HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-08-21 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa..
7
•
First Fa~•ily iFlies
• ·To S_aii Franeis~o .. •
•
DAILY PILOT .
* * * 1oc * * *
n-tlJl{SDAY ':t.FTEllNOOlil, ;.;uGUST.·2 r, 11 969'
VOC.. A lfO,. ,... 1 J•CTtoNSt II PM«I
r 'l"Zt ff"'•·&<ffi'".".f YW !ri2tW;t 1·>WP MW§t f .??'tPO\l;::g; t' i 1·'4 "'."'!Ii
·~ Pup. on R~~s [
' ..
·r 1Ni-PUP STANDS TALL •IN A SHOT GLASS
And St ill Le1v11 R~m for an 11c1 Cub;t
.
Shotglass Pup
Ounce ·s mall· Eve n fo r. C1iiliua~iua
Small is in this year. Just ask Cricket, ·
the mother or a day-old, one ounce
Chihuahua in Fountain Valley. · ·
Cricket 's little pup Is so tiny he can sit
up in a shot glass and still leave room for
an ice cube.
He was so weak al first, thal , Mrs.
Samuel Staley, 15968 Rocky Road Court,
Cricket's owner, had to feed him milk
from an eye dropper every 45 minutes.
The veterinarian said if he lived 24
houni he would have a 50-50 chance at
survival. Forty-tight hours and be would
make it.all the way, the smallest P\lPl>Y
the vet :had-evei' Seen. ' ·
So far· so,good .. The liU~ fella, born at
· 6:XI p.m., Tuesday; bas · now · gr'oWn
strong enough to feed from his mother.
And he shows a lot of spirit for a pup in
the bantam weight class ol Chihuahuas.
The little tyke bu a brother and sister,
each oC normal weight, close to three
ounces. Hb dad, named Poky, Is lhe
mailman's dog.
Mrs. Staley said the pup WM· just fine
this momilig and loob like he11 make it.
"He's like a child,. &0 helpless," she
said.
. '
Korea
From Wire SenJces
America's First Family flhv,out of El
Toro MCAS today for a San Francisco
meeting · with their Korean counterparts
and a mini-version of last week's Apollo
11 state dinner tonight,. ;· , ,
A small crowd of · about r.o persons
watched Presiden~ Nixon 'and his family
off at 10: 10 a.m . wai\iag under warm,
friendly skies of the Urllted States Marine
Corps base.
A gUUerlng array of guests -including
actress June Allyson, of Lido Isle -and
Zsa ~ Gabor and Mrs. Clark Gable
have been invited to the 8 p.m. affair in
the St. Francis Hotel.
Some o{ the toughest security precau·
tions In San Francisco history were im-
posed for the visit of President Nixon and
President Park Chung Hee.
An estimated 5,000 persons are ex-
pected to crowd the streets around the
famed Bay City hostelry, including 500
anti-war demonstrators.
The gala banquet tonight, one of few
ever held outside Washington -like the
Apollo 11 fete -will draw San Francisco
Slate :college P.resident Dr. s. I.
Hayakawa and also Henry Cabot Lodge,
chief U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace
la I ks.
South Korea's president modestly sug-
gested typical Am eri can food for the ban·
quet, but Mrs. Nixon approved a menu
not seen every night in the typical
American home.
Mousse of sole, breast ol duckling a
l'«ange, potatoes Berny, tomatoes
farciaes, limestone lettuce, assorted
cheeses (fromages) and figs roma will be
offered, plus California wines.
Entertainment will triclude a Marine
Corps band for oo-called bani rock dan·
. Looters Inf est Gulf Coast • ., ' ( • oJ. • • ._
P~ CRRimAN, .MJ!s. Wl'I~ -Cliiistian 'la!<' Wednellday, 1-a aller •
Looters, black marketeers and' ,slag· • Civil Delenae officl1J said the f)Ylf eo.,,t
gering sanltaUon problems plagu'ed the toll had -reached 2.tl. Mississippi Gbv.
Gulf Coast survivors today and the rem, "" JOhn Bell Williams ~!ft today that .. We
nuts of Hurricane Camille claimtd more have a minimum oC 230 tlodies" on the
victims in Vlr'lola and1 W•ll Vllzinia. M13aissipp\ ~
The toll of the strongest· hurricane ever Five wert dead in t:ouisiana, at lent 30
to ,strike the U.S.>. mainland d iplbed in Virginia and two in West Virginia.
toward 300 today wltn uncounted bodies Cecil Yatbro, exttvti\'f: secrdary ol
still buried in the mud and debris or the the Mississippi State Building Com·
GulI Coast . and the raging 1 watert uf' mission,' sa\d "We've, got ·IOM of btxUea
Virginia and West Virginia rivers. now and they 're st.ill dl&&lnl them out."
The storm il!cl! 1.truc)c out into the A force of nearly !,SCIO National
AUantic Ocean. heading away from land, Guardsmen patrolled thi 600-aquare..mlle
!raving an Incredi ble swath of dcalh and area 'of devastaUon in Mississippi and
de&.tructlon along Its thousand-mile Louisiana. They reported instances or
overland track trom the Gulf of ~lex.lco looting and ~black market,eering, but of·
to the ·AtlanUc. · ficials said they had i~under control.
ThlrtJ more bodies were found in Pass Early today Camille -now considered
-
an Atlantic storm rat.be.r than a hur·
ricane -was centered about 400 mUes
eDst of the Virginia capes and moving
rastward at 20 to 25 miles an hour. lb
highest winds ol 50 miles an hour
threatened no land area.
The Weather Bureau said the storm
wou ld continue to grow.
The Virginia squalls aent the historic
Jemes River rampaging through
Allegheny Mlklntain towns. Virginla'1 toll
was expected to ~ u nood waters
receded and rescue teams '"te:red the
stricken areas.
Camille, which struck inland with Ito
mile-per-hour winds late Sunda y night,
dcall the heaVien JOSI of life in a
tropical storm aJnce-H'11rrk:ane Audrey
(See CAMJW!, rap I) •
1
u
•
'
•
11hree Yo·nn.g Men . ' .
Killed in ·f;o~nty
cing, plus Spanish flamenco and classical
guHariSta ,Celedonio Romero and his
three aonsi
Various eifts will be exchanged by
dignltarie1 al the formal event, followed
Friday by An"lnfOnnaJ luriCheOn OOSted by
Secretary of: State William P. Rogers, at
the exclusive Bohemian Club.
The l~heon will precede aummit talks
between the u.s: and Sot.ith Korean
presidenta, after which the two chiefs of
state will issue a joint communique.
Three Young Men
Killed in Auto,
'
Cycle Accidents
Three young men died Wednesday
night and this morning in separate traf·
flc accidents In Westminster, .on Pacific
Co4st Highway north of Laguna Beach
and at tile entrance to Orange County
Raceway.
The dead are:
-RuueD w. Horn, 24, of 56IZ Mangrum
Drive, HunUngton Beach.
-Daniel E. Hovard, 17, of Pasadena.
-Ca...U D. Taylor, 17, or Santa Ana.
Horn died of a skull fracture suffered
when his: motorcycle rammed a car in w .. tn)lnster.
Hovard, driving a small foreign car;
croased over the center line at Scotch-
1111 County Traffic 1*
131 Death Toll ISi
man'• Cove north or Laguna and 1maah-
ed headon Into a car carrying teenagers
Bonnie Lynn, 16, or 711 Ocean Blvd.,
HunUngton Beach, and Calhletn Farritor,
16, of Claremont. Both girls suffered back
injuries but were reported today in good
condiUon.
Ta.vlor was a passenger In another
1rnall foreign car Involved In a headon
crash. The Calllornla · Hlghway Patrol
aald the driver passed on a blind curve.
on the entrance rOad to Orange County
RaoeW1y, off the Santa Ana Freew.,-oa Irvine Ranch. ·
MotorcycUlt Horn. a warehoumnan
for a market in Buena Park, wu riding
hl1 eyCle to work northbound on Golden
West Avenue at I p.m. Wedne.lday when
he crashed inlo a car driven by Clara Scarborou&J>, or Anah<1m who was turn-ing~ ltft at Garden Grove Boulevird,
Wettmlnlter police: uid.
Toe Orange County coroner said Horn died at Wutmlnater Community Hoopilal
at I :25 a.m. today. He 11 survived by his wi!J. Sylvia. TflC Scotchman's Cove accident oc-
cuited shorllY before 2 o)c;lack tlils
mo1'11ng, the CUP said. Hovai'Owu dead
(Set CllilSllES, Pl .. II
Gas Chamber
-~~aped.by
I
· 'Single· Vote • •
u,., .....
Spiritual Fall
Police suspect 2Jl.year-<>ld Bos·
ton man of attempted Bib!•
burglary Wednesday at Har·
vard University. They found
him lying at boltnm o! court.-
yard outside Widener Ubrery
with two cOpies of. rare Guten-
berg Bibles beside him.· C~t
burglar apparenUy lost his foot-
ing, fell 60 feet clutching
volwnes worth $1 million.
Wayne Files Suit
Over Wild Goose
Actor' John Wayne ol Newporl Beach
la IUfng a buildlna material firm for
'72.IOO damag.. clon• to his !ill-loot
yacht, Wiid Goos<, and 136.2111 r0< breach
ol contract.
W11n<'1 lllil, filed In Los Angelea
Superior C.Urt Wednesday, said he
charted the dleael powen>d yacht to
ln1'rpocl CorporaUon 'laat May 11 '
thrvuglt 23. Tbo boal ran aground on May
JI in San Diego Harbor, the IUlt said and
su.staloed damages of f12,000.
Wl}ne al.tO aaKI the boat wss not
returned to }lJs N~wpor1 Beach home at
2628 Bl.Y Short Drive until July 19, nearly
two moothl after the end o{ the charter
period. He uu fll.2111 ID< tile breacb ol
contracL
By Al\'OlllR R. ~
Of .... a.~, '"" lllft
A killer who cut down two would-be
heroes ln the •t.D> terrorist holdup ol a
Stanton nightclub -then tried suicide to
escape the gas chamber -wu spared by
the California Supreme Courf Wed·
nesday.
One vote was the margin o{ life for
William W. "The Man" Mt'Clellan, 28,
whose 19$7 death penalty was reverified on
a 4 to 3 vote by the high court in
Sacramento.
Uncorroborated evidence ol a prior
crime spree by the beady.eyed kllleJ: -
given by his meek accomplice -dUrlng
the penalty phase of-McClellan's trial two
years ago was the basis for the decillon.
Wayne L. McFarland, :3, turned state's
evidence against hi• companion af!er
pleading' guilty to two counts of murder
just two years ago tooay.
He i.! now senring life in prisin, w;tth
parole possible in five years.
The two Alhambra men were arrested
several week! after the daring robbery of
'J'he Gaslight, 12435 Beach Blvd., Stanton
2.lh .y.ears ago. .
Joe C. Gray, 35, of Huntington Beach,
and James Seagris, 40, of Stanton, '1t'ere
cut down in a bail or .31 caliber elugs
when they began throwing chairs at the
robber1.
"The Man" WM convicted as lhe two-
gun trlggerman In the· brutal killtnp,
. while McFarland, known 11 '"Ibe Mole"
for his submissive role in the bandJt
team, fired no .shots:
A parade of witnesses who were Jn the
crowded tavern about mklnigbt on Feb.
16 when one bandit grabbed the stage
microphone to. break up a Comedy skit
and amiounce the hol<!up testified agllnsl
' '(See SPARED, Pip I)
• • Orange,
Weatlter
Partly cloudy mornings and
sunny afternoons are 1Ull In
the ofCing for the Orange
, Colst. Wit'h temperatures ran,.
Jog from 75 to 85 depending on
where you park your cir
' INSIDE TODAY
Senot• criUcs of Prnl<lgOJt
.zero in. on .~.zpcmditfcre1 bit
Pentagon fears auch action ttaqtt
give ever more active R~
fearful · adflC1ltoR•. Poge 23.
~ 2: CllHI,_ t'~
CM!kt If Crt~ l4 --. ~-' •~1 ....... ''" ' ••ltrl•llWMlll J4 l'!llUIMt 1 .. 11
Htntc'" 14
""" ......... 1i ---
=" ,: --.. ·--' .._ __ .
S'rlN: ...... 1t ...... -l!ii" ,_. .
Si.ctf, ,._... 11 ,....,_... ,, -.. :.--:-.... J
I
•
. ' ..
l,._DAll __ v_m_or ___ s ____ 'hundlY~, _ , AU91Kl n, 1969
• ...,. to CO!!fress
P entagon Cuts
Military Funds
WASHINGTON (UPI) -DelelllO
6ec:relaey Melvin JI. Laird annoilnced to-
day he WU · yltktlrc lo .... r<9Siontl
pressure and reluctantly reduclng the na.
tk>n'1 armed forcts by 100,000 men and
spending by SS billion. He warned : "lt is
clear our defense readiness will be
weakened." .
Laird told a news conference he
ordered lhe cull a!ltr btlnl ln!onned by
the chairman of the Houst Ap-
Jln>prlations Committee that at least ~
billion would be cut from defense ap-
proprialiooa nquull.
* * * Gls Pinned
"I 'f'ieh it were poulble for me to sl.$lt
that thest cuta COUid be made without
lmflalrlni °"r defenae "'-·" Laird aaJd. "Re~ablJ I mll!t a&Y. tbat these
cuts wUI reduce our capability to meet
current commitments.''
Laird'& act.ions would reduce defense
spendina from llO blllioll lo 17'1 bUUon, • ff&ure ~Pentagon ofllclal1 said wu '4.l
billion below the requtall of the Johnlon
administration.
In addition to the 100,cm.man reductjOll
in unifonned ranks, another 50,000
cMllon fobt """1d bt eliminated and 1111
&hips would be mothballed.
'Tanks Sen~
As Cz echs
Protest ·
PRAGUE . (UPI) -'11ie C.!choslovak •
govl!ftuoent aent tankl tonight lntn Pr..,. where. crowds ~at¢d as blah
as 1001000 exploded into noisy •nU·
Russian protests. Some persons were hit
by tear gas and beaten with clubs.
·oemonstrationJ alao were reported ln
other cltle&, on this firat anniversary of
the Soviet invasloa, and in Brno, 110
mlles away, police ustd tireboses to con.
trol crowds or youUls.
Sixty tanks toot up positions on ihe
west bank of the Moldau River, two miles
from Wenceslas Square, the scene of
todly'1 noiliest ootburat 1t an tmoUona l
boon demOnltraUon when C1echollovak1
-and 110m1 of their soldiers -cllalited
"Rusaians go home."
By Red Guns
In Rescue Trv
"The disUnguiJhed clllarman ol the
House ApproprilUona Com.millet has
1tated thal hiJ comrnlltoe w!U cul at ltall
•s billion •• , and has alerted me to the 1
fact that the current fllcal. year II nbt·
ning and lhat action abOuld be taken
now," Laird 1d4td.
Laird said the cutbacb came at • \ime
when Soviet rpUitary tlrtt11tb Is in-
creasing and added: 11J bellftle It 11 lm·
portant that the 'Ametlcan public be· tn.
Conned about stepped-up Soviet activities
in strategic offensive and defensive
fields."
, .. t Ul'I T•11Mi1t
COUPLE TAK I SOGGY SUMMlit ·STllQI.~ OOWN MAIN S;tllEET 0~ GLASGOW, Vl llGI NI A
Camillo Spanks Old Dolnlftlon1 W~"'-r l ur .. u l Si ya Flootlt Worst Since 193'
. I I
There were sklnni1he1 in the ltre/.s
throupout the day and as the 5 o'cl(.3,.
rush hour approached )'Clung
demon4trators anned with eobble stones
battled pOllce 1n the Pranaa Brana area a
qulr\er mile from the aquare. Olher
fighting wu reported in the old toWri llC.· tor. •
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Infantrymen
batUing &o retrieve the bodies of eight
Americans from a wrecked helkopter in
lhe junaled 1re1 below Do Nang killed
IOI Ccmmw\lll1 In a ..na ol fire!lpls.
Jklt bJ fate today Uley were piMed down b1 IUM and un1blt: to move. Tbt bottles In lhe lblck ·jungla and
...,... brulh Inland from lhe coulal city
of T1tn KJ brouiht lo 400 lhe number of
Communlatl fight.in& in that aru this
week. nte area has long been a Com-
munist inflltratkln route to Da Nang.
Spokesmen said the latest fighting cost
unit.a of the American division's l96th
Ltw:ht Infantry Brigade at least eight
d .. d and • l!'ounded.
Mott of the cuualtles were suffered
whtn the infantrymen were attacked
while trying to reach the scene of a
helicopter crasti Tuesday th1t apparently
killed elaht perlOlll, lncludlna a U.S. bot-
tftUon commander and A!soclal.ed Presa
photopTpber , Oliver Noonan, it, Of
Norwell, Mau.
Spokesmen aald the Communists knew
the infantrymen's objective and peppered
the American lines with mortar fire and
m,lped away al the Gls from the shelter
of a junaled knoll. The bottle htaon
Wednesday and lasted through today. By
the end of the day the American,, were
still half a mile from their objecUve,
unable to move rorward.
U.S. Ff Phantom jell Jed by Col.
Richard Henry, 0, dumped tons of r:x-
plosives on the Red poaitionl. All
available arUUary . and he 11 cop t e r
gunships un]eashed their firepower in
support of lit< troopo.
• ln olh<r fighUnl U.S. forces killed l2
~ Communllt.. in a four-hour battle near
Tay Ninh City on the Cambodian border.
But far to the IOUth In the Mekong Delta
Viet Cong iUet'Tllla9 killed ei&ht South
Vietnamese troopa 1n an 1ttack on a sen-
trylesa camp.
Sentencing Set
For Beach Riot
LaJT1 Bara1lla, tt, of IA Mirada, facts
!enlendng in superior Court on Sept., 26
for leading a riot 1D HunUngton Beach
Jail April.
A Superior Couri Jury found him l!llllty
Tuesday of a felony charae of waulllng
a police Offtcer and a misdemeanor count
of inciting a riot.
Baraalia facts 1 , po11slble county jail
tenn of up to one year and a ,1,000 One.
Charges of assault with a deadly
weapon and remaining at the scene ol a
riot were dropped during the trlal.
Barag\la was one ol some 20 peraons
arrested by police otflce!'1 during the
wild brawl that b r o u g ht rein·
forcementa fr om throlJihout orange
County at the beach city. The riot was
1parked when otflcen altempted to ar-
n1t a young adult on narcot!ca chargta.
....,.., ..... lls;ucta ........ --__ ,..., --CAlWlllllA
OA.MOI COM1 l'\ltlllHIHG CQlll...WY
l•ltff1 N. Wtt• '""*"' ... Mlillllt J"' a. c..-1.., Viet ........... Otntttl INPIH"
Tli•M•• K•nd ·-n.,,. •• A. M...,Jtl11•
~··llit -c.tt -.i .. *'"' ... t!flfl
..._, Mtelll; ''" ~-........ ~~i •.\.=
He also said he saw no lull in the Viet-
naftl war, pointing out that enmny in-
itiated ad!Yity In. lhe Vietnam conlllcl
wu higher during the ftrst sit tftOrltha of
this year than durinl a llmllar period in
lMI. But tie said 0 .S. forcn are now
enaaged in a 1tr1tea ol "protective
reactk>n."
Of the cutbaCkl, he 11kl: "In llUJll-
mary, we In! 10Ln& to mike major cul!
In military spending. We wlll llrive lo
alleviate to the maximum extent possible
the adverse impact of these reductiom.
But It is clear that our defense readiness
will be weakened."
The enemy attacka of Aug. 11 and 11
may have been aimed at ralalnt
American cuualttes In response to the
U.S. program of turning more of the
responsibility for fighting over to SOuUl
Vletnunese: forct1, Laird noted. He aald the "pollcy of protective reae-
Uon" tn Vittum WU aimed at reducln&
Americin cuua!Utt.
Fron• Pqe 1
CRASHES ...
on arrival at South Cout Comfnunily
Hoepilal, south Lquna.
The t.enqe &lril In lhe -nd auto
were both repoi'ted ln 1ood condlU"' and
were to be hmt'errtd today~from Hoag
M.-ial Hotpllal, In N"""" Btoch, to
KaJJer Hotpllal ln Fontana. Be.tc1a' bock
lnjurl .. , they IRil!eted cull and brl\JltO.
The coroner u.ld Tl)'lot wa1 fatally
Injured ln lhe ?:41 p.m. Wednetdoy crash
at the raceway and d1ed lhret houri
later at Santa Ana Community Hospital.
Driver Of ·the~car in Which Tayler was ridJnc, Timothy J. Lewis, 19, Of Santa Ana, alao was taken to the Santa Ana
hoapilll where be wu treited for major
<.'\Its and rtleued. •
In the lflCObd. car wrr• driver Gary
Allen, 31, oi 1171 Brillo! SL, Colla M.,.,
nol Injured and Pot Ritt, 14, of oran1e,
who wu treated at the acene for minor
injuries.
'rile CHP aald lhe Lewll car, approach-
ing the nceway on the fretway access
road, puaed anot!ler on 1 blind curve
and collided headon with tbe Allen car,
which wu tu.Vina: the nteeway.
Pouiblllty of bringing charaes aaalnst
Lewia i.a beini ·invettia;ated, the CHP
aald.
F rom Page 1
CAMILLE ...
clalmed 430 lives in Te111 and Lolilalan1
ln 1167. Camille's damage mipt t1cffd
'l blllion and officials fe.ared the dealh
toll may surpass 500.
OllEATER RELIEF
Vk:e President Spiro 1\ Agnew toured
the disaster area • Wednesday and
prtdl<ted federal relief fundl WtlU1d be
the lftatesl on record for 1 dluster.
'lb< mil!ery along the Mississippi and
l.ooislana cOasts was stark.
'11lere was little power, drinkin& water,
foOO and communicalions In -the area.
Sanitation problems posed he a I t h
dancers. Silt trenches were dug for
bathroom•. Motqultos and filet swarmed
by tile thousands. A llenlh roee from
decomposed bodies -thoie not yet found
and lhllee 'jplled knee deep" awaltiil&
removitt. • Rltugee1 acavaged fGr food, hunUnc
!or cans hi Jlle dtbrlt of &loret. Starvinl
dop rotmed In packl. Snakes and rats
slithered •boul. • •
Looters and black marketeers took ad-
vantage ol the chaos.
state Adj. Gen. Walter G. John!on. en-
forcing limited martial law and a 8 a.m.
t'l 6 p.m. curfew, ordered his Soldiers to
bri'ng in looters "dragging or st.anding."
"A looter is one of the vilest type peo-
ple, as bad as a grave robber," be said.
Uquor stores, groceries and ~ have
bten ioOlod, _ii< salil.
Jotuwon .also vowed to clamp down on
•some a~ itill able ,,to~a~. Wbo
"are ralsfng the ptice bf fOOd, especia1ly
milk, sometimes as much as 100 percent.
·Under martial law, this will not be a now:.
ed." He aid tome peraon& "1't sellln&
frelh water for 11 a aallOn.
Church Council Backs
.l\rahs on Land Retur n
CANTEltilUHY, EncJand (UP!) -The
Arab oaUona today bad the backing or the
W0rld Council ol Cbun:hes In th<~ battle
for the return of land eel!td by Israel in
the June, tt57 war.
The council, which represents 241
Protestant and Orthodot denominaUons,
aJ90 urged tlle" United States to mtore
normal diplomatic relations with Cuba
and offered to media1e the Nigerian Civil
War.
Dlitl.Y PILOT ttetr PMlt
Visiting Ji'ot.orama
Liz VenderVeen, 17, Hu.n1lnglon Beach and her pet J)OOdlo, Pierre,
pawe to ponder photOI on display In Folorama exhibit al Fashion
bland In Nowpor! Beach. More than tl,100 worth of r.rizea -will go
to visitors to DAILY PILOT·Radlo Stallon KOCM even. It continues
1brougb Saturday .
•
Bi.bbl~ Gna~ded
HurriCane Ruins Si ft ed for Bodies
PMS CHR!SilAN, Mlsl. (UPI) -All
thal remllned ol Pus Chriltlon today
were the creefH:lld aoldlerl who guard
nllna that almost DO ~ could re.ally
wanl
Workers and giant ·machines ...plowed
the debris searching for the bodies they
could smell but not see.
Gone with the townfulk -rnonied and
poor, black, white and cajun -are the
agonl!l.nJ questa that lead men to grovel
In the sUcky gray mud t h a t Coat!
everything far some ecrap of food; and
that drives a tnothtf to S(.'OOp stinking,
muddy water trom a ditch for bet Child
lo drink. .
1bote that ire gone, many of them
homeless, are the lucky ones. They lived
through the greatest storm man has
recorded in the United States and now il
Is behind them.
Light bulbs have been replaced by dim
flashlights ; water comes either from the
few lrtetlan we1l1 or fro m ctnlral
dispensing points where it has been
trucked. A bathroom more often than not
is a slit trench uaped from the soggy
ground btblnd a scboolhouoe.
It will be wee.ks and months before
there is full electricity and utlliUes, yea.rs
before "°""'. Ind bu-, lhe Cllll-•neriea ancl nl&ht 1pota and molell of Biloxi 1te rebulll.
Never qaln will there be. thi 1r1nd,
eolumntd homes of the ltt.h century that
1tood 1n Pass ChrtaUan.
* * * Attempt to Halt
'Debbie' F ails;
Bermuda Braces Most were airlilted and bussed
Wedneaday to Camp Shelby, Miu., south
of HatU,.burg, and tasted their !lrst hot meal since last weekend. MIAMI (UPI)-Hurricane Dtbble, only
'l1ie dead are scaUered in improvised sllahUy weaker ilter 1 aecood attempt to
mor~ and overcrowded mortuaries. ~calb' ~f • e 1 e. the 1torm, turned
SWl othen are buried beneath fallen northward tod17 1Dd aimed her 110-mll~
trees and pllei of liiiii.ber that m were an-hOar winds toward the teiotritlland
~~stily ;recloo shelte~: h~ed; ~ -·Of',BCrtniRtr.· ·-· -
persons still wait for a hot meal. Such 'Ibe National Hurricane Center Jn Ml-
scenes are familiar in Gulfport and ami uld the stonn shifted to a more
Biloxi. . northerly coura during the night and
In the bnck schoolrooms turned Into . would gradul1lly 1ncrea1e its forward
dormitories and dispensaries, children speed today
cry. and play and laugh and ~ing. For At nooft, ·EDT, Debbie wu centertd
their parents there Ls little happiness. near Jattiude 29.0 north and longitude
Those In the shelters have no homes to 84.5 weit, or about 230 mllis due south
which they can return. There is no elec· of Bennuda. lt wal rnOving toward the
trlcity, no water, no sewera1e. nortl'l·n6rthtaat at 11: fn .p.h.
'Wanted to Be Hero':
Luxury Ship Arsonist
PORT EVERGLADES, Flt. (UP!) -A
private detective who 18ldft: "wanted to
be a hero" has been charged with ittUng
a fire aboard the retlred luxury liner
Queen Eliz.abeth and qu1ckly turning in
the alann.
Pollce said Anthony Romeo, 2tl, of
Hallandale, admitted setUng the fire with
a ·pillow on Aug. 8 and a few days later
making a hoax telephone call that a
bomb was about to e1plode on the big
!hip now moored a1 1 tourist attracUon.
Forecatters aa.Jd if Debbie conUnued
OD Ila pt<tent courae, It would f>o!I iilo
tnllet wt of Bennuda tonight.
Project Stonnlllry sdenUola had hoped
W~'• aecond ~ uuult wuuld tafne the hurr:lcanel A t tJ jets
dumped a ton of sliver lodkt crystals
1nto lhe •-Y wall ol clooclf,~
lng the eye in ·a repeat of Mi0day'1 op-
eraUon. t
No other s e e ~ t n t attempts were
planned.
· The oliver Iodide, In th~ l! supposed
to cool the hurricane's funnel wall, sap.
ping it of life-giving heat l!he!JY.
Scientists say ii will take several wte.ks
to ;malyze the results of the experiment,
although neither seeding had any appar·
ent effects on the storm.
Tfie government obviously expected
more trouble tonight after two nights of
anU•RussJan outburstl which so far bas
ti.lied two persons.
Today was the first anniversary ol the
Soviet-led invasion of CUchoslovakla ind
at the stroke of noon 15,000 Cuchoslovaks
burst into Wen«!las Square, t b e
Czechoslovak symbol or freedom , in a
clam.orous outburst
Even some of the Cuchoalovak soldiers
sent In to maintain order joined in the
chlnts of "Rtwians go home."
There had been two nights of violence
Jn Wencesla1 Square, and two men were
reported kllled by pollct ln an outbreak
Wedlltl!daynlahl.
More than 320 were arreeted. The
government called the vlcUms crlminal
elements, social outcaaU and hoollpm.
The heart of the dtmOllltraUon was
Wencealaa Square but conaervative
estimates said more than l o O , o o o
Clechoalovaks filled that and n .. rby
streets. Police moved throuah the
crowds, hurling tear Ju occa1lonally
aomeUmes clubblng bystanders un~
mercifully.. ·
At one tntersecUon crowd• lolsed
heUert (Uny colnt worth alx-hundredth!
of a tt11t) at the Communist militia.
Uncmf.inned rtpcrls said a tourllt bus
belonging to the Soviet travel qency
Jntourlsta had been badly dented and its
windowt smuhed.
Frem P•1e 1
SPARED .••
th< pa~.
McClellan was named by the widow of
one victim as the killer, while McFarland
a.dmltted his role as the ba.gman who
acooped up cash as bis partner kept the
crowd t.rrlfled.
He testUJed later against McClellan
listing a spree of Southland robberies:
laler mentioned by Deputy District At·
torney James Enright during the penalty
phase of the trial.
McFarland maintained a calm, al·
times ainuaed composure during the
sensational trial -.shackled hand end
foot -then put up a bold front for
newsmen Sept. 13, 1987, when con-
demned.
UPHELD VERDICT
Judge Samuel Drel.zen upheld the jury's
vtrdlct ol death in the San QuenUn gas
chamber on both counts.
"You guys are looking at the best man
you'll ever see," McClellan snarled as he
was led out of the courtroom under heavy
guard, apparently trying to Jive up to his
nickname to the last.
SALE J ust two wee~ more ... thr u Augu st 30
ORDE~ IN YOUR CHOICE OF STYLES AND FABRIC
AT A MOST GENEROUS SAVINGS • , •
HERI TAG E
• llvtna t.r&dltlon ln furniture
H.J.GARRETf fUR Nll1JRE
'ROFESSIONAL
INTUIOR DESIGNERS
;
0,. M•. TIMI. & "'· ''"'
•
2215 HARBOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646·027'' 64~0276
ii
I 1~ ,.
11
~ ,.
1
-Doniillgion Beaeh
ED I JI O,N
* YOt 62,.t'IO. 200, 3 SECTIO~S, 36, PAGES TEN CENTS
.; . '
' .
Armed Forces Cut Told.
Laird Says 'Defense Readiness Will be Weakened'
DAILY l'ILOT f' ... te ff T•ITT C1'11tlt
TINY PUP STANDS TALL IN A SHOT GLASS
And Still Le1vt1 Room for •n Ice Cub•
Sho1gla~s . Pup
Quftfe ~mall E,ven for, .Clp,lwah ,ua
~t\m ;tir~iil'I'~~ the mothei' or a day-old, one ounce
Otih~bu;1. ln fountain Valley.
' v · lrtver Sii"·
W ASH!NGTON (UPI) -Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced to-
day he was yielding to congressional
pressure and reluctantly reducing the na·
lion's anned forces by 100,000 men and
spending by $3 billion. He warned: "lt is
clear our defense readinesJ will be
weakened."
Laird told a news conference he
ordered the cuts after being informed by
the chairman of the House Ap-
propriatioM Committee lhat at least $5
Nixons Hosting
Korea Leader
In Bay, Area
From Wire Services
America's First Family Clew oot of El
Toro MCAS today for a San Francisco
meeting with their Korean counterparts
and a mini-version of last week's Apollo
11 state dinner tonight
A small crowd of about 60 ·persons
watched President Nixon and his family
off at 10: 10 a.m. waiting under warm,
friendly skies of the United States Marine
Corps base.
A glittering array of guest.s -lncludinr
actress June Allyson, of Lido Isle -and
Zsa Zsa Gabor and Mrs. Clark Gable
have been invited to the I p.m. affair in
the St. Francis Hotel.
Some of the toughest security precau-
tions in San FranctsJ;:o }Uatory were lm·
po'"!f for the yisit o!,j'rllldent~iJ<i!t UNI
President Park Chime Hee.
An estimated i,OOD persons are ex-
pected to crowd the Weets aroiind the
famed Bay City bostelry, includln1 500
antJ-war demonstrators.
billion would be cut from defense ap-
proprialJCINI requests.
"I wish it were possible for me to state
that these cuts could be made without
impairing our defense readineS!," Laird
aaid. "Regretably I must say that these
cµts_ will redu,ce our capability to meet
current commitments."
Laird's actions would reduce defense
spending ftom $89 bill ion-to $77 billion, a
figure Pentagon officials said" was $4.1
billion below the requests of lhe Johnson
administration.•
Jn addJUon to lhe 100,000.man reduct.Ion
in unilonned rants, another 50,000
civilian jobs would be eliminated and 100
ships would be mothballed.
"The di&tlnguilhed chlannan of the
House Appropriations Committee has
istated that his committee will cut at least
SS billion • , • and has alerted me to lhe
tact that the current fiscal year ls run-
ning apd that acUon should be taken
now," Laird added.
Laird said the cutbaclu: came at a time
when , Soviet military . slllJMllh is in·
creasing and added : "I billeve It Is fm.
port.ant that the American public be in+
formed about stepped-up Soviet actlvltlel
Jn strategic offensive and dtlenslve
fields."
He also said he saw no lull in lhe Viet-
nam war, potnUng out that enemy tn-
ilia~ activity in the Vietnam conflict
was higher during the first six months of
this year than durini a sinillar period in
1968. But he said U.S. forces are now
engaged in a strategy of "protecUve
react.ion."
Cricket's UUle pup is so tiny he can sit
up in a shot ct&ss and still leave room for
an ice cube.
He was so weak at first, that Mrs.
Samuel Staley, 15968 Rocky Road Court,
Cricket's owner, had tO feed him milk
from an eye dropper every 45 minutes.
So far so good. The Jit~le f.ella, born at
6:30 p.m., Tuesday, has now grown
strong ellOlJlb to feed from his mother.
And he shoWs a lot of spirit for a pup in
the bantam weight class of Chihuahuas.
The little tyke has a brother and sister,
each of normal weight, close to three
ounces. His dad, named Poky, is the
mailman's dog. ·
The gala banquet tonight, one of few
ever held outside Washington -like the
Apollo 11 fete -will draw San Franciaco
Stale College . President Dr. S. J.
Hayakawa and also Henry Cabot Lcxlge,
chief U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace
talks.
Three Young Men
' '
Killed in A,uto,
Stanton Gaslight Killer
' '
The veterinarian said if he lived 24
hours he would have a 50-50 chance at
1urvival. Forty-eight hours and he would
make it all the Way, the smallest puppy
Mrs. Staley said the pup was just fine
this morning and looks like he'll make it.
"He's like a child, so helpless.'' ahe
said.
South Korea's president modestly sug·
gested typical American food for the ban-
quet, but Mrs. Nixon approved a menu
not seen every night in the typical
American home.
Cycle Accidents Saved by High Court Ruh
'
Larwh Tract Off Ground Mousse of sole, breast of duckling a
I' orange, potatoes Berny, tomato e 1
farclses, limestone lettuce, assorted
cheeses (fromages) and figs roma wlll be
offered, plus CalifonUa winei.
Three young men died Wednesday
night and this morning in separate traf-
fic aceident.s in Westminster, on Pacific
Coast Highway north of. Laguna Beach
and at the entrance to Orange County
~c;eway.
By ARTHUR II. VINSEL
Of fllfl D9h P'lltl Stiff
A killer-who cut down two would:be
heroes in the $1,200 terrorist holdup of a s~ i:illhtclub-then.tried suicide ro .
t;tcapirthe gas cham.ber -was spared by
lhe Califon;tla Supreme Court Wed-As Zoning Changed Ol('d Entertainment will include a Marine
Corps band far »Called hard rock dan-
cing, plus Spanish flamenco and classic1l
guitarists Celedonio Romero and his
three sons.
The 'cead are~ ·
-Ra1seU W. Hora, 24. of 568Z Mangrum
Drive\ HLintlngton Beach.
-Dinlel E .. Hovard, j7, oflPasBdena.
·-Carroll D. Taytor, 17; of santa Ana.
Horn died of a skull fracture suffered
n'esday. '
One vOte was the margin of life for
William W., "The Man" ,McClellan, 28,'
whose 1967 death penalty was reversed on
a 4 to 3 vote by the high court Jn
Sacramento.
The Larwin Company's now famou s
tract in Fountain Veney finally got off
the ground Wednesday with planning
commission approval or a zone change
for t 12 acres between Talbert and Ellis
Avenues and Newla~d and Magnolia
Streets.
Planners okayed a planned develop-
ment, residential tract !ith a density fac•
tor of 6,800 square fe~t per lot and a
minimum lot slze of 6,000 squa re feel.
Commissioners al the same thne turn-
ed down the· city councH requested zone
change for a planned development with a
density factor of 7 ,200 square feeJ per lot.
Only Commissioner CartalLMohr op-
posed the zone change. He preferred to
5ee the 7,200 square feet pe r lot factor.
The new tentative tract 11\8P .submitted
by the Larwin (.ompany indicated a fixed
school al.Le and minimum lot slz.es of 6,000
Beach Man's .
Airplane Flips
A light private plane was flipped over
by the prep wa'sh of a 8-2& l>omber
Wednesday afternoon while taxilnj,on the
runway toward take off from Orange
County Airport.
The small plane ended·upsjde down, but
Lyle weaver, of 17882 Be.It Circle, Hun·
t.ington Beach. at the controls, and Olght
lnstrudor Bob Herman, of 9128 La
COlonia Ave., Fountain Valley, were not
biiured.
Wea.Ver ,aaicl the Cessna 150 was.tossed
O'f<r b' Itron& bla!u ol wind frord a
World , War ll bomber owned by
Tallman.ts Aviation, which was wannlns
up JU~es.
Damage to the plane was estimated at
$~000.
175 Acres Blackened
AUBURN (U PI) -A fire blackened
about 175 •Crea of bnlsh before being
brotl{lht undor conll'O} Wednesday about
thtee miles south of this Placer County
communl\y.
~·
square feet, two items the commission
had demanded be£ore passage.
Primary difference between the PD
6800 concept (approved) and the PD 7200
concept (turned down) is about '54,<m in
money dedicated to park development.
"When a developer goes under the PD
7200," elplained plannlrt1 . director St.an
Mansfield, "the city can require him to
pay $200 per lot for park development
rather than $100 per lot." .
The city Will also .demand ornament.al
street light.s and sig115 in the Larwln
tract
Underlining. bis opP@sitlon. Mohr said, "I'm. not sure..$54,000 is worth the 188,000
· !QUare feet we're giving up to the Larwin
Company. I don't reel there Is any place
in this city for a densJty at-eater than
7,200 square feet per lot."
ChaJnnan James Dick disagreed,
staUng, "I think we have met nearly all
the objecUons raiied to this trad, and I
think it's time we got lhat property
developed r.r the good of the City."
No residents spoke against the Larwin
Tract duri.ng,.the bearing.
Various gifts will be exchanged by
dignitaries at the formal event, followed
Friday by an informal luncheon ho!led by
Secretary of State William P. Rogers, at
the exclusi•e Bohemian Club.
The luncheon will precede summit talks
between the U.S. and South Korean
presidents, after which the two chiefs of
slate will issue a joint communique.
Following his arrival in ~n Francisco
today, President Ni.Ion asmired·Pi'esident
Park that violent provocations by the
militant North Korean regime will not in-
timidate American commitments there.
"Together we have resisted harass-
. (See NIXON, Page 2)
Stock M•rkeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted througb aoother session today,
with brokers reporting investors conUn-
uing cautious and staying out o{ the ac-
Uon. (See quotations, Pages 10-11).
Trading near. the close. wu slow. The
Dow Jones industrial average at 2 p.m.
was 1.8$ 1t ~.07.
Black Markei Flourishes
when his motorcjcle ranfmed a car in
Westminster.
Hovard, driving a small foreign ,car,
crpssed over the _ center llhe at 'Scotch-
1Kt County Traffic lNI
la& Death Toll 131
man's Cove north of Laguna and smash-
ed headon into a car carryini teenagers
Bonnie Lynn, 16, of 711 OceJin Blvd.,
HunUngton Beach, and CAthleen Farrltor,
18, of Claremont. Both girls suffered back
injuries but were reported today in good
condiUon.
Taylor waa a pawnger in another
amall forelgji car involved fn a beadon
crash. The Calilomia Highway Patrol
said the driver passed ·oo a blind curve
on the entrance road to Orange COi.mt)"
Raceway, off the Senta Ana Freeway oil
Irvine Ranch.
Motorcycliat Horn, a warthouleman
for a market Jn Buena Park, wu riding
his cycle to work northbound on Golden
West Avenue at 9 p.m-Wednesday when he crashed, into a car driven by Clara
Scarborouah, of Anaheim who wu tum-(Bee' CRASHES, Pate 2)
Looters Inf est Gulf Coast •
Uncorroborated evidence of a prior
crime spree bY Jhe beady.eyed killer -
given by his meek accomplice .... during
the penalty phaae ol McCleillan'1 trial two
yearJ ago wa11 the baslll for the decision.
Wayne L. McFarland, 2.1, turned state'a
evidence against hls companion alter
pleading guilty to two .counts ol murder
Jum two years' ago to<iay.
He Js now aervlng life in prison, with
parole possible in five years.
11le two Alhambra men were arrested
.several weeks alter the daring robbery of
The Gullpt, m.15 Beach Blvd,, Stanton
Doctor's Wife
Faces Sentencing ·
On Grand Theft
Mr,s, Ei(rleda StelnbeTg, the' wife of a
Huntington. Beach phyaiclan, 'Will be
aentenced Sept. 10 In Loe Angeles on two
counts of irand theft,
The Gennari born wile of Dr. Terry
StelnbeTg ot 10071 John Day Drive pied
guilty to tl1e chargeo Wednesday. Thirty·
two Other counta of grand theft, all atem-
mina from Mra. Steinbera'a alleged
PASS .CJ:IRlSTlAN, Mias. (UPI) --ChrlsUan late Wednesda,y, houri after a an Atlanl.le storm rather than· a hur-embezzlement of '30.000 trom the-
1..ooters, ~k marketeers and stag-Civil Defense official said tlle Gulf Cout rlcane -was centered •bout 400 miles mortuary where ahe wu 'emplO)'ed as a
gerin& sanJtlilOll probfe!!?f plagued the toll had reached 237. Milslulppl Gov. east ol the Virginia capes and mo1fing ~eeper, were dlim11Sed.
Gull coast aurl~vors todaY and. the rem-JOhn Bell Williams said today thlt "We rastward at 20 to 25 miles an boor. Ill· Proeecuton accUled Mn. ste&lberg:
nants of Hurricane: cmnm, tia,tmed more have a mWmum of 230 bod.le&,, on U. l\ipest winds" of 50 mlltl an. hour SI, (If uatnc u.e, 'funds of tM Ga~
victims In Vlrgtnla and Wiii Vkginla, Miss~sippl Coasl I llu:oatened no fa.'ld area. 1C!nP1of -and ~ .Mort'*>' In WfOI
The toll of the strot1gelll lwrricane "" Five were dead in Looiafll)a, al.least• I 1fw Wutbet Bureau Aid the storm. Loo Aqeln l9>fnlillge her tlolel for txr
to strike the U.S. maic.land climbed in Virginia and, two in West Virginia. lwtliril ~ &o gow. peridte homi flntlhinp, ~ fun IDd tow~rd-300 today with \Jncounted bodies • Ct<it Yarbro,' executive \t<re!ary of ' m Wl!i>Jal oqualls ltlll the ltlstotlc • mlety " waluable ob)eda d'art. -_._
stiil'boried in ·tht mnd ~nii itebtta ol lhe the Mwwlpp1 State Bulldlna Com. James liiver rampaatng I h r o u 1 h ~offered at on oarlltr beWllli
Gutt Cout and the raging waters ul mlselon, said "We've got tons cit bodtes Alleg~Mountain ~· Vlr&lnla's toll lndicated that tM flnll accountfng ol
Virginia and West Vir&inla ritera. now and they're sUU diggiilg them oul" wai e ·' tid to rise as flood waters li-11'1.-Stein)JerJfs acUvltln over a th~
The st.oho it.self struck ouJ Into the A force of nearly 2,500 National receded and rescue teams «1tered th• )'ear per:lod' COU., run u high u $80,000.
Atlantic Ocean, }\tading away from land, Guardsmen patrolled the IOO-square.rnlle ' stricken areas. lnvestfgafu ~ Mn.. Stdnber& got
lf'aving an incredible swath of death and area of devastation .Jn. Misaisslppl: and . c~,; wblch a\rllck Inland !wl\h ltQ_ the SllD•\ure& '9'1-!l)ortuary tfficlala ()R
destrucUon atoog t t 1 thousand-ml!• Louisiana. They reporttd lltltancea ,C, 'mll..,...Qljl' _ Jl'!nd! . .l•t .... §.YQd!\1 .nlcht. ·-bllll\k c1>e<b fqr wlllt the ,elalmtd ,..,..
averland traclt froin the Culf of Mc1lco looting and black marketeetl'.ng, .... M'~· rai-~ .. heaviest Yoa . or llle I~ I k:£l°"1•te. tof!\Pe.mr ~ 'I\ WIS
to the AtlanUc_ , ficial11aldtheyhaditunderC<>lltrol. ! o~~ sine< Hurricane l\udrey atfeged,tho\, lllli"IM~ l\lijil&.0..Cliecfi;
Thtr\y more bodies were found In Pa!• Early today Camllle -..... ~-' jifff CAM1LLE, Pl&• I) payable lo 1lf:t ~I crtdl\C<'I·
---------~~ ------
2!h years ago.
Joe C. Gray, SS, of Huntington Beach,
and James Seagris, tO, of Stanton, were
cut down in a haJI of .31 caliber alugs
when they began throwing chain at the
robbers.
"The Man." W\l! coovlded as the two-
gun .triggerman in the brutal killings,
while McFartand, known aa '"Tbe Mole"
f91" his. sUbmisslve role Jn' the bandit
~am, fll'ed no shots.
A parade of witnesses who were In the
crowded tavern about midnight on Feb.
16. when one bandit grabbed the !Jage
microphone to break up a comedy ekit
and announce the holdup testified against
the pair.
McClellan was named by the widow of
one victim as the killer, while McFarland
admUted his role as the bagman who
scooped up cash as his partner kept tbt
crowd terrified.
He tesUfied later agaimt McClellan,
listing a apree of Southland robberies,
later mentiooed by Deputy DiJtrict Al·
torney James Enright durin& the penalty
phase of tl1e trlal.
McFarland maintained a calm, at-
times amll!ed COinposur1! during the
sensational trial -Sba'ckled hand and
foot -then put up. a bold front {or
(See SPARED, Pa1e II
Orange
Weadler
Partly cloudy mornlns1. and
sunny afternoona are atiJl in
the offing for the Orange
Coast, with temperatures rang·
Ing from 75 to ~·depending an
where you park your car.
INSIDE TOD.t.Y
Stna.te crltfct of Pentagon
uro in on ezpetKJiWr(I ~ut
P""tag!"' fearr 'nch. ~llorl ;11111f 1
givt·c;t1ei'--nwre odiW Rusdau·
ftaf'/ul advantage. Page 23.
I DAI\. y I'll.OT
Not LA 1'.fillionalre
Nixon's Italian
Choice Surprise
Pnllldem NlllOn Wednetd1y nomln1led
career dlplomat Grahlm A. Martin as
U.S. ad>buudor lo lta\Y.
Thn1omilllllon, expeeled lo be routtne-
ly confirmed by the Senate, came u a
surprile in nne quarter1.
II bad been rurncnd Iha! the am ·
baaAdonhip would go to H e n r y
Salvatori, a Los Angeles millionaire who
haa been • heavy financia1 contributor to
GOP campaigns.
But preildenUal press secretary Ron.
Ziegler, who announced Martin's nomln•
tion, denied bearinc Salvatori'& name
menlioned during White H o u 1 e
disawloos of the post.
GlsPinned
r .
"l'd just stick wi~ 1
thll l?lDOWlCement,
it 1 were you," he amillngly a d v 11 e d
newsmen at Laguna's Surf and Sand Hotel. •
Martin, 51, la a one·time Wuhinaton
repa11er.
The nolive. ol North CMolina bu been
In gove-oervtce olnce Jalnlni the
NaUonal Recovery AdmlnistraUon in
1933. He entered 100 Foreign Service in
1947 and most ~nUy served as Special
Asslstant to the Secretary of Stale for
Refugee Ind MigrillJoo Alfal(s. ,
In Rome, he will succeed Amb•1a1dor
H. Gardner ACkley, who is Jeavtng
government service.
...
Tanks Sent ·
As Czech s
Protest-·
PRAGUE (UPI} -The Czechcillav~l
government· 3ent tanks tonight into
Prague where crowdJ estimated u blp
.. 100,000 •xploded Into naUy 111111·
IWsllan proteata. Some -were blt
by tw glf and belteo with clubl.
Demonstratlona alia were reporlod Jn
other cities, on this first anniYen&rJ of
the Soviet invaaiOR, aqd in Brno, UO
miles away, police used flrebolel to COD·
trol crowds of youths.
Sb<!)' lanks look up pooltiails on the
west bank of the Moldau River, two mlles
from Wenceslu Square, . ~ 1e111e of
toUy'a noisiest outb4D'lt at 1n emotional
noon demonstration when Czecboelovaks
-and some of thei{ soldiers -clwJted
u Russians go borne."
By Red .Guns
In Reseue Trv
Jn 1963, President Kennedy appointed
Martin u ombusador lo Thalland. In.
December, 1117! be received the Depart·
ment of Slate'• Distinguished Haoar
Award. He lJ married to tbe form~
Dorothy · W1llace. They have t w o
daugliters and a aan. COUPLE TAKE SOGGY SUtt\Ml!R STROLL DOWN MAii!! STREET OF GLASGOW; VfRGINIA
C1mUle S1Nn k1 Old Domlnfoh; W11th1r Bur11u S1y1 Floods Wortt Since 1936 · .
There were skirmishes In Ille .u.ei..
"1roo&hout the day and .u ·the I o'clack
rush hour approached young
dem~ra!Ofs armed with cobble atonea
battled police In the Pranaa Brana arta a
quarter mile from the squari Other
lighting waa reported in the al~ town ....
•
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. Infantrymen
battling to retrleve the bodies of eJght
Americans from a wrecked helicopter in
the jungled 1rca below Da N1J11 lrllled
103 Communllls ln .• -of flref18hts.
But by late tod1y they wm pinned down
by guns and unable to move.
Tbe hllllea in the thick Junslts and
5Cnlb bnllh Inland fnim the coutaJ city
of Tim Ky brolllht to 400 the nmnber of
Communlsll f"'1tln( ln that area lhll
week. The uOa bu lorll been a Com·
muniat inflltra&n route to Oa Nang.
Spokesmen uld the latest lighting cost
units of the American dlvtslon's 196th
Light Irifantry Brigade at lust eight
dead and 39 wounded.
Most of the casualties were suffered
when the Infantrymen were attacked
while µytng to reach the acene ot a
helleopter cruh Tuesday !bit 1pporently
killed eight person!, tncludln( a U.S. bl~
tP.llon commander and Aasoclated Prw
phaqnpher Olll'<r Noonan, 21, of
Norwell, M111 ..
Spokesmen uld the Communiltl knew
the lnfalltrymen's abjectlve and peppend
the American lines with mortar fire and
sniped away 11 the Gia from the lhelter
al • ,Junljed 1malL ''"'" tlllltle """"" Wedneldly and luted through today. By
the end of the day the Americans were
sUU half a mile from their objective;
unable to rnoYt forwlld. -· ·
fi
U.S. F4 Phantom jela ~ l17 'Col.
ichard Henry, 43, dumped tons of ex-
losiVes on the Red posiUons. All
4vailable artillery and he I i co P t e r
sunshlps uitJeasbed fhetr firepower in
4upport of the troops.
' In other fighting U.S. forces lcilled S2
tommunists In a four-hour batUe near
Jay Ninh City on the Cambodian border. But far to the south in the Mekong Della
:Viet Con( guerrillas killed eight South
Yietnamese troops in JD attack on a sen-
Jryless camp.
Front Pare I
NIXON •••
)nenl fnim the Nartb during the past two
yean:," President Nixon told him.
••together we have dilcovered that the
danger ••. has Only stlflened our reao1ve."
: He added !bat the li.s. would still Bland
by the small republic after aome type of
Vietnam peace ii achieved.
: The Student MpbtllzaUon Committee,
One ol several militant groups expected to demonstrate, passed out leaflet!
charging Pilrk as the Korean c.'OUnterpart
91 South Vietnamese President Nguyen
(:ao Ky.
· They said the anU·war movement Is
pledged to the right of Vietnamese ind
Koreans to work out theJr own futures
Wit.hoot American intervention.
DAI LY PILOT
~GI ~ f'Um.ISfflMO COMPANY
1.ekrf N, Wtff _ .........
Jttk It. c .. ..., )11c• ,,.....m ..,.. GcNr.I Mtllf9'f
Tht111ii1 Ktewil .....
Thol"'l11 A. M•1phin1
Mll\tllllt ldlllr
Albetl W. l 1lt1
AUOC:llll t:llllw
"'"''""" 1eec:• Office lOt 51~ Strt•f
M11lint .Yir1u: r.o. 111 7t0, t2641 ..... """" N""°" toclt: ))II Wtt.1 lt.tlllllt ........... ,.
C11lt Mn.I: JJt Well llY lll'ftl
Ut!,1n9 lti(.11: 2lJ Ftrtlt ·-
I
Ma?tin is one of five ambasaador·
nomlneet announced Wedoeaday. The
others are: • From Page I
CAMILLE .••
-Douclu MocArlPt II, amb-
to Iran.MacArthur has been ambassador
to A'u!ltrla since 1967. The 60-year~ld
carter diplomat, nephew of the late
~al,,will succeed Ambas&ador Armin H. Meyer, now ambassador .to Japan. claimed 430 lives in Te1as and Louisiana
-llabhlloo Mc:Uy...., amba.uadar lo In 1967. Comille's .damage JDi&bt esceed
KanyL Mcllv~, 16, haa been am-$1 billion and· o!llcials feared the death
blaador lo the ltepubllc al'Gulnea. loll.mii BUrpaia llllJ.
-J ... Palrld< .... llnb1M-lo '
Ku'fall Wolall, &I, bu -eel u oc1in1 GREATER RELIEF
execullve oecrt11ry d. t1io DeportmeiK of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew toored
State. • the disllter area Wednetday and
-Vblco9I tlo ll..tel, amaa..i« to~ incllcted federal relief funds would he
Jamaica. A native t:i Lot Ana:eles. tbe 0-. the gr.eatest on record for a di!ast.er.
y..,...ld rul ealate ei;ecutlvo wu 'The misery along the Mlssisslfll!I and
rf!C¥UY elected ma,yor of the VUlap of Loidslan.a couta lfll stark..
North lUPs, N. y, The:e1w1111We JIO"!er, dtjnkina watF,
CRASHES •••
Ing left at Garden Grove Boulevard,
weitmtnster police uld.
The Oran(• County coroner uld Ham
died at Westmi111ter Community Haapltal
at 1:25 a.m. today. He ii IUl"Vived by his
wife, Sylvia.
Tbe Scotcbman.,.I Cove accldent oc-
curred shortly belare 2 o'clack W..
morning, the CllP uld. Havonl.wu dead
m arrival at South cout '· Coqimunlt7
Hoopllal, SOuUi•lla111ili: ' ·
The i..na.O sJrb lo the aecand 1ulo ,..,:e batl).,{epar1«1f In &aod condttiaa and werl 1n· bl li'.anil«reci:.todl fnim Haaa
!.leinorlal"!loipitil, In N~ Beach, ta
Kaiser HO&p.ital in Fontana. Besides back
injuries, they suffered cuta and briuses.
The cdrooer laid TJylor was fatally
Injured ln the 7,41 p,n\. Wednetdq crash
at I.he raceway ,and died three hours
later at Santa A'na Community Hospital.
Driver of the car in which Taylor was
riding, Timothy J. Lewis, 19, of Santa
Ana, also was iaten to the Sant.a Ana
hospital where he wu treated for major
cuts and releued.
In the second car were driver G1ry
Allen, 31, of 2173 Bristol st., €osta Mesa,
not Injured and Pat R.ice, U. of Orange,
wbo Wu treated at the JCeDe for minor injuries.
The CHP said the Lewis car. approach-
ing the raceway on the lretway access
road, passed another on a blind curve
ind collided headon with tile Allen car,
which was leav!~ ll.>e raceway.
· Possihlllty of ~ char8" •gains! LeWis Is being lnveatipted,.'the CllP
uld.
food and communicatioos tn the ara.
Sanltatiao rblems posed be a Ith
danaen;. Si trenches were dug for
bathrooms. Mosqoitos and flies swarmed
by the thousanda. A stench rose from
decomposed bodies -tpas_e not yet found
and those "piled knee deep" awaiting
removal.
Refugees scavaged for food, bunting
for cans in the debris of stores. Starving
dogs roamed. in packs. Snakes and rats
slithered about.
Looters aod black markete<n took ad·
vantage of the chaoll.
State Adj. Gen. Watter G. Johll!on, ...
forcing limited martial law and a I a.m.
t? I p.m. curfew, ordered his soldiers to
bring in laaten "draping ~ stancjjng." , "A,-. ls°"" of the vilest type peo-
ple, 11 bad as a grave robber," he said.
Liquor stores, groceries and homes have
been tooted, he uld.
,... ~ohnton-,allO v9wed•'to ~p down on
some stores, still ab1'e to operate, "ho
"are raising the price of food, especially
milk, sometimes as much as 100 percent.
Under martial law, this will !lOl be all?W·-
ed." He said aome persona were selling
fre!h water for $1 a gallon.
Church Council Backs
Arabs on Land Return
CANTERBUllY, En(land (UPI) -The
Arab notioo.s·todaY had the bocking of the
World eoUDCil of Churches in their batUe
for the mum of land seized by Israel in
the June, 1!187 war.
'11le council, whic'h reprt1enls 241
Protestant and Orthodox denominatioos,
also urged the United Statea to restcre
normal diplomatic relations with Cuba
and offered t.o mediate the Nigerian Civil
War.
DAIL V PILOT lttft ......
l'bitlng Fotorama
Liz Vanderveen , 17, Huntington Beach. and her pet f)OC)dle, Pierre,
pause to ponder photos on display In Fotorama exhibit at Fashion
Island in Newport Bea<h. More than $1,100 worth of f.rt zes will go
to visitors to DAILY PILOT-Radio Sl.allon KOCI( sven , It continues throu&h Siltuldi)r.
I •
Rubble Guarded ,
Hurricane Ruins Sifted fqr Bodies
PASS 'CHRISTIAN, Miss. (UPI) -All
that remained of "Pass Oiristian today
were the green-clad JOldiers who guard
rulm that almost no one c<llld really
want.
Workers and giant machines plowed
the debris searching fer the bodies they
could smell but not Jee,
Gone with the townfolk -monied and
poor, black, white and cajun -are the
agonizing quests that lead men to grovel
in the aUcky gray mud t ha t coats
everything for some scrap of food ; and
thal drives a mother to scoop stinking,
muddy water from a ditch for ber child
to drink.
Johnsons Flying
Here to Visit
Nixon,' Family
Lyndon B. Johnson and Lady Bini wJll
fly irt ·from Johnson City, Tex., next
Wednesday to celebrate the former
President's llst blrthday as guests of-the
~ First Family in San Clemente.
President and Mrs. Nixon will entertain
the Jobnsobs al anmronna1-1uncbe0n at -
the Western Vlhtte House, aides disclosed
Wednesday.
The Johnsons daughters and their
families may also attend.
It will be the first informal visits the
Johnsons have made to the Nixons since
the inauguration.
Later tn the day, President Nixon and
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson will fly to
Redwoods National Park In Humboldt
County to ded icate the Lady Bird
Johnson near Orick.
Iowa's Governor Asks
Halt of 'Gas' Train
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -Gov.
Robert Ray, has called upon the U.S.
Department of Transportation to in·
tervene and bait shipment! or poison gas
through Iowa.
The governor vowed Wedne9day to call
out Iowa National Guardsmen to patrol
point.! along the routes, if Transportation
Secretary John Volpe does not stop the
shipments.
1'bose that are tone. many of them
homeless, are the lucky ones. They lived
through the grealelt stoma man has
recorded fn~the United States and now 11
;, behlnd them. •
Moot were airlifted and bussed
Wednetday lo C&ptp Shelby; Miss., south
ol llattleahurg, and lasted their first hot
meal since last w~kend.
The dead are ttcattered In Improvised
morgues and overcrowded mortuaries. sun others' are buried beneath:fallen
trees and piles of lumber that once were
hOU!es.
In hastily el'e(ted shelters, hundreds of
persona sUll wait for a hot meal. Such
scenes are familiar in GuHport and
Biklxi.
In the brick schoolrooms turned Into
dormitories and dispensaries, children
cry and play and laugh and sing. For
their parents there is little happiness.
Those in the shelters have no homes to
which they can return. There is no elec·
tricity, no water, no sewerage.
Light bulb.1 have been replaced by dim
flashlights; water comes either fmm the
few artesian wellJ or f r o m central
dispensing points where it has been
trucked. A bathroom more often than not
is a slit trench acraped from the soggy
ground behind a schoolhouse.
It will • be •weeks and months -befare
there is ron electricity and utilities, years
before homes and businsses, the can·
neries and night spots and motels of
Biloxi are rebuilt.
Never again will there be the grand,
columned homes of the 19th century that
stood in Pass Christian.
Mad Dog Runs
Wild in Beach
A vicious dog ran rampant acr06S
more than a dozen stree.ta in North Hunt-
ington Beach Wednesday night until
pursU:lng 'police managed to . shoot lt
down in the flood control channel at
Springdale Street.
Humane society officials today are in-
specting the dog for · possible rabies. It
reportedly bit four people at HunUngt.on
Center where the wild, two-hOµr thrfe·
mile chase began aboot 5 p.m.
When the chase ended at the Warner
flood control channel It took five bullets
to kill the huge German Shepherd.
tor. .
The government obviously e1pected
more trouble tonight after two nlghta of
antl·Russlan outburst& which IO far bas
killed two persom. ~
Today was the fir~ annivenary of the
Soviet·led invasion ofiCzecboslovakia and
at the stroke of n~~~·!'° Czechoslovaks burst into Wene Square, t b e
Czechoslovak sym~ of freedom, In a
clamorous outburst.'.
Even some of the Czechoslovak soldiers
1ent in to' maintain order joined in the
chants of "Russianigo home."
There had been t1-o nights al vlalence
ln Wenceslas Squate, and two men were
reported killed by police in an outbruk
Wednesday nlghl .
More than 320 were arrested. The
government called the victlml criminal
elements, social outcasts and bdolfgana.
The heart of the demonstraUon was
Wenceslaa ·Square but conaervattve
estimates said more than 1 o o , o O o
Cieclioalovaks filled that and nearby
streets. Police moved throua:h the
crowds, hurling tear gas occasionally,
~etimes clubbing bystanders un·
mercifully.
From Pare I
SPARED • • •
news;men Sept. 13, 1967, when con-
demned. Judg~ Samuel I_>reizen oPheld the·Jiuy•s
venlicl'OI death ln the San QuenUn ps
chamber on bOth counts. 1
"You guyl aie looking a(tlle be.st man
you'll ever see," McClellan snarled u be
was fed out of !he courlroom under heavy
guard, apparently trying to live up to bis
nickname to the last.
Alone with hls thoughts on. Death Row,
bowever, Ute convicted slayer slashed his
left ann and then rereamed to jaller1 for
help when he wal<'.hed blood form a pool
on tbe floor.
Supreme Court justices also reversed
death sentences for four other Death Row
inmates Wednesday, all on erounds that
prospective jurors cannot be excused on-
ly for oeposing the death penally.
TheJ,Jncluded:
-Harry·W. Schader. convicted of Ute
1963 slaying of a Sacramento policeman.
The CQW1. ruled 4-3 that the Wilherapoon
ruling applied.
-Dennil: Stan"ortll, convicted o r
several r~pes and the murder or two
teen-age girls in the Richmond-Pinole
area in 1965. nie vote wu 6-1.
-Cbarle1 Gardner, convicted of rob-
bing and slaying an Oakland storekeeper
in 1967. The vote was 6-1.
-Booker T. Hillery Jr., convicted of
lhe rape and murder of a Hanford &irl.
The vote was 5-2.
SALE Just two weeks more ... thru August 30
~DER !N' YOUR CHOICE OF STYLES AND FABRIC •.
AT A MOST GENEROUS SAYINGS , , ,
HERITAGE
a. lMng tn:dltloo In tuDltar•
H.J.GARRETf fURNillJRE
PROFUSIONAt
INTERIOR DESIGNERS °"'" .._ .... "'" .....
'
2215 HARIOR ltVT>.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
64/>.0275 646.0276
I
I
·1
'
l
I
l _
DAILY PILOT
Sponsored hy UCI
For the Recor.d . -
72 Kids ·set for Vnicamp
,Births
DEATD NOTICES
tl:OFIELD
HtlTY C. SclllfleW. 7Vf Ordlkl. c:.or-.i ....... ,. SUrvl* 0.. wtff, LwlR S.
Scofllldl ~ ...... Jolln S. Ind Martt c. Scdi.kl· botll o1 CoroNo d91 Min incl 111,.. tnnibont. Prlv1'9 1r1-ldl MNScn wlll ~ lltld Frtclff. l'lfl'lllY
'""'"" M flohl eot1lrlbllllanl. B1lll
Mor'llJll"Y', :1J20 E. Co111t H1111W1y,
Coron• dl4 ,,..r, Dlrtcton.
ARBUCKLE & WELSH
Weatdlll Mortuary m E. 17111 st., Cotta Me11
MS-1111 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona de1 Mar OR S-HSI
Costa M... Ml 1-ZUI • BELL ·BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Brudway, Costa Men
IJ "'1m • DILDAY BROTHERS
llutlqtoo VlileJ
M-ary
171tl -Bl•d. u,.t1qtoollea9
IC-7'71 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARr
1795 1-U CUy<111 Rold
Lqwn1S..C~
fH4411 • PACIFIC VIE)'I
MDIORIAL PAllK
Cemele<J eMor1WJ
Sloe p~ .. Drho
N...porl lka, Colllnta
llUlll • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7Ml 8olta Ave..
We1tmbmer as.sm • IBEftEft MOR1t1ARY
Lopn1 lkltlo IK.lllJ
Sa a.-ta fll.ltll • SMITBS' MOR'111ARY
11'1 Mila SL
Bmdln""" S..Cb -
Births
Mr, •nll' Mrt. lttft'lltll Y•M'• ,IMO II cam1,.. Df' .. AIM. c, COit• ,!MM, tlrt
Mt. Miii Mra. WllllMI P. KIM. Jr,. UU
$0. Ptcllk. hnl• Ant, t b-1
Mr, anll' ""'1, D1nJ1I M. ONllbs. 1nl W1!11<t, CO.It MIN, tb-1
Mt. tnd M"' llobfft D. Uwh. 614 . S.1wanl ltd,, ow... •1 #!¥, ...., ... _ .. ,
Mr. Incl Mn. Vlclor T, LM, tlf Otk
$1., CCllll Mis&. bn
Mt. Incl Mrs. Jahn Cwtttr, 1•1 '-ltntlll, c;..,_ 11111 Mir, 11ev
Alttlllf •
Mr. ind Mn. D111nt ~ j!H
P~lla, CO.II #MM, tin
Mr. tnd Mra. l'rtnlt lt•l•'f• llf Vlo-1w1 .. Cor,11 .'MM, bo"t
Mr. .,,.. Mr'l. Cll•rln Ullf#!W1llo an
AVIOCltdo. CC11!1 Me5&. bW
Mt. trod Mr1. Jllfry J.trfh••• 2011 Gok11MY1 Pt., CMll MQI, bo"t ""'"'' . Mr. inf Mrs. Dontld "''""""'' no £!1'111'1111 •• .,, '""-... en. bot' Mr. Incl MrJ. P1trldt M. Tnl•l9n. 40-ll C1lvln Clrc:ll. M11t1lln1ton Btl(ll, t lrl
Mr. Incl Mn. w ... ...., L lcpti.., f.Q6
G.111 Clrdt, l'wnl1lll V1 l1h', boy
Mr. 8M Mn. Mtrtln ltobim. 2077 W•llltt No. S, CCllll Maw., boy
Mr. Incl Mrl. JDllfl Henry. •721 Court-lltld Df'., Coront 11111 /Mr, boY Mf. Incl lo\n. Chris ....... rMlllK, lmll
Flkon Avt .. Fmin11ln Vtllt't', "°Y
""""' ' Mr. I r.cl Mrt. lrldlrf LA8trt. 617 V!c-lil:lril, Coll• ,,,...., bo"t
Mr. Md Mn.. Jn S111'1kr1', »Jr WulmLMttr, CCIII• MIN. t lrl
Mr. Ind Mrl.. Rober! LontPl'e._1,lS2 Strentde Ln .. W\Jnll1111ton 8Md!, t lrl ._,,
Clllbl*.IM ltd., CCllll Mele, tlrt
Glubllovw lld •• C.I• MIN, tjrl
Dr. tr.cl fin. Mllloft Gitt.<'. :MJf7 C1tll
Portolti. C•lsh"-lllecll. llo'll Mr. Md' Ml'I. llobtrl M1mlltan, 67'
VFaor11 .. C..hl MHI'.\ tlrl Mr. lhd Mr1. llobtrt Mol11nw. 1t1•2
stt,..r1y, H11nll11t1I001 B1ldl. bot
Mt. Incl Ml'I. BWYn ROii. 172 Prt ble
Or .. T111lln.. bvr Mr. 11)11 Mn. P1u1 W11v1r, lll02
Fl11mort Wty, Co1t1 Mt11, t ld Mr. 11111 Mn. Edmond J1cb0n, l\U Ktn"I' Ln. CCllll Meil, t lrl
Mr. 1nd Mrt. J1mn Wiison, 5'l
TrlYft"H Dr .• CCllll Mtu. llcW Mr. incl Mr1. $1'111 Jen Lu, IOISA El P11a, Foun!tln V•llev, tlrt Mr. lf>d Mrs. Robtrl W1rMr, 1902 W.
MtrldlY Ln.. Salllt Arlt, t lrl
Allllllf t
Mr. 1NI Mrl. Glendclfl Fletdltl', "5 W. wu-. Cost• ""'"'· tlrt Mr. Ind M~ llJd\11111 Plclu... m • Ar1llf:, Ntwpoi1 8Hdi, boY Mr. t"nd w.. Dlrwln ~ 1ns w.
UMtn u. .. Sl!ll• Ane. llo'll tN. 1NI Ml'I. GorWn Crlbtll. 11"tA
Glr1lcllM l.llM, Hunlllltlton 1.-dl. "' . Mr. Inf Mrt. J...,, (lle<Ty, DI l"Hdl
TrM \.-. N_,, 8ead1, t lrl
Mr. tnd Mn. T'"'8teo Al'ltrt1. 11116
Ct11f. A'le., H"""Hnttoll 811cll, 1lr1 Mr. tncl Ml'!.. Gr11ory Howland, 2f06
Lell lth. CCll11 Mnl, boY ·-· Mr. incl M,._ G1ry G. 9 . l 1l, 20211 llamonl Ln .. H.,..11,..ton 8t1ch, 1lrl
Ml. 111d Mn. Frllfltls Vr1fnt, 2750
Portol• Or., COii• Mell, 1lrl
Mr. 1...i Mrl. fetlr £. W11l<er, 411-C
Hlmll"" 51., CCllll MHI, llrl
Mr. •rid Mrl. l.llMY D. PFr11!111Y, ms
P1c:11c, Cot!• Mlt1, DoY Mr. 1rid .,Y.r1. Oennlt 11'1111• 1Jll l!!:ngl1nd N"o. 8, Hunllfllkltl l e.di,
"'
MEDALLION HONORING WALT DISNEY
Walt Disney. Medal
Offered to Patrons
IRVINE Seventy-two
O~ange County cblldren hjive
ligned up to attend this year's
UNcamp JeSlion in the San
Bernardlno Mountalns as the
result of effort.a by studenta at
UC Irvine. ' 11ie camp bus will make
~ to pick up the children In
Santa Ana "'Monday. Boys and
girls &-13 years old who
otherwl!e would not have an
opportunity to go to camp will
SA Woman
Faces Card
Fraud Trial
SANTA A...~A -A woman
who allegedly used a dead
inan's ttedJl card to buy baby
clothes in a Costa Mesa store
must answer to the <'.barges
make the llklay mowitaln IQ-Rlvtra!de IJllf UC!. UC I
j partlcl~Oon 11 under tho oum. ~
Twenty-lout u n I v er a 1 t Y auspicet of the University
lllldeoll will occompany the Interfaith Foundatioo.
yo u n a 1 t er a u camp Several pbysJcJans frmi lhe
counselon Same of th e Orana:e County area have
children from Fremont School donated, th ·e i r professional
In Santa Ana participated dur-servlcet for . physJcal ex, inJ the put JCbool year in aminati-Ons required for each
special tutorials by camp _.,chlld"!"•bel ... ore..,.•.,ll,.endOiiiilnilloieiiiam ..... •.-
counsetors who also a r e1•
members of the UC[ Com-
munity Projecta tutor I al
group. Other children have
participated In Poncro, the
UC! Community House In San-
ta Ana.
Cost of the camp session ls
$60 for each child. The money
has been raised through volun·
tary contributions and at a
UCI student carnival last
spring.
Unlcamp, located at Barton
Flatl, is a project of. the
University R e I i g Io u I Con-
ference and is supported by
students at UCLA, U C
NOTICE!!! Hearing Aid Osen
we are now equipped to
offer PERSONALIZED
Service to the following brands
-of hearing aids----
• 9UAUTONE • AUDIOTONE
•TELEX • SEIMANS
• BEli.TONE • RADIO EAR
ANAHEIM -A medalllcn to
commemorate the late Walt
Disney is now avallab le
through· the Ca 11 for n I a for the second time in Harborf;:;:=========;ll
Institute of Arts. District munlclpal court.
• OTARION •DAHLBERG
Eye Loss
Wins Suit
A bronze replica of the gold Doris Boyer, 24, cf Santa Ana, has been ordered in medal presented by P!esident superior Court to return to
Nl.J:on to Mn. Wall Disney will Costa Mesa for revival of the
be given to donors of $100 to lower court file. Her possible
the Institute of Arts. addicUon to narcotics -the
Disney founded the art reason for Superior Court ac.I
school, 2404 West Seventh ti<ln -will not now be in-
Street. Los Angeles to vestigated.
SANTA ANA -A San establish a new approach to A Sears Roebuck and Co.
Clemente man who lost bis training in the arts. security guard arrested Mrs.
Think
HADLEY
CASHMERE
Think right eye in a freak j\Ccident The medal was given In Boyer as she ran from the
at 8 service station has been recognition of D I s n e y ' s Bristol Street store last May 8. ~ blht awarded $40,000 in damages "disUngul.shed public service A clerlr: said she left her $15 C II al'\.
by a Superlor Court jury. and outstanding contribations P\lr'chase on the counter and ~ I
Lawrence Reisinger, 64, suf-to the United States and the fled as lie checked her. card ·~":.:: .. " "~ •
fered the injury that led to theo,_w:or:.::ld::_.'_' ________ w::lth::_:th::•:c::r.:edl:t:d:•:parlm:.::en::t·:_.=::=========
kiss of his eye on Feb.17, 1915,
while he was having his auto
serviced at the Union OU Com-
pany IJlation, um N. El
Camino Real, San Clemente. A
small piece of metal struck
Resinger in the eye while he
was wait.bing work being
performed on the car.
Named with the Union Oil
Company as defendants in the
action were station employa
Jack Mayer, Paul Snelling and
Mark Troutt. Reisinger cited
'
Sears
.• ACOUSTICON • YICON
• MAICO • AUDIYOX
• SONOTONE ~ZENITH
LAGUNA HILLS
HEARING AID SERYICE -
1D1.w .. of o, ... , Co1111ty H..t .. Aid s.ri col
CALL
C~LLICT 830-0530
If No AM"\I< Coll 541·2335
21111 ,_ • Y--la-S.lte JOJ
LAGUNA HILLS
ST. JOs•:~OSPITAL them in a complaint which
""· , sought a total of $50,000 in
Mr .• ...., Mrs. Robert H. ~17"' damages. CM1t!WI, Founllln V111W( Mr. 1r.d Mrs Alb&rt P111pl~·.1r 11 C .... -=::::;:::::;:::::::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;::,' tit Drl'A, Hunll,.lon Bt..:n. ,.
""·' Mr. 1M Mrs. J-ll. Bolby, 17615 51111• Crlttobll, Founl1ln V1ll9Y, llo'll
Mr. ""' Mr1. EIWtl~ uo12 IP<"lntd•l9. All. 11f1.H_llflllfttton Btldi, t lrl Mr Ind 1NL Jetf!'n' V. Luut, 22232 ien-Dr .. MIMlon Vldo, t lrl
Mr Mid Mii. A~ /'It. Llibt na i'ldtw11tf, H41!1111!1910ft fHc:ll. 9\r(.
Altl. 11 Mr. Ind Mn. Chtrles I. White. 11m J"'9r.., l.llM, No. A. M11nTln1flln 8t1cn. 11r1
•
BOAT BUFFS
Almon lock1b1y it tht only
11111-lime ho1ling Miter workllMJ'
011 any new1p1p1r i1t Or11tge
Co1111ty. f1i1 ocl111i.,, co.,,,.,,
of ff1tl119 •nod y1ckth11g lllwt
it 1 d1ily f11t1re el the DAILY
PILOT.
For Hobbyist or Homeownerl,Regular $69.99 ...
light,·-eompact Sprayers
e Uae it for f•t aprayi .. 0£ pain.1,
.,-arniah, fertiliser or imeeticide
•Also an. be wed for inflaling •nd
•ir cleaning
• GiYe1 ap· to 6-id. Spray p1Uem wi1h
powerful \.\·BP molor . ·
• 2.? C.F.M. It 3S p.a.i.
~BP Compact Paint Sprayer 24 49
SAVE $10.50! R...,tv 3'.99
Jf.z.HP Compact Paint Spnyer 6299
SAVE $271 Regulll-89.99__
For Farmer or Homeowner! Regular '169.99
Y2-HP Paint Sprayers
• l eylindereomp1eWoc epnyer
• Powerful lh:-HP, 115 .-oJt electric
· motor
• DeliYen 2.8 e.f.m. al 40 p.1.i. or • .
maximum 100 p.s.i. (2.2 e.f.m,)
• Spny iun. IS.ft. 1ir hoae
¥°+-HP Paint Spnyer 13999 SAVE $601Regulor199.99
3 Gallon Pai.nt Tank 3145 Regular 44.95 SAVE $13.50
l·HPl'ointSpnyer 18199 . SA VE flQI Replor 259.9!1
"'''1·--1 · . . . . ) .
11899
I 1111111 d I 11 111 I l ril'
For Commercial and Industrial Use! '339.99
Tank-Type Sprayers
•Raged work.hone deli•en 7-3 e.!.m •
at40p.aJ.
• Mnim•m 150 ir.aJ. con be atiliaed
to pcrtfer air too~. /
• 1.'owe.rful l~·BP motor. Complele
with enelooed.bell pml ·
• RoU. euil1 on big llHn. wlieelo
2·HP PalntSp...,.en 25899
SAVE Sill! Regulor369.99
USHER'S
GREEN
STRIPE --------------------~-----------------------------, I ..., ,. t.t. .. ,._, tJl-4SJO a _... Cll a.nit LCNO ~Hf s.o121 ~ ID i.11u. N4 ,.,..,, 1'V ....,,, MO WI M1'2 aount co.ut "-""' ~J I
Since 1853, the Wlillll Uth1 Scocch
CAHOM•• S.O.OWI .....,.. OI a.1ocw. 0 •-4•11 Ol.'IWIC t. IOID AH •f211 llMtA MA a 1.JJn lOIUHCt Ul-lflf,
I ciwtOMHC +J.MI, .. t47•1 twl'WDOO "° t 4r41 OtN«K '31.2100 ~ w. "..._ '""°'' vAlltr PO wu1. fiM.2111 I CXMt4~11 .._lWl:llWDl .. »21 PAJM191o\"1.J211. SS~fll .,.._ ..... IXWll ~ll\,,,lt11 , .... --------------.--.-------Sears-------.-------------' "Sotlolapioft.GuaiantttdorYourMOMrlkodd' ' •• -• $hop6N!PloM11 '-j' ...... ~,.~All\.loNGPJI.
1.
1
f
JO D.IJlY PILOT H T111w$11ay, AUQUI( 21, 1%9
Your Mone1'• Worth C~mplete-New York .Stock List
How to Beat Srock Ma~ket OVER THE COUNTER l·----.. ---------------·I Nl!!W VOltK f"'''" TlwlnoMv.'• cp191etf
Ntw l"'Wt;-6..U l~cM11oM-tr•1 •
•
B1 SYLVIA PORTEii
A way you can but lhis
Ylclously nuctuatirlg s t 0 c le
mtrlet, put yQUr money to
work and sleep well at night is
through "dollar cost averag-
ing" -a stQCk buying method
whleh many lnstttutlooal as
well u indiv!dutl investors
u,se with conJidence in rough
timcs !ucb as this. First, let's auume you don't
have any convlctioru about
where lhe stoc.k market is
heading in the uext sevual
months -but you feel strong·
ly that the long·term trend or
the U.S. economy is upward
and stock prices will be much
hlgher on average five years,
10 years, 15 years from now.
LET'S ALSO assume you've
accumulated some extra cash
and you earn enough to be
able to accumulate cash .for
investment from time to ti.me.
Okay, (I) Decide now how
much money you can com-
fortably invest at regular in-
tervals in eilhe'r individual
ilocks or mutual funds.
(!) Select your indivldual
1tocks or mutual funds to fit
your lnvesLmtpl objectives
(soli~. steady income or mu·
Jmum growth or a corn-
binaUon, etc.) and to mett
your family requlrfmtnts (you·
can take far more risks if
you'"' a young bach<lot than
U you're the yout1g father of
infants). (3) Ch~·k the
perfo/mance of y o u r In-
dividual companies or mutual
fund managem.ents over a suf. llclent period to_ be Nute that
the perfonnaoce_has been con-
sistently good.
(4) ST~RT now~ invest vi&
dOllar cost averagJ.ng.
(5) lnvest lhe same fixed
amount at fixed regular in-•
tervals In the future -say,
the 15th of ea~ month or th~
15th of ever)' third month or
the 15th ol every sixth month,
~c. ,
(6) Keep thls ·up over the
long·term, so your 'Shares can
grow with the economy'•
growth in five or 10 years.
171 lgl\C)f< the day-to<lay
fluctuaf10na in the market, for
yoo aien•t' trying to gue4! the
bottom. ·X.ou're averaging out
NASD Llatlngs for W-llloy, ~t 21, 1"9 .. .=:.. """ """ c:-. !: -IA... 1::;:~.'·ji
• .,._.. .... """4Nllt _..,._ ~•laulll; t AM. W,. Mii. 116 M tt ; .... ,. -_t "·· 1:, ..... ,~llf. • ~ · ""-" -a.cw. ,,...., • ......,.. ., _..._. · 1.10 <f " C"" "1'
• ~.. .... "'I . !!!I ~~ , .. r.• '" •.1
HEW YOltl(_ (,t,,.) Cllfl'°" 0 "" 10 ........ R tN. l'ti'ftllt '.~ 1,'," ~;,.:,~11· 1~ ·im I·" ·im; ! ·=~~ :i -TM followlnt bid~ C• ~ 2' .. 1.1. ... /10Utf fll Jlot ·~ '"'"" T .... M~~ If 1 \lo.,. 14 lie I 1 -..... ...... >:11:: ' ,,... ti~ ~ "" "'4 111,\ •tn 01)11. ~"' • .........!~.. iii \'f . + \ii 11JI ~ I ~ luMllt4 'b.. ~·~ SI' 24 25* Huci fll' 2t Jll ftt (111111 ~, .$1,l Mnll/OI t1 V. ..., V. 8!!1!!!. "'4
le N•lllrlll Auoef. ~ 311 l+l't ~ ... 1' ~ ,. Gf.W 1~~ ~ .... 1MLll I,• 207 ~ !ii -~ + M B;ri'O'i(i; .50
Dee ot 1~rl~':: = ~ ~~~14 ~~ \~ !l-" .,., ":'! 11:e 1m 1• ~:!it~ '('0•1 1•
1
, ,,m; .! Im,.,. =i ~. l,K~> ,"~ • •. Ju'
rot "::f,,., lrtl!SK· ~ 1n11 !"" ' ~ n~ M .,. ;:rlil Wt ~ '" Alr l'ro4 ·*' ... ..., 1E "-""' .,,, ,,. ,.....,, ~ !!YI' 1111 Nud ,...,. '!"' ~!.!.· St 42 ~ Alt",.. 11u.u ~ \~• 'l:U. llf 1 I:/ "'t1Z ·'° =-'-i.:!ri , :'-:; ~ ~~ n· n tit~ :: ~~~' ~ ~~ il"' ~~i{r. 1 m nt i= ~ e. 1""~ ::r:-~~ = ~=" ~ J~ ,t~ 1=t~w. ·~~ 1 ~ =~~~ r nn F-•• ,, 11 !sva ff ff~ U iS~ ~'
=''"".,.., ~r-~~A~ ;~ t 1~l't~r :~·!la E~/r~ J-'~ ~!il't.::}l :H t n! ff: t;: Err!1~mo it' (J;~"'lif ~:" 11~'1 ':VI 31· l~l rv~.lr If" i1 cro Go~ ~"' ~ti :'1=~: 1·~ 11 11.. nlli 41V. -\\ 8wif1F 11U,JQ =~ dtt,:~J~ ~~raft M IU ftl ~-' 1i~ I Ii~ 1llf 77~ !,~ :il::P:=' r.21 ~ ~ , u~ ;.:·\4 =~u.~2,50 ~1t11 nof ~~'=l.~ &•s L ~ !;1'1 lam-lk ll~ ~~ tr.: t~f\:" ~'1:\:1i~ !~ fi u~ IJ~ ll~ ± 5 e ~ rn111r~ or COIT!• Crwlrd 2,Vi tjl,/i 11 SoUfll i wr .. • ~ ~ A leclMlll •1.~ 17 3, r,• -• ! • lltllt Sii 1.11> rn111tor. CrMI Wt t'lli 10\'I j•* I' Wt , .._, 2'111 A,IUtd ,d ... ' -BHM Ind 1 '° Mt tw"! ~ TI~ ~~z;~ cl r,~ n ~c...~ Int llU :o'Jot't' 31 ''Ill 1J ~r1l:I~ 1:# ,µ, ',,!= 1,l:.,.~ Ht: ± tt l~ck11~"'· ,:ta AFAl't S 20Vi 22\.lo C't'-C 10 11 ,...,,., , .. >>~ ,, .. ~~ ''" , .. Alllf Ch1lnl n i3il + ""'''''" -A.llM Cn 11 12~ Oelll•I ln 21\'I tt\IJi )II"' F"-d\'I JI'; 11:1d.'D'Yt. lt\; 21 A.¥o!llPC ,309 10 J"' It~ 1'\lil + l'i " ·-Aunt Et tv. 10\'I n•ntv M 1014 n1~ Ktlttt 11 ,, ll:•"'b-·Fi "'l'I Nl\'I Ateo. 1.111 "1 i.,. ~ ~'-+ -~ Ill: a,ri~.d :ft''i.~: ::~ :I g~,, Oi:'J Ir' 10~ kio11s1 .i 11o 11\tj ll:•vctt c, :m '°" Z!ll'ft' .Jl·'° 13 1r... !"" 1110 _ \lo a~ er-1 YOUr OOStJ and the fun· A.Ir IF!dl" Siio l\lo Dw Mlr l~ ~ ~:~~ IO~ ll~'-'1 ::: ~: rs,,., lJ AmerE1 ·l.20 I 23\.11 l 2'~ + ~ =2:1 ljSb "!t:"' F IV. 1\1 lle<-or In 17"• IN Kitr T 1t '"' 11:.., "111 111 ~ AmrEt pf'!,61 2 «IV. .0 .Olli ..... !lol.tt~..C wl damental uptrend ol the •• rh 1'""' 1'"• °'"•"' ~ N, l<el!ell 5111 ~1111 lt9t Crd :M\'lo 37\'o ·.~ .... l(r.w• ,"'~.~I~~ l~V. I'"" l!iOfld SI.•• I • • lfll II\£, 21111 22\lo l'lelfll ,l.R ~.. '4 ktllwd lol'h 3$\'I O!lfY ,(to 30 n "'"" ·.., v.no~ ••• ffi• •~ llordt"' 1,:11) market over.the long-term will :11.e1 ~t': 1 t'i 1111 R::""'cA~~ 50\'l Sl\'I ifeutt "' 11-. 11i.; A:Old r x nv. 26 MlrFn r .... .,. ,, · .. aorowar i :1s c•~ )"OU With jt, A.l's PN t'h 1V. R:f ll!ir 1' I~\; kfl'I F ib 1'\I< 11\lo l!~!n M '4 'It ~~~';..''!° l~ r.w. f!~ ftt ~ R:~~ ;':. -·J All(! •••• 3'-lo A•4 ~ JI 2l'ili kfl'l c ... 2' 2'I ltoulotl 'l 11\'i A.rn!lk NOit ' '3 21'4 ~ 21 ljo Baur"' Inc Altl .. Eo t Am It l~ kfl'tl PC m m lroY t':ASI V. ~ Am 8 MICl5 1 IJ 3,04 Jih ~ -\lo llr1nllA.lr .50
'
Al IY, 01JWh' E •\'I JV. i(1,.., El '"" tV. A:Ul Slov 11 U It~ , ~ 70 I>• •• •• -~ HERE·s ·N l A CM! ~ 1~ 1,,l'Wi r.111m Cr u 2'1~ ~· .. ,, It'~ 11\/i ltw•" ... 2A'' ,111, Am, ., .... ,·:::: ... .. -,. 8rlQQ I 2 . ..0. ,,., easy examp e .ln'l.Me , 81 1 •4' 1 .. m .,, ... ts " .a11o ~ -v. a'I" .,. 1.70 r d II Am CIT I 2'llll 2314 KI re :Ill :!'I "'°' \lot 1l'4 25"" t:ldller tV. 10"" ACln "' f 7$ 31 26* 2' ail -V. ftr JIMV of 2
0 0 arS cost averaging With A El L:b t .\Ii Do~ 'Md 21\li mi. ~Of~ ?:' 2;~ ~n I~ ;~I~ 1Jn Cem .611 1f 11 .... II .. 111111 -V. lldwv Hole 1 a hypothetical investmen' Of Am F.•or U\li 1111, OllW J"" l'°' lt.1 LIF!dl II! '\~ , .... kf CotnP j~i ~ A. Cl\1 .. lo ,I.'!,. S 32VI 32'11 :n:.. + l'i 8wvH~. of Al ~ Am l'"ur11 f J\I, Dovie D8 22\'t 13\'t LIM WCI lt !JV. Sci• 1"4 • 6l4 NfotC.r "" 39 tl'loli 27:1# 23V. + Ill llklY"UG 1.1
1:1:11. a month bem•n today The A Gr~I 3111~ 31 P);. .... HI A 1 '••-7 7•• ·'<• ~-·· 6f" n "°CrvSlit 1.AO 2 m. 1~• 231'9 · · · · · Brow" Co ~ ' 8 "" • •m l(erlt 13"' ""' ounti" 0 2'l"' 1w. t~ ~c...,1 ~ .<Y: Sc1<I S H :u\.: 'I"" "'en pf ,,$0 z10 61~ tl"4 6l:W. ..... ll•own . co o, price swings bave been eX• Am l<IS!I lt 'IOV. D"tl•on 0 11"' Ltltur G 'I l7 <.cr!~o A l\t \'I AmCy1n 1,.,21 llf ~ r.~ r.~ ++ ~ l-=s~'f.J ••• n<f • • Am Medi 30\11 /1"6 El Plf!lt 2' 2~"' LeYI" Tn 1 Sffrle J1f 17 17\!J A.1);111111 • t "' '" .. " O ··• 0, agget&K:U a C001Dll8SlOnS Am p ;.,.. 11~ f\lo F8s1 Sit 1Yi 911, L.Wlt flF 11\i 11\0t ~if:i Crnp 7~\lo U "r ~~u,o1>!'.l.o<.,~ I l'~ 13\11 13'4 .•..• ru11s.,., · a
h "bee 1· . "SI Gob JV< m Econ Lib .UVi 41\.'I UllY Elf n•t, 1•11,j ·-·-· 151.4 16\/i ..... . .. ld ~ ~ ~ + ""&ucvEr 1·2 ave n e unmated te make AS• r. P """ 11 FClocb st 21;11o 1"\lo Lobl•w '"' 1\4 ~::;e;, 1,0 "" 61 Am ,' ,_•.. 11 111 2~ 2F.'f + '-&ue1e1 co .to •• ·11 t 1· stand t Am T11v l''i'i 1! Educ sn 6 7 LOU Cd¥ ··~ J\lo Yo-NII 40 41 ,.,,,, :iq> .... 21 21"11 1J\.li t11'1 -1/o B...ioe1 In bl 1.11e I us ra ion OU . A.ncllr c e l M.Jll· i=1 P~si:• 1,"" 1~ Lot Etrll lJYo 1, ~.;;~1 r.. w, l>i!i AE••nd "''"'' uo 11\li 11~ 71'4 +1\fJ llutt"orW 1.10
Pan Am T~lls Loss ,
Dale f "1:1 -AM-. e 6tl4 '' ~· NII• nv. 13111 Lvftdl ,. 10 ""~ sc11 w11 1,14 14'1/o A.Genlns .so ~ Mi! ~~ M~ = ~ =~:r•111...:! 0
:!. .~ Anken c I '* t NU( l ~:W. 1~1!, Mild GEi l:N Ul,/o . \Ill'! ,.,, #I'll,..,., AGntn pf).IQ • , .. ,,.. ,,.L -... eunltll: on.so ,, Arc1tt N 341"' lSVr Eide~ 7 1" M~olc l'.h Y.•.\ 31 "'° SoUto GI 21~ 2n\ AmHolil ,70 .. ,. '" '"" ... Bwrl Incl 1 ..0 ~ II "' Arri IM I'"> UV. F11r""' ''"' 1Vo Ml[ Rlty IDV! llV. ~\V "•Co 1•~ J~ A 1-tomt 1..0 104 41 Mi'>lo 60"' ···· eurl'>dv ;rli
• .. O.;" "'*"' M 16\'o W' El C Svt '" si,; M• l~r: JI .S~ Sw EISYc Iii.. 11'4 A Hoo:;e pf J 1,ll ;1:t ~~ ~~ .! ~ Svrroh• '.60 /
[
~ Areltn pf 3' Fl D•I• 11• 11\ Mgmt A$ $ S~ ~"•C•f'r' R 11,ro Am o..11 • 11 19,.. lt 1.,.. + ~ B•hU,.,,, 1.11 .. "'ril MoP IN ll\lo El Modut 61,'1 ~ !••r•ur 1• 1• \ Sid ll:f!l!I 26 17 A,mlnvll 1.10 ,. ,,,·•, ••• ,,·~ _ ·~ eunt,..Sh .Ill "' ,.,,....,. H •nn "" Flee c,., 71 ,. M1n1~ M tr .. 1'1\ ~·d 5'"" """' ,,..., AmMFdy ·'° ... .. ..
~
Aug. 15, '69 Will Probe Mergers
I Sepl. 15
Oct. 15
the earnings ot nearly all
i Arvld• lf ,,..., EmPS on 17 0 \j, II p • .,.,,, , "" Sl•n HPd n 24 1'M1tCi• 1.10 79 .uv. AJ'Jo 4•Vt +IV. ~ M".C llQI 1·'"' 2•·~ "'n•rgv C 11 I' Md 51\Tp 3QV. 32 \l••w r1 •• o• A.~!Clx w! 1 291~ 2t"' ~+'!ti C1bot Co .6 A11!o Sci 7% Pl Ener1 At 1\/0 6~\o ""~'"r O .,.\I, •o ~utl•c TV l"" Jh Am MO!o" 21' t;t 8~ • .,. -14 11 Fln•"I
I,. 125 2 l\Y~"''"O ·~ ••• Fn~r~ B l1 13 McOuY 27 ,. Jli.~~-1 ., 1i,, 1"'~ AmN11G1s 2 "' 3J ~11;; '2 -,.. •ll•llM ,1lf ~ 0Blbbllt 1 7'\to Enfwt•I lf\'I 20'~ "'""''c I( 1•;~ ·, Silbo "d Jli 1~\o A.mF't!Ol ,1111 ll lGV. 10\'o HI" + l'o moRL AS• ~ 20 2'' 8•lrd ill ''U lnft <'on Qo•o • •V, Mt'Cltrn 36 JI '""~~ 116 I~ ARe1rdl .4119 I 2'l1 210V. 221 -l'o •m115D 1,10 .w n &Ir.tr 2011< 21 Eqwll on lN u•11 .l.'ei..•r ~~ ••~ T•"9or 1 11"' Am R•rr.h wl 20 S6i,:; U'1o S$1io -'4 d8rew .All• 50 15 31/3 ,11~1 "''"'. Jl1 ~~ Frle ,.K 13 .... U•'o Merit No 21'4 H V. ... . e lJY, 14'.fo ""' Se11 1 10 2'l'llo 2'l'll n 1.ro -.,. Cd8rw In.AO.
Pan
Air\vays,
solidated
American
Inc. and
w or 1,d
its con-
subsidiaries ,
preliminary and unalldited
statement for the quarltr en-
ding June 30 indicated net loss
after taxes of $1 ,881,000, 1or 5
cents a share, compared to net
income of $17,630,000, or 52
cents a share, for the same
period last year.
Total operating revenues for
the quarter were $271,326,000,
up .4 percent, f r o m
$270,364,000 for the same
quarter last year. Tot a I
operating expenses w e re
$270,433,000, compared to
$243,021,000, for the June
quarter last year.
Harold E. Gray, chairman
and chief executive officer.
noted. "The air tramport in-
dustry is afflicted with prob-
lems of · increased c o s t s.
labor disruptions, slower rate
of traffic growth and air and
ground congestion. These pro-
blems have adversely affected
WE'VE GOT THE
ANSW•RI
TAI Will. AHBWEll
YOUR TEl.EPHON£ •••
WAKE YOU UP •••
DELIVER YOUR
MESSAGES •••
TAKE YOUR ORDERS •••
AND FILL MANY
OTllER NEEDS •• ,
FOR AS .LOW AS •
$14.50 PEA MO.
CALL US NOW FOR
INFORMATION ANO
A BROCHURE.
1.lbW:~:~ BUREAU
543·2222
t OFFICES TO SERVE
ALL OF ORANGE CO.
PHARMACY
TOPICS
lly TERRY GRANT, R.Ph
Be1~·e<>n sixlrf'n and lwenly·
l\\'O, G<'orgc \Vashlngt.on su(·
frrl'd his first attack of ma·
laria, a casr of ~unall1:iox
that lf'ft his la~ badly
mal'ked for life. and a ~l'rJous atta~'k of pleurisy, pi·ob-
ably tul>t'rcular ln orii:-in. • • •
airlines, including Pan Am. In
our own case, the slower rate·
or traffic, growth resullS in
part from1 Ule cumulative ef-
fect$ 9£ expanding U.S. ~
foreign airline coritpetition."
Gary said, ''Merger within
the industry can and will do
much to solve the airlines•
problems, improve service for
the public and also improve
results for llltockholders. In ad·
dition to Ui.eu benefi t s,
domestic rights w o u 1 d
strengthen Pan Am's position,
and we are prepared to In-
vestigate opportunities that
may arise for either ac-
quisition or merger."
Net ~loss !or the first six
months of the year was
$12,701,000, or 37 cents a
share, compared to a net in·
come of $14,288,000, or 42 cents
a share, for the same period
last year. The June year-to-
date figures included capital
gains after taxes on disposal
or property and equipment of
$1 ,515,000, as compared to
capital gains of $3,308,000 for
last year.,
Total operating revenues for
the yea r -to-date were
$513,075,000 up 3.2 percent.
over $49'7;,197,000 (or the same
periCld last year. For the
month of June net income was
'6J20',000, or 18 cents a share,
cqmpared to $14,397,000, or 43
cents 1 share, tor June last _year.
Firm Plans
For Losses
NEW YORK (UPI)
American Standard, lnc., said
Thursday it Is setting aside a
special charge of $25 million to
cover possible losses on the
sale of assets.
The company had repOrted a
profit of $29.3 million on the
sale of stock in the fir st
quarter of this yea r in addition
to an operating profit of
$12. m million for the first
half. It was explained that no
losses have occurred so far on
the sale of assets but the com-
pany is considerit1g disposing
Of some unsatisfactory opera·
Uons and the dispo&als could
result in losses.
Avis Selects
Mesa Ad Firn1
'"I.' wt f ""Esterln 30"" 31\'t , ..... C.•" ,.., A TIYIOI' w 61 69 ""'Ship .60 • l'O\'I 2Q 111 + VtC011 Pac 3.l'O Nov. 15 50 15 Jl/J """ .,. c I~\ 10"' ,,, ,,~.. ~·. ' Mld"' C• 11 \'i 1 1~ 7•· .... ~ u,, ~Vt A Smfll 1.90 167 2f>,li 2t-. ~ -\'t Ca"a\Rd 1.10 B•rwd: 1$V. 16\'I Fa!H'I Tk Iii t\~ ,,.~i;~ ~'-JV, Trierm A 10 11 AmSGA.lr .70 l6 41 \.7 ~ .O'lt -\0 CIP C B«$1 Dec. 15 50 20 2 ~•sf" P ''~ 10 "•'••Id T ,.,. 1·, Mldw Gr nv. ,,.,.. T•··~y r0 1> ,,,,. Am Std l 1!I .O\.t '''" '°"' + y, C1rbrun 1 . ..0 &•view 12\\ 131\ F•r!MI 20 20\'I ~·~·. r,, ~ nv. T!tfn1 I" ll lru AmStd DU.1S 10 11~ ll•V. \IS ·-· C•rllilt ,O(I Jan. 15, '70 50 25 2'h 11,r,."'·, • :Jl\''1 ll'h l'Mt< Mt ,,~ ,,, Min VtG \7'11 11.lli Tiie" GP l?l't l )V. ....,.. Sltrll .•• s HV. 21\11 lll\ -"'CaroPLI l.a Feb. I(\ """ ..,. I e 1 13\'o U Ftt Bost .W 61 '10 "K" ~ Sllll Tri~ 1 1v. l\(o A Su111r 1.60 I 15 1•\!o 1~ -\4 C1rpTcti 1.60 <N i1N lf3 ;•Im !rid II IJ c11r: PE 7'VI 1• Mctrwk R 21 24 Trncnt r, 1~'' ~'~ ASU~Pf"°2.6.,! 1 41 41 41 .,, .. C•rrlerCD .60 What you have done i.s buy 11·~~ .,1..0lil 104lo FitM 1nv 1t 1n; ~·o~"' Pll ,.,. 11,. T'"""' o sv. ,.,,, ....,.. pt ... 2 io\.\i 10\'r 1o'lo ·-··· C1rrGn 1.fh ae • ..., l6 Fsl I!~" ·~ 51,1, Moot• P f\'J 10 Trencl ·~ ''YI,~.,,, "°'ti T 2 . .0 ns SJ'"' S3 S3'Ao .... C1rlerW • .io. fewer shares at the higher '1~1':,,.,L•w• ff, ~U ~:t,,•,wF111 ,•, J:~ l"'oro·• .( '"" 1'41o Trtco Pd n '' Afl'IWWks .v ' 11 lOfo u ..... c1.e J1 . !I · · ,. .. ' Ill' VI ..., Mol(lo M t 10 T•ICl~Jr-11 l W. AWWSflf 1.25 ~ 11"" 11 11\'J + \lo C1se !If A.l.44 prices, more shares at the 11!~t11~ ~-Mi 'r"" Flllht se1 ,, ts .. ot ciu, " 16 Tro11!e1 J I 11~ •w ore1 1.n dOO 11 11 11 .... ·. c.stltCke .60
I . . .... "" eo-"' ' "'ood FP l\lo '"' MIH!lltr 11>.(; 13~ Ty•"" "d u '1%1 AW,lpl 1 . .Q 1'0 22 ... n~ 22 ... ·•··· C•te•Tr 1,70 ower prices -Wli.11 u1e same "..!:""' ,, D :w, .. Font 011 23.,.. 2,v, "'~""' c 2,.\ '""' unitec 1v. 10 ""' Zi"' 1 '°"' '°" ~ -v. cc1 M••<!dt
o/ -·u' • ''' Fo•• t;r"I 311<. :ft''> N1! 8•1'>d ''Ill $Vi UnArt Th 23 24 "°mftK 60 1 23\o\o 1J 2] -""°CCI M 1>11.JJ amount money. Yo Ur ~oil a... ll\.\i lJ•1.r Fotodlr ll'I 3'lo 01,,r:Ar <1 1,,,. ,,~., un 0o11r 1,,,. °' A.rn!Kllli to 2s SCI'-"' SCl\4 sa•1o + •.r. Ceco Cp .ID . h OOth~ c 2•lo, l~h "rn~I c~ I"-' ·~ Nellie Co ' '"' Un lllum 31\!o Jt'.4. A.MK c .lo H3 lJl/4 2.-. 11'1o +1 CdlnelfCP 2 average price on your s ates aOll c.,. 1•1' 11 "rr11un e 101,1o 11" .. ~, "''""' •• 6o\ u" Mc<;U 1 '""' jll,,MP 1,::: ii o .iv. '51'1 """ + "'ce11n "'"'·so
0 'he e d I . $21 43 llrkwy G >• "' """'"'• ~'• 1 H '°d.F'CI 27\lo UV. Un ll:el11 1''• l~ A Cofp 152 ~ 39\~ ~ +1"~ ~In$ ,ll) n sevn a.es is • llrwft,,.,. u ~Xtrtn1<1 15~!'14 .. .-ir:•o , ..... ,:l\lo11Sfl1<n111 l~\1•v.A::::~2 . .o nll 31i~31 -v.cent"e1v .20c1
per share But with your t11:.11. gm~ 8• ,','"•'•~ .... ,,, .. ,, •,· ' •"'' Nit Lib 21\i 21v. u! crwn AV. sv. Am1e1 .32 • 11 16VI 17 -~ cen Hud 1.• • ~ II .. rt I t~ "'~· ,,,.. • .... •\~ ll i!'"Ytl 11''? 19"" Anacord I 90 -'OS 2Pi 77\• ,Tl'o -'.4 c ... IHLI 1.32 you have purchased 17 I-3 .~;~: ~ ,'-,.·• ,•,• ... "0• ,•,~ ·,· •,.·~ ~·• N•t SKR 12v. lj us sii11r ,7,,., ..,,,., •ncnHad: '.IO ~ 45'4 A5 "5 -~ 111L1 PU.so ' r ··" "''' sv •.. ~t S~ow ,.,, us rn.1 31'\'I ,,..,, AncaroNSY 1 s 2'lV. 211' 21'4 -·~ Cen!llPS 1.11 shares, so each share has cost c::..~ 5v r.:~ ,·,·,,,. "IJ' <:it l~ 1 • "'''°* '" •1' u, PenP """ 'l"' ilnd ciev 1.10 3 .J9Ao :l.JVJ 3S"" -11o cen•L•EI .M
l20 r ·~ G!'Olll 41'. Jl'J ''.Cn ""' l~" ,,_\', U!M 51 d > V. AplCheCD .20 lS m. 2314 2n. -i,:; <"toMF'w 112 you .19. c:~ .. M. ',.' ',,' ,..,,r·~ ,., u Hi thlG 2A'42SlllUt11 '"" 11\~29V."'peo()]I l.•lt •5 17\io 3"'1o 36~+1\<o~en!SW )011(1
) th. h'~h • J ,,... Glno't 3414 J5 Nir,tn F Yl\'i ~' 11•1 LO 11'• 11~ A<1<11 Chem ll AlV. .CO~\ 41V. +111o Cent Sovi ·ao n lS Tl"' ... ehca case, t;nrts.w' •'" ~'' r.11111•11 "'YI '"'' Nltlt A 31 n v1nc1 S• 20v. n "'11:"' SYc .ff !l lOS1"' 10s·" 10s"" -4i c.,.,1,1u1 u
You WO Id be sh · r. P t 16U Glt1$n W 43 41 Mlpl1 ~ Jl\li 3'"· ll!v WO" 7'I 1'1U A.rc/\Dfln 1.MJ 20,, •,,, .. il,, !\'•:!:~Cerro 1-'llb u owing a paper c'" fn'"' •v. ''" r.1D1t Rub •v. •v. NA Re~ , •l'I w.cisw ·P 11 21 Arl1P11bSvc 1 ,, ,1,. ~ llJ:,, ~ .. c er1.1eec1 .IO loss .t the end Of I~ but you ,•P,Teh8 5Vi 'Vl Gori"'' 12 u "'r•r ., .. •·• lr'~ •Y 1>•~111 ~"* •>io "''llM os .:io 2_ •"" .-,,· -j: ceuniA.lr .IO w o, "•·e 1 A ~'l.r r;, .. l"I l'.n IA~ 1'\ft NE~r OU A'~ ''4 W•rl<hw 12:t4 lnl ArrncoSI 1.60 .,.. » CF S would be nicely ahead by Feb ci~r GtJ 1•v. !'" Graoto Sc ll .Y "PA "·"'• ,.,,. '"·~ Wts11 Hr. "°"' u ... "''" pf '.1s ," lll:"' ~1 2.... ~~ 1 c11!.ni:~ ·fnc ' C•,o; NG •··r. ~loo C.rf!"n Ml IA:\/, I>"• NW N•IG lG 10\lo Wesll RE 11"1. 11% Mm11Ck .W 03 .,. _..,... _.,. Ch $ > -15 (your cost per share ~en1e~,, 2t h Gmfl ltE u 11\.'I "'W p ..... ··~ -\'i I"'•' Tr ,,,.., ,1,,, ArmFt.ut> 1.60 ll j1v. 37V. .:...1•,1, c omo ··~ I • ~n ¥ 21 211Jio r.r1"n•!I IM 11' Nv<I 11;.., 26 2t Wlltlb Rt 22\!o n.,., Aro Corp ·'° 1 1J'"' 3\.li :23\.lo + ,,. /\arterHY• J $20.J9• the market $30). ~~I LO IOU. 1~ GrO'<'t Pr 1•\'l IS" !""" •;r 10 MY,, We'tl!rto nh 13•~ Arvin Ind 1 4~~ ~~~ ~$io ~ .. ..:.li,:; ~~~n J_!10 ' ' &•-•'' lA>"° JS r.rw111 •n Jl'"-U Ciiio Wit 'l'f 30 Wt111111 M 2'l 2'\lt Atllld Oll 1.20 ' , .. >O<'• >O"· _ u.C/\trnt!rn lb •-n )'Ao 1"' Gu1rd Cll WI ~ flot S'an u M Wt!lt~ .-; ln>S 11" "°'"° Brew " ., c•~
You ... f 1· lies ..... • .. ,, " t",(,tfj T"( ~ .... l DrmCll'll 10 10>,li Wttat p 131'1 ,, .. AHd DG l.1t I '6 46 "' -\'f • ..,mN'r 2.60 CIU"• o course, ose ~~r8u1n ,, 1r G1111 '"' l\i •+~ nn~r ,." ,~,., ,,,~ wotn NA 11 11 A.$.(1$~ 1 .2~ 3 ~ J4'4 :u111 -;1,c1>emwav .1<1 tvcn with this ~stem ii your 0. I ra.1 " 7 "vrocir l•..., ,.,~ over N"' ll~ ''"' Wtt11 Mt• JV. ··~ Aisd 'E" i":ia ~ 1~"• 1~\\ ~l,., .:.::,, ~~: ~=•o'·fl u~ C.llr1t S 111 120 Htrn Cos 16\.'I lli.. l\0-"(•I • .,.. W.in p,.tl 1q1'< J'fti,. A!IC!Y I kf t ~ l ll'~ lll'~ l!31'1-l>~ (hf!ebro ,'l'l
l'udmnent is so bad that you 11'111 pf 107 IOI "'•1"1 V<> ,,,. ''4 PEC •• ,, 121.lo 13'.lt Wint WI! 1211> 13 "''\ Aichi J 7.S 1260 !9llo SI"'--~ -~ CMcE•ll Ill e••• !llldtl ., IV. A l(tnovr S 2S\l:i 211'1 O•ll!;t n. M •~\; "'"nb•11 Jl>.< 71"• Al ll!Clt 111.,i· 3 J 11'1'" 102 1t2 _ ClllMlt SIP p buy an absolute dog of a stock 1111 u" ''111 t.< "'"Yf~ !n "''• ""' PAC l'"IE 3" is WfMlw T 3,,; ,,, AU illtll.,, 10 125 7' .... 15 IS -3Vi ClllMSIPP d 1''1 u a 24\4 "" !(Jiii Mor 151'.1 1' ... ~c· Co 'Iii ""'W1·~ Pl r > 1'''1 A,llRch ' I~ 21,,., 2~'" 21''1 +1 CMSP Dt ct 5 o.r mutual fund or if ·you are 1•"' Mt 22:') 2311o "'~ft,...,. " ,. ,.. Pencoi 10 1il'li wn:t1111 E 11~ 5\< ~ll'' cc11~ 1 ,1 Jl't J•,• s·~ -·~CM Mu•ic 1
I l'rlCll'I ·~ ~ Hllilvn 111"' 11\~ n"'"" D'~ '' 1•1-'! """'""" r 2<'"> ,...~~A 81 ~I~' U U1't U 1'\\ + \\ ClllPneuT ? orced to sell out when the 11"1 Mtf '"" 1011o Ha1m EP Jl SJ P•ultv ,. 12 nl'.i Yrci"v £ '°"' ~ A~iS'Jtr 08, 11 16 1s<,io i.<~ _ "c111 1111 P~c
market vaJue of your ac· ~~c'l:"~':, r~10 ~ 1~""~ 1~~ l:~ = ~ ~~}l~ ~1Nu,;
, <1¥WY Pd ,!7 9 $1' J1 S21't + II> f\oekl'u!! 060 cumulated shares is less than Avco 1113.20 10 57' s1 J7 -"4 !hi Ti!lf 2 :io
Your actual cost. Avne1 1"" ·'°° 1.s lA!'t 1•~• 1~ .. h•lt ctt :..a ... VOfl P~ l.llO 31 l~l"o lMI 161~ -ti, hnorntll (( But I'm assuming that if Aztec 011 G1 u1 u;.:. 1011 u"' +1v. Chnsle• i"
You care enough to read thi• Mutual Funds -8-Clo•GE '~ fl~bck w 1.36 u , .. , 1l'4 ''"" ... ·~ El~?tf· lOfCI! column, you'll foll ow these B1k'°11T .&s ~ "-. ""• "Y. + v. insuTe1 ·1.«1 easy -but absolutely essen-BittGE 1~70so m i:i~ ~~ ~.; ·· · · c1 TF 1n 1,90
/
........................................ ,. ::wG "'Jc~ i:Jll 60"'1 "°'" ""'"' + v, CIT" 1115.SO tial -rules. If so, history 8anaP11nt ·'° i1 16V. '~~ '~"' .j.. "' l)t!et Svc '
hou ··-th I 8tMP p!l 'S 1 " ,. ?It + \~ C!~l~~y of~ s ts 1.114t over e ong-tenn ~""J.'TJ~O Au l(ou~llfOfl: eorns •ed s.os .Sit\ C•llMI 11.n n.n eenk Tr 1.1' Sl 6Hlo 6l'.lo 6l~ + V. c 11v strs . .o you'll come out way ahead. NEwOMvo'RK1f4 Pl Fvncl,A 7.oo 1.11 COmmonw11t1 Fels: C11111 11.6611.66 c1er~Eo 1..io
-Thi 1ouow1;., ""'°" fvncl I I .It t.66 1•• Fd '·fill·" "Mut 1'.IJ 1,,13 CJ~i:Jc,11?,11 1 .. '° .. l•rlonJ, •uoo11.c1 11v Stoc11 lu 1'5 ncom t. .1t tMtn 1.n 1,n c,... !hi N•l'-1 A.U.OCI· kl C. '22 $1, ft\'ilt 1· 10.SI ~II '°d 10.11 It.It CleYE ll!I 2.IM
•tlon ol Slaffl!ln B•tt :11 l)' lodl .1110.• :MIH Giii 11.12 n .25 Clllrox .7J!t
NEW POSITION
Valt•c'1 LuVisl
V altec Fills
New Position
The Vallee Corporation ln
0.11efs, Inc., •rt 16 r d 1 .2t l .25 wllh "' .. '·'° M .... ,.r 15.U "·" Fm· ance 'c'~~.',',', .... M, th• or(ltt ti whld1 or.cit! .to ·'! with CO 1.n 1... '''' '·" A.ff tlleM M<urltln OJICll'I S! .to 10.tJ on.o Al 15.•716.t5 MMllti.n l!.U 11.•l C "''°l"t .SCI ~d hi.,. Mfll OI-1.l2 t .CW omotl ··1 '·'! cOon l .$310,41 lN"° PIAl.10 ml Cbllll er bolloh! •otd st 1l62 li.fi :::: ii f: li:ll ~~v ~~ 1,:ll i{:Ji c:i's5J:1 pi\'..1~
edl W't~YJ.tt w"~ '.:~ \o:Ti Ill 1·' J.12 MMOOCl~'I ll.$2 1,,71 CoctCol 1..u Abtrclf\ 2,00 2.12 •l'IMI" 11.l2 19.~ CMICOo'd I • 11,20 Qrlon Fvnds: B • f Coc1B11t1 1.20 AcNIJr1 1,•7 1.1' 1011 1...: .Al t. OMol Ill 1 . •1 ·u o,' rwth 10.Jt 11.l'I' 'n· e 8 !C.0•10 P0•1~',·.~. Affllllld l.OI 8.1, 1111 5~• f .ff 1 °"*" In 4, . ncom •.07 4.'6 Aflltn 10.olll 10 . .CO e"I $/Ir IO,Jl 11.27 or1l Lei TJ.JD 16. l"SU• 1.5' 1.29 0!1ln1 lk" 1 Aloi>• Fd 11.63 12.11 h•nnl'10 Fo;nds: n!Y Cto ll.* lA,4'1 M[•, Fd f.14 9,ft olllnRftl .IO
Amceo 5.8& '·'l llel•n 12.16 ll·n """"' W 1. '·" M.. Gth s.ao •.11 olol""' l .~ Am 8111 l 21 J.s..t Com St 1.1t rnW '" tt·' U.32""' 8"'G S.19 J.I• Co" Ind .7 Arn 0v1n 10:..a11..1o1 Grw111 '·!!·1: Yoh M ·ff''·12M~o; min 10.nn.1' co111n 111.t.1
AE• "'' t,tl .... inc:om 1. !·70 1 Inc: 2. JlA wt Shrs l J.9.S 11.t! NEW YORK (UPI) _ The 1!'• ••, .. f:!.1.60
"'m Inv .... 1.99 ChlM Grouo: Iii Tr .ti I .IS ~EA. Mui 10.6-4 t0.16 -luGls 1,411 Am Gr!h •. II 1.4 Soe<I '·' .22 twrt 1· 4.t9 UI 'rrll 2.6t 1.14 _,
Arn M111 '·iJ 10.s. FllNI 11.6111.71 vld sr11 .ri ,,1~ ,.,, ws.c l0.1111.si insurance toss on the Gulf j""!ijt' . .u. AmH Giii j ·I 3.G. Frnl H.11101.&1 .T t" .61 1.18 t'l,•t, ll!CI 11.l7!1.37 ol h 1.7, Am PK .s LOS Sh•Pld n.n 12... t " •.ll 6.tt :~· rnv1! 7.n 1.13 Coast from hurricane Camille omb n 2 40 Anc~ Group: Ehlmcl 11.32 20.0J gr1x.i lS.t• 15.9' "'' S.Cur Ser: ~aml olv ·AO &~l11 1l:U 1lr! ~'l:"JfJ~ i.1, !·" i:~V;~ .. ~!w~2r'~ 14"10 ~~" '2:!1 1j~I probably will approach $100 ::wtfcipfi:?i ~7 Inv '!·:~ 1f:~f ~~,~ 1l:a 11:U f,~i l1:~ n:'! g~~f11 ::ff •:~ rnlllion, Qie Jn s u ran c e :r:::..?1~ci'°
•uocl• .u 1,.u vent ,,•.,•,• ,,'.'•1 ncom 1.oe 1.1"1 Pt Slk" '·" 1.65 'lnformati"on lnsti"tu•· s a Id amt•! A.Itron .JJ ,,92Cammc !Dl'CI 11.XU.a lncam s.:st 4.11 "" -MllU. 1 1ock" 1'.S11s.n s1ock 1.Mi t . .co ..... _..1 Tb estlmat was onr•cCP 60 Eberst lJ,411'.69 ~·' Wttt t.lhl 1.2s 1ue:;uay. e e ~EdU. (eo Foret ll.'51'.62 ti Gr1h t.11110.6' based Oil reports from ad· Edl1 °''
119""' 1A.1ll•. 1 Ntw Eno t.111o:s1 1·usters tn ours tes. e ig-_•,1!!£4.6$' nlot11 1.$ t.11 N-Hy 26.11 U.6' ~-· -• au11v t.s110.39 Ntw w1c1 ''·'i u .r.i gest losses will be i n onFd pf•.» ::~. Gttt '~"~ 1~.~~ ~:W~'"' lt:tt If·~ Mississippi and Alabama. ;:~~rb'"l .1l Irvine Opens lmro Sc LIM I.fl euwth 2•.14 2' 1' . f la Tb b' Edis Ill S
vef'' 1" l•.•! IJJf NoruJ,' 16.2114:11 ConsPwr l·"
A S • t · i=:r.::; fl::f itM ~~ l:n ::il ~.,,Pw pf .so ere 1 es F••m Bu 11.m 11 .0I fOCI Fcl !,_,1 16.?1 LONDON (UPI) -British :iJ~;~ ;~ Fed Grtlt 1).60U!161GI "" t .8010.11 ont Copp JO "111 Cto n .e1n,1t1~ wms u .98ntt In s urance cQmpanies ""' c, 1.Bo 'Id Fo;rid it.1,11.12 ell 1s.111':i' estun· aled .-.1 lhe•·r lo•""s',"•',!!"'2~ The Irvine 1 n du lll tr i a I ~l=•n"/i~ J~~:J1'5' ... ~"~so ~:~ 1:f: "'ia _., ~ •• I·~
ovnm 6 . ., 1.011 "• Mu1 • :16 i.M from claims growing out of ~::;M8:t ·r~ Complex has announced the 1ndu,1 •.H s." Phlt• n:1~11.M h · c ·11 lh u 5 CM•!"' ·~~ !.31 6.91 P11or1m •.21 1a 01 urr1cane am1 e on e . . c...,1 ei 71 opening of a 100-acre research ~~r1111 1 :?t 1t/J ~i= 51 ,0.~r1i~J: Gulf coast will be between $4.8 ~°O'..,' o.t•,,
an·d development park in ":; 11~:~ ::H 1t~ ~I_.,!" 1nv 1~~ l;J~ milli0t1 and $7.2 million. ~~'ir":t:S-"'! M11lll ;fs J·'" F'r ~ Tit ,,_JI 2•.]1 l':-rln 1.«t
Newport Beach. "!;, ri:: • .o.J 41:3} ~:,:~"" '~::: '~-~~ CHICAGO (UPI) Trans ~-t' •"• ,,' Forlv acres of the new 11t c10 '"' ••.. Purnan 10.4' 1o:u -· ' I ""' I·'° ···· Pltntm Funds: un·1on Corp says 1't has found ~-•,~rid 1·10
"spectacular view" property "~ '6'f:i s:1' l::t ::;!. i!:i! U:C f th' I c:1tiT l~
l ed l'"eundrs 1.J: t.n11 tth 11.36 12,,2 a use or e green a gae scum cor1n111a ."9 ls ready for sale, ocat on Four1111 11.1, 12.u l'ICOm t .Jt 9.oe on ponds and lakes usually corGw11i·~ • Fr1nkll" Grouo: nvtst 1.15 7'2 19 JDv t"" wn~ side of MacArthur WI SI l.fl'J 1.1' Vl•fl 10." 11:6J considered a nuisance. Trans c:-, .. ,, .• IR:'. ~ TC 11.!112.61 \IOYlll 1.9• t n "'"
Blvd. near UC Irvine, with y~ t:" ~·P. ":O .... ~Kll 1~:1? ,f~ Uhlon said it has obtained pa-~~~"'l..J.:,10 ·u · leled ;r.-·~ '·" ;:;:"' 1 . .it •" tent on a process that uses the f=rnc11'1 streets and uU ties comp • "'nd S:C.m '· 1~~1 =~• F~!.:: ":" scum as the principal medium c.~o•,,•.,.511 The i;ites are available in ~•11• 12·"4~t.M 1"1 '"v H.'3 u .6!1 in sewage treatment. ~;.;;;,co" wt rOUD \K: $11(1 3',611 l&."' ., ,..""'117•11 1.611 units ranging from two to 15 ~:;: Sf 1f:fi ll::l ~:n 51 ~~:Jf :~;~ · --"-cTs co111 . .o
• • "" Fut Ad f·U 1,.00 ~ Olv 11.~ Jf47 WASHJNGTO"' (UPll _ t~..,•hW 0 el"•. 5
Irvine has appointed E. J,
LuVisi to tie new post I or '
operations manager responsi·
ble for all activities of the
company other than legal and
finance\ •
George Pettn; Advtrtlslng, As o)>eratlons m a n a g e r ,
Inc. has been appointed LuVlsl will report directly to
advertising agency for Avis W ... D. Gibbi, Vallee president.
Rent-A.Car in all western "LuVlsl's depth or experience
slates. In quality manufacturing will
acres. The rema1n1ng uv-acres ~·111 1nc1 , .to 1 ..w Ii! Eoun j· ,:a1 ,, c.... l
rvolln ll . .00 1 .'1 ltw l.Sl Avemco cl\rn. has registered ~V,!!!etr., ·." will be available in 1970 u•rdn 2J.11 21.11 I~ 1~:111 .m v•,. .. .,c. n
• ..lff~/tCll'll : ;\ ts n i~~ Dtlns ~:* n:n 350.000 shares of common ~~~j~·t:, .. ,, ~._.~ i.~ ·ft 1~..,. ionn.n stock with the Securities and ~~~w~ 'to..i
El B ;~!':ft 1.'7• 1: 11 ~1J.rw11 1; ~ 1J ;J Exthange Commission for the c~~ 1• 1.611 Pac 11ys, .. cwt. ... 11 6612,jO -Inv '" •i~ r111 .... hase of Metropolitan Na-~ Gor • 00 •.OO tr lrov 14.J7 1S.11 ..-"
Ad agency headquarters are be invaluable to us during the
Approximately 25';{. of thl.' located at 2790 Harbor Blvd., coming year ." said Gibbs in s:el"lt'ra1 population t'Ull be Costa Mesa. announcing the appointment.
teot 11.fi1>.eo .111=..,,., Gt s.• I·"' Uonal Bank of r.taryland. It is I"' 1tr~ 1"0
Sells Land ~lr.'n.i 11:~ 1::r ~J:~ ... s~" ,~l .IJO proposed to exchange fiVfl ~·~ •1~ "'81~ 5'.~ l:J =~1111 'l~~ 1i·M Avemco shares ror each bank ~ r•l
Elpa' •-c Irvine ..an-rr.e 1~.. ~rJO f;~ s1~J..,1to. ~~' s:a share. ~'":.L.., :tz
deeply hypnotized and in 8 llijijiiiiijjjjjjjjiiiijiiijjjjiiiijjjjjjiiijjjiijjiiijjjiijiiiiiiijjiijjiiijjjiijjjt rcllltlvely abort ptttiod of
lime. This. however, ii &
dangerous practice and can c a u 1 e psychological prob-
lem& ot a pe.ntll.Mflt nJt~. • • • Many &el'Vicemt.n coming
bac.k h'om the l1'0pics ha~ recum!.nl episodes of ma-l&rill. Altnoll thr«! ttmusand
CA.'M!t "'~ reported In the U.S. in 1968. . ,• • ·For ~ery U&eful. dill& that
f"l'!llChCfl the public, more
th•n live lhow;end oom·
pounds are sludlt'd ta.od eventually dlAcer&d. • • •
10l" mod.c;!m &<'rvSct with old· tuhloned courtesy, brlna
)'OU1' orescrfptiom IOI
PAik LIDO PHAIMACT
•llN-loM N••,.,t IMdt t42--ISIO ,,.. 11911_.,
ORCO ELEGTRONICS
Announcing • New Serv ice
for Orang• Count y!
A COMPLETE LINE OF:
VIDEO CAMERAS, "RECORDERS
& AWED EQUIPMENT
AYlllablt On A
RE-NT.AL IASIS!
DON'T f01•n oua
MIW PHONI NUMID 646.5037
ELE CT RONIC S
16n IUHllOI-COSTA MISA
!Jo;it So. of W11t !Jtt. St.I
, .Lii ., t mt Glh 7MI. 11•1 '°"'°" DPL. ll ..
......,, .... ..11 '"'-t it bas completed ~11""1 11·" 1 ·1 c .. DD 1•:i1 u:,, Det:r• o ~ "'"'"""'~ '-'Ill d l~lll . Sloclt U.1S 14.~ Dell'!!• l.OI
•grtemen.tl and entered into ~::lll: nd 1 . n,l:lln 1=1~1G' ::: 1l:f: Market g:\,~l: .~· . f N • • ~GI 11.611 U,7'1 Del~ol tserOW for the acquiS1Uon o "' '"" , ,j' .. ,. 70.37 "·• 0t ft'I riv ~ •tt TO,U 111'1 OflWI" M
approximately 1900 acres ot : ,J: 1 · l}:ff lww.1 \.,!,\ •:~ SymfJols =•':1 '$:
recreational rtsidentlal prop-::vni:.o. G,_~ ·" t~r.• J:~ ,~:~ o,,=", 't'°:
ert,y known as Sweetwattr @'"" 1::J: 1f:I t~ rJ ~::i ':n !~iii;.. "'!T:.11'11 :.:k"~.., ~.:-== = .. i:·t
f •. SI 4, l''y Efl t.11110.6t Miit g:~:i .. l. Lakes. Ind. in exchanae or t ti·~1,:'l ~ ~f 1}!; 1!~1 Sties 'toutts '" vllOlfkl~ Df'I Ed ,ti.•
sh f I>~ 1M l:J1 T.....C tnc iu 5'1A -"'ho tllfr• or••.'!.!!:.......~ I Mt.I Pd SM! M 7501000 arts o common lf!'I 1tnh '·" .,. u:!l' Mui 10·11 ,'°°' 1" 1::r.,,11n11~~··v";'.".""i..:p: b rec1~11r. .t4.!Jt
atock. ~\ TI:~ I : u:i::.. Fund~~vln :r...r dvr:!::'!"·..!!~·!Wd. ::~ ".~ 11~1~ir 1,te
I w 1· . A.COft 1.~1 •.t' •IOCi div . ---. rir:, f~ 'lflllle 1Sh.wn l • .io
At lbe same t m e • ~-'!~!'di : ,f: l~ ';::J 11:{: :_,"'/(/~,'!' r.. ~(.,. "' ci:.'rii !:f" J"ofio ••--en•• were ct1mpleted K.Yi10M J,liil!' uA tin u,..vt ll •I~• • ~.....,., or unt .,., o~••!lllan .-.."
-""""'" ·"' 11$ 111 61 ·r. Vo ... \'"' F<!: t -De<I Of N IO !tilt -ti! ~ ~ • ·-
•
nd -·row entered into for "' ~' 'lt . • Vfi ~ n t,q 1·•1 wmvi.t 1. luvt wmi c11v~ 111 .,. 1ort1o • .o
the ;~ of the Sweetwater : ~1 ld 1
11:1! v!?11~ f:.i1 ~ ~~"r.£~~r.'!S:t::i~~V:~ f,l\tr3 ~1 · . ~ H )II.lie ... Ve!'ldrb '·l! .MP •I0<.~ ... 11v :s::~y...pfy1blt It'! dodl rtoneo ~ Lakes property to D1aun s, "'' l 'j·" ~ V•l'Mllt s. . 1.n 11ur 1"8. "' l..i -t,111 ••kit ,,, .,. ,,.;(IW JO
In h r 1 .t i . Ytr lndP l°'' .•• Cll-10..nd or U-GI :iilhition .... ~'" llM'Y .30ti 1nc , Tex. exc ange or ,lI 11111111e M .11 ""'~'11. dlvldtlld. O!Jtftlli 1 20
P8Yments totalling '4,000,000 ~~ '!.U !':i ~iii«~ 1l:l~ \~:i; ~tO-C11~ "'.!iL .. ftvlderlf, ~111 ~~ :S
P)US JntettSl O\ltr & flye-year i!..,Gt 1 Jf l : ;..-m,~· n~ \l:;t dlltt~llft. l!t-(1 ~ -WlltllUt ~~ ~j "od red b f"rst ~~'Rlcil 15.~16. WW 111111 ?. f.~I Wllfrll'ttl. -Wllh. wlt~RJ.:d~~ll'f ,
pen , secu Y 1 t t': 1. 1· ¥!"lltthn ''· 't.l.I ~i.o,~vl'!-i~iitd -tiiliiii O:( £: .n mortaage on the •ttaf prop-f~ :· ' ~1\3 1·1l 'A'f1 Clf'Pft£., ...,.,. 11!1 -hi;'~~ :I.ct. ~er ~~.
-.. .: : WIK .... :'ill l:ll' ... , dt!lvln--WlfTlntl con"""·· ICl!rn '·" -v· • ~ WWlll J.06 1....C• I ...
I
\
•
~--··-----
Thursday's Closing
I
\
Prices-Complete-New York
Prices End Mixed
In Light Trading
NEW YORK (UP!l -Prices closed narrowly
mixed on the New York stock Exchange Thursday
in light trading. ·
The UPI market\Yidc indicator was up 0.14 per-
cent of the 1,546 issues traded, 650 moved ahead
and 588 declined. The Dow Jones average of blue
chips industrials showed a gain of 1.52 at 834. 74.
::rumover amounted to around 8 million shares,
about a million below Wednesday's pace.
Oils an~ electronics moved in both d.irectlons,
but ~eneraUy in narrow ranges. Standard of Cali-
fom1a rose around 1 near the close. IBM closed
?t ~9, up 2 118. Steels, motors, rails and gold min-
ing issues moved in similar fashion .
Among the ~ost active rtocks were Union
Carbide, Natomas , Benguet, Reading & Bates, Gen-
eral Instrument and American Telephone. The lat-
ter closed at 53 114, unchanged.
Airlines and aircrafts showed scattered strength
although fractional losers appeared in bath groups.
Conglomerates followed a mixed path, but there
were few point-size swingers.
Iowa beef packers. up 4 718 Wednesday, gave
up more than 1 near the close.
Chemicals. edged higher in some instances, but
here. too, gains were small. Ou Pont closed at
127, off 11/4.
Prices were mixed on the American Stock Ex-
change in moderate trading.
OAll.V 1'11.M J J
Stock Exchange Li st
I
I '
•
~
I
l
12 DAILY PILOT ThUN.day, August 21, 19f,9
'
""-"°"" .. MR.MUM
Politi c s v s. Produet
De1nos Giving Nixon
Son1e Hi gh, Lo w Marks .
I By RAY?itOND LAHR Oklahoma took over the na·
WASHINGTON (UPI) tional chairmanship I a s t
~a.tional Dem~~alic Part.Y of-January the party head-f1c1als are givmg President ' Nixon high marks as a skilled quarters has un_de_rgone
political salesman but, as thorough reorgantzalion. He
could be expected, ·much lower had been busy at what he calls
grades for the products he is ,;professionalization" or the
se:e~ believe he must do an sta~f, the employment of ex·
unusually good selling job to per1enced peo~Je ~ho may
muster support for his pro-wa~~ career Jobs Jn party
gram, his party and his own politics; .
hopes for re-election. They are . Harns ~as told associates ~e
convinced that he will never 1s unwor~ed about the party s
be the political hero who can debt , which has been reduced
depend on the broad popu\ari· a~~t ~.000 from the $6.2
ty which benefitted Dwight o. m1lhon figure of Ja~. l. But
Eisenllower and John f .. Ken. after th at reduetion, the
nedy when they were in the Democrats took over about $2
White House. million i~ additional • debts
These are among the early from unpaid preconv~ntion e~·
assessments of the President penses of former Vice PttlSJ·
after bis first seven months in dent Hubert H. Humphrey,
office as he and Congress are Sen. Robert F. Kennedy of
taking their summer holiday. New York and Sen. George S. , McGovern of South Dakota in-
DOING WEIL curred during their campaigns
Althoogh .they concede Nil· for the presidential nomina·
on is doing well in front of the tion .
televi si on came ra s ,
Democratic Party officials
believe be ultimately must win
his battles on issues and not
by relying on popular appeal.
On the basis of their own
private polling, they see Nixon
coming on strong in the
general field of foreign affairs.
They see the electorate divid-
ed over the way he is handling
the Vietnam war. crime and
race relations. And finally,
they think he is weak in the
area of economic affairs, in·
eluding taxation and spending
and the high cost of living.
HARRIS LAGGARD
While he has appointed two
commissiom to recommend
changes in the party structure
and national convention rules,
Harris bas been laggard in
naming the national policy
council authorized I a s t
January.
He expects to name the
council along with severaJ ad·
visory task forces at a three.
day party leadership meeting
here next month. Humphrey,
1968 presidential nominee, will
be chairman and his running
mate, Sen. F..dmund S. Muskie
of Maine. a member.
They visualize the cost of
Jiving as a continuing issue
unlikely to vanish before the
1972 presidential election.
As political realists, these
officials see some of the
issues, such as crime and
economic problems. working
for them now instead of
against them as in 1968. Their
reasoning is based on the fact
that responsibility at the top
has shifted to Republican con-
trol. The Democrats are no\11
the "outs" in contrast with the
GOP which will be held ac-
countable for the state of the
Most Democratic con-
gressional Jeaders have en-
dorsed the project without in-~ dica ting a willingness to serve
on it. Even before his recent
politically di sastrous ~
automobile accident at Chap.. I:
paquaddick, Senate Democrat. ~,
ic whip Edward M. Kennedy f:
was reported shunning an in·
vitaUon.
union.
SEE DIVIDENDS
Again as political realists.
the Democrats see political
dividends for their party in the
budget and tax problems
beset~ing s t a t e governors.
Republican governors now
outnumber the Democrats 30
to 20; governt:·-':lps held by 24
Republicans and I I Democrats
will be filled next year.
Yet, the Democrats rec·
ognize their own problems in
dealing with issues. For ex-
a mple, they must convince the
voters that they can be both
liberal and again s t
lawlessness.
Since ~en. Fred R. llarris of
Kennedy partisans said he
had become fed up from
seeing his every act. and com-
ment analyzed as a move
toward the 1972 presidential
nomination. Since the ac-
cident, he has announced that 1 he would not be a candidate
for the nomination. ·
CREATE CLIMATE
Harris views the policy
council as an agency which
will create the climate for the
1972 Democratic presidential
campaign. Meanwhile, as a
member of Congress, he is
trying to work closely with the
Democratic senatorial and
congressional campaign com·
mittees, which bear primary
responsibility for protecting
the Democratic majorities in
the Senate and House in the
1970 elections.
I See By Today· s
Want Ads:
• A ho~ In One! Baker man
-...·ante-cl for night w...k,
make donut!, etc.
• For SY."Hl.Marts ! A swttl..
hllart of a lounge in black
fake fur $65.
• In a Dttp rul'Ple ~lood
for a pair of Amethyst
llalia.n &llJIS lamps.
' •
• '
'
DAILY 10·10
SUN. 10-7
FRIDAY &
SATURDAY ONLY
GALA· FLORAL
PAPER TOWELS
5i97~
R eg. 33c
Stock-up on this K-mart special! .,
1 Gal. INS ULA TED
PICNIC
J UG
147
Reg. 1.97
•
250 COUNT
PAPER
NAPKINS
Hg. 33c ~
2s~ ~
Just the item for summertime cook-outs, picnics or ~
~ camping trips.
1 ~~a:ucw1.ii:&J:rm1;•PR
CHAISE
LOUNGE
PATIO
. CHAIR
~ 5.00 2~5 5 •• ~ R e g. 7.44 Reg. 2.99 ea
f~ ~:=a:="!!"'r; a::::: 6 webb style
~
7 /16"-50 ft. Vinyl
GARD EN
HOSE
i
Simil1r
>o
lllu1tr•iion
97~
fteg. J.94
'
RtlDAY &
SATURDAY ONf.Y
G.E.120 INCH-2 SPEED
ELECTRIC FAN
Reg.14.77 1288
. ' tastes · great r, in)cans!
CANADA DRY ' . -.
FL:AVORS
CHOICE OF YOUR FAVORITE FLAVORS
1.76 Reg. 1.96
P er Cu e
Buy several cases at this big savings
ii BBQ
:GRILL
Reg. 1 8.88
Sturdy grill includes mo-
tor & spit. Handy adjuat-
ment for grill height.
J t/z H.P.-22 INCH
~OWER MOWER
'
Reg. 59 .88 42 88
-...... ~ '• • • • • • • ... .•• "'.~ 0 ... ' ' ......... -~ .,-...... • ...,. --•""\ -· 0 • __ ....,,._ ,. .. • T, ... ~. ~ •· ;•'
· 2200 HARBOR BL VD. ~~::;r 0~1d COST A MESA
·· Harbor
·-· . ---· ... ·---· __ ,,_______ -· -. -... ,. --· . _, --. ...... .
'
'
l
•
;
f
Fountain Valley
EDITION
Today's Fl•al
N~Y.· Steeb
* 1/0 C. 62, NO. 200, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES TEN CENTS
Armed Forces Cut Told ·-
Laird Says 'Defens e R eadiness Will be Weakened'
DAILY PILOT P!Mt. ••TU'" C:1YUll
TINY PUP STANDS TALL IN A SHOT GLASS
And Still Lt8v11 Room for an · Ice Cube
Shotglass Pup
Ounce S mall E ven for Chihuahua
SrT1a1I is in this year. Just ask Cricket,
the mot.her of a day-old, one ounce
Oiihualwa in Fouat.aih Valley, ' •
Cricftl's lltlle.'pqp is l!IO tlny1h'e•ean sit
up in a shot glass and still leave room for an ice cube. _
He was so week at finf, 'that Mrs.
Samuel Staley, 15968 Rocky Road ·Court,
Crickel's owner, had to feed hlm mllk
from an eye dropper every 45 minutes.
The veterinarian said if he lived 24
hooni: he would have a 50-50 chance at
surJtval. Forty-eight hours and he would
makt It all the way, the &:mallest puppy
lhe vet had ever seen.
So far so good, The litt}e lei~ born at ,,:iq .p.,,,,., ·,'f\let!il!\Y, )IQ, I'>"' K'(\Wn strong ~gh ·.tQ fffd froin his mother.
And he shows a lot of spirit for a-pup in
lhe bantam weight clasa of Chlhaahuar. ....
The little tyke has ·a br6ther and slster,
each of normal we.lght, Close to three
oun~. ·His dad, named Poky, is the
mailman's dog.
Mrs. Staley said the pup was just fine
this-moriling and looks like he'll make it,
"He's· like a child, so he.lpless," sh&
said.
Larwn Tract Off Ground
As Zoning Changed OK'd
The Larw1n Company·s now famou!l
tract in Fountain Valley finally got off
the ground Wednesday with planning
commission approval of a zone change
for 112 acres between Talbert and Ellis
Avenues and Newland and Magnolia
Strtell!.
Planners okayed a .planned develop-
ment, residential tract with a density fac·
tor of 6,lm square feet per lot and a
minimum Jot Siu Of 6,000 square feet.
Commissioners at the same time tum-
ed down the city council requested zone
change for a planned development with a
denslty factor of 7,200 square feet per lot.
Only Commissioner Carroll Mohr op.
J>OSed the zone change. He preferred to
see the 7,200 square feet per lot factor.
The new tentative tract map submitted ·
by the Larwln Company Indicated a fiied
school: site and minimum lot sizes of 6,000
Beach Man's
Airplane Flips
square reet. twO ttems lhe commission
had demanded'before passage.
Prim4ry dUferencc between the PD
6800 ctincept (approved) and the PD 7200
concept (turned down) is about $54,000 in
money dedicated to park development.
"When a developer goes under the PO
7200," explained planning director Slan
Mansfield, "the city can require him to
pay $200 per Jot for park development
rather than •tOO per lot."
The city will also demand ornamental
street lights and signs in the Larwln
tract.
Underlining his opposition, t.1ohr said,
"I'm not sure $M,000 ls worth the 188.,000
square feet we're giving up to pie Lanrin
Cclmpany. I don't feel there is any place
in this city for a density greater than
7,200 square feet per lot."
Chairman James Dick disagreed.
stating, "l think we have met nearly all
the objections raised to this tract, and I
think it's time we goc. that property
developed for the good of the city."
