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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-06-07 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• , • Ir an's . DAILY PILOT ---- -. • . --• --... . -........ ---,-,,.---.. -~"-~-~-~----"-c--c,---..,.,.--=--• ... . ~ ., .. ., " .... . . _. " .. . . RartholoDtae Attorney ::.RIDAY A,R'E~NOON, JUNE 7, :1968 VOL. 11. •O. tlJ', 4 S•CTiottS, .. PAt•l 10c . .__F_1_·1_es_. _·s_u .... r i_t_l_o_r__ _s_10_0_-~_7_o_o_J ..... n-m----------------------~ Silent Vigil I ' . ' Burg~ary Suspect Slain -By Santa Ana Bar Owner UPI T• .... 11 ... -THROUGHOUT LONG "NIGHT, A•VIGIL IN ST. PATRICK'S "Honor Guord Stondl in Cothodrol•With Robert Kennody:a" Body Thousands Pack Church . To Mourn Sen. l(ennedx NEW YORK (UPI) -Passing Robert F. KeMedy's closed coffin at tne rate of 5,000~afl hour, a day.Jong procession of mourners said a sad and often tearful farewell to the senator they knew as Bobby as he lay in state at St. Patrick's Cathedral. The great and the humble, some lug- ging shopping bags and others car· ryiog cameras, stood patiently in line for nearly a mile on midtown streets in muggy heat for a glimpse oi the un- draped mahogany casket. Honor guard teams of four, family and friends, stood guard !Or 30 minutes at a time. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, only Stlrvivor o( the four Kennedy brothers, .s·at alone at the mass, the first of eight said for the assassinated senator dur- ing the day. Two hours later Robert F. Kennedy Jr., 14., joined an honot guard team that included television person- ality Jack Paar. Young Kermedy alternated between clencbing his fist and running his fingers gently over the top of his father's coffin. Occasioo&lly he glanc- ed up at the thousands passing, weep-o tng, crossing themselves, even ben· ding qllicltzy to kiss the bier. CREPE BtmONS sound of sobbing. "Oh , God, what have they done to you," one woman cried loudly as she knelt in the light of tall tapers to press her lips to the casket lid. . "Lamb of God, wtio takes away the sws of th e world , grant us peace " in- toned a priest. ' Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, 77, came to the cathedral alone, took com- munion at a side altar, and remained for 80 minutes. Barely a dozen Of the thousands in the sanctuary recognized the black-clad figure who shared her prayer book during mass with Army Spec. 4 Jose lndart of New York who unsuspectingly sat beside her. lndart later said he recognized her but did not let on. HONOR GUARD Green berets made up one honor guard team including Sgt. Major Francis J. Ruddy, 43, who bad laid his beret on the grave of John F. Kennedy at the late president's burial. Others who stood watching as the hours pass- ed were ChatJes Evers. brother of assassinated civil rights i ea d e.r M'.edgar Evers, Kenmedy aide Kenneth O'Donnell, the NMCP's Roy Wilkills and Washington Columnist Rowland Evans. At midmorning, the deceased'• eldest sen, Joseift P, Kennedy 111, 16, ~Joined the honor gUIJ'd .with several.- young friends and former Negro Olym- pic decathalon champion R a f e r Johnson who Was with Kennedy (See MOURNERS, Page I) ' I He saw mourners who wore Ken- nedy campaign buttons with black crepe-auacbed.--He saw young tourists with knapsacks on their bacU. He heard the stnaffle of a multitude of feet on the cathedral's marble floor, the d~ 11rr7 of tile organ, amt.th• eenU• .. ~ Poli,ce Seeking Accomplice in Holdup Attempt A suspected burglar was shot to death early this morning by a Santa Ana bar owner and police are looking for the dead man's accomplice. Killed was Larry D. E ll iott. 18, possibly of 1206 E. Stafford St .. Santa Ana . P olice said the address may be fictitious. Officers said Kazys Ztlkauskas. 55, owner of the Dizzyland Bar at 718 E. 4th st .. told them he was working in the oftice at about 4:15 a.m. when lie heard a noise. lie grabbed his M-1 .3(). caliber carbine rifle and moved to the door of the office overlooking the bar area. _ There, Zukauskas told police he saw a figure in the darkened room and he believes the person said, "Hold it" or "This is a holdup." With that, Zukauskas reportedly told police, ·be fired. The bullet entered Elliott's arm and went throu~ his body. The coroner's office estimates that be died within a few minutes. Zukauskas then went behind the bar and saw another figlD'e tn the rear en· tryway, he reported. He said he caUed to the man to "come here'' but the suspect ran and Zukauskas shot at him. The second shot apparently missed its mark. Police found a shattered window at the home of Thomas O'Neill. diagonally across the street and a block away from the open rear (See BURGLARY, Page %) GOING TO CAMP? CHECK THE PILOT There are at least 43 ways to find the fun In the sun Utis summer if you are a boy or girl -or an entlre family -looking for a day camp, overnight in tile m()Wltains or other "summer camp'' experience. The DAILY PILOT Saturday will devote almost in entire page to listing the 43 programs available to summer campers from the Orange Coast area. Check the list and make your plans. Sirhan Guard Tight Grand Jury Considers Murder Indictment LOS ANGELES (UPI) A California Grand Jury assembled to- day to consider a request for a murder indictment against Sirhan Sirhan, the accused assassin of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Sheriff's officers tightened security at the 1.-0s Angeles County Jail in response to telephoned threats to storm the' jail and kill the 24-year-old Jordanian immigrant. They said the callers said they would risk anything -even death -to eliminate the man they believe killed Kennedy. Sheriff Peter J. Pitchess said Sirhan, captured Wednesday morning at the Ambassador Hotel after Ken- nedy was felled by a bullet in the brain. remained outwardly calm and unconcened. Tbe slight, swarthy race track exercise boy and health store stock clerk was confined to a 12-by·12 windowless cell in the remote hospital wing of the downtown jail. A dim ceiling light ilhnninated the gray walls of the cell and the prison ·buDk he slept upon. A wash basin and toilet were the Only other furnishings. An unanned, uniformed deputy sat on a stool inside the cell and watched Sirhan's every move. A second armed deputy outside kept his eyes glued on the suspect through an unbreakable glass porthole. Four guards paced up and down a narrow corridor outside. 0th er deputies patrolled every n o o k and cranny of the jail complex. The extreme concern over keeping Sirhan alive convinced Dist. Atty. Evelle J . Younger to go to the Grand Jury for the indlcbnent rather than Bartholomae's Attorney Sues Estate for $100,700 • The Beverly Hills attorney who suc- cessfully defended the widow and sister-in-law o! slain Newport Beach sportsman William B&rtholomae in 1964 has sued the multimillionaire's estate for $100,700 in legal fee-S. Paul Caruso filed the suit in Orange, County Superior Court Thursday, naming Security First National Bank defendant, as special administrator of the estate or Charles A. Bartholomae, Wtlliam's late brother. Caruso won dJsmim;al of charges against Carmela Bartbolotllfle, widow of the wealthy oilman, and an ac~ quittal of Manola Gallardo, sister-In- law_ and housekeeper at the baytront mansion. · Both were arrested 1 and charged in connection with the mystery-cloaked blcher-knlle slaying of. W 1111 a m Bartholomae nearly 4~ years ago. Caruso claims Security rlrst Na- tional Benk ls indebted to him for services rendered during hi& defense ol the Spanish-bOrn sisters, plus other legal work for Charles Bartholomae. The latter died Nov. 22, 1964, of a heart ailment and administration of his estate is pending In Orange County Superior Court. The sta"bbing death ol the elder Bartholomae shocked the Sout.hland, which avidly followed the sensational trial of Manola Gallardo as a suspect in the case. CllD!So finally won acquittal of the Spanish-speaking woman, who stood trial on a manslaughter charge for nearly two weeks several months after th• llrg. . following the normal procedure of fil· ing a formal murder complaint. Filing a complaint ...._necessitates a preliminary hearing, a courtroom pro~ ce~ng that would have required Sirhan to be present. The Grand Jury method carries no such requirement. No law enforcement official here wants to transfer Sirhan from hiE tightly guarded jail cell and risk the possibility that, like Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan might himself fall vic- tim to an assassin before coming to (See SIRHAN, Page %) Orange Coast Weather Don't look up at the sky, you may get splashed in the eye, cautions forecaster Frank Ernst. Along with our normal cloudi- ness, a bit of "local drizzle" is on tap for the coast this week- end. INSIDE TODAY Carnival time in Cotona del !ifor makes for delightful pic- tures and a reminder that theTe is nearly always something special to do along tht Orange Coost, ... WEEKEND.i;R. Mao•· tine toe.toy. • L"""""-_____ , ----,,,,,.,,,.~...., ....... ..., ..... ,"~ ·~·~· ..-'% ·-....... ~ ...... -.......... , , ' l . I ' I ' • .. 2 DAn.Y PILOT FtldU, J11114: 7, 1968 CitizensGroup UrgesOCC 'Hold Bond Election A joint Harbor Area.West. county dtl-lil!aoc:e :oaurutt .. ThlD'lday riJght recommended Orange Coast Ju.nlor College Dlstrlctdeparl from its tradJ(loiu1.I pay-.as-you·a:o policy and ·. 'llold..a llond elecUon. 1· ll wall suggegte<I ~. boOd amount ~ In th·e range of '3 mflllon to $7 .5 n1illion to cover building needs for two to five years. "The people don't want frills," wame<l.Charlotte Lyke, a Costa Mesa , housewife. I ' "It isn't lrllll. Don't you think peo- ple are looking for an excuse to vote no?" . asked Paul Phillips, a Hun· U,.I Ttllll'tlolt LONG WAIT -The long wait before daw n today to get in- side St. Patrick's Cathedral in . New York City was too much for this elderly woman among mourners !or Sen. Robert Ken- nedy. She stepped out of line and sat on curb to rest. From Page 1 MOURNERS . • • Wednesday when he was shot down in Los Angeles. As brilliant sunlight poured through the cathedral's lofty stained· glass win- do\\'li to replace th e dusky candle glow, the line lengthened from l<"'ifth Avenue to Madison and Park Avenues. Mourners funneled into the midtown area by train, subway, •car and chartered bus, fillin g Park Avenue's fl owered b or d er e d walks eight abreast. Hundreds had waited throughout the night for St. Patrick's bronze doors to swing open at sunrise. All about them were reminders of the nation's grief - the flags run up to hall staff, the crepe-draped photographs in Fifth Avenue store windows, U1e tribute of a few cut flowers carried by some of the mourners. Mrs. Mary Ann Camp of New Jersey and her three children kept the night- long vigil. "I want my children to learn -that people must obey rules," she said. "I want them to see what happens when they don't." Everyone referred to the senator as Bobby, even the priests in the service of the mass for the dead. Gary Solitro, 21 , of Philadelphia, put it simply : "You hate to Jose a man like Bobby." DAILY PILOT • ...,.,. '-di Celhl Mw H ....... ~ 1.apM IMdi .,,.._......, Fe1ntvl• Yell*J CAU'°lNIA Rob1rt N. Wtttf hblW\ef Themt1 K•t•il Editor Thol!'ltl A. Mutphlnt MtMll!t• l!flfor Joek R. C11rlty Ptul Nl11tn helnn1 MllM9'1° MYtrtl1l111 DlrK!of' Offlct• Coal• Mtta: »I Wiil l•v $1rett 'lewport Bekll: nn w. 111bol 1ou1tvtr11 ..... RI •• •'" ,,, r lrelt 4111RM Hl.lflllr\tton INc:h: ll!r 1111 S!i'ttt tingtOO •B .. cb banker. "We have to overcome the excuses. That'• our mission," sald Lloyd Gibbs, a management consultant f r o m Newport Beaoh. The board Of trustees will consider next Wednesday nJght lhe committee's recommendation for a bond issue. Recommended for the sam~ ballot is a proposition to convert an exJsUne 11).%-cent override now lln1ited to use for construction to gentiral purpose use. The override funds then could be spent for expenses of curreot opera· qon-including teacher salaries. Ttie conve.rsiob would not cost tax· payers any more than they now pay. Fifty perceat voter approval would be needed. Two-thirds IU)proval would be required for bond passage. The cumiit district tax rate Is 64: cents per $100 of asteS.sed valuation. Sixteen persons from the Orange Coast and Golden West areas who volunteered for the fiDance com- mlttees were unantmous In agreeing that a bond issue and tax conversion ls the way to go. The alternative to a·bond Jssue -an override election -was discarded. Memories of two override defeats of 1966, surfaced in remarks that over- ; rlde iounds like a foul wor4 aDd ·that it lrhplles an overJpendlng of the budget. The board could call a bond election for · mid·Sept.mber, the day oI the gen&ral election Nov. 5, or anytime aft.er late December. It was argued a bond election is needed. for the district to make use of state funds. Proposition 2, which pass· ed on th.ls week's primary ballot, re· quires the dlstr1ct to put up matching funds on a SO-SO basis. Supt. Norman Watson said he belleves that because Orange Coast's campuses are so underbuilt for the fast-growing enrollment the district might qualify for $5 million of the $66 mllllon state Issue. ' He said the Golden West campus in Huntington Beach, built for a max· imum ol 1,500 students, will cram in over 3,000 &ludenU ner.t fall and can expect 12,500 &'tudents knocking on the donr within 10 years. ''We don't actually turn students away," Or. Watson sald. "But be<:ause we have po1tpoaed building and ·haven't hJrtd any . ntw 1n1tructor1 clMses fill up. Then 1tudents don't enroll because theY can't get the pro- grams they want. . "ID effect, we are diecouragl.llg them fr-Om continuing their education. And remember, 95 percent of parents say, 'My child will go on to college.'" · It wu decided by the finance com· m.ittee a bond issue Is needed to ,tlde the district -0ver for a couple o( years. Under new legislation, trustees wlU bo a ble beginning in 1971 to r aise the tax rate without a vote of the people. They then wtll have the same power as city councilmen. "Are most people tamlllar 1with thlt law?" Catherine PepPard of Corona del Mar asked. "They are going to be in for qulte a shook." or. Watson said he-foreisees difftcul. ty with the proposed bond Issue ballot. "There would be two is~ues on the ballot," he said. 00n~ for a tax con· version at no cost to Ole taxpayer. The olhet for a bond Jaue. "Three guesses which will pass and which will fail." Cong Use Ch~nese Rockets ·In Worst ·. ·Saigon Attack Hurt W ar Veteran Finds Life Changed SAIGON (UPI) -The Viet Cong. using giant new Chinese weapon.s, hit Saigon today with the bloodiest rocket attack o{ the war, A U.S. military spokesman conceded it was "virtually impossible" to halt the attacks. A l!lpokesman said the 16 rockets fired at Saigon were huge 122 millimeter (about five inches) rockets newly bnrJght in from Red China and that in killing 7.5 persons, wounding 46 and destroying 'n buildings they did more harm than previous terror bar· rages of 100 or more. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the outgoing U.S. military commander in Saigon, said on his return today from a trip to the . lfnited States the roc~et .attacks were n o t "particularly significant" from a military stand- point. He said the Communists were trying to "grab headlines through~t the world by portraying a facade of 1,087 Precincts 1trength." The headlines would apply particularly to Paris where U.S. and North Vietnam negotiators have been holding preliminary talks. Asked whether it was possible to stop bombardments of the city which has undergone attacks seven con· secutive nights an official spokesman said: "In thls type of warfare, it's like stepping on ants. lt'a easy if they're all gathered around a clump of candy, but when they start to scatter in the grass you don't find them. "In the same way, you never stop the ants from getting at that piece -0f candy. Stopping them ~om infiltrating with a rocket, two rockets at a time, and then dropping thepi in 11n Saigon w6Uld. be virtually impossible." He said the sites for today's attacks were spottl!d and that artillery zeroed in on them. But he made. Jt clear further attacks could be expected. It marked the 1eventh day in a row • Here're Tabulations Of County Vote Totals Here are tabulations of Orange County's election results with 1,087 out of 1,173 precincts counted as of today: President: Republican Ronald Reagan 127 ,511 -Democratic Robert F. Kennedy 58,893 Lynch Delegation 18,642 Eugene McCarthy 65,427 U. S. Senator: Republican Thomas Kuchel 62,87'..? Max Rafferty 102,416 Democratic Alan Cranston 77,829 Anthony Beilenson 29,659 ReprerentatiVe in Congress: 35th District: Hepubllcan James B. Utt 56,549 William A. Dougherty 11 ,285 Robert T. Jones 9,444 Demecratlc Russell F. DoolitUe 19.779 Thomas B. Lenhart 21.641 Representative in Congress, 34th 'District: RepubUcan Bill J. Teague 35,3'l8 Lawrence J . Stafford 10,964 Democratic- Richard T. I.Janna 58,061 Representative in Congress, 32nd District: Repu blican Craig,Hosmer 13,319 Democratic Arthur J . Gottlieb 4,604 Waller L. Mallonee 4,700 State Senator, 35th District Republican James E. \Vhetmore 50,630 De mocratic Louis J. Cenl.ite2I7'031 Gordon T. Shepard 28,538 Member of Assembly, .69th District: Republican Allen L. Banick 1.191 Bob Bark 3,40 l Bruce Nestande 19.0JIJ Laurence J. Schmit 6,758 Democratic Kenneth Corr 34,404 ... Member of Assembly 7lst District: Republican Robert E. Badham 54,872 Democratic Frank w. Raczek 25,753 Men1ber of Assembly 7oth District: Republican Robert H. Burke 42,G51 Democratic Jim Bentson 38,396 County Central Committee, Fifth Dt1trlct: Republican llopwood 24,304: Frizzelle 10,159 Franklin 8,003 Melugin 7,645 Carroll 20,918 · Carpenter 21,943 Creely 8,441 Rogers 22,794 Democratic Dusenberry 11,021 McGaugh 9,386 Meyer 10,669 Rosener 7, 706 Olson 9.615 Cory 8,926 From Pqe I SIRHAN ... trial. The Grand Jury hearing may shed some Ught on growing speculation that the man who shot Kennedy may not have gone to the Ambassador llotel election party alone. An all-points bulleUn was in efrect fb:r a young woman in a polka dot dress who ran from the primary vic- tory celebration shortly after Kennedy was killed. · "We spot him," a campaign worker said the woman told her. "Prior to the shooting," according to the police report, "suspect (Sirhan) was observed with a female Caucasian described as 23 to '¥1 yellf's . five feet six inches tall. wearing a white voile dress with three-quarter sleeves and with small black polka dots." The woman wore dark shoes and "boutfant type hair.'' "We don''t Utlnk it was a conspiracy at this time.'' a police investigator said, "but we are not going to throw anything Jnto the wastebasket" Although the Grand Jury p~ ceeding1 are officially secret, it was learned the DA '1 ol.Oce planned to call 17 wltneue1, includJnJ Assembly Speaker Jesse Unruh, Kennedy's \. California campaign manager, and Olympic champion Rafer Johnson and football player Roosevelt Grier, the two men who disarmed and im- n1obilized the suspect. The remaining witnesses will In· elude members or Kennedy's cam- paign staCf, hotel employes nnd celebrants at the. victory party who witnessed the shooting. No members of Kennedy's im- mediate family were scheduled 1o ap- pear. Younger said the evidence should be presented by tonight, but he said it "might be a long day." After arraignment, Sirhan has 10 days In which to. file a plea. California law requir es the DA's office to bring the defendant to trial within 60 days of his pleading, but the defense fre- quenUy wins delays. Sir han, a few hours after the 1 shooting, was arraigned on six counts of assault with the intent to commit murder and ball was set at $250,CXWJ. But the Senator's death automaUcally made It a capital case, which Is not bailable. · OflJcers would not disclose the total number of guards at the Jail. ' of terror shelllng of the capital. Guer- rilla defectors and captured Viet Cong documents said the attack on Saigon is designed to strengthen the hand ol North Vietnam In preliminary peace talks wilh the United States in Paris. Nine of the rockets exploded within a mile or the modern marble Presidential Palace and several within hall a in.lle. The rockets bit a Roman Catholic church, a hospital and the Offices of International C o n t r o 1 Commission CICX::), the Indian-Canadian-Polish agency set up to supervise peace pro- visions of the 1954 Geneva Treaty on Indochina. The hosP,ital blast killed two persons and \}'OUnded four. N.o casualties were reported in-the church or in the ICC headquarters. Millt.ary' spokesmen said all the Vic- tims were Vietnamese civilians. They said the worst previous rocket attack was May 2.8 when~17 persons were kill- ed. in _a rain of rocket terror. From Page 1 BURGLARY. •• door of the bar through which the bullet traveled. Police theorize the rifle slug sma~­ ed through the window at the O'Neill home, 801 E. 3rd St., and ricocheted through the house. No police state- ment was released to indicate the slug had ~en recovered. Officers found that the rear door of the bar had been pried open. The search is still on for the second man. Jn the meantime, the police are listing the case as burglary and justilied homicide. "Things seem a lot different; either that or I've changed," the young veteran said quietly, shifting to ease a wOl.lllded hip. Army Pfc. James Blood has return- ed to Laguna Beach to convalesce afteiiing "blown up" by a Viet Cong boob trap. Bl was retW'tling with his platoon from an ambush patrol to kill Viet Cong May 5 when the man ahea~ of him struck a trip wire. They were 1n a rice paddy of the Mekong Delta. A shell exploded 25-yards behind the 22-year-old .soldier. Shrapnel ripped in· to his buttock, emerging from his ab- domen. It struck his leg and neck also. On May 19 he came home. Blood is walklng with a cane now, his hip painfully separated at the"joint. But, he hopes to be regenerated ~fore another summer rolls over Laguna Beach where he grew up. "I was fortunate, really," the soldier said, "if I had been nearer it would have killed me or blown off one of ·my legs." Straight from the hell of booby-trap· ped forests and paddies, from snipers and snakes, Blood has found that not all the adjusbnent involves his wounds. "People are screaming about prices and wages and raising their own cost or living." he said. "It really blows your mind; it almost seems like there's a war over here ." "I didn't ask to get drafted or go to war," he said, "but, when you see that people back here ' have turned their backs on you, wow ... like Mr. Jottnson sent us over there and all of a sudden he says he was wrong." Bll)od described the anti-Vietnam demonstrations as a disillusionment, a letdown to soldiers "like follOwing a religion and having -the leader or the religion do something to let you down . "I stuck by my country," the soldier said, "I could have laid down and pro- tested; I could have burned by draft BLOWN UP IN VIETNAM Pfc. James Blood card but I stood by the country and went over there and got blown up and they're not sticking by me." Blood Said many are doing a great job in the fighting and other tasks of Vietnam : "Like the doctors in field hospitals, they do a fantastic job; guys come in with their legs hanging and they. graft them back together." ------ r DREXAL SALE FEATURING DREXEL~S ESPERANTO COLLECTION ALSO ON SALE DREXEL FRENCH COUNTRY MANNER -DREXEL 'S INDEX IXCLUSIVI DEALERS FOR : HENUDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE to DAYS NO INRUST-LONIHI RIMS AVAILABLE ON Arl'ROVI D CRlDIT 1NJN11 ' NIWPORT UACH MZ·ZOSO 1727 W-Drive INTERIORS ProfeuioMI lottrior LAGUNA IEACH Dn19"tn 145 Nortti Coast Hwy. 494-6551 A--.AID-NSID ON N FRIDAY ~IL t ...... t.n "" M..t ef Or.,.. C••lttt 140·1261 t r ' ... .t I' ·' I' I I f , I I r t 1 • r n r " ' I' • I \, -a •a• e a e q:OQGtp p; • • • p =· t e a u o s a = 0 • , Bun1ilig1on Bea~h Voar Hometown --. ~OL 61', NO. Tl7, ~ SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES ... • UP'I T..,._.. THROUGHOUT LONG 'NIOHT, A VIGIL IN ST •. PATRICK'S Honor Ou•rcf:Stond1 'ln·C•thodr•l'Wlth. Robert K•nnody'o ·Body Tribute at· GWC 500 Students Attend RFK Service - ''Senator Kennedy had so much faith and trust in young people -that's why 've feel his death so strongly.'' Bob Enz, student body president of Golden \Vest College spoke those words to a silent, serious and nearly motionless assembly of about .50f' students gathered at.noon Wednesda~ in the College Center. The bright. casual clothes con- trasting with the somber young face~ made the memorial service for Ken- nedy somehow even tnore impressive. Rick Simmons, coorainator o f Golden West's "Students for Kennedy" group said, "To the youth of America. Robert Kennedy was s o m e th i n g special. 'He represented our spirit •.. our vitality , •• our youth." Tom Newman. county "People ror Kennedy" coordinator, found it d.ls· iicult to spell. t-re di scarded a prepared speech and said a few simple words of1tribut.e. Rededication was stressed b y Kenneth Cory, state assemblyman for the 69th District. in addressing the junior college students. "What we do wJth our lives is what matters -Kennedy showed us that." Cory stated. He said it's extremely 'mportant "that we talk with those we don't agree with" to achieve peace and progress. Enz reminded his fellow students of a James Thurber quotation: "Let us not look back in anger. or ahead in fear .•. but around in awareness." Golden West President Dudley Boyce and the Rev. Robert Larsen, pastor of Grace Lutheran Church, ad· ded words of rededJcation and prayer to those of. the students. (;iti%etas Unanimous Dally Paper -FRIDAY, :JUNE 7, '1968 TEN CENTS .Thousands Mourn RFI( 5,000 an Hour File Past Casket in St. Patrick's NEW YORK (UPI) -Passing Robert F. Kennedy's closed coffin at the rate of 5,000 an hour, a day~long procession of mourners said a sad and often tearful farewell to the senator they knew as Bobby as he lay in state at St. Patrick's Cathedral. The great and the humble, some lug. ging shopping bags and others car. rying cameras, stood patiently in line for nearly a mile on midtown streets in muggy heat for a glimpse of the un· draped mahogany casket. Honor guard teamg of four, family and friends, stood guard for 30 minutes at a ti.me. Sen . Edward M. Kennedy, only survivor of the four Kennedy brothers, sat alone at the mas$, the first of eight sald for the assruisinated senator dur- ing the day. Two hours later Robert F. Kennedy Jr., 14, joined an honor guard team that included television person· ality Jack Paar. Civic Center Site Choice Cut to 2 By MARGARET HALL Of flll O•lly f'llet Sl•ff Inching closer to choosing a site for the new Huntington Beach civic center councilmen Thursday narrowed the possibilities from four to two: The decision followed a ptesentatlon by Robert Zinngrabe, chairman of the Urban Land Institute Civic Center sub- committee. Zinngrabe's report in· eluded a ranking of the four possible &ites under study. Councilmen decided to concentrate efforts at evaluating a site across from the Huntingt()n Beach lllgh School on the northeast corner of Main Street and Uni()n A venue against the prerent downtown location of the city hall including the library and ad· ditional adjacent property to be ac· !quired. The council eliminated from further considenl.tion pro p er t..Y 1t 1tbe northeast corn-er of Goldenwest Street and Warner A venue and another site at the northwest COrnel' of Gothard street and Garfield A venu"e. Next step is for rthe ULJ sub-com- mittee to supply any information they deemed valuable in evaluating the two favored sites to the city council by June 17. Zinngrabe. stressed that his com. mitt:ee s.erved only to provide in· formation. "The decici()n. is yours, genUemen," he told the council. new , site - a city hall and a police facility. Park1ng will take much of the .acreage. Jack Froggatt, vice·presldent of the l!untington Beach Company, pointed out that the original utI &tudy of the beach city two and a half years ago had come up with the same two sites which the sub-committee's work show· ed to be most adYantage<lus. Sheriff Gets Death Threats Against Sirhan . ,~ i\l:IGE~S . ..,{lmlh ""' . <A Callforiila G~and Jury aisemb1ed !0-· day to consider a request for a murder indictment against Sirhan S;lrhall, the accllsed assassin of Sen, Robert F. Kennedy. Sheriff's officers lightened security at the Los Angeles County Jail In response' to telephoned threats to storm the jail and kill the 24-year-old Jordanian immigrant. 'They said the callers said they would risk _anything -even death -to eliminate the man they believe killed Kennedy. Young Kennedy alternated between clenching his fist and running ·his fingers gently over the top of his father's coffin. Occasionally he glanc· ed up at the thousands passing, weep. ing, crossing themselves, even ben- ding quickly to kiss the bier. He saw mourners wbo wore Ken - nedy campaign buttons with black crepe attached. He saw young towists with knapsacks on their backs. He heard the shuffie of a multitude of feet on the cathedral's marble floor, the deep throb of the organ, and the gentle sound of sobl>Ulg. "Oh, God, what have they done to you," one woman cried loudly as she knelt in the light of tall tapers to press her lips to the casket lid. "Lamb of God, who takes away the sins of the world, grant.us peace," in· (See MOURNERS, Pace Z) OAIL."T f'IL.Of""' ...... .>I DOG "' ~·JWi SEVEN '1iltECKEO 4'al.• · Geber j ay' As Calmly As His Masters 'Did • ' . Gebers Ride Out Squatters Quit Valley 'Rancli' "Pistol·packln' Mama" Geber chat- ted amiably wilh the manhal who rode onto the old homestead Thursday m6rning, not on .a high.spirited palomino but in an official car with a red light on top. Fountain Valley ltlsl<H'y, ohullkd around the property shirtless and chewing on the stem of a well·Uled pipe. The decision is a big one. Around $61h million . will be invested in the civic center development which the council estim·ates will serve the com· rnunity "50 years or S(). •• ... The maximum acreage needed for the civic center is 7.6 acres, Zinn- grabe told the council. However. some thought this should be enlarged. Sheriff Peter • J. Pitcheft"" said Sirhan, captured Wednesday morning at the Ambassador Hotel after Ken - nedy was felled by a bullet in the brain, r~mained outwardly calm and unconcened. The slight, swarthy r-ace track exercise boy and health store stock clerk wat confined to a 12-by-12 windowless cell in the remote hospital wing of the downtown jail. \VJlUam Geber, the sometime rifle· . toting most famous squatter 1n recent It was all over in a matter of hours. ·And a little bit of tile Old West was gone from the 2.3-acre "spread" alongside bustling Brookhurst Street within sigllt of the busy San Diego Freeway. Two buildings are planned for the Players Postpone> ;Petrified' Opening The Huntington Beach Playhouse production of "The Petrifled Forest," originally scheduled to op~onight, hrui been postponed to next Friday because of the assassination o( Sen. Robert F . Kennedy. South Coast Repertory, opening "A Streetcar Named Desire" tonight at the 'Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa. will not perform 'the play Sunday night in deference to President Johnson's proclamation of Sunday as a day of moUrning. A dim ceiling light illlttnlnated the gray walls of the cell and the prison bunk he slept upon, A wash basin and toilet were the only other furnishings. An unarmed, uniformed deputy sat on a stool inside the cell and watched Sirhan's every move. A second armed deputy outside kept his eyes glued on the suspect through an unbreakable glass porthole. Four guards paced up and down a narrow corridor out.side. 0th er deputies patrolled every n o o k and cranny of the jail complex. The extreme concern over keeping Sirhan alive convinced Dist. Atty, Evelle J. Younger to go to the Grand Jury for the indictment rather than following the normal procedure of fil· ing a formal murder ~om plaint. Filing a complaint necessitates a preliminary bearing, a C<lurtroom pro- (See SIRHAN, Page !) House Committee Okays U.S. Aid For Desalt Plant The proposed $765.5 million Bolsa Island water desalting plant offshore of Huntington Beach got a small finan· cial shot in the arm today when the House Appropriations Committee ap- proved a $1 rni~n immediate federal commitment. · Approval or the $1 million allocation in \l/ashington comes after renewed debate on tile nuclear water pro· cessing plant in the face of risin g cost estimates. Fate of the program to convert salt water for domestic use was questioned after a dl sclosure that the plant price tag has increased from an estimated $444 million to f165.S million. After ei&ht years Of nesting on ~e property at 18131 Brookllunt, Wllllam and Alice Geber, who paid rent only sporadioally, ll«:ordlng to iroperty owner David Sherwood of Northrldge, gaw up their little "ranch" without a whimper. Moving vans and trucks moved onto the dusty property alter Deputy Marshal Lyle Pell served the "writ ol possession" Thursday, Treasuras gathered over the years by the Gi!bers were packed up and hauled away for storage. Olickens, dog'$ and cats were to be taken to the Huntington Beach SPCA shelter, Wreckers during the day rolled into the tree·shaded "junkyard" part o{ the (S.. GEBERS, Page %) Orange Ceas& \ OCC Bond 'Election· Asked GOING TO CAMP? CHECK THE PILOT Today's action by tile congressional committee included the money in a supplemental appropriation bill for the current fiscal year ending June 30 in response to an Interior Department request for $2 million. Weatber Don't look up at the sky, you may get splashed ln the eye, cautions rorecaster Frank ErnsL Along with our normal cloudi· ness, a bit of "local dr.izz.le" is on tap for the coast this week· end. By THOMAS FORTUNE ot t111 o.11r f'llfl s1.n A joint Harbor Area.west County citizens finance ~omm.ittee Thursday night rec<1mmended Orange Coast Junior College District depart from its traditional pay-as-you-go policy and hold a bond election. It was suggested tl\e bond amount be in the range of $3 million to fl .5 million to cover building needs for two to live years. "The people don't want frills,'' warned Charlotte Lyke, a Costa Mesa housewife. "It isn't frills. Don't you think peo. p1e are Jooklng for •n excuse to vote no?" asked Paul Pbillipr, a Hun· tlngton Beach banker. "We have to overcome the excuses. Tbllt'.L.our.misslon.'" &lld Lloyd Gibbs. a management consultant r r o m Newport Beach. The board o( trwttes wiJJ consider next Wednesday night the commJttte's recommendation for a hood lsaue. ---------..... Recommended for the sarnt ballot is a proposition to convert an exi!Ung lOY.t-ce nt override now limited to use for construction to general purpose use. The ovenide funds then could be spent for expenses of current opera· tion inclu4ing·teache.r salaries. The conversion would not cost lax· payers any more than they now pay. Fifty percent voter approval wpuld be needed. Two-thirds approval would be required f6r bond passage. The cWTent district tax rate Is S4. cent.s per $100 Of. assessed valuation. Sixteen penom from the Orange COast and Gfflen West are.as who volunteered for the finance com· rnlttees \ffl'e unanimous in agreeing that a bond Issue and tu convers.lon Ls the way to go. Tbe alternative fa.a bond lsiue -an override election -was dl.scarded. Memories of two override defeats of 1986. surfaced in remarks that over· Tide sounds like a foul word and that it lmplJ .. on overspendillc ol the budget. • • -- The board could call a bond election for mid-September, the day of the general electlon Nov. 5, or anytime after late December. It was argued a bond election is needed fOT' the district to make use or state funds. Proposition 2, which pass· ed on this week's primary ballot. re· quires the dJstrict to put up matching tunds on a 50-50 basis. ·Supt. Nonnan Watson said he believes •that becauce Orange Coast's campuses are so underbullt for the fast-growing enrollment the district might qualify !or 15 million of the $65 million state issue. He said the Golden West campus ln Huntington Beach, built for a max- imum of 1,500 student.., will cram ln over 3,000 students next fall and can expect 12,500 students knocking on the door within IO years. "We don't actually turn students away," Dr. Wat&on said. ''But because we have postpoMd bu.ikl.ing: and (S.. O<.'C BONDS, P1ge %) There are at least 43 ways to find the fun in the sun this summer U you are a boy or girl -or an entire family -looking for a day camp, overnight in the mountains or other "summer camp" experience. The DAILY PILO'l' Saturday will devote almost an entire page to listing the 43 programs available to summer campers from the Orange Coast area. Check the list and make your plans. Baccalaureate Rites Slated for Sw1day Bacoalaureate ceremonies will be held Sunday as ireviouoly sd!eduled. ror 1IM! hlgll schools OI 1IM! lluntlngtoo Beach Union 1-Ugti School Di11trlct. DT. Max Fomey S<ild Wednesday he felt the 1erious·.minded ceremonle1 suited the nation's day ol mourning for SM. R"1lcrt Kem>edy. J . A. Hllflter, director of the Office of Saline Water. said tbe appropriation is needed to meet the government's share of preliminary design work ex· penses under a contract with the Metropolitan Water District of Southern Calilornia. He said actual payments or $300,000 are anticipated by the end of th.ls month. He said the appropriation aJso would show project sponsors the continuing interest o! the government as an en· couragement to proceed despite the cost increase. 1be Sl millioo approval, however, wasn't as mucb as had been hoped for on Uie local fronL Pt(au Weyuk.er, admJnlstratlve Mtlis· Ian! to Robert H. Burke CR-Huntington ll<!OOh) expliined tile ..,ounced It million al'P"OPri~tion es a cut from $.1 million wbidl the federti government was to appropriate this ye..ar. The mooey "will not neceuarily be (Set DESALT, Pace 2) • ... INSWE TODA. Y Can1ival time iil Corona del Mar make1 for delightful pie· lures and a reminder that thtrt i.s Marly atwc111 som.tthing spteial to do along tire Orange Coast, !tf WEEKENDER Maoa- riM lodoy. .. .. ,..,, .. ,. ' " M ' " " " , " ' .. , ·~ ...,,... ' ......... 11·1J '""' 1•1' ..... ....... .. T......... ,. TIIMtwt Wo s err -. ---.. ·-... _ -.. _ ..... '"-=·~ 11 .......... " • " 1•ts • ' • . .. -~~-..... ,., ' • < • < e;ae:::e :::e====== = a •Sit w w = u ___.,_,,.... ..,.. '.! !¥' u JF :au u QLS QLE a ya . w u a w u. = u a • I J • J~L"f_P_l_Lo_r __________ •_rlday. June 7, 1%8 1'Parleff at. llCI County Poverty _,, IJ"nder Spotlight , . ,,..A, diy.Jong ,conference on "Poverty lions of U1e county showed 10 percent tn..clrab&e county!-' -WW. be. held at. UC unemployed, ·60 p.ercent employed in Irvine on Saturday. unskilled jobs and Jess than,50 percent high school ·graduates. The conference, sponsored by 20 These poverty pockets are located io Orange County community service HunQngton Beach, San Clemente, the groups, will focus on efforts to break Sanla Ana~Gardeo Grove·Fou.ntain · fthe ~verty cycle. ·Valley area, OraDgei CYPre1s-Buena ~ Park and tbe "AnoJielm.FuUerton• • ~verty -pockets in ~e county are ' Placentia area. isolated and invisible to m an Y There will be four speakers , follow· residents, but they do exist, according ed by a panel discussion and then face· to the conference brochure. to-face workshops. ' A 1967 survey of impoveris~ sec· P.peakers will be Supervisor David Baker, one O( JS members of the Na· GWC Faculty • OKs College OAIL'Y PILOT ltelf l"M1" Huge Cong Rockets Hit Saigon SAIGON (uPI) :.: Tlie Vlet Cong, using giant new Chinese weapons, hit Saigon today with the bloodiest locket attack of the war. A U.S. military spokesman conceded It was ''vlriuaUy impossible" to bait the attacks. A spokesman satd the 16 rockets fired at Saigon were huge 122 millimeter (about five inches) rockets newly brought tn from Red China and that in killing 2S persons, wounding 46 8nd destroying 'l'I buildings they did more harm than previous tfilor bar· rages of 100 or more. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the outgolng U.S. military commander in Saigon, sa.td on his return today from a trip to the United States the rqcket attacks were n o t 11particularly significant" from a military stand· point. Salary Plan tlonal Commission on Urban Problems appointed by the PreSident; Francis Laird, chairman of the Manpower Development Training Act Advisory O:>Uncil; John Jimiqez, principal of a Fullerton school witb 98 percent minority race students, and Granville Peoples, Orange County welfare.dlrec· tor. Panelists will include two Negroes, two Mexican-Americans and a realtor representing the Orange C o u n t y Chamber of Commerce. MOVING DAY AT 'GEBER RANCH' GOl!'S QUIETLY AFTER MARSHAL ARRIVES o,puty Marshal Lyle Poll Tolks Quietly with All .. , Wllllom Gober He said the Communists were trying to "grab headlines throughout the world by portraying a facade of s.trengttl." The headlines would apply particularly to Paris where. U.S. and North Vietnam negotiators have been holding preliminary talks, Orange Coast College instructors to- day are holding out for higher salaries ~ven though teachers at Golden We st College have come to terms with the junior coUege ~trict administration. -The conrerence will begi{ at 9:30 a.m. in Ca·mpus Hall, the UCl gym. nasium. The talk!: and p a n e i discussion will be in the morning. Following picnic lunch, the audience will break up into work.shops from 1 :30 until 4 p.m. From Page I From Pqe I In the end, salary schedules for the sister campuses in Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach wiU have to be the same. District trustees have postponed Wl· ti! Wednesday consideration of the two salary· Pf"Oposals. Golden West instructors are willing to settle for an average 4"2 percent salary increase worked out with Supt. Norman Watson. The Orange Coast College academic senate is asking for an average eight percent pay raise. Whep the separate .proposals were presented to trustees last-week, Dr. Watson urged .the board to favor the lower Goldeo West proposal. Never before ln the 26-year history Of the district has the administtation been unable to come to agreement with the instructors on salaries, Watson said. Je remarked that a 4;2 percent raise would amouot to a cost-of-llving in- crease and said that ls all the district ls prepared to pay. Like Magic Beach to Hire Only I Worker Income and outflow at Hunting.ton Beach city ball was reduced Monday n.i:gtt with council's passing of a resolution to hire only one full time emplOyee in the city treasurer's office. According to city treasurer Warren Hall, one woman will be in t!Je office full time at a $t!,OOO to f7,000 annual salll1')' and another working 20 hours a week at $3.SO an hour. Hall, himself. earns '100 a rnooth, as an "absentee manager." 1 Hail said th.a( when Mrs. Betty DiekOtf was treasurer, WO!"k.ing full time at $550 per mooth, she had three full time assistants. MOURNERS. • • toned a priest. Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, 77, came to the cathedral alone, took com· munion at a side altar, and remained for 80 minutes. Barely a dozen of the thousands in the sanctuary recognized the black-clad figure who shared her prayer book during mass with Army Spec. 4 Jose lnda,rt of New York who unsuspectingly sat beside her. Indart later said he recognized her but did not let on. Green berets made up one honor _guard ~earn including Sgt Major Francis J. Ruddy, 43, who had laid hls beret on the grave of John F. Kennedy at the late president's burial. Others who stood watching as the hours pass- ed were Charles Evers, brother or assassinated civil rights I e ad er Medgar Evers, Kennedy aide Kenneth O'Donnell, the NAACP's Roy Wilkins and \Vashington Columnist Rowland Evans. At midmorning, the deceased's The laws of physics are put into practice by Cubs from Huntington Beach Pack No. 405. The boys will demonstrate various tricks to visitors at the Scout·O-Rama Saturday, utilizing their knowledge of science. They are, from left, Steven Powell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Van P9well; Britton Holtz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Holtz; and Scott Durham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Durham. (For complete story of Scout·O·Rarna and more photos, see Page 7.) .. DAILY PILOT Husti.ttn a.sh, Cfllif«'lls Rott.rt H. Wted P~bUJMr Th•"'"• K11"il .... T\011111 A. Murphint M1111111ln1 £cHIW Alb1rt W. l1tt1 Wlllr1111 Rt1d AAoc!-'• k\H'l!l~tron l e•dl •dl!Ot City Editor H .. ~ IMdl °"'91' JOf Ith Str11t M1lll~1 M4rt111 P.O. In 7tO 92441 ' Ofhtr Offi,f.1 ~ lleKhi nn w. lltOOI hV!"'n Cotti MIMI • Wftl a.1 &ll'Mt ... tl/fUI ••• u., ,., ... ,," ""-·- ,. -~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~--~- Fro111 Page J OCC BONDS. • • haven't hired any new instructors classes fill uP. Then students don't enr{lll because they can't get the pro· grams they want. "In e£fect, we arc d~couraglng them (tom continuing their education. And remember, 95 percent or parents say, 'My child will go on to college.'" It was decided by the finance com- mittee a bond issue is needed to tide the district over for a couple or years. Under new leglslation, trustees will be able beginning in 1971 to raise the tax rate without a vote of the people . They· then will have the same power as city council1nen. "Are most people familiar with thir. Jaw?" Catherine Peppard of Corona del Mar asked. "They are going to be in for quite a shock." Dr. Watson said he fettsees diUicul- ty with the proposed bond issue ballot. "There ~·ould be two tssuea on~ the b·alJot," he aatd . "One for a tax C(>ft· versJon at no cos t to the taxpayer. The other for a bond Issue. ''Three guesses which will pass and which will rail." ' Grove Youth, 19, Killed in Crash A 15-year-old Garden Grove boy lost control of hi s car on a slight curve near Gi'ilnts Pass, Ore., early today and it rolled over a bank, kUling the youth"s older brother. Oregon State Police idenUfied the dead youth as Richard H. Nantell. 19, of 12o:r.? Quatro Ave., Garden Grove, bu t did not say if he was dead at the accident scene. Timothy Nantell. driver of the car when it went out of control on Tnte.rstate Highway 5 along the Rogue River, is hospitalized today for treat- ment of his injuries. From Pnge I DESALT .•• spent this year," Weyuker added. Congres,man Richard T. Hanna (D· Westminster) saJd, "1 belleve thls to be a most salutary development and it indicates the commitbnent·to see the projec~ through. "I would hope U1at-the project would go ahead ln spite of the Increased cost for it will be a significant contribution toward efforts to tolve the area's w•ter problem." eldest son1 Joseph P. KeODedy III, 16, joined the honor· gu ard with several young friends and former Negro Olym· pie decathalon champion Rafe r Johnson who was with Kennedy \Vednesday when he was shot down in Los Angeles. As brilliant sunlight poured through the cathedral's lofty stained glass win- dows . to replace the dusky candle glow, the line lengihened from FU th Avenue to MB:dison and P.ark Avenues., Mourners funneled Into UYe midtown area by train, subway, car and chartered bus, filling Park Avenue's flowered bordered walks eight abreast. rrundreds had waited throughout lhc night for St. Patrick's bronze doors to swing open at sunrise. AU ·about them were reminders of the nation's grief - the flags run up to half staff, the crepe-draped photographs in . Fifth Avenue store windows, the tribute of a few cut flowers ·carried by some of the mourners. Mrs. Mary Ann Camp of New Jersey and her three children kept the night· long vigil. "I want my children to learn that people must obey rules," she said. "I want them to see what happens ,.,.ht!n they don 't." Everyone referred to the senator as Bobby, even the priests in the service of the mass for the dead. Gary Solitro, 21, of Philadelphia, put it simpfy: "You hate to lose a man like Bobby." GEBERS .•• property where seven rusting and unstartable c.ars had been collected over the yea.rs. AU of the wrecks were hauled away. The Gebers were evicted from the property they had occupied for eight yeaN. During the time they had squatted there, William's hairy barrel chest and broad back had become brown un· der the Qrlifornia sun. His wife, Allee, had worked as a • ca¢ering truck operator. Both Gebers had farmed a little, added to the col· lection .of_ animals and "goocµes " on their little ·ta.rm and just let life kind of happen. ~But as Fountain Valley grew up around them (the big, new Fountain Valley Orlve·in Theater occupies acreage partly behind their small "ranch" and other developments are approaching from every directi~n), zoning and other city regulations threatened their free-thinking kind of existence. In the spring of 1967, sherlll's deputies appeared at the property to lend a hand to county crews assigned to clear the weeds from the property. That's when Alice was accused of holding a deputy at bay in front of a pistol. The "Pistol-packin' Mama" title was given to her by newspapers cover· ing the incident. But the publicity calmed down aftl!!' awhile. Then it came time for spring weed killing again. Fountain Valley police officers in March, 1968, talked to William over the barrel of a rifle·. He said later it wasn't really loaded and he wouldn't have shot anybody. Asked whether it was possible to stop bombardments of the city which has undergone attacks seven con· secutive nights an official spokesman said: "In this type of warfare, it's like stepping on ants. It's easy if they're all gathered around a clump of candy, but when they start to scatter in the grass you don't find them. From Pqe 1 SIRHAN ••• ceeding that wol!-ld have required · Sirhan to be present. The Grand Jury method carries no such requirement. No Jaw enforcement official here wants to transfer Sirhan from his tightly guarded jail cell and risk the possibility that, like Lee Harvey Oswald, Sirhan might h seU fall vie· tim to an assassin bef e coming to trial. · The Grand Jury hearin ·may shed some light on growing spec tion that the man who sbot Kennedy not have gone to the Ambassador o el election party alone. An all-points bulletin was in effect for a young woman in a polka dot dress who ran from the primary vie· tory celebration shortly after Kennedy was killed. "We shot him," a campaign worker said the woman told her. "Prior to the shooting," according to the police report, "suspect (Sirhan) was observed with a female Caucasian described as 2.1 to 'Z1 years, five feet six inci\_es tall. wearing a white voile dress w}\h three-quarter sleeves and with small black polka dots." r DREXAL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION • ALSO ON SALE ••. DREXEL FRENCH COUNTRY MANNER-DREXEL'S INDEX IXCLUSIYI DU.URS POR: HINHDON -DRIXIL-HHITAIH tO DAYS NO INTIREST-LONGH TlllMS AVAii.AiU C?N APPROVED CREDIT 1-'fMJll titt. HIWPOIT 10.CH _ Ml·JOIO 1727 W-'lff DrlH '"'1ot1h1ol i!:.!!~M?~ LAGUNA llACH~- Deoito.. J41 N .... c-1 Hwy. 4"4-6111 ANWlll J:.ID-NSlD OPIN NIDA't 'TU, t ,..... , ........... ., O!'at= C.ucfy 140-1261 f I I -----------------..---~-----.......------...... -- -------------- ... . Lag·nna Beaeh ' VOL 61, NO. '137, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES _, t:A(;UNA BEACH, C>.tlFORNIA FRIDAY, \JUNE 7, )961 ' ' :Juniors, Seniors Reap G:alaxy of The born of plenty seemed to have opened at Laguna Beach High School '.Thursday as scholarships, trophies, . pins, plaques and certiticates poured for th bountifully for nearly two hours. A packed audience watched business and civic leaders honor juniors and seniors et the annual honors and awards asSerqply. · The value represented -about $32,000 -at the smallest high school in Orange County was more than the amount gjven by some colleges. It compared with a cash value cl $12,750 for scholarsbip awards last year. The program opened with the .i\ssociated Student Bond Award presented to Tom Purdy and closed with dedication of the school year book to R. A. Paige, a teachei' at the high school for 21 years. 1 • William c. "Will" Hitchcock carted off tibe greeter number ~ honors of any student. Here are the awards: Daughters of tbe "1Uertcan RevoJu .. tion , -Medals of excellence in scholarship to Julie Merrill and Jim Sweeney and home economics awards to Pauline Favour and Myrna San· · chez. Lagoo. Beach Lumber Co.~100 to Roger Dougherty. Lions Club -$100 each to Eric Bermant Brandt Davis, Mi k e Mawnann, Steve· ReninC and •Greg Oliva. Bank ol ·America -Achievement certificates to LanO! Bonnet, art; Susan Brown, IOclal . studjes; Rita Cutler, ·music ; Randy Devore, in- dustrial arts; Pauline Favor, home economics; Bob K·a war at an i, ~thematics ; Kathryn L a m be r t , foreign language; ~aJg Petersen; science; Fred S8ylor, English; Lailra Sd:loenleber, business emac..ulin; Jim Sweeney, malh and <sdAmco (p~at); wur .mtch<o,clc, Uber~ arls;(plaque>. Sor-Optimist ..:. Sbe<Ty • Giindle, Alberta Patterson, Edu c,~t i o.n al scholarship ol-$350; R~ 1Kiooman, drama, fl5; Hilary Huston, music, flS : Debbie Zeug, physical edQ9ation1 $25 ; and summ~ for .Joh Berger, Cyjldee Hendric)<son, Dlape -Holt, Darci Linkey, Gall McReil,>~th. Meyel'S, Qaud1a.Miller. JUlle' Morrill. • Today's Closing N.Y. Stoeks JEN ·CENTS Hono.rs· Dickey Coftin, Kathleen White .and Nancy Martin. Lagtina News-Post Athletic Award -Mlke Jackson. Athletic · Captains -Doug Schmitz 3,nd Steve· Shapard, baseball; Steve Weizbowskl, basket ba 11 ; Dave llustwick and , Kurt Jensen, cross country; Bill Jones and Tom Scherer, football : Chuck Norris, goll; W11l (See BANQUET, Page%) ousan s ourn enne ,_ " ·Kennedy Slaying Coroner Two of he district attorney today released {he follc>wing names of those tum· mc>ned to appear before the county grand jury during its investigation of the CIBsassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy: The list included two of the five persons wounded with Kennedy: Ira Goldstein and Irwin strc>ll. The latter was wheeled into the hall of justice on a hospital-type bed. Anc>ther witness, lienry Carreon, reportedly met Sirhan at a ~et shooting range in the San Gabriel Valley, a few days belore Kennedy W'36 shot. Roosevelt Grier and Rafe.I' Johnson, •.wu athletes who were with Kennedy When he w.as shot and who helped cap- ture the suspected asS;bssin, were on the list but they ac~ompanied the senator's bcxly to New York and ap- parently ~re still in the east. Also summc>ned were David Es- quith, who took Stroll to the hospital when he was shot. He later was ex- cused from testifying. Also called were two radio car or- ficers Arthur Placencia aind T. R. White', who were the first patrol car to reach the scene and took the suspect into custOOy. Others included four Ambassador Hotel employes: dishwasher Jesu~ Perez, Eddie Minasisan, Vincent di Pierro and assistant banquet manager Karl Uecker; seven ambulance drivers: 1-larold Burba, rt.: ax Behrman, Robert Hulsman, Jerrold Hemingway. Richard Walker, Thom.as Ratliff and Donald Rus. One Witness, who said he was a porter at the hot.el where Kermedy was shot but wtio did not give his name begore going into the witness room, told newsmen he saw the accused gun· man at the scene half an hour before the shooting. The accused asked several times i( Kennedy would pass throtigh the area, tbe witness said, and "looked worried, bUt not nervous ... I didn't see anyone with 'him." Another witness was Irwin Stroll , one of the W<>unded. Shot in the left Calls Victims UPI Tel9phof0 .GRAND JURY WITN ESS Dithwasher J esus Perez leg, he arrived in ·a wheel chair. Another was Ira Goldstein, shot in the hip, who arrived limping. Walker, an ambulance driver, said another victim, \Villiam Weisel, told him he felt "three sharp stings" as he was hit by bullets that wounded him. POlice officers called included Sgt. Albert J. La Valle, an investigator; Lt. Al Hegge, Ramparts division dd,ec- tlve; Lt. Charles Hughes, ce>mmander or the Foothill division detectives; De Wayne Wolfer, a ball.i&tics expert, and G. D. Dill, a homicide detective. Irvine Meet to Study Orange County Poverty A day-long co nlerence on "Poverty in Orange County" will be held at UC Irvine on Saturday. The conference, sponso red by 20 Orange County cc>mmunity service groups, will focus-on efforts to break the poverty cycle. . Pover ty pockets in the county are isolated and invisibae to man y residents , but they do exist, according to the conference brochure. A 1967 survey of Impoverished sec· tions of the county showed 10 percent unemployed, 60 percent employed in unskilled jobs and less than 50 percent hlgn~scbool @:aduates. ~11lese p0~ets~are~1~ocated in Huntington Beach, San Clemente, the' · Santa Ana-Garden Grove-Fountain Valley area, Orange, Cypress-Buena Park and the Anaheim-Fullerton- Placentia area. -- There will be {our speakers, follow· cd by a panel discussion and then fate- i t . to-face workshops, Speakers will be Super visor David Baker, one of 15 members of the Na- tional Commission on Urban Problem! appointed by the President; Francis Laird. chairrn.an of the Manpower Development Training Act Advisory Council; John Jiminez, principal of a Fullerton school with 98 percerit minority race students, and Granville Peoples, Orange County weliare direc· tor. Panelists will include two Negroes, two Mexican-Americans and a realtor repr~entll:!:g the Orange C o u Q t y Chamber of commerce. The conference will begin at 9:30 a.m. in CMnplis Hall, the UCI gym- nasium. The talkD and p a n e l discussion will be in the morning. R'ollowlng picnic lunch, the audjence will break up into workshops !rom 1:30 until 4 p.m. ' Meters Take .Beating by Wild Auto It was a bad morning for traffic meters ih Laguna Beaeh today. A hit-and-run driver flattened two of the,m near the library and got two shade trees and part or a 1959 Cadillac to boot. Police Sgt. Dave Brown said the wectbound 1955 sedan, registered to a Tustin man, crossed the curb between the library and the Park Avenue bar· ricade; 6'eered one meter aa4 .. m trees: clipped the pa?kect' c~bt" &:ross Park and )mocked the bead off another ,meter showedng Park with nickels aii:l pennies. I · In the process the hit-run car lost Jts license plate which police recovered. Brown-eaid the detectives will be talk· ing to the niiisiered owner to see if he can a<!ocunt for his car. Another loss in the brief auto ram· page at 12:45 a.m. was a city sign which said "Do Not Enter," referring to one-way Park Avenue. In another accident, a motorcycle versus parking meter, the driver, Jack w. Fleury, 21, of Redondo Beach, suffered a head laceration. Brown said his vehicle went out of control at South Coast Highway and Forest Avenue and bent· a meter at a 45 degree angle at 2:22 a.m. today. Those Streets Are Planned For Driving It soonded almost like tile G<orgo Gobel joke about making a careful left turn on New Year's Eve and hav· ing sc>meone step on your hand. Laguna Beach police Wednesday at· rested John Gary Johnson, 20, of 456 Canyon Acres Drive, oo suspicion of being under the influence of dnigs. Sgt. Dave Brown said Johnson was southbc>und in the outside lane of South Coast Highway when spotted by officers John Saporito and John San- ders. The problem : he had no car; he was afoot. Brc>wn said as Johnson approached Cleo Street he transferred to the faster inside lane. TNlffic was backed up for a block to St. Ann's Drive. Po- lice yelled at Johnson , said Brown. but he ignored them. As they got out of the patrol car, he fled, said Brown. He was 106t for a time but in a COO· pie of minutes, the officer said, Sapo· rito and Sanders learned by radio that Johraon was back maneuvering among the traffic. Brown said they returned and dis· covered Johnson running among the tables at Taco Bell's. He came pas. sively. Brown said Johnson was also book- ed on a $38 traffic warrant but It in- volves a car. GOING TO CAMP? CHECK THE PILOT There are at least 43 ways to find the fun in the sun this summer tr you are a boy or girl -or an entire family -looking for a-~y camp, overnight in the mountains or other "summer camp" experience. The DAILY Pll.OT Saturday will devote almost an entire page to Ustlng the 43 programs available to summer campers Crom the Orange Coast area. Check the list and make your plans. THROUGHOUT LONG .NIGHT, A VIGI L IN ST. PATRICK'S Honor Guard Staitds In Cathedral With Robert KennedYs Body Laguna Baccalaureate ServicesSetSunday i'Vight B~Ioaureate services for Laguna Bea<:h High School will begin at 8 p.m. Sund~ in Irvine Bowl. "In Times Like These" is the tflpic of an address to be given by Dr .. Ray C. Gery, president of the Laguna Beach Ministerial Associatioo . •Musk will be presented by the sentoc clat5s, the high scbOOl concert choir under the direct.ion of Joack Kref· ting with Frederick M. Barnes at the GrgatJ. Tom Purdy will give tfK! invoo:ation and William Jrudlcock will reod the &eriptures. The Rev. Charles Waiers ol aie Baptist Church-will-lead -the StOelc JlfarfceU respon&ive reading. The pastoral prayer wiJJ'.be given by the Rev. William Eckel of tbe Presbyterian Oiurcti and tile benedic- tion by the Rev. Fr. Robert Bood ot ~ Oatt»lic Church. The baccalaureate is open to t'he ,public. Laguna High Calls Off Grid Game for RFK ' ' IA-<etpe<l·to-tlle mcnory.o(,lfli-ltla Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Leguno Bead! High Scbool bu PQ#Ol>ed its •prdilC lootl>Oll gome · w!llill wes . -!«' S.tocdlly nJ&l>t. NE)'/ YORK (AP) -The -toclc ~ High !ooft>all coedl Hal market's advan!=e was trhnmfld by 'Akin6 &MO\lnced lbc pos~ment­ preweexend profit taldng this al-Fflday,, adding tile game ,will be ternoon . (See qu0tatloos, Pages 8-9). plll)'ed Mord>Y atternoon al 3:1S. . ' ' -· ' St. Patrick's Cathedral Packed By LOUIS CASSELS U,I Stnlor l!dllor NEW YORK -The people who tou~hed Bobby Kennedy's hand in life reached out Friday to tou<:h his casket in death. By the hundreds of · thousands they came -rich and poor, black and white, old and young, male and female, immigrant and native-born - a vast polyglot stream of humanity united by a common sorrow. Undeterred by 9<klegree heat which turned midtown Manhattan' into a bake-oven, ~hey waited in line for upwards ol five hours in ocder to spend five seconds filing raSt the bier in St. Patrick's Cathedra where Sen. Robert F. Kenn~y lay in state. The throng of people wanted to say goodbye to ·tbe 42-year-old senator whose brilliant career was cut short by an assassin Wednesday in Los Angeles was so great that authorities had to abandon plans to. cut off the processic>n at 10 p.m. They announced that the great neo-Gotllic Roman Catholic Cathedral on Fifth· Avenue would remain oi>en all night. GRIEF PRESENT It was the biggest outpouring of grief ih the big city's history. Funeral services fc>r the senator will be held in the cathedral at 10 a.m. Saturday. All of the 2,300 seats will be filled with dignitaries, friend~. lllla- tives and other guests invited 'bf the family. The two men who were Kennedy's rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination -Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy -said they would attend. President Johnson's pl.ans were not announced, but no one would be surprised if he shO\red up. Following the funeral mass, the body will be taken to WashingtQn by train for burial late Saturday af- ternoon in Arlington N at i o n a 1 Cemetery. Robert Kennedy's grave will be near that of his older brother, President John F . Kennedy, who also w.as cut down by an assassin's bullet in the brain, just fc>ur and a half years (See MOURNERS, Page 2) Or ange Ceast Weather Don't look up at the sky, you may get splashed in the eye, cautions forecaster Frank Ernst. Along with our normal cloudl· ness, a bit. ot "local drlnle" is on tap for the coast this week- end. INSWE TODAY Carnival time in Coronc de! Mar makes for delightful pie· tures and a reminder that there is nearly alwa111 something special to do olong the Orange CO<Ut, 1te WEEKENDER Maga· zine todau. ..""• '' s~1vi. """' ' Qillfenlt. ... s.c&el ,._ 11•11 CllnlllN 1942 S_.. 1•1' Ctl!tlet H llMt ~ •t C-W.r'lll '' T.......... • Ottt•.JMfta&_ J _, ... ..,. W I •.i1t11• ,... 11 ......... • '"""" ... -..... .. '"-Calll 1 W ........ .,...... 11 · Art..._. 11 A• ~ n DMftMr • Mehu: 11 Dl'Mll IJ "'"''"' 1 ,..... 1•11 Mt~le .... 11 , .. ..._ I ~·---. -···· ' ......... ·-4-4 Miit ...... • °"'• c...tr r .....,.. .. •n _,. • I , ............. ~111!111----------~------------.-..--------~~~~~~---- _Z DAIL~ PILOT 4 Victims . . • Of Shooting ' Improving _LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Four persons wounded lo the gunplay that attended the ~sasslnation ot Sen. Robert F. Kennedy Thursday were ·ma1c1n1 satisfactory p"'gr.., In Los Angeles area hospital& todey. A fifth was discharged. He is Ira Goldst.eln, 19, a newsman Crom EDdDo who 1uffered a bullet wound in the lert thigh. A spokesman •t Encino Hospital &&id Goldltein would have lo get around with a cane temporarily. Reported Jmprovin& in tbe lntemive 'care ward at K.aiaer Foundation Hospital was Paul Scbr~e, 43, western re&lcmal director . of the United Auto Workers Union. Surceona removed bullet fragmentr from his skull during a tWo hout 'lperation w~sday. Schrade, a ".llembe'r of the Kennedy delegation to the Democratic National Convention. suffered. a skull fracture, but the bulle~ djd not penetrate bis brain. A1lo progresstn& satisfactorily a: the 1ame hospital was Wllllun We1sel1 30, a broade.t oeWs necutive from Washington, D.C., who had a bullet removed from his abdomen. Mrs. Elizabeth Evans of Saugus, was reported "doing very well" by a spOtesman at HwiliDftozi Memorial Hbspital In Pasadena. She was being treated for a scalp wound . Irwin Stroll. 17, L<ls Angeles. was in "good"condition at Midway H05pital. ·He received a bullet wound in the ·tower left leg. * * fr Kennedys Sa~ Yorty W elfome At RFK Rites ' NEW YORK (AP) -A spokesman for Mrs. Robert F . Kennedy said to- day that Mayor Sam Yorty of Los Angeles would be welcome at the funeral for the slain senator as the of- ficial representative of that ci~y. · It waa ea:rller reported that Mrs. Kennedy did not ·Nish the mayor to at· tend the funeral. Severe.I Democrat,lc clubs ~90 have urged him lo 1tay away. Frank Mankiewicz, press secretary to tbe late senator, said the Los Angeles City Council had appolnled Yorty as offlcial represeflt.aUve to the funeral and that he would be w~come. Thomas Jardine, Yorty's 1 press .secretary, said. Thursday that Sander Vanocur, an NBC television newsman. had quoted Mn;, Kennedy as saying she preferred that Yorty oot attend the hmersl. Vanocur accompanied the K.emedy family and the senator's body on Thursday's flight from Los Angeles to New York. Jardine said Yorty had no idea wby Mrs. Kemedy should make such a comment and said that Yorty "is en· tirely confused about it." Hnndreds to Help On Heart Sunday Hundreds of local volunteers from the Orange Coa5t area wlll call on neighbors Sunday to open their hearts to the City of Hope during t1>e llMUal "Hope Sunday" drlve. The City of Hope is seeking cures to cancer, leukemia end 1 J 1 n e s s e s resulting from blood, chert, heart and hereditary abnonnallties. 'The specialized services of the City of Hope are available to men, women and children in every community acT09S tbe nation. Patients are ac· cepted on 1"1erral by private phy~­ (dam. • DAILY PILOT --Col-lo 111:.Mrt N. w •• 4 -lll•ll'I•• Kt•vil .... Th•111t• A. Murph l11• IMMtlM lfltor kkh•r4 P. N•ft ...._ 1Mc11 c~ 1•11w .l•ck k. .C.t.., P••I NTt1•11 .............. ~Olfllmr ---...... ..,.._, P.O. a. &6' tl6U w ,_.,. __ Ott.er Offlc•• ' __ ,.,.,_ .. ,,_ . ....,.,., 1Mct11 nn 'W ... ,_ •""'9w.,. """""'* ...,.! -"" '''"' .. ~ki.,,.ful Care ' ~ ' l j ' • Too Dangerous Unde.rsea . . Study . ' ' Plan -1'orp~do'ed i • ' ' • • ~-· -The-plan-of ·two college 1tudenl1 to erect a sµbmarlne chamber on the Lleuna· Beicb : ocean floor wat , ~ by collllcll caution Wed- 'J neaday Dl(llL OCC Refuses ' To Sign Pact On Seat Taxes 'WUll fresh 1-of wlmilng a victory in Sacromento, Orange Coast Junior College District trustees have again · declined to sign a seat tax agreement with the new Saddleback Junior College District serving the Laguna Beach, Tustin and Mission Viejo """"· The agreement was r e j e c t e d Cal Stat"e Fullerton 41.ud~nts Jln1 Pamplin and Sue. Webber :,hrugged and quietly left lhe counc;it ch8Jllbers after hearing all the reasons such a venture might linpuil thf' dty. · The pair had asked J*rml.sslon to plant a four-foot observation cube. a converted Air Force altitude chamber on the bottom of Wood& O>ve. ' niey wrote that an open entrance at th,e ·bottom would equalize trapped air pressure with the water pressure and tha t a wave-drive compressor would constanUy replenish the air. They stated in a Je~r that the Conshelf and Sea Lab projects have never wrestled with the biological needs of the crew. They wrote: "Our goal is to establish a habitat 30 feet widerwater which will use the ocean's wasted energy to provide enough air, fresh water a nd electricity to sustain one man indefinitely. "Other areas of r~search will In- . elude the culUvation of. lobster, abalone, plankton eating fish and edi- ble kelps." ~aguria Beach Exploorers will demonstrate their E(Xtensive . training for search and rescue---work wltich their newly formed post has been organized to teach and handle. The .boys, students of Laguna Beach High School, are, from left, John Brown, son at Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Brown; Richard Burt Jr., son of.Mr. and Mrs. Richard Burt; and Glenn Kawaratan1. son of Mr. and Mrs. Hide Kawaratani. (See Page 7 for complete story, more photos.) because OCC trutees don't want to take any chance of jeopardizing a bill pending In tile Legll<alure . They worry that legis.tators would get the mist.a.ken idea they are willing to gi\'.e ground. They are not. The agreemeot was proposed to trustees by OCC Supt. Norman Watson to make it easier for Saddleback transfer students to register with the Orange Coast District. City attorney Jack Rimel had warn- ed that the city might be sued for maintaining a dangerous contraption if someo'le drowned. F....,. Patre l LAGUNA HIGH BANQnET • •• Hitcbcocl< and.Tom Holm, swimming; Rick England and steve WeizbowskJ, tenn!S; Larry D'Armond and Mike · Totten, track: and Will Hitchcock and Tom Holm', water polo. Harvard Book Award -Brian Wainwright. Bartmore Beauty College -1321> each to Roberta Fagiin and Susie Tompkins. Delta Kappa Gamma -$100 to Sherry Grindle. North American Rockwell -$lKXl per year to James sw--e:en·e·y:- Douglas Aircraft -Michale Totten, . plaque. .-- State Scholarships -$517 to Robert Frost and $284 to Jeanette Nichols. Yale scholarship -Michael Totten. UCI -$1,450 per year lo Brett Heizer. . DAR --: Laura Schoenleber, good citizenship. Panh~llenlc -1100 to Dldcey Coffln. Hughes Fair Enterprise -Robert Kawaratani. Gemco -$2.5 to Will Hitchcock. Rotarv top scholars -Susan· Brown, Robert Frost, Jacques Jura, and Craig Petersen. Civitan -Melinda llawklns and John Heid. American Legion -Robin McNelly, Jull~·Morrlll, Patrick Shea, and Peter Volz. · "I Dare You" award -Dickey Cof- fin and Mike Totten. Junior Chamber of Commerce -·$:2oo to Garv Sequeira. AMa R. Chambers Speech award - Will Hitchcock. Elks Club -$25 each to Robin McNelly and Ted Benson. -American Chemical Society -Brian Wainwright. • Insurance AaenU. -$100 to Susan Brown. Khnals Club -l500 to Ann Shat· tuck. California Scholarship Federation - Susan Brown. Jacques Jur~. Laura Schoenleber, Susan Dav1s, Nancy Har- rison, Kirk McCarter, Tom Swartout, Robert Frost, Bob Ka""6I'atanl, Jim Sweeney, Diane Dwyer, Mike Jackson, Jeanette Nichols, Russ Williams. Brett Helzer. Craig Petersen, Mike Tottan. Tom Glidden, Linda King, Ann Shat- tuck, Will Hitchcock. Fred Saylor, Dickey Coffln, Ray Gradecak, Dick Krantz and Jill Stephens. California· Savings and Loan -$100 to \Vill Hitchcock. Laguna Beach Assistance League - $500 to Tom. Purdy. Commµnity Players -Kathy Qin· non. $320 ; and Diane O\vyer . $200. Business and Professional \Vomcn - $100 to lltary Collins. Schoepe Home Economic~ award - Steve Renlng, $100; and Pauline Favour, SlOO. Class of 1959 service a\\'ard -Ann Shattuck and Bob Ka...,·aratani. Martin History award -e100 to Will Hitcheock. , Rotary Vocational scholarship - $400 to Randy Devore. Laguna Craft Guild -$50 to Jennie Jensen. Optimist Boy of Oho Year -WUI lUtchcock. Victor Stuart award -S25 bond to Terrie Perrine. Polly PrtHt Vocatlonal ~ward­ M)'Mla Sanchez. So\lth Coast Community llospital Auxiliary -$100 to \Vl\1 Jlitchcock. ArthW' B. Harward -$1 .000 to Brett Heber. Thurston Grant -Mary CoWn1, Sl ,000: Susan Oavts, $1,000 ; Diane Dwyer, $1,000; Patricia McP.1ahon , Sl.000; J•an•lt• Nichol$, si,000; Tom P\ll'dy, -41,000; ~JO!ll.....l11ton. 1750; Laura Schoenleber, f75(); Wesley Lum, '6'00 (a ifadU ... ) and MI k e Sd>oenleber, l!OO (I V&duate). Prlnctpal'a 1ward -AM Shattuck, and Bob Ktiwaratani. Festival of Arts -$3,800 amona An. di Bell, Lance Bonnett, Jennie Jensen, Jecque1 Jura, Mori« Slaflces, Tonl Tll14!1, Peter 1lner, Patrick Tobin encl Katen Wilson. Ebell -$3,000 among Susan Brown, Will Hitchcock, Bob Kawaratani, Jeanette Niohols, .Craig Petersen and Ann Shattuck. From Page l MOURNERS. •• ago. Friday was the little guy's day to honor a man who was born to wealth but always had a tremendous feeling for the poor and oppressed. As they passed the A f r 1 c a n mahogany casket at a rate of 6,000 an hoW', some made the sign of the cross or genuflected. But the m o s t characteristic gesture was to stretch forth a band and touch the lid of Ule closed casket. · OLD SUPERSTITION There is an old Irish superstition that touching a casket keeps the _devil from troubling the soul o(. the deceas- ed. But many who patted, rubbed, caressed or kissed Kennedy's casket were .plilnJ,y not of. Irish descent For tb~1 1~ 19em~ to be purely a gesture .of.. • .uecuon -another manifestation ~dlvr:-. ~ mystique ,that caused ~ . , ·atampede around him, trying to · uep. him , during his short and exploslye·~·stdenti.al campaign. The senaiof.J :'Widow, Ethel. preg- nant with their lltb child , came to the cathedral at 1iOOh With the three eldest c.hildren:· )Cathleen,. 17, Joseph C. III, 16, and Robert Jr., \4, They knelt In a front pew while a priest, oflerlng a tne11 for the dead, intoned the prayer: "May light ebernal shine upon him. O Lord ..• be merciful to the soul of your faithful servant Robert." N".rs . Kennedy, whose trademark is a halrbow, wore a black ooo for this sad occasion. Her eyes were wide and staring. For her, It was only Ule mid· point· of the nightmare. STILL TO COME • 'st,Ul to come was S&turday's funeral' and ttte mournful trip to Washington in a black-draped funeral train. And finally, hardest of all for a grleving lamlly trylnj to malntaip tis dignity. under relentless public gaze, the long funeral p r o c e s s 1 o n through \Vashington, '"past the Senate office Building, past the Departnient of Justice where Kennedy once served as attorney general, around the Lincoln Memorial1 and over the Potomac River to the national cemetery. The Kennedys know 1he route on1y loo well. They'v~ been there before. MOTHER VISl'l:S Mrs. Rose Kennedy, T7-year-old mother or the tragedy-stalked famil)' slipped into the cathedral at 8 a.m.: unrecognized by the crowd. She took communion at the side altar and re- ntained hidden in a corner for abou1 - an hour, watching the procession past the bier. 1 When she left by a side door. her regal pose gave way, and she broke down in heavy sobbing as two hefty policemen supported .her to a waiting car. To lose ™-'O sons In the satne way is too much for any mother -even a Kennedy. