
'rheir guests included J\ilr. and /Vlrs. Clifford llcidt, Col. Bruggere's sis ter
and brother-in-la\v.
Early · Bird Catches the Worms and Watches Them Squirm
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I need your
cool, detached C<lunsel.
~ly husband gets home rrom work
about 4:30 p.m. I get home about 5:30.
For the past several weeks I've had the
peculiar feeling that somebody had been
In the house -ash trays in odd plates, a
sofa pillow mashed out of shape,
OCdspreaci wrinkled, loo man)' towels
hanging up to dry. One day I checked the
garbAge and found cigarette butts ~·ith
lipstick. (I don't smoke.) I knew then
that my husband had been entertaining
1 female in my absence.
Yesterday I decided to leave work half
an hour early and meet lhe guest face to
face. My timing was beautiful . I caught
them ~ight in the act. I've never seen two
ANN LANDERS
more surprised people In my entire life.
But I was surprised, loo. because the
woman turned out to be a neighbor who
is the town tramp.
l have decided to forgive my husband
because I'm sure she chased him and
wore rum down, as she has dorie with sn
many other.11. But I'm not willing lo let
her off so lightly. The question: Can t
take legal action against t~e 1voman for
breaking and entering 1 If not. what other
legal steps c:an I take? -\\!RONG
DEAR \\'RONGED: Tbe VIOman did
not break iol6 your honle. She 't''ali a
guest. The only legal steps yov can like
ere against llL\f. l\ly advice Is lo forget
II. ~
DEAi\ ANN LANDERS , I am a 16-
year-old girl who ha11 a summer job at
tho lairgrouncl . It is very Interesting
because 1 get to talk to all kinds of
people, but I do have one small problem .
Please lei! me what to say to older men
(about 40) who don't exactly get fre:1h but
slart to tell you about their personal lire
"':hich is nobody's business. For example,
yesterday a man came over and began lo
discuss the weather. All of a sudden he
blurted oul. "f\1y wife and I ha\'t
separate bedrooms because we like dif·
fercnt mattresses. I like a so{t mallreu
and she likes a hard one."
Please give me a sentence or t\VO that t
can use to change the subject tactfully.
Thnnk you. -MOLLY
DEAR l\10Ll.Y~ You don't netd lo be
tactful ~·llh a clod like th1t. He wouldn't
notice. Just say, 1'1'm not Interested In
your mattress. Shove off."
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I had my
divorce hearing two months ago but It
\l'On'l be final for a year. Whal ls my role
during this year? Am I sUll married?
Can 'I date? Should I weat my "''eddlng
ring? Everyone I talk lo has a diflcri:nt
opinion but no on2-call_&!_vt me the rln:il
~'ord. Do you have it? -NEITHER
FIS!i NOR FOUL
DEAR NEITHER: The 1ns"·er1 are
not en"ravcd on tM RosetlA stonll. There
1111 no "final word '' -only opinions. If you
want 1nlne , here It 1111: \Vblle wailing for
your divorce to become final you can
dale If you wish. By ctate, J mean ~enjoy
the company or men, but be a loose
hanger , No playing bouse, no coiy
alliances and no weekend trips.
As for your wedding ring. It bas no
significance now, so why wear II?
"The Bride's Gulde," Ann Landers'
booklet, anS\vers some of lhe most fre-
quenlly asked quc!lllon.s aboul weddlnp..
1'o r~ive your ropy of this com-
prehensive guide, write Ann Landers, in
e~rc of this newspaper, enclo!llna a long,
s~lf-addreBscd, slumped envelope and 35
cents in coin.
Ann Landcrli 1vll\ be gliid to help YOll
1vilh your problc1ns. Send them to her In
c.;'.lre of the DAILY Pit.QT, enclosing a
!c1:.a<1c1rcssed. $Nn1pcd envelope..
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J <f DlllY PILOT Tuttday, A~ust 5, 1969
l H1unTot1·mngtonSBae.wacyhePrla1yhGou0se~s5proodnucti8onaorfn'ThTeheater Boards Polly and Becky Thatcher in the matinee. Alternate
Adventures of Tom Sawyer' will be presented in The cast for the evening perfonnance will include Kelly
J .
Barn theater on Friday, Aug. 8, at 7:30 p.m. and Masterson, Kimberly Cole and Kim DeLacey. Di·
Saturday, Aug_ 9, at 2:30 p.m. Pictured are (left to rector is Randy Keene and the producer is :r.1rs.
right) Robert Campbell peering through window at Robert'Murphy. ·
Crystal Payne and Lisa Johnsen who portray Aunt
Horoscope September Rites
Leo: Display
Responsibility
Blakelys Tell Troth
Dr. and Mrs, Thomas A.
Blakely of Newport Beach
have announced the engage-
ment o! their daughter, Elaine
Blakely to ·Michael Campbell,
son of Mr. and Mrs . Edward
Dudley Campbell of Van Nuys. WEDNESDAY
AUGUST 6
By SYDNEY OMARR
SPECIAL HINT: Cultivate
re.served manner \l:ithout ap-
pearing stilted. Ring. bracelet
or wrist watch can lend
dramatic quality t o ap-.
pearance. Grooming accent is
on arms, hands. News is ,.like-
ly to be made in area of
tramportation.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Check safety devices during
any journey. Be sociable, but
avoid being a chatterbox.
Good lunar aspect heightens
ability to write, communicate,
put acros! Ideas.
• TAURUS (April 20-?i.fay 20):
Obtain hint rrom Ar I e 1
message. Asking questions
could steer you to genuine
bargain. Finances are
highlighted. Accent on what
you acquire and how much lo
spend.
GDUNI (!\fay 21-June 211):
Cycle high. Try something
new. Streamline procedures.
Be active. Take initiative.
Welcome contacts, challenges,
special assignments. B e
direct, positive. Purchase Hem
to brighten home.
CANCER (June 21-Ju\y 22 ):
Spotlight on areas Previously
hidden. Key is to have a good
time without being foolish.
Remember those who may be
confined to home. hospital.
Friend confides a secret
LEO (July 2J·Aug. 22):
Some of your desires are
fulfilled. But you find they
carry with them definite
responsibilities You may be
working overtime. Be ready.
Display &ense of
responsibility.
VlRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Stress on ability to live up to
potential. You want more
recognition. Key is to find a
v.1ay to gain it. You do so to-
day by cooperating in special
projects. Also, by displaying
confidence.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
\\lrite, ad\'er!ise. pubh~h -
get views Oisseminated. Be as
original as possible. 0 I d
methods v.·il l not suffice. Call
attention lo your O\\'n at·
tributCs. 111gh11 g ht in-
dependence.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
Your intuition is correct in
money matters. But it Is still
best to let mate, partner take
initiative. Coo.serve strength
YOU KNOW
YOUR CHILD
WILL LEARN
TO SWIM AT
BLUE BUOY
AMS. Wiii Y•1
AHINl-.hlitMltlutl,
s.... AH,c '""' 546-1800 -~
You will eventually have your
say. Patience.
SAG ITIARIUS tNov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Obtain hint from
Scorpio message. Your cycle
today is such that you do bet·
ter as a keen listener,
observer. Develop v I e w s
withoul necessarily expressing
them. Play waiting game.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan
19): Judge motives o l
neighbors, associates, co·
workers. But avoid making
somelhing out or nothing.
Some around you may appear
stubborn. Appearances can be
deceiv"lng. Give beneril of
doubt .
ELAINE BLAKELY
Bride-elect
Anaheim Class
Plans Reunion
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Pressure is lifted. You
get greater opportunity for
self-expression. Keep promises
made to children. Welcome
respite Crom routine. Do
something different. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): A dinner dance and special
Attend to basic ch 0 res, awards are in the planning for
especially those related to Anaheim High School's Class
home, property. Get rid of or 1964 five year reunion.
safety hazards. Concentrate The Grand Hotel. Anaheim
on orderliness. Then emotional will h2 the scene of the
chaos will also evaporate. gathering announced for Aug.
IF TODAY IS YOUR 30.
The future bride wa s
graduated from New port
Harbor High School and at·
tended Orange Coast College.
While in high school she
placed first during a Southern
California VQCal audition and
lhe ~lusical Art s Club audi-
tions and recei ved Ebell Club
and NHHS mu sic scholarships.
Featured in many musical
productions both in high school
and at OCC, she was a student
at the Los 'Angeles and San
Francisco Civic Light Opera
Association musical theater
v.·orkshops at the University of
Southern California.
The bride-to-be was invited
to tour with the Doodletown
Pipers while attending OCC.
Her fiance, also a member
of the Doodletown Pipers, was
graduated from Grant High
School, Van Nuys, v.·here he
received awards in football,
and attended Valley College.
The couple will exchange
wedding vows during Sep-
tember rites in the Plymouth
Congregational Church of
Ne"·port Harbor.
Family Weekly
Every Saturday
BIRTHDA y you are creative Those Interested in al·
and Jove to entertain. But you tending may write for tickets
also have a strong homemak-at $8 each. addressing Reunion
ing desire. You enjoy good Committee, in care or Mrs.
food and Might be: quite a Pam Pebley Laster, 306 E.
cook. \\'eight of added respon· South Street, Anaheim .
sibility is currently indicated r===================::::;:-1 -but you also have more fun. I
To l!nd our more abOut vour1tll 1rid ~•trolCQ•, ord•r SVd"IV Om1rr'• J.O.
"'or -'•'· T~e Trulh AbOul A•t•o•oov. Srnd J.O c•~" to O"''" 1 60ll~lr1 l~e 0"'1L'I' PILOT. 6~• Jj'(I, Gr•nd (:(ntrll Slltion, N•w York, N.'I'
Models Like
George Look
\\'ith models in the fashion
showrooms in -the New York .
garment industry, the summer
hairdo is "the George."
It's named for our famous
ancestor, George Washington.
and other colonists v.·ho v.·orc
their hair pulled back in a
peruke. I The way the girls wear ii for
day is with hair sleeked back
from the race and fa slened \
\\'ith a decorative band or a
Jock of hair twisted around. I
F'or evening. make the band
rh ioestone or pearl. I
WOOL GREMLINS -•
The
KNIT
WIT
rHOHE
145·2112
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
l ow•' Mtll •(rett fro"'
w.etwortll'1
l rhtol .t tt.t '-Diet• Pwy.
COSTA MW
•
STORE· WIDE
3 DAYS ONLY
AUGUST 7.9.9
Regular & Half Size Dresses, .... Coats,
Also B•g•, Jewelry & H•ls.
Every Article in the House is at
1 /2 PRICE!
445 S. COAST HWY
..
LAGUNA BEACH at Hatel La9una
For Top Sports Coverage
Read The Daily Pilot
Queen Counting
Castle Pennies
By MARGARET SA VILLE
LONDON (UPI) -You
have to admire an aristocrat
who bravely venluf'el\, into
trade to help with the upkeep
· of the borne of her fathers.
Especially when such a step
was never dreamed of in all
the years of her education.
In the veins of this lady runs
some of the bluest blood in the
worl~. She counts her lineage
in centuries rather t b a n
geoeraUQJlS.
Nevertheless down In
Norfolk she is selling cups of
tea for six cents, coffee for
eight and raisin cakes for nine
to he.Ip meet the increased
costs of managing her howe.
Her name is Queen
Elizabeth II.
folk who have developed the
habit o{ spending a day in the
great country houses and
park.lands from ari age that
will never return again.
Profits of these ventures are
tax-free but must be used only
ror the maintenance of the
property.
The venture into trade
doesn't mean that the queen is
not one of the world's
wealthiest women. She is. But
the way they (igure it at Buck·
ingham Palace, why let San-
dringham House be a liability
when it can pay its own way?
From now unW the end of
September 1housands o f
tourists will pay their 60 cents
admission charge.
Harbor Key Award
Salty Honor Given
\Vbo is Jay Gould?
He'• the Grand Old Sall of Child Guid·
ance Center.
This honor was bestowed upon the New·
port Beach resident by members of the Har·
bor Key af the guidance center during the ....
group's first annual Yachtsmen's Ball last
Friday in the Balboa Bay Club.
The announcement of the identity of the
Grand Old Salt was made by Mrs. J. O'Hara
Smith, president of Harbor Key.
Gould, a p~tron of every endeavor of
llarbor Key on behalf of Child Guidance
Center, was cited for his interest in and his
dedication to the work of the center.
Present with Gould as he received his
award from Mrs. Charles Hostler, baU chair-
man. was his wife.
'!'he award included eight sterling silver
cordial glasses. and silver tray in a walnut
case, upon \vhicb an engraved plaque will
be placed. Times being what they are,
the queen has banished the old
rule that the royal family
must never be associated with
a commercial undertaking.
This will admit them to
parts of the house and
grounds. There is a self· I..--------------------' service restaurant k n o w n ,
She was led to this step, ac-
e<>rding to court c I r c I e s ,
bi!cause her official palaces
are maintained by state funds
but Sandrlngham House ls her
personal property and she has
to pay for it from her ·own
funds.
Since it has 365 rooms and is
bigger than some well-known
hotels this has become a drain
even on the plump purse of the
House of Windsor.
So the queen is doing what
many of her "right trusty and
entirely beloved cousins" -as
court usage has it -have
been doing for some time.
That is charging admlssion
f ees and .. providing
refreshments for lhe common
naturally, as the Cafe Royal, a
souvenir stand offering San-
dringham tea towels and pol·
tery, illustrated books and toy
models.
There is a market stand that
sells produce grown on the
estate, flowers and plants and
vegetables and fruit.
Visitors can see the
beautiful gardens designed by
the !ale Queen Mary. The
glasshouses contain memen·
toes of King Edward VIII who
built the house around an old
manor house saying he needed
•·a room for every day of lhe
year."
The royal family now main·
Jy uses the place in winter for
shooting parties and quiet
relaxation for a fortnight over
Christmas.
Fihal \Veek, Tuesday, August 5 thnt 4 pm Satur·
day. August 9, all 28 Gloria Marshall locations
in the West offer 1h Price on your choice of
l·Iips or \Vaist or Thighs or Upper Arms when
used in conjunction with any Gloria Marshall
Program.
·Why GLORIA MARSHALL is No. 1
28 LOCATIQNS IN THE WEST
Gloria Marshall' a d.i4't "just happc!ll."
ID be<mne the world'• leading Figaro
Control System.,. quick, llllf• "'8Ulta
made it that way. At Gloria Mamhall'•
you'll Jose more inches and pounds for
leM money than through MY other
Program, anywhere.
./ lose poun& and inches from hips,
"'aist, thighs, tummy and arms.
1 Special machines are designed to
'( banish every correctable figure fault.
./
Results come quickly, without pill.!!,
drugs, &lrenuous eiezclae or starvation
diets ,., efforUe!&ly, pounds and inches
"!all away."
J No disrobing. We are not a cm. While
gynmasimm am build healthy muacles,1
in . almoet every case, the eurcise
Undo ID build big appelitee;. th111, ln·
1tead of lO&ing1 the patzon. actually
iains weight.
I Froe child ""'"
Call now for a free sample vis.it, where
you actually use the .gpecial machines
for redUcing and electronic Facial Con·
touring. No ~rge,., no obligation,
Mystick Krewe
Fiesta 'Kaptured'
A strategic citadel captured
strictly for fun will be the
Harry Phillips home in
Fullerton, when the merry
Mystlck Krewe of Komus
turns into a liberating force
Saturday, Aug. 9.
After their successful libera·
lion of the staging area,
members will celebrate wilh a
Fiesta de Las Palmas at 3
p.m. Other hosts for the fun
bound invaders will be Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Mehnnann of
Buena Park.
Pinatas and other fiesta
frills will provide a
background for an authenU~
n1arlachi band. A juke box wUI
provide additional tunes fo l
dancing, and a catered Mei·
ican dinner will be served al
9:30 p.m. Other foods on tht
menu will be those from
secret recipes captured before
the fiesta date.
Reservations may be madt
before Aug. • by calling Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Shugert ol
Anaheim.
430 P1clflc Co.it Highwiy-642-3630
It a1Kt1 ••tt •I 11 .... ••'I' Cll.l~I
SANTA ANA -
A11ahtl111. h'ffrlr Hlll1, Coflll•, CreMh•w, D•Wllry, Gl111dalr, LU1wff4,
l•llt lffch, N•w,.rt IHch, N, HollywoH, 011teirlo, Pnade11r, Sa11 DI ... ,
SttltN A• .. hM• I•"-•" l•11lorul, T11mo.., Whittier. $a1Ht al1e 111 Frt111e
S.cre!Mllt-. S... J .... 111111.,.•ko. Wahurt Credi.
1840 W11t 17th Strttt-50-9457 fC~lt 1111 Cf#i.a J/trtl.alf Jlif. Ct. l~t.
'.. .-...
Saddleba~k
EDITION
-Today's Final
N.Y. Steeb
VOL 62, NO. 186, 2 SECTION S, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, AUGUST 5, '1969 TE~ CENTS
.,
Nixon Starts Clemente Rest Saturday
'
President Nixon and his family picked
the dates for their Southern "California
vacation today. They'll reach their ne\V
ocean ,view hilltop home in San Clemente
Saturday and will not return • to
.\Vashington until Sept. 7.
Antiwar Protesters Await Arrival distributed throughout the state.
He said ·"les.s than 10,000, but more
than 1,000 demonstrators" were expected
to arrive for the Sunday afternoon pro-
test.
DAILY l'ILOT Sti ff l'lOll
THROWN FOR A LOSS
Pe.ace Group's Sarnoff
DOIVta tlae
Missio11
T1·ail
Capo Trustees
Approve Budget
CAPISTRANO BEACH -A $5.5 million
Uudget for the Capistrano Unified School
District was appro\"cd Monday by
District trustees.
The spending schedule is based on a
district assessed valuation of $134.6
million and a general fund tax rate of
$3.66 per $100 assessed valuation. Total
general and bond interest and redemption
tax rate is $4.29 per $100 assessed valua-
tion.
.• Tracts O""ll So11y/1I
Fou r tentative tracts in t h e
suutheastern part of the county spreading
nver 176 acres with 709 single family
homes are before the CQunty Planning
Ctimmisson \Vednesday for approval.
They are:
-Laguna Niguel. 58.6 acres with 215
Jots at the east send of La Plata Drive
cast of Crown Valley Parkway in the
Klug Pl anned Community, by Security
Fore Corp.
-El Toro. 31.9 acres with 140 lots al
the southerly intersection o( Muirlands
and Los Alisos boulevards, by Southwest
Contractors Inc.
-1\iission Viejo. 57.7 acres with 218 lots
and one park site between Jeronimo and
Trabuco roads, about 2,300 feet east of
?\1antilla Lane, by Pi.fission Viejo ~o.
-Capistrano Palisades. 27.7 acres with
146 lots south of the San Diego Freeway
and east of Via Sacramento, by Presley
Development Co.
e Budget Conside r ed
IRVINE -TrG'stees of the San Joaquin
Elementary School District will consider
adoption of a $4.44 million schools' budg~t
at their meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m. 1n
the Irvine School Multipurpose Room.
14736 SW Sand Canyon Road , East Irvine.
Saved at Wedge
Surfer
While the rest of Orange County was
preparing for a warm but quiet welcome
for the President, protest groups have
begun a statewide effort to drum up a
protest (!atherlng in San Clemente Sun-
day, Aug. 17. They art advertising the
protest of American foreign policy as far
away as San Francisco.
It is unlikely the President and his
family will be directly touched by the
protest. The President -along with Mrs.
Nixon, Tricia Nixon. Julie Ni :1 o n
Eisenhower and her husband, David
Eisenhower -will be comfortabl~·
esconced behind the nine-foot block wall
surrounding the sprawling Spanish villa .
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District Monday denied a plea by
At Leary's Ratacla
the Peace Action Council (PAC) for use
of a San Clemente school field as a focal
point for the protest rally. They said the
field already had been reserved for a
youth football gathering.
Irving Sarnoff of Los Aigeles, PAC
representative, told the trustees that lhe
Sunday arternoon protest would proceed
1vithout a specific gathering place U need
b<.
Jn San Francisco. an underground
newspaper -the Red Mountain Tribe -
said the Vietnam Committee for Solidari-
ty with the American People (VCSAP) is
"cordi ally inviting everyone to
participate in a march" on San Clemente.
Said the newspaper:
Ex-Laguna Man's
Death Natural
Ri\."erside County coroner's deputies
said today that one-lime Laguna Beacll
resident John tilurl Griggs, 26, died 1'om
ot.her than natural causes at or. Timothy
Leary's now deserted hippie ranch.
Griggs died early Sunday in Hemet
Valley Hospital after becon1ing ill and
coliapsi ng in his teepee.
Investigation into the cause of his death
is continuing, said Riverside authorities.
Griggs and his wife, Carol Jean, 24,
moved f r o m Laguna about a year ago,.
shortly after their five-year-old son, Ger-
ry, swallowed the hallucinatory drug STP
and was hospitalized.
On June 23. 1968, the youngster alleged-
ly found the pills in a yard near the
Griggs' home at 1215 Roosevelt Lane in
Laguna Canyon. He CQmplained that his
hands were burning and he collapsed .
gofng Into convulsions. He was released
from South Coast Community Hospital
after several weeks treatment.
Griggs and his wife were arrested at
the time on child neglect charges, "but
we Couldn't make anything stic\.;,'' said a
L<:iguna police spokesman today.
Griggs, who, while he lived in Laguna,
wa~ employed by the Mystic Arts World,
J psychedelic sbtlp, was the scco!ld mem·
bcr of Dr. Leary's mountain commuttity
to die in less than a month. On July 14,
Charlene Rene Almeida, also a fonner
Laguna resident, drowned in a pond on
tbt property wb.ile UQder the influence ot
LSD.
Leary was later arre.!ited on charaes or
contributln(! to the delinquency or a
minor. Mi:5s Almeida was 17.
Five days before Griggs' death, his
wife gave birth to their s~nd chi.ld. .
Meanwhile, the 100 persods v1ho lived In
teepees on Leary's setUement land, own·
ed by an organization headed by the drug
exponent, have moved out. "It's a bad
scene.'' one of them was quoted.
Dr. Leary's son, John, was arrested at
the Griggs' Laguna home a year ago on
drug charges, since dismissed.
Lagunµ Coach Hal Akins
Does As Well on Canvas
One can tell thai Laguna Beach ltigh
School football coach lial AkiM is an
artist. At the end of the season he pre-
sented his players individual. oil ~nd
canvasses he painted of them 1n action.
One -can ;i!so tell that arlist J1al Akins
is a football coach.
At his f estival of the Arts booth he .
quietly sits. drawing next year's foot-
ball plays in a sma ll notebook. . .
And one can tell that Hal Akins is
successful in both fields.
His Laguna Beach High School fool·
ball team. the smallest team . in the
league, captured the championship last
fall . He has never ended a season lower
than third place.
Likewise he's the story of success at
the Festiv~\ grounds, where he's been
exhibiting for seven seaso ns.
Depending on what you \vant him for.
Akins can be found either at the high
school's coachin$ office designing a grid·
iron attack, or 1n his gallery-the fan1-
ily garage-attacking a design.
"You ha\•e lo attack with inspiration,"
he said. "That's what 1 tell my students.''
By the way, he's also an art instruc·
tor at Laguna Beach liigh School, which,
'Dies' 3
\l'ilh his painting and coaching leaves
little time for anything else.
Akins describes his work as a· cOrhDln.:
alion or abstract, non-cbjcctive and
contemporary action. Some of his most
popular pieces are football and beach
scenes, whether a sea of umbrellas or
big surr.
But like any progressive coach who
changes his plans to stay with the times
or confuse his opponents, Akins is a
progressive artist. He doesn't, however.
want to confuse his ciistomers.
"It used to be that about 90 perctnt
of the people rejected my art. Now,
rnaybe only 80 percent," he chuckles.
"People now are more knowledgeable
about art. There's no doubt about that.
There a real renaissance in art -
people are more tole rant."
Akin's own personal rena issance has
lately: evolved into the field of three-
dlmasional wood sculpture. }!e's even
considering selling his panel wall where
his paintings are hung. of which woott
sculpluring plays an integral part.
llis largest wood sculpture is named
(See AKINS, Page Zl
Times
Frantic reJ>uscitation efforts by lwo were Craig Coffin, 21. of 128 \'ia Havre. They found lraln pal.rolling In his
Ufcguards Monday af~moon saved the Lido Isle, the off-duty Los Angeles lifeguard jeep. lie called for an am·
life af an 18-year-old body surfer found lifeguard, and Newport Lifeguard Lt. Al bulance, then relieved Coffin. Irwin, who was on routine patrol near ed fl oating face down in treacherous surf off .. N" Street when Meyers was brought in· A lifeguard rescue OOat also arrlv on
the Balboa Peninsula wedge. to shore. the !lcene to assist the guards on shore.
'J'hc two guards, one of them an off-du· /"::'three other body surfers. all from Llfeguards Identified the three swlm-
ty Los Angeles County lileguard. restored I ~verside, first noticed the victim mers who di!tCOvered Meyen as Tom
the breathing and heartbeat of Steve rloating fact down 70 ftet from shore, Carroll, 19. John l..angley, 17, and John
f\1eyen, 18, San ·Oigec, who bfOke his lifeguards &aid. Jimenez, 17, &11 of Ri verside. •
h'1ck and nearly drowned after going They brought him into shallow water Lifeguardl u.id the waves at the
··ovtl' the falls" on a wave he was riding. Md summoned aid from Coffin, who was Wedge, the Newport a.rt1'1 btst -and
Meyers, whose heart stopped breathing on the beach. most dangerous -body surfing iPot,
thrft times during the surfside revival Coffin administered moulh·lo-mouth were very steep.
efforts. was in seriou1 condllion today, resuscitation and heart massa(!e on the \ Sir nonswlmmcrs were rescued from
lloag Memorial J~ospital aides 11ald. victim while the three youths went for the water there through Moud1y,
Credited with saving the youth 's IUe mart help. llfcguardl said.
,
"San Clemente is a mere 9-hour drive
from Berkeley, and thousands are ex-
pected to make it. so it should be easy lo
hitch down. (They can bust you unless
both feet are on the curb.)"
ln the Peace Action Council's ap-
pearance before the .Capistrano school
board. Tru stee l·larcourt Bull asked
Sarnoff if he was a men1ber of the Com-
munist Party .
"That is not germane to the discussion
here." Sarooff replied.
Bull then asked Sarnoff if he thought
the protest would help the President ob-
tain "rest. peace and quiet" in his sum-
mer \\lhite House.
·;That depends on ho\v you define
•
OAILY l'ILOT Stiff ""-"
FLOWER POT IN THE SKY
Waterln9 11 • Han9up
Laguna Parking
Meters May Get
Flo1very Touch
A twelve.foot high parking meter? With
flo~·ers on top ?
Only in Laguna Beach.
•·it's only here on trial. If we find it's
feasible and desirable, the merchants will
be asked to buy more o( them," explained
(,1\amber of Commerce Mana(!er Wa rreh
Morgan.
The parking meter In question towers
proudly in front of the Chamber office at
280 Park Ave. As parking meters (!O, it's
an impressive piece of hardware.
Sitling atop the meter, 12 feet Into the
air, sits the flower pot. But the flowers
ha ve had a rough summer. ·The lreen
flowers are plastic . The brown vegefallon
was at one time alive.
Now ll's not. "It wasn't watered." ex·
plall')Cd Jack EM:hbach, flower consultant
to the chamber.
The chamber would like lo see
downtown merchant& buy the llower pots
lo place on the meters in front of the.Ir
stores. The going price is $50 each. That
doesn't include the cost of the flowers.
"We'll probably use Lantanas," sa id
Eschbach. "They're about five to si.x feet ·
(See METER, P1ge II
'peace'," Sarnoff retorte4 .
ACLU attorney Phillip C h 4ri!?_ n I s , '
representing the PAC, said the l istrlct
and the city would ha ve to accept both
the benefits and burdens of the Pre.sid en-
lial presence.
lte said the peace group, U1e same
organization which organized the Centtiry
City demonstration against then-Presi-
dent Lyndon Johnson, was planning a
reasonable protest.
.. The human beings are going to be
here whether the city CQuncil and board
of education cooperate or not. They will
either have a place to go or they will be
shuttled back and forth," Chronis said.
.Sarnoff said that more than 25.000 leaf·
leis promoting the protest have been
No New Attacks
The Presidential J>arty is expected to
arrive at El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta·
tion in the Presidential jet, Air Force I.
lf normal procedure is followed, the
family will travel by Marine helicopter
from El Toro to a new landing pad across
the street from the Nixon summer home
in the Cyprest1 Shores section of San
Clemente.
Young Eisenhower, who with wife JuUe
is expect~ to spend the entire month in
lhe San Clemente home, has quJl his sum·
n1er job as a researcher for a Senate c:om·
mittee. He will return to Amherst College
Sept. 16 for his senior year.
tiirs. Nixon said she expects to be busy
next week with preparations for a dinner
August IJ in Los Angeles, honorin1 tbe
A)lO\lo 11 astronauts.
Hanoi Letting
War Fade Away
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces In
South Vietnam. respondi ng to current
American military \\'ithdrawals as an
Allied concession of defeat, h2ve can·
ce lled plans for new offensives and ma y
permit the war simply to fade away,
military sources reported today.
Basing their report on intelligence com-
muniques, the sources said North Viet-
nam apparently believes it can achieve
its goals tn1 South Vietnam without
* * * Nixo11 to Bring
More Gls Home
By Late August
\V ASI UNGTON (UP I) -President
Nixon is expected to announce a pullout
of 50,000 more American troops from
Vietnam in late August and may schedule
another withd rawal of 50.000 flghting men
in October, it was learned today.
This means Nixon will try to withdraw
125,000 lroops by the end or the year ond
fulfill his expressed hope of beating
former Defense Secretary Clark fi.f. Clif-
fo rd's timetable of 100,000.
An adm inistration source said f';ixon
and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler. chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of staff, have agreed the
withd rawal of 5().000 more Gls is fea sible
now-. Nixon will announ ce it later this
n1onth.
On the basis of \\!heeler's on-the-spo t
survey of the Vietnam militia and Nix-
on's own talks and observations during
his round-the-world trip. they report edly
have set another target in the fall of
50.000 troops in the phased withdrawal.
Nixon announced an initial troop cut of
25,000 duri ng the June 8 f\1idway summ it
meeting with President Nguyen Van
Thieu of South Vietnam.
Nixon was considering a broadcast to
the nation from Los Angeles Jn late
Augusl on the next pullout or fighting
men in hls campaign to "Vietnamb:e'' the
\var.
\Vheelcr presented his evaluak>n of the
war picture and continuing military lull
lo Nixon on J uly Z2. a short lime before
the President embarked on his world
tour.
Nixon sai(jl in Guam he was reviewing
the possibility of further tr oo p
withdrawa ls and would make bis pooltlon
clear in late August. The de-escalation of
enemy Activity -an evaluation of
whether I'. is deliberate or not -is under
inten sive study in the White House and
the Pent.agon.
50 C0,,1PETE
I N FOTORAMA
The 1''otorama Camora Contest. which
offers more than ssoo'roi:: the one pict ure
that win.s the grand 'Prize, <1rew 50 entrle3
Jn its fl:-sl wee k· of CQmpeUOon which
closed at noon last Thursday.
The top three photographs .are publlsh-
ed today on Page 5. Entries for Judging
in the second week of the three-week
event are being accepted now .it ,11 DAI·
LY PILOT offices (see rulet, Page 4).
Grano prize wlnntr will be R ltoclt;d dur·
lni Fotor~ma at 1''ash1on laland Aug. 21·
23. I '
I
further military efforts of major pro-
portions.
A North Vietnamese army officer cal>'
lured last week told Allied interrogator•
he had been instructed to inform his
troops that they appeared to have won
the war "because the Americans are
going home," the sources said.
A ranking U.S. officer said Hanoi , for
the present Lime at least. seem1 content
to "more or less sit back and wa:tch us go
home.."
'·North Vietnamese goals remain
unchanged,'' be said, "and Hanoi now
believes these goals can be fulfilled in a
low-keyed military effort.·•
Another source said North Vietnam and
!he Viet Cong may simply continue the
seven.week old fighting lull indefinitely
and allow the war to "fade away."
American troop withdrawals from
South Vietnam increased to about 12,200
Tuesday with the departure of another
150 anny troops, who had been assigned
to quartermaster and postal units. The
cutback began July 8 under a Nixon ad·
ministration program.
Although ground fight ing has fallen of f
lo little more than scattered skirmishes,
Aifieric8n B52 bombers are C0n1iiiiiiilg
daily raids over suspected Communist
positions.
fn overnigh t raids fi.fon day, the
bombers hit targets in the northern sec-
tor around lhe abandoned Marine outpost
at Khe Sanh and also slruck agaiMt in·
filtration corridors from 45 t.o 80 miles
from Saigon.
fl1ilitary communiques on ground
lighting of Monday said Allied troops
made ';light but continued contac t" with
Communist forces. They said at least 208
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops
were killed in the ski rmishes. America n
casualties listed for Monday were one
dead and seven wounded. South Viet·
namcse casualties were described as .. light."
Stock ltlarkets
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed almost even today, after moving
narrowly throughout the session. (See
quotalions, Pages 10.11).
The Dow Jones Industrial average at
2 p.1n. was of£ 1.81 at 820.77.
Orange Coast
' Weather
Hazy sunshine, the weather-
man's euphfmism for foggy daf'I,
will preval\ lhrou(!h Wednesday
along the orange Coast, with our
high of 72 more appealing than
the :;lj;'• ~Di\ y
Catifornio's most prominent
Dtmocrot. Jasse Unruh sny.t' if.T
governor or nothing-if ht runt
at au -and tliat he's not ht·
terested in challenging Sen.
George ~furplty. PtlQe 8.
••••lltt ,. "'"""•! P'llM• .,. (tlifffltl.t • ...,..... ~ .. ,
Cltulfillf 1 .. t l Orll'IM C"91tJ It Cfftlks U •rrwi. ,..,.. II C-~ ' hti.t .._ l>·I'
DMtll !Mt"lcn It '-"" 1 .. 11 Ulltritl .. _ ' ,... MMti;•h 1•11
&lllff'l..._I t T•llm• 1J
l'IMM• 1•11 TllNIWI • .._._ 14 WMl!lw I
Allll L_,..tn U Olt!MI Wiii"' 1•
Mtttll\ll II Wll'lf HoWI .. ,
IM'li.1 t
•
,
2 DAILY PILOT L lutSda1, August 5, 1969
OAILY ,lLOT S11ff l'i.tf
'
Two Issues
Bog Down
Plan Board
It was a long, wann night at City Hall.
The Laguna Beacn Planning Cam·
mission labored over a seven.item agen·
da at its Monday night meeting.
After nearly four hours or hushed
discussion, the meeUng was adjourned.
Five items wert le[t undecided.
Throughout the meeting, shouts ot
"Speak up, we can't hear you," were
directed at planners as the public hear·
tngs evolved into private talks bet\veen
the commissioners.
Decisions were reached on t"'o matters.
\Yith relatively little discu ssion, the
rommlssion approved a request by Yvon·
~ L. Crowshaw to add a bedroom and
bathroom at her family home at 1030
Temple Hills Drive without providing ad·
ditional off-street parking.
GE.RALD HUNTER, FERNANDO HUERTA TALK THINGS OVER DURING YMCA EXCHANGE PROGRAM
In Leguna, Whlt.1, Blacks ind Brown• M1kt •n Effort to Understa nd Eadl Other
The commission also directed Assistant
Planning Director Al Autry to forward a
letter to the City Council rtcommending
modifications of the parking certificate
program.
Laguna Cultural E~change
Blacks,
By TOM GORMAN
Of !ti• D1llY "lllt STiii
The people looked my "'ay, but they
weren't looking at me.
Their eyes were railing on my two
brothers. That's not so unusual, except
that one is black and the other brown.
They were my brothers, but just for the
weekend.
11 v;ast was the first haU of a cultural
exchange, sponsored by the South Orange
County YMCA.
Fourteen Los Angeles teenagers -
black, brown. and one white -were
guests of local teenagers in an attempt to
understand and appreciate each other's
feelings.
Organized by the V's Youth Council. it
was a start of a dialogue between three
cultures. An open and frank dialogue it
was.
"It was one step on the road towards
better understanding," said Fernando
Heurta Jr., 16, of Los Angeles.
"There'll be curves and detours. We're
going to have to be strong to stay on the
road and mike it straight. This exchange
was good. But what we really need Is an
adult exchange."
Fernando was my brown brother. The
black ont was Gerald. He had a natural
haircut, but not too Jong. When I first
saw him, he was wearing boots, blue
jeans, and a tee shirt. I didn't know what
J was getting into.
But then Gerald started talking. He
was the student body vice president at
Los Angeles High School. He was a start-
er on their championship football team.
"And he'll be going to Syracuse University
in the fall on a full four-year scholarship
for athletics and scholastic achievement .
He 'll major in electrical engineering.
\\'ell, so much for first imp ressions.
Even if a guy is black. I learned that
qu ickly.
I took my brothers on a tour of the art
festivals. I figured that i! this .is a
cultural exchange, I'd better show them
some culture. Gerald. 17. liked it. And
he 's bringing some of his friends back
next week for a second tour of the
festival s.
But, being black, he drew some eyes.
''lf they look at me, 1 look at them," he
aaid later.
I had never hosted a black person in
my home btjfore. I wanted to make sure
my actions were natural, not put on, not
plastic. I don't think they were. But hon•
do you tell a black that 1·m acting the
way 1 usually do -that my actions were
honest?
"You get the Idea that everyone is
going out of their "'ay to be hospitable,"
Gerald said. But he \vasn't concerned. "I
lvas a guest in your home. so naturally
DAILY PILOT
OUNGI! COAST PUltlSHINCJ COMN.M't
l eNrt N. Wettl •rai.n ... "'*'"'
Jacli: •• c.,1..,
Vkt ,,..Nini ... CJcftel' .. Mui"'
T1io111•t 91:,,,3
E•illf"
Tl.0111a1 A. Mirtplrii11t
~!Gli.r
~l\h,,.i r. t-1.11
L-0-11 Cltr lfltw
L .... INdiOflke
2tl ,..,,,, ~q,
Mtll{111 .Y411u1 P.O. 101 6il, t2,52: --(Dlll ,,,,..., n: *"' .,., ..... tl""'9'1 ••II',,,, Well ......... .....,. """""1111~1 --. .......
-·
Browns
you'll go out of your way lo be
hospitable."
"I'd like to come here aga in. But I
want to stay longer, a week at least," he
said. And my home is open.
Fernando had different things on his
mind when he talked to me. He .agreed
that it was hard for him, as it was for
Gerald, to rome ro ld into a white's home.
"[ was treated good," he said. "I liked
your family a lot, because they '"'·ere
human."
\Vhile Gerald wants to be an electrical
engineer, Fernando has hi s sights on
other things.
"1 want to be a revolutionary. I look,
and I see people who helped others. Look
at Cesar Chavez, Martin Luther King.
They helped their people. I want to help
my people. l want to revolt against the
things we face now."
But Fernando has had his problems. He
had been expelled from two high schools
before going ID Hamilton High.
He reailzes thal an education is a
neeessary tool for a leader. He wanl! to
be a leader, and now he wants his educ a·
lion. ''I 'll have to struggle for my educa-
tion. But I want it so very badly."
"You have to have educat.e<t people to
lead. I'll educate myself first. Then peo-
ple will look up lo me. I don 't mind being
a tool, as long as it's use<t in the right
v.·ay."
Fernando has great respect and love
for his father. "I look upon my father as
Y outli Takes Over
Plane as Dad
Dies at Controls
PRI NCE GEORGE, B.C. (AP) - A 21>-
year-0ld California youth with limited
flying experience took .over the controls
of a twin-engine amphibious aircraft and
landed· it safely here f\.1onday after his
father died at the plane's controls.
The plane carried 12 passengers.
John Dorr Jr., of Santa 1t1onica, CaliF.,
a student pilot, moved to the pilot's chair
v.•hen his father, John Dorr, Sr., suffered
a heart attack.
The younger Dorr radioed a mayday
signal which was picked up by Stu Spurr.
piloting a B. C. Airlines plane. who found
the distressed aircraft and shepherded it
to Prince George airport.
There. the air trarfic control tov•er took
over and radioed in structions to the
youth. He put the aircraft down in what
was desc ribed as a fairly smooth landing.
The youn~er Dorr's experience '-''BS
limited to single-engine aircraft and he
was not licensed for flying twin-engine
planes.
The plane was on a flight from
Trembler Lake, 115 miles northwest of
here, to the North"·est Territories when
the mayday call went out,
Trio Swimming
In Pool Caught
Laguna Beach police late 1tfonday night
arrested three young boys as they swam
in the high school pool, \Yllh them in Uie
pool were a picnic table and a bench.
The arrests resulted from stepped·up
police surveillance or the pool, which has
had to be closed several limes In the pasL
few weeks because of vandalism.
Children taking swimming classes were
forced to go home 1'fonday u•hen glass
was frund in the pool by lifeguards.
Police, reportedly using electronics
equipment, htlve the pool area under 24·
hour surveillance.
'Sin' Not Gronnds
For Taking Child
SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -The Slate
Court oC Appeal hu held that a child may
not be taken away from his mother simp-
ly because she is "living In iln."
The court Monday reversed a ruling by
a lower court that "A. J.," a 13-year-old
boy, must be placed In a foster home
because his mother was "cohebltlng with
a man not her husband."
Brothers
a saint. He's a sour~ of pride for my
family. Y.'hen we came to this rountry
from ~fexico I was very young. My
father was a baker, but when we came
· over he got a job as a janitor. Now he's
foreman at the company where he once
cleaned the balhrooms.
"He came from nothing to something.
And thars a hell of a Jot to do. He's
f>hown me that if I work hard enough, I
can get somewhere."
"I want to help my people. 1 want to
improve the general standing of the Mex-
icans. We need pride, unity. The blacks
have the Black Panthers. We have the
Brown Berets. They help our people. I'm
thinking about joining that organization,"
he said.
In the meantime, Fernando's "'orking
'vith the YMCA as a counselor. He loves
\vorking with children. "See these beads~
One of my boys gave them to me. I love
these kids."
If the purpose of the weekend was to
generate a meaningfu l dialogue among
three races, it was a success.
\Yhen Fernando and Gerald left my
house, they left a note ol appreciation for
my mother. They signed it, "Your friends
al"·ays."
They y.·ill be.
As it stands now, businesses unable to
provide the required off.street parking
must pay a fiat rate of $1,000 to the city,
The money would go into a parking fund.
The rommission has recommended that
a formula be used so the rate is equitable
for the businesses in the different
downtown areas, based on the assessed
valuation of the lend. Overall, the prices
of the parking certificates will go up,
perhaps several thousand dollars per site.
In other matters, commissionen defer·
red :
-A request by Carl Benson and Victor
LaPorte to reduce the required number
of off-street parking spaces al a new. of·
fice building at 473 Forest Ave. until a
parking lot is rompleted. . .
-Recommendations to the city C1>unc1l
on amendments to the building code in·
volv ing RI , R2, and R3 (residential) lots.
The planners will look into the proposed
amendments by three loca1 architects in
study session. The proposed amend!1'1e~ts
deal with height restrictions on h1ils1d_e
residences, side yard setbacks and densi-
ty. -
-Action on a request by Werner E.
Ehrenpreis to develop a 12-unit apa rl·
ment complex at 607-611 Sleepy Hollow
Lane. Ehrenpreis asked for the con-
tinuation so that the City Council might,
in the meantime, rela1 building code
restrictions. Those restrictions are the
same ones the planners will look into in
study session.
-Approval of a request by ltichard
Burt to add 32 unil! to the existing eight
units at The Shoals aparbnent complex,
1601 S. Coast Highway. Planners will look
into the traffic circulation before con-
sidering the request for the third time
Aug. 18.
OAILY PILOT Srtff '"'" LAGUNA'S AKINS COMBINES FOOTBALL , PAINTING
On the Field, the Art 11 in the Co1chin9
From Page 1
LAGUNA'S HAL AKINS • • • --
"Man-\Voman." The i;hapes of a man
and woman were carve<! out or separate
sheets of p1ywood, then tied together by
yam.
"Notice the gaps," he says.
litost of Akins' y,·orks are some~·hat
abstract.
''I paint for a particular effect. nnd
use the subject matter as a tool, rather
than let me be the tool and the subject
matter the end result." he explained.
Tha( attempt W convey a feeling-
rather than convey any particular scene
-resulls in the final abstraction,
''Thars "'hat l try to tell my students,"
Akins said. "I want my students to be·
como thinking artists, not just cameras."
Akins has previously taught in th e
gt.ate oC Washington and, closer to home,
'
In Fontana. In those and other areas,
he said, students often take arts and
crafts classes bel.ieving it's an e.asy
course. But boys tend to stay away from
those classes, he"s found.
At Laguna Beach High School, Ifs a
different story. Boys have no re.ser\'a·
lions aboul taking his classes-in fact,
some of the football stars are his best
students.
"And the studcnrs aren't taking the
cla.ues because \l's an easy course with
no homework. They're genui.ntly Inter-
ested. There's a built-in lnttrest in this town,·• Akins said.
"And there are a lot of kids \\ith 1
lot of n11tural talent. It's like football.
The betttr the kids arc, the more fun
It Is to coach them.''
DAILY r1LOT li.t'I Plltle
PAUL, MARGO, BRENT UHLAN SAFE AFTER SIDETRIP
The family Dachshund Was in the Ba9919t Compartment
Laguna Skyjack Victim
Says Cuba Flight 'Scary'
"A man has stepped Into lhe cabin and
directed us to fly to Havana, Cuba. Do
not be alarmed."
Those words, uttered by the captain of
a Trans World Airlines Boeing 727 over
Wichita, Kan., last week, began an unex-
pected adventure for a Mission Viejo
minister and his family and the president
of a Laguna Beach manufactuling girm.
"The scariest part of the trip was lan-
ding at Havana. YJe came down during
the tail end of a large stonn. The plane
as it came through the clouds suddenly
lilted and was buffeted like a ping pong
ball," the Rev. Mr. Paul Uhlar said to-
day.
Mr. Uhlar, his wife Margo and their 3-
year-old son, Brent, along with Donald
Barda, president of Telonics Industries,
were four of 131 people aboard the flight
hijacked last Thursday by a prisoner who
held a razor blade to the· throat or a TWA
stewardess.
The man was described by Mr. Uhlar
as a "middle-aged, clean-cut" man who
looked "like a businessman." Uhlar saw
the hijacker only as the prisoner was led
through the plane by armed Cuban
soldiers in Havana. ,
The JO.year-old minister is associate ,
pastor of the lo.fount of Olives Lutheran
Church in Mission Viejo. He and his
family live at 26622 Carretas Drive,
Mission Viejo. The family arrived in Los
Angeles Friday.
Barda, 38, lives in Laguna Beach at ·
1074 Van Dyke Drive. He heads the
Laguna-based ' Telonics f i r m v.•hich
manufactures ~cro-wave components.
While in Havana, the passengers were
given ham sandwiches, the only thing
they had to eat for 13 hours. The hi·
jacking had interupted lunch aboard the
plane, Mr. Uhlar said. They were in the j
Cuban capital for five hours. \
He said that the Cubans \Vere "very
nice and very courteou s." Soldiers took ·
the names, addresses and occupations of
all the passsngers. '
~tr. Uhlar said that during the Havana
stay, it rained continuously. No special
problems came up, he added.
The minister did not know what hap-
pened to the hijacker.
Venezuela Visitor
Laguna Girl Exchange Student
\\''hen Leigh Kiesselbach goes on a
vacation, she goes on a vacation.
The JS-year-old paguna Beach lligh
School senior left tHis morning for an ll·
hour flight Crom Los Angeles Interna-
tional Airport to 1'11iami, Florida to
Caracas, \1enezuela . And that doesn·t in·
elude any unscheduled slop overs en
route.
Leigh, who has never ventured outside
of Southern California, will spend a ,
month in Caracas staying at the home of
Diana Baral!, a 17-year-old who just
recently returned to her home after spen-
dlnga year in Laguna Beach as a foreign
exchange student.
~Uss Baralt was the guest of ~[r. and
1t1rs. Jerome Linenkugel, 515 El Bosque,
where Leigh also lh•es -lull time.
Leigh made the promise to herseU to
go to Diana's naUve home last
December.
Flying from ~liaml to \1enezuela
doesn·t faze Leigh in the slightest -e\·en
if Cuba is somewhere in between.
"No. I'm nol worritcl at all. As a mat·
!er of facl, '' she said. "I kind of hope we
f!o get hijacked. It 1vould be kind of ex·
ciling."
Municl1 Bishop
Won't Quit Post
~1UNICli (UPI) -In a surprise a~
pearance on West Gennan television. the
Roman Catholic auxlllary bishop of
t>.tunich vowed to remain in otfice despite
his admitted involvement in the '"'·arUme
execution of 17 Italian hostages.
l\lsgr. ~1atthias Defregger said P.1onday
ni11ht he "''ould not resign in "the present
period of uproar and excitement.''
Defregger "·as a captain in a Gennan
infantry unlt billeted in the Italian town
of Filetto dt' Camarad1 in June, 1144,
While there, Defregger has admitted he
passed on the order for the execution of
17 hostages but only alter arguing against
the massacre.
TRAVELING SOUTH
Laguna's Kiesselbach
From Page .1
METER •..
in width. and they hang about lh'e or six
feet. And they only need watering once a
"'·eek.''
The maximum cost of the plant would
be $S per pot, according to Eschbach.
No formal proposal to the downtown
merchants has been made yet , r..tor1u.
said. ''Y.'e're just trying it on !or !lie.
The idea came from one of the ladies in
the beautification committee, who saw
them in a town in Ma ine.
"11\is project ShO\\'S Iha\ the beautlficll·
lion committee Is renlly worklng,''
~lorgan said.
' I
' ' '
Newport Harbor Today's Final
N.Y. Steeb EDITION
VOL 62 , NO. 186, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGE_S ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 01969 TEN· CENTS
Nixon Starts Clemente Rest Saturday
OAILY PILOT S11fl PllO'-
THROWN FOR A LOSS
Pea"ce Group's Sarnoff
Lido Thiev es
Get $9,750
In New Suits
Police are looking for the midnight
haberdashers who ·broke into a
fashionable Lido lsle men's slore early
this morning and made off with 59,750 in
men's suits.
After ·hurling \\\'O \\'OOd-and-metal milk
crates through a plate-glass \vindow on.
the east side of Bidwell's, 3467 Via Lido,
the burglar either reached in or climbed
in and stripped a rack of 78 men's suits in
assorted sizes and colors, owner Helen
Bidwell told Ne\\·port Beach police of-
ricers.
The police re sponded at 3:29 a.m.,
·when the thieves activated a silent
burglar alarm.
J\1rS. Bid,vell said the suits ~·ere valued
at an average of $125 each.
Old Mesa Scl1ool
Reunion Slated
The class or 1948-9 of the eighth gratlt
of the 1.-fain School, 19th and Newport.
Costa 11esa. will hold a class-reunion
August 22 at the Elks Jlall, Elks Lane in
Santa Ana.
The reunion will honor f\Uss E. 1\1or-
row, one of Orange County's oldest living
teachers.
A social hour will begin at 6 p.m., with
dinner at 8 p.m.
Reservations are $8.00 per person.
For reservations, call Bob Dinger at
S48-0S66 or 541-4933, or Evelyn William at
&48-9447 or ~30.
J\osygin in Hungary
BUDAPEST, Hungary 1API -Soviet
Premier Alexei N. Kosygi n arrivl'd here
today. the news agency P.1TI reported .
The agency &aid Kosygin will s1>eM a
vacation in Hungary al the invitation of
Premier Jenee Fock.
Saved at Wedge
Surfer
Frantic resuscitJlion efforts by twn
lifeguards Monday arternoon sa\1ed the
life of an 18-year-0ld body surfer found
floating face down In treacht'rous surf off
the Balboa Peninsula \\-'edge.
The two guards, one of them an off~u·
ly Los Angeles County lifeguard, restored
the breathing and heartbeat of Steve
~!eyers, 18, San Dlgeo, who broke his
back and nearly drowned after going
"ovtr the falls" on a wave he was riding.
f\.1eyers, whose heart stopped breathinc
three times during the surfside revival
r.fforl.s, was In serious condition lodAy 1
Ho11g flfemorial Hospllal aides said.
CrtdltOO with saving the youth's life
President Nixon and his family picked
the dates for thei r Southern California
\'a.cation today. They'll reach their new
ocean view hilltop home in San Clemente
Saturday and will not return to
Washington until Sept. 7.
While the rest of Orange Counly was
preparing for a warm but quiet welcome
for the President, protest groups have
begun a statewide eHort to drum up a
protest gathering in San Cle1nente Sun-
day, Aug. 17. They art> adverlising the
protest of American foreign policy as far
•away as San Francisco.
It is unlikely the President and his
family will be directly touched by the
p~otest. The President -along with Mrs.
Nixon. Tricia Nbcon, Julie N i x on
Eisenhower and ~1er husband , David
Eisenhov•er -will be comfortably
esconced behind the nine-foot block wall
surrounding the sprawling Spanish villa.
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District Monday denied a plea by
Leary Ranch
Death Said
Not Natural
Riverside County coroner's depulies
said today that one-time Laguna Beach
resident John ~1url Griggs, 26. died fr__ol]l
fit.her lhan natural causes at Dr. TiriiOffiy
Leary's no\v deserted hippie ranch.
Griggs died early Sunday in Hemet
Valley Hospital after becoming ill and
coliapsing in his teepee.
Investigation into the cause of his death
Is continuing, said Riverside authorities.
Griggs and his wile , Carol Jean, 24,
moved from Laguna about a year ago ,
shortly after their five-yea r.Old son, Ger·
ry, swallowed the hallucinatory drug STP
and was hospitalized.
On June 23, 1968. the youngster alleged·
ly found the pills in a yard near the
Griggs' home at 12l5 Roosevelt Lane in
Laguna Canyon. He complained that his
hands were ,burning and he collapsed,
going into convulsions. He was released
from South Coast C-Ommunity Hospi tal
after several weeks treatment.
Griggs and his wife were arrested at
t!1e time on child neglect charges, "but
we couldn't make anything stick," .said a
Laguna police spokesman today.
Griggs, who. while he lived !n Laguna ,
\\'a5 employed by the Mystic Arts \\'orld,
:i psychedelic shi;p, was the seco~d mem·
bcr of Dr. Leary's mountain community
to die Jn less than a month. On July 14,
Charlene R~ne Almeida, also a fonncr
Laguna resident drowned in a pond on
tht property while under the influence of
LSO
Leary was laler arrested on charges of
('Ontributing to the delinquency of a
minor. Miss Almeida was 17.
Five days before Griggs' death, his
wi!e gave birth to their second chi.Id. .
~leanwhile, the 100 persons v1ho hved 1n
teepees on Leary's settlement land, own·
cd by an organization headed by the drug
exponent, have moved out: "It's a bad
seene," one of them was quoted .
Dr. Leary's son. John, was arrested al
1he Griggs' La guna home a year ago on
drug charges, since dismissed.
Congress111en Selling
Assets lo Pay Debts
\VASlUNGTON (UPI) -Rep. Seymour
lfalpern IR·N.Y.), said P.1onday he had
ordered liquidallon of his assels to pay
his debts. IL has been estimated Halpern
owes more than $100.000 to several banks,
Halpern. a member of the House Bank··
ing and Currency Committee. said it was
"preposterous" to imply that his voting
record had been affected by his debts.
'Dies' 3
were Craig Coffin, 21. of 128 Via Havre,
Lido Isle, the off-duty Los Angele~
lifeguard, and Newport Lifeguard Lt. Al
lt\\•in, who was on routine patrol near
"N'' Street when f\.leyers was brought in-
to shore.
Three other body surfers. all frnm
Ri verside, first noticed the victirn
floating face down 70 feet from shore,
lifeguards said.
They brought him into shallow water
~nd summoned •id fro1n eorfin, who wa s
on th<! beach.
eo rnn administered mouth·to-mouth
resuscitation and heart massage on the
\'ictlm whlle the three youlhs went for
more help.
Antiwar Protesters Await Arrival distributed throughout lhe ltate.
He said "less than 10,000, but more
than 1,000 demonstrators" were ei:pected
to arrive ror the Sunday afternoon pro-
test
the Peace Action Council (PAC) for use
of a San Clemente school field as a focal
point for the protest rally. They said the
field already had been reserved for a
youth football gathering.
Ir ving Sarnoff of Los Argeles, PAC
rcpre sentalive, told the trustees that the
Sunday afternoon protest would proceed
\vithout a specific gathering p!ace if need
be.
In San Francisco, an underground
newspa~r -the Red ~1ountain Tribe -
said the Vietnam Committee for Soi!dari-
ty with the American People (VCSAP ) is
"cordially inviting eve r yon e to
participate in a march" on San Clemente.
Said the newspaper:
"San Clemente ll; a mere 9-hour drive
from Berkeley, and thousands are tX·
peeled to make it, so it should be easy to
hilch down. (They can bust you unless
both feet arc on the curb.)''
In the Peace Action Council's ap·
pearance before the Capistrano school
boa rd, Trustee Harcourt Bull asked
Sarnoff if he was a member of the Com-
n1unist Party.
"That is not germane to the discuss ion
here," Sarnoff replied.
Bull then asked Sarnoff if he thought
lhc protest would help the President ob-
tain "rest, peace and quiet" in his sum-
mer While Hou.se.
"That depends on how you define
"~lenrietta," Rhode Island Red O\Yned by Mrs. Kathleen English of
Costa Mesa, loves chOcolate, a s she demonY.rates by plucking pie~e
oI candy from mouth of Lance English, 11 . 1-lenrietta also devours
cal food , grapes, peaches, corn on the cob and milk. She lays one
egg a day, except on Sundays.
Hypnotist Dante Freed
'
On Boat Theit Charges
Jet set hypnotist Ronald Dante, hus-
band of actress Lana Turner, today was
cleared of charges that he stole seven 16-
foot motorboats valued at $18,SOO from a
Costa Mesa boat firm .
Sant.a Ana Municipal Court Judge Paul
!\last agrted with Dante that his pro-
secutors had failed lo give him a speedy
trial "wilhin the full meaning of the
law.''
In any event. Judge Mast noted, those
same prosecutors had failed to insure
fh"I 1vif""<1SCS vital to their case were in
court today.
uante was hustled (rom the courtroom
Times
They found Irwin patrolllng In hi s
lifeguard jeep. He called ror an am-
bulance, !hen relieved Coffin.
A lifeguard l"(SCUe boat al!KI arrived on
tilt scene to mist the guards on shore.
l..ifeguards identified the lhree .. 1wlm·
mers who discovered Meyers a."i Tom
Carroll , 19, John Langley, 17, and John
J imenez. 17, all of Riverside.
Lifeguards said the waves at the
Wedge. the Newport area's beiot -and
most dangerous -body 1urflni: spot,
we.re very steep.
Six nonswimmer s were rt5Cucd from
the watef there through Monday,
llfeguard.t !laid .
by aUorney Burton Rosenberg and
buslnc11s manager Art Newberg lo avoid
what Rosenberg described as "a possible
re-arrest ht the district attorney."
The possiblillty exists, a district at-
torney's 11pokesman later confirmed, "but
it is extremely doubUul that we will take
further action."
Dante , 49, took further action by today
filing a $7 mJIUon malicious prosecution
suil against the two men whose allega-
tions launched criminal action against
him in May, 1968.
Named by the Malaysian born en-
tcrtalnc .. are Ronald S. Snyder, 36, of
2320 College Drive, Cost.a Mesa and Dr.
Dennis W. Albright, Anaheim .
Also named in the lawsuit is the Marlin
Boat Co. of Orange. whose outlet is Mesa
Boat Center, 1595. Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa.
Dante was accused of giving the boat
company a check for $18,515 which bore
\\'hat proved to be a fictitious name of a
Las Vega.s corporation. Investigators said
the check was written on a non-existent
branch of the Bani!: of America al which
ncllhtr Dante nor the Las Vegas tor·
poratlon hed Bn account.
The prosccuUon took on wider publicity
\\'hen Danle became the target last June
17 ot' an unknown gunman who fired five
shots RI tht hypooti11t as he drove his car
Into an undtrground garage.
lhnnphrey Undecided
CHICAGO CUP!) -Hube(! H •
llumphrey said Tutsday he has not mllde
any de(lnlte plans about running for lhe
Senate Jn MlnnCM>tt ne1t year.
.,
'peace'," Sarnoff retorted.
ACLU ~ttorney Phillip C h r o n I s ,
representing !he PAC, said the district
and the city would have. to accept both
the benefits and burdens of the Presiden-
tial presence.
He said the peace group, the same
organization which organized the Century
City demonstration against then-Presi-
dent Lyndon Johnson, was planning a
reasonable protest.
"The human beings arc going to be
here whether lhe city council and board
of education cooperate or not. They will
either have a place to go or they will be
shuttled back and forth," Chronis said.
Sarnoff said that more than 25,000 !ear.
lets promoting the protesJ have been . _,
No Netv Attacks
The Presidential Ji&rty is expected to
arrive at El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta ..
tion in the Presidential jet, Air Force I.
If normal procedure is followed, the
family will traveJ by Marioe helicopter
from El Toro lo a new landing pad across
the street from the Nixon summer home
in the Cypress Shores section o( San
Clemente.
Young Eisenhower, who wilh wife Julie
is expect~ to spend the entire month in
the San Clemente home. has quit his sum ..
mer job as a researcher for a Senate com-
mittee. He will return to Amherst College
Sept. 16 ror his senior year.
Mrs . Nixon said she expects to be busy
next week with preparations for a dinner
August 13 in Los Angeles, honoring the
Apollo 11 astronauts .
Hanoi Letting
.War Fade Away
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces In
South Vie,lnam, responding to current
American military withdrawals as an
Allied concession of defeat, have can-
celled plans for new offensives and may
pennit the war simply to lade away,
military sources reported today.
Basing their report on Intelligence com-
muniques, the sources said North Viet-
nam appari;ntly believes it can achieve
ita plJ ba--South Vietnam withoul
* * * Nixo11 to Bring
More Gls Home
By Late August
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon is expected to announce a pulloot
of S0,000 more American troops from
Vietnam in late August and may schedule
another withdrawal of S0 ,000 fighting men
in Oclober, it was learned today.
This means Nixon will try to withdraw
125,000 troops by the end of the year and
fulfill his expressed hope of beating
former Defense Secretary Clark P.1. Clif·
ford 's timetable of 100,000.
An administ ration source said Nixon
and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of staff, have agreed the
withdrawal of S0,000 more Gls is fea sible
now. Nixon will announce JI later th is
month .
On the basis of Whee ler's on·the-spot
survey of the Vietnam militia and Nix·
on's own talks and observations during
his round-the-world trip, they reportedly
have &et another target in the fall of
S0,000 troops in the phased withdrawal.
Nixon announced an initial troop cut vf
2.'i,000 during the June 8 Midway summit
meeting with President Nguyen Van
Thieu of South Vietnam.
Nixon was considcring•a broadcast lo
lhe nation from Los Angeles in late
Augu!'il on the next pullout of fighting
men in his campaign to "Victnamite" the
war.
\Vhccler presented his evaluaton of the
"'ar picture and continuing military lull
to Niaon on July 22. a short time l>efore
lhe President embarked on his world
tour.
Nixon said ln Guam he was reviewing
the possibility of further troop
withdrawals and w~ld make his position
clear in late August. The de-escalation of
enemy activity -an evaluation of
whether l'. is deliberate or not -ls under
in tensive study In the White House and
the Pentagon.
50 COMPETE
I N FOTORAJUA
The fotorama CA mera Contest. which
offers more than '500 for the one picture
that wins the granJ prize, drew ~ entries
in ils fl:'JI. week of competition which
clME.'ii at noon last Thursday.
The top three photoarllphs are publish-
ed today on Page 5. Entries: for judging
in the second week of the thrtt-week
event are being f!ccepted now at 111 DAI·
l.Y PILOT offices (see rules, Page 4),
Grano prize winnt:r wlU be :oi;elected dur-
ing Fotorama at F'uhlon lsland Aug. 21·
%3.
further military efforts of major pro-
portions.
A North Vietnamese army officer ea~
lured last week told Allied interro&_ator1
he had been instructed to inform hii
troops that they appeared to have won
lhe war "because the Americans are
going home," the sources said.
A ranking U.S. oflictr said Hanoi, for
the present time at least, seeml!i content
to "more or less sit back and watch us go
home."
"North Vietnamese goals remain
unchanged," he said, "and llano! noW'
believes these goals can be fuUilled lo a
low-keyed nlilitary ~ffort."
Another source said North Vietnam and
the Viel Cong may simply continue the
seven·week old fighting lull indefinitely
and allow the war to "fade away."
America n troop withdrawals from
South Vietnam increased to about 12,200
Tuesday with the departure of ant.ther
ISO army troops, who had been assigned
lo quartermaster and postal units. Thi
cutback began July 8 under a Nixon ad-
ministration program.
Although ground fighting has fallen off
to little more than scattered skirmishes,
American B5? bombers are conlinuinc
daily raids over suspected Communist-
positions. I
In overnight raids P.tonday, the
bombers hit targels in the northern sec·.
lor around the abandoned ~1arinc outpost
al Khe Sanh and also struck against in·
filtration corridors from 45 lo 80 miles
from Saigon.
Military • ctihirfluniques on ground
fighting of Monday said Allied troops
made "light but conlinued contact" wiUt
Communist forces. They said al least 208
North Vletnamese and Viet Cong troop:f'
were killed in the skinnishes. American·
casualties listed for Monday were one
dead and seven wounded . South Viel·
namese casualties were described as
"light."
Stock /llarkels
NE\V YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed almost even today, after moving
narro'A·ly throughout the session. (See
quotations, Pages 10-11 ).
The Dow Jones Industrial average at
2 p.m. \Vas off 1.81 at 820.77.
Orange Coast
Weather
lla.zy sunshine. the weather-
man's euphemism (or foggy day1,
will prevail through Wednesday
along the Orange 'Coast, with our
high of '12 more appe.allng than
the inland area's 93.
INSIDE TODAY
California's most prom bu•nt
Democrat, Jesse Unruh SCft/S ti'1
go~rnor or nothi11g-i/ he '""'
at all ...: ond t/1at l1e's no' 1n-
ferestP.d in chatlengb1g Strn,
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~ DAILY PILOT
DAILY I'll.OT Sttff PIMtt
Be..,een Mesa, Valley
Best Bridge Spot
Study Going On
Studies to determine the best spat for
another bridge spaMing the Santa Ana
River between Costa Mesa and Fountain
Valley are under way, but nothing
definite is expected for two years.
Under current development patterns in
the west Orange County ~glon, the Ioctl·
tion would appear to be a linkup of Sun-
flower Avenue on the east and Ellis
Avenue on the valely side.
F1.:untain Valley City Council members
will discuss the matter in slUdy session
prior to their regular 3 o'clock meeting
tonight.
Costa · Mesa City Engineer Gecirge A.
ltladsen said oUicials on the Mesa side of
th~ river and county authorities have
pretty well a1reed ln theory on the
r.ewest propo$ed location.
Costa Mesa City Councilman Willard T.
Funds for the job will coMe from stile
gasoline taxes and the county's arterial
highways financing program .
One of the primary considerations In
picking a new sile is determination of the
future Orange Freeway route rouahly
along the river course -if the s t a t e
doesn't end ii at the San Diego Freeway.
"The bridge project will come up when
the dem11nd is there," ~tadsen continued,
'·but we're not carrying that much traUic
on nearby Talbert Avenue yet." •
GERALD HUNTER, FERNANDO HUERTA TALK THINGS OVER DURING YMCA EXCHANGE PROGRAM
In Laguna, Whites, Bl1ck1 and Browns Make •n Effort to Understand Each Othtr
Jordan said Monday he is delighted at the
news that a crossing further inland from
one orlglnally proposed and hotly pro-
te&ted Is planned.
Club to Name
Hale Fund
• Laguna C1iltur!'l Exchange
Representatives of the Mesa Verde
Homeowners' Association bitterly fought
the plan four years ago when a crossing
\Va~ suggested at Gisler Avenue, mat·
ching up to Garfield Avenue in Fountain
Valley.
Raffle Winner
' The Balboa Angling Club will announce
Bla~ks,
~ TO?II comtAN
-. t"4 DlllJ Pllllll st1tl
The people lookOO my \\'SY, but they
weren'! looking at me.
Their eyes "'ere falling on my two
brothers. That's not so unusual , except
that one is black and the other brown.
They were my brothers, but just for the
voeekend.
It wast was the first half of a cultural
exchange, sponsored by the South Orange
County YMCA.
Fourteen Los Angeles teenagers -
black, brown, and one \\'hite -were
guests of local teenagers in an attempt to
understand and apprecia te each other's
feelings.
Organized by the Y's Youth Council, it
was a start of a dialogue between three
cultures. _An open and frank dialogue it
Y.'a.!i.
"It was one step on the road towards
better understanding," said Fernando
Heurta Jr., 16, of Los Angeles.
"There'll be curves and detours. We're
going to have to be strong to stay on the
road and make it straight. This exchange
was rood . But what we really need ls an
adult e:rchange. '1
Fernando was my brown brother. The
black ont: was Gerald. He had a natural
haircut, but not too long. When I first
saw him. he was wearing boots, blue
jeans, and a tee shirt. I didn't know what
J was getting into.
But then Gerald started talking. He
"'as the student bOOy vice president at
Los Angeles High School. He was a start-
er on their championship football team.
And he'll be going to Syracuse University
in tbe fall on a full four-year scholarship
for athletics and scholastic achievement.
lie'll major in electrical engineering.
Well, so much for fU"st impressions.
Even if a guy is black. I learned that
quickly.
I took my brothers on a tour of the art
festivals. I figured that if this is a
cultural exchange, I'd beltt:r show them
some culture. Gerald. 17. liked ii. And
he's bringing some of his friends back
ntxt week for a second tour of the
festivals.
But, being black, he drew some eyes.
"If they look at me, I look at them," he
said later.
l had never hosted a black person in
my home before. I wanted to make sure
my actions were natural, not put on, not
plastic. I don 't think they were. But how
do you tell a black that I'm actins the
\11ay I usually do -that my actions were
honest?
"You get the ldea that everyone is
go.ing out of the ir way to be hospitable,"
Gerald said. But he 'vasn't concerned. "I
\\'as a guest in your home, so naturally
DAILY PllOT
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Browns
you'll go out a( your way to bt
hospitable."
"I'd like to come here again. But I
want to stay longer, a week at least," he
said. And my borne is open.
Fernando had different things on his
mind when he talked to me. He agreed
that it was hard for him, as lt was for
Gerald, to come cold into a white's home.
"I was treated good," he said. "1 liked
your family a Jot, because they \vere
human."
\Vhile Gerald \'.·ants to be an electrical
engineer, FernandQ has his sights on
other things.
"1 \vant to be a revolutionary. I look ,
and I see people who hel~ others. Look
at Cesar Chavez, Martiii Luther King.
They helped their people. J want to help
my people. I want to revolt a1atn.st the
things we face now."
But Fernando has had his problems. He
had been expelled from two high schools
before going to Hamilton High.
He reailzes that an education ts a
necessary tool for a leader. H?'wants to
be a leader, and now he wants his educa-
tion. "I'll have to struggle for my educa·
tion. But I want it so very badly."
"You have to have educated people lo
lead. I 'll educate myself first. Then peo-
ple will look up to me. I don't mind being
a tool, a.s long as it's used in the right
way."
Brothers
Fernando has great respect and love
for his father. "I look upon my father as
a saint. He's a source of pride. for my
famlly, When we came to this country
Crom Mexico I was very young. My
father was a baker, but when we came
over be got a job as a janitor. Now he's
forema n at the company where he onct
cleaned . the bathrooms.
"He came from nothing to something.
And that's a hell of a lot to do. He's
shown me Jhat If I work hard enough, I
can get 1ornewhere."
•·1 want to h•IP my people. I want lo
improve the general standing of the Mel·
icans. We need pride, unity. The blacks
have the Black Panthers . We have the
Brown Berets. They help our people. I'm
thinking about joining that organization,"
he said.
In the meantime, Fernando's working
with the YMCA as a counselor. He loves
"'orking with children. "See these beads?
One of my boys gave them to me. I love
these kids."
If the purpose of the weekend was to
generate a meaningful dialogue among
t~ree racu, it was a success.
\Vhen Fernando and Gerald left my
house, they left a note of appreciation for
my mother. They signed it, "Your friends
always.'/
They will be.
"All we're trying to do now is study the
alignment so we'll know where to go -if
and when we do -but ttie plan for a
bridge · is at least two years away,"
Madsen explained.
No cost estimate has been made, but
Costa 1t1esa and Fountain Valley v.·ill pay
for the eventual bridge approaches, while
the county will pick up the cost of the
span Itself.
Guards Hoping
Stormy Doreen -
W on't Hit Town
Maybe, just maybe, the Oran1e Coast
is in for some rough .surf Thursday morn-
ing, thanka to tropical storm Doreen.·
The storm, now wailing about 1,035
miles southeast of here, could create
heavy waves and a lot or headaches for
lifeguards, who kept busy two weekends
ago rescuing scores of swimmers and
surfers caught in strong breakers and
riptides.
the winners and 1 total proceeds Monday
rrom a raffle held to augment the
scholarship fund of Balboa's Colston
Hale, 16, who lost most DI' his firigers la st
spring in a bayside accident.
The Rotary-sponsored scholarship fund
for the Ne"·port Harbor High School stu-
dent has topped the $1 ,100 mark so far,
and the proceeds from the angling club's
raffle of new fishing tackle sh<luld add
substantially to it, Rotary spokesmen
said today.
The \\'inners will be drawn by members
of the angling club Sunday evening.
Rotarians tonight \viii start another
drive for young Hale-a search for apart-
ment furniture for the youth and his elder
brother, Frank.
The younger Hal e, who has moved to
the Harbor Arca, and his brother plan to
live together and continue school. Cole
\viii enter his junior year at Harbor High;
:Frank will enroll at Orange Coast
College.
Fred Swenson, co-chairman for the
scho larship campaign, said the
furnishings will be sought fi rst from
Rotary members at the regular monthly
meeting tonight.
Appeals to the public for home furnish·
ings will also be issued, he said.
The funds collected and administered
by members of the Rotary Club will go
toward Hale's college education. He
hopes to major in psychology in college.
~ieanwhile the youth is continu.ing
physical therapy al lloag Memorial
Hospital where last May IO he entered as
an emergency patient suffering from
nearly total amputation of his fingers.
Laguna Skyjack Victim
Says Cuba Flight 'Scary'
Or she could veer farther out to sea.
Chief Newport Beach lifeguard Bob
Reed said today that if the waves and
curnnts materialize, he wtll rely on the
radio-equipped jeeps and boats and the
telephonHQuipped lifeiuard towers to
aid In rescue operallons, along with the
nonnal complement of lifeguards on
duty.
Registration Set
For Tots Classes
Rtgl1tration for the next session of
Tiny Tot Swltn Classes at the Orange
Coast YMCA, 2300 University Ave.,
Newport Beach, will be held Aug. 11 .
He received the injuries in a· freak ac·
cident on the docks of Art's Landing in
Balboa, where he had taken a job to 5Up-
plement his meager income. He was liv-
ing with guardians, poµ.tnts of his best
friend.