NG residents spoke against the Larwin
Tract during the hearing.
WASHINGTON (UPll -Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced to-
day he was yielding to congressional
pressure and reluctantly reducing the na-
tion's anned forces by 100,000 men and
spending by $3 bWion. He wemed: "It is
clear our defense . readiness will bt
wt?akened."
· Laird told a news conference he
ordered the cuts after being infonned by
the chajrman of the Hou11e Ap-
propriations Commit.tee that at least $5
Nixo11s Hosting
Korea Lead er
In Bay Area
From Wire Services
America 's First Family flew out of El
Toro MCAS today for a San Francisco
meeting with their Kore8.I) counterparU
and a mini-version .of last week's Apollo
11 state dinner tonight.
A small crowd of about 60 persons
\vatched President Nixon and hlS family
orf at 10 : 10 a.m. waiting under warm,
friendly skies of the United States Marlne
Corps base.
A glittering array of guesb -including
11ctress June Allyson, of Lido Isle -and
Zsa Zsa Gabor and Mrs. Clark Gable
have been invited to the 8 p.m. affair in
the St. Francis Hotel.
Some of the toughest security precau·
lions in San Francisco history we.rt im-
posed for the visit of.President Ni:a:oo and
Presid~nt Park Ch"1g Hee.
An estimated S,900 ,pert1>na: are e:a:-
~~ "' ""'!'d the .-.. 3'oond the
famed . Bay qty1lM!!ii!fn, lncludln ~' anU~war d~J, ~/;·., '·1
The gala banqueHoOight, one of few
ever hoilh'!U!ail:i/' Wall!il)lt.p:-~·,I!'" Apo11t n le1e -will driw SaD FrllllCllCO st&~ . p,!lep Prtalde•t Dr. s. I.
Hayakawa and al!!O Henry Catd Lodge.
<1.hlef U.S. nea.otlator at the Parls peace·
talks.
South Korea's president mOdestly !Ug·
gested typical American 'food for the ban-
quet,· but Mrs. Ni.ton !IPJ>"OVed a menll
not seen every night in the typical
American home.
MOusse of sole; breast ol duckling a
l'orange, potatoe.!!I Berny, tom at o es
farcises, limestone lettuce, assorted
cheeses (from.ages) and fi1s roma will be
offered, plus California wines.
Entertainment will include a Marine
Corps band for so-called bard rock dan-
cing, plus Spanish flamenco and classical
,Wlarista Celedonio Romero and hls
three aoas.
· Various gifts will be exchanged by
dignitaries at the formal .event, followed
Friday by an informal luncheon hosted by
Secretary of State William P, Rogers, at
the exclusive Bohemian Club.
The luncheon will precede summit talks
between the U.S. and South Korean
presidents, i!fler which the two chiefs of
state will issue a joint communique.
Following hls arrival in San Francisco
today, Presldeqt NI.ion assured President
Park that violent pro\ooca£lons by the
mUttant North Korean regime will not in-
timidate American commUmenta there.
"Together we have resisted bar&M-
(S.. NIXON, Page ZI
Stock Jllorkeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted through another session today,
with brokers reporting Investors contm.
ulng cauUous and staying out or the ac·
tion. (See quotation&, Pages 10.11).
Trading near lhe close wu slow. T1\e
Dow Jones Industrial average at 2 p.m.
was 1.as ac &1S.07.
Blac k Market F lourishes
billion would be cut from defense ap-
propriations requests.
"I wish it were pGSSible for me to state
that these cuts could be made without
impairing our defense readiness," Laird
said. "Regretably I must say that these
cuts will reduce our capabillly to meet
current commllmenlS."
Laird's acUom would reduce defense
spending from $80 billion to $77 billion. a
figure Pentagon officials said was $4.1
billion below the requests of the Johnson
administration.
· ln addition lo the ·100,000.man reductJon
in .uniformed ranks, another 50,00&
civilian jobs would be eliminated and 100
ships would be mothballed. '
"The distinguished chlarman Q( the
~ ApprnpriatlonJ Committee has
stated that his committee will cut at lea.st
$5 billion •• , and hu alerted m, to the
fact that the current fiscal year is run·
nlng and that action should be taken
now," Laird added.
Laird said the cutbacks came at a time
when Soviet military strength la Ur
creasing and added: "I believe It l!! Im·
portant that the American public be ift..
!ormed abo_ut stepped-up Soviet" activities
1n strategic offensive and defeostve
fields."
He al!!O said he saw no lull Jn the Viet-
nam war, pointing out that enemy in-
itiated activity-in -the-Vietnam conOict
was higher during the first siI monthl of
this year than during a similar period in
1968. But he said U.S. forces are now
engaged in a strategy of "protective
reaction."
~ .o ~ -gMeii Sianton,Gasii ght Killer
Killed" nt':A.titb, . .
Cycle Accidents $aved by High Court Rull
•
Three young men died ·wednts<fl!ly·
night and this .morni,ng in separate traf·
fie accidents in Westminster, ·on Pacific
Coast Highway north of Laguna Beach
and at tlie entrance to Orange County
Raceway.
Tbe dead are:
-RW1sell W. Hom, 24. of 5e82 Mangrum
Drive, Huntington Beach.
-Dold E. Hovard, 17, of Pasadena.
-Carroll D. Taylor, 17, of Santa Ana.
ltom dled or a skull fracture suffered
when his motorcycle rammed a car in
WertmJnster. ,
Hovard, dri ving a small foreign car,
crdssed cNer the center liM at Scotch-
1• ~ TrtiOc 1111
1• ne.,11 Ton 131
, man'• Cove north ot Laguna and 1mas~
ed he.tdon Into a criJ' c~ teenagers
Bonnie Ll'Jlll, II, of 71\ QCt!a1' Blvd.,
HuntlnrtM Buch, and cathlffn ·Ff!Vtor,
llLol Clarem<clt Both g!rll lllflmll back
lniurles but ,.... ref)Oi*I today In pd condltkn .
Tlj'lcr wu a -tn anoOler smlll lor.lgn c" Involved. In a heodon cra!IL The CaU!omta lllgbway Patrol
&aid the drivtr puled. on a bllnd curve
on the eaa.,.,. rQad t. Orange County
=a~ the Santa At&l Fteeway on
~II Horn.a wlHhouleman
ror a mltti;et ln Buena Park, was riding
his CJ<1e i. work norihbound on Golden
Welt Avenue at t p.m. Wednelday when
be cnabed into a car <!riven by Cb.fa
~ ol Anaheim who waa tumo
(llee CRABllES, Pa1e I)
BJ ARTllllll'R.. VINSEL
' Of ... .,.., ........ ,.
·A killer who cut down two would-be
heroes· tn the 11.200 lerTortst holdup of a
Stanton nightclub -then tried rulcide to
escape the gas chamber -was spared by
the California Supreme Court Wed-
nesday.
One vote was the margin of life for
William W. '"The Man" Mc:Clellan, 28.
whGee 1JS7 death penalty wu reversed on
a 4 to 3 vote by the hJgh court in
Sacramento,
Uncorroborated evidellCf! of a prior
crime spree by the beady-eyed killer -
given ~y hla meek accmnpllce -during
the penalty phase ol. McClellan's trlai two
years ago was the baala for the decl1ion.
:Wayne L. McFarland, Z3, turned state's
"°ldence against his companion after
pleading gutlty i. two coonta ol murder
Just two years ago today.
He ii now aervlng life Jn prilon, with
Parole pouibhl In five years.
The two Alhambra men were arrested
seve:i-at wee:U alter the daring robbery of
The Gu1J&ht, ua5 Beach Blvd., Stanton
Doctor's W i fe
Faces Sentencing
On Grand T'heft
Mra. EUrleda Steinberg, the wile of a
HunUngton !leach pbyalclan, will be
sentenced Sept. 10 ln Loi Angeles on two
.count. of grand theft.
2~2 years ago.
Joe C. Gray, 35, or HunUngton Beach.,
and James Seagrls, 40, of. Stanton, were
cut down in a hail of .31 caliber slugs
when they began throwing chalra at the
robbers.
'"lbe Man" was convicted u the two-
gun triggerman in the brutal killings,
While McFarland, known as "The Mole"
for his iubmlss:lve role in the bandit
team, rired no shots.
A parade of witneka who were ·In the
crowded tavern about mldnlght on Feb.
IS when one bandit rrabbed the stage
mlcropbone to break up a comedy !k.lt
and &Mounce the holdup tesUfied agalmt
the pair.
McClellan was named bf the widow of
one victim as the killer, while McFarland
aClmitted his role as the bagman wbo
scooped up cash as his partner t.ept the
crowd terrified.
He testified later against McClellan,
listing a spree of Southland fobbetiea.
later mentioned by Deputy District At-
lomey James Enright during the penalty
phase of the trial:
McFarland maintained a calm, at.
times amused compomre during tbe
sensational trial -8hackled hand and
foct -then put up a· bold front for
(See SPAJIED, Pap I)
Or11J!ge
Weather A light private plane was flipped over
by the prop wash of a B-23 bomber
\1{edneaday afternoon while taxiing on the
runway toward lake off from Orange
County Airport.
The small plane ended upside down, but
Lyle Weaver, of 17882 Bell Circle, Hun-
tington Beach, at the controls, and flight
Looters Infest Gulf Coast Th~ Gennan born wife of Dr. Terry
Steinberg ol 1007t John Day Drive pied
gufHy i. the chargea•Wed...i1y. Thirty·
two other counll ot Cfand theft, all Item·
ming from Mrs. Steinbera'• alleged
embe:ulement of $30,000 from the
mortuary whm the-wu employed u a
Partly cloudy mornings and
sunny afternoons are 1tlll In
the offing fOr the Orange
COlst, with ternpe:rature1 ran.19
lng trom 75 to 85 dependJnc on
where you park yoUr car. Instructor ~b Herman, ol 9128 La PASS CHRISTIAN, Miss. (UPI) -
Colonla Ave., Fountain Valley, were not Looter1, bl1ek marketeers and stag.
injured. ~ gerln& aanltatio!l problem1 piqued the
Weaver sakl the Cessna ISO was tossed Gulf Coast aurvi\'Ofl today and the rem-
over by strong blasts of wind from a nants oC Hurricane Camille claimed m1>re.
World War If bomber owned by victims tn V~ilnJe and West VJrglnla.
Tallmantz AvillioD, which was wanning The toll of the strongest hurricane evtr
up It• engines. tG strike the U.S, mainland climbed
Dlmqe to the plane was ettimated at loward 300 today with uncounted bodies
fJ ,000. ltiJl•buried tn the mud and debris or the
GuH Coast and the raging waters u(
175 Acres Blackened
AUBURN !UPI) -A fire blackened
about 175 acres or brush before being
brought under conLrol Wednesday about
three milts aouth <:A th.is Placer County
eommunity.
Virginia and West Vlrgbda rivers.
The stonn itself struck out Into the
AtlanUc Ocean, heading 1Wly from land.
!raving an lncrtdlble sw1th of death and
destruction 1kmg I t s thou1and·rnile
overland track from the Gulf of ~tellco
to the Atlantic.
Thirty more bodies were. roond Jn Pus
)
Christian late Wednesday. boon afler a
Civil Defense official said the qui! Coul
loll had reached 137, Mlaslsslj>pl Gov.
John Btll Willlams said today that ''We
,.ave a minlmum ol 2311 bodies" on the
Mississippi Coast.
Five were dead lo Louisiana, 1t leut )0
in Virginia and two in West Virginia.
Cecil Yarbro, executive secretary of
the Mmlsslppi Stale BUiiding Com·
missk>n, said "We've got tons of bodies
now and they 're still digging them oot."
A force of nearly 2,500 NaUOnal
Guanismen patrolled the eotHquare-rnlle
area ol devastat.ion in Mlsslsslppl and
L-Oulalana. They reported Instances of
looUng and black marketetrlf\I. but of·
flclals said they had 1t undtt control.
Early today Camille -®W con!ld<red
• •
-
.an Atlantic 1&onn rather Ulan a hur.
rklDe -w11 centered abOu& 400 miles
eaat of the V~glnla cape& and movlnc
tat.tward at 20 to 2$ mCa an hour. lb
highest wlndl ol IO mUa an hour
thru.tened no land artL
The w-....... llkl' th• storm
would-1111o..-. 'Ille Vlfllnla oqWills .. 1 the historic
Jamt1 Rlver rampajt:i\I tD o u & Ii
Alle&b<ey Moulltahl t.-Vlrglnl>'1 t.11
wu expect~ to rise 111 flood waters
rec!@ded and re.cue te11ms entered the
stricken areas.
Camille, which 1truck Inland with 190
mlle.p<Nlour wind• lale Slm!lay nigh~
de1lt the heaviest Joa of life in 1
tropical atorm slnco fturrkant Audrey
(Sec CMff!JZ, Poa• II
bookkoeper, -· dismiue<L ~ accused Mrs, Sttlnberg, 3', ol using the lunda ol tbe Gatu,
Kln1sley and OateO Mortuary tn West
lMI Anselu t. lndull• ber tutes for ex.
pensive -IUmllbln1s. coolly !url and a variety ol valuable objeCts d'art
~ otrmd 11 an earlltr htarlnJ~
lndlelled that the One! accounllnf ol
Mrs. Stelnbug's acUvltles OYer a three.
year ptriod could run 11 hip u ll0,000.
lnveallgalon said Mra. Steinberg got
the algnatures of mortuary offk:lals on
blank checks for what ahe claimed were
l•r,·11m~te com)>eny expens'9. ft was
al eged that _. then mtlde lh6 check
payable i. her -•I credll«I.
h ... •
INSm E TODA.Y
Senate critfca of P•ntagon
zero in on t:penditwn1 bu&
Pmtaaon ftcrri such action "'°' oioe twr more acttvc Ruuianl JmJul advontagc, />al;c 23.
{.
J
•
t DAil Y I'll.OT ft T1llr*f, 'All?'lft ft, 1 ...
Net Lil nu11 .... 1re
Nixon's Italian
Choice Surpri~
P•-Nbon Wed-ay nomlnaled
career CUplomat Graham A. Martin as
U.S. -lo llalj<. 1'I nornloltion, opeoted t.o be routine-
ly caeftrured by the Senate, came u a
IUl'pl'lle lo -· quartera. lt bad been rumored tblt the am-
buadonhlp would go to He n r y
Salvatori. a Los Angeles millionaire who
has been a heavy financial contributor to
GOP campaigns.
But presideoUal Jl"ll oecrelar)' Ron
Ziegler, wbo 1......-d Martin~ OOJnl ..
tion, denied blaring Salvatori'• name
mentioned. during White H o u s e
diJCUSSioos ol lhe pooL
..
•111a juat stick with Ulla announcement,
if I wert you," he smilingly a d v i s e d
newsmen at Laguna's Surf and Sand
Hotel.
Marlin. 56, is I on&-lime Waablncton
.. porter.
Thi naUve ol North Carolina bu'beeil
In 1overnment service since joining the
Nalional Recovery AdministraUon in
1933. He entered the F.orelgn Servk:e tn
1947 and most recently served u Speclat
Assiitant lo the lle<relary of Slate for
Rel\Jgee and Mlgratlan Allalrs.
In Route, he will succeed Ambassador
~v~r-~~Y·.-~ho ~ .. ~~av:lp&
.,,, .........
..
Tanks Sent
As Czechs
Protest '
PRAGUE (UPI) -Thi Clleebollovak
government aent lalib lonlght lnlo
~ where cro!rdl llllinalad 11 high
as 1001000 tkJ)lodld into no6ly anu~
lluaaJan proltsla. -poi'IOlll ..... hll
by tear au and btaiaoi wtllt clubo.
DerfiOnltratloftl alto Wert rtP!)l'tld Jn
other c!Uot, on thlJ flrll Umlnratr)' o1
the Soviet iJ\vuloo, and hi BlllO, 110
mllea away, pollce UMd flttholel to con-
trol ctOWda of youtha.
Silty lanka took up podU0111 Jin tiie
west bank of the Moldau JUvtr, two miles
fl'ont Wence1lu Squart, h lteM of
today's nolal~st outbunt at an tmothtnal
noon demon.slraUon when C1echollovaks
~ and eome ol their IO!dlll'I -chUlled
•'J\uJslan1 Co home." • GlsPinned
By Red Guns
In Rescue Trv
Jn 1983, President Kennedy appbinltd
Martin 11 ambl-to Thallind. lit
Decembtr, 191'1, he fecelved the Dtperir
ment of State'• Dlltlhgulahed Honor
Award. He Is married lo the former
D.orotby Wallace. They ba"Ve two
daughten and a IOI\.
Martin iJ one ol. live ambalUdor·
nominees announced Wedneldq, The
othel'i art:
COUPLI TAKE SOGOY SUMMllt STllOLL DOWN MAIN STRIET 01' OLASOOW\ VlltOINIA
Camlllt Sponkt Old Dominion; WHlf\or BurHu Soy• l'loocla Worat Slnco ~
1bert were sklrmillhetl In. the ltrtets
tllrou1boul lhe dq and 11 tht I o'clock
rush hour a p pro a c ht d" )'OUng
demonstrators armed wllh cobble r&one3
battled police in the Pransa Brana area a
quarter mne from the aquare. other
fi,tlUog wil reported In the old !own atc·
tor.
•
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. ln!onlrymen
battling to'retrieve the bodies of eight
· Amorlcaol fnlm a wrecked hellcoplar In
tile JwilJed aroa btlow lit N tn1 kffied
103 Commuolala In a ..,Ill ol !lnfllhla.
But 1J7 late today tJiey were pinned down
by l\ml and unable to move.
The bottles In the thick J11n1les and
scrub bruab hi1bd from tht coutal clt7
ol Tam Ky broulht lo 400 tht number of
Commun!Jla ll&l>tlnc In that area th!J
week. The area bu Jong been a Com-
munlat infiltration route'° Da N1n1.
Spokesmen lald the laleot fighting COii
unitl of the American dJvlalon'a lOllth
Ligtit Infantry Brigade at leaal eight
dead and 39 wounded.
Most of the cuualtlea were autferM
·when tht Infantrymen were attacked
wh!l• trylnc to reach the acene of a
helicopter cruh Tuesday that 1pparenU1
kllied ellht ptl'IOlll, lntludl1>1 a U.S. bat·
lPJioft commander and Asloclated Pren
photofrrpber Oliver Noonan, II, of
Norwell, M111.
Spoketmen aald the CommuoJ1la kntlP
the lnfaoll)'mlil'I objective and peppered
the American Una with mortar fire and
mlped awAJ at the Gii from the 1beltet
ol a JllJll]ed knoll. The batUI btgan
W~q and luled through loday. By
the end of the day Ult Amttlcam were
still hall a mite from their objective,
unable to move forward .
· U.S. F4 Phanlom jets led by Col.
• Richard Henry, 43, dumped tons of ex-
: plosives on the Red positions. All
:1 available Artillery and h e 11 co pt e r
: gunships unleashed their firepower in
:? support or the troops.
• Jn other fij:hUng U.S. forces li:llled 32
: Communlsta In a four-hour battle near
: Tay Ninh City on the Cambodian border.
• But far to the llOUth ln the Me'li;ong Delta
'.Viet Cong guerrillas killed eight South
: Vietnamese troops in an attack on a sen-
: tryless camp.
Ff'OM P•1e l
NIXON •••
· meol !nan the Noi<h durlo1 the pul two
yean," President Nixon told him,
: ••together we have 41tcov.ered that the
: dan,;er .•• bu.only aUffened our resolve.''
: He added that the U.S. would 11111 llland
-Douglu MacArth11r U. ambauador to lran.Mac;Arthur baa been ll1\ba1sador
to Aultrta since 1M7. The 80-year-old
career dipJomat, n~hew of the late
General, will succeed Ambuaador Armin
H. Mey~. now ambuaador to Japan.
~ Mdlnl.., amb-.dor to
Kenya. Mcilvainl, II, bu been llD•
buaador to the J1o11ubUe ol Guinea. ~ ... Palifdl "*' amblaador to Kuwa!L Wallb, II, bu oerved u actlol
e1ecuUve ae<:retaey ·GI tilt Department o!
State.
-Vlaoeat dt. l\oolet, amb1111dor to
Jamaica. A native ol Loi Angele., tbl 43-
yw-old real est.le necutlve. wu
tteenUy elected ~ ol the Vlllqo ol
North 111111, N.Y.
From P .. e l
CRASHES •••
Ing lefl at Gard'" Grova Baulevard,
Wetlmlnlltr police aald.
Th<'Ol'anp Coun\y corontr aald Hom
died at Wutmlnller Community Hoopllal
al 1:15 a.m. loday. He la 1UrVlved by h1J
wUe, Sylvla.
The Scotchman'• Cove actldtut oc-
curred ahortly before 2 o'clock thl•
morning, the CHP aald. Hovard ..., dead
on arrival al Soulh COlll Community
Hoopllal, Soolh Laguna.
The teenage litl.s in the 1econd auto
were both .. ~ In 1ooc1 cood!Uon and
were lo bt tranal<'mil loday fnlm HOii
Memorial Hosplla~ In Newport Beach, to
Kaiser Hospital in Fontana. Besides back
~uries, they suffered cuts and brlt11ei. "''rtle coroner aald T1Ylor wit fatally
Injured In the 7:4S p.m. Wednt9Clay cralh
at the raceway and died three hours
later at Santa Ana Community Hospital.
Drl\'er of the cat in which Taylor waa
riding; Timothy J. Lewll, It, of lanla
Ana, also was taken to tht Santa Ana
hospital where be was treated for major
cuts and released.
In the eeeond car Wtre driver Gary
Allen, 31, of 2973 Bristol SL, Costa Mesa.
not injured and Pat Rke., 24, of. Oranp.
who wu treated at the ICtOI for minor
lnjurl ...
The CHP uid the Lewis car, approach-
ing the ractWay on the fi'teway acce11
road, passed another on a J>llnd curve
and collided headon with the Allen w 1 Which wa1 leaving the ractWay.
PoselbiUty !'f brtnglng chai'ge1 q1l111t
Lewla la being lnvuUgaled, the CHP
aald.
Fre111 PflJ#e l
CAMILLE •..
claimed 4.10 lives in Texu and Louisiana
in 1117. Camille'• damqe mllht ucted •1 blffioo and olflcla!J feared the dealh
toll moy 111i'p111 IOO,
Gl\ICAT!I\ lllWEF
Vice Pnsldmt Spiro T. ~ toured
the dlwter area Wednadq and
pradlctad federal rellel fUnd& would he
the aratltl on reconl !Or • dlaaeler.
'l1le mllery aloof Ille Mlaalallppl and
LauJalana couts was stark.
There wu liUle power, drink.Ing water,
food and commuoJeaU0111 In the atee.
Stnllatlan problems poaed h e a It h
d1111en. Slit trenchee were dug for
bathroom•. Moequllol and ru.. awarmtd
by the thousands.' A lllench rooe from
decompooed bodies -thole not yet found
and thoH 11plled Giff deep11 awalU~
removal.
Rttu11t1 scavaged for food, hunUng
for cw In the debris of atores. 5tatvlng
dog& roamed ln J*!kl. Snakes and tats
allthered aboul
LooW1 and bla<k markelter1 took td-
vaolap,of the dtaot. ·
Slate Adj. Gen. Waller G. Jolwon, en-
forcln& limited Jlllrt1al law and a t a.in.
t., t p.m. curfew, ordered hll eoldJert to
brinl ln Jootetl 11draging or l\andlna:."
"A looter II Olll of the villtl type pen.
ple, as bad u a grave robber," he said.
1.iquor atorea, groceries and bomea have
been looted, ~Hid.
Johrison alsO Vowed to clamp down on
some skl'es, st.ill able to operate, .who
"are ral!ing the price of food, espec1allf
mlllc, 1101Mlbnes as much aa 100 percenL'
Undet mutll.1 law, thi1 will not beano"·
ed." He aaid !Orne persons were sellinc
fresh water for $1 'a gallon.
Church Council Backs
Arabs on Land Return
CANTERBURY, England (UPI) -The
Arab naUonl today had the backing of the
World Coundl of Churches In their blltle
for the return of land seized by Israel in
the June, 1967 war.
The council, whlcb represent.. 241
Protestant and OrthOOox denominaUona.
also urged the United States to restore
normal diplomatic relations with Cuba
and of!ered to mediate the Nigerian Civil
War.
.------fbj the small-republic-after tome type·~----~----
; Vietnam peace h achieved.
: The Student fl.!oblllzaUon Committee,
: one o( several militant groups expetled
: to demonstrate, passed out leaflet.a
: charging Park as the Korean counterpart
: of South Vietnamese Prtsldent Nguyen
·Cao Ky.
: 'Ibey Aid tht anU·war movement ls
·pledged to the rlgtit ol Vietnamese and
: Koreans to wort out their own ruturea
: without American lnltnentlon. .
OAllY PllOT
11:.Hrt N. 'Wtt4 ............. ~"""
J1ck Jt. Cuti.:r
lllu ,.,.'*"' .... Gcntr "" .......
Tht111111 Kt1•il
l:llhlt
Tho•i• A. M1rp\lnt MM..it11 illltt
/.lhtfl w .•••••
Al•lttti i.11.,
H1111t"'9tH lffl91 OfOUI
lOt Ith Str11t
M1lll11f A4tlr••u r.o. ••• no, t!6i(I --ttfllllllt'f IMUI: t"I Wnl 8t""'9 l11111twr•.
(tlllt ...,, .. Wt$! ..., '''"' utun1 ...-.: 2U ftr•I ,.,_
OAl\.Y' Pl\.OT Stllf PllMe
1' .. ltlng Fotorama
Liz VanderV•en, 17, HunUnglOft Beach, and her pet poodle, Pierre,
pau1• to ponder pbolot on dlaplay in Fototama exhibit at Fashion
bland In Newport Beech . More than •l.100 Vl~"1! of r.rlzcs wUI go
to visitors lo DAILY PlLOT·Radlo StaUon KOCK f\len . It conUnucs
through Salurday.
Robbie Guarded
Hurricane Ruins Sifted for Bodies
PASS Cl!IUSTIAN, Miss. (UPI) -All
that remained of Pass Christian today
were the crten-clld aoldler1 who guard
ruins that almost no one could really
want.
Workers and giant machines plowed
the debl'll aearthln1 !or the bodies tJiey
could smell but not see.
Gone with the townfolk -monled and
poor, black. white and cajun -are the
aconlz.ing quelt.s that lead men '° grovel
In the 11Ucky gray mud t h a t coats
everything for some acrap cl. fOOd; and
that drives a tnother to scoop stinking,
muddy water from a dltch ror her child
to drink.
Johnsons Flying
Here to Visit
Nixon, Family
L)'!ldoe B. lolmooo and Lady Bkd will
ny in from John9on City, Tex., ntlt
Wedntlday to ce1ebrate the former
President'• Slat birthday u guests of the
new Finl Family In Sao Cl~e.
President and Mn:. Nllm wlll entertain
the J-.at an !nlcrmal IIU1d;leon at
the Western White Hwse, aides dlscloeed
Wednesday.
The Johnsont dtughters and their
frunlllet may alao attend.
Jt will be the first Informal visits the
Johmons have made to the Nixons 11lnce
the inauguration.
Later In the day, Pre!lident Nixon and
Mr. and Mn. Johnm will fiy ta
Redwoods NaUonaJ Park in Humboldt
County to dedicate the Lady Bll'd
Johnson near Orick.
Iowa's Governor Asks
Halt of 'Gas' Train
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -Gov.
Robert Ray, has called upon the U.S.
Deparbnent of Transportation to in-
tervene and halt ah!pmenll of poUon ga1
through Iowa •
-The govei'ilM vowed wectne&aay to Cilt
out Iowa NaUonal GuanfJtnen to patrol
polntl 1long the routes, if Transportation
Secretary John Volpe does not stop Iha
shipments.
Thole that are aooe, m1ny of them
homeleu, are the lucky ones. They lived
tllrouj:h the greattst llonn man has
recorded ln the United Slates and now it
is behind them.
Moot were alrllfled •· and btwed
Wednesday to Camp Shelby, Miu., iolrth
of HaUleoburg, and laaled thl1r fltll hol
meal alnce last weekend.
The dead are scattered ln lmprovlled
morcuu and -overcrowded mortuaries. sun others are burled beneath fallen
treea and pile.a of lumber that once were
houtet.
In haltlly erected shelters, hUndffil11 of
pet10n1 11Wl wait for a hot meal. Such
scene1 are familiar in Gulfport and
Biloxi.
In the brkk schoolrooms turned Into
dormitories and dispensaries, children
cry and play and laugh and sing. For
their parents there is little happiness.
Those in Ute shelters have no homes to
which they can return. There is no elec·
tricity, no water, no sewerage.
Light bulbs have been replaced by dim
nashiightl; water comes either from the
few artesian well.s or r to m central
dispensing points where it has been
trucked. A bathroom more often than not
is a slit trench 1Craped from the soggy
(J'0<1nd behlhd a schoolhowle. · n will be Wetk1 arid months before
.there ii full electricity and utlllUes, years
before homes and bualn1se11, the. can-
neries and ni1ht spots and motels of
Biloxi are rebuilt.
Never again wUI there be the grand,
columned homes of the 19th century that
atood in Paas Chrlstian.
Mad Dog Runs
Wild in Beach .
A vicious dog ran rampant across
more than a dozen streets in North Hunt-
ington Beach Wednesday night until
pursWn1 police managed to shoot It
down tn the flood col'ltrol channel al
Springdale Street.
Humane society olflcial1 today are in-
specting the dog for possible rabies. It
reportedly bit four people at HunUngton
center wlf~ld-;-two:hour-ihree
mlle chase began about 5 p.m.
When the chase ended at the Warner
flood control chaMel it toot five bullets
to kl.II the huge Gerrilan Shepherd.
'Ibe government obvlouily elpeeted
more trouble lonllill aller two nililll or
anU-Rwaian outbul'lll Wblch to rar bas
killed llPO pt(!OOI.
Today wu the flrlt anniverllr)' of the
Soviet-led Invasion of CJechoelovakla and
at Ule llroke of noon 11,000 Cuchollovaka
bunt into Wence11lai Square, t be
Czechoslovak aymboI of frtedorn, tn a
clamorout outburat.
Even some of the Caechollovak 1oldiera
aenl In lo maintain order joined lo the
chanta of "Russian1 10 home."
nitre had been two night. of vloltnce 1n Wence11las Square, and two men were
reported kllled by police 1n an outbreak
Wednesday night.
More than 320 were melted. The
1overnment called the vJcUma crlmlnal
elernenll, IOclal oulcaota and booliclDI.
The heart of the demonatraUon was
Wencealas Square but conservaUve
estimates aald more than 1 O o ; O o o
Czechoslovak• filled that and nearby
streets. Police moved through the
crowds, hurling tear gas occasionally,
sometimes clubbing bystanders un-
mercifully.
From P•1e l
SPARED •••
newsmen Sept. 13, 1967, when con·
demned.
Judge Samuel Drelzen uphtki the jury'•
verdict of deaUt_ ln the Si.n Quentin 111
chamber on both count.I.
"You guys are 1ookJng at the beat man
you'll ever see," McClellan marled as he
was led out of the courtroom under heavy
guard, apparently trying to live up to his
nickname to the last.
Alone with his lhought11 on Death Row,
tiowever, the convicted slayer ala shed h111
left 1rm and then screamed to j11ler1 for
help when he watched blood form a pool
on the floor.
Supreme Court just.ices also reversed
death sentences for four other Death Row
inmates Wednesday, all on grounds that
prospective jurors cannot be etcuaed on-
Jy for opposing the death penalty.
They included:
-Harry W. Schader, convicted of the
1963 slaying of a Sacramento policeman.
The court ruled 4--3 that the Witherspoon
ruling applied.
-Denali Stanworth, coovided o f
several rapes and the murder or two
teen-age girls in the Richmond-Pinole
area in 1965. The vote wa11 S-1.
~arles Ganlntr 1 convicted of J"Ob..
hing-antt1laying an Oakland lt.Ortkee])ei"
ln 1967. The vote was f.1.
-Booker T. Jtillery Jr., convicted cl
the rape and murder of a Hanford &irL
The vote was 5-2.
SALE Just two weeks more ... thru August 30
OtlDER IN .Yelm CHOICli OF STYLES AND FABRIC
AT A MOST GENEROUS SAVINGS , , ,
'HERITAGE
•
H.J.GARRE]T fURNflURE
PROFESSIOllAC
INTERIOR DUM;NERS 0,... ~ -I l'rl. ''"'
l
2111 HARBOR rt.VD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
1.46-0275 6~&.027'
I
l
,, -------..-~
Beaeh Today's Final
EDI TION
VO L 62, NO. 200, 3 SECTION S, 34 PAGES JHUR~DAY, AUGUST 2f, '1969 TEN CENTS
130 Protest Sleepy Hollow Storm Drain Tax
More than 130 per!IOO! created a stan-
ding.room-0nly protest before the Laguna
Beach City Council Wedne!day night but
railed to win action in objecting lo Sleepy
Hollow storm drain assessments.
Councilmen listened to more than lhree
hours of discussion, then look no action. At issue are assessments against
homeowncr.s both in the downtown bowl
and in the hills which \\'ill pay for the
sprawling Sleepy Hollow -Park Avenue
stonn drainage project.
Down the
Mission
Trail
Lagoo11 Cleaned
At Lake Fores t •
LAKE FOREST -No one can say the
Beach and Ten~ Club doesn't take Its
housekeepifl$'. seriously. Not while its
lagoon is being vacuumed.
The lagoon is closed while a giant
machine is dredging Its bottom in an ef·
fort to sweep up the muck that ac·
cumulaled durinc I~ winter floods.
"'When we're through tt Wtli'be as clean
and beautiful as a swimming pool," said
Bob Figuer11. club director.
And that's precisely whal it is -a pool
V.'ilh a sand bottom Y>'ilh chlorene and
olhcr chemicals added for safety. There
is only one difference this one is in a lot
oI backyards.
e Name f'lan Told
JRVINE -Orange County supervisors
Tuesday announced their intention to set
a hearing to change the name of Valencia
Avenue lo Moultorr-Parkway.
Short segments called Navy Way and
Ridge Roule Road also are proposed to be
renamed Moulton Parkway so one road of
the same name would extend from
Leisure World paralleling lhe Santa Ana
Freeway to lhe Newport Freeway.
e Drive• Co•npleted
IRVINE -Completion of Bethany and
Biddle drives off of Turt1e Rock Drive
with waler, sewer and street light im·
provements was acknowledged Tuesday
by Orange County supervi sors.
e Speed Llnait Set
LAGUNA HILLS -The speed limit on
La Paz Road from Paseo de Valencia in
Capistrano Highlands across lhe freewa y
to . !\1uirlands Boulevard was set at 40
miles per hour Tuesday by Orange County
supervisors.
Traffic was checked by radar to
determine the proper speed for the road.
e T ruurb Clubs Form
LAKE FOREST -Two groups at the
Beach and Tennis Club are still in the
fonnation stages. A young adult group
for high school gradut1tes interested in
joining other young adults for picnics,
barbecues and olher gel·togelhers is
being formed along with a group for
Htarary buffs called Great Book of the
\Vestern World .
Anyone interestcd in either of these
groups may sign up al the club.
e Y AF Spe oloer Cardf!d
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Dana
Rohrabacher, Orange County chairman
of Young Americans for Freedom, will be
guest speaker al the meeting of the
Constructive Action Network Council of
Saddleback Valley Friday.
Al!O on the program at the 7:30 p.m.
meeting in Royal Savings & Loan
Association will be a !hort film, "The
Berkeley Revolution". The public is in·
vited.
Play house Not
For P arked Cars
Thanks, but. no th anks.
That was the respon.c;e or city coun·
cilmen Wednesday lo a deal offered by a
Laguna Beach auto agency owner who
wants lo lease the old Laguna Beach
Playhouse: site to store cal'!i.
The proposal came from 0. \V.
Stephens, of South Coast Motors.
"I appreciate lhe problems he has. but
that property should be used for public
p~pcrty," said 1'1ayor Glenn E-Vedder.
After all the talk:, Wednesday night's
public hearing was continued to Sept. 3.
Jn the end, ?.fayor Glenn E. Vedder
summed up the drain cost complaints
tllis way :
"The people at the top o( the hiU think
the people at the bottom ought to pay for
it. People at the bottom think the people
at the' top ought lo pay for it."
Seventy written protests were received
by City Hall prior to the start of the
public hearing. OnJy letters which asked
lo be read J.loud were read. Councilmen
heard IO speakers.
City Attorney Jack J. Rimel told lhe
council early ln the discussion that only
the way the assessment was spread was
at issue, not the total cost of lhe project
itseU.
The stonn draiD project cost $478,000 of
which the county paid $100,000. Another
$32,000 was paid by the city from funds
collected from developers leaving a total
of $348,000 lo be borne by the 798 a&sess·
ment parcels.
Assessment · engineer L a u re n c e
Thompson etplained that he figured the
amount each property owner would have
to pay on location of property, and &quare
footage of each property.
Thompson uplalned the properties
were divided lnto three zones, a high risk
ione where assessment is 10 cents per
square foot, a medJum risk zone where
assessment is 5 cents per square foot and
a low ri.sk zone where assessment is 4
cents per square foot.
In Iara:e undeveloped areas where
future development may be restricted,
Thompson said he gave a 30 percent
credit to the' property. ,.
Most of the property owners protested
the apessment on the basis that they
were not ncelving beoeflt equal lo lhe
amount of money they "A'ere being charg-
ed.
One such speaker was Dean Harbold of
2008 Donna Drive. Harbold angrily aaid
that his assessment of $1.875 w1s not fair,
and poinled oul that. the large hote:l·motel
complex of Vacation Village was assess-
ed only $678.
Harbold said that the funds for the
Sleepy llollow project should have been
raised by a bond iS!ue and paid for by lhe
entire community. He ~lved a hugt
ovation by the crowd.
Engineer Thompson agall't explained
lbat the assessment was based on land
(See PROTEST, Page I)
on 0 as un s
NixonsHost
S. l{oreans
In Bay A1·ea
From \I/Ire Services
America's First Family flew out of El
Tor9 ~1CAS today for a San Francisco
mectlrig with their Korean counterpart.~
and a mini-version of last week's Apollo
JI slate dinner tonight.
A small crowd of about 60 persons
watched President Nixon and his family
off at J0 :10 a.m. wailing under warm,
~ndly sides of lhe United Slates Marine
Corps base.
A glittering array of guesl, -including
actress June Allyson, of Lido Isle -and
Zsa Zsa Gabor and Mrs. Clark Gable
have been invited to the 8 p.m. affair in
the St. Francis Hotel.
Some of lhe toughest security precau·
tions in San Francisco history were im·
posed for the visit of President Nixon and
President Park Chung Hee.
An estimated 5,000 pe.r!Ons are ex-
pected to crowd the streets around the
famed Bay City hostelry, including 500
anti-war demonslrators.
The gala banquet tonight, one of few
ever held outside Washington -like the
Apollo 11 fete -will draw San Francisco
State <'..ollege President Dr. S. t.
Hayakawa and also Henry Cabot Lodge.
chief U.S. negotiator at the Pari.s peace
talks.
South Korea's president modestly sug·
gested typical American food for the ban~
quet, but Mrs. Nixon approved a menu..
not seen every night in the typical
American.home.
Mousse of sole, breast of duckling a
]'.orange, potatoes Berny. to m a t o e s
farcises, limestone lettuce, assorted
cheeses (from.ages) and figs roma wlll be
offered, plus California wines.
Enlcrtainment will include a litarinc
Corps band for scr-called hard rock dan·
cing, plus Spanish flamenco and classical
guitarists: Celedonio Romero and his
three sons.
Various girts will be exchanged by
dignitaries at the formal event, followed
Friday by an informal luncheon hosted by
Secretary of Stale William P. Rogers, at
the exclusive Bohemian Club.
DAILY PILOT ...... .-, Rldlt,.. Kttlli.r EL TORO COMMANDER HISE ESClj)RTS NIXONS FROM MARINE CO(!PS ONE; TO AIR F9RCE ONE
. ~~~~Break' T•k•• President .to. San Fr•nci~ for Telkt With Souftt Korea'• P•rk
Police Harvest
Youths'· Ci·op
NobOdy Will be getting high on what
Laguna Beach police plucked after hiking
to a spot just below Top of the World
Elementary School Wednesday.
Investigators popped up on the pastoral
scene as tl~•o young men tended a crop
believed to be Uieirs -consisting of 10
allege.d marijuana plants up lo 10 inches
high.
Detectives arrested 1'-lichael D. Callan.
19, and Kent Kelly, 20. both of 62S
Seaview st., and booked them into city
jail on suspicion o( cu1livalion of mari·
juana.
Clf!.rnente PTA Leader
AppeawNareo Charge
Mrs. Marvena Kennedy, president ol a
San Clemente PT A, will appeal ·her con-
9'iclion for smuggling :Kl·pounds of mari·
juana across the Mexican border1 her at·
torney sa id today.
. Frank Gregordch, who defended the
44·year-old mother or three litUe children
through two-trials tG!d the DAILY
P!LO'I':
"All I can uy is tbat · theie were
general errors in law at lhe trial. ·We are
basing our appeal on those grounds."
He said the appeal would be flied with
the 9th clrcuJt Court of Appeal today.
Mrs .. Kennedy, Jast spring elected
pre!ident of Marco Forster Junior High
Sch00l PTA, waa convicted last month
alter htr first trial ended in a hung jury.
Last week &he was sentenced to an in-
detennlnate 1entence in federal prbon by
U.S. District Judge C. A. Muecke.
Pygmalion Unrufflell
Commenting on the deadlock jury al
Uie first trial. a spokesman for the U.S.
Attorney's olHce said: "The jurors just
couldn't believe aueb a respectable look-
ing person could have done such a thing."
Pigeo1i on Thigh Steals Show at Festival
By JEROME t'. COLLINS
Of "'9 0111~ ~llfl Steff
A pigeon pounced on Pygmalion's thigh
at the Pageant ol the Masters in Laguna
Beach Wednesday night.
It brought down the house. But It didn't
slop the sbow.
Pygmalion -a white painkoaled liv-
ing nude -didn·t move. Just her ltne-
feathered friend did.
tt flapped its wings franUcally trying 111
~et a good grip on the "statue's" slippery
thigh. And Its claws dug In dctp.
But Pygmalion still didn't move.
The audience of 2,300 at Irvine Bowl.
meanwhile, applauded the p i g e o n ' !I
perlormance wildly. The• amphltheater
rocked with roaring laughter.
The pigeon. Festival of ..Art& olUclals
explained this morning. was a homlng
pigeon that didn 't go home, as it was sup.-
posed I<>.
Here's the story bthlnd the 'whole
humiliating alfalr:
The picgon wa s one or 10 kept in 1 cage
atop the Irvine Bowl stage. 1'he birds are
owned by 13·year-old Klrk Woloahyo,
. ' \
whose home is out in Laguna Canyon
about a mile from the Festival grounds.
Every night during the run ol the
Pageant, the Festival's annual big show.
Kirk has been releasing the plegona when
the bell is tolled in "The Venice Bell,"
another "living pidure". The nuttering
pigeons are supposed to recrtate lhe e.,..
vironment of Venice's San MarCO!I Plaza.
"The Venice Bell comes on before the
curtains part on "Pygmalion and
Galatea.'' By then, the pigeons have
headed on home ou\ 1n the canyon.
But Wednesday night one stayed
~ind.
Instead. it zoomed about the bowl, looJI:.
ing for a place to touch down.
Then on came "Pygmalion and
Calatea."
Galatea, the !eulplor, sat lherl!, with
eyes clOICd, In quid contemplation.
Pyg malion stood there, with eyes open, In
less quiet contemplation -especially IO
when the pigeon new in her1directfon.
"Pigeons obvfOU$ly do ha\rt an •ffinily
ror statues,-'' explained F~val pUbllclst
Sally Reeve.liter. ,
•
The bird landed first on Pygmalionis -
er, ah -chest. ~t it slipped off. 1'1len it
flew alxlut for a few seconds, finally com·
ing t.o a fit.fut rest on Pygmalion'• thlgh.
Galatea kept his eyes abut throughout
the Incident, wondering what all the
laughter was about.
The scene lasted less than lhrte
minutes, according to schtdule. For
Pygmalion they were a vf!fj long few
minutes. But she didn't mave a muscle.
Finally, though, as the curtains cloled,
she smiled sUghlly.
The audience IM'l! lnl<> lhand1<lng •I"
plause. "Encore!" shouted one clown.
1.trs. Rene, noting that the Festival
neyer rele~s the.names of Jts· P_yeant
performers ("particularly the nUdes"),
conclud<d :
'1i\t the vtty lcam., I think Pygmalion
should get a purple heart. She ba4 IDDle ecratdles, you know."
And the pl"""?
ll was pl114;ked ol! Pygmalion's llll1h by
a 1tap hand. And carried home In a box.
From now on, aid Kirk Woloshyn,
111m ,.Ill be ""11J nine plj[eons released
• for ''Tht Vent« BeO. n # ' • • '
~lrs. Kennedy was arrested last year at
the border when customs inspectors
noted she seemed unusually nervous and
a search or her car turned up the mari-
juana in plastic bags under the seats.
At her second trial. a former tenant of
her beach apartment te1Ufied that she
had agreed to take marijuana I CJ'OSI the
border Jn her car for him because ahe
waa In Onanclal dmlcullle9.
The tenant, Mark HllMOn. 22, was also
convicted in connectloa with the case. He
failed to show up at his se:ntenclng Mon.
day. A bench warrant Is now out for his
arml
Wednesday morning Mrs. Kennedy
l!igned a noUce Ill.al !he would JJOt appeal
her conviction. But aUo~ Grq:orclch ti>da,y Uld she had changed her mind. He
added Ill.al he Is ,..111ng an appeal bond
lb win ber relea>< fl'1llll San ~&~ Cow)\l
Jail
. In 1nother development Wednetday, II
waa learned that t character wltneu ror
Mrs. Ktnntdy al her se<:OOd trial WU
herMll atl'elltd on sbopliltlng diargu.
She 11 Mrs. Chaiiee.n Wart, 41, president
of the Ole ltanaon Elementary School
PTA tn Sin Clemente.
Mra. Wirt was accuted then of taking
less Ulan IZ'Worth ol artjcles rrom I San
ClemenlO aupennartel on Auauat t,'
'I
Laird Bows
To Demands
Of Congress
WASHINGTON CUP!) -De!<lllle
Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced to-
day he was yield1ng to congressional
pres~re and reluctantly reducing the na·
tion's armed forces by 100,000 men and
spending by $3 billion. He warned: .. It It
clear our defense readiness will be
we:i.k.ened."
· Laird told a news conference be
'ordered the cuts after being informed by
the chairman of the House Ap-
proprlaUons Commill<e Ill.al al leul 15
billion would be: cut lrom deleme ap-
propriations requests.
"!wish it. were possible for me to state
that these cull could be made without
linpairing our defense rHdlneu," Laird
said. "Regrettably 1 must Pf. that these
cuts will reduce our capability t.o meet
current commitments."
Lalrd's actJons would reduce defense
spending from $80 billion to m billion, a
figure Pentagon officials sal~ was '4.1
billion below lhe requests or the Johnson
administration.
In addition to the 100,000-man reduct.lon
In uniformed ranks, anolher so,boo
civilian jobs would be eliminated and 100
ships would be motll balled.
"The distingulshed chiarman of the
Hoose AppropriaUons Committee has
l!ltated that his committee will cut at least
$5 billion ... and baa alerted me to the
fact that the current fiscal year ii nm.
ning and that action should be taken
now,11 Laird added.
Laird said the cutbacks camt at a Umt
when Soviet military strength is in-
creasing and added: "I believe It is Im·
portant that lhe American public be in-
formed about stepped-up Soviet actlviUea
in strategic offensive 1nd defensive
fields." ------1
He also said he saw no Juli in the Viet·
nam war, pointing out that enemy in·
itiated activity in the Vietnam co,iruct
was higher during the first six months o(
this year than during a stmilar period in
1968. But he said U.S. forces are now
engaged in a strategy of "protective
reaction."
Stock ltlarkf!U
NEW YORK (AP) -'!be 11\0ck mlrlcd
drifted through .another mslon today,
with brokers 11!porting Investors contin-
uJng cautious and staying out of the K'"
Uon. (See quolatlons, Pages 10.11).
Trading near the clOl!ie was slow. Tht
Dow Jones Industrial ave!'q:e •t 2 p.m.
was 1.85 at &lS.07.
or .. ge
Weather
Partly cloudy mornings and
sunny afternoons are Jtlll In
the offing for the Orange
Coast, with temperatures ring·
ing from 75 to 85 depeodln& on
where you part: your car.
INSWE TODAY
StMU critics of PtnfoQ'm&
rero In on ezptnditurt• but
Pentagon fear1 1uch action ma11
givt .wr more acttt11 Ruufons
fearfill adoon1<>0•. Page 21
I ~ .
,
f
! DAILY PILOT
Johnsons
To Visif
1st Family
Lync!On B. Johnson and Lady Bird will
ny ln from Johnson City, Tex .• next
Wednesday to celebrate the fonner
President's 61st birthday u guests of the
new First Family in San Clemente.
Presidtnl and Mrs. Nixon will entertain
the Jminsons at an informal luncheon at
the Western White House, aides disclosed
Wednesday. .
The Johnsons daughters and their
f:unilita may also attend.
It will be the um informal visits the
Johnsons have made to the Nixonl sinct
the inauguration.
Later in the day, President Nixon and
Mr. and Mrs. Johnson will fly to
Redwoods National Park in Humboldt
Coonty to dedicate the Lady Bird
Johnsoo oear Orick.
Double Session
Fears Ended
For El Toro
By PAJ\IELA HAU.AN
Of 1111 D•llY P'llet Sllfl
There will be n~ double sessions in El
Toro thia year.
The announcement was made during a
gpecial meeting of the San Je>aquin school
board Wednesday night at Irvine School.
More than 100 parents who had come to
protest double sessions at Gates and
O!ivewood Schools applauded t h e
decision.
Double sessions had been feared
because two elementary schools schedul-
ed to open in September, Valencia and
Aliso, have not yet been completed. But
Ralph Gates, district !uperindendent
said, completion of homes also has been
!lowed down, reducing the potential num-
ber of cbildren to be enrolled in the
dislrict.
However, school officials said, the
single session will not be without pro-
bleins. Children who would normally at-
tend Aliso will be at Olivewood school,
'"but clilldren who would attend Valencia
would be scattered among Olivewood,
Gates. O'Neill and Linda Vista. Thus,
Jlll!rlll wittl four chlltlren in elementary
1 achOol ·coUfd have a dUferent ldUl4 1n
l I eadl school. ! OOler problems will be the curtailment
: of activities involving multipurpose
: r rooms, which will be used as classrooms
~ 1 and the hiring of extra personnel to f 1 supervise lunch pe.ri<xls. Using all
• ; available facilities including mobile units ? there will be eight e.1tra classes at Gates,
' three at Olivewood, five at O'Neill and
4, four al Linda Vista until the new schools
l · are ready to open in December.
~ The board explained that double session
may indeed become a possibility by the
end of the year in Mission Viejo. They
also explained that although three new
' ecbools have been approved there are no
• longer funds available from banks or the
"' 11tate to build °"m, because of high in-
~ terest rates. Only one tchool, localed In
, the El Dorado borne area may be built
.. durina: the .llext year.
Fire Burns Brush
Near O'Neill Park
A fire burned 28 acres of brush in a
canyon east or O'Neill Park Wedne!day.
It took cOWlly Division of Forestry
crews on the ground and four borate
bomben three hours to control the fire.
Cause of the flre has not been detennin-
ed.
0 ~'11 PILOT
OIM~ c:aui P'Wl$tlNO ~
•• ...., K. w ...
............ PVM ....
J•c.~ .. C1rin Viet., ..... ow. .......
Th•lrl•f KHYtl ·-no!MI A, Mtf1WR• _,...E•ltw
Rlc.1r4 P, Nall ..__
<~ ·-----212 ,_,.,, Av1.
Maill111 ""''"" r.o. t.1 ''"' t2U:t --c-. ....... ~ ...... 1 ...... 1'1,... ....... ~:ni1w.1 ........ ..... ,.., ....... i••Jffeel
_______ .,. __ __ •
f1.u ,r~•1•
Council Boosts
Laguna Tax ~te
The Laguna Beach City 'Council
Wedoesday 11<1 the city tax rile at II.II:!
per SlOO assessed valuaUon, an increase
of %7 cents over last year's levy.
Only CQUllCilman Charlton P. Boyd
voled agalllll the tar lny nttded lo
finance city _.11oos far the cumm
fiscal year. ·
It is estimated that for the owner ol a
$30,000 nome the increase wW mean an
extra $20 to the annual city tu bill. The
t.ax rate i& based on an auessed worth or
the city or 1su mlllloo.
In other action, the council: '-
-Denied an appUcatlon to pennit
fortune teWni by !lonldly and Barney
Adams represenled by pllomey David R.
Cadwell.
-R.rerTed to city llalf a proj<ct report
roe lb• completion ol Bluebird canyon
Park made by the La&una Coonllnatin,
Council and propane! by archttect K.,.
ntth Wood.
-Refemd lo city 3laU a lelier by Earl
L. _. npnlln1 the poulble reopenlllg
or an alley behind Glenoeyre Slloel between Thalia and Anita lllnela.
-Passed on to a l!itCOnd reading a pro-
po9ed 'ordinance change re gar d l n g
permlll lor palnled signs and ror cban&e
ol copy .. •rllllna signs.
-Will sludy a _...i parking
certllicale procram al the Sej>I. 10
meetlni. -R.rerred to traffic coounlU.. a lei·
ter from Marge Chaloupka regarding
parking proble.rn on Victoria Drive. A
--Is to lnvesligale maklng the
road a aoe way meet.
Three Die in Separate
Orange County Crashes
Three young men died Wedneaday
night and this morning in separate traf-
fic accidents in Westmirulter, on Pacific
Coast Highway north of Laguna Beach
and at tile entrance to Orqe COunty
Raceway.
The dead are:
-Rowell W. l*8, SI. ol 5611 M-Drive, Hunllnaton Beach.
-Dulel E. llowerd, 17, <I Pasadena. -Cami! D. TIJ'lor. 17, or Santa Ana.
Hom died or a atuD lradure IUfleted
when his motorcycle l'IDIDltd a car In
Westmillller.
Hovard, driving a l!llall forelp car,
crossed over the center line at Scotch-
man'• Cove north of ~.and mnub-
ed headon into a car carrying teenapra
Bonnie Lynn, 18, of 711 Ocean Blvd.,
Hunllngton Beach, and Cathleen Farrltor,
1~ or ClaremooL Both llJ'ls IUfleted baclt
Court Approves
Receiver for
Saddlebaek Inn
•
Attorney trttiie ·s·urmeyer'• ap-
pointment u receiver for the Slddlf:baclc:
]M, Lagu114 Beach, bu been conflrmed
in Su~rior Court. . -Judie' ll'Qierf Cci'r!ihn ilr*nle1I t11i! ft.
quest or the Laguna Fedel'11 Savings and
Loan AssoolaUon that the Los Ang<les
lawyer be .._ to oupervlae the tansled
financial tffaita of the Art Cofoay
hostelry.
Laguna Federal look acUM qalnst the
inn through a Superior court complabtt
charging Us operaton with lalllnC to
make paymenU: over the: tut 11 montbl
on a $485,000 Joan.
Laguna Federal points out In Ill com-
plaint that failure to honor the: note
brings Into effect a pn>vlllon that tho
bank can take over the motel'• totlection
of "rents and pronts." 'l'be. bank _pl~ges
that it has not been allowec:J to take this
action.
It has been explained by Saddleback
Inns or the Americas that the Laguna
Beach facilily bearing the group name
was sold by them th~ months ago. nie·
group identifies the present owner1 u
Gene Randono and Charles Dreyer.
The Saddleback group also points out
thal tenns of that sale called for the
name of lhe Laguna Beach Saddleback to
be changed wUbln IO days. Suell action
had not, apparently, been taken at the
1ime the complaint was filed by Laguna
Federal.
Randono and Dreyer, the Sadd1eback
group explainl, took over "all assets and
JiablliUes'' of the Laguna Beach Inn at
the lime ol purchue .last April. Thal
sale, the group adds, "was neceasltated
by changes in u<hltectutrl polldes."
'
2 Sailors Find
3 Women Not
Nice Companions
Two 1ailon found three wcrntn made it
a pleasant crowd wblle hlfdl.blklnl
downcoa>I lo Laguna Beach ear]J today,
but lhr,. men who 1uddenly joined them
made it downright unpteuant.
San Francisco-based -Navymen Carl
Haskins, 20, and Oary Has~ln. lt, were
pi<ked up In Long Beacll by the feminine
trio, only to rtop the car Jattt at A&ale
Sireet and South Coaat llilbWIJ'.
'llvee men who bad -!ollowlng In
another car pulled 1IJ> behind, hopped out
and robbed the sailors al l:nllepolnl ol
$30, plus their chewinJ swn and ctsirtl·
tts" 'Ille sir penons then drovt off and Ill<
lwo victiml dashed to a coffee lbop
whfn Of!Jctr John Saporito WU Oii a
break to rep or l the robbery, wblclt
proved~...,, opportune.
Just 11 the 11Uora were lf:llin& their
tale, police said. tbeJ aaw tw<> ramlllar
cars drive b)', ao Patrolmen Slporlto and
Ken Frum11ethen toOIMd off In punuJt.
Amsted and OOoked on suaPlclon ol
armed robbery were Jam• WU.On, :ZS,
Daniel Brilcoe, II, Vidor Brllcoe. 11,
Sondra Corbet, 30. Janet Matthew•, 20,
ond Patricia Houoeman, Ii, all or Long
Beach.
fnjuries but were reported today in aood
condition.
Taylor was a passenger In another
smatl foreign car involved in a headon
crash. The California Highway Patrol
said the driver passed on a blind curve
on the entrance road to Orange County 1• Ill 1• Ill =:c the Saala Alla ,_,., on
~ Hern, a wareboaaeman IO< a market In 8uma Park, WU riding
his cycle ln -k -Oii Golden West Avenue at t p.m. Wedneaday when
he cruhed into a car driven by Clar•
Scarborou,cb, of Anaheim who WU turn-
ing left a{ Garden Grove Boulevard,
Westmlnater police aald.
'Ille Orqe Coonty coroner llid Hom clJed at W..tmln!ler Communlly Hospital
a.t 1:25 a.m. today. He is survived by bis
wife, Sylvia.
The Sco\clunan'1 Cove accident CIC'-
curred llhorUy before 2 o'dock this
monllnt, the CHP said. Hovard'wu dead
on arrival at South Coast Community
l!Doollal, Swth Lquna.
T6e leenli•. slrli In the oecond auto were both ~ In good condllion and
-. 1o be lraderred today "'1nr Hoar
Memorial ll<lpltal, In Newport Beacl!,'to
Kaiser Hoopllal In Fontana. Bealdeo baclc
lnlurl.., 1hiy IUflered cull and brlUJOO.
. ')'ho -·'Oald "fl1lcr .... -Injured in the 7:45 p.m. Wedneaday cruft
at tbe raceway and died three h:ms
taler al Santa Ana Community Hoopilal.
Driver of the car in which 1aylor was
riding, Timothy J. Lewis, 11, or Santa
Ana. 1lao wa1 taken to the Santa Ana
hoopllal where he WU lrealed for major
cull and rcleaaed. In the 8eCOnd c.ar were driver Gary
Allen, II, or 2m Brlltol St, Costa Mesa,
not Injured and Pal lllce, 24, ol Oranp.
W'bo was treated at the ace.ne for minor Injuries. 'l'he CHP uld the Lewis car, approach-
tng the nicew.,-on the freeway access
road, passed another on a blind curve
and coWded htadon with the Allen car,
wb1cb wu leavln& the raceway.
From Pqe 1
PROTEST •.•
area and locaUon only, not on the value
or the land or ill buildings.
"It doesn't make any dillerence
whether Jt's 1 vacant lot or 1 lot with a
$$0,000 house," he said,
Another speaker asked If It would be
poulble to hire another assessment
engineer.
The woman said that it would cost only
about $1.80 per parcel to hire another
engineer to get another professional opi-
nion of the a.sseS!ment spread.
City Attorney Rimel aald It was possi·
ble but impractical to do so, noUng that
the council could direct the present
engineer to use a different assessment
£onnula If ll wished. He saJd the action
woold just nosull In spending money un-
nectSSarlly .
John DIFiore, representlnl the Hilltop
Homeowners AslodaUcn, utd that they
would like to see the matter delayed until
November. The group had at first asked
that the council delay the declsl.oo two
weeU, which was done.
Lagunan Guilty
Of Drug Charge
One of three t.atuna Beach residenll
lndlcled by the OrlDI• Coonty Grand
J""f on drup charpo bu pleoded guilty
in Sujierlor Court to tbe aale ol mar~
juana.
Judce Howard C&mtron or d e r e d
Cllrlstopher M. Yeomans, 21, or 21511 Vic-
toria Drive, to return to court Sept. ta for
pn>balion bearlnl and oenlenclng. He
r.,.. a poulble aenlence or bro to 10
yun In llale pr1aon.
-Y eomaJUJ was one or eliht perlOlll in.
dieted by the Grand Jury on a variety or
charges lnvoM11& narcoll<t a n d
dtnilernus drugs. Court action 11 pendlng
in the cases of J:ltUy Jean Crumtr, M,
and Sandra Yvoone Shflby, boCh or Jnl s. Coast HlsbwlJ'. Lqwia Beach.
MtL cr.amer Is ac:cused or Hlling
tSO, pouesslna marljuana with lntmt to
aell and J)051Wlon al dange<OUI drug~
MflS Shelby II charied wllh se1111Ji WI.
··---· ··~·--. ·-----
TINY PUP STANDS TALL IN A SHOT GLASS
And Still Lnve1 Room for •n Ice Cube
Shoiglass Pup
.
Ounce Small Even for Chihuahua
I
Small ls In this year. Just ask CriCket,
the mother of a day-old, one ounce
Ollbuahua In Fountain Valley.
Cricket's little pup is so liny he can sit
up in a shot glass and still leave room for
an Ice cube.
He was so weak at first, that Mrs.
Samuel Staley, 159e& Rocl<y llbad Court,
Cricket's owner, bad to feed him milk
from an eye dropper every 45 minutes. .
The veterinarian said if he lived 24
hours he would have a 50-50 chance at
survival. Forty~t hours and he would
make It all the way1 the amallesl puppy
the vet had ever seen.
So far so good. The little fella, born at
6:30 p.m .. Tuesday, has now grown
strong .enough to feed from his mother.
And he shows a lot of spirit for a pup in
the bantam weight class or Chihuahuas.
The little tyke has a brother and sister,
each of normal weighl, close to three
ounces. His dad, named Poky, is the
mailman's dog.
Mrs. Staley said the pup was just fine
this morning and looks like he'll make it.
''He's like a child, so helpless," she
said.
Nixon Appoints 5 Envoys;
Italian Choice Surprises
President Nixon Wednesday nominated
career diplomat Graham A. Martin as
U.S. ambassador to Italy.
1be nomination, expected lo be routine-
ly confirmed by the Senate, came as a
illrpriae in some quarters.
It had been rumored that the am-
bassadorship wouJd go to He n r y
Salvatori, a Los Angeles millionaire who
has been a heavy financial contributo~ to
GOP campaigns.
But presidential press secretary Ron
Ziegler, who announced Martin's nomina-
tion, denied hearing Salvatori's name
mentioned during White H o u s e
discussions of the post.
"I'd just stick with this announcement,
if l were you," he smilingly advised
newsmen at Laguna's Surf and Sand
Hotel.
Martin, 56, is a one-time Washington
ttporler.
The native of North Carolina has befn
in government service since joining the
National Recovery Administration In
J933. He entered the Foreign Service in
1947 and most recently served as Special
Assistant to the Secretary of State for
Refugee and Migration Affairs,
In Rome, be will succeed Ambassador
H. Gardner Ackley, who is leaving
government service.
In 1963, President KeMedy appointed
?i.1artin as ambassador to Thailand. ln
December, 1967, he received the Depart-
ment of Slate's Distinguished , Honor
Award. He is married to the Cormer
Dorothy Wallace. They ha\·e t w o
daughters and a son.
175 Acres. Blackened
AUBURN (UPJ) -A fire blackened
about 175 acres of brush before being
brought under control Wednesday about
1hree miles south of this Placer County
community,
Gulf Coast
Plagued
By Looters ·
PASS CHRJSTIAN, Miss. (UPI) -
Looters, black marketeers and stai·
a:erlng sanitation problems plagued the
Gulf Coast survivors today and the rem-
nants of Hurricane Camille claimed more
victlms in Virginia and West Virginia.
Tile toll of the strongest hurricane evtt
to strike the U.S. mainland climbed
toward 300 today with uncounted J>odies
ttill buried in the mud and debris of the
Gu.If Coast and the raging waters uf
Virginia and West Virginia rivers.
The storm itself struck out into the
Atlantic Ocean, heiding iway from land,
ll'aving an incredible swath of death and
destruction along I t s thousand-mile
overland track from the Gulf of Me1lco
to the Atlantic.
Thirty more bodies were found in Pass
Christian late Wednesday, hours after a
Civil Defense official said the Gulf Coast
toll had reached 237. Mississippi Gov.
John Bell Williams said today that "We
have a minimum or 230 bodies" on the
?tilssissippi Coast.
Five were dead in Louisiana, at least 30
In Virginia and twq in West Virginia.
Cecil Yarbro. executive secretary or
the Mississippi State Building Com·
mission, said "We've got tons of bodies
now and they're still digging them out."
A force of nearly 2,500 National
Guardsmen patrolled the 600-square-mile
area of devastation in Mississippi and
Louisiana, They reported instances of
lotting and black marketeering. but of•
ficials said tbey had it under control.
Early today Camille -now considered
an Atlantic storm rather than a hut•
ricane -was centered about 400 miles
east of the Virginia capes and moving
P3Slward at 20 to 25 miles an hour. Its
highest winds of SO miles an hour
tr.reatened no la:id area.
Phone Company
Worker, Fireman
Rescue Woman
A telepnone company employe and
Laguna Beach firemen saved the life of a
woman whose apartment was gutted by
flames early this morning .
Sarah Bangs, 51, was in South Coast
Community Hospital 1his morning after
being pulled from her apartment at 668
Glenneyre St. by Dale CUI.right of Garden
Grove. -
CUtright told firemen he was driving by
1he apartment at about 2:30-a.m. when he
saw smoke in t.he living room . When he
stopped, he saw Mrs. Bangs standing in
apparently hysterical condition in her liv·
ing room, watching flames engulf her
couch.
Cutright tore away a screen and bum·
ing draperies to enter the room through a
window. He then pulled the woman to
18.fety.
Mrs. Bangs then r a n back into the
burning apartment to get her purse,
Cutright told firemen . He pulled her out a
second time, and turned her over to
neighbors who had asse!Jlb\ed outside.
M !lames spread to a kitchen , Cutright
went next door and led two blind women
to safety, according to firemen. He then
returned to the burning apartment and
began watering it down with a garden
h.ose.
In the meantime, firemen arrived at
1he scene, and found that Mrs. Bangs had
stopped breathing. Firemen couldn't
detect any pulse.
Fireman Robert Passage administered
external cardiac massage, "''hile other1
applied a resuscitator.
Other firemen then extinguished the
flames, which did an estbnated $4,000
damage to the apartment.
SALE Just two weeks more ... thru August 30
ORDER IN YOUR CHOICE OF STYLES AND FABRIC
AT A MOST GENEROUS SAVINGS , , •
'HERITAGE
a. IMn~ tradJtion tn fu.mltore
H.JaGARREfT fURNrpl~E
PltOFtSSlONA~
INTERIOR DESMiNUS °"" --TWrs. .. fr!. 1 ....
2215 HARBOR BlVO.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
6~6-0275 6~6-0276
'
I
'
.T~, AlltOlll 21, 1969 DAILY l'ILOT 3
TB -Unit Condemns County's Houriding Policy
' lly '1110MAS FOl\TllNE
9f IM .,..., f'l•·tf9ft
Orange County's hard line of having a
collection age~ bound tubercuJosi.'1 vie·
tirns over unpaid bills wu condemned
\Vednesday before county supervisora.
Knute Martin, executive direetor ol the
county TB Association, said California is
the only one of the 50 st.ates that does not
pay tuberculosls hospitalizaUon costs and
Orange Is the only county that has an ag·
gre&Sive procedure of collecUng from TB
. patients.
Supervisors asked for testimony from
county Health Department and Medical
Fashion Island
Fotorama
·Exhibit Opens
...
The jangle o{ the automaUc voling
machine, chatter of photo editors talking
on the United Press International Tele-
photo circuit and the mellow tones of a
atereo console which is offered as grand
prize were the sounds of opening day
today as Fotorama came to Fashion
Jsland.
The big sights and sounds show opened
a three-Oay run at the Newport Beach
shopping center. It will be a pen free to
the public until 5:30 p.m. today, from 10
a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday and from 10 a.m.
to 5:30 p.m. Saturday.
"fore than $1,100. worth of prizes fur-
nished by radio statiOn KOCM will be
awarded to participants in Votorama at
Fotorama at the close of the show late
Satun!ay afternoon.
Visitors to the bfg show under a blue
and white striped canopy on stage court
today got their first look at a show which
offers hundreds of unusual photographs.
Included are Mars "close ups" taken
by Mariners 6 and 7, moon snapshots
taken by the first lunar tourists, as~
nauts Nell Armsrtong and "Buzz" Aldrin.
Also featured are two large traveling
disr,lays of award-winning news pOOtos, a
col ection of some of the best work of
SouthJand commercial photo~raphers
this portion of the show coordinated by
Professional Photographers West, an
Orange County association affiliated with
state and national organizations -and
some of the best pictures taken during
the past year by the award-winning
DAILY PILOT pholo stall.
To qualiiy for prµes, Fotorama visito,rs
need only to register aod cast a ballot
in Votorama at Fotorama-selecting the
picture they like be.st from among the
top three wiMers in the Fotorama cam·
era contest for nonprofessional pho-
IDgraphers.
•
•
• • • • ctnltr olliclol1 ·lie pt. 10 belore decldlnt
any action. ~ -
"llliam Meuller said he has chaired a
TB Association committee that has
:studied county eXcesses'in' tbls neld over
the last seven mohtlis and they have
conlr>11ec1 "documellled e~ldence that r.
nothing short of astounding."
Patients have received bills of $5,000, $6,~ ind.,43,000," .he sa1d, "and after 10
days they ...., past due they are !urned
over to a collection qency.
11 ~u'Jtd'amentaJ·ty, this entire
.
circWJU1lanct ill wrona.'' he continued.
"The TB patient JS lsola{ed lor U.. pro-
tection ol society. hot confined for his
personal convenience."
Richard Butkus, or Buena Park, whose
wife and six-year-old son were clinfined
at the Medical Cenier, said he has a
S7 ,400 bill plus bills fro111 babysitters
while his wife was out of the home.
Mrs. Sandra Butkus said she felt she
could have stayed ln isoll.Uon at home
aod taken medicine but was threatened
wllh a court order lf she didn't submit to
confinement.
.. One oral drug that was extremely ex ..
DAILY PILOT SI.ti Pllf ..
VISITI NG FOTORAMA -Liz VanderVeen, 17, Huntington Beach,
and her pet poodle, Pierre, pause to ponder photos on display in
Fotorama exhlbt at Fashion I sland in Newport Beach. More lhan
$1.100 worth of prizes will go to visitors at DAILY PILOT • Radio
Station K,OCM event. It continues through Saturday.
It all started back in 1919, when we rented the
second floor of an old building in downtown
Detroit and began making tools.
-
This year, we're celebrating our 50th anniver·
sary. With plants in forty other cities (and 16,000
employees) across the United States, Canada,
India, West G~rmany, Italy and England.
And we're turning out products that range from
precision machine tools and computel' memory
systems to missile parts and packaging equip-
ment. 1919-that was a very good year.
Ex-Cell-O Corporation. Proud , ,_ A14'•<
to be part of this rommunity. ... .. m .. ~ ..
I C> 1-i"XlB°~"' ~ Yl!Jm~ ~ i . .. ,. ~ ~ 191• f961l if , ··' ~, .....
''•rtnors ot
Ex-Cell-O Corporatio.n
·,
Cadillac Con1rols Division
P.O. Box 1500
Costa Mesa. Calif-=ia 92626
----------------------·---
pensive In the hospital could have been
purchased at the dnig store for hair the
pric<," she said.' "It has roached the
point whet'll we have. no recourse but
bankniplcy ."
Supervisor William Hirstein said doc-
lors have told him "some patients go
home, ~row away their medicine and go
to a party. This is just exactly what we
are trying to prevent."
Hirstein said tt ls not true as he has
read in a newspaper that he doesn't have
any sympathy for the: tubercular patient.
He a1so re01aried, "We're trying to get
'
that hoopltll on a ..ir.oupportlna bull u
we can. Perhlps we became more 1g-
gresatve after we got direction rrom the
Grond Jllrf to eel with ti on bill col·
lectloa."
To chargea that Orange is the only
county that employs a tu collect.or on
medical bllb:1 Supervisor David Baker
replled: ,
"Maybe that ls why our tax rate Is
$1 .71 against the others' $3 and up."
He scolded physicians and medical peo-
ple opposed on the naUonal level to
90clali.zed medicine for turning around
and pressuring the '*""1 to absorb the
TB confinelneni: COIL "I baw never
.
receiv<d any aympllhJ rrom the mtdlcol
proleaslon In paytna Ill)' bllll," he said.
CounlY Counoel Adrian Kuyper aald the
COllllty II obli(oted under the law to bill
but can compromlae on 111 ablltty to col·
led.
Or. Davtd Geddes, president of the TB
Association, said he thinks a 2$.y~
payout period for young· famlUea, aa the
'COllection agency Is requiring, ls all
wrong.
Dr. Patriclr. Murphy, a Newport Beach
physicla·n, sald that Usually patients 1r1
advised to go to the hospitll, tiut1 the
subtle difference with lubercular patients
ts they ""' told to 10 to lbe boopttal •
English Testing Blasted
Mexican-Americans Say Proce d ures 'Hold Back A_ble'
A Mexican-American 1 po k e s m a n Ramos referred to.Jedeca.Lprograms-lO-t.im&r.-gr:eate-than-lhe-Negr·o.---
WednesdaY a:skiif or'°'a'-'ng!oe~c"'o~u C-n7t"y-"f..-cC"\th\Ce=.dlsadE~v~an'.'!ta'::ged operatlng in the "Responsible people have told l1lfc that
supervisors to relax testing procedures county and uked, "Why ii it that we have not made enough noi.se. I am op-
that screen out potenl;lal county govern-everything is Negro oriented? The Mex· posed to violence, but i feel this is com-
ment employes who do not have perfect ican-Ame.rican populalkm in the ~ty is ing to a boiling point," he w.arned.
command of the English language.
"Testing is a big hang.up that can hold
many able people back,'1 said Carlos
Ramos, retired lieutenant c o 1 o n e 1
repiesenting United LaUn American
Citizens.
"If a job is open for a garbage col-
lector, Jet's sit down aod determine what
he has to do -be able to drive a truck
and show the strength to lift a S<l·pound
can."
Supervisors responded to Ramos'
remarks by direct.ing county Persormel
Director William Hart to prepare a
report specifying types of employment
where other screening methods than a
written test might be appropriate.
"I think he has an excellent point,"
said Supervisor David Baker, who pro-
posed the task for Hart. "M0&t of the
work we do here is specialized and re-
quires on the job training; it is not taught
Jn college. It often times has been pointed
out that a high school education is needed
even to get a custodial job."
Supervisor William Herstein t o I d
Ramos, "I'm sure our standards are
pretty high. If you were hiring someone
you'd want the best person you can get.
If we hire someone not as well qualified
and they aee someone else promoted they
might be disappointed and broken
hearted."
Ramos argued, "Not all of us have the
potenUaJ to grow and it is far better for
some to be in a job without pOtential to
grow than to be on welfare."
lie said, ''Mpsl people locked -into
poverty are severely undereducated and
psy~hologically defe.ated."
Fairgrounds to Face
Scrutiny at Board Meet
Criticisms and remedial steps pn>posed
by !ta newest director will be considered
tonight when the 32nd D i a t r l c t
Agricultural A.s&ociaUon meets at Orange
County Falrgrouncts in Costa Mesa.
Santa Ana attorney Alexander Bowie
covers a broad range in his letter asking
Fair Board President Cecil J. Marica to
place lhe matter on the 8 p.m. meeting
agenda for discussion.
He raises questioM about the ap-
pearance, operation, future expansion o[
facilities and building (unds available -
plw: potential dl.sposal of the site at 88
Fair Drive -ln the five-page note.
Bowle then follows with eight :separate
points he feels should be explored to cor-
rect problems 'he sees, including broaden-
ing of fairgrounds management and
streamlining of board operations.
Bowie and the second most recently ap-
poipted dlrtttor, Tom Rogers, of
Newport Beach, are known to be en -
thusiastic about re Io cat in g the
fairground• aomewbere in more rural
Orange 'County.
Several of Bowle11 requesll and recom·
mendaUon renect thJ.s trend of thou.Kht,
noting that no one bu been appointed to
. an alternate site study committee
formally created in June. ·
Such developers as Macco Corp., Lino
coin Properties and Royal Street among
others sbould also be invited to submit
Ideas a bout what they would do with the
presenl grounds, he said.
Bowie also claims the appearance of
the grounds is a disgrace and the ad-
ministration of the 32nd D 1 st r i c t
Agricultural Association needs to be im-
proved.
He said the 1!169 Orange County Falr
and Exposition seemed with some ex-
ceptions to have been less thna
wholesome and interesting ror visitors
and calls for revised planning of the 1970
event. -
Bowie is asking the board to have
Secretary and General Manager Alfred
Luljeans prepare reports for the Sep-
tember board meeting ·on, per.,nnel, pay
and job duties for basic review.
ConBider~lion should be given to
establishing two management posh, one
of secretary to the bciilrd · •nd one of
generu . managem£Dt:-tie · further C'On-
tenc11.
AUGUST SPECIAL
• We Do Our Own Servicing ·
• We Do Our Own. Financing • we Do Our Own lnatallatlon , .
'
14.7 cu. ft.• ft1odel TBF-l:SSE
11 .8 eu. FT. TWO.DOOR $198
RE FRllOEllA TOR
$278
Economy Washer and Dryer
PHONI
541.7711
$248 FOR THI
PAIR
22 YEA.RS
QUA.LIT¥
SERVICE
'Foodceilter 18'
al&ft. • Modll '.l'n41DD
'398
• APPLIANCE & TV
SALES and SERVICE
1815· NEWl'ORT ILYD.
COSTA MISA
)
-I
r
t
1
.f DAll.V PILOT
• ,
'·
The baby weighed 60 pounds and
the parents were speechless. The
new arrival was the latest addition
to the nine-member family of J im-
mi• and Submarle, hippopotami
at the Philadelphia Zoo. Frod
Ulmer, curator of mammals,
said the baby will not be
named until its sex can be deter-
mined. No one can get close
enough at present to find out
~ whether it is a girl or a boy. The
1--~baby!s-brothers-and-sisters-a-r--e
named Bubblet, Auguste, Llnpopl,
Anthony, Cleo, Ra msl1, Rh1madu1
and Aod•. • Beavers on a c~ek near sun ..
dance, Wyo., are he\plng man fight
stream pollution. Earlier t h i s
· week, a tanker overturned and
· spilled 5,000 gallons of gasoline in-
to the creek. But beaver dams
trapped the gasoline until it could
be removed, and kept it from run-
ning downstream into the B e 11 e
Fourclie River. •
Three girl members of tht
North Door' Si'flger1 rock group
achfevtd a dubioua dilti'nction
at the Iowa State Fair in De 1
Moine&. Pig exhibitors awardtd
the girl$ blue ribbons and .. Hog1
Are Beautiful" buttons 4f the
"Best Pen of Three."
• Pet·sbop owner Michael Flligib-
bon of Hornchurch, England,
ls going down in history-at
least in a small way. Two dozen
µ>ice, accidentally sent to Fitzglb-
;bi>n by a collector in Pakistan,
proved to be of a type previoualy
lmlmOWn in Englanil~ The Br!Wh
museum has named the strain
.. SaJpingotus Michaelis" a ft e r
•Fitzgibbon. •
Hippk1 may recomidn th.tir anti·
haircut IM1D1 if more borberi like LUi
Sch~k take up tM 1htar1. Lili, Swed.-
Uh bom looel11, puti finishing touch-
e1 on a ra:or-cut hatr styling for
Rube Broada11 of Chicago. • Burglars who stole $300 from the
safe at the Hamlett Motor Sales
Co. in Marion, Ill., added insult to
injury by making their getaway in
two of the finn's used cars.
BLOOD STAINS SHOWN IN SHARON TATE HOME
First Picture of Scene Where Five Were Brutally Slain
Tate Murders 'Blackout'
Lifted; Drugs Confirmed
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Narcotics
were found at the estate where Sharon
Tate and four other perlOns were stabbed
and shot to death but there wu no sexual
mulWatlon of the victims.
Police broke their silence on the mus
murder cue to make the revelations in a
terse statement imled Wednesday "in
lbe inletest of accuracy" becauee of
nunon and speculation about the
macabre olaylngs Auji. 9.
Pollco bllpect<lr Harold .Yarnell, who
earlier bad Aid there were no narcotics
lf.S. Asks Reds
To TellNames
Of 1,000 POWs
PARIS (AP) -The United States uked
North Vietnam today to identify the more
than 1,000 American prisoners of war be-
Utved held by Hanoi and to guarantee
their humane treatmenl
Phllip Habib, acting U.S. delegate
chief, accusM the North Vietnamese of
neglecting "commonly accepted 11tand-
ard!."
Habib raised the prisoner issue at the
Slit plenary session of the peace talks,
which gave no indicaUoo of moving off
dead center.
Habib put into the record a statement
signed by 42 U.S. senators calling for a
list of names of the American prisoners of
war, prison camp inspection, repatrla·
lion of the sick and wounded, and nego-
Uatioos for their ultimate return.
''These senators speak on this issue for
all Americans," Habib declared. "The
senaton denounced your continued refus.
al to Inform the families which of the
missing men are alive and which are
dead."
Habib declared that "this demand for
humanitarian treatment of our prisoners
reflects the view of all who cannot accept
your excuses, your self-jusUflcation or
your continued neglect of commonly ac·
cepted standards."
"ln the house" 1ea&ed by Mlss Tate and
her hwband Roman Polanski, tald the 19
detectives asslgned to the cue have in-
terviewed 200 persons.
"At this time we have no_ wmants of
arrest for anyone," Yarnell said in the
&tatement. He said many persons remain
to be interviewed and Los Angeles
authorities were seeking the help of other
police departments in locating them.
"None of the bodies had wounds in-
volving the sex organs," be said.
''NarcoUcs were found on the premlaea."
Yarnell said there wu no evidence at
preaOnt lo ·comieet.the Tate munlers with
any other murder cases. He apparenUy
rererred to the double murder of Mr. and
Mrs. Leno La Bianca the day after ·the
Tate s l a y i n gs under simUar
circumstances. The words "Death to
Pigs" were smeared in blood on the door
of the La Bianca's refrigerator.
Y amell confirmed that the word "PJg11
was written in blood on the front door of
the Tate home In Benedict Canyon and he
emphasized Qi:e word was "Plg" and not
"Pi~."
Pie U the nickname of HarrilOll
Dawson, one of the men police would like
lo question about the slaylnp. His fn.nd,
Thomas Harrigan, 1:1 of Manhattan Beach. was questioned and released by
police last Monday,
Harrigan was asked U the word on the
door could have been Pie instead of Pig.
"l never heard of that before," Harrigan
wwered.
Green Beret Hearing
In Murder Case.En
SAIGON (AP) -The preliminary fn.
vesUgaUon into the Green Beret murder
case ended at Long Binb today with no
indication whether the e.1ibt U.S. Special
Forces mep accused of the killing will be
brougbt lo trial.
The investigating officer, Col. Harold
Seaman, whose funcUon Is similar to
that of a grand jury, will forward his
recommendations to Maj. Gen. George L.
Mabry, commander of U.S. support
troops in Vientam.
West Hot, East Cold
'
Record Low Marks Recorded in Up per Great Lakes
C'alltornfa
•
.. C'outal
IWJY Wl'IM!I,. ....i111 ocu11one1 ..,, ..
tot IOdty. Wll'llk wn"'rl1 I 19 II
kl'(lll, HT911 tocl•1 1~. '
Ynlef'a.l~'I "'ll'lllltr.iure '•"'td ''*"' • 1'111111 Of " to i.. l"i."4 ""'1\per•tur.
"'""" lrO"l'I U lo ft, W•!tr ll'mi:itf .. '~'· ... , 641 dtotf'ffl. Sur1, llJoor1. Tide•
lltUltlOAY
Fl"t 11111'1 . l21J• e,l'!'I. '7 "*"' low •. • 7:00 •.m. 2,4 fl'IUOAY
fl'Tnl l'lltl'I , .• 1:41 '·"'· J ' l"k'JI IOw ............ 10:'2 a ....... J.I
IKOllCI l'l!tll ....... , .... .Sr~ JI.Ill. S.I
Stfl •Ms •:TJ a.f'l'I. lolfl 71ii JIA ,._ ._Jra'""" tttt1t;¥&A
V.S. Sutnmal'fl
A It,... l'N"I ol ,.ol1r err ftl'litf'ed
lfl{ftr L..tk• SuNrlor lod1'1' bl'OUllll elHr 11'1d coof.sr we1~r trem ,,,.
G,..•I Likes lf'ld Nfw IEl'l!lllncl· Into
muc11 ol tftt SCI0./111911!.
R«O!'d bl't1kl111 low '-'"-•lures
IOI' thlt 1t1i. were ..i •I ON1ny 11o!n!1. T~ lflCludfd Q tt MMlltCll, Wl1., '°' •I Plrttllurtll, Flt~ l l'ld ii 11 Wl'I
Ptlm l tKll. !'tit.
Nffr lr1t1l11t -tnlOfll low1 "'' '"'°''" lrom tri. ~-Gttet le~••
to me ""''"''" llO'tklrl of N•w E,,.. •• nd.
PrrcltllleUo" """ (Ol'!l'h'llCI to ll'lt mlddlt Mlu !t..itlc>I V1tlly to the ten.
tl'l1 Gl't1I l"ltlM. S,,'"9flfld, M~ r~'t'tid 1.tO ~11'1 1"2 Intl'*
t.111111 ... »mllllltt "'"°"'
Allll.Jciverciut .........
All•nl•
B•ketlfltid
BltlMrck ·-''"~ •-viii.
"'""' C:lntltt11t1tl ........ .......... ......
F•lrbenkl ·-Honolulu
Lo.""'"'" """"" Mlnne1llOlls
~ Of'IMM
New Y0111
Nortll· Pl•tt.
Ga~l•ncl ~)·-"" ........
Pelm $prl1191
Ptto ftDbl .. "'°""tir Pltl\.tlul'lll
PortlUICI
1t1old "" ll ~d ''"" lh"O S1cr•mtl'lla
'"' ''"' "" '" -.. fl,1'11~
"""""
H1911 Lhr Prtt. .. .. .. • " " ... " " .. .. ..
" .. .. n ·" n ..
" ..
" .. ..
" .. ...
" ..
" • ... , .. ..
" .. .. .. • .. " " " ... .. .. . I " .. n .. ., n .. .. ·" " " ~ "' u n .. .. " .. " ·~ .. .. .. , .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
"' "
Arab Mosque Burned
Fire Ignites Mideast
By UDllcd Preti Iakrnadonal
Fire of undel<mllned origin today
1wept iht geat El Aqsa Mosque in Old
Jerusalem, one of lslam's most sacred
'lhrl.nel. Tbe 'Arab world reacted angrily,
blaming Israel and calling it the gravest
lnC!Jdent sinet the 1967 June war.
Th< moaque, which la ,_,d o y lo
Medina and Mecca u the holleit In
Islam, wu the scene in 1951 o( the
1W1assination of King Abdullah, 1 the
father of King Hu.sseln of Jordan.
Mosque in the 6th century and sit! atop
the Walling Wall, Judaism's principal
sbrlne. A hundred yards away is the
Oome or the Rock from which the
Prophet Mohammed is said to have
aacended into heaven.
Prime Mlnister Golda Meir called an
urfe:\t cabinet meeting to consider tbe
new cr11is blowing up over the incident.
She apressed regret and the government
lmpoeed a c;urfew-in Jerusalem's Arab
Quarter to prevent disturbances.
Israeli troops moved into position
around the Old City Walls and,polico sped
Into the Arab quarter. AB they dld
Shellunhassan Alkhlled, the Grand Mufti
of Lebanon, called th e incidebt "the
gra\·est since the June 1967 war. 'f ·
The El AqM Mooque was built i\)lout 20
years aft>r the nearby dome ol \ht Rock
Fire broke out at 7:20 a.m. and burned
through the roof of the mosque and
heavily damaged the interior before it
wa! brought _under control three and a
half hours later. Reaction from the
Moslem world was Immediate and angry.
" HOUSEWARE
+PPLIANCE
BOYS-!.-
WI l'IATUU THI FAMOUS •••
shepherd (Im) casters
LOW, LOW PRICIS!
YOUR CHOICE OF:
PU.Nn MOD I L,
IRl•HT HASS or
ANTI9UI COl'l'IR.
PU.ft• STIM
FASTININ5 SET OF 4
R .. ul1r $1.t S
HIA YY SOFAS, llDS. CHAIRS ROLL WILY ON SHIPHERD SUPIR CASllRS
25 YEAR GUARANTEE * HELi' Sl'OD HOUSE CLEANINCO
sllllltlr
wttll
SHIPHIRD CASTERS
IF, AT ANYTIMI JN THE NEXT 25 VEARS,
ONE OF THEii SHIPHIRD CASTIRS FAIL
TO WORK IN VOUR HOMI IECAUSE OF
A DEFICT, IT WILL 11 RIPU.CED FREE OF
CHARGE!
* SA YE CARPETS
AND FLOORS * ADD NEW IEAUTY
TO FURNITUR E
-GUARAHTEID I Y GOOD HOUSEKEIPING -
9ntnoducing
THE FINEST IN
STAINLESS COOKWARE
CRITERIA by EKCO.
ALL NEW SHAPES FOR FASTER, MORE MN COOKTllG I
GUARANTIED FO R 15 VIAR S!
Som• food• you cook need th• •low. ewn heat of ~
Iron. Other foods cook bitter In heavy aluminum.
Th1~1.th1 ld.1_1J>ehl_nd Ekco'• new Crit111_rl1. The bht
metal for each kind of cooking has bffn sealed betweell
layert of .. sy-eleanlng, trlple laminated stalnl ... ltML
Now t he g~ cooking pans 1r1 the good looting
PIM. tool Low profile design for maximum burner
cowr1g1, lncr11nd cooking efficiency.
Handlff and cover knobs are oven •fe.
7·PIECE MULTI·PURPOSE SET
A cook·••rv• ••t Including 1 and 3 qt. coY919d
u uct1pan1, I-qt. eov•red saucepot, !::~ ::i~:t~~1~1···~ ~.·.u.~~~~ ~~~~ ."'• Odtf t3995
OPEN STOCK FROM tl.95 TO $19.95
CRITERIA 10.llCH
GOUR•ET OMELET PAN Yo• h••••'t llY•d •tn
you'w trite! this unlqu•
omalat pan with apaclally
dulgltad, .toping aldas.
Tuma out prot.nlonal .............. t4295 fata-.ryd ..... ,
SPECIALLY PRICED
0 CLUB ALUMINUM "BLACK MAGIC"
OMELET PAN
l 1/1·lnch1lr• 5649 ••s''"''• $7.95 e
l O·lndw •Ire s7S>e ••o•la•ly $9.95 •
New DURABO ND9 Fused On Teflon Finish
No Need For Spocial Kilchen Tool•
Of course Club Aluminum ha s a new n1ore durable
Teflon fini sh. Durabond is th eir name for it, and it
permits the use of regular kitch en tools ••• and
still lasts and lasts. Black so 1hat it is virtu ally stain·
less, but still with all the "stick less cooking-no ~cour
clean up'' qualities that ue so important
But it is the construction of the pans lhemsclves tliat
really counts, Thick solid even heating cast alumi·
num. Favored by good cooks for generations, there is
nothing quite like it.
Club Black Magic comes in three lovely colors •••
Avocado, Poppy aDd Harvest Gold.
WOOD PANELING TO WALL FLOWERS
'
• •• GO &::,T,g· 49:d
Uu.AllllDIW /l&JISTJC
Want a wood paneled room? I+'• easy, with CON-TACT
pl·astic. Looks hand•ome, costs a fraction of the price of
real wood. Like flowered walls? It's just as ea>sy, with the
wonderful "instant decorating" vinyl pla•!ic tho! goes on
so smoothly with no paste, no tech, no tools . Best of all,
these lovely wall• are ea•y to care for ... they're wash·
able. Coma He dozens more patterns ond colors, start your
own decorating project now, and see how proud you'll be.
I 8" wide.
I
Saddlehaek
~DI T ION N.Y. Stoek9 ,
:VOi:. 6 2, NO. 200, 3 SECTIONS, l4 PAGES TEN CENTs
130 Protest Sleepy Hollow Storm Drain Tax
More than ISO persons created a slan·
ding•room..only protest before the Laguna
Beach City Council Wednesday night but
failed to win action in objecting to Sleepy
Hollow storm drain assessments.
Councilmen listened to more than three
hours of discussion, then took no action.
At issue are assessments against
llomeowners bolh In the downtown bowl
and In the hills which will pay for the
sprawlin, Sletpy Hollow -Park Avenue
storm drainage project.
After all the talk, Wednesday night's
public hearing: was conUnued to Sept. 3.
ln the end, Mayor Glenn E. Vedder
summed up the drain <mt complaints
t.hiJ way': ,
"The people at the top or the hill think
the people at the bottom ought to pay for
it. People at the bottom think the people
at the top ought to pay for it.':
Seventy written protests were received
by €ity Hall prior--to the atarLof the
public hearing. Only letters which asked
'
to be read aloud were read. Couneuitien
heard 10 1peakers.
City Attorney Jack J . Rimel told the
council early in the. dlsaiuion that only
the way the assessment wu spread was
at issue, not the total cost of the project
l!!elf.
The stonn drain project cost $478,000 of
which the county paid $100,000. Another
$31,000 was paid by the city from funds
collected-from_.cie.velopers le•ving-a...tclal
of 1311,000 lo be borne by the 796 .,,.....
ment parcels.
Asseument enginetr L a u r e n c e
Thompson el]llained tl;at he figured the
amount each property owner would have
to pay on location of property, and square
.foOtage of each property.
Thom'Pson explained the properties
were divJded into lhree iones, a high risk
ione where as.wssment is 10 cents per
square foot, a medium risk zone whett
asse.ument...is 5 cents.per aquar.-fOIX and
a low risk iooe where assessment is 4
cents per square foot.
In large undeveloped areas where
future development may be restricted,
Thompson said he gave a 30 percent
credit to the property.
Most of the property owners protested
ttte assessment on the basis that they
were not receiving benefit equal to the
amount ol money they were being charg~
ed.
One such speaker was Dean Harbold of
2008 Donna Drive. Harbold angrily said
• that his as~ssment of $l,875 was not fair.
and pointed out that the large hotet:mote.I
complex of Vacation Village was asaess-
ed only $678.
Harbold said that the fund.. for the
Sleepy Hollow project should have been
raised by a bond Issue and paid for by the
entire community. He received a huge
ovation by tbe crowd.
Engineer 'I'hompson again e1plained
that-the assessment was bascl! on laJHI
(Sff PROTEST, Page Z)
en ta on 0 as un s
Down the
Mission
Trail
Lagoon Oeaned
At Lake Forest
NixonsHost
S. l\.oreans
h1Bay Area
...
From \Vire Services
America 's First Family flew out of El
LAKE FOREST -No one can say the Toro MCAS today for a San Francisco
Beach and Tennis Club doesn't take its meeting with their Korean counterparts
housekeepin~ seriously. Not · while its and a mini-version of last week's Apollo
lagoon is bemg vacuumed. 11 state dinner tonighl. The lagoon b closed while a giant
machine is dredging its bottom in an ef· A small crowd of about 60 persons
fort to sweep up the muck that ac· watched President Nixon and his family
cumulated during the winter floods . off. at 10:10 a.m. waiting under warm,
"When ~e·re throug~ it ~ill be as .. clean friendly skies or the Un1ted States Marine and beautiful as a sw1mm1og pool, •&kl ,,.. C ba
Bob Figuera, ctub director:, or" , s~. . .
And that's precisely what it is -a pool A glittering array or guests -including
with a sand bottom with chlorene and actress June AllylOQ, (I{ Lido tsle -and
other chemicals added for safety. There Zsa Zsa Gabor and Mrs. Clark Gable
is only one difference this ooe is in a lot have been invited to the S p.m. affair in
of backyards. the St. Francis Hotel.
e Name Pla11 T old . ti!°!"i~ ~a~~r~~~= i:cto~tyw:::Ct;
lRVINE -Orange County supervisors posed for the visit ol. President Nixon and
Tuesd~y announced their intention to s~t President Park Chung Hee.
e heanng to change the name of Valencia An estimated 5 ooo persons are ex-
Aveaue to Moulton Parkway. pected to crowd the streets around the
. short segments called Navy Way and famed Bay City h<>stelry, including fJOO
Ridge Route Road also are proposed to be anti-war demonstrators.
renamed Moulton Parkway so one road of The gala banquet tonight, one of few
the same name would extend fro m ever held outside Washington -like the
Leisure World paralleling the Santa Ana ApOllo I l fete -will draw San Francisco
Freeway to the Newport Freeway. State College President Dr. S. I. e Dri1'eS Complete d Ha.yakawa and ~Jso Henry Ca~ Lodge,
JRVINE -Completion of Bethany ~nd f:,•:! U.S. negotiator at the Pans peace
B~dd1e drives off of Turtle Roc.k Dr.ive So~th Korea's president modestly sug-
w1th water, sewer and stree t li ght Im· gested typical American food for the ban·
provements was acknow~edged Tuesday quet, but Mrs. Nixon approved a menu
by Orange Cowity superv1SOrs. not seen every night in the typical
•~Spe~cLLindUe.t
LAGUNA HILLS -The speed limit on
La Paz Road frorn Paseo de Valencia in
Capistrano HighlanCs across the freeway
te> Muirlands Boulevard was set at 40
miles per hour Tuesday by Orange County
1upervisors.
Traffic was checked by radar lo
determine lhe proper speed for the road.
e Te nnis Club.• Form
American home.
Mousse of sole~r"tast of duckling a
rorange, potatoes: Berny, tomato e·s
farcises, limestone lettuce. assorted
cheeses (fromages) and figs roma will be
offered, pills California wines.
Entertainment will include a Marine
Corps band for sc:>-(al!ed hard rock dan-
cing. plus Spanish flamenco and classical
guitarists Celedonio Romero and his
three .sons.
Various gifts will be exchanged by
dignitaries at the formal eve nt, followed
Friday by an Informal luncheo11 hosted by
Seeretary of State Wllllcm P, Rogers, at
the exclusive Bohemian Club.
. l DAILY P'tLOT P'~ W llk"-rf K .... llr
EL TORO COMMANDER HISE ESCORTS N\XONS FROM .MARINE 'CORPS ONE 0 TO AIR 'FORCE ONE 'Wor~ .Break' Tak11 President to.Sen F'ranclsco fo r Talks Wtth•Soutn ·Korea's Park
Police Harvest
Youths' Crop
Nobody will be getting· high on what
Laguna Beach police plucked afi~r hiking
lo a spot just below Top •of the World
Elementary School Wednesday.
Investigators popped up on Ult pastoral
scene as two young men tended 1 crop
believed to be theirs -consisting of 10
alleged marijuana plants up to 10 inches
high.
Detectives arrested Michael D. Callan,
19, and Kent Kelly, 20, both of 625
Seaview St., and booked them into city
jail on suspicion of cultivation of mari·
juana.
Clemente PT A Leader
Appeals~lVarco Charge
Mrs. f\.1arvena· Kennedy, president of a
San CJemente PTA. will appeal her con-
viction for smuggling »pounds ol mari-
juana across the Mexican border, her at-
torney said today.
Frank Gregorcich, who defended the
44-year~Jd·mother of three litUe chlldren
through two trials told the DAILY·
PILOT·
"All , J c3n say is that . there 'were
general errors In law al lhe trial. We are
bruting our appeal M those grounds."
He said the appeal would be filed with
the 9th circuit COurt of Appeal today.
Mrs. Kennedy, last spring elected
president of. Marco Forster Junior High
School PTA, was convicted last month
after her first trial ended in a hung jury,
Last week ahe. wa:i sentenced to an in·
detennlnate sentence in federal prison by
U.S. District Judge C. A. Muecke.
LAKE FOREST -Two groups ol the
Beach and Tennis Club are still in the
fonnation stages. A young adu lt group
ror high school graduates interested in
joining other young adults for picnics.
barbecues and other get-logelhers is
belng fonned along with a group for
litarary buffs called Great Book of the
Western World.
Anyone interested in either of these
groups may sign up at the club.
Pyg1nalion Unruffled
Commenting on the deadlock jury at
the first trial, a.1pokesrnan for the U.S.
Attorney's office said: "The jurors just
cqul~'t believe such a re!peetable look-
ing person coold have done such a thing."
e Y Af' Speaker Carded
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Dana
Rohrabacher, Orange County chairman
of Young Amerlcans for Freedom, will be
guest speaker at the meeting of the
ConslrucUve Action Network Conncil o{
Saddleback Valley Friday.
Pigeon on Thigh Steals Sho w at Festival
Also on the program at the 7:30 p.m.
meetiog in Royal Savings & Loan
AMOCiation will be a short Ulni, "The
Berkeley RevoluUon". The: public is ln·
vited.
Play ho use Not
For Par ked Cars
Thanks, but no thank!.
That was the respome of city coon·
cilmen Wednesday to a deal offtttd by a
Laguna Beach auto agency owner who
•ants to lease the old Laguna Beach
Playhouse site to store. cars.
1be pf"OJKMHll came from 0 . W.
Stephens, ol South Cout Motorz.
''I apprech1te the problems he hA~. bul
that property i;hould be used for public
property,'' said Mayor Glenn E. Vedder.
'
By JEROME F. COLLINS
Ot flll Dill? ,11'9 St.ti
A pigeon pounced on Pygmalion's thigh
at the Pageant of the Mast.er• in Laguna
Beach Wednesday night.
It brought down the. house. But it didn't
stop the show.
Pygmalion -a white paint-(!Oated liv-
ing nude -didn't move.. Jullt bu fine-
feathered friend did.
It flapped Ill wings lrantlcally trying to
get a good grip oo the "statue 's" allppery
thief'. And ill claws dug in deep.
But Pygmalion stin didn 't move.
The audience of 2,300 at Irvine Bowl.
meanwhile, applauded the p I g e on ' s
performance wildly. The amphltheatP.r
~ked wtth roaring laughter.
The plgron, Festival of Art.a officials
explained thl! mornlr.g, was a homing
pigeon that didn't go home, u it wu: sup-
posed to.
Here·s the stCJry behind the whole
humiliating afrair:
The piegon was one of 10 kept in a cage
l!ltop the Irvine Bowl st.age. The birds art
owned by t:J.year~ld Kirk Woloshyn.
---------
whose home is out ln Laguna Canyon
about a mile from the Festival grounds.
Every night during the run . of the
Pageant, the Festival's annual big show,
Kirk has been releasing the plegons when
the bell is tolled in .. The Venice Bell,"
another "livin8' picture", The fluttering
pigeons are supposed to recreate the en-
vironment of Venice's San MarC(IS Plaza.
·"The Venice Bell cornea on before the
curtains part on "Pygmalion and
Galatea." By then, the pigeons have
headed on home out in the canyon.
But Wednesday nlght one stayed
behind.
Instead, It zoomed ebout the bowl, look-
ing for a place--to touch down.
Then on cJme "Pygmalion ind
Galatea .''
Galatea, the, sc:ulptor, sat there, \rilb
eye• cklled, in qulet contemplation.
Pygmalion stood there, wlth eyts open, tn
lw qulet cootemplaUon -especially JO
when the pigeon new Jn her dlreciion.
"PlgeCJN obviously do have an afflnJty
for statues," explained FuUval publicist
Sally Reeve later.
The bird landed first on Pygmalion's -
er, ah -chest. But it slipped off. 'Iben it
flew about for a few seconds, finally com-
ing to a fitful rest on Pygmalion 's thigh.
Galatea kept hi& eyes shut throughout
lhe incklent, wondering what all the
laughter was about.
The scene lasted less thin three
minutes, according to schedule. For
Pygmallon they were a very Ioog few
minutes. But she didn't move a muscle.
Finally, though, as the .curtains closed,
sbe 'smiled 'slightly.
The aU<Uti:DCe burst Into thundf!'ing ap-
j>lause. •1Eocore!" ahouted one ck>wn.
Mn. Reeve,,nottng that tl1e F.otlval
never releases the namu of its Pageant
perlonners (''port\t1Jlari)' the nudes"),>
CQ<IC\uded : '
'"At the Very lcaJt .. l.th!iik1Pycmallon
sholi1d aet a purpl• h<frt. She 11ad .....
acratches, you,tnow."
AJld the pigeon 1
It wu placked oll Py!!"'allon'1 lhlih l>Y
a stage hand. And cml;d home Ip a bos.
Fn>m now on, ll8id Kiri< w~.·
there will be only nine placons rtleaaed
!or ''The Venlce Bell." ' . .
Mn. Kennedy was arrested last year at
ttie · border when cUstoms inspectors
noted she seemed unusually nervous and
a search of her car turned up the marl·
juana in plast:lc bags under the seats.
At her second trial, a former tenant or
her beach apartment testified that she
had agreed to take marijuana ecrosa the
border in her car for him because she
WA! in financial difficulties.
The tenant, Ma.rk Hanson, 22. was also
coovlded in connection with the case. He
faJled to show up at his sentencing Mon-
day. A bench warranL Ls now out for his
arrest.
Wednesday morning Mrs. Kenni:dy
signed a noUce that she would not appe1l
her conviction. But attorney Grtgorctch
today said sbe had changed her mind. He
I,~ that be la seeking an appe1l bond 4J wln her release from San Dlt.go County Jail.· , .
in soother development Wednesd1y, It '
wu Jeai;n!?d tl\fll a character. wit.Desi, for' ftfri. Kennedy at her MCOnd tri.Jl was.
litir&elf arrested on shoplifting charges.
Sh< h Mn. Charleen Wart, 48, president
of the 01• llantO!I Elementlf1 School
PT A In Sab.1Clemente.
' Mrs. Wart wa, •CCUsed then of lakln&
lass than $2 worth al l.rticles from 1 San
Clemente supermarket on August t ..
Laird Bows
.To Demands
Of Congress.
· WASHlNGTON (UPI) -Defeme
Secretary Melvln. R. Laird. announced too
day · be wai yielding lo congmojonol
pressure and reluctanUy reducing the na,
lion's armed fo~s by 100,000 ~n JM
Spending by $3 billion. ·He warned: "Itis
clear our defense readinw will be
we3ke'ned." · ~ ,
· 4Ud told a news conference ...
ttde<1cl lht.cuts after. beint.fnf.......i b>'
the-"cbainnsn . o(ile!~• ~ . t~~lll(i~~
iJropriatlons Yequesti. ' -• _.;:I ,wWJ i1.. were poullm: for me lo 1t1lt
that these cuts could be made wllhout
impairing our defense readiness," Laird
&aid. "Regrettably I must say that these cuts will reduce our capability to meet
CUJTent commitments."
Laird's actions wouJd reduce defense
spending from $80 billion to fl1 billion, a
figure Pentagon officials said was H.1
billion be.low the requests of the Johnson
admlnlstration.
In addition to the 100,00().man reduction
ln uniformed 1 ranks, another 50,000
civilian jobs would be eliminated and 100
ships would be mothballed .
"The distinguished cbiarman o{ the
House Appropriations Committee has
stated that his committee will cut at least
$5 billion ••• and has alerted me to the
fact that the current fiscal year Is run-
ning and that action should be taken
oow," Laird added.
Laird said the cutbacks came at a Ume
when Soviet military strength is in-
creasing and added: "I believe it ls Im·
portent that the American public be in-
formed about stepped-up Soviet activities
in _strategic CJil_ensive and defensive
fields."
He alSCl said he saw no lull in the VJet-
nam war, pointing out tll.at enemy in·
itiated activity in the Vietnam conflict
was higher during the fin;t six months of
this year than during a similar period in
1968. But he sa1d U.S. forces are now
engaged in a slrategy of "protect.iv•
reaction."
st...,k Markeu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
drifted through another session today,
with brokers reporting investors coatin-
uing cautious and staying out of lhe ac-
tion. (See quotations, Pages 10.11).
Trading near the close was slow. The
Dow Jones industrial average at J p.m.
was 1.85 at 83S.07.
Orange
Weather
Partly cloudy mornings and
su nny afternoons are IU JI In
the oUing for the Orange
Coal!t, "rit h temperatures rang·
ing from 75 to 85 depending on
where you park your car.
INSIDE TODAY
Se1iatt critict of Pttttagcm
ttro in on tzptnditurea but
Pentagon feart such action m<IJI
give ever more active Ru.srimu
-fearful aduantage. Pagt 23.
... "... ft. C11tftnllt t
C7"1lflM ti'-# ._,.. " c,..._. tt
0.111 Ntttft'I t -. 111""'1 P.,. I •11ttrt~ 14 ,..... 1 .. \1 -" AM Lt~ 1) Merf'l.aff Lktllttt t
•
•
ii DAll.Y 1'11.0T L Tllllndlr. ""'121, 116'1
Johnsons
To Visit
1st Family
-r---
1qndoo B. J-and Lady Bird will
11y In from Joh!llOll City, Tex., next
WednesdJ)' to celebrate the former..
Presideat•s ltst blrthdq a.s guests of the
new Flrtt Family In San Clemente.
Ptttldenl and Mn. Nixon will ent<rlaln
the Jotmaons at an lnl'ortnal luncheon It
the western White House, aides disclosed
Wednesday.
'Ille J-dauahlen and their
f3tnllies may also 1tt.end.
11 will be the lint informal visits the
JobneonS bave made lO the Nlxool alnct
the tnauguratloo.
Liiier In the day, President Nixon and
Mr. and Mn. JohnlOll will fly to
-Natlooal Park In Humboldt
o---'CWi\\j-,. dedicate the Lady Bu·d
Johnson ntlf Orick. I
Double Session
Fears Ended
For El Toro
By PAMELA HALLAN
01 ,.._ DeltY Pllfl Slfff
'lbert will be no double sessions in El
Toro UU. yur ·
'Jbe announcement was made during a
special meeting of the San Joaquin school
board Wednesday night at Irvine School.
Mere than 100 parents who had come to
p('OteSt double se&!lons at Gates and
Olivewood Schools apPlauded t h e
decision.
· Double HSSions had been feared
becaUJe two elementary schools schedul-
ed to open in September, Valencia and
Allio, have not yet been completed. But
Ralph Gatel. dlatrlct superlndandent
a&kl, completion of homes alao has been
11lowed down, reducing the potential num-
ber of chDdrtn to bt enrolled in the
cllllrlct.
However, achool of!k:iab: said, the
alngle ....ion will not be w!thoul pro-
blem.I. dilldren who would normally at·
tend Allao will be at Ollvewood achool,
but dilldm:I who would attend Valencia
1VOUld be 1e1ttered amon1 Ollvewood,
Git.el, O'Neill and Linda VlBta. Thus,
parents with four children ln elementary
1ebool could have a different dilld in
eoch 1ehool.
Olher problema will be the curtailment
C1l activiUes involving multlp!.ll1)0Mi
rooms, whlch wlll be used as classrooms
and the hiring or extra personnel to
1Uperviae lunch periods. Using all
available facilities including mobile units
there will be eight extra classes at Gate!,
three at Ollvewood, five at O'Neill and
four at Llnda Vilta until the new schools
are ready to open in December.
Thi board erplained that double ~!!ion
may indeed become a possibility by the
end d the year In Miulon Viejo. They
alto explained thet although three new
ICboob have been approved there are no
longer funds avaUable from banks or the
O!at. to build them, because of blgh in-
terest rates. Only one school, located In
the El Dorado home area may be built
durjnC the nest y .. r.
'
Fire Burns Brush
Near O'Neill Park
A flre burned 28 acres of brush in a
canyon ea&t. or O'Ne ill Park Wednesday.
It took county Division of Forestry
crews on the ground and four borate
bcmberl three houn to control the fire.
Cause of the fire has not been detennin·
ed.
~~ ... ....-aw.un
• .-. ... w ... ---.J•&• a. c..t.., Vliet,,.... .. 0-.....
flilM•• kHti ....
lMMI A. Mlrl'JflfMi --....,,,...,
ar1:••~ •. N•R
..__
C:ltr I ... ---212 ftr••t An.
M.m., M4rna1 P.O .... •U. t2&1! --c..99 ..... , ,,. --· ..... """ """"9 ..,_I fHI wal ....... ....
• 11 IF JIA """' • llll ..,_
. ,<ci •
fJ.UPerflN
Council Boosts
--
Tbe La'""" Belcb Cily Council Wednelday let the city ta1 rate at $1.93
per $100 asseaaed v11-tuaUon, an iocrease
of 27 cents over lut yearts levy.
Ouly councllman Charlton P. Boyd
-l(alnlt the tax ~ needed to llnaoct city operallonl for the current
fJSCat year.
It is estimated that for the owner of a
$30,000 nome the Increase will mean an
extra l20 to the annual city tu blli. The
tu rate b bued on an aaessed worth of
the clly of ISU inillion.
In oUl<r action, the councJI '
-Denied an appIJcation to ponnlt
lcrtune teDlng by Dorothy ""' Barney
Adami represented by attomty David R.
Cadwell
-Referred to cily llall a pro)ecl rep<n
!or the completion d Bluebird Canyon
Park made by the Ll(wla COordinallng
Council and prepared by archtttct Ken·
neth Wood. -ntrtn"ed to cily stall a letter by Earl
L. Seccr reprdlng the poaaible reopenhlg
d an alley behind Gtenneyre Slrtet
betwee.n Thalia and Anita streets.
-Passed on to a &econd reading a pro-
~ ordinance change regarding
permita !or painted signs and !er change
·d copy on existing atgns.
-Will liludy a proposed parking
certificat< prognm at the Sept. 10
meelin(.
-Referred to traffic commit.tee a Jet.
ter from Marge Cbaloupka regarding
parking problem on Victoria Drive. A
committee is to investigate making the
ro.d a one way street.
Three Die in Separate
Orange County Crashes ·
Three young men died Wednesday
night and thil morning in separate traf·
nc accidents in Westnllnster, on Pacific
Coast Hiahway north of Laguna Beach
and at tlie entrance to Orange County
Raceway.
'Ibe dead are :
-RmttD W. Hon, :II, d illlZ Manpum
Drive, Huntinlton Beach.
-Duk! E. 11ovanl, 17, d Puadena.
~ D. Taylor, 11, or Santa Ana.
Horn died d a atull -IUffered when h1s mOtorcycle nmmed a ear In
Westminster. Hovard, drivinc a amall foreign car,
crossed over the center Jlne at Scotch-
man'• Cove north of Laguna and smash-
ed beadon Into a car carryln( -....,..
Bonnie LYM, 18, 0C 711 Ocean Blvd.,
Huntington Beach, and Catlileen Fanitor.
16, or Claremon~ Both glrla lllllered back
Court Approves
Receiver for
Saddlehack ~
Attorney lrvinl Su Im e 7 er' 1 •Po
polnlment u receiver for the Slddlehlct
Inn. Laguna Beach, baa -...rJrm<d
in Superior COurt.
Judge ll<>bert Corfman lnm.d the re-
quest of· the Laguna Federal Savinp and
Loan AuoclaUon that the Los Anaeles
lawyer be named to 1111pervlse the tangled
financial alfaln of the Art Colony
hostelry.
Laguna Federal took action qalnat tho
tnn through a Superior Court complaint
charging its operaton wiµi. fai11ng to
make payments over the list 15 monthl
on a $485,000 toait.
Laguna Federal Points out In Ill com·
plaint that failure to honor the note
brings into effect a provision that the
bank can take over the mote1'1 collection
Of "rtnls and proUts." The bank alleges
that it has not been allowed to take this
action.
It has been explained by SaddlebaCk
tnns of the Americas that the Laguna
Beach fatjlity bearing the group name.
was sold by them Uu'ft: moolhl ago. The
group identifies the present owners as
Gene Randono and Charles Dreyer.
The Saddleback group also points out
that t£nns of that sale ~alled. for__ the
name of the Laguna Beach Saddleback to
be changed within 60 days. Such acUon
had not, appareoUy, been taken at the
time th~ complaint was filed by Laguna
Federal.
Randono and Dreyer, the Saddleback
group explains, took over "all useta and
JiabiliUes" of the. Laguna Beach lnn at
the Ume of purchase last April. That
sale, the group adds, "wu necessttated
by changes in archit.ectural pollcles."
2 Sailors Find
3 Women Not
Nice Companwns
Two sailors found U'u'ee ~en made It
a pleasant crowd while httch-hlktng
downcout to Laguna Beach early today,
bul three men who suddenly Joined them
made it downrlghL unpleaaant.
San Francisco-hued Navymen Carl
Haskln.1, 20, and Gary Haskin, 11. were
picked up In Long Beach by the feminine
trto, only to stop \he car later at Agate
Street and Sooth Coaat Highway.
Three men who Md betn following in
an~er car pulled up bMlnd, hopped out
and robbed the sailors at tnHepoint of
llCI. plul their chewln( gum and clpret-
tes.
The llx petlOns then drove off and the
two vk:Uma dashtd lo 1 coffee shop
where OffW John Saporito w11 on a
brtak to report lhe robb<ry, which
proved vuy opportune.
Juat u the aailort were t<llin( their
tale, police said, they uw two f1mlllar
can drive by, IO Patrolmen Saporito and
Ken Fnlma1ethen roomed off In pursuit.
Arrested and booked on 1usplckm of
anned robbery were Jamea Wiison, 22,
Daniel Briscoe, 19, Viet« Bri&coe, 11,
Sondra Corbet, 30, Janet Matthew11, 20,
and Patricll HOU6eman, 191 all ol Lona Beach. •
Injuries but wei-e reported today In good
muiitlon.
Taylor was a passenger In another
smaD foreign car involved in a headon
crash. The California Highway Patrol
.!laid the driver passed on a blind curve
on the entrance road to Orange County
I• CoaDtJ Tral!lc 1 ..
1• -lltatll Tell 1•
Raceway, oil the Santa Ana Froeway oo
Irvine Ranch.
Motoreycllst Hom, a warehouseman for a market 1n Buena Park, wu ridlng
his cycle to work northbound on Golden
West Avenue at I p.m. Wednesday when
he lTaahed into a car driven by Clara
Scarboroulh, of Anaheim who was turn. hie left aI Garden Grove Boulevard,
Wet1mlnster Police aaid.
The Orana:e County coroner said Rom
died at ·wealmJnmr Communily Hospltsl
at 1:25 1.m. today; He ia rurvived by his
wife., Sylvia.
1be ScQtchman's Cove accident oc.
curred lhortly before 2 o'clock this
morning, the CHP aaid. Hovard waa d,.d on arrl'11 al South eoa.t Community
Hospl\I~ Sooth Luuna.
The teenqe gtr18 in the second auto were both reported in good coodiUon aod
were 1o be transferred today from Hoag
Memorial llolpltal, In Newport Beach, to
Kaber Hospital In Fontana. lle!ldes hack
ln]urlea, they su!!ered cull and briuaes. The coroner said Tayklr was fatally
Injured In the 7,45 p.m. Wedneaday cruh
at the raceway and died three hours
lat.tr at Santa Ana Community HospltaJ.
Driver of the car in which Taylor was
riding, Timothy J. Lewi!, II, or Santa
Ana, also wu taken to the Santa Ana
hoepltal where he was treated for major
cull and released.
In the HCOnd car were driver Gary
Allen, !I, of 2973 Bristol St., Costa Meaa,
not injured and Pat JUce. 24, of Orange,
who wu treated at the scene for minor
ln]url ...
The CHP uid the Lewis car, approarh-
lng the ractway on the freeway access
road, puaed another on a blind curve
and collided beadon with the Allen car,
which was leaving the ractway.
Fron• Page L
PROTEST •..
area and location only. not on the value
of the ,llnd or-tts buildings.
ult doesn't make any difference
whether it'.! a vacant lot or a lot with a
$50,000 house," he said.
Another speaker asked if it would be
PoSSible to hire another assessment
engineer.
The woman said that It would cost only
about $&.80 per parcel to hire another
~ngineer to get another professional opi·
nlon of lhe assessment spread.
City Attorney Rimel saJd it was J>OSsi-
ble but Impractical to do so, noting that
the council could direct the present
engineer to use a ctllferent asseasment
ronnula If It wi!hed. He said the action
would just result in spending money un-
necessarily .
John OiFlore. representing the Hilltop
Homeowners Assoclatloo, said that they
would like to see the matler delayed until
November. The group had at first asked
that the council delay the decision two
wuks, which was done.
Lagunan Guilty
Of Drug Charge
One or three Laguna Beach re&ldents
lndk:ted by lhe Orange County Grand
Jury an drugs chargei has pleaded guilty
In Superior Court to the &ale oC mari·
Juana.
Judge Howard camenm o r d e r e d
Olrlltopber M. Yeomans, 21. ol 2613 Vic-
toria Drive, to rttum to court Sept. 18 for
proballon hearing and sentencing. He
faces a poaaible ~nttnce oi two to 10
yeara in state prison.
Yeomans was one of eight. petJOOS in-
dicted by the Grand Jury on a variety or
char1ea involving narcotics a n d
dangeroos drugs. COurt action Is pending
in the cases of Setty Jean Creamer, 36,
•nd Sandra Yvonne Shclby, both d 27111
S. Coast Higbway, Laguna Beach.
Mrs. Creamer is accused or sclllng
LSD. possessing marijuana wiOi in ttnt to
sell and pc>ssts.!llon of dangtro\ls druga.
Miu Shelby I! charied wttb aelllna I.SO,
,
CAILT P1LOT ,_.. ~ TtnJ Ct't'llM
,j
·Gulf Coast •
Plagued
.. By Looters
PASS CHRISTIAN, Miao. (UP[)
Looters, black marketeers and sta.c·
gering sanitation problems plagued the
Gulf Coast survivors today and the rem~
nanLI of HurriCane CamJlle clabned more
victlms in Virginia iµ>d West Virtlnl1.
Tbe toll of the strongest tiurrlcane ever
to strike the U.S. mainland climbed
toward 300 today with uncounted bodies
still buried in the mud and debria of the
Gulf Coast and the raging waters uf
Virginia and West Virginia rivers.
The storm itself struck out into the
Atlantic Ocean, heading away from land,
ltaving an incredible swath of death and
destruction along i t 11 thousand-mile
cvetland track from the Gulf of J.1elico
to the AUantic.
-~#!<!Ll!l!O.._.WJJ· .._.w_ere_found Jn P.ass
Christian late Wednesday, hours after a
Civil Defense official said the Gulf Coast
toll had reached 237. Mississi ppi Gov.
John BeU Williams said today that "We
have a minimum or 230 bodie.!I" on the
Mississippi Coast.
Five were dead in Louisiana, at leut 30
ln Virginia and two in West Virgin.ii'.
Cecil Yarbro, ezecuUve secretary o(
the MissiMlppi State Building Com·
mission, said "We've got tons of bodies
now and they 're still digging them out."
TINY PUP STANDS TALL IN A SHOT GLASS
And Still Luves Room for •n le• Cube
A force of nearly 2,500 National
Guardsmen patrolled the &IO-square·mile
area of devastation in Mississippi and
Louisiana. They reported instances of
Joe.ting and black marketeering. but of·
ficials said they had it under control.
Sho1glass Pup
Ounce Small Eve11, for Chihuahua
Small Is In this year. Just ask Cricket,
the mother of a day-<1ld, one ounce
Chlhual)ua' in Fountain Valley.
Cricket's little pup is 110 tiny he can sit
up in a shot glass and still leave room for
an let cube.
He was so weak at first, that Mrs.
Samuel Sisley, 15168 l\ocky Road Court.
Cricket's owner, had to feed b1m milk
from an eye dropper every 4.5 minule.!I.
The veterinarian said if he lived %4
hours he would have a 50-.so cblnoe at
survival. Forty-eight hours and he would
make it all the way, the smallest puppy
the vet had ever seen.
So far so gocld. The little fella , born at
6:» p.m., Tuesday, has now grown
strong enough to feed from his mother.
And he shows a Jot of spirit for a pup in
the bantam weight class or Chihuahuas.
The little tyke has a brother and sister.
each af normal weight, close to three
ounces. His dad, named Poky, is the
mailman's dog.
Mn. Staley said the pup was just fine
this morning and looks like he'll make it.
"He's like a child, so helpless," ahe
said.
Nixon Appoints 5 Envoys;
Italian Choice Surprises
President Nixon Wednesday nominated
career diplomat Graham A. MarUn as
U.S. ambassador to Italy.
The nomination, expected to be routine-
ly confirmed by the Senate, came as a
&urprlae in BOme quarters.
Jt had been rumored thal the am-
bassadorship would go to H e n r y
Salvatori, a Los Angeles millionaire who
has been a heavy financial contribu:tor to
GOP campaigns.
But presidential press secretary Ron
Ziegler, who announced Martin's nomlna·
lion, denied hearing Salvatori'• name
mentioned during Whitt Ho u s e
di scussions of the post.
"I'd just stick with this announcement,
if I were you," he smilinJl;ly a d v i s e d
newsmen at Laguna's Surf and Sand
Hotel.
Martin, 56, is a one-time Washington
reporter.
The native of North Carolina has been
In government Hervice since joining the
National Recovery Administration In
193.1. He entered the Foreign Service in
1947 and most recently served as Special
Assistant ·to the Secretary of State for
Retltgee ind Migration Affairs.
In Rome, l'le wlll succeed Ambassador
H. Gardner Ackley 1 who ia leaving
gavernment service.
In 1963, President Kennedy appointed
Martin as ambassador to Thailand. Jn
December, 1967, he received the Depart-mm of State's Distinguished Honor
Award. He is married to the former
Dorothy Wallact. They have' two
daughters and 1 son.
175 Acres Blackened
AUBURN (UPI) -A lire blackened
about 17S acres of brush before being
brought under control Wednesday about
three miles south of thia Placet County
community.
Early today <:amille -now considered
an AUantic storm rather than a hur·
ricane -was centered about 400 miles
east of the Virginia capes and moving
tastward at 20 to 25 miles an hour. It.I
highest winds of 50 miles an hour
threatened no la'KI area.
Phone Company
Worker, Fireman
Rescue Woman
A t.elepnone company employe and
Laguna Beach firemen saved the life of a
woman whose apartment was gutt.ed by
flames early this mgrning.
Sarah Bangs, 51, was in South Coast
Community Hospital this morning after
being pulled from her apartment at 668
G!enneyre St. by Dale Cutright ol Garden
Grove.
Cutright told firemen he was driving by
the apartment at about 2:30 a.m. when he
saw smoke in the living room. When be
stopped, he $aw Mrs. Bangs standing in
apparently hysterical condition in her Jlv.
ing room, watching flames engull her
couch.
Cutright tore away a screen and bum·
ing draperies to enter the room through a
window. He then pulled the woman to
u.fety.
Mrs. Bangs then r a n back into the
burning apartment to get her purse,
Cutright told firemen . He pulled her out a
second time, and turned her over to
neighbors who had assembled out.side.
As name.! spread to a kitchen, Cutright
went nelt door and led. two blind women
to safety, according to firemen . He then
reW~ to the burning apartment and
began wat.erin& it down with a aarden
hose.
Jn the ineantime. firemen arrived at
the scene, and found that Mrs. Bangs had
stopped breathing. Firemen couldn'S
detect any pulse.
Fireman Robert Passage administered
external cardiac massage, while olher1
applied a resuscitator.
Other firemen then extinguished the
flames, which did an eslimated ,4,000
damage to the apartment.
SALE Just two weeks more . . thru August 30
ORD£R IN TOUR CHO!Cli Of STYLES ANO FABRIC
AT A MOST GENUOUS SA VfNGS •••
HERITAGE
& ltTtng tradJUon in fur-nlt.ur•
H.J.GAl\l\ETf fUR~lplRE
PROFESSIONA~
INTERIOR DESIGNlRS
..
'
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
"46-0275 646-027'
'
•
•
-..... - --.
• I '
Newport Barbor
EDITION
:tOL'..-62,,.NO. 200r l SECllONS,-3<l-P-AGES-' ------"'-'-'
'
DAILY .. ,LOT .. IMli. lY Rlcllar• Ktttillr
EL TORO COMMANDER HISE ESCORTS NIXONS FROM MARINE CORPS ONE TO AIR FORCE ONE
'Work Brtak' .Takts Prt1id1nt to San Francisco for Talks With South Korta'1 Park
Nixons Fly to Bay City
First Family Hosts Korean President Park
L From ~wire Servi~•
America's First Family flew out of El
Toro MCAS t,oqay fQit ~a s.a· FranciscO
meeting with their Korean counterparts
and a mini-version of last week's Apollo
11 state dinner tonight.
A small crowd of about 60 persons
•atc:hed President Nixon and h.is family
oil at 10:10 a.m. waiting under warm,
rriendly skies of the United States Marine
Corps base.
A glittering array or guests -including
actress June Allyson, of Lido lsle -and
Zs.a Zsa Gabor and Mrs. Clark Gable
have been invited to the 8 p.m. affair in
the SL Francis Hotel.
Some of the toughesl se<:urily precau-
tions in San Francisco history were tin.
posed for the viait of J>resident Nlxon and
President Park Chung Hee. •
An ~timated 5,000 persons are ex-
~ to ttowd the streets around the
famed Bay City hostelry, including SOO
anti -war demon1trators.
The gala banquet tonight, one of few
ever held outside \Vashington -like the
Apollo 11 fete-will draw San Francisco
State f;ollege President Dr. S. I.·
Hayakawa and also Henry Ca bot LOOge,
chief U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace
talks.
Sout.h Korea's president modestly sug·
Three Die in Separate
Orange County Crashes
Thrte young men died \Vednesday
night and this morning in separate traf·
fie accidents in Westminster. on Pacific
Coast Highway north of La guna Beach
and ·at the entrance to Orange Cou nty
Raceway.
The dead are:
-Russell W. Horn. 24, of 5682 Mangrum
Drive, Huntington Beach.
-Daniel E. Hovard, 17, of Pasadena.
~amill D. Taylor, 17. of Santa Ana.
Horn died of a skull fract ure suffered
w.hen his motorcycle rammed a car in
Wesllpinster. Hovard. driving a small foreigri car,
1961 Cotrnty Traffic 1961
l:&a Death Toll 13&
Irvine Ran ch.
Motorcyclist 11orn, a warehouseman
ror a markel in Buena Park, was riding
his cycle to work northbound on Golden
West Avenue at 9 p.m. Wednesday when
he crashed into a car driven by Clara
Scarborough, of Anaheim who was turn-
ing left at Garden Grove Boulevard,
Westminster poli ce said.
The Orange County coroner said l{orn
died at Westminster Comn~unity Hospital
at 1 :23 a.m. today. He is survived by his
wife, Sylvia.
The Scotchman's Cove aCcident oc-
curred shortly before 2 o'clock lhis
morning, the CHP said. Hova rd was dead
on arrival at South Coast Community
Hospital. South Laguna.
. The teenage girls in the :second auto
!Seo CRASHES, Pago ti
gested typical American food for the ban-
quet, buL Mrs! Nix~ ,aPtr'flved • menu
not seen every ' nillit m the typical
American home.
Mousse of sole, brtest. of ducklirg a
I' orange, potatoea. Berny, tomatoes
farcises, limestone, . lettuc~ usorted
cheeses crrom11e1) and bgs roma •ill be
offered , plus California wines.
EntertaHiment ·will include a ft1arine
Corps band for so-ealled hard rock dan-
cing, plus SpaniJh flamenco and classical
guitarists Celedonio Romero and his
th ree sons.
Various gifts will be exchanged by
(See NIXON, Pa&e %)
Planning Board
Studies Irvine
Building Request
Irvine Company requests to create two
land parcels for construction of the giant
Seaboard Finance Co. corporate head·
quarters at Newport Center will be
discussed at tonight's Newport Beacll
Planning Commission meeting.
The tract is located in the 600 block of
Newport Center, between Newport Center
Drive East and San Joaquin Hills Road
and between Santa Rosa Drive and Santa
Cruz Drive.
In a related use permit application, the
planners will be asked by the Balboa and
Meritplan Insurance C<mpanies lo
permit construction of a mulU-level park·
ing garage on a lot separate from the site or the Seaboard building.
80th companies are owned b y
Seaboard. 'Fonighl's meeting starts at I
o·clock in city council chambers.
"
•
Toefay's Flnal
N.Y. Steeb-
Defense Funds Cut
Laird Warns Slashes Weaken U.S.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense
Secretary Melvin a: Laird allltOUO«<I to-
day he was yielding to congressional
pressure and reluctantly reducing the na.
tion's anned forees by 100,000 men and
spending by U -billion.-Ha..wamed: "lt..is
~!ear our defense readineM will be
weakened.'•
Laird told a news conference he
ordered the cuts after being infonned by
the chairman of the House Ap-
propriations Committee that at least 45
Looters Swarm
0¥er Ravaged
Coast of Gulf
PASS CHRISTIAN, MIS!. (UPI) -
Looters, black marketeers and stag~
gerlng sanitation problems plagued the
Gulf Coast survivors today and the rem·
nants of Hurricane Camille claimed more
victims in Virginia and West Virginia.
The toll of the strongest hurricane ever
to strike the U.S. mainland climbed
toward 300 today with uncounted bodies
still buried in the mud and debris of the
Gulf Coast and the raging wat.en uf
Virginia and West Virginia river1.
The stonn itself struck out into the
Atlantic Ocean, beading away from land,
leaving an incredible swath of death and
destruction along i ts thousand·mlle
overland track from the Gv.U of Mexico
to thf AIW\dc. •
Tbir11 "'°" """" "'" ...... ,. P'ut Christian late Wednesday, hours after ~
Civil Defense official .aaid the Gut( Cout
toll bad .reached 2.17. Misrilslppi Gov,
John Beil Wllllam1 11ld today that "Wo
have a mintmwn of 230 bodies"' on the
Mississippi Coast.
Five were dead in Lcuisiana, at least 30
in Virginia and two in West Virginia,
Cecil Yarbro, executive 'sectelar1 ol
tlie Mississippi State Building Com·
mission, said "We've got tons of .bodies
now and they're sun digging them out."
A force of nearly 2,500 National
Guardsmen patrolled the 600-square-mile
area of devastation in Mississippi and
Louisiana. They reported instances of
looting and black marketeering, but of•
ficials said they had it under control.
Early today Camille -now considered
an Atlantic stonn rather than a hur·
ricane -was centered about 400 miles
emit of the Virginia capes and moving
l':astward at 20 to 25 miles an hour. tts
highest winds of 50 miles an hour
threatened no land area.
Stock Market.
NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market.
drifted through another session today.
with brokers reporting investors eonUn·
uing cautious and staying out of the ac·
tion. (See quotations, Pages 10-11).
Trading near the cl06e was slow. The
Dow Jones industrial average at 2 p.m.
was 1.85 at 835.07.
175 Acres Blackened
AUBURN (UPI) -A fire blackened
about 175 acres of brush before being
brought under control WedneMlay about
three miles south of this Placer County
community.
billion would be CJ.ll from defense ap-administration.
propriations requests. In addit.ion to the 100,()()().man ~ctim
"I wtsh it were possible for me to state in uniformed ranks, another 50,00I)
that these cuts could be· made without civilian jobs would be eliminated and 100
impairing our de£ense readiness," Laird ships would be mothballed.
said.-!!Regrtuably-1-must.aar,-that-lhe~,.~-"The-<llstlngulshed-cblarman-of tht·
cuts will reduce our capability to meet House Appropriations Committee has
current commitments.',' stated that his committee will cut at least
Laird 's actions would reduce defense $5 billion ••• and has alerted me to the ~pending from $80 billion to $77 billion, a fact that the current C'tseal year is run-
f\gure . Pentagon officials said was $4.1 n1ng and that actlnn should be taken
billion beloW !}le requests of the Johnson (See PENTAGON, Page%)
Splrltliftl "Fall
Police suspect 20-year-old Bos·
ton man of attempted Bible
burglary Wednesday at Har-
vard University. They found
him lying at bottom of court-
yard oul.jide Widener Library
with two copies of ,rare Guten-
berg Bibles· beside. bi!tt. ,Cat
burglar appa.renUy lost his foot•
ing, fell 60 feet clutching
volumes worth $1 million.
. I
Wayne Files Suit
Over Wild Goose
Actor John Wayne of Newport Beach
Is suing a building material finn for
$72,000 damageS done to his 136-foot
yacht, Wild Goose, and p&,250 for brea~h
of contract.
Wayne's lllit, filed in Los Angeles
Superior Court Wednesday, said he
charted the diesel powered yacht to
lnterpact Gorporation · last. May 18·
through 2;J. ni.e boat ran aground on May
19 In San Diego'Hatbbr, the Suit said and
sustained damages of $72,000.
CofC Nearing
Suggestion
On Sex Oass
By JANICE BERMAN
Of tM 0.11)' l'llft Stiff
The Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce today is moving closer to Its goal
of a set of recommendatiOl'll on sex
education and family lite instruction for
the Newport-Mesa Unified S c boo I
District.
The studies are expected to be com-
pleted within the next three montm.
The Chamber's commiUee, h<aded by
Dr. Nolan Frizelle, has invited guest
speakers with a wide range of
backgrounds to discuss the controversial
Issues involved in setting up web a pro-
gram.
Past speakers have included poUoe
detectives, health department staff ~
pie, psychologists and educaten.
This week the committee beard a
woman physician who i1 seeking election
to the Orang• Cowlty 8':booi llolrd AUJ.
26.
ORANGE INTERNIST
She II Dr. Doril Aruajo <i Oranp, in
Internist.
lier practice deals ft!Oltly with adults,
but her views on sex educaUon are deriv-
ed from her role a& ''a mother of fCXll'
children."
She said today. "E am oppc:lfit!d to any
kind of course wbJch is not taught with
inorals."
When asked what kind of morals the
referred to, she replied, "I th.int we
!hould just say morals."
Or. Aruajo said ah< felt the fldl ol
biologi,cal reproduction should be taught
"at appropriate age levels, and alwaya in
a dignlfied and modest manner."
She said she approved of the teaching
of the facts of · venereal CUsease at the
high school level.
"II ha< to II< done, unfor\Wlatoly,
because VD is rampant in our society."
FAVOR PROGRAM
At the Monday Chamber committee
seMion. the internist told panel members
that there are three groups who favor
programs of family life and JeJ educ.a·
tion : professionals, such as physician.s~
population planning experb and planned
parenthood groups, and sex educators.
Dr. Aruajo said the 11ex educators are
interested in "the study of sexual If.an.
dards and behavior without any de.finl:tion
of right and wrong."
She said, "They want to acquaint the
child with all the facts and lhen let him
make up hl.s own mind about what ii
right and wrong."
"l must oppose thiJ form of education
because it does not include the principlea
of right and w,rong," she aaid. crossed over the center line at Scotch· ·
man's Cove north of Laguna and smash·
ed h,eadon into a car carrying teenagers
Bonnie Lynn, 16, or 711 Ocean Blvd.,
Huntington Beach. and Cathleen Farrilor,
16 of Claremont. Both girls suffered back
tnJuries but were reported today in good
condition.
Pygmalion Unruffled Wayne al:ta laid the boat was nol
Murned to his Newport Beach home at
2628 Bay Sflore Drive until July 19, nearly
two monlhs•arter the end of lhe charter
period. He asks $36,250 for the breach of
conb'acL
Dr. Frlz:elle commented 9 ''Understanding the beliers of these three
groopg might enable us to come up with a
program that's more effective than any
(See SEX ED, Pa1e t)
Taylor was a passenger In anotht"r
amall foreign car involved in a headon
crash. The California Highway Patrol
aaid the driver passed on a blind curve
on the entrance road to Orange County
Raceway, off the santa Ana Freeway on
Blood Donation
' ' Story Corrected
Directions for donating blood to the ac·
c:ount o( badly injured surfer ~ve
Moyero publish<d Wednesday in the DAI-
LY PILOT were incorrect. ,
The American Red Cross, rlQf. the blood
bank, will accept donations of blood for
the seflously injured youth only through
., its bloodmobile program. The blood col-
lection veh)c.le will stop a' Hoag
Memorial Hospital Friday, Sept. 12, to
receive blood donatiorui.
Donors can give blood in t.ht blood-
mobile parked near the hospital's con-
'f~ee center from 2:30 p.m. until 7
p.m. Appointments tire necessary. They
can be made through the Red Cross
headquarters in Anaheim, teltphone 774-
3782.
Pigeon on Thigli Steals Show at Festival
By JEROME F'. COLLINS
Of lllt O.Uy l'li.t Sl•ff " A pigeon pounced cm Pygmalion's thigh
al the Pageant of the Masters in Laguna
Beach Wednesday night.
It brought down the house. But"jt didn'l
stop th• show.
Pygmalion -a white paint.coated Jiv.
ing nude -didn't move. Just her flne-
feathered frieOO did.
lt napped its wings frantically tryin'g to
get a good grip on the "statue's" slippery
· thigh. Aod its claws dug in deep.
But Pygmalion still didn't move.
The audience o( 2,300 at lrvine Bowl.
meanwhlle, applauded tbe p i g e o n ' s
pcrfonnanct wildly. The amphithea ter
rocked with roaring laughter,.
the pigeon, Festi val ot Arts officials
explained this morning. was a homing
pigeon that didn't go home: as ii Wa$ SUI>'
posed to.
ltere'a the story behind the whole
hurnillating aftalr:
The piegon was one of 10 ke'pl in a cage
11top the Trvine Bowl stage. The birds are
owned by 13-year-old Kirk Woloshyn,
• '
whose home is oul in Laguna Canyon
about a mile from the Festival grounds.
Every night during the run ol the
Pageant, the FestJval's annual big shOw,
Kirk has been releasing the piegons when
the bell is tolled Jn i•'Mle Venice !tell."
another "living picture". The fluttering
pigeons are supposed to recreate the en·
vironment of Venice's San Marcos Plaza.
"The Venice Bell comes on before the
curtains part on "Pygmalion and
Galatea." By then, the pigeons have
headed on home out in the.canyon.
Bui Wednesday night one .toyed
bellind.
lnslead, ft womed abotit the bowl, look~
Ing for a place to touch down.
Then on came "Pygmalion and
G;ilatea."
Galatea, lhe sculptor, sat there, with
eyes closed, in qulct contemplation.
Pygmalion stood there, w1th eyet open, in
less quiet contemplaL!<111-especially JO
when the pigeon flew )n'her dirllCfjon.
''Pigeons obviou!llY do' hare an Affinity
for statues," explained Fe.stivaJ publicist
sal)jl Reeve Wer.
I
The bird landed first on Pygmalion's -
er, ah -chest. But it slipped off.. Then it
new about for a few seconds, finally com-
ing to a fiUul rest on Pygmalion'• thigh.
Galatea kept his eyes shut throughout
the incident, wondering what all the
laughter was about.
The scene lasted less than thru
minutes, according to schedule. For
PyiJ11alion they wtte a very long few
minutes. But she didn't move a muscle.
Finally, though, as the curtain& closed,
she smiled slightly,
The aildlente·burst into thundering ap-'
pJauae. ~·Enconi!" sbollttd one clown.
Mra. Reeve, noting that 'the FesUval.
tiever releases the nanles of its Pageant.
perforiTu!h'' ("patUcuJarlY the 'nudes"),
COf\C)Uded~ , .
'.'At tho very least, I ~k P.ygmalion
ahciuld get a purple heart. She bad '50me
scratches, you know." •
• AD<I th< pigeon! . , .
It WBI plucked elf pygmalion'• !hlih by
• stage hana. And canJed home rn • ,box.
· From· -°'11 11id Kirk .Woloohyn ,' fllere fllll ~· ilaly, n1ne ~ !ol<ued
. foe l'Tlle Venlci Bell.'1
-
Worker Injured
As Gas Explodes
· A 2f.year old construction workers suf·
lered serious bums Wednesday when a
gaflOUne can he was using4o fill a hot tar
pump aploded.
. Newport Beaeb police said Clllborl L.
Hanson of Orange wa.s pouring gasoline
into the pump at 2015 E. Bay-'1de Drtve
when, some gag splashed on the pump's
hot ..,me, ignlilng lh• can. .
• HIOIQG was ·uken : to Hoag Hospital
'lfilll llrat and ...,...i<1ogree bums 111 hil
left mn and body.
. lfo hlf • -translernd -to Pitm
-l!oapital.
Carrier lJumps Tug
SAN ,RAJIC!sco CUPh •. -The
ma.ssj ve carriv"Uss Cloral.Sea bumped.a
W,bO"ol·and 6er1~1oc1a~ '" d._: tog olf th• 0.kl'11 Qato, d""1PIO( ,a bill dozen
~aqiep into ~~-I ' I
1 ..
Oraage
Weatlter
Partly cloudy momlng1 and
sunny afternoons are sut~ tn
the offing for tht Orange
Coast, with temperaturea rang·
ing from 75 to. 85 d~pending on
where you park your car •
INSmE TODAY
Scnote critics of Pnitogon
zero fn on expenditures bu.t
Pentagon fears such action may
gite ever mor1 atUoe Ru.ssian.t
l•arfuj advantdg<. Pcge 23; ·
•
-;-f DAILY·
N•t LA MUll..-1~ I
Nixon's Italian
Choice Sur • rise
PrtaldtM Nixon Wedne9day nominated
Career diplomat Graham A. Martin u
U.S. ambassad« to Italy.