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, only survivor of the four Kennedy brothers. had come earlier. sitting alone during a 6 a.m . mass whlcb was the first of elghl said during the day. GUARD CASKET The two ol«Hr boys, JOMph Md Robert, took turns during tile morning standing 1n the honor guard around the cakiet. The guard was changed Ire· quently, consi&ting ·aometime1 or membtrs or the ermed forces, and at other Umea or retaUve1, friends: political aoooclates and •tall aides oC the late senator. Comic Fantasy Set fQr Laguna Women's Club The comic fantasy, "Revolt at the Portals" will be presented 1rr Laguna Beach Saturday night. A 10-member drama team The ~ng's Players from Biota ~liege, wdl be performing for the public at 7:30 p.m. in the Women's Club at Glenneyre and St. Ann's Drive. It's not St. Peter at the Golden Gate but the office of a modern day "Mr. Peters" into which Ule play's cast con- verges. Characters such as "Rip Darren,,, an. ad~enturuome pilot, and "Miss Al- q.wst, a member of the beat genera- tion discuss their lives and attitudes on ~ar!h as 'the.r await e1,1trance into thell' final destination after their re· cent deaths. · The .play climaxes with eternal directions from Mr. Peters. "The play prov.es lo be as mentally stimulating as 1t is entertaining," commented Clyde Cook. professor at Biota. He is tra,vellng with the team Which carries its own lighting and sound elfects. Written into it was a loophole to Z!llow for change in legislation. It stipulates the seat tax agreement be subject to provisions of the law as it shalLex.ist on-Nov. 15, 1969. OCC trustees-in rejecting the agree- ment la.« week said they do not wish to make students pawns in the con- troversy, but they think the burden of m,aking ento:llmeDt easier lies with Saddlleback and the Orange Couo1y School Board. Ad,mission of Saddleback tr£'1lsfer students is now an involved process reqliirlng stops wlU! bolh Junl..-col· lege di&tricst and at the county sctiools ofllc<. The agreement propoged by Dr. Watson bas never been submitted to 1lle Saddleback board. Children to Show Art on Weekend Fowth, tifth and slxlh graders from Laguna Beach's three elementary schools will display thelr art work Saturday and Sunday (June 8 and 9) from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the lawn of tf!e Laguna Beach Art Asroclation. The ·second annual event w1ll draw close to 50 young exhibitors. Though children may set their own prices, some works will not be for ule1 Voting Record Set Except for . . 86 . Pr.ooinctS • ' ' • Orange County voters set a dew record for primary elecUon balli?~n'g Tue&day, but. there are · peopile iir 86 precincts who won't know how their neighbors voted for two weeks. ~ Here is w:hy the votes of the; 86 precincts were not tallied by the CQm · pufer, according to County C~rk wn11am st John: ~ "This ·year we had five dilf~nl kinds Of balloU jn some precinc~ - ~~publica~. Democratic. American Independent, Peace and Freedom and non-partisan. • "To be certain that each group ol election workers did an ae<:urate and honest job, we programmed the com· puter to reject any obvious discrepan· cies. "For instance, if there were lJIO Democrats registered ln one precinC1 and the computer detected that 18.5 Democrats tiad voted those votes wer1 thrown out of the totals. The machine rejected returns from 86 precincts. · "We taught the election people b~ motion pictures how to correctly giv• oti.t and a ssemble ballots, but I gues' · we must recognize that some peopl• do make mistakes," St John sighed. ' r DREXAL SALE FEATURING DREX-EL'S ESPERANTO . COLLECTION ... , ..... ALSO ON SALE . • . DR£XEL FRENCH COUNTRY MANNER -DREXEL'S INDEX DCLUSIVI DIALllS l'OI: NIN UDON -DHXIL -NHITA•I • u+jJ,;;-"~ ~ /;;" NIWPOIT llACN Ml.ZOIO 17J1W-llrtn IN'llllOllS Plof..iusl I-LA•UNA llACN D....... J41 Nri C.. Nwy. ~ .... ,, ~10--NSID ONN NID~t 'TIL t ,.._ T• ...... .., eif 0.,.,. CMllfY IM .. 116J I l 4"4-4111 f ·' ,. .•. .. ' '· .. ··• .c .. ... . : • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • < • • • • • G • • • 3 • • • § § • • •• .. .. " • " • " ~ > .. ~ • • .. :i .. .. i: = .. • .. .. ~ .. ~ Q c 0 • .. .. " • • • " • • • .. < " .. .. ~ _I_. KENNEDY MEMORIAL CEREMONY GATTHERS CROWD OF STUDENTS AT UCI Ul"t T•llPiloM ,. LONG WAIT -The long wait before dawn today to get in- .... ~ide St. Patrick's Cathedral in ... New York City was too much for this elderly woman among , moarners for Sen. Robert Ken- .· nedy. She stepped out of line :,;'and sat on curb to rest. • rl ... .. ~ . ...... ' '-• • .. 0 ~ " .. • • • • • .. ~ • • • • .. • < .. .. a • ~ 0 0 .. .. .. " -• .. .. .. • • •• " " " • .. • ~ ~ ~ • • • .. a w • = • .. .. .. • .. • .. ~ G • 0 ~ " " G • • • .. • .. .. ~ < ~ • • • "' .. .. & .. .. • • llEWPORT CEKTER • Tribute at _UCI Students Paitse to Mourn K ennedy UC Irvine students took time oul from &tudying for finals to turn out Thursday at a memorial service for Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Speaking to the students, Chancellor Dariiel G. Aldrich Jr. called the observance •·a brie( but honest tribute to a m.ari.'' He gave this prayer: Sirh,an Labeled 'Polite, Humble' 'fEIBEll, lsra11:1i -Occupied Jordan !UPI) -This tiny Christian vi l!a,l!.e to· day struggled to understand that one of its sons is accused of shooting Sen . Robert F. Kennedy. For Sirhan Bishara Sirhan was one of the quiet ones. "A very gentle, polite. quiet and humble boy . interested mainly in books" said a schoolteacher of the 24· year-old Arab who left for America a decade ago and came back in headlines that shocked Teibeh. Salim Awad, the principal of the village's Luther-an school. said, ··it is beyond comprehension how he could have committed such a terrible act on his own initiative without having been put up to do this by some other peo· pie." #1 FASHION ISLAND I • "We pray for our troubled people, wandering in the twilight of un- certainty. Jn our hearts we know that they are beset with suspicion and fear, animosity and greed. "We .ask that Thy spirit will strive mightily with the leaders of our coun- try as they seek the "means by which our peoples can live at peace and understanding with one another. "'Impress upon their minds and hearts that, until we are at peace with Thee. we can be at peace with no one else : that freedom can exist nowhere unless it existS everywhere; that the strength. of this-nation does not lie .in armies and navies. but in the integrity of her people : that peace and un- derstanding is born out o f righteousness, and nothing elsl': Uiat the trouble with our nation and the world is still -people ; that peace i11 not possible until men's hearts -our hearts -and the direction of our wills are changed. "Make us willing to be changed, whatever the co'st to our self-suf- fi ciency, whatever the price to our in- ·sisteoce on 'having our own way. ··our Father, grant that the day may 11oon come when culture and learning and education shall again light all lamps that wars and civil strife have extinguished, when all may be united in the high venture of build:ing a better wocld. Such was the goal of 1he young man whose passing we recognize here today. Amen.'' • ,644°2200 • Frid.,, June 7, 1968 OAJLY PILOT ;J Cong Blast S3-igon Reds V se Giant New Chinese Weapons SAIGON (UPI) -The Viel Cong . using giant new Chinese weapons, hit Saigon today with the bloodiest rocket attack. ot the war. A U.S. military spokesman conceded it was "virtually imPossible" to han the attacks. A spokesman said the 16 rockets fired at Saigon were huge 122 millimeter (about five inches) rocket!! newly brought in from Red China and that Jn killing 25 persQns, wounding 46 and desQ"oying 'l7 buildings they · did more harm than previous terror bar- rages or 100 or more. Gen. William C. Westmoreland, the outgoing U.S. military commander in Saigon, said on his return 'today from a trip to the United States the rocket atlack5 were n o t "particularly ~ignificant" from a military stand- point. He said the Communists were trying to .. grab headlines throughout the world by portraying a facade of 1trengt!\." The headlines would apply Charactor Actor Dan Duryea Dies At Age of 6~ HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Mild man· nered Dan Duryea, famed for his movie and television portrayals of a heel with sex appeal, died today following a long illness. He v.·as 61. His long career be2an on Broadway and continued for more than 25 years in Hollywood, during which he ap- peared in nearly 60 theater films and more than 75 TV shows. Duryea col· lapsed in the bathroom while dressing, a fire department 5pokesman said. A servant Who heard a lhud found the actor on the floor and summoned a F ire Department rescue squad. l·lis recent work incluC:ed the part or Eddie .Jacks in ,;Peyton Place," a wandering confidence man who returns 19 years after deserting his wife. Duryea's last movies inc I u de d ""Flight of the Phoenix." "River of O-Ollars," ··Five Golden Dragons" and '·The Bamboo Saucer." The actor lived qui~tly in a Hollywood hilltop house and rarely at· tended parties or visited. nightclubs . His wife of 36 years, Helen Bryan, died suddenly i n 1967. They had two sons, Peter, now 28, an actor, and Richard, 2.S, a talent manager now touring with the Beach Boys. partJcularly to Paris where U.S. and North VJetn•".'· negotiators have been holdtng prellnilnary talk11 . Asked whether It was possible to .stop bombardments or the city which has undergone attacks seven con- secutive night.\ an official spokesman said : "In thi11 type of warfare, it's like · stepping on ants. It's easy if they're all gathered around a clump of candy, but when they start to scatter in the grass you don't find them. ··in the same• way, you never stop the anl.li from getting at that piece of candy. Stopping them from infiltrating with a rocket, two rockets at a time, and then dropping them in on Saigon would be virtually impossible." l-le said the sites for today's attack.~ were spotted and that artillery zeroed in on them. But he made it clear further ·attacks could be expected. Tl marked the seventh day in a row or terror shelling of the capit.al. Guer- rllla defectors and captured Viet Co.ng documents saJd the attack o.n Saison is designed t-0 strengthen the hand of North Vietnani in preUminary peace talks 'with the United states in Parl1 . Nine of the rockets exploded within a mile of the modern marble Presidential Palace and several within halt a mne. · · The rockets hit a Roman Catholic church, a hospital and the Offices of Internat.ional Co n l r o I Commission (ICC). the lndian·Canadian.Pollsh agency set up to supervise peace pro- visions of the 1954. Geneva Treaty on Indochina. The hospital blast killed two per11ons. and wounded four. No casualties were reported in the church or in the ICC headquarters. Military spokesmen said all the vJc. tims were Vietnamese ,civilians. They said the worst previous rocket at.tack was May 28 when 17 persons were kill- ~ in a rain of rocket terror. Aeeompllee Sought Santa Ana Bar Owner [(ills Holdup Suspect A suspected bur.i::lar WA~ shot to and saw another figure In the rear en- death early thi!i mornin,i:: by a Santa tryway. he reported. He said he called Ana bar owner And police are lookin,ll: tn thf' man to '"come here" but the for the dead ma)l '~ accomplice. s uspect ran and Zukauskas shnt at Killed wls Larry D. Elliott . II\. possibly of 1206 E. Staffnrd St., Santa him. Ana. Police said the ·address may be · The second shot apparently missea fictitious . its ·mark. Police-round a shattered .Officers said Kaiys Zukauskas. a!l , window at tht home or Thoma~ owner of lhe Oizzyland Bar·at 711\ E. o·Neill. diagonally 1tCros~ the 1>treet 4th St .. told !hem he wa~ workin,i:: in and a block away from the open rear the office 11t .about 4: 15 a .m. when he door of the bar throu,i::h which the hef!rd a noise. lie wabbed hi s M·I .:lfl. bullet traveled. ca\i~r carbine riOe and moved to the door of the office overlooking the bar Police theflrize the rine slug smash- arC'a. ed through the windOw" al the O'Neill There, Zukauskas told police he saw home. 801 E. 3rd St.. and ricocheted a figure in the darkened room and hf' through the house. No police state· believes the person said. "Hold it" or ment was released to indicate the slug "This is a holdup." had been re<:ovcred. With that. Zukauskas reportedly told Officers found that the rear doc)r of police, he fired. The bullet entered the bar had been pried open. The Elliott's arm and went through his search is still on for the second man. body. The coroner's office estimates In the meantime, the police are listing that he died within a few minutes. the case as burglary and justified Zukau~kas then went behind the bar homiCide. ·""------------,---~ ~ . ' ~ "!: \ c • .:-r~ l ); . : ' • .. You must have a Laooste shirt shift. It's cool. It'.s oomfortable. It's easy-care Dacron• . ,) /; ,/' / . This is the feminine version of the lamous crocodile sport shirt. David Crystal des igned it ••• and you'l l lind it's perlect 10! your California summer life. In ·luxurious new double knrt ol Oac:or: ·polyester. Sizes 8 to 16 . A .#White or Blue. B. Bl ue with white or red with wh ite .. C. White . lJ,00 Suncharm Sportsweor, i..:...· • ;1j\\ 'fl~ .. ·u umS' MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 10:00 TILL 9:3Q • OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL S:30 ) _:., ' ' ll ---• ·-~-~----_,-..., .......... ~--.. -~-~, .. -... -.... -... ~ ....... MU .... ...,~...,~u._-~M ........ ..,.~~~-~···"''"'"'"''"'·-"'"'"-'•"0.•~C"•"-'"•~·~•-"'.~~~_...c:...t...---.... -------,--.-.... ~....-...--___ &._......_.._ ___ ..._ _________ - --- - -- ----_...._ ~ ~--·----·--~--~~-- • c~ -. .. Dll!Pr ..... •lllM Mn. Bl•ncho Cosper, of Anna, m.. bas been able to adjust to most every change in her lifetime. One tbin,g however, she hasn't been able to adjust to, she ·aaid, is miniskirts. 11 resent them," she said. Mn. Casper celebrated. her 102nd birthday Monday. •· ( - FrlQt, J!Mt 7, 1968 Split Predicted In RFK Delegates ' . LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Calllornla deleptes to the ·Demoorati~ Natiomal Con<Vention -172' followers bereft ol a * * * Keating Eyed As Successor · To RFK's Seat ALBANY, N. Y. (AP) -The names ol former Sen. Kenneth B. Keating and Rep. Ogden R. Reid have been ra!Jed in speculation over whom Gov . Nelson A. Rockefe:ller will"n ame as a successor to the late Robert F , Ken· nedy in the Senate. While Rockefeller and other polrtical leaders declined to discuss the im- pending appointment publicly, there was substantial private reflection on the subject Thursdiay at the Capitol. Rockefeller's press secretary, Leslie Slo.ate, said the Rq>ublican goVernor had "given no thought" lo a successor to the slain Democratic senator. Keating's name was among the first mentioned. The suggestion was that Rockefeller might wish to return him to the seat that Kennedy won from him in the 1964 etection. Keating lat'er· was· elected to the Court of Appeals, the statels highest court, but has only two years to serve before reacbing the mandatory retirement age of 70. leader -today were reported receiv· ing overtures from the oamps of both Vice President Hubert H\Ulljlllrty and Sen. Eugene McCarthy. Assembly Speaker Jesse M, Unruh TI'u'isday is.s-ued an appeal to tht 172 delegates pledged to assassinated Sen. Robert Kennedy to· maintain unity wi- W a meeting c.,, be oalled. ~u.t some delegiat,s privately were predicting 8 split. I ' ' f "We are bound togetner .kf.' e corit- mon cause -serving tlhe niemorY •of Rdbort-F . .i<ennedy. ii not hi1 actual being," Uni'ull said. ·"I .-lhat all members of the delegsa.ttbn Will 'remain untted until such time as we oan jointly assess our situatioo." unruti said he hoped to arrange a meeting of the delegation wittM the neiGt two weeks. He left today for New York at tile bead of a party of state legislators wbo will rep r .e se n t California at Kennedy's funeral. Paul Ziffren, fcxrmer Dem-0cratic na~ tional rom.mttteeman and a Kennedy delegalf.e , expressed hope that the dele~tion would cast their ballots fur Kennedy on the first roll call at tihe c-ohvention. "This.is the very least we C&'I do t-0 honor tlhe memory of tale man to wtiom w~ were pledged," '1.Ufren said. Kuchel Concedes, Lauds Raff e11y On Election Win . • L f I Ul'I Tl!rwhi. VOA :Cl-ll EF tik s1GNS OVER DISPUTE WITH BOSS ~Joh~,Ch•i'les -~ly Leonard H. M•rks i Angered John Daly Quits • 1 . • Voice of .America Helm WASHINGTON (AP) -Former television ·personality John Charles Daly hM quit as head of the Voice of America, accusing his boss of "ex- ecutive UJ)dercutting" a~ "malad· ministration" in tlhe trans<;r of a Daly aide. · Daly submitted h i s resimation Thursday, effective immediately, to Leonard Marks, director ~ the United States Information Agen~1· He com· pLai:ned that Marks' office transferred one of his VOA aides whi Daly was abroad. Marks promptly accepted t h e resignation. He sent Daly a letter prai,sing his one-year record as chief ... of the U.S. government overseas radio. 'Phe 54-year..cld Daly, .a broadcast journalist, moderator of the former TV panel show "What's My Line?" and son.in-law of Chief Justice Earl Warren, was appointed to the VOA post by P res ident Johnson May 29, 1967. Marks, a communications laWyer and friend of the P resident. runs USIA, which handles government pro- paganda abroad and is the parent agency of the VOA . 'Dhe VOA , with an annual budget of $34 mii'lioo, operates 101 transmitters around the world and ~ams programs in 36 l~guag~. -- ... -........ ~· ., .. . . ' ' Hanoi Stall • ... Over Peace ~ • • I 1T alks Seen ~-. ... -PARIS (UPI) -Hanoi can be .ti; peeled . to stall at the Paris Vletn$~ war talks pen~g m i 1 it a r:; developments on the batUefield aliltJI pOlltical, developments in Ame~ d.iptooiatic sources said today. .,-,; -·t~ They said the assassination of ~ Robert F. Kennedy has apparen . made North Vietnam reluctant · decide on any new moves In' It negotiations until, the A m e r i C .Z,: politica\ s·cene clears. tlloC' · So far in the talks Xuan Thuy, NorQi. Vietnam's chief negotiator.r-has stuCk rigidly to h.i s demand that all u.~. bombing and "other acts of war~ against the north stop unconditionally before progress can be made. ·~ U.S . 'delegation leader W. Averell Harriman has just as firmly insisted that the North Vietname~ reciprocate by showing some restraint on their side. Today Harriman was to fly lo New York for the funeral of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, and will confer a second time with President Jo~nson on the stalemate~ talks, informed American sources said. Harriman and deputy negotiat()r Cyrus Vance said they would JeaVe tonight for the funeral in New Yofli: Saturday. The American sources sai4 RaJT.iman hoped to talk with Johns{>)~ eithf'I'. in New York or Washington •.. ., .. Miss ·Ro tic e Carter, of Magnetic Springs, Ohio, the 1968 "Colo~ Girt" at the U.S. Naval Academy tn An- napolis, Md., gets a kiss from her date Mid.!hipman First Class Michael _. E. Leppert of Worthington, Ohio. The colorful certmonu took place during the C91.9t: Parade Tuesday as part of the ~aditional June Week celebration which is highlifihted by graduation.. Reid, Wfio..rgpresents a Westchester · Counfy ·Gistrict, ·has -been personally close to Rockefeller for years and has occasionally advised him on ·political -:O!iK"'"'Cll""AMENTO=· ' <Al'J'.'":t5ectarJng-"-.r1.11 -2 ' ll:c<:· · ._.,,._ · - his ·1s yean!n-Washington part-or -n.aunaps ' ~urr., •• , ""rs . .. ···~ • Los ,Angeles arson detectives. in- vestigating a $3,000 blaze at a school, found a button on a window ledge . Among the c u r i o u s bystanders stood a youth wearing a jacket with a missing button. After comparing the window ledge button with the remaining buttons on the jacket, detectives booked Robert l" Scott, 18, on suspicion of burglary and arson. • Twenty years a~o in Centralia, lll., Irving Keith r.\•rtin was an elementary school t each·er and one of his pupils was his son Bryant. ·T hursday, father and son will re- ceive doctora te degrees at the Uni- versity of Southern California., The elder Martin receives a doctorate of education. His son gets a la\\' doctorate. • The MinistT11 bf Defense has , ·~ put up for sale 36 missile .:' launching pads, which will go on tht auction block at the Mi.3· rllm, Engl.and, Missile Center. The pads do not conu equipped with the ground·to-air missiles far which they were built, how- ever. The Ministry said. tM mis· riles became obsolete shortly ~r the Missile Center became operational. • Comedian Peter Seller1 has an- nounced that he and his Swedish· born actress wife, Britt Eklund. have parted. Sellers, 42, currently is in Rome. Miss Eklund, 23, left Rome Sunday fo r her parents home in Stockholm. Sellers and 11iss Eklund have a daughter, Victoria. 3, who is staying with Mi s~ Eklund's parents. matters. ., The 431ear-old congress{llan who was president of the old New York Herald-Tribun e is known to be in· terested in attaining higher office. FRANCE TIGHTE NS GVN SALE LAWS PARIS (UPI) -The French govern· ment today stiffened the already strin· gent restrictions on the sale of hun- ting rifles, .22 caliber weapons and shotguns. A provisional decree from the Minisb-y Of the Interior banned the further ftte sale of bu nting arms without government permissioo. The ministry said the decree had been ''under consideration for several days," apparently because Of the F'rench political upheaval, "the most 'thrilling chapter or my life ," U.S. Sen. Thom·as H. Kuchel con- cedes he lost his Re p ublican renomination bid to Max Rafferty. Semi-0Uicial final returns issued \Vednesday by the secretary of state's office showed Rafferty. s t a t e superintendent of public instruction. garnered 50 percent of GOP votes in Tuesday's primary while ·Kuchel roll· ed up 46.9 percent. In a statement telephoned from Washington. Kuchel said "returns ... indicate that "tax Rafferty ba.s been nominated and I have theref<ore sent him a teleqam felicitating him on his victory." "I wish to add my u.nbounded gratitude to my fellow Republicans and to my fellow Calilo~ who have permitted me t.o serve them for more than lS years irl the United States Senate and for a like period in California state government -'"They constitute the most thrilling chapter Of my life." said Kucb.el, 57. "I can never lose a keen interest in government." New Gun Control Bill 'Not Enough'-Johnson \VASHiNGTON (AP) -President .Johnson, speaking in the wake of a new Kennedy assassination, has•told Congress that "55 long months after the mail.order murder of President John F. Kennedy," it is timf in the name of sanity for a tough gun-control law. He served notice Thursday that a 1neasure passed by both Senate and liouse and now on his desk doesn't go far enough because it bans the mail· order sales only l)f pistols. He wants the ban to apply to rifles and shotguns as well. When it was in the Senate, such pro- ponents of the tougher provision as Sen. Thomas J . Dodd (D-Conn .), lost in their bid to include rifles and shotguns. Two of Dodd's staunchest allies in that losing cause were Sen. Robert F . Kennedy, whose brother w a s assassinated with a mail-order rifle five years ago, and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, whose only s u r vi vi n g brother, Robert, was asse.ssinated with ~ pistol two days ago. 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S.Un11 s.11 l•k• Clf'I St " DINO Sin Fr111(1Ko S..nta An1 S11nt1 81r11<1r• ~•lilt S'IOl<t"-rr.e,....,11 W11f!1nO•on 1, Sll ,., " . '' 5• " " . " • • ,, ,,, : ~ .o.I Trusty CHECOTAH. Okla. (UPI) -A con- victed robber walkecl away1 from the Oklahoma State Prison today. ter· rorized a hospital and abducted a nurse and a ]>Oliceman at gunpoint. The prison warden exchanged himself for the hostages and calmly talked the escapee into surrendering. .. He kept lbat gun on ber head." said the policeman., Faye Kirkpatrick "'He wasn't hostile. but I think if they had pres~ him be might· have shot the girl." The escapee, identified as Thomas J. Rogers, 2S. was .~. trusty a{ the prison a1 M.cAfester. Okla. and had Terrifies been considered "extremely weU behaved." Officials said Rogers walked out of the prison some time before 2 a .m. PST and went to McAlester General Hospital. \Wlere he demanded a car. ··1 told him, 'Sir, I don't have any car.'",· said Walter Hamilton, an orderly. "He thought I was lying. He backed me agaimt a wall and jerked out a gun. He said, 'Give me the keys to your car. J mean business'." Hamilton said the intruder got about ''three or four of us" in line and marched them down a hall. Hamilton hung back and finally slipped away to Hos.pital '·· call police. The gunman fOrced Mari1Y Fain. 18, a nurse. out.side with a pistol at her head. ·· Kirkpatrick answered the call and \Vas confronted by the gunman wh~h he drove up in front of the hospital. Hamilton. watching from the thir'cl floor, saw the gunman with "the girl in .on e hand and the gun in the othet • shoving her along in front of him. "He and the girl got in the back·tif the car and the policeman drove them away," he said. ·: A few minutes later, the.car ran two highway patrol roadblocks but officer·1 shot out its tires and surrounded :n.. Tam O'Shanter . The big bar scotch ' in California. . ' . Now available for your home b-ar .-=w 9 9 lfifth ~99/quart • $259/tentll • $1.59/*1>int DISTILLED IN SCOTLAND SINCE 1861. 100% llettdH Scotch Wllltkl" .tO proof. !""pert.ff by Gol•11 tmpo,, C.J • ..,.rlr HUt•. C11lt • • FrldlllL_ JUl'MI 7, 1%8 DAILY PILOT 7 s~out~o.-Ra1na Opens: -·at oc Fairgrounds NOT MONKEY BUSINESS -Scouts from Costa Mesa Troop 444 are serious ibout construction of monkey bridge built to add to festivities Saturday. The boys are, (left to right) Bruce Hubert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hubert; Tom Mahoney, son of Mr. arid Mrs. Frank Mahoney ; Mark Budzinski, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Budzinski; and John Mercado, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mercado. · For The " Catalina Line Begins Flights to LA Airport CUB CREATIVITY -Everything from pirate ship to tote~le head will be on display in booth of Huntington Beach Cub · Pack 227. Showing items are (left to right) Stephen Eckroth, sop of Mr. and Mrs. Paul ~kroth, David Hag· ler, son of Mr. and :tdrs. Earl Hagler; Leo Stiles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stiles; and Ricky Stockwell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stockwell. All pro- jects were made by Cub Pack. FUN AND WORK -Drumming looks easy and tuba tooting tough work; Wayne Hart (left), of TusUn Scout Troop 62, Donald Clouser of Westmin- ster Troop 284 (right) and flag-bearer Paul Ober· holtzer of Laguna Beach Troop 702 will march in Scout parade at 9:30 a.m. Saturday · New General At El Toro Thousands Join • Ill Show Record FULLERTON -CaWina Air Lines will begin Aero Commuter service between the Municipal Airport here and Los Angeles Interna· tional Wednesday with 24 flights a day, according to EL TORO -Major An estimated 9,595 boys with booth projects and by 140 Scouting units march cera from Los Angeles, will Fred AU$Un, the airline'a General Arthur H. Adams from between. Huntington other d IS p I a y s , have from Costa Mesa High participate. There will be president: assumed command of the Beach and San Clemente, prepared dramatic proof of School to Orange County numerous !loata created by The City Council this week ~ Marine Aircraft Wing representing 185 Sc o·u t the Scout-0-Rama theme Fairgrounda to formally scouters. ,.. t ···--approved a 9<klay lease at El Toro Marlne Corps Air troops, C:Ub packs and Ex· that "ScouUng Bui l d s open the one-day festivities. Each of the o .an g e Which Will permit ~. Aero piorer 'posts, will take part America" by ·building its Five marching units, in· Empire Area Scout Coun· Meetings 1·" Station this week, reliev1'ng · th Or E · r. di t D Commuter s er v Ice to in e ange mpl.l'e \.A.Jun· yoong men, accor ng o r. eluding the King's Men cil's nine districts will lead operate out of the old Brigadier Genefal James A. cil Scout-0-Rama, Saturday, William Burns, charman. Drum and Bugle Corps from a div\slon of the parade. ,lllOAY terminal building, but calls Feeley w"ho will assume a t 0 ran g e Count Y The annual event 'opens Anaheiin, the San Diego Chairmen of each district for construcUon of terminal duties as the amistant wing Fairgrounds. with a colorful parade at Highland Dancers and the will ride in antique or vin-JMr Vis!• Masonic L,odff, M:,.~ Templs, 1«11 15th St., H u!t'..,~t:Xlcf:i~r.o, C1,..in H•ll, Unlv1r1ll'I' of C1Ulol'Tlla, trvl,,_, 1:30 ,.:.=:is Wlltlout • P1rtMr1, Ol".nee ~='I'~~ .~~~ ~wnh'Y c:luri. River Levee Work Bids To Be Called facilities and par king at the _1co;;;;;;m;;m;;a;;n;;d;;er;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Th;;;;;;e ;;bo;;;iy;;si;, ;;a;igi;ed;;;;;;B;;;;;;t;;o;;l;;8;;, ;;;;;;9;;: 30;;;;;;;;a;;. m;;.;;;;;;w;;h;;e;;n;;bo;;;iy;;s;;;;;;fro;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;C.i;ri;;;;;;na;;;;;;V;;a;;ld;;e;;z;;M;;e;;JU;;. c;;an;;;;;;D;;a;;n;;·;;;;;;la;;;;ge;;;;;;c;;ar;;s;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w-north end of the airport as soon as possible. SAl UIU!IAY Chrl1t11n llual,,...rnen'1 Commln .. , ll1lbo. 11'1' Cl11b, NtwP«t a.1o:.11, 7:30 1.m. Fire Calls • Cott• M9u 11'a 1.m. Tllursdlly, t11Jt' 11frm, 1tth Incl Whlttltl° sh. 1:02 p.m., t11H 119111'1, 26111 F1lrvlftl .... 1:3' 1:m .. 1r1u fl,.., rNr of 2501 H1rbor llvd.. J:IO p.m., wt. tire, lCIU Flllmor1, Apt. 161 -1.2.000 dam~ll 6:11 11.m .• l1W1Stl1111on, 1"6 M1ple •:Jt p.m., aul'O fire, tterbor lli...d, 1nd .., ...... 7:53 11.m., re.eue, 2100 Newi>ert Blvd. ,,,3 p.m •• l'ftCUI, 151 Jloch"l•r SI. •::M 1.m .. Frld11, ren.ur, 1650 NtwPOrl .... DEATH 'NOTICES KAISER K1l1«, Afe 81. 0111 of a.tti, 0. ~ l•th SI., COlll Mn.-~ vecl 1wv $OM, Chelttf Ina rs HI', Ol'l'OOl\I t llr11 ITMrt, F4)'1 Tr1'-"-I'" N~ 1 Run. P-. Anlhtlm. ·~ jMft ;.:r"'~1'r11au"tlfv:~, 11:"'·, .. ~,l'lj Minef'I• Gllr ... tt, l(lflMll 1' ~lldl"llnl · 16 -t-cir1nddl/l<lr•n, SANTA AN-A -Santa Ana River levee improvements will cost about $960,000, ac· cording to Chief Engineer George Osborne of the Orange County Flood Con- trol District. The ~rea to be improved to safeguard against future floods extends from the San- ta Ana Freeway and Katella Avenue in Anaheim. Bids will be opened July 18. The job calls for facing the levee slope with rock and con· crete. The last remaining $1 million in the 1956 bond issue will be used to do the job, Osli>rne said. iE 3 =• l't11rff'l-t1rlnodl Id..,. trVICtl• v,, 2 p.m.. 11111 ""'"J:,\\f.:'•. •i'f.';1\'l:r""'"~'..i:,\ Tokyo Left1'sts llroedwJV Mortu1rv, llG 1ro1 ..... .,, CO.II ~II. WRIGHT Storm Hotel AudrtY MM WrlQhl. •1t W. l11lbo1 !!.:"s~=1~~i11riu~~~w'fnf~ TOKYO (uPI) -Crowds ic.i..W''°"&.:.'"'~~ ... ~enctYc:'..,.,:-: of militant leftist students ~"" E-Elliott.._ N;;;.;,;ort ed f d ctu end twopr111c1e n l ldr•11 . swarm over a ence an M:Yrc"':i.:"'~~I i~'w1~~'. into a U.S. military officers E,..,., ~~~~. t:\t. J:si~ hotel in downtown Tokyo to· 11 ree!QI). COWLEY day before riot police drove ' ''I0<\411 Arthlblld o. CowltY. 11.rttr~ them away with club6. Y .. Amw. Re,16tn! ~ 500 Erner• Police said more than 150 11, LllllU,.,. ElllCfl. lie of dHI , "Mt/;. 5urll'1vl!'d bv ~· Mat.11 ,M students were arrested near ~Ull '"" Mr1. Junes , Stn ~111n fl' • bill tpj -h.:g.. P..'!!f __ . F~•· the Sanno o 1cers et, a .~~ v1-~~i'V:n:. 'r.,rirc; hotel used for officers on vi.w MortuMc0i:UEN rest leave· from Vietnam The Fullerton.Los Angeles !lights will be scheduled between 7 a.m. an:d 11 p.m. The one way fare is $7 in· eluding tax. Dana Soil Report Due DANA POINT - Because Orange C o u n t y officials think the San Juan Hills area around Dana Point and San Juan Capistrano will be the next major area of development, they want a geologic report on t h e stability of the soil . The State Division of Minas and Geology-will-do· the survey under a $20,000 contract with the county. The state will match the county contribution. The area east of San Clemente and north of Canada Gubernardor, waa mapped last year. General OK'd WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate Thursday ap- proved the nominaUon of Gen. Willia m C. W e s tmoreland, outgoing U.S. commander in Viet· narn , to be Army chief of stall. · RMl!d c. McEvtn. Plllitd IWIY ~"t war duty. 25 111 V111n1m. Resident of 12'6l r-------::;~~~~;;;;:::------­Rinclllro W1y, ~ Grovt . 5urvlwd kw 1:11,..,.11, Mr. tnd Mn,,__~111urn W. Mc:E.-, or tl\I l>Omll rwv brOll'lfrl, sm-e"' G•rd.., Grfll<lt, end St..,i.,, H11nllr11tvn llNdU •l•I••· Ml'$. M1llnl1 .=ou:-6,:~E P~''l'i'IJ'..:f,~nd~"i:'i w1'il be ~~1. JUM io1 3 o.m .• •r,dt1e vi.w ~1. •ni.rrrwn , .,.,,ult v..., 11 Pert;. Dlrecttd bv P1,!I~ f!W Mo~rv. WffiTEHILL ~wl" F_. Wl'lli'Hllll. 1662 ElllMI' l'"l' I'd.,. .,..,.... DMI of detth, J1,1t11 • rvlwd bv wlta, C.!Mrlnti IOI\, d'lllrch 4'uohfw. Joaniu br~· rTYi 11,tw, Mr1. r· J. · ""'"' s.uurd1v. 1: 11.m., m11r ColonllllNE Home. l'ruce ,. L-. Jr. 1752 Bl.lfl'll'llm, ~*~·~~~;..,~ end Mn. I~ L•M. Ir I • Wlllllmi 1l1MI'" Debr•~ S«v,, ""•..., , a.v. 2 ~ Ptlk rim r C· F11Mrtl • BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR l-9aO Costa l\.le1a Ml f.MU BELL BROADWAY . MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Co1ta Meaa uum PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemel<ry e Mortuary Chapel S500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach, cantonla '"-"00 PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '7801 Bolsa Ave. Wutmln1ter IN4Sts SMITH'S MORTUARY m Main SI. Hantln(loD Beach LE M53t WESTCLIFF MORTUARY Cfl E. 17tb SI., Colla Meu tffl!M WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARK Mortuary • Cemeler1 Clla]lelr Illlll Beach, Wetlmlaol<r SSI·I'/!$ e •WI Price • Quality • Style • Guarantee For the dilcrlmlnating buyer t•ho wants wmething different! 1v1i11bl1 in 14K. white or ytUow 9old BOTH RING.S ....... ' 275 .00 • Atk A!.awt 1Clrk'1 TPFllU ~ Upf• 12 M111th1t• Pay.~ f:IOW 2 GREAT STORES TO SERVE YOU KAllllOlll HUNTINOTOlil CI NTllll SHO .. P'INO CINTlllt l•ACM a IOINOllll lM HAlllOlll llVO, HUNTINOTON.,,IA(M ~COITA-MIU.-...... -- OFIN MOit., TNUllJ.. 1'1111, TIL t ,.11., e. 233 E+ 17th St.-Coat1 ~s1 Shopping Center, Co1t1 Mffl • 1406 W. Edinger ind Bristol St.-Edlnger Center, ,S1nt1 An1 · • 2300 H1 rbor Blvd. 1t Wii son St.~H1rbor Shopping Cent1.r, Co1t1 Mff• '2" ValHI Gallon Plastic Spout Jug $144 ....... ,,......, 49 95 ?44 ZelKo Spin cast Rod&Reel ;,,._$544 ~: --. t.::J: Q.lok, Inf ..., __ - '21" Yaluel Mitchell Garcia Rod & Reel . .._$ 411 '17"YalH! Coleman Lantern ·s12c• ·--.... -,.tty, , ........ .,.,., ...... ,,,,,, 100 '"' - . • 6827 Westminster at Golden Wfft, W•tmlnster e 17904 fNtnolla ·st. at Talbert, Fountain Valley e Boach & Edinger Blvd., Huntington Bi\"ch c-lwt--' ..... .. ,,,,, ...... , ---.... Men's Knit Perma Pren •· Golf Shirts ~$2'' Faultless Futura Golf Ball .... J ...... 3iS2" -----... __ ..__.__._ _ __. ....... ........___.____._ ~-----------·------··~----------......_--. ...... -.•.-.w•ee e •*A ••··-.w.,.,. .. -... -...-•.•.•. ~~~~::a:. ~ ---·- 1J DAILY PILOT f,ld.,, Junt 7. 1968 LEGAL NQTICE LEGAL NOTICB Jlf••e,'• W or ll• ll:.1 ""' ....... ~ ~ro~~=~·;~~ti~ .. ~ ~~~ .. ::a£!:;E WeHare OVER THE c·oUNTER -A~ M ·~Mil.:'' ,,_ll' lm ·+ii llff'AILtllUH •ffUUfM)ttf AMO """ ,_ Ill *'* ... -ii "" G:iY~UG \·~ 1 -1-~ P•oc•ou••s l'04l TM• lll•MOVAL ,.,,..,.,.,. ttdllty "' ,, wllMll Wkl 1--------------1 l"' "~ • • O:S OYWllHIAO UTtl.ITT PAC:!UTl&I Wldllll Off' tlr\ICfllN lltfM MrvH. 111 W...CO • MW awo ttJ• 11t1TAU.ATlOM o 11 1n a«.on1e,.. w1t11 "" -llwbie Emh ' ii d Nl!W vo1ut. IAl"l • ,.~ eeMOllt'I avwN ' 1 17 ,Jf" 1"' + t.n•o••••OUllD •AC:ILITl•I t • """' ,.. .... *" Mii t9ftn. "' ,.. ro e . NAS O Ll•tlnt• for Thvraday, June,, '"' ..... Yd ~ t.llctlt .... .new.: t::.s::rd!·M~ '-r. ':tt E" ::·;; UMOlllOlllOUMD \ITIUTY OlfnlCT1. r-.d"'9 lfll~ Ill' utJlllln .., flll l lrttt l~owi I~ t • ~ lltE CITY COUNCIL Of' TMI CITV Wllfl .... C!GllMllM.loft. "Jht ...... I• '4l'f_ • 111111Uw0-Qe. ~II!", l ' t? ,. :+'.ft Of' COl"TA Mal.A. (AllfDll.NIA. DOii .... -~ • .._, 991"6fl Jr"" ::.. tz. j ~ fi"" fl .,; ~ ~-·l!:IY o.tD .. IM M l'OlLCWll wr#lhl .. lllT>9 .,..,.. tot Ill ....., .... .,,. -Ar ''* ="".,:~ j• ·~ 1f,.. + ~ c:=:-.~~t..':I'::~ ~~o~r-= Jn Elec tion .... , --1No\Jn•1All.._~ ... ,•w •Ill....... •111"*•-nr.;-, 1J-D p-r ! '#.'eoi., ! w "'J~-"" ~tht~=~~::cw:-= a~:~~"::,:;-~:"' " ~·k 1 " li"' t!.. l~ r F.A "1Air~fl\;':,., 1~ lt. ~IA 11'1·~,lJ , · #!~·, c .. r~~ !:-.w1A ipj ~ lr.l Imi1~ ~-1. Dl,llOTJONS :..i .... _'""W:.~:::. ~TOlt't MOT~: l"r~ fof:~f,~ltl'lr ,JI C?~ u: t ,s ! ..... ~·~r::rMI tfflt ~ . F.,i:. .. r. ... ' '4 if1A -:::iJv""lf tt,.c,"',.,.a"' 4:fm+-~ ~l11tllltonllMl'IC!lftltWlll vll*I.,. .-..ulNCf u114•rtr•u11d t!!.,h ';,1f:.11'":i,...~lAllll:•~11:u4r;e lf~ ft~ 1 t t lr/'"""I i " ~ lit 1 ll:i" .•~v.fl l~J.~.,J,. 1U~t?t:ttli +fti OI .,_,... tt«t1Mft9r 111 "'It -.dkwl ltelll1i.. w'llfllrl i.n U•I dey1 •fNr ='"1hi-lt~.,..'¥ 111\!0~ 1111Hl•1;'•H.rt• L I ~ Trntvo....,,,•11 .I "~ i'I ~ dlf!Md ,,. inH. lflfY 111'1911 lie,... tllt n<elPf 11 well 110llt1. a~=t~ =-or~::.~1k..i':~~ :i Yll. ;_r::~ fl.J! l ,~ 1,= JO flt \Ii Ar of ll!_ 10t 1 =I~ --'::'\:_.":"~t=-.. lfltll'I tbl Tiii 1111111::. 111 11tOl'l4I Ille ,.... I ltMH\ =.,~ a-111 '" "'-... Am •'E M.111111 ':B ~:'!n~ .. Mtl AO 1" ~ A "'t:,.~ 1 fJ c -{? c:\ ~~~·., 1§ ~ ._ iv: i ~ ~ ·~"'C.:.n:::1o11"'7:: :r.!:'.i~~·=lal'M;= c .,: I lutlln .... i. ont,:t,~11:.l~«l . .O ~ ~ l. l ~·~~~:.im, .... ~.llll ~u A f.sc'-t 11 lt~ 1 lJ"''t1~ tllt:'Jt't ::: U , V.+11. ,1, .. C,, C.lltwni., ll'ltll In u$9 of MNlu by 11'\1111 °" ~ Jl'ioe'&*"~ • :-. ~· 'J t4 ;Ji~ cl ~\.\ !,.\! tiju~l!.om I ~ \.'I tt~ -· '""' Sau11 1 1TI .. =-(t tbl "Unci.rt""'1!1d ut111ty 0111rkl"· •''"" ., 1ue11 """"" 1ttt no11c1 Proposals to overhaul our Am ~bt 0: pi.4~, :• l"I 1i.. !\II ~~ "''*'• °" 1i1t ~ ~~ ,. /:: ~ ·'.~ • ll.. ~"" = 8orv ~ 116 !!; ;m :': ~ Ill' ''Ol"'1d"' tNtl ft'\Un rfwl -r11 must ti. -.-1'9d In .... Unltld St1IM Ubll Wf!lfare syJt!M are Amico P,_rllti A ' ft v.~Orv CO I\l 1-1·' ~U4 t 1 V. "' p ~ &: ~ +I Int Cllv wltllln wlllcli ""'' ovtmM4I m1ll Lft I ----w'lt11-•••• p c "nNI" Inc, " fT 3 l ,. 1.~ vvl. ,.!.•J..:!,' •,j• •,. l "'II""' r tt' iv. 6 v.· 4i\li ... ~ =~l"ICf!l(Ui 21 F ... ~ """"' ~ -11•• ~ ltnlc-llt-111. ~ IO tllt ~ Ill already deep 1n 19 6 8 :~..,..toa~cJi'°1.JO u: ~ !JU. .. ~ ~ tii _... ~ "A " .., .:IO ~ 11 """' -•Ml ••nd I I~ ! ..,,, .. . :=.,.:,'.; '7,."''~~n::: :d:J =:r'.!:' .':.•::: "°":":1:-U.,11-1~ presidentlnl politics a l'I d ~~,...~~11u ~ ~ n ~I'll J~ 2: ~i~ M~ ~d ·" flv, ff ~I'll :1 .Jc"g ,:: '!1 1it ~ Jl~ + :=~"i=•t ~fi :% v. l 'iA\ ...,,......., 1e h ........ 1t1ont ., lldlDn ""'""",., 1t1t owner 1"''.., .. .uc11 civil right!. The movement A~r1~°'"' ff.I'll ~ "" \ln If" ff~*•=* .. or* t• st u. :1 ~ Ji~;!J' 1 t ~ p, f'~ =~~~n .ko• 1E 111i '" -1• ._,,, 1111, °"''-· .,..,., ,....,. •PH•ra. •nd IMllt."r !or reform '· ••trao-••-ar ~;i:Tcr~ T.!!.!..P•od m " 7l.... I ,,~ j W•,~kott 1 coo111. 1s• •"IOI" ~ ,.. .!O'it §!y, ,_ 1ro·Cr.oti 1 110 + fcl .... .._ .. 111'19H ll'IHll ltfld '"" "4r•llld IO •lid! twn•t"• • 1.11 ~ l"UUl .... 1 •w: c1 ... H .. ,.-..... 6r w ··-Eltc rk .)4 2' ,,..... Al Pd IJ 1 100 100 , ltOPl.1 1.ll " -\ii """'1114h11dua11. flrmt. ~·110111. tMWn 1CldtH11•1111 NIN-.-Uy broad and diverse, quite ~~~..t,11:"1,l2 tl1\ :.&~ 1514 \'~ il 1,~ w:r:.,:.~~'!..·• ~"' """" 1~-.I s1r .o11 ' 4N. 41'.-11'11 1r11T'T 1r' stt 1 X1'4=111 "'.,_.,,lllM. end lhltr .. lfltl •nd .., rl'll i.tt -llrH _.......,, nit, babl { be d bat AU41offOlllca Cit f; fil'll lll.:1 a~ IO'h ~.Y,.. M10~.7;' :ti"" ~l/i ff A S1111 M jT 17\fo y ~ "' 1rp Sii .60 •? 1ra 4?1'. ~ + '4 -1cw-. •nll wlltft ro ..,,..._ ,_,,_ " pro y ar yon w AulO'ftl•IDn l1DM1 ~ s:t 14'-A • 4'V. :!ft~rtord· u1v1 c.. ~ ~ ~~Al~'!:. )11•1 1 J5' ~ ~ U; -t \'I '"& CP i 1T ltt; ii\l -v. !di "PO.., -"-' w1rn Md O-•I een ... en. Cltv °' C011' ,,._, you think. Oonslder: ti.~~'=:°' 1/3 11:111 lj ' '~ ' w;ri:i=:,.r,r.1 inc-I.& 1~ 4114 MV. :~P,iC.,. ~l 1ev. 1ft lla. ++"" :~erw :2: 'if f, stt U :+ ~ =1·: .... "= •=:'" -~ !:i.'f~ ~::::.:~ti!:"= -Viee President Hubert ·:~Hf:~':!: ~ SJ ~ II er~''": JI Ir 1'4 Jr w.~· Bly fift"c°li en t rl/i :~.II\.. TT ~ ~ .. ri::-la :: ~Al ... { l~t? il! l~tt ~I~ ~ fll"" stuti.. ltlltfol'IM. .cl by.,,. --IO-, • "-"'' = Humphrey say• that '"·ey l,.,•,t!-Ml-~· ... • .. ',.ii"!. ~ 12\lo. f:1"!',ust;1.. 11\i ;mtt\') ffv, "$S::t.::;"~' 1141'::f,.m .n \Ii lov., lti ~~!.A~·'°-~ r •• ~. ~~ "' ·~~.,~or.-' ,", '-· --~ :!: .:: (l'Ol .. rmt. briKes. ,,_fflnn«I, .... Mftl wlll'llft fcJ<tv•l•lll .. . ... 11 .. c .. ,,. ... ~ lfd,_ N _Tiit Wnftll I A ~ 1 ~Milt I ~· 186 "21/i to,. ~ -1~ !Kt c. ".'IO u,.-u-"'ff~21""1 + ~ ... 111on. c:llfOl.ltl;. 1W1tcM1. -.,"" N1',"~• -, • .!.1• ~ i.-!1': Issues tn this year's national ~~~! • .'!.111..~,_. Si~ Ir' i:~ ~= /.a ?!\!!. .. ,,. ... Wfl•uTt.00 ,•_. 1 •, • ," •'!"" M lrFI .• .111 H mo ,,,,.. in. ~· •ltntMCp 2 1• s1 ~ ~...._ + \'I :L~::=~=-~: ~~_:,L.:!E:'~~::f·f: ldnebacomte,"~rille~ery"gboduaryan, orleeda~~ep~::,a ",.,'~~,, U,.' !"~"''°"1"""~~:;:,,"' ~;· i 1 ~t;~.;;~n 1~ 1f~ 1~5::ta~r,·~ ;tY ~ ~"' ·J;~t1! :n~r,:~:e 'ff~;: !5 ~5 ..i Of" inef\11 In ~1Ylnt1 •lfdtk. llowri ttftr fhe 1T11ill"8 !Mr.of, UllW IY i~ " IJ fi::t ~ubl :1.::1' _, .._ 25\'J 2' tS\'t ""' C&n l a Hi:: 14. JI; + 'h 1-·~· ~~ ~ JJO., -... ' '... ·-1·· • ~v t11eno1. lo'Jntld 1111 • u.-rot negative Income •·-, or -· "' "''' "' ,. '-,~ l~t ""'' ..., • I " ·~ I·" ™ ... c.11 p1 • 11 1 3014 29~ -j --" 1 l ~ ""' ""' =~c:. Hrv1ot. ot ''"' •' •r 1eu tl\aft 11thf (II lfl(llltt by In\ Clll MIA eo.,llli!-C•lllll .OS l5 .,.. Sit CYll'f\30 "°""' :JI = I •1.!ic I.,. 20'lll lf "'" ~tm ... 1' U!_ 2t4io t lll'lflll .ft I 7S'4 1J ~1~·+1i. I•) ''\lllllfy" "1tH i..c:-..i. .n lftdlft In''"' 10 tot -kid lft I~ family alJOWanee • , , • The B-•i.t' P1toe~.1_161 ~ r" m ~ I CCcq ' U ~.· ~ SA$V.~ .... Ult l~11A.N coJ~ANfr's f\fi ~o:. 1tt S: f'ti I ?:"' -1~1\'i~spl:.11 11jf ~~ ~ ;,ii>: t.1~ ""*"' • ...rr11e WHIVI"' ilectrtt. w lo;uaut tllCI on aakl .,..,.,1-. sent welfare program Brlclltdotd F_, 211 !!...._ i..v. Fl~ :C~~ ~I~ ~ 21\l ,,,., ... • ,...,. ' "' "mer.i1f')O ' n Im ~ -"' «IMPw 1 OI ' 1~ lilt. 11~ "' UllM'lunl<llkwl DI' tlmlllr or (cl TM 111111~ 1fven by 1M Cllv pre l~wlt1 O~ I• n'" • r. ,:,= c-1N't ,a fYI '"" t• ,-1 >'•• .. Ln U'll IMl lj AC..ySug 1'.• 21 SJ'4 II< i~ tnl SW 1:111 lff ,. 4J\.'i ,u '.i'."1 llf:. cNnr 1o Pn1Ylde 1t11 ,_,.1rte1 un-mocks justice."(A negative ~;~l:emnc. Iii ,. Fltlc ~ F:.C, lumbll '" ' """T'n 1 u 4.S4 ,... "' °" )!_!15or• •o 31 n\.ii n H\.'i i • =••,:::, ... ~:. :.,:n. <If 1 d.,.rouno t1<1ut1e1 t11111 p1r11g,111r1v IJI-come '"X will be explained 01111 p~.u11111~,.1.:.1' .,. ™" v. •'"'•-.. ,•, "• ·• l~ ii fN im~rt.."llM4lt l 11 '™' 11~ M1D1t 1.e. U ~· \T' .c1:v. 1v. c;ro 1.60b m .w~ 'Jo"" "''-11. ll':llM '511, PU•ltc MRAlllMO •Y W><K!IV whit -1t It ,_,frtd 111 tr. '""' jl'I !;.."' • ~ "" ~ :II ~ ~.\'I re ~ ~=ll:bl• S'Lvfoi1id ,C Im J.. 1: :m~iru~~.2,' 1'i i' -llv. lJ .... -;-~ c.J\:i° P,'° ~~ ffit ~Iii ~ l!: co•u1t1l done •1 dfl1tl'lllnt4 by tllt City in a later <:oJumn in this c:J:-·~-11 ~I.'° i: 2tv. ':'" ~F:"~'t~'"' co M 5 Fl~ Fin ot T:;' • •Vi f\lo 11/i A'" IPw f.5-1 ji) "" :m-~ ~-A l.e to 'l-'11 'il\ '"' 1"' The C'eunc.11 ITll¥ '"""' lllN 1o tt1119 £11tll'lfff •nd Wll d•I• 11111 ff w ld • ) n "Cle. 1 1, lMll 1100 F ~I ~!~n c~"• • .. • •• ..... '•mm '*,,' /" 0 10 ~. ~. -.•,'4 P! .. !!I .. 11!3... 110 •"•"~ I •,•,~ ,". c•ll 11111111c i..1rlntt .., 1sart11n work 11 not (()mPleted w11111n rl'll ll'llr· series. • bl tc •th 111r1 Br-11111 10 10".I Fl 1 w ,,.Iv Fin "' l!x lld 6111~ 'ill ......,, ""'"' 100 ., ,,~ell'ler '"" wbnc l!Kfttl!v, 11ee1111. Iv uo1 divs 111er ~•IP! o1 alldt In his campaign Sen Washington t s mon u Wl •1111,, R-rc11 c 11 1" u I'"" H ri lttot tsl••;1 1110 ' 4"' t Am{t01•1 ,10 75 1' 11\.11 IF t "" ,,.m115 1 20 41 n 'lt U"' .,• wfetv Of" wtlll,. ,...ulrn 11>t r1mcw11 notke', ~ Cllv Coo;ncll wlll 1"0¥ldl ' ' V t plague the U S tll8t ncl,,.lrln lJ lJY. )\lo P:'°Hlc ;:., ''\.,; XI ii"' 'h12 ~~'4 ~ Hom°": 111·~20 "1 r ~'h t +i lllMBk f . ..ct 2t 7, 73"4 4\.'t = \; of ""111. overM1d wtrts 11111 1U11Cl•led tuc.ri r1Nulr1<1 l/ncleriillKIM t1e11111et, Robert Kennedy opposed a a ow 0 . • • Tel 4Vi f' ·'° lj~ :~ ·lf •1 1wr1lde Fin coi11 2•1. "' 2•.i. Am H11111 . 51 11ov. 10,.., 1.1 • , ... ~er" ~ :J .ifii' ~m ,~~~ + : • 11Ytr~11td flrudu,.• wlll'llll clul11111&ltd In wlllch QSI the c;osl 1nd t~Pfl!SI guaranteed annual income With '1plague ,after plague &:tt!~~S rlr'<;I Int " I 1\11 AM C~lf5J'kvANC'e s rclits J'lit :~ .~,f~ J. " ttll i~:io fh,. Cl'lemw11 ."20 13$ 11 • 11~ 11~·: -:. J ft"e• of the c11v _,, 11'11 undtrtraund tlltrffll w111 be •ssesied 1111lfl.ll 1M ' until they agree to give US i&H Ted11101ov1 1 7'¥1 7'4 A.int llle 1 l7"4 11•,1,, 311/i Amlnv11 i.10 t 1'1".I 1~14. 19\.11 .:::. c,"",...· ~~._1.6110 l •2\>1 o ~1 -'II. 111ilall1llM o1 wlret 1nd fltlllllft !Or ...--rtv bet111\led and bKomt I 11111 emphasized that jobs 8J"e the . . • l111co ln11Tum1m1 11/i tV. tV. Am Gen no .olO 20~\ j114 20 AmMFdy 90 31)] ''"' ~ll'o 211-. VO">ru 31 631\ 62h 6)0/1 + '1• suPPIVlnv 11oc1r1t. C01T1mun1c111o11, o, u1>tn 1uch proi>ertv. heart 01 the matter. He call· mearungful Jobs • and ,•, •,,',M,.'!, c11~~ 1 • 111,h 1zz, ..... 1~.~ Am tr Ge111r11 1.1<1p1 :JOl'I 1 JOl'I A.MF 111 3.90 110 70\lt 10·;, 101o; ·-v. f~r,~~~1 i?it !\ ,•1~ Dl\ ll'"' -t l>1 11m111r or 1ssocl1t.CI 1tr¥lct. n.. Cllv (d) II u"°" tile 1l111lr•llot1 of the t d I O ·~ T.,,., ,.,. .. "'"Am Gutr Liff lm Hlo It; 7"4 AMl!I Cl 1.90 11 '~ 4 '"' ~ + \I, c G •v •• 121' 11\"t + ~. cierk 111111 nv1111 111 •ffiKll!lt '"'"~ thlrtv lXI) d•Y period, tM ••kl r,,. ed for a review of welfare guaran ee annu~ me me. H~~ni' T1~.'~ Ill 26 211 21 Am He•t lll• ~ .10 i~ 11 HM Am Marors 1901 1•14. n'it uv. +~~ M vrwn d 10 JO 12' 1X1 +s awne,, •• 11'1owft "" "'-lat! ...u1t1Hd qulrl'd u1111t1r1round 11c11n111 111¥• nol benefits to establish ..... ;.,·,. -The Com!TU\tee For "''!!: 0M. ..•• .. '" .. ~ Am N11 1111 Co 1lol 12"4 11\11 11'-' AmN11G11 2 21 :II l7'iil 37~~ -'"Ill ~~11~'i'fs't•' "• .ls lJl 1~ lJI ~ 5''ll '"rt• ,... ....... ,,, v. •• "'GOnlUI Int Co .'JO :lt'U :lO 211'1 Am New• 1 70 '5 .. \lo ~. +'Iii . -1 "°"' v. •o +1'.~ asoK~nl roll ind lo Ille •fffclecl ~ l>IOYlc!ed· 11>t CllY tlltl .,w"' E · D I t HI •r 20 '3V. '5 6' B-kl,.1 Sid Corp U\ot U'h 111'1 Am Pholoet>Y f2' \91/o It\\ 1fl4 _ 11' Cl!MSPP 11'1 S 2 19'1t 'h 19'A + '• ullllllel mnce,..,.,, by IT\lll ol Ille 111119 protff(I lo do 1111 -1!; provtdld, mal standards natiODWide CODOIDlC eve opmen t a H00¥1r Co· 1 w27"" 201 ~ n,,. Bonnewlllt S~IYI nLH11 ' •'Iii •V• AR11n:h .Ok 37 201'\lo 19111> lt&><o +1"" ~~0NlusJc1 )0 19 2'1.i 2' 2ol'i' ± '·0 "rid p\lu of wcti 11nr111111 •• 1u11 ttn howwtr, tt 11tdt 11rem11n •r• unoc· di d non pro!c·t group of 200 Hondol Motor C• •.. c.111 Liie 1,. co 11 11 uv. Am s.01 1 :i5 ~ 1tlo :it~. +.11.1o 111!'11 .., •1 "°"" Cl «I\• P D) C11ya prior lo Ille elite tlltt'tot. eupltd encl 110 eledrlc or COfTlo to 3SSW'e that nO in 'vi ua1 • ~Oii lnl«ll<lllOMI il'\'11 5' ~llf·Wetlem Still .IO 20 1G'A '10 ...... 5.l!IP .60 " 21'lil ~ 2o\li -.... Cl\I RI Ptc 10 :!$ 2"Rro 2&14 'J~ Eich swell 11Hr11111 111111 bit °"'" 1o tllt munlcallonl 1erv1cn •r• btln1 or family !alls below the pov-distinguished b US in e s S H~:"1 Fffrltt5 ~ ~ :it~ hubb Corp LSD '2V. u .&J\.'i Am Smell l 15.S a:i>.r. to 801'1 -1'h ~~~11~~ UP • 24r,;, ?-4\.'i '''"' + '• -·bllt ,., m••" ~llnutd from lk'M .... r,, •• ., """•• "" Cl"' t111ll In d ed tors h Id ~ 1, ,L ,..,... NA Fr,,.roc:lal 39 ltl/i 31 Am5oAlr 10 Sl U'lt 66\lo 67 -~ c•oTlt'-T NW l1 2'\t 2~ 261.to + ''< ~ "" • •u ....,.. '' 1. •• lea ers and uca e l"'or""' cs 63 .. ""'" 64 NA F1n1ndt1 11'1 ,.,., 27>Ao ;~" Am '" 1' :>76 :it :w"" 31 + "· " "' r 2 s st"' stv. ~ -"• IO li!M. "' liKh •uch heiring •JI lltu <If PrOYldlnt t!le reoulred Un-erty me. . I nt-nd Ctnllllltf 1.40 3' 37'!1 3' ned Int • 7t '° 7t ""'5!1114,., 7 110 111 111 111 +JV: Chodtl'ull .60 117 21 21 21\/; . . P1114f\11nre1?11td 1t1111bit.r ...... 111 orr-c1ertM1Und 11dlttll't. 11...,• 1111 •ulhorl· -Sen. ~ugene McCarthy a policy forum 10 New York ',',',,,,,.,....,'"," .... , lS ~ lS onn "-r11 1.n '1 67'" u AmSll•ll " 62 37 :111 31 +1 c11rucr1n 1. 11 '1~ .., 40 -I'• PortUnltv lo bf "'•"'· The dKkllwl .. ty lo order "" dlKOlllllCf1on Ind • 'd M to d b t •rr'lllltnl °""" n ~·. ~ Eductfror1. 1111 Co of Am ..... IDl'J '"" " 5u91r , ... 19 31\lo 31 JJ -"" ~~onrn ·'° 115 ..,.,,, ... t'i ••14 + !4 111tcounc11i.i..11bot11111111111conc1111M. ,_,, 1111 1ny ,,.,., 111 ~ proposes that the federal City in mlll· aCoy .tte a,eJ;i~e:.".~~"111:0'° 36 ,, 36 E~1r1Genef'11 5'4' ~AmSu,.,· • , 1or. '""' 10¥. ci '•••' "' ..._ """ 611/i-~. Prior la l'lokl .... tudl .wile l'lffr..... ~Ice wlrll'I ''"' •&SOC!lled f1c1Utlll'I "d • th R k I mlTU ee s ' .. Ft,.,,,.ri N•" W«ICI ,. 5lV. ~ S1\.'i ...... T• T ,,. 'M57 .at'4 .. 4 \\ . •. !WI I.JO l7 2.m 24'7 2JV. -l• ' ' ' -10 ~ government etermme a e oc ee er J••rDlll or111 .o "" FannenUllll'wrlttra S6 .s. S1 Am Tob 190 14 3:M 33111 ~+···\ii c1n Ge 111 • 110 u v. '1\IJ 67Vr llMi City 1!""91-&11111 UIMU wlll'I I ll -IVlro ut Mlv Mr\! u "' .. p ' • • d. ·" f U•tenstn rDGC; .2S '"" .: ........... Fldllltv CCll1> 11'4 u+ 17111 A WWki ":ll 20 l~V. I• 1•1'11 C'ln MUI 1.2fl• 61 ""' " ~ +2·~ •!!«led u1rn11e1 •rid 1111" .,_,. 11 P111V. UflOll complellDn °' t111 -rk tw m inimum 1nco1ne which 1t r elfc o m myste n _,on1s or ~~r s~~191J1 '·" " :." "',., u"""' Aun 1.'° o "' a AW, 111 1• 10 2314 ""' n v. :+: ·" c•TF1n 1..10 i11 m• Jrv. 11v. -'" rlPOf"I 1or ... timtnklll '' lllCfl 1w1r1,. 111e cnv • W111ttn ,_., s.11111 bf nlt<I will a, 5 u re !or all we are s em re orms. ,_, .. _ 21 21 First Am Tiii• 1M .Jt lN u\li 14 ""' Zr11e 117 2"" 2,"' 2'49 + v. c1T F ..is.JO ~ 1n 101 102 .•. ~ conlilnlnt, .,,_ all'Mr lnfonnllltn, wlltr flM C1tf Cltrk 1ettln1 lartl! lht ... , n .,..·p l5'h 3'\.'i 3S'A Fii N•I ll!W.lt JV. :>'-JV. "'""lelc 11 71 U\4 Sitt 511/i -14 !llltl Sw: 1 1" UV. 53\li 5ll0 + '• -est.Ill 1111 well utl!Hi.t' fllrlldNllOn ltd 11111 .... rtc1ulr.cl ulllMl'ITVUnd Americans." Among the CED's speakers K,•,-1 El ..... i:...!.2S m\o ~ Fr11"111;lln Life ·'°' 2t'llti Xiv. 21'h AmlK Inc I lU M\'11 '! 63\IJ 11\IJ 115 CYpf1.25 ' ''"" ••I'll ,,...., + Vo ~ ... -· ' • -· 1,1 • _ ,,_ ,--, llwood Co .. 10 71 10 l'unu AIMrkl Cm 1,j) d¥I 41-1' .0'11 .t.MK cl -.. 73 1~ M t.ti-. ~ 11\1111¥ .XIII 1.S. '3 61\'t 61\11 ~ •rid er.ll1T11le1 "" "'. ca1 .. "' """ lid Ill nlW ....,..., pr(l'I...... "" "' v· Pr "d t e Ralph Lazar u' ~ 11Uck1 F "-" Cl! ,, • " .. Generll R•lns 2 275 2IO 1'f •UK ~I!:......... 3S ...... ... ...... , .. City $!rt .25e I 21lli 21'9 ,, •••. c1rv •rid 1Hect.d ~ _.._ Sudo C'OSI lh«eof, 10Hll>tr with • IH•• -Fonner ice es1 en w r~ • ~,,_..-cJ11 I'd i' 3'V. 350 :I"" GS.no l'•ll• 1.20 60 '1 SIVJ AMK ~120 · 1 17i~ i7iY1 171\.i .... c11111 E<1 1.20 m 211 ,. • .., ''"" ..-1.j, '-' 11\ett 111o coni.111 •n """"~ 111 ducr1pt1°" o1 "'-llfopertv 1111nit Nixon says he is studying a chaU'man of F e d e r a t e d 11111 aror~111 114 m H.,1over Flri 2.20 ~ .uv. .u AMP inc .'II ll 5: 351'11 31~ +~ c11111 on ,..., ){CJ S6Y1 1S\.li 5J't. -\\i 1M llrM ""ulrtd lo td\'Oplth 1udl wlllch wen cost Ii lo be. 1ilftied. TIM . Dep Im t St d Klnci RnaurCK 1 U \,'J '1 .Q~ Hllrtfonl l'Jre 1 ~ 21h 21111 A"-• Corp 2.1 3'~ 3'tt -~ Cle...Ctlff 1.60 I• " Sl\'11 .if +2 ut1Cter1roullll lntl1lltllorl 1tnd rtm11Y1I Ill CllUfteH 111111 tlltr consl$rl"' wlcl wide range Of alternatives . ar en Ores a R Knudun Cte1m 1.60 «MIO '1"4 -«l\.11 Home 1w,ur1nce 1.C '6¥i OV. ~1V. Am1ted 2 .er U "' 4 V. 4~~ ~ Clt\IEllll 1.11 42' 3n'o 37._ 37•'t -\\ -™•d 1..:mt1n.. ,_,, n. • ,,,,,. 1M place tor tiHr· to the present we l 1 are 'Mari·on B . Folsom, director ,',•,,.-, '·' -• '·'' 20vo 21 20v. ,rnc1et l I~ 111:1 Am' u u ..,,..cond ;..511 .w liN SO!°• 52'4 +1 c1evue 110 " 111'11 '° 1ii.r. +11~ ' '.u'''' M 'V .... 1 of ~· G '5 '2 nh!n:oesl LHo[ 1l-"I I 7Vt 'nc!IHG 1.•0 72 I'll 5CA!o Sl\'o -'4 Clawlrt Pt.2.50 t ICl'h 7t\.'i IO!ili +VV. I~ Ill Htt. ... 11111 proltsll llllMI ""' lutUmen ( Ea k LA Al f •YI 6\lo 71,1,, ,,,.,, Jc:flet"SOn Sid lie .ICI :J611'J :17\4 lol\; "rid (Illy 1.20 l<I :IM:t 38 +1 CluttlPtl .llO 116 :U'4 lll't 35'4 + >1 DEJIGllATE llNDE•OllOUllO UTll l-"" cost of well wort!; -sue~ system, inc I u ding a 0 stman Koda -again i.), b,,,,r'to"7M 1t 2'\.11 Llno;aln N1! Liie .u 6J 6J"4 6ll'> Anlcln Chtm 111 1:n• 11\.'o 12\'o -v. C1fSIGi J.111 19 ·5tV. "" JVIA + ilj. TV DIJTIUCTS IT llESO"-VTIOll. pr•mh.u. wlllch .. 1c1 """" s.11111 nol bf guaranteed Income. hard I y wild.eyed t:.".!l, "".·~~· .•• 11 :IO lt LOU1111 ...... Stnrn life 1' 16V. 1 'It APCOOll ·"I 110 """ "l5 ~+\lo COWCOI nl.:IO 190 '°9-' 1W. IO'AI + If, •llotr 1111 1uch Pllbllc hllrllllJ 111t Ins tMn tell (10) dtYI tllerHtt•r, ,, l'o JI 31 Mer.; ~-ltY .2t 2J :U 22\lo A.-Clltm ll 4 Vlo 4 *"° + ¥. Go.:18tlo 1.20 51 :M'llo ll • lol t'~ councn 111111L..tti.t ""JlllbJlc P1KM111v. !3) Thi cnv Cleric a11111 1or111w1111. Gov. Rockereller hasn't v:isionaries. While views o.n f-',,•,M,.a. BPW ,Cl 1J 14 1J ¥!salon Eoul'" 40 111¥1 11v. 1~ Arc11D1n 1.60 1 6n'o ,,.,. 62!t't-"" eo11P11 1.10 11 "'~ .u.1 .o~·, I• hff111'1, .. lely or ~Hire r~l<"M tudl UIOI\ Ille time lot lle•r1"9 tuch p~ .. )om 35"11 ai',(; ~I rd;l _ _!.l•f1• ",:... 11 ,. ... 2"11 Arl1PubSvc 1 92 2J\'t , ~ ~ + ~ Colu P Pl).50 V60 60 60 60 -'i• _.. ....... _..._ _.. ' , '' .. ' ,,.. yet publicly stated bis pos1· the best welfare re~rm dil lel1ur1 Grou11 " '° a "' un ..... F.re . .-v ""' ::i.i :lllv. A•llM os :to 111• :ti 34\lo ll'h -'h coi11MIK 1 20 21 .. '"" ,-+ '" '""°"'' ..... .. .. ,,, u,....,,.,.""""" ft,. lelh 111¥""' bwn ~ • l YI ·-no ~ • • ·~ • tHLy. Ell .. Cll 1 60 lCll "' lOIYt Nill 1 .. w1rn Lli. '"' IOV. llMI 101'11 Annao SH l 1~1 j2 51'4 S2 + ;lo Call!!IA.ad 'ao 617 ,,L :-;i:L ~:'" •''• i1.n.11on w11111n • o.1g1111td ,,...,, ""· Jn wrltliii to Ille per'°" n P0111U"1n t i · b t I fered •"l speakers at '"e D s1or u 42fo.. 14 4'111 N111on"1c1e '"" '"' t Armour 1 o111 •ta •V. • "'"" +1~ ~ 1 1 1G · " ...... .., -caunctt •h"'' 111 l'rJOIUtlon. c1ee11... vt wai prtn11 .... 1nd • noflei: 111 on U as ong ago as • "" 1.1i ~' ~llCI 1 · 11 11 No· A...., life c11o. 10 1ov. 1~ ~ •~~k 1.«i. 10 ,,.,. JCMoa n -~ :.01 ~1111 '~ ft if~i H~ ~ +il9 sueto m10 .... lfd .,... 111 unc1tr1rouflll wr1111111 t 11•,10 1 10 "" _, M&rch 1967 he .appointed a CED lotum called for a new .lo..c~M x 32'4 33'14 ,w, P•c!nc N11 Lit• l!-1/o 1614 1 Arm ub 1.60 1s ., 41/o "" v. v. or 1n ll'li .60 lo ,.v. i u ~.ti unmv Dldrlct Ind Cll'Mr wch remoYal thtreol, 111 Ille m1nner htre1Mbll¥• • ' • t r • I Mo•Mvn<;·MO¥!t... 13\lt " ljl\li Pie St(! Liit 6"' 61• Aro °"' .to IS l2"/J JPJi 32'4 -~ as l «lb 106 51\o't ~ + ,. •M under•raund ln•t•ll•tloll. SYch ''''''" ror ,~ .. ,1.,1..,,, of 111, nollc• commJttee of n a t 1 on al sys em o income ma n-M G Aul111nor 1m ,,,.. l v,. Pe,,...y1.,1n11 l ife s -51114 Jiii Arvl111nc1 .to :P ll:it l1't• ».,., -'\• as of 1 I 33-l't _ °" •• t M.olllnckroOI Chtm • n 14 n Prwld·Wa1ll 1 33 19~ Ashkl 011 1.20 1075 l<l\.'i ~ '3"' +r~ !oluG11 1 '2 7 261-i ~ ~ resof\1111111 •11111 lnclllclt I lk!lcrlpllon ol to P<0¥1dt the ~ulrrd undertrauncl Jead eTS to CORSider "if the enance, Mtr•ll>lln Securltle• 21 .... 2tl/i 'l7V. R~blle N•I Life .•JS 10V. 21'Ao 20 Ast!DU Df1.«I •I 11'4 17 !7'4 +S'4 aluPlc .l!'il 86 .0 ° 'm .f"fi ·~· •re• comprl1l111 IUch dl1!rld end t•dlllles, ot tl'le llm• Ind p11et 11111 Th p .. d l' c M tlo!!·HOf Sll<>lllltS 311/o Jl ... R Ric!>mond Corl! Jll~I 39'11 JJ A$118..-W .10., jJ 12'\li nv. iv. -'4 ol SoOll I 60 11 4'11> () .(11,'J +1 sn111 11w !ht 111119 w1thln ....,1c1o 111C11 11..e council wltl Hsi -1uc11 rfPOrt problem of public welfare -e rest en s om-M~L •• ~ ·,rid •.ao 35'11 3''1• lW. t P111 F&.M 1.61 :io ~, tti.o ..utd OG 1.611 62 11:i;. 78'h 1 ~ -v. ombEn 2«1 Jt 151,t, 1~v. 7""' _ ~~ r1mcni11 ind l/llderi~ r~11111111M •rid wi11 ~ •• , 1t1olffl5 '''''"' 1uc11 was given to you, what ntisst"on "on Ci'vil Disorders •.,·~"!,•! Co<llM. ,,_ , 7'V. 11 11 , ttco Co 1Jxr Olo't ... ~1 .o....iDG<la w1 1 SJV:I 53\lt 5l\lt !' comE pfL7ii 2 '° ~ !IP'll< _ '"' • '' '° '' •-., ,_, ···-I • ··• 00 -• It ... ''' " .• ,1 FM .. ·~ '13'11 2'\o't 14 1leco Co l\,'Jpl 11~~ 11\4 17 .... A111'SP<a l 20 15 32·~ 31 :J1\lo 11, ComlCte 1.llO S40 !J'lt o•• -•" '"1 •ccom11 ,,,_ 1'"' w '"" .. ,, .. ., """-• '""""" no "~"1 1 would you r-ommend as m· 1·15 r 1·0t report rem'"dS u s Mld11M 1111t11 .20 1514 1.w. 1m Se•bol•d l lf• •ns w. 1 6"'* Audtr1ft ·'° · JO 1114 11 . 11"" 1-a !omer 111450 11lj ii"" 67'" 61"" ;_,; •tteclld ... -m --.-must bit •fflfV lllrlh "" ,,._111 °' "" ~~ ...... .., I p St 1'4 9 ..... So¥erel11n ILIUM '° 6J 60 A1tacln¥ 1.40 3'8 «:r J9'i •O "' omSolY .see: I "" 19'11 ~ -•4 to rec1tft under''°""" llT'llc•. A •uHl/rlf!l'll. d bl" " I th that the c 0 n s e T v "a t • ~t C:'Mt 1r: 1 "' co;. •114 _,,,. Sure'il Liii '"" • 5 0sv. '""' AtchflM 1 60 916 :it 31.._ ll v. om1so1 P"l.90 n11o 21 21 -'M ru1C111ibla time 1t11n bl •llllwld tot II! u"°"""' 0.11 1nd 11111/r Ml tot SOUO Pll IC poucy or e R bl" , .d I th •1v e Mo~i; P!in r, Ys ' nv. 24V. nVt Title Int ni1t 1.lOI .iv. cv. Alcitl1 111 ·50 621 13 . JN ltli * omwEd i.20 1•t U>A ~ 64V. + v. such r-11 1nd undl ... •Dllf'll '"" "" 11earl"9 o1 11rotet11, t11t Clll/flell c 0 m mitee's discussions epu 1can .s 1 o , e ate Marr11on KnuOs.en 1.00 :n n\IJ " Trive1~ •m ·"' ~ u l!i\lt AtCltvE1 1.26 x:Jt ""' ~ 261\ '4 corn EPn.a 21 1'\o\ •1r1o 2' -~. il•lltlletli 111¥111!1 dut. ,...nr for tile shill h"r •nd conskltr"" r"""1 1nd Se Robe A Taf Murphy Pie Mir .511 11'¥1 1tV. 19 Tnick Unwr'I Attft 1," 22 U 22 Ari Rldo ),10 1S Ill 17Ro 130¥. 'h Comw OU ,60 SOI 21.._ 27 211/i + Vo •¥1111bltt"" <If l1bllr. ,...re.1111. •rid ,,, ••• -... If -bf •nv, Ind tfitn next decade?" Out or that nat.or rt . t, call-Nlllon,tl 5nl1m1 56 sa SI Uni~ Ins Co .Am .IO 19"4 :llllo'. " "'I' Ric~ ~ l so 111 '°""' 110 -1 • Comaat ti 611.'t If "" -~ ., ~· .. ...,.. Nelmin Mlrcui IO l2'h 33111 3' U/lled uTrtlLil'e 6'io "m ~ A !•t Ch .IO :IOI ~ 27Vi 221'1 -4" c:'one M111!. I Jl Zllt 2l i f'lU1Pmenl nkftnrv tor slldt ,.""°Y•I PR1Cttd to 1111""' moc11iv vr f'lliKI c 0 m mlttee's discuszions ed1 as far back as 1949 or a f'letwo111t El c 11v. 1,.. 13o;. u Fld Gu1r 160 SI>.< 51V. 51"" All•• Coro '6$ 1 6l't ~-. ..... ~OlllOlum .IO lt J""1 :M"Ai •1111 tor lflt ln1l1llllklll of lllCfl llft.. t11t 1ttes$/Tlfnl. " · N .... En G&'i l ~O 2H\ 21'1'1 lf'rio US Lift .40 19\'s 2lt'4 :It "urorlf'I .20 IM U'A ~ "'°" + 1'> onraCCp .60 !11 SSh SS 1'4 llfftraund 11e11111n 11 IT\IY ii. oc· (ti If .,,., 1sseumtnt 1•_po.t H id came a steering committee mmimum standard floor Nlchlll~ Fut 1.to '2\.'i ..., .rzv. vo1kswllillel'I Ins • i i,, • ..., .o..u11Nch .6Clb 1 ~ 36 36lll . .. Edis 1.111 '" ~ ,, J2V1 v. u1tonm ll'lerrb'f'. w1lhfn ti~ fJ) ci.n altet Ill can-f 12 Ind tr"all Is hi h to · JI · • Nitti.en AC Cl :n lol :n Weuern T .. .,.1ers '"" "" ~~ "R" !'IC .72 f " nv. " + V. tnl"dl1 pl 6 17 9' ~ ~ 14 '-- U.' •w•u• ,,., , ., "" ·-· ,1 .. __ __. o top us 1 s w c • • • • give a a minimum Ho c-1 Alrtlne1 ..... , ... wus111re 1111 co 5"" •111 • .o..u1s1>1t1r os. 21~ .l6>;'o 35". Js'iio -1".I onE011 PIJ 1 " tt\'I " ,... • ..... ,.-... ' • llm\llOll ...... nc:' 1,,_,,, "'' .. 1•L f"' , •• ,,,, ''"'' "YCO CP 'l.:IO l l1 Sl)U. .... •'ft +"' onE lllC'.4. z2'0 nv. nlo't )JV, IV. wllet!IYer-111e COUMH er""-•n o1111e •n-ent '11tll blctlrnl • 11.,. has just submitted a report standard of decent living No cent Air Unifi •¥. 1aU: '"" B•nk•ri Tnn'i'J.oo 7"2t~ "" n'lti Av•...,.Pd n.M 1 .ci>t:o .f'll.:. 4p.; + v. onE11etnd 1 lu •sv.. U11i 4S '\ unc1trtrvunc1 u11111y O!tlrld Ind Dl"IM,. u11on "" P•OPerl• 1e11nt1 wlll<h !ht recommending "an m· come and to all children a f·'· op· Sc°'.:'~~~'~511'°' 12 13 n•A Chi .. rr Nv c., 110 ~ ~. uv AYMt inc .50 311 Ulf; '3\'t 6'ltlo -v. tnF-/·so :to 65't. 64 ~ ~• Ille ~·t 1111 palH. O'>'li'NH wl•H 1u.nsmtnl Is midi bf Ille Cll'r Cleric, ....... 0111 c 2616 c . • NT . • AVlll!t 111'2 50 I 2'U 21l 7U +• !onFrtl.51h d 97 "° J9\li :itY. 'ft and 1U11Cla11c1 o.,.r111.ci strvcturn •nd 111e c1tv c1er1r; 11 dlredtd 1o 1um · t t portunity to get a start · g 1 11Met 1 ims ~i"' r.~ l7'lll c~~1 N4'~ ~111 \:" ~ ~~ ~ ",....Pd i.60 :w 1'3 ''° 140\ll + '4 onN••G 1.1 " ~ 1t 211:i.. + \lio 11t1r11n ., Provided In SK11on t5Gl .,..,r 10 111e As-ind T111; CollKI· m a 1 n en an c e sys em, ID = c""'' • iav. 11 lOYI "'"' N11 a~ Ch 2 s•"• Y\:o !i1'M -8--c:::~~·111~·50 1fi 3M• )71-\ ~ ·• htrto1. ti w11 bot u1111w1u1 1or '"' or 1 111111.:. o1 11 ... on rim <If t1ld possibly ·a negative income Ute." P1bst Brew ,,., u iu mo. F101 N11 c11y 2 6W. 6N 65 B•bck w 1 36 ,4 45 .a~ Utto -i•t. ~nt•lnr 1:.cr lSS ~·to i{'r'I lfi2 -~ ""'°" or u11111v to 1tec1. c.tn11Nc;t. Proi>ertll!I on wnl<h 111e •ne11tn1111 tax." -Tile President early in~~ :~rF~ J11t '"' :i.. Fr1n1din N•t Bk NY 11 J.t 3•v. J.t 11~.ouT .'to 21, 76'111 1•\\ 1~ + ;y. on1"1rL .so IKID 21~ 10 .... &:111 +1" Olaeil. ~-. 1111!n!11n, con11nue. en'lllklv lie• not tttetl 1111C1, 1nd .. kl AsHU-~ ""' ·-I) 14 11"" Mlrt. H•rtO\lef" Tnnl 2·10 SJ\"t ~ ~ •II Ge 1 60 '7 ~ 19\lo 2'V. + '4 tll•k l" .. It"' SAit + ~ Of"-·"' l'Olel. plllfhffd wires•"" er •114 Tl lC Colltclor tllell Md"" -The Rockefeller Com· 1968 appointed a Com-~:~2~;:k~~"2.«1 ftv. ~ ~~~~U;[A' 1!l1'"'1~ 1~ 1111iGll'f8 •'-5G UC! )J !1 7!1 ..... ~MCPI r ~ 1' ~ lt "··· 1POCl1tec1 OYer!wM ttructu~1 111 "" •mount of wld .s1e11men1 10 11'11 mi"ttee was he ad e d by mission on Income M•'n· •,~ °"'v--, •,d!.! J.t lli SJ WE5TElttt BANKS ~B•11 jufi 1ti 1lB tt~ sor.11 ~v. +,;.i. ont O:." 70b o ~ n ~"'1 ···~ Olsrrtd allt• "'-dtlt ........ 11ICI 111~1 ~Ill" blll tor 111<11 lt\llld ... ~ • .i QI -~ n 12V. 12'4 Arlt-Bink 1 1JV. 2'\/o 7.IV. I 'p pf!'tj •;g Silo't 50\IJ SJl'll +21'11 ~COP ,;, 15 z100 IA\ 111\ ~ - owrheld t1C1llt1" .,.. r"u1rte1 111 bt 11111111 1111 pnn"t!HS '"'""' wt11ct1 11hl J oseph C. Wilson, chairman ten. an c e •• u n de. r t he P0•,,.£"..s, ~-•-•11r 23~ n l'll 231.1. B•nlc llllAmw•r i.10 11'" 7314 '1~ .,:oi1 l let .Ji .-i1.1. ~,., .u\'11 -fo 11ns J.ilo 1• N "~ tl,,. :i:-1·• ~-Id ti!' II/cl! l'ftOlu!lon • ..,,.,, •i 1....._1 wt• not Hi4. ltld ,.. h h f-;i-~ ,...,,. ....., •Vi .A'o '~ Bal"lll; d Cll 5 I.Ill JI 31\IJ 31.,.. 111.ie 1nc·.ao li 'll\.11 ~ +11'o IMrtt :l20a s 1w. U'h 65'!. + v. I ' .. cf Xerox Among its c alI'mans lp o ·--d ty-P•r•mDllnl Pie 1.0 11 11 Ek o1 Toky0 d c11 2' ,....,. Basic 111 i.so s.. 56 +2 °"' MGt • .ct t 211"-20v. 1ov. 111d ov1r11ta<1 IKI II" ""'v rt<Nlrld HUmtftl lh1U N dut •nd HYlbll • • P&ricvltw Gem Jl\~ ??,. llllt tnllnel• V1lllr 8k .:Ill 17 11 11 eir-.Mfg ·'° 1-tS 1~ 19 -14 !°"'on 1.llO 1n '6!'. 66\t 66-'\.:..: \<; to fu•n1a11 wrv1c1 1o 111 oW'lllt or «· 11 ""• wlN 11"" 11 wM •-rtv m embers were A r j a y coon Ben W. Heineman of P•ullv P11ro1.um 22\lo ..... nv. enturv B1n1t s•u • 111. 111111 11111 n ~ SJ~ S3>.I -· ··-. Ol'll 011 Pl , -+ •14 4Vi 4 "Ai -•i. cuo1nt e1 prOP«tY prJor to ll'lt 11xes. ,,.. oue •nd Nrtblt, Ind 11 Miller, vice cba!MJI· an ol Chicago to exami·ne all 0P~~ ••• M•'•'",'' ~.-·60 11v.. il?,, :n )ltv N1111k .IO lN 11+ 18 1•uKhLb ·'° 1ot nl'I 10\4 n>1o ~ ont ltt LIO ' "'5'lo "'"" '5Vo + i'o 11erhtrm1nc1 by 1udr ow,..r or ll((up1nt not Plld wtten clue Ind PIY&ble, ih•lt ""'...., ,. .., 77"'1 .,.,. 27\/o ~rocker.Ciiium 1..cr:r. 33~ J.l\'o :D't41 ••ITL&b 16 so 5'1/a 5:Jl'lo S-i'lt + "" on1 •l ,60 321 ~ 2#/o 25"'4 + 'Iii of'"' undtriiraund work nec;H1•rv tor be•r 11111-11 ,, ,,. ,,,, • ,1x -r F d J h Bl k forms of 1·ncome J a· Pubco Petro1111m .lJ 1~ 16~ 1'"9 ide!i!Y 81nk .6111 H\O n v. nv. aYllkClg '50 11 t••l'J 1'"" ''"" +"" con1ro1 D1tft m 11• 16'"' 110111 -lY• ·~ .... OT : 06ep OC , ex-UI IR· Pub Svc of NM .to 11•.~ n 1.:. nv. Fin;! B1ncorl>Cll'tllan 1 14~'• 14"" nv. e-arl"9• io t 3'1!'. :tt'l4 )2'1\ -v. Con....o l.60I ' Jill 'j'~~ :16"• ,uch ownt• or lltCUNnl lo c°"llnue lo ctnt 16""1 per 1nnull'I, t I Th R..i.cor Carp 77~ 1Jl/i 2J Firs! Securl!Y Cp I SO 301/s 31 \IJ 30¥1 BNtFCli i.12 7 ~ 68\\ tl\lo \lo v. !°'*Coll 1211 IO JV,. 36 " ····: receive ulllllv Hrvlc1 •• proyldfd In JllCl!tll '511, •ESPOMSIB!LITY 0 , e C U t j Ve C 0 m m i t tee enance proposa S. e COm· Revell Inc 10 101/o 10 Ga!ew•v NII Bk s !J'lo 16 !J'J. Beckm•n .SO # !i1 5614' 56 .... i 'Mo OOl>lrln l.20 124 4 51 53'4 t t• Sedlon t50t MrM>I, Ind !or 1ucll CITY h • f I I d St I mission almost surely ·11 Rlchudlon 20 31 31:\4 311' lmPlrl•I 811"111; )1 11 11 a.cionOk .JD l• 67'/o 67 61'!o "' OOP!lld_11IA.S s 1•1"4 13''.'· "1"' )14 re1M1Mble 11m1 •e<1u!rfd 1o rtm0w Cllv ,11111 r~~ 11 1.., own -~nii C a1Iman O n an ee ; · WI Roedcrefl M1Q, 75 1t 20 21 Liberty N11 Bk .24 """ 1 ~ 8«dl.'ilrc lb JJO "'" 6311, M14 1>,:o ~oo:oer TR 1 13' )3 30111 :n +m J110 t•c11111n 111.r .. 1c1,"""',' been 111 c1tr-11c1"~ulpmeni'1,om .ii'';o1a Albert L. Nickerson, be reporting its findings in :=:~W:~1 ;61fo ~.1, ~1~ ~r" ~:r~!?US":r;F8~."m J"' J" J,:z ft:l)T.~ .i1:. 1fl ~ mi ~:Z lv. c:::r.nS'\·~ M ~H~ ~11, j~~ +~~ ... r10rmKt, Ind ••ttll •• 0 llerw!1e f9(1Ulred lo be r«nOYed lltrtuncllr Ill chairman ol Mob1"I Oil·, coming months to s p u r Roc:kt+ Rete1rcll II 17V. 17 Slnll Monie. S.111< .S2 12 12'11o 12 Bell H-.60 111 l'I ~ NV. -... COP11Rn1 .JO 21 '31'1 '1~ .f'l\lo + v. ~ .... lded~.-.''x'c'sd~MT0M0•,·, OMO•OI •· tll\Ple 1111'11totntblt1111 OWl'lff" ot VMr b" "( d d b I Rockwell Mf11 1.CI 71!i .... 27 ?!_\IJ $...;Clit N111 LA 1.2!s ~ .,,,_ 0!11 1e11 lntercon lll 1~ 11~ 17"" -\\ c,","'•"o 1,.~.. 36 21'4 28 28 ..... ...... ·-r ~ .... .. 1 .. ,_, Gu"""'~ve Levy chairman or pu uCI y an e a e RlllH• 8roi '°' 20 21 ,.. 5.o 1IH h NII l.«:r Jt\IJ lOlfs 40 tm11Co 1.60 ] 5~• """ 56'1'1 -"' or n . ... 35.\'o 35-\11 lS\11 CY 0 11 u .. US\,IAL (lllCUMSTANClS. '" e.u~., PD o 'lll"IO'le HIM w "' n :111.G ' Pull d •L th'. RDY•1 OU! NY l.lls 76Vl! nl/i 15 Sumitomo B• C•l .90 ~ NV. Benell• I ..ct 107 C\lt •l~ "'21'11 -Vo Corn Pd 1.70 130 ~ 31!/t 39' +·~ Notwl1Ml1ndl"9 !ht ProYlolon$ 1111 11111 Z:~"",.,r=n~f~ ~i!:".~~:'. t he New York Stock Ex-e 1ogeu1er lS way, RQYI In ... <If Amir 31\'t ... 111 :lllll ~ult!y :·'Bk I I ' 7'11 ·~l'l'!.,l.70 n 3f'i\I W4 35111 ..... C!orG":t 2-;:1 • >41'> 317 w --IV. ~01n•·-··--·-, •• ,,,,,,, m•· " ...,., _11 • , ch ange ••• Hardly a group 1·1•s lmpress"ible, 1·sn't 1·t? j',u!.~ c!....~, • o ""0 11on 1ncorp '·'°' '1'r'o 41\\ 47.._. ~n 1F .,.J.so J 11m: 111v. 11114 -1v. "'"", •~ 1 .tS14 cv. .sv:i _ ~ iMlll~"~nd~lnf.t.;d tor • ~rlod, In 111t'~ ':ti.~~~~o::~~:: ti!' ·•~"' f,...., ~~ ~,~ ~~ v!11e~·~:lr:P~l: .JOs rn. ~~ r.u i::ll~ :::·~ II~ J2~ m; ~ +·v. Cg;~tt°.50 i~ ~~ ;ru lo~ fl~ not 1o ncft<I 1 ... 1101 1111n. w111'1DU! tlll• ordlMM.t or bf 1 rH01ut1on off is ca 11 y irresponsible Something indeed is hap-:!~ffinA~r;:,v,~or:; 11\\ ,,,,., 11v. we11s F•roo B111k 1.cr "' u Vi 41'A Benl' 5Pf:l50 11011 :w1o 35'h 3.W. ..... c••neCo 1.i.o 16 Jiii " """_ ...._ •ulhorlh' ol "'9 C1111nc1t In "'Ill!' lo 11ro. •dooltd 11omuint 10 Section ,503 lier.at radicals. pening! • ,•,~,..,." •,,",",,•,r !,:IOI 2t~ ~ 2t "CF·Wrkl str cv>Alisn '1 101 t7 IH..,11 .. 1 l(lo't 1~v. l~ ..•. crescent .1 Sll tl IN uv. 11'16 + ~ ~Ide emtrgenCY •trvlce. TM council <•n"" bt Plrl--..... ~,.,, "" 1,_ N Wb • ~ , .. 61~ Am l ilt Rvb cv""IJ l'lO 1:15 1211 11er11ev Pho 21 JS lol 3' -1 ,re1ct Pf1.2S l '111'1• 7ll>k ,,... _ '• m •• • 1 '' ' "" _...... ~""""' .. , " """ The A~CIO has come ext· at•s wrong w1.th s.. world :MV. 21111 27 Arden·Mllf"fa!r ":iou 10 1J 10 Berm1n Lee$ 161 SS'/J ~ 5'V. -iv. rompKn .ao 3t 1tv. 1ev, '"' _ '" • r1n INC I l>tf'ITI u • on ""'-'' P•oYkled on eccount ol lhor"lllgt ol -l' LI" • Sees C1nd1 Sh<IC>1 1 U V. 21 71 A•l1n'1 D~t «v\lttl:! 21S ZIO 217 BP<Vlllum .60 n J2'1• l2\lo . , CroowHll!CI I l? 31'\lo JOV. 1•-1 •"• ~=~.:,•. ";: c!'!'.~11 ::;•Yu~',,•,•, m1te•111s. w•r. rKtr11n1 b~ 1111bllc out in favor of a S"'Stem of our welfare syste m ? S11mr...:h coro 21 1'\IJ "ZJ e'L 0o11c11 cv41'>f,7f l60 JIO s~ih 511 1.60 2S1 J2 ) .,. )1'111 + 1~ Crow co11 10t nv. 414~ "" \~ ~-· 1ulflorltlt1, 11Tlkn. i.tior il111urt14nc111, .1 Se'len·UD 31"' JI JWo 11-nr• Airlines Slt.11' 100 \CO Big Threti ,60 1 J.t\io :M'lll ~ + ~ c,•-2C11ric 1'1 '~ 61>.:. 10\lt ii. c1rcum1t1ncH. wllhllllt dl1cr1.,.111111on cl¥11 ClllObedlenci, or '"' olller minimum incomes. Simon & Schuster .11! 1•~ t ao. llutfufTI$ cv M s76 117 122 BLACICOk 1.05 JC23 60 Jl\.lt 60 +2 rown t 2.'lO 121 "I'll •·~ 4 ''o ~· 11 lo 1nv ""°" or ulllltv, lo ereCI. clrcu""l'nce btyond 1111 conlrol ol lhl Eco . Is . Sl.1<191 P•Y Ln~ ·'°' 1!i ml. tJ C1n6Cl1 Dry cv~I 111 Ul 111 8!1n LMIO 1 11 ~ 2Sv. 25Vt + •~ ~'II ZS pff.20 f700 7l na.. 73 ' 1~ cl!fl11Tvc1. 11101111, m1in11111. use or •"••· -1,_ ,,_ ,1_,, ""'"' ,._.. -nonus ran g l n g So c1u1 w11er .11 16" 15+ \~ Colemen Env 61 73 12 n &li>r Btll 1.50• 611 53111 $2 52'11 +v. 0ru1,c II 1.20 216 .., 3' » · , ' .. •·-" , ... .. "~ '"' ..... , . K • p !.o Unkll! G•1 1.lD :tS'lo :MU. 26 con1rol O•tr, o:v:W.519 U7 111 le:J Bobbi• 8rk1 U l 11\io 1·71/o l n'o-'Mo C CCll'P .olO t& l"ll't 32"11 J1V, _ , .. :::i:lfdpa ovr;,.,:':;~r:!."' 1"" •d wllt bl .,,ompllllled M•ll bit t~· fDrromMilthWe arFfchedCOnServa 1 "vhe 3 1SCI" ays Sou~~U0omG,,0•1ut!"" .OJ "5'11 •I'll ol.l"'1c,..,.;tter.Clt1'111 4.60" 1' 11 76 81!f~ 1.:ZO , .. 1'l'ot 11"'1t 71~ ... C~~~y C~ 171 ?t 21\'t 2lV. +1 •w ·--o•••• ••<••"•••· tended tor 1 perlOll t<llllYt ltnt lo 11>1 t Soum-~ 1''\lo 20\to 1,.. •r Wal F -51'• It 11 11 B<><I ltc: .ts 1.;) 6141< 60 60\lt -I'll f •n · I Jtv. -Sa'4 51\/i -•\ '" • -,-··''"" _., -······• .. tll'lll o1 sum nmnilklll. • n 1 man O e lw lh 1o Gtn I"" .:111 10\IJ 11 10'/t Feu M1r1 "' 611 1t no 1n Bol p11 . ..o 11:s 11 ''"" nv.. -1\o't umm01nt .to 11 37* 37 37~ + \~ .. , ~ .... -. OU u I •t r Chi to lb Kaiser Steel Corporal1"on's PKI 0'11n1Mt .Pit 6'h ,,, FMC Corp C¥3\'asl1 150 150 Bone! srrs 1 16 2"41 :111\.'i 29* + ~ unea. r .20e ' 11~ 11"'" lib -v. s.c111111 •50l htrtol, 1111 cr1v m•Y &.c11111 ftlt. PENALTY n vers1 y o cago e lllldro.D.,...mlct 301/i sa 31 """""'"' Tr .c:v•76 uJ 1J1 1!.l 8kMnt11 1 . .._. 6 5'1'41 ~Vt .w.... .. . C111111 rug .10 .,. 11'\io 17lt. i11' _ "- tulllorl n inv.., 111 1111 .tllt to11ow1"' 0 . 11111111 bf Uflllwful for 1nv 111r11111 1o liberal Dr. James Tobin of directors have declared a orffl!I srr.et C101111 ".~ ...., Gib ""'Cit to.,.,,,,,,, 9' 1112 ff 11or""" 1.20 s.. J.t'9 :w11 l.IV. _,,. Cur111~ wr ' t1• ll\.11 11u »YJ 1 .. Cn>llllM: Vlolalll •trr 11rovlsltn or lo 1•11 lo ~ art I di "d jSP llld1r1t II 1• 17\'I Hollv Suv•r cv"'°'IJ 16i l~S 8or1W•r 1.?I ~ JJl'll 3r.i .+-"' 1ur1 r A 2 S ]I :J7V. JI I'll "' ,_ m,,,,1 .. at ticm1'-,, ol'I' wlll'I 1nr ot tM reciylr.....,,15 o1 111rs Yale University have en-QU er Y VI end o{ 25 1 •,•,,'•, ',"",~••'•'"", 1:o.r. 'v. ~ Houaion Corp jjs6IJ " """ " Borm•~" ·'° t6 1,.... ·11"' Mi ~ un,tr H 1·20 2) "'" •)ti. .u '• ··• --"' , nd\I 7L• 114 61~ M1us1 COii Ckr cv-IJ 61 •2 Bos Edit 2,oe 15 .ct """ Cl +v. ,Ye DPs l .IO 15 Jll'll 37~ Jl\11 'lo. "<lulPn'ltnt lnsl•lltd u.,.,.. t 111 ° n1nce. 11~ ""°" ... 101111n1 111r dorsed the n egative lll" come cents per share .of common 11+rr B•OI .60 15•~ 2''"' ~ P1e Outd• Ad xw " 14 n ,U n aost Me 11 ,. 2N ~ !7>4 ! ~ YP•u~ 1..cr ,OJ Jt'llo 51\'I 5t 2V. 1~rvltlon ind lo 11\t .. llJ!edlon 1111 P""¥1J1tn ol thlt Ol'1ll"'"nct or l•O!nt 10 lrolee ol C1lll .50 11\'• 11 17\<o P1ulCT ~ S'\0111 116 •u 117 llOu•n• 1nc 207 211'1 11~ 1"11 ~~ -D-Iiie c11v EllllnMr. cam111Y wlll'I 1ny ol Ut r1<1ul•tmtnts tax Economists associated stock, payable on June 28 to ubicribllof'I TV uv, l:M 1:w. Shin Mllsiiblshl .:Wl'>l71 '' t7 t~ lr•nl!Alr .so 1.u 19\lt 21 29'\,'I ~ ~bl Ptllt. ff 11ec1ro11eri U1ld ••· s~11 bl dtelTlrd 9u111v of , ml$CI• wi"th. the Brookings lns"tu·' stoc'-L·Iders o! record June '•""'m•• •,~','.!!' u" 15 1#.'! t11r111r Mlrt '" Ss eo 90 '° Brt111s1 2.o111 ,. Sl' s11M 51'\lo -~ Din "'" 1.2e1 • 114• 2s~·. 16\~ + "" ,,,.,_. ,_ ,,-~ Hohtl-. 1M1nor 111d uPtn ton¥1ctlon lh«eol u r.uu .... ... 1m u~ l~ TJuiflY MJrt e" u n 106 1D6 8rb Mrt• 1• 231 ""' to 11 + ~ 00 •"!,S.P 2.'lO 1' ,.,,., ~~ Jl:! +"' ·~ ~· """ ''"' ~-10 " ' • • 14 T•,,_ll :l.O lto l•l Ito Tol<vo Shlblur1 ~7t ti 16 G •y~.,..p 1.60 13 4'1_.,. _ 1 lcl Ovtrflffd Wl•ff ftxckn.I .... ol ,,,. pun"""" vY ••tine not ll• tiOn have made several ex l C 10 :1:51.~ 35'\oO l#,~ Tr1n1 Wll'll PL 516' 75 71 7S 00 1YCO pfl,25 11"1 9d tJV. 96 -! '-au-lint itrvcturttl cro»!n1 l ftY c1ec11,,. FIYe Hundred 0eu1,. 1uoo.001 • • ::'l:nFr':ere ls;! 1'V. ,,. w1y111 Mtg 4\losll7 u2 1JO 112 K ·cds L1.ke fo 'l PL 1.52 120 ,,..., 21~~ 29\'i 1~ ... iion <If 1 District within wt.1e11 o• by 1mPrlsonrn1n1 not ••cftdl1111 1!• xhaustive studies of income The board also de<:lared T«u!V':e11 Prod1 2.411 1:it 1'3 13' w111i Frito J•~• n rr to 11 gP lllA l.15 110 67 •l 61 11;, ""''~••d "1rM 111.,, been prolllbllfd. U) monltu.. or bv bofl1 1uch II~• 111d • le I the arte Jy divid d f T1lllfl R1n~~ Jt •l 31'11 Wl'rlrtalrer CP <N-17 '15a" :MO 247 e.<e Ca 7 'IS ~i S-!"4 5,v, • Ill" ~MClllll la bulldlllll ... "" 1mprl..,.,-~ •. Etch tUCll l>e•IOll tllell main nance proposa s , qu r en () Teus Am OIJ l°'' 1 n'll \f~ lf"" .P•rarnounl ~~tT~:L l'U~~:i: 10..16 •. 31 I As k Andy ' 8:1itt~E, lj~g, tt ~: tr..: ~ = L,: \ r>e•!rMler <If I Oltlrld, ......, •uch bf deem.a 111111v ti I ltP1r1le elfeni.e -The Rev. Ralph Dav:id 361h cents per share or $1.46 t::1"1'1 'i:'lf~~lc1~p1ci:ia 211 21 \J II nd 11 JOI ; O.! Mnle 110 11 " wlr• ar1iln•t• lft 1n ••••from wlllcll tor Heh "•Y du•lllft •"Y PDrlltn 1111 Abernathy 1:ned the Poor preferred stock for the l'"'M,~.'1.Po.....r .1Ql 1STAt " 1511:1 v;~rb!ll Mvt Fd 10.rf ~1:21 1~:~ Delt1At• .~ !" u,u,~ :1:1,,,.., 1 .. :nv.. •1 .. ~~ POln, ovtrhud wlrft Ind ••SOC:llltd whldi 1ny YIOl•lkln ol '"~ <If 1~• llr& 'I .. 11'\ 21'4 Denn Mio .60 J6 ,. 16!h oy1rl\l•il 11ructu•e1 1r1 no1 ,.,,,. "'•IGM of th11 oroln~nee Is cort'm11ttc1. People's .. m ..... 1gn • in s ame dates. fl-, .J!,rou11 ..«> 1Pt 111' 1 D1111M111 Pf 1 2 'O'J. 60 i!\i 1~· •oooo«. conllnuld or 119rmlllfll by 1udl 11erion,1.-;:;:;;:;::;::;::;:";;;;;'':;:-;;;;:;:;;;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:-:·:::"·-==:;::;::;::;::;:~'·=~·=;;"': Den!Sv 1,:!0o IQ )~I 31~ • " ., ·• 00 "" Oenl<GW 1.... >•1 -·· 1••" o• ·· ·,0· lcll Poln, ovtrhe•d w1r" 11111 ''"' .. ,1 punl•heble lllerelor •t pro-Dreco 111A'" 1 f'!.',' •••" ••• f '' 111ocl•fed overlleld tlructurn Utllll ¥1dtd for In thl• ordln1nct. D~co pf 8 11 J1i'; ;j f7u, 1,,1 tor tht tr1MmtHlon of eleclrlc '"'""' SKlltR flU, CONSTITUTIONAllTT M al F d DeSotc>lnc .to J1 IV. 31~ J \.'I \~ •I nomlll<ll WlllllH In l~C~ll ti 3',500 II •nY tedk!n, IUbUClkHI, ""!tMt, utu un s 8::1:dJ'ot'l~... .., 1I~ 2~'• :15 ... +V. ¥flll5. cltu5t or phrete <If 11'1\I crdlnence 11 tor ti/" llt\IJ t4\o\ + '"' (ti °""lltH w!rn •ll•clllll to ""' 1nY r11son Mid IO bot 1nv11id, such Del 5tee! Ml 2'11 ""' :r.n'o ~ + 'Ill •. , ~ -I, __ ·• 00 ~\lllbl1 1.lO 3 ,>~ ,.11,~ Jl"" _.,. 1d1tlor 1urf1c:. 1111 1 .... 111\nt .,, ...,.. '""' ... 1 not 1111!'(1 lllf ¥•11dllv al Dixie!" .n. 13& ,.,. va 2ti; + \ mr.•"" ..r 1 llrtdr.11 or llllhlr fixture ,,.. tftNl1nl111 PO<llo"' ot 11111 go11S111m 1.40 n.i ~ 31>.r. 32 " •nll r•"9ftdl111 m:im -1111:111on °" ordlMroc:t. The c1111nc11 llll'etw c1ecotn !•Sil .., ci ' t1V. -· ,, 11\f: llulldllll I'll 1nolfMrr lllCl!kwl on Ille lh1I !I ""'OUll:I IM¥e ldOPled '"' g11S el Dl.:iG .. 5 2M. ;;u: ... . l&ml ... , 1.-'' "illl '' '°" -+ '.•, HIM bulkl!lll OI'" lo Ill Hltctnl OfdlMfl(tl •nd udl Mdlon, e.uboecllon, "' .,. "" ts.\ ~ bulldllll wlll!OUI creul"' 1ny .Wik 11111tt1et. cllut• vr 1111 .... ll\lreol, Ir· '""'I ~On., Sec: 11..1417. 