Swenson said the Rotary CI u b
welcomes more donations of either
household items or cash for the
scholarship fund, which, he said, is sure
lo grow each year.
"A, man has stepped Into the cabln and
directed us to fly to Havana, Cuba. Do
not be alarmed.''
Those words, uttered by the captain of
a Trans World Airlines Boeing 727 over
\Vichita, Kan., last week, began an unex·
peeled adventure for a :fi.fission Viejo
minister and his family and lhe president
of a Laguna Beach manufacturing girm.
"The scariest part of the trip was Ian·
ding at Havana. We came down during
the tail end of a large storm. The plane
a.s it came through the clouds suddenly
tilted and was buffeted like a ping pong
ball," the Rev. Mr. Paul Uhlar said lo·
day.
Mr. Uhlar, his "'i(c Y..iargo and their 3·
year-old son. Brent, along with Donald
Barda. president of Telonlc.s Industries.
"''ere four of 131 people aboard the flight
hijacked last Thursday by a prisoner who
held a razor blade to the throat of a TWA
stewarrless.
The man was described by Mr. Uhlar
as a "middle·ased, clean.cut" man who
looked "like a businessman.'' Uhlar uw
the hijacker only as the prisoner was led
through the plane by armed Cuban
soldiers in Havana.
The 30-year-<>ld minister is associate
pastor of the t.fount of Oli\'es Lutheran
Ch.urth in t.tission Viejo. He and his
fanlily live at 25622 Carretas Drive.
, 11.Ussion Viejo. The family arrived in Los
Youth Takes Over • Plane as Dad
Dies at Controls
PRINCE GEORGE , B.C. (AP) -A 20-
year-old CalifornJa youth with lbnited
flying eiperien~ took over the controls
of a twin-engine amphibious aircraft and
landed it safely here. Monday after his
father died at the plane's controls.
The plane carried 12 passengers.
John Dorr Jr., ()f Sant.a Monica, Calif.,
A 1ludent pilot, moved to the pilot's chair
when his fathtr, John !lorr, Sr., suffered
a heart aLtack.
The youn.ger Dorr radioed a m•yd•Y
1ignal whk:h was picked up by Siu Spurr.
piloting a B. C. Airlines pl1ne, who found
1tie distressed alrcr1rt and shepherded It
to Prince Georae airport.
Thert, the air traffic control to""·er took
t.iver and ridioed instructions to the
yout h. He put th«l aircraft do,vn In lvhat
was described as a fairly amoolh landlng.
Anieles Friday.
Barda, 38, lives In Laguna Beach al
1074 Van Dyke Drive. He heads the
Laguna-based Telonics firm "'hich
manufactures micro-wave components.
\Vhlle in Havana, the passengers were
given ham sandwiches, the only thing
they had to eat for 13 hours. The hi·
jacking had interupted lunch aboard the
plane, lt1r. Uhlar said. They were in the
Cuban capital for five hours.
1-fe said that the Cubans \\'ere "very
nice and very courteous." Soldiers took
the names, addresses and occupations of
all the passsngers.
tllr. Uhlar said that during the Havana
stay, it rained continuously. No special
problems came up, he 11cldecl.
The minister did not know \vhal hap-
pened to the hijacker.
Cloav11i1ag It Up
The classes a r e limited to children
three to four years of age. Each class
has four children per instructor and are
held Monday through Friday.
Registration for the final session of
swlm classes wlll be conducted Aug. 15.
Rogers on Ba li Island
DEN PASAR, lndooesia (UPI) -
Secretary of State William P. Rogers ar·
rived at the Island paradise of Bali today
for informal talks with Indonesian
Foreign Minister Adam Malik and two
days of rest and a look at Bali's famous
dancers.
Donations of any kind can be directed
to the Colston Hale Funrt. P.O. Box 165,
Balboa Island, Calif., 92661.
Big Bear Lake Area
Can1p iug Planned
Reservations for two summer camp
sessions in the Big Bear area at $35 per
"·eek are now being taken, according to
spokesmen for the Boys Club of the
Harbor Area.
S\vimming. hiking, fishing, boating.
horseback riding, crafts and other types
o! fun will be offered durins the Aug. 17
to 24 and 24 to 31 sessions at Camp Cedar
Lake.
Comedian f\Iillon Berle, surrounded by Ringling
Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus clowns,
di splays l'tls Cace·making style. Berle presented
diplomas Monday in Inglewood to clowns gradual-
ing !ron1 official CIO\\'R College of circus. Colleee
trains clowns to bring happiness to all people of all
ages.
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DAILY P'ILOT Sl•ff l"l111t'
FLOWER POT IN THE SKY
Watering ls a H1ngup
Laguna Parking
Meters May Get
Flowery Touch
A t'l'.•elve-foot high parking meter? \Vith
flowers on top?
Only in Laguna Beach.
"It's only here on trial. If we find It's
feasible and desirable, the merchants will
be asked to buy more of them," explained
Chamber of Commerce f.1anagcr Warren
Morgan.
The parking meter in queslion towers
proudly in front of the Chamber office at
23{1 Park Ave, As parking meters go, it's
an impressive piece of hardware.
Silting atop the meter, 12 feet into the
air, sits the flo"·er pot. But the flower s
have had a rough summer. The green
flowers are plastic, The brown vegetation
v.'as at one time alive.
Now it's not. "It wasn't watered," ex-
plained Jack Eschbach, flower .consultant
lo the chamber.
The chamber \vould like lo see
dow ntown merchants buy the flower pots
to place on the meters in front of thei r
stores. The going price is $50 each. Thal
doesn't include the cost of the. flowers.
Marijuana Guide
Offered Parents
A !~·page booklet providing factual and
frank in!ormation on marijuana has been
added to a collection of printed material
available to parents at the Newport
Beach Police Department.
The bright pink booklet, ''A Parent's
Cuide to Marijuana" is available free to
the public on a rack in the police depart.
ment records office .
The booklet, produced as a public
service by \Vestem Electric. details the
history, symptoms and description of the
fo'rbidden weed and the paraphernalia us·
ed to smoke it.
Besides the pink booklet on marijuana
-and anoth{'r entitled ';No Sec~t" pro-
vided by the Exchange Club -the public
infonnatlon rack contains 1naterial on
traffic and bicycle safety.
Municl1 Bisl~op
Won't Quit Post
ltfUNJCH (UPI) -In a surprise ap-
pearance on West Gennan television, lhe
Roman Catholic auxiliary bishop o!
ltfunich vowed to remain in office despite
his admitted involvement in the "'artime
execution of 17 Itall1n hostages.
l\1sgr. ,.lalthias Defregger said to.fondq
night be would not ~sign in "the present
period of uproar and excitement."
Defregger was 11 captain in a Gennan
Infantry unit billeted In the llllllan to\\'Q
af Flletto di Camarada in June. IH4.
\Vhlle there, Delrcgger has admitted he
passed on the order for the execution of
17 ho11tages but only alter arjuini against
the m~acre.
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' • ~Cl<IJ
BEA ANDERSON. Ed;tor
Tu1111t11 AUIUll •J. 00 H l"llt U
I
Giant Roster
Still Grows
, Joil)ing the county's ever grov.1ing club r?sler is _t~e University
of Southern California Town and GO\\'O Junior Auxiliary, Orange
County, \Vhich has announced a get-acquair:i.ted day Thursday, Aug.
7, for the newly -formed group.
The Corona de\ :tvlar home of Mrs. Richard Bertea, \\'~O is trans ..
!erring from the Tow n and Go\vn Junior Auxiliary of Los Angeles,
\vill be the setting for. _the beach get-together.
Also transferring from the Los. Angeles Auxiliary \viii be Nlrs.
Douglas Simpson and Mrs. J. K. \Vhite.
Hosting fhe initial gathering will be a steering committee in -
cluding Mrs. Oby E. Woods. president of the group, and the Mmes. T.
A. Dev ine, J ames Hewitt, Edward Bru1nleu, \Villiam Hazel\vinkel and
James McCunniff.
The Jonathan Club of Los Angeles will be the setting for the
group's Ch.:irter L1:1ncheon on Sept. 25, when they \vill be honored by
the Los Angeles Town and Gown Junior Auxiliary membership.
Dr. Norman Topping, University 'Of Southern California presi-
dent~ will be among special guests.
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-? •i •
•
" Ne\v members of the county auxiliary include the l\.1mes. Phillip
Ahshutz, J-lorace Benja1nin, Robert Brownsberger, Rene Caron. John
Cashion, Donald Clarke. Craig Combs. Mason Fenton, Bruce Galey,
?ilichael Gibb , PauL 1-Iadley and Ed\vard Halligan.
Others are the 1tmes. Richard Ingle . Bernie Lecky, Derek
Le\vis, John Lightfoot, John Miller, Thomas Morris, Gordon Morro\v,
Frederick Myers, Richard Peckham, R. P. Par,k.er. Richal"d Ramella,
\Vi!liam Reed. Dan Rogers, ·J. M. Rose. fiank Sanford , Dale Stinch-
field, Robert Smith, Knight Sooy, James T~ler and J. P. Tyne Jr.
~~·~z-~ii;;;~~~:;;~ _,:L
"'
.· J
CHAPTER BEGINNING -Perusing a scrapbook soon to be
filled as Uriiversity of Southern California To\Vll and GO\\'n Junior
Auxiliary o( Orange County begins its activities are (foreground ,
lefl to right) J\1Irs. Douglas Simpson and Nirs. Richard Bertea.
I ,
J\1lrs. \Villiam Haze\vinkel does a bit of rock and shell hunting.
A get-acquainted clay for ne\v members \Vilt take place on Aug.
7 in J\1rs. Bertea's hoine.
Rafters Ring
For Debutantes
National Charity League debutantes' fir st In a se ries of
parties may sound like J.11 old scenario as they san1pled a
taste of the old \vest.
The script \Va s much n1ilcler and only e1nph,,..asized the
good life on the ranch, complete \Vilh a su1nptuous barbe-
cue.
Reviving the old custom \Vere J\1r. and Mrs. Jack Lin-
den Caldwell \Vho entertained last Sunday at their Coto de
Caza ranch. 1-lonored guest was their debutante daughter,
1'1iss Janis Linden Cald\vell.
To \VOJ'k up healthv appetites for the repast. the young
\vo1ncn and their escorts \Vere invited to participate in ha y·
rides, skeet cind trcip shooting cind lo pitch horseshoes.
\\lhile dining they \Vere serenaded by Steve I-larper \vho
played guitar.
As the sun be gan to sink in the \Vest and partygoer::;
prepared to leave they pa cked up 1nany nostal gic memories
\Vhich. no doubt . the.v \\'ill ren1ini sce about at the next part.v,
a luncheon in the Ne\\1nort J·larbor Ya cht Club Tuesday,
Aug. 26. /losting \viii be J\.Trs., John Leon Laun and her debH·
tante daughter , Miss Kri stine Laun.
Other debutantes \Vho \Vill tnakc lhcir bo\v to societv
during the annual Thanksgiving \VCckend ball are the Missc's
Susan Barneson. Stephanie Cutler. Emrnylou Duyan. Diane
Frizzelle. Robyn n Alberta Ne\vton. Carol Jean Rosenast,
Ronda Dianne Vogel and Barbara Loui se \Voolsey.
DEBUTANTES DUDED UP -Sampling a little bit of ranch life
are 1969 National Charity League debutantes as they launch a
series of parties prior to their entering colleges of their choice.
\Vhile Miss Stephanie CuUer strums a favorite , Miss .Janis Linden
Cald \\'ell decides to take a ride and Miss Carol Jean Rosena st says
she'll wait. ·
Their parents are l\1rs. John J\.'lax Rau , Mr. and J\1rs.
l\·lalcoln1 Cutler. 1\fr. and fvlr s. Peter Duyan Jr .. Dr. an rl
l\1rs. Nolan Frizzelle . J\'lr. and Mrs. Laun. 1\1r. and l\!lrs.
l.eorge Ed\vard Ne\vton . l\'lr. and l\1rs. Robe.rt Stanl~.v
Rosenasl. 1\•tr. and Mrs. T-lans \Villian1 Vogel and J\•Ir . <ind
l\trs. Roy Blakeney \.Vool sey.
E_arly Bird Catches the Worms and Watches Them Squirm
DEAR ANN LANDERS: l need your
cool , detached counsel.
My husband gels home from work
about 4:30 p.m. I get ho1ne about 5:30.
For lhe past sev eral weeks I've had the
peculiar feeling that somebody had been
in the house - ash trays in odd places, a
sofa pillow mashed oul of sh11pe,
bedspreaQ wrinkled, too many towel s
hanging up to dry. Ooe day I checked lhe
garbage and found ci garette buns "'ilh
li1>slick . (I don't smoke.) I knew then
th at my husband had been entertaining
a female in my absence.
)'esterday I decided to leave work half
tin hour early and meet Ille guest fa ct lo
face. My timing was beautiful. J caught
them ~ighl in the act. I've never seen two
ANN LANDERS
more surprised people In my entire life.
But I "'as surprised, too, because th e
woman turned out to be a neighbor who
is the town tramp.
I have decided to forg ive my husban.d
because I'm sure she chased him and
wore him down, as she has done with so
many olhers. But I'm not willing lo let
her off so lightly. 1'hc question : Can t
take legal action against the woman for
breaking and entering? If not, "'hat other
legal steps can I lake ? -\VRONG
DEAR \YRONGED : The \\'Oman did
not break Into your home. She was a
guest. The on ly legal step~ you can t.ake
are again5t Hlflf. ~fy advice Is to forget
Jl. I
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I an1 a 16-
year-old girl who has a ~summer job at
the fairground. II is very interesting
because I get to ,~lk to all kind s or
people, but I do have one sn1all problem.
Please tell me what to say to older men
(about 40) who don 't exactly get fresh but
blart lo tell you about lheir personal life
\\'hich is nobody 's busine.~s. For exa1nplc.
yesterday a man came over and began to
tllscuss the weather. All or a sudden he
blurted out. "f\1 y \Vife and I hal'C
se1>arote bedrooms because we like di f·
fcrent maUresses. I like a soil n1attrt:ss
and she likes a hard one."
Pl ease give me a sen t.::nce ~r hvti t.1u11 t
can us.e to change the subj~ct toctrulty.
1 lu1nk you. -MOLLY
DEAR r-.-tOLLY: You don't need to be
lactful \\'It h a clod like lhat. lie \\'Ouldn't
notice. Just say, "I'm not interested in
your mattress. Shove off."
DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 had n1y
divorce hearing two months ago but it
\\·on't l>e final for a year. \Vhat is my role
duri ng th is year? Am I still married?
Can I date? Should I wear my wedding
ring? Everyone I lalk to has a difl cre111
Qpinion but no one can give me lhc final
word. Do you ha ve it?..-NEITl-IER
FISH NOR FOUL
DEAR NEITHER: The ans\\·ers are
not engraved on the Rosetta stone. There
ill no "final \\'Ord'' -only opinions. JI you
"·ant •nine, here ll is: 'Vhllc waiting .ror
your divorce to become final you can
date If you "'ish. By date, I mean enjoy
the company of men, b\lt be a loose
hanger. No playi ng house, no cozy
alliances and no weekend trips.
r\!1 for your wedding ring, 1'1 has no
signlficHnce now, so why we11r it?
''The Bride's Guide," Ann Lander s'
~ooklel , answers some of the most fre.
<JUenlly usked questions about weddinp.
To rc1:eive your copy of this com-
prehensive guide, write Ann Landers, in
core or this newspa per, enclosing a long.
st!lf·acldresscd, stamped envelope and 35
ccnt-s in coin.
Ann Landers \vi\1 be glad to help yoit
\vilh your problems. Send them to her in
care of the DAILY PILOT, enclosing a
!!Cl!·addresscd, stamped envelope.
•
,
J 4 D.111. Y PllDT Tutsday, Auiust !, 1969
'Tom Sawye r' Goes on Ba rn Theater Boa rds
Huntington Beach Playhouse's production of 'The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer' will be presented in The
Barn theater on Friday, Aug. 8, at 7:30 p.m. and
Saturday, Aug. 9, at 2:30 p.m. Pictured are (left to
right) Robert Campbell peering through window at
Crystal Payne and Lisa Johnsen who portray Aunt
Polly and Becky Thatcher in the matinee. Alternate
cast for the evening performance \\'ill include Kelly
Masterson, Kimberly Cole and~ Kim DeLacey. Di·
rector is Randy Keene and the producer is Mrs.
Robert Murphy.
Horoscope
Leo: Display
Responsibility
WEDNE SDA Y
AUGU ST 6
By SYDNEY OMARR
SPECIAL HINT: Cultivate
reserved manner without ap-
pearing stilted. Ring, bracelet
or wrist watch can lend
dramatic quality to ap-
pearance. Grooming accent is
on arms, hands. News is like-
ly to be made in area of
transportation.
ARIES (Marrjl 21-April 19):
Check safety devices during
any journey. Be sociable, but
avoid being a chalterbox.
Good JUnar aspect heightens
ability to write, communicate,
put across ideas.
• TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Obtain hint from A r i e s
message. Asking questions
could steer you to genuine
bargain. Finances are
highlighted. Accent on what
you acquire and how much to
iipend.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Cycle high. Try something
new. Streamline procedures.
Be iictive. Take initiative.
\Velcome contacts, challenges,
special assign'ments. B e
direct, positive. Purchase item
to brighten h-Ome.
CANCER (June 21-July 2.2 ):
You will eventually have your
say. Patience.
SA.GITT ARIUS I Nov. 22-1
Dec. 21 ): Obtain hint from
Seorpio message. Your cycle
today is such that you do bet-
ter as a keen listener,
observer. Develop v i e w s
\Yilhout necessarily expressing
them. Play waiting game.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan
19): Judge motives o i
neighbors , associates, c o •
workers. But ayoid making
something oul of nothing.
Some around you may appear
stu bborn. Appearances can be
deceiving. Give benefit of
doubt.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·F'eb.
18 ): Pressure is lifted. You
get greater opportunity for
sel£-e~pression. Keep promises
made to children. Welcome
respite f r o m routine. Do
something different.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Attend tG basic chores ,
es pecially those related to
home, property. Get rid of
safety hazards. Concentrate
on orderliness. Then emotional
chaos will also evaporate.
lF TODAY IS YOUR
September Rites
Blakelys T eU Troth
, .
ELAINE BLAKELY
Bride-elect
Anaheim Closs
Plans Reunion
A dinner dance and special
awards are in the p!anning'f~r
Anaheim High School's Class
of 1964 five year reunion. ·
The Grand Hotel, Anaheim
will be the scene of the
gathering announced for Aug.
JQ.
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas A.
Blakely of Ne\vport Beach
have announced the engage-
ment of their daughter, Elaine
Blakely to Michael Campbel>,
son or Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Duclley Campbell of Van Nuys.
The future bride was
graduated from Newpor t
1-larbor High School and at·
tended Oran ge Coast College.
\Yhile ikhigh school she
placed first during a Southern
California vocal audition and
the Musical Arts Club audi·
tions and received Ebel! Club
and NHHS 1nusic 'Scholarships.
Featured in .many musical
productions both in high school
and at OCC, she was a student
at the Los Angeles and San
Francisco Civic Light Opera
Association musical theater
work.shops at the University of
Southern California.
The bride-to-be was invited
to tour with the Doodletown
Pipers while attending OCC.
Her fiance, also a member
of the Doodletown Pipers, wes
graduated from Grant High
School, Van Nuys, where he
received awards in football,
and attended Valley College.
The couple \\'Iii exchange
v.·edding vows during Sep-
tember rites in lhe Plymouth
Congregationa l Church o f
Newport Harbor.
Family Weekly
Every Saturday
-.;:.;:_~_:;:_;;_;;;_;;:_-;:_;::_;:;:_::: .... ::::::::::-. --~~-.:·;.._';·;;·:;;;;;·;;::.-.:..-~~ .... -. -
Queen -·c~u nt! ng
Castle Pennies
By ~IARGARET SAVILLE folk who have developed the
LONDON (UPI) -You habit of sp(indlng a day in the
have to admire an aristocrat great country houses and
who bravely ventures Into parklands from an age that
trade to help with the upkeep will never return again.
of the home of her fathers. Profits or these ventures are
Especially when such a step tax-free but must be used only
v.•as never dreamed of in all for the maintenance of the
the years of her education. property.
In the veins of lhls lady runs The venture into trade
some of the bluest blood in the doesn ·1 mean that the queen ls
world. She counts her lineage not one of the w or Id's
in · centuries rather than wealthiest \\'omen . She is. But
generations. the way they figure it at Buck-
Nevertheless d o W n in ingham Palace, why let San·
Norfolk she is selling cups of dringham House be a liability
tea for six cents, coffee for \\'hen it can pay its own way?
eiglit and raisin cakes for nine From now until the end of
to 'help meet the increased September thousands o f
costs of managing her 'house. tourists will pay their 60 cents
Her name is Que e n admission charge.
Elizabeth I,. . This will admit them to
.. ... . . .. -;
Harbor Key Award
Salty Honor Giver
Who is Jay Gould? I
He's the Grand Old Salt of Child Guid·
al'lce Center.
This. lionor was bestowed upon the New-
port Beach resident by members of t.he Har·
bor Key of the guidance center during' the
group's first annual Yachtsmen's Ball last
Friday in the Balboa Bay Club.
The announcement of the identity of the
Grand Old Salt was made by-Mrs . .J. O'Hara
Smith, president of Harbor Key.
Gould, a patron of every endeavor or
J~arbor Key 011 behalf of Child Guidance
Center, was cited for his interest in and his
dedication to the work of the center.
Present with Gould a s he received his
a\vard from ~1rs. Charles Hostler, ball chair-
man. was his wife.
The award included eight sterling silver
cordial glasses. and silver tray in a walnut
case, upon \Vbich an engraved plaque will
be placed.
'
Times being what they are. parts of the house and the queen has banished the old grounds. There is a self·._ ____________________ ..
rule that the royal family service re staurant k n o w n ,
must never be associated with naturally, as the Cafe Royal, a
a commercial undertaking. souvenir stand offering san-
She was led to this step, ac· dringham tea towels and pot-
cording to court c i r c I e s , tery. illustrated books and toy
because her official palaces models.
are maintained by slate funds There is a market stand that
but Sandringham House is her sells produce grown on the
personal property and she has estate, flowers and plants and •
to pay for it from her own vegetables and fruit.
funds. Visitors can see the
Since it has 365 rooms an<fis beautlful gardens designed by
bigger than some well-known the late Queen fi1ary. The
hotels this has become. a drain . glasshouses contain memen-
even on the plump purse of the toes of King Edv.•ard VIII who
Hbuse of \Vindsor. built the house around an old
So the queen is doing what manor house saying he needed
n1any of her "right trusty and "a room for every day of the
entirely beloved cousins" -as year.''
court usage has it -have The royal family no\v main·
been doing for some time. ly uses the place in winter for
That j,s charging admission shooting · parties and quiet ·
1 e e s a n d p r o v i d i n g relaxation for a fortnight over
refreshments for the common Christmas.
Final week, Tuesday, August 5 thru 4 pm Satur-
day, August 9,-all 28 Gloria Marshall locations
in the West offer l/z Price on your choice of
Hips or \Vaist or Thighs or Upper Arms 'vhen
used in conjunction with any Gloria Marshall ·
Program.
Why GLORIA MARSHALL is No. 1
28 LOCATIONS IN THE WEST
Mysti ck Krewe
Fiesta 'Kaptured'
A strategic citadel captured
slrictly for fun will be the
llarry Phillips home in
Fullerton, when the merry
Myslick Krewe of Komus
turns into a liberating force
Saturday, Aug. 9.
After their successful libera·
tion of the stagine area,
members will celebrate with a
Fiesta de Las Palmas at 8
p.m. Other hosts for the fun
bound invaders will be Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Mehrmann of
Buena Park.
Pinatas and other fi esta
frills will provide a
background for an authenti~
mariachi band. A 'juke ~ll
provide additional tunes fol
dancing, and a catered Mex·
ican dinner will be served al
9:30 p.m. Other foods on th•
menu will be those from
secret recipes captured before
the fiesta date.
Reservations may be made
before Aug. 4 by calling Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Shugert a
Anaheim.
Spotlight 4>~ .areas previously
hidden. Key is to have a good
time without being foolish.
Remember those who may be
confined to home, hospital.
.friend contides a secret.
BIRTIIDAY ,you are creative Those interested in at·
and love to entertain. But you tending may write for ticketi
also have a strong homemak-at $6 each, addressing Reunion
ing desire. You enjoy good Committee, in care of Mrs.
food and n1ight be quite ;i Pam Pebley Laster, 306 E.
cook. \Yeight of added respon· South Street, Anaheim.
sibility is currently indicated rl ======~~============::--!
-but you also have more fun .
To f;f'ld out more •llO~! vourstlf •"4 ~ ~•lfOIOllV. order Syd"•Y Om•••'• SO-P•Qf booll.•e!. Tiit Trut~ About A•iro'OllY. Set'ld SO ce~h to Omarr • Bookl•t !~ DAILY Pl~OT. Bo~ J1AO, C.r1nd Cen1r1l SttHon, Now Ver~, N.Y.
Gloria Mmhall's didn't "just happen''
to become the world's leading Figure
ConllOI System ••• quick, eale reeults
made jt that way. At Gloria Marshall'•
you'll lose more inches and pounds for
JeSs money than through .any other
Program, anywhere.
./ Lo5e pounds and inches from hips,
waist, thighs, tummy and arms.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
So1ne or your desires are
fulfilled. But you find they
carry v.·ith them definite
responsibilities You may be
working overtime. Be read y.
Display &ense of
responsibility.
VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sept. 22):
Stress on ability to live up to
potential. You want more
recognition. Key is to find a
\\'ay to gain iL You do so to-
day by cooperating in special
projects. Also, by displaying
confidence.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Write, advertise, publish -
get vie\\'S disseminated. Be as
original as possible. O Id
methods Y•ill not suffice. Call
attention to your ov.·n at-
tributes. Highl ight in·
dependence.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Your intuition is cprrect in
money matters. But it is still
hist to let mate, partner tak
lnillative. Conserve strength
YOU KNOW
YOUR CHILD
WILL LEARN •
TO SWIM AT
BLUE BUOY
A.ii S. Wiii 'fee
~-. hlltff llf1111d. S...AN.T•tlll
546-1800
Models Like
George Look
\Vith models in the fashion
showrooms in the New York ,
garment industry. the summer
hairdo is "the George."
Ifs named for our famous
ancestor, George \Vashington,
and other coloilists who wore
their hair pulled back in a
peruke. I
The v.'ay the girls \\•ear il for
day is with hair sleeked back,
fro111 the fa ce and rastened
1 with a decorative band or a
lock of hair twisted around. I
For evening. make the band 1
rhinestone or pearl. I
WOOL GREMLINS
"'•v• ff'ltV svct""'ed 1n ln!lllr1-
lln(I your ~"llllf19 prObltm? h
lt PVltf!'d I" Mll'M pllct1 t nd 1oa~v In oll'>ers? 1 lmt tor you 10
brlllfl II in Ind Wt'll ~IY9 II 1tr1)fllllMed out. We'll lltwt lun
l•lt.ln9 '"°"' 11 wtlil• VOii rttlluo 1 new Jlllll lfl knlUlng . .,.
The
KNIT
·WIT
PHONI
545·Jl1 J
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
l1w11 Mtll etro11 ftom
Weo!worth'1
l tlttef .. tff S... Di.ti• ,_..,.
~STA MISA
, ;b ' !'lp.\.S
C)"'; 0 I\ I G I
_1/2 PRICE
STORE-WIDE
3 DAYS ONLY
AUGUST 7.9.9
Regular & Half Size Drones, Coats,
Also Bags, J ewelry & Hats.
Every Article in the Hou1e is at
1 /2 PRICE!
445 S. COAST HWY
LAGUNA BEACH at Hotel Laguna
For Top Spo 11s Coverage
Read The Dail y Pilot
1 Special machipes are designed to
Y banish every eotrectable figure fault.
I Results come quickly, without pills,
drugs, 11trenuous exercise or starvation
diets •• , efforUessly, pounds and inches
llJall 8V,'tlf."
J No disrobing. We are not a gym. While
gymnasiums can build healthy muscles, 1
in ,aJmoet every case, the exercise
tends to build big appeUtes;· thus, m.
11tead of losinf~ the patron actually
gains weight
./ Free chlld care.
Call now !or a free sample vi.sit. where ·
you actually use t.ho .spcci81 michines
!or redUcing and electronic }~acial Con·
touring. No ~barge .• , no obligation,
430 Pacific Coait Highway-642·3630
~ Anoh-'"'· lf•Mly Hiiis, Co•h1111 Creinhow. Dow11ey, Glewdole, LQ)ioweed,
Lo119 1.-c:h. N•WJ•rt IMCh, N. Hollyw•ocf, Olltfffle, Pa.od•ll•, Se• DlftO,
So11to A110, So11to IOJ!Joro, S•11lo11d, , ..... Whlfttef, Soltlll ol•• 111 '1euio
Soc1ome11t .. loo Joto, S1111111yvelo, Woh1lt Credi-.
(I llHk• lfif •I l•lbttt 111 ClYbl
SANTA -ANA -
1840 West 17th Streot,-543-9457 ec..,rr,11 lltl Cl#M M11n•en M1r. ~. l•t.
' -
i
I r
-":
Costa Mesa
EDI TI O N · N.Y. Stoeki
voe. 62, NO. 186, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, '1969 TEN CENTS
Nixon Starts Clemente Rest ....__.,aturday • • •
President Nixon and his family picked
the dales for their Southern California
vacation toda/. They'll reach their new
ocean view hilltop home in San Clemente
Saturday and will not return to
Washington until Sept. 7.
Antiwar Protesters Await Arrival distributed throughout the !late.
He said ';less than 10,000, but more
than l,000 demonslrators" were erpected
to arrive for the Sunday afternoon pro-
test.
DAILY' PILOT Sit/I PMi.
THROWN f'OR A LOSS
Peace Group's Sarno ff
Mesa , Valle y
Study Bes t
Bridge Spot
Studies to determine the best spot for
another bridge spanning the Santa Ana
l\i ve r between Costa 1tfesa and Fountain
Valley are under way, but nothing
definite !s expected for two years.
Under current development patterns in
the west Otange County region, th!! loca-
tion \vould appear to be a linkup or Sun-
flower Avenue on the east and Ellis
Avenue on the valely side.
Fwntain Valley City Council members
"''ill discuss the matter in study session
prior to their regular 8 o'clock meeting
tonighL
Costa ~fesa City Engineer George A.
t.1 adsen Said officials on the Mesa side of
1 ~.e river and county authorities have
pr etty well agreed in theory on !he
r,ewest proposed localion.
Costa Mesa City Councilman Willard T.
Jordan said Monday he is delighted at the
news that a crossing further inland rrom
one originally proposed and hotly pro-
lt::!led is planned.
Representatives of the Mesa Verde
Jromeowners' Associalion bitterly fought
the plan four years ago when a crossing
wa! suggested at Gisler Avenue, mat·
ching up to Garfield Avenue in Fountain
Valley.
Korea Accident
Kills Mesa GI
Spec. S Alden 0 . Sage Ill, son or Alden
O. Sage. administrator of Costa Mesa
Memorial Hospital, died Sunday in
Korea .
The 20-year-old Army Medical Corp
Specialist was killed in a !ruck accident
in the Demilitarized Zone of Korea.
Sage's father said his son. who \\'ould
have been 21 next month , had four
months to serve in a three-year hitch. He
had been in Korea two months prio r to
the accident.
Sav ed at Wedge
Surfer
Frantic resuscitation efforts by l.wft
lifeguard! Monday afternoon saved the
life or en 18-year-old body surfer round
floating face down in treacherous surf off
lhe Balboa Peninsula wedge.
The two guards, one or them an of(-du-
ty Los Angeles County lifeguard, restored
the breathing and heartbeat of Steve
'-leyer!i, 18, San Dig~. y,·ho broke his
back and nearly drowned 11fter going
"over the falls" on a wave he was riding.
'-feytrs, \\'hose he~rt stopped beating
lh.ret Umes during the-surfslde revival
f!ffortJi, wa!I in ,;eriou~ C(lndilion today,
}Joag ~fcmorlal Hospital aides 11ald.
Credited with sav1ng the youth's life
'Vhlle the rest of Orange County was
preparing for a warm but quiet welcom e
for lhe President, protest groups have
begun a statewide effort. to drwn up a
protest gathering in San Clemente Sun·
day, Aug. 17. They art' advertising the
protest of American ror.eign policy as far
away as San Francisco.
It is unlikely the President and his
family will be directly touched by the
p~otest. The President -along with Mrs.
Nixon, Tricia Nixon, Julie N ix on
Eisenhower and her husband , David
Eisenhower -y,•ill be comfortabl y
esconced behind the nine.foot block wall
surrounding the sprawling Spanish villa.
Trustees of the Capistrano Unified
School District Monday denied a plea by
Hanoi Cuts
Plans After
U.S. Pullout
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces in
South Vietnam. responding to current
American military withdrawals as an
Allied concession of defeat, h2ve can-
celled plans for new offensives and may
permit the war simply to fade away,
n1ilitary sources reported today.
Bal!ing thei r report on intelligence com·
muniques, the sources said North Viel·
nam apparently believes it can achieve
its. eoab in South Vietnam without
further military efforts of major pro-
portions.
A North Vietnamese army officer ca~
tured last week told Allied interrogators
he had been instructed lo infonn his
troops that they appeared lo have won
the war "because the Americans are
going home," the sources said.
A ranking U.S. ofricer said l·laooi, for
the present time at least, seems content
to "more or less sit back and watch us go
home." '
"North Vietnamese goals remain
unchanged," he said, "and Hanoi now
believes these goals can be fuliilled in a
low-keyed military effort."
Another source said North Vietnam and
the Viet Cong may simply continue the
seven-wee k old fighting lull indefinitely
and allow lhe war to "fade away."
American troop withdrawals from
South Vietnam increased to about 12,200
Tuesday with the departure of another
150 army troops, who had been assigned
lo quartermaster and postal units. The
cutback began July 8 under a Nixon ad-
ministration program.
Ni-xon Pla nning
To Pull 100,000
\VASHlNGTON (UPI ) -President
Nixon is expected to announce a pullout
of 50,000 more American troops from
Vietnam In late August and may schedule
another withdrawa1 of 50,000 fighting men
in October, it was learned today.
Thls mean.i'Ni:ron wilJ try to withdraw
125,000 troops by the end of the year and
fulfill his expressed hope of beating
former Defense Secretary Clark M. Clif-
ford's timetable of 100,000.
An administration source said NixC1n
and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of
lhe Joint Chief! of staff, have agreed the
y,·ithdrawitl of 511,000 more Gls is feasible
now. Nixon will announce it later th is
month.
'Dies' 3
were Craig Coffin, 21, of 128 Via llavrt,
Lido t~e. the off-duty Los Angele11
lireguard, and Newport Lifeguard Lt. Al
Irwin, who was on routine patrol near
"N" Street when Meyers was brought ffi.
to shore.
Three other body surfers. aTI from
River&lde:, first notk:td the victim
floating face down 70 feet from shore,
lifeguards pid.
They brought him into shalk>w waltt
and summoned a.Id from Coffin, Who was
oo lht beach.
Cofrin admini1terM mouth-tG-mouth
rcauM:lteUon and heart massage on the
victim while the thret youths went for
more help.
' '
the Peace Action Council (PAC) for use
of a San Clemente school fleld as a focal
point for the protest rally. They said the
field already had been reserved for a
youth foolball gathering.
Irving Sarnoff of Los Argeles, PAC
representative, told the trustees that the
Sunday afternoon protest would proceed
without a specific gathering p!oce lf need
be.
In San Francisco, an underground
newspaper -the Red Mountain Tribe -
said the Vietnam Committee for Solidari-
ty with the American People (VCSAP) is
•·cordially inviting e v er yo n e to
participate in a march" on San Clemente.
Said the newspaper :
hSan Clemente Is a mere 9-hour drive
from Berkeley, and thousands are ex·
peeled .to make It, so It should be easy to
hitch down. (They can bust you unless
both feet are on the curb.)"
In the Peace Action Council's ap-
pearance before the Capistrano school
board. Tru stee Harcourt Bull asked
Sarnoff if he was a member of the Con1·
munist Part y.
"That is not germane to the discussion
here," Sarnoff replied .
Bull then asked Sarnoff If he thought
the protest would help the President ob-
tain "rest, peace and quiet'' in his sum-
mer White House.
"That depends on how you define
"l-lenrietta," Rhode Isl and Red owned by Mrs. Kathleen English of
Costa f\'tesa, loves c~ocolate, as she demonS"".rates by plucking piece
of candy from mouth o! Lance English, 11. flenrietta also devours
cat food, grapes, peaches, corn on the cob and milk. She lays one
egg a day, except on Sund8ys.
Oil Tower Complaints
Bring Mesa Crackdown
Biller C{)mplainls about a tower of
lroubl~ they couldn·t really prevent led to
a Costa Mesa City C.Ouncil demand for a
crackd0\\71 on any permit violation~ at a
con troversial oil exploration site just
outside city ljmits.
A score of area residents turned out to
discuss the 136-foot drilling derrick near
Paularino Avenue and Bear Street. an
issue 11ayor Alvin L. Pinkley unhappily
branded half-legal and half-illegal.
The tower stands on an L-shaped finger
nf county territory -but surrounded by
city land -and the only jurisdiction
Times
They found Jrwln patrolling ln his
lifeguard jeep. lie called for an am-
bulance. then relieved Coffin.
A lifeguard rescue boaL also arrived on
the scene tO ass&i fbe guards on shore.
Lifeguards idcotilled the thrte swim·
mers who discovered Meyer1 1s Tom
Carroll, 19. John Langley, 17, and Jnhn
Jlmenei. 17, au of Riverside.
Lifeguards 11ald the waves at the
Wedge, the Newport area's bcgt -and
most dangerous -body surfing 11pq1,
were very steep.
Six nonswimmers were r'escued from
the water there ibN>ugh Monday,
Ufeauards said.
I
councilmen had was whether any slanl-
drilling would be permitted.
"Thls city could' iiot prevent that rig
Only If the drilling went straight down,"
explained City Attorney Roy June. an ex-
planallon which fell on ears allegedly
deafened by the clamor of heavy equip-
ment.
Orange County officials isinied a permit
for ·Camay Drilling Co. hired by Qc.
cidental Petroleum Corp .. to conduct test
borings for mineral samples. activity
never mentioned Jn a Costa Mesa law
prohibiting actual petroleum production .
June explained that councilmen then
had to decide wheth er the law meant to
prohibil slant-drilling at an angle, which
is not forbidden if the rig is 300 feet
outside city limits.
Councilmen voted 4 to 1 to allow It,
with Mayor Pinkley dissenting, since the
whole complicated matter left them
between the Devil and the deep sub-
terranean 11lrata.
"I fall to see the logic," said James
J!yams:, of 3088 Platte Drive, who warned
councilmen that the rig had better be the
lrist one to reJr IU: ugly form on d1c
~ Mesa llklylne. -
"Perhaps yoo couldn't help this one.
1'he reason I'm here Is to make darn sure
you know how I feel," Hyams continued,
at.IU\Ollgh mOlt of his nclsllbora made no
comment. "r can Stt that derrick," he added, ''J
_can hear It. I don 't like It."
The next speaker "'' more lrate. "You four gentlemen who voUd for It
let Ull down," dtclart:d ~trs. Cyril
Pitonl.!lk, of 788 Paulartno Ave., which is
quite near the exploration site.
"We should all remember it when it
<See OIL TOWER, Pa1e %1
---------------------------------------------~-
'peace '," SamoU retorted.
ACLU attorney Phillip C h r o n l's ,
represenllng the PAC, said the di strict
and "the city would have to accept both
the benefits and burdem of the Presiden·
lial presence.
He said the peace group, the sa1ne
organization which organized the Century
City demonstration against then-Pres!·
dent Lyndon Johnson. was planning a
reasonable protest.
"The human beings are going to be
here whether the city council and board
of education cooperate or not. They v.'ill
either have a place to go or they will be
shu ttled back and forth," Chronis said.
Sarnoff said that more than 25,000 leaf-
lets promoting the protest have been
He Req1rests It
The Presidential f.llrly is expected to
arrive at El Toro Marine Corps Air Sla--
tion in the PresidenUal jet, Air Force J,
If normal procedure ls foUowed, the
family will travel by Mar ini hellcopter
from.El Toro to a ne;¥" landing pad across
the street from the Nixon summer home
in the Cypress Shore! section of San
Clemente.
Young Eisenhower, who with wUe Julie.
is expect~ lo spend the entire month in
lhe San Clemente home, has quit bis sum·
n1er job as a researcher for a Senate com·
mitlet. He will return to Amherst Colle1e
Sept. 16 for his senior year.
~1rs. Nixon said she expect! to be busy
next week with prepa rations for a dinner
August 13 in Los Angeles, honorina the
Apollo 11 astron~ts.
Mesa Asks Probe
Of Cify Manager
A formal request for Investigation of
public statements about personal in-
tegrity and municipal finance involving
Costa hfesa City Manager Arthur R.
hfcKenz.le went to the Orange County
District Attorney today.
The city council -including Coun·
cilman George A. Tucker, author of the
criticlsn1 -voted unanimously to ask for
the county probe, based on McKenzie's
own reijuesL
•teated discussion or a $7.56 m.illlon fis-
cal budget during a July 22 -hearing led
lo Tucfe.r's angry comments, to whlch
~tcKenzie replies in a three-page paper
rel eased Monday.
Tucker finally flared up while asking
for answers to questions regarding
capital improvement .allocalions in the
main budget, municipal golf course losses
and surplus cash in departmenta l
budgets.
The scene at the hearing on the budget
-which Councilman William L. St. Clair
•
Leary Ranch
Death Found
Not Natural
.,
Riverside County coroner·~ deputies
said today that one-lime Laguna Beach
resident John ~furl Griggs, 26, died from
other than natural causes at Or. Timothy
Leary's now deserted hippie ranch.
Grigg,o; died early Sunday in Hemrt
V<illcy Hospital after becoming JJJ and
col;apsing in his teepee.
Investigation into the cause or his death
Is continuing, said Riverside authorities.
1..;riggs and his wife , Carol Jean, 24,
moved C r o m Laguna about a year ago,
shorUy after their fiv~year-old son, Ger·
ry. swallowed the hallucinatory drug STP
and was hospitalized.
On June 23, 1963. the youngster alleged·
ly found the pills in a yard near the
Griggs' home at 1215 Roosevelt Lane in
Laguna Canyon. He complained that his
hands were burning and he collapsed.
going into convulsions. He was released
from South Coast Community llospilal
after several weeks treatment.
Griggs and his wife. were arrested at
thr time on child neglect charges, "but
\'le couldn't make anything stick," said a
Laguna police spokesn1an today.
Griggs. who. while he lived in Laguna,
wa l' employed by the Mystic Arts World,
a psychedelic shop, was the seco:id 1nem·
bcr of Or. Leary's mountain community
to die in le~s than a month. On July 14,
Ch&rlene Rene Almeida, alllO a rormer
Laguna resident. drowned in a pond on
tht properly while under the influence or
LSD.
50 COMPETE
JN FOTORAMA
Tho Fotorama Curncra Contest, which
offers more than $500 for the one picture
that wins the granJ prize. drew 50 entries
in it.s fi:·st week or co1npeUUon which
closed at noon last Thursday.
The lop lhrtt photogr11phs are publi sh·
ed today on Page 5. Entries for judging
In lhe llC(Ond week of the three-week
event are being acc::epled now at •II DAI~
LY PILOT oftice11 (Me rules, Page 41.
Grano prfte wlnner will be selected dur·
Ing Fotorama at Fashion Island Aug. 31·
23. •
had already criticized In a paper -was
one of the bilterest in council chambers
for months.
Tucker subsequently delivered a three·
page paper stating his opinions on tht
budget lo the press a week ago, resulting
in the 'counter·action by McKenzie Moct-
day.
\
"fn the interest of time, I would merely
equest a copy or this resoluUon," Coun-
cilman Tucker said. '
"This was nol a personal thing against
Mr. McKenzie," he observed.
Not everyone In the municipal govern-
ment picture apparently wees: with
what c o n s t i t u l e s inlelit·versus-ap-
pearance.
'DERELICTION
"For any elected otficial to question
the integrity of any city employe and not
do something about it is dereliction of du·
ly," Jl1Jayor Alvin L. Pinkley declared
earlier.
The city manager said al the climax of
the stormy budget hearing in which th•
package was approved 3 to 2 with Tucker
and St. Clair dissenting that he would be
happy to answer·more questions.
"Except for budgetary discussior\s in a
study session with the entire council, Mr.
Tucker has not made a ' contact wilh
ll'yself or any member of the staff con4
cerning any elements of the budget,"
· hfcKenzie's paper says.
"Therefore in light of public allegations
regarding the integrity of myself and the
administrative staff. .. made by Coun-
cilman Tucker, I respectfully request ..•
an investigation," he concludes.
McKenue's paper challenges the valid!·
ty of several points raised by Councilman
Tucker, one that the city's $1 per $100 tax
rate is set by the general law municipal
government .
\VITHOUT VOTE
The rate can be raised by the city
council without a city-wide vote through
establishment or assessment districts, he
explained . ;
He also documented several alloc:ation1
and planned expenditures (or various p~
jects Tucker bad demanded to know
about earlier.
These include traffic lights. drainage
improvements and street widening at
severa l locations, with other& planned if
money becomes available through com-
mercial and residential development.
Orange Coast
We ather
Hazy sunshine, the weather·
man's euphemisnt for roggy days,
\viii prevail through Wednesday
along the Orange Coast, with our
high of 71 more appealing lhan
the inland area's 93.
INSIDE TODA\'
Catifofflict'I n1ost prominent
Democrat, Jesse Unruli aays it'!
governor or nothing-if he runs
at au -a1uJ tl10c ht'! not i11·
tcrtsted 111 c11alltnging Se11.
Georuc tlf11rpl1y. Page 8. '
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2 DAILY '!LOT c Juts4lf, August 5, 1969
.Flies Own Sult
Lana's Husband
Cleared of Theft
Jet aet hfp_notlst Ronald Dante, hus.
band of actress Lana Turner, today was
cleared of charges that he stole seven 16-
foot motorboats valued at $11,500 from a
Costa Mua boat firm.
Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge Paul
t.fa1t aireed with Dante that his pro-
secutors had failed to give him a speedy
trial "within the full meaning of the
law .''
In any event, Judge ?-.fast noted, those
same proueutor1 had failed to insure
that witnesses vital to their case were in
court today.
Dante was accused or eivi.ng the boat
company a check for $18,515 which bore
v.·hat proved to be a fictitious name of a
Las Vegas corporation. lnvestigltora; uid
the check was written on a non-existent
branch of the Bank of America at which
neither Dante nor the Lat Vegas cor-
poraUon had an account.
The prosecution took on wider publicity
when Dante became the target last June
17 or an unknown gunman who fired five
shots at the hypnotlst as he drove his car
into an underground garage,
GERALD HUNTER, FERNANDO HUERTA TALK THINGS OVER DURING YMCA EXCHANGE PROGRAM
In Lagun1, Whites, 8l1ck1 and Browns Make 1n Effert to Und1r1t1nd E1r;h Other
Dante was hu1tled from the courtroom
by attorney Burton Rounberg and
bU5lneu manager: Art Newberg to avoid
what Rosenberg described as "a J>OSSible
re-arrest by the district ettomey."
Club to Name
Hale Fund
Laguna· Cailtural Exchange
The pou.ibllHty ei:Jsts, a district at·
torney's spokesman later confinned, ''but
it is extremely doubtful that we will take
further action."
Dante, ~9. took further action by today
filing a $7 million malicious proseeulion
suit agaillllt the two men whose allega·
Hons launched criminal action against
him in May, 1961.
Raffle Winner
Blacks,
By TOM GORMAN
01 1~1 O•llJ l'li.t Siii!
The people looked my w•Y, but they
\.\.'tten'~ looking al me.
Their eyes were falling on my tv•o
brothers. That's not so unusual, except
that one is black and the other brown.
They were my brothers, but just for the
weekend.
It wast was the first half of a cultural
txchan.ce. sponsored by the South Orange
County Yft.fCA.
Fourteen Los Angeles teenagers -
black, brown, and one white -were
guests of local teena1ers in an attempt to
understand and appreciate each other's
feelings .
Organized by the Y's Youth Council, it
was a start of a dialogue between three
cultures. An open and frank dialogue it
WU.
"It was one step on the road towards
better understanding," said Fernando
Heurta Jr., 16, of Los Angeles.
"There'll be curves and detours. We're
going to have to be strong t.o stay on the
road and make It straight. This ei:change
was good.'But what we really need is an
adult nchange."
Fernando was my brown brothtr. The
black onll was Gerald. He had a natural
haircut, but not too long. When I first
1aw him, he was wearing boots, blue
jeans, and a lee shirt. I didn't know what
I was getting into.
But then Gerald slatted talking. lre
was the student body vice president at
Los Angeles High School. He was a start·
er on their championship football team.
And he'll be going t.o Syracuse University
in the fall on a full fou(:l'ear scholanihjp
for athletics and scholastic achievement.
He 'll major in electrical engineering.
\Veil, so much for first impressions.
Even if a guy is black. I learned that
quickly.
I took my brothers on a tou r of the art
festivals . I figured that if this is a
cultural e1change. I'd bettfr show them
some culture. Gerald, 17, liked it. And
he's bringing some of his friends back
next week for a second tour of the
festivals .
But, being black, he drew some eyes.
"If they look at me. I look at them," he
said later.
J had never hosted a black person in
my home before. I wanted to make sure
my actionll were natural, not put on, not
plastic. I don't think they y.·ere. But how
do you tell a black that I'm acting the
way I usually do -that my actions were
honest?
"You gel the idea that everyone i:o;
going out of their way to be hospitable,"
Gera1d said. But he wasn't concerned. "I
was a guest in your home. so naturally
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"4t111!111ft.,. -..a: .. IHI lhtl
Browns
you'll go out of your way lo' bt
hospitable."
''J'd like to come here again. But I
want to stay longer, a week at least," he
said. And my home la open.
Fernando bad dlffuenl things on his
mind when he talked to me. He agreed
that it wa s hard for him, a:i It waa for
Gera ld, to come cold into a white's home.
"I was trealed good." he said. "I liked
your "family a Jot, because they were
human."
'Vhi le Gerald wants lo be an electrical
engineer, Fernando has his s.i&hts on
other things. ,
"I want to be a revolutionary. I look,
and I see people who helped others. Look
al Cesar Chavez, Martin Luth er King.
They helped their people. I want to help
1ny people. I want to revolt against the
things we face now."
But Fernanda has had his problems. He
had been expelled from two high schools
before going to Hamilton High.
He reailzes that an education Is a
necessary tool for a leader. He wants to
be a leader, and now he wants his tduca·
lion. "I'll have to struggle for my educa·
tion. But I want it so vgry badly,"
"You have to have educated people to
lead. I'll educate myself first. Then peo-
ple will look up to me. 1 don't mind being
a tool, as long a:i: it's used in the right
way."
Brothers
Fernando has great respect al'ld love
for his father. "I loOk upon my father as
a saint. He's a source of pride for my
family. When we came to this country
from Mexico I was very young. My
father wu a baker, but when we came
over he got a job as a janitor. Now he 's
foreman at the company where he onct
cleaned the bathrooms.
"He came from nothing to something.
And that's a hell of a lot lo do. He's
~hown me that if I work hard eDOugh, I
t·a n get somewhere."
"I want to help my people. I want to
improve the general standing of the Mtl·
icans. We need pride, unity. The blacks
have the Black Panthers. We have the
Brown Berelll. They help our people. I'm
th.inking about joining that organization,"
h~ said.
In the meantime, Fernando's working
with the YMCA as a counselor. He loves
working with children. "See these btads?
One of my boys gave them to me. I Jove
these kids."
If the purpose of the weektnd wa.s to
generate a meaningful dialogue amonr
P1ree races, it was a success.
When Fernando and Gerald left my
house, they left a note of appreciation for
my mother. They siped It, "Your:-friends
always ."
They will be.
Named by the Malaysian born en·
tertaine" are Ronald S. Snyder, 36, of
2320 College Drive, Costa Mesa and Dr.
Dennis W. Albright, Anaheim.
Also nar11ed in the lawsuit is the Marlin
Boat Co. of Orange whose outlet is :desa
Boat Cent.fr, 1595 Newport Blvd., Costa
Meu.
f'l'Oltl p_,e 1
OIL TOWER. • •
comes time to vote," she continued, her
voice breaking on the verge of tears.
Stung by that thought, Vice Mayor
Robert M. Wilson declared ~frs. Pitoniak
had a valid point in complainlng, but fd·
ded that 'he was not apologizing for his
earlier vote and would repeat It under the
circmnstances.
But he made a moUon for a new formal
demand for the compaiiy to Jtick to
dozens of .strJct conditions attached to the
original city permit covering a 90-day ex-
ploration and »<lay cleanup period.
''To the letter of the law," mapped ~.
Mayor Pinkley.
"If they were 1oing to design it so It
wa1n't objectionable, then they did the
worst job in the world," the mayor con·
lilmed .
Ted C. Bologh, ol 286 Del Mar Ave.,
c:ritlclzed the derrick, saying engineers
pledged to cease drilling operations at 6
p.m., dW'inl the earlier permit hearing.
The Balboa Angling Club will announce
the wlnn,ers and total proceeds Monday
from a raffle held to augment the
scholarship fund uf Balboa 's Colston
Hale, 16, who lost most of his firigers last
spring in 1 bayside accident.
The Rotary-sponsored scholarship fund
for the Newport Harbor Hlgh School stu·
dent has topped the $1,100 mark so far.
and the proceeds from lhe angling club's
raffle of new fishing tackle should add
su~stantially to it, Rutary spokesmen. aa1d today.
The winn.ers will be drawn by members
of the ~ng club Sunday evening. ~otarialis tonight will start another
drive fo.r young Hale-a search for apart.
ment furniture for the youth and his elder brother, Frank.
The younger Hale, who has moved to
the Harbor Area, and his brother plan to li~·e together and continue school. Cole
will enter hill junior year at Harbor High·
Frank will enroll at Orange Coast
College.
Fred Swenson, co-chairman for the
scholarshJp campaign, sa1c. t h e
furnishings will be sought first from
Rotary members at the regular mmUhly
meeting tonight.
Appea ls to the public for home furnish·
lngs will alao be issued, he said.
The funds collected and administered
by members uf the Rotary Club will go
towa rd Hale's college education. He
hopes to ~ajor in psychology in college.
Meanwhile the youth is continuing
physical therapy at Hoag Memorial
Hospital where last May 10 he entered a~
an emergency paUent suffering from
nearly total amputation of his fingers.
Laguna Skyjack Victim
Says Cuba flight 'Scary'
Mayor Pinkley then amended Wilson's
original motion, calling for mlnute e1·
amlnation of the tape-recorded dialogue
ol the tarlier counell hearing for added
c:Iarillcation.
Unanimous approval was vuted.
Area residents complain the noise
keeps them awake at night.
"Who's going to pay for the roads they
smash up with their he.avy equipment~,"
demanded Howard Patterson, of 3083
Platte Drive, asking also about cleanup
costs.
He received the injuries in a ~re.at ac·
cident on Ole docks of Art's Landing in
Balbtla, where he had taken a job to sup-
plement his meager income. He was ]iv.
ing with guardians, parents of his best friend .
Swenson said the Rotary C 1 u b
welcomes more donations of either
household items or cash for the
scholarship fund, which, he said, is sure
to grow each year.
"A man has stepped Into the cabin and
directed us lo riy to Havana., Cuba. Do
not be alarmed."
Those words, uttered by the captain of
a Trans 'Vorld Airlines Boeing 727 over
'Vichita, Kan., last week, began an unex·
pected adventure for a Mission Viejo
minister and his fa mily and the president
of a Laguna Beach manufacturing girm.
"The scariest part of the trlp was Ian·
ding at Havana. We came down during
the tail end of a larre storm. The plane
as it came through the clouds suddenly
tilted and was buffeted like ·a ping pong
ball ," lhe Rev. Mr. Paul Uhlar said to-
day.
!\fr. Uhlar, his wife Margo and their 3.
yearo(Jld son, Brent, along with Do11ald
Barda, president of Telonics Industries,
were four of 131 people aboard the flight
hijacked last Thursday by a prisoner who
held t1. razor blade to the throat of a TWA
stewardess.
The man was described by Mr. Uhlar
as a "middle-aged, clean.eut" man who
looked "like a busintss:man ." Uhlar 11w
the hijacker only as the prisoner was led
through the plane by armed Cuban
soldiers in Havana.
The 30·year-<ild minister is associate
pastor of the lifount of Olives Lutheran
Church in Mission Viejo. He and his
family live at 26622 Carretas Drive,
~fission Viejo. The famil y arrived in Los
Registration Set
For Tot Classes
Reristratlon for the next session or
Tiny Tot Swim Classes at the Orange
Coast YMCA, 2Xl0 Unlventty Ave.,
Newport Bl!ach, will be held Aua. 11.
The classes a re limited to chJldren
ihree t& foOr y6ars of age. Each class
has four children per instructor and are
held Monday lhroogh Frlday.
Registratlon for the final se1sion of
awlm classes will be conducted AUJ. 15.
Rogers ou Bali Island
DEN PAS/\R, Indonesia iUPll -
Secretary of Slate William P. Rocers ar.
rived at the island par•dlae ol Bili tod•Y
for tnformal taJkt with lndonealan
Fotelgn Mlnlster Adam M•lik and two
dl)'I of rest and 1 look 1t Ball 't f1motU
dancers.
Angeles Friday.
Barda, 38, Jivea In Laguna Beach at
1074 Van Dyke Drive. He heads the
Laguna-based Te.Ionics r i rm which
manufactures micro-wave components.
\Vhile in Havana, the passengers \Vere
given ham sandwiches, the only thing
they had to eat !or 13 hours. The hi~
jacking had interupted lunch aboard the
plane, Mr. Uhlar said. They were in the
Cuban capital for five hours.
He said !hat the Cubans W«~· ~·very
nice and very courteous." Soldiers look
the names, addresses and occupations of
all the passsngers.
~Ir. Uhlar said that during the Havana
stay, it rained continuously. No special
problems came up. he added .
The minister did nol know what hap·
pened to the hijacker.
Clow1ai1ag It Vp
City officials explained that 1 $25,000
bond was posted by Occidental Petroleum
Corp. It\ ~ver any street damage and
they are also legally bound to adequate
cleanup.
City Engineer George A. Madsen added
that studies of equipment and vehicle
weight-versus-roadway capacity w a s
studied before the gear was moved onto
the site.
He said qualified city employes are
also supervising certain such maneuvers
at the site.
Vice ~1ayor 'Vilson added that if area
residents-who have resisted annexation
-would merge with the city. lhe rig tow·
ering over their homes v.'Quldn't be there.
Donations or any kind can be directed
to the Colston Hale Fund, P.O. Box 165,
Balboa Island, Calif., 92661.
Big Bear Lake A1·ea
Catnping Planned
Reservations for l\\'O summer camp
sessions in the Big Bear area at $35 per
,.,.eek are now bei ng taken, acco rding to
spokesn1en for the Boys Club of the
fiarbor Arc a.
Swim1ning. hiking, fishing, boating,
horseback riding, crafts and other types
of fun \\'ill be offered during the Aug. 17
lo 24 and 24 to 31 sessions at Camp Cedar
Lake.
Comedian MUton Berle, surrounded by Ringling
Brothers and Barnum and Balley Circus clo\\•ns
d isplays his face-making style. Bt!rle presented
dlplom01 Monday in Inglewood to clowns gradual·
Ing f~m official Clown College of ci rcus . College
trains clowns to bring happiness to all people of all
ages.
"
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FLOWER POT IN THE SKY
Watering Is a Hangup
Laguna Parking
Meters May Get
Flowery Touch.
A twelve-foot high parking meter? With
flowers on top?
Only in Laguna Beach.
'
,
I
' I ,
I
' \
"ll'3 only here on trial. If we find lt'a '
feasible and desirable, the merchants will
be asked to buy more of them ," explained
Chamber of Commerce Manager Warren
1.forgan.
The parking meter in question towers
proudly in (ront of the Chamber office at
280 Park Ave. As parking meters go, it'1
an impressive piece of hardware.
SitUng atop the meter, 12 feet into the
air, sits the flower pot. But the flowers
have had a rough summer. The green
flowers are plastic. The brown vegetation
was at one time alive.
Now it's not. "It wasn't \vatered," ex-
plained Jack Eschbach, flower consultant
to the chamber.
The chamber would likt · to se:e
downtown merchants buy the flower pots
to place on the meters In front of their
stores. The going price is $50 each. That
doesn't include the cost of the flower&.
"'Ye'll probably use Lant.anas," said
Eschbach. "They're about five to six feet
in width, and they hang about five or six
feet. And they only need watering once a
ll'eek.''
The maximum cost of the plant would
be $5 per pot, accurding to Eschbaeh.
No formal proposal lo the downtown
merchants has been made yet, 1'.iorgan
said. ''\Ve're just trying it on for l!iize.
The idea came from one of the ladies in
the beautification comm ittee, who saw
them Jn a town in Maine.
"This project shows that the beautifica-
tion committee is really \\'Orklng."
Morgan said.
Old Mesa School
Reunion Slated
The class of 1948-9 of the eirhth grade
of the Main School, t9:h and Newport,
Costa Mesa, will hold a class reunion
1\ugust 22 at the Elks Hal!, Elks Lane in
Santa Ana .
The reunion will honor 1iliss E. li1or·
roY.', one of Orange County's oldest Jivin&
teachers.
A social hour will begin 116 p.m., with
dinner al 8 p.m.
Reservations are $8.00 per person.
For reservations, call Bob Dinger at
54&-0566 or 541-4983, or Evelyn William at
548-9f47 or as.8730.
Mr. Suthlerland
Succumbs at 52
Funeral services \\'ill bt held at 3 p.m.
Wednesday ::it Pacific View ~temorta.l
Park Chapel. Corona del ~far, for
Clayton W. Sutherland, who died Monday
at the 1ge of 52.
~fr. Sutherland. a construc t io n
supervisor and estimator, \\'al an Orania
County resident for more than ~ years.
He ls survi ved by hi.s wife, Bernice B.
Sutherland or Tuatin. and a sister. Mrs.
J. ,Y, Allan of Costa 1'.fes.a.
• 4 • t 4 • • • • a 0
T"'4ay, A"'"'' 5, 1969 s DAILY 1'11.0T 3
Ail-port Chief: Man in Mesa Man T1-iolnj~ed
•
In S. Coun11
Hot Seat
Oeared of Bresnahan Piloting Facility
'Fence' Rap ~ Through Flak of Criticism Car Wreck ..
Stephe:n Sampson ot Costa M~sa his
been cleared of criminal chargea that
were launched live months ago with the
fatal shooting of a 1S...year-<1ld boy.
Superiol' Court Judge Howard Cameron
ruled Monday that the prosecution's
evidence was not sufficient to support
charges of receiving stolen property. It
was alleged lha.t he was the "fence" for
cameras said to have been stolen by the
dead boy, Stephen 'stubblefleld.
Stubblefield was shot when three pollce
officers opened fire on him last March IS
when the youth fLed from Corrlgan's
Cameras. S30 W. 19th St. Officers said he
ignored repeated demands to halt.
The Santa Ana Heights boy's death was
subsequently ruled by the district at4
torney to be justifiable homicide. Mrs.
JI el en Ellis, Stephen's mother, has sued
Orange County. the city of Costa Mesa
and the state for a total of $252,000 in
damages.
Charges were filed against Sampson
following investigation of the Stubblefield
shooting.
Among those chal'ges was the ac-
cusaUon or child molest, filed by ill4
vestigators following allegallons made by
youths who were frequent guests of
Sampson at his home -2379 Santa Ana
Ave. Officers said many youths fre-
quented the house, attracted bJ the many
ele<:tronic gadgets and devices created by
Sampson, who was described by in·
vesUgators as an "electronics wizard."
But the two boys -one 15, his com-
panion 13 -whose complaints led to the
filing of charges against Sampson pro-
vided a sensation in his Superior Court
appearance when they admitted that they
had lied about their illicit relationship
with the electronics expert.
Both boys, whose names have not been
revealed, face charges of perjury,
........ "'t··
'IMPOSSIBLE-A HATED WORD
Optimist Bresnahen
Harbour Swim
Team Second
Local splashers from the Huntington
Harbour Swim Team placed a close se--
cond to Charter House of Anaheim during
the "C" division championships of the
Orange County Swim Conference.
The. Harbour swimmers collected 305
pointsto the 327 compiled by Charter
House in the Estancia High School pool
Saturday but managed to qualify nine
members for the conference finals
scheduled Aug. 9 at Foothill High School,
Tustin.
Freed Prisoner Reflects
U1il1ealed Inner Damage
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of n.1 OIL" ,1111 S!ltf
"!11ora/.e and eq11ipn1ent are better than in any other war in his·
tory. l've bten lucky ••• "
Robert F. Frishman
Long Beach, Nov. !7, 1966
"About (his fact, that this is a bad war, I have no doubt ... "
Robert F. Frishman
Hanoi, Date Unknown, 1969
* The gaunt face was pale~ thinner since th~ stateside interview three
Thanksgiving hoildays befol'e. No insignia marked the rumpled sweater, issued
I to l:lanoi's prisoners of war,
His floppy. boneless arm lay hidden under a bare
white table in the grainy, blownup ~millimeter magazine
pholl'.lgraph. fie also kept it hidden in letters home, if they
were ever mailed.
One could see in the dark eyes an unhealed, Inner
wre<:kage.
I had forgotten U.S. Navy Lt. Robert F. Frishman
and would have skipped on after a glance at the emaciated
POW interviewed by Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci in
the mid.July Look magazine. but saw the name.
Freed Mond ay, Ll. Frishman 28 is coming home to Amefica, but life
\\.'ill never be the same. * . He was just a young carrier-based fighter pilot home for the holidays,
\\.'ith ~·plus missions over the North and six Air Medals, when I was sent to
interview him. His father, public relaUons director for the Long Beach school
district, don1inaled the discussion.
The precision bombing of a big oil depot and resulting fireworks might
have been a spectacular play in a football game between crosstown enemy
high schools. Lt. Frishnta n said little.
He was easy to forget.
Lt. Frishman said much in Miss Fallaci's Look magazine account. lfe
talked hungrily after reportedly not saying a word to anyone since being shot
down Oct. 24, 1967, on a mission he had described as the wol'st kind.
* "It's safer in Vietnam,'' he explained, comparing his planned combat
air strikes to our driving the freeway to work, th en suffering the physical toll
of job stress all day when his assigned work was momentary.
"The worst ones are when you just go out hunting supply barges or PT
boats," he said, ''it's easy to drop your gU:ard."
.. I v•asn·t even diving when they hit me, I was flying. Bad luck," he
told ?i1iss Fallaci, showing a shrunken arm, shattered so badly that eight
inches of bone was removed.
Time and silence. as well as a surface-to-air rocket have left marks on
a man who loved to fly and chose lhat way to serve, based on his comments
and the wounds mirrored in nis eyes.
"God, if only I had a book," he said in the magazine. ''But staying there
In that nothingness, all you can do is think .•• but thinking isn't enough for
a man is it?" * ~ The !dory tells much by Lt. Frishman's failure to answer many questions.
\Vhat is that nothingness?
··1 didn't kn ow much about Utls war. Just what 'They' told me that
North Vietnam \vas the aggl'essor against the South and if America didn't
slap them .•. " One must stop lo consider that "They" are authorities who control what·
ever a man in a society or specific set of circumstance is allowed to know.
"* "They" were present, watching and listening carefully as th! und er·
weigh POW talked of excellent prison food. peace negotiations, and learned
for the first Ume that Americans were about to land on the moon.
Lt. ~~rlshman, released ror so-called humanitarian reasons, was al~o
quoted as condemning U.S. involvement in Vietnam and saying be hoped some-
day to come home and work again.st any such future ventures.
And whether one shares his earlier' beliefs or what the young fl ier told
Miss Fallac.i as a high-ranking prison o(ficial stood by does not matter here.
* "War's a: horrible lhing: now t know it.,'' Mid Lt. Frishman who then
hoped to be home with his Wife by Chrlstmas, based on what aulh<rilies told
him or peace negoUa:tlons.
"Not many or us know what war means, de we?" he conUnued.
No m~tter how impersonally Lt. Frishman asked that question In the
dim Interview room In •lanol. I could give a personal -It only parUal -
answer to the young mBn so easily forgotten three Thanksgivings ago.
The answer Is on Page 31 of the magazine.
It Is In bis t!ytS.
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ni. o.11r '"'' tt1tr
Last week, Orange County Airport
Dla:tttor Robert Bresnahan celebrated
his 48th birthday, and he's happy about
Jt_.Jargely becaule he has survived.
He allows that his job is the cou nty's
hottest of "hotseat" positions. It's a job
full or criticism, long hours, cwrt suits
and endless planning sessions.
On the wall of his office, flanked by
prints of the Navy's Blue Angels flight
team in action, hangs a modest In-
scription:
"Miracles are accomplished by ppsitive
thinking."
Bresnahan subscribes to lhat. He has
to. It make take a miracle to solve all the
woes of his job.
The airport he administers has never
had more business or criticism. Traffic,
both private and commercial, is at an all
time high. So is public feeling about the
jet.s now usin~ the once sleepy air strip.
"I've got a Job where the ground rules
can change each day. It's tar difterent
than the work of most other smaU airport
managers who tell me they're trying like
crazy to increase service to lheir
terminals. I have to do the reverse.,.
The issues that dominate Bresnahan's
day ra.nge from studying solutions to
complaints about jet noise and working
wi~ at least three county departments
which have direct administration of
segments of airport service.
Bresnahan is a short stocky man with
a direcf manner. '
He stepped into the airport manager's
slot .. in March of 1968, bucking com-
petition from 90 other applicant& for the
job.
Before that he managed Riverside
County's system of airports.
His first stint at airport management,
however, was in Battle Creek Mich.,
near his hometown of Dowagiac. 'He held
that post for nearly five years.
Airlines and flying have mono~lized
Bresnahan's life. His present family life
is no different.
He admittedly defied hi.i father in 1943
to enlist in the Navy's flight training pro-
gram.
"lie was a veteran ol. the World \Var I
cavalry and wanted me to join that
branch, but I chose the Navy anyway."
After World War 11 he resumed his
studies and became an efficiency expert
and engineer for a manufacturer of jet
engine perts in Michigan.
.Bres.nahan bas served as a test pilot, -
flight mstructor and bolds credentials as
a pilot for both DC3 and DCf aircraft
His two adult sons, Robert and Jerf.y,
plan to become airline pUots after they
complete college.
"My daughter, Patricia, Is a college
music major. She plays the trumpet " be
said, smiling. '
He and his wife of ~ years Mabel Jive
in Fountain Valley. ' '
It is at that home, on Friday evenings,
he says, when his firm conviction against
the word "Impossible" can lose its vigor.
','Somet!mes when I get home on those
Friday nights I really think that some
things are impossible.
"That disappears come M o n d a y
Lhough." '
And wheil Monday comes the relax-
ation from gardening and fisJ\ing -his
m()S( avid bobbies -give way to the
tension oC a busy executive.
When he speaks he may rise from his
des k which is covered with documents
and aircraft models. He will wander
around the office et times, then sit down
SHE'S REALLY A COOK
Columnist Nan Wiiey
'Ask" tlie Cook'
Column Added
To Pilot Pages
Most housewives somewhere tn the
kitchen have a whole drawer full of .
l'~ipes and cookbooks. So they know
what to cook, but hardly anybody ever of.
fers them help on how to cook.
The DAILY PILOT starting Wednesday
\\'ill oUer readers a new kind of cooking
column -"Let'1..Ask The Cook" -writ-
ten by Kansas City housewife Nan Wiley.
No white-coated laboratory type work·
Ing Ir. the sterlllty of a test kitchen, Mrs.
Wiley uses her more than 10 years of e.x4
pcrtence as a writer, radio broadcuter
and researcher to (ind the 811.!Wtts In her
own suburban home's kitchen and to
report them ta rea:der1 throughout the
nation.
The new column will make lt.J first. ap-
pear&r>ee Wednesday in the DAILY
PILO'f''g food liCctlon and will be a
regular weekly feature of that section.
abruptly.
He speaks with a tense of urgency.
"Some people have criticized me for-
bclng an Impatient man, and I have to
agree with them. I am impatient."
Jumping Immediately lnto the mass of
lssuia facing the county's aviation pic-
ture, he examined the concept of public
desire and opinion about the issues.
He sees an Immediate need for tapping
the pool of public opinion on the airport
issues -sentiments that have yet to get
much attenUon he says.
"I sit at more public hearings than yo11
can lmaglne, and It seems that I always
see the same people tt>ere, and
sometimes I think that there has to be a
better way of sampling the majority opi-
nion than the public hearing.
"lt seems the only people who come to
them are against something. There are
few who are for something."
Included in the silent majority,
Bresnahan say!, Is the county's industrial
community, which has yet to be beard
with any intensity on airport growth mat4
ters.
"l really expect a strong showing by ln--
dustry on the Issues. After all, the airport
is their Ufe 's blood."
UnW public officials hear from more
spokesmeri for industry and the millions.
oC othP.r private citizens, "I don't think
we have an accurate indication of what
people want for aviation iD Orange Coun4
ty."' say5 Bresnahan.
"I really wonder if we're ana1yzlng the
public pulse right."
He says his greatest hope is for a
smooth, orderly system of planning for
the expanded air service to Orllllge ·coun-
ty communities.
"ll v.'e can sustain a system or smooth
planrung where all segments fall Into
place -a series of small decisions -
we'll solve this thing. And I really believe
Jt will be 90Jved."
He criticizes arch foes of expansion of
the present terminal (or drawing para14
leis of the Orange Countl terminal with
Los Angeles Internatlona Airport.
"That's a ridiculous comparison," says
the airport chief.
"There Is quite a difference between
the 250 jet departures a day with four-
engln:? craft at L.A. and the 2Q
departures of twin-engine aircraft at
Orange County each day."
He also seriously questions the validity
of many of the complaints from the same
sector over airport noise.
"If these planes are indeed. causing a
great noise problem. then why are con-
tractors and developers building new
'QUIETER ENGINES COMING'
A Blrthd•y Rtlloction
homes In the area and selling them quite
successfully ?"
He would like airport and noise critics
to "take the time to learn what the real
factors are and offer some constructive
solutions."
Land use compatibility surrounding an
airport is the key issue in solving pro-
blems with noise, he says.
••Every airport I can think of was first
bu!lt oo the outskirts of town away from
residential zones, aOO government agen.-
cies allowed the development of residen-
tial areas to a point where they met the
boundariee of the airports."
Residential areas will never become a
compatible use if they aajOin airports, he
believes.
"Even If we do get aircraft with
quieter engines -and I believe that we
will, eventually -you can never
eliminate Lhe fear of a crash from the
owner of a home. Statistics still won't
dispel that feeling that a jet might come
zinging down his chimney some day.''