The nominalioft, expected to be rouUoe·
Jy coofit!ned by the Senate, came u a
turprlae In oome quarters.
II bid bttn rumonod thal the am·
baasadonhip would 10 to H en r Y
Salvatori, a Los Angeles millionaire who
has been a heavy financial CQntributor to
GOP campaigns.
But presidential preM secretary Ron
Ziegler, who aJlOOunced Martin's nomlna·
tJ.on. denied hearing Salvatori's name
Frono Page J
. ' mentioned duri111 White H o u. 1 e
dlscussiona of the pool.
"l'd just stick with tbll announcement.
if I were "JOO," he nnlllngly adv 1 • e d
newsmen at Laguna's Surf and Sand
Hotel ••
Marlln, Ill, Is a one-time Wubln&toa
reporter.
'llle native of North Carolina has been
in-government service 1lnce joining the
National Recovery Administration in
1933. He entered the Foreign Service in
1947 and moat rtctnt1y aerved u Special
Aoslstanl to the Secretary of State for
Refugee and Migration Affairs.
In Rome, he will 11ucceed Ambassador
H. Gardner Ackley, wbo Is leaving
governmeDt 5tfVice,
In 1913, Prealdenl Kennedy appointed
Martin u ambaasador to Thailand. In
Tanks Sent
As Czechs
f>r otest '
PRAGUE (UPI\ -The C?ecboslovak
government aent tanks toni&ht into
Prague where crowds estimated as hilh
as 100,000 exploded Into noisy anti~
RulSian protell!. Some persona were hit
by Lear cu and beaten with clubs.
°"..monstraUom alJo were reported in
other cities, on this nm anniversary ot
the Soviet invasion, and in Brno, 110
miles away, police used fireholel to con·
trol crowds o! youths1 Sixty tanks took up po11ition1 (In the
we.si bank Of the Moldau River, two miles
from. Wencealas Square, the scene or
today's noisiett outburst at an emotional
noon demonstration when Czechoslovaks
-and eome of their soldiers -chanted
••Russians go home."
CRASHES-..• -Decomber,-ltl'lc be 1ed!l~ the Dopart.-
menl of Slate'• Dlstlngulabed Honor
Award. He ill married to tbe former
Dorothy Wallace. They have t w o
daughters and a ion. were both reported in good condlUon and
were to be transferred today from Hoag
Memorial Hospital, in Newport Beach, to
Kaiser Hospital in Fontana. Besld~s back
injuries, they suffered cuts and bnuses.
COUPLE TAK0E SOGGY SUMMER STROLL DOWN MAIN STREET 01' GLASGOW, VIRGINIA
Camille Sp•nka Old Dominion; WH'!'t r lureou Saya Plooda Worat Since 1936
The.re were 1kirmishe1 In the strftt5
lhrooghoul the day and "' the 5 o'clock
nWt hour approached yomi.g
demonstralOis arm-----eclWIUi C'Obble ittiies
balUed police In the Pransa Be1111 am ·a· .
quarter mile from the square. Other
fighting wu reported in the old town aec-
tor.
The coroner said Taylor was fatally
Injured In the 7:45 p.m. Wednesday crash
at the ractWay and died thtte hours later at Santa Ana Community Hospital
Drit•er of Ole car in wtlich Taylor was
riding, iimothy J. Lewis. 19. of Santa
Ana. also was taken to the Santa Ana
hospital where he was treated for major
cult and released. Jn the second car were driver Gary
AUen, 31, of 29'13 Brlslol SI., Costa M ....
nol Injured and Pal Rice, 24, of Orange,
who wu treated at the scene for minor
Injuries.
Tbe CHP oald the Lewis car, approach-
ing the raceway cm the freeway acceu:
road, passed another on a blind curve
and collided he.adon with the AUen car.
which w•a le.avi114 the raceway.
Poalbility ol brmging chargfS against
Lewis ts being invesOgated, the CHP
said.
Fro"' Pare J
NIXON ...
dign]tariea at the formal event, followed
Frldll)' by an informal luncheon hosted by
Secretary of Slate WUllam P. Rogers, at
the exclusive Bohemian Club.
The luncheon will precede !Ummit talks
=i:~ta the U.~. and South Korean , .after Which the two chiefs of
state will issue a joint communique.
Followlng his arrival in San Francisco
today, President NiJon assured President
Park 111111 violent provocaUOlll )>y ·Ille_
militant North Korean relime will not lft-
timidate American commltmenta there.
''Together we have resisted hara st-·
ment fn:m the North during the past two
years,•: President Nixon told him,
~ "together we have discovered that the
JI dancer ••. has only stiffened our resolve,"
• ; He added that the U.S. would still stand
., by the mall republic after some type of
::i Vietnam ptace is achieved.
Tbe Sludenl Mobilizallon Commlltee.
;:t one al eeveral militant groups UJ>et.ted.
i to demonstrate, passed out leafletl ·
charging Parlt as the Korean COWllerpart
ol South Yletuemese Presldenl Nguyen
Cao Ky,
They said the anti-war movement is
pledged to the r!ghl of .Vlelnam"e aod .
Koreans to wor~ out their own futures
wllhoul American intervention.
' Young Woman J umps
From Golden Gate
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Authorities
sought ldentHication today of a woman
whose body was recovered shortly after
she jumped from the Golden Gate Bridge
early Wednesday.
1be victim, about 23, a brunette, five
feet four and weighing 125 pound!, was
the bridge's 367th known IUidde and the
27th .. Jane Doe."
D~ILY PllOT
OUNCla CGA11 """-•U.. CDVANY
l.Mrt N.Wt-4 _,.._
Jetk I. e.rt..,
Wlal ~ W Gffllrtl Mlfltttf
n. .. , ........ 11 -' Tit.111" A. ""'''lli•• ........ (., ... . J,,,,.. F. e.111., --"" ----1211 w ... a.n ...... ,...,,.
MtUl .. MM.tP.0. ... 1111.tJMJ, --
Martl.n is one of flve ambauador·
nominees announced Wednesday. The
others are:
-Dau1Ia_1 Mac~rUtar 0, ambassador
to Jran.MacArthw· has been ambassador
to Austria since 1967. The &G-year-<1ld
career diplomat. nephew of the late
· General, will succeed Ambusador Annin
H. Meyer, now mnbauador to Japan.
-RobW.. McDw•ne, ambassador to
Kenya. Mcllvalnt, 55, hu been am-
bassador to the Republic of Guinea.
-Joba Patrick Wallli, ambaslador to
Kuwait. Walth. $1, hu MrYed u lding
execuUve eecretary of the Department of
StJte.
-Vlncnl do Rlolel, -to Jamaica. A naUve of Loa Ancdes, tbe 43-
year-old ttal estate necaUve wu recenUy elected _ ... cl the Village of
North Hills, N.Y.
· Frono P .. e J
PENTAGON. ••
now," Laird added.
Laird aald the c:utbacks came at a time
wben Sovlel mlJltary illr<nglb Is in-
creasing and added: 0 1 believe it la Im·
portanl 111111 the American public lie tn-
fonned about tteppe<klp Soviet activities
in strategic offensive and defwive
field.!!.'"
He also aald he 11w JtO l(tll In the Vlei·
nam war, pointinc out that enemy m.
itiated activity in the V1etoam ccnfiict
wai bi&her durinl the ftnt six -of
F rom p .. ., J
SEX ED •..
one of the three (programs each eroup
might advocate) taken by itself."
Many more persons will be in-
terviewed, Dr. Frizelle indicated, before
the study ts completed.
.. We have received quite a bit oI crank
mail and correspondence taking &troflg
views ·from both sides but we will still
it.and by our promise to make this study
as objective u possible," he said.
Frtzelle attes&ed that the commiUee's
recommendations ''might not be in the
form of definJUve suggestions, merely
1<>me guidelines the district people can
use in drawing up a curriculum if they
Wl5h."
He &aid the committee has followed a
four-point fcrmat: questioning of KUe5ts
who are well-versed with the subject;
studying materials and c u r r i c u I a ;
evaluaUng public optruon on the con-
trovenial issue. and drafUng suggestions
for the implemenUng oC programs for the
Harbor Area.
Jail Confession
Bid Withdrawn
lhls )'U1' lhaD durinif a illmlllrll'$111n •• Y>ll#IGEJ.ES IUPll -The defense
1961. But he said U.S. forces are now opened its case today in the trial of two
engaged in a atrategy of .. protective brothers charged with murdering ailent
reaetion." screen actor Ramon Novarro.
Arkansas Mayor Calls
Emer gency in Mar ch
HAZEN, Ark. (UPI) -Wllb a handful
of unanned black militant marthen a
twCl-day walk away -Mayor Jerry J.
Screeton threw up ·road blocks, armed
130 auxillary pollcemen With llhotguns
and closed all businesses in preparation
for the. "March Acainst. Feat." ,
The marchel'll -which numbered eight
•I the mosl -were to pau lhrough Ha·
zen Saturday.
Before resting the sate'a cue Wed·
nesday, Prosecutor James J de man
withdrew an offer to call Robert F •
Pe.terson, who had told jail officials that
one of the brothe.n, Thomas Scott
Ferguson, 18, bad admitted the slaying
while ln JaU before going to trial.
'nle withdrawal came after two hours or discussion, wlthaut the presence of the
jury. At the close of these di scussions
superior Court Judge Mark Brandler rul·
ed that: disclosures by Peterson would
have to b:e confined t,o 1'1omas Feri\150n
and could not include any accusations
made against his eldet brother, Paul
Robert Ferguson, 23.
Stanton Gaslight Killer
Saved by. High Court
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of '911 O.lb' ..... l'9ff
A killer Who cut down two would-be
heroes in the $1,200 leiTOflsl holdup of a
Slantoo nightclub -then lried llUlclde to
escape the gas chamber -'!f'U spared by
lhe California S•prem• Court Wed-
needay.
One vote was the margbi ol life for
WUUam w. "The Man" McClellan, 28,
whose 1981 death penalty waa revened on
a 4 to 3 vole by the bl&h ·.....i in
Sacramento.
. Uncorroborated evidence of a prior
crime speee by the beady-eyed killer -
given by his meek accompJice -during
\he penally phase oC McClellan's trial two
yean ago was lhe basis for lhe decision.
\Vayne L. McFarland, 23, turned stalt'r
evidence against his companion after-
pleadlng guilty to twa counts of murder
just .two yw1 a,go today.
He i1 now serving Ufe In prilon, with
parole possible In five years.
The two Alhambra men We~ arrt1ted
several weds after the daring robbery ol
Tbe Gaallgh~ IJ435 Beoclt Blvd., Slanloo
21,; year1 ago.
Joe C. Gray, 35, of Huotlnclon Beach,
and James Sull'il. 40, d si.nton. were
cut down in a hall d. .31 caliber alu11
wli<n the)' began lltniwlng cbalra at Iha
robbtn.
'''The Man" wu convicted 111 the two-
11111 trlggennan In the brutal killings,
whUe McFarland, tnown •• "The Mole'"
for hb '"'bmllll" ..ie In the baodll
tt'am, flrft no 1h0ta.
A pvade of witneues who were in the
crowded tave.m abo<lt midnigbt on Feb.
ts wlito one baod~ srabbed the 1111e
mlorophont to btta k up a comedy &kll
and aMOWtCe the boldiq> lelllfled-agalnsl
lbe pair.
McClellan w11 named by the widow of
one vktlm 111 the kUler, wh!le McFarland
admlttod hb role u Ute bacman wbo
scooped up cash as his partner kept the
crowd terrified.
He testified later against McClellan.
lisUng a spree or Southland robberies,
lat.et mentioned by Deputy District Ai;
tomey James Enright during the penalty
phase of the trial.
McFarland maintained a calm, at·
times amused composure during the
sensational trial .,... shackled hand and
foot -then put u,p a bold front for
newsmen Sept. 13, 1967, when con-
demned .
Judge Samuel Dreizen upheld the jury's
verdict of death in the San Quentin gas
chamber <m both counts.
"You guys are looking at the best man
you'll ever see," McClellan snarled as he
was led out of the courtroom under heavy
guard, apparenUy trying to live up to his
nickname to the last.
Alone with his thoughts on Death Row,
however, the convicted slayer slashed his
left arm and then ~med to jailers for
help when be watched blood ronn a pool
on the Door.
Supreme Court justices also reversed
death sentencta for four other Death Row
jnmates Wednesday, all on grounds that
~ve jurors cannot be exeu&ed on-
ly fot opposing the death penally.
'Ibey included:
-Harry w. SCbader. convicted or the
196! slaying of a Sacramento policeman.
The caurt' ruled 44· that the Withes.spoon
rQllng applied.
-Delnla Stanwarth, c:onv1cted o f
several rapes and the murder of two
ltefloll• girls in the Richmond-Pinole
Art• In 1065. The vote Wiii 1-1.
-cbarles Ganlntr, .convicted ol rob-
bing and 1l1ylng an Qakland storekeeper
In J967. The vote "''' &-1. -Booker T. Biller, Jr., convicted of
1ha rape aod murder ol a Hanford alrl
Tbe volt was i.z.
Rohhle . Guarded
Hurricane Ruins Sif d for Bodi.es
PASS CHRISTIAN, Ml». (UPI) -All
that remained al Pua Ouiatiatt today
piles of lumber that once were
were the green-clad aoldien who guard In "ly ~ shelters, hundreds of
ruins that almOlt no one c:Ould really peraona 11 watt for a bot meal. Such
want . scenes famll\ar, in GuUport and
Workers eod Jlaol mac!llnea plowed Biloxi.
the debris searching for the bodiea they In the brick schoolrooml lumed Into
could smell but not see. -dormltcrlts and dilpenaarles, children
Gooe with the townfollt -monled eod cry eod plsy and lsugb and •Ing. For
_., black, whlto and cajun -are the their parents there b Diile happiness.
agonizing quests that lead men to grovtl 1bo9e tni the lhelterl have no born.ea to
in the sticky gray mud t b a t coatsV which they can return. "l1lere is no elec-
everything for IOmfl so:ap of food; and trlcity, no water, no aewe.r.ap.
that' drives a mother to !COOP sUnklng, Light bulbs have been replac~ by dim
muddy water from a ditch for her child flashlights; water comes either from the
to drink. few artesian wells or from central
Those that are gone, many of them dispensing points where it· has been
homeless, are the lucky ones. They lived trucked. A bathrbom more often·than not
through the greatest storm man hu is • slit trench !Craped from the soggy
recorded in the United Slates and now it arouDd behind a schoolhouse.
is behind them. lt will be weeks and months before
Most were airlifted and mwed there is full electricity and utilities, years
Wednesday to Camp Shelby, Miss., south before homes and bu.sinsses, the can--
of Hattiesburg, and tailed their fim hot nerles and night 1pot.s and motels of
meal since last weekend. Biloxi are rebuilt
The dead are scattered ln improvise<f Never again will there be the grand,
morgues and overcrowded mortuaries. columned homes of the. 19th century that
SUD others are buried beneath fallen stood in Pau Christian.
Clemente PT A Leade_r _____ ...... ____ .
Appea'ls Narco Charge
Mrs. Matvena Kennedi, president of a
san Clemente PTA, will appeal her con-
viction for smuggling 30-pounds of mari-
juana across the Mexican border, her at-
torney said today.
Frank Gregorcich, who defended the
44-year-<1ld mother of three liUle children
through two triala told t.'te DAILY
PILOT:
"All I can say Is that tl)ere were
general errors in Jaw at the trial. We are
basing our apj)eal on those grounds.''
He said the appeal would be filed wl~
the 9lh circull Court of Appeal today.
Mrs. Kennedy, last spring elected
president of Marco Fonter Junior High
School PTA. was convicted last month
a.Her tier nnt trial end«ftn a bUng jury.
Last week she was sentenced to an in·
detenninate sentence in federal prl!on by
U.S. District Judge C. A. Muecke.
Commenlillg on lhe ~ock jury at
the first trial, a sPokesman fOr the U.S.
Attorney's office said: '11The juron just
couldn't believe such a respectable look·
ing penon-eould have done such a thin&·"
Ml'll. KeMedy wu armted lut year at
the border when customs inspectors
noted she ~ed unusually nervous and
a search of her car turned up the marl·
Juana Jn plasUc bags under the: seats.
At her second trial, a former tenant or
her beach apartment testified that sh~
llad agreed to take marijuana acro11 the
border in her car for him because: she
wl! in fmanclal difficulties.
The tenant, Mark lianso!J,_n_ was also
convicted in connecllon wtth the case. He
failed to 11how up at his sentencing Mon-
day. A bench warrant is now out for bis
arrest.
1be government obviously erpected
more trouble tonlgllt after two nights or
anU·Rusaian outbursts which ·ao far has
killed two persora.
Today wu the first ann!venary of the
Soviet·led invasion of Czecho&lovakla and
at the stroke ol noon 15,000 Ctechoalovaks
burst into Wences.laa Squart, t h e
CUchoslov1ttk f,mbol of freedom, in a
clamorous outbunt.
Even some or tlie Czechoslovak aoldii::n
sent in to maintain order joined in the
chants of "Rualliana go home."
There had bedn two nJghta of violence In Wencesla1 Sq'uare, and two men were
reported killed by police in an outbreak
Wedne&day nJght.
More than 320 were arrested. The
government called the vk:tima criminal
elements, &Odal outcasts and hoollpns.
The heart of the demonstration was
Wence.slas Square,/' but conservative
estimates said more than I 0 0 , 0 0 0
Czechoslovaks filled that and nearby
streets. Police moved through the
crowds, hurling tear gas occasionally,
sometimes clubbing bystanders un-
mercifully.
Double Session
Fears Ended
For El Toro
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of ""' o.llr 1'1111 .,.,,
There will be no double &Wions in El
Toro thill year.
The announcemtnt wu made dwing a
special meeting of the San Joaquin school
board Wednesday night at Irvine School.
More than.100 parents who had come to
'protest double sessions at Gates and
Olivewood Schools applauded the
decision.
Double sessions had been feared
because two elementary schools schedul-
ed lo open in September, Valencia and
Aliso, have not yet been completed. But
Ralph Gates, district superindendent
said, completion of homes also has been
.slowed down. reducing the potential num·
ber of children to be enrolled in the
district.
However, school officials said, the
single session will not be without prcr
blems. Children who would normally at..
tend Aliso will be at Olivewood school,
but chiklren who would attend Valencia
would be scattered among Olivewood,
Gates, O'Neill and Linda Vista. Thus,
parents with four children in elementary
school could have a different cblld in
each school.
SALE Just twp weeks more .•• thru August 30
PROFESSlONAt
INTUIOR DESIGNERS
OIDE!t IN TOUR: CHOICE OF STYl.ES AND FABRIC
At A MOSt GENEROUS SAYINGS , , ,
•'
RERITAGE
ta 1Mng tn.d!Uon In furniture
12 15 HARBOR IL VD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646-0275 646-0276
l
" ,I
I
r -
.t;osta Mesa-
·EDITION.
Today'~ Fln•I
N.Y. Stoeka.
TEN CENTS
• "
Defense Funds Cu.t
Laird Warns Slashes Weaken V.S.
W ASHlNGTON (UPI) -De£ense billion would be cut (rom defense ap-
Secretary Melvin R. Laird announced ~ prGpriations requests.
day he wu :tlelding to congressional "I wlsh it were possible for me to state
pressure and reluctantly reducing the na-that thest cub could be made without
administration.
tion's anned forces by 100,000 men and imp_alrlng ou_c. ®Jense readine!s," Laird 1-~spenWng by $3"ti11Ilon. He wamii'.1: "ICTS sa..id ... Rcgreltably I must ~)' that these
· dear· .. our defense readlnes!: will···be···-··rotir will reduce iKfr··eip:abuny to meet
In addition to the 100,00G-man redaction
in unifonned ranks, another 50,000
civilian jobs would be eliminated and 100
ships would be mothballed.
"The distingulshed chlarman of. the
House-Appropriations Conii?Uttee • has
stated that his committee will cut at ltut
$5 billion ..• and has alerted me to the
faci that the current fiscal year ls nm-
ning and that action should be taken
DAILY ,ILOT ,.,.,._ Q RlcMll"f KMl\llr
EL TORO COMMANDER HISE ESCORTS NIXONS FROM MARINE CORPS ONE TO AIR FORCE ONE
'Work Break' T1ke1 President to Sen Fr1nt:isco for Talks With South Korea's Park
Nixons Fly to Bay City
First .Family Hosts Korean President Park
, ~ cFrom Win Services.
Alherica'• First Family new out of El
Toro llCAI! lad"l' · f!i<l.l·fa# Fra!Jcioco · m..ttnc• with their Korean · ,...i.rparts
~ a ~-or last· week's Apollo
~,linnet tonighr. . .
1 It' 'l!\>iill C"'!'d oi about IO """'°"' watcl)ecl President NiJon and bis-family
·di at 10:10 a.m. waiting. under warm,
f~ndly 11kies ol the United States Marine
COtj>i l>a•e. A glittering array or guests -including
actress June Allyson, of Lido l11le -and
Zsa Zsa Gabor and Mrs. Clark Gable
have been l?vlted to lhe a p.m. affair in
the SL Francis Hotel.
Some of the toughest securily Pfecau-
lions in San Francisco history wett Im-
posed for the visit of President Nlxon and
President Park Chung Hee.
An" esUmaled 5,000 per!Ons are · ex·.
pected to crowd the streets around the
!~med Bay City hostel!}', loc;luding 500
anU-war demonstrators.
The gala banquet· tonight, ooe of few
ever Hkt outside'Washington ~like the
Apollo 11 fete -will·dtaw San Francisco
State <'.ollege Presktent Dr. S. I.
Hayakawa and also Henry Cab9t Lodge,
chief U.S. negotiator at the Pari& peace
taikS. . '
·South Korea's president modestly sug-
gested typical American food fot the.ban·
quet.. but Mrs. Nixon approved a menu
not. seen .every night in the typical
American home.
.Mousse or sole, breast of duckling a
)'orange, potatoes Berny, tomatoes
rarcises, limestone lettuce, assorted-
c.heeses (froinages) and figs roma will be
offered, plus Callfomia wines.
Entertainment will include a Marine C9rPa band for so-called hard rock <lan-
cing, plus Spanish namenco and clas&cal
guitarists Celedonio Romero and his
lhree 90r\I.
VariOW!I gift! will be exchanged by
dignltarle1 at the formal event, followed
Friday by an informal luncheon hosted by
Secretary or state William P. Rogers, at
the erclusive Bohemian Club.
nie ni-'!Iii ~~It tan.. befweien -r tbl 11.S. and' SoUtb Korean
pregldents..,after which the two chiefs of
state willJlsue ~~ cmnmuntque. F~ bis In San Frand sco
today, Prmdmi Nlxoo 3.ssured President
Park that .violent provocations by the
militant North Korean ~~ will not in-
tin)idali ~ c~(J there.
•"Together we lMi'il cftlfl.istetf barus-
menl from the North during the 11ut two
xears," . Presidmt Nixon told _ him, """""*' ... ---.Iha! tho danaer .•. bas oo1y sUffened our resolve."
Stanton Gaslight Killer
'
Saved by High Court
· A killer who cut down two woold-be and James Seagri&, 40, of Stanton, were
heroes·in the $1,200 terrorist. holdup' of a cut down in a hail of· .31 caliber slugt
Stanton nigbtcl.ub -the?\ tried suicide to when they ·began throwing chair• at the escape the gas cha~r ""'."'"was spared by robbers.
the Callfornia Supreme Court Wed-"The Maii" was convicted as the tw~
nesday. gun trlgge?inan in the brutal killings,
One .vote was the mar•in of life for while McFarland, known as "The Mole" "'" for his submissive role in lhe bandit William W ... The Man" McClellan, 23, team, fired no &hots.
Whose 1967 death penalty was reversed on A parade of witnesses who were in the
a 4 to 3 vote by the high 'court in crowded tavern about midnight on Feb.
Sacramento. 16 when one bandit grabbed the stage
. microphone to break up a comedy skit ~nclil'fOborated evidence of a prior .1.Jld announce the boldiij>-festified against
crime spree by the beady.eyed killer -the pair.
given by his meek acc«q,plice -during McClellan was named by the widow of
the pena1ty phase o( McClellanfJ trial two one victim as the killer, while McFarland
years ago was the basis for the decision. admitted hi.! role as the bagman who
Wayne·L. McFarland, 33, turned state'11 scooped up cash as his partner kept the
evidence against his companion after crowd terrified,
pleading guilty to two counts of murder He testified later against ~lcClellan,
just two years "ago today. listing a spree of . 5outh1and robberies,
He is 'now serving' life in pri.son, with later mentioned by Deputy District At·
parole possible in five years. tomey James Enright during the penalty
.~ two .Alhambra .men, w.elie .arrested . phase of the trial.
!everal weeki after' the darin(.robbery of McFarland maintained a calm, at-Tt\t G~t.. j2"3SrBiach .81:\ld., Stantoo times amused composure during the · 2" ye&n alo. · · sensalional trial -shackled hand and
Joe C. Gray, 35, of HuntJncton Beach, (See SPARED, Paget.)
' • • t o.\tL y Pf\.9T """..., ,t.ttltw vi.....
CITY MANAGER TAf(ES WILO CUT AT FASTBALL DURING ANNUAL DIAMOND DEBACLE ,
Mlfhty McKtnll•, Othor City...Oacla Strlk-1 Victim• for Five Stralthl v .. ,.
l
weakened." r. , current commllmenls."
Laird told a news conference he Laird's actions would reduce defense
orde:ed the cuts after being Informed by spending from $80 billion to $T1 billion, a
the chainnan of the House Ap. figure Pentagon officials said was f4.l
proprlations Committee that at least $5 billion below the requests of the Johnson
Looters Swa1·m
Over Ravaged
Coast of Gulf
PASS CHRISTIAN. Miss. !UPI) -
Looters, black marketeers and stag·
gerlng sanitation problems plagued the
Gulf Coast survivors today and the rem-
nants or Hurricane Camille claimed more
victims in Virginia and West Virginia.
The toll of the strongest hurricane ever
to strike the U.S. mainland cllmbed
toward 300 t'Xlay with uncounted bodies
still burled in the mud and debris of the
Gui! Coast and the raging waters uf
Virginia and West Virginia rivers.
The storm itself struck out Into the
Atlantic Ocean, heading away from land,
lf'aving an Incredible swath of death and
destrucUon a1ong J t 1 tbousand·mile
o"'.erland ~act from lhe Gulr of Mexico
lo .the·~· Thirty more bOdies were fourid in Pass
Chri$Uan !ate Wednesday, houri after a
CtvU qei-oU!clal said. the Guli'Coa&I
toll hid. reached Jll. Mlaslaslppt GoV.
John Bell Wiiii~ said today that "We
have a minimum' of 230 bodies" on the
Mlsslsslppl Coast.
t'ive were dead in Louisiana, at lea.st 30
in Virginia and two in \Vest Virginia.
Cecil Yarbro, executive .secretary of
tbe Ml.ssisslppi St.ate Building Com·
mission. sak! "We've got tons of bodies.
now and they'rt stHI digging them ' ouL"
A force of nearly 2,500 National
Guardsmen patrolled the 600-square.mile
area or devutatlon in Mississippi and
Louisiana. They reported imtances of
Joe.ling and black markelee.ring, but of·
flcials sald they had It under control.
Blood DonatiQn
Story Corrected
Directions fOr donating bklod to the ac-
count of badly Injured surfer Steve
Meyers published Wednesday in the PA.I·
J.Y PILOT were lncorrecl
The American Red Cross, not the blood
bank, will accept donation11 of bloOd for
the seriously injured youth only througll
its bloodmobile program. The blood col·
lection vehicle will ltop at Hoag
Memorial Hospital Friday, Sept. 12, lo
receive blood donations.
Dooors can give blood lit the blood·
mobile parked near the hospital's con-
ference center from 2:30 p.m. until 7
p.m. Appointments arr: necessary. They
can be made through the Red CrOM
headquarters in Anaheim, telephone 774-
3782.
• I.Mot T• .....
Spiritual Fall
Police suspect 20.year-6ld Bos·
ton man of attemptid Bible
burglary Wedriesday at Har·
van:l University. They found
him Jying at bottom. of court-
yard oul$ide Widener Library Wlth two copies of rare ·Guten.
berg Bibles beside him. Cat
burglar apparently lost his foot·
ing, !ell 60 leet clutching
volumes worth tl million.
Arkansas l\layor Calls
Eme1·gency in March
HAZEN, Ark. (UPI) -With a handful
of unarmed black militant marchers a
two-day walk away -Mayor Jerry J.
Screeton threw up road blocks, armed
130 auxiliary policemen with shotguns
and closed all businesses in prepdratlon
for lhe "March Against Fear."
The marchers -which numbered eight
at the most -. were to pau through Ha-
zen Saturday.
Pops Fall Again
Lads. Take Generatwn Gap Game
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of "" Otl1' ,."' lltff
Softballs new ijn rout and fair nurries,
' while naccld muscles napped In flab-
bergasting fashion Wednesday a1 Costa
t.tesa city fathers fought rugged rivals
from acniu the Generalion Gap.
Records Were smashed -and the Um·
plre may have been -as the doa('ltill
nine dropped an ti to 7 game to city
playlf'OU!ld all-1lars under the !lghl.s ol
tho TeWinkle Part diamond.
"We never got 'abea4 before,'' shrieked
Parks Director Joe Jones u the City
Pops' seventh run was tcored bJ Recrea-
tion Director Kdlh Van Holt, who smack·
ed a home nm with ~-loaded.
One might sa)" It was still a stunning
upset despite the l~s.
The four·IMlng clash opened with um·
pJrc Mlke Ke~·· ce.remonlous entry
onto the du&ty field of honor. followed by a proctul.on, o( lovely attendants bearing
~aim frondi encl what appeared lO be
champ•gne.
''Play Ball," he gargled after evtdentl)'
, toal\llli his !llUe brother Patricl:
"Flash" Kennedy, a member of the all·
star team.
Vice Mayor Bob Wilson led off the
dads' batting roster. followed by City
Manager Art McKenzie, both of whom
were th'rown out at flnl base ron either
intield hits or lqng bunts.
Nobody est.abUshed just which.
Otamber or Commerce Execulive
Manager Nick Ziener, cleanup batter,
and•was the only pop to make first base,
with young Richie llauck acting u his
{>inch-nmner. '
It was a whole new ballgame when the
All.stm went l<>l>al and the Pops trotted
out to pastpre, distriooUng coondlmen
carefully to avoid ~ Brown Act viola·
tion tn the outfield.·~
The younger pl•rors quickly came
from behind, hammering out the hits, as
Councilman 4 Bill St. Clair committed
three errors in deep rlght field, the last
on a four.run "homtr.
Some !ency hilling by C<lmmunlcalions
Director Orv AmbUrgey and Van Holt
r•llled the City Pops hack Into oontenUon
for their nr1t win In tfii:flv•year history
(See SOF?BALL, !'ap I)
(See PENTAGON, Pap I)
CofC Nearing
Suggestion
On Sex Class
By JANICE BERMAN
Of "" Dlllr 'fflt stiff The Newporl Harbor Chamber ol COm-
merce today is moving closer to Ila 1oat
of a se1. of recommendations on ax
educaUon and family life instructJon for
the Newport-Mesa Unirled S ch o o 1
District.
The studies are expected to be com-
pleted within the next three monlhll.
The Chamber's committee, headed by
Dr. Nolan Frh:elle, has Invited gum
speakers with a wide ranp o f
backgrounds to discuss the controverllal
issues involved in setUng up such a lll'O-
gram.
Put speakers have included police
detectives, health department staff peo-
ple, psychologists and educatcn'.
This week the commillee heard •
woman physician who is .etldnl tlldlon
lo tho Orange County 5chool BolJd Alig.
26.
ORANGE INTERNIST ,
Sbe II Dr. Doris Atuajo ol Or ..... u
inlernisi.
Her practice deals mo11Uy with ldults,
but her views on aex education are dmv·
ed from her role as 'ja mother or four
children."
She said today, "I am oppoeed to any
kind, of course which ia not taught with
morals."
When a11ked· what kind ol morale: ahe
referred to, she replied, "I thint we
lihould just say morals."
Dr. Aruajo said she felt the fact.I of ""'
biological reproduction should be tauOt
"at appropriate age levels, and alwafl '-
a dignified and modest. manner."
She Bald sbe approved of the leadtiq
of the facta of venereal diseue at lbe hi~ school level. ...
'll ha& lo be done, unlorlunate!Y,
because VD.is rampant in our eociety."
FAVOR PROGRAM
At the Monday Chamber commlttee
session, the internist told panel memben
that there are three groups who favor
programs of family life and aeJ educ:t•
llOO : professionals, such as phyilCliffii~. --
population planning experta and planned
parenthood groups, and seJ educators.
Dr. Aruajo said the sex educaton are
int.crested in "the study of ~xual at.an-
dards aod behavior without any deflniUon
of right and wrong."
She said, "They want lo acquaint the
child with all the facts and then let him
make up his own mind about what ii
right and wrong."
"l must oppose thlt form of educa\}on
because It does nol lnciude the principles
of right and wrong," 1be aaid.
Dr. Frl1elle commented,
"Understanding lhe belief& ol lhete lhnle
grotip1 might ena~le ua to come up wtlh a
program that's more effective than any
(Seo SEX ED, Pqe Z)
Orange c ....
Weather
Partly cloudy mornings and
sµnny afternoon• are 1lUI Jn
the offing for the Oranr•
Coast, wllh temperatures ring.
ing from 75 to 85 depending on
where you park yolll' car. ·
INSWE TODAY
Senate critter oJ Ptntooon
zero in on ezpmditure1 but
Pentagon /ears 1uch action ma11
give '""" more acUue Rwtlml.s f<arful advanlaQe. Poge 2J.
·,
• ! J DAl~V l!llOT L c
Net IA MIUlonalre {
Nixon's Italian
~·_c_h_oice Sur~rise
I
f .
Pmldtnt Nllon Wednelday nominated
career dlplOlnlt Graham A. Martin as
U.S. ambaaaador lo Jlaey.
Tbt nomlnotloo, expOcted lo be rootloe-
Jy •canfJnned by the 5'0ate, came as a
ourprUe in ..... quar18ra.
It had been rumored that the am·
twsadonbip woold BO to H e D r y
Salvatori. a Los Angele.a millionaire woo
has been a heavy financlaJ contributor to
GOP camp&ignl.
But presidential -RU.tar)' Ron Ziegler, who annowm Martln'• nomina-
tJon. denied hearing Sa!vatorl's name
mentioned during WNte H o u s e
discu.ssiOlll ol the pool
"I'd jull itlck with thia IDDOUDC<Dl<ll~
F"°"' P .. e :l
SEX ED ...
one ol. the three (proarams ·each group
might advocate) taken by ltseU.''
M111y more persons will be In-
terviewed, Dr. P'rize1le indicated, before
tbe study is completed.
"We have received qWte a bit of crank
mail and correspondence taking slrong
views from both aides but we will still
st.and b1 our promise to make this study
u objective as possible," he said .
Friztlle stressed tblt the committee's
recommendations .. might not be in the
fcrm of deflniUve suggestiOl'IS, merely
IOme guidelioes the district people can
uae in dmrin& up a curriculum if they
-wish."
He &aid the committee bu followed a
loor·point format: que411oolng of guests
who "1t wtll·ventd with the subject;
study1nc materials and c u r r l c u I a ;
evaluating public opinion on the con-
trovvsla.1 luue, and drafting suggestlon:i
for the Implementing of programs for the
HarbOr Area.
,Jail C.Onfession
Bid Withdrawn
LOii .\NGELES (UPI) -The defense
.,,.ned Ill cue today in the trial ol two
brothers cbar&ed with murdering silent
1ereen act« Ramon Novarro.
' Mare resUni the state'• case Wee!· )iesdaJ. Prosecutor J 1mea I d e m a n
withdrew an offer to call Robert F.
Petersen, who had told jail ollicial5 that
one of lbe brothen, . Thomas Scott
• .P'ergulOO, 11, had admitted ·the lllying
)while in jail before going to trial.
~ The withdrawal came after two Jtours
:~f discussion, wlthqut the presenct of the
l3ury. At the cloae of these discuS!lons
lSuperior Court Judge P..tark Brandler rul· ~ed that dlscJosures by Peterson wou1d
;hive t.o be confined to 'nlomu Ferguson
,and could not include any accusations
.made q1lnat his elder brother, Paul l Robert Fersuaon, zs.
:
!Beach Man's
' iAirplane Flips
1 A light private pl111e wu flipped ovet
I by the prop wasb ol a D-25 bomber
! Wednesday afternoon while taxiina: on the ~runway tqward take oU from Orange· ~ County Airport.
' The mWI plane ended upside down, but ! Lyle Weaver, of 178G Bell Circle, Hun--I iJiigtoo Beach, at the controls, and flight
• Jnatructor ~b Herman, oI 9128 La
; COlonla Ave., Fountain Valley, were not
injured.
i Weaver said the Ce!sna 150 was tossed
. qver by strona: blasta of wind from a
· World War 11 bomber owned by f~allmantz A.v~ation, which was warming
up Ila englne3.
; Damaie to' the plane was estimated at
: ,J,000 ..
'
OIWfllll ('QUt" ""'..... COMPAttt ............ ---J.tdl .. Cl,j.y
Wli:ll ,.,...... _. G*Wll MeHt11
l'tlM•• K1ttTI' , ....
---JJt w ..... , ,., ...
M1lllltf AMr-t •.o. a., 11.,0. t2•2• --~ ..... r7'11Wllf ............ =::::, .. ~.._ ~llldrl:••--
' ~ • 1f I were you," he amilln&ly ad v l 1 e d
newsmen at LaguQa'a Surf and Sand
Hotel.
·Martin, 54, ls a ooe~e Washington repcrter. ~ •
The nitivt o( North Clrollna hu beOn
In ~overnmenl ...me since joinlllfl the
Nationll llocovery Admlnbtntlon In
193.1. He entered the Foreign Service In
l!M7 and mosl recently served 11 Special
Assistant to \he Secretary ol State frr
Refugee and Migration Allain.
In Rome, be will ~ AmbaSAdor
H. Gardner Acklq, who ii leavinJ
government service. ,
In 1963, Pres1dent Kennedy appointed
Martin as ambluador to Thailand. In
December, 1967, he received the Depm.
rnent of· Stete'I . DtallJ!IUlahod Honor
Awanf. He lo mairied to the former
Dorothy Walloc:e. Tbey have I w o
daughters and a aon. ·
Martin ii one of five ambauador·
nominees announced Wedneaday, The
othen are: .
-Doaglu MacAfthar II, ambauador to Iran.MacArth11r bu been ambauador
to Austria since 1987. The IQ.year~ld
career diplomat, nephew of the late
Ceneral, wtll succeed AmbuSador Armin
H. Meyer, now ambassador to Japan.
-Min-Mdlvalaa, ambusaclor lo
Kenya. McUvaloe, 55, bas been am·
bassador lo the 'Republic of G)lh\ea.
-Job Palrid< llald, ~ lo
KuwaiL Wallh, 51, llaa Med u acting
e1ecutive aecrtliJ')' of. the Departmes of.·
Stete. •
-Vlncm do ·11411e1, .-.ior lo
Jamaica. A nadve af1.nl ~the 43-year~l(f----,:.W atale aecuUve was
recenlly 'elecled ~al the VIJJaie ol
North Hiils, N.Y.
· f'l'ffl P .. e 1
SPARED ... . .
foot -then put up a bold ftonl for
newsmen Sept. ·13, 1987, when con·
demned.
Judge Samuel Dniren apbeld the jury's
verdict ol death In the San Quentin gas
chamber 'OD both count.I.
"You CUJ1 are Jookinl at ·the best man
you'll ever•." McCJeflan snarled u he
was led out ol the \'OUflroom under heavy
guanf, apparently tryln( lo lin up lo his
nickname lo the Jut
Alone with bb tlioupta .. Death !low,
however, the ...,,lead *1l,.r llaabad bb
left arm and the1! ocremect lo Jallin for
help wllea'be '111!died blood fcrm a pool
on the floc:ir. ··... -
' Sli]rime' Court. jalllCea ·alao , .. med
death seat-for faor other Death Row
inmata Wednutlay, au Ol1 lfOlD1ds that
PfOlpectlve.juron cilnnol be eac:uaed oa·
Jy for oppooliig the death penalty.
The ' 'L: • .led· ' Y.lnCIUU • ; -HarrJ W. Scbldef, convicted of the
1963 slayiJ,g of ·a Sacramento policeman.
The court rUled H that thi Wlther.apoon
ruling applied.
-Dellllis St.uwor1h. convicted o f
several rapes and the murder of two
teen-age girls in the Richmond.Pinole
area in 1965. The vote wu ~l.
-C'aarlet Gardner, convicted of rob-
bing and slaying 811 Oakland storekeeper
in 1967. The vote w1s 6-J.
~Booker T. Hl.Uery Jr., convicted of
the rape and murder of a Hanford girl.
'J'he vote Wll ~2. ' .
PLANNING , OLYMPICS
Mtsa Scout Louftk
..
Mesfi. Explo,rer
Scout Honored
Dave Loufek, a 17-yur.old Coola Mesa
explorer ll<qlll, lw been -lo help
organize the first NaUonal Ezplorer
Olympia In Colorado.
He will meet with 98 other explorer
scoutl fnirn tcroa the country 1t
Color1do State Unlvenlty, Fon Collins,
Aug. IS • U .to plan the event.
The olymplcs will be beld Deal aumm<r
et CSU.
Loulek, !lit Counley Club Drive. w11
chooaeD by the Orange Empire Area
Council because of his tnvolYement and
erperitnce in athletics anlt-his con.
lrlbuUooa lo the Boy Scouts.
He 11 active ln track at Costa Mesa'•
Es!Anda i!lgh School where he will be a
s<nlor this !all.
I •
'
-... _ .. --~----···~ ---
• ,. Wt~ l • ~ ~
. . ~ . . "' ...
Tanks Sent
As Czechs
•
Protest
l>ll4GUE CUP!) ~ Tha Ciecboolovak
aOvernment aent tanks tonlght Into
Prque w~ crowda eatl!nalod u hllh
u 100.• moploded into Dolly anti-
-pr-. &ome-per""" were hit
by tear ... ai\d "beaten •ltll club:!.
Demeootrallonl .alao were reported Jn
ol!W' dlloa, OD thiJ flnt annlveraary of
the -lnvulon, and in Brno, 110
mllet a•111. pOflce uaed flrei-to -~ -al yoqthf. Sixtf tanb look up po<ltlons on the
west bank of the Moldau Rlver, two miles
fnlm Wencealu Square, the oceee of
today's _.._ ouUJunt at an ernotlooal
noon. demoOltratJon when Czecbolkwab
-and ..... at· u.;r -~ c:banled
••Jtuaaj1J11 .. hoqae,". I _ _,;:n>e~;,er~~~..,'.m·, -the .u.eta
COUPLE TAKE SOGGY SUMMER STROLL DOWN 'MAIN STREIT 01' OLllSOOW VIRGINIA
Ca mill• Sponlc1 Old Domlnlon1 WNfhtr ~ S.ya l'looolt . Worlt, $1-im
lhrou&hout Jtie da'j and u the I o'clock
rush hour , 1pproached Youn&
demOllJlraten ·UV*! with cobble lloDea
battled polJol! in the Pranaa BCf111 'ai'eA a quarter mtJe from the 1quare. "tKher
figbling wu reported in the old town JeOo
tor.
~ . .
From P .. e 1
SOFTBALL • ••
of I.he-clanic.
~ Some, perhaps, realized they could
1tand in ~e very footprints of their wiry
oppooenta and still be crowdini the strike
zone with their beltlines. ·
A few stepped back and started con.
necting when they came up to bat after
somehow retiring the other side.
Fire Chief John "Wrong Way Cor·
rlgan" Marshail blasted a blazing line
drive toward third base, then chased the
smoke 0 like any good fireman . would,
rounding third, then second. to collapse
safely on first base.
The fans went wild .
Stimulated, Councilman St. CI a j r
clouted one deep into center field Dnd set
out grimly for first base on a collision
course with · Chief Marshall who was
sprinting for home plate.
They passed like ships in a fog.
FANCY FIELDING
Younger older players in the municipal
aggrqation displayed fine form, but fan·
cy fielding by the playgroond crew
blunted their attact and spirits faltered.
"Casey" Ziener struck out foe what be
declared was the fint time in 42 rears
and gav~ a $2 tip to the record-setting
bu·rrer. -11 •. , ".f •
.It.was the bottom of.the IOW'th liuiinc
and time was taking Ill toll . .
Assistant City Manager Fred Sorsabal
had a red spot on his m!U hand and the
youngsters began stealing bases like
kJept.Qmaniacs in .a 1Sporting goods store.
PR0'1'0 FINISH
Back at the plate, U,e . umpire's kid
brother clouf<d that determining home · run. bringing tn three teammates before
he slld 9ver the , plate in a photo finish
with th~ ball.
"Salt,!'. declared his ~ig brother.
.,Protest," ~the Opposition.
Kennedy consulted hi! 1961 rule book -
supplied courtesy of the B1'8.11fe InsUtute,
the cover said -and opined that protests
carried a $1 filing fee and automatic ex-
pulsion of the complainer.
Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, a veteran of
the Social Arts Week classic originating .
in 11184, observed after deelaring the 1969
game won that by 1974,' the City Pops
may get their first victory.,
TEAM ROSTERS
Here is the roster of two teams never
to be forgott:n:
· Coach Larry Kaban'a crew Included
Bob Zahnlecker, Cralg Clark, Kevin Plat-
te; Brent Schnitzlus, Milte Stout. Joe
Horst, Danny Lodgeness, Jeff Erickson,
Tom Massey and Flask Kennedy.
The losers included Zlener, McKenzie,
'Vilson, Sorsabal. Jones, Amburgey,
Marshall, McKenzie, Robert Oman, Jim
Eldridge, Van Holl, SL Clair, George
Madsen and perhaps some who clung to
the sidelines.
Wayne Files Suit
()ver Wild G.oose
Actor John Wayne ·of 'Newport Beach
Is suing a building material firm for
•12.000 damages done to his 136-foot
yacht, Wild Goose, and $36.250 for breach
of contract.
Wayne's suit, filed in lbs Angeles
Superior Court Wednesday, said he
charted t.be diesel powered yacht to
lnterpact Corporation last May 18
tbrouah 23. 1be boat ran agrl')Und on May
19 in San Diego Harbor, the suit said and
sustained damal!'• of m.ooo.
Wayne a1lo Said the boat was not
ietumed lo bb Newport Beach home at
262i Bay Sbare Drive until July II, aearl,y
two montht alter the end ol the charter
period. He asks '311,2111 for the breach of
COO\rl'L
Fire Burns Brush
Near O'Neill Park
A "tire burned IS acres of brush Jn a
canyon east of O'NtUI Patk Wedneaday.
It, look coonty Division ol Forestry
crewa on the ground and four borate
bombers three hourJ to 'coatrol the fire.
Cause ol the fire ha1 not been determln·
ed.
,
Rubble . Guarded
' '
Hurricane ~uiw Sifteq:Jor Bodies
PASS CHRISTIAN, Miss. cilPJl."-AD lreea and pi1'a of lwnber that onco were that remained al Pasa Clrtallan today houleo, •
were the gr<oi><:lad aoldlen wbo 1UUJf . In'~ ~ ahellora, hunclredJ ol
1\llnl that ahnGot no me could reo1J1 ~ llill watt for a hol meal Such
wanl · · -JCeflf:I are famD!v in Gulfport and
Workera and llant machine. llk>!'Od~~-~'Blloll. ·
the dehria aearching fer the bodloi they .In the brictJIChoolroomt turned Into
could anelJ bul no1 see. . -and ~ .... -
G<ne· with the --lllCllled and cry and play and Jaup and •1!11· Fer
pocr, black, w1lilo and cajun -are the " -their parenla thin II Uttle happjneas.
-!zing questa that lead men lo grovel Thooe in the llhellera bave no hornet lo
in the 1Ucky griy tn1id that coats which they can return. There iJ no elec.
erer)1hlttc for tome scrap of food ; and t,rictty, no water, no aewerage.
that drivea a mother lo ._ ~. Ught bulb:! have been replaced J,y dim
muddy water from a ditch for her child flashllghta: water comes either from the
to drink. • few arte.slan wells or f r om central
Those that a{e eone. many oI them dispensing point& where it has been
homeless, are the lucky ones. 'Ibey lived trucked. A bathroom more olten than not
through the greateA storm man has U a slit trench scraped from the sogy
recorded in the United States and now tt. ground behind a schoolhouJe.
is behind them. It will be weeks and months before
M06l we.re .airWled and bussed there is full electricity and utilities, years
Wednesday to Camp Shelby, Mias., IOUth before homes and buainsses, the can-
ol HatU.,bui'g, "'l<ltaaled their firll bol neries and night apota and motela of
meal since last weekend. Bimi are rebtilit.
The dead are scaUered Jn improvised Never again will there be the grand,
morgues and overcrowded mortuaries. columned homes of the 19th century that
SWI other• are buried benealh fallen alood in Pus Chrtallan.
~~_ig)J.ts_·Apartment Units ·
Nixed by County Planners
Several Santa Ana Height.!I residenb
Wednesday won a victory after presen..
ting arguments against being sandwiched
between two large a pa rt m e n t
developmenta.
County planning commi"lonerl turned
down a request by Victor A. Deverlan lo
build 20ll apartrneal unila on eigbl acrea
Young Woman Jumps
From Golden Gate
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Authcrltles
IOUght identlflcaUon today of ·a woni&n
whose body was recovered lhorUy after
~he jumped from the Golden Gate Brida•
early Wednesday.
The vicUm, about 23, a brunette. five
feet four and weighing 125 pound1t was
the bridge's 387th known aulclde and the
27th "Jane Doe."
~ ol M~ DriVe a( Tu"~n Avenue.
Cornmisolonen told hlin lo coine bock
when be has plans that &how a lower
density.
A half-<fozen r .. i<leala al the Co<ia
Mesa.border area complained that.deMe
apartment houalng on either side ol their ·
MOM Drive homes would make it ll~e liv-
ing in N"" York'Clty.
On _UM! Santa-Ana Avenue Rde of the
homes, a 171knrlt apartment prqject is
Wider ""1ltruclloo by Wan! Management
Co. • ' · Planninc commlsaloner1 also took into
consideration a Jetter from the county
Airport Commiulon strongly recom.
mending denial because the proposed
apartments abute the take oU pattern
from Orance County Alrpcrl. The county
already is being sued over aircraft noise
by hundreds of reskients of the Back Bay
area, the Jetter noted. '
'lbe gow!mment obviously upectf.d
more trouble tonight afttr two nlghta of
anti-Russian ontbursta which ao far has
tilled two J)er30nl.
Today Wu the first anniversary of the
Soviet-led invaioa ol Czechoslovakia and
at the stroke ol ni>oo 11,000 C..Cboolovab
bunt into Wenceslas Square, t be
CJechoolovalt · symbol ol fr<edom, in a
clamorous outburst.
Even 90IDf: of. Ute Czechollovak aoldicrs
aent in lo mainlain order Joined in the
chanta of "RiwiMls go home."
Thero bad been two nigbla of violence
in Wencealas Squart, and two men were
reported killed by police In an °"tbnalt
W-ynlghL
More than 320 were arrested. The
government cailed the victims criminal
. eltlllents, social outcasts and hooligans.
The heart ~f the demonstration was
Wenceslas Square but conservative
estimates said more than 1 O O, O 0 0
Czechoslovaks filled that and nearby
streets. Police moved through the
crowd!, hurling tear gas occasionally,
aometlmes clubbing bystanders un-
mercitully.
From Pqe 1 ,
PENTAGON. • •
now/''Laird added.
Laird aaid the cutbacb: came at a time
whan 8oviel mllllarY llrength' Is In-
creasing and added: "I Delleve tt is Imo
portant that the American pubUC be in·
fonned aboUI stepped-up Soviet octlv!Ues
in strategic offensive and defensive
fields."
He also said he saw no lu11 in the Viet·
nam war, pointinc out that enemy in-
itiated activity in the Vietnam conflict
was higher during the first sl1 months of
this year than during a similar period in
1968. But he said U.S. force1 are now
engaged in a strategy of "protective
reaction."
'Wanted to Be Hero':
L~ury Ship Arsonist
· PORT EVERGLADES, Fla. (UPIJ -A
privste detective who said he "wanted t.o
., a hero" has 'been charged wllh setUng
a fire . aboard the l'!ltlred luxury Uner
Queen Eti:abeth and quickly lumln1 Jn
the alarm. ·
Police said Anthony Romeo, 20, of
Hallandale, adm.Jtted setting the fire wlth
a pillow on Aug. 8 and a few days later
making a hoax telephone call that a
bomb was about to explode on the big
ship now moored as a t.ourlst attracUon.
SALE Just two weeks more ... thru August 30
OIUlEl IN TOUR CHOICE OF smES AND FAIRIC
AT A MOS1'. GENEROUS SAYIN&S , , ,
. .
AERlTAGE
[aJMnc lladlllGn_ID C~tono
H.J.GARRETf fU~Nf]lJRE
'1!0FUSIONAC
INTWOlOU~ UIS HARBOR ILVO.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
64~275 646·0276
I
.T"""'1, A"""t 21, 1969 • S DAILY l'l~OT 3
llf TIUlMAS J'OllTIJNE
' Of ... Delt'f ,... ... ,,.., clr<umstan<e Is """11!." he conUnued. pensive In· the baopllaJ could have ....., that hoopltal Oii 1 oell-lllppCll'tln( basis if received Ill)' llY!llpothy !ram lhe medical
"n.0 TB patient Ii bolatid !Or the pro-purehQed at the ctnic atore for half the we con. Perhopc we became more ag-proleail>n in paying my ~." he tlld.
tectlon of soc~ty, not confined for his price/' she aaJd. "olt hu reached the gressive alter we 1ot direction from the County Coumel Adrian Kllyper llJd the
personal conve .. ;"'nce." .... int "'" ... e but Grand Jury to 1et with it on blU col· county ls obligated under the law to bill ..... r-• w11 ... re we J .. v no recoune lecUon." but can eompfomi.9: on 1ta abllity to col.
TB Unit ,Condemns _County's Hounding Policy
cJc.) ollll:lals i!eP!-JO -. cleddinc
ori irui ICtloo. ' • •
Orange County's hard line of having a wuu~·Meuller II.id he hu chaired a
collection agency hound tuberculosis vie-TB Al.;;1aUon cammlttee that has
Urns over uqpakt bUls -was condelODed stUcfieil~~relcesees ln'UU fltld oVer
:Wednesday before count .Y,:'ffi"pervlaon"°"~;n·, ;.--lll"""'t_...,.,_'<' -11\lQlhl·-aod..U..y hive ---f[nute Mal'tbf;"Uwuve r
councy TB Association, said California is comp "dociuneatea 1tv9denc:e that ls
.RJchanillutlrua, of Buena Pa~.'w!M>se ba'*1uplcy." To charpo thal 0r,... la lhe onJ l!ct w~1ikY,eat'°"1,.aon_w.ere '1°"1.~· ~-~mi..,..-wu111o1111r111<!l!l"'ata'"".,.--""""";;i;i;," .ii'y tliil' iriililOYi 1 tuhicoin'1ffi#~on~"90ri::.IDav1ini;rd GGHl<i~,:;P";ui,d•n o
at the ·Medical Cenler,·aai¢ he• hu a tort have told blm osome patients go medh!al bllll,.. SuJ)erylsor David Baker Aeocl&Uon, said hJ!l thinks a '5-ytar
;
l
'
the 00Jy one or the 50 states that does not nothing.~ of a11h1nxU01."
pay tuberculosis hospitalization costs and Patienti: have received ~111 of '5,000,
$7,400 bill plus bills from babYslUen home, ·ihrow nay tbelr medicine and 10 replied: payout period for young famlliu, as the
while his wife wa1 out of the home. to 1 pariy. 11)6: la just uacUy what we '.'Maybe that i. why our tax rate ls coneetioa ageney 1t requiring, ia all
Orange ls the only county that has an ag. M,000 and '8,000," he safft, "ind after lG
gressive procedure of collecting from TB days they &re past ,due lhj!;y are turned
Mrs. Sandra Bulki.Js said she felt .she are trylna to prevent." . •t.711gatnst the othen' p and up." wrong.
could have stayed ln isolation at home Hlrltei.D uld Jt is not true as be has He scolded phyeiclam and mecllcal peo-Dr. Patrick Murphy, a Newport Beach paUents.
Supervisors asked for testimony from over~ a ~ectlon a1eocy.
and taken medicine brit was thre~tened read ln a -per that he doesn't have pie oppoaed on the national level to physician, sa1d that uSually patients are
with a court order if she didn't subin.lt to -_-n-bercul tJ soclaliled medicine for tumln£ around advised to. go to lhe ho.spltal, but the
county Health Department and Medical • 1 F U o d am e 11 ta 11 y , thls entire confinement any sympathy for the tu ar pa ent. and pressuring, the county 'to a~rb the subtle difference with tubercular patients
"One oral drug that was extremely ex• He a1ao remarked, "We're trying to get TB confinement COIL 0 1 bav1 never is they are told to· go to the bospltaJ.
Disposal or Expansion:
Fair grounds io Face
Scrutiny at BOa-~d Me~
Criticisms and remedial steps proposed
' by its newest direct.or will be considered
tonight when lhe 32nd D i a t r i c t
Agricultural As.sociatloo meets at OraTige
County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
Santa Ana attorney Alexander Bowie
covers a broad range in his letter ·.asking
Fair Board President Cecil J. Marks to
place the matter on the 8 p.m. meeting
agenda for discussion.
He raises questions about the ap..
. pearance, operation, future expansion of
.. facilitJ~ and building funds available -
plus potential disposal of the site at Slf
Fair Drive -in the five-page note-.
Bowie then follows with eight separate
points he-Ceelll: Should be explored to cor-
rect problerru. he sees, including broaden·
lng ol fairgrounds managemenl and
Council's Fh'St
Mee t Delayed
. A first meeting of the, Breathable Air
Council, scheduled for Friday, has been ~cancelled because the principal speaker. ·u.s. Civil Service Commissioner James
E. Johnson. learned he will be tied up
in Wasttington, D.C.
streamlining of board qperptions.
Bowle and the second most recently a~ I
pointed director, Tom Rogen, of ·
Newport Beach, are known lo be en-
thusiasttc about r e'I o cat in "r the
fairgrounds sbmlwbere in more rural
Orange County.
Several of Bowie's requests and recom-
mendation reflect th.iJ trend of thought.
noting Iha! oo one bas ....., appointed to
an alternate site study committee
formally created in June.
Such devek>pen as Maceo Corp., Lln-
colq Properties and Royal Street among
others should also be invited to submit
ideas about what they would do with lhe
present grounds, he said.
Bowie also claims the appearance of
the grounds ts a disgrace and the ad-
ministration Of the 32nd D i 1 \ r i c t
Agricultural As.wciation net<Js to be im·
proved.
He said the 1969 Orange County Fair
and Exposition seemed with some ex-
ceptions to have been less thna
wholesome and interesting for visitors
and calls for revised planning ol the 1970
event.
Bowie is asking the board to have
Secretary and General Manager Allred
Lutjeans prepare reports for the Sep-
tember board meeting on personnel, pay
and job duties for basic review.
Consideration llhould be given to
establishing two management post&, one
Sa..u Part 11
capt. James Sawyer saved all
29 passengers and crew mem-
bers when bis charter fishing
boat sank in the AUantic off
Cape Henry, Va. Boat was an-
other victim of Hurricane
Camille, which swept across
Virigin~ and back out to sea
Wednesday.
Valley Planner
Grafton Resigns , The meeUng probably will be. resched-
·uled in mid-October to coincide with Na-
tional Cleaner Air Week, a spokesman for
the sponsoring Orange County Tubercu-
losis and Respiratory Disease Association
aaid.
of secretary . to the board and one of
general management, he further coo-
lends. .
Bowie also voicea some dissatialaction
with circumstancea in which fairground.a
land along Arlington Drive was aranted
to the city for widening purpoeea:, con-
tending nothing was given in return.
Thomas GMdton submitted hls reslgna.
lion Wednesday night "a Fountain Val-
ley planning commissioner.
The Breathable Air Council is to be
composed chiefly of Orange County leg-
islators, all of whom have expressed in-
terest in joining the grq.ut. ,
Grafton. one of the oldest members of
the cornmJaion in Point of aervice, told
planners Wednesday was" bis last meet~ m, becaUJe be-would soon be moving to
Santa Ana. •
•
It .all started back in 1919, when we rented the
second floor of an old building in downtown
Detroit and began making tools.
This year, we're celebrating our 50th an'niver-
sary. With plants in forty other cities-(and 161000
employees) across the United States, Canada,
India.West Germany, Italy and England.
And we're turning out· products that range from
precision machine tools and computer memory
systems to missile parts and packaging equip-
menl 1919-that was a very good year.
Ex-Cell-O Corporation. Proud ,,. ••••~t
to be part of this community. .,-. " -<T'?-•,.,*
"f--f:=:!.J n ~ ~ \11]~~ i \ m E -. ,.. , ••• ff '• -~ . ....._ .....
Ex-Cell-O Corporation
COdillac Controls Dlvislon
P.O. Box 1500
Costa Mesa, Callfomla 92626
•
English Testing Blasted
Mex ican-Americans Say Procedures 'Hold Back Able'
A-MextcatFAmerlcan 11nrk1r11na n-u1rector Wiiliam Hart to prepare a
Wednesday asked Orange c o u n t y report specifying typea of employment
supervisors to relax testing procedures wh~e other screening methods than a
that acreen out potential county govern-w~!tten _test might be appropriate. ,,
ment employes who dG not have perfect . I think he has an exce11ent point,
commalil of the English language. said Supervisor David B~~r, who pro-
"T ti · bi h th 1 bold posed the task for Harl. M..t of the es ng ts a I ang-up a can work we do here Is rpeclall7.ed and re-
many able people back," sa1d Carlos quires 00 the job tralninc; it Is not taught
Ramos, .retired . lieutenant c o 1 ° ~ e 1 Jn college. It often times has been pointed
n;presenting Uruted Lat1n AmerlCan out that a high ICbool educatkm is needed
Citizens. . even to get a custodJal job,"
"If a job Is open for a garbage col-Supervi.aor WlllJam, llttaeln to I d
lector, let's sit down and determine what Ramos, ''I'm sure our standards are
he has to do -be able to drive a truck pretty high. If you were hiring someone
and show the strength to lift a SO.pound you'd want the best person you can get.
can ." If we hire someone not as well qualified
Supervisors respo~ed to Ramos' and lhey Re someone else promoted they
remarks by directing county Personnel might be diuppointed and broken
hearted."
Ramos argued, "Not all of us have the
potential to grow and it is far bettet for
some to be in a job without potential to
grow than to be on welfare."
He said, "Most people Jocked Into
poverty are severely undereducated and
psychologically defeated."
Ramos referred to federal programs
for the disadv.antagecl operating in the
county and asked, "Why is it that
everyUtlng ls Negro oriented? 11\e Mex-
ican-American populalion in the county ls
10 times greater than the Negro.
"Responsible people have told me that
we have not made enough nolse. I am op-
posed to violence, but f feel this ls com-
ing to a boiling point," he warned.
.~ -
Fotora111a Display Opens
The jangle of the automatic voting
machine, chatter of photo editors talking
on the United Press International Tele-
photo circuit and the mellow tones of a
stereo console whJch is offered as grand
.prize were the sounds of opening day
today aa Fotorama came to Fashion
bland.
The blg sights and sounds show opened
a three-day run at ·the Newport Beach
shopplng center. It will be open free to
the public until 5:30 p.m. t.oday, from 10
a.m. to 0 p.m. Friday and from 10 a.m.
to 5;30 p.m. Saturday.
More than ,1,100 worth of prizes fur-
nished by radio station KOCM will be
awarded· to parUcipanlJ in Votorama at
Fot.orama at the close of the show late
Salunioy afternoon.
Vialtor.t to the big lhow 'under • blue
and white atrlped canopy on stage cOurt
today got their flnt look at a show which
offers hundreds of unusual photographs.
Included are Mars "close ups". taken
by Marlners a ind 7, moon snapshots
taken by the first lunar tourists, astrit
nauts Nell Armartong and ''Buzz" Aldrin.
Also featured are two larje traveling
displays of award·wlnning news photos, a
collection 0( some of the best wor'k of
Soolhland commerclal pboto!!'aphers-,
this portion of the ahow coordinated by'"'
Professiona1 Photographers West, an
Orange County auoclatlon aHUiated "with
stale and national organizations -and
some of the best pictures taken during
the PB" yw by the 1ward-winning
DAILY PILOT photo atalf.
To qualify for priza, Fotorama visitor•
need only to rta1ater and cast.a balfot
in Yotarama II l'~ecllnc the
picture lhey like best from among the
top three wlnners in the Fotorama cam·
era contest for nonprofessional pho-
tographers. • ·
Ballots are cast on mechanical Print.
omaUc units milftufactured by the Auto-
matic Voting Machine Corp. of James-
town; N. Y. 'The A VM units are among
several automated voting systems under
study now for officials use in elecUons
.held in Orange.County.
Another higbtigbt of the !how ls the
·operation of a telephoto machine which
brings to Fotorilma instantly news pic-
tures which are being moved on the
United Press 'International circuit Vilit..
ors can both see the pictures appearing
and hear photo editora throqhoul the
.nation chattlni with each olb<r and
ar~ for ,prjcrity "on the wire" .for
. ~r pictures. ·
AUGUS'T SPECIAL
• We 'Do Our Own Servicing
• We Do Our · Own Financing
• We Do Our Own Installation
14.7 cu. IL • Model TBF-15SE
11.1 CU. FT. TWO.DOOi s 193
REl'RUHRATOR
$278
Economy Washer and Dryer
PHONE
$41-naa
POii THI
PAIR
22 YEA.RS
QUAL ITY
SERVICE
'Foodcenter 18' .w ... 11. • MOdol TFF-18DD
s393
APPLIANCE & TV
SALES and SERVICE
1815 NEWPORT ILYD.
COSTA MESA
·-~~-.. -....
DAILY PILOT
Ar~. Mpsq,,,e BurM<l
'
I •
I Fire Ignites ·Mideast
. ' Mooque In the 6th century ond sll5 atop B7 Ullted Pnu !Jderulloal! Tito> -ue. wlllch 11 IOCOlld oll1y lo
--i'lro-ol-undtlermlned-ori& loday-Medlna-ltld-Mecea-u-;the-llolleet . n e-Wa!Ung-Wall;-Judamn's-prlncipal
shrine. A hundred yards away Is the
Dome of the ,Rock from which the
Prophet Mohammed Is said lo have
ascended into heaven.
: The baby weighed 60 pounds and
the parents were speechless. The
new arrival was the latest addition
to the nine-member family of Jim-
mie an d Submarie, hippopotami
at the Philadelphia Zoo. FNCI
Ulmer. curator of mammals,
said the baby will not be
named until its sex can be deter-
~ mined. No one can get close
. enough at present to find out
-:-whether it is a girl or a boy. The
-baby's brothers and sisters a r e
named Bubbles, Augusta, Llnpopi,
,. Anthony, Cl.o, Ram1l1, Rhamadu1
• and Aoda. • Beavers on a creek near Sun--
dance, Wyo., are helping man fight
stream pollution. Earlier t h i s
. week, a tanker overturned and
spilled 5,000 gallons of gasoline in-
to the creek. But beaver dams
trapped the gasoline unW it could
be removed, and kept it from run-
ning downstream into the B e 11 e
Fourclie River.
• ,.
•
Three girl mnnbtr1 of the
North Door Singtr1 rock group
ach~d a dubtoui diattnction
at the Iowa Statt Fair in D e 1
Mofn11. Pio trhtbiton owordtd
the. girl.I blue ribbom and "Hogs
Are Btouttf1tl" buttom ai ·tM
.. BtlJ Ptn of Thrtt.H . ' .
• .Pet-.shop .owner Mlchaal Fltqlb-
bon of Hornchurch, , Englanc\,
·ts going ·down in history -at
least 'in a fmall way. Two dozen 1 mice; ~eatally sent to Fitzgib-
1 bon . ·by a collector in Pakistan,
!proVld to be of. • type p~y
'un1cnown Iii 'England .. Tile f.:!_ltsh • m-bu 111111od tile otr.m
}"Selpingotus Michaelis" a It er I Fitzgibbon. •
I
BLOOD STAINS SHOWN IN SHARON TATE HOME
First Picture of Scene Whtrt Five Wert Brutally Slain
Tate Murders 'Blackout'
Lifted; Drugs Confirmed
'
LOS A1!GE!,ES (UPI) -Narcoqca
were· found at 'the estate where Sharon
'Tate and four other penons were stabbed
and shot to death but there was no sexual
m11JU)at1on of the vicUms.
Police broke their silence on the mau
murder case to make the revelaUons in a
·terse statement' I.wed Wedneod117 "In
'the lntertst of accuracy" becaWle of
rum«a ond speculattoo about the
mlClbre 11ayinp Aug. I.
Pollce llllJICd« Harold Ysrnell, wbo
earlier bad Slid ~ were DO narcot.lca
U.S. Asks Reds
To TellNames
' Of 1,000 POWs
PARIS (AP) -The Unlled Slates aaked
North Vietnam today to Identify the more
than 1,000 American priS011ers of war be-
lieved held by Hanot and to guarantee
their humane trealmenL
Philip Habib, acting U.S. delegate
chief, accused the North V1etnamese of
neglecting "commonly accepted atand-
anla."
HabJ"b raised the prisoner luue at the
Slit plenary ses,,ion of the peace talks,
which gave no lndicatlon of moving off
dead center.
Habib put into the record a llatemeot
signed by 42 U.S . .senaton calllng for a
list of names of the American prisoners of
war. prison camp inspection, repatria·
lion of the sick and wounded, and nego.
UaUons for their ultimate return.
"in the house" leued by Miu Tate and
her husband Roman Polan1ki, aaid the 19
det.ect!veS assigned to the cue have fn..
terviewed 200 persons.
"At this time we have no warrants of
arrest for anyone," Yarnell said fn the
statement. He said many persona remain
to be interviewed and Los Angeles
aut.boritleJ were seeking the help of other
police departmenl5 In locating them.
"Nooe ol the bodies had wO\lllCll In-
volving the se1 organs," be said.
"Narcotica were found cm the premJael."
vanien said there wu no e\rldenoe at
pn!SOl1t to connect the Tate Jl1llfCler> with
, any other murder cases. Bl apparenu,
referred lo the double murder d Mr. ond
Mrs. Leno La Bianca the day alter tho
Tate s 1 a yin g s under similar
circumstances. The words "Death to
Pigs" were smeared in bJood on the door
of the La Bianca's refrigerator. ·
Yarnell confinned that the word "Pig"
was written in blood on the front door of
the Tate home In Benedict Canyon and be
emphasir.ed the word wu: "Pig" and not
"Pie."
Pie ls the nickname of Harrison
Daw&OO, one of the men police would like
to quertlon about the slayings. His fri,end,
'Ibomas Harrigan, Z7 of Manblittan
Beach, wu questioned and released by
police last Monday.
Harrigan was ~ed U the word m the
door could have been Pie instead of Pig.
"I never beard ol that before," Harrigan
MSWered.
Green Beret Hearing
In Murder Case Ends t , Rippin !111JV re<Oll!l<Ur thtlr anti-
haircut vit'101 if more barbers like Lili
Schmk take up the 1htar1. LUt, Swtd-
ilh born lovel11, puts finishing touch-
~& on a razor-cut hai1' 1tyling /01
; Ru.be Broaday of Chicago.
! • l Burglars who stole $300 from the
'"nle5e ttenators speak on thls Issue for
all Americans," Habib declared. "The
senators denounced your conUnued refus·
al to inform the families which of the
missing men are alive and which are
dead."
SAIGON (AP) -The preliminary ln-
vesUgatlon into the Green Berel murder
case ended at Long Binh today with no
indication whether the e:lght U.S. Special
Forces men accused of the killing wUI be
brought to trial.
• 1ale at the Hamlett Motor Sales
Habib declared that "this demand for
humanitarian treabnent of our prisoners
reflect.I the view of all who cannot accept
your excuses, your seU-jusUficaUon or
your continued neglect of cunmol'lly ac-
cepted 1tandard.s."
The lnvesUgating officer, Col. Harold
Seaman, whose function ia similar to
that ol a grand jury, will forward hit
recommendations to Maj. Gen. ~rge L.
Mabry, commander of U.S. support
troops in Vieotam.
; :;,j~ ~:~~·u,~~~-=~~ ~
two of. the firm's used cars.
I
. . . West Hot, East Cold
Record Low Marks Recorded in Upper Great Lakes
..
"
I •
'
• • . . • .
I . .
l • ' • !
C'ellto"'la
c ... t.i
HoNy llUMllll'lt .,.. .CU•l-1 dlflM
foe ION'f'. W... -Jlttl'f' I 19 II tnoh. Hlttl loiMY 74
Vntenlll"I ,..,_..i.,,.. r1~ '""" • 1'111t1 ., 16 .. , .. ll'l!lncl ~.111 ... ..._., ll"1lflt 61 19 '5. W1'9r ...,,_,. ... f\I,.._ .. .....,....,
Sun, Moon. Tides
TH\/RlOl.Y
Jl1rt1 l'lltlt ' 1):2• ··"'· '"' P'IM low , •• , 1:lll •·""· '4 P'IU04Y
L"* tffCll f').t,, 1.,111 Merlk:t F'l"t l'l!ell , •. , , , • , , , • , 1:41 '·"'· I 4 "'12, l wi.t'llt ln·JN, Mt. WllMP! ti• l'lrtl low . , , , • , , ••••• , , • I0:41t 41./'l'I, 3.1
"-"'"""" 103-lt4. ltlV9Mldt 1tn. StcerlO l'llelt ............. Sia .. "'' 1.1 1-. ,...,.. ~ 111-11 .. ••rttltld .,...,., "" 0-. .... .,.. ... "" ... • ... l :lt ....... .... 11)1 ...... ......,.. n.n. ... • ... l:JI jt,11'1. .... 12:» '·"'·
v.s. s ..... ......,,
A 111'11 1r1o111 of p01tr llr ~
-l.1~1 l11111rlor IOUY ~I
Clffr 1r'IOI 'Ollllf' -""" "°"" IM GnNI l1kt1 Ind N-lllllaM ll'ltl
fl'lllCll ol "" SOulll1111t.
ltrcord bn1tl._ low --ltlilr.I I« lftl1 di" ... ,.. Ml 1t INlllY .oln! ..
T-lll(ludtd ~ 11 MadllC!ll, Wit~
.t6 It f'llltbu'8h, Pl., Ind 61 II W.1! P1I"' alKll. l'la,
lrl11r lrwtl"' O¥trllllht lo'" wt-A _,.,.. '•om !!'le u'""1' Or"' L•~t•
to '"' M1lar11 ""1len -flf New 11..-11/'ld.
Pl'felt1lt1llorl •11 confined to lfll
mlcld/41 Ml11tl11'"°1 \11llly lo tht ceA-
tr.I Orff! P11111t. '-ll""llN, Mo..
l'9Ctlwd I.ti ifldlll-Wllfl I.JI ll'ICI*
t1UIM Ill 1 ll).mlrw!1 ,....ioo.
............. ·-Alt111!1
l•kll'Stllld
ll""'rdl; .... ... ,M
'"""11Yl111 .......
Clnc;l,,1'1111 ..,_ ....... _ .......
F1lfto.nk1 ·--· ...._ ....... ·-· ...... _
._y ..
Horn. Plltt.
0.-lallf .,. ...... "" ........ P11m SPr111111 "''° ltotllts Pl'loifrllX
PlllMlll/'911
Por11Uld
lt11td Cfl'Y A:~ •klff
·~· 51<r•mt,,10
Sell LaXI Clly
"" -hR l'~-l-
Ml• Ln "1K.
" ..
" • " 71
'" " .. .. .. ~
n " .. " ·" " ..
n " .. .. ...
" .. ..
" " .. • ..
lM ..
-" .. .. .. .. a " .. 71 ... .. • .. .. " • "' " .. .. . n ,-.. .. D
"' " " .. .. " .. " '" ., .. ..
lM .. " .. .. .. .. .. til n
.wept Uie cr<•t El Aq1a Mooque In Old Islam, wu !lie scene jn !lit ol the
Jerusalem, orie of lllam's mOlt sacred UH<iwitloa Gt Klnc AbdUllab, the
ahrlnel. The Arab world reacted IDIVl1Y, father of King Huaeln ol JordlO.
blam!ilg llrael and calling II the gravest Israeli ·t?oopo movod Into ' pas!Uon
Incident since Uie 1917 June war. around the Old Clty Walls aod pellet sped
Prime Mlnlller Golda Meir called an into the Arab quarter. Al they dld Fire broke out at 7:20 a.m. and burned
lhrougb the roof of the mosque and
heavily damaged the L'lterior before it
was brought under control three and •
hall hours later. Reaction from the
Moelem. world was Immediate and angry.
urgent cabinet meeting to coosider the SheilunhM&sn Alkhaled, the Gl'llid Multl
new crisis blowing up over the incidenL ot Lebanon, called. the lnddeot .. the
Sbe expreuecJ reiret and the government era\·est a1DCe the June 111'1 war.'"
lmpoHd. a curfew in Jerusalem's Arab The El Aqsa Moeque wu built about 20
Quarter to pnoveot disturbances. years alter the nearby dome ol the Rock
HOUSEWARE
APPLIANCE -----
BUYS!
WI RATUU THI FAMOUS •••
·shepherd, ... , casters
LOW, LOW PRICES!
YOUI CHOICE OF:
PLANET MODIL,
lllwHT llASS or
ANT19UE COl'P'EI,
PLATI e< STIM
FA5TININw
$599
SET OP -4
R11ular $1.tS
HIAVY SOFAS. llDS, CHAIRS ROLL IASILY ON SHIPHHD SUHR CAmRS
25 YEAR GUARANTEE *HELP SPUD
HOUSE CUANINw
snm!Jr
wltb
IF, AT ANYTIMI IN THI NIXT 25 YEARS,
ONI OF THUi SNllPHllD CAmRs FAIL
TO. WORK IN YOUI HOME llCAUSI Of
A DIRCT, IT WILL 11 lllPLACID FREI OF
CHAlwEI
*SAYE CARPETS
AND FLOORS * ADD NEW llAUTY
TO FUINITUU
SHIPHEID CASTIRS -OUAltANTl lD IY OOOD HOUllKllPINO -
9nflioduclng
THE FINEST IN
STAINLESS COOKWARE
CRITERIA. by EKCO.
All WEW SMAPES FDR FASTIR, llDRE EYH CDDllllGI
GUARANTEED FDR 15 YEARS I
Som• food• you cook need th• slow, even hut of c..c
Iron. Othar foods cook better In heavy aluminum.
Th•t'e the Id•• behind Ekco"• new Criterla. The bHt
metal for ••ch kind of cooking h•• been ualed betw9MI
layar1 of eaav-cl•anlng. triple laminated stalnlen stffiL
Now the good cooking pana are the good looking
pans, tool low proflla design for mexl mum burner
covarege, Increased \:OOklng efficiency.
Hindin end cover knobs are oven •f•.
7-PIECE MULTI-PURPOSE SET
A cook·&erv• Ht Including 1 and 3 qt. covend
.. uct1pen1, I-qt. covered uueapot.
!:; :;~~~~'~'.~ ~.-.~~:i::~~~:~~.m. Offif •39es
OPEN STOCK FROM ti.ft TO t19,H
CRITERIA 1..-1ca
GOURMET OMELET PAI Yo• tt•v•n't lht"•d ~tn
you'w trllld this unlqu•
omeln pmriwfth •JNCl•lty
dnl;Md, .ioplng •a-.
Tul"l'lll ovt prof.-ONI
=-~11zas
GllAltANTEED ft)Jli 11 JIUU. TUM
II IN1~rails1111 IO 611tcblll..........,_, ..... ..,. is,...11, nco.0:11np1aor p!Mlt ....... ...._ ... ...._
SPECIALLY PRICED
0 CLUB ALUMINUM "BLACK MAGIC"
OMELET PAN
1•1.-1.,h.1 .. $64.P
ragulorty $7.95
1041Mtt1lze s7pe
regula.+,$9.95 •
New DURA80ND9 Fused On Teflon Finish
No Nead For Spacial Kirchen Tools
Of course Oub Aluminum has a new more durable
Tenon finish. Durabond is their name for it, and it
permit.s the use o( regular kitchen tools ••• and
still tuts and lasts. Black so that il is virtually stain-
less, but still with all the "stickless cooking-no scour
clean up" qualities thal arc so important.
But It is the construction of the pans themselves that
really counts. Thick solid even heating cast alumi-
num. Favored by good cooks for generations, there is
nothing quite like it.
Cub Block Mqic coaa lll thtee rm.Jy colon , ••
Awcado, Poppy llid HIMll Gold.
WOOD PANELING TO WALLFLOWERS
···GO J~gg· 49:d
Want a wood paneled room? It's easy, with CON-TACT
plastic. Looks handsome, costs a fraction of the price of
real wood. Like flowered walls7-lC. just as easy, with the
wonderful "instant decorating" vinyl plastic that goes on
so smoothly with no paste, no tacks, no tools. Best of all,
these lovely walls are easy to care for ... they're wash-
able. Come see doiens more patterns and colors, start your
own decorating project now, and see how proud you'll be.
18" wide.
N.lreland
Leaders
United
BELFAST, Northern Jreland
(AP)-Nortbem Ireland'•~
ing Protestant party closed
ranks behind Prime Minister
James Chichester-Clark Wed-
nesday night ·despite rnlsglv·
Jngs about the ruture ol the
Protestant reserve police.
No incldents were reported
during the n1ght.
The prime minister told the
Uniorllst party caucus that the
B-Special police reserves -
hated by the Catholic minority
In Northern Ireland -woold
not be inactivated. He said
they would man roadblocks
and guard various installations
outside the areas where Prot·
estants and Catholics battled
last week.
Some party leaders had fore--
cast demands for the govern-
ment's resignaUon if the B-
Speclals were diSb"'iiiQe<l-;tiul
-
Tllund>y, A"""! 21, 1969 DAILY l'JLOT if
• t · N. Korea ~eeps Silent
-.. '
Copter on
PANMUNJOM, Korea (AP) that they Nrvlvtd.
-North Korea refused today Marine Me.j. Gen. Arthur H.
to giVi! any information on Adam!, the American and
three U.S. servicemen wbose U.N. Command delegate, told
helicopter the North Koreans the Communists the pllot lost
shot down Sunday. his bearing on a training flight
At a meet\n& ot the Ko~re!!L..:."JlllJl ~ l<nowin&IY..fu'iJl-
ffitary Arm ll fl"CeCOm-to your territory." He said
mission. Maj. Gen. Lee Choon that the pllot radioed that he
Sun, the North K o re a n was lost and minutes later told
delegate. lgnored U.S. re· U.S. ground controllers that
quests for inlormaUon on the his helicopter was being fired
condition of the men. North on.
Korea has given no indication Adalm said the pilot, WO
Judge Calls Meet
On Kennedy Case
Malcolm V. Loepke ol Rich-when they saw the bell~oopltt activ1tie&.'1 ffe &aid it was
mood, lnd., had been assigned headlng north, but the pilot "unthlAkable'' the helicopter
to his unit pnly sloce July 21 apparently failed to see the pilot., could make navlgatlonal
and that the other two men, warnlng.
Capt. Da vid H. Crawrord, The American gene.rat also erron desplt.e such "un-
Pooler, Ga., and Spec. t said the North Koreans "could mistakable. .. landmarks u the
Her van E. .HolstaUer, 1"'.w· no.Lha.VJLhad._ant-,j1W.ific:at>on..JL..__ll~"--estuaey._ a-n d
point, Ill., were aboard for for firing on a small unarmed Kanghwa l<Sland, which are
fUght training. He added that helicopter that h a d In--between North and Soulh
Crawford arrived In Korea on-advertenlly wandered into Korea.
ly two days before. your air 1pace." The helioopter was the le·
Adams said U.S. ground Lee asserted that Adams cond American aircraft shot
personnel fired yellow smoke was making a "brazen ex-d9wn by North Korea this
grenades to warn the pilot cuse'' to coVer up "criminal year. .....,_,,.<-=-a~m......,..,=-OICL'J..,,
Lunar Signpost
232,271 Miles to Moon
they seemed satisfied with the ,.,,...-"'"' •L
prime minister's statement,
they said they were assured
that the party would remain
in control of the sir counties
()f Northern Ireland, wh.lch
have a Protestant majority.
Ul'I Ttlllll!91•
FLOWERY WELCOME FOR KOREAN CHIEF
Perk Chung Hee Cheered on Arrival in U.S.
Korean Chief Here,
Slates Nixon Talks
CARMEL, cam. (UPI) -
President !;'ark Chung Hee o(
South Korea arrived \Ved-
Lt. Gen. Sir Ian Freeland,
commander of the 6,000 British
troops in Ulster, took some of
the heat out of the pollUcal
situation in removing the S..
men rrom riot areas. The move
largely satisfied many cf the
Catholics, wt:\) were glad to
see the spec:als march away
from their d.xirsteps and into
the countryside. In Belfast and Londonderry, nesday for talks with Presi-
bulldozers began to clear the dent Nixon believed centered
rubble and demolished barri-
cades under the watch of Brit·
ish troops.
an bis country's military
security in a post.Vietnam
Asia. Chichester-Clark was selling up a committee of inquiry to Park, his wife and top aides
investigate the riot deaths. Six flew from Seoul in a chartered
Catholics, including a 9-year-
old boy, and two Protestants
were shot dead. The commit-
tee faced a gigantic task of
sifting through allegations and
counterallegations.
In England, 10,000 Irishmen
stayed away from work in Bir-
mingham and Coventry Wed-
nesday in answer to a call for
a national stoppage to express
solidarity with the Ulster Cath-
olics. There was absenteeism
in Leeds, Liverpool, Wolver-
hampton and Bradford.
At the United Nations in New
York Wednesday, the Security
Council shelved the Irish Re-
public's proposal to send a
U.N. peace force to Northern
Ireland. The 15-natiOn body
voted unanimously against de·
bate of the question which kept
it oU the agenda. Britain had
opposed the move, contending
that because Northern Ireland
is part of the United Kingdom,
U.N. intervention would be an
illegal intrusion into internal
British affaln.
* * * Irish Riot
Leader Seeks
U.S. Dollars
Think
GEIST
Think
JED.In tnhA _ .......... ·-· .. I 6G44M ..... ,,..
' ·-'
"'
•
IACK ·TO· SCHOOL
SPECIALS
Yo• co• ...... Hie Mir tlreaed kl• I• Kllool -"' blffi11
in ... rl. _.o It ponfbtel C... bt ho ... • tclMrl
MYLO-GERMANTOWN
50% NYLON, 50•4 WOOL
.... s1. 2:::· NOW 60e
MALIBU 159 649/e Woof, 36% NylH. ball
II ... SI.BO.
MONA 130
Maclil11e winhable. ball
1 oo•,-Vi"lh• wool cUIH
twist. If• soft m Ill• ,ar1t,
13' 100% Ylrtl11 WMI. Mii
PLUMA.GI
ll1f9.51.IO. W•lle lt l01t1I
175
100'/• ,.,,. ..... ltoll
lOPI
1199.$2.00. , ... , ...
f~ o sweater.
JUST A.11.RIYID!
STITCHEllT kn S Tiie co1tYenetfo11 pleu te inobl $750
Jnilr .,. e1teMl011 of your owt1 t111tw tole!tt. ftCI•
THE
KNIT
SOUTH COAST
PLAZA
Lower Levo!
WIT
Brister at San Diogo
Fwy., Costa Mesa
545-2812
lnaldt eWtry can, you'll find three honesla Wtlenevtr' yi:>U'r1 ready,"' n are. Whertv1r
you are. to-goodness fresh cocktail•. Liquor and all.
They don't taste homemade. They're mixed
professionally. With the finest Ingredients we
can lay our hands on. Uk• Smlmofl VocJICa
for lht VOClkl Manlnla, Glmlete anc;f Screw-
drivers.
Md because the cans are aluminum, they
chlll t11ter. All you do Is fllp open and Btrve.
More Important, Clubtal/a come In nine
lavorile llavora, from Extra·Ory Martini to
rre1h, frothy Daiquiri. .
We call them Clubt111 .. BecauM the~'r•
10 muqh easier, quicker and b1tt1r thin
coekteUa. •
"I'll drink to thll.•
Here is bow:
Savings account dividend for 1
year on $500.00 I =•z52
Free safe depo~lt box for as long
as you maintaln·i500.00 savings
account = •6!!
(approllmata ynrly-t ta r1111 boll ti benk)
PLUS:
Free service charge on $750;00
of American Express travelers
cheques = •71• OR -
Service charge free on purchase
of up to 10 tickets to the Forum,
Dodger Stadium or other sporting
and theater events through TRS
(TICKETRON)
Total benefits on your $500.00
savings account =•J•!!
Stop by and see us to open your
account. If you have any questions
please call 540-4066. We are open
9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., Monday thru
Friday and 1 O a.m. to 6 p.m.
Saturday.
acific
• • • • • • • • • •
• avmgs
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
SOUTH COAST PLAZA • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA
MAIN OFPICE: l401 WHITTI!ll BOULEVARD• LOI ANOELU, CAUl'ORNIA
I
\
'I
----..... -•
I DAILY PILOT EDIT9BIAL PA.GE
• Study Should Be Made
Joint comm•n:lal·mllltary us• of El Torn Marino wUI bo an unremltlln( empba!l1 on 111z. Al>o, truo tx·
Corpo AJr Station romalDi a live subject tor study, de-ceUence In writing wW bo quickly blue-penciled Into ob-
l!lite' all efforts In some oiliclal and wioff!cial quarters livlon.''
to &idelraci< the Id••· ,..,,...,,,,..,----=:f' cGra4y~ea.wu promptld-by-lbo.&lcDIAl-ol"'# 1-----~~=r-Durry o H-agalll, 611-aglilii commelil million contract by an author of a book McGr..S, "°""
!OUI persons concerned with Orange County's knotty •ldered trash.
altport probltm were published last week. 0 J bl •· lb j t lb t of lb Wbat 'II au selUed down to wa1 that study of joint n Y pro em "' • pro ec was a some • usa ol the Marine facillty Is sUU in the second phase of trad lned wnt'tetra wrooodle loolUnwelnU.tThbedlr work had to bo
tbe Muter Plen ol Aviation , the contract for which Is one over 0 um g wr I o a •
oll ed 'th Willi L p · d A After three years ol wrltlng editing, ·combining now being nq at wi am • ereira an "' chatters and Uelng tbe book toge!her, ii was accented IOciateo, deslgner1 of the first phase. . < This is in accordance with the Board of Supervisors' by yle Stuart, Inc. and published Aug.Sunder the UUt,
t 1Naked Came the Stranger.'' dinctlve to the County Alrport Commission. A mililaey-<:0mmerclal partnership in El Toro'• we The hoax book bas already sold 20,000 harckover
may Indeed prove to be lmpractlcal. But changes both copies and paperback rights have gone to Dell Publish·
ln the facility's environment and military operations ing Co. for $127,000. Twenty movie companies are read~
have been accelerating. What ls described today as a in& it. permanent defense department program may well be Altbough McGrady and the 24 other contributors
obsolete within five years. say they were in it only to prove a point, not for the
The possibility of joint operaUons at ,El Toro bas money, it appears each member or the team will profit
to bo con&idered lo the master plan's second phase if handsomely despite the :ZS.way split.
the plan Is to llllve credeoc• and validity. They've certainly also made their point that a book's volume ol sales bears no relationship to its quality as
'~aked Carne TheStranger'.
Tiie p0orn tit< mlillg, Ill< l>cUtr • book .. u. -if
ft'• 1e%f1 enouoh. ·
Three years a'o a literary boax based on this cyni·
cal postulate had Its beginning In the editorial ·depart-·
ment of the Loog l&land newspaper, Newsday.
Mike McGrady, the prize.winning columnist who
dreamed it up, sent a memorandum addreased to t•the
finest writers at Newsday.'' It read:
literature -particularly if there is enouah_ empbuls
on sex or aberrational behavior.
And they've remineled us of a bit of verse attributed
to novelist Gwen Bristow:
WriU of ogre~able, crean-mindtid people
Sociable, tone and 1erene-ndnded people
Leaving out mean and obacene-mindtd people
And the critics 1DilL tear 11ou apart
But wallow in muck about horrlbl• people
Doptly dreadfUl deplorable peoplt
\Vhom read.era will loathe. from the ttart
Terrible ~ople
Unbearable people
.
"Each participant will write one chapter generally
centered In an area of special interest. Each chapter
will be set in the same community on Long Island. Each
will involve Mn. Gillian Blake, homewrecker. There
WhoUy unthinkable, stinkablt people -
In capital Jetttr1, that's ART. ''Goat> SHOW!"
Danger in
Reactors
Near Cities
Ont cl Die real perils In t«:bnology !J
that, ~. we u dllsens have
i-11111 i.. to oay about fondamenlal
-made by our goveromeot In
-11111-Ill all. A.I ...,..... u:pertl9e becomes more
•mitt' to the workinp ol modem
..... -the -mill Is lort:ed .. dopmd apoo ~ he ClllOOI
........... debate, hecalllO he -not -enouJh -and also because IO
nwch or the bulc informaUon b
.. c:lasified.''
OUR TBll£E MOST Important
tochnolog!cal declslOlll of the last decade
Uwe beet &o put a man on the moon, to a-eate u ABM aystem, and to buikl
mclear power reactor• near populated
.-ea1. Apart from costing many blllloas,
-decilloIII lflect tbe llvea of all of
lll. AJooi with many -if DOI moot -
ldeoUIU I happen to believe that all
&twee baYe been tragic and e-ipenaive
mlllakt1.
One cl the -booka conllnnln1 my
"lew 11 "The Carelea Atom" by Sheldon
Novick, wblch deals. cl e a r I J . and
bonelti)' (so far a.s I can de\ermlne)
with the potential danger of buUdinc
llrae power reactors near metropolitan
attas. Yet we are going ahead with this
program, wben it ls not even certain that
auch ructon are safe anywhere in a
populated area.
NUCL&ll llEACl'ORS are dangerous
olnlpq by virtue of their el<lmoce. Afl<r
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
We poor folk really enjoyed seeing
the rich gentry eaUng, 'drinking
and pufylng Ill the Century Plaza
on TV at tupayerl" erpeue.
Mlrie AnlolneUe was especially
preUy.
-R. A.O.
11•cb a plant bas been functioning for
some time, it ll st6ted with ndiolcUvJty
to a far greater extent than that in a
powerful nuclear bomb. And, of course,
radloacllff effects are irrevenlble -
once contaminaUoo •Ls in, there b no
known cure. Four years ago, so conservative a
physicist as Dr. Edward Teller pointed
out that "a gently seeping nuclear reac-
tor can put its radioactive poison under a
stable inversion layer and conct:nlrat.e it
over a few hundred square miles in truly
deadly fashion." He concluded: "In my
mind, nuclear reactors do not belong
on the surface of the earth; they belong
underground."
EVEN A YEAR before then, a survey
of government "storage t a n k s ' '
diJcovertd that nine of lhem were leak·
ing, one of which had already lost 60,000
gallons. And it has been estimated that a
single gallon of radioactive waste can
j90parUiz< the health and aalety of
mUlioQI of people.
Last year, the Atomic Energy Com·
misalon asked Congress for $2Ya bllllon to
replact failed and falling tank1. Thls is
hardly reassuring. If we are going to be
careless with our atom.! -despite the
best or intentions -the public has at
least a right to decide whether the pro-
gram ls worth tbe risk at this staa:e of
(JUI' nuclear knowledge.
Enanwured of Secrecy
About 21 yean ago the United States
ballt a U,ooo-ton tranaport without
portholes or superstructure windows to
clelend against prowling submarines at
nipt. Reporten wm barTed from the
launching, and the officer commanding
Che ~ -denied anylhlng mmuaJ 1n construction. Three wee.U
W.r the _,.! WU pictured and fully
deocrlhed In the London llluJtraled N.,.1,
So there ls nolblng new about sense.las
military secrecy, and the lying that ·~
tends II. 411 reuooable men coocede thal
Sn wartime thflre are many occulonl
wbtfl it. ii dangel'OUI to reveal your plMI
and 1cls to the enemy. The rig)lt Of t)le
-le to !mow ii llUbordlnate to IOCUrity.
THE TIUlUBLE ii the military
hierarchy (and the diplomallc hierarchy,
too) Is .. mamoured of ..... ..,. ~ !J
unable lo dlstlnpllh between valid -euhnen~ aod cOnceabnenl Of everything
for Ila own uke. In the latter cue It Is
lift the coosplracl8 cl kids In a
oc:boolyard, w-arcane alfalrl are not
tbat Jmporlant.
A aood recetrt example Is ttie
••cJaasfficallon" ol ttaearch In chemical·
blolollcal warfsre. Any country wlll1 a -..um cl sdeatllic.Jndultrill capsblll-
ty can make and tal 11011ou1 gaaes ud
fool aNllllld with I"'"'· and many of lliom do, The i.~c. _pr.J11!:1ple lo 111ch -ponry Is unlvenal knoWledge, as wu
alGIIHplltllng, GOCO lhe atom WU split.
BUT TRI c.a military enclave Is
mmly ludlcfool with ill barbed-wire
--'J1*l when Ibey klUed a few
thaulud ....., lo Utah with nerve I"·
Ibey haYe to Uo allout It, lhwah lhe only
war ln provea ii wllb an enerJ'\1 •tlkh
!J llCll mUlnl ......... and ilo'l lolnc
to mUt 1111.
ln June a Vletnamese, unidenUfied.
wu abot and killed near Nba Trang, 200
miles northeast of Saigon. This Is the
hue al the Green Beretl, a special
servicu outfit which the actor, John
Wayne, celebrated in a film.
Commmandlng this base wa~ Colonel
Robert Rheault (West Point) who was
&Ulptnded from command July 20, a
mM\h after the lncldenl
RECENTLY THE Anny amsted the
colonel and an uaortment ol majors and
captains, charging them with murder and
cooaplraey. Here the case stops, while
the Army conducts a "secret in-
vestigation." Presumably the Army had
enouah evidence to make such grave
charaes, and preium1bl1 the accused are
held in Md confinement.
But lhe American people are not
permitted one ICJ'ap of this evidence,
thou.ah they have a high stake in it, and
ln the fair name of their soldiers
ovenus. Tbe evidence will ol course
hive to be revealed when the case
rtachts court-martial.
You may be sure the elite and touchy
CrHn Btreta are In a hurric•ne of gossip
about tht evidence. It 11 hard lo see
what, beyond embarrassment, warrant.I
the de11d 1llence, or "'hilt beneOt derivea
from Ii to the 'accused. lbe Anny Ind the
n1tion.
The •ccused ha\•e alrudy bttn injured,
perhaPll Irreparably, but fair men wlll
have a cart not LO CIOOvlcL lhe.m on aJ.
lqotlon.
A Review of Nixon's Position
U.S. Not B~gging Out on Vietnam
WASHINGTON -Enroute fr o m
Bangkok to New Deihl Preaident N!Joo
talked frankly with four oewsmen
privileged to ride with him oo Afr Force
One on that lea of his receot around-lhe-
"orld trip.
It was on this occaaion that Nixon at-
tached great symboliml to his vilit to
Saigon, which be bad juJI flnlal>ed, and
said it il11.1Btrated that the U. S. was not
hll&Hlng out of the Vlttnam war. The
term, bugging out, wu NlJ-e11'L He
described President Thieu 11 one of the
four or five leading poliUciana of the
world and otherwise ~ l1'eal -fidence In the South Yltlnamele lead,..,
This :JO.minute· discoune Of the
Presldl!llt'I seeDlll to come Info aiiarpel'
focus with lhe unfolding of events in Viet·
nam, and it raises the question of
whether or not the general public Is tx·
peeling too much from his policy or
disengagement.
RENEWED OFFENSIVE operations In
Vietnam and the continued intransilence
of the Cc_.mmunisl negotiators in Paris
are aUecUng Ni.xon·s policy. But evt!.ll
~ Rfchard WilectU • • • ::t ,..
without that effect a careful study of all
that Niion bu said on many different oc-
cas.ion1 may indicate a longer·run in·
volvement in Vietnam than the lllClllt
hopeful would desln or expect.
What the public hu least believed is
that Nixon's action on trooit withdrawals
is in fact condiUOned upon the criteria he
baa aet up. nw: public hu wanted' to
believe, and bu been encourqed by the
news m~ to believe, that come wbat
ma)' Nixon will withdraw our ground
combat f1.n:es just aa fast 11 he can IO u
to complete the procaa before the et1n-
grtss.iona! elections next year.
But even i! that were done lhete still
would be a couple ()( hundred thousand or
our forces tn Vietnam lllelf plus the
maulve seat and air power located
elsewhere. A million men are now in-
volved in maintaining the United Stlt.eJ
as the leadinc Pacific power.
TIU8 INVOLVEMENT is bound to con-
tinue, In one rorm or another, at a very
high :evel whether we are less Involved
on the ground in Vietnam, or not.
It is perhaps safer to take Nixon
precisely on the race value of what he
has asserted and lhls is that no prior
schedullna: of troop withdrawals has been
made. The decisions will be made from
lime lo time based upon whether or not
the South Vietnamese can take over, the
vtolence sl,Jbsides or the.re is prOgrtss in
~ Paris talks.
The Praident is about to make another
declsl..,, having promised one by the end
Of this month, and it Is supposed that he
will order more troops home. But the fact
or the matter seems to be that such
withdrawals are discounted by Hanoi as a
fraud, the level of military activity i:i1
stepped. up, and troop dispositions do not
indicate a Communist withdrawal back to
North Vietnam in response to Nixon's
initiative.
Therefore he will have dilficu.1ty, iC be
conUnues the withdrawal, in maintaining
the credibility of his owo crltma except
i>n the one point of Saigon's ability to
replace the withdrawn forces.
TIIERE COULD come a time when it
Would ht: judged that Saigon's abillll had
reached its limits and the progress which
the public hopes will be rapid will be eI-
tended over several years.
Han ui is making it very difficult for
Nixon to carry out his policy, apparently
on the assumption that the American
public does not want any more caaualties
and will make the President get out on
unfavorable terms.
Perhaps Hanoi is wrong on this tis it
hu so often been wrong in the past in
seizing the beat opport.unity for a set-
tlement. The best offer Hanoi hu yet had
came from Lyndon 8. Johnson at the
Manila conference In 1966 -a complete
withdraw.iJ in six months. The Saigon
government is stronger now than it was
then, il! armed forces are better able to
fight. Hanoi would have been better off to
have settled in 1966 than now. And it
would be better for Hanoi to settle now
than to count on t.l'!e U.S. bugging out,
which Nixon says won't happen .
ABA's Judicial Appointive Power
WASHINGTON The Nixon
Administration,. softening in It 1
adherence to .. strict construction'' of the
Constitution, has granted the American
Bar Association a perpetual veto over the
appointment of federal Judges. Jn the
wake of a similar concession to the
American Medical Association over the
appointment of an Assistant Secretary of
lieu.Ith, Education and Welfare, the
fellows over at the National Association
of Accou ntants may now be expected to
claim Ule right to name lhe Secretary ol
Treasury.
Since the federal judiciary is constanUy
expandlng, and since much of the judicial
tone-if not actually the Jaw-in major
const!tutional areas Is set by federal
judges, It may be useful to take a look at
the ABA, the new appointive power.
THE ABA CLAIMS a membenhip of
.substantially less than half of tht nati<m's
attorneys. '11le ABA pruenlly carries
140,558 lawyers on Its rolls. '11lere are
more than 325,000 lawyers in the country.
ABA members are older than the
average of all lawyers, more established,
"ea!Uiier and more likely to have a con-
siderable stake in keeping things the way
they are. ABA firll accepted black
members in the '50s.
All of which Is not to say that the ABA
should not have a voice In the selection Of
judges. But to give the sole voice to an
a.ssociaUOft which hardly rtpresents its
profession. and which is profoundly con-
servative at the lOc&l and national leffl,
is a major step. It may tven be an un-
constitutional one.
"TBE PRDIDENT s b a l·I nominate
(judges) and appoint them by and with
lhe advice and consent of the Senate,"
s<oys the Constitution. The Founding
fathers &aid nolhinc about the advice
and consent of those lawyers with the
mellll and lht time to devote themsdvu
to the administration ol tbe ADA.
Tht A&.4. maintains • 1tandin& com·
mlttee on the federal fudidary which
provides a rating to the Departmtnt of
Justice whenever a candklate is being
considtred hy lhe Prtsktent or a senator
from the Prtsldetit's party.
The ABA committee ls a.mall, and ft Is
set In lt.s ways. It Wiii rate 11 "not
qualified" any candidate for judge who
has not had courtroom experience. Thu~. tt !ollow• an old mytll cl lawym, chiefly
fostered by litigating counsel. ln fact,
some of our ertat judges have had no
trial experience.
rr MAY COME AB a 111rprile to
laymen, but the fad Is that nearly 90 ptr·
Cftlt of all noncrbnlnal (civil) trials In
slate courts aNe from automobile IC·
clllents. Judges appointed for their e1-
perience .as trial law-yen are more likely
to have thought deeply about medico-
leaal upecta of hHd and neck lnJurles
than about the limits ol free speech and
a!SOCiaUon.
lt is doubtful if experience in con-
vincinc a jury Olat the victim or a
whiplash Injury was somehow at fault in
the aeddent which caused the injury
greatly qualifies a man to decide ques.-
tlom involving the rights of the accused,
the Civil Rights Act or state voting re-
quirements.
The ABA also has narrow views on the
question or age. It will automatically rate
as "not qualified " any candidate who bas
reached his 64lh birthday and will rarely
approve anyone who has reached the age
of &O.
ONE DEFENSE OFFERED by the
Administration for the abdication of the
appointive power to a rather natTOw
private group is that it would reduce the
pressure on the White House from in-
sisten t senators and other politicians who
beseech the President to appoint their
friends. This way, says Deputy Atty. Gen.
Richard Kleindienst, the President can
say, "Sorry, Senator, the ABA says your
friend is not qualilied."
But the Preaident of the United States
is supposed to be able to stand up lo this;
that's why th e Constitution gives him the
power of judicial appointment. If we do
not believe in the President's fortitude.
then we should have to aS!lume that in all
other appointments-in those where the
ABA is not available as a buffer-the
President readily yields to the blan·
dlshment.s of pollticians anxious that he
name some friendly hack.
Dy Frank l\.1anklewict
and Tom Braden
Peace Corps Boondoggling Charged
WASHINGTON -Tbe Peace COrps
•pent 1639,411 lul yew for a ..nu Of
1ludl" and polls to f1od out what 11'•
doing Ind bow It's dofnc·lt.
In addltkm, tbl qency employed IOme
400 to-ealle:l "nperts" and "consultants"
for v1rylng perlodl cl time ot from llO to
$75 a day. Ol th1I number, 71 recdved tbe
I
by the Louis Harris polling organlzation
at a cost ot '82,500.
top compensaUon cl fn per dlem. ONB BAill\l8 P B 0 J E CT , with a
Thtse unpublllhed fadl were brought • $$1,000 price tag, was a study •jof t h e
to llg)ll by Rep. Vernoo Themoon, R· llOcial atUtudes career pitlernl and Wit., member of tbt llouH Foreign Af. _..,,.,_ ' b1-ol ntumed loin Committee, during 1 bearin( on the • _, t pro
p,... Corp&' 1101 mlUlon budpl, 'lllat II volunteen.• The other, for lll,500, was
l900,000 lw than lul l"'&r'• buc!itL ''to meuure the current attlludsa toward
Notable tmonl the Peace Cori>I' llat or thf Peace Corps amona collep senJors."
"reKarcb" projecls were two coodllcted Rep. Thomson llwply criUclzed the
....--a ., Georte --~
Dear Gtor1w
I've met Ulll Morine and I lite
him. How can 1 http him overcome
his 1hyne11! •• BLONDIE
Dear Blondlt :
A ohy MarlM!
llold him rllht lhett, Bloodl•I
You've e1plured a 1py!
$131,000 ouUay as ''an unwarranted waste
of laxpayen' money."
"This ao-called rtlUJ'Ch." the fonnu
Wilc<min eovemor told WUllam Wbtlan,
Peace Corps budiet director, "bu all the
tarmarks or hlf)t-Oown boondoggling.
Goin& ovtr the list of these studies,
anatyaes and polll, I can't flnd a single
one that on its Ylf')' face doesn't appear
UMlest."
In ...,. ln>lanct~ Thom.son pointed
out, the 1tudies are patently con·
tradictory. He also stressed that, as far
a~ the record shows, nothing has ever
come of the repc>rlS produced by U>ese
atudiea.
By Robert S. A11en
ud Johll A. Gold1llllin
-----' Thursday, August 2l, 1969
Thi editorial pcge cf &hf Daily
Pilot ietk• to inform and 1tl,,..
ulatt readers b11 presenting this
ftewapa~'t opiniaru and com·
mentaf"l/ on topici of interest
and afgnfflcanct, bu-providing o
forum tor tht eipreuion of
our readers' optnl0ftl1 and bu
preaentir1g the diverse vl1w-
points of informed ob.tervers
and 1pokenn1n on topics of th.1
da~.
Robert N. Weed, Publl.sher
I Th"'"1, Autusl 21, 1969 DAll.V "1LOT 7
Deale• FIMJa Complained
C~EB,~G Murphy 'Running,' Belies Rumor OPlll :14 ltOUM
TIC TOC MAllttCITS •116 .U
CMll. ..............
SACRAMENTO (AP) -complalned to Pmldent Nixon The report wu carried In ho 1Ull 1pew In a boarH ho woWcl quit tho cablnol aad
W Mi h Republican Sen. Geo r I• that Murphy wu slow in get-the naUonally syn d t cat e d 1emiwhisper. try for M'urphy'1 job. ....... _, •·'--arren"'·~--~~-•_,_ ____ ,!.,.\Jrploy .. '·.,·=~ ::"r.=!.~~;g tin( the campalcn w>Cter way. Drew Pell'IOll column. • Whon Finoh, form er Murphy aald, "Secretary :J_ •J"..,. , .eo.::1;~;·-Flncb u-the fortuer-rnovi Murphy' heatttr-narbeen-eautornJa leutstanriovemor, &inch-and -ar.-u loH11---
rumon hli not run for a actor's campaign manager lo one eource of rumors that he tan into a White Houle rebuff together as two people in
1n would not setk a second term.· in his effort to name Dr. John poUUcaZ life can be. He bu of-M Talk • teeond term 1179' 11164' In Ites, he underwent surgery Knowles as hls top heaUb fered to do la)'thlnc-be can.~ ost -at1ve ne1: Ja::i:e c~el r~ ~ ~I =du:~ n~w~t~~~: for cancer of the larynx and deputy there Weft rumol'I that ~~e:~ :;;t~1:.i~ha'a 1.
Wednell:lq "to give you a new drama which seems t o Finch often hu 1aid be
ata1'11 roport on my campal&n originate In Washintt<>n and woold. Ilk• to be a U.S. J l"11o-
B1 L M. BOYD Paar, who 1~ed die f!rsl ol for r...iection." cooUnues to raise a question Navy Employe Found Knifed oenator, but also has aald he l
LOVE , ~ •AR _ A the late nJ.&ht televtaton talk Murphy &aid his campaJ.an about whether I will be a can-would not run qalnst a GOP "'"u " shows, ri&bf. T" A. Allto was <rpniu.Uon work wu about did ate for re-electlon,'' OAKLAND (UPI) -Police stabbed lhrtt Umet In the ab-incumbent. 'lbe main theme of
blonde rectpliolillt, who Is btrore Pur all rilb~ but lbe three monlha ahead o I Murphy, 67, said. Wednesda7 found ao Alameda domen. The body w a 1 tho Murphy·ll'lnch rumors bu
never short ol interested first of the burich was a schedule. He denied a publls.h--"1 can tell you that Naval Air Station employe discovered after Roaa' office been that llurpby would step
gentlemen ftiends, says her humorous gentleman named ed report that Robert H. Secrelary Finch joim me in knifed to death !n his Oakland called his apartment house out of the race, possibly gtv1n&
standard opener when her of. Jeny Lester. That "" lt Floch, 1eeretary ol health, saying that it has no basis apartment. manager to ask why be had health reuons, Itavlq the
!. · d th years ago educaUon and welfare, had whatsoever in fact." Malcolm Roa, 29, had been not come to work. field open to Finch.
ice LS crow ed wi strange BEAurY _ "As to which1 --------~-----------------'-'-----------------'--====-:::'=-::--======--men goes like this: She throws are the world's most beautiful
a handful of paper clips up in women,,, writes an Everett,
the air and moa~. "How long Wash ... •--"ber ' I II do I have to stay single aod ·• ~1 • ' can te
unsatisfied? Why d o e ' n ' t you trom experience there's a
somebody take me home for a whole raft at gl.r1a in the Far
.J><l.J'.'.....&ther._to_ the Point. North who""' haH Swede and
what? Nonetheless, it gets -half-Eskimo;-aod wbat--makes -
results, evidently. "After that them the most beautiful is you
perfonnance," she says, .. 1 never have to fight about who
never have to wait more than brings in the wood or goes to
10 minutes before 1 0 m e the crick for water.''
NOTE A FADED SIGN on a l!lmooth article sidles up to alk. Wenatchee, Wash.. a pp 1 e me out to dlrmer." our love
and War man frowns on the orchard fence: "God help
procedure. He says it's too those who help tbemselves." ... EVEN NOW, THERE are direct. He calls it dirty. more killings in Chicago every
"'HOW FREQUENTL y does year than in all of Great it happen that a man of 55 or
older fathers a new baby?" in-Britain. • .IT IS REPORTED a lady named Sarah Jean Glo. quires a client. At last report Vt!" of West Vifiinia became a
the record showed about 15,000 grandmother at the age of 27 ~~rr ~at age llwere . . . AN OUTDOORSMAN
.........,.,.... at111:rs amua Y. • . contends no racroon ever
MC ST TALKATIVE sleeps in the same tree two
CITIZENS in the naUon no nights running. Didn't know
doubt live in Warren, Mich. th L ALL CREWMEN Th l town h 90000 I a · • on a as , peop e Britain's royal yacht Britannia wi'h 203,000 telephone.a. are required to wear gym
.. T E A R S - W h e n his shoes so ihey woo't go clomp
creditors finally got to him on clomp and wake up Her Ma-
July 21, 1913, the legendary jesty .
Buffalo BUI Cody, wobbly oil a READING _ If your high
bale of. hay, cried and cried school boy has trouble with his
and cried. Would not bring this reading, get him to take a typ..
up i! It mattered to Buffalo ing course. For some reason,
Bill anymore. But a letter the teachers say, a student's
from a tough-talking Texan ability to read well perks up mocks the modem men who
weep, contends old westerners considerably as he learns to
did H ' Cod type. never · es wrong. Y Your questions and com·
wept. For hours. 1 1 d nd ·11 CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. men s are we come a . w~
"Where can an IS.year-old buy ?.e 11se~ wher~~er Possible '!'-
booze legally?" A. Only in Cliecktng Up ~ddress ma il
Louisiana and New York so to L. M. Boyd, tncare of tJie
far as I ·knov; ... Q. "IT WAS DAILY PILOT, Bo:i 1875,
STEVI!: Al.J...EN, not Jack Newport Beach, Calif. 92663.
Solon Joins Pickers,
Savs Conditions Good
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A
state senator who spent lour
days picking grapes at a
Delano vineyard .says the ex·
perience confirmed what he
previously believed -that the
United Farm \Vo r It er s
Organizing Committee does
not speak for the workers.
Sen. John Hanner, a
Republican from Glendale,
gpoke at a news conference set
up Wednesday by' a public
relations finn which
represents grape growers.
"As a re.ult of my ex-
periences living and working
among the migrant workers,
with my identity known only
to the owner of the farm, 1
Rock Slide
Hurts Fire
Fighters
CRESTLINE (UPI) -Five
fighters were injured. two se-
riously, Wednesday night when
they we re surrounded by
flames of a IOO-acre brush fire
and caught In a rock slide in
the rugged foothills of the San
Bernardino NaUonal Foreat.
A NaUonal Forest spokes·
man said late Wednesday the
fire conUnued to bum out of
control.
The spokesman said Ed Tay·
lor, San Bernardino, a foreman
for the Call!omia Division ot
Forestry, auffered a rractured
skull, cuts and abrasions~ Tay.
Jor and Mike Weir, San Ber·
nardlno, a CalHornla Forestry
fire fight.er, were taken to St.
Bernardine Hospital. Weir suf.
rcred a poaatble broken ann
and fractured rib cage.
SF Swear-In
Highest Negro
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Thaddeas Brown started work
today 11 San Fr1nclaco'1 new
tax collector, tho ~ljlieif
Negro civil Ml"V&nt in the
city's history.
More than 200 perl<ll\I Hlled
the board of supervllor1
chambers Jn city haU Wed·
n~ay for the 1wearln&·ln
ceremonies conducted b y
Municipal Court Judie J01epll
G. KeMody,
•
came to the conclusion that
the assertions and allegations
made by the union were
false," Hanner said.
He sald none of the grape
pickers at the 3,600-acre ranch
owned by Pandol and Soni
suspected be wu a state
senator, altbou.gb one of them
asked if be wu a pollceman.
"The men I w<rked among
earned eood lncome1 ,"
Hanner .II.id. "'Ibey wert
artisans Ind they made $3 an
hour. Their living conditions
were adequate.
"They lived in rooms for
two workers each, with a
group tltchen, like in a forest
servi« camp. 'lbe lavatories
were the same, with a lar1e
shower room. We worked nine
hours a day."
Hanner, vice chaimtan of
the Senate Committee on
Labor and Social Welfare, aakt
he haa visited other vineyards
and he believed Pandol and
Sons is representative.
Rafferty
Bam Books
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
"Soul on Ice'' by Eldridge
Cleaver and "'lbe Dutchman"
by playwrigllt Len>i Jona will
no longer be used in the black
studies program of San Fran-
cisco hJgh achoo!..
Both boob.by tho COlllrover-
sial black authors are sprink·
led with four-letter words .
Schoo£ Supt. Robert E, Jeni"
ins told the board of education
Wed!le!day night that ho acted
to withdraw the books after
State Supt. of Public Instruc-
tion Max Rafferty ruled that
their use in a classroom would
be considered groundl for re-
voking teacher credent.lats.
Raf£etry a a t d uae ol the
books would violate the state
educaUcn board code which
speclfies teachers m u s t in-
1truct lllldents "to -ldJe.
ntN, profanity and fallebood.''
Costa Rica RR
Shut by Strike
SAN JOSE, Colla lllca
(UPI) -Slrlkln1 employt1 to-
day forced the Northem
Railway of Costa Rica to l\.IS-
pend operauons. The lint is
the only land link between thl1
caplt.al and the nation'• rich
blnana plantaUona oo the
Caribbean.
Sears-
122)8
SAVE s13?
'42.99 Sears Craftsman
5/s HP Router
97
!otk About Sean Convenient Credit Pl.u
•Depth adjutment in l/3r incr-111a 11p to
l'/a"I
• Grooves, mortiaes, nhbets. dO'felaill. c.on1
and much more with accessories
•No load apeed ••• 25,000 RPM
e With spindle lock
e 10 ft. 3 Wire cord and adapter
Modcl2~06
SA VE •5 and '10! Hedge Trimmer or Electric Drill
18'74
SA VE $10! $M.99
Craftsman
Belt Sander
Sa•e
Now? 3491
• 3-incb,d ... lopa 7/8BP
• S1nd1 wood, mttal,
pt.tic and ttone
• No-load belupoed!JOO
aa:rlaee f ootperminte
• 10 ft. Jwirecord 1
.Your Choice
24~.?
129.99 Hed1e Trimmer
• H1nlened alloy lleel ht.c!M
• F"u:id rev t.mcllewitbth•ab
.tide rwitr.b
eJ/SRP.15" ......
134.99 Eleclrie Drill __ _.-i
••• '" BP; ... hMpeed
e R~miiile I• nmoN ~
bokl -back .. drill bit
SA VE $5! $44.99
Electric Hedge
Trimmer
Re1.
44.99 3997
• Bailt with % oeponte
imulatioa .,.._.
e All·positioa lioat .....
clle.~BP
• Stub·l•nalh, Z·wlre
cord
•With 16.in<b blade
Alk Aboat Sean Convenient Credit Plana
SA VE 12119.99,Sope.
Router
Bit Set
7sa
• F1-.ti&l11; • ..i
•Battndlld .........
ened to P"' &-. •1
eot6ng
• lnchodet Ill , .... ..._
"+'eialDsblll.V"llW"
bit
~-----------------------------~-----------------:,, ...., •• tA a.••°" s21-41JO R MOMTt e1 J.3t11 10HG KACH HE u121 ~to 2.1 1''· HA ..s1•1, YU u1.s1 ttCO we M2't SOtnH ~~ .. ft.UA1111 I I ' I •>11 "4Hl'A ANA II 74J71 1'*'*' -~ CAHOO.l ,A_C 3•0.0661 <itlNOAlf Ot 5-1004, a ..... ,11 ou·.wte ' SOTO AN . • SAM'AftlflN;l.s N44011 VAUtt PO l ...... fN.ltJO ••
I COMf'fOH Nf d-2.Sll, Nf 2·'761 tfOUTWOOCI HO f 0St•1 Ol1J<o!G4! 637.2100 ~· • MClt«A IX .4o61'l l -'t'llllllCM rl f •lfll
COVINA "'"°'II IMGU.WOOOOl 1·2S21 tA$40lt-IA dl1-l2lt, 351·•211 ears ..... ,
~--------------------------------------------"SotlllactionGuaronleadarYourM-yBock" •• $hop6Nlabll~llnuahs.uni.rt.:ioA.M.•9a30P.M.
•
,
I
8 111.11.Y PILOT Tllursdly, AU9'11l 21, 1969
By Phil lnterlandi
"fm looking for aomething that will eacalate our . :t&lka.''
Terror s~ene
4 Found Dead After 'Spat'
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Tony Howze had a spat with
his wife and stayed away from
home for several days, but he
wasn't prepared for the scene
of unrelieved horror he found
on his return.
When he opened the door to
his two-story home in the
Visitacion Valley district Wed-
nesday night, be found his
wife, his stepson, hii wife's
niece and nephew and the
family poodle -all dead from
carbon monoxide poisoning.
Howze jumped back in his
car and sped off for help. Sev.
eral blocks away he spotted a
police car and shouted: "l
think my family has a11 been
killed. I want you to come
back with me.''
Patrolmen Robert Gillin and
Al Square accompanied lhe 41·
year-old Howze back to his
home.
They found his wife, Gussie
Howze, 29, dead in a bedroom.
His stepson, John More, lay
crumpled in a nearby hallway.
Candance Lewis, 13. his
wife's niece, was dead in
another bedroom. M i c h a e I
Jones, 2, his wife's nephew,
was dead propped up on a
pillow i.a bed.
Downstairs in the garage,
the stiffened body of the fami·
ly dog lay with its muzzle
pointed toward a crack uoder
the door. Nearby was the body
of a moose.
The family's late model car
was also in the garage -the
key turned on, the gas tank
empty and the battery dead.
Police theorized that Mrs.
Howze had returned fro man
errand and somehow forgot to
turn off . the engine.
Coroner Henry Turkel said
there were no signs of foul
play, but scheduled autopsies
which is routine in all unat-
tended death cases. He said
the gas victims had been dead
four or five days.
The grief.stricken Howze
told investigators he left the
house on Friday after a minor
argument with his wile. He
said he went to his job in
EmeryYille, where he works
as a card dealer in a poker
room, and remained there un-
til Wednesday night.
Panther Denies Link
In Connecticut Death
SAN FRANCISCO (UPIJ-
Black Panther chairman Bob-
by Seale says he "knows al>-
solutely nothing" abou! the
slaying of a Connecticut Black
Panther in connection with
which he was arrested by a
squadron of heavily-armed
FBI agents.
"They will never be able to
prove the charges." Seale 's
attorney, Francis J. McTernan
asserted. "This is obviously
part of the Justice Depart.
ment's plan to harass and jail
all Black Panther Party
leaders."
CoMecticut authorities filed
Millionaire .
Said Capable
LOS ANGELES <UPI) -A
superior court judge ruled
Wednesday that Neil S. Mc·
Carthy, 81, lawyer-sportsman,
is now capable or managing his
$9 million estate himself and
needs no conservator.
Neil Dillion McCarthy, the
millionaire's~. had contend·
cd that since his father suffer·
ed a stroke last April, he had
lmJt the capacity lo handle his '
financial affairs.
Superior Judge Benjamin
Landis ruled that the senior
McClrthy has made a com·
plet.e-recovery.
Smog Alert Set
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Tem·
peratum soared and smog
seared eyes a.s authorities call·
ed the first smog alt~rt of the
ytar In Los Angeles.
The county alrrllullon con·
trot district saI Wednesday
!be oione coonl ruched .62
parts per million in s nm e
art'U, \f h I I t temperatures
moved be)'OOd JOO degreei.
Four smGg alerts were called
la 1968.'
\
kidnaping, murder and con-
spiracy charges against Seale
in connection with the killing
last May of Alex Rackley, 24,
a Panther from New York
whose body was found in a
swamp near New Haven. ·
Four carloads of heavi\y-
armed FBI agent,, surrounded
an auto carrying Seale hack
from a wedding Tuesday night
and forced it to the s.ide cf a
downtown intersection in Ber-
keley. Seale offered no resis-
tance.
Seale spent Wednesday in
.and out cf jail. He posted $25,-
000 bail on federal charges of
un1awful flight to avoid pros-
ecution, then was immediately
re-arrested by local author-
ities on a Connecticut murder
warrant.
Seale remained calm
through~.t the proceedings,
only ra1s1ng a clenched fist
black power salute to su pport-
ers as he was led in and out
of courl
Woman, 85,
Rescued
LOS ANGELES CUP!) -An
SS.year~ld woman with a
broken leg was carried to
safety from a blazing apart-
ment building Wednesday by a
parking attendant who worked
at a nearby lot.
Firemen said Steve
Goldberl, 20, saw the fire from
a parking: lot and rescued the
unidentified "1.Jtllan Irom the
three-story building.
The blaze caused heavy
damage to lbe building and
gutted the upper two stories,
firemen said.
ON THE TUBE
Fer the h•1t 911i4• fo whtf't
lr1t1'P•flit19 er1 TV, r•td T't'
WEIK -d1•trle111,d wifh tho
S•tuftfe1 ed1t;e111 ef tht DAILY
PILOT,
'
ears
Great
Value! 3 89
gaL
• SeJ£ .. priming on sound.
painted surfaces
• Dries in Mi hour
•Colorfast. resiata Llister·
log., discoloratioa
.,
Interior Acrylic Latex
One-Coat Paint
Se111'9
Low
Price
gal.
•So superior in p erformance it's
guaranteed to cover iu one coat
• It clings to the brush or roller,
flows on easily, smoothly
• Withstands repeate d washings
• Your choice of decorator col'Ors
•Lead free ... safe
Use Sears
Revolving Charge
SAVE
35%!
Compressor
S.\VE
$40 99ss
• Ragged %-RP motor.,.
maximum 100 PSI
For the Record
Sponsored hy UCI
72 Kids Set for Vnicamp
19.feetings
Birtlis
1111111 C-t Ctmll'llllltY MIN'llll
J•IJ 14 Mr 1Nt Mn Fr1ncl• G. Miki.a. tson i.\cini1 V1r1if, Latun1 Nlllltl. 1lrl
"'"" 11 M•:.v.l Mrs Nlcllol111 I . Allllll'lll..,,
'"· JD v1ie11111 P•r11 Dr •• LH~llll , 1lrt
,, • ., 11
Mr. end Mrs. Alchtrd A.. McGIMll, L......,. had!,_ boy Mr """ Mr•. l'ltlOrd tl. VtrmllVU. 1'ns.11m Ot' .. 1.Huria l•tch. 1lrl
J•lll 1' Mr end Mra llobtrt J. Cmeltk\ urn Arm.·_,. Dr1v~. L•tun• NI.,.,..""';'. Mr .nd Mrl. Arnoll OoAlld. 21111,.. Cal!Md, Mlulon Vitia. •lrl
' ''"' n Mr. 1rld Mn .. 1111~ J. J~. 2'0 Kllltl Pllct. Newwt ltldl. loY
J•"' '' "' •r.:: Mn. Leu!• C. K1111"1. 2'111 Cort 1111 Qrlvt. Ml .. IOll v .. 1o. 11rr -1 Mt .,.. Mr1. e1rrv L ,,,,..,1. 2'11 V11!1 l'leit Drlw. L-"llue •
"" J•IY 21 Mr Miii Mn. Fr ... ArcMI' W Gttl·
lith WfY, LetuM lffdl, 1frl ,,,,,. ti
Mr. 1NI Mn. L1r,... E. Crou.1.. !!i5 J.ith CoMI t+lthWIY, L_ ..... ...,..
M~lr~rwl Mn TtrrY H. M~r9t!. :N121 Ji.rc..it OtlVt. MIHlor! Vlelo. BOY
/wt. 1 Mr. Miii Mn. Cl-.rln V Jvndl:., • IJ1 Gltnnt'rtl StrHI, Lttulll 8MCh, bm' M• 1"11 Mn ll<>beM J. WllH"""'' 1512 N. Coa11 H19hw1r, ti111"' l•tdl. ....
HOAe M•MOltlAL HOSPITAL
.IUIY II Mr. ,,.... M ... wrni.m ltrtmtl"1 1:121
Wthan Avt., Coal• M_, 1lrl
Altlllll I Mr. 11'.d M... Rlt;Mrd Wolf.. H1
Ot1ol<I, L..Vn& .!ilkh. llo'I' Mr. 1nd Mr1. Jolw! P. YOUllll. ffM
l!IHn A'1. No. D, COl!I ft\eWI, boy Mr. 11141 Mfl. Mlrk Lrt"s.11· 200! Mo. D AMhtlM A..-.. eo.11 Mft9, 1lrl
Mr. Inf Mf'. J«Oll'lt I!. Cl'l1"9e, 1171
N1h:mll A..-.. Wfttmln1ftr, 1lrl
Mr. Ind Mr•. Jlfln A. L•ltln, 1"' Anal'lfln'I An .. c.11 w111. 11r1
Mr. 1nd Mn. Jot>n Mcluw, ll'O 01rr111
St., COii• MIH, boy
Allt¥lf I
Mr. '"" Mn .. ltldllrtl A. S.WYtr, 1m I! ••1111M •"" .. 111it:..a. 1lrl Mr: _,. Mrl. Wllhun II. Whitt, 1n1
Del1Wlt1 SI,. H1111tlnttoft '8udl. boy-Mt. Ind Mr-. lloY L1nd111y,
Gtrflllcl Aw., COlll MIU, 1lrl Mr. Ind~. Jotln F, ll~1n, lml Jlr•
f"llYn UL, HUflll"'°"' ltedl. l lM
Mr. end Mn.. llldllr• T. Un.ID. »I.I
Flllmorl W1Y, CCllf1 .IMP. ftllfl ....,.
Mr. 1nd Mn. MitMft ·-• l#t P'Mv "'·· COii• ~. 1lrl
DEATH NOTICES 1
ARBUCKLE 6 WEl3ll
Wntcllff Mortuary
4f1 E. 171b St., Cotta MOii
14M!ll • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Coron• del Mn OR I-NII
Colla Meu MI W4ll • BELL BROADWAY
MORnJARY
110 Bro.tw111 Coltl Mesa
LIWW • DILDAY BROTHERS
llmlUapo V .U.,.
Monaary
17111 11.acb Bml.
e .. t1nplleadl
ID-7771 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORnJARY
1711 i;opu Cuyoo Rood
Lqm11Beadl _,
• PACIFIC Vll!W
MEMORIAL PAJIK
Calletory e Mortaary
t'lllpd
Jiii Poctllc View Drm
Newport Bell<h, Clllfonta -· • PEElt FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7111 BelAA.._
Wnlmlml<T -• •8iiU""'"l"E'"R MORTUARY
1-olleadl -Su a.me.ta , ... , .. • SMITllS' MORnJARY
D7 Milo SL
Duodnplleadl -
Births
IT. JOSIPH HOSPITAL ....... .......
lRVINE Seventy-two make Ille llklay mountlln ,.. Rlvtl'llde and UC!. U C:I
Orange County children have joum. parUclpaUon Is under ~e
signed up to attend llU! year's T\t'enty-four u n 1 v e r 11 t y auspJcu ol the UnJversit}'
Unlcamp seuk>n In the San atudentl w!Jl ICCCIO,\PIDY the Interfaith FoundaUon. Bemardino-Mountains-as-1he1-7~0;;u';'in';;g,;s'i1'=e-;,o;,"":11;'!'"'~C1111:;;;:;;p:---sse01vi<eri'iairl PJiyslcians bun Tue
result of efforts by students at ~s SOme-of Ut e ()_rang~ Cou.nty area have
UC Irvine. ' cbUdren from Frent0nt School donated t h e I r profeaion81
The camp bus will make In Santa Ana parUclrted dur-ser-v~ for physical e~
stops to pick up the children in Ing the past achoo year In amlnaUona requlred for each
Santa Ana Monday. Boys and special tutorials by camp·~·chl.l•d•bel-i>t.•.•.,tt.otld-ln-ca•m...,._
MEDALLION HONORING WALT DISNEY
girls 9-13 ytars old who counselors who also a r e11
otherwise would not have an members of the UCJ Com-
opportunlty to go t.o camp WW munity Projects tut o r I • I
SA Woman
Faces Card
group. Other childma have
parllclpated In Pancro, the
UC! Community HOllSeJn San-
ta Ana.
Cost of the camp session lJ
$60 for each child. The money
has been raised thrOIJ&h volun-
tary cootrlbuUons and at a ucr student carnival last
NOTICE!!! Hearing Aid Users
we are ·now equipped to
offer PERSONALIZED
Walt DisMy Medal
Off ered-to-Pmrons,___
Fraud Trial Sertlce to the following brands
spring.
SANT A ANA -A woman Unicamp, located at Barton
r-----of hearing aids, ___ _,,
ANAHEIM-A medallion to
commemorate the late Walt
Disney is now available
Eye Loss
Wins Suit
who allegedly used a dead Flat.a, is a project ol the
man's_credit card.t.o_buy...baby__Unlversity..-Re..l-11-i.o-u-1.Con-
clothes in a Costa Mesa store fefence and is supported by
must answer to the charges students at UCLA, U C
through the C a 11 f o r n i a for the second time in Harbor!;==========
Institute of Arts. District municipal 00\ITl.
A bronze replica of the gold Doris Boyer, 24, of Santa Ana, has been ordered In medal presented by President Superior Court to return to
Nixon to Mrs. Walt Disney will Costa Mesa for revival of lhe
be given to donors of $100 to lower court file. Her possible
the ln!litute of Arts. addiction to narcotics -the
Disney founded the art reason for Superior Court ac-
school, 24<M West Seventh uon _ will not now be in·
Think
HADLEY
CASHMERE
• 9UAUTONE • AUDIOTONE
·•-TEI.EX-•-SEIMANS
• IELTONE •RADIO EAR
• OTARION •DAHLBERG
• ACOUSTICON • YICON.
•·MAICO • AUDIYOX
• SONOTONE •ZENITH
LAGUNA HILLS
Street, Los: Angeles to vestlgated.
SANTA ANA _ A San establish a new approach to A Sears Roebuck and Co. flNtfUM et o,.. c....y H .. 1 .. Ahl s.mc.J
Clemente man who loot his training in the arts. security guard amsted Mrs. Think CALL
HEARING AID SERVICE
right e)'e in a freak accident The medal was given ln Boyer as she ran from the COLUCT
al a service station has been recognition of D I s n e y ' s Bristol Street store last May 8. ~ tnhO awarded eJn,ooo in damages "distinguished public service A clerk aaid she left her 115 ~ If No A.MW• Coll 541-2335 ~ and •~•""'"" tributlon -·-•·-th t d 11111 ·-;. Y.a..d•-S.lte JOJ by a Superior Court jW')'. ou--'6 con s .,....."'._.. on e coon er an
830·0530 •
Lawrence Reisinger, 64, suf. to the United States and the fled as be cMcked her card ·~iau N~... LAGUNA HILLS
fered the injury that led to the1~w'.'.'.cr~ld'.'.·:..." _______ __::w~lth~lhe~cr~edl~t~d~epartm~"'.'.'.'~"L:_J::=========!:!!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!~ loss of his eye on Feb. 17, 1965,
wh.lle he was having his auto
serviced at the Unlon Oil Com-
pany station, 1002 N. El
Camino Real, San Clemente. A
small piece of metal struck
Reslnger in the eye while he
was watching work being
performed on the car.
Named wtth the Union Oil
Company as defendants in the
action were station anployes
Jack Mayer, Pal!! Snelling and
Mark Troutt. Reisinger cited
them in a complaint which
sought a total of $50,000 in
damages.
Sears
Mr. lllof Mrs. Robert M. lltth. 175'1 Cl'llsl...ut, Fovnt1ln v1nw, boy
Mr. Ind Mrl Albtrt P1ff1ll 111 5111 C11--============.! 1i. Drl~. ttvntll'lltoft 1111a1, boy r
.. .,.. t Mr. Ind Mn. J1m11 R. l osb'r, 17MS SIMI Crl1!CINI, Foun11ln Vtllolr. bor Mt. Ind Mn.. flwelL 161172 kH'lntd1ll,
Apt. 21t, H11ntrnt1on 8uch, 1!r1 Mr. Ind Mrs. Jeffl'W v . Luc.es, nm Tar,,_ Of"., Mlnfotl Vl.10, 1!rt _ ..
Mr~ Mn. Linet M. Lltbl\ "" , ttliQlllltOfl •MOit • rl
.Alf9, 11 Mr. 1tn1 Mn. Ollrlll 1, wi.1t1, t1m Jlfflr.on LMlt. No, ,.. H11nlllll'flln
BOAT BUFFS
Almon lot.••b1y i1 the only
f11/l.ti1111 l:.01ting editor wor•in9
on •ny n1W1p1p1r in Or1nge
Co•ntv. Hi1 ••cl111ift COYlfll•
of bo•t/., •"' v1cht1., llOW1
11 • 4•lly f11h1re of th1 DAILY
PILOT,
_ _! ...... ~~"~"'---------======================·!
For Hobbyi&1 or Homeowner! Regnlar $69.99
light,· Compact Sprayers
• Uee ft for l•t 9Pl'l'Ji1111 el paiat,
Yamh~ fertiliser or imeeticide
•Alto etin· be ued for inflating 1ad
air cleaning
• Gm. up· to IMIL IPftl' poUorn with
power Cal l>HP IDOi.Or •.
• :i.1 c.r .M. at as p.o.i.
14-HP Compact Paint Sp..,...2449
SAVE llO.SOI Repbr 34.99
'4-HP Compact Paint SpnJV 6299
SA VE 127! B.p!w 89.!l!L.
For Farmer or Homeowner! Regular '169.99
¥2 -HP Paint Sprayers
e 1 eJliaderwmpaw:rr1pt1)•
• Poworful ~P, 115 ...it el-W:
· motor
• DeliYen 2.8 e.C.m. at 40 p...i. or a.
maximum 100 p.1.i.. (2.2 e..C.m.)
• Spray""" 15-11. air h ...
'V .. HPPalutSpnfar 13999 SAVE l60! R-199.99
3 Gallon Paint Tank
Regular 44.95 SAVE 113.50
l·HP Paint Spnyer
SA VE 1781 Regulor %59.99
3145
18199
,,
For Commercial and Industrial Use! '339.99
Tank-Type Sprayers
' •Raged workhone deli..n 7.Jc.C.m.
al40p.a.L
• Mu.Im.um ISO p.aJ. can be atiJlaed
to power air tooli
•Powerful l~.HP motor. Complete
withenelooedheltpard ·
• Rolla eallly oa bis ICMn. ~
2-HP Palnt SonYen 25899 SAVE lllll ll.einlar369.99
USHER'S
GREEN
SI'RIPE ~---------------------~---------------------------, I ...,,.,.,"' ...... t.tl-4.QO ...... CM Mf11 ~""°'Ht Ml21 ........ f·llU. HA N141,"" ....,,, ..:OWi MU? IOllJM(O.Ulr\W ~ I
C.tHDCIA ·-~1 CM.MM( 0t'j.101W, a 44'11 CllYWIC & tQlfO""" 14.tU . • ........ a 7.JJTt ~ 54.t•ISll I o:-toNM!"2Ml,MfU741 llOW'#OOIHOf.J"'' OtANOt637-2100 ~ ..... "'""""°'~' VMU'l'P0 ...... l,fM.2D) I Since 1853, lhe m:.laillll liaht Scotc:b
ff rn.t-ltMrl·,n111 D11UNtrt C."'-!Mlt'l!lf, «t. •IHI
CO'l'Mo\ H6.0611 IHal.rwoooOlt f,2Jtf t~"1·~2ll, :JSMtll ... """"'IX Ulll WlllllCM'kf.l•tl ,, .. -------------~----------Sears~--------------------' ·SotW~tioo.Qvorontffd0<YourMonayladc" - -...... NltlolrM11•tr ...... Sato1dorNOA.M.IONOP.M.
'
l
I
•
Jt bl!LV PILOT
YOtlr /ffonew's Worch
How to Beat Stock Market
Pari Am Tells Loss,
Will Probe Mergers
Pan American W o r 1 d
Airways, Jnc. and its cor>
solidated su bsidiaries
preliminary and unaudited
statement for the quarter en--
ding June 30 indicated net loss
arter taxes or $1 ,881,000, or s
cents a share, compared lo net
income of $17,630,000, or S2
cen!JI a share, for the same
period last year.
Total operating revenues for
the quarter were $271,326,000,
up .4 percent, from
$270,364,000 for the same
quarter last year. T o t a t
01>erating expenses w e r e
$270.433,000, compared to
$243,0!1,000, for the June
quarter last year.
Harold E. Gray, chainnan
and chief executive officer.
noted, "The air transport in-
dustry is afflicted with prob-
lems of increased c o s t s,
labor disruptions, slower rate
of traffic growth and ai r and
ground congestion. These pro-
blems have adversely affected
WE'VE GOT THE
ANSWIRI
TAB WIU ANSWER
YOUR · TELEPHONE ...
WAKE VOU UP ...
DELIVER YOUR
MESSAGES •••
TAKE VO~R ORDERS ...
AND FIU MANV
OTHER NEEDS •••
FOR AS LOW AS
$14.50 PER MO.
CALL US NOW FOR
INFORMATION ANO
A BROCHURE. r Ttl.EPHONE "" :lb ANSWIRIH&
BUREAU
543-2222
9 OFFICES TO SERVE
AU OF ORANGE CO.
PHARMACY
TOPICS
lty TlllllY GllANT, ll.Ph
Bel"'t'<.'n sixl<'Cn and \\.\·cnty-lwo, Gro~c W8.tihington suf·
fercd his first Attack of ma·
laria, a cose of smallpox
that left his race badly marked for life, and a seri-
ous a ttack or 1,Jcurisy. prob-ably tulx'n::ular in origin. • • •
the earnings or nearly all
airlines, including Pan Am. In
our own case, the slower rate
of traffic growth results in
part from the cumulative ef-
fects cfl expanding U.S. and
foreign airline competition.''
Gary said, "Merger whhin
the industry can and wi ll do
much to solve the airlines'
problems, improve service for
the public 8nd also improve
resuJts '!qr stockholders. In ad-
dition to. these benefits,
domestic rights w o u I d
stiengthen Pan Am's position,
and we are prepared to in--
vcstigate opportunities that
may arise for either ac--
qui.sition or merger."
Net loss for the first sir
months of the year wa.s
$12,701 ,000. or 37 cents a
share. compared to a nel in·
come of $14,288,000, or 42 cents
a share, for lhe same period
last year. The June year-to-
date figures included capital
gains after taxes on cfisposal
of property and equipment of
$1.515.000, as compated to
capital gains of $3,308,000 for
last year.
Total qperating revenues for
lhe y ear -l o-date wer.e
$S13,~5.000 up 3.2 percent,
over $497,197,000 for the same
period last year. For the
month of June net income W"8
$6,120,000, or 18 cents a sha re,
compared to $14.397,000, or 43
cent.I a share, for June last
year.
Firm Plans
For Losses
NEW YORK (UPI)
American Standard, lnc., said
Thursday it is selting aSide a
special charge ol $25 million to
cover possible losses on the
sale of assets.
The company had reported a
profit of $29.3 million on the
sale of stock in the fir st
quarter ol this yea r in addition to an operaUng profit of
$12.727 million for the first
half. Jt was explained that no
losses have occurred so far""
the sale of assets but the com-
pany ls considering disposing
of some unsatisfactory opera·
Uon! and the disposals could
result in losses.
A vis Selects
Mesa Ad Firiu
NEW POSITION
V•lt11C'1 luVisi
Valtec Fills
New Position
The Vallee Corporation In
Irvine has appointed E. J ,
l.AlVisi to the new post •f
operations manager respon'si·
ble for ell activities oC the
company other than legal and
fmaoce.
George Peters Advertising, ·A! operations m a n a g e r ,
Tnc. has been appointed l,.QVis:i, will report directly to
advertising agency for Avis W'. 0 . Clbbs, Valtec president.