111¥ C:fkm 'i" 11.'2 ON Wm$ 17,7717.77 81~\'"~·~ 1~ JS.._. l5'4 +1? ";ri'·Anr.-, IU«ltll!d "Ulflfl'!lfll ~~l::i~~s~~·,,•n~~":. ~EWtJ~~ IA:fif'l c:i~ L~•ll 1t1~ 11':11 l:."!t~lldlol I :~~i1t ~J:ft~d :::1 rn 81~$JO.crj,to 1~ =.~.~ ~ p =++ ~ •rid l-11"' ltn.e'IWll· llltd bv I CllUMI ot PhrlHI be CIKltrlJd lnv1no, -Ill _.. "5'-w 7.12 .u lllYtsl Grolllt; ~Ii. F4 15.fl "·'° DIG pt"• 1 .., » .... ~ .,,,, ...... ' ., I ,,_ 1111on .. ,, __ , '~ oHV NI 75.M II.Ill Miii 11 .6' 12.6J p '""' 11.tf 12.t7 g11n m "60 .. ., •• :r' .,. u• tv "''"In nl Clll'l't!TIUll Cl ""' SECTION !. Tiiis onllNrllct lt..11 lfkt lll1P NI _,,. •-' Dia troc: 14.31 1•.6.l Slllck tl.95 2t.tS P lal 1.11 f,IJ lntf'tCI .sOb Joi ~ .., ...... icw. efft<I 1no lit In fuU tor« !fllrlv IJOJ d• .. • •11on 114 Securltlft Delt I'd 17.01 It.ff Stied •.:111 •o.oo Pine SI 1;.•1 \1 ,t7 Cisney lOll "' 67'\0 :t" + ~! !•I Ewi-t -""""'"' I'll from ""' •lier 115 N•IH• Ind ,.lor lo DMltr.. Inc.. 'wti~ 01¥ Gr "·J' 11.16 Vtr P1r '·'' 10.Jl tlonMr U.rl ·~.,,, 111 Sei1 I 7 IN '1 ~~ + ~ ut'IOe'<"Pl'CM,lnd !telllrllt. Wdl •• 1\l'l'"llQI Ille tlllllr1llon 1111 ltllftn (Ul d•Y• from Ht 1111 Pl'ictl 1111 01¥ tn" \0. I 11.llll tnv Resh 20.t7 22..11 1111 In.. l'-61 11 <1 rP-.60 ' 1~ Jf\/o 3716 -\• mDUftMCI tr.M'°""""" 'Id I I I 1 1 PIUlll bf llUbllllltcl OflCt In llir Ori/I.. IM:>I l«\lr~ Dlvld ~r '·°' 4A1 ISi Gwll'I 5.61 6.20 rktr l A 26.64l '.ll..0 OomeM.111 .IO 61 ....,. II 6J +'I - --···1 ,.,_ 1-~ -•• •·· 0 • •t muld Ill,... 00..Th In t.1$ t .M ltlel Fd t1.15?7.ft Provlont •.XI f.8' Ooml'd .06n 20 oO ''" -•• , ... ""'"' ''"' •• '"' ,,_ .._it •I,. lo!, 1 ,_.,,,_ Ill -r•I told (bid! or boutlll Dt••tl lt.11 lf.10 '""' I'd It.•',,,,.. Purll1n 11.tS 1,_n Domin Fd rt ~10 #If ... ).1' -•• ct"'rorb· •nd ~Miid ducll. Clro.lltlon. 11rk'lted 11111 putlllll'lllll hi lllt (l!lkldl: O•tv!V• U.1417.11 lyY rd 1~.,7JJ.t7 Pulnlm Fund1: Donnell~ .Ml 61 ~ 4J~ ~14 +'v, lhl T-11"' •Ni, .,.,.rtlrld City Ill Cotti "'""· IOl1111tr wllh lllt FOR THE ClASS OF 'BB • N .llll; E"n Bil 11.IJ U .1$ Jallnlln ?2.'922.H fQu!I IS.It lt.111 Dorr Dllw" IC! YI :ic ~ _ '• wires Mid 111oclated OYe•lltH 1ttuer """"d 1111membtr"i1111 lllt c11y covncu Abfr"llM!ll .l.lJ 1.., E1m ilk 11.a "·'' Kn'1-Funds: GtorV 16.'<i lf.'7 Do¥erc:P 1.10 ti IA. 111,1, 111 +1'-. lu .... I/Sid Of" .., bf Ulid In ('Oft-W'Ollnt tor Ind "'lnll"" NITll. Adil" I'd t,11 '·" Ebfr1t 14.l• 1,.1! !UI 81 :IO.~• 21.tO Grtft U.'614.02 Ooweh!ll 2.«I 111 """ """ -~ lll!IC!lon with cor11trudlorl pro!Kh. PASSED ANO ADOPTED llllt Jnr dlY A" j Fd f,11 t ,'6 EITIPI Gr 15.T.I It.ID YI 82 71.11 7•,1' lllCPm t.t7 lo.51 Orenlnd 1,40 llO ~ U.... J.t t l"to $iK!llol ,,.,. NOTICR TO ... OPRllTY Ill Junt. 19'1, ~ All Amil' 1.71 I.Cl E11t••1 11,St ,~. UI 81 t.lt 10,90 ln¥1SI '·'' ~.J) grntr pf2~ 'n .... U\4i ~)~ -\4 OWN• .. , AJIO VT1l lTY COMP•N•R•. A. L. PINl(LEY A SU 1 1 ESJION FOR FU1URE ~&~:.ft 1t:n d::: i;~1•1r11 1l:~ lt:ti ::: ~~ ;:t~ 't21 :::.I:c11 1~:~ tf~ D~~E~.J :~ mt r.~ ~14 _ v. Wllhln "" 110) dlYI 111« Ille If· Mlvor of tht Am G•11'1 •~ T.10 E<1ul Gll'l lf.1721.01 !" 11 21.642!"' Sn!CIOer l'uncls: 0•"1u• ·'° ,. 39." l 'llo ,,1,1,, -l• 11!(11 .... d•lf ol • rnolullon """'""' CllY of Cast• MHI ""' 11!¥ •l.7\ 4 .11 E"lrSf 111 ,.,., 7Q,..0 VI , u .11 •3,1' 8&1 17.• 11.•1 Out'lvMI 1.10 JI )11(-li 3'~ :11'>4 f'' 1111•iutnl1$1Ktklllt~llt"'°',tlleCll'r ATTEST : AmMut \G,I 11.3tE•P!vl' 7t,05J0,9D ui l lj.r,11.<'9 C11"" St 12.UU. OvkePw 1.20 1J ~\.'I lJ~ :Jr."" 1 Cltrk 111111 mlll\I '" llftcMll utlllller. c. K. PlltEST "m Pie 1 ... ,, .. F•lrld u,to 11.,5 Ut $1 . 1 f.11 IMt 111¥ tS.61) JS.IS gu::r,m ,50 101 Ys:" 21 ... " 1l •ncf tit ""°"' llWlllM ..... ProHl1Y C!fy Cltrlr: Ill "" e!IY Ill C0tl1 Mt•• A,M~ CIP 1D•.'•7 1 1.·~ ~~ J.f!W l1:g ll::l K~r:ir::d 11:M l .Ja s-i~ly ts·U i'i:R .,:;o-.:: ;~ 1tt ~SI~ ,i~ i~ii +f wllf'llft 1'ht Ol11Tlct cre1t.<I bv .. 10 STATE Ofl CAlll'ORNI" \ SECURITY ..,uo !:!.. ~,,.. Fld c.P" 15.lj 1•~1 K11kk Giii 1~.!l u .1i Slit E<tU11 1::4121.al •"•'"I r,"',·l! f '"' 16Aio -1 \~ rnolutlon <If 11>1 ldDPtltn "11,.ol. $11d CDUNTY OF ORANGE l n t ...,...,,. · II Fld Fund 70.' n .01 ltxln11 10 ... 11.~7 SK Illy 1.9) t.76 u °" ·"" u· 11.li +• City Cltrt 111111 turtlllr nolll~ tudl ti· CITY OF tDIT'4 MESA l ",""'a ll~~~·74 l'ld Trnd :R.DOlol.11 L1x 1ch ll.IJ1'77 S.IK Am 12.1113.U r:·~,,. .. f, . .J.l 21-~ .... , -~~ !KtlO .,_.,IV -n ol 1111 l'lt'OtUltv I, C. I(, Pft\EST, City Clllti! ot 1llt City ~lld. ~·11 9 63 l'l,..ncli1 p'i'.f["'j" Llfler!Y j·OI t.11 511 SPfl:!I li.3"117,90 0""' 1-1,10 1 ....... ,,.,. ~·" -·~ Illa!, M 1'lllY" • 1nf WNll'I O«Ul'l'lllCI <If COii• Mttl l llCI u.Oflldo CNl"t ti 111t Si.... · 1 ··11 0 7 "11 ti'' 1n1 .TT 1.~ 1r.rhold Upto¥111 · .., · ).I -l4 ····1 1uc:fl _.,., dft!t• .. eantillUI h Cll'r Cauncll or lh9 Cllv ol C0ttl MHI, k l Cit I.' · 1,1nm 7, 1 · It Slt l 12 S,U 1"'9 11.to ll,fD ¥mo Ind .10f ?J 21\\ 12 .... + l• r-.iw tlldftc. -lolkift. ff '*' ... Y e.rtl"" .... , "" ,-•. , ,., -·-ll•blitn 1.11 t . / rw:om .to 1.6$ r:;11 SIYler. Fd1· w ln'ltl'I t S• 1041 OYNI"'" A l?\.11 n ~ + V. ..,. •• .... ....,. ..., "" 91111 R•ld 11, '•"I·'•• lndu1! I.fl •.•7 1111c1 1•.10 31.lii S-r tflY 1•.111•.•1 -.f _ 11mlllr or 1110d11W Mt"VIC-. 1111¥ Of' '"' ~IM..C:t No, •t1 wn lnftvdlletd SftllNG 0 Btndl 1'=11 1-'" 11 10 fl 11'• Wd'r ~I ehlll -Ide •II Ind COM!clt•ed WC!IOt'I by Nl;fkln II '"' A s ACC ONT AI B.i I'd 1:,, ,,., ~II ""' 1 • . ,::; 11 l'1:~: ltn 1::~~·.n ~~~ .... IOlef'Cll AO r ''lo 1'1' JI• -~ =:,7 • '-::11: ,:::-:vcr .. ~; =u~ :'': ,:!y~1':..,ct!"!ldc=~11:': l~i~kst '~~ Jt:: F~,s~ 11.ss 1'.M ='~!Id l ·~ j~·~ ~~114 1:·~ lt'lI !~ ~ ·5;? 1 \\7 ~~ ~ ~';\ !'~ f,_ 11'111Unntf11'11' tu#l\'I,,. 1111Utv « PltHd 1nct •dOIPMCI 11 1 "'1'1cilt •I • (Ill 'r"o 1l·U 11·'1 Fltl·F=11 1~:~ ';"' M111 Glfl 11:111 14:.. kltn l'..lf t.ot ::; i~r ;~~ •l'l ~~ 21~~ \; f'• ullllllel .t 1 ... laallon, IUbl«.'I to fht ,._ .. ,. !llftll ... of Mid Cltv Clluncll !Mid ~II Inc fc.f ft• Flt G!ll t.IJ t.i, Mltl 1'r .:11 ll.fl tltil11 ROI FulldS : KodM n, .i 16111 J \lo 1i11 :"'~ ,..:-.. 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' HI-\ ~ fi" ~-~ •R•NM1111L1TY TO bt11 h1 11c11 n•w11 Chi ck n ''WHERE COURTESY IS A WAY ·oF BUSINESS LIFE'' ~f .. 0 1t .U1i':ff','1:'Fc: .,"r,;:'nU~::. Mrt?f : :Z:~',~~ 1l1';l:·:i E:;o~c~~ '~ i11' r.'' .. ii':. ,..ONlffT OW'lflltl. •Off, It', 11111r.... i lwt TI th• -9d 11.0I' 1 . • 3'i:Cla vn•'llll Nt'W Hor ."f1 JO. 1 W~lt•hll '!· I 11,llt E••rw.P .cit. I ll'' ))• , 1 1,1 1...,..,. "'"°" CIWft!N. oeen11111, •1 -Fo n .tt !' I d 11 ... 1•.11 N""' Wld .tJ !6.fft "'""'r Fd 2 .41 t1 to E¥~~~10 ' H'l N~· -• lett1• ~IM • ""'""" 1 DAILY ,llOT. DfKCll'd n ,•I I· 1 Mil rtnd 11,~"·ll Not,..11 11.n11.n N1~11e10 tS.to 1t:w E•C•' 1~ •• 1\: ,~ .: '"i' <;: ..... --_. .... ,. .,. Id °"' In• lj·'° .11 !M Fulld ~ f . I en-1 lOJO 10.j11 WIJCon 1.4! t .lt F•ctw ii & "' 1~ ... lfllw • .,,_,_, ..,m ... 1 r °""" Inf .2t s.11 1nse11 $lo. l . '· 100 !<d 164 11. • WDl'l~ •~s 7,1' 1<11rt1m IOI 1 70ili '°1• -le ( , I • ... --·------· • , • I Friday 's Oosing Prices -Compleie I . . . ·----~~ .. . . ' L!. ..:._ .:__ __ .:.._ ..:..._ ------..._....._ ----·--~--~ New , York , '"411' Jvnt 7, 1961 ~tock Exchange List ..... .... (....._)HI .. r..-CJ4i•• r119 DAILY PILOT p ( • • I • I \ • • • • - ' JO DAILY PILOI Fr11iay, J11ne 7, 1%8 -- I . ' • ' I • • • ' • ' • . I " .. II • ONE DAY ONLY! SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED! SORRY, NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS Be summertime trim SAVE 30c Save! Babys'vlnyl SAVE38% Mon's .100% cotton SAVE33% Handsome aluminum SAVE23c in cotton iamaicas! waterproof parities iYJ walking shorts glass bottom mugs 66c • 100% cottOn duck, twill 99c • Nylon covered legs, 3, .. 37c •Tailored to be trim J9?,_ •Big 14-oz. capacity •Tailored, side :ripper waist; Sanforized® •Rich plaids, solids •Keeps drihks colder •Sun-bright colorsr 110. i.29 •Machine washable llG.20c Pl. • Cool cotton crispness llG.2.99 ~ Beautifully styled RIG. 19c •Misses' sizes 10..20 • Si1e1 3 to 2.C·mos. 'i Men's sizes 29 to 38 • Malce terrific gifts SATURDATONLTI IATURDATONLTI SATURDAY ONLY! • ~_1 . ' ' ) .. . ' ' 2.1 O off calendar travel alar1111I 411 UO.Ltt • Calendareftange automoticalt, •3x3"'vinyl caa 17-jewel Dorset watches with rich Spei~el ® bands! • Styles for him. her •Calendars, self-winds • Precision movements. •High fashion styles e.Matching watch band •Yellow or white gold SAVI 7.07 17aa llG. 24.95 SATURDATONLYI 6-le11ym set with 9' slide, airglidt! • 2 swings, lawn swing is big enou 9h for 6 • 2¥2-in. tubular steel •Wards delux@ gym set SAVE 20.07 39aa 110. S9.9S \~ ... 79' pr. stretchable cnw socks for 111n 0 ''"" ""'"' 2 $1 nylon, rkh 1had· f • " ot 't'' .. . /f' ,!;' 'i I',. ,_ ..... ·1! ,/''/ .#"'.,. -~ ,,,I', .r!;o-'-"""' ,8' Men's smart 100% cotton 98'5AVINGS knit turtle-neck shirts •High fashion turtle·neclc shirts, so popular this yearl •Cool short sleeve cotton knits you machine 'Wash and dry •latest colon to add vitality to your sports wardrobe •Make gr•ot gifts for dad: get them in men's siies S·M·L llEGULAR2.99 EA. Prt-hin11d alumin- tconomr scntn door. • Decorotive grille • 211~6'9u or 3'x6'9 " • 7-inch kick plate • Hardware included SATURDAY ONLY! SAVE 2.1 D aaa llG, 10,tl Disposable vacuum cleaner dust •a1s! •fit Signature v·au & most other models • Tou out when full •No men to handle / SAVE59c 110. 1.25 •Giant assortment of lush tropicals and beautiful evergreens •Come in l ·gal. cqns •For pa tio or yard •At the Ga rd en Shop . ' ' Ward sound praofed food waste disposer •Will pulverize most foods; jam-proofed •Has stainless stee l cutti ng ring; V2-hp - RIG. TO 1.19 ...._ ___ __. SAVE 20.98 llG. 59.91 IATURDATONLYI IATURDATON .. YI IATURDATONLYI IATURDAYONLYI SHOP ,MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TILL 9-SUNDAY 11 A.M. TO 5 P.M. HUNTINGTON BEACH 5:::::: :rv7· PHONE 714-892-6611 .,__ . ---·----------·-•••--••11r---·,-·,..· ,.,.,liioiiGGm..,--;;,;;,;;:,;;;.;.·;;· -;,;·:..-:.:-:.;-:..;-:.::.:-:.:-:..•!...:!•~-:.-:·:.:-:::•:~ .... ·::-_:_:: _ _:__ ____ • _ I I i I ' ) ) I • • J . • Star-Spangled Gala Cause Flagged California's primaries are. over, however political conventions, cam- paigns and national elections lie ahead and the nation's mind ls especially switched on to the future of America. One group of women, Queen of Hearts Guild, also bas its collective mind on another cause-the future of Children's Hospital of Orange County, and tying the two ideas together, they will stage a gala summer benefit, a Star-Spangled Ball tomorrow evening. • About 300 party-goers are expected to dance under red, white and blue banners, dazzling stars and bright silver balloons during festivities which will begin with a 7 p.m . cocktail hour. Mrs. Macauley Ropp, genera] chail'man of the event. was assisted with plans by Mrs. Frank Wirsig. Others working on the gala included invitations c<H:hairmen Mrs. Earl Steer and Mrs. Robert Patterson and their committee members the Mmes. Robert Schock, Prentice Taylor, Alfred Payne, Clarence Carson, and C.R. Hulst. Mrs William Gwin n and Mr.s. George Gade co-chaired a patrons Jet· ter committee including the Mmes. Harlow Boyle, ·Harold Wire and Monte Warr, and reservations co-chairmen Mrs . Robert Russell and Mrs. Arthur Zimmerman were assisted by the Mmes. Tristan Krogius, David Gtaf and Francis Fabian: · · Guild members helping Mrs. Douglas Keneston with decorations in· eluded the Mmes. Neal Amsden, William Hinwood, Thomas Fleming, Wit· liam TowM_end , William Thomas, James Wheaton, Richard Worthington, trorace Fritz, Herman Roesti and Charles Roberts. HosteSses, led by Mrs. Roy Marcom and Mrs. William H: Beck, will include the Mmes. Bernard Syfan, Neil Nelson, Stanley Eichstaedt, and Dwight Smith. .1 BLACK-TIE AFFAIR? -Mrs .• Macauley Ropp looks over her husband's planned attire for tomor- row evening's gala Star-Spangled Ball and finds that· no necktie will be necessary. Kenaston hopes to set a style trend among husband's of Queen of Hearts Guild members, Children's Hospitel of Orange County at the summer benefit. Telephoning was the responsibility of the Mmes. Verne Daily and Howard Hinrichs assisted by H. P. Willats and Robert Anderson. Mrs. Gordon Forbes is ways and means chairman for the guild, and ~1rs. Ga1e Pike serves as finance chairman. The Laguna Line Anniversary T casted By JEAN COX OI "fMI 0•111' Pli.t ll•ff THE ADOLPH KROCHS, 16-year residents of Laguna, invited about 80 "intimate friends" for cocktails in their Pearl Street home to celebrate their 59th wedding anniversary Saturday. Sha~ toasts with the K-rochs were Mr. and Mr1. Donald Vander~ hilt or Laguna, who celebrated their 22nd wedding anniversary the same ~day. The former Chicago residents had another reason to celebrate. Kroch recently received an award from UCI acknowledging bis help in support of the university's library. HOW MANY people can claim to have tasted Lion Stroganofi? All or about 53 guests attending a cocktail and dinner party given by Mr. and Mrs. Frederick I . Richman recently can. Festivities began with cocktails in the Richman home where guests were given the opportunity to vi~w Richman's prize orchids. Later the group adjourned to Bob Boyd's Restaurant for a dinner which included a taste of the lion Richman shot during a bunting trip. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Nugent who accom· panied the Richmans with a group of Rotary members on a four week trip through South America. · Other Lagunans sampling lion and other concoctions included the Messrs. and Mmes. Charlton P. Boyd, Leonard G. Davis, Peter D. Fulmer, Link Harris, Robert E. C. Martin and Dewitt C. West. Three Arch Bay residents invited included Mrs. G. H. Ernsberger, and the Messrs and Mmes. Fred S. Hilpert, C. Stewart Tinsman and James T. Van Rensselaer. Other area guests included Or. and Mrs . LaVerne Fletcher of South Laguna and the Messrs. and Mmes. Allen Harper of Pasadena and South Laguna, Paul K. Justus of Laguna Hills, Lawrence R. Kent of Dana Point, John B. Lawson of Laguna Niguel and Rollo Mock of Dana Point. EBEL~ CLUB'S literary section highlighted its final meeting with a review or works by Issac Bashevis Singer by Mrs. David Young. During the gathering in the home of ·Mrs. Alfred Kress,· members named Mrs. Wallace Scott to replace Mrs. Howard Hinrichs as new sec- tion chairman for the coming year. Assisting Mrs. Kress in serving luncheon were co-hostesses Mrs . Larry Hunt and Mrs. Edward Nell . Also present were the Mmes . Robert Mccarter, Kevin Carroll, Clarence Carson, Lewis Gillette, Macauley Ropp, Charlie Dean and Edmund Van Deusen. MRS. BUD TAYLOR, president of the Laguna Beach Emblem Club, presented her group's floral wreath during Memorial Day ceremonies at J.feisler Park. Members present in~luded the Mmes. Fred Myers, Jim Ker· rins and Frank Hatcher. Aura of Mystery Surrounds Kiwani-Annes Laguna Beach Kiwani-Annes are keeping mum about plans for the first program they will put on for thelr husbands, Laguna Beach Kiwanians, during a luncheon meetin-g tn the Hotel La~una at noon Wednesday, June 19. Will they dance, sing, show inov1es? Acting mysterious about the whole thing is Mrs. Karel de SM!t (center) who shares her secret plans to (left) Mrs. Charles W. Mc Clanahan and (right) Mrs. James E. Agnew. Shooting Off Mouth Triggers New Round of Investigation DEAR ANN LANDERS: wt week I afove my motbe:r to her brother's funeral in another state. r.(y mother dJdn't stop talking for a single minute. All I heard was, "Byron's wife shot him. He COULDN'T have shot. himself. Father taught hJm how to use a gun when be was in bia early teens. He never bad a tnJshap. At age 50, wtth all thoie .years of gun experience behind him, Byron COt)LDN 'T have 1bot hliiiiilf. HtJ-wtte sh« hlm.'' When we arrived i.t my er.and.mother's home my mother said to tht:. dugyman; "You know. of course. that Byron's wife shot him.'' He replied, "that's absurd. Hls best friend who is on the PQllce force did the investigating to be sure there was no foul p(ay. Byron shot himse lf ac-clde~ while cleaning his riilf.. He ~ f. ANN LANDERS apparently didn't realize it wa s load- itd ... My mother told him he was crazy - that-there must have--been &eYel'Al- people in on "the: pltl." and that they have not beard the eod of it because she was going to the authorities and see that "justice is done." My mother was in stitutionalized for mental Illness several years BRO and in my opinion the world would •be a safer place if the y had neve r let hf!r ou t. Is there anything I ca n do to p•· - vent her fr.oni pursuing this wild idea? I am deeply concerned. -1'.D. ~-OEAR--Y:D:: You ar~ !'Ot resp-onsl- ble for your moUter's conduct. It sounds as 11 she has a l005e connection and all the talking In the world will not pers uade her· that she ls mistaken. So s:1ve your brealh to ·coo l your 19up, dcitr. The authorities Will recognite her disturbed state and deal with her testimony accordingly. ' DEAR ANN.LANDERS : I have been reading your 1..-olumn for years. I notice that women often write of humiliation and heartache because of cheating hu sbands. J'd like to tell yo u how 1 solved the problem . Less than a year after we married I walked into Jiarold's office and found one of the little typists sitting on hi1 lap. When they saw me they almost died . She pretended to be removing a cinder f:rom bi1 eye. I told her lf she wanted Harold she could have him -and after she had finished with the cin der she should gjve some thought to the rock& in his head. The girl assured me she didn't want him , that she had -a flne . boyfriend and then she pleaded with me not to tell anyone. The following .~.ay 1he qull Six months later I was riding home on the bus. When w~ stopped at a light I glanced into the. next car and there wa y my husband and a woman in fond embrace. The worn.an . it turned out, was the nurse who had attended hJm when he had his ·appendix removed two months earlier. • I told Harold that very evening that we were through. I went to see the nurse the following day and informed her-lhat-1he-coold have him. She-Cried and begged me not to tell her husband. She 18..id she didn't want Harold and that she had been a crazy foot ' That was sev,en years ago and he's been a model husband ever 1lnce. Once he got it through hla. bead that I didn 't care whether he stayed or wtnt he decided to behave hJmself , ~PAMONA DEAR P.AM' Wllll a py Uh iUt I can under1tllld wby yn cealU't eare If he stayed or went. I'm glad th soJa .. tJon worked for you, byt rm certala 1t would DOt work ln all cam. TbuQ for writing. · Do you feel ill al ease .•• out of it? ls evetybody havlng a good time but you? Write for Ann Landers' booklet. " eYeylOPOj>uliftty," enc -lhii wltll your reqUO<t 35 "'"" ln coil\. and a long, self-addressed, stamped .,_ velope. Ann Landers will be glad to help 1<111 with your problem1. Send them to.let In care of the DAILY PILOT, ~ ing a sta~. aelf--addressed .. v~. ,. .• ....,.~....,,.._ ~ ...... -" ......... J ....i.~· _._ ... -' .._ --_, .a..J • ... w ....J..A.-~i;;......a.._11;;-.c:.. ... ._ .. 4e.k '"' '· '-'X k '.4 '•'-+-+w.t'+·.:.. .· .. :.-~ <...a.... ..... ..._4._,._'.,.._,._,.__,. •• .. ~ .. I 1 1 I • I DAll.Y PILOT fr~. Ji.Int 7. 1968 Lake Tahoe Honeymoon ·Nuptial Vows Pledged Gerilyn Lou Balley end Richard Allen Drake '""' m a r r 1 e d in W11tmlnster Church of Je1ut Cbrlst of Latter-day Saloll In a dou· ble ring ceremony 1ollm· nlzed by the Bishop Willllm Bawden. The bride 11 the daughter o! Mr. and Mro. Gerold Balley of Garden Grove. Her husband ii tho ,.. o1 Mr. and ~·· RU1sell Drake of Huntington Beach. Given in marriage by her f•ther. the bride wore a ny· Ion organdy over taffeta gown wttb an empire line accented w I t h 1ppllqued lace. Her' tiered train fea· tured a large bow. Her illu· slon veil was caught to a headpiece of nylon tulle decorated With seed pearls and 1he carried a bouquet of white African lllies. Miss Susan Jackson of Lakewood was uked by her cousin to be maid of hono.r. She was dressed in full length apricot gown with short sleeves and a bow in back. She wore a headpiece of -~pricot voile with apricot velllng and she carried a bouquet of yellow daisies .. Officers To Assume Duties Miss Nita Walton of Orange will be installed president of Orange County Spe•ker1 Forum at a Juncb.~ Tlfesday, June ll, at 10:30 a.m. ln the Galaxy restaurant in Sant.a Ana. lnstallinc officer. Mrs. T. H~ Ockels, also will place in office the Mmes. E J I i 11 Porter, Newport B each , first vice president; R. G. Miller, Placentia. second vice president; K e n net h Smith, Newport B e a c h , secretary; Wayne Reaf.snyder, Garden Grove, treaSurer, and H. · J • Howard, S a n t a Ana, ' ' parliamentar\an. Mrs. J . Orlend Smith of Garden Grove will discuss A Woman • of Note. Mrs, Herbert J. Clark of Santa Ana will give a ''surprise" ,P.ech. Friendship To Flower Banquet Marks History in the Making Bridesmaids, dressed in full length .yellow gowns with short sleeves and a bow in back were Miss Lau· rel Wells of Fullerton, Miss Marla Meridith of Garden Grove and Miss Kathleen Quinn of Garden Grove. Each carried bouquets of apricot daisies and wore yel· low voile bow hats with Y.ellow veiling. An island motif will pre· dominate when the Aced· emy ·of. Friendship, Women of the Moose, chapter 1158, sponsors Friendship Aloha tomorrow in t h e Moose llome, Costa Mesa. Admiring a work of. art in the Pavilion Gallery prior to a nirhost cocktail party sponsored by the Newport Beach Hlsrorical Society are (left to right) Alan Ducommun of the Ducommun Realty Co . and owner of the Balboa Pavilion, Mrs. William Ritter, Society vice-p'resident, and Judge Robert Gardner, Horoscope • who gave special introductions preceding the din- ner in the ballroom. The festivities Wednesday eve- ning marked the occasion where Society members presented its first historical marker in honor of the Pavilion. · Miss Jill Drury of Orange was flower · girl. Her goWn was styled like the maid of honor's and she carried 8 w h i t e basket of--.yellow daisies. ..,._ MRS. RICHARD ALLEN DRAKE S1nt1 An1 Home .· Appetizers ~ be served beginning at 6:3> p.m. and following a Polynes!an din- ne.r. there will be dancing until 1 a.m. Officers and chairmen oC the past year will be recog- nized and newly elected officers will be welcomed. Aries: Smile, Concede New Year Activated New officers will preside. secret pals will be disclosed and plans for the coming year fQrmu.lated when tile Seal Beach Junior Woman's Club meets ThUJ"Sday, June 13, ill the~ of Mrs. Reno Lorenz. Best man was the bride's brother, Bonner J. Bailey of Garden G rove. Ringbear· er was Gene L. Drake, Hun- tington Beach, the bride- groom's nephew. Ushers were Ronald Drake, Robert Drake and Russell Drake all brothers of the bride· g r o o m from Huntington Beach. Author Explains Uphill Sliding This year's project for the group has been donating funds to the Moosehaven hearing aid fund . which pro- ceeds from the dinner dance will benefit. SATURDAY, JUNE 8 _By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): P~asure obttined at social affair ; but ooe ck>6e to you pet"Stst.s in asking money question. E x h i b i t sense of humor. Be flexible. And t'O have peace, make minor concession. ' TAURUS !Ap<ll 211-May 20): Obtain hint from ARIES message, C h e c k detaila cooneoted with legal papers . Your mate. partner ~·aw attention. Remain in the background tonight ;.s an appreciative audience. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Communicate w it h those who work with and Serve you. Get ideas·across. Make meanings c r y s t a 1 clear. Thia overcomes tendency for others to be en- viow. ~eone may be spreading false report. CANCER (June 21.July 221 : Accent on creative endeavors, r o m a n t ic iildventures. Day features change, exci1ement of discovery. J o y indicated tllrough dlildrei and tile theater, LEO (July 23-Aug . 22): Yoo enjoy being with the CANCER· born today. Some have much in common with your current goal. Ex· cellent for entertaining at home, building confidence of older individual. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): stress on dealings with brothers, sisters. Journey indicated. Much movement shown: you have to con· centrate forces. otherwise, you will be here, there and oowflere. Think. LIBRA (Sept, 23-0ct. 22): Finish project; it could mean money in the bank. Individual who previously was cool now confides pro· bl em. Be sensible. Avoid becoming involved in ex- pense and emotional turmoil. SCORPIO (Oct. 23. Nov. 21): Cycle high. Initiate pro- jectB. Circumstances turn in your favor. Your judgment more apt to be correct. . Watcti personal ap- pearance. Dress for the oc- casion. You shine at social affair. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Fine for attending special lectllN! or group devoted to your charity in - teresU. Visit one who is con- fined to borne or hospit.al . Adhere to golden rule. Your favors will be repaid. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 19): Good hmar aspect highlights pleasure. romance. praise fro m respected friends. Excellent for humanitarian work. Get together with SAGIT- TARIUS individual. \Vork out constructive program. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Now you can approach individual who is in position to aid, ful'fill ambitions. Do so in forthright manner. A void tendency to ms.ke sensational claims. Be con- &truotive, sensil>le. Mrs. Lester Davis, a past president of the club, ha1 been named the Juniors' Woman-of-the-year. Active with the club and also the March d Dimes, Mrs. Davis served as vice president, secretary and treasurer, and as ch.airman of ttie city's Mothers March and bhe Youth ill C.Oncer;t series for the M·aroh of Dimes Foondation. Providing music in the church filled with bouquets of white and yellow gladioli were Mrs. LuDean Howe, organist and Mn. Ellen Nicholson of Huntington Beach, soloist. A reception took place at the church after the cere- mony. Assisting with the .cake whlch was decorated with apricot roses were Miss Cherie Cleveland, Miss Col- lette Kozloski and Miss Sha· ron Williams, all of Garden Grove. Miss Wendy Vance circulated the guest book . Dr. DonaJd Curtis will tell MOnday Morning Club of Laguna members How to Slide Uphill during t:heir last luncheon program of the season in the Hotel Lagun a Monday, June 10. Fol\owng a social hour at 11 a.m., with music pro- vided by Mrs. William Hobson at the piano, a buf- fet luncheon and fashion show will begin at noon. Dr. Curtis. to be in· troducro by Mrs. Martin J. Gurney. is the author of "Your Thoughts Can Change Your Life," "Human Problems and How to Solve The'm" and "Daily Power for Joyful Living." -H is last book, "How to Be Happy and Successful." has sold in the millions, and he has appeared in more than 100 major Hollywood pro- ductions. Currently he hosts a color television travel series entitled, Its a Small World . Reservation for the gatherlllg may be obtained by calling Mrs. Ruth Hat- fie ld, 494-4650. British Club Women of British ances- try are welcome to join the Daughters of the British r- Empire, Westward Ho Chap- ter. The club meets the last Monday of the month at noon in various locations. Further information may be received by calling Mrs. R. W. Ketteringham, 494-64-41. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent oo journeys of the mind. Means you can satisfy intellectual cutiosity. Ask questions -obtain answers. Study advertising, pub!tc relations campaign. Keep e<>mmunication lines open. PresidiDg at their first meeting will be the Mmes. H. D. Brown, president; Roy Steidley, RonaJd Adams and Carl Irwin, v ice presidents, Mike Knapp, secretary , and Tom Nicholson, treasurer. The bride is a graduate of Bolsa Grande High School and her husband is a grad· uate of Redondo H i g h School. After a wedding trip to Lake Tahoe they will live in 'Santa Ana. Members Welcomed Looki ng ahead to the com- ing year. prognam com· mibtee C'hai.rmefti 1U'e plan·· It=========== Activities Concluding Grandmothers ning to attend aµditiorn; at ··come and b r i n g a the Wilshire-Ebel! Club, Los friend" is the request be-Angeles on Wednesday and ing made to members of the Thursday, June 19-20, to M i d w a Y City Woman's select future programs . Club. rv.eanwtiile Mrs . Phil Den-A . prospective member-ship luncheon will take place n.is and Mrs. Robert W. CM Auxil iary at noon Tuesday. June ll. in Roper, Vagabond and the clubhouse. 8241 Bol sa Theater Party committee The first Thursday of the Ave .. Midway City. chairmen are p I an n in g month m e rn be r s. of the Hostesses for the lunch· fu ture gatherings including Re .... :.OtL .. 11 of • 1; c re t At noon every 11 econ d Arperican Legion Aux iliary. eon will be Mrs. Clair Bunt. a summer theater party tv sisters and exchanging or Thursday the Newport Har-Costa Mesa Unit 455 gather Mrs. Fred Williams and the Hollywood Bowl and a t.:lore ' mudic STUDIOS Headquarters for beginners on all instruments. Summer classes now forming. 1794 Nr.p9rt 11•4. Cost. Mno Ml 6·060, :i~bs wlll ctA1CluC.: ttie ~ear's bor Grandmothers' CI u b in the American Legion Mrs . Golvin Street. trip to Las Vegas. activities for members of meets in the Newporter Inn. Hall, at 8 p.m. Information" F;;;,;~~;'.~~~===~~;,;~;;~~~==~~=========~ Mu Upe:ilon chapter, Beta Mrs. Verna Pitt 'at 642-3566 regardingmembershipisob:h Sigma Phi, Monday, June may be called for member-tainable by calling Mrs, 10. rs=hi='p==inf=o=rm=a=U=on=·======'N=e=al::=H;o:u~g~an~,~54ll:::;=<\3~7~4=·==>I The meeting will begin at ,, ' Betrothal Announced During Dinner Party s p.m. In the Foontain FORMER STYLIST AT Valley home of Mn;. Robert M=,aji be •PP' ,prtately UNIVERSAL STUDIOS decorated w i t h stars to emph:.size the year's theme, Reach for the Sten. Sociai meetings will take place during the summer with the first busine&s m e e t i n g scheduled for September. Mr. and Mrs. Ricllard A. Coot ct Hunt!ngtoo Beach CATHY McKINLEY Will Morry WA1'•HOUS• 0VTLaT FURNITURE ' -CA Rm lfl SOfAS $169. --FORTREL CARPETING ........ 5.95 J. J. KNICl!llllOCKlt 4001 lllCH IT .. N.1. ...,._. ,. ......... MMA"""'I 14M40t ,. .. --. have announced the betrothal oi her daughter. Caeliy Lynn McKinley and James Robert Dupree. The couple have selected June, 1969, for their wedding in St. Andrew's Presbyter· ian Church. The bride -elect , an honored queen of Job's Daughters, bethel 313, is an alumna of Coste Mesa High School and is attending Or.m,iige Coast College where she is studying English. The son of Mrs. John Bruno of f>(irtage , Ind. and the late Mr. Dupree is a graduate of Port.age High School and is stationed on o·~----. \ "U-.. with the U.S. Marine Corps. The betrothal was reveal- ed during a buffet dimer party where Mrs. Dennis Hamann or A 1 ta d e n a a.uisted with the ar· rqements. Brunch Waits For Kiwi Club Newport Beach chapter, members of the Kiwi Club and their husbands will gather in the Balboa Bay Club for brunch Sllllday from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. A special guest will be Mrs. William W i I n e r , recently elected national presidflnt, a n d associate member of the Newport Beach group. Cl ub members former American Airlines stewardesses. Further in· formation a b o u t mem- bership may be obtained by calllng Mrs. Don Howard, 846-586.5. 0.-0-1 l•• •••• ........ -"A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE" ,.,.,.. _ ..... •1• •.•. '11frlll .... """"' Cttl!I ,,.. .,,.. ....... t4: "U.••--........ ..,. ....... Sfllt n..itN .... ,.,. .... .. Ce1 '"'°1JU fer :•cull .. CLAY it Co1u11lt1tlofl A,..,111•~1• ~Y Apll'olflh'l'l•~t F••turin9 The Finest line of Wi9s end H•irpi•c•1 3545 E. Coul Hwy. Coron• 673'6961 dol Mor 6 DELICIOUS FLAVORS ThlM .,.. 1lx of our m•ny flavors In wedding lltl. And they run the gamut, from Bold end Beautiful to the demure. F•lr Lady. They all hlVI one thing In common, however. E•ch II fully covered by our dl•mond guarantee. ~ From our COup d'etat Collectloo, $750. B. The "In" Set Look: Ten diamond Mt, $500. C. Swinging Set, "450. D. Thi Bold end lleeutltul, $620. Malchlng bind, $30. E. Antiquities: Btadl: cofor on 14 klnt gold, $27&. F. Folr IAdjo lllrM dlomond HI, '260. ~I SL~VICK'S c/~_,...., 11 FASHION ISLAND N E WP 0 RT C E N•T E R •44 -118 0 ---... I l J I ' I I , I I ) I •, I \ .. . " • ,. =------... ·------------~------------~·-----------r-·------------···-·--------------~~--~~--...,-.-., • :t .... .,,. , U11. '' ro Birth of a Yaelat -~~ .... ~~is how Wayfarer Yachts' new Islander-SS Iook-~'iifta few weeks ago when it wa~ popped from the =-m'.01d. The yacht, largest ever to be produced in fiberglass, is now being co~leted and readied for &hipment to its owner in Chi~ago. ... .. ' Biennial Bermuda Race E.U3 Mesa-built Yachts Set Thirteen Costa Me~a-built _ iaj£j.11g yachts will be in the ~ ititing line-up when the biennial Newport (RJ.) to Bermuda race gets under way June 22. -.The Costa Mesa built bo'tlts will include 10 Cal-405, twa Cal-37s, and one Cal-48, ,.. all products of J e n s e n Mal1ne. Others will be two ~-·coJUmbia-40s from the .. 'Coltimbia Yachts Corp., and • •one ·Islander-44 produced by -: .. w&i)'farer Y.a.cht~. AH will be '-" sailed by East Coast skip· •· pers-and crews. ·• Offiy local crew "in the famed "race to the Onion ""; Patth" will be John B. •1 Kilroy's 73-foot yawl K.ialoa tr from Newport Harbor 1:: Yt:Cht 1oC1ub. Kialoa II W-35 • first to finish in the 1966 Bermuda race. Kilroy said he expects his major competition this y~ar to come from S.A. "Huey" Long's new 73-foot Ondine and the perennial front-run- .ner, Stormvogel, 7 2 • f o o t schooner skippered b y Cornelius Bruynzeel o f South Africa. Only other West Coast yacht in this year's race is the 55-foot sloop Santana from San Francisco. The 635-mile race to St. David's Light will have a total of 161 entries,· ac- cording to Sydney H . Rogers, chairman of the race committee. Twenty. seven of them will be from seven f<lreign C<lu ntrieJI - five from Canada, two from . : . Traiisatl.antic Race .. Argentina, eight from Germany, one from Sooth Africa, five from Bermuda, two from Sweden and four from England. The entries include six previous winners : the 59- foot schooner Nina , now owned by the Merchant Marine Academy ; the 56- foot sloop, Gesture. skip- pered by James Madden, Pennsylvania ;W.T. Moore's Argyll. a 57-foot yawl from Oyster Bay, N. Y.; Malay, the 46-foot yawl owned by D. D. Stromeier, Scarsdale, N.Y.: the 53 ft. Carina, a yawl owned by Richard Nye, Greenwich. Conn., ..and T. Vincent Learson·~ Cal-40 Thunderbird from Rye, N.Y • ' . : Yank Emerges as Darkhorse LONDON !AP) American yachtsman Tom Follett and his twin-hulled schooner, Cheers, emerged tod ay as one nf the dark hor~~s of the Trans-Allantic liOIO:-. race -one that the ~tltrs are worried about. ;·-WW! the race nearing the 'erid-it it::s first. week, Cheers ~ been reported since ~g Plymouth I a s t 'Sli!!!@ay. -N<*'-that Follett is in trou- !6tf!--1fe and sevet'al others rit~i!le original 35 are keep-:£ng:'ltluiet as a matter of 'pOlicY -not letting the cAfier"S know where they are. Ctfeers is a schooner-rig- ~ .~aj.amaran d i r e ct~ y d6sQen(1ed from the sw1ft- s~g outrigger canoes of Polynesia. The experts rate ~~!;~Qf'e of the fastest boats ' . , in the l"ace now that Frenchman Eric Tabarly's giant trimaran is out with steering trouble. One sailor wtio wants to knoW Follett's whereabout.o; is South Australia's Bill ~Iowell, sailing G o I d e n Cockerel. His catamaran is 43 feet over-all, much the game length and therefore much the same in potential speed as Cheers. Speaking by radio to his London sponsors Thursday, Howell said: "J wish I knew where Follett is . Then I'd know if I should put on more sail." Leaders of the rcree. which i.o; sponsored by the London SW1day Observer newspaper here today were about 700 miles west of Plymouth on their coursei:; (()I" Newport. R.l. Howell reported overtak- ing the 53-foot sloop Spirit of Cutty Sark, sailed by Bri- tain's Leslie W i 11 i am s, Thursday. But both apparently were some 30 miles astern of the 57-foot British Ketch Sir Thomas Lipton.. sailed by Georfrey Williams. Bruce Dailing of South Africa. sailing Voortrekker, was reported well up with the leaders, although keep- ing bis exact position to himself. WiUl Tiabarly gone -:-he won the 1954 race 1n a record 27 days -the likely winner is anybody's guess. Most competitors this time seem to be slow lo shake down and 30 days may prove a winning time. ··New Tr~nspa~ Ra~e Due. --.. •· ~San Francisco to Tokyo Cours e Sla1;ed r.;-: _':A.'-new 'l'Nnspaclflc yachl . . rac6'hi in tlhe making. ;rrlji propo5ed new race Is 'fi.om-San Francisco W TO'k)io i.nd is being organiz- ed ·io· stlrt March 15 , 1969. ; ·-CO-sponsors are the Slocum l...Sdciety , and the Nippon : ~e.an Racing Oub. • --Entries a r e limited to • mooo,bulll -een 24 and : ~ ftet ove......U. R a c e f,"~r said the event ls a ~_.,_ effort to coon· • teract the trend toward ;1a.rge and expensive safllng ~m,chinas. ~ The Slocum Sociol,y 1" a ~Oil • profit or&ani Z & t J 0 D : s~H•hod In 1956 to ~· en<:c>Urase and sup-J;Plrt ,Jong dlatance pas1a1es r ti!!,omeJI boat.<. ' 1 A i\mUar race for Midget ; ~-Racing Fleet YAL-hts • ·(~to 30"feet) was propMed J lbli -y.., to start (l'Om ..Mirlwl del Rey to Honolulu . , but has been abandoned. Contestants in the n e w race will be required to have prior experience in singlehanded offshore sail- ing. as well as be over 21 SIYC Delays Opening Day -------------------.....l..------___ ,._ .... _. __ --- Outboards Delayed ToA.ug.25 ----------.-. ·-.__ ,.__ "'~ -· frldaj, June 7, 1'68 DAJL V .iLOT 17 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE _ LEGAL NOTICE ____ ........ __ .. ,.6..1 __ ~ . ·~ I I 1 pil!..,~ ..... ,....,..., .... ,..., .. ,.,. •• .,. • .,.,.,.,.,. ...... , .... ..,,.,sc..,•sa .. •s••<.,. ...... ,,.. .. .,, ........ ,...,.Ai.,.<<_, . .,, ....... <t<i"~4""'C~•!!"l<!!"lst ... eezc!!llst,..,..,., ................ ,~~~·~.~.*!.~.~.~.:-:.~.~-=--.:--:--~~~-~-~:~:.~•. ~ ~·. ~~ ~ < • ' DAILY P ILOT EDITORJAL PAGE - Planning for ·· Growth ' A $26 mlllion general obligation bond olecUon has been scheduled for July 23 by directors o1 Moulton- Niguel Water District to finance sewer and water facillUes expansion. The funds are to prepare for projected expansion of Laguna Niguel, North American Rockwell property, Mission Viejo and Capistrano Highlands. Votes in the sprawling water district with about 9,600 residents are allowed on the basis or one vote for each $1 of assessed valuation of land on the last equal- ized tax roll. Passage of the election would seem assured since the large landowners of the district control 65 percen t of the votes, nearly enough to swing the two-thirds mar~ gin requirement !or general obligation bonds. Despite this. the water board has gone to unusual lengths to assure small landowners it is being fair. If the election fails, the needed funds would be obtained from levies against the land -levies "'hich. for,.J,. most part, would come from the large landowners. The action, which came as a board resolution April 29 is more a moral conlmitment than a legal one. ' However, it does represent a wholesome departure from board attitude two years ago when homeowners were alarmed and demanding answers about high property taxes. This time the water board is taking its case to Lhe people. working with homeowner groups. answering questions and holding meetings in the district rather than in Santa Ana. One of · Ironies Of Our Time Physical tests given to European and American schoolchildren have s;1ov.11 that the European children are rar more physically fit than ours. despite our greater resources in food and our greater emphasis on sports. There are two culprits here, I think: the automobile and the telephone. Unlike my generation. the American child today uses these as substitutes ror his legs. I must have walked 10 miles a day when l was a boy: I doubt if the modern child walks 10 blocks a week. And regular waiking is probably the best and ctieapest form of keeping fit. ONE OF THE IRONIES of our time is that youngsters are pro\ided with elaborate and expensive athletic pro- grams at school and elsewben -and then they are bused or chauffeured to the sites of their endeavors. U they walked back and forth regularly, they wouldn 't need such involved pro- grams. The telephone, for au its usefulness, is another enemy of physical fitness among the young. I don't think I te lephoned a friend more than once a month ; if J "anted to see someone, I 'valked or biked over to his house. Nobody dreamed of chauffeuring me as a boy, ud I rarely took a bus, ex- cept to go downtown once in a while. IN ~tY BA.RI. Y TEENS, my closest friend wa5 Saul Bellow. Uie novelist. He and J Liv~ about a mUe and a half from each other. diagonally across a park. We would spend the late af. ternoon or evening together. and then walk each other home. When we got to my house, we decid- ed there was still more to talk ' about. so we would turn around, and I would wa1k him back to hi s house. And, often, we would turn around once again, and he would walk me back to mine. We would sometimes do this three or four times. and think nothing of it -and do it three or four times a week. ·RE WAS ON THE track team (an excellent miler). and J was on the ten- nis team; and we both got so much ex· ercise walking that we were always in top form, without the necessity for calisthenics or special programs. Our school. in fact, didn't provide any. It is absurd to spend so much for athletic and fitness programs today, ·and at the same time allow children easy access to the telephone, the car Cl" the bus, when they could just as easily (and more healthfully) walk to school or to a friend 's house. But they seem to have enormous energy for everything -except a simple six-· block stroll down the street. The mere thought of that exhausts their im- agination and brings on symptoms of immense fatigue. Telling a He From a She 11 is nice: to know. where you're with another person, what sex that person is. l\1en. for example. traditionally feel more free to be tl'lemselves, are more at ease. even speak in a different man- ner iI th~y are in tht company of other men . They are also usually more boisterous and less boyish. 'Yemen. on the oUier hand, when in the company of women show just the u:>posite b:.ait.s. They are more ill at ease, less free to be themselves, and in many cases profoundly less feminine and fun-worthy. O~F; ·OF THE increasing problems of ch·ilization is how to te\\ one sex from the other. The passion for con· formity appears to be gradually d::.stroyi ng many of the recognizable differences between the sexes. Here are a few guidemarks that help the interested bystander distingulsb the hi ms from the hers: Ir it likes, while swigging something straight from a paper cup, to ata.nd in Dear Gloomy Gus: When the beaches at the south end of town , such as Wood's Cove and Diamond.. are such rtpulsive messes, wtth garbage the backyard and brag about the barbecue sauce it has concocted, it is a 'man. If it would rather go to an in- door cocktaH party and gab what it doesn't know about baseball and politics. it is a woman. Does it punch you in the ribs while ii tells a merry story? Has to be a buck. Does it place a soft but infinitely restraining hand upon your arm while it tells you its troubles? Has to be a doe. THE ONE TllAT says, "Let's have another one." can be safely described as male. The one that inquirei.. "Oh. do you really think I should?'' ls un· doubtedly female. 011t to the incinerator to deliver the garbage with a grim air of resignation trudges the husband . Out to the in- dnerator with a burst o1 oratory, "This Isn't the way it happens in the apartment 11ext door -after all, SHE is married to a civilized man," walks a burdened wife. Does it accept love a5 a bond and a mytlery that must be taken for granted? That's the eternal lad. Must It be assured of. love and doei. it dP.- mMd that lpve's mystery be ex- pressed in words. however lame and unhelpful. as well as in conduct, however eJOquenUy mutual? Thafs the eternal l.a51. strewn all over. including st&Jr· C.Ue.t._how_e&11-tk-.cit.y ~lk-------~-=- about buying another big chunk Tax Increase of beach property downtown? We can't even k~p clean what · little we've got now. Cblt1a.l100chee, F11., Twin City -B. H. New1! "Don't be surprised If there n.i. IM"'"' refttC"ll ,_.,.. ......... "' is ·a t4ll Increase. It has been put ;:,-:~ :.:=, :=.-:."; :.-:_ on the shelf, but l! Is now bttng taken oU." ( ' --The new look in board attlttide generally and th1 1 resolution on intent to avoid ti.ny lnequi_tabJe increase in tax burden ~is a happy change in the water district's public relations posture.' In a situation where large land. owners control the purse strings, it seems well that the need for public works bonds be· spelled out carefully to the average family. By the same token. the homeowners would do well to consider the appreciation of their own property by developments suc)l as the Autonetics Plant of North American Rockwell.· With High Purpose ... Scnlor s of Laguna Beach High School were Im- pressive yesterday as they marched in caps and gowns to learn who among them bad been honored. Impressive too. was the amount of awards and scllolarsbips presented, totalling about $32,000. The seniors Sunday will take part in Baccalaureate at Irvine Bowl and appear there again Thursday !or the big night, Lhe traditionally colorfuJ commencement exercises. Graduated and congratulated, they , go forth with high purpose and plans into the main stream of life. With them go the congratulations and good wishes of the DAILY PILOT. t • .·~~ ~ MA.u<,-.,...._, L '\ 0 i'D lll(E TO WITH!>AA\11 M'f R£QUE5T Fol A WEfl<i~ l'AS5 1119.1~~. A Reader Updates an Old Cliche To.the Editor : I am writing this letter in the midst of monumental matters which enter my mind including personal, social, national, and worldwide conditions. While listening to radio reports of Senator Kennedy's CQndition , I am reminded of a letter which I drafted for submission to the DAILY PILOT about six months ago with a theme of "the importance of the individual" with a thread of "thinking basic and using cliches to guide the individual and the subsequent society toward an ultimate desirable situation for all." I did not submit that letter because in careful review I came to the con· clusion that we are now confronted with a national disease which might be termed an almost impenetrable in- dividual egotism. TO BE l\-10RE explicit, I felt J had something valuable to say but realized it would probably be met with argu- ment, criticism , and controversy rather than the consideration for which it was intended. Listening to the radio now and hear- ing how Congress will expedite actions to try to control the use of weapons and how perhaps millions of taxpay· ers' dollars will be spent for the pro- tection of presidentiaJ candidates and their families. etc., etc., I w i 11 use the same conclusion as the previous letter and hope it is not too subtle for anyone to understand. There is one cliche I have always felt was an excellent one. that is "an ounce of prevention is worth " pGund of cure." However. I think it is out- dated and should read "a pound of prevention is worth a megaton of cure.·• R. W. MOORE Barking Dogs To the Editor : Since S. G. Undine (who wrote about people with inferiority complexes who leave their dogs home alone to bark - a connection I still don 't see the logic of) is unlisted in the phone book, r cannot tell which of my neighbors he ls -the one whose small ch i I d screams outside my window, the one wh ose son plays rock music at full volume. !he one whose electric saw purrs on weekends. the one whose wife honks loudly when she wants the garage door opened, the one whose power boat warms up at six a.m .. or th e one whose teen-age son regards our small Island a·s a speed- way. TRUE. I AM GUILTY oC leaving my poor dog alone far more than t would if I had no other purpose in llfe than to make him happy (he's a dog. not a "kid''). I work. vi~it f11mlly and friends. go out on dates. and fre· qucntly travel. However, I am itUll far more qu iet In the conduct of my life than are my neighbors. If they'll agree not to di sturb my sleep ever again, I'll agree to let some<Jne hire a dog-sitter for mt. SERENA PAX LttUrs from readers are welcome. No"1Ullll/ writers should conoe11 their metsage.s in 300 words or fess. Th.c rlt/h& to condense letters to fit 1pac1 or eUminate libel U re1erwd. All ~t­ tnt muat include $1gnaturc and m.(lil· Ing addre11. but names wilt be with· held on reqUt"1t. • Accorded an Aura of_ Legi~i~acy ' The Preachment of Violence Following are excerpts from an editorial in the June 6 edition of The Wall Street Journal: If there is something radically wrong with contemporary society. we think in fairness it should be noted that it is not peculiar to America. Look pr·actically an~here in the world and you find violence. stupe- fying irrationality and i n c i p i e n t anarchy. Another way of putting it is that lf there is sickness it is not just in any particular society or nation; it is iti man himself. Beyond all that. we think a special responsibility devolves on what may loosely be called the intellectual com- munity, the people who set ·the fash)ons in opinion. IN THE DISTORTED rationale of mft)t,y of theril. violence is accorded an aura of legitimacy. Thi11 attitude is doubtless rooted in the fact that for a generation or more a m a r k e d permissiveness has been encouraged in home. school and judicial stan- dards. Not surprisingly, ours is becoming, and !lOt just here in America, increasingly an age when anything goes, and more and more that is cGming to include actual crime. Now intellectuals may be able to make fine disti ncbons between the kind Of violence which finds French· men ripping up paving stones and hurling them at each <Jther and the kind expressed in lhe shooting of an American Senator. (From some of the foreign comments on the "shocking conditions" in America. you mlght think the current French orgy of violence and anarchy had neVef ex- isted.) But psychopaths don't make distinctions; t hey are inevitably stimulated by the general condoning of violence. AND MA KE NO !\1JSTAKE, it is not only being condoned but applauded by opinion-moulders. Ministers of God have been heard advocating violence under certain conditions in such causes as civil rights. Other in- tellectuals justify the violence at Colunibia University as a useftil ad- vancer of social progress. These men are to be blamed for the preiePt and example they set, not least the ·en· couragement Uley give to the derang. eel among us. . Most people of course do not accept these concepts. Indeed, their reaction to a specific crime and to violence in general is one of shocked .disb:clief. Still the moral confusions ·and, the resulting disorder are und•JJ:iably spreading. THERE IS LITERALLY no way, in any case, to prevent crimes like that at Los An geles Wednesday morning. Nor is there any easy way to see how man's drives, in an age of violence. are to be redirected to _better purposes. But at least the leaders of opinion can stop tJ1e preachment of violence and anarchy. They can begin -and it is high time -to reassert the urgent claims of order and reason for the safety of each of us and for ttie sake of society as a whole. Our Roles as Farmer.Brown By ELLSWORTH L. RICHARDSON rtllnl1ter , The Neighborhood Congregational Church Laguna Beach Let's go back East to the farm! It is springtin1e -the best time of all the year in that part of the country. The roads have humps in them -the ice has caused open fissures in the road. There is a breach. a sign of winter's wrath. her hoary bN?:alh! And spring? The men at work repairing the breach! Swollen brooks fed by winter snows have in their wanderlust broken over the banks and have found new ·.river beds. Instead of making the turn in the bend a s it did last August. the stream has now shot across the field where in August high·tasseled crowns of corn stood and .wagged their silly heads! FARMER BROWN is now at work repairing the breach! Some careless hunters, some heartless skiers "have removed the top rails or fences and Farmer Brown must repair the fences before the cows are let loose. Yes, winter has left its scars! ln other places there ate open breaches: some friendships have been torn asunder; some are only held by slender tendrils of hope, of pride. We all have roles to play as Farmer Brown. We have hands to kiss. hurts to heal and wrongs to be forgiven. ,.---B11 George---. Dear Geroge: Wbat do you do wltti problems you don 't ~ve an an&wer fOr ? 'T'o whom do you turn ror help and how much.does it cost ~r1Jo PUZ Dear Pu.uled: --010'.,, T Cel lot, Of protiltms I c~'t so~. but J have a iood researdi IC.aff and they work cheap -it just costl me tbt price of 1 post card. Who do yoa think writ.el all those letter1 signed "stumped" by Abby, Ann a.od the ~ti.? What have we done befCJre in other springs? Into the breach of a bfoken fri endship we have poured s p it e , jealousy, an unwillingness to yield, salt. revenge ... the same old stuff! TltE PLAY, "All Your Sons," was the story of a father who did rus bit for the war effort in World War II. With na.·o sons in the service he was a manufacturer of engines for P-5ls. One day the foreman at the plant call- ed the manufacturer at home to say that some of the motors were defec- tive, the engine heads were cracked. Th e manufacturer advised: "Fill 'em up , get rid of them. We've got to fill our contract. so many a day. Yeah, we've got to make money you know!" The breach was filled with poor metal! IT SO llAPPENED that 21 pilots were killed as a result of this manufacturer's desire to make money and he was indicted, sent to jail. Later Quote~ C. R. Ballew. San Diego -"The way out of our present troubles Is so simple it is frightening. It is the ability ol man to say: 'I want to help my fellow man and help myseif.' " Dr. E11ther B. Clark, ralo Alto pediatrician -"I look forward to a time wtien all infants born 1n America wUI ti.ave I ~ expectancy of about 100 years with small likelihood that I.hey will die or be crip- pled bf any ~ the dlse...,-or clil0rd@r1 wbicb have bet.a I 0 preVllent. ,, C. II. -fl. El Csjoa, '" p ld crt1l1 -"America still Is CONttng along on th~ prertll• that -bultt up by a eentury and • ball of sound money p0llcy." on he got out. It so happened la~r on, also. that the inevitable telegi:am from the government came to his liOuse tell· ing of the death of his sod, tarry, overse.as, in a crash landing. You got the feelin g that perhaps it was one of the planes that hia ·father had manufactured.! But hiS-mot.her wouldn't admit It. She said, "~ i1 not dead. Hir will come ba~k :: She knew to admit Larry's death Would imply that her husband was a murderer. Indeed he was ... 21 pilots: dead! But when the 22nd was killed, that was different! ' BOW 11IE PLAY ends l'll not reveal. The point of interest to .. Us is this. A defective part, a breach, filled with poor metal, was patched. The father felt no respon sibility, .no guilt, 21 pilots dead but they were Somebody else's sons. His son dead. <1nay)>e a defective part? Ah, forget · it! You can't forget it! The breach In a.n engine head, patched up with old stuU! We can't repair with "old stulf" some friendships th a t havt. b ee n broken. The rather s.aJd at ciia .point. ''Let's be practical. You dOq't,. wlllt me to be a Jesus do you?" 'nQlitt,just It, we did expect him to be a .re1u, to be through with this old stuf1 .. ~IO be willing to forgive , to be a repil.rer of tile lxeacb! ---WWW- Priday. June 7, l96Q The editorial page of th4 Oail11 Pilot 1etkl to inform and ltim. lllau rcadc,, bu f.""'tfiiv this ~apo:ptT's optn ons and cemo- m<lltc'l/ on topia of 1111.,.U< and ~ DW prooldiog o- fonun for U.. •:i:pr"""" of our rtadcrr opin'°"'· aod by presenting ~ dlvn-t1__:_uftw. poinll <1f mf°""'d obl~r and IJ'Ok•""'" "" topiu <1f IA< day. Robert N. Weed, Publis~ '" l I I I ' .. • ... .. . . . -• Newpo~t Harbor Today's Closing EDITION VOL'. 61', NO. '137, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES NEWPORT BEACH, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 7, .1968 .TEN CENTS ' Citizens .Group occ Bond Election By THOMAS FORTUNE Of ,.. DllfY 'lttt '"" • A joint Harbor Area-West County ciUZens finance ::<immlttee Thursday night recommeoded Orange Coast Junior College District depart from its traditional pay-as-you-go policy and hold a bond election. It was suggested the bond amount be in the ~ge of $3 million to $7.5 million to cover building needs fOr two to ·ave years. ,• uTbe people don't want frills," warned Charlotte Lyke, a Costa Mesa housewife. "It isn't frills . Don't You thlnk peo- ple are looking !or an excuse to vote no?" asked Paul Phillips, a Run· tington Beach banker. "We have to overcome the excus,es. Tbat'-s our mission," said Lloyd Gibbs, a manaiement consultant f r o m Newport Beach. The board of trupees will consider UPI Ttl .. llOHI ... THROUGHOUT .LONG NIGHT, A VIGIL IN ST. PATRICK'S \ Honor Guard Stand1 In Cathodral With Robert K1nnody'1 Body ~rvine Meet to Study Orange County Poverty A day-long conference on "Poverty in Orange County" will be held at UC Irvine on Saturday. The conference, sponsored by 20 Orange County community service ~ps, will focus on efforts to break tht poverty cycle. Poverty pockets in the county are isqlated and invisible to many re11ldents, but they do exJst, according tO::the conference brochure. A 1967 survey (If impove.rished sec· Qty Pay Hike ,. Wins Sup~t tioos o! the county shOwed 10 percent unemployed, 60 percent employed in unstilled. jobs and less than 50 percent high 8'Cbool graduates. These poverty pockets are located jn Huntington Beach, San Clemente, the Santa .Ana -Garden Grove-Fountain Valley area, Orange, Cypress-Buena Park and the Anaheim-Fullerton- Placentla area. There will be four speakers, follow- ed by a panel discussion and then face- to-face workshops. Speakers will be Supervisor David Baker, one of 15 members of the Na· tional Commission on Urban Problem! appointed by the President; Francis Laird, chairman of the Manpower De,welopment Training Act Advisory Council; John Jiminez, principal of a l. plan to grant Newport Beach city Fullerton school with 98 percent eri;>loyes an average 6.8 percent pay minority race students, and Granville hih today has the endorsement of the Peoples, Orange Cowlty welfare direc- clt)'s Civil Service Board. tor. loard members James Devine. W. Pantllsta will include two Negroes, AQtn Grubb and Alvin Kellam two Mexican-Americans and a realtor unblmously adopted a resolution representing the Orange County ~mmending adoption of the wage Chamber of Commerce. p""1mal, QOW uncl§r,Cllli: founcll-con· -The con!erence wW begin at 9,30 sl~ration. -a .m. in. Campus. Hall, the UCI gym- 1't.e plan was put forth last week by naslum. The talk~ and p a n e I mantclpal consultants Grlffenhagen· discussion will be lo the morning. Kq)eger following a comparaUve Following picnic lunch, the audJenCe aui-:vey of 11alarles tn other public will break up· into workshops from a~cles and private industry. I :30 until • p.m. .. , '• .. next Wednesday night the committee's .recommendation for a bond issue. Recommended for the sam~ ballot is a proposition to convert an existing lO!h-cent override now limited to use for construction to general purpose use. Tbe ove.i.'Tide funds then could be spent for expenses of current opera· tion including teacher salaries. The conversion wouli! not cost tax- payers any more than they now pay. Fifty percemt voter approval would be needed. Two-thirds approval would be required for bond passage • The current district tax rate ts 54. cents per tlOO of assessed valuation. SU.teen persons from tbe Orange Coast and Golden West areas who volunteered for the finance com- mittees were unanimous in agreeing that a bond issue and tu conversion is the way to go. '1be alternative to a bond 156ue ~ an ovmido electWG -WU discarded. 5 Hours for 5 Sec.onds Thousands By LOUIS CASSELS Ul'I 5'lllol' •.iter NEW YORK -The people who touched Bobby KeMedy's band in life reached out Friday to touch his casket in death. By the hundreds of thousands they came -rich aw poor, black and white, old and Young, male and female, immigrant and native-born - a vast polyglot su:e_am of.-humanity united by a common sorrow. ' - Uodeterred.~bf. llHlegree heat which turned midtown Manhattan into a bake-oven, they waited in line for upwards of five hours in order to spend five se<:Onds filing past the bier in St. Patrick's Cathedral where Sen. Robert F. Kennedy lay in state. The throng of people wanted to say goodbye to the 42-year-old senator whose brilliant career was cut short by an assassin Wednesday in Los. Angeles was so great that-authorities Memories of two override defeats ot 1966, surfaced in remarks that over- ride sounds like a tout word and that it implies an overspending of the budget. The board could cilll a bond election for mid-September, the day of the general election Nov. 5, or anytime after late December. It was argued a bond election is needed for the district to make use of state funds. Proposition 2, which pass· ed on this week's primary ballot, re· Mourn had to abandon plans to cut off the procession at 10 p.m. They announced that the great neo-Gothic Roman Catholic Cathedral on Fifth Avenue would remain open all night. It was the biggest outpouring of grief in the big city's history. Funeral services for the senator will be held in the cathedral at 10 a.m. Saturday. AH·of-the 2,300 seats will be -filled wltf! dlgnJtarles, friends, rela- 25 More File Noise' Protests Over Airport Ken1aedy Slayi1ig Names of 25 more property owners whO filed anti-airport claims with the County Board of Supervisors Thurs- day, bringing graud total of alleged damages to $2.24 million, were releas- ed today. Coroner Two of Calls Victims · The tolal of 61! angry P>'J'l>trl:Y.,-; o'wners claim jetg flying over homes' The dlstr~ attorney ~oday released the foUowtng nam·es of those sum- mwM" to appear before the county grand jury during Jta investigation of the assaseination of Sen. Robert F . Kennedy: and undeveloped lands are causing losses through noise, exhaust fumes, combustion debris and other nuisance factors. Claims running from $250,000 for a firm owning 13 pieces or proi:)erty in the }Vest Bay area to one claim for on- ly $5,000 on Cliff Drive are included in tbe big package. Supervisors will consider the claims Tuesday and will undoubtedly reject them and refer them to the County Counsel. as was done with two previous groups of claimants. This is normal procedure in any claim lodged with the county. ORA~GE DAMAGES Unique in Thursday's list were two property owners in Orange, seven miles from Orange County Airport, but asserting jets make a landing ap- proach aver their homes. They are Mr. and Mrs. Walter Adams, of 544 S. Swidler Place, Sl6,000 and Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Rhodes, of 591 S. Swidler Place, who claim $22,000 in damages. Others filing claims for the first time Thursday included: Mr. and Mrs. Steve Asahino, 1323 Ashford Lane, Newport B e a c h 1 $2.8,001: Mr. and Mrs. David Barnes, 1310 Estelle Lane, Newport Beach, 125,000: Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Beamish, 1201 Estelle Lane, '37,500. Mr. and Mrs. David J . Bunnell Jr., 1301 Santiago Drive, Newport Beach, $35,001: Mr. and Mrs. Alvin S. Cox. 1.612 SE Mesa Drive, Santa Ana Heights, $.50,001: Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Dische, 1824 Leeward L a n e, Newport Beach, $25,001. Mr. and Mrs. Walter J . Koch, 1112 Cambridge Lane, Newport Beach, $25,001; Mr. and Mrs. Clude J. McCall, 1724 Terrapin Way. Newport Beach, $43,001; Helen M. McCray 1712 Ter- rapin Way, $9,380 ; M. C. McCray, 1136 Somerset Lane, Newport Beach. $25,000. Mr. and Mrs. A. I. Melden, 132.6 Hampshire Circle, Newport Beach, (Set AIRPORT, Page 2) . Newport Queen Finalists Named Four Newport Harbor High School coeds today were named finalists in the Miss Newport !\each contest. They are Bettina Echtenliach, 16; Donna Lee, 18 ; Bonnie McDonald, 17; and Tracy Sherick, 18. The winner will be crowned by the current queen, Linda POeger, next Friday at the Commodore's Ball at the Balboa Ba~ Club,-eccording "to Junior Cham~r of C.Ommerce committee chairman Tom Barnum. Barnum's _six-man comm It tee selected the four finalists from 12 seml·flnallsts on the bases o f personality, poise and appearance. "'IT .......... GRAND JURY WITNESS Dishwasher Jesus Perez 1be list included two of the five persons .wounded with Kennedy: Ira Goldstein and Irwin Stroll. The latter was wheeled into the hall of justice on a hospital-type bed. Another witness, Henry Carreon, reportedly met Sirhan at a target shooting range in the San Gabriel Valley; a few days bef'ore Kennedy was shot. Roosevelt Grier and Rafer Johnson, two athletes who were with Kennedy wben he was shot and who helped cap- ture the suspected assassin, were on the list but they accompanied the senator's body to New York and ap- parently were still Jn the east. Also summoned were David Es- , quith, who took Stroll to the hospital when he was shot. He later was ex- cused from testifying. Also called were two radio car or- fi~rs, Arthur Placencia aind T. R. White, who were Ute first patrol car to reach the scene and took the suspect into custody. Others included four Amba5sador Hotel employes: dishwasher Jesus Perez, Eddie Minasisan, Vincent di Pierro and assist.ant banquet manager Karl Uecker: seven am bu la n c e drivers : Harold Burba, iv.: ax Behrman, Robert Hulsman, Jerrold (See HEARING, Page 2) Schools Plan Full Use Of Federal Aid Funds Harbor Area school officials today are prepared to make full use of $158,730 in federal aid for which tile Newport-Mesa D:i!rtrict is eligible. A year ago, school authorities did not use most of the federal money available for underprivileged students because they had not yet designed the programs for it. This year the district is not planning to default any of the funds. Purchase of musical instruments for six Costa Mesa elementary sehoolJ is one way the money will be spent. The biggest part of the federal money, however, will go for salaries of teachers of, special programs. Programs are to be broadened beyond 1ummer p r e s c h o o l , kin- dergarten follow t h r o u g h , in· dividuallzed instructlon Jn.. grades one through six and a mobile library. To be added are junior high remedial reading and mathematics and €n in- stf'ulnent.Al muaJc program for elem~tary students. The fund.s wth go to slx target ele1ne ntary schools -\V h I I t I e ~ , Pomona, Lindbergh, Wilson, Canyon and Bay View -and to Rea Intermediate School. These are the schools with the most students from families with annual in- come of $3,001 or Jess. Once the school is identified, all students at the school share in the extra attention. In most cases, 9aid Assistant Supt. Norman Loats, these schools don't have the musical Instruments that other schools in the district have. Objectives of the· federal Msistance progr.ams are to improve t h e children's seU Image and change their negative attitude toward 1 c boo l thereby improving 1ttendance and raising the students' educational and occupational aspirations. NEW YORK (AP) -The sll><k market's advance was trlmmed by prewee.kend profit taking this &f· 'ternoon. (See quotattons. Pages 8·9). ' quites the district to put up matching fUnds on a 50-50 basis. Supt. Norman \Vatson said he believes that because Orange Coast's campuses are so underbuilt for the fast-growing enrollment the district might qualify for 15 mlWon of the '65 million state issue. He said the Golden West campus in Huntington Beach, built for a max- imum of 1,500 students, will cram in (See OCC BONDS, Page Z) RFI( lives and other guests invited by the family. The two men who were Kennedy's rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination -Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy -said they would attend. President Johnson's plans were not announced, but no one would be surprised if he showed up . Following the funeral.-maas,-tb'e (See MOURNERS, Page 2) Police Probe New Leads in CdM Murder Newport Beach pol.ice were sud- denly optimistic today about the search [or a suspect in the slaying of. Corona del Mar insurance pro- grammer George F. Lyons. "Several leads have developed and a break is expected very ·Soon,'' said Det. Sgt, Kenneth Thompson. Thompson declined to dJscJoee what the "break" might be. He refused to say whether Jt migtt involve an ai- rest. "We don't care to jeopardize the case with any further information at this time,'' he'explained. The search fOT leads in the murder of Lyon~, who waJJ bludgeoned to death in his modest apartment May 20, recenUy has centered on Spring- field, Mo., where Lyom' missing 1961 Thunderbird was found on May 23. No murder weapon has been round. Coroner's officials said, ·however, that it was a "blunt instrument." The FBI is working with local and Missouri lawmen on the case. GOING TO CA.MP? CHECK THE PILOT There are at least 43 ways to find the fun in the sun this summer if you are a boy or girl -or an entire family -looking for a day camp, overnight in the mountains or other "swnmer camp" experience. The DAILY PILOT Saturday will devote almost an entire page to listing the 43 programs available ro summer campers from the Orange Coast area. Check the list and make your plans. Orange £oast Weather Don't look up at the sky, you may get splashed In the eye, cautions forecaster Frank Ernst. Along With our normal cloudi· ness, a bit of "local d.riizle" ·is on tap for the coast this week- end. INSIDE TODA l' Carniool time in Corona del Mar makes for deliahtful pic- iurts and a reminder that thtrt i'I nearly alwo111 somtthina speciot to do alona thl! Orange CO<>$t, see WEEKENDER MOf/11· zine today. " • " ... .. • • I . .. _!_ ,.._ ~-.!.• --'~f--1"' IF -~ -.. ..-...-_... J.L -Mt.a-.'"' .. _,.......,,.... --~~-~--·~-~-------------···-·--·-·-------------- I I i I I , :p · Stew-pendous Cary Pencovic, soli of Mr. and Mrs. Pinky Pen- covic, samples the culinary pro\vess of his fellow Scouts, all members of Corona del Mar Troop No. 17. These boys, like others at the Scout-0-Rama, Ylill show visitors how to rough it. Watching Cary, from left, are Chris Broughton, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Broughton, Bernard Pegg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Pegg; and Bob De Mott, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert De Mott. (See Page 7 for COD)- plete story, more photos on weekend Scout-0- Rama.) OCC Instructors Holding Out for Higher Salaries Orange Coast College instructors to· ~day are holding out for higher salaries even though teachers at Golden West College have come to terms with the junior college district administration. In the end, salary schedules for the sister campuses in Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach will have to be the same. District trustees have postponed un- til Wednesday consideration of the two . salary proposals. Golden West instructors are willing to settle for an average 4Y.t percent salary increase worked out with Supt. ·Norman Watson. The Orange Coast College academic senate is asking for . an average eight percent pay raise. When the separate proposals were presented to trustees last week, Dr. Wat.son w-ged the board to favor the lower Golden West proposal. Never before in the 20-year history o£ the district has tl1e administration been unable to come to agreement with the instructors · on salaries, Watson said. He remarked that a 41h percetlt raise would amoont tO a cost-Of-living in- crease and sald'that is all the district is prepared to pay. From Page 1 OCC BONDS. • • ever 3,000 students next fall and can expect 12,500 £"tudents knocking on the door within 10 years. "We don't actually turn students away," Dr. Watson said. "But because \\"e have postponed building and haven't hired any new instructors classes fill up. Then students don't enroll because they can't get the pro· grams they want. "ln effect, we are di~uraging them from continuing their education. And remember, 95 percent of parents say, 'My child will go on to college.'" It was decided by the finance com- mittee a bond issue is needed to tide the district ever for a couple of years. DAILY PILOT ""''"' ..... c.liifen .. Reli91t H. Wttd f'vtlllwr Tliornt1 Keevil ..... Tho1t1tl A. Murphint Ml!IHlfll Editor J•romt F. Collini N9WMrt a.Kii C/hr Edller Jtck R.. Orrley Peil Hi11" lvllnftl Mtfte.... A"'"'1lll111 Dlrtctlr .... ,.., ..... OMle 2211 ·w,,t 1111/ff• llvd. M1Uln1 A4,r1111 r.o. loa tt71 ti:66J Oth..-Offlc11 Callt Mn9: mo W•1I .. ., 11'"1 ~ 1Hct11 m ,_, ...... _ H1111!111t1011 m.eac111 :IDf !tri 51re11 L •• Dee Cook, Bolton Bid ' For Chamber Positions F'ormer Newport Beach City Coun· cilman I?ee Cook is still keeping his !land in community affairs. ' Cook is among cai:ididates for th e. Corona de! Mar Chamber of Com- merce board of directors. The ex-councilman, who lost a re· election bid last April after servinr: From Page 1 AIRPORT. • • $40,000; Mr. and Mrs. Donald P . Owers, 1724 Marlin' Way, Newport Beach, $20,000: Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Ryan, 20181 Kline Drive, Santa Ana Heights; $IB;ooo. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ryget. 1115 Somerset Lane,.$25,000; Mr. and Mrs. Robert E . Schaefer, 1707 Terrapin \Vay, $15,000 ; Robert L. Werkheiser, 1600 Santiago Drive, Newport Beach, $45,000. Francis M. Delaney, 1908 Windward Lane, Newport Beach, $29,000; W. T. Dinsmore, 2905 Silver Lani?, Newport Beach, $10,000 ; Mr. and Mrs. Marlo E. Jarman, 1130 Highland Dr Ive , Newport Beach, $20,000; Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. McManigal, 1946 Windward Lane, $30,000; Patricia Ann Simons, 2223 Golden Circle, Newport Beach, $20,000; John R. Kelley, 2927 Catalpa St., Newport Beach, $15,000; L)ca Land Co., 1617 \Vestctiff Drive, 13 pieces of property in \Vest Bay area, $250,000. eight years on the council, is a long- time Corona de! Mar merchant. He owns Johnnie's Liquors. Also on the chamber election ballot, sent out to 200 members, is 1968 c0un- cil candidate Donald Andrews Botton, youth leader and owner of Newport Floor Covering. Bolton lost a narrow decision in April to incumbent Coun- cilman Lindsley Parsons. Cook and Bolton are seeking two of eight seats on the chamber board. lncumbent directors are Jim Barto, Howard Folso m, Don Gifford, Carl Kegley. Grant Howald and Helen M'1rphy . Other candidates are Roy Peck, Jim · Purdue, Rolf Swenddal, Everet t Adams and Bob Bartholomew. Chamber secretary Jessie Hill s&id ballot ·results will be reported ~es­ day. Officers for the new chamber year will then be chosen by the new board. From Page 1 HEARING. • • Hemingway, Richard \Valker, Thomas RaWff and Donald Rus. · One witness, who said he wa& a porter at the hot.el where Kennedy Was shot but who did ItOt give his name begore going into the witness room , told newsmen he saw the accused gun- man at the scene half an hour before the shooting. The accused asked several Umes if Kennedy would pass through the area, the witness said, and "looked worried, but not nervous .