Bresnahan offers no set solutions to the
county's airport service question, but
says adamantly that If the majority of
the county's taxpayers desire a certain
plan. "then It will be built."
And as far as a time limit to the solu-
tion, he is uncertain, too.
"Il might lake four or five generations
of living wiUf the problems of air travel
before a solutiOn could be found. It's
hard, even impossible - I hate to use
that word -to say."
Tbrte ptnona were lojuttd In • pal~I
South County automobUe accidents ,_..
day, one Involving rour cars on the a.t
Diego Fr~way and the other three CllS
on El Toro Road. a
Most seriously Injured were Charlls
Bermea, 51, of Reseda, and Lucy Lo~
50, of Whittier, who were ejected fnln
their car in a 1:45 p.m. colllslori on~
San Diego Freeway near the Presf«P
crouing In San Clemente.
Both were reported in satisfactery
cnndition today with head injuries .1t
South Coast Commu:Uty HospitaJ.
According to the California Hlghw13
Patrol, the accident occurred when a car
driven by Allyn Hoffman, 26,. of 264S1
Vera Cruz, San Juan Capistrano, had· a
blowout and crossed the center divider.
Hoffman was not hospitali1ed, nor wifire-
drivers of two other cars involved in the
accident -Eric Slromblad, 32, of 3504
Via De Frente, San Clemente, and Joseph
Guarziola, 43, of Pico Rivera.
Beqnea and Mrs. Lope;r; were thrown
from the car when a door was torn off on
impact, according to the CHP. A patrol
spokesman said they were not weartni
seat belts. ~
Jn the second accident at 5:45 p.m., a.
car driven by Garden Grove resident
William Anderson lost control and Cl'O$§.'
ed the center line on El Toro Road hg.J
mile south of Live Oak Canyon, lhe .
reported.
Anderson's car first struck an auto
driven by Pascual Lozano, 37, of Trabuco
Canyon, hit a power pole, and came to
rest against a car driven by Richard
Jones, 61, of 390 North Avenida Castilla,
ol Laguna Hills. _
Anderson was treated for head Injuries
at Santa Ana Community Hospital and.
released. Lozano and Jones were not in-
jured.
Valley Seeking
Pei·sonnel Man
Fountain Valley School District ta seek·
ing a part·Ume personnel director.
The post, which may be filled from
within or from outside the district, was
formerly held by Mike Brick who was
recently appointed superintendent of th•
district.
Tl}e commission includes Don Whan,
chairman; Lois Rufer, vice cbalrman~
and Don Eddy. Robert Read is •ctlnC
personnel director.
There3sonyou're not
reading this is because
youalreaay know we have
mornjng,mid-day and eve11ing
jets goingtoPhoenix.
ThereuonYoU'renotreadlngthisls beca1111eyoualreadyknowweh&venewSuper
DC-9'1 with more leg room for aU paseengers to make your trip more comfortable. .
So instead of reading any of this, just call your 'fravel Agent or Air West and go.·
Air\\atia die west's awn aidioe••
•
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i
• DAit V l'll.DT
.' • Yiiesday; August .5, 1969
POW s Back, Say !reatment 'Ad~quate'
A Bcrbank police sergeant raid·
ed. a television antenna Sunday
night after a cifuen reported see-
tn·g long strings of a dark substance
hanging from il -looking like
marijuana. Sgt. Russ S • n d • r 1
quieUy placed a ladder against the
side of the house, climbed to the
roofsop and tiptoed to the antenna.
Sanders quickly realized from the
odor that he had raided a smelly
-but lawful -rooftop beef jerky
~urtng operation. •
Even the best of baseball
minds were atumped when the
measage boord at the Oakland
Coliseum asked, "Who holds tht
record for the most babes in a
single seruon? -Hornsby, Mu-
sial, Ruth, Cobb? When the
crowd began to howl, the er·
nmt word was changed. to
"ba..ses."
• A man and A woman were ar-
rested for bit·run and drunken
driving during the weekend in San
Jose when their car struck 10
parked cars, a tree and a house ..
Police said Edward Galvan and
Htl•n Zamilpa were taking turns
behind the wheel.
8'
''.The dirtiest th i e f l 've ever
seen," s·aid Canine Unit Patrolman
Jeck R.upp1ner after his dog Shep
flushed an alleged burglar al the
Venus Jewelry Co. in Chicago. The
i;uspect, found hiding in a basement
grease trap, was "about as dirty
as a man can get, 11 Ruppaner said. •
Venice beaches were the .scene of
a reverse twist on the famous coUeg·
iate diversion -the panty raid. Mary
l.9ms flew in a helicopter ahowering
titachgoers with packages of a dis·
posable panty product as a promo-
tional gimmick for the producers of
the undergannent. • "Who left the beads on the
floor?" Mrs. George Rutter of
~scon, Ariz. asked as 6he. no-
ticed something near the table as
her family was finishing dinner.
Then the beads moved. That's
when their 15-year-old son Chris-
topher got a hammer and squash·
ed. what turned out to be a coral
snake. "I didn't kno'v how to cap.
ture it or we \VOuld have," ~1rs.
Rutter said. "You just don't go
around your house with a net or
something."
VIENTIANE, Lao< (AP) -Looking
gaunt after monthl in North Vietnamese
prison camps, three U.S. prisoners of war
arrived In Vientiane tonight and describ-
ed !heir trtatmenl as adequalo.
They landed from Hanoi in an lnterna·
tlonal Control Comm.lulon plane ln com-
pany of an American pacifist gouP. that
went lo llie North Vielnamese.capdal lo
pick them up.
After huddling with U.S. embassy of4
ficials inside the plane, the three came
out to meet reporters. They seemed
somewhat dazed.
Lt. Robert Franchot Frishman, 29, a
Navy pilot from Santee, Calif., -acted as
spokesman cfuring the questioning. Asked
about their treatment in prison camps, he
replied: 111 do not want to jeopardize
other prisoners sW.I there. My treatment
has been adequate."
Frishman, however, praised the treat-
ment he was given by North Vietnamese
doctors to a wounded right arm suffered
when bis plane was shot down. His arm
hung limply by bis side.
With him were Capt. Wesley Lewis
Rumble, 26, an Air Foree pilot from
Oroville, CaW., and Douglas Hegdahl, a
seaman apprentice from Watertown, S.D.
"The doctors were very busy giving
treatment to their own p e o p I e , ' '
Frishnlan said. "It would have been
ealiier to amputate my ann but they
operated on me and removed my elbow. I
still have my arm."
Frishman reported the main diet of the
prisoners was "based around bread, soup
and pig meat."
''It may not sound very good but they
had a way of preparing it lh.at made ll
tasty," he said.
Frishman sa,ld he had not been
brainwashed. He added that lhe treS:t·
ment of the three prlsonera by tbe North
Vletname!e had been dequate and that
relatives of other prisoners should not
worry. Rumble did not speak during the
interview.
Hegdahl said nervously that the main
activities during their imprisonment were
sweeping floors, smoking cigarettes and
listening to the Voice of Vietnam, the
North Vietnamese propaganda station.
The three looked gaunt and pale but
otherwi!Je well. They wore blue dungarees
and rubber Ho Chi Minh sandals without
socks, They were escorted by a four.man
pacifist mission from the UNted States
headed by Rennie Davis. The North Viet-
namese turned the prisoners over to the
pacifist mission Monday •
The three met for 40 minutes in the
plane with U.S. Embassy officera.
They had spent from IS to 28 months in
captivity. A' North Vietnamese :>roadcast
said that at the ceremony at which they
were turned over to the pacifist group
they said they were well treated.
Court Cert.ain to Reopen
l(ennedy Crash Inquiry ..
EDGARTOWN. Mass. (UP!) -The
case of Sen. Edward M. KeMedy's
autQmobile accident, which a week ago
appeared closed, is all but certain to get
a thorougb)'eairing in the coming weeks.
15 Americans
Aboard Missing
Chilean Plane
SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -Four
Chilean military aircraft began a searclt
today along the slopes of the Andes
Mountains for a World War II·vintage
U.S. Navy transport plane that disap--
peared. and presumably crashed during a
storm.
The miSsing plane carried 16 persons,
one of them a Filipino woman and the
ctbers Americans. The Filipino was one
(I{ six women military dependenlS on
board.
Tha -twin-prpp C47, mJlitary version of
the DC3, was on a nonstop 700-mile flight
from Santiago to Buenos Aires, Argen·
tlna, Monday night when it vanished after
failing to make a scheduled radio check
about 100 mile! south of this Chilean
capital.
Chilean Air Force officials s a Id the
plane was apparently down in an area
near Curico near where it was to have
begun a course taking it i n to a pass
thrqh the four-mi.le-high Andea Moun..
~. whlcb line the border between Chile
and Argentina to the east.
NIXON'S SPEECH
ON HOME POLICY
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on's radio-TV speech to the nation Friday
nightwill be centered on-domast.ic issues,
primarily including new welfare policy,
the White House said today.
Presidential press secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said the 7 p.m. PDT speech will
also deal with comprehensive manpower
training programs, revenue sharing, the
federal antipoverty agency.
Ziegler said messages on the three
topics other titan the antipoverty prcr
gram will be sent to Congress. fiext Mon·
da y, Tuesday and Wednesday.
Dist. Atty. Edmund S. Dinis is awaiting
only the official weird from District Judge
Jame! A. Boyle to begin an inquest into
the death of 28-year-0ld Mary Jo
Kopechne, wbo drowned July 18 when a
car driven by Kennedy ran off a narrow
bridge on Chappaquiddick Island and
plunged into a pond,
Boyle is expected to authorize the in-
quest today or Wednesday, Dinis' Jetter
or reque.st to Boyle was received Monday,
and the judge took it under advisement.
District court clerk Thomas A. Teller
said Boyle would act on the request
"either tomorrow or the next day -this
is within a reasonable period."
Under Massachusetts law, Dinis has
the authority simply to require the in4
quest be held. His request to Boyle is a
formality following rejection of an earlier
request for an inquest by the .state
superior court.
Dinis is expected to explain his:
reasons for seeking to reopen the case
sometime this week.
State Approves
New LA Airport
As Jet Facility
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The stale
has given the city of Los Angeles the go
ahead for plans to create the Palmdale
International Airport as a major jet
p8SSellger facility by 1977.
Approval of the application was an·
nounced Monday by Joseph R. Crotti, the
state aeronautics director. The airport
would cover about 27 square miles in a
region northeast of Palmdale, about 50
miles northeast or Los Angeles.
Crotti's decision is subject to these con·
dllions :
-Federal Aviation Agency approval of
the proposed zone of alrcraft approach
and safe air traffic patterns.
-Relocation of two parallel sets of
runways at least 2,000 feet north and 4,000
feet to the east to reduce noise level
around two local schools.
Jet noise should be cut to a "reasonable
degree" by the time the facility is com·
pletcd as an international airport, Crotti
said.
Fair Weather Everywhere ..
But There Was Some Chill and Rain Here and There
«:aHfornla
Coastal
Nlofll 11\d .,_,.1"9 !Ow (10\ldt wUl'I
h11v 1f!ei-..-i 1ur111tl1" IQ41Y erd
WednHa1v. w1...:11 wnlffl~ 10 to II
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S1111 , ~,,.,,,,,. Tides
TUESDAY
Flrll hit!! l:U 1.m. l .I
WEDNESDAY
1'1"1 low , , .... 1':11 1,m,OS
,I•\! h'fll ....••....•... 7:10 1 m. l .l
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ll.S. Summary
F11• -""lid we1n..r prev1li.ci ~· 1'!'10$1 ol 11-.. 111tlon lrom 11\t R0t;kl-. to
~ """'IKlll111t fvdll,,
Tiie 111!111nl i>atlltrn w11 undwlctled
belwH!I 1n unw•loOllllUe c:ri111 In fM
Pttlrlc ttttrttiwnt 1nd contlnllfd ·
c:IOouOll'lt$S INI KAl'l!rld ti !" llonsi
mvcl'I ol 1111 Ea11em t11bol•cl. Pocllell cl' n)fM!lme l!luMerll>o"lrt" rev.ct ~tl!on1 cf the mlll<:O<IHMnl, tlul tt.n1 ,_rill' OlmlnlihfO belcrf
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dtrslorm late Mon cl 1 ~ o~er 1ovt1t111ttrn Ntl:lrai~• lrid !~Ul•fd Cl'lll
SKrscn In '"' co""m11nl1¥ ol O\lntlo!r, •O m114'1 .011!/I Of 011'~~1. l"r<lPI•!~
111m•I! WI• "'llO" ~l!btll ,1, .. lv•I
l'l!"lmt1t'rO ~" ,,,._ uouncl Plrmoull!.
lltY .. 1wt11 Cl l or>al!n.
Temperatures
11•-tl'lfll!ld
81smerrt.
··~ ·~ ... llrowntYlllt
"'"'" ClrlclnMl1
"""" Dfl MolMS .....
F1ll'Wnk1
1"1)11 Worltt '~~ Htl-
H-1\1111 IC1nw1 City
l.11 Vetl1 Los .r,n;1le1
Ml1ml
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New Oliffn•
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Okltflatn<I (lly ....... Ptlm 5'>flne1 Phaiinb
PllT>bu"°l'I Por!l•NI
R 1~id City
Rl'd 91ulf
R~no ~'<ram•nto $111 l.•k• ,,,.,
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IO .. ·°'
PROUD PARENTS -Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Rumble
of Oroville, CaUf., proudly show a photo of their
son, Air Foree Cap\. Wesley Rumble, 26, alter learn-
UPI Tel.,..._
ing of his release from a North Vietnamese prison.
The Rumbles had heard from their son on1y twice
after he was captured 16 months ago.
Mariner 7 Takes
'Beautiful' Shots
Of Mars lee Cap
PASADENA (AP) -Mariner 7 streak·
ed acrosa the Martian south polar cap to-
day, snapping and storing pictures sci en·
tislS said would glue tonight's television
viewers to their chairs.
Preliminary signals flashed o n
monitors at the Jet Propulsion
LaOOratory were evidence, a spokesman
said, that the photographs as finally
transmitted would be "beautiful," show·
ing features of the planet's southern
hemisphere never seen before.
Commented Dr. Robert B. Leighton,
Calif om.la Institute of T e c h n o I o g y
astronomer, as he viewed the incoming.
signals: "Wait until you see the full scale
pictures of the polar cop-Wow! We are
seeing the antarctic wastes of Mars."
Mariner 7's fly-by pictures from 2,000
miles high were stored on tape for
televising over three hours starting at
PDT tonight.
spokesman for ABC said the network
anned to broadcast some of the pictures
live, but that no time had been set.
Mills to Correct Slip
On Reformed Tax Rates
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Cha!nnan
\Vllbur D. Mills said today his House
Ways and Means Committee in·
advertently denied millions of middle in·
come Americans a tax break in just-com-
pleted reform legiSlation. He called the
panel into session to remedy the situa·
ti on.
The committee agreed last week in ap·
proving the most sw~ping tax reform bill
in history to cut everyoae's taxes by at
least 5 percent by 1972.
But, Mills told the House Rules Com4
mittee, there was a misunderstanding
and it turned out that under rates ac·
tually published , many middle income
people would get little or no tax cuts.
Legislative work on the tax reforms
continued as a compromise six·month ex·
tension of the 10 percent income tax
surcharge awaited President Nixon's
signature. The President had. wanted a
full year'.:: extension, with the rate reduc·
ed to 5 percent Jan. 1, but gave in to
legislative I e a d e r s demanding the
reforms.
Mills called a meeting of his committee
to rejigger the rate schedules to give the
middle income taxpayers al least a S per-
cent rate cut. The J.Iouse takes up the
reform bill Wednesday, with passage ex·
pected Thursday.
Mills' announcement came as liberal
lawmakers opened a ne1v campaign to
head off a second six-month extension of
the surcharge.
Claremont l\lan Set
As Singapore Envoy
WASHINGTON (UPI )-President Nix-
on today nominated career foreign serv·
ice officer Charles T. Cross as a1nbas-
sador to Singapore.
Cross, of Claremont. Calif., has been
deputy for civil operations and revolu-
tionary developme nt support in the I
Corps Area in South Vietaam since July,
1967.
One Picture is Still
Worth More than $500
. . -..
ORAMA
Camera Con~est
••
RULES
I. Anyone whe i1 111t 1 prol111i•11•I ph1!19r1ph1r, 111
'"'p!ov• ef fer 1111mb11 el tlie f1111il y ef 111 1mpl1y1 10 th.
DAILY PILOT, F11M1~ 11111141 Mtrchtnll A11oci1!i1" ,, 1
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thit Y''r will lie 1cctpl14 fer iudtl119.
J, Pichirt1 1h1v!d be unm1unt1d 9\111y prin!1 t i l111t
Jr1 l11cl!11 In 1111, pttf1r1bly I • 10 inch1l.
~. N191li¥11 el conhtl phol11 111ud bt r11dily 1v1i11b l1
10 lhtt bl1w~p1 c111 bt ,..,,J, for pwbli c1Uo11 i nd fer di1pl1y
11 Fot1r111\1,
5. Ptin+t li1cor111 l~t pr1p1rty el !ht DAILY' PILOT 1nd
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fU!lt.I
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h1111, tuch 11 1p1rh 1ctivlli11, fir11, fleodt, t11ff:c ,,,;Jtnll,
l.01!1119 t ncl ~1di11 et 1c11111 wit~ 'llr1m1tit: i111p1tl, w11w1w1I
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teld by !ht ""'''·
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)tell 9r•nl p1rmiu io11 for p"blic1tic " '"cl public di1p!ty ef
'"' ph1!01 1ybmi!ftd for comp1titi111,
10. Wi11111ri ef l~t lop !krtt pltett ••<~ '"'tek •ill bt
publ;1kt.I in +ht DAILY PILOT. Tluy will rtc1tv1 125, 115 111d
110, rtiptctivt!y, i11 F11hi111, lil111cl 9ift ctrtiflc1!11. 6 r1nd
p11zt win111r (to ~t u ltcltd A"'il· 21 -21 cl~ri~9 F1lo•1m1 11
F1ihi111 l1l1Mll 9th 111 1d.lition1l 1500 111 9 ift ctrllf,c1l11 •
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DAILY PILOT 11fic1 by t~1t timt . D1adli111 1h;1 w11k ;, Au9. 7.
11. C1nh1t phot11 1hould bt dir1ct1cl to: ,olf/ttmt
C1m1r1 C111l11t, Publ1e Str•+c• 01p1rtm111t, Or"'t• C111+
DAILY PILOT t1Hlc11111rt1! youl.
Still Win
EN.T.ER OW!
•
Midgets Marry
Two midgets, Ruth Genzer and Fred Soucek,
leave the Little Church in Storytown, U.S.A. at
Lake Gorge, N.Y., after their marriage last week-
end. The couple are members of a traveling midg-
et group. The bride, 25, is 30 inches tall a n d the
groom 60 inches.
Who Does Frm1ce Lilie?
Napoleon, Hands Down
PARIS (AP) -or all its
\varriors and unfurlers of the
flag, France loves Napoleon
best.
If some leftist historians call
him an advance-model fascist,
Frenchmen respond by buying
books about him, pasting
Napoleonic eagle decals en
t heir car windshields, and
dressing their kids in T-shirts
that slare out with the head 0£
Bonaparte.
Aug. !fl Is the 200th an-
niversary of his birth, and the
government is going ahead
with plans to do his birthday
imperially.
They were not quite so sure
about it at first. To find out
about how Frenchmen rate the
C'mperor, the French Public
Opinion Institute was com·
missioned to do a popularity
poll on the man V.'ho bled the
nation's manpower, left
France smaller in size than
v.'hen he seized power, and
stripped its finances.
GREATEST EVER
The institute reported back
confidanlly that on the basis
o( every 100 persons, 35
thought Napoleon was the
greatest f'renchman e v e r ,
There was just no com-
petition: Louis XIV had only
five points and J oan of Arc
and Charlemagne I h r e e •
Because he is a contemporary,
Charles de Gau lle v.·as not in-
cluded.
According lo the poll, what
Frenchmen found most admir-
able about Napoleon \Vas
his civil code that still re-
mains the basis of French Jaw.
They said they liked his wars
least.
"\'ihat the poll didn"t say,"
according to a F r e n c h
television producer who had
access to it, ''is that the thing
that Frenchmen really like
about Napoleon is the glory,
all that grandeur. That's the
slOry." .. Much like books on the C1v1l
War in the United Slates,
books on Napoleon have a
readymade audience in
France. Anything with a de-
cent cover, says R o g e r
Stophane , a writer, has a
guarantetd sale of 30,000
copies.
Many are apparently bought
a!'i gifts. \Vith titles like
··Napoleon and ~1usic." "The
Embroidery o( the Napoleonic
Era" and "Napoleon at the
Dining Table," they don "t beg
a reading and go weU on end
tables.
GETS PRAISE
The serious work more often
than not praises him as a
GRAFFITI by Leary
remarkable figure i~ history
and as the man who ct1nlinued
the French Revolulion, at
least until he became carried
away \l'ith his notions of em·
pi re.
There is no open criticism at
the large, successful Napoleon
exhibition at the Grand Palais
in Paris. where paintings and
documents are displayed wilh
the emperor 's blue and white
field tents, his redingotes,
their shoulders girlishly nar-
row, anJL.p.:markable toilet.
'"'riling aria mess kits, tool
in bone, silver and gold.
Most of the document~
stress his intelligence, his
good sense. One exhibit. ad·
dre55ed to his soldiers in
Egypt, reads:
"Don 't contradict the
1'-1ohammedans. Act towa rd
them as we acted toward the
Jews and the Italians; respect
their muftis and imams as you
did the rabbic; and bishops -
protect all religious places as
the Roman Legions did .''
CRITICS ABOUND
This is the Napoleon that the
:French admire. But his crilics
<ire particularly aggressive.
If they argue from a rightist
or iconoclastic position it is
often to say that Napoleon
wasn't really French, and that
his tru e loyalties were v.·ith his
birthplace. the island o l
Corsica. His real attitude
toward the French. they say,
can be found in his di aries:·
''the most hideous people that
ever existed."
O t h e r critics say he v.·as
money-mad and cite the funds
he spent on restoring his
mother's house in Corsica. Yet
a writer like Andre Maurois
states: "Never was there a
n1an who had greater riches
and approp riated less for
himself." ·
t\10ST SERIOUS
The most serious a n d
\\•idespread critical argument
is that he destroyed the ideals
of the French Revolulion. For
French nationalists, Napoleon
bled the country into a posi·
lion which r ep r esen ted
France's permanenl loss of
predominance in Europe.
llistorian Henri Guillemin
\\'riles: "Tales, they just
spring up around Napoleon
Bonaparte . And th is year,
because of lhe bl centennary,
there"s a festival of stories, a
great carnival of lies. ovations
and verse that scorn the tru th .
Because, as far as this
personality is concerned. the
tn1th is sinister. Sinister,
sordid and horribl e."
French schoo l children get
another version. A book called
"Napoleon Told to Children"'
by the same authors who did
an immensely popular. twit-
ting one on De Gaulle. is much
more respectful in tone.
De Gaulle him self was to
have spoken on Napoleon in
Corsica Aug. 15 had he not
abandoned the presidency in
April . Now the job falls to
Georges Pompidou.
BOAT BUFFS
Al111on Loc:••b•Y it fli1 only
fu!l-ti1111 Oo1tin9 .dilor wo1~ifl9
011 •fly 111w1p•p11 in 0111191
Co11111ly. Hi1 1•c:lu1iY1 c:1Y11191
,, bo1ti119 • ..d y1c:liti119 ...... ,
11 1 d1ily f11!1r1 of th1 DAILY
,ILOT.
Russians
Can't Sar.
Englis~
MOSCOW (AP) -The
RU1Siaru succeed in a ·lot of
thlnas, but attaining racility in
the Englilb la.niu•ge ls not
one or them.
This even goes fOr the
names of American Comnw-
nist leaden'.
When Gw Hall was In
Moscow recently he w a s in-
troduced at a news conference
as "Hell Guess."
This blooper illustrated the
chronic Russian confusion
over the letters G and H in
aranslatlng foreign nam es.
The Russians also seem to
have a gift for mi xing up for-
eigner' first and last name.
Hall's first name threw the
translators for a loop anyway,
because spelling it straight in
Russian would have made him
"Goose," the same word in
Russian and English. The
compromise makes h i m
"Guess."
Another classic deformation
is the name of the former U.S.
vice president, pronounced
here as "Goobert Hemfry."
Under the Russian system of
translating, Havana becomes
Gavana,. Hamburg is Ga m-
burg, llawaii Is Gavaii and the
American fil m capital is
Gollywodd. A HolJywood
\Vestem movie ct1mes out in
Russian: Gollyvoodskl kov-
boyski film .
The trouble does nol end
\Vith proper names.
American expressions are
popular among the English-
speaking Russians , but the
results .are some t imes
disastrous.
A Pravda writer. Yuri
Zhukov, demonstrated h i a
knowledge of English recently
by introducing an article on
rumors of a change in Viet-1
nam policy thus :
"It's cooking something in l
Washington.''
Since this sentence appeared
in Pravda in English, the
author went on to explain that
this is an old American ex-
pr essio n that means
"Something is being cooked in
the Washington kitchen."
Occasionally a glaring errOr
in some public sphere goes un-
noticed ror weeks. The first
translation for the movie
"Room at the Top" was
"Mansarda" in Ru ssia n
3.dvertisements.
Mansarda is the Russian
wo rd for attic.
It was changed to a less
literal translation after some
complaints.
Russians learning English
arc badly handicapped by
thei r lack of c<1ntact with
· native English speakers, caus-
ing them to fall into the trap
of outdated slang.
One young diplomat, anxious
to show how hard he had
studied his Engli sh, was tell-
ing a group of Ame ricans
about his fellow-students who
couldn't make the grade in the
Institute of Foreign
Languages.
"These you would call nln·
comp<>0ps. yes?" he asked.
Another recent graduate,
confused by an American's
rapid speech, interrupted and
"Lower, please, I don't dig
you."
pleaded :
'The Russians also are great
borrowers.
Blue jeans. a hot item on the
black market here, are called
jeansy. A sweater is a sveeter,
phonograph records are disk!,
and the main street in any
Russian city ls nicknamed
Broadvel. .
· There are hazards in many
languages.
A couple of years ago a
Czechoslovak official, speak-
ing in public in Moscow, prais-
ed the "krasny ihivot" o( a
Spanish v..·oman Communist. ,
In Ciech that m e a n 1
"beautiful life."
In Russian it means "red
belly,"
Women Receive
40% of Degrees
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Women are receiving an In-
creasingly larger percentage
of the ct1llege degrees awarded
each year In the United Slates,
according to the National
Center of Educational
StatlsUcs. Women receive 40
percent of all degrees, and are
gaining on male graduates.
The figure is about the same
as before World War 11, but 1
large gain from what it was in
1950 when women graduate!
accounted for less than 25 per-
cent of the total.
FIRST
WEEK'S
WINNERS
SecoJad Place
'PEPPER JOHN '-Thot's the name of
t he cool block cot own ed by Mrs.
Dono!d McCormic of Cypress. Her
neighbor, Mrs. William M. {Virginia)
Corson of 5394 Rome Ave . Cypress,
wins $15 in Fashion Island gift certifi-
cates for th is techn ically "difficult
photographic story of a co.t whose
tongue betrays his impatience for din-
ner to be served. Photo floodlighh and
whi te tablecloth used for backdrop
combined to bring out d etails in p ie~
tu re.
..
,
• i
DAil Y l'ILOT
First Place
'GIRL TALK'-Lloyd K. Denny of 1632
Wind sor· Lone, Sonto Ano, o member
of the Co•st Camero Club, wins $25
in Fashion ls!on d gif t certificate;; and
o chance to be grond prize win ner of
the Fotoromo Camero Contest (o noth.
er $500 in gift certificates) with this
precious moment captured on film lest
April 21 when the seal washed ashore
nea r the dory fishi ng boots at Newpo rt
Pier. Denny is soles mo no ger for a How~
thorne electronics firm.
Third Place
'DANA POINT AT SUNSET'-Robert T r•cy
of 1763 I Queenwre•th W•y, Irvine, •lso e
' member of the Co•st C•mera Clue, comes
in th ird in the first of three weeh of the Foto.
rom a C•me r• Contest with this striking study
of trees, wQning sun and shining seo os evening
settles over the Orange Coast. He wins $10
in Fashion lsl•nd gift certificates.
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~ l -~y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I
' 1At-tracting Top Skills
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•
, •r1t11 u modrn. Thi& i• forthn oht. Wt'r•_lithcr worth
U,or no&.worth a damn and we ought to bt flreci."
This i. the way Assemblyman Frank Lan.terman
(J\.!Ja Canada) summed up the-~eral allltude ·In both
b6wes ol. 'the Legislature toward a solf•voted pay in·
creaie as . the bill was sent to the govemor'B desk for
1i1ning into law. The measure would raise legislators'
anJIUal s8laries $3,200 to a total of $19,200, elfecUve
Jan. 4, 1971.
As recently as l~. legislators were paid $6,000
a year, a wholly unrealistic figure for PQsitJoos that
Important In the nation's mosf populous slate. A
constitutional amendment that year brought salarie&
to $16,000 while requiring the Legislature to meet every
year iq&teatl of biennially. The action also pennitted
legtslators to grant themselves pay increases instead
of reserving this right to the voters.
Mem~rs of bOtb houses rationalized their acUon
by calling the increase a "cost of living adjustment"
for the "hardest working legislature in the nation."
If this be the criterion, then it is equally valid
in the case of Orang~ County's Board of Supervisors.
As the DAILY PILOT . has recenUy pointed out, the
present $15,600 salary is less than is paid to most de--
partment beads working under the supervisors. For a
•'board of directors" setting policy in the administra·
tion of a $190.million budget, the salary figure is un-
realistic.
Orange County taxpayers deserve top management
of their public affairs. To get this, a salary level will
have to be set to attract top management skills full
time. :The day of dependence on the independently
wealthy, the retired or those who must also have some
source Of' outtide income is gone.
'Ibe state Legiilature must, by law, approve salary
Increases lor general law counties 1ucb as Orana:• County.
When the next move to bring supervlaon• salaries
Into line with today's re.qulrements comu up -11 it
undoubtedly wlll next session -Orange County's atate
legislators should lend their support.
Leary's Mind-blowing
Dr. Timothy Leary, 48, apostle ol LSD and mll'.l·
juana, appears to be &uttering an escalated caae of
psychedelic delusion in hjs "campaign"'-° succeed Gov.
Ronald Reagan In Secramento.
His latest flight has it that 11some influential rilen
in government are out to get me. I am the leading
spokesman for the-largest persecute<! group In· the
country -30 million marijuana smokers." \
In trouble with the law in Riverside County over
the drowning of a 17-year .. ld Laguna Beach girl whlle
allegedly swimming under the inlJuence of LSD In a
pool on Leary's ranch-commune near Hemet and fac·
ing a narcotics charge in Orange County, the fonner
Harvard professor has now associated himself in
a p9bllc statement in Boston with Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy. He said both be and Kennedy are "targets
of the establishment in this country.''
He told reporters he usually has ''a mind~blowing
experience at least once a week.''
If California's voters were to endorse Leary for
any public office at any level, it wouJd· be they more
than he who had blown their minds.
Leary's aberrational flights have become a pathetic apectacle.
Nixon's Complex Message State Lands
No Bugging Out in.Vietnam
LAHQ~. P~AN l'\toldent
NIJrln ended the Allen part ol hls-"""'1d·
Ibo-world \oor here and had to a!k
-ll what he had acoonplished. Was
this trip ntcessary?
In t,f'>e li&ht of what· has happened the
trip \DMku.btfcUy wq necessary. The
meua.ge he ~ied to Alla was so com·
pi<• and aspectl of It so contradictory
th~t it nqulrtd. some face-to-face u-plalnii>c lo tbe !<Iden ol Alla.
Nltoo wu ptting out of Alla and still
l\ayinC Ihm. "Ille mWtary presence and
.pnilllo In Alla WU to be lowered. We , .wen 'botkial away !nm future Viet·
~' YelftW90not,lnNiJon's-. ~amc out in 'Vletnam, We ,..,.. pe<-
••lltln( in Ibo struille In -bJI dlf.
.1•...t '""" untu Ille nlbt o1 wr c1e1er. > iillutleo ID Vlelaaln was aaured.
~ . -.,, 'l1IElU!: ll'Ell!! TWO btJ ev-on this
jrlp. ~outlined 111' new Asia poUcy in
;a 51-mlaute preu dilcoune on Guam. He
"!tpnted It to Aa1u · leadtrl • In 11.mi.,
DJakarto ud Bangtot.
. " ~n be ..,.m to. Ytetnam. TbiJ wu, in 'tlilOn's mlnd·•-ll)'lllbollc-,..iure·-.C
;tJ!.1Qpparl 11f· !'l<ltdent Thieu. Goin« to
, the ~I said. and havln& an
merlcp prioldenl l\alldlnc there at the
denlW Palace J11-!4e ~r there Is
In Ill the Wk about'bu"1DI-
-thi\ Saigon Is not 1oini lo
!lo Clll,141!1b Ci'1 u -....
aginative olficials in Hanoi have been
boutjng.
Whenever Nixon says anything .like this
some of his aides scurry around to
rewure the journalistic community that
hi.! wordl s~ be taken in the who le
contut of his determination to end the
war in Vjetnam. This naturaUy causes
some conluston, but it !Ppean. on balance, that Nixon 'is trying to lower our
COltl: in Vletnup :wltbollt creating COTI·
clltloos In which the Communi<ts can take
over.
HE WAI GQATLY impressed by two
tljlqs In Salion. the hl1h caliber of
Amert~ troops there which, in his new role of commander·ln-<hlef, thrllled him.
Contact with these troops made him feel
that the basic character of the United
S:tatea ts very atrong.
~y. he was· greatly impreMed
with President 'lbieu's confidence and he
left Se.lgon bellevtng that the Thieu gov-
munent wUI make the grade. Nixon
judge(t Thieu to be cne of the four or five
best politicllt\S in the world.
Such views are not popular among the
ap.Urwar people at home. American
troops are butchers and Thieu la a gras~
ing charlatan in the Intellectual anU-war
lexicon.
The anti-war people would not agree
ellher with Nixon that tht caliber o( the
effort in Vietnatn is one of our finest
hours to be compared with our
achievements in space because both have
been such difficult undertakings.
WHEN NIXON IS listened to as he
speaks in this vein, usually in informal
discussions with a haU dozen news men
permitted to travel on hi! plane, he
sounds rather hawkish, but his aides then
explain that th1t ia not the case and he is
on an irreversible cour11e of reducing our
military commltments in Asia.
lI one is to peer deeper into what
mctivates Nixon in these discussions, it
could be this : He is !till determined to
withdraw troops from Vietnam at a ... fast
rate.
He rationalizes this by reassuring
himself that the Thieu government ii, in
fact, strong enough to take over and
therefore we will not be bugging out. He
did what he could to strengthen the Thieu
government by his symbolic visit to
Saigon.
So, on balance, he probably was
reassured during his trip that his policy
is right and that he can make it ac·
ceptable to fearful Asian leaders. Events,
not what Nixon says, will prove whether
or not his confidenet is justified.
.·Ted Kennedy Still Popular
'
• WASHINGTON -Now that Sen.
EdWard M. Kennedy has renounced
rtounciatlon and resumed his Senate
•ieat, tt Is time to take a hard look at cer-#ln political consequences of the
..Pfr900al tragedy which took the life of Jilary Jo Kopedme.
In the immediate attmnath o{ the sen-
~·· auto accident, a lot of premature ~es -were spoken and written by
PfOPle who should know better. Much of
.that $J)OO.llation will have to be quietly
a•Howed in the months ahead.
Even now it must bt stated frankly
tut all political projections one, three !l8d more years into the future are very
daaney. Much depends on circumstances
wbicb art still to unfold. With that
-.eat, a few cornmenlll can be offered.
IENNWY, HIMSELF, has made it
dear that he will not be the Democratic
CIDdidate for President in 1972. His stat~
~ment does not-mean, however, that it was tbe fatal accident on Martha's Vineyard
wbich deprived Teddy of the chance to
,. qainst Prtsident Nixon next time.
Mitre i5 ruson to think othirwist.
History suggests, in the first place, that
M:IOfl. u an incumbent President, can
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-.. ·amw;n: !.-
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probably be reelected in 1972. The odds,
to the extent that they can be computed
now, were thus running against a suc-
cessful 1972 campaign by Kennedy or any
other Democrat -before the aceident.
All this is well known to Kennedy and
to those associates who want him to seek
the presidency . There are s o m e
persuasive indicatlons that the senator
was trying, before the fatal accident, to
disengage and remove himsell from the
tole assigned him as front runner for the
197~ nomination.
ONt SUCH indicatlon came from Sen.
itike Mansfield, D-Mont., the Senate
DemocraUc Leader, who is Teddy's
friend and champion. Just before the ac-
cident, Mansfield told a group of
reporters at one of thole "background"
meetings that he did NOT thlnlt Kennedy
would run in 1972.
"It's funn y about the Kennedys," a
veteran non·Kennedy Democrat told us
recently, "they are like a Royal Family
-perhaps th e nearest thing we have
ever had ln this country to a Royal Fami-
ly.
"You can't always tell how the pubUc
will react to them. People want to protect
them, and seem to apply a different set
oC standards to their statements and their
behavior."
'Ibat 1ssessmtnt may Itself be a bit
romanticized and overdrawn. It seems
clear, homver, from lhe outpouring of
Quotes
cart<r B. 5,.~ 8.1". 1oda!Ho
disk Jockt;1 turoed •-rokcr -
••vou cant buy love, but you can
buy time to &njoy lile ...
support which was prompted by Ken-
nedy's televised plea for guidance, tbat
he Is still a popu lar public figure, espe-
ciaU)I in Massachusetts.
DURING HIS campaign for reelection
next year KeMedy'J conduct after the
Chappaquiddick acclden~ wtll be ques·
Uoned, publicly and privately. His
television account of the incide}lt will be
ntold, especially his statement that his
behavior immediately after the accident
was "indefensible."
The old ·Harvard Inciden t. In which
Teddy got another student to take hls
Spanish exam, will be recaUed. The tug·
gestion will be made that, in Ume of
personal crisis KeMedy tendJ toward
funk and uses poor judgment.
All early Indi cations are, however, that,
\Vhen all th is business has been aired,
Teddy will be reelected to the-senate, and
perhaps by a rather large margin.
What th en? Well, it is worth
remembering that the burning quuUon
among po\itldans. as wryly immortalized
by Vice President Alben W. Barkley, is
always: "What have you done for me
lately?" ,..
$
By llobert S. Allen and
J obit A. Gold1mllll
Dear
Gloomy
\.Gus:
OK. be "gloomy," but don't try
so hard to be nut,y! The mail
carriers don't set a&lde first clau
mail so they can deliver only
"Junk'' mall on Mondays. Instead,
they must deUvtr Salurd1')''1,
Sunday's and early Monday's
mall-and first clus mail always
hu priority._
-J. L. "'" ,.....,.. '"*"' ,......... .,...., .... _.,,1, .,.... "' "" ........,, .... "'°'' Mt HIW ft • .._, .... o.ltr Pl•.
' Commission
Stands Fast
Refusal by the State Lands Comntission
to lift the .ban on offshore oil drilling on
state leases in the Santa Barbara Chan·
nel is news of the most welcome sort to
hard·pressed residents of the South
Coast.
The unanimous action taken by co m-
mission members Houston Flournoy,
chainnan, Caspar Weinberger and LI.
Gov. Ed Reinecke , overrode a staff
recommendation to lift the ban. Frank
Hortig, commission executive officer, had
maintained that the state atood to lose
money by continuing tbt ban and warned
that production from federal leues might
drain stati·tldeland nserves.
' NErrHER ARGUMENT carried weight
with the full commission. Weirtberger
stated that despite any threat of
economic loss, "I don't think that at this
point we know enough to authorize
resumption of drilling with any degree of
safety."
The News·Press subscribes fully to that
view and: joins other Santa Barbarans
and conservation-minded Americans in
applauding: the commission's responsible
sland in this matter.
It does so in the knowledge that the
batUe for a clean environment is going to
be a long and arduous one. Jn contrast to
the State Lands Commission's action, for
example, the state Senate Finance Com·
mittee on Thursday rejected t h e
Assembly·passed Unruh bill to ban
further drilling in the state's waters in
the channeL Assemblyiban Unruh, who
immediately called for an Initiative ac-
tion on the state ballot. charged that the
commlttee was "in the pocket of the oil
companlea," and deplored the fact that
its action seriously penalized the chances
of vital federal legl&latlon.
UNRUH'S NEC&'ISARY and tnllghten-
ed ·bill received •four of the seven com·
mltlff votes it needed for a fa vorable
rtc0mmendatlon to the full Senate. One
of those four votes wu chalked up cont·
mendably by this di!trlct'1 Sen. Robert
Laiomarsino.
There Is obviously a great amount of
citizen work to. be done to broaden the
vision of some of the state's lawmakers
-to nlandate them to give new weight
and priority to the quality of our air and
water. The altemativt is to multiply the
various forms of polluUon now afflicting
so many communities.
Fl.JRTJIER OIL DR.Jll.ING in this
channel -on either state or ftderaJ
leases -will be an irresponsible im·
position upon the citlzenry. Jt will en·
courage industrial practices which will
continue to work environme n tal
hardships on citizens elsewhere. It is
Ume the crucial majorities of the
lawmakers and admlnlatrators faced up
to this fact.
Members of the State Lands Com·
mission, we believe, met their obligation
to the public. The majority of the state
senate Flnance Committee did not.
Sa1ta 81.rHra New1-Press
Dictatorship
Santa Paula. Calif., Qnnlcle: ••'J'hm
are many Wilt• uodtr oui" s11tem by
which 1 majority can havt its say. our
checks and balances provide ample
means to..bt heard -but not to rule by
vlol1nce. 11111 ls dlctatonhlp. and that
form of ,ovemment we want as far away
as po&Slble, whether Communist or Nar.i.
But minority ml• II not th! alttmaU••.
either. It ltad1 1tral&ht to
tot.alltarlanism ..• "
Evil of Forced
Rejection at 65
When -#e arbitrarily force men b>
"retire" at 65 -as we do more and more
in our closely geared society -we are
offering some of them a blessing, and
others a curse.
It setms to me that, just as we require
cand idates for serious jobs to take ap.
plication tests, we ought to provide the
same individual scale for candidates for
retirement, and not banish so many men
by some generalized ruling that is grossly
unfair.
In the arts and sciences, for instance,
where activity can flourish without the
heavy hand of the payroll department on
its windpipe, the history of achievement
includes &ame of the g r e a t e s t
masterpieces of all time.
IF KANT HAD been forced to "retire"
evenat70, his'' Ant bro po log y ,•'
"Pi.feta-physics of Ethics," and "Strife of
the Faculties" would have remained
unwritten.
If Tintoretto had been put on the shelf
at 70, he never would have painted his
magnificent and tremendous "Paradise,"
a canvas extending 75 feet by 30, which
he completed at age 74.
And Verdi at the same ripe age, com·
posed his most profound opera. "Otello''
-and 11 years later, at 85, he gave us
his "Ave Marla."
If Lamarck had been swept into the
dust·bin even as late as 75, he would not
have com pleted his classic work in
zoology, "The Natural Histora-/cf
Invertebrates" which came out "·hen he
was 78.
' .... •It."'·-··~·---~-:-----~--....
I Sidney J. Harri.s
i
""' •••·-• ' e '"'· ·'"'~'"' """-...... .-.. •• ,, • .,,,....-'
OLIVEil \VEi~DELL HOL~fES wrole
his most chamung and pungent book,
•·over the Teacups," when he was 79.
And, most remarkably of all, Titian
painted his priceless "Battle of Lepanto"
at the age of 98 ~
Now, there is no reason to believe that
meo in 11\e arts an~ sciences retain (or
even augment) their talents more than
men in either fields. The distributional
curve of abilities must be pretty much
the same along the age-scale in any oc·
cupation not calling for intense physical
exertion.
SO~fE J\'IEN, it is true, may become
senile in their 70s; others may already
have been senile in their 40s, but nobody
knew it; while still others may retain
their keenness. and improve their judg·
ment. as Goethe did. whose final book,
"~i~htu.ng unde~ Wahrheit." the supreme
d1sllllat1on of his thought, was finished a
year before he died at the age of 83.
A man \\•ho 14·ants lo retire should cer-
tainly be given the opportunity ; but tfie
one who wants to carry on deserves the
san1e consideration, if in the opinion of
his peers and coUeagues, he is capable or
doing so. \Ve rob ourselves of much talent
by any compulsory rejection by age.
Bats in Your Belfry?
Are you on or off your rocker?
We live in such unreal times that it
Is difficult for us lo be sure "'hethcr
we're batting .500 or simply have bats in
our bellry, whethefwe are safe and sane
or out of this world and hiding in a self·
made Babel.
There is no need to push the panic but-
ton over the problem, however. There
are simple, easy ways to test your own
normality or abnormality quotient.
For example, just answer the follow·
ing questions: ,,
When you go fishing. do most of the
other fellows in the boat catch· more fish
than you do?
AS YOU WAIT in line in a bank to cash
a check, can you reel the uniformed
guard's eyes staring at you suspiciously?
After 10 or more years of marriage, ls
it beginning to dawn on you that in most
things your wife is probably smarter than
you are?
But would you rather be drawn and
quartered by fou r wild horses than admit
this to anybody?
If you ha ve a sneezing flt oo a bus, do
you have the impression that all the other
passengers are Wishing that you'd drop
dead?
Now and then don't you think you
mlght have gone furlher in life if your
parents had given you a better middle
name or Uncle Sam had given you, a
more aristocratk:·sounding Social Securl·
ty number?
ARE YOU FINDING 11 hamer to
remember whttht'r you borrowed $10
from th e guy at the next desk in the of·
!tee or lent htm $l0?
Does it anooy you "'hen you sharpen
ptnells be-cause the Points seem to break
ofr more easlly than lhey did in the old
days?
AJ a matter or fact. most of the things
they turn out today don't have the quality
of lhings they made in the old days.
Hal &yle
, ,.,,.,_ .....
'fhal's true, isn't it?
\Vht'n the boss asks you to do
something new. do you grun1ble for three
days before doing it?
At a cocktail party, do you prefe r to
wait un til the second martini takes hold
before you fe el up to talking to a
stranger? Would you rather wait for hin1
to speak to you than introduce yoursell to
him?
CAN \'OU FEEL foam gathering in the
corners of your mouth if anyone under
the age of 30 qucsjions one of your opi-
nions?
ls r.1onday your v.·orst enemy and Fri-
day your best friend '!
\Veil, those are the questions. Now to
the results.
ll you answered "no'' to all of then\
you're in a slate of psychotic euphoria.
You need half a dozen psychiatrists, no~
just one.
But if in every case you gave ''yes" for
an answer, you're as oormal as suds on a
glass of l~r.
You ere probably just getting older and
tireder and what you need, instead of a
psychiatrist. is a good long vacation.
.---By George ---,
lelevision the l Den t George:
I !I Lassie on
original Lassie?
Dear Curious:
CURIOUS
No, I've nt'lvtr heard Las!lie say a
si ngle original Ullng -tn fact, it's
gotten to where when she tries tG
ltll· people ~me thing they just look
bored half the time.
I
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CHECKING
•UP•
Beauties Less Apt
To Marry Happily
By L. M. BOYD
BEAUTIES -So you'd like
to win a beauty contest, would
you? !\tay be you ought to
reconsi der said a m b i t i o n ,
voung lady. Th ink of thi s .
Statisti cs s h o w a f.l i s s
America is 40 times more apt
to wind up a divorce court
than the girl who never enters
a beauty contest. Some odds,
thos'e. Am assig ning our Love
and \Var man to rind out why
the most beautiful girls seem
~o unlucky in the matter of
matrimony.
"PIN POINT the
geographical cen11r of the
North American continent ,"
directs a client. Pi erce County
ln North Dakota is about as
pinpointy as I can get on that
o ne . . . . • A COR-
RESPONDENT said Barbra
Streisand recently got about $1
million for four '''eeks' work in
Las Vegas, but he didn't say
\\'l:!Y . • . THOSE STATES
\1·herein a doctor ls most likely
to be sued for malpractice arc
Alaska, California, MiMesota,
and Oregon.
P..tAN" -· That ditty called
"Tie Me Kangaroo Down,
Sport" is the work of Rolf
Harr is , the musi c al
Australian. An original wit ,
that one. Among his clever
acts is bit wherein he chants
his banter in some sort of
getup which makes him ap-
pear to have three legs.
Sounds slapstick., doesn 't it? lt
i s n't though. Highly
sophisticated. At the moment.
just can't name. a more creat-
.f¥e.cllaracter than Mr. Harris.
GRAPEFRUIT tJo w
another member of tne Get It
Right Club wants to blackball
me because 1 eJTOneously
stated the sweeter blossom
half or the grapefruit was the
haU to which the stem was at-
tached. "That's not t h e
blossom half, my friend."
\vrites he. "The grapefruit
grows between the stem and
the blossom. And the blossom
ha lf, opposite the stem half. is
always sweeter ...
Slt10KE FOLLOWS
'Draft~ ,-
Chairman
Resigns
NEW BRIT~, Conn .
tU PI ) -The outgoing
chairman ol the National
SclecLlve Service A pp e 1 I
Board and a board member
\\'ho resigned last monlh
charge that Selective Service
DirectQr Gen. Lewis 8 .
Hershey runs roughshod over
the supposedly independent
board.
In fact, the member who
re signed, Or. Kenneth W. Cle-
ment of Bratenahl. Ohio,
believes llersbey should be
retired and replaced by a
civilian since •·for some lime
nov.•, he has been unable to
distinguish between himself
and the Selective Service.''
Judge Henry J. Gwiazda of
New Britain, the oulgoing ap-
peal board chairman, said
Hershey's bur ea u e r at i c
maneuvering and meddling in
the board's activities impeded
justice in many draft cases
and "'aS aimed at reducing the
board to a rubber stamp for
Hershey's poli cies.
'•\Ve are not only under
General lfershey's thumb, we
are actuall y subject to him ,"
Gwiazda said in ar. interview .
Gwiazda. who has submitted
his resignation from the board
at the request of President
Nixon. said Hershey, 75, ap-
pointed director in 1948 by
President Harry S. Truman.
has used his position to quash
board options which, by ex·
ecutive order, are supposed to
be independent of the director
of the Selective S e r v i c e
System.
Most intolerable has been
the board's inability to appo int
an executive secretary -who
must not be affiliat ed with the
military, Gwiazda said.
The execulive .secretary of
··-OBJECT OF BLAST
-Gin. Heflhey
the National Selet'IM...Serv!ce
Appeal Board is the key man,
according to Gwiazda ,
responsible for running the
board's Washington offl~ and,
most important, for funneling
information about the draft
appellant to the three board
members whose final decision
carries the weight of the
Pres ident.
Gwiazda, appointed to the
board by President John F.
KeMedy in 1964 is a former
mayor of New Britain and
probate judge. He .said the
staffing problem was part o{
an effort by Hershey lo
··eJimina~ the presidential
boru'd.
· "This ls an effort on the
part of the director ol long
standing to eliminate the
board, usurp the prerogative!
and authority of the board or
lo make the board subservient
to the direcctor,'' Gwiazda
said.
NA~1E GAM E-A Grah am,
N.C., subscriber finds it funny
1hat one fine frie nd named
Torn Collins. who lives on a
street called Fiflh. is a
teetotaler. That's not so odd. l
used to know a girl named Gin
H1ckev \\'ho lived in Manhat-
tan. i10ll'eve r, she \\1asn't a
tC'elotaler. Hardly . Not cert ain
\1hat eve r happened to her,
but believe she married a
J\lexican glassblower a n d
111oved to Tijuana.
CUSTOMER SERVICE ' Q.
"\Vasn't it Mae \\'est who said ,
'An optimist is a g i r I who
n1istakes a bulge for a
curve'?" A. No, that was Ring
Lardner. l\lae West said ... A
cur\'e is the loveliest distance
bel\\'tell two point~." ... Q.
•·JF I DOS'T shave for a year.
ho\v long \ 1' my beard be~"
1\. 1\bou t seven inches, if
average.
BEAUTY -\\'hen camping
out, mister, does the campfire
smoke tend \o follow you ?
Maybe yoo 're beautiful. lf so.
too bad. noth ing you can do
about that. lf you're not
beautiful. however. and the
smoke still follows you, try
this. Build your lire on a
slope. With open space uphill
where in you ca n sp read you r
nig httime bedding. And ope n
space downhill wherein you
can set up a couple of daytime
lounging logs \o sit on. Here's
why. f.iountain air cools more
quickly than valley air. So in
calm \\'eather, the normal cur·
rents will drive the smoke
downhill in the night, uphill
during the day.
Your questions and com·
inents are welconied and
will be used wherever pos·
i ible in "Checking Up.'"
Address mail to L. af.
Boy<l, in care of the DAILY
PILOT, Box 1815. Newpor!
Beach, Ca lif., 92663.
Nixon 's Poverty Plan
Ai111ed at 'Long Rim'
• · T H E THREE-LEGGED
'\'ASHIKGTO~ i CPI) show initially an ·tnc rease in
President !'\1xon s important cos! but in the long.range the
message on llelfare refonn existing system could cost as much in dollars as the ex-
Friday is expected lo pro~ panded system."
a federal noor of S50 a month ------------1
payments to all adult welfare
clients -the aged, blind and
Scientist-ast ronaut disa bled.
lt1ost states could cul their
v.-elfa re costs fo r I h es e
categories under this plan,
although it "-ould cost the
federal government more to
su pport the catego ries. Sates
could choose to pay more than
the federal minimwns.
Quits; Plans to Teach
SPACE CENTER. Houston opport unities lo rly into space
(AP) -A scientist-astronaut
said today he is quitting the
space-nying business to go
bac k to teaching beeause the
City Orders
Curf e'v After
Disorders
PASSAIC, N.J. (AP) -A
111ghttime curfew was ordered
ICM.lay after a second night of
fircbombj_ng and Io o t i ng
ravaged a predominantl y
Puerto R1 c<1n neighborhood
l1crc.
are rare.
Dr. F. Curtis l\lichet. a ..
physicist. said he was resign-
ing effective Aug. 18 and will
take an a ssoc i a te pro-
The White House proposal. it
was learned, also may include
a new a n d controversial
fessorship at Rict t:niversity category of recipients -the
in Houston. lo"'·-income en1p!oyed. And it
"If! just beC'ause of the would put an empha~is on
time involved," he said. "The 't'ork training programs to
program has stretched out and ease clients off \\·elfare rolls.
the opportunities for flights The administ ration's pro-
are so few." posals are not expected lo be
Three others e I en l r-s I s · passed by Congress and in
aslronauts also ha\'e quit in operation unt il at least 1972.
recent months. Dr. Brian T. The pack.age will be design·
O'Leary. Dr. Duane A, ed to reduce inequi tie! in the
Graveline and John A • \.l.'elfare svstem. which now
Llewelly n resigned for various .• rliff~ \\'kitly from s t a t e to
reasons. state.
There has been a general Among the inequities are
unhappiness among many of wide \'arial1ons in sates' pay·
the {\\'O groups of scientists· ment levels to elienls and lack
astronauts selected by the Na-o( incentives for so me !ow-in·
lional Aeronautics and Space come (an\ili es to sta y off
Administration over th e welra~.
stretch-out in Lime between Some proposa ls v.·ould cost
space flights. Several of them the go\•ernment more in the
and back
Po!lcc reported one instance
of shooting and said bout 1.000
persons gathered in one small
area at the peak of the
disorder s ri.tonday. Sixteen
persons were arrested .
Police sealed off the tene-
ment section bordering the
main downtown b u ! I n e s s
district and fired tear gas
before heavy rain! cleared
streets. ttlayor Bernard Pinck
imposed a curfew to start. at
9:30 p,m., closed taverns and
banned sales of gasollne in
containers.
have told newsmen they v.·ere short-run than the present Om Speed nter
miss ing out on sol!1e or .~ir system does,. one S?Orce said. !!::n vt: ': w.t ~ ~
be!t years of s c 1 e n t 1 f 1 c But he said savings could •tlY modlfations b1 NASA".,. win
research while waiting to fly rt.!Ult ove r lhe long run. ~ our """ on UM tnOOft. This NDil"
into space The federal government now nit.Ion, truly • ,_,,. for .......,a.
The spa~e agency al!O has shares up ~ $75 a mo~th in the = = ~ ~.~
lost two other scientists in the three adt1\t ca tegories. and handsome. 2 bcJttoft. 4 dllll, Olnlrll
last week. Dr. Wilmot •less. pay &bout S35 of lhe first. $37 ~ ct.• ... ,...,. •• TM onlf
di rec tor of the Lunar Receiv· ba~ on a c omp I i ca t e d Midi..,...,. by ttl•..,... on tile rnoo11.
0
OMEGA
ing Laboratory her e. and Dr. fonnula and a certain percen-PrimflllS..
El bert King. curator of the tage of the remainder.
lab. have announced resigna-';If \\"e don'! change the
Early loday only the IHtcr of
lhe disorders -garbage hurl·
Ed from rooftops. .shattered
glass. discarded n1crcha 11dlse
and burned out g 111 5o llnt.
bombs -remained on the
deserted slreels.
i'lental Ward
Order Blasted
lions. system. we are looking ahead
Both told newsme n that the at tremendou! increases in
space agency i! more in· public assistance payments,"
!crested in engineering than in the sou rce said. ..There art
pure scientific pursuits. !Orne projected ngures \\'hiCh
JJIBLE T l/OUGHTS
CHOOSIN• TO OllTI ll•t•rdl1'19 Chritt.
th• !lllE 1•y1, "Thouth H• "'•'• • So11,
yet tEAl'.NED H• ob1d+•"<e-111d-H1
b•Glll'I th• 111thor of 1t•r111I 1•l .. 1tio11
u11io •II th1r11 lh1t OIEY H:,,.", Heb. S;l -
t . Althou9h J•1u1, LEARNED ob.di•,,<•,
H1 "'"'' •11<1 DISO I EYED. "'' H1 9••• up, H. 11•111.cl lo ob1v r•lti•r th111 lo
SIN. H• COULD HAVE r•be lt•d. but H• dld11't. H• 11ld ~ God,
"-11"'\. 11 I will bu! I t Thou w!lt", Mitt. 26;lt.
SACRAMENTO (UP I) -A Jo•"u• 11;c1 lo h1t p•oole, ''-<ho••• you th;, div wlio"' v• wlll
l'lemocratic lawmake r has ,.,.,,_11 lo• .,., ,.,d 111y hou•• .... .,.,11 ,.,.,., th• L.rd". Jo1h.
criticized all a "smokescreen" 2'1 ;1S. s'"""•l t.1i4. "l1hold. 10 ob•Y ,. b•ll•r •h•11 ••crific-",
an admlnlst.r1Uon order dlrec-1 Sim. 11:12. J•1u1 •••d. "-hy <•II Y• M•. Lerd, Lei d 111d
ling bet(td·UI' sta Uing and DO NOT th• .... 11., ... 1111ch I ••y ?". Al10. "II "' , .... M •. •••P
fewt'.!r patlenl\ In t ~ e My ,.,.. ..... 11d 111111h ". flt 6:46, J11. l'1 :1il. H•••, He '"'•P••1bly
ct\ildrrn's ward at Nipa SI.Ile c•1111•c*•cl LOVE 111.I OI EDIENCl. Lo•• f1 d•mo111tr 1t•d by
oh•4i•fl C•• H05J>llal. Assemblyman John Dunlap, De YOU ob•'f' Chritl, •• you 11 ... f1om il•v to d1y7 H•"• you
Napa, a critic uf menttl LEAllNfD thh1 H• ''''· "-t••ch 111 "'';•~•. b1p+iti11t th•-
hM'l'lltal eondlt!MI, dcimended l•.tthlo9 th•fl'I to •bt•tv• •II thi11t1 wli•ho•"'' t h1"• c•lll• ~,.. 111.111d•cl y•u-", M.11. l l ;ll -lt. i\iunday that the Department VISTT "'• t tudy th• l lllF wltli ut, Chu•th of Chri1t. Jt7 W, QI ~11!nlfll llygir.nfl finrl fl morci W!11011 $1., Coal• M•1~. C1ljf. ,,,,,.Ph. &41·511 1, l •S·2'1'11 .
1 H'"1tington
Center
HUNTlffTOH
RACH
ltl•Ml1
• Harbor
Shoflfll ..
Cent.r
COSTA MllA
14f..t4JI
•·rcazlbl~ and lmmcdh1te AOIU• 11~,.176), hon to the crl&il tillu&tlon." 1r,..::.;;.;:;;,;;;;;,. __________________ 11------------J
Tu~, .Aiigust 5, 1969
U.S. Steel Nixon Repercusslo_n-
Cuts Part
Of Hike
Russ 2nd String
PimBURGH (AP ) -U.S.
Visiting Romania
Steel Corp. rolled batlt port of
it.II broad·ba!ed price lncrease
Monday, but the big
steelmaker held fut to higher
rate! that have now been
matched by virtually all major
producera on materials used in
the auto and appliance in-
dustries.
The company, which trig·
gered the current round ol
pr.Ice increases last Wed-
nesday, lowered posted hlke!
on galvanized and aluminum
eo11ted sheels from $9.50 to
$4.50 a ton. The move was at-
tributed to a failure by other
producert to adopt lhe $9.50
Jncreue.
Major producers followed
U.S. Slffl's average 4.1 per·
cent increase. But they settled
for a $4.50 a ton increase on
the galvanized items, which
account for about five percent
of I.he industry's shipments.
Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.
was the only produeer to adopt
BUCHAREST (UPI) -The
Soviet Union today dispatched
a second string delegtUon to
Romania"s 10th Communist
Party Congress in a show ol
displeasure at the weekend
visit of President Nl:1on. Rom ·
ani1 hailed the Ni:1on visit -
but reaffinned its loyalty to
Soviet-led Communism.
The Soviet delegation. led by
K r e m I i n t r ouble!hoote r
Konstantin F. Katushev, ar-
rived at noon to a greeting by
Romanian party ideologist
Paul Nicolescu-Mezil . Presi·
dent Nlcolae Ceausescu, Nix-
on's hod, was not on haOO to
gttet the Russian visitors.
It has been generally ex·
peeled that Russia would send
Premier Alexei N. Kosygin
and party -leader Leonid I.
Brezhnev but· they found
themselves unable to come.
Diplomatic sources In f.foscow
. the $9.50 increase for galvaniz--=ao••••••••r . ed, but it adjusted the price ...
attributed this to displeasure
ovl!r tht Nixon vl~lt. .
An editorial \n tbt Com·
muni.st Party daily Scintei3
said the Mxon visit was '"a
deci!lve moment in the evolu·
lion of relations between'~ the
United State! and Romania.
But the editorial, signed by
Chief Foreign policy com·
mentator N. Radulescu, said
the visit "does not at all auect
Romania's relations \\'Ith the
fr iendly (socialist) countries
and does not prejudice the
natural International relations
Romania promotes in keeping
with her consistent foreign
policy ."
"As a social ist country.
Romania centers her foreign
policy on friendship and many-
sided cooperation with the
socialist countries with which
she is linked by community of
system, ideology and aims,"
Radulescu \\Tote.
shortly after U.S. Steel's an·
nooncement ~fonday.
U.S. Steel's price on the flat-
rolled products. which account
for nearly half of the in-
dustry's total shipments, has
met resistance from Genual
Moton, a top cu!tomer.
Unprepared~
Gag Poster Sparks Suit ·
The automake~s F i s h e r
Dody division last week ad·
vised U.S. Steel to hold back
on shipments "pending a re-
evaluation of the competitive
situation wltb respect to steel
prices."
Observers say G e n e r a I
~fotor! was apparentl y
wa iting to see if other pro-
ducers would reject U.S.
Steel 's Increases and post
lower prices on sheet pro-
ducts.
But the pattern was com-
pleted Monday when Republic,
Jones & Laughlin, National
a n d \'/ h e e Ung-Pittsburgh
matched U.S. Steel's increases
on hot and cold-rolled lines. '
NEW YORK JAP I -The
Girl Scouts of America is
suing a post er company for $1
million for portraying a preg-
nant Girl Scout alongside !he
motto "Be Prepared."
In a federal court damage
suit filed Monday agains t
Personality Posters Manufac-
turing Co., Inc., of New York,
the Girl Scouts cla imed the
poster was a ''wanton and
malicious defamation of the
scouts."
The Girl Scout! charged the
full color poster of a smiling
girl "In an advanced state of
THINK TWICE!
We have 2 great NEW
SAVINGS PLANS-
GUARANTEED
GROWTH PLAN
and GUARANTEED
INCOME ACCOUNT
pregnancy, wearing tht nf-
Hclal Juruor Girl Sc o u t
uniform" was "intended to
impule unchasity and moral
lurpitude \o mem bers."
Further, the suit said, the
poster was designed to destroy
the association of Girl Scout
aims w i th ''t r u t h .
hel pfulness. friendliness and
kindred virtues among girls."
The scouts, a 57·ycar-old
organization of 3.7 mi llion
girls from 7 to 17, also sough t
an injunction against further
produ ction of the po!ler and
con~scation of those already
prirOd.
DAIL V 'llOT 7
\ll"'IT ...... • 1Uakh1g Ran
Theodore S o r e n s e n,
former aide to Presi-
dent J ohn F. Kennedy,
will run for the Senate
in 1970. I-le will seek the
late Robert· F. Ken-
,nedy's seat, now hfld
by Gov. Nelson Rocke-
! e I I e r ' s a ppointee,
Charles GoodeU , ac ..
cording to William J,
Van Den Heuvel, an-
other former JFK 'as-
sociate .
Gleason
May Wed
f.llAMI \UPI ) -The Great
One is in love. _
"It 's true, he's very much In
love," a spokesman for com·
edlan Jackie Gleason aaid
i1onday.
Television and filmdom'! fat
man -wbo's been reducing
lately -wants to marry
Beverly McKittrick. an 't I·
ecutive secretary from P¥tiam i.
as soon as he can get a
divorce from his estrang~
fi rst wife. Genevieve. The
Gleasons have been separ<Med
since 1954. •
GleasOn met Mis! Mc~t·
trick about three monlhs a}o.
shortly after he broke up .,.th
his longtime c ompani on ,
Honey Merrill. .J
Each new account earns guaranteed interest of 5.25°/o
per year.
In the GROWTH PlAN
interest is left to accumulate for whichev~r period
you choose-J, 4 or 5 years. THIS PRODUCES
THE HIGHEST RETURN ON INSURED SAVINGS
ANYWHERE IN THE UNITED STATES.
In !he IN COME ACCOUNT
your interest check Is sent to you every three
months for the desigrnted 3, 4 or S year period.
One of tlvse two pl1ns m.ay be right ('or you. We recommend them
.as a secon~ounf., a long·tetm inv~tmeflt. Wilhdrawill s before the
period's end are subject lo restrictions. When held to ;erm's end
or beyond, SilVings in these pl.ans P,roduce gr.atifying rew.ards .• ,
·at the world's '"4»t .attr,.ctive environment for ,.vings-
L.agUN Federal Snings.
Amid the be.auty o( our chinning seaside commu ni1 ies, s.avers have
lnve-sted tkeir wivings at Laguna Federal for over a third or a. century.
Tcxby they conlinue to find .al Orange County's LARGEST, FIRST .and
STRONGEST i~t Fed~ral, MW s.avings programs helpfully lailored
10 meet individual needs. Each belter-w;iy-to-save provides 1he. nation's
highest retums, with Insured uJety, with DAY IN to DAY OUT INTEREST.
PASSIOOK ACCOUNTS: 5'.& CUllENT ANNUAL IATE eal'N s.1n
when compounded <Wily for one ye:.iir.
CUAJt..VITUD CltOWTH .. d INCOME ACCOUNTS' 5-251: ANNUAL JtATf.
compounded dally, accrued or paid quatteffv
for 3, '4 or 5 'fN1 period.
•
•
llANCHES-UCUIU •1cunr 3 MoMl'd ..,.,... Tel .. ••tMa. •1201·SA•CWU1'e'-601 ... a Camll'IO lta'LT1ltphoftf,9tllt5 •
•
·-! '
D.lll Y PILOT Tuesday, A119ust S. 196t I
1.Unruh: Gov ernor
Race. or Nothing
1Hf SttA.HGl wo•~D
~
MR.MUM
IA'l
Sacramento Closing
School Ai.d Bill Nears Agree m ent
·Jail Leader
Harris Now
In Alameda
OAKLAND (AP) -Drafl
resister David Harris, who led
a noisy demonstration and
hunger strike protesting con·
ditions at San Francisco Coun-
ty Jail has quietl y been
transferred to the Alameda
County Jail here. '
Harris. 2.3, husband or folk
singer Joan .Baez, told his at-
torney he expects to be
transferred Tuesday to Saf.
ford federal Pri~on Farm in
Arizona to begin serving a
thrte"1'ear term for refusing
draft induction.
Harris and 40 other federal
prisoners we re on the hunger
strike Thursday through Mon-
day claiming j a i I officials
denied medical care to a man
who was roughing blood. •
"\Ve have been aware of
avercrowding in the jail and
we are looking into any allega-
tj on s of maltreatment or
mistreatment of prisoners, ..
said Deupty U.S. Marshal
lrevlyn Blauard.
A reporter who ins pected
the five-foot·by-eight foot cells
Monday said they were bare
with no bunk. was basin or
drinking facility and have only
a hole in the floor for a toilet.
Sheriff Matthew Carberry
said a cellblock which houses
federal prisoners is run under
contract with the Federal
Bureau o( Prisons and is
checked at least twice a year.
He said conditions there are
"decent, clean, and humane."
He said he was trying lo
have the Department of Public
works i n s t a 11 unbreakable
aluminum t o i I e t s and
washbasins in the isolation
cells.
Walter Anderson, a
registered n u r s e regularly
assigned to jail duty, said the
prisoner who reportedly
coughed blood was an ''epilep-
tic who's had a cold off and on
for a Jong time." He said the
man was receiving "adequate
medication" 'for. his "cold,
,stomach pro b lems and
~epsy."
;Dentist Stabs
Wife to Death
MONROVIA (UPI) -A 51·
year-old dentist, armed with
two pocket knives and a blunt
instrument , stabbed his wife
to death Monday then al-
t.empted suicide in t h e i r
$50.000 home. Df. Carl Vollmer Y.'as in
critical condition at Arcadia
Methodist Hospital.
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
N:semblymao Jess Unruh said
toda y he has no inte ntion of
running next year for the U.S.
Senate inslead of governor.
Nor has the autom®ilt ac·
cident of U.S. Sen. Edward fi.1.
Xennedy altered the campaign
plans of either Unruh or
Senate hopeful John V. Tun·
ney. their aides sb.id.
Neither Democrat has an.
nounced his formal candidacy.
But both have been cam-
paigning for months.
There has been behind-the·
scenes speculation -primar-
ily among Republicans -that
an "understanding" has been
Teached between Unruh and
San Francisco Mayor Joseph
Alioto.
This s upposed un-
derstanding, given w i d e
credence by Republicans at
the highest level, is that
Unruh will bow out of the 1970
D e m o cratic gubernatorial
primary and allow Alioto to
win the nomination virtually
unopposed. This w o u I d
sidestep a party blood.bath and
enhance Democratic chances
of defeating Gov. Ronald
Reagan.
Unruh, so the theory goes,
then would run for the Senate
nomination, long eyed .bY Rep.
Tunney.
Democrats flatly denied it.
i.l have not met privately
with the ,mayor, although I
v.·ould not be adverse to doing
it," Unruh said.
"I have not been urged by
anyone to run for the Senate
to the aclusion of the
governorshlp.
"And I have no intention of
doing so."
Unruh also said he knew of
no such meeting between his
representatives and Alioto's,
The reason many
Republicans believe the story
is that it makes sense
politically.
Alioto, it generally is be!iev·
ed. is determined t() run for
governor. He has several
Southern California speaking
engagements scheduled this
month and a $100 a plate fund-
raiser next m o n t h in San
:Francisco.
I ,,
Unruh Jong has coveted the ---------------------governQrshlp.
But many po\ilician.o; con·
sider Reagan almost un•
beatable at this stage. A biUer
Democratic primary on I y
would help Republicans.
On the other hand, many
regard 67·year-old Sen. George
Murphy as a tough but easier
Republican target. And \'lilh
Tunney failing to catch Fire
politically, the throry goes, it
might make more sense for
Unruh to run for the Senate .
S pade Cooley Parole
Due After BI/2 Years
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Parole in February is in store
for Spade Cooley, country.
style bandleader once known
as the king Or western swing.
is live years. to hfe. But under
California law, the Adult Au·
thority determines the time to
be served. It denied Cooley a
request for parole a year ago.
SACRAMENTO AP) -The
-legislature · neared agreement
on a multimUllon dollar boost
ln state aid to schools today
and pushed toward final action
on Gov. Reagan's tax rebate
bill.
A Senate-Assembly con-
ference committee reported
late Monday it had drafted a
compromise school aid bill.
resolving differences between
versions passed earlier by the
two houses. Contents of the
compromise were not reveal·
ed.
Reagan's $84 million one.
time only income tax reduc·
Probe Set
In Hospital
·Decision
Uon hill WllS up for a "key hear·
ing In the Assembly Ways and
Means Comittee with il!I
sponsor, Sen. George Deukmc-
jian, (R·Long Beach,) c..'Oll·
fident it w o u 1 d win ap-
p r o v a I. Meanwhile, both
houses ploded through lengthy
files of pending bills as the
lawmakers pushed for ad·
jourmnent of the 1969 session
sometime this weekend.
The Senate earlier passed a
$9S million school aid bill
while the Assembly's version
totaled nearly $189 million. but
with a provision that i\ would
be cut to meet the limits of
Reagan's budget. The con-
ference committee w a s
directed to write a com·
promise measure.
The Republican chief ex·
ecutive has allocated $120.S
million, plus money from a
yet·to.be-determined surplus
in school aid.
Reagan agreed to boost his
The state now provides $L5
billion ln aid la local schools.
But many districts face fiscal
crises wiltl taxpayers frc-
<11.1ently voling down local tax:
increases and bond issues.
Reagan's 10 percent income
tax rebate, revised in the
lower house. carries a limit or
$100 for a single person and
$200 for a married couple.
Deuk1nejian said he could ac·
cept the Assembly changes.
Another of Reagan's bills
was dead.
That was his proposal t()
change the way judges are ap-
pointed. An attempt to revive
Reagan's "judicial merit
plan" from the Senate's in·
active file failed on a vote of
17-11 wit11 30 votes needed for
approval.
This was the third con·
secutive year Reagan's plan
was rejecled by the
legislature. It provided
regional commissions to ap-
prove non)inees for judicial
posts with the fina l ap·
pointment to be made by the
governor from a lisrof three.
No\v, the governor makes
the appointment with virtually
no restriction.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The allocation for new school aid
City Council bas asked the as a means of breaking the
superintendent of c e n t r a I budget deadlock that left the
Receiving Hospital to tell why state without a budget the
a fatally wounded Los Angeles first three days of the fiscal
policeman was taken four year, July 1·3.
miles to that city.run ~ospital• ----------------~----
when five major hospitals
were within blocks of the
shooting scene.