Renl·A-Car in 1U western ''LuVlsl's depth of experitnce
states. in quabty manufacturing wlll
Ad agency headquarters are be Invaluable to us during the
Approximately 25% or the located at 2790 Harbor Blvd., coming year," said Gibbs ln
~ell4"ral 1>01>ult.Uon l'11n be Cost.£ Mesa. announcing the appolntment.
dl'('pl)' hypnoUzed and ln a ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiwi rtlaUv~)' ihorl peribd oC
llmc-. nits, hoy,·tver, ii •
dAngerou.t wacttcc and an
C a U II f: p1ycho)ogicll1 pt'Ob--
leml ot • pmnan~nt nature.
• • • •
?-1a.ey acrvk:t-mcn comln,:
beck from the tropics havo
N'C\U'ttnt e1>lsodtc ot ma• larta. Almoat lhn!'e tbOUslnd
caRS wm rtporttd tn the
U.S. In 196& • • • For every 1Mt:f'!1J druc that "l'f&Cbel the publJe, mor"l!''
lhln Ow thoutand com-poun&I att 1tud1it'd and ....,,"'"! d~
'" modt'm J1rorvloo wtth nld· ruhloned oou.rl~ay. brln& ...................... ,
PAalC LIOO PHARMACY .. ,_ ....
.... ~---totl-\Slt ,,... o.r1nrr
0 R C 0 E L E CT R '0 N I C S
Announcin9 t New Service
for Orongo County!
A COMPLETE LINE OF:
VIDEO CAMERAS, RECORDERS
& ALLIED E9UIPMENT
Avalloblo On A
RENTAL IASIS!
DON'T P0•51T OU•
HIW PHONI NUMMI 646.5037
ELECTRONICS
1177 SUPlllOI-COSTA MUA
IJ"t Se. 111f Wt1f 17th St.J
•
,
OVER THE COUNT'.ER C.Omplete-New fork Srock-List
..
DAILY '1lOT
:Wednesday's Closing Prices -Complete New York St~li Exchange List
....... l..o.. ... , ______________________ , ..... .,., .... -
·-•-'-atMCM,1-......... \. .. c-.c.... 1 ............. , .. c..
:J. ,~Ii" 'i ~; ~ 1 ·~·j~,;~ II • •• •• •" DOW JONES AVERAGES ~~'c!'. f., 'l ;:I II~ \Iii t ~ I " fill { T ~ St k M k t Hit r ''ti. •n i: ~ ' f• ,'lf.'!.~"'""""'' ....,_ ·-·· ~~::cir, •:ii 'I i It .i" •'d '~ .! .... ~=.~.:~:. oc ar e '1>11 l~, ··1 I .tEJ!i ~-= m°f11r.1r1fr.J,,'?::r~~:;r:,;,..;. fl ~ -l ·~ ~ ... ·i··" Ull rr:.,~ tft,'U m~ -S.~ vMor. i 14 M 1.,. I 1, .., '5 ,s11t 111.11 .a.at "''' ., ... _ t..tf 11.cKom• JO ft -. .+11~ ~ I "-lalC!I-11 11te11 11Mt '" •vtr:fl:' vu~-JO I ~" • ~ -''
:::,.,']\ , • 1 l = ~1: :::::::::::::::::::::::::: m! ~:!r:1i: ·~ ~ ti~ ::,ll ''~· i IP rt 6Sllk ............. "1,J00\1='1.lt lt !~
f:1c ' n ~ i!" + ~ ~~"'~ ... t 1.
l , • t .. " NEW YORK (UPI) -Profit tal<lng Wednesday
]
~ • :: " snapped a four-day. stocl< market advance in • -j"' ' • • + • •• -" ~ II J •• -•· ·~ od1 t t ad' g I :t '\ • • 't::rr; ill t, " -"'w ... d .. c1 , m: r.''" J114 • r: *+·Ii' m era e r i.n . • ~, ' l"' u! e~ + H :,:::t:! .• l 1 tl i tt '1 "+i* ::rn ·'" 1 ti~ ~ ·~l + ,;
i :i :.:. ._ Declines topped advances by around 1'° tssties. .~.1 ~ o~'t i.~ -:;, 1~:..";1~~ ... i.. 1! ~.:.... 1• :r.•~"' ~ 1 ~ ~ ".!.::-,,
• .,. 1,. But pressure was light as most traders a-ared "11' '' ""' n \.\ ""' + l!: 'r5~~·.ro: ,. " , ii w•;;!o . ,. -'""' • t '•
ll
.. ~ = tt 10 be COnsolldating their poiltlonS aftat reCtnt big •= i·.!fi n'' ~~ r,t'! ~~:; tf T~~1~"1:1 ~ h :Z t "' ;t1fn1~ ·~ l~ ~ 00 r,\t + ~:
•• .. + ~ gains. 0111 Ji; Jlrti ~\\ HI\::-~ .. l111~w ~1'11:1'·/o Jt I r. ~ wZ ±.r' ::::ritr."; • IL~ \~ ia\"':: 1-+ .. ... • .,.. ~ a--. a ..... l w , 411, u +1 "'"' ,, 11 1m I"' -• -~ Sho~ly before the final bell the UPI mar•et """':.. '.11 ..... 4 • J•"' ,.l, ..... l '"' . 1 , 1~ u 1r, +" "' "' ~ t\O -._ "" = U ,, • . , "' . ~,..:!'MU'! ,,. 'j'"' ,."' t h .. . .. llC;Sn coe • ,..., "" 'IL~' , ' ·sl;. l'l\' 311' .•. j :t ~ ,_. wid ~dl0ca1 totbr was70~ff 0.14 percen t on. 1,555 issues ~",·JI tt ,it"' ,ij~ ll"" +," l-'*" 1 "u V ·~ "~ = 11 -=i:n,.,~~J!! !f llls.~ s1t>j ~\? = ~ '\'"' '' ~ tl: tradcv, eae, ., retreated and 563 gained. ~· =.~-~ ''" t:yt, 12f~~ ~ U,t,L lllC 1 I~ ·1 n· fl'' -"':~~~11•.1111 !! ...... ti; ,','"• ;1 ••• •
U .l \ •
1
~·: -t~'·.· The Dow Jones average of blue chin industrials !'* ... ~ l'" 11h 11" ~ ~ u,", co •, _ .,. "' "'-, 1a wn eenc 1.:111 l~! ll" ~ -.. t •.a • u 7 l ~ 11 ct .1111 • ,,~ ~::z + ,., ~ C11 .... \t ~ ~ "'w11nPac 1,20 u n ,, _ t"I
l ~ ~ I\ -~ \V&S Ou.,.0.93 at 832. 6 near the c ose. Volume ap.. ~rbf~lt: :t: 11 1.11: u ... mt :t ::: 8 ~~~..o'1 i a -~ I•+ n =~tttntt .lJ~ •• , "" "'"' R\4 = ~ -• proximated 9,000,000 shares, some 3,000,000 shares T ""I~" •fl: Hy,+ \'t wnun lf<Lg J 'u ,n 111 ,, ',' !!~ • • -,14 - -Un IV . Yo -\\ W••l•EI ' 1 " it~ s"' = l! " ~ "t ~• under Tuesday's pace. Tm.ftn1 ,61 , ,\\t1 l11t ,1'11 + ~ ~~,~, J " 4~ 11~ + ~ w"'E .. ui 12n !11 !t ... ,,,.
,.. •7Vo t.S11 't 11 Among the most active issues were Control ~·~ ~r:l 1 " ~ ~ + ·· ~n;·~"'l)! ·~~ \l *,\"-1iU ~ \\ :~~~· 1.• f, "' ''~ Y~ .!. ;; ,1 ~~ ~f~ ~ _1~ Data, Natomas, Fr~rt Sulphur on the str•nfl of .. 1il .n fl~ ff 7Jl4 2l-lo -~Un l'< .. l 1100 u"' ""' ""' Wtvtrlllf .IO llO ll"il JI.ff. '™ .... ,. IU lGJllt 110 'I -.. ,. :fror" JN s1~ n .. t Youn l't Pli dto fl'YI 11 '' j ll Wh"'"I" 511 us int l'O ""' + •• I :If • Vt-l bl k f M 900 b 25 I PH o .fO I l!to n .. n11 It UnOltCal .llO JS JO':t '°""''°,..' ""'"'' 1 llff 11'11 6'16 " ''" + ,~ u, fl:u" H"a' ~~ _ ... .., an ear Y oc o 111•, s ares at 112 o c 14, t(f\MI .D f u' ~ _" uoc.1 P12.j(I ]' "14 1.$>.a ..,~ + •• Whff1P, "'s 11" s1"' ~ "" -~ -,.. ~ex·~-. a·' Inland Steel. . •1n1r11, .u ..h'l:a....l.!.h..-U.un•t.c-C• j 'i' ,, ~ *-+-1,. 1.r1c1 1."' w sm st.lit""--''""'---! " =v ~ ilf:fl¥ ., .U't 33.-. -\t; UnlotoPKll 1 "14 '3~ .. ~ -0,, WhlltCn . .ob J'N tt1'i fl\lo tt ... + '• " "" ~ "' + ·,_. Electron1'cs a·' oils moved ,.,, both d1·rec\1'ons ,, m10 ' lll Ill +r1t unPt.c "'·'° " n-'~ Rt . Wlllf(ft p!A l • : a,s.,. U\4 -u 1 '°" 311" Jlllo nu t ,,. Pl 6 ' ni.. """ + II Unlontm 1 • .0 ' ~.,. ''" Q. + :i;, W1I ~'-11 pfC t 4 )t Miio -•·· • 'j" "j'• J3\'I + ·~ ' !ellnffO 1,Jt to ~ ,.,. -{• Vnlrolfll .1fl .. I D" n Wll tCrH ·" tJ 31~ !! + ~. ll ' 1 .. H -» but point•Size losers Were noticeable in several ina Ifill« MS.JCI •'!! N'k .. \\ .. 14 -.. Unl"l'Y•I p1 I JlfO I 1 lU -ti.lo Wltj Meil 2 :t2 11 j11io I.lo + t'' ) 3611 31141 !lt\lo "" t •~11e:o l .611 ll.\\.1 """ :tll~ -~Un -""<IPt 30 •• 3 ~ •;, l&'I + vt Wll 1ker 11 li l~ lh -1>a
' JJ~ H" IG -1 .. s ances. tnlTr1 I.ea ' ~ 1J .... 2Sh -'iii Uftl!AJr, ;~ • # 'I" _..,,,_ Wkllt'!Carp I .. J1 11114' Jl"' + \.-t 1 11 1 il H II f th tt~G•I L.(I 11 ~ 16-.0 ~ -.. v" I Cp . '9 ' I II ... -I.lo Wl~llr ·'°" • ~ n" l!Mi -1. 3l 3''ot. \'o rtt Oneywe WaS One 0 e narrowly traded !)eCa TuG1 rn~ j1Va 2'1/t -" Un I Flf ~ • ~'6 u-· -'Ii :zullem• llro llG 11 ·~ lJ~ -1. 31' '5l' ~ •"-tronics. T. Paul Bothwell, vice president of Honey. .~r.~,•i"' 1~ ,,,~ ~r~ i, ~~ -1.~ 8~1f'rrlci 11. • )~"' , ..., 13: :i:.,. wl~~'llr.1~·': 1~ 11 Ii ~:: ~! • 3'1lt y1• !fil + \i t111~1111 • • , ~ lU\.'J l~I 'Ii. Un!lllld p .It 10 ' t +\I Wlll!ll>· l.'11 '1 u 12 n -'• .ij; ~~ 33~ +l"' well 's computer control division, said time-sharing ,.. o, .05 tt"' .11v. 11 un11 MM 1.'° ' n 1.1o nu -""w11Ps~c 1.10 10 1m 1"'1 1"4-\•
4' ., .... -~ '~ -1\ IA I ill b ll t " b' I k .. • ~ t 1 , 11 -Iii v" Hutlf Hf "' 11'1 1.-. 11,,., Wl!ca '" '1 10 , ... , 21\.\ 2Mlo + ... 37 141, 1,v, u~ + "" compui.er sys ems w e oon o a .., ti ion mar et ••V1 t 1. '' v. ~· s1\'I' ..... unu ,k Min u 41, •":.' •" + 1' wo1Y ww :so i1 u .... i,,. u11o _ ll
f 23\lo Utlo U\4 + U. by 1975 from about 'l billion nOW. llllron ' 114 t \o l'"' -"t Vrr .. I l."1 l :JP\ ~ :II* -"'Womeko ."1 10 111'1' I 19\\ -'• tJ lHlo 11"' 111~ \ • t•IT llD .OI i 71'1 1W + 'tlU f'lln r. 2tJ n_u ,iJ\i !1 ., W=C• •I 1JJ Ullii i... ,..-. t"
.. 22~ n.;, n-. = ~ Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific gave 1·=~"1 PJt.CI ] ~ ,,.. ·~ t ~ 8 ~r•u1r .• r '6:1111.~"' 1.t a:±.~ WIO "'_1:n 1'7 t6Vt 14 :)6\1 ~ l1 221'1 n ... Hiio . .. d . ~fl \.M l " n"-~lllt _ y, U pi:e 1 :ro lJ ltU ~\'\' JIVt _ '•Woo PfJ.to It '''-' 'r'I S7\io +1 '!~ n,. u~ ~· _ .. ;. froun 1n the rails after climbing sharply recent-r 1nc1 ·'° 2 tt\i +,. v P1vc11 · .... ,, :n11o l1Vi :r1t -1"" w.,11t ... ,,..., u u u"' ,,.., ...•• -•·• d.. .-. Th l~ftvO.. .611 ll l \lo 11"' u s-\\ tt Hl4o M H Writ It~ Jt l 101Vt 107"' lOW. , •. , "' "" il~ • 1 -,,,_ Y. e company said tt knew of no reason for the ,...,., '·'°' • , ,,., 41'1• : : ::: u ""•h · •·~ $ll '""° :.. ~. wu'"'''' -• 1 1,,,., 16111 '•"' ... fl 12.\t t \.\+Iii k' l!tMlr JO 4 1\ 4~+v.u s11•l t.il \' ,... jf··-v.•~~'' .60 1l't !' fl p,""-~' U 11 1 1 ... StOC S recent SpUrt. m1c 11.1!1 I.Ill 1: it it'• »'• -\I U Tlti»c 'u 1 11"' I~ 'llVt + "°II.TA Ill( JI 1:it It tli -?ii '" !! ... :rt ... t -"' St I d l~" lll!tJ: .3' 1i ... ~ ,....., -\\ U11~ V•ll . • llt ,,t, ,..., '"' -·~ Y1191t 0 LN 1 tl"li -, .. t .. '' 11 .11.1i1 -11 ee s. motors an chemicals followed irregular 11~ "'' r j ff"' ,,,., 1tv. -"un Ill "I· » 1141 ,,"' ~ill I"',.,, .1t 11 1N "'"' 4m •ii J 'l ,. ... Sf" -1 lh So d'd i li d !'jj~ '!i 1 U lS lJ~ + :r,f, Un "' I 1 11 'l .+ "" llWllf Horn "! !1111\ "I.I ftl\ -• 1 1 " ••1' •1tt •. pa s . 1 a r nes an aircrafts. I! 1. :'!' r,v. tt!1 .•.. unvu~1 \.50 1 ''°"' u"'j .,. -14 ''" cor• ff ~'' ,,..,, ''" -1\c JG d .I.I.., .I.I"• p · • ed 00 o ·"°' ... t't !''Ii -\t Uni"° Prt to 1)1 ''" U" -•• enlllll: 1.40 ~~ ~ 1~ -'• 1uos"'''"'5l11+1.., r1cesweremix ontbeAmericanStockEx~ , .... c •. t! 'l .,,,. '-1.1i1u11o11~1lb ,,,j \~ t>i.-,...111'111nc1 .1t 1 i,nt.t JVt-•• lr•n•Un J.1 241 J~ ~ ll'o-\\Ursllldtl .. 40 :i.. , .. :it tt'Mi-l'oCllPr<lttlhd I>• Th• AHllClllM ru1 1N•
Complete Closing Pric_es -American Stoek Exchange List
I
! OAILV PILOT
... ...--. ..
MR.MUM
T""""1, ..,.,l 21, 1'6'
Politics v s. Product
Deinos Giving Nixon i•
Some High , Low Marks ,
By RA V?t10ND LAHR
WASHINGTON IUPIJ
National Democratic Party or-
ficial s are giving President
Nixon high marks as. a skilled
political salesman but, as
could be expected, much lower
grades for the products he is
selling.
They believe he must do an
unusually good selling job lo
muster support for his pro-
gram, his party and his own
hopes for ~lection. They are
convinced that he will never
be the political hero who ca n
depend on the broad populari-
ty which benefitted Dwight D.
Eisenhower and John F. Ken-
nedy when they were in the
\Yhite House.
These are among the early
assessments of the President
a£ter his first seven months in
office as he and Congress are
taking their summer holiday.
DOING WELL
Although they concede Nix·
on is doing well in front of the
television came r as,
Democratic Party officials
believe he ultimately must win
his battles on issues and not
by relying on popular appeal.
On the basis of their own
private polling. they see Nixon
coming on strong in the
general field ol foreign affairs.
They see the electorate divid·
ed over the way he is handling
the Vietnam war. crime and
race relations. And finally.
they think he is weak in the
area of economic affairs. in-
cluding taxation and spending
and the high cost of living.
They visualize the cost of
living as a continuing issue
unlikely to vanish before the
1972 presidential election.
As political realists, these
officials see some of the
issues. such as crime and
economic problems, ~·orking
for them now instead of
against them as in 1968. Their
reasoning is based on the fact
that responsibility at the top
has shifted to Republican con-
trol. The Democrats are now
the "outs" in contrast with the
GOP which will be held ac·
countable for the state of lhe
union.
SEE DIVIDENDS
Again as political realists.
the Democrats see political
dividends for their party in the
budget and tax problems
besetting s t a t e g1>vernors.
Jlepublican governors now
outnumber the Democrats 30
to 20 : governt:·_';ips held by 24
Republicans and 11 Democrats
will be filled next year.
Ye(, the Democrats rec-
ognize their own problems in
dcall ng witlt issues. For ex-
<imple, they must convince the
voters that they can be both
liberal aad against
Jawlessness.
Since Sen. Fred R. llarris of
Oklahoma took over the na·
tional chainnanship 1 a s l
January, the party head-
quarters has undergone
thorough reorganizalion. He
had been busy at what he calls i
•·professionaliz.ation" of the
staff, the employment or ex-
perienced people who may 1
want career jobs jn party
politics.
Harris has told assoc.iales he
is unworried about the party's
debt. which has been reduced
about $500.000 from the $6.2
million figure of Jan'. 1. But
after that reduction, the
Democrats took over about $2
million in additional debts
from unpaid preconvention ex-1
penses of former Vice Preai·
dent Hubert H. Humphrey, ·
Sen. Robel'\ F. Kennedy of
New York and Sen. George S.
McGovern of South Dakota in-
curred during their campaigns
for the presidential nomina·
ti on.
HARRIS LAGGARD
\Vhile be has appointed two
commissions to recommend
changes in the party structure *
and natiooaJ coovention rules,
Harris has been laggard in
naming the nationaJ policy
council authorized I a s t
January.
He expects to name the
council along with several ad·
visory task forces et a three-~
day party leadership meeting 1
here ne1t month . Humphrey, ~
1968 presidential nominee, will
be chainnan and his rurming
mate, Sen. Edmund S. ~luskie
of Maine, a member.
t.1ost Democratic con-
gressional leaders have en-
dorsed the project without in-
dicating a ~·illingness to serve
on it. Even before his recent
poliii ca ll y disastrous
automobile accident at Clap.
paquaddick, Senate Democrat.
ic whip Edward M. Kennedy 1
was reported shunning an in-
vitation.
Kennedy partisans said he
had become fed up from
seeing his every act and com·
ment analyud as a move
toward the 1972 presidential
nomination. Since the ac-
cident, he has announced that
he would not be a candidate
for the nomination.
CREATE CLIMATE
Harris views the policy
council as an agency' which
will create the climate for the
1972 Democratic presidentlal
campaign. :t.feanwhlle, as a
member or Congress, he is
trying to work closely with the
Democratic senatorial and
congressional campaign com·
1nittees. which bear primary
responsibility for protecting
the Democratic majorities in
the Senate and House in the
1970 elections. ~~~~~~~~~~(
I See By Today's
Want Ads:
• A hole In One! Baker man
v.anltd for night y,•ork,
1nake donut!, etc,
• For S\\"Pt'thParts ~ A !\\"f'CI.
heart or a lounge In black
!ake fur ;65.
• In a Ottp Purple ~food
for A pair of Amethyst
Jtalian &l.a.ss lamps.
DAILY 10.10
SUN; 10-7 OSTA WSA
STORE OffL Y
FtllDAY &
SATURDAY ONLY M·ID-SUMMER FRIDAY -&
-SATURDAY ONLY
GALA ·FLORAL ·
PAPER TOWELS ~
5i97~t
33c
I
1·
20 lbs. BARBECUE
CHARCOAL:
Reg. 97~ 1.37
For all your outdoor barbecue coo king. 1
. ..I! J -.......
6'1'ak
Foam
ICE
CHEST I
47'~ ' Reg. 84c J
'
t
1 Gal. INSULATED f47 a PICNIC "
JUG • Reg. 1.97
250 COUNT
PAPER
NAPKINS ~
Rg. 33c J~;t the item for summertime ~~c:cs or ~
camping trips.
CHAISE
LOUNGE
5.00
Reg. 7.44
7 webb style
7/16"-50 ft. Vinyl
GARDEN
HOSE
. ,
PATIO
CHAIR
2 F s5 0
R
Reg. 2.99 ea
6 webb style
'---Si"':t., •• l ll~1tr1lio ~
97~
Reg. J.94
'· i I
' . ,
ti '
· G.E. 20 INCH-2 SPEED
ELECTRIC FAN
Reg. 14.17 1288
•
• .tastes s .reat .
C.i in cans! '*'
CANADA DRY .
FLAVORS
CHOICE OF YOUR FAVORITE FLAVORS
1.76 Reg. 1.96
Per Cuse
DWtiA•
Buy severa1 cases at this big savings m= P • <MP!'WW. .:-W'W 1
, BBQ ~.GRILL
·:1366
Reg. 18.88
Sturdy grill Includes mo-
tor & spit. Handy adjwt..
ment for grill height.
l l/2 H.P.-22 INCH
~OWER MOWER
Reir. 59.88 4288
I .
•
I
'
I•
•
•
..
•
Overtu Fe ,.,,
~UT THEM TOG ETHER AND THEY SPELL 'MUSIC'-Another
word •'bravo•: might be added to cba!'aol.e.U. the group of music
l<Wer1 .and sappoiters W"? will "i?'e as chairmen of Ol'al)g•
County Pllilhanuonic SoCi8i'Y'1 Women's committed for 19611-'io.
Looking 'toward the coming s~asoo .as they· lu>ld' letters spelling
the.name oi the musical society they support are (top photo, left
to rtght) Mrs. William Uniack, Huntington Harbour Admiralty
Committee; Mrs. Robert ¥. Isbell, Bayshores Committ~e. and
Mrs. David C. Duff, Eastbluff Associates. Jn center photo are
(!Ott to right) Mrs.-William Liiing, Alla Bahia Committee; Mrs.
Wes: Walker, Costa Mesa· ·Committee, and Mrs. Richard Newell,
~esa Verde Committee. Shown in botrom photo are (left to right)
C!ie Mmes. Robert S. Leith o! Upper Bay Committee;
James B. Keyes, Laguna Committee; Roy E. Halberg,
Irvine Terrace Group; Alan V. Andrews, Highlanders Commit~
tee; David \V. Lang, vice-<:hainnan of Cameo Associates, and
Claude, L. Patterson, cbainnan ltvme Terrace Associates. They
are 12 •ot 25 committee chairmen who will take charge oi the
vaned filiid raising programs ' plaimtd by tlw cominittees to
lienefit•the Orange Couiity' PJ\illumnonic Society in its untiring
efforts to bring fine quality·lnuslt to the area;
Gives
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Lio)'ll and I
6men
n.lnffr, AUlll" JI, Ifft . , ... ,.
. :
; • .se.asoA ;
Already antlc!paUng the sound o! violins tuning up for fall '& tlrst "°"'
• cert, members o! the W001en's Committees of Orange County Philharmonic
Society are looking toward the 1969-711 season.
Continuing another. year as chainnan of the board of directors ts
Mrs. Raymond Dotta, who will guide tbe 25 countywide committees who
number 700 in their memb~rshlp.
ServJng With her also for another year are Mrs. Leon Lyon, vice
th.airman and Mrs·. Hubert P. Prat.her, treasurer. Mrs. William Schillin&
~r. will be recording secretary and Mrs. J. Donald Ferguson, correspond·
mg secretary.
MAIN GOAL
Hannony of. purpose ~raclerizes the diverse committees, for their
main goal is to assist the~ Orange County Philhamonic Society in present·
iDg tine orchestras and sol\)ists to the public.
Benefits to acquire funds for their project are as various as the con-
certs the society arranges.
This fall the Balboa Commfttee, whose 'cbainnan iS Mrs. Frank
Hutchison, will have their annual cocktail benefit, while the Lido Isle Work·
ing Committee will present their Glamour Auction under the chainnanship
of Mrs. Robert C. Vordale. "'
11-----------<>·TH ER-&.VEN'l'S----------
_, The Irvine Terrace Associates, led by Mrs. Claude L. Patterson, will
repeat their Autumn Soiree Dinner Dance, and a German beer garden
Octoberfest will be the fund raiser for Newport Shores Committee who5e
.t4airman is Mrs. Robert McGinle~.
The Laguna Committee, led by Mrs. James 8. Keyes, will join with
the Tustin Committee for the first time this fall to combine their benefits
into one theater party at the Laguna Playhouse.
As the holiday season approaches the Alta Bahia Committee again
will sponsor Las Luces de Navidad dinner dance. Their chairman is Mrs.
William Laing.
The annua1 Christmas boat parade will be sponsored jointly by four
committees in Huntington Harbour, where chainnan of the Huntington
Harbour Philhannonic Board is Mrs. Dallas Moran.
The four committees, Admiralty, Islander, Marina and Starboard
are heade:d by the Mmes. William Uniack, George T. Hersh II Richard
Davies, and Gabriel Felix. '
The committees will jointly celebrate the parade's success with their
Grand Marshal Ball in the spring.
In the Newport Beach area at Christmas time, tbe Bayshores Com·
mittee led by Mrs. Robert P. Isbell and the Beacon Bay Group whose
chairman is Mrs.' Robert Hodges, each will sponsor a cocktail and boat
.parade viewing party.
Highlighting spring activities will be a Champagne Cruise of New-
port Harbor repeated by the Eastbluff Associates led by Mrs. David C.
Duff, w_hlle the traditi<>!lal antique and treasure F1eamarktt will be staged.
by; members of the Irvme Terrace Group, whose chairman is Mrs. Roy E.
Halberg.
SPR ING FESTIVAL
Mrs. Wes \Va1ker, chairman of the Costa Mesa Committee will aid
in plaMing the spring Music Festival, which will encourage participation
oi talented area children and adults:-
The Highlanders Committee, whose chairman is Mrs. Alan V. An·
drews, ptan·s to close the 1969-70 Philharmonic Season with a reception after
the final concert.
ThroUghol!t the year the Lido FJliends Com1nittee sponsors bridge
·benefits. Mrs. H.erman R. Johnson is their chairman. Mesa Verde Com·
mittee, led by Mrs. Richard Newell will stage tbeil-pre.Easter Children
and Teens &bow.. • • • ·
As rweU as planning their fund raising activities, most ol the com-
mittees meet mooUlly' to hear musically oriented programs. The High·
Janden, Coaunittee, however, became so interested in their study of opera·
Uc histqry and composers they plan to continue in the special field.
. 1 The, VPJ?tr Bay Committee, whose chainnan is Mrs. Robert S. Leith,
enjoy' presenting programs by their own members, who are largely musi·
cians themselves. This group also has presented a benefit cookie te8,
FURTHER SUPPORT
A popular fund raiser has been the Home Tour sponsored by the
Linda Isle Committee. Chairman for the group this year will )le Mrs.
Raymond G. Godber.
In addition to financial support, the cameo Associates assist with
mailing in the Philharmonic office. Mn. J. Leslie Steffensen is the chair·
man.
As the summer draws to a close, these many dedicated committee
members may envision the overture to another successful season.
Through their enthusiastic endeavors music lovers of Orange county
may expect a continued high 1tandard o! musical performance and high
quality of programming,
Bride Shirt Off H.is Back-=Sew What? .
' ,
thb? -EMPTY COFFERS
• have been married for &iJ months, The
have Invited him tO the theater, to con.
certs, the ballet, \o dlnnert at my hcine
and I have taken him to ee•eral family
affairs.
Jells lnlurance. He works harder lhan
arlybody I know. The poor guy 11 out of
the hoolfl by a in the morning. He often
makes calla after supper and doesn't get
home until 10:30 or later. He gets no
guaranteed salary, but works atr1ctly on
a commission buia.
DEAR EM: I lllbtk lllese b<riala
lluien lliave plenly el aau. Woald Ibey.
a•k a frtenClly crocer for free ca.ant\(
goods? Aside from the 11n, bl m01f
...... II II Ulcpl to klclt beck a c-
mJ11tol OI U ialll'UCe ,.UC)'•
day we came horilt from our hor!eymoon
Lloyd presentl!d me with lf palra.or sox
to be damed, seven alUrta with frayed
cull• (he allowed me how h~ miliher
ANN LANDERS
turns .. them over) twO jacket.I wllh holes
::...~ elbows .and .""' pain ~ torn DEAR TlllM: Uo,.i dklal-a wilt.
Lloyd Nl(Use. tO b 'an)rthJ,..g 1oUt, In ··ife'11ioold bave mqf!d W1Ua·S•1er TeU
fact 11e..-to )ecood-hand sales to buy .him you will mend rtpprd ,,...., ud
more worn.out rap. I have plenty ol IOl'.kl Uiat are wri AviDJ, bul Lhe ~k and yard work to keep me 1tem4o 1te111 11lvqe procram 11 oat
lilly. I simply csnnot 1pend hoors men· Al ,_ dtn1, da'1dna: apd pa~hing things for lhls . IO onform lllm Che U lie bays any motl
m.tserty:py who it'ntlt THAT bard up. -rum_m••• be wlU wear It, boles and all.
l'm U and L~·ts 30. Atty advice? -The Ume to call I halt Is NOW or you'll
THIMBLED· THELMA. he -la lot 111e mi of yoor !lie.
'
DEAR ANN LANDf:RS: I am •
divorcee ·who ii altrlcdve ~ not
beautiful, good comptny but not brilliant,
comfortable bu( not rich. A certain
bachelor Jn our crowd 11 COMtantly
paired with me by friends, colleagues and
re1at1ve1. Everyone think• ot us as a cou--
ple but HIM.
Jn the past 111 ~ we have 1pent 30
eveoings toeether -by 1clull COWIL I .,
The trulh la u l0itlow1: He is a charm-
ing compenlon but ha hun't spent 110 on
me "'1ce the d•y 1 met him. What do you
thllik ol thb rtlatJonolllp!-GEE GEE
DEAll GEE GEE: lt'I~ -I
YMI want to 10 tm.ap life "1fac
Uckets, glvln1 panlM ... blvlUq 11111
cbarmltg fellow to k ytur pest. lie, l
am 11re, wlU be avaUable 11 lolg-. • )'II
•l'fl wlllln1 to provide IWD wlUt frw
eak11atameaL
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My 11usbanc1
' •
My <0mplalnt is thb: Severo! !?lends
and rtWives to whom he ha1 aold tn-
mr&nce poUcles hive said, 11l'm IW't you
don't want to make ll1Y l110l1<f on us -
bOlf about knocking oil your can-
millloo>l(' He replles, "Of c:oone." Theo
he mall• them • check lot the -
alon """'he retrJ>Old. . I have a nelg!lbor wbot!e .husbMd ld1'
automobllel on c:ommllllon and Ille hu
Ille -~ Wbl\ do yw lhlnl< "'
Do you ft<! Ill It Nie , .. out ol kl~
everybody having a 1ood limo bul you?
Write for Ann Llndm' -lei. "ThO
Key to PopuJarlty," encloaln& with yout'
requeat SS cent.a in coin 1od a loo&, sell~
addresocd, stamped COYl'lopt.
Ann Linden will be glad to help yo•
with your problems. Send !hem to her U,
cue ol the DAILY PILOT, eoclollnl •
oelf-addrtlled, stamped eovelope. . '
·--------
•
I
I
' . .. . .. .. .. .... ,....... . ......... . . . .... ~, ., .~. .. .
• • •
: J 4 DAILY PILOT
Space Pioneer Still
. • •
' . . . on Wing · The Tee
Tattler
.Horoscope
Virgo: Be Practical • • By JEAN WIWAMS
Of .. O.lly ''"" 11•11
amelhyst cross necklace given
to her by her husband on their
. America'& Jlrat lady of the wedding: day.
• stratosphere touched down ANTIQUE EARRINGS •• t:t.!~~~;;~~~ briefly in Newport Beach lhis Her earrings, called ac. I (Editor'• Natt: A CllWM 91 ~·· t• ftlt *'"" wlH -r ""' Wfflt In Iii. DAILY flLLOf. l• ,._, K"" fGI" IM w.k, .i.. .. rniill thel\'l It ,,0.
I• 15'0. '811• Msw. Tiiiy "'lltf k
FRIDAY
AU\;UST 22
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Practical, money is s u e s
domlnate. Be flrm but also
fair. AJplies specifically to
legal matters which affect
financial status. Don't make
demands in excess. Word to
wlae here should be sufficient.
realistic liaht. Not wlae lo take
others for granted. Be
analytical. week. quarellea, are tiny watercolor
• • Sht Is Dr. Jeannette Pie· painlings over 200 years old
; ~." card, widow of f a m e d sho"·ing early balloon ascent!.
.... balioonlsl ln\'enlor Dr. Jean They originally were buttons
Piccard, and she was amo_ng on an 18th cent u r y
apace pklneers hooore:<' w~th gentleman's coat, she corn-
Jnvitations to the Pres1denttal mented.
dinner for the astronauts in A gold and diamond pin in
the Century Plaza Hotel. the shape or a balloon with a
A visitor in the Newport basket attached was the gift of
Beach home of her son Don the president of the Oklahotna
Piccard and his wife. the high-City Gas Co. ia appreciation
fly ing grand~r ~f . 14 for a flight she made with her
-revealed that she 1s cont1nu1ng son Don and others on May 17,
as a lecturer consultant lo Dr. 1963, when she suffered a
,:. Robert Gilrulh al Hous1on·s broken ankle in landing and
. -Manned Space Center. had to spend six wet ks on
~-"I don't believe in retire-crutches.
mttil, .. she laughed. Thti crutches slowed her
She has flown back lo her down not at all. for she at·
Minneapolis home carrying tended the 50th reunion of her
collected mementos of the graduating class al Bryn
-.-Altrofete, to which she was Ma\\T and also completed a ~ 4escorted by Mr. and Mrs. speaking tour for Dr. Gilruth
' Charles R. Able of Dover that took her to Hawaii, Scat· ~ Shores and ftlr . and Mrs. tle and Las Vegas. i Walter Burke of Cameo She spoke to Or. and Mrs.
Shores. Gilruth at the Presidential
l ' ' ' i ' '
Her adventures in reaching dinner, which was a delighUul
Newport Beach in time for the occasion, she sa id, and the
dinner were of space age pro-food was delicious. She saved
portions. the tiny American flag which
CAUGHT ON WING topped the dessert as well as
She was caught almost the gold-bordered invitation
lit!:rally on the wing by the and replica of the plaque left
White House invitation, she on the moon.
said, having reached htin-She was able lo greet such
neapolis on a flight from the "old friends as Jimmy Doo\H-
; Northwest the same day and Ile" and was pleased to be
• being en route to her island recognized by ,yt Llnkletter.
..; home on Lake Vermilion. She was seated al a table with ~ Minn .• which she calls The Robert W. Sarnoff. prestdenl
C, Outpost. of RCA and Secret.ary of the
r. "You see. J had just bought Treasury David M. Kennedy
:.:.'" this new, second-hand boat ," and Mrs. Kenned y.
she chuckled, "and I had to Besides Dr. Piccard's son
;; see if it had been sunk ." The Don, who manufactures sport
~ home can be reached only by balloons in Costa ~1esa -
,.. boat, and torrential rains and "They're for fun, just as you'd ~-torn ados had swept through go sailing." she said -she r: the area that week. has two other sons. Dr. Paul
;:. After a flight to the island to J. Piccard is a professor of
•~:.' find that the boat was saved, polillcal _science at Florida
she retumed lo Minneapolis State University and John Pie-~; and -approximatety one hour card is a mechanical engineer
f: before catching a plane to Los and researcher who was one ~: Angeles -retrieved her of the originators ol Corfam. f: jewelry from her b a n k , RECORD FLIGHT
~ enlisting the willing aid of her The record-breaking balloon
,..; banker for the off.hours open-ascent to the height of 57 .:'.179
~ ing. feet \hat she made with her :=: The jewelry she brought husband in their pressurized
with her was truly appropriate gondola was on February ZJ,
;: for the occasion, the loveliest 1934.
;-being a gold filigree and Did they take parachutes? ;r======================.I ' • , • Co1ne Sefaool Da::e •
Read hag
• •
Pa11s!
Tbe Bookstall 111 r. 11tti st., Cest• w .. 141,..,11
UlllllN Tll9 P•llWU "911MI
FAMED BALLOONIST
Dr. Jeannette Piccard
On that flight they did. Dr.
Piccard said, but balloonisls
ordinarily do not require
them, for if the top of a
balloon ruptures, the bottom
half reverses and becomes in
effect a parachue.
Such an accident befell her
son and daughter-in-law in
1954, she recalled, revealing
that Mrs. Don Piccard also
takes to the skies. The couple
"°'ere several thousand feet in
the air when their balloon rup-
tured but they glided safely
back to earth.
What did she wear on her
historic flight? Why it was .. a
10-year~ld tweed pantsuit."
she recalled, "the kind wilh
knickers." She had used lt also
in Swiss mountain climbing.
But she added with a laugh, "I
also wore a new pullover and
cardigan from Peck and
Peck."
There was no need for a
space suit, since the gondola
was pressurized, she"'f:om-
metlled, adding "It's a lot
easier to build a space capsule
than a space suit."
Among other souvenirs of
the astronauts' dinner she took
home was a swatch of space
suit material -beta cloth, she
identified it -imprinted with
the Apollo 11 insignia, a fitting
memento for a gallant woman
flier, America's first woman
space pioneer.
~vecl ., MOn111w,j · lly SYDNEY OMAllR
MENU TIPt Rutabaa .. , root
vegttabln, 1"bltand1I main
dlJb, oocb u &lllOd pork Joi•
....1 OU Ille bill llo<e 1be
mOOll wtU eater C.prtcern
1Ga11bL
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
You get on a more prac--
tical footlnc. You understand
basis for certain actions, reac-
tions. You coWd get overtime
asa.ignment t o n I g h t _ Be
gracious. Later, social activity
increues.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Accent ls on movement, deal·
ing with persons at a
dist!._~._Ordi.n.ttlly, you art.
practici.J. Today you seem to
procruUnate. Pillnt is that
you must recognize chan1es
within.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Promo t e better com·
munlcaUons with mate or
partner. Do plenty o( listening.
Cycle Ja such that you should
let others tale iniUalive. Wait
and see -play waiting game.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221:
Money enters picture i n
unusual manner. Some pro-
cedures are discarded,
replaced by\ the more-up.to.
date. Improve home sur-
roundings. Make peace with
family member.
VIII® !AO&. 23-SepL 22):
You may be in romantic
mood. But try to combine this
with degree of practicality.
See persorui, !ituationa in
LIBRA (Sept. 23.0CI. 221:
Practical efforts tonight pay
dividends. Obtaln hint from
Virge message. Keep up with
correspondence. Doo't waste
time procrastlnallna. Do what
must be done -In thorough
manner.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2ll:
A trip In conjunction wilh
friend may turn out to be a
surprise. You gain extra in-
formation. You may be
nonplussed byd iscov e r y.
Overcome tendency toward
jealousy. Take it easy.
SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dtc. 21 ): Strive for greater
originality, independence. Ne1•
starts in new directions are
favored. Reward indicated for
speciilf care You -give im·
portant project.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Cycle high; you gain
through new contacts. Study
S1g:ittariu1 mes1agc. Y o u
should communicate with one
at a distance. B r o a d e n
horizons. Travel may be au
importan t key.
S D • I • d AQUA.Illus {Jan. :W.Feb. orority I ners nv1te 181: Day features "'"'"· Naturally, you should be
decreet. Confiding in wrong p i ( n i ( k j n g Plans for the first public and children from the Sons of person ·could create problems.
Norwegian dinner in the Norway Book Service. Sub-Know this and a c l ac·
Bidding farewell to summer Harbor Area will be discu.s&ed jects include Vi It in gs. cordingly. Be friendly but
will be members of Beta Garn· Norwegian way of lite and dignified. ma Chapter. Epsilon SigmJ "°'hen Trygve Lie Lodge 90· history, dictionariet>, textbooks PISCES (Feb. 19-h1arch 201:
Alpha sorority, Fountain Val-Sons of Norway, meets at I and cookbooks as well as A friend could give mate,
Jey. p.m. Tbunday, Aug. 28. music, songs and folk-dancing partb ner erroneous impression.
A family picnic will be the The group will meet In its instruction. 0 lain hint from Aquarius
last social activity planned by new local.ion, the Odd Fellows Pric~ range from $2 to $4:, inessage. Check details. Ir
the group before beginning a Hall, Co1ta Mesa, and seven and additional information persistent. your goal comes
busy fall schedule. applications for membership may be obtained by calling close 10 reality.
It will take place between S will be voted for formal ia· Mrs. Ray Nielsen, 548-8888. JF TODAY IS yo Un
and 9 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 24, in itiation in September. Stam ps collected by the BIRTHDAY you are able to
1 , =~~ Atlantis Park. The "Luteflsh" dinner, plan-group and returned to Norway accomplish feats which cause
S h I H 1 Inactive during the summer, ned for Oct. 19, will take place are sorted and sold lo col· others to blink in wonderment. c 00 as I PTA Notes the chapter's next business in the American ~gion Hall. Jectors around the world. You are on a new path at
meeting will take place Thurs-Members interested in Proceeds from Utls project are present, and it could lead t1>
New Home 1--~-Y_;._~_p_1.1es_'_·_~-~-th.....:.~_.b_om_•_o1_.....:.~_°"'_fu._1P..:·,_~...:._',•_:k_o':"_both __ ~_._~'-'-Y_~_,:_,cu_1o_1~_·_~_·h_i~or-dr_•_~'-·ip_p_1e<1_an_d_~:::~:.:~':::'~:.:":::~o-•_•_1_._"d __ •_m_•_tio_n_•1
Sunshine Community
Nursery School is moving its
facilities to the Presbyterian
Church of the Covenant, Costa
?o.1ei;a, and will have an open
house Friday, Sept. S, to show
off the new location .
formerly housed in the
?o.1esa Verde Methodi s t
Church. the sc h oo I is a
parent's cooperative directed
by f\1r s. Lee VanderHeiden..
Classes are conducted for 3
and 4-year~lds with lhe help
of mothers.
Parents of 3 and •"')'ear~lds
are invited to the open house
from 10 a.m. to noon Sept. 5.
FY Higli PTA
rtlr1. Wllllan'I Brockman
President
COMING UP: Mrs. Charles
Blair, health chairman, and
five members will assist
with physical examinations
for boys going oul for sports
\Vednesday, Aug. 20.
:tif e m b e r s also will serve
snacks to registering
students beginning at 7:30
a.m. Wednesday, Aug. 27,
and Thursday, Aug. 28.
The next board meeting will
take place at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday, Aug. 26.
'
SALE!
i
I ;
'
I
I , • ' CELEBRATING OUR FIRST YEAR i ' ' '
, •
'
' ' ' ' •
' • ~
' .. ..
' t . .. ;: .. .: ....
=· ..
' ,,.
;,
·= • ,. •
•• , . ..
\•
•• •
•
F I MAilPPERRS ree. -ANY SIZE
WITH EACH PllCE OF FAIRIC
CORDUROY "FLIRT VALUES TO
SJ.91 YD.
HIGH -PRINT" HAWAIIAN
ACRYLIC
LOW f'o1y1it•r & PRINTS
R•ya" •S" WIDE -
1.91 v,1, WILD l VllRANT 1.•• v.1. WASH l WEAR
14' yd. 150 yd. 150 yd.
VIBRANT STRETCH M1"uf1ctur1r1
"TRI MMINGS UNUSUAL
FABRICS UNUSUAL PRINTS
TO ~O" WIDE SELECTION FROM
175 yd. so•/o OFF Holland
Exclusive Suitings l11ek te School PRINTS !DRI P DR.•Y) Ir SOLIDS Silk & Rayon Cottons • :O": 11.50 45" WIDE
·:o~· 2.85 V1 riow1 W•1¥•1 66C yd . VALUES tO 'io": $3.75 SJ.ti YD,
95c,,.
4S" WIOl
·:oo: $3.80
INTEltNA TIONAL
5 SPOOLS OF 98 THREAD c
REG. $1.45
100 % ASSORTED BACK TO WEAVES AND
RAW SILKS FI BRES SCHOOL from Japan BROCADES Bondeds,
175 yd. 250/o OFF Woolens,
DESIGNER WHY PAY DR
AND MFG. MOREi SUITINGS Suitings MFG. FROM FRANCE VALUES TO
ZIPPERS S5.'I YD,
VALUES TO
$12.00 YD. FROM
300 I' ,., I.SO Inch yd. 60'0 WIDE
60" rolyHter Drapery SPORTSWEAR DOUBLE KNIT KNITS VALUES "TO
S7.91 YD.
$2,90 YA•O
$3,90 YUO
$4.90 ....
Fabrics
45" WIDE
FROM
95cyd .
YOU MUST
SEE THESE
VALUES
CHARGE Ill.
2750 HARBOR BLVD •
COSTA MESA
fHARIOl IOUlfVARD AT ADAMS)
JIN COLLEGE SHOPPING CENTER)
I l ..
•
•
•
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
•
, .. ,.
'
One place for all the school
shoes! S!rapper with upper
•
o! erase-antiqued lealher. 8.99 . The
turtle-grained brass ring moc. 6.99 .
Perfed wing-lip, 6.99. Black manmade
palent slrap. 6.99. Shoulder bag . 4.99.
Fun shoe fashion . 6.99 10 8.99
HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTON BEACH
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
COSTA MESA
• i
;
1 ' I ' '
;
t
'
13
Thut?daJ, August 21, 1969 PA!J.Y PILOT J5
Organists
Strikln& harmonious chords w 11 J ho tho Organlll Guild
when Its Orange County Pro-
f"58lonal members meet from
2 \o l :lll p,m. SUnday, Aug. H.
in the Meadowlark Country
Club, HUll!lngton Beach.
Also featured wilt be many
organists from the L o s
Angele• Organists' Breakfast
Club llld tbe Long Beach llld
San Diego Profe1sional
Or1anist club.s.
Harmonize
Ticketf, at tl per person,
will be avallable at the door
witb proc:<eds to .. dooal<d to
area philanthropiu.
Following the concert, Diet
sean of Huntington Beach will
host the guild's luau jamboree
beginning at 4::SO p.m.
The p.ibllc is invited to the
concert. and HawaUan atUre
will contribute to the luau at-mosphere.
Hawaiian Honeymoon
Candlelight Vows Read
Peering
Around
Ro.aeymoonlag ln the aod carried thrt~ long stem-
Hawallan lalandl are the med Ivory roees: with mat·
I ,._,.,_ J c.o1.11.1. ching green ribbons. ormer ... ,u~ eanne ~J.WllGI Wearing identical costumes
and Jlllllll Charita VOfl'I , who and carrying o~ long stem-
exchanged wedding vows and med rose were bridesmaids,
r!np Jn Whittler's Hillcrest tbe Mbse> Gtoigla Dowell,
Congrecatlonal Cbureb. Nancy Gumm, Jill Carey,
of Ca 11 for n I a Scholarshlp --------•II Federation. She is m&jorlng in art at Calltornla State College
at Fullerton and ls 1 charter
member of Beta Psi Omega
sorority.
A GALAXY of prewedding
parties feted Miss Marjorie
Hlggs of Santa Ana, kin-
dergarten teacher at Harbor
View School, who will ex·
change wedding vows Sunday
with Paul W. Hebert Jr. of San
Think • •.
GWl OF MICHIGAN
Think
Jta1n lnhG
WMlcllff 1'1&11 NfWttftw .... 6U·M44 ..... ,.. a HARBOR REFORM TEMPLE Tbe Rev. Dr. James A, Suzanne Foilcault, Judy Wirtz and Carol Thompson. Petenon officiated for the Robert Vogel was b 1 s
candlellJbt service w b 1 c h brother's best man. Seating
unll<d tbe daughter ol tbe guesll were Davjd Root, John
Vltout Leonard Sbllalas of Crum, Michael Berg, Darryl
Brea and the aon of the Fair, Daniel Bunker, Charles
Charles Vogeb o{ Newport Conoaty llld Randall Davis.
Her husband lJ a Newport
Harbor High School graduate
who recelved his diploma Crom
the UnJverslty or Southern
California, where be was af-
filiated with Alpha T a u
fraternity. He plans to enter
tbe USC School of Dentlalry in
Diego. !'.:======='==::! Mrs. Belty L. l)avis of Lido
Isle hosted an afternoon
shower for the bride-to-be,
assisted by 1.lrs. Jack Kates
and Mrs. Jack Niday.
Announces
Religious School Registration
to be held at
MRS. VOGEL
Los Angeles Home the rau.
Let TV WEEK
Turn You On
St. James Episcopal Church
J209 Yhl Udo, Newport IHcll
hhml.,., A.IMJ. JJ I JO-t :JI •.a. .. 12 NeM
fM lnfor.atfOI Coll 675•J44J-644-Gl4f
Calendar
Outlined
Beach. When they return from
'Ibe bride, given In marriage Hawaii the newlyweds will
by her fatber, wore a gown ol. make their home in Uis
candlelight silt with full chU· An.fi:esbrlde was graduated
fon skirt and detachable from La Habra Jflnh School,
enroll now ••• ti 1 "' J11
cathedral length train. The ••
long sleeves and empire style: ;;!wl!~e::re:lhe~w;iasi\:a;;;;lif;;;;' e~m;;;;em;;;;be~rl ~ W~J'.L!P21l•ue<! wlt~ll
PIANO LESSONS
---At Coffee ·INTRODUCING-. . · • imported French . lace, and
leaves o~ matching lace ~
cented wltb crystab caught
CHILDREN'S IEGINNERS GROUP
LESSONS START IN SEPTEMIER JERRY GUTIERREZ
Plans.-for the coming year her shoulder length veil of 11-
will be ouUined w he n luslon. She carried a bouquet of cascatling fern I n d members of D~ by the Sea glamellas.
gather for the tradltionaJ Mrs. Duane Gollborer came
hi ""_ .......... G,IROLll Friends ·p Coffee next Satur-from Denver to serve as au.s
) /'''<".
'--WE WILL RENT YOU A PIANO
CllUclren'1 i119ll'IMrs Ol'OUP !»-
-lnsonl. N.-"Id tol1llv $ clltttrent -.,.,.. llour It.HI llllld
I. I I 0 "· Wurllntr Electf'Olllc Music L•bor&tory. Aoea 6 to
n . Out 1u<.11tr1 1t1 pl1no
m~]Drl 1t our Ioctl unl""'11-
tln.
ADULT ORGAN
CLASSES
lt911i1!11" l'IOW fOr 5'1>ffmbll" day. matron of honor, and Miss 1717 I. c.-Hwy,
Mrs. Cecil McConnell of Cheri ShUala was her sister's c ........ .!.~::t·•tso WallichsMusicCity daun being formed 11 o w I PIR
Phone fod.ly -•5k IOr Mr1. LESSON Vin Okltn.
Laguna Hills will open her maid of honor. 'I11ey wore em· • Mcastet C"'9e
horTte '1>r the event which is pire gowns of moss green cbif. 11 y..,.. 11 S•11t1 1.ocatlo11 South Coast Plaaa ••• Costa Mesa Phone 540-2830
open to all Della Zeta alum-,~foo~..,~·th~ma~tchiog~·~g~ar~deo~~ha~ts~~~~~""'!"~~~
nae.
For1T11rly At South Co11t Pt111
DRAMATIC SCISSOR CUTIING
WllJmrl®J
Vice presideQt and program
chairman, Mrs. James Fogar.
ty, will outline the program,
which will include a Travel
With Us night. featuring the
members, an American Field
Service program, the annual
May benefit, a brunch and
bridge.
The group meets the second
Monday of each month at 7:30
p.m .. September through May,
and Mrs. Donald Avery, presi-
dent, extends an invitation to
alwnnae in the area to attend.
548-0460
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
The next regular meeting
will be a crafts demonstraUon
in the home of Mrs. John
Waller, Costa Mesa, Monday,
Sept. 8, at 7:30 p.m.
COME TO THE
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FINALS,
2:00 P.M. SATURDAY, AUG. 23
JUDGES,
LORIN GRISET-M1yor of Sonia Aoe
CHRIS MITCHUM-Star of Gemini Americ1n's "Big Foot••
MARY ANN MOBLEY-Former "Mi11 Americe"
GARY COLLINS-T.V. and Movie Per1on1lity
DOROTHY LUDVIGSON-
Mery Webb Dav is Modeling Scout
PETER LUPUS-Of T.V.'1 "Mission lmpo11ible''
FASHION
SQUARE
Oon't mi11 thi1 ••• see 10 gorgeous
and t1lent1d te1n1 vi•in9 for the Mis&
T 1en191 So. C11ifomia crown. Groovy
mus ic by th• "S1cond Pha11.'' S••
who's going to Fort Worth to complete
for the n1tionel title • • • 81 on th•
Mill et 2:00 p.m. wh1n all th• excit•·
mint b1g ins.
SANTA ANA FUIWAY AT MAIN, SANTA ANA
Another first from Newport National Bank
•
•
SAiURDAY TV BANKING IS CONVENIENT AND EASY
Banking on Saturday will be an added
conveniel'ICe at Newport National Bank for people who
mfs!ed banking during the week, or when emergencies arise
and extra cash is needed. Just drive up to our unique
Auto lV Drive.Jn screen on any Saturday and, after pushing
the button, one of ou r television-selected tellers
will cash checks, accept deposits, make withdrawals on
savings accounts, accept loan payments,
issue money orders and even open new accounts.
Our special TV hostesses will serve you and your family
refre shments and show you how to operate
the TV Banking. It's convenient, fun and very easy,
Saturday TV Banking can make your lifa
a little more pleasant. . '
at unique
at these locations only
IN FULLERTON
SUNNY HlllS OFFICE• Harbor al Bru • 871°7290
UNIVEllSl!Y OFFICE• wt C!lop""n It SIJ~ r.one1e • 87H840
IN NEWPORT BEACH
WESTCllFF OFFICE • W"icliff 1t Oover • 642·3111
SATURDAY TV BANKING IS AVAILABLE BETWEEN THE HOURS OF 9:00 AoM. AND 1:00 P.M.
AJso open evtl')' day rill 6:00 p:m. end Cl;OO p.m. on Frldl11-
••
. .
' • • ,
l~t:;::;;:;:?:::;::;:;;:=;:.;=;;,;;;;;;;;o;;;;;,;;;o,;;;;;-:..:. .. , ---~~-:.-.-.-.-.-... -:.:;:::: • .:..:.:;;;.:,:: . ...-.. ~ •• ::.::~::.:.-:: .. ...-.::.::._::.::_:_::.:-•• ;;:.::.:_::.;:"='.1";,=: .. ;:_:;,: .• :,;.=:::.: .. :.:.,.:~=:.::.: .. ::::.::::.".'.::.:~::;..:::::::::~:-:: •. :::.~:-:".::.:._=-=-===~! •••
\ ~ II D.lllY ~LOT
•
Volunteers Call Out
For Benefit Rummage
Do you dread the late sum-
mer chorl d cleaning out
' clmeta and ~ty garqe
shelve&?
• The Job may be made eultr
1f y~ know that cut off
clethlna, furniture, boob or
old bHc-a-brac and whit•
eltphant.s can b e come
valuable conUibUUons to a
"""1ly ca"": the Mardi ol
Dllnea.
A two-day rummaa:e sale to
Alums Join
At Benefit
benefit the aallonwlde
-.rch !OUDdaUm Is belna
planned In Oci.ber by lho
Orange County i;q..,..Rowid
Dancers.
The rpecl!lc d.al• and place
ol Ute aale 1n Costa Meaa .will
be announced later, reporU
Miis Onella Com!ll o I
Newport Beach-who Is ~
ordinaUng the collection ol
Items.
Committee membtn who
are ttklng calls and lll'lnainl '
pickups of donated artlcln in
various dtle1 are u follows~
Corona del Mar, Mrs. Michiel
Carl, 6'7U739; Coeta MUI,
Mn. Joe Kirby, $41-7590, and
Fountain Valley. Mrs. Len
Janky, 1162-Q713.
Numbtrl to call in other
The Albert SlUon Home wlll areu are Huntington Beach,
benefit when m e m b e r s • Mrs. Juan Dillon, 536-8013;
huat>ands and lrienda ol Chi Laguna HJI~. Mrs. Frank
Omega Alumnat -Of--Oranae-OJ.non,-837-6284;-N e w p-o-r-t-
County attend 1 wine-tasting Beach, Miss Correll, 67S-8&38;
pvty In the borne of Mr. and South Laguna, Mrs. J . B.
Mr•. Richard K JI Ii nae r. Holloway. 499-3Z53. Ind
-'Orange. Westminster, Mrs. Dick Hoff.
'J1Je party will take place man, 897-8656.
between 7:30 and 9 p.m. Fri· Arrangements for pickup of
day, Sept. 5, and reservations Items also may be made ~
!., may be made by calling Mrs. calling the March of Dime• o •
( Kiu!nger, 63_7-5971. flee at M7-&U4.
Half Sizes
Space Age
llvlng -a
polyester
wardroM
and a
washer/ dryer. /i;.-~
Jet Into this
new life
from Half.Size
Shop.
from $20.00
~~~1sHALF-SIZE SHOP
I
..
1805 Newport Blvd., C.M.
"1/1 ltloc~ Mrttl of lltk Sftlllt"'
Hours: 9:30 to 5:30
Friday to 9:00
224 Orangefafr Mall, Fullerton
m
II
IN THE WIND -A Drip-dry Champagne Luau will be the last "'°'al event of
the summer for members of Las Brizas del Mar, Fountain Valley. Planning
the event are (left to right) the Mmes. Fred Peterson, John Travis, John Mc-
Clane and Edward Lavell.
Final Fling
Luau Torches Flicker
Tiki torche!, fresh fiower barbecue, lnfddltlon to speak· open house in the !all.
leis and Hawaiian mullic will ing ·engagements on the work Forty percent of all aalea
create the aura of the islands of Children's Home Society, will be returned to, the
when Fountain Valley's Las Christmas card sales now Children's Home Society ,
Briza11 del Mar members and are taking place, and will con-which ienea the adoption
husbands gather for their last tinue through Nov. 15, needs of children in every
.aoclal ev~nt of the 1Ummer. Members are entertaining codnty In California. Residents
A Drip-Ory C h a m P a In e during in'dlvtdual showing1 in lnJerellled In the card salea
Luau will take plact Jn a their homes, and aelecUona may obtain more infonnation
poolside setting at the Foon· will be available durlnf the by calling Mrs. Joseph Maiolo,
lain Valley home of ~1r. and bridge luncheon and a holiday chairman, at 962-8265.
Mn. Joseph Exner Saturday.I--''-------'----------' Aug. 23.
The "strictly for fun" party
wlll launch members into a
myriad fall p r o j e c ts, ac·
cording to Mrs. John McClane,
&ocial chairman.
Piece de resistance wilt be
an authentic Island menu
which will be catered hY Len·
nert and Bodn>gi, Costa Mesa.
Cuisine will include chicken
Hawaiian, 1weet and aour
pork and an array of exollc
fruit.
Another highlight during the
evenl111 will be a hula conte!t
for husbands.
The pariy will be In aharp
contrut to the serious en-
duvon p11Med. by the group
!or loll, aald Mn. Anthony Ga-
jewakl, prealdenl
Already planned are the
Chrlatmas card aale, a layette
ahawer, bridge luncheon,
Chrtatmu baiaar and it.If·
flng a booth durtn1 Fountain
Valley'• tradlUooal Halloween
-LATTERERS!
<••11o-11s.H 494 Cl111flt
lowes1i Price Ever
Fora Great
Maytag Pair!
BOOTERY! 5-10
co..,.115.ff 494 c•-11·
C. She will loft this rettat smtdt 't'inrl boot for &ll! lt'a shiny •nd 'llFild in uabc1r·
•b1e rolorl ad bliw:lc. Jr's the late U&C
of fllhion. SiJea ' to 10. Save!
LIATHER SHOIS
o ...... 7.'74.tT J""' 0•'1 6.88
Dre11 (Dford and slip.om for him with ~Wac leuher llppcn and PVC• J10les.
BJAck or brawn ici sites 6!ti-12 Snc! .,~~ . -
Only -s39aaa
Model AIOO
090
These· are not "stn odel s ••. they have
all these great dependable Maytag features.
411 E. 17th St.
SHOES FOR BOYS! ............ 3 97
j o,,,, ,,.,, ' • .
Euy ore ..;nyt uppon io orlord OI: sli~
on lfJ'les loc school are black or brow& Dmable IOlea.&.e 8~ ., 3.
3.•7
Top Scores C~nfracfe.d
!labor Atta re11dentl werlfl Paira. a two atAion cbam·
amonc top ICOl'tfl ln the •1st plonahip event
Summer NaUonal Tournament. "'·etr " · th of thlfl American Contract Topptng r.ii sec~ons in f
Bridge Le:acue conducted Jn fint session ot lhe h1astera
the Ambasudor Hotel. Women11 Pall).. were the
Milton M. COhen o1. Newport Mmes. Maraaret McNamee of
Beach achleved the rank of Newport, Bernice Mealey of
Llfe Muter of the IMgue by Corona del ftiar and Maxine
acorlna h11h Jn the ft11xed Pfeiffer of Newport.
Teamt compeUtlon. Only Mr1. · B. R. Gildea of
11,000 out ot an estimated 40 Newport led in her section of
million player1 have reached the Olympiad Fund Pairs, a
this rank. on HCSSlon championship
WEIGHT@.
WATCHERS; •
Some !1lking, iom• U1t1nln111nd
1 pro;r1m 1h1t work1, TM
I flll llOCHl.111.....c.AU 135.5515
Mr11. H. E. Rothrock 0£', ~·~ve~n~t.======~:=====;:==== Costa Mesa and her partner[:
lopped their sectlm ol the
Gfendale Pairs, a one 1MSion
championship event, and Alex-ani:ler P. 1'-11tcluill of Costa
?.ieu and his partner headed
their section in the first
session of the Masters T\1i1ed
Uncle Len
Offers Prizes
•• •• I! ii
NEEDLEPOINT DESIGN
LAST 10 DAYS
OF OUR 15TH ANNIVERSAR·Y SALE
Odds and ends and discontinued items
which have not moved during our sale,
have been further discounted to move
during the next 10 days.
We must make floor spac:e for
merchandise bought at the last
Fumiture Show, now arriving
daily.
HURRY 'FOR PRICES
YOU WON'T BELIEVE!
Phone 548-5131
1865 HARBOR BLVD. • DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
Back-to-School
Discount Sale
r•e Latest style in s6oes!
THE NEW CASUALS
IMPROVE FOOTING
o .. a.,.s.99
3 v.,, o.,, 5.44
nw MW nn 1hoe will be !tJliMNt ..-ith IDO$t of yom faah·
K>ru thia tdJOn. 1( is leathtt slid Tlnrl with a hi&h front i nd ~ck.le and di~ aulps. Gren ~th ~ Mila. f'lata, IMlf'
~ &owa .iG 6iacs' ., 9. ~lit
@ QAVl5 .RR OWN Costa Mesa 646-1684
Dally 9.9 • Sat. 9·6 2200 HARBOR BLVD. at
WllMo COSTA MESA
----------
----·--------
; '• J r · ::" :. I '
AUGUST 21
···-" ... JC) (IO)
.,
......... ,,.)
Dell-·-JC> l!Gl
• "' -"" (C) (30) ·~ LDOll 1t tti1 Moon.• Alen Stolt 1nd
MtrowW Dr. I. Ii'. lwltt -lnfomlltiow allned from 11n1111t1ned
111100t fli&tits to 1W conotpll ti ... -.
a()) m -1ci '")
., -,. JC) (!O)
t.JO !P.D!.!t.'7.!'fnd':. ~'./.i ~~
7:llO. CIS r.!Rf .... (C) {30)
W•lhr CtonkitL
non llllldll • wriety " Clllll llt-dudlnt 111 lllt8nrphd suk:IN. .,.,
oftitar 11¥Jt thrrlf'lf I robllerJ, Ind
w1rniftf tllt f:itr" ti Ill '"'-1111 tidal wm. (R)
0"'-(C) (30) Ted M~
t!) I IB<W I Wtifd Dlnm If lilt
Ww1d (C) (60) Th• linter flfllltt
sPotJl&llb *"'111 Ill lhl most dr.
matic 'ind lldtinl; d.111tfS of tht
world. (R}
7;JO
CJ WW'• MJ lint? (C) (JO) Witty
Bruntr hosts.
mr....n CC> (30J
ma())""""" ""' "~
@ CIJ """ ... ""' (Q l30)
UilWllM .... 11 ..,_ (C) (JO)
!llll'''"' ....... (30) ·-of Utt ftfttl Potition." lnltn.dor lltOCI 0 ID @ m Tiit WldiUlfs (t)
frederidl: Hotd' pruents IOlllf tiftt. (60)--C1ll Mtrt111 •nd Lou it.wit
pit studies fOf practice. He pet· d~ up 11 tr1mps for • "llu111·
forms 1n ltallan Rl!lllmnce piece min(' mldley Ind Plul l)'lldt t!lmt
-"lltllent." bak&r, speti1lizin1 In etkts for
. lll'IO!er parties.
l!l!l '"" -fC) <30l om-JC) ''°> G Drll• "'-(Cl (30)
fJ 9 (iJ Anl .. I World (C} (30)
The curiolis bird known n tht pel·
lean Is tilt 1ub]ect of ton11ht'i
show. Scientists study tht strana•
bird in one of Its Hortlt American
habitats. Gunnison Isla nd in the
Greet S.lt Like of Ut1h.
o mioo m-not••..., • Tiiiiif (C) (60) .. 3&-23-36. .. Ala·
andlf M~ plUlll'f into Mt N-
lip!Ml'll Wlttl '""""'' tnthllSlmt wllen he Is Otdertd to tK0¥11' 1
microdot 0011t1inln1 stole!'! delens.
lnf0fm1tion. Thi clot il bellewd to
be In posseuion of one ot sevtral
beauty contestants. Nancy l<ootack,
J. Let AWfY and llTlt J1kkllrt au"1.
(R)
Beijt@ @DD11tllf .._ (C) a:n-r.!:;:tai,i. Brown,
:! ;:' w'::.~ ~~ ttita.':;; ta,_. ti s--fC) (2 hr)
(Jimmy Oetn) turns for hlllp to Din stM AllM holts • ~Pttt of SU11-
1ftet winnlnz 1 bHutifUI fir! day'1 ihow.
(Broob Bundy) in lft 1uction. (R) • II) Mn Alli M II M°"" (C) (30)
0 J1tk '""' (30) Mel Bl1nc -
aunts. IO:SO ID,._ (C) (:.>) lill .loh!'L
I~~¥?>:',=:~,.~ E U. lrtt • II Obe:a!M (IO)
11111ttw.• C.flot hn tlfld 111 his ht·
tm to 1111 annd'mothtr fht he la nrrltd Ind hH two chlldrtlt. Norw 11:00 II D fJ Ill mm .... (Q
ttilt shl Is comlna to fislt Ind he 8 AIJM Hltdlcod
his to come up with a wife. Ctrlos . decidts ttiat Sister 8artrill•'s slrur. 0 lllo¥1t: -n. ,9bwt Witt! ~· Jennifer, 11 tt1e likely e1ndid1te to Ham.-(myst~) -4Mlch1rd W1d·
portray tiis wif1. Elinor Don1hut mart, Mark stlMlll.
Ind litlJtn Adlms I L/est, {R) mW. C. fllkil f'illl flltval: ''YOU
B MHr $ .... "'ltll Mmllrt" Cln"t Clltat "' Hond Man," co-(ifrtrna)~l-Ntt Cui""-Irene starrinc tdlll' 8er1:111 (1939)
Dunne. OJ ..-: .... ....._ 1111t C1ttf. I 'mpd 111t h1il"' (homJrJ '57-m Trd • '"-'""* (C) {30) I Tim Hort, Audny Delton. QI""' ·-(60) @ill@ CIJ QI())"'"' JC)
fl!J C.11 ,..., et.. (30) Cfllo
student .lol11111 dt KftJstt pertornu ll:JO fJ ta \f;l MM lriltill (C) Comic tht last mGWment of ''Sonlta No. kft l M E llllMr, Op. 38" b1 llrallma. Len u tz ~
Clsets often 11\.Slnr:tlol Ind arifl. DID()) m TllllllM .. (C)
dsm. ., ...... ...,.. ..,.. (di'•
E Qocht I( Rott (JO) m1j '43-l.ltft Ladd, Daftn1 Reed.
0 IH> Ill !II"" ...... (C) ••••
rt L11 ind N1psay llumll gutst.
1:0011 9 Cl) Tiit 1'rilontf (C) (60')
Th• Prisoner :aeeb ta undermine
the pow!!f of Numb• 2, Ind poe. lZ:JO m Cllilllf
tlbly tntrtnc:h himself n lleld ol dt AcltR n.trr. "Golden GJOYtt Hit YIH11:1. (ft) $lOry .. '
.,.. .... (30)
n IH> mm"" •~ (C) l30l 1:to 11-.,., ,... n .. • ,,.... •7ftia o.flint OM." • ti!J) 52-Ron.t CUrwminp, 81r· m .... (30) b1r1 H1f1.
.
8 Ct II t...., ....... hlN (C)
f P I f) /\. Y
DAWME MOVIES
......... I.Wot "" ,...,. , ....
111t) ''<!-flroMld Colrnln, W1ltlll' .,_
fJ ........ (rD!lllllCf) 'J7-Jotn
linnttt. W1tMt Baxtar. •
C'J (Cl .... ,.,).--(wutem) -Gtoffrey Korff, Cltfls-
tlM Gl!MI,
e JOB PRINTING
·-(C)
e PUBLfCATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
Quelity Printing end Dtpend1bl• S•rvic.•
.for mor• then • qu•rt•r of • c•ntury.
PILOT PRINTING
IJtt WUT IALIOA ILYD NIWPOIT llACH-141..CJJ' '---~~-----~-~-~~·' -
nRKINS \
1• no.....,. J ..,., .. __ •u ..,_,,...,,.. ··--
MOON MULLINS
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTT AND JEFF
..-~CF
RJ<TY-1
WM Sl'UT5 lS
OF.~51.M.!
IF ANYTHING HAPPENED1!:> '>t>U,
l4EAVEN 'FO~IO. Tl4EN YOUR 'FAMILY
WIU. BE PROTECTCO Wm\ $50.000.1
WELL, DON'T LET ME
'FRIGHTEN YOlJ INTO A
HASTY OECISION -•
51..EEP oN l'T 'ToNIGl.J.i !
GORDO
"IOIJ11'6 NOT
.4 .$I/JIU' _..i---.1 ()It J\Q'.)O
1tCJt.! .
"'' •
MISS PEACH
•
i;ooo 8061<&
ly Cliorfes M. Sc:liulz
.----...
Thursdar, August 21. 1969 DAILY ~!LDT l7 ~
INTIJIGUE -There is plell'ly of romance .and in·
trigue iii the mQtion picture ·"Diamond Head" to be
seen on Channel 2 at 9 tonight. Charlton Heston
and Frances Nuyen, sho,vn above, are two of the
.Stars inthTfiUTi. Yvette Mimieux , George CtiikffiS
and James Darren co-star in the film , set in Hawaii •
TELEVISION VIEWS
British Cool
To A.M. Sho'v
ly Harold Le Doux _ I._ _____________ _.
FWl«t.Y, l'll 1"""'5TEl>IM By ROBERT MUSEL
S<EI"" nus Fl!IEN• Of.,.,. .. "' NEW'YORK (UPI) -The British were inter .. !,. THE lll~E Of l«OPY-lNE FEU.OW· • I YOU c.tAJM IS iJ.WAVS &EIM6 ed in doing a mqrning sho\v like_ NBC's "Toda)' ' M~SSED BY TI4E POUc.E! but they finally decided against it !or the remark·
able reason that British homes "frequently dQ not
have centraJ heating.
By Ferd Johnson
vou•11i; HoARD OF
"TH6 J..ONG ARM OF
TH6 ~~w ... ? ...._.....;_
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
IF YOU WAKE lJP
TOMORROVI, YoU CAN
LET ME KNOW r::::!--,/"\,_ THEN!
By Gus Arriola
...
Climbing out of bed to shiver ·ii} front of a set
while the coal fire or oil heater slowly warms the
place is punishment rather than pleasure and al·
thou gh the spartan British are used to i1t the tele-
vision powers felt it was not the frame of mind in
which to enjoy a local version of Hugh Downs.
IT IS NATIONAL differences like this that lend
point to the belief o-f Julian Goodman, president Of
NBC, that TV as we know it here, is an American
conception tailored to this vast, complex land as
no other system could be and, in his opinion, tlie
best in the world.
Goodman discussed television, a few days be--
fore the first premieres of the new season, in an
informal chat in his office in the RCA building. He
Lured down the sound on the three color sets fixed
into the wall creating a striking, ever..changiDJ
mural -a new art form, perhaps?
Goodman is pleased with the ne\v NBC product.
soon to be judged by the only jury that counts, the
viewers, and, coincidentally. by a cross-section o(
that audience apt to offer him advice over th'
breakfast or dinner table in his own home; his 8&i
year-old father, his seven year old son and' th~
three teenage children between. . ·~
"I REALLY think the American system is tli.8
best for American tastes and American needs," b.,.
said. "Our 200 million people are really oeve-ral
countries in one; I think sociolog1sts will make thiS
point. We feel that what has resulted from this
American system is very good and I think it will
go on and improve. I haven't seen any system iri
any foreign country that would be good for us." ,
In addition to .entertaining and infonning, Good;
man sees TV's task as unifying the nation for grea,t
events, Hto create moments of great national shar·
ing" -the moon landing, the Kennedy and Eisen·
bower funerals.
"I think television should be judged by the great
things it has done such as the walk on the 1mooo,'!.
he said. "What a difference for us between the swn-
m~~ ~f 1968 and 1969. A year ago we were-heavily
cr1Licized for our coverage of the Democratic·Na·
tiona1 Convention in Chicago by people who Diam·
ed us for what they saw. This year we gave tbe
astronauts the same coverage and they liked Whet
they saw." ,
GOODMAN recalled the time when a si ngle. 15
minute. newscast was the nc\v s budget of the day
and s~nd that news and information now took< as
percent of the NBC schedule. Part of this is done
to the aViiilability of iatellites which he said mh!bt
lead to the return of. programs showing.the world to
American viewers but this time with a new and ex-
citing immediacy. ~
"Satellites increase the appetite of the public
for news wi th more imagination th.in when we bad
to fly in the film . Use of satellites is no longer a
technological trick so we can see five oceans. at
once if we want to but we don't do tricks 1!'.Dym6t'9.''
Dennis tlae Menace .....
... 1 •
•
T
I
I
•
:. Past Glqries Recalled
1· A World War ll German minJ.,subrnarine ts lifted
from the North See with one of its two outboard
torpedoes still on its starboard flank. The midget
Hayakawa Sees 1 More
, Shot at SFSC hv Rebels
~
SAN FRANCISCO (UP<J-
Dr. ,s_ l Hayakawa expects
• ''cne more shot" from cam·
pus rebels when classes are
resumed at San Francisco
State College UJis fall.
cut decisions. Whether they
were right or wrong, they
we r e decisions. Of course
there should be 33 murh con-
sensus u possible, but you
also have to confront lhe fact
t h a t sometllnes decisions
have lo be made before the
consensus. for uample if
students are tearing up the
campus.''
But carpp;zs violence may
have ''run its course" acl'OS5
the nation, Hay1kawa, presi-
dent ol San Francisco State,
Slid in an interview.
1be spunky semantics pro-f~. by Unhesitating and
urrelent1ng use of police force.
ldKloed the most prolonged
anqw rebetlion in the coun-
try l8et year. He became a
hero .to many, but some fac· u11J lllll IWdebl voices still vow-lbllt Hlyakawa must ro.
1be 1 tu dent newspaper,
llacUd Oil • bendl outside the
new collqe president's office.
calls him an "ambitious IRtle
paranoid.'' It declares faculty
and student.s are ready "to
wage ano4.her battle" to oust
him.
Professors in general have a
lot to ICarn about real life. ac-
cording to Hayakawa .
"Institi.ltioos of higher learn·
ing. being citadels of reason .
ordinarily do not have the
safeguards agahat irrationa l
behavior," he said. "Some of
our professors ace pretty far
removed from the consensus
of the everyday citizens. niey
live in a curioos w:orld of their
own making."
He said professors need
somebody not only to interpret
the academie world to the
general public but to interpret
CAMPUS SERENE "the general public lo the col·
In his office, Hayakawa lege community."
said: "It is serene. It baa been LOT TO LEARN
al.I sum.mer. 1 am tempted to For example, be said. ''I
think that violence on the think professors have an awful
campus has run its course, lot to learn about the decision
that it is a thing of the pasl." making proCess. All too many
Last year San Francisco professors. being men of
State was anything but serene. thought, are content to think
In six months of turmoil the things over indefinitely when
college bad three presidents. d · · lled 1 · a .... ...i..-strike, a student ec1s1ons are ca or 1m· -...-~ mediately." strike and, for several months, almost daily skirmishes be· In his view c o 11 e g e s
tween demonstrators and po. everywhere are b J! t t e r
lice. Before the new adminis-prepared to meet disruptive
tration under Hayakawa re-tactics now as a result of the
iltored order, 731 persons were rebellions experienced since
arrested and 120 injured. the Berkeley uproar or 1964.
Hayakawa cooctdes the reb-They have, he said. establish·
eU; may have another shot in ed "better defined lines of ad-
their cannon. "I rather think ministrative authority, more
they do," be said, "but the clear cut rules of student
real crisis is past because discipline."
they bmr they are not get · Disruptive elements on the
ting anywhere. that violent college scene "are weakening"
tactics will be met with firm Hayakawa said. He doubts
resistance." Many of the agi. that there is any tight-knit na·
tar.ors have "moved on to Uonwide network of agitators
.:mewhere else," he said, and plotting new turmoil.
other& art in jail. COMMON GOAU
'Ibe 62-year~d ex·profes· ''It is a loose organization. tor cl. Ena:lish, now penna-1 nn nnesident of the college, . ike the informal fraternity of ,.. -· rock bands," he said. "They adm1ts he will "never be, rally an expert and able ad· don't have to have an
ministrat'or." But he believes crganization if they have a
8b'on&ly that he can "crys-common spirit. a common
tallize a sense (){ direction in style, a e-0mmon idiom," he
the collef(e, crystallize a phll-said. There is also a "certain
OIOJlhY ol education." degree of mutual ,aid" among
TWO KEYSTONES campus rebels which brings
The two keystones or his students from Berkeley to s.
pbibophy, he aaid, are t.bat F. State and from S. F. State
the campus must have an to Denver for campus dilrup.
"authority'-' who 1cts effec-lions.
lively, and lhet the college Hayakawa said that or the
need& a "1elf·image" ol itself many legislative proposals for
and its role in 90e1ety. control of campus turmoil he
As for authority, Hayakawa approves pf some and thinks
said, "I Dlllde, from the very that others are .. oveNU.ctlon .twc•••rc; • number cf clear-at aver1JUftitive."
i·"voiiii'"iiioiiiM':'"::_·· ........... ! r You want to •II some item !
:!: that you no longer nMd but •
, someone elH c1n UM for
' $50
?
NOT OVER
7 ? ? 7
YOUR ANSWER: -
?
You call .THE DAILY "LOT, aok for
·Claulflo6 Ad .. rtlilnt, and pla .. •
........ --" PILOT
:. ' '.i. • PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED AD
•T OUR SPECIAL LOW RA TE
. ,2 LINIS 2 TIMES 2DOLLAR S
AND YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I
DIAL NOW DIRECT!
' 642°5611• ,.. ____ ,u.1
I
• i • • • • • • i : • • • • i •
•
No More Bras
Women, Seek Mofe Freedom
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) reporter, ezpllined:
-There's a new front in "!l's a habit t pi cked up at
women's rev o I u ti on for school. Going Without them is
freedom. "SO much airier and less con-
Legions or young ladies· are fi n\ng."
turni n g 'toward ihe Bernice Capaldo, a 22-yea r.
bra.ssiereless look to give old Paterson, N.J, hilh 1ehool
them more freedom of move-teacher, acknowledged 'what
ment. • was apparent as she win·
Evidently it has caught on dowshopped. ·
a Iona: AU antic City's •famed "Whenever PoSSlble, I never
Boardwa~ -a showplace for wear a bra. J put one on only
di,playing new fashion trencb. when I really dress up. I'm ~
"Braa are a real pain," hibited wilbout one then.''
grumbled Christine Young, 17, Kathy Pasterciyk, 1e, of
of Philadelp}\ia . Pittsfield, Pa., confided that
1.1bey're too binding. But she feels "awfully stuffy" in
when , you wear 1 400, you bras. ~
have, to wear th em The girls admitted to owning
sometimes," she said. brassieres but P.refetred to
An 18-year-old flOor girl al a stash them in 1 closet.
B o a r d w a 1 k auction, Judy B.ut not all the girls approve
Goldberg of Levlttown, Pe., · of the trend.
said 1 she hat-ed brassieres. "I Cathy Melgban, a 21-year-
hardly ever wear one." old nightclub waitress, -wants
-DAILY-PILDT 17 A
DENTAL PLATES .
WY COMPLETE AlWAYS
CREDIT DENTAL. SERVICE LOW .
' TERMS IN OUR OFFICE PRICU
PENTOTHAL
(for Sleep) For Extractions and Fillings
WELCOME
UNION
DENTAL PATIENTS
e DIFFICULT CASES
WELCOMED e PENSIONERS
WELCOME e NO Arl'OINTMENT
N.ECESSARY
§. l6 MOS. TO PAY
e O,EN EVES. l SAT.
~ e SEHAILA
ESPANOL
PHONI
S.2-6625
DR. JEPSON :~'v.','. :
. ' sUb will be cleaned and-overbauled'i..before-going-on
pennanent display in the courtyard of \he Wtlmes-
haven fire department.
yntbja Dimon, a_,..2-kyea~_of _lb_c. ban lhe ...hrl _
old Ohio Western University movement.
16123 BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH
NEAR EDINGER-GROUND-FU>O• -MODERN
AIR CONDITIONED OFFICE
sludenl who wears high· "l don't know too many
waisl.ed braless dresses on her guys who go for the flat·
summer job as a newspaper chested look," she slated. :
MEMIEll AMER.ICAN ACADEMY OF DENTJST-
AMERICAN CREDIT DENTIST ASSN.
IW'il New Ii.II AUTOMATIC TINT CONTROL
•• , eliminates green •nd purple faces. Magnavolt·ATC lets.you
11lect ~he flesh ~one colors most pleasing to you end ~E!!.them· that
way-in every ptcturt, .on every program, on any chann I Just Ht th•
Automatic Tint Control once-and forget it!
IWil New ilnd improved
... AUTOMATIC CHROMA CIRCUIT
... rsducu variations in color lnten1ity. Megnevolt ACC .. ures
uniform co1or Intensity from station to station -no matter how ohen
you chlnge channel&.
11111 Instant
Will AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING
• , , 11lmlnate1 th• nMd for critical picture tuning, l11V9ntld by
Magnavox In 1964, AFT keeps alt station 1ignal1 locited·ln to glve vou
a perfectty-tuned picture thlJt is alwaY! prtclse-instantly 11nd auto-
matically-on tvery channel, every time I
TAC-plus thue other advanced Meanavox feature• contribute
to the unequaled enjoyment of owning today's finest Color TV; New
Brlllltnt MX600 Color Tube-gives you vivid, natural color pictures
which are clearer end sharper. for more lif9-like picture fidelity I nd
realism . MX600 with huge 295 sq . in. screen-a; combination of engi-
neering Klvancements to bring you the ultimat9 In viewing pteeaura .
Chromatone-for thrill ing depth and dimen11on. Ouick·On pidum
and eound eliminate annoying warm-up delay. Bonded Circuitry
ch1•il uts •new standard of ~reliability. '82-Channel Remote
.Control fQI' UHF NHF is optionally available on all models shown.
Ycur choices
of tin
Jtath•lll
atyln
50
NOW ••• the first ind only, f1bulously convenient
TOTAL AUTOMATIC COLOR TV, •• a new Md exclusive
ELECTRONIC SYSTEM which COMBINES aU the functiona of
the t.hne Magnavox innoootioru described below. It the Color TV
brand you're considering DOES NOT HAVE ALL i'HREE, it ia
already ohlolete; !or only Magnavox TAC _bsnilhea annoyinJ
color variations and the need for botbenome picture
adjustments or tuning! TAC-to simple
lt•ll•n Provlncl1I
model e9JO
Conttmpor•ry-mod1I 8922
on CQ~111d 1wiv1I c1111rs
en concealed 1wivel c1ster1
French Provhtr0lal
model 1928
l•rly Amerieen-modll 1124
en eenee1l8d' twiwl cMters
Select fro m over 40 nlagn ificent M agnavox C o lor TV sty les ... from 259''"
TOVATT~s
MAGNAV~ HOME
1
ENTERTAINMEKT CENnR
Dire~t Fa~tory Dealer
BROOKHURST & WARNER 401 MAIN ST •
\,
'
TONY' tOYAn trountain Valley
962-2456
Downtown Huntington Beach
.536-7561
•
•
Thiwsdl1, Auousl 21, 1969 ' DA[LY PILOT Jill
Contre•• WlUlng
w
FAA ·Planning to Autom~te Controls . on Ai r Traffic • •• • •
. '
·'By VERN HAUqRLAND enacted, will permit us to tralf k:, with lhe ultimate establishing the klentJty of m. auuested 1 o I u t Ion 1-I n to complete thls l)'lt.em at the structure into multJJane aerial high~enslty llrporta do Jllll"
••lfiN"~~ (AP) meet the needs of civil avia· result of ~Uer service with dividqal alrµatt, and in maiDo calculatlna now control tqson.. pme ijme IM._t ~ centtr pr(). .NaJtwaya. . alwlYI reach IJMlr' f u 11·
W""' u'~' -Uon in a timely, orderly and· lesa delay1totbefiyingpublic. taining this ldenUty · u the geated areas and preplannh11 gram Is completed-by the Q. How are the ~estricUons capacity.AtJll'K,Nn1rkaad Consresr wlllin1. the Federal above all· a f i n,a n c i a 11 y Right now we are installing Olght movts throu&b hia area and aequencini aircraft ar· end of 1973. recently imposed a~ lhe five O'Harf, there are abnolt
Aviation AdminlatraUon will responsible way by making our National Aviation symm of respon8ib0ity. rtvtnc at an aLrJ>on. In addiUon, experlment1l ~ost congested aJ~ •ork-alwai1 ut1ultd a1ot.r evtD d1ll"o'
automate Ks air traffic control the people who use the system NAS Enroute Stage A automa-Perhaps even more lm-START AUTOMA110N work ls under way ht the use mg out? Are they likely to ex-· ing 'the peaks. · ' • •
system IS one way of in-•. pay for the needed im-tion equipment in the 20 air portant la the automatic We also have a program of small, re I at Iv.~! Y. in-plr.e at the end of the year, or No decWon Ml bteh mede ctt~~ the safety of the na-proVements. route tralric control centen in altitude rep<rtina f ea t u r e , W1det way to equip about IO of expensive a I r b or n e cpm-to be continued, or to be ex-... t extenalon of d\e ~ ...
lions J~ed alTWays and Q. Just what are the .FAA the countermlnous United whiclt relievea both controller our bualelt airport control put:ers-the "areana~igation" tended tooth.er~? ~.or extens~ .to~. croAwdmded1M:~irportsl J. hn H Sh f. plans fo~ usin~ computers and States. Jn 1dditioa to providing and pilota of the need for towers with au tom at Ion equipment that makes itp(w:I-A. Despite the· reStrlctlorui, airpOrb •. nte FM ,wut,~· au.~ua or 0 · a automatic dev1ces? automaUc processiDI, tra'nsfer much of the air-to-ground 1yatem1 that wW do about the ble for a pilot to electnmt~lly tht~e is plenty of space wait until It can ' rritew U. .. ~~r deacribe!S-' the plan 111 A. We expect computer and updating of Oight in-communications workload . same job that NAS Enroute ·. repo1ition a radio navigational available, especlally during overall effect.' on the enttri.
perhaps tbe most tm~t ~st.ems eventually to Jive us formation, this 8)'stem also Eventually the system will Stqe A ill doinl for the staUon Uywhere be neodJ tt. the nonpeak hours o( the day. travel season ''tb11 ~ progr~ in which _we are ln· kn proved air safety, increased provides usiatance to the.°""' as.mt controllers in predictlng centn. Our knowledae is far This, In effect, converts. tht Z.en during the peak I , before making a ~ f~
volved aod aays if Congress capability for handlin« air troller which help.s him in traffic conflicts and makhll enaqb abtc, tblt we· Upec:\ present single-lane a I r w a 'y 1erwnlly 1n mklafternoon. the 1910. ! rdt1!tltoappropri1temoney1--'-~-"-~~~-"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lhe FAA may be forced "to
apply the brakes to aviation
growth" and impose further
flight re!lrlctions.
Acute congestion forced the
FAA to limit la.st year the
number al takeoffs and Ian·
dings at the tiatipn's five most
crowded airport&-Chicago's
O'Hare, Washington'• National
and New York City's lhree
major terminal.1.
WNG HOURS
' A 1 aociatioos representing
the air traffic controllers have
protested for years the long,
stress-filled hours and an·
tiqiiated equipment associated
with the men in the control
lowers.
A report released by a groop
oC RepibUci.n congres8men
warns, "Because of the in:-
crtased volume ol. air traffic.
the iocre.ased number of
passengers which an aircraft
can carry and the increasing
complexity of mechanisms for
general aviation, the air ac-
cident fatalities will probably
increase in lhe future ."
"If we do not Set im·
mediatt, massive and drastic
change in these three areas,
we will be In danger of being
complelely overhwlemed by
the civilian aviation complex
'"'have created," it added .
The report, the result of a
year of research by the con-
gressmen's staffs, a Ito
charges the FAA with laxity in
its responsib11lty to regulate
airline .chedules, at r port
certification standards, airport
development plans and the
growth and direction o f
civilian aviation.
INTERVIEW
In an interview before the
congressional report w a s
made public, Administrator
John IL Shaffer outJin<d FAA
programs designed to mate
air travel more efficient and
safe.
Q. What are the major ac·
tivitics in the FAA programs
to improve air safety?
A. Well, just a b o u t
everything we do here is aim-
ed at bnproving air safety in
one way or other. For ex-
ample, we have had a pr~
gram under way for tilt past
several years to improve the
crash-worthiness o C com.
mercial alraaft.
We alse are pusilmg the
area navigation concept as one
means of unclogging the
airways IJld reducing the con·
vergence of aircraft o n
navigation aidt. ·
We also are working with in-
dustry to develop a collision-
avoidance sylltem and a
clear-4.ir turbulence detector.
Buf perhape the Dl06t .im-
portant program in which we
are involved is the automation
of the air traffic control
system which will enable us to
handle more aircraft in the
systtm more expedJtiously
and safely.
PROVIDE RADAR
. Among tJJe things t h J 1
aystem will do 1J provide our
controllers with direct radar
read out of aircraft
altitude-the missing
dimenaion from p r e a e n t
radars-as well as other
pertinent flight inlorrnalion.
We expect to have all 20 air 1 ,
route traffic control centers
serving the -eolic U.S., "
well as the 60 busiest airport
terminal areas, equipped with
this sys1em by the end or .tm.
· Let me add that much of
what we plan to do and hope.
to do to insure the safe and
orderly growth d. aviation in
this country is fied in with
Presldenl N'IXOll'• airporl·
ainlf'1y1 bill which ia now
before the Congrees.
.. Q. The Air Trana port
AssoclaUon and the airlines
have complained that the
f~eral government ls lagging
11\ providinJ a modern alrw~• system. Are the complalnta
warranted! What progress ls befna made and how can It be
hastened?
A. I think they have reuon
1.o complain. Our airport·.
airways system haa not kept
pace with the growth of avla·
Uon in recent years, and 111 a
reauJt we are eon!ronted with
conaesUon and del1y1 at m1ny
al our major tonninall. Thil
la the ruson we are so an1-tous to gel pmnpt 1ellon on
the adminiJtraUon"a 1irport-
1irwaya bill.
MEm' NEEDS
We believe this bill,
let TV WEEK
Turn You On
LUCKY HIONDID'' MIArs.: •• uAIANTllD ro• rLAYOI. JINDl•N•SS/
CHUCK ROAST ..... ""'"'" .. 55•.
SIRLOIN STEAl •••.•••••••••• '1~.
RIB snu .~···u.······.···· 911i.
STEWING BEEF .... , -.... 88.t
POil CHOPS ............ n .... 69,i.
................ 11 c
''"-' Pm.ii I~ ,_ ...
11.$. Me. 1 1•1191-NIW (N •
POTATOES 1 10 ~48c ... ~s.,1--,
PAPEll ··-l VILLA PLATES
100 Count Pkg.
&&0 . . _.., '
_•,.,,ii'«.. ; . I 6"i11C:-•·~' ~~ •• • l
FROSTING MIX ::::l";'.~~:~: ... 15'
w~Van de.. Kamp's111wi ... Miiiiiii'iKiMixis .••• 32 '
AN OUTSTANDING VARIITT POMPEIAN OUYE OIL.wu-83'
OF FRlSH BAKERY GOODS ... PwmRS NUTS::=.~ ..... 79'
CAT MOST UKIT ITOllSI OI A OIL 93' \11111\ll\I HYl\JllJJl 111111' .-. MAL---·--.. ·-· p wg411,~J~iH1!Cipij!Q.t1!~ilijiihiM4;1Jil4ijillf411~'1
~ DESENEX =:: r SUAVE H~IR SPRAY
..... fOI ATMllTIS fOOT-l~·OUMCI CAii l llUL&I, nmo IAll o•
--01 .09 OUJKI TUii HUD fO IOLD FORMIL&S
...;.";:· YOUICHOKI 94 c 1 ~~-56c ~~ OUlll tOW DISCOU NT PllCI Ii-' Priu
HW & sHOUOOS · UL TRl BRITE == SHAMPOO PIKl llKUIDIS k ... IAllL
fAMI LTllllTUll $127 73c
!'11<1 llKUllB lk °'' lAllU
ul1rot"ll'~
HIAD I. SHOULDERS
lOTIOll SHAMPOO '="'.:::: •11• ,.. ........................... ...,.
::.-::."'.:.:~:.' $, .. , .. 2 llllD I.
SllOULDllS ..... ,, ...... ........
..... IMt.11•$111 .......
S0'11h" VINYL
GUDBI HOSE LAWN J.P.llllllll -.;_ .... $1sa 1 ···--·"-"' ........... _hr _ ...... $223 ... "'" ...., ..... ......
'
FRESH
FRYING.CHICKENS
1.1.U.MAll •~ 3 5 c _,_, llt.
RUMP IOAST ._. ~ ••••••••• ~ • I SL
POITEBIOUSE ..... v... .. '1*l
~~~~!!~.a.~.~.~ ......... 79'
H-LIACOll 77< .................. _. __ .,, ..................... .
~-Ml..!!.'~~~ .............. 79'
THIM SUCID IACDN 79< ....,....,,,.... .. ............ -.......... --
HARVEST DAY l'WS-... -35'
FRUIT COCXTAIL=-· .. ···-···25'
llOllDO GRAPEFRUll::':" .... _30'
DOLi PINEAPPU = .. -25'
DEL MONTE PEA.CHIS=:.. 29 '
FRUIT TRIATS =::" ........................... 35'
DRINK :=" ... ~~::::'.'.: .. _._33•
CRANllRRY JUICf=~'. .......... .75'
... ~~/.--.
CAMPFIRE
MARSHMALLOWS
16-0vncelog
IMAll -LAM a
CHOPS •1•:.
LINISAUSAll ··---33' ML m .
... 4-&f/.--.
APPUWID
APPLE SAUCE
Q.9'1JUJIJR.Wh-·······-... 43< ORANG£ JUla l:.'.\':. ... ____ 26'
APPLE JUICE:":l" ... _ ........... -... 24'
!l!A~l!l.!l.!LX ....... __ 27•
:I..~ ~ ... ~~/,
'l::illl' 0
'( c"::ELL'.S HOME snu '--"......,......._ __ ..,,,_ : PORK & BEANS
1J Ourtee Jor
HUNT'S TOMATOIS --. ...... -31'
TOMATO JUICE ::r..., __ 33•
SLICED l&TS :".:.".'. .. 17'
CHIU iWls::::u 17' 1 ~-... DllSSING---£9• .. r. .... """"' ,...,.m, _ __.v , ' --' : ,... ' \
MllACU WHIP-........... .:. ........... 78' JIFFY ClXI MIX=~-15'
HISSING :..-:.... ~-.. ·--36' VANILLA WAFIRS :::l.':.. ........ 37'
TOMATO SAIJa :"..:'~--... ..1 6' OATMEAL COOKIES::l.-6S'
KOS111R PICllES:::..':'~-43· PAOFK TlllATS~ ................ 38'
....,. STICIS""'--44' FRENCH llEAD :::."i:l~ ..... : .. .31• r"""6 ...... ..._ __ ,,,,_
Pl' 'UI OUVES MllT.~ ........ 46' BREAD --~~.~~!.~·-·-·.·---·35• ... _._,,_ .. ,., __ , .... .
... kJv&t~-......
CARNATION INSTANT
BREAKFAST
71/J.Oo.lox
i:.MllQJ-
GLAD TRASH BAGS •• ........... 73'.
. ZEE TOWELS::l'l'-.. ...... _ .. __ 30•
'scon TISSUE ·-·--· ••• . .....,.,..-. ...... --··-....
.. TIDE DETIRGENT .... -. .•. -...... _12'
IVORY FLAKES ll'.'... ... : ................... 79'
OXYDOL DETERGENT ................. 82'
SALVO J'EWTS :: ................. 74'
... ';" .... N DROPS••M-57' ,_...... . . ~ f NU D :;_---------·---· 13•
CRUM Pits ::-::........ .. . 27' JOY~~~ ruA"'iftR~---66• ~n.qc .. H-•'"''ffU"""1 ; MIL "'6IU' ..a.m.. •. _ ..
CHEESE ,.vo ...... ,.u-•.-89' · · ............ -.......................... CA .. •y SOAP 15' ""' t&ftllM··---·~··-· .. ·-COOK IN IAG :::::.~ ......... 27' DUPONT SPONGES.-,.. 35' ftlUClltllP.ILICl91119'1.t9r••~-I "'" -....... ,...,., .
PEPPERED STEAllS~":l.'.'.~-...... 65' i VANO LIQUID STAR<!l ............ 27'
IElf STROGANOfF :::::,_49• PUREX IUACH :::...--... -.69'
MOTT'S APPU JUKI -~ -~~: GINO'S PIZZA =:::..:.~~--78'
CUT Gllllll WJIS:.:.0:::: ........... 16 FISHSnas ::r:r. ....... _ ............... 39' PREMIUM'ICE CllEAM.-... _ .. .79<
FOREMOST IUTm ::O::i::!..-79• •. HARVEST DAY PW.-............ ,,:· PERCH nLUT=............. .. .. 61 '
POTATO IUDS=.~................... ROSAlllTA DI......,. 44'
G_,." .. ""CORN '"·-23' -"·:::.~=~ .. -· "5111 WUUll 1M&c.ua... ..... _ M1X1C0111 _:..., ________ 27' . O•DN lllllGS ::.'=.'--··-···--37'
PAl'lll IOOK FOR KEY BUYS
... ~&f/.:-i GllllN PIPPEllS ::::-..:.....~_.69'
ZEE NAPKINS ....,_..,_ ... _._.,_ .... ................. -.... ..
60CountPlit• .,..._...., .. • ••' .. ..,_
C> •r.--...... --1 0 ......... ...., .... ' ........... ..,
111
-I 1
•
'.
.. ---..... MARGARINE ,~ ........... , ................ .,..
'
•
•
'
• ,.
' •• -•. • ' " "
•• ~
' .. ••
.. '• "
\
............ ,~·~ .......
'
Jf IWl Y PILOT ri...doy, ...... 21, 1169
FOREST H!Wl, N.Y. (UPI) -R<>d
Laver Js keying ·himself up for an all out
While downing a lilhl lunch at the Well
Side Term.is Club one day this week, the
31-year-old Corona del Mar resident lefty
cast. frequent glances •t the bright green
grass courts where he'll be shooting for.
-I out with Aussie Fr«! Stolle. fin-A year·ego, nooe ·ol the ·proe had a
dlng out for hlmtelf. c.han'.ce to P.rflCtice oo grass before the
tournament& he'll p!ay·bofor..the year i..
O<ll. • effort to acore bis 'secoOO grand slam of
the world's top tennis Utles.
"This ls more important than the firsl
one," said Rocket Rod, who swept the bi&
fCKll' as an amateur aevtn years ago.
"Thia one la for cash. Titles are nice but
playing for money la how I make my liv·
ing now."
Laver was born ln 1938, the year Don Open. La~er says he ,1impJy wasn't ready
Budge became the first 11Slammer" by · physi<~.elly a_nd bow~-in ~ quarter·
winning the Australian, F r enc h , finels,to ·Cliff Drysdale of South Africa.
As for his C~ncts of a aecond slam, he
ls confident, J\sk him w.hat player worries
him the most and he answera, "Me!''
"Th the $16,000 top pri:r.e. ·
Head groundskeeper OWen Sheridan
walked by and Rod called out: "How do
they k>ok this· year?"
"Soft," said Sheridan. "Too much rain.
Wimbfedon arXI U.S. amateur cham-"l·1hould be ready thif time:• he says.
pJ.onshlpr1. At 24, the red·hatred· native Laver isn't sure exactly how much he
Aussie did it himself to rank with Budge haa won In pri.Je money since he turned
aa sole copyright owners to the historic pro late in 1962.
feat "The gr065 doesn't matter anyway,
ere are ~ ~~ny good players no
one opponent ts more · import.ant than
~nother," be says. '"The probleril always
1s cor1C1!:ntraUng for an entire ·match. It's
the same for all ol us."
He'll get ati much practice as he can at
the oilo of the 1137,000 U.S. Open which
starta Aug. 27. He'll seek as much
pr1v1cy .s can away from the courts
I'd like to have as much money u my
gr ass has fungus."
Laver's expresaion didn't change. You
had the feeling that any old court was
okay, tboogh R<>d admlll he prelm a
slow or medium slow Cilmposltion court
to anything el!e. An hour later, ht wu
Now Laver baa a chance to do ft again does it?" Ht; says with a typical
under circumstances even more difficult American attitude about take-home pay.
than either he·or Budge faced before. All "This is my best year. So far I un·
four " those toornamentl now are open derstand l have won $89,000. All I'm sure
to profHSJonals but as king ol the pros of is J have my last cbeclt atill in my
R6d. already has won the flr!t three lep pocket." ·
He mentions John •Newcombe and Tony
Roche of Australia, Tom Okier of the
Netherlanda, Arthur Ashe a00 Clark
Graebner of the U.S. as top cballengen..
So, of course, dot:a everyone etse.
lo ,.. -and opportunliiel lo·
apply onal "wet hot packs" to his ttill year with only the U.S. Open re-That was a $3,000 haul in a reooit pro But the big man Jg Rod Lave--all 151
pounds of him -until ht& all out effort
ends in 1UCCeSS or failurt. famoua bu nnetimes ailihg 1eft arm. rnainiDI· tournament at Fort Worth. one of 30
P .ro Football May -Go International
DETROIT (AP) -The Natiooal and
American football league are hurling for
major expansion between 1972 and 19'79,
commis&ioner Pete Rozelle saJd Wed·
needay, probabty to such cities as
Honolulu and Mexico City.
Speaking at a Rotary Club luncheon in
Dt.troit, the profe.ssional football coot-
mi.ssimer II.id npansioo may follow the
practic:o of the National Hoct.y League
by JrOCfucing lix new teams at onct.
"I don't know ezactly what we'll do,
Oaks May Go
To Washington
Without Barrv .;
NEW YORK (AP)-The exodus 6f the
f!naocially..ning Oakland Oaks from
the American ButetbaJI Auoclation wu
a foregone conclusion. But what of Rici
Barry, the team's COlltroversial mair~
stay? And what of the proplR<f merger
of the ABA and the National Basketball
Association?
Thole questions are buzzing around
pro bastetban circles today In the wake
of the aale and transfer of the Oaks to
Washington for $2.S mill.ion.
The new owner of the new team-the
Washington Caps-ls Earl Foreman, a
Washington altorne:y who once co.owned
the Baltimore Bullets of the NBA.
Foreman has his problems. He might
be looking around for a new (orwltd to
re:p]ace Bany, and he might be in the
market for a new coach to replace Alex
Hannum, who Jed the Oaks to the league
champiooship lut year. Neither is J>e.
lieved to be pleased about. the Oaks
leaving Oakland.
There are reports that ABA and NBA
club owners, who began talking about a
merger two weeks ago, were working
under an agreement that the ABA fran·
ctusea in Oakland and la Angeles would
move to other cities and that Barry would
go back to San FranciSC'O of the NBA.
which he bolted two years ago to join
the ABA.
NBA C.Ommissioner Walter Kennedy
said the relocation o{ the West Coast ABA franclilaes -and of Barry to San Fran-
cisco-was discussed in recent merger
talks but nothing was confirmed.
"'11ltrt was no agreement of any kind,"
he said, adding:
"ln tht: liRht of the Oakland transfer,
the whole NBA·ABA mattt:r looks a little
sticky. The NBA will have to ta.kt a
quick, new look at the entire situation.''
Kennedy 58id tht: &pecific transfer of
the Oaks to Wa!hlnglon-NBA territory
becaUM of the proximity of the Bullets--
had nevt:r betti a part of mttger discus·
li<Jng.
Warriors owner Franklin Mieuli con-
firmt:d reporta that Barry has a claust:
in his contract with the Oaks which says
he can move if tht: team moves-mean·
ing in effect that he is now a f~ agt:nl.
Barry owns 15 percent of tht: Oakland club.
"'I've indicated to Barry that I w1.11t
him back, that the. team wanta him back
and that the fans want him back,"
Mieuli said.
Barry, rt:ached in Darivel'1i, ~fass.,
uid he would have no comment until be
Js coniad.ed by tither tht: league or the
new tum. Foreman said ht: talked with
Barry last Sunday and ''to my knowledge, he'D play In Wuhlngton."
But Hannum, who has a. Wut. Coast
cmst.ruction bullineas and 15 percent of
the Oakland club, had plenty to say.
... 1( the Oaks move to Washington, l wm have to make other arranfements.
That mi&ht mun geWna out o basket·
ball."
CARLOS, BEA.MO N
SET TO RETIRE
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -World
.-"II holders John Carlos and Bob
-wtl r.tlro fran tract and field
-~ft waa r<porlod Wedneoday.
.
but il b a po15s.ibillty," he said. 1'lt's been
successful for the hockey people. They
just had one big e:a:pansion and that was
it. Perhaps that's the way to do it."
Rozelle .said the leagues will expand to
32 clubs in two confere.ncea of four.four
team divisions by 1979, although no new
club! will be added bdon. 1972.
Tbe league is looking for e:a:otic cities
and may also e:a:pand into the South, but
Canadian ciUes will probably be off.
limit..
"I think that by tlie time we get to 32
clubs we will have gone outside the eon-
.tinental limits of the United Statt:s, into
Honolulu, cl., perhaps, Mexico City, but tt
is doubtful that we'd want to bust up the
Canadian League by pulling a team in
Montreal or Toronto," he said.
Birmingham, Portland, Phoenix, Seal·
tie, Mt:mphis. Tampa and Honolulu art
aIDoo, the clUe1 competing for new
clut., / One group is moving for a Carolina
club that would route between Winston--
SUDS IS SAFE -Bill Sudalds of the Los Angeles Dodgers slidef home
with the Dodgen' first run as Philadelphia catcher Dave Watkins
watclles the ball being thrown by him and into the dugout. The Dodgers
Saltm, Ralelgh and Charlott•.
Altp noting that Joe Namath's lhterest
Jn a controvershil'"New York night club
will be JOld next week, Rozelle criticized
the over~phuia on the nonsport side of
football.
"I hope that in the decadt: ahead we
can get awa,y from to much emphasis on
the business side of pro football, with the
bonusea and the mergers and the co~
tract dllpuloo, and get back to what's
happening on tbe field ,'' he aald.
Rozelle aloe> aclmnwledged tbal tbo
league ha.a employed a Miami bookmaker
1 ... tbe 1aat 20 yem· to keep track of the
point spread on each weflk's glmtl.
''We have a common interest· wit h
bookmakers,· because wa both want to
keep the game clean and above board,"
he &a1d. "We also wahfed to know when
there was a rapid change of odds, which
might indicatt: a ·trouble spot worth ift..
"'.esti.a;ating."
He said the situation was not com·
parable to Namath's interest in his
ntghll:Jllh. tbe Bacfiekln m.
U"I T.....,. rallied for four runs in the sevent.h inning and went on to down the
Phils, 8-5. lo take aver first place by ball a game.
Baseball Is Dodgers Rally for Victory
Too Perilous
NEW YORK (AP) -Ba.. ball t• a
dangerous game compared to such pain·
fut activiUee aa boxing and soccer ..• at
least, it is lt yoo ask lorn and tattered
Ivan Murrell.
Murrell, a 24-yea.r~ld outfielder for lbt
San Diego Padres, 1ave up a promising
career in boxing and a more promising
career in M>Cce:r to try his hand a1
baseball, and All he has to ahow for it
thllll far are broken bones a n d torn
ligament.a.
"I'vt: playeQ 1occtr ever ¬ 1 wu
lilt.le and l never got hurt." sai d
personable Ivan. ''In boxing, t won ~
amatt:ur middleweight fights without a
defeat and didn't gel a mark.
"Then I started playinj baseball and
the first month •fler signed with
Hou Mon In lta t broke my wrist."
Davis' Bat Puts LA • Ill 1st
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Willie Oatis
of the Los Angeles Dodgers was once lm·
ht.led as "a promising outfielder.'' Ht:'s
been promising t:ver since but the returns
havt: been lt:ss than great.
Untll lately.
Blessed with quicknt:ss afoot, a long,
lean but powerful body and a fluid swing,
Davis in eight stuons had compiled an
unimpre.Wve .265 major league baUinf
average.
When he conneclt:d for two singles in
five trlpg to the plate Wednesday, lead·
ing the Dodgel'!I to an 1-5 victory over
Philadelphia, Willie sounded a bit more
like his promises.
The victory enabled the: Dodgers to
lakt: tole posstSsion ol first place In the
National League West, ~au gamt:
over Cincinnati, which Jost 2·1 to SL
Louis.
A month ago.. about the time of the All·
Star game bl'ftk, Davia decided he'd use
a heavier bat. Ht we nt to one of 37
ounces.
Now he Use! a 41).ounce club and lhe:
results In 18 games havt: been ama1ing:
:Ml hit.! in 72 at bat.!: for a .417 average.
ting a. lot of e:a:lra base hits.
Of his 30 hits during the streak, Davis
has 26 1in.gles, many of the "leg" variety.
"With his speed,'' said former manager
Bobby Bragan once, "he could hit . 300
on Infield grounders." '
He has hit safely tn 2.'I of the Dodg!t!" ""'
25 games since the All.Star break. LOI ANll•L•I "MIU.OIL"MIA
Dodger Slate
A....,, '1 °"°"ri et l"fllltdllltlllt •.• P"'· ICFI (WO)
Al/I. :n Da09trs 11 New YBl'l Jll.11\. KFI (Ml
A\111. tJ °""""' 11 H-Yorll 11 :101 m. ICFI ( ... I
"'"'· !• Oo11i1ers •I fMw Ver'! 11 •.rn. ltFI !Ull Ave. H ~ n MOnlTHol T:SS t.rn. ltl'I 16'01
A1111. 71 OMMr1 w ~I 1:U p,,in.. l<FI tMOJ
'''""" wui. ••• •lJO MOia." •111 w.o...-. d J 1 ' • P1rur. 10 S t )
Svcl9' ... a ' I I 1<esco. rf 2 • 1 Cr1"""1J, rf 1 1 I
Slmnon, 7' S J I
Torborl. c t I I M•I!..,, c 1 I 1 .kl.,.,, P I I 0
Ml-kl!IM, p I I I lbf.tflJ, !ltl I 0 I
..... p • • •
G1lwlt._ pti 1 t 1
Mc!NI\, P 0 0 0
•• r ~rt! S I 1 I
J •••
1 • 1 •
I 1 I I
' I ' I • 1 ' ) 0 • 0 •
l I I t l • 0 •
I I t o
' 1 I 1
' 0 • • 0 • • •
I II I t
I I I II
TOl•lfl l1 10 l roitltl H S lt S
lOI A•IH 0711 008 4211 -I
"t!ll11NIP11l1 M Olt IOI -I
GUNS FOR 2ND SLAM
Rod L•ver
No Surprise;
Laver Top Seed
For U.S. Open
FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) -,, ,R<>d
Laver of Corona del Mar, winner of the
Australian, French and Wimbledon title.s:,
was seeded No. I Wedneaday Jn the U.S.
Open tennis championships starting ne:a:t
Wednesday.
Mrs. Ann Haydon Jones ol ~&t Bri·
lain was &t:eded No. 1 in tht: women's
5ingles.
Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Va. was top
seed among the U.S. enlriei at number
lhree. Billie Jean King, Long Beach,
Calif. also at No. 3, was the top seed
among the U.S. women .
Tbt Set:d.lng1
Men's -I. Rod Laver. 2. Jolin
Newcombe, Australia. 3, Tony Roche,
Australia. 4, Arthur Ashe , Richmond, Va.
5, Tom Okker, Holland. 6, Ken Rosewall,
Australia. 7, Clark Graebner, New York.
8, CliU Drysdale, South Africa. 9, Roy:
Emerson, Australia. 10, Fred Stolle,'
Australia. 11, Andres Gimeno, Spain. 12,
Stan Smith, Pasadena, Calif. 13, Pancho
Gonzalei, Lo5 Angeles. 14, Manuel San.
tana, Spain. 15, Marty Riessen, Evanslont
Ill. 17, Qenis Ralston, Bakersfield, Calif.
Women 's -I, Ann Hayden J ones, .Bri-
tain. 2. Margaret Smith Court, Au straUa.
3, Billie Jean King, Long Beach. Calif. 4,
Julie Hldman, New York. 5, Virginia
Wade, Britain. 6, Nancy Richey, San
Angelo, Tex. 7, Rosemary Casals, San
Francisco. 8, Kerry Meh:.ille. Australia.
Messersmith,
Powell Hurt
In Halo Win
Reichardt calls the Baltimore Oriole11
"the hem over-all team I've ever seen In
baseball." But he doesn't act like it.
Reichardt 5troked a two.run, fifth.In·
ning single Wednesday n i g h t as t~
California Angels snapped a seven-gama
Oriole winning streak with a 3·2 victory,
But both teams may have been losers.
Andy Messersmith, the ace Angel 'righ t.·
Angel Slate
Aug. )I Angels vs ••ltlmor• 7:5S p.fn, l(Ml'C 17111
Avv.. 2t A1194U vs Oetnllt ''" p.m. KM .. C 1no.i Avv.. 1) A/1111$ vs O.!rolt lt:" p.m. KMPC fnDJ Aug. ,. A"!lllS vs Oetro!I U :SS p.m, l(MPC 1nt1
Auo. H Ano•Js a! CleWl•nd •:.ill p,m, l(MPC 11101
...... 11 A119t l1 ,, Clevelartd .,,., ""'· l(MPC (111l'l
l1ander, and powerful Boog Powell of thf!:
Orioles, the American League's RB[
leader with 110, left the game with iit<
juries after they nearly collided It first
base in the seventh inning.
Messersmith, who picked up his 12tlt
victory of the year, was taken to nearby
St. Joseph's Hoopital for X-rays of his
right shoulder.
Ht: fell heavily oo his right side alter
taking a throw from first baseman Jina
Spencer on a dazzling play to retin
Powt:ll and the Orioles in the seventh.
Powell, in attempting to avoid crashing
Into the Angel pitcher, struck tht baa
with bis left foot and sprained his ankle.'
Powell's injury was described as "not
loo serious" by a Baltimore official bul
Messersmith 's may be a diffettnt story.
"He was in a lot of pain," Reichardt
said. ''It would only be conjecture on my
part but it appears he might have ,a.
dislocated shoulder or a broken eol·
larbone."
"l think I heard something pop in my
~houlder," Messersmith winced befOJ;"e
being taken to the hospital. :
The clubs winds up their st:ries looigtrt
with Baltimore sending Tom Phoebus, 12·
4, agaiM Steve: Kealey, ().-0, who wlll be
making his first major league 1tart. ':
aALTLMOlll 1lr Atbl
lulonl, 311 S I I 0
Molton. " J • • 0 F.ll:Olll-. r1 J O 1 I
,._..LID lllOO
H1tofln, p 0 I I 0
Hllndrkb. c ' I I I
0.Jdln!Gn, :Ill J 0 ' 0 llettenmurtd. cl ) I o o
..,.,,,.,,. J ' 0 0
McNllly, p 1 II • ~ L~1rd, I 0 0 0 0 '-""°""' JO , I I 1
CAll,.ORllUA
W r lrM
A!M>•r. tll ' 1 1 6 JOl'.flS ..... r!J11•
1'r1901I, IS J I ) I Mor!Oft, rf 1 I I II
Von,r1 10111
lleltllll'lfl, ~ ' I I l
.. ROdr .. vei. & ' I Z I s-... , lb ' • 1 • .. 1<111. t 4 • I II M~mtl'l.pl 0 1 0
IC T 1"1m. • I I I I Clrioo aald he and Be""°" would
.... -canpdfng In a moot nul
... Ill Soull1 Lake ~ahoe.
91r1oo llld be tntendod to try out for
tftl1 'doNI foo&balJ nm year and would
1111 lllaJ for San J,.. t1111 fan.
That was just the atart. In 1964, hi
knock«! oot the ohoolder of hl1 t11row1Jii
arm by ruMln1 into a wall trytns to
malte 1 cat.ch .
. In 1915 ll wu a lorn knee cartl11ge ltlat
required surgery julil before he wu lt.o
open the aeason with the Altrol.
Manny Mota and Wea Parker each had
two-run singles in a come·fro~hind
fOtJr-run aeventh Jnoing, propelling the
Dodgers to their flftl1 straight victory.
''It 's done all lht good In the world for
me," Davis said of the heavier stick
Wednesday night. He said he stands a
bit farther away from the plate and
chokes up four inchel oo lhe bat.
The Doc11en tend Claude Osteen. tS.10..
to the mound tonight lo face the Phillie~
Davis' best previous major league ea,
son was in 19&4 when he hit .2!M with ti
home runs.
E -Ao!tt t, T, Ttr*'. ,,,,.,,.,, DI" -\..•
Anfllf• I, ltttllMlt!P*llt I. LO• -Lo6 A1191l,9 !:\) Pftllfdelptllil 7, H -S1hf'l'IOl'tl, '#111'. ,._,.tr, Mii: ,
-D JOfln*I lltl. S• -Mllll. S -SUI'-" G.
TOltk 312 4 2 To'-h J1 •tll
lll!il'l'ICll'I fl&CI 008 M -1
C.lllllrt1l1 001 1Z 00~ -I
I" -M8""'l"ll!~ LOI -l1Ulmor1 10. (411.
fornil .. 11 -0. JD~. SPe<tC... Mil -~ ~oofrlO-U), $1llllOll (ll. 11' -MOt!Ofl, JOll..,I01t1.
I '"" pmlouol1 announ0oct ht plan-•Jo -Ibo M<n:bant Marine Acad· ••
In 11117, ti ... u boN spun, first on the
rigbl boel, then tl1a l<IL And last aeuon
he lnjuttd his !•ft 1bouldor tryln1 to
make a d!ViJli cakh. j
Now ba!Ung .293. the 11-foot·l ll Davis
has an IS.game httUng atreak, lonaest for
a Dodger 8Jnce.Maul')' Wills got at least
one hit to 20 straight garnu In 1116.1. But
the Davis phcnmie:non isn'l exactly un·
eipoclod. ..
But tbl• year, afier a very slow start -
'1·foM5 durin.g one 1tnitch, 2·for·l l dur·
lng 8nother. l·fol"-12 during anothe.r -
Davia hu pulled himsell up wltbout get-
..i.c•lOl'I· ll'MlllAllSO "'''°" •lfi • s J , j Mlklc•IMn IW.»> l·ill I t I II I L•l'l'lll T 1e11e Mtl .. fl )1D601 Q.JK~ !L,1 .. l)l 4 I 4 I • J llllli., tl)Jto
l .W11to, 21ft&1l time -t :•I. AttendltlC• -e.21"2 .
'
II" N II Ill II lO
MtNlll'I' fl.17-1) '113 1 l l l • ~ ~i11 l•lrl I 0 0 0 1
H1rdln '1GO Oll "'--""ltll IW.n·U 7 • 1 1 t I l(.T8!\lft'I ) G I 0 t 1
W" -Mf>\\4•smllll 1 Pl -Mtfldrlc.b. Tlll'!ll
-) ••. Alttfldtf!Ct -11,»f.
I
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' • •
' ' '
•
i
. ~BattiIJlore ..
~
:roDonate
$$tol\.ids.
•
Player1 of tile Ea1t.em Division 1udin1
Baltimore Orlolu havt decldeit to dfJllate
1111 the money collected In nne1 In: Frank
Roblnm11 "kane:aroo court" to the
~ Sharon Corrale1 educational fund.
The fund was establlahed for the fJdUca~
. tion of the four small chUdren of ctn..
clnnatl Reda catcher Pat Corrales whose
• wife Sharon died in childblrtb lut month.
With Frank Robinson presiding u club
house judge, Ule Orioles usually asses!
v fines or up to $1 after every victory fOr
inhactions ran'glng from playtn1 field
mista1'es to uncoordilllled strtet a\llrt
and a wide range of "•Ina."
The Oriolei had Intended to use the flne
money for a late seaaon pirty. Robinson
said that more than t600 bas alr:tady .been
collected and the pracUce would continue
• with the funds going to COrralts.
' .
TORONTO -The expansion committee
of the National Hockey League was ex-
pected to decide today whether two new
teams should be admitted to the Jeque
for the 1970.71 seam.
The top contenders for admisalon are
Vancouver and Blltlmore, provldin1 both
cities an! prepared to meet requirtmenb
that lnclude a franchise payment
estimated at '6,000,000. • Running bact Jeff Jordan, who was
sidelined for the first two preseason
games of the Los Ancelet Rama, may He
action agaJJ\st the Kanw City Chiefs
-here Saturday nil ht·
Coach George Allen said Wednesday
the ex-Washington Husky has looked well
in drilla ahd "U he's ready, I want him to
see game action."
Defensive guard Roger Brown had a
cut removed form his broken right hand
but It appeared doubUul he'll play a&alnst
the Ctuefs. • • HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. -Johnny Sample,
the New York Jets' Itft cornerback, was
hOlpltallzed Wedneoday for furlher lrea~
ment of a back ltraln.
The team phy8iclan of the American
Football League team, Dr. James
Nlcholu, aaid Sample's back bad not
responded to treatment as e1pected. He
will probably be holpltallzed for about
five days.
Sample wu injured when the pro foot·
ball champlona met the College All-Stars
in Ch1ca10 on Aue. 1. • MILWAUKEE -Low Alclndor, the 7·
foOt-1 rookie with the Milwaukee Bueks,
may not lead his team to the NaUOnal
Basketball Association champlonshlp Wa
year, but be ii filling up aeats.
The Slicks announced Wednuday lh1t
ticket sales are booming with 10 1ame1
listed as particularly good aellera. • WILLIAMSPORT -Tho Republic of
China Paclflc, In the Jon1e1t LltUe
League World Suies game ever playtd,
topped Valleyfield, Que. Canada, 5-0 W~
nesday, in a 12·lnnilll opening round con-
t.est. Regulation 1ame1 m eb: innlnfa.
This was the fourth series game of the
Clay. Jn earlier games, Santa Clara, Callf.
shut out Williamsport, Pa., 2-0 and Tam·
pa, Fla., topped Wiesbaden, Gtrmany, 2·1
in no hlt vlctorl es. =-
Elyria, Ohio N<>rtb btat 'r-.fayaguez, P.
R, 5-2. • WASHINGTON, Po. -Arcodl1, behind
a 13-hlt attack, trounced Wilmette, m.,
16-2, and Gadsden, Ala., beat Aiken, S. c .•
4·1, Wedneoday night ln the opening
round of t.he Pony Leaiue nrld aeries.
Carnarvon ol Victoria, Britllh Colum-
bia plays Caracas, Venezuela, and Hono-
lu lu meets North Plttlburgh tonight tn
other first round 1ames of the ckAlble
elimtnaUon tQurnament. • KLAMATH FALLS, Ore. -Lu V1111.
Lewllton, Idaho; Pottland and Ontario
won firtt round game1 in . the Weatem
Region I American LeiJon Bueball
Tournament here Wedneaday,
··Kl amath Fa1 lt, the holt team, waa
liidetracked by Lu Ve1as, 12-5, to com·
f)lete the day's four same set. Prior to
the Klam ath P'all1 game, Lewiston aook·
ed Yakima, Waah ., 14-4; Portland, 1hut
•ut Honolulu, 2-0 and Ontario alapped
Ea.st Anchoraae, Aluka, 17-2. • .. VANCOUVER, B. C. -The V111couvtr
Sun said Wednelday that Merv 0111, a
Vancouver bu•lneNman, may be belplna;
the BriUlh Columbia Lions ot U~ Cana·
dlan Football L!"11• In ne101l1llon1 with
'All·Arnerlcan halfback Ltroy Keyes.
K1ye1, the No. 1 draft of tht
l'hlladelphla Ea1le1 in tbe National Foot·
ball 1.o.,.,, hal been W\lble lo .,..., on
'-"'"' with tho Eagles.
~--~.---~------..,,..--,...-.-----_,,---,-_,.,=-,,==;------·-=cc-·-----·-· -. -·
Enougla tor a Fi•la Fry
Thund11, Auourt 21, 1!69 bAlt. V ~!LOT .J.l
Futu_re Looks Bright I
Gaucho Bos s· Optimi~itic .
' I
As ·21 Veteran s Return
By JOEL SCHWARZ
Of tht O•llY POOi Sl•lf
Jf opUminn is contaa:iow, look out for
Saddleback College when the G1uch05
take the field Sept. 20 at Southwestern
College.
George Hartman is optlmisUc and ha s
plenty of reuons to be as he prepares for
bis second season at the helm .
Hartman surprised plenty or people last ran when he directed the college's first
team to ·a M rtcord playing an in-
dependent' schedu.!e,
Out of the chaos of building a football
program the first year, Hartman put
together a free-scoring outfit and aet the
foundaUon for a strong program.
When the Gauchos report for the start
ol fall drills Labor Day at UC Irvine,
Hartman expects to haye between 60 and
70 players 011 lr.and. --
And he has what every football coach
craves -plenty of experience.
He will have 21 lettcnnen back from
last year's club, including 15 starters.
A manpower shortage was Hartman's
chief problem in 1968 but the anticipated
htalthy turnout should cure that.
"Last year we had eight or nine kids go
both ways, but I don't want to do that
this season. We're going to go with two
platoons along with specialty teams," he
says.
''Right now we have a fine nucleus to
work with -good guards, oubtand1ng
recelver1, a fine quarterback and a fine
running back. But we have to bolster our
offensive line with some tackles and we
need help in our defensive secondary and
interior line.
. Some o( the !18~es that put • smllf! on
Hartman's face include Rod Grieves,
Marc Rai'dy,. Gary ·Rossman, Gary
Ruparj and Paul cox-.
Hart.man says G~aves will . be his
'starting quarterback after i n injulj-filled
freshman seuon. .
"He really came on 1tron1 for u1 at thtt
end of last year .. He only played a~
half the season but .ttlll t. h r e w
13 touchdown pasaes.
"lfe's definitely an o u I 1 landing
quarterback and throws the ball as well
as anyone I've seen."
Graves figures to do a lot O! throwing
because he has a corps of fine receivers .
Heading Ule list is Hardy, a M, 215-
pounder who went both ways Jaat year.
Hartman calls him a pro prospect.
The Saddleback boss also ls high on the
receiving abillties of end Rupar and
Rossman, who will be sh.ltted from slof-
back to split end.
Another talented pass catcher is Cox.
who Jlartman says is "our best all4
around player.
''He's so good as 1 running back and
defensive back 1fiifl'l.1Pr0bably have to
play him both ways, although J don't
want to play anyone the entire game."
Other returning vet.erans include or4
tensive linemen Jack Keonedy , Bob
Urell, Jeff Virden and Gary Lime along
with quarterback Chris Hector, who
started a couple of games last year.
Defensive veterans include linebackers
Bill J,angley and Jim Young and linemen
Mike Derbyshire and Kim Krau.!e.
Hartman also will be counting on a
healthy influx of frestunen players after
a busy spring recruiting season.
Among the top newcomers will be All·
Crestview League center Don Martin and
fullback Rocky Fletcher Crom Foothill.
end Rick Day and linebacker Pat
Gorman from Tustin and guard Mike
Johnson from San Clemente .
Hartman also hopes he still may land
tackle Tom Scherer o{ Laguna Beach,
who's undecided where he 'll go to'echool.
The Gauchos start the season Aug. 28
with physlcal exams from 8:30 to 9:30
p.n;i. in the school,'s tomparary quarters,
2765 Camino C8plstrano.
How They Stand
NATIONAL LEAGVE -. -E11I Dlvlalon
W L Pct.
CHICAGO 76 46 .e23
NEW YORK 88 &I .571
ST. LOUIS 88 14 .557
PITl'SBURGH 64 18 .533
PHILADELPHIA 48 72 ,j()()
MONTREAL 3'/ 14 ,317
Weal Dtvlaton
LOS ANGELES 87 if .556
CINCINNATI 65 Ii .556
ATLANTA 67 18 .536
HOUSTON 84 57 .521)
SAN FRANCISCO 64 57 .S29
SAN DIEGO 36 86 .295
Wtd•1tdtt'1 ll"Ullt NIW Yorlc ,, m Fr•llC!KO 0
Plltsbur111 I, Hou1fon o
GB
11
27
" 2'\
3\1
E11t Division
W L
86 J6
69 51
65 57
BALTIMORE
DETROIT
BOSTON
WASHINGTON
NEW YORK
CLEVELAND •
6:1 61
62 Ill
51 74
\\.'eat Division
MINNESOTA 72 50
OAKLAND 69 50
KANSAS CITY 50 71
CALIFORNIA 18 70
SEATILE 18 72
CHICAGO 46 76
Pct. GB
.70S
.57$
.133
.IOll
.IOI
.408
.590
.580
.413
.407
.400
.J77
16
21
21
I , .. •• 21 1,a
22
2J
26
J•ck Kennedy, who works as a deckhand on the
Thundetl>inl out of Davey's Locker, diaplays the·
341>-pound black sea bass ho caulbt ne"" San
Clemente Island. Kennedy landed the beauty on so.
pound test line, wing mackerel as bait.
St. Lo\111 2, C!nclnn1ll t
All1nt• .. Clllcl111 2 Monlre1I 11, S1n 019H 1D LOI AnlflH t, Phll1 .. r.fl(t J
Wl1lnut1u•1 llt1utr1
l(on111 (Ill' 5, Ntw Yotk 0
01~!1ncl 2, CltV11!1ncl 1
Won't Be P~qy
Mesa Coacli Optimistic
Over '69 Grid Outlook
Death and taxes, according to the
cllche, are the only two sure thlnas In
life. Costa Mesa Hi11h School football fans,
however, have been able to add another
item to the list - a lackluster virally
football aeuon.
Mesa, alter nine long years, hu yet to
tute the glory of a wlnnJ.ng campalsn.
That ta:, to win more aatne1 Ulan Jt lose1.
!A *"*'"'*"'****"* ROGER
CARI.SON
The bist the Mualan11 were able to
compUe was ...... I record ln 1987.
The wont waa an it• campal1n tn 'M.
In 1983 the Green and White w11
outscored 111,!S, overall lncludlnc 1 111-'
p11una from Banta Ana.
Wt )'Ur it Wll a S.e record with five
of those Jouea comln& in the final 111
••met.
So, with that in mind, ifa rather •tart~
lin& ta hear a head coach atate, .. Our &oal
thl1 year is not simply a winning seuon.
We want the lea1ue championship, se-
cond place isn't llood enough. We don't
intend to be 1 pat1y in thla Jea,ue any
lonaer." .
That, however, Is exactly what new
coach Max Miller is saying and he
believes he has cause for thinking his
Mustangs are prime threats to the league
title.
Miller came to hfesa last spring after
serving six years as varsity coach at
Cordova High in Northern California,
Ar1d he's a man uAd to winning.
Hll last three teams at Cordova won
Golden Empire LeagQe championships,
chalking up record• of 7·2, 8-1 and 8'1.
It llhould bt noted thll Cordova didn't
win big unUI Miller installed mulUple
offeo1e, the fMD1Uon hJ1 Muatangs will
be running out of thls year. '
Miller likes the multiple 1trles because
he feels he can take 1dvanta1e of the op.
ponent's defensta better and that he Jets
more out of the talent on ha nd.
The multiple olfense revolves around
the t.quarletback (Bill Ade!IOO IA the
leading candldlte for the postUon.
Mesa wtll woi'k off the QB with power
wtng1, pro seb fan formations (1pllt
backa) and the t.
. Cyc&ts at Mesa
A speclt,l all-S.n Fernando Valley
match race will hJihlllht Friday night's
C1ua A ~ycle racin1 progra.m at
Or1111e COunly Fairground tn Cotta
Men. AclJon. starta at s.
T ... Y'I OM111
St n fr1nclKt llrv•nl 241 tt Ntw Yor• (lttvt r 17·71
ltn 1>19" CK1llt1' A .. ) •t Monlrttl tW111fw. tkl J.71, "It h!
LOI Antltltl (0.l't4in 1 .. 10) •I f'llllHt!llll•
IFrvll'l•n .. ,), "Ith! -(lncillMll (,,,.,rill 1).J) ti SI. Loul1 (lrll11 U·
10), ""'"' -"'!•"'• {l rl*!f ~l II Clllc .. o (Hindi IS.t) °"" ''"'" &cl\fdultd. 'l'IMr'• h ll'ln Lot ""8tlt1 •I N1w York, 111tl!t ll/I ,rtlKJKO •I Mon!rttl, J, ....,.1..,,lthl Sift Oi.to •I Ph1i.d1IN111, nltM Cll'ICllll'llll •t Plltltou/'911, J, twi-1111111 '
Ho\1111111 ., ctllc: ... Ail•nll •t SI. LOUI .. llltllt
kttorl 7, MlnM...:tl• 6
W11lll1tt1tol'I 1, Chic"° 1
C1Utoml1 J, l •ltlmoni J
01111111 " Sttrtlt s
T ... 1'1 Otlfln
11tumor1 il'tlotllut 12"') •I C1llfor1111 (Mc· Gtotlll11'1 S.Ut. nlfllt
OtlrOll IWll.On l•I) If .... lllt (""11 9-1), l'lithl
0!!11 t•mtt Kllldultd. ,.....,. ... ""'
ltlt!mott •I Olkltlld, ntlfll Ottrtlt 11 Ctlllel"lll•• nllht
Cll\tt ltllll •I IHltlt, nltl'lt W11hll')flln 11 Kaftlll (fly, ftlthl New Yortc II MlMIMla..111thl QllQM ti to1!0tl. nltht
•
Cressi • Rondine Fins •
• . • • 8.95
5.95. 6.95 . 7.95
Junior Tennis Rackets • • • • • • 4.95
Adult Tennis Rackets • • 6.95 to 45.00
WILSON -DUNLOP -DAVIS -BANCROFT Masks • • • • • 95c · 1.19 · 2.95 · 3.49
4.95 . 5.95 . 6.95 • 10.95·
Snorkles • •
Beach Floats
Skim Boards •
95c • 1.95 · 2.95
3.95 to 21.95
. 4.95 & 10.95
Ladies Tennis Shoes · Converse • • 7.25
Tennis Dresses • • • • 13.95 to 19.95
Mens Tennis Shoes • Converse • 7.75
Jack Purcells • • • . . . • • 8.95
Mens Tennis Shorts •
Mens Tennis Shirts
. 4.95 to 12.95
4.95 • 6.00 • 7.00
Bad Fa_itla Curged
It 1ound1 ampllcated but Miiier says
his candidates applied it well in the
1prtn1 and will be ready to roll in the fall.
The Me1ans will be playing In new
unlfonn1 ... Green and Gold styled along
the lints of the Gree n Bay Packers.
RALEIGH
PARTS
'ARMSTRONG BIKES
TIRES -TUBES
ACCESSORIES
Pennsylvania Xtra Duty Tennis Balls
Doz. 7.50 Can of 3 1.89
Granatelli Raps USAC
IND!ANAPOLIS (AP) -Rice car
owner Andy GranateJU accuaed tht U.S.
~uto Club ot "bid (alth" Wedneldl¥
beca111e II fallod lo lncrtUI the Umlll on
gas turbine tflllnt• In raclna.
USAC frou 11! enctne Umlla for the
next two ,ytal'I Tuetday.
"The U.S. Auto Club p r o m I • l d
repeatedly that If their 1la3h In the ela
of turbine engtnca made turbine• non·
('(lmpetilive In racing, they would prompt.
J_y increase the size ot Lbe t\l.tbines,"
Granatelll said .
"8ut their decision lo frtttt the I U
Inch turbine air lntlltt rule abowt that
their bulc Intent IA lo kill lurbln,.
fortVtr.
"The 11me applies lo four·wheet
drive," ~ aald.
The USAC dlr.cton 11.!o rulfirmed tho
btn on four-whtel drive car1 alter the
end ol thl1 year.
"Ironically, lttll decl11lon to kill a pr.;
areaslve aa!ety Idea come& when four·
wh"I drive lo beln1 tried and tatted ii
major ractn1 clmlll• all over the world.''
GranateW said.
I
lf the Muatangs are to fillllly mature u a football power, Oot. IO mlght be a
&90d ttartlng time. It's the aecnnd Irvine
Leque Ult of the season and Loara, the
deltndlng CIF AAA champion Is the op-
p!>nenl.
* * * E1tucla HIP'• veatare wltll the
welcbta aca1n1t u .. Grude was lll•bly "
1ucce11fill wtU. Ute fto1t Eagle• tall.lag the compedilta b7 1 l,llT lo 1,111 fillll
tally.
• Let Joyce 1 aophom.ore, oulcla11ted bit
rival, lli.tM, for ... of lllt bl1111t wla-
nloc matite1.
S.oltr 1\od Fellt btach pri11td lH
pounds •s times. lle11 a Jlneb1cktr u d
tl&ht end cudl41te for Ille v111Uy.
-IASEBAl.L ~HOES
FOOTBALL: SHOES
SOCCER SHOES
JOGGING SHOES
BASKETBALL S.HOES
Three Star Practice Balls ... , 48' .
TABLE TENNIS BALLS -PADDLES
NETS ~ BRACKETS -SETS
K2B·Kro-fHte GoH Balls • • • 1.00 each
DART BOARDS & DARTS
w•1st ROCKET SLING SHOTS
PADDLE TENNIS PADDLES
HANDBALLS & GLOVES
"
-------_,_ _______ " ___ ---------------------~-------------'-'--""'-.......
,,
~
I
•
' ., ·-
• . . ~. ~-
. .
..
•·
•
•
• -• 9 g . •
• . • ' •
OAllV PILOT
Los Alamitos
Entries
,... ,,..,.., ...... 11, , .. ....., .. °"' cw .............. ,., 1:41 l".M. """ -'" • ,.... ••(81 Ot\MI ...... l(Ke
'llltlT llAC•. 4111 ,.. .... M1Jdlln 1
,..., olds. Cltlml111. l"urH 11100.
Cltlm1"'1 •rlu 13*. ltowdr B1r..-d (llldMrtll u o
"'-ry'1 Tonto Gel 11' H ... Cool (P1tllo) 111
Llf9 t,.,._,, G.ll fllrlr*;lty) 111
Si.rrtln CloWn 120
Bold ~ (WatJonl 110
1M10 ltacQf !Motrll) 11 1
Bo F.u (H1rtl 129
t>orlllO All' 111tanlO no
Thi c..m n•
S•COMD RACI. GI ¥1,.11. 3 ""' Dkll 1rt0 1111 Ill Gra B Plu1. Purw
'1500.
ltldt,... (Wrklflll llJ
G<llt ltllnCJI (APlld~I 11J Lvdly .... r. C1I tStr~I 111 °"""' '°" (Smlltll 116 Old 5llu11 (I. IMktl Ht TrvdY T~ (~R..,....,11 111
W1r CMn1b IWI'-) 111
Moal1ll M1blt (Llphlm) lto aaorce Dnlene CCII~) 114
Str1wdor1 IPlumbl 111
TMll.O ltACI'. :uo v1rcb. 1 Vtlr
olcl1 1J'Hf UP. Ct1!mlnt. Pune 11900.
Clelmlnt prkt 11100. 111\t Dlnto' (It ,.,.,, "'
0n9 sir..,. 1111t111r<:111 ue
Mr-Olo Toro ILll>lllml 173
W1r a111e (Slr111ul 111
BUMV'I Int (AOflr! 111
Dal,ibll H11tr ( APOd.u I 1 I& oo W11<ll tSmllhl no
POUrtTM ltACI. :ISi y1rd5, J ¥tlr
olds. Cl1ln\lnt. Purw 12100. Cl•lmlnt
i>rlce S2JClll.
HIYI Bid (It l l nkll s..efl1'1 1teq1111t (Wr gh!l
Tin)' Tllundertllrd
lud £ .... (ltlClllrcb)
lett!llOl'I (Sfflll~l
Frolly l1r lll>'I' tH1rl)
"'-'I Miii ILiPNml
Mluv lie SUf'I (W1llOl'IJ
'" '" '" "' "' "' m
'" l'IFTM rtACI . 5't y1r111. J ftlr olch
•lld u.. Allowlf'IUL Pllne SlllCID.
FOKY HtrlC (Llplltml J?] Mini Ml Down (Wrlliloll llf
Sir l lffrtriew 1•-l 11' L\llT>NIY (IC.lnli) 116
Klll1rnt'I' (Cl<lkq) '" H-NI J-1ll ID lllnllll 1 If
WNlow' 11-1 (Mt llfynolll1J 116 ·-' J•• fl r11'11tlrrl 11 7
Slll'TM ltACI'. d y1rd1. I _,
•lcl1. All-..._. Pur141 U'IOG.
Tar Physicals
Set Saturday
Physicals are slated Satur-
day morning at Newport
Harbor Hlgh School for all
Sailor grid aspirants.
1be exams will be conducted
In the boys locker room
start{ng at 8:30. Candidates
should bring signed consent
forms with them.
Thursday, August 21, 1969
~ ... ~{Malt) ·--5..-lorl"' Fl•mln Eloht CMorrl11 A Goin' ,,.,.., 111: 8111••1
l<IP!Y'I Sfft {Wrh1h!J
Skklo Po!oe (W1t11>11J
&I~ Zelll>vr 1SmltnJ
Lkldr.V 81r Oii' lAiltvl
"' "' "' '" '" '" "' '" '" IE'llfHTH RACE. VesMI' Sr. Coul'H ~l'O Ylrdl. 3 yt,lr old$ I nd 111. Cl1lm-
lr.o. P11rs.e UolOO. Cl1!mini1 prk1 IDl'O.
Hof Ptl>Hr Pod !Hirt) 127
Slwdl 'Em fSmllJll "' El C.v!l111 (W1tson! 11•
lllillt Ob~ (C1NI011) 1n
Forw1rd 8•11'tr'f' 111 l1rrt<1'1 Biscuit fllllnl 11'
WOlldl'I A<ld<el t1C1ni.a! lU
T1• .. Tr~r {Ll11111m) 11'
EIGHTH RAC E. olOll Ylrtli. v11r
olds 1nd UP Jn Gr.Ide AA Plul. PutH
UJ:l(I. TllP lt1r Stklltr Emffooltl Rt<-
rttlion """· MYI fMrla (II S.nlul 117
G1bbV'1 80¥ lltkh1rdsl llt
M1enD!la E""' 1Ll1>111m) 11'
C"-t1'9r RO'l'll fWlb""l ll'O
Cocty kid (Smllfl) UJ
Fiiiy A Go Go (Ad1lrl lU
Real Charoer fMalwd1) l!t P~r Bav (Cardo11J 111
Roen IOnlcii (Hlrl\ 120
Dlainondll An Wi~ {K111l1) 111
NINTH A.ACE. ol<IO VIJ'(!I. 3 V"lr
~d1 alld up In Gr1dr-AA Mlnu1. Puru UlC.,.