•. l didn't see anyone with him.'' Newport Harbor Honor Students Get Awards " • A Gift of Sabots Saj~'~g Instruction Get,s Big Boost ' Newport Beach recreation leaders an about to. lauhcb an expanded 1all- in1 wtructioe ~rorram with a fleet of· spanking new sailboats. F 11 t • e n lresh-"""1•111<'boatyard sabot.a Will be donated to tbe city by William ,Shock f< Co., Newpor\ m~f~ufer of the a.root Vessell. Ttitr sabOti wm ·replace about a dozen ~tired. clty boats, according to Parks Department Director Calvin Stewart. Delivery of the new .boat.a, which sell for '300-$500 ,each, b expected ln twO weeks, As .. they wear out, Shock will replar;e them, _agai'n ' at no charge fu the~ty. ' Ip addition .to the gilt of sabots, boat finn ow'ner William Shock will provide 'the' city with a Lido 14 motorboat for use by sailing instructors, wJU U.ke care of the storage and mainte"nance From Page l MOURNERS. • • 'body will be taken to Washington by train for burial late Saturday aJ. temoon in Arlington N at i o·n a 1 Cemetery. Robert Kennedy's grave will be near that Of his older brother, or the boats, and will build noals and access ramps at the ba.y end of 29th Street, wh,re ~ firm 11 located. Apart trom goodwiU, what does Shock get out ot it? The sale of a few sailboats, said Stewart. He 'explained that ~ of the con~ dltions of the offer is that the first of each serJes of 15 ·salting lessons take .place at Sboclc's floats, near the boat sales office. Each trainee would be a potentJal cus.tomer. Last year, Stewart noted, about ·1,000 ·persons enrolled In the year· roupd program. Man.y more are ex- ~ted this yeari the brand new saOots should.help assure Uiat. Cost of all 10 les'sons .iS but $10, he poinUMl out, <!dding that ·aoyon.e from 9 years of age on up can ftll'oll. "We en.- ·courage family particJpation," he said. Stewart said the advantages of Shoe.k's offer to the city are obvious. He U~kell tb•ni 'olf: · ·~ll participants ln our sailing classes would learn to sail in a tirand new boat; the city wouldn't have to buy any more boats; we'd have no more maintenance costs; the new ' boa ti are safer than' the old ; and the morale of our instructors would be elevated by ·having the new equip- ment." • City councilmen have unanimously a_pproved the plan. So has the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce's marine division. Members Qf the dMsion gave Stewart this advice en Shoe k's offer: "'Take it." "If anyone can top this," concludes Mayor Doreea Marshall, "let him Com1 forward." No one is expected to. Shock ls the only 1abot ip.anufacturer 1n town. Bartholomae's Attorney ' Sues Estate for $100, 700 President John F, Kennedy, who also The Beverly JUlls attorney who suc- ~as cut d.ow:i;i by an assassin's bullet cessfully defended the widow and 1964 bas sued the multimillionalre'i: estate for $100, 700 in legal fees. ~~J~e bratn, }usl four and a half years _ sister-in-law ~ slain Newport Bea~h Friday was the tittle guy's day to sportsman William Bart!iolomae m Paul Caruso filed the suit in Orange County Superior Court Thursday, naming Security First National Bank defendant, as special administrator of the estate or· Charles A. BartbolOmae, -William's late brother. honor a man who was born to wealth but always had a tremendous feeling for the poor and oppressed. As they passed the A f r i c a n mahogany casket at a rate of 6,000 an hour, some made the sign of the cross or genuflected. But the m o s t char·acteristic gesture was to stretch forth a Dand and touch the lid oC the closed caSket. There is an old Irish superstition that touching a casket keeps the devil from troubling the soul of the deceas· ed. But many who patted, -rubbed, caressed or kissed Kennedy's casket were plainly not of Irish descent. For them, it seemed to be purely a gesture of affection -another manifestation of the Kennedy mystique that caused. crowds to stampede around him, trying to touch him, during his short and explosive presidential campaign. The senator's widow, Ethel, preg- nant with their 11th child, came to~ cathedral at noon with the three eldest children: Kathleen, 17, Joseph C. Ill, 16, and Robert Jr., 14. They knelt in a front pew while a priest, offering a mass for the dead, intoned the prayer: "May light eternal shine tlpon..bi.m. 0 Lord ... be merciful to the soul of your faithful servant Robert." 11".rs. Kennedy, whose trademark is a hair bow, wore a black one for this sad occasion. Her eyes were wJde and staring. For her, it was only the mid· poi!X of the nJgbtmare. · Race Car Driver Dan Gurney 'Hit With-Divorce Suit . F'3lllous Harbor Are.a ral!i! car driver-builder Dan Gurney, who.~h­ ed second ln the Memorial Day 500 Mlle classic at lndi'anapolis, was sued for divorce Thursday after a 16--year marriage. Mrs. Arleo J . Gurney, of 1221 Starboard Lane, Corona del Mar, took action agalnst her husband, after a separation of more than three months. A suit filed by Newport Beach at· torney Murray Choti.ner in Orange County Superior Court charges the handsome speedster with extreme cruelty. Mrs. Gurney alleges that her hus- band infiJcted without just cause grievous mental and ,physical suf· ferblg which destroys for her the legitimate aim of the marriage, the suit says. The Gurneys' four children, John 11, Lyndee, 10, Daniel, 7 and James, 5, are with Mrs. Gurney and she wants to keep custody, according to the suit. She also wants financial support for them and for herstlf. Caruso. won dismissal of cbtrges .against Carmela Bartholomae, widow of the wealthy oilman, and an' ac· quittal of Manola Gallardo, sistelr-ia- law and housekeeper at the baYfront mansion . Both were arrested and chargdd in connection with the mystery-cloaked butcher-knife slaying of W 111 l'a m Bartholomae nearly 41h years ago; Caruso clahns Security First iNa- tional Bank is indebted to himi for services rendered during his defense of the Spanlsh·bom sisters, plus ~er Iegal work for Charles Bartholoml(e. The latter died Nov. 2'Z, 1964, bf a heart Jlilment and administratioll of his estate is pending in Orange County Superior Court. The stabbing death of the elder Bartholomae shocked the Southland, which avidly followed the sensational trial of Manola Gallardo as a ruspect in the case. Car~o finally won acquittal of the Spanisft"-speaking woman, who stood trial on a manslaughter charge for nearly two weeks several months after the slaying. r DREXAL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION ALSO ON SALE DREXEL FRENCH COUNTRY MANNER -DREXEL'S INDEX DCLUSM DEALllS '4)1: HINHDON -DamL-HERIT ... GE '° DAYS NO INTlllST -LONGll m111s AVAii.AiLi ON APPIOYID CllDIT 76' llM 1111! NIWPOlT llACH MJ·JOllO 1727 W-Dif.re INTIRIORS Profvw11nnl ttt.n. --LAGUNA illCR _ D.,,._. , 345 N-c-t llwY. "'4-4111 A~-.t.ID-llSID OPIN PllUt "T1L t ...... , ... """' ..... 9f 0.-,. e....., 141-126) f " ' I . . . •• BEA ~NDERS(IN, Editor '""*'Y• I-J, 1ftl .}llKM fl• .. 11 Bridge T ourname.nt Into Playoffs "When the red red robin comes bob bob bobin' along ... " He'll feel right at home if he bobs into the Corona del Mar home of Mr. and Mrs. George Weedon on June 9. For flocked together to congratulate winners will be members of bridge flights , d.ialbird, yellowbird, eagle, flamingo, ibis, nuthatch, lyre- bird and roadrunner, who participated in the Friend.1y Bridge Tourna- ment sponsored by Harbor Guild, Services for the Blind, Inc. The theme of the awards cocktail party is Birds and these creatures will be well represented both indoors and outdoors, in cages and on limbs at the Weedon home, blending their tones with the music of the Retro- gressive Five Plus Three. Not contented fo sit back on their perches, but ready to fly into the playoffs are flight winners, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Forbes, flamingo; Mr. and Mrs. George Yule, roadrunner; Mr.· and Mrs. Robert Underwood, ibis; Mrs. Jay Beesemyer and Mrs . Alvin Cox, eagle.; Mrs. Alexander Black and Mrs. Howard Mooney, nuthatch; Mrs. Rupert Hendricks and Mrs. Orval Stewart, dialbird ; Mrs. Allen W. Crisell and Mrs. Harvey Peai;-son, lyrebird, and Mrs. Jeanette McCormick and Mrs. Kenneth Win4 terburii, yellowbird. . - Weekly flight winners" have been enjoying another kind of flight .•• a trip to San Francisco, and grand priz_e winners will enjoy two days at DI. Costa Country Club and Spa in Carlsbad. SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT -Chirping over the success of the Friendly Bridge Tournament sponsored by Harbor Guild, Services fot the.Blind, Jnc. are {left to right) the Mmes. Patricia Creamer, John Rogers Davis and William Roller, who are busy wrapping prize packages for flight winners. Awards will be pre- sented at the cocktail party June 9 in the Corona del Mar home of Mr. and Mrs. George .Weedon. Grand prize will be a two day trip to a Carlsbad spa. ' Proceeds from the bridge toilrnament will go to Services for the Blind, tnc .• of Santa Ana, a nonprofit corporation totally dependent on private donations of' time, equipment, facilities and funds. Now that Harbor Guild members have "tried their wings" sponsor4 ing a bridge tournament, they are ready to fly into next year's tourna· ment. \ · Lidoites Recognize A Time fo Celebrate Time-out for celebrating 10 .. years of achievement was called yesterday by 35 energetic members of the Lido Isle Philharmonic Working Committee. At the same time they honored Lidoites who are members of the Continuance Fund of the Orange County Philharmonic Society. Mrs. George D. Godfrey opened her Zurich Circle home for the tea party and assisting as hostesses were the Mmes. Glen W. Thomas, retiring committee chairman; Robert C. Vordale~ new chairman; John L. Laun Jr., Richard A. McClure, Vincent Healy and Frank Bret. Giving financial assistance by subscribing as a Continuance Fund member is of major importance to the society, because it en· ables the organization to bring the world's most outstanding classical orchestras, conductors and soloists to the county. Many of the subscribers have monetarily aided the society for the past 1() consecutive years. The society's over4 all program also includes an annual series of Free Youth Concerts for county students and ·scholarship funds for music students at UCI and Orange Coast College. Founding members of the society who are Lido Isle residents include Miss Agnes .Blomquist and Mrs. J. D. Milliken. Committee members who have served on the society's board of directors during the past decade include the Mmes. Clinton F. Eastman, Laun, William H. Mead, Arthur Strock and Ralph M. Tan· dowsky. The committee funnels its enthusiasm and talent into the an· nu_al fund drive and the yearly Glamour Auction, the major fund4 raiser. Jn addition, Lido members are active patronesses for the society's annual I. Magnin & Co. Fashion Concerto, J,he main support of the free youth concert programs. TEA FOR TEN ••. -Years of service, that is. Celebrating their tenth anniversary and the finan· cial assistance given Orange County Philharmonic Society during the past decade are members of the Lido Isle Philharmonic Working Committee. Mrs. George Godfrey {right) hostess, serves tea to (left to right) the Mmes. Alan J. Mickle, Hugo Schmidt and ·Frank Bret. Shooting Off Mouth Triggers New Round of Investigation DEAR ANN LANDERS: Last week I drove my mot.her to her brqther's funeral in another state. My Jhother didn't stop talking far a single minute. All I heard was, "Byron's wife shot him. He COULDN'T have shot him3ell. Father taught him bow to use a gun when he was in bis early teens. He never had A mishap. At age 50, With all those years of gun expe.rience behind him Byron COULDN"t ·have shot bimseti. HJs wife shot hlrn ." When we arrived at my ANN LANDERS [t] DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have been Six months later I was riding home DEAR PAM: Wltb a py like tnt J reading you.r column for years. I on the bus. When we stopped at a light can understand why yoa eoalO't care notice that women often write of t glanced into the next car and there humiliation and heartache because of way my husband and a woman in fond If he stayed or went. l'.111 glad tbe aola- cheatlng husband.a. I'd like to tell you embrace. The woman, it turned out, tlon worked for yo1i1, but I'm certabt tt how I solved the problem . was the nurse who had attended hlm would not wort la all ca1e1. TbaaU Less than a year atter we married I when be had his appendix removed for writing. fent her from pursuing this wild idea? walked lnto Harold 's office and found two months e¥lier. one of the little typlsU sitting on his I told Harold that very evening that Do you feel ill at ease .. , out of it? apparently didn 't realize it was load· ed ." am deeply concerned. I Wh th th I t thro h I t to th ap. en ey saw me ey a mos we were ug . wen see e ls everybody having .a good time but My mother told lli.m he was crazy --F.D. died. She pretended to be removing a , nurse the following day a.oOlnlormed that there must have been several DEAR F.D.: You a.re not responsi; cinder from bis eye. her that she could have him, Slit cried you? Write for Ann L~nders' booklet, 1~--uandm ' · to the clergyman, "You know, of course, that -Byron'• wife shot-him.'' He replied, "That's absurd. His best people in on "the plot" and that they ble 'for your mother's conduct. It , I told her if. she wanted Harold the and begged me not to tell her husband. "The Key t~ Popularity," enclosing ·1,,..,1><,.c,.au!!'s!'!e'-~~~;..,·=~~~~~~=~-'could..bave him an<idJalllltL11oru.•he..._nha111d1--1Sb>0ee_iuWl1CidL.11•hieecid01idn111LI'IL11W1'ID01ICJllArt1.11:11•1d11Lanlllllld1-with your requesL3S...oceetn~lsLl1"nuro'°"iD'-1114---· she was going to the authorities and soutfds As U 16! hit a loose coMeCUon finished with the cinder she shou1d that she had been,l,~U)' fool. .a long, self·addressed, 'stamped en-- - friend who is on the police force did the investigating to be sure there was no foul play. Byron shot himself ac· cidentally while cleaning bis rifle. He ( see that~ustice..U..done." and all tbe talking1n ~e world_ will not give .tome Ulougtit to jhe rocks in hi TH_at was seven y~ars ago and ht'• velope. , My mother was i.nstitutionaliied for persuade her that she ls mistaken. So head. The girl \ssured me sbe didn't been a model husband ever since. Ann Landers will be glad to help Y'OU mental illness several years ago and save your tirealh to cool your aoup, want him , that. she had a fine Ohce Ile got it through hit held that 1 with your problems. Send them to bet' in my opinion the world would be a dear. The authorities will recogniu boyfriend and then she pleaded with didn't care whether be stayed or went In care of . the DAILY PILOT, enclo,.. safer place if they ha<t. never Jet her her disturbed state and deal with her me not to tell anyone. The following he decided to Wbave himself. Ing a stamped, self.addressed en- oui. 15 there anything r can do to pre· tesUmony accordingly. day she quiL -PAMONA velope. · • • ' .1 I I • I 1 I • . . --. . :: . • •• :: :· . . . . :: :-:.-.. .. • • -' ... -... t ......... ,.,,. • • -. .. ... .. . ..-• . . . ~ ....... "> ......... --·• ..... JI DAILY PILOT Frtd,u, Ju1tt 7, 1968 Lake Tahoe Honeymoon Nuptial Vows Pledged . Gerllyn Lou Balley .. d RicbU'd Allen Drue were m a rr led in Westmlnater Chureh of Jes111 Christ of Latler-cley Salnll in a dOU• ble ring ceremony aolem- olied by the Bilbop Wllllam Bawden. The bride 11 the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gereld Balley of. Garden Grove. Her husband ii the son of Mr. and Mra. Ruuell Drake of Hunt!nglon Beach. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a ny- lon cqandy over taffe-ta rown with an empire line accented w i t b ' appliqued lace. Her tiered train fea- tured a large bow. Her illu- alon veil wu cau&ht to a beadploce of nylon tulle decorated with seed pearls and ahe carried a bouquet of white African lilies. Mils Susan Jacbon of Lakewood was uked' by her cousin to be maid of honor. She was dreued in full length apricot gown wi~ short sleeves and a bow m back. ·she were a headpiece of apricot voile with apricot veiling and she carried a bouquet of yellow daisies. Officers To Assume Du ties Ml11 Nita Wilton n t Orange will be installed president of Or111a:e County SpeU:era Forum at a luncheon Tuelday, June 11 • at 10:30 a.m. in the Galaxy r-urllll.Jn £1n(J Ano. ln1talling otncer • Mr1. T . H. Ockels, allo w:tll place in oUiee the Mmes. E 1 l i s Porter, Newport B e a c h , lirlt vice president; R. G. Miller, Placentia, second vice preaident; Ken net b SmJtb, Newport B e a c h , 1ecret•ry ; Way ne Reafsnyder, Garden Grove, trea1urer, and H. J • Howard, Sant a Ana, parliamentarian. Mrs. J. Orland Smith of Gardf.wl Grove will dlscu1s A Woman of Note. M: r s • Herbert J. Clark of Santa ·Ana will give a "1urprise" speech. Friendsh ip :To Flowe r Banquet Ma rks Histo ry in the Mak ing BrideamaidJ, dressed in full length yellow gowns with short lleeves and a bow in back were Miss Lau· rel Wells of Fullerton, Ml.as Marla Meridith of. Garden Grove and MiJs Kathleen Quinn of Garden Grove. Each carried bouqueta ol apricot daisies and wore yel- law voile bow hats with yellow veiling. An i1JaDd ,moW will pre· dominate when the Acad- emy of Friend.ship, Women of the Moose, chapter 1158, aponsor1 Friendahip Aloha to(norrow in t h e Moose Home, Costa Mesa. Admiring a work of art In the Pavilion Gallery prior to a no-host cocktail party sponsored bf the Newport Beach Historical.Society are (left to nght) Alan Ducom.mun of the Ducommun Realty Co. and owner of the Balboa Pavilion, Mrs. William Ritte~. Society vice president, and Judge Robert Gardner, Horoscope · who gave special introductions preceding the din- ner in the ballroom. The festivities Wednesday eve- ning marked the occasion where Society members presented its first historical marker in honor of the Pavilion. Miss Jill Drury of Orange wq flower girl. Her gown was styled like the maid of honor's and she carried a w h t t e · basket of yellow daisies. -. MRS. RICHARD ALLEN DRAKE Sant• An11 Home --A theta will be aerved be r at 1:30 p.m. and f owiJI& a Polynelian din· ·ner, there wW be dancing until l a.m. OOicers and chairmen nf the put year will be recog- nized. and newl)r elected offleen will be welconied. Aries: Smile, Cqncede New Year Activated New officers will preside, secret pals wtll be disclosed . and pkms for the coming year formulated when the Seal Beach Junior W001an's CIUb meets Tiw.nday, June 13, in the home of Mrs. Reno Lorenz. Best man was the bride's brother, Bonner J. Bailey of Garden Grove. Ringbear- er was Gene L. Drake, Hun- tington Beach, the bride~ groom's nephew. Ushers were Ronald Drake, Robert Drake and Russell Drake all brothers cf the bride· g r o c m from Huntington Beach. Author Exp.la ins Uphill Sliding Thii' yeai-'i prOjict for the group hu been donating funda to the Moosehavto. hearing aid fund, which pfti- ceeds from the dinner dance · will benefit. SATURDAY, JUNE 8. By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Pleasure obt&ined at social affair ; but ooe close to you persists in asking money question. E x h i b i t sense of humor. Be flexible. And txi have peace, make minor concession. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Obtain hint from ARIES meHage. C h e c k details coonected with Jegal · papers. Your mate, partner want5 attention. Remain in the background tonight &<s an apprecia,Uye audience. GEMINI (May 21.June 201: Communicate with those who work with and servti you. Get ideas across. Make meanings c r y s t a 1 clear. This overcomes tendency for otber1 to be en- vious. Someone may be spreading false report. CANCER (Jwt< 21.July 22 ): Accent on creative endeavors, r om antic iildventures . Day features change, excitement o f discovery. J o y indicated lllrough children and Uie theater. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' You enjoy being with tlle C ANCER· born today. Some have much in common with your ctirreut goal. Ex· cellent for entertaining at home, building confidence of older individual. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)' Stress on dealings with brothers, sisters. Journey indicated. Much movement shown; you have to con- centrate forces. Otherwise, you will be here, there and nowhere. Think. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ot. 22)' Finish project; it could mean money in the bank. Individual who previously was cool now conli.des pro· blem. Be sensible. Avoid becoming involved in ex· pense and emotional turmoil. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)' Cycle high . lnltiat. pro- jects. Clrcumstances turn in your favor. Your judgment more apt to be correct. Watch personal ap- pearance. Dress for the oc· casion. You shine at social affair. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21), Fine for au..nding 't'Ocial lecture or group devoted to your charity in· terests. Visit one who is con- fuJed to home or hospital. Adhere to goklen rule. Your favors will be repaid. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 19)' Good lunir upect Betrothal Announced During Dinner Party 11.r. and Mrs. Ricbard A. Cook of Huntington Beach CATHY McKINLI Y Will M•rry W411•1tOUSI oun.aT FURNITURE - ha.Ye announced tile betrothal of her daughter, CMl!.y Lynn McKinley and James Robert Dupree. The couple have selected June, 1969, for their wedding in St. Andrew's Presbyter- ian_ Church. The bride -elect. an honored queen of Job's Daughters, bethel 313, is an alumna of Costa Mesa High School · and is attending Orange Coast College where lbe it studying English. The son of Mrs. John Bruno ol Portage, Ind. and the late Mr. Dupree is a graduate of Port.ace Hieb Sdiool and is st.etloned on OldnMN with lhe U.S. Marine Corps. 1be betrothal wa.s reveal- ed during a bullet dimer party wllere Mr<. Dennis Hamann of Altadena auilted "'14h t h e ar- rqemeat.s. hi g hlights pleasure. romance. prai'5e from respected friends. Excellent for humanitarian work. Get together with SAGIT· TARIUS individual. Work out constructive program. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Now you can approa<!b individual who ts in position. to <rid , fulfill ambitions. Do so in forthright manner. A void tendency to make sensational claims. Be con· .truotive, sen..ible. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Accent oo journeys of the mind. Means you can satisfy intellectual curiosity, Ask quesUom -obtain answers. Study advertising, public relatioM campaign. Keep communication lines open. Activities Concluding Mrs. Later Dav.Mo, a pa1t president ol tihe club, has been named the Juniors' Woman-of-the-year. Active wMh the club 8Dd also 1be March al Dimes, Mrs. Davia: ftl"Ved es vice president, secretary nd treasurer, and as chei.rman of the city's Mothers March and the Y outtl in C.Oncert series for ~ Mardi of Dimes Foundation. Presiding at their first m<etdng will be tile Mmeo . H. D. Brown, president:; Roy Steidley, Rono<d Adams and Cari Irwiq, v i c e presidents, Mike Knapp, secre-tary, and Tom Nicholson, treasurer. Providing music in the church filled with bouquets of white and yellow gladioli were Mrs. LuDean Howe, organist and Mrs. Ellen Nicholson of Huntington Beach, soloist. A reception took place at the church after the cere- mony. Assisting with the cake which was decorated with apricot roses were Miss Cherie Cleveland, Miss Col· Iette Kozloski and Miss Sha- ron Williams, all of Garden Grove. Miss Wendy Vance circulated: the guest book. The bride is a graduate o( Bolsa Grande High School and her husband is a grad· uate of Redondo H i g h School. Mter a wedding trip to Lake Tahoe they will live in Santa Ana. Dr. Donald Curtis will tell Monday Morning Club of Laguna members How to Slide Uphill during bbeir last lunchecn program of the season in the Hotel Laguna Monday, June 10. Followng a social hour at 11 a.m., ~ music pro· vided by Mrs. William Hobson at the piano, a buf· fet hmcheon and fashion show will begin at noon. Di". CUrtis' to be In. troduoed by Mr<. Martin J. Members Welcomed Gurney. ie the author of "Your Thoughts Can Change Your Life," "Human Problems and How to Solve Them" and "Daily Power for Joyful Living." His last book, "How to Be Happy and Successful," has sold in the milliooe:, and be has appeaxed in more than 100 major Hollywood pro- ductions. Currently he host.I a color television travel series entitled, lt6 a Sn;iall World . Reservation for t h e gathering may be obtained by calling Mrs. Ruth Hat.. field, 494-4650. Bri tioh Club Women of British ances- try are welcome to join the Daughlef's of the British Empire, Westward Ho Chap- ter. The club meets the last Monday of the month at noon in various locations. Further information may be received by calling Mrs. R. W. Ketteringham, 494-6441. Lookine ahead to tlle corn- ing year, program com·-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; mittee chairmen are plan· ,.. "Come and bring I the Wil.shlre·Ebell Club, Los ning to attend auditions a-t l:Z , m friend" is the request be-Angeles on Wednesday and ZO/'e u~ic ing made to members of the Thursday, June 19-20, to Midway City Woman's select future programs. STUDIOS Club. M'eanwtiile Mrs. Phil Den-Headquarters for A prospective member-nia and Mra. Robert W. ·beginners on all ship luncheon will take place v bond d C M Auxi liary at noon Tuesday, June 11. in Roper, aga an instruments. ' the clubhouse, 8241 Bolsa Theater Party committee Summer classes ~G randmoth ers The first Thursday of the Ave., Midway City. chairmen are planning month m e m be r s of the Hostesses for the lunch· future gatherings including now forming. Rev_la.tl"n of Me c re t · At noon every 11 econ d American Legion Auxiliary, eon will be Mrs. Clair Bunt, a summer theater party to ~194 Ne.,.n ttni. si6ten ~and exchanging of Thursday the Newport Har-Costa Mesa Unit 455 gather Mrs. Fred Williams and the Hollywood Bowl and a c .... M-.. Ml ''°'°' ~will c<AlClucl , the )ear'S bor Grandmothers' C I u b in the American Le g ion =Mr~•~·~G~o~lvl~n~S~tr~e~e~t.===~tr~ip~to~l.e~s;::;V~eg~a~•~· ===~=========; aottvitiel for membert of meets in the Newporter Inn. Hall, at 8 p.m. Informationlr Mu Ups9on chaptar, Bet. Mrs. Verna Pitt at 142-3586 regarding membership is ob- SigJna Phi, Monday, June may be called for member-tainable by calling Mrs. ship information. Neal Hougan, 548-6374. 10. -=====================;II '!be ~ will beiin at.• 8 p.m. In lhe Foon!Bln Vane, hoan< of Mr<. Robert M-. Gifta will be appnpriatefy d.e:<xlr'ated w I th stars to emphnsize the yeer's theme, Reach for the stan. Social meetings wW take piece during the summer with the first bu&ines6 m e e t I n g scheduled for September. Brun ch Wa its Fo r Kiwi Club Newport Beach chapter, members of the Kiwi Club and their husbands will gather· in the Balboa Bay Club for brunch Sunday from 11 a .m. to 2 p.m. A special guest wiU be Mrs. William W i 1 n er , recently elected national president, a n d associate membef' of the Newport Beach group. Club· members former American Airlines Bt.ewardesses. Further in- formation ab o u t mem. bershlp may be obtained by calling Mrs. Don Howard, -· FORMER STYLIST AT UNIVERSAL STUD IOS CLAY •• 6 DELICIOUS FLAVORS • CARPET lft SOFAS $169. ---· 'J1a1111 r W.-' Th ... are 1ix or our many flavors In wedding Htl. And thty run the gamut. from Bold end Beautiful to the demure, Fair Lady. Thty all have one thing In common, howww. !aoh 11 fully covered by our diamond guarantee. A. From our Coup d'etat Collection, $750. 8. The "In" Set Look: Ten dl1mondtet, $600. C. Swinging Set, $450. D. Th• Bold and l!e•utiiul, '920. Matching band, $30. e. Antiquities: Bleck color on 14 ktrat gold, $275. F. Falr i..Gy .Thraodlamonch•t.1250. .... ~~~-11~~~--11 ..... -"A--SfREETCAR NAMED DESIRE" f<wd :Jfi o_mpd on . l'ORTlllL CAltl'ITING ... '·" 5.95 '· '· IOiiCmlOCd i ...., l9ICH "" .. ... ~·A' .... , ............. " • ' ....... ..,.,., ...... , ..... 'Mt ..... ,......,.. CMtl MMe °""' ........ 141 .............. ,... ... .. -:: =· .... .::::= -· • Contultotie11 A¥ollohl1 .. , Appel11t1!1011t • h1turin9 Th• An•tt Lin• of Wi91 ind H1irpi•c.•1 3545 E. Co.st 1-ft,y. Coron• del M•r 673-16961 ( , It FASHION ISlANO NEWPORT CENTER 644-IJIO , • Birth of a Yacht • -, • • ". . .. .... •• frldQ, Junt 71 1968 • DAILY PILOT JT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • LEGAL NOTICE MOTte• TO c••DlTO•s t.•OAL NOTICI frtO'FICa 01" TltUtTll·• SAL• ltSMM..UTION Jf\IMlllt JJ.Mt IU,.lltlO. COUltT 01' TMf NIW,.OltT·MllA Nt, O 1\11t ltl!IOLUTION 01" Tl'll llOAIO 0,, STATI 01' CALll'OltMIA l'Olt UN11•110 ICNOOL DISTRICT On Jul\' t. 1 .... et 1:00 o'clock ".M .. •I eouCATIOH 011 Hl!Wl'OJIT-MEM TMI COUNTY Ofl OllANOI lffHa lll'll\llS •U. tilt -lfl 9!!ftonco Of rhll Ore"'' C0¥ii!Y UNtFU50 SC:HOOI, OllllUCT 01" Ht. ....... NOTICE IS HEJlllV GIVf:N fhil tl\f Cwrtnollw, 111 S.11tt A1'19, C.ttrol'ftlt, •OAANG!' ~OUNTV, CALlllOllNIA Etltle Ill MVJITA E, HEWETT. •Ito to.tit Of Eduu!IOll Of IM w ......... MfM SECVIUTY lllJllT NATIONAL ~ANI(, •1 Mt ... 11, I* ltMw11 •1 MVJl.TAr. ESTELLE HEWl!TT, Vnli:i.e. k!lool DF.ttkt Of Or•rllt C-h'• .tui., •-l~led trwtH llt'4tr Ille °"""' _, 0.. tr10tl1111 flt Molll'llltr M.Wt1111 • .,,_, 0.C..lfd, C.llforlllt wlll rec1lvt "''" tllliJ ~ to 11'\111 ft!M NOWMl!tt M, IHL l'Ndt ~ """' MCOlldtd IM ~rtltd, IN lollOwllllf NOTlCI!: II HEllE&V OIVIN liO tllt t•» , M '1111 tllt lltl N ol J ,.... t Ntll\lt "'-tlrl Cl, ,.Cl...., 111 lt-lutlorl w11 Mlo!HH: (J'Mllol'I Ill tllt ibov1 llMltll dl(Mitnl fii. MittA_ of Mid Sd'CMI~ 011:14 lo(.lt!t 0.Ctmbet ll, Ifft, !11 '°""'Sol, NH -JIESOt.VID ~I It J1 !No lnkll!ltn of llllt •II ._ "'"I/If , .. lfftl ffllMf 1'ht II 1ff1 , .. etr1lfll Affnllt COlll Mew Of Otfklt1 It~ 111 1tM '"lt't Ill !M 11111 ht,,. 91 llllK.llloa. ~Ill te - ul4 ..,..., '" ••rtll te llll tl\ttn, C.U,,,,.111• •I whl(ll llmt ~Id b1ft 'Orlll ~ C-IV ftKOrdu ol OtlllOf CD1.111!Y1 tlonfo "U1 IO 142.U. lnc.l\ltlY1, of ltlt Wllll , ... l>t(:ntl•Y vw(he", In .... olllu Jllbllc1¥ ~ •l\CI rNd lot: C1lltor11r1. °" rulOl'I of ctel1uM Ill tf\e E-..C.tl«I COiis, tlO '''"' tlO lht Clrv Of OI .... eltl'tl; of ..... loboYI f!lllllM CtOllf'I, OI lulllltU Ml!Chlnet l"411Stfl1I Arh 11&r-• or Nrtor~nc;· ol oblltatlofll Cot.It Me .... -IClNl cwHr•tloly '" to .,._, hm, wlltl .... _ .. rv Or1lll"9 Ind H•~1r1 ~" .. Ind --""tf'llW· I Nollu of Owf1111t •lld """""' tor iWbU( ll>'fft '"' M•ll'"" 'l'Olldllr1. IO the ""*"""" ti• l!Uen. E•11llM'\Mt EIKI .... 19 5111 Ulld1r ()1111ot1r1111 11e ... OU(-,..,.,, ..... ,,.. l(l'W6 !NI cer· '--''''""' & M"ttn. "'"°'"'"' •I All "'41 '1r1 .. IN Ill ICC«d•llCll wllll \ft41 """ rtcorelld '' PrOYldeCI fOr It>/' .... ftltl .... 1 llfOPitr!Y tlaf'ltl Ill ""' Clf'f (// Wow, '" 0 . IClll' 16". ....,..,.. ltt>dl. Ctndl!loru l"'truc:t~ encl &illlelff<•lkM• lllCll ,,.;. 111111 "'"" ll'IOlllTIJ he'flM' Cetl•·~ Cwllf'f tlf Dr•""· 11110 fll (olllort11fi ""3 Vlllltll II h 'ltct ef wflldl irt' ....... °" Ille In 1114' offlei qi 11>1 ''-"'rd alll(t ~ tt(:Ord1lloro, wlll Mii et Collfwrtte, fl! ftllt ltllOWllll COIWilllol'I; bo.l•kltu ,, .... und1nl•lll4 bl •II '""'"''' PitWCl'll9!M A1e111 of Mid kllDol Olt!rlc!, ..ubfk 1uc:florl " .. ._ ...... llleldfr .... Tllolt ffllf"I WIM .. "' _, 19 IM Hl'talllllll Jo Ille .. , ... ol Niii 4e«dlfll, 11$1 Plt~enn1 AW/lllt, COii• Miii, CQh, ... .,.bill t" lawtuf rnMl\I ef tllt k!IOOt Dltlrl('I. wtlNl'I tlll "'°""" llfltr lllt tint Mll(I. (1llfw11it. Ul'll"°' St1l9 .e ...,_"'9 ti tl--.e .,.11, Jftlt_llD!HflY~l~ ~llPtd 11 follows ; tloll ti ltl!t 110llc1, ._ l!•d! ~ 11'11111 1ubrnlt wit~ 1111 1114 1 w~ (l(IWflllnt ., w1rtertf¥ ta1tr.1tff Aft .. ..,_, ft< ..rtitc1 •nd 111 '"" o.Jld JUlll 1, IHL tatlll*°On' tfll(k <ertlllld -.. 0 rff!IOMI• • lftlt"-41 M 1iO tlllf, -"" er t11o ddlll .. I IMH'Hlft *"'* over, IC,.,. ftobt'rt '· IMll• bi. bt.W. oor , blclcllr'• bond '""""' 91y1Dl4! C11mlN'tnc•, !ht lm.r'fft cori•.,.rd to '"" ...._ ~ ""'' ~ Ill laM 1tlollled Eaitwtor of lht WI-11 1M oorW Of 1111 l+ewPO<'f.MHe Unl119d -fll;l!I k U,vndtt uld 4trd " tr1,11t. lfl tlO JllMI Mt!!:..,.., Jft. #It 0.UN tll of tl'll 1bove n•lftlCI ~"'Ml klloll Dl1lrkl lfl tri. 1ITIO\lllt flOI II" IM 19 1111 OfOINrtv 111 Ort,... C-h. P1rllllol'I ol liW •-1111 S.nlllllO d9 SILlllllJ. &.OIWS, &AllA"O•Jt A !Mn 11111 OIJ'«nl CS'!!.) ot Ille eum 11111 Of C•llMMll.• ffMf'lktl 111, 1111111 Ant. rtlldtrM lft C111 No. lln MVIRI bllf .,, 1 1uar1111W th•I IM bl~r will PAll:(El. t : 'nllt '°"'°" of Lof II of ..... ~'""-WU. 1161, hi lllGlr P.O IN 1t,., "'"' lfllo 1tw pr_. COfltrKf If 1111 H_. ~I-. 1& Hr mw ll'llrld I, IWlfl •10 of Judl,,_!f of .... 11'11t M!IWllll"I lffdl, C1llltnlll '26olJ ••ml b •w•tftd. him. I" ttw1 &Y""I of 'rtc0rdl4 In look '· 11 Ottt 0. ., Mkltl Ollfrkl COli1I II C.~lomt•, In A"'""n flW ••ecllllr t1ll11r1 19 ll'lltr lnlo •lldl ,Ollllt.tl. #It Miii«! .. """' Mui. f~Cit'*' ef Or•PN Jiit CllY flf COOi Miu, Counrv fl/ Pvbllihed 0!'11111 COlll C1!1r Pllol, 11rOC:-.cl$ ol ttwl cMc:• Wiii ti. IOrltllld.... COvtlP\<', Sit!• Of C11110r11l1.'dnerlbed II OtMltl, • Slttt "' ~llforflll. I ... .Iii/It 1, Tl, ti, H. ,,.. tu.a In c•t1 ol • bond, TM tull '"""' TMreof lflltowa: l"I""'"' •I 1 Nini Ill tllt faGrlbH 1110llOWl1 ' 1::...;....:....::..:;;_;::..;:::_...,: ___ ....:;:::_c1w11t bl ,.,,.II.., to 1110 khOOI Dl1lrlCI of Norl'hwl$11•"' !In• ol Aid L.i fl, di.. l1tlflll1N ,, ... llUIM•sl COl'lltr "' LEGAL NOTICE Ori"" Coun..,, 1111t 1111rto11 '°'"'""'terly UO '"' from P1rc1I I, ti cllKrlbed In d~ tio Ille No lllOOlir m1v wUhdr1w hll OIO 1or 1 !ht most Nort111r1¥ torMt ol uld lot, COlll Mii» Vl'llon School Ol1tr1d ttrlOll ol forly.11111 (.Ui <11i'1 1.,..r tftl inf rvnNflf l!!l!IC• Soull;I to -.r ... 10' .._..,. ....,,...., 12; lt6', In look ftOTICI o~ IULK '"""'"'· dllt HI for 11\t !IPflllfllt lh~rtol. W' E••'· Nr•lf•I wlltl 1111 tGQ. Hll• 7$1 ol Ofllct1I lttc ... 1111 NOTICE 1$ HEAl!llY GIVEN TO THI!! TM floerll of Elluc1llon OI the NewPOtl• Norlt\l1,1tr1Y Nne of uld lo!, 221.)1 flll lt'Mll'lc9 N6l1ll '° •. W" Wpt, tllllO IM CftEDITOlll 01' PATRICIA J .. lllCE, Mn• U"l11rd $.:hoot 0!1lrlc! ffll"'fl lh1 lo 1 Nini lfl • UM which 11 l'lf•lll' Allttrl¥ 1111& or .. Id P1rett l, 1 dlJl1nc;• Tr1111111'tr, lh1t e llulk lt11'1sfei It tbOUI •Ith! tlO rtltcl .II,. O< ill bldo, Ind llOt wltll lr'IO 1111111.t M61'tl'lwilllrflo a '"' tt 141.f.t "'".I "°l"t on• tvt'H, ~ .., be !Mcll lw Tr1111tff0(, ~ buillMU "'CIH1rll¥ •ccAt>t ti.. 1o,...1 bllt. 1"4 lo "°"" TM IOlll!w!l1toorflo llM of 11141 1ot1 C<I"' llOU111t•llrh>' 11'1d htlllflll I •Miu. ..,,.,. ti !Ht H•rbor lhod .. In IM CllV of •11..,. 111• lntorm•llh or lrr0!9ul••llV I" lfll/let tovltl Jt <tttr~ W 4J" W.t, et rt . .:i IM!; ll'ltrw.1 '°"""'*""'"'• C1111 Mesi. Covni... ol Or•"ll•. Sltll of •llY bid r~e!11ec1. •IOnl M1d otr•tlll NM, 11(1 ftltl tl'llllet •*'-tt-·•fCI of llhl cu .... "'"""". Cllftlnll•, 111d 111 t>f whoM bllllMu 0.lld J1me 6, 19'1. Norlll SO ~t11rll5 10' 112" Will, 1t1r1!lll CMlrll llllllf of $3° 01' •f", I 41slu~ Mmtl encl 111dr•J11 uMd •11'hlll lllrN NtWP<>rl·Meu Unlllt14 wlltl tllt tlorlfle11t1r1¥ NM of .. Ill Ill, of ... ..55 Net to IM blellllllftl Of I ....... 1111 ... ,, • l•r II ·-lo khoOI District of tl0.&3 ,.., lo .... NOr!h-llrl¥ ffllt •I '*""'* Cl.I,...., COll(:IVI wallrl¥ '"" Trer\Sflree, 1rw 1"1 H1rbor l\llld .. Coit• Oru111 Co.mlY, C1J!lor1111_ 11llf \.of Ill fhtf'l«I ,.,.,.,._,,,._,., '""' hlvl .. I ,..iw of IJO.OG 1'91" lhenc:t1 Mesi, C11llor11l1, to A N THON V IY A. Mitt.hell 11111 Ntrtfl-llfl\I """ )1,M IN! M 11'11 r,aotlflw .. i.r1¥, 11o/ll !he ore of llhl OEANELLE, Tr1n1ferl" Wl>Qp buslNIU A,Cl!1>11 Purthlllflf Afl"t Pllllll or fliltll'lllll\I. ....... .. cur ... Wit-'! I e1111lr1I •"1111 ol 1d4re11 Is 411 E. 70lh sirttl, In the Cltv Soll·~ "ARCl!:L 2: All _, lor lnflt.q IJ' 11' 01''. ' 4i.t11'1U ol ll.IG fffl 1" of Cost• Mtu. COIHll"t of orinee, Stale of Publlshi!C Ort"O• Co1.t O•ll'r Piiot, •nd ffr1>1 "''' lhll Nrllon ot Lot 11 of 1111 l>hlllnlntl of lllOl ... r t•\lll'P eur'ff, Ct llfomll, ol IM ftlllow!ns1 _described Ju'lt 1. 14, ltd ttM.I Nt,.lldl't ~hit, •• P., fnlP !hi,._, <:OllCIWI •11eftr •nd ·h111IM I. r1dlu1 ot --.1 Pl'OP6l'IY of Tfl/1$11! .... , •wrt: (oKOril.d I" loot ... •t Pitt 13, of 1111.1* feelf lhlnc_• '°"""'*"· •!Mt the An atoc:t in tfodt. fl~t. eciulp!Mnl al\CI LEGAL NOTICE Mli«1141neoll5 MIPS. rec;or<h of Or1nt1 ire of llkl r..,.,,, Cu"'11 tnr-h " to04 wlll of 1 cirt1ln sn•c-tt..r builnna ' c-1y; si.te• or·c1Mfllr11ll•, <ltWllMll c:sontf1l 1111111"" 15" Ol' 11", • d!st1nc1 known 0$ "ORA NGE JUL.IVS" •ml •• followa: MIMlnt II tht "'°'' 11111 D,lt'IMI ... I t1nffnl 111111 !Ilene:• ~lld 11 1"1 Mlirbor fltva .• In "" Cllv .... ,n SoulllH1"t torMr OI' ,... llnd ..... 1... $11,111\ ,. II' 10'' E111, ''°"' tlld 1 .... ol Cllll Miii. Coi.IMY "'Or1nt1. Stile ol Cl!JtTll'ICATt 01' IVJ1Nlll btlort oescrlbell In P•r<t1 1, •rwl N... •ent line •• dlllll'l<f ol '·'' ~r. more C1Htorn11. 1/ld th•I '"-torNol119 built l'JCTITIOUS M.IMIJ 111nt thenc:t Ntrlll '° 411fMI 10' ~" ... 1 .... to Ille MIU!Mrly UM ot 11lct "'"',.,. Wiii be (OM\l!'f\m•lld DI\ or 1tltr TM und1ri11r>e11 do cer111v ~ ••e Wts1, P•••t111 wllll lhe Mr1IM••lil•IY P11cet II llltflc• Nerltl ,,. ot' "" !111. Tlll'lllY 11111 11111 1111 of June, 1'611, Concl11CCll111 • bu1l>1tu •I 1671 P!•centfa llM ol ••llf Lot fl, 20 fMl1 ll>tl'ICI 5011111 i i-iild oout ... rlv llne, 1 dltl•nc:• ol lf'l~ll E.creiw Ne 11~'241U. at The An.-, COlll Ml1•, Cal[lorflllo Ul'Hllf 1111 Jt 4eer ... .W -0" Well. 1Nr1llll Wllh ..0 4f feel lftO'I or II t Ille I 1 of IKl"OW ite~rtminl Of tM COit• Mnt llcllll°"1 ll•m. "'""' of Amerl~en Gius IM Soulllta1ltrl¥ tl>!t ot 11ld 1!11, lff.6' be9i i ' "• 0 PO n lrllldl of Stc\lf'lrv Finl N1!1D111t lllnk II •lld 1c .... Co., Ind 9elbol GF411• Com-'"' lo "'' St\llllMs!wrJv ""' " IBkl nn "'· IN E, 11th SlrNt ln th• CllY of CCIII• o•nw 11111 ihtit .. Id llrm I, comPOstll of lo!: ltlerw:t :iouN1fltrl\I, 1loM Mid U:~!~CE: IS HEttE•V GtVEN lllM Oii Mesi, county of o,.,,..,, Sl•I• ot 11'11 followlroo peri.oru, who'e ""m" In lull SOiiltl,.tttlr1¥ Ullt, 20 ltet to • JOl'lf In • , Illy " J-. Ifft, •I lilt tiour ot Cl1llorfll• •nd 1lllcu ot re1ldeM:e ••• 11 10110-: , u"' whld\ 11 ••r•ll•I with Md dl•l•M 7.30 • cloct P.M. • Pllbllt meelll\I of ,,,. OATlilD,Junt 4 \NI J. WUH1m P11tn1m, 111'1 .lc~CI• St,, NDrlhwtslerl"t )00 !If! from flll lklrd" Edllc1lloll Wiii be Mid 11 Its AnlhonV P.r...-111, Ttal\llH"' G•rd1n Gro11e, C1tlfo•nl1. k>ull'IN•ltrflo 11"41 Of .. 11t to11 1Mnc;1 r1tular mffllnt PllC1 lor • PUllUc Mlrli. .. llbllthed Orl.llO• C&&il 0•!1¥ Plk!I, C1111!11 W. Sch1fer, 1751 S1nt1 .Int North 39 dlOrtt!' rt' 43'' E•1l, •lonl ,11-11111 ...... tltrl of mlllll\I tile etv ... lct J.-7, ''" ' 9""" .1111,, C0911 Mls1. C.lllornl•. Mid .... 1i.111ne.1,. ... fl!nl 19 , ... Mini '':11,·IT FU.,, •• ''"' O•led ,,.,_y 15, 1941 of bttlnnllll LVEO l~1t !hi ?-".\'his is bow Wayfarer Yachts' new Islander·55 look· ~· ~ a few weeks ago when it was popped from the :: , .aDpld. The yacht, .largest ever to be produced in fiberglass, is now bein~ completed and readied for shipment to its owner tn Chicago. LEGAL NOTICE T·HtJS J. Wllll•..; Putnam Said ull .;.111 b! m1clt to P•ll !ht Cll111" tnr1 llOlnl of EOV<1llon 1!1 htrtb'f C•lvln W. Sch1l1r obllllllons NCUrtcl oy Mid oeea of lrusl dlrkltd to t l'n flOlfCI of 111• 1fflreu1d Slttt of C1lllflrflla, °''"'' CDIH'lh'~ lndUdl"" 111 COlh. '""' •l'ld 1•""5" of auDlk '""""" lw llOllllll eDPI" ot lllls On May U, INI, l>Plors me. 1 Not1rv truttet elld of 1111 tr111! cr~•lt<I by .. 111 Jtesolunon, 1111\ed tw I mtlor!!y of 1111 Public In 11111 for ••llf Stele, l>t!r!ll>rl1ll11 d&ed or truil; 111 sums e.,..nded under m..,.,Oe,, ol Ille lloarll of Ed...:11~ In IPl>t!ared J WlllJ1m PutnJm •"4 C1l11ln tile le•m• m Mld dHCI al ll'\llt, llOI lh•" 11\ree (ll PubHc Pltcfl In lilt Ol1!rlct, W. Sclleftr k-n lo -to IN l'h• 1>er'°11' riP91di ind S,J6,0S).11 rem1lnln9 or!M:IP•I $1111 P<»lff>ll to bt complet..O 11<11 llH thin ' Biennial Bermada Race .. ~;l~ Mesa-built Yachts Set Thirteen Costa Mesa-built sailing yachts will be 'in the , i. \lifi.rtin g line·up when the •. l1tirinial Newport (R.I.) to Bermuda race gets under way June 2'2. • •.•. the Costa Mesa built boals will include 10 Ca140s, iWO Cal-37s, and one Cal-48, all_ products of J e n s e n. "":,Jd_@tine. Others will be two . Calumbi-a~ from t h e ''.'._ O)Iu mbi11 Yachts Corp., and • _ .. QJ:l.!!; Islander-44 produced by -W.ayf-arer Yacht~. AU will be n:~·· .ia:Qed by East Coast skip- ·:, ... ?ers and crews. . , .. Only local crew in the · 18.med "race to the Onion ·~· :Pajch" will be John B. .,·" · .JG.lroy's 73-foot yew I Kia1oa II from Newport Harbor .... ~,":(acht Club. Kialoa II was ~IH' -· .. ' first to finish · in the · 1966 Bermuda race. Kilroy said he e.xpects his major competition this year to come from S.A . "Huey" Long's new 73-foot Ondine and the perennial front-run - ner, Stormvogel, 7 2 • f o o t schooner E>kippered b y Cornelius Bruynzeel of South Africa. Only other West Coast yacht in this year's race is the 55-foot sloop Santana from San Francisco. The 635-mile race to St. David 's Light will have a total of 161 entries, ac- cording to Sydney H . Roger s, chairman of the race committee. Twenty· seven of them will be from seven foreign countries - five from Canada, twa from .::· Transatlantic Race 1:.-~ '· ----------------------'" Argentina, eight f r o m Germany, one from South AfriCa, five from Bermuda, two from Sweden an~ four from· Engla nd. The entries include ~ix previous winners: the 59· foot schooner Nina, now owned by the Merchant Marine Academy ; the 56· foot sloop, Gesture, skip- pered by James Madden, Penns y 1 va n i a; W. T. Moore's Argyll, a 57·foot yawl from Oyster Bay, N.Y.; Malay, the 46-foot yawl owned by D. U. Stromeier, Scarsdale , N.Y.: the 53 ft. Oarina, a yawl owned by Richard Nye, Greenwich, C.Onn., and T. Vincent Learson's Cal-40 Thunderbird flom Rye, N. Y. : _;:Yank Emerges as Darkhorse .... ·~ LONDON (AP) American yachtsman Tom Follett and his twin.bulled schooner, Cheers, emerged today as one of the dark horses of the Trans·Atlantic SO"lo race -one that the ~1it.llers are worried about. :-:_:. ~1Vf-lth the .race nearing the :;:-.end.of its first week, Cheers _ liij-mt been reported since f:~ J>lymoolih I a s t ·I'Mrday. ~Ot the.t Follebt is in trou· ~ He and severai others ... Ji1'Jlie original 35 are keep- :,;~ quiet as a matter of ~ ~cy -not letting tile -.Offiern know where they are. Oheers is a schooner-rig- " ge(I catamaran direct I y • , des<:ended from tbe swift- niling outrigger canoes of • POlynesia. The experts rate ' tW one o( the fastest boats -~ -. .. ~ - in the Nice nO'YI that Frenchman Eric Tabarly's giant trimaran is out with steering trouble . One sailor who wants to know Follett's whereabouts is South Australia's Bill Howell, sailing Go Iden Cockerel. H is catamaran is 43 feet over-all, much the same length and therefor e much the same in potential q>eed as Cheers. Speaking by radio to his London itponsors Thursday, Howell 98.id: "I wish I knew where Follett is. Then I'd know if I should put oo more sail." Leaders of the race, which is sponsored by 1tie London Sunday Observer newspaper here today were about 700 miles west of Plymouth on their courses for Newport. R.l. Howell reported overtak· ing the 53-foot sloop Spirit of Cutty Sark, sailed by Bri· tain's Leslie Wi 1 IJa ms, Thursday. But both apparently were liome 30 miles astern or the 57-foot British Ketch Sir Thomas Llpton,, sailed by Geoffrey Williams . Bruce Dailing of South Afriea, sailin g Voortrekker, was reported well up with the leaders, although keep· ing his exact position to himself. Witt! 'I'abarly gone --;-he won the 1954 race 1n a record 27 days -the likely winner is Mybody's guess. Most competitors this time seem to be slow to stiake down and 30 days may prove a winn ing time. _ ... ~ew -Transpa~ Ra~e Due . San Francisco to Tokyo Course Slated Outboards Delayed ToAug.·25 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO Cl.EA.Tl 5ECUll:ITY INTIRl!ST (Itel, '1t1'4ll1 ".C.C.) who:i1 MmH 1rt 111bKrlbed to th<! wllllln of !'ht note ieC11rtd by 11ld dffd of !ruff, 191\ llfl doly1 b!Mor1 1111 41tt ol tald NOTICE Is hertbY 11116" lo lht 1Mlruni.e11t and ack110wledged m.v ·~· with ln~nl lnim Otctmblr 1, 1ff7 ff f" Public "'"""'' ukl a.I" lo be POiied Cr..Olto11 of HOWARtl A. LAGESSE 111d eculed lht umt ld "°' Idell ONI 11 Ind on 1401 Slll'lttnlll Sire-et, FLORENCE f', L.IGl!:SSE. OtblOIO, Roseile C, k""• llOitecl ~:~o;,, if6t. NtWPOrt Btld\, C111forllll -11 •nd Oft Wl\O:lt buslno51 1ddtas It 7271 .. llZI Me. Notary Publlc.C.llfer"ll SECURITY PlltST N•TIONAL Admlnl1tr1tlon Oflictl, 11$7 Plec111ll• •• We1tmln1ler, Count.' of Or""''· s1111 Prlrielpel Oltlc• lfl !ANk •• Ttw~ AllffllMI, COlll Mft,t, C11!1f1M11 Ind -1t ol Ca!lfornle, Ille! • 'tcurl1Y lnlrre'I Is Orins1e Counl'r 11, Lt;.,.11 w McMullln end fl! l!rislt" Sdlool -Alfml"lllrtllon Of. tboul la bt creattd b'I Oebtor and My commlHIOfl l!aPireo AHl•t•m Triitt tt..,1 fices, 2000 Clltl Ori..,., N,_. fl.-dl 111d are"~ lo RONALD R. ROCHELEAU, a JulV I, 1'611 E)Ult otflcer I»' PllMllhlllO I llOtlC-of the lllOPllon ol m1rrl~ min 11 SDlol Ind 11p1rale pro-Publlthf!d Orl"llt Co.o•I D•H'I' Pllnl, ZHd 1111$ ResolulfDll orice I" !'he °''""' COlst pert11, Securld P•rl'I'· Vll'IOll bullntu Id• Mly 11. J4, ll Ind JUM '· )ffll 164"61 Publl110td Or1fllt• Coon! O•lh' Pilot, Otll'Y Piia! .• lllWSll•Hr of 1mer•I dr6$ 11 '20 WHI ltth Slrttt, Coat1 Miii, ' J""• J 14 1\ IUI t534 clrcullltlon IWOllJJ\td 111 1111 N•-f·MHI County of Or1110e. Sllte of C1llfl)l'11r.. ' · ' V111111c1 Sdlool Ol1tfkt, uld Pllblk•llo" to Thi praperfto In which 1/111 Stoeurl1Y LEGAL NOTICE be mtde It 11111 llv1 Ill it1n before 1111 l11lerest •111 bt cre11td Ii. ln 1ener1I, tit LEGAL NOTICE. dtll of ul4 IUBllc mell'"9, fl•llH'ts arid 11111'-111, fur11Uur1· •nd" NOTIC• TO Cltl!DITOlll AYES: MEMIEftS_ fllrnl1hlft4l1 <ti DablOr cover1111 PfOPttly IU,l!llllOR COUJ:T OF TM•. STAT• Mr. Stfouu, M". Lllh', now located II '20 Weal ltltl Slre11, C111l1 °' CALIFORNIA FOR TMIJ Mt1. a.,,._, Mr. Frenkll",· Me,a. Counh ol Orenve. Stitt of COUNTY 01' OR.INOR NOTICI! 01" l'UILIC SALE Mr. Mlc.Mllll1n, Mr. Pt'flOll C1llfornl1, 10d bu1lntss k"°Wll ,, SPOT· No . .l·SN.O To N0tm1n G. Oo't'le 111<1 Ta Wl!om It NOES : MEMIEll:S TEO klWI. E1t1l1 of Henry O 1'111\tr Dtc1tlld fM.y Cor1'trn: N-. , . Thi olflreuld .ecurllV tflnHdlori wrn NOTICE: IS HEREIY o'IVEN to ... Nollet 11 heretw olven 11111, dlttult AllSE"Tl MEMIEllS be '"11!11Ummalld on Dr •fltr Ille 11th dl"t tTf'dll9"I ol 111• •boll• nunld 4Ktdllll lhll h1111roo 1N1n IM:ll In 111t o•Yme~l of Mr, 11tll01td of Juno, 1161, 11 10 .1,M, ti l1flk ot alt Hr"°"• hivlnt1 clelmi igtlnil the ta!d 134,tfl.Jf, lt!I Prlnc1Pll 1rnaulll Pt'Mel'lll'I' STATE Of" CAltP'ORNIAI Amtrlc1 NTl.SA, Ml NOl"ltl M1ln 11., Sin-dKldelll art regulrld lo flll tl\em, wllh 11119 trMI owll\I !tom krk E""''rlMt, Irie, CO!JNTY 01" 011.INC.E !•. II An1, C1!1lor11l1 In IMllllll'M!nl1. tM 11ecenerv llOllChttl In 111t Offlcl ot 11\d N ... m1n G, DOYif' IO U"lon-l•llk tor I, Elltabelll M. LIIJv, Cll111 of the l&&•d So llr 11 known to tht secured l"•rt'I'• !he cllrk of lilt ebo\le ~l!Tltd court. or to Which Norm1n G. Oo~le ha• ' td air· ol !~!loll or 1111 M1-ri-M111 Unlfllod •II bu1lneu "'"'"" elld Md••nes utld b't' •re1enl 11\em wlll'I 1111 nl<llta"" ttln --1 Pr®'rlY. khool Dt1tflct Ill Or•rie• Countv, !he Debtor ft<" Ille three ve•rs !11! 1111!, 11111ehln, to 1~ urwlttlllntd 11 Thi office The ulldlral1riect wltl on IN l7lh 4;Y .:! Cl1tf0fllle, hlreb'f eertltJ' !hit ttwl 1llo11e •re: N-. of hit .IUar111iyJ Grliham 111d CIWYI,, Jwna, lfft, ti t:)(I o'clod< i .m. 1 11 •""' fO'"tlflt 11"611tlloo! w11 duh' tlld DATED: M•Y 1711\, 1'NI, 1000 Jtrllllll Trull Bwlllllflp, LOl\t ... Ch. W•t tntr1"te to VnlDll 9111~ l1 SOii IOU! 1111ul1r1¥ lllOtltd trY Ille .. Id !olrd 11 • SECUJ:EO l'AllTY Cilllor1111 9GIQ2, whkh Ii !he Pltce o1 Mlln Slrttl II l e Vila AlltnUt Ill 111.e CllY reoul1r mHlll!I tll&teof '"'Id Ol'I Ille 1ht ftOl'llkl R. RothllllU 1>1n1,,..1 of l~I ur.derolined In ill ml""' ~I Or.M~. Stile of Celllorll!I, of/Ir for 4tW of Mlo't', I.... Ind PIUl!d tw I &ANIC 01' AM.ltlCAr., MTA5A 1Nrlalnlnt1 to tM tilt!• 111 Mid lflced1nt, oublk 1111 11111 ... !\, wilt.out w1rr1lll'1' ll_Nllllll'IO!ff VOii Of 111 Ill& member1 llf .. , Nfrltl Mlln St. wtlhln 11• months 1fler l!le !fr.I oubtlCI• •ndlor rtcourM, IM persor\11 "'°"rlY ,.kl 11 .. rd. S1nl1 AAI, C.llJWlll• llDll of thl• nollce. dllC•lo.d hereLfl bt1ow llld Miii " II ... ,.. WITNJ.SI WHEREOF. t hlllt' IKrtW "'· ,.."11 Dttld Miii 10 1HI coLl1tu1I IOI' tht lllYmefll ot the ln· htr~nf(I UT mY h•nd 11\di HI( tllls 1\11 PubHtl\ell Oraf'I• Cuot Oelh' Pl\cU. L"tl•' k. siimm~rt lfelll.Ontll 4t1eflblcl t tlove 11r •"Y oorllon dl't' ol Mey, 1'68. · June 7, 1'61 91J..61 Ex.-culor thereof, lMllldlnt •«»m111a1.i lnlltftl l!Mubelh M. L11Jv Of th• Wiii o1 lh• thereon. e~l>tlltH of 11le ind lt111I '"'· Cllrk of 11ld AIXllll "•med &ecl!de"' Thi perM/111 11t'Wtrl'J lo bl .rierH fir l"nl of lllucellon •rt1h1m 1111 c.....,., ult 11 d11$Ctlbtd n lolklwt: M1rL111 C. l t rtllOll 1-------~------IU• J1rltl111 TrYlt Swlll lfll Ono ''°""111<1"" Niie Jn IM erl11Nll Jtme W, Pft'fon •.1• UI LMt •••ch, C•Mlff"ll ffM1 tum of llf.(1(111.QI 41!..0 Octotllir 12, IKJ Rlld9rlek MlocMlnlen "OTICI TO CJl:I OITOllll T1I: (!lSJ l)S-1111 11tcwlltl try Krk Enterorltti, Irie. Ell111belb M. Lllflo •',",'r'•'oto,•,•.~·.,•.r,,•,•, '•'o'o AHlmtJI fir ,11111-r P•Ytbl9 le Grff", Slmkt I. LI.tiff' tr Se"m I . llr1nkttn .. Publlshe-d Ott"lll Co11t Oa lh' l'llol, order. ' D-111 Str111U 1M• COUNT'I' OP OJ:ANOI. Ju'lt 7, U, 11, 21, 1'61 t'1"61. S1ld llOI• 11 ofcured fly a 41..i of ~I of Ille NI. A .. HU !NII d•i.d Oclolllr :n. IHJ bt!Wftn to.rd of ~!IOI\ of E111tt of Loutllft ftltdy, Oec..1ed. LEGAL NOTICE ICrlc E"tttPrl..,, Irie., '' Trv1W. Tllll N•-" ~ lJl'ttfttd NOTICE II HEll:l!•Y GIVEN to t11e 1111ur1nc;1 &.-TrU1I Co., •I Truile•, 1"4 Scholll Dl1lrkt or Credl!Oro of lhl l bo\lt 111mlod dKld<!nl Gre1n, Slmke i rld L•llllr, 11 hlllfl.. OrtPIOI C-ty, C111for,.11 LEGAL NOTICE th1t 111 Oll"IOl'I$ ha~IM cllllmi 111htal 1111 T·14tn d i...,, 1.,., rtcorded Hovemtltr t, 1"5 Pllblllllod Ort"" Coaf! Dafh' Pllll, P li Hid lltceclent tr• required to 1111 lf'lem, HOTIC• TO Clt.DITOJIS 11 d0<umet1I numbtt 20.U ti ... '""-J11M 1. Ifft ~· The Long Beach o ce w1111 Ille 11«&111..., 11ouc11tr1. In '""office IUll~~·~:Lf:g::1..,0:0~"~N~T.1T• Noe »i Of Offktar ttKortll Jn thl of· Officers :.i\ssociatioo speed-:: W:r:,':, "t11:,•~ ..,:::.lfid ,:.:.:.:; cou"l"r C?",,.ortAr.MOf 11<1 of till r.ooo111., f'ICorcHr "OrinH ···t ... hed led f ~ le Ille lll'ldltlllnld ., C/O .... ... n Cou"'"· UVl1 rep ... l<Q se u or vou... ,.,....,,,.r &.-HIM 3U Wnt Thtnl E•l•l• of ,TENA HEW8URGH, •k• Thi ebove HK-rllllfl coll1!1r•I 11 '" Ille •" ,· .. ' • • ''"' ' --· ., ~ KATIE NEWBVllOH, Otctlled, 11>11111nlon or ,,,. "'1dfff!gMd ..... Wiii bl Sunday h36 beeri po6(poned ,,"J!'p~'ot.:.1~·;11i:.~.,.~~~ NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN lo 1119 •W•U10ll for lflJllK!lon ,, ""'llm1 of '·VM1 ~ A 25 In 111 IT\ltltri 111rt1l"1r111 1o '"" Qf1t1 of cr.ottor1 ot tl!t 1llov1 n•mtd de<:tdl!'ll 111111. C:fRTl,.ICAr.T• 0,. DJKONTl"U.IHCI "' ug. • Jlld dtceclenl, within ila rMntht eller fflt 11111 Ill P•fl"'11 Mvl111 cl•lrnt IOllllll the Tiit Ulldlt1!Gntd re1erwK file rtlfll fOI 011 UI• Alit0/0. A•AlitDONMl"T The C•·~ty event Wll to llrol pulltre11/D11 of lhl• llOlh;e. H llf lflcedenl 1r1 r1<1ulred la 1111 !Mm, '"lllte •n~ or 111 pr(IJ.llKll\11 lllddlrs le ., •ICTITIOUI NAMI Ulll'J D11td MllJ I.I, lffl with the neceu.arv \/Olldlert, In Ill• off/ti OUllllY "" •~hlltlll"' 1uHlcJt"' ai1h or THI! UHOEllllONEO .._ i..retw h•ve taken place Sunday al Jotet>h s. ....... of th• ci.rk of '"" 111ove 1nl1ltfCI court. or cerllllld f'llnds prior la 1cceit11ne 111'1' llld. certlfV thaf, "11d1111 J-l. IM ht .. Adml,.lllrlfOI' l'I' the Eltllt to 11r.Hnt them, with lllt MCPHl!'V D1IH1 : JUl!t 3, 1'61. Cl•ffd te df bu1l11111 ulldlr flit lltll!l(lur. Long Beach Marin e (If "" lbovf Nlmtd dec:lde"f llOlldlert. to lhfl """'"lpl'l9(! ., IM ottlc• UNION flANK """ -Ill • .,..1-M.f.N CLIANING C:U.Utll I 'l'OUNO tf MllCl MAYO, 111 Sov1t1 C11rll1kl 9Y •· A. St>lrfford, S&RVICF' al tS4 Ilk., llrltf, C.O.ta Stadium but w as ........ ~poned Y-. ,.,.;...... & .._ A\111\ue_, Mont11>t11o. c•llfo,1111. fOWI, Cr.d11 otnetr MtU. c1111orn1•. irl'llctt .,.,,_. w11 t .,.,.... JU w .. 1 T\lllnl Slffll wlllch II Ill• •lece OI" llull111$1 Of llle 4114-0t lotmtrh>' ~ of' ,,.. r.1i.w1,,. in deference to the natiooal 111111 AM. C•llMl'lll• r.1111 \ll'lde'tl•Md 111 •II m1t11r, 111rt11~1.,. 10 Pu1111,1110 01111111 c"'' D111.,. Pilot. """" wtio.. ,.._ 111 !lfU 11111 PIK4 of . """'" 50-4DI A 1111 11!1te "' Mid dtc..Oe"'· w!thl" •l~ JuM 1, lfd t 7J.61 rtsld111c. rs •• tol-., to4-lt: day Of mouthtng f()f' f'1e late .l!llfM"t fir Ar.•mllllllrm.r month$ Iller lri. flrll•pullllcetlofl of thll Mlrtln W, IClrto11, lit Klmlllon Slfl!lf, P11blllMcl or1,,.t Coeli 0111¥ ~11o1, natrto. LEGAL NOTICE C01l1 Mt11, Clllforl\l1. Sen. Robert F . Kennedy. M1Y 11, ''· 11 1ncr JijM 1, 1t61 U\41 D1tect Ju"e s, 1'61. C1rt111c1~ tor tr1n11cll"' el tiu1111111 Mlkt MllY/O "OTICI Oii INTl!NTION Ulldu 1111 Ibo..,. flclltkllJf 1'1111'\1, Ind If. .James MacDonald, presi· LEGAL NOTICE E•ecutor TO Dl!OICAT• ••••M•"T 1141•1t .i ..wt1ca11on ,._...,, "' on 1111 dent Qf the Police Officers ~bo:e n~!.,":ie~~.... NOTICE 15 HER£8V GIVEN tlllt6 M, ~,,:: r~.of~ ~'3.J.=:; 1------~~------IM1111 M1w• lh<I ?hi di¥ tf M• .... UM, .... IOlr 0 $Kllor! 2.U of"" c111n Coda. Association, estimates that ,0,,,, ','•""",,,,,,,,, .111ttMY 11 L•w Ed11e1tiD110 of 1111 Newport·Mtll v111tltd w1T/\llsa ,,..,.1111,.., 111111rc1 ._,"' Ju111o Ill llvlfl Girtltllll Awinu-ScMol !•!Tiet of Of11191 Couni., lHll. more than 15() boats will be l'J,IRIOll COUlllT 011 T"I Mlllllllelll, Cilllorllll '°'* Callfornl1, 1da1111d 1 Re'°fullon of I"· Mirtl" W. kor!Klll competing, testinf. skill and ·~~~1c:~~#'=~•o'l::11-.~tt 11 , ... '•r ;::"11!." ~c!::''~~ '!''i:;~~:c1:.~ J:: ,.~b,11111td,, ,o, "•'",,.eo.11 011tv "llD.!;, ,. t I ' (' h I ( I Ml. ..,...,,.. TiilPllMI: lll·nJ·SUJ 11or1tlon fOr Mlle 1tre9' M'MI hltllW•Y "'~ ' ' ' ' -s am na m tve a co o -ue • 1,1,11 of Hir"" Jlou Ket11.,, 11,. Put111111ec1 Dr•1111• eo.,, D•llv P11o1. ~.· .. ,. 1_..,, 11 . 111 11c:itet1l-------------- ed ou t b Dar d hydroplane k,,_.,, ,, H1rrv tt. KNY1r. Dtce•ffd. JUM 1. 14• ,,, n, ,,.. ~ o'ffr, 1111 11111 oc:""' """°'"' of !hit ••Id classes two stock outboard NOTICE IS Hl!llEIY OtVIN ,. IM ••reel Of lllml Joca!ICI ., ,,,,.,,.,. Ellml!lt> • crldltori of 1111 ,...,.,.. Nlnlld 4tcedlnl LEGAL NOTICE l1ry School Site, !11 lhl Cltf of Co1l1 classes and four sporty in-11111•II1e,_ h1'lf,,. c111rm1 •111n1t n.e Me••· 1--..,.,,,,-,~~=~----- b rd ••• · h ..,011 llld dl<ldtrrl 1r1 rtcWJ!'ld le 1111 """"' A l'tlbllc mtellnt 11-Ill• tunllDll of NOTIC• O" UITl"TION TO oa ..,.egor1es -t e ......... wllh 1111 MC111•,.,. llOllcflfr,, In Ille offfot NDT•te TO CJtfDITOJIS maklll(I •uch lll!Olc•llon will IN held ., •No.10• IN TMI SA.La 011 and 145 cu. in hydros the of the dirk of tM lliilwo'l IMll!ecl court. or tU .. l!lt lOll COUllT o .. TM• Cll:lll ,,..... lflth So:hool LVCll.lm. 2•• ALCOttOl.IC •SV•llA••• . . • • ,. pr-nt l'lllm,ol Wiii\ 1111 MCHU"" tTAT• 01' CALll'OJ:Nl.1-F•INllW Jtolod. Coll• Ml!ll. C1IH1ml1,.... . J-s. '"' ex cl t I ng t w 0. m an 'f'OUQ!ln, to ''" ulldln!•ntd It 11111 Ofllct .. OJI THE COUNTY OF OllA"•• lt!I llltl "'~of JUl!t. 1Hf, ti Ill• llour ol "to WllO<rl It Ml'I' COllCll'll: crackerboxes and the ol o1 111r Attor....,. E1r1 M•lmroH, 16)f wnt NI. A.fftM 1:30 o'cllc:k P.M. Sublect to 111u1"c1 or "" 11c1-1.,. c ...... ,,,...,, LGI Anttlel, C.llfor"I' 90011, E•l•I• of flon"ll M. W••-· Dtce1ffd. IOARD o,-EDUCATION l'llld "'· notlu 11 her ...... 11 .... 11 1111! !ht orfu] super stocks. which II !ht Pilltl of OUslnoH (If ,... NOTICE IS H!ll:EflY GIVEN le !hi NEWPOllT·MES.I UNIFIED unoe1111....o ·,r°"°"' lo un •lcohttllc C titi · th I ullllenlpnecl In ell m•n111 perl1!nlnt lo cr..,11011 of !he 1bo11e ri1moJd lltctde"I SCHOOL OISTRICT O.Wr•HI ot !hi ,.r_I_ llnulllld 11 ompe on ID e ast 1t11 n1111 of 1111 c1ecec1..,1, wfl'hln sla 11111 ,u 11eri.on1 h1v1ns1 e1111m1 111!MI lhfl fly e11111N1t1 M. LlllY totlowi: category will be particularly "'°"""' 11ter Ille 11rir ovt>11can°" o1 11111 11ld decie.Hnl 111 '"'ulrlld to 11i. them, Cieri! of uld IN•ll 11'1 Goll Courtf or1v1, eo.t1 Mia . ' nolle1. wilt\ llle ntttHI ,., vouchlra. I" Ille of!lc• Publ!$hlll Ott»;I COid 01IW Pll!rl. .~ Purw111t '• _,. '""""""'' "" u ... keen, matching w or 1 d 011e<1 M•v '· 1Ht. of 111« cltrk of 1111 1bo\11 '"'"ltd couri. J""' 1. 1ue '63 ... lflnleP!td 11 111P1¥lroo 19 tM OtNrl'rT!ent record holder Don St. John H•lln M. 1Ce1111r or to pre't~' tMrn. with th• ne<::1111rv el Akollolk le_. .. , Colltl'OI tot 1uutra1 . Adml11!1tf1l•l• vouchert. to Ille ulldetJloned 11 Ille olllct LEGAL NOTICE by tf•Mfor of In 1tceflllllc lllY1r101 of Inglewood against Clem WI~ Th~Wlll-Ann•xed of M1 Alfor,..,.1. 111n11y o. c111rt •lldl ne_. !or Uc1n1t1I for 111f11 ,rmmfin 11 McCullab of Torr.a.nee Al ot 1he E1111' o1 lhe Louis s. 1<11n1r1. 23611 Hunllntton or1111. PR·'" 1011owi: ' Abo111 ntll>lld detedelll Sin M1rlno, CINfornF1, Wlllcll 11 !tie Piia SUl'IRIOll COUllT OP TH• OH IAl.I (;ll:"llLAL Thompson of Van Nuys and ltrl MlltnroM . of bllllneu of llle uncl~1'11111d In ... 1'1'111· t TATI OP CAr.LlllOJINIA .. Oil (IONA PIOE PUILIC l!:ATIHG PLACEI R L ••• of Lo B h "" WM! ltll llrMI 1tr1 perl1l"I"' to 1111 nl1le of ukl lltc• CO HT'!' OF OlllAr.Nel ...,,,,_ dltlrl111t tt itrlltlt 1111 leluance on ari>Vl, ng eac , u. A......._ C.lltw!ll• t1111 111111, w11111n •I• morrtht ,1 .. r th• ""' THI u cr1 WCI! llClfl&1l1l .... ,. n11 , 11er111eo11 .,. among others. Tll: (flll OUfltllrl l·Mll ·~IJC•llO" ol 11111 llOtkt. NOTICIJ OP =~.:.':'3011 ... TITIOlf !fl! W!ltl .,.,. ofl'lce el .... -""""" ol St J hn' Sh k All«lltf' fir Afm{llk!reh1~ Oiled MaY 74, 1961. A-tk .. _ c-.,o·-.c.,,,,.,, " ' 0 s oc wave set wn•T~Wlli-AMUH "'"'" ... MoOllY ,.Oil ,..O .. ATI! OP WILL A"O POlt !Iii """ ' l'l Marine stadium record by '""llli'Mld Orlf'le ca.nl 0•11¥ Piiot, E•KlllOr LITTlftS TllTAMl!NT.lllV :~ ~lrll ~.lf'll .. :"~~= . lb t MIY 11. 2•. '1 '""'June 1, ".. 167"61 OI 1111 Wiii ol tM Etlal• of Jacob T-11. •IM~-•• d6"lll .... rO\llOICI tw .. w T ... ., .... 1-,,ar1ng over e course a J1cob P111r T11m1i11. o.ct••ed. · k 1 I Aboll• lllmld dtcldlflf NOTICI!: IS HEJ:El'f' GIVl!N Tllolt .,. -lletn ... "' '"" .... « I ohct re an average speed Of 73.831 LEGAL NOTICE st1n1n o. c11r11; "" 1.191• Miry w. 1111711n Ills Hied herein 1 "'''" .,-..,-,,:..,. ,,._..,"' !!.., w-rlfk.ltll! m-" 11 b . h s. ""'""' ,._ ...,. ... m es per our in t e annual '·>HJS ntt HYllH"'"" or1w•. l!Ol'I tor Pf'l)be11 o1 wm •nd tor 11111•11(• DtP•rt11*1t. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Memor;al Day 1 n b 0 a rd c••''''CAT• OP •u11N•1s 1111 ""'"'"'' C•M'""'' of Lttte,, t1111mt1111,., 11 P1111l9nlr, ,, •. o. INTE1tP1111s1 1. •MC. • ~-jfi' hi but has been abandoned. I All t ' -t1cT1t1ov1 NAMl tel 1111) tU-1121 re1tr111c1 IO .. htch 11 mtdl •o• t'llrllllt Pllbll'llold °''"" Gll•I Dtll'r Piiot. ,,... new ~·-·"l'ac c yac years o age. compe 1ng Regatta tast week. TM ulldtBkllled dltl c1r11fY""" 11 COii· .111tr111n 1or •••ar1tr 111rttcu111u. •"4 th•t ttt. um. 1/ld •l•t• JUl'l1 1, ,,.. -.e ,! • -ce is in the makin".. Contestants in the n e w boats will be subject. to In the outboard calego•y duc:trrie • bulJnno '1 iiu Hi,..r "ub111hed or1ns1• ca11t 0111v '11o1, o1 11t1r1"' "'• ••me h•• Ml'I 111 "' • ... ·1 , Boull'f'tr<:I. COlll Mnf, C.111ornl•, under M•"t 14, l1 illd J~ 1, 14. lffl ~. JllM 21, IHI, •t '::IO 1.m .. In the court· • The ........,..sed new race ls Met will be required to strict survey a s to suitabili· the driver to watch wUl be ""11c1111-'''"'"·-of KN01Tt' ic:eo room o1 0.1t1rtme111 No. 'ot ••Id court. I"' "T"'v , t: •rid till! N14 firm II ctmfOttd (If IM LEGAL NOTICE 11 IOI Horth M1ln SlrHI. 111 lht CllY et from San Francisco UI have prior experience in ty, and stores for ttie s.200 Long Beach s T ed May, to11ow1rie Hl"lllll, .....,, ... m. i" '"" 11111 s.11t1 An1. c1111or1111. 1 ' singlehanded olk'hore sail· mile race. world c hampion in 1965 and •lac:ic!,':'~.";:n."J:1~i., Hirbor, T.11111 0111d June '· '"'· 1--,-0-T-,.-.-.,-,-,-,-,,.-,-,•.-,-,-.,--.. Otyo Md ls being organlz· 1966 and a member of the AnaMim. c1"fflmta. NOTICt: 011 sulk T•.1"1P11t c urt11 ~: :..:,' JOHN, Counlv Cter-T, s. ..._ ., ' ed' "".._ start March 15 1969 Ing ,. wen -be over 21 Entran•· ma· be r G H '''" "'' 1• 1N1 is.n •1114111 u.c.c.1 ..., • °" .NM •· ,,.. •1 11* o'docl Ar.,M. ·w ' · ' ....,, ".) Y O any ulf all of Fame. He is H~ H. Gt_, Nolle• Is h<lreb"t" 11ve11 111 1IM cr..111or1 741 ~ Miii i~ 11 tl'll f,,..q olflCI 111t"r1,Q to llc.urltf -+· f",• • .sponsors are the Slocum nationality, o( either llex, also the American Power s11tt ..-c11110r1111, °''"'t te\fni...: or 1tDNALo R. aocHtLEAU, Tr111111ror, .._ Allf'Wll. co•llll'lll• •H T.~ .. ·.-, 1.,":: ,~_ .... -:-1111• ~ • · '°' 8 l A . ti Cl ·c Oft MIY 16. 1w. IM!ore ,,,., • Nollrv whoM 11<111111!11 1ddrn1 11 t?O w. ltth fl,, T•I 01,1 u, .. ,,. ..... ·~ "' •••• • S~iety and , the Nippoo SJYC D } and be amateur or pro-oa ssocta on ass PubNe in •nd tor u1d St•lt, "r..,.,.11v CGlll M-. ~ou"tv of or'"''· 1111e of Attlnll'f "' ,,.'"-" of c1111om11. 11! c v It IT v TtTL• Ol$an Racing Club. e ays fetSional sailors. Competing outboard hydro rec 0 rd io"::~~ = :h.!':irn:~:c:: ~11'°;'!~·t "'-!,.•"'ti~:-~·, 1l.•bcl:·N~ P11!1H1Md °"'"'" C111! Dt!Jv Pltol, !~'¥.!::.c~~:e..·.,cw:i·:: holder .at 94.830 mph. eel le lilt w!ltlfn ' IMtrvrnelll I/Id l'LORENCE ..-. U.OESSE. Tr .......... JUM 1, ,, u. lHll .. 7 .. euttcl 11'1' ROllEftT I . GUl!:NTHlll •Ml -· Jtntries are limited to O yacht.II need not be owned b y P'ts 111 be ~ 7 •t11-1ec1ow M e11llCVl'ltl"" u'"'. .....,.. 1>u1111tH tddr••1 11 nn """' No. LEG .. NOTICE ANITA•· GUINTHfll(.~ '"" w111 mono "' .... ~--2• and pening Day 1 . w open <I'\ a .m . 10FF1c1AL &lALI 1. wu1rn1n11er, c-w o1 0r-•· '''" AM ~ Odollf 1 .. nrAo ••......,. '""'-.,_.,...,.__, ~ entranu, nor need ttiey be to drivers and at 8 a m for J018'11 1. 011111 tf c111torn11. • no. 11206 In botlll ''"' ""..,.., Olftct•I ' '--·'I R f A dr' t .' . 'I NII•"" P~llc.C..llflrn11 TIM proiotirh' lo be lr•Mlerld Is loc.lfld ,..., RKWdl In tM fllflct ,if 111t ....... fl! --;-35-1 feet OVltll-.a • ace of t he same registry as the ans. tvers mee 1n g wt 1 ,.rr11e1.,.1 ottlct 1" 11 120 wm '"" strHt. '"'' MeH. c••T•PICAT• op •utiN•ss er • ..,. Cwtmr. c1..,..., tw ,...., 111 , enn.~·"'r -id the event is a Shark Island Yacht Club na"onality J -· -~an's. be held at 10 a .m . and the or111111 eounrv c-rv of°''""· s1111 of t eni...111.. •1cT11t0u1 N•M• illfllltt Ji\ """""""' w ,....,. .. ,.. e1 ...... IA>" ~ h ...........__ 'ts 0 ' "' " UJe auu. 1 r· I I My Commlulon E••lret S.ld •r-rt'I' I• dn<r11114 In ......... 1 TM U/ldltt1ltl'IOCI ... CMllf\o hf It ~ ebll!Mtlont --...,., ~ "" 'J oote ettort to cou.n· as po6"t"'·~ I pen1ng A 1rst rac ng w II start at J11ne ,,, '"° •-= An 11a111..., ..u1om1111 •!'Ml .-wiu 1uc11 .. , '*"'""' 1t '" vi. Ll4e Merit, tir1adl or -..u11, ,.e1C1t ., ~ ... Day ceremon'es and dedl ppUcatlon for entry in noon P11b111111d °''"'' coe11 o.r,., fl11ot, of 11111 11tt1r.otr bull"'" knoWll 11 SPO"f· NfWPl't •lldl. c.~1, llndtr 11111 tie-,_. Mwdl •· IHI. .. ~ "°" ... A trend toward I . ca· ... ' ' . Mfy 17, 1(, JI .,,,,, JIJM 7, 1Hf Ml ... 11!0 KIWI 1"'9 iec.1..i II m 'W•t;t '"" '"""" fll'l'll lllmt of S1!.1V1ew MAJttNE lUI In bac* IJX, .... 1•., ..... (If.. , "~ lion Of j(g new clubhout~ t.1ie race moy be obtained Adult ticket price 1s $2, It .. ((1111 Mno, c-i... " Or•""· s11i. co. 1nc1 111,1 11111"""11 ~.,11111 ne1.1 •.eom. wu11111 ,, MHc 1uct11111 ,...,. and .-.-n.<;.ive Wling from Seer""'" ... ', s J 0 c 11 m with children under 12 ac. The of c11lfOl'n11. to11ow1119 --· ..,_ 1181111 1n "'" 11111 1or c1vi. wltflout wofrll'llY •• 11 11t11. -. -.,,-~ .. ,.-.-originally scheduled for S un· .,....., ' T"" bu11r trlf!lftt' wtN • _,1111n1111ted Ptttt °' f'llldtlltt 11 "fl1i.wt.: 1tMM1tt1111 • .,. llltWllbr111C11, ti. 1t1tffli11 • m~cbines. Society, Box 387, Eaet companied by parents ad· °"or '"'r 111117111 dly of J-. lffl, 11 Clllttn ,_ lll•hbetk, m ·Aw1U<11. _... • ..i.i Tl'lllM 1:w 11M Dllf" -; 'the Slocum Society ts a ·dayc'o"'mJmuneodl6o.r. G••ald Setauket, N .Y. mitted free. Orin9• Coast's r.~11~n:.~~~s:·:~.:.o;i: •. ~~ &:":M~ ~ri~lllWlll!I ~= '~"'"C:.:':""0.:.:-.fm:: .., C1tltornl1. CIMorllf JI-111111~ C•Utornll, ~ • , ·-I nori-profit organJ z at Ion Most Complete So 11r •• klldWn te IM Tr•11tttrot1t. •H s1a111 of co111ofn11. 0t1"" c-tr1 TM Nor'lll &n W f/11111 ~ "·" * Spat.km &aid the eveat was 111111ntu ,11tm11 '""' ac:ld•-utH iw o.. Mly , .. ,,... ""'°" fM, , ,., 1"t., ""' ...,. m .. Mt 111 t11t •••• es blished in 1955 to ~ due ~ the 0 ,,.. STARTS NEXT WEDNESDAY-LIDO THEATRE PRINTING Tr1ris11rw !fir"" 111._ Y1•r1 1111 out. ,111111c 111 •NI w 11111 ,,.... Uy •"" 1111111._MW111 ~ 11 fl ~..._ w _.. 1r1: Noni. 1,_rtd thlrllf J1m11 ':.:C..~ Fott...llw ,--., • .....,. • • -rec)ord, encouni.ge and sup. . D111d: M•., 17111, '"*· ,. '"' '° w t1Mo ... ,... ,. "*"" ,..,.... ,.. ..,., a. ... n. , l ~,,..,,._lo"" m.tanc. paSla--tiOO&l. day oLmournilli.for •. ~ SERWCI! ...iu.•-.. • ........._..,,, ----.........w. _ _,_ -.-. r? -.~.. t Sen R-"'--' ~rs-otJ r1111itror 1<1--'tld M ••~"" -°"'"" ~ • 18 -.. ... 11 boat.a. tile la e . vua.' F. Ken-• ....v, WM> Y H<!Wti"" 11.. "-1011,1c1AL 1r11.L.1 ,.,. ""' .,,,_ /11 ... ,.i.. e1t11M..,_ r-'d ~ ned" Sundov PIOl'lt!Cll "· L1"18• Jlirllpfl I, O.wlt 111C11rllf "' •Id o..f ., Tnnl, o •" ':'.'tt'limll8r ?eCe for Mt g.:a I ' I ' I .. am• Tr1111flr-Mltt no Publlc.C:.~tor'™' DIM MIV :tf, ltM. -: Oc-Racing ~·teet vat.-hts The MW Clubhowe will be • ·-~·-illllillill-' ' I IANK 0, •MllllU.. •TAU .. rlllCINI Oltb 111 llCVlllT'I' TIJl.I! INSUJIANC& __J_"; ,.._. I _ · iiii •1 "-fftl Motl• tt. -nr.-Covftl't' COM,.INV 1 Ujf'lo :r> foot) was pr°"osed open for l0L9pCcUon Su.nda.y .,., ......... ,_ ..... .u.. C.llfwllk 1i.1_1 c_,_'°" .,...,. .,. J. 1. ,...,._ ~year to rtart. from but there wid be DO mYA IOSCllA Phone 642-4321 ·~· =. Ct>lil 01lflo ,.tl&I, PllbllthtclJ~~·.1't'...1 O~L· ,.llot, ~~-l.:"'0!1tt "lll:ll• -Ma(ina dCJ Rey lo ROncilulu oeromonles. Sparks said. Jin 1, 1"' "'"" Mlv 11. v. ,, .1111J-1. 1• ....... J-1. ,., 11. ,.. • ,...... . ' LEGAL NOTICE ~-r- r ---• • -------~ ----------------------· ---------·--------........ -"---- • I i DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE A Glut of Poles, Lines "ApparenUy, lbe only things you Americans don't put above ground are sewer lines." That's a bit of British overstatement. by L. W. Lane., past president of Gre.at Britain's Tow,n Planning Institute. Lane made hi• observation during a recent visit to the Orange Coast. He and ¥s associates were mightl!Y impressed with lhe forest& of utility poles polluting much of lhe local landsc;ape. They would be eveq more impressed if they were to return here today. JU.St a brief drive up Jamboree Road would be sufficient. More than 60 proudly towering power poles, repl~ce­ menli for stubbier, less sturdy poles, are now lined along the newly widened roadway. The poles are painted gray ..,.... a recent beau· tification breakthrough -but they are still noticeable. And they will become even more noticeable as ~e months pass and the thin black strands now stretching from pole to pole are joined by many ~ore, much hea· vier cables. This draping of the land by more . mil~s of power lines seems inevitable with the pending indus- trial development in the Jamboree Road afea. ft seems inevitable all over , and unstoppable. No one, it appears, has enough rti'o1_1ey or legisla· ti on to provide for the burial of power ,lines at. a pace even remotely equivalent to overhead 1nstallat1ons. Under a California Public Utilities ruling, the city of Newport Beach receives about $50,~ year.ly from the power companies for undergroundmg pro1ects on certain streets. But that amount is hardly significant. At present costs, lhe '50.000. would Piil' for lhe burial of no more than 1,000 feet of cable. Jamboree Road alone is a~t 15,000 feet Iona. In other words, even i.f all the available money were used for that major arterial street, and no other, lhe job Would take 15 years under the present program. That is why the problem is growing. What's the answer? Money, lots or money, lo spe~ up research to make underground installations cheaper, and to speed up the burial.process as it exists now. It has been estimated by experts that it would lake a 10 percent increase in customers' electricity bills over the next 20 years to underground all exi&ti.ng overhead facilities. That's a state-wide estimate. This may be too great a price, in the opinion of many. But lhe only alternative is a visually polluted landscape. Airport Noise Abatement . Noise abatement at Orange County Airport is some.. thing no one can reasonably oppose: But methods pro- posed to accomplish this-a county code, for instance- Jikely are illegal. The Federal Aviation Agency has jur- isdiction. No satisfactory answer is likely to be fo und until either a joint operation with the Marines at El Toro for commerciaJ jets or an entirely new major airport sit£ is located farther south. Studies now underway may provide the needed answers. ..... , N .,,. ...... ,,,,,.. ...... ·J.··-.. ............. 1'.. :: ;.'fl~-= ,,,~·-,..::·· '!':"l~.:._·. ·.-~ .~: .. ~ . ... ·~· ..... One of Ironies A Reader Updates an Old Cliche Accorded an Aura of Legitimacy Of Our 'Time Physical tests given to European and American schoolchildr.en have shown that the European children are far more physically fit than ours, despite our greaW resources in food and our greater emphasis on sports. There are two culprlta here, I th.ink: the automobile and the telephone. Unlike my generation, the American child today uses these as substitutes for hls legs. I must have walked 10 miles a day when I was a boy; I doubt if the modem child walks 10 blocks a week. A.nd regular walking is probably the best and cheapest fOrm of keeping lit. ONE OF THE IRONIES of our time is that youngsters are provided with elaborate and expenaive athleUc pro· grams at school and elsewhere -and then they are bused Of' chauffeured to the sites of their endeavors. If they walked back and forth regularly, they wouldn't need such involved pro· grams. The telephone, for all its usefulness, Is another enemy of physical fitness among the young. I don't think I telephoned a friend more lhan once a month; if I wanted to see someone, I walked or biked over to his house. Nobody drumed of chauffeuring me as a boy , and I rarely took a bus, ex- cept to go downtown once in a while. tN MY EARLY TEENS, my closest friend was Saul Bellow~ tile novelist. He and I lived about a mile and a half from each other, diagonally across a park. We would spend the late af- ternoon or evening together, and then walk each other borne. When we got to my house , we decid· ed there was still more to talk about, so we would turn around, and I would walk him back to his house. And, often, we would turn around once again, and he would walk me back to mine. We would sometimes do this three or four times, and think nothing or Jt -and do it three or four times a week. HE WAS ON THE track team (an excellent miler), and twas on the ten· nis team; and we both got so much ex· ercise walking that we were always in top form, without the necessity for calisthenics or special programs. Our school, in fact, didn't provide any. It is absurd to spend so much for athletic and fitness programs today, and at the same time allow children easy access to the telephone, the car or the bus, wben they could just as easily (and more healthfully) walk to school or to a friend's house. But they seem to have enormous energy fpr everything - except a simple six· block stroll down the street. The mere thought of that exhausts theil im· agination and brings on symptoms of immense fatigue. Telling a He From a She It is nice to know, where you're with another person, what sex that person is. Men. for example, traditionally feel more free to be themselves, are more at ease, even speak in a different man- ner if they are in tht company of other men. They are also usually more boisterous and less boyish. Women. on the otl1er hand, when in the company of women show just the opposite traits. They are more ill at ease, less free to be themselves, and in many cases profoundly less feminine and fun.worthy. ONE OF THE increasing problems of civilization Is how to tell one sex from the other. The passion for con· formity appears to be gradually destroying m311y of the recognizable differences between the sexes. Here are a few guldemarks that he!p the interested bystander distinguish the hims from the hers : If it likes, while swigging someth.ing straight (rom a paper cup, to stand in Dear Gloomy Gus: Does our Newport Beach CJty Council need remindins to prod .. :IU.l>' ' the backyard and br.ag about the. barbecue sauce it has concocted, it js a man. If it would rather go to an in- door cocktail party and gab what it doesn't know about basebal\ and politics, it is a woman. Does it punch you in the ribs while it tells a merry story ? }las to be a buck . Dor:s it place a sOft but infinitely restraining hand upon y<lur arm while it tells you its troubles? Has to be a doe. THE ONE THAT says, "Let's have another one," can be safely described as male. The one that inquires, "Oh, do you really think I should ?" is un· doubtedly female. Oul to the incinerator to deliver the garbage with a grim air <lf resignati<ln trudges the husband. Out to the in · cinerator with a burst of oratory, "Th.is isn't the way it happens in the apartment next door -after all, SHE is married to a civiUzed man." walks a burdened wife. Does it accept love as a bond and a mystery that must be taken for granted? That's the eternal lad. Must it be assured of love and doe11 It de. mand that love's mystery be ex- pressed In words. however lame and unhelpful, as well as in conduct, however eloquently mutual? That's the eternal lass. To the Editor: l am writing this letter in the mid11t of monumental matters which enter my mind includJng personal, social, national, and worldwide conditions. While listening to radio reports of Senator Kennedy's condition, I am reminded of a letter which I drafted for submission to the DAILY PILOT about six months ago with a theme of "the importance of the individual" with a thread of "thinking basic and using cliches to guide the individual and the subsequent society toward an ultimate desirable situation for all." J did not submit that letter because in careful review I came to the con- clusion. that we are now confronted with a national disease which ·might be termed an almost impenetrable in· dividuaI egotism. TO BE MORE explicit, I felt I had something valuable to say but realized it would probably be met with argu- ment, criticism, and controversy rather Utan the consideration for which it was intended. Listening to the radio now and hear- ing how Congress will expedite actions to try to control the use of weapons and how perhaps millions of taxpay- ers' dollars will be spent for the pro- tection of presidential candidates and their families, etc., etc., J w i 11 use the same conclusion as the previous letter and hope it is not too subtle for anyone to understand. There is one cliche I have always felt was an excellent one, that is "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." However, I think it is out- dated and should read "a pound of prevention is worth a megaton of cure." R. W. MOORE Barking Dog• To the Editor: ... Since S. G. Undine (who wrote. about people with inferiority complexes who leave their dogs home alone to bark - a connection I still don't see the logic of) is unlisted in the phone book , I cannot tell which of my neighbors he is -the one whose small c h i I d screams out.side my wind<lw, the one whose son plays rock music at full volume. the one wh ose electri<' saw purrs on weekends, the one whose wife honks loudly when she wants the garage door opened, the on"e whose power boat warms up at six a.m .. or the one whose teen-age son regards our small island as a speed· way. TRUE. I AM Gun.TY of teavin1 my poor dog alone far more than I would if I had no other purpose in lire than to make him happy (he's a dog, not a "kid"). I work, visit family and fr iends , go out on dates, .tnd fre- quently travel. However, Jam still far more quiet in the conduct of my life than are my neighbors. U they'll agree not to disturb my sleep ever again. I'll agree to let someone hire a dog·sitter for me. The Preachment of Violence Following are excerpts from an editorial in tht June 6 edition of The Wall Stree t Journal: ' Ir there is something radically wrong with CClnlemporary society, we think in fairness it should be noted that it is not peculiar to America. Look pN.cticaUy anywhere in the world and you find violence, stupe· fying irrationality and i n c i p i e n t anarchy, Another way of putting it is that if ttiere is sickness it is not just in any particular society or nation; it is in man himself. Beyond all that, we think a special responsibility devolves <ln what may loosely be called the intellectual com· munity, the people who set the fashions in opinion. lN THE DISTORTED rationale of m any of them, violence is accorded an aura of legitimacy. This attitude is doubtless rooted in the fact that for a generation or more a m a r k e d permissiveness has been encouraged in home, school and judicial stan· dards. Not surprisingly, ours is • becoming, and not just here in America, increasingly an age when anything goes, and more and more that is coming to include actual crime. Now intellectuals may be able to make fine distinctions between the kind of violence which finds French- men ripping up paving stones and hurling them at each other and the kind expressed in the shooting of an American Senator. (From some of the foreign comments on the "shockin g conditions" in America, you might think the current French orgy of violence and anarchy had never ex· isted.) But psychopaths don 't make distinctions: they are inevitably stimulated by the general condoning of violence. AND MAKE NO f\UST AKE , it is not only being condoned but applauded by opinion-nloulders. Ministers of God have been heard advocating violence under certain conditions in such causes as civil rights. other in- tellectuals justify the violence at Columbia University alli a useful ad· vancer of social progress. These men are to be blamed for the precept and example they set, not least the-en· couragement they give fo tbe derang. ed among us. Most people of course do not accept these CC1ncepts. Indeed. their reaction to a specific crime and to violence in general is one of shocked disbelief. Still tile moral confusions and the resulting disorder are undeniably spreading. THERE IS LITERALLY no way, In any case, to prevent crimes like that at Los Angeles Wednesday m orning. Nor is there any easy way to see how man's drives, in an age of violence. are to be redirected to better purposes. But at least the leaders of optnion can stop the preachment of violence and anarchy, They can begin -and it is high time -to reassert·the urgent claims. o( order and reason for the safety of each of us and for ttie sake of society as a whole. Our Roles as Farmer Brown By ELLSWORTH L. RICHARDSON Mlnl1ter, The Neighborhood Congre1attonal Church Latuna Beach Let's go back East to the farm ! It is springtime -the best time of all the year in that part of the country. The roads have humps in them -the ice has caused open fissures in the road. There is a breach, a sign of winter's wrath, her Hoary breath! And spring? The men at work repairing the breach! Swollen brooks fed by winter snows have in their wanderlust broken over the banks .and have found new river beda. Instead of making the turn in the bend as it did lut August, the stream has now shot across the field where in August high·tasseled crowns of corn stood and wagged their silly heads! FARMER BROWN is now at work repairing the breach! Some careless hunters, some heartless skiers have removed the top rails of fences and Farmer Brown must repair the fences before the cows are let loose. Yes, winter has left its scars! In othe-r places there are open breaches: some friendships have been torn asunder; some are only held by slender tendrils of hope, of pride, We all have roll!s to play as Farnler Brown. We have hands to kiss, hurts to heal and wrongs to be forgiven. ...