In a unanimous resolution
Cooley has been imprisoned
since he was convicted in the
1961 slaying of his wile, Ell.a
Mae.
The California A d u 1 t
Noguchi Reject s Case
Work Backlog Denial Authority said Monday the
musician -whose real name flee statistician had informed
Mrs. Cooley was found dead
April 3, 1961 at the family ran·
ch near Willow Springs.
At his trial, Cooley's
daughter, Melody, then 14,
testified that she saw the
bandleader drag her 37·year-
old mother partially nude
from the shower. She further
testified that Cooley stomped
on his wife's body, burned her
with cigarettes and strangled.
her. Cooley had flied suit for
divorce several months before
the killing.
Monday, Councilmen asked
Dr. M. X. Anderson, the
hospital superintendent, to ap-
pear next Monday before the
council t o report on the
"circumstances surrounding
the transportation and death
of Officer Robert Cote."
Dr. Anderson was
unavailable for comment Mon·
day.
At your
• service-LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Los Angeles County Coroner
Dr. Thomas T. Noguchi issued
a blunt rejection Monday of
Dr. Russell C. Henry's denial
of his charge that a backlog of
cases had piled up in the cor·
oner's office.
The coroner said that the of·
Unruh Opens
4th Festival
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Ribbon-cutting ~remonies at
Will Rogers Park kicking off
the Fourth Annual Watts Sum-
mer Festival were probably
livelier if not more unique than
rnost.
Hundreds of people, many of
them children, crowded the
park Mond11.y to hear singer-
composer David Bryant sing
his original festival theme
song, "The Underdog." But it
was Assemblyman Jess Unruh
([).lnglewood.), introduced as
''the next governor," who
drew the Utunder praising
what he called "the spirit or
Watls."
"If \Ve have to make a
choice of putting a man on
Mars or wiping out poverty
and fear and housing in·
equities by 1978, \Ve should
certainly opt for the latter,"
Unruh said.
The assemblyman compared
the week·long festival to the
Tebuilding of Coventry, Eng ..
"also destroyed by violence,
anger and hate."
him in writing that ''on the is Donnell Cooley -would be
date of my return there were freed in February but did not
1,027 cases awaiting th e specify a date. He \vill have
issuance of death certificates served 81h years.
plus 167 which are ready to be Cooley..-now 58, was con-
signed and closed." ' v i ct e d of second-degree
Dr. Henry, acting during murder in Kern County
Noguchi's absence. had called Superior Court at Bakersfield
Noguchi's st a t em en t in July 1961.
The song for which Cooley is
probably best remembered is
"Shame. Shame On You."
Cote, 23, was shot last week
by department store robbers.
He was taken from the scene
by ambulance to Central
Receiving, where he died an
hour after being admitted.
Recordll show the am·
bulaoce w a s dispatched by
hospital, which also ordered it
to return. "completely erroneous." He The statutory term for this
said the caseload was "ef·1 ------'---~:;;;;••••liiiiiii;;;~~--------·1 fectively current'' with about
200 cases \.\'ailing to be pro·
cessed.
Earlier, Henry had asked
for a transfer to another
department indicating he may
resign from the s er vice
altogether.
County Administrative Of-
licer Lindon S. Hollinger said
, Monday he still fecis the
charges he brought against the
reinstated coroner were fac·
tual and the re commendation
that he be dismissed was pro·
per.
GOP 'Control'
Vote Exp ensive
SACRAMENTO (UPll -
F r e s h m a n Assemblyman
Robert G. Wood, the man who
gave Republicans the crucial
go-ahead vote in t h e
Assembly. spent $115,920 to
win election.
"H's one of the largest ex-
pense statements that's ever
been submitted on a special
legislative election,'' Assistant
Secretary of State H.---F.
Sullivan reported Monday.
Our
market research
department · thinks
they ·deserve a bow
,
a new
HFC office
in: Newport
Beach
NEWPORT CENTER
2087 SAN JOAQUIN
HILLS ROAD
PHONE: 644-4511
Need up to $5000?
REDUCE FAST! l••I•"·-·•-
After a rece nt survey our heroes determined that you
were fed up with bad t a sting water filled with all kinds of
chemi cals , like chlorine; salt. and sodiul'(l . Lose up to
20 Lbs.
In
20 Visits
They t old us you were t ire d of lifting that heavy bottle
of water and that you felt you we re paying far too much for
that inconvenienc e a nywa y.
So we took th ei r a dvice and did something about it!!
W e develo ped the Lind say R.O. Water Pu rifier. It's like
havin g yo ur own bottled water company working for you -
out of sight -und er the si nk. And t here's a convenient fau-
c et where water fa u.ceh ought to be, on top of the sink.
llCllllS Ill fAQUTllS VISIT THE
HUNTINGTON
BEACH SPA
' \
,
We did fail in one way tho ugh. W ith all the convenience
and CU!ality we offer, we couldn't quite f ind a way to charge
as much as bottled wat er.
Whe n you need mon ey to pay bms, buy a
be tter car or meet other important money
needs, you may arrange for it in your own
hom etown offi ce of HFC, House hold Finance.
The HFC manager will explai n everyth ing
you need to know about your loa n. Whars
more, he'll tell you what you r loan will cos~
In dollars and ce nts, befo re you borrow!
And at Household, there's a convenient
repayment pla n for eve ry budget. Each year,
more than 2V2 million people tru st their
mon ey need s to House hold Finance. Why
don 't you? Stop In, call or apply by mail
to HFC's newest office today.
-NOW OPEN
I
I
om 400 Arm.IATID a.up COAITTO COAST AND WOl1DWIDI
·-10111a~
HEALTH SPAS
11 ANAHl lM
. l ' "'~ (" •1 • l
I\ ORANGE
t.:~ f ~AIOI/\ ~~r
' " ' ' "
Ol'tfif J t.ATJ A Wffl: • Ol'fM 1t 'ti~ It 820·030 I 639-1441
W e onl y cost a bout. o ne-filth &S muc h.
C ome to think o f it, maybe WE should be taking the
bows .
The Lindsay. Co.
642-6861
833 Dover Drive, Suite 4
Newport Beach, California 92660
--• -
HOUSE HO
FI NANCE OU.If .;)'.JI ---.~-lie~
COSTA MllA OFFICll
~. Harbor Blvd. at 19th St ................ Ml 6-4416
South Coal! Plata, Lower Level .•••••.•• 540-9703
HUllTlllGIOll alACH OFFICI
Five Poinh Shopping Center •••••..••••• VI 7.3577
IAllTA AllA OFFICE
204 W. Fou"h St ...................... 547-5491
•
----------------------------------...... -----"""'!"' ..... ---'!"'~~
A Real Din·galing
'Big Al' Sues Nutty Off Camera Too
By VERNON SCOTI'
HOIJ..YWOOD (UPI)
Alan Sues is the wacky
zporl!cf.Ster of 1'The Rowan
and ltfartin Laugh-in" wtio ls
dedicated to remaining sint:le
after a short-lived marriage.
Sues is as unabashedly nutty
off the air as he is ringing that
little handbell on the show
and reporting fictitious sports
events.
He lives in what h e
describes as the last of
Hollywood's alum areas.
Home ls one enonnous room
in an apartment house. He
decided to live there when a
friend pushed him in a window
to look the place over and
discovered he was locked in-
side. .
He spent his first night in
his new quarters sJeeping on
the floor.
Since then Sues has acquired
a television set, a divan with
fold-out bed and little else.
He's made a kitchen out of one
smaJI alcove and, of course, he
has his own bath.
But then Sues requires little
in the way of comfort because
he spends almost no time at
home.
\Vhenever he's not working
on the NBC-TV series Sues
h.ilS the nightclub circuit.
His miniature refrigerator is
empty. Alan eats almost all
his meals at a small
restaurant around the comer
or at parties.
Sues is also a prominent
man with the ladies.
"I've been going with two
girls simultaneously," he con-
fides. "I try very hard not tc>
mention them to one another."
His dates usually consist of
a movie, dinner and dancing
until closing time at one of the
discotheques in Hollywood and
Beverly Hills. He enjoys, too,
taking hls girls to ice shows
and the theater.
Weekends find Sues driving
to San Luis Obispo up I.he
California coast. His brother
owns a restaurant there and
the local beauties find a
television personality a
refreshing change.
A native Californian, Sues ls
a beach buff. He surfs. swims
and bakes in the sun. And
while his sports gags on the
"Laugh-In" are strictly for
humor, Alan himself plays
tennis almost every morning
to stay in shape.
He is able to play every day
because rehearsals for the
show are usually limited to
afternoons.
On Tuesdays and Wed·
nesdays he reports t o
rehearsal headquarters i n
beautiful downtown Burbank
at 2 p.m. He is free by 6 in the
Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS 45 Bring down
l Ftfnch upon onfsflf
47 Straw b111ot sfapor! 48 Charitable
1
~ E1apsfd dtfdS In t1mt 49 Conveyancf lOSt1ttof 51 Install une1slnfss in office j tC Carptntfr's 53 Owelll'tJ, tool unit: A r. J 15 Mounta in: 54 Statu e Comb. form 57 Fr fnch 111. A~froachlniJ pronou n w te or 59 Service cl ub
!"' mfmbe rs 17 piC f 61 Ch.aractfr In B/5/69 18 Gambl!niJ Shakespfare gamf !.4 Within --· 5 Or irts 38 Ftfnth, 19 Verdi of: 2 words & las Vt1Jas fXplorer Ir• production fi7 Painter's exchange Canada &.
20 Stron~ tough accessory : medium: USA : lndlv duals Colloq. 2 words 3 words 21 New Yorker 68 World Serir.s 7 G!<!graphica1 39 Entllshman's or Nova fl9urf: SllnlJ region um rell 1 Scollan 69 Mexican 8 Faculty 40 In th e past 23 Great 1evolutlonist 9 Play a 43 Dtfft ivt warmth of 70 Bear flute of ife fee ling consltllatlon 10 Box With 46 Kind of
/ 25 Hi?hest nolt 71 Jus t ont ligh t blows roast
26Maean ti mt 11 Tract of 50 Neptune:
effort 72 Fanfare dishonor 2 words ~ 27 Put on 73 Si r Robert 12 P1tsbfilet 52 Be one of
'29Flrt . 13 Suffer ng the Jfl Stt 31 Pitching Britl 1h from .m111 54 Work statistic: stalfsman 22 DestrYt f111propetly :
Abbr. 74 Real tslalt 24 Forma l~ 2 words
)) "·Gone with contract 1ffirmt 55 Section of
the Wind", 75 Engllsh staltmtnt Irelan d
f .g. city 27 -tasse 5, Brlff 1nd
35 Kind of 28 kind of t"" sound DOWN .lt\!tr 58 arblt,
37 Rt11tivf 30 Pra is e fOI Ont
of a pokf l German 32. Distinctive 60 In a state
41 Caterer's composer app earance of read iness:
groduct Z Regulat ion 34 Jets or 2 words
42 tf'SSed 3 Very stlf· Map I' 62 Gem
~ells crnlerfd . leafs 63 ConlfSI
44 lace for person 36 Entrustfd 65 Altlrtd
dellverles 4 Cut lo another 61. f ood: Slang
l " I
'
"
3l
'
'
6
70
3
•
IALIOA
673-4048
OPEN •
6:45
HELD OYER
2nd WEEK!
7tt E' ... ....
.. , .... ,."ll'llUla This Summer's Big
Fun Showlll
1 'm Europe, baby.
I -you Dutdl Elni DilcMt, Gcnnln ...........
...... RoaldtL
You ..nt me World-W"nl VecationT-•zu ..
Mowwmcven.
• PLUS
' OUYD aD MICllta J.HU.Mllr'
•iiAMMllML IROOICS'
evening to pursue ~Is · and
otherwise enjoy the good life.
This &wnmer he will tour
for six weeks with Rowan and
Martin and such o t h t r
memben of the cast as Ruth
ButZI and Henry Gibson.
Sues is a leading exponent of
mod clothes.
He !eels well dressed in a
sports shirt, scarf, vest (no
jacket) and flared trousers .• =========== Not infrequently he'll dash in-
to his one-room home -the
walls of which he has painted
dark brown -and change out-
fits before going out on a date.
"I'm not the kind or guy who
Uk.es to have his dale drop by
and fix dinner," Sues says.
M11in.. Diiiy •I \:a MM. lflrv Tllun ........
I IJ.lft.-f'rl. ill. I :• s .... J , .....
IEST PICTUll
Of THE YIAI I
Sp•t i1l Cliildr1n'5
Prit11
14 l Undir-$1.50
TfCHNICOlOR" ""• ,. __ _
-ALSO-
DEAN JONES
BUDDY HACKETT
-A.LSO-
WALT DISNEY'S
"WINNIE
THE POOH
AND THE
BLUSTERY DAY"
CONTINUOUS DAILY
flOM 2 P.M.
IT'S HllE
MOST FANTASMAGOllCAL
MUSICAL ENTllTAINMINT
IN THI HISTOIT
OF iYllTIHING!
-SHOW TIMES--,
ETet1i1t9l 7;DO l t :JO
Mat. Sat. l s~11. 2:DO l 4:30
~R.~
. 'Dick'Van '.l)yke
. Sally Ann'HoWe.s
'tlonel Jeffries .... ~
"Chit!)' Olil!Y,
'Baig~
-· SUl'tR·PA.NAVISIOH" TECHN1COLO~
~ Und911 ......
What'do~ supply?
We n1pply 'W'Omm hlih .choo~a•tel with Speee-Age
epportu.oitie&. E•e1'1lhin1 lto dmini.c:rati•e to •P•e•
we11tbu 1PtJr.iaU1t..
Wh..1 el1e?
We Ji"e 7011 pratip Ma Woman in the Air Fone.
Want morel'
Bow about a rich aodal life? Flill end •aried. Bow about
tr••oll'
Now i1'17ov tum.
Yy •apply • real desire lo meet lhe world •• t.n ace.m-
pD1bed, matu-e. channi.ng wom.n.
Th1t"1 lbe moe• important thins the AJr F0tte damaoda
•f JOU.
It'• ja• a lia\ple Cl.IN •f ,.pplJ and dmund.
Contact M. Sgt. Al Torres
Ii• c.h~• ef Or-.. C..t .,.. TKAltl .. 1
USAF Recruiting Office
116 W. Third Street
Santa Ana -Phone 547-2288
(Tiit •111~1 ~bUlol\M Ill tllt '8bllt 1111-Jl ly flit OAl\.Y PH.OT)
, .
DAil Y Pll(JT Q j ,
Kaplan Joins Cast
Marvin K1plan bu been set
as Telyegin and Daniel Ades
aa Yeflm to complete lbe cast
for the forthcoming pro-
dur:Uon of ''Uncle Vanya."
opening Aug. 21 u the fourth
and final production of the
current Center-Theater Group
·ma-• ... •MllDI"
,._TICHNICOU>&aiiii
subscrlpllon sea.son In the
:P..iark Taper Forum.
Both Kaplan and Ades were
recently seen ln productions al
the Mark Taper F o r u m .
Kaplan appeared as EtieMe In
"Chemin de Fer" and Ades
was featured in "Camino
Real."
NA"nONAL ct:Nl!'•Al ~ATIOf
Fifii!r.a.!!!! . ... ...,,...., ............ ,,,,
ACUS 011 lllll PAU:INll
OPIN AT 6141
SHOW STARTS J P.M.
NOW SHOWING
"STILETTO"
WI ..
Ale:r Cord Britt Ekl1nd
.,~
Jason Robards
Britt Ekland
I "THE NIGHT THEY
RAIDED
MINSKY'S"
xmuo19.1
fllEW,ORT llEACH • OR.3-3350
Ends Tonight
"THE APRIL FOOLS"
SleTe M'9~ff• ,,
"THE THOMAS
CROWN AFFAIR"
PREMIERE
. ENGAGEMENT
Burt Lancaster
Peter Falk
In
"CASTLE
KEEP"
From the J.
outspoken novel
where aoldiers
talk like soldiers.
And fight like hell!
A GIANT OF A MOVIE
' COLUMBIA PICTURBI PRl:8BN1'11
llllGRT I DMll1
PICI I llllll':
ENDS
TUES.
CARL FOREMAN'S
MIClllll'l IDLD
, __. JrL...ti Sth WHk
-PLUS-
J1mes Garner in
'Support,..,,,'
Locol Shtriff' "••TR
Ii!,
IOlOI b,o.i.o•• -Ac"llO ~ M..ol•-COlllA..U..M:JHl~ .. I
It the Chol1ma• doeM"f ldll kl"" , • • U.S.-lrltl .... l_,•
h1Ntllt"C* wlUI
20th Century-Fox presents
liREliDRY PBH
ADDE HEYWllD'
An Arthur P. Jacobs Production "IHE IHAIRDIAD'r
I l'Oh• C(/jlUll'l"fOl "'fSVHS ~ ND FIA.TUii CHARl10N HESION ~2 AT IOTH
WEST COAST PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
Gloomy Gus is
:,
'*'"""'"* E .,._. . ·············-
Your Kinda Guy
oddball heroes
10th-Century. castle!
'
Patrick O'Neal . Jean-Pierre Aumont
SCOTT WILSON • TONY Bill • ASTRID HEEREN • AL FREEMAN. JR. • JAMES PATTERSON • BRUCE DERN and
lllltlC.,. '""" ...... ,,... . Dn'gp Do.IL '''""'"""""'"""~DINIElTIJIAIJASH""DA~DM1r1El·8'ud •'"""""~'ll1ll.LINWT\NCE·1111A10L~ •Gia\ .-~SYDNEYPQl.IACK· -~MlltllNRAllSDHOFF""JDHNClllEY, ""-·tt"""'11A' ~
. l•itlHZ!let+'
. Starts TOMORROW!---.....
£z.doNEWPORT BEACH-at the
entrance to the fabulou!> lido l!>le OR J ·83SO
DAILY
Continuous from 7:00 PM
Saturday and Sunday
Continuous from 2 :oo PM
Tickets at CompUticket OuUet1
lncludlng Bullock's, Ralph's M1rkel1,
W1Uick1 or et the Box Office.
I
I
I I "arbor llvd. at Mcfadden • Phqne 5l1·1271
I "CASTLE KEEP" ~!.!l'lJ.iill::::::=: ·~'
I ..... .,a:1sPM JD 1~!::1~ I ,..,,... J~··1 IC]Q
I "SUPPORT YOUR JID--··-l l;::s:. . ." I LOCAL SHERIFF" is;:::::J 01~ i .::::: .. ~~~;-;;-;~ ~1'~1 -o·· -[
I See Complete Show _: •
1 as late as IO:lO 'PM "'" r... • ., ,..._
"'
•
.... • •• • ..
• ••
---. • -·
I •
' "
.,
' . ..
'
Je DAILY r!LDT s T11ud.IJ, August S. 196•
Econom y
Up Again
In July
OVER . THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stoel{ List
--
...
For the ~li:th time during
the past seven monthJ, 0. C.
Adanu, manaeer ot Se(!Llrity
Pacific N11Uonal Bank's Costa
1'1esa branch, has reported
another record hiKh for the
local C('(lnomy.
As estlmat~ on the bank's
buslntss Index (1957-59-100),
last month's .economic activity
registered at a record 202.J,
up 0.6 perrent rrom a previous
high of 201.I In June and up
12.7 per~nt from 179.S a year
ago. Pre\'iOU$ monthly irxltx
' ! llO
l ,..1--l--
.... .... -.... ....
readings for lhls year are -----------------------
200.1 for h!ay, 193.2 for April,
189.li for March, 191.7 for
February and 190.0 far
January . Every mcnth of 1969.
except f..!arch, brought a new
record.
Among individual economic
indicators. seasonally adjusted
June-to-July improv'ements
have been made In depart·
ment store sales, J.6 percent,
real estate sales 2.6 percent
and bank clearings .5 percent.
Construction declined 1.8
percent during the month.
Since July, 1968, the percen·
tage gain9 have been 23.4 per·
cent in clearings, 16.9 percent
ln construction, 16 percent in
department store sales and 4.4
percent in real est.ate sales.
Employment decllned en a
seasonaUy adjusted basis dur·
ing June, the latest month for
which figures are available.
Statistics for eight cf the to
Southern California counties
i;how a loss of 6.600 in tot.al
civilian employment -from a
record high of 4,617,100 in May
lo 4,610,500 in June. Since June
llf last year. employment
has increased by 2.9 percent or
128.000. 'Past-yea r percentage
Increases have been 3.3 per-
cent throughout California and
2.2 percent nationally.
June's ave rage unemploy.
ment rale was a $easonall y
adjusted 4.1 percent -1 up
from 3.9 percent in April and
?11ay, down from 4.4 percent a
year ago. Ratios for June.
1969, were 3.• percent for lhe
nation and 4.6 percent for
California.
Subsidiary Sued
NEW YORK (UPI) -D\llG
Corp. has sued its !.() percent
owned subsidiary, Southeast·
em Public Serice Co. to com-
pel Southea.s(ern to call a spe-
cial stockholders meeting to
elect ne1v dlrectors. Chainnan
Victor Posner of DWG !!laid the
Southeastern management had
ignored--·his request f o r
r e prese ntation on the
Southeastern board in spi te of
DWG's large holdi ng s.
Southeastern sought futilely to
merge with Eastern Gas &
Fuel Associates of Boston to
avoid a takeover.
Motaey's Wortli
Negro Women's Job
Gains Just Illusion
By SYLVIA PORTER
Slatistics on pay and job
level always can be tailored lo
mislead, it nol to lie. That's
one of the first lessons a
serious reporter of economics-
like-it·is must learn. I've just
re-learned it in a new Census
Bureau study tracing the prog·
ress ol Negro women and of
l\'egro men since 1960.
The figures seem to show
that the Ne&(o woman, for
decades at the very bottom of
the U.S. economic ladder, is
finally moving rapidly ahead
and that she is even pulling
ahead of the Negro man.
FOR INSTANCE. since 1960,
the proportion of N e g r o
wctmen in white collar clerical
and sales jobs in big cities has
jumped from 13 to 23 percent.
In contrast, the proportion of
Negro men in this category
has remained al 12 percent.
Again, the proportion of
Negro \\'omen in professional
and managerial jobs is up r r 0 m 8 to 11 percent in the
past decade. The rise for
Negro men has been from 6 to
a mere 9 percent.
In the same period, the pro-
portion of Negro women
employed as private household
workers has fallen from 34 to
20 percent while the earning'i
of year.round Negro women in
cilieg have climbed from 59 lo
73 percent cf the earnings of
white women. The earnings cf
Negro men, thcugh , have cnly
inched up from 70 to 71 per·
cent of white m e n ' s
paychecks.
BUT "'HEN you look behind
these impressive p a y • j o b
slalistiCs, a far d.illerent tale
emerges.
1,.·-----------------.. ··I MfW "l'OltliC fAf"/ · MOnOtV't ~,. 1• Nt• YOfi; $iodo. w..,.. Dt!U\'
NASO listings for Moncl•y, Auguol 4, Ifft
ltt..-lt!M ""-flflw ............ ~ffMt9t\' t A.M. '-tlAIO,
l>rk• .. ..e IN .... ""Mi ., IM111-_,..._ • CIJP'"'"'e
To illustrate, the white col·
lar category, as far as black
women are concerned, is
made up largely of typists, file
clerks and retail s a I e s
workers, among the lowe:i1
paid workers. M acco Sells Interest
f
A mlltull fund lnvestina in the
. devetwment 1nd use
of the oc:un 1nd its resources ----------Mlcft11t• Di1trH~•ter., lllC. , ...... ,, .... H•• 'I'm , Ji.Y. 111114
f'tMM Mf'ld me • P"DSPKlUI on
th• GCN"°"lphlc lulld, IM.
Cltr tip
As Mrs. Dorothy Newman. a
top Labor Dept. expert in this
field, remarked, "A white col;
lar on a male clerk is nol
nearly as impressive as a blue
colla r on a construction
craftsman -in terms cf h.is
paycheck as well as his
status." She asks, "How many
men -black or white -want
to become typists?"
AND WHILE il's true that
Negro women have made big
strides in the category cf
~··professional and technical"
v.·orkers (a vague Labor Dept.
occupational catch-all), the big
gains have been as low-paid
elementary school teachers
.and low-paid medical techni·
cians.
1·voii1··;·1o·ai:EM~··:·--** .... 11
: You want to sell some item !
: th1t you no longer need but •
: somHr• •Is• <•n use for •
! NOT OVER $50 •
i 1 1 1 1 ? ? • ..
i YOUR ANSWER:
I i : :
3
You call THE DAILY PILOT, a1k for
Classified Advertising, and place 1
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED AD
AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE
LINES 2 TIMES 2DOLLARS
AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I
DIAL NOW DIRECT!
i • : • • : : : • •
I
642·5678 ;
CTlll INrl NIM CHllty 14f.1UIJ : ,,,.,,, .. ,,,,,, .. , .. ..........,
L -----
In Rancho California
-Macco Corp., Newport
Beach real estate development
subsidiary of Great SouLhwest
Corp., Friday announced the
sale of lts one-third interest in
the 87 ,500-ecre R a n c h o
California devel opment.
Macco's inter es t was
purchased by a partnership
comprised of Aetna Life &
Casualty Co. and subsidiarie!':
Qf Kaiser Aluminum &
.Chemica l and -Kaiser
Industries.
In a statement is.sued by
\Villlam C. Baker, ·president of
Great Southwest Corp., the
purchao;c price v.'c.s disclosed
as $t9 million cash.
~1acco had joint-ventured
the property with Kaiser
Aluminum & Chemical and
Kaiser Industries as eq u a I
one-third p11rtners in 1964. The
total purchase price for the
peN:CI in 1964 was $21 million,
which required a cash in·
vestment by Macco of $2
million.
"'Macco has realized an ag-
gregate profi t of $17 million 01\
its Rancho CaHfomia in·
vestment," Baker said.
I le aclded that as a land and
re11l estate developer, one of
f\1aceo's dlverslned act\viUe!i
is to acquire and. develop it to
stimulate land appreciation
and ca.sh flow &nd to sell at a
substanllal profit. •·on this particular pa.reel or
111nd. '"C did JU$l that," said
Baker.
Rancho California. located
tn ruverskle County near the
town of Temecule, ls 11
development cffering • com·
plemrnt or community
facll !ties including
1grlcultural1 commettlal and
industrial ame nities.
In uddilion there
U1an 2M home.."
under coni1tructlon,
1100-vehiclc resort
art more
curn?ntly
a recrea·
of a~
proximately 200 acres, a
thoroughbred horse training
facility encompassing 3,
acres, an 18-hole golf cours
under const ruction and
various schools. s hopping
facilities and churches on the
property.
Burroughs
Gets Pact
Nilsen J\farl-iD
Joins Witte
··-.... , IW..J Httfl ltw CloM CJll.
$11t<9 Hlf
llMll-) Nltll 1.IW Cle ... CJitt.
-D--
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Monday's Closing
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,I -:'~·' DAILY ,ltOT
Prices -Complete New York
Attempt to Rallr,
Market Falls Off
NEW YORK (AP) -An early attompl to keep
last week's rally rolling slum blod today, and the
stock market slid to a moderate loss
The Dow Jones industrial average -up 2 46 at
10 30 a m -closed oU 4 01 at 822118
The early lead advances h-.,ld over declmes fad~
ed m later tradrng Of I 553 Issues traded 756 de-
clined, and 581 advanced
There were 6 new highs for the year and 48
new lows
Volume totaled 10 70 million shares, compared
with 15 07 million Friday
The New York Stock Exchange index o(
1 200 common stocks was off O 27 at 51 S5
The market had a pre••y good rise In a short
period of time ' an analyst said 1 and 1t ran into
a profit taking phase Apparently some of the in
vestors who bought \Yhen the market was down de
c1ded to take profits when prices rose
The Associated Press SO.stock average \Vas off
3 at 293 7 '' ith rndustr1als off 1 6 raUs up 6 and utilities off 2
l lills Off ice
Sou~hern Cal1forrua First
Nat1onaJ Bank has applied to
the comptroller of currency
(or a charter to establish an
office near Laguna Hilb: near
El Toro Road and Interstate
}{igbwey No S
Stock Exchange List
Complete Closing Prices -An1erican Stock Exchange List
•
-·-·
•l
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'
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f
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I.
DAILY PILOT
For The
Record
Meetitags
TUE$DAY
Hu11Un11tot1 6t1Cll BIHi(~· No. 1100.
\leler•nt o! WDl'ld Wff I, \l.F.W. H111, l1' Y11r\11c.,..,., Hunllnolon
l!.1ech, 2 p.m,
Rol•rY Club ot Newl)Dl"l·Bllbllfl, lr.l!WI Loett Coun1rv c1ur-. 1600 E. Co•11•
H111hw1v, Coron• !kl .Mar, 6:]1) P-"'· Co~11 MUI· NlwPOrt Hl•bot' llol'IS
Club, MHI Ver~ (Ollf\!rr Club.
(OSI• Mew. •:•S p,m.
k•I lle.t11 Tou1m1$1...-s Club, 1g1 R1ncl\ ttouoe, 1100 P1clllc Co.i11
H!Ol\WIY, 51'11 81Kh, I p,m,
81ltoll Say Llont (lub, Vil~ M1rln1,
IW.S S1v!.ldt Drive, Ntwl>O"I 8eKll,
' p,m. HUnlingron 8e1Cll El~• Lod91!, Ellu
Club, IQ.I Oc1.ir Ave.. Hunt1n11•on
ONCh, 1:30 1>.m.
Vc1er11115 ot World War I 1n<I New Me.~ 81rr•<ks 120. Amer!cen
LtOl"" t>all, S.U W. lllh Sr., (0511
Me11, l :J.I P.m.
Slerr1 Club, S1n!1 .A"I Public Llbr1rv,
S111111 Ana, I 11.m. 1-ta•t>o<' Are• Younv Rt1>Ublic1ns,
N.wPQl'ter Inn. NfwPCrt BtKll, I "·"'· 8 1llXll Sk! Club, NoWPOflor Inn,
NewS>Orl 8e1ch, I P,m,
Odd Follow• Loclllt lllo. 111, Odd
FolJCw1 lom1tlo. 716 Main Sl'let,
Huntlnglon B••ch, I:~ i>.m.
L.0.0.M. Mooso No. llSI, .us E. 111h
Stroot, CP•I• Me.•, f :H "·"'· Soclt!v lor the Preserv1ll0t0 •I'd
Encout111emont of B•r~r Si>l>P
Qu•r!•I Slnving Jn l>merlc•. Cooll
N:e1t (h8ptor, Colle<ie P1r~ Scr>ool,
2Jt0 Noire Oame. Co•!• Mt!.11, 7:•5 om. (1!ifornl1 !>o<ittY ol P1ychla1rlc ledlnkl1ns. F1ir1low Cf\ 1 p It r,
Falrvl""' Sllle Hol'lilll tudlloroum,
1:311 ....... • Smolh Coti! l>ctive »XI C lull, Vill~g•
Inn, I~ Marint. 8111»1 lsl•nd, 1.JIJ p.m.
WEDNESDAY
ll lue F11mt l o11rm111ers Club, Mes•
Verde C.wnlrt Club, Cos!• Mna, 1
1.m. Co•I• Mtu Op!lml1t Club, Cost• Mf1a
Golf 1nd Country Club, 1701 Goll
C.cur1e Drive, C0$11 Mt••· 11 noon.
Hun!lngton Stach E•<hf"9t Club.
r.ner~ton l!cacf\ Inn, Hunt1nv1on
l!~•<fl, 1l nt>Dn. V'"stmln11er Optimht Club, l<•nll" T~ble Re.tauren!, Wt•tmin•1tr, 11
·~ . ... os!• Men 1t;ot1ry (luD, Colli MPll
G-olt lflrl Couniry C!UD. Co•ta Me .. ,
l? ""°"· Fcunl•in v111n-E~d,3"9t Club. Fra.,.
<011' l'1!111ur1"'· \llSl 8•1ch Blvd.,
Hunll<1t1'><1 &e1c~. ll:B p.m.
DEATH NOTICES
ALLEN
M~rY E. ,t.llrn. :tnl El 1110 C irc1~,
C~•ll Mt••· 1>or .,, dolt ol <lealh,
A"9U.-f ;i. 5.c-rvlctt 1r'ld Interment will "'° to·lld in SI. P1tricW'1 C•m•Tery, Falt Jti~tr. MitHKnu.,.ns. B11tz Mor-
1u1ry, 11'1 SuooriCr, Coste M~•~-tor·
wl«l•"9 dlrector1.
SEABORN
Edvth E. Suborn. 70' 35tl> SI., Nr w·
P<lfl 8tacto. A.ge 63; ddlr or a~atl>,
Au11u1t 2. Sur~lved Dy l>Uibllld. Haw·
1ra: two sons, Lerry ~born, 1>11.0:11
e<>d Or. Robr>rl ~10q1n, Newoort
801cf\; d1U';tnter, Judlttl S~6'X)rn,
Mourri.ln v~w. c1111. se .. k:••· Wl>d· nrlO<lav, 11 AM. Ba in C1>1o>el, 11•1 Su·
r>erior, C°''' """"' will> f'111or Gror9r J. &u\;lll..cter otllc111l"9. 1ntorme~1.
Feirt11vrn Memo•·•I Parl<. 81IT1 Mor-
1u1ry, Oi~1ors.
\VRIGHT
H•nrv Br1yd1 Wrlgt,t, -.ge 61. ct l!1'
NOWPO(I Bl•d .. NeWPOrt Beach. 0111
l)f ""8'!', Augu1t ), Survived b• .,.,,,~.
EmMt> C. Wrlghl1 '°"' Rui\.1111, of
S•"'' """' br01her, A. c;. wr11m1. of S1nll An1. 5er¥ic.t1, Wtdne1d1y, 11
AM. P1cl!le View (~a~I. lnt~rmeM.
"'•<Ille View ~mortal P••~-Oire<:!ed
llY P•Ci!ic Vltw Mor1YtrY.
ARBUCKLE & Vi'ELSH
Westcllff l\-tortuary '
4%7 E. 17th St., Costa l\tesa
646-48&8 • BALTZ l\tORT UARIES
Corona del l\-lar OR 3-9450
Costa l\1esa P.ll 6-242-1 • BELL BROAD\YA Y
l\10RTUARY
110 Broad\\·ay, Costa l\-1esa
LI 8-3'33 ·· • DILDAY BROTllERS
lluntington VaUey
l\-1ortuary
17911 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
842·77'11 • l\-tcCORl\tlCK LAGUNA
BEACH l\-IORTUARY.
1795 Laguna Canyon Road
Laguna Beach
494-5415 • PACIFIC VJE\V
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e l\tortuary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Dri,·e
Newport Beach, California
644-%700 • PEEK FA~ULY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOl\fE
'1'801 Bol$a Ave.
Westmin1ter 893-3525 • SHEFFEi! MORTUARY
La.guna Beach 494-lUi
Su Clemente 49Ul00
I . • ~IS' MORTUARY
U7 !\lain St.
Huntington Beach
536-1539
T11estU1, A11911st 5, 1969
Mesa's Plaza .
Honor Platoon
El~:d~~i~:,~:lla~t.d~ m~ enlist·
togelhcr Aug. 19 and menl oath.
togeth erness will continue to Brig. Gen. flenry W. Hise, comn1ander of El Toro MCAS,
be a way or life for about 80 "'ill deliver a talk during the
Orange County youths -from hour-long ceremony, before
peeling potatoes to pulling the young recurits say their
triggers -and maybe even g o o d b y e s to families and
reminiscing about cer tain girlfriends and depart.
recruiters. Togetherness \\'ill continue
They will comprise a special for approximately 10 weeks of
Orange County ho09r platoon basic training at C a m p
nf young U.S. Marine Corps Pendleton, after which each
i11ductees to be feted i n man will receive orders send·
ceremonies at South · Coast ing him wherever he is need·
Pla:t;a, Costa Mesa. prior to ed most.
cmbarkalion for training. 1'he p r o g r a m is being
Scheduled to begi? at 11 :45 organized by the Corps and ·a:m. in tbe plaza's Carousel the Orange County Chamber
Court, the ·induct1on ceremony of Comnlerce military affairs
will ~ feature band music, committee. according t o
prayer, add r' e s s es by Chairman Gene A. Robens.
1,00<f New Irvine
Stude1its Oriented
Each weekend a 'different
+ .__ •
Regiotutl Court Going V 11
First of four buildings in the North Orange County
negional Civic Center in Fullerton is scheduled for
completion by next January. The $1.5 million struc-
Drug Rap
Dra,vs Term
ture is designed to house six courtroo1ns. It is
located at the corner of Harbor Boulevard and \Vest
Valley Vie\v Drive.
Man Said
Addicted IRVTNE -One thou sand in·
coming students will be in·
troduced lo the UC Irvin e
campus during the month of
August.
group of students and parents SANT A AN A A Costa
will come to the campus, Jive Mesa trucker who inviled his SANTA ANA-An El Cajon
in the dorms, eat in dining prosecution on drug charges , ORANGE -f.irs. Judy \Vas burned when he at· n1an accused of the armed
halls, attend sample lectures when he invited narcotics Montgomery, a 25·ycar-old tempted to pu t out the flames robbery of a Dana Point ball
County W ornan Dies
After Bur1iing Self
Students and parenls will be
takin g part in the orientation
program designed to acquaint
the families with the academic
and social life at the universi·
ly.
agents into his home has been orange housewife \\'ho set fire ,1·ith his bare hands. shop has been found by a and attend several planned sentenced to 90 days in Orange Superior CourL judge to be in
social events. County Jail. to herself last Thur s day danger of becoming addicted
This weekend, the first Billie Ray Kilgore. 31, of 341 following an argument with Ltt 1-labt·a '59 to narcotics.
group of 280 students and E. 16th Place, drew that her husband, is dead. Judge Willia1n Speirs
relatives arrived. jail term from Superior Court The woman suffered third ordered the committal of
They will be given tours or Judge William Speirs when he degree burns over 80. percent Class lo l\1eel Ralph E. Lemke, 24, to the
the campus, special group pleaded guilty to possession of of her body when she doused Ca I i for n i a Rehabilitation
Narcotics
Violator
Sentenced
\SANTA ANA A
Westminster man I a <C I n g
Sufl':rior Court trial on escape,
burglary and receiving st9len
property charges was ruled
A1oodayi to be in danger or
becoming addicte d to
narcotics.
Judge William C. Speirs
ordered John llill Miller, 21, or
8822 St. ~ndrew's Ave., to be
commilted to the California
Rehabilitation Center at Nore{)
for an indefinite term .
' Miller and another patient
escaped from the psychiatric
\vard of the Orange County
Medical Center last Dec. 14
and were recaptured three
\\.'eeks laler. The Westminster
man was being held on ac·
cusations that he '\'fas a
member of a burglary ring
\vhich concentrated on the
theft of drugs and business
equipment from the offices of
Huntington Beach physicians.
J\1iller's only apparent con·
cern Monday was to gel an
answer to a question that he
claims to have asked
repeatedly during his long so-
journ in Orange County Jail.
f.1iller complained that th&
prison chaplain had refused
many times to allow him to
read "The Aquarian Gospel of
Jesus the Christ" on the
grounds that the "chaplain
said he didn't believe in it."
Miller got his boo~. Judge
Speirs didn't commil himself
on a matter of belief but he
did give the prisoner
permission to read the con-
troversial volume. Countian's
Death Said
Accide11tal
discussions on the campus lile dangerous drugs. He was also her clothing with paint thinner LA HABRA -The 1959 Center at Norco. Armed rob-
and a speech by Chancellor placed on three years pro-and turned herself into a graduating r:la ss of La Habra bcry and drugs ch a r g e s ;::::======::::===~
Daniel G. Aldrich, Jr. bation. hurnan torch on the front lawn High School is planning a 10· against Lemke wil l be ON THE TUBE This is the third year UCl Kilgore wa s arrested July· 8 of lhe family home at 18831 year reunion to be· hefd on sus pended pending his release.
has introduced new students to while federal narcotics agents Vine St. She died Saturday at October 4. Lemke was one o( five
the campus. The student and were serving him 'vilh a copy !he Orange C-Ounty · J\ledical f.lcmbc rs of the 1959 class persons arrested by sheriff's
parents are charged $21 for or an indictment charging him Center. · at'e asked to contact the Re-deputies last J\1arch 23 shortly
For th• b•1t 'Jui.It to whtt'I
h1pp1nin9 on TV, re•d TY
WEEK -di1iribuf•d with t~•
s.turday 1dition of fh• DAILY
PILOT. room and bonrd and during \vith smuggling marijuana into Authorities said ~I r s . union Committee, 3042 J\1aple after the holdup of Phil's Fish
the weekend program. this country Crom Mexico. Montgomery's husband, Paul, Ave., Fullerton. and Bait Shop. SANTA_ ANA -Orange!_:::_::.:::::::::...'~'.:.::::;__ ___ ::::::_:::::::~:=:_::::::::::::_ __ ::.:::::'C'.'.'.:~:_::=:::::::...:.::::::....'2::...'...::'.::'..:'.'.:.._ ____ __:'.'.:'.~'.'.'.__'.'.'.'.:'.C:_ ____ .!::::========~
County Coroner's deputies
have ruled the death of a 15-
year-old Cypress youth found
in the \Valer orf Surfside an
ac cidental drO\\'ning.
The body of Gregory C,
Stnith, 6790 Tahiti Dri ve, \Vas
spotted al 6· J5 a.m. last
Thursda y by Seal Beach po-
lice, 152 feet east of Anderson
Avenue .
Nude except for a calendar
wrtstwalch stopped al July 23,
he was taken to SmiU1's Hun-
tington Beach mortuary where
the autopsy was performed.
1'he red-haired youngster
\\'as last reported to have been
seen early Tuesday morning
\\'Ith lour friends at Hun-
tington City Beach.
Police officers arrested his
juvenile companions for being
drunk and violating clfffew at
that time.
·rhey theorize that Smith
may have seen lhe officers
coming and fled into lhe surf
to avoid being arrested.
The other four boys have
been released to their parents.
Man Gets
1-5 Years
SANTA ANA - A Santa Ana
1nan accused of murder when
officers lound the savagely
beaten body of his "'ife has
been sentenced to one to five
years in state prison on a less·
er charge.
Superior Court .I u d g e
\\1\lliam Speirs handed that
jail term to Donald Josepb
Brackelsbcry. 34. \Vilh the
defendant's plea or guilty to
an amended charge of in·
voluntary manslaughter.
Brackelsbery \vas arrested
last Feb. :i \\'hen poli ce
discovered the mutilated body
of his "'ife al the couple's
ho1ne. Brackelsbery's first ac-
count of the death "'as that he
found her body \\•hen he
returned home from \\"Ork the
previous evening.
f.1urd er charges were filed
\\•hen it was discovered that
Brackelsbery had called Santa
Ana policl' the pre vious even·
Ing lo report a quarrel with
his \\'ife .
Man Cleared j
Of Riot Rap
SANTA ANA -A Superior
'ourt judge has cleared a
Nonvalk youth or charges filed
against him following his
alleged participation in a Hun-
tington Beach riot last April
20.
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When we send a telephone Installer to put in a
new telephone or an extension, h e'll do his best
to see that yo u get what you want. Put the tele·
phone where yo u want. Give you the model you
want. The color you want. His main job is to see
that you're satisfied. That Iii\
way we'll be satisfied. ~ Pacific Telephone
We're here to help~
Judge Ra ymond Vincent
freed William 1''. \\'right, 21 ,
after a jury filed back to court
to reve;al that it was hopeless·
ly deadlocked follo"'ing seven
hours of deliberation. Judgr
Vincent declared 11 mls trlial
and agreed lo n1le on the
charge$ from the bench. ·-------------------------------------_:_---------------------------
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~---· ;n:~,,.....,,,,,,,..,.,. ............ ,.,,, ...................................................................................... lll!l""'"""'"""'""'lllalllllll'!ll"l"'lll!!''l!"'!"ll!!'!ll'l"ll"'!"'llllllllllll!!ll
J OD EAN HASTINGS, 642-4321
T11t'4•1, AlltUlf J, 1Nt I l'•tt II
Giant Roster
Still Grows
J oining the county's ever growin g club roster is the University
of Southern California Town and Go,vn Junior Auxiliary, Orange
County, \Vhich has announced a get-acquainted day Thursday, Aug .
7, for the ne \vly-formed group.
The Corona del Mar home of Mrs. Richard Bertea, \Vho is trans·
. ferring frotn the To,vn and Go,v n Junior Auxiliary of Los Angeles,
\vill be the setting for the beach get-together.
Also transferring fron1 the Los Angeles Auxiliary \Vill be l\'lrs.
Douglas Simpson a nd Mrs. J . K. White.
Hosting the initial gathering will be a steering comm ittee in-
cluding fvlrs. Oby E. Woods. president of the group, and the Mmes. T.
A. Devine, James Hewitt, Edward Brumleu, WiUiam Hazelwinkel and
J ames l\1cCunniff.
The Jonathan Club of Los Angeles \Viii be the setting for the
group's Cherter Luncheon on Sept. 25, \vhen they \Viii be honored by
the Los Angeles To,vn and Go,vn Junior Auxiliary membership.
Dr. Norman Topping, Universi ty of Southern California presi·
dent, \Viii be among special guests.
Ne\v members of the county auxiliary include the Mmes. Phillip
Anshutz, Horace Benjamin, Robert Brown sberger, Rene Caron, John
Cashion, Donald Clarke, Craig Combs, A1ason Fenton, Bruce Galey,
l\1ichael Gibb, Paul Hadley and Edward Halligan.
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Lo.-Others are the .[i.1mes. Richard Ingle, Bernie Lecky. Derek
Le \vis, John Lightfoo.t, Jt>hn 1\:liller, Thomas A1orris, Gordon !\1orro\V,
Frederick Myers, Richard Peckham, R. P. Parker, Richard Ramella,
\Villiam Reed, Dan Roge rs, J. M. Rose, Hank Sanford, Dale Stinch·
field, Robert Smith, Knight Sooy, James Tyler and J. P. Tyne Jr.
CHAPTE R BEGJNNING -Perusing a scrapbook soon to be
filled as University of Southern California Town and Gown Junior
Auxiliary of Orange County begins its activities are (fore ground,
left to right) ~1rs. Douglas Silnpson and btrs. Richard Bertea.
Mrs. William Haze\vinkel does a bit of rock and shell hunting.
A get-acquainted day for new members will take place on Aug.
7 in Mrs. Bertea's home.
' MERCHANTS 'TAGGED' -Enlisting the aid of merchants in
Seal Beach, Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley are mem-
bers of American Field Service chapters representing four area
high schools. Signing up prospective participants are (l eft to
right) Afr s. James Poulos, Mrs. Richard Lyddon, Mrs. James
Facer and Mrs. Esther Funk, genefal chainnan of the annual
\Vhite Tag sale.
AFS in the -Field
Chapters Volunteers
Seek Program Aid
"Taggipg " area merchants this month are volunteers representing
the American Field Service International Scholarship program.
They will be asking the merchants in Huntington Beach. Fountain
Valley and Seal Beach to regi ster for the third annual AFS White Tag
Sale Day which will take place Saturday, Oct. 18. Last year 205 merchants
in the su rrounding areas participated.
Also participating in the major support program for fri endly inter4
national relations will be more than 10,000 students from 1-Iuntington Beach,
Fountain Valley, f\1arina and Edison High Schools.
They will be requesting donations or $1 each from all area resi ·
dents for the AFS scholarships, \vhich in turn \viii entitle the buyer to a
10 percent discount in stores of the partici pating merchants.
To designate resi dent-participants in the international goodwill pr•r
grrun, each \viii receive a White Tag which merchants wi ll recognize on
the designated day. The discount only will apply to merchandise other
than sale items or those governed by the Fair Trade Commission.
Jn addition to receiving a While Ta_g, residents will be provided \vith
a list of participating merchants in the three cities.
Moni es donated during the \Vhite Tag sale is a major means of sup·
port for the program which enables \VOrthy students from foreign coun-
tries to attend hi~h school here and also se nds American students abroad
ta encourage understanding and l!OOd\vill among nations.
Participating high schools thi s year ""ill have 11tudents coming fro1n
Germany, Ethiopia, Australia and Thailand. Two Americans \viii be at4
tending school in Brazil and Argentina \Vhi le t\VO oth'ers joined in the sum·
mer program in India and Vene zuela.
The yo un g people are available to ~hare their exoeriences \Vith com-
munity groups and organizations via film s and slides during luncheon
meetinqs.
Th e community nro,[!ram, \vhich opens doors to underst.:in ding anrt
friendship among peoples · in the \Vorld. rr.t urn s 40 nercent to hi gh school
AFS club activities and 00 netcent to\vard scholarsh ips. Last year's sales
anproximated $4000, and adult chapters and clubs are anticipating doub4
Jing thP. amount this year. ~
Serving as a:eneral chaltman tor \Vhite Ta,i::-Da~ is Miss E.c:lher
Funk. and c.o-.ch11irmen are Robert. Ne~•m::ln. Hun tin,i:!tcin B"'::tch: ?vfrs.
<'h "l rlottP. Mork . MR:rina . and l\frs. R.ictiR:rd Lvddon . Founta in Valley. Thi!! •
Ediso n High School chapter still is in the process of organizin g. •
Early Bird Catches the Worms and Watches Them Squirm·
DEAR ANN LANDERS: t need your
cool, detached counsel,
My husband gets home from work
about 4:30 p.m. J get home about 5:30.
For the past several weeks I've had the
peculiar feeling that somebody had been
in the house -ash trays in odd places, a
sofa pillow mashed out of shape,
bedspreaci wrinkled, too many towels
hanging up to dry. One day I checked the
garbage and found cigarette butts with
Jipstick. (I don't smoke.) I knew then
that my husband had been entertaining
a female in my absence.
. Yesterday I decided to leave work half
an hour early and me~t the guest face to
race. My timing was be'aU tlfUI. t caught
them rtsht In the act. I've never seen two
--. ,
ANN LANDERS ~
more surprised people in my ent.ire life.
But I was surprised, too, because the
woman turned out to be' a neighbor who
is the town tramp.
I have decided to forgive my husband
because I'm sure she chased him and
wore him down, as she has done with so
many others. But I'm not wlllirtg to let
her off so lightly. Tho q·ucstlon : Can I
take legal action against the woman for
breaking and entering? If not , what other
lega l steps can I take? -\VliONG
DEAR WRO NGED: The wo man did
not break into your home. She was a
guest. Tbe only legal steps you can take
are against lllM. My advice is to forget
II •
DEAR ANN LANOERS : I am a 16-
year-old girl who has a summer job a~
the fairground . Jt is very interesling
because I get to talk to all kinds of
people, but I do have one small problem.
Plca.'>e tell me whal to say lo ofder men
(about 40) who don't exactly get fresh but
star.I. to tell you about their personal life
which is 1'ohQ2¥'s business. For example,
yest erday a man came over and began to
discuss the weather. All of a sudden he
blurted out, "My wife and I have
separate bedrooms because \\'C like di!·
ferent mattresses. I like a soft mattress
and she likes a hard one."
Please give me a sentence or lwo that I
can use to change the subjecL tactfully.
Thank you. -MOLLY
OEAR MOLLY: You don 't need to be
tactful with a clod like that. lie wouldn't
notice. Just sa11 °J'm not Interested la
your mattress. Shove off."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 had my
divorCe hearing two months ago but il
won't be nnal for a year. What is my role
during this year? Am I still married ?
Can I date? Should I wear my wedding
ring? Everyone I talk to has a difrerent
opinion but no one can give me lhe final
word. Do you have it? -NEITHER
FISH NOR FOUL ,
DEAR NEfiHER: The antwers are
not tngraved on the Rosetta stone. Tbere
Is no "final word" -only oplnloes. 1f you
want ;nine, here It Is: While waltlf'& for
your divorce to become final you can
date If you wl1b. By date, I mean ujoy
the company o( men, but be a loose
hanger. No playing house, no cu:&y
alliances and no weekend trips.
As for your wedding rlr1g, It ba11 no
slgnllicance now, so why wtar It?
"The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers'
booklet, answers some of lhe most fre-
quently asked questions about weddings.
Ta rer.e.ive your copy of this com·
prehenslve guide, write Ann Landers, In
care of this newspaper, enclosing a Jong.
self-addressed, stamped envelope and 3S
cents In coin.
Ann Landers will be g~ad to help you
with your problems. Send them to her in
care of the DAILY PILOT, enclosing a.
seU-addressed, stamped envelope.
-
' 'I
\
I
/
... ,. .! :!. DAILY PILOT T\ltSdJY, August 5, 1%9
r
i • I 'Tom Sawyer'' Goes on Barn Theater Boards
-, Huntington Beach Playhouse's production of 'The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer' will be presented. in The
Barn theater on Friday, Aug. 8. at 7:30 p.m . and
S.aturday, Aug. 9, at 2:30 p.m. Pictured are (left to
nght) Robert Campbell peering through window at
Crystal Payne and Lisa Johnsen who portray Aunt
Polly and Becky Thatcher in the matinee. Alternate
cast for the evening performance \\'ill include Kelly
Masterson, Kimberly Cole and Kim DeLacey. Di·
rector is F.andy Keene and the producer is ~1 rs .
Robert Murphy.
"
' • • '
••
' 1.
I ' !'
l
' I
Horoscope September Rites ·
Leo: Displa ;1 Blakelys Tell Troth
Responsibility
WED NESDAY
AUGU ST 6
By SYDNEY O~SARR
. SPECIAL IUNT : Cultivate
reserved manner without ap·
'pearing stilted . Ring. bracelet
or \l'risl .,.,·atch can lend
dramatic quality lo ap-
pearance. Grooming accent is
on anns, hands. News is like·
ly lo be made in area of
transportation.
ARIF.S (March 21·April 191:
Check safety devices during
any journey. Be sociable. but
avoid being a chatterbox.
Good lunar aspect he ightens
ability to write, communicate,
put across ideas.
• TAURUS (April 20.~tay 2D):
Obtain hint front Aries
message. Asking questions
could steer you to genuine
bargain. Finances are
high.lighted. Accent on v.·hat
you acquire and ho\v much to
spend.
GE~UNI (~1ay 21.June 201:
Cycle high. Try something
new. Streamline procedu res.
Be active. Take initiative.
Welcome cont.acts, challenges,
special assignments. Be
direct, positive. Purchase item
to brighten home.
You will e\·entually have your
say . Patience.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Obtain hint from
Scorpio message. Your cycle
today is such that you do bet·
\er as a keen listener,
observer. Develop view s
without necessarily expressing
them. Play \\'ailing game .
CAPR ICORN ~Dec. 22.Jan
19 1: J udge motives of
neighbors, :associates, c o ·
workers. But avoid making
something out of nothing.
Some around you may appear
stubborn. Appearances can be
decei ving. Give benefit of
doubt.
AQUA RitJS (Jan. 20.Feb.
ELAINE BLAKELY
Brid•elect
Anaheim Closs
Plans Reunion
l8l: Pressure is lifted. You
get greater opportunity for
self-expression. Keep promises
made to children. Welcomr
respite from routine. Do
son1ething different. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 201: A dinner dance and special
Attend to basic ch 0 r es , an·ards are in the planning for
especially those related 10 Anaheim Hig h Schoors Class
home, property. Get rid of of 196~ five yrar reunion.
safety hazards. Concentrate The Grand Hotel , Anaheim
on orderliness. Then emotional "·i ll b:! the scene of the
chaos .,.,·ill also evapora le. gathering announced for Aug.
IF TODAY IS YOUR 30.
Dr. and f.1rs. Thomas .A.
Blakely of Newport Beach
have announced the engag~
ment of their daughter, Elaine
Blakely to J\1ichnel Campbell,
son of r.lr. and h1rs. Edward
Dudley Campbell of Van Nuys.
The future bride 'v as
graduated from N ewport
Harbor High School and at .
tended Orange Coast College.
\Vhile in high school she
placed first during a Southem
California vocal audition and
the P.1usical Arts Club audi-
tions and received Ebell Club
and NHHS music scholarships.
Featured in many musical
productions both in high school.
and at OCC, she was a student
at the Los Angeles and San
Franciseo Civic Light Opera
Association musical theater
workshops at the University of
Southern California.
The bride-to-be was invited
to tour with the Doodletown
Pipers while attending OCC.
Her fiance, also a member
of the Doodletown Pipers, v.•as
gradu8ted from Grant High
School. Van Nuys, .,.,,here he
received awards in football,
and attended Valley College.
The couple v.•i\I exchange
v.·edding vov.·s during Sep-
tember rites in the Plymouth
Congregational Church o f
Ne..-..'}>Ort Harbor.
Fam ily Weekly ..
CANCER lJune 21-July 22):
Spotlight on areas previously
hidden. Key is to have a good
time vrithout being foolish.
Re1nember those 11'ho n1ay be
confined to home, hospital.
1'l'iend confides a secret.
BrRTHDAY you are creali\•e Those Int erested in al·
and Jove to entertain. But you tend ing may write for tickets
also have a strong homemak· at $6 each. addressing Reunion
ing de sire. Yoo enjoy good Committee, in care of Mrs.
food and niight be quite a Pam Pebley Laster. 306 E . E e s t d
cook. \\!eight of added-rcspen· South Street. Anaheim . V ry 0 Uf ay
sibility is currently indicated r===~~~;,;~===========~:-1
-but you also have more fun . I
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22\:
Some or you r desires are
fulfilled. But you find they
TD Ut>G DVI mort 1_,I \'O"fHll l l'!G ~,r,oloo•. "'"'' sva,,.. Dm•r"' ~ ~?:.,,<ill~~:!;., ~hf (tnr:111:'o o" ... ~: •
!oolllr! Ille OAILY PILOT, 80• 31-IO,
Grtncl Ct"l'tl $1t llan, Ntw Yo•ll.. N.Y
carry with them definite Models Li'ke responsibilities You may be
working overtime. Br ready.
D is p I a y sen s e of G Lo k responsibility. eorge o I
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep\. 221: \\.hh models in 1he fashion
Stress on abiltty lo lne up to sho.,.,Tooms in the New York
potential. You v.·ant more t · d h reeognition. Key is to find a garmen in us try. t e summer I hairdo is '"the George .'' I
"·ay 10 gain it. You do 50 to-lt"s named for our famous
day by cooperating in special ancestor, George \Vashington,
projects. Also, by displaying and other colonists v.·ho v.·orr
confidence. UBRA 1 Sept. 23-0ct. 22,: their hair pulled back ·in a
\\'rite. ad vertise. publish -pe~e~·ay the girls \'.'ear it for I
get \•lcv.·s disseminated. Be as d;iy is v.·ith hair sleeked back original as possible. 0 1 d inethods \\'ill not suffice. Call from the fa~ and fa.s1enecl \\'tlh a dl;'C'or:11ive band or a
attention to )'our 0\1·n a!· lock of hair twisted around. I
tributes. H i g h I i g h t ur For e''ening~ make the band
dependence. h. I SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 l :li;;r;;;;io;;e;;st;;on;;e;;o;;r;;pe;;;;a;;r ;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;i I
\'our lntullion Is corrc.ct Ln
money mauers. But It is stiH WOOL GREMLINS
best to let mate, partner tak
initiative. Consen·e strength
1/2 PHI .CE
STORE· WIDE
3 DAYS ONLY
AUGUST 7.9.9
1 YOU KNOW
\YOUR CHILD
WILL LEARN
•TO SWIM AT
Ht•• r~tY \!l(cf'fdecl ln 1"••1!•~·
t+"') .,..,.,, k."i!!"'9 11rooltmf ,,
11 111111Pot m ·~ pl1cn •"4
M>911Y i" 111111 .. I l•-fO<,.., 111
bt "1; i• ;" tNI -'II flll~t '' 11r1IO~lfl'lllCI ""'I W•"ll flll•• , ....
1tkll!ll '"""' 11 -'>1141 >'OU fH hlt
I ''"'' _.Ill It\ -nil!,.
The
KNIT
WIT
Regular & Half Site Dresses, Coats,
Al•o Bags, Jewelry & Hah.
Every Article in the House is et
1 /2 PRICE!
~
/BLUE BUOY
e-AIMI le Win Ye•
..... , ........ t.iM4. ....... , .....
546-1•
'
PHONI
545.2112
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
lowtr Mill 1cr11n f•ol'fl
W'1olworfh'1
l rl111l .t tk S.11 DI .. • Fwy.
COITA MISA
445 S. ,COAST HWY
LAGUNA BEACH at Hotel Laguna
For Top Spo11s Covel'agc
Read 'f~1e Dail y Pilot
•
Queen Counfing
Castle Pennies
By MARGARET SA VILL~
LONDON CUP!) -You
have to admlre an arlatocrat
who bravely ventures into
trade to help with the upkeep
of the home of her fathers.
Especlally when such a step
was never dreamed of in all
the years of her.education.
In the veins of Ulla lady run s
some of the bluest blood in the
world. She counts her llneage
,ln centuries rather t b a n
generatioll!.
Nevertheless d o w n in
Norfolk she is selling cupi o{
tea for six cents, coffee for
eight and raisin cakes for nine
to help meet the increased
costs of managing her house.
Her name is Queen
Elizabeth ll.
folk who have developed tho
habit or spending a day in the
great coun!ry houses and
parklands from an age that
will never return again.
Profits of these venture1 are
tax.free but rTI.usl be used only
for the maintenance of the
property.
The venture into trade
doesn't mean that the queen Ls
not one of the world's
\vealthiest "'omen. She is. But
the way they rigure it at Buck.
ingham Palace, why let San·
dringham House be a liability
Vt'hen it can pay Us own way?
From now untll the end of
September thousands 0 r
tourists will pay their 60 cents
admission charge.
Harbor Key Award
Salty Honor Given
\Vho is Jay Gould?
He's the Grand Old Salt of Child Guld·
ance Center.
'fhls hon'or was bestowed upon the Ne\v·
port Beach resident by members of th e 1-lar·
bor Key of the guidance cente r during the
group's first annuaJ Yachtsmen's Ball last
Friday in the Balboa Bay Club.
The announcement of lhe identity of the
Grand Old Salt was made by Mrs. J. O'Hara
Smith, president ol Harbor Key.
Gould , a patron of every endeavor or
1-larbor Key on behalf of Child Guidance
Center, was cited for his interest in and his
dedication to the \vork of the center.
Present with Gould as he received his
award from Mrs. Charles Hostler, ball chair-
man, '''as his wife.
The award included eight sterling silver
cordial glasses, and silver tray in a \valnut
case, upon \vhich a n engraved plaqoe \Viii
be placed. Times being what they are.
the queen has banished the old
rule that the royal fam ily
must never be associated with
a com~erclal undertaking.
This will admit them to
parts of the house and
grounds. There is a self· i..-------------------...1 service restaurant k n o w n ,
She w\s led to this step, ac·
cording to court c I r c I e s ,
because her official palaces
are maintained by state funds
but Sandrlngham House is her
personal property and she has
to pay for It from her ov.·n
funds.
Since It has 365 rooms and is
bigger than some well·known
hotels this has become a drain
even on the plump purse of the
House of Windsor.
So the queen is doing what
many of her "right trusty and
entirely ,l>eloved cousins'' -as
rou rt usage has it -have
been doing for some lime.
That is charging admission
f ees and providing
refreshments for the common
naturally, as the Cafe Royal, a
souvenir stand offering San·
dringham tea to.,.,·els and pot·
tery. illustrated books and toy
models.
There is a market .stand that
sells produce grown on the
estate, flowers and plants and
vegetables and fruit.
Visitors can see the
beautiful gardens designed by
the late Queen r.1ary. The
glasshouses contain memen-
toes of King Edward VII I \\•ho
built the house around an old
manor house saying he needed
"a room for every day of the
yeer."
The royal family now main-
ly uses the place in .... ·inter for
shooting ·parties and quiet
relaxation !or a fortnig ht over
Chrislmas.
Final week, Tuesday, August 5 thru 4 pm Satur·
day. August 9, all 28 Gloria l\1arshall locations
in the West offer ~ Price on your choice of
Hips or Waist or Thighs or Upper Arms \vhen
used in conjunction with any Gloria .l\1arshall
Program.
Why GLORIA MARSHALL is No. 1
28 LOCATIONS IN THE WEST
Gloria Marshall's didn't "ju.rt happen."
l<> become the world'21 leading Figure
Control System ••• quick, safe J'e6Ult.s
made it that way. At Gloria Mars.hall's
you'll lOGe more inches" and pounds fo r
Jess mone)"' thnn through any other
P rogram, anywhere.
{ Lose pounds and inches from };1ips,
wa.ist, thighs, tummy and anns,
1 Special machines are designed t <>
Y banish every correct.able figure fault.
./
Results come qu.ickly1 withC>\.l~ pills,
drugs, strenuous eurcise or stan'BLion
diets ••. effortlessly, pounds and inches
.. !all av.ray." ·J No d isrobing, \Ve are not a gym. '\'hilo
.... 1Ymnas.iums can bWld healthy muscles.,
in .almost eve'fY case, the exercise
tend.9 to build big appetites; thU!, ~·
21tead of los.ing1 the patron actually
gains weight.
,/ Free child care.
Call now for a free sample visit, where
)'OU a~ually use the spcci<tl maehines
for reducing and electronic Facial Con•
touring. No ~harge, .• no obligation,
Mystick Krewe
Fiesta 'Kaptured'
A strategic citadel captured
strictly for fun v.·ill be the
Harry Phillips home in
:Fullerton, v.·hen the merry
Mystlck Krewe of Komus
turns into a liberaUng force
Satu rday, Aug. 9.
After their successful libera-
tion of the staging area,
members will celebrate with a
Fiesta de Las Palmas at 8
p.m. Other hosts for the fun
bound invaders will be t1r.
and Mrs. Robert f.1ehrmann of
Buena Park.
Pinatas' and other fiesta
frills will provide a
background for an authentl'
mariachi band . A juke box will
prov ide addilional tunes fo1
dancing, and a catered Mex·
ican dinner .,.,•ill be served al
9:30 p.m. Other foods on th4
menu v.·ill be those from
secret recipes captured belore
the fiesta dilte.
Resen•ations may be madt
before Aug. 4 by calling Mr.
and J\1rs. Richard Shugert ol
Anaheim.
' ' ! Came fh comfortable ta$pat-clothes, un·
' l dressina: is unne~uary. r.. ..tf. ,
._._.._~~ .. -.-L .. •
~~a(!Jhali ~~·.!'~.~~~';.!~'!!.
NEWPORT BEACH -
430 P1ciflc Coast Hlghway~42.J630
11 l lMkt ~•ll ti l lMll 811 Cllitl
SANTA ANA -
1840 WHt 171h Slrffl-543.9457
A11ohei111, l••erly Hll11, Co'f'h•o, Crtiuhow, Do•11•.,, Gl•11llol1. L11~••••'·
lo111 hock, Hew,•rt le&e.h, N. hollvwood, 011111!10, Potod•••· Se11 01.,,,
So11to •••• S.11to lorbor9'.. S1o1nlo11d, To"o1111, Wlllttl11. $011111 0111 111 P.101••
lcttromo11to, 1011 Jose. S1o11111r"•'•· Wol11•t Ctirelt.
TUESDAY
AUGUST I
•:oo a Tiit 111 ,... tt> 1so1 )lny
Dunpll).
D ID ............. (CJ (10) I e All,.i. •..ea•-(()-rtont'd,
f!'MI 5:00 PM) C1lll. An1tls vs.
MtW Ycwt Y1nkM1 tt N.Y.
'0 Sir O'Cloti: Mtwlt: "Rtt•-11
lie flJ'" (Ki·A) '59-Vlncent Pritt.
Brtlt H11,.,.
C'Jl ... (C}(IO) m I LM LllCJ (60)
ID 11t111111 (C) 130)
Ql) (]}MIU Doqill (C) (90) m Wiid'• ..... ? 130l
0) IMnl:ld Dmnt T111r1 (30)
Ill -(CJ (!O) "" ......
l '!O filMIC -..., (t) (60)
m .hUJ D11ke ._ (30)
tiJ 11) Nllrdltf·l r\nklty (C) (30)
9 Cll ID "'"' (Cl 130) f&I fKlll 111 SWtdn (C) (30) "Un·
de:r !ht Mldni1ht Sun." Tht etl1Ct1
of Ar ctic Clrclt Mldni(ht Sun lfl
demonstr1!1d In Swldlslt UfL au Ko11c1n "' tC> <&01
7:00 6 CIS Ewen In& M1wt (Cl (30)
Walllf Cronkite.
fJ Mlt't Mr LIM? (C) (30) m l'1AWn (C) (30) Allin lud'·
den hOlls.
YLH
"". Q) 00 ..,,.,. -(CJ (I W) °"' ,. ii ...iMd ..
'" Anttria• phtnolrlteo• n!Mf ttlt• .. • IOOft •• fV1111 of ttlt
Hitt! Gow. RocUfllltr lfW Ml •
11 l'tesldlnt Ntlon't -11! tmOt'
111 lhown. lllCludln1 n '"tttY1"
wltll Prttldtnt Dll'ltlitr. AllO!hlf
ston tells of tllt r\Cllllt lllt• Pl' CIP~• In the WGri6-Abu Dhabl-
c1u1ht It mldPOlnt lft treMtorm.:
tlon lram leudtl dtMrt 1he!kdo111
to ZOOl·C'tlllury oll·flnanctd llloPlt.
Tonla'lt's tdllion tltO "ports Dll
th• poJltletl prllon1rs who ha~•
ISCIPld from GrllCI 1nd ttslHY kl
1111 "currellt 1116 tyil11111tlc ust"
of !Off\rit bf tilt 11C11ril)' Pollcl
and otMr 11111tlts In tllll count11.
0 -• (t) (!O) '"' .... dlrta'll'll PIP1ni lrt ft1tu1td In I
muslul "'Beith Pllty." lllmtd on
th1 nst eoeat « floride's loncbolt ,.,,
fD RO F11tlrtl (60) '1hl Rl1t end
Fill of Mor1rt.• mr ..... (JO)
,,,. a a o .... .., iCJ 001 ""' tries lo coltlCt ~ dtbll lonl·
O'Ytrdut • lluck ontr kl find htr-
self • uptlft of • COIH'tin1 lliA·
bitlr {J. Pt! O'M11ttY). (R)
o @m mn,. <•> '"' wWllo'1 Got tht Bundltr" Pollet
end cr\111lnalt Mtrdl for • mlss!n1
n U1t e.ontalnll'lt $150,000 In stoltn
"'°"'1• (R)
fJ ""'* (C) (30) ltd Meyers.
PEANUTS
STEVE ROPER
IT W>"1T IA< FAULT .. llOPER/
"TliE THING THEY'Re 1'4UNTIMO M! FORl ·-JT NEEDN'T HAVE HAPPINED/ -J 'llw'ENT
HOME 'TO ASK
EDIE TO TAKE ~
ME BACK .'
-AND SME
WAS WILLING/
PERKINS By John Miles
m Mdl11e'1 RIV)' (30)
Q) C!l """"' (CJ (30)
m * CHIC·Y PARTIES 'N * LOVELY POWERS GIRLS
DOING THEIR 'THING' *
m1 1p1c14 1wor1111 "'ltilltr (C)
(&l) A story of wom111 irt t man'•
world. f11turtd t r• 18'111'11 pro-
feuion1I 'll'l)llltn; JI.Ide• lit• Bul-
1rio • "' Dbtrid """ • '" JUDGE PARKER
Ho;s; Or • .ltnny, lrom tilt Philip. 1 '!!1 .. -----· !""---... By Harold Le Doux
EE) Museu11 Open HoUll (30) "lrlb-
11 C,1rY1n11 From New Gu Intl."
Hosl-curt!Of Is RUUlll Canllllf .......
(S ({)TM Clld Cuys (t) (30)
m 1111nd \JI t11t s..11 (C) (30)
m h• """ <C> 130)
7:30 D 9 !JJ Llnt1r 1c1 (&ll Scott
l1nctr d1st0't'trs lhil Duth Yalle1
P!WIUOI mor1 pe1il1 thin those
of heat ind wild an!mats wh1t1 Ila
stumbles into In outlaw's (Ra Hol-
1111n) t1mp wflllt JUMYilll mlnin1
ptoperty. (R)
D tll C!l m"" '"" ICJ 160) "AU -Our Yast11d1ys." C1pt. Ki1t
M1. Spock 1nd Dr. McCoy 111 trap.
pld in the p;ilt by 1 m1chlne just
hours bef011 the planet II ID u -
plodf. (R)
0 .lltk '"'"' (30)
0 @ m !fl Mod ..... (CJ (60) ~ptalnGreer, C.H SUr1ery." WllU.
pfnes. 11 Quffll of Ancell HOSC1il1I; 11
hwmtr l1111ni1 diampion Gus.sit
Mo11n: •nd Ruth Brooks, President ot ttMi Lapinal Company.
fl) CllllCM Attlt1ntt (C) (30)
IO;OOIJ 5(j)CIS Men Sptdtl ltl
(60) "Don't Count 1tle Candles..
Loni Snowdon"s Emmy 1w1rd·
winnln1 first v1ntu11 inlo the lie!d
of 1rlevision dccument.uies: Is r•
bmdcast. Tht proifllm euminn
tht problem• of •flna: throu(h th1 •Y• of the crut end tlHJ humble,
th1 ticll Ind lht poor. (R)
om-1CJ '"" o ®m m'"' ._ <CJ '"" 0 1111111 (t) (60)
ED USC Miiiie flltinl (60) John croWn hosts • Pl'otr•m with cemst
Gabor Rejto 1nd pt1nist Al lct R•Jlo
ti the USC School of Music..
ti! Mn Alli di ki M11.tt (C) (30)
work!nt at um:ltrcover )Gb1 ln I llt.30 (9 News (C) (30) Bill Johns. hospital to blocll naraitlts tfllrtes, Pet1, Linc uld Juli1 SIJS99C1 1 @m F1ll1Rt Corut11 (30)
hiaJlly mpec:ttd htad n11r11 (Kin.
H1mllton) ill a narcotics robbtry. II __ 0 __ -
(R) :00 -U 1!101 wi °""'News ('C)
0 Mlllitn $ hir. 9hfir II_. 0 AltrM Hitdact
(rom1nc1) '61-Paul Newman, »-O Mftir. (C} -tlolnt S.turda1'
annt Woodward. Sidney Poltltf, (drama) '5S-VICtor Mat11r1, filch·
Difh11111 C.1roll ard Ea:arr.
mtidl., c ........ <e> (30) m~•..., CC> Roll•"'" CD......., ,. ... (60) rett, Rl!ttta ffu(lla, Carl Betz. M·
Ian Dr1k1, ltli.nd l Somrntrvlli. fD frtlldl CW (30) Julll Child arid DMllY Cox 1uat.
prapel'fll roast let <I lamb. m Motir. "ltdJ' ~ l.ilMll" al~ di ,..._ (30) fdrtm1) '47-Jtne Carr, fr1ncis L
Sul!iv11l.