D«k No!!W! (L!Ph1mJ 111
R'11'1 Rta~! (C•rdD?I) no
M1nd1te IWl!wnl 116 l~rl•I 11.otlcot (Smll~) l:itl
Mr. Ptnonalltf 1erlnkltvl 110
Prll'ICl!'UI /Nrroti (A<:l•lrJ 11 1
Lll!~ MIU Wi nn {IWh.on) Ill
Mr. Bar~ (Pfft') 170
Hy Rf<!Wll {Htrl) l:ID
Volleyball
Deadline Set
Deadline for entry into the
third aMual ~1onarch Bay
Jnvitatlonal Volleyball tourna-
ment is Sept. I.
The two-day tourney, slalfld
for Sept. 6 and 7, is expected
to have a record turnout which
is held in front' of the Mon~ch
Bay Club:
lt will be a double elimina-
tion affair with no handicaps ..
All players must register by
8:30 a.m. each day of com-
petition with action beginning·
at 9.a.m. ·
Players have the right to .
select their own partners with
two out of three games to 11 in
the winners bracket and one
game to 15 in the l<>5ers
division.
Sears
OCSwim
Team Trips
Halecrest
The Ol'l!nge Coesl YMCA
swim team won Its second
swim test in five outings with
a na1Tow win over Halec~est
Park Saturday. The final
score was not reported, how-
ever.
f.10 Glrl1 90 yet, fr.._1. S.lldtW
Odtn.,.!d IH). .. ,o '°"'' '° .,.,, trN-1. • ... Pe<11to 1r1.
11·12 Glrh SO 'I'd. lr-1. Sim Nill·
Mn !YI 2. Gklrllll LI""' {Y) 1 Pit S,..11'11 (Ml.
11·12 Bw 1 .st yd. ,,...._,, Brlln M~
llltton IYI 2. Clr1 Dl<tlchan 00 l, O•n loom!J (Y).
1J.U Glrb 100 yd. f,__1. Wench'
Stunaet10 (Yl I. IC11hr Wiiii IH I l. G1il WI""" (YI.
lt.14 IO'l'I 10D yd, tr-1. SteYt
Mlrnn CH) 2. 8rftt llou (HJ I. llobo
er! Cllitf'f CHJ.
f.lD Glr'll »'t'd. twe.ut-1. $111dr1
Ocltn.,..Mcl (HI 1. IC1...., DIVl1 IYJ ,.
P1f IMllll11111 !H).
"'0 llcru JD 'I'd. llrN1t-l. D1¥lcl
Br1nn1n (YI 2. a rwtt Smlltt {HI ).
IC.ilh Wolff (Yl.
11·1' Glrl1 50 'I'd. br..11t-I, Sim
Ntl1on (Y) 2. s.brln1 Cl llrlln (Y)
l. Pl! Sm!lh CH).
1l·lt 8111'1 50 yd. brNJl-1. llrl1n Mkldelon (V) t. Bob Comotl IHI' 3.
IC~lt! Wolle (Y).
IJ.l• Girl• 100 yd, brNst-1. Gill
W1vne (YI 2. Mllody Morg1n IHI 3.
Kiii>¥ Wll 11 !H).
TJ.U BIWI 100 vd. a l'l!•ll-1, Don
P1ntKOsl·(Y) 2. ar.t ll ou.(H) J, Sll Yt
M~rr111tolH).
f·lO Gfrl1 1$ ¥d. 11¥-1. Lorr1lne
F'lcle-!Y) 2. Mtllu. HIM!er·IH) l. Ji n
G1rdner·!YJ (, Jerri Girdner,
f·lD llon :t5 TII. 11¥-1. Rl /ld'r Ped~
CY) 2. D1vld llr"""°"'lYI J, IC1lltl
Wolft.CYl.
11·12 Girl• 50 yll. 11¥-1. Sim Mii~
IY) 2. Gk>rlln LllYPr·(YJ 1. Slbrint
IC1111rl1n·C YI.
11.12 son JO ¥d. 11~-1. 8rl•11 Mld-
dleto...IYI t. Miki Ml~(H) J. °r~~4 "":(~. ~d. ttr-1. WtnllY
5.MlnOl,..IYI.
IJ.U .II"" 50 Y!I. flY-1. Slew ~r(on-{H I 2. Bret ll01s-C HI. ,.,o Glrll 50 ¥d. blck-I. Lorri!,..
F•ld•CY) 2. V•rrl ~rdntr-!YI J. MeHn1 H1n11fr·(H).
,.10 llcw1 511 Y!I. btck-1. D1¥1d l ren-P>Oft.C YI 2, Eric" Holifnter.(Y) J. Eddie
Ch&on-(H).
11·12 Glrll 50 Yd. bldl;-1. 5_,
NlelSelt>IY) 2. Glorlln L1!\tw-!Yl l. 1\.IJ 8oy1 50 ~II. Uci<-1. Brfln Mkt-t:=ir~i~)~· 8obb1 Jolln&ono!Hl 3. O•'n
1).U Ion 50 ¥d. •bick-1. B~ llotS-
Wltll·(H) ). Wtnd~ .S.Ufldtr.(YJ 3. Liu Frfd.(Y),
fli l 2. ltlcMrd Enoc:ll-(Y) 3. Rebert cnerl·CHI.
1·10 Glrll-1. J11t ~rc!Mr-IYI 2. Lft!lt lltnclt!HY).
f.10 Bo¥1 Inoa-I. ll1ildV Pecllfo.IYI
1. D1~ld Brtn1111<1·(Y) J. Keith Wolfe-
lYI. 11·U Girl• lndD-1. Si m Nltlsen-IYI
2. S.br!119 K111rl1n·(Y).
11·U &!wt lndD-1. Brl1~ MIOdlel°"" cv1 2. cnr11 Mlnroe·IHI J. Mlke Mtnslr.•IHl. ll-U Glrl'I lnclo-1. WHMIV S.uncltn-CY) ,, G•ll ............ cv 1.
ll-U Bon lncla-1. Br1I llou.(HJ 2. Sine Mlrrgn.(HI.
AIM APPROACH SHOTS AT TOP OF FLAGSTICK
l'U bet that if anyone ever studied the subject
they would find that most greens have more sand
and water In fr.ont than in back.
Yet, most golfers Invariably fall ahort of the
green more often than they go over. If they are not
short of the green itself, they usually are short of
the flagstick.
To counteract this tendency to fall short, I sug.
gest that, instead of aiming for the hole, golfers
should aim for the top of the flagstick. This will
automatically cause approach shots to carry deeper
Into the green and, more often than not. closer to
the hole.
PUT POWER BACK INTO YOUR SWING!-Wlttt the help of Arnold
Palmer·s illustrated bookhit, "Tu Shots and Fairway Woods ."
Send 20$ and a stlf·•ddressed, stampad envelope to Arnold
Palmer, In c1rt of this newsptper.
San Clemente Youth
Captures Swim Race
Los Alamitos
Results
.... " ltACa:-;;-;.,N11. Mrildlft i
w.r olOI llrlcl Ill Clltll. Cltlml"'. P111'141 11100.
RllDV Am Gold (~j ~.10 21.M 10,40
Get.wtv Jelln !Smith) •.IO •,20 Cllltomlt S1ncl1 (Rlcftlr110 4.20 Tifflt-11 '1IO '
S«1lttled -Morlltll ctl'lt!i, M1rv'1 Tonio Gil, Mr. llrll«llOr,.,ltldllOll.
SECOND ttACI, UO 111'111. I ~Hr olch. Md u• Iii Grlclt A #111111. Pur .. 1110l1. Deck Btll (Lll>htMI
Dtllotl1 .Miii IWrlthl)
Dtrrllbll fAdllr )
TW..-11 4/10
7.IO 4 ... t . .a 4.60 J.OI •••
kntdled ~ o.n11v ll1r •-· Heo. dufll, AVWllle I~, OU..! Moon,
Robll! ht Monie.
MIOMTL Y DOU I La -,.rt_., &1111 ~:· • 1·0tck ..... "'"' .,., ••. )'MlltD ltACI. 4CiD WrdS. Ml~ 2
YH r Ciiek. PurM 11100,
FHIV llDY•I fC.r1111a)
J11f$19 lov (WtllCWll
Tlnr Folly fLftlMmJ
T"""'-211 1111 No K1"11d!ft.
•.60 J.00 2AI
fJ0 1.«I uo
FOL!ltTM 1.ACI. 5" )'t nb. J .,..,.
ollll •ncl ""· Atlow•ncH. PllrM 1110« C.tclt 09ck lAdtfr) 11.00 6.211 •.Ill W1r Ori POYert¥ IWrlgll!) 27.IO 12AO
TIIV O.nov (A,poc11e.1 '·°' Tl,,.,._21 2/10
Scr1ld!ed-o.¥ill'1 Brlu.
l'll'TH ••er. ~ Y•nl•. I ¥H r oldl. Cl1!ml1111. Pvr11 12100.
Jo Burres1 (ll.IQl9r111) 7.00 •.«1 J.00
De(k P•rotf o• CrOlby) 6 . .io •.oo
Mr. a.,. Charg1 [Llpnaml 2.IO
Ti.r-11 3(10
S~r1tm.6-H11! Sm.M, $11111rn o.i., 111111111 l lKu!I, Cln Bir Zin.. •
SIXTH RACE • .UO Wnll. l .,...,
ol<:ls Ind "9 In Gr.a, A Plu1. P11rM .....
Altrvl1llc" IH1rt) t.20 •.IO J.~
S.ITIPIQn'I Siiier (WltOM) SAi 4.IO
Mr. Spy 81r (Llphlfll) 1A
Tlm&-12 5/10
No Kl"lldlft.
StVEHTH ltACI'. 3$0 y1nl1. l 'f'Hf
ollls 11111 ""' In Gr"-AA Plu1. PIJfM u ...
DlcftV'1 Gem fSmllhl 16.«I 7.IO S.111
The Orange Coast area's
prowess in swimming made
itself felt in the Pacific
event and Lloyd won it with a ~=i.·~'ttic '~=\ '"° ;::
J :26.59 effort. ~~:.~
~, Northwest. recently ·when San
Clemente was rep~ted by
a five-man team from the
Edgewater Beach Club.
Mate Randy Smither was 'l!IGHTM uct. «111 v1rd1. 1 .,..,
third with a 1:30.17 clocking. o111s 11111 "" 11t Gl'Kt MA ""'"*''"
"""' woo. Scott Renfro, headed for the E-'• Hancodt
Univers.ity ol Oregon in the 1w.n.on1 10.00 •·• '·~ MoofMI DllrnMd (Morrh) 4,411 3.IO fall, was named the outstan-L1t111 Torwn IMIWJ '·•
ding SWiJl'mer in the 63rd an-~~~~
nual Kelowna International NINTH ttACI'. l!O v1rda. ,. w 1r
Oft the Greens
Severson-Abbott
Win ·at El .Niguel
John· Severson and Mike Ab-
bott, Of .lhe San Clemente Golf
Club, team ed up to capture
the secood annual InvitaUonal
Golf Tournament at Ef Niguel
Country Club in L a g u n a
Niguel, posting a three-under~
par score of 212.
Second, one stroke back,
were Don Candy and Ray Hef·
ferao of Carlton Oaks CC.
Jim Brimble and Ron
\Yinterburn of Irvine Coast
Country Club finished third
with 214.
Only two teams out of the
00.t.eam fi eld in the two-day
event were able to break par
on Lhe championship El Niguel
course.
Severson and Abbott were
awaraetr the Stevens Manning
Perpetual trophy .
Low gross winners were
Crant Hornbeak and' Bill Selman'~of Santa Ana Country
Club with a 228.
Second went to Dave Speak
and Stan Hickin (229) and
third was nabbed by Grant
Meyer and Dr. Ray Henderson
of El Niguel with their 231.
Winners i(l the first day's
competition were C h u c k
Osborne and Jay Strapp in low
net and Fred Willard and Dick
Krorunan in low gross, both
tandems from El Nigeul. '
Two other teams from El
Niguel won the second day's
scoring wiUt Willard McCay
and Rick Gouin taking low
gross and Don Gallant and
SkJp Swartley low net.
Coata Jtlesa
club lnvilallonat Monday fn
best two balls ol fOUJ'!Ome ac-
tion. ....,
Two teams tied for second
three strokes back at 140.
Dorls D'Lametl!r, Rose
Schwendimann, Jean Dalpee
and Jane Adams and the con·
tingent of J ean W i 11 on ,
11-farilyn Jones, Marlon Vos.ot
and Fran Lewis shared the
•pol.
Jean Touey, Ll!e Yelton,
Betty Jo Sleva and Maxine
Assmu.s took third plact with
a 141 and Jane Fohl, Jeanie
Chabot, Jean Creighton and
Betty Callagher were fifth a
stroke behind.
At 145 was the foursome of
AdriaMa Coote, Lucy Walker,
Dee ~Hawkins and "'Evelyn
Cr0nnan ~hile Jeanne Cox,
Be tty Brown, June Rose and
Anne Sullivan finished with
146.
Men's club action over the
weekend was dominated by
Bob Steach's 74 in the low
gross category over the Lake
Course.
Low net honors went to Jim
O'Shaunecy (78-11-67 ) followed
by Jack Clark (82·14-M), Jack
Frazier (80-11-69), De an
McC18f)ahan (82·12-70), George
Dernbach (77·7·70) and Glenn
Freeze (87-17-70).
Others were Jack Towll! (77-
6-71), Frank Leister (8.S-14-71 ),
Mack Harris (82-IG-72) and
Dick Hitzeman (82-tO-n).
Two For One Coach Ben Cummings took
his small contingent north and
three members oC the team
copped indJvidual honors.
Swimming Regau.a a n d ol<h Ind UP In Grlclt A Minus. f'llrM
r-·•ved ,. G I siaoo. Shooter was attempting to ........... 1,ue e n e r a sonic Moon csmllhl '·'° i.to 2.IO Blackwell Cup. Leo'• l•r °"""' cw11-1 3.60 J.oa The team of Nadine Mate, unload his rifle while riding in
Corby Lloyd, a 16-year-old
junior at San Clemente High
School and the Crestview
League champiOn in the 400
free, won the Pacific
Northwest four-mile I o n g
distance swim championship
at Williams Lake n e a r
Spokane, Wash.
There were 40 entries in the
Renfro captured t h r e e ~~~1,10ar1nki.y1 4.lt Bea Regan, Dorothy Allen and the front seat of a n
events ln the Vancouver, B. c. kr.idled-Tr11I¥ Hr, 11e11"'"° N.. Creta Ianelli combined for a auto mob i I e ~ The rifle alfalr. ~~. Stllrcti Tont, Mt. Min)(, o.nay best ball of 137 to capture the discharged, injuring two boys,
Lloyd nabbed Ute p. K. outNILLA-.IOn1t Mllll • ,.LM'I Costa Mesa Goll and Country ages e.lght and 16, who were
Wrigley CUp at the same,1_"='=°":""::":"::"~" ... :::::=--C_l_ub~'tsisecioiinjjdjia~niniiuaiiliwio~me~n~··s ""s1.·11~inglii;.iimiplthije,.bacltmii,.miajjl.iijjiiiil Regatta after winning the
half-mile swim in 9:35.7.
Others competing for Cum-
mings' crew were Alan Flem-
ing and Gary Smither.
EXPERT
INSTALLATION
AVAILABLE
40°/o
~}/)] OFF
... t1llf -· -111'1 TIE Ill -' DUii
Ch.ck our •¥•rvd•lf low priol•
on ath.r Fh .. st!HWI tires
.. Tiil E-G'I.._ Pldl . UIW EvoMJll'I
firt$fOnt"500"
America'• most asked·for -by-ntmt tire I
··111~-·-1• r .. _,. ...,,,,m,,. .1 ......,.1oo_....
• TIACl-TllTll AT T..m WIUI
""'" ...... lor .,._ .... d.,..bilh7
•2a.oo •1e.ao •31.15 •19.01
2 9.75 17.815 33.75 20.21
30.75 11.41 35.00 21 .00
32.50 19.50 37.26 22.315
35.75 2 I .45 40.7& 24.41
39.25 23.61 44.76
If we •llollkl 1.it ou1 •I
YOW: lllH, -w1111._
YOllJ I "rDr..check# ...
IVllnt 11-lDr ~ • ..,.._
11.11
••
•
M
fl69.95 Compact Auto Air Conditioners
'flruloat CHAMPION
fun 4·Plv Ny1on Cord Tire.i
··~q~ lOW
PRICll
ON Rl L
l llEI •Faster cool-down time for "right now" comfort 8 8 A
• Jfigh C.F.M. for greater air circulation lhroughout the entire ,
car constantly
•Sleek, clean design slyling for a.smart look
•Safely padded b.ezel ••• mounts_11eady under dash
ASk. About Sears Convenient Credit Plans
I Save •2.a2 I
rt1odel
5717
67
Each
... ·-.. -
Vacation New Keystone
Car Serv,ica DIGGER OFFER CUSTOM WHEELS
hf 11p1rt 1111tM1lu
fl all t•l1 Wirt
I. Align front end
2, Bal•~• front
WhH ll
3. Adjust brak••
(Orum TYJ>91
4. Reptck out•r
front whHI
bearings
• Rupcd 11i11t ered iron piaton •nd e),rome rod ••. wean
beucr than original 1bock1
:g!~ ..... ,_
Experl
Jruuallation
Available
•Patented El111tomelerrin1 meam no (•ding
•Aluminum eooli.n1 finB prevl!nt
• Be•l build-up
••• "'" ,_ .......... olr
......tillotol ............ ....
flresfone
AN SPORT
8-ply, he•vv duty
nylon cord tlr•
for PICK-UPS,
VANS. CAMPERS
AS LOW All
2 FOR
•42
•.'Jo.II lllO;wd
"lut •2.llO,... lh l'lct. b.
'-" ... Mii ..... z ...
otl '°"" ........ .
Super King Size
CAR COOL
CUSHION
Big 32" x 21 " 1lt1
~ ..........
·~1 ... -1w1-
• Vi11yl-i..l lltbrio
•M11--~ •t'Mft.,"""""'
~-------------------------------------------------~ --Vi M•-121..f)JO ..... GI ,,,,.,, \OHO MMJI HI! Jl412t . ritOWI M2'2 -u. ANolo IO 7.)J71 '°""'"" ~2·1311 I
-F fR1s1·oNE-.. sioiE-·
I ~,..,..., Ol~Of .. 1004,04~1 1 CXYWIC A tofO N'41~211 PQJifiON411P2>11U,.NANl6t.W•·USI IAH!AlfsmGf.f«Oll llU!ttfU.ltD
I _,. 6.nl&. IC ,.,,._ NOU,_ HO w••1 Oii....,. 631.2100 ..,,,..u, MCW«A u •·611 t VAILtY ro 1.1.u1, M'-tnO I
_....,, 9Ql'WOOOOl.1-lin t.W.0-.•11~111, ~S1.,,ll IOUIM COl4flt.UA.S40.3m WIMONl''l•·lfl l ,________________________ --------------------1 S< 'ii rs
-Sal lf<df• Guaranteed orYoarMoneyaeta• ...,,Hlo,.._...,.._...,, ... Ax. .. , ... ,,..
I
~ ---------------
475 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
646·2444 -8 to 9 Daily-Saturday a.s
•'
In
IC·
J
00
10. •• ... .,.
n •
)SS
he
m,
ne
ith
1ie
nd
a
of
~r.
yn
>X,
nd
ith
he
by
>W
ke
m
ed
ck
'n ge
nn
~-
. ).
nd
to
in
n
le
'· re
•
•
1
"'
..
WHAT'S IN:
OUTDOORS?
bJ Jed: A-y
DOVE OUTLOOK .GOOD
Wlth the opening of the 1969 dove bunting season
only 10 days away, scatter.gunners in Southern Cali-
fornia can look forward to a good opening if the current
warm weather trend continues.
Filed reports from the Department of Fish and
Game and some private hunting clubs disclose a good
population of birds in Orange County •
Even thotigh there is not much open land in the
county for unattached hunters to hunt, local residents
can find good shooting in the adjoining counties and on
some of the private clubs and ranches. ·
lf you are like most hunters, the last time you
handled your shotgun was at the end o! the past season.
Jn order to make the most of the opening day, hunters
should acquaint themselves with their guns again, be-
fore going out into the field.
A couple of boxes of shell s put through the gun at
one of Orange County's target ranges, before opening
day, could well improve shooting.
More up-to-date information on the opening of dove
season \Vill be in next week's column.
BROADBILL UPSTAGING MARLIN
Peggy Hitchcock of the Balboa Angling Club reports
thst even though the marlin picture has been slow to
develop this season, the broadbill are coming on very
strong.
David Hayes of Corona del Mar caught a club
record broadbill on medium tackle last week.
Hayes, 19, landed a 305-pound fi sh aboard the boat
Ranaer V, and it took him 8 hours and 15 minutes to
land the swordfish.
Hayes hooked it 15 miles off the east end of Cata·
Una Island. usin~ a "flyer" for bail.
More broadbill have been taken this year to date
than marlin. and surprisi ngly the big spikebills are hit·
ting bait re.(!:ularly.
Larry Hehr of Costa Mesa, aboard the "El Pro·
fe sor" perfonned well over the weekend by boating a
broadbill (253 pounds) and a marlin (143,,. puonds ) in
t\vo outinl{s. Hehr spotted the fish working near the 209
and baited them with mackerel.
The first marlin to be checked into the angling club,
taken on a jig, was weighed in by BiJJ Bridges of Har·
bor Island. But, the best bait, by far. has been Spanish
and . Pacific mackereJ taken from under noatine kelp .
patties.
ALIACORE UP AND DOWN
Albacore ·season is nearing the half way mark,
but as yet the albies have failed to make much of a
showing far our area sportfishing landings.
Counts thus far have not been consistent.
Deep Sea
Angling
Hits Lull
A.cti.on Opens Sept. 1
Dove O_utlook Still Bright l
The blgest dove populallon hunter's be11t bell fOC' good doves In the awe11te of 111 hunUni Is tn prospect In Lan--
DAILY •ROT J{
Heat Wave
Cools Off
Deer Hunts
"ll's just one ol thoae In years is now sr.re•d •hooting on openinc morning. species may be ntt.1.uased. fair Valley, \Vlldhorse Canyon, th •-• ...... c JI I ,._... The warm weather has IC!f'to lhings." toU&•NU~ ou1,nutrn a orn a llunters are cautioned again Area Pmpectl Von Trigger Hills and the
'that's how veteran and southern Inyo County, that dove seuon this year Following, by area, are the Hackberry Mountaln!. Moat ed the deer to search for lots
fishermen at Davey's Locker with hunUng prospects ex· opens on Monday -not on Southland dove hunting pro--doves usually move out of of shade and deer hunters lo
and Art's Landing explilned cellent for the 46-day split Saturday -and that wardens specta : western San Bemardlno Coon· stay home. There h11 been a
the sudden drop off in fishing sea.son which opens on Labor will be in the field watchlnc OWENS v ALLEY _ Dove ty before the opening. blg drop ln the bun11ng
activity Jn local waters. Day, Monday, Sept. 1• for hunters wbo may try to population as hl(l:h as or higher RIVERSIDE, 0 RANGE, pressure In nearby mOuntains,
Bass and bonito, which have That Is the COll!ensUs of l\unt before Labor Day. than ever before. If mild SAN DIEGO -Lots of doves aod 1 corrt!pOlldJng drop in
been bJUnc steadily all sum· Department of Fish and Game For 1969, California has a 4&-weather holds, OWens Valley bot most are on prlvate lanW.
mer, started shying away reports from the field which day split dove season that a~ should provide some or the Birds abundant south of Per· the number of deer taken.
from bait over the weekend add these reminders : plies statewide. The first bun. best openiJli-day shooUng in rls, north of Lakeview and Most of the locaJ hunters.
and Wednesday the catch in Whether or not the doves ling period ls Sept. I through the state. south of M01eno in Riverside who drew special doe permits
local water waa negligible. hold in their present locations 30. The second period b Nov. SANTA BARBARA. VEN· County. In Coachella Valley will be waiting til the end of
For example, the morning depends on the weather. If 29 through Dec. 14. TURA -Doves are abundant doves are plentiful along August before they return to
haU-day boat out of Davey's chilly nights hit Antelope Legal shooting hours are in both counties but mostly on Coachella Canal and areas the hills.
with 41 anglers only brought Valley, Owens Valley and the from one-halt hour before private lands. Best bets for IOOth of Thermal and from Five.hundred special do•
home eigh! bas.s, one halibut high desert country, heavy sunrise to sunset in the area the unattached bunter are Valetie Jean to Mecca. ln San permitl were Wued by a
and three sculpln. The catch popul.aUons of doves now in belnc hunted. Cuyama Valley In Santa Diego County the Boulevard drawing for Ult TtnaJ• area,
aboard Art 's half-day boat those areas can be upect.ed to 1.Journlng do .. ~. ringed lur· Barbara County and Lockwood and Jacumba areas should be which, lncludel orance Coun·
wasn't much better with just a take oU lot a warmer climate. tie doves and Chinese spotted Valley in Los Padres NaUonal among the best for unattached ty. 'Ille buck• will 9000 atart
handful of bass, barracuda The abundance or while· doves may be taken statewide. Forest In Ventura County. shoote rs. runninc with the does. and the
and bonito. winged doves now along the White-winged doves n1ay be LOS ANGELES -.Antelope IMPERIAL VALLEY -hunter's success should lharp-
Bolh landings said sudden Cowado River from Bard and taken only in I mp er ia I. Valley is the unattached Doves are widely scauered Jy increase.
dry spells hit local fishing oc~ Winlerhaven north to some 20 Ri verside and San Bernardino hunter's best bet but chilly but there ts Jots of feed and Again hunters and campers
caslonally and they expect the miles above Blythe could be CounUes. Mexican g r o u n d nights may move many birds the opener should be another are warned by local rangera ta
catch in local waters to thinned oul ii summer thunder doves may not be taken. out before opening day. good one unless rain in· be very careful of !Ire.
bounce back within a few storms co.ntinue to sweep the Not more than 10 doves In SAN BERNARDINO terferes, Hunters ahould stay With the high lire hazard, a.
days. area. the aggregate or all species Doves are now thick around out of growing crops, but fire now could ruin the re.
In the meantime, most or Whatever the weather, may be taken in any orie day. springs and '.ock watertnc harvested fields from Niland malning part of the couta\
the area's deep sea action has Imperial Valley and l he On or after the second day of places throug .. out the hl(l:h and Westmoreland south lo deer season and alJO have a
been restricted to s 8 n Colorado River area will pro--each of tbe two splil-seasori desert of eastern Sa n Me:a:lco should oiler good great dell of• effect on the
Clemente Island where bull bably be the u n attached periods • maximum of 20 Bernardino County. Excellent thooting. dove and quail populatiom. bass actio.n is hot. The fish -------------------------.....:. ______ _:_ __________ _:__..:..;.. __ _
ranee from three to 14 pounds.
Art's Landing also brought
home 14 albat'1lre from the
Cortez Banks Tuesday and
may schedule another run
later in the. week. Fishermen
are advised to call Art's for a
departure time .
* * * Deep Sea
Fish Report
SANTA MONICA -llJ •nt!tru ~7' IN", :itl bool!ll!, 10 ll•lll•ur.
"AltADlll COVI -'° •111len1 '" beu, 2 1Mrr1c\1111, II h1!11111t, lo.! banne.
1
I
FREE
Alignment Check
,.. Last minute reports place the Jongfins about 25-40
• .... miles south-east of the east end of San Clemente I1land.
;,_ This 111 a ·61h·7 hour trip.one way, for most or our local
IAl'I DllCtO fl't. lllfll•N&M ·
"l•lltf"-R'I llillfl~1) -tn l"llt r'1 ''° •lblocort, 1 "veil" t11n1, n Ytflerwltl~ it berr1cUd1, Ul bon!io, .g ben.
OCIAlilflD• -'42 lflllllrtl 4C.5 t..r· •aclld•, 70S a.u. •n bonito. l Ytllowltll. )6 htll~wl.
W•-t-r, ..... ,, ttt-11111 . ..........
• r • ··-
~ •
•
.•
• • • .
• • •
•
• • • •
•
party boats. Spike Taft is chasing the fish with his boat
the Patrician, running out of o·avey's Locker, and is
finding some good working schools.
Art Gronsky, of Art's Landing in Balboa. is also
making the occasional run, but reports that JocaJ fish·
ing is much more re\varding at present.
Don Hansen. dow n at San Clemente Sporlfishing. is
filling his boats with bonito, barracuda, bass and some
yellowtail.
BASS, CATFISH & BLUEGILL HOT AT IRVINE
f'.luss Cleary of Irvine Lake says fishing is good ,
dese1te-the Jack of rainbow trout action. Anglers are
having .no problem -cat<!hing ·nice st-ringers of \Vann
water fish.
The fish derby has completed its second weekend
and has two more weekends to run.
Irvine Lake will offer dove hunters a chance to
hunt the lake area. Reservations are currently being
taken for the second, third and fourth weekends of hunl-
ing.
O~ening day and the first weekend are booked up.
hfore 1nfonnation on lhe Irvine Lake Hunting Program
can be obtained by calling Dan Franco at (714) 633-1520.
Trout Plant Schedttle
The following S o u t h e r n
California streams and lakes,
listed by county, are scheduled
for stocking th is week with
catchable-size rainbow trout
by the Department of Fish and
Gan'le :
LOS ANGELts'-!fig Rock
Creek, Bouquel Canyon Creek,
Crystal Lake, Jackson Lake.
San Gabriel River East and
\\'est Forks. ,
RIVERSIDE -F u I m o r
Lake, Hemet Lake.
SPORTING GOODS
DOVE SEASON
OPENS SIPT. I st
•A COMPUTE STOCK OF
SHOTGUNS IY BROWNING-
REMINGTON-WINCHESTIR
• DOVE CALLS AND DECOYS
W1U MAKI YOU! Tllr l SUCCISS
• HUNTING VESTS
ZIP Off GlMI llG
lNJI LOTS Of POCKETS 7ts
MOllllO I A'I'" I"'. Memo! -'1
•Mltr11 ,, 11111 Old. n1 '""-'°" f\"lrti't LMMll""I -75 11'191tru ti n1111w1 • .W lint cod. l,~ rock cod.
LONO IEACH I I'~ ~htt) -
20j 1ll9t.n1 ' •fbKore. S ben.ocuC11.
1.ZtO NH, 31 bonllo. 11 roe-i..u..
, .. _,,_, 1''-r) -n '""leo"s; •17 bes~
7 b.lrrtWO&, llJ bonll'O, J halltl<I!, 10
roc~ftvl, l1ree -11 11111tr1: -W.
bo"ltv. 11 blr1c11111, 1t bin. II mlcir.1~1. l'-clfk S...rttltN11tl -13'
11!91e!"U ' 1lllacore. ' Jf!IOwt1U, 11
l'llllbu!, '67 ull<o and llutl blu, ti
bonltD.
l'll!W,OllT 10 .... ff'I llCW'lr) -11'
•rtOlot•li XI •~r. '72 bin,. t
lltl!bul.
SAN ClfMl!l'ITI! -:Ill •111len1 571
bonllo. lS6 be1.t, 14'1 l*,.,Kudl, 6 ll1llbut, I wlllte SM beH.
SAN 'l!DlllO 11'1111 SI. U11411"') -5' '"'"''I ! Wfllte ,,. tieu. I 111t1but, "°
ul1'G litu, 117 botlllo. Oltl'lll't L..,.
1111 .. I -Ill -~'1 6 VlllOWllll. I wlllll Hf bell. 1 ltlw lift l'llrll, 200 bonito, 7<1(1 ClllCO biQ. 7 lltllllul.
OXNAlllD -lU .,,.1101 l,.oll.J blq, lU bonllo. JU rock cod. 11 N rrt cllda, t ll•llllHI.
P'Oll:T MUl!NIMI -ti 111119"'1 I»
Cl lko l"d bull 11111. 251 llooilto, U
hlllbul, ti ti.rr1cud1.
MALllU· -'4 • .,. ... II ,., ultco
beti. 11 bo"llo, 6 a.rr1uJ4ll, i lltllbul.
1 Vllte>W!lll.
ltaDONOO -111 l"9~t11 l vt11ow1111, l 7 ll1tt1u ic11, t.IG c1lko
._n. 1.nl IMlflllo. l lllllllvt. ••rwn -161 '"llffl; :IOI MIMI ti.... 17 ....... ·~llCll. >21 bontlg, 13 rntatrfl • .161
r«lt cod.
SEAL al!ACM -117 1"'1"'; ' blr.
•1~. '5 bor!lto, "' HM IJ9q, j
lltllbul. 1!1•11 -,, 1111191"'1 ' "'" ••cuff. 211 11ot1110. n ...,.. Hu. ' 111!111\11, 21 ,.,.a,,,,,,
60.game Winner
Ch arles Radbourne won 60
iames in 1884 while pitching
for the Providence club in the
National League, says World
Book Encyclopedla.
I
I
CAMP SALE • SPORT CLOTHING
#200 COLEMAN LANTERN 9.95
#425 COLEMAN STOVE 12.95
Rtt. 13.95 SUEPING BAGS 9.95
COLEMAN iCE CHESTS :l~'l.,.u
• WOOllCH SPOIT SHllTS IN PU.IOS
• llATtn:I SAfAll In TIO JACIUS
• UATHU JAatrTS WITH JllNGl RIM
• SPOIT JAClnS 1'HAT lllr YOU AFLOAT
•TENNIS DIUSU AND SWU.TEIS
• MIN1 fUINll TIVNIS ANO WAlM.Ul'S
• OUllTED PAIUS AND"YUT1
•GYM TlUNlS AND SWUT ClOTHING
SANTA ANA
219 I. 4th
Kl 7.5723
· FULLERTON
601 S. luclld
171-5911 I NEWPORT CINRI
•27 fa1hl•n Island
644-2 121
I i
'BIG EDGE•
RBHEAOS
lont ...... MoMukll bad MK.•tf,.,..
osl---wilhlfe~I
~It •22
lONBMllER
. Touti 4·plr nylol c:orcl COllsbiCtiutl i1t mst
slits. • Durable Super·SYI nbbt,, • SI'*
performanc.t •1•Q implCil. bnliles. 1111
ci-1s.
AS LOW AS s99s
40,000 MILE GUARANI&
BRAKE RELINE
•EXPERT WORKMANSHIP
•QUALITY REPLACEtAENT PARTS
• SPECIAL LOW PRICES
50,000 MILE GUARANm
-only $6 more with our
$ 95
MSTP wheel stablllzatlon
specified by fadory
COSTA MESA
FDll , IOS1'
UIS
WESTMINSTER
JONES TIRE SERVICE L. J~ LITTLE'S Big 0 Tire
2049 HARBOR ILVD. (At layl
Phone 540-4343 or 646-4421 -
DAILY I o.m. • 6 p.m. e 511. 'Ill 5 p.m.
7352 WESTMINSTER AVE.
Phone 893 -5572
DAILY I •·!"·· 7 p.m. e Sit. 'Ill 5 p.m.
ALL M,'JOR. BE CREDIT
CARPS RE Goodrich
'
-----·----------------------------------------~---~~-"-'-~~~---------------
ft . llAll.V "LOT nnar .• .,..., 21, 1'16• =
B•ees (Antlnue
' .
Kurt Wiese Nf!W
'
Lido 14 Champ
~. c1!~:~:'j~!°:aii~!~
chaqi,plon of the lJ00.14 Cla~s.
The young skipper claimed
: the 11Ue ••fter 1 five-race
• series sailed Monday and
Tuesday from Balboa Yacht
: ,Club, the host organization for
the Lldo-14 nationals.
Runner.up in the junior
dlvilloo. WU Ross Butcher o[
Alamitos Bay Yacht Club and
ste\'.e Smith of AaYC w a s
third. other trophy winners
were Bru ce Hwnann. BYC,
and' Mike Peters, Mission Bay
Yacht Club. There were 25 en-
tries in the junior division.
Competition in the senior
division for the natkinal tiUe
got under way Wednesday
with the 80-boat fleet being
divided into four flights.
Jim Tyler of BYC won the
first race in the competition
between the red and green
flights. Ed Rodriguez was the
winner in the black aiid white
flight race.
The i;:ompetition contin\led
today after which the fleet
was to 'be split in hall Wit.b the · ' •· ·
aldullt '""'" --top---division-saillng~foF-the---'-~
championship and the s<coild NE W :CLASS OFF ICERS -Na(ional Udo-14 sailprs Coo)< time out from a
half ·sailing 8 consolation 'busy week of racing for the national cbarllpionsbip ·Wednesday to elect a new series. Results of Wedn~y's rac-slate of officers. From left are Merlin Gayman, chief measurer; Jim' Tyler,
ing; . · treasurer; Mike Hillm an, secretary·; Dl'ck: Van Deuz.er, .pr~sident ; ~ul Hubay,
RED AND GREEN ·FLIGHT vice president, and ]$d Rodtjguez, _!~tiring-presiderit a'nd· defending champion.
-(!) Jim Tyler, BYC; '12)
Penney Pincher Ads Tvrn Sense Info Dollars
·---------. . -·
Rivals Racing Ag*1il'.l
Passage, Blackfin in Race to La Paz
l_n t e maUonal blue-water the New York Yacht Club
sailing's most intense rivals -burgee.
Blackfin ·and .w 1 n d w a r d A two-hour penalty assessed
Passage -art-exJ)ected to against Windward Passage for
reneW thelrfeUI! Nov. I in the contacUng another boal at the thi~ sailing of the Long start or the HonoJulu race rob-.
Beac h to La Paz race, officials ~ her of a first-to-finish vie·
of the sponsOrlng .Long Beach tory and a new record lit that
"':acht C1µb di~losed. Transpac ~l13Slc.
,Entties have ~n a~pled , The race commJttee, in a
from' both Ken De:Meuse, decision ltill being debated
owner· of Blackfin, and Robert and disputed by yachtsmen
F. Johnson, owner of . lhrt:Ju-'1>out the country ,
Windward Pas,yge. Blackfln awarded the honors t o
will sail under the banner . of Blackfln which finished about
SL Francis Yacht Club, and ao hour behind Wjndward
John.son has entered WP undU Passage.
{ I 1
·''A:rti.Stry in Moving"
' 'lbt !80-mlle rocelrom Loni
Beach to La PU, the fui>ous
'flshlng .-.sort lo . the Gull of
California!· bu drawn more ' ' !him 50 appltca\loM with more
elQIOcled prior to. )he Se)'!. 15
dea.~e, accordlqg to race
1 chalrn\aD• Bob B a1a ham.
. Facilities ·in. La Pu Harbor
wllf make II ~ lo
restrict the entries to about S5,
Basham added.
The race originated 1n 11153.
It's particular challenge 111 an
approxlmately·100.m11e beat to
w~ther after turnlnc Cabo
San LuCU.
for~-,
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
CaH:
494-1025
La Paz Race
Date Set
For Nov. 8
Stewart Robertson, ABYC; (3)
Don Robertson, ABYC; ( 4)
Peter Parker, NHYC; (S) Bob
Poscan, KHYC. BLACK&WlllTE FLIGHT;-------------~~----------~--~---::::::::::::..::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=~
·'-Beach Yacht Club haa
set the date of Nov. I for the
start of the third International
Yacht Race from Long Beach
to La Pu, Baja California.
· . Commodore Nonnan Scott
said more than 50 appllcaUoas
for the race have already been
received and that it might be
necessary to limit the actual
number of entries to 35.
The race will be divided into four classes of yachts with
Cruising Club of America
m e a s urement certificates.
Clas.ses will be fonned when
the· entries are closed. A
minimum rating of rr feet is
n:qui...i.
Entries will be considered in
aceordance with the following
criteria:
1. ParticipaUon in previous r. Pai races.
2. Membership in Long
Beach Yacht Club.
3. ParUc:ipation by Mexican
yachtsmen.
4. Prior ocean racing ac-
tivity of owner, Ripper and
crew.
5. Geographical origin or en-
by.
AU Inquiries regarding lhe
Tace should be directed to
Robert A. Basham, General
Chairman. .Long ~ch Yacht
Club, 6201 Appian Way, Loog
Beach, 90803.
Eagle Rock
Race Slated
Cabrlllo &a.ch.Yacht Club Is
tponscring Jts annual Eagle
Rock Race Saturday for
yaChts qualifying under the
Multihull Association, Ocean
-(I) Ed ROOriguez, ABYC;
(%) Dick Deaver, BYC; (3)
BiU McCord, BYC; (f) Dick
Lineberger. ABYC; (5) D. 11.
Sanden, PVSA.
Boat Parade
Takes Over
Lldo Isle Yacht Club's an-
nual• August Regatta this
weekend will bow to the
Character Boat Parade by
.scheduling only one race
Saturday, followed by the
usual two on Sunday.
, Channel traffic notwithstan-
. ding, race committee
chairmaD Ed Ha y e s an-
ticipates a large turnout of
Finns, Flying Juniors, Lido-14s
IA & B), Sabots (A, B & C)
and Flippers for the noon
starting gun.
Sunday's races will start at
1 p.m.
Nina Nielsen
Wins Sabots
Nina Nielsen of Newport
Harbor Yacht Club won the
Balboa Bay Sabot F 1 e e t
Championship in ii: five-race
series Saturday. There were
14 entries in the series.
Second place weat t o
Burdick Ray, Lido Isle Yacht
Club, third was D e n n i s
Dtirgan, B a h i a Corinthian
Yacht Club and fourth was
King Humann, Balboa Yacht
Clu~.
• RF.:L_IEF OR NO COST
',, --1 '"' • I' • ,
STOMACH ULC ERS
POO R DI GES TION
HEARTBURN
DU£TO EXCESS ACID
Racing, Pacific Handicap and -+-.O.er 10 Milllcm Paek•1" ef
Midget Ocean Racing Fl-t w:1tuRO's TA~•"' t.11 •old. .... l//i1Uard'• ~1)1 llelltnll1Jeaa.edd. •hid! rules. •-o1 th! c:11w eauoa ol •-..:h dliim., The race ls open to all erte111disil(Mdtoplac:e1 te...,....,.-.... , . . ,_,_tho lrTit.ated 1urlH1e1 ol. the .tom· yachts holding va!Jd raUng ac11. Thil -tint:,...,. ,,.met ti.-lni-certificates whose ownera or uud _...,.... •-IMl4I Iii lhtl proc-
skippers are members of • ~ diratloa.
yacht clubs alflltated with the ~I~-· TtW OW.. Southern California Yachting At the md"' Mtem .,.,... ••}'<Ill 1n1
A•-' 11· thorouf:bly-...m-!l atld 11tllfwd. tho: full .,_,a on. pmdlul plb wll be rdm6ld ta JOU-
'Ille first class will start at ~
11 a.m. from a line to be htitrs1
established outside of Los POSTR"S PHAl MACY
Angeles Harbor, a half-mile 1.AMS.t.T Dl UGS
&OUthwest of the Log Angeles Tltl lfTY DRUG STOlllS
Harbor Light. VISTA DRUG S
$'~~~~··~~·~~·i~~~··~···~·········1
You want to Mii some Item !
th•t you no loneer nHd but *
IOITleGM elM dft UM for It
NOT OVER $50
? ? ? ?' ·? ?
YOUR ANSWER: -
You coll THE DAILY PILOT, osk for : Cl-lflod Aclvortlslng, ond ploce •
PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
CLASSIFIED AD
AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE
2 LINIS .2 'T IMES 2DOLLA.RS a AND YOUlt CREDIT IS GOOD I • DIAL NOW DIRECT ! • :
64Z ·5678 IT•----1utl
Sears ·
GUARDSMAN ·RAYON
Full 4 Ply
30-month Guarantee
Regular Trade-In
Price •19. 95 ·
6.SOxll
Tobelest
B l1teklnlls
Pio• l.79F.E.T.
AndOld T",,..
Ask Ahont Sears
Convenient Cr edit Pla n s
SIZE "•••lor ''" SIZE ,_ ... '"' y, ....... Tr.-.111 F.t.T. , ....... , ....... r .&.T. , .... ·-..... -Tubeless Blackwall Tubeless Whitewall
6.S0.13 19.95 14.95 1.79 6.S0.13 22.95 17.21 1.79
6.95ll 14 20.95 15.71 1.96 6.95x14 23.95 17.96 1.96
7.35xl4 22.95 17.21 2.07 7.35xl4 25.95 19.46 2.07
7.75x14 24.95 18.71 2.20 7.75xl4 27.95 20.96 2.20
8.25x14 27.95 20.96 2.36 8.25x14 30.95 23.21 2.36
8.55xl4 30.95 23.21 2.57 8.5Sx14 33.95 25.46 2.57
7.75xl5 24.95 18.71 2.21 7.75x15 27.95 20.96 2.21
SAVE25% 8.15/8.25x15 30.95 23.21 2.38
8.45/8.55xl5 33.95 25.46 2.57 SAVE FROM •S to '10 9.00xl5 39.95 29.95 2.83 PER TIRE
ALLliTATE P ASSENGER Tire Guarantee
Tread Life Guarantee Tread Wear-Out
Gaennteed As•i11111: All &ilurnol ·· . "Guarantee
the tire resuhini from not1n1l road Gainnteed Apin11: Trncl -.. hlZIU'ds or defect1 in rnererial or
<workm.a.hip.
F« u-Lo"F f« rt.e life of me
ori&j-.1 tre9d.
Whit Se.... WiD Do: hp.it Mil
PUMIUrt• ., 110 ch1r1t. Ja CIJt o(
ftilure, in HChllflF fOf the tire. re--
pl-ct i1ch#"girconl1 the proponioft
o( t11tre111 rquli1t selli111 price plus
federal &else Tu-1ha ttptnentl ...........
~L
Fer How Lena: Tltc--mbn el
moadls specified.
Whel Seen Will 0.: Jond1111W£ fer
the rire, reopl8te ic. ch11gh11 the c;m..
rem rcgulu tel liq price plt11 fedenl
Ettise Ta: k• rbe fonowins allow--Monti. C..1nnteed
12 fO 24
27 to 39 ·-10% -
,--------------------------------------~----------
'
IU&I.\ Pl.K T~ a-4400, 521·4530 n MONTE GI 3-3,11 tOHG KACH HE ~.0121 l'tcO WE 8-4262 SANTA AHA K1 7-lS71 TOIW«l .542·1511 '
CANOGA '"K ~,0.0661 aU«M.11 CH .s.1004, a -'·4611 otvMl'IC & smo AH 1..s211 "°""°N" ED 2.1'''· NA 9.&161, vu 6-61s1 SANt" Ff W1NOJ 9'4..,,1 UftANO .u.1m I
I COMnONNf , • .,Sf), N£'2--5761 HOILTWOOO HO P-.5941 OlAHGt 637-21()(1 SANtA MONICA fX 4-671 1 VALln' PO 3·1461 , "'·?n0 I
C0VW. 96'.0dlf INGHWOOO Oii 1-2.521 ,~ 611-3211, 3jl•4'll 1 SOUTH «MST '1.AIA '40·3333 YllMOtn' "'-f·lfl 1
,________________________ _ ___________________ , Sears
l. • ' ~salislaclion Gu!Jran111d or Your Mo ney Back" Sh., 6Nlgh11MondoJ th....,,i. s.t.rdoy 9'311 A.JI\, to "30 P.M.
------------------------· .. ---...------.,..--.,....----·.,--~-----,-------------,-..,--,...,.-·,.---,.--,----,-----.. ....
' G1IAFl'TT1 . by l.llfY·
Ex-bunny
Now Has
Mart Tips
•
. NEW YORK (AP) -As a
~ltyboy b u n n y , Caryl
Goldman's stock in trade was
tlps. Now, Jt months later, her
t\pl ln trade are stocks. She's
a registered representative at
a brokerage house.
The road from the Playboy
Penthouse, where-bunny-suited
hostesses wor,k mainly for
tips, t() the world of Wall
Street and high finance may
seem long.
But to the petite, raven-
haired MW Goldman, tt was
only a bop, skip and a jump.
"I quit after three years at
the club, started as a trainee
at Newburger' Loeb & Co. and
now here I am,'' she says,
glancing at the electronic
stock quot.es illuminating the
wall above her desk.
"I iike it here. It's exciting
and challenging," she fi8ys, .
perched on the edge or her
chair like a , , • well, like a
bunny.
She is llny -fJve feet even
-28, and completely
feminine, but doesn't seem out
of place in the "board room"
filled with some 40 men and
only one other woman.
"I first got interested in
stock! when my father died .
He Jert my mother a Jot of
5eCUriUes and l got very in·
volved in investing them for
her."
"After a while, I decided t
might as well get in the
business and started applying
at different trokft'S."
Miss Goldman d e a I s
(rimarily with 1 a r g e in-
vestment accoun t s and
traders, taking buy and sell
orders on the phone and keep-
ing a close watch on the pro-
gress ol various stocks.
She's a well-educated ex-
bunny with a Bachelor of Arts
degree in art history from the
University of Syr3cuse where
sbe made the dean's list, a
master's degree in education
from New York UIUversity
and taught first and second
grades in Bedford-Stuyvesant
before becoming a Playboy
burmy.
"! left teaching beeause It
was no longer challenging,"
she says. "I guess it was
a bout the same situation a! a
bunny."
Senate Draws Bead
~--.
on Pentagon CO Facing
Navy Trial
WASlllNGroN (AP) -([).5.0.), wwld cul all but $20 -'Ille Ft4A Navy flil>l<r, • IN uceedl Ille _cootjl( com· Eqi.ton, (0.lllo.), ..., ..of. CAN11ERJ1A, Australia (AP)
Senate opponent& ol Pentagon million ol th• 1100 million corrier-based plaoe beinl parabte land-bued l\!tllgth." fer l)ls amendment to eut 15U -'Jbe commander ol the Aus-
rpending are drawtna a bead toUght thia year for the developed following the -The CV.A.NU nuclear at-million for retlll'Cb aod ,__ tratian aircraft carrier Mel-
on new planes and ships for a AMSA, pending a further cancellaUon ol the FlllB, the tack carrier, ltCOOd to the ,.... bowne will face a court-
series of ehallengea to items ,review of. lta feas.l.blllty. Navy's version of the coo-NlmJts claa can:ien de&lgned totype produc:tkm ol. th• 1111rtial because ot hls ship's
that could exceed the ABM in "l have been unable to trovenial 'TEX. to convert the 15 carrier fOrce MBT1U tint, whkh h • collla1on with the U.S. de-
tenns of Iona-<..,. budgetary m~pe the conclu>lon that the NOT DECIDED to oucltar power. withdrew !ut Menday aft« = Frank E. Eva01, the
impact. many legs upon wbJch the Sen. Vance Hart.Ire, ([).Ind.), Sena. Walter F. Mondale, :,e:!!f: ~~~O study :aid :i'!';. naval department
More thao '50 billion fu long· AMSA • rest.s, even in com· who said he bas not decided (0.Minn.), and Clifford P.
run costs for adv 1 n c e d bination, .cannot begin to sup-yet whether to offer an Case, (Jt..N.1.)1 whose amend· Sen. Marlow W. Coot, CR--'l1Je Melbourne's command-
mllltary hardware are Jn. portJt," he sakl, adding "The amendment to eUmlnate the ment would withhold $377.1 Ky.), and Birch E. Bayh, (I).. er, Capt. John P, Stevenwn,
volved in four ltema in the $20-case for relal?lng any klnd of $239 million for it in this million to'Jay its keel pending Ind.) are the cotp0naor1 ot ls cbar~eil • with failure to
bllllon Pl'Ol;Ufement autbotlz.a· a bomber deterrent is almost year's bill, asserted .)t might a full GAO .study of the the ~endment to trim the :i:ii:e :'red~ ~leerhad
lion bill to come up for voting as doubUuJ. •• eventually cost $25 billion. justlficaUon for it. charced alze of the anned force1 by aetermined. it was on a col-
af\er Coagress returns in McGovern estimated the Hartke called on Secretary that maintenance of • full I> the number of men wlthira'!'" lislcn eourse and failure to
September from it.a summer plane, scheduled to be ready of Defense Melvin R. Laird to carrier force in the missile from Vietnam. Sten D l 1 pu( the Melbourne's engines
recess. . in the late 1970s, might cost as provide a Pentagon coet com-age ls ••simply wasteful and estimated the CWTent 3.5 astern when he had deter.
Alt.hough unsuccessfUI in much as $12 billion, and Prox-parison study 'ft>lch h" ~1-t inef!lcle:rK.11 million man force colld be cut mined d)t eolllsion could not
their bid to block the ABM mire said Jt might come to ahowS t•tbe relative cost ol REOFFER PLAN to 2.5 million at a saving of SlO be avoided by action of the
DAILY I'll.OT 2S
I.IT'S llE fBl.Y
U )'OU ba'lt new nftl,bhon
or know of ~ movtnc
to CIUI' &re&.. ~ Ult UI
IO that W. 1D1.1 uttnd a
tdendly welcocne and help
' them to beccme acquatnttd
ln their new wnoundlnal.
So. Coast Visitor
494-0579
494-9361
Harbor Visitor
Family Weekly
Every Saturday
Safeguard missile d e f e n 1 e twice that. carrier-based fighter sirengln In addition, Sen. Thomas F. billion. del!troytr alone.
system, the bipartiun coali-1---------------.....:'----=---·---------------------''-----------------
tion of Pentagoo opponents
have won a series of skinnisb-
es m such things as chemical
and biological warfare (Cl!W).
auditing defense contracts and
limiUng soc ia 1-science
research with military funds.
But none of these has placed
more than a dent in the
massive Pentagon budget. And
even the congre5.'iooal cham-,
pions ol the military establish-
ment concede privately that
far more important things now
are coming under challenge.
ASSAILED THREE
In just one day last week,
senators assailed thrtt major
new aircraft programs-the
CSA super transport, the F14A
carrier-based fighter and the
Advanced Manned Strategic
Aircraft-and called for a
complete review of the Pen-
tagon's entire concept of air
warfare needs.
A day earlier, the Navy's
plans for a nuclear-powered
aircraft carrier came Wlder
fire.
In addition, a move ls under
way to force the Pentagon to
cut the size of the nation's ,
armed forces as troops are
withdrawn from Vietnam_
This is an area that Chairman
John C. Slennis, (0.MW.). of
the Armed 8ervices Com·
mittee already baa cited as
one in which as much as $18
billion even!\'allY could he
saved.
These are the weapons
systems expected to b e
challenged by amendments
next month:
-The CSA, on which coltl
have swelled some $2 billkm
beyood the original 13 billion
estimate due to a contract
assailed by b o t h ..,pporters
and opponents o! the plane.
FORBID BUYING
Sen. Willlalli Proxmiro, (0.
Wis.), has offered an amend-.
ment to forbid further aA
puchases after the iniUal run or 58 planes, pending a
General Accounting Office
review or costs and feasibility.
He challenged also Stennis's
assertion that it is "a good
plane," citing a wing that
cracked during static .testing
and a secret Pentagon ~
analysis he said concluded ad-
ditJonal C5M are not ju.nilled
on either military or economic
grqunds.
-The AMSA. the A l r
Force's, new long-rang e -
bomber, approV1!d last year l>Y
Secretary ol Del""" Clark
Clifford aft« beiog blocked
for years by his predecmaor,
Robert S. McNamara.
Sen. George S. McGovern,
.,
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546-7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9 to 5:30
SUNDAY 10 to 5:00
~"""""'iiiHOMI UTEITAIUDI
ICE TEA GLASSES
r -~-
--
BLONDE NYLON BRUSH
-n
<if D Remember De9wood
lumaleed1
D w.u, he did11't "'• thi1
ki11d of bnnlt. D lut t+iey'r• •¥eileble to
)'DU •I • II•• low .,..;, •.
77cu ..
l 0 l l/2 ·4 locll
M."/ WAAT
(iORCECOS
-..... ~~<?~ASH ...._
AdYtrthtd 1p1cte11~9ood'"itrrv-Autust-!-ll, I'" C en4-, .. know
+hit hlll in 5111 Fr•11ci1co thet'1 eelli119 to Tolly .. 11n1tt, it'•
1•yi119, "Your ct r i1 rolli119, yowr ,c•r i1 rolli119.''I
PLASTIC TUMBLERS
·~ 0 A mu1t f~ h11t"'• wit+.
' me11y 1111111 fry.
l1~6:.fi~::~·~~ D ,, ••• ,. ........ .,D .. '"'••k•t•
[\ '"' 111lthirH ... ,.,. ••
' . O Ch.ic• •f tw• ai111,
m111y colort.
24-1 OL ..
. 2~10 ...
TAPE TOOL
NOTHING OVER 5 BUCKS
I e•c.ept the Glidd•n, but it's
10 good, you won't c•re.J
WICKER DESIGN
TRASH CAN
l•tter looking, ru99td, snip lid won't
blow off. Rln•• cl•1n with tht host, I Now
we gotft perftc.t t bttttr mousetrap
end wt'fl h•v• it mtdt.)
99
32 Gal.
100 COUNT
PAPIR PLATES
0 Her•'••'"" .... ,.
0 H•t •tr.et 4•.t.
IMit • '"" ..i •• 1. 0 AH t+i ... 4•\"lo
thet'• 9r••I.
Ste
PISTOL NOULI ...... _ .. j 0 Tlt1 fun w1y t• w•l•r
· · th1 l1w11 or •hruti.i..,.,.
0 Squ•••• if'• •n,
rel•••• it's off.
. 0 AclJMf1bl• l~Y fr•lll
\: fl11• to i•t.
·~
* * * As Pentagon Fearful STUCCO ROLLER & LONG
199
GLIDDEN SPRED HOUSE
..__.' ............,. ............. 1 59c
50 Ft. Nylon Reinforced
.. ARDEN HOSE U.S. Falling Behind
WASffiNGTON (AP) -The
Pentagon's chief scientist said
~ay that unless Congress
changes its mood toward cuts
in research the United State.!!
could lose it.a technological
superiority over the Soviet
Union.
"We are about to lose our
lead," Dr. John S. Foster Jr.,
declared.
"We are losing our historic
superiority In d e f e n s e
research an d development
because the Soviet Union has
been increasing its research
and development in derense,
atomic energy and space while
the total American effort in
those areas has been roughly
constant.
"And now, the critical at·
litude toward the Defense
Department may result in an
act.uel reduction of the
American effort."
Foster, director or defense
research and engineering for
the Penlagon, offered a major
assessment ol the ac.icnUfic
outlook from the Pentagoo'a
standpoint in a speech before
lhe Anned Forces Manage-
ment Auoci.aUon Conference.
F061« said he Is highly Clll!-
c«ned that nne memben of
Congress who have been
crlticillng defense. cost over·
runs and waste In weapons
procurement want to c:ut the
Amerk:an defense rHtarch
program •• The administraUon
want.s to expand the elfort by
about 7 percen~ he nld.
F061'r said the Untted
States must remain the leader
In researdl to [[UArd against
"disastrous ~" In
weapona: developed in secret
by the Soviet Union. He
acknowledged that the Pen-
tagon must share a lot of tht
blame for the Joss of con-
fidence of tht public and
Coogress in the way it has
developed and prodaced
military weapons in the put.
He spoke of memben o{
Congress Hwho have grown
tired o( lecturing u.s and urg.
ing reforms.
"U we won't straighten out
our way," Foster aaid, "they
w:ill straighten us out their
way -through cuta Jn
research and development and
procurement money."
"Since all of us in defense
management have been Judi·
ed guilty, U-11 nothing that
will help now except to make
sure that all persoM un-
derstand that the altuatlCl'I Is
critical and make clur that
we are making the changes
which must take place."
Foster said he hopes 0 our
critics" will plnder the bn-
plicatlons ol potential
technological inferiorily In the
future.
"They mun rulli:e that
research and development
results are proportionate to
research and development ef.
fort, th.al research a n d
development shapes th e
weapons ol. the future. and
that It could be an un·
precedented disaster if thJs
country were to be 1urpaa&ed
technol<>slcally by the defeOle
elforts ol tho Soviet Union," Foster aald.
\
~F,' D c~~~~,~~
~ -without the exte111io11 rd h111dle,
i-~ D Roller c:o¥er ;,
repl1c:ee1Jle for ,, .... , ,, ..... , ..
129
ENTRY LOCK
r'""l~ ~:0-""""""T"";IO Neel f•r lreepint the
kids i11 end the bill
c:ollec:tors 0111.
0 Tylo delltn mod1I with
mou11fi119 herdwtr• en4
, two lieyt.
399
WOODEN TABLE LEGS
O For t1bl11, ch1in , th•t
holfl •·m1d• TV YDll 111•1
wir.d to9ether.
0 CY11 ••r th• pe1c:oclr i1
bl1clr t white, bvt yo11r
ht!r h blu1, ri9h11
• tnch.--··· .. -.......... 19c
• ln<h ......................... ~ 1 c
~£..--:.iil....-1 .. inch ....................... 3 le
'
PAINT
0 ld11I for wood, brick.
1fucco, consr•t•, 111cl
pri1111d in•t•I.
0 Pl•nty c:olen.
D S1fitf1cfio11 9u1r111t11cl
or y1ur lflO"tY ti.1ck.
6 79
GAL.
Glldden Endurance House
PAINT
e On• co•t C•ll'l1tl•ftofy
CO'ftfl,
0 To119h •ii "••• ptint
wlll ke1p your ho1111
4•t1li11t whit• f•r v••r1. 0 It'll ti.e 1te114111t wh111
• .,, w1U1 h,.,,
cr11inbl14 •w1y.
6 79
GAL.
MITAL PATIO TABLE
0 Port1ti.lllty p1u1
co1111111lt11C1.
0 H11'1dy ch1init11
hei9hf, IOll·ll'l•f 1., t1, ••
_.CL Ch•ic• of colon or
britht 1u111hl111
1t•lf•r111.
129
I • . .
·D Nylon reinforc•..i for
1tre119lh eltci /1~t
lift.
0 With 15 Y••r
9uer111t•• 11 '11 ••
r•tlr.d ti.y the11, ••
d•n't com• loo•lnt
,,, lftt.1
319
({ .
Pentrex I
'' -
GERMAIN'S PINTRIX
Buy One, Get· One fRDI
0 C9re1t forM11I• •+ ltit ••.,iAf• ffoM •M "'
the fl11e1I 11111'11' fn th• b111i111•1.
[] All 1tur1t••• f•rtlllt1r t•11f1i111 •h•l•tHI
1ro11i, .r ..... n..i "''"''""''· CJ IW111t, R• 11en11
2 GALS.
fOR 4ts
I •
'
I
I
I
I
-, ..., --..,.. ----
U II.lit Y PllOT
...... ll'(M ............. ............... _.,,MJJe
EXCLUSIVE RUN
' Bart
'•rmdu .fM.1111£ AMIT -J-G•-W--~ -"SUPPORT YOIJR -
LOCAL SHliRlf'"
IN. SMw 5t9t1 1 ,.111. •
Cnt. Set. -.s ... fr-2 P·"'·
MATINEES DAILY
-.. --·--•.loll. tlMf_....,_
ST ARTS WED.,
JOHN
WAYNE
GLENN
CAMPBELL
j@i
DARBY
•·IATlD
The 1trange1t
trio ever to
track
____ .,., ___ ----
INDS
TUESDAY
gUE 0
'G IT
a killer. -
NOW TOGETHER FOR
THE FIRST TIME
··, • EXCLUSIVELY I
• cour~~=1'.'."' •I
Jack Lemmon and
Catherine Deneuve are
"The April Fools"
-·Ii AO.-Cftoltffo_,,____
A ~o-ni ""'-Ile'-.
BARGAINS GALORE
Shop tt hOlltt' et HI/ ft•i.1 v•~r •rmc~•lr. It w•r\• eithtr ... ,,
wtHi DAILY rlLOT Dl1111·t ·lh1• t41. Phe11t 642 °16~1.
•
. -,
No Greek Playhouse A wards Slated ..
Date for Memorleo o[ the not too di,. Nominated foc lbt Tbelplan rei@ar ttb," P ldweli
tant 1,.... •uon tJ. tbe Award, 1lvtn ror tbt best for "OtMration" tnd Jeanne
Co.>lta Joi... Clvlc Pl11"°"" perlorm1111c• In 1 r<>lt ol •OJ CocrtU and Tom Tltul, boll! 'Music' will be l'ftllJ jlmd Sa11Jtday0 '1:W.u,~.,.;;:;;;,;K;;1th:;;y~La;;;d;=d=f"='='lr=·=for="=Mlddle=="=the=="""=l="=, olgbt when the -.ye1r-old,
community theater 1 r o up
.lt&get Its IMU&I awatdl ~
Qijet at the Coota Mooa Goll
and Coubtry Club,
' NigotJat.ions to preterit the
fo11.hccmin1 Lyrlr; Optra . of
Oranae County ptodut;Uoo · of
'"lbe Sound of Musle~ in. the
a~t· Thealtr arttr j l's
SepleJnM:r fun In Laguna
Beach endfd amicably thl!
wttt with a declsion to Wive
tht project at thlt Umt,
Pf:rforme:rs from th ~ put
tellOD will be honored lD five
categories, 'f'hlle two ad-
ditional awards, n e 'ff to the
playhouse ~ year, also will
be presented. The dinner ~
scheduled for I p.m., preceded
by a 7 o'clock aoclal hour.
1 new thtetrt ••1t«lenw
Jay: A SellSllY Celebration
Fri ... s.t.
8:30
Sunday
7:30
Tlcktfl: $2
Call 675-1120 "The Sound of Mwic," star-
rtn1 . Marni Nixon and Alan
Bergmann and direc~ by .
Kent ,Johnson, with Euaene
Ober as musical di.rtctor, will
be presented In a new pro-
duction in the 1rvinf Bowl on sepc. 51 •. 12 and 13. Also
feahl'ed in principal .Upi-
porting roles are Andret
JOiilin °'IS the Mother Abbea
and Su ·Harmon as Els.a with
Alfred Dennis in the role bl
lifax.
Members oC the C I ' i c
Playhouse Patrons Association
will, award a plague to the castil;~~~~~~~::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;=;
and director of their favorite
e_lar, _to_ be. ch01en frilm the
Dte-ptoclUCUon season which
lncluded "DrNm Oltt," '11be
Im..,W V er b lo Love,"
''Generation.'' .. The
Remaruble Mr, P~
er" and "MJadle of the Night."
h1 a statement issued Tues-
day. Ji. Jeln Bedell, Lyric
Opera president,· said that
among the difficulties en-
countered In con1ldtr1D1 plans
to exteod "'lbt Sound or
Music" run to the Greek
Theater \\'ere "~ast changt11
necessary under Actors Equity Oh, You Kids!
r u I c, adaptatlon of 1 et s Three or the ladies from ''Ladies' Night in a Turk·
de!igned for Irvine Bowl and ish Bath" al the Laguna Playhouse compare gams
lack of time for proper re-in this scene from the playhouse's last 1bow, play-direction o! the cast for the , ing Thursday through Sunday. From left are
Lo! Angeles_ stage. ' Betsy Hewett, Blanche Mickelso n and Pat Needer·
Talk!I were lnitl!ted by
Greek Theater general direc-_!ll __ a_n __ ----------------~
A special award Will bt
giYen in metTJOl1 of Linda
Ba!!"', winner of the lllfl;tl
be1t 1elrtu 1ward and star of
"Dream a1r1:11 :wtio died Jut
December.
Notnlnees f()I' the regular
a,,.ards and the pl1y11 for
which they ore nomlnlltd are:
Best actor -DaYld Goodall
("lrregµlar _Verb"), Robert
Engman ("Generation"), Ron
Flllan (11Penny~cker") and
Hap Graham (' Middle of the
Night"),
Best actress -Audrey
Snitzer ("lregular Verb"),
Francy Walsh ("Generation"),
Pat Harp ("Pennypacker'")
and-Theresa Smith ("Middle tor James A. Doolittle, with 1.
B. Kornblum ol Performing
Arts ManageD)ent, Laguna
Beach, repmentln1 L y r 1 c
Operat A.ssoclatfon.
_ cl the Night")_
Bedell noted tha\ the "SOund
of MW!lc" perronnance11 "are
rapidly reaching the sellout
point in Irvine Bowl." He ad-
ded that "if we bad been able
!<> trwport the productlo!J to
the Greet Theater, with ili
larg~r apaciJy, many more
people would be able to attend
what we believe lB 11otn1 to be
a brilliant re-creation of the
Rodgers and Hammerstein
classic musical."
'P l' · p -d' ' s f Beat 51.1pporting actor -00 S ara lSe e Rick Gun.rt !"Dream Girl"),
Ed IJtllt ("li'regular Verb"),
("Gentr1Uon11 ), Paul Gracey
As Playlwuse Opener 1;;;;;:~"' •• =~:="r=-.. =M=ur·=·1=1
"P=en-
The Huntington 8 e a c h they played In "See How They
P.layhouJ& ·will inaugurate Jl1 Run'' will be Paul Sullivan aa
1570 aeaaon wUh the Brill!h Lionel TOop and Colin Gulver
comedy "P.00!'1 Paradise," as Reverend Humphrey. Olher
scheduled to open nert month cast members are Lilly An
, 1 • r • •
Lu1l11z
~-i~ -
for a f!Ve-weekend run. Payne, Steve Uhler, Matlin PlllT IUN
Phlllp King's ·farct is pal-Fucll!, Valere:e How and Rita &1r1ltli"• '•••
terned after his earlier play, K.Lmer. "WHATIYlll HAPPINID
Velma Sun, executive direc-
lor of Lyric Opera, 11id that
"it is Lyric Opera's sincere
hope that perhaps next season
we will be able to present a
production in association witb
the Greek Theater."
"See How They Run," also "Pool's,, Paradise" opens Sept. TO AUNT ALl,lt"
staged by the Huntington 12 for fl\te weekends of Friday ''HOW TO COMMIT
Beach Playl\ouse, and will in-and Saturday production, clos-MAallAGI"
elude many of the same Ing Oct. 11. Tickets may be lab Hop• -Je<ki• Ql1110ft CoatlH•• S••4.y 1 :JO P.M.
characters as the earlier _ _:o<'.'.:d•::•:ed~by':..:::ca::ll:::in~-g'.:~::::::;t. __ 1'::=========='11 show. Howard Solomon is
directing.
~t in, the
"Mdrvelous . ; • Brilliant . , . 4 Stars"
"tHREE l'ENNY Ol'ERA"
CLOl•f lATllltEl .. Y
DON'T MISS TNIS Git.AT MllSICALI
M-,.,. lttHn11tleM '4UU
Crossword Pm.de
ACROSS
1 StH-
importanl
pr rs on 5 Exchan9r for mC>Oty
9 Very bad
14 In g'ood
phys ital
shape
15 Bone:
Comb. form l• British
subdivision
17 Entrancrw1y
18 In the
vicinity
11! Item of door
hardWlff
20 Strip 2Z Mars or Arts
24 Ont hl\Un9 crt1ain golf
shot
25 Btfort
2b Concern
of F 81
and RCl.!P
28 Ttltphont
directory
entry
30 Cartltd on
withaul
words
45 Ovr1 ly wordy
•7 Makes s1d
49 USA, C1n1d1
or Ut•lto
51 Ba rrel part
5Z Pr ompted
54 Eag le on
par 3 hole
55 Superltlivt
su ff ix
5BStop by
a b1rr1l!r •l French
social affair •l Kind of
exca¥1tion •s l11vrntor t "The
ti owe Drath ol •7 Refuse lo "
rnact Into 7 li!alt animal
law I Biid ti• fllng11kt 'kind cf wood
70 Ont that )0 Y11kon city
perfor ms 11 lealhtr
an 1ct lorec1st
71 Actor IZ Otslrt
Novello lJ i.1tl'ltr
72 Punish by natty look
wh1ck in9 21 Nattow·
13 Fln f 's wooden sttill
pftrtner 23 Barrltr In •
74 Pickpockets: w1ttrcou1se
Siano 27 Exercise 15 Rtmovr 29 Family
ffclll sighl membe1:
' Informa l
00\VN JO .. ---·-
H•rry:
11211•9
37 Cl1afl ts
Lamb
38 Rtlalivt
J' Div iding
mt mb1i1rnes 41 lttm
of larm
equipmen t
4• P1onoun
48 Continuously
SO St1tr: Abbr.
SJ Hous t
of ---
55 Cl1cu ---5~ Ptrl. to p1rt
of Europe : Abbr. 51 Nu mbrr
58 Gl11s
product
51f Pl1nt
•O Charge upon
. PLUS WALT DllNIT'S
"WtNNII THI POOH"
T-r 11 l :• . •:• ,. ......
IEST
DFWIW:.1
Wli>NER6
ACADEMY AWARDS
~"··~* ...___~,, ,J,Mfll,.'J.~.
....._ --,.. C.-Ml Mllr '7WMI
OPIN Nl•HT~1 1:45
MAT. SAT. I-SUN. 9t 2:00
YOU'LL LOVE HERBIE
the fncredlble lltlle car!
·----_ ... -AUO PLAT INQ. -·
Welt Dl1"•r'1
"INCRIDflLE JOURNEY"
32 Indian cl
Ont1rlc 3• Marine 11nim1ls·
2 words
40 Grinding
too ~
l Plier ror
11mprr1tu1t
taking
J words
Jl Aldtrs
and 1' pens JJ "Toe bid!"
l• Taptr cH
rea I rs tatt J -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;~;;;~~;;'j 62 J1 cob's
"" 64 All 41 Llgllt
metal: Abbr. 42 VJlntry
wrather
cond ition
44 Raja'• wile
•
"
"
"
<
....
Z Lawt!I
po!n l
3 Color
4 ··--nolrl!
5 PtfSSl!S 1g11nst
)5 lndonf111n
,.,,~.
3• Cul Into tlmbt11
..
•
ccnsidt1td
one by 011 f
••Filthy abode
b8 Upper
rxtrtmlty
1121169
"ENOBMOUILY IJITDEITDfGI
mnilUAL. OITUAT ... A FAii.FAil
ABOVE AVERAGE FILM A80UT W.l,lll
IT'S IN A NEW BAGI'' -0AYIOOOLOMAN,WCB!1.RA010
. ':'"""'I tu.~l'ICl'-'1$11! .......
·~•l.lfWm~
:R1Jo ............. _ ._ . I; I ' : . .. -' .. ' .
DAllT
(en1l111,1ou1 fl'INl'I 1 :00 '"'
Setvrffr e!ld Svfldof
Cenllt1vov1 frem 2:00 'M ,_.c_ ·-... .....,._..~-··""''· ......... ,., ....... oo ....
-......
•canumr -, f !OO PM ... ~.
"SIPl'llf •HI tK•l ll(llff"
1,, ................. )
_, 11:11 PM
S.. ~ si.. '' Ll+e •It.a N
trilATIONALOINl!ltAL~AllOH -NOW PLAYING!
Fo-x'"iiTK CUST N.Aan• w s... .... ,,_, ...... • M'411~
IOI OPPICI OPINS 1 :M
SHOW ITAITS I :it
COOLED IY
Rl,Rl•IRA TIOll AC•n o• ••• PAlllN• .........
A'ADIMY AWA•D
WIJllNll IN
Sn.UIM ,.,.
IMMY AWA.ID
WINNll
-Al.SO COMRY CO-MJT--
IOi HOn • JAClll •LIAION IN
"Hew To· Commit MorrlaCJ•" I Ml
MUST IND "TUHDAY
"CHITTY" 71Ml 11:tl
''INDlhS IUMMll"
AT t:JI OllLY
e AND e tnUtNll A&AIN IT POf'UU.I DIMAND
ENDLESS RAVES fOR
THE ~'ENDLESS SUMMER"
"CONTINUOUS £XCITTM£NT WUMT ... l P!lfm
... HYPNOTIC BEAUTY .• ; lliOV1t OUTDFSIHI."
BUOYANT FUN." ·-·--v1nc1nt Clnby, N.Y. lJmes
"SOMETHINI VERY Sl'ECIAL."
-Atchtt Wfn1r1n, N.Y. Post
2nd Sm•sh WHk! .
D••n Joft11 -ludtly H1c•1t1
h1 W•lt Dh!19I'•
"THE LOVE BUG" , ...
"Tho INCREDIBLE JOURNEY"
Japantse Movies Every Tuesday Night
' .................................... .
SPECIAL NOTICE TO OUl PATIONS :
I TM pklurn Ill this tm: INiy bl ceni .. 1rlCI by ttmt to ~ -': 111lllal1 !Dr cftlldt .. incl YWf1I ,eo,i. -11111 r"11lr1 per1nlll dlt-u .. 11111.
• "CASTLE KEEP" IRl I
: C~tr1ry to •dvtrll1l11C1 Dl"!'Cf!G -uw.!ral •NI 111911rlll!I •'*•I iwti1rt, '.(OUr'll *P'-under 11 (nett 10 Wiii not bl ldm!Uftl le Pa.:~ !Jc Thn11r1 19 1e1 Ille Cl'U t lt:turn 1111111 In this Im: ~nltu K·
tomp1nltd by ptrf'llt or ldult futrdl1n. ..................................... .,
At lost It's~
•
Jde W•r" GI" Ce111plNU "TRUE GRIT" ,, ..
'Theodore lllt•I
' • "MY SIDE Of Tho MOUNTAIN"
........... 4,4 ,., A4•HI
1eelMll ..... ._......fflllffe
Jnlls...llW ...
.lit';
ln ... w °'4~• IR11111111•t
hrt '-'--htlt ,... "CASTLE KllP" , ............... .....
"SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL
SH!RIFf"
Nt tllt ......, tf wttl llt tlfMltlM ....... ae .. m-1;"" .., """' .,. ";\~'; .. . ............ ~......... ..... ....
ft!ld r!E1
TQ T.mftc ,.,,.,.
"THE OREliN SLIME" ....
THE VAMPl~E KILLERS"
............. ~ ............. .
MILD om '' H>PUU.• llMAND ......,_ ......... "4
"THI CHAIRMAN" .... IHA•ON TATI
"VALLIY 0, THI DOLLS" 1••••··· ...... ~ ........... ..
HMtf 'IWIN C ... lt Ctrftlt" .$175 "ONCE UPON A
TIMI IN ;,~1 WIST"
Pit Dtll l{lllff't Alll ''"'Cit
CARIOAI "THE LOVE GOD?"
"""_....... •• , ... ,h
•
DELINQUENT
TAX · LIST
SUWr!bld lttlCI 1-n le btfore
-flll• ffl'I Choy Ill' AugUI!, lHt
Ill ffllt 1;.t Ille follewlno ... \l...:I for llM -ell th..,,: --Ao;~ ot Acr• Mcl-Mdltloll Ml-Aclfolnl119 ~m-Mmlnlllrtlol'
Mrnl'-Mmlnl.Stllor
A4mt•-lol:lmlnlslr•1rlx
Adm1:--A11mlnl1tr1trllr
~--.::__,,
Amtt'-Amerlc1n
""P-Autt4o0r'J P1n;:1I Number
APl-AP1r!m..,1
AHr>-Assoc:llllGl'I ""°'-"*"°'la•• All)l-Attorney
A111--A11enu.
kll-& .. cn
Bii lltWHlli et.-a•nt or !laail.
l ldt411lldlr$ ll!k-BIOCk
81v.J.-8ou!h'•"' Bros.-8rollltrs
C/A-Ctnltll Molt C~tln Clr-Clrc~ C/L-Ctnlff l.Jn1
CMWP-Co.1111 Munlcl~I Wlltt
Co-CounlY Olr ComP1nY c.omnwtlll--Con\"""1-tlh Conllr-COl'lil<vetion
~111 ....
Cor-Cotnl'f
Corp.-CO!"JIOl'tllo!I
C1r-Cerller Cla-C.,.,1'1 cvn-unron OAf'-DlsctltMoll .. FollOWI
00-"" DDS--Oeoec11
D«r-Otcrte Dftc-DQcrlbed or DtKrlp!lon .,.,_ __
Oi6p--0~1
Ol5t~1trict
oi ..... 01wr1ion
Dr-OrM
E-E111 E11ml-f:1Mmml
E-EGll(lli(Mi Ely-E11t1rly
Enlrpri-E111trprlM5 E1t-E1t1l1
t i .~ cr!Mtl •l~nd .. lllr'lll
E1:-EllCe,f or fKlull ....
El!K-e.uic..tor
•
f .. M-F1~ 6 M~tt
FIJl-F01'"1na
FtKl-FtKtionel ,,_,_
fwy-FrM-Y
Gdn-Gverai..
GG 81...a-Gttden Gro~1 Bl'td.
HIS llvd--HuntlnglOt! INdl Blvd.
H tt-Htltlll1
Hwy-Hlfih•I.,
I ITIJl-1 "'Pf'OvetMnt
lmf>S--lmpnW-b lnc-lncll,ldff19 or lncorPlll"•llll Incl-Inc.Ml.,.
inl-lntl'l'Kt
ln_l_lnMtll
lnYet-ln¥at"'9!!1
lrr90--lrr19vllr ,__..,
LA-l.0$ AnQ.tft
L.n--1.Mnt or Lint ~-i.Ocatlon °' Leatlll Lp......j.b Pendma L~lcll\Mld $urv•)IO'
LI-Loi
Lrd-Llmlt.d
MD-M1ln1en1nu Dl1trld
..
DAILY PILDT %&
LEGAL NOTICE LBOAL NOTICE
•
!
• •,
•
~I • • I
I
• • •
I
l
,,
• "
.. .•. _ ...... __ .
•
H DAJLY PILOT
I ~ • •' •~ • ' .. .. ' •' * 'H •0•1•••,,..,,. ·~·-.. " . . " .
LEGAL NOTICZ LEGAL·!llOTICl!i LEGAL NOTICE
• •• . " ·-
LEGAL NOTICll
PROPERTY IN
LAGUNA BEACH
UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
LEGAL NonCE.
PROPERTY IN
PORTION OF
SAN JOACjlUIN
SCHOOL DISTRICT
COOi! AltlA 11•11
PROPERTY IN
PORTION OF
CAPISTRANO
UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
coo• Alll!A n•n
CODI! AltlA b-m
C.001 All:U. n•
CODI AltlA •-tel
C.001 AllU,,.,...
""'""""' Jlmei s .•• ,. 111~1-0S, ,, '°" Lat ts. IJ27.S7. Murct11t. c .... ,'" 1 .• ,.,. .. ,, ""' ...,. ~.l1.
COOi AltlA IMN
LEGAL ~ones LEGAL NonCE U!:GAL None& LEGAL ~one& LEGAL NOTICS
I
l!Msd'Q', ~ust. 21, 1969 DAILY 'ILOT ff
t.EGAL None& LEGAL NO'l'ICE
I
I
!
l
• '
• I
I
•
I
i
11
I
f
--..--~ ... , . . . ~------__,_... . ·--~ -----
' Q DAll'I PllOT ThO'ldl)', August 21, 1969 ~;-~-;-----:;;;-;--~-:== Nevada Has
Problems
-·n··-·-···--· ·-·-····---oiiiliing
Diverted
To Laos ·
DAILY PJ.tOT
'With Drugs WANT A·D·S
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP )
-The "beautlful people" and
dispiaced hippies are con-
tributing 14 a burg...,ing
narcoucs and marijuana pro-
blem in Nevada, says the head
ol a state agency set up to
cootroi the problem.
"But the fact is that our
problem here is very small in
relation to California's, even
on a per capita basis, .. said
Thomas Carrigan on Monday.
"I wouldn't want to live there
and fight tbat one."
Carrigan is the head of the
&tale narcotics division
established this year and
given $100,000 to fight drug
sale and use.
"We believe the big supplie:t
are coming in from Southern
California, San Francisco and
Arizona," said Carr i gan .
Arizona and S outh e rn
Calliornia are shipping points
for drugs brought in from
Mexico.
Residents of San Francisco's
Haight-Asbbury hippie colony
art being driven out as crime Business With Pleasure
WASHINGTON (AP) -The HOUSIS l'OR SALE
IWI w•lcbt ol American aJr Genor•I 11111 Jl?"U that, WU hlltinc, North 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~
Vietnam unUl lut fall's boD I' -~ "" 11o1t bu ...., diverted • Exceptional Income
against e n em y lnfiltratlon·
' traill in LaOI; p e D t a & 0 D Property sources tePort.'
The bombing bad been 10Jng
on for years · but was in-
tenalfled sharply after last
Oct, 31 when then-President
Lyndon B. Johnson decided to
stop• all aUacb agal.nst North
Vietnam.
Pentagon sources found it
strange, therefore, that Senate
Republican.Leader Everett M.
Dirksen should say that the
.f -2 :BR unia l -1 BR iut!t
house -2 BR Early Amt'ri··
can dtslgned home on l111e
landscaped lot. Must self to
liquidate boldinp.
Lachenmyer
ReJltor
1860 Newport Blvd., CM
CALL~
Eves, 646-2290
Nixon adininiat:railon might
find it neceBS&ry "to do a
bombing job" Jn Laos.
Dirksen, r<portlng last week I z=:==:==:=z=:==:==z
on President Ni.Ion's remarks
to congreuional leader1 after
touring Asia, said that Laos is
becoming an inflltration Point
tnto South Vietnam.
DOVER SHORES
BAYFRONT
HAVE TO DO rr
syndicates move in on the An amateur painter in Les Sables d'Olonne, France.
drug trade there, said Car-finds a way to combjne business and pleasure as
rigan. They are settling iii temperatures soar. Adding an umbrella to his easel,
he kept cool In the water and drew attention of an
admiring public.
"And if perchance we had to
do a bomblnc job there, then
of course. we would have to d&
it," the senator from Illinois
S!>ectacular .f bedroom home
with an unusual blendlni of
el@&ance &: warmth. l.al'lt!',
formal dining room with
split brick flooring. A spiral
stairway· leads to a mqnil-
cent high cei.llnged living·
room. Priced at $129,500.
Call for app't. Nevada, Jdaho, and Montana ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-told newsmen. and bringing their fa vorite
weed with them.
The "beautiful people" -
non-conformist like the hi~
pies, but over 30 and rich -
also represent a problem when
they come to Reno or Las
Vegas to gamble.
"When the beautiful people
are here for a wee kend, we
have problems," said Car-
rigan.
Reno and Las Vegas are two
of the three areas where
Nevada narcotics tr a f f i c
flourishes. The other is Lake
Tahoe, where an Jncrease Jn
narcotics arrests was first
noted in 1967.
It has snGWballed since lhen.
Reno had 68 such arrests that
year, 284 last year and 236
through July 1 of this yeer.
The trend in narcotics and
marijuana use among young
people in Nevada follows
California, but with a time Jag
of two years, said Carrigan.
"Marijuana is still hopping up
where it is available.
ORAMA
At Fashion Island Aug. 21-22-23
• .Outa SIGHT
SOUNDS
YOU
Can
Win
USE THE AUTOMATIC VOTING MACHINE TO PICK A PICTURE
VOTORAMA at FOTORAMA
Pre&en ted by
The Grand Prize
SllllO CONSOLE wltto FM-AM RADIO, FM M ULTll'l.IX .. d STIRIO RICORD PU.YU-$159.'5
Next 2 Prizes
2 PM·AM POATAILE U.DIOS with IUILT0 IN CASSETTE PU.YllACKf.RICOADING UNIT-$109.'5 nch
Next 3 Prizes
J FM..AM "CUtl" CLOCK UDl05-$U.'5 HCh
20 More Prizes
·20 SITS OF S STEREO RfCORD ALIUM>-Ap P'•xlmatoly $25 ptr HI
tAlf ,ti••• c.tH1tt1tr 1f Pl1die KOCM, lnd~dl119 l'l'lor1 th111 l,OQO fr•• Joh1111y M1thi1 •i"tltt te h 9)~111 1w11y111 mt ll duri119 Fot111m1I
..1
Picadilly
In London
Not Same
LONDON (AP) -" .•• l'd
... rather h an g around -P~c
cadilly Underground -living
off the earnings of a high clas.s
lydy •.. "
The wisUul song was sung
by thousanm of British
soldiers u they left London to
go off to World War II.
The United States has never
acknowledged it publicly to
avoid putting supposed 1 y
neutral Laos in an em-
barrassing diplomatic position,
but American planes have
been clobbering North Viet-
nam's supply routes and
storage areas in Laos since
early in the war:
The only official reference
to this ii an acknowledgment
that the United States con-
ducts "armed reconnaissance"
flights in Laos at the request
or the LaoUan government and
shoots back when fired upon.
Pentagon sources report the
following statistic,, t o il-
lustrate whan ts now hap-
pening in the hidden war in
Laos:
During last October, before
Johnson directed the bombing
halt to encourage Paris peace
negotiations, U.S. planes were
flying about 12,000 sorties a
moolh-apinst Norlh -Vietnem.
Attacks' in Laos were running
about 4,700 sorties, or in-
john macnab
17141 642-123S
901 Dover Drive, SWte l2t>
Newport Beach
$24,500!
TREES! TREESI
Privacy assured by block
wall fence -majestic trees.
Generous 11zed bedrooms,
formal dininc room. Bullt-
in range, oven I; siishwub-
er. Prestige area. 540-1120
TARBELL 2955 Harbor
Ready to Expand?
3.SOO sq tt ol gracious livin&,
S enormous bdrms, 3 spac-
ioul balhlli. See to appreci-
ate. Color this one succas.
To see CALL DAN LEE
S4(}.1J51 Heritage Real Estate
Cool & lovely
Ivan Welle' new dl'!sign. Ct.
yard pool I: sweeping view
of bay. 4 bdrm 3 ha + pow-
cler nn. Formal din rm.
Family rm w/lrplc I: wet
bar. Key at Rey J. Ward Co.
1430 Galaxy Dr. 64&-1500
Their sons and daughters
don't go to war. They probably
don 't often live off the earn-
ings of high cliss ladies. But
'hundreds of them do what
their fathers longed to do -
they just bang around the
subway entrance in the gar-
ish 1littering heart of Lon-
don.
Piccadilly Circus -in Bri·
tain a circus is a traffic roun-
dab<>rt -throbs to the beat of·
boogo drums. Bearded and
beaded hippie musicians are
the psychedelic squatters in
what is npldly becoming Lon..
don's "people's part."
dividual flights, mo!11hly.
NEARLY TRIPLED 4 Bedrm-$19 ,850
With the bombing halt. No Down G.I. ~• tn • --I tri Jed ~jzned for a large family. so,~es ~ near Y P 2 baths. Kitchen With IUXW'Y to U,800 in November. In December, Lao ti an built·iM. Park like yard.
fli11hts peaked at 15, O O O 1 ~Cl~os~i~ng~<m'.,':!t..:,.,..=~~~ sorties, declined to l4,llllll last1.TARBELL 146 0604
January and settled to an IS THE PRICE HIGH?
avefage thereafter of about Not this 1 -yr young 4 BR
MOVE ALONG 12,500 a month. Spanish style home at only
Clustered afound the statue During the summer the ~·~ ~ 2 baths, g~en bit. monthly rate has dropped as m kitchen. Large hv nn, of Eros on .the triangular traf~ low as ll,500 sorties. Pentagon w/w cpts, :lrpl. Immac
fie island, the drum·thumping, officef1 say this is due to the cond. No down VA terms.
guitar-strumming d r t r t e r 1 P w c 546-5440 from Brilain, America aod bad weather of the monsoon · · ·
Europe camp until the bobbies season over Laos this time of 5 Beclrm + Pool
move them along al dusk. i:'tof~ i:\1r::l:n.14 any + 3 Bath•$26, 950!
Many remain in one spot for The bad weather affects F~ily living at a prict .~
hours. both sides adversely however 11t your budget -see thil!. "I'm waiting for the col-. , n • · Rich wood paneling, hand-
lapse 0£ capitalism," said a U.S •. Pilots c~ t Y as many 80me bar. E!erant firepla~
South African as he pauses in ml&sions, w~le enemy trucks Excellent area. M0..1720
bis reading and looked out have more dif!iculty on muddy TARBELL 2955 Harbor-
over the wandering flutists , roads and tr11ls through Laos. ! Oi;iii;i;i ... ..,..,..,..,...,
bare 'driff bedrolls d North Vietnam is estimated * 3 BR l 'h baths, carpets, 1 mi s, · an currently to be sending about mangled cola cans. drapes, large fenced yard. A French boy with shaggy 10,000 to 12,000 men per month vacant _ immed. possession.
red hair danced wildly to Into South Vietnam, virtually $20,150.
harmonicas and' drums. Four,_•_ll_vi_·_a_La_os_.______ Wells--McCardle, Rltrs.
American Boy Scout,, walked LEGAL NOTICE 1BlO Newport Blvd .• Clrf.
nervowily onto the island. "Be l--~~~====~-548-7729 anytime
Prepared," said their badges. KO~~rJc~ 0Jr::~=~~rvm:N"1t':, t111 ""'~~~'!'!!~~~"" American tourists a r e c11v counc11 "' "" c 1rv o1 eo.11 Mn• BY OWNER $23,900
al ood I hilling wm llokl • l'Ubllc P!ffrlnt1 or1 TllHd11" 3 Bdrm 2 ba crpl< "-ways g or a s or ~••mber 2. 1'Nt. 111 1'111' C&ul!dt •• •• ., ...... ~ •• :lrplc. 2 patios. 6% 1io GI two for the island people after Ch•mtitf' •1 t11t c1tv H•ll, n F•lr Drlvt, 1 __ .,. ~ .. ·1a perf So COiii Me ... •f ltll holir of 7:30 Jl,m., or .,... .. <:O'W"'•u.:n a gui r ormance. me •• -,,.. ... ,"' ,, Th• m•tier 1n1' be entrepreneurs do a thriving Mard 1)11 111to 1111111io.. Df LH s ,..11h11, 12'1s • • Sol/Ito 8r1nd 8&ultv1rd, Gletld&le, hi busmess selling homemade retone tt>e hillowlnt •~lbtd rn1 l'FW>
rings and J>endanb spread on ert' ,,':':,.!,~ L'; ~.C:.~1111 Tract an
the. asphalt. the IOUll'I akle ol Mtrrlm•c WI' flll of :!'600 H1rbor 8aultv1nl, "' 11r1 SLEEP ON GRASS .,.rtkl,ilarlY deKrltled ·111 I "'"' °" Ille Mel 1v1n1bl1 for publlc lnt111Ctlon lrt Most spend their nights 1n ""' office o1 tM c11v Clerk.
sleeping bags on the graSJ of ni!'~~;r:.,: :~r~~1::..,:•.~~
nearb~~~reenbouPart. 'nle police :;:= :),1 tie':~:":! :'~ c=:u :;Pfi: rouse wocm· a t I a.m. c11v o1 c11111 Mna t11 a1kf RUGN "'"~
Harold Froebel, a 2CJ..year-t1on R·l~K ""'EST
old shirtless German wearing citv 'clerk o1 the
lach d f ded denim CllY o1 Co.11 Mer.1
a mus e an a s, l'ublllhld Ottiwe aiu1 O•ilr l'llDt, said he came to London for a A111U1t t1. ,,.. 1~
month 's vacation, •'but so far LEGAL NOTICE
I've onl,y seen Piccadllly1----------
Cirais and Green Part." MOTtC• ~:41:':.o1To•• He bad only one pound -IU'•••oJt COUJtT 01' THI S2.40 -when he arrived. But ITATJ 011 CAL1"0""''" l"OR TH• COUNTY 01' OllAH•• like many other low-budget N .. •~n11 Eurtvwu1n students he got E11•1e et JOHH E. A.MDEltSOH, • wr-• t Otceatfd.
past the ~gratlon officer cr:g~~~e .. "m!4e,~v ,:~~"~
by borrowmg money from ""' 111 •-1111v1nt1 ct11m1 tMIMI n.
another traveler and retumin& Hkl ~' 11'1! """'1""' '° fl1t "*"'· • W1111 tM nee:.,,,,. 'l'Wdlln, In fM .me. it onct he was inside the coun-°' t111 c1er1. " t111 •llovt llltltlMI (Ollrt, or
t hi ,,._, "'-< whtl ""' .._,., f'I · vwdler., tD the YMenlgned .. Ille tffit. The police would like to Ill L..l.80WE ANO Vl!HTRl!IS. AttorMn. ·c11 Int Wht Flr•t $1ntf1 LOI A.ftlotllt. move the 1 ers along, but c1111°"'11, to02t wtokf\ " the ... " " J•unfortunately th""''re allowed i...iroes. '11ttw111M11n1trwc1 hit •II"''"",.. . ~., _..lnlrlt "' lllt lltltit of llkl .... l'lt. to 1t.ay," wd one officer on w11t11n"""' month& lftfl' tflt flrtt 11111111iu.
the crowded traffic island. ''°(;,:'!., "'"~~;. ,,.,
"We just hive to tet Uled to , AL NOTA. .1 ,. Adlnlniltr•lof J . ... ......... . ~ ....,. ...,.... ......
BIGGE;ST BOTHER ~~= ti:: :::~lllU The island peopl~ say that 1m W•t Ill,.. ,.,...
next to the police, the street %:: "1ri:1'"M~nu..,.
sweepers and water trucks are Atllro!•n "' M<11111htr1,... ••· b. ho 1'1.lbllsMd Orlntt Cout 0.lb' l'lltf, 1.11\:'lr i.ggest ther. At 4 Alltl.ltt 11. 21 11'111 switmtiitr 4 11•
every afternoon, the police 1"" • 1SSHt
eacort the sweepen through
the crowd ond water truck BOAT BUFFS
comes by to hose off the day's Al111011 leck•hv ;1 th1 •11ly
accumulation of trash. full-tlll'I• t.oiflr19 1tlliot we1•t11t
Ean Luc,. U.year-old Fren-011 Illy n1w1p1p1t i11 °''"''
ch visitor Who says be is a Co11~•w. Hit •• ,1urlvt e.or•t•t•
surrealist painter, grumbled ef lto1tift9 1l'HI v•chti,.. n•w•
when his N<:ksack w as 1 I• I -.a., f1th1t• •f th t DAILY drtnched. PllOJ. ·----__,.-..,...:o: ..
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
HOUSES FOii SALi .
Generol 1000
Investors
Attention
Eutsidt' Colt& Meaa &nd
just a block from ti. S.A.
Country Qub. Six pride of
ownership Uraits. S twO bed-
room units plu, l one bed-
room cqttaee. Co~crete
drive, separate patiof, top ·
ahape throua:hout, plenty oI
privacy 1or all. $69,500 fU1l
price and excellent flnanc-
inr available.
"For A Wise Bi.iy"
Colesworthr & Co. ·
542-1'?1
MESA VERDE
Tllis immaculate 3 BR fam.
Uy home can be youl'I by
assuntlni 5% % FHA LOAN.
A mWlt see to appreciate. . Askin<
$26,950
TWO ON LOT
EASI'SIDE. Newer 3 bdrms
& older 2 bdrm, dt:tacbll!d 2
car a;atqe ~ workshop. Ex·
terior recently painted.
Only $29;950
" ----
PERRON
~:/ .... .-r ....• ., ...
PLACE OF DIGNITY
?1-fany years of satisfaction
att yours for the asking .
SEPARATE BUNGALOW.
Double doors lead t0 Ughted
outer court yard. with pner-
ous plantings, community
Olympic pool, patio and Bar.
B-Que. Ta~ pll'!uure from
extensive uae of quality wall-
to-wall carpetin&'. Cozy fire.
place, built-in cook center
with dining area for famil)'
feaSting. 1WQ SPACIOUS '
BEDROOMS, two lwrurlous
bath's. See this delightful ,
,.ctult> catt-free retttat, tie. ,
fort you buy. EXCLUSIVE
\VESTQ.IFF VI L LA for
thoee Wbo care. FULL
PRICE ONLY $48,500!
Evenings Call 548-3265
A Duplex For
No Money Down
Owner will sell to vets, it
show& a gOO(f return, always
rented, both are 2 bedroom
1 bath units in a good atta
of Costa Mesa, originally
there "'~ .f now there js
only 1 and this is it. O!vn,.
er anxioUJ, askini price h
132,450.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
293 E. 17th St., 64&-4494
UTILE
HACIENDA
\Vi th del uxe aputment;
in Cbrona del Mar,
on 2 ~Lots!
Cute as can be with
adobe walls A: fireplace.
Formal dining room,
2 bedrooms, 1 bath,
larie kitchen \\1lich
opens onto sunlit patio.
Won't last ,.,
151,500
REALTORS
673-4400
VACANT
5 Bit 3 BA cpls/drpa.
Lndacped 961 Pa-. Act
Open.
SA Hits; Vacant 2 BR duplex.
Sil pr $140 DlO. You paint,
u Is. IM optiOn or tell.
~ Birth. Allo * 3 BR la tam rm, trplc, cpll, drpl,
bit-ins, dshwshr. Lg fnced
yd. Low FHA int. mt
Bayvlo... SA Hrts. Owner,
A&IM1_, ... PM
SHOPPING for a home?
Call, write or visit our Of-
f.ice for ~ fr'ff copy Of '
our "Homes Far ....1Jvirw"
MIPilno, with picture'
prices Al details ot our
..i..t llallnp In N'l'P"I
ll<aclo. °"""" Dtl Mu A Caita Meq, RED CARPET
REALTY,.,402; W. Balboa
Blv., N.vljiiirt B.taclo. 9M!. g-15-«100. ) -
r ·
1111111--:----....,..-:'."",.--....,..::""""...., ...... __ ------.,.....---:---,...,.-----------------------------------
••
SU.POlt -Thundq, Auou1t ZI, 1969 DAILY )llo'r )9
.HOU SALi _ JfOUl lSJ!Oll.SAl.a-.HOUS ES l'OR ULLJ:t®SJll'~~-"1-.HO!IJl1.1'~1t-fl<ll _, HOUllJ_!_Cl.lt SAL.I JllNJ'ALl __ .lllll"TALS.-_ ~----_ llENTAl.S _ °'""!'" 1000 G_,., --lDOO Cotti -1100 Hun= ....,, 1400Huntlr ...... 1400 Huntl ...... BNch 1400 -· ~-....... --Unfumllhed Houw u""'"""""
AMume FHA unn 111 B£FOR£ SCHOOL STARTS WHY PAY RENT? Nowpwt BNch 22oo o.ner11 3000 Hun11....., 1Hc11 ..
lrond No,. Llllfnl
1'abulolls • -old ..... ---'"""' t'OWW. l ator1' • &l'IMe rwt~
dlnins 6 11rtU:rbt area, 4
Loon 11111 Yr .... Spanlth •'>le. ,... --------
on New homes, ready to move lo. 2 to 5 -,.....,li%1HAI0<11,SBR., QUIET '!fdlldod ,pot risbt 't"~ ANOTHER! L"MOplloft $UIMo. ~3 1~~~. ,·0 ~ , $-Bedroom· 2p1aBath home rooms,2to3baths.~mlletrombeach.Flrst :U~·i!i~~· to on .. ro::!_~ ..... ~ .. ~!"m. KUcbtri. o!u~tb·=z: N~~·!..:...~,,~ .,.. f.,.-dqj • "'Dlld. with 11rt co payment up to 80 daya alter move In. CORBIN-MARTIN ~ • -·~-mo. F_. YUi!. ""' pn · -~-• '· VACANT VA/FHA Terms. From $2•,990 REALTORS OR' Bacbaloet.U. ll5Glmo monttlLeu< J'fntandLut. BR,2BA,Mlc,dlnnn,
HORSES! HORSES!
Priced ., ull 12S,500. l-l500 dn &nd pay m2 ,... • '1$-1161 Incl all ~Ill. 'l2IO w Ocean. C&U • bltni. I car,.., ~ -.
COATS indud'-..,,.W I " 303I E. Oiue Hwy., OIM """'-Pbollo 137.im or ' nr o:lila, lb~'' ctl-• adll. -
LI .. Yo II Upl • a ..... ;.;:.: •• ....u~.;...~: The Beach i25•1ao.1 Get. 5.11-32!1. E~~::~~ ~.~TEES ...... ,,,, dub. ·Ow .•••.
Vacation a month or more tn WALLA.Cl '1. Near acbooll A traNpor-$6340 Down/$161/Mo. DOVER Shore• bay front 536-Jm.4. 2fll52 ·c.l&mltltl
fabulous W.111-HAWAUI-···t TOllS ...llllon.-(on Broolchurot 1 mil e South .. Adamo) 5li% + II MM! -........ hon>b, • BR. ' BA, ..... Walker & Lee _L'1._CM_,.. ===---· Sh4l? 2 bdrm comp!elel,y "" 962 • 1353 $19,0l!O loon. 3 BR 2 ba. P&lio, 10' prlvale dock. URGENT!
bdrmltte.
lurnilhed condo .. ;e on -,......_-5"'4166'-l_.4141-HAF FDAL REALTY AV.USept~)'llylie,SlOOO '1182 Edlngu LeUe or leue opljon. Beauo
beach. C&U ror fl.ltther iD!o. ...,...... ftl&) .. Homes to Match ~" mo. 11 S : 11 o.5 013 or lu..+as5 or 5«).;51f0 tllut 4 Bdrm, den. formal
p!O/mo. !"'!"""'~~"""'~!!!!!!!!!!! Newpgrt BHch 1290 Huntlnghln Beech 1400 '740 W1mtr, F.V. -213,m-mJ Open ... ., dining room, 3 bathl. 3
&
S4&·5&ao 1101 SEASl.fO~ a In a I e $210. 4 Br, 2 Ba. l)'Ud tor a:araae, 3 blb bun Mndy --~lftl 1105 BAY VIEW • pooWUulla TRY THIS ONE Fount1in Volley 1410 lute 4 bdr, • ba. "'"' chlldre" Avail now. Local beach. Nr. IClils • lliop'r.
GE REALTY Me .. Del Mer• bell...,,. 3 Br, l Ba on wide FOR SIGHS I beach. Avail Sepe :IO-June Brolcer, !45-0111 1425 mo. 18831 H&rma
*91lKll'W.GI' CLA.81115.... greenbtlt. ,1950' b eaut Bran4newand -'....l trieutheA3~y Devtiopedlot. ~~Ol"Fa:~c!.111¥· (213) $lfl?.,3Brpart]¥tum,lcekll. sC:.·-~~U841.th ~ ~th
'Hou11 With IMMED. OCCUPANCY """"'""'· 142.500, l44"'26S .,.., 4 n. "~· yr. -..,.... 00 IJP&C. --• Children .\ pela· O.K. Bkr • ~ -• ~·
YACAHT HOME
Immediate occupancy for
your family. Newly decorat·-
ed " tully carpeted. Ideal
location near WestcllU Plaza,
See this lovely 3 bdnn home
today.
$24,500
(r/.~lo•n •v•il.)
Newport
••
Victori1
t1nytim•>
'-'11. .,.,au ........ bedtooml, 3 Br, 2 Ba + 4;40 IQ: 4 4m1-WINTER rentaio 81.Y Shott•. 534-al80 bullt·lns. t!ret>W» 6 _...
EVERYTHING ! 4 BR BY OWNER Nawpgrt Helghti _ 1210 2 ~~' Dramatic, rabod 1y rm or xlra bednn" den. 3 BR, mod;m ldtclien. ws. l2'0 3 Br •·--· Newly pal-A
4 &tnns plus 3 baths, Perfect cond, near scbool.t I ;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ce...,. living room w1tb cfil.. 5% % FHA. 10% dn. owner 64&3&33 • • ... u nn. rumpus new carpets. Wal lc;t n 1
plus l~e ram. rm., tam. rm, 2 Ba. 545-&31S f1 SPACIOUS tinciive tlreptau, An all will take 2nda.. 139-0l6fl e BAYSHORES • nn, trplc. W/W, Children A d1stanee to acbooL $2Z51.mo.
impressive llVini room, glasa prden kitchen takes $28 950 9 Mos. win small pet. Bkr ~ Rltr. 546-C!U.
plus unique hlll&ide lo-Mua Verde 1110 3 BR I: Family nn. Luse the "erk" out of housework ' 4 Br. turn. ::.Ure~l&, 1· • $95. l Br mttact gar, atove, 3 BR. 2 bath houle with
cation, Off e.r ed at PRICED for immediate We Uvlnr rm. Stone ftplc. HW and raalces cooklrw an ex· S•nf• An11 1620 "C .. ntOMA& Realtor W/W. Avail tn1. Bkr bullt-.ins, fireplace le c1oubll
$46,950, 27'26 <:udinal. tlootl, cpts. A: chps:. Well perleoce, Oleck these built-224 W. COut HWy, 5'U527 534-6980 garage, New•.. .....i..ted ...
at $27,950. I mm a cu I ate kept, Pro laudacaped, Ask· ins: w.n to wan carpeting, CHARMING s bdrm., w/'fl v _..., •
home with 3 huge bd.nnl, 2 ing $28,<00. draperits. fenclna, beaut. cpts, pa.ntled library· 2 Coron11 def Mar 2250 Cotti Ml.,. 3100 new carpets. W a 1Ir 1 n I
sparkling baths, large taml-Owner/Bkr. 646-2414 front ya.rd ldscpc including patios, trplc. $26,990; 1$1.41 . 1 BR ;\i~~:-· #25/mo.
Jy room. double raised qrlnklers, Deluxe blt.ln ap. Month. See lilt Shawnee. $275: F~ agle, residence. 1 cottage, Cl'Pta. drpa:, • • ~-----"'::,..,-'-"c 1 hearth fireplace, comer lot Dover Sho 1227 pllances ineloellric: Ranee, 540-8258 Bllt. fro~ ocean. 2 BR., IU'I'. utll tum; $125 mo. 4 BR., 2 Ba., drapes. cpta, No Down ''VA•• & room tor trailer. CAU. ,., oven, dlshwuher '· d~ frpl., . patio; 1 blk. trorD Older cple pret d. Doc ok. bit-ins; walk to hi tchool.
First time ottered at ~se RAY GAULT 54 0-1151 * UNIQUILY ~ iua::O movDr eHrmoun· ~ ~: "i:.i9Uftii'Mitii ... --····r7·0Q ~-= aru. Adu I t1. 6U-32l6 aft 5 ~-=~· ;c_i:.,· ie!::" .... !!1
terms. Sharp Back Bay • 3 Heritare Real Estate Dlfferent ''Old World" Con-• .. ui;u Mesa Vtrd ,, __
bedroom + large family OWNER TRANSFERRED temporary o:eeutive tux. $27.IBO. and worth every pen.'. LAKE Forest. p.rden home e 3110 Yrly 1~ $235. f92--0'l6I ·
room • Double fireplace -Priced ~for immediate sale Ul')' hom'e. Unobstructed ney, CA or FHA. <n4) Many olru. plua lhad1 Biibo• 2300 3 Bdnn fenced yard. 3 B!l-2 BA. ftplc:, bu',
Intercom • Covered pat!ct • at $27,950, I mm a c u 1 ~ t e Bay &: 1"ltn W-most mu. 5S1-8400, 11AMtit1 PM. Bkr. patio Ir yard, S Bdr, 2 Ba OCEANFRONT 4 Bdrm enc carpet!,• dn.pea. $215 mo. blt-1n1. $225. or beat otter.
Pool site ;yard. Immediate home wit h 3 . oversized 500) 811' fl 4 Br 4% ba + plus tam. room. 837-8646 yard Winter $225 .tnc,\util. 715 St-Janlff' Rd., Npt. 5121 Sparrow Dr.
poueasion -$34,950, =-r!~~ J::ie maids qtn. Ideal for enter. NO NOISE aft. 6 PM Owner transfer-308 E. Ocean Front Hgts. 714-962--899C for appt~
rahed hearth lire ... ce • ..,.. lalnln(. Euy maim. lmmed NO TRAFFIC red. PACIFIC S&nd..a392 Malloy
''!' ,. I "I' i .<~,1 \, ! , , . 1, .', ! ,,
546-5990 '
ner lot & quiet cul-de-sac. occupancy. Furnished. O EXCITING 3 bdr, den. La Lido Isle 23Sl Newport Beach 3200 Dr. trpl, 2 ba, cov. brick
CHINA COVE Call '4>8424, South Coast S1'8.000, Aaaume 6%% loan. NLY QUIET Pas VJuX>n Viejo. By P&lio, •l<iVe, relrig. rap,
. °"1te'i/.a1fitEA•ta~1ei';,;;;bi0iMiO"i;;i;11ox~1:;;;632~N;i:Bi_;;. 5'8-;;ii;;7249~.i;;;;;;;j LONELY BEACH! owner. ,M•um• 6% FHA. :0;~;~,;.:~ 8/8 cJrp., $185. 616-2561
\-0 THE REAL
\"'\.. ESTATERS
GREAT VIEW $46.2313 • 648·7171 sv.•1. Assuma ble Loan ~ Brand ..____ ..... w Anxious. unmed occu p. .w TOWNHOUSE 3 bedroom houae.
l
lmmae. modem home w;thin Nr So.Cout Plaza, 3 bdr.111 For sale by owner new ·~·~on °~"· 8'1>-1583 <th Br. Gardener. Owner Available Sept h t
50 yanh1 of best bay beach. 4 BEDROOM ba. hvrm w/ frplc &: panel-inr cul-de-sac with net tnf. 673-mO. 2 Bit. 2 be.tbs, bltnl., frplc. 962--857S for 1nfct I Vii!w of harbor & ocean ~ wall. $26,900, Pay dn to S 2 fie, M mlse le: )'OU can walk LAKE Forest, on the lake. NEWLY furnished 4 BR. 4 carpeta, drape1, $225 month.
I
from Jee. living room & ba.l· existing loan. By owner. ::Uc~~~s i:!eto~stoZn:i :~he i!:h!d~nni, 2 ~= :i::'6 2:··~ Ba. avail Sept lSth. Winter Bay & leach Fountain V1Uey 3410
cony, Lowest pnced tn Cove MESA VERDE 546-1957 betwlU pm. dinin& room.' ~ den ily ~. All glus :: transferred. ' or longer. tn4) 675-1349 Realty, Inc.
at $62,500. AIL 3 BR's-BY OWNER with wet bar .\ ti.replace. with range, sell cleaning 2 BR, 2 BA bome, JUnrl7 901 Dover Dr., NB Suite 126 BEAtrrlFULLY landscape4
\Valter Haase Beautiful ne\v carpeting, I> 950 Victoria $19.500 GI Sitting room w/fl.replace. 3 oven, dl.!hwuher, disposal. Lagun1 Buch 1705 patio. 2}J Via Dijon. Leue &4>~ Evn. S4U966 3 Bit. 2 BA. blt·inl. frpl,
I ~ cated on QUIET cul-de.sac ?:.,OOWFalnuederal $21,000 5% bdr, 3% baths, Garden en-Drape~ea:. t~ut, car-HANDYMAN'S Sept.June. 675-4825 YRLY , --at b each. · = ~clioo~ -~~.-
street Has a Iarae cwered "" t $21,500 614 tcy. View ol bay A moun-.-t1.... 1 vlng din .. _,, FURN R ~ --• • 0 203 g .. ----~.. •~ 500 5v •-•--,... ... '6 UI I , mg, ,,..., ~ial' 4 .__ uni .. 120 4 B ' 3 BA, oontemp. Children&: pet OK. 3 na 2 • Yrly l&e $2'l5 mo.13t-3'135 "" enclosed. FR NT PATIO, .._........ ._.., ~ ........ 111. $82.500. &16-2151 muter bedroom with own ..... ,..... • ~ ...... ue. Newly dee. Avail Sepe 8 ba 2 e•--dbl _, even room for boat or trail· ',,_ take over loana ~ rl t ba-Co-.. ._ 1 •• ·""'s to beacb Patios decks ' • pa,.,..., ·pr• frplc -6"' p va e .,,, "'!""'e.., ., .. • • • wntr rental or yrly. 675-3604 R/O, dsh·-, ., __ ;,, -'. I -·no BNch iColdwell, ..... & Co.
1
550 Newport. Center Dr.
Newport Beach, Calif.
,8™700 644-2430
PRICE REDUCED
er. Excellent v a I u e at ee548-1059ee fenced private pte front w/ocean view. Nds. paint, ... UUI.,.._. ....... --vu
$27,500, can now. as this $26,950 Assume S%% FHA, 3 Univ1r1lty _P1rk 1237 ~Pine Jrnmedi;,te oc-etc. 9lould arou $9,000 yr. B Ibo 1 I nd paint, ~1-I: drpe, pool. SM'OG pop e plan ill u f t ,.. ..... ....., • -~•·· -.99(). VA, Pr. $89,600. Consider tradet. I • I a 2355 Steps to ocean. $33.S mo. free Laauna Hills. u ar w It ' as BR, 2 BA beautiful patio 61n% ~W.--J ..,...., -MISSION reta. Cor Joe 4800 Rtwr Lovely 4 BR. enclosed pa.tilt. 546-9521 or 540-6631 home. Vacant. owner. Open Assumable insur. Joan on thll FHA, 0:>nvd1tional. (n4) REALTY 494-0731 lST TIME ottered, nicely NB Avail now: 64&-6942 • Fenced yard. Blt·lns. Leue.
house Sat & Sun 1-S. ·mmacula I cl 968-1997. 219:1!1 S u mme r 18(r VIEW, juat cmnpleted 3 tum1Jbed. 2 BR. 2 bath: Water pd. $& ea 545-4265 1 te Y ean, exquta. Circle, H.B. Bkr. BR.~ 21" BA. _300 I((. ft. cllOtce location. Advlts $250 HARBOR H i r b I and•. 4 eve1 ~%. ~.2 cf;:C)new !!!l!!!;,,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!I aundec:k. Arch Beach Hats. mo. Call Puaderla T9M003 = ~ bapethta nro~~ "SUP=ERI=o"R::-::-,-e=11,::-"2"""'BA~I BY OWNER: 3 BR, 2 BA,
PROPERTIES WEST 5~% $34,700. Owner Mr. Lewls ._.,., Ncrth nd Ma•·-·•· Assume existtnc VA loan. 3 Ctt.f) 523-5013. 1112 Nori&. Huntington 811eh 2400 im. Wattt pd. Avail. Sept. e • """ oou...,... or 1008 Baygide, N.B, 675-4130 BR l" •-~ Low 3. 615-Im lady, no children or pets. ~ -w. clown COMMANDING 1245 l5e 1ter. 4M-81D9 3 BR. & VIEW ~e~t. Acroas from 2 Coastlint.C t II $150 BEAUTIFUt.LY furn, ATTRACI'IVE 3 Bdrm 2 ba ' . •
$1000 1 -=:z=======~ I tam rm. ,.,..., block wan, J BR, carpets, drapes, Iara:e I 1 patio, aprinklen:. 295.1 Royal
'lol $31,000. COUNTRY LIVING Palm Dr. $24,500. 546-9896
~ I K .• Nt{HOlS
DAVIDSON RHlty 1 BDRM. 2 Ba. N•arly ...,
:>t6-MOO Evea. 642-4!b'1 Cl N
Turtlerock Hills. Almost new swimming pools 4 a 21 acre a • n1 air cond. mobile home in family rm hOme. 'mtns, 2 BR 1 BA. ocean view. No
home with many extras. park. &olf coune Children V'iew lot in Laguna Beach, beautiful park, w a 1 kl n B' dshwbr, frplc, wuhtr, cav pets. $190 mo. You can have horses, BBQ carpets. ean. r. 1choola ~ii ACRE Country Estate, 18x in the kltcllen, relax in your & market.II. $27.800. Assume
36 pool, 3 BR custom home. 20x24' master sui~ & over-low rnA. Owner. 545-6f73
Rear yard; hl:lnt1 or unit!. look your own beautiful % l$43;SOO. Owner. 531-~ acre. A MUSf SEE TO AP.C __ ol_log.:...e_P_o_rk ___ l_llS
Priced to sell quickly $44,9:50 welcome. No yard work or $6,§0. Small but level. d ls tan c e o t be a ch. patio & fenced yrd. Nr all * * 494-7924 * e Red Hiii Rtalty WOITY'. $203 per month in. $1,000th. ~ ... 7val, at $TO TCaneacbarba /Owner on leave.' -'oc"hb'ii-. IZIS:::;;::;.;"'°;;;:·,:5'3-;::·:;.1341=;;-.1
18068 CUl Dr cllld•-pm " ,,_i tJo mon -~ ,... b7 •PPL Rell. 1 · L19un1 Niguel 3707 I vu .• Irvine .... a n 'd C2l3>~*3 e BAYCREST e OPEN 9 AM-3 PM 833-0920 fees. Jwt liv~ it up 4 they 2 BR., fenced yard. U4,50D, req ' ' Beaut. unt. 4 Br. 4 ba.. For-3 BR. 2 BA, beautiful view. :
Gener ii 1000
-FOREST E.
OlSON
Inc. Realtors
COSTA MESA
5¥.,% $125 MO.
I Coastal waters, jwt.
minutes away. Bright 6:
cheerlul 3 bedroom, I family room. kitchen
,
1
with bullt·ins. Quiet .\
settne. Private swim 6:
tennis club. All of thls
I
for only $25,500! At.-
sume FHA loan. No fee!
Better be: fast! call
645-0003.
' SPANISH SENOR!
f 4 BEDROOMS
' Spanish elegance. 4 lge.
1 bedrollll, 2 tiled 'baths.
' Spanish tile entry'. Mas-l •ive double fireplace. i Open flame cooking in
1 a gourmet kitchen ~
deluxe buUt·ina. Huge
I Play room .t only $29,-
950. cau now Senor! ,645-0303
RANCH IN THE
CITY
ASSUME
6% LOAN
Large 4 bedrooms, fam-
1 ily home. Big country
kitchen with deluxe blt-
ins. Huge, huge lot.
Right In the cit>'J,Plenty ot elbow room. i-ou can
have horses too! The
1 bit 6% loan pays every·
thing at 3166.~ mo.
'Don't delay! can today
646-0303
1 NEWPORT BEACH
DELUXE DUPLEX
sind 'pebblet throw
~rom that wonderful CcXJ1 IN. Two luge bed· ' foDms and larl('' kitchen
with deluxe built • inl,
MJndecka. Great loca·
tion. BIJ nnta pays for
itself. OnJy $38,500. To-~t buy! cau now
PRECIATE, $49.500 3 BR, 2 BA. Separate guest wW do tbe rest. Will take lot. flnt TD or?, L B h 2500 mal din. rm., pool. ~. Bl"••, '·h ~-. -k -4St-8170 ong llC . "C'' THOMAS, Realtol' Uuo Uli ...... ~y ....... N9>
·-RE~.f.~! Furnished w~e .!!~brand ~!~:~ ;~ ..,,i~ ::.::: su-':o JEAN SMITH room w/bath. Pool, 6%%
Realtor 1oan. By Owner. 515-'1813
Coron• del Mar 1250
3 bedrooms, convertible den, BJ OWNER Rentala te Shiir9 200J new, deluxe dl.lplex; cloae to 729-8038 aft f PM NEWPT. Bcb. Exoeptional,
646-3255 Newport Beach 1200 OCEAN VIEW
400 E. 17th St., Co8'ta Mesa
WOULD YOU BELIEVE
$37,900
and in Harbctr H1and1. 3
Bdrm, I: lovely den, 2~~ ba.
Everything sparkles, Beaufi..
fu1 cpls., cov. patio, 68 ft.
frontage, Just remod. yr.
ago. New ·dshwr. & formica,
F.A. heat. \Von't last!
B•y & 811ch Realty
675-300() Eves. 548-88611
Mm E. Coast Hwy., CdM
$23,500
No Down G.I.
Shimmering waterfall . large
covered patio. BBQ. Big bed-
roonu, fireplace, Full dining
room. Sprinkle!'!. Clo.sing
costs. 540-1720 ·
TARBELL 142-6691
~.-a.. 'beacbo8, churches 6: mar-'"PARK LIDO" Like ne 2 adults. lovely warm -r DESIGNED FOR --"'°"'and lonnal din. · SINGLE 21 ,,.. or over Kiri ID ""'-~ pl""1 carpet. · .. w, 2 ~ I COMFORT inc room with a la.) Oe&rft Walk to Bet.ch. T month.I lb.are 2 Bdnn. AP t. Ready ~· immed occu-Br, 2 Ba,, trplc., pool. 2 car 1auna, Bl', living, dlnlnc, '
$51,500 view ol ocean and jetty, All new. Adult oceu:pltd. Up-W/la!'M, Call W--4608 att. pancy. • pr, $250: BJcr. 6f6....0732 ~Ba. =he-=·~ I * * * * = ~u: ~'=' ~~ ll'&ded cptJ I drps, ' BR. 5:30. 3 BR. 2 Ba. Jower •••••• $300 a.y Shores 3225 trom ' ~ Br. $365 mo.
Single owner pve decorator yard • tor the 1ami1f ,that fam/dinln& f'!ll. elect. ldtch-WORKING Pf roommate to 4 BR. 2 ~. upper •••••• $350 673-4886 1:
Carte Blanc ~ huge, deluxe deserves the beit. en. Indoor I outdoor patl~. split $175. bctUN So. Lquna Owner nU;ht furn. or COMid· WATERFRONT Near BBC, 1•
mstr. bdrm. 1uite & spacious * m.500 * Assume FHA Joan. IllneA tn with A workins mother I: er yrly. leue. Mn. Joy, luxury 3 BR, 3 BA, with Duplex .. Unfvrn. 3975 2nd or guest bdrm. , 2'h 67U550 family, 968-1178 after 6:30 ac>n. Aviil Aua. 25th. Aft. eves., 642-2253 •• or gardener, yrly Sept. 15 to 4
baths. dramatic split level. P.M. 5:30 675-2973. BURR. WHl11 )'t'ari. Resp, adul~no J!fl. TWO Bedroom dupltx com· I
lavishly appt'd; wallpaper Reduced-$25,500 2 YG. Profeuional men wilb REALTOR 7lU4U6'7f tit 213-·t::r:HlS:lti pleteJy redecorated with a
abounds • dream kitchen • NH.r ocean Owner trans-3rd to share rent. Furn. 2901 N'pt, Blvd., NB f75..fGI Corona cltl Mar 3250 garqe, will rent only to
priv., walled, bay v iew P.'l· • townhlt' 3 BR. 2111 BA i. elderly folka, no pets
tio • absolutely fresh !: ferrtd. Luxurious ~stocy, 4 1tudy. 'i.rntv. Pk. .nine: Laaune Nlgutl 2707 m.VINE TERRACE 536-3302
IJ)arkling. Barely used. This bdr, 2 ~ ftrtplace, din rm, Sll--2588 alter f pm. ;s.;; De 1 u x e home for yearly I 'w"A°"TE=RF=RO=NT="'t.a,..-.""1.ow,..-""iy·l
,,.,1y1ed mutt1 "Franci:!ra" CAMEO SHORES. Sell or elect blt-ms. 2-car pr, cptl, LADY AVAILABLE Sept 141'1 3 BT Jease 3 °"--d'·'-I"·· -i.ue 1_.11 1,....,.-w,. 2 drps, Nr tehool, shopping alccto •hare apartment. 2% ~rt beach · WUi:_-) • ~u ... , ..... ,. "'"' new 2 BR. 2 BA. Extra ,
plan bas it all. Call: "-................ cntr & excluaive en-. club. no hol $65 mo. , d-r ..... .,7 .• i: ..... room. 30' livina room. All Ip llv rm, frplc, elee
carpeted & decor a t e d • draped. Lovely heated pool. petl. ~ Dock avaJ1
VI Poli e 1 d •hare 2 Bdrm Apt w/um•. I< dloh -• ew. ce pa ro' . MASTERPIECE C&llG42-4608alt5:SO. DUPLEX-vlew,prtvaee; wa&ll<r: Pool malnt RENTALS Adultl only, M petl. $.550 avail. weekly durlnl Aua· A a:ardener incl. $450 per f
Bdrm, den home. Newly Owner 536-l91f .. ,,. * 60-7811 .,; 'J" • • ~ ,,., beautifully carpeted &: kitchen, ~tio. Adutti. no
.
. ~T _ E<"J;od rarcJ•n. o c • a n MEDITERRANEAN SINGLE 21 yr or over rU! ID V1<1tlon R1nt1l1 2900 All buill-lno lnciucfins rtrlg. 675-1!99 ·
incl gardening. Call owner, 4 levels of ltOOll')' living, 4 BACH., 22, w/2 Br. apt., Sept. 2 Bd.nni, fireplace, mo. Refs., pliue. Call own-Apts. Fumbhecl
$21 ,500 2414 Vbla Del Oro 675-5698 bdnm, 3 batba, formal din· N"pl B<acb-$120 per month. -· 200111 KlllP Rd. er, 613-0513. RE .. TALS
3 big bedrooms, 2 baths, brlclc Newport Beach BY THE SEA ina:, aeparate game room I 536-!069 Aft.tr 7:30 PM. 548-239' after 6 prn. View home wfpool, 4 Br. Apta. Furnished ~place sets-oU large liv. 644-1133 644-0505 tve&. Channing 2 Br. + conv. den 2 fireplaces putslithia one on FEMALE Roommate. 22-28, Avail. Sept. Cth. General .. -.
ing room. Dream kitchen • + formal din, rm.; atUc your must tee it. Priced to lhare 3 Br )Tly, on Bal Summ1r Rentilt 2910 Irvine Terr. 3 BR. w/pool. "IVVU
built-in range ~ oven • ex. apace, 2 frpl; walled gal'-riX1L~~~·~REALT hland. 6'J3..8405 eve1, Qulck occupancy, $160. 2 Br .,_.plex convenient.
tra eating area, Patio tor I/I den, VIE\V of ocean A jet· · Y STABLE worklne wctman 25-CLEAN Balboa Beach Unit.I. Don Franklin, Rltr &13-2222 location. W/W, avall 111.
parties &: BBQ's. ty, Steps to beach Assume 142-14111nytlme 30 to share Back Sq condo. Steept 2 to 10; for summer OCEAN 6 C taJlna vi 3 bkr ~
142-6691 TARBELL ~: ~is ~Ybd.S CH 0 0 L Joan at 6~%. $108,5oo, 51' % G.I. $175 MO. $100. St&-7871 f:~:i:. ~vd. = Bedroom.a, d~ roo~w. $130=-. ~I-Br~. '-.,-...... --w-/-w-.1
IAYFRONT APT. HAViN horn• ,;m,;.~;';; Walker Riiy. 675-5200 Newport Weoe 3 BR. 2 BA. BACHELOR 30 .,,12 BR ape • l4fl MoOth avail now. Baby o.K. lll<r
Via ta Del Lido. P\•-r • ,1,·p waiting for you. This borne, MUST SE LL I !am rm, \S mi to beacb. GE in Corona del Mar. $100. DUrlPLEX WITH ':t.E W • Call agent 6G-l235 f15..5653. su..eao " "' ~--kit. Cptl dl'pa 1prkln mo 673--0216 aft 6 PM p va~: avail. wee....., dur-==~~~-~~~1 available, Encklsed &araa:e. on a quiet, tree.lined s~t vwn~.-moved, no reu. otter patio fe~d l~ped· · · ing Aug-Sept. 2 Bdrms $2)0/Mo. 2 bdr, frplc, cpt.s, $137.50 Bachelor apt. All uttl
$28,500 ia ideal for the young fam. refuffdnn di·n' nnBeau~·-4t ,!~'.~t. frplc: New Paint $27,000'. Newport •·och 2200 tireplwe, 1arqe. 2001~ ~. ~frJf~ =· wash/ g'; ,,;:!,,w, avail 9/1. Bkr
Georgi Wii iiamson ily nr for the more matlltt :• · ., .. ., ....,,-, ... ue Owner will take 2nd. 22122 -Ktnp Rd. 548-2394 after 61 "'='""=-=-"'~~:;,.,~-~~
REALTOR family. Price reduced to cpt g. &: drapes. Mk $65,500 C&pistram Ln. Hs S.f0....9M5 W..UFFS Condo 3 Br, 2 Ba, pm. 2 BR. l Ba with ~ 1$135. "="""'1-Br=-, -... ~ •• -conve--nlen~el
673-4.150 Eves. 6~1564 $34,400 tor a fast sale. OPEN D1L1ncy R1•I Estate or 968-4!32 walk to pools & sbop'g 0 • 2 BR Balbo9 apt •. u Br, Ba, 1\-"t•t wlna'. ctpta, location. Adult only. Avail DAILY 1-5 PM. 324 Soug 2828 E. Oiue Hwy, Cdl4 -· • •• fl~ .,. ,_' •--~--/ ,_ ~ ~~ ~~ drps, ~. 2 pallot, $190 mo. 9/1, Local -MM111 NEAR WestcliU Plaia. 4 BR, Harbor E...es. MM810. 673-3770 u..,. ,,_.,..,.,.,. .,........_ == P,:: .,'!::-.,._,,, 673-9045 -=========:.1 1%. ba, fam. rm., ALSO Bttautlful Buyl THE SUN NEVER SETS on ~.u., v,.....,...., .;;:;.:.:c;;;_ _____ -
cptd/di'pd, lncd, • h. de NEWPORT HEIGH T s CAMEO . SHORES, 2 bdr, Lage 4 bdnn mue roofod ClaSIUled'• --. ROOM, bath, _.. • .. Huntington Beech 3400 Coat• Motl ' 4100 .
""'' qu·ee --t ·~ 500 • converuble den, 2 b a, .... _ 1y ·"th 2., ba••-al ~--· ' i Su= • .-, • $29,950. As.sumable FHA loan Spacioul Iv rm A: din rm. ...,.u "' .,. u .. , For an ad lo tell aroun4 trance. ON BEAQI, $30 00 wk.
Kingaard MI 2-2222. at t!*~-3 Bdmlloe i'· .:..:o..':· Profeastonally land1eaped. !~':'rm~ U:~ the dock. dial MU67I. S50 wk. 4M..sM.f 2d,:., ~rUce~'!1:: • Dq, ;-. month. UP.
Coita Miu 1100 pa • .. as a 0 ............. $45,000 Shown by appmnt find. PLACE your wai.nt Id when BALBOA ine:xpensiw cot,. erptl, ·drps, p:Xll $150 mo. •Studio a Bach. Aptl,
J..ce. living rm., lots of wood only. Collect: (213) 34J·~ Pacific Shores Realty they are lookin« ,-DAU.Y tqes .. wkly nt.ec. A,vall 963-167l after & pm, Sa t I • ~
ASSUME. 1 panelJng. Eves. 548-4009 pn.or clasaified $0667I now. 54"'31.51 afterU noon • ncl UtUs • ..----'·
5 ~% FOR Bey & Beech Rlty Inc. LGE. hllllDp lot. Penn. view S4~~1-8'86;;·~~~-~~;;96U1tl1;;;;!1==;;:::::;=======;;;;;;;;;::::;=;====;;:=;::=;=====;::: e Maid-· TV onll. OUTSTANDING 901 Dover Dr .. Suite m ol ocean & h1111. Privaey. !!! General 2000Generel e New Cafe A: Bar VALUE IN Newport Beach 14.1-:JOOO !teallDr m.2010 e 11 UNITS e 1-=:::.:~---'===:.::..---..:2::0000...=::::::':,•l:._ __ _;2:::1>::::00 231' Nowport llhd. -
COLLEGE PARK Arouna IXYJl: room f" ex-WANT n ~ou 3 BR, 2 BA, lam nn, sep din OPEN HOUSE B1lbo1 Plnlnsvla UOO panaion. X!nt llweobnent. E-PLE rm. Fully equlp lcitchen, ulil SPECIAL -3 BR, Far dlca on lhioexclllS!ve 6 d.OQ-0~1. I f)-C:fjtQ.• MODERN PURN 2 BR
nn. rmmac lndscp, Quality CUstomized home-, tor im-Walk to ley/Ocun otherl, please call \:)\!;t J.." 1"1--'It p p W Maple by Wi1loo
extras. See tct apprec. By mediate occupancy, Huee muter bedroom plus CLAUDE SHJFF!R , Pool. Sharp, Bltns. $155. No
ctWner. Eves &: wknds. Owner S1y1 ''SELL'' 3 others. Family n>em, 3 REAL1t>R 675-CMT.3 8oloc aSlmPllScrombltclWont.PuuteforaChuclle pets, Kidt over 16. Call
549-1920 2215 ANNIVERSARY LN. baths, ideal family home. Manaaer ~c
OWNER M 0 VIN G TO {)pen Thurs/Frt. 1·5 Dbl frpJc., patio, $53,500 Executive MlnMI .... , ..... len.t of h FURN 1 BR Apta 6 8lul:lm
IRELAND. Will lranlfer H•I Plnchin a A11oc. R. c. GREER, l\e&lly 4 -211 batht, lormal ,_ ......... -... •Vall Sept, lot. S110 " $120. I
6%. loan to beW ~· 3900 E. Coast Hwy, 675-4392 3356 Via Udo 673-9300 dintna-nX,m. nee.r the btacb. p te ton. ftw _....... 2lS3 Elden, Apt. f. Adu1a
EARLY CALIF Lido la'-live ~-1 -Spolidlng s year old home, 3 OPEN SAT & Sun. 442 1S51 • priced .e 142,000. Attnc-I TA y H rv I Giiiy!
·CUSTOM HOME bulll-i••. 0..tom pallo. U• l're•tige cu.-home. 4 • l'l<lllc S"°"' Realty I I I' j. BR, no peer. -"""
• bdnm, 2 batba, all eleclrlc R I v",, d . Dr.. N.B . .;;;;;;;;; .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ~·"~ I VALUE, Adult -..... 2 I
<d brick llttplace "1bake BR lge. rumrm ...... 4-LIDO ISLE HOMES . -Ews.·5'16-3240 -• -• • d"11wuhe\l.~tpool, quiet
$18,950 roof. Qulee locatiOn. CALL level. Fenced yd., 2 ~cs. All"'-all pricet, Bay. 'I I . $145.2295 A.._Clf. +..,. don't build them 540-1151 HerilAI< R••l ble-u.. ovmiized gar, o11 front A inllde, Sa!H, 1ea<el, POOL IS ·COOL !CORIO· 54M818 or~
like thll ._ .... Lath 11::!:<:;:.:;la::"==,,..,=-=~~1 alley. Pool '"" loL °""· -Call ' THE HOMI! IS BIG I I' r I BAOIELOR ...... sh1 c h Md pluter. 2 Bdmu., BY OWNER' ..,_ CM. i _dr_,ps.=548--='*=-===~-LIDO REAL TY INC. 5 BRt BIG A THE TERMll .. tidy prelrmd. l60 Monlb; lia-...s flocrtllr, Kop-Bdnn, biln kl-., 11&-1 OWNER'S SACRIFICE 3400 V .. Lido 613-!830 Ari WIDE OPEN. 131,!00 32S E. Ut> St.. CX.
lier kettle kllcl>en with blrdl cablnell. e8r1211' lol 4 or 5 BR. 2 mo. old -!!!""!''!!!!'B!!''!'!'~.,."'!'!' 1 rs A IUGHI' PRICE! S.U. J I 4 · -""""" ·tile ~e! Even the w/ alley acceu tor bo&t or K\111 home. LR. OR. Fam. * 4 BR, 3 BA. Auumablt titulb' loc&ted Pre1tJce PIDUO Ntofcl.f.m11 llCNwho• ~eru:i~~"" OK ~.'ft .... "r1:e~~ ~l tn.llcr. 814~ loan can ba R wllll l>:pl 6 be<. 3 Ba. 511% loan. By ...,... HomeR ·L H-'-RI I Ii J 11 ""'"'*'"'*'_,_...,_ JJ00.2335Elden.Cll I -•·led, b<rd lo &llUmod, $24,950, M3-11'8 C>!>ll. ..,,,,, many Xlras. $60,500. m.m& IX • ....,...1, tr. 1::::::~-::·=-=~-=~___...._ •-""'"' r• ,..... h ~" -XI e ••• ~ •• u• -847 2:125 v"''""'" fn yow. Op01at•1I LOVELY Bl& 2 Bro 111 Ba. t lltt urr)'I '--" $8500 ca1h • assume 5%.~ 0 ... -.. ...... ,.. -· I 1..... tti ..... " "'-' "-......... .._
64:1-0303. FHA loan. sm mo. 14, 3 DUPLEX WEST BAY Biibao lslind IUS Huntingtoft DUl\PIL l "' ,.,.._ . isioS:..An.."".o::a.r
FORESTE. br., hm. 1993 Meyer PL, Ownttwillca,.,,.TO,noloan 21 2 SAPPHilll H1rbovr 1~ j!i-;;.;;;1"""1•;..;1_,l_,1~ •=:-.i.~l'=~ IUJ.Sep.,Mn.1-l*n>.o.t-•
0 L S 0 N cor. 5'aJ. tct let Flreplacea, etc. 3 BR. 2 BA A: dtn M x SO __ .;;.;;.;;;..~--'-"''I · · · --,,_ Melop "-..,No.. W.. tace. ind. utll.
In<. Reolton
.•t Harbor Center
2299 ll*'hcr Blvd,, C.M.
3 BR home + den on ..... r 6™111f. brick pallo .,.,..id bwn i:0ni~ M ~HA • '"1~SNUMlff $QIJ".2smms IN I' I' .I' ji I' r I ooty, .. pell. --lot. Backs on alloy. ill% EASl'llLUFF 3 BR, 2 BA, celllnp. ..;.plelely .remod. ror .,: ~ e.!'ecu11w ""'; "' _ "' • • • l . _ . 2 BR. adolll. $\to. Mo. 1113
F1:1A loan. oniy $215.950. 2288 f&m nn. Extraal Immac. By owner $52.SOO ~ bdnn boat dock 00 'at ' Santa Ana Avt, C. )I'.
?\feyer. Ml-6252 Rllr $39.930 by owner. 6'4--2405 PLAHNING to ~? You'll ~1. A beau~ at ':ni; • $~E~ lmt~ TO I I • I I . I } m-lm, "° 54s-Bm
3 BDRM., 130 FT. WIOE CHARMING Back Bay 3 J1 tinc1 an amadrw munbet of '49.kiO ... £Z t.!nns. - -• • ' · • · • • BEAtml'lJ'LLY ro1UC
UlT: almoo\ "'" c""° br, 2 ba. cpt•/d.,,., bllnl. homes In IOdlJ'• 0•"'°"' R. D. Slae ... Rc&li1 2 BR, healld pool, adlllll. no
'21.000. owrER -0wner. 121.<!0. ~ Ms. Oieek them,_, S<14Slt -. 53M5ll • SC'!AM·LE1S ANSWER 1!.fWSl~~110N • '!'-00 pea. S1l6 + nW, -._
' -. ! r t ! ' .. • • ._,.
I
s
I
•
I I
I
I
I
I
.-~ ...... -... , .. _ . ~ ... • S ... ~. •••••••••·• ••I •.. ~-... ~ .,.,...._,_.,.
DAILY PILOT
tekHTALS RENTAL$ RENTALS REAL ESTATI
-·¥t:'u~ Apts. UnfurnJthld Apta. Unfurnllht4
When You
Want it done
right •••
Gener1I .._ _;;=.::.:... ___ " * I * * * *
{
..... port ...... 4200 Goner•I 5000 Conm• dll Mar 5250 -.. -COUNTRY CLUB e RENT e
LIVING 3 Room• Fumffv,.
I BR, ""' -· trplc, J*Um. lmmed. OCCUPll'l(I)'
67Ml44 Mcl.eod
lndUltrlal ........
, ': s:!:~ ... -;,m,::. $20-$25 & UP
hcaudM 1.andv•pfna il uz.-Montb-To-lafonth Rentall
E11t Bluff 5242 Call one of
the experts
listed below!!
u:rr •be 1~70' with o.lfice
I: 40x~ alU wlth 1tMJ
fnmo onl> • ld«I ... tnu:L Inc 11nn. m.ooo • 1>e1t o1
tmm. Owner wJU carry lllt
TO. '*"'11tled recre:atioo&l facU. WIDE SELECTION DELUXE all eJec. 2 & J Br.,
' iUtl m a country club at· Applianoet .t TV'• avall. 2~ Ba, closed gar. $300 up.
l mosphtre. Now leuln& tn No Securlf1 Depoalt 752 Amigoa Way, N.B. Near
• Newport Beach. JtFRC Furnlture Rentall I ~°'=M=H:i Se=bl:.:6M033====
( I ( •• J
W•lll-McCardl•, Rttrs.
1810 Newpon Blvd,, C.M,
548-7729 anyllme -. -,,,.·. -
I' .,.,,,,J:!i'': =-~ 1~. ~:,:ohm= Coron• del Mor 5250 SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY I SERVICE DIRECTORY ~'-'~!.%~~~ 1;:;
Modell open noon to 9 pm l1~1~5/Jr. l2iiBR~4-~pl~•~•~. jbl~t-~insi;,. I ;i~iii;;iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Appllonca Ro~I-. PIU't, will mb-divkle Terml. n•, 1<2-1110 "'1>t.,,,_O>ildOK.Local ~; Ports ~·· 6510 Floan ~ J1nttorlol 6m $42,000.Call""429or-.