---811 Georwe---. Oe-ar Geroge: What do you do with problems yoo don 't have an ane:wtt f<lr? To whom do you turn for http and how much does it cost you ? PUZZLED What .have we done befG"re in other springs? Jn to the breach of a broken (riendship we have poured s p I t e , jealousy, an unwillingness to yield, salt, revenge ... the same olc,t stuff! THE PLAY, "All Your Sons," was the story of a father who did his bit for the war effort in World War II. With two sons in the service he was a manufacturer of engines for P·Sls. One da'y the foreman at the plant call· •e<t the manufacturer at home to say that some of the motors were de!ec· Uve, the ehg:ine beads were cracked. The manufacturer advised: "Fill 'em up, get rid of them. We've got to fill our CQntract, so many a day. Yeah, we've got to make money you know!" The breach was filled wJth poor ·metal! tT SO HAPPENED that 21 pilots were killed as a result of this manufacturer's desire to make money and he was indicted, .sent to j'1J. Later Quotes C. n. Ballew, San Diego -"Tht way out of our present troubles Is so simple it is frightening. It is the abUJty of man to say : 'I want to help my fellow man and help myself.' " on be got out. It so happened later on, also, that the inevitable telegram from the government came to his house tell· ing of the death of his son, Larry, overseas, in a crash landing. You got the feeling that perhaps it was one lff the planes that his fat.h er had· manufactured! But his mother wouldn't admit it. She said, "Larry is ..not dead. He will come back " She kneW to admit Larry's death would imp1y that her husband wu a murderer. Indeed he was .. , 21 pllot.1: dead! But when the 22nd was killed, tnat was different! HOW 'IRE PLAY ends I'll not reveal. The point of interest to us is this. A defeetive part, a breach, filled with poor metal, was patched. The father felt no respoo1ibillty, no guilt, 21 pilots dead but they were somebody else's sons. His son dead, maybe a defective part? Ah , forget it! You can't forget it! The breach in an engine bead, patched up with old stuff I We can't repair with "old stuff'' some friendships t h a t have b e e n broken. The father said at one point, "Let's be practical. You don't want me to be a Jesus do you ?" That's just it, we did expect him to be a Jerua, to be through with this old stuff, to be willing to forgive, to be a repairer of tlle breacll I ------ Friday, June 7, 1968 Bi( Brother, the state, to keep SERENA PAX ft.I promlH to remove billboards Dear Puzzled : b'obl Cout HICbway ? A buU· T I Lett«r.s from reodtrt are Wei.come. Oh, ,Yes, J get lots of P!"Oblem1 dozer and a bonfire could d.. -.l-8X-DCJ'ease-NormoUv-..nt<n-.llould ,,.,.oey-i11.;,-_ ! cant solve~tJJlate_L(ood_ l----f--ii\i611J uirey .. oru-in--.-;...,,~-1----, . 00 •• resoardl .WI and they work ~s1aae1 an 3 wor~ or re~•· Tht cheap -it just costs me the Dr. Es&.ber 8 . Clark. Palo Alto ptdlatrk.la1 -"I look forward to a timl!i When all infants born ln Amer1ca will have a life expectancy of about 100 years with small likelihoOd that they will die or be crip- pled by any Q( the dlseag-es or disorders which have been so prtv-ent." - Tht editorial J)Cl:Qie of the Daily r;ioi seelc.t to inform and rtim- ulatc rcod.dr1 bv presenting th.it n«WJPCJ>U't opinions and com- menta111 on topics of intett.rt and significcncc, by prwfding o forvm for the t%p're1.sion of our-"rtadm' ophtimu, and ti presenting the diveric vf.ci! pointr of informed obstr0er1 and IJ>Olc.e.smcn on topics of iht do~. ftll ....... ,..... ,....,... ...... .. _.,. ... " -...... "'" .... ,...,., ..... _, ..... ., ..... --G. N. w. Cbactanoochet, fi'll., Twla City nght to conc:Un.sa lttt.11to/1t1pac1 price of a post card-Who do you ~ews : "~n't be surprised If the.re or eltmtno~ libel ts. rcrerotd. AU ~t-think writes all f!lose letters 111 a U.x increase, It bas been put WI mM.1t 1nciude 1igrsaturt and mod· signed "Stumped " by Abb Ann on the &:he!{, but it is now being Uken ing address, .t>ut nam.ea will be with-Ind the rest? y, off." held on rtquest. • C. R. Be11.11ett, El Cajon, on gold crt.111 -"Amtrtca still Is coasting alone (Ill the presUge that was built up by a century and a haU of sound money policy." Robert N. Weed, Pu~Usher -----=-==---=--=-----=-:..,.,.-;c---~ -----~-------···---~---~-~·-·-----~-~··---------~~~~._, ..... -=--------------..,.--'.. . . -- • _ DAILY PILOT ... Costa Mesa ... Today's Closing ... EDITION N.Y • .Stocks -· .. :~. 61, ·NO. '137, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ··-"'•! COSTA MESA, CAllFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 7, '.1968 JEN CENTS • 'itizeris Group .OCC Bond Election ... ;,; ";::By moMAS ~'ORTUNE • .,...,. Of ... Dloll)' ,. .... ,,... i :'!iOint Harbor Area-West County citi.zeb,s finapce ~ommlttee Thuf.iday night recommended Orange Coast Jui}.iqi;'College District depart frOm its. traditional pay-as-you-go policy 8nd hold a ·bo nd election. It was suggested the bond amount be in the range of $3. million to $7 .5 mi~Q.q to cover buildiJ:i'g needs for lwo to f~Ve..years. . "The people don't want !rills," warned Charlotte Lyke, a Costa Mesa housewife. "It isn't frills. Don't you think peo- ple are looking !or an excuse to vote no?" asked Paul Phillips, a Hun· tin gt on B~ch banker. "We have to overcome the excuses. That's our mission," said Lloyd Gibbs, a management consultant f·r o m Newport Beach. The board Of trustees will consider UPI Telwl!GNI { ·THROUGHOUT LONG NIGHT, A VIGIL IN ST. PATRICK'S :;.~onor Guard Stands in Cathedral With Robert Kennedy's Body lTvine Meet to StUdy . -. Orange County\ Poverty A day.Jong conference on "Poverty in Orange County" will be held at UC Irvine on Saturday. The conference, sponsored by 20 Oranie' County community service ~l.lJl.~ will focu~ on efforts to break the-~erty cycle. eit(ttty pockets in the county arc lsolli1'1 and invisi ble to m an y resi<t~s. but they do exJst, according to l6e.Conference brochure. A:~ survey of impoverished sec· -· ·=·~- tions of the county showed 10 percent unemployed, 60 percent employed in unskilled jobs and less than 50 percent high school graduates. These poverty poc;kets· are located in Huntington Beach, San Clemente, the Santa Ana•Garden Grove-Fountain Valley area, Orange, Cypre,ss-Buena Park and the Anaheim·Fullerton- Placentia area. There will be four speakers, follow- ed by a panel discussion and then face- to-face "'·orkshops. -:~!t: Speakers will be Supervisor David TE~ SJ N Baker, one of lS members of the Na· -l~Se 1oes ot tional C.mmission on Urban Probleme ..... ~.. appointed by the President: Francis 1'~1-1 f W Jk. • ' · Laird,, ~hairman· of the Aianpower lf~~~e 01' a Jll Development Training Act Advisory -·-··=· .. Council; John Jiminez, principal of a Hctt(.'"\Vould you like to be in William Fullerton sChool with 98 percent H.-NfOhols' shoes today? minority race students, arid Gran.ville Q?A:·llke to have been in them at Peoples, Orange County weUare direc· one-~t Thursday. tor. 'l)i:Sls.year-old machlnls~ ol 1933 Panelists wlU Include two Negroe1, Wtl;l:IJin St., Costa Mua, was arrested two Mexican--American1 artd a realtor on';:.iliii>tcion of sh0fe~£ ~ a representing the Orange · C o-u n t y ~-guifdat . a , '-mm1-.,.C1.,;namberof~eou1n1eree. Hatt;iOC Blvd., stopped him as he left The conference will begin at 9:30 th~)tJJ'e . a .m. in Campus Hall,-Ulo UCI gynl• QjMQ'd Dan flforrls said Nicllots trll!d "(la~iu m. Tlle talk~ and pan e I oll:j(::lf6.97 pair or shoes, le.ft his old discussion will be In the morning. b~ on the display stand in t.heit FolJowing picnic lunch, the audJence p!d,:•and walked out after buylng two will break up into workshops from pa!ijfdl socks. I ;30 until • p.m. ··-· -:...:.--...... .... ~·-·-··-... ne~ Wednesday night the committee's recommendatioo for a bond ls•ue. Recommended for the same! ballot is a proposition to convert an existing 101,.?-cent override now limited to use for coostruction to gent!.ral purpose use. The override funds then could be spent for expenses o( current opera- tion including teacher salaries. The conversion would not cost tax4 payers any more than they now pay. Fifty percent voter approval would be needed. Two-thirds approv1J would be required for bond passage. The current district tax rate Is 54 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. Sixteen 1persons from the Orange Coast ana Golden West areas who volui:iteered for the finance com- mittees were unanimous in agreeing that a bond issue and tax conversion is the way to go. The alternative to a bond issue -an override election -was ·discarded. 5 Hours for 5 Seconds Thousands By LOUIS CASSELS U .. SMll .. Ectllor NEW .YORK -The people who touched Bobby .Kennedy's hand in life reached out Friday to touch his casket in death. By the hundreds or thousands they Came -rich and poor, black and White, old and youn g, male and female1 immigrant and native-born - a vast polyglot stream of humaIDty united by a common sorrow. Undeterred by 90-degree beat which turned midtown Manhattan into a bake-oven, they waited in line for upwards of fi ve hours in order to spend five seconds filing past the bier in St. Patrick's Cathedral where Sen. Robert F. Kennedy lay in state. The throng of people wanted to say goodbye to the 42-year-old senator whose brilliant c.areer~ was cut short by an assassin Wednesday in Los Angeles wa s so great that authorities Memories of two override defeats ot 1966, surfaced in remarg that over- ride sounds like a foul wOrd and that it implies an overspending of the budget. The board r:ould call a bond election for mid-September, -the day of the general election Nov. 5, or anytime after late December. lt was argued a bond election is needed for the district to mil.'<e use of state funds. Proposition 2, which pass· ed on this week's primary ballot, re· Mourn had to abandon plans to cut off the procession at 10 p.m, They announced that the great neo-Gothic Roman Catholic Cathedral on Fifth A venue would remain open all night. It was the biggest outpouring of grief in the big city's history. Funeral services -foi the senator wiJl be held in the cathedral at 10 a!m. Saturday. All of the 2,300 seats will be filled with dignitaries, friends, rela- 25 More File Kennedy Slaying Noise Protests Over Airport Names of 25 more property owners who filed anti-airport ·elainul with 'the County Board of Supervisors "Tttur'i~ day, bringing grand tota'4f alleged damages to $2.24 million, were releas- ed today. The. total ot 69 · angry property owners claim jets fl ying over homes and -undeveloped lands are causing losses through noise, exhaust fum es, combustion debris and other nuisance 'factors. Claims running from $250,000 for a firm owning 13 pieces of property in the West Bay area to one claim for on· ly $5.000 on Cliff Drive are in cluded in 'he ,big package. Supervisors will consider the claims ·--uesday and will undoubtedly reject '1em and rerer them to the County ·'lunsel. as was done with two ·evious groups of claimants. This is normal procedure in any ·1im lodged with the county. Un ique in Tllursday's list were two 1roperty owners in Orange, seve n 111iles from Orange County Airport, but asserting jets make a landing ap- proach over tlleir homes. They are Mr. and Mrs. Walter (See AIRPORT, Page Z) 2 Youths Nabbed For Purse Snatch In Costa Mesa Coroner Two of _,. 11> • ._ ... 1' .... GRAND JURY WITNESS Dishwasher J11u1 P1r1z Calls Victims . ., , .. ,,;;. ~,.. .r The district atOOrney today' released the following namee of those , sum· moned to appear before the county grand jury during its investigation of the assassinati on of Sen . Robert r·. Kennedy: The list included two of the five persons wounded with Kennedy : Ira Goldstein and Irwin Stroll. The latter was wheeled into the hall of justice on a hospital-type bed. Another witness, Henry Carreon, reportedly met Sirhan at a target shooting range in the San Gabriel Valley, a few days before Kennedy was shot. Roosevelt Grier and Rafer Johnson, two athletes \vho were with Kennedy when he Was sh1.1: and who helped cap- ture the suspected assassin, were on the list but they accompanied the senator's body to New York and ap- parently were still in the east. Also summoned were David Es- quith, who took Stroll ·to the hospital when he was shot. He later was ex· cused. ·from testifying. Also called were two radio car of- ficers, Arthur Placencia. aind T. R. White, who were the first patrol car to r each the scene and took the suspect into custody. Others included four Ambassador Hotel employes: dishwasher Jesus Perez, Eddie Minasisan, Vincent di Pierro and assistant banquet manager Karl Uecker; seven am bu I an c e drivers: Harold Burba, J\1:'.'"a x Behrman, Robert Hulsman, Jerrold · (See HEARING, Page 2) Witnesses who carerully de scribed two youths and a car involved ln a $14.60 strongarm robbery in a C<_>sta Mesa shopping center Thursday !11ght aided police in capturing a pair of suspects. Catherine T. Palmer, 31. o[ 915 \V. \Vilson St., a former Costa Mesa Police Department clerk, :;aid she was attacked .jn the lot at 2701 J~arbor Blvd .. aner making a night bank deposit. Schools Plan Full Use < Of Federal .Aid Funds One youth tore her· purse away and shoved her to the ground, then jumped into a car which roared out of the lot with its lights out. police said .. Using in formation from w1tnesse.s, Sgt. John Regan and Patrolm.an Da vid Hayes stopped a suspect vehicle after following it from Newport ~oulevard and Victoria Street a short distance. Robert P. Irvine. 19. and Robert .T. \Vertz, 21 , both of 177 E. 2:2nd St.. v:ere arrested in front of their llome and booked on suspicion of strongarm rob· bcry. Mesa Church Plans Mass for Kennedy Harbor Area school officials today are prepared to make full use of $158,730 in federal aid for which the Newport-Mesa District is eligible. A year ago school autttorities did not use most <>( the federal money available for underprivileged students because they had not yet designed the programs Cor it. This year the di strict is not planning to default any of the funds . PurchaBe of musical instru ment s for six Costa Me98 elementary schools is one way the money will be spent. The biggest part of Ute federal money, llowever, will go for salaries of teachers of special programs. Programs are to be broadened A special requiem mass in honor oi beyond summer p r e s c h o o 1 , kin· S<!l Rdber t P' Kenn~·-derprten-follow-+h·l'-0-""IJ-l>.,-ln· duci.oo at St. JOiln the Baptist Catholic diViduallzed instruction in grades bne Qhuroh Costa Mesa Saturday at 10 through i\iX and a mobile library. To ' ' be added are jonior high remedial a.m. 1< ... r. Anttion.y McGowan also an-reading and mathematics and an In· n'tntnced U1at a 7::10 maS5 at the strumental mUiic program . f o r church t<l'lilJht will be orfered to the elementary studentll. skldn senator. The funds will gl't lo six target \ l elementary schools -W h i t t i e r , Pomona , Lindbergh, Wilson, Canyon and Bay View --and to Rea Intermediate School. These are the schools with the most students from families with annual in· come of $3,000 or less. Once the school is identified, all students at the school share in the extra attention. In most cases, said Assistant Supl Norman Loats, these schools don't have tlle musical instruments that other schools in the district have. Objectives o! the federal assistance programs -are to improve t b e dilldren's self image and cbange their negative attitude toward s c b o o I thereby improving attendance and raisinc the students' educational and oCctJpQUonal aspirations. Stoek MarkeU. NEW YORK (AP) -Ttie stock market's advance was trimmed by preweekend profit taking this. af· ternoon. <See quotationi., Pages &-9). .. - -------·-- - quires the district to put up matching funds on a 50-50 basis . Supt. Norman Watson said he believes that because Orange Coast's campuses are so underbuilt for the fast.growing enrollment the dlstrict might qualify for SS million of the $66 million state issue. He said the Golden West campus in Huntington Beach, built for a max- imum of l,SOO students, will cram in (See occ BONDS, Page Z) RFI( tives and other guests invited by the family. The two men who were Kennedy's rivals for the Democratic presidential nomination -Vice President Hubert Ji . 1-lumphrey and Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy -said -"they would attend. President Johnson's plans wert n<>t announced, but no one would be surpris~ if he showed up. Following the funeral mass, the (See MOURNERS, Page 2) 'Round Trip' Cliase Jails Two Mesans A pair <>f Costa Mesa men , jailed to. day following a wild motorcycle-auto chase, might just as easily )l,jve gotten to the slammer without goln·g via Hun .. tington Beach and Fountain Valley_ wasting au that fuel. Hugh C. Barnett.· 31. and Daryl G. Moore. 29, both {Jf 2518 Newport Blvd .• \Vere booked on suspicion of petty theft after the inciden t. whicli ended up back where it started. Motorcyclist Richard A. Squier, 21, of 20101 J1arbor Isle Lane, Huntington Beach, said he was leaving Kona Lanes, at 2699 Harbor Blvd., when he saw the two men. He sil id the y were stealing motorcy• cle helmets, gloves and goggles worth S84. which had been left hanging on his an d a companion's motorcycles. Squier told investigators he jum ped onto his machine -helmetless -and roared off after the men. who were hC'aded north on Harbor Boulevard . Squier. a 1-loag Memorial Hospital (See CHASE, Page 2) GOING TO CAMP? CHECK THE PILOT There are at least 43 ways to find the fun in the sun thi s summer if you are a boy or girl -or an entire family -looking for a day camp, overnight in the mountains or other "summer camp" experience. The DAILY PILOT Saturday will devote almost an entire page to listing the 43 programs available to summer campers from the Orange Coast area. Check the list and make your plans. Orange Coast \l'enther Don't look up at the sky, you ntay get splashed in the eye, cautions forecaster Frank Ernst. Along with our normal cloudi- ness, a bit of "local drizzle" is on tap for the coast this week· end. INSIDE TODAY Carn ival r.ime in Corona de& i\lar tnakes for delightful pic- tu res and a reminder that there is nearly tUwa~s .something special to do along the Orange Coast, see WEEKENDER Maga- zine today. ...... C•llferlo .. Cl•Mffltf ._ ·--DHtll Mite• l!dl"NI P•M -..,. ..... Plrt. C•llt ·~-4.1111 LU-. MaUM• Jl\ttlll\ll llo\e.,._ oui.. Mut111I Ftlllft ..,,,..,,., """ Otlfltl C11111.., .. le . DAILY PILOT ....._P .. e I AIRPORT .•• Adamt, of 5« S. Swidler Place, •t6,000 and Mr. and Mrs. Donald w. ~. ol llel 5. Swldlar Place, n claim $:!2,000 lo dama,ees. Otheri llllDI clalm> lor the lirsl Ume 11lurlday Included: Mr. and Mrs. Steve Asahlno, 1323 Ashford Lane, Newport B e 1 c h , .$28,IXXl; Mr. and Mrs. David Barnes, 1310 E stelle Lane, Newport Beach, 125.000 : Mr. and Mrs. Rlchitd W. Beamish, 13'1 Estelle Lane, $3?.500. Mr. and lltrs. David J. Bunnell Jr., 1301 Santiago Drive, Newport Beach, 13S.OOO: Mr. and Mn. Alvia 6. Cox, 2512 SE Mesa Drive, Santa Ana Heights. '50,000: Mr. and Mrs . Frant r:. Dische, 1824 Leeward L an e, Newport Beach, $25,000. Mr. and Mrs. Waller J. Koch, lll2 Cambridge Lane, Newport Beach, S25.!lll; Mr. and Mrs. Clude J. McCall, 1724 Terrapin Way, Newport Buch, $43.000 : Helen M. McCray 1712 Tu~ rapin Vr'ay, $9.380; M. C. McCray, 1236 Somerset Lane, Newport Beach, $25,000. f\1r. and Mrs. A. I. Melde11 1326 Hampshire Clrc~. Newport mach, S.fO.OOO; Mr. and Mrs .. Donald P. O\vers, 1724 Marlin Way, Newport Beach, r.M>.000: Mr. and Mr11 . Raul T. Ryan. 20181 Kline Drive. Santa Ana Hei ~hts : $18.000. Mr. and Mrs. Clint on Rygel, 1115 Somerset Lane, $25,000; Mr . and Mrs. Robert E. Schaefer , 1707 Terrapin \Vay, $15,000 ; Robert L. Werkheiser, 1600 Santiago Drive, Newport Beach, $15.tro. ' ' Francis M. Delaney, lBM Windward Lane, Newport Beach, $29,000 ; W. T. Dinsmore, 2905 Silver Lane, NeWport Beach. $10,00l: Mr. and Mrs. Marlo E. J arman. 1130 llighland Dr Ive, Newport Beach. $20,000 : Mr. and Mrs. Paul G. McManigal, 1946 Windward Lane, $30,000 : Patricia Ann Simons, 2223· Golden Circle, Newport Beach. $20,000 ; John R. Kelley, 29Z1 Catalpa St., Newport Beach, $15,000; Lyca Land Co., 1617 Westcliff Drive, 13 pieces of property in West Bay area, $250,000. Fram Page 1 MOURNERS. • • body will be taken to Washington by train for burial late Saturday af. ternoon in Arlington N at i o n a I Cemetery. Robe,rt Kennedy's grave will be near that of his older brother, President John F. KeMedy, who also was cut down by an assassin's bullet in the brain, just four and a half years ago. Friday was the.-litlle guy 's day to honor a man who was born to wealth but always had a tremendous feeling for the poor and oppressed. As they passed the A f r I c a n mahogany casket at a rate of 6,000 an hour, some made the sign of the crOliS or genuflected. Bilt the mos t characteristic gesture was to stretch forth a band and touch the lid of the closed caaket. There ts an old Irish superstition that touching a casket keeps the devil from troubling the soul of the deceas- ed. But many who patted, rubbed, caressed or kissed Kennedy's casket were plainly not of Irish descent. For them, it seemed to be purely a gesture of affection -another manifestation of the Kennedy mystique that caused crowds to stampede around him . trying to touch h.im , during h.is short and explosive presidential campaign. The senator's widow, Ethel, preg- nant with their 11th child, came to the cathedral at noon with the three eldest children: Kathl een, 17, Joseph C. Ill. 16, and Robert Jr., 14. They knelt in a fro nt pew while a priest, offering a maes for the dead, intoned the prayer: "May li'gbt eternal shine upon hlm. 0 Lord ... be merciful to the soul of your faithful aervant Robert." N"us. Kennedy, whose trademark is a hairbow, wore a black one for this 'iad occasion. Her eyes were wide and staring. For her, it ·was only the mid· ,x>int of the nightmare. The casket rested on a bier draped in purple, in the crossing of the cathedral, where the wide center aisle lntersecta the dde transepts. It was flanked by six candles in tall bronze holders. A single wreath of white lilies lay at the foot. Later in the afternoon ILOT C:..... W.... CeUfenkl lo .. •rt N. Wttd --1110111•1 Kte~il ·-Thflll•t A. Mtrplrtl111 INtlMW.. IEclltol" J1cl: R. C•rl.., r111l Hit••" 11it1:-M9nHiff AdWrtl•lftt Olrtder c ....... Office llD Weit a,y Strett M•lli"t A44r•t•: r.o. 111~ 1560 92626 N-1 IMcflt J211 W. hltlM loult v•nl • .. ~,.• .... (ft· 112 •-1 .ll•Hlllt ~ '-<Ill » Sift *'"" • ~ Tiltl t ·~·-·-•-u Cubs.fro1n Costa Mesa Pack No. 373 ar.e pictured with the skill game they will have on the Midway to catch a ll comers. The boys built it themselves. As the tennis ball runs its course the game is rock- ed, making customers yell ''Tilt." The boys are, from left, Dan Ogden, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ogden; Kirk LangdaJe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Langdale; Tom Meng, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Meng; and Mike Goar, son of Mr.-and Mrs. Lowell Goar. (Comp1ete Scout-0-Rama story, inore photos on Page 7.) Girl 'Mad,' Takes It Out With Car 0 11 Blocl\: Wall Linda S. Trujillo had her!el! a big bash early today. In fact, police said, she had herself five of them. Officer Gary Blaylock was dispatch- "' Race Car Drive1· Dan Gur11cy Hit With Di voJ'cc Suit Famous Harbor Area race car driver-builder Dan Gurney, who flnilih · ed second in the Memorial Day 500 Mile classic at Indianapolis, was sued for divorce Thursday after a 16-year marriage. Mrs. Arleo J . Gurney, of 1221 Starboard Lane, Corona del Mar, to<>k action ·agaJnst her husband, after a separbtion of more than three months. A suit filed by Ne,vport Beach at- torney J\lurroy Cbotincr in Orange County Superior Court charges the hand£01ne speedster with extren1e cruelty. Mrs . Gurney alleges that he r hus· band inflicted without just cause grievous mental and physical suf· fering whlch destroys for her the legitimate aim or the marriage, the suit says. The Gurneys' four children, John 12, Lyndee, 10, Daniel, 7 and James, 5, are with Mrs. Gurney and she wants to keep custody, according to the suit. She also wants financial support for them and for herself. Fro1n Page 1 OCC BONDS • • • over 3,000 students next fall and can expect 12,500 ctudents knocking on-the door within 10 years. "\Ve don't actually turn students away,'' Dr. \Vatson said. "But because we have postponed building and haven't hired any new instructors classes fill up. Then students don't enroll because they can't get the pro· gran1s they want. "In effect, we are dii:couraging them from continuing their education. And remember, 95 percent of parents say, 'My child will go on to college.''' It was decided by the finance com- mittee a bond issue is needed to tide the district over for a couple of years. Halecrest Ouh BoaJ'd Ex panded Certain revisions ln the structure of Costa Mesa's Halecrest Club board ol directors have been announced by president Da\11l IA!lghton. The board has beetr expanded from &evtn to nine members, with John Carlisle handlln& ftnacniaJ aff•lrs and Kurt Hanaler u slgned as flnanclal secNitary. Blll-~'erguaon-11 heod ol i!'OW>d• anJ maintenance for the non-profit. membership club raclllty and Phil Ross will act as hl.$ aJdt. In are•s of 1afety, securlt)', repair and Ule like. Anne Smith will be official keeper or .the mlnutec, while Matt WaldeUch will heed youth affairs and Wamn Attwton wUI coonlinaUI a mu ter calendar ot special events and parties . ed to the area of 17th and Babcock Streets after neighbors reported a reckless driver. Not wrecklet;s. Reekless. The patrolman said he found a 1959 sedan which had been rammed five times into a concrete block wall, caus- ing an estimated $700 in damage along a 70-foot stretch. While he was at the scene. Lind a S. Trujillo. 27, of 2222 Canyon Drive ap- proached and ide nti£ied J1erself as driver of the automobile, Blaylock said. His first question was inevitable. "l was just mad at people," ex- plained the woman. who was not ar- rested, but left to_ negotiate with owners of the wall. Mesa Verde's Adopted Marine R eported 'W ell' "We're happy to r eport that he's well," Scott Paulsen, a teacher at Mesa Verde Elementary School said of one of the four young Marines in Vietnam which his sixth grade class has adopted as honorary big brothers. '11!.e students have been sending let- ters and packages to each of the Marines every week since Christmas. Recently they learned that Jlm Boully, one of the four young men had been wounded and each sent him a card. The other men. Bob LaPlante. Harold Folk and John Rich , as well as Boully correspond with the students weekly. Over 50 packages have been sent by the class to their ''big brothers." and the Marines promiSe to visit the youngsters ''sometime a r o u n d Christmas.'' .Yo utl1 Charged In Tl1ef t Spree Richard Allen Kacy, 19, of Santa Ana. was in Orange County Jail today in lieu of $18,750 bail pending ar· ralgrunent on charges of burglarizing a string of Newport Beach businesses. The tcen·a~er was arrested at a restaurant where he worked after detectives Ken Sn1ith and A r b Campbell said they u n c o v e r e d evidence linking him to the thefts. The burglaries. occurring wiUtin a 24-hour period, involved the rlning of offices which netted the thief several hundred dollars, police said. Kacy became a suspect in the case nfter his name was mentioned by one of the businessmen whose offices was hit. Little Bo-P.eep Ca n Find Sheep !-lJWo.llo-.PeepJs still bereJt ol her lost llvestock, she should have made it out to Gleneaglel5 TetTace in Costa Mesa Thursday. Mrs. Martha T. Taylor. or 1179 Gleneagles Terrace, reported to poUcc that her backyard was full of woollies. and not the crawling worm kind. By the Ume lnve1tlgator1 arrived, however, the sheep had been moved. occ Salary Holdout I ·Te~~r.s Seek More ; GWC A ccepts Pact Orege Coast College 1nstructor5 to- . ~ay are )\~gout for higher salaries elfe11 though teicheri at Golden West Collep baie come-to tenns-with the junior college district administration. fn the end , salary ich~ules for the ,s~ter cam~es tn Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach wiU have to t>e th~ same. • Dlib'ict1trus~ej hive postponed un: OCC' Refuses ill \Vednesday consideration of the two salary propcsals. Golden \Vest Instructors are wllung to settle for an average 4'11 perceut salary increase worked out with Supt. Norman Watson. The ·Orange Coast Co.Uege academic s~nate is u king for an average eight percent pay raise. When the separate proposals were presented to trustees last w~k. Dr. \Vat.son urged the board to favor U1c lower Golden West "proposal. Never before In the ~year history of the district has the admlnlstratlon been unable to come to agreement with the Instructors on salaries, Watson said. ' He remarked that a 4'ii percent r abe would amount t4 a cost-of-living. ln· creaae and aaid that ls all the district Ja prepared to pay. Barthol~mae's Attorney ' . ' I j ' • y n ' .. d b e '• ' . l, To Sign Pact On Seat Taxe s Sµes Estate fo:U .$100,700 J -11>e Beverly Hills attorney ~ho auc-Superior Court. -) With fresh hope of winning a victory' in Sacr<:mcn.t.o, Orange Coast J unior College District trustees have again declined to sign. a sent ·tax agreement with the new Saddleback Junior College DI.strict serving the Laguna Beach, Tustin and A-ti.Ssion Viejo areas. The agreement was r e j e c t e d because OCC trustees. don't want to take any chance of jeopardi!ing a bill pending in the Legilsature. They worry that legislators v.·ould get the mistaken idea they are willing to give ground . They are not. The agreement was proposed to trustees by OCC Supt. Norman Watson to make it easier for Saddleback transfer studerrt3 to register with the Orange Coast District. .\Vritten into it w~ a loophole to allow for change Jn 1egislation. Jt stipulates the seat tax agreement be subject to provisions of the law as it shall exist on Nov. 15. 196:1. OCC trustees in rejecting the agree- nient last we ek said they do not wish to make students pawns in the con- troversy, but they think the burden or making enrollment easier lies with Saddleback and the Orange Courrly School Board. Admission of Saddleback trmisfer students is n<>w an involved process requiring stops with both junior col· loge districst and at the county schools office. The agreement proposed by Dr. Watson has never been su bmitted to the Sa-::ldJeback board. Mesau lo Gr a dua te David Bihler, son of Mr. Harry Bihler of Costa Mesa will be among the 42 seniors presented high school diplomas at the San Rafael Military Academy commencement exercises Sunday. cessfuJly defended tbe widow and The stabb ing death of the elder sister-in·law of slain Newport Beach Ba~tholo~ae shocked the Southland, sportsman William Bartholomae in w~1cb avHily followed the sensational I I illi. , , trial of Manola Gallardo as a ruspect 1964 has· ·sued the mu t m on8.ll'e t in the caae. estate for $100,700 in legal fees. 1 J Paul cciruso flied the suit in Orange Caruso finally won acqultta, of the Tb d Spanish-speaking woman, who stood County superior Court urs ay • trial on a manslaughter charge for naming Security First Na~~nal Bank nearly tWo weeks several months after defend411t, as apeclal admUllstrator of the slaying the estate of Charles A. Bartholomae, · William's late brother. Caruso won dismlt"Sal of charges against Carmela Bartholomae, widow of the wealthy oilman, and an ac· quittal of Manola Gallardo, sister-In- law and housekeeper at the bayfront mansion. Both were arrested and charged in connection with the mystery-cloaked butcher-knife slaying of W i 11 i a. m Banholomae nearly 41h years ago. Caruso claims Security First Na- tional Bank is indebted to him for servicer reridefid dW'lng lils-defense of the Spanish-born sisters, plus other legal work for Charles Bartbolomae. The latter died Nov. 22, 1964, of a heart ailment and administration of his estate is pending in Orange County From Page I HEARING. •• Hemingway, Richard Walker, Thomas RaWff and Donald Rus. One witness, who said he was a porter at the hotel where Kennedy was shot but who did not give bi.a name begore going Into the witness room, . told newsmen he saw the accused gun- man at the scene half an hour before the shooting. The accused asked several times if Kennedy would pass through the area, the witness said, and "looked worried, but not nervous ... I didn't l5ee anyone with him." Another witness was Irwin Stroll , one of the wounded. Shot in the left leg, he arrived in a wheel chair. Another was Ira Goldstein, shot in tlMI hip, who arrived limplog. From · Page CHASE ... 1 ; . ' ' • I , I orderly, &aid the chase. went Nia the San Diego Freeway and a nudlher o( surface streeta in Fountain Valley, as the men tried to ditch him. ~ In fact, he said, it went p&st thi. FoUntain Valley Police Depiftment, WJlere-be stopped to ask he1pr1p- turing the suspected thieves, g through tracts ·and empty fiel . A Fountain Valley patrolm~ joined the chase, but pulled over th• wrong car, so Squier continued the pt4sult on his own. JI Discouraged by failure to slt.ke the dogged cyclist, Squier told po~e, the two men roared back to KonC Lanes and put the riding equipment with the other machine and left again. : Squier nagged down Costa-Mesa Police Officer Ted Sorenson -talmost immediately and he checQd the suspect vehicle, whlcb was stofiped by that time at Harbor Boulevard and Peterson Way. The pair -denying any knowledge of the incident -were gracious about allowing Squier and the patrolman to check their car for any loot. There, on the !loor, according to the delighted Squier, wh o placed Barnell and Moore under citizen's arrest, were his motorcycle gloves. He told police they must have fallen out of his helmet as the pair rushed to return the equlpment to his bdddy's motorcycle. After first denying any coMectlon with the incident, the auspecta refuaed to make any further atatement. · r DREXAL SALE FEATURING DREXEL'S ESPERANTO COLLECTION ' ALSO ON SALE •.. DREXEL FRENCH COUNTRY MANNER-DREXEL'S INDEX IXCLUSIYI DIAl.DS POii: HINUllON-DllXIL -HRITA .. to DAYS NO INTHIST-LONllR mMS AVAILULI ON APPROVID CllDIT NEWPORT HACH 641·1050 1717 Wfttdlff DriH INTllllO•S l'rof-ltotorlet LAGUNA llACH Dotlto... J45 Nri c-1 ljwy. 4"4°615! A-e-AID-HSID Ol'I N N IDAY ~IL I ,.._ Tell .,_ .. .., .t Or.,. C""" 140.l t'J { , I ~··--·---,.---·~··-------~· ...... ~·~·~-~..,.,•r··~--·--.... .--..--,.r-·...,,.~.~..-~ --.. ---..... ---~ " DAILY· PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • Homes for the Eld~rl y . ; . Should a handful of elderly women, enjoying Utelr Armed with statistics from tlu1>oghout Oraqe twlllgbt years in a homelike atmo&pbere; be forcl>d to County, one woinan told the council :Monday th.i .,.,,Y move at the wishes of a majority ot lh8lr heigbbors·? clUes allow up to five or• six guesti without req•"~ .. ., This was the decision faced recenUy by the Costa -~~ Mesa City Council over Mrs. 'Helen M. Slezak's guest ..a conditional use permit boarding · home at 316 Bucknell Road and the. aaswer As a result of subs~uent discussion, the &s~ ' was a unanimous: No. ., Me_sa City Councll 1>rde.red. a.revieW of their ordJbnce( .- Under the guest boa'rding: nome concept, licensed which· could lead 4> r e vi a i o n and perhaps ·1111 · by Ute Orange County Department o! Social Welfare, •trlngency. • 1 elderly persons who· can caie for tllemselves but need The residential area concept of providing homes only limited living quarters and a sense Of belonging for the elderly where they can be happy and feel a part to the household are afforded a way of havi ng fuller, o! the household is encouraged by the county and shOuld homelike lives. be Implemented by each· city . Costa Mesa bas about 20 sucn tacllities, nearly aJJ in residential areas. Protesting neighbors emphasized Monday they don't dislike the Slezak operation. They just dislike its location. Essentially, they seem to think it will cause them to lose money on their lifetime investments. Property devaluation, incompatibility with the neighborhood and alleged profit-making enterprise in a residential area were ·among reasons marshalled by the opposition. · A homeowner with his life's savings invested has a right, if not a duty, to look after it, but opponents of the Slezak guest home hadn't done their homework very well. Land values in Costa· Mesa, it was noted. have gone steadily upward over-the years; the well-kept home is attractive and has not been altered, and noise and traf· fic problems do not exist. · Neighbors in the immediate vicinity spoke in behalf of Mrs. Slezak's guest home. Some who protested pre- sumably were unaware it was there until enlisted for the City Council showdown. All f or a Fine Cause It started-out beca .. l1se an old-Umer named Bob S~es figured Costa Mesa ought to have a celebra,tion of its owD. Under the ~er of the local Lions Club, it became the Costa Mesa Fish Fry. The late Mr. Skiles was gifted with a wide range of im.aginaqon, so possibly he wouldn't have been too sur· pnsed to have seen the scores of last week's 23rd An- nual f.'ish Fry. But ·some of the rest of us can't help but be a J1tUe awed by the success of the eommunlty's sin· gle biggest annual event. . ·The Fish Fry this year grossed more than $70,000. This means the Lions Club will have something like $20,· 000 .to pour into local activities, chiefly into youth or- ganizations that desperately need financial assistance. '. • .;.~ ~4,~ ~~*' ' One woman who spoke Monday said homes in the tract are currently going at quite profitable prices compared to when they were built and sold. The Lions devote hundreds of hours of their time to .. mak_ing the event a success and the time they contrib- ute 1s, for the most part, money from their own pock· ets. They are to _be congratulated especially this year to: the s~oothness with which the Fish Fry ran and with the high quality of the parade and attractions. c 'l'D Ll!(E TO WITlll>AAW ~ REQUtH f~ A WE~ ~ • 9NJA.~ One of Ironies Of Our Time Physical tests given to European and American schoolchildren have shown that the European children ·are far more physically fit than ours. despite our greater resources in fo<><j and our greater emphasis on sports. There are two culprits here, I think: the automobile and 1he telephone. Unlike my gemration, the American child today tu• l1ese as substitutes for his legs. . I must have walked 10 miles a day when I was a boy; I doubt if the modern child walks 10 blocks a week. And regblar Walkirig is prob.ably the best and cheapest :form of keeping, fit. ONE OF THE IRONIES of our time is that youngsters are provided with elaborate alld exoensive athletic pro· grams at school ind elsewhere -and then they are bused or chauffeured to the sites of their endeavors. If they walked back and forth regularly, they wouldn't need such involved pro- grams. The telephone, for all its usefulness, Is another enemy of physical fitness 'among the young. I don't think I telephoned a friend more than Ol).ce a month ; if I wanted to see someone, I walked or biked over to his house. Nobody dreamed of chauffeuring me as a boy, and I rarely took a bus , ex- cept to go downtown once in a while . JN J\JY EARLY TEENS, my closest friend was Saul Bellow. the novelist. He and I lived about a mile and a half ' from each other. 1iagonally across a park. We would spend the late af- ternoon or evening together, and then walk each other home. When we got to my house, we decid- ed there was still more to talk about, so we would turn around , and I would walk him back to his house. And, often , we would turn around once again, and he would walk me baek to mine. We would sometimes do thi11 three or four times. and think nothing of it -·and do it three or four times a week. HE WAS ON THE track team fan excellent miler), and I was on the te-n- nis team; and we both got so much ex- ercise walking that we were always in top· form, without the necessity for calisthenics or special programs. Our school, in fact, didn't provide any. It is ,absurd to spend so much •for athletic and fitness programs today, and at the same time allow children easy access to the telephone, the car or the bus, when they could just as easily (and more healthfully) walk to school or to a fri end's house. But they seem to have enormous energy for everything -except a simple . six- block stroll down the street. The mere lho1,1gbt of that exhausts their im- agination and brings on symptoms of immense fatigue. Telling a He From a S he It' is nice to kinow, wh ere you're with another person, what sex that person is. Men. for example, traditionally feel more free to he themselves, are more at ease, even speak in a different man· ner i1 they are in th~ company of other men. They are also -usually more boisterous and less boyish. Women, on the other hand, when in the company of women show just the opposite traits. They are more ill at ease, less free to be themselves, and in many cases profoundly less feminine and fun-worthy . ONE OF THE increasing problems of civilization is how to tell one sex from the other. The passion for con- formity appears to be gradually destroying many of the recognizable differences between the sexes. Here are a few guidemarks that help the interested bystander distinguish the hims from the hers: If it likes while swigging something straight fro'm a paper tup, to stand in Dear Gloomy ·Gus: the backyard and brag aboui the barbecue sauce it has concocted , it is a man. If it would rather go to an in- door cocktail party and gab what it doesn't know about baseball and politics, it is a woman. Does it punch you in the ribs while it tells a merry story? Has to be a buck , Does it place a soft but infinitely restraining hand upon your arm while it tells you its troubles? Has to be a dOe. THE ONE THAT says , "Let's have another one." can be safely described as male. The one that inquires, "Oh, do you really think l should ?" is un- doubtedly" female. Out to the incinerator to deliver the garbage with a grim air of resigncftion trudges the husband. Oul to the in- cinerator with a bur11t of oratory, "1'hls Isn't the way it happens in the apartment next door -after all, SHE is married to a civilized man," walks a burdened wife . Does it accept love a5 a bond and a mystery that must be taken for granted? That's the eternal lad . Must It be assured of love and doe, It de. mand that love's mystery be ex- pressed ln word1, however lame and unhelpful, 11 well u in conduct, however eloquently ·mutual? That's the eternal lass. A Reader Updates an Old Cliche To the Editor : I am writing this letter in the midst of monumental matters which enter my mind including personal, social, national, and worldwide conditions. While listening to radio reports of Sen~tor Kennedy's e<>ndition, I am n!mtnded of a letter which I drafted for submission to the DAILY PILOT about six months ago with a theme of "the importance of the individual" with a thread of "thinking basic and using cliches to guide the individual and the subsequent society toward an ullimate desirable situation for all ." I did not submit that Jetter because in careful rev:iew I came to the con· clusion that · we are now confronted with a national disease which might be termed an almost impenetrable in- dividual egotism. TO BE MORE explicit, I felt I had . something valuable to say but realized it would probably be met with argu~ ment, criticism. and controversy rather than the consideration for which it was intended. Listening to the radio now and hear- ing how Congress will P.xpedite actions to try to control the use of weapons and how perhaps millions of taxpay- ers' dollars will be sj>ent for the pro- tection of presidential candidates and their families , etc., etc.. I w i 11 use · the same conclusion as the previous letter and hope it is not · too subtle for anyone to understand. There is one cliche I have always felt was an excellent one.' that Is "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." However. I think it is out- dated and should read "a J>Qund of prevention is worth a megaton of cure." R. W. MOORE Barking Do91 To the Editor: Since S. G. Undine (who wrote about people with inferiority complexes who leave their dogs home alone to bark - a connection I still don't see the logic of) is· unlisted in the phone book. I cannot tell which of my neighbors he is -the one whose small ch i I d screams outside my window, the one whose son plays rock musi<! at full volume. the one whose electric saw purrs on wee~ends . the one whose wife honk s loudly when she wants the garage door opened, the one whose power boat warm11 up at six a.m., or the one whose teen-age son regards our small island as a speed· way . TRUE, I AM GUILTY of leaving my poor dog alone far more than I would If I had no other purpose in life than to make him happy (he's a do g, not a "kid "). I work. visit family and friends, go ou t on dates. and fre - quently travel However, I am sUll far more quiet in the conduct of my life than are my neighbors. If they'll agree not to disturb my sleep ever again, l'U agree to let someone hire a dog.sitter for me. SERENA PAX Accorded an Aura of Legitimacy The Preachm-ent of.Violence Following aTe exceTpts from on editorial in the June 6 edition of The Wall StTeet JOurnal: • • • It there is something radically wrong with contemporary society, we think in fairness it should be noted that it is not pec:uliar to America. Look pllBctically anywhere in the world and you find violence, stupe· tying irrationality and incipient anarchy. Another way of putting it is that if there is sickness it is not just in any particular society or nation ; it is in man himself. Beyond all that, we think a special responsibility devolves on what may loosely be called the intellectual com· munity , the people who set the fashion s in opinion. • • • IN THE DIS1'0RTED rationale of many of them, vjolence is accorded an aura of legitin1acy. This attitude is tloubtless rooted in the fact that for a generation or more a m a r k e d pennissiveness has ~en encouraged in home, school and judicial stan· dards. Not surprisingly, ours is beeoming. and not just here in America, increasingly an age when an ything goes. and more and more that is corning to include actual crime. Now intellectuals may be able to make fine distinctions between the kind of violence which finds French- men r..ipping up paving stones and hurling them at each other and the kind expressed in the shooting of an American Senator. (From some of the foreign comments on the "shocking conditioosi' lll America. you might thin~ the current French orgy of violence and anarchy had never ~ex­ isted.) But psychopaths don't n1ake . distincti ons ; they are inevitably stimulated by the general condoning of violence . AND MAKE NO MISTAKE, it is not only being condoned but applauded by opinion-moulders. ~nisters q(. God have been heard advocating violence under certaln conditions in auch " causes as civil rights. Other in· tellectuals justify the violence at Columbia University as a u11eful ad· vancer of social progress. These men are to he blamed for th'e precept and example they set, not least the en- couragement they give to the derang- ed among us . Most people of course do not accept these concepts. Indeed, their reacUon to. a specific crime and to violence in general is one of shocked disbelief. Still the moral confusiOOs and. the resulting disorder are undeniably spreading. THERE IS LITERALLY no way, in any case, to prevenl crimes like that at Los Angeles Wednesday morning. Nor is there any easy way to see how man's drives, in an age of violence, are to be redirecte<I to ·better purposes. But at least the leaders of, opinion can stop the preachment of violence and anarchy. They can begin -and it is high time -to reassert the urgent claims of order and reason for the safety of each of us and for the sake of society .as a Whole. Our Roles as Farmer Brown By ELLSWORTH L. RICHARDSON Minl1ter, The Neighborhood Congrel;attonal · Cbufch Laguna Beach Let's ga back East to the f-arm! It is springtime -the best time of all the year in that part of the country. The roads have humps in them -the ice has caused open fissures in the road. There is a breach, a sign of winter's wrath, her hoary breath! And spring? The men at work repairing the breach! Swolle n brooks fed by winter snows have in their wanderlust broken over the banks .and have found new river beds. Instead of making the turn in the bend as it did last August, the stream has now shot across the field where in August high-ta1seled crowns of corn stood and wagged their silly heads! FARMER BROWN is now at work repairing ihe breach! Some careless hunters , some heartless skiers have removed the top rails of fences and ' Farmer Brown must repair the fen ces before the cows are let loose . Yes. winter has left its scars! • 1 In other places ttiere. are open breaches : 11ome friendships have been torn asunder; some are-only held by slender tendrils of hope , of pride. We all have roles to play as Farmer Brown. We have hMdS to kiss . hurts to heal and wrongs to be forgiven . B11 Gflor gfl Dear Geroge: What de! you do with problems you don 't heve An answer for ? 'J'o whom do )'OU turn for help and how much does it eost. you? Whal have we done befr;re in other springs ? Into the breach of a broken friendship we have poured s pit e , jealousy, an unwilLingness to yi,eld, salt, revenge . , . the same old stuff! THE PLAY, ''All Your Sons," wa s th e story of a father who did his bit for the war effort in World War II. With two sons in the service he was a manufacturer of engine11 for P-Sls. One day the foreman at the plant call· ed the manufacturer at home to say that some of the motors were defec- tive, the engine heads were cracked. The manufacturer advised: "Fill 'em up. get rid of them . We've got to fill our contract. so many a day. Yeah. we 've got to make money you know!" The ~reach was !illed with poor metal ! IT SO HAPPENED that 21 pilots were killed as a re11ult of this manufacturer's desire to make money and he was indicted, sent to jaH . Later Quotes C. R. Ballew, San Otego -"The way out of our present troublt5 Is so simple it i1 frightening. It Is the ability of man to 11ay: 'I want to help my fellow man and help myself.' " on he got out. It so happened later on , also. that the inevitable telegram from the government came to his house tell- ing : of, th~ death of his son, \NJ'y, overseas, 10 a crash landing. , You got the feeling that perhaps It was one of the planes th.at his father had manufactured! But bis mother wouldn't admit ii. She said, "Larry is not dead. He will come back •• She knew to admit Larry's death would imply that her husband was a murderer. Indeed he was , .. 21 pilots dead! But when the 22nd was l.Ulled, that was different ! HOW TIIE PLAY ends I'll not reveal. The point of interest to us iJ this. A defective part. a breach. filled with poor metal, was patched. The father felt no respontibility, no guilt, 21 pilots dead but they were somebody else's sons. His son dead, ma}be a defective part? Ah. forget it! You can't forget it! The breach in an engine head , patched up with old stuff! We can't repair with "old stuff" some friendships t b a t have b e e n broken. The father said at one, wint, "Let's be practical. You don't want me to be a Jesus do you?" 'I'blt).Just it. we dld expect him to be a J-, to be through with !hit old stuff, ID be willing. to forgive; to be a reJ>lifer of tbe breach! ---WWW- Friday, June 7, 1988 .> Dr. Either 8 . Clark. Pa.Jo Alto The edit.orial page of the Dall rt pedlatrlct1a -"l look forward to a Pf lot '''"' to inform and m,,.,. Ume when ..u · lnfanlt born In America wm have a tlfe expectancy Klatl reotUr1 b11 presenting t11.U of about 100 year1 with 1mall ncwlpo:pn't opinions mW ~ j Every town has Its own queen. How come we in COit.a Mesa have to go to RUDtlngton Beach to find our11? Tha1t'1 Uke elect· 1ng Reagan governor of New 1 Yotk. Of course. these da.ys any· --+-,.,,....,fin bappen~·t =-=-_::--l---LJ'-........--1 .,.----Wtun fTO* f'H(f...., •r• weloome, Norfl14lly wrltefl should conve11 their mess<1ge1 U. 300 wordl 01' L~es. The right to condense Leiur1 to fit space or elbninate Hbel ft re1erved.. AIL Ler.. ttTS miut Include slgn:atuTe and mail- ing address, but Mmfl wiU be with.- Ml.d on reqM.f.JL -G, E. A. Ch1UaMOCbee, Fl•., Twin City New1: "Don't be surprised if there is a t&tx increase. lt hat been put on the shelf, bul it is now being taken off." PUZZLED Dear Puzzled: Oh. yes, t get lot1 of probleni1 I ..... n l "U'~"• uu• I·-· ... I 15"""" research stalf and they work cheap -It just coils me the price of a post card. Who do you think writes all ttiose ·lettt.r1 aigned "Stumped" by Abby. Ano and tM rest? ltlcellhOod that Utey will die or be crtp. m.ntarv on toplca of h>let'ul pled by any of I.ht dlie:i;;•;;,••;:•-;•;,'-l-~lP!Jl!llln.gnlfl<otlc_J!ll''-:...,111; ... ~L'.,;b':'V'l'PTtw•.,llldlnl1~~·~f-l---'-­~eval~l... lch-tlave-• " our reader1' opinion.t, and b11 I '\ J>r<""tlng th• d{vrrst !If..,. C. R. BeaMtt, El Cajon. oa 1,w poitt.U of infomud ob1rrwrt crltls _. "America still is coutin" and ipo~ °" topfcl of Uk • dav. · • along Cln the pre.stl&e that WIS bWlt up Robert N. W--•, ~-b"·•-,_; by a century and a half of 1ound ~ .-" ua.tn! money policy.'' • 'l. • • ' .. . , ' _, • ' • ' ·-------~----~---------~.-,., FridaJ, Ju11t 7, 1%8 DAILY PILOT J 1 LEGAL ,NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE su .. ,o,Talf:a ~~~D~~~1 t1o•t NOT1c1 l--c,,~,0~=1_.:,oc•crc,c...,ccc,c,c,;.:;,.:...,-,--l-,-,-..._'•:~~ ... 0T;10"".;':.":.to,'•"¥"~:::.,:.,o,co.,..,.:•:•co:-•-• LEGAL NOTICE .STATI 0' CAUl<Ol:JllA l"OR l.!Mlfll::w.~~~\~Tll:ICT Oft J\lh-;, ,.:·.~ i:~· .. tlodl ,,M., •I EDUCATION 01" N~l"OltT-MIE.U. TMI COUNTY 0. ORAl'IO• •Ike lll'flll-. ~lft trlt 10Uft1 e11lrt.N:.1 II !tit Or•-Coun,.,. UHll'IED KHOOL. OllTltlCT 01' Mt. ......... NOTIC• 11 HEltEIY GIVEN lflat IM Courlllouw, Ill Miiia AM, Catltor11l1, OltAHOC C:OUMTY, CAlll'OltNIA !tl.tt ol MYll:TA I . HEWETT, llMI loa•4 Of Efllu!IOll ot'trlt Htwtoor.._M tl!CVIUfY fl'lltlT NATIONAL IAHI(, M Mllf 21, IHI •-11 .. MYl\TA. EITELLE H!!WETT, Vlllll .. SClllOI OIMrl(J .. Or•lltl C-IY °"" UllOl11Hlll '""'" ~ "" .,.... "" (Ill""°"'"" MembM' Ml,I.,. aw..-. °t:Ti:'i II HEll:EIY GIVEN io h Calllof'lll .. wlll r-.l'H _ ... 1111tt w ..; tr111t MtN ~Mt" ff. ... L ,,.... 111¥ :.u-:-.::. ::..c;:~iw. flMI lollow!flll :r.:"1 ..... " lilt ...i-. M.....:I de«dlnl 11• ... M. Oii"" Jiit .,.., "' "'-· ..... 11 Arlllur Htrrll'O e.. _..... 111 ltESOlYl:o !Mt It ,· .. --.... ~ "" offlc• ., llkl $cboG.I l>l1lrtd llM:•'-'11 OtclrnMr 11, IH1. "' llooll. IW-I. ..... .. I ........ ... . I I ll ..,._ ~ .... cWitlft'I HllMI "" t llW l'll«nllll A c.01.1' MeM II Dfl1ct1I fllCOr'dl Ill tfll lllllc• ., Illa -loAt1I II Eduulloll. --Ill ,. SK· M"-' illiKldftll .,. f'Mlllrld 19 lllt """"'· ~INfw11l1. II wtlld! l~ld ll>tct! wm ~ Coullfy ltKorder Of Or'"'' COUfllY, """" 1ru1 ,. 1'1U. lllclUll\'f, "' ti. wllll 1M lllCftMrw YOUCl'l9'1. 111 Ills offlc:t Wbllctv ~ •llcl •M4 tor· Ct H!orllla, lw ,..'°" Of dtf•u" •~ the E~llOll C:OO., 19 '''"' ri. !tit Cltv ., ol .,,. cltf'll "' tM •bovw tnlll!H ""'"' or 811111111.t MK!'ll<111 1...ai.11r111• •"-N'l!Mfll or HftOtlMll(A " Mlletilloow CC.II Mew., • -lc:lNI cor-•lioll. Ill lo ••-I ltl1m, wllfl Ille llKHMr'I Ot'ill!llt 11111 Herd..;,,, lilPPlltl .,,d MCllrtd ~" 1 Nolle. 11 Dlleun 111<1 llM"""'t for ~•11c 1trwt 111<1 hl•"w•'f ~r1, lo 1111 UllcltoAlt/'IH C/I l!!llt~ IOWl-I l!!IKllGll ta Sell U""-• Ottf of 'tfwt"""' ---· llnOef" aM KfWI lilt! Cl<'- "-• l1r1,,. ..... Mr"1. Altor-• II AH tldt ·,,.. .. bol In ac-otMllCI wllll h .. ~ ·-· .. •1'9111Md .... tw ... ltlll All ..... _.,., loclt..i '" Ille Cllv of LIW, I', 0, IOll I .... N""°"' ltldl, Col\dlllOlll. INlrUC:liolll 11111 S...c.lli<lltolll .... ll'IOl'I ll'llfl ll'WM rnonlh& '11¥1111 Cllllfl ~. COUlllv f1I Ori,,.., $fltt (If Cllltoml• .,.., WlllCll .. !I'll •Ila II wl'llcrl .... -... n1e '" IJll offlu II "" ~ llna llildl "-'*""" Wiii ... II c;.tllorftla. Oii 11'11 l•U-11111 cOl'ldltlOll1 bu:llMll at ........ 11 ...... In tll 1111tMr1 l'11rd\e1l111 Atefll /1' .aid 1cf1of1 Ol1trlct, .ubllt tvcllol\ 19 trlt llitlWtf lllddlr tw Tllal tl'ler1 Wiii bol Ill COii lo ,,.. .wt1Jnl111 .. !I'll Mlltt II NMI ~'· 1W l'WiCMrll A...-. CMll #MM utfl, Nr•bll '" Wiwtlll -"' "" "'-' Olftrld. Wfllllll m "*'.,. llflw "" nri1 ,.,.i:.11q. c.111orn11• ' u~ 111 .. 11 "-lc.t 11 11 ... "' .. .., Thia _,., 1s ~1-.. .. loJ!ow\: tloll ol 11111 lllttlCI. E•cll tllclOe• mV1I aubmlt wllll 1'111 tJld • WI"'-' C-111 ot w1rre111Y IXlflDtd All •I,•"'"'"' IOI' rOld 111111 I ll J"' 011N J111111 r, 1Nt, 11tli.t1clor'll Chlek c1nltlH br 1 r~· o< lmpllfcl 11 lo !Ult, PGlteuJOI\ .,. et1-,,.._,..J .,...,._.. thwelo 0¥1r, •.Cl""IMI ltallan I'. l1111ft bit INlllll .,. 1 blddoff'• bof1C1 midi HWtblt cumbrlllCK. Tilt l11W111 Cll)vewl'd to 1nd 11111 llllCler 11'111 "'110f1 or Willd 1lklltld EXKIJ!or /1' tlM Wfll to 11'11 •clfr Of 11'11 N~ U'llfle<I -l!tld lw rt \lllder Miii dffd-Of tr"ll, In to J-Mcl"Hdln In tlM OKfM .,f ..._ 11' ll!t lillwt 114med lllecaOenl $d'IOOI Oltlf"lcl !ft the 1~1 1111 iew. 11111 19 If-. •r-ffl !ft Or1111<1 C-IY, l'lrlttlOll d 11'11 It-"<! kJ!ll"" M l!ILl!ltS, LODI!, IAUNOl!ilt lo ""'" Hva Nfttllf 15') Of IM ium Sit"' /1' C1llfollll1, dlW!bld 11: Slllho All.I, rll\lkf"ld 111 C.M Ho. llft MTl!•s Md II ....... ntn ""' ""' bldd9f" wm l'All:Cl!l 11 """' ...,... "' l.lf " "" ............. s.tlfl\blN" 12 ...... 1 .. --P.O ._ 1fft, 111111" 111111 m.. p,_ Con!rtd II Ille NIWN'1 H11tl'lh. ff "'" W1111 ll'ler-.1 I , ...... '10 II J~llll crl IM 17th ""'-' lllHll. c1.,,_.. nus 111n1 11 1w1n1H "Im. 111 111e iVlfll Of ~ 111 Ioele 4, 11 -c. "" J ... ldll Otilnct Clllf1 9f c.111w1111, 111 ... ,..,....,. ... l!Xlc""' l1tltlr• "' ... 1er llllo Mich Qlftlr1c1. ... Mli.«I .. _ M-. ~ II Orl ntl ... City llf co.i. MeM, C-lv If "ubllllleo:I Or11111 Co.11 0111., l"ltot, ...-oc.~ ol ttit chlcl wUI ti. lorfe11itCt, or CDllnlY. $t1I• If C•tlfornl•, c:lffcrlbtd 11 .°'11'111· State DI (:1ttfo<"nl1. •rid JUM 7, 14, 21, 21. I.. KS-a 111 CIM Of 1 bol\d, ll\t flfll lllm lt\lreot tollowt: 111!'9111111"1 11 I POlnl In !hi !Nscrlbllll ft 11111Dwl! t 1---------------'·lwrn be lor!Ollld le 11ld k'-1 Olllfkt /1' Norll'lwqttrlv N .... ot Mid Loi f1 , dll-... IMllll II tlM 1111111'1111! corntr flf Or111111 Cou11h. 11111 ll'lerffll Sollinw.•ltf'f\I u• !Mt lrom l'tmit 1. 11 dtKrlbld 111 deed to '"" Ho blclder ITll'I Wlll'ld•1w hll bid tor I '"" ,,_, ~fy c:omtt or Mid lot. eo... ...,,.., Unlen Sd'lool Oblrld 1--,,.,,,,.,,,-=~~~-----J ~lod ol lorf\l..fl¥e 1'51 dl11 1ner !ht i nti fVlll'lllll ~ Soult! JI d9tr"' lt' fl<on:lt'lil &wtl!rnbff 12, I"" In 8ooll: ltOTIClf 01' IUUI: TltAN,,1!.a d1le .et for !ht _,.lflt Iller..... 07" E1st, ••r1lltl wllll f h 1 IMl. -1SJ II Oltlcl1I 11:-.MJ NOTICE IS HEflEllY Gt\IEH TO THE The II~ ol Ed!Jullon o1 lilt Nrw-l-Ho'1/\e111trl1 llne Df u 1d lol, ttl.32 feet """-Norll'I D' JI' W' Wat,, ...... Ille C .. EOITOll:S OF l'ATlllCIA J. PfllCE, MIKI V11Jtl1C1 Sc:l'lool Ol1!rlcl re.er~11 1111 lo 1 1M>lnl In I II"' wllkl'I II Hrlll91 t11ltrl¥ dne fll Miil l'1rc1J I,• dlstl l!C:.9 Tr1f11f«or, that 1 bu~ 1r111ilet 11 lbOlll •Ith! lo rtlecl tn~ or 111 blib. '"" not with 1nd dloltnl Horll'IWllt..-tv 300 fllt of IU.'4 lllt to I '°'nl"" • c11rve, co... to bl midi lw Tr1nrt1r01", wllost b\11l111H necHUrllv ICCtol !ht lclwt•I bid, Ind to from 1111 Soulhe11lerly llnt of 11ld lo!; "'" IOUlllN"e•lv Ind hl Vll'lfl • r1d!OJS ldd,._$ 11 11'1 Harbor Blv<I .. 111 m.. City f1I w1lve anv lnl11rm1llfy 11r lrrt11ultr!fy 111 ll'llllct South 2' dff!tll W 4" WHI, ol 15.0t fel!J tloellCf 1011tlowes!trlr, Colli MeN, Count¥ f1I Or•""'· Stilt ot 1nv bid rirc:elvl'd. 11o11t Hid P1r1tlel lbw, JG: INI: tllellca •lollt Ille 1rt al 11ld Cl.lr'lt lhr-h • C.llfwnll, ""' •II al Wf'loft bu1lneH 01ted J11ne '· 1961. Norl!'I $0 de9rl)ft lf' "" West, N•tllet Dtnlrll 11111 .. "' J3• 07' 4!", I dllllllCI .,.INS 1nd aod.-.uff used within 1111'11 NtWPDr1·Mtw Unl!lld wltn ttw Horlllea•"'"h' ~,,. ol t11d lo!, /1' ff.SS Ml 1'o ltw betl11n!111 ol • 'INrl llst ,.,,, WI l1r II --"' khool Olslrlct /1' 210.'3 IHI 19 ttw Mor!l'IWllltrl¥ NM ol ,.. ..... -Cl.lr"ft, o;:tlftCIVf wallrl\I Ind Tr1111ferN, 1ra 1.,1 Harbor llwd., Cos!• Or1ntt C....n!Y, C1llfornl1 wld Lot ti; ll'lellc:t Horttw11'9f"IY llol\e 1'11"11111 I rldkll Of Ut.00 feel; ll'ltnc:e Mtll, C1UfWDlt , to ANT HOH V II" A. Mitchell Mid Hor11'1Wflfertv llM, ll.M 181 lo Thi MUl!lwesferlv, llorw 1111 1rc Of Miid OEflHEl lE. Tr1111ftr11. Wl'loll blllllltls AC'tlng P11rchlsl1111 Ao•~! POlnl /1' bl9ln11l1111. ,_,... c......., ltlroutll • C1nfr1I 1ntl1 of ldd•t11 11 411 E. :IOlh $1ffft, 111 the CITY 14 .. 2193 PAltCEL 1: M 11umenl !or lntlrtst 1:5" 11' 07", • dlsJlnce ol 31.IO feel kt Of Coat1 Mtiu, Counfy ol 0.1,,.1, s1111 o4 P11b!!11w!d Or1,,.e Co•1I 0111\1 Piiot, 11\Ct ,,.ra1 ovtr th•I 1>11r1lon of lot t1 Of lilt bltln11lnt of lllDlhlf" r1uern (111"\11, L EGAL NOTICE "'" I C1llfornl1, or tlM followl111 dftcrlbed J11rw 1, U , ltolt '""°" N1-1 H1ltl11$, •• Jiii' mllJ therwf COllCIYe easterly •rid hlvl119 I r1dlus .,f "'-"'' -IY f1I Tr1111fe,.,., lo-wfl: recordld '" 8Qllk 4, It •.ii• 13. of 110.ao ltll; lhenn IOUt!M•IV, tlont th• Birth of a Yaclat All •tock J11 lrldl, ll•lurts, ectul-1 1llcl LEGAL NOTICE Mltcell9111D111 MaH, .-oh et Or11111e 1rc of Mid ....,.,.. curw' lh•-h I 111111 will Of • Clf1<eln 1111d< hlr bon!llHS c-"'· s1111 /1' CllltornU1, ckKrlbld c1ntr1I 1111111 Of u· CD' Jr'. 1 dl11111e1 known 11 "ORANGE JULIUS" 11111 11 fo llows: Begllllllnt 11 Ille most al 41.JI feel lo • t1-11I lfne; Tllenct loClr.d II 1tt1 H1lilot 15lv(I .. Ill tlM Clr. . l'-4SS2 Solt!Mrtf ---DI ,,.. lllld l!trt!fto Saulh t' JI' 10" E11t, •lollt Hid 11,,. of co.II Miii, Coiinty Of Or11111, Sl11t"' Clll:Tll"ICATI! 01" IUSINISS bef!IA Ou<;rl~ .In 1'1rttl I, 11111 ru,._ ~nl line, 1 dli!inct of t.61 leer, mon c1 n1or1111, 11111 ""' the lortto\111 bulk ~ICTITIOUS NIMI! 111111 llllnCI Norm 50 dtvrNS It' 11'1" or leu. to lhl lllllli'llrl'I Une of 11ld tr1nsler wlll bol con111mm1ted ""or 1f1tr The 11nci4,...11ne<1 do certl!Y w., ••• Weot, parallll with lh1 1111rlhe11tt rl¥ l'1rr.11 I; ltltlKI Norlh 1t• or 11" Ei Jt Tut.0.r 111t 11111 dly of J..,,.., lfft, collducl!llll I b\lllneu 11 1471 Pltctnll1 ll111t al Uld LDI 11, 1t IHI; l ... 11c1 Sllulh ton Id Ille l II I ' ll'l~Oll9h E..:raw No. 114-24QS, 1t tne Av111111e, Colt& MeM, C1lllornl1, llllder the J9 de9rees ..,, • 43'' West, ••rtlltl wilt! :0 0 1 ,::, .:::e :,. Y leune,I 1 '"d 111~~ ~ lf,(J'DW dePllrfl"llenl of Ills COii• Miu "clllloul !Ir-"' ,..me of Alntr!r.en Gllu flit $0Utn11ileth' HM f1I u ld Joi, l'H.4-4 • ' • 0 P11 ~ llrtndl o1 Sec11rllY Flrol N1tlorl.tl 81nll 11 Ind Sere"" ·Co., 11111 81lbM Gllaa Cllm· 1"1 lo the Saulllwetltrl\I 11111 f1I Nld "'-lrlllint, '"' E. 11th $1rNI In !hi (!fy of COlll Pll..., 11111 11111 11ld firm IJ GOM-.eoli /1' lo!• "'°""" $CIUl-1terl'I, '"°"' 11ld NOTICE rs HEltEllY GIVEH ""'' en Mfsl, CO\lfl!Y o1 Or111ff, Sl1t1 of llM followl1111 l'lrKlllS, Whllte l\llMI In lull Soutn-illrtv Une, 20 lttl lo 1 pO(ll! Ill ~ 1'!" H1 of JUlll, IHI, II tne hour o4 Cllttornli. I"" P'-OI •Hldenc1 '" 11 lollo-: 1 11111 Wllldl 11 l'lrl tll1 wllll iftlf .i1111nt 7.30 "clod< P.M. I public meell111 of !I'll OATEO Junl ~. 1f6l. J. Wllll•m P11tn1m, 111t1 Ac.ell SI.. Kormwijl•rlw JOO IHI fr1m ttw llolrd ef Edllc1tloll wlll be held •I 111 Allllloll'I Ol•ntlla, T•lll•l•rtt Garden Groy1, C1lllflr1111. Sol.ollwll t•lv HM of 111<1 tot; ttwnc• '"ullr m111l111 Plle1 for I 11..0tlc ""•rl.,. "ublllhed Or11111 Co.11 0111¥ Plk!I, C•!vln ~-Sch1h!r, 175' 51nl1 An• Norm Jf <1111rH1 W 4J" E11I, •lollo Wiii 1111 'IUH!lon of m1klllf the 1lorH1hl JllM 7, 1'61 ....._ ""'··Cost• Meu. c111111rnl1. 1110 111r111e1 11...,, 116.4-4 !Ht to ti.e l'Olnl i r:n,t.IT F"OT"'' ••so• EO Oiled MIY 15, !toll. of betllnn!lll u .. v 1~11 tnl -· This is how Wayfarer Yachts' new l slander·SS look- -':-!'"'; ·_a a few weeks ago when it was popped from the fiberglass, is now being completed and readied for shipment to ita owner in Chicago. J. Wllll1m P11!111m Slid ult W111 be mlde to ,.., Ille Clerk Of lnl• Boerd ol EdiiatlOll 11 hereb¥ C1lvln W. ScNler .OllelU-wcvrtd ti\' Mid died ef tnrd dlrtctfocl to 1Jva notlCI of flHI 1for111!d Stilt of C1IU11rn!1, Or11111t Counlv: lllCk.lcllnt ill cmh, '""" 11111 llPI"""' o1 l'llbhc mfflf111 b¥ P01ll1111 COlllts ol tnl~ LEGAL NOTICE T-J4t7I On MIY 1', IHI, before me, • Nol1r¥ 1r111tn '"" of the trvsl cre1llcl lw "Id ltn.olutl<111, 1l11111d lw • melorl!Y cl !I'll Public 111 1nd lo< 111d Stitt . .,..,.,...Jty a.ea /1' lrust; 111 111m1 •~Nlldld under m.embers llf ~ Board o1 Ediiclflon ht NOTICR Of' INTl!NTION TO IOPllred J . Wltl/tm Putnim .,,d Calv!n ll'le ltrnu of ot ld dead ol ITuit, not "'"' lllree (l) 1111bhc pllce' In Ille Ol•lrlcl, Cll:EATE SICU•ITY INTllltlllT W. $<1'\3fer known lfl mf ta ti. the peri.ons ,,,,1,., o·• •>•.•".11 nmi1nl~ prl11el111I Mia -'I"' lo bt Cllmlllt!M not U lh1" ~--: _liiold . The yacht, largest ever to be produced in ('ICI. Utl..4117 U.C.C.) '"' ..,.. '"" I llGJ d °'' .. ' NOTICE 11 hereby 1 "' 1 the WhoS<I n1me1 ire 1ub«rlbtd to 1119 wllhln of 1111 no111 securld tl't' nld dte<I 111 trust, en •YI "'e 11!e 111 nld .::. : : Credltori of HOWAfll> A 't~GES$"E 1111 l111tr11men1 •lld tckriowlt<:111ed I"•" ••· wllll lnlerHI "°"" Oecember 1, IH1 •• 111 J>Ublle meellflt, ••Id c;g11Jts to be PC>Sled · • KlllN 11>1 ,.,.,., 1110 ""te provided """ ti •nd "" 1601 Sl~ltf!nth Strttf, FLORENCE F. LAGESSE, Olb!OI'•, Aos.eite C K"" O J7 1Ha_ NtWPllr1 l51•dl, C1!1tornt1 111\f 11 tnd en w-buslne11 ldd•nl II nn 1'1111 No. N1111.., P~blkA'.11iternl1 •IKS~~~11:tTv Flll:ST NATIONAL Adm!nJ1lr•ll011 OlllCll, 11:51 Pllel!nlll I, WHlmll'ISler, CD11nr. ot Or11111e, Sl11f Prlnc!HI Olllr.e In llA~K TrvtlH AYMlle, Costa Miu, C1llloml1 11111 -ti of C1Ufor11l1, '"'' I HC11rl1'1' lnlert1! II Orange COVlllY II l :.ii'' W McMull!n tllll Oii El'ISltn ~ • Adm/nllfr1llon Of· ibovl lo Ii. Crf1led by Debtor •1111 Mv Cammlulon £•Pires A:111~1nt1 Tr~•I llttl !lees, 1* Cliff O•lvt, Ne_,t lleadl 1nd trlnled lo llONALO It. ROCHELEAU, 1 July l. 1Ha Elllll Olt!ctr tl't' 1>11bJ11hl1111 1 llOl!Ct al '"" 1doP!l"" of Biennial Bermuda Race t ~ 13 Mesa-built Yachts Set married m... It 11111 '"" •W•r•lt ..,.,.. Pub!llll<>d Ori11tt Coi•I .Oillv Pi1ol. 1nu !Ills llesolutlon OllCI In lhe Or1111e CINld pe'1y, Secur.,, P1r1v, Wh0$f bu1lnt11 Id· Mir 11, JI, Jl ind Ju11t 6. !"Ill IM-6' Publlllltd Orine• CNil biltv Piie>!, 08flY Pllo!, I new1p11>tr ol 11~ner1f drHs°ls IJt W1•I ltl~ Skttt, C11it1 Mffl, June 1 u JI lHI tS34 drc11ll!I011 pUblllhed 111 tne MeWPOrl·Me111 CDlln!Y ol Orlllfl, St11f Ill C1lllornl1. ' · · tJllllltd Sdlool Di.trlct, 11\d 1>11bllullon tn ·-: Thirteen Costa Mesa-built • _sailing yachts will be in the : "f Ss,'8rting ijne·up when the ;_ " ~biennial Newport (R.I.) to first to .finish it\ the 1966 Bermuda r.a.ce. Kilroy said he expecls his m ajor competition this year to come from S .A. "Huey" Long's new 73-foot O ndine and the perennial front-run- ner, s10rmvogel, 7 2. foot Argentina, e ight from Germany, one from Sooth Africa, five from Bermuda, two from Sweden and four from England. Tiie ..,_,.,., In whJdl tilt Sawrll'I LEGAL NOTICE Ill mite11 al ... ,, five UI .,_.,, befort lhl l11tef"l!St win be crnled r.. 111 "ft'lllrtl, ell LEGAL" NOTICE dlll 111 wlcl llWJlc metllM. flxtura 11111 l<I~. furnU11r1 11111 MOTICll TO ClllfOITOlllS AVES: MEMIEltS fllmlllllntl "' Dlbtor COYerlntl pr_,.i., IUl'l!ll:IOll: COtJflT o~ THI! STA.TIE Mr. S"'9Ull, MrL LUI¥, ,_ locelitel II 170 Well I"" Strftf, C111t1 0" CAlll'OltNIA l"Ofl THI! Mr1. lltAHllfl, Mr, Fre11klln, Me$1, Covnly Ill Orin«, Sl1t1 ol COUNTY OF Oll:ANOll NOTICI! 0" l'UILIC SAL• Mr, MacMIH11n, Mr. Pevloll C1lltornl1, 1llcl butlnnl kllOWll 81 SPOT· NI. A·SKO To Norm111 G. O.wlt 1'ld Ta Whom It MOES: MEMllEllS TEO KIWI. E1t1te ol H1nrv O. Fisher, Oecttlld. M1v Conctm : Hone Tlls 1tor111kl HWrllv lr1N1cl!oll Wiii NOTICE IS HEA EllY GIVEN io lfll Koflct It i>erelw liven llllt, d~llln ABSENT: MEMIEllS • Bermuda race gets under way June 22. • The Costa M esa built boats will include 10 Cal-40s. fwo Cal·37s, and one Cal-48, all products of J e n s e n Marine. others will be two • Columbia-40s from th e Columbia Yachts Corp., and ope l slander-44 produced b y Wayfarer Yacbt~. All will be sailed by East Coast skip- pers and crews. Only local crew in the famed "race b:I the Onion Patch" will be John B . ~llroy's 73-foot yawl Kialoa TJ from Newport Jiarbor Y;icht CJub . Kialoa JI was schooner ~kippered b y Cornelius Bruynzeel o f South Afr ica. Only other West Coast yacht in this year's race is the 55-foot sloop Santana from San Francisco. The 635·mile race to St. Dav id's Light will have a total of 161 entries, ac· cording to Sydney H . Rogers, c hairman of the race committee. Twenty· s even of them will be rrom seven foreign countries - five rrom Canada, two from Transatlantic Race The e n tries include six previous w inners: the 59- foot schoone r Njna, now owned b y the Merchant Marine 1\cademy; the 56· foot sloop, Gesture. ski p- pered by James Madde n , Pe n n sy Iv.a ni a : W. T. Moor e'.s Argyll, a 57·foot y awl from Oyster B ay, N .Y .; Malay, the 46-foot yawl own ed by D. D. Stromeier , Scarsdale, N .Y .: the 53 ft. Carina, a yawl owned by Ric hard Nye, G r eenwich. Conn.. and T . Vincent Lcarwn'i; Cal4-0 Thunderbird from R ye, N .Y. Yank Emerges asDarkhorse LONDON !AP) American yachtsman T om Eollett and his twin-hulled aChooner, Cheers, emerged today as one or the dark h o rses o r the Trans-Atla ntic solo race -one that the ·leaders are worried a bout. · -with the race nearing the ·...;.:_eo;1 of ih5 first week, Cheers -'bu not been reported 6ince in the race now that Frenchman E ric Taba r ly's giant trimaran is out with steering trouble. R.I. Howell reported overtak· ing the 53·foot. sloop Spirit of Cutty Sark, sailed by Bri· Iain's Leslie W i 11 i a m s , Thursday. Outboards Delayed ToAug.25 bl COftSllffllTlllld Oii or •~• the 11th day ...-editors DI ma •bov• "'mid dec.e*nl tllll hl¥11\t bNll mMll In lhf "'"'""nl of Mr. 111.,..led DI Jlll'le, lHI, 11 IO AM. •I ll111k et l l1 per....,. hivl11t tll lrns llllnll tlM Mid SJ.I.Ir.I"' ttw prl11C1PAI lfrllMlnl prtllflllV STATE OF CAL1FOltNIA) A~rlc1 NTl.SA, 1111 Morin M1!n SI., St h-dec..S.nf i re ra<iulred fo flle ltllm, w!tn 0... 11111 owllll from Krlc Enterprl1a, lllC. COUNTY OF OllANGE )H. 11 Ami, C.IHoml1 In lns11llmen1t. t~t lllCHs..ry v011Cners 111 1111 ollke of and N0tm1n G. Oowll! lo Union ltnl< fw I, Eh11bllll M. llllv, Clerk /1' lnl! le.rd So f1r 11 knowii to Ille SecurK P1rt\I, 11>1 clerk of IJ'lt •bllv• e~lllled COltf"I or lo wh lCJ'I Norm1n G. Do'lle his PlldeK ct r• Ill Edllt1lkln DI tilt Nl-f.Mes.I Unified 111 bll1l11tts names and 1ddr .. s~ used tl't' pre!lfnl fflem, with IM ..ec.~s&('f !1111 Pln<>ftll Pl'OPlrfv: • School Ol1lrlcl /1' Or1nge Counlv. IJ'le Otbfl?r lor 1111 lhrtt _ye1r1 111! Piii, vouc"'"· to IJ'le Uflde!'ifgnt<I 1t T"t otllce The 111'1der1l•ried wm,"" llll 11'11 d•v,ol C1l!tornl1, herebV urfl!Y th1I Ille tbeur ire: Mani. ot his Al!orll4YI Grlslltm I nd CIWYe" June. 1'61, 11 •:lO Otlock •.m. 11 tie 11111 to•teol11t ll1111lullon w11 dulv ind OATEO: Ml¥ 11th. 1961. 