1:00 IJ ZIMI Cr., (30)
m Hanf (30)
ED ftat~" <60J
11) Dbcotlttq111 1 Co-Ct (C) (60)
1:30 O 9 Cil T\t Libera Show (C)
(60) Comedl1n Geor11 Gobel, th1
Danish hust11nd·1nd-wil1 .:ina lNm
ol Nina and fredllik. Australilln-
bom lin11r-d1nCfi·tt1rtn Trtshl
Hobie a!)d Frend! puppeteer And11
Trallon sen• up an lnttmatlonal
potpourri of music ind comedy 11
1utst1. llbertce's ktybGlrd concert
spot lt Livi'• "A-Flat Major.• Ht
lfl) (}) tlJ Ci) 9 Cl) -(C)
ED R••P• ..... Conftnnc9 (30}
11:30 0 MoYlt: '"r•ll str1nllf" (wt.!I·
t rn) '57 -Joel Mc:Cr11,
0 dl @ m Ttal111t Shn (C) Flip -Wilson aullllltutt hosts. and
Hines. Hin• 1nd 0.d 1utst.
0 M0tit:: .,Si""'*'• lmystlfJ)
'47-A'tl Glrdlllf', Frid MtcMutrlJ'.
0 @ Cil Ill"" ..... (CJ »ey returns. Guesb 111 Ruth Gor-
don, H1rvl}' StoM, Gu7 M1rb end
H1111ny Youn1m1n.
t lso pt1ys "F11li111 In Love" Ind lZ:!O m """' 4'h1 lmpo!.Slbll D1e1m."
CJ @@ @rll Julil (C) (30) i_ovt m ~It Thet~ '1ht Wlddin1
11 • M1ny-Si1hted Thini.M A 1irl· Of l!lll M•riftle.
lriend 1sk1 Juli• to help lier meel
1 fellow sht h11 nipped over •nd
is un1w1r1 th•t h• is Julil'1 boy-1%:45 0 Mtvi1: "Cenlrablftd Sptin• (ad+
friend Ted Ntwm1n, 1strospace de-venture) '58 -Rich1rd ,,...,...
1i1n«. (R)
0 Giltlt MICl[wll's l.u. H•ll tt~r (C) (30) St1n II.an ton •nd 1:00 CJ 0 Nns (C)
C.mJyn .lonn 1u1st (R) 9 Co1111nunltf lullttkl l11rd (C)
O @Cil m It T1ka. Thief (C)
(60) ''Get Mt to lht Rl'IOlutlon
on Timt." An Industrial cartel maku 1:15 IJ Movit: '11lt CrMD• Wt~"
1 secret contract with 1 rmllutlon. (mystify) '55--fr1nk l~1;o,, M1ri
1ry le1der, tnd Alu1ndtr Mundy Is B\anchud.
t'311ned to stt1r the document
from 1 bu11l11-pniof life. (R) m""' ,,.. (CJ l'Ol
fD 1111 fir Yow Ull (C) (60)
WEDNESDA Y
DAYTIME MOVIES
1:30 m All·Mi(ht hr. "Ct1tnt. Inc!
"Dt1th P1ys in Dolltrt,. end
.. Slll•td of Atl.tntit. ..
1
11:008"1\t ttP llMil till H1wl" (Id·
W:nlu11) '33-Camlt Lomblrd, C.11
G11nt.
1%:30 m "RMl!p ti the I JNl1ton"
(1dventu1e) '62-M!ckey H1r1itaJ.
.,Thi Prttendtl" ld11ma) '47-AI· ~ Dtkker, C.th1rlne Cr1l1.
z:ao t;D '1ln•1111n blind" (iitltnte·lit-
9:00 0 '"TII• Mort tfll MwrW' (com-tio~) '49-Barton Mtcl1n1, Ylrctnla ~) '43-htn Arthur, Joel McCrt•. GrtJ.
0 "I'll Nmr rorpt Y111'' (d11ma) J·oo-H"°" C.H f ... .. '51-T)'fl>!ll Powtr Ann Blyth. · -rM 1 n1 Q (C) "11lt Jt.w.t If 111 ... 11 (dtt.mt} 'SZ -G1ry Mwrill, Bette
Stower" (dr1m1) ·~Jtnt Russell, DaYis. Shel!11 Wlntm.
Rlch11d E11n. 14:30 6 "RNd ti tit" (musical) '47-
1:30 m "The Grtt11 Man" (comtdy) Bob Hope, 81nt CroSbJ, DorothJ
'5'7""""'11st1rr Sim, Jilt Ad1ms. l11110111,
e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
Qu•lity' Printin9 ind D1p1ndable Servic•
for more thin • qu1rt1r of 1 century.
PILOT PRINTING
2111 WIST IAUOA lll'D., NIWPORT llACH -142 .. )21
OKA.V •• PON'T MAKE ME SOllNP LUCE
A. LIAR, SAM! HA.VE Hf2 TMl NK I'VE
INTERRUPTEP A VEr-F
IMP011'TA.NT COfilFEi0KE!
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
WELmM_tjsnJDENlS! THIS SEMINAR
FEATURcs A COUl\SE IN AD\IANCED
DEPRAVITY KNOWN l\S SADtSTICSlt!
MUTI AND JEFF
MUTT,T~E
POODLE BUG
MUST BE
HUNGRY!
GORDO
...
50 AM II
LETHIM SIT
"!llERE AND
STARVE!
o.
MISS PEACH
WE'VE MEYER. MET, Mr.PK'IVR
!UT MY M~ 15 "58EY 9'ENCtt
Y«JllLP IT IE f'OSSUILE FO« 'IOI
TO COME 10 MY HOME THIS
EVENING?
• ••
• ,
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S«IEn.rY EA.rLIER.M.ISS rorr.vn; Ml.PRIVE«!
~ANP EXPLAIMEP I NEEP LE6Al AP\'1(£
TMAT 1 PO HA.VE A ANP, NATlllAU.Y, l'P
f'REVIOCl5 ~ PAY 'ft)ll roe YOUr
TIME~
By Ferd Johnson
A~D tTS COM?u;TSLY
SICK!iNIN<;,oU!> BE IN~
BOl<N 30 'Yt;~~~ )l -roosoo~,
~)
By Tom K. Ryan
. \\(X)l() IT l!E AWRIGHT IF I JUS'
GPDWl.ED ER SQ'.\ETIHNG?GNASHIN'
Willi ONLY ONE 100TH IS SOl\TEf\
...
DIFFYCULT!
By Al Smith
'OOOOL.ESUG/ ALWAyS
ASK TO HAVE 'THINGS
PASSED "TO YOIJ!
By Gus Arriola
..
Ii TH•
11 WORJ.l)
l . 15 II SQUARE, I FiOACH r II •
>l'.J(}
KNOW
IT, /V.B~f •
By Mell
i
' .
THAT'f 'TRUf!.
W..0 CAN VOL.I
T!WST l>ETTE.I{.
THAN A MOTHE.I<:?
ri/ICANCINE,oo you
'111ULY CONFIDf! IN
'!'OL.IR MOTHl!R 1
! Pf!FINITnY ""· r
TELL Hl!ll: ALC MY
F~lf!ND!'> .sec;~eT~.
I ,
I
DA(LY 'ILOT JS
JAZZ MAN -Paul Newman, above, pla.ys a Jan
man living ill Paris, tonight at 7:30 on Channel 9,
in the motion picture, 40Paris Blues ... Joanne wooa·
ward and Diahann Carroll are c~t .a~ lw~ girls who
fall in love with Newman and Sidney Poi.tier.
TEI,.EVISION VIEWS
Many Shows
In the Shop
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -WbHe lhe nation's televis·
ion viewers b ave been watching moon-walks,
princely investitures and re-runs, many_ of televis--
ion's entertainmenL vehiole6 have been Jn the shop
for overhauls, minor and major.
Some show s, of course, are running so smoothly
that any real remodeling would be downright f~l·
hardy -"Laugh-In" and ''Bonanza" to mention
the two front runners.
THE YOUNG stars of ''Mod. Squad'' a show
aimed at Lhe younger set, will have acquired a
snappy red ·sport car, replacini their over-age
statio11 wagon. And Chief Ironside's reward for
solving all those crimes will be a sleeker paddy
wagon to speed to the scenes of action.
Ruius of "The Good Guys," however, will
simply forget about his beat-up taxi, a comedy de-
vice that didn't work out well anyway. Stars Bob
Denver and Herb Edelman will moye lo a new,
more attractive diner and concen1;'ate on short
orders.
Love and romance wilt continm! as important
ingredients. "Jeannie" the genie, will marry her
astronaut master; Barbara ~ldon Of "Get
Smart," will become the mot r of twin secret
agents, and there will be a ne baby in the "Be-
witched" house as well as a new husband -Dick
Sargent replacing Dick York as Darrin.
THE NEW CHILD also will have a nurse, an
Insecure, neuro1ic witch played. appropriately
enough, by comedienne Alice Ghostly.
Doris Day's series \viii have a whole new TV
Jook. The star \vill be moved to the city and a job
on a fashion magazine, thus gi\ing Lhe comedy
series some of the sheen and glamour audiences
Jove in Day movies.
Alexander Mundy, the cool cat-burglar of 11It
Takes a Thief," will acquire a father -Fred
Astaire, playing a slick senior Raffles in about one·
third of the episodes.
"The Flying Nun'' will be undergoing more
subtle changes. It sµrted out as a wann and slight-
ly saccharine series two seasons back, and emerged
last year with emphasis on slapstick and broad
comedy which ultimately got a little out o! hand.
Now it is being pulled back toward the original
concept, with that keystone comedy police chief re-
placed by an appealing young boy, an orphan, in
the cast of regulars.
"HERE COME the Brides." will be played In
an 1870 Seattle that has grown into an im pressively
la rger town over the summer -and the stories
will lean more on action and adventure than
romance. It is a change of space designed to beef
up its m'ale audience.
"The Virginian." will have a new ranch hand,
Tim Matheson , to replace David HarLman who rode
off to a new series, "The Bold Ones" and "Daniel
Boone" wilt have a new side-kick. ex-athlete Rosey
Grier, playing an escaped slave who was raised by
Indians .
Dennis the Metaace
'Mo.~MM($,l 1lON'r JOG. EYf.lll' SO mtH
I JUST JitlC(' A Umt IWI06lt."
I
~
I
I
\
---------------------·-------------.....------·
Jf DAILY PILOT Tursdl)', Auguit '· 1'169
Kindly Giartt Brown
May Do-It for Rams
Dy A1soclaled Pn11
Behemoth Bob Brown de1troy1 foes on
the field yet to his teammates he's the
kindly giant. •
Many feel the Los An&eles Rims' ac-
quJslUon or the S.fOOl..f~. 290-J>!lund of·
tensive tackle from Philadelphia could
br!.ng the NaUonal Football League UUe
to the West Coast.
"Someone up there must have been
smUing on me," Brown declares. "When
that trade was made, t thought I bad just
been given a prellll:nt.
"Thls i.s the fiiftlst bunch of athletes
I've ever been associated with."
Just then Charlie Cowan, a fellow
tackle, chided, "Look , Bob Brown is
being interviewed. We have a star in our
midst."
"Hey, write this down," Brown ordered
the reporter. "Thal guy over the.re, all
these guys, are really marvelous. You
want to know il that trade made me hap-
py! Well, man, it was better than sex."
Brown and defensive back J im Nettles
came from the Eagles for defensive back
Irv Cross and linemen Don Chuy and Joe
Carollo.
Coach George Allen says the Brown
trade is possibly the best he's ever made.
During a scrimmage with the San
Diego Chargers, David 11Deacon" Jones
was asked, "Isn't it fun watching Browo
oot there ?"
Arthur Knocks Laver Jones, who plays opposite Brown in in--
trasquad scrimmages, replied:
Who Can Afford to Snub . •
"It sure i1 fun to be watching Brown .
lt 's a heckova Jot better than being any
closer. You 've gotta have a few tricks up
your sleeve if you're going to play
against him. Believe me, I Imo~·."
$600,000 Pact? Ashe
Just then Brown flattened the
Chargers' Ron Billingsley, 6-9, 290. He did
it with finesse and such quickness that
some of the Rams on the sidelines didn't
even see the actual contact between the
two players. •
Few men could afford to turn down
$120,000 per year. Y~ Arthur Ash~ says. he couldn't af-
ford to give up hts affairs ~o become _a
contract pro with the National Tennis
League. M he is quoted in a recent story ap-
pearing in the New Ydrk P~, "I value
my independence too much.
Since the contract he .":'as orf~ed was
for a five-year span, it s obvious that
freedom is worth a great deal to ~he
world's top rated amateur • • • like
$000,000. t . t The story in the Post goes on o pain
an incredible pli:tµre of ~!he's alleged
prowess and worth to tennis.
And it includes a slam or sorts to
Rodney "The Rocket" Laver, the Corona
GLIMN WMITI
........................
WHITE
WASH
••••••••••••••••••••
del Mar resident who Is quite likely the
best player who ever lived. Rod will get a
chance to answer Ashe in person if the
two collide at the U.S. Open in Forest
Hills, N.Y., later this month.
Here's a few excerpts from the Post
lilory:
"6onald Dell. Ashe's friend, adviser
and boss on the U.S. Davis Cup team, has
s ai d the U.S. ()pen champion doesn't
realize his own value. Dell thinks Ashe
could be to tennis what Arnold Palmer
was to golf.
"In his own way, the country's ranking
player has that certain charisma which
endeared Palmer, unlike Jack Nicklaus,
to the golfing public. Such a pertonaUty
would be invaluable as a new big-money
era of tennis dawns.
"The coontry's sporting public. Ashe
said, wanl.8 a winner, No. I ; an
American, No. 2, and color, No. 3.
"Rod Laver, the Austr alian touring pro
who needs to win the U.S. Open for h.is
second tennis grand slam, has two things
against him. Ashe said. The red-hairtd
Jefthander is not American and he is not
colorful on the court.
"Tile current mishmash of player
categories bothers Ashe. 'I wish they'd
forget the word amateur.' Ashe said.
Some people are under the impression
that because of a quirk in the USLTA
rules, we can play for prize money.
That's not true. They call us players. iii·
dependent pros, not amateurs.
"Someone suggested that soon there
V!'ould be Arthur Ashe tennis shorts,
shorts, rackets, sunglasses, dry-cleaning
establishments, much in the vein or
Palmer's various enterprises."
That's quile a buildup for Ashe.
But if he and Laver lock horns at
Forest Hills, you can wager your next
several pay checks on The Rocket
without much fear of )osing.
Short Clrrull•
Looks like the Rams are beaded for a
tremendoua 1ate Friday nlgbl i.a their el·
Angels Battle
NY Tonight
hiblilon football opener "·Ith lbe Dallas
Cowboys.
Game officials are looking for a
minimum of 70,000. Pre-game tJcket salts
have already nettt:d more than $215,000
and It may be the biggest Tlme1 charity
series turnout since 1951 when 91,935
clicked through Coliseum turnstlie1 to see
the Rams cremate the Washington
Redtkins, 53-14.
E1roy Hirsch was tbe Ram hero Jn that
one, hauling in three touchdown pa91es. •
Richie C<lnigliaro, brother of · the
Boston Red Sox hotshot, is described as a
shy youngster, not blessed with im·
mediaie athletic success.
However, the 15-year-old did hit over
• 300 at Swampscott prep school in the
Commonwealth of Massachuse tts. He
plays in the outfield like Tony, his big
league brother.
Projections indicate a ~O million
television contract will be awarded to Lei
Angeles for the 1976 Olympics -if th at
city 11 successful In lls bid to put on the
wor!d sports extravaganza,
The 'Iii gamu In l\1ealco we re worth $1
million for TV rights and the '7% Olym-
pics In Germany are bringing $13.5
million.
"Did you see that?" one asked.
''Whoosh," e.1claimed another.
Seconds later, when the Rams went on
defense, Brown filled a to\vel with ice and
approached wide receiver Wend e 11
Tucker, gasping for breath after a long
run.
"Breathe into this," Brown said. He
held the towel to Tucker's face and said;
"Breathe right through it, man. It too"k
me five years of scientific research to
figure this ou~ How does that feel. Feel
like you're p!ayin' in Minnesota ?"
Then he walked up and down the
sidelines, refreshi ng players with his
homemade remedy for tiredness, When
he was through with one customer, he
could cry, "Ice man's here, ice man 's
here."
His thick musta che turned upward into
a grin moments later when Jones walked
off the field .
"Man, I've been standin' here for five
minutes holding th.is cup of water for you.
Now if you had gotten that quarterback
sOo ner, I wouldn't have had this long a
wait," he said with mock anger.
Does he like Allen?
"He's fantastic. I mean , there is a
tremendous' rapport between the players
and the coach. But after all, when he was
fired last year and all those players stood
up and said they wouldn't play unless he
was rehired, well, that mean's the man·s
got so mething.".
A•aother Syntlietic Field Clietit
Spartan Stadium at Michigan Stale University gets its first strip of
Tartan Tur!, an arli ficial playing field surface. The nc\v field \v ill
be ready for use by Sept. 20 \\'hen J\11chigan State opens its season
against \Vashington . The project will cost $250,000 and will drastic·
CUT DOWN -Mau ry \Vill s was lhro,vn out at the
plate in St. Loui s Monday night on this play when
Card right fielder ·vada Pinson fired a perfect
throw to catcher Tim McCarver \\'ho put the tag
Ul"IT ....... 111
on the sliding Wills. \ViUs argued that McCarver
missed with the tag but ump Doug llarvey stuck
by his decision. St. Lo uis won, 2-1.
Dodgers Resume NL Wars,
S~nd Big D Against Pirates
" ' LOS AllGELES (AP) -The l<>s
Angeles ~gers will return to tbe wars·
of the wild Western Division o( the Na-
tional 1..e·~e tonight when they open a
nine-gam,}!" homestand against t h e
Pittsburgh. .Plr ates.
On the mound for the Dodgers will be
Don Drysdale, ~ agaimt the Pirates'
Steve Blass, 10-7.
The Dodgers ·limped home ~1onday
night after a 7-12 mark on their longest
road trip of the season. However, the
club is only two games behind leading
Cincinnati, good for third spot in a five·
team chase.
St. Louis sent the Dodgers reeling west
with a 2-1 com-from-behind victory Mon-
day night, as J ulian Javier, Redbird
ally reduce maintenance costs and player injuries. Michi gan State
joins the Astrodome, the University o( Washington and University of
Tennessee, \vhich also have artificial football fields.
stt1'.>nd-baseman, tagged ace Dodger
reliever Jim Brewer for a game-winning
homer. The Cards took the series J.1.
Walter· Alston , the Dodgers' manager
and a veteran of 16 summers in the Na·
tional League, said "This is the toughest
Dodger Slat<!
A~,. J Ood•~r• \ii Pllhburoh 7:55 p.m. ICFI ll<ICll
Aug. 6 Artail• •I New York JO:H •. m. KMPC (1101
A"ll. t Ang;Js •I BOllO!l '=25 p.m. KMPC C110 I
race I've seen. There were three teams
in it in 1964 and three in it in 1959, but [
can't remember one with five teams so
close.
Alston was cheered by the news that
the Dodgers' number one clutch hitter
before an appendectomy sidelined him -
first baseman Wes Parker -w\IJ begin
to work out with the club fonight and
should be availabl e for service in about
10 days.
LOS ANCELES n . LOUIS
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C•aw!ord, ph 1 o o o
B•-tr.p 0000
Tolal1 ll l 1 o Tut•h TW<> oul Wl\"1 winning run scored.
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St. Louis ooo cu
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Time -1:0J. A!t1nd1nc1 -:M,115,
Namath Not
FBI Fan After
Being Tailed
NEW YORK (A P) -Quarterback Joe
Namath of the New York Jets said in a
magazine article Monday th at he was
being followed by agents of the Federal
Bureau or Investigation during last
season and had a visit from the FBI at
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., the week before
last January's Super Bowl.
Namath said the Super Bowl vislt had
r esulted from a threat against his life on
the Jets' previous via it to Miami.
"I've got lo admit that I'm not one of
lhc biggest fans of the P'Bl these days,"
Namath continued.
NEW YORK (AP) -Rudy May , who
after 11 straight relie! appearances was
given a chance in a starting role, hopes to
keep the California Angels out of the
American League's We.stem Division
cellar as the club begins an eight-game
Baltiniore T ea.111 Plarte Escapes Collisio11
"I mean, I don't1mind them tapping m:v
phones. I don't eVen mind them playing
the tapes for every tourist who walks frito
their ofrices. I just wish to hell that
lhey'd pay their share of the phone bill.
"It wasn't nice of lhe: FBI to send com·
plete strangers to talk to me in Fort
Lauderdale. The least they could have ~one was send the age nts who'd bee.TI tall·
1ng me during the season. On TV Tonight
Ch•nn<!l 5 , 5 p.m.
read trip agllIJISt the New York Yankeea
tonight. •
JI.fay, at one l.ime considered one of the
nwre promillng lefthandf.rs in the game,
has pitched well agalnst New York twice
e:lrlier this &ea.son in s t a r t i n g
a ·signmcnts.
On May 6, he lost 2-1 with his own error
p1\•lng the way to defeat and on May 16
k:;t ¬her 2·1 decision after he had a
o e·h.lll.er until the ninth.
The Yanks will counter with their ace
~~I Stottlemyre, 15-6. The 1ame will be
1~·,vlsed back to Southern Callfontia
fr:>m i ankce Stadium.
The Angels will play two·games In Nt\v
fork, three in Boston ovu the ~·cekend
1nd cooclude U.e trip with three in
Detroit.
-
Lucky Dress Does It for U CI Coed
SOUTH ORANGE, N. J. (AP) -Patil
Hogan'& blue eyes fla shed anger but she
wound up smiling after a scranlbling
upset of Kristy Pigeon for the womcn·s
singles title in the Eastern Grass Cou rts
Tennis Championship.
hi woo because I ~·ore my lucky
drtss," the 19-yeaN>ld UCI student
beamed. "\Vhen I play, though, I keep
two things in mind: Get your serve in
and return the oth'1" guy 's."
Miss Hogan overcame a first set loss
for , U, &-:J, 6-4 victory. Pi11M Pigeon is
ranked sixth national!)' while Mis9
Jlogan, \l.'ho was not rated In !his touma~
ment. rank! 10th nationally.
In the mt:n ·li doubles {inal, St.an.Smllh
and Bob l ,utz knocked off Arthur Ashe
and Clark Craebner, 6·3, 9-7.
CLEVELAND -A Uni ted Airlines of-
ficial denied a report that 11 chartered jet
plane carrying the Balti1norc Orioles
carnc "'ithin several hundred yards of
midair collision 1\1onday while ap-
proaching Cleveland"s Airport.
"There was no near miss." said the
airline's press relations 1nanager. '"No
near n1lss r<'port "'as filed to the control
boarfi by the pilot." He s:\ld federal law
required pilots to file near miss reports
when thev occurred.
'J'hc pl:i°ne ~·as rcportrd to ha\e h11nkcd
sharply to the right to avoid hi~tinJ a
light single engine plane which wa s mak-
ing an approach at the same ILme.
H.OCKY r-.iOU/\ii, N.C. -Jim Gardner.
president of the American Ba~ketball
Association. challenged the Nation;i l
Basketball Association P.londay lo a
\\'Or\d championship game or series
bel\\·een the champs of the two leagues.
1-Ie Also said b.e will "TMe NBA l'<>m·
missioner \\'alter K,enned y to suggest a
midseason game bct"·een all-stars rron1
the ABA and NBA.
CHICACO -Second baseman Bobby
Knoop of !hf' Chicngo \\'hite Sox will he
out indeftnltcly w1tn11 frilcture of the rin1
or his right e)•e socket , the club an-
nounced "1onrlay.
Knoop received a black t)C at
Ballimorc July 27 when attempting to ge t
Da1·e Johnson on a double ~lay.
THOUSAND OAKS -The Dallas
Cnwboys announced Monday that veteran
defe n!ive ta ckle Jethro Pugh, vl'ill not
play Friday night in the club's (ll)ening
e.1hlbition game against the 1.os Angeles
Jtnm11.
Pugh, hospitallzed wllh a slight ulcer
All:1ck la<:.\ 1\·rt'k. \\<IS in cAmp ~1onday.
l'u gh i.~ a kt'y par t of the Co\\·boys'
front four.
"I'm preUy sure they started keeping
me company right after we lost a couple
of games to Buffalo and Denver," said Namath.
"It was nothing personal. but I had five
passes intercepted in each of those
games, and the FBI or lhe CIA or
.SOITicbo;y like that got a little curious.
Nothing serious. They jusl checked my
bank depos.lls.
"I don't blame them, 1 guess. I don't
really k'now very much abou t gambllnf
.•. but l"ve. been told some people do bel
on professional football 11ames. Guys kid
me now and then.
'C'mon Joe. you want to make $50,000
this weekend"'.'' and I kid them right back.
'who do I havt lo kill ~' and they ju5t
laugh. They're onlv fooling around, but
somctin1es the F'Bl doesn'l have ony
sense of humor."
"
••
. . . .. . .. ... . ~'~ ~: .. ~.~~~~~~~.,..,...~ ........................................................................ 1111 .......... "' .. """1111 .... .. I :: ... " ' • .. •
'
Baldwin Drills South Club
To Pitch
At Big A;
On Protecting Quarterback
Sandy Kouf ax has qreed,~lo
come oot of rtllrtmen( for 6oe
aftemool\ to pa~pate liilhe
A n g e ls-Dodgers Otdtbiers
Game al Anahtirn S~
SUnday, :i\ug. tr. 11 The fir.st-ever mt\jor ·league
oldtimers game in 8'.rthern
Calllorn!a will ,be a tpree.tn·
nlng preliminary " th e regularly achedulect An,els
game against the woi;id cham·
pion Detroit Tlgers.,1 Koufaxt ont d three
finaliats ln the ~nl voting [, for "grutest: ever"llefthanded
pitchers, wUI be attn in action
locally iOr the I~ time since an arthritic elbC ended his
brilllllil weer er the 1916
sel.IO(I, .., I
KouJax i¥1D' ~ the starter for the Dodie whose plt·
chlng staU ludes Don
Newcombe, C r 1 Erskine,
Jo.'1nny Podres and Clem
Labine, The &I.gels' staff in-
cludes EJl Grba, Ryne Duren,
Ted B°'fllletd, Don Lee, Bar-
ry Latm:an. and Bob Lee.
Other st111 who have ac-
cepted invlatioiu to t h e
August If dauic are Dodgers
Jackie R~n. Charlie Neal,
Norm La&er, Don Zimmer,
Elmer Vlfo, Irv Noren, Chuck
Essegla\f Dolph Camilli and
Babe .Qtrman; Angels Steve
Bilko1•1 ~ed Kluszewskl, Earl
Avern, Billy Moran, Joe Kop-
pe, lilly Consolo. A Ible
Pealon and Ken Hunt.
A/Jo scheduled-to appear are
P~ic Coast League Angel
sws Stan Hack, Bob Schef-
fbg. Jigger Statz, Lou
lfovikoff, Billy Schuster, Lou
Stringer, Carl Dittmar, Bill
.Kelly and Max West.
Koufax, three times winner
of the Cy Young award and
the National League's most
valuable player in 1963, plans
to stay in the lineup long
enough to_get to swing a bat.
By EARL Glirrl.EY °' .. Dtlfr ...... , ....
Tom Baldwin lan't aL 111
ba>bful about° telllnl )'Oil he's
a born optimist and you can't
help but feet be's genuinely
excited about his South an-ltar
team that will play t.be North
in Orange County's lMUal au.
star prep t.eam Aug. 14 at
Orange Coast College.
After a ICrlmm"e session
Saturday, .Baldwin expres$ed
satisfaction with all phases of
his team's game ei:cept for
pass blocking.
On Monday , he had the
South work a solid half-hour
on pass blocking and now he
.sounds llke a man ready for
the opening whistle.
Anderson
Challenges
At Elims
Steady Roland Alexander of
\Vest Los Angel~s continued to
set the pace Monday night at
Kon.a Lan,s' West Coast
'-fatch Game Eliminations but
finally a legitimate challenger
has appeared.
Mary Anderson. an Anaheim
bowler, posted a four-game
938 block Monday evening and
earned 200 bonus pins by win-
ning all of his four match
games. Alexander, steady as
always, rolled an 810 to re-
main in the lead by 87 pin!.
And'non hopes to boot
Al,xander off his perch next
Monday evening at 9:15 when
three-month, weekly tourna·
ment resumes, "If you need an e1tra first
baseman, I'll finish the game
there," he told A n•g e l s
management. "Don't forget I
y,·as a first base.man at the
University of Cincinnati
(1954).''
Reserved and box seats for
the .Qldtimers Game are on
sale daily at Anaheim Stadium
and at Mutual Agencies,
Wa llichs Music City, Buffums
Department Stores and all
ARTISTIC PAIR -This Laguna Beach High duo will be suited up for Orange
County's North-South prep all-star classic Aug. 14 at Orange Coast College.
Centering the ball to quarterback Steve Wiezbow ski is Steve Klosterman, a
~pounaer who'll play center and linebacker. Wiez'pawski will start in the
defensive backfield and will be available for quarterbacking duty if needed.
Several othen In the 16-man
semlfinalist field advanced
Monday night. Defending
champion Lamar Keck rolled
a 909 , "t9-1nove into fourth
place. 'Glendale's Foy Belcher
dropped to third from second
with an 833.
'lbe highest bl«k rtgislertd
Monday was a 143 by Bob
Kennicutt of Santa Fe Springs.
He moved from &th lo eighth
with the eUort. United california Banks i n h II'
Orange County. Tong est '-'amp
The Oldthners Game will ----=--------'"-----Yet
begin at J p.m., to be followed
by the Angels and Tigers at 2.
Stanford~
JCs Nab
Grid Aces
N ye Says Hardworking
Dallas Ready for Rams
The Orange Coast area's
two aemlftna1ists failed to gain
appreciable ground. Fred RJc-
cllli, Westminster, dropped
rrom eighth to 13th with an 829
and Fountain Valley's Dick
Braasch moved from 16th to
14th with an 854. , ,
Anderson picked lhe right
night to show up with a hot
hand. He seemingly placed a
hex on hls opponents becawe.
hts four match game. op-
ponents could average only 745
against him, yet all 16 players
topped 800 for the evening.
Stanford University a n d
three junior colleges in Los
Angele.! have won t h e
recruiting war for the services
of players in the third annual
Big Brothers All-Star Football
game, which will be played
Aug. 14 in the Los Angeles
Coliseum.
Stanford topped all four-year
schools by nabbing f i v e
players, including St. Paul's
A\1-ClF Southern Section
quarterback Jim Wise.
ST ... NFOllD UI -Ctl!'>Cln( Jlllvtr'
Jl"" Wlw (QI!, SI. P111I; Mike Sobolik
IHI ), A1t1n1..v : "llle-t•lt S..Mf••On
!HIJ. $1. Fttntltl ~ Mtrl!n CT·Gl,
St. P11111 tnd Pierre" Ptrrtull If), 51.
Jolin losco:i. UK 17! -Cllv pl1'rU' IHt'I: l11kt (GJ, Ctrson; Gt.., Brtmttft.r CT!, Sin
Ftrntndo. NOTll.E O.t.ME Ul -Ctlhotlc
Plrr"•<l John TrrH()lull: !Fl). Pl111 X;
Mlkt Etultnll tllll, Notre Dtmt,
$1\ermtn 01k1.
$AN OIEGO STATE 111 -Cll'r pit· Vet"I St9\tt MllC;P>ell (0111, "'trbonM;
Don Gr1r (Fiil, s.tn Pr<lro... SAN JOSE STATE Ul -Ct!llo!k
Pll'rt'I Joe Hlck1 !Hiil. MOunt
Ctrmt11 ltO" lttuchmtn IEJ. )el",..
Oii.EGON !O -Clf't plrr"tr Ok:k
•r•nc:• ITJ. Ttn .
THOUSAND OAKS -You
could call it homecoming, bul
that implies fun and games,
and it's been something less
than that for Blaine Nye in the
camp cf the Dallas Cowboys
this summer.
"They tell me this is the
toughest camp yet," says the
second-year guard who once
threw bis v.•eight around for
Servile High School i n
Anaheim. "We've worked real
hard. The coach is looking for
that little extra to put us over
the hump this year."
The coach is Tom Landry
and he'll send the Cowboys
against the Rams Friday night
at the Coliseum in the Times
Charity Game.
"We'll be up for that one."
promises Nye. "We always_
want to beat the Rams."
He says, ''The practices
have been real encouraging.
We've been working a Jot
more o(l execution. detail and
coodilioning. Proficiency is
what we're after. We must be
proficient."
Big words?
Yes, but Nye can handle
them. In the off-season he is a
teaching assistant at the
University of Washington
where he is completing work
on his masters degree in
physics.
Nye did his undergraduate
work al Stanford where he
payed defensiv' tackle for
John Ralston. Drafted fifth by
the Cowboys last year, he was
shifted to offensive guard and
now he backs up both starting
guards, John Niland and John
\Vilbur.
How They Stand
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Easl Division
As a guard, one of his prime
responsibilities is to provide
protection for quarterback
Craig Norton, and he was ask-
ed to evaluate the ex-Universi-
ty of California All-American.
"He's ju.st great," ~aid Nye.
"I have all the. confillence in
the world in him . H''s really
taken charge, and of course
you already known he's got a
rocket arm."
Blaine thinks Morton can
take the Cowboys to the Super
Bowl, something that t.1orton's
predecessor, Don Meredith,
couldn't quite pull off,
although he came agonizingly
close.
''.I'm sure we can go all the
way," says Nye. "It's going lo
depend on how the b21l
The. semifinal field mntinues
through the next two Mon-
d&ys. whereupon it will be
slict:d to the top four who
return Aug. 25 for the cham-
pionship rolloff. The winner
will thtn engage the: winner of
, a simil1r tournament at San
J< .. ranclsco's L & L Castle
Lanes In San Francisco over
the Labor Day Week.end.
The standings figure to be
juggled considerably this Mon-
day. Only 53 pins !eparate
ninth-place Benny Beeker of
Gardena and Rkcllll, in 13th.
Leader Alexander is averag·
Ing 213 for the tournament.
• Tbe Slaadht&•
I. 1111!11111 Altxlndtr. WHI \.A t.ff;I bounces, of course, but If we '· ,...,,.,., """""°"' An1~1m '·'" learn our details, I think it will 1. Fn ,,1c11tr. G1enc111e '·"s 4. L1m1r Ktd:. llnotelt tAl1 bounce our way." s. Mlkt suv1•, Tarrt.-.u t.111
N . 23 Id la ds Ill '· 011t 011 ...... w,,, LA ..... ye IS y~rs 0 , s n ir 1. Jer.., Hl(:lier, 1:1 Mon!• t.JJ4 4 and weinlu• 255. He and wife t. e. J(emkl.rtt, s.tntr. ""' S.rlf!M t,:111 .. -o{ t . lenl'V 1,1;11r. G1rdln1 t,Jff Annabelle -she's a native 10. s. ac11wertf111r, L1 vemr t ,2s1
Idaho whom he met at Stan-11 . Gll11 Ntvj"'• Los Al•mltos •.1u 11 •. Bllll ll1m ''l• .-. ... 1111rn t ,fH ford -have a year old 11. Frtd 111cd111, w1.1m1 .. 111r '·*
d hie M II nd i•. lob "'°"""' Gtnltn Graw ''!" aug r, e ssa, a are el· u. 0 1c11: 11r11.c11. 1'"111111111n v1111r t, •
peeling another child i n ,., Al c111r1hl!I. 111 ... er.lff '·"'
MlllAr'• """' December. Hltll G•'"' -HKktr, 111
'1PU1 bJociin& WU the ont
tbln1 we hadn't spent much
time on IO we really went at it
tod•y.'' B11dwin aa id.
"The offensJve line really
responcled well -I think lt11 do a .really &ood job.,,. ~
Mond•Y wu mostly an of-
f-ve day for the Sooth -he
hid indicated after the first
scrimmage Saturday that ht!
defense: was outdistancing the
offense ao Monday be at·
tempted to shorten the. gap.
"We went through all of our
plays, just aort of runnJng
through them in trying to 1et
our timlng down. We spent
equal time on the running same and passlnc •ttack.."
AJl.CIF wingback Dln}'l
Bera, who sat out half of the
scrum with a hypere:ltended
knee, WU fr I 1 k y Mond1y,
Baldwin rtporta.
"I bad lo slow him down all .
aftemooo."
Baldwin WIS Uked wbal
aspect of the North's offensive
offulna: concerns him most.
"I've been telling our k.lds
all along that lf .they beat us
lbe'rt going to have to throw
awfully well, And for that
reason I'm worried about Bob
Canary or Savannah, w h 0
they 'll be playing at outside
receiver.
"H''s quick and small and
the type of guy who could
really hurt us if we make
m1ny mistakes in t h '
defensive. backfield."
Spikers, AAU Clash
In Beamon Inciden t
AUGSBURG, Germany apokesman aaid.
(AP) -Members of the Beamon said AAU officials United States track team
threatened today to withdraw told him he could not return
from a u .s.-Britaln meet in home Ualess he jumped
London next week following a tonight in the Augsburg meet.
verbal clash with Amateur There w1s no immediate
Athletic Union officials. comment from AAU officials
In a statement endorsed by on Bcamon's situation or the
most of the team's 4 3 threat.
members, the. athl,tes said 1be athletes also said they
they "will abdicate 100 percent would re.fuse. to participate in
from the London competition the Aug. 12-Il meet in London
-1 complete no-show" if Bob if 110-m.eur hurdler Gary
Beamon of New York, world Powers of Los Angele.! js not
record long jumper, is not reimbursed for his roundtrip
allowed to tttum to the United air ticket from Loa Angeles to
States by Thursday f o r Stuttgart. where be particlpat·
''personal emergency edlastweek.
reuons." Powers, a late addition to
The statement was adopted 1 the tum, told a reporter the
at a meeting of atbleta in a AAU 1aJd it would pay only a
hotel in downtown Augsburg. p o rt I o n of his plane fare.
They att here for tonight and George Freon, hammer throw-
We.dnesday's meet with West er, told a newsman that failure
Gennany. to honor the London comrnit-
Beamon was not scheduled ment could result in lifetime
to jump in tonJght's com-suspension from International
petition because stitches taken track and field competition for
during dental surgery were to the American m,n. He was
be removed today, a team chairman of the meeting .
Lowly Los Amigos Pulls
Cage Upset of Century
By DAVE CEARLEY
Of ftMi ~ Plllt SJfff
The n'ar-impossible hap-
pened Monday night in the
Santa Ana College gym. The
hlghly·regarded Mater Dti
Monarch! were ..rocked by the
Jowly Loi Amigos Lobos in a
starUing 48--fi5 upget in the.
Santa Ana basketball le.ague
tournament.
Los Am.JgoS 'had not notched
1 Amigos broke. 1 tie at 17
1plece, tlJ1d th' IA>bos never
trailed thueafter.
Ralph Chandos, the
Monarchs' leading scorer, sat
out the lint halt with a
sprained ankle, taUying 13
points in the Jast two periods.
H1gb-scoring guard Wernu
Raes WIS held to jlllt J points.
a victory in regular season H l Sh l league play Ind In previous un er 0
encounters with Matu Dtl Victim was rabbit hunting
had been bombed 'lt-31 and 96-with four youths, knee:led
32. down while others shot over
In other tourney contests, his head at a bird on a fenct:.
But Jn the same breatlt,
Baldwin pointed out that the
South, loo, bu a hlgl>«tane
deep pass threat in Don Helloo
of Mattr Dtl.
Baldwin, who has bad. his
club suited up in shorts and
.shoulder pads for ttgular
workout sessions, say1 he m1y
have another full-gear acrlm-
mage Thursday.
He wants ooe session under
his belt with the Soulbunerl
trying to maintain e:iecution
under the stress of bard bit-
ting.
The South coa<h had plan-
ned to concentrate o n
defensive techniques for this
e.vening.'s workout at santa
Ana.Hlg)t.
Loaran
North's
Threat
Dave Gibbs, the Troy High
School football coach who will
guide the North entry in the
Aug. 14 Orange County all-star
prep game at Orange Coil.st
Colle~e, thinkll he has a player
on hiS side who could spell Ule
difference in a close game.
He's Brant Light, the
halfback from Loara who led
the Saxons to an unbe.atea
campaign last fall .
"Brant has really played
well in our workouts," says
Gibbs, who played in the
North-South game in 1959.
"I'd say he. is our m05t
dangerous ball carrier. He's
oor breakaway guy. And I'd
say S t e v e Clodfelter from
Troy could be ·cJassllied like
that Our downfield blocking
has progressed to the point
where we hope to shake either
or both of those two loose. in
the game.''
Gibbs, who concentrated his
i•onday evening workout on
defense, said his Northerners:
were in for more of the same.
tonight The lone offe~ive
work tonight will be. tining
work on the club's 13 running
plays.
Gibb!> still hasn't decided
who he'll start at quarterback
for the. contest: The candidates
are Norm Kepner of Lowell,
Andy Bielanski of Savannah
and Dave Robertson of Garden
Grove. He: says the latter two
are the better throwers but
that Kepner is the best runner.
The North logged a twc>-hour
workout Monday, it 's longest
yet.
Gibbs reported no injuries
sustained in either Saturday's
scrimmage or in Monday'•
workout.
Today's Final
Stocks Today Santa Ana edged El Moden1, Victim suddenly atood up and
61-46, and Santa Ana V1lley was shot through the arm. was nearly upaet by Sad-1------...::.--------------
dleback, 53-50.
A dismal 4-point second
period performance by the.
Monarchs gave the Lobos the
lead at the half, 21-17.
A pair ol buckela with only a
minute left In the hatt by Lo<
LO$ AMIOOS f4'l •• l'T .. ..
K111 tl ' ' • " Knit• ' ' ' • ,_,, ' ' ' • Gtl't:11 • • ' ,.
Sl'lreul ' • • • ·-• ' ' ' HMlonllll • • • • .._..., ' • • , ,_ ' • ' ,
TC111ll .. " ,. a
MATllt Dll on •• l'T .. .. ,_, ' • ' • , ... ' • ' ,
~min • • ' • ...... ' • ' ' ·-• ' ' • ,_ • , • " ........... ' • ' ' Wtlktr • ' ' " Talft lt .. • " .. ,_..,. ... "'" LM Amltot • " " .......
Sme 5L40!Nowthe
Oow 1h gallon is easier
to get hold ot:
now 5ll.49
(qs'J189) WASHINGTON (II -Ctl!'>Cltlc Pltrtr Grw C11t!!n1 (QI), Ill~ MO!lltllfl"llr"V .
WHITTIER ill -Cllv Pltrtr Eft
llotnkl (TJ, Sin Pedro.. FULLEll.TON COLLEGE 111 -
Ctlllllllt pltvet"I S!nt Ftlt COil,
ServHtr Mire Etttn (Cl. Mtttr Otl.
MOONT SAN ANTONIO COLLEGE
111 -C111'1ot!c pl1yef'S !tin GtrtneY
fT). l ltl'oGP Amtf: 0111 l rkk IC·LI),
ll lsholi Amt!.
Baltimore
Detroil
Boston
Washinglon
New York
Cleveland
Won LGst Pct. GB
73 34 .682 -
58 47 .552 14
58 49 .542 15
56 55 .sos 19
52 56 .481 21 1h
45 64 .413 29
Blaine is one or only a ~-··~';;;;';;"';;';;-;;;;;';;-;;;;;"";;";;· ;;";;';;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;11 handful of Stanford graduates II
MAr Oii " . " ,,...,
llllVEllSIOE CITY COLLEGE Cl) -
C111'11;!1ic pltyer Ciers! $1totlcevltl\ [G·
LIU, Notr"I' Olmfl, II.Mn~.
CEIUtlTOS COLLEGE! (1) -C11t>ollc
,,1.nr Joe llttl IHI), II. Jolin IOICO. 1110 HONOO COLLEGE !1)
c.i111111c "'"'' Grt11 LH (lit), St. P1uL
West Division
t.Unnesota 67 41 .620 -
Oakland 61 42 .592 3~~
Kamas City 44 62 .415 22
Seattle 43 62 .410 22 1h
California 41 63 .393 24
Chicago 42 65 .393 24 ~
~v'1 ""ulh
Cltvtltncl 1, 1111!f'l"IOl"I I
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0n1, """' 1o;toe(lull!d
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f"H't'Mt J•,l. 11\elll
Mlnne\oll {Cllt P\CI l ·ll 11 Dflr911
IMcL1l11 1114), nleM
Oeliltnd tOl:lofot 1"1 •Ml ~ u.n I I C-ltlld tM<Dewlffl 11.10 ...
Ell11_.ltl •S), 1, hoi..,leM
S..ttl1 !lr1~r 14) •I ••ton
ICUICt lM), 11\fM
Ctll'9rnll 4.IMy •·'1 II ~tw 'fwtt !S!Gtlllmyr, 1J.I), nltltl
I(_.. (lf't !Ntf-4-tt 11 klll.
mcr1 (Hardin i-'l. nl9hl
w~r'• ••""• W.Kllln9fel'I VI Cl'licfft 11 11\ltwl\l-
krt, """'' Mllllltloll 11 °''"'"' 1119111
o.iu.nd ., (.llftltll'ld. """' ~.nit ti •011111'1. "'°"' 1t1ni11 CllJ ti 81111"""' Miit Ctll!0tnl1 11 N""' Y0tlo.
i.n pro(esslonal football, so it
has to rate as a remarkable
coincidence that he would be
substituting for another Stan-
ford man, Wilbur.
"lt is kfnd of strange:, Isn't
it?" says Blaine. "John thinks
ifs kind of weird, too. He
keeps accusing me of haunlina:
him." ======= LET'S BE FRIENDLY
U you have naw nel11;hbon
or know of anyone movtnc
to our area. pleue tell UI
IO that WI may extend • I
frlmdly welcome and help
them to bttom• acquainted
ln thdr new 1urroundlnp.
So. Coast VisHor
494-0579
494-9361
. Harbor Visitor
0
I I
I See By Today's
Want Ads:
e On a clear Da_y you may
not need A BENDIX MR-4
32 mile radar, II~ new,
1deal for lug, pleasure or
comme:rclal craft, but it is
valuable durlnc 1.111 .. -ea-
ther.
• ~1aybt not a t.1oon walk,
but a.n \nvitatSon lo walk
on tUPlhlM, bH.ullf\ll pak
orqe acrtlan 1'\11, lld
new tor 1"19 -·
e Unmentionable f But u
aurt u taxet, 6 c.m.tery
loUI, In Jnalewood, all or
aepll"liteb'. •
Now Califoraia'• moct
populu ball aallon coma
10 )'OU al 11 CUf•lO"flck•
upprlce.--.-.erow.
·~jqllaMJo.Pm<ct
srfp for b•1•ncecl pouriq
from Int pour IO lut.
• C.t-t m.. No taller lhu • 611h. boa boldo • f.U "-• ....... ,...,.,., Ptrf1:ct
pourt.1 costro1 ••. 1moo1b.
~-miytlmc.
Old Crow
TISlt ..... k Ille l!QIW\-popalorllomlloe.
'
NIJKl'f lllMMt ... mian • •.Ml'llUI • •nit n,... u • •""" ... --.a
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oA!lY ~llOT
Top Albacore Fisl1eru1e11
The Balboa Angling Cl ub tGJ>ped 16 other fishing
clubs in the 1969 Inter-Cl ub Albacore Tournament
in San Diego. Members of the SAC participating in-
cluded (kneeling from left) Phil Righter, Ch uck
Howard , Hank May, Ted McCon ville, Ho\vard Ash·
Los Alamitos
Entries
l'or TuUdlV, Au1. S, lHl-Jllll Oil'
Clt•r & f'11I. 1<11'11 l'MI 7:0 'M
Double 1111 111 & 2nd 11(11
QliiMlll Ill fltl l•<I
l"IRST IACE. J!IO ~••O•. M••den
w1r olG1, Cl1iml119, P'ut1e $1 100.
Cl1imln$ price SJOOO.
T~· Nole !O 111.-1\
Crlw>ln ISlrt.,.•l
Well Moto•MI (Ad1lr!
Henry'$ f<!()I.• !Hi rt!
Naboa¥'• 8ADY !B•ln~lev)
11~1'°" IMoh!ld•l Tol•do'I P'1llto (W1•!)urol
S•tr<a Bloftd:t Ill 8•nk1) Sl.H'Dln 0.1~ CL~1m1
li•1>1d<o Pletn11 (llm11a1)
SECOND ltACE . .illCI ~i<d!.
OI"' ,.,., UP In Grldt 8 P'lu•.
lUOO.
P'eftn1 (l\fqJtr ID B•"kl)
Joe-8 Lfll [Alltir)
Miu S"'"' Ou:
Jtv'• Stin CCH<h»•l
81ld1n1Ck> (Mo.-ro•l
Cvn1in Riller !l-l1rt1
IWI Wl""e' lW1thO'I) ~lvi111 Sl•I'" (ltanl1)
T"" lliv M•n !LlP"•m) Old Sf\ui (II B•nksl
'" '" "' "' " , '" '" '" '" "'
"' '" "' "' '" '" "' ". "' "'
THllO IACE. lSO Yltd!. Ma•""" 7 vear old•. Cltimlng, Purs• SHOO.
Cl1lml119 prlct SJOOO. Ttoret Fo.-All CLi1>111ml
G•I• Go Min CO B•M.~l Trip The L1lch !Wi!W>nl
Californl• Slnds (M.,,r11I
Bru~ To Win (H1rt )
MldW•Y Tom (Adair]
80 Ft« {I-I Crc!ob\1 1
Mtc!IOPO 81• lCtrd...,11
800 llco Aod~ 0<1"l•l Miss M...: s~ 111 81nk>)
"' "' ..
'" "' '" "' '" "' "'
l'OUllTM llACE. l50 v•rd1, l vtar
l!lds •"" UP In Gnode A PIVI l>te!I In
C11i~. Pu'1e $1100.
F!r• Rocke! (Brin~ley\ Calld<I B1y lar (Smilll)
Sam'• Nigl\! 011! lWtrson)
Luckv B•rT Joe (Sl•""l
Go l'<omb~ (C•rGOJ1l lrue C•n Fly (Ad1l1)
Cit Quick rWll!'burtJ
Apollo Roc~d !O 8•""'11
Mec••'I Tldt (Wtloto!f
C~•Of'Offltl•r Clll>tl""l
l'll'TH IACE. :i!iG yatd1.
010,, Cl1lmi119, P~rlf! 12\lOO,
Price UOOO
". "' '" '" "' ", "' ' " ' " "'
K'•nno'J B•O.-(5t•i>el "' Vel\dr-l\1 ~Iner !Adair} "' M;nl (~lr'llt {Ll""1m) "' L•ne P1u..-IM1!•ull1J "' _.,,,,. Ww--iMomtl ·~ M1dem Cnu lSlflU~) "' lol•dot " Btn'o) "' MiQWlln !C••dwel '" Soolltd Devil (SmT!n) '"
Sl.l(fN IACE. 5<1t va•G" l Vtlr 0101
trld up. Al\ow1ncn. Punt lllOCI.
l!cbav Dt Lu•• (MC'fl•) "' '" '" '" "' "' ",
11oe11eo Mic~ (Ano<llc•J
Patr S!ep {AO•ln
El G&•ll•n IWltlon\ V111•n1 P'tlnc;e<;, !C•r~Ol•)
8an~roll B<>b (L<pnam)
BOOllN" R04v1"! I IC.In•!)
H)iP SP~
Ktnv ot 11>e Turf (W~ro) "' '"
SEVENTH I.I.CE. lSO vard1. ¥ea r
olcl•. Cl1imine. Pursr 17000. Cl11mlno
prlc~ ~.
fwltrecl Sllfdow tMo.-riiJ
SooclTeCI W1~ !AdllrJ Mr. Cupid IK1nl•l
Lovi"~ VO<i Don l ft'I Cllitrt<' (H•tl1
M11ter cn1rae (C1rdou 1 Gold linltig !Smll~I
Mr A11gol Wint• (8r!n~l!vl
Recommtf'ldl!'!I (1-t C•..tiY) Skldc P'o!se lWi15<1ftJ
'" '" '" ",
' " '" '" '" "' '"
'EIGHTH RACE. IOO Y1rd1. ) Y!M
OIOI t lld uP 111 Gr1<Se AA Plus. Pur>t
tnoo. lht LI H10•1.
Fitly A Go Go tAG•lr)
N~111 ( Rlcn.rau
Ont DI Tnre, ILll>t\1m)
April Dial (C1r<loll)
5'-ltll SPff<IS lW•!JQll)
Dtdt "l°"e !P•9•J llon Slc~le (8rl!!lcle•) M:lndilt !Hort)
Top Oe<:k Josi! (H Cro:>lil•l
ClllU ilar (K1ni1)
" ' '" "' "' "' '" '" "' '" "'
"llNTH llACE. lSO y1rdl. 1 ¥t~r
olds 1tKI up Jn Grtdt A P'lu~. Pur.e
11.oe.
Donar Moo-..,.n
Nt"11tt'I Hone • (ii! Bink•)
Ven!urovs FIV !P'&of l
PtmdOn B•r lH Crolt>Y)
Honor True (Slf•unl
Detot>y•1 llHue>I tWrl'l!lll~
Willow Gold (McR evflOIO!.I D&mn Tootl11' !Ll..ntml
S"'1ll•'1 Reouell (Ceroot11 Dic~•v'• C01'1!•c (Smllhl
m
"' m
'" '" ' " "' "' "' '"
Club Claa111pions
--·----·-~----.. ----•• " ..
•
AIU!r Re·hlrlng LEGAL NOTICE ! LEGAL NOTICE
CllTl,ICATI Of' Slltlfll!# CllTt•tcATI Of' •Ullltll ..
H ed l'ICTIT.,UI "AMI l'tcTITIOUS "AMI -__ _:1,j~~~ 'flit Vlll:ltrtll1*, ... <MllJY tit ""' CM111\1..-tbt.i. -, . . o'W°C; ---j.,_-r~~ Clfli~lllf •u«1111 I llolij-Jl 110 bfl \»II SlrMt, , ,.,. 1 A-. S.1111 AM. Cellfol'11le. vnclw" IM C..11 .IAfM. Clll't~• Uloft~ tr11 llt-
I llcfltlou• flr111 Ml"' et flllfWOl_IC ~ tltlal.ll tlrrn Jll-d Kl!Y-'JO llEAUTY
I
During Winter
11111 llllt .. Id llrrn It CMI.., of 1111 a tlllt Ml41 firm It (:t!l'IP911f of the
i.1wlftl --· ~ -Ill ft/II ... IOllowlrle "~ .... -.... full ¥' 'llU .f r.-141111« It II fDlllNI': _ .. \ 'IKt of r111dt..Ct 11 11 IO!lowi: • Clll'lfOll I,. I Vt"-'°" Hll ... i. A-Ht,tl M. Ht"""-lldt" U70 loutl'I
, Lff ,,......"•· c1111or1111. c1,...,....,, sent• A~. c.111orn11
Dl'W Aull~l 4. lttJ. Olltd Allftnl 4 1"6t
C. L Ivers Htlll M. "-Mlrllldt 111i. " Cllll0,,.,11, ON~ CtlHllY: it1i. of C.tlf0t11l1. Or._ C_..,;
Qn Aut\111 '-!Hf, ....-,.. '"'' I Holtry On AllfWI 4 1,.., btfofl -; I Nlltlrv l'Wllc 111 1114 tor tlld t1111, W-llY ,.~II( Jn t lld fror Mid Sltlt. H•Ml'ltl!V
,...,._ Cllftton L lvtn k...-n It 11'19 IO "'"'""' Hthol M. i'fffVeN,ltdt it.-11 10
NEW YORK (UPI) ~Th'•' wiJll I do .. m"•• " build bl "" Pfrsotl Wllotl "'llM i. tUbKrlDM 1"' to bl fl-. 1111'-'llf!OM ntmt i. 1~ -la ng 0 -v ....... w IO !lit wllfll!I lllall'VIMl'lt ft l~knotw'"fcl lct .... ID' 'II.I w 11111 n r,.1"""""' Inf
was an awk;ward poalOon to be a winner." ~,1= f:.tr"' 1d'JW_.., .,,e nlt'll*I 1111 .. m,.
in for anyone. ~ JOIEl'H E OAVIS (OfJ,ICIA SEAL)
Even for someone· Uke Has last December's ex-Nol•rr 1"ub11c. c••llWllll =~·~~~tlloml• ""'rience cb• .... ed hUn any! l'rlftel1111 OltlU •~ Pr!MIMI Oflra '" George Allen,, the ei:tra con-. r-• -.. O•-• Countt "Cnn" c-rv •• ,.. nl""• -·ch 0' r •'-a • -"It may have mellowed him H-1 c-1u1on E•lrei fiMY '°""m1u1o11 e._.1,,, .,... JVU .,...,.. ltl'I:: ~ JUN 21, lf1f Jvl'le ii ltl'll
An-Jes Rams who may sJt a little bit •• Olsen conceded l'\ltlll~ 0r...... C:1tll Ctl!Y P'llcll. l'ubHtl\td or,_ Coui 0.HY P>Uel ·-.~ I ' ' ' • • . -• Awusl 5, lt It, "' lfff 1w• Al/I I •-lt If ... '"' ,....; down JOme 'day and write a ''He's so dedlcited that one of ' 111 , • .... •
book, about beina 'In awkward the thlnp last year COtild have LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE J)OSlt1ons • • ~l--'--~.;:,,.;;;..,;;;------1.--,;:~::::::,:::,::::::__ . . • ,.been he D'egle.'~ted ~ ·c11tTIP-ICATI 01' IUSINISS I l'>Mlt1 This was a bit more than, nl ti . bet .... P-l~TITIOUS HA.Ml Cl!lTi'-ICATI Oil IUSINISI
two weeks ago. It was.Ole firlt mu ca ons ween~ pre~ r"' _,.,.,,nte1 do cer111v lhtY •r. •1c1T1ous HAMI
time Allen and a1f bis play«-: ~ Jbe team 9f bttween the =''t:-1! ="."~ .. r,:,,:::. =r 1
: du~:, ~i.[!1: :rµ. ':f~~v,r:i 1:,,:i,
had "Otten '""ether ainoe last front office 'and the team, fldlllout firm llllM d Fl-OIENCe COlll Mell, C1llfol'f1l1, ul'mr ffle flo e ~ tAKfll:Y Ind 11111 Ml• tlr111 11 ~ llllous firm ntme et HOUSE OF MARCUS December when the)' ra)lied. These are kind of extraneous "'._ tro11ow111e .,.r..,s. wnor.1 ,.._ 1n 1nc1 ""' n ld.11rm " <-m 01 ""'
around him after Dan Reevel . ' tun 1t111 1r.a.t11 rn1,,_. ,,. •• to11c.1: to11ow1,.. eer-. WflMI ,...... m f\l'H ·~ • but I SUPJ>05e they are bn-JOMllMI A. Vin °"' l lndtfl 1116 •lie• of '"'~ Is •• frollc•ll'I:
tthhee dRamay a1'::..,o~~!tmflredaa .him: portant. ·It'• too bad that a· =· ~~"..!::. ~1=~:.o' Ftd••I ~~:1A;-1ren'." "':f: Ii':'~:·~ ..., YU"a • ti.tM J11tr n. lfft. ....n.,,. .. 11.
Th. Pia••-b·ad .1.-.. • .. .1;...1 coach, with all the1 other work ~ A. v'" r>er Llftdtn °'* .wir 1•. ,.., • # '-" gi:;m~ ~rll C. Viti Ott' Lllldtn W, E. Mlf(\11 Reeves re-hire Allen then 'or he bas, has to . take cart of s11i."' c1uftmr., or.,,.. cou""' sr111 Of c1111ono11 , . . °"' J\l'IV 21. ·1,.., llrlOri' me. , Not•tY o,,1'199 cw111r
else they d qwt and lft the end things like that,· too.'' llublle In 1nc1 tor ""' s11tt. Ptf'IMlll'I' Ota Jul1 1•. 196', befcrt mt, 1 Net•"'
the Rams' owner·had to do an Olsen one of .... n---• 111PMrtd "°"''""" A. v1n O.• Llnci.n l'IAlll< 111 •I'd tor 11111 Sltlt. ""°"''"' , ' ~ JWUmJ 1NI Mtrll C VIII Oer Llncllfl kno'ltl11 fO •-Ired WILLIA/A E. MARCUS know11
about-face and take Allen more articulate me m be r JI ,,,. .. 111 11\f ",_,. Wll05I 111mn '" lo mt to 11e 11'11 11ertot1 w1m1 n•rnt 11
back •••s the al bllc ' 111111$Cl'lbtd to IM wllllln lllttrl,ll'Mnl 11'1d subaeribtd to Ille •llM11 lllslnlmel'lt I nd . ___, eeoer J>U came m-1e<tt• 111eY ·~""'*' "" 11m1. .ck-1tc1etc1 111 •-tC\ltn 1111 ••1nt.
Now here was George Allen away with one major miJim. cOFf1C1AL SEAL) IOFF1c1AL Sl!AL> J011P11 I!, C1Yl1 Jos-'t E. 0.Y!JF
and the players who had saved presslon about the club's io-Not"" l'1,1buc • c.11tor1111 Nc11rv P1,1blk.c1111or1111
his job back tOgether again for tern.al problem last Chri.atmas. ~~~i:-~::~· .... ~~=·t.~~~ n
the first time under the same Mr comrn1u1on Expires My Comn!lulofl Eulr11 LEGAL NOTICE J11111 ,,, 1tl'll Jut11 ,1, ttni
root at Cal State (Fullerton). P>ut1111hM O•trlH C0111 01111 PHot, P1,1bllil\ed or_. COltt o.rry l'llot.
Allen had a let stored up in IAl ,.11 Jult' n •nd """"" s. 12. 1t, !Ht uout J1,11v IS. tt tt '""' ""'"*' s. 1t.1t 1:t3N•
him, a lot he might have liked su~~~o\ Tto~:~o~~~M; v LEGAL NOO'ICE LEGAL NOTICE
by, (s econd row), Frank Sno\v, Jim Chadburn,
Ralph Clock, Bill McGee, Ed !'o1artin, Gordon Wen-
dell (lhird row) Bob Lloyd. Fred Howser, Dick
Thompson, George Allen and Bob Reid.
to say to hi! players but he STAT• o" e.t.L1,.01H1A ,-oa
dld 'I ' • THI COUNTY Oft OltA,..1 · l'•lUtJ ,, MM n . .... A...nu Cl!,Tl,ICATI OF IUllNl!ll Ct:ITl,l(ATI Oil •UllNlll "lie did 't have t 1!"1t.i1 of lOIEiltT M. EMIGH, Cf(eu-Pl(TITIOUS NAMI lllCTtTIOUI ,. •• ,., NAMI
n 0 say ed. Thi ll!ldt!'li.ntcl do c1r1111 11111'1' i re THe UNDERSIGNEO .. herebv ctrtift much " cne of them reveals. NOTICE rs HEiltEIY GIVEH lo 1111 Conductln• • bu1l!llU ,, 2114 Ntwl'Ort !Ill! !hey 1r• conclll(ll,,,. • bulitMu ,, ' c__ I tl'llCUtort of ,,,. •bovt 1111'Nd dKldffll llouieYlrG, COlll Mnl, C111fornl1, ... nee. to.II $ tll s at (.I c.f ,. I ' We .wcW how he fe t.ancJ he lh1t Ill pet$0nf lllvlnt cl1lm1 ltllnlt 1'-Ille flclllklu1 firm Ml'lll flt CENTURY Ar.. r ._ "!:"o rHt. .}'!'_ •• ~.~
Gals Hit
Jackpot
With Fish
Los Alamitos
Results
M011111v, Awt. •· 19'1
Clur & F111
1'11$1' IACE. ~ Y•rd$, Mlidl')I !
Y1"1r cl"' bred 111 C11ir. Cl1lmlna, P'urse 11 100.
kn ho f U W uld declldent 1r1 ~"'"" to !He fhtm, HOUSE Ind Jiii! tllcl llrm Is COfl'IPOSld Of ' OUft,. ••nlilll· '"'''"' ... ,. ew w we e • e ap-with 1111 111cn11rr ~ ... 1n "" ofllce 111e totio.i.,. "''°"" whOM 11tm" -rnliili fomll, """e~ 111e flctll!wt fltni TM'"' of
preciated the ppsiUon he •Was of ... d•rlc of"" •lloY• ll'l"llld ceurt, or •NI PIKIS of rtlldtllCt ., ••• follo'fil: IARCLAY ANO ST!IN, • <O:..rt111r11!~
• h •· ' lo trtsenl """" with 11'11 flKtulry Tlltll J •JW! Otnllll W Wld<llnd m Ind ltlll stld fir"' II <omPllled <:JI/ II-. In and e didn t have lo Spell voudllrl. to 1"" ulldtr.itnld It 11'11 olllct Emtflld 81y Lltvfll B~t(ll, C111l~rnl1 kl!low!11g P1not11, """* "'""'-Ind I~
;( OUt Remember be ~tu has of Ills lltOl'lll'l'I, OSTROW. OlUCJC ER, '21S1 ' drus~ •re 11 lollowl, to-wil: • ' ,,. NA.$AT1fl I. KUlllT, t171 Wlllhlrt , Ger•ld S!eln, No. 2 Crnt 16'd, lo11-a ball club to run no matter 1ov111v1rc1, •-•rv HUii, c1111wn11 90210, 0•ted0"':11~'w' ~~ .. nd ). 1.,. Hllll. c...111om11, N10mt steM, N•. 1
h t H h o. intai wllkll II file •lace of tousfntU of 11'11 Tl'!lls J Wldlland Crtsl ROM!, Jtol!l111 HIU.t. C1~fo•nl1,
W 8 • f! AS W ma . n «T· ll!lders!1nld ill 111 m1IM-rs i>ert1lnlt'll' to Stilt of Ci1itoi:ii11 Or•ntt COuMY' M1rl1 ltrc,..,., l lso 'ltnown M!.\Mlrlt
tain standards. It wouldn't do 1111 H t11e of "Id dtcKIMt, 1111111111 IOllt' °" A11tu•l .c,. 1,.;, belor• me, , NOtiry Ettel!!'°" 811'(.11v. IJOI Comw1ll ·L111e,
f h t I II . f h . monm1 1l!er 11'11 !Im PllbllcttfO" §f 11'111 P1.>blk tn •nd lor uld Stilt, Nrtot1I H'I N1_woort l tflch. C1lllornf~.
or a coac o e one c ts no11ct. ·-•rfd Thi is .w. wic1t1t11C1 •nd Dtnit l WITNESS 11111r h111C1 1111s Jtltl ,_. ~f
Players to take a couple of O•led Jui'I' 31• 116' w. wlck111nc1 1u1ow11 to "" to be th• Julr, IN•. J. OONALr/:MIGH INl'10lll wfloll 111mes i rt tubscrlbed to Get11d Slt!11 laps around the field and then E•eclltor of ')'!ti of !I'll wtttlln lnstrvrntnt •IW! aeknowlldgtG N_,1 Sleln
h th I tu ,, th tM •bow med •eclllent tlltY IXICUfecl 11'11 11...._ Merle l1rd1Y ave e payer rn w e OITlOW, OIUC •• (OFFICIAL SEAL) STATE OF .CALIFORNIA
coach and say 'remember NAIATll • JCUl JOSEPH E OAVIS COUNTY OF LOS ANGELes ) SS . tin WlllJll,_ •tv111. N " , bik-C Ill t On 11111 1'!11 d.ly "' JI/,., A.I) • lfff, "'-what I did for you last Decem-kvwtv MH11, Cllif. tttll ,. ~ r;:,., ~1 ~ orn 1 !Pre ~ Mirr Elh!n S.Ylftan 1 Not.rr
ber1' " Tth f11J) 1n.,_ UUI vt-2t11 0,111C Ctwn.:: ft P'11bllc In 1fld for Mid COi/nit' 9ftd Stitt.
• Al'ltr'Mn""' •ncullf' Mr ~!n ... inkNI Eulres rf'lldlng lllereln dult cotnmlHlontd ..,d 5•u v Brvte (WflCllJ 20.~ 1.20 s.'3 FMT10111 Q....,1110<\ (LIP/\om) I.ID l.111
f!m'J_i!lt__augl_g__rs. ~-ay~_ .. !M.e.i:i .. -.~~~~~u~"t';ll't5•.~01~~--·· __ ,1.;r;,
o ver the fishing spotlight along Scra1<:Mc1--Cl'IOll1 a .... Mr. l ruu.
What George AJlen did In· P'ubll•lltd Ortner .C1111 DlllY l'!lol, Jv11t ti, lt10 swom • .oerMlnlllv ,_,..., Glr•ld Sttln,
te d , his j,;.,.,,..,, .... J .:1.:1-Autllll !, 12, If, H, ltff 1'44t l'UbllUled ortnte CCIII! Oilly ftllot, N-.r Stein Ind Mule llarcll'f -..-n It .s a .lll. .. um.we ....... awucSS __ .. ---·-· · .. -... Avtllll!,12;1t,·u,1fff un-4f me IO be Ille Hnon• ~ flllft'ln .,. to the Rams was deliver a sort LEGAL NOTICE -'*crllll!d to "" wt111111 1n1tnil'l'lll'l1, end
the Orange Coast by reeling in
some whoppers in recent days.
Joa n Stoller of Newport
Beac h topped a m e a g e r
\vee kend alba.core c ount of six
flsh with a 291/4-poundcr land-
ed in the middle g r ound area
near San Diego.
Both local landings. Davey's
Locker and Art's Landing.
suggest anglers check with
them for departure times o n
a ny albacore runs.
In local waters. Lucy ~faese
of Duarte landed an 131.4·
pound halibut Saturday while
Glenda Lee Willis of Lakewood
took home an 8'f~·pound calico
bass Friday •
Another big bass, this one a
10~4·pound sand bass, was
caught by Arthur M a c e of
Costa ?\1esa.
Both Newport landings
repor t fishing in local w aters
good w ith bass and bonito top·
ping the action.
The bonito are now running
as big a s 14 pounds.
Lee Clarke of Davey's
reports big calico bass a r e
b iting r egularly on the land-
ing's twllight runs.
C'cr, Al'$ Ft•our. Surgln O.lt .
SECONO. IACE. 350 ):lrdl. J VN•
11ld> Ind UP in Gr1<1e A Mlnu" Purse
Sl10.1.
AyU11il• Bare!ld !StrluSll l .IO J.-IO 1.IC
Mr. S<OOl>fr Bull IAdt lrJ 11.DO 6.60
A•OfTlk AC'!lon /H CtcW~) U.lll Tl--11 1/10
S<r•td'll!d-0.f'ldy Vakl•, Jule'1 RCln, Dl.i F1>t, 1<1WNll llt'f'lilo
NICHTLY DOUILE--f.SIH'I 8r~u
& •·Ar~nll• l i ,..tld. '•I• 164.4'1.
Tl-ltlD I .ICE. till Vl fiU. M110en 2 'ltJc old1. Pvfl• t llOO,
J191J1r'1 Go Go (Adtlt)
Lltl!t Per<:t-nt {Sml!ll)
Flt1t To Go ILl<olt1m) 11,.,...u 1110
).60 2.60 2.20
•.60 2.ao· 2.lt
Scr1n:tled-Mlss Anchor Walch, TOii
l rvce.
"OURTH lACe. ~ Y•td' l '/Hf
Olds Ind uP. Allcw1nctt. 'urse 11600. lab's R1s1us (K1nlsJ 11.20 1.21l J.UI
llr•ss L11!d (Morri') 3.-40 l .'11
Mt. Min• <H Crllfby) J,QO
Tlme-lt }/10
No scr11cr...1
llll'TH IAC'E. 350 Vltd•. 2 1e1r
otd1. Allow1n1;11. Purlf! 11100
Nlnv Note (ltlth•nlll ,,1(1 <l.!O J,611
Laov llimln! [8r\nkley) '·"' s.M A W1• A•l•I• (Hirt) 1,60
T!mt-11 3110
No Kr1tct>es
SIXTH •ACE. Ve<1Rl1 5r. CO\lrse-
110 v•r"'. l .,..,., old' •rid l/P, c111m-
1n1. '""" nooo P'~rlt••'! 1,.,.ee !!mill\\ 4.00 3.0ll 2.111
Miu W1m1111m fAPOOIC~\ ?.IO S.IO
Nld(I Del Mir (Llllllem) 2.ta T!Mt-4' f/10
kr•!Ultd -G" Floult Ge. Golden PueG!o. Ntd Mew, G1U1nt V111/r,
SEVENTH IACf: . .IOO Vlrcll. 3 YN• 010,, Cl1iming, Pur~ l 'lOO.
M•qnollt E1glf !Lloh1m) t.20 4 70 3.20
T19ht Sqvee:e (Smllh) J..40 1.60 Natn~n Oe!rolt (l-l1tl) J,lf Tlml'-10 S/10
No Stfl!Cl'lel;.
l!IGHTH •ACI. 350 'ltrd1. 3 ~Mr
0101 •nd ~ In Gr1G1 AA Minus. Puri.e 11100.
Mr. Olo Toro fllc>h1m)
l'm S..rlo ISmitlll
Mr. 8arne1't CP1oel lime-ti 1110
1,:IO l.60 1.IO
7.00 I.Ill
··~ Scre!ctled -0.ndY Mool1h, Ttl1111 Gln~r. GerOf'll""' 1111, Go Go E1gtt.
NINTH IAC,(. 100 11rd1. J ~tr Old\
tn<I UP in Gr&ele A Plu1. Purst 11900.
Olcny ll~r Joe (..,,.In t.oo S.60 J.60
Hornel'I DKolh {W1t11111) l!.20 15.00
Mr. Argc (Mdte,-noldoJ 2 . .0
T l~10 1110
~•Ud\ed -Min Junole lhr. Jet Mt Jtl, S.llu•ro 1101, Un1!lf'(hed.
OUINELL..._..Oldl1J ltr J .. I a.
NOrftll'I Dtlgth, 1'11• 1114.ft.
Baseball's
Top Ten
f slate of ;, unJ ' LEGAL NOTICE ~ckMwledeecl to mt m11 1t1ty utt11!ed o uie on message. T..iHu 1ht ,,me.