OAKWOOD Broker 645-<llll ~ -------WALLS, w1...:W~ noon, 499-3157
GARDEN 5100 ore• REFRIG I< Alr Conditioning Corpot Vlnyl Tllo °""""· Commezclal & Comm1rdol 6015
Whoddyo Wont? Wh•ddy• Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spodol Rote
Coste Mesi Service. Res1d A Comc'L All •1Y1" P • ...d colors resideDlial. Daily, weekly
APARTMENTS ON TEN ACRES Ken'• Retrtg. 8'7-7882 Ftee HI. Lie.'°"'" ""''"'Mo. 897-7350 C-1 BARGAIN
5 u--5 tlmos-5 bucks
ttULES -AD MUlf INClUDl ~ .,.. ........ traclt. ~ '" """" Ill ,, ... (OllSTRlJ(1J(I l l 2 BR. Furn & 1Jnturo 54().7262 546--4478 SPARla.E Janitorial & w· OLD Duplex on big c.i bus. a-'¥OUtt ,,._ flMIJ" ~ .....S liMt ff ~-
J WINTER rental. Lee. crptd 2 Fireplacn I priv. palios / 81lty1lttin9 6550 Girdenl-6610 dow cleaning Senr. w~ I~ 63'x293'-~ntral k>ea· ~NINO FOlt SALE -TttAOQ ONL'¥1
, Br, 2 Ba. blt·ins. closed Pools. TeMis. Contnt'l Bkkt, ---'---'=---..;;:;.:. "• dowa, resid., eomcl, oonst. uon. $27,500, Terms. 5t1'6661, PHONE 642.5671
pat Io I: & a r a I e, JUST (OMPlfTING 900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26U CHILD Care tcr mothers Cleanup. Free est. 968--EJL.I ~ .. ::;7~·233==1'-------To Piece Your Tr1der'1 P1racfiM M
=~':;~~v~I 5;fc\· (MacArthur nr. Cout Hwy) :~t i:~a~ = !il:!~ ANTHONY'S ESI'ATE Maint Trtt Serv lndustrl1I Rent1I 6090 SHOPSMJTJJ complete
I
629-1492. H•rbor Heights Four LOVELY home, 3 BR, 2 BA, jU!I anywhere. 646-8662: CM Removal & trimmings, free equipmen!,. Jlgaaw.' paint 2 " 3 BR UNn'S 644-4860 estimate Call 541~ For Le•se 4200 Sq Ft 11>ray, m.illma: equip; a.bo SINGLE You.nz AduJta Lux-an with fireplaces, cpta l drps, lease. $400 mn. BABYSl'ITING B y ex-• · Shop 81.._ Nr Ontown 5 strina ba.u ~ F O R
ury 1arden aplll with coun-d'·" h • 2 ha 673-200'1 perienced mother d•v wk, The Beet, costs no more! C M..,, t . try club abnollphett and OM•W&S ers ths. 3 BR 1 Ba $280: 3 Bl' 2 Ba, hr. Huntington Jkach''area. Experienced Maintenance L1ndsc1ptn9 6110 oit1 eu. Many ide•I au n or camper equll;y.
complete privacy. SOUTH Rental Manager -~1665 Budget Landscaping . UHi. Cont1ct owner, 17;11J0.;:.;282S~.;,,...,,-.,.---,,..-,-
BAY a.UB API'S. Irvine at Mrs. Ouistiensen deck, util ~th cptd, L;;r.--.;;;;;;;;;;:-""cl;rr;;-;;;;;;·J.~G'.:rad~ua~tec.:H~o~rtf~cul:!":t~ortlt~-* Uc'd landscape contrac-Mr. Dickerson. '61 ·FORD CUstom 4 door,
1 16th Newport Beach. 3117-A CIMamon Ave. dtpd, BI, garage. Avail MAT, wohoman, child care, AL'S Gardertlng & Lawn tor; completelnd.scpg&aho 641--0084 Da ys 390 h.p., auto. new tires,
n4l 645-0550 Cott• Mes• 8/70 620 Marguerite, CdM your me. Own trans. Maintenance. Commercial, Ja,pe.nese gard_•ns 830-3031 541-5452 Eves R&H, Xlnt cond., Value i C Phone 546-1034 Open Sat & Sun (213) 1c,:Rc::•~f';:'·c,:n:::·:;2S:c,:.:hr::.·.;;548-<!tl9.::,::=__ induatrlaJ l residential, LANDSCAPING Yuccas for • $1650. Fer equity ln real
OCEANFRONT Duplex· 2 '""'!~~~'!"!~~:""' h'~OO-<OOS=-~~~--~-1 BABYSITI'ER -reliable •646-3629* sale, call Juan Pantoja, FOR Lease Ml b Id & 's estate or what have you!
' Bdrm, avail Sept 6 to July 6 J' HARBOR GREENS 2 BR south of hlwa.y, crpts., middle age, car. '1----------~=:,,,,:=======! 4800-2400-21~1351}...1500 IQ 673-9183 on INse_ $175 per mo to drp frpl N blld 67Ui<l!9 NEW lawns re • seeding. p h 1 It. 1667~8-73 Placential;;,;;.:~=~~~--reapo"'lble adult&. Call co.I-s., ., garg. 0 c • Complete lawn care, clean ·~~ ing ng Ave. Cost.a Mesa. Geo. 1966 OLDS Cutlass Su· .,~lect"'-,-'t"'21"'3lc....,m.ul2tl~~-""~'~'~· ~
1
BACHELOR unturn fr 0 m ~~~jly~~L 'f·6~~· BABYSITI'ING In my home, up by job or month. Free P11nt1ng 6850 Woods. 64~U&I or 67>1J80 preme. Power, bucket
.,1 • 2 BR •• From I'~ 10 llJO .... &"ail 1 2 • 3 • 0.1 area. estimalcs. }o~or info, call M 1 INDUSTRIAL sea"lll. new tires, R&H. Xlnt • api;,. J.W. Bd~.fftat~ ~. child 2 BR. large apt., ~It-ins, new Call 548-3823 11~ or 893-1995 P.ATh.'TING Int." Ext Lowest • . 3100 IQ. condition. For la1f! model
$175. No children or pets. care center, adj to shoppin&. crpt., freshly pa1ntf!d. Cpl. CHILD care in my home, ERV'S LAWN It contract~ pncea. Fully ins. ft., 4 offices 3 phase power. Econ Van or Similar. Call
1525 Piacentia. Also avail. No pels. 0/40, no pets. 673-0130. vicinity Del Mar & Sant.a GARDENING SERVICE Satisfaction £UlU, Free est. $350/per month. 642.roiG
t 2 u:m:rum apt, $200 mo. 7100 Peterson Way LARGE 3 BDR, 2 BA, laMll Ana Ave., C.M. 548-4965 ~:/~mc'l/Indus. Reas! EXTJint/Wlneel lapo6'13-tg A~~r rm ~ ~~~er:.Natltt$ ~i~lo75;i'• "'CR""U°'ISE=R,;---Al;-;;P,-,"""2
Costa Mf!Sa 546-@70 rm, priv patio, bit-ins, dsh-V"IV"•t.N • • •"' • ....... depth finders, range 1200
Students ok. -"'M"'"'A'"R=n"'N=l9=U~E=--1 wshr Otlld~ over 12 OK. Brick. Masonry, etc. Jap•nese G•rdener + good palllt, neat work, f'.OR Lease--Nf!w 2500 aq. ft. mi. Recent aurvey -will 1 • 646-9683 * $215/mo. 67>3794 a.ft 5:30. 6.60 loc ref&. Roy, 847-1358. industrial. bldg. 9c ft. 1639 ___ ,_._,prop, TO or -al· I"'====,,..,=--= ~ Exper., comp! yard &ervice! '·"'""""' "'" ' OCEANFRONT. wtntor $225. GARDEN A.P'TS. Ba lboa 5300 Free .,1, 645-0912, !)68.2303 CLARK " CLARK Mo"""'"· CM. 6'13-9017 !er boal Owner. , Off oceantront t I: 3 Br apta BUILD, Remodel, repair. CUSTOM PAINTING Lo~ 6100 (n4) 7.ZS-3400 Excellent, park-like surround--Brick block CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST! •• Sl.60-$175. CM 2 BR, util furn -· tor aduli. o-•y. OCEANFRONT Up""r 2 ' ' CODCtttr, e ~2936 e \VILL ex",."" .. " ........ ,000 HCI\ ..... _..., •11 ..-,.,...,....ntry no job too small Mowing, edglng, odd jobs. ....._,,.... .,.J
1 _,., inr-.xw• Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR. Apts, Bdnn conv ~n. No children ~r-' . Reasonable. 548-$55 PAINTING, Papering 16 yrs. BARGAIN. 2 apt lots Costa eqty in land at Rancho
OCEANVIEW: 2 BR. winter PooJ, 111' shoppina. or pets. $2'l5 inc ulil yrly. Lie. Contr. 962-6945 in Harbor area. Lie. & ltfesa. A 19 unit & a 55 unit. Calit. where the action is
•·-~60 2 BR f Uy -~ E ,.,_ EXPERIENCED Japanese Ex l I ~2060 + I uc., "' or , am Im Santa Ana, ApL ll3, ......, ........ -..an Front Builders 6570 gardener. Reliable, 540-7373 bonded. Reis. tum. 642-2356. ce oc. or Ior 16 uniU:. Need de-
rm, winter be, $195. e 64&S.>«2 e for free estimate SUBURBAN Painting/Dec 536--0131. Anytime. preciation owner, s.u.J666,
: 60-M.16 LCE Bacbelol" unil Sharp. B•lbo1 l•l•nd 5355 • Room Additiona Expert Guaranteed Work Acre•-6200 Box 676, Tustin.
, WINTER -2 BR $175 + util. Cpts/drps. Nr. So. Coast * Apartments & Units JIM'S Gardening l lawn Free est. No job too large 11-SAN GABRIEL HOME 2
'
' can be eeen Aug. 23rd. ~2 Plaza, OC'C. $125 incl refrig. YEARLY, unfurn. beautiful * Custom Homes * Kitchens maintenancr. Res. &:: Com-or too small. $3lil0 Lanun• Be•ch BR, 30' den, pool. $10,000.
IOI' W •·· A NB upper duplex Apt. Very * 2 s ~-lali · merclal * MB-84U • { pm, . ~ ve., . I: uW. See at 973 Valencia tory .,~ sts FREE ..;c..:..;="'~""..:..;::;.. __ ,l e For better painting can 1 ACRES W/PERMIT equi~ for 3-4 units within
Avail Sept. 6. Apt. 2 aft. 5 PM wkdays & close to So. Bay. 4 Br. 2 layout/design 20 yrs. exp. Cut & Edge Lawn experienced painters a t TO KEEP HORSES 3 m1 from beach. Bir,
*NEW BAY FRONT all wkends. ~ Salisbury Rlty. Pacific Coast Builders Maintenance, Licensed 646-4077 after 6 pm. Adjace nt subdivision. one rutn. 213 I $3133_ ""'~~...,.----~-~,,;,======= 24~" E r-··t H 548-4808/64$-2310 aft 4 ' Winter renta.11, 2 Br, 2 Ba Z-1 BR unfurn apt. $ll5 mo. • -· ............., wy. p A p ER SPECIAlJSTS _ m~e E. ol hwy, util avail. Oceanfront lot near Newpt.
' tum. Avail Sept~· $2'25, mo. See Mngr ever aft 5:30 & Huntington Be,.ch 5400 Corona de! Mar 675-7191 JIM'S GARDENING & lawn Cal's best for vinyls, flocks, $35,000, %: Ca.iih. bal 1st trust Pi;r. gd. renl.al area, 25'x
'Zlf 19th st. 615-0236 wknd&. Avail. Sept 1. 136-D ma1ntenance. Res. " Com· foil murals 847_1659 eves. deed. 85 $37,500 will trade $10.000
: e WINTER RENTALS e E. Bay St.. CM. 642-475' 2 & 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, pvt patio, C1rpentering 6590 mercial. * 54&.84U. • · MAKE OFFER 11 eqty tor small house or TDs.
WINIFRED L. ros.s, Aat. 2 Bdrm., 2 ha. Nr shpg cen-h eated Po o 1, new I Y CARPENTRY 642-4766 Plastering. Repair 6880 Write ot contact: George R. Briggs Rltr. 613-8UO , ~ e 6U--385Q • tf!r, No children, pet&. Call _d_"°"'--'"'-· _...._ _____ 1 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Reliable Lawn Maintenance '--'---"'--'----1 Kress, Box 914, Laguna Cabin Cruiser 31' 1op cond
OCEANFRONT winter lat, 3 betr 4 pm, 646-6222. Huntington Beech 5400 Too Small. Cabioet In gar-Gardening and Clean-up • PATCH PLASTER.ING. Beach or phone 494-;4726. Slps 6, twin V..s's, ra~
BR, tam.Uy, $175. 41117"i!i JMMAC 2 bdrm Tti·plex. aget1 & 0 t be r c.abinets. Ge •-• 6682 An types. Free estimate. ACREAGE For Sale, com-phone, auto pilot, etc. Want ner1I -M'rYlet• Call 540-68'l5 pletely eoglneered It im-vacant lot, TD's or !! ? Se~c,"""""'-"'-"'~Driw~=·===~ I Opts, d.rp&, blt-ins, re!rig. CHEZ ORO APARTMENTS 54s.8175, U no answ~r., leave
lll Acres nr. rivtt. Small
hoose on Hwy 31, Colvillr
Nat. F~st, Wash_ 115.000
Val. \Vant OJ. NB prop or
kits. 64.5-1745
Trade pizza & mack shop
on waterfron1, Balboa Is-
land or lftlaur&nl eqUip-
ment for what have you !
6T>m4
TRADE MY EQUITY IN
1969 PONTIAC GRAND
PRJX FOR OLDER CAR .
LIST PRICE S5500. 546-2774
HAVE: Ii!. acre + shal'P 2
BR home, Acacia St, S.A.
Hg"IS; $28.~ clear, horses
ok. WANT: 20x55' trailer,
Broker. 642-5851.
St.reet/oH road dune b\taY,
entirely new design_ '65 Cor.
vair eng. SliiOO val For
boa.tor!!
496-2'00
3 BR 1% ba, frplc, lg lot,
extra 18x22' garage. $25,500
$3300 eq. Want camper,
travel trlr, late mod. car or
TDs. Owner/Agt. ~
Big Bear A-frame c.abin.
Crpts &: blt·iM, Swed. frpJe.
Prettige area, n4,<XXI eqty.
For local home, unlta, or
! ? By owner 968-3597.
20 Acres ranch. 3 Modern
homes, 2 wells; fenced.
Training track, huge bArn,
14 smlll: FOR land, unita
or ! 145.000 Eq. 6'5QS9
1..a.k~ Arrowhead ~-ater·
front lot $50,000 val. Pacific
Palisade! Ocean View lot,
$27,500 val. Want: Income.
Bkr.548-ml -LARGE l BEDROOM Adults, no pets. ;J.40. 8234 Atlanta Ill!&'. at 646-2372. H. 0 . CON51'RUCTION site clean-provf!d on San Diego Fnvy. Valued $ll,OOO. 673-~l ,. .. _ -•· s 1 Bdrm Pri Pool •-• h uling ~""" • Plumbinn 6890 Zoned Ml, one acre parcels .. ~ "'°"th, ,.. ..... _ ~ ou""r p.m. , gar. , ........ erson up, a , ;>.,......... IY ----=·--=-~-I .& * * * * * --v ~~-----'='="=;--1 washer/dryer. 5.16-3927. =""""=="'"---I terns installed & repaired, to 15 acres avail. Bel\lo"een '1' *""""* Famy· Villa Apts CARPENTERING, room ad· 845<1152 PLUMBING REPAIR Crown Valloy p.,.kway A Etl '!'!'!'!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~'!'!!!~~![!!Jl!![!!Jl!!!!!!!!!I
BRIGHT I: cheerful 2 BR 2 BR, crplll, drps, bit-ins. No ditions, patio decks & No job too small Rancho Viejo in l..aguna18uSINESS •nd ANNOUNCEMENTS ~.~t Patio W 1 t chi Id re n or pets. covers. Quality, cu st 0 m HAULING, Genera.I, trees, • &'2-Jl18 • ·guei Call A 1 12 2 ......,.""" • · n et· Near Onnce Co Airport & \Vlhr/'--. pool 1 1 so. hedges, toppf!d, trimmf!d, Ni · lO -~ · to • FINANCIAL and NOTICES ~ <llJ"I work. 645--0415 PM lo 4. 499-1355, stan,1-.:..;:..:;.:..:;.:.::::::. __ _
OCEANFRONT, 3 BR. 2 Ba ~ta ::.u1:ve.o~20l22 968-5756 Aft 6 pm. REPAIRS, ALTERATIONS re.moved. Big John. 642-4030 ~~-model, Repair. 6940 Allen. Brokers welcome. Bus. Opportunltlfl 6300 Found (frff Ads) 6400
Frpk. Yearly leale.. Delime. Nk..\Y 2 BR duplex. Bil-ins, CABINETS. Any size job Hauling 0730 BUILD, Remodel, Repair TAKE over 5 acres. m down.
-
$350. 67J-7053. I ;;-=,-.,,=,-...,-~~--I crpts, drpg. 1150. AduJts 25 yrs. exper_ 548-6711 Brick, b1ock, c 0 n c rel e, m. mo. Near lake & town. sri.1ALL Grey &. wht. female
2 BR Triplex ApL Carpets, only, 15lll Olive. 5.16-8523 QUALITY Repairs _ Altera-CLEAN UP It lite mcvlng crpntry, no job too small 894--4743 Agt. PARTNER kitten. Vic . Bea's Laun-
Coron1 del Mir 4250 ~1i patio. $130/monlh. T • 5640 llom -New consl by hour Tree It a!Irub removal. Li Contr 962-6945 dromat, Baker Sl, C.M.
ust1n or Contract. 646-3442 l"'~""""''!"'~bl~•;.· __ ....:~~135!l~11 ~;c.;;;;;;;;;·===,,;;== Mount. & D ... rt 6210 $1i,OOO caah required tor ex-~54&.-0==1.I0~~-~---1
• l-Ul" kue. l BR, SEPARATE, new 1 BR. gal". THE ASPENS REPA~n *GARAGE. cleanup, trash S.winl 6960 •••••••• panSion. O.ld eit.ablished MALE White cock -a. poo ar, patio, So. ol hwy, apt. Euts.i .. -I Adull .1UI1., Partitions Small haullog, By ••· job or by ":;°":J-'-----=0011 I Am . ·1 • V'cto . CM afte 5. uc. 15652 William St R od I t N" u.., -company diversifying. Sal-encan "" 1 r1a,
OCEANSID: Hwy, 2 BR, ~!"!...., $125, incl. elec. Tu.ttin'11 prestige address a!m, eCall, •'KE· Nite,,.or day, the hr. 646-1568 25 YRS. exper Seamstress, ary 112,000 + profit. Double Owner pis identify I: claiar. "' .....,....,..,,... as. ...,.1>4679 attn-"ft .... •--ruoi,., m"'' '"Z191 E turn, walk to &hope:, adulll<I •====""'=~--I Adult living, fl!) pet11 YARD/gar cleanup, Remove =a.uu .... "' ............ next year. Call 1'1r. Lee at """"' ves.
only, no pets. yrly. 540-3864. THE SEVILLE 2 BR, 1% ba.. Shag carpels Cement. Conc,.te 6600 trees, ivy, dirt, tractor clothing specialty. 645--0731 RANCH 213-437-8CYZ4. y"o"UN=c""'n'"o"•ty,.--p"m"k_ne_o~tcred~I
w/prage, $150. AduJts -Total air condiUoninz backhoe, grade 962-$145 e Dressmaking -Alterations HOUSE male cat, vie, of Collegf!
fAVAIL. now! 1-B:r. view apt crpU: -drps -Bit-ins. Fenc-Unfurnished • CONotETE Work, bond· TRASH HAULING Custom Designs PARTNER wanted, active or Park. Owner pls ca 11 r:;, ~ Rltr 613-%222 ~ .. >'_!!·_2619 Santa AN Ave., Gymnasiums & Saunas ed & lie. Patioa/drvwys * 64&-6446 * & inactive. Exciting new pro-545-4522 ~ F~~:~tio~~ ~~;·2hiillps Cement . n>asonable • 64.>2120 Alter1tions--642..s&45 ACREAGE d<oett proRtected by US pa-cF°"E"'MAL="E"Ge=r'"m-an"'""s"be-p°'hcrd"""'I
B1lboa 4300 ESTAT&clte fam ily home ~ Housecliani"9 6735 Neat, accurate, 20 years exp, en · are opportunity. approx I yr. Santa Ana &
Largt grounds, Xlnt loca-e OlNCRETE work a 11 :.c:.:::==;.;;;,;:.. _ __o...;... Manufactured &: distributf!d. Del li-1ar, 616-01Z7
OCEANFRONT
BACHELOR APT
•673-4938*
Huntington lle1ch 4400
1 Br Medallion, condo, all
blt~ln. rdrlg, encl patio.
pool, qu!<l 1130. """""
Or1nge County 4600
SINGLE Young adolta, lux-
ury garden apt., w/full
recreation facilltlf!s & com-
plete privacy. South Bay
Club Apts. m so _
Brookhunt, Anaheim C714l
'l'J'l.<000
lion. $215 mo leue. 1293 _D_•_•_1_P_o_i_n1 ____ 57_40 types. Pool decks It custom. CARPETS, Windows, firs, TILE, Cer1mic 6974 NEWBERRY ~9412·MIXED 7=~-w-1tt-haired-.--T-.,,.,.-. -r.1
Baker St. Cati .,.132.• etc. Res or Comc'L Xlnt !.:::.:!...:::.:.;:.:;;:::._...::..:.. BEER. wine It dell; liquor Pu bl 2 BR Duplex, lease, crtps, -==-='"""-'=----'al ppy ack, white, tan. 2 BR, w/w ,,_.,, .. ·-bit· -bit . tri .;:; work Reas! Refs. 54M1.ll • Verne, The Tilf! Man * SPRINGS potenll . Established store Found in CdM. s~75u ~........ ..,.., • ·lnS, re g, no pets. CEMENT \VORK, M job too Omt work. Install & repairs. In growin1 commwrlly. ==~'"'7-'..C..'~--":::...-1
ins. 1·2 childttn ok. $130. $190. TI4-689-M78 amall, reasonable. Free Bay & Beach Cleaning Serv No job too small. PlasteT CITY OF LAKES 537-1758. BLAO::Kitten,whllepawalt
mo. Nr. schools. 962-30!"6 'R~E~A-L~E-ST-A~T~E---estim. H. Stu.nick. 548-8615 Carpets, windows. Jloors, etc Aw.... h MAKE YOUR OWN LAKE 1;;;;;;;;,;;""==-,,,-~ chest. Yellow collar. Vic. of •-& Commc'f "'"1401 patch. Le......,'6 s 0 we 1" WORKING Print 5""" ""th
Ge-r•I ~• -7 1-1184'" """"' '"U' -· Mesa· VPrde. "'-2832 Newport Beach 5200 '"" C1rpet Cleaning 6625 WINOOWS DIRTY'! repair. 84 -""" ........ ......., 20 Miles East of Barstow on AB Dick photomat 'plate ==-=-~0..,-=----,1
Rent1ls Wanted 5990 Johnny Dunn your local 6980 freeway. Elf!v. 2000 ft. Near maker, offset print ing FOUND: Twin 10 •pd STUDIO APT CARPET &: Furn. cleaning: service. Free etit. 642-2364 T.,rc:";o...:S.::•;..rv;ci.;c•'---'-'--Lake lm'een. Wonderful land press. For sale or lease. bicycle. F.V. M:z..4001
2 Bdnn. 2 baths upstairs. Liv for 1 day service & quality EXPERIENCED houseclf!an-GENE'S TREE s ERV: tor apricots. alfalfa, nut tree ~ or 642.-0920. 177 's"MA"°LL'"'""Fc-•m-."""'Efk"""°""H~O<lnd....,..1
rm w/-1-dining ·-·.All wnrk, call Sterling for ....__ _ .. bl trees/shrubbery removed, rrowing, fish raising, hone Riverside. NB. wlcollar. vie Magnolia iii ...,.,...., ....... RENTAL F briahtness! 642-8520 ing, own car. L.PCpenua e. Roberta ll B 52851 elec kitchen, wa.sheNltyer INOERS ..., $18 day. Phone, 642-7871 trimmed, hauled away ranch, hoe.ting, etc; etc; ESTABLISHED beauty salon. I ~=="·=·c;;-· .,,,,-.,=-I
incl. Ca.rpetf!d &. draped. En. lllmHSIYI ... GUAIANTlll DIAMOND ls a carpet11 best 549-1359 In CdM. 6 chairs, newly YOUNG poodle brownish or-
clO&ed patio, 2 C8l' garage. ~t: IESIDOOW.-IUSllllSS friend! Diamond Carpet Ironing 6755 ~;:;~====== 40 Acres Ranch Land, Im· decorated. 675-3420. ange, w/Oea collar, nr Baja
Use ot clubhouse, pool & ArT.-IOOMMAn S11Y1CE Cleaners. &!~1317 I ~~::::l!....----= Upholstery 6990 proved WITH modern 2 BR •LIQUOR LICENSES• & Capistrano. Arch Beach
u.una beth. $250 ""'r mo, r~~ 0 . <-'n • e WILL do ironing in my ST U ho ranch house-, Ige liv rm, Inter-County Tramfe-Heigh ts. 494-8486 ...... 4JJW.1-.... , .... _ .... ,,, ........ , ... t ean111g =!Vice bomc, 15<: ·~ece. CZYKOSKI'S cu . p I. be ed il' b ••. , I •• MacFarlane Rlty ""'.... -L" ed · am . cc uig, re..,. as * ORANGE COUNTY * FEMALE Ll h 642..3862 ,.., ,, , P 7 • PPP , 1cens , u1.sured, • 54 lM • European Craftsmanship rm, kitchen, modem bath & ''WE WON'T BE UNDER.. g l b 1" own ,
• G•rden Grove 4610 -,,.. .... ,,..,~;;,..=~-l or 2 bedroom, furn. or guaranteed. 646-0094 JRONlNG. Fast, dependable. lOO'f. fin! 642-1454 l b" T k h en-similar to shet-p dog. 2928 c-"~'---"--C....'-----' UNBELIEVABLE · Vall 1831 N rt Bl CM P um mg. an ouse SOU>" Limited Quantlty' Ro,·al Palm Drive. C.M. -partly furnished apt. in good c .. rpet Liylng & My home, Fountain ey ewpo ·• · · closing 1000 gal galv. stor· Winston C2l3) 272-4249 coll~t SINGLE 'Youn& Adulti Lux·
ury garden apt. with coun·
try club allTIOllphere and
complete privacy. SOUTii
BAY CLUB AP1'S 13100
CHAPMAN Ave., Garden
Grove fTI4) 6Jti-.J)3Q
BAY VIEW residential area r.ought by Repair 6626 area. 968-J0.19 DON'T JUST W!.'.iH for !IOme. age tank under 45 lbs prts-·1~=::..,.,;.:.:;::.c;;c.=:.,:=:: I SMALL mack & hrown
Simply lakes YoW' breath working couple (Io ca I ------=c::.:..;:.;::.;::: IS YOUR AD IN CLASSI-thln&: to fumlsh your home sure. With double gar. Con-PLASTIC Bus. for sale. lnj. female dog. Vil' Edwards &
away, overlooking Lido &: neY.'Spaper executiveRl No CARPET LAYING .l'IED1 Someone will be • , • find great buys in to-cretc septic tank, all elec., molded pie frames. $8200 + Bolsa. HB. 893-8162
So. Bay! Spacious 2 Br. children, no pets. Up to $175 C.A. Pag~ 642-2070 i~"';"""'~· ~for~~U~. ;D~ial~642-06~?"i.:.;;d~ay~··~"~~as"s~lfi~·ed=-=Ad;iii'·;;;~ 5 hp pump. 301 gal per min Inventory. 496-2500 GREY rabbil 546-5146 or !Z ba.; glamorous ten'ace per mo. ~ Aft 5:30 at 80' depth. Improvements: 549-3&18
lor '"'·-·· Adwts, "" PM or week•"'•· Eled"c•I 6640 Your Ad Should Be Here, F enced with I" by,. x 300 ft lnv1stmenl Dppor. 6310 =B~I R~T"H~C"'E~R~T~l~F7.IC~A~T"'E" I pets. S550 per month. LANDLORDS: we ha v e _______ ...:;.;:..;.; redwood fence . 7 Miles Ea.st
L...,,.1 llelch 4705 -;-;;;""""==:ro"'R;;-675--:"'6~~ tonanb waiti"" "" ""'•" • ELECT!UCIAN "° job Th ' L k" F lfl ot ""hool. 176.000, II Ccl, PARTNER R.E. Projod. -2191 1-~-------NEWPORT Beach urxler 1150. Frtt service. !:rvK:!m:li~4prompl ., re 00 1ng Or • bal lit trust deed. \Vill ne-Nmt .~.000 .. Return prof1I CAfofERA In Newport
S BR duplex, tum I: unfum, Walf!rlront 2 bdr, 2 ba, New Local Broker, 645-0lll iiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiii~iiiijijjjjj~~----iiijiijjjiii;iijijjjjiijjjjjij;1 goUate. Courtesy lO broker.
14
milhon. Title .ln5.. C.O. Heights identify. 548-5360
m Vic Hu 11: o, new luxury bldr. bu 11 t-i n s ,1 1~=BD=°RMS"=--'-.,.--..,,-,,-,~nl --84.7 ........... P·M··· Trustee. 646.l234 ~~:r trp~ car. ~':."='.'°parking. bolt Newport Baaoh " CdM REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTAT~ I :'!!!' :'!!!' Money to Loon 6320 _L_"-'-----640-l
100 CLIFF DRIVE Caribe Balboa area. 77l-5536, eves &: Gen1r1I Gener1I __ G;;.•:: .. =r.:.•''-----i;R.;;;E;;·;;W;;;"";';od;;;;;;;;;;;6;240;;;J t.t • 2nd k>am for -·1 .. 1. LADIES wallet. Vic Center
St, CM or 3rd Ave., Legwi.a
Beach, Fri 8/l. Valuable
p a p e r 1. itew.rd. 400-2369
aft. 6.
wkendr. ,. ......... Two bedroom tumhhed 310 Femando St. cash. Bomrw on )'QUI' pro.
AU Deluxe Featurn 673-3003 NEED 2 Bdrn1. apt in Income Property 6000 Office Rentil 6070 pet1y eq without tilsturbing
w-;? ~\':;y ~ach B~~;;:,.J ~,: ~ ~ n~ _::.::"""'~..,~":;'Se~bl~~:~::"~:~u~%;'.,Se~p~t.-L· I :R-:oo::::m::1:-fo-;r_R_•-:n_1 __ 5_99_s P~usT~1!~ER~ ~t! SS MORE CASH $$ li:" :'e~ 2ndht ~s.
494-2449 Disposal Crptd Drpd lA>wel" e LANDLORDS e LARGE pleasant room . Owner wW can-y lst TD at MODERN OFFICES SRtUer Mortpge Co. Inc.
p ANO RAM 1 C V le w, ;s of ne-.w-duplex. $275 yr-FREE RENTAL SERVICE PRIVATE enlrance. Work-S~% int. l!.% Down buys. FROM $65 PER MONTH For Your Home Equity Serving Harbor Area Z yrs. -~-'" AJ'·-•-eh 2 ly or $200 wintc.>r. Stt 111 Broker 534-6982 Ing man only, ~1504 155 000 ~ 11 -i Air-cond., parking, central lo. Absolutely no cost • • • 336 E. l'ltt. St. _...,.....,...,ng ""' """'a ' 1809 W. Balboa Call 673-2223 "'=~-=~=~-· 1 '°""=='"7"'7'c--~7" ' r '1 ,-, cc cations. Secretarial service. to you the Seller! 642-21TI 545--0611 bdr., furn. All elect. Mature NICE 3 or 4 BR apt or hou!!e WVELY bch. home, pvt, ba Ewing Invest. Realty 230 E, 17th, Col'rta Mesa 12 years of paying more cash ____ _ ••
adullt, no children, no pets. eves. unfurn Ol" furn. Good & entry. Kit priv. $85 mo. 644-4323 OR 644-1361 o Cou ty perV
, SUS/mo. Eve11.: 499-3755. VIEW apt. adults only, one residential an:!a, Re r p , Quiel working Jady. 673-8064 4 NAT'IY Nl.FTIES 642• 1485 for ~~be ~it ~~. · 1Mo:;;:::.rl;.,g,;:•,.!l9::':!'C.T.:.·:.:D:.;.'.;;•c...;63=45
' * WINTER RENTAL * laf'gl!! room w/fittp1. • sm. 6'5.5139 t?\lt!, All 2 BR -Elec b!Uns. Lush 2 OFFICES availablf!, ap-: Tben call the Best CONSTRUCTION Money
, Spacioul 2 U.R 2 BA ocean kilcbl.'n avail. Sl65 mo. =B~us=INES=~s~i...-d~y-d~u"itt-, -t' 1 "G==;H====== patios AND oYf!r 12% net pro.x ~ .... sqBaf~er, CM ava.ilable for income pro-~---~~~tlful ~2:~~Sun or afte.t 'i..bdrd•••~.P!.~ 2:,lSC, rumisht'd. uest omes 5998 return. J\take inc prove it! 549-U&i'Mon lhru Fri BEVERLY JACKSON ~~~tlpe~rlyoteisF, ~~,·~
--"V ""'""'"°"" PRJ room in Jic'd Guest Jo Han~n. Rltr. 6'6-8226 .........
LOST 1t 180 E. 15th, C.M".
lnstanmaic camera, black
case. Reward for roll of
film & camf!ra. 1500
Newport Blvd. 54S--51~ '
GLASSES, 250 block on
17th St., C.M, Oldham on
caae. Reward. TI4: 5of8..548l
714;m-1700 2 BR. 2 ba, elec kit, trplc, * lttature working V.'Oll'lan, Home. Good food, congeni!U Office &: dask spatt, Homes, Shopping Centers,
DELUXE Ir, J Br, .undeek, enc 1ar. Ste11S lo heh. lit. lovely room w/ prv ba k atmosphere.. Avail n 0 w. Busines• Rental 6060 Sttretarlal aervl.ce. REALTY 0 ff Ice Bui Id i n gs . SIAMESE cat, armwen to
bar, ocnn view, C&fllOl1. S2SIJ. mo 673-1900 or e:nlra.nce, 64&-l84J 548-S22S. Newport Civic Center, Apartme.nb, etc. Write or freckles, female. Lost vie
GREY & while kitten w/
fiea rollar, Vic Hntg Deb,
Beach &: \Varner. 84a-3517
$1e5 leuf. UID pd. 0-1473 548-3131 ,..-....,-=~.,-.,---~ ========= e PRIME Retail Location e 67>1601 &47"'°ll or 54.5-1245 call TiUe Realty &. Ea.!it Bluff. 64-4-4529 3 or 4 BR. Older hotne would I Store 17xto, xlnt ft. &: auto PRIVATE OFFICE Insurance Company. 2151 ===-7'~--~~-1
-.. 5000 VIEW apt, 2 Bedrms, split be gttat! Eut of Newport Mite, Rent,. s 5999 •-fr ~--H ~ c M. a-~ 8 11 d · Bl WHITE female -.-11., 1os1 lewl. Elegant carpettnc, il possiblf!, Aey k>cation coo. '-'" IC . .i.ci u. .,.,....., . crpts., drps & •tora.ge space ... ,.. u In I• rm-.............,
drapes. garage, firtpl&ot. 1klered. 1150. M~lS STORAGE ga.ragH. fully I ~"c::.._:...:;=,:...______ In the Glendale Fed Savino BUSINESS •nd ingham, Alabama 35Jl3 sno HB. No )dent: f
VEN DOME =
Call.,..,.."ott""'l"'=PM=sa-....:,,,_""',:,;,--IB =~us=IN=ESS=~t..-dy'"'"~d~,.";..,-, -1, I enclo&l'd. Avail Sept. 1st. 12,j() SQ. IT. modem, lit Blda; •• Corona de l Mar. $.JO. FINANCIAL Phone: Cm> 251-6286. children waiting. 962-1434
BALBOA BAY a.ue ex· bdrm unlum apt. To $110. s:n. mo ea. 548-2921. C.hf. lloor. xlnt oUltt/tlore loca· mo. Call Evelyn Halbakken $75.(Q) 1st TD on u.cm sq. R.E\VARD: Carln Terrier,
IMV4CULATr.: APTS! qui.site 1 Br apt F'lml or CglJ &42-0086 ~i DOUBLE garage l or rent ~· l.1usl sublet~~~~! 675-64« or ~65 But. Opportunltl• 6300 ft. brick commerc. bldg, on brindle color. Vic Pomona,
ADULT-A FAMILY unt lM. $400. 6'2.763.l for car or storage. E side I -wttkdays SEE At 188 E. 17th St.. Of. WE DARE YOU long-tenn leased I and •1,,c; .• ;;t.;Call="543-ll-:c--98=~~-I
Rooms for Rent 5995 $15. 22S S~rlc:s SI Cti.1 li-L\R.INERS CENTER Naxt to Security Pactrlc Payable $150 per mo. Incl. GRIEVING: Beautiful calico
SECTIONS AVAILABL!l 2 BR. Apti. furn. or u.nturn.1.:=:::!.:.::..::::.~..::.::!.:: Jrfiiiir.i.'""'12t11m-;;;;;---;;;-,. Office &: gtore bldg. rent or Nat'I Bank. Plenty of park· to check us out, Nationwide JO~. All due 5 yrs_ Rental cat, ans to "Cica" IT1etu.), et;J:. "'4%f''7S:•rk A1,:~ Ytarli{it;y '1U2lO N'PI'. Beach homt; prtv. G~~· toc:'r ~ 0 f~ Jea.sc. $75 to $1~ per mo. Ing, a 11 ulil. included. Co. needs a diltrlbl.ltor Jn Income $2.400 per mo. 20% 546-9965 *' n....-.....!.~ Si ObH • bl.th, phont txt., sep. rt.rr!K. ~ndy 1~ ·C.M. ~J 149 Rivcnkle Ave. &f6-!414 '~"="=W.=~~----I yoor area, 2 10 1 hn Pt r DllCOU_zt. DALMATIAN Ma I c. vte, * 2 _..,.....,. uae of w 11 1 her 1 d r '1 t r -= w«ok (days nr e~) lor hl&h Proker .f91'.1no Bob' Big Boy * him Pool, PuV.,...n Wfftcllff 5230 $20/Mo gan.ge_ for rent StQr· BALBOA LSLAND • LP&se 2 CARPE"I'~ dl'll.ptll, air con. ea I N lling YOlll-~..,:0,.:...="-"'-'"'""'~-1 s ' C.M. Re-*,...,,.. tndk'/lndl'J fac'll 64.2-351! ~t onl).<. 642-2657 Eait Side, Storts, toge1twor M ~p. 301 dl!lonlng, plcnly or porkln;. CA~ :;p p;llt'~ job: $l6SO 15% DISCOUNT wllJ'd, 642-20'15, 968-1516 «Vl'.
lllS Anaheim Ave. SND prl'. 2 BR,. 2 BA. <'Pl. l'iilAN Or air!, 115 wk. C.1\1. Marine Ave. 673-81$3 STO &: up. \Vclls-McCardle, rtqulred (secured), For In· Jst TD on white: \lo·ater vk!w BUSIEST mt.rke tplac.'11 In
COSTA MESA f4Z.28U drp. frplc, hlifns, •Cl"OAI Kitchen pnvs. M&-39J6 lllterlw""A'°NTE'=o=-.. -S~,-0,-.-g,-..,.-.. -~ Or M.-e ycu.r broktt Rttn. MS-1129. t<"rview In ycur area, 1e1nd lot In Laguna .Btach. SG,000 tcrwn. The OAlLY PtLQ.T
fnn C.oco't. 1225 It PX>-1 ~1.:.0.:.P.:.M;__-"'"'-~-~ lor merchond\M.', s. Laguna smoJI rtorr LARGE Exel'ulive office namro, and phone no. to: 111! S60 mo., ml'I. 9%, all 011ssUied 1ttUon. s •., •
Adulta. M2-o<l239. 1665 lrv1ne. DAILY PlLOT Oaullied or Dani\ Pl. area. Call col· Catalina Jalnnd S75 MO. N.8. Also 1>maJI ofJice from Distributor Dtvl~n. 590 N, iiUc 3 yn, Broker .494-ll3S mmK')', t1.me A: •ffort. Look
OW IC4m tor RESUt:rs eeetkm ~OW! ll!CI, 716-0.UJ Phone Avalon 187 $tS mo, Owner. 6Q..4644 Anl5a, Covlnt, Callf_ ru.m White ~lqtwrtl! Otme-a.Jlne now!!!
• I ' • . . • . I .I j
. ·~ ..... ·~ ' ... •• . -------~-. --.. 4 •• ~ ._ .... , ........ . ' .... ~ ... ,,...."",,... ... -···-~~· -
'"""""' A-%1, 1'69 DAILY PILOT ~
ANNOUNCEMENTS JOIS a IMPLOYMENTJOIS a IMPLOYMINT Joas a EMPLOYMINTJOIS a IMPLOYMINT Mt'RCHANOISf POR "'""~ ..... ,,.st fO~
1;1"'nd;;....oNO_T_IC_E_s ___ ·I Help Wonted, Moft 7200 11•1p Wonted, -7200 Holp w.-~·Ip Wontod Jabt Mott, w-. 7511.lwllo -· Wom. 7500 SALE AND TRADE SALE .. AND TRA IJ
JOBS a IMPLOYMENT JOBS a EMPLOYMIN'I'
Loot 6401 ' "'DEDVERYDRIVERT Women 7400. WDIMO 7400 '~·~·n~l~tv~·;·iiiiiiiiCiiii~IO;OO~F~u~m~l~lv~ro;.iiiiiiii.;~ ACCOUNTANT GENERA.I. SHOP WORK + * --
DO<;, ....U Ion& " balttd One cl the counlrln top Need young ntarried man * * '1 J.C. PJ:NNEY COMPANY
blonde color, curled up tau •. buUdJna: tlrms . Brtabt. ~:.~I~~; Fuhlon hland-NNport Beach LOST OU"' LE'•se~ 118 collar, aiii, to Rlkkl. ~ ,... for Wllal ,. 1oug, & wil\lng 10 -1c. Call J. C. PENNEY COMPANY ., #ill
Vic c.meo Shores, CdM atrnment !ft Onntre O>tlnl>'. tor appointment fHhlon lol4nd _Newport IMch HAS OPENINGS FOR. Ow .... -..house building b 1>eliit ...,.;; m-.uui.~ '1 ''· ~~~'!<t •=.:,:,, ~ Alll~B=~ mns PART TIME coo Ks w A 1 TR.Es s Es Must V ac~('e Now
SHAOOY Black Poodle, few broaden hla e><l>e~ence and Costa M.,. I U S B O y S
.-.... haln, 111" ta 11 , ,.....,. for • oolld Mure. 5411-9326 S A L E S LA D I "'S R_df.,. of -'°'' or cast ~ to "Rolo','. Vie Conslructkm eXJ>er. hclptul REUBEN'S .,.. Our 6000 •q. ft. Store Stock mott be tolll Boba Chlca a. Sprf?lgdale, but not mandatory. Salar)' With some experience and wlllln.f to Open to Publlc Flr1·t time H.B. Oilld'a pet. Reward. comme.nsutate wtth ability HoUHWIVft. & Mothers learn. Top worklnf condition.a & envfron-
'93-l,!51 p1., exaoU••t fnn<• benet111 COCO'S Can you spare 1 f-· ~-·-each day and a•• mti ent. COdm~_utan11vdolnwa1os plua lnclmeals & 3 Rooms Fum. V1lue Over $1000. Now $389.1 or a ...,J!d.wlde parent oom. . "" •~• "" PS. an ou~ g bene!ill udlng e S r. outhln!fc Sponlsh ltltm. ,.1, • 96 In. ""'11·
1.Po_rio_n•_hl ____ 640_5.1 pany, Contact w. c. Baker *DISHWASHER* to the family Income at the aame time? hospitalization and profit sharing. .., ., 1 with 56 r. . .,.1,hlng Ion '"'· ,. clllfr • ,
DIVORCED <n•> 541}.9'1JO Schedules convenient for you, mornings, If· A DIY In 10 AM s pc. Sponl"' Dtnottt, ook ttblt top • 3 hll'ly M•I * , MAN and HELPER. Perm. Apply in person temoons, evenings or comblnatlona of all P. M :,g:r1on lo 1 PM, ltwr1n110 011tchl,. 11bln, lop dilnblo '"""' hr
part ume, to averare twc ISSS W. Adams Work In 1tore under the finest ot condltlons 0 Y thru Saturday n.n.r.,o 0-1.
YES IT'S YOUR ...... dally tor. early mornJnr Costa Mose and top supervision. PENNIY'S FASHION ISLAND O · 1·1 1• I f I 00 I th ·1 I FAULT newe:paper dellveey t 0 pH 1 UJPS PETROLEUM nee 1n • 1 • •m• pr c•s o o •r 1 1m1.
Fer reoo~ message that homes in N.B. Over $200. co APPLY IN PERSON 'E:quaJ ()pportwrlty Employer Plua t nhexfra sptcl1I off tr ,5 off on eny $iOO
wllJ change yoUt ilte call average per mo, Must ha~ Now hiring for •a I a r y-All •tudeil.t poaillons are filled pure: ••• or more, with • copy of this •d.
ORANGE CO.,.,_..., late "'°"'' &talion wagon o..,.ted ..,..;00 alallon. PENNEY'S FASHION ISLAND * *•IO pc. Quilted Co'"e' Assemble --···-·$159.9
24 hour recording and be dependable, Call Experience desired. Good ~~~~~!"l!"l!"l!!!'j"!'!!!"l!"l!!!!!"l!!!!!!!!!"l~1· 96 in, Quilted So'f1, w/56 in. love stet -S1'49.9f l---L'°"IC"E"N"S"'E=D-=---I L.A. Times 642--4800 starting s a lary plus 10 AM to 5 PM Monday thru Friday 1; •60 in. Heavy Spanish Coffie Tible ..... _ ... 29.t
Spiritual 11 .. dlngo, advtao WAITER ....... ., commt..km. with All student pos!Uona filled. , HoWlp W1n1M Holp Wanted • Lu90 M1tchln9 Lamp T1bles ········--·····-'19.9
on all matten, 312 N, El excellent opportunities tor '"'*' 7400 Women 7400 • Sp1nish 01eor1tor lJimpi, fr"'m ___ _.._,r'4.9
Camino Real, San Oernente Apply in JlttSOn advancf'ment. For in-Equal opportunity employer l:;jiiiiiiiiiijjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil e Guaranteed Box Sp9s. & M1ttr1s19s, from $19.t
49UUG, 496-9507 _._ 5 formation contaet manager, J' --'--:------• St1c;:ks & Stacks of 15 yr. Quality K<lnn & Quet
10 AM . JO PM KA~ .. ,RAMP':Os· lh'ookhW'll & Adami, Hun-* * ~nawport . PRESS Sets •I TERRIFIC SAVINGS. • ttngton Beach. B k T Attractive Export 5Dl 30th St., N.B. "•'"°"w"""'A'"'l"'TE"R=s---I •!J!!!!~!!'!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!?~~~!!'!!!~!:!!!!!!!I personnel OPERA TOR In orm• s •• ,. Ch8'9t M1slor Chu91
YOUNG WOMAN CCI°"" Mond.,) i-Help Wo--TRAINEES--B1nkAme,;ce,d All Accepted = .:.~~ ':i:it -.,.R,_e-ce-n"'t~G,..r.ca"'du~a..,to--• BUS BOYS H~.!':n"'"" 7400 Womon 7400 agency Mature ......... .-. to·~ °"" "'•QJ-s.t. 9-6. Sun. 11).! 541-9660
213: 591-4S38 LIO PM Olemical Engineering Re-Experienced 833 DOVER DRIVE &emble materials. operate
"al"cb & 0.V.lopmeot Or. BERKSHIRE'S -ACCOUNTS-NEWPORT BEACH P"'""· make plastic --. AP R FURNITUR SOPHISTICATED Bachelors ange O>unty location to 642-3870 """"'t ahlft 4 30 ·~·
Woman writer ..... $12,500 for ri&hl man. Call RESTAURANT INSTALLMENT PAYAILE CLRK >fu;;.Frt, ~fo~:i 2065 Chirlo St, Cost.• Mesa
Behind "Htrbor Cir Wf.sh"
Enter off Hamilton or Bernard St.
.... .,..... tip• for '"'"'" Ann Mc\V"lillams 615-2770, 3450 Vie Oporto CREDIT Pononnol Aloi lo $550 5'3", lhould be alender and
book. Box PGM>, Daily Pilot Merchants Peraonne1 Aget). Newport Beach . One year exp!tience, Must be experienced in per-agile, Waltrtues usuan,
.Jam• Loyd Bullock cy, 2043 Westclltt Dr., N.B. Mr. Patrick CLERK Procell vendor tnvoictt llOrtnel work Wfth insurance, make good ptts1 operatora.
pleue contact )'OUl' sister TRAINEE -~-'.:::...~:::..~~-Good t;yping required and pu:rcbut orden, work:m:.ans comp etc. + Must be able to apeak ud
A liHI• litrd to find, b11t worth th• doUtn you ••vel
Marlon lhland J'""'" at SHIPPING CLERK * DRIVERS * _.,_ compu1e """t YU1ances. i"Od typing, Excellent op. 1'Hd "!"~. 847"fl JOBS a EMPLOYMENT JOBS & EMPLOYMEN
2401 llaniaon St, Evo,..tt, & LITE DELIVERY N E • EXPERIENCED 10 key addJrc macblne, portunlty to advance. "-~ --Wuh. Interesting work, need young, O · xperience calculaCorl and lite W-Acct1 Payable $45a Mr Horsley. PerlOMel Mar. Help Winted Women 7
ENJOY economy vacation ambitious man w/ mecltani-Necessary! TELLER tng. Good AIP background, CAMBRO MFG. 00. Women 7-400 Help Wi nted
Catalina Island. From $8 cal apptitude. Balanoe-F1o, Must have clean Cal1fom1a eome experience witb time J-;;;760l;u .. a.,;;-'':;';-H.,u;;;mi-;. Bcb~;.· :=I
mU!week for twc. Hermo.a 885 W. 16th, N,B. 642-5700 driving recoed. Apply UNITED CALIFORNIA MASTER card• desirable tor one of FOOD CHECKER --------PBX
Hotel Phone Avalon 187. FUl.J.,Time positions 1 AM YELLOW CAB CO. BANK ciur b@st ftnns. Full and part time Anlftrlng service has
ALCOHOLICS Anoeymo"' to 3 PM shill. and n PM 10 l86 E. 16th st. SP~IALTl£S CO. M MTST O,.r lo $435 /CASHIER Ing for one openttor. 8 AM
Phone SU-7217 Cit' write to 7 AM shift available. MW!it Costa Mesa 3029 Harbor Blvd. ust be experienced, work Inifependant Ban1c. Jooklng PM wkend; 2 PM-10 PM.
P 0
-
·-~-Mn•• be local --1-'-nt w 1· t b ~====~~~-Costa Mesa, CalU. in a pleuant beach area Hotel Restaurant • Only ex. lor ou•-lng, -bl• day week&: 4 PM TO 8 • • .&-.:t........, ... ~ ·~ 2 VOLKSWAGEN mechanics I..,, Mo I A offi--~ ad· __.__ ,... ..-·-·-2 d k ~ -~ rtferences. Sal""" and com-to ,,. -• tw 546.2033 "'I""" nrov e v& '-" •""'"' """~""'"'ed need apply. Five .-:i~ to ---n n-· ott;-. ays wee ......... .,.... """ .. IF ""'" have rented a ladder ~" l' wn ... room O•uY, o ----TE=LLER="'"°---1 C "---v•-meo• d k ll ...... .... ,... .....,. but will .,_ -t -• J-~ missk>n. Apply in person tune up arid rbake mecb .. 1 otta ~ "'G""1"' I F "1d t u25 an wee •re el shift. TELLER AND OOllllu••T ..,,.. -~·--;;.'.;......,..;;...;J.cuoe.;.,_196_"_p_l•-ase on1y: 8 to 5, helper for lub & oil, 51)..50 Aggressive yoong company 642-2427 r r •Y 0 ...... Newporter Inn Hotel NOTE DEPARTMENT _,,..~_.tud_e_nt_._54_>-_=_--ll
... BAYSHORE RICHFIELD full --~-~-1 with •-"-and ·Type 50 wpm, use good: 1107 Jamboree Rd. 0 OPERATORS guarantee, we pay group ·~ •"' ~ jOOgment, must be dfl:all N PENINGS • • • •. 200 w. Coast HW')', NB Ins., vac. & holidays. new accounts experience iri An equal opportunicyo .nlnded & insurance back-C.Onta~be~--Bsnklng experience preferred Experienced in alngle JOBS a EMPLOYMENT
Job Wonlod, Mon 7000 INSTRUCTORS 53&-ll9l. Bank or Savings & Loin. 1 employer -helpful ll4<-1700 Exl. si"' but ..,, nee. with related and ov<rloclu. Good p;
d P od . M h" . lo 2 yn. pttl'd. Pleuanl .Clerk Typ.lot ••75 T 3 qUallltcallon• For appomt worl< prices 11oody Mature, young a ult, look-r uct1on ac 1n1st1 small ciftice atmospbere.1~;;;-;;;_;;;;;-;;;_;;;-;;;;;_;;;_;;;;_;;;-;;;_;;;-;;;;;-;;;I .,. am to pm, Mon-Fri. · · EDDY MOSS 14Dt2 Locus ENGINEER. non.degreed, Ing for good future, able to Drill press er Turret lathes. Contact Mr. Lapp, A • -T)'Pe 55+ for sales promo-Hou SEK ment pbone: Mr, Brown,
with 17 years electronics ex-meet' the public. Apply in Small close to!. instrument DOWNEY SA VIN GS & ccounting Clerk tlon dept. tnlettStinK firm. Laauna. 1 ~:pp~~~ 540.ml. COOSt., Westminster; 534.8738.!1.
perience urgently seeks person. parts. Small company with LOAN ASSOCIATION family, Uve in, private room K·H.sekpr. Nursing d
night job to pennit com-Holiday Health Spa good working conditions. 837-t9U or 6'2-6533 A position ls now available & bath, pleaaant home, 1 &e. Bett)' Bruce at ties. Live-In, expd, pe
ple&n ot degree w o r k 549--0343 --..=..,__.="°.--I in our Accounting Depart.. children, all In _......_, • m Gx ~~28top pay, refs ttq, d·-'--'-·-. Will consider e Costa Jrfesa e FEMALE HELP ment that _,. __ tl>e --• .,~
....... UOJ'll BOYS 10 -14 PART TIME ll AM 2 PM ·---·~ ... CREDIT MANAGER well behaved. Other help in .~... ec job as technlclan tlr ? For DELIVERY Serviceman S130 • • o1 a 10 key adding macluUe, home afternoons. Applicant " MATURE woman for re
inteiview, write Box P 429, wk after trng per. Initially Carrier Routes Open Ideal for Mothers with child.. typewriter, and the uaual mu 1 t be responsible & Acency f0t Career GUU sales in houRwarn j: ilfta
Dally Pilot. 1().12 hrs daily, later after for ren starting back to school. Clfflce akllla. A position la now available capable o f supervision. C!O W. c.o.at Hwy., N. B. Rion Hardware, 1024 Irvine
route learned >T h r s . Laguna Beach. So. Laiuna Unllorms & meals tumiabed. P.S credit m.......... far a Salary It t t me ... BJ appolnt. 646-3939 Westclift Plaia, N • B Job Wented, Ledy 7020 Permanent Re!s re q. DAILY Pll.DI' Contact Mr. Dinius. This position otfert a tood --~ 642--1133 --•· hil 642-4321 McDONALD'S growing dally newaparer in negotlable. Relertncet re-, .-tor P . QUALIFIED, Resp. lady Servisctt. 500 31st St., NB salary witb attractive frirwe Oral:lge c.ot.mty. Newspa~ q'tlired, .f99..Z29 , BABYSITl'ER. Te a c be r MATIJRE WOMAN
teeQ posttlon a1 Com-DISHWASHER Top ~~ppcy~~d.Person 31;f =B~~M. ~~:i::~:= experience ls preferred tut SALESGIR wants mature woman to For telephone aurvey our ar pamon. Drtw, Swim, Free needed at BLUE DOLPHIN we would consider applit:an(J LS care tor infant, boy 10, girl , fl~. Mom. 4 ~ 8 lo travel. Ava.H. IOOJ1 Box ALLEY WESl' RESI'AURANT e 546-9!M.1. e anc.e ~rage, three wtekl credit experience in ether Younc mature g1rla: able to 9. Hot11tkeepirg a.tao. Hunt. Gd. pay Ph. Mn. Phil,
M881, Dally Pilot 2106 W. Oceanfront 3355 Via Udo LVN & NurNs Aides vacation after 3 years, etc. tieldL meet the public, Ideal u Bch area. 897-4978 775.3, 9:30 a.m.-3:00 pm daU
WORKING Mol:hel': wi ll Newport Beach. 675-In4 Newport Beach Large, progressive ECF Applyln.peraonat thl 'nlispositionottenanexceJ.. ew, job for working Alta CLEANING lady wanted. 2 TYPIST for 00
"""""· I my home. Excellent EXPERIENCED s er v ; ce Salesmen Wanted """' u. Orientation prov;d. DAILY PILOT lent salary and attractive rfrls, M"" be attractive • .,. • ""k on Udo 1'le. bluepra;t shop. Over -~ •-• ~ s•-ti Man D ~ ...... _.. ed by a full time, in service, frlnft bene11ts tndudlqr fut. wtth a COOd figure:, Pleue-'write and· give Pho-· cA""""J caft, $35/ ...... WJWU:S .,,........ "' on ' &ya, ..,.........,,., full and part"-3 11 •~ ly -~ '·· ·••-• and Ill A~•• Jn "'"• .....,...,,., • ol94-446T be.fore n AM off. Salary + comm. Apply . . ........ e educator. Openings to • _... --m~ e ... ....., pel'IOrt references. Daily Pilot Box
in person. Grants American lnqmre in person 11 to 7 shttts. 330 West Bay street, O>sta insurance coverage, 3 weeb Holiday Health Spa M 903. BABYSITI'ER Wanted,
Domistrc Holp 7035 17475 Bnx>kh""l Fountain KINGS FOR MEN M .... All for Mrs. Green-vacation """'U... ,...,., 2lOO llarioor Blvd., CM. BABYSITTER U·3!>4 wk<lys. 2 cblldren, pm'
Valley. 2300 Harbol' Blvd., CM Cell ROYALE' man or caU 64M321 for an pmEon proaram, etc, WAITRESSES 4 days wk. 'v1c 'p.w!:!; penn. 673-3780 ews. Chine!le Jive-Ins. Q\eerful
Permanent. Experienced.
Far East Agency 642-8703
George Allen Byland Agency
Emplcyer Paya Fee
106-B E. 16th, SA 547..()395
GAILEN Kamp Shoes "DISHWASHER: MUST be 546-MSO interview. Put or !Ull time. Over 21. Scbl, C.M.. Start Sept MOTHER Attn'd OCC-
Sboe Salesman part-time for experienced, only. •·MR EXECUTIVE Apply In peraon Xlnt Pl)'. Apply tn. Jll!l'IOlli to 54&-nf9 needs mature woman to al
back-to-acbool perk>d. Exp'd MIKE," 3J9 Palm Ave., GENERAL at the Mr, Hont Odesi SECRET A R y ture 3~ old boy 646-5409
P"'fon'ed. Contact Mgr, 54 Balboa, CallL Apply aft 2 SECRETARY DAILY PILOT NE~,:ORT HARBOR woman Gen1 olli;. ':n,,. HELP noeded In Accmtn
Fashion lsl.and, NB. PM and a:sk for Roger. Needed for exciting, temp.> CHT ~LUB pt-time, perm. 6'15 ~12 3 o citttce. WWJng to
......, ------______. SERVICE Station salesman. rary usjgnment. Good short. 330 West Bey St. '120 W. Bay, NB Equal Opportunity Ehlployer 54o.3943 -MO-LD_MA_K£R_S Exp'd, age no barrier. Lull band and tnnscnblng .,.. PRODUCTION Cott• MtlO blwn ll·l2 noon It S.1 pm -======1 tfflp Wanted, Men 7200 time, salary +~ comm. chine skills needed, acept Mon. PIE .lhop work. pt·time No Jobs-Men, Wom. 7
Mobil Station, 24362 El Toro Western Girl Inc. Ailr: for Mrs. Grienmtn MARRIED? TOO MANY Tu$ANi.Y""5. S
STOCK ROOM
TOOL CRIB
AITTNDANT
Must have recent exper-
ience of tncoming re-
ceiving of stores and ni.w
materials, tool crib ~
trot, and shipplng & pa-procedures.
C.all Jim HyatnA. D8,ys
642-Xll. Eve1. 646-0019
F 0 OONTOURS -estab. 1953
Now in Orange County
Top Men Required 546-3030
~ COLLEGE student w/experi. ence to work full time eum-mer, part time during
school. at Chevron Station on beach in Laguna. MUBt
be 18, NO long halr. 494-9003
TRAINEE
for food prep & cooking ,
with abWty to adv quickly.
t99-4132 or 499-3900.
Rd,,LagunaHilla. 54<>-0325 NOEXPm!ENCE BILLSr Pe""""nt-·~ NNPIE
., NIGIIT work in bakery. NECESSARY or call 642-4221 time help wanted In ~k 1510 Baker, C.M.
Make donut& and assist. SECRETARY for •n Interview bar. See tnanagtr after ?:30 BABYSITJ'ER; )'OUr home,
Trotter's Bakery, 234 Forest EXPERIENCED Apply fn person pm. Paulo Drive In weekdays, Newport Shores:
BRISTO
COFFEE SHOP
Ave., Laguna Bch Permanent. 20 Hour, 5 day Theater, 3051 Newport mw. 2 chlldren alter s c b I •
JANITOR WORK-evenings week position available THE HARTI.EY CO Executive Secretery CM. &16-8384 • FOOD A BEVER.AtlE
pa rt-lime. Newport-CO.ta Newport s ..... hrs, 10.12 • For Pllbllabln& Oo. P...,ld<nl -F;;1"c"'eooNiKVKVE;;;E;;;P"E"'R~11;:AlTRACTIVEmlAC'i'iiii'1iwrnoii<MANiAN:,..,,..ii: I WAITRESSES Mesa. Apply days, 320 s. & l.J PM, Top aala.ry. Write Experienced and adapt.able eo .. i .. -. •Ult>. ~ .. paJd -•-· 45 to instruct In makeup 9 BUSBOY Glassell jst, Oranie. Box P-421, Daily Pilot. 1987 Placentia Ave. to a wide variety of projecta. ;'.!...,-_ ~· , tu.au techniques for 1 am 0 u 8 e CASHIER
Costa Mesa Heavy etenorette dictation, """ MAN, ateady part time job. Do You Have Shorthand helpful. Must be NJ.auel Pef'llJIUlel ~ models. We wUl train. No telephone lntervtewa
Xlnt. L.A. Times route College Accounting --=====--! well.groomed, articulate, at.. 26Cfll. Gett;y Re.cl l;;,83&-0=7,..43_. ___ c--:--I
open, ll'Vlne area. $200. + CPA OFFICE NEWPORT tractive, Excellent -1-Nl&uol Ind, Pu!< EARN money at -·
mo. 962-4633 Interesting..Qi.allenglng BEACH conditions. and company 831-1471 Modi.Ing •mall part a,
Co!fee Shop Manager SERV. STA. ATT' 2 Full Commensun.i. P<Y. ""'87< AD AGENCY !rlnp benellll. 54o.66S6 Gonorol Office $400 Pre-. work or bobby
21-30. Salary & bonus. Send time Men. ovu 21. Must Good ~ lkilla + prev. qualtfle• )'OU. Send details
GULTON INDUSTRIES resume. 002 s. Beach. have exper. & a hair cut. Factory Trnee1 $1.65 hr NEEDS TELLER Joua work exp., oe.U Loraine Box 4151, 1rv1.ne 92664
l&H Whittler Ave. Anaheim 490 E. 17th St. C.M. Good · cippty to advance, Part time help. Good . Merdlanta Pf!reonnel Aten-WOMAN to work in donut
Bristo'• Coffee Shop
The Newporter Inn
Appl)i 2 to 6 PM, Mon-Flt. _.,_
NEW MARINA
RESTAURANT
Costa Mesa, Cal.It. SERV SI'A ATI'. Night man, Ma'•tena·-M•at o, p 1 Pleas&DtABwoILITrldng!EcoS ndil:ions. -ist for cleric.I d.,.. Experience Pniferred cy, 200 Weltclitf Dr •• NB. ahop, Apply 1n penon before
l PM 7 A 280l E '"'' '""'" • '1"' A....i;;, fn -raon to Mn. 66-10 AM. NO PHONE'""•, Eqoal opportunity employer O to AM. PP · Clean up 7-9 p.m., 5 days. UNLIMITED AGENCY tiea, errands. $t.'5 per vvv .. -"'1u ~ (Experienced only)
i-,.,-,..,-,=-..-;;;:n--;:c;;-I ~~~~Goldenrod, Gd rate. Richard's Mkt. 488 E. 17th st., sw1e 224 hour. Cell Berbar1 et ,.:-~.~~SAVINGS OCCASIONAL <ter tor l 2947 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
-<NACK SHOP ,#.9 EXP. •-,, Sta. s·•·-· + 3433 v;a Udo, N.B. 67l-6360 r,,,,. M•1a 642-1470 6424910. child. Days, Mature woman. COUNTER HELP, lull or O WAJTERS
"""" * ii\JSBOYS * DI SnWASHERS
.,., .._.,. AND LOAN WW call bu1a )'OtD' home or part time. Apply at Taco comm, o/titne pay aft 40 PAN Washer, all around NEED attractive, 21 to 35, 1515 Westd.lff Dr. mine. C.O.ta Meaa on1y, Call Bell, 699 So. Coast Hwy,
e WAITRESSES e CAPTAIN
bra. Full/I. Perm. 990 E. : ma~ ~ols t!'ancy Waitress for lunch buHet. ExJ?er1enoed Newport Beach on Saturday between 1Q..f. Lag. Bch. g.3 PM
Cat Hwy, NB. n F s, 44 guna Apply in person Mon. thru HOSPITALITY HOSI'ESS ii 642--1682.. . BABYSITI'ER, 2 childttn, 2 Lunch & Dinner
GROUNDSMAN Saddl be k Cnyn Rd., Lag. B. 49<-»20 Fri.; While Honie Inn, 3925 TELLER fooklng to "-eou.-. 1 n•'u 1 re e ~. SERV. srA. ATI'. Exper. Newport Blvd., Newport to __ ,_ r ma .... '11 wometon SCHOOL TEACHERS!! p.m. • ll p.m.. my home, Contact Mr. Jamei Demato
.. -n1y FIVE POmTS SHELL Beach. w"""'vme neweomen Would )'OU like to make llOIYle reh. 642--916.l Monday thru Friday ,.... '""° -da.v &nd n;g!rt Ch•rmak 837-9700 or 495-•Pb •84• ,,.. UNITED CALIFORNIA tl>e commuruly, Mu.t have "'In '" tor this w1n1e,1 EXP'D SALESLADY THE-..... aw.JI.able thru achoOl A" .. 7. : ..-.rm * * * SECRETARY. for BANK "-•Mt~ car and ~ ho--~ ..,.V"" .. ~• ~·-· • ui: ,,.. Try• new career part time Men Ir Wiinena Oo"'1"'" ---.-----' ,...,, Apply "' ...... --Moonll ht E 5 I 9 ESTABLISHED Insurance • ad-firm. Shorthand m Ocean Ave. dable. Apply 235 E. Main. ,._. ~ call ·----~ NEWPORTER INN Frt .• J to ~ p.rn. 9 er-VII 0 Lead vall N B CIUlce 80, typing 60, lite book· ' .......... n.tacb Suite 7, Tuslln, Ca I I f. • Ulle~ cir ....... _..,., * 5'&-5.183 * -.Over 21. Call on new pa.rents, s a ' ' • ' k Call -.--oc ,.11 _,,,,,_ Realty 675-3581 ll07 Jamboree ll<>ad Nat'l concern. $5 hr, comm. Career oppt. 615-6383 eepillg required. Pam, 494-5646 ......-w.w BEAUTY operator full time, ~~ c.:~!\-i~· Easy, 54s.88al SERVICE Station attendant ~k_ 6'7>2142 bet 9 AM & 5 EXPERIENCED ELECTRONIC P~= ce::-e ~ KUat wage It con\m. Gwen's Newport Beach, Calli. 1 .. -~=.:~::.. .... I lSER~VT~CEE'°is~ta~tio;;;n;:aia1l'1e"O;ndiiiant~. Exper ... ,,. s.. Mil<•. WAITRESS ASSEMBLERS In C.M ....... 5 ~ k Bty, Shop. 494-3294 BAKER ~ N opening shift. Andenon'• 4678 campus Dr, NB Experienced in single needle Slnall commercial productl '1:-.S. 548-8261 morns or ~j MAID, fUll or part time, P!tEVIOUS achoo1 e&fl • SAWMA Union Service, 1645 Adams, PLUMBER. Experienced in and overlock. Good Piece Mfg. tn a.ta Mesa. Know\. 8 p.m. $1.7S/hr. 6 du/wk. Laguna ~ ::·3742.~ llG' hour e PLUMBERS C.M. 540-1200 plmnblng & heating. Fringe work price~ 11'ady work. Apply In Po,.... ed&• of Color Code w/ pre-s-. Motel. 49<-852L PP Y person.
COOK & fond prep man benen ... 64&4922 -EDDY MOSS 14042 LocuJ1 SURF A SIRLOIN vlouuxperlencehelplUl.Apo MAIDS. Part Imo °' lull BIKINI Barmlld/clancer SAN JOAQUIN • STOCK ROOM Seafood, bn>;tor, HI 1 b St., Westminster; 534-8738 5930 p C 1 H -•·· time. Experience not ~... •-"-ta· SCHOOL DISTRICT
H I W ~d IC. 1 • wy. 1JY nectauy. Ku Nllet Villa !,';;," or parl:•wue. ""111 14fi00 S. W. Sand C.,.yoi!I & RECEIVING gal/benefits ..... ,.,.,. • p ·~·· WOMAN.........Ue, ... ,.... N•wport llloch CORVONICS u-~-··~e1 _,. Eal! Irvine "·'ti Women 7400 ""'""" •:-e to earn mo-. ,,_ En•-~,. --w .. """" 1921 Bayaide 11.u -Ave., • _. · • CARPET FULL TIME Delicatessen ...... ~ ...... ..~J CllllD •--h • H ~ -· ~·~· L~Drl~ve~,~N~e;wpo~,t~Be~•~i:;=.:lliiAiiYirno~-~·~~·;;;;;r;:~l--'-=:::::=:---1 5 dayg k. See Win prizes, l'IO age limit, no "°'"' ....,te ome.....,.,.. Colt.a M'eaa .
ERS men. a wet COSMEJ'ICIAN, also exper, ttme limit, Will train u ·irv· Care o1 3 children. i;7a>ERJENCED F/C book· BABYSl1TER needed, 5-dQ Eiqlerienced LAY Teny. ~Time Uquor ei salesgirl. F1 or pt-time. Beauty Counselors. S47...QS46 Da.Ys. Referencn requtmt. NURS!:S keeper, full tlrne for local wk. FU1l or 'Iii time. 2 ~ .... 1.. E. 17th St, C.M. LI &-ml4 New n-... ---. So. •··ta .,. -• u.-Firm Call Children. Ute housework ~""""""''"'.,.. ..,,...,. .... ~,.. ...... "' ._., St'ITER For 2 boys, needed. ........,_ e RN-Relief duty. two 4l;va _. • 633-li66l for Mature woman. 839--1759 a1l ISLANDER White Eleph&ntat Ana. 6f2..6641 Rtgular hours. wkdys. 2:30 HOUSEKEEPER $100 mo. per Wttk. appointment 6 m. BOOKKEEPER
2135 "~-01'0~ ~~las M u-Jp w~•. --oo Htlp Wont-•, "•n -oo thru 6:30. Mesa Vttde. Own Ltve In or out. 1963 Wallace, e LVN-Rellef, four lbltta: BEER BAR, nf.ghta. Apply In p, """'yon ..... .• ........... esa ""' .,..._ , ' 9U """' I' trans •tart Aug 29. _5(5...8345 Apt D, CM. 7 m-0765 per week. Laruna 8eacb P!l"IOn 2.-4 PM THE WAITRESS Experle:l1Ced, 18
Hunti'Vton Valley
O>nvaleseent Holplt:al
* EXPERIENCED *
COOKS
BUSBOYS
DISHWASHERS
APPLY IN PERSON
REUBEN E. LEE
151 E. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
BUSBOYS
Part or fU1l time. Exp mt
~sary. Xlnt pay. Apply
ln PoflOJI to Mr. flo"t Ch~I
NEWPORT HARBOR
YACHT CLUB
'1'lO W. a.,, N.B.
btwn U-i2 noon I g.7 pm tx. .... -.
MOLDERS··
EXPERIENCED
Permanent mold operators
Top pay to top men
Apply Precision Castings
i044 Placentia,
Costa Mesa
DESK' Clede College boy; pt lJVE.IN Houaiekeeper, 50 to Nurstna "°n:!9 HANGER, a0> Newport :ty:iln~ ~~;·:~
time, Ken Nllea Met.el. 1031 65 yn, Prot. couple A 18 yr. 49l;;;ao'l5 Wvd. C.M. Mon thru 'nmn. Mr. Steak: Kant. s:::ewman Ave. Baygi~ Dr., N.B. daughter. Molt wknds. fret, WOMEN, fn1l or part Umo Gl.RL FRIDAY part time for 2267 Fairv1ew, C.M. Pr oolonal
C ·-· I t !:veL '"'· -· -!mmed tor' Child .. -ofllct typlnc ,l;i,i' ;;;;,:=:::.;:"'::'=::-:= arw-1trla Emp oymen GIRL to lit borne So Catt AMtea or Colnpanlone. recepHonlet. h.blon hl. i. TYPISTS. 2S yn. or oldtr, Employment 1 to 3; Mon thru Fri Lta. 1 child. T:'°30-6:30 )l.F; Age h to 65. flee. Call 844-0Ht 0 w/strong backaround on Assistance
Call 833'®> ext 2036 own trarit. or llve nr. $18 Slttlnt Prttty Aetn<Y TE:LEPllONE SQUcrroR mM electrto. Penn..=-COASTAL AGENCY
UVE -ln Housekeeper, prfv. wk. Att 5:30, 675-2973 Member of Wt Sit Better, Wpm dAlb' M Fr E:Kp'd w/malllnr nnn. · A rntmbtr of
.... m. Salary open. Call ar.... WOMAN fw night shift, Inc. SUbol<ltaJy of Gerber pre!. -b:: oi 0-MAID &>tD"-& &>tWlll, Inc.
e p.m. 847-<856 HB ll to 7 SAWYER HOME Prod. Co. "2-3214 '2 hr. ~54 ' $1.11$ per~ 2790 Harbor Bl,,CM -
MAIDS 14M116 PART .. Tlme bakery wmil:. TWO (2) sJ.i.Es PROMO-S4Wl29. 54 Inlen'lewlng Now: ..
Hotel/Mot>! experltnco PrHHr,.Sport1w11r-J,pply ,,._ .. 234 Foreat, TI 0 N SEC REl'AltlES WAl'l'RESS Apply In .. ..,., , COOl(S
6lU4lO GOOD PAY, STEADY EMP. IA&una Beocb. See Mn. Ty pt 50 , pl t aAni Sea Shanty Jlnlauranl 830 WAITRESSES WIDOW To livo-ln, .. m. -Raupp. · • peniono]tty. P11W1 o!c, rd t.tdo l'...ic 0... N.B.
1'0t9J'Y, lite houaekteptnc. MarEL Maids. pretm.blY tEA01ER Wants. nllable ben's. Mn. Quinn ~mo FULL time niabt COUnHlor, The Derby Rett•urMt
Rtfl!ttnl!ft. 53&-35S2 with ~nee. ME S A be.bysjttu or blbytlf.. GENER.AL omct Musi ~ lo 9 P'M:. AttractJvo, iOOd 1262 Palisade• Rd, CM I
W AlTRESS. MOTEL. i46>9681 t er/bouakeoper, -like 10 wwk with iJ&um. !lgutt. IW2"3630. 546-8390 '
Apply at The Nlbbltr, 1902 GRAVEYARD WAITRESS, 'FV Gd.ben.'1,p1UlboWce.Mr.MRDONlJT-ncodawomell2l WAITERS,WaJtre11e1 l •Harbor, Costa Men 10 PM lo 6 AM. 1"30 W. LITE Hakp& 1: cook meals QuJnn. UW'l50 yn or owr. Ai>Ply in pttl()n BUsboy. Fret exp'd, Apptyt
LIVE-In bouaakpr, 511 ..,.. Pacit1c Coo>t Hwy, N.B. fw tlnalt elderly !Ady, CM. BAltMAlD Wantod, "'l>'d USE. 17tll.~-· _ _ 2121 E. C.... Hwy.Cd M.f
wfs, pvt room It both. adult THE QUICKER YOU CA1L, Call U U750 5-6 p.m. p~emd. .o\P p I J tilt NURSES AIDES • Fe< O,U, Pilot Want .jAt l
$2Z mo. 548-&410 or 6'&-5216 THE QUlOCER YOU Sl:u. O.W.f PiQii' WANT All8t WAILLER. lltlt Omu!'HB. El<perl......i mlon Dial "2-M?I for RESUl.ll;
•
•
I
I
I
•
I I
l
.4l•
Sa DAl\.V PILOT
-A' IMl'lOYMINT 1• Mer., w~ 7500
'2!N
I ?•te
ASSEMBLERS-
l MECHANICAL
I Experienced ln precisk>n ' anembly 1nVoltri111 clole
I tolerance alignment and
fittbw on productt 1ucb ' II: cleliMte ~ tnllns. ' I valves and tnsmunents.
'
•
T1Vlda1, '""'' 21, 191.9 FOR nd IVISTOCK TRANSPORTATION MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISI FOR MIRCHANDISI FOR MERCHAHDISI fOR MIRCHANDlll PETS • L FREE TO YOU· -~r~• , _..._
SALi ANQ TRADE SALi ANO "TRADI SA~I ANO TRADE SALa ANO TRAiii SALE AND TRAiii ll25 . Spoed Ski loots ...::::=.::...:~::..:==':-:~-::------;:11;:1111;.., I ~F"----'---_----:.,..,-,,..11-F-um-:-ltuN-----:ltl::•:-• I MOO Diii ctrl'E ...,.. .,...1c11t .. -·
'""'11'"' IOOO P.umlhlN d <i_iii......,.iiiia.iii:iiiii'iiiii'iiiiiiiiiiii"iiiiiiiii"I,;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;; 1--------l 1ov1rc bonM. 5434<52 1121 'U CHRIS a-on • &tr.
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ••••••••••••••••• LABRADOR.....,._ ..... KrlTJ:N Parr,..,__ to Fbql1. Make olt <r lnde * AUCTION * ~. ~., ~ ':!·1• ~ sood ~"\ m~ •121 1or. sc>-1&!1, PUBLIC NOTICE
DKOIATOI ~ CANCEUATION
OF 18 LUXUIY APARTMUITS
SpuW. & Modltwr.,_ .Fl!'lliln
All BRAND ' NEW 9-p~. Midittrrenean Bedroom Suite In PeC11n
61
DO
!Reg. '!49.001 ......... ._ ........... NOW " •
Gorcjtous Sp1nish Cu1tom Bu!lt Sofe with.
metching Lov• Soet-Cho1ce of heeut1ful
l1bri<1. !Reg. $419.951 _ ........ NOW $225.00
Sp1nish Dining Sets ···-······---······ .. ····-·-···$75.00
Solid Oelc: End Tebles ond Coffee T1bles •. $11.00
Till O.Coratot T1blo limps
* 3 ROOM GIOUI' * ~ K<noeJ.. CM 2 BLACK ...... " pupplet ..:15::.· H;; ... ::....,-:-5".,-I ""boa'"'L""'•"""H"R,1
COMPLm FRIDAY -AUG. 22 ...._ • • *** <17-ll49 *** M,,.._ New mu ... "'"" 7:illl P.M. ' 842-9911 aft< PM LIYlnt Room -lllM-. -Dlnolhl m:w·a USED FURNITURE .WELSH O>rri !P,.,brolce) ONE cute, Jo,.:-lia!J<d bn>wn 1-:,.o==, =====:!
$297 Bed"""' aete, Div ..... LoV< chempiot1 •IJod. 5 """• 2 klttu. Female. 5'3-U32. Morino Equip. 9035
teat Dfnettes Che•t.I Com.. ~ Priced acecrdlQa: 9~·x11~· wood paUo roof, Weekly Paymenta •• We Carry OUr Own Contncbl ....0, Wnpi Plctu~a, c.r. ID .,.aIJi,.. S<Mna. ""'condllio<I. 616-1'82 8122 SAIL !ALE -New, u...i,
let'" tablti: Color TV Side ~ SACR.FJCE ~ DO<r-DUTCH rabbit male Unclaimed . Main.;, JI b I. VAN'S Discount Furniture bySidt..ing.ra.,,~·fuez. ,,,..;. ~ Quol1ty"ll •tr. 5jt-Oln "''" l :oO p.m. '8122 Ge"""'. s,,,.,..,n. '.;!
417 W. 4th St., Santa Ana Free P'arlClnt er,' Wu1ien: I: Gas Dryera ~. Mtl.!t Co 'by Sil.~ TRANSPORTATION or will alter tv :· TWO Opon Dilly to.I _ Sat 10-6 -547·2412 6' MUCH, MUCH MO~! DACHSHUND, J3 ea u tlt u I come, 117,~ aer t 23 A:.
· COM>!·BRO\VSE AROVND AKC fe11111<, I montba. All Boil A Yochb 9000 DAYS-ON -ugus ••••••••••••••••• WINDY'S AUCTION ...... $511. -I • ' ".< 1Ll·M· -• P.~imHA~:
, BRU~ Gri(~on Pu,J>.. '11 Gl.ASSPAR Ct I al i On• ~th SI .~ 54~
1130 2(175\\ N ......... Blvd. Black. champ 1lr" (213) lnboanl<llllboanl. 120 Mm:.1.:::::;:,;;;;·;i;;,i;v-,.-:;;;:;;;;;;;il
Betilnd' Ttiny'a Bldr. Matia. 429-506t aft 6 P.M. Cl'Wter wllh power jet A: * MERCURY 3.9 _outboard
Fr•nchlse Closeout c:o.ta Mt!Sl *· 6t&-8686 Bolton Tenitt, PGttl' trim. Full •cover. engine, S99. H~'Har-
8022 Plenos & Orp111 . ' G•rageSafe
Coif ller...,,,,I Dept. ~ 171') 4'6-9401
!Re9. $49.951 ............................ NOW $11.00
SP41nish H•n9in9 Sw•9 limps
IReg. $49.~51 ............. --.......... NOW $1f.50
GARAGE 'Sale: Fri, Sal,
Sun. 2239 Vista Huerta, N.B.
(Bhill1). "'·
'nle factory hu ~ cloee OPEN DAil..Y 9 to 4 male, ! wk&. Ready to enjoy. A 11 bou.r. 213/592-l.006
out Ill 4 eo~--1-· A: 2 "'-lnet •""1518 maintenant"e reo:irds. 1 ·-"'~ ......... KI 6-ffH Boat·Y•cht Pianoa on a cost.plus buis, VINYL TILE, L I no I e u m , owner. · · Charters 9039
Furniture Auction 8025 Nev~r q:&in piano bargains Asphalt Tile -BeautifUJ ml-Dots 11;25 15' All Glau. 75 bp Johnson, -------= I TE LON IC !
EN~INEERING CO.
L•gune Beach
Equal opportunity employer
ESCROW
OFFl<;ER
-NEWPORT-
NATIONAL BANK
CONTACT MR. CARTER
642-31ll
A decorator dream house on display -3
roo"" of gOrge<IU$ Spanish lurnilllre (was
reg. $1295.00
SACRIFICE • ·• • • • • $398
Credit Terms A:,1il. Credit Cle1red lmm1di1t1ly mm FURNffURE
1844 Newport Blvd • ...:..1m1.>
Costa Mesa only
'"'1 tltgt.1 'II t -WIL, Ill. & S... '116
• Fumlture •
Appliances e Color TV
AOK AUCTION
7722 Garden Grove Blvd.
We1trnlnster nr. G.G. Frviy.
Tuel It Thllrl T PM-Sat 6: 30
Estate consgnml, Repo. New
like theae! First tome~ ftrst on a nd patterM. Free large whl trlr, full CO\'tt. BLUEWATER CHARTERS
served. estimate.. ·Uc. Co t1 t r , PURE bl'!d fem. minla~ Co 1 t new $2500. H a v e u Drive Sall or Pov.ft'
WARD'S BALDWIN SMJDTO 546-4478. poodle pup. $2:1. call after 4, larger boat. must sell now! Skippered local 1port: tl.shl,_
l8l9 Newport, C.M. 642-MM V3 OFF on all bikinis & cov-549-l82'7 $10$ Firm. li44-U94 Harbor Cnrlsea Mfi..9000
ANYBODY GOT PIANOS! er-upa, Any size top w/any !RISH Settu-pupe:. To good 16' BUROICRAFI' Ski.ff. 18 FAST 3.5' Jettriel, fUlb'
Yes .•••.• we have Pianos! bottom: $14. suits now honle only."lAKC. Adonble! HP Evinrude motor. HuU eqp'd. Marlin cbaira, outrlg-
Yes • •••·· :;cu can rent & i9.80. Anything Goes, 2400 llih.rHted! Call 546-'1504 needs 'NOl"k, rood motor gl!ts, pole• 1: reell for c~it all monies toward W, Cst Hwy, N.B. Open su.n. AOORABl..E mixed pood1e $125. 613-9052 marlin Is albe.oort •. (2lS) .
purchase. . SELLING Out! Bi.ink & twin puppies, I "'ffkl old $5. 17' Gl1Wtron, 1/0, V-8, 699-0903.
Appllancft 1100 Yes.··· We have Wurli!zrt!r bed fw-n. he.its tabl 49~1.i'l'O. loaded w/extnts. Mint l========:"''..':.I Pial'IOll!I' s, , c , e1, -'-~---.-----US£ 0 RMO refrlg1, stoves. waahen, IRISH Setters, 9 wks. AKC cond. $3000. 546-1&46 Mobile Homet
LADY Kenmore washer, 8 HO ~0 F·.floHn~-'-nd NY TV's, bathing suits. Straw reg. OlamP..lon b I o o d 17' cabin Cruiser, trailer, ;;.:;;.::.:;:....c;.:;.;;;,;.;;.. _ _..,.,.,-cycle. ,100. Kenmore gas -.o .... ., aMl h t 10c 1550 A .su......i--GREENLIAP PARK dryer, 8lilfseries, hot or cold Ne~rt Be-ath 644-0391 c~M. ~9188 ' .,......... line. 6'73-4448 'lO hp Mere. $350 takes iL in clear, Cle&.l\ COOi Colla
air, $75. Both in very good WANTED WANTED : Fem a I e1..;,6450'l95=·==af=t=S=. ===== Mesa. New 92 space aduJt
. cond. ~0--0681 PIAND: &: ORGANS SURPLUS factory d res s Chihuahua, 1 :yr. or less, 18oo ·t & y hh 9000 park, Modet.I A: Sales otf.lce *6..., ...,....,* fabrics &-remnanls. So 1 d i.;._U;;:n<l~•c;',.;ISll~.,:&1&-<225:::::::;;,.-::c;=I.::::-'::-:;::;--:-':-':::-;:-::,-:::; located at Parle. Open 9 AM 16 CU IT Cold.spot, avocado ~ to the publle M Monday
green, bottom freezer 13:1 WAGNER UPRIGHT thru Sat. l820 Monrovia, AFGHAN fem. AKC. white FOR SALE or trade, 28' Jef. to 6 PM.
lbs. Near new. Cost $349. , PIANO, $1SO CM. wlinelhll\'~llkll. Oiamp, blood-frlea fill~ boaNt. H~. tt-h ACCENTHOME. SALESMOBILE ~ll for $20Cl. 548-5915. * &12-2316 * · ~ bottomed ilQ,). ew ..-p
' OUtlride Sales I TAPPAN b ill in KIRBY Va CU Um <leaner AIREDALE, fem, 7 mo1, eng, encl bridge, C.8. &: 1750 Whittler Ave. Furniture IOOO Furnffur'9 aoop u • gu range SPINET · Plano, w a In u I with at t & e b men ta &: C'hmpn AKC. shots, lovea marine radiol &: antennas, Costa Mesa '1}4: 643-USO.
-----.----::1~il;-al~~~ doo~ finish. Excellent condition. polisher. Take over gma,ll kids, cats. $60. 494-4044 1967-08. 15 mph cruiae. Good l!b:45, Columbia. 1958 model.
20 Pc. "MADRID'' OVER -STOCKED $250. 642-SCMl · pymts or $41.10 ca.ah. Credit A.KC Labrador Ft.et. pupo, range. WW OOMider new or 1 BR, fum l aptd. l'ull sink, excel. cond. $125. Dept "'"1289 •-·--~-1 ha -~ ~"-NB _.., · xlnt ped &: hunt In a ant ... ...., can or wnn. ve alwn awning, adult .,... .. , Curttntly lf!llinr to hou~ 3 R G MUSJ S£U1 SaUSun 435 .....;., Ave, .. Radio, 1200 2 FORMALS Bl 9/10 S48-2560 after 6 pm walk to ahop'r. '3 0 0 D, -I·--''--''. Add"' to...,.,,. OOm roup • GE Auto -·her Top oond -. ue ' background. $ffi. 51970 you. .
.. ..... ..... ..,.. J~ • ~..... .• , SCRAM LETS yellow 718 with headpiece11. :II' Fishing boat $5000. Ford 4 548-7049 tin. fo-,,.,.. commission FROM MODEL HOMEs $65. Hamilton auto gas Call m ,~, bet "1 --,===-;;,.,--:;;;;:;<.~! Income~ Keep in shape tree. lncludes: Quilted aofa and' New 9 pc, conk'!". arrang. dryer $35. 548-0587 . • .....,.........., ween ,,. Horses IUO c y I d i e a e I , ta d i o , LAKEWOOD '&t; 20X55: 3
Reyresentatlves needed all chair - 2 end tables & cof· choice of cln. reg. $230, p.m. AQHA Perm Ree fathometer, OF, AP, refrlg Br., l~ ba., cpts, drpt;1 1tor.
over Ora.nae County. fee table -2 lamps-drea,s. now $149.50. Headbrds: HOTPOINT electric dryer, ANSWERS Mammoth Lakes Bargain Quarter Horse. Beautltw fj box; n 4152 9 • 4 0 9 & or cab. New Adult park: Call
549-3368 or 842-lt51 et -mirTOr -headboard -Kinr1, $15, Queenr $12.50, xlnt cood.~ My mobile home (winterized) year old Buckskin Gelding. 962!2QK aft 5 pm. 643-1291 Aft. 6 PM. H I'd H Ith S quilted box spring & matt-Full $10.50, Twin.I $3.95. Vanity _ Brook _ Fudge _ Fum. &lps T. Many Extras! Excellent for trail &. 31' Crulwn, fib, under re-1 BR. 10x5tl Great Lakes. 0 1 ay ea pa ress -5 pc. dining room; Trundle seta (duo riser) w/ KENMORE Electrjc dryer, Limpid _ TO MOVE Sac. S2995. Ex. cond. 531-3374 pleasure. Must aell-uking model $3300, incl, mooring. Furn or unf, l9T3 Nwp
. FREE MEMBERSHIP!
• C:OSta Mesa • ·table &. 4 hi-back chairs. inner spring matt. reg, $106. &ood cond. $30. An okl-timer ia one who re-MATCHED set. zenith $500 or best oUer. Call 546-1946 Blvd, Sp 36, CM. 642-1542
.i---,t"N°'OTICE + COMPARE AT $749·95 now $'19.SO. Roll-a-way beds * 84;7-BllS * members w.hen )'OU could get Microlithic, Z-2 all in the 54(}..563(1 days or 633-3394 1-'-=;;=======
i For lat ti~ fn' 1969, $399 w I inn. spring mat( reg. KENMORE Automatic anything in yol!J" apartment hearing aids. MU8t sell eveningsorw@ekend11. Sallboat1 9010 Mini Bikes 9275
Farrow Rea.Icy hall 2 open-No down-Pmts only $16 mo. iJ9.SO. now $39.,SO .. F'.uU sz. washer, good cond. $40. by lhreateni"i TO MOVE. 642-099.l GENTLE but spirlled horse KITE&: YARD DOLLY No. TACO 44, 3% hp, Xlnt cond.
( In.,· for real estate sales-WELJ('S WAR£HOUS£ sleeper-sofa rog. $239.50, now * 847-8ll5 * s· SELF~·tai-• Campe-w/tack & •tall. Muat sell, °"'. New lo 1969. See '"" ' % lo va.11. $169.50. New OOds: K I n g T 1 I I 1205 """"" ·~ • ....... jackshaft, rear 1 u g p e n 1 . 1 men. 90 commw n a $99.5!1, Queens, $89.SO, Full ·12 CU. ft. new GE •ff I on $ 3 7 5. Free i e t $·'1 5, make offer. 644-0439 No. 84, Bahia Corinthian fy,·d. shocks. ti73-7584
able,+ insuranee and other $49.50 Twins $39.50 fully refrigerator. Used2moothl. ZENITH Color 21"' 1V, 18 Relrlgerator $35. 5031 Good apirlted ridin&: Yacht 'Oub. $'195. Call B. MINI Bike-RUPP 350,"""" to. benefit GO with~ Ia.rg. 600 W. 4th St.. Santa Ana ' • 962-2953 ~icFadden Ave NB horse I sal Mueller. 6~00 days, or esL Open Daily 9-9 ~ .. n. n . spreads $9.95 mos. old, like new. $200. " · · or e. new borne. $95.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
. 293 E. 17th St., 646-4494
FRY COOKS
Sat. 9-6 Sun 11-6 Oiristma1 lay-aw!l)'s now. LARGE Copper Frigidaire ~ 2 1WIN beds, steel frames Call 673-5755 644-4394 nites. * 644-1618 *
SPANISH SIESTA SLEEP SHOP, 1927 refrigerator. Good condition 21 .. RCA v · to 1 DI each. Comer table $15. GENTLE Gelding with * SANTANA 22 *
Harbor Blvd., CM ~2760 $'50. 644-4869 ic r conso e, very C&U 673-722.6 i;pirit, perfect for girls. $DI. FULL race/crui!'ie. 5 saiJi;. Motorcycles MEDITERRANEAN daily 10.9 Sat.sun 10-6. nice tone $2S. 893-5405 FAMILY lhembersip 1 n Call 545-2860 aft 6 pm. Nu ipdmtr, hdwr, spinnaker.
As Shown In model homes. Office Equipment 1011 Antiques 8110 Hi·FI & Stereo 8210 Irvine Coast Country Club ~hppty™. ,:.'!"',~Mann.,' ~kly.,
3 Rm• of tum. (din m , ll• "' .... Pvt ply. tm-1918 FREE TO YOU n ·~ ~-"
nn, 6 bednn) priced else-TYPEWRITER, Add, mach, Lerry Morgan Antiques 1969 STEREO CollllOJe, dbc, NATURAL ranch mink stole. SEA s c 0 u t 'a desperately
where at $895 is youn today calculator, Very reasonable. Be there when the Van pulls in beaut cabinet, complete Valued at $800, aell for $S50. BEFRIENDED mother kit-nttd a MAIN sail for 22
at only J39IJ. Easy Credit Xlnt mnd. ~2423 noes. In • take your pick! 14 wlnew g u a rant e e, 4 675-12TO ten w/2 champagne babies FOOT ALB AT Ro SS.
TennL Pump organs, 2 dozen roU Speaker sound aystem, 4 ipd OOUBLE wall heater like needs kind pennanent home. &G-5769
Santa An• Furniture ~~~t~ec(~u ~e~t:.: t~~ top Desks, IS Olina cabi· English c~r, eolld state new $2S: King size bed ~ pay for neutering8!21 27• VIKING Aux. Beaut end.
Top .'llQ'N. pennan@nt, hon-Qi W9 4~~~ &ln•ta An.a • day) $8SO. 675-llZl nets. Austrian Annoires. i diamond needle. Pay off lrame f7 50 548-2938 BLACK --•-puppy. !.<Mng, Moor avail. Trd 0 K. ut. aod worid11i conditiOlll -.;;:;;m.::r-:7.:o:;::::,-,,= Bedroom suites, Brass ~s. bal of $79.10 or easy pymntJ. ' "><iH: -Cf Mr Postma ' tn area'a leadina: restaurant. ANTIQUE Gate Jeaged tab.le, H Grandfather clocks, VJenna Credit n.-1 535-728S RIC model plane, radio cont good for~ children. Needs 54&-8030 x • •
Apply 8 am to 5 pm for in-magh. Duncan Phyfe mahg Otlsehold Goodi 8020 regulators &. Much More? .....,., · equip. Misc engs & pb $125 immediate home, 66-2191 894-4094 =::=-===,;--==='
· terv1ew at cocktail table~ M a p I e BED divan, 2 match chairs See at: 238o or 2428 Newport STEREO Console P 1 u 1 or besl 962-8741 after 6 PM. &122 COLU?i.1BIA zt, sleeps 6,
MAHNING'S
COFFEE SHOP
24031 El Toro Rd.
·Lellure World Lquna Hilla
837-1014
SNACK BAR
OPERATOR
PREVIOUS s c h o o I ex·
perlence prelttred. Salary
$149-Sl.02 per hour. Apply
in pel'llOn,
SAN JOAQUIN
SOK>OL DISI'RICT
14600 S. W. Sand Canyon
Ave., F.ast Irvine, Calil.
CDUPLE To manage &:
m&intaln 111 unit motel in
Costa ?.1eu, Must be hard
Grandfather cloclc, Wht Ir. $35. Coffee Ir. 2 end tables Blvd., ·Costa Mesa 548-73&3 system. Ampex ~ t ;1ri SELLING out! Comp I et e NEED gd home fncd for 30HP inboard. Full racing
gold-dbl dresser. Walnut $15. Wall racks s.;. Pole WE Repair TiHany leaded deck, turntable, furniture from 3 BR apt Alt adorable blk!bin O>cker/ Loaded w/optionala, Xlnt
bookcue. Blond Philoo,TV. lamp $8. Other oddments. 1amPs & itained glaM win-~f't1:;:Ui~r"."'ea':'~i~~~i 5 p.m. 60-6389. · Scottie iemale, 8 wka, Sm cond. 494-7735, 646-6047 ====='"'°"°'""=:-:-I
Other misc iun'all iterm, all E~1. 548-5179 dowa. Also have aome for Glerm 645-4))41 or 833-l611, 4,.x8' Brunswick l %" alate b~d. 8364493 8121 PENGUIN aailboa t 11 ~ •
in good conct, 548-8653 if no :---'-----~ sale. bl $SOO • ll Free puppies need good wl1all &. trailer. Top con-
i:Ao °""" G1ro11ge Sile 8022 ext. 2516 pool ta e, · ho M he Im "25 837 ••~ ""' -=-''--""----"CO.: TIFF AifY HOUSE 541-3'151 STEREO equip; AKAi M-9 * 546.f484 * t ~· , ot ;ill we be ~~r dition .,.. . -o>RO "u:"A"v"m""c,-'-:,:;:tac;t,::-.-,;8'cc,::,:::t-:;2 CHAIRS: all new uphol, ANTIQUE ·SALE <Robert/I) $500. Pioneer 130 CARPE"I' d 8 ~729 8,'h1'ro=R:;Nl:-:i:•-';Ll';do:;":1,-;4'=wi:;clho:-;:tr::.n.=,,
mo. old 8' sofa & love i;eal Spanish hi-back w If o o t Everything 30 to 50% off. w Multlpltx $250. 2 PK>neer Shap, tweeda, bl-lo pile. All ogg. Xlnt cond. Call
6' collee tbl. 2 e'nd com-stool, $50. Maple Berkllner MARY JANE'S ANTIQUES speakers $250. Ster e 0 colon. Free eSt. Lle Colltr. NEED good home• wlfencd 673-2891
modes; hide-a-bed, 8 pc. recliner, $50. Swee.theart 2432 Newport Blvd .• Costa earphones $25. aeanlng 546-4471. yard for beaut female collie HOURLY RENTALS
Span. kingsize bedrm set. lounge in black fake f\u' $65. 1'tesa . T S3 e 545-7676 and. 1 )'OUllg G/Shep mix. * Rhodes 19., * Will sacrifict; call collect Others •-$15 King . equip. apes a. QUAUTY king bed. quilted. $.2091. &: 8"6-381& 8/22
uvm • -alze PORTABLE Stereo Record Complete, u nu 1 e d $105; Fun Z.One Boat Co. Balboa 213-433-4340 hide-a-bed in black naugh. Sewing MKhlnn 1120 Pia 2 _ ... _ •t:11 •• __. .. •'IJ:ft .,,._ 5 or wlmdl HEIP! Land lady wants me LIDO 14 e Furniturt • $90. 12 cu ft refrlg $95. yer. spellACrs . .,...,. wU1u• -........ "' out • lovable Fox terrler, il $1195
AppllancH· • Color TV Ste..,., aewing madtino. 1969 SINGER 64'"2231 MT-0406 lw 1~·• lhot. .,bkm wtlh tra "· •• ...... .... •
rugs, books &: misc. NO SPANISH bedrm set, girl.I 494-0081 ' ' sni *6'15-2400*
AOK AUCTION JUNK! Afternoons from Zig.mg cab mod al.lghtly Sporting Goods 8500 twin bed &: matching c:-iest,
2
,.........,. ., n...-•-· ldtt•••
6
Celes~~~ation T722 Garden Grove IDvd. l:30 and all day Sal 19741 uaed. Stylish wal cab. Does washing machine. 962-3753 ... u •"' 7S r.,,,,,.., .... v..ow...,
J.WHEEL Harley-Davidloo
45. Metal plates, black lace,
Very Clean, need1 work.
Make offer. 54S-3568 uk fm'
George.
'68 Honda l Th, S speed
Scrambler, 900 ml, LIKE
NE\Y. $450. 832-3668 bet I •
5 or 494-2393 aft 6 Westmimter nr G.G. Frwy. B hard St H B ....,.. """" everything without attach. SURFBOARDS wks old. ZlJTA Stale Ave., Cook * ~ll66
Tues & Thurs 1' PM-Sat 6:30 us ·• · · .,,,_.._,,, Bit-in controls to overcast, '67 PERFORMER 9'6' Misc. Wanted 8610 Co!ita Mesa. 54s.-.4D50 8/22 e
wot1cen. no exper. nee. Estate coosgnmt. Repo. New WATER tanls for camper, make button holes, sew on Paid $90, aeU SJO. SPAYED cal w/aU ahota., 1 RHODES l3, Racing & ple~• $Jl0/mo plus turn. l% bdr DESPERA butane heater, camp I ng buttons, hem dresses, make * _.... horn ure !!loop. Gd cond 'l Aails . • pt ,,..., .....,.. TE! Le a v i n a . 1. " 0 n WE PAY uoRE :yr old. Free to .,......... e. l4lfltt 6.,., .,.....,. ~ ., .. .,.. i ..:;,:· ~~==="',-.,===:;-I state, mlist sell ENTIRE equ1p. auto 1re1, ~~. fancy stttche1 etc. 5 Yr. 7• 10" RICHARDS $55 . m Aft 5 p.m., S42-5389 8122 . ,..........., or"'"""""'"
RESIDENT DIRECTOR hotaefull of furni~ &: al>' •urfboan:I, gasoline motor, partl A: aervice guar. Pay 117 E. Bay, Balboa KITE No. 676.
1968 650CC Triumph Bon-
neville, chrome tank A: side
panels. New tires. S900.
548-4987 or 545-9763 ( Wld:J
TRIUMPH 1966 TR6C, xlnt
tond, Jo ml/I, rec. tuneup,
6.iOcc $695. 548-<111
for boys. Older man or cou-pliances. Mostly Spanish ::_i~e. It • we • got·. II! $5.8& dn A 9 pymnts of $5.88 ----.."-..;$-51;-.60"'°:---I CASH PART Cocker Spaniel .female Aqua Blue. Xlnt. cond.
, pie. Small private &ehooL pieces. No ' rea.sonabll' offer ;;;;:;r;;;-:::-::::;--o.,--==' I mo., no interest chargo! or: .22 PISTOL ~541 8 mos . o ~122 * 6'73-3848 * •~'7.l-=94~1;0=,...,.===• I refused. Priv. Pty, 968-5249 BEIGE sectnl $15, Rattan Full Price $58.80 .2' calibre piatol. (cylLTl 45 '67 HONDA CL 450
CHURCH ORGANIST 19756 Cambridge·Ln, HB. chair, twin bed $6, Cltohe!i, For no obllg., free h 0 me replie&. Complete with fast· ADOPT?' Well·loved kittens, Power Cruisers 9020 Excellent condition.
"A .. .....,.. or Mg.7218 1Dc-$2. Moon wagon, $2, d-o. Call c-•Jt ••~ .. 'til 9 d-w hot•!•' ·~. ·~Tll9 F-1,._1 •. -. appliance• 6% wks. Several colors. :..;.;.;..;._______ New tires $695. 64&-196.1 ;nv.e.OI'" TRIPLE Dreuer w/mlrror, Odd & nd. 927 "--ado '"" ''al .. ,.. ... +N ,,_ "" ......... .., "' fi44"--02ll 8l2224' GLASTRON, 3 yrs .1---,-====o.---1 1 --~--Fe=---_.,.-,-,.ho-.,-1 Bak ~ buff t twi 8 e 5· ....... un • PM If t·" call collect att 5 PM. colored TV, piAnos, ,....,ans * 67 KAWASAKI
M A LE Ir.-m ... e use-er '"' .,.,.enza, e • n C.M. MD-1984 Ttu-.Sun. . , Q.U, 31 9694 . 'coN •···r~-~ 8"1:L "-. and antiques. -• 3 FEMALE halt Siamese kif· old-cost new i9. 750, load~, $550. Good cond . . keepers. Park Lido Conval-bed corner group, apl. Biie """'""'"2"13":"'°5=-::;:-:-::::;-:-... ..,.,...... ..,.,. n..... . ht tens. 8 weeks old, 54,5.5978 23.5 hp V8 Oievy, sis, bait eacent Hospllal. 642'2410 wal. dining nn set Sac. All PATIO SALE -Torui of 1969 SINGER toucb-o-matlc, cellent for beginner $45. ...rq ot nig .
8122
tanks, etc. Sac $3,7SO. Phone 2005 Santa Ana, CM
LIGHT Assembly work, 8 hn like new. 642-9006 ~:,.~~h7.!:..,0, 1 c~o;-.;ng• .' ~~ ',·. zig ug, button boles, eews 968-4587 after 4. °'"3620 ,..__ 846-ll61. Honda Scrambler 33'l
.per day, O\ler 18, under 60. QUALITY Klng bed, qullted. a: teI~l." .......,,P of ~::ii on buttom, blind hems. $ E BUY $ MALE 3 mo. .......k"8.-poo. FISH OR SKI Drake 27• twin Kit. Just rebuilt. Much
Sl.801hr. Complete. u n .i se d nc&: 1 ... v u S34.~ or $4..16 mo. 526-6616 M ;;;';;''°;;;;";;';;";;:'°"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;;600;;;;! w Loveable. f'ree lo good . be fly b 'dge chrome $475. 548-4782
HEIRWOOD SHU'ITERS \\"Orth $250. Aft 5 or wknds 1terlng,1china &: glaM: ob. =ho=m,,•,.· --~=763_1_. --,--.8-/-0221~d!rrrt1~~ tong~ '69 KAWASAKI 250cc, 250 1~ Pta-•tiA A••· CM. ••7 "06 ject.. Al.t0 2 Victorian M I I I st 8125 E FREE Kitt •-• • Call ~ •~nr -• ~ "'' '""" .,.. ~ -'--'-11 s U. ca n • FOR SAJ..E: Star Depository $ FURNITUR $ ens, wea,,.,.. uo anvwhett. Sacr. $ 5 & 0 0, miles, .,,,,..........., .. te.r • I"======-== 1;-;o;;;""'':::::-;;;:-=::-;:;;-..-:~ I u1&1111. 0 9th t., Balboa. -------nd ...._ .__. __ ,. 6 k ·v· INTERESTED In full or part USED 5 pc Din !el $1$. 5 pc Aug. Z.22, Aug. :15-26. LES Paul Custom Guitar, Money Sl.fe. CDP-45, Serial APPLIANCES sa .,.,.., u1111........ w 1. 673-5822 p.m.
time work! New space age walnut &ilnn RI · $49.SO. PA~O •-•, .. Good TV •-. bla•k with -Id ~m. Hu--No. 32247. Brand new. '500. will deliver 833-2632 ' B/22 * SKIPJACK 21J' LOADED "H~O~N~D-.A-Scn~-m~b-.lu-. -.-d'".' ... ho Call HF RC "'1 W 191 h •t "'""' "'u " .,v ,.-, ,,.-( I 00-1 M "' t l Color TV1-Pit1101-Sttreo1 product for me. . . . . .u . • AMIFM hi 0-phono $.lO. Oil buckind gold p i c k. New CCII -o ng COi no 1. Piece °' HMM M SACRIFICE to a p prove d Bimini top &. outriggers to cond. nds. baltf:ry 1125. 340
6<U-6559 10 am--3 pm only. 548-3481 artifacts, many other with case $650; youn foe lncluckld in sale price. )\'.Ill CASH IN 30 MINVTIS home, adorable Boston Ter-iwim itepa • trim tabl. 16th St .. C.M. Aft 5. 54&-5663
REUABLE Cple to help •BIRCH Dining Room &et thi ........ 8122 lndlana-10· $490 wilh hard shell case. handle lale ilt. deliW:ry of e 541 '531 e rier, male. ARC r ea. 613-5126 BSA Victor"68,xlntcond. _ .. _,_ .,,,,_ ~ same. c 0 n tact John -837 ·-~ g unit.I Jot part for sale. 4 ..., .... " plus 1 536-{,697 ' Call ·nan 494-4006; home Fea.rnley, Mon-Fr\, 11 10 5 WE PAY CASH ............. ~IC 22· 1963 Century Many extras. MU&t. lell!
rent Must have ref's, 1 host. Larae hutch. $250. GARAGE SALE 494-~ The N wport 1 GERMAN Shepherd 10 mo Raven utility. E :1ce11 en t $625. * 642.-1467
childok.Westm!n.839-
23l
4
644--0587 Birch hutch&. dinina set.I-========= ~~·Jam~ RJJ~ N~~'.'--;.--.o;-.;;;;;;o-0641~·1B64Good watchdo1, cond. (213) 378-6449 or YAM.AHAXISScrambler '68, School1-ln1tructktn 7600 HIDE-a-bed IOfa. Ea r I Y tora. 2 rattan arm chain. 2 Pl1no1 & 01'9aftl 1130 644-1700 ' • WANTED ,,_ liJ5..Qil1 perfect. Ml,l!lt tell. make ol·
·.A.rnuicu. Like new. $100, back, 2601 Way l.Ane, China MOM & DAD PEAR llhaped di a m 0 n d · MALE. Yorl<llhltt Ttnier. •57 • 27' OWENS T.S. SIS, fer. Mom. 675-7987
SAUCERMAN SCHOOL 5«5-6934 Co~. CdM. Sat Ir Sun. .00 IT NOW!! aolit&ire, , 76 Cts. White gold ' FURNITURE No chiJdren, 968-2126 8/23 fa tho, covers, iood cond. ·65 305 HONDA Scrambler,
Co. Fairgrounds, gr. 1-& DESK, drop-tront llOlid-<>ak. GARAGE We 1 t •rt Ing While we have the greatest setting. Free or im· TOP CASH IN 30 Mlnute1 KITTEN. One PIYchedellc, 6 $4500. Trade considered. new chaln l sprocket, Whe~ the Program Near new $35. Pair, metal Thurs. M is condition, select.Ion, the most reaaoD. perlectK>n to JO t Imes Quality f\lrnitu~. color TV'1 wks old. 2005 Clay St., N.B, SG-1839. Barnell Clutch $350 546-1548
· Fifi the 'Child ,... ' headbo:an:b; $8. 644-1830 Wll.!lher, dr.yer, furniture &: able rentala, the be-st teach. 'magniflcalion. $950. ~n by 1terem, appliance• toob, 54s-&156 8/23 28' TS CRUISON, V4r\ves: '69 HONDA 90. ONLY 1.000
Willard H. Saucerman, 4 Pc. King size Wslnut cookware. 2230 Donnie Rd.,' er. Ow:>ose from Conn, Wur-app'I. at U.S. National oJbce equlri. FREE KITTENS SIS la.nkl. SACRIFICE! ml. Llke-new! $275.
Ed. O. Bed.rm set 'Co$t $1l00 N.B. litter, Knabe. Fischcr & Bank. 543-9335 531-1212 673-4236 8/23 673-6912 or 548-2854 962-S185
S4IM060 Evet 64&-l~roll now s.ac. $450. Ukt ne'\'. 642-90069 ~=E"tG'°'E,--"'-ug-. -. •• -,.-, ..... -~$35~.1 others. Spinets, A: Con!IOleJJ VIRTUE din. set, 7 chn $30. WE PAY CA.~S"H"!,--LOVABLE, Ge.ntle, nouae. CRUIZON 16' Cabin cruiser '69 250 TRIUMPH, like new, l;;:;:::::-;tlo;::nal:;-~V;;;;:;-tlon;;;;;;-<.slb;;; WHITE prov dresser & mlr-Frigidaire washtt &: dryer rrom $5~. Rentals from 110 14' Frigidaire, good cond. brim. St. Bemarr:I mix, 8 wood/lbgls, motor & trtr. 683 mi. $MO.
uca aca ror $50. Pr Italian Amethyll'l $80. Bird cage $3. Purtl'ler monthly. S.15. Ta hie saw $35. Lady wkll old xlnt wtth c~lld.1_15'11==· =MS-4588======-494-83~2 cradm • · · Sr Citizens glua lamps s:ll. Bed 1kte $10. Dining set $10. 54&--8250 GOuld Music Company Kenmore gaa dryer, xlnt • NOT Checks 673-3oM ' 81231 ·
Oillcoat 10 leuon typing chest $10. Cus. bit pnw low: STUDIO couch 1ab 1 e 1, ~ N. 1.taln SA 547-0681 '-"Ond. $75. HJ.n, 16 apkn I For GO~ -USED DARLING part beqle pop. Sneed !ki 8oltl 9030 Auto Services Sehl: 1'lilJ Lel."IOn. 173 Del Rat $40. Chair A: otto $JS. Chain TV l rhe d . fJu11t off SA Freewa,yl cabn. $20. 9123 Buttercup """'• s;, It p rts t4QO
M&r. C.M. S.S.285t Dbl bed-&auty Rest matt cam~ el~. ~O ~~. I "'u'"Hd-.'H"'•_m_m'"ond"'°'"o=rv=-•:-::-n Ave .• F.V. 842.-5001 Funlllurc, Stereo. TV or Pie•. 6 w Ifs· 0 Id· 1961 u· Clutron, ~ h.p. -'"'---'-'------=
)!ON'l'.'ES9JR1 Teacher of· 6: box r;prinp $50. Mi11e rum-CM 542-A52t SALE ROYAL 1 lrl "-. Howehold Items o( any kind. 546-4310. 8/19 Mel'CW')'. Xlnt cond. $li9S. 409 llP, 409 cu in o..y
•-~ ..... _ Lr.tr, he~··1 aU ilh.1~ .. 00-8430 ot' 548-22ll -;-;,--.,,.-=-=-.,..---1 eee c "'~'M'lter, e 547-5722 e HEALTHY, Happy kl.1i...,,_cau='i67..m~~==:;:-;--· -•• 5 eci• ,.,_,..;; .... "~'=' GAS J f Ions ~. woricl ttne1,,,=,....,=:=-=:'"":,--,=c~ 1_ enguW":. ••v. Au p.m., woodwlnds. adYC'd .flute A ext U6. awn~w. reaer. isa. M&-1b) NEED briCks One m. ltn1. weaned • hoU9tbroken. While ll~ll! 642--0289
oboe ...,_.7 -awlmmil1;( pool va c uum B-3 l Le.lie, A·\00, S.lOO. ~ 548-4615 81231~==='=="====.;,,=========I · DON'T Give up! You JNt.7 irqufp, 3 airl•' bikes. ~le. DESK $65~ drl!Ml'.I' wlth mlr-reuonabJy priced.· 1 1
'nJ'J'ORJNG find Jt at Atr.erica'1 larrnt. 2422 E. 22nd St., Nwpt Bell. ~-i1:.' s.t'i:n ~ T~: ror $55; bednn aet $13.So; USED baby dressU. table. FR.E1E Pupp)es, mbl~~.!' e ri;-~;l~le~H=0t~--;;;~~~9200~~M=lolal~:fe~H~o;me~1~~9200~~1 SPANISH OR FRENOI mO&t Ul'IUIUal unfinished couch $IOO: golf elubl. ~ Must be In rood condlUon l ma ttlH! poodle, !LC"' II *
• S1Jll ht. -ftlmitutt """'· Cor. R<dhill ~.U:.ET·,.;,.,.,. •:1':..u": ALLEN THEATER, 32 pod-lion '1'· n...... ,...,., .. ., 56-<167•. white. 646-66tl 1123 BAY HARBOR MHOOl~UI SALES RCHANDISE FOR 6 S.nto Ano Fwy, Tuotin. 1 FREE Ra~; oil co-Good ~
SALi AHD TllADI ~, ... ,;,r ~ptt ";;'.: ... ~"'•~"'·,. ... ...,,::.,,.:-"-;::..,,,',,,·= ...... =-.I .ia, .,_ neW! ~=.., "';;,. ····: Pttnllo Mlchlnory, etc. 1700 .... '" = Clearance Sale l~~~~::::::::!~~l 5ff..5f'JO dolhlrw. Dr&ttlna: equlp.' B\i 5«Ttnp Now In our End •644-2987• f"ORKLTFT 600J lb. Oark.l::--;-;=-,--::--"C'.'.=--,-.-:-11 IOOO ==.,..=~::-;;::-:::-= " •·t-S •A " of SWnmtr Cle•tM<:e Sale! l SING'" m, m b,,, ht p , $1075. Runs good , 3 Kittl'ns 6 "·eekl old. DANISH Modtm liv. l'tn ~t: muca tnon! . .,. un. .w"J· HAMMOND """ 642-mJ 897 2433 5'19-nJfi aft 4 PM 8123
Vll(C STATE. Mtdlt· aof.a, chair. tabln, b.&Hock; ~ Highland Dr .. N.B In CORONA DEL MAR Balboa s..y Club.1750. Call PETS ,,; t!VEsr0CK
0. Aft 1>1.,1.., M ...... H t9 Chffte ,....
All "-1 r t. J4' W1*
tns•_,.l'IOfaA.ioft.tllt, Blut. 5.16-3997 GARAGESALE-.rvtrythiftK ~ E, CoUt HW)-. &73-BOOn aflf'r 9 P.M. 615:«10t a _ T \\Tks old 3 Oxktr PllPPlts.
Cllfllltll ..... 2 tnd com-I'~·"-·-ta-·" I muat go! 364 E . 16th Pia~. ACRILAN c1u11Ct .• l3'Qtt, 14 x 0091 1125 f'rte to good llome. ,,.,.._ Jtidl!..e-«d, llms"i. rw•.uwu• IO uUU'<'I nto CM M ~ HAMMOND • Steinway • Ya• _ 9S2-6401 812l
INCLUDING -----,
lit PAllYllW IOlLAWAY
CASA I.OMA
C.ASllAS
SHl lATON MANOI
PIUTlel
HO Mm&
CILDllTY
S.AHAM
IAY HAllOI
COINll.'-
PASHION MANOI '11llrniltwfllf SC-ni.h Kina qupen m bed COii 1400 MC. ta esa.. . mahn . nt'lf & used plano1 ~~. '66 ChUdcraft ~. 1,·-00~RA-B_LE __ ""_"'-.-,-.. -.-,-. FR€E Cutt Trrrl-Poo pup-
-bfdrm tel A 1 1 0 $l8S. Pullm•n choir COii HUGE Garaif Sale, Aug. 16 or all makes. Beft bl.IJll in °"'"""'-c~--..,.--:-:-I fCC moyed 3 8l2a
i...ttat lonna.I dinlna rm $185 •II $75. 642-!llXWi •. A 17. 2S14 Bll,yslde Dr. Cdr.t So. Calll, ~ht heft'. Jltalth $pa memberships, ~Ake ~J~.~s.91..0 mo. pies. 6"'kBold, 839-1297 1425 BAKER ST., COSTA MESA
... •• ' l'nQI. old. Wiii up tl))'I YoU no longer; nffd, ANYrnlNCi and E~l')'thl11t1:! SCHMIDT AfUSIC <X>.. 12 months {O\lf:r ~ vlalta)l-;~:c-:oc'-~:-::;::::-NEED Good home1 for v, lledl I• ef H_.., •II Miw ..,v;, cau co 11 e ct aeU the.Iii for m'h with Tap valUH. 1e895 Walnut, 190'/' N. Main. for $99. ~larly ~. t.llu Cock·e~Poo Terriers lovable kittens. wrd col.on CALL Sff.f471. to DAY
~ DAILY PILOTWJ.Nf ADS! Fin V£, r SlnUo Ano WM!=;;,',;;~""'1,;;~.;...---T'--7-•_kl._,_646-_lll33 ___ .,_.~ ... -L-.t'3&"'93----'-/2311io .. ___ !!!lfl_lll!l!!! ........ _ll!! __ lli .
•
-----·----cc-=-----~----------~-::;--:;,;~----·· ------,~~ ---~
•
~ ' .. •• • •• ' •.
•. '
I I
• ::· . .
•
• --
" •
, ' .. , Ji!IPOlln',!_D' ·:W-.XTURiio· . '
.. WALL . ..,QVl!RINOS
' -
' ·-~-· fltltrnclt • f104s!.~ . . ' iiARG~ ~El.EC1'10N .
. ''TUl!U" ctOTH • ''GRASS'~ CLOTM•
1 ... 1jtl 1e 4st . 449 =:::t .
• · I • , "oft . co~;: ~·tr9.:iL.'l\io'!°'J.eo COMP. "ETAIL S.t0
J '' .............. ...,j tl'ltlllllb. I
)
•
7
I
ll.S. Pledges to Help
Bepel Attach t;tn Korea
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, Jt.UGUST 22, :1969
Coon Can .'Stay
MSLY 'ILOT 1teff"""
GWEN JOHNSON AND FRIEND CE t EBRATE DECISION
• .t For Buzw1ll, H•ppln111 la a Hfm• In L•eun•
' ' <
Ra~oon · to~ -Stay
Laguna Tee n. Gets tO Keep fet
Can a racoon from Cucamonga find
lCJYe and happine.">li in Laguna Beach?
Ye1, says Gwen Johnson, 13-year-old
mMter of. Buzwell, a three mootb old rae-.
coon. And the city council agrees.
Miu Johnson received the counci1'1
J>emllssior. to kec'p Buzwell along with
some advice on the care aad keeping of
raccoons. '
He 's to stay In a metal cage six feet by
four feet by 4 feet blgh when not und4r' •
direct control of his master, cwncilmen
decided,
Cage~ ratt<IOft will be kept at G"'"''
house ~ 616 MysUc View in Laguna.
Buzwell came to Laguna from a
Cucamqa raccoon ranch where th e
ani'rnW ,art raised as pets.
City ifbciaJdom came into bi.f life
becaltse' a municipal law regulat.tf1the keei)ii1~~ of wild and or exotic a!Jlma11
withili '!'• confines of the Arllst Co!OnJ.
' Moon Walk, Press Blamed
For Poor Fair. Attendance
By JANICE BEm1AN
Of "'9 Dal!Y ,llft Stiff
11ie Moon Walk, bad pr'ss and a
doubk!-header at Angel Stadium caused
Orange County Fair attendance to plum-
met in Coda Mesa this year, the fair'•
Board ol Directors bean!. Thuraday.
Fair G<!leral• Manager Allred Lut)eons
blained those three factors fer the 33 per·
cerlt drop th total attendance.
Lutjeans placed the majority of the
bl1'me on the astronauts.
Coverage of the moon mission, he said,
"look the better spots In U1e paper ."
'"Our material was relegated to a
i11eoondary position in the paper," he said.
J-te charged that the press was
rE>Sponsible for "wholly distorted and
wildly fabricated stories about the im·
mtnent sale of the fairgrounds," which,
tie 111d, discouraged people from goq lo
Ille falr.
Jn addition to the moonwalk and the
i:rm. the Laguna Beach art festivals.
l'le San Clemente art festival, and the
double.header at the Angel Stadium
\Vert rung ln as other attractiOl'll!I the fair
tiad lo compete with.
But, said Lui.jeans, there was also tbt
problem or inadequate advance plarmtnc.
''We got a late start on'J>amphle:t! and
placards," he 1ald. "We didn't get our
r.ntertalnment announced untU J2 days
before tht flfr and the moonwalk."
He b!1untd fear as a reason that
•
fairgoers left the grounds early.
·~ was a direct mlection of the
trouble at tbe Strawberry Festival," he
toJd the board,. "'Ibere were a lot of 'hip-
pie types,' who made no trouble, but I
trunk they may have worried "°""
vbltors,
uwe .. Jbave a problem next year when
we tr}' ;> sell spaee," he 1aid of the I per
cent kf' in revenue.
L1,1tje:JOS urged the board to "get
P.verything together by January so that
from Fe'bruary through May, we can
develop public interest in the fair."
2 Pilots Killed •
Oii Desert-Plight
Na.LIS ABB, Nev, (UPI) -T'tro'Alr
Force plloll ...,. killed today when illelr
supenonic Phantom jet Oglllor-liomber
, craabed and )lomed In the,daett "'1U.
on • pradlce ~ gunnery ordnan<t.
Tiie Air F°""' uld 'llie ICddOJ\t oc:-
CWTed about 40 milel nor111 ... st <i Lu
Vegas on the NtlU. Gunnery Rl:r.:;:.
The FlE lwtn-qlne UuboJet wu Jeed.
td with pracllce rocket. and bombs,
meaning the ammunition WIS used II
markers In the target area
•
VOL. a. NO, •1, 4 IKTIONS, .. ,A.II
• IC mon
00
Kor:ea Def,ense Vowed
Nixon, Park Pledge to Repel Reil Attack
-
By ME RRIMAN SMITH
U'I WJtlft ...... a""""'
SAN FRANCISCO -President Nixon
and President Park Chung Hee ol South
Korea p:'edged Jointly today t h a t
American and Korean forces stationed
alOng the 38th parallel will remain
"strong and alert" lo continuing C<';n· mjmist aggression. ·
In addition to stating their detennin,.·
lion to meet any armed attack against
South Korea, they also recognized tile
necessity for "long term efforta lo lwen
the causes of tensJon on the Korean
peninsula."
The joint statement was iSSlled as the
t-.·o chief uecutivea coocluded their t~
,.
Nude Husband
Escapes Wile's
Hatchet Attack
By TOM BARLEY
Of ftlt 0.llY 'llllf It.ff
A screaming blood-aoaked Santa Ana
man who told police he aought refuge
Thursday night in a neighbor's home
from his berserk hatchet.waving wife Is
today listed in fair coodlUon at Orange
County Medical Center.
OfOcer1 Aid Ramiro Lechuga, 42, told
them that the first of three attacks by bis
wife occurred while be was lying nude on
bis bed watching television.
Lechuga alleged his commonlaw wife.
Marla, 34, attacked him with an electric
saw but he managed to disarm her after
1he infUcted several cuts Jn an apparent
attempt to sexually mutilate him •.
Lechuga then told police that· he wils
checking on the couple's sleeping children
when his w1fe attacked him from 'btblnd
with a hatchet. A.gain, he disarmed her
but only after she had struck him twice
with the blunt end and once with the
blade.
Lechuga then -officer• used lhe word
"lncomprehell!lbly" -again turned his
back on hll wife to put the hatchet away.
She allegedly struck him 1everaJ lbnesi In u.. hack with a carving knlle lnllicllng
aeveral wounds and J&ceraUons.
Offlcen 11id Lechuga decided lo call It
qultl-al tbat point He ran from the home
wcreamlng for http with his wife hard on
bis heels brandishing tile llelchet.
Neighbor• managed to separate ··lhe
couple and held the screaming woman
until police arrived.
Throoghout U.. fracai, Lechuga lold ol-
flcen hit wile kept asking him : "Whi' do
you go out with other; women, what is
wrong with me?"
Mrs. Lechuga is today in Orange ~
ty women'• /all. She is accuaed of assault
with 1 delld 1 weapon •
day visit to the St Francis Hotel in San
Francisco.
The 1tatement said:
"President Park gavirail account of
conUnulng acts of aggression committed
by the North" Korean.Communist regime
against the Republic of Korea. 1be two
presidents agreed that Republic of Korea .
forces and American forces stationed in
Korea must remain ltrong and alert and
the two presidents reaffirmed the
determinaUon ol tbe.ir governments to
meet armed attack against the RelXlblic
of Korea in accordance with the mutual
defense treaty between South Korea· and
tbe United States.
"President Nixon and President Park
tool! -<i tile newly fotmtd home!~ rtlel'Ve defenR force u a cootrlbution to
the w.curtiy and at.ability ·oft South-Korea.
'Ibey qr<ed that tupport for tile force
should be cOntinued. ·
"'Ille lwo pttndenta recognized the
neceeslty for long-lmn ·effort to 1 .....
the causes of temion on the Korean
penltmUe.''
Other Items In the jolnl statement Jn.
clud®' -An invitation from Parb to Nixon to
vislt Korea. Nixon accepted, but the two
chief executives sald the Nixon visit
would take place at a time of mutual con4
venience. Diplomatic !OUJ'Ct!ll aaid this
(liee NIXON, P ... II
Heavy Fighting Erupt,s
In Viet Coastal Plain
SAIGON (UPI) -More heavy fighting
broke out today on South Vietnam's
northern coastal plains where U.S. forces
have killed more than 400 North Viet.-
namese a n d Viet Cong this w e e k.
American troops found mo r e than 100
Communist troops dead on one bat·
Uefleld.
Communist forces bombarded the blg
U.S. base at Da Nang today in an attack
that killed one American and wounded 42
others. Seven Vietnamese civilians were
killed In a similar rocket "attack 100 miles
to the llOUlh.
The ahellings were part ol a series of 25
such attacks overnight, 15 of which Wert
at U.S. unlta. The attacks killed two·
Americana and wounded 72. -
The heaviest fighting was centered 17
lo 23 miles west Of Tiin Ky w1UCh·ls 80
Worker Burned
By Boiling Tar
A construction worker badly burned by
boiling tar while workJng on an Anaheim
rooftop la loday lleted in critical coodlUon
at Anaheim Memorial Hoepital.
Michael WIWam Pollert, 25, of Lo
Habra, WU nllhed to the hospital bY
Anaheim police following the aCcldeilt
(arly t.odax on a construction site on
Anahelni Boulevard.' om~ra sai4-,lhe
vicllm suffered aeYere burn. over the
·lower part of hl.i body.
lt la known that Poller\ was J~ing the
, hot tar on the roof w.bew.the ""'Iden! oc-
curred. But further deWllo of the mishap
are not. Ytt available. Fellow workert
u.ld Pollert WAI WMklng alone and that
hts tcream1 drew their attenUon to the.
tncldent.
I
miles from Da Nang and 'M miles
northeast of Saigon. It Is in an area
where U.S. infantrymen have been trying
unsuccessfu!Jy to reach the wreckage of a
helicopter that craabed Tuesday, klWng
eight AmeriCJUUI.
Seven Army troops an:! Oliver Noonan,
29, an ,AsiocJated Prt:!!s photographer.
were aboard the helicopter.
· U.S: troopii said they cariie upon the
bqdles of 103 Commµnist ·soldiers 11lun·
day in ·an area 23 miles west of Tam Ky.
'l'he slain soldiers apparently were killed
the previO\lS day, U.S. spokesmen Mid.
Far lo the southwest and eo mUes
northwest of Saigon, U.S, !IStb Infantry
Dlvl&lon 1 troops· killed ~1 North Viet·
namese soldien in a battle Thursday a(
the ba!e ·ol Black Virgin Miluntatn. ·
11ie Americana: supported by twO AC47
tiun•hlps and jet Ughlcr-bomben sultered
light casualties and no f1lalltJe.i, niilltary
!Jiokesmen said. .
· 'I1le U.S. America! division .baa bomf!
most of tile fightlfli near Ta,n Ky. .
Military spoke&men said a urut, of the
IJ.S, l96th Light Infantry Brigade of the A~erical Division was attacked Tbura·
dl\Y night t>Y Communist troops 11 mllel.
west of Tam Ky, · ·
• The ~ sununoned lrilll<r,: •id
the baUJe whlclv prOgieoied ""61 Iller
llf&litraU. One-Americ111 waa killed lncf.10' -'bul·u.s. foreea Aid 111ey coul<(
not tell wl1etller iu!y' of .u.. communiit
~ w're killed. , , • ,
Dr. Salk Burglarized
SAN DlEGg (AP) -Dr. JonM Silk
aaya a burglar pried open a ~n In
Salk's home and look l fllO 1elev!slon ll<i
and IS In cash._ The deYeloper ol po)lo
vaccine headJ the nearby Siik ln&lllUI•
for Blolo1lcal studle&.
Cap~tol City
S~db~
• ., ' 1
Plan "Works
RICHMOND" Va. (UP!)-Tlle -J~m~ ,River J>attered the aandblp pro.
lcctlhg Richmond · early i.c11J after
bolling down from the mountalnl with at
least ff dead in lta bal:kwa&h. ·Tbo. -..
bags held and Rlciunond wu -"'-
(See J!hc.!""'• ·Page 4), CIVIi Defense autborfU.. uld lherl
were « knQWO dt.ad, 411 injured and 111
miasing in Ailegbeny Mountain lowl)I
upriver from Richmond. More cuuaJ.
ties were expected as tbe villqes peeJld
bock lay~ of mud and debrll.
'llilrty.fOOI nooc1 watm slalilmed Into
·Richmorxl'• sandbag barrier · u the
James roared toward the Atlantic Ocean,
swollen by _up to 10 inches of rain from
the; remnants of hurricane Camlllt.
The James reached a peak of •.59
feet-one foot below the top of the sand·
bags-in Richmond about dawn, then
haH 111 boor later the walcn fell lo aJI
feet and b1eary~ed workers croaked
a hoarse "Hooray!''
It was Virginia 's WGrSt flood 11nce
1936, washing away lowns, cavin& Jn
mountainsides and 1 we e p I n g away
bridges.
Weary o£ficlals said Richmond was
spared only because it was forewarned.
The capital city piled along Jts riverfront
a sandbog fortreaa d .. igned lo bold back
peak flood waters of' 31 feet-allDOIJf u ..
acUy the height at which the Jamet
crested shortly after midnight,
"We're in u good a shape u we JMl9" sibly can be," said City_ Monagor AlAo
Kiepper at a midnight news coilference.
f•JUctunc:md'teems to be in good lbap« ..
The Jameo be-llichmood witli !ti
swirling ....i for .-four hours, but
tile makeal!tfl dim llfCCelllfuDy protected
low-lying 'warthouses, plants and clg...,.
0tte faclori... Only 4QO 1o 500 ........,.
were evacuated from their homes arid.
according to Public Safety Director
William Groth, "Not on}J were there ao
(See FLOODIJ1G, 1'1111.ll
Oruge
Wea:tller
Sul)nf, s~es will .. warrn lhe
Qrange Coast over lhe weekend ,
while Inland areas lute some Jow
clouds and fog overnlaht and the mercury drops iulo the upper 80'L
INSmE TODAY
,Windup of IM Lido 14 M-
tional champion1hfpa and the
HenntSIJI Cup ractl highlfghtl
cs bu.rvi wtcke:nd of boat!JIQ en> ~ottv ai .. a tilt c ... ~ Paot u.
•
f
I
,
I
. '
D.111. Y !'II.Dr s
Thailand j .
To .Discuss . ,
u.s.~Pnllout
.
WA!Slflll01QI' (UPI) -The Untied '
Sfl&8\ and ~tnd have •&reed to ell-a ti:lldua! pullout of "-ican
troapa frem the Southeast Asian country, the-Dopartment omooncod todly. ~ spokesman .Robert J .
Mieloolley · iald tbe Forelgn Mlnllter
Thacll Khojlwj hod approach<d U.S.
~ Uonard Unger oo the stJb.
Jec:t11n u;;;;;\ot oo Wedn"'1,Y. ·
"We for our part," McClo.skey saJd,
"are willing to enter into such discus·
sions."
He Aid Prealdent Nl100 felt that rela·
Uona wilh Thailand were very tmportant
and on his ~t lrip to Bangkok
"agrefd that, at an appropriate . lime,
there abould be consultations leading to a
1radual reduction of the le\lel of our
fOfCe4 In Thailand."
11'le Uni~ States currftltly malnl&int
obold 41,000 military pmonnd In
T!llilond end an·llddillonat groop ol 1,lOO
who provide ~ainlna .... ~."""' and ad·
vice tO Thai fQfces. Of the 48,000, about
ttire&-quarten are air force pe:rsonnel
llld tbe l'Mt ll1DY· The Air Force conducts air operations
and raids against· the communtsls in
South Vietnam' trOm Six Thal air bases.
Anny personnel provide k>gistical su~
port for the U.S. forces.
The State Department could not say
immediately when the force reduction
talks might begin, but McCk>skey said his
guess was that they would be held in
Bangkok.
Placentia Man
Makes Up Salar y;
Steals $175,000
Bll!y L. Ball, figured he WU underpa id.
So &au, a former ucrow company of-
lier. stole '175,IXKt from hi.a: employer.
But he got ceugbt.
The 39-year..oJd Placentia man pleaded
guilty Thursday to lheft charges.
Los Angeles Judge Antonio E. Chavez
set Sept. 10 as the sentencing date in
Superior C.00.rt.
Bell took the money between October
1967 and last May.
He aerved as vice-president and escrow
officer for the Business Title Corporation.
3871 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles unW be
was fired May 9.
The embezzled fundJ wen U9ed by Ball
for Uie purchase of eigh t pieces of pro-
perty, to JM!:Y medical bills and to buy ex·
r..enslve autamobiles.
Dewey Sm.Ith. district attorney'• in·
vtsUgator, said 88.ll told Cnvest.Jj:aiors his
salary was not enough to compemate him
• for running the business while the finn's
· president. Mlltoo Weiner, was recovering
• lrom a heart attack.
Smith aald Ball would dlp into Ille
firm'a long term escrows, write a check.
to the seller of the property, forge his
name aod cash it himsell.
He began by taking small ,!\JllOUnls of
money, ranging from $300 to $5(1(1 and
then was taking as much as $17,000 at one
time when be was caught.
BaJl's scheme fe]l apart In 1'1ay when
an attorney sought to learn why a client
had not been paid aft.er the close or an .,crow.
The escrow company's records showed
that a check had been rettlved by the
lawyer and cashed. It was then learned
that Ball had forged the &lgna.ture and
cuhed li himseti.
Camille Destroyed
5,238 Coast Homes
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Red Cross
said Friday Its latest survey shows that
Hurricane Camille destroyed 5,238 homes
when it hit the Gulf Coast Sunday.
The agency said it had revised upward
to I l,&67 the number of homes receiving
major damage w h l 1 e 20,826 Incurred
mlnpr damage. Also, the Red Crew said,
1.f1!1 mobile homes were de&troyed or
damaged, along with 569 business
eatablishment.8.
DAIL\ PILOT ............................ ._ __ ,...., --CAUPOINIA
OlAHGI COAS1 "°'*'1Mlltf9 CCWIWfY "••ttt tL w ••• ,.,,~1-""'""'
J..S. L Cttlr,
Ylct ~ tllCI COtlltr• MIMtft'
n.... ktft,1 ·-n.:::.:-~t11• -~ ..... t,,. *"'..., '""' .....,~:mi-.. .. ..,.....,.... '--._,., 211,. ,_, ,,_
"""llliWlao .. _.! M .5111 ..,_
I ',· • I ~ •
Ul'I Ttl ..... !t
' ..
Camille Deaths
•
Still Mounting
GULFPORT, M~s. (AP) -The rrim
tearcb for Hurricane Camille victims
" d ..... ed on along the MbalaSlppl GuU
CoUI today anlid di!agre<ments on the
death count and a new problerq arising.
Refugees trickled bllck into tbe
hardestJiit area at nearby Pus Christian
where bodies were still being found . The
new problem involved bodies being wash-
ed out of Pau Christian cemeteries and
mlatuen for hurricane vlctlnui. nus
caused some conlusion among rescue
teams.
Mls1i.ssippl Gov. John Bell \VUliams
stood by his count of a mlninuun of "200
plus" killed by the viclous storm when it
awep& out of the Gulf ol Mexico Sunday
nl&ht. But the Civil Defense coordinator
Nap Cassibry put the toll in two of the
three coastal counties at "approximately
235."
"We may never know 1ctua1ly how
many were kUled," Ca5sibry said. "Some
wlll be declared u miulng for a long
time before they're declared officially
dead."
put out, we do not have the bodies."
Handling the bodles-caUlld one of the
oew problema.
WalJy Dabbs. an assistant to Gov.
WUliamJ, saJd the bodies of storm •lc-
Wn:s "are piling up" lo area funeral
homes with no way to cet them to tem•
porary morgues set up at Hattiesburg, 70
miles north of Gulfport. He · said
refrigerated trucks were due in from
New Orleans to help.
"'ll>e tnicks betttr get here pmtJ
soon," he said, "because we're going to
have to find some way lo di5pose ol thtm
because of the health hazard."
State Highway Patrol Chief Inspector
H. C. Sl.ay said some of the bodies found
in Pass Christian had already been em.
balmed whUe shattered caskets v.·ere
found nearby.
Slay added that "a great many" of the
bodies found in Pass Christian were hur·
ricane victims but would not estimate the
num):>er.
SOUTH KOR EAN PRESI DENT PA RK AND HOST REVIEW TROOPS AT SAN FRANC ISCO'S
M1morie1 of Kor11n Conflict •nd • Joint Pled91 of StrMttth •t the Jlth P•r•llel
PRESIDIO Ca:ssibry said the confusion over the
death count &tenu from "the sheer
magnitude of what we've got to do and
are doing for the living."
Aircraft started spraying part of the
battered area loday in an effort to con·
trol mosqultqes. Authorities said a
regular program for spraying was being
established
Health officials said medical needs on
the coast were being met and e.mph35ized
any threat of epidemic had ended. They
also said there was no longer any need
for mass immunization against typhoid
but added that drinking w,ater sboi.tld be
boiled or chlorinated ezttpt in Gulfport
where the water supply was clear.
From Page l
NIXO N, PARK MEET. • •
would probably be next year.
-They agreed that the Allies in Viet-
nam should continue ''lo work toward se-
curing an honorable and lasting peace in
Southeast Asia . In th is connect.ion, Park
endorsed the peace propo6als expounded
by Nixon last May 14, and Nixon, in turn,
paid lribut.e to the contribution in Viel·
nam by Korun rorces. ·
'Ibe statement said the two leaders
agreed to consult closely and with their
other Allies cooet:rnlng the Vietnam
situation.
At an unusual state dinner Thursday
night -unusual because or its size and
for its site outside the White House -
Park warned that any imbalance in
coordinated U.S.-Aslan efforts to meet
the regional needs would inevitably lead
to "new disturbances and threats" in
Asia.
This same theme was somewhat r::iuted
in the joint statement although Nixon and
Park did emphasize their concern about
continued aggression from the north.
Nixon in his toast to Park Thursday
night emphasized Independence of. free
Asian nations also meant "self-reliance."
The joint statement was issued in writ-
ten fonn at the St. Francis Hotel and the
two leaders who had planned originally to
appear before reporteni at the conclusion
of the talks, decided instead to mike
separate statements upon departure from
San Francisco International Airport.
While a small crowd of antiwar
demonstrators clashed brleny with J!Ollce
outside the elegant St. Francil Hotel,
Park and Nixon exchanged toasts Thurs-
day pledging mutual cooperation and sup-
port. They met for two hours earlier lo
discuss U.S. aid to South Korea and
Korea's military security.
Nixon told the banquet audience in the
St. Francis' sofUy-llghted California
Room that the United States was grateful
for the sacrifices being made in Vietnam
by 50,000 South Korean troops.
''But we also have tremendous respect
ror the fact that despite the military
burdens that the Republic or Korea must
bear," be added, ;.that economic: pr.,.
gress has moved forward at a dimension
no one though was possibe."
Park dealt in much stronger terms.
He said that while the Seoul govern-
ment supported Nixon's efforts to end tbe
Vietnamese \Var, "the very aggressive
North Korean Communists -bellicose
Communists" presented a continuing p~
bl em.
Park stopped short of asking additional
U.S. aid. But he said;
"1 think the Asians as well as the
F rom P a ge l
FLOODING ...
deaths, we have not even beard of one
serious injury."
About 625 National Guardsmen patroll·
ed black-out areas throughout Thursday
night, turning back sightseers from
restricted areas and directing lraUic.
HIGHWAY C.OSED
At one point, the James crept to within
20 ioches of flooding and closing busy
Interstate 95, a superhJghway linking
Richmond with Washington, D.C. Par·
alJel north-south hlgbways ftrt closed earlier by floods. ·
O:lly one major metropolitan area-the
city of Hopewell with about 20,000 resl·
denb-now lay in the flood'• path. Fur·
lher damage by the James, already
mounting into the millions, was expected
to be light because the river widens as
it winds through marshlands toward the ....
Richmond's :sLICCeSS story contr1sted
tragically with reports sUU ltlckUng in
from Virginia's midsectlon, where tbe
floods began Tuelday night alter eying
Camille uneipeciedly dumped more than
10 inches of raln on I.be James' head-
waters.
Tales of death aecompanied rescue
workers coming out or Inundated areas.
1btre wtre reports of a Cirl hokllnf
onto a lrC!t limb and then dluppurll'JI
before she could be savtd ; or a man
who swam to r~e • child, only to
drown after the you;ttr w11 pulled to
safet ; and of a fam! of tour that sur-
viv::f the first 11Ush flooding, only lo
die when their home collapsed into the
current when ill mOUDtalnslde suppcrt.s
ga\·e •·ay.
United States people should bear tn mind
the sober faci. that only when the ln--
itiatives and efforts of Asians themselves
and the cooperation of the United States
art; well coordinated and balanced
together so as to meet the needs of Asia
In an effectiv.t way, can we expect great
effect from the new approach of the
United states for the 1tabllity and p~
gress of this region.