1000 Jerkins Trull 11u11c111111, Loni !leld'I. WHt enrr111Ct 111 U11l"" link •I 500 South reg11l1rlv 1dopted by 11>1 u ld ao.r11 el a SECUllEO PARTY Cl llfornll 90I02, which IS ll\tc P!ICI of Mlln Sl<HI ti L1 Vel1 Aven"" In 1111 City regultr meellfl9 thereof llslcl 1111 '"°' 1bl lloMld It. llocheletu bullllell o1 11\f unclerslf.lltd ;11 tH m1t1..-s or Of1n1e, $!1le Of C1ll!Ol'nlf , offer tor div ol Mlw. IHI, 11111 ~ssed by 1 IANI( 01" AMl!ltlCA, NT&SA Plrl•fnl"'I lo lhe Hllll ol llld lle(ede.il, PllbUc Ille tncf un. willlolll w1rr1f'llY 11111nlm-...... ,., 111 1111 members o4 111 N1Mft MllR U. wllhln sl~ "'°"'"' ifh!r 1111 11,...1 Pllblkl-11111/11• recour11. ffle per111111I p.--rl'I Mid Bolrd. Stnlt Aae, C1llfontl1 1111<1 of 1"1• llOllCf. dHcrl-herein bl!-ind llelcl lw II II IN WITNESS WHEllEOF, I lllY .. l!tc•-No. ,._,.,. O.ll'd M•w u, 1961, c.oll•"'r•I tor the PllWITW!nt ol !ht In· hert11n1G 11! mw hind 111<1 1111 !Ills 21st Publ!1hed Or1"'1t Cust 0~11'1 Pllo l. Lwle It. Summer1 d1bltd11tu dHcrlDed 1bove or •nY parllllfl Hr of Mlw, 1961. Jul\I! 1, 19611 taJ-63 Execulor llllr~, l11th.ld!ng 1CC11mul1litel f11l1rHI Ell11twtn M. Ltltr 01 lllt Wiii /1' lllf ""'-'', • ...,.es "' Mle Ind lmvll fftl. Cllrk"" llld Abovt n1mtd oeclcl..,I TM P1<111n1! prOP1rfy to bl ottered tor 8o;trd of Ed!Kllloll Grls.tltm inti c1...,.,. Ille II dncrlbed •s lllllow1: M1ri•n C. l!lt l"llMlll 1------,:-,,,-.,,,------llOOI Jtnl111 Tn11t l •llel11f Onl PromluotY note In IM orl1\l\ll June. W. Pt.,,.,, •A• u.i ......, le•cll. C•Mlwlllt tOMI sum ol m .000.111 dl11d Od-r :n. 1"5 ll:oderlck MlcMllll1n NOTICR TO Cfll!DITOflS Tll: !11U 4U-101 t•Ku!td bV Krk Enlfrpr1M1, lllC. EUabelh M. lllh' ~U,Ell:IO• COUflT 01' THI! All•,.,..¥• Mr 1".tllr-.r P1 ¥1blt 111 Gree11, Slm-e .. l•lller OI' Selim 5. Fr1nktln STATI! 01' CAlll'Oll:NIA l'O• P11bll11W!d Orongt Cai•1 Ooll\I Pllo!, 11rder. Ollnlld Slr1uu THI! COUNTY Of' Oll:ANOI! J11nt 7, U, 11. 11, 1'68 "I.ii. Sild <111le !1 •K11red b¥ • deed Of Mlmbol,... el ll!t Ht. A·IHU lr\lll dtlM Otlober 11, \til bl!l~n 80.rd of Ed11Utl<111 ef E1ltl1 111 lourftn R....,v, Oet11std. LEGAL NOTICE l(r+c En!er11rl1es. Inc,. 1s Tr11st.,., Tiile M-'1·Mew Unllll'd MOTlCE IS HEllEllV GIVEN 111 Ille ln>Ur•llCt & Trvtl ca., •• Tnnll'f, 11111 Scl'lolll Olstrld ti/ crt<:1llor1 of lilt •bovt nerried dlc-nl Grfffl, S!ml<t 11111 L••her. •• lle~H· Orifllll CllU~hl. C1llfornl1 LEGAL NOTICE fh1I t ll P1r.sori1 h1vl119 c111 .... 111l11sl 1t'lt T-Ul1I clt'1', tnd record..:I N.,..,,mber 1, tNJ l'Utllltt.ed Or1111• CINlfl 01ltv Piie!. ,.h L Be h P I• 11td dtcedt~I t rt r1<1ulred to Hie tlltm, NOTICI! TO CflEOITOll:S '' o-,m-• -•m°'' _,, 00 ... mo, Junt 7, 1'61 ff2~ e Ong ac 0 tee wllh Ille riecelUr'I VllllCl'ltrs. ln Ills lltllce SUl>Ell:IOR COUltT OF TH E STITI! -s" ·~ .-.~ IJf '" lerlo; of tie bo¥ o~ CJiLl~ORN1A 1'011: TH• ... ,. '.JOol "' Olf1c11I •·cords In IN ol· Officers •As'soci'ati-g....,..,f. 'c 1 • e •ntrtled court, llr CO"•TY o• oo•••• Ike ol th1 CO<nllw recorder of Or1111e "'' >""""" lo 11r1.enl ltiem, wltn tn1 flf!<:et»rv " "' boat ~·~ cheduJed f vouchln, to fht undtrlklllld ti C/0 Ko. A·SM1l C1111n1¥ . ·-~-......., I or Y1111111, Prtllnlr 1. Hirwi. 315 Wnl Tllln:I E1t11t ol TEMA NEW8UflGH, 1k1 TPll 1bov1 described collllerll 11 Jn tlM Sunda y ha& been ............... ned Slretl, Sin!• Ant, C11tlor11l1 '17!11, whlc" KATIE NEWBUllGlol, Decetlld. -.oulOll of Illa ullderoltllffl """will bl! t"-"""t"' 11 Ille plla o1 b111Jne11 o1 ttM unci.<"ileried NOTICE 15 HEll:EllT GtVEH lfl 1119 1w1ll1blt IOI' lnt.11ectloll 11 Ills time DI l.,U141 to A 25 In 111 m1tter. P1rt1lnl111 to fhl "'''' of credllon of Ills 1bo"f "'mid dlcedtnl 111e. CRllTlf<IC.\TW 01' OllCONTINUANC• ug. • 111<1 dtceOent, within ilx months •tier Ille 11111 111 IH!r111n1 h1¥lng cillm1 "1ln1t Illa Thi IH'lltertdi llld r1urve1 !ht rl1hl to GI' USlf ANO/Oilt A8ANOOlllMINT The charity event Wa~ tO first Pllbllclflllfl o1 lt!IJ 110llc1. Mid dlcede11I 1r1 rnulred to 1111 lllem, ,_,lrl In¥ 11r IH pr-lift blddlra to G~ ~ICTITIOUI IU.Mll Olllld Maw 14, 1961. w!tn tne l'>KUllO' WIUCher .. In the office 11111lltr b'I eihllllllllf wlllcleftl UJh 11r THE UNOEll:SIGNEO ~ llttlbo/ h ove taken pkice Sund ay at Jo!lel>h s. 1tea<1~ o1 1ti1 c11rk llf me 1bove 1ntltled c1111rt, "' Cll'llflld funds prior 111 ta:11>tlllf '"" bid. c•rt1tv 11111, 111ec11... J11M 3. 1161 tit Adm!nl1tr1tor of ltle E1t1!1 111 pres.en! them, with In• riectuerv D1lld: JUt'll J, 1'61. ce•-19 do bu1!11tt1 11J'ldtr Ille flcllllou1 Long Beach Mar i n e of tlM •bow nlmMI dtCl'dtlll ""llCl'lerl, to !hi undt••(gned 11 .... olf!ce UNION llANK firm n1m1 of ''Tll:l-MAN CLEANING CLAUDE E. VOUNCl of MIKE MATO, 111 SWlh G1rllfkl By lit. A. Sp1fl11rd, SE ii.ViCi!" •I ~ 81~1r Slreel, COlll StaWum. but was postpcned, "'""'· ........... & H-.i IWllUf, M .... r.i..110, C•lltor11ll, '°""°· Credit Olllctr M•M. C1lllornl1, wl'llch blllll!llS WIJ JU wn1 Tlllnl tlrMI wtilch 11 t~e PllCt Of b\11ineu o1 t~ 411'-0C 1or,...rl1 comPOSl!d or 1111 lllllowl111 in deference to I.tie national S1R1t ... ,... Callt."'1• t2n1 unc!er1l1M<1 In 111 m1ner1 pertAl11!nt to P11bll1,,..,, o''"" C1N11! n 11tv '"11o1, ".....,,, whiff ,,.,.,., '" ftll1 Ind 1111<1 or l'lllne: $41·4n1 11\t Hl•te Of nld decedent, wllll ln ~I• J11111 7, 1Ha t7~ r111dint1 11 11 1111-.,, lo-wit; da')' o r mourhing for tJie 'Jate Atltrlll'I llr A•mlRhlr1!1r monlh1 •lier 11'11! 11"1 publltttion of llli1 Mir!!" W. KorlOn, llt H1mlltoll S!rfff, Publislled Or1no~ c....,., 01llv Pl~!. 110lla. LEG • .o\L NOTICE COii• Mes1. C11tlol'nl1, Sen . Robert F'. Kennedy. Mlv 11, 21, 11 •""June'· 1m Ul-611 Otled J11nt I. 19'1. Cer1111c11e IQ' 1r1n»tll1111 /1' bu1l11et1 J a m es Mac Donald' P'c,S)•. Ml~t M&Vll NOTICE 0 , INTl!NIION undtr ll'le 1bovt l!Cllllatn nlme, 11111 Al· LEGAL NOTICE E•~culor TO Otl01CATI! RAll!M•NT lld•¥11 ol l>ubl!Clllon ll\lrf'of, ire "" Ill• derrt o f the Police Officers OI '"' Wiii of !M NOTICE IS HEllEll'I' GtVl!N 11111 Oii ~ •• ~~ t:~e .... °' .. __.": .. ""·.~ •• '1.~.:" ..... 1--------------1 M111t M•Y• Abeve n1med dee eden I 11>1 2111 H w irl Mlv, 1961, lllt I01rd /1' ~ ?"'6 ;,/ tlM 'C'1vH Cldt ~· Association, e stimates that l'fl·t4'VI Ed11C1t1on of ttie H-1-Mfl.I Unt11e<1 IT · NOTICI! TO Cll:EOITOll:S Atl-y II Liii S<t>ml O!i!tlct Ill 0rlftlt 1 ClllHll'r, , ... w NESS m'I hind "111 lnl div el Jun .. th 150 boats 'I\ be SU 111 Soulfl G1rlltkl A"1nut more aD WI l'ERIOlt COUflT 01" TH• Mllntebll .. , CI NJernl t tOl4I C1n10rnl1, ldollted I ll:n.olllllon of l1t-' Mtrllll W. KIH"...., COmpe"-g tes"-g '·'!\ a d ITATtE Clf' CALl~Oll:NIA POil IR l'l"tl l'lr 1...,tlon to dldlc11t 1n 11.em1nt 111 11w Cl· Pllbllihld Ortr111e Cali! Dillv l'llel LEGAL NOTICE '-:--:_ Jtaving Plymoutti l a s t .,_. g!l[urday. One s ailor who wants to know Follelt's whereabouts is South Australia's Bill Howell. sailing G o Ide n Cockerel. His c atamaran is 43 feet over.all, much the same length a nd therefore much the same in pollen tial speed a s Cheers. But both apparently were some 30 miles aslern of the 57·foot British Ket.ch Sir Thomas Lipton ,, sailed b y Geoffrey Williams. Bruce Dalllng o f South Africa, sailing Voortrekk er, was reported well up with the leader s , a1though keep- ing his exact position to himself. l.UI , l.UI Sii.I n THI! COUNTY OP OltANOI! ' ·-rv of COii• -· • munld1>•1 cor-,,,. ' •• '' '' .... ~ ... I · · 1· J hol f I N1. A·lt7'4 • ' 21:1-n:1-1uJ tkln to ..w11t 1ret1 nc1 hi 1iw • • • • ? • .._ S aJnllla ln lVe a CO • ue • Eiti .. Ill Hirry llou Kf'IYlr, t llll P11bltsllt<! Orlf'llt C1N11t 01i1'1' Pllol l'Orl ' r 1 a I "'1-------------- ed·o u t board hydroplane known 11 H1r.., 11:. K""•r, OICl.llld. Ju"' 1, u. 11, tt, IHI M =~· 1,:1~--:~oi!: o1""..,.~.!,~ ·-..:_ -'-lll'ot that Follett is in trou· ."': • bfe. He and severai others -::_ot-1he original 35 are keep- 7. ·.:.ili,g quiet as a m atter of " poJ.icy -not letting the Speaking by raWo to his London sponsors Thursday, Howell said: "l wis h 1 knew where Follett is. Then I'd know if l should put on more sail.'' With Tabarly i;i:one -he won the 1954 racl': i n a record 27 days -the likely winner is anybody·s guess. Most rompetitors this time see m to be slow to shake d o wn and 30 days may prove a winning time. c lasses two stock outboard NOTICE IS HEii.EBY GIVEN lo ""' 1>1raol of land touted,, Smalltv Elernen-• c ... cllton ol 11\1 1bcwt Mmtd dlcfdtnl L EGAL NOTICE l•r'I ScMlll Slh, t11 the Cll'r of Cosll classes and four sporty in· ""' 111--.. hlv1r11 c111rm ... intt 1111 Mew. 1--------------•--d cat . th 280 wld dlcedtnl ... ra<IUlnd la flll """'· A 1111bllt me1t1111 -""' llVfllflln of NOTIC• o" INTl!NTIGN TO IJ{Mr egories -e wlll'I the lllCISU('f VOUCl'llf'I, 111 11'11 al'llCI NOTICE TO Clll!OITOllS mal<lllll """' dt!dlc:lrtOll will bol ""' •• l!NOAOI! IN TNt SALi! o" and 145 cu. i n . hydros the of th• clerlo; ol llw 1bo...e enlllled court, or SUl'l!ltlOll: COUflT GI" THll COlll Mffl Hltl'I kMGI Lwr.111m. 1'SO ALCOMOLIC SllVllltAOtEI , I ' to ornenl lf'llm, with !ht llKl'l•t'"I' STATE 0" CAllf'Oll:N IA Ftlrvltw llOld, Cmll Meu, C1tlfoml1, llfl JUllC! J. 1"9 e X C It n g l W 0 • m a n ""uchtf"S, lo ttle 11ndtrslgn<'d et flll olllct POii THE COUNTY 0" OllANOI! 1111 11th dty o1 J....,., 1'61, 11 !"-tlllur o1 To Whom I! M1y C<lf!Ctrn: crackerboxes a""nd the col-or her Allor,..,., E1r1 M1lm•MI!. 16:16 Wfsl Ne. A·fftM 7;30 11·c1ock l'.M. Su1111e1 111 111u .. 1c• 111 Ille tkenH ••· LEGAL NOTICE -· ethers know where they are. .Cbeers is a schooner-rig. ·goo catamaran d i re c t I y descended from the swift. sailin g outrigger canoes of P blynesia, The experts rate )\er one ol the fastest boats Leade rs o f the race. which is sponsored by the London Sunday Observer newspaper here today were about 700 miles We6t of Plymouth on their c ourses for Newport, New Transpae Raee Due . San Francisco to Tokyo Course Slated 1111 SltHI. LOI Antelfl. C1tlf0r111t t'Oll1. Ell•le of ll011nle M, Wltllff". Ot<••~. 150AllO OF EDUCATION plled lo<", llOl!ct !1 hlreb¥ 1lven lhll !he orful s uper stocks. which I' the PllCf of b\lsl~n of "" NOTICE IS HEllEllV GIVEN to Ille NEWPORT-MESA UNIFIEO u-ral1Md ..,_ le tell •lcollollc C t'(' · th I I 1111derslt ned 111 •II miners o>er1al11lnt to credllor• al rho •bove ,..,...d d•cedenl SCHOOL OISTRICT "-Ylr•OH 11 !ht pr...,IJe1, dlscribKI •• Ompe l IOn In e 3 S 1111 "''''-of 1•ld dectdt~I. wl!Mn •I• Illar tll l'f'r10t11 l\t"illl tlllm1 q1lnil Ille 15v Ellzt""tll M. LlllY fol-.,: C9tegory Will be par ticularly ,,_,~ offer th• llri! IHJbllc~llon of tllh llld dteedenl i re requlr@fl lo flit lllem. Clark of 11ld llotrd 1701 (Oolf CourM Or!vt, COlll Mtll. k hi I d noll~e. witn 1111 riec1•w rv \fOIJdltrs, 1n "" offlct P11bll111H °''"" C,e11 011ty ,otlot, l'uflulnl to •uch tn!...,llon. !ht llfl-Cen, mate ng W 0 r 01!ed Mev 6, 1'61. 111 t!\e cltrk 111 1ht •~ve enll!led covrt, Ju11t 1. 1t61 '~ deriline<I 11 •llP1¥1nt ro !ht Oeot rtrnenl record h older Don St. John H1lln M. Ketvtr 11r '" pre1en1 lh!m. with '"' 11Ktu1rv 111 Alcol'lollc ,.,, .... ,. Con1r11t lflr IHU•nc• I . Mml11!1lr1trlx vou(~er•, 111 lht Ullllf:<Sl11n..:I ti lllec ollltt LEGAL NOTICE by tr1111ter of lft •k&lloltc blv~r~•1 of Ing ewood against Cle m w1111-Trie-w11~ln~M1 111 111, Attornr.r•• s11n1tv o. c 11rt 1nd 11cer1 .. ,.,, 11ctnS11I f1'f" '""" 1r...,i," ,1 McCullatt of Tonia.nee Al Ot 11\t Et l1!1 of ""' Loul1 s . KUftt!r1. 2360 HuntlMton Orlve, Plt·tn tollawo: ' AboVI ne,....,.i decedt~I Sin Marl.,.,, C1t1tornl1, WJ\lt" It t1M 1l1ce SUl'llfllOlt COUflT O~ THI! ON SALE GENEllAl Thompson o f Van N u ys and •M M..__ /1' buslMH ol """ ........ 111\td Ill 111 IMI· ITATI! o" CALlf'Oll:N IA l'Olt ll ONA FIOE .. UllLIC EATING '"LA(tl Ron Larson Of Long B each 1u. wnt lltl strMI ltr• P1rl1lnl111 1o 1111 es1111 111 u 1<1 Mn-TN• COUNTY OI" Oll:AN•• An.,_ dfllrl119 1o Protat "" IUU111C1 I L• AllllltS, C.""'1111 tM1t "'""'· Wltnln 11• mon1m ...... "" Htsl -NI. A"4f1)2 DI llld'I t!COllM(I) ITll'I 1111 • ¥trlllld p,.... among ottlers . Tll: !tUI OUlllllrll 1-Mll 1111bllc.11\on al lh\1 notice. NOTICI! Of' HllAlllNO o• Pl!TITIOJI ltsl wltn 1ny llf!ICI of Ille O.,..rlmffol of S J hn' S ""'""" tw Atlmh1htr1lr!J 011..:1 Mflv ?(. 1'61 Alalihollc 111vtr•t1 Control wltnln >o t. 0 s hockwave set Wllll-'fM.'#11f.411M•.. J•m•• •. · ··-----'Oil "ll:OIATI! o~ Will ANO 1"011: • .......... , l•TTlflS Tl!STAMl!NTAllV d1w1 /1' the dtt. lht ••OO>Oled Prem!-a Marine stadium record by Putillllled o...... CINlll O•llY Pllol, E•KUIO<' .... llrat Pllllled, 11111... ,rouflds lor . Mfi'I 17, 2•, JI 11111 JUM I, 1161 .. ,... Qr 1111 Wiil o1 the Ellllf Ill Jtcot> Tel/nln, tl$CI \nown l l derll1I It p<0¥1ded bv ltw Thf pte"'!- r oarJng over the course at "'"°"" 111mec1 d1e111t~1 J~1~~t..-1:~:';i1::~··~EN T...,r .,, now HcfflltCI tor the.;..,"' 11c:o11c111c an average speed Of 73.o"l LEGAL NOTICE "••ltw o. Ci.Mi_, LM111 bt..., • .,._ Thi form"' var111a11on m1¥ ~ 1------==o------·JI . ••""1 Mlrv w. T"""" ...,, lllltl lier.In • IH!ll· be obl11111<1 from '"" of'lci' or 1111 miles per hour in the aMua\ l'·>HSJ 1"'t """""''"' Dflva, t11111 tor Pl"IOlr1 o1 wm '"" '"' 1u u1nc. Dlllrt,,,..,1. M emor!a l Day 1 n b 0 8 rd Cl!1tT1~1CATE 01' aus1N1s1 StR Mll"l11t, ci MfWN• IJf te11er1 les11men11,., 111 P11111-r. l'.R.G. f:NTEllPll:ISES. IMC. A new Transpacific yacht but has been abandoned. yeari; or a ge. All compc tinn 1'!CTITIOUI NAME Tt-J UIU :tU-lltl r.ter111c1 10 wtllc:h 11 ""'" !or hlrll'llr l>llbll•Md Or•lllt CNtl 0 111¥ •tie!, t-Regatta tast w eek . Thf u11<1eral11ned doel <1n11y tie I• <""· Arriir ... n '"' ••tUtor 01r1k1111u, 1nd '"'' !tie 11,... •1111 •l..::1 Jun• 1, lNf ....- race is in tile making. Contestants in the n e w bo.at6 will be s ubject lo In the outboard c ategocy. d<1et1r111 • bllslneu 11 1n5 H••b!lr P11bll11'1ed or111t• co.11 o111y "''°'· "' 11e1r1111 111e •• ,,,. ...,, be•n set •o• 1-------------- The ed I ·u be . ed I .._, 1111111ev1rd. Cot!• Mn~. C11ttorn11. ulldtr ~ 2, ll •llcl JIJlll 1 I• 1f611 "°""· June 11. lffl, 11 •:JO 1.m .• In the C1111r1-• propos new race s rac e Wl reqwr o Sll 1Cl survey a s to i;uitabili-the driver to watc h will be 111e 11c1111ous 11rm f>lmt o1 KNOTTY KEG ' ' ' -of 0e111r1men1 Ne. 1 "' uld c ... rt. ~ ,_ and !NI s.ld firm It cOlllllOt.ed of the LEGAL NOTICE 11 IOI Nortl'I Main SlrHI, 111 ttw Cll'r of from San Francisco i.u have prior experift>Ce in ty. and stores for ttre 5.200 Long Beacll's Ted May , 1o11ow1111 11e.--. ..,,.., ,....,. IR tun•"" s.nt• An•. cilltomll. T-k ·-" · be' · · 1~ nded o1~-'I ·1 v.·orld champ1'on 1'n 1965 and Pile• °' •nldfna 11 •• 1ei1o-: o 1t111 J ' lNI 1--,.,,,,.,,,--,,,~cc"°'cc,-.,~--O yo..,."' 15 mg organ1z· stn g 11..-,1a ~i1U1e s-a1 • m1 e race. Hornf• H. Gr"'". J.4' Soutn H1rW. T-,.n • -·, -'· • c NoTic:• °" T•u•nn •Ala -1966 and a member of t he -'Ntl\tlm. C1Ufornl1. NOTICI! G" "&ULI( Tll:ANSl'lllt w. E. s ....... M, Cll\lfl1Y .... T. '-NI. ., ad to start Man:h 15, 1969. ing, .M w ell as be over 21 Entrants m.-.. be or •ny c·-••••••• u cc 1 c11artn J. Kiu, 0n J""" "· 1H1 ,, 11,00 •'clod< A.M. ·' .. Gul.f H all of Fame. He ,., 0•1ed M••' .!.:.,'"'•. 0,_, ..,., • • • 11111. 1111 ,, "" ''°"' offlc• ..,.,.,llU 1o •-....... "'~nsors are ••e Slocum ti 1· I -·~ w, Hot1c:11 " fltf"etrv i1vt11 to lhe Creditors 141 Slvth HIM"'"' Tl• ' c ' _,,,. -W .. r~ ui • ne ona 1ty, Of either ~f':X, a so the Americal! Power sr~ll! 111 c 1111o<"1111. 0r1,,.. Countv: /1' llONAlO 11. ltOCHELEAU, Tr11111eror, L.et ,._..,, c iirlenlll ,..14 ' MU••11t• omNn'f, 15 Nerlll (.',.,..· t d th N' On MIY 16, 1HI, belor, -· I Nol1rv whost butlllHI Mldrftl 11 121 W, lt!h Sl., Ttl (1U) 1:i7-0M SrNclwl'I In ~City Ill 5"1111 An•• l!1I• ~1e Y an e ippon SI YC D J and be amateur or pro-Boat Association C las i; C l'llbllc In '"" fbr uld s1111, ......... ~ cm11 MeM. c111nr. "' °'""""· i11t1 of "'**' ..,.. ""1~ "' c 1ntor111t, s E cu 11: 1 T v TITt• Ocean Racing Cl.uh. e. ays fe86ional sailors. Compel.Jn~ o utboard hydro T e c 0 r d :,""='ri! = ~rt;:"m!T"' wi:c;: ~llfw~ 111·~· w:o11r i:..·-:.1N~ l'vbll11>ed Or•"" Cotti G•ltv l'llol, ~~~.:~~~::~ 'o1 i~·::: Entries are limited" 10 holder at 94.830 mph, ed lo """ Wlllllll ll'IS!fvmlnl ..... FLORENCE "· LAGESSE, Tr-ltrel'I, Junt '· •• IS, 1"' "14 Cl.lted by ltOllEll:T E. GVl!NTHEfl 11111 0 • D yachts need not be owned bv p·1 ·11 b 7 Rrt1111w1e1t1ed hll 1•1C111ed"" ... ,,.... w11ote-Ml~• tddl'Hs 11 nn "ltu NII. AN ITA•. GUl!NT14Ell:, llllltwiilld '""" wllr mono-hullt\: between 24 3nd p e n 1ng ay . • li Wl e open at a.m. !OFFICIAL SEALI •• WnlmlM ..... COUflfy of Orll'llt. Sltlt LEGAL NOTICE rec.orded October ,,, 1ff,l, II dOCllrnlllf entram.11, nor need thry ht? to drivers and at g a .m . for J~ e. 01.,1s of c.1ttorfl11. ""· '"°' 111 "'*' '1'"', ''" s... f1I Offfc:111 &-; feet overen.· R a c e r th . I A dr" Hollr'I P11bllc:-C•lltor11l1 Tl'ICI p-rty to be lr1111fll'ld II loclled ...... llKonlJ In 11\1 ofll(f of ... lttc.Orlltr !!JI Shark I sland Yac ht Club o e same regis try as the ans. tvers meeting will PrC11C11111 Olf1n in ., .,. w"' '"" '""'· c .. ,,, M@u. Cl1tTll'ICATI! 0~ iusiMRs• Or•-CllllltY. c1111on111, w ,.._ "' LEGAL NOTICE nsor said Ule event is a nationality ol the entrants . be ·held at 10 a .m . and the 0.11111• """" c-"'" 0re,..., s1119 o1 ea11111N11•. ~1cT1TK>u1 NAMI! tts11u1t in 1111 ... .,"""1 er -'lnNllCI flf r. hM J)()61:poned Its Orwoning r· I . MY C«nm1nloll E•~l'l't Slkl .,.._,,, II ctesullllcl Ill -•I Tiit \llOOfnltl'lttl ... urtlfY tie Is ~ Obllw•llolll MCWN lnlr8bJ lncl111H111 11'19! • · Ube~ e.f{or1 to coun· ~ A Ucati f tr ins racing w ill start at J11"" 11. 1Nt ": All fl•"""' t111iPn>el'lt w ...., win clueftM 1 IM!ftal ,, 111 v11 Lkll Hor-11, tntcfl .,. .,,.,., no11a "' W111c11 •• ~··-t-:.act ~. ~-• •-.. ard Day ceremoniff and dedica· PP on Gr en Y in noon . l'11blllllfld 0r11111 Cot•' o.1w l'11ot. DI 11111 belf"-blr •1-lll\OWft .. SPOT· "'-' llKfl. c......,r., u..oer 1111:.. fk-~ Mardi •· 1ML ... lleCutrllftl ...... ' LU .VUU ...,... tf'l@ race mly be obU;," d A Mtw IJ, 24, l1 UICI JUM 7, ,... NMI T£0 KIWI llld llilcfl,_ II Q WHI ltlll llllow """' l'llflll II SU.VIEW MAiltlNE m1 Ill INMlll 1536, HM la ol u ilt Of-! _ , __ --4 ~ve ,.,.1,.01 tion o{ its new clubhouse., ine dult ticket price is S2. st .. c.i.t1 """' c111n1Y °' Or•""· 11111 co. 11111 11'111 •Id"""' 11 <-..1 111 .... riC1a1 lttelnh. •m un ,, aollblk auc:11. -~ &1.u -.--fro m Secretary, SI o cu in with c hildren under l2 a c· "'C1trtor11r1. re11ow1"1111 ..,_, W11o1e ~•me 1n 11111""' ,.,. ca111. ••ll'loll• •1rr111tY 1s 111 "'"'· <riginaUy scheduled for Sun· Soci""', Box 387, E:i.st Th ni.. 111111 """'"' wut a. .;t>M11mmelfld 1)1(1" raldll'lol 11 111 1e11ow1: --•lorl. "" enC11rnt1r•nc••· ""' 1rrtentt I ~· .... ~ com panied by parerits 1d· • °"' er 1rter 111c1 11111 *"' flf J-. '""·at ct11r'" J-l"lttibtcli:. m A~ ~ 19 Hid Tn.m. 111¥ 11111 Oeld fl -.... --...._ ---·-c...-iah. ,.. 0 day, to June l&, Setauket, N. Y. mitted free. O ,... _ ~ , &•'* ., AtnlrlCA NT•'-'· •1 "'°""' M1111 cer-•1 NM. c.1.,..,,11 Tnnt 111 •-1'1' "'""'Nd 111 1111 or. "' •uo ~-_, c 0 m m 0 d 0 re r --ald f~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~;;~~;;~~;,[I range -....oest I st .. 111119 Ant.'-'"'"'°''""' 11119" o.1ec1 ~ , .. '"" co.t• ...,,..., Co11r1r. 11 ~ ttth "' · -"I ..... 1 t t vu c.111w11i.. CMrt1o!1 J-l"lll'lllill* c..lllwMe, -.cr1t11t1 • -f llGll .. ...-vu. air.-i • on C! ....... 1..... .... d ~\;v-t was .. Most Complete s. ••• '' ~ 1o .,... Tr1111i.re... all s1111" c.ntwn11. 0r..,.. c_,,.,1 TlW Mlr1l'I •.n"""' 1111 SOlrll'l n.116 .. .+ .. b H .. t..-• 196$ to .,.-Mi UI cu 11111/MU Ml'MI tlld "lddta1e U'Md 11'1' Oii Ml'I II, 1"61. brfron me, I Nltllf"!' ftll 1111'11Nortll,..,_.1"!f1f111t IE19' ' _.., .,..._. ID ~ due ..... ,.. STARTS NEXT WEDNISOAY-LIDO THEATRE PRINTING Ttt11111ror,.,."" ""'"J'l•rs 1111 ,..,, l'WMC 11r..,.. tor .. Id 1111-.1 --11v *,... 11""" w..i 11o1""' Let 11"' "'-fl andJuft. Y""7"t""IC"U lln;: .,..~ ,._, NIHll'llll Ciltrlll J-f'I~ ~-l"llrvlPW 1'111'1\1, •• •llllwrl ... ..... ..__._ "--~•0.m·•hfa __.._.... _,_. 0.t.!1:1: Ml'f 11111, 1.... Ill t'r\t .. bl lilt ~ --~ ,......, LI flllAOI ,_... Ill ~ L .... JI, Jone dlJtanct pas.1oige1 won Y vi mvw 1nneo '" • SERVICE 11-1c1 it. 1toc11t1M11 •llblc:rlll..i 11 fl'le w11111t1 ll'lil"'-t 11111 Ml1U111_,. M1,,., .._.,, 1111 ""' --11 ........ ,.. "-• late Sen 11~-F K.... ,,..S Nor WHO y()(I cOI'· Tr111111ror a.:•now~"' l•f!ClllM"" ••-· Or111t1 COUfll\' illJMUI. Ul,MI.... llr.: • VVDl. • .,,_,. .._.1'11 "· L1~-COl'FICIAL SIEALJ I• lilt ..,,_ of ''"Int nbl!N!lor9 -'1-.J ...... Amlla.r race. for Mid~t nedy Sunday. '""'""" '· l--....... 0.¥1• ltclll'"f'll ""uld Ote4 of Ttllll. PAUL na•-11 ,,,,..,.,.,.. Neltry PUC111oC1ntw1111 Ot,_ Mlrt' ,., "M. Oc8lll Roclnf Fleet Y•~ The new clubhouse will be ~·· liiililil-' • I .... CHI' AM••KA. Nfl.SA "•lnclNI Cima ... ••CUfllTY TITLIE IMSUt.ANCI! t ( lo 311 !~ __ .... f • "-Sund .., """' """" M. Or•-'°""" COMl'ANY up ~ Wal Pf"Y"'""' opcl\ o r 1n.pec:.....,.. RY hlltl •111. Cl.... MY c-i.lOll ~.... ,., J, .. A....._ U11' yell' to ltart from but l here wut M no l!JCNW •• "'"" ,...... ,,, lt1'1 Aatlshnt Viet •rol~llll ...... 1 ... ..1 .. 1 "D ... lo Ho~1u1u ....-1.... c:-.. i.-·d "'hon. 642-.. ~21 "~bl*! o.-..... c..11 011tv 1>111)1, ,.1111111tow °'"'"" ee.,1 0111¥ ~~~ l'ultlllMlf °'"'" eo._,1 0,1.., ,.,ie,1, ...,. ...... ""-' •\/OJ wv certlD'lUUH:llt .,,-u NU • .._ JIMll 7, 1"' ft2.4 Mt!¥ o , 14, )I 11111 J-J, ltrtil .NM 1. '"' tl, ,.,.. PSHt .. _._ . . --I -. " • -- I y-BY WILLIAM REED Reeds ••• In the Wind NEtlPOR I CEJll I ER " • -..,..,_ ,-.. ~ .. -:;;!" -· • • • --.. -•• -... -,.; F'rlday, Ju11t 7, 1%8 Ex-·Coun~ilDlan Gisler Feted .BY MARGARE.'T HALL ot 111it Deir l'llM It.it The "seven stages of mankind" - as appi.led to former Huntington Beacl'I city councibnan Ernest Glsler's life - were a highlight Of the testimonial din- ner fOr Gisler held Wednesday at the Sheraton-Beach Inn. City officials, including the entire ci- ty pouncll, joined with Co u n t y S~pervi!Or David Baker, about 60 #1 FASHION~SLAND members ol the Gisler family and many friends of the rancher who gathered to honor hlm. Aa Nobel Waite read an account of Gisler's Ufe, friends switched hats on G\sler's head which tyPified a particular state Of his U!e = a baby boonet, Swiss cap, baseball cap, farmer's (elt, cbe!'s and finally a straw hat to mark day~ of leisure. A surprise to many of the fl.Jests was Gisler's perfo;mance at song ln· eluding Swiss yodeling. "He·s really good at it,'' laughed Waite later. GreeUngs from digni taries and &&Sociatea incuded a telegram from Governor P.eagan, resolutions from the state legislature and Huntington Beach City Council. Ivan Liggett. trustee of the city elementary school district. told the guests that a district school would be named for the pioneer rancher. .. --== , Gisler'• father bought 40 acres in Fountain \.'\.tiey back In the "Gospel Swamp" days. The family's holdjngs expanded until "they owned most of what ls now Ji'ountain Valley" ac· cording to an early resident. Ernest Gisler se-rved two terms as 1-iuntington Beach city councilman and ha.!! taken active part in many civic al· fairs for several decades. Valley High Honor Grads Recognize.d Yearbook 'Dance' Planned Tonight At Beach High You must have a Lacoste shirt shift. It's oooL It's comfortable. It's easy-care Dacron• This is the feminin e versi on of the famous cr ocod il e spor t shirt. David Cryslal designed it ••• and you'll find it's perfect for your California summer life. In luxurious new doubl e knit of Dacr on• polyester . Sizes 8 to 16. f,. White or Blue. B. Blue with wh ite or red with white .. C. Wh ite. 33 .00 Sunchorm Sporhweor, u urns· •• 644°2200 • MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY lO:Oil TILL 9:30 • OTHER DAYS 10:00 TILL 5:30 ' • • " l l I --·--·----··--... -....... ·~-· ... __.f •• ·'-'"'"""" .... '=""'' ·--""-""""' _______________________________________________________ .... , 1 I -• • . .. ~ • ' 4 · DAILY 'ILOT 1~'11¥tlle_.,MWl .. f0 Mrs. Bl•nche Ca1per, of Anna, Ill.1 has be~n able to adjust to ·most every change in her lifetime. One thing however, she bas.n't been able to adjust to, she said, is miniskirts. "I resent them," she said. Mrs. Casper celebrated her !02nd birthday• Monday. • Fr~. June 7, 1968 llnrula Asks llnity Split Predicte~ In. RFK Delegates Lo'S ANGELES (UPI) -Calllornia delegates to the Democmtic National Convention,._. 172 tOllowers bereft d. a * * * Keating Eyed As Successor To RFK's Seat leader -today were reported receiv· ing overtures from the oamps ot both Vice Presktent Hubert Humprey 8lld Sen. Eugene McCarthy. _ Assembly Speaker Jesae M. Utr\lh 1)>JIOday Issued .., appeal to lbe 172 delegates pledged to wasAnated Sen. Robert Kennedy to maintain unity Ull- til a meeUQg can be called. But some delegates Jrlvately were predicting o spliL. "We are bound toge~ kl a com· mon ~ause -ll!l"Ying ·h memory of RObert F. K'omedy, ii not Id! ac:lDaJ being," Unruh said. "I Jmow-that all IIl<'lllbor1 of 1lle delegation wlll r<maln united until 8UC$ time as we can jointly ass• our situation." ALBANY. N. Y. (AP) -The names ol former Sen. Kenneth B. Keating a.pd Rep. Ogden Jt .. Reid have been . ·. -19.ised in speculation over whom Gov. -Umub said he ))oped to .anaoge a meeting ol the delegation wittlin 1lle nelll two weeks. He left today f'OI' New YU'k ol tile '-1 of a party of slate legislators who will r e p r e s e n t Oalilomia at Kem<d-y's luneral. Miss R o 11 c e ·· eartef', of Magnetic Springs, Ohio, ·tilt' 1988 "Col.or GiTL" at the U.S. Naval Academy in An.- napoliJ:, Md., gets a kiss from her date Midshipman First Class Michael E. Leppert" of ·Worthington •. Ohio. The colorful ceremony took place iuring the Color Parade Tuesday as pbrt of the traditional June Week celebrntion which is highlighted by graduation. • Los Angeles arson detectives, in· vestigating a $3,000 blaze at a school, found a button on a window ledge. Among the cu r i o UiS bystand ers stoOd a youth wearing a jacket with a missing button. Afler comparing the window ledge button with the remaining buttons .on the jacket, detectives booked Robert L•• Scott, 18, on suspicion of burglary and arson. • Twenty years ago in Centralia, Ill., I rv1ng Keith ~arti11 was an elemen\ary school teacher and one of his pupils was his son Bryant. Thursday, father and sOn will re.. ceive doctorate degrees al the Uni- versity o! Southern California. The elder Martin receives a doctorate of education. His son gets a law doctorate. • The Ministry of Defense has put up for sale 36 missile launching pads, which will go on the auction block at the Mis· sion, England; Missile 'center. The pacU do not come equipped I~ with the ground-to-air missiles for which they were built, how- ever. The Ministry soid the mis· siles became obsolete shortly after the Missile C~nter became operationol. •:-;.. .... ...,..,.....,.,,.,.....,.. ................... • Comedian Pet•r S•llers has an- nounced that he and his Swedish- born actress wife, Br:ltt Eklund, have parted. Sellers, 42 , currently is in Rome. Miss Eklund, 23, lelt Rome Sunday for her parents home in Stockholm. Sellers and Miss Eklund have a daughter, Victoria. 3. who is staying with Miss Eklund's parents. Nelson A. Rockefeller will name as a successor to. the late Robert F. Ken· nedy in tbe Senate. While Rockefeller and other political leaders declined to discuss the im- pending appointment publicly, there was substantial private reflection on the subject Thursday at the Capitol. Rockefeller's press secretary, Leslie Sloate, said the Republican governor had "given no thought" to a successor to the slain Democratic senator, Keating's name was among the first mentioned. The suggestion was that Rockefeller might wish to return him to the seat that Kennedy won from him in tbe.1964 election. Keating later was elected to the Court of ,Appeals, the state's highest court, but has only two years to serve before reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70. Reid, who repres~ a .Westches'ter County district, has been personally close to Rockefeller for years and has occasionally advised him on political matters. " The 43·year-old congressman who was president of the old New York Herald Tribune is known to be in· terested in attaining higher office. FRANCE TIGHT ENS GUN SA LE LAWS PARIS (UPI) -The French govern· ment today stiffened the already strin· gent restrictions on the sale of hun. ting rifles, .22 caliber weapons a11d shotguns. A provisional decree from the Ministry of the Interior banned the further free sale of hunting arms without government permission. The ministry said the decree had been "under consideration for several days." apparently because of the French. political upheaval. Paul Ziffren, former Dewµocratic na· tional committeeman and a Kennedy delegate, expressed M,>e that th< delegatioo would cast theif' ballots for Kennedy on the first roll call at tlle convention. ."'Ibis is the very least we can do tn honor the memory ol tlhe man to whom we were pledged," Zillren said. Kuchel Concedes, Laude Rafferty On Election Win SACRAMENTO (AP) -Declaring his 15 years in Washington part Of "the most thrilling chapter of my life," U.S. Sen. Thom'as H. Kuchel con· cedes he lost his Republican renomination bid to Max Rafferty. Semi-official final returns issued Wednesday by the secretary of state's office showed Rafferty, s t a t e superintendent of public instruction, garnered 50 percent of GOP votes in Tuesday's primary while Kuchel roll· ed up 46.9 percent. Jn a statement telephOfled from Washington, Kuchel said "returns ... indicate that Max Rafferty has been nominated and r· have therefore sent him a telegram felicitating him on his victory." "I wish to add my unbounded gratitude tn my fellow Republicans and to my fellow Californians who have permitted me to serve them for more than 15 years in the United States Senate and for a like period in California state government. "They constitute the most thrilling chapter Of my life," said Ku<ilel, 57. "I can never lose a keen interest in government." New Gun Control Bill 'Not Enough'-Johnson WASHINGTON (AP) -President .Johnson, speaking in the wake of a new Kennedy assassination. has told Congress that "55 Jong months after the mail-order murder of President John F. Kennedy," it is time in the name of sanity for a tough gu n-control law. He served notice Thursday that a measure passed by both Senate and House and now on his desk doesn't go far enough beca·Jse it bans the mail· order sales only of pistols. He wants the ban to apply to rifles and shotguns as well. \Vhen ~t was in the Senate, such pro- ponents of the tougher provision as Sen. Thomas J . Dodd (O·Conn.), lost in their bid· to include rifles and shotguns. Two Of Oodd's staunchest allies In that losing cause were Sen . Robert F. Kennedy. whose brother w a s assassinated with a mail·order rifle five years ago, and Sen . Edward M. Kennedy, whose only s u r vi vi n g brother, Robert, wa s assessinated with a pistol two days ago. Rain, Floods Plague South Hurric ane Abb y Ex pected to Die in Georgia California Souti,er" C1llfornl• 1klt1 .,...r1 v1r· l•bl¥ doudv 1nd drlu lv loGI¥ w1111 1 f'fW ~rl 111 tN ~M V11ln 1re1. Tl'lert Wll Httle ltm~··""'' dlanff. DeMr!I Nd _.,.ty WINI•. 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'l• • Tiit WHIM• a11r11U .... ,...., If , ... •tlb!IJ!y ol loCll 1'-lnt Ill t t•t ..... l'IOf'fll ~ii •l'ld """' "' Seulll C1"'4lnl Mc1111t ti 11'11 1ot1..., rtl"' 1111. ) I Hanoi Stall : i VOA CHIEF RESIGNS OVER DISPUTE WITH BOSS John Ch.rles D11ly Leon11rd H. M1rks Angered John Daly Quits Voice of America Helm WASHINGTON (AP) -Former television personality John Charles Daly ha6 quit aa bead Of the Voice of America, accusing his boss of "ex· ecutive undercutting" and "malad· ministration" in tile transfer of a Daly aide. Daly submitted h i s resignatiofl Thursday, effective immediately, to Leonard Marks, director of the United States Information Agency. He com· plained that Marks' office transferred one of his VOA aides while Daly was abroad. Marks promptly accepted.· th e resignation. He sent Daly a letter praising his one·yea1 record as chief .of the U.S. governmeni overseas radio. 'Ibe 54·year-0ld Daly, a broadcast journalist, moderator of the former TV panel show "Wha('s My Line?" and son·in·law of Chief Justice Earl Warren, was appointed to tihe VOA post by President Johnson May 29, 1967. Mark.Ii, a communications laW)'t!r and friend of the President, runs USIA, which handles government pro· paganda abroad and is the parent agency of the VOA. The V.OA, with an annual budget of $34 mil'lion, operates 101 ttansmitters around the world and beams programs in 36 languages. Kidnaps 2 , S1arrenders Trusty CHECOTAH, Okla. (UPI) - A con. victed robber walked away from the Oklahoma State Prison today, ter- rorized a hospital and abducted a nurse and a policeman at gunpoint. The prison warden exchanged himself for ttie hostages and calmly talked the escapee into surrendering. "He . kept that gun on t).er head," said tbe police.man, Faye Kirkpatrick. "He wasn't hostile, but I think if they had pres!ed him he might have shot the girl." The escapee, identified as Thomas J. Rogers, 2.S. was a trusty at the prison at McAl.ester, ·Okla. and had Terrifies been considered "extremely weU behaved." Officials said Rogers walked out of the prison some time before 2 a .m. PST and went to McAlester General Hospital, where he demanded a car. "I told him . 'Sir. I don't have any car,' '', said Walter Hamilton. an orderly. "He thought I was lying. He backed me agaiMt a wall and jerked out a gun. He said, 'Give me the keys ·to your·car.~L.mean business'." Hamilton said .the intruder got about "three or four of us" in line and marched them down e hall. Hamilton hung back and finally sUp~ away to Over Peace r:f al ks Seen PARIS (UPI) -Hanoi can be e:r• pected to stall at the Paris Vietnam war talks pebdinc ni i I i t a r y developments on the battlefield and political developments ·tn America, diplomatic sources said today. They said the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kfi!nnedy has apparently made North Vietnam reluctant to decide on any new moves in he negotiatiom until. the American political sc_ene clears. So far in the talk.$ Xuan Thuy, North Vietnam's chief negotiator, has stuck rigidly to his demand that all U.S. bombing and "other acts of wat" against the north stop unconditiQf'lally before progress can be made. U.S. delegation Ie'ader W. Averell J!arriman has just as firmly insisted that tbe North Vietnamese reci~ocate by showing some restraint on their side. Today Harriman was to fly to New York for the funeral of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. and will confer a second time w1th President Johntion on tbe stalemated talks, informed Amefican sources said. Harriman and deputy negotiator Cyrus Vance said they would leave tonight for the funeral in New York Saturday. The American sources s8.id Hamman hoped to talk with Johrison either in New York or Warbington. Hospital call police. ni.e gunman forced Marily F-ain, 18, a nurse, outside with a pistol at her head. Kirkpatrick answe."ed the call and \Vas co nfronted by the gunman when he drove up in fro nt of the hospital. Hamiltdn, watching from the third floor, saw the gunman with "the girl in one harid and the gun in the other, shoving her along in front of him. "He and the girl got in the back of the car and the policeman drove them away'" he &aid. A few minutes later, the car ran two hiehway patrol roadblocks but officera shot out its ti.res .and surrounded it. Tam O'Shanter . The big bar scotch in California. • TRAGIC FAMILY PORTRAIT -Kennedy family has faced tragedy over past 25 years. First blow was wartime death of eldest son Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. (upper left). In 1948, Kathleen, (top second left) died in plane crash. Sister Rosemary (top second right) is mentally retarded. Father Joseph. P. Kennedy, Sr. (upper right) suffered stroke in 1961. President John F. Kennedy (lower left)1 was assassinated in 1963. Senator Edward M. Kennedy (bottom second left) came near death in plane crash. In 1966, Senator Robert F. Kennedy's brother-in--law, George Skakel fbottom second right), died in plane crash. Rob· ert Keniledy is shown lower nght. Family of Tragedy Trouble Has Never Quit the Kennedy·s \VASHINGTON (AP) -Bouvier Kennedy, died or months when Cavendish was Once more a Kennedy has lung disease when two days killed on an infantry patrol. been struck by violence. old. A daughter had been In May 1948, flying to Can· sWlborn to them earlier and nes to meet her father, Once more tragedy has be· both are buried beside their Kathleen was killed when fallen a child o[ Joseph P. father in Arlington National her chartered plane crashed and Rose Fitzgerald Ken-Cemetery. into .a peak .bordering the nedy -, the latest victim of Rhone Valley near BEGAN IN 1941 Marseille, Fr a Ji c e . A misfortune in a family that The Kennedye' days of peasant brought her body ' had everything going for it: heartbreak began in 1941 dowil from the hill in an ox wealth, power a n d un-when Ambassador Kennedy cart. matched achievement. and his family returned There are three other J ohn, the Kennedy who from London. female metnbers of the Ken· became president, w a s "Rosemary was not mak-nedy clan, all attractive, all assassinated. Joe Jr .. the ing progress but seemed in· prominent in their own oldest, died in the explosion 61.ead to be g 0 in g right. of his bomber on a backward," Eunice Ken-Patricia Kennedy was dangerous mission in World nedy said. "At 22 she was married to actor Peter \Var r. Kathleen, the third of becoming increasingly ir-Lawford and divorced last the nine children , and a ritable and difficult ... her year. Eunice is married to wartime widow, was killed memory and concentration Sargent Shriver, once direc- in a plane crash. And now and her judgment were tor o! the Peace Corps and Robert is dead. declining." until recently director of the TEDDY HURT The family made the Office ol Economic Op· Edwmd M. Ted Kennedy, agonizing decision to put her portunity, now in France as l·nto an ,·nstitut'"'n and later U.S. ambassador. Jean is 111 se nator like brothers John '" · h E launched a drl·ve to aid married to Step en . and Rob ert, lay painfully s ·th h h di ( · ob · r persons similarly afflicted. m1 • w o an es many o 1mm ilized fQr a year a ter the Kennedy family business suffering a back injury in a JOSEPH KILLED interests, taking frequent plane crash. Rosemary, the ~ I t · t · liti I Lt. Joseph p. Kennedy eave o asslS m po ca second oldest Kennedy, has . Jr., was i·ust 29 when he was campaigns. epent much o[ her life in an institution !or men ta 11 y killed Aug. 12, ·1944, TRAGEDY STRIKES retarded. He had entered the Navy The family of Mrs. Robert Now Robert, at 4 2 , in 194J, graduated first in Kennedy also . has been . his class at pilot training struck by tN1gedy. celebrating a ma1or victory h I d b M !"" h d . sc oo , an Y ay i7't"I a Joan Patr1'cia Skakel, her in his drive for the pres1den-fl h b t ll own enoug c o m a w1'dowed sister. died in May cy, is dead from bu ets · · 1 aliI f fired at close range. missions 0 qu Y or a 1967 when a particle of meat trip home. lodged in her throat. Mrs. His wife Ethel, expecting lnstead he volunteered for Skakel's husband Wijs killed her 11th child, was on the a mission that involved in a plane qash in 1966. campaign trail with_ him. loading. up a Liberator, .:=========.I A few years ago, while the bomber with 10 tons of highlr family gathered in arniction explosive and aimjng at a around Edward's bedside, Gennan V-2 rocket site. The Robert had enough humor pilot was to eject before left to remark: radio guided the bomber to TOO l\lANY its target. The plane ex- plOOed in flight. "I guess the only reason Kathleen,· who had been we've survived is that there serving since 1943 as an are too many of us. There American Red Cross worker are more of us lhan there is in London, had married trouble." William John Robert Canen- But trouble has never quit dish, the Marquess of stalking the Kennedys. Hartington, a captain in the Servi.nCJ The PUBLIC & TRADE Joseph, the 80·year-old Coldstream GQards. They patriarch who was am. had been married. only four bassador to England, has 1;=:~~~~===============;1 been paralyzed for years from a stroke. lie was with bis wife at the famiJy ·com- pound at Hy.annisport, Mass. when Robert was shot in Los Angeles. The Kennedys were not told about the shooting immediately. The son of John and Jae· queline Kennedy, Patrick NIGHT •nd DAY ·SERVICE 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. Ftld'a)', Ju~ 7, 1968 DAILY PILOT 5 As·sassin Vicious American Fact W ASBING'.I'ON (UPI) The assassin bu been a vicious pclltlcal facl., of life for well over·a' century of American history. Thirty-five men have been President or the lJ.aited States. F9W' of them were slain while in office. Overt attempts we..re made on the lives of four , others either while they wue in the White House or. just . before or after. 'Death has stalk.ed presidents in a theater loge, in the U~S; capitol, in, a railway depot, ?D a sunlit plai.a ln Dallas. The pattern of hate began developing in 1835, on Jan. 30, when an insane housp- p a In e er.--Ri c hard Lawrence, aim¢ a pistol at President ~w Jackson ~nd pulled the trigger twice. The bullets failed t o discharge. ATTENDING FUNERAL The attempt took place ~n the Capitol in Washington while Jacksoo was~attending the state funeral of a con- gressman. · His &saitant, who was disarmed and captured, was member of lhe famed acting Boot.ball~ into a corrktor tried on two separate counts famUy -initially plotted to' ~Ox 7 of the theater of assault but was found in-merely to kidnap the Civil Whei:e Llncoln .s.at·watcbing sane. L a w r e n c e , who war President. But upon "Our Ameri<;an Cousin" and 1houg'ht himself king of the defeat of the South, his fired a bullet from a single. 'United states, was confined· hatred hardened l n t o shot derringer into the back in mental institutions until murder. ot the President's bead. uo. his death in 1861. Around 10:15 p.m. of the. The second asussination tragic Wednesday night , (See ASSAsslN, P~1e •) attempt brougllt death to a1-_.:.---------------r---:- President. The victim was Abraham Lincoln; the assassin,. 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Four of his fellow con· 1pi.ralor1 -Mrs. Mary Sur· ratt, Davey lterold, Lewis Paine and George A • Atzerodt -were hanged in a Wuhlngton Jallyard July 7. F'our others went to prison. What was Booth's rnotive? •·0ur country owed all btr troubles to blm and God simply made rne an in· 1trumeot ol his punish· ment," he wrote 1D his diary. ZND TO DIE James A. Garfteld wu the second American prtlldent to die at an u1u1la'1 hand. He was shot tn tbt back at the Baltimore and Ohio railway depot in Washington by Olarles Julius Guiteau on July 2, 1881. The presi- dent died S.pt. 19 at Ille · o c e a n resort of Elberon, N.J ., where he had been taken to recuperate. Guiteau, a scrawny political banltf"GD with a weird evana1UC1l religious bent. became cmvtnced that Garfield bed dellb<r.C.ly dttrled him an •ppolntment u U.S. Ambuaador to Vienna or at leut a con· 1ular post lo ParlJ. Early on the Saturday morniog of July 2, Guiloau rose early at h1I roomln& hOu3e and while hi• victim Jtill lived wrote th11 nott :. ""nle President's tr a 1 t c death was· a· sad nect11lty but it will \mite t b e Republican pvty and •ve the republic." He Ulen went to tbe dtpo~ eot a shoeshloe, b1red I coachman to take blm to jail alter his deed, eumlMd bit '" caliber revol'lft IDd took \IP vigil in tbe lldlta' waiting room. At 9:20 a.na., G~, IC• companied by Starillrf o1 State James O. llltM, er· rived to board a trllft t• I two·.,.,·eek vacaUoo to lft· elude yaohthll OD th• Hudson Rlver. FIRED TWICE Guiteau 1todt up to the back ot !ht u .. \llpaoUllg Pesident •nd fired twice. One bullet tore harmlessly through a coat sleeve, the other smashed a vertebra, 11vered a large artery and lodged in his abdomen. Ouiteau went on trial Nov. 14. claiming insanity. At one ·point, the dead President's backbone was introduced in evidence . \Vasnington's social set crowded the courtroom during the lOY.t week trial, hissing, cheering and sometimes laughing. The defendant once ex· ploded : "I expect an act of God that will blow this court and jury out of that window U it is necessary." The jury took five minutes to rule him sane and guilty cf murder. He was hanged in the district jail shortly •fter noon on June 30, 1882. shouting as he stood on the 1caffold: "My murderers from the executive to the h8{lgman will go to hell.'' McKINLEY FELLED states. ftred a bullet from his Sl.fi, ,38 caliber revolver as the ex-president rose to speak. The shot struck Roosevelt point blank in the chest but was slightly dellected when it hit rus bulky speech manuscript and his spec· tacle case in a pocket. As Schrank was wrestled to the ground, the former Rough Rider lold 1 his au· dience, "it takes more than that to kill a bull moose," then delivered a 50-mlnute speech before rusbina: to the boepltal for tr .. tment. Hll ~-be killer WIS adludiocl -and com-mitted for Ult to a mental bOfPttll. He told tbe <ourl he wu mot1vat«1 by hi.I PISllOOlte 09poclUon to Roosevelt seekiD.g a third term. -FDR ESCAPED Franklin D • Roosevelt narrowfy missed becoming an assassin's victim on Feb. 15, 1933. only 17 days before h.is inauguration. In Miami, Fla., Gulseppe Zangara, a deranged bricklayer who blamed bis.chronic stomach pa.ins on whoever was pres· idenl, fired five shots from the revolver he bought for 110 in .. pawnshop. He misled Roosevelt but OD< bullet fatally wounded Chicago Mayor A n t o n Cermak and tbe four others wounded members of the audience at Bayfront Park on Bilcayne Bay. ZIJlgara, who stood only nve feet .... 'Otil)ted but 1111 tJOUllllo, pl111ded Juilly twice -first OD F1b. 20 btfore Cerm$.d1ed: again on March 9 wbtD he was ar· ratcned oo a charc• of m\U'der. He w 1 a eltc· trocuted at the ttate prilon at Raiford after be was cteclared sane by a panel of doc:IOro. Vllly! Zangara t o l d autborlties: ''Si nc e my stomach hurt, I 1tt even with capitalists by killing the President. M)' stomach hurt for a long time." TRUMAN TAllOET R o o 1evelt's successor, Harry S. Truman, w11 the tar1et of a violent 111..m&Uon effort t b a t erupted into an afternoon ttm battle on Washington's Pennsylvana Avenue Nov. 1, 1950. Trying to kill him were two fanatic members or the Puerto Rican nationalist movement -Oscar Collazo and Griselio Torresola - who believed the slayin g of Truman would dramatize their cause. Armed 'vith G e r m a n revolvers that had cost $15. Collazo and Torre sola sought to storm into Blair House where Truman was living during renovation of the White House. As late lunchers strolled back to work and Truman napped upstairs, the two opened fire at guards and Secret Service men at 2:20 p.m. When Ute crackle or gunfire ended, Torresola lay dead at the entry or Blair House, along with \Vhilc House policeman Leslia Cof· felt. Collazo "'as sentenced to life in a federal penitentiary after telling the c o u r t : "Anything that I had done , I had done it for the liberty of my COWllrf." I ' 11 ( No Blanket Commutation ~ . ;eay City For Death Row Inmates Asks ·Guns Turned IQ -· . v.· CJ ( ' 0 -. . . . ' " r ·~ .. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -San Quentln Prison's Tl death row lnhabltanta dld not automatically wln a reduction or 1entence Mon· day when the U. S. Supreme Court ruled against so-called •·hangJng Juries." Attorney General Thomait C. Lynch Friday informed the staU>'s district attorneys th3t each case will have to be dealt with individually. On Monday the Supreme Court held, In the ca1e of \Vitbtr$pooo VI. lllino1', !bat a death aen~nce may not be lmpol<d b7 a jury from which persona opposed to the death penalty have automaUcally ,b e 1 n ex· eluded. 11Plaue.ckm•t try to ch&DJ• my convictJOD8-l ~ Jn 001 mil\, oa1 vott, aud one man, one ~ •• · Lynch 1ald the key word 11 far as Cautornta con· vlcUon1 Were concerned was ·-~ a utomaUcally." Illlnoi.5 automatically e x c l u d e s persons with s c r up le s against the death penalty, Jn California f u r th e r que•· tioning is undertaken when a prospective juror says he is against the death penalty. Poor March Leaders Feud Over A utlwrity Lynch's office said Mon~ day it could not be sure how The leaders have been California would be affeotld feuding '\'ilh Rustin since until ht hid read the Sunday when he issued a 14· Supreme Court opinion. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ci vil rights leader Bayard RuStin gave leaders of the Poor People's March until noon today to put him in lull charge of the forthcoming ma1s sympathy demon1tra. tion or do without him. RustJ.n, oraaniur . of the 1963 morch on w .. hlngton that brought more than 200,000 pcraons here, said 'nlur1diy ht mu1t have "complete authority" over the June lt demonstration or he would quit at its coordlnetor. lie 1ave march leader• 2-t houri to decide. aim J "We conclude from the point lilt of march • n opinion," the letter t o their names. district attorneys said, "that The Rev. Ralph David no prospective juror should Abtrnsthy and H o 1 e a be challen&td or excused for Williams, SOuUllrn Chri•· caua• on account of his tian Leadershln Conference view& in opposition to the " death penalty unless he offlcial1 who are dlre<:tin1 answer• affirmatively one tht aampaign htre, dlsavow· or more .of the following ed Rustin's statement. three questions: Tha: U,t of · s pe c it t c "l. Are your views on the • _ . death penalty such.as would demand•. for Jobs, inoome r,revent you lrom making an and houling wu welcomed · mpartlal decision as to the by 1 i be rat consre11men. defendant's tuilty? sympaU.Uc to the march, "2. Axe your views such who complained they could ~at you could never vote to F • ' t 1 1 Abe lh · unpose the death penaltyf ore1gners no . ~am rom rna y "3. Are your views such specifically what he wanted that you would refuse even Inhen'tance . Congress to do for the poor. to consider imposing tbe Rustin, sometimes called the theoretician of the civil rights movement, has con· D Sh Law Up"""t siderable presUge and in-eputy Ot ~ fluence in both the white ' death penalty ln this casef" The letter ,nid th1t if any of these que!Uon1 were anJWered in the afflrmatlv~. the prospective juror might be subject to challenge for CIU6e. "The Witherspoon stan· dard1 may or may not have been met in lndlvldual cues in California already tried," the letter, signed by Lynch and Aast. Atty. Gen. Albert W. Harris Jr., said. SAN FRANCISCO (UPl)- Independence Day, observed to celebrate a freedom wrought With weapons, of. fers San Franciscan• this year a cbant.'tl to unarm themselves. Those among the cJty'a 747 ,000 re&identa who h a "r\ stashed guns ln their house· holds can turn in the weap. ons at police stations ''with no questions asked." In declaring ''amnestyl' TOKYO (UPJ) -Thou-versity in Fukuoka, a city in for gun owners during the sands of militant left wlng southern Japan. The plane week of July 4, Mayor Jo-- students protesting u .S. hit a new building under con-seph Alioto told his weekly struction and touched o f f press conference Thursday military bases on Japanese demands for withdrawal of that no serial numbers soil clashed with police In 57 all AmerlC'an bases in th J s would be traced and no Leftist Students Riot In 57 Japanese Cities cities today. One group in-country. · questions asked. vaded a tl'.S. military offi· The Air Force Jias thou-"This voluntary gesture cers hotel in downtown Tok· sanda of planes in Japan as \.\'ould be the flnest possible yo where police used clubs part of the Pacific Defense tribute to the man who tried to dr:ive the youths out. Network established under to close the gap between The focal point of Ule Tok· joint security treaty be-black and white America," yo turmoil was the Sanno tween Japan and the Unit· Alioto said, referring tot he Hotel, a billet in the Aka· ed States. late Sen. RobertF. Kennedy. saka night life district for1-------------------- American officers on leave from Vietnam battfeflelds and other Asia posts. Hotel guards kept the American guests inside. Japam1e reported 210 stu· dents arrested in the dem- onstration at the Sanno Ho· tel and 28 more in 56 other cities including Kyoto, Fu- kuoka, Kobe, Sapporo and Shizuoka. Fights erupted near t h e runways of tbe U.S. air base at Itazuke in southern J a· pan, an4 authorities said 50 policemen -and 50 students suflered minor injuries there. One student was ser. iously injured in the Toky9 . melecs. One cau,se of the demon- strations was the crash last Sunday night of a U.S. A i r Force jct fighter-bomber on the campus of J<yushu Uni· GM Workers Back at Work FREMONT (UPI) Tune in the Colorful Sound of Orange County Music! RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM From Fashion Island , Newport Beach and Negro communities. h LOS ANGELES (UPI) -To [)eat Operations returned Io Californ~'• I.aw bannln1 in· normal today at the General herttanee of property by R d U l 1 foreigners wa1 ruled invalid e S rge SACRAMENTO (UPI) Motors assembly p an by Superior Court Judi• SherlU's deputy Kenneth following a mass walkout Jo11ph T. Call Thursday. Ro~al, 38, was 1hot to death triggered by a 11 e g e d His deci&ion paved the Italy voice todi,y and • robbery suspect remarks over the death of way for a woman in Com· wounded In ID exchange of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. •nun;~ East Germany to in-gunfire followlo1 a beer btr The plant was shut down = HOME CUP!) -Com-h Id t Th d b horlt the estate of her son, 0 up. a noon urs ay u t munist leaders met Pretii· D •-ct' rte I R l d f · ht hi! Harry K. Kraemer of Van ci.c: 1ve1 l"tPO c oya reopene or n1g s t Nuy1, who died in 1962. dent Giuseppe Saragat to· was killed as ht and another ~o!"pe:'.r~al~ion~. _ _: ___ _!~-::===================-Cali ruled that the statute day and denfanded he ap· ck!puty ordered two holdup,- waa an Intrusion by the point a premier who would suspects out of thtlr car in a ,---------------------~,.,--state into the fltld of foreign agree to Communist quiet rt I ld en tl a l rn:1rticipation in government. nea'~borhood -orlly alter allairs '"which the Coo· ,.... •u Communist parliamentary ml lght sUtutlon entrusts to the · d C .. leaderi. Pietro Ingrao and They sald Francisco C. President an ongress. Paolo Bufalini. made the de· Salas, 36, and Arlin Damion, Mrs. Ida Kraemer, 96, of mand as Saragat called 22 both t ~ l t Erfurt, East G e rm an y . ' O i.cramen o, so claimed the estate of her them in, among other out of tht car, One fired at di ed d political leaders. for con· the offlcere, mortally wovn· son, who was vorc an sultation6 on c::ppointment of ding Royal. Tht 1tcond fled did not leave a will. The stlte attorney general's of· the new government as re· on foot but Wll captUMd flct intervened, claiming quired by law. later hidlnf in a 1arage. Mr•. Kraemer could not in· Premier Aldo Moro sub· Salas wu felled by a blast herit the estate because mitted bis res i g n at i o n from a police ahotgun an.:I Ealt Germany does not Wednesday .,.,·hen the new hospitalized for treatm1nt. allow American heirs to in· parliament convened that Both were booked on suspl- herit estates there. W'3S chosen in May 19-20 clon of murdtr 1nd armed Call rulled that the state --=e=lec=ti=·o=ns=.========'0=b=be=r=y=. ======;,I statute conflicts with pro·1l'" vl1lOns of a treaty between th1 United States a n d 1 Germany signed in 1923 and still in force. A state Jaw forbidding roreigners to own land in California Yras declared in· valid a few years ago on almUar grounds. STARTS NEXT WEDNESDAY-LIDO THIATRB 1r, HOW You DO IT{ 'lhl IHlll Waraf --"'· ir·s Nor WHO roll CO"·· PAUL nEWmRn . <.O &•A""'"'G 0 SYLVA KOSCINA the ~. original 1 light , . Scotch now5~ fifth USHER'S • i Another Ohioan, President William McKinley, was fell- ed by an u1asln'1 bullet at the Pan-American Ex· position in Buffalo, ~.Y., on VIVID )!EMORY c 11 • Uie sweltering afternoon of or more vivid. tragic a I n g $ept. &, 1901. The ahota were memory was the day of ~:1 h~~ ~~e:i~ c:oi~~ :::~ ;f;le l~ i~~a\~~= All Cars In The Harbor Area revolver under a Texas Book Depository handkerchief bandaging his struck down Presidew. John hand. F. Kennedy. McKinley, shot twlct in Lee Harvey Oswald, an the chest and abdomen; died ex-Marine loner who had tight days later of blood defected to the Russians, poisoning and gangrene. then defected back, was ar· His 14().pouod assas~in _ rested as the killer the same 1,11 itinerant farm hand and day after the slaying or factory worker who was on Dallas policeman J . D. Tip- tbe lunatic fringe of the pitt in another part of town. anarchist movement -was The death we&Pon WJI convicted Jn a two-day trial id1q_tlfied as an Itallan·m•~«i and electrocuted in Auburn riOe pUrchased by tpau prison 45 day• after order for f21 .45 lneludln1 KcKinley died. 11.!0 !or pot ...... And why did he do it? . .\t What prompted 01wald coe point in his trial, was n.ver learned. He in C'lolgOC!!z declared: "I k.Jlled turn WM 1bot to dllt.h lr1 the the President because he Dallas Jail by nll!ltclub was the enemy of the good owner Jack Ruby Uie day people -the good working after Kennedy'• 1laying. -''· I 1111 not llllTl' lot AND HOW llOBERT my crime." 0. Juno I, 11118, Sto. ASLUllH'I TARGET llollart 1'. Kennedy brother TheodOfe Roosevelt was o( t.be slaJn President who tbe target of an asae'.111n's ., was s~g the Democratic bullet in Milwaukee after lie Pre s 1denilal nomlnation had left the White Hou1e himself, appeared in the and wu campalgnlng on the ballroom of the Ambassador Bull Moose ticket. On Oct. ~I jn Los Angel~s to 14, 1912, J oh n Nepomuk make a primary VJctory lchrank, a New \'or k: stAtement .~. aaJoonk:eeper and lcncmtnt Smlling and waving, be owner who had trailed left his weUwisbers. Jiate - ~vtll llltouih a I r b I lfld dtlllh -w11 wlliliDf, •• t CAR WASH '1.25 ELITE CAR WASH and JET WAX VALUI •2-U 2950 AARIOR ILVD. COSTA MESA 8-otn Ad1m1 & Baktr (546-1191) GOOD ANY TIME USE ONE OR USE BOTH 6000 ANY TIME f COUPON ii ''--·-·-·-·-·~·, , WITH THIS COUPON FREE CAR WASH With G11 Fill-up No Minimum Gallons ELITE CAR WASH 2960 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA -. Adams & 11.tkar (546-1191) • ----·---------------------..-----,..,,~--·----~---~--~-~-~·--,..­.,.. , - s~ont·o·RaJDa o ·pens ·at· ·oc • ·~,.. _..,...., • • • ' ·.,. ' .......... ~.u:'*''lil'•Ni NOT MONKEY BUSINESS -Scouts from Costa Mesa Troop 444 are serious about construction of monkey bridge· built to add to festivities Saturday. The boys are, (left to right) Bruce Hubert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hubert; Tom Mahoney, son of Mr. and Mrs: Frank Mahoney; Mark Budzinski, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Budzinski; and John Mercado, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Mercado. CUB CREATIVITY -Everything from pirate ship to totem pole head will be on display in booth of Huntington Beach Cu b Pack 227. Showing items arc (left to right) Stephen Eckrolh, so n of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eckroth, David Hag· ler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hagler; Leo Stiles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stiles; and Ricky Stockwell , son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stockwell. All pro- jects were made by Cub Pack. F'rlda;, Jun! 7, 1%8 DAIL V PILOT 7, FUN AND WORK -Drumming looks easy and tuba tooting tough work.1 Wayne Hart (left), of Tusti n Scout Troop 62, Donald Clouser of Westmin .. ster Troop 284 (right) and flag-bearer Paul Ober .. holtzer of Laguna Beach Ttoop 702 will march in Scout parade at 9:30 a.m. Saturday I For The New General At.El Toro Thousands Join • Ill Show · Catalina Line Begins Flights to iA Airport EL TORO -Major An estimated 9,595 boys with booth proj~ts and by 140 Scouting units march cers from Los Angeles, will Fred Austin, the airline's General Arthur H. Adams from between Huntington other d Ill p I a y s , have from Costa Mesa High participate. There will be president. assumed command of the Beach and San Clemente, prepared dramatic proof of School to Orange County numerous floats created by The City Council this week Third Marine Aircraft Wing representing 185 Sc o u t the ·Scout-0-Rama theme Fairgrthounds ..it o forn:ially scotlters. Record FULLERTON -Catalina Air Lines will begin Aero Commuter service between the Municipal Airport here .,,, _______ ....._,:: and Lios Angeles lnterna,- tional Wednesday with 24 lights a day, according to Meeti1ags Pll:IOAY ~r Vll!I MlllDlll.c Lodr.• MISD!llc: Temp!1, 11Dl Ulh S ., HewPOrt vf11K~OJi30&i:-1111, Cll'nPlll H1\I, Unlvenll'I' Df C1Jllornl1, lrvlnt, 7:l0 Pliw~b Wlltlll\lt P1rtn.r1, Or111ts (001ntv,, M .. V1rde COllnl,.., c!IJb. (0111 MIMI• I l ,lfl. 5ATU1'0AY Cllrl11!1n llu1IM$1men•1 CD1T1mln10, l1lboil Illy Ctvb, H1WPort le1cti, 7:30 •·"'· Fire Calls '"'' Miii 11 :21 1.m. Thur•v. 11111 1l1rrn. ltth 11111 Whflll1r Its. 3:02 P.m .• l1IM 111rm, 2690 1"1ln1l.w .... 3:3' 1.m.. 1r1u flr1, rur Df 2.501 H1rbor lllvd. J:lO p.m .• HI. !lrt. lOd Fiiimore, ...... 161 -12,000 d•m~ge 6:1' 1.m .. fnv11!11111on, 1"' Ml1>ll 6:1' 1>.m., 11/tg fire, Htrbol" l lvd. t nd Sunllowlf" 7:$1 "'·"'·• rncvt , 2100 Hewpprt llvd. t :U p.m,. fffcvt, 151 ll:octiest1r SI. 6:1'-1.m., Frld1y, rncve. 1'50 Haw-I llvd. DEATH NOTICES KAISER m tle 1(1l1er ...... 11. o~· of dffth, o o 1£ Ulh SI., Olli Mne, vivid ,_ tont. hit!., 1na f'le1 Illa«. o,_1 'hr•' -Min . ~lY• Tr1utwtln, H!:"'ff.11 ~I llh1r. P•lt• Anthe~~ J;.J;' ,:/111~1r ·su~f::h. '~ef!Mlll n'111r.'r"1 M!n.rv1 Glrrz"· tc1nM111 1 11rlnllefl!~rtn1 1 vrNJ11r1110clll~rtn, River Levee Work Bids To Be Called SANTA ANA -Santa Ana River levee improvements will cost about $960,000, ac· cording to Otief Engineer George Osborne of the Orange County Flood Con- trol District. The area to be improved to safeguard against future floods extends from the San- ta Ana Freeway and Katella A venue in Anaheim. Bids will be opened July 18. The job calls for facing the levee slope with r ock and con- crete. . The· last remaining $1 million in the 1956 bond issue will be used to do the job, Osborne said. ~(ts, ,.,.,:~:~r• 2 -tr~~.hl 'i';IJ 8roedWiv Cn&pel. ~ntombmilntb H1rbor T k Lef • l Rwt M1u.01eum. 01recled v 1111 O yo ·tis S lroedw1y Mortu11y, 110 lro.dwtY, Coslt MIN. WRIGIIT Storm Hotel AudftY M .. W~kth~ ''' W. l1lbo1 ·~··s:~1V~ h'1~!-ci~w1M~ TOKYO (UPI) -Crowds ~-W ~h.S:uo\~tr.:Io...n-c!:.Si of militant leftist students l'lltl'lltl'. El!!!"" e111C11t. H swarmed over a fence and 11Cf11 1114 ~r,1r 1n dchlldr 1 n, .~~~~i.w"'l:Or~I ,.•,:;;·.rt:'rJ: int<> a U.S. military officers H11Wr1 JoMloll 0111c1e11ncr. 11uJ hotel in downtown Tokyo to-Mor11>a,..,, 1711 lullf!'IM, (OSll 11\twi, dlrllCfan .• COWLEY day before riot police drove them away with clubs. Colooel Ardllbllld o Cowl..,, llellrtd v.s . ..,,..,v. 11~1c11r.f ~ /:° _,:~~~ Police said more than 150 J::W 7L~~vtd .. :'· wH:. M1b.11 two students were arrested near ~:i:~~k~~~ro1~f'?. s.;,;~~ the Sanno office!'&' billet, a />:~l"lk' v1-Mlmor5r.r if:rll. 'T.'ciirc hotel used for officers on \litw Mort"Mc01E!UE'N rest leave from Vietnam approved a oo-day lease troops, Cub packs flnd Ex-that "Scouting B u i l d s open e one-uay festivities. . . Each of the O a .n g e at El Toro Marine Corn.: Air I t ·11 I k t A · .. b b 'Id' g ·1s ' E Sc Co which will permit the Aero 't"' porer poss, w1 a e par mer1ca Y w 1n J Five marching units, in-mpire Area out un- Commuter service to Station this week, relieving in the Orange Empire Coun-young men, a1!corcilng to Dr. eluding the King's Men cil's nine districts will lead operate out of the old Brigadier General James A. cil Scout-0-Rama, Saturday, \Villiam Burns, charman. Drum and Bugle Corps from --a _division of the parade. terminal building, but calls Feeley wbp-'vill assum·e at 0 range Count Y The annual event opens Anaheim, the San Diego Chairmen of each ·· dlsbict for coMtruction of terminal duties.as the assistant wing Fairgrounds. -y:ith a colorful parade at Highland Dancers and the will ride in antique or vin· f acllities and parking at the _ico;;m;;;;ma;;;;n;;d;;er;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;T~~;;e ;;boi;ii:y;;s~, ;;•~g~edii;;;Bi;;;it~o ;;1~8;i;, ;;;;;9;;' 30;;;;;;'·;;m;;.;;;;w;;h;;en;;;;bo;;;;iy;;s;;f;;r;;om;;;;;;;;C;;or;;i;ina;;;;V;;al;;d;;e;;z ;;M;;e;;x;;ic;;an;;;;D;;a;;n;;· ;;;;ta;;g;;e;;;;c;;ar;;s;;. ;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! north end of the airpOrt as soo n as ~ible. The F ullerton·Los Angeles flights win· be scheduled between 7 a .m. and 11 p.m. The one way fare is $7 in· . eluding tax. Dana Soil Report Due DANA POINT -Because Orange C o u n t y officials think the San Juan Hills area around Dana Point and ... San J uan Capistrano will be the next major area of development, they want a geologic report on t h e stability of the soil. The State Division of Mines and Geology will do the survey under a $20,000 contract with the county, 'The state--w\ll match the county contribution. The area east or San Clemente and north of Canada Gubernardor, was mapped last year. Gene1·al OK'd WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Senate Thursday ap- proved the nomination of Gen. William C. Wes tmoreland, outgoing U.S. commander in Viet- nam , to be Army chief of staff. • 233 E.-17th St.-Cost1 Me11 Shopping Center, ·costa Mesa • 1406 W. Edinger and Bristol St.-Edlngtr Center, Santa Ana • 2300 Harbor Blvd. at Wilton St.-Harbor Shopping Center, tosta M111 • 6827 Westminster at Golden West~ Wt1tmln1ter e 17904 Magnolia St. 1t Talbert, Fount1ln Valley e Beach & Edinger Blvd., Huntlngton_Bea"°th llontld c. McE\141n. P•.Hed ··y; MIY war duty. ls In \'ltlrt1m. ltnK!eoil lUtl i----,,~--::;;;;;;;;;~;;:::--------1 1nchero W•v, Gtrckn Gr•VI. Vf'<'(V'ed r tr. 11ar""ll' Mr. end Mr1. ~L rrn W. McEIMt'I, of 1111 MmtJ 1-brottier1, Shvtn, Gird"" Grvvt, tlld Sl'"llY. Hvntlr1tlol'I 111ch1 11lttr, Mr1. Mtl•nle Hou11tr llt1tOI P1ttrntl 1r,1ndmotMr, Mrt. 6r1 Mclut11. llllno 1. S1n11«1 wilt bll held mflnd.IJ, J11119 101 l D,fl'., 'lcillc View 1111. lnt9frntn , PecUlc V t W Mfn'ID I 1'1rlo;, Ol rKltd by P1clllc VIWffiT'Effn.L ~dwln F. Wl'lltttlftl, UU Elmer l •"!· rdtn GrM. o.tt of dttlth, Jun1 . n1lvtd llY wife, C.lht•IMI to<i, cn&rd1 dluohll/.' J111nn1 br~. rrvi 111i.r, rs . .f:.· J. . ~~;sc~~~~~r~:· l!lr11te II:. L1ii Jr, $752 l l(•nfWlm, II-Pl!'k It ol dtel!I, JIJM 6, !;';'I~ Dl'~::Ci>;I' ~::_i rr~,tnl:;i WllU1m1 ·1l1ltr, r1ji,';;iT.,.m~oN!I I dlY, 2 p,m., F11ner11 Home. BAL'l'L ~IORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR S-Hll Colla Men Ml 1-UU BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY UI Broadway, Co1tl Me11 LI 1-3433 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortuary Chapel S500 PacUlc View Drive Newport Beach, California llU-!7• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '7111 Bold Ave. We1tmlntter ISS-3$%1 SMlm'S MORTUARY 1!7 Moln St. llaatlncto• llelc~ LEMAt WESTCLIFF MORTUARY C!7 E. 171ll St., Colla Men 1111181 WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARlt Mortuary Ir Cemetery Cb pell 1'801 Btaeb, We1tmla1ter Ul·l'l!I e IN-WI } • Price • Quality • Style • Guarantee For the diJcriminating buyer who wants something different! aveilabl• in I 4K. white or yellow 9old BOTH lllHGS ...... .' 275 .00 • A1k Alt•irl Klrlri'1 T''"'' ·~ U1111 12 M•ntht I• P1 y ~ NOW 2 GREAT STOR!S TO SERVE YOU MAit to• IMO"'!" CllfTlll JM NAltlOll ILYD. COITA MllA-Ml<MH "UNTINeTM CIN,11' llACM I IOOt•llt MVNTINITON llACH ... .... 0,IN MON., THUil$., '"'· Tli. t ,,M. ,( ----------------·---~-~-- '2" Value! Gallon Plastic Spout Jug $)44 '17" Value! Coleman Lantern s124' Wl4 ..... wittl twi .. '" .,.. .. _ with ... ..... "' ,_ 4 NfMl1 -AM/PM. i!Mtfws11 ..... Mltri111. '21" Sunbeam Shavemaster Electric Shaver 517" c-tw1 c11NM hes4 a '''fl••I its•I ltl9'sl,,....tlll-.... Faultless Futura Golf BaHs .... at.$2M 3i'219 llllf•lt11 ,. 111 •• , ........ Wltl• ••••ft• 111••'•' ..,, .. -- • • . ........ ~,,,,. .. -. • .II DAILY '!LOT \ , FrldJ)>, June 7, 1968 • ·----,LEGAL==,,.N-OTI,_CE __ .,_...,..,,_LE_G,...AL __ No_T1_CE ___ 1_1tloJUJ11'• W01'11' \ ...... :~·,.-:-,~ .. c ... ::.'~'!::= ....... :..-:;; Welfar. ·e } OVER THE CO ,_ ..... T A • 1 s *'• <,.LIP o • 1111 •, _,,., .. .._ "" tac111nn ,.ttr-UN TER llortl\tnl' ·'° •JTAILIU.1 ... •••UU.YIOlllS lliHD ,..., 19 tit $eetloll '* •fld ... kl fOll 2.0I ~~=:ti ~""f:.r•.::,~~ =::'i: :=,."'till°:.~~ ... ~ 1--------------1i:t~r:;, ""'° ™• 1111n-.1..u.Ttofll o. "' ~not w1111 • ••lkffil Embt•oiJed MEW •ORI(' 1 ... ,1. Tilu,..,.~ COll!P\'" ,, ... W.-.1r JO UMD• .. •ou•o ,.AC1u·u1s 1 M "'""" ~ulelloll\ •1111' 11tlH1 ot "" NASO ll•lfnns for TburMl•y, Jun• 6, 1961 M-Y0t~ sroc~ £).c111"" "'"": 1riw,si ,_,. wwo1•••ou1110 \IW-ILIT'I' t11n11CTL -91W utlUl\I 'K ltlflUtln ... "'-••• ' Ntt llrr.IMYfl' I• TME CITT COUNCIL OF T'ME Cl'l'V wllfl ""-OIWM'ltta• If "" '°""' 11 't 1t:;1 tlltll L ... Ci.t (llt. 0•0t !!.,MY 111f, l DF COlfA MELA. CA.Lll'Olllllll .... DOI,) llllf -llttMd bl' '"" Hr-~•Hf Hl!ll:EIY 0..0AOll Al l'OLLOWl1 wllfll11 "'--n--idtd 1i11t Ill 11\t Bt!Yf\UG 1j .. ~ I. Arnet. J " "'""' ICIOtd "' .._1u11o11 _,_ --"' flt lfellon In EI ti• 114 All!.:= ''* l'rl• -A-U f:::C!'' p1"1 1 J 0. ..... UC "' "" C-11 ........ """""'JclNI t.scil lwrlol. Ille ('lty COUftfll, tl\rowll ec on INOUITflli! t Mii~ 0-.. •• "'• •n'" T~ >< •14 AHM Ill m:'"'I ' n, lii!' Silo ll1·, + ~ 1,•.,".~!'f J c..dil wMdl Wll M tllOWll u the Ille (Uy Clol'rt. Wll llVI l'IOllCll Ill >> > ~ '"" ,, li lk ' Co !if •I U + "'--u.... ....... Utl~IY O!•lri<t Ordl.,.IO wrlt11111111M",_111-n1lonol .-.AI C4Jt, l :t1:fl' II'( !JI\ ll IJ';,f~:!.c~°'{1 10 B.'t \Ii ~ ,1,e.t1f 1~ '1\1. ~Iii )l'\O.f1•1~~.;:~dl110 .... ~.,,.II -.. toliow.: MIO\.,.,.,.,,~. •1'111. "ll!lct ... wr111,.. ~~tlll ur~ lU {,1. I~ {,1, :.i:v. ~,(.:. llh 1 14 1ia lr•1111oun1 m P1 .. 1 r.;: ,.... ra ,!:;'ll" ff 1' )'" 1~• ! " '!< .......,.. ttll. D•PtfltlllONl !It Ille ow..., ttwtOI' tt UIOWrl °" 1111 r11or,.. 1"•1!11111 U R"' tt lfllutY Pnt!N•I • N \ii JrtM Com i~.;tMt ltl.I l.i. " A~ 1 Hut .70 1 :io0 •• i' • t•~ ~ ~o . o, ......_.,., ... 11111 oN!l'ltoll(t """~ .. ,, ~~~ •~I rofl. IO -f.O•TOlll'• NO~: ~' .. F." '°'Ar ' llllllUtlrlft nVt ~ ,..,, ... ~"'-, .... fl • fil ••1.'1'L.Dda•'" 16"' 261' ll Addt ... I «I 10t 11.. l'I -c! 1/lditlti.t"'Ulttclundt••••und ''°"""Ol lllf 'Ii'" l'llveAltltrl~'tlnt.» 'j" "ll" , .... ,.~• 3 221'1 ! frco ;:i ·· :lln lil't VIAGm!r1_1 " 1•1 1' 1 lldeFnM or llflrw.-111r.irw~r Jn 11111 '°"''°" > >. I I -r INlfl or•• 1n • Pl'ba",li Al>~ EQuit!.. I -. 1 14 l lltfll M~llflfl llltnl I U TtlOeir /""'"I Pi ~ A1to<111lt 111 ff "" 1411~ ll « F ot .O Oillf!""" ,,. \lt'ld. 11\ty tlltll 111111 ,,,. flt I'* w 1111n It!\ 1a1 d.liY* tf'ltr wtill !ht 1•1111 11,..iy "wilvfd In lfN A 1 id Prooti'iln ~ II"" 1<11 111 Al 141~ i~ ! J rhilty ndutl o f'" ~Prod Jab uo ia 3 1'i Yi ,~If F~ e l """"'"....., _11..._ u.r.)llMlll 10 Tltf:m tft'.91"' ..-1uc11 "°""· lll'•kletlt111 ~lltlci . .,,Ytv~ Po.-l"lr '""" "U p,_ " 1): ii ~ ••-"'r 111 e ... 1~ 'fi 1~ 11GOn Golt .1111 ~ '•" •"{:.,' ,,"'• '•' "!! ,~, 1 2 '!: ulov~".l., 111 the "'1w1 ... O'!nnlllonl: (bl Tiie llOl'kw lo -!ft""' ... 3~ ... ,v ....... !!!Hllc.ll, • .. iw:I ~t ~!.!n,!_G•CQll •• ·.-",.a.. :::.1 (cot',.~~.·.. " "'~·'or" ,... ii I !" \4 h -•• uni! •m II t1J ''Cot11miHIOll .. Wll -IN G>llt'fd UllCN"9t'OW'f t•dUll" IN'f 11111 ' I lr°':' =..r'.Olu~~r, l;,i.s Oft A.Mr 'El~M411n 1.:0 r,'.14 GU IYI ~ E.,. ilnt. 6Wt •il'lo Un lilock A Mt! .611 '"" "' '"'A nth/""" 13 j1t h~ 11~ 1 ~ ullk ~IJ.SO ~161k unNt1" c.nm1n1on °" "" •I"'"-'""' by 111r-.1 ,.,vie-.., by ..... Arn« Gre1 ,. 1111 ,..,.. ~ "' u co , 1lt:: 1'\IJ ut, 2:!TrM1~ .120 lll1 ilf:1"' ff ~ :.;;:•c·~10 ~' l.ffi.,. L ' ~ 1~ 111~~:iayrld ~·20 Sttl"I gt Ct l!IWlll•. mill. 111 UM fll ...,-.,iu bY m.11 °" Am Mid ~" .10s 11 ll"l'ltllllr fQul11mt 11\11 1•7 I~ ~fall $hilt l.nd 013,~ ,' I'•" '•if:iM<"'~.,j!' • D~ n, , 1' urr""'lh1 I 1111 ~u..,..,,_. ut1111'1' DIJtrld" .ilhtf fll '"°' NtwM.-'"" "°'iu Proposals to overhaul our ~" Pl>N, '•'!-'"'' "".-~ · ~ ~ ,•"r.!odc P!rt ''° ,.,,_ , ~1,,_ vw11; Uhl eor" 1 !! ... .,"... •• e111hT•r .20!' .,. ··m11..-k:t" llMH -II flllll .,.. '" ft'Wtf bOI ~lltod "' "" U11lltd ,,,,,, ...,,. R .. -.. ........ ... ,.. .... V.cco ll'ld\ls I 1 l \lt A 90 ... -c-. w!ml, .,,..., ..... -!ft, owm..d m.!l In 1 w.lld .,,.,.lol>I wlltl POttKt pUblJC wel(are Sr.:t.'tem are ~le..•,~, n A • • ~I """~c'~Kfl \fo lE VI~ 01"'1 Co 4>.I. l\~ ·~ A/C:tud 2,C II 6:1\li ~ t.lllo ,.,. '" ""' '"" ,..l\MIU '"' li 1AV. "'" 1 l " ll"" V11iej B11 71 1jl1 n,_ 1211 A \Id P1 3 • 61 61\11 •m ~ ~ wt..., •nO •uotM!llll -tlllld ttfueo ,.,_Id. floddfltued to lflt _._ t11 already deep 19 1J 8 ~~T'u..flt :JO ~~l? ~ .ujl\41 :: ll:"~~ 11'.lo I 11\0 v.,.-. lne Cor11 l 'lo 1t 11:w. A~ Piii' 1.io 111 l!\\ ll nlt i l 11 ~:\ J~t! ,0 :=-ri:: ~1:i.ct...:1u;t' ::,~ ~~ .°'...,-::::' .:1:1:.:~·~ ~ M1 u 1 r" d lled "' ti(; 411 lft .. r;;i1on.1 ... ml ll~ ~.: ~:~ ~,:'~"'":. _,,. ~~ :J "'" :1~~.:·\'.J 1i!10 ~~ 301~ ~ _., ~1i.h M 111 """""""' '9 mt -1.i-of .s.tdlofl 0•"*' to 1M OWMI' tlltffd 11 Jlfdil pre$ en a po l~CS a D ~Olli-Me~ ' I 't li. l! Lu~~ Prlflf .IO 411'1 ~ "42"' VJVl•ftf W rd " :U l!\lo AllleclCll I H 1 )6;', ll>\\ :It\\ ~ CamoRL .IM .., "'1111, .,,.,1,,.11e1. ow"'"' ,..,... .,._,,, '"' musi 11e civil rights. The movement Ar~~~,~ 'n" • •:;.,\\ 1 C9 '° '•"' 1.,. 1•"" w.0..0111 .. ..., 2.20 sa " "lllld Kl• 1 1 J1i., JOI• 311., v. cimo *• 1 "' .... - • • , for refonn ,_ -~ •• ~•-·-•,•, •«, r11 ,...1 rod ,~ ..... ck,,• E Nlflla 1tv. 21 20\ll w.1~er-Scot1 Cot11 u 1, u11i A led Mlll•J 1 50\io 511!/i SOI\ -~ ,.., Dno so /cl .. ,.,._ .. 111111 _.., 1111 i... ,.. 0 w n •' • 1 .ia .... "' w~~ tu AGfl R . ....,.. 1111 u;V,, p <jl'll W•mer El«: Btll lol :nu II"" n Alllttl 'u • .w 5111.r. .it so~ +2 C<1nS011 ~r 3 clllde 111111..,.,..lt. """'· ~·'*""· "-..,,_ ., tM .. ,,,. _,.. u b' d d di ul'-A..-.W•rt .. H-l 11) fl •t\ot I ......... \ftC •VI ' Wu/I N•I "•• • ..... ,,, ... •1111c1s1r lAI 11 ..,!Ii .,y, ., +1 Cdn Br~ ,40 ... troen.~lo1.. ti"ll ftlllt' """"' '"" ori "" i..t .-.l!hd • .....-1 toll, Y roa an verse, q ui; Ar,....,.., Purti-.s 1. 2 lWI :llYI u11o '""' 11e "',, '." \llll 1 11 W•t11;1M.Jot1;'o.. · ., "' ., "' A IHS1 pf • 120 ,. w "' . conBrw tn '° -icw-. •11111 11111111 I'll' ldlll'HI -rs. .. .....J.. .. bl far be d h l Alllllotf9n.kt C• n f'M UVi .... 1-~ Wt1 '° llM I ~Ill W•m. 11\IQ ..... :av. lJ\11 31'!4 Alli.dkoD ... 51 111' 111"'1 17(\ +"' COnP•c ,,,,. (dl "Pain. """"9d wll'ft tnO 0-tl °'""'"'·Cl,,.°' C0..11 Mew, .... .,._ y yon w a AlllO'Nlllofl tndutl $1 r. $1 ... .. u.-, 3.i\11 W••lloer'lord CltV) Co t i;{ N '"" Al:t-.Chtt , J5" ',,•• ,' ... ' ',!~ _ ...• ',~ •. ~.,••,I~~·, • , ,..,_ vou.lhlnk. r--·'der•. ~~tom111on,1~.!' ,• ~ '•" •,!«jl:I ,...,. •,•-,_, M • Wtlllrloton M11 Inc 1 .. ~"-n ,,,, A1 P C1t11 ..,. ·-'"' •--1•1111 .,....,,,... 1tr~" 111111 If ~ •• • -riv .... u. tuCti "" " ~ ......_i.c Oii . .,.. t'AI wn ~ ·-Ell\ :lt\'I 21"'i Wel!t l""ustrles """ .U ·~ ;'" Alt to ' 11\li 111\r 1• t. (, Ctnloen ao ..-n Jl6ll:l, '9Wwl. ~ wlr", .. ·~ ~ dtlrMd-• ... ~ ~,.,~-·• V'-· Prtsld t H be l 81b(Odt Electrorllo S1V. '2 Im 811Ch1rwt 80 5l'lili Sl Wnl &•v Fl~ COl"O l'rl 2 H\ Alcoe 1.IO 11• 71fl 72 n~ + V. CltP C B<k•I c9f'duct9rl. 1vn. 1lubl.-1tlttl9frm. ...,. ..... -·-" " -l\.'ll en U r 1•rl'll'I Hll'ld Pt.41,,,... 4"'4 (jll mnomlc1 l•D ... 