He reviewed some cf the NOTIC• TO Cl•OITOll IN WITNESS WHEJleOF, I "'"' fllre· tUl'l!l101 couaT OI' TM• t.t.l ltlt 11n10 Jtt m1 ll•nd •nd 1lfl1td mv 11111. e vents of last season, a season STATI 01' CAllllOINIA llOR NOTICI TO Clt•DITORI Cl•I sett Hie Oty· 11'111 vnr In 11'111 Ur· in wh'1ch they f'•'•hed only ... TM• COUNTY 0, ORAN•• tUPlllOA COlll1" o• TMI llfl'CHe llral ··~ wrl!kn, , • ~...,, • M .. A~ ITATI 01' CALl,OINIA (OFFICIAL Sl':AL) corid best m their d1v1sion and Et!1lr of liAJlAY T "0 M" s l'O• THI COUNTY Oil OllANGI M1rv Elltft: S.Vlllln
k bout h t h d 'bee SCHWAllTZ t kt HAlllY T SCHWA.It.Tl NI. A.aut Not1ry Publk.C1!11Gm11 Spo e a W a a D Oftttitd ' • ' Est11t cf CAflOLYNE H, llROWN. 1111 Pr!"<:l~•I O!tfct !n dooe since then NOTICE IS MEIEIV GIVEN lo fht .CAIOLYNE RAE IJlOWN, Ofl:tlltd. LGJ A"l!lltt (()U11jy
• crtdltor~ ot Ille ttlO\lt 111~ dtcld&nl NOTICE IS HElelY GIVEN lo 11\t My Ccml'l\lsSlll!I Eu !ru
Some of Allen's conversation th1t 111 11enon1 ll1Ylr.9 c111m1 1a1lns1 the cr111111ors 01 Ille 1110ve n1ml!d df(f!den! J,.., • .,, IJ71
I l d I n ld deCtdtnl ,,.. re<:iulrl'd to Ille them lf'lll Ill HrSGlll htYlttt cllll'lll ltllMI the T-MUI was on a persona P ane ea • w1111 rt>e n~euerr lfOl/dlero, in 1111 olllc~ 1ekf dt!!;...ient ire reQ\tlred 1o trie l!\eom, L1w Offlct1 o1 Edmond J. ilt111t
;ng with the way h e felt about ot 11>e cleric of the 1bove •11tlntc1 ct111rt, .,. w1m Ille MC1n1ry vo11Cl!lr" In Ille offltt 1147 WHI '""' StrHt . 10 Jlft5<'n! tl'>efn, with Ille lll!ct•nrv of the citric of '"" tboYe e111111et1 covrt, or G•r..,.., C1Mttr.-11, "241
the coming season. v1111Cf\e••· fo tilt 11ncJ•l"ll~tllCI ,1 '"' office to preu11t thtm, wl!h 1111 necn11rv Publbl!H Or1nge c.,.,, 0111~ Pllet. "H ·d h J Jti of $AMUEL A. GREEN9UIG, AllOl'lllV Yllllchtrs, to Ille undtr111ned II lllt offkt Av11,1st J, 17, lf, H , !Hf 1"'5-ff
e Sal C WaS 00 !lg 10!• We•I Vlllt't' 8()Ulev1rcl, Allllmbrl, of h~ 1ttor11111. Block I. lrlckner, !!If..,
·forward to it knowing this C1llforn11. Wl!lch 11 ""' ptac:t o1 touilMU 127' North l r...rw11. S.ftt• All•, LEGAL NOTICE
,, of Ille unde!'llllnllll I" 111 miners P••· C1lllflr'nl1 "701, wlllch l• ~ Pllce °'[-~------------would be our season, says 11111in1 to tht .,,,,. o1 111d decfdent, bu1l111U of me urHMrtloflllll '" 111 m111en NIWl'OIT·MISA UNtl"llO KMOOL
M r OJ th Ra s' wllllln follr monltl1 Iller lhl f(ttl PUbllcl· perttlnl"9 to , ... tlfil!e ol 11ld C'ectdent, DISTlllCT e r in sen, e m tlon of 11111 fto!I~ within fou• monlhs 1lfer me llflt P1,1Dllc•· NOTtC• INV•T•N• •tDs
s tickout defe nsive tackle and Dllecl July n . ;,.,, !Ion of m11 nollct. NOTICE IS HEIEIY GIVEN lhll Ill• Llllltft e·-~ Oiled July 25. 1Hf • ' ' ' ,_ one of the F e a rs o m e ,,_.,,,,-. -, .,,, oouGLAS ~. eRow,. 0•• o auct1 ... n ot 111e NtwP<lrl·Mtu ~u "' E I Unlflecl So:llool Ol1l•ld of Ort~t C()U,,,.,, Foursome of me •llovt n1fftltl decedent Admlnlslritor ol the '11 e C1Hfo•nl1. will •fC•I"" ltlllld Dldf 1111 '"
''
, • . . . SAMUIL A. GIEl:NIUlG of lilt tboYe n1ml!d decedent 11 -, M .. ,,. We ve been in tra1n1ng two llH w-1 •• ,.. •••• ILOCK • lllCKNl:R, INC. : .... ' . on dlr " Aut1USI, 1Ht "" "' 2U 1 lffw II "" office of "!ft School Olltrlct,
weeks and we a ll feel the ;,'",~. •,,~1'1• .!~1111,.',"11 ~•nt•"'~n•,' c11u.1~711 1oc111111 •t 1151 Pl1cent!1 Avtftu1, COit• 1 ..... ~11, C1llfor11!1, 11 wlllcl! !Im.I 111ot bid• same way coach Al en does. A""""" ,., ••IClll•hr Tel: 1714, os .. sei w111 tie Pubnc1y oPf'ntd •tKI ffld k!r:
Wh ' ~ be f l'ubll$hllll °''"" Cotll Dally Pllol, AlltorMYI i.r .. .,,,bilslrll•~ ' . SCleNCE SU PPl..IES & EQUIPMENT Y. rvr a num r 0 JU1y 15, 22, tt efld AllllDll 5, lHf 1J?t.H 'ubll•hed Or1noe Cct!I Dtlly P•lol, All bldi ere lo be in eccardance wllll
reasons," Olsen explained. Julr 29 •tKI A11111,1.i 5• l~. 1~' 1"' Hro-69 Condlllonl. rn11ruc11ant. 1tK1 s...c11+c111or11
F. f J th f th LEGAL NOTICE wMch ~r• now on Ille In tlw ofllct of hie " 1rst, we ee at or e LEGAL NOTICE P'urch11r"' Aoen1 "'urd khoOI 0111r1c1.
first time we've been able to 1as1 Pl1c1n111 AYtnvt. Cos!• M•••· IAR 1tn ca+iforn!1,
pick up a couple of boys In t he NOTICE TO CllOITOll NOTICE TO CRIEOITOl5 e-~c~ bidder mu11 submll • bltl dP-11
d ft h help U It also SUl'llllOfl COURT O' TH• SUPlllOl COURT Oil THI! ITATI In the forni ol 1 Cff!lllllCI or "'l\ltr'• r a W 0 Can 5. !TATE OP-CALIP-OlftlA P-OR OP' CALl•OINIA P-O• check ore blG llOnd llC!Ual lo ltve •ercent
looks as if we're going to have THI: COUNTY Oil Oill:ANQE THIE COUNTY 0, OllANOE (S~<l (JI/ '"" •m()Unl ol till bid, m•d• NI, .1"324J No. A4HlS
a good runn)'ng attack and E1t1te el PATllCIA M. EMIGH, Et!l!e of HENRY J. HEINIGER PIYlblt Iv l'l'lt ordtr of lh• NtWPOrt-Mn• ' Ull•fltd School D!strkl A PfrlormlllCI
that'll free Roman Gabr iel. o~~E IS HE•EeV GIVEN Ip the ~~~$1C'E IS HEREIY GIVeN lo 1 ... 8ond m•Y be r11<1ulrea •• '"' dllcrellM ot
f f I 'JI be ~ ' " lhe Oll!rlct. 111 Ille t'l<!n1 of l1lture 1$ Then. too ee wt a crfdllora ,,. lht 1bo¥1 n1mfd dKllClent crllClllOrs ot the tboYt nemeci K en! tr>!•r Into •vch <:Ofl!rad the orOC1!e!W'of ' . Jh . th th1I 111 perMPN hlY!"9 clt!mt e111ln11 lilt lhll 111 Ptroon1 tllYI"' clelm1 1011..,1 ll!e lhe Chick \:!Ill ~ IGH 11.;, 1 ol
s tronger unit an Jn e said OKt<lflnl ••• r11<1~lr11C1 "' lite thtm, u.ld dt!!;ed•nl art reoul•ed to t!le 11\em, bonC', me 1~11 i u!. 1~0;,; '!:ii i:
past " with "'' nec•ssarv voUCMr1, In the ofllc1 woftl Ille necnutl' ~l>.Kllert •. 111 lllt otllce for!ei!eo 10 iild Schoel Olslrl 1 ot 0 ,1"' • of the cltrk of lhe •bove entl!led court, or pf Ille cltrk II 11-above entllltd court. County c 1
Part or O lsen's. feeling has le ore1tnl !~em. with tile nec:Ht•rv pr to 1ortunl them, Wiii! "" ntet.. No hlcJder m11 wl!lldr1w hit bid fllr •
t d 'th hat happened last vouchfrs, lo m1 undt'llont<I 11 m. C>fllce 11ry Youclltr1, to 1111 undertl11'16d 11 ...,.1oc1 of lortrf!Yt US) d• , lfllr 1111 0 0 WI W ol Ills •llor,,.r1, OSTROW, ORUCKEI, 1111! l1w offices of WALSWORTH, SelDEL dele $el tor !he OP1nl"9 lllt :0,
December. There is no ques-NA$A'TIR & KUIET, 9171 WU1h!rt ANO CRAIL. 1616 Wt•lclffl Drl ...... Suite Tiit llo.a•d of Ed11e1!k>11 of thf-NfWHrl·
I. ho OJ f J bout B()Uieverd, 81Yftly Hllll. Ctllfo,,.,11, "210, l(lt, N..,.port lhlCh, C1llforftl1 f'U60, ~· Unlflld School Obtrict rnirvit "'' ion W sen ee s a which 11 lhe •l•ce of b\l'sklus 01 '"" whlcl! 11 111t Pl...:t ol bO"Jl111u ot Ille rlthl to •llKr •nY or •II bloi, t tKI no!
George Allen 111'1dtr1ltllld In 111 m11t1r1 ""'l"lnt1 to under1lt nllll In 111 l'llllte~ Ptrltln!"' to nKtH•dlv acetPt lilt lowest bid i nd 1111 • , ,.,. nit It of •I Id dece!IMf, w!llllll IPur 1111 "t1!e of seld dKedt!nl, wlt~ln f()Ur wa!Yt ,.., ln1Prr111lllY er lrr11uitrl!v In
"I don't think you'll find a monllls 1f!lr m1 firs! 1ubllc1tlon of 11111 monll" 1tt.r 1~ first P\l'bllaotl°" of thl1 any bid rtalved.
d d . led h notice. notice. Dtled J ui'I' ,. lHf more e !Ca c 0 a c Ottld Julv 11, lfl•. 0 1fld J ul1 H, "" NEWPORT MESA UNIFIEO anywhere," he says. "ffe J. Do1111d Emltll, Admlnt$lrtlor Jtln llel!I Helnlver SCl-IOOL O.t5TRICT
k 24 h d and h , of Ille E1t1i. of tilt E1t«u1•1• ot Dr111111 Cout'lty c.i11ornl1 wor s ours a ay e s 1bovt n•med dectdtnl of me Er111e of Bv Darotllv Harvtv
OSTIO'#, DRUCJCll, IUSATll lllt 1bo¥1 ~•med dtctd!nl P'urch111n, Aatftl
& KUll:T WALIWOITM, lllOI L AND CllAIL 645-1100
t111 Wlhftlrt llhl•. UH W"ICNff OrlYI Publilhed Oru1vt Cotll Diiiy Pilot,
Vike Teams 8tv.,,., Miiia. Clllf. "211 NI--' lt~ll. C1llto111l1, ""' Jurv 29 •1111 A1,1111nl s 1Nt ltl)6.6t Ttl: OUI tJ't.t)tf Ttl (7U) '42·MM, (714) .MH-172 '
12UI 17f.HH AlllnllYI Ill' r •1e11trlx Alt.n11n fo.r A•m11111tr1Mr l'ublllhtd Or•rl'lle co.air o1n1 Piiot. LEGAL NOTICE
Publli.htl:I Or11•s11 Ce1sl 01Jt"I' l'ltol, July n, 2t 29 1nc1 A11tual !, Ifft 1Jl!-69J--------------
F orf eit Two
1
'_._._ .. _·_·~· ~~,E~· ~~·~~~·~· ~·;~o~r~rc;E~-'.~_ .. _· i ;:======1:E=G=AL~;;N;-o~--1=1-c_-E_-_-_-_-_-~1 .~~~~··::·t:~=1~.~~A '::R
THI COUNTY O' OlANGI
l,\lt1n• 1'·10U HI. A41hl Both or Marina H lg h NOtlCI TO CRIOITDlll CllTl,ICATr OF IUSINESI NOT!C( 01" IALI OF lll"AL
l\l,IRIOR COUIT OP-THI P-ICTITIOUS NAMll PIO,l!ITY .IT P'llVATI IALt'
School's. team s in the Long STATIE OP-(ALll"OINl.I P-OR Tht unok'll•* !IOU (tt!llY lie Is con· In the Maller of lhe E11111 " JAMES
Beach Police Baseball League THI COUNTY 01" OlANOI d\ldl"' • llullne11 1! 17171 8•1cn 111'/d., J, l'ESKUL E. OtC.IMCI.
\Vere Involved in f c r f e it ll!:Jltte 0, ~A~·.?.4c1: AR LE e N ~~t~:l:!°"11~~·c11.;,,:;!11':~nl~E'S'C"O.'M~J u:.~~"~'.s }!t11e~1YE:.G~i1~.111~1u:i~
d I • S d fJ I OVLE tka 8EATRICe GORMAH SALES •nO lhel 11ld flrm 11 COll\PC!ltd Of Adml11l1t,..tor, '' Adm ln!1t ... !Of will! Wiii ec s.1ons un ay a emoon.. IOYLe' •k• llEATRICE " IOYLE •k• !tit fOliowlnt l>trlOl'I. wllo!t ntrl'I• In lull A!llltXed of lht Estllt of JAMES J.
_The $ea1 Beach Lions, WhO 8EATlliCE G. IOYLE, OeC..u<:i. ' ltKI PllCI of rl'Slde"<:e It IS fo llow,: P'ESKULE, dKtlled, wllt 11111 11 prhl1!1
1 NOTICE IS MEREIY GIVEN i. me Ootltld E. Shelllto. 1321 V1r11 Circle, Siie lo flle hlghe$1 ltKI bis! ntl bidder. have wrapped Up the OOP creclllotl of the lboYI n1mtd deCtdtnl HunllrPllOrl lltldl. Iller dMllCllon of 1ny fe<l!H!lled broll;er't
crown w ith a 17-1 record were INt 111 ""°"' t11v1~.1 c1.aim1 •011n1t mt D•led Juf>r ,., lH,. comml11lon, VllOl'I the i.rms 11111 «"· • ' . nld d..:tGent 1,1 re<1ulrea to 111e tlltm. Oontld E. Sllt!lko C'!llM1 fltrel"l'ller m~lloned. 11111 wbhtct AMllillCAN LEACOUI! banded a gift-wrapped Win wllh the "'nsserv Y()UCl!"J' In ttlt cfllCI' Stele of Celllornl~. Or1r.ot Coun!'I: to conllrm1tlM bv lht 1b1we •11tlllrdl
•llyer Clult G Al Jl H S d h M~· ' M k I of !he cler~ of !Me 1bovt entl!lllCI CO<>rl, or On July 11, 1969, btlore mt, I No!lry SuH,lo• (Ollft. on WllClneM11y, Aut1111I 10, Cirew Min '2 W 69 116 '"· Un ay W en '--...VY $ ar e lo pr t 11 n I ll'llm ""1111 mt llKIHlr'I P11blle In 111<1 tor 111d St1l1, PtrtO<l.ily lHf, It lht h()Ur of lwehle o'clock noon.
11.smlth 8iti tl 363 11 1n .3" failed to show up w ith enough veu<:hers. 10 tflt u1111tn111ned 11 tr... olflce IPPe1reo Ocn11d E. Sllt!tu ktlown le me or ll!e•••lltr wl!hln 11111 time 111owH ..., ,JJ6 of hli tltor"in,. CURIY a, 8All"IE5 SJ10 lo bt !ht ""°"' Wt\Ost llll'llt ls 1ubKr!ti. !.aw, &I !ht Clflte of 11'11 l'ultlle
OHvi Min 99 ~~ 61 1:U .JJ2 play ers. Vllle'llt ROid, Lont leech.. Cilliornii td fo "'' wl!h r11 lnstrumtnt ttKI Adml11lstr1tor. 1111 E111 Clltl"-1 Strett, :i:;~1~:f" Bil ::: !,' ~ ,',", ·376 And the Kaufman and Broad taeOt w111c11 11 1111 Pltc• 01 11111;11111 01 IN 1cll:now1eoet.i "' tx1euted !~t ,,,,,., Stnl• ""''· Cflllorn11 f'lttl1, •!I rlthl, 1111e, ... JOt uf'ld ... slt* In tit ,,,111.ri Hrltlnfflti lo (OFFICIAL SeAl 1 !nlerHI 8rnl nlltt of H id JAMES J,
P•1•ocell1 ll•n 1°" is• 63 Jot .ics team (9·5) of Marina had to 111, "'''' o1 ••!d dtctdtnl, wr"'lft lollr Jt1n L. J<>1111 PESl<ULE. dett••KI. 1t lllt li,.,. flt Iii• P-l! Bal IOS 31' 5' 1 u .JCl f f 't •18 ,_ th M •·r "'°""'" •lier ltlf 11111 l>Vllllc•lkln of 11111 Ho~t•Y P11bHc • C1lllorn11 Gtllll, •tKI •If rlghl, !!111! •"' lnte,..11 IMI F .H,,..ltd WH l!I ~1 7' ,,, .lG.S Or el I game w e Ow ncl!~f Prl11CIN! Oltlct In Seid etltlt ~IS 1CC1ulrt<1, by Pl'trlllon cf
Cate• 0.1. 103 '10 lll 11' .19s Patrol outfit for the same 01"'°' Av~ust 1. 1Nt Or1n91 (()Untf tiw or cm.rw1 ... oll'llr 1111n or l11 •ddll1'<> II J...:k1on 0.1< 107 JSI Ho lOS .29• " GLeNN IOYLE MY COl'l"m(""l"" Exp!r11 to lhel cf .. rd !N(l!dtnl 11 lM llmt flt hll
NOmt ll~A• reason. Ad,,,Jnl1tr1tor or !tit E1t1!• M.orch 1, lf7l llf1lll. In IM fo Iha! t@rlllft rtl l pr-tr 11 J•c••on. Oa~l•nd. ~1, F How1•d. "-al Beach plays Kaufman Of me ibove ntmH dKt<leftt Publl1l'ltd 011not co111 Otl!r P'llclt, de1c.'~eo, ",.'!~~.•·.!e wH: • ., • Wnn•nvton, l!: l<illftlrew. Mjnne5ata. .X (UllY & IAlNll July :>t 1tKI AUO<Jll $, 12, 1', 1Hf 1~·1f Lv• • -~ A , Trecl ..,., In I ~1 · Yiir,.,em•l<i, llcuon, 191 P'cwtll, and Broad this e vening al 7 at sit• v111n, ''" CliY of co.11 Ml11, C()U111t'oel 0•1fl9e.
81ltlmort. 1t. [ h' h , Id L-INCll Cllllf'flll ,... LEGAL NOTICE Stile ol C1lfforn11, t i ptr l'l\IJI ,eCOl'dl'<f It~• 1111t11 1n Sea Beac s McGaug F ie . Tth 111u 1H-.se7* In book 11, P••• M flt Mlktll1ntOV1
Kllltbt'°"", Ml-5<1!1 JOi t P'cl"l'!I, A~• tor A•mlnlllrllll' Mlp1, In Ille ollk• of 11M1 COIHllr
i11llimo .. , N/ fl . J•iklllft. Oa~l•nd, LEGAL NOTICE P11bH1hed Or1nve Co11t 011!1 P'llot, NOTl(I! TO CRIEOITOllS llCO!'Cler of 11141 CllU!llt'. Cotrul'!Cfl1'1
ti: F, H,,_,_rcl, W1111ittt!Ol'I, 7'; Y1.. AllllUll S 12 It H. Ifft 100-tf •UP-••101 COUJlT 01' THI STA.Tl ~-ft 11: UI Ml911Glll $11'Mt, COl!f trremY.I, h!m1, 11. • • ..,, ' ' ' OF CALIP-OINIA llOl Mne, Calltomit ,
l"lltlllftt ....... TNI COUNtV 01' Ol.IN•I lld1 ~ oilers •te !nvlltd for 11ld ProlP· 11 O.clllelll NOTtCI TO CllDITORS EG Ni. A4 1tn trl'I' •tKI mull M Jn wrlll"' lftd wl!I be
McNt llv, 111111,.,...., 1 ~1, tll; ,..,.. SUPlllOfl COUIT OP-TMR L AL NOTICE Ellllf of JACK FAANCtS A. COYLE. rKtl'lllCI ,, lilt oHlce "' me Pllbll<.
fl'lf r, llo!tlmotf, f.1, .1111 Lelle~ D!o-5,',',"coO~NCTY'"0',°'o"•'•'.'o'•l kllll..., 11 FRANCIS A. OOYLIE Ind t s Admln!1tr11or. 1141 El li Cllntl\UI Slrttl.
trot1, !•·• .. 771 ; Odem. Olkli no.' 1"'· " c•lT1,ICATI Of' IUllNISI. FRANCIS ALLliN OOYLE, Ol«lstd. S111t1 An .. Clllfo'11!1 '1701, or mtr bt ,
.7111 J.P•rrv. Mln....,10t1, 1io•, .150. NI, A-021' l'ICTITIOUS NAMI NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN to !ht lllrd With tl'll Cltrk ot tllft SllHrler NATIONlllL LEAQUI E1t1t1 ot WILFllD I . VERITY, De. T~• un11 ... 1!tntd doll (trtlfY sl'le h creclltors ol th• lboYt nlmld dlU!lflll C1111rl, Or ""•Y be ch!lluerld fro 1tld
1'1...-.. Clu• G Al • " Pel c~•""· (oncl!l(ti~o • bullt'IHS II 165,\ F~tll !hit •II 111rson1 hlVlnt clllfl'll lflllMI IM Admlftl1tr1fo• l>l!flOlllllY, •' lft' tlllW CltrMMt P'oh at ;141 J1 !l• ~i "IOTICE IS HElE8Y GIVEN to llMI AV9,, L19U"'I lletefl, C1lltornl1, undfr stld clecldtll! t r• nt:IU lr'td II nll !lltm, •lier flrll PllbbWllO!I of 11'111 l'IOfkl tftd
M.Atou p~" 106 •&t n 160 'J•7 crt<ilto" cl Ille •~vt n-dtcldent !tit llcllHous flrm ntmt of TH E STITCH. w1m the nieceuttl' vouctwn In the office btlor1 11111 m1kl11t of ••Id 11le.
C.Jono, NV tt l"6 '' l)O •1 I lh~t 111 lltr..int ~tVlftl (lolm1 101!n1I !I'll (RAl'T SHOP lllll l!wl slld firm II com. ot !!'le citric ot 1.,_ l~vt eniitlld COllO'I, or TERM$ OF SALE ; (1sl!, lawl\ol l'lllnn' A .JOl'ln•o~ C•n 11 117 u tll · ' ••ltl decfden! •re '"~!rid to 1111 tllem, POJtO o! lht 1011oW1nt Mrton Wl'IOI' 10 ••estnt lhMI wllll tl'lt: 11eceu•rv of th• Un!'-d Sl11t11. T111 "r<:ffll (IO'!l) of .J•' wrm mt nf'(eu1ry YOl.iCfttrs. In lht 11111«1 • ell 11 the ·.., "'• l/'llOlnlt of~ must 1«1m11n1 Mell Sl••o-11 P'~n tl l:ID S. Ill ,3-jJ ot lllt de.-of lhe t llOve enllt~ court or nt"ll In full •nd Pll tt of fffldenct '-vou f rs, \I "!tntd •t IM Ltw wrni.11 bid or offer 1111111 lilt btllf'IU of
l'f:rtt C•~ 100 <lt!J to 1lS JlJ fG J1rnenl lhtm, wllh lilt neceU.,., 11 lellOWt: \ Olllct ol llOY 8, WOOLSeY, HU Wnt. Ille ~H prkt 'tv blf ~•Id -ce.,. &•~th Clft N 110 !1 IOJ .m YOl/Cl'lltt, 10 t~• ullllef!lo!lecl 11 1119 offrc. Lte d Si "'K nt.,~ e,.-un11 Avt ., Co-t~~fo~i!"';1~he w::;. ~~n,!::c"oi n,...,..1ion ot ult ,Y tltd S1,111trlor c.rt. _,oi-<1n •• 171 n 11• .311 01 Motnt: a. MOo•e, 11tom1vs. ''° Klf'lt•!tl' •on• • r. • · . • Atl blW ~ oftm mv" be iullol'llllled.,. McCovty SI' t7 J!I 6( t~I .3)0 Ctlllff, 1*' Wlllhlre &owievircl, L'ot 0.11111 J1,1!y 30. 1,.t bu1lne11 flf "1f unders~ In ell 111t1i.fl 1 fol"m ll.of'!lltl!tcl.trr Hie Hiit•
11 ..,,!'Oii "" " 15' •1 '" .J11 ""''in. C1t1fomt1 90011, wi.tc~ 11 !Ill Ltt s. tc.lnt -'•1111119 fro 1'1'11 -''" " IHI ._'"'°"", Tiit --nlll'tl --io-r'ilill 1,,., ~ 111 llldt 1-""'" RUM 111c:. tlf hulilnlSI fl// ffle uiwiersltllld 111 111 g111e cl C11llor11l1. Orin" COU!ll'I~ wlmlft 11!ur l'llOfllM lllV tilt ,.,., IUl!llct • llert1111 r11trved. McCo~ey, S.n Ft111tlKO. !ll: L M~Y. Ml l!efl l>tl'!llftlnt ~ 11\f! n l•I• .,., ••Id °" AU9Ull 1, Ifft, btlor• -· I No. 1~.::.,"}11..,"°;',1u1,. OATEO: Jul~ 2t, lf6t, Cin(l"""!I, .10; H • ....,,Oii, At11"lt. }11 decldlnt, wl!llln four mon!llS tiler lilt ltrv P\lllllt In Ind for 111d Sttle, Hr• Dou t11y '1'1 rw,, JAMEi E. Hll!IM
Ptrez. Clntl!lnttl, 17> Wvnn, HOU!IQn. 11'11 Publl<tllon of jl'l!1 llOllce, '°"'II' "'°"ll'td L .... Kint kMWn to ....;:kllll j I __!_ W)ll Pultl)( .... Jtlllllllrlltl' IM •
H. Dl!ed Jlll'r II, 1fff, -IO "' "" ""°" -ftMll .. ... •• r x ...... Atm!ftlllr•lor Wfl!'I wm
··"' IHI .. lft M.til'J tJle-llt VttllY, ""' scrlbtd ,. "" wlllll11 lntll'-1 Incl Alln,-1111 of 111• E1••1t An~•td of utt l1t1tt
Winners of the Laguna Beach Gountry Club's champions hip tournament in-
cluded (standlng front left 1 Mrs. Eileen Caspari s, second flight \\'Inner ; Mr s.
Jane& Poor, club champi on. 11nd Mrs. Thelma Toomey. firs t Oig ht \\•Inner,
Seated are 1''Jrs. Gene G riffen (left), first !lli;:h t runnerup , and Miss Gracia
Joh nson, champion.Shjp fligh t runnerup.
S•"''' Chic.toll, tt1 McCewy, Sin John lurrl" Vttlty tc~-led9'td sri. exll(.Vftd llMI llW., lOY I O:..tl;~ flUllltl fl<fdent AOllAM kUYl'al, COUNTY COUl'llft.
Fr1oic:l1ni. ti! Pere1, ClllC l~noll 1)1 f tteUlo•t of "" wm {0FFICJAL SIALl A~ II LIW ANO JOMM M. l'ATTlllOff, D•l'l.ITY
8tftll;I, C~i(ltO. Pl l . MIY. c\ncl~ ol ,,.. lllOVI n1""" d111;tdenl H•lell ill:. P'IMoll "*' Wt1t.:llN Ortv1. Suitt JN ., 'OHN ~ ,ATTll&Opt
na!t, It, MOOlll! & MOOJll, AlltrfltY1 Nor.rr P\l'&llt, (lll!Ol'ftl1 ...... I IMO. Ctlllen!ll nut ~r.m ,_, ....... lllllltt* Pllt~lnt HI Klr••-Y Ctlllff Prlr1<1HI Oltle. In f~h O l•I t4I IMJ AlllllXH Stlm1. Chti..l>O. 11•1, .llJr HOIT!· lDIH W!lllllrt 1...,1tv1rd Ortlll'I Cotoftl'I' Ait.r ftr ;._.,,.1 I tr Ilia IHI l l lf Clltllf'IUt llr.I
m1" C~ic190. ll•J, ,,,, Cl'llon, S!, LM A1tte .... Ctllflf~I.! f0ll4 My (llmf!llllltl\ Eq1,.1 Wiiii :fj1 A-Jlf ~I 1 ;:== Ctll'-11 t2111
l "'ls, llJ, 11): Se1••r. N~w Yorlc. A111rnm '" Uft\lllr'I Oct. 1 1en l'ubll...,, Ortn1t CMit Olli il>+kll ~ • ln41 uwtn
IJ•. 1111 C.1rro11, Cl11Cln1111I. ll·S. Put!litMd OrlftM CM1t flllty Pnol. 'ubllsl!td 6f111M tcieit Olltr 1'1!01, July U, 22 tt •I'll A11tull I. lNfr IW.jf A .. llb~lllllfj O 10.1 ':'" Ctlltl f11U1 l'.!lel.
1l>f. Jv1, '" :aa. 2' 11111 Au-• .I, lflt l»wt ,illvgu1t S. It. If, n. lfrt 1453.•• ' • 11' • ' • .., '"'"'
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..
-.
OAJLY '1LOT
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE
1000 Gener1I llG~•~n~t~r1~liiiii .. iiiiiiiiii;l~OOOii;iG~-~r~1~1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~10iiiooiJ~°'~~·~"~r1~liiiiiiiiiiiii~1~oooiiiio.~n~t<~•liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1~000~ General 1100 Huntl""°" INch 1400 liunflntton -h 1400 1000 Co1ta Mt.sa
•*****
READ THIS -
• • • • Are you, in the mar· ket for a new home, a home
in a. prime area very close to
Huntington State Beach: a
home you can customize while
it .is being built, a home de-
signed by outstanding archi·
tects and constructed by Frank
H. Ayres & Son; a Company
that has been in business since
11JOS?
' IF YOU ARE
e e e e Come to RANCHO
LA CUESTA at Brookhurst and
AUanta in Huntington Beach
any day between 10 A.M. & 7
P .M. and select your home in
our ne,vly opened UN IT V.
PRICED FROM
$25,990 to $34,200
968-2929 or 968-1338
IN COSTA MESA
6 -LUCKY PEOPLE
can have IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
in any one of these 6 custom homes
which were completed this week.
~fany features such as :
e 1/4 Acre Lot e Wood Roof e f.lrepl•cn
• Concr ete Dr ives
• P•tio Kitchens with P•ntrya
• 4 Bedroom1
• Wall to. W•lf C•rpeting e AND Much Moro ·
V.A. -F.H.A. -Conventional fin·
ancing a v a i I ab I e. Prices from
$29,175. Hurry! Hurry!
COATS & WALLACE, REALTORS
~{;) 1491 BAKER STREET
546-4141
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
O-r1I 1000 General 1000 $16,500 PRICE AND
•AYFRONT
HOME
\Vllh ~r & Slip,
Short run to jetty,
Luxurious borne with
3 Spacious b!droom! &
paneled, book-lined den,
office separate from house.
Oase to sandy beach
Private, enclosed yard rus.ooo
Call..J' ohn Abell Re.. 61>7365
-------1800 B"RICKS 4 BEDROOM
POOL
,18,900
Make up the massive patio!
Where in the world can you
find a 3 bedroom, 2 bath
home, NEAR TH.E BEACH
with electric built-ins, excel· Sounds unbelievable doesn't lent carpet, boat door to
it, but it's true and this back yard, and VACANT!!
home's immaC\llate througtl-LESS THAN $2.000 DOWN!!
out, \Vit~ !ou~~argef ~ WE SELL A HOME ~~eat. 0 doubles, ~e. EVERY 31 MINUTES
Bl"'k w.n ''""'· and '""" Walker & Lee distance to beach. Full price
$18,900. Did I say $18,900??
ll01v can that be? You'd
better Stt it cause it's true.
Call64<>4494.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St., ~94
FIX IT UP
FOR $17,500
2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
5*9491
Open 'Ul 9 Pl\f
Bayc:rest
1941 Windw•rd Lane
Well designed for the growing
family, 4 bdrms, 2~~ baths:
Patio oil master bedroom,
formal dinina: room, beamed
ceiling in living room, large
cntl')', large family room
with brick fireplace. Lots of
closet1, cupboards 4: storage.
Pool 1i%ed yard.
LAND HO!
LAND A'PLENTY!
PLUS
LAKES!
LAKES!
LAKES!
LOOK TO YOUR FUTURE,
through clear blue l\kies ..
NO S?>fOG, clean, DRY air
. , .the Ideal climate for al·
falfa growing, nut &: apricot
orchards: horse ranching,
fish hatcheries ••. unlimited
opportunl ties!
THERE ARE OVER 100
LAKES (man-made-I NOW
JN THE AREA ... makl!!I this
not only a highly productive
area, bu t one of 1reat beau-
ty, as well.
80 ACRES just SOLD ••. 93
ACRES, level. now AVAi{,
ABLE. with pump & well; or,
1G.21Mo ac~ parcels avail·
able, Don't be a ''J remem.
SHOPPING FOR A HOME 7
Call, write or visit our o(fice !or your free
copy or our "Homes For Living" magazine
-with pictures, prices and details of our
select listings iil Newport Beach, Corona del
Mar and COsta Mesa, TRANSFERRING? Ask
us for a "HOmes For Uving" magazine from
any par t of the country. We have associate
of!ices throughout lhc U.S. RED CARPET
REAL TY, 2025 IV. Balboa Blvd., Newport
Beach 92660. (714) 675-6000.
HOME &
INCOME
3 BR. homt with 2 BR.. rent.
al plu'I room le> expand on
huge 66x300 R-2 lot. Enjoy
plum, Hgt, oranges &: other
fruit treff, quiet Eutalde
loca1ion. Full price only
$27.f>OO. Call 54().1151.
1-lerit.age Real Estate
Open e~I.
* * * * * *
MAKE OFFER
New homes, ready to move-In. 2 lo S-bed-
rooms, 2 10 3 baths. Y.i mile lrom beach. First
payment up to 60 days after move ln.
VA/FHA Terms. From $23,9'0
The Beach
(Ofl Brool<hurst 1 mllo South of Adlrml
962 -1353
--------~~~~~~~~~~1 JOIN THE HAU
Gonorel 1000 ! General 1000 OF FAME I 'N'"•'"w=po=rt=a.= •• =h='"1=200= Huntington Bo1ch 1400
--------Homes! Have a record se• 1--,;--,;;-::-°"'=""'-z-AS:1~~E1~~:'R:S~A. __ F_O_R_C_L_O_S_U_R_E__ :i,oni!,:R~~:C:rn~~·: Ocea:tr!n~ H~:E3RB;, utll TRY THIS ONE
ASSUME LOW MESA DEL MAR finle league '"" family -rm. "wi"" rm, llv nn FOR SIGHS I
2 STORY big ellcl05ed patio or unall w/!rplc & ocean view. Brand new and rj&ht near Ole
PAYMENTS OF $115 'n1is Sbedmom,3l:!flthhoml!! astl'o dome. Roomy kit w/bltins &: beach.48eautuulbedrooms,
P .l,TI. MUST BE SOLO: NOW!! avocado sha& crptg thruout. 2 baths. Dramatic, railed
Submit your do\vn payment Lovely large bedrooms. Front yd w/patiG &. ct.bana. ceiling liYlna: room. with~
on this lovt:ly 3 bedroom LARGE FAl\11LY ROO~t oil $64,000. 67U990 tinctivti fin'place. An all
cottage ready for ltnmedlate largp kitchen with cup. OWNER'S SACRIFICE glass garden ldt.chen takes ' ......,._,.si~". Huge l••-d •--~ I DEN• 1 "C'... ""'"6 2313 k .----.~ "'' ..... uu••.n.•5 ga Ol'P. ·• .,.,.. ..,.. • • 646·71n 4 or 5 BR, 2 mo. -0ld 1-Iarbor the "erk" out or housewor
Yard for tke kids. Double pansive living room with LR. DR F and makes coo~-an a.'t:
garage for Ded. For Mom, STONE FIREPLACE. Fully TWO TO ONE :il~1::mr:p1 &. bar.' 3 ~: pe~ Check .... th:. bW!t~
beautiful carpeting and cus-draped and carpeted~! In Dl-llghtful Eu!side loct.OOn. Crpts, drpfi, many Xtraa. ins: Wall to wall c:arpetin&,
tom drapes throUghou!. one of Costa hfesa's finest 3 BR home with exciting 14x Xlnt financina:. 548-8281 draperies, fencing, be•ut.
FULL PRICE $22.~. NO a1<ea.s, this l:M!auty ts ottered 20. 1 BR rear unit on }&e. {l'ont ya.rd ldSCPI includlnK
00\\'N Gl's. Low down a t an unheard of '36.:,00 with landscaped fenced lot. Close ABUNDANCE sprinklrrs, Deluxe bit.in •P-
n1A. all lenns. NO 00\VN VETS, to everything. Outstanding of many deluxe duplvcl!!S. pliances Including: "RaJ'la:e,
WE SELL A HOME FHA or make an offer!! value at $34,950. Some oceanfront, some close oven,dishwaaher l:diapou.I.
EVERY 31 MINUTES Trade in your smaller ho1ne to parks -& shoppina:. From It's ready lo move lnto now.
Walker & Lee on this one!!! $27,500 to S6t500. 6601 Luciento Dr. Hunt, Bcb,
WE SELL A HOME P fopertles W11t $27,190. and worth every pen.
7682 Edinger EVERY 31 MINUTES 546•2313 • 646_7171 1028 Ba.ysid!-, N.B. ~130 ney. CA or FHA. Cn4>
"'~.,,., .... ,140 Walker & L BLUFFS S31-11'40.11AMto T•M.B11r.
Open Eves. ee BY O\VNER: Eastslde Ott. 3 1 level 2 Br 2 ba, convl!!nient $20,750 FULL PRICI
2700 Harbor BJvd. at Adams Bdrm, bltn kitchen, natural design. Exira.s, patios. Own-Believe me! Thal'• !ht price INDUSTRIAL 545-!M9l birch cabinell. 66xl26' lot er. $35,500, Alt. S pm please on.this l bedroom Rancllero. PROPERTY Open 'ti! 9 PM w/ alley access tor boat or 644-1180. Situated on huge 50 x US
-u:::-;;=:..:.-,,-,,..,--1 trailer. 6~ C/a loan can be DELUXE Condo, many foot lot. Covered PaUo. Nnt Located in the center of lhe Hesitate You Lose usumed, $24,950. 6(2....t178 2 B I ,...__ ... ~.1.1 ........ 1 .. ted tn-COSTA l\fESA INDUSTRI· Hu H xtru, 2 Br, a. poo _.~o.a.. ",..,...,..., _... ,. __
AL DISTRICT "'-old rry" u:,ry BY 0\\!NER $23,900 ;28,500. Xlz1t tl!!rma. Alt· side. Submit $2,'0CO uuwn,
• <MA year • Nea_t 3 ~l'oom 1,, bath on 3 Bdrm., 2 ba., crpls., drps., 64&-0132 assume F JI.A. 6% tnte!'ellt
2.000 square foot bu ilding a _nice big fenced comer ~t frplc. 2 patios. 6,.70 GI with payment of $lt'J lnclud-f~sesho"U0y' •,1,"',u,"'ad•,0P1~.!nb.10 with ace~ for boat or trail. Joan. 646-70l4 N•Wfl.Ort Heights 1210 es all. call before lta ione! .. ., = er. New drapes through GUt. --WE SELL A HOME
many industrial or commer· Assumable low interest loan. CHARMING townhouse, 2 COZY & CHEERFUL EVERY 31 MINUTE$
cial uses. Three priva~ of. FulJ price $22,250. bdr., 2 ba., slngle level. 1 2 BR. Dining rm. Frplc. HW & L
!fices, shtorage ~.h plus YT"· old, ,m"" !Xtras?_.'!..o,p floors, cpts., le drps. Large Walker ee arge s op area w1 over. I o C' a t o n. mma .. u.. e li!!nced yard. Dbl gara1e on
head doors. Proper1y com. Adults. 540-9365 eves. alley. Asking $24,500. :.Wee
plctely Wack·topped and BY O\VNER-3 Bdrm., 1%. an otter on ttti1 now.
chain link fenced. AN baths, double garag~. 1959 GRAHAM REAL TY
IDEAL BUY AT , , , $33,250 Rosemary Pl., ~9--8786 646-2414
Present financing can ~ as-
sumed. Near Newport Post otnce M esa Del M•r 1105
TRY NOW-
BUY LATER
··For A Wise Buy"
University P•rk 1237
$24,950 F.P.
1M.i'1AC. 2 BR. townhouse--
Many extras.. Community
pools, tl!!nnls. Call for detaill
7682 Edinger
842-44.15 or S40-S140
Open Eves,
FARM smE
2-Story home. 3 Bdrma. 2
baths + lgl!!, retteation
room. I n t e r c om ll)'ltem
throughout. Lt:i:e. Otl de Sac
lot. Owner moving out ol
state and must sell. Only
$20,900.
°'Owner N.-cls Help!
lm'tlediate pogsession -big
5 \dnn Carriage Estates
{a~t 2900 sq fl) with pool
in toJI Mesa Vi!!rde location,
Out ol. area owner makin&
double .pay?N!nta -~·anu
oiler, n"uonabl.e or not!
This 4 bedroom, , 2 bath
charmer with. all electric
ltitchen really needs &
SCRUB BRUSH and PAINT
JOB! But where in the
JEAN SMITH
Realtor
646-3255
her wben-er" • , • invest!-Evenings Call &16-lDSO
ple thi1 opportunity In New· "iiiiP.~iii!"-iii!ii'iiiii Colesworthy & Co.
"That's right" Jive in THIS
J bedroom 2 t.th l\1ESA
DEL MAR hl>ml!! for $225
per month tor one yt"ar -
some down now and buy Ja.
• Rod Hill RHlfy
18068 Culver Dr., IrvinP
OPEN 9 AM-I PM ~
MUTUAL REAL TY
842·1411 Anytime
FAIRMONT-PLACE
Corner Jot makes it creat
for boaVtralltr GWner. Ger. ceoua 4i BR. home with hun-5'5·!!80
bl!!>tTy Springs, NOW!! en.~
er's must liquidate lntl!!rests,
Call 847-6640 alter 6 PM, any.
time weekends. Mir cintrnl tt.bt)
LEGE REALTY -·-
WGl'ld can you find your 400 E. 17th, Costa Mesa
home NEAR THE BEAO·T[!!'!"!'"!!"!"!~~~!!'ll'l'!'!!
with room '°' BOAT OR $3 512 DOWN!
CAMPER and \1•1th LOW ' liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I DOWN at only $121 per PAYS I? this \l.'l'.lnderful mon·
month Prin. and interest. ey ~vina: 6% GI. loan! NO l000 POllSt!Slion like NOW!! qualil~, NO po1n~ or u.
l;Go=n=•=r=•=I::::::::::::::::::::=,[ WE SELL A HOME sumpt10n fees., NO interest
FOREST E. OLSON
tnc. Realtors
SPANISH.SENOR'
,4 BEDROOM S
Spanish elegance. <I
large bedrooms. 2 tiled
baths. Spanish tile entry.
Massive double fireplace.
Open name cook1ng in
a gourmet kitchen +de·
luxe built·ins. Huge play
room and only $29,950. can now senor! 645-0303
FHA LOAN 53/, %
$19b MONTH
PAYS ALL
A!'lsume FHA loan of
$24,700. No ft-es ! 2 story
3 bedroom, 3 baths.
Formal di n i n g room.
Separate family room.
Qua..litv that wtJI e:otcitc
you. Price slashed S3I.·
000, ~Iler to help in fin·
ance. Dial 645-0303
EVERY 31 MINUTES """""'· NO d•iay•. Moo. em 4 bedroom, 2 bath, with Walker & Lee :n'::ily.=;·i~r,i:~
2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491
Open 'ttl 9 Ph1
schooltime. Hurry Jor this
exceptional ··:t1ue! ! !
WE SELL A HOME
w;ik~~&r:~ • J BR 1~ bath, hdwood
floors., cpta I drps, frplc,
double a a r a a e, beauWul
fenced yard. $24.500 2iH3 \Vt':tcllff Dr. * ZONED for BUSINESS 1 646-rnt Open Ew!!.
BR cottagl!! w/a:ar $14,500. IMMAC. DUPLEX
• $21,000 -no loan charges · 14322 Grc ;alley, Tustin
$4000 dn ·owner will carry. 2 Bdrms., 2 baths, Beaut.
3 BR. 1 %. bath, interior re. landscaped, s p r i n k I e r 1.
decorated. Vac, & bruned. $l'i.750.
occupancy, CORBIN-MARTIN
NEAR SHOPPING REALTORS
Wells-McCardle, RltN. 3036 E. Cst. Hwy, CdM
l.8lD Newport Wvd., C.!11. 675-1662
~8-7729 anytime BEST BUY !
Mesa Verd.--$23,950
Best Repllbll·c Buy : bedroom, 2 tie.th. Quiet "''"'"'ial '""''· Buill-i,, I o v e I y carpets, drapes,
Freshly painted. 540-1720
TARBELL 2'55 Harbor
4 BR +Pool
This delightful 2 s!ory
4 BR home is an out·
standing value, Formal
dining room, family
room &: large I iving
roqm. Extra targ, back BEACH LIVING >·art1. $36,$0 takea it,. ~ck eay area ~e 2 baths.
LARGE DUPLEX COATS hrep!aoe, buill-ua, """'"
Sand pebble's t hrow & DAVIDSON Realty
•
drapes, A1klng $46.950.
from that wonderful st!l. WALLACI 54&.S460 Eves. 56-4!Ml
Two l•rge bedrooms and • REAL TOU l""iⅈ;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiipiii .. ~"~": :i~;.."t:.'if,_~,:;: W>-4141-OCEANFRONT
Sun decks. Creat loca-fOI*' Ewnlngl) 3 BR home on ocellent
lion! Good n.'nts! Only llJZ::::l=======I .. h m~ 538,500. Today 's best II ac; _.,.....,.
buy! C&ll DO\V 645·0303 s2 500 Georg• Williemson TA~E OVER 71///. 1, 613-4350 REAL~~. !Tl-1564
FANTASTIC BUY
J'antaatlc $20,900 loan.
No ftts. One of 3S bee.ti·
tilUl town homes in ex·
chJ.tlve Newport Beach
artL Total priCe $23.250.
2 txtl'a large bed?'Oom1,
2 btU\s, fireplace, bu.lit·
lnl + dub houu and
1uper · pooli Onl7 10%
dn. J:lureyl Clll 645-0303
51;,% Gl-
$162 MONTH
NEWPORT BEACH
Bl'at hlah tntuea:t. l..ar(e
c.u • L o m two bedroom horrie: In Newport HJ;hts.
PlentJ or U1ht A-ch&nn.
Alie)' acceaa. Jtlih C .L
lou of $20.600. ljoo'11
for pool. boat. camper.
Ont,y SM-lntemt! Call 643·0303.
NEW CARPET LEASE
NO QUALIFYING Everyone can u::iume thli 4 BR 2 bathl, heated filtered
high FHA }Gan. • pool, Sack Bay cul-Oe-i&C.
546-9521 or • 540-6611 ~~yj DSON RHlfy
st6-S460 Eves. 54$-4941
4 BR.-WATERFRONT
Immac. Cond. $46.~ =====~I Carp., drape1, bUiJt.1n11, etc.
CnyJCorner \\l'ondcrful, family homt'!
In l\ft'u. Verdi!!, lmmediali!! CAYWOOD REAL TY
posses.lk>n. 3 •nd !amily &306 \V. Colt.st Hwy ., N.B.
room. Exct'ptionally clean. • 54a.1290 •
Only llfi.900. U382 F L E E T LaM, HB
S..l·SllO 3 bdr, 2 ba, fam. rm. Xlnt.
119CiMmlttiefttl cond, l \i YT"· old. Prof.
lEGE REALTY <lecor. $32,SOQ. 9'2·1'16 °' .......... .ell 64&-4328
NEED Sharp young lie. R.E.
PLANNING to mover You'll aales woman part or full
john macnab
GOLD COAST
Over 4.000 sq, rt. ol luxury
liv!Jlg with a panoramic
view. 4 Bedrooms, huge liv·
ing room; tormal circular
dining room: garden kitchen
and breakfast area. Paneled
family room with fireplace.
Like new. Priced $145,000.
(7t4 ) 642-11235
901 Dover Drive, Suite 120
Newport Beach
-C· 1 PROPERTY
82'x233' le has a good !IOUnd
3 BR honic on front of lot.
Owner will finance the prop.
erty -no loan fees. Call
llO\V for details.
$39,500
Newport
•t
Victoria
(anytime)
646-8111
Top Quality Duplox
New on market. 2 BR.a, hdwd.
firs, frplcs, FA heat, bit-in
kitchs, 1arages -betv.·een
unill, I& fncd yd1, quiet
street. Costa Mesa $28,500.
This \von't last! Call now!
Choice E'slde 4-Plex
Near 17th St., Costa Mesa. 3
-2BRIha.l1-J BR 2
bath w/frplc. All units have
bit-ins, cpta/drps, pvt patios,
garages. SSS.~.
"I TRADE"
Bob Ol~n Rltr. 546·55&1
Courtyard Pool
"Forever View" New Wells'
plan ready for Sept. deUv.
er)'. 4 BR 3~ ba, po'Nder
room, fam rm, . w/bar I
frplc rortnal dln1ns: room,
19><.ll' pool.
Roy J, W1 rd Co.
tBaycrest O~)
14.30 Galaxy Dr. 646-1550
$24,~R. ESTATE
Tall trees lhade the! yard.
High block ,..'&ii fence, de-
ll&hUlll patio. 2 balh1, for-
mal dlnl11K room. Bullt·ln
kitchen. dbhwa.sher. Pu){
.... yard. 500,,..,0
TARBELL 2'55 Harbor
645.0303
at Harbor Center i299 Harbor B!vd., C.M'.
find an ammnc number ol time. No exp. rrq'd. 645-0111 DON''T .nJsT W'.sH for '°me.
homes ln todQ's 'aassWed N'O matt•r what It is, )'OU lblna: to tumlah YoW' home
Ads, Check them now. can ttll 11 w1th a OAlLY , , • find put buys in to-
While eJephanll! 01me·•·Ilne PJLCTT' \VANT ADJ! MW!iTI f'lllY'I 0.u,tned Adi, ,._ ______ _, --'-------
. I •
•'
CLEAN SHAG
SWmy 3 bcinn with shag
carpetilig and plenty of
room to live. Locaf~
near school. library and
£hGps In a quiet ?>fesa
V e r d e · neighborhood
Drive by at 1633 Minor·
ca. Asking $30,950 t '-'e
also have a 4 · bcinn in
similar condition, sim·
ilar location and simi·
tar price!)
•) )~,·,:;,{\ ~· r~1· ')\~ :i :·ri.._•
546-5990
$1600 DOWN
642·1771 Anytime
MINI RANCH
CUSTOM home in beautiful
Eutside ~sta hlesa. {~
block to Irvine AVI!!.) Tawer.
ing shade trees, plus produe.
tive fniit h"l!!et on 300 toot
lot. Hard\\'OOd floors, largl!! family' room, 2 balhs, Near-
ly 1h: acre for the secluded
enjoyment of country living.
;.17.500.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2043 \Vest.cliff Dr.
646-771.1 Open Eves.
-JR. EXECUTIVE
Home
642-i777 ter, It's sharp and clean.
Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... ' Don't me.lee a mistake -
Lone50llle House
COLLEGE PARK
call now.
1-oTHEREAL ~ESTATERS
-' I •,
Jn an area where there are
lots or children, ~ lo
schools & shopping, New 546·2313 • 646•TI71
drapes in la.i-ge living room .
tamily room. Vels.-No Dn. Pymt. Baycrest Neat .. and family nn. on
\Veil designed for the growing corner in lovely Mesa dcl
family, -4 bdnns, 2~ baths. Mar. Room tor boat, trailer,
Palio ott master bedroom. etc.
fonnal dining room, beamed ~ 546 ·5810
celling in living room, large {neareinerN lhntrt)
entry, large family room LLEGE REALTY
with brick fireplace. Lots of I!OJAdlrM at lt.artlar,r..Y.
closets, cupboards &: slot·i ~!!!"l!!!"l!!!"l!!!"l~~~~ age. Pool sized yArd. I'
JEAN SMITH Mesa Verde 1110
Reoltor
646-3255
400 E. 17th, Costa Mesa
Country
Gentleman's
Estate
SJi.950. Assume 5% r;~ FHA,
3 BR., 2 BA., Jam rm. bl!lns,
cl'pts, drps, immac patio
home. Vacant. O wne r,
545-4265
Corona del M•r 1250 :.:.._ __
Owner Win d~s ot extras makes ii Ffnance ireat for any tamily. sm pays all, VA Loan.
At 7°/o Interest Ru L. H'""°'· Riiy.
Corona del Mar. lbarm with -~=,..;.,"c.1·.:.2525=;,=~-
a mini-view. Spacious 2 BR DUTCH HAVEN
and den with a dcljahtful 5 MIN. to DoUJ:l.u 4: l""Ny,
cov. brick patio, No polnta, 3 Bdnns., t" baths. Many
no fees, no impound accoW1t improvements. 21'31) PatM>.
no pay ott penalty, Call Ill Block fence, 70' comer.
quick, Take Dftr 5~% G.I, Owner
673-1550 -·· -O THE REAL
\.'."\. ESTATERS " . '.
Near Coast Hwy.
332 M1rguerita
BY THE SEA
Channing 2 Br. + conv. den + forinal din, rm.; attic
space, 2. f111l.: walled pr-
den, VIEW or ocean & jet.
ty. Step1 to bfach. Assume
loan at 6~%. $1tll,500.
W•lkor Riiy. 675-5200
BLOCK TO OCEAN
NEAR BluU1, in l:M!aut. Cl!AI
-.1 Bd, borne, patio + 4
Bd., 2 Ba. w/lge. private
patio -cpts., tl:rps. $89,500
R. C. GREER, Realty
3355 Via Lido 673-9300
BRASHEAR REAL TY
8~7.a5.n 536-2123 Ews.
l'M LONELY
COOL POOL -VACANT
Lqvely 4 BR plus Jara:e fam-
ily room. Otbet'I a vailate,
all prices & tenns.
HAFFDAL REAL TY
8740 Warner, F. V. 842-4400
Sol Vista Special
Drive by 7812 Rhine Drive
4 BR, fam. rm., 2 baths.
\Valk to Huntington Center.
Pat Robertson Realty
847-85.53 • 893-4J.52
FJIA 6~% 3 BR 3_.ba cot.
lot.· 1 ml from ocean. Mu1t
see to appreciate. 962-7569
-Or 962·1678
FABULOUS View! O'looldng -;_;;,;========!
Little Corona Bch. Hear the Huntington
surf! lmmac 2 BR. den, 2 Harbour t405
BA. Fee s'lmp. Xlrtt tin. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1 $34,soo 0wnr. n4-fi1s-s116 • (-O THE REAU
'."\. I.:STATERS N __ •w~po-rt_B_•_•_ch ___ 1200_1 ib~kn7-""~loo;;;om~•;;-;:;;;-;c;;-°""~
CdM; ''lNVEST NEAR THE
MAGNIFICENT
WATERFRONT Newport HeiCJhts ~1 din~· 3 Br. 33•• Garba, decn~= Pier 1: 60' dock. Lce. liv. nn., t > I ','
646~23't3 • 646·TI71 Custom! t:ud anot:,· home ~n i:t tam. rm., ~rt kitchen, 5 BEDRM 11 Remember when houses had Some view, nr. beach & \\'et bar; BR. balconies:
Better than new. "Queen's" basements? Refresh your t..-.. 6~ ~JO" 4300 sq, ft.; 60' swxleek,
kitchen -l~nest bulll·ln ap... memory and see. thl'I CWJtom ,;':·~;:·:=B::"';:· =::'~;-==· ::'.:': Great down channel Ww,
pllances. D1shwa.she:r. Fam· home In lop N~·port lido l •• s:::l•:_ ____ l;.;3.;;.;51 MllAI t;;_~r. has O\\'n fireplace. lly room. Carpeting, drapes. Heights location "'Ith 1000 ·-1.1 u 1A ~vercd ~lie>. You'll love sq. tr . basement. Needs a 1 YEAR OLDI lllllllMi
this . ~me. 540-1720 little fre!hening but a buy ELEGANT 2-story custom
TARBELL 2955 H•rbor at this price o[ $42,500. home featured in '69 Lido
TOP LOCATfO-i;r-Homo Too,. A real "muat (eltlwell, lllitket & Co.
\VALK to \Vcstclill Ccntt?r. Sl!!e" for the quality home 550 Newport Center Dr.
3 BR .• ,. 2 BA ., ","",. nn, .. buyLIDO"· $84R,E"10A.LTY INC. Newport Beach, Calif. spac, iv. rm., p ., VI w a•• •700 u•2•-
cpl1, &: drps, fcnc'd. ~ .. 646·7171 • 54&·2313 :WOOVlaLldo m.ss301 :~===•E:i-Eii::-~I
cov'd pal:io, Only ;28,500. QUIET DOUBLE I•
N.B, _.I \l.'est Bay Ave. duplex. 3 Br. BalbM lsl,pc! 1355 HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
P .W.C. 546-5440 2 ba. lo"·cr: l·BR. 1·ba. up.I-""--.:.;..-.:...____ BAY FRONT
LARGE Spanish home on l~ pvr. Custc>n1 built attractive l Br, 2 Ba A den. 24 " 30 16!171 Soltro Lane. Beauti-
f ho ,_ N uni'~ 3 car gar All ,.n a brick PA\k>. exposed beam tul <4 bedroom, 3 bath, "~ ac. or raes. u• ewport ""• · '' ce.111"-. com"letely remod. Bo.Ck Bay area.JO ac. in quiet nt'ighborhood. $59.000. ..... " peted, buUt-.lna, dock raclli-
CUSTOM built 2 bdnn. pl111 mountainl nr. EI 1 In or . BURR WHITE By owner .. ~ lits. OWntr hu mowd East
muter iulte, 11."IXllan'• de-714/&f6...56{11 REALTOR Huntington Baach 1400 ~lld1-t1M& sale, fll,500.
light. with loo.di -0f closet ========
1
=100 2901 Newport Blvd., N.B. --~-·---. (714) 67UOSO
1pact. Easy yard 10 maln. Costa Mesa 675-4630 642-2253 Ew•. 4 BEDROOM o
tain, Prime ana. Acces• ---------111 500 full ~ 2 BR. Ible to air travet1-. FD..~UPPER $ 2 0, 9 5 0 B•th-Ba th·B•th-Ba th · ' P • ' -••• ~ "• P"-' f 1 d I t -Pl 1 elect. blt·ln rt.nlte • oven, -.... I A...• lll60Newport81vd.,Ot '"""" or mme a e 111cre •rt 41 us a orever
Rltr. fU6.398 54~3483 sale-cubrnll any rea11>na.blc view, 3 FJll\Cf blend w/ fL~. ~~tm:\':d.~:1 •1!!::~~!'!!!!'!!'~~~!1!
l h otter. Ea111!de. Costa MeMl fresh pai111 for extra charm. et ll3I, JI'"' ma. Vtty dun, I' HUNTINCTON HARBOR ·ac enmyer ... 3 BR. hwd. flrt., ram. rm. \V~qw \\'Ill trade d 0 w JI. Lowest priced i..i .. ~ in HERE'S a liMI-hldo..·--· • neecft' tender, lovln& CIN!. $5.500 HQndlt>ll. .,._. •vt: -...,
Bring often • ca~h l1'1b. Ha l Pinchln & Asaoc. thl• area. 6 )Tll, new, 60 x for the ttred e.xttUUve, 3
DON'T rtve II away, 1ct
quick ca.ah tor lt with a
Dalb' Pilot want Adi
"2-S618
CALL 545-3414 South Coast 3900 E. Coe..•l """'· 6r..-4392 100 renctd. lot ldacpd. bdrm, bolt dock on main
"'J channel A beaut)' at onb
RWE$tate 11 YourAdtnourciaaltied1! lflllfw~illSmf!lbl 1e,950 -EZ terms.
niE QUICKER YOU CALI.., Someone will be looldna for ~-~ 1l.. D, Slate, Rc-117 •
111E QUlCKER YOU SELL lt, Dlol W..s671 &47-3519 E~ 53M5iS8
' l
j
I
I
'
-----------------~-------------~-------------------. -• ---· .. . ·-----·-....... . .. ' . .... . .. ~ . ·-.. -· ~. ,, . . ....... ----..-.. ' . ... . . . .. . . . -.
ff DAil Y ·l'I UIT
'HOUSES fiOlt~SAl0"'"'-.1!,-.,....,R'"EN"'T°'A"L'S-----,R"'E"'llTALS RENTALS RENTALS RINTALI
Apto. Unluml.,...
REAL ESTATt
Gtntrll RIAL ISTA~
Genlr1I Hou"' Furnl1hodl Hou111 Unlumllhld HOUlff Unlurnlsht_d • ~-Fumhhod fN<hr•y City 1616 --= 1
Irvine Terr••• ~45Mt __ ,._v_._rd_• ___ 3'-. 1_1_0 11_F®_n_t•_l_n _V_•_ll•..:Y __ 34_1..;.0 1 Newpott lloach 4200 Cotto,,_. 5100 Rtnt11t W1ntod 5990 Rl•chOs 4fSO.
~ -' ' 1"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~; 8~ ~. ~ ~~ EAST BLUFF 5 &'.lrm,. 3 LOVELY 4. Br., 2% ba., % L~ ISIXI. lmmaculate MAGNIFJCENT View, week I• Ila""· 1375. O>ntaet M. sty btn. ..... yd,'°" paUo. par Qld !lPlnbb 3 ~ .• or }'euly, opllt ""'4 -, (NlftllllnMlll WANTED: 1111\ uni-hie, MONTANA
rtorea. 1'ake over '5'.4~ Schmidt. Box 2S5 North UlO mo. 54$4870 4ft. 5, 2~Ba.Uis. (213)317-6003 bedroomJ.tltfpla.ct,a:arase, VIUIKU\.INn WeaWde COrta M•••· RANCH l ~r~.H~·~"-~'""~·~P~.T=.L=M="',!;~Be~nd=, W~u:=;h~9804S;;::==;;;=;;;!4 BR., Iamlly room, Jeaae, 2001~ Khlc• ·Road, 548-2394 ' ~. S Tttns, cpl. ce.rptted, 89).6801 cltl\n, lmmed octupaacy. Laguna S.Kh 3705 aflcr 6 J.m JUST (OMPlEJING M6-538l Bitter Root V..Oey
Santa Ana Hgts. 1630 Corona del Mir 2150 $325.Ga.rdner.M0--3885 LUXURIOUSZ..1odcrn2BR21;LO=l'{ER="°'...,.~--n-o~n-t-=w. , •LANDLORDS e 41 milca soutb'ol Miatoula.
WINTER -SmaU. cha.nnJng ba, trplc, b1Hu21, dahw&.hr. _ NeWpart. 2 Br, 1% BA, Hirbor H1l9ht1 Four FREE A.ENTAL SERVICE .Monti...._ tBo~~lc li ~ t BEDROOM Home + Den. Coll1g1 Park 3115 ..-1 .. &: ... avail c:-t l 2 It 3 BR UNITS a-.._ 5U'6982 ervo r wa er, _, acrt• 111-,..
I ~ ~ B 2 Br., cottage, great }111tio. r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;-:;-;;;-;::;:;-::;;~\.;U;;t;;il;pd;;·;"':;;;·l;;I05~ .. === ·-·.-•-· ... ,., · · 1-~"°"'=.,...'i-o'""-~'-~I prect. toW aio acres: part S6X300' ot. ...,.,...,, Y ldeal single penon. 400 lrls.1 MODERN 3 Br. hout1e, xnlt ""lnlfl' lae. Ulo. 646-S&t! all with tlrtplacea, * Rtnt•I Strvict * under gravil)' 1prlnl0er IY"-
OWPC1". 6t$-64G9 condition. Yrly IC'.'ase, Avail Ltguna Nfgutl 3707 Bilboa 4300 dllhwnsbcni & 2 bath!, FREE 'I'9 LANDLOR6S tern. Low down paymenl, 6%
Uguna ... ch 1705 Summtr Rtnt1f1 2910 -""=w=·=t=all=M0-633<======l3 BR, 2 SA. beat1llful view. ~la.I =i:::; Blue Beaten SG-Olll int~st. Califomla jnttrut
-~ •rn n-1~-~ h U ·1 -~•tt d" •· t ii-.. 2 BR. PeninsWa Pt. 3117-A Clnnomon· Ave. BACHELOR'S ROOM, $60. for_ sale or 1t'llde. DI.YI. PRICE REDUCED ~~ °" ~ """8 c ni s. Newport Beach 3200 UI -115' .... w • .,, CJ"t> •· .... ..., Sundeck..' 4145 mo. mo. incl, util., no cooking. 546-984j, alt. S, 644--0123.
*VIEW HOME* :!~~~~ lO;c~~r ~:~ [ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;:::;:::;;;;;;;[~l~rpl;;';;·;836-5;o·=:;'l50~or:,;54~2,-:;;l2;,l5= I ~==*=6'1>-068<===*== p~• ~1:34 Avail Spt l, Man only. mj~~~~~~~~
BY OWNER '15 E. Balhoo Blvd .. Balboo B / B Condominium 3950 Balboa lsflnd 4355 !..,,,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!l'<'ll=<::;•·;::;:;====;=IAcroa511 6200
PERFECT condition! ~ust BALBOA -Jnex-pe:Mive cot· 0 s s HARBOR GREl:llS Guett Homes .S991 --L-=.-.-.-n.·-8-0-.-.-h--see interlOi'-to apprec ... te! '"""'S. \Veekly rates July, TOWNH U E SZ-aS. Beaut. 2 Br, l% Ba. un-CHARMING lmmae. 2 BR lft • .. BR 2 BA 1 .. -livl""' rm .._~ 1 "'A" ,,,,.. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, !!plit· fum, Country Club Villa. PRY room in lic'd; Board & 7 ACRES W/PERMIT
;lrepiact, dt;'t't;, all,. elec: AugUst, Sep ' '"D-\1~ -level, 3 l'ar carport. Faces Crpts, drps, blt-lns. For in· ~~h. *~:~Ir Au: ~ d ~ BACllELOR unfU:m f r 0 m Care homt for elderly, am· TO KEEP HORSES
lric incl kitchen. Thermo cusror.t 2 BR, lg modem._ 1 pool. SZ65 month. fo cllll 213-826-3481 or Aug 16th, & ls! 2 wks In $110. Al~ avail 1 • 2 • 3 b'ulatory man or woman. Adjacent subdlvl!kln o n e
controls: each room. Beamed hOUse from ocea~. Avail. ALSO 341-9451 Sept. 118 Abalone. 67S-0588 Bdrm. Heated P®ls, child Nourishing meala, congenial mUe E. oI hwy, utll avail.
ceiling thru-Out, wall to \vaU Aug -Sept 873-6055 2 Bedroom. 2 balh, spllt-lev·I=='======== care center, adj to shopping. &trf!OSphere; lrg yard _ & $35,000, ~~Cash, bal Isl trust
ca.rpeU, drapes, Jge cot lot, 2 BR, 1 BA, adj. bay/beach. cl. 2 Car garage. $225 Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 BEAUTIFUL Upper duplex No pets. ))3\10, Avail now. ~ deed.
sht'\lbs. Good deal for G.J. Avail. Aug, $200 wk. monUt. ' I BR 2 BA ,, bik to'--·· Apt. Vtry close to St. Bay. 4 2700 Peterson \Vay * PRIVATE room Jor elder· MAKE OFFER
Owner moving to ranch. 67l-1901 Bay & Beach Oce~n vie~.n .,.,....~ 8~rs~~~ ~·. Costa Mesa 546--0370 ly lady In lic'd gUt"St home, Write or contact: George R.
Price S3T,700. 2 BR BaJOOa apt adj Realty, Inc. ** 67J-.5822 ** THE SEVILLE good 'food served. 646-3391. Kress, Box 914, Laguna
MAKE OFFER beaches/nier .$1&-llSO wkty. 901 Dove o NB su·t 126 O C 4600 2 BR. W/garage, $145. --Beach or phone 4944726.
0
'
t• 1 ,,...,, .--r r.. 1 e 2 BDR Duplex crpl! d range ounty I p 6000 Write P. · Box ..., ..._ .. na 536-39ll, 6T;r5810 6-15-2000 Eves. 548-6966 blt·l,,;., gar'., C i'e i7:·; ~dults -crpts -drps -mt. ncome roperty 1l ACRES, Ol'allge & avocado
&oebtim_ or call 4r"4126 any-BALBOA .1 BR, redec. Nr. $145/mo 210 ,..··ii Pl CM SINGLE yoUJ1i'. adults, lux-!Ans. FAe~~" Y .. ~-;.... 2619 Santa SLEEPER grove. So. Or. County.
e, beaches. $75-$135. wk 1 y. SPAC. 4 Br. 2 ba. dupltx, ~~ · """""' •· · ury garden apts. \Y/full na ve . ...,.,........_, $130,000 on cash de a I * * EXCEPTIONAL * • 536-391.1 or ~10. blk to beach. Avail. 1 yr.1-64., .. .,.1.,,535.,.,..-=------recreation I a c i I i t 1 es & -Z.O ACRES navel, high pro-w/$25,000 do\\rn. No pymts
LAGUNA BEACH HOME lease, $300 per m6. M u s I <cN r ALS complete privacy. South Newport Btach 5200 ducing orange grove wit.re-on equity for one yr.
OR WEEKENDER RENTALS have refer., no pets. Aph. Furnished Bay Oub Apts. 277 So. SPAC new 2 BR, 2 BA, ef-mendous growth potential 494-6594 Broker.
Walk to Wood's Cove Bch. 3 Houstl Unfurnished 1.-nt 833--0820 Brookhural, Anaheim (714) .... Adj to Hwy 60 olf ramp ~0 G I .,._ kit, frplc, enc gar. Steps ki • · · -· ' TAKE over 10 Acres no
bedrooms, 2 lull baths -1 General 3000 ''PARK UDO", like new, 2 enera ..vuu ~772-IO:i'SOO'=======·I heh 1 $250 M 673-1990 the main lernunus to new down $Z5 Ra h .1 bedroom, ' bath 2nd fir. B 2 B frpl pool -. se. , o, lake & recreation project. . mo. nc s1 e outside en~. Neat , r, a, c; -2 car $135. Nice 1 Br, pool, pulling Gard•n Grove 4610 or 541-3181 PRE _ PAID INTERE5'T 11r. huge lake. 894-t743 Agl.
$325 LEASE, 4 BR. 3 BA, gal'. $250. Bkr 646--0732 green. Avail 8/19, Broker BALBOA BAY CLUB DOWN ~ clean lll$ide, out. Gay 2400 ft cu t m no pe ts ex-; S147,......., FULL M t & D rt 6210 .. ~,n ~tto. pr ivacy. sq. · s 0 • C 3 BR 2;l ba, bltlns, pool, ~64>-0~~Jl~l~--~~--SINGLE Young Adults Lux-quisite 1 Br apt. Furn or PRICE. oun • tH cu ....,. 32> Vista Baya, M. S265 I · 9/ •~ Fenced. Close to beach, 646-8636 -ease. Avail 1. $150, 1 Br lowtr, nicely furn, ury garden apts with coun-unf. Lse. $400. 642-7633 MAY TRADE
hwy., stores. Priced to T29-8038 aft 6 PM Patio, '"-'/W. Avail 8/5. Bkr try club atmosphere and OCEANFRONT Apt, 3 BR, 2 e Plell.'le call: Tom DeMaio
sell •• , $33,SOO. Call I 0 r $250. 4 Br, fam rm. 2~1 Ba,
8
-Sh
22
~ complete privacy. SOU'I'H BA, dishwshr & lndry. e REALTOR (TI4) &75-6259 UNO HO!
99-"'1 Condo. R/0, re frig, extras. ay ores 3 S -BAY CLUB AP'I'S 13100 appt. Bkr., 4 .,,.. Child t Bk ard O>mpletety redec, Jse $285 TRIPLEX -n ''' -me. r C t M 4100 CHAPMAN Ave G en HANDYMAN'S 534..o9io ....., WATERFRONT Near BBC, oa a eaa Grove (714) 636-3030. mo. 548-8077 PRIDE of ownenhip. Live UNO A'PLENTY!
SPECIAL $165. 2 8', l'n Ba Townhse. luxury J BR.. 3 BA, 'vith $30 00 wk up Bl II 5242 In owner's unit It Jet the 2
• I-me units, 12<! yds. lo gard, yrly Sept. 15 lo -4 • • S A ' 4620 Ea1t U BR. units pay your way. PLUS "~" Stove, refrig, patio, Avail e Day , k ... anta n1 l'AA 500 beach. Patios, decks w/ yean. $650 mo. Resp. • ~·ee • mon.... O NEW DELUXE e .,....., . Drive by 653 Plum. LAKES I ocean view. Nd!. pa.int. etc. S/l.\Bkr. 534--6980 adults, no pets. n4--6-42-.5674 •Studio & Bach. AptJ. YRLY. 2 BR 1 BA, 2 car gar, t mer, C, M., then call -• EXE~~IVE H 4 5 & e •--1 U"" .l p•-·-1 s -3 Br. 2 ba apt. for ease D L ' R LAKES I Should gross $9,000 a~ual-.._..,, omts. or 213-799--4856 ......, ....... ,..,,~ ael"Y. Adults. Nr Bristo hopping Incl. spac. mastt. suite, din e ancy tal Estat• •
Price $69,600. Trades cons!d. 6 Br. Furn & unturn trom =========! • Maid Service, TV avail Cntr. $145 mo. 646-2542 bl 2828 E, Cbut Hwy., CdM LAKES I
S300. Bkr 645-0111 · Weotcl1'ff 3230 •New Cafe & Bar Avail a115 rm. & d · garage, auto. 673 '71 • erec!. 1 .;,:=o====--::==~ door opener avail. Pool &1--,,..'°"ii=;'~7"'0'==--I MISSION REALTY 494-0731 SJ.l{I. 2 Br, gar, yard,L _E_A_S_E_W--l-.f-l _N_B_3_B_ 2376 Newport Blvd. 548-9755 1-rec. area. Nr. Catholic -4 NATI'Y NIFTIES L~R TO I YOUR F1JTURE,
VIEW HOME children O.K. 2 f estc t ' -,._:• MOBILE home: 2 hdr., L1gun1 8ffch 470S Church & school It Corona All 2 BR -Elec bltin.s, Lush NI 0'°""sM"OG""1bJUe skies. , . • • Broker 534--$80 Ba, am rm, crpls, ... .,.,, across trom beach. Pool & , c ean, DRY air e e BY .OWNER bltns, 20x40 hrd pool, pool laundry ,,,,·r. Adul", ..,.. 100 CLIFF DRIVE de! Mar High. patios AND over l2% net • . . the ideal climate for
h Ow 0.0 2233 ~ ·-r · h d • ONLY S255. • return. Make me prove it? air· u · · N'w 3 Bdrm • Den. 0 -om Costa Mou 3100 se ner .....,.... eves •~ 1·-1 til & 1 Two bedroom urrus e a a growmg, nut & apn· "" D<O • • pe'"". ua pus u -c ean-865 Amigos Way, N.B. Jo Hansen, Rltr. 646--8226 t hard ho h ceilings, outstanding VIEW.