"But should these efforts be<ome un·
balanced for want of positive efforts on
the part of either !ide, new dlsturbancu
and threats will inevitably recur in this
region."
The crowds generally were friendly
Thursday at the historic Presidio where
Nixon first greeted Park, along a
molOrcade route to the St. Franch;, and
in Union Square outside the hotel.
But there were a few heck.lers, in·
eluding Mite Maloney, 27. who in·
terrupted Park's speech at the Presidio
by shouting for Nixon to produce the
"secret weapon" plan for ending the war
he promised in the 1968 presidential cam·
palgn. •
A Cl"O'llt'd of 4,000 cathered 1n Union
Square when the two pre&idents arrived
at the hotel. Several hundred
demonstrators carried signs and chanted
slogans against Nixon and the war.
* * * Lodge to Tell
Nixon No Chang e
In Red Position
SAN FRANCISCO ( U P I )
Ambassador Henry Cabot IAdge has ar-
rived to tell President Nixon he sees "no
change" in the Communist position at the
Vietnam peace talks In Paris.
Lodge traveled aione by commercial
airline and arrived Thursday to attend
the meetings between President Nixon
and South Korean President Park Chung
Hee.
He plaMed to fiy with President Nixon
today to the San Clemente Western White
House to report to the chief executive.
On his arrival Thursday, Lodge 5ai<f
Nixon had made "flexible and com·
prehensive" proposals at the Paris talks.
"The Vietnamese president has also
made proposals of his ovm, including
bipartisan government and international
Inspection where ne<'essary," the chief
U.S. negotiator at Paris said.
"But there has been no change at all on
the part of the other side from their
previous attitudes, which include U.S.
~·ithdrawal alone and which would leave
the whole country free to the domination or the North Vie\namese."
3 Locomotives
Block Freewa y
But None Hurt
BOSTON (UPI) -In one of the most
spectaeular accidenta in years, three un·
manned diesel locomotives ran out of an
engine house Thursday, around a yard,
off the track, through a fence and onto
the Southeast Expressv.·ay, Boston's
bu1iest superhighway. (Set photo, Page
S).
Tbe hi&hway was finally cleared at 3
a.m. today 12 hours after the accident.
Tl<o of the U... Penn Central Railroad
dieseh, etch weighing 180 tons, Wtre
stranded acroa: the expressway's north·
bound 1.M CiUSing the biggest traffic
jam In rectnt hW.ry.
Th<re wm no lnJWi ...
An lmrMd!ate lnvetUgaUon was begun
to determine how the diesels took such •
Wl)'Ward course.
1bousands ol 1pec:tator1 rushed to the
acme. The combination or parked and
stalled carun aid• streeta end the traffic
jam on the exprMs Wl)' caused delays or
up to two houri for motorliU.
I
Premie r Huong's
Resignatwn Caps
Saigon Struggle
SAIGON (UPI) -PMme Minister Tran
Van Huong resigned today in the climax
or a five-week struggle with President
Nguyen Van 'J'.hieu who sought a premier
who could get along with the South Viet·
namese legislature.
Huong, a former schoolteacher who
escaped a Viet Cong assassination at-
tempt last March, quit after an impasse
over efforts to reshuffle Thieu's cabinet.
Thieu's office mad~ the announcement
of Huong 's resignation, which political
observers aald could bring a major crisis
in the South Vietnamese government.
Huong's most likely successor 1s a
deputy prime mJni.ste'r, Gen. Tran Thien
Khiem.
The U.S. Embassy in Salgon had put
pressure on Thieu to keep Huong in of-
fice, poUl.ical sources said, on the theory
that if Khiem became prime mini.st.er,
South Vietnam wauld re~um to a near
mililary government.
lt was the secood time Huong, 67, had
resigned . He also served three months as
prime mlnlster in 1964.
Huong, a former tehoolteacher a n d
mayor of Saigon, had been the target of
Thieu's own political alliance, the Na-
tional Social OemocraUc Front. The
alliance had asked Thieu on Aug. 9 to
remove Huong.
Harrison C.OUnty Coroner Mrs. Gladys
Gorenfio said she had held inquests for
HM persons in Gulfport, Biloxi, Long
Beach and Pass Christian.
"These are all the bodies we have," she
Wd. "If there any higher figures being
* * * * * * Why · They Stayed
'We 've Had Hurricanes Before •.. '
GULFPORT, Miss. '(AP)-Wby dldnl
the residents leave before Hurricane
Camille unleashed its fury on the
P.1ississlppi Gulf Coast?
"l gueJS the people just didn't reallu
the magnitude of the storm," Nap
Cassibry, a state senator and area C.lvil
DefeMe coordinator, said early today.
"I know I didn't realize just bow bad Jt
could be. I've lived here all my life, 51
years, and I just couldn't conceive of 190
mile an hour winds.
"A 20-foot Ude rise Is just inconceivable
and I think that's why there were so
many people trapped by the atcrm. Hell,
v.·e've bad hurrlcanes -and bad ones •. so
we thought -in the past."
Cuslbry, who, took a few minutes out
at 4: a.m. for an interview, placed the
d'"th toll in llarrisoo end Hancock, two
of the three counUea whlcb hug the Golf
of Mexico, at ••approximately 235." The
figure, he said. does not Included Jackson
C:iunty where Coroner Benny Bryant said
he had 1lgned two death certiticates for
Camille victims. Jack!on is east of the
main damage area.
"Qulte frankly , there has been con-
siderable confusion about the body
COMPLETI SET
count," said Cassibry. "We may never
know actually how many were kllltd.
Some will be carried as missing for a.
long Ume before they're declared of.
fic.ially dead. What is it? Seven years!'
''That figure is going to go up," he ad-
ded. They've located quite a few bodies in
the marsh west of Bay St. Louis. They'll
get those out today. These aun't included
in the 235.
"I'm really depressed. The death count
will go a third hlgher before we're finish~
ed."
That would put the toll somewhere
around 315.
Why the coofusioo over the number of
dead?
"There's ootbing that we can do for the
dead," said Cassibry. "We've got the liv·
ing lo think about. The sheer magnitude
of what we've got to do and are doing for
the living is astounding. .
"I know it's been slow. We've had ao
muoh damage that it's kind of hard to tell
"·here to put it together. There's so much
debris to clear up. We've got the
necessary people. But it takes lime.
"Actually, we're sUll numb ," the official
added.
1 ARM CHAIR s499 3 SID! CHAIRS
I SENIOR OVAL TAILE
OUR SUMMER SALE ALSO \NCLUOlS ULECTE!j Gl!OUPS F~OM OREXEC, lITTJT At;~. HENREDON,
NArlONAL, MARGE CARSON . HERITAGE & HENREDON UPHOLSTERY PLUS MANY OTHER LINES.
UDUCTIONS ON ACCESSORJIS, LAMPS. AND PICTUH S ARI ALSO AYAIU.lll.
NIWPORT I EACH
1727 w .. tdlff Dr. 642·20.!0
OPIM N IDAY "l1l t
ORIXIL . HlltlTA~I • HlNRIDON OIALIR.
INTERIORS
Profeetton1I Inte rio r
Doolprs
Avallablo-AIO-NSID
• • LAGUNA BEACH
345 Norlh c ... , Hwy.
ortH NIDAY 'TlL t
..... ,. "-...... Of'-111 c..., .... ,J,J
l
49«151
' ,.
11
I
•
Boniingion Beaeh
EDITION
T .... y'• Fl••I
N.Y. Steeb
' ' '
'
voli 62, NO. 201, 4 SECTIONS, :.io PA'GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA" ' FRIDAY, A1J6UST:22; ·1969 . TEN CENTS
' . . • •·r • •
New Edison High School to Open on Schedule
Edboo. High School will open it.s aoors
sept. 10 to UOO Huntington Beach
1tud<nt&
Fean.that,lhe school would qot·open,
f~ double sessions at HunUngton
Beach · High School, have been dispelled
by school. officials working to solve the
ptobtenis brought by a plum.ber1 ·and
heavy+ eQuipmel'!t o~rators strike. . ·
A'few1problerrur will still be found . The
physlca1 e,ducallon departmept won't
have shower facilities. Science classes
will iuwe to operale ·wit.hout labs for a
few weekll.
But ne1f ·Principal Ernest F. Pascoe is
optim1sUc abQut the 1Choo1'1 lnJUal year.
"I'm convlriced our people will sit down
and brainstorm ~aome-Weaa to work
around the problems. You may see some
interesting experiment!," be 58..id today.
Two possibilities exist to aolve the
physical educaUon predicament, said
Pascoe.
Flnt, all pbyslcal aclivicy migbl be
delay~ until showers are installed. In
which case iuBtrudors .would concentrate
all their paper work -leamlnf sport
rules -into the first few weeks.
"Second," explained Pascoe, "we do
have hoses hooked up~ We mta:ht allow
the boya physical activity then hose them
off when class ends. 0
State codes forbid any science ex-
periments without water hookups for
safety reasons.
"We'll just ha\•e to concentrate on
bookwork,'' sald the principal.
No time estimate for completion of the
work is abaUble. "We don't know when
Richmond Escapes
Floods Batter Sandbags; City Saved
RICHMOND, Va ,, (UPl)-Tbe swollen
Jidfes' Rivir battered the sandbags pro-
teC_Ung Richmond early today after
boillgg·,dowp from the Jl\OUDtains with ·al
least' 44 dead iii its backwash. The ISJ'ld.
bags llekl and Richmond was spared.
(sea ~os, Page ·41.
Civil Defense authorities said there
were 44 known dead, 48 Injured and 116
mWing in Alle~eny Mountain towns
upriver from Richmond. More casual·
ties were expected as the villages peeled
back layers er mud and debris .
Thirty-foot flood waters slammed into
Richmond 's ~ndbag barrier a,.s, the
James roared toward .the Atlantic Ocea11,
swollen by up to IO inches of rain from
the remnants or hurrlcane Camille.
The James reached a peak of 23.59
feet-one foot below the tOp of the sa nd·
bags-in Richmond about dawri, then
half an hou'r later the waters feU to 2!.51
feet and bleary-eyed workers croaked
a hoarse "Hoor ay!"
Leaders End Talks
Nixon Pledges to Aid
Koreans Against Reds
. .
By MERRIMAN S~UTll
Ul"I WNfto ...... ._,..
SAN FRANCISCO -President Nixon
and President Park Chung Hee of South
Korea pledged jointly today t h a t
American and Korean forces stationed
along the 38th paraUel will remain
"strong and alert" to continuing Coin·
munist aggression.
Jn addition to stating their determina-
tion ·to meet any anned attack again st
Sooth Korea. they also recognized the
necessit, for "long term efforts to lessen
the ciluses of tension on the Korean
penlMula.''
The joint statement wu issued as the
t'lt'o,chief ei:ecutives concluded their two-
day vi!it to the St. Francis Hotel in San
Francisco.
Stock Jtlarfcets
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
closed with a small gain toda y as it
reportedly continued to consolid ate the ,
1alns made ln its recent rally. (Set
quotatiOM, Pages 10-11).
Trading noar the close was moderate.
The Dow Jones jndultrial average at I
p.m. WU up 1.71 at 1311.&6.
The•otalement aald:
''Presidmt Park gave an account of
continuing acts of aggression committed
by the North Korean Communist regime
again~t the Republic of Korea. The two
presidents agreed that Republic ol Korea
forces and American forces stationed in
Korea must remain strong and alert and
the two JftSidents reaffinned the
determination of. their governments to
meet armed attack against the Republic:
of Korea in accordance with the mutual
delense treaty between South Korea lDd
the United States.
"President Nixon and President Park
look note of the newly formed homeland
reeerve defense force as a contribution to
the !leCUl"ity' and stability of South Korea.
They agreed that support for the force
should be continued.
"The two president! recognized the
necessity for long-term effort to lessen,
the causes of tension on the Korean
pen insula."
Olher items in the joint statement in·
eluded :
-An invitation from Park lo Nilon to
·visit Korea. Nixon accepted, but the two
chief executives said the Nixon visit
would take place at a time of mutual con·
venience. Diplomatic &OUrCe1 said this
(See NIXON, Pap I)
tt v.·as Vir ginia's v.•orst flood since
1936, washing av.'ay towns, caving in
mountainsides. and s w e e p i n g away
bridges.
\Veary officials sai d Richmond was
spared only because it was forewa rned.
The capita l city piled along its riverfront
a sandbag fortress designed to hold back
peak flood waters or 31 feet-almost eJ"·
actly the height at which tht James
(See FLOODU"tG, Page i)
Heavy Fight
Breaks Out
On Viet Coast
SAIGON (UPI) -Mort heavy flghling
bron out today on· Sotlth Vietnam's
northern coa>tal plalni where U.S. forcu
have tilled more' than too North Viel·
namese" an d Viet Cong th is w e e t,
American troops found m or e than 100
Communist troops dead on one bat·
tlefield.
Communist forces bombarded the big
U.S. base at Da Nang today in an allack
that killed one American aQd wounded U
others. Seven Vietnamese civilians wen
tilled in a similar rocket attack 100 miles
to the south.-
The shellings were part of a series of 2S
such attacks overnight, 15 of whtch were
at U.S. units. The attacks killed two
American1 and wounded 72.
The heaviest fighting was centered 17
lo 23 miles west of Tam Ky which Is &o
miles from Da Nang and S4 mile.
northeast of Saigon. It is In an area
where U.S. infantrymen have been trying
unsuccessfully to reacb the wreckage of a
helicopler that crashed Tuesd ay, killing
eight Americans.
Seven Anny troops and Oliver Noonan,
29, an Associated Press pholographer,
were aboard the helicopter.
U.S. troops said they came upon the
bodiea of 103 Communist. aoldicra Thurs·
day in an area %3 nqles west of Tam Ky.
·the" plumbers strike will end or how long
the w~t will' take," added Putoe.
Olher ptoblems the school must fact
Include constluction of tPe swimming
pool, black lop paving for can, landscap-
ing, and water .1n tbe1cafeteria.
"Parting will beJhe biggest ~blem,'1
admitted Pascoe, •''we plan to ask
students who live. nearby not to drive to
school."
Right no\v school authorities are highly
Involved in the more mundane problems
of launcJ:Ung a brand new lCbool.
Reglltration · coiltlnue!I this week and
nei:t, t.eachen must·btcome acqliainted
with ~ school, a d st~ents-art urged to
lake advantage or acbool >Oriented ac-
tivities.
One l\ldl. activity is ·the 'pUn:hase of
associated student body cards at $6 Which
\viii cover 'all Edison iCharger acUvlties.
"Buy one and save $52 on achool1 ac.
livities ," urges.-Pucoe •.
ldentiCication pictures stand on the
waiting list or items lo be taken care or.
On Aug. 21 students with last , "names
beginn1nc tn "A" thn>uab .. K., can 1haft
pbotoo taken al the achool, with tho; Hll
of the lludents P'<"nl the lolJowinc d17.
Price ls $2.50.
·~tf ilie strike 11 tettled," &aid Pa.coe.
relurnlng lo the blrger problem, "aor IOP.
priorlUes win be shower facilltlet ind lbi
science Jaba:"
Despite aJI ilie probJems, the new'
school al 21400 Magnolia Sl, la ready' to
open. And if you call 9U-1351 lbt llaff of.
Edison High School will greet you with a
cheery, "Yea air! Tbe IChool w1D. he
open:."
·Nude Man
Flees:Wife
With Saw
By TOM BARLEY
Ol!Ma.ll'rl'I• ..... .
k &creaming bJood:Ooaked -Ana
man 't'ho told police he '°"girt ..,,,..
Thunday night In a · nelgbb0r'1 bmne
from 'hit berserk hatchet-wavhig wife '1s
today llmd In fair coodiUon at Oraiip
County Medical Center.
Ofllcen said Ramiro Lechuga, C.·told
them that the first of three allacq by •hil
wife occurred while he was lyin1 node on
bil bed watching televisiOn.
Lecltuga alleged bis commonlaw wife,
Muta, 34, attacked hfm.wtth an ellctrie
""" but he managOcl to diann her after
oJ\e ~ several cuta bf an •Pl"""' ~to 1a11111Y mulllate blqi.
' ,, ' • 111'11 tild peJ!oa 11111 "' ,.. • .. !Ji• c:0upi,•111e1piis ddlilnn
whm wlfeatlloHdblmfnm.lllldad ··~lh·1 tislebel.Agale. he~
WI ~ after 1he· had _. 1i11a .brice
wlt6 ~ bluht end ha .... 'oldl'llll
blade.,, •. , -:. '
• 'J .4 I
lJ'r.ee'king Firm 'Wre~ked .
O < 1 ' I l j • ;! t iluge· tongue·of•llame towers above· Cleveland W~lting Comp8lte
San ·Francisco•during 1•Ull<llarm fire -Jy today., Blaze, ·
authorities •uspect was, set by arsoniJt, C8USCo1'!1 e'!funafed:'l nJl •
lion in damage . .It w.., 1ec:ond major file in ·•ame hidustriaJ section
of city· in: tliree days. · •
Valley Recall Candidates
Issue Vote Statements
'!'hr.;. candld;ltes•ln F-.In Valley'•·
Sepl J3 recall '· elect I~ have tssved
1ei)arate campaign statements this week
listing issues and questions on-which they·
are running.
Papers we re issued. by George Scott.
Bernie Svalstad and Jolin .Ginos. Scott is
seeking . Ma.yor Robert Schwerdtfeger'•
cooncll Seat, while Sv.31.stad is challenging
Vici-Mayor Don Fregeau. Gfnos ls alter
the seat now held by Councilman Joseph
Courr!ges. ~ ·
ScQt.t'1 paper featured qu~1 revotv·
ing around the issue of ethics and zoning.
He failed to answer the quest.Ions he
posed, bul scott did'pt'omlae th• residents
a series of "wblte papen'" to explain hia
positon and background inJhe campaign.
Svalstad came to the point more quick·
ly. He oUtlined, point-by-point, the issue•
on which he stands. ·
He lilted 17 ·specific points he ravors,
including strict mainmiance ol lhe city
standard ol 7,200 -square feet per }ot, ~
position to an industrial airport, and a re-
examination ol the industrlal master
plan.
Gioo«· called for a "cbang•· 1fith •
'J1U11)0lle," standing . onva peraonal _plat,..
formol.·"honeaty afld·iMelrlty." ·
Jlis 1 pfogram "•empha$izes youth IC•
tivlties -Ginos b a Ut.tle League of..
liclal -and_outllnq ~ progr3.m to utlliie
aJI possible adult" talenls In working with
youth 0( the clcy. ·
All lhreO g,ncll<lita promised filrther
ballet.ins ·i.JC.explanatlons of· their can-
didacy. as well as personal meetings with
the rl'Sl<I0!\15 of .Foµntaln Yal!ey. 'fhey
allo· promjled· to release· }.ists· o( pro-
minent dtliens supporting tbtJr.aeparote
candidacies.
' .
Boys Club .Holds
Car~ival T~nigh.i
The Boys' Club ol Huntington . Beach
will conduct its Secdnd Miiual Penny
CarnlvaJ Friday at 7 p:,m. at the club-
house, 319 Yorttmm Ave. ·
According .to P~t ·t:>ownq, execu.Uve
diroctor for ll)e clnb, I ~lirtety 'ol· IC·
Dead ""og's Body· uv;u.. ;, p1ann0<1 . with prpnta-iiolhr 10 J..11 the·ctub ... EVerytblrtg wlU iCOlt'a penny,
and there will, l>e inlall prlles and awf")I
£1 _ -' · •' ':IT' · ' II to. lkll!Olti! '!>On" ~ ''7C.ts ·R~es ,,. est·,,:: mr. ~··! • : . ' , ,, . . • • .
Ledniga thin -olflcm·.-lhlRd
"Jnc<inipreheoalb)J<" -apln ·-hil back oo hla wile to.put the hatd1el •*"1·
She alle&ed)Y atruct him aevenl um. in
the back with a carvtog lmil• lnlUdi.;
several WOUDda and laceraUons.
Officen said Lechuga cleclded to c:all M
qu lta: at lhat point. He ran from the home
acr~lng lo/ help with his wile bard ~
bu beela brandishing the'hatchel. .
Neighbors managed ·to tepU1t1 tbt
couple and held the acreamlng wciinu
until po:Uce arriffd. · ·
Throughout' the fraca1, Lechuga !old d·
flC91'1 hit wife kept asldng.hlm: .. Wiiy do
)'OU IP out with other WOlll<l1, -II wrong with me?"
MrL LoclnJi• I• .loday ln_Orange .c;lliap.
1y WOil)••'• Jail. She 11 accmed or.-
with a deadly weapon.
l'llllce officera today oaid the M-
bom woman waa acquitted b1 her
homeland on charges of killirig bet. ht!o-
hend. They olate lhal Mn. Lecbuga allO
told them. that W.. tilled I llCOlld lDJI.
band In .self defense.
Joint Y's Men
Breakfast Set
Y'1 ftfen Clu~ of Fountain Viney,
Golile'nwest and Fountaln Valley wlll liold
a Joint breakfasi,at I a.m., S.turday, at
Manny's Restaurant, 70«Q F.dln«er Ave ..
Huntington Beach.
An . Orange Counly Sherill'•. Depait.
ment investigator will be the ptC
speaker. · • · · · ·
The Y's Meo Clubs are .•"'"-"""'ed.., by the West Or1111< County YMCA In
Weatmlnrlter.
Oraalfe
Weatloer
Sunny skies wm warm ~
OranJe Coa"st over the weekend
while b1land artas tu.e aome ·low
cloudll and fog ovemlgilt and Ille
mercury dllJllO lnlo. the upper ll~L
INSIDE TODAY
· -' " · ' ' • ·.1 ' • ·r ~ , ~Wn~~ ~ feiaV1il<ftw1n '3.""'1 ' .'fhe·bodf·of•'G<!man ·Slw'phlrd&>J, ~ .. ~. -'at ~.ill)d}ilier , · ohol ind k!llM' wecidoocloi Jjlgllfb): 1\111\-.l>Wl!.club. 11m.,<aori'. <1\ib,manliets
Windup of th• Lido 14 M-
tfOtl<ll chami>fmuhipl ond Illa R~nntsii/ Cup : f'QCel hfghUohtt
o 'blUJI wtrkeM· of bool/ftg ..,
fftritli along tllc Cooi J., l'OQI [I.
u,,,......,.
SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENT PARK AND HOST REVIEW TROOPS AT SAN FRANCISCo'S PRESIDIO
M1morl11 of KorHn Conflict and 1 Joint Pledge .t Strength et tha 31th Parallel
I
.Ungton Balch poliCe, la iielnc ~'°' ,Wlli he pven the ~t7 to ll~t'<>lll
day for possible rab~1. • '. ~ :tliilr ....... Ions m tlloit,'!l.,,·'"ho'bave
Offlclall of llie veierlhaJ-il PubUC boon worldn1 , with them 1ln«> !ht c:lob
lleaJt/I ™9artmenl said It -'1d !>J<e .P,ned In 0ct0""r 1' \ . • .
five ar six days before the rl!Sllita o( lab • :lddilion1l ' 1ttrldlcll1I Wllr" lnclllde
Jc&ls In! known. , 1111~0)' ~· • filbirlg detblel/ 'rtlQ(
They said Drily one bite victim hal ~n . -· ~ )qt, pell1UI 11\ufnr, -.• reporf<d Jo·them;andbl>hasnolb1e111d-~l 'Martlap'Dl..Uon'\ ..
vlMd .to lake the rablel 'trtetmenli aa · BoYs .... beinl , 'l""""apd ·to brine ye~· ' • Chell" 11m111o1 to ilit tam1'NI. ·
-.an. " ............ C1llfMlll I ,..,.., ,..,,. f.I c .... ,,.. ,,... or.-CMll't' •
CtMkt » ,.,.... """"' lt crwe " 111 ... n.n
a.9111 ....... t ....... -t>lt . ...,... ,... . '""' , .. ,. •••lat ;:s A 'ti·•--,,.... W "''' ,.,... t•n ~ "
,,..... 11 ~ --"" ........ ,, ...... . .,,.... . .......... ..
.... &M ........ ...,.
•
I
~---------......... -·-
' DAll.Y PllOT H FrldlJ, l11111$l 22, 196•
Ac~e·ss Action Belayed Thailand
To Discuss
U.S. Pullout
•
Full Board ro Decide on Salt Creek
°'""' Ooanty~·wlll -mother two wetb when they ire all -l lo tau action on a propooed
poll~!<! ~ p\lbllc access to beach
•n<I ~ojs.
The ,polley, desltned to prevent another
Salt Creek COQt~versy, W'-' proposed for .
adopt.Ion this week by Supervisor David
Baker but two o\ber 1upervi&or1 talked
him oot of II on bobllf of a lhltd col·
leacue "'ho "N abaent. ••'J'his is a very tmportant policy matter
Mid all of the members ought to be here
to a.ct on it," said Supervisor Alton E.
All"' <l Laguna Beach. Superfuor
Wllliam .Pbi1Upe: WU in Sacramento for
an . appeal to the Sl3te Highway Com·
mi:sslao on the Orange Frttway.
l!akar ttluctantly yielded to the <lelay.
but not before Supenisor Robert Battin
pul In. "f'm felting lirtd <l atudying
things today and letting them die tomor-
row. 'Die road· to hell is pived with good
Intentions. We ke•~ pultlng things off and Plltliol lhlngs off, ' . .
....... qld Ila Is -..... diol 1-a.i..
Ollca. Tin CID Beach, Is ID tlle -ot ,p1aanlnc. H ' '
Jn the paal, be sild, aliP<nili<iro Mvf
betn-.coocerned about public. access but
there has been a lack 91 any dlrec:Uve lo
the count¥ alaff. His propoaed-pollcy:-
"In the int.ertsl of ensurtnc that there
wUI be public acteU· to public land!,
partlcularly tideland!, It b the policy of
.Ibis county lhat ii will.seek lo obtain or
protect public access to ~blic lands.
"Every county department and county
agency is dJn:ded to keep thlJ policy in
n1ind when dealing with developments or
matters which affect or may af(ect publlc
lands."
Baker proposed such a policy during
the Salt Creek Beach discussion Tuelday,
but his proposal was dropped when '
supervisors Allen and WlWam Hirstein
had to hurry away from the meetinc to
atteod a swearlne·ln ceremony for an
honor platoon of 80 Marine recruits.
Phillips was in Sacramento when Baker
~":.."'=.:.:::= ~aldllowlll'bt ... -.,.i ~week,, to ~ poJJcy conshltraUon was
poslpoaed lwo weeks. .
Baker pointed oul oOiJ! lout ot 11'1
county supervisors are ~uired ~ be
pruentW-~ the county budget and lt Is p1<tty Important. .,
Hlnliln. rtlerrlnJ to the mean hlih
ilde determination of where public
tldtlandl begin, uld, 1•10 the caae of tqb.
tide there isn't any public land avallabl•,
only at low tide. Thia Is the way It Is. You
have to recognize. the facts."
Allen Hid be wl!lled time to 1et an op1.
nlon f~ county counsel on what mr
pllcatioos the policy mig!rt have IC\< th•
Upper Newport Bay land swap with the
lrvlne COmpaoy.
Of the c:owity'a 13 miles ol coastline, lt
now are privately owned. Ttn miles
belong to cities and 14 miles are in'public
ownership, inclllding nine by the state,
one. by the federal government and four
by the county.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tho United
SI.ates and Thailand have agreed to
discuss a gradual pullout of American
troops from the Southe.ut Asian country,
the State Department announced today.
Department spokesman Robert J.
McCloskey aald the Forti1n Minister
: Thanat Khoman had approached U.S.
Ambassador Leonard Unger on the su)).
ject in Bangkok on Wednwlay .
"\Ve for our part," ~1c:Closkey said,
11are willing to enter into such discus·
sions."
He said President Nixon felt that rela-
tions with Thailand were very Important
and on his ree.ent trip to Banckok
"agreed that, at an appropriate Ume,
there. should be consultaUons leading to a
gradual reduction of the level of our
forces in Thailand."
F rom P119e l Victim Count
Disputed on
Gulf Coast
'lbe United States currently maintains
2bout 48,000 military personnel in
Thailand and an additional group of 1,200
who proviqe training, assistance and ~
vice to Thai forces. Of the 48,000, aboUt
three-quarters are aJr force personnel
and the rest army. NI XON, PARK MEET . •• The Air Force. conducts air operations
and raids against the communista in
South Vietnam from !ix Thal air bases.
Army personnel provide logistical sup-
port for \he U.S. forces.
would probably be next year.
-They agreed that the Allies in Viet-
nam should conUnue "to work toward se-
curing an honorable and lasting peace in
Southeast Asia. ln this connection, Park
endorsed the peace proposals expounded
by Nixon last ti.fay 14, and Nixon, in turn,
pa.id tribute to the contribution in Viet-
nam by Korean forces.
The staWnent said the two leaders
agreed to ~It cklise:ly and with their
other Allies concerning lhe Vietnam
i;itualion.
At an unusual st.ate dinner Thursday
night -unusual because ol Ill site and
fpr i~ site ~taide the White House -
Park Warned, that •nf imbalance in
tocrilnated U.S.-Asian effort.a to meet
the regional needs would inevitably lead
to "new dlsturbancu and threats" in
.Asia.
Thia same theme was somewhat 1':1Uted
in the joint statement although Nixon and
J>ark did emphasize their concern about
continued aggression from the north.
Nixon in his toast to Park Thursday
night emphasized indeptndence of free
Asian naUons also meant "self-rellanct."
1be joint statement was issued in writ.
ten form at the SL Francis Hotel and the
two Jeade~ who bad planned originally to
appear before reporten at the cooclusion
of. the talks, decided tmtead to make
separate atatementa upon departure' lrom.
Sao Fraiiclsco lotemallQIW AlrpQrt. ·
While a small crowd of antiwar
demoMtralon clashed briefly with police 'ou!Jide the elegan~ Fraocls Hotel,
:Park and Nixon ea ed toUts Thun·
day pledginj mutual cooperation and sup-
port. Tbe.y met for two houn earlier to
~diac:uss U.S. aid to South Korea and
·Korea's mllital')' aecuiity,
Nlxon told the banquet audience in the
. St. Francis' sqft.ly-Ilghted California
:.]toom that the United States wes grateful
·for tile sacrifices belD& made in Vietnam
:JJea.chgoers Come
Despi te A.M. Fog
Three .11traJght days of early morning
fog failed this week to halt the Oow ol
traffic to HWltingtoD Beacll. city beach.
"Low fog here, means hot wtath!'r
inland. and that's where t~ beach crowd
originates," said Mai: Bowman, assistant
director o( the Harbors and Beaches
Departmeol
A total of 82,000 visitors spread almost
evenly over Tuesday, Wednesday and
Tharaday, came to the beach to ·escape
inland heat. Water temperatures were from 63 to 59
degrees, but visitors soaked the sun on
the sand.
"\\'e had heavy fog Thursday morn-
ing," explained Bowman. "but the tem-
perature was 93 degreu in Garden
Grove."
"AU the fog does," he added , "is keep
t.be.m ou1 of the water."
DAI LY PILOT
ll ol>.rl N. W••'
Prnldtl'lf 111141 l'\ltlll""'1'
J 1ck a_. C111lty
Vite PrttlOtftl 111141 Cimtf.I M1111ttlf
lkM• KM•il
U >K T••fll•• A. M11•r,hl1111 Mlt'IWI"' Edi w
.-.1h1rt W. I••••
lo1wti.1t: Ell1W
H11'"1.,.... ..... Office.
• 309 Ith Sl111t
Mti1i11f .A.'clren1 P.O. 111 790, tl6'41
91Mt Offlcn
N-r1ktcll:111 1 Wnl S11b!M ~ti c .. 1• Ntut: lJI WC'll a.v s~· Lllllfll l.acf\; f:J fwt~ A-
CIAf\. 't PU.OJ. ••llt MlllCll • _..,.. ... ................ -.Mi.,,.. ... ~. ••Cf'llf 1""' *'I .. ._.,.._ ..mllN 1W MllllllMl*t
-..di. ,.,.11111 v111er. C•"' ,.. ..... HCW>
s-t ._.. .... i....-ktcll. '""' "'"' ._ ........ Colili..to. ar..,.. C...I ~ ""'~ llflllllltt Slflltl -•12211 Wtll ..... ..... . ,,.,_. '"""' .,,. .. wc.i ,._.., '''""· Cott• ,,...,.,
,, .. ,.., •• 1114J 64:t-4Jt1
,..._ W• I•,., C-61 M0.1211
ClwlPW MlwtW1tt 641-l•fl c.m-. ,,., Otllff C..N '°'*1"""" c---,,,,1 ••• 1111111 ........ ..... "' --" ....,,,,.,..,..,.., ....,.111 _, .. ,....,... ...._ Wl(loll ,.,.,.. ... .. _,,_ .,,,,,,,_
._,,.. CM'9 ,... •.. 'I 11 Ht11"°" .. ..,
.,.. tcfll Ji!ku. c..i.1cr~le. "o1.t 1t1•""'1I I-• ~If• °'*-.VI tit' O!lf!I U II ,_llllyf ~ a.-..1Mo11. Sf.It ....... 1111r.
•
by 50,000 Sooth Kore .. troopa.
"But we also have tremendous rupe.ct
for the fact that despite the m.Hltiry
burdens that the Republic of Korea must
bear," be added, "that economk pro-
gress has moved forward at a dimension
no one though wu pouibe."
Park dealt in much ~r terms.
He said that while the Seool 1ovem·
ment supported Nb.oo's efforts to tnd the
Vietnune3e War, "Ule Vt'f1 aggressive
North Korean Communlats -belliC<lle
Commun1sta" presented I CODtimU.al pro-
blem,
Part atopped abort ot uldq addiUooal
U.S. aid. But he llld:
"I think the A.a1ana as wen 11 the
United Stala.qieople abould bear ID rnlnd
the sober fact that only when tbe tn.
iUaUvu and tffortl ol Asians tbemHlvu
and the cooperaUoa of the United States
are well coordllllltd and balanced
together so a.s to me.et the needs of Asia
in an effecUve way, can we expect great
effect from the new approach of the
United States for the. stability and pro-
gress of this region.
"But should lbe3e efforts become un-
balanced for want of positive efforts on
the part of either aide.. new dllturbancts
and threat. will inevitably recur in this
region."
The crowds generally were frle.ndly
Thurlda)' at the historic Preaidio where
Nixoo Ont sneted Park, aJooc a
motorcade route to the SL Fronds, Ind
in Unioo Squatt outside the hotel. .
But there were 1 few heckler&, in.
'eluding Mike Milooey, 17, whO In-
terrupted Park's speech at the Presidio
by shouting !or Nlnn to p-ce the
"secret weapon" plan for ending the war
he promi!ed ID the 11111 prealdeoUll cam·
pa Igo .
A crowd of l,000 11tbered ID Union
Square when the. two pn:aidtnll arrived
at the hoteJ. Several hu n dre d
demonstrators carried alins and chanted
&logans against Nixon and the war.
From Page l
FLOODING ...
crested shortly after midnight.
"We're In a1 good a shape 11 we pos-
sibly can be," aaid City Manq:er Alan
Kiepper at a midnight news coofer~.
"Richmond seems to be. in 1ood &hape."
The Jamu battered Richmond with its
swirllm!: crest for almost four hours, but
the makeshift dam sue«s.sfully protected
low.Jying warehouses, plants and clgar-
eUe factories . Only 400 to 500 persons
were evacuated' from thelr homes and,
according to Public Safety Director
\VilUam Groth, "Not only we1e the.re no
deaths, we have not even heard of one
serious injury." ·
About 52$ National Guardsmen patroll-
ed black~ut areas throughout Thursday
night, tumlng back sightseers from
restricted are.as and direct.in& traffic.
The State Department could not say
immediately when the force reduction
talks might begin, bul McCloskey said his
guess was that they would be held in
Baugkok. GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) -The grim
search for Hurricane Camllle victims
dragged on ilong the Mlssismppl Gull · ==r~:::=:.n:,~· Premier Huon g's
DAil Y l"ILOT l"Mk .,. Tltl'Tl' Ct¥111t
LOOKING FORWARO TO LUAU IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY
Que•n Rosemary Ke lly, Repp Blue' Bend
Refugees triclded bacl< Into the
hardeJt-hit .... at neamy Pua Cbrlltian Resignation Caps
wh.,. bodies were sWI being found. The Vall T£ • • Pl 0 =~r:1~ ... 1nv::.,. ~:-J::.; I ey .1~1wan1s annmg Saigon Struggle
mistaken for hurricane victim!. nus SAIGON (UPI) -Prime Minister Tran
caused acme confuslon among rucue L f E o F mil Van Huong resigned today in the climax
teams. uau or nt• ... e a y of a five-week struggle with President
Mississippi Gov. John Bell WUJiam• .l.i. Nguyen Van Thieu who aought a pmnier
stood by hJs count of a minimum of "200 who could get along with the South Viet.-
plus" killed by the vicious stonn when it namese legislature. S\veet Leilani won't be present, but a. A list or events includes 3 fire dance, Huong, a former schoolteacher \vho
swept out of the Gulf of Mei:lco Sunday l~rge part of Fountain Valley \\'ill be games, battle of the bands, the first an· escaped a Viet Cong assass ination at·
night. But the Civil Defense coordinator w!':cn the Kiwanis Club holds its second 1 · tempt last March. quit after an impasse Nap Cassibry put the toll in two of the nua running and jogging championships, over efforts to reshuffle Thieu's cabinet.
three coastal counties at "approlimately annual Labor Do.y Luau, Sept. 1, at the and a lot of exoLic food. · Thieu's offiCf! made the announcement
235." civic center, 10200 Slat er Ave. ll 's a day planned for the whole family or Huong's resignation, which political
"We may never know actually how and all residents of Fountain Valley have observers said could bring a major crisis
many were killed," Cassibry said. "Some been invited by the Kiwanis Club. Tickets in the South Vietnamese. government.
lim'!m bebeldeclaredtbe :" nussde· cling for,~ long Camille Destroyed ore $2 for adults and a $1 for children Huong's most likely successor is a e ore Y re are.d o [1ciaUy deputy prime micister, Gen. Tran Thlen
.dead." under 12. Kh.iem.
Calllbry Hid the confusion over the 5,238 Coast Ho111es AdmisslontolhebigbatUeoftbeband> Tbe U.S. Embassy In Salgoo had put
death count •le.ms from "the sheer dance is $1, inside the community center. pres.sure on '11l.ieu to keep Huong in of·
mapiludrl of, )fbat 1'8'vt got to do and 'VASHlNGTqN (AP) 7 The, Red ~as Ticket.I are available at Sir 1'1ichael's fice, political sources said, on the theory;
are do1ag for Uie llvlnc." said Frift•y 1 •• atest surv-:shows at R that if Khiem became prime minister. Harriaoci County Coroner Mrs. Gladys ..., "'1 eslaurant, Crocker CiUzens National South Vietnam would retwn to a near
~nflo aald she bad held tnq~ests for Hurricane Camille destroyed 5,238 homes Bank, city hall and at the luau. military governmeni.
104 persons in Gulfport. Bllo1l, Long \\•hen it hit the Gulf Coast Sunday. .Special Tahitian dancers from lbe It was the second time. Huong, 67, had
Beach and Pass Christian, The agency said It had revised upward Tahitian Vill"i'f! in Downey have been ar-resigned. He also served three months as
.. These are all the bodies we have," she lo 11 ,667 the number of homes receiving ranged for by KJwanis director Jim prime minister in 1964.
nld. "If there any hlCher fi&urea being major damage w h l 1 e 20,82tl incurred h1onsour. Huong, a former schoolteacher an d put out, we do not have the bodies." mayor of Saigon, had been the. target of Handling the bodies caused one of the minor damage. Also, the Red Cross said. · Clt1b President Stan Mansfield said Thieu's own political alliance, the Nao
new problems. 1,007 mobile homes were destroyed or several hundred attended last year and tional Social Democratic Front. The
Wally Dabbs, an a.Wstant to Gov. damaged, along with 569 business he hopes even more join the South Sea alliance had asked Thieu on Aug . t to
\\'illillIUI, said the bodies of storm vic· ,-•-•ta_b_u_· s~bm;;cn-tsj. j;l;;,;i~~~~jjiil~l~un~lhi~·,~y~e~ar~.iiij-·iji·f.iljiiijil~r;e;mo;•;e~H;u;oo;g.;;;;;;;;;::~-tims "are piling up" in an:a funeral
homes with no way to get them to tem-
porary morgues set up at Hattiesburg, 70 Si
miles north of Gulfport. He said
refrigerated trucks were due. in from
New Orleans to help. Ummep
"The trucks better get hen: pretty
soon," he said, ''becaw!e we're going to
have to find some way to dispose of them
because of the health hazard."
Slate Highway Patrol Chief Inspector
H. C. Slay said some of the bodies found
in Pass Christlan had already been em·
bakned while shattered caskets were
found nearby.
Slay added that "a great many!' of the
bodies found in Pass Christian were hur·
rlcane victims but would not estimate the
number.
Aircraft started spraying part of the
battered area today in an effort to con-
trol mosquitoes. Authoril'ies said a
regular program for spraying was being
established.
COMPLm m
1 AlM CHAil . s499 J SIDI CHAIRS
1 SINIOl OVAL TAIU
* * * * * * Why They Stayed
'We'v e Had Hurricanes Before •.. '
GULFPORT, Miss. (AP)-,Yhy didn't
the resident& leave before Hurricane.
Camille unJeashe.d its fury on tht
Mississippi Gulf Coast ?
"I guess the people just didn't realiie
the magnitude of the storm," Nap
Cassibry, a state senator and area Civil
Defen.se coordinator, said early today.
"I know l didn't realize just bow bad It
could be. I've lived here all my Ille, 51
yem, and I just couldn't conceive of 190
milt an hour winds. .
".A 20-foot Ude rise ls Juat ~nconceivable
and I think that's why there were so
many pMple trapped by the 1tonn. Hell,
we've had hurricanes -and bid ones, so
•e. tbougbt -in the patt. It
Cassibry1 who toot a few mlnuta out
at f a.m. for an interview, placed the
d..cb toll In H-and Haocock, two
of the three counUea 'wbidi hlli the Golf
" Mealco, at "appiUlrn.ttel1 m . • '1'11'
llJIW'<, be Hid, dou not locludtd Jackloll
County where Corooer Be.ony Bry111l said
be had 1lgned two death ctrtlflcal., for
Camille vk:Ums. J acbm 11 east of the
main damage area.
"Quite frankly, there has betn con·
sl derable con!U1lon about the body
count," said Clasibry. "We may nevu
know actually hi>w mlllj' wtrt killed.
Some wtll be. carried u missln1 for a
long Ume before they're declared of·
ficiaUy dead. What Ls it? Seven years."
"That flgure Js going to go up," he: ad-
ded. They've. located quite a few bodies in
the marsh west of Bay St. Louis. They'll
get those out today. These aren't included
in the 235.
"I'm really depressed. The death count
will go a third higher be:fort we're finish-
ed ."
That would put the toll somewhere
around 315.
Why the confusioo-O\'er .1be. number ol
dtad!
1"There'1 notl'ilng that we can do for the
dead," said Casslbry. "We've got the llv·
Ing to think about. Tht llleer mqnilude
of what we."Ve got to do and are doln& for
the livlnj ii ast<>undlng .
"I knolf lt'I betn 1101'. We 've had IO
·mudl damage that It's kind of hard to tell
whtrt to put It together. There's so much
debris to clear up. We've sot the
ne.ctSaary 'P'OPlt. But It taJi:u time.
••Actually, we're still numb," the official
aridtd .
Casalbry sajd Pa.ss Christian. 10 miles
we.st of Gulfport, WI! "definitely with no
queatlon •I all the hardest hi!."
Ilia assessment of the couta1 ares!
-----------
OUR SUMMER SALE ALSO INCltmll--SEilCTm" l:mUPS FlOM DREX~ tmlTA&r; HENREDON,
NATIONAL, MAR6E CARSON. HERITAGE A HENREDON UPHOLSTERY PLUS MANY, OTHER LINES,
DDUCTIOMS ON ACCDIOlllS. IAl!!ncAllD PIC1llUS AU AUO-AVAILA ...
\
llUXIL • HlllTAtl· HDI._ DIALll
1a1.. •
NIWPOlT HACH
1727 W"tcllff Dr .. 642·20.SO
ONN 'JtlDAY "Tll t
INTBIOIS
Profulllftll lnttrfo,.
11oo1.,,. ..
Anllabl ........ 10-NSID
LAGUNA lllACH
MS North eo..t Hwy. 04-6551
OPDf fllSIAf "m t
I
I
I
I
II
I !
I · 11
I
1!
I "I
·. . -.
Freeway
Priority
Explained
SACRAME NT O -A
member of the State Highway
Commlsslon a 11 u r e d an
Orange County deleg•tion this
w~t that the commission
realizes the need for com-
pletion of the Orange
Freeway, but said it must be
measured agaimt other needs.
-·
President Sets Travel Style
..
Friday, A119ust 22, 1969
Food Stamp Plan
Starting Oct. 1
SANTA ANA -Food the first year's cost to the
stamps will be avaltable in t'OUnty lo administer the pr~
Orange County on Oct.. l, gram will be $115,000, about Welf~ Director Granville $40.000 more than estimated
Peoples reported to county earlier. A supervisor and
1upervlJOrs thla week. seven clerks are being hired
Supervl.ton granted Peoples u administrators.
authority to enter into con-Orange County ls one of the
tracta with banQ to iell the last three counUes In the state
stamps. Peoples said he el· to begin the food stamp pro-
pecbl about 30 bank branches gram mandated by a It.Ile
DAILY PILOT f
YOUNe. WNTUlllOMI
M11l1ktlklf'llMC Orlenltif ~
.... 1 M• (Wl•lfl ,.,..... fW
~"" ,,.,... .... tl'tWlll ,,..,_
for AUTOMATIC I.AWN .,RIHIU.I ...
R...-i by wtlflllt Oil~ 'lltt ... ......
Make a Sharp
Deal; Use
DAILY · PILOT
Dime-A-Lines
Aleunder H. Pope of Los
Angeles made the remark
after the Orange Freway Ac-
tion Commht.ee asked that the
commisalon not divert the con-,_
will be offering tbe food:\;;;S~u~p~"~me~C~oorC~~d~ee~is~io~n~. -~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;iii~ stamps for sale. ·
Food stamps are designed to
help the poor attain food
purchasing power. Stamps are
bought by those who qualify al
less than face va1ue with the
ditlerence being made up by
I See By T9day' s
Want Ads:
1tructlon money to other
routes.
In question are corutrucUon
funds to complete the Section
of eallfornia 57, the Orange
Freeway, between the
Riverside Freeway and the
Santa Ana Freeway.
the federal government.
For example, a family oJ
four with adjusted net income
(gross income less necessary
living expenses) <lf $200 to $219
monthly could buy $92 worth
of stamps for $68.
e A hole ln One! Baktt rnA1l
wanted for nJaht wcrk,
make donuta, etc. Pope told Frank M. Reid.
chairman of the freeway ac-
tion committee an4 executive:
vice president of the Fullerton The best way to get around the President's Western
Chamber of Comme rce , White House grounds js to take a tip from the man
"Nobody questioM the need
himself (left). Reporters (right) find the golf cart
a handy mode of transportation
Peoples said about 10,000
families in Orange County will
qualify for th< food stamp pro-
gram and that certification of
the income of those not now on
weliare will begin-about Sept .
I.
• For Sweethearb? A ~
heart or a lowWe ln black
fake fur $65. for the Orange Freeway. It's
just a matter of priority."
Pope added that the com-
missjon "faces acute problems
tn many areas" and it'1 not a
question of whether to build
the freeway, but when.
Meetings
DEATH NOTICES
BANEY
J 111lne It. Miner. 1'01 L1k1 SL, Mull!· ~ lllllloll l11ci'I. Gr1v111dt 11rvle11,
' . r . .
t • . . . .
. • . • "
• YuN1'1'. 11 W4 Good M>Nhtrd C......
''""· Dlreettd bf Dl!Mr •rothlr1 Mwfulr'l'o IG·ml.
STEN CE
HORN
CASEY
DoWa M1rlt C•.n'. Jl4 E. Oct111,
N-...rt •1Kfl. 0111 ol dull\, Aue111t
1t. Sllr'l'lvtd br '"°""'· ~' 81,.. •I. Cotl1 Mtu; d1111h!1r, Mra. 81111
tt.ii.r, W11h1119lon1 ton, lllkh1rd llelttr, W11h!M1t0fll SOii, llltl'llnf H-i.. Well'llM!on; broll\er, Ooll11d
il'lnT•-. ServkH wlll bt lleld Sellir· °'" 11 AM •11t1 Cos!• Mnl Ch1~I. 170 $W>er1Gf'. •1111 COlll MtN, Olo
r1e1or1.
HOPSON
• I-Gmffl!Ot M0fl'90!\. 10171 HolbllNI
~ Drl'I'" H1111IT"111!11 llt1Cll. Ot!t of O.Tll. A1.111ulf 21. $Vr'l'IYlll by tiu..
blfld, J""" "'-<in; 90l'I. J1ma ..._.,,,, Jr.1 11t~ Slllr H1rrl1011.
• lrvlne. 1NI Mr•I• Lu~ HunTIM-ton le1cll1 brofllll!n, Wll!l1m M.
F1$11tr, 5111 ltr111Nllno. 111d Wllbeort Fltfltr, Clllrl!:ln. 1'1.1 1t!tt1 1•1116-
dlilclmi. S."""lcft "'111 tio. hlld 11 I PM S1tunl1r P1clflc View C"-tttl.
R9'1'. Edwin! G. A11t1 l!lffltl911..,, En-
tomb!'Mnl P-.clfle View Memor!ll
P1rti: ~llMtltum. P1clflc View Mortu-
-l l"Jl'o DlrlCfWI.
•
• ' ;'
' ' • ' ~ •
• •
r
'
'
t . •
~
ARBUCKLE & WEL'lH
We1tclW Mortuary
'2'1 E. 17U. St., Cotta Meu -• BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR :1-145'
Calla M,.. MIWW • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broad"1y, COltl P.fesa
LI 1-lm • DILDAY BROTllERS
Baatlngtoa Valle7
Mortlary
1m1 B<lidl emi.
HantlnliOO ll<ac-
Hl-T/11 • Mc()()RMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1715 IApu c..,... Rold
LquaBem
fM-Nli • PACIFIC VIEW
lllElllORIAL PARR
Cemetery • llloc1uaf1
Chapel
not P•cifte View Drive
' Newport Bem, Cllflornla -• PEEK FAMILY
, COLONIAL FUNERAL
• HOME
t '7801 Bo111 Aft.
Wutmluttr IN4DS • SHEFFER MORTUARY
L11una Beaek 4H-1.US
SI• Clemente f.tulll • S~UTllS' MOR1VARY m Mm1 St. _.
Hualfftrtoollud
AMiii
$41,398.40 Bottomless Charges The welfare director also
told mpervisort he estimates
Allocated BarmanDue BackinCourt Let TV WEEK
e In a ~P Purple Mood
for a pialr of Aµletbyat
ltalian 1lul lamP11.
posure and disorderly conduct
SANTA ANA -Sheriff bar manager who recently charges.
James A. Musick will receive setved IO days in Orange Booked in the polict raicb or
To Sheriff SANTA ANA -A Santa Ana
July 26, Aug. 9 and Aug. It $41,398.40 In county funds this County Jail tor defiance of a were Shirley Ann Nellon, 27,
week, his department's share court order banning bot· and Jeannette Ruth Oman, 2S,
of this year's distribution from · tomless dancing will be back or Santa Ana and Toni Jane
the California Peace Officers' in Superior Court Monday on Tarantella, 26, of Long Beach .
Training Fund. renewed contempt charges. Brown and Dennis Farley
The sheriff's department Robert Roy Brown, manager Oman, bar manager, were
qualified fOf' the allocaUon on of The Apartment, will be ask· also arrested.
the basis of the number of of. ed to explain to Judge Robert Brown dre..,. his tl}.day jail
ficers trained during fiscal Corfman three alleged viola· tenn last month for his con-
1968-69. More than 23,000 of· lions of the order barring viction on similar allegations.
ficers have qualified and near· pantsless performers -all of He was also fined $500. Oma n
ly $8 million has been earned which resuJted in the arrests was cleared after he suc·
by the department since the <lf the entertainers by Santa cessfully argued that he had
program started in 1960. Ana police on indecent e:r· · not received adequate notice
A portion of fines collected
by local courts is submitted to
the sta"" Treasurer for proc· Coast C1"ty Wm" S Honor essing through the Peace Of.
ficer program and distributed ·
to police and sheriff's
departments on the basis of
officers completing training.
•
For Pedestrian Safety
of the nature of the charges Turn You On
ag~nrthim. I-::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~~~~~~~~~!!"!~~~~~~~~~~ It is expected that Districtl-
Attomey Cecil Hicks will
press for strong court action
against Brown and the en-
tertainers of The Apartment. ~ ,.. •
The Santa Ana tavern is one of ~ ,
seven bottomless bars named l ;iz
by Hicks in an energeUc pro-~ :,"
secution o! such '
establishments in r e c e n t ~, ~
moMnths. th ~""'' ore an 20 such en-; --
tertainen have been suc-
cessfully prmecuted by Hicks'
<lftice since the a n t i . b o t-
tomless drive was launched
three months ago. l
Conviction of Brown on this t
second contempt charge could !
put him in Orange County Jail
for the next three months with
tines of up to $5,000.
The program is seen by
those contributing -they
serve more than 99 percent of
the ~ IJOP!llaUon -aa a
dl!llnlle boool lo officer siand·
ards with fiDBDclal backlng
of prograJ111 designed to im-
prove law enforeement ef.
ficieocy.
SEAL liEACH -The city of
Seal Beach has been awarded
the second highest citation in
the fiat.ion for pedestria.n We-
ty in ciUes of it.s size, ac-
cording to Stuart A. Wilkin.son,
district Jalety consultant for
the Automobile Club
Southern California.
01
TURN IN Tbe award, from t h e
American Automobile Assocla-
tion, will be presented to the
dty in September. It was bas·
ed on safety record!!, public
education programa, crmsing
guard placements, s tr e e t
l igh t i ng and similar
pedestrian-traffic standards,
\Vilkinson said. Irvine Prof to Head
World Science Group
Seal Beach was competing
with 666 cities in the 10,000 to
25.000 population bracket.
Santa Ana also won an AAA
special citation for pedestraln
program improvement, rank·
ing fourth highest in si:r na·
.tionwide awards tor cities ·
the 100,000 to 200,000 category.
IRVINE -Roger W •
Russell, vice chancellor for
academic affairs at UC Irvine,
has been elected president of
the International Union ol
Psychological Science for a
three year term, 1969·72.
The election was announced
recently in Landon, at the 19th
UC lrvlM'I RusHll
Think
International Congress of
Psychology, atten ded by
delegates from 40 nations.
The International Union was
founded in 1951 and Dr.
Russell is the first president to
be a resident of the United
States.
The union's membership
consists of national societies of
La Palma, Placentia, Brea
and La Habra will also receive
plaques citing those com·
munities for having n <l
pedestrian fatalities in the
past year, Wilkinson added.
psychology and funcUons as a.i----------1
coordinating body, conducts
spec:ial projects and acts as
consultant t<l the United Na·
lions, UNESCO and <llher in-
lernationat organizatioos.
Uncle Len
Offers Prizes
a HARBOR ~~~c~s TEMPLE
Religious School Registration
to be h•ld •f
St . James Episcopal Church
J20t YI• Ude, New,.rt .....
hhlrfft, A ... JJ I JO -t :JI •& ,_ 12 NH•
hr '"........," c.n 671-1442-'44-0140
Turn on a 100 watt light·
bulb-yours for only
10<* with each purchase
of gasoline ... at partici-
pat ing Texaco Retailers
in this area. Lightbulb
supply is limited so
don't delay. Turn in at
~=!~;.~~~· -
~ .
I
'
.. ·' -., .
,,. ... <".
L __ _ ,•.
Used ID be, Volkswagens were enough to moke some women give
up driving altogether. Accelerator up , .. clutch in, .. shift ••• lurch,
Very embarrassing.
Thors why we developed the lurchless Volkswagen. A bug that's
equipped with an option we call the automatic stick shift.
It's an automatic because there's no clutch·pecfal to worry about.
And because you can drive it around town alfdoy without shifting.
It's o stick shift becouse it con also be token through the geors
monuolly, just like o reol Volkswagen. (Thot's for you men.) And
because ot speeds over 55 mph you con shift into o higher, over•
drive-type gear to save on gas.
But the odvontoges a ren't oil procticol. In the Jody bug, a gal can
fee l more like a womon. Because the only shift she hos to think obout
is the one she's weorlng. ~
NEWPORT BEACH
Chick Iverson, Inc,
«5 E. Coaat Hwy.
(714) 67U900
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
Bill Y oles Inc.
32152 Vallo Rd.
499-2261
HUNTINGTON IEAtH
Horbour Volksw19on
11711 Booth loulov1rd
(714) 142-4435
1 Ellen Tracy
' Huntington Beach Office: IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD •••
Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal
Savings, where your aceount is I
Think
Today's News
Today is The
Daily Pilot Way
Located at 91 Huntington Center
at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd.,
adjoining the-San Biego Freewar.,
in Huntington Beach.
MAIM O"'ICI!
t 111 l Htll, Lot ...,,..r .. • ln·\351
Clllf tft._.t
WILtMlllll Of'PICI: at» WUtlll" l lWI. • ,,.._1116
u.. C'YIC ennui 2~ll~•Uf.ll01
TARZAMA:
1171( V.l'lllrtl 11\11. • MMt14
UWTA "°"!CA:
711 Wlltlllrt 11'1'11 •• 1-.074'
SAM,IDlllOt
10tll & 1'.1C1lf11 • N 1·Ho&1
WltTCD'YIMAl
lM!tlfld '!!."""'cw .• alt420t
SAFE• CONVENIENT• AVAILABLE
Morloat ftuctuatront 'dolt, '"'"' Cooot and 8ou1hont ..,.,. ••• their oa.pltal • ....,. ,,..... In Yalut. And '°"'N llJl'a
of the hlOl*t .. """"" cone)ltant •Ith Mftty when )'OU
NV9 at eout,1nd Sovthtm. Foremott ••unince of._. b«ltfttt la tht outltlndlr.G
fln1nclal tlrtngth m1lnlllntd ttllO\lgh tM )'tars by die men.
tgtmllint cf COUt end 8outl'ltm F9dertl Slvlnaa.
INSURANCE TO $15,000/lESOpacts OVH jOI MllllDN
PAHOJIAMA e1TY1
tl11 '1111H\lye11\'d, • 8H·11'1
HIGHEST PREVAILING RATES
~:2,~~ L~;,'!!~J ~~!"
DIVIDENDS TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL
COAST
AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS ........
LOAtl lllllVICI AOIMC'Y1
1tol No. M•lfl It.• [ft4) 6414ztr
•
I
I
I
Jf DAIL~ 'ILOT
LEGAL N<111CE -Cl l TtrlCATI OP. I USINlll. •ICTITIOUt •..:MC
,,. ~ • "'11rv "" ••• ~ ... .._ at ••11• ~, ....
lfijl#ll'el'i. '"""''Ill ll'ell11,, Ct llfomlt. ~ t11e fl("*"' lit"' ....,,.,. er
llltc"°"ll:O'S HAUMARK Mii 11111 MIO """' )t,.......,. ., .......... ""*"'· ~,.... -"' f!.tll ""' '"~ "' t •lotltl'IW .... ., '°llllW•! •1ct11t• ,.f!tlm-111, lt>t.t vi. V1-..i1. 1~111M, C.llfonll• .,...., '••(It Jt~ Jlt.fttl-. llnt V1t V1:t9'W. lrvll'lt .,. __
1-'M Julor "-I""
fUcM rf Ftllllf!UI"
Treck ~ Ffflllfrl.ttt
&1111 .. '"'''""'-· U.. MttlH Ctuntv• 00! J111Y tt, llH, bffo,. ""• • No11,,.
Plllllk l'I tM 10r .. lei St1'11, H!'MllMll!Y ~1"4 •1cti1td il'.tt1llm111 111C1 Tr.Cle
-M PMll11'14111 k-i. 11'14' .. bt "'' ""°"'' ...-.. nernu 1rt •u'"cf"lbtill 10 f'!'l9 wi1fllft lfi:ll,_I 9fHll ecV.OWINQl'CI ~ ••~IH Ille U Me. tOf'P.tCIAL SEA.LI
._... I( P1"9rtofl,
Nl*N" P"lolb!IM:1Utotnr1 Pr~ll'll Oltl<t I"
l .. -"'"lt1 COUf'!Y
Mr Commlt1IOl'I tk•1rt•
MtrC11 11, 19"
lOOI• IC. PAnS:•SON, Att.•,..Y· 1..U I , Wlllhltt I"""
W!tMir, Ull ...... lt MW
Pu&rltll..i °''"'' CNst Dtllr l'llOt, A.ueu1f I, .. 11. ,1, IHI IOUt
LEGAL NOTICE ·--C•l.TlllllCATE 01' •Ul lNlll
PICTITIOUS NAME
TM uno1n '9nttl dwt CtMolr k 11 con
Mtl'ltl t bull ... i.s II ISH MOMOvl1, N9WM!I at•dl C1!\IOl1111. U'llC!tt ll'lf lit•
ttllou1 llfm 11•nw M .SUH .SET •l'OCI 111•1 .. ,d tlrm Is COMP<aff ot tf\1 IOllOwlll•
~ wftol,1 n.mt ift lull •<111 •I•<• el
~fcltnc• 1, •t IGI-• Mllr.1 T•ll•, llllO l"omon-No JI c ... 11 M.11, c1111or,.•• 0.led "'........,1 t, Ifft Mlli1 t i ll•
lt•ICI of C•llfe.rn11, 011"9• Couf'!Y
Of\ o\w~• t, 116', b~o~ "'<!. 1 Not1,..,
P~hc ln tl\O lo• ulll Sl•lt, •er1o0n1llY ••-red Mlkt T1!t1 known lo m1 lo be tllfo ~-wl'IO!t n1m• I& t<.1bs.rlblo<I 10
""' Wltllln lntt111met1I •"" 1(knowle<l'lled
llCI UIKUllCI """ time (OFFICIAL SE"'L) ORIAA.H V UTT NollfY P11bhc-C1lil0t11l1 •rlnd!lll Offlct In Orlnte CavMY M'f Commission l!xplrH Mardi 17, 1tn l'VbllsNd O!'IMf ( .. SI 0111'1'
A\lfV.I l. IS. ti, 'lt, 1"'
LEGAL NOTICE
Pok>!
u~,
llOT!Ct: 0, l"U&LIC Mt:A•tNC &li,,ORE TNI CITY COUNCIL 011 THI. CITY
011 '0UNTAIN VALLIY NOTI CE IS HF.llEaY GIVE N tlltl on 5e9ttmlll!r 1. lNf, ctl 1·eo PM '" tiw CO\lftt)I Clltmblrl. Ctho H1IL t6:1!1t S!ll!r A¥!1'1U4'. F-'lln V1llf¥, C1llfe.rnl1, 1111!
City C.uAClt Wiii I'll~ I .... buc lw••lntl ... .,... lollowl,,..
1. %0filt: CHANOI: NO 1'U • "'-11 en Pl-Int Commlut0n 1dlon Oy ll~~ •ftCI A1socl1te1, Ar<11llK11 Prt<lH Plan No 13', 1a1rtm•nt com•~~ 11 lrookl!U'll INI G1rllt kl. ), Al",l!AL 0111 PLANNING COM-
~ISllOlll ACTION • by Jim !(.ct-. ,.,_,...., !Dulled ~ liolle ol C.I ..
b r ... r1, -mott "' IHI !Kl _.,,. 91 Sllh!r A.._ Ll>h. :Jl fo •J ol fffl•
llth<e TrKt M•• No. M41 Tt.ue mllle'lo Ill! *"1.,. pr0(11Hd -.u.nt lo ""' ,l1nn1"11 LIW1 o1 IM
S11'9 of C1lltornl1 !Gtw1 COOS. 6S,OOll el HCll ) .... lhl Fountll" Vtllrf lotil119
o.dlnencit Tllit t onll'l8 Or1tln...c:1, ZOl'lll'ICI
IMM, vnd f xlllblh .,., on 1111 In trle
,llMJ119 OeHr_, -•ft •w•ll•blfr tor .wuc: i.i...c11or1 *>II ..,..,1rui11cM.
Thos1 okllrlnt Iv tu!llY ln lt\IOI' or 1n
-lrton kl lllHt l'fOPCMb. Wlil bl 11-an -lutllty f9 00 so II Nrll!e• lft.. lomictllon If deslrl'd, YOU m•~ corilt ct ""'
P' .. nnlnt 0ft11rlment ti .. , 1411 '"" "lt r
te "'' lboYe 1 ...... CITY COVHCIL OF T!o<E CITY OF l<OUNTAIN V ... LLEY
Ml,., E Celt City Cltft: PubliJ'*il Or-t CN•I 010IV "'•lot, ,...,...,1 n. ,,., 1!63-1'
LEGAL NOTICE ..,.,..
C&RTl,ICATIE 011 IUllNt:ll l"t(T!TIOUS N"'MI THE UNDERSIGNED oo llereb\I terlllv
""' "'"' 1r1 cond\ICti"' • lltJllneu •' l lW West Clll'IW'l'ICl!>'""1t11! A 'f t 11 •1. l'u1"'1on, C..lltornfl, 111\0tr trlt llUllloul firm n•"" of CCW "550C l"'TES, ind It'll! wi. llrm 11 corr-.i al tl'lt lotlow.
lntr, wllul 11111\ft 111111 id6rt'"5 •re 11 "'-· 1-.!ttlfl Conltlcien, Im • !JOI W1l1 c_.,.,, AWMll. F11ll t •l o11 C1!"-lll1 CCW Enlt~ $4' Oc.t1n A11tn11e,
Stctl k id\. C1!110rn!.
CA TED lhla 3nl day d June, l'ff
(CorPOr•lf. k~tl 81l"'TTAIN CONTllACTOllS, IN(:, • C1111.,..,.1ct Cor-•llOl'I av Edwin E antt•ln. "•t:Jlfflll CCW ENTEllPll lSES A LltflltlG 1"1rtMt"llli9 llY Hlrl'Y $ C-Gentrctl P1ctri.r ay Sidney W1lnlll!,. Gentrll P1rt,,... ay MCI• C-Gtner•t P•rtner ll4T E OF CM.IFOllN1A ) COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES) H °" tllll 3rd Hy "' J...... lfff bt!(ltt
-· I Hal1rY ,litOlk In tnd for SI" 511!•, rt11dlfll ltierlln, ~ly comml111ontc1 1n0 aworn. perM>111ll¥' -•rfld EDWIN E ll lltATTAIN, ~to mo lo bt 11\t Prts! tllflf 9' IM corvor1tlcwl 1~11 execu11'11 !he
font.or11t IM!niment wi bf.1'11N of ll'lt tOI'
_..11an lf\t•tln N!'M(ll, Ind ackllowie.!9·
ir1I lo ml ,,.., Well CO•-•tlon I Xl<;;v!H ... ~ Wt'TNE.SS ""' 111"" •11111 .. lk!1I 111!.
CS...ll H1rrlel H1mllton
"'"''" Putllk • C111torn11 PrlnclHI Ofll« In
LOI /ln9fltl C0\1111"1' STA'fE OF CALIFORNIA I COUNTY 01' LOS ANGELES! •~
Ofl Junt S. IMt, bf.Iott ll'le t11t ~"'
411nltned. • Hot1rv l"llbl< ln Ind tor Slld Sl•l1, per..,,1111 •-red SIDNEY WE IN8E ll~. HARRY S COONEN, 1ftCI
MAX COO NEH, kMWn lo ,,... lo bt 11M ..,....,. wnou 111"""5 1rt 1\/lbc•!bed 10 "'' w!tl'ltn lnslr....,1111 IMI etknowledted 1n11 1Moy 1xecu1"d umt WITNESS m• lllftlll lftlll effk.111 itfl.
(Seil)
...... 1tt 1-<llfllllon Noury Public • C1htorn•1 l"rllleiHI OHK1i In l ot Aftfeies c_,, II.OTHMAN a. HAMILTON •&M WltllllA ... lev1t11
U.. A111>1let. C111f1.n!l9 "Ml ...... ......
"~lll!lhect Orll'IM CO.OU Dl•lw A ... ~! I, I!. 21, l'f, Ifft
LEGAL NOTI CE
-. ' .... -
H Friday, A11911st 22, 1969
Yot1r Moneu's Wortli -Complete-New Y orli Stock List OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Lf1tin9s for Thursday, August 2t, 196t
Slump in Stoel{ l<lfW 'l'OlllC {At>! • ,-r1QV'1 CGl'TIOlfll Ntw Vwk Stett; Ex<llellcte orlc•:
~=.) Mllll Lew Cleta C:~
T I . L ··•lc:ll'IC .• ea lm ess on ,rfut ... -Ille ..... •ll•ll ., .... 111 .... lllltMtWll ... WMlllotiM. A*lll ·"' "' 11\.\ J6 ""' ± It::~ 1~19 C g .,.,.._.,.,,.,. . ..,._... ... tlltl•t._. •t .,..,..""""Y , ,,,,,,.. ..t"' N•so. -A-aai1c ,1 2.JCI
~L.t~ I 10 11 70\fi '10 111"MI + \'o llh lflll .i J
-H'fl!t:~ ~": Det ~r,r "• 1'~ =a': U\\ mt'•,!!fl9ol_..t n IM =~~~ t: *" ire *~ +i~ =~(J: ~
By SYLVIA PORTER
1969's severe £tock markt't
slump should be. teaching you
-the 1nvei;tor or would-be 1n·
vestor 1n mutual funds
some exceedingly valuable
lessons. And since I suspect
I'm safe in assuming that your
own investment record In 1009
lo date is at best "mixed," the
lessons should help protect you
Jrom s1m1lar Joss.es 1n lhe
future.
Here a re a ha lf -d ozen
lessons I've noted "'ell
II ) IT IS THIS type of
rnarket -a steep, sustained
downtrend for months
wh ich tn.ily lest~ the calibre of
the professiona ls who manage
lhe funds. What':s more, while
you can hide your own in·
vestment mtslakes, the fund~
can't Their records a re
published pcrlocheally ; their
purchases and sales a r e
reported by a wide vanety of
statistical services, the
performance rank of hundreds
of funds is charted weekly.
Yoo need not guess, or hsten
to rumors about some miracle
adviser The facts ar e
available and you can find
them
(1 I Some or the most spec.
tacular short-tertTI performer!!
on the upside have been the
most spectacular short-term
performers on the down side.
·n 1e third best performing
mutual fund 1n 1963 was the
biggest loser (a fantastic drop
of 48 7 per cent) 1n the first
!iix months of 1969.
Says the United BuslneM
Service · ''Now ii appears
there_ was nothing magic 1n
the methods of the high flying
go-go funds after all -they
were s impl y a ll -out
specuJators. '' Says lrvmg L.
Slraws. president of ORI
Research Limited of New
Capital Co.
T ell.s Profit
Capital Alliance Corp owner
or Manners SaVlngs and Lo.an
Association of Newport Beach.
~ported net earnings for the
11x months ended June 30 of
$188,187, as compared ' to
$193,IOO. For the comparable
period or 1968.
This was 25 cents per share
ror the first ~ months of 1969
as compared to 25 cents per
share for the first six months
of 1968.
Net earnings per share were
adJusled to reflect the 7 per-
cent stock d1v1dened paid in
1-'ebruary, 1969.
Join~ Witter
.... d lCI ...... E NII t i·· w.. VIO qt~ 11ili 'fi J~ d ~~r::".~ ~ :;~ l~ !11·" i ~ t::1
;:: l York· '''the nulstand1ng polnt11tri .. w"'ltf ~~~~,~ uv.~~ 2.111 ;·"{' ''~W\~ 1.• \: t:"" un +2~11H1,lbttt •
J see is that the hot·shot funds :;r.,_N11_.1ot1~ ... ·,;. k ~"" ' ""'°""" "" l•r.t 1
1t: e ,l1tt ;!~ ~·'!:~'do• uo g 1:~ ~¥' +·•; l:l'W~ ~
of last year by-and-large did a m, ..... ~ Ill(.:~·~:: u~te ~ n~ a;; r ,;\.\ l "' &wJ.: .:" i" •,'r'"'°" ...... 1 r 17 IJt'o ••• ,. """Air
lousy Job In the down mar kets. ~ cte11u'1 ~·"::: i. ~ 1 -.1llw MOi"'ci: 1m jl141
1 1~ v. •v l~~td!I uo •s 1 ~ lii' ftt = ~ l:~~~"'' ·Z:
Therefore, !here has to be :_..,;:•~'i\"1 :i.;; '"""1n Is fj ' [:~ C: mi 2JYI~ r1!f: : :J" :Ill :fa ~,lu f: 1:4~ 1~'? 1n!: h l :\I tnl ~ C: o•m ·t I h lh 11111r11111ma...... , I'~ l'I ~~ '' ,,_ •• s ·-• • , "'lt1tt'!Ol 1D U J!~ di!. qi. •• !"'"I' , 1 av e ques 1on as o w e er a , """ 11 wftidt flltM P'iJ:'t t A.., ij;! ~., 'i 1,-. 1!:? i;""cmv 8~ ,.v, Al(•Mtu .11 t1 11 tw 11 : -lj i '
fund should bt bought because :11'1.en ~ ~ Lctt t.\) ... \l " ~~~ ri ' !ill t='111 ~~ 11~ ~i=·r.-1~ i :fa t:~ mt =~ a=:, 1~::
of a .short-term, h e rol c~Hd 1J3~f11i.llf. ~s~! t; =.1'1.U 1,:, 1~fll~Nt 14 1' ~n=~~; A ·1~ ~U: ~~=:=:~ 1110:.~
record ' 11~11r 11\1.-11, l111111 !'!Ao Nf t Lib ai14 2 SC.1 w.r 1 "" 1Itt_ Ari'°'""" 1:?' 11 21 ,~,• ,•,1 " • et' ·
<3) T H E SllORT·TERA1 °"o0c rnl':. dt•~= ~:El 1J: ~:w. =:t f~"-111: 1f' r.; ~~ ..ii
46j'.{ :-! ~f.nl ~ 1~ J:~ JI JI-=~. '" • lllt !Mli.l6t icKOY J Nat »-1~ '1 ., G•C• JI._ 2 iilt AU~11t 1$ A M'Mo u ,.. I' .m
investor In mutual funds Is re1au iq.-11., nrom • t.111o1 'ti ,.. 1!:15¥1: 1:~ 11t :m:=1!';_41::f J =: ~~ = ~:1·,· !t'l"f•tc:'.;
just as vulnerable O.li the ::i~tt "' c.orn-I ~~!1 11;.!Q1 14 SY11H~~ ·1~ f~ ~~' 2S'I. jf'1-At!i..tz:i: " '' !~ u IN 11~~110
short-term trader in individual w (~ 't~ ~ lee ~.11fi n~ nl'I H~.t... It"" ~ ~ :" 2~\) ::="f:;;. n u .... u= II~ i.~ l:rrfat. I.JO
stock!. He may be even more ~v!,P'c0' ?f"' fitt :::Oi;!v0~ ,r ,~ ~%"11.~ ~ su. 1•:: i~ ~"' '11~ Am11s... 1" 1~ It~ ,.:! ~'Iii= U :n•:'r;.,1
vul nerable be<:ause mutual ~C.fl'le e1 '"' 10~ 111~ •• '"' •vo N~· ic; :11 1ot' f~8d11 " io11. lei.• ~:,1;~ ·1~'111 tt 171-a 11\11 ira-" kit a1u , •
funds nev~r were intended to ~ .. "':.a~: ,~~~ ~~ .. ' l~YI U11o ;px• ~ 1!v. 1m r:n~.11 ,, ,,I .. 1J" AmrEt~60 t ~v. !f\l nik + it =~ I~~· ,,_ t di ed1 I' 1ndua I" Ill on Cora ' 'l'J w N•!G '~ 101to T1111e• 1 ·•v. ~ ,1:'.IO 20•' ,!!~ 'dfi~, • ,, .. u~"•-""•' ~ a ra ng m um ~.,r11rn F \~ quu oll ?~ U'i'I w P11 " ti~ Hl'i r .... ,, 1)11. .,141n .t..t.lrFlltr .Ill ...... ,. ..-aoi--. ...
141 The funds which have A11 .. '1tnc ll~ ~ni. r.:,i!t<: /ii~ ~1v. 0ti'1.: :ri: ~:Hto :~ ;:~ 1! 'ti,, II\ Am A!rlkl • ~ 1'1t 11:1 3214 -14 ~1111j..21
I d f 0-, Alf(o Lnd 11 u --a C:~ !"' 714 ~It WI! " JO Theto:n A I V. 101-1 ""' •Aker I .la I~ I ... 14!-t !iY.e I W l,tt so I Ive or I year In· All1f 8tv Mio '"' FMrl Tk ~ •..:. ~ ~ it jf TllfllY Cct ,,I ~ 25\lo Amllk NOit I J 20~ )O~ XI~ -INl'll IO
vestment records have done ~\= :::.. !" ~" ~::~1~ T lMO ti~ ~~'" ~ .-Ir-;Jr;.~ J: li~ lf'~ ial~: ,•~1 ~ ~,3'., ;. :ti~~ •• ,~:.",!.!·~ relatively well in the down •111ec1 E11 7¥> 1~ FHN Ml ,~ 'I ~ H• 1Z~ utt Tr-c 1 ,,•., ~'ti A<·-• , ,, ... •t~ ,.. .,. .... If, • N A"'n Geo 15 1n4i Ftl 8'»1 •n.&t f ~ Ttncnl G .. .. -· i• U-\1 l6 -ll1 l111St 2 4111
market of 1969 _ suggest>ng AmMk t 1D F$1G Re 'i'I ' ,•,c 1~r1 111~ u 1o1. trnvi1 o ,'," ,•, ,-,"•',-, , !! 1• 11~ 111"1 11~ + 111 Br!·'' M• 1 XI ""' OTtl nu J\'J l's!M 1nw " t\111 • ti Br lS'• 3'~ Trend In " -] :n 32\Q _,,_ •• &r tlMY pf I that these funds h ave "' E• l ib • Mo F11 11.e1111 ·~ '"" "•K "•E ll is Tr!to Pd 37 Joi Arr1Crec111 " > 2'2t.o 21¥1 ~ = :1;..,..,.. H1i. . Am E•pr ~ ' w. Fit WF!" • ,... 1111;(0 Co '"" rv.. Tno11r 1J IP..I ACry:W, 1 40 4 2M-, UI• J'3f\ ........ Ht .. AJ managements which can be .t.o:n Furn R o f'l4I 1'11et.,.._ 191111 l!,. e._1111:o1 lo 10~ Trook1 »''> Jlf.l Aery pf ~JO 110 u 42 •l t--~ lki....UG 1.1'1 . A (l'"' )11\lt ,, l'klttl SClf , ..... , Ill .. ~...., Dlt 111.1 lf\lt Ty~ Fd 16;. 11"1 AmCYWI 1.2$ 15' 2't\O _._ ..... Brown Co reasonably expected to turn 1n Am Her11 IJ'" 141111 Food FP 11.t 1.,i; P0aulrl' P 11 1JY1 unaec ' Arn oanu 1 n 24"'1 ;;'" l•;;; + ,, ,,_,, co "'
d f ""' 111$11 10 n Forti Oil 1l "" l\llllt 1o>:. lUl UnArt T~ n ~:Vi ADu11~1 ·'"' H 12"1 12 2 -'II·-51\tro I re W a r In g per ormances Am Me(tl 311. 3111. Fost Gr11t JI » P,eetin T 20 JI un Doll• 11 'Ml't A011fl pf 1.. ' llh 111o1. 11v. t .,. 11r11n1wt. 011
Unde d II "'" p1.,.. '' ,, ... FolOC'tl• ,,._ ,.. •n Dl•L 5"-··~ Uft lUum 3 •• •"· "mEIPw r SI ISS ....... -~ _, , .. ,e. I :10 r a verse as we .ll!il A si Gob J"• ~ Frrkr c .. ,-;;,: 1ov. P1 Entin ''• ~111 Un Mt;GU 1'" 1t Am En~• 1 31 21'• • m; _:Mci co ·IO fa vorable market cond"•t"•ons ASt G "" '"' 11 Frn•!n E XIV. 11"" P,• G&w 2.v.. H '' un Ael• u 1511) Am E•P 1nc1 " 1 11 ,1:s, + \ Bud• F Pl 60 Am Ttlv l••k ~4~ F~lvew ·~ IV. '"" RE Ul.t l•~ us 8kMI 111'1 191/t AEJC tNI Pl4' JllO ,. • ., 7Dl-'I 1011, -1U: lud1fl Ill ... t969 's top performer chalked Anchr Co u ... u•, Gartnlit 1si,. 11•lo :~"'! W• 1"-ti• us Crwn ,•,• ,,s'4 :,~~n1_,,.l!. 25' n\.I 10t1 n +1 lluflFcrt 111 "'n!>eu' 8 II\, 621/t g•• s~c IJ.>\ 1'"' !<1111 t\, 10~ us E"Ytl .., -n ~ ~ l2'11i 'II llUIO\ll w AO up a 128 percent gain in 1963-"'....,"' c 1 1:w. Air'" n.. 1 ~ttrle s1 '' .:i u.s .SUtctr •1\• .t•.; Amliolil .l'O 2s 1' 11\t i. + u, lluM R1o:no ' Arc.11 N 31~. lSO.. Oe<llCf 2'\ 31,. tlroU I 41 4:2 us TtkL :itv. Jl\4 A Homt 1.41 31 W.ii '°'"' l(K~ + "'llunkll ofl .IO 68 -not Wtld. but 8 respec· Arn Ind UV. 17"" g l(lnellc '"> J :~Rd! of '4 611 U• Pl!fl, 1J\.\. ?WI : Hon\1 DI 2 10 t0 f9 90 t llurl Ind 1 olO
t bf d Th ArO.n M 1ov. lOh Ill Est 10 11 nn ub ni1 72\li tJ11tt Sld '~ nt m kOlll n '2 lt'4 a v. :19 -.-Vo llurncrv ,70 a e recor . e long-term Arden •• :w 3' 111111 ~t. J'" P,11aron 101-1 21\li u1u 1..0 '' '° "'"rnvir 1 10 11 1•i,., ''" lfl'o + \' 1ur~i. 60
d . bo h d Art Ml)P 12•• ,,,, <lllten ,., 71"" I( Pd ,,,. 4\i Vil LO 11 11•· AmMFdy '° "' lt'~ .... ,_ ••• nunv 1 21f recor -1n I own and up Arrow 1-< .., 50~, g11111•, :i,ol~ JS P1!'11crtn 601'1 '' Vince s1 Ml't n,., AMtTCt• 2 10 61 ~" 44!1, .U""' +I ll> 11u11ertSll ·to
' k ,_ " th b· t "f¥1di 11•1, lll;o l11lell «Wt '1\IJ P"ctrlr HI{ 'lt JO VI¥ Woll 10 ~ AMllCI• Wl I JI)\ JO• lOl.11 rn r e.., - is e arometer o A1cc 1191 .c:1 11> ,1.,.. 1e11" w .:i ,, P•o Goll 1~14 13" WKsw P 11 21 Am Motor1 ls.t , ...l '" :_ t• study in deciding what might A1110 Ser 7h >.1o Glot> Rub ' 1 :r~ ~l"~ ' •'I) w "-'"-' '"' AmN•rG11 2 111 l2" 31v. ll"' _ ~: c-1bot ca .tel ,..__, f\.'i ti Gorin'• 12~ lj\I; _,, "" 2N 2t\o W1tlttw 12111 lll-t ""'""°' 121 6S \Ilk 1011 l\o _ \~ (ti 1'!111nl bt the fu ture potential llbllllt 1 "" GrlOh en 17"11 I :ubS NM ''"' UV. W•ll'I NG 11"' lt'h Allfl•dl ..... 2S,,, 22\V:t 2" +• C11t11\M T3I • Bair# Al tV. 11VJ Gr•"" Sc Y 5t llb.S NC l,_. l?"i Wctsll ltE II"-It\\::::: Rl<Cll WI ]$ fl y Y 'o +1 C1mpllL .dct \5) The record of the n~load 8111t;or ;io• .. 21 G•effl M1 "'' lt•. :ubllhr IS'< l•v. W•1 Tr """ ,,..,, .s...1 1 • n·~ n·~ n"' _ ·~ c1masa 1.10
I d
111! P1tnl 51, 614 Grnll RE 11 11;, UteN 1\4 Jl' W~ Ill 11~> n u, Am S~lct jO 11 l'Co'.. l''• 20'o + \' ;"dB~w . .0. un s, which can be bought &Punt w1 ,,, 1 G•lnnel 110 1u P, Bennet ,..,.,JD11>Welcltrn 11 a. A !Er''" 108 "'• 19\!li :it•,+ \!lifd~ P•c J 'IG
I h f ll1nls!r ' "'• ,, .,_, Pr )4•L IS•L urlh SI " 11\11 WeUnl M 23 ''"" Am " 10 )I •1•-••• ''" +• aP1c fnJ ?O wt oul pa yment o a S<1les B•rw.:t l!'.lo i.v. Grv.fii 1., n " 1:1 "' POuo co 1v. 1 we111 o 1a~ 11 '1. Am Air tnl'O J lllH ll!~ x '; "" 1n1IRd 110 'l f bl 81tl t1 P 9 t >; Gu•rO C;~ ~ 61> Putnm$ U'o 1''" Wl!{jl P 11 .... 13 .. Am Sid I 57 IO\o )9''> l9•~ 1 <:tct C lldtH t1arge. com pares avora ya.Yi.on ll•.ui.GtildTK 1" 3 RIKI o~n 10 11•1,w.1n NA 11 n l,.•msfd P"7I 1111•\o112· .. 1"""=t:c:1rt1r...,, 1•0 with tht I th Id f ds II~ JDl'1 Jlli1GUll l11t ••• ,,,llan>llEI '1t'l,JD"1W•lnMI' I'" ··"'rnSttrlf 41 111•' 11i., ,.,~:t l• ... 1•11•1' 60 a 0 C Oa Un , 8el!e h ie 14 l•i•, (lyrodn lAl, lS\~ R•wCI! C• 20J 20I W$1n Pull U 19li A SU111r 1 60 IS 15'1 i.l\l lS~o 1~ C1r0Pll I '1
which charge a sales (et of as 1~011"" l~~ l~ ~:::i C.:! 11..., 1~~: ~:~: ~: l,.31~ la5v. :t:._wn ~~~ ~~ •• :;:s.rz1r 1 !8 ~~ t;1, _J J,0 +11. ~:~1i~11 1:
much as 9 3 percent above the Sert 1-<1 J1 » H1nowr s 11•. "'" "-," ,M1, ttl. 10111 wrnti.. T l•• 1« ~Qwww,.•,• ,-,•, ,,~ ,','.. ,••,,•. '•"•_•'~·.rt",',"•".,." ll•lr lctb SJ J1 Hrttn 111 "-)' 1 •l •I'd 31 ll WllC "'L 1'7'to 1'1•~ "" •• " , net asset value per share Of BUluPS w av. .... 1111~ Mor 1s...., 11 1t011e ... s10 JD 3'l wra1w E 1•1o J~• ~~'Jr;!,. 1•1 1110 21i. 72'• 1110 ~ ,,c ... J1 fllrd Son J• l1 H~nr~ F 26 11 oao E • ?!•/,, 1~ W~•nd C 26 11 11, ·~ lf 20\., 7G )(I\~_ \lo c.., of Al •4 lhe top 20 performers 1n 1969's '\"Chr '"' '" HlUt"'" ""' 11•) lloo•" M 26 JO Y•dnJ £ •~• I\• "':::;;~~~....: '°llO 1• 23'• 11'• 1J10 + '4 ~1111~c~e 60 d df I f t th B K t 1-<I 33 3' t-101m EP SJ 11 l,MK Co ,lll 12 5C!o 50 SOV> + ~ •1erTt I~ rea u 1rs six mon s, six LT'i E1 ,,,. •"-' Koovtr ,._. 21•, AMP inc; •• 1~ ~: i::,; 32~! + ~ ?€1 ,/!"';;t11
were no-toad funds . Of the top ~""ae'C ~r.., ~lv. ~~1 !.~' ,~"' ,r• · ::::;~ ... • <,or.t iu '1'41 '°"' ., •• -+l c~o cp •a
h f ICK C I IS Hu<I pp ->I -17 311.:o lll •l!lo + 'll '""el1~C• 1 two, t e 1rst was a load fund, .-w, ·~ .:\.: J!IV. Huto G... J: u MUTUAL •,~.'..tl-~1',... 1 ny. "'~ 16'• -4-r•1•n atA• 'iO
th d I d I H ·-""" "" 317 211 11V. 21h Cl!!ICO 1111 JO e se<:On a 0()-Oa fund """ Ar ll 11'• urst P ?2\.'> ll'i> ~hHoc~ .Ill XI '41o OI'~ .W' _ • ,. Cen!Fd'r :lo.I · "'"' le n:u. 2l''o H'flll Co JJ\ol. :u AncoroN~¥ 1 " --... .., Hu<I I ., (61 WHAT'S MORE Ule 118\IClr.t• ll...,15 Ind Cit 23'•'''• AndC l•v 110 ''1'• 211~ 111~-1•i"en111t1 131 ' 11•11119 .S 13 l:N. Ind NIKI 2•l• 2!•, A l>e( lO IS JSt• J~o lS~t + ~~ C:1"11"'1 "l number of no-load funds is ex-llu•n•t F lH~ 111-'1 1n101ec •'Al s •::Ou ~ ,11 ' 21\t ,, • 2J -"Ir. !'nu.~ 1 f
f . cir W .Sw 11\.1> ''"' ln!r••d 61"1 1•1, FUNDS A 11 ,, 37V.i 38'h +l>'t enMPw 1 11 p od1ng along with the load C•mco n is In! con! Ill• u QUI c"'m 1s •2'ili •1~ 41'4 + ~. •"' sw 1 to
f d Th C1non M n 11 1nr.11 S¥1 ''" 1~"• "'"-" Sn ' ' .. 101 1o.s 101 +n .. .,, s.o~1 16 un s. ere are now more E•MM a ,. 14 '"''"' 1n 1o•• 11,, A•dlo.n 1 '° 1 •Jli 4.S'" ..s~ .,,T•lyr 11
than 600 mutual funds, ol !:~41-1:~ 1:~ 1~1 ~'rir' ,~~ ,f;; ~~]~~~~~Ji '! ~~ ~~ ~: ~ !:;~MC1~111
Which 63. Or 10 percent, are ::T~IA m 12~ :~: rYcllr ;3'" ~V, -:~~ 'J ~ ~: :~ ~~: ;_ >'i r:'fitilr f/Jto
no-load funds. Of 140 new :~~ ~~ 1: ... :oci.,. i~I \",rf!e' 1:~ 1;14 INVESTING '"~••fors Grovo· !~f~t; ~ 12
1 r, . ._ ~;t ~'• .:'.:...1~4 ~~=~ :"fa runds Operaling Or fiJed in CIK NG 17l, lJI\ ntext lO 21 COMPANIES !OS nal oo' ,•,> ,s, ,•, AsftlO 0 ,, 0 ... 1 )I X>O 16•. -'~ ~~lrlfM'", o'o •nTfl 181'• 11 tonlo 2t lO NEW YOlllt IAP\ Mu! "' 91 39'o lt•• Jll't + '' nll~ n l'egJstral!On In the fJrsl SiX-fn VPS 71 11',C, I• SoUtt1 2''11 21 -Tiit! !(lllowlna ouo Proa • 11 • 91 As.d 8t9 W 17 lOlo lDto ID'o -1~ 11«.ktr !>Int h1rr 0 ID'< u JICOln F S !'I> lctllomJ wor140 ov Slod• 1 t 2116 And 0 GI :/ti 991 .. 1~ I<\ '6'"> + ·~ C/\emf!r~ 111 months. 40, or abou t 30 per· cnm Le• I•" is J•e<1un c 101~ 111' ,.,. N•!lon1 Au«!· Se ect , 0t , 11 "'"dTr1~ •O • 1~ 111:, '''• ,., cnemNV 1 "°
I I d Cl'lftmld l'\ J>.Jtm W11 ll 'Jl?V.lllon OI Sfturlllft V1• Pv 117 15'AllCIYEI 1 )0 1• 1Hlo 7! 7S% +, ... ll&mW•~ 10 cen , were no. oa funds, a c11e1 1n11 1•1 1,, J•rmbv 111~ 111. o..ren., Inc:. •rt Inv Resh in ,..., A1C11VEI DI• uo u u 11 ... 1 • c:11n Ofllo •
k d · ~"" u11t I• 11 Jllf1 FO• 1..., 11. ltit ode.,, 11 -ltn 1;;1tt 72 ''''"'All ltlchllll 1 ll'I '"'' '''" ''''' . ctwmro ,., mar e percentage lllerease 1 ar&1 1, 7!11) K1l•P• st ,, 13 ll•t•• ·~urlt!•• 1 ... e$1 11.11111; A•IPch on is '' ~ ~i•, ChlcE111 111 "the f d hrl\! ~ 111 1'11 Ktl!SI pl' 1•.011 cavlO n•wt bffn lyy '" •n"'!IAlcho!) l7~1~,,.1i;i..,i;1·.;1 ""C~IMll S1PP ' no. oa s Cllrl~I al !07 !D7 K•I~•· lDS 11' >aid •b•OI or l;IO<>Oht J Hnco<k I :it 'DI 11,llltch pl1' IO 41 ,,,,, lj'I, 7A•,I, + "" ClllMSIPP <1 And you .ca n find fu nds to Cn$del '" ' K1¥"" s sv, l•1•..a1 Thvrldv JoMstn 11 St.11 i.. ,..118$ c~em 1 " 21,,. 21,~ 27,0 + , c~MSPP P• s Cll!r Ull. ,,,, 2s·~ I(•~· T I J lt•• l i6 o\tll l(•vs•on• """"' All•• CO'O 110 s•. s• ... ~·+,•Chi M111lc I meet every objeclive max· c11r-. u e 1~~. 2•"' Ke11t11 5\1. 6\o ~t>t•,'" '•~ 2112, Cus Bl :ociot1io &1 11.uror1 •I~• , 1,,,. 1, ,. ~c111PneuT ' . Clctrk Mf 21 n KttlWtl ll 35 "d""" ""I' Cut 82 20 :11 2:?2JAul$pkl• 09ct ,. •S' l$:1\ U'lto -1•cn1 ~I P1c 1mum capital gain or Jong· Cl8Y!o<> •'• •1 ~ 11:..,11 E ,,.~ 1.U ,",1111"d ,,• •, ,, !! C11• •• • 1• 1n.:i Au1om•~ 1.,d ,. ,..,.; 11, 141 -'" c~11.1P ct 1JP ~l•n• M~r •• J 10"1 I(•~· Fib u·~ u U!te • ... (Y$ 1(1 7 ti '" A¥1:o Cct 11(1 3' , I • -,., CnRIP clNW term gro,vth af capital and in· Union o ,., 10V:t l(m cu. 1s 11 ~~0 Fd 'l ~ 1! ~ ~~ lic2 s JD s to •no arl xi , :;f:~ 2:;;. ~t! -:"' CM TUlf 1 "°
b I d f d • low '" 20 21 Kevst PC 1\lo 1':o "' e f11 s.s.i UI I 10 fCI 21.11 Ave .... Pd :n I S71"t .u·~ Sl"i -.. CnotloFu ll 60 come, a ance un s or 1n· olt<fl E •111 1•.aklne1 e1 ' 11 A~ 0~ 1039 1,» ~"" 1 1111n :10Aw11e1 •»c"' u 1~ ,,,, 14, -,~cnr1s ctr 60 f d I" d f nd Colllna F 71 H!? l(lrk Co l 1 111~ AE 1" , tl UI l If• t 00 Avon Pd 1 10 " 16"• 16, 11.,z :t,.~ CCII cvC>I \Od come un s. spec1a n:e u S, Colan Sir ?S'• 111. K"9D Vol 21<.'t ?•Vi A .. Gu:~ 1 11 J IO c~ SI 5 ' S61 AllK 0 11 e;, _u 8-16\'o 1'"' •"-+ ,,', ,',,~.·c.. •. ·:',,", '•'•
t t It kid !Ell lllf'i'l tMC Dll l'''' m r 02 Po1r 4ll 1H ...... ,. "~·· in erna 1ona s oc un S, etc om c1r JS >& •nc' in ,,\0 211~ ::;: 'N,~, ; ~ l~ 35 l(ni b 1 '' •" Once you 've decided whal Aet ,.,, 1111 tan1111 in •+A ••\ AinN G111 l .1S JM ~;!-'j~01c:.1 \!1 ~l H ~t ll1btk w '3d •1 '"• 14'' ''" + ,, c1nnGE 1 40 • Inn Sl1 ' [•"" Wd II 11?/ Am P1c 7 lt I DI Le• R ~ I 3116.tl li lk>Dl!T 6S ?t ,,., 10\o lt'11 a' C•n GE p! l your investment ob1ect1ves om G•• u 1:m ,,..,, 1 ~. Ancl'IOf Grouo u1111ry1c , 17 61J 11•11GE 1 70 ,, 1'11< :n n + .~ c1nMl11 1 40'f Cam Ttl 7S 76 Leh CUI 5 !~'I tacit ! ti t 16 tile Siio JOO S .. ll1IG •1!14 JO 1!1(1 .S7 .... '6''> u... (lnSuTtl 7.40 are, you can find an establish-Com 1+1ttr n i.o, Ill'> Lel•11r e; Mllt 11v.. ~ 1 •11•" It.: 1..... 1 17 1:n l•UG l>fU 1:io 611..., l'l\'t 60\~ · CITFln 1 IO
d f nd I nd h h .11 Coma 4 S'1 I'll lf'lln Tn I 11 11'¥ 1,fO f ,JS LI"° 650 llO fl1npPunl Ill 1'l 1''" 1' 1'V. _.. "-Cltl.,,SYt ' e U or U S W 1C WI Cma Cm 12 u l rwl1 l'IF 17•; ltVJ Fd In• IO •l10!Loomls Slwlts 11.,.qp "'J 1 J.~'"1 l.l''r JJV. ~'Ii CllV In¥ 101>
lch th Cma Ind 1} 11 LlllY EM 7] 7' "'·~·· I u 1 d '•"Id l791l1t7 BIM Tr ,.. 15 •s ·~· .. '~ .f 1•4 Cllvtrw pl Ill ma em. Cmp Mtn •~• s" Lobll'N ,,_. 1·~ A.Itron • M •" C•olr 11n11 11 B1rb011 1111 J? '~ 1 ~·~ s)v, _ ~ c11y1n an 31 To Sum Up Of all 111 I Cmp TK 1•" ;iov. lOI' Cdv 6'-'11 7'h At• 1-<ovoMon Mut u 14 "u"_•_·~--'-'--"--'c'...:"c':•...:':":'..:':":'--:..~·-·, cuv S1t1 40 , e eSSOnS ~on llotk l'f'loJI OD Elrn IA\1:1 10 Fund"' •ti 1 S9 Mtn~tn 11• J O~I .,.Cla•~E~ 140
of 1969's stock debacle, the c:\~'.:'n ~~: ~1! ~,.",,Clle;~1 1; •• "t°J: Fl~ a •!g l!i~::i l:f. \~'1\~t ~::~~11~11 1 .:
most significant was the c-, L l.S'lll 1•'" M19k o. J1v. J21'>, <" •"• ••, M•s 1Tr u i211•s cie.Enu i o.1 C1 ... ,, • ~ Mtl AllY 11 11 lbtof\ ! I~ MUfl. '" 10'9 Cl Pl abysmal record turned in by Corp s "' 11 M1!1;r1 11 si er••r Fd 1 "1 1 M11""" 11H 11 H NATEC' ci:.ox '12:~ 1""1rd lJ 1~ Mllml At J\'< 510 BonO,tk i 11 I '4 Mc0on t JO JO 11 "" many of the bright \and oh so re11 """ tJ.: 1av.. Ma"911• ts•~ Ul\ 1~1on 5t '• u,, in II Mldll Mu 'n 1.n S i:!::::;e•.,1 :'° ron Co 11•., lO M1nl11 M 4·0 J"lo 01 on · J Cit Mcodv Co h •• 15 7~ arrogant. so obnoxious ) young crurcn 11 11"11 u>,.; M ••-• Jt 40 l"'"d,s1 J', "• t, JJ Moodv'1 n ss u u l~: F1J"~1 ~ Cvares C 10 11 MO Sl!!I' Jl Jtl~ u\loc: MOl"IOP Fund~ "' n1en managing the funds nAn1e1 1n 11t11 ,,,.,MA"'' o :11;, :it ~G F,• ,•,-•,•, •,•, :•, 0 •w"' 10 :11 11 :11 Slt~lfCS Ea I'll ',~,,,',' ,",,',','•
'foRAL Dtnt¥ M 10 11 McOllY 17 11 ~tn• " lncQm I"' I 16 : lry to get rich 0111 D•o 11>, u•, Mtdlc H IR•~ 70 :a;: ,1\i' 'M ; 1: 1nw• 1 .st 1 l' c,~•,<0•,,, ',',.' . d II d Dft¥1S Fd II H•t Mtdlrn 35'11 J1 ~ O ' MIF F'd t ?6 IO 1 ~ 1nore gra ua y an gracious-D1Y Mtr i•• 1 10,, Mt IP•• 1 1~ C""' .Sh• 10 u 1 t :lt M1F c111 s"" 1 J-< CotQ •11 1.10
ty· you 'll live longer lo enioy DKor in 11 ,,.... Mtrie N~ 211\111~ r;:;r,1~ ~~7'1n 11 M.~ nmo J 1' s"" 16 Ce "',.·,:~·,,•,1tJ · Otll•nc • ~,,_ Mlcll Gt~ I ll-?. St I It I·~ II Omln IO JI 1111 t ., -
Your fortune 0-1111 ,..P ''~ ••t M1d1<1 c1 ,,,, 11,, "';i~ •.,. 12, M111 s"1' 11." 11,.. 11 S co101n1t1 1 60 · D1tu• c~ s1 ~ Mldlf>• ,.. 1•:; .!,._ 7 ,7 111 Mu! '1"rsi 1 •• I ~9 con tnd 75ci ·~-" HE"' Mui 10,66 1n •• Coll lft 01' IJ SoKI 2tS 321N11WStc ln611 1s1 Coll l11ofl 60 .Joh n I. Kent has Joined the
Newport Beach offi ce of Dean
Witter & Co as an account ex-~~~' '.~ -.-. _ .. 0 , --· = Ch11e Crovo · > N•I Ind 11•O11 ,0 N I I E f'' , .. ._, ---,.r., .. --. '··-• .•· -..~ "'•-· '' n • u a >Ona n · -~ .. ·-----•· Fr'i ,,.11D113 1<1e1 t .. v•t 101 166 v1 ronment 11s pll " 1 N•l Sec11r S..r C I (olllG•s 1 '° Sl!r~d 1116 1 16 1hl•~ 1n s.. 11 ~' orpora ion Orange h a 5 co1uP1c1 '°" ecut1ve
Ken t 1s accredited by the c.
Nr"' York Stock Exchange •
and will handle individual
brokerage accounts f o r ""
Newport Beach area residents
TURN ON
• " ' •
\"'
'
I
/
I
Clltmtl II )t 20 10 llond J ~ 6 Ol ColS.00~ 1 16 Co1on111• nrvld • '6 • _, reported f EoutY • 15 1 It Grwr~ t l• t., 1rst quarter per ComDEn 2 •a FU11d 11111111 Pl Slk ~'II I~• ComlSolv 40 G<w1~ • o11 1 G6 •ncom s q 6 H common share earnings of 16 c,~'.",'•'•'-",, I V"'I •I• Ill ~lo<-1511 tll ~" , s,:::::mr..!.~.,.~11J,s~~ ;~ ~!1 ~~~ t ~~ 1;3~ cents after reOecting ex-~~:of."~ Fina11ce Briefs
YOUNGSTOWN , Ohio tUPl)
-Youngstown Sheet & Tube
Co. said the strike of coal
n1iners al 1ls Nemacohn m ine
soon will force 1t lo cut i;teel
procluct1on for lack of coa l
unless the miners return to
work The company has flied
suit against the United ~tine
Workers 1n federal court 111
Pittsburgh far initial dan1ageo;
of $1 075 m1lhon plus S20
m1lhon a day p u n 1 t 1 v ,._
damages growing out 01 tile
strike.
~ """'-" u• N !~ ? 1 lrao d "I f C<>mPlll .Sci <ind potato starch business but c, •° Fo 'to rn, •,1 N~w F~o : :~ 16 ~~ r inaty I ems o 7 cents com111 ncom • u • i Nt"' 1-<or ,~ ,, ,, ~l per share Cone Miii• 1 will rcllun the molasses and ~7~f~1 ;ttrn1~ ~·w wrd 11 .. 1,,. COl'l••tc..i 60
other rood businesses 0 f11:1:~ ~~ I :r l i; ~r .... ~~nl :~ ~ l~ r. The.dn•ers1f1cd corporation's s::fci~~' !,': Per:tck & r·o rd omo Ai u 51 ,1 06 t.:or••" u" li" net income b e f o r e ex-~:::ld~1~1i omoe1 • •1 'n ~: : ;; 1~ r, traord111ary items during the con F_, 1 °"'p lld t l?IOll100 1'9 lt~•l•'• th th COl'IFd D"5C co"'° Fo •1• ou1n1 F" ,,~1~11 rec 1non s period between conFrtloht 1 LOS ANGELES !UPll
r.1cCulloch Oil Corp hes com·
pleted two development wells
1n the Kitt y Field 1n Campbell
County. \Vyo. The t"·o are
now 1ng al a combined rate of
900 barrels daily,
CLEVELAND iUP\J
!on1111( 5 U S 6? l"ln• 1Ym5 ., "t 1•,... C N tG on<ora hl4 16Jtn"'le11 1•111•1• Apnl I through June 30 wasc::.twr 11// ~~I 11~ • ~-·~·tj f"loe>enh I •1 I M $318 •~ !:PW "S? coro La is 3.111 14 "~n" so • 1t 1 " ' .wu -a 46 percent rise noPw ':,,. 50
Cn•Y C.ICI u '° u 411 ;~11!"u1 1; ~~ ,: ~~ above corporate profit pro-ontA1•L .so ~;~1-::,:~:lll~Plloro,.. t ll lCO' •t f h l°"1Cati2to t'\Q~ M ,, ~ " Poloo 11J 1 ,, Jee ions or I c period ct C•n 01~ is
11 Inc 11 I'll Plnr 5' ,~ 14 lG 7• lfenry D. Clarke' J r (~~°':i1 n IWft ll •9l :~1 ..... n:~:~'~ NATEC' . . •Cont Co TIO oiv:~ :~. ~·~1 ~'~Price T• 1•., ,, 4\ s president and chief c1 CD 0111.' so
0ow1 1.. i s1 1 11 Pro Ftortd 10 '~ ,~ 1s ('Xecul1ve officer, reported ll ~,,',"',-?! Dowtll F 1 » '93 ProvdM • 11 ! 11 •v O•e•el 11,, 11 99 P~•l1•n 10 ~ 1a 1t1 !hat the firm 's net worth as of ,'~,1Mi.f, ,'".·-o ..... r I'd 11OG u 15 P••'n1~ '"""" J -· ~ _ E11on&How1•a· Fou,1 10 "' n i.:t une 30 had Increased to G"Cll!t on p1 1 Bt••n 10 u 1! tt <"-ct I• 11 15 1" COl'll SU 1 Grw•~ 11.S"t 11 11 '"·•"' 11..,.11.s $21.573.000 ·an increa5e: of 36C0111 Ttl n IMOtn I ll'" Imam •jl t lO I bo , rCllllTctl D•I• \\1 t N s To N • S<i!cni N c s ... t i it 111 ,1 ,1 1~ .... 1 1 • ··~ pcrcen a ve its March 31 net Con""<)(! 1"'" S•ot~ 1• ii 11 tt v"'• io l.!i 11 '' .. ti f $15 83 coo11; unu '° 1l'Pl 1 H J Hevnold~ Ebrr" lJ • 1•1• .,vo ... ~n '" •f1 .. or 1 O , l ,000 l::1110llfl'"t~ t.•o
TR.\V, Int . has ob tained a
~2;> 6 million Air Foret con·
tract lo design communica·
11ons satellites. . ,,,., '' '' '' •• to Teth ,.,. '"'' Cl k . I d I ,.,_ '' ' Tobacco Co ha~ settled 1\s Em;ft ~t 1 nJ ,·;.:; 11"'"'. 1111 is ·~ 1:1r e potn e out I \at this ro.,;'~fld 110 (n(!rQV 11 !l u 15 ~O\~ft!~ ••• ,. nuarlerty f I I C0polln1 Si'I~ four )'ear olcl ant1tn.isl dispute 0'.VIAHA (UPI' Con1· En•ori• 1, , ""se11,.~1r t56J i111 ., 1nan4:' a report IS roP'NIS•t 1 'l!I Eou•rv • 1110 '1 s .. ,_, """"' the first reflecting the total ,••,·.·11e "'' with the Jusl1cc Oepartmenl modorl': Corp. announces it r:ou• 01~ un•v••' 1~1 in~ 11s?1sn or 1.111•
O"cr the acqu•s•t•'on of Pe''''' w•fl build a fa tor Pr t E•ll'• is '.It ~n•I ,. '" :11o,. consol1dat1on and realignment ,. ... ,,.,.un .n • c y In es on. F.v,.,,1 in u d ,\ ,, 11~1 ••" u II! 1 11 . rowiott '°'
& Ford. Ltd, through 3 con· Ont., to make mobile homes ~:~.'I'd 1 Par1~5J s.~"01..S' :\~ :~ ~ 0NAT,ECadcquisitionths made by c~"'::.:t 1 ~
sent decree The Reynold~ and another in Bellclonle. Pa , ~:dmc~~ B H \: ~ ~~ f"°,:'1• JU ~ ~ ur1ng e last flscaJ .... ~"' 1 l!Ob
group agreed lo dJVeSt itse lf Of to make campers and recrea• ~II~ ~~d ;'!~a:~ i::t1.!"S 1~~ n n yeat. f:;:,";:~rn.i ~
Penick & Ford's corn milling 11onal Vl!htcles. F1d Trnd J )l 21611 Sti 0..n 11 ~1 "·" Since its new fiscal year r;g~01.,.;·";o' l ljii0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0i0ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"llF 1~~·1 •~ 111 i:::..~ ,;~a:: be~an on Apnl 1. NATEC, ac-f;=ra--\or!, lnctu1! '1• J 72 Sit 1.,... 11 k\ 11 I'! QU>red 18 t f " ' 1ncorn •u ttJSt!>lttr e ,,1 1&1 perct'n O the ''""'~n 1.M Vtnl llo4tUSWnl"vtll•l1 ltd ""TSC"""'°
Turn on a JOO watt light·
bulb-you1s lor only
JO<• with each purchase
of gasoline ... al partici·
patmglexaco Retailers
in this area. Lighlbulb
supply is limited so
don't de lay. Turn in at
Texaco toda y.
Forum on Puts & Calls
MAKE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS
DO THE WORK OF THOUSANDS
while limiting your rl•k and multiplying
your p rofit potentl1I
TUESDAY, AUGUST 26-7:30 p.m .
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2-7:30 p.m .
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 9-7:30 p.m.
These are the dates that Goodbody
experts will present lectures on options
I puts & calls). Make plans to attend
one-i>r-all. Call Miss Wood for reserva·
tions.
GOODBODY & CO.
ESTAILISH(;-D llf!
F'•F v, 10 "' 11 I' Sovt• '"v ,. '° 15 11 ou s an 1ng common stock and ,..,..•hy rn Fu '"G'n '"10 jSt~rm r:t 54 ••a debentures of A mer1ca n ~'::17!·~p1i;.s ~., l~'tk • n '! S!1!t 5• ullft¥e l! p 'f G I ''<om ... 1n li'l!'-F•• Mu111 t JJ '!2 $!,.IHI••,.., r uftd1 ac1 IC rou1i. nc. and ap-'""''"'• -F~I Nit I 51 t 1 "''" l"d 1110 111' '" F1! Sz•8 41 Ol 4't) ,l~U( l "\1 A01 ptOXlmaleJy 5 percent Of lh!: :~,:~1·y;oy·~ I? l ~l!l ~ :U s1~f.:'"1toe ~~' .. $CS outstanding common stock o1 "u·•-1-l ,,.
IFI• 1" 111 Jtl 11 ,1 :!O•tJO'J T "Yr,..~·'"' Flld G•" S•l Jtl r~n o. u r.u 1, he Haw111i Corp, cv..-~r.M 1" ~:.-:• ,, tt 1j ~ 5 Sta<~ u" 14" Frctnl<ll" G•OI•~ ~~ l~C:.I ~ "6 t II I)~" •tw 1 ~
(°"" $l 1.0f I 11 5ualn$1 I 41) l& \.; /ff ""•~•Ce l •s ONlC 11 ~'"19 ~•ncr G• 11n1' •• ffJ•'·•et 1>1ro I"" -UM '" 'lltM~ Aa ?0'.18'1 l' ft 11.,1 ""r11
F/:!Cfnm j n i' T=~; 12 ~ l~~ "'•ncte ! U F-un4d"lm ' 10 " Tt(froo~I •JO s ,, f'llVC'! '" )) Si!n SH 11 ) 11 ., TPCllllOI 1..00 111 Y••• ols g~~ft~b J:: ;s_lbf•lt• n l" ;•m• Gt JI ~ 2111 °"""4' co 1 ~~'1111 ,~:~.: ~~.~~ Otlm•r.P l tt Com ~ \l li \4 ~ Tr1¥ E• t 11 lt 6f T1-i.ltowl"' It 1 ~ .... f9 JY!MiolJ ll'1ld Otl Mli.t I It fUI 11.d •utt"lll(!Or Fd 17 ~1161 lft !fM tfOC-k ...., .... _. ... OP~llto.,•:K·~'·, ,• ~rtl! Ind 21 ft A.I wfl( Gt •II 4 M ""' n rvo~n lj .S •I Twll( Inc-l16 ':oo »"-llfur~ I"' uf"IOITU-1 L Dll!te In! In 111ran 1 It JS It u~11 Mut 10.17 11 ti II-Abo e~tr1 Cl!' ••" •· •""'Y•I ffld !?!'!" "'•"'\ ·,~ Hl"'lllont Uftlld t i1 lG 111 In l'Nll Plu1 f!O(I( di¥ l. f-W<lered """""" ' HFI 'il S~ U"lllNI f\lncl. or Nit! to It• 111\t ¥!'ctr ~l.,lblt 1n0fttt•t¥ tllo G• ft t jl!('Cll'I 7j1 •11 llOClr. d~lll '"'· e111.Mt.-11, r•kl llM DenROr 1.10
E
t-• I I~ 1• t I' tt lfol:lt f l llllf. 6-0tc .. rlG ff CMll .,allot Def~ .t .. •rllor t t1o1 ! n k1111 I 60 1 tl Ill n4,., "" "'41•trlb\ltltll CICIM Odtl!nlnc " •rtw11 u I! I !.i UFd c-ti t '4 -P•ld 1111 ¥'t4• lt-Otcl9rto0 at Hki f><llf'dll 't!I &C l4w 11 11 r. V•lut LI"" r;9, "'1-r 1lac t dlvl!IMd lllf 1111111 "" Oii iid "'' "! ~-Gor J '1 I tt Val LI~ I lft 111 k-Dotcl~rf<:I er "Iii "'I~ r.lr tn IC" 1>11 51,._1 ,it H~~ 1j ~T 'j ~ '~~°T11 JU : ;: ~:;~i.;.!~.I~'~:" ~, ddTv= .,W.11~ gr:,t;r~-~' 'II f;11:1"~ 1 t~ '• ~f Vn<tS tal 1 11 I'° dettrrNI or tlO •!l;lo.i •~•9n •1 "•' d!YI· Ol•ml11tt I Ml SI g:~ JU it) Vind•bl ~ ID •I ot!ltl <nMtlllt •-,.,,,, Or ~kl In IHI l"ll1S~CI"' I «I ~I to ,. 1 Vl~td J " , ti 1111') •loct; dlwldtn 1-llrrlb !" 1~ 01•,... ~• rJ ·-~M :o ~ :1 ; VII• lndP \ ~J I 'J !!Jr,,~..... "'"Jll«I tltll "' Of" f!•· 1'"JltJ ~ 01 M Imo G"' 1 61 I '4 V~lllO I 07 U ,.,w ' ~L •~.cl 1triWllM ~tlL -"~ l)lcltol'ltlll Al
1
11( , ... \1 .. 1111 Wl 1.•11r1 • IJ 1e fl) -.olel•l1"' g,.,.ldlM. 1)1~ "" o"' ! }1 W•llS! In 11 fl it ft 1-'tltl 1., IUll t")l(·l-!e 60
Ind Trnd '1 11'' wtll91n 11 MI ~ fldtlllllli.,., .,._I• rltllle iw-Wfl'llllut !)Hlonro 5611 IM1trw ' 1 :iii Weir Ind I t4 i. w•trtntt --WI!~ w • • 'In I' n\M<('"" !ID 111,•• ''k f tf w~ win 1~ 1116 1 Wlf-l.tal•tllt1: tt111rtmt b• 1uth n -~,;, o """ ..>!lb
~..,J \ tt 1 :J W1\ll Mu 1' •> 1! llO dt -...(11iee, t~-!• flvklt"" ~E• ounM'!"' "°
11
.... (o• I ' "II W!MI-1 H 10.40 -~ dl•lrlbulfll, wf-'Mltn 19\lld, "'"" f>!US..1 1111 .,... Cu<~ '. "'/"'""' ., I'~ 111"9'.,I ... lln!Hr "-e ..... rwit, "'P· • O•ll'•""f• lfO
'
1'------------------------------J 1~v l~dlt ll '"! " WI( ,., lf !'& dlY ddFYln< _W.,-r1nh cGn\Hll•ll, ,,.,....-Mii' 10 _, toil H I 111 Nortll J Gt )I Otlll~f 1 11'
,I
Friday's Closing Prices-Co~plete New
•
I
York
H
Stocli EX"change List
UAL lllC 1 UAJICO I
OllLV PILOT )J
American Stock Exchange List
• ll l'l'U lJ + \i
II 12\1 U\1 17\lio -"" • 1 It. .~, • .
31 l)lt l)V. ''* + ..
10 11 16111 16\lo + " ,, "* '" 11,;, •
II 6''o ·~ tl' + I~
j5 lJ\' 1H4 17lt +11-9 ..
S )t\lf )t\lf 2'VI • •
' 11\~ 111~ llh .•
S in.. lllo 11~
33 .. 1111 tll .... J'l
J.I Iii 7'i I\~ + ~, n 11 u 1r + ·~
1' TI• •\.• l"i +I
l J]'l "'. "" I n in LIO.. IJ\11 • ... ,, ...... ,
1 ''"' 10'• '°"" ... '• 4 ' ... J + '•
l ?S\o )S U + '•
1?7 11!0 1)llo Ill'\ + \o
1 ~ "' "'•-'· n s•,. s1-t S\o + \1 11" "Cl ~ ,,~ -1'• ' 'l U'• J11h -I• 102 1 1.1 l•~ 1$1.11 +•• ••a Ill~ 42'A+'o Hn lu.n ... +i,., • 11 , 1!1141 -'• Ill~ U\lio I !; ... ,
11 s ,:-'"'4\t. J;: ·: ' t.W. 1.l'i ,.~ 501 1-.1 +•\
t ~ ~· $llo-\o " ,, 11"4 ,, .. -~ to10"-m'•-1 n '~" Jt 2T,, ! ~ )9 .,_, ,.. 11· '• ··~""l''• "',: l~ 12~ lT"' + ~? " ... ~ .... m-.. ,. 11111 Ii'' 1,1 + ,_
7J '"" \If +1 • , 1'i!1~:1,,, :1;: ~ ~
,),1).1 2f11 ; ...... 30 1G1, I' l(Mlo "' ,,, t !Oh o>., OO:t
ll ... t Vt "" -~~ 'fJ 'fl• ....... ~ +1t~ •ONO~· ~ 1"° -\II 1 no 1xi oa _,
?l SJ01 W''> y~, -•t
$1 '" 1111. 119 !' 15 1•1 1'5 ,,,
,,, ,,, "' 1111.i ,, <fa IS 11 1$ l'o
16 76 14'• IS'' 1:. 101112 12 . Jll 11 11
I I!& t!' 11& .&.! , 111 lit 111 s 9)', f)l< 9)11 -•• s "O'h tO '°" .a.. '• )II 17' 11)\'J 1711/t i' 24 6J 61 '2\'J ., JUUH -2
?6 66 s•·~ 5't'r +l'• u n,,. ''" .,;, -11, 4 A4 let ... +• 3t7tJt7 J 111 111 111 +1 I 1'5 14$ 14$ -t 16 ll IJ 1{\lt -,,.
lJ U Sl'"i U + '' ,,, ., 11\lt to -lit
I :it'\ JI\' ]11\ ! ,, 1$ ])to ])\lo 11\\ ~ ) 1$11 7Jllt 75Vl 1 12m,1! ni,,, 11 $1 5.ji,.\ 5.j\'j -J
$ " 1$ ,, +11\ l N'\ M\'e 16\t -1'• ,, 14\.'o 11 74111 + 11 I US US 115 -lJ
' &$\\ U\11 ~ • 10 114 11j 11, -tl
1 ''""' 1 .... 71\li -1 l 11111\ 10.\i 1CIV, + , .. ,, " """ " -1 I !J\'o 5j JIS -'•
11 '~ '"' 11 !" :lO ""' ·~ '6'Ji 1·~ I 17 H l,'o 17 tl;o
1 11 n 11 .+ '• ,, ,, 11'1 67
JI 71 71 71 +1 1 ... ,, •• ~,i ..
I fOl'I U IS -i 11 .,\It 6t M +1 I 10 let let .+21111
,. 1fl(i 71 " -... $717171 25 111 IJO 111 -+1
,, tJl'i to !!:"' -1 ·~ '"'""'',. 16 SI $5\1 1:1 ff 1:1* 11•t 1(13 +t 111M 1' lU .,
l 'PAs Honor
ComtMa1i
Timothy P. fl a Id Inger.
Ne\vport Beach, has been
honored by the CaliCornta
Society oC Certified Pub!Jc Ac-
countants for high mark! on
the CPA ExaminaUon.
Haldlnger, 484 East 21st St.
\\'AS ranked second among
I 022 persons taking t ft e
CalilomJa cum m May 1968.
The CPA SOCJ.ety prescnttd
him the John F. Forbes
Certificate of Honorable Men·
tlon for h1I achievement
He was also awarded the
EliJah Walt Sells award from
the Amtrfcan JMUtute of
CPAs for lbe paper he wrote
during the 19\; test. It wu
one or the 15 best ot ttl,44{ ta
the cowary.
Haldlngtr is em]'lloyed 11 ~
manaaement comu.lta.nt for
Arthur Young & Company.
Sacta Ana. He had ~
degr,.. In •n!llnetrlnc Imm
Notre Dame, accounUng from
Stanford and In polltlca t
science from the N a v a l
POllgraduate School
I J
I
I
I
t
,. . ._,..,._l<~..,..-"'."'.,...._ -·-----·----------------. .. . --. .. . . ---. .
I
•
I
-
• -·
11 01.11.V l'ILDT • rnday, Auoust 22, 1969
Russians Now Wonderitafl •
Was Czechoslovak Invasion· Calamitous Error?
a1 WIWAM L. RYAN Czechoslovak par Ly func· socialism." te1rated by heaitant steps m.lty toward change, have The Czechoslovak eplaode must conUnue worldwide until
AP Speda1 Corretpoldeat tiOOI.\')' who b looklng more Party lead~rs, 'SL r o u 11 l toward putUng "a human face become the modern world's also' can· be judged to have set there is no more capitalist
, complained, 11 gr o s,a l y UIJ· on socialism,'• ,•was not the leadin<I' rtacllonariea. back chances .for reaolving system anywhere. •-·let le ~ lod t and more like Moscow's pro-ed ... •-• or -~ b kel .,,,,.. au.::rs •Y mus derestimat "'"' uwuence party11 infl\JQOC indeed ex· Jn 1~0. c o m m u n t st s East.West dlrferences Y Observen are 11 Y to con--
wonder ,whether lhiy have spective viceroy in PrafXe, imperialism." By pennltting tremely weU:: 'Ibey may be celebrate the lOOth birthday of peacefuL means. U.S. leaders elude from the Czechoslovak
made a calamUous mistake in laJd all the nation~s trou les abolition of censorship in 1111, drawing conclU!ions l l k e Lenin, the founder 0 f are looking at it that way. e:s:perlence that Moscow finds
Czecholsovak.ia, QOe which not lo failures of the~ or he added, they . made in-the$fl: by erµ~ ,ihe refprm Bolshevlsn;i. The story of Ever lince the inVasion a security only in tsolatlng COUil· bistory might judge a slinging the system, but to e i~u-formation medla "the chief the Russians showed 'lack of cz-·'·•lovakla m a k e !I a year ••o, the Soviet pre"ss has tries and peoples. Consla.pt
el I the tir Co ence of "anil-Socialist, r1&»t· h. 1 hi · and conn 1 ~·"" -e d eat or · en e m-1 .. tools of t e r g -wtng <lence in the survlval of doubtful · curta1·n raiser, co••tanUy rem Ind e d Com· stress on "the leading. role of ·s1 t wing opportunlst or c e s. ., d ••
----
Tfti nk .
RUSSEL TAYLOR
MAKE BELIEVE FUU
Think . '
mun1 movtmen • These, he insiated, caused peo-anti-SOCialist forces, a n the system, without the ap-Constantly these days the munis\S that while Moscow the party" appears to un-
1t does not take much dig-pie lo "draw conclusions about made it possible for enemies plication of a touridquet on the SoYiet party is required to supports • • p e a c e f u I coex-derlcore fear thaL the party's w~u:.:iu. '"•.:::::_ •
ging into the background for 1_jth~e~sy~stem~~··~ina~blU~·~ty~";••~corpe~,~to~"~dl~:s1:nt~egr~a~te~th~e~pa~rt:y~."~~";•~w~ot~1~de8~·~,,~~~~~~~r•;•~ise~~·J;d~dogm=~·:·~to~ra~-J1st~e;•ce~:~· ~it~m~ust~~be~re~g~ar~ded;_jro~le~is~in:d~ang~•:·~· ~an~d~a~lo~ng~~~~~~~~5~ West.em specialists: to con.-and to throw "suspicion on the Others will ask: If Com· And some may 1rideed ask if tionalize the perpetuation of a as only a maneuver, a weapon with U, '*Ule whole Socialist
elude, on the anniversary of Matl.lst-Leninist concept of munist rule can be di.sin-the Russians, by wum.ihg tn· power elite. in the "class stMJggle" which l!lystem. ••
the Russian invasion, that the
Kremlin acted from weakness
-the sort of weakness which
seems to pervade the entire
area ln which the Soviet
system of rule prevails.
The analysts will consider
the Saviet actions as in-
dication! of weakness because
of the distinct impression that
v;hal was done was dictaled
by fear. The story 0 r
Czechoslovakia suggests in·
-,ecur:lty ameng the Soviet rul·
ing ellle whlch impelled it to
retreat behind bastions of doc·
trine. Tliat doctrine itself, by
the Soviet Communists' own
accounts. is in danger of
crumbling before the force of
Western ei:ample.
WHOLE STO~V
The whole story since the
Czecho,,lovak reform move·
ment began early in 1968
seems to have illuminated a
consistently defemive attitude
by lhe Soviet Communist par.
ty. It appears to exhibit
iOmething close to panic at
the slightest suggestion of
disagreement.
By Soviet accounts, the
Czechoslovak crisis was partly
the work of "imperialist"
agents from the W es t ,
"subversive elements" inside
the country, and dark force:;
bent on ;indermining the
enUre "Socialist system" in
"'the East.
\Lubomir Slrouga l, a
School Bond
Suits P ending
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Two lawsuits were on file to-
day seeking lo nullify the re·
quirement that lw~lhirds of
those voting must approve a
local school bond Issue to pa!!
it.
Alty. Gen. Thomas C. Lynch
Thursday sought to dismiss
one of the cases, pending in
U.S. district court here, and
settle the matter in state
courts. Both suits seek to
knock out as unconstitutional
a provision that requires 66
percent approval of bond
issue!. The controveny may
wind up in the U.S. Supreme
Court before it is settled.
Ji;l c J{esidenls
Given Degrees
Two Balboa Island residents
have received bachelor of arts
degrees from Cal State Los
Angeles.
They are: Patricia A
Nakauchi, 1221 \.2 On}'Jt Ave ..
and Raymond f'. Smith, 1316
Bay Front.
· ruaN ON
Turn on a JOO watt light·
bulb-yours for only
lO<"with each purchase
of gasoline ... at partici·
' patingTexaco Retailers
in this area. Llghtbulb
supply is limited so
don't delay. Tum In at
Texaco today.
•s.ai-w....u•
LOW .VOLTAGE
LITE SYSTEM
A wonderoua thlng •vst-• lo
lran1lona, an ordinF'J' hoc:kyord bl"
er GmdimoJAllab. OuldOOI'
Ughl1C1N iSwble1colorM. 12 wait
cu.tput b ao·llhOck.. La, • krf ~ .., .......
1999
REAL BODY HOLDING
HAIR SPRAY
Th• hcdtng bd ptb 1a111 an. ~
Mt JOU pen.at. OI' ... DOS' .. ccm •tock r
"llp for the '°11 licbool t-
ot big ..mo;. .... CRatioa u...
CUl.llCGll.Cl ... k.UtiMyg'9t '
out ol th• batb la IUdl "lllO la01U,)
BAR-B-Q
LITER FLUID
T'a•hest Dlnt yet !or thathrUty
pyl'OIDC:lllloc. Odorh.. DO OG.Jd:iodr. ti 9\lte
•tent oaytbne. Un lDdocr• t. U. Htepl-
too ln oaM r-want loptricl
ol old lowi.tten Ja•t.
50 FEET
NYLON
REINFORCED HOSE
Su.ptill' 1trong eyloa matorced
boH 11 •vcod w,.ULH. Jou.It"•
iiol '"goofmt oB.'" ,.heD NOdlas
th• awspaper, if • "'nMmeb.'1
3 99 ~
INCH
SCALLOPED
CONCRETE EDGING
J.ay llllil 1tv.H cmd ,_ nrter haft lo replace
gard-bord .... (might ~to replace a acs ot t•o
U rou ru alol ID tlteaight). Cbolt•
et Nd or acdldal 11"'1•
'
POP RIVET
TOOL
IU"et C1Dythh1g working one hcmdtd
t..-cae1kle.ll..i:clod•.
1.athw.metal.wood.yw __.It.
)l!ldud•1 qqort.& dftt&.
199
DAISY IOGllTLITE
A podcy addlUCNI to the kl\Cltu.
berth. ~,..... ycu n...t er Mii glo•
to guide 10•. (Scunch lill•
R11dolpll'• _..to -.) Low ,.all
u-I.en po-. -oa Wectr!.dtf,
.LOVDLE LAWlf
ORlllMEXTS
v.,, cute. tmpeniO\I• to
weather Cbu.t wakh tb1 trigger
hoppy hunters.)
Cboo .. trora skwi.k. ...,,.lmil. meocii, fro§,•
get them. all cmd CGll lt
Dl.1oeylcmd W•st.
199
'{OU WILL
KILL M ~.vou
SA~IST. MAkf
'iOl/ll. Ot.o>N
'IOU WORE
Me l!OWH,
l'LL. T~t<£
"Li.. oF TH EM .
01< 9oY
LE1 '11te Al>
60 "110 f.I LL
0 QT' "!II e:
ICE
Bll.MBOO
FEllCIKG
237 6'xl5'
ROLL
'>•GMS
20 FOOT SOAKER HOSE
Tbt.11 c-old aoak that reallJ' lu.llh••
•p U.. IGnibcop• -d moll .. 1t 11111 Nnl •
V'°"'°"'' 91ML Maot tu. pta!tolM loraJow ..... at.uasr.
59c
DRIVEWAY
COATING
Doa't wcrU and pt ccrv.ght ta th• flrat
taill of the MOIO-. coal DO•• llG\'el Jl'S'ib§
later. "'°1ec1• cmd H011 )"O\lr
drt .. war 1or,_m ...
GLIDDEN
SPIED GLIDE-ON
A 1uperb maMary palnt that DOI• 011
emoc1hly ont tmcli. 11\lcco. coaacret•· 10Uf atw
~ .. Mcmr eolcrw.
4 99
GAL.
TUB EltCLOSUBE
WITH SAFm GLASS
Film extnr.dlld al••ll1111• fram•.
towel bar, all ti. material MC•SMrt
lo do a being-DP tob. 10.. U..tb•~ ..
ling-email" elbct•IJJ
2999
KIDDIE
BUBBLER
FOUNTAIN
Hook lhl• Up tc the cut.IU
JG\lc•t. and the kid• wu•t bl
nonlng Iota drink cl
wat91 all doy leng. IJlo.
ther"ll co.a• nagging lor •
1~t-AldJ299
M ftrtiMd epedal1 good lhN Aup•t 11. 1111 Caci
., MCNIGl'J' wezit gold prospeCUag OD Mr
TOC:aticD ••• ll cllda'I paaoutJ
VIPOREf IE
INSECT STRIP
A grea1 iDYeii.tlcn by IODle fUJ•
who g'ct Ur.d ot kl.rig bu.-4 bf
anldentlffed Orin111 ob)9Jet" Reallr
•orb. hut lot 3 month•
ond i• odot frft.
DOUBLE SPRINKLER
Pla1tlc sprf:aklerwon't 'l'ta ar prlN•
for de11p bu.I will de th1jobcmcl1hoWd. la1I
o·wblla ulH• the ~d get• It wttb th•
MW pCIW'lf saow.r. WUh spik ..
MODERN CHROME BATH FAUCET
Modwn eould mtiem It ho:• • place for hot water.
Thi• I• triple chrome o.w bnn1 -1th the
h..,., boM. Fill standard' lncb . .......
399
GET YOUR
OWlf CREDIT
CIBD
I
t I
I
I
-
• Fo11ntain-
• ~~lley T ... yf'.-Tlbl I
I ' ' • I
N.Y. Steeb
'
. voi:. .62; NO. 2QI, .. SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY.,CAUFPRNI,( ' ' FRlDA"; '.AU6UST 22; 1969
't • I : . • ' ' , .. • ' '.. ~ .... ' "
New Edison High School to Open on
. ' .
Sehedule.
I ''
Edl'91\ .High .Schoo\ will open Its doors
Sept.. · 10 to 2,200 Huntington Beach
atudenta.
Fe-.n •that the school would not open,
forcing double ·sessions at Huntington
Buel,. High 1lchoo~ have been· dispelled
by. 9Cbool officials working to solve the
l>l'Ob1ems · brought by a plumbers and
hel\')' equipmeni operators s~e. ·
A :rew problerru: will still be ·found: The
phystcal educatlOn department wtin 't
have ahower facilities . Science clas.9es
will · have to operate without labs for a ..
' '
few weeks.
But new Prlnc.lpal Ernest F. Pascoe ls
optimisUc about the school's inltial year.
"I'm convinced our people will -1lt down
and brainstorm aome ktea1 to work
around the problems. You may see some
uiterestlng _.imenta," be said today.
Two posstblUtles exist to solve tbe
physical education predicament, said
Paseot. .· t
Fl.rat, all physical 1letivity mi&ht be
delayed unUI showers are lNi\alled. In
which cue in&tructorf would concentrate
all their paper work -Jeamlng sport
rules -into the first .few weeks.
"Second,'' explained Pasct1e, "we do
ha'le hOses h'ooked..-up.' We might allow
the boys phys'ical acUvlty tJieO-bose them
off when class e&ts."
Slate codes forbid any science ex-
periments wi\b<>ut Wfler hookups tor
safety re.asms. I
4 'We'll just ',flave to concentrate on
bookwork," said the principal ..
No time estimate for completion of the
work is .abaiJ'Me. "We don' know when ~ , •. '
Richmond Escapes
.. f lQods Batter Sa11db~gs; City Saved
',•
RICHMOND, Va .. (UPl)-The swollen
JarM.'Ri.w·er battered the sandbags~
tedlnc Richmond early today after
J>oiJ.inl ·dow.n from ·the mountains wiUfat
1east 44 dead in Its backw~. The sand· bats held and Richmond was spared.
(See pbotol, Page 4).
Civil DdeMe authorities said there
were 4t known dead, ~ injured and 116
missing in Alle~heny Mountain towns
uptjver from Richmond. More .casual·
tiei Were expected as the villages peeled
~ . .
,
back layers of mud and' dehri~.
Thirty-foot flood waters sla1nmed into
Richmond's sandbag barrier as th.c
James roared .toward the Atlantic Ocean,
swollen by up to 10 inches of rain from
tbe remnants of hurricane Camille.
The James reached a peak of 23.59
feet-one foot beJow the top of the sand-
b.ags-in Richmond about dawn, then
half an hour later the. waters fell ~o 28.51
feet and bleary-eyed 'Workers croaked
a boarae "Hooray!"
Leaders End Talks
.Nixon .Pledg.es to Aid
f_o~~a~ AgairiS't·Reds
'By MERRIMAN'SMlTJI .,, .. .,.,.. ....... .....,.,. >nit stitem<nt liid:
tt was Virg.inia 's worst flood since
1936. \\°ashing a"·ay tov.'J\S, caving in
mountainsides and s weep i ng away
bridges.
\Veary orflcials said Richmond was
spa red only becauSe it was forewarned.
The capital city piled along its riverrront
a sandbag fortress designed to hold back
peak flood waters of 31 feet-almost ex.
actly the ·height at which the James
(8« FLOODING, Page I)
Heavy Fight
Breaks Out
, .
On Viet-'Coast::.,
SAIGON (UPI) -Mort l)eavy lighting
·brob ou\ ~Y, o( Solllh Vietnam's
northern cputal pl'alM·Wbere U.S. forces
haye killed m0re than 400 North Viel·
·name.-;e and Viet Cong this week .
American troops found m o r t than 100
Conimunist troops dead on one bat·
tl<!fleld.
the plumbers strlJ(e will end or hdw lorig
the work wln'take," added P~.
Ot~er problems the school 1mu,t .fac:e
include coostruction of .Ule swimming
pool; black top pa.Ying for cars, landscap-
ing, an<fv.•8ter 1n the cafeteria. •
"Parting will be the bl1gest problem,"
admitted Pascoe, 1 "we plan.r.to ask
students who live ·nearby not •to·drlve to
school.I
~t now school authorities are hJghly
lnVQ!ved in-the more mundane problems
of !au~ a btarid
1
JlCY(.Jiel]®l: ,):
· Re;istraUon ·continues this 'weeki. •nd
nc.1L, teitchers· must>becorne acq'~
wllh ~school, and·l!ludfnts m u""1 tO •
ta.ke advantage or teb;ool o'rienie4 ,,c.·
UvlUes. -·:
One Nch activity is Ult purcha3Col
associated !tu<lent body,....cardl at $f WN.Ch
Win cover .all· Edison Charger acUvWes.
"Buy one and save • on • llclxi01··8C·
livtUes/' urges 'Pa&cot.... • . :-~
ldentifitatiOn picture~ stanct ·on. the
waltina:· Ii.st of, ilelflf. \c)" be \akCn:,CJre<.of.
On ·Au&. 28 ~lude"" · )!jtli l..t ~.I .... ... Tl'" ~
~ L#i J -.:au
begtnning in "A" tbrough1"K,. un ·hine
pllotoo taken 11 the schcioL wilb tht\-
ol lhe·!""denll pr¢ient the lollowinfdly,
Price ~ fl.58. • ·
·"If the 11.rlke ls sefUld" laid Puc:oe
retuntins ~ the bigger ~lem "oar ~
pri-OriUes will be !hoWer faclU~·snd·tht
sclence labs.''
Despite all pie probl<ms, the ··n.,,
school at 21400 Magnplja St., 11.rudJ ta
open. And U you call llQ.t3Si the lllall of
F.dison l:llgh School wlU ireet yoa wttb a
cheery, "Yes air! 1be IChool will bt
Opeb."
Nude ·Man •
Flees ' Wife
With Saw I . ' l •
ii;, ·"l'OM 11iai.Ev
Of,.. De ... Plllt ltlfl
A 11Crtamlng ~!ood·~ed -·Ana
man who 141d polict he ~ ..,.,..
'"1m;sday nll!ht in a nolghbcr'1 home
from hia berserk hatch~wavil.1 'wtfa ;il
today lilted in r.Jr condition.at on.a.
County Medical Center.
. Olficora said Jlaminl Lechup c .~• I·~ lhem !hat the fin\ of.three atla~I by-his
wlle ·ocourred While be wu !Yinl:iiiide en
hil bed w•tchinc television. '.
· Lechuga llletled his commoolaw -·
Maria, M, 1ttacktd him With1 .n. eledtic
nw but be managed to cllsarin bar after • • I > lhe.¥f~ HVeral cuts '1~an·~
·,,1 ~'i~;:iL:~J..,...-.
.i . .. ! CGO!Rle'~a!eePlnc cllQifl;es ~ wbea·lila'1rlft illded '""'..~
'1! U1'-!~~~ bo ·;r".= . ' ..;,,c'l":".!J. bl ~. il!'O!t,llb; . '
• ,,~ ,Wlllll unt frN) ind . anet ·wtth · the
bla4"' . ' ' •• ~up ~ -i•OUlcera ,used the Want
"ioo:mprehenail;llJ" -apbi tuned hi1
back on hil wUe to flUI !he haJchi,t """1· ~he lllel!"dly slruck him seveTal lil1!" jn ihe back WJ!b a carving knif.e Jnlljclq
~veral,~·and ,lactraUons. . ••
Ollicen aald Lechuga decldod to ..U 11
quill 11 lbat point. He ran from Iba -
SAN FRANCisco -President Nixon
and President Park Chung Hee of Soulh
Korea :pledii;ed jointly today th al
American aod Korean rorces staUoned
•kine": the -38th parallel wHI remaln
"itrong and ' alert" lo continuing ~·
mUnist 8ggreuion.
In addition to ·atating their determina·
tlon ~to meet any anned attack against
South Kerea, they alao recognized the
necessity for J'long term efforts to lessen
the •eauses of · tension on the Korean
peninsula."
"President" Park " iave an account of
cOOUnuiliJ; acts or· aggresSton Committed
. by the North Korean Communist regime
against the Republic of. Korea .· The two
presidents agreed that Rej)ublic of Korea
forces and American forcu stationed in
Korte must remain stronl and a1ert and
the IW)I preJldenll rulfinned the
detennination ol. their governments "I
meet armed'altack against the RepubliC
of Korea *in aceordance with ttie mutual
defeme trtaty· between South Korea and
the United Stiles.
Communisf forCH bombard~ the big
U.S. base at Da Nang today in an attack
that killed one American and wounded 42
others. Seven Vietnamese civllian1 were
killed in a sUnllar rocket attack 100 mll!l
to· the south.
1 t • ' < • ' ' ' ~ '4 1 . I , I•· r • > J, /~, , °' ')""""~ • ·wreekingl<'irni Wrecked ! -'.
iw:ream!ng for help with hi1 wife hard,1..-.,
bl• '""5'brancllsblnl ¥.ha~ ' • -
'11le joint statement was i589ed as the
two.chief executives"concluded their twO.
da1r'fhit to tbe st. Francis Hotel in San.
Ft111Clsco.
Stock Mal'keu
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
ctoied with a SP18U gain today a!I it
repbrtedly continued to t'Oll.90lidate the
t~s made in its recent rally, (See
quotations, Pages 10-11). .
Trading near the close was moderate.
'"'8. Dow Jorte1 industrial average at J
p.m. was up 1.79 at 836.66.
"Prtsldent Nixon and PM.!ident Park
took nole of the newly formed homeland
reserve .defense force as a cootributkin to
the security and stability oC South Korea .
They agreed that support for the force
ihould be COii.inued.
"The two presidents recognized the
necessity for looi,..tenn effort to lessen
the· causes of tension on the: Korean
penlnsu1a. '1
Other items In the joint atatement in-
cluded:
-An invitation from Park to Nixon to
visit Korea. Nixon accepted, but the two
chief execut.ive!I said tbe-1 Nixon viait
would take place at a time at mutual con-
venience. Diplomatic aources said this
(See NIXON, Pa1e I)
The shellings were part of a series of 15
such attacks overnight, 15 of which were
at U.S. units. The-attacks killed two
Americans and wounded .72.
The heaviest fighting was centered 17
to 23 miles west oC Tam Ky which is 60
miles from Da Nang and 3t miles
northeast of SaJgon. It ts in an arta
where U.S. infantrymen have been trying
unsuccessfully to reach the wreckage of a
heliCQpter that cr8llhed Tuesday, killing
eight Americans.
Seven Army troops and Oliver Noonan,
29, an Associated Press photographer,
were aboard the helicopter.
U.S. troops said they came upon the
bodies of 103 Communist soldier! Thurs-
day in an area i3 mllel west of Tam Ky.
, I i I ' , , r " : , .. ,_, ' • • . '.: •'
ljuge·lnngue of flame towers above· Cleveland Wreckln1!"C01Jtpany ii>
Saro F,ranc~)during: fotxr-alann fii'e early: tod~y. , l!laie -:wJl~. · ailthor.itieS'~Uti~~ Was set. byi arsonist, .. caused\an e'stim~ Si1~.
lion in damage. It wBs •secOnd.major fire in same industrra1 section
of•city iii flu:ee day1. " . ·
' ' ' -. • ' '": I ' . ·. valley ~eeall cruididate~:-
. ' ' . . '
Issue Vote Statements · -. '
Three candidates In Fountain Valley'!