6' " wm Pw1' .. G11 ao 27"< nv. 21,. AMB11c ,60 " 11 5S"' .s6 -:u Ca•br11" 1 XI Ctt1$U•mt. bt-lrllfltlottn~, 11>-,_.i wlllllll ~J'll t•J hoWri •n.t" }IUmphrt:V 5sv1 that "kt:u ··-¥~ .. ~~t ... O M ., ... , I 1 \i ldOll~,utlrlft II~ 10Wt l~ Wes~ll PubUt111114i ,1J ~:.. 30\.1 :IOI\ Amlr:ffii 1 ~ \1) •5~ 411;, "5 +11, C1rlls/e 60 1uLl1ot1, Mouk. 1wlkllM. corn--the rNlll/11 flltfeol. If llOlkl ll l l'flll -' -.., # "..._.. '6\\ :y., lk!.,,..._ _n4'il \Ill>• n'' w"!',!.!-.te-CM•:r.I A 111'• 11 lM' A'l'f': J l ll t.Mo 1il.:; '3''• +•'lo Ct ro C&Oll J mu"lulloll clrcullL IPOlll<l(ft. II• tw ..will IO ltllllu f11t owntt Of 00-iSllJeS in ttJjs year' I national Bff;ln.1 \ltn I. SI .IO ii"' :itU. i:" IKlnlUX I •• "' " ,,...., 16Y,, 17 11\11 Mlrl 11 t ,IO 20 l7~ 3All 37'!11 -.... CatoPLt 131 --·m _ ---.... .. Cl... , hrlUlllte Klllllll'•,.v ,... l:lAll"fc CIP »4 .. ~ Wl,•,t!._~o { wm1") 12 \ll/J 1/ Am Air ~ ICI 213 '1\11 2th 16~ + '' CaroT.. ,J, t•dlrntnh lflCI -""""-lllcltld ~-"' ... .,,,, '' debate" will be' guaranteed aen0 'c' c~ .., ~,, ... 15! ·~ , '''"~~la ... ,.. wr ,......, 11+;. 11~ l l'o Am Bak., l 11t ~ 2!14a 2'!' -i.r. CerP Sii I 60 •toov.,.rllllll'ld w1m111 • 01t"ld 11111 .,... Clttk aNtl, w1111111 fof1)>-.1111t 1•1 In-me ~r everybody, or a ':=".....,, ,,_..,,_ r,·""-,,-1,l! ,""", ---, ..t... '"" .!,, w1c A.Jr F,.1111, 1, lfl'I 1™ Ami~ lojo .. t 2 v :i.:i. 11 + ""c.rrler CP 1 Id or uHi\11 111 WNh'IM •lltfl'lc. '*'"' trtff !hi ""Jn"' '""''°'· a11M: .. v ,..., a 111u1 ... "" q -... •r!no ~ ~ ~ ,,.. • 'l'llbl lnoun "" -•l'I Am kN "' l 1110 ss ~\~ JJ\i -\; ''" PP'l.2-.! """""'11tc..tlon Of' tlml .. r or 1 Qllrll f!11.-.ol, IM'lnlM on 1 Ural not 11 r Cllfll 211'1 l'N Ftcl M41" 22"" t:I~ 2311) YutN :w.;11 J pf .SO '" .,. t >.4 AmBOc.tl j 60 $1 66~ h ~1 + ~~ Car1trW . .i:i1 utOCl•iM ...... in, le» than ,11111 111 llldlff"" ""' 1101 negative income tax , or -n:z• Alrtlne un11s 11s 1~• "'I~ "~' 1 .60s 11\4 ~ :n\lt z.vre 1 , 1oy. ~ 1, Am ''" .20 lot s1111 s2" -1.-i C•i.e JI ' ' ""''''-, "'' , •. -. '' , ___ '' ,,-, -bo _," '' , _ fa 'l D-·· Tb Bosloo'I C10U11 .05 1S 36 Fed n $ cvP!l.20 Jll'h .-n 31 zior. '11'1 atflC !o6 t V. •~ tV. AC1n Dt l.7S 1 XII~ 30\~ JOV• + \• C11t Pl Al..U • u '" I 11(.......-• .....~ ... ... -~ ... r ml y 8 ..... ance • . . . e 8-altr p_. .1.. m Pio •" 'lnl '°" oro • 13 t5 ... ,,., $.AV NGS .. LOAN CO.w>ANIES Am Cem 6o 211 221.'l 11h n 'h -'A C•1l!e Cool\ I l>ttlOnl or enlllln 1UPl>lvfno ti.drlc, UllCllO<lt P'-(11 on ~Id or .... 1111. l IC • Btlovetord FOGm ..... ..... ~ F rJ •ec Cl)l'O 11\IJ. IZ'h 12 A,,.., Sl.L Ut•h u 61~ 1 ,,, ... C~•ln 1.60 I• )1'• 37"1 JI ... -I~ CITerT• 1.~ corn1T1Unlc1llon or 11mn1r ,, le) T"' no!lce •!ven bt 1111 Clt'I' presen WC1..1are ,prog1am 11ru ... wl11 Oruq 11 ?j\" n 201.i F\tl'ltr Sclentlflt .:zci Jlli 31~ n~ a~1mor11.$aY & ln 1i•u u~ 11 AmCon1 ,Mt 1 19>.< 19~, 1tl< c~<o CP 10 a.....cl•l'HI .ervlc. 1w m11nt o1 el«:· Clerk ~ prov1~ Ille rtaulrld 1111-mocks justice "fA negali·ve eulfun'IS tnc .10 22 221.0 """ F:etchlr c.,1111 '"" '"'-•Vi eo1umb s .. L 1 AmCrectl! .90 • 11•1 ?lh• 21•~ + v. c,1,11e1~0 1 ti I 1 I It ct I , dergroul'ld fttlHllrl •ll•ll ""lcu1•rly • C.l(llocnem s ~l"• 26U. :!S11J Flf'll:Mr itunc1 lt~ '1G 20 Empire FINl\Cltl • 17 111'1 ll''>ACt'/'SUI Ill! 1'I l2" 321:. l2'•-i•i~1Jn PfA~54 ' _:,,a,, ~",.!f •, •. ,0~,, ... ~,,.,,,0 ., ,.. "' __ , , " , " Income tax will be expt-•-e .. C•111 Pet u111111e1 1 12 ;s1. i~ :uv. F~ld• G1111 2 n~ 11 11,. Eou111bi. Sa.LL a 0, s 4i 0 Amc11n 11s J» in. '~" 11•1, + _.. er1e1111, .lo ~ ...... .. .. ll>fC ·~ w w ... ~ I rf<IU r 0 cuu ... Eal I Porlld Cem 1,511 ],\ :ii ' :i6 •2 Producii lid 00 61" 71~ 71~ EQU Table S&l Porlld .00 1&;, 1'\• 16 AmOltl l WI I 'O'• fOI-> •Ob -"· en QUI• '° COUNCIL "-•• ct.1,rmll!K by "" Cltv in 3 later column 10 Utis 1111 W•1'!r su .... 1c1 1.SO u.,., 25 1•Y. F011r Stir TV ''h 11a '~ First Fin of w .. 1 , 1,11 '"* l't'l A!J' Du8IVts1 J1, •,•,~ •,•, .. , •,•,~ -:/: ~~ c,•,~Fll•'•'• "'• .. TM CollntU ml, ftom tlf!ll "' tlmt E"91M'l'r •!>d 1h11F 1!1te lhll II U ld • am1>111 C85Ull1 JO 7:U. IV. I g:;rde11 Llflll (O l 5V. l Fl~t L111eo.tn Flnan 9Vo ,,.... 9<1t ADuftl pt,l~I ~• .,. .,. " - c•ll PVf/Hc ~e•I"'' "' •iat1t111 wDl1c 11 nol cottoPlilltd wlltlln '"' 1111r-sen es.) W hingt thi lb .lh _ "",, '•''',',.',.. 11 16'11 16 Fl<1t surew C!lffl • fll .~~ &i;. Am~Pw 1 5! 127 ll>~ lH• 36'h ~~ Ctn!IULI l 2• wllel!>et !tie ~lie neceull\I, 11u1111, .., (JO) d•v• •lier rKtli>t o1 1uc11 as 00 s mon WI ,,..r1l 1 111 1~ 10 Flrsl Wr-stlf'n Fin 4 4V• 4 A nll• I'° 11 tPI< ~ ~ c tlllt plf30 In his campa!~ Sen ~~"I R;uNrdl co 2• u 21'" Hawlllornt Fin .10 ll'h ,2 11\14 Am wo »o:1 1J.4 •1 571;1 sn. +1.,. cenlllPS I 12 ...,, • ..., or Wl!ltrt r1<1ulr11 1t1o ~•I nollce. 1111 CltY CO\lfltll will pravld• l!>'-'1 • l plague the US tntl!. nctu.lrl" 13 13" 13~ P11Clflc s.~ I. L" .30 2• 25 '~ Am 0111 ro tJ 1m l8'o'o 11~ -•,!, CenMP"I 1 ill of POli!s, av1rt1eld wire. 1»<1 1uocl1lld 1och tlQulrtd ul'lder'troullCI l•cllttln, Robe.rt Kennedy o...........,-4 Q a . VOW,, 0 · • Te/ "" oi .tO 13V. 13~ 13 Rlvetllde Fin Corp 214 2~ 2,Ao A koma 120 117 '1\lo M\~ •iv. +no Cet't SW 11a overhNd J!ructun1 wlltlln dtal1nlll>d In which a.e tna toil Ind ew11e11st ._,..,.,...,_"' With plague after plague e>n T1 J l1f l 15\lio 15'111 IS Trans Coat! l"v 1 3* ~ :Nit A Heme of 1 1 90 90 9D Cetir Soy~ 80 lrfll ol ttlt C/1\1 •nit ttle 1111C1erground tti~rtof Will be tl.Wtsed 10111111 ln1 guaranteed amJUal ine<mle, . . GltOltl\rrn Rsrct Int 7... I 7.,. INSURANCE STOCKS .t.m Ho10 .U 70 110\• 10!!¥. 110 -1 !erro 1 60tl t1111111111on o1 wire• •"" tacltlllu tor P•o1>ertv ben~fll!'d "'Id ~ • 11e11 emphasized that jobs are the until they agree to give us G&H ecnnotogy 1 1:2 1\~ 1et1111 Lrfe 1 371or, :JA\~ J71'l .o,m H~c w! 10J l1 36.,. 37 -'h er: ::r lfo sVOPtv t"ll electric. cornmun1co11 .... , ,, uo"" s11c11 Proi>ertY. heart of the mailer He call-meanin,gfudl i· obsl • and ,•, ~·.'\~~.~~. !,i:;:git;i~ 11:'h 1~ 1~1'1 :~n~&.~~~.iri1 ......._. ?!!~ ?1, v. ?!,,_ ~:!:~~~', 1 J8 6~ ~T~ ~:~ lf;z + 11• :~siiaA ~ '° slmll1r ar assocl1Ttd 111"'/lce Ttje Cltv !d) II UPOn IM e~Pi••!lo" OI lht -v.,. ,... ~" 6~ 7'-~'A ,.., '>> ......., •~v•" """AMF at ]90 CF! Sii 9D C~rk sll•!I no11rv 111 •ttec:t!'d prOf>l!rtv thlrtv c:IOJ ct•v o•rlod, '"" 11kl re-ed guaran ee annu-a rncoone G 1c1 r 1 '' 211 17 A;:', H',,','.,t, ! .. •~.,, ,'.~ ,',"' .~~ n 11006 n 11 11 -1\'J 1criadbn5 t.:0111 '. ' ' '' .. !or a review of w eUare Tb C .11 F ~~~~';i•~'c,tY P ... •N ... ·-•M , ,, , -, s •'" , ,, +• "•mo , -owner• •1 1naw11 on t It INlll 1 oulred ulldtrt•OUlllll l•tllllles l\4'v1 !IOI .... • c .. I\~ I~ Pio Am NI! Int Co M 11\(,, l?•t I f •v • " • 4 11'1 'l " ·•v aueum.nl n:ill Ind lo ffle llftclfll betft s>roV1<kCI, lf'le Clf'I' ol\tH tottnwlfti bene(its f.o establish ''minj. -e Offiml Ce 0 r llCll 0. "'"" 61 66.\'; At001'141ul Ins Co 1 XI 79V. 30 2~ AMel 11! 4 25 l Ill 116Y, 11M~ -l\~ Chases-7 f 0 ~111111 .. c011C1rllld 1w inell 01 n.. 11m, Proceed 1o c1o 1~ ..,.,k1 p•ovl<Md, al tandanl ti .d Economic Development 3 HI sne1r ,., 63\IJ. ts "' B•ne>11ci.1 s1a coni 13\l 13w u v. Am Mo!o•• 67• lJ\11 111" 1J\1 + u. c='{ 'i'% Ind pl.a of Midi hfftlllll it lttsl ltn ~-,-, " 0 .. ->•->·•• ''' ,~. m 'Ii S na OnWl e 1 Hoovor Co I 271" 21'\lo 21 BonnevU~ Sv1v1 "Liie • .... •'U AmNatG1s 2 30 31 37~ 31 + l1 ("-:. ", -'"'~~ •• "'-" ~"' -·---''! g 0Up J 2fl0 Honda Motor Co l:J\li, U\'J 1J~ C1llf lite Ins Co 17 11 17\', Am News I 63 U\'lo 4' '°"\'l +1 ""'" I ,,v 1101 111v1 orklr to 1111 1111e 1111rto1. cuollfd 11n11. "'° 1ledrlc v nwn-to assure that no individual non-prU1.1 r \1l Hoin 1111trna1111n11 l! m-1 >i c.1i1-Wi".1flrn stue IO :xi "»>Jo 111 Am Photocoy 1•oo 1t..., 111' 1tttt +1·~ Che. .,,, 1 60 E•<ll Midi lle1r1"' ..n111 bOI 111>tn "' 111e munlutlol'I• se,..,.Jcft •r• btl"' or famUv falls bet-·· the poV· distinguished b u sines s H~,'!!", FHrlK1 3111 3!1 l't Chllt:oe Coro 1..!0 .nv. "' ~Ill ARtorcn °'' u 1tt1~ 1t7 !ti -v. ~~ ~lo,• PW!lc-11111 nM'I' bt COftllrwtd trom tlmt fu"'ltlw:d !M~lo. 1t1o City loh•U 111 .1 v ..-fi,~ •. l'f'!i olD\li 39\lt CNA Flftlnci•I 39 ltl.'l 31 Am SNI 1 21 ~t '9~ 2'V. + ~ ese rv 4 to nme. At 11dl 111Cfl hla•l"' •II lieu of Pto¥kllna 1111 re®lrtd VII-ertv line " leaders and educators held 111•orinellts 63\l 'S'h •• CNA F1,..nc111 !If 25~ n11o "" Am sn111 ·'° 7• u·~ 21\., ?6Yt +~ ... ChlcE;nt 111 l>lfSOtll l-'-rttltcl 11\ttl lie •f\'111 in -.. _ -< >>>•'· " ---· > J • , , I "i.llCI (or\lllftfol' 1 .4Q .:6 37V. 36 Combl""" lno .Q 79 llO 7' Am Smell l S9' ll\'t 77\'o ll>i +4~ CC»G01Wn Cl oortunll\I "h: bt nein1 The c1ec1s1on o1 ....., ' .c-"'1' •• ..... -.u ..... r · -Sen. ~ene fttcCarthy a policy forum rn New York Jn;!"'~~t'=' l.'I ?Si'o 35 con" G1ne .. 1 1 n '1 67'~ "' Am~Atr 10 n ~,i. Mh "'' -t\.4 c~IMI':"' sf~~ ll'HI Councn sll•ll M11 ... 1 Ind COflCIUll~ll. ~.1°"!:r .':'; :~~~c::,ri::: proposes that the Ceder al City in m1d·May to debate l~t~r."' Btt• f1f lto ~ : ~ ~=~,~~~o °'Am m 12'\ tlh ~ ~r~ 7'-10 1/ 31l, ~ ... ~;,.:, ... C,,MSPP ~ s Prior lo lloldlno •«" PUbl!c h11rlf>g, 11tvlce Wlrn •1'111 1uocl1ltd f1cllllll!f • th R k f U ~ ·ti , Jeroens, Al'ldrew to lo! 37 l6 F.....,.., New W0t'4 :IO s:tY, SI 3r' Am Ster/I .4 "511 J6 :UV. J6 + 'h Cnl Mu1lc I 111e c1t11 E,,.1,,., u..11 -It wi111 ,11 ..uPOtvl"' uttHty ""'1ce '° .,14 11,.,.. government "determine a e oc e e er mrru ee s jtrrDld C!lffl, "° "° F•r"'-5 u11C1wr1ter-. j Sil Jt 5311'1,. $uQ1r 1 60 21 11~ JOl'I Jl\\ + •• CMPneu i 1111 lffKlfll utlllllff el'ld fh.111 Dtl'lllre 1 11er1Y. Upon cort1111t!lon of the wor1I tw m1n· · which .1 ati f urgenstn toGc: 25 6\ii: 7 6\1, Fldtlfl\I C!lffl 17'!< 11+ l1'1o ASUt f1fA1,6J 1 1.1 fl •7 -'"' C,,I RI Pie tePOr1 lor •ubrnlHlon ,, Mltll 1otirt,,. ,,. Ct ... • wtitren ,_ 11111111111 !It.II unum income 1 rec Ommen ons or ht Air Fteloro• · 6& ,~,, .. " Fire unwrt Aun 1..so 43 41 43 Am$ut 01 111 l Milo To><. ti).\: -\o c,~:1,•,~ .Yw' •• 'II f U U-' ·-e f 1<1lle1Stfflf1f l4' 21 n?l Fl-stAmTltlelns.lQ 13,,.14'~1' AmT .. f2.010ll.ul\lt411't 4 "1 ".,,, cot1!1!nl119, • .._ other lnklrm1llon, wlltl 1111 Cll'I' Cl9'11 Mttllllil fOl'f!I fM WI a S S Ur e Or a We cue SJ"~ m re Orms. Ktmin 'rf.: " 3S•.;, 36\lt :ll'/o Fst N•I LfleAlt l~~ Jio 3,,, Am Tob I 90 161l 5J'.'o ~1~ 3314 + V. CniTl!leTr 2 tM •~Ifft of lllCfll ulltttl"' 1>1rtlclN!lon 11ct 111111 !Ill tlQulttcl uncklrtround A ...:,..,.. " Amoog the CED's speakers "S!EI t 115 20'\9 '°"' Fr1111111n Lue f05 "'" lO'A 21~ Amwwtu .M 1t HV. lJ~'o u•~ + "'ChocltFun .60 •11111 11llm1lts Clf ""' lol•I Clllh to """ t1dnlle1 111"1 betr1 l>f'O\l!Hd •1'111 Ille men.-uS. • Kel Co Oii 10 l1 10 Fu ..... AnMrlu c.. 1.511 411'A "'"" .,,., AWWW' I 7.1 •60 ll'lo Uh 1fl• .. .. ~~~~~1i" ~ .city •1'111 •tttdlll ~ -·• Slldl ms;I ""'""· iotttner w111t • "9•1 -Fonner Vice President were Ralph Lazar u s , Ket111.K v Frlt<f c11 .1G • " • Gener11 Rf-Jno 2 21s 780 ~ Aw• 1111 1.43 JJIO u w n 'U •••• cnrys1er 1 rtflOff 111111 11111 tonl1ln 111 unmtlt of o-·•>o"---"" ·-·-''''''' . • h . F Kevslorle C111t Fd I :UV. JS :w.. Gl"u Fills 1 :Ill 60 '1 $11h Am l ine :J9 21 2Nt 2~v; • c e '"" 111111 ,...u1r111 ,., ,-rett 1 .. ~h ~ ... """ "' .,.........,,T NlXOD a h is tud g c atrman of e de rated Kl B "' 1v. 1 111. Menown Fir• 2.:xt 4l~ "''" .. Ame1etc 11 1a s2..,_ 51,,,. 51'\0 -1~ ,•nn,.o, •,», ..,..,,.. "" wNcll well '°'I II lo bo tua.sed. Thll S YS e S Yln a 1<1~ fl·~ '':S 4'1,-j 16 4JV. Hilrtlonl Fire 1 ~ ztfo 27V. Alfll•c Inc 1 • 10 '2'4 5~ i? +1-t. c'>' •, f llftdirvround lnsllllttlon •1111 r-•1 ot Council lh•ll 9fftf' arr11111erlnt1 .. 111 wide range of alternatives Department Stores and Kt1U<1sen cr'i.m 11.1111 ~ •l'!il .o"" HOfl1e troura11Ce 1 oo ~ •7"' .,.,. AMK co JOt 114 1001. nv. 9&'4 +1'11 8't~21 , •"" l'Vlrlltlld laclllllel. ttport,.fls • llm1 tl'ld Pl~c• IV h<Nt· M · B F J dir I K-c:oto '' ~ lllOtll l ll• Ins Am s U U AMIC C11 wl 13 SI>'• 50 ~on r " Jtctltol tsn. couNCIL M A"Y "" prat..b 11atnsr 111t 1ueumer11 °' to the present we I (are ar1on • o som, ec or Krcoer ._, c;o;pt 2.15 43 45" l2 tni-:omt Lit[ 1•~ t 1•,o, AMP tl!C A s1 isw 3s :IS t v. l T F Pf5 50 ~s~~:-t.1°1~~~~E::r:~~,.~o~TILI• "1• '°'' •, sucn wo'1t voon •oe.,n syStem, inc I u ding a of Eastman Kodak -again l::..,"'0~~~~rw~"" 2*'" 1'"' ~ l~~N!~uJ!8.if ?1i/, i~ ~~ :=~ )0;g 3if· ~U' !if! ~: +1~ c)l~~ 5,,~c • 1 • orem!,e,;, wh di s•ld lime 111111 nor I d l l d d l 1no 1 19 20 19 Louhl1<'11 & Sthrn Lilt 16 M\lt 16'4 An•tCl!ld 1 50 4j9 5210 »\.O 5n~ _ 14 c,·,~~ ,!•0Pfl.J0' tf, .,..,. •nv sucll Pllbllc 1111r1r11 thl Int 1111n !en 1101 d•v• ltltte•lltr. guaranteed income. ta r Y W I • e Ye i.!~::is o~s 16 Ja,, ',', ,•,.~,'-c,.0000,,•t~ .2! '••'•• " n,.~. AnchHG 1 .o 15 SB' '' '·''' ~ '" ,, .. ,. ,·,·,, ~,,, Cou11e11 fll'lds INt n.. Pllbllc MCessll\I. 01 The c1w Clerk 111111 klr1nw1111. Gov Rockefeller hasn't visionaries While views on L•vnt & eowier ·'° u ''" ~· .• ""' ,,.,. An11 ctav 110 1J 37\'• ~ :1 _;;; ciark c 110 !'ot•lltl, stlftr or well1r1 re<iulres ~11en UllO" the !Im• tor lle•rl"9 well Pro-• • • • t.~~r J.i Jf<'• l5t~ 35!/o MONtc~ ll!e 75 '29 :19~> ~ Anken Chem '51 tJ'I ,;1~ 12~~ -1\'ll Clerk 0~1 di nmov1I •nd such un<1er"11round In-'"'' ft•Yl1>11 1>H11 flMed, t lv• 1 notice Y.•l pubtlcfy slated h is pos1"· the best welfare re'"rm dif-~e,,',',"."e••'•'~', , ~ '' so a Net Un lClfl Fire l.'9 l~'.~ 30 "'"' Apeo 011 99t 155 °6\\ '5'~ '5'• ,,. '' c,, , •t1!11tlC111 wlltlln 0 11Hl1n111d are1, the ... ' PJ .. C• .,. JOI 109 Hl8'h Natl l•eWern Llfa Ins 101• 10•1 10~• ,,, ,.,. ,_ ·01 -~ ' -+ "l ev I ! 60 111w •• 11.,.to1111oersonJnPOss•st,,., t bl I g fered all•peakcs tlflC' 0 , •'"" 01,L NallonwfOo ''" ,,, 0 Qua m ••4••>'~•a -•c1evE11111n CoU"11c11 111.t!I, lw rt10lut1on. c1eci.re o1 wen oremlses, 1nd 1 notlot 1n ion U as ong ~ o as CE ,f tledr a tTliee'illll !ere ,,j ia" -11" Na Amer Life ces. 1p 10.,. \Oh ,,. Ar<hD•n 16CI 11 i.Jlo ~1"·1 iN ..... ~•c1evl1• ;10 1uc11 11esl1n1tect •re• •n Undet'ground wt111111 1 n e re o 1 10 fne owntt March 1967, he annNnted a D orum ca for 3 new MecrodYr11 ll l1¥< ll~ .,...., P•dl!c Nat Liie l"4 ii•., 1Sll Ar\zPubSvc 1 n 2~ 2170 1'/l, t V. c1ev11e Pf2 sc VHllly Dltltld and ordlf' 1udl rlfl!IOVtl fnereof, I" lltt mlnner llfr•lnaboV• t'f'v• M Movl'°" 11,~ 14 U'h P•c Sid life 4l-6~• " Arl1n1 ~S 10 HO lS't:I 31~ l''o + l\lo Ctuetlf>e• 80 11!d un<1ertr01111C1 1"11111111on such provided 1or 111e 111v11111 cf '"" 110t!c. committee of nation a 1 system of income main-M'1r1f".f""1l11nc:e 1n. 12'141 U\li Penn•v1v11n1a Lite s ..,,,. .sov. ,..,z ~rmce \1 J 1M3 5}~~ 51 51t• +2t; csrsrc1 5 in •-·>•••-,.,,, •-••, , .... ,,,,,_ -., ,,,,, •• , •• •-•''" ·-·-•••-, • .,,,,.,,,.,, ·~ , '' 1, .. PrO'ild-Wa"" l ..., -•~ ,·-~· , ., ,! •,,,? •,,l', ~:J Coe.Col ~1 20 th.-•re';' ~m~i~~-, •11eh c11i1ric1¥'~;f "" '"' ~~ '""''¥ "'' leaders to consider '1( the tenance. Mir•"-s..;u';u1n ,,..., 2'11'1 Hv. ~tPUblk Nat Lift. u 2Q.,., 111~ 201; rm c • """ -. ~ • '.7 · • Coc1B!I• 110 ... l•cllllles. ol -tile 11.,.,. -.nd pi.c1 fllll M loll Hot SlloOPn lPI 31" ~ RiC/lmonci coro 311, 39i, 3lV. ArmRu 1.MI 2 IR .ill~ •~• -• Colg Pal 110 1n111 ttx ll'lll trme w1111111w111m1uch tneC011nc11w1111>111uP0111uchtfPOr1 problem of public welfare -The President's Com·M~L~.11 ·1nc11.oo """ y,v. :i.1.,.sr P111 F&M l6& lO ~~ ww~~~lncf~ ,;& ~ ~~i 5iv. il"'::!:.~col9P 1113~ r1mov•I 111111 ul!Oer1rllllllll lntt11i.11on 1nd Will llNt l>l'Ole1b -.11111•! 1ucll · to h t • • C ( o· d Memor~ C'l"'ll 7'9\'J 11 !1 Slltco Co 1.00 .:!'"' ""'"" •1 Aslllll 011 110 ltl n 3914 .r:t +2~ Co1111nAI~ 1.10 loh111 bo t«Om.PHlhld •nd wn111" wt.ldl '"~'· "-'di notico 511111 •loo "'' was given you, w a m1ss100 on lVl isor ers Mtrcn•nt• FM. Line 1 23~~ :uv. 14 s.1~ co~""" 11:\ol n v. 11v, Asriou Pf1 00 11 81 n•,:, 81 +• com~Rid eo 1tt1ctld P,_rtv ..-1 mu1t bt ttllh' tortll "" •111011nl "' 1111 prDPOUCI ld d i'n ;1s riot report reuu·nds us Mldl•flll C•pllel XI 1w. 1,~ 1~ Seaboen1 Life Im ~ 1 6'11 Aodl!lrew i0o u n>.: n\• 1~1 + v.. Colaln!G 1 60 "' rKOtlVt Ul'lclortroul'ld MnllCll, A sment WOU you, recG!flJlleO aS h th . Mist Pll ;30 9\~ IV. SO'verel<;1n eLfllM <!O 63 60 Asld DG \ 60 ~1 78!t 71 71t'• + ll Colo Sou Pf • .._bit """ .,,.n 11oi •llowt<f for •tses · sound wblic policy for the t at e c o n s e r v a t 1 v e Mor11•dl Mlrlt sr, "' .:iv. 41V• ~ surevt u1t •ns 1 s 5V. "" A1dSPro 1 10 s l1 '°~~ lO!o -1\to ton tnd •Oo wd! ,_.1 '"' lllldertl'OU!ld • ·ni!,1111V~"':,O•tei:,~~~,:i , . . R bli , .d l th l I MDnl1Pl1111 • tl\'J 2.v. ny,:ptleh11 nit/14 461/o :l :S:;:;Aslll'Trin .«I :'.i6 17\-4 1''• 17 -'~'!if ~r'f*' llltlllklrl. hlVllllil 1111tr '"''" for the lhlll ::r tnd ~~dtr flM r!POr! ll'ICI C 0 ffi mltee'S diSCUSSIODS CPU C3n S 1 0 , e a e Motrlll>ll Knuds~ 1 00 ~k n:z P, J~~tU~~~I ~n l .d H" 2.5 n :~:.--1•1 l:i ~\It ll~ ~J~ Il"' oluGils 1.52 •v•llebllll\I Ill .. bot. m1terl•U.. Ind •II proletll, 11 l!ltre bt •nY. 1nd lf\e<l next decade?" Out or that Senat.or Robert.A. Taft, call-:::11:::!'1~~1Z'r::; .~ 56 $1 51 Uni~ lru Co Am ,ta 1"'4 Xl'h "A!cll\s ol ill ll1 12\~ 1Ho UV. s;, ol~.1Sh ~1"';:n'1117'=1?;,11:i ~ :-'! •nic~ to •111rm• rnoc1u~ 0' rellC'I com nuttee's discussions ed. as far back as 1949 or a ~:l:::'k1~~1 c~ ~~ ?3~ tti~ H~11~11 ~u7.L160 sfo: si~ st:! :~:~El !?1 ~ It'" U 1:1~ ~ ~g,'..bEn ~·:8 ---• > >>><> bo Ille tllft$l!\fr>f • • t d fl New En• G .. E 110 211/o 11'rl 19h US Lii! olO 711'1 201.. 2'I .-.11 Rlcll j 10 61 Ill l~ 110'11 .f-·,,_ CornE Pl l 70 ~ •• rou.... •c e• •• rn.av oc.-111 u •ny 1SH11m1nt 11 "°' ... 10 came a steenng comm..ittee 'mm1mum s an ard oor Nichol-. Fn• '·'° llll) .. 41,,, Votk~w-ins • 1v. ,,, A11Rch o1 15 1100 63¥, 63~ 63.\li "'. comicre 1 eo usl--0 "'•"~-w\tnon tlv• !J) ll•Y• '""' llt wn-f l2 -.... · · · · ll · • •••·--ac • •• •• Wnlern Travelers 4l\ .v,. ~ ''' '"" •< > " ''' '" ''' +> comer DU SO Sten.tr""· UMLAW,UL -.crs. 11rm•ll011 .,... 1t1o councu, tl'lt 1mo11nt o top lnuustrlalist.s which •••• to give a a mm1mum No C~Alrtinn 1 5"' "'; ~. Wll'1!!te 1,,. co ~ ,,... 1 Atlas .... ,,, .10 ll7 mt. :U'io :n•'• + ~ cornsol'I .i.oe ~n """ Coun(.11 Clll•tes •n or'"' 11MUA"Oent 111111 become• 11e<> has 1·ust submitted a report standard of. decent Ji."ving ~--£!!?!,,A,!r,,".!lns •Vt t EASTERN BANKS AHas C_pro 511 1 i.i;, ,~ ..... amis.oi /'90 llndetground Ulllll\I Dl~tr'ld and.,.,.,. UPOn ltlto HOl'lf'1Y •O•lntl wl'!kll 1111 '""'"'-•• ... .... ,,on\ 10\~ tva Bank~ Trust ] 1111 n•o 7:p~ n~ Auror1Pt .oa 11• ~ Wt tl\~ -"'~wEE 1111·~ 111.-•-•I GI' 1111et. v...rr...R wire. -.ues-111 madl bl' 1111 c11'1' Clerk. recommending "an income and to all children a !alt op-Oc§:E"Mcrtum Inc '°' n 11•,1. CIMMer N'I' c.. 1,10 ~-..-. ff\lo Au•INcn 60b , J6V. ~ ~ -Yi comw 011 ·60 •nd •uodtttd ovtrhMd st•llC!llrfl c-· c·--, , .... ., ... .... o UI\ 76..., ~~·Chim a.nk N'r 1.i 51"& 5th 51 ARA 111e 'fil 1t tt "'"" nu +1~ c 0 · •1'111"" "' ,.,,. 1 d '""' •v'" ma Int en a n c e system, portunity to get a >tart in f'IQDn Met•I asu 11 11"'1 in.'°"' 111 NB cn1 XI 31v, vv. J7 Autsoklr . 111 :i.1..., lffl 36\.'o +,.. ,~"M••• , therein •• DteYlllld In IKllO!I fS03 over 111111 MleSSCll' •nd T1~ Coll«!-co (O<"O 10\'I n ·10\lt Flflf Nit '' Ch 1 51,,. $1"-<57\(o Avco Co 1. 161 5G'h tY f'f\lo -\\, c""" 1 s.., herlol, ti ..n111 bl unl•wful tor 1nv or , not!c.. ot 11tn °" e1cn Of wld possibly a negative income life." P1bll Brew .25 ll "' llv. F!rJt NII Clhl 1 "'"' ts>.:. u Avco Pr.I 20 s~ 101 100 101 +11~ congoiem Ml PfrlO'I DI' 1111111'1' to erect. conttnocl. propeMles °" whlcn 111e i utumtflt l " The p ·d I I . Pie Auto Prod ,,:v.o •V• 33' Fr11>kllnN119kNY ls :i.i '""' :u AvervP11 n'6 11 l7Vi ~tv. •lV.;tl ,onr~ois"iao p11e1, t"", ma111111n, tonllnue. 1mp1DY ,.,., not bffn P•!d, •nd ••lei Aswn-ax. -res t en ear y In P1c Eltdrlmrd 11 11~ Min ~anqv" Tnl'I\ 210 ss\.'o U\o i5\.c, Avner In~ .50 •10 6•l• 60\'J 6"111 \1•v. c::i:t:1i, 1 6 or ooer•ft fl'Oles, 0....,.n11ct wlrH •nd .~ T Th R k f ti C 1968 led C Pee f'tr E11t Lints 2C .:! "' '3~ MorQ8~ Guar 4 lOl'l'"' 109 l!l't.r Avnet 1>!150 t 10S '05 1DS +1 c ''' •, 1 Ot lnu IX COllKIOr Shlll .Gd 1111 -e 0C e e e r Om-appOln a Om• Pie r .. mbi.-Rat. a ' ll','o 13'!~ 11" lojal Bk al NA 1' :JO 1f Avon Pd I 60 72 1•1\1. 1:19\~ 1'0'A +I ,~, '.,' " HIDCl1ttd ov1rl!e•t:1 1truct11tt1 I~ Ille •m°"nl ot .,.Id •swument lD IM Ill h d d b · · J M · PK Oulcloot Adv , 3' SS J:J WESTERN BANK$ -8-Of1E> ,.", Dl•trlct 1n1r IN 11111 when 11111 "'" ntu11r bll1 lor '•••• ievled m ee was ea e Y m1ss1on on ncome a 1n-P•c v" ou corv 12 ll'"' nv. Ariz-Benk 1 'j'U ,.14 231~ _on eclrld 1 overllold ,.,urt111 ... rlQulrl>d lo be I Q•llU.I Ille prt'ml'IH UPO<I whlcll ••id J oseph c Wilson chairman l e n a n c e u n d e r t h e Pt Git & Wiler :13'·' 23"7 2J·~ Bani! olAmerlc• 2.XI • "' 12'U 11" 91~ck w 1,J6 49 !~.. 44'~ ..... +~ \~ c=:~mi~ 11 ~ tel'l"<OWld by 1udl rttoh.lllon, ••«DI II 1Hetl""'11 Wtl llDt l>lld. S•lll 'II· . ' . • P110fl11r Mor!l!IQI ,,'111 4;1 ." D•nk of Cal SF 1.80 :JI ltll) .... BakrOUT .60 Ill ...... 2j.\. l. i~ z0<1NalG 70 ••lei ..... t111ac1 11c1111111 m11 bl r1<1ulrW of Xerox:, Among i t s chall'mansh1p of railroad t"· P•r~mount Pit 'o 11 a~ 01 Tokvo of c11 ~6 211v. B•lt GE • 1 6 .., :19V. 29 ~· -.. ·-••• , ~ lffll'nenl 111111 bo ell.it 1iw:I PIYlhlt • . J Partl:vlew Gem 31'/o ~.L 31\4 Cen!lnela Valley e-.» 17 18 17 B11Gp!B •.SO iso,, U 7S ?~ i+1,,. ,;~Pw ... 411 to lllrnllh ""'Ice to ... owner or OC• II ""' 11me lltn1 •s still Ol'Oll'trt'I' members were Ar I a y coon Ben w. H e ine man of Paulev Pl1ro!tom :nl.!i "'. 23\'J Century Bink 5\fo I I"" Ba"!IPUlll Ml "" .1811• .... 1,,' ' "'··· tuP•lll Ill Pt-rty prior kl ll'lt ll~K ire dtii 1nd P•v1bll, 11\d It Pelllbont M lilt 611 JJl/o 3t 31 illy Nat Ilk to 17'!' l Ban9P Dfl 'IS • •• •1'!1. "'1 I On w ~' ..... Pftrll!rmtl'l('I 11'1' 1Uc11 -r ot oc.cuo1nt not 1>11d ¥llle!'I di.It •fld 1>1Y•bll, .n.11 Miller, vice chairman of Chicago to examine all Ploneet N ~ •• ·~ vv. ~ t1'A roc:ker-e1111en& 1 o19s 33i' 30~ bi, la•bDll l.IH ·' <16~ ~•~ 46'"' v. con111n[ ' " of 1tlo ullll•rtlllllllll work MC111strv lo• "'' •--•• ,0 -, '''' " ''' _, f • PYbcj Pttrow•m u l~ 1'3.lo 1""' Idell~ Bank .-'''' ,, .. , ''~ Basic Int .80 .., p,,.•i 2'14 1,•,~ ~ .• ',~',',,", 1·~. •••• "' "' .... Ford·, Jooepb Block. e--orms of 10-e ma1·n-, ..• ,, ,, M .• · ...... ... " B1s1c,t,r 2sa elJO '' •· -wen ~r or occu .. nl lo cont!nt11 to ce11t !•%1 per •nnum, ,. "'""' ""' l?V. ri:i 12'/o F•rst lntOl'llClfllrlan s l~V. 111> 13' 10 ,,,. -, ·~ co~t can 1 rtnlve \in Illy lltvlct •s Df"Cl~ldl>d ln t . . t t te ance al Th Redefr COrD :tt~ 23,. 7.1 Flm Set"""' Co 1 ~ :lll'l ll~, :JOI llale~ IQ .•o 10• 11z: Vt " "t" Cont co 7Db 51cllon f.sl:W llereol', •nd lot IUCh ~~':" t$11. llll51"0Millll1TY 01' e CU 1 V e C 0 m ID l e e '.1 propoS S. e COm-Reve ~ 10 \CW. 10 Gateway NU Bk s IJ'U 16 J~V. ~:~~,~~ .SO ~6 Shi 5ie\' 3J~ ++l< Cont tns •3 :IO rllMtrolble !!ml '9<1Ul•ld to remove chairman of Inland steel; ffilSSJon almost surely Will a:.ca~~ .. llnM3. ~ i' ~.,. ~1" Ln::t!.elNe~n\k 2 11 11 Ba•trlatl ,, ~9 "'"' S?~i· SJY, + 1'i CIM!~ 220• H •• ''"'''"' '"'r 111c1 work "''been Cl.., shill re-move 11 lh ow11 !Kl>tnlt Albe l L NI k b ~· ·ts f d. '""' C ' 01 , •• o-• M 1 • ''i 07 'h BayukCiQ so 10 u •, lf 1• ~Cont Mo! fll "' ~• •II t.11\1-owlled IOUIJ>menl from 111 POltt f C e f 8 0 D e repo1'llng I In tngs Jn rti onto ' '" ,,.. anufacturerJ Bank l\lt ,t~ Btlrlll9! 80 11 31' J2'• 31~ + i,;. Cc.nt 011 llO 1Mrformld, •lld •~ce1>I •s olherwt.e rtqUll'ed to bt removed hertullller In h • • f M bil 0 .1 • h Robert11>11,H H 2 :IO JO'lt H~ 31 Pe( NM 9R SF 1 60 45 45'~ ...,,. BNI Fib 1 65 17 6-8'' 6l\li M'h ~Cont Olt pt 2 ....,,.,ldtd 111 tr.11 or11111111C• 1 ,. ,, ., ,.. c airman o o 1 · coming mont s to spur Rocket ~ewer(h 17 u s. ... 11 Monlc1 B•nll s1 u 1214 lt.. Beer F ,0 ,. , 11 1• 81 81 -cor.1 su i.eo kCfloll ... •x<••TION. •M•l.OlN· .~s~ :e1n lo~!n::v.""'111e-:~or .... ':",,,' Gustave Levv, ch··-·· o'f publicity and debate. ~:i~w:j~~'~.,:, c ~·h lf 26\.',o Sec 11~N•l LA 1 ~ -""• .41!~ _....,.Bede pt\,191< Ml 110 lo] llD +6 Con1 le 160 t Y ott UNUSUAL CllllCUMlfANC•S. ,,,. wo h , --. Pull d h. ,_,1 p,•• ., '·"' 1 •• >"" ",, "c,al hi Nat 1,00 Jl!l'l •• ,,,~ BKkmtn .sa Jll Si~' !o61> • .,, ''Con rct Data "" lt1M i.o..:ltlld 111 ll'lt rttolullon t N y k S k Ex l th I ¥• .. a,. '" S11m tomo Bk C1I H 26 ., • ,. -c .... -1 601 NofWl1t1111rdl,,. "'' provlslam ot tfl!t __ _." , ., t--e ew or toe· -e oge er IS way ~.... ,.,. o1 Amer :n"" :uv. llVt su~tv Nal Bk, 1 , 11~ BectonDk ·'° JO 1R\ 661' ''~ + 10 c~c-•• ,_ OtOIM!'IUI, ,,.erlltMI l1tUUltt m1'1' bt u,.u l'U'1'Uln _,_,IOft t503 llereof " Ill k C 0 41 .(l:W. Union B•ncorp I «ts ""'° 4 t\ 47j! lee<;llAlrc lb 16t 63 61 111 63 +1~ ,-"1• ·,::,: 1111t•lled •nd inelnt•llled lor , 1>1•1od. kctllll tSn. EXfENs10N OI' TIME change ••• Hardly a group it's impressible, i sn't it?!~~ 1!:ciu's 17"11 111 .. 17"1. us Nat Bk so '1i 11 27"' 171~ B11c;a PH .sa n 56 ssl'I J5\~ +'"" 001>1r 11 •¥ l'ol "' ~xceed 1~ tlOI d•YI, wl""""t In ~ twlll !Mt tnv Id r1<111!red bv f f I 11 · ·bl S th• · d d · h .iu.,, Alrw1,s cm 10\I 21"" 201'1 V8Ht'I' NB Pfloef!fs SOs HU rot~ lt\; B•t Htm .10 b 0 ?5"1 2,VJ 11'-' i'~• ~:"~ndt'i:Af 11111 On1ln•11ce DI' 1w , tt10lul1on O s C a Y UTespons.t e ome 1ng m ee lS ap-ScJ>n111n Eleci•Oftlcs 1:1\'o 1,_.. 17'.lt wells Faroo sent 1 olO .,. ""'" .a\•, a,•,',,' ,~o,•,,...! m " Al''> so s ... CooPT "'115 lllll\ot!!v of lilt C.OUncll In orcler ta Pro-l d«oled Pll'"•lllll ID !.ecflon t503 llfr.ot radica\S, perung! !S:':.1co!t &,,",'.",' l.?Os l1"1. J!Rio,,. 211 ACF·Wrto Sir cv•'~•n ti 107 t7 ,.t ~· 1i1 18'1 ur, ll'l o t 4• Co1>1lanll 1 10 v!de emtt9elle'I' .er11c1 TM C111,111Cll cennot INI oertorm~ wllll!n IM lllTll 6>.ll ,. Ills Am O•l l Rub o•'oll 1:10 l'l.J 170 Bemlf.D 1 60 1 SS'i 55.,, 51'~ '"Ceo Rno SC m1v 1t1n1 -c111 111rm1n1on. on sucll 11,..,111ed °" •t(ovnt of , ... ,.,,, "' -The AFL CIO has come Next: Wbal's ~·rong with ,!!., ,o,•• ••-• 26~• 21~ 27 Atde1-..¥.1vta1r 1oo :iou 10 11 10 :~1; :., OOJ 111 •n o •1\~ •1\'. + .,, cW:.1511 110 :'"raom:la~~ ~ c:::I ::f9'1' U ~ u '.°i mlllrltll, Wor, restr•l"I D'I' Pllbllc OUt }fl £avor O( a S}"slem O( Ollr Welfare 5flitem? ~t1e~nt"or;'""' ~',\ ~Vt g :~~"&ii~::~~~ ~ 220 J.~i Bene!Fln I 60 a {~ .. t;l'l ~t~ :--~I ~orlnlnp~ 11~~ drtum•l•llC:tl. wtltlout lllscttm!Nlllofl autborltl"' 1ltlkn, l•bot dJ11'urbl11Cn. • • . . ~en-Up 37'~ JI 37'• Bona"'• A!rllnn 5".s7' 100 mo a!"',',', ~,,' "• ••, •~ ts•u •S'-" -1'-' c:~Gw 2.1C• clvl1 dlfObt<llell(t , or 1ny on..r m inunUJn incomes. Simon a. ldiutter os I''> ' "" B11f111m1 o sv. 176 1n ni en ~ ~ 721~ 71 n -~• c 1 0 '' to ,..., ""°" or utlHl\I, '9 ••eel, drc11mlt1nce1 btvoncl I~• tonlro/ Clf IM . st1C1111 Pil'I' Len 'DI 25 ~ 2S C•neda o,-, oHlosll 111 113 11 tnF 5of2 » JI'° l.Sh lSl'o .lSh -~, c or'l"e .! comtn.td, ln11111, ..... 1n111n, 11'11 or 1ctot, llltll "" 11,,,. wlt"111 w11i-•• _.. -Economists ran gin g So c111t w11w .n 1•"' H+ 1w. co1 ..... n E119 M n n n engu1t !ff l~lh u i.111 + \> c~iB"Jca'i so 0Cllf'll1 llQJe,, 0"9ri'ltR wltu •nd ~" _..,, f th h . K • p So u11!on Gl•J-10 u>o 26W 26 COl!lrol Data cvNsD 117 111 Ill Ber~n Ptoo 30 35V. 3'10 ll ,,, .. , , •• auocitltd owrlle811 strllcl\lrn Id wtH bt •CCDmPllslled t~•lt bOI IS-fOm e 8rC C!Onservative a1s er ays Sou~t5ltm Dr 111111 Gj , ..... ,.. """ '51'1 Croc~er.Clllzens •60" 76 11 16 Betmln l lal I~ r,S6'Jo 13~ 35-U. +1~ Cre;°«-not 1j0 $t<ftlll 9*. OTKER l!'XCl!'P'T!ONS. ltr.cled for I Df;tlOd f'llllVlltnt ID IM Qr Milto F 'edm ~lftW<!ll GI• l .,. 101/o 19'°' Far War F -5141 79 71 71 lervlUum 60 "" '• 31\lo l'Z'< -V. cre1cl l>f l l~ llm1 of tudl ltmll•lton. · n rl an Of the jW Rsn;h .. Gl!n lrw ,:IO 10V. II lOV. Ft'U Mart cv 116 79 lJO lll lelh S!I 1 60 106 !>, l1 31V. + ~I Cromp!Cn ·111 .c1.'.:,!.11• ,'11"1 •,.'"",-',"", ~ ~c,r~•n.!.! ~ tslL 'ENALTY University of Chicago to t he Kaiser Steel Corporation's ,~se,.o0r~~Mmt. ~ 6\11! J'h FMC Cora C'll\'o.at 150 150 Big Three 611 6 3•·~ 3~·\ ::r•t.. + h Crou1eHin11 1 :>«:""" ""' ~ ,,,.. " ,,_, II I _,,, ,,_ ~ :JO'h l1 Jl Frutl\;1uf Tr cv•7' l!J 1!1 HJ BllC~Oll 1 OS 11 "~ j! 511 -'':Craw Coll aulflorlze •n, or •U 01 1111 klllowl"' ,~. she 1 be uni.wtul kit inY ""''IOI!~ liberal Dr. James Tobi·n -1 directors have declared a Sotl"'I StrMt C•olt11 'Iii •'j GI~ F•n Cal "''"n76 '6 101 '6 Blln L811; 1 11 1S'• 1!'!• 15~ -·~crown Car~ Cll!lllono. wlol1l1 llW Pf'O\lltlon Ot lo 1111 to corn-Vl art f d •• d $SI' 111111111 11 lf 17• Hof(y Sug~r cv~•!IJ 115 1~5 81ue Bt11 1 ~ 1J !1\o SG'l:o !1 +1,_. Cfownle 2 XI 111 Any mun1c1 .... 1 t1cllltlt1 or PIY with 1ny of me re<iulreme"ts ot ltlls Yale Universitv have en-qu er y IVt end of 25 j'",te E•P'""'!ll>n !'4 t\~ eo.:. Hou11011 Corp s.it.1 " 99\/. 1•1 llob!>le erts 1&1 1a>, "' ia•u •• t• c roc su 1 20 .,.UIPmtnl llllllllld 1mdlf' !ht oroln.o11ee. Anr "'"°" Ylol1t1119 1nv J ts h f ta e l"°"11r,.5 711, 1'4 &YI Maust COiii Ci e cv•"li1&l 62 62 Boelnl 110 27'9 12>• 711~ 71~ + V. CTS Caro '.o iupe,.,.1,11111 •nd 10 '"° utiiiic11on of Prov111 .... ot 11111 on11r.ance or 11111"' 10 dorsed the negative income cen per s are o co1nmon tater aroe '° 11~. 26V. H"" Pac ouidr Ad , .. M" e2 9$ n eeise 4sc .1 110 •o~. 59 11»1 +l"' cu11~hv c~· Ille Cllv Eng!netr. comply wnn •nY of ltr. ff<1Ulr1t11111tr. tax Econom1· ts . led stock payable on June 28 to !i~~l 'tl '"~ .~ 1::: /!... :,t'! p1~1u1~ ..... ,~.·'" 116 no 117 i~~s~11 1° ~: ~. n.L ~ ... +1Vo CUll!llnn " " shtll bl ....... Oo>>•· -O m>·~~ , S aSSOCia I D en ...., ,. n f!U sh CW.117'71 ,. 91 '' '1 • •••• ~•" Cummins RO lb\ Polts, ot eleclrolltrs llS 111· •• "' -·· Ith th B k. . l kh Id f d J unttl l1111111trl!S H'4 U 11•;, hd!IV Marr c~ Ss IO 90 90 O~Mnth ! 6DI I Sol\, .\]'~ ~•'It + ¥o CuneoPr 'lOe ctU1lv.!v for 11~11t1hllng mMnor •nd uoon convlctlOll !Mrtot W e roo 111gs I nstitu-SOC 0 ers 0 recor une Timar E1ec 11111 1~, u;:, lf'llo rnr111v M1t1 o 51 n 1o& 1U6 Be"'~ 1.10 01 :MV. .u>.< :U\~ + v. cvonDru~· ,0 (cl OY•rht1d w!rr1 ce11~1111lvt of Jll1t1 be ounl•ned 1w • tJne net e•-lion have made several ex· 14. ~:~.,'c'oM• 190 193 190 To1tvo sn1blura cvlHH1t l!J 16 Ill curuu wr 1 SU1>POrll110 slrudurt11 cress111t1 •nv celdlng Five Hul'ldrl<I Ooll1ti Ul>OCOO) ~~ ~ J.P.< J4!\o Tr1n1 Wl!ST Pl 5'l.6t 75 71 ,'"" K'd l k Cur! Wr A 2 ....,.11°" ol a Dl11t1cl within whlcft or by lm11tl10nrntnl ool txcff<!l1111 six XhaUStiVe Studies O£ income The board also declared ~!}~3t~~~·~s 2,411 1 16'.lo 16 W•xl'lt Mio '111!1 172 llO I $ j e fO Culler M 110 OVlthead wlr" ~IVG bHn prol!lb!Md, (&) months, Dr by boTft IUCh f!f'<ll 'Ind · ( ( h Teior. R;1ncll l~ lfl l~IJ> ~~I\~ rrag,o l~• .~· .TI. llO l1 CYCIOPl 1 80 or COlllll!Cllng fo blllklltllll Oft "'' lmorloonm~nf E1(1\ IUCh P~rlOll Shell main e n ance proposa s. t e quarterly dividend of l•••• Am 011 Corp ' 13 Ill~ 12\'o ii er MuiuAL FUND'S 260 141 'A k A d ' CyprusM 1.411 1>1rlm1ter ol • Ol•lrld. whl!I IUCh be detmed •11Jltv of. •l'll••elt oflmH The Rev Ralph Da·'d 36" ce~s per share of $1 .,, Texas ClN>l!8 Cc•o lt l•Vo 1 .... 15 P1'1mwnl Mui FO 9:11> 1016 fJI s n y 1or Mell " , , -• Y• Tl "' "OU Texl1e Ch1mkal1 16 21 u unl! "" 01 -'J "' I' y wtrn orloln1te In'"''" lrom which v ur ntt 1ny POrflo" of Abe th d p _, T " p ~ 1 u ·~ ,,. 01n Riv 1.10 11 :1641 2511 16111 + t\ POlts, _rtiqO w1re1 •nd •isoc:l••ed which •nv v1011t1°" or •nv ot 1111 11,... rna y opene the oor p11:.1erred stock (or the T~~""'•• ower .11.. J~.,..16'lll\\1s~v, vanderbllt Mui Fct 16,JI 1 :n o 11---------------·ID•n•C~ 210 10 4,, "' 7 ovlrl>IR itn.telwfl •re l'IOI ,.,,,_ vlllons ol ti.It o•dlnance II comm!ned,l ~p~~~f~'~;;:~~~~~~l~~;;:;·~~~~~~;a;~~;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;:;:~T~>~> ~~·~~c;;:;:;:;:~,.,~~~~~l """"'"'"'•ll:O::"'"'"'"'"""''"'"'"""""""'"'"""""""'="'"' .. "'" 0 o',',",'.' ,' ,", ,n,, '•"•: ,",;.,' !.~: ;:-,~! lllbltllCI a>nll11uld or •rmttted bV •utll l>lflCln, eop es ~m., .. gn I n same es. r,,,;1,,:ru0 · 2,i. 1~~ 1R? ... , 21,.. .,0 ''' Po-. __ ......,,d wlr" ,1111 •nd •h1!1 bt P1.1nls,,..bl1 lheretor 11 pro-D0PL PICC 3.oO Ill~ 14 '" 6ol ~1. ~ v••••,.. ,......, o..-> -· Ht• O .lJ J~ S4V. ~·· + 1•, 1ssoc:l•ltd ovtl'l\f!R structurtt 11tfll """"' '"' ft "'I ordln111<1. Det Mucr !.60 ;t la 31 ,.. '+' for !he 1 .. nsml11lon ol tlK!rlt -1"11'1' Sl'ClleR HI#. CONSTITUYIONALITY M al F OtlPwlt f,(M 31 i 4 :n~ '• ~ .• v. ti noml"'I vol'-9" Ill t XtHI ol U ,500 II •"' le(lloll, s.uOHcllon, Mnlll\Ct, utu unds Del Mn1e 1 10 31f J):I\ J11o :l]:lo t •> volb ci.1111 or Pllr•.e of thl1 orlllnaR-I•"' OeltaAor .«I lll J2'9 j>01o J~-"'• ,.,.. Dtnn MID 60 6" JS>o '"' -0 fel 0--llt811 wltl!I •"•dlt!d 19 till '"" tN..,.. llfld to be lnvallll, Judi DM!Sy 110a 1a l P o 37._ Jn;_.,, e•,..lor tUrfl'Qf "' • bu11d1"9 ""' Ofelllort shill not •fleet me ••lldll'I' ol DtnRG W1 10 101 ,,,, 1111 'Tl .~. ,....n1 ol • brKll:ef or ottotr nrturt 1tlo rtl!Wllnl"9 l>Ol'llon1 o1 111F 1 Deteco ol a ! J',!~ ~ j' +.-h Ind tlftlndlM ll"llm -IOC:llloll "" Of'dlNllCt. Tiie C111.1nc-ll herllw 1Mcl9t1H DtSotolnc IO .. 3l... H> ,(-\o ""' wooino to 1notlllf' ~!loll °" 1t1o ""' rt -.Id ll•v. '°""'" 11ot DetE!lls 1 '!I 'l 2s 2•'>' ~•l• .. .. ,,.. blllldllll or lo '" tcllKelll Ol'dlMllR ""' tldi Hdlon, tUbsKl!On. R!l Es1~1J,lg 1'9 ll·1i ;; .. ;; ... :; .. ~ 111111111111 wlltlout C1V1tt111 ,..., 11111ttlc .... twice. daui.e or Pllr•H lhtreol, ,,. J~!KI 1 c .... ~ s.c I'-"' n . lrw c~m 1s,71 11 '' one wms 11•1111•71 O~V•lb•s 1 10 s :n•'t 31 3~ _ ,,, 11~. resl>loCll"9 ol lh~ t1c1 11111 1nv -or ,_ , •• , <•P> (orp ld •.2J 11.11 /rw tndlc 13.• ll.1• OPo1f1 r<J 1 ,6 f7' De~ter 22e " '9\~ 2f>.1. 2111'1 +. '" !O A11NtMH, 1isoc:t1lld 1<1ulornent ,,_... Mdlon1, wbMctlont, i.enltllCIH, lM"toetMlll9 ""'°" C111rv C1p 15.ll l•..SS n~es IOI u1 .. v1n Pe1111 sci too to.i 8~?,:a~ c\·'° U :n •'\' .n ·+•• ~':':i,.,-::'':rni•=•:;.,:::1c:r~ d1uses or l>htlffl bl decltf'td lnv•Od i;"ON. 111"°11" b'I ~'= ~ 7tU ,f·~ ln:t11~ Gr'"'l~;M 12,5 ~~i!" \1'% l~i1 Olis fl! 01.1!1 ~ ~h~ ~~ ~ ,:t.1411 s•CftOH t. Tlll1 Onll<'llllCI 111111 l•k• "'"' N1ll11n1I AtlDCI· l>K•I Inc u .l l 11,61 Stott n f !" ts Pilot 1'11 9.61 g11m1,n11 1 IO llJ •s... ...,., 6 -·--vlcft, "1ed •11111 bt Ill full lor<e !lllrty (lOl lltn 111on ol SttUtlllfl Oei. Fd 11.01 11·!' StlKI t JO 1000 Puie 51 1,,i,1 11 @J 0 Ina rr ,:!Cl 115 15\'I !J 11~ ~'• C•I Eaul-1 IPOUrtflllnt la I•""' •nd illler lh NIU91 11111 orler fa DHlet~, lllC , '''Div Gr 1457 1 ·• V1r P1y t671051 PiOllHt 1•~11(t1 ~i:'o"°"«i!>" 1~ 31 :M•• 37 ' 'lo underllround' tK!MH•a. such If •llrlKI 1111 ••Plr1llor\ of nttfltl f15) lllT• tram lh Ille Pf!Cll at ~m~~ D v Inv 1Gll 11 )0 Inv Rt'1! 20971211 Pl1n In~ l f.6115<7 IGlorg,.j IO l l1 ~ ]!\(,, :le~ '• rnounltd l••nttormefl, It d t 1 I• I tin.ti• bOI l'Vbllfhed Ol>tt Ill ll'HI OrinH tMSI 1Kll Dlvtd Shr 4 02 4,.fl 151 Gwlh 5 67 6.70 l'rl<e l R 26 &: '6.60 o Glarq ml at • 11 1 2615 7'V. 'J rnounltd lemllNll be~H I nd IM"'r COii! D•ll'I' fl!lal, • ,......,._r of ltftlrll toUkl M•e ~;1 Dow Th In f.IS t.r, lllfl Fii 27.U V n Pr.,..ldnl 6 » 6 59 Ollllrcihm &0 2:S 60V' ll JJ•,. '• c•blfleh, 9nd Cll!Kffllct dvch, dn:.tll lf(!ll. irlnltd •fld Plllllllllld tn Ille ">11_i"",111l OI' Drexel Jf 10 If, 0 1vt1I Fii l9 '' )l.• Purlt1n 11 t5 iitl Dtflf'r•CI Jab 131 •7'! 59'-:2~ '' Cftl T_,,.., POlh 0"""""'° C>-• C FOR THE ClASS OF '88 ..... : Ortvtu1 U1• 11,ll "'I '"d 7~~7:St7 Putnam Funds Olsnel 300 '' '' 46\, ·~ -'• ' •T Ml• M'"'· tvoell\tf W!ltl IN • Ill A1kEe1na1t lllll2UJD1111stn ii.e121.n 91!u!I 15 !f1660011! ...q ~ • ·-c .6• 67 +I Wlr1f, I nd -.uocliltd °""mtM ilnlco llll!Tltl of fllt m•mbf,. OI IN Cllv Coun,11 A~l'tll l.ll '·" Elln 5tk 17 • .:J II f4 l<ll'StO!le f undl. G-g 16.4fl l)., DrPtDPtr 16 ;J'i; JI~ C 'h -1~ fufft vMd M' "' 11111 uHd 111 COi>-l'Gll,,. ~' llld •oal,,.l l!le 11~ Mvlu fd '·'I t .t6 Ebrrsl 1•.1' 16.11 !us Bl :20.~1 '1·'° Grth <•Ui "02 DotneMl11 1, '•" 61>; 3~'11!.+. '• lullCflon wllll ton11rllel!O!I ono!fctt;. 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Mttl :~hp~~P 1~ ff 1'~ ~~ldBMu lt~ l'1.:~ I r.~' ~J lt.t! t.6l l:Ctlnv !l~ y :f s~~rEof~r , ~~ jj,,, ~;: + ~ wlltlJ11 Ille Di1trlcl crull>d lw tllllsfATI; OF CAt.IFOltNJA I A1toFO IM 1,n FedGrltl \1,)2l ,f'3K;ndrb ~01111S'!'tOlv 1$6816tSg~~ · 3-4 35•o 3p, lS'llo-1• rnolutlOft ol 1111 l1kll>tlon llllf'9ol. S.ld COVNTY OF OlllANGIE J u SEC' URrrY AJ<e Mouglllon: Fld Coo 1$, I! 1•.•1 11.:"ltt Giii 1 SJ ll.lj s~ Eoult 11:9121 :1'l ~ke p:O 11 % 12 3'1• 111;. fi" • Cllv Cle•lc •hlU lur!llet "°'!fr •udl •I· c•-•• COST• MES• ,._,... V<'llVlll Fld F""'ll JQ.• 720l lt•l"91 10.68 !! 6 Ste l11v .•> t76g·-··· ... 11 JI·~ l!\' v. +·14 '• I F;,;.i B 11,n 12.1' Fiii Trnd l1.ao :u.n L•• Rscll 11.n 1; n &e11e "'"" 111• 1:i.1a ;:;.1•11 ·:::, 16 ~·· >o1 +1 tKl'ecl .,_,, -... of .... -1"' '· c. I(.. l"llllEST. Cll'I' Ci.rt fll ""'Cll'I' Stoclt ,,,1 'lJ FIMllCl•I Protrm; l \btrl"/ t.OI ll S•I SotlcS l J7 !1, dUPOlll ;"':..... 21! "'• 1>,\ 1 \? ...... t,.,.t. 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Sl«k H .» bt rct 1 t~ '"' ~-"}' .m;r W•llSI Ill ll-1,, ';• ;mre1 "' 'to ~ !n~1;'1 tu',, '~·· u ,, *"' (:ll'llflllulMI. Wlte ftll• ., •• flHf ...... lh• Cwltll A&B 1 u 1·n ""' Catt 11 ·~ ... "! #I ' W11n Mii l:J.tt 1•, ' lnlf'f'Alt i'O 11 ! • • .,.. ...... - .•• '········-... I. I ' I c• I . ''WHERE COURTE"Y IS A WAY OF BUSINESS LIFE'' Cwlll!CaD tCD • lmt~lll ""l 1 ..,... ·' itWl!llFd l),4.l l•.•j Ell\lll rl !-'o n1 } ~ .... ,..,,.TY °"""~ ... • " " "' "w' " '' OI' 1-• "·" 'j· >M "' °'il!' . ft ...I u.~ w~"n'"·" '°' Em•O"" • "~ !'" ' '+ '!' l•I lwrr --.... , ..... ...,.."'*' ..,._ It'• 11•1rly .1 •• ,, ffl• ,:;: ~= It= 1~:1! 1':::0,r::'" ,J.i4 ,~~ ~= WIO n:,~ \lf·ll rr"°'i.r1,... l!:!f Ji'·F." ~:::..~oh~n 2?2 ,J \, J.... JI'• ~ 1 t.tlflt, l«lf'Ylllt ~ ™''"' • DAJLY rllOT. (Ol'ltOl'd ,, .. , ;I nd r'fl'!d t.14 ll. NerMSI 11.7l iJ:S: wimi.tc fJ.'O , . 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"' • • • ' ' I • June 1'61 DAILY PILOT Thursday's Closing Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List , ... / l . • • • . . ... . .. . ---. . . IO DAILY PILOT FrldQ,..June 7, 196ij • . R • . • ... • .. ONE DAY ONLY! SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED! SORRY, NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS Be summertime trim in cotton lamalcasl • 100% cottOn duck, twill •Tailored, side zipper •Sun-bright colors! •Misses' sizes 10-2,0 SAVE 30c 110. 1.29 SATURDAY OllLYI 2.100ffcolesnlar tr11Yelala1'811i 4•• --• Calendarthaogit a-*illy •M•.inyt- 17-jewel Dorset walclles with rich Speidel• bands! • Styl• for hhn, her •Ca lend-oolf.wlada -Pr9Cl1ia mGWMnfl • High fmhlan atyl• • Motthing watch baacl • Yollow •""'he gold IAYI 7,07 1788 _ .... SANUATOl&YI ~ ....... ,ell'lfl•I IAYl20.07 •I ...... laWll owl119 3988 .. "" -·for 6 • ftt.la. twboolar ....i •Wz•d•l111 ..... ..... ._N .,.._.TOlll.YI SllYtl Babys'vlnyl waterpraof ,.11t111 • Nylon covered legs, waist; Sanforized® •Machine washable •Sizes 3 to 2.4-mos. SAVE31% , RIG. 20c PW:. IATUllDAYONLYI • I Mon's _100% cotton ivy walkina short.!._ •Tailored to be trim • Ric h plaids, solids •Cool cotton crispness •Men's sizes 29 to 38 SAVE33% RIG. 2.99 98•SAVINGS • llgh fashion lultl..-1: shim, so popular this year! • Cool ahott ••-oolhln knits you machine -•h and dry • latest colors to add 'Vitality to your sports wardrobe •Make great gifts for dod; get them in min~ aizes S-M·L REGULAR 2.99 EA. SATURDAY ONLY! l'rHI ............ SAYl2.10 Dis,.11•11 vac1um SAVE59c ·······----cleaner dust bags! • 1>ecani11 .. grill• a•• •fit Signature voes 66~KG. • 21'1169""' 3'a69" & most other models • 7-lll<h klclc pla,. •Toss out when full •Hardware Included .. .. 10.tl • No meu to handl~ llG. 1.25 Mil DAT .... YI SAntllDAYONLTI Handsarne aluminum glass bottom mugs •Big 14-oz. capacity •Keeps drinks colder • Beautifully st yled •Make terrific gifts • SAVE23c REG. 19c SATURDA 1' OllL YI ~ . . : Wards spectacular summer evergreen clearance sale! •Giant assortment of lush tropicals and beautiful evergreens •Come in 1-gal. C(!ns •For patio or yard •At the Garden Shop Ward sound proofed food waste disposer •Will pulverize most foods; jam-proofed • Has stoinleu steel cutting ring; Y2-hp SAVE TO 53% IE<r. TO 1.19 '-----' SAVE20.91 $39 llG. St.ti SA TVRDA 1' OllL Tl SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY TILL 9-5.UNDAY 11 -A.M. TO 5 P.M. -. . . HUNTINGTON BEACH --s:: :~:~: =~~· PHONE 71 -892-6611 . _ .. , • • ---------... -------------------... --.... -..... -........................ --.~~-----• ·-----,,..._.....--... _...,....._=------........... -----· .. ,,.--,,,_, ~....,..,,.--, ..---... -.... --......... . • In Style . Even though the first day of summer is two weeks away, members of the Women's Division, Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce are thinking about fall finecy. A Fall Forecast will predict what milady will be wearing, and benefittinf from the luncheon and fashion show will be the group s beautification committee and the city's Boys' Club. Activities will begin with a social hour at 11 :30 a.rn., followed by the poolside luncheon and show in the Huntington Harbour Beach Club. Modeling fashions from Ingenue n' Him will be Miss Hnutington Beach of 1968, Jeflye Blackard, and princesses, the Misses Barbara Pettit, Bormie Dayton, Pamela ·Reed and Enriqueta Cosio. Tickets for the event, open to the public, may be obtained. from any member of the Women's Division or by calling Mrs-. John B . ..Carmello, 842·5658, chairtilan, or ~s_._ Ru~sell Reillf.,_ 847·5!1!., ticket cJ"!airman: Given-away to some Iucly guest dunng the after~ noon will be a bioycte, according to Mrs. Jake Stewart, president of the women's organization. : ·Mrs: WiJl Jenkins will head the Fourtb of July ~atade entry com.vllttee and assisting will be Mrs. Ed· . ward. J . Casey Jr., ·Mrs. Neil Peannain and Mrs. Rob- ert Wall. At a recent meeting conducted in Mrs. Pearmain's home, plans and ideas for the parade entry were dis· eussed . . . . POR LOS PROFESORES -A fiesta, no less! Plan- ning the annual dinner dance, _Fiesta de los Pro- fesores, are members of the Fountain Valley Edu· cation Association (left to right) the Mmes. Bruce Uhl, John F. Allen, Jack Pirtle and Glen Miller, and Mi ss Claudia Brakebill (seated). Festivities will take place in the rustic decor or the Sadd.Je- back Inn on Sunday, June 9. beginning with a 5 p .m. cocktail hour on the patio. Fiesta Echoing Sounds The rustic decor or early Califoriiia will lend a romantic atmosphere to the ailflual dinner d a n c e sponsored by ttie Fountain V·aliey Education Misocia- tioo. Members and guests will gather next Sunday in the patio O{ the Saddleback Inn , Santa Ana, !or cocktails at 5 p.m. and following dinner at 6:30 p.m. they will con- clude the evening by dan- cing W> the music of the Warren Baker orchestra. Theme of the party ii Fiesta de los Prolesores, and unique invitations for the affair were designed and made by Mrs. Bruce Uhl . Coordinating activities is the group's social chairman. Mrs. John F. Allen, and in charge of reservations are Miss Claudia Brakebill and Mrs . Glen Miller. Mrs. Jack Pirtle handles publicity for the organization. Guests of honor will in- -:lude Dr. and Mrs. Edward Beaubier, and other board of trustees of ttie Fountain Valley School District in· eluding John 11arper. Mrs. Franei!S Donovan, M r s . Douglas Meyers. Harold Brown , Dale St u a rd , William Craine, Jerry P4a{Jley and Mrs . Richard Jonkman. ;·<I~. .,,, t' .'#. June 12, in the Huntington Harbour Beach Club. The public is invited to attend the benefit, and ticket informatioh may be otr tained by calling Mrs .. John B. t:armello, 842-5658, or Mrs. Reilly. 847-5H7. . Little . Thin Ones, Big Fat Ones Howe.f er you like your pancakes, it wiU be "batter up" for Robinwood Little League at a fund·raising breakfast between 7 a.m . and noon tomorrow in AI· bertson's parking lot, McFadden Avenue and Edwards Street, Huntington Beach. All he can ~eat is bein~ promised Bobby Duffy by his mother, Mrs. Mike Duffy (left) and Mrs. Richard Davies. Co-chairmen Mrs. Pat Worley and Mrs. Davies have announced that in addition to pancakes, sausages· orange juice and coffee will be served for 75 cents a person with children un; der 3 free. Also assisting with prepara tions are Mrs. John Leckie and M~ Allan Wilkins. ., • Shooting Off Mouth Triggers New ·Round of Investigation l • . • DEAR ANN LANDERS : Last week I drove my mother to her brother's funeral in another state. My mother didn't sitop talking for a single minute. AJI I beard was. "Byron's wife shot him. Re COUIDN'T have shot hlmseU. Father taught him how to use a gun when Jle was in his early teens. He never had a nUshap. At age 50, with a1J those years or gun experience behind him, Byron COULDN'T have shot himseU. HU wife shot him." When we •rrlved at my grandmotner's home my mother said to the clergyman, "You know . of course, that Byron's wife shot h.im." He replied, "That's absurd. His best friend l.~? is on the police force c:Ud the in~gating to be sure the.re was no fow play. Byron shot himself I C· cidentalb' while cleaning his rifle. He -- apparentl y didn't realize It was load- ed ." My mother told him he was crazy - that there must bave been several people in on "the plot" and th.at they have not heard the end or it because she was going to the authorities and see that "jusUce is done." My mother was i.nsUtuUonallzed for mentaJ lllness sever.aJ years ago iJ in my opinion the world would be Ufer place if they had never let · out. Is there anything I can do to pre- vent her from pursuing this wild idea~ I am deeply concerned. -F.D. DEAR. F.O.: You a.re not respontl· ble f<r yOlr mother's conduct. It sounds as if she bas a loose connection and all the talking in lbe World ~ill not persuade her that ·~•. II mlalakep. So aave your breath to cool )'Off" soup, dear. The authorides wlll recopl!e her ditruri>ed Slate and dMJ wltb her testimony ~. DEAR ANN LANDERS': I have been rt"adlng your column for years. I noUce that women 'often write of humJUation and heartache because of cheating husbanda. I'd like to tell you how I solved the problem. , Less than a year after we married I walked i.nto Harold's office and found one or the little typi sts sitting on-hJs lap. When ti)ey saw me they almost died . She ptttended to be re.moVing a cinder trom his eye. r. 1 ' I told her if !he wanted Harold the could have rum -and after she had finished with the cinder •'he' should give some thought-to the rocks in hi• head. The &1rl assured me she didn't tant him. that she had a fine ' yfrltftd· and tlien •he -with • e not to tell anyone. ft:e followint y slle qUlt. . - ' Six months later t was riding home on the bus. When we stopped at a light l glanced into the next car and there way my husband and a woman in fond embrace. The woman. it turned out. was the. nurse wbo bad attended him when he had his appendix removed two months earlier. I told Harctd that very eveoing that we Wett throoJh. J Wf.nt to see the nurse the Collowfng day and informed her that sbe could hava him. She crled •nd begged me ni>I toted lier b•-· She oal~ !he dldn't wan\ Harold ud !bat she had been a craQ fool. That wu seven years •40 md 'be1s 1 ~en • a 'model busbahd erir · ·since. Onct1f.got It through his hticl 1111( I -· e--yOd..-...nt he ed to behave hlm,.U, --.=;pAMONA DEAR PAM, WI.lb a 111 llh .. l<j can under1tand why yoa-CM.lla'•~ne If be stayed.or went. I'D\ Clad.tlie'91• Uon worked for you, bat ,J'm certala'k would oot work la all eues. Tllllu; for •·rttlag. .. • ' Do you feel Ill at ease ... out Of tt.'? ls everybody having a good Ume bJ.i JOU? Write for 4nn Land&rs' bookie( "The Key . lo Popularicy," encloalof with your r.quest 35 ctnlt In cohf °" j. loo&, 1elt .. ddre1sed, stamped; ..,.. velope. , Ann I.anders wtn be ~to btlp yoa with yo~r p<•bltm1.' ~. tho_m to hW in care Of•tba DAIL~~. eacW ing . • stamped, ••If--... velope. l I ' l • • • --. , . ' . . . . . . . . . ; ~ . . . . . . -. Lalce T ohoe Honeymoon " . .Nuptial Vows Pledged ~ .... Baile7 ...i Jlictiln. AJlm Drab Wtn •arr led it W.,.,,..•eur Qedo _. _ -., 1----··-... n.c eat 11.,-..._. -..,. Ille llilllop William Baa' 'De bri* is die """""' "' lllr. .. Im. Genld -· -Groff. Ber ........ ii die -°' lllr . ...i Im. -~ olB•...,._~ Gita iii .......... ..,. hor bldler~ .. bride 1"lft • 111- -• ..., eftl" taftda _....,..... ;•e tim accemkNI •it II appliiquftl ____ ...... _ -· ..... ----... ftil was emgllt. to a .. ..,,.. • "' ,,,_ tulle ----pearls .............. ~ ., __ ilia. --J-ol J..abwood •• astei .b:J her ...... lo be ..... o(lianor. • ... clreued in full length apricot ,... -lbclt lleews md • bow in back. She wen • beadpiece "' ~ yoiJe -apricot veiling: and 1be carried a bouquet "' yeo ... dailles. Officers To Assume Duties MW Kita Walton o f CJnace .,;u be lmtali<d .,,......, al Orang<! County Spnttts Porum D a , .......... Tuetday. June II. aa. 10:30 a.m. in the Gala.ty restauraDt in Santa Ana. lllllallinc o!J16f.ilys_ T. H. Octets. abo will place: in office the Mmes. E I l i I Porta, Newport B e a c h , fint vice )ff'esident : R. G. Miller, Pl.ac:entia, leCOnd vice president; Kennet b v·~·tti. N"e-wport Be a ch, s ecret ary ; Wayne Jlt'aJ1nyder, Garden Grove, treasurer. and II. J . Howard. S ant a Ana, parliamentarian . Mrs. J. Orland Smlth or Garden Grove will di.lcuts A Woman of Note. Y. r 1 • Herbert J. Clark ol Santa Ana wiU give a "surpriJe" speech . Friendship To Flower Banquet Marla History in the Malcing Bf'idetmakk, dreued in run leDgth ,.-,...,,. wilfl lbort sleeves and a bow in back were Mia Lau-nt W.U. al Fullorton, MW Marla Meridith al Ganlen Grove and MW Kathlttn Q1Dm al Garden Grove An iii.and motif will pre· dominate when the Acad· emy of Friendship, Women of I.he Moose. chapter ll.58, 1ponsor1 Friendltµj,/" Aloha tomorrow in t h e Moose Home, Costa Mesa. AdmltlDg a wort al art In the Pnilioa Gallery who gave special !ntrocluctiom preceding the din- prior to 1 lllHiolt coc:ktaiJ party l)JOlllOl'ed by the ner In the ballroom. The festiviti .. Wednetday eve-Each carried bouquots o! MRS. RICHARD ALLEN DRAKE -- Newport Beadl Hlllprica) Sodely are (lftl to rilht) Ding IDIJ'ked the occasion where Society memben Alan Dowmmwi al the Da<ommun Really Co. and pres_ented iU fitlt historical IDIJ'ker in honor of the apricot dailies and wore yeJ.. s.nta AM Homa. 1aw """.bow bau "'ith ------------"'------yellow veiling. Appetizers will be ~ed beginning at 6:30 p.m. and following a Polyne1'.an din· ner, there will be dancing until.,,1 a.m. . -al the ll&lboa Pavilion, Mn. William Ritter, Pavilion. IW&JUI Dr:ury al Orange WU flotrer. girl Her gown WU llJi<d JiU the maid ol honor's and she carried a w b i l e balbt ol yellow ~ vjce presidm, and Judge -Ganlner, Author Explains Uphill Sliding Officers and chairinen o( the pa.at year will be recog- nized and newly elected officers will be welcomed. Horoscope dailies. • Aries: Smile, Concede New Year Activated N'""1 nffice111 will pruide. 5t(.Tei pab: ~·ill be di1clM.ed and J>'ans for the coming year formulated when the Seal Beach Junil)f' Woman'1 Club meeu ThUTSday .. June 13, ln the home of Mr1. Reno Lorenz. Bat man wu the bride·, brother, BonMr J. Bailey of Garden Grove. Ringbear- rr was Gene-L. Drake, Hun- tington Beach, the bride· groom '~ nephew. Ushers were Ronald Drake. Robert Drakf and RUueU Drake all brothers of the bride· g r o o m lrom Huntington This Year'• project for the group ha• been donating funds to the Moosehaven bearing aid fund, which pro- ceeds from the dinner dance will benefit. SATURDAY, JUNE 8 87 SYDNEY OllAJIB ARIES IMan:h 21·April 19': Plealare obl&ined at IOdal affair: but one ckJte to you .,....... In •idng money quatl .... Exhlbl t ...,. al humor. Be Onlhle. And to have ~· make minor conce11ioa. TAURUS (April 20-May 201: Obtl:in hint from ARIES DIOlffge. Check detallt connected •HI> i<gal papen, Your mate, p1rtner ....... -·.Remain .ID the backcrowid ton10rt .. 1111 appredallve audience. GEMINI I May 2l·June 20·1: CommunJcate w i t h -who work with and HTVt )'OU. Get kieat acTOll. Make metnlng.1 c r y 1 t a I clear. ThU overcome• tendency for others to bt en· vioul. Someone may be lpreldlnc lallc report. CANCER (June 2l·July 22): Accent on creative ende1vor1. r o m an t le ;.dventuret. Day features chanae. excitmlent o f dlacovery. Joy lndkai.d tlirot"'1 dtlklren llld Ule --· LEO (July 23-Au1. 221 : You enjoy beinl with the CANCER· born today. Some have muctl in common with your current goal. Ex- cellent ·for entertaining at home, buildlDI confidence of oldeT lndlvidoal. VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept . 22): -... dealinp wllh brother•, mten. Journey indicated. Much movement shown; you have to coo· ceotral< !«-. Otherwllle, you will be brre, there and oowben:. '111lok. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: Finltb project; it could mean money in the bank. Individual who previotuly W'U cool DOW conlidtl pro- blem. Be tenlible. Avoid becoming involved ln n- pense and emotional turmoil. llCORPIO IOct. 23-Nov. 211 : Cycle high. Jn.Watt: pro- jecta. Circumstances turn in your fa\'.Of'. Your judgment more apt to be correcL Watch per 1 onat at>" pearance. Oren for the oc- culon. You thine at tocial allalr. 8AGl1TARIU8 INov. 22- llec. 21): Fine for attending 119'clal lecture or croup devoted to your charity in· teresta. Vl.Jit one who ii con· fined to borne or hospital. Adhert to Soiden rul<. Your favors will be repaJd. CAPRICORN lllec. 22· Jan. II): Good 1uur upect hi g h I i g h t 1 pleuure. romance. prai1e r r o m respected,.,riends. Excellent for humanitarian wori_ Get together with SAGIT · TARJUS individual. Work out coortructive program. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. lJ): Now you can approach indivklu:i1 who ii in position to aid, f\llf1ll ambitions. Do IO in forthright manner. Avotd tendency to m.etl:e senu:tionaJ claim•. Be con- structive, 1eniible. PISCES (Feb. If.March 1D): Accent cm journeys of the mind. Means you can uo.ty lotellectual curlooily. AJi quutiom -obtain aRJWer1. Study advertising, public relationl campaign. Keep · communication line• open. Mn. Lester Davis. 1 part president of the cluh. ha.5 been named the Junior1' Woman-of-the-year. Active with the club and aho the Marcti of Dimes, Mrs. Davis served as vice president., secretary and trea5UJ'er, and a1 chairman of the city's Mothers March and the Youth in Concert Mrie1 for the March of Dimes Foundation. Beach. Providing mwic in the church tilled •ith-bouquell of wttite and yellow gladioli were Mra. LuDean Howe. organist and Mn. Ellen Nicbollon of Huntington Buch, aoloist. A raeption took place at the church after the cere- mony. Allisting with the cake whJcb Wat decorated with apricot r05e1 were Miu Cherie Cleveland, Miss Col- lette Kozloski and Miss Sha- ron Williams, all of Garden Grove. Miu Wendy Vance circulated the guest book. The bride U a graduate of Bolsa Grande High School and her husband ii a grad- uate of Redondo H i g h School. After a wedding trip to Lake: Tahoe they will live in Santa Ana. Dr. Donald Curti5 will trll Monday Morning Club of Laguna members Haw to Slide Uphill during their last luncheon program Of the sea5on in the Hotel Laguna Monday. June 10. FoUowng a social bolU" at 11 a.m.. with music pro- vided by Mn. William Hobson at the piano, a buf. fet hmcbeoo and fashion show will begin at noon. Dr. Curtis, to be in- troduced by Mrs. Martin J. Gurne)·. is the author of ·'Your Thou~ Can Change Your Llfe::· "H um an Problems and Haw to Solve Them" and · "Daily Power for Joyful Living."' His last book, "How lo Be Happy and Succusful." bu 90ld in the milliom, aod be bas appeinirin more than 100 major· Hollywood pro- ductioos. CUrrently he boots a color television travel series entitled, Itc a Small World. Reservation for t h e gathering may be obtained by calling Mrs. Ruth Hat· field,4114-1650. Looking -.t lo the com· British Club Women of British ancei- try are welcom~ to join the Daughters of the British Empire, Westward Ho Chap- ter. The club meets the last Monday of the ritonth at nom in various locations. Further information may be .......... by calling Mrs. R. w. Ketteringham, _,, Members Welcomed ing year. program com-1-::=========t mittee chairmen are plan-Ir ning to attend auditions at "Come and b r; n g • the Wilshire:-Ebell Club, lA6 friend" is the: request be· Angeles on Wednesday and ing made to members of the Thursday, June 19-20, to M i d way City Woman's select future programs. STUDIOS CJub. Meanwhile Mrs. Phil Oen-Headquarters for Activities Concluding Presiding at their first meeting will be the Mmes. H. 0 . Brown, president; Roy Steidley, Ronald Adams and Carl Irwin, v i c e pre1idents, Mike Knapp, secretary . and Tom Nichol100 , treasurer. A prospective member· · __ Mr Robert w be all C" A .1. ship luocbeoo will take place ~ "'."' v.;;.i,.00 and g!noen on rv1 ux1 1ary at noon Tue5day,·June 11. in Theater Party committee instruments. Grandmothers the clubhouse. 8241 Boba Summer classes The firsl Thursday of the A Mi~ C't chairmen are p I a n n i n g ve., uway I y. · · I din ~rmm· g month m e m b e r • of the Hostesses for the lunch· future: gatbenngs me u g now 1u • Re-...t.J.i. ... u of ~ t: c re I At noon every 11 econ d American Legion Auxiliary. e:on will be Mrs. Clair Bunt. 1 :summer theater party to l7't4 .....,_.. IM. ti1tfn and exdlanging of Thursday the Newport Har-Costa Mesa Unit 455 gather Mrs. Fred Williams and the Hollywood &wl and a c.... ..._ Ml M60' ;:i!U will c<A'IC!ud 1 the )ear's bor Grandmothers' C I u b in the: American Le g i on. ~Mr~s~-~Gol~Vlll~·~s~tree~l~===lri~·p~i.;;w;;;;~V~e~g:;: .. ;·===~========~ activitiel for members of meets in the Newporter Inn. Hall , at 8 p.m. Information Ir Mu Upsilon chapter, Beta Mrs. Verna Pitt al 642-3566 regarding membership is ob- Sigma Phi, Monday, June may be called for member· tainable by calling Mr1. 0 11hip information. Neal Hougan, 548-6374. I Tho meeting will beg;. at ,;==='=::===============,11 Betrothal Announced During Dinner Party 8 p.m. tn the huntaln Valley home of Mn. Robert M-. GllU wlH he appr :iprUldy decorated w I t b stars to empilulze the r-'• theme, Reach for the Stan. Social meetings will lake place during tbe 'SUtnmer with the flnt bu8inese m e e t i n g scheduled IOI' September. FORMER STYLIST AT UNIVERSAL STUDIOS Mr. and Mr1. RJchard A. Cool< of Hunlln,... Beach ~ATHY MoKINLIY , Wiii Morry WAltlNOWI OVTLIT FURNITURE -CARPET lff SOFAS $169. --rottTllL CAlll'ITING ..... ff 5.95 J, J. ICNICDalOCm •Ht II ST. Nol. I...,_ 1 .MW ... I have 1 n no u n c e d the betrothal ol her daughter, c.actiy Lynn McKinley and Jamu Robert Dupree. The couple have 1elected June, 1969, ror their wedding In St. Andrew'• Pre1byt.er· Ian Church. Thehrldt ·tle c.t,an honored queen of Job'a Daughters, bethel 313, ls an .alumna of c.ostti Meu Hi&h School and le: attendJng Orange Coat!. College where Ifie Is 1tudyinft Engli1h. The 11on or Mr~. .John nruno of Portage, lnrl . and ttie late Mr . Dupree is a graduate of Portage Hi gh School •nd i1 1tetloned on Okhlaw-a with the tJ.S. Marine Co,,,.. The betrothal wa1 reveel· ed durln.g • buffet dinner party where Mn , Denni1 Hamann of A It ad en a 1111tted wkh the ar· rqementa. Brunch Waits For Kiwi Club Newport Beach ch.apter. memberl of the:· Kiwi C1ub and their husband! will a:ather in the Balboa Bay Club for brunch Sunday from II a.m. to 2 p.m. A 11peclal guest wi ll be Mrs. Wiiiiam W i I n e r , recently elected national president, a n d a1M>Clate member of the Nt'W1K>rl Beach group. CJub members all are former American Airlines Metvarde1aes . Further In- formation • b o, u t mem- ber1hlp may be obtained by calling Mr1. Don Howard. IM6-!86.I. °""""" -' ........ T ......... w1••' "A STREETCAR NAMED DESIR·E" """'' ........... "*" ... TllMtr .. COlft """'- ....... ,,.. 141 "Maw••• II•.,.., ..... _...,_ -· Cel ""'' Jd ,., CLAY at Cont11ff•ti•11 Av•il•itlo ., Apjtoh1tmo11t Featurin9 The finest line of Wigs en~ Heirpi•c•• 3545 E. Co11t Hwy. Coro,,. dtl Mer iv-6961 6 DELICIOUS FLAVORS Thne are tlx of our many flavors In wedding sets. And they run th• gamut, from Bold and Beautiful to the demure, Fair LAdy. Th.y tll have one thing In common, howwer. Each 11 fully covered by our diamond guarantee. A From our Coup d'etat Collection, $750. B. The "In" Set Look: Ten diamond Mt, $500. C. Swinging Set. $450. O. The Bokf and Beautiful. $820. Matching band, $30. E. Antiquities: Black color o..,t 14 karat gold, $275. f . F1lr L.ady .ThrM diamonchot, $2!0. SL~~-~k'S 11 FASHION ISLAN1D NEW,ORT CENTER ~. o--~ 4.44-1310 . I I t -. ,• • • • • • =.,. zq .. w • z c a c c + 4 CJ '+Sf ••a;=; r+ F P '* W * Harbor Council 's Movie Guide {lldttor'I Mell•: Ttlll -It IU.,. \t .,...,.. ..... ""' films Dll'MllttM ., Ker11or CoutltH PTA. Mn. lltobttt $0f"lt!lMfl 11 ., .. ,....., •nd ~ ~rt S-II CllWM\lllee dlelr,,,..l'I. II It ll'ltwlclld H I r .. lfe!l(I lfl o.ltrll\11111111 Mllllb .. lllm1 tor ,.,1 .... -·-· . Ind wtll• 1-r wtek~. Y-wlew. lfl IOllCll'ld. Miii lfMom '8 Mffll Gvldl, c..r1 ft ft'MI DAILY Ptl .. OT,I THE FAMILY BIG MOUTH Troth Told CrooU_, hotel and stewardess bank examiner manager chase a and his took-alike, a vicious hood. HALF A SIXPENCE - October Rites Planned MRS. JOSEPH DREW BOOGAART Caribbean Honeyr:noon The betrothal of Rebecca Lease and Mario Vislntin was disclosed by her parents, V11 . and Mrs. Anthony F . Lease, during a family party in their South Laguna home. Among special guesta at· tending were the Mmes. Lottie Beekman, D i a n e Hicka, Harold S n e a d , Charles Mooshian, Gussy Littman, Mari MacMillan, Honeywell Barner, B e t h Croul, Ann Hankes and Rowena Burack Currington. Others were Miss Glad Keer, Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Williston, Mr. and Mrs. Byron Watson and Otarles Wells. Miss Lease is a graduate of Laguna Beacfi High School and is completing her second year at UCI. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Giovanni Visintin of Trieste, Italy, attended L i c e o Gulielmo Oberdan in Trieste. The couple have selected Oct. 5 fOr their wedding in Laguna Beach. ~ REBECCA LEASE Brid .... lect Tucson . Setti hg For Marriage Memo to Secretaries: New President Named Catalina Methodist Church in Tucson was the setting for the double ring nuptials linking Sara Merrill Tipp and Joseph Drew Boogaart in marriage. The Rev. Dr. Ray W. Ragsdale performed t h e afternoon ceremony for the daughter of Mrs. Leonard Tipp of Corona del Mar and the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Boogaart of Boca Raton, Fla. Given in marriage by her uncle, Allan McDermott, the bride donned a formal white lin~n gown enhanced with outlines of lace. Her mantilla headpiece of silk iUusion formed a second train. She carried a nosegay of yellow daisies, stephanotis and white roses. Mrs. David Thomsen of Corvallis, Ore., the bride's sister. was matron of honor in a lime green crepe dress. She held a nosegay of fern . yellow daisies and baby white roses. Dressed identically were bridesmaids, Mrs. William Wahl of Tucson, and the Misses Nancy Moore of San- ta Monica, Sally Townsend of Elgin, Ariz. anti Judy Kennedy of Phoenix~ Serving as best man was Hector Vargas of Tucson. Ushering guests to their pews were John Boogaart of Maitland, Fla., the bene· diet's brother, Tho m a s Roger of Yuma, Ariz .. James Gill and William King, both of Tucson. Skyline Country C I u b, Tucson, was the setting for the reception. After receiv· ing guests the newlyweds departed on a honeymoon in the Caribbean. Upon their return they will make their home in Tucson . The new Mrs. Boogaart is a graduate of the Univer· sity of Arizona where she was affiliated with Alpha Phi sorority and was Sigma Nu white rose queen. Her husband is an ahun· nus of the same university and was a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. Kappa Alpha Thetas To Entertain Juniors It Adds Up ~ Orange Coast Alumnae of with either Mrs. John Far· Kappa Alpha Theta will rer or Mrs. M. E. Shinkel. entertain Juniors with a Jun· cheon and bridge party in the Costa Mesa home of Mrs. D. W. Knobel. At Convention Date of the affair· is Wednesday, June 12, and reservations are due today Garden Club The first Tuesday at 10 a.m. Is the time set aside for members of Harbor Garden Club to meet. Loca- tion may be. obtained by c a l I i n g Mrs. Bradley Schwarz, 646-6M2. Beach Babes Every Wednesday at 7 p. m. members of TOPS Beach Babes convene in Huntington Beach's Recrea· Uon Center for programs. Mrs. Farrer will serve as Orange County Chapter co-hostess. members, American Society New officers of the coast or Women Accountants, will group are the M m e s . attend the Weste.rn Regional Shinkel, president: Farrer Convention of the society in and Merle Amundson. vice the Edgewater Inn , Long presidents : Knobel and John Beach Thursday to Sunday, W. She 11 , secretaries; June 13-16. Edward Chapman I I I , Highlighting the con· treasurer: Knobel, federa-vention will be a t>r~idents' tion representative, and C. Dinner hosted by Miss Julia V. McMannamy, and Mar-Kaufman. national president ion A. Johnson. Panhellenic from Cleveland, Ohio. representative. Representing the chapter Committee chairmen are at the event will be Mrs. the Mmes. Fred A. Howser , William H. Coe of Corona recommendations; Clifford del Mar and M::rs. Noel H. Dudley, publicity; H. C. Rodgers of Fu 11 er ton , Dec~er, magazine ; Donald present and i n c o m in g R. Ward, historian; Vernon presidents. Edler, ways and Means ;__;,----------! Kenneth Ross, Girls' Club; Donald "rippett, fraternity trends; Don Lang I 11 e , hospitality, and Ed w 1 rd Nicholsen, newsletter. The DAILY PILOT Covers Boating Best in W est NOTICE ~~Sh~ • 1113 N. MAIN ST• SANTA ANA IS CLOSED USE DUR N!W SHOP AT 74 FASHION' ISLAND N!WPORT CENfER ALlW~ALLT AT ANTHONY'S Coron• del Mir l••tyM your olcl sh.-te the MW """" loolc. THE NEW LOOK 3 CONVENIENT SHOl'S e J.401 L COAST HWT. -dtl Mer-67J-4MO e J4lJ VIA LIDO 11 .. ,... ..... 111.auo e 74 PASHION' ISi.AND 'Newport ·-~ 644 ~Ill ' JUNE SPECIAL! Buffums' will dean, glaze and reline your fur stole 42.50 You have a choice of hundreds of linings in marry colors and patterns. Coats and jackets, sl ightly more. Have your furs stored. Vaults oo prem ises in Downtown Long Beach , Santa Ana , Pomooa •. Minimum charge includes 100.00 insurance, pick·up and delivery, 4.H Fur Salon . Buf1Ums· N•'#jltrt Cen+.r *I i:a1hiel'I hit"" e •• ·2200 Me11., Th1i1r1., Fti. 10:00 t111 t:13.o•h•r o.,, 10:00 t11t s rJo ---• • • Friday, June 7, 1%8 Marriage Vows Recited In Catholic Ceremony -1 HARBOR AREA REFORM TEMPLE SABBATH SERVICE FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 8:30 P.M. SINIOR CIJIZINS RICRU.TION CINTll 2110 ISTH ST. NfWP'OIT llACH FOR INFORMATION: CALL. •44-0140 ·· SPECIAL BUY! Fabric shoes for men and women Ollfetd-•'Yt• febric tho.a of homeipun-lik1 coltorl/lillllVro.,..,n bl...d. Comfortoble Yllkani1.d outsol1 *h.lr .. tmw.d 1tyling. Wl!IN, lllodc, blut. WOIMtl't li1in. C.lofful f11bric 1llp·•n 1port1 shiny buckle trim. Sporty looliino cotton/llllffl/rcr)'Oll bleNl ~'' te.tw.d "'1kotii1ed outsom. Noturol, ywllow, Clf!JllG9· W-'1 t11 ... C1e~k •~-ttyl• 1hH with hood-·hofieod llPf*"• Mxtlnci 'Nlconl1.d ~. Mt h aftot for i,pott °' cowol -· ... Miii • .o,.~ ... dart!:~-~·.111.. . ...,... t.IHtc .u,._ i. "'"' tor ~-COtU01 -· Top. lfl loob, comfort-' ¥Olwl Tatwtid ~ ..nol& OooM-. ar mgii .,_. Mtiri'1 Ii-. 2tor$7 -u..-'i:".!& . ACCOUNT T_. COSTA MESA HUllTlllGTON BUCH llWPORT BEACH I "'"''""•R c..ter) , ............ , ... ~ .. ~~-~~-----~-···--------Lo------·----;..... _________ , ____________ ~---~---- '· ' • • · .. ·~·~·.·.· . . • . . . .. • •r-•·••t"•••t..-t , ............... ~ • J;t. OA!lY ~llOT Frld11, Junt 7, 1%8 Gurney Awaits Engines, May DriVe Brahhams lly ~ GUSTKEY ' ............... Uatll It can acquirt some more crllld prix racinl enctnts, Dan G<ney'a All·Amtrlcan Racers plant ID Slnla Jua Is temporarily suspen• dlft& lta srand prix racln1 roar~· ' GnnM'Y wu ttcketed to have driven 1111 cca 11 the Spl Grand Prix In llOJ&lum ao Sundl)' and the Dutch GHnd Prix Junt 23 but a Girney tum • Moooco Moy 2'I 1 .. 1 two ........ "'lbll pull ua In • potltion al dthtt driviDil ID Europe with p1lcl>ed-up eoglnet er wttbdrawln1 entlrely. We'Ye deCided to rit a few out unUI we can 1et iom, men •n&lne•." explained all0Amtrican Racen ieneral manacer Mu Muhleman. Althoua:h Gurney'• Eaile mac.hlnes ·won't be oo-any--of Europe'• 1tarting gridl for a whUe , Gurney himself wW probably coll\ll<le. • .He may wind up drivln& Jack Brabham cars in the S9a. Dutch and Frencb.(July 7) Grend PrW. All·Amerlcan'a cran4 prlx engines are built at the company's European branch, Anglo All-American Race.r1, In England. Gurney, ol Corona del Mar, is a lamJUar nsun .. tht srancl prix clrcuit. havin1 won more (•ia:J srand prlxs than any other Am6rican. Nor 1s he what you would call a nobody on U. S. track"J. , He wu asked ii his recent second place finish ln the lndie.napoli1 500 was the hlfhligtlt ol his 10-year racing career. "Actually, I get mort satisfaction from the fact tbat Bobby Unser was driving DM ol our Eagles and won the '"""· "As far as my t:lnlsh a:oea. MCond place is always 1econd plaet. But Se· cmd waa a1gn!ftcant for us this time because I did It with a stock block •Oline -that miaht be the bel(lnnln1 ol a trend ... ''You m11.Y now aee more Ford, 01evrolet and American Motor& stock blocks in IndJanapoUs race cars from now on." On the turbine issue, Gurney and the rest of the automDbile racing world ls awaiting a ruling from the USAC rule1 committee on whether or not turbine engines will be banned from racing. Racine CU' owners made a re<:om· mendation to the committee recently that turbines be banned entirely, The committee will make itl ruling ln mid· July. Gurney and Mubleman 'believe turbines will be ouUaw«I but are prepared to join 'em if they don't ~ck 'em. ''We could be put inlD a posJUon where we would be rorced to build a turbine car." Muhleman said.~ "We don't want to. lhDU'gh. We really believe racing either has .to be all-turbine or all-piston. What do you think would happen ll you tried to enter a jaguar at the do& races? "And there's another factor - money. A turbine en&ine costs about $$0,000. A Ford racing en1lne runs to an lnvestment of about U>,CXX> and an Oily about fl(),000. Our en1lnes are .worth about Sl2,000. ·• Added G u r n e Y : "Flfty·thous!lnd dollars would be a very conservative price for a turbine engine." Gurney will drive the car he powered to second place at Indy in the Mosport race in Canada June 15. Sports • Ill Tribute to l(ennedy By The A11oelat.ed Pnu The sports world will join the rest of the nation in paying tribute 1o the slain Sen. Robert F. Kennedy this weekend in the only way it can -by postponing some events and delaying others. Affected sports include major and minor league baseball, thoroughbred and harness racing, boxing,. auto rac- ing and power boat racinc. But all was not harmonious. The New York Mets baJked at playing baseball at all Saturday and said they would not show up for their scheduled game agalost the Giants in San Francisco. New York's Belmont Park will hold it! Saturday racing program against In Paris Tourney the wishea D( Its board .of trustees by Drder of the State Racing Commission. Three major league baseball games scheduled for Saturday were postpon. ed and none of the others will start un- W after the funeral. Two Sunday games also were put off. Today's schedule remains intact. Baseball Commissioner William D. Eckert ordered the postponement of Saturday gamea in Washington and New York and directed that the start of all other contesta be delayed until after the burial, Three games scheduled for the afternoon were changed to night CDn· teau. But-the Cbicaa:o Cubs, whose 'Old Man Gonzales' Faces Laver for Title Let's Call Time, Raul! Sho Saiyjo (right) .seems to be weakening here against foe Raul Rojas in a !~round non-UUe fight at the Olympic Auditorium Thurs- day night. Saiyjo wasn't as weak as he looked . He won a decision victory. Popovich l{eep·s Poppin', Lefebvre Still Benched LOS ANGELES (AP) -Paul Popovich wasn't exactly welcomed with open arm5 by Los Angeles Dodger fans last winter when he came here trom the Chic3go Cubs. replaced injured Jim Lefebvre as the regular second baseman. LeFebvre, a proven hiUer. has been sidelined since late April with a wrist injury and everyone has assumed he would return to second base when he is fully recovered. But Popovnch slam· PARIS (AP) -Pancho Gonzales. the old grey fox of tennis. w& aJI ready today to try to tum the clock back 19 years and reach the final of the Open French Temis Champion. ships. He faced Corona de! Mar's Rod La· ver. the world's top money-winning professional. in the &emliinah. The match was scheduled for Thurs- day but was postponed because of rain. Goo.tales, resting his weary limbs af· ANGELS DRAFT . PIRATES' JENKINS Bill Jenkins. Orange CO.a.st College's slugging second baseman. was picked by the California Angels Thursday in major league baJeball's annual player draft. Jenkins. a fonner Huntington Beach prep star; is expected to complete another year of athletic eligibility at OCC before signing with the Angels. The Angels also drafted Sunny Hills High (Fullerton) outfielder Gordon Carter and Bolsa Grande (Garden Grove) pitcher Jerry Carr. Loara (Anaheim) second baseman 1-larvey Winn was picked by the Min- nesota Twins and tea·mmate George 7.eber went to the Yankees. Magn<Jlia (Anaheim) pitcher Dennis Deck was tabbed by the White sox. • ter tWil strenuous matches the day be· fore, didn't pretend to be sorry. The 4Q.year-0ld veter~ from Los .'\ngeles last played in th.ii tournament in 1949-and reached the semifinals. That year he turned professional and remained in the wilderness for 19 yt:ars, until open tennis brought him back. The other semifinal, between Andres Glmeno of Spain and Ken Rosewall of Australia, tentatively got started Thursday but waa stopped by rain with Cimeno leading 5-2 in the open· ing set. The lour pros have the stage to themselves alt.er holding off several spirited challenges by amateurs. For more than a week the pros have been trying to adjust themselves to the slow shale courts, which they are not used to on their professional cir· cuit. and to facjng total strangers whose play they have sometime! found unorthodox. Gonzales, who plays most of his ex- hibition matches on wood, said the courts here don't worry him basically. "I spent three years touring Europe with Pancho Segura aa a professional, and we played on this kind of surface most of the time," Gonzales said. "For my money. Segura was the finest hard courts player in the world. Those three years taught me a lot- and for one thing taught me how to play on this kind of surface." To a:et the utility infielder. the Dodgers had to give up popular Lou Johnson, an ouUielder who helped win National League pennant' in 1965 and 1966. But Popovich. a 27-year.old switch hitter, has ingratiated himself wttt'I the Dodgers to such an exbeat that he has Won't Vie i,n Oly11apics Australian Holds Lead At Speedway INDIANAPOLIS. Ind. (AP) Br~ crampton of Awtralia carried a twe>-1troke lead into today's second round of the $100,000 Speedway Open Gou Tournament. Q-ampton rattled otf four birdies on the back nine 'nluraday and finished with a four-under·p.lit M. , Billy Casper, PGA leading money winner. was tied for second with a 70 after being penalized two strokes when bis caddy raked a 11nd trap before Ca$pel' bit on the third bole. The effortA by Crampton and t:asper. who played together , oversMdowed the tine lhooting of J'Jihn Uve\y Md Masten champion Bib Goalby. Uvely. 2.8,of Canton , Tex., shot a hc:lHn-ane on the par 3 2()4..yard 17th he te. and Goalby fired hi1 first double- ugle oa the p.-S 50.l-yard uventh hole. 'Alper, Goalby and Lively were J01:ked in a seven-way tie for second price with Speedway cr.teodln1 dwnp Frank Beard, Don Flirlield, Jim Gnni -i Bobby Cole . Jack Tuthill, PGA tournament direc- tor, saJd 1 epecial servict: in memory or Sen. Robert F. Kennedy will ,!'