3250
ing fee. 21002 Ocean. HB see All Deluxe Features . __ co ore s; rse ra.nc -
All elec kitchen. Roman 3 BR • 2 BR • Garage Corona del Mir mngr. Avail Sept. 1 . \Valking D~tance to Beach c d I M 5250 a I R I 606 Ing, fish hatcheries -•• un-ba.th. :r.1ust 9ell • $47,500 or 536-lG74 $225 _ Yearly lease orona e Ir UI nus •nta 0 limited opportunities!
offer. OPEN SAT It SUN 2 BR house S. of Hwy, ex·1 ~=~-------I 4~2449 MARINERS CENTER THERE ARE OVER 100
10 4 pm l.""' "'-.i:~ $197 TO $225 MO. + WATER cellent condition. Married LGE Bachelor unit Sharp. ~~~~~-~~--,...., • LAKES (man-made) NO\V am • • "" ""¥ ..... "' 1 hld Is Crpt /d N So c t 2 BR doplex, fw-n & unfurn, •~ vmce "" skire bldg, rent or IN TflE AREA al< Drlvt, or phone 830-2825. Frplc., bltlns, 8' fence, cor-coupe, no c rn, no pe . s rps. r. . oas nr Vic Hug 0 , new ~ lease. $75 to S120 per mo. , : . m es
LAGUNA CANYON 2 BR ner, :side gate, \I/ill sell on SZ25 mo. 837-2526 Plaza, OCC. $135 incl. cpts/drps, frpl, gar. iJ,. 149 Riverside Ave. 646-24l4 this .not only a h1ghty pro-
contract 1or $1000 down. 3 Br, 2 Ba lam rm, bHins, everything. 546-5079. Aft, 4 l ~===------1 ducti~·e area, but one ol
hoUle $14,500. Fenced yd. 642-2221, 646-9666 gardener $275. 642--1682. 2066 , 7P=M='==~-----'""~-:.,11156;,.,.~-----• PRIME Retail Location 8 great beauty, as \veil, Zoned industrial. 494-8170 1 ........................... I • RENTAL> ON TEN ACRES 17X40, X1nt Joot & auto traf-80 ACRES J"•l --'d •• , ~ Paloma Dr. AITRACTIVE, 1 BR., util's. ~ ""' "" 1 BR .• heated pool, near LEASE: Lovely, big Mesa 4 BDR dupl<x, 2',' ho, ~-$99.50, Want older, Apts. Unfurnished 1 lt"2 BR. Furn Ii: Unturn fie. 1871 Harbor, C.M. ACRES, level, no\v AVAIL.
beach. Year lease $175 mo. Verd e 4 and family rm, ~1th blt-ins, dshwshr, Tl:r:x/ sq ft. single gentleman only. Call Frplcs I prtv. patios/Pools. 6464i654 ABLE. wilh pump k well;
-494-3208 after 5:30 pool, wet bar etc. $125. mo. Year leac". $300/mo. 541}.7573 aft 5 PM 642-617 Gener ii 5000 Tennis· Contnrl Bldst put-or 11}.20-40 acre parcels avail-
applies if option-.to--buy de. .,,_ ting ~n. Offlc• Rental 6070 able. Don't be a "I remem·
Condominium 1950 sired. 2 BR House, excellent cond. 8 ACHE~ OR. ulil pd. 900 Se-a Lane. Cdi\l 644-2611 Qer when-er" , , • ,invtsti-
College Realty 546-5880 11arried couples & no Nice/working gtrl or lady VENDOME IMacArthurnr.CoastHwy) ~ODERN OFFICES gate Newben-y Springs,
BE AU T I FU L 1 BR., 1 ............................. 1 chi\drt'n. $250 mo. * 675-3291 =~~pets. $i5 mo. F RO!l-'I $65 PER !'IIONTJ-1 NOW!! Owner's must liqui-
Bayfront custom furn. Will 3 BR, 2 BA, Bit-Ins, carpets, IMMACULATE APTS! 4,VAIL No\V, large 2 bclr apt. Air-~nd., parking, central. lo-date interests_ Call 847-6640
sell on contract or lse op-drapes. Small enc l osed Lido Isle 3351 LOVELY Big 2 BR, !Vi Ba. ADULT & FAMILY new crpts, painted. bit-ins cations. Secretarial service. after 6 Pri.1, anytime -...·eek-
tion. $32,500 owner. 673-2259 yard. Double ga ra ge. Pool, patio. Clean, adults SECTIONS AVAILABLE Sale or rent at $200. Couple 230 E, 17th, Costa f.Iesa ends.
RENTALS Eastside. $175. 1st & last 4 BR, 3 BA, beaut exec. $100. 2310 Santa Ana, C.f.f. Close to shopping, Park over 45. 673--0130 642·1485 ~
HoUHI Furni1hed plus S35 deaning Chargf'. home. Steps ta beach & 645--2933 *Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba CHANNEL Reef apt, 2 bdr, 2 SPACE i~ real estate office
549-0674 app'L Avail Sept. 1. t~~nis crts. For lease unlw-n 1 BR, $145. incl, utils. Heated * 2 Bedroom• ba, $475/mo. 1 )T lease. for public stenographer, in-
Genar1I 2000 CONDOMIN IUM 2 BR. 11h $350., furn . S650. Na pets. pool, adults, no pets . *Swim Pool, Put/grttn 675--5483 sura.nce agent, acCOWltant,
'---------BA. crpts, drps, dshwhr, Refs. consider opt. Owner 54~2627, 968-1740. •' * Frpl, lndlvllndry fac'ls =~--~--~-1 bookkeeper, etc. 675-1972, SMOG·FREE
$175. Incl. util. C.oey 1 Bt, displ, patio, 2 car gar.1~'=73-='="='=· ======1-GO-RGEOUS New 1 & 2 Br. 1845 Anaheim Ave. ~~wi:i~:u~:~ J~;,l -=34~l~O~W~·=Bal,...choo""-"Bt'-v"d'-. N:.,·=B'-. -1 NEWBERRY ~~r ~~new w/w • .Adults only. $175 mo. Balboa Island 3355 Activity rm, pool, sauna, COSfA )it:ESA 642--2824 No pets-. 673-9234 PRIVATE ollices w/bath,
!========= ll,54~>-:_:1259':".__~~---mM> Parsons, C.M. 642-8670 crpts., drps & storage spa« SPRINGS
Rentals to Share 2005 $1d65. Jmmae 2 Br. crpts, 3!BclR.d~ ba. c~t. home, ~~25f~ ALL Util pd, 1 bdr duplex, • RENT • ~?P~·~~~~:~n_s~:o~Ji: Binldgtho GClo'ro"dn'''dFodl MSavi~~~ City of Lakes
rps. Privacy, patio, yd n u ing ga.uener *" older adlts infant pets OK 3 Rooms Furnitur• $~90 mo. 540-2266 ·• a e Ill'. ,,..,.. nrAKE YOUR OWN LAKE
Bach 27 will share 2 bdr care, no pets, ad u J ts. Salisbury. Realtor 673--6900 $lOO. 23~:;. Elden, CM $20 • 525 & UP , ""=-~~~--~I mo. Call Evelyn Halbakken apt, NB w/non-smoker, $85 675-1859 "t' 2 BR routh of hiway, crpls., 675-5444 or 54,5..316.5 20 f.till"s E. of Barsto1v,
on f1>ee-...·ay, Elevation
2000 ft., 30 Acres adj.
lo Lake Loreen. 100
Lakes (man made) in
mo ~g.33351,,~B~R~~A-va~if~i-m_m_<~d-ia-to~ly-.1 Huntington Stach 3400 1 8~-· elec. bllns, close gar. hfonth-To-Month Rentals drps., trpl., garg. Na child, SEE At 188 E. 17th st, Of.
$125 to respon. par I y. \VIDE SELECTION no pets. Yrly lse. $180 mo. Next lo Security Pacific * G~ to share beach apt, Completely redecorated, EXEC Home, 3 levels, cpts, Adul\s, no pets. Refs, Appliances & TV's avail. Avail 9/t Aft. 7, 675--3717 Nat'l Bank. Plenty of park-
yearly, 25-30, Newport Beach Yard work provided. drpd, 21rpk, air cond. 4 BR 64&-4224 No Se-·•ty Depo•i't 673-0095 64&-0404 •~~~~------1 ~.... ing, all util. included · liv & din rm, elec kit, l'l?C 1 & 2 BR., furn. & unfurn. HFRC Furniture Rentals Huntington Beach 5400 642-4210
3 BDRM., 2 Bi!-. E-side, nn, ... fam rm, 21f.i BA, huge Pool. Nassau Palms. 177 E. 517 \V_ 19th, CM 548·3481
quiet street. Sl95 mo, deck wlth \'iew of coast. 22nd. St., S42-364S. 156& w. Lncln. Anhm 17..._2800 NEW $150 up. 1-2-3 BR. NEW Deluxe oUice spaces
837-6417 or 548-6330 Garo ·1 Set 1st '~===='===== Heated &-sauna pool! rec 320 to 1200 sq ft at Santa . l BR, gar, patio, cpts, drps, 1-:-'°"'~-,,-~~~-~-I ... "" ener.h 7~~a~ ·1 $145. 2 Br studio, 114 ba, rm. Heil & Algonquin. 'Mgr. Ana F~:y & Crown Valley r,~n SAi L4EO ts the NRoErtShEpoRv'' ttove, re:big, tropical &etting 3 BR., 2 full Ba., stove, __... monl : Newport B•1ch 4200 f t dr RIO Bkr u 001 1400 ~ "!18 ion o acres
for adults. 1 hlk to shop regrlg., washer & dryer. ~s.O~i' ps. · · 846-3137 or 8464144 turno · .,., - '
4""..-u JNG South 10 'acrei IM:
$185. Mo 544-4780 $215. Mo. NOW s THE Newport Bearh =~~=~~~~~·I NEW $145 up_ 1-2-3 Br, htcl Office & desk space, PROVED \v ith m 0 d er n * 64&-5386* ' COUNTRY CLUB $170. 3 BR, 2 Ba, frplc, & sauna pools, rec rm. Heil Secretar ial service. ranch house etc. Unlimited
3 BR on Irvine. Pre!e:r col-LIVING W/W, bit-ins. Child O.K. & Algonquin, Mgr 846-3137 & Ne\\'J)Ort Civic Center, --,perfect water, 301 GPM ai !~; )= ~ ~";4Q Sleeps 2 Ad~~g. ~U:. 37S~a~~~: Luxury garden apartments Broker 645--0lll 84&-4144 67:'r1601 80 ft depth, Price $18,000, lf.i
545-6328 eve. TIME FOR orfering complete privacy, $125. 2 Br 4-plex. W/W, 2 BR duplex, pri yard, patio, LARGE Execulive offiL'C Cash, bal 1st TD, Subject
Newport Beach 2200 I-~~---~---beautiful landscaping & un· patio, Children O.K. Broker crpt.~. drps, pool. $l35. N.B. Also small oHice irom land has 220 ft. frontage on --'------...c:.:..: 2 BDR. house, $110. nr, paralleled recreational facil. 534-6980 S42-1MO S45 mo_ Owner. 675-4644 Silver Valley Rd., 7 mi. E. of
HARBOR Highlan&-3 bdr, 11choc>l & shopping. 2 Hies in a country club at· =-~~-,,--=--7"'1.-of school. For further infor. children OK. &l&-2634 2033 h N 1 · -$150. 2 Br, 2 Ba., 4-p ex. 2 B.R. lovely upstairs, stove, 600 to 1200 Sq, Ft. ma"oo pie••• -" 0•7 oo•o 2% ba., den, dbl gar, QUICK CASH mosp ere. ow easing in / RIO h"ld & t " = \;d.U ,.., -uvt covered p8.0o, fenced )Jard, I ="='at~I~'"~· ~C_M~----. Newport Beach. w \V, ' c i ren pe s drapes, rugs, ocean view. or~FICE, C.M. 646-2130 after 6 PM weekdays or any. -~-ner. Children & pe'· NEW 2 BR unfum., married 1700 16th Street O.K. Bkr. SJ4..-{j980 l ~A~d:u~tt~'·,,m=S"th=St=.="=·B~.;';;~[l~~~~~~!_~~I time weekeods, •--~ 111' 2 B ~-t lndu1trial Rent1I 6090 weloomt. $350/mo. Avail on couple or adult lady only. Furnished or unlurnishecl ;i. r gaiu.:n ype
or about Aug 1'. By Near cvtrything, no pets. l\1odels open noon to 9 pm '4-plex. Stove, \V/\V, Avail Tustin 5640 . THROUGH A B•-"'°980 -RENT n<w M-1 noormg _____ _ appmnt. 6(2...85(fji U40 mo. 642-3837 after 6 pm 714: 642-8170 now. ...-. .,.........., I · 10 ho ~'""' ~ Tl fE ASPENS comp ct ion. .s ps, ~ MAKE ho · ·
DOVER Shores bayfront 2 BR., ground flr. Close to OAKWOOD NE\VPORT Heights, 3 bdr, 2 156."2 William St sq ft $ll5 mo. 135.5 Logan, . your me Jn scenic
home, 6 BR. 4 BA. 1,......, shopping, $l25 inonlh ba, dbl gar. lg enclosed yd. Tustin's prestige addrr~s CM 675-5116 high desert. See our tux--•-GARDEN $200/ I 6~5352 · urious Gold Medallion Ha· patio, 70' private dock. HaJPinchln&Assoc.6Ta-4392 DAILY PILOT mo yeary ,.,... Adult living, no pets M·2 INDUSTRIAL space in ciendas in Sk;y ltarbor
Avail Sept bt, yriy he, $1000 EA s Ts IDE 2 BR. $110, APARTMENTS Deluxe 2 bdr., pool Adults Shag carpets concrete bldg. 3000 sq ft. 7-46 Ranchos $21,900. 2 BR. 2
mo. -213: 1B 0·5013 or 1 child: 3 BR $145, 2 child, $150 Total air cooditloning \V. 17th, CM <213) -434-5082 BA, panelled den. For local
213:785-6333 Na pets. 540-0289 SINGLE Young Adults Lux-* 536-2398 * Furnished & Unlumished FOR Lease-New 2500 sq. ft. infa call Mrs. Pangborn
ON THE BEACH DON'T J US"l' WISH ror aome-WANT AD ury gnrden apts \vilh coun-Gymnasiums & Saunas industrial b~g. 9c It. 1639 673-1328
2 Bdr, 7308 W. Oceanfront thing to furnish yoUr home try club atmosphere and Costa u.11 5100 Apartments from .... ~~.... Monrovia, CM. ~9017 Robert Schoenleber, Inc. --o complete privacy, SOUTH ~ For information ~· s bdtvid -.i , . , find great beys in to-u:n PER monlh, East 17th Contractor, u tr BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine at E · ~ ~~ 29 Palm Ht h PLACE your want ad where day's Ca.ssllied Ads. 642-5678 16th Ne\\•port BeaC'h, MARTINIQU Coa11al 5700 St. CM Street Exposure. ...,.10., Y v':u1 g way
(hey are 1ookl.ng -DAILY For Daily Pilot Want Ada tn4) 64f>-0550 GARDEN APTS. ;;..;.;;,;.;..;c...-----RQi11lonomics. 675-6700 ucca ey _
PILOT clusilled! ""'18 Dial 642"'18 5000 NEPTUNE E"o<ll<nt, parlc-like •orround· Beach Apts. NEW bldg. "'" Bristol & Exch1ngos, R. E. 4230 ings for adults only. Baker. 5,00J sq. Jt. & UP-1---~-----
Gen•r•I 3000Gener1I 3000 Gen•ral 3000 Avail now. 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 BR, Sullivan 540-4429 NEW M-1 .Bldg. ip Cotta 1-----------------_;_;.;.;c:.;_ ___ ....:;:.:;:~ 2 BA. Call (TI4l: 62S-1462 Bach, 1• 2 & 3 BR. Apls. New • Deluxe Mesa. 100% lease!; FOR
It A' 6 Pool, nr shopping. , .,16 6100 co eel. ter pm. 1777SantaAna,Apt.ll3, 1714) 53-Lots vacant 1'fl·, Sull ivan
1 BR duplex, sleeps 4. l Blk e 646-as.!2 e (714) 536-1487 540-4429
ocoan. 185 w.,.,k, Aog.; TOW HO S 'I'll Oeeae Aven"' OCEAN VIEW \Vinter rental Sept $125 mo, * N U E * (3 blks \V. of H.B. Plerl' R. E. Wanted 6240
lncL util. 3ru w. Balboa 2 BR, l Y, BA, C'rpts, dt'J>S, REAL ESl AYE San Clemente Anxious seller! ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I 642-IZ72 patio, Adults. $160. l:W E. \1<ants to moVe this bca1tlftd]•
l & 2 BR apls. From S135. ta Melody Lane. 642~72. Genertl lot. Asking $13.900 wil'i 15% CASH $$
Clean, 2 bdr duplex, crpts, Ren'tols Wonted 5990 down & will subordinate bal-$$ MOR£ $175. No children or pets. d f . l ----------I'""' to Con.,truction Joan. i 1525-Placentia. Also avail rps, stove, ng, ·car gar, I
unlurn. No children/pets, $!JO/mo, o ATTENTION e For more Information, pcase For Your Home Equity
"*~N~E=w==a~A7Y~F~R~O~N=T~* ~".,6-438=..,'""~~--~-I Owners In this area.who may call Kh, \V, Small. Absolutely no cost • , , MODERN 2 Br. cpls, drps, have income property in Eck off & A1soc., Inc. to you the Seller!
2 Br, 2 Ba, $330. yrly lse. GE kitch, encl. ~ar, nr bus. VIC. of L.A. AIRPORT: re· 1818 \V, Chapman Ave. l2 y~ of paying more cash
area!
Costa Mesa 2100
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DAILY
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PILOT
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Jo.t.DUR t \ · Furn., adults. 233 19th St., $140, Adults, n1gr, 12'4 E. sponsible coup!~ &-6 )T. old Orange, Calif. for Orange Counl)' proper~-. '
Apt. C. 67"'=>-0'236. 20th daughter (no petsl, seek 2-3 541-2621, Eves-wknds 538-59TI Call the Rest... •
~111'1.1 ·
ICtlHE . ,. " , . I , I. I' I , .. A wHNtroy.,., "He d idn't
_ _ _ mind her enjoying cracken ln l
• 8-S bed until he came home ond \ 11A11' IM I diocove,.;i a -In the closet."
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SCRAMLm AHSWD IN CLASSIFICATION 7900
BACH. ApL \Vlll lease to Br. unfurn. home (court, Then call the Best N!sponslble adult. $80 ~to. 1,. LARGE Unfurn bac~lor apt sgl. d11o<eUing or some apts. BARGAIN. 2 apt Jots Costa
-400 sq ft. Elec range &. M A 19 "t & !» IL Block to ocean. Avail. Aug. rtlrig. No pets util pd. $l25. C'Onsidredl, nr, school, In esa. uni a un
1st. Call Collect: Smith ~9-3866 nice area. Deeervtng film· Excel loc. 645-2060 or
213: 793--0728 ily 1vill give bes! ol cart>, as 536-0131. ·Af\}'time.
1 BR xlnt Joe. Close 10 Bay :.I BR., 1~i ba .• cpU, drps; 01vn homt, to your rental. Excellent view lol
&, beach. Adults only. swim pool, ¥arage. Adults, Can pay Sl25 or a bH more, Upper Three .Arch Bay
675-7S7S if no an.s. 4g.;.9471 _ no pets. 642-8042 but please submit what you By Owner _ 494--7890
BEVER! Y JACKSON
REALTY
147-60:13 or 545-1245 • 1 BR unfurn. $120 mo. Also have Area or 1-fawthomc. '65 RIVIERA. all 1 1 &. 2 BR. Apl.s., furn & u~ Furn, BachC'.'lor Sii) n10 untll LAwiidale, etc.: husband em-equ p., .. ••••••-fum. S165 to $200 yrty. ....,,,, 6<' _ pl-~ b w t A'rit very clean. Nds body wrk,1~:'!'!'\!!':'~~~!"'"'"'"'" t.:
I"' o-o~u .,.,,.... y es em 1 f]('ll ..... .,, .. t "" ~" "BUSINESS nd • Anita, Jones Rlty. 673--6210 Call locally: 642-3589, eves/ ....,_ 1 · .,,.._..... • 1
e WINTER flt.'NTALS e 2 BR, adult$ only, drapes, weekends, * BY Owner: Loi, D8nt1. Point, PINA.NCIAL
WINIFRED L. FOSS, A.gt. nc\v crptg,, nr shop'&· UM :iontd S unltl. Lot, San
• ~ • mo. 642-2389 ~ Clemente, zontd 18 units, Bu1, Opportvnltie1 6300
3 BR, 2 BA' Townhouse. ~ tloth ocean view. 494-5352 LIQ. LtCS
BUSIEST ma.rlcf'tplace In Crpts, dl'JlS, bit-Ins, pOOJ, clb RENTAL FINDERS BUSIEST marketplace tn save Thousands!
town. The DAD..Y J>Il..OT hse. $215/mo. 5§.S270 = IOllSlll+••aAlll1DI town. The: DAlLl" PILOT *ORANGE C'OlJNTY *
Oa.uifil'd sectkln. S..\.'e 2 BR. unfurn. Carport, patk>. ~t;: :~.:.m~ Clauifled Mctton. SA"~ On Sa.le Gentr.l-Sl4.000
ttloney, time Ii: et!ort. Look SI2:i. 771 Shalimar Dr., Ct\! us w.-.. C....M.·-MMl1l money, time A elfort Loolt Act Now, 1..lmlted Qu11.ntlty!
ftOWl 11 893-4487 now!! I Wlntmn (71Ji 27'2-4249 coll~
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SPECIAL CLASSIFICATiON FOR
''NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
', ' Spodol Rot.
5 Lines -S--tfmff -S bucks
RULll -AO MUST IMCLUO!
I-Wiii! 'l'Olr MW lo In*· ............ .,.., WMf .. ln4llr.
>-YOUR ..ii... .:,..n,; •Hrftt. ~ .,... 8' .OVtrlll\nt.
*
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Want if done
right •••
Call one of
the experts
listed below!!
SEllVIC& DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY S!RVICE DIRECTORY
6680 labysittlng 4550 G .. denlng
-~-~---BABYSlTMNC By the wk,
You furn tranaportaUon.
Call 642·1407 by day.
Japa nese Gardener
Exper, comp! yard service!
Fett est. 54&.7958, 546-0724
ALLEN BROS.
P1perhanglng
Palntint 4850
E>.'T/lnt. pnta:. Aver rm. $20 + iood Plinl. neat work,
loc re1S. Roy, 847·1J58.
Tlllfda7, A-5, 1969 DAILY PILOT ~ '~t·
~a IMPLOYMINT JOIS a EMPLOY JO~S .. ~MPLOYM•... .udS .. rMl'LO VMINT , t
-Holp~1111od, -nGOHelp Wanted; Mon 7200 Help Wanted Mon n oo H'lo Wonted :"'I
• -' Wome n 7«IO ~
* * . i' &lectrontcs SEC'tET AlUAL
J . C. PINNIY COMPANY
Faahlon ltland -Nawport laech
H•• Full Time Openln.g• For
AUTOMOTIVE SERVICEMEN
Recent experlenco In lubrication, brake ad·
juslment and w b·e e 1 balancing required.
Competitive salary arrangement, top flight
working conditions with neweat and fine.st
equi~ment Generous benefits including hoe·
pital1zation, employee discount and profit sharing.
AJ>J>IY In person 10 AM to 9 PM,
Monday thru Saturday
H U G R E S D:ies The Beach :
·-:• -;1
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-:.
~~
NEWPORT BEACH
ELEC-
TRONICS
Beckon?
MODS are headed for
Micco In Newport
Baoch. We nHd the
following to ttaff our
ever growlnt Beach
f1cllltle1.
SECRETARIES
~-"""hand I. "1>irc 1kills, public relatk>ns, Real
Estate1 oonstructk>n back·
Jl"OUna belpM.
.
4 ' . "\ ,. ,. ~· • ~HIJ«)FOll SAll-TRAOl!I ONLV I WIU. baby1\t my home,
PHONE 642-5671 Me• Del Mar area, exp'd
To Pl1ce Your Tr1d1r'1 P1r1dlM Ad &: re!s. 546.1692
llorse Lovers! 3 BR hOmt', 20 Acres ranch. 3 ~rodern WILL care lor your baby up
GARDENERS STUDENTS
working way thru <Y.lllete.
Exp. Lie_ Reas. 646-4203
e For better painting all * experienced pe.lnten a I
646-4077 atter 6 pm.
PEN~l!Y'~ F.tSHION ISLAND
Equal Opportunity Employer
*
TECHNI-
CIANS
far components test and
production suppot1, A mini.
mum of one year of recent
tndUJtrial experience is re·
qUlttd, A knowledge of sol-
id •!Ale circuitry b dea:ir-
able.
CLERK TYPIST
TypiJla speed a minimum 60
wpm, attentive tp details.
" " . '
Barn, ro1Tal, riding arena, homes, 2 welli; !!need. to 3 yrs: love & atten, Jots
lack room, etc. 1%. ac:re. Training track, huge ham, of toys, 646-8298 * EXPERT JAPANESE
GARDENDER $31.000 eq. Trade for IMd, 14 stalls; Jo"OR land, unltsl°"========
:omm. Submit &l2-&l87 Birr. or ? $45,f.OO Eq, 675-6259 Buslneu Service 6562 Free Estimate. 646--0830
EXPERIENCED Japanest
gardener. Reliable. ~7373
for tree estimate
20' Century-ideal ha)' cruis.,
bay fishing, boat hopping.
t?lc. Refin. in/out, beaut
cond $3000 val. Trd. lrock,
wag., R.E. or ? 543-9661
Trade or sell all/part 20
M eqty in 20 acres Rancho,
Calif. I want unitl, T.O's
or ?? You get 1:1Xld tax
shelter. Owner. 544-3666
lmmac. owner's unit gep.
hoUSe + 2 duple.xes &: tri-
plex -beau~ malnl'd.
Tnde ~ for RA zo~,
clear prop,1Bkr. 64.'!-6487
OUtslandi;& new view home
l..sgtJna Bch. 3 Br, den.
Beam ceil'gs, elec k1L, Ro.
man balh. Ti'd eq. of S14M
for lot. '! by O"-'r. 830-2825.
LAGUNA exec's, splil.Jevel
home; 4 Br. 5 hp.., Sauna,
Huge nnl. Near. beacb.
Ocean views. Val. $87,500.
For TD's or Comni. 494-
4653.
TRADE
F'OR JIOME, duplex or
T.0. Well located•C2 with
large paved parldnr lot
and good building. S27.200
with $21,700 equity. Agent;
646-7711
* * *
Want 2 BR. or mobil home. Shorthand·Typing. One-d a y
llave nrly. New 3 Br. 2 ba, aervice. 3919 Quail, New-
C'pts, dl'fll., bllns; tn:-es. port 54(}.6184
Equity $5,000. Pyts $163.il.J;========-CLEAN-UP Speciallst! Mow-
1111. edging, odd j 0 b I • Canon Realty, 6'Th-3581 Carpentering 6590 Reasonable. 548-6955
Lake Arrowhead, maa:nili· ---~. -~---J~lld=·s~~G-ard_eo_l""--&--la-wn
cent 5 Br, 4 ba Oii goll cse CARPENTRY maintenance. Res. &. Com·
& lake. View. $125M clr. Lo MINOR REPAIRS. No Job mercial. * 548-8411
dn. Airplane or boat trade. TOCI Small. Cablnet in gar-
Owner (n-4> 459-3103 or as::e1 & o t be r cabinets. Johnson's Gardening
337·3169. 568175, 1t no answer leave Finest equip., expert care.
msg at 64.~2371. H. O. Planting, clean-uJ)6. 962.-3::>35
3 SEP. houS<'s, rm. for 3 Anderson
more. Present gross $4.300; I===~-~~-~ Eq. $15,000. Want Big Bear REPAIRS, ALTE~TIONS
home or local lot or small CABINETS. An¥ me job
boose. Call 675-0098 Z yrs. exper. 548-6Tl.3
75' CRUISER, A/P, 2 depth QUALI1Y, Repairs -Altna·
finders, range 12Ck) mi. Re· tlom -New const. by hour
cent survey-will consider or Contract. 646-3442
prop., TD or smaller boat. REPAIR, Partitions, Small
Owner (TI4J T29-3400 Remodel, etc. Nite or day,
=~=~~~~--I Reas! Call KEN 540-4679 2,000 SQ. IT., Capistrano
General Services 6682
HAULING, General, trees,
hedges, tapped, trimmed,
removed. Big John. 64Z-4030
H1ulln,9 6730
YARD/gar cleanup Remove
trees, ivy, dirt.' tractor
backhoe, grade 962-8745
CLEAN UP &; lite moving
Tree & shrub removal.
Reasonable. 549-1359
Palisades home on 120x1s.; Cement Concrete 6600 dble lot, $10,000 equity.f----'------
Trade for liveable duplex • CONCRETE V.'Ork all
or '! 496-2702 aft 6 PM types. Pool decks & custDm. 4735 l-IAVE 8 I-BR furn apts in Call 548-1324 Hou1ecle1nin9
Anaheim. $12,500. WANTl·*~C~O~N~C=R=ET=E~W~or~k-. ~ .. -... -. 1.fAINT-res/comc'I, windows
small duplex, hoUSe or ed &. lie. Palios/drvwys our specialty. Xlnt \\'Ork,
TDs. Lee Pereyda Real etc. Phillips C e me n ~ • reas! Refs. 642--944G
Estate. 54S-6380 m1990 1-~==~----Bay & Beach Cleaning Serv * or '494·5488 * e CUSI'OM PATIOSe C.S.rpets, windows, floors. etc * * * concrete'sawing & removal Res & C.Ommc'l 64&-J.401 l!!i!!"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!~!i!!i!!!!!i!~~~~~!!.I ~-s~1~a1~e~L~k~·~•~8<2~-1@0~10~ CARPETS, Windows, firs, 8USINeSS ano ANNOUNCtMENTS * CONCRETE firs. patio,, etc. Res or C.Omc'L Xlnt
FINANCIAL and NOTICES etc. Concrete&: blk top saw-v.·ork Reas! Refs. 543-Clll
PAINTING • Int/ext, 2 Univ Help Wanted, M•n 7200
senior'!, 3 yni exp. Resp.
833-2232, 492-4432 evt1.
CLARK • CLARK CUSTOM PAINTING
• 642--2936 •
P A P ER SPECIALISTS -
Cal's belil for vinyls, nocks,
foll, murals, 847-1659 eve~.
PAINTING -po.perlllJ', 10
years In area, Re~ble
rales. call 642~
e PAINTING Interior/exter-
ior. Reu rates, Free est.
347.7495
PAINTING ,Papering 16 )TS
ir Harbor area. L\c. il
bonded. Refs furn . 642-2356
THE particular painter
for J)6.rttcular people,
'""""" Plastering, Reptlr 6880
e PATCH PLASTERING.
NJ typettl. Free estimate.
·coll 540-6825
Plumbing 4890
PLUMBING REPAIR
No job loo small
• 642-3128 •
Re.model, Repair, 6940
BUILD, Remodel. Repair
Brick, block, conc r ete ,
crpntr)i, no job too small
Lie. Contr. 962.-6945 * IF you need remodelint:,
palnting or repain, Call
Dick;'64Z.1797
R.E. SALESMEN
WANTED
Established Real Estale
firm, apecialiiing ln list·
lng and sale of unde-
veloped amage for re-
sidential devektpment
n e e d 1 ct>11aclentioua,
honest, full time u .les-
men. Exp, ~ R. E.
Lie. req·d O>mmi5slon
hail!.
Following Poritlons
Available ;
Salesman tD handle list·
ing territory containing
prime land IUllable for
single and multJ.famlly
residential development.
Use our excellent build-
er contact! for Hies,
Salesman to handle So.
Orange County/North-
ern San Diero County
tet't'ilor)'. 1'o1ust bave
exp. in listing and sale
of large apeculatlve par.
eels. Establl.sbed invest.
tor cllentele ptcf'd,
Help Wanted, Man noo
HUGHES
NEWPORT BEACH
H11 urgent
requirements for
-SWISS-
SCREW
MACHINE
OPERATORS
IA & Bl
OPENINGS ARE ON
nRST AND SECOND
SHlFTS
Openings are on lit &: 2nd
ahitt.
HUGH ES
NEWPORT BEACH
500 Superlor Avenue
Newport Beach, Ca1J1.
Equal opportUnity employer
M&F
LAZY MEN
We need 4 lazy men who will
not work more than 4 hours
per day, or accept less than
$185 wk.
Work Jn a d•en, ah·-<»oo. ALSO WANTED manufacturing factllty lo-
cated near the beach. Enjoy 2 men who are not lazy, will.
top company benefits. 1bese ing to \.\'Ork 8 hrs per day il
position• offer an e_xceHent accept Jess than $250 per wk,
future with a growillJ', com· We're Lazy Too
mercial division, at Hughes Do not call before 10 am or
Aircraft Company, a recor· after 5 pm, ask for Harold
nized leader in the field ol . Golden 642-6862.
electronics.
Ple11e apply
In perton
HUGHES
NEWPORT
0
BEACH
ESCROW CLERK
Escrow and aeoounfuw
background in land develoi>-
ment. realty or S&L.
Lrom·jbttck·, ETA MM MM ---Excellent benetlbl and lood
starting salary. Send resume
Including salary history to:
Personnel
Representative
MACCO CORP.
PO. BOX 217S
Newport Beach, Calif.
92663
~al opportuntty ~player
TELLER
Positlon Immediately avail.
able at our Newport Cen~
branch tor an experlmced
teller.
Please apply in poraon
5SO Ne,,1>0rl Center Dr.
Newport Beach
SECURITY PACIFIC
NATIONAL BANK
Position open lo men & wo-
men. Equal opportunity em-
ployer.
, .
• ••
' . ' . .. •
..
.'
LAGUNA Beach Uni f ie d ,
School District I 1 ac-]:!
cepting appllcations for a \
school secretary; this will
' .
I
I 1 r
I I
I
I I
8u1. Opportunltlu 6300 F d (F Ad ) 6400 ing. Reas. Don, S42-85l4 W1NDOWS DIRTY!
oun r.. 1 CEMENT \VORK, no job too Johnny Dunn your local
Salesman to handlr land
gultable lor O>mmer-
clal/lndl!.!trial develop-
ment l\fUst have con-
s.ide"ble experience in
this field and 'establish-
ed clientele pref'd. Per·
haps fonn nucleus for
O:in1mercial I Induatrtal
Division. 500 Superfor Avenue
Newport le1ch, C11if,
Executive Sales
Starting aalary p!UI com-
mWion, First year earnings
of $12,000 p!Us poealble 2
yttr tralnl"i pl'OIT'llm. by
century old national com-
pany. Business or sales
b&ckgT'OUnd helpful. No tra-
vel. ?tfanagement opportun-
1111!!. Eoual opp. emplr.
be either a U month or 10
month position. Testa; wUI
be glwn for quallHed ap.
plican11. Penons· applying
must be U.S. citizens. C.On-
tact Penonnel Ottioe, 550
mumont, ~. b y
8/10169.
J-•
BRO\\'N female dach!hund-1mlll, reaso~ble. Fr e c service. Free est. Mb'-3445
SPORTSMAN Thlll'll, vie La Plata & Vista cstlm. H. Stufiick. 548-8615 EXPER HousekceP<r, day New opportunity for the e Drrssmakini • Alterations
sportsminded man or Plaza, Laguna NI C'. u e I Y.'Ork. Dependable, ow n Custom Designs DIKE 4~ C1rpeit Cle1ning 6625 tran~. 8-2 pm. 96&-2401 * ,.. ,.46 * woman to get in the field .,...,...,..
they enjoy the most. SIAMESE Kitten, wearing CARPET &: Fum. cleaning: 6790 25 YRS. exper Seamlltress, AND COMPANY
\Ve have a limHed rumber of red collar w/bells. l\.1.adera for I day service & quality J1nltorial alterations & ttpa.ir, mel\5 INC
•openings for the ambitious & Jamaica. Mesa Verde. work, call Sterlinz for w•• '... Wind"" fioon <lothl"g -clai"''· 645-0731 Ph ) •
ho Id l'k to 540-"'" .~.h-···•. ~·" o'""' ~. • • ....... ..., one: (714 646-9'31, person ''' wou 1 e .......,., n u"'~ ~u carpets. Commercial &. Alteri1tions-442-si4s-reap the rewards of the. ever I ;FOM,UN;;<;;D;,-5,-mo:::=:.--::0;:1d;-;B;;la-d<"'I ·=~===. ==== nsidential. Dally, weelky week days, for appt.
inC'rt'asing recreation ex-German Shepherd pup vie C1rpet L1y1ng & , and/or Mo. P97-7350 ~N~oa~t·:-";:"':":'"'.;c:":..• "'~""""'"::'::""~·.!.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= fllosion. Cd~f. 673-3232 Rep11r 66261 =========~ ;..~------
EXTREMELY mGILEARN-L d 1 6810 TILE, Cerami•-6974 YOUNG & LANE has · GLIDER-Nice big. 2' wing CARPET LAYING _a_n_i_ca~p_n~g~---INGS ON THIS AMAZING, * v.-· ........ TUe Man *
Sewing 6960
Equal opportunity
employer MIF
MANAGEMENT
TRAINEE
BUT FUN BUSINESS. =93 Vic l\tesa, del Mar. C.A. Page 642·2070 * Lic'd landscape contrac-..... 1 ""'
You do need at least $1200 to I~~~~---,-,-~!:;;==;=:;==;=='===;;;=::; tor; comple1.e lndscpg & also Cust. work. Install & repnlra. openings for experienced Excellent training program
$3600 cash to start. Silver tern, min poodle found Electric1I 6640 Japanese gardens 8.10-3037 No job loo amall. Plaster • Tira11tore M1n1gers •. -tor an excellent poslUon.
\Vrite (i;:iving phone no.r 7128 vie Beach & Edinger -pate~. Leaking 1 h 0 we r e Commercial truck Our unique Management
ALL SEASONS HB. 842.1604 'ELECTRICIAN. no job too LANDSCAPING Yuccat for repair. 847-1957/846--0200 tire Saletmen Training J>rorram fulloy,•s a
SPORTING GOODS co. I ~=========-! small. For prompt service sale, call Juan Pantoja, well planned, comptthenslve
P 0 Box 566 Found tFr .. Ad ) •400 call 545-4614 -='"='·=2035=='="·='='=''°="=.m=.== 1 ;T,;.r;:•e:_S:;•::rv~lc::a:__ _ _::.'9"8:.:0 We pay lop salaries + a \lG-schedule • • • provides you · · s u '°""======== _ nus on net profits. Benet'ltr
R . Earl Bittinger
827·7000
The Rigger
# 16 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
NEEDS AN
EXPERIENCED
DISHWASHER
Apply In pen10n only
DISHWASHER
& BUSBOYS
18 or over. No exp. Nee,
Apply In per90n 2-4 pm
EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
Needt-tl tor excltlng, tempo-
l'lll)' aulgnme11t. Good short.
hand and traMcrlhfn& ma·
chine skUls needed.
Western Girl Inc,
540-0.125
Ass1mbler Tr1lnt11
$1.65 HR
Pleasant workfrw conditions.
ABILITIES
UNLIMITED AGENCY
488 E. 17th St, Suite 22.f
Costa Mesa 60-1470 Salt Lake City, UL\lh. 84ll1 I . ESTATE Mal•i ...___ "-rv Include paid vacationa, trft thel best ~ty to de-CAT, orange, male. vie. Floors 6665 P1perh1nglng " ••= """ ve op quic.....,-unu a respon. COCO'S SECRETARY CANDY SUPPLY Lynwood Or., 0.i S4~m 1---------p 1 l 6l50 Removal & trlmmlngs, tree hospilaliz.ation & life lnsur-sible executive in Omsumer
ROUTE Carpet Vinyl Tiie 1 nt ng esumate, Call 541-0088, ance, All repu~ will be held Finance •• , Interviewing b •!!!!!!21!'3l~W~•,.•t!!cl~iu ..... N!!.!!B!!. !!!!•I EXPERIENCED
AFFILIATE LONG hail'l?d hlack male kit· AU styles "·"Id colors SUBURBAN Palntlns::/Dec _G_EN_E-.S~T~REE=~~S~E~R~V~:' in strictest confidence. a major pa.rt ol lhls non-Pennanenf, 2fl Hour, 5 da,y
{NO Selling tnvoh·cd) ten. Vic. of Seavll'w & Free e1t. Lie. contr. "'-""rt G"·-"t··• Work Utti1/shrubbe""' removed, Phone Bob Lane or Omar s@Ulng, salaried position. --CHEMICAL week position available "'-"-' . r I Dahlia, CdM Pis call & <:.A.... U<U<M• ~ ·~ Ford at nt/54&.UIT u~1 lo •• n COMPANY """'ce...,nt income or ew identify. 673-6300 -~=54=~=""==54='""='=' ==-I Free est. No job too lafi"e trimmed. haultd aw a y1'!!!!!!!!!!~..,!!!!~!!!!!!!!! ..,.,,. emp yee ""'ne fl Newport Beach, hn, 10.12
hours \\·eekly "-"Ork (Days or I "'=""-~-~---I or 100 sma.11. 494-319() 54~1359 1· and !'e(Ular salary lncreas-OPPORTUNITIES for retail· & 1.J PM. Top salar)'. Write
evenings!. Retilllng 1A col. YOUNG n1ale German G1rdenlng 6680 1-~~~-------;='=======I Experienced es baRd on YoUr proere1s. ers, dl1tr1butora &. WhOJesaJ. Box P-421, Daily PUot.
r · Sh he-' n..~ · PAINTING lnt & Ext Lowest -H' h -~• d lecting money rom coin op. ep '" vvs, \•1c. Santa ---------Upholstery 6990 '" ....,......,.. 1t'll. Ullte. ers w/&ales or business Bllln,.ual T~pltt
erated dispensers in Costa Ana J:leigh.ls, Owner pls. 0 GARDENER A contracted prices. Tully Ins. BROILER MAN PACIFIC FINA'NCE bkgrnd. Age no barrler. Ter-French/"En•llt to .,35 Mesa & surrounding area. call&: identify. 5'1&-1190 ., Satisfaction guai. Free est. CZYKOSKI'S CUST. Uphol. Six nla'hts a wk. Starting rate 16612 Beach Blvd. rltor1.e1 open. CTI4) 645-0466 • """
\Ve est. route, (Hand I es MALE Bassett, liaht brown EXPERT JAPANESE Jin1 Weeks 673-1166 European Craftsmanship $26.00 a day. Contact the Huntinaton Beach & (7].14) 645-U02 Excellent benefits. pleuant
name b r A. n d candy & Commen:ial Landscaping DAll.Y .,nm WANT ADS ioo•,;, fin! 642-1454 ch"'· Interviews bet. 12-4 working conJIUons. &. v.·hite, HB area. 0\vner M · ct Y SERVICE STA. Salesmen. 1 ABIL~•
"""k" S157fl. Cash ....... uir-aintenanec aM eanup I ;r;;;;;;B;;;P.;;UN;;;;;;G;;;;RESUL;;;;;;;;;TS;;;;;!;,;;;0.:.;;;;;l~l;;;~';;;w,r';;";;;;;;Bl;.i;;;C;;;.Miii.;;;;I p.m., Mon.·Frl. Apply In •• ,..,4 Harbor Blvd. "'= .~.., please identify. 962-8028 MIKE INC ~ Full time graveyard shift UN"' lTED AG£N-od. For P'J'SOnal f'nterview • °"=-.,=='""-"""~ . person only. G-~ G ~·• "' 'PET F -• · 1 7 h ...... en rove and 1-Part Time eve. & wk. ABS 1 s -· in Costa Mesa area, send OX-•-.:u-vic. l • CALL 642-5196 y Ad Sh Id B ff ., E. 7th t., Suite ""'
name, address & phone nun1-, ~°'=1a_w_'~"-·-"~"~·~5.1&-~s.;-·1_6 __ 1·--c;;,;;:r;;:;cc::;;:--I/ OUr OU 8 ere, FIVE CROWNS Equal ,-.. ,tly -pl--ends. MUJt be experiellCt!d c.c,,;1a Mesa 642-1470 , Cut k Edge Lawn ,...,....... '"" MJ'"' k neat In appearance and ---btr to r.1u1ti-State Inc., 9075 SAT. vie. \\'akeforest & :P.faintenanec, Llec11Jed They're Looking For II! RESTAURANTS __ _ _ _ === handwrlting. See Jim 2540 Recpt. $400
E. Imperil.I Hwy. Downey, Fairview, Cloi. Small n1ale 548--1808/64!>-2310 aft 4 3801 E. Pacific Coait Hwy. IJT JABSCO N t Bl d c ~1 F/0 oUiec, young prefer Calif. 9024~ (213) 861.o871 dog, bro'll."Tl & y.•hile, bushy ..::::::::::::::::::::::'.::::.....::'.~....! .... _..,._;;,..,. __ ....,.._ __ ;;;;,._.,..,....,,...:1 Corona del Mar epor v ·• · · some college 11) fee reim.
CANDY SUPPLY tall. 54N732 Experienced JfARDWARE Experlenced • bursa:i beach area, plush NEEDS/\. COUNTERMAN & ORNER lfi all -•-· M ROUTE Tortoise·!lhell. fem. 3 mos. w/ Salesman ~ed. APPLY o ices, c Lo.-....:, er-
CPart or Full Time)' flea collor vie Scasho~ &. ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS JOBS & EMPLOYMENT TOVATT HARD\VARE STOCK ROOM City Auto Parts chants Personnel Aiency,
Excellent Income for fe'v Orange, HB. 642-6988 and NOTICES ind NOTICES 15960 Springdale, HB CLERK 2t>t3 We!tclill Dr., N.B. hrs. weekly work {day• or 1 'roM.UNo<iioo'-iip-;-;-;;-:~1~7· :-:1:.:..:...;.;.:;.;.:.:.:.:..___ Help W1nted, Men 7200 892446.1 Mr. Hensley 2072 Placentia, C.~f. 64~Z770 (al*> lee Jobe:)
relier pt ion "'.105 C t LI --Is1ulngmaterial,oo"lrnl. RECEIVING CLERK eves.) refilling and collect· sunglasSl's on camp u 8 Personals '" eme ery o s 6418 e JANITOR • ~OUNG ma.n '11.'allted to train mteh. counting invenklr)', So rl 1 __, R1cept/Gen Ofc $450
ing money from coin oper· Drive, NB. 646-2191 1---------1----------11-fa\ure man, No elCJ)erlence in Hnrdware buslnes.<;, Must , storage, protection o( ma. me exp<' ence pre e••=. l.c\lely new Irvine area olfcs.
ated dispensers in your SMALL Whit _, • COUPLES • 6 CE METER y Lots, "•<••··-. W• w•'ll -,·.. be 18 or over. APPLY terials _R.. other related Kerm Rlma Hardw•r• Xlnt oppty. Pref some S/H, area. No sellina. (Handles e ll'nier type e SINGLES e " "°'J ''"''" 6J"'4 546-7080 Call Edie, '"'110 ~.... male dog, red collar no tags. . I n g I e wood· A 11 or Free meals, unlforms furn. TOVA1:'1' HARDWARE work, 1i!ust be able to oper-.nv-.J
nanie brand candy and Friendly w/chtldren. 6"6-1403 Tired of Ban. Mail & Ht Cos! separately. Reduced rate. !shed, insurance plan avail-15960 Apnngdale, HB ale lifting apparatus. ~tAN w/coll1;e student 10n Je1on Best
snacks) $1650 total nsh rt'· =--0c.,,--~~~~ computer -clubs: ;JOIN TJiE 548-5084 ~ able. Stock plan avail. Apply 892-4463 Mr. Hensley EQUAL OPPORTUNITY would/like aomeone to llvt Employment Age.ncy
quired. f'or personi..I inter· G.s wk kitten. Vic. HIUllilfl'.ln YUN! THE JN CROWD -17.o=s.-..-o=""'=== E1ifPLOYER in. Prlv. rm w/color 'IV. 2120 So. Main, S.A. view in your area, send b ct. BrkhursUBucha.rd. DIV. OF l.fl.f.P. Meet Othf!rs J B & EMPLOYMENT at: ~1cDonalds of Huntington Loi & Maintenance Man _ OOZ-8429 Beach. 16866 Beach Blvd. No Experience Necessary Bayfrnnt, Balboa Iiland call L VN & Nurses Aidt name, address and phone with YOUR Interests•' our Job Winted, Lidy 7020 847_g100 r.tust be over l8. See Jim 1.iBS DALE WAY atter 7 pm. 67l-8927 r ·-e p...._....ssive ECF needs number to : CUTE Wbit • bla<k kit'-~ %•eek1•• ....... ~s or 11elect CX>SrA MESA CALIF 92626 ....,11 ..... ~
E''T e '"''" <¥ .-. ' Mtle1, Service Manager, ITI<J ;,. •251 · ESTABLISHED Insurance • U. Orle.11tation provided by a "ROUTE DEPART~1 :~ lonesome for playmate. Call them individua.IJy & {GALS COMPANION, Convalescent ~
No. 25" join FREE) can Leah 1-9 Aide or pract. nurse avail. SALESMEN .Allen Oldsmoblle~adillac, -~~~~=07~~1 Leads avail, N.B. ollice. full lime, In service, educa..
0 -·· 962-4692"' !l6ll-4006 .,, Lagu"" "'"'h.<84-1084 ACCOUNTANT ea ..... •••"~ tor. 0peru,,g,'" all shllt•. P. . Box .<Do>O FOUND: Gold cuff link in-p.m. W'>9320. Live in/out. Sh. or long OW tlal pd f '"" Anaheim, California 92804 1~-:---c-:-----•1 """' Jlomemakers st7·6681 FACJ'ORY TRAINEE, One of the oountrie1 top FULL TJME Service Station eren or sw .. ,.ers
itials LRB. vie C.Orona del * Al " service compleled, H . S. building f Ir m 1 , Bria:hl, Help. One. 1faveyllt'd. Ex· & nlle O""ll. PIZZA fl.far, 64~1 one. r 1.fOTHER'S AID. Exp. H.S. TOf.l LEONARD needi aales-dtploma. Phone for 1ppt. young man fer initial .. per. pref'd. Rlchlleld. 19th RN-In S.rv·Educ. St'nior. Avall. Remainder of men -CALL .1'""2 uo ,116 NO h. ~.u-,,,._,,,_ Full ..,,,..... .no-v slgnment 1n Orange County. &; Newport. C.M. p '-'"' '"• ·• ...-.
An . . f ·-.. summer. <213) 346--020 u-•tmlt·• oppo-·"I~ ror _,,_ Ume, day shill, Only thc!lt pwa eqwp or pi_.. YES IT'S YOUR 110 1 · 1 SERVICE Stalk>n rraveyard EXPER Busboy, :nor over, "' ICU ....... 'I '"'°""' who CfU1! need 1 l 1030 Lost 6401
house, incl: oven, elPCt LOST: \7\c. 1.f('sa Verde FAULT f 1 !!Chool gir wCants 0 ..... nln<. Prefer older man, top salary. Ben Brown'1 a dqreed &C<'Ollntant 10 LOOKING for retired active w w s'APPJ..,,•.,Aa. cheese grinder, pm& pans, CM Se 1 babysitting r.x hour. .M. ,~ 31106 s c t H So th broaden his experience and man for light work around . arner, · · ~
ho' , •••• "t•"hl,.., San!· Country Club, .. ; a· ror recorded messaa:<" 1hat area 646-ll32 must be exp'd. App l y · oas wy, u lo -'Id f 1 -.=--E-CRETARY ......... " .. point Siamese cat. adult, wtll cha.nee your life call I""'=· ~=c;=;:==~"' I Cht'vron Station, Harbor &: Laguna. See Jim after 6 prepare r a ...,. u ure. office bldg. in Cotta Mesa. ' ~
Serve ice-cream maker ("·a· spayed female: no rront ORANGE co. !;47-6667 Dome•tlc Ht-IP 7035 , _:Sa:;n::.::o:'.:;'~<":;.""'~.:way~,.;CM:;::·_l-i;pm;;;.. ;;--;-....-;;;;~...-,... Con1tructlon exper. helplu1 It interested, ttply to PO Typing 60, shorthand 90. Pn" ter -operated), TOBlllmaster clau·s, no collar. ~ward 24 hour l'l"COrdln< ,,-,. BOAT CARPENTERS but not mandator)'. Salary Box 1686 Newport Beach, IOnalil;y, iood on phones, A cate french-fcyer, e.tc. 95~ Chin<'se live.1111. owerful OLDER f.fan oommcruiurale with abUicy ' aptitude more impotlll1t
profit margin. Total Value 573-2859 or 645-2Cl68 LICENSED Perm.anent. Experienced Nl&"ht Oerk, Sma.11 hoteJ Ex Pe r lenccd. Intercstina plus excellent fringe benelill SERVICE StaUon attcndent. than ~per. Salary open.
$5500, will tell aU tor $2500. SMALL br'O\\"Tl/\l.'hile male Spl.rltual Reading&, advice Far El.it Agency &12-8703 673-9410 <:'USk>m 1\'0J'k. To~ pay. oI a \\·orld·wld1 pa.rent. com. Exp'd, ace no ban1er. Full For penona1 W.Mtw call
Call 925-1116 or $58-1828 Col· Chlhauhua, L.A. tqs, vie. on all matters. 312 Ni El EXPERIENCED •hoe. sale• \YWard Boat Work&. 1295 pany. Contact w, c. Baker timt, salary + co m m · 64~0 lect. N.B. reply 109,2Sth St .. NB Camino Rt'al, San Oemente Georp Allen B$land :iency man, Inquire 2'5 FGrest,_Ba~k_er_._CM______ (7141 ~9710 Mobil Statk>n. 24.1$2 El Toro =====~--~•
;;,;======:F;: lwsf: Toy, silver female 492.9136, 496-"°7 100-i1'1J.1~~~. s:!s 54~4195 Ave., Laguna Beach. SER,V. STA. ATTNO'T, over UPHOLST£RERS Rd., Lquna HUli. ~=INtT~Ndb~ ney to Loan '320 P(l()dlr. July 30; vie. PaciUc 10 A...\f ·JO PM -Sh" 1 /R • I ts Exp nee Sff Mike SER V. qt}., ATrND'T, Top ,...., 8J,NLn EA to
··-· •• I II t Be h •PP"' ec••v"' Al
0
RPORT. TE'XAoo ·-· --11 ~, -·-..... ~-...... .,., .... .ii uac. un. ac . AUX>HOUC! Anonymous Help W1ntecl, Men 72.00 Cl k '500 'IUI .,.... • ~ • ·~· ""'""' l•lll' tart Ph for I t. 50-S983 & •nu loans fnr qu.Jck Rnva.rd ~ Phone ~7217 er -~ C . Dr NB • Top wage1, custom shop, Per. AIRPORT n:xACO 4678 1 . . n . Borrow on your pro-, o.· 'Nrilt te COOKS Prefer JJOm<! electrical t@cb ampus " , , manent full time. Must be Cam Or N.B ' SASSY LASSY, 2901 Harbor,
eq w"lthol,!t disturbing LOST: Baby raccoon w/ col· P.O. Box 1223 Cb1ta Me1L backgl'OUnd. Costa Mesa SHOP Helpe.r-4& 11our week, pus '• • C.M.
r io. lnle.Rlt 1st TDs. lar & leash, vie Hnll \VANT yount lady 10 ac-company. $100.00 Apply; 708 WOJt 1~ fully MX:P. Upholstery ALCOA (Cutco) 2 oart-Ume -Ac.-cnt-~C~lk~-$4=SO~-I
"""-n ror 2nd Tl)a;. llarb:lur Tame & scared. company aarne driving to 13 yean or older ABILITIES Strttt. Costa 1.ftsa. ..,.,,,. Ne·-Bl•". Evu It Sat Aus $3.87 Hr . .., _ _..,_,1 11 • 1 -· R •••u•• c b ..,.,._, .. ,..,. • '\I "All•-student OK 0 '" =•, ~"""' ~·.... t. typ "'· ft. SAtt1e:r Mot'tpp Co. Inc. ew. O'IU" "' K11.nsas lty. Ex c an g e F.xperienced pre:lem!d UNl.UftTED AGENCY SALES Trainee -Salary ol C.O.la ?tfnu, 543.1915 ;::5 PM V'U'".....,. ctnt work exp, beach artt,
lng Harbor Area 20 yrs. e$100 FOR RETURN Reis. ~2 Apply In ptt10n bet. 2,.. pm 488 E. 17th St., SUite ~4 Comm. Bus. machines. 766 -*-F:.;D:-.;;R~IYE,;;;;R"S:-'-'-*.-Call Loraine., Merchant!
336 E. 110. SL ?tfale, Sable broY.<n BUR-Costa Me!lt 642.Jf70 Weit 19lh St. C.M. n-no--1 •·e--nn ot><161l MESE .,.1, co>1 673-7099 Announcamant1 6410 COCO'S BOYS lD . 14 SPORTING Goodl SaJ"m'". No 'Experience He~•==~tod 7400 W',.,ciitt er.:~N:ii''..S.mo
6345 White mln. poodle, male. no ~ 21ll 'Vellclitt, N.B. CUTier Jtoutes Open Neal'• Sporting Goods, 219 N...-essary! Acr.N'rs Rec. A: blllln& girt
rtgages, T.D.'t collar, Vic. Orana:e., CM. for E. 4th St.. S.A. .,. WOMAN-hou.Mw\lt, UM y00r wanted. Exper. only. Ae.
~ lST TO on octan vitw
1. S'J', due 3 yean. 10%
ltcount. 497-1210
1491-1021 eyenlnpl
S 8'<clt .._ -· Bi.<" ltlectlab ewr! See lbl
IL Y P111l'l; Oualllod
NOWI
. . . .
675-1010 Undet•ctaE>le Men's ASSJsrANT Cl:lEF A all· Laiuna Btach, So. lA&'una MAN to v.wk: pm. time in Must ht.•• clean ca11toml1 1pue tltne to earn moD11y. curate typl.ft. Apply W. o.
&rOUnd oaok. OJtlntry club. DAILY PILOT rentals )'IJ"d, momlftl'J A drlvlnr rft'Otd, Awt.J Win prizes. rn r~ l;H•\t, no Sehock Co. 35CD S. Creen-
"toc,p"...,""'""":,· ,.496-=5446_,=:-.,-==-=,,6'2-'321-=---=--I 1''tekcndt. WU! ~In. Af!llly YELLOW CAI CO. Ume limit. Wiil train at ville St., Santa Ana
DAILY Pllm Dt)fE-A· EXP. Tailor fllltt. Ptrm. 1930 Newport Slvd, Of. 186 E. 18th St. Btauty Coun&elon. &47~~ fuA!NEEs_ Ful er p&rt
LINf!· You ca.n U11 thrm po11\Uon. frinct be.nefitJL. 1d.l·o"1SH="w"AS11°"'"E"n-. -,,-pp1y=-,-,, -=,....;c..ta=;;...;Mc.•;;;11;:... __ n t f\ JN l BamWdldanctr. t Im e . coo1c~rountain-dish
for t pennies a day. Dia.I pa.y. Apply Mr. WUllarna, 4' penon. swtu Chalet. 41• E>:P1d_ busman, top wqa. FUii or part-tlml. Coata mactune. TI.CE ZOO, W.
&f.1~71 fashk>n laland. 644-2424 No. Ne>NpOrt Ave. Newport Apply Newpurt (':rollo, 3333 Mesa Coea:t H")f. ,. MacArthur,
\Vhlre r;Ierhanb) SOCK 11' TO '~fl.I t ~Ach. w. C~11t lilwll,1. NB. 6'1&-'1301 Ne.."--------'
405 Custom-made balrp1ece from
Perton111 6 transparent A.t'!UiciaJ fktn.
Attractive E xpert Comfortable, Mtural-lookln1.
YOUNG WOP.tAN ONJICe Co. Hair Replact-
dancer will teach you an m4!!nt Center, 4SS N. Twilln.
latest s\ep1, Call Ardell Orancr, ClJ 6l3-0431
213: !191..().'lfl 1-10 Pl\t \ .......,., a-A • 'JI
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MEltCHA NDISI FOR M E R CHANDISE FOR \IERCHANDISE FOR
-~ALI AND TRADI! SALE AND TRADE SAL E AND T RADE
Pumttvre IOOO'urnlture 8000 Ml1ce1J1neou1 1600
* J, C. PENNEY COMPANY
Fuhlon lal1nd -Newport BNch
NEEDS PART TIME
SALESLADIES
Housewives & Moth.n
can you spare a fow boors each day and. add
to the fa mily income at the same time?
Sc hedules con\l'enient for you, mornings, af·
temoons evenings or combinations of all.
\Vork in 'store under the finest of conditions
and top supervision.
APPLY IN PERSON
PENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND
10 AM to 5 PM Monday thru Friday
All student positions filled.
Equal opportunity employer
=rrfJABSCO £31
NEEDS A
• TYPIST •
r-.tust be accurate typist, wllb
dictapbone experience· pre-
ferred. Pleasant working
conditioM and good com-* * pany benefit8'.. l~~~~~!!!!l!!!!l~'!';'~~~~~!!!!l~~~ I EQUAL OPPORTUNITY I~ EMPLOYER
Help W1ntM
Women 7400
STENO CLERK II
$510. to $620. per month
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
Requires two years recent
clerical experience, 100 wpm
shorthand, 50 wpm typing.
Apply befon> 5 pm, Friday,
Aug. 8th, 1969 lo the Person.
nel Office, City of Newport
Beach, 3300 Newport Blvd.,
Newport Beach, Calif. 92660
<n •1 673-6633. __ ......_ ________ ....
a,::r.;:;;;:r::rn:
Rare, rare opportunity with
brokerage tinn. Will earn
$300 n10. during 6 mo train-
ing period, Yearly potential
$20,COO up. Must be attrac-
tive, 30 yrs or older, and
have earned at least S.ml
per year, with some mngmt
u p.
ABILITIES
UNLIMITED AGENCY
488 E. 17th St., Suite 224
Costa Mesa 642-1470
~.........,.~
SECRETARY
Help Wanted
Women
ITT JABSCO
7400
KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR
148.i DALE WAY
COsrA MESA, ~LtF. 92625
<TI<&J 54.5-3251
Car W•sh Help
Ca1hiers & Hoste1Hs
Pa11 & full-time, over JS.
Pilulti locations company.
Metr~Callfornl•
Business EnterpriMs
2950 Harbor mvd., CM.
546-8191 IBM alpha-numerical. Verify
and some related clerical
duties. Good workin&" condi-1---~--,,..-----
ti°"' and """'"~· newport .
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY personnei
EMPLOYER -· agency .
1485 DALE WAY
COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92623
(n4) 545-8251
SECRETARY/
GIRL FRIDAY
Entrepreneur with v.ide
variety of business Inter·
ests needs good ri1ht
arm. Exciting challenge
for creative brain with
background in stock,
computers. advertising,
promotions, etc., or abili-
ty to learn. Cool Newport
Beach oUice, Salary com·
mensurate with ability.
Phone 67>1122 for ap-
pointment.
Profesllonal Servic•
for the employer
·•nd the •pplic•nt
133 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3870 549-2743
CH I E r TELLER/BOOK·
KEEPER, <'\ga:resslvt
young company oeeda girl
\\i th teller, new accounts
and bkkpg ... experience in
Bank or Savings lt Loan. 1
to 2 yrs pref'd. 21 to 45.
Pleasant, small office at-
mosphere. Contact Mr.
Lapp,
00\VNEY SAVINGS k
LOAN ASSOCIATION.
837-49U or 64~3
44S last 17th .......
Ceita MIM -t
MALE
J. C. PENNEY CO!>.!PA,NY
Fashion /'l•n4 -N~t llelclt * Stock Umlted FrH · Delivery
HA S OPEl(JNGS FOR
COOKS ' WAITRESSES
*
IUSBOYS /
With 1ome experience and willing to
learn. Top working conditions & environ .. ment. Competitive wages plus meals &
tips; and oulslandlag 6enefits Including
hospltallzation and profit sharing,
Apply In person 10 AM to 9 PM,
Monday thru Saturday
PENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND
F.quaJ Opp0rtunity Employer
All student pog!Uons are filled
$60,000
WAREHOUSE SALE
over 6,000 sq. ft. of qu1Uty furniture ,
SPANISH MEDIT E RRANEAN
Showroom Furnftu ...
PRICED TO SELL -SAVE $$
3 Rooms complttt, low •• $389.
' Bank Terms -Store Charge Plan
Master Charge -Ba.nkAmericard
Open 9 ·9 D ally Sat 9 ·6 Sun 10 .5
APPROVED FURNITURE
2065 Charle SI., Costa Mn• 548·9660
Behind "Harbor Car wash" off JlamOton or
Bernard St., a little hard to find but worth
the dollars you save! *1 ~~~~~~~~~11 Mfg. _Entlneer $850 up !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Furniture ---8000 Musica l Inst. 8125
BS Deg~. ex~rienced in Hel~ Wanted Jobs-Men, Wom . 7500 1----------
1
• ________ _
ordinates or defense pro-, __ W_om __ •n ______ 7_400_ I---------3 ROOM GROUP
d 1 1 • EXP. COOK Living rm, bedroom, dincUe SALE 01· trade: Framus dbl.
pick-up bass w/cue. Also
Fender accouslic gUitar.
Both new. 548-7145
Uc S. RELIABLE babvaitter for $297 ~ e \VAITRESS lhis coming school yr, for W kl p t • Dish"·~~"er er Y aymen s .• , •. good 2nd & 3rd grade girls. ...,.., W c t ... App1.. in .............. s.,.,. e arry our own r.on rac T ool DHfgner $800 Close to ?i-tonte ViRta school, Y ,... • ...,. V • D' p Chalet. 414 N. Newnn•t, NB en • rscount urn 2 y -•1 2 nice home & big heart -,..... 417 w 4 h s rs 1Nt ege, yn ex· d .,... • t 1,, S.A. S47·2412
rt I ,_req_,_'_._54~7-'892-"'"'=~'=--l_7<0 __ 1 PRODUCTION MANAGERS, Open Dai1 .. 11).8 * Sat 10-6
Pianos & Or gans 8130
pe ence at loo desien. r SUPERVISORS • !NSPEC ~ F h' SALES ac: ranc 1se Closeout \\'IU design mechanical TORS, Top jobs. lt51 Pla· SPAflllSH The Cactory has ordered close
devices for machine, sheet FULL time, experienced. Ex. ttntia, Costa Meaa. MEDITERRANEAN out ot 4 Console & 2 Spinet
metal equip~nt. cdlent salary, commlsslonl-0RE'<'Osn1o"EN""T;-;D;;,lRECTO;;;;;v;;ru;R-Aa Shown in model home•. Pianos on a cost-p]us basis.
M.old Shop Forem•n
$10&1
.'\ years minimum ex-
perience as moJd shop
foreman in tiberglu .
Credit Reporter
Tr•I-to $525
and benefits, Call for appt. for boys. Older man or 3 Rms of furn, (din rm, liv Never again piano bargains
J,.._OSE,PExHt.MlOAGNIN couple. Small pr Iv ate rm, & bedrm) prlced else· like these! First come. first
school. 673-9410 where at $895 is yours today served.
equal opportunity employer IJ°"an=it=or"ial"'", ------at only $399, Easy Cl'C<lil WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO
HOSPITALITY HOSTESS is C.Ouples or aingle persons. 2 Term$". 1819 Newport, C.J\f. 642-8484
looking for mature v.'Omen or 3 hours per night. Call Sant• Ana Furniture GREAT selection or new &
to welcome newcomers to 536-8600 "26 W. 41h St., Santa Ana reconditioned Grands, Also
the community. Must have CHURCH ORGANIST 547-0789 once-a.year special purchas.
typewriter, ear. and be hon-54{)..2279 or 543-7218 -;;T:-;A;;B7L;;E:;S.-c2;-:;,.,.=,-. °'SI'°St°'•=m=a"n,· 1 es of Knabe, Fischer & Wur.
dable. Apply 235 E. Main, -=._ $25/large, Ideal for trailer, litzer consoles & spinets
SUJ.te 7, Tustin, Ca I l t . Schools-Instruction 7600 patio, kitchen. 642-4060 from $579. Rentals too -544-6925 (rm SlO. monthly. ~ to "--o years college 1--=====----Educa.Honal Vacation 5th * Studio Couch with one. Geiuld Music Company SECRETARY _ _._ bolster, S15. 645-0114 2043 N. Ma.in, SA 547·0681 pttfert'ed. tome accounting TYPE tto, SIR lOO. Top pay, gr-rs .•. Sr Citizens
baclmlttnd. They will train. Fee paid. Also fee positions. ChiSchl"l<0eTrtial10, _lessoi:i.17typl"Delini Office Equipment 8011 HAMMOND • Steinway • Ya·
Fi•ld Assistant
Trainee $507
Young man to learn com-
pany busineS. from the
bottom up. Outside 'WOI'k.
Truck Driver
$80 Wffk + Comm.
Gciod driving reaird, no ar.
rest. bondable. W i 11
average Sl!iO week.
Cook $3 hour
Niguel Personnel Agency • .....::S!!On. maha • new & used pianos ~I Getty Road Mar, C.M. 548-2859 TYPEWRITER. A d d i n g of all makes. Best buys in
Laguna Niguel Ind, Park S"~l°'T7A"'Sc;M"O°'NTESSO===R"'"I '°Sc'"'boo=1 I roach, calculator, Ver y So. Calif. ri6'ht here.
831-1477 21h to 6 years. Enroll now reasonable. Xlnt c on d. SCHMIDT MUSIC CO.,
Lenz of California for Fa.II. 646-3706 or 541-5697 892·2423 eves. 1~0~~ ~:~"·
F•shlon ls lend THEATRICAL 7900 HouMhold Good1 8020 1'* CONN SPINET **
Newport Beach SCRAM LE.TS MOVING: Refrigerator $40. •~"75 J\los. old, perf. cond. Ex,,_,.,,,nced astistant mana· -646-7073 ,.,... •• ~ ' • P icnic table & benches $15.
ger, Call Mn. J o h n son , . 2 black vinyl bar stools. SlO. WANTED 6444411
· ANSWERS eac.h. Tricycle 15. 645-1646 SPINETS & GRANDS
• • • OPERATORS • • • 5 PC. Sterling Silver Coflee 63&-362o
Experiended in sina:le ntedle Gypsum _ Guard _ Beach Service without · tray $300. NEEDED: old upright piano
and overlocks. Good piece _ Jmpair _ CRUMB. 'A 673-4627 wkends or alt 5:30 \\'ith good tone for Juvenile
work prices. steady work. wife-strayer. "He didn't Hall. Call Pat Bush 673·1660
EDDY MOSS 14042 Locust mind he r enjoying crackers Garage Sale 8022 PIANO WANTED
St., Westminster; 534-8738. ln bed until he came home f213) 877·1035 Pvt Party
PART-TIME Secretary &. and discovered a CRUMB In SEARS Ole.st. type, Cop. E • EC TR JC p LA y E
.. "lone !...;.,,.,,,_ 10 -· fl. " Diversified positions oUerlng
both chaJlenge &. responsibil·
ity. Minimum 2 ~ars ex-
perience, sborthand nee. Xlnt
fringe l:lenefits. Phone for
appoint. Mrs, Koehler,
540-40'/D.
ACCOUNTING
*CLERK*
Bookkeeper. muRt type from the closet." ' • •LL .. L ..... PIANO and rolls $500. Experien~ in preparing dictating mac ht n e, ans "M"E"°Rn.;Cc,:H"A"N"-''"So;E"'F"°O""R' $100. 20 x 80" pool table, Fi,m! LI g.tv\•7 SALES-\VOMEN·full ·or part S · h M · lood DI I / baU k ~ panLS or · ex1can . telephone, run trial balance. C-Omp w s, cues, rac , ==========II time to augment family in· SALE AND TRADE •= R nd 1 1 bl 4 J\Iornings 645-0621 _..,, ou map e a e, H ' Fi & S come v:orking 4 to 6 hours chairs, like new $60. Ex-I· tereo
Rapidly expanding manufac. per day placlng ne\Y space Industrial S•le1 • WAITRESS • Furniture 1000 ercising couch $2S. Dinette 1969 STEREO Console, dlx.
· 1 he N ag< product in homes on a E • d $750 + 18 to 35, neat appearing. Full 1 & 5 h · SSO L" tunng company n t ew-xpecr1enc• , ZQ PC. "MADRID•' tab e c an'S . 1me in beaut cabinet, complete "-· M ha monthly se~ 1 er v Ice time. Apply in person. bl 4 · 125 671 port.......,..ta esa area, s an Commission. BOB'S BIG BOY oak ta e chairs . v.'/new g u a rant e e. 4
opening for an experienced charge basis. Call Jim Arm· 3 Room Group Governo' C!i-f 6 4 2 -6 3 6 5 Speaker sound system, 4 spd CHARTPAK accounts payable clerk. Ex-•trong 64l-6862 Tr1iMe, $500 + Comm. i 54 E. 17th, C.M. FROM MODEL HOMES 540-0017 English changer. solid state
ROTEX cellent fringe bepefits and •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• FR 0 NT DE SK 0 R Incl,udes : Quilted sofa and TV, $35; sttl't'O plus 25 LP's, & diamond needle. Pay of:I wo...1.1 ~-conditions Sharp anressive aalesrnan.. ru .. """'ID~ •. , •-ori~-n-baJ r $79 JO •-'"""" • "'~ .c.. "'r ,.,,.,., chair -2 end tables & co r. $100; desk $10; '62 Buick o · or ea!f)' pymn..,..