Sept. 23 recall elect.ion have • issued
separate campaign statements this week
listing iss ues and questions on which they
are running.
Papen were issued by George ScoU,
Bernie Svalstad and J.ohn Ginos. Scott I!
.eeking. ·Mayor Robert · SchwerdUeger'!I
council seat, while SvaJll.ad Is challenging
Vice M8yor Don Fregeau. Ginos is after
the seat now ..!Jeld by Councilman Joseph
Courreges.
Scott's.paper fealuted qµe.lti<m revolv·
ing around the issue of ethlca and wnlng.
He failed to answer the questions he
posed, bUt S<!ott ·diCI promi:'lt \lie re!ltdent:s
a series of ."white papen" .to explain his
poslton and .background lri the campalJ:n.
Svalstad came to the point more .IJUick·
ly. He outlined, point-by-P,Oint, the '"".,
011 which he stands.
He li&'ted 't7 lpeclfic points he fivor1,
including strict mairitenaiice .'ot the · cttY·
standard ·of 7,2(!8 squ1re·leet ~r Jot,.np-
poslUon to an lndustriRl airport, and a re-
examination or "the in(fustrlal ma~r
Gino!_ called for ,•· "chanle with ... •
purpost," standina: on • personal· plat-
form of "hOnesty and integrity."
His program empbailzes youth 10-
livltles -Ginos is a LiWe League ·of·
ficlal -and outlines A" progrim ta uti.Uze
all JIOl"!lble adult talents In !"«king 1f1l.h
yooth of Ute city ••
An three candidates pnxniKd furtller
bulletina and· explanations '1lc lhelr•can-
dldacy, aa well as persooal me«ings;with-
the residents· of Foubtoiln \VaUey_.~Tbey
alJO prpmlaed , to rei.... llfts '"· Pf!> mlnent cltluns 111J1portlnt1 !heir _,ate
candidacies.
' Boys Club .H i>l:ib,.
iCarnival 1TO.~~g~i
plan.
· The· Boys' Club. Of HWlli'!fim.i:a.&ch
will conduct Ill secOod AiinuaL P°em\Y 1 ~rnival Ftiday at 7 p.m. ,it' UW'Cl'bb-hOus!, 319 Yt'lrkt,.,wn. AVe.' , ..... , ·
.. • ·kcordln1. 14 . Paf Downey, ~,i,,
director., tor ·the c1ul5,! •)variety ,ot. ao-
D d n' · ' B' ·d 'uv\ues' ls P1'111jed w1U1.mr\11 'gliJnl'io ~. ..vog S O, y ;lhe'c1~b . .':11'Y1\hlnt1 •!!JIL~·~ P...i .. , , · ". aildtlier.wijlbe.smilli'<~·lnda'fardl· ' h' ' . ' '" to potllclpOuni. "iY'" ~ Gets1.Rii '1es.Test , .:l:~. 1
. ,'.-.· : •••
· • • ' · • . H11hli&hllnl the eveilllljJ 1¥\1! ..UI
1;be ~·ol ai.Gem>an ·S~herd dci1; ; bO a ~le lhlow.~ atDOlld.Va ,<Jt¥.r
shoj end kllleil W"ed..,doy nl&tit,bY Hun-, boil' chlb .Wo<ken. Bojs'i~hi• ~I
Un&too J!eaCh · (>Oiice; ii being t;s1ed to-wUI be given '\be opjiOt'jiliiUj' to. tile, OiJ1
<W. for -ible mbles.. , · , • Uie!r ~ oo"lbolf~ HI •
Olflclllls · ol1 •the" \'c~rln~. PubUc. • be11t w~ wJlhit~I'~ l!!<:Chib
llo!llih pe~r!Jnent\sald It woilld • take . o/.~'' } .. , • 1, , !fie or six a~ t!elor. tl\e !au]\&. ol• l!Jb • Add!Uoil•l' •ttnctlo!iJ w1~' J..;hJde ... lf,;.~li;.;,,.;,;;.;...::... __ _:._...,:....;. __ _......,,if<t """.,.,._ •. '. ' ' ' .• furi<ey .li)Qol>.· ~· derti)•. i\111
.,, ·-• , ,,.,,. iaiCI ....,,,.,,~ blte vJclim I'!" i.e.. . "'"'"'· .,..61 '°"' ~ '!.':!"I" 111111 • . nported 14 lhem, and fie has not been'!"· . opedll "Mat1iln.a-tlon''· ., , ,
SOUTH KOREAN PRESIDENT 'PARK' AND HOST RIVIEW TROOPS AT SAN ,RANCISCO'S PRESIDIO vlaed 14• taie the ,rablt1 trulment.· u Bo~ .... betii ,~qed /".o tidntl
M1morloa of Kore•n Conflict •nd a Join! Pltd91 of Slr..,.th at th• Jlth Porol11I yol · their lamlliol to !hi cimlval ' -.
• I
' -{---I ·
Neighbors managed to• s<pOr11e. ti. ....
couple,ud held. the ICr~ wOmu ~'"-
untU·poUce anived. • · 1
'niroughotit the".fraC.is," LechU1a told of~
!Jcera llja .wile .kepl.uillng·bimi ,"1Vb7.do
)"911 I~ out Wlffi other W~en, What. is
wrong·wlth lhe?"
. Mrs .. Lechup.Js,tnday. lh .OrJlllg"c.iun-
ty _,,.,, •• Jail, SIJe•Ja -ol -wllh a ~ weapoo. · ·
-olftcen 1oc1ay ·sald .tht-born waman was acquJtted · •
homtlaild on chariet• o1· ldlljiig :heri''-
band. ·They state that Mn'. L>cb•p ..
lolcl lhern ·that she .killed • -· -band In .. u. defeme.
' .
JointFsMen . .
Breakfmt Set
Y's Men CIUbl r1 Fow1tiin Valley.
Goklemmt and Foomtlln Valley wrn hold
a joint breUlut ·~ I o.m.; Saturday, al
Manny'• RMallran~ 70IOZ Edlnier Avo.,
HunlingtAlll ·Beach., ..
An 0ronae c.unty . Sherill'• JloP,lrl-
ment lnV.sllptar will be the Peat
speaker. · : · · ·
The Y'1 Men Clubs me aponsored'-by
the West Oraille CowJ1Y YMCA In We!llninsler. '.,
=~M ': ,_ ..... ·-. 1 C~J .H --·· ,._,... ......
1•:iat111r1• n.-,..... 1•n ,...,_ 11
-L...-.n 11 ·-. .............
.
C...t
.. ~ ..
'
•
i
I
I
I
-~-__ ._-~-.. :-::_::--:::=:::::=::==-::::-:::~-==~==---::-.::...:_:_:.:.:_:_:_:_:_:_:::::.::-.'."':'.:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'.:::=:::::::'ll
•
'
1 . OAILV PJlOT
. " -.F~ll Board ttiDecide,on Salt Creek
. . . 1
To Discuss
U.S. Pullout ;Qimlll Coun\Y .. pery1..,.. wm "'It
8'lOtbN' ... tv.'O weeb when they are all
prt:aeDl to take action on a proposed
~ fe . ....,,._public access to beach
AlldUdeluds. "Tbe policy, designtd to prevent another
Salt Creek eoti\roversy,_w~s proposed for
lidoptlon lhb week by Sup<rvbor David
Bel<er b\11 two other oupervl!ort talked
hhn out iii II 011 beb>U of a third col·
league wbO "" abseat~ .. . ''ThiS b a vel')' lmporiaDt policy matter ind all or the members ought to be here tO act on it,'* said Supervisor Alton E.
Allen ol Laguna Beach. Sup<rvbor
Wllllam Pb~ was ln Sacramento for an apphl' to the Slate Highw~ Com·
lfllssion on the Orange Freeway.
Ba)\or .,iUdanlly yield«! to Ille del~.
~ JV>t;h01-Supervisor lloberi Battin ·
put· m.'.:¥m-getUng tired ol studYinc
UUn«& tbday and letting them die tomor-· J'.ow. ;rhe road to hell·is paved with good
""••''-'. We keep putUng lbings o[f eod ~~ltibigi orf."
llWtuldllllllawanlliot1 ~'lniailltdil ' · ,~·
Ollct,-Q1n ~--b"' ... _ •........ ......: .. :=
pllmllns." • ' ' -11141 "' will "' ... ·---In -the paat; he ..i«. "a11p<i'YllO<'l'IWI,. .wet,t,_ IO tho policy conaideration wu bee • • -· pooqiotlcd two weeu. -n concerned aWl! public ,._ .l>U1 Babr. pointed, out .ooly lour or five
there hu been a lack of any ~ve to county supervisOra are rtqulred to be:
. tho ""!"JI¥ staff. Hia proposed policy: ~t to adopt the county budget and it
"In .the inlerest or ensuring that !her. "pretty inl'pot1ant.
will be -public -to public laQdo, ljtnlein, ttferring to the mean _high
parilcular!Jr Udelands, It is lb• policy of' Ude del<rmillOllon of where public
this county, that It l'IU seek to oblalll 9r tidelandl bqhi. said, "In the cue of blgb
protett public access to publtc Janda. Ude there isn't any public land available
"Ev'"?' county department and C011nty only at l6w Ude. 'lllll i.. thew~ it u. Yw
agency 1s directed to keep thl! polley ht have. to reC.op1ze the facts. ..
mind when dealln1 with dtvelopments or Alltn W4 he wanted Ume to aet an opi·
matt~.s whlch atrect or may affect public nion from couoty eotmsel on what Im·
Jandl. plication& the policy might have for the
Bftker propcM:d such a policy dwi.n& Upper Ne!fPOrt Bay' land swap with tlie
the Salt C...k Bea<:n,dllculllon 'l\teeday, lrvme eompany.
but .b~ proposal .,was dropped . when Of &be county's 4S mllesU coastline 19
supervisors Allen and William Hirstein now are prtvately owned. Ten mltes
had to hurry away· from the meeUns to belong to cltiet and 14.miles are in public
attend a swu.ring·ln ceremony for an ownership, including nlne by the ltate
honor platoon1af 80 Marine recruits. o~ by the ,ffderal aovermneot and mu;
PhllllJ>3 wa> in sacrainento wben Baker by !be county: ,
WAS!UNGTON (UPI) -The United
States and Thailand have agreed to
dlSCU!! a gradual pullout of American
troops from lbe Southea!t Asian country•
the State Department announctd today.
Department spokestnan Robert J.
McCloskey said the Foreign Minister
Thanat Khoman had approached U.S.
Ambassador Leonard Unger oo the sub-
ject in Bangkok oo Wednesday.
"We tor our part," McCloskey said,
"are willing to enter into such discus·
aion.t."
He said President Niaon felt that rt1a·
lions with Thailand were very Important:
and on his recent trip to Bangkok
"agreed that, at an appropriate time,
there ·should be consultations leading to ..
gradual reduction of the level of our
forces in Thailand."
' . . From Pqe J Victim Count
Disputed on
Gulf Coast
'Che United States currenily maintalns
.?bout 48,000 military personntl in
Thailand and an addiUonal group of 1,200
who provide training, assistance and ad-
vice to Thai forces. Of the 48,000, about
three-quarters are air force personnel
and the rest anny.
NIXON, PARK MEET .• •• 'l1le Air Force coaducts air operations
and raids against the co1nmunists in
Sauth Vietnam from six Thai air bases.
Army personnel provide logistical sup-
port for the U.S. forces.
would probably be next year.
-They ag!Oed that the Allies In Viet-
nam should continue "to work toward se-
curing an honorable and lasting peace in
Southeast Asia. In this connection, Park
endorsed the peace proJ>OSIJs expounded
by Nixon last May 14, and Nixon, in tum,
paid lr:lbute to the contribution in Viel4
nam by Korean forces.
The statement said the two leaders
ag.eed to c<NUtt cloo~ and with their
other Allie$ coocemihg the Vietnam
situation. '
At an unusual stale diMer Thursday
night -unusual because of its &ize and
for il.s site Outside the White House -
Part warned that any imbalance In
coordinated U.S.-Asian ellorts to meet
the regional needs would inevitably ·1ead
-to "neW c&turbances and threat.I" in
•Asia.
'Ibis same theme was somewhat outed
in the joint statement although Nixon and
Part did emphasize their concern about
continued aggression from the north.
Nixon in his toast to Park Thursday
night emphasized independence o( free
Asian nations also meant "'self·relianor:."
The jOint statement was issued in writ·
ten fonn at llle St. Francis Hotel and the
t'l\'O leaders who bad planned originally to
appear before reporters at lbe conclw:lon
of the talks, decided instead to make
separate statem.enta: upon departure from
San Francisco ltiternaUonal Airport.
. While a small crowd of antiwar
demonstrators clashed briefly with police
·outside the elegant St. Francis Hotel,
1,Park and Nlxoo .. changed touts 'lllurs-
day pledging mutual cooperation and sup.
.. port. They met for two hours earlier to
. .Glscuss U.S. aid to Soulb Korea and
.Kort\,8.'s military security.
Nixon told the bUMfuet audience in the
_.SL Francis' softly.Jlghted California
. lloom that the United States was grateful
for the sacrifices being made in Vietnam
: Beachgoers Come
Despiw A.M. Fog
Three straight days of early mornlng
fog failed this week to halt the flow of
traffic to Huntington Beach city beach. "Low fog here, means hot wuther
Inland, and that's where the beach crowd
originates." said Max Bowrhan, assistant
director of the Harbors and Beaches
Department.
A total of 82,000 visitors spread almost
evenly over Tuesday, Wednesday and
Thuraday. came to the beach to eS<;;ape
inland heat.
Water temperatures were from 63 to 59
degrees. but visitors soaked the sun on
the sand.
"We had ~og Thursday morn-ing," explained man, "but the tem4
perature was 93 egrees in Garden
Grove."
"All the fog does," he added, "is keep
them oot of the water."
DAILY PILOT
R,l>•rf N. W•td "™"*'' .... P1.iblltMI'
J•tk It. Curl•y
Vic• Prllldltnl 9114 GeMtti Man•a«t
fhMJI•-•, K•••il Edll'llr
lhtMt,t A. Mu•pfii"' ~1~ta11w
Albert w .. 1.1 ••
AHoti. .. tcmw
H•lltf ... IMcll Offlol
lOt Ith Sltttf
M1lli111 M•r•11i P.O. lt1 7f0. t2141
O"°'Offkot ~ k&'dll t)ll Wtll e.trt11111e!Nve1•
CCllltt Nolta: JJO Well &t't l lrffl UlllN ltkJI; ;2J F•tsl A~e-
by $0,000 South Korean lrooJ>3.
"But we alto have tremeodO\lS respect
for the fad that despite the military ·
burdens !bat the Rtpublic ol,K.,.. must
bear.'' ·be added. .. thlt economic pro-
gress hu moved forward at a dimension
no one thou&:h wu Pollibe.''
Park dealt in much stronger tenns.
He Aid that while tbe Seoul 1ovem-
melll 111pporled Nlron'a efforts to end the
Vi~ War, "the very · aaresafve
North .Korean Communlats :.... belll-
Comm•miata" prneottd a cont.tnulng pro.
blem.
park al<JRped abol:I of Wini addiUooal
U.S. aid. But )le said:
"I tb1nk the Asians as well as the
United Stoles people should bear in mind
the aqber fact that only when the in-
ltlaUY.<S eod erfot1a ol Aalana lhemaelvea
and the cooperation ol Ille Unlled Stites
are well coonlineted and balanced
toceQ:>er so u to meet the needs of Aaia
ln an effective way. can we expect great
effect from the new approach of . the
United Slates for tho atablllty and pro-
'"" of thb r<gton. "But should lbeoe e[forts become un-
balanced for want of po.sJtive efforts on
the part of either side, new dlsturbancu
and thruts wW inevitably recur in thi5
·region."
The crowds 1enera1Jy -..re friendly
'llluraday at the hllloric Pruidio where
Nixon first .... led Park. alq a
motorcade route to the St. Frlnds, and
in Unioo Square outalde tbt hotel.
But there. were a few hecklers, in-
cluding Mike Maloney, 21, who in-
terrupted Park's speeeb at the Presidio
by sh«lling for Nixon to produc:< the
"secret weapon" plan for endinC the war
he promised in !be 1981 presldenUal cam-
palp.
A crowd of 4,000 1alhered in Union
Square when the two presidents arrived
at the hotel. Several hundred
demonstrators carried signs and clwrted
alogam against Nixon and the war.
From Page 1
FLOODING ••.
crested shortly after midnight.
"We 're in as good a shape aa we pos-
sibly can be,'0 said City Ma:tla1er Alan
Klepper at a midnight news conference.
"Richmond seems to be In gOOd shape."
The James bJttered Richmond with its
swirling crest for almost four houn, but
the makeshift dam sucusstully protected
Jow·lying warehouses, plants and cigar-
ette factories. Only 400 to 500 persons
were evacuated from their homes and,
according to Public Safety Dlrector
William Groth, .. Not only we.re there no
deaths, we have not even heard of one
ierious injury."
About 525 National Guardsmen patroll-
ed black-out areas throughout Thursday
night, turning back sightseers from
restricted areas and directing traUic.
GULFPORT, Miss, (AP) -The llim
search for Hurrlcane Clmllle victims
The State Department couJd not sa.1
immediately when the force reduction
talks might begin. but McCloskey said bi!
guess was that they would be held in
Ba11gkok.
dragged OD alq the MlasiJslppl Gulf CIAILY PILOT PMM rtJ TelTY Ct¥11i.
Coast 1oc1a1-amJ<1·dlsagreementa 1111 th• LooK1NG FoRwARo ro LuAu 1N FouNrA1N VALLEY Premier Huong's
death count and a De'if-problem arlalng. Queen Rosemary Kelly, Rapp Blut5 Band
Refugeea lrlckled baclc into the ' R ' C
hardest-hit,,.. at nearby Pass Christian esigrtation UpS
where bodies were 1Wl bting found. The ' Tall JZ ! o Pl 0 :"C:t'°o':'r:~.:~i::::~ 1' ey uwan1s annmg Saigon Struggle
mistaken for hurricane victims. Th.is SAIGON (UPI) -Prime Minister Tran
caused IOllle confusion amooa: rtscue L f E 0 Frunil Van Huong resigned today in the. cllma%
lelll11ll. uau or ntire y of a five.week struggle with Preaident
Mluiuippi Gov. Jolln ltell Williams , Nguyen Van Thieu wbo !Ollght a premier
stood by bis CIOIJrlt of 1 mlblmum of 0200 who could get along with the South Viet.-
lu .. ~1led namese legislature.
P 1 ~ by the vlcloua stonn when it Sweet Leilani \\'on't be present, but a A list of events includes a fire dance, Huong, a former schoolteacher who
awept out of the Gulf of Mexico Sunday large part of Fountain Valley will be games, battle of the: bands, the first an-e!Caped a Viet Cong assassination at·
night But the CJvil Defense coOrdinator .,.\.,en lhe Ki"wan1·5 Club holds 1-•• second 1 . nd . . h tempt last March, «iuit after an impaaa• N c 'b t th toll f '"1 ~ nua running a Jogging c ampionshlps, ap as11 ry pu e in two o the annual Labor' o.· y Luau, Sep!. l, at the 1 over efforts to reshuffle Thieu's cabinet. three coastal counUes at "approzlmately and a ot of exotic food. Thieu's office made the announcement
235." ci vic center, 10200 Slater Ave. It's a day planned for U1~ whole family or Huong's resignation, which political
"We may never know actually how and all residents of Fountain Valley have observers said cou ld bring a major crisis
maey were killed," CU1ibry said. "Some been invited by the Kiwanis Club. Tickets in the South Vietnamese government. ~ bebeldeclarlheed ~s mwde· clinl forffai long Ca111ilJe Dest1·oyecl are $2 for adult.s and a $1 for children Huong's most likely successor is a wiue ore y re ared o cially deputy prime minister, Gen. Tran Tbitn
dead." under 12. Khlem.
CUaibry said Ille coolusion over the 5,238 Coast Homes Admi.!siontothebigbatlleoflbebands The u.s. Emba"Y in Saigon bad put
death count atema froiti "the sheer dance is •t. instde the community center. pressure on Thieu to kttp Huong in of· magnitude~ what we've got to do and WASHINGTON (AP) -~e, Red CroJs Tickets are available at Sir Michael's flee, political sources said, on the theory;
are doing for the llviq:.'' said Friday its latest survey -shows that R t I c k c· · that if Khiem became prime minister. Harriaon County COroner Mrs. Gladys es auran ' roe er itizens National South Vietnam would return to a near
Gorenflo said ahe had held inquests for Hurricane Camille de stroyed 5,238 homes Bank, city hall and at the luau. military government.
104 persons in Gulfport.. Biloxi, Lopg when it hit the Gulf Coast Sunday. Special Tahitian dancers from the It w~ the second time Huong, 67, had
Beach and Pass Christian. The agency said it had revised upward Tahitian Village in Downey have been ar· resigned. He also served three months as
''These are all the bodies we have," she to 11,667 the number of homes receiving ranged for by Kiwanis director Jim prime minister in i964. •
aajd. "If there any higher fJ.IW'U being major damage w h I 1 e 20,826 incurred Monsour. Huong. a former 5Choolteacher and put out, we do not have the bodies." mayor of Saigon, had been the target of Handllnc the bodies caused one of the ·minor damage. Also, the Red Cross said, ·Club President Stan Mansfield said Thieu's own political alliance, the Na•
new problems. 1,007 mobile homes were destroyed or several hundred attended last year and tional Social Democratic Front. The
Wally Dabbs, an assistant to Gov. damaged, along with 569 business he hopes even more join the Sooth Sea alliance had asked Thieu on Aug. t to
Williams, said the bodies of stonn vie-_•_sta_bl_l>h_m_en_t_s. ________ :_l:.:un::...::thb:.:":.::.y•::ar::·:_ _________ r:_:e::mo_::::ve:_::H:uo:n~g-:_ _____ _
tims .. are piling up" In area funeral •
homts with no way to get them to tern·
porary morgues set up at Hattlesbur1, 70
miles north of Gulfport. He said
refrigerated trucks were due in from
New Orleans to help.
"The trucka better 1et here pretty
soon," he said, "because we're going: to
have to find some way to dispose of them
because of the health hazard."
State Highway ·Patrol Chief Inspector
H. C. Slay said IOllle of the bodies found
in Pass Christian had already been em·
balmed while shattered caskets were
found nearby.
Slay added that "a grut many" or the
bodies found in Pau ChrisUan were bur·
ricane victims but Would not estimate the
number.
Aircraft started spraying part of the
battered area today in an effort to con·
trol mosquitoes. Authorities said ~
regular program for spraying was being
established.
Summer Safe-~inaf W.ek
mt~ _ ......... .. --
COMPLETE SIT
1 AIM CHAIR s499 l SIDE CHAIRS
1 SENIOR OVAL TAILI
* * * * * * Why They Stayed
'We've Had Hurricanes Before ... '
GULFPORT, 1'1iss. (AP)-\\1ly didn't
th e ~ujdents Jeave be(ore Hurricane
Camille unlushed its fury on the
J\olisslssippl Gulf Coast?
"J guess the people just didn't realir.e
tl'le maioitude of the storm," 'Nap
Cassibry, a state senator and area tivil
Otfense coordinator, said early today.
"I know I didn't realiH: just bow bad it
could be. I've lived here all my life, 51
years, anl'l just cou1dn't conctive ol 190
milt an hour winds.
"A 2.Q.foot Ude rise Is iuat inconceivable
and 1 think that'• why there we.re so
many people trapped by the •l«m· Hell,
\\'t've had hurricanes -and bad ones, so
1''t thought -In lht put." ca.sslbry, who took a few minutes out
a\ 4 1.m. for an interview, pla~ the
dtl<lh toll in Harr!Jon and Hancock, two
of the lbrto counUea wblch h111 the Golf
of A1ufeo. at 111pproxlmattl)' US." The
filU", he said, dots no\ lncluded Jacbon
County 1fher• Corooei ll«my Bryant aaid
he had aimed two death certiftcatea for
C.mille vtctlnu. JackJon ii eaat ol the
ma1n damage arta.
"Qlilte frankly, there hu been con-
aiderable con!UJion about the body
'--ount," said Caalbry. "We ml)' nevu
know aclllally bow m1111 ...,. tilled.
·Some will be carried as missing for a
Jone time before they're declared of·
ficially deld. What is it? Seven years."
''That figure is going to 10 up," he ad4
dcd. 1bey've located quite a few bodie.s in
the marsh west of Bay St. Loul!. They'll
get those out today. Tbe.se aren't lncluded
in the 235.
"I'm really dtpresaed. The death count
will a:o a third higher before we'rt finish-
ed."
'That would put the toll somewhere
arouod 315.
Why the conlllSion over the number or
dead!
"There'• nothing that we can do for the
dead," aald Cassibry. "We've got the liv-
ing lo thint about. The !heer magnitude
of what we've eot to do and are doing for
the Urine Is asiOOlldlng.
"I know it's betn alow. We've had so
mucb damqe that lt'a kind of hard to tell
wh<ro to put it io,.th«. Thero'• oo much
debris to cttar up. We've got the
neeessary people. !ut It takes time.
"Actually, we're aUU numb," the ofOclal
added. c ... lbry said Pus Christian, 10 miles
west ol GuUport, wu "definitely with no
quellloo at all the hardest hit."
Illa uaeosment ol lho c:oulal areal
~ . jrd_~. --f'
Olll SUMMER SALE AlSCI l~CUDES StUCIElf~nlOIA OREXE!;H'DlTJ;Glr, HENREOONj
HATIONAl, MARIOE CARSON. HERITAGE a HENREOON UPHOLSTERY PlUS MANY: OTHER llN£S:~
llDucnONS ON ACCUSolllS, LAMPS, AND l'ICTUIU AU ALSO AVAILAllLI-I
• DUXU:. HDITAH. HllNUDON DIALll ' ·
NIWPOtlT llACM
1717 w.-1111 Dr., 641-1050
°"" "''"' 'nl'
INllllOIS --··-· DoolgMn
Avall1ble-AIO-NllD
LAGUNA IEACH
J4S Nortfl COii! Hwy, 494-6U1
Ofltt RIOAT "m 9
..... ,. '"" ...... .,.,... e...., '40-1161
t
l
I
I
' ' I
r
•
' ' I
t
I
s
• n
ii
1-
Y.
'· ,
d
~
d
~
l• ..
"
,/
...
Laguna B~aeh .
Teday'sFlilal
•
. VOL 42, NO. 201, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES
DAILY ,ILOT Sllff ......
GWEN JOHNSON AND FRIEND CELEBRATE DECISION
For Burwell, H1ppin111 Is •·Home In Laguna
Ra~oon to Stay
Laguna Teen Gets to Keep Pet
Can a racoon from Cucamonga find
lave and happiness In Laguna Beach?
Yes, says Gwen Johnson, 13-year-old
mas ler o[ Buzwell, a three month old rac-
coon. And the city council agrees.
Ptfiss Johnson received the council's
penntssk>r. to keep Buzwell along with
&Orne advice on the care and keeping of
raocooru.
He''t to ltay In a metal cage si% feel by
lour 'feet by I led.lliah when ·not Wider
I
direct control of hi..s master, councilmen
decided.
Cage and raccoon will be kept at Gwen 's
house at 618 Myst!<: View in Laguna.
Buzwell came to Laguna rrom • a
Cucamonga raccoon ranch where t h e
animals are raised a.s pel.'i.
City officialdom came into his life
because a municipal Jaw •regulate:i: the
keeping of wild and or e:1ot.ic animals
. within the coolintl ol lhe Arllst Colony.
Truetee Describes Bitter
S,chool Board, Chief Split
By TOM BARLEY
Of "" oillY 1'1'91 lf9tl
A piclurt of a bitterly and politically
divided Orange County Board of ~uca
tion and a rebellious schoOO superifi..
tendent "who is determined to go bis own
way in defiance of the board whenever he
feels it is necessary" was drawn today by
Trustee Donald S. Jordan.
Dr. Robert Petenon was condemned by
lhe·retired school teacher "for his con-
at.a:nt refusal to advise the board. of
vitally important programs and his
refusal to accept board advice and
counsel in programs that are not so
vitally important."
Jordan made it clear in hi.! press con-
ference that the board is politically and
sharply divided.
He is backed. he claims, by trustee A.
E. ••Pat" Arnold and those two members
are·opposed by ti'WJtees Clay Mitchen of
Laiuna Beach and Dr, Dale E. Rallison,
a Santa Ana d~r:ttiSt.
HAS SUPpORT
Jordan made it equally clear that
Peierson almost always bas the support
o{ Mitchell and Ralli!IOD for "tome con-
troYefsial actions." And be condemned
the superintendent and Mitchell for re-
cenUy calling a press cmEenn::e to rebut u.,._-t ol lhe OrllliO CAunly Grand J.,,.
leary and Wife
Fail to Keep
Date in Court
llr. Timothy LeOry and·hll pQbliciud
family .didn't keep their pretrial date
Thtnday in Superior Court, an apparent
lndk:atlon that they prefer to wait for the
Sep. 3 trlal setting procedure.
Leary, 49, RDM:mary Leary, 33, and
John Bush Leary, 19, gave the court no
prior JndicaUon ·UuJt they would not be in
coUrt -a fact duly noted by a 9i!aP.
proving Juda:e Howard Cameron.
'!be Learys lace charges Iba! they
'Wtf't in possession of marijuan1 and LSD
when they were arrested last Dec. 315 in
La · a Beaeh. C charges !al« precedenct In
tenna of trial actlon cover cherges pen.-
dills in Rtvmkle Coonty In which Leary
;ntf hls wife are accused ot drug vlola-
lkins ana Leary himself j!I charged with
contrilxlUnJ Jo lhe delinquency <! •
mlnot.
Leary"1 arreat on lhir tau.er charge
foOO'wed the drowning or • 17-year--old
Loguna B<och gtrl who "" aakl by tn-vesdptors to have been under the .ift...
floenc:e of LSD when she died In the pool
At the Mountain Center hippie hangout
Jordan today defetxle<I . that report as
"sane and sensible" and supported I.he
Grand Jury's suggestion for elected coun-
ty board members and an appalntive
superintendent as a "welcome and izt.
>pired proposal.
"Whatever anyone might have to say
;bout that Grand Jury report it bas to ~
conceded that these people dkl their
homework," Jordan said. "They have
closely studied the work of our board and
Dr. Peterson at many ol our meetings
and their repoct wb the product of lh<loe
observations.••
Jordan said many aUtmpt.s had been
made by the board to come to tenna with
Peterson but "it is no longer possible to
discuss anything with this man. Our rela·
tiooship has reached an impasse," the
trustee as.wrted, "and about the beet we
can hope for now is to perform our
routine funcUoM in the best. way we
can."
DEPLORED DIVISION
Jordan said be deeply deplored the
deep division of the board along political
lines. He also asserted· that Rallison,
Mitchell and Petenon represent extreme
right wing political thinking with himseU
and Arnold ca.st in the role of. moderates.
Re also made piajn thlt future board
actioo and outlook will hin,e: a great deal
on the outcome of Tuesday's election In
which two candidaLes 11eet the post
""""11ty vaoaled by probation olllctt
Lyle Guipre.
Jordan bitterly condemned Petenon'•
recent' accusation that he (Jordln) had
placed "spjes" in the county &chools of-
fice.
Jordan said Peterson's outburst stem-
med from the trustee's 11very natural"
desire. to obtain lnfonnatlon on programs
the detalls ol. whicb ht claims had been wifhlield Imm the bnll'<I by p~,
MANY COMPLAIN
"Many people involved In those pro-
grams have called me to complain of the
su perintendent's conduct and actioll.'I In
many instances," Jordan aaid. "In vlew
of his refusal to acqµalnt us with the
natw.:e of ' many of these lnnovatlous I
felt .ml feel It b my dltly to make lheae
inqu]rles.'
Jan:lan eriLicized the board's lrt-
veetigallon o1 ramlly tile and ,.. ..i.Q •
(sft JORDAN, Pqe I)
Repul>ljcan Women
•
Gather Saturday
'lb< Lquna Beocb l!epubllcan Women
will bold a White Elephont 11!0 Saturday
from t a.mi to I p.m. at tJie • Womao's
Club, at the comtt ot Glenneyrt and
TllalJa StreN. eoa .. and dOllub wlll be aold on the
club patio.
I
'
ORANGE cOUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY; ~U6UST 22, ·1969 • .TEN~ . .
Nixon 'Pledges to Help
In-Defense of l(or,eans . . ...
Schools Due
Millions
From State
SACRAMENTO (AP) -'lb< l!!ale end-
ed I.he fiscal year with a record $524:
million budget surplus, Controller Hous-
ton I. Flournoy reported today .
This means California's 1,200 local
school districts wi~ get nearly $175
million in new st.ate aid during the com·
lng year.
During the summer~a big budget baUle,
Gov. Reagan agreed to put unexpected·
1urplus money tnto new school aid -
over and above the $105 million he:
already had budgeted and another $15
million the state got unexpectedly in
federal funds.
The surplus turned out to bt $79.11
million bigger. than had been expected.
Of the $79.81 million "bonus," about $35
million came from governmental
economies, Finance Ditector Caspar W.
Weinberger said. The ether $44 million
was because ta.zes brought in more
..
• '
revenue. than auticip.a1ecJ. . .
Here 1!I bow the new lchool money -. _ _.. _. , _ -·· _ . . • MLl! ·~
:r'myin.!f ~'Jt:"il~. fJMifJ~!:ftU,I..,, ~I"'· .,.,,·· ~! . '·
session -will be used: CoUJlfy•i new South c..ast Regi.,.U C1YiftS•nlA!r is hWJ!g tow;aij •
433,7 million, t~ a .combination or compleUOll IP' IH!:ember ol this' ,ear. """""'"'ill Incl~. lliP!'t' ~ gen1f11 oclx>ol Pf<\ll'am support and rooins, a.li!lrary imt br&nch offkes lor nr!ou1 segmoiits•otman~
spec11l proirams 1UCb as for 11ow County government. Location at Crown Valley Parkway and Niguel• rea~rs. ·u" r ch . net Road in .~g.1,Jna Niguel is designed to iave south county residents a -m1 Jon or resear • new pro-trip to San.ta ·.&........ · , · · graJns. . ru..,. . -W million for Junior college con---------------------------
slruction.
49 million which llays In Ille blgber
education conRruction fund, and cannot
be aptllt without legislative act.ion •
When tbe school finance bill passed, no
one was llll'e how big the budget aurplus
woo.Id be. Most frequenlly used estimates
were ao mllliGn to $40 mfi11on.
And educational experts esllmated that
the total new atd appropriated by the bill
woold be about fi:U million. Instead it Is
nearly lt7$ Ollllion.
The figwes were revealed by the
Republican P'kiurnoy, who noted they are
preliminary ones and will be rechecked
between now and the fmal report on Nov.
I. -Then, N/einberger took the podlum in
the news cooference room and said
Reagan was "delighted" ~1th the educa-
tional windfall.
Weinberger made a point of saying a
large portion of the surplus was the
result of Reagan ad•minis t ralion
economy.
Police Clothe
Natw·eBoy
A YOWl& man who· police said was
cavorting in the raw on Woodland Drive
Thursday riiitrt was wearin1 j a l l
coveralls today when he appeared for 1r·
raignment in municipal court on In in-
decent nposure charge.
Ofncets said William James ~1oscato,
21, wa·s arrested at about midnight In the
JOO .block of the rustic \Voodland Drive
area.
County to Delay· Action
2 Weeks on Salt Creek
Q-aq:e Gpunty 1upefvisors will wait Jn the past. h~ 1ai~ supervlspn have
another· two weeks when they are all . been.~ abOut public acceu .but
ppnt to take action on_ a proposed ·there hu bieen a tact of Uf1 ~9' to
policy to ensure public accw to beach the "COUD\y sialf. His proposed poricy! , ..
and tidelands. · · "Jn the J.-itere.st of ensuring 1h&t. tl\ere
The j>olicy,'designed to prevent another wilI be. publii; access to public ~.
Salt Creek·conti'oversy,'was1 proposed for · partlcularly tldelandll, It ls the .. pollcy" of
adoption this wf!ek by Supervisor• Dav!d . this -~nty thlt It will seek it obtain or
Baker bUt twO other sllpt!rvisors ialked ' · protect public access to pulille }!nds. ~
him out of it on behalf of a ttllid cOI .. · ''Every county,department •and ~y
league who was absent. . agency ls direcled to k~p ~:poli~ tn
''This is a very Important poilcy qi.alter · mind ·wben dealln1 with developments l?r
and all of the members ought to be here matters which alltct or may iffect public
to act. on it," said SupefVlsor Alton E. lands.','
Allen of Laguna Beach. Supervisor Baker proposed such a policy during
\Yilliam Phillips was in Sacramento for the Sall Creek Beach discus!lion Tuesday,
an appeal to the State Highway Com· but his propo&al was drapped when
mission on ti;ie Orange Freeway} supervisors Allen and William Hirstein
Baker reluctantly yielded to· the delay, had to hurry away from the meeting to
but not before· Supervisor Robert Ba'ttin attepd a awearinc·in ceremony for . an boilor platoon ol IO Marine rwvlts. put tn, "I'm getting tired 'of 8tudying P,hlJUps wu In Sacramento when Baker
things today and lclting them die tomor-brought the matter up again Wedneldal
row. 1be road lo bell ls paved with good and Allen and Hirstein Wed for deferra •
lntentlon!l We keep putting things off and Hirstein aald he will be on·vacatlor1 neit
putting things off." week, so the policy conslderaUon was
Baker said he is aware that "Bolsa postponed two weeks, .
Chica, Tin can Beach, is in the process oC . Baker pointed out only four. of five
Planning." . county supervl.son are required to '1e:
present lo ailopt the coilntj bUclcet and ·ii
Tri~ia Elusive Is pretty lmportanL
Hlrsteln, rererrtni to lhe m ... hlih Ud< · d<termtnauoo of where pubfic
tidelands begin, said, "In the caR or hllb
itde there Jsn't any pubUc land available,
only at low Ude. Th.ls ls the· way ttjl. Yl?U She's Got Liberal Boyfriend
The Western White House Is keeping of·
flclally mum about lt, but 'Tricia Nixon
has a boyfriend. A poliUcally liberal
boyfriend, accordln.g to uncoofinned ..........
'lb< nports couldn't be <onllnned
becau• FAward ~JS.year-old
Har'i'lnl law student. Thursday d>ecRcl Out ol the San Clemenfe IM. '
•le hid been .staying there tinct lasL
weekend.
"I think maybe he's gone to San Fran-
cisco," said a derk at;tbe inn. That's
where Tricia wenl with bet rlllnlli Thurs-
day. Tiley...,. due back to<lay.
Nobody knew whether Cox. wtlo
eocol'led Tricia to an Aogel1 baseball
gll!llO Tlluclly, 1111uj~ nlarn with U.
Nlxons. · .• .
Two wteka aso, th< 23-year-old~ •
Nixon daughter stayed a few days at the
Cox famlly home In Westhampton, Long
Island.
Cox thi:l aummer bas been, working for
tho New JlepQbllc. a liberal • polillcal
magazlhe. He a 11 o bas done 1 o m e
volunteer work far ..RalpJl . Nader's
"'Raider&," I groop of de!Hcated .)'(llOg
men :-motlly, law t~nts -!'ho· are
probing Into p~ -federal 1ovemment operatJons. •
Cox, who ls· ftl>Oried lo be fn.
depe!ldently wealthy, swam ln \he Nixon
family pool and along the" bead! wlth
Tricia durilJI his, S;in C,lc-ta,vlsl\. The
~te alto'Jook 'J1'let drlva "l'.aod down
lhe •<iA!tlln.i ' AtJrl,cl~1· re<{iltal, ~I~ 119"!11 ~des b=d D111 •~,,,.·~~nUy : t=r··9~~··• ·'""
have to recoghlze the fa cts," •
Allen said he wanted Ume to get 1n oPi·
nlon frOm county coullael ori what btl-
plk:ations the policy might ha\rfi for the
Upper Newport Bay land swap with the
IM!tne Company' '
Of the cowty's 43 miles of coastlloe, 11
!!OW are privately owned. Ten miles
beloog to c1tlel and H miles are In pQbllc
ownenblp, Including ntne•b)':tht. lllatio,
~ by the federal gov1r11111eat arid fG!rr
. bjl the -COW!ly.
Presiden~ . '
End2Days
·Of Talks
By MERRIMAN SMJl'll
Ul"lmlll_,.._.
SAN FRANCISro -Preeldelil l'ibm
and Prestdirif Part Cb11111 Hee of So.a;.
Kor.. plOdged jointly today I b a I
American and Korean forces llttJDnetl
along ·the 38th parallel 'Will remabl
"strong and alert" to coot1nUfnc cqn..
munist 'llfeslion. ·
.In addition to atatin1 their determlnl-
tion to meet any armed attack a1a1nst
South Korea, they also recognhed .u;.
necessity for "long term efforta to'Jeiien
the causes of teruiion on· the Korein peniniula .••
The joint statement was Issued. at~ the
two chief e:zecuUves concluded .their hro-
clay visit lo the SI. Francia Hotel ID San
Francisco.
The "statement aakJ :
"President Part 1ave an account of
cooUnuing acta .ot aggression committed
by the. North Korean Communilt r~
against the Republic ol. Korta. The av.
pmidenb agieed that Republlc. ol X.....
· fotces and American 1arcea ·lllalloned 1n
Korea must rtmalo 'mong and alert mt .. the .. lwQ ~ ~ thli
a.t.mmiaUon .of a..1t ..... -lo nieet atmed attack aplnit lhri ~II<:
. of ilo!'a In •-dance· with the mutual del~1 treaty betwe.,; South Kan. ~
the Ucnid Slates. • ·
"Preaident NWio and I'm!-Pal1i toot note of the newly formed h:aeland
reserve i:lefense force IS•a COjltr1butinn ie
the security and stability of Soilth ltllr'.eo. Til<r. agreed that support for thli forte
&hOtild be continued.
''The two presldent1 .recosnJr.ed the
necessity for toni-ttrm effort to 1tllm
the caUBes of temion on the ltbrNn
peninsula."
Other Items In the joint lla1""enl fn.
eluded :
-An invitation from Part to ·Ni1on to
visit ·Korea. Nllon 1ccepted, but the two
chief execuUves aaid the N~on . .wt
would i!Ue place al a. Um~ rl. 'nl\1lUl.l ·coD-
veBiehce. Diplomatic aoureea Hid tbll
would probably be' rlext year.
-They agreea lhal the Allies In Viet-
nam 'shOuld: continue •:to work toward 1eo
curing an honorable and lastlng _peace jn South~~ Asia. ln thla conpection. PU-t
en~ the pea~ proposall. ~
by Nixon last May· lf, and Nixon, tn tum.
paid tribute to the -lbutlon In Viet-
nam by Korean.forces.
'lbe statement said the tWo 1eMen
agreed to consult cloe;cly and 'f!'flh tbiir
other ·Allies · cOOctrning the Vietnam
1ituation. · ~
At ail unusual state dinner Thuriid11
night -unusual because or Ila &Jte ar1d
for Ila site outsJ«te the White HOUie -
Park warned that any -Imbalance.-In
coordinated U.S.·Asian efforts to meet
the regional needs would inevitably Jud
to "new dbturbaocu and thru.tl'' in.
Asia.
Thia game theme wu IOl!lewhat DUtli:I
Jn the joint statement atthcJnch Mzoa _.
Patk did empbaslZe their coocem abcm
conllnued aggresstoo I-the north. •
· Nbon In his !past lo Park Thutsdly
night emphasized lndependence o1 free
Asian naUons alllO mean« "ldf·rdlance.'•
(~ NJXON, Pap I)
' 0r..,e
. ,' Wleadler ,
SU)UIY sides .will Wll'IU the
Orange Coast over the ·Weebnd
whlle inland areas taste aome ~
clouds and r'!S overnight and tho
mercury drops Into the upper ltl'L
INSmE TOD~Y
Windup of th• Lfdo 14 ,,..
·Ilona! c'"'"'plomhlpa mrd Ill<
Hltfl.,IW Cup ""'" hfghllgllt
• ""'1'1"f'k•ad Of l>oatllro Cle>~
ti1>i1V ittang •11< coo.~ ~llVf I&;
..... ,. Mif..e .... " C..llfltnlle • ......... ... .. <"9111• 2t-4t or.-'-" • C,..IU 11 lytN ..... ..1. !! C,_.._., H .__._ !ll'D
l_)tflffl ... • .._. ,.... , .. ,1 1"""'91 ..... ' ..... M-1 ::::......... ::::: :......*""' _ ... };
=·~:. .. t l; ~= ..,
Mt--· • -""" .. Mt$I tl-H W...... ti•
I ' • , •
. '
f
•
-
2 D.t.11.Y '1l0T -L •
t .. .~ --' ,. ... ..
I • ~UPl)-The nQllen • ,_ --Ille Allulli! OctlD, opuwl <1111' ..... tt WN ~'""""· l ~S' t '•·-~', ....... .liF.-llptoll-alnlalnllll Tlltcoplllldl)' .......... liar!Y-llaom I Ille~ "-lllt'1 arl' ·«~""\!Ir ....... -dl_, ... toholdlllct
' ll*fl dead ftini'11·bactwuh. The'"'*' The J ... -.... el .... ped·llood ,,.. • ., ti l'lii ·-....
• hqJ and ~ ·wu~ spored." t"~llll . •'ho& ..., 1114 lllp.!11 ~ IUlil-adlJ 11>1 t.llbt ii wbldl tlll Jama
\SM'pboU>s, P~ jJ. • --In' Rk!UMll4 aboUI dawn.' then er.sled shOrtly Alta-m!dnlgl>L • '-'~~Del~• autbari~. said ·&here hall an ~ ..,. #ff. W,at;n fijl"'\O ~51 . 1 ~'We're in as good a shape as we. pas-.
wen 61 boWn dead, 411 inJured aod Jl6 I~ and blell)'<Y~ worw1 cioik<d slbJy can be " said CllY, Manag'f ·Alan ~in"'~ Mountihi-town:s a bblise--11RooraY.l'' ._ -... Kfepriet at a' mldnlgbt'ifews conference.
uprtveri :fr!lm JllChmond. More casual· It we Yirginia'1 wont fJood ·since "Rlclunood seems to be tn good shape."
U.. w.,. •e;pedld.as 1lle •illagu :1 ' -IJll, ~ aw•f. ·towns, ca•ing in Tho J,..., batter«! RlcJunond.wUh its
' bad< )ay1'·ol0 m..••L~-~~ , · )n<lunllinsldea aod 1w e ep Ing away swlrljn~ for almnel four houri, but 'OOrty~!lOI ood·......, -dfea. • • • -· ,u..,!11' l dapt 111ccessri11ly )ll.cl!cted
, lliduno0d'1 ..,.., blrri".° G tM Waary <llldoll _ .JOid RlclJmmlc! w.as jow.Jjini w~ plaots and.. cigar-
' r \
Nude Husband
Escapes Wife'~-.
Hatchet Attack .. .
·' 2 A· ~ bJocl'i~k<d Santa Ana
man wbo .'tbJa police he sought refuge
Ttmr~y -f!ig'ht in a neighbor's home
Crorh ·JU& berslfk.tiatchat.-wiving WU~ l! (Qd~!~.ir(f~ ~ition it Or~
County Medical Caller.
Officers said Ramiro Lechuga, 42, told
them that the first cl. three at.ta.eta by bi.a
wife occurred wbtle he was lying nude on
his bed watching television.
Lechuga alleged his commonlaw wife.
Maria, S4. attacked him with an electric
saw but he managed to disarm her after
she inflicted several cuts in an appartnt
attempt to sema1Jy mutilate him.
-Lechuga· then told po~ that he was
checking 90 the couple's sleeping children
when his wife attacked him from behind
with a hatchet. Again, he disarmed her
but only after she had struck him twice
with the blunt eod and once wttb the
blade.
Lechuga then -officers used the word
"inccrnprehenaibly" -again turned bis
back on his wile to put the hatchet away.
She allegedly atruck him several times in
+ the back with a carving knife inflictinC
several Wounds and lace.rations.
Officers said Lechuga decided to call tt
quits at thal point. He ran from the home
screaming for help with his wife bard on
bi• heels braodl!hing the hatcbtt.
Neighbors managed , to separate the
couple and held the screaming woman
until pollct arrived. ·
'lbrooghout the fracas, Lechuga told of-
flcen his wile k~pl asking him; ''Why do
you go out with other women, what is wronc with me?"
Mrs. Lechuga 1" tnday in Orange Coun-
ty women's jail. Sile' is accused of uaault
wlth a deadly weapon:
Pollet officers today said the Me:ri,can-
born woman was acquitted in her
homeland oo. C;hafgea of ltllting her hu6·
band. Th!f state that Mrs. Lechuga also
told tbem that she kllled a second hu.s-
band in self ddense.
From Page 1
JORDAN ...
tim proirams as a ''degeneration into an
obviOUJ aUack upon Paul Coo k ,
superintendent. of the AO!lheim High
School District and related programs in
other Bdlool district&.
"The educition values in such ~
grams were1nuied undtt an avalanche of
emotional. extreme right wing political
attack," Jordan aaid.
Jordan accused Peltr50n of brinJing
about tbe resignations al "some.la to 20
members of the coonty schools-office
staff."
He also condemned Peterson's refusal
to take the board 's advice on the
superintendent's hotly c r i t i c l 1 e d
"barbershop poll," in which Peterson
&0llcited the views of barbershop patrons
oo sex education in schools.
DAILY PrL.OT $tiff.._,.
Flipped Over Flapjack• • '
Lions Club President Gordon Kent warms up for organization's
Jieries of pancake breakfasts during Labor Day weekend Aug. 31-
S.p!. 1. Tickets at $1.20 each can be purebased from Lions Club
members. Proceeds from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. breakfast at Heisler Park
will go to Laguna Beach Boys' Club.
<; •
One Press Conf erenceJust
Like Another Press Meet
B:v TO~f GOR~IAN
Of fM 0.llJ Pli.I Sllff
Press conferences and briefings are. •
"'ay of life in America. today, ranging
from national, state and even down to ci-
ty issues.
Everyone, it seems, is out to meet lht
press.
How far will this go?
PLACE: Lag\;na Beach High School
pre.ss room,
TIME: UO p.m. (PDT). .
Thi.s being an informal gathering of
newsmen , theft won't be any television
. coverage by the major networks.
The briefing 1s aboot to begin. Press
secretary Fred Schomehl has just eri-
tered the press .room, and heads direcUy
to the podtum.
"Hey, Fred, I was wondering ... "yells
out one correspondent.
"Just. a sec, Smitty," Fred responds. "I
have some announcements first. before
we get to any quest.ions.··
"First otf," Fred starts, as the
typewriters begin to clatter, "let me
cla rify for you fellows who weren't listen-
ing earlier, who will be the chief justice
of the Student Court.
"You'll remember that I had said the
poot is filled by election, not by presiden·
tlal appointment. The chief justice, ac-
cording to final tabulations, will be Mark
Sizelove."
One reporter yells out, "Where's the
nearest telephone? I've got deadlines
era~ all over the plact!"
"No~. fellows, if you have any ques-
tions about the court, I'll refer you to Mr.
• Si:lelove."
''.The other announcement is that the
President ,.;u1 lea\'e next Wednesday on a
Laguna Captures
Lawn Bowling
·Tratllng by 17 points at the ope'ning of
the second round, Laguna Beach came to
life and scored 41 points plus to defeat
Ne.-port Beach, 22f.200, in inteN:ltib
l•wn )>owllnp compeUUon in Balboa this
week. •
Newport captured five of eight gamts
In the first Jl"rind for a to1al of Jlf shots
to '1 !or the visitors. But Jn the second
period, ~ downtd their llo.<ta in alx gam~ and Ued one. The acore was ~gulla, JJ7; Ntwport. 86. .
Two Llgwt3 teams won two 1am~
.. c:11. Henry Peck, I!. N. Parker, Ed
LenlhlD and Slan McCllnUc ll'Olt up 2H
and 16-7. Blll Dovis, Nay SweU and Hugh
Cavanqh won 11-11 and 14~10. Dr. L. W.
Ketchum, Cuy Holsopple and Arthur Lee
\\'OD 1$-9 and titd 11·11.
I
Laguna
Teen
Corner
tour of !iX 1chools in the Crestview
League. If any of you guys want to
cover it, see me later, and I'll Set to it
that you're accredited.''
"Now, I'm open to questions. Fire
. away." ·.
'"Hey. Fred, is it true that school opens
Sepl. 4!"
"Let me just say, Stuart, that that's
the date our staff has been alerted to. If
any changes come up, you guys will be
the first to know."
"Fred, I understand Utat there's been
some changes in the cafeteria food
service. What's the story?"
''Yes, we have opened up four v.·indows
to expedite the service. And v•e're also
contemplating food stamps. But the
President wlll have something to say on
that at a later date."
"\Vhat's the latest en the budget ,
Fred?"
"Well, I'll tell you. The President call·
ed an emergency meeting of Student
Congress for next Tuesday, and I can say
lhal the budget v.·ill be discussed. Jf you
"'ant more info, I'll have to refer you to
lhe budget consultant, Gary Norton."
"What's the truth In a rumor I heard,
Fred, about a student protest O\'Cr
clothes rules? I've been told lhe students
might boycotl the next buketball game."
"No comment."
1'Does that mean there is somcUting to
It?"
"Go on to the next question ."
"F~. what's the latest on the person·
· nel problem? I know.the teachers and
· co.aches •re sUll upset."
0 Th1t's a Cood queeUon. But I have to
10 now. Thtn's a staff meeting in 10
m1nute1.
"Thanks for coming up here, fellows.
Set )""1 next week."
_Dr. Salk Burglarized
SAN DIEGO !AP) -Dr. Jonas Salk
11aya a burglar pried open a acrten in
Salk'• home and took a $1~ television set
and $3 tn Clish. The developer of polio
\•accine heads tbt :::er~: S&1k ln!Utute
for Blologk:a.I Studies.
•
·l_ta,ging Flood Waters·
ell< fa-IN.. Oaly 400 lo IOO perions .... ------~ to Nile 8lfJl1 -WUUua Orodt. ''Not only were tbtre M d_. we bin not even heard of one
serious tnJ !'
Abool U5 ~atlooal Guardsmen patroll-
ed black-Oil! arw throughout Thursday
night, turning back slgbtseen from
restricted areas and dlrect1ng traffic,
At one point., the Jamea crept to within
20 Inches of flooding and c!Ollru! "'1sy
lnlttstate 115, a superblgbway linking
lUcl\lnond with Wulllngtoo, D.C. Par-
allal north-south hJahwayt were clooed
..... .., llooda.
OaJy .,. 01aJcr 1111t1011olltan ·-
city of Hopewell with about 20,000 resi-
dents-now Jsy In th• r.ooc1·. path. Fu!'-
lher damage by the James, almdy
mounting into the millions, was expected
to be light because the river widens as
it winds throuJh marshlanda toward the ....
Richmond's SucctSS story contra.sled
trqically with reporll ttlll trickliq in
!nm VirllDt&'s mJdteclJon, where tba
floodl began Tuesday nlgbl after d)'tni
CamJlle.~ dm11i>!d men Gia•
10 ... of rain ... 1111 J-· llMcl' wain.•
TaJes of death accompanied l'MCUI
worken coming ·out of inundated areas.
There were report, ol a girl holdlnC
onto a tree limb and then disappUring
before she could be saved ; of a man
who swam to rescue a child, only to
drown alter the ;;ter waa pulled to safety; and of a fa of four that sur·
vived the lint J{USh 1 fJoodlng, only tG
die when their 'home collapled into tht
current when tta mountaiaSlde 11.1pports
1ave way.
:-k * * ** * * Refugees Trickle Back
Camille Deaths Mounting
GULFPORT, Miss. (AP) -The grim
search for HurriCMC Camille victims
dragged on along the Mississippi Gulf
Coast today amid dlsagnements on 1lle
death count and a new problem arisiDj.
Relugees trickled back into the
hardest.hit area at nearby Pass Christian
where bodies were still being found. The
new _problem involved bodies being wash-
ed out of Pass Christian cemeteries and
mistaken for hurricane victims. This
caused some confusion among rescue
teams.
Mississippi Gov. John Bell WJlliilms
stood by his count of a minimum of "200
plu$'1 killed by the vicious storm when it
swept out of the Gull ol Mexico Sunday
night. But the Ci\>il Defense coordinator
Nap Cassibry put the toll in two of the
thret coastal counties at "approximately
235."
"\Ve may never know actually how
many were: killed," Cassibry said. "Some
will be declared as missing for a long
lime before they're declared officially
dead."
cassibry said the confusion over the
death count stems from "the sheer
magnitude of what we've got to do and
are doing for the living."
Harrison County Coroner Mrs. Gladys
Gorenflo said she had held inquests for
104 persons in GuUport, Biloxi, Long
Beach and Pass Christian. '
'"Ibest are all the bodies we have," she
said. "If there any higher fJgurea bein&
Water, Sewer
District Sought
Fonnation of a water and sewer
as.5esrment district In the Arth Beach
Heights aru has been approved by the
Laguna Beach City CauncU.
Councilmen set Sept. 24 as the time of
a public hearing on the project. Bids on
the project will be opened at the Sept. 17
meeting of the council.
The improvement district covers about
300 lots. So far there have been no pnr
tesb, City t.1anq:er James D. Wheaton
said.
put oot, we do not have the bodiea.'•
Handling the bodiea caused one of the
new problems.
Wally Dabbs, an assistant to Gov.
WilliamJ, said the bodies of stonn vic-
tims "are piling up" ln area funeral
homes with oo way to get them to ~·
poruy morgues set up at Hattlesbl.ll'g, 70
miles north of Gulfport. He said
refrigerated trucb were due in from
New Orleant to btlp.
"The trucks better get here pretty
soon," be said, Hbecause we're going to
have to fmd some way to dispose of them
because of the health hazard."
State lllgbway Patrol Chief Inspector
H. c. Slay said some of the bodies found
In Pua Cbrallan bad already been em-
balmed while shattered caskets wert
found nearby.
Slay added that "'a creat many" of tht
bodies found in Pass Christian were buf'>
ricane vicUms but would not estimate the
number.
Almaft started spraying part of th<
battered area today in an effort to con-
trol mosquitoes. Authorities said •
regular program for spraying was bein&
established. .
Health officials said medical needs 01
the coast were being met and empha.aiRd
any threat of epidemic had ended. 'lbeJ
also said there was no longer any need
for mass immunization against typboi4
but added that drinking water shcWd bf
boiled or chlorinated except in Gulfpor1
where the water supply was clear.
From Page 1
NIXON, PARK MEET ...
The joint statement was issued in writ-
ten form at the St. Francis Hotel and the
two leaders who bad planntd. originally to
appear before reporters at the conclusion
of the talks, decided instead to make
separate statements upon departure frpm
San Francisco International Airport.
While a small crowd of antiwar
demonstrators clashed brie.Dy with police
outside the elegant St. Francis Hotel,
Park and Nixon exchanged toasts Thurs-
day pledging mutual cooperation and sup-
port. They met for two hour6 earlier to
discuss U.S. aid to South Korea and
Korea 's military security.
Nixon told the banquet audien~ in the
St. Francis' softly-lighted California
Room that the United States was grateful
for the sacrifices being made in Vietnam
by 50,000 South Korean troops.
''But we also have tremendous respect
for the fact that despite the military
burdens' that the Republic of Korea must
bear," he added , "that economic pro-
gress has moved forward at a dimension
no one though was possibe."
Park dealt in much stronger tenns.
He said that while the Seoul govern·
ment supported Nixon's efforts to end the
Vietnamese \Var, "the very aggressive
North Korean Communists -bellicose
Communists'' presented a continuing pro-
blem,
Park stopped short of asking additional
U.S. aid. But he said :
"I think the A!l.ans as well as lhj
United Stat.es people should bear In mint
the sober fact that only when the in
itiatives and efforts of Asians thernselvei
and the cooperation of the United Statei
are well coordi~ted and balancet
together so as to meet the needs of Asil
in an e'ffeclive way, can we expect grea:
effect from the new approach of thl
United States for the stability and pro
gress of this region .
"But should these efforts become un
balanced for want of positive effort.I OI
the part of either side, new disturbance:
and threats will inevitably recur in thi
region."
The crowds generally were friend))
Thursday at the historic Presidio wheri
Nixon first greeted Park, along ·1
motorcade route to the St. Francis, au
in Union Square. outside the hotel.
But there were a few hecklers, it
eluding Mike Maloney, 27, who in
terrupted Park!s speech al the PrWdi
by shouting for Nixon to produce th
"secret weapon" plan for ending the wa
he promised in the 1968 presidentiaJ cam
palgn .
A crowd of 4,000 gathered in Unia
Square v.·hen the two presidents arrive
at the hotel. SfveraJ hundre•
demonstrators carried signs and chante
slogans against Nixon and the war.
Summer Safe-:J.inaf W.ek
,,
COMl'l.ITI SIT
1 AlM CHAil s499 J SIDE CHAIRS
1 SINIOI OVAL TAii.i ~-~
•
OUR SUMMER SA1E AlSO l~Ctlleln!Uerm· Gl!OUPS F(OM DREXEL'. HD.IT JJ>t HENREDON,
NATIONAL. MARGE CARSON. HERITAGE A HIN RfOON UrHOLSTERY PLUS MANY OTH~ LIN!S.
lDUCT10NS ON AC~llS. LAMPS. AND PICTVllS Alf ALSO ·AYAILAfl.I.
NIWl'OltT IUCH
1721 w.t«JH!ilr. '4t·IOIO
Of'IM """'"Ill t
LAGUNA llACH
145 North Cont Hwy.
,,.,._,! lntorltt
DoolfMrt
Av1!11llf....,;;t,I04ISID OPIM flllAf. 'nL •
.... , .......... ., .er.-.. c..., .... ,, ..
(
----
,.
Nixon Lik~s Surprises
' He Fits L1JJ's 'Impromptu Pres ident' Mold to a Tee
By HELEN m~AS
SAN CLEMENTE (UPI) -Onct upon
a Ume Lyodon B. Johmon lived in the
\\'hlte House and ,he wu called the
"lmpro.mptu President."
to U}ejr surprise, reporters finG lhe
r.w>re consttvative, lpw key, programed
Richard M. Nixon fib the samt mold..
Madison Avenu~ Image makers
notwlthstagdlng, the similariUes, more
than the different'e sin style between Nix-
on and his predecessor are coming into
!OCIJ~
When LBJ ~as riding tall in the saddle,
he would summon reporters to news con-
ferences in his oval office, on a moment'•
notice. He also had a penchant (or taking
orf on trips without advance notice and Jn
an eiuberant mood, he would drop
hombsbeU news from improbable plat-
lonns. •
In other ways there is more contrast
between the two men. Compared to
Johnson, Nixon is an absolute gadabout.
Johmon fought the painful presidential
syodroi'nfi that the White House was the
lonellelt place in the world. "Lonely
Acres," he ultd to moJn. And he never
felt be could move. easily in public. .But. Nixon ls out on the town here
almost nightly, droppin&. in on
restaurants and motoring ilong the busy
coastal freeways during evening hours.
Beach city restaurants are having a field
day revising their menus to read: "Presi-
dent Ni:ioo Dined Here."
Even bis wife, Pat, marvels at his
spur-of-the-moment decisklns to go to the
ball game when they are in Washington.
Mrs. Nixon says her husi:land and their
son-in-law Da\•ld Eisenhower start laking
~aseball at ~ dinner table and the
President suddenly will leap up, and gay,
''C'rnon David, let's catch the last few in-
nings" when the Senators are playing. _
"He thinks all he has to do is make a
couple of telephone calls," says Mrs. Nix-
on with a smile.
The telephone calls alert the Secret
Service who set the wheels In motion for
Protective Ctistody
Witnesses Stay n1 Jail
But Aren't Forgotten
The case of hvo witnesses assertedly
being held in jail like prisoners until a
forthcoming murder trial won't be acted
upon now bul won 't be forgotten by
Orange County supervisors.
Supervisor Robert Battin at first
demanded action to make life in pro-
tective custody easier for Ricky Tice. 18,
and Carl Tice, 15, then later this week
had second thoughts.
The teen-age brothers are material wit·
nesses in the case against Arthur D.
League, 20, charged with the murder
June 4 o.f Santa Ana patrolman Nelson A.
Sasscer.
fttunicipal Judge Paul Mast ordered
them held in isolated protective custody
because of the possibility their lives may
be endangered. In a court appearance
earlier this month, Carl Tiet: said he was
with League and a ~itness lo the shooting
of Officer Sassct:r. Rick Tice. along with
League, is a Black Panther Party
member.
Tiniest Puppy
Reported Fin e
The tiniest pup in Foontain Valley -
maybe the world -is still healthy today
and standing tan. for a one ounce
chihuahua, that is.
Mrs. Samuel Staley, 15963 Rocky Court
Rd., reports the little tyke is "growing
like mad and fighting for his food ."'
"He's almost an ounce-and-a-hair now .''
she said this morning. of the pup they
have now named "Chico" (little guy).
Chico passed the critical 48-hour stage
-the veterinarian .said if he lived that
lllng he'd make it -at 6:30 p.m., Thurs-
da)'.
The rub is that while in custody at
County Jail, the two witnesses. accused
of no crime, are being treated exactly
~ike prisoners.
They dress in jail clothes, eat jail food .
sleep on jail bunks in a jail cell and
follow jail rules. But they do have a
television set, magaz.ines and a deck o(
cards.
In a letter to county supervisors, at·
tomey Thomas J . Keenan pleaded for
better treatment for the brothers. He
said they are isolated from their families
except for two , 2{).minute visits each
week when they are only allowed to look
through a window and speak by
telephone.
He said Rick Tice's wife Is five months
pregnant, has no · funds for medical care
and is deprived ol the $100 a week her
husband earned before being confined.
Supervisor Battin responded by sug·
gcst ing daily visitation privileges and use or county welfare funds lo compensate
the wife. Other supervisors cautioned him
to learn more about the matter.
Upon reflection, Battin said he would
like to defer any action until after the
trial. Preliminary hearing is set for Sept.
25.
His reasoning, attOI'(. ing to Fred
Harber, his executive asSJ..stanl, is that
"this is a policy matter al'ld supervisors
should not discuss it ~·hen individuals are
involved and pefsonallties could obscure
the principle ...
flarber also said ~!in decided the
judge of the court has jurisdiction and
treatment of the partic1dar witnesses is
not a matter for supervisors to take up .
Jn his letter. altorney Keenan said he is
aware that the sherHf does not have
faclliUes other than the County Jail nor
fund s or authority lo inst.itute another
type of confinement.
prtsidenUal tr1ve1 lhrough the dart
Washington slreP.ts by callinl Giii a large
aegment or the k>cal police fortt to halt
traffic at every intersecUon for !Us fast
moving motorcade. A1 the presidential
retreat in lhe A.Jaryland Catoctln 'Moun-
tains near Washin&ton, another White
House' bonus be is enjoying, Nixon often
will head out the gate for a drive lo Get-
tysburc, Pa., 20 miles away or lo
neighboring small towns with his buddy,
Charles G ... Bebe" Rebozo, to mingle
with the townsfolk. They a I w a y 1 buy
boxes of candy at the local drug store.
It was in the same spirit that Nixon
ayid his wife made a quick command
decision to take a cable .car ride, for old
llrne's sake. in San Francisco just before
they departed on their Asian tour la.st
month.
\Vitl1 another -"Impromptu President"
to cover reporters are finding truth in
the Fren~h motto : "The more il changes
lhe more it is the same."
Police Aiding
Clemente Due
Free Lunches
The next demonstration by protest
groups near the We.stem White House in
San Clemente may include chicken-to-go
-for the polict. .
San Clemente city C1)Uncilmen have
decided to provide carry-out food service
for out-of-town lawmen ""'ho assist local
officers in controlling the pickets.
Councilman Dan Chilton Wednesday
rerommended the box lunches for the
visiting police, who last Sunday included
members of the Santa Ana. Nc\fport
Beach, Costa fo.1esa, Westminster and
Fullerton city forces and the Orange and
San Diego Counties s h e r i f f ' s
departments.
Chilton's idea was unanimously . a~
proved by the council. U was in-
corporated in a motion commending San
Clemente police and out-of-town officers
for their Peace Action Council parade-
\li'atching Sunday.
The next PAC demonstration is su~
posed to take place Sunday, Aug. 31. It
will be a "smaller free speech rally." ac-
cording to PAC representative Robert
Bland of Laguna Beach.
Sunday's parade attracted some 4,000
marchers. none of whom was arrested.
San Clemente Councilman Thomas
O'Keefe, who is an attorney, said there
coold have been several arrests for
"technical violations" of city ordinancei,
but flQlle were made because of the
''restraint of the police."
Councilmen, al O'Keefe's ·Urging,
directed Police Chief Clifford ·Murray and
City Attorney Carl Kegley to prepare a
report om the city 's legal position should
arrests occur at future demonstrations.
O'Keefe in the past has voiced concern
that the city's refusal to grant a parade
pennit or provide a staging area for anti-
war processions could make convictions
oI arrested,participants dilficult.
Mechanical Voting Starred
Fotorama Exhibit Visitors Pusli Buttons for Winners
~techanical \'Oling, up until now a
novelty in Orange County, continues lo be
one of the highlight.s of the DAILY
PILOT Fotorama at Fashion Island.
Visitors to tile big show at the Newport
B'each shopping center a r e invited to
participate in "Votorama at Fotorama
by using a Printomatic voting machi~
manufactured by Automatic Voting
Machine Corp. of Jamestown, N.Y.
The machine is one of several types of
automated voling systems under study
for official use in Orange Counly.
A pair ol the machines is being used in
the Votorama at Fotorama g a m e in
which visilOrs are asked to select by
popular vote the grand prize winner fn
the Fotorama Camera Cont.est which the
DAILY PILOT held for non-professional
photographers.
The \li'inner will reecive $500 in Fashion
Island gift certificates; voters get a
chance at more than $1.100 in merchan·
dise prizes furnished by radio station
KOCM .
Fotorama, open until 9 o'clock tonight
on Stage Court in the Fashion. Island
shopping t"enler, goes into its final day
Saturday. It will be open from JO a.m. to
5:30 p.m. on Saturday and winners of
prizes will ~ selected in lhe final half
hour of the event
Fotorama of(ers visitors a look at hun-
dreds of unusual photograph,,, many of
them award winners in professional
photojournalism competition and some of
them prize winners in competition among
pro!essional "ct1mmercial'' photograph-
ers.
Another highlight ~r t~e show is the
rlemonstration of· i Unifax, the machine
w h i c h automatically and electronically
creates pictures sent by P a c i f i c
Telephone Co. Jines over the United Presa
International network.
Fotorama visitors also get to listen in
on chatter among photo editors talking on
the nationwide UPI Telephoto citcuit.
AUTOMATIC VOTING MACHINE EXPERT 91U EPS FO;l'ORAMA HOST ESS ON 8A!.LO!!NO
Don Davis Show1 Lauren Mau•cappt How Mechanil•I Voter Docs Its Job
Frid.or, A-22.,1969'' L' DAILY P'll.IJf
An Old . Tiliae'r Wings It
' ' ' , I ' Looking a bil like the Red Baron himself, leather· ange County Airport. Penny flew in _from Bradbury
helmeted Robert Penny guns his Navy N3N prior for. the. event. F1ying old planes is h1s hobby and be
to takeoff at recent fly-in for vintage aircraft at Or--really wo_Uldn't harm a beagle, or a beagle'1 fleas.
Reds. Bomb · Da Nattg Base
Heavy Fighting Flares !n Coastal Plains
SAIGoN llJPI)....;. More heavy fighting
broke out today on . South Vietnam's
northern ·coaital ptatns·where U.S. forces
have killed more than 400 North Viet-'. '' namese a n d ~Jet , COOg this ., e· e k.
Amerie;1n troops found. m o r e than 100
Communist troops <lead on one bat-
tlefield.
CornmwUst rorces bombarded .ahe 1 big,
U.S. base at Da Nang-today in an attack
that killed one American and wounded A2
others. Seven Vietnam~ civilians Were
killed in a similar rock.et attack 100 miles
to the soulh.
The shelllngs were part of a series of 25
sueh au.acb overnight. 15 of which were
at U.S. units. The attacks killed two
. ' . . ! . . ~
Passenger Injured
. .
In Quick Lauding:
OAK VIEW (UPI) -Donald.Troutner,
34, La ~1lrada, was seriously injured
Thu rsday night when 'the Ugbt plane in
whlch. he was a ,pugenger crashed on a
residential ,area street while aUempting
; in emergency landing. • ,
Sh'eriU's Clepulies 11ki the pilot, Ch:arles
C. AdlJDI of Pasadena,. escaped unhann·
td
Americans and w0unded 72.
The heaviest fighlfng was centered 17
to 13 miles west, of.Tam Ky which· is 60
.mites 'fTQm f,>a N~g arxl .M . miles
northeast of Saigon. It is In an area
where U.S. infantryTnen have•bc?en-lrying
unsucceSs!ulJy t.o reach the Wreckage of a
Officer Killed
In Freak Mishap . . .
SANTA MONICA (UPI) -A freak ac-
cident Fri<lay nighl rook: the life of a San-
ta Monica police offictr as he was
training a rookie Oflicer in the use of .i . . . . .. ' three wheeled motorcycle. ·
Motor officer William Davidson, 31.
Woodlancrmlls, was 'demonstrating the
use o( a· parking enforcement mototcycle
· Thuraday.everring to Gecrge Sennatt Jr.,
a·po11ct <fepal-tment recruit, ih the park-
ing lot of the 1Santa MoOica Court House.
Davidson was Jeaving·the parklng lot and
failed to see a chain drawn across the
driveway. The chain caught Davi9eofl
undeT · tbe neCk and threw him off the
vehicle.
Davidson died th.is morning at San~
Monica. Hospital. • ·
helicopter that crashed Tuesday, . killing:
eight Americans.
Sev.en Anny troop! and Oliver Noonan,
29, an AsSociated Press photographer,
were aboard the helicopter.
U.S. troops said they came upon the
bodies of 103 Communfst· soldiers Thurs·
day in an area123 mllea·west of Tam Ky.
Worker Burned
By Boiling. Tar
·A construction wcrker badly burned by
boiling tar while working on an Anaheim
r:ooflop is today listed In a itfcal coodilion
at Anaheim "Memorial Hospital
Michael William Pollert. 25, or La
Habra, was ru&hed to the hospital_J,y
Anaheim police following the accident
early today on a construct.ion lite on
Anaheim Boulevard. Officers said the
victim suffered severe burrui over .the
lower part of bis body.
· 11 is known that Pollert was laying the
hot tar on the roof when the acC:ldent oc-
curred. But further ~et.ails of tbe TI)ishap
are not yet available.' Fellow worker•
said Pollert was working alone and that
his screams drew their attenlioa to the hicident. . .
hire on Chevrolet SavlngsTime.
You llrea.dy know thii Mi the time of year you're
101n1 t.o uve money.
You juet want to know how much you'll uve,
and on what car.
Plenty. On a Chevrolet..
T,ake Impala. Even_ without year-end aavin1s.
you d •ve. ·Many models COit leaa than last
yMl''e, comparably equipped.
You MVe again on your Chevrolet dealer'•
special Yt:m4ld price.
Clttvrol5 /11tpala Sport Cou,_
-·-
,..
And you aave still a third time. The day yoq,
decide to trade Impala in. (Traditionally JUa:hor
reaale value, you know.)
Name enotber au that. promises: as much (be.
aides Cbevelle, Camaro and Nova). . .
You can't.
When you're on Chevrolet Savinp Time,~yqa?re
onto 10metbing big.
Putt1n1 rou 11111, kttps us llrst,
I
l
\
•
-----------. . . ·. •
. .
Vir.ginians Bead for High -~ro11n·il
• ,.._ Ht!M Holdtrmon, the
cook at .Rainy Lake Lodge, In
'.1memat1onal Falls, MIM., 110UJ1d· ·04 a bom to summon a resort em-
·p1oy., to the kllcllen. Five min-u~ later sbe noticed a bull moose
·hooded f~r the lodge. The big ahi·
ma! stepped ashore and came
within about 15 feet of the build·
Jltg, theo ambled oil into the
-woods. •
CaUfanlia toe1 getting read11
1o point tDitll prid< to a.elf thil
11nnmff' when it aoan:d ·pa.st the
20 million population figure.
But the Department of Finance
reporkd that a declining birUl
ratt and ltu migration than tz.
pt:cted ha.s produced a 1kno-
down in population growth.
Now the estimate i.i that thie 20
million level will be pa.s:ied next
April
Record Dooding in the wake of Hurricane Camllle la ln\111-.
dating Virginla. Al left a line ol. utility J>Oloo la eJmoo\ submerged along the James River in Manakin, near Rieb· mond. while at right a small house blocks State Route 6
at Farber. The building was washed down Cove Creel:
early Wednesday.
• A young man described as "col·
lege age, nice looking and well
dressed" bas been passinJ. out $1
and JS bills in Crawfordsville, Jnd.
"1th no strings attached. The
youthful philanthropist, who refus·
es to identify hirilself, said, "I just
feel good and that's why I'm doing ll" He thrusts the money into"tho
~ands of people and quickly disap-
pears, then returns later to give
1B.way more money. 1.oca1 banks
llnd police say the money is legit-
imate. •
• Actress Loretta Young shown in
t41 .photo with hu.ibcnd Thomas H.
Lnoti toc11 granttd a divorct: a/~r
·11ears of maf1"iage. Mi.sa Young said
~wi.s had left her 13 vear.s ago, but
ihe had waited to obtain. a divorce in
)optl of reconciliation. Lewis wa.s
Drderec! to pay $1 a year in alimonv. ' /. .
Israelis Fire
Over Crowd
At Mosqae
By United Presa lotunaUoul
llraeli troops today fired lll1ola over the
heads ol a crowd d Ill.one throwing
youths in Jerusalem protestirig the fire
lhat swept through the El Aqsa Mosque,
one ol the Arab world'• holiest shrines.
Anti·lsraeli demonltraloos also broke out
in Nablus on the occupied west bank of
Jordan.
On the nghtlng !root, Syria reported
a~lrcraft lfUMerJ drove d.f · three
Israeli jet fighter PJane1 which flew over
the 11167 ceue-fiia line. A military
!pOkesman in Damucus a1Jo said Syrian
And lsraeJI ground forces ex'changed fire
late last night and el.{ly today in another
sector aloog tbe front.
The anti-Israeli demonstrations in east
Jerusalem flared .during noon prayers at
the mosque which was heavily damaged
in a fire Thursday blamed on Israeli
arsonists by the Arabs. Witnesses said a
crowd of youths, cbanUng "Nasser,
N;wer" hurled ltones at Israeli troops
_ ~ the !{196Que. The reference was
to Egyptian President Gamal Abdel
tlasser.
'Ille wi~ laid a rock struck the
head of lbe officer commanding troops at
one et the gates leading into the ·mosque
compound and then the crowd charged.
The troops counterchanged and fired "a
.number of llhot.s" into the air to disperse
the demonstrators.
Kennedy Should
Pass -Sorenson
NEW YORK (UPI} -Former
presidential assistant 'Ibeodore C •
i;orensen said Thursday Sen. F.dward M.
Kennedy should not Mill !or the presiden-
cy in 1972, even if the political debits
from biJ fat.al auto accident vanish by
then.
Choosing a phrase for Kennedy's na·
tionally televised speech to the naUon ex·
plaining the accident, which Sorensen ad·
mitted he "worked on," the: former aide
to President Kennedy said:
8 Arre•u, Sore Skulls
SF's Nixon Protest Small
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A brlef
Ourry ol violence between police and
anU-war militants outside the St. Franc!J
H9tel 11luraday night produced some aore
skulls and eight arrests.
The violence occurred when mounted
police moved into a line of about 50
demonstrators on Post Street after the
crowd began damaging autos. The police
prodded unruJy demoostrators and there
was 50nle resistance. Officen jabbed
with their clubs to drive the mass back
onto the sidewalk and chued some in-
dividual mllltants along down t ow n
strttts.
But the brief sc:ufDe was the only one
that marred nearly 10 houn of protests
in Union Square across the street from
Czech Troops,
Tanks Pull Out
After Protests
PRAGUE (AP) -Tanks and troops
pulled out of Prague today after
demonstrations on the first annivmiary
of the Soviet invasion underlioirlg the
deep division between the Czechoslovak
people and lheir Communist government.
Communist party leader G u s la v
Husak'! regime sent tens ol thousands of
Czechosklvak soktiers and l50 tanks into
downtown Prague Thursday night In a
massive demomtra.Uon c( m i I it a r y
strength.
It shocked and angered many Czechs
who remembered all too well how Soviet
tanks took over the city and the ci>untry
on Aug. 20-21 last year.
Aft.er five hours of ·maneuvering in the
streets and spotlighting 'some apartment
house windows, the tanks rolled back
acrou the Vlt.ava River and out of the ci·
ty.
'Ihe other arm7 unill also departed.
Street cleaners began clearing away U:e
debris left by the rioting in which the
public showed tts frustration at a year of
occupation and l n creasing ac·
commodaLion to Soviet direction.
tl'le hotel where Presidenl Nixon hosted
South Korea President Park Chung Hee
in a formal state dinner.
At Jt, height, a crowd of about 4,lm
gathered while the Student Mobilization
Committee presented its p rotes t •
However, the great majority of the crowd
was made up of spectators watching the
goings-on in the hotel and in the square.
And there were doi.en.s of pro-Ni.Jon
derTionstralors in evidence, too.
The crowd in the square waved signs
and chanted off-color slogans while
waiting 90 minu}es for organizers to show
up. A sign with photographs of Nixon and
Park under a "Wanted for Murder" sign went up, u did a Viet Cong flag. The
speakers finally showed up to lambast
the two chief executives.
The police department had massed its
forces early in anticipation or possible
violence. But through the day, there were
only mlnor Incident,.,. A cherry bomb
tossed from the crowd exploded near ac-
tlng Police Chief Al Nelder. A milk
carton filled with dirt hit an officer and
there were some arrests and warnings
for obscenity.
The trouble started after the militants'
Union Square pennit ran out at 8:30 p.m.
Most went home, but some went around
to the Post Street entrance to taunt late
arrivals to the state dinner. Mayor
Joseph Alioto ol San Francisco drew the
most hostile recepUon.
A small American nag was burned by
some of t~e Post Street group. Nobody
was seriously hurt.
* * * * * * Zsa Zsa Gabor Upstages
Nixon Dinner Politicians
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) .-Zsa Zsa
Gabor, the glamorous Hungarian actress
who never grows old, 5lole the Show
'I'tltll'!day night at President Nixon's state
banquet honoring South Korean President
Park Chung Hee.
Resplendent in a gold-studded pink
gown with her blonde hair piled high on
her head, Zsa Zsa confessed that she did
not know exactly wby she was one of the
few Hollywood celebrities invited to the
gliUering dinner at the St. Francis llotel.
But she told reporters that she had
• always admired the President, dating
back lo bis vice presidential days, and
that he had once autographed a
photograph for her by writing, "From
your biggest fan."
World Opinion
Sought to Force
Hanoi Reaction
Calling everyone "darling," Miss Gabor
explained that when her "beautiful borne
In Bel Air" was up for Sile, then-vice
President Nixon was looking for a house
and dropped in. That's how she got his
picture.
Later the Gabor mansion burned down
and with it went the Nixon photograph.
Distressed, Zsa Zsa wrote the Presi-
dent last month and requested a replace-
ment. She said that within two days she
reteived a glossy photograph aulograph·
ed, "Sincerely, Ric.hard M. Ni1on.11
Shortly thereafter came the invitatlon
lo the state banquet in San Francisco and
Zsa Zsa told all her fri ends that she was
"Invited to a president's ball."
Miss Gabor was completely at home
\Yith the trappings of protocol amid the
fashionably gowned and jewel-bedecked
women and fonnally attired men.
'Bernie~
Irish Police
Reserves Off
Riot Duty
BELFAST, Northern Irtland (UPI) -
The commander of British troops In
Northern Ireland &aid today Protest.ant·
dominated police reservists will be
relieved of riot duty and will not longer
be able to keep weapons in their homes.
The British decree represented a vic-
tory for Roman Catholics who have long
denounced the "B-special" group, blam·
ing most of the nine deaths in the week:
of Cathollc·Protestant rioting in Northern
Ireland on the volunteer force .
Protestanta had warned the British to
"leave lhe 8-specials alone."
Lt. Gen. Sir Jan Freeland, the BriU&h
commander, said henceforth the weapon.~
of B·special forces will be stored in a
central annory a n d is.sued o n J y in
emergencies. Unlit now the reserviru
have kept their weapons at home even
when they were not mobilized.
Freeland said he had asked the in-
spector.general of the Royal U~ter
Constabulary "to start putting the amu
issued to the Ulster Special Constabulary
in Belfast and Londonderry under central
control."
"There would be considerable security
advantages if these weapons, like those of
the regular army and T.A.V.R. (Ter·
ritorial-a:nd Volunteer Reserve) were
concentrated in armories when they are
not actually required," Freeland said.
He said he plans to expand the ar·
rangement of arms storing to other com·
munities in Northern Ireland, except in
emergency cases or where an armory is
not available.
•·where the weapons and ammunition
have been stored for safe custody in
armories, they wlll be issued to the
special constabulary at my discretion
whenever the constabulary duties require
them," Freedman said.
On present deployment or t h e
reservists. the general said he want.!
them to be employed •jonly on guarding
vulnerable points and guarding police
barracks and on road checks in border
and country areas.
* Fights
:: A 24-foo~high picture of a nude
female had a very brief exhibition
in downtown Chicago. Some people ~ailed the picture a work of art.
~thers called the police. Phill ip
'.$ross, owner of a remodeling firm, ~id he commissioned the mural
~ause he wanted his scaffolding
to be decorated with something
P."iore interesting than signs wam-Jng workers to wear hard hats.
After passers-by gawked at the
~ude and traffic began to snarl,
f,he picture was ordered taken
dawn and Gross asked his artists
f:o come up wiUt something more ~servat.ive.
"I think, as he said. h1s action at that
time ol pressure was indefensible; and I
don't think that being so reeent in the
minds oI the public and that being so
clear an Indication of his action under ·
pressure at this stage of his life that he
lhould try for the presidency in 1973."
Prague Radio said five persons had
been killed in rlot.s -lwo youths 18 and
19 ln Prague Wednelday night. and three
pereons ln Brno on 1bursday. The broad·
cast said 12 per90rts were injured in
Brno. PARIS (UPI) -The Uniled States is
banking on world opinion to force a
change in North Vietnam 's treatment <1f
American prisoners ol war, dipl<1matic
observers at lhe Vietnam peace talks
said today.
I risli Lassie Seeking Funds
t
Thousands of young Cteehs clashed in
Prague with the helmeted riot police, but
many thousands more c i t i i e n s
demonstrated in more pas.sive fashion.
=Northeast A wakens Chilly
Thu1iderswrms Pummel Great Plains, Rockies
Coaatal
In llWl'llf!f fOI wlflt 1'\try -
•IN "1 11 t .11\. 11111 "ktl"' .... M-
"'-... (lull,..., W!Mil -lo
tm • frt IS tMtt. Hiltl fod1f, fl.
y .. "'""' • ...._I._ ,.,.. .,_
• ~ ti " "' 7S. 11111 ... 9-11\ft r•'* .. , .. tttt. W1tw ......... ""-., .......... s • .., n-. l'iu.
,ltDAT
''"' """ 'iATVlci.t.Y' t:• '·"'" '·' 'lnt ... • •• , .......... t1M 1.ft'I. I.I ,..,,, llilll ...... , ...... •11• I.II'. I.I
.._ 10W ........... 1,:11•111·''
lfGlllll """ •••. . ...... ·~· ··'"· '·'
•1'" •:211 •·"'· "'-' n • ""· •!Mt •·N •-'"· lett '·" 1.m.
Temper•t11re•
.. " " n Illa IS
•5 •s .. " " . ~ " " .. n • " " .. M
" " • H fl
" " ·~ .. .. . n " ,, IM • " " 81 ,, " . ,, 11 ·"' " . •• •l n •
,, 1• ·'' " . 111 ..
lftl }1
PO " " ~ .. ..
94 SI
IN 11 " .. ·~ " .. " .... .. " 75 ., A •
111 ti 11 .,
!i.1aking an issue of the plight of U.S.
servicemen held by North Vietnam has
become an important part of Ule U.S.
position at the talks.
At Thursday's 31st session of the con-
ference, American negotiator Phillip C.
llabib took the unusual step ol reading in-
to the record a statement by 42 U.S.
senators on the prisoners.
Diplomatic observers said the U.S.
delegation, apparently recognizing the
present lack of Conununist response lo
peace moves, was taking time out to
emphasize what bad been a aide issue.
The basic aim of tbe peace t.alb, an
end to the Vietnam war, has become bog-
ged down because of Communist refusal
to even discuss peace proposals, allied of-
fici als said.
The North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
deleg8tions insist that no real discussion
of moves toward peace can come before
the United S t a t e s uncondltlonally
withdraws alJ ill troops from Vie~am •
'!'bey INlsl their treatment o I
American prisoners 11 humane-1bey
ha~e rejected demands for information on
who is held prlJOner by contending that
the United St.ates is the aggresaor in
Vietnam.
The statement signed by 42 senators
read by Habib cornplalned tjlll "l,18$ .••
American families are .UU waiting for
the release of a husband or son, aome
even for definite word whelhtt a loved
ooe Is dead or alive."
"This kind ol cruelty lmpooed on In-
nocent byJlanden II bolh l'11pugnant and
virtlfally unthlnuble," It llld.
DiplornoUc oboerven llld U.S. olflclal1
are dependlnc on world public opinion to
pressure North Vietnam on U1e prisoner
issue.
NEW YORK (AP) -Bernardette
Devlin had changed from blue jeans worn
in Londonderry battle lo a petite white
minldreas but she q).lickly made it clear
that her American fund raising drive was
in the spirit of the barricades.
"The barricades will stay up in
Northern lreland until _the government
comes down," the 22·year--0ld Miss Devlin
vowed before a cheering audience o{ 500-
lrish-Americans.
Smuggled through the barricades into
the lrish Republic and nown to the
United States, Miss Devlin, younge!t
member of the British Parliament, em·
bu'ked Thunday night on a tour to raise
money for the homeless and hungry
Roman Catholics of' Northern Ireland •
0 We ask that every pet'IOn interested
in humanity and social justice come to
our aid," ~liss Devlin, still clad in the
blue jeans she wort in battle, told a news
conference on her arrival at Kennedy
Airport.
Hours later she was ready for her first
speaking engagement before a capacity
crowd in Inwood, an Irish encla~e at the
northern Up ol Manhattan.
She bn111ght the crowd to Ila feet again
and again, charging the Protestant con-
stabulary acted "inhumanely and in..
justly" toward Ule catholic minority in
ber country.
"Wben UW!te madmen tried to come in-
to Derry/' she said, "they came In fast,
but went out a damn sight faster after we
started on them.''
"Everyone In Northern Ireland that's
worth hll ult wants an lttland where
every~ne Jntludlna: Calhollc:s,
l'nitestanll, llltld.,, Jews and anybody
else can live tof:ether :• she told the
crowd .
She praised lhe Briti5h troops for their
,ffort In brlnglna order to U1e land.
f
NEEDS $1 MI LLION
MP Btrn.dett• -Devlin
saying, "They a.re a necesaitr now
because they hive restored a ae.mblen«i
al ordfl'. Howevtr, we all know they CID-
not stay forever."
She told her sympalhetlc audlen<:<1,
1•tt'1 a strua;le of ordinary people tor 1 -I life, fret ol fear and inUmldttloo. Urum the problem Is 80lved It i:ould ••U
become 1 civil war."
Jler tour Is being sponsored by the NA•
Uonat Committee for Irish Justice and
the fund rai&in1 goaJ Is SI n1illlon.
r
UPIT .........
Real Traffic latta
Three Penn Central railroad diesel locomotives ran
unattended out of an engine house, around a yard,
off the tracks, through a fence and .onto a Boston
superhighway, just before the everung rush hour
Thursday. There was a massive traffic snarl but
no injuries.
New Jersey Biggest
Casualty of Cutback
WASHINGTON (UP 1) -
The batUeship ltew Jef'3ey, a
three-Viar veteran and the last
of her mighty kind, has been
ordered back into mothballs,
perhaps to U>e scrapyard,
because her operation Is cos-
ting too much money.
The old baWewagon was
rescued from a shipyard limbo
16 months ago so her guns, the
nine largest artU!ery tubes in
the world, could burl their
nearly one-ton shells 21 mlles
inland against targets in Viet-
nam.
Halsey's flagship than a.s a
combat unit.
She returned to the Pacific
for two tours during the
Korean war, where she earned
four batUe stars.
Of( the coast of Vietnam she
flr'ed more than 20,000 rnunds
in 434 miMi~. first against
North Vietnam and later
against targets: in the south.
When she returned after five
months to her home port of
Long Beach, Capt. J. Edward
Snyder, 44, her skipper, said
"only an idiot" would decide
not to return her for another
tour ol duty.
,,~.,. Au .. st 22, 1969 D~LY PILOT $
More Pullouts. o ·ue? .Polish Playboy
•
• I
Laird C11:ts Seen Most in Vietnam
WASHINGTON (AP) -'11>1
p~·· 100,0f».plus cul In mllltary _ .. la likely le
be viewed u a ilgn the Nb:on
adminlatratloa ls tblnklng hie
in the way of. fututt troop
wi.tbdl'lwala from Vietnam.
But he apecificaU, rultd out man reduction comet 1s part
Slain on 'Trip'?
Secretary of Def""8 Melvin
R. Laird, •nnounclltl the cut
'lbunclay, Aki the military
reductim over the next 10
months doesn't necessarily
tmply a Vietnam cut of that
scope.
combat t r o op · ..-wall · of a coogr.,.ioo>Jly dlrocted · LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
from West · Germany, South Pent.q:oa effort ta 1l11 b Voityck J"rolrowsky, slain 'With ~area and Okinawa -leaving defense spending by another . four ~ persons at the
Vietnam u one ol die· few re-$S billion for tbe current fi&cal' estate or actress Sharon Tate,
mainlnt plact1 where large year. was experhnentlng with the
numbers of AmericaM art Laird alrtadf lopped •t.1 hallucinogenic drug mescaline
sta.Uoned. billloo from the origlnal &ct111 when he was murdered, •
Pentagon offldals admit 1970 bud_get' Inherited I n close fr iend believes.
privately that Lalrd corWders January from the outgoing ad· Thomas Mlchael lla!Tlgan
potenUal replacement of U.S. ministra~. said be saw Frokowsky the
troops by South Vietnamese a Under the new economy G B t day before the m a c a b r e
factor Ill his plans to trim the drive. due to leave the defense reen ere mur<lers and the p • 11 • h
overall American m 11itar1 bodget at '77 billion, the Navy emigre told him he was oo the
fO<Ce level will lay up 100 shipo Including DecIS' •• on Due flllh day of an eight-day Fur t benn«e. President the BatUesbip New Jersey, the mescaline trip.
Livm' g tr --1 NI.Ion said in June he bopt.(l to Air Fon:e will curt.ail training M e s c a I i n e p r o duces
Ule be able to mort than match a flights sharply and the Anny SAIGON (UPI) -It will hallucinations similar to the
suggestion by for m e r is 1upposed save $500 million take .at least five days to find more potent LSD and OCC41'S
Still Soars•, Secretary of Defense Clark M. in its: various o p e r a t I o n , out wba:t the Anny is gOing to naturally in the cactus butt90s Clifford to get 100,000 combat maintenaoct and training ac-chewed by some American
troops out <A Vietnam this ilviUe.s. do about the eight U.S. Special and Mexican Indians in tribal
.
I
for him Ill hll native Clnad ••
He told d~vee be waa fn
Monhatlao Beach, IS mnes
from. the murder acene, the
niif>t of the alaylll!IJ. Al~
queittlonlng, be wu releuedi
Harrigan first met
Frokowaiy In June, 19111. and
be had cone to the Tate home
Aug. 7 to Invite hhn to a parfy
on Saturday. But" be did not
give the Pole the address. 1'ii•
was too far gone on the trlp.
He'd never have been able to
understand the directions.''
U • Jul ye'1'. Some memben of Congress Forces (Creen Berets) of-religious rites. p Ill Y Some military off I c:: er 11 will find Laird closing down ficers acmsed of murdering a Harrigan said Jay Sebring,
believe the next withdrawal military butallalions ln their Vietnamese civillan, a U.S. who the n·ext night would be •
WASHINGTON (U.PI) announced by the Preiklent home stales and that could milllary -sPokesman said to-one of the five slain, was sit-WASHINGTON (AP) -
Okinawa Return
Slated by '72?
The cost or living crotinued its will probably amount to no bring howls ol. anguish. day. ting in a chair with his head Secretary of state William P.
d climb . J 1 1 more than 25,000 men. Further The manpower reduction Is "There are at least 450 to tilted to one side, "as though Rogers and Japanese Foreign
otea Y ID u y, ncr..,. pullouu c:oold lake place over expected to leave U.S. 500 pages ol testimony to be he were watching a movie on-Minist<r Kiichl Aichi will try,
ing five-tenths of 1 percent comln& mooth!:. strength at about S.3 million typed," he said. '"Illa~ alone ly he could see." to reach a general un-
mostly because of b I g b er At Thursday's new1 con-men by next July. wl!l probably take five days." He said Mis11 Tate was not derstandlng here Sept. 12 to
prices for food and services, ference, Laird would not com-"I shall strive to insure that After the tesUmony has high and seemed unaware of relijrn control of Okinawa &o
the Labor Department mit hlmaelf on the Id· thecutshavethe'Jeastpossl-beenprepared,Col.HaroldD. the condition ot Frokowsky Japanbytm..
reported today. ministration decision t bis ble impact on our readiness," Seaman of Hampton, Va ., and Sebring, "As thoukh there Slate Deparbnent olflcla1s
'Ille Bureau ot L a b 0 r month on whether to co Laird said, "but l want the chainnan of the lnve11tlgalion, was nothing out of the who disclosed this said tl"9
Statistics said c 0 n sumer beyond the presenUy authoriz-American people to know that will make his recommendation ordinary." . general understanding woui:I
prices have risen 3.6 percent ed 25,000-man troop reduction there wUI be an inevitable whether to drop the c:harges or Harrigan surrendered to include an agreement on U.S.
80 far this year, for a in Vielnam. weakmlng of our worldwide go ahead with a court martial police Monday after be learn-military rights on Okinawa
1 'I\Je "more than 100,000" military nM:ture." of the Green Berets. ed authorities were searching after the reversion date. seasonally adjusted annua 1_..:::~..:::::.::..:::::.::..:::=:..:......::::::::::.:::..::.~..:::..::: ________________________ ::.._ ________ _
rate of more than 6 percent.
This is the highest annual rate
in the first seven months of a
year since the Korean War
year of 1951.
But the bureau alsc reported
that an increase in the take.
home pay of rank-and-file
worken matched the July
price increases to leave their
actual purchasing power about
the same.
The price increases for July
added to gloomy news already
from the Commerce Depart-
ment, which has just surveyed
Ule business scene and found
more inflaUon ju.st about
everywhere it looked.
The two reports were not
encouraging news to the Nixon
administration, which b a s
vowed to curb inilatlon and
hopes to have that mlSsion -
its foremost domestic goal -
accomplished within one year
at lbe most.
Another first from Newport National Bank
But the Defense Department
revealed 'Thursday that she
will be decommissioned as
part of a $3 billion Pentagon
budget cut.
"It was simply a matter of
mooey," Aid one naval or4
ficer. The government spent
$30 million to put her back into
fighting shape, and it cost
$26,000 a day to keep her 79 of-
ficers and 1,556 enlisted men
ope.rating.
Coed Jail Cell
The decision to return her to
duty as the world's only
operating battleship was a
controversial one from the
start -not because cl her
record but because some
naval olficers felt the money
could be better spent.
'The Philippine Sea, the
carotines, Leyte, Luzon, Two
Jima -her log is a roll call of
World War ll in the Pacific. In
thme days she saw more
service as Adm. William F.
Girl Held 8 Days as Man
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
(UPI) -AUantic City police
admitted Thursday they had
failed to separate a girl from
the boys.
They said Charles Albert
Nehus, who was tossed Jn the
men's section of the Atlantic
City Jail Aug. 12 on theft
charges, turned out to be 17-
year~ld Phillis Kachur, a
young lady who favor 1
trousers, loafers and shirts.
"Well, hell, it's hard to ten
these days," said Police Capt.
Albert Wilson when the seluaJ
revelation was made during
an examination of the prisoner
in AUan~c City Hospital.
The captain said M 111
Kachur had spent eight days
with a male cellmate. He said
"'The cellmate never knew hli!I
mate's secret Or if be did,
he's not admitting tt."
Wili!lon said that during her
jail l!ltay she spoke in a low
voice and never took a bath
and that she also told Jail of.
ficials she had lllffered a
chest Injury.
n1ou111va
aSICk
IOY8 bug •••
sae Dr. IYerson
athlsnaw
.bog h•dQUll'lft
SATURDAY TV BANKING
SATURDAY TV BANKING IS CONVENIENT AND EASY
Banking on Saturday w.11 be an added
convenience at Newport National Bank for people Who
missed banking during the week, or When emergencies arise
and ~ra ca$h is needed. Just drive up to our unique
Auto 1V Drive-in screen on any Saturday and, after pushing
the button, one of our television-selected tellers
wiU cash checks, aocept deposits, make withdrawals on
savings accounts, accept loan payments:.
Issue money orders and even open new accounts.
Dur special 1V hostes5es will serve you and your family
refreshments and show Y'llJ hoW lo ~perate
tlte 1V Banking. It's convenient, fun and very easy.
Saturday TV Banking can make your life
a little more pleasant.
II BnlQI
at these locations only
. IN FULLERTON
SUNllY HIUS OfflCE • H•rbor II em • sn.7290
UNIVERSITY OfflCE • Ent Cltapm>n al Sble Cone11 • 871~
IN NEWPORT BEACH
wmtllff OFFICE• Westcliff at Donl • 642.3111
SATURDAY TV BANKING IS AVAllABLE BETWEtN TllE HOURS OF 9:00 A.M. AND 1:00 P.M.
Allo opon <M17dqbll 5.-00 pm.and 6.-00 p.m.oo fddoya.
•
•
-·--:=-:..:::.::=::::;;:;-..a;;..,,;.::::-5.~· ..... ~-:;.::.=.:. ::::::=: -:::--:-7=7 .~' .. ;• ,• .~.-.. ~.-. ·.-. -.---------------••save l .. -• 4 •••
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE ; .
I • Spirit of Vigilantism
~ ls the spirit ol the vlti)allle lialDI In 1-U laWI -and throuCb cl-cooperation with ~ /
Thll point WU ~ by Police' 1.t. 119bort
McMurny. "Too ~ irlerchanla In towit-!DOii i'd
1ay -refuse to sign complaints about vi~ In llielt
stores," be11old,the DBA. "They don't want to lake •tlit ·
time to go t0 court. One Aton °'""'r told mi he c•ui~t
25 abopllllers In a month. I asked hhn wbat he did. ~e
said, •l took the Items away fJ'l)m them or made them
Beed!? • . \,
' Comment& made by members of the Downtown
BuJ1nea Aaaociation (DBAJ at a meellnc on th• "Hip.
pie Situation" last week mlCht. leed you to tblnlc so.
Anl!Y merchants spoke Of using "utra-le&al"
melboda to unmake the hippie ..-.
"Sl>ava their heads, escort them lo tho city llmlls
and i.u them not to come bad<," 1u11e-one lady.
".Maybe we all ou&bt to start pecking .45's" said a
pay'." •
TheJ.oung 1boplilten, II .can be aafely aJ1umed, then we to other 1tore1.
bulb\eiaman. .
'!here Is no reallOll, 11id another, why . storekeepers
can'I boolt the price of apples for hippie customers
from a nickel each to $1.IO.
It was also·suggested that tna1much as the young
transients represenf a "health menace," they should
be dOCOl\tamlll.ltad -with lye if necel9ary -"In
order to keep our city jail clean."
Fallure to cooperate with ancl support local law·
men also sl!owed up at ncent City COUJICil budget'
dl..,,uS&ions. Several tnpayen ur1ed councilmen to r"'
duce the police force, In the face ot a Ill percent tn-
crea!e in arrests for dru1 v1ol1Uons.
' CouilcUmen Instead hiked police manpo\Ver. But
they did It without any strong support from the bwlneas
community. And councilman could .have.. used a little
help in feodlng oft th• cui.tax .. at-any-cost crowd. The all·bUt unanimoos attitude of the DBA mem·
ben appeered best typl!iad by one . man who reported
he saw police one dey arrest a suspected drug user on
the beach. t\J several youths booed the arresllng of'
tlcen, recelled the slockbroker, "I clapped and yelled
at the police to break b11 arm."
The DBA's energl .. and power will be more· pro-
ductive U they can be concentrated on the constructive'
rather U>an intlammalOry' approaches to handlliie tfrls
di!licult and !rmtratinl problem. •
I The dlljllBY of.bate at the DBA meellng was fright·
enlng. But It was born of frustration - a frustration
over · the !allure Of laws to bring an end to Laguna's
hippie Influx. In that respect, Ille bale and the frustra-
tion are undentandable.
D~teline San Clemente
Nevertheless, Ille views expressed by the business-
men rei;>rtsent no answer tO a complex .socloloitcal
phenomenon. And when their pent-up anger !Pld lrus.-
traUon cools a bit, the businessmen realize that.
Newspapers lhrou&hout the world uu. put week
were Inundated with reports about President Nixon and
his Western White House activities. Tba articles wera
all datelined "San Clemente."
The an.<Wer must be foond throuCb understanding
and careful appraisal ol the many complex elements of
the problem, tb;oUCb strict enforcement Of existing
But don't you believe lt. Most Of llUlse storipa were
di.sclosed and written al the Surf and Sand Motel in
Laguna Beach, where dally .Preas briefings were held.
Green Beret-CIA Incident
Case Can't Be Covered Up
' WASHINGTON -Th< cumulative er.
feet ·« a series of incidents involving the
Peofagon ii 1Je1ni underelllmoled Jn lbe
Nbon AdmllllltrotiGa. 'llleM lncldenta
have o n e cammoo f8dar. 'lbe Ntson
Adminiatr•Uca ii not beloi lrul< llld
open about ~. llld to the -It ii not. that much ...,.,. fuel la ldded to the
alftady rqil!I flames ol ..U.P~
1e11UmenL
The Green Beret caa la undoubted!J •
burt1t1Cfatlc hassle between the Central
Intelligence Agency and the Arm,.SpecW :rarce1, envenomed by the hatreds and
fnlstt1Uons of the war·zone mentality.
Emqing rrom this Incident is a phan-
t&snq:c:ria of public impressions darken--tnc th e heroic image of t h e Green
Bema and deepenJn1 the COD1plrat«lal
lmqe rl. the CIA. So, In the e n cl, both
become t b e murderoua agents of
mystertom, baleful llld bmlillng policies
Jn the mire nf the Vietnam war.
POR WEEKS THESE hqpressions
have been permitted to grow because no
me is tokl why the four Green Beret of·
ficen were impriloned in the death of a
SOUth Vietnam national IUSpected of
being a double agent. No inlonnaUon has
been Iii..., out officially oo wby the m<n
were held or what they are charged with.
Salp rumor and .. port &Upply a pico
ture ol. order and counterorder by the
CIA in the as.qs-inaUon, with the Green
Bereta u the premature executionen.
Not a word of explanation has ernerpd
from the Pent.agon or the White Home in
a cue which fascinatu especially thole
who wish to blacken the American forces
tn Vietnam as wanton killers ridin&-down
a dtfenieless people.
)Vben the new wave of war proteatl
,
"
y
......... ~
I, • !
becinl. u It WldClubtedly wtll before this
year la avor, both tbe G-Bereil and
the CIA will' be pilloried u murdero<U
oymbola rl. pQblic dlqrece Jn Vielnam.
The cue 11 not oomethlni the ad·
mlnlltratlon, or the Army Special Forces;
or the CIA can cover up. Without ade-
quate explanation. this incident becomes
new ammunition for those who are only
temporarily holding their fire on lbe Pen-
tagon,
THE UNITED STATES mlUtary qrec.
ment with Thailand f a1lt: into the ume
category of unei:plaloed arrange:menta
which <Idle public doubt and dJalrult.
For moollw, the Penta,,., the Stale
Depart ment and the NiJon
AdmlnlstraUOQ 11 a whole have had an
-1W>!ty to explain the ··-or the military qreement between the Unlled
States llld 1llalland and iii force and ef·
feel
Blt,by bit the slory has come out that
such an acreement ei:l!t.s, that it involves
the pOootbll uae of American troopi to
OJll'OIO Commllllllt forces In Laoo, and
that these troope would be under at least
nominal Thal command. The reluctance
with which thla bu been unofficially ad-
. milted only helghteN the lmpres~on of
aecret· commttmenta whJch could involve
the United Stal<a In 1 aecond !root In
Asia at the ume time President Nli:on
proclllms we are redlJC'ing our AJ1an
military commllments.
Incest Increases
117 NORMAN NIXON, M.D.
'The taboo aganst sexual intercourse
between blood kin of the immediate faml·
);y -particularly father and daughter,
mother and son, brother and sister -has
ex1ated in all societies since time im·
menorial. ln only a few privileged
dulel. usually royalty, and tn some sec-
tarian groups, were incestuous relations
ever permitted.
Conaidered a universal crime today,
Jsn and penaJtles covering incest in all
of 1he United States date !>&ck ooly to
tlllZ. Many states still do not c:ove:r
cohabitation of aunts and nephews, uncles
and nlea.1, first. cousins. or brother•i.n·
law and slster•io-law.
l'UNlSllMENT FOR tlJiJ r<n1l ol
permUd .ex behavior varies from state
to state. Usually only the male is
cuUpted, although incest is just one
t)'Plptom of a di!turbed family silUIUon
In wtllc:h the mother. daughter or llster
OOlll<llma ii the inltJgal« in I .....
lbMlllp which may coOifuae l!Ddltlcled
'
fer montbt or yun.
l\IOll Americana· believe Incest Is
almolt non-extatent, IJnce these crlmu
are seldom reported to the police. Hor-
ri!led at even the tbotliht, mtDY people
art embarTaaaed just to talk about it.
Nevertbelw, psychiatrists have been
reporting increasing numbers <lf in·
dividuals who have committed incest. No
aerlously disturbed family is immune
fn:rn this tr1gedy, rtaarcl.lesa of racial,
rtllgloua or econcrnic bacign>Ullcil.
EVERY CHILD, when 3 to 4 years of
1ge, begins what Is known as the Oedipus
or Electr1 relationship with the'Jp.rent ol
the oppos.ite sex as a part normal
perwonaUty developmenl
:--Wbea Plf't'Jltl are aware of this family
trtanglo and !real tt appropriltely, the
boy IUCCUBflltly resc>lves his romantic
feellnp and fafttUita toward his mother,
juJI u a sJrl warkJ through llmllar
c>prlclous reeling, ror her father. by lhe
Orlt or teCOnd grade, then marches on to
the grtener fields of normal boy·girl rela·
UOnahlP.B l•ter. But only when both
pitretQ outwardly show }ove ror each
olher' u a rell«tton or their happy mar-
ria(e.
wmr INNUllll:RABLE ramlli" brok·
en by dJvorce, detertlon, and death each
)'UI'. there are countlesa remarriages In
"1llc:h c:hlldrtn ere Involved. Since judges
lllUlily awani the cuslody of young
chlldr.,, to the mother, a new al~
uaUoa arilet when a wom1n rem1r-
r1... For the lllepchllcHlepportnl It·
traction, referred to as the "Phledra
comple1," btcomts the counterpart of
lhe Oedlpua and Electra rtlatlooahlpe.
Here again there has been nothing but
dis.sembling by administration officials on
what the Thal -ll10lllS. The \erul of the ......-... lflld _,,
from the public. A11utineo II received ·
only Iran unidentified ...._ that I h e
otreement II not .au1-Uc In lta effect
or of such a blndlni nature that It mllhl
as well be. MUCh more is needed tban tbe
word of unidentllied sourcu: on t.bil point.
ANOTHER SOURCE or distrust and
doubt is lhe manufacture and movement
in this country of Jetbally dangerous
gastJ1 and compounds, eiperlmentalions
in spreading epidemics Jn warfare, and
the potenllal di&ast.er from wrecked car-goes of such fatal agents. ~ lhat,
the uUllty of the policy of manufacturing
and storing IUCh agents is in question.
In each cw, bQwever, a wall of mi.sun·
derrtand!ng ta: perm1tttd to rise because
Inadequate explanaUOl'll and justifica·
tlons, or no explan1tton or justification at
all, come from rttpOl'IMble aources will·
ihg to be ldenUlied by name.
It ii as if tbe PtntalOft, the. State
Department and tbe Nixon
AdminlatraUon believed they were pro-
tected by an imprelJlable · wall of
juatlllable secrecy In the nallOllll In-
terest.
But the time has Ion1 ll1lce puled when
the need fO< secrecy II acoeJlf'd .. I
justifiable or pracUcabla defenae in all
cases.
If the Pentagon lriahta to aee men af
the pubUc'a confldtnoe drain away tt wUI
conllnue to operate behind the ableld of
aecrecy when lranknea would better
aerve lta own and the•naU<llal ,intertst.
• Ill. u~·.s .
Particularly rar older atrll durinl pr ..
puberty aod early adoleaceoce, the step-
father often is the flnt object of their
normal interest in adulta m the opposite
1e1. The aame ia true in altuations like
Phaedra'• when a young woman marTies
a much oldtr man and falll in love with
his aon of a former marr,tqe.
SINCE THE stepchild Ind stepparent
are not blood relatlvel, the incest taboo
is diluted conalderably. Unless the new
family unJt 1a a aou.nd one, with both
parents loving and respecting each other,
the sLe:pparent-stepchi.ld attraction can
get out of hand.
Individuals who resort to Incestuous
behavior certainly ate mirtd up emo-
tionally. The families· In whkb U-of.
fense1 OC'C'\lr usually are to dlsrupted that
children cannot develop lnto normal,
health;r adults. With suspk:iOM. rivalries
and jeakluslu so tnten11fied, family
harmony and cooperaUon are markedly
diminilhed. Punishment alone ii not 1
detem.nt for incest but psychiatric treat..
ment of the family, not just of one. in-dividual, can be bllptuL
Dear
Gloo my
Gus:
Saddleback lo over the hill.
"'" ....._ ""'*" ,.__., ....... ""' ..... ,..,, ,..... .. .. ~-SWiii
,_ Mf ........ ~IMftlf ._ 0.tff PUM,
L
TV Gave New
Image of
Pat Nixon .,
M'oi;tern runmunJcations lift the woman
k"""" collDquially as lhe "First l.ady"
Jnto ~ public Ulht in a way impoaslble
in' the last centiiry, This was disclosed cn
television earlier this month bi a half·
hour narration by Mrs. Richard NU:oo of
her trip around the world.
Further, the program gave evidence cf
the profound effect a Pre11dent'1 wile Can
have on her husband's national atanding.
Washington and Lincoln Witt perhaps
exceptions. They were · ao preem..bltnt
their wives hardly touched their careers.
Martha Washington, still 1 a r I e I y
unknown, was a colonial dame who kept
he.!' place. Mary Lincoln wu a protean
figure whose husband turned out to be of
such immense stature that she has
be.tome a passing oddity.
IN OUR 11111E WE have known thtte
extraordinary wives, Jacqueline Ken·
nedy, Ladybird Johnson and Eleanor
Roosevelt. We appear to have beeq
glamorized into unreality in our view of
the then Mrs. Kennedy. Mrs. Johnson had
such eminent good liense u in some
measure to counterpoise her huaband'1
1agglng fortunes. l'drs. Roosevelf was
probably the most remarkable. Of the
White House. wives, because she was
ltldom there.
Fcr six months Mrs. Ni xon's image
(that word!) resisted erforts Clf the news
media to make her interestins.
EVerybody acquainted with her knows
her as a woman of fine character and
high intelligence. But she had been seen
as a passive figure , in public appearances
alweys calmly beside her husband, yet
only an adjunct or lhe Presidential
prestnce.
WHAT SHE HAS lacked publicly is
animation, but this is a tricky apparition.
It may be interpreted aa inability to pro-
ject personality, which is pallivity, or as
true modesty. These are widely differing
traits, though they often wear the same
guise. We i.now that from our everyday
experience, people wDo setm aloof at
first glance, bul are not aloof when
known.
This television program lhould have
altered some impressions m a n y
Americans ti.ad for the yeu Mrs. Nl:ron
has been in the public eye.
First, it was skillfully paced and pro.-
portioned, in a hair-boor instead of an
hour. We had fortknowled1e Mrs. Nixon
would ~ Impeccable in action and al·
titude, but we did not. know how she
would tran9Cend this social value. And
that she did.
SHE DJSPLA YEO a movin& reeling ror
bumble human bein&S, people who have
lost 1n rue. or never hid a chance,
retarded children, orphaned children,
desperately wounded American soldiers.
'Mle facts of these people 11 she bent
over them and took tMlr hands glowed
wilh a liA:hl wblcb fortstalled any cynical
efforts to see ber vblta aa'lnsplred ~Y
seU·interesL She was other than studious
ol how she would appear.
Then whtn she talktd, eaplainlng her
approach to differing 9CeMI In differing places, you perce!Ved slle wu not aloof
at all, bul a wam>hearled, concerned
woman In a part of the world where all
does not come up ro.w1.
nlis Is of COW'M but one penon'g view~
J>Oint, but It mu.st be nkt at a duty in in·
terpr.Ung events. As f u r t h e r in-
teri>tetatlon, It b submltled here Iha~
whatever the pollUcal profit or the
Presidential journey, the human profit la
Incalculable, due chiefly to Mrs. Nixon 's
own concept of, m! responH to, ~ task
put belcn llor.
Latest Moon LtJltding
Most Suicides
Among Affluent
We Wert talking about hls Soclat
Studies, and my older boy asked me to
tell him about the Depression. I tried to
explain it as humanly and graphically as
possible -although the memory still
hurta -and happened to mention the
number of men who committed suicide in
those days.
\Vh&t surprised him mosl was the ma.
jority or suicides v.·ere men or affluence
-!¥Inkers itnd brokers and buainessmen
-and not the very poor. He found it
hard to un:<1erstand why this should be
the cause.
AS WE GROW OLDER, however, we
begin to recognize that a privilege
wlthclrawn Is more painful than a
dej)rlvatlon we have always Jived with.
As Aristotle said long ago, no man feels
chtated for not having an eye in tbe back
of his head; but tf men were born with
rear eyes, a person without one. would
nsent his 1'blindness."
Growing <llder is also corrupting, in a sense. We become used lo what wt never
had before, and . find it harder to live
without such advantages than we ever
dreamed .would be possible after we had
them. U anything proves "original sin"
ln human nature:, it is the lns1.diou! way a
IUJUry turns into a "necessity." And it is
far easier to do without a higher standard
oI uvm,: than to retrench after having it
POOR PEOPLE were not much worse
off in the Depression than they had been
before : there was a tightening of belts,
but belts had always been ti ght for them.
Jt was the prOliperous suddenly racing
poverty v.·ho took a look down the
precipice and found the dlslance so shat·
tering -and many preferred to jump
than to roll down into the deep ecooomic
chasm.
Indeed, for those who remember it,
there was a certain kind of grim
camaraderie among the poor in those
da)'!. a feeling of everyone being in it
together. much like Londoners Jn the
Blitz -and this sense of sharing a com-
mon misery provided the poor with a
morale that Was lacking Jn the newly
depr)vecl .
ACTUALLY, SUlCIDF.S have always
been more common among the affluent
than among the poor; the latter have
hopes that if they could get a little more
money, most of their problems would be
solved. But the prosperous already see
that there ls no end to this proctsl!i, and
are forced to the candid conclusion that
personal happiness does not depend upon
the acquisition of more worldly goods.
What is a pity is that the social and
moral virtues engendered by wan and
depressions lend to erode in times of •
peace and prosperity. We act belier
toward each other when things are bad,
but quickly forget the common welfare
when the danger has past -and just
when we need it most.
Call I t 'New Humanism'
"President Nixon has recommended to
Congress a program or legislation which
he calls the. 'new federallam,' but it may
be more aptly described as a 'new
humanism' in government.'' -David
Lawrence, Wasbinfton Siar.
"He (President Nixon) has dealt with
the intolerable paradox of American life.
He has insisted that poverty in a pros-
perous country must be eliminated. He
has asked the Congress for tax reform.
He hu begun withdrawing troops from
Vietnam, Md put a limit to American
responsibility for keeping peace all over
the world." -James Reltol, Ne..-York
11mes.
0 1t was thoroughly In order ~l the
Pmldent ur1ed the elimination rl. tbla
'coloual fa1Jure1 In favor of • brand·ne.w
approach. We applaud that decision, as.
in fact, we think most citizens alto will
agree in broad tenns with the basic goal1
the. Pre11ident set forth.'' -W.Ulactoa
Star Editorial.
"TO DESCRlllE the Nixon plan u bold
ls an understatement. It t1 a reform to be
Dear George:
\Vhat'1 the matt.er with the mid·
dlwged generaUon, George? How
come you cats are ao rkilculously
hung up on how long somebody11
hair is~ of all !itupid thlnt;et
NINETEEN AND SHAGGY
Dear Sbago:
You know what, Shqo? You're
going to make a real areat bilOI Jr
you don't watch ouL Where do you
cet oU condemning a whole genera-
I
Gutlllt Editorial · j \~. ..
compared with th' original adoption of
the Social Security Act in 1936."
Richard Wilson , Columni&:l.
"His work incentive proposal, H
energetically and imaginati vely ad·
ministered, in time should lead to an
enonnous reduction in relief rolls and
costs. The gain in individual 11elf·reliance:
and self-respect could be even more im·
portant to the national well-being than
the potential savings to the taxpayers.''
-Wasbintton News F.dJtorfal.
"The President cannot implement hi!!
program. Now it is up to Congress. And
Congress very clearly should heed Mr.
Nixon 's urging to offer opportunity and
dignity to those in need inste!MI ot a
v)cioos cycle of dependency."
PhUadelphl1 Bulletin Eclitorlat,
tlon? 1 not only don't care bow long
your halr is, and think anybody who
condemns today's kids is nulot, tJut
T 've got a strong hunch you can
hardly weit ror your age to catch
up with your basic 1todglness. Back
to the e>presso, pseudo-hip -YOU
ain't COMiJ\a U!.
(Send your pn>blem1 to George,
the natlon'• No. 1 authority on
Sideways Thlnkl"I.)
.-...-.-,,.~~~.oc.«T"'"'""~·~·'"""""'""ll"!""'"'-..,.~""""":::;:;::;:::;;:;;~:;::o,.. .. ., ............ llll., .. 111111111111111111 .. lll!lllllllllllllll!!l!lll!l .. lllll .. !!!!!ll!l!l'.'lll!!!!!ll!ll,il!llllll'!!l!ll!lllllll~llllll!!lllll!lll!llll!l!ll!llllll!llllll
----,
\
•
~Auto Show Premiere Given .<Sreen tigfit
' ' . . On the freeway rolling nonstop to the Sixth Annual lnternallnnal
Automobile Show of Orange County are the county's nine AlsiStance
League chapters, which annually·spotu0r the benefit Premiere Night.
1970 models of foreign and' domestic automobiles will be unveil-
ed In !he Anaheim Convention Center Wednesday, Oct. 8, and the eve-
ning for car buffs promises to be as dazzllng as· the new cars them.
.selves. a
Themed A Parade of Progress of Wheels, the collection ol
''wheels" will be the first showing of the new models in the country.
In the .. driver's seat" for the premiere i.s M11s. Nickolas J.
Frank Jr. of Corona del Mar, general chairman. Assl.sUng her is a
countywide committee of Assistance Leaguers, including members of
the hosting Newport League. ' .__
Newport Beach members Iendi,ng.a hand are the Mmes. Colin
Re111olds, chapter presidfnt;· Walter Lier, co--chainnan ; Robert E.
Leitner, ticket chairman; John Davies, secretaryi J"rederick Pres.
cott, angel chairman; Wilbur Reynolds, dinner chainnan; Orrin W.
\Yright Jr., dinner co-chairman; Brode 'Busche, decorations; James
Winton, hostesses; 'Frederick Prescott, fashion coordinator; Roy Hall,
publicity: Edward A. Boyd, awards; Hugh K. Wright, transportation,
and Paul Rogers, steering committee.
Representing the Newport Beach Assistance League auxiliaries
are Mrs. Claude L. Patterson, Las Reinas, and Mrs. James M. Sink,
Juniors.
Committee members from Huntington Beach,· as announced by
Mrs. Gilbert Turnbull, chapter president, are the Mmes. Richard
Crouch, chairman; Rich·ard Crawford, tickets; Norman Warner, host·
esses and dinner reservations; Hugh Stutsman, publicity; James
Sayer. awards, and Fletcher Dart, decorations ...
Laguna Beach League members offering their services are the
Mm.es. Thomas Jones , chapter president; Charles Coffyn, ·auto show
chamnan; Theodore Taylor, tickets; Robert Marvin, fashions; Pat ..
rick Randall, publicity; Milan Chiba, dinner; Donald Conklin decora-
tions, and Daniel Schryver, ways and rheans. '
Premiere-goers will gather in the Grand Lobby of the Conven-
tion Center for cocktails from 6:30 to 8 and those wishing may dine
in the Anaheim Room at 8 p.m.
'nckets now are available from any Assistance League mem-
ber at $5.
Proceeds from the admission tickets will further the philan ..
thropic work of the nine league chapters, but dinner ticket& will be
offered as a convenience with no benefit to the Assistance League.
-6-men PUTTING'THE CHAIRMAN IN THE .DRIVER'S SEAT -Better"
than on a television show, Mrs. Nickolas J. Frank Jr. of Corona
del Mar has been put in the driver's seat for the Sixth Annual
Intematlooal AutomoOile Show Premiere of Orange County. As-
sjstance League members throughout _ Orange County have re-
~eived ·the green Ugh'! and are spnaing "toward the-gala Oct. 8
benefit premiere in Anaheim Convention Center.
••
Rivierans
Open Year
With Luau
Inaugurating the 1 9 6 9 -7 0
party season for Riviera Club
m'embers will be a gala luau
Saturday, Sept. 13, in the
outrigger.
The club's Guys and Dolls
chairman, Mrs. John J .
\Villiams Jr. of Laguna Beach
announced that the Hawalian-
style evening will include din-
ner, danclng and distinctive
Island entertainment.
Humalemale's, a Polynesian
entertainment troupe, w 111
provide dancing, singing and
instrumental selections.
Rivlerans may m a k e
reservations for themselves
and guests by teJephoning
Airs. Williams at 4M-3J07.
Assisting the chairman Is Mrs.
Gilbert Hodge3 Jr. of Cameo
Sbol'<s.
Cocktails wru be served at 7
p.m. and dinner will follow at
I.
The Balboa Bay Club will be
the seWng 5ept. 10 when
members welcome a musician
from the Lawrence Welk show
to a luncheon at 12:30.
Cocktails will be served at
11:30 1.m.
, .....
SOME ENTERTAINING THOUGHTS-Mrs. E. M. JohDston,and '
Mrs. John.-J. Williams Jr. (seated; Jett to right) enjoy the dance
offered by Kalua and music of Lucky who will be perfonning dur-
,. '
Ing Ila Rlv)•Ja Club'a luau Saturday, Sept. I~, In the Outrigger.
The entertillners ..,, part of the Humalemale's, a Polynesian
troupe. "
Press Workshop
Chairmen Bid
' When school bells ring, press chaJnnen for parent~eacher units will be well infonned on how
to report news of their organizations il they attend a very important meeting next Tuesday.
The DAILY PILOT will conduct the annual
workshop for press chairmen and presidents at 2
p.m. in Sl. John the Baptist Catholic School, 1021
W. Baker St:, Costa Mesa.
In charge of the s~
sion will be Miss Judy
Hurst, associate society
editor of the DAILY
PILOT and Mrs. Gared
Smith, DAILY ,PILOT
coordinator of PT unit
news in the Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach, Laguna
Beach and Mission· Viejo
areas. All ~ress chalrrpen
and president! of parent
teacher unit~ In these
areas are invited. Furth·
er information is avail·
able from Mrs. Smith,
&t&-2097, and directions to
the meeting loc~tion are
Mn. Gared Smith available by cll)ling the , school at MS.2712.
Coffee will be served during the session and
question and answer period.
Mrs. Smith, begllllling her third year .. unit
coordinator, is a graduate of San Fernando High
School and the mother of two high school age
daughters. ·
Her husband has been a licensed architect since
1956 and opened his own office in Newport Beach
in 1961. · .
Mrs. Smith is a member of the Women's Archi·
tectural League and has been affiliated with PFO,
PTA and Camp Fire Girls. · ·
Heirs Loom Anxiously Over Stepmoth~r-to-be·' s Treusseau
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'll man lhil
brief. AD we need Is a one-line answer.
E\·eryone lnvolved in this family mess
has ogreed lo abide by your decision.
-l ohould be done with the beauU!ul
silver, chlna, linen and antique furniture
when a widower marries? He hall two .
married d1ughter1 and • crabby young
glrlrrlend who will be hiJ wife within a
few weeks. Thank you in advance -
TROUBLE IN TEXAS
DEAR TROUBLE: If tlM widower
wl1lle1 to lcttp aD of tt, he abolld dn IG -
unle11. tl coune, bta lite wH• left
1pe<lfk: ....,.,II lo ker deuplen.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm IC~.
ANN LANDERS ~
"
Please help me. la lt,,ossible to get hook·
ed on Hiet pills? I've been taklnc them off
and on for five yearL 'nle weigbt I
wanted to Jose ii gone and lhere Is no
need lo be on lhe pills any loneer bul I
can't ill off them. They giva me a lilt..
especially when It cornea to 1e1.
Last week I tried to get along without
pills and I couldn't do IL. Thi>, ill wbal
scared me. The aecond day wilhoul pilll 1
!ell Jelbargic and deprmed -nol hi-
,lcresled In anythln& ~ '3I)eclaUy my
husband. I told him I had a headache. '
The next day I went back on the pilla..
J don't want to go to• doctor becau.se I
might get somebody in trouble. I get the
pllla from a friend who work• In a drug
store. What I! In them· that g1ve1 me such
a boost! Am I hooked? -UNSIGNED
' DEAR UN: n. pllft p-~y c:oallln So far I baven'I seen lh< Hit. Wbal's C..lnll, ML v.._, N, Y. del-wblck cu Indeed be butl . lhe mailer?_ No response? -S. F. EX· I coold go on but Qll<O llmllallolll
formln1. Go lo YMr doc&or at once ad AM mUe It tmpoulble. T1dt U1t reprnab
••k ldm ,. llelf YGa -Ille ullll. Ul D'~ ' . 'Ille flnl 11..._.., INll walll to IUal< lsp't ~al lo 'ume yocrr "frleodly" • ,DAAA S. F.: Ive W M m.8Y / .o wbo wrt&e. .
dragg11t; But [·taa ttl1 yoa, dur woinan, rel,_.a f CIJl't prfi:lt tr.em Ill I.-. lllllt
Wltit• h • did ·,,.. 1ou wu .t. act· ti. ltow'• &ldi for 1•nen? .,. ~How rar ahould • teenage couple go?
frteadUlp. -R.iilq Mii c.., •. 81'. Loall; Can necking be safe? When does ii
Spaan CoulncUou Su~ Mick.· Dal' become loo ho! lo handle! Send for Ana ,DEAR ANN LANDERS: A 1'hlle back ri• GraH'. Inc ' Broottya· Coaiei 'Landers' booklet, "Neckina and PelUnf
you prJnted a letter from a w~ma.n whose O.tmlc-al ~~~1 Newark· Ralpll -Whit Are the Limit.I?" Mall your re-
huaband couldn 't get a job 'because he JOies, ~ammenw: 'ftredct c'o., Troy, quest to Ann Landers tn care of your
had • prison record. You told her you 1 Mte:b.; u.u.,.. Feandry, IMfoH. N.C.; . ntW$paper enclosing 50 cents in coin and
.were su(e rnany finns would bt happy to Goodynr, Imlay City, MT'cll.j Follett, a Jong, stamped, sell·addressed envelope.
hire 'ex-cons and that you would prlnt the PuWlShillg, Cblc110;-Ktn11 . Sa• co Ahn Landers will be glad to help YO\I
names of the companies U the personnel Ser\ttce, Ltxtn~; M a R Contncton, with your problema. Send them to her lD
managers would write to you and make Butfaloi E1too Taylor, Kanau City, Kan.; ce.re af lhe DAILY PILO'I\ enctoaln& 1
tbemse.lves known. Browa and B,lcdow, SL P•llli Carbon: self-addressed, stamped envelope.
• •
J
'
t • • r
DAil Y l'ILOT
. ~ ~ .
'Mod' Hatter Mad About Champagne Tea
No hat. will be too mod for the Mad .Hatter's Champagne Tea
planned by tbe Wednesday Morning Club from 2 to 4 p.m. Wed-
nesday, Aug. 'ti. Pouring from ti!• magnum is 'Mn. Richard
Valdes, while Mrs. David 'Forge admites the Mad Hatter's por.
trait beld by Mn. William Hill. Members and women lnlertsted
in joining tbe group are invited to attend the tea In the Newport
Beach home of Mrs. Anthony Genzone. C<>ehalrmen will be the
Mmes. Clyde Pomeroy and Frank Hoyt. President of the group,
Mn. Fred Johnson, will receive guests along with other officers
and board members.
Weddings, Troths
Pilot's Deadlines
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brld., ire reminded lo hive their weddin(
llories with black and white gJo"y photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart-
ment prior to or within one week after tba
wedding.
For engagement announcement& it ta
suggested that tbe story, al1<> accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be
submitted early. U the betrothal announre-
ment and weddine dale are six weeks or less
apart, only the weddinJ photo will be ac-
cepted.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories1 forms are avail·
able in all of the DAILY PILOT offic ...
Further questions will be answered by Social
Notes stall members at 642-4321 ar 494-9466.
Pr9,spects Welcomed
P'&t11pectlve members wnl
be Introduced to the alma of
the O(JltbtUUon, &ludy groupe
and 80dal adlvtties of the
Huntington Beidt Branch.
American . AMOC!aUon o r
Unlventty Women, during a
Kolfee ·Klatch Wedn...Say,
Au1. f7.
Members and interested
area. women wlll . be tn-
tertalned between 10 a.m. and
noon In the home ol Mn.
Franklin Gllclirtat, who may
be called at $9%-2512 for ad-
ditional information.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chapel Rites
Dodsons Travel South
Uoneymoonina hi Coronado
are Mr. and Mrs. Rooco
Antonio Dod1on . 1be
newlywedl exclu1J1ie4 their
VOWI and rinp during a
ceremony conducted by the
Rev. 1\octr Betsworth io the
Peek Femlly Wedd!nc Chapel,
Westminster.
The bride, the f o r m e r
P.amlla Elsa Reed, daughter
of Mr. and Mni .. Damn W.
Reed of Garden Grove, was
escorted to the altar by her
father.
She wore a floor length
white mpe 1own de~gned
with a lon1 train, corn-
D. llodaon of HunUnatQD
Beach, wu Donald Steven
Chadd, best man. GuestJ were
auted by Barry Kirk Everltl
Followin& the ceremony, a
buffet supper was served dur·
ing a champa(De rectptlon .in
the . home of the bride's
pannts.
Special guuts In attendance
Included Clifford Benson from
San Jose, and Mrs. Bernice
Rautio, her godmother from
Astoria, Orta:on.
Both the' bride a n d
bridegroom "'-ere graduated
from Marina High School,
where the new Mrs. DodlOn
was a ban~r. Jlrl during her
21enlor year. Sht alao served'u
Miss Costa Mesa durlna: the
past year.
plem1nted with an illualon Her huaband wlll continue
veil, and can1ed a. bouquet of · hJs education at California
white and cortl feathera ahe State College, Jl'Ullerton, in the
deotgned and cruted. fall, and they will make their
Debonh ~usen, th e home 1n Anabelm.
MRS. ROCCO DODSON
Anaheim Home
bride's ~p•iltt:r, served as
maid of honor and ' Camilla
Yates wu brideanaid. Both
wm gowned in noor..tenlth
coral drtaata and carried mat.. cbln& feather bouqqeLI.
Atl<nding the brldegrnom,
ton of Mr. and Mrs. MIJ'W!
USS Hornet Captain
Feted in Emerald Bay
•
Horoscope
qemini: Mystery Solved
SATURDAY
AU~UST 23
By 8Yl)NEY OMARR
TEEN DATING HINTS:
' ' ' JI): Avoid one who aeekl to To fll'ljj 1111 wile'• 11X11r tor vou lit
-1M1 '1o ..... ~ SrlllMY 01n1rr'1
skirt the law •. Be tnathful Doe1t1t1, "~" HI~,, '"' ""'" w ' W-." b111Mllle Mod SI ttnll Thw aeeret (ears vanish. '° °"'-''' .t.i ~'J1'•••· tt>t 0A1LV mor, •~ ·~ . """ ''"'"' "~ Communicate doubts as well TIOft. "'.-: vor11.. . . 10011 •
. as dt'1re1. Chan&e of scenery1.oiiii;i;i;i~iii;;ii;;i;;ii;;i;;;;;;;;;""il
b ln41cated. Think
PISCES (Feb. l~Mareh 20):
Avoid overspending. You can MR PANTS entert1Jn erandly w i th o u t •
going overboard wheft cash
outlay la concerned. Let com-
mon sense -and budget -
act as reliable guides.
IF TODAY JS YOUll
BIRTHDAY you are
fasUdlous, vitamtn-conscloua,
Think
capable of slltng up people at J tnhQ a mere 1l1nce. But you don 't C II .,,..._ ..
alwa)'!: do what you know ls '-"'J· I
good for yoU, Settle" 'down now wn1r11tt , .. ,. "".:;'Ill' 11111
Eveata featuring acltnce and
mush~ prove srea& ~tlracUon1.
C&prlcorn all.lael. but alto
makes demandl. S1gll'8rlu1
m_ay nettJf baqet. Romaace
11 accrnted for Vlr10, wblle
Cancer may be 1erlou1ly coa-
1i~rl11.1 a permanent nla·
tloo1b!p. Aries prevet a poln&
but sbould avoid 1ctm1 11.ke •
big 1hot Taunu: may dlseu11
travrl plant, attend evtnt
wblcb slimalaka de1lre to be
on the move. Seorplo 11 brtgbt
but rutle11. Aquarius could be
on a bllad Ute wblcb baa
clande1Uae overtones.
ARIES (March 21./.pril 19):
with new pel'IOn or project. .u-t.u .1,.. I~~~~~
Cooperate with authorities.
Don't attempt to take law into
your own hands One with. U·
perlence is giving yoU. &OOd
advice. Take It.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20):
Your · in!tlnctl are fine. But
you should also permit logic to
have a say. Don't neglect to
call or write to individual who
thinks much of you.
GEMINI (Ji.tay 21.June 20):
Change, variety and travel a~
accented. A mystery can be
solved. But lhis can be done
only through joint effort
Study Arie• message.
CANCER (June 2l.July ZZ):
Seek hannony with mate,
partner. Day to Jet others
have their say. Play waiting
game. What you need comes
to you. There should be no
que stion about forcing issues.
Don·t.
LEO (July Z3-Aug. 22 ): Be
analyticaJ. Concentrate on
basic issues. Improve rela-
tions with nei gh bor s.
coworkers and other
associates. Avoid self-decep-
tion. See persons, situations as
they actually exist.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Your creative reaourtts art
put to constructive use. 'Therti
is pressure. But it represents
a challenge you can suc-
cessfully meet. Be confident -
set fine example for yowig
persons.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. ,22):
You finally get around to fix-
ing something in h Q m e ,
residence. Be persistent. No
more delay. Be aware of
security, safety meaaures.
Finish what you st.art.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
!:fforta appear s om e w h a t
scattered. New approach 11
best one today. Confusing
message should . be tem-
porarily put aside. A relative
Is subject to quick changes.
Know this and be prepared.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Interest In utroloay,
unusual subjects Is
highli&hted. Your ESP workt overtime. Trust iMer feeling,
bunch. Applies especlally to
re:acUons concerning opposite ....
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan .
Relit the Heat -Keep Your Cool
• pluzs in adequate ly wired
115V outlet
• lake It where you want
to cook
Short-order demands
quick end almo1t
fun
Faetor11 Bonte Economist
Wiil De1t10111trate Cookl1111
Sat. A11rr. 23 . fro111 9 lo 5 P./tl.
IPJlll PGOD, RIFRISHMINTSI
ROY BULLA'S
Ji.tr. and Mrs. Ch a r It 1 ?.tr. and Mrs. Robert Wetd, 19): Pace slows. You get what you want. But now you may Roberta of Emerald Bay J\.tr. and Mra. George Gade, want something else. Study
boated a cocktail party in Mr. and Mrs. Macaulay Ropp Scorpio measaae. Neet!;ssary to
honor ol Navy Capt. Carl and Dave Porter, recently be dlacriminatlng. Choose the
Seiberlich of the USS Hornet elected Lt. Gov. of the best. Stick to quality,
STEVENS T.V.
• '
1913 NEWPORT BLVD ••
548-3493 UNDIR
COMPLETI. NIW
MANAGEMENT
low Budget
Homeliving
Stressed
and his wife. Int.ernatlonal Alliance clubs in -~A~Q~UiA~R1iu~si~(JSan~.ii2iio.iiF~ebi.mr~~~~ Capt. St.iberllch la lhe man Japan.
res.~tble for ret.rlevtna: lhe The Se\berllchs and Roberts
Apollo astronauts when they were guests of the Festival of
returned from the moon. ln Arts for dinner and the
FORMERLY Of HOUSE OF POMPEII
HUNTINGTON BEACH
HIGH STYLING LONG HAIR
COLOR CORRECTIVE WORK
P ruh Coi//urej
I
3355 VIA LIDO, NEWPO~T lllACH
( B1hincf Blu1 Dolphin Rtst1urint l
673-6800
0,... MMll•r thru l1t11ri11,. lffnl"'t ~r A,,.lntment
SAVE COME IN TODAY
YI .. u.ic'4S
·3 o"1s ot\l1
A 1peclal home economics 1951 he was awarded the Pageant oC llt Master1. Hosls
coune will be offered lo Harmon InttrnaUonal AvlaUon for the dinner were William O.
hom4maker1 on low budget& Trophy by Prtaldent Truman. Ji.1artln, Festival president and
by the 0 ran & e Count Y Among the 60 guests were Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Reeve.
Cl\rl1tmu Stal AilOClaUon[~~~==;::~~~~~~~~~~;;=:~~J[ bc&lnnlng T\ie!day, Aug. 2tl, atll •
10 a.m.
Tbt cl&.Pel, which are free,
will take plact In the office of
tht V1tcrana Charitable Foun-
4atlon of Orange C®nty, 1nc.,
201 S. Sulllvln St., Santa Ana.
Emphu\1· will be pla~ on
the use ot money, bud1etlng,
&hopping technlque1. maldna
uae of advtrtlsementa. the
value of labell and food
pr<pora!lon.
Mra. Carolyn NiJton Is pro-
aram coordinator for the eight
session &cries, which I s
scheduled for Tuesday and
Thursday mornings.
Anyone interested in the
progr1m may call the
Asaoci atlon al 542-7213 for
further informaUon.
SA VE up to 400/o
ON Ni¥1 PRI CISI
ORGANS
Ha111111e1Hf CJ.or••
M1111111e114 114 l
Tli11111i VL·l
W11rlll1tr 40 40
TIRRIFIC SAVINGS
ON 2 NIW ORGANS
RECORD TIME
Rugged Glycine chronograph
in st1lnlesa steel. Stop watch feature.
plus separate c:f'ials for elapsed time
in aet:onda, minutes and hour•.
Perfect for divers and drivers.
f:'ll.,....:1 to tllow 1191..i
S76. i.U~~ :1' Lo•r•t Tr 4•·• ~Jt\11\; O I L ., no.i
.. ,. " C'fl 1•1NNlll rlA•O CLASSll
S .. °'4 PHONI i us C
540-3165 South Co11t Pl411, Cotta IM••
11 FASH ION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEA CH -644-1310
Y-(ht'" Ate""'! -8t""A!Ml'lc:lrll, Ml•l•r (Miff, too
~ "-'•r· Frhl•r ••tll '1JO P·""
WORLD'S FINEST FURS
Hundreds of l'onta1tic Buys!
Fox -Jaguar -IAapard
Ch111ah -Ocolot -Boavor
Sabio-Mink
Broadtall & moro
'" capes, Jackel•. ccab o"d
ottlers, YOU SAVE, b1cau11
oil ou r fl"' fur1 ore monu·
foctur1d by u1. YOU SAVE.
beco u1e you ore BUYING
DIRECT.
N1tur11 f ull L1notll
lflf in~ Co1t1
hilly l1t·l 11t 11"5 Vt111t
Now $995
Put a lovely fur In layaway
for Christmas NOW, You
w ill b1 glod you d id.
Hove on 1•ch11lve da1ign
at no ••tra <Ott. Clioo1e
pelt•, color, quality, and
price. YOUR FUR WILL !f: CUSTOM MADE
right hert in our fa1hlon lalond fur aO•
Ion. Compl•t• fur ••rvl11
• FU! STORAGE I RESTYLING
• REPAIRING e CLf:ANING
M. JACQUIS
MASTl• Nltlrl SIN(! 1•23
I• fASl'llON IM.AND, NrwPORt IEACH ......... ,