1Ai'20 S. Susan, Santa Ana CALL FOR APPOINTMENT WAITRESSES Some experience in Indus-tic office, Fuhi6n Island fee table_ 2 lamps_ dn>ss-convert. $480. Gretch guitar, "Cr<d=;;'-t -c°";;;P;;-t-·= 5.15-,..7289-,~"7-ll
TYPIST to $500 546-3300 Permanent, ....:xp'd pn>fe.rred. trial sales desired. area. Call 6#-0753 for ap... er -mirror -headOOan:f -hf'gt offer. Kodak 35MM SONY 600 tape deck,
Fee paid. For lovely Corona 1----Fu=u"'r"'u..=----Apply bet. 2-4 pm pojntment. quilted box spring &: matt· camera Sl.0. <110 Iris, CdM tum-table, amplifier &
del Mar (IUice&. Mmt be HOUSEKEEPER Security Gu•rd $390 DINNER-FOOD WAITRESS ress -5 pc, dinin1 room; 6T:r7741 ' speaker $175. IJ73..465l
able to type 60 wpm. COCO'S Experienced. table & 4 hi·back chairs. 1~D~B'°L"'bc-<d....,-""'Cc-<0-m-p"'l•"t"•l'"",-ccbcd '6!1 PANASONIC 8 track
ABILITIES Appl · Reliable, no weapons. Just Dry Dock Restaurant COl\fPARE AT $749.9J frame & mattress, auto stereo. AM-FM & tapes. UNLIMITED AGENCY y m person 2131 We5'lclilf, N.B. ~ W n-··t Hwy NB $399 2207 check in. 'Illey provide _,,.~ · ~ " · · v.·asher, mi~ item!. C 545--0577 ASS E. 17th St., Suite 224
Costa Me!!a 642-1470 Huntington Beach Wardrobe Gal equipment. s 0 me ~x· BABYSITTER. 1 child, 9-6. No down-Pmt~ only $16 m,,. Canyon, CM 645--0731 \Ved,
HOSTESS/MANAGER-1~v~~=e~~~:1s. Stahl to $641.33"' ,. periencebelp1ul. M~r~~~·-6, 642-6975 WELK'S WAREHOUSE =r:~~~uR"'~"· F"°~.,..-.""'201=s""'P°'o".i"a"ro"P'~.1 Tape Record_e_r_1 __ 1_22_0 m FFEE SHOP e company, top ne its, ..., TAPE R•-~,, So•y 530 4 ~~ r · I t k . nd . M k Llve-in babyi;ltter, 10 pm to (Renublic Homes) "'M . LV<U " N'wport'r I""· N-·-rt B•h. r~ . .-. une x n v.·or nig co 11• a e 600 W 4th St Sa t An '' Track stereo $225 offer 2272 " '"',..... " KITCH & CaU 8 AJ\f. 2 small children, ages ' " n a a n~-ains for SI! 54&--0855 Excellent working conditions, EN HELP cut patterns. Kay, FEMALE Open Daily 9-9 ........ ., Maple Apt E. CM
&alary and benefits. Write: 5-;6-S410. i='=&='·==541)."'4=9'=.==== Sat. 9-6 sun ll-6 ALL week. Baby furn., vinyl i==========ll
Food &: Beverage Manager, Apply in person Jason Best J L-•11._l.. 7500 ---,S"U-;;-M;:M-:oEc;;Rc---1 car top carrier & misc. Misce!laneous 8600 1107 Jamboree Rd., Newport Employment Agency ou--m:p, Wom. 10412 Shalom Dr., HB.
Beach, Calif. 9262C. Huntington Beach 2120 So. Main, S.A. Fiie Clerk $375 CLEARANCE! * * Garage Sale * * DOG BED, VERY CLEAN,
C Fv ho ,._ • ·~ 36 b s NB like new, only Used a rew LEGAL SECRETARY onvalescent Hospital me needs moun:r-auu-No ex-rience Tieee"'"'""• FRY COOKS N ~ -$99 50 Q """' 1 t.
..,,_ ~J ew .... .,,.s; n.1ng • , Utten times. Metal box Y.'ith quilt-'~ ood 18792 Delaware St., Jl.S. stitute until summer ends, no -rtaln he"ght -qu'-• S89 50 Full 1<9 50 Twi Fast. accurate typ..,,, g 7.5. hfF. 96S-J.99tl after 5:30 '-"" 1 ... .....,.,.. · , · • n l lOO ed pad, large enough for an
on phone, Some sht.'lrnt. $39.50. fully guaran. Sleeper· Appliances Irish SettCt', $8.00 (;,I.origin.
Small bu sy office, HB. See Betty Bruce at MAID p/lime, Call in person Teller Trainff $300 Top wages, pennanent, hon. sofa matlreslles, reg. sz. LADY Kenmore wa.'lher & al "on sale" pricel. Also
536-8078 or 838.M60. m ~ Hntg Sl1oi'e• Motel, 21002 est, and working conditions $29.50, New 9 pc corner ar-Kenmore electric , 'so I t. Shipping Crate for dog, slur.
BEAUTIFUL Girl wtgood • Pac Cst Hwy., HB. ' Cashier background, at-in area's leading restaurant. rang. choice of clrs, reg. heat" dryer. Both in very dy, es()(!cially built for lri.~h
figure for modeling. Great t.66 XeC SECURITY oUicer ha s trd.ctlve and well groomed. Apply 9 am to 5 pm for in-$230, now St<19.50. Headbrds: exct>llent interior & exterior Setlt'r's air trip to \\'est
Pay! 3 to 4 hours per week. Agency for Career Girll private room for aingle terview at Kings, Sl5, Queens $12.50, condition. $175 for pair. Coast. Make good dogbouse
No experience. Hobby -410 W. Coast HW)I., N. B. Y.'Oman under 30, ( no Full Sl0.50, 1'\ins $3.95. 646-0836 aft 6. 642-0114, ext lor outside" animal. $15.
strictly for fun. Write box By appoinL 64~3939 children) in exchange for Production Control MANNING'S Sleeper sofas, choice of clrs: 294 d Call 847-6640 after 6 P!i-1
M869 Daily Pilot . housekeeping. Send a 1 I Tr•lnu $346.67 COFFEE SHOP ~~g-s~2:~~~a~~ c~~~·~i LA c"'""o'°Y "....,~"'"""°''"ore=-'°a"ut"o=m=,:c1ic: I MACHINISTS Tool box &
SECRET ARY p~~~LDf~ w~Om~n~• ~~~·M:aa. PO Box l9U, If YoU can type 50 and have 24031 El Toro Rd. clrs, reg. $20.95, no\v $12.99. washf'1-. late model, xlnt ~~ls27t92or r.ale. After 6 pm. -;;=====-..,.-~ Leisure World LaIUna ltilla ful sz. $9.95. SIESTA SLEEP cond. $95. 847-8ll5 -~-.-,.-;===;-;---o-11 Afternoons only. Trainee ok. clothing store. Retail ex· HOUSEKEEPER needed for a good phone voice. will 837-1014 * AU N * I • ho !hand · h lplul w •---------SltOP. 1927 Harbor Blvd, K•nmore Electric d....,e• CTIO Gd. typ ng s r or penence e • or ~ semi-invalid lady, lite cook. train to operate ad· 1· CM .,
Stenorette requ.it"ed, 962-6912 b'aln. Apply: ing. 2 dayi a wk, 8 hr.i. SlO. · 645.2760 d al I Y 10-9 Good rond. 110 V only U you will sell or bey
before 1 pm. BACK STREET per day & meals. 642-1385. dressograph. Experienced Sat-Sun 10-6. $25. 5<16-2342 give Windy a try
LIVE IN. full or part time. Fa&hion !&land Vic Hoag Hospital Bookkffper a nd Fumltun> i-eturned from dis-O'KEEFE & Merrill range, Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m.
Newport Cente• Medic•I B ck Ofll General Office Work play studios, model homes, ..,..,.,1 nd'f ir<>n Call d HOUSEKEEPER -COM· CHILD CARE, CDM area. 5 ' a ce M/F, matun>. Day shift, 5 decorators cancellaLion. t;vvu co i ion .,.,.,. Win y's Auction Barn PANION. for elderly care. SECRETARY . Receptionist, day.11/wk. 2 "hildren, 5 & 8. $400 . 64U285 after 6 pm h
RS 638 ~ day week. Apply m person. Spanish & Mediterri.nean etc, ~========· 1 Be Ind Tony's Bldg. l\1at 'I. Apply HOME~AKE • 1 lull-time, typing, dlctaphone 540-6370 after 5: ST<>-5564 Knowledge of X . Ra Y,, Interviews between 10 AM· RD fURNITUREA ·ntiqu"' 8110 2075~') Nev.'POrt. CM 646-8686 E. 17th., Santa Ana. & PBX, 8:30 °5:00. CHRISTIAN woman wanted 4 PM 547~1 e MAID. 3-4 das/wk. EKG, draw blood. ' 1844 Newport Blvd., CM J\JISCELLANEOUS Ii o u se. a s nursery atlendant at Lorry Morgan Antiques h Jd ood R 00 1· 1 Experienced In aingle needle • RELIEF C 0 0 K. 2 Newport Harbor Lutheran FIVE CROWNS every night 'Ul 9 o g s. em e ing sa e.
and overlock. Good piece daa/wk, Ch h Su 8 '"12 Re•ept•-1'1t/Typl1t RESTAURANT WM., Sat. & Sun. 'til 6 UnloaEXPd,·ngAN40S~OVNanSAL•·nE -w Gn>en naugahyde recliner. d work New 1enior c I t Ii ens urc · every n, ;.,,,. · .. ""'' '"' Wagon wheel light fixtures.
8210
PUBLIC
NOTICE
By A cqu1sttion
From Fed•r•I
Court
Bankruptcy
Sale
ENTIRE STOCK
LADIES APPAREL
Dresses·
Uniforms
White & Colors·
Bras. Girdles
Ungerie
Hosiery
ORDERED
SOLD
FINAL
3 DAYS
All Assets
Formerly
Patti Lee
Uniforms
and
Classi
Chassi
Lingerie
p
R
I c
E
and
Undergarments
EVERYTHING
GOES
50:FF
Nothing Reserved
DRESSES
Famous Brandi
By Barco -
Paul Jones-
Lagrace -Bob
Eva ns De1igner
Series-Bra1 &
G irdles by
Lillyette -
Warner-
Gilead -F or mflt
Roge rs-Exqui•ite
Lingerie by
Gllead-JerMera l
a nd Warner -
Mr. Barco Men's
-J ackets
~~yp~~~ 111~{ t.ocusi n>sidence, Lag Bch. 494-9458 1 -'-1,,·50,,,1"h'°"c._54>-9404-=~;-,=.--$346.67 38Cl1 E. Pacific Coast Hwy. DON'T Give up! You may warehouse. 2tl Roll top 642-3526. After 4 ~kdays
Billing Clerk $450 Corona del Mar find it at America's largest, deski. 16 China cabinets. 20 & all day Saturday & sun-ALL St., Westminster; 534-8738 GIRL FRIDAY, gen. ofc. SL'< months ge~ral of:lice I---.~.-....,--.---most unusual unfinished Round oak tables, oak chairs, d
YROLL CLERK woril:. Shorthand not req'd. Excellent Irvine area Co., ex ..... rienc•. Typ e ••, P rof.i sional furniture store. Cor. Redhill -k•-. h·'l t-s. •nnoi-s, 1;;,;"""· -,,;;-;::::"""7-:::-:::::;-:::=·ll PA Pretty ottcs, Ideal work1ng ,.,... "" Employment '"" • ., ... "'L-'" ROTO-Tiller, 4 speed trans. Requires minimum of 1 year _c.i_i_1_or_•0P0P_t0'.,,",."-.-"-85 ___ 1 -nds. "·'I Kay, 5'" .,,0 posting invo•·.,.,, s 0 & Santa Ana Fwy. Tustin. 1 300 clocks. You name it! \Ve ~ "" ,..... ~ m e Asslst•nce · So f N rt Fwy Excellent condition. Heavy heavy payroll experience, MAIDS Jason Be1t PB.'<. COASTAL AGENCY m1 . o ewpo • have it! See a!; 2380 New-duty \\'ith new cluth, new and modest typing ability. Hotel/Motel experience Employment Agency Open 362 days per yr. port Blvd. or 2428 Nev.'port d ·ve h .
25
ho 2
Contact Mrs. Mazur, 540-9nO 673-9410 2120 So Main SA A member of 544-s.t70 Blvd., c .M. 548·73&3 11 . c,a1nsSa.
1
"'ad
;;;;=="""==-;-;=-::-::I · · ' · · Typist Tr•lnff $365 Snelling & Snelling. Inc. RIPL -;;.-:=====c:::c-cc=' I engine. or e or tr e. SECRETARY: self •ttarler. BEAUTY OPE R A TORS ----:N'°URSES==,____ 2790 Harbor Bl, Ci'\f 540-6055 T E Dresser $SO, TIFFANY HOUSE no\v open (Make oUer) 642-5488
Expanding division. Greal wanted: No f o 11 ow ing a RN-Relief duty, two daya Excellent opportunity for LAGUNA B'AC!I Un I r I• d matching high-boy $50, twin in lovt'ly old Ke 11 o g g "KI°"R"B°"Y°'v;:,:::cu':u::m,,-;Co;lc:ec:ac:n:-,::-:rll
OFF
oppty for advmnt. Starts neceuary. sra-4232, 675-3701 k "" beds $40 each. 847-6319 l\tansion. Featuring leaded . h Call Sally H_... c~n per wee · young girl just out of School District is accenting h · had d Wit a t t a c h m e n t s & $500. ... •• ~ MAID, FulJ or part tlm•. •LYN-Relier, four shifts ,, 3 ELEC Sinlmons single beds ang1ng s cs, 8$50rte .. he T k 11 6Cii5 11ehool and can type 55 applica1ions for 1eacblng f gay 91J's furniture & ac-pons r. a c over sma , $1.75 hr 6 das/wk. Laguna per week, Laguna Beach 'aides and PI a Y g r o u n tJ w-oam mattresses, xlnt pymts or $41.10 cash. Credit PHONE SOLICITOR Shores Motel. 494-8521 Nun:lng Home wpm. supervisors. Persons ap-cond. 2 wt 1'.'ht \'inyl ht>ad-ttssories. 122 S. Orange, Depl. 535-'7289.
EwniJ'B work. No 11elllng. I :com.LLEG;;-;;r;E::-;G;,lr:;l,-:xl;:n•t -:_:::;:,,.,.:-I 4~ plying mu~t be U • s . ~~:~1~i195~! .~ 'Sa~m;:a,,;A~n~":.ll~•::;·m;:,.~t~o~?~p~.m~·: I >VIN'mYL~'fTIL~~E'.,lL~lrnO<oiil~e~u;;mm:;, II S~P.Pl>151" "Po"°, .• .," 18585
8hopMpalngln mer to be.1..-1t fu;;; $25 Personnel Clk. to $3a Collection Clerk $375 citizens. contact Personnel -;; 8120 Asphalt Tile -Beautiful cot-" ... -22"'"' Cood Offl ·~ Bl t 4... CHILD'S crib & mattress. Sewing Machines nd ~nl•rl ll.B. wk. ~ typist able to work with ce, '""' umon , ..,.... ors a patterns. Free
vr: D n-~ people. beach area, Call On.! year expei·ience in col-8546. by 8/15/69. white. $35. ~-SJlll'GER touch-o-matic, e11tlmates. Lie. Cont r. e BOOKKEEPER e I rest._,..... •ors Loraine J\lerchants Person-leetion. T)'pe 45. neat and l's"E'"M"I'·"="c:,..:.-.,=no=n-;lo:-;:h-,,ol~p 64fWl128 --zig :ca.g, button holes, SC\\'!I 546-4478.
Pharmaceutical planL, thn.1 Tofop ~ .. ~~~with Iota nel Agenty. 2<H3 Westclill attractive. mnnage 12 nit'fly furnished 1\tR. & 1'.trs. chairs. good on buttons, blind hems.Q =~u"'°A'°'LI°'T"'Y'"""k1'"n-g"'""1""'.-qu=;1"°1<d'"'".ll
trial balanct:. Salary opelt" exper. VI'>".£'""· Dr., N.B. 645--71'70 2 Br &: pool apL,, (Adults condition, can be used Y.'ilh $.14 .88 or $4.16 mo. 526-6616 Complete. u nus e r1 $105:
For appt: 646-3931 HOUSEKEEPER. woman Am \\'orking mother, 5 day Gir l F rid•y/ onlyl In telum for an apt at modrrn or provlnt!at decor. v.'Orth S251J. After 5 or wknda 1's=m=v=1CE=""'s"t"a1"'1n=n-a"1°'1<"nda"'°'n"t.' 1 =h. ~i-;mo'r ~i-fi.~· wk. 8:30 to s. Starling Sept Pa yroll Clerk to $500 partial rent, fl.1lnJ1n um S.13-2027 after 4:30 p.m. Mu_~i~.!!...!'!.!t_. ___ B_1_25 847--0:$06
all sbUtl open, •Pr>l1 2800 ~J time. Lite housekeepin~. TYPC ;;o, a.rt interest or dot.ies, 64~95XI after 5 pm. VTRTURE Bros dining lable, S ~B""'A°"B"Y'er=tb-&;-om::a""tt"re::,:-,,-,..,=rr'.11 w. Cst Hla;hway, N.B. Housekttper Wanted own trans. mature worban, JOIN HAJR 1:. co. _ three lea.f S50. 6 matching hi-back Guitar ale eond: f•ranclscan appl .. dln-
MS-3252 full time call aft 6 pm. 839-1759 b3ckground. Know payroll fnr out haJr lll}'lilltsl Open-chairs Sl3 each. 6~2-1614 Elr<'!'rlc singl(' pick up with ner \\'are: ba.'ls guitar & ~ONE SOLITOR 4-9 642-8644 DENTAL ASSISTANT. train. thorourhly. Ing Aug. :st in Balboa QUALITY King bed, quilted. this ad case, gd. cond. 894-121!1
pm dall)' Mon.Fr. Exp'd CURTAIN I: dnpery sales ed and exp e r I enc e d S. /T I11land. C3U SWl, Mon, Tues, Compltte. u nu 11 e d Slai: $99S COfl.fPLETE H
0
J
8
eh 0 1 d
pret Depel'ldabte, CM office exp(l'd, No calls. Udoft'a. chairsid•. Pb.: 548-5602 wk cret•ry ypi1t \Ved, n4: 67>-1230 or on worth $250. Aft 5 or 'l\'knda All J\1en:handln! rumishinJrs. A\5e Yard
$2 hr. st04164 ' So. Cout P1ua C.M. days to $500 other da,ys. 213: 449-6967 847-0-i06 Btlow \Vh!llt', tool 11. 4·'8-COShl 1'.teM SL
WIDOW to llw: in temp .. lite EXP'O SALESLADY EXPERJENCED MAID Type 60 wpm; Many COUPLE to manage .l main-SPANISH 8' blue couch, nne Grant Music CM. 548-1079 I
hllusekttping. -mutt drii,."e. Mt!D & '"miens Odthfn&: v.iuitl?d for motel divenlfied offi~ dul.let. taln 18 unit motel in C.M. year old. Xnlt (f)nd. $125. 1~ Garden Grove Blvd., s t.istEST "m!U"ktl~la~ in
Relerenoe& 536-3552 + ~ * 642-2670 Mu~! be h111rd Vl'Orkers. no 549-0507 -G&J'den Grove lo\Vll. Tile OAT1.4' pD.,()'I'1
AtarEL Ma.ids. int~bly LICENSED Sh11mpoo a:irl * * * r-.tAID • • • Prefer someone v er Y l'!XPf'r. n!'c. $200/mo plu.s 'R;;E"rn""1"a"E;;R"°'ATO;;;;:;R""s"'20"".'°' "a""" 'N"'E"°.A"R"""'°'w-c"1",-.,:c,.,,=, s"'pa=n1"•lc1 OassUit'd section. S a v rl
MOTEL. 6*416&1 + ~T * 30(k)6 S. Coli.st, 499-2005 DAJLV PILCYf WANT ADS! green chair~. 64&-."'401 ~tand. $40. 673-4."«Mi now! II
SALE ON THE
PREMISES
2400 WEST COAST
HIWAY,
IN
NEWPORT ARTS
CEKTER
SHOP~ING
CENTER
Acro11 Str••t
From Stvft Shirt With Uperience. MESA needed. Top pe.y, _u2G!UN~A~R~E~E~F~•~t~OTEL~::_J l!!m!•!l!lcul!!!!oul~!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!l~!U~rn~. [I '~i~bd~r~•p~t~. 54G-9279~~·~ I wall het.htr $20. Avnc:ado g11tta.r. lncludc11 ca.se a.nd _IJ'IOl't'Y, time •-effort. Looil
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I
i
•
---·--·---·--..... -~~~~~~~.~~ .... ~ .... ~~"""!_ ...................................... ""!' .............. ~ ................... "' ....................... 11
• Tmtq, ~ll;llllt ,, lM OAJLV PR.OT 23 MERCHANOl5~ FOR Pers ind LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR.TATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR'l'ATION TRANSPORTATION fiiANSPORTATION • ~ • . •• 1
ALI ANO TRADI H.,.. _ , 1130 S.llboa11 9010 Mobile HomH ~00. Pvne &ut1IH 952.1 lm~Alitoe 9600. Avt~ W1nlld ·9700 l,!9'11 C1rs ~ UM<I C1rt-9lllO
IK•ll•n-• UGO ThonJbrtd s•ld"'&. 10 yrs. BY owneN2' .\lden Sooj, ' DUNE Bugy Show Salt. SUNBEAM CADILLAC ' • FORD 18.2 ceotll &<>Od back. slin <.new hlterlor. -BAY HARBOR Bodi" t>om $1\t. Cb1.11iJ • -WE i'Ar .,. .
60 PWR tehscopo m. Bal' Maey i*66iii $9,SOO.lst1'7,llOllCub-no MoblltHom•S•IH """$249. La Pu Dune . • CASH -
bolll, 160 lb llO Maple din ' -tr&d ... s.e at 2$47 w. CO..t Cua ">ma Roll • Aw111 • B11UY Supemwb~ 36231911! ALPINE. E:xeepllonllly 'a CADILLAC
m table 'chalrl $'15 Ba.,,, F"EE TO YOU H~, NB. next door to -Shere ton Manor . Hamene • W. Warner, SA. ll4M045 clean. I.ow mlleop. Private eo.p. de Vil1< ~. ~ m.1.ttn11 t to " ~ ltt•t. 6C-ll22 evq~;; Klt • P.restt;d. Sahara OPEN' 9-7 Wkd)>I, Sat lM ~. $1100 6t6-~ run Powtr 1: Air
MOS!' SEU. '15 Galoxlt ilOll
SL. Ur hdlp, ""'' air, J'/9, P/B, auto tranr, bucMl
...... '8,000 ml Xlnl corul Kitcben aervkt Cut $5 20" · 1( d&lll 54Ml91 ALL &IZES for Ultd CUI A trucka 1Ult "LOADEl1'
blk• IS. N•:-_,_ Knu(ll)prlS TO ~ home ·-I•-"" _ .. _, Jor Kl·· ., ... ••• NOW ON DISPLAY lmDDrlld Autos 9600 TOY.OTA ..UGRO .. TH"" boeCHE-YRO~ $412$.00 -r ..... .; ••• ...:., ••••. foldlnl metal CP*.ID .,,,.... • ,.. • ..-••llq .,_ .. 1425 Baker St.. Cotta Mf'a s;..;. "' VIII••• Auto S.l•a -~· •"" .. _ ..,_
ea. hT1.,.en _col.~ ~Ddlrli ~le.cn:a~t!1m"' oth~~.~ ~~ine cond. '115. call ~-~talocMk ,E~~st of1Hn'•'l~~~94lvd70. DATSUN [TlnlVlntTIAI •-"' .._ c.-•n -485 E, 17th St., C.M. ~O p~. 1;:~to. w/tape a:
-1195 '
mac _., _,. · and dlapoaJtion ol a collie, u• ALCX>RT SAILFISl'I .....,. ..... '""" --&:a.:.~-Q -''""" .,.. '44 Cadlllac Coupe 'de vUICi, -::=:=:;.::=====I
GOKART. Twin Mtc 9" Abd 1 lowsble mutt. Good Mlboeany, new!y llnllhed. OREENL~AF PARK '69 DATSUN BHt OHi• Are At lllll S..cb Blvd. •ri& owner, air, leather, LINCOLN VER~A!~· All or apart wltb chlldrtn. 836-5STJ $1.89._,* 6'2"-Sl23 ln cltar, dean, coal Calta Bii sedan, 4 dr, dlr, C qieed, DEAN LEWIS Hun~&.3SS18eacb $1590. "2-20U
S200. .,...,...,,...., * ?oteaa. New 9'J •PAC• adult front disc brake1, overhtad _ '61 CADJLJ..AC.. Xolt collCf.
Utility trailer wie traded for m.ASS ll'TY LIDO 14, excellent park. Models &: Sate1 oUl.ce cam, 1peedometer reade 3200 WE PAY CASH Alr-cond: $795. Prtvate Par-
store.1e. C.M. area prefer'd. 3 LOVELY FlUU)t Kra.)" It C:,~~~7:6:1· located at Parle. Open 9 AM mUes. WW make excePtlon-1966 Harbor, C.M. ~ ty. 642-8382
54<>S63ll ,.... white kl"'"'· a wlca. old. to&PM. al••oltoprvt prl>',Fullpr. BILL MAXEY FOR YOUR CAR 1·.;i;nr-,CAD=s.=e1an=0e'"vu'"1e=-."'Good:::;I ·ATTN: Hobbyllt'I, wood· BolC trained • ...i. weaned, to NEW Sailboats: 12'6" & ACCENT MOBILE $175.S. YNW 146 LB. call Vic, 'co ~rv::.f &. ~~~ :,;,::;;,: ,,,..8: ~·&~':"~" ..... 1,::,0~.~~.. ~R9,,.~~,E~~rv·s ITIOIYIOITIAI CONNELL ... ":'.':~-°""
sizes/ at 2323 Santa Ana • Udo 14 • Cotta Mesa 114: 6'2-1350 NO 1 • ---·
Av" CM. _, alt 5 & ~ ~:,'~~~.'.'~; WITH TRAILER UVE By the Bay In Sp: 29, DATSUN D~LER 18811 BEACH BLVD. CHEVROl.EJ CAMARO
"·knds $800 , 19'-2432 mobil home&:: cabana. Pvt, Hunt. 811ch 847-1555 2828 Hutiar Blvd. ,67 c•"•Ro klda. Daya 644-4420, eves, beach I bh · & I DOT DA UN om. M cA•1200 """" Lawn Mower $4. 497·1808 8/5 CAL 28, No. 19. Outboard, • cu se poo . 3 ml N, ot Cout H'N)I, on 8ch tM .,_ 3lT C pd ~ xln condlUo
Floor Lamp SS FEMALE 10 mo Lab le eqp'd for racing. $8800 ::.-:~ ~~i~· ~Lt~~ ~ ~b :vdh 1967 Land Cruller. HT. 2fXXl CONFIDENTIALLY nimfns' rfd· e~t., plu~
Dinette Set $30. Beach Shellie mlx. Shots. Ex· ' 675-4028 8-0227 84~Tl8lg or 54.0:c2 ml, winch le cbaln. A/C & We Pay Mott For black int. Sacrifice! Llk•
'87 LINCOLN, orta. owntr.
tmmac. CClld. Lt. anen
w/vl.nyl top. Leather. All
-I> air. $3295. '40 Seville, Ball:la.. 6'1$o3508
-MERCURY
'61 Mere Cot. Pk. Wp. 10
pan, a.Jc, rack, P/S, P/P,
PIW, pwr. aeaQ:, 1pd. cont,
auto door lock. AJlll'M.
much more. $2850. 8SO-M'8
chair• Sl each. 54M340 cellent health. Needs family 26' F,OLKBOAT, aux aloop, heater, Aux i&a. Cus.tom top Foreign Or Sportt Can fore!zn car In trade. Full pr
REF RIG E RA T OR $2 w/ chlldrn & Jenced yard. tapatrake hull, depend. sea 24 X 60• l!l68 MOBILE Homo. '68 DATSUN losdor. •alum. •torege box· PAID FOR OR NOT 11'99. UJH 173-LB. Call BW OLDSMOllLI
washer $20: picnic table ~~15 8/5 boat. 2 &eta dacron 1ails & Reasonable, 2 BR, 2 BA, B!i' station wagon, auto tr&nS, es, trlr hitch, crptg, Afety B J SPORTSCAR "'-8T73. ---------1
$15; desk & chest $10 each. KIDS Bored thll aurnmer. aplnaker, Make otter. den. Adult Park. 645--2635 overhead cam, dlr, disc bra· belts & haJ'ld holds, Hubs. • • ======:==== • • -
968-2052 Give them one of our darl· 646-0713 8x35 Trailer cabana_, Para. kes. Perfect condition, Takt Misc tools & equip. S4000 in-CENTER CHEVROLET
CARPET ing kittens. Orange, calico SEA Scout '1 desperately mount, nr. sbop'g, adult trade. Sacrifice. \VBJ 589 -vested-for S3lOO. 54&--5856 2833 Harbor Blvd.
Shags. tweed•, hi-lo_pUe. All & honey colored. 6 wkl old, need a MAIN aail for 22 park, $28(l0. 642,.Ql.;g LB. Call Ken, M.>0634 TRIUMPH Costa .f,1esa 5404491
colors. FreeesL L1cContr. N.Co1ta Meaa. MS-27068/5 F OOT AL,J.:l:ATROSS. ---.... WE PAY TOP 54....,418. 6<2-5769 Mini BlkH ·9275 ENGLISH FORD 1-------1 OWNER Deceased., lovable '64 TRIUMPH DOLLAR
FOR The large family Di· blk/wht adult Boston Bull 17' O'Day Dayu.Uer Convertible, SJC681. only ror good, clean wed can:,
nette table & 6 chain. needs lovin& home. All shots. Demo $1750 -Used $1350 ASUZA Apache r.ttni-bike, ORANGE COUNTY'S ~1.97 all maktlt. See George ~
'65 EL Camino. Xlnt cond.
New tin!s &: paint job, $1095.
Ph: 842-3444
'34 CHEVY
$il0
6!>-2965 Chrome. Jn eXQellent et1n· Adults pref 548--0813 8/5 14' O'Day Uled ........ $500 Fenders, jack ahait, 5 HP .P Th··' Rob' F rd
dltlon. Call to see. 646-406.1 • Fun Zone Boat Co. Balboa Continental engine $11 S. VOLUME ENGl.ISH S.tt Dt•I• Art At · C\/Qore Ula o
TWIN Sf&me1e cats, Bonanza htini-bike $75. FORD PEALER DEAN LEWIS c.M.2060Harbo.,rBl~; .. ,...., '66 Malibu Conv. Fae air, ~'IOV I NG-Must se ll neutered need good home. STEVE Wilson Sabot No. 646-4644 S LES SERVICE ou't.N.I 327", loaded, xlnt cond.
hougehold furnishings. 2528 Have papers. Call 5J6..6294 4531 Racing rig, exlru. Gd • A .. 'l---=='='"----1 $1650. 540.7828
Littleton Pl, Cf.I. 546-1057 aft 10 am. 8/5 cond. $300. 548-7574 \VANTED :u~ GO CART in 1 '69dlaMODdELSll 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 WIJI Buy l.:;i65.-;;Che=~:7-.1m::::ps1a:;:--;;,-,D;:r-,. Good;::::;
C I b good condition. Will otter mme te e very "' NEWp0RT Tennis u AFFECTIONATE 10 wk. old 22' ALBATROSS, equipped SS . .,.5703 LARG~ SELE~ON cond. Auto, V-8, $1200.
•-h' 1450 ~~ ~ '" VOLKSWAGEN Yo1-Vo"-··•••• or Po-·he •= ""78 Family Mem....,rs IP black female puppy. Mixed for racing & nite sailini;. Th--~ " uqiw .... ,,,...,., f f .. •2005 ) -•«• 6 P'1 -ore .._ pay •·p do"·-. P&ld for pl111 trans er ee, ..-bree d, med . s I z e. 1213 , .. ..,.JU.>.) at!er " . 9300 ,,. ""' .._.-.
J:o:XERCYCLE Good cond. 842-2396 8/5 ALBATROSS No. 27. 6 Sails, Motorcycltt ROBINS FORD '66 VW, xlnt cond. $1225 or or not. Call Ralph
$150; garden tractor $75. CUTE part Manx kitten. boat cover. Good condition. 2060 Harbor Blvd. best oUer. 673-000'.>
'60,CHEV Bel Air 4 dr, RIH,
mech &ood, rood rubber. ~2954 or 673-6640 54S--7ln Needs loving home. 548-0452 673-6076 · · · Costa ¥eaa 642.0010 646-6245 IMPORnl WANTED
Misc. Wante d 8610
WE PAY MORE
CASH
For furniture, •PP11ances,
colored TV, pianos, organs
and antiques.
Ds.v or night
636-3620
$WEBUYS
$ FURNITURE $
APPLIANCES
8/7 LIDO 14 ·No. 2153 w/rover. '65 BUG. Sunroof. 35,000 ml. Orange Countlet =:----.,,--,,.-==-; Xlnt d ""'" New tires, tuned exhaust. TOP $ BUYER Kittens. salt & pepper, & con • S;r>N. , FIAT Good cond. $975. 646-4200 Bn.t. MAXEY TOYOfA tigers, other colon, ,run-•67~2318* ' 18881 Beacll mvd.
eyed. 836-4493 LIDO 14, f'xcellent t • '59 FIAT 1100 65 SQUAREBACK,' o~e ff. Beacb. Pb. M7-&5!55
1 yr, spayed, altered cats, condition. $650. . , Rebuilt eng. 4 sp. StJck. owrw:r-~erfect shape, Pric-=="'=========
w/all shota, Need id home. * 673-4474 * 1 Beautiful cond. Must see! ed right. 57J..l379 Auto Lu1lng 9810
891·5480 CORONADO 25 1250. 00.9563 1965 VW ISOO S oquare baclc.1..;;;;;;;;;;;;_;::~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
SCRAP Lumber. 1 9 O 9 Llke new. bargain! 675-5846 '67 BULTACO ---~-. Sll50. _ LEASE • RENT
Federal, Costa hiesa 8/5 Sea Scout's need a main sail 100 cc LOSITO FERRARI 497-1835. Ask for DON ALL POPULAR
2 BLACK adorable puppies for 22 foot Albatross. 642-5769 $225 Good Cond '67 VW BUG. Good condition. MAKES *** 497-1849 *** 14, HOBIE CAT 642-9421 FERRARI $1275 or be1t of· FORD
FREE ma I e rat, '68 Y.Al\1AHA, 250 Endure, lo Newport Imports Ltd. Of,. fer. * 968-43!4 'AUTHORIZED
CHRYSLER -------'67 CHRYSLER
2-DOOR HARDTOP
V-8, automatic, 1.actory &Ir,
power 1teerlng, power bra·
kes, radio & heater. Jmma.
culate. (UDE 743) $2295.
Llack/white. 642-4424 815 No. 363. 675-4808 eves. mig, xlnt cond. ange Cowlty'1 miJ.y author-'62 VOLKSWAGEN, R/H. LEASING 1~ YR. female Samoan, ~:t !ft~! ~a~es 5!4o.~ 548-T94J. i~~e;!~inVICE-PARTS c, 1"6°.;,, ~~!91 a"ttllSl650pm or of· SYSTEM CHRYSLER -PLYMOUTH
very ienUe, ONLY to good ======='=== '67 TRIU~H., Bonnit.~ '650 3100 W. Coast Hwy, er. IJ"ll"t<J • Get Our Competitive Ra!e1 2929 HARBOR BLVD.
ATLAS
home, 549--0744 alt. 6 Power Cruliiri 9020 cc, lots chr'OtM. new eng, l ·Newport Beach 1968 VOLKSWAGEN Pick Theodore COSTA MESA 546-llG4
p.m. 8/7 --------O\vner, Best ofr over-$975. 642-9406 540.1764 Up. Low mileage, still ROBINS FORD Open Dally 'tll 10 p.m.
ASGAN hound free to proper
home, 645-1219 8/T
LOOSE eucalyptus trte trunk
for outdoor table or
firewood. 842-7269 8/7
MIJST Sell 2'l .r.Jerc, cabin .646-4203 Au thorb;ed MG Dealer uewarranty 536-6405, eves -· •
cruiser. Sleeps 2. 6 cyl. grey * Like new 166 Yamaha 305. -847~S5 2060 Harbor Rlvd, CONTINENTAL
marine. New 50 gal fuel 5,lOO·actua l mil e 's, KAR.MANN GHIA '65 VW bus, 9 pa11s, RJH, 2 Corta Meaa 6(2.0(llO
tank, bait tank, etc. &st of· $400. * 968-4138 · _ _ new tir('S, gd cpnp.. Service J;ll LEASE ,.,,, CONTINENT AL Mark JI
black with white leather
TORONADO
NEW ' l!XICOTIVE ONLY '..6
TO CHOOSE FROM
BIO SAVINGS!
· University
Oldsmobile
• • REAL Sharp '66 0 J d
Cutlau, Hol. Coupe. Gold
with blk. Landau top, kl
mlg, nu wbt/wall tirt1 I
brkl. R/H, custom blk lthr
Int & bucket seats. C.Onsole
with tach, P IS, P/B, P/W,
fact air. Must aee to
believe! Private Pa.rt)', Best
otter. 962-2860
'68 OLDS F-85 aharp, &f1!Y·
No cash. Take over pymnta.
S881mo. 1$1970) 673-5567
PLYMOUTH
Col&f TVs-Pi•n11s-St•r101
1 Piec:• or H&UH full
CASH IN 30 MINUTES
• 541-4531 • ~~ ADOR. lri-col. male
Beagle mix pups. 2 mos., nd
gd homes, 527-2642 alt.
5:30. 8/7
rer over $1000, 673-3828 T U'lPH '59 OD. cond., new paint, ;.• e c 0 r d s a v a 11 . , .,,_ rr Vtll RI " 1966 TR6C, xlnt good tires. $300 or best of-51350 * S3J.2262 6S Cadi~c Coupe de e,
S d Sk• B t ~JO cond. lo rnla, rec, tuneup, ft'r, 64i-5857 fully equipped. $129 mo.
pee -I oa S yv 650cc $r:JO. &tS-4111 =========[ '67 V\V Camper, newty rebll '67 Ford, 10 rass station wag-
upholstery, red trim. Stt to' ---------1
appreciate. $1895, 548-1501 '65 Plymouth S1t1lllt1
\\' ANTED--Campcr or sleeper
for 8 ft GMC pickup.
642-3526. After 5 weekdays
& all day Saturday & Sun-
days.
\\PANTED Sewing Machin~
Very rood!!rately priced.
Portable. Ask Sor Becky
S.18-1811
2 LOVABLE male Siamese
mix kittens, 3 mos. l black,
1 orange, Ask for Cindy.
357-3267 8/7
14' FG ski & family boat. 's"'u"z"u"K<'1°'Tra=il~B"ik'o:-:c110=--cc MERCEDES BENZ cng .• many "tras. $2395 or on, r /h, air, ps, $75 mo.
35hp, elect Johnson QB. All Excellent condition $200. 611 best olfer. 497-1192 '67 Chrys Nwpt, Plr $67.50 mo.
equip, extra fancy! $650. Kings Pl. Newport Heights '68 V\V Sedan also '67 VW SOUTH COAST
84.7-C&38 '69 BULTACO Puraang & ex. • Sedan/or trade tor VW Bua. CAR LEASING
ONE OWNER POWEJi CAT tras! Xnlt cond. $675. Aft 5 962-2329 30G \V. Cit Hwy, NB 645-2182
2 Mere 800's $1300 pm, 642-S69'T ; ONE 0\VNER
•· 642-2936 e * HONDA SCRAMBLER • 65 Volkswagen 17,000 ml.
36
Used Cara 9900 FREE to qual home: Beaut =~=~~-----.,.,--;--Sl.200 642-29
bred ntl G Shep 1967 16' Glu:tron, 50 h.p, 250. Good condition, $22.l • • • · -TRANSPORTATION CARS pure • ge e, · L.k N • $1350 1\0 >"·· all ahob. Hay• l,l•l'l'ury. Xlnl cond. 11495. 642-3706 ; '67 VW. ' o ow. . llCWPORTER MOTORS
Call 673-2259 "';-;;""'"'"""""""°:-=;= Own~r. Days 546-4936 eves. ru;n pups in 2 wks. Will Iflace '66 HON DA 305 Scrambler, , • • . 642_ 7787
CORVAIR ---·----'62 MONZA 2 dr, '65 Spydr
140 hp eng, 4 ~BJ!dr-dlrm
f.ohls, $300. alter 5. 67S-7346.
COUGAR
'68 Cougar, fv.11 pwr, air, xlnt
CQ)ld. !l550.
Hardtop, bl1 en,tne, bucket
seats, fact air cond., new
paint. $1199 full pr. wUI tine.
prlv prty, dlr, LB-NPU 604,
Call BUI ~14. .
'63 PLYMOUTH
Sport Fury Xlnt cond. a.
speed, $550 548-0l32 -
'57 PLYMOUTH in very &ood
condition. S2:50. * KI 9..1111 * \VANT To buy {home) bar.
~~ round or L shaped. hfust
ba reasonablt'. Phone
!i44-4687
pups when weaned. 5J6..2091 16' GLEN L (l\falahini) '67, xnlt cond. $350. •l;""=o::;;--;;;o;;;u,-;;;::;::;: 2036 HARBOR BLVD.
or 846-3818 8/7 85 hp Johnson, $1 O O O, * 673-4306 * MUST SEIL NOW! SAC. MUST Sell -'66 VW Camper. COSTA MESA PONTIAC 96~
675-3880 -,.,,...,,.....,...,,...-1966-230 s. AIR COND. Fully eqp1 , lo miles, xlnt FALCON LONG haired calico lh ====~==="' 1967 HONDA 450 AJ\IIFM, P/S, P/B. BLK cond. s2.495. 6~2-1536. .548-5294 or 548-8511
Persian female spayed cat. BLUEWATER CHARTERS $600. 536-1106 FINANCING AVAILABLE '65 BONNEVILLE HT Need perm. (It temp home, U Drive Sail or Po\\·er [========= W/BRO\\IN I.NT. 62,000 l\li. '61 V\V SUNROOF BUG. l400 '60 FALCON statk>n wagon, 6 -· 0 .1 rN GREAT CONb. S2950. nr '-~st oiler. · TEACHER leaving entry, U·'· R -1175
Machinery, etc. 8700
FIBERGLASS Rapid cure
booths. Twin 8' x 12' temp
control booths, ducted to
J\tinnesott tloneywell c o n ·
trols-Heater-blower. Best
offer over $1000.
213-321-8323
PETS and LIVESTOCK
Pets, General 8800
\\'ner 1 L RJ&-4493 8/7 Skippered local sport fishing Trailer, Travel 9425 OR !ST GOOD OFFER: u ~ 645--0479 Must sell car, X111t cond. eye , ...... r. urui • ' Ftill pwr, dlr, fact aJr COZJ..
K11"J'ENS, 1h Persian. 3 pure· Harbor Crui3es ~6-9000 RUS!l' "'7 ""9 Se t 306 u........ ··-No 2 64&-{i92T Eves. d!Uonins, pwr windows, low, TRAVEL tr ·1e 14' SI 4 ' "' """"' ·68 VIV 1°-. 2 d' -'n, 21,000 co'.'1 ........... er!"" . ' white, l liger, I Pieheideho. ai r, • ps • JIJU !K.I •• FORD low mileage. Xlnt tonditfon 2005 Clay NB 548-8456 8/7 Marini Equip. 9035 port, cabana rm, '65 model GOING overseas mus t mi Xlnt cond, R/H, Priced[========= In and out. Total Price $1399.
-in gd shape $700. 847-1358 sacrifice my 'vife's 1959 to 'sell $1800. 673-1735 BUICK ---------~I Will flnc prlv prty, LB VBA BEAtmFUL % Siamese kit-P/JR, 710 hp, V-8 Marine IM cedes 190 d n Very
"''16-8748 8/7 ~ I h d v Cl" se a . vw BUS Sunroof 23 000 '68 Ford Tor"1no 319, Vic, 545-0634. "' engs. arne ea. acuum Trucks 9500 clean. Asking $~. Costa . -' 'd 1----------
501 OF white picket fence 3• gau , Elec. Tachometen, Mes&a, 549-1453 or 546-5417 n11!cs. E.-c;cel!ent c 0 n · BUICK '69 RIVIERA $4550 390 hlgh [performance, f 1pd. '85 GTQ-.4 spd. 389 Maas all
h . h 400 Kohler 2 5kw auto start 163 Ch•vy Pickup Private party. 837-7643 Loaded, leased car. Used"'" dir, pwl-disc brakes, one around. Slicks. New paint. ig · El 1'1 O d e n a , ' 1960 Mercedes 190. Clean, ••v CH ER R y CONDl'rlON' Newport Heights 817 marine generator. 673-3261 Custom sport truck, bucket f . '61 V\V BUG, perfect con. purchase option. Pvt. party own,r, pear new. Will ta.ke .
nevi tires. $750 I r m . $~ B f 5 673-9474 old•r c•r In .. d•. W!L 8n Make otter. Aft 6, 548-.SlM 11; PERSIAN seats, fact. air cond, p11-r 642-4452 eves. rlilion. ""f"· e ore ,
EXOTIC Rats, beige 11.nd 548-4950 k i
11 e ~,: Boat Slip Mooring 9036 steering, dlr, super condl-==-=======[.,;M>-~~38~2;.:l._:;•~fl:::"~· '::.·::"'.:'.S-79::236::::,=j·,~.,~B~U;,,l~C~K~SkY-lar~k-co-n~vt, cLB~·~Cal;iJ;\"n!K>'-.;;"54.>063;;;;;;;'-'t~;.;;; '6T FIREBIRD 400, diac
1rhite, h!ack and white. "P"LAN-;-;"r"o"'a1"i.,..-,..,.,-.,,-,,.,.-,1 1~. MO. U-sllp, 1211 6 in by lion! Cost $4400. Wiil sacri-MGA '6.~ V\V sunroo f, runs pis, bucket seatll. $775. '60 ro.,.... Station Wqon. brakes, tach, p/1, vinyl top,
Young rats or breeding tall ,~ yin tubs & 6' feet 38
1
., ft. Up to 20 ft mast fice $2099. LB 886628, Call GREAT. Clean! lturry $750. Alter 6 pni, 549-0120 pvt. Radio, · heater , white 22,000 orlr mL Forced tD
stock Tx 10 $3. 546-3634. • ~;cas 7& one 673--7449 Ken 494-9773 or $45.()634 1962 J\IARK II 1600 Conv. 642-3028 pty. l!lldewalls. Good cond. $250 ="-ll,.;Sc,'195-o-.~968--'-2840-0--'--..,,..I 1169 n-t La C 'l evergreen. ,,..9---050 817 -=========~ CAMPING •· Surf1'ng. '66 c R I ""•h uo2579 237 E 20lh '54 LaM ns _, t N LNrse ne, ·" · -· • extras. Priced right. 601 1968 V\V 2-DOOR Sedan '68 BUI K lvlera. Lo\v m. .... · ~ · · • a ~"" conv u
!"========,-[ MR. Grey & 1'1r. Black are 2 Aircraft 9100 Dodge Carry-all, V-8 4-Poive!I Place N.B. 64&-3001. $1500 Finn Loaded! S 4 5 -4 O O 9 or _CM"'""'"''""';;:::.:::;-; palnt. Orig oWner. Bett of.
Cats 8820 gentle, l yr. old Tom Cats, speed, lo book, 64>2238 673-173:> 71&-1330, Ask for Lor! 68 FORD F-100 Bit.le 8 cyl 3 fer ln 5 day1 take1 Jt.
\\'ho need a loving home. PIPER Super Crulser 19·17 lo "";;o'-R~s"'='°°'F~rd>< S HE FO!lter spd.· 20,000 ml. Take over 673-3481 549-1453 8/7 *F ALE: '58 ° • 6 POR C '67 V\V $152.'j, kept in X111!,.,.,-..,.....,,7,....,c-o..,--;;-;c =========[ STUD Service-k i t le n I •
Siamese, Persian, Burmese,
Abys, Russ blue~. ~58
HIJ\'lALAYAN KITTENS
time, A1nt cond. reasonable. cylinder,~) Ton truck. S275. cond. FJ\1 radio, lo miles. ''61 Special 4 dr V-8, P.S., payments. Pay off S197i.21. •
2 l\IITENS need good home. 673-4911 $2900 6·12-4627 Days. 1967 Ponche 9U-S Coupe, 673-3261 P.B., aulo, factory air. Mobil Station ' 101 N, . RAMBLER
Free delivery & one week's · R ~ $38' ;,.t~966 Harbor, S.A. 531-9245 cat food. 545-0147 8/7 Mobile Homes 9200 * SHELLS * Jactory installed, sports kit, '64 V\V Xlnt cond. $895 uns 6""'" "· '64 RAf.lBLER A T
SIJJ,";ht Freight· Damage Rally mulller, dyno tuned, good Hrell & battery '66 RIVIERA. All E"tru 1957 FORD Fa!rlane 4 dr mer. op
ANGEL Trailer on beautiful CHEAP! 839-1800 Amer. mags, AM/FM. new 546-4399 plus stereo. Must Sell! Sed. w/ T-bird mtr. Runs cone!. 4 dr, auto, radlo, btr.
SEAL & BLUE
714-871-9590 714-529-3932 Boats & Yachts 9000
space, J\1 a r i n a Park on FORD PU. '54 Flatht!ad rblt Dunlops. $5000 kf ~:.~. 61 V\V E"ccllent ~nd!tlon ~1;;26;9;;5·;,:968-;;:;;;'964~af~t5~== 1-good"-;;ii.iCFo!C>l;(afftFS'lip:J,m1.Bi890.2-o9_24_1 ~P;h=.=536-=15=27=====1 D 8825 FIBERGLASS Supply centtt Penn. New 5 yr lease. \vilh motor. 1400. 642-4248 2125 871~3232, X3ll2, wor ,.., .. rs, ..., -.. '66 Ford Fefrl•ne ·-
ogs 7' 0333 497-1558 homo "'mil"•'"'" LLAC T BIRD 1 • • • 8 • • • • • now Jn CJ\!-NB a re a. bay view. $7500. 6 .ru or Orange Ave, CM e 836-8287 e CADI $495 •
TO good home, pr~fel'ably Everything for your boat, 015-09i2 '63 * ton Ford, camper '66 PORSCHE 9.l2 ,coupe s1----,*.-;;'60i7"iBttU;;G,-.*--1---------2 DoorjLoaded, VS, etc. Lie. MUsr Sell/ GoinJ t 0 \\•ith child-n. \l hu.s1~ •• ~~ surfboard, car or home. THE QUICKER YOU CALL, 'd ...,'IC,. :::pd, AM I F M, J mm a c. '67 CADILLAC 4 door sedan JRM949 Phone 0•2 6023 Dtr
,,._ " I\)' n ..• , · · I n1 f'CIP · •.u.>V· $132:.i or best oiler tr . ,... · · College! S9 T·Bird Rebuilt
'ollil' .. Foatur""' o{ a hus"'· OOH: resin spcc1n now o Y THE QUICKER YOU SELL ,,,.,_9703 $4,000. 670 .,43 de '.Ville. Ortg O\vner. a , f ll -• R •• ~ $3 9-I ·1 \ · d """ ~ .,........ '66 FORD \Vagon. u y 3'7\1 engine trans. uns and dis ....... sitlon or a rollie. · ;, gn reltu · Vin nn' ========~-=I 838-6{b:l Jea!her upholstery, stereo, •-"-1737 S · C.. v c ·' d equpd w/alr, P/S, PIB. real &ood $~. 646--9563 Also l loveable mutt. Good =8• uperior, ·'"· MOTOR HOMES 9215 J.i eps 9510 '63 J\1GB, hard & soft top, '65 V\ ampcr, i:u. con· loaded 1\•/extras. Must S2350. 642_5400 days.
\\·i rh children. 836-5672 l;;;"',-2-01;-60cc7;;o;;c;;;,.,,.c-;-::-;-;-:-::-i~~;;;i;i;:;;;::;; -"--------neiv tires, radio, wlre wheels.1.,;"':=·::;":•="""=·=536-=="="===i sacrifice! See at l 7 5 0 548-0797 eves. '62 FULL pwr, new tires, I • • • • • • • • • '67 GLASSPA R Ci tat ion. '46 Army Jeep, top condition. Very good cona. J\.Iust sllll.1 · Newport Blvd., C.M. Prl 1.,;,;=,,;;;:;;';2=::-:::-c= battery, very clean $650. ALASKAN ?.JalamulOI!, {sled Inboard-Outboard. 120 1'1ere. I J New everything! incl paint. Make oUrr. 49-l-9S08 VOLVO pty. '59 FORD Falrlane, as la $50. 1 ,,54,_>-.,,3,.,294="'~""'·=-=..-=~I
dog pups), AKC, beautiful Cruiser with po1ver jet & I & tires, 673--2191 [--;1;;;951i9>PPOOiiRiiscCiH:iiEF',-;s<;u;;;pc;;;r:--f---.:..::...:~~--1'0"1"'AL'--,d~i,..-t~..,.=S678=". '°Charp== ,ea2.ll;.,64;;2-8285-;;n.al;;;;;-"-,;'6i::P:;m;;;. ;:;ol '68 T·BIRD, 429, BllAndau,
ooloring, great family dogs, power tr!m. Full cover. , Sacrifice $1195 VOLVO yaur ad, then alt back and DAILY PILOT Oau.Wed M l power, stereo. Take
iriendJy, loving, eMY to Ready to enjoy, A 11 11 I Campers 9520 * &48-7943 * llften ~ th'e phono rtngl 1ectlon NOW! over pymts, 548--5429
train, Perfect shO\V docs, maintenance records. 1 1.;;;::;;0£:;;:=:==:;='-'"'°=======::.-=========,-I good for breed Ing. O'.'!ner. KI 6-4444 CAMPER '56 Porsche. Xlnt coud , 11u Best Deal1 Are At I;
R••,'',,''"35d73 purebred, $120 26' Frisco Flyer Sloop, s.1 •• -Rentals ~~18:a~7t~500~~~es.$1000. DEAN LEWIS up . · Fiberglas hull, 'virh teak
DOBERMAN. black & tan trim. Cheoy Lee bit. l •1bd, HEADQUARTERS Authorb:ed Deitler * '65 CONVERT * 1966 l.Jarbor c.t.t 646-9303
n1ale. 1 yr., family dog, all encl hesd. Boat Is very Eldorado· Four \Vinds Xlnt et>nd. All xtras, nu pnt .. 1:.::~""';i:i:':'~i;;;;.,-o:;::--
fi'JJYJ.. STAR GA'ZEK~ .. ,
1-~'7.::::-r--Br CLAY Jt. PO'' UllA
sho!s, AKC. $125 642-6744 clean! ST200. Broker .f94-39I6 FDR Scolllman • Ba1Tacuda 1op. Must sell. 648·1234 1969 Volvo, 18_00S. Top
FREE ZEBRA MINI BIKE 1-==,..,.=-==o.---1 cond. Fully eqp d pd, 1800
.!ft AlllJ M Your Do1l1 Acti.fty Go.lid• l:j.. set u r'h. ~ :;·;~ Y .Accord/n9 '" lh1 .Sf•r1. oa':21 @~ :HIHUAHUA pup PI es , JD' GLASSPAR dinghy S200. MOTORHOMES with purchase of any '56 $600 FIRM. nii's. For info. call
creamy v.·hite males, Cham· 3 hp Johnson motor $100. camper or camper p.ackagti! Needs \\'Ork 675-6686 675-7141 bet. 9 AM-(2 1. 1-1~· To dewlop rne;uoge f?' Wtd~oy. 52~~_1': 23-!°' read WQfd, cmesp0nd1ng to r'll.l'nbert 69·~ pion stock. 546-3634. 1169 Both $275. 675-5116 , c k d•-nly -~~ ·~· --0 °''""1 Lano, C.M. 2 5' -CABIN Cr u i" r, RENAULT TAV•us ofyourZodlocbJrth slgn, sco~"
lhISH Setter puppie1, AKC, Le.pstrake hull, a/s, gall~y. "' ROBINS FORD
\Vebllnc line, 8 wks. 646-1738 head, etc. Xlnt cond. $2800. ..,,,-' 2000 llarbor Blvd.
or &12--4!96 Call sro.-0718 Costa Ale1ia 642-0010 .,
TEhtBROKE \Velsh Corgi, 1908 29' 1'1onterey Character '
champion i<irccl, 5 mtil~s. 3 boat. Good cond. Diesel 1 -. -'66 SPORTKING Camper:
rcn1alrs. Priced according pv.T. $2200 673-4911 t-1 _ lo!.~ of <'Xtrus. \VJth or
I l'.t 0 •0 '928 w/out tn1rk, t'G2 GMC o -,,0,-•,,":-"-;-:-Y;::·~~.,,~:::-=· =-:--~12<1' GLASSTRON, 1967, ~ •· v.•/air cond .) J\takc oUcr. Black Labrador puppies, 6 lnboan:l-out. 235 hp. 88 499-34~
v.•cek~. AKC Reg., Cham· radio, Loaded! 846-UGl
pion blood line. 646-Zi59 23. Chris utility $J875• New ON DISPUT TH£ All ffCW RENT·A·SHELL
'I I N lATURE 0-h DODGE "EXPLORER" WEEKENDS, IVE EK Ly , ..:)<,; nauzers, crpts & pphol. A~l oond. MONTm.Y * 839-1800 Al<C. 4 mos, penn 1botl, 642-6087 or 67$-.1393
1111 .......... •lttl .., '"'"' tlnlilll. llrn Ntlr w1t1i .....,.,,
ktit•, ...... •IPL Camp<r Rt~l-•_1• __ 9_5_22
9610 Sport Cara GOOD Economy car. 19601 -'--:=--::-:-:-:-:::-:'.-::--
Jlenault -25 milts per '57 PORSCHE
gallon. In good running con-Sunroof, coupe, jet black.
dltion Sate tires & bnke1. JKr 343. SALE!
$150.00. Call &12-3526 after $1397
<1:00 and \\lcekends Best Oaals Are At
SUNBEAM DEAN .LEWIS
Nt..:xi l s-.lt Jl~'s 6111ut ~·" MA1t'XJ :1Y'o;)11 32S1ron2t 6211..Citrt MO>l.21
Q\-41.A] • .ff.6; ~=--Id.if ~!~:;">' :!=-1 .. 19 ~67-71.,6 & Dcn't J.S Not t.S Effltl~ 60-63-
GIMIMI 6 A ~~ ¥f:tbd 66 l"'1ICl'lt.d SA!JITTJ.al\.11
c;@ w.;21 ~~'!,;,,g ~e,,n1• :~~ ~·" J:...1 Y'~(»ifM 9T""'• 3'/M\:r:..o 69Nt<1 t.!C.21 IFi! G\424~.4o ~~~horit)I !~~:v~ ~1i• l.1-U1~~i1
• 4 12h 42N" 721f'1 ""~="'~~"' CA"'ll. 13Thl •l T1evtl 7JAblolultly CAl'llcoate
~ J~' 1~,.~ ... ~ 7.S J!N --·'· I l•M&Y 44Vout 74 ~ ...... ~
_.,, JIAY~ ,,No ... r.... 1eAbirll)' JN1.tt '&I SUNBEAM Al pin el966Harbor,C.l\J. £46-9303, ~ itfor -'1PfOW't 11z. ~-..
rd . t'-& 1~; .. ?·.,!',,"2~ tly .. ~ :;e:.,"'41 ~t" .tf.61-62 l ia top, 11cw paint., ucs A ti uu Cli•tlcs 9615 .-"' MW! MF QUA&IUI carpe.!J. ExcellentcondiUon, _n_q""'.-".'~..,.-:::----LIO 201,...,.,.... 11 •j•~ •
11000 be t of ~ M•, 23 21 ,...._.. &! Tediw 8 w.... .IN'.:IO beautiful pupa. 830-1667 18' JOHNSON Cab Crgr ~
tRiSH Setter puppies 7 wka. hp, Evtnrude OB, Tilt Trlr,
AKC rec. Chnmplon blood ~ulpl, $1050. 84T.f678.
line. 673-4.t48 1964 Owtns XL fhboard 19'
AlL s1rn. t1 ,001. ti roor. n root. 1 T&All r1111.14e.
INt A• Al>il'llOVl• Cl lOll.
one owner. or s · 1938 FORD AUG.~ ~~ ti ..... ~ _,
0
,u1, t&11 f~. Private p&rty. MT-«184 l'\ool .. lnal Ford Coupe. Very l •F ~ ,. ·-21 v•,. l'\l;:,}t!21 ... ,ro_ Jsvw.. asgr,...._ "'"11~..r'""" '* EXPLORER * rr·swONPERl'ULlhe!JW\Y cood condlllon. 1 1 -56w ""-•· !'··-find 2,•,v,-0 511,°" src:.-.t ,,_ By ·-k or --nt'. Luxurl. buyi Ui •PP """'"" .. YoU ~~ v1aGO STANDARD Poodle. AKC. SU.pe:rb conclidon tncl trfz.
.ldalt. Best Ofter. sasoo 873-8.593 * 91!~79 * ?oJAYi5AY OiYOJ'C'ffl ' 26' wl
AKC 8 t11et Pups J75hp Chl']lller. 11 pitt
Tri"(.'Olor 6 wks $SS, •MQ.&638 avail. $3?.00. 673-C"o\85
"" .. _ " In"· ~--·"'ed Ad ~-·' ~ 2llffQm !51~ ll8Tllllk m.ttu7ll oUJ. Sleel)a 6, Self contain-... ,.,\..UUWi,I •. w........ AU0.23 :ztHett "I"-19Wlth '
t'd. Umlted riumber. ean 1~1he,..,,m=,_;;-,-:-;:-;·..-r;-= ----~"• ""'·" 30~ llJV-,,,,.,,__ WA•
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11-· 1'_.... lad.,,. IS YOUR AD IN CLASS!· • 645-1441 ~~ \l;Y .., ~-I
LEISURE RENTALS FIEDt Som .... wlll "':I,,.,=;-;;;,-;;;;;-;;;=,...;;;; rna) 64J.fi6U, 1114) 8S7-3809 looldnc tor Jt Dial 642.5678 DAILY Pll.crr WANT ADS1 --------· __________________ _.
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DAILY •nor Tllfsdat, August 5, 1969
HYDROS IN ACTION -Unlimited hydl'Qp!ane Miss
Budweiser piloted by Bill Sterrett, leads the pack
tn the fin.tl heat of !he Seafair Centennial Tro_phy
race al Seattie. Budweiser went on to tak e first
WINNING DRIVER -Bill Sterrett (center) driver
of the unlimited hydroplane Miss Budweiser, ac·
cepts the first place trophy for the Seafair Centen-
Hydropl41ne Race
place trophy' for the day. Atlas Van L ines-and the
checkerbdard patterned Mi ss Bardahl placed second
and third respectively.
UPI f'hti.•
lsi Boat
:Winner
Of ·,Race
DULUTH, Minn.' (AP) -
The flr~l boat to' arrive. here
from Sault Ste. Marie, ·Mich\,
on the 390-mlle Tr8ns-Supf:rlor
yacht race was annoWlced to-
Cfay to have won the Overall
championship.
The big winner was The
Tigress, the ff.foot, sloop rig,
one mg;st saill)oat Of George
Lyon, Rochester, Aiich. It car.
ried a crew of five on the _race,
plus the .sklpper.
The Tigress arrived here at
1 a.m. (COT) Wednesday,
more than an hour ahead of
the seco\id boat to reach the
Duluth-Superior, Wis., harbor.
The Tigress topped Class A.
•
~;:.:~. ~~~~~~8~~ J::~ Lu1npy Seas at Marblehead
Pierpont of White Pine, Mich. Bundled in foul weather gear, the ere\\' of an entry in :r.1ar:blehead (M~ss.)
Third in CJaSS A was the Race Week jockeys for position near the starting line as heavy s\vell ob-
Balkina, James Reld, Sarnia, scures yacht's stern. Starting buoy is at background left. No such conditions:
0 t are expected .fo"r 'the 'start of Newport llarbor Yacht Club's Ra-c·e \Veek R~ ~inners in the other classes _g::.a_t_ta_F_r_id_a_;Y:._ic._S_at_u_rd_ay:__a_n_d_S_u_nd--a_;y:._. ________________ _
were:
'ti Class B: I, Flying Jenny Ill,
'\l!'.4 D. B. Snider, Mt. Clemens, .;W Mich. 2, Alexa, Claude
~ ~ Lawrence, Port H'Uron, Micil.
1,Jt.,... 3, Chinook, Jim KI ode,
Race Week
Expanded
1'o 3 Days
Two. Brothers Rivals
nial Trophy race. On the right is Budweiser's own·
er, Bernie Little. Announcer Howard Gifford is on
the left.
Sheboygan, Wis.
Class C: 1, Vernandi, Fred
Melby, Minneapolis. 2,
Boomerang II, s t u a r t
Campbell, St. Joseph, Mo. 3,
Keeljoy, Robert W i I k i e,
Savage, Minn.
Class D: J, PrOcrastlnation,
Thomas Dawson, Norwalk,
Ohio. 2, Cygnus, William
Soeterbeir. Duluth. 3, Maria,
Hamid Zigmund, G r a n d
Rapids, Minn.
Sc1·ap Bids Set
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The u.s. Ma'rltlme
AdmlnlstraUon says Jt will
open bids Au•. 21 for Scrap.
ping the 27·Year-otd trah8port
attack ship USS Monrovia.
Newport Harbor Yach t
I
In VYC Dinghy Races
Two brothers turned up as 'Nev•port flarbor Yacht Club.
sailing riv3Js Saturday and v.·as the runner·up with sh.
Sunday in Voyagers Yacht wins and one loss.
Club's Race Week Regatta, Club's Dinghy Match race The dinghy match race com-
originally calendared for competition. petition was sailed in Thistl.t
Saturday and Sunday, has Mike Allen of Balboa Yacht sloops. The series is patterned been expanded to three days,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Club was the winner of the after the Congress ional Cu t
In addition to the traditional series with a score of seven match racing series which il
Race Week Regatta for all wins and no losses, while his sailed annually from Lon~
classes, the event will also brother p a t , represenling Beach In large boats.
feature the Gold Coast Race' -liiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-for ocean racing handicap I
yachts on Saturday only.
Yachts rated under the
Cruising Club' of America han-
dicap rule will race from the
starting line at Balboa Pier to
the-Long Beach entrance buoy
and back.
Budweiser l(ing of Boats ._N@!l!partJ~[~@.~ Savinis : ·
SEATrLE (AP} - A pudgy "1 was looking at that
little guy with a sparse bur of walch," said Sterett, holding
salt-and·pepper hair charged up the massive chronometer.
and skimmed a thundering "I was sure I wa s timing the
hydroplane to the top of the start pr'etty well. But when
national unlimiteds list Sunday those three guys poured it on,
in the Centennial Seafair it was all I could do to keep
Race. from hittin' it too."
Bill Sterett of Ov.·ensboro, Sterett overcame the urge.
Ky., who drives the Florida-pounded methodically around
based-Miss Budweiser, racked the course for the required
up t ,200 points, and the boat five laps, then cruised an ex.
catapulted from third place in-tra one for kic~s as Ute three
to first in national standings. errant drivers, Muncey. Dean
To do it, Sterett had to ex-Chenoweth in J\1yr's Special
ercise a lot of self-control and and Leif Borgersen in Notre
place a lot of faith in his clock· Dame, had to go six to make
size wristwatch, He won his up for the miscue. Savair's
two preliminary heats -and Mist, the fifth boat in the heat,
the race final , too -but in the didn't err at the start but its
fii'st heat he was one of only engine went bad before it
lwo boats ta avoid a fal se completed a full lap, and it
start. Bill Muncey in Miss U.S. was driven to the pits.
led the other three boats in the Myr's Special led the na·
heat across the starting line tional paint scene going into
well ahead of the starter"s ti;c !;eafalr and v.•as a respec -
~ table third in its first heat, gun.
Plush Proje~t
Boat Goes V p From Scratcli
VISTA (AP) -Richard S.
Keller is d o i n g something
about his dream to sail the
seas. He's building a boat.
It's a big one, 46 feet long
and 15 feet high.
The trouble is, Keller lives
lf miles from water. He re-
fuses to Jet himself worry
about that, t h o u g h. Since
Chris6nas Day, 1967, his only
concern has been building the
boat.
"Bending that copper pipe
was quite a job," he com·
mented Monday after putting
in plastic water Jines for
Soldier Second
Over Atlaniic
LONDON (AP) -Tom Mc-
Clean, a 26-year~ld Irishman
in the Qritish" Army, is the
second rpan to row the Allan.
tic alone and has set a rec-
ord for the cl'06sing.
ltfcClean. a survival expert
In the jlritish ·Anny. landed
Sunday at Blf!;cksod Bay, Ire·
land. alter rowing 2,000 miles
from St. John's, -NOd., Jn 72
days. •
A 'spokesman said McClean
encounteretd • ahar.ks and (~
quenf gal~ but was Jn very
good condition when his 20-
(oot • dory reached the beich
70 miles north of Galway.
cold water and copper tubing
for hot.
Around the master bedroom,
an aromatic cedar closet is
being fini shed. and there vdll
be carpeting throughout.
There w i 11 be separate
cabins when Keller finishes.
as well as a main deck
house that will have a mod-
ern galley capable of operat-
ing at sea on IZ..volt current
and in part on 110 and a die-
sel engine that will all ow Kel-
ler to travel 2,000 miles.
He reminisces. ·''Like most
sailors during World War 11,
I wanted to sail to the ~outh
Seas."
His son, Jell, 16, helped in
Keller's labor of love until he
broke his leg in a motorcycl e
accident. And his wlfe'.s a
s o u r c e of encouragement
since she prom ised to Jive on
the boat after rerusing to Jive
on three others which he
bull!.
After working as an engi-
neer at the Hughes Aircraft
Co. plant Jn Oceanside, Keller
rushes home evtry day to
build some mOre.
At. his b;oat JOO~ over the
orange trees on his three-acre
grove, people spot it and ask fiow he. will get it to the
water.
"That's not my problem ,"
Keller replies. "It's going to
be handled by a bearded boat
mover from San Diego."
And he jusl keops building
·~ay.
But the Detroit boat's engine
went sour in the second heat
and Chenoweth was flagged
off the course and !ailed to
make the final cutoff) With on·
ly the Gold Cup in San Diego
Jeft in the 1969 seaso n, the top
of the hE.'ap is ·crowded.
Budweiser was 5,375 points.
ftlyr's 5,150, and J\1iss U.S.,
also of Detroit . has 4.925.
Notre Dame lost its chance at
the national top spot but has
accumulated 4,082 points and
could knock either Myr's or
Mi ss U.S. out of second or
third.
Atlas Van Lines, with Jim
McCormick driving, had se·
cond place finishes in all three
starts in the Seafair for an
overa ll second place standing.
It was worth 900 championship
points and $4,750.
Third was Miss Bardahl of
Seattle with Fred Alter at the
controls. Bardahl duplicated
Budweiser's feat by winning
handily in her two preliminary
heats. But after a good start
in the fina l heat, and ":hile
bearing do\vn on Budweiser's
roostertai l. the 8ardah1 's
engine (Juit. The placement
earned $3,100 for lhe team of
-Ole Bardahl, the oil·byproduct
tycoon,,
Miss U.S. lvas fourth for the
day, winning $2,500.
Multi-l1ulls
Won by
U.S. Boats
HAMILTON, Ont. (AP)
U.S. sailors dominated the
North American ~1ulti-hu11
Sailing Championships on the
weekend, \V inning cham-
pionships in each of the A, B
and C classes. The races took
plac~ on Lake Ontario.
Dennis Posey of Niantic
Bly, Conn. won all seven
raetls in the lntfrnational 8
Class Championships to take
the trophy.
Otto Scherer of Severin,
f\.ld., also enjoyed a perfect
win record, gaining seven wins
In the International C-Class
event.
The International A·Class ti·
tie was won by Robert
Hawekotle of Hopatcong ·Lake,
N.J., who lost only one of his
seven races.
Rick White and Keith Rubin
of Akron. Ohio, dominated the
Shark CI ass competition .
White won ri ve r11ces and
Rubin. two ns they rinished 1·2
Main Office: 3366 Via Udo, Newport Beach, California 92663 • Phone 71-4/673-3130
P.A.. Pal""'"· Chaifll\M of the Board • Agnes Blomquist. President •• ' .•
COfOnl del M•Offlce: Fin-cial Plaza. ti9J Newport Center~ • C.oron1 dcl Mar, California 9262:5 • Phone 71<4/644--1461 l
Which type are you?
Here ere four savtngs plans, designed for four different types of people.
Whtch one suits your savings personality? The charts will show you how each one works.
Pick a number from 1 to 4 and Jet one of our people experts
get you·stcfrted on your p'ersonalized savings program. Whatever your type,
Are you one of the
regular people?
PLAN #1•
Regular Account
This plan is fOr regular
people wlth regular
salaries who have
decided to save regular
amounts anywhere from
$5 a week up, but who
want their money working
for them. They also want
it to be some place they
can get their hands on it
lf they need It in a huny.
If they can leave it alone
for a year or more, itwitl
give them the Big Annual
S.13 yield.
REGULAR MONTHLY
INVESTMENT
$25 $50 $100
6Mos. 152 304 608
1 Yr. 308 616 1.233
2Yra. 632 ,,, .. 2,529
3 Yrs, 972 1,946 3.892
41 Yrs. 1,331 2,662 S,324
5 Yrs. 1,707 3,4'15 6,830
10Yra. 3,900 7.801 15~602
15 Yrs. 6,7 15 13,432 26,8&4
20Yris. 10,329 20,662 '41 ,325
there is a savtngs plan for you at Newport Balboa Savings. ·
Are you one of the
other-people people?
PLAN #2"
'Ufe Income Plan
This is for people who
have a sum of money they
would !Ike to put aside
and receive the Interest
every month but not
touch the principal.
Perhaps you intend to
leave your money to your
heirs. In this plan the
original invesbnent is
retained for a lifetime
and you have a regular
income every month. If
your future plans are for
your children's future,
then this savings program .
may suit you. •
LIFE INCOME PLAN
lnltlal O.potit ArllOW!t of Check
$12.000 $.50.00PetMonlh
1~.500 60.00 Per Month
20,000 83.00 Per Month
25,000 104.00 Per Month
50,000 208.00 Pilr Month
Are you one of the
retiring people?
PLAN #3"
Monthly Security Account
Thfs is for people who
have a lump sum of
money but who know very
well that if they don't put
it away somewhere out of
sight, they will spend it
Perhaps they are looking
forward to retirement and
know it would be better to
have a certain amount of
money coming in every
month over a given
period. And in this plan
not onlywlll they get back
a lot more than they put
in, but there will still be a
nestegg to reward
themselves for not -
blowing it all at once.
INVEST $10,000.00 ANO:
you receive end you retain
each month for .an eatate of•
$ 50.00 1 cr'ye&rs $ 8,675.00
$ 50.00 15ye&ra $ 7,725.00
$ 75.00 10 years $ ~.775.00
$ 75.00 15 yeara $ 1,000.00
$100.00 10yeara $ 875.00
INVEST $25,000.00 ANO:
you receive end you retain
aach month for an &state of•
$100.00 10years $25,600.00
$100.00 15 yeare $26,050.00'
$150.00 10yaara $'17,800.00
$2PCl.OO 10 years $1 0,000.00
$250.00 10 ye1ra $ 2,200.00
Are you one of the
patient people?
PLAN #4•
Guaranteed
Annual Rate Account
This plan is for people
who have a given sum of
money to invest and are
willing to wait a while for
a good return. The
minimum deposit is $1 ,000
(more if you wish, of
course), in exchange for
which you receive a
cerri'ficate which Will eam
6o/0 a year or a net of 30o/o
if left untouched for 5
years. If you are one of
the patient people, this
plan Is ideal for you.
YOU YOU WIU MCEIVE ...
START •ft•r 1ftef ah•r
WrTH 3 years '4 )'•lfl 5 y11r1
$ 1.000 $ 1,170 $ 1.233 $ 1,300
$ 5,000 $ S,852 $ 6, 168 $ 6.500
'$10.000 $11,705 $12,338 $13,001
$15,000 $!7,558 $18.50-4 $19.502
Avera1 gs S.69% S.IMo/o 6.00ofo Ylt d
Guaranteed 17% 23% 300/o Growth
' ..
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