<ooode the tournament'• finll round 5unday. Pllyen "1!I wear black tabs on U.tlr -· .. part or the nlllOftl! d'3 or l1lOW1llni proclaimed hf Pm!· delltJ-.0.1 ' med two doubles and knocked in two runs in a 4-2 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates here Thursday night. Rhodesia Out of Games Cla~e Osteen, 4-7. will try to extend t h • Dodger winning streak toni,ht when he takes the mound lh a series opener against Philadelphia. He'll be opposed by left-hander Chris Short, 3. 6. PITillUIOM l.01 .l.NO•L•s .. , -,... 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'J'he international set In the meet at Memorial C o 11 s e u m is well represented by AustraUa's distance runner, Ron Clute; Belgium'a Andre Dehertoghe in tbe Compton mile, a.nd Mel.lco'• Hector VIiianueva ln the 3,000-meter steeplechase. MEXICO CITY (AP) -Rhodesia, \Vhich was invited to compete in the Olympic Games he.re in October, "WU! find it impossible to participate in them." ' That as announced by Mexico'1 Olympic Organizing Committee Thurs- day. Rafael Solona, head of the Organizing Committee's presa section. read a statement by Pedro Ramire Vazquez. president of the Organizin Committee, which referred to a Ma 29 resolution adopted by tile Security Council of the United Nations. The resolution called on member states to prohibit the entrance of persons with RhDd.esian passports ''nothwithstanding whatever other'' agreement might have been made Connolly help push George Youne. the Ca5a Grande, Ariz., school teacher. to a new American mark. The record is held b1 Pat Traynor at 8:32.4:. WIIU1m1 Raaa Huntington Be1cll RJtb School 's Paul WIUl•ms wW run 11 the hi.ch school 880 a.calnst old oemet ls Gree Jones of I.Oaf Be1cb Poly. In aaotber prep event, Slu~ Ana will send u eltbt-man mile relay team ant.ha'" by fs11c Cttrt.11. Orangt Coalt GoUece history in· structor Ed Bwke will be up agaJnst Youn& will confine his efforts to the old rival Hll Connolly again when the steeplechase and will not compete in hammer throw event beflns at 6 p.m. the 5.00'.) meters where Clarke Is BID'ke 11 the American record holder favored. at 235-U. Clarke. paclnl himaell lor lb• Olym· i. the sr.p!echua. Vi!Wlue'lin.;--Jii< 1ame1 In Oc-. Iootr to 'J, be(ore the: resolution was passed. The Vasquez statement said that "in virtue ... of the mentioned resolution lhe Organizing Committee of the. Games of the 19th Olympiad ob6erves with all objectivity the obvious result that the sports delegation of Southern Rhodesia, which wa.s invited to ~cipate in the sports competiti.Dns of the month of October. next, will find it impossible to participate in t:he.m ." Solona declined to answer any ques- tions after reading the statement. Rhodesia. a member in good slan· ding with the International Olympic C.Ommittee, has declared it.s in· dependence from Great Britain. Bri· lain has not recOgnized the move, howewr. Renew ready for a shot at his world mark of 13:16.6 in the 5,000 meters. Billy Mills. America's gold medal wiMer in the. 10,000 meters at the 19&4 OJ)rmplc gamu In Tokyo. and Van Nelson of St. Cloud, Minn .. who won the 5.000 and 10,lXXI meter races in 1as1 year's Pan American games, will be on hand to challenge Clarke. Feature foot race of the night is e1· pected to be the ~meter claah between Smith, the former SO Jose State flash. and Hines. the •year-0Jd Te:r:as Sou1tJern stu. Hines u15'set Smith in this fneet tut year and 11.so beat him by a whisker last week at Stn Die&•· Smith claimed ho IOI • raw doclslol! from tho iudaa at Son Dlo(o one! -to 10 to tbt ' Wrlgley Field has t'IO lights. were fore· ecf to postpone their game with Atlan· ta. In California, where Sen. Kennedy was assassinated. the state cDm· mission ruled that Bay Meadows, Golden Gate Fields and Hollywood Park would operate today and Satur· day. The Emile Grtffith·Andy Heilman 12-round middleweight fight a t Oakland was postponed from tonight to Tuesday night. The President's Cup Regatta. a Washington, O. C., fixture for hydroplanes, haa been postponed in· definitely. It waa acheduled for Satur· day and SWlday. Repriman,d ' Proves Helpful To Cherubs NEW YORK (AP) -Maybe all the California Angels needed was a tongue lashing for them to aw·aken from their fortnight-long sleep. In two weeks. the Californians had lost 8 of 12 games. \Vednesday night club President Bob Reynolds said his Angel Slate JUl\t ) A'lltll 11 Ntw Ycrlt (2) 1:S5 P.m. l!;MPC (710! J1111t I An11tl1 11 N1w York lO:il 1.m. 11.MPC: 17101 players were playing "like zombies in a fog." And, for the first six innings of Thursday's game with Baltimore, the windup of a four-game set, the Angels still slept. But the alarm clock rang in the 'seventh inning and, two innings later the Angels had an 8-6 victory. In that fruitful seventh, the Angels trailed 3-0 until they solved the pit· ching of Gene Brabender. Eight hits and seven rWls later the seventh.place Angels lifted their record to 24·29 and handed Eddie Watt his fourth defeat against two victories. In a twi-night doubleheader today. the Angels were in New York facing F r i t z Peterson. Z.2. and Bill Mon- bouquett.e, S·3. The Angels scheduled George Brunet. 5·5, and J i m McGlothlln, 4-4 . CALlll'O•NIA 1.1.LTIMD•• ••rllrbl ·~'""'I Sc1!11I, lb 4 I I I 8\Alr, d • I 1 0 Fr-1, 11 J I 1 1 l1e1'1ry, rl ~ l I I lllfPCll. cf J 1 1 g Motion, 11 J D I 0 Mllldle<, ll J I 1 I "°""II. ID 4 0 0 0 llffl:~ .... I. II J D 1 I 11,RobinSOll, >It 4 1 l 0 Role1, p 1 e 1 o O.JOhnson, Jb • 1 1 o J.Hlll. rl 4 l I O Henorlci11, c 4 1 1 l Mlnlon,rl 00Dllti911tcf',U 1 0 00 s11t11no. c • 1 1 1 a111on1. 1111 1 1 1 1 11;-, 2b • 0 I G 8rabo"""r•'P l 0 6 0 ~1ttln,P 1000Wtll,11 0 0 00 B"""""ltr. " o I o o D'OOl!Hl!ue. " o o o o l(irl<Nlt'lc•, J I I 1 I F.llDblflN!I. ... I I I D Tc!1lt JI' I u I Tot111 l1 6 t 6 C1llfoml1 OOlt 00$ 7111 -I 81t1lmon • . , CIOll 201 Ql)l -' E -l:tlellll'ft. LOI -C1tllom!1 I, ltl!lmor~ '· II -F,....1. K-. Slfl1U'C. 5(1111!. lll1lehlrol. Hit -Htndrldo1 14), l11lonl (U. l l1f11'l' !,), SI' --Hinton. Rivalry reviewing stand to receive a second place medal. In the shot put. Matson, the giant Texan who holds the world record at 71 feet, SS,, inches, has hi~ principal opposition from George Woods nf the Pacific Coast club. Woods' be.st mark ia 68-1. Silvester, whose world record of 21ft.. 4 is up for approval, goes in. the discu!i against Cary Carlsen. So u the r n California Strlder1; Bill Nevi l 1 e . Pasadena Athletic AssoclaUon, and Jon Cole, Pacillc Coast Club, all or whom have been ow.r tbe 200-foot mark. Seqren appears to be lhfl class of the pole vault.rs wlth~a best mark of 17-6i. but he'll hove to top Chris Papanlcolaou o1 san Joat State. 'fiPP""k•laoa lw dooe 17-1. · ' ' AH live North American Soccer League matches and two international contests this weekend will be played as scheduled but ceremonies honoring Sen. Kennedy will be held before each. The Davis Cup matches at Charlotte are scheduled to begin tonight with two single.s matches. The doubles are set for Saturday and the final two singles Sunday. PGA officials decided to go ahead with the Speedway Open because of next week's U. S. Open. However, a special service will be held in memory of Sen. Kennedy before the start of Sunday's final round. Mets Balk At Playing Saturday SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The New York Mets' players took two ballots Thursday and voted unanimously both times not to pJ;ay any game against the Giants here Saturday out of respect to the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Giants' spokesmen were not im- mediately available for comment. Saturday was scheduled to be Bat Day, a club promotion, and a crowd of mare: than 30.000 was expected. The Mets voted in ChJcago and Manager Gil Hodges informed Giants' owner Horace Stoneham of the decision. Hodges said Stoneham asked him to take another vote and he did so as lhe team's plane landed here. The result was another unanimous refusal to play. · The Mets' front office backed up the players 100 percent. Both M. Donald Grant. chalrman of the board, and Johnny Murphy. vice president and general manager. said they were in complete sympathy with the Mets' players. They said they would take any con· sequences but insisted the club would not play Ute Giants Saturday. Under baseball law. the Giants can insist that the game be played and can claim a forfeit if the Mets fail to ap· pear. "Sen . Kennedy represented our st.ate," said Ed Kranepool. the Mets' player representative. "lie followed the game. He was rWl· ning for election from New York. We. decided it would be disrespectful to play." The Giants originally announced the game would be played at 4 p.m., in· stead of l p.m. Chapn1an Seeks NCAA Championship SPRINGFIELD, Mo. -Paul Deese, basketball coach of Chapman (Calif.) College. is doubly honored today. He is th e coach of the year in the NCAA 's District 8, and his Panthers will battle tonight for the NCAA 's World Series title. The American Associati<>n of Col· legiate Baseball coaches will choose the nationaJ coach of the year. and the announcement will be made at the association's convenUoo next January. Don Richard.!. Chapman pitcher, was named to the first team NCAA college Division All-America team to· day by the coaches. He was 12-4 on the year. Chapman rode into tonight's cham· pions.hip finals of the NCAA college division baseball toW'nament on the three-hit pitching o( Bill Holt and a home run by Dennis Veiti. Chapman. in the winnera' bracket. will fllffl the winner of a losers' bracket game this afternoon betwetn. Delta State. Miss., and Arkansas State. I! Olapman loses tonight. the title will be cSedded by a final game Satlll"" doy night. Holt struck out 16 Thund1y night u Chapman shut wt Dtlta 3-0. Vdts drove In all three nw with his homm" in the first lnnina:. Earlier. Arkansas State eliminated Loni Ialand University 1().3, poundin1 16 lilts . Jim Wiener. who had a .179 fveraae, aot f o u r of t b • bill and drove IJI thr• nms. ~ · · - ----·-··-.•-·~·-·-•--.1"'*""'4"''""'P"'"¥""'>""'F.->">"">>""5P"P""F~.,..,. .. ,_,.,,_,,,..~~Y'"rr~ r ~-.-r-r rw---.-r.r .:r ~.rc;-r :r r ..,-.-;:;--., ..... -.: .. -;-ir'-~-,,.,.-,;-;-, • !!_age Stars Bloom Calls Rehs ·Best-ever Talent ' . • By j:ARL GIJSTKEY Of tM DlllY ftlllf Stitt .AfW' only three workouts, Bill Bloom· is claiming his s o u t.h all+star buketball team Js the greatest club in the four-year history of Orange County's a n n u a I prep charity cage classic. Bloam's impressive South· team+Jneets the North June 22 at" Orange Coast College. -"This will . be the Qest group" of individuals ever to play iD, the game -l just hope W.e. jell as a team." :Bloom, who coa c he s Corona del Mar High, has held three night workouts at CdM this week and switches to afternoon workouts next week because of graduation commitments. Ji4i was asked to name his first string as of now. 1,wo Mesa Coaches Resign "We ll, t don't see any reason not to have Mark Soderber g (tr.arina) and John Yule (Cd.M ) in the.re at the same time," he said, "I'm going with Yule at _ center, Mark at a forward, Br i a n Ambrozich (Hun· tington "Beach) at the other fo rward and Jlm Huckstein i M-ater Dei) and ·'Greg Snyder (Huntington Beach) a't the guards .•• He added that his second unit contains Al G a g e (Newport) and Mike Sweeney (Mater Del ) at the gue.rds, Bob Lindley (Santa Ana) at center, and B11l rv.:oore (Marina) and Phll Jordan (CdM) at forwards. "There's really not too much to choose from with those two Uflits. In fact, the second team was running along right w.ith the first team Thtu1day night." The individual sqt -thus far is Snyder, Bloom says. B~~':! i:;,::g ~0 i~. ~ui Top Southland Swimmer shooter. he's a great leader· Corona del Mar High swimming sensation Toni Hewitt shows off the trophy He's going to be • great col· she won recently for being named Southern California's top woman twimmer lege player at Stanford." for 1967. Misa Hewitt smashed the existing world record for-the 2DO m eter but· The coach says his biggest terfly and is a prime threat in the upcoming Olympic Games. challenge is defense. __c.:c:.c:__:._ __ _;c_ _______ _:__ __ .::__;c_,__ _ _:._ _______ _ Friday, J.unt 7, 1%8 DAILY "LOT If Monarch F o r Next Se uon . . Reds Win, ·UC Irvine Sets Mater Dei'6 spring foot· 48 -36 Cag e Polo Slate ball practice came to a close Three lnvltaUonal tourna· Thursday nlgbt at the santa ments spotlight the '88 slate Ana Bowl where t h e of the UC Irvine water polo Monarchs went t h r o u g h t e a m, released by the their annual spring "Red· school's athletic department White" football ganie. ~1g'j will host Its annual The "Red.I" won, 48-36, ln affatr Sept. 28, theh take to the "fiag" game without the rood for tournaments at · d UC Berkeley and the Gold proved.its_~ trubmaa basketball echeduJe, the Up- comlnf •&eada hliblilCflted by controntaUons with tb1 IJCLA and IJSC Frosh. UCI will also take on new4 ly lorn!ed Saddlebaclt JC ill this season'1 lt-aame slate. pos. na!St Coast lnvitatio at an a Said coach Bob Wood5 of Barbara. ,...._., ,,..,. kllMll1t his charges, "We think we Nov. '° uc san 01wo ""'*" had a real good spring. We UC Irvine has also ap-Tou~~ lf-21. ,.. w~1tt1tr ,,..,. had only nine returning let-1:~ '1t~ ~,!­termen, but we're pleased S h f E" h h J-• 1 ,,..,. with them and especially the c ae er 1g t J::: U< ·-J< progress with some of those J•n. , •t uMi__,.,. that didn't letter last year." In State Bowl Si~.~tW="'~ Woods went ·on to state ""· 11. •' °' x that the overall backfield After six weeks of com· ~: It :: ~r..,.,_,,_ was coming around, "We al Fto. n. •t ~'"'T....ri · notition in the 23rd annu Feti IS. s.n oi..e '''"' """"' have more speed and a little ,,_ r:e11: !I: ~ fi" . California Men's Bowling fft. """'C,'' •u..s .. ,. more depth this year, but .n ' -ch--amplons·hips, m ~' !2-~"'J we'll be younger an d Schaefer. of. Westminster S•t'. -:UC~1m1 1 smaller than last year." ranks eighth in the ail-gg: ~ et ~ 8~ ~ The quarterback situation di · 1 Oct • ._ 'I '-"" ·~JC CJVJ events han cap di vis on. Oct. s. '' e.1 "°"' ,.1-.. at th& Monarch inS'titutlon is Schaefer sports 8 pin total 8ri: f\.~L'::°e • .= ,._,. apparenUy no problem to of 2,073, with Tom Woo of gg: lt::: 1:-t~ s1 ... Woods and his staff. Stockton setting the pace via gg. 1•. st oc Ht1•1-; 111..,.,.t1M111 Ted Hamilton and Bobby a 2,121 pin effort. g:;: Jt ~~'la:.Tu1~~ Haupert took turns leading Action is cUXTently being N.W.'~~i''fr ltftt• hrtlu• lrlvlt•· the Reds in their victory ..... ed t Cart Bo I ,,.,., amil in s._ a er w ::: tt. f,u1u~q,;~i.. uv• with H ton throw g two (Fullerton) and Anaheim Hn. I" oc scoring passes and Haupert Bo 1 Now. 1 , L.-. e..c11 c•tr Je- th '=;::=w=·===================""==·~"';::"=:""'="'"=::====~·i:;:=; ano er. 11 Meanwhile, Bob Williams STARTS NEXT WEONISOAY-LIDO THEATltl. of the White team was con· necting for three touchdown a eria1a, including an SS. lr8 NOr WHO VOd cdl· Tw.o more coaches have resign¢ from Costa Mesa H:igtt' SchooJ's coaching staff, -the DAILY P ILOT I e' a r n e d t"Oday , upping the num·ber of departing ?vtustang varsity bosses to three-this Week: "The tough job is teaching ttie type of defen11e I beUeve in~ But already the guys are at mi d -season form defensively. We'll play the man-to-mart with half-court yarder. • S . . T . p F th;ooWh~ '=e'':"'s: PRUL llRllm wrinm1ng, . enn1s uts ans, ~~~~kis;~~o~··~~~-~~::.2:.,~·~~·,m~/~'i:~r l:~s~YL~v~r:ios~·~c1~1A~~~=~~~~:,J Dave Ashleigh, h e a d water polo and assis.tant swimming tutor joi n s wrestling guide Ed Royer as the latest to resign. Wed· nesday, baseball coach Bob Parsons announced he was quitting-, __ pressure." or Soderberg, the 6-81\ Marina giant. Bloom says: "When Soderberg wants to dO it, he's unstoppable, ~e's an a w. e s o m e basketball player, I'll tell you." In Dari\: About Identification • Aableigh boasted t w o championship teams in 1967 a s the Mesa Bees and Cees copped Irvine League titles. He is assuming a teaching job ln Modesto and will also serve as· head of a swim club for the San Joaquin Vall,ey city. Aild, he's gunnin~ for a berVi on the 1966 Olympic team after captaining the U.S. Pan American Games gold medal winnere a year ago. Royer is headed for a job in the northwest, concluding -a .OQe-year hitch with the Mustangs. His wrestlers were second in the Irvine circuit. Replacing Ashleigh will be Terry Bowen, a ssista n t . aquatics coacti at Kennedy High in Anaheim. He was a Metropolitan Conference diving champion at Cerrit.os College. B<iwen was a jaycee All· America two years and earned college All·American- l<fU:fels al Cal State (LA ). He played water polo for Jriland NewPike for four yea'rs. Bloom says the relatively un1leralded Ambrozich - ~who was -plucked out of a PE class at Huntington Beach and became a varsity star -will benefit from the a11·st.ar game. "This kid is really good and a lot or college coaches don't know it. There'll be a lot of them at the game and I'm sure they'll be im· pressed witti him." Bloom plans to scrim· mage his team against both Orange Coast and UC 1rvine sometime before the game, probably the week preceding. Kennedy Death Stops Racing Saturday's racing agenda at the County International Raceway has been called off by gene ral manager Mike Jones. Jones said the cancellation was due to the services being held for Senator Robert Kennedy of New York, who wa11 assassinated earlier this week in Los Angeles. What does a high school tennis playe-r and a high school swimmer have in com· mon? Simple. You can't tell who's who -wit) or without ~rogram. , As a matter of fact,, you can't even tell whlch team is whic h team. The swimmer, for instance, has only trunks in the way of a uniform. But, in· stead of a Costa Mesa swimmer adorned in green and white stripes or a Ne'!P(>rt Harbor lad fiashlng through the lanls in _....,. ..........•...•. RO GER CARLSON _, ..•. •-.-··•·M.····· blue and grey trunks, each and 6e very swimmer -runs around with multi-hued trunks, or single colors of everything in the rainbow and more. Not all schools fall into this category or multi-colored trunks. Some schools go as far as wearing their school colors like Santa Monica High and Glendora High. But. for the majority, they don 't. E specially here on the Orange Coast. If you're not an official of the meet or don't have a program to tell you who 's in what lane, you're out of it. Generally, in high school dual meets, the meet director will call out the individuals just before the race is run and will give the lane assignments as well. If you're on the ball, with pencil and paper in hand, most of the time you can get it down before the race begins. However, it seems to this corner that the whole thing .is entirely unnecessary. Coaches have come up with reasons for women's club action on Assmus (109-41-68), low net. the state of affairs in swimming such as: • 1 ed · Marth Merrilee Dungac tie d "The awimmers have l-0 buy their own Ciampa Takes Honors In CMCC Golf Tourney MoDday resu t 111 8 Nadine Maze (213} for low trunks." Ciampa taking low grosg net of_ the mon.U'I on.the Loe So what? Things are tou gh all over. hctnors with an 81·14-67. Low Lagos course. Because they have to buy therr own rte(. ~ to Peggy Maull's On the Mesa Linda circuit, trunks, the school colors shouldn't be 83-22-61 followed by Mer-Marge Fitzstmmons tied worn? stock that is required to fit an entire team ~ special colors." Could be. But if the desire WJlS there by the coaches and the swimmers, the pro- blems could be erased by simply ordering way ahead of schedule. What's wrong with numbers -Say two inches high being :;ewn on the side of the trunks? With that, at least the home team could be identified with an inexpensive roster. The visiting team could brin~ some copies of its roster to the meet and people would at least have some knowledge as to the names of the participants involved. Scoring is another matter. There is no reason why a small scoreboard couldn't be utilized at all meets. Nothing elaborate. They don't need lights or electronics. Just a simple cardboard tally board to show the running score. One for each division. Some of the coaches might not be aware of it, but the.v definitely aren't the only ones in- terested in the team score. At one particular dual meet this past season, this reporter watched an athlete come into the offi cial tabO.lation area only to get run out by a coach. ~ As he walked off, he commented, "AU I wanted was the score." Tennis is even worse. Everyone is running around in the same white shirt, the s8me white !horts, the same white socks and the same white ten· nis shoes. That's it. No numbers -no names -no school colors -not even a small school insignia on most. What's wrong with the boys's names on hls back like in American League football? A color stripe of some sort to show the school's colors? If the name idea is too gaudy for th e t'acquetmen. a small number on their shorts to show at least whether they hap· pen to be the number one singles player or the water boy might be in order. A makeshift scoreboard f-or individual final scores ... a scoreboard for the team totals ... anything would be better than the total of nothing that ls done to date. Most likely, nothing will be done in either sport to enhance it. They've been going along in the same manner for some time and it's doubtful they will change. I-Ray Tolkes and Tom Gehris. ~· Du • 89 24-% J with Carnelle Kennedy at Another statement brought out was, i.uee ngian 8 -' on· 195 fo r low net of the month. "Most department stores where the trunks . JJit G'aertner'a 83·17~ arid See Ciampa Pa1e II are purchased, don't carry the extensive Adri~~·s 89-23~. -----'---"------'-----'------'----~~---------------I Too bad . ~ flj.ght winner WQI J\oSemary Skillion (87-26-61) iri the low gross division. LoW ,..net ftnt to Peg lten (93-2H5) and tecood. went Baseball Standings ·to Bev Blwttistone. (Wl-26-66). Nadonal Leatoe American Leape ll!arton V001 won the low W L Pct, Gii W L Pct. ll'Oll tt1le in the !bird !tight St. Louis ...... 31 21 .598 Detroit ........ 33 19 .635 with a 99.34-65. Low net PhHadelphia .. 25 22 .532 3t,1 Cleveland ..... 31 22 .SSS bOOGr1 went to Shir~y Atlanta ....... :rr 24 .529 3Y.t Baltimore ..•.. 29 22 .569 Hawk• (103-36-66) followed San Francisco .7.8 25 .528 3Y.t Minnesota .... !rl 25 .519 by~ Grose at lO'l-34-68. Loi Aa&eJei ... 29 26 .527 3"' Boston ....••.. 25 'J:l .431 Mesa Linda winners wett Cincinnati.-..... 25 24 .510 4Y.i: Oak.1and ..... Z3 'I1 .460 Millie Pedeneo (107-37·70), Chicago ....... 25 28 .490 &\\ California ..... 24 29 .453 low grm Mid Max J n e New York .••.. 23 27 .460 7 New York .... ,23 29 .442 H.ouston ....... 21 30 .412 9 Washington .... 22 29 .420 Pittsburgh 19 28 404 101\ Chicago ....... 21 29 .420 Fish. 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IMtlh wMi Yflll 111 •Y .... .t .., wl11Rl11t ,,.Och. 111' I 2IMI • .,.,,._ SIMll Atl•lllfll t llo!lllO.o IS l'tl"""""' 11 red: Ofld, " l\tlllll.IL ( ....... Plffl -1, llllllffll 1'1 .. 21 M«IWdt• 11 llol'll!v, If .. -, .... ) -lS .,,...,., 1• Minllo. ,, . .,.,,.(\llM, 2 11111111.11. •*""l:t auc11 co.-•, \AdlllrJ -1' .-111'11 1' Mrr1cw., S4' lletll19, a > iii I Yl llllwllll. CArt'l .......... , JOHNS-ON A SON _,.... ..,.,, 114 .. ,.,._... so .... OAAH6E COUNTY'S 01.Dm ISTAIUl ht D UNCOLN ~ WP:CUI Y • COU•AI DIALll :a10 -. • NllM. SU •IACM -1• ,,_,_,., '° Ill:"" '°° WEST COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT llEA!=H ~ns1 '42-091l Pr'tl 1Mludd dlf M~t•1 tt~ bJ~ =r:;; • PriCI It'.;~ !~;t:~:~~:f~,1~fii:!-rf:0a: ;::r.~ f1tl~tit~;p1,,1 eu~/'ttirouah tr.1•1tor f.h ~ee, • ~:~d!ctcd 011:._•:ovr ford ou111 .om• l(Plf~ ti\le e-,;U•·) 11'•11"' • Checked Mustang prices ~ely? So.t!them California is America's numbei 1 Must11111 market-and your Ford Dealer ii ~ly Iii a Mustang dealin' inood. Right -,o.i have lots of new '68 Mustanp to. c"- from at prices you ca n't afford to 11111 up , Get switched on to Musta111. lt'a a Musta ng bu,-r's market-·and it'• really booming oow. . . Tbl llllel II on II 1111111, -II your SIUt•era c111tlrlll fft Dllllr ' ,._1 1• llwllto. 1'"' ""' bt•i OP JN .SUN D'w (..,..._ 11 .... ,1• ~ •1 .............................................. 'll"..:~:.:...;,:.:.:.:~~::.:· ....................... .,.. ... ...;. ...... :.. ............ ~1--:~=--..,.,--.0:~--,...,--,":-,.,,...-.-... ----~=--=--;-.. ........ -~ -::r ,, ~· , . -----~.~~ .,;. __ • ., .. I ~ . . ' " • • • :'f r \•,·1re 1 , JC DAILY PILOT Jogging-New Adult Pastime for Coast Area '. By EARL GUSTKEY °' ,... lhltr ,., ...... lt's never been an unusual scene on the Orange Coast to see blgh school or junior coll ege, trackman running al9ng Coast HI K h w a y , Harbor. MacArthur or Newport Boulevards. 'But now a new running specimen -the adult jogger -is craning the neeks of passing motorists. The national jogging craze /' that seems to be reaching a peak hu indeed fastened It.sell to' the Orange Coast area. Seeking verification or the wonders of ~ogglng, we con- tacted the Orange C.Oast area's foremost jogger , Norm Lumian. Take a drive (or a jog) behind the santa Ana Coun- try Club some late alternoon or around the Back Bay and you're likely to spot Lu· mian, 1 40-year-old former track coach who,now teach· eii hl1tory at Orange Coast College. Another vei~ran area jog- ger is a Newport Beach physician, Dr. John Miller. Both he and Lumian urge restraint in the manner and lnitia1 intensity of jogging. Lumian says procedure in jogging is a factor to be con- sidered by the beginner. jo~~~ :~::am'7°~g th:/~ beginner will go out and just round 'round and 'round a track ind get bored ttlff with the whole idea and quit. "Half of the fun for me Is getting out and running neu golJ courses, around the Back Bay and th.rough neighborhoods. Variety 11 important." Lumian Is frank about what jogging has done for him. "I came down with polio when I was six and it was nine months before I could walk -and that was just about all. I had a pot belly from inactivity and I needed a corset to eet my pants on. "But I've been running steadily for the last 28 years. I've weighed 162 pounda for the last 4even years and my pulse is sometimes as low as 38." Experts gay one with a pulse rate of 80 or higher is not in top cond.Jtion. A con· ditJoned rnan has a heart count ol. 60 beats pet min· ute.) Dr. Miller, 47, is in his ninth year of running. "I try to accomplish about two miles a day if I can, but professional requirements often interfeni. Maybe once or twice a week I can get in seven or 10 miles in the Back Bay." Nine years ago his M frame weighed 170 pounds. Now he's holding 1teady at 151). He dlscourages jogging only for the sake of losing weJght ''It doesn't work. Unless you also lower your caloric intake, you wt1n't lose an ap. preCiable amount of weight by'Jogging." He a l s o recommends forethought on the part or a prospective jogger. "No one should try a jog· ging program without a physical examination," be sar,s. 'And not only that, but an adult should embark first on · a walking program and then ease himself into jogging. The whole program shouJd be gradual." Lumian, a mediocre athlete in his youth, says runnin g oUers him something else besides a 38 pulse count. "At the University of New Hampshire, 1 was a very average runner -anything but excepUonal. Pollo left me with lasting effects -l was a poor ball-handJer and I was ball.shy. I'd close my eyes when a ball wa1 thrown my way. "But running is easy. I think 75 percent of joggers who've kept at It ~people who weren't succ.eaful in other sports ·and ~Pd a de- sire to express ttiemselves athletically.'' Lumlan expresses himself on a daily basis. "I run every day weather permitting or not." A NEW ;JOG FOR YOUR HEALTH CRAZE JS SWEEP ING THE COAST AREA WITH ADULT PARTICIPANTS PWDDING DOWN STREETS AND SIDEWAYS. *** *** *'** Hollypark CIAMPA BAGS HONORS PIRATES OPEN PLAY . Eisenhower Doc Gave Birth Entries Continued from Page 15 Ran4'ho San JOfUJUln Nels Shafford and Yvonne Haig teamed up to fire a 150 -good for first place in the mixed couples event on Thursday. S upep!Ytendent's tiQl'l tournamem Seaclifi receJlltly. Associa· held at llfeadomlark Ward's Pirates, better known as ,, Orange Coast Oollege, will share the honor of inaugurating the Orange Cou nty M e t r o Baseball campaign tonight when they take on the Anaheim Hustlers (Cal State, Fullerton). To Idea of JoggingforHealth ,., S1lllr611Y, .I-I. \~ Dar ci.r & f'11t -f'lnt ,., 111s l'.M. f'llll T llACIE, 6 1111''°"91' S oklL C11lmlnt. PurM S7000. ct1l~ prlu 111,DOO. ,Admlr•I Lt arem (J Artel'burn) Clauv Kl<O IR CttnP&O INll•n Gold IJ Gon11111l Flddllf'I &oy ID Vtl•s<!Wll w~ 1'1lrol tM \ltlenlutl•l Cotol11n IM Y1ne1J s...,. sauce 1w H1rtKkl 110 R•"" {J Stlltrtl Ytlr ·~ '" "' :ollQ "' "' "' 'N "' · llCOHO •ACIE. 1 1111 mhti on tilt ti/rt. J YtfT oldl. Cl•lmlnt. PUrlt '7500. Cl1lml111 1>rlct $1~,000. Wlnt Commtndfr (D l'lerctl Wtt Fltt (W H1rm.tJ) Murpll (W H1rrl1I Bo•tr Bob (L PlllQY J<) Prlnc:dlnt Wr!r Em Pnll IM Y1nt1) Rwul1bft (J S..lltrt) Dffdlod! IA Plntdt ) Lllcopl• CJ L.tmblrt) COl'roY Kid fW M•hO<f'llYI SMnll'ltl Count CW H1rt1ck) "' '" "' "' "' "' )I• • "' "' ... "' TKlll D JIAC I . I 1116 mllH Oii !M turf. J vear ohh. Allow1M••· l'urH AIM IEllllla>le El Cha1>11rr1I (M Yuiez IJ '" SIXTH RACE, Ont m11e on the tur1. J Y<!t f oldl .. w . C111slll9d 1llow- enus. Pune 110.000. Th& S1,1111t1 Clull. OVI OI F«ll5 (M Y1nezl Iii Fl8ht Or "Hgflt CD Piere•\ 1\i A·Trtlffc ClltrM• (J L1mbtrtl in N1Wrca (W MtnorneyJ 1n A·Grn1a (J Limbert) 112 Hui.11111> Kid• IW H1rrll) 1H Gald Admlrtl II IL "'"''' Jr) 11• CltlH!ftltr'S Rule CW Ht rmtll) H• Acrolomt (D Htlt\ 116 A-Ht. E. Ml!lerlct. lr•lned en!ry. SEVENTH llACIE. i IU•I-•. ' yt1r lllds .. I/JI, CltHlllO!'d •llow•MH. l'une 110,000. "'"°''"'' Clltl'ltr Clry of --· Son J•ct. (J Arttrburttl Quicken Tree IW H1t11ckJ x1r111eniorv CJ GOl'l&ltiJ Voune Pro (A Plned•l 1t1clnt Room (L Plnc•Y Jr\ A·Mr. P1vne IJ L1mblrl) A·Bold T1d la (J L1mblr'1) A--M. E. Mlllerltll lrt!nt'CI "' m AIQ1 "' l1) "' '" entrv. Second pl'llce went 00 Gene McDonnell and Lee Stevens, who shot a 151. A three·w<ly tie exisited for third with Bob Holt and Shirley ObPrstein ~i1:-· · g ~e spot with Bob Schaffer and Millie Johnson and Hai Shaw and Kay Berger. Their score was 153. '\lli'. Men's Club cham· pion.ship was won by Bob Brand Saturday with a 29&. In second was Paul Runge at »I. followed by Jim · Voelkl at 313 and Ken Cushman's 314. The Jack Robertson Invitational Best B a 11 Tournament at Meadowlack was captured by Norm Karkut and Ron Womack with a best ball of 116 OVel" the weekend. Low gro9S ended in a tie with Craig Olson and Jack Stapp sharing the top spot with Don Boaz and Bob Nelson a( 135. Olson riddled the back nine for a five·under par 30 on Sunday. Santa Ana Opening pitch in the scheduled nine·inning con- test ~ set for 7, wi·th the teams clashing at Anaheim's La Pa Im a Park, Manager Dale Wonacott of the Pirates has tabbed veteran right.hander Gary Dunkelberger ta open on the mound. the 6-foot·l, 200-pound flame thrower who prepped at Kennedy lligh School. Jogging's current papular- ity appears to have exper- ienced its genesis in the mid-1950's when President Eisenhower's heart special· ist, Dr. Paul Dudley White, told the American people to "get out and exercise." He used a bicycle but passed along the word that running was even better. Then Oregon track coach Bill Bowerman and New Zealand track coach Arthur Lydiard teamed to enthusi- astically back jogging. The now.famous Royal Canadian Air Force exercise manual also promulgated the bene· fits of jogging. But the latest and prob· ably the best booster shot u ... P11•u1r!1llo (A MllMI) Jonslt l!lov ID Vel11•utU Al Rll1ut {L Cenlwltl lhlurtenl (W Htrlatll) Grty l'-r CA l'lntdt) 1'11111 ID l'ltrc•l Dlt~o $•curlh (J St11trtl "' "OUllTH llACI. t turktntl. J Yttr OICb. Allow•Mll. PurH 17000. HU1>o,i111 CL PllKIY Jr) llOHTH llACIE. 1\\ mllH. 3 YNr old• .. up, lntlewooO H•ndlCIP. PUrH '50,C.OO t cldtd. Gron 951,Ull, To ..i,.. ~· w.osa. Ludt.v Bulll IJ Arlerbur"l 110 Junt1t Roed iJ Limbert) 111 A·GtmelY (W H1rr11J 11' B•Prlllld Lind !L PIMIY Jrl 110 lndutto IW H1r11tll) 117 Zulu Lid IJ Sellers) HI Rivet fW MahortttYI lot A flight winner was Pat Wade 1278) followed by Wayne Goldie (284), Bill Winter (291) and B u d Wright (293). Bob Bradley woo the B flight def'by wiUl a 284. In second was Dick Gravely at 289, third was Orville Hudson's 290 and Adrian O'Neal was fourth at 294. The 6th arinual Junior Invitational is scheduled for June 24 wtth thret fli ghts for boys and two flights for girls. The field is limited to 90 entries. 19th Bole Irvine Coast Country Club will be represented at the Desert Inn International Gold Cup Tournament at Las Vegas' Desert Inn June 20 tlu'ough 22. Area Jogging Programs No Longer Lonely Events C...,_e tJ L1mblrtl Qv11lmuf\do (0 P~) llellouncl ID Hill! Cupid O....c:l!d (0 \/tit-I) Rto\d Son IA Pl~t) St1 H11rvlltlt IJ St!tetll C1nterburv llotd (L GllU11n) 'N 'N '~ "' '" "' "' •N "'"TH llACIE. Ont mite on Ille turt. ~ "'r oldl & \Ip. Cl1lmlnt. Purie 17500. Tap Cl1lml1111 prlctc 110.· 000, Scnl 0t 1!1ly. .. IC.h1llne Fln1W91n IM YtneJ 21 Atllnowledot (A Plned1) Gtn. eunm"°'e (J Stltenl Arc En Ciel 11 CM V11t1111111l1l Pesh&'• Vlr!ut IW H1rrl1) S1>1um1n II CF ~rr•I T1ll Du-t (J GonJl1tl) L•uvnln Sir B1llour (J L1mDert) Counry Attomey !J At1erbuml "' "' "' "' "' "~ wtu •11! m "' Dtck Hin.I IL Glllll_,,I lot O'H1r1 IM Y1neU 111 S.ltl1lnt Mtrlctl IL .. IMIY Jr) 120 A-Prlnce1tnHl1n {W H1rrl1J lli Moll HOii tW H1rm1IU 11' Hiii $111rie (0 l'l1rct) 111 A-J, W. Mt!OtWY trtlnH tnlry, 8-T. S1l1dln tr1lned en!ry, NINTH ltACIE. 0,,. m1i. on ~ h,or1. ~ Y'flr o!d1 " UP. Cltlmlne, Punt 17500. TOP Clllm!ng prk1 110.000, l l•<k1•-(J Arlerbuml '" "' '" "' "' Ru!ltll Tllumll IL l'lnctY Jr) SlltdV 1nd11n (A Ctf!Wlltl $lltnl Trv1t (W H1t1c1k) Soulllem Host (L G!lllt•nl Grtl! Fo• (J Gonz1lt1) PttCt $(Pttll II (J Ltmbl:rll Y>ort Accouttl ID PleraJ lot A!tmlto. !J Stller1l M1d!11 (M Ytnetl • '11 "' '" "' '" In the C Oight, Jim Hitchman was first with a 300 followed by Nels Stal· fonl, Hal Smith m1<1 Robert White. Se acllff Al Glaze of Santa Maria tne annual Califo. 'a WOil Out of an origimt 2,500 aspirants froon 16 states and Canada, 19 teams, con· sisting of 10 players each, represenWlg ten states will compete. Connell Battles Harbour In Connie Macl{ Action Jogging along the Orange Coast isn't necessarily a lonely, free lance proposi- tion. The Costa Mesa Recrea· tion Department is sponsor· ing a "Jog For Your Health" program at Orange Coast College's track. Exec· utive ty'pes meet th ere' Tuesdays and Thursdays from 4 to 5 p.m . for group jogging. Race Results Corona del Mar H i g h School track coach John Blair reports 25 adult jog· gers can be found on CdM's Connell Chevrolet hosts Marina Wednesday. track in early morning and Huntington Harbour at Connell Chevrolet's game evening hours. TeWlnkle Park tonight at 6 with Garden Grove was Lots of adult joggers be- while Marina Is entertaining postponed due too a flooded long to the Back Bay Track Brea at Golden West at 5:30 field upon arrival at Garden Club. a group that can be in Connie Mack baseball ac· Grove Wednesday. contacted at 1162 Dorset ~---"-"" ............ _. .. _......,. ____ __ HOLLYWOOD l'AIK llllULTI THUlllOAY, JUHt I. 1 ... CIMf'. "Isl l'lllT I ACI. ' h.tr ... 1. J & 4 YNr old ml lden flln•1. l'lll'M U$00. Culottn l~rt•ct) 10.lCI S.20 s . ..o Stlow ZHm IL GllH1111) •.to J.QCI C-IL l'lnay Jr) •.OO n,,,....1 .11. AIM R•n -Svtvltll.,_, AccurKY. our HtlrH1, 111 TIM 111111. Tr•tllc Cloud, l'rlrKIU ICOl\I, Tr111'JI Lowl'JI. 0~ H111, Pt1rKHI Solrmd'IP. k••ldlld -Sook'I Jt61, C.l'ld' lvr>nY. 11...,.11 ll•v-r, l'urr. llCOHO llACI. l\'o mllH. 4 \' .. < 4 eld• " u11. Clllml"'. l'un• UOCICI. It-llovl IPfe.rctl U,20 7,20 ~.IO ltoll Tiii D"""' IGenl.lllll 5.00 3.ao 01ndlnl IA PIMd.I) J.IO T1..,.._1.~t 211. Aleo lttn -Ttn Fool Hlell, Sldll of Gold, Ctftl• c1,., Mlrln1111111. DtlCllllCI Kint. No SCr•lclln. DAILY DOUILI, l<CllllH• I J. 1-...,,., P.W tn.K. THlllD 11;).ca. st;;;..,..,,, 2 1111r old tMldlnl ... u ... uooo.. T1<11tl Dir ll'lna¥1 1.M 4,..0 S.IO Sotld llort IW H1rmth) 11.IO U.IO IM Cet>rl (L 011111-n) •.:IO Tlml-.M t/J, Alie Ill" -(Ml ef AMN, Vl'l .... llY, M.itor, Jtl111t Cfeu, .. .,.. ... ,, T,_,., P...otf H1\llfll, Ground PI w I r , l'tfllftCW't, ""''" 1(11ed. kf'•ld'IM -Wfl"'lln Tvm. SkY 11111, Abdlutior, W11kl"' Sllt:k. Oii """' \lk!lln'. NW Oi:ii,lblt. "'"T" JIACI. I !/Ii mltn. l "'' o""'. Cl•lmlnt. PurM f'IJOll. A·flov1t Desert (A P!MOI ) I.DI :1,M •."1 Ground Line fl'lnuY Jrl l.60 '·'° A·Chokt Son !Pltrcel 1.00 l.60 •.<IO n_._1,.u '1J Also lilt" -Ptrlun, C.rtmN. Tooll:lt, Fllunll ... , IC.1 .... -rd. A -C. JlllY 11'11....ci entrv. Ho kTtld'lft, 'fM flACf'. • lurtono1, Flllle .. mtl'fl 4 YMf oldl & 1111. Cll111tlld :~. Puoe 110.000. Mlr1 Femme ILtmblrtl •.20 l.00 1.40 Mlbll't H-y 1J Gonult1) S.IO S.00 Lti IA Plnedtl J ,IO Tl-Lot l/J. l lOMTH llACI, 1 111' m!te1. J v-tt old c:oll1 " 1tldlnn. Gtblller11 Stl,n, Purst Sl0.000 ldOtd, Dew1n !PlflCIY Jrl J.B J.1G '·'° Arntcrlun Tltt• fH•rm.111 J,IO J,fO p,_, Proof IJ Stllln) t .IO Tl..._1.• S/J. HIHTH llACI, 1 lit m!lel 111'1 ff>I tvrt. FUl'-s " rnera • l'Mf' oWs & 1111. CltU1'111ct AllowlftCtL l'Ul'H llt.000. Mol>tfull H1lrn1 (0 \ltlt-1) ,.,. ,, ... '·'° $1nd.(r..t; 11 CJ SIUtrll l .M J ... (;IPIW Qo.-n Ill (J Limllerll J.l't ~, ...... lion. !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~; Huntington Harbour wiu lr be seeking to get back on the winning track after dropping a 7·1 decision to HUttllntlon Hertiour Mtr1111 STARTS NEXT WEDNESDAY-LIDO THEATRE PAUL DBlllllRD MARINI UJ : ~::r : : \\~-~~· ~S~Y~L~0V~A~"~K~o~f~c~1N~A~~~~~~~~·~·~·~"~',~~,~~~~~~~8~i.~"::.~·~1 Wl!lkk, II l'l1mlnt, lb Crtnt, d MOii, c Oirr111. r1 MOlf\, H Henry, Jb C1mlbtll, 1b ICl'1111r•tr, • Totalt HVHl'IHOTOM Mun•tw. u '""*'':Ill Whltrltlcl. Jib ltvdff. 111 M91!1, ( ,,,.,......, rt 1tut1, ~ """'·' JOlltl, • 1111/llNI• I TOltll A• It H lll l 1 , a o -- ' 1 I 0 l ' 1 1 , l 1 1 t I l Q J 1 0 0 l a I 0 , 0 ' 0 ' 0 0 0 1'07 6 2 KAlllOUll tll Al Ill H 11111 l 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 I 0 0 1 e I O , 0 Q 0 ! f I 0 , 0 0 • ' 0 • 0 1 Q a a I 0 0 0 , I See by Today's Want Ads • There's a swap.a·ran'I• a:•rtl en p.'l11)'l Every Sat. and Sun. NMl•nt ltA<IE. 6 tvn."11. S .. 4 ,,..., old m.tl!Nfl fltlln. ,_ USOO. c-~e11 (.I \Mntiitl'tl SA t.• 1 ... iiiiii Hlll'ric.nt k'tr (OfllUlell t .41 S.IO OOtlY 11• ... I' """""""' 11." '° I 2 [I ---, e Yoo c&It get in the S'ol'ing b t things wilh !his 'f:t(j Sprinr Special! Tl.....,._J.lt J/S. lltO "'" -ltHd !"el. NMir-. ~evrw. 5ul"tl"I Tlfl, ~ Lou, ••• ,..GI'! """'""' \Allllf"f'• am.. k••ld'>tf -c.tvllr..,. .....,..,,. G .. ~\11 FM,_, '---W 111111'8, O..t 1'111' nv. u ...i'r '-• ~ Schock S1ill111 Sdlool J.111., ...... ,..._ St1•h J11~1 I 7 • AtN 4 tlint I J T.-e W..ti C111M Ut Merits ind Benefits of Leasing lhe Family Car lncr111l11t n1ml:i•r• •f Al'lltrlr.1111 now 11111 th1 f1mily ,,r, Ap. p1r1ntly th1 ltl11 11: "wh1tt' 9014 for r.01l•r.0111d1u1 h111i11111 l'ltll it •I•• 1•..I fitt Mr. F1111ily•m111." Ew1111pl1-1 111w Col1ny Pt fl 1t1tl•n Wl fOll with t lr CIJl4itl•nlnt t l ll b1 llllttl for 1 125 11t-.ttfflfy ltfrtt ffl:i11lfft littl1 C1111t r fPll f1r •l:i•11I S•ll, which l1tef114" .-II r11t1lr ... s1rvlr.• 1114 m1!11t1n111c1 fer 40,000 ml1 tt lofl ch1119•t, t11"••11pt, 1tc.I. Tht clt1l1r bvy1 ytur '''''"' c•P, f,••lnt copit1I fer ln••1lll'l111I 111 lh1 m1rk1t or th1! "'c1tio11 • Then>'B I~ h11ncty house dh't'<:tory? ,,... .. e Hl'rC''!J an ,Ir tlbc.rc;la.!1~ OHlt:O: dti;.:1.y1 Lane. Costa Mesa. Stan Stalford, recreation supervisor for the city of Fountain Valley. is running a class that adheres to the program. Stafford, national co-chair· man for the national AAU · long distance running com· mittee. has "50 or 60 people following through with the aerobics program." ...-~I Every minute and a half •.• someone calls AAMCO f:v1ry wick MMCO 1•tlt lltc1 mort than 10,000 tran1mls1!on probl1m1. You ''' fr•• towlna , • lr11 rotd· check. l11t, 111'lcl1nt s1rvlc~o1t t\m11 in Just on1 d1y. And with MMCO, your tr1ntm!11lon ''" bl protect1d by oYtr 500 MMCO Ctn· ttrs CO•ll to COlll. f:vtty mlnut• 1nd ' hill, som• on• pre,11 , . , Y• .. ,. trnt .,_, tr.•••'-No AAM'COI • COSTA fl:ESA 1745 N1WJ"rt It. 646· 1 666 G1rdtn Grove fS.11 G1rdlfl Gr;.,. ''"'· S1nt1 An1 '7t e:. "'"' St. ..,.,.,, Kids Li ke to Sch Newport ·-pr•,.,+y-•" tho " rlv•r. A.11 11c1ll1nl l:i•o•l•t on lhh 1ubi•<I If' I ft.• f•, tho 01ki119. Pho111 Joh1111n. I Son l i.,coln·M1rcurr i11 ·1' N•wport l11ch, '42.0,1 1 ., 141·1271. ______ _,____,~~~-----'' And y' ------------- was the article "How to Feel Fit at Any Age" in the March edition of Reader's Digest. It's a condensation from the book "Aerobics," by Major Kenneth H. Cooper, M.D., of the U.S. Air Force Medical Corps. Keying iU pitch for jog· ging on the fact that 55 per- cent of all fatalities in the United States each year are attributable to cardiovascu· lar illnesses and that there are three.quarters of mil- lion U.S. heart attacks an· nually, Major Cooper strong- ly recommends his system- ized areobics program. "Aerobic" means "w i t h oxygen" and,js.,.ua.e~ in ref- erence to exercises like jog. ging which require oxygen. Major Cooper headed an Air Force team assigned to do research on exercise and he says the results of the testing of more than 5,000 subjects "may be the most extensive amount of information on exercise in medical history." Simply put, Major Cooper says a jogging program (he lists jogging as the best possible exercise, followed by, in order, swimming, cy· cling, walking, siatlonary running, handb-all, basket- ball and squash) can reduce the heart load by up to 30,- 000 beats per day .. He has charted a detailed running program in the article. And you start by knowing just where you stand-if you can't run a mile 'in 12 minutes you're in "very poor" condition, according to Major Cooper, and you program your jogging ac· cordingly. . ~ If you can do a' mile and three.quarters or more in 12 minutes, you're fn "excel· lent" shape. Crossword Puzzle ACROS S 1 Rotated rapidly 5 Seletl by vote 10 Preposition 14 Foreann bone 15 We ight· lilting device lb Mounta in 17 Ineffectual 18 State 19 As iati c garm enl 20 l<ing of the HWIS 22 Ciltus: 2 wo1ds 24 Circlet 2b Bird 27 lla-iuscripts: Abbr. 30 won: on a manuscript 32 Kind of overtoat lb Can. pro-vince: Abbr. 37 First public appearance 31 Permission to do sOflle· ~,,, 40 Swedish boy's name 42 Under 44 Exert a pull· Ing force · 45 Character • ••• in "The Tempest" DOWN •n1~ 31 F IDwer JJ Insect stagt 34 Ad'rantagt 35 Slalr post 38 Pol$Ollous 41 Fur $0Utce: 2 words 43 Restrain ed 46 Ul\truthfvl '"''" 48 GDd: Comb. Fomt Sl Rt'retits 55 Kind of shot 57 Mctift tmsat-. ls(lctoty S8 War Vod 59 Pett. to I ~~pt of poe11 60 ~l~d.of palm 61 Instrument 63 Fonnal expressiDll of choice 64 lmplrllal 65 Teat 68 Nollet '· ; .... -...... --.~-~--··---·--·•""""*"""'"""""'*'*'"=~••P"••"'"'*'"•""••.,.··-·-••r-....-• .... ...-,'?'..-•••-·-··-··--~-··---------------------------·~----............ ,..,r .. .,,.. .. ,..., ................. ...,,.., .. ,.....,-• F rld•Y, JIN)tl 7, l %8 • DAJlY PfLOT .17 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ltOTt(I TO CltlOITOltl Ll.S.\L MOTtcl . t.TICI o• TIV!Tll't SALi ltllO&.VTtofil WMll• ~ iU•lltlOlt COUltT 01' TMI" MIWl'OltT-MllA ML D llHI •!llOt.UTIOH 01' THI IOAll:O Of' ·:::•c:,.w·::"o~i:H~·.· IJHll'llO KHOOL OllTltlCT °"Ju"' t. , .... II t:• l'tlodl f'.M .• •I ~~~1IOH K~ "'~~T~!cJ: .... ,......,. NOtl(t: ~E~~G~H 11111 IM l~~:llCll~ llW .. :•"&=. OllANGI COUNTY, (ALll'Olt:NIA E1Mt1 ti MVltT.f\ E. HEWE". •IM hltd fl 1'*"-litn ol V. ,,._~ lfCUll:lfY l'lltlT NATIONAL IAIOI:, ._. lrM't 21, 1Nt =.:. MYRTA l'.tTElL• Hl!WETT, Uf\illtd SCNill Oltlrkt el Otlflll C....,. di.I"' -'"'" lruilM WlfW l'lc ...., el .':: -lion 91 ~ lrMrl111 h= NOTICI IS Hfltl!tV GIVE!ll It 1M C11tfwi111, Wiii ~el-. Hllld bldt ... In.ti! .. Nd "'°'""""' ,._ ,,.,, ..... lrt' lt:llWlll~ !:,.=~Mf, ltll f9I IW a....-1 ., ttM: • .._ ~ 41e~1 ~-_:;:;:~kill~ =i.t'::' 1.:',C: =.... ~~. ~ ...... ':::~ :.Z ll:UOlvl'D' 111a1 11 1'1 1t11 111r.11t1011 "' "'t: 1-11 Mr-PllVllll ti loll1111 ... ,.lnsl Ille II l1$J f'\l(tfllll Aftl!UI, Coto!~ 'f'll, tf Oftlcltl 11:.Ctl"lll Ill lhl .rtiu el till lfll1 INtd ot lfuoullon. --nt M Sic.· .. 1" .... u ...... I """"· ¢11,.,.,,.t •• wlll(ll 11,... H id lllldl .... " coun,., lt:ICOf'll'f ., Or•• C:.U.,ty, lioou l'Jjf .. 1•1». lrlChlll.-.. ol ""' wttll llW ...Cftlltv VWChln, ln lhl olllu JlllbNcl\I ~ '"" ,..., ._. C.llPwllll, tw rttlOll el cMllUI! Ill fl'll EllllC1tltn C-, lo tr111t Jo t11t Cl'°' fll 111 lhl cltrt. .. "" '""' ..,,., ... COYrl, or IU-.ll'llU MltlllMI• 111111U.1r111 "'" ff\lll'\fllf or .... '9f .... llC.I II ...... , COii• ,...._,., • mut!klNI COt_,11 .... .,, - lo ..-n111t lllMI, wl~--~ ftK.ut,., 0.11!1111 6tlf "*'1fWir1 luNMN 111111 M(l,11''4 lhl!th'~ I , ~Hai of Otl>u.IJ 11)11 .. _,., !Or JIVl!llt 1trffl 11111 llltllw.., "' ...... \ll'Mllf"--(/I '-"'"' E ... 1-1. I EIM.HM .. S.11 u.w.tt O...t" Tr'lltl .... ----· ..,,..,....."° ICtOU !Ml Cff'• L-. llfl'lflf ~ M"*""' Atloi'Mn II l\H !»«t ... tt Ill 111 ICC41'lljln(.t: wit!\ Int "'"" ~llM 11 lfl\tldld ,... trv 11w -~ .... _,.,..,. 1'l<ll'fd 111 1111 (I"' el Lew. f', 0. • .. 16", Nl'lltfOCI k6dl. ( ..... ! ...... 1111tr11<tlofll Ind $Mlt:l11t1t• 1N """' 1t1111 lllr• 11\1111111 "'""'-c.ilt ........ C.W."' ot °"'""'' St11f1 fll C1llftrnl1 fNQ Wflldl '-IM 1l•c1 If wllldl •tt -°" 11i. In ,... tfflct" ............. alMI tll(fl rl(tl"MI"""-will•« e1 C1lfl01"nt1, °" lfls IOllOWI"' allldlllen1 111111-a <ii 1111 11 .... al.W Ill Ill m•llert l" ..... chl1l11t ....... t el 11kl k!lillo! Ol1lrlc.I, JIVMlc llJ<tlill tro the llltfltlt Md9lr ... 1'flll """'9 wlll M Ill <ft! le Ill.I ~ -lllftlnt lo lllt t1l•lf 9' Mid ~I, lW f'IKlnt!t .. .......,., """ MtH, tti.11, MYlllM 111 llwtul lllOl\tY tf 1'lt kllMi Olaltld, l Wl!11111 tlll """"""' .ti« IN flftl MllCI· C1Utornlt. V11lt.11 Slllw If A ...... lcl ti llfN " Nie, TMI .,...,f\I I• -.C:ritltd 11 fo!lllWI : Hell " 11111 Mike. -l!:Mfl llldlMf lllutf 1ubml! •1111 h .. 11if 1 Wttlwwl -I tr w..-ftlllw ...., ... .., Ali laM!l'llM ltt ,... 11'1d 111 ,,.. 011M JUl'WI I. INI, 11thl1ctwv dllCll; ""Ille( "' • re-II-... l1111tllecf II .. 11111. -lDll ., ..... Cl!Mfllll --n """'"' ov•r. I Cl'Oll 11.oOen I". lfttlllt °" blflk ., , l*lller'• eoolCi ..,.... ,.,..._ """""-· -. "'"""' _......... • .,.,. __ .,....,. t111 -'!M If llNI 1J11tt111 E•Kw1'1t of 1111 Wlll, 10 11'11 tl'der ot lhl N"""""l-M1$1 Uri!lltd -Mid 11'1' II ......,.,. 11ld llllld If I~. ln tit JI .... "'icfl'WOlrl If\ Ille Oiuft fll II 1111 l biw """'" ~I kllltl Ol1trlct 111 1111, tlnlllllll 1111 IHI IMI ,. llw •,_w Ill °'"""" CWfttll, l"1l"lftk9 fll 1111 R..c:M ·Senti-W ••L•llS. 1.o•WL l.t.llAHGll • llMlll ...... ••Cffll ~) Of "'' 'u"' lltlfl "" C1lllor11l1, IMKrlbed II! Slnl1 .\N, ,..,.., Ill CIM Ho, llt? •v,1111 bid II • -·•nltt 11111 u ... bl-• .. 111 f'Alt Cl!:L ': Til•I -rloll ol Lot ti el tnd .......... ----t2. 1161, Ill &Ollr f', In UM, Mier lflto 1bt pf'oHsH Coatract 11 1t11 .....,..,. M>l'~lt. et ... 1Nt> ·ttwr.ol I , Ntl 411 ot Juft..,....11 ol lllf IJ'llo W.-1 hKll. C1llf«lll• HW HIN 11 1w1rcMcl 111111. In 1111 1wtfll fl rKenlN Ill llll 4, ti -U. el JvolM<lll OilMd C.,,fl II C..llfornlt , l1t Alfll>nlly1 .... ll•IC-Ullu<'"• '9 en1~· 11110 11.Kll Cllll'llrHI. 11\1 ~~11e-.1 11111-. ._... .. Or•-... c"' d c ... Mloll. County fll f'\llllllhld l>f'tntt ca.ut D1IW f'llal, p.rocffds ot 111t <loe<k wlll to. fafttlllcl..,. Caun,.,, $!lift ol Ctdfor1111, dlKrllled n Or-•· Sltll ti C.lllwltl1. '"' .I-1, 1', 11, JI, 1'611 tlS--4il In <IU of t D<llld. IM full ...,.. ""'"' ..ilewl~ .... IMlflt 11 I ...... Ill ""' ~ .. '91 .... ! 1--------------l wlM ft IOl'ltlllld ""Hl<il kllall Oltlfkl II flilll'WI_._..,.,. llne II Hkl Lot t1, 41.,. ... llll'lltl 11 I'll lllllfll•ll (el'l'IM' flit LEGAL NOTICE Or1ntt County, t1 .. 1 ~ SwtfNet,.,.tw 1511 ... I,,_ f'wul 1. • ~ 611 dllllf lo ni. Na ~. rMV wlNr1w Ill• 111<1 lo• 1 1111! most "kltlMr"' eotntt ot stlcl IOI, CG:ll1 Mftt Uftlol Sd'loal Olllrlct 1--,,,,,.,~---~-----l ~•IOd el """'·llw US) 8t~• 1lhlr 1111 •l'ld f\lflftl,.. ""'"<• 5oulll $11devrea10' rf!<orci.ct ~ n. '"'· Ill IOllll lllOTICI 01' IULK T•AlllU:•R Ute Ml tor tile _1,.. ttw..-. W' Ell!, P1r1lltl with t ... 11(11., ,_ 1SI ., Olllclll ._., NOTICE 15 Ht.ltl!:IV GIWEN TO THE Ttw 9.alnl ol Eductlk>n ol 111<1 Ntw-1· N0t1111!11t1r1V A111 ti Mid 'ill, ttl.'2 Ml ll'llt<ttl Het'll r JI' .W" Wu!, liont llMI C'EDITORI DI' f'ATRl(IA J, f'llCE, MeH U11ll)ld kllool Olt!rlcl ruerws -to t POl11I 111 t -... wllldl k 1a'11lltl -twttt llM Ill HN l"WUI I, I dl11111c. Tno .. twv, """ • 111111! ltlMflr " •bout rtflll It ,.,loci ....,. or 111 blOa. tnd "" wltll .... dl1Mllll NOO""'-tflltlw -lffi ol U7,tl '"' ... ,..... -• cww. (6flo .. to. ...... tit' Trlntftrt<, wl'lase ~ nlOllstt\IY KCft>I !Fie -.11 -; tnd l'I !"'"' t1w ~llf'lw NM ol llN Ioli el\tll I W I Pi..., ... i.wllw I tMlllll ..iclru1 II 1tt1 HI,.,.. lhod., Ill "" City .. _ ... ...,, 111rw .... 1111 Ot lrr"ull•llY 111 ""'"'' 5oulll Jll -·-"' 43" Wf-$1, "' 15.IO !Mtt IMrlcf, • IOUlll ....... rl'f, Co&ll i\MH, Countr Oil 0r1-. 51•19 .. lflY bW rKe-1...-d. •loM llkl Hrlllol1 UM. lO lee!; llllnc• •lonf "" If< "' .. ..,. COfW 11\r-h • C.lttor1111, 11111 111 o1 """'°"" bulllltM 011• Ju111 6. 1'61. """111 • ...,.,_ 11' Iii'' Wut, ,.,.i1t1 central ... 11 1' #" 07" d""'. 1 .i1t11Q M-..... 14dt-wed wlWlln 111.-f MlwPOrl·Mtll UnllJM wllll llW Moo-111111i.r"' tint. ol 111d lat, .i 6'.U fMI Ill 1111 bpt!..,.lf'tl el I -~ 1111 NII, • fer •11 ~'Ill-lo s.:r-1 Oll!tlCI el 211.~ 1'111 It 1t1i1 HW!tlw91tt"' •11111 el ,.,.,.... Olrft. ctC!UW -•l•rlV 11'111 Ttl,.111'•, 1 .. lttl Ktrbtl' Blvd., C.ti l>f'tnft C...,..IV, C..l!!lt"lt Mid Lal '11 hlll:9 Nott1!t411'tflw •lonl hlwlnt • rffhll Oii' Ut.• leell lllenct MIMI, Ctlltorrola, Jo ANT H 0 HY '' A.. MllC!llll '"°Id ~,_, ... Now, '1 ....... lo h ......_ .... ..,, .... ""' 1rt ef 111d OEll:NELLE, Trt111'-'"' w11oM buslMSo l\ctlllt Putcl\t1l11t ll;t~! Hll'lt 9' 11HIMl111, _r .. C¥&'V9 llWMlll I aintr1I 1nglti ef tddr111 II ~1 1 IE. 10lll Slrffl. 111 Ille Cl!Y 54-1793 f'AltCIL t : 1\11 eu-t for 1,.. • .,. u• 11' .,.., I ........ " 31 .1111 '"' le 11 C•I• Mew, C.U.ty d Oru19'1, Stet. al l\lbllill'e<t Ortntt Cotti •011'°' l llol. Al'ld ",.. e1w•r-ltlll ~ II Lii 11 .. 1111 bttl""lfll _, -1119• r1wero1 cur¥t. C1111'11"1111. o1 11\1 tollowlnt .,..cr!llied Jllf>t 1. H, 1,._ ..,..., Ne...,,.. H111nh. 11 N<" 11111 ltle•eef cllfKI,,. 111t.r1Y 11'111 ll1vtne • r1dlu1 ef H•111t11I "'-'"' ol Tr1n1teror, 11>-wll: recardlld I~ '-'' II ,, .. b. af I•,• le.iii llllolce lllU!lltrlY, 11ont Ille All ltoelt 111 trt111, l!•lurts. "ulpmt:nl 1nd LEGAL NOTICE Mltc1ll1ntOU1 M111t •etOtdl 9' Or-• 11c 11 Mid ,.,...,.. Cur'W lllr-~ 1 toad wlll Oil 1 °'"•*" -c:lt bllr llull11ta County. St1t. el c111i.rn111. d-llled C111tr1I -It fll ll' D' )1'', • dlsl11K1 k-11 "Oll:AMGii JULIUS" Ind •• toliow.: .""""'"' •• till """ If ~1.31 ... , 1• I l•-nl line; !he-net locll'fd II lttl H1rbar llyd., 111 !flt Qlv "-45.!t Soulherl¥ <$'flt!" fll 1111 llnd he_,,I,.. Soulll t• JI' 19" t.111, 11-11ld ,.,.. o1 Colli Mui, Ceullly 01 Or.net. Sti .. 111 CE•Tlll'IC:ATI! 01' IUllNllll bllor1 d11crlbld 111 l'lr<tl I, .... ,,,... -I Iii•, I dltlll!KI .. f .17 Ifft, mart: C111forrWt, Ind 11111 1111 1.--1111 bul-f'ICTITIOIJS MIMI nlftl 11>1nc1 NOl'ill -30 detrw1 111' 02" .,. ltu. to Ille 1.1111llllrly nne el i i!d tr1n1hor w!ll to. conwmm•lfld on 1, t lltr TM unde~l;nlld do ctl'lll't -••• WQI, p1rtllll wllfl 1111 Ml'lhll1llr1¥ f'irctl II IMfKI Ncw1ll w DI' II" Eiil TIHldlY 1111 11th d1y Ill JUl!I. lH&, Clllductlllll I buslneu •• 1'11 llolClfllll lk'lt el t.llkl Loi fl, JI twl; """"Soulll ..... llld t.111111\iffl ll11t I dl1!•nc• d llV'Mh f.Krow ~ 114-MM. If till Avenua. Cmll M8-, C1lllo<nl1, Ul'lde• 11\1 :It dtt1rH1 .cf" 43" West, N•tlltl wtlll 40 .it '" • -""""""' al "" C111t• MIMI tltlfllou1 firm ntml ol Amffl(.loft GllH "" Soull!M1ll'"' ..... ot Mloil ID!, lMM • '· "-" .... 1e .... lo ,~. 1111111 or lr1lldl of Seo.orl!Y Flf'9! Ntllol!lt itnt 11 Ind k<IM Ce., tnd l•lbol Gl1u Cem-IHI la 1111 5oull'\-ll"ly llftl DI 11ld llitW.1111. 1Pf IE. 1"'1 Str•I 111 Ille Cl"' et Costi Plll1 Ind ll'Wlt 11!d llrm 11 Clln-'<I of lotJ "*'" 5au"'ffilerl\I, 111M t.11loll NOTICE 15 HElllEIY GIVEN lh1I ori IMM, CllUl'l!1 ot (Ir-'Shll9 f11 till lollaw lnt P«rJOnl, WFleH ... .....,. 111 lull Seo.r!frwMltt"' llne, 111 !Ml lo 1 IM)illl II\ ~ 11111 IH1 ot J"'"" lMl. 11 1111 l'llur of C.lllofJlll • Ind •l•Cfs ol r1"1ldenc• •rt •• lolllwt: I NM wllldl LI N••ll•I with -dlmnt 1.311 o't!Odt f'.M. • •11llllc meetlll!I of .. ;llJrtla of a Y aelat .. '"*':''!"~ OATI0°J11nt 4.1NI. . J. Wlllll111 Putntm. 111tl Aettlt st .• Narfflwt11ir'°' -1111 "°"' 1'lle aotnf el EOuctllan •Ill bl! lllkl ti lb Alllhoriy Ot<11ellii .,.,.....,.," G1rde11 Grqve. C1lllarnlt . 5'ullllllftrl\I MM of uld Jell llltnce ..., .. , ,,........, Plitci lrer I IUl!Nc hltrl,.. f'llblllhld Or-CD11i Dirllr 1"11111. C11¥l11 W. kllt'-r, 1151 t.tnlt ..,.., Nort11 )f .,,... 4t' 0" 1111, ..... -... _,_ fll .,....._ Ille •Por~fd )UM :i.. 1... ~ ........ COii• Mna. C1lll0tnl1. stld 111r1lltl llM, lM.4' IHI"""' polnl '':"',·,, •u•~ •• ···-•• Dlled NI.Iv 11. 1f61. o1 bQ111111nt '" .....,_v 11'111 IM This is how Wayfarer. Yachts' new Islander-55 look- .!<£8 few weeks ago when it was -popped from the ~o1d. The yacht, largest ever to be produced in fiberglass, is now beini completed and readied for shipment to its owner m Chicago. J . Wllll1m Pulntlll S.ltl Miol Wf11 to. ,,,... it MY 1111 Cllf't;. ol lllls klnl ti Educllllll II l!lrttrt Ctl¥l11 W. kfl.tltr 11t1l91tlons MC:ured ll'r 111<1 dffd 11 1"1$1 dlr...., .. llft llOllc1 of 1111 •latl'Mhf 51111 II C1llhHnl1, Ortt111t C-1¥: lncludlllt eM c.IJ. ten .... ..,._ If PUlblk tllHtlnt bl< -llnl c111lti1 ol 11111 T·ltllJ °" Mt1 1,, 1'61, before mt:, I Hattrv lru111'1 Ind ol lht '""' C•••tld D>t llld A•llrlftn· slt>nld ""' I ll'lllOtlty <If "" HOT•c• 01' IHTl'HTIOH TO Publlt In •nd fat .. rd s111e ..... -1.., dttd ol lru1I; •It -ex~ under ...... 11e .... Ille klnl ot Eotuc•llM '" c••ATI SICIJRITY IMTE•l!iT •Pl>H•ed J WllH1111 Putntm Ind C11¥ln Ille ''"'" ol 11ld deed el lr1.11t, ..al """ """ (l) 11t1hlk •lien. '" "" Dlslrld, LEGAL NOTICE llolu. ,,11 ... 111 U C.C.I W. kht"'r knciw11 lo 1111 lo bl! the per.on• ttHldl ind 12'.0SJ.11 r1m11n1M IH"lll!;!Pll .. Id PCISllM II" com•lelld not ..... 111111 l<IOT CE 1 Mr D>t "1 1111! wll<IH ntmtS ••e .Ubsc:rlbN lo !!It wllllln ol !tit ..a~ ucurld IW ••Id ftt>d ti '"'5f, M ODJ .. 'n bllfor1 llw Ult ol Mkll Credi~ el ~OWAReO A 1L".:GEs~oe nd lnslrum1n1 1nd 1(k..a,.1Mglld 11!eY ••· wllll llllettll frDm Dec:ltflllle• 1, INJ 11 111 llUl!Uc 111tetlnt. llld <Olllts la Ill _,.., ' • .eulld Ille 11mt llld !Ille pravldlld -11 tnd Ofl l.01 51-tffmll StrHI. FLORENCE F. Ll\CiES.SE. O.hton. Rouiie c Krio• D led M 17 '"' Ne-I ll••d'I. c1nforN1 -ti Ind .... -buil ... 11,tddieu I• nn f'Lu• He. Nol•ry PVbHc..C1tltorltl1 • srti·111Tv FiltST NATIONAL Admlnl•l••llan Offl<a. 1151 f'llc1nll1 I. Wtllmlnllcr, COUlll'J' ol Orlftlt, $!tit _Prlnel .. I Offlcil 1~ IA.HK. 11 Tr""'" Avmue,J:CJsJ•,Mell. Ctlll1tl'il& 11111 -If . Biennial Bermuda Race ol ClllfOl'lll1, '"''' • HCUf!"' l11191"fll lt Q••--Cau11tv •w Lewi\ w. McM11lllfl 'Ind !ft'I'.'*"" ~--......... r1lfflfl Of. lllowl la lie CIHlell bl< °"'1ir and ~ M' C<lrnmtulon f.llPhW .t.aalrlllll TrUll ·111 .. 1 fie•, 11111-Clltl' Dftlirot. ~ ... di llld 1rtnle-d le lt:ONALO A. ltDCHELEAU, I July 1, lH& e1tilt Ofllctr bv 1111111111111'11 a 11111<• ...... 1<1Mll<ln al llltrrltd 11111n II llllol ll!d lltffrlll ,,,,_ f'llbll1hld Or1119t Coe1t 0111¥ Piie!, UUI 11111 11.fftllvllall trKe 111 t+.1 Orl"ll CM1t pertw. Sel:Uftd P1rt'I. wllolt butllltll eel-Mn 11. M. ll Ind J-'· '"' 164... l"ut!Llsl>ecf O••nt• CMll 011Jy Piiot, 011,.,. Piiat, • -Pit" "" tMt•ll dreu 11 '20 W11f lt!h Street, C•I• Mui, June 1 u 'JI !Kl tSJ-61 clrnol11l"" 11uhH1hed 111 1111 Nt..-t•Mtu Count'J' Of Or1t111t, Sl1!e ol C11lfornl1. ' ' " U11llled kl!Qll Ol1trlcl, st.Id 11ubllCtllOr'I 19 Tht Pl'GPtrt'I In whfch I~ Stcur!t'I LEGAL NOTICE be m1de 1t llMs! tlye IJ) d1y1 ~ ltl1 ~,;)3 Mesa-built Yachts Set . " . ..:. -'"'rhirteen Costa Mesa-built sailing yachts will be in the .. starJ~ng line-up when the -biennial Newport fR.I.) to Bermuda race gets under way June 22. The Costa Mesa built ~U: will include 10 Cal-406 , ~· Cal-37s, and one Cal-48. 811" Jiroducts or J e n s e n !M<i.nne . Others will be two 'Cblttmbia-40s Crom t h e 1'.5olwnbia Yachts Corp., and "0De'1slander-44 produced by W3yfarer Yachtt. All will be sailed by East Coast skip· "Piri' and crews. ~Only local crew in the fant~d "race to the Onion ·::r,~teti'' will be John B. :: Kifrp.,v's 73-foot yawl Kialoa .. ::1f''.,D'om Newport Harbor 'i,.,Y."~t Club. Kialoa II was first to finish in the 1966 Bermuda race. Kilroy said he expects his major competition this year to come from S.A . "Huey" Long's new 73-foot Ondine and the perennial front-run- ner, Stormvogel, 7 2 -foot schooner ~kippered b y Cornelius Bruynzeel o f South Africa. Only other West Coast yacht in this year's race is the 55·foot sloop Santana from San Francisco. The 6.15-mile race to Sit . Daviii's' Light will have .a total of 161 entries, ac- cording to Sydney H . Rogers, chairman of the race committee. Twenty- seven of them will be from seven foreign countries - five from Canada, two from Argentina, eight from Germany, one from South Africa, five from Bermuda, two from Sweden and four from England. The entries include cix previous winners: the 59· foot schooner Nini, now ciwned by the Merchant Marine Academy; the 56- foot sloop, Gesture, skip- pered by James Madden, Penn sy Iva ni a ; W. T . Moore\~ Argyll. a 57-root yawl from Oyster Bay, N.Y.; Malay, the 46-foot yawl owned by D. D. Stromeier, Scarsdale, N.Y.: the 53 ft. Carina, a yawl owned by Richard Nye, Greenwich, Conn., and T . Vincent Le-arson's Cal-40 Thunderbird from Rye, N. Y. Outboards Delayed ToAug.2$ lnlertll w!ll bt trtlled 11, In 1tner1I. 111 LEGAL NO'l1CE d11t al ltld _..lie f!IHlllll. flxlurl'I Ind eC11tlp1111nl, IUl'llllu,. Ind H'OTIC• TO (ltlOITOlllS AYES' MEMl••S lumf1Mn11 ol Debtor CCIVtrlflt p.._rty SVll'1!1t10111 C:OURT 01' TNll IT•T• Mr. Slr1<111. It.ts. LH"', MIW lo<.1led II llfl Wtsl 1tth StrHI, C<IJl1 01' CALll'OllHIA ll'OR THI Mrl. 11..,....., Mr. l'rtn-!ln, Me11, Caunh al Or1n1t, S!1lt cf COUNTY 01' OltAHOI NOTICI 011' l"UILIC l.t.LI Mr. M.ecMllll1n. Mr. PfJlan C1lllarnl1, tnd bu1ln1H ~llCWfl It SPOT· flll. A·JN.IJ Te l<lormtn G. DIYll Ind To Wllom II NOES: MEMIEAS TED KIWI. E1t1\t II Htn•y 0. l'lloher, Oec1111d. MIY Cencffll: N-Th9 1lor1Mld security lr11111d1Dft Wiii NOYtCE 15 HEPl:EllY GIVEN la -N6llOI II lll'9bY 11w~n lhlt, ... Ill. AISENT: MEMIE•S be C1n1um1111ted 111'1 or tllff 1111 17ltl • ..., cndlllln cf Ill• •lllY• llllllld d1Qd111t ""'' lwYI"' ...,, ,.... Ill "" ••Y"-1 el Mt, •1enti.d Oil JL#ll, '"'· t i 1e A.M. 11 Btlll< al Ill Pt•WI• llt wl ... ci.1m1 "llMI 1111 llkl .,,..,,,", 1111 IH'ltKINI 111111,1111 -"" STl\TE Of CALIFO.NIA) Amlrke NTa.SA, IOI Nortll Mlln St .• SI"" dlcldlnl lrt tMUlnod It flli llltri\, wttfl .,._ 1M -Int tr.,., Klk: Enif,.,\_ I~ COUNTY OF OllANGll )II. II Ant, Ct llfeml1 In l111!1U~nli. 11>1 nl«Ulrv vouc ... n 111 till ellln el 11td Nor1111n G. OllY)I lo IJlllM ·llflk ,... I, Ellu!Jeth M. Lii..,, Cleft al 111• ...... So l1r ti --"' "'' Slcvnod "'""· IM cltirt of lllt lbow .:.11tled i:ourl or "' which NOtl'Nlll G. Oeoi<le h•• "..,.,. CW• el Educl!IM " Ille ...,..,,..,.,,.... Unlllld Ill bulJntU ........ 11111 Nd'IUll UMll ""' llrtHlll ltlem, •1111 "" lllC~l'V t1ln --· prOHl'IY : ScMol Dlllrld If On111• Ceulll\t, IM Oebler tor !tie ""'" YHfl 1111 .... ,. -..dl•r1. "' Ille ultdlrtl•riecl 1t "nit otflCI ,,.,. lll'llltn19Mll '"".!!....."" l1'11 ::y,:: Clllfomll. "'"""' cw1llV !hi! "" •llavt l tt: NDf!I. el 1111 AltOl'Ml"I Grlll'ltm 1NI C.-., J ... , 1N&, II t ::IO o ~ •. ti\. and """°"" A.....,._ Wll ... !'/ 111d Dl\TEO : MIY 11111, 1W&. lCIOQ J1ttklM Tr\111 lkllllflllt. lAflt ... ell. wr1 tllltllltt la lh!Jell k flk 11 51111 SauC,'!'. "'9Ullr"' ..,._..., 11'1' !Ill "'Ml hrd 11 1. SECUll:ED .... ,y Ctllfom!A 901(12, wlllcll II ... """ of Mloln Strwt II Lt vm ............ Ill"" " '"""r --, ............ lit ... !I'll !111 •-Id Ill. llllChlloltU lllltlMH el 1111 u-rtl•lltll In t ll l'Nlillf'I fl/ 0,1..,., 5tti. GI CtlllorTllt , Gtltir fllf NY ti ,,.,, lMI, llld """ tw I •ANIC 011' AM•ltlCA. NT&SA Pfrlll11lnt lo '"' Ullll "" Miki deceOlnl, puhnt ult Ind Mt!. wlllioul WI"''"'"' ...... II~ """" ol '" 1111 -be .. ol •1 tMl'ftl ~II SI. wltlllll 11• menii,,, tflff ll'>t 11~1 IUIHlc.e-111d.11r l'K .. tt.11, ttll Mr-1 ..-.er'IY t.11111 ..,.,_., 11~!1 .A111, C111feA11 tlall of !Ills nallce. i:i.crlbMI h>lr•l11 blllw 1nd held 11'1 ll &I IN WITMEU WHIElEOF. I f'llyt •tcf'IW lfl. tt-"111 Dlllld MtY 1~. 1'61. a1i.i.r11 fir 1111 P1Y1Mnl ot Ille lft. 11tr111111o Ill 111y ,....,. 11111 -t 11111 7l1t l"~i.ritd O..t ,... Ceul 0.1"' Piia!. Lylt 1(. s..,........, dillllldftlM MKl'lii.d ....... or tnY -lion dlW OI Mt\I, \Ml. JUM 7, IN& MUI E•KlllOr thertof, l11t~l... HW!nlllllft In-I Elitbttll M. Ll!IY QI ltff WIM o1 111• ""'"°"' e•-Oii' Mle Ind ltpl IMS. C"'* ti Hid Abe,,. Mmecf etc:ldl!I! Tbt --· "'-'°' lo lie flltlred for I~ If EduclllM $rilllafll 1NI GIWYll' .... It clnc:rlbed It felio'n: Mttllfl C. lll'9llOll 1-------;07.:-,,,------11 .. J .... lllf Trftl 1111 .. n• OM """"~ Mfll lh tlll lf'lllMI J.....,. W. ,...,.._ ... It: UI ~ ktc~. C•lflrlll• """ -.. m •.DO dtt .. Od-.1' 22., 1"5 ltedtrldl IN<Mlllllll HOTICll TO ClllOITO•S Tll: (Ill) UJ-1411 e~ICll!ld bv Krlc l!nllrPrlMI, 1111;. l!'llJ1'9ltl M. LlllV llJf'•llOlt COU•T Of' TNll A"'""'' fir 11'1lllllMr NYlbll II Gnen. Slrnb .. Lllhff ti' $ellnt S. ll'r1'*l11 LEGAL NOTICE IT•Te. 01' CALll'O•NtA 1'0111 Publllfled Or1nt1 CD11I Dll"' lllel, onr1r. Oan.tkl Slrl\M TH• COUNTY 011' OllAMO• Jllf>t 7, U, 11, 21, 1'61 ft!-41. Stld nele II MC:Ur&d bw I died ol Mtn'llNrs Oil 1111 lfl. A-n.U tru1t d1!1d Oc:leblr n . 1"5 be'-... ,. f//I l!cll..aHan Ill IEll1hl ol ),ou•Hn RffdY, Dec.used. LEGAL NOTICE Krlt E11llrPrl1t1. Inc., IS t1V1tar, Tiiie .......,l'MWll Utllflld NOTICE 1$ HERESY GIVEN lo 11\t Jnauririce 1 TrUll Ce .. 11 TIVllH, 1NI Sdloel Dtslrfd al Cl'ld(lllrs ot 1111 lllo\tt ntll'lld dtctdenl GrHI!, Slmkt 11111 Lt1Mr, M kllltR-Or-CtuntJ, Cl!l,.,.1111 lh1I 111 ,.f'llll\I hevint clllm1 "llllfl till T-1411' clen" INI rKonled Howmblr 2, \Ml f'Ublltlltll Orl"ll CotJI D111Y 1'11$1. Th L P I. Hid declllllnl •r• r~ulrlld Ill Ille them, NOflC• TO CltlDlfOIS 00 •-o-I oom .. , -u ,, .... ""· Jllf>t J, IMI ff141 e ODg ~ch 0 ICC wlltl llW llKtlM,., wudll!'I, In -.ltflct llJll'~~l~:L~:~:~ ... O~o'itH;H~TlrTll .. , ....... ,.;.i"°'; Oftklll hc~rdJ In 1111 of. Offioers .o\ssociation speed· = 1~,,c::.,~ 111'1111~,'~i:, '"~114 :.=-.:;'. cooHTY DI' OlllAN•ll 11ct ., lfll _,,'"' noctroter o1 D••f'tlt boat regatta 6clteduled {or ~..::W.": H-=~·~~~.:,' T~I~~ E•l•lt al T~'NAA·J::rWl!IUJIGH, .... ~~ybev1 tlncrl!IM ce!!tlUll 11 '" "" 'fi-ansatlantie Race LEGAL NOTICE • S nd h beef! ......-...,. d Strlll, S111t1 AM, C1lllaml1 n1Cll, wlllcll ""TIE NIEWllUllGH, DlcHNd. -.eu!Ofl el ll!t \INltrtlollld tN W\11 1111 U 8y 3$ l"""''-t"'ne It 11>1 ii.c1 el llulJMU ef 111f llflderlllned NOTICE IS HEJIEllV GIVEN la !he IYl lll bll l0t 11111.clloll 11 lllt !11'1t el f'·M1a t A 25 In tll mi tttr1 Pl'rflllnl.,. lo the tlfl lt el credtlora al IM 1boYI ftll'Nd ~I 11tio. C:•ltTlll'ICATI D,. DltcOMTllllUANCI 0 Ug. · Mid decedent, wllhlll ii.or manllll tftff Ille 11\11 111 H r"Slll'lt Mv!ne cloll1111 ... 1,..1 1111 TM llllllllrtllnMI '"'"'"' 1111 l'ltlll le Of' USI AlllD/OR AIAN~M•MT The charity event wag to flrtl publlc•llon o1 thl1 ..atlct. said dK..:ltnl ire requlrtd la 1111 IMm, rr<1ulrt 111v ar •II wo111tcll¥e hklderl fro 0" ,.ICTITIOUJ MAM• 011td Mlv U, lHI. wlltl IM ntet'Sllrf voucllera, 111 1111 1fflc1 -·ty 11'1' ••hlblll"' ..rfllclerit, Cllll or THI!: UNDERSIONEO dDtl fllrtlrt' hoVf!: taken place Sunday at J_,i, s. AeedY ol 1111 citric a1 ""111ovt 1r11111111 court,.,. c.,.1111111 1u11111 Prllr 1a K<<!Pllrlii •ll'P' lltd. uflllY 11111. lffKl!w _,._ l. lNI ht Mlllllllilrlfll' 01 It'll Elllll fro 11re1"1ll !hell!, wllll ltff nKftllrf D11td : JUM l, IN&. ~IH lo dD 11111111111 U ...... !hi fkllll- .. :'.-Yanl{ EmergesasQarkhorse LONDON fAP) American yachtsman Tom fqllett and his twin-hulled ~ gclmouer, Cheers, emerge'd -;:JMa;. as one of the dark -:fl~ of the Trans-Atlantic ··~l>lb7.Tace -one that the ~ Jiidii-5 are worried about. .'.~·~ab the race nearing the ::;.~na.1E its first week, Cheers ,.~~ been reported slnee •1d~g Plymouth I a & t ~l\'fl'iiclay. ~-..~t~ that Follett is in trou- l>It;.lle and severai others ·or 'tl'ie original 35 are lreep- . in( ··:quiet ~ a matter of \P!l\1~ -not letting the ot:liers· knov; where they are. '•-a.rs is a schooner-rig- ~gec;l _~jiilamaran dire ct I y desct!hded from the swift- ., sailing outrigger canoes of Polynesia. The expe_rt.s rate .l>er.ooe of the fastesl boa(! ini the race now that Frenchman Eric Tabarly's giant trimaran is out with steering trouble. One salk>r who wants to know Follett's whereabouts is South Australia's Bill Howell, sailing G o I d e n Cockerel. His catamaran is 43 feet 0vtr·1ll, much the Slame length and therefore much the same in potential speed a s Cheers. Speaking by radio to hls London spollSors Thursday. Howell N.id: "I Wish I knew where Follett is. Then I'd know if I should put oo more ail " • • Leaders of the race. which is sponsored by the London Sunday Observer newspaper here today WEn about 700 miles west of Plymouth on their courses for Newport, RJ. Howell reported overtak· ing the 53-foot sloop Spirit of Cutty Sark, sailed by Bri· tain's Leslie W i 11 i a ms , Thursday. But both .apparently were some JO miles astern of the 57-foot British Ketch Sir Thomas Lipton,. sailed by Geoffrey Wi!liarm. Bruce Dailing of South Africa, sailing Voortrekker, was reported well up with tile leaders, althougti keop- ing his exact position to himself. With Tobarly gone -he won tbe 1954 race 1n a record 'l:l days -the likely , winner i& an ybody's guess. Most competitors this time seem to ht sklw to shake down and 30 days may prove a winning time . Long Beach Mari n e ., "" 1111w "''""" dtl:tittflt ¥0Ud'ten. 10 111e Ullftrtltntd 11 "" att1a uHIOH I.AH• llrm ... _ o1 "Tll<MAN CLtl\HING . CLAUD• •. YOU... ti MIKI MAYO, 111 $oulll G1fll•ld 11 R. A, 5'1~, SEll:VICE.H If U4 .. kit Strut, C..11 Stadium. but was postponed y.._, •l'tMJll'" I H... l\w11u1. Manttbetkl. C1llfor11I•. HIMll. Crldlt Offl<1tt MQt, C1llflwl'lll. ""'ldl _,.._ -· JU W911 n.IN llrwl wllldl II !l>e l'loq el bwlrlft1 01 -.er+oe: ..,,_.., ellnlPllM If h tol~ in deference to the national ...,., ,...., c ......... nn1 un0tr111n1C1 111 111 1111tter1 1ttr111111111 1e •u.tilllhed °''"" eo.11 °''"' "11111 • ...,.._,, wt.-,.._ 111 tull 1,.. pMa If· f'lllM• Ml-4U1 IM ttl11t of 111ct dtetHnl, wllllln sill J-J, INI 915-411 l'Mldlltn II .......... lil>-Wf!: day of mourhing for the late .. ttenie.,..., ,..,..111111r.,.,. """'"'1 etter '"" ""' ~11c111ori a1 11111 Mlrllfl w. K....-. DI ~'*" ''""' •uhllslllcl Or11111R Ceul D1ll\I •11e1, nellce. LEGAL NO'l1CE C111h Mell. C1llfllnll1. Sen. Robert F . Kennedy . Mlv J1. 24, ll •nd J11111 '· '"' "'"" D1h!d JUM '· 1w.. c1r1111c.t11 1w ,,_,._ ,,, IMI-• J M D I . Mlk• M.lva NOTICI Of' llllT•HTIOM ullllt• 1111 •bav• llCl(llous 11111111. •lld -1· ames ac ona d. pres1-LEGAL NOTICE E.~tcutar To o•oic.a.TI SASl!MINT 11c11.11 of ttubllc.etlOI! 1111t.oi • .,, °" tti. d f th P · · OI 1111 WUL el I~# HO' C• •S IOllY Ill h llfrke af lfrll C.U...., Citric ef ent o e ohce Officers Allo¥t 111mH d«lollent ' H c;rvEH ""' on 0.11191 c-t-r. Ufldlr ""' Pl'Wi•ltla 81 · · . Mlkt Miff 11\1 2lll My "' Mty, lMI, 1111 ... ,. el SKtloil 2 .... llf 1111 ClYll C... Association. estimates that MOT•c• ~~1~l'iorTo•• .-.111......, 11 .... ~".i:."°"~1r.:' ~~::" ~= w1TM£ss ""'"""'""' w '11w,,, "- more than 150 boats will be SUf'llJllOll: C:OUll:T Of' TM• Ill teuta O•l'fl•hll A¥tllllt C1IUe11111, •doilfed • •tselullon ol 1 ... 1™· , , STATI Of' CALtl'OllMIA l'OR Mlfllltetll, C1Qlar11l1 ,... 1 ... 11an to dMllC11-in 11-nt 19 IM Cl-M1rllft W. K!ll'"IOll campeting, testing skill and TH• COUMTT Of' OltAN•• '" ,.,. ..... lw "' Co.ft Mna •• m11nlclp1I CM-f'llbMsllld 0r.,,.. C1111! D1tl\I l"llal. t ' ' f' l hol f I IN. A-ff1'N T.......,1 JIS•tll-SIU 11,,,111en fa< Plllllk "'''' •nd hl'llhW•Y Jun1 1. 14, 21, :!I, !NI fM.41 s am1na 1n 1ve a co • ue -Eitiie 111 111,..,. •oe• K-r. •lie 1u11K111ad O••rll't c1111 1»11¥ Piiat. ""r_..", 111d _n, 19 bl 1auie11l-------------- ed ou t boa rd hydroplalle tnciwn " H•rrv A. K-r. Oec:111M. """" 1• It. 11. :!I, 1911 "'"" ow1r • .,. '"" 1aeu llOl'll..,. o1 llMt .-1d I t t k t•--d NOTICE 1$ Hl'll:t:llY GIVEN la 1111 1>1rul 11 leNI lacl!H 11 Sn\lll\llY" Elemt,.. C asses, ,WO S OC OU Ll\ldr crlldllel'I o1 "'' 1tlav• n•rned otecectt111 LEGAL NOTICE 11rv kllaOI s1i., 1n 11'>1 er"' oi • c°''' classes and four sporty in-""' 111 "r-111¥111• c111"" 1111ns1"" · Mfl•. 1~-.,,,-,-~~~------ •--rd categ-i'es the 280 Mid dlCl!<llnl 11'9 rt<IUlnd la 1111 ~11,!m• oO••C• TO CO.Ol•OOS A •~bite lllHllM UflOll lllt qun!IOr'I Ill HOTICll OJI IMTINTION TO l.IUld v• -wllll !tit lllCttll,., -mtr1, In lhl unll!I ""kllltl IUcll dedlcttlen Wiii lie hllcl II •HOAG• IN TM• SALi QJI and 145 cu. in, hydros, the ol tile tll!rlc cf .. •be .... llllllltd C'.Cl\lfl, ar IUl"lltlOJl COUllT 01' THI Cnll MIN Hltll kt.Diii L-. MY ALCOHOLIC •11V11tA•m . t. la 1rlltfll !111m. wlltl 1111 l'IKtiH,., STATI! OJI CALIJIOllNIA 1'11,..lew ADICI, C.11 Miu, C11110mll, an J s,. 1.., ex cl I fl g t w 0. m a n -.ld\lrt, .. "" lll'llltrtl11'1d 11 -aftlct ll'Olt THI! COIJHTY 01' 04lAM•• 11\1 ltltl cMt ol JUM, ,,.., II """""' ot T• Wlllnl tt Mar C--..: UM crackerboxes and the col-a1 11.,. .. 11..-... Y "''' """'"',..· 1w wut "'· -'·"'" 1:• t'clock f'.M. s.,n1tc1 1o 11-11tt "' "" nee ...... lltl SlrMI, Lo» l\nt11H, C1lllornl1 toCl\7, E:tl~~ Ill' 8annll 11111. W•IMI'• C>tc11Nd. llOARO 0,. l!:DUCATION Plied tor, nella It Mreby 91\tlll l"'I tlle orlul super stocks. wllk~ h; "" •lie• ol IMnllllH OI "" NOTICE IS HEltEIY GIVEJ\I .. IM HEWf'OltT-MISA UNll'tE"D undlt1l9--"' NH •ledllllc Competition Jn the last ll!'ldtl'll•Mfl Ill •ti m1H1rt pet11lnlnt lo erect/tort al Ille t bave ntrnecl dec&delll SCHOOL OIST•ICT ~·-II ""' '''""""· Wl<l'IMf .. 1111 11l11t1 Ill ltld dectdtnt. wlllll~ 11• ltl•I 1M "'"OOl'I' h1wlnt1 ci.lm1 111ln1l ll'lfl llv Ellltbeltl M. LlllY lflllclwl · category Will be particularly lllOllllll titer Ille nrtt -nc1!1"" ol ltll1 11ld llecflknl ••• •t<111lrff 16 flle llltm, Cieri< 111 .. Id hon! 111i G-elf C-... Drl""" Cost. Miii keen matching W I d rtelltl . Wiit! Ille MCHM,., ~n. In "" aftlCI ""bll1lled o. ...... Coe1! 0111\1 f'IJel, """ll*lt lo IUdl llllttltlofl, ""-.;,.. • or 011ecr Mtw '· '"'· "' 111e '''"' Of "'' •bow 111lltllld c...,rt. JU111 1. "" ~ der119nect 11 _,,..,,. Ill -D.Mtt.........,t record holder Don St. John Heltrl M ic~· a• 10 P•,•mt •M m, wn~ '"" 11tce111rv "'AklM-llc ...., .... _ c11111re1 fill!' 1uw11C1 r I l od . Admlnl1lr1trh VOll(hf!rt, re Ille undenl11!ed 11 1111 olflu LEGAL NOTICE tw trtl\lf1r ot 111 •~lie .,....,_ o ng1ewo against Clem w111t-ni.w111-1.11nuN o1 1111 .t.t1orne.1. s11n1t1 o. ci.,.. •nd He-c., 11c-1 .., 1t1-. ..,._._ 11 McCullati o( Torrance A l 01 "" E1111• o1 "" Lau11 s. KUMfl, ,,.. H""'""''°" 0rtv1, ••-tn fro1-., , ' Abovi! lllllled dtudtlll San M1r1M, C1filaml•, wllldl 1• 1111 Pll~• SU,,IRIOR C:OURT OI' TMI ON SAi.i' GENl!lt:.-.L LEGAL NOTICI! Thompson cf Van Nuys and 111'1 Mllr!lt-of butlMtl"' IM unckl'llelll<I Ill Ill _,_ ITATI 011' CALlf'OINll\ llOR flOM.l "'01' l"UILIC IATIMO l"U.Cll Ron Larson o{ Long Beach NM "'"' M Str... 1'1t1 P1tlti111,.. lo lht nl1"° el Nld cllc• TMI COUHTT Of' ORA ... 1 .._,..,,.. *"' ... Iii ..,.._, ... '-• Lit .......... Ctllflftll• .. 17 lleftl,. wlllll~ II• ..-Ills .tlltt IM ft .. ! He. A-+ttft el Midi lc-{I) _,, ft .. I ...... lfltlll - among otflers. Tiii: {2111 DU!lb'll l•Mll •ubllut• "' lllb notlu. MOTICI Of' HSARIHO 01' f'llTITlOfll .... .itti -°"'4:1 ., .. °'"'"'*" fll St. John's Sbockwave sel ~'=:lt..~i;':r11"• 01'" ""'~ ... ,~. 1 ... , .. _ .. a. ,..01.t.Tr o' w1LL AND 111"0111 -'lcohllk 1--te..trll. w1111111 io 4 L•TTllllS T•ITAMINTA•Y 8•1'1 ol !tit ..... llM "'°"*""' ..-l!'l!llft a Marine Stadium record by .. "u~,""',. ,,Of'~ c111, \,..011w ~~':; E•«uter Eil•t•"' J•-r-. .... 1111 --•• "'" fl?' _... •tlllllt .,....... ..,.. ·:New Transpa~ Ra~e Doe . -. . th t \t • ... ..... 4 ..... • OI '"" Wiii ol .... J1(&b f'tllf Tftll'llfl. Diel•.... del'llll 11 Pl'OWldtll ..... llw. n.. •r-1- roartnf over e course. a A00¥t MITIH 4Kldt11t HOTICE If HllllEIY Gl\IEH Tiii! •r• -llc1ntld lot" ""'Nie ot 1laltwllc an11:verag~A s~thof 1;J:8.11 LEGAL NOTICE :'.-::=.~i c:11 .. IMiL.,.. Mt•• w. ,.,,..,11 1111 lllltl iw,.rn 1 "'1-::;••=,;..I"'",.:,"".~,~ "i: m HI'S per 1wur m e ennual P.MUt u.. N111111111t11t11 orr.... tiao1 "' 11ra11111 t1' wilt 11111 ,., M-• o.e""",,. S'un Francisco to Tokyo Course Sl.ated ,. ~ 1pew Transpacific yacht race~;& in the rnakinz. ~ pn:lPOl!ed new race is om San Francisco to Tokyo Uld 11 be.ing organiz· d qi start lol.,..,h 15. 19119. ' n6ors are the Slocum ociety and the Nippon -ean Racing Cub. ies a r e limited to oni>!lullo between 24 and · ~t overall Race ' lllid tht event ls a liberate effort to coun· ad h trend toward ' and expensive sailing 5'ocom Societf is a pront organl z a t I o n hed !n 1955 to but has been abandoned. Contestants in the n e w ract: will be required to have prior experience in li.nglehanded olfshore sail· ing. ~ wetl ~ be over 21 Memorial Day 1 n b 0 a rd CIRTll'ICATI Oii' 1uuN111 s..11 "'""•· c.......... 111 Lt111,r1 Te111m111••rv 10 ••Utlow•, ..... o. •NTl1t1"1ttfES. INC. years of .. ae. AU competina -•1n1Tto1.t1 NAMI t11 uni UJ--1111 ~trt11c1 1o wllk:~ 11 ,...d, .., lurlllt• Pu•lllf>ld °''"'' eaa1 0ei1w 111111, -" Regatta last week. "flit ...,...., .. _. "'-ttf'IH~ """ 11 _. Atht1111t ,., 11ec11111" 11r11cu11n • .,.. 1N11 111<1 11 .... ,,,. •IKI J-1. iw ...,.. boats will be sub"'ct to In the outboard category d\icttne • 111111nt11 it 212J Hlrbfr ,.u1111.iwi o·--eo..1 ri111oo f'1i.1,., ..,.,,..,. "" """ h•• batfl ·111 ""1-------------,~ , lault\t1N. ee.11 Miii. C111tornt1, ""*' M '' '' -• , '' '"' --.,_ • '"' '' •·-, m '" ., ,_ . lh dr' to h jJI b 1111 Octlllo.-ll'fll ,..,,,, M KNOTTY KEG •• ' ''"' 4 Ul!I ' ' • ....--. 4 --' ' • .-• " strict survey as to suitabili· e 1ver watc w e •nd 11111 111d flrm 11 carnt10ted °' 1111 ,_.. 111 °"'''"""'' No. 1 e1 ••kl caun, t nd Long Beadl's Ted May, 1ar1ew1-_,.,, wllff• ,,.,... 1n full ,,.. LEGAL NOTICE •1 801 Nitrll! lrMlll '''*''· 111 "" c11y " y . a st.ores for tile 5.200 ... 111111 °'"'· c1111°"'11. mile race. world champion in 1965 and '11~r"~.·r:,.:,,.••,:•~ H•rblr. -------o,c_,c.,c,.,-------1 011e11 Ju"'•·'""· 1--.-0-.,.--,-.. --,-,-..,....----.. -,-0-- 1966 and a member of the ANlltllll. C..llforr\11. HOTICI' 01' IULK TIANSl'lll w. e. IT JOHN, (OUlllV Cl<l•k T ........ , Entrants may be of any G U Hali 1 F H . 01111d MtY 1•. ,,.. CSK• """''" u.c.c.1 Cfllr•" 11111" 0n J""" 1'. ,,.. 11 11!• •'clld. .A.M. U 0 &me. t IS ~ H. GIHll Netl(t 11 lll!reDv 1lvt11 lo !ht CrMlllorl :~i.,.::: Hiii ltl'llt II t'M frOlll IMce .,.._ t9 ._,.Plff nationality, of either iex, also the Am8rican Power ""' o1 c111ter"''· l>f'•"" Cou11tv; e11t:OHAL0 11:. •ocH1L•.-.u. rr1n1'-""· '-" ,___.., <••..,.. .," T111e •-MOii c.r-.. 111 Ntrtll LEGAL NOTICE B .. t A OCI ti, Cl C On Ml• If, ,,.., btfort 1111, • Nett,., wlloM bultne,. ...,, ... 11 *" w. u111 SI .. '" uui t tJ-1,.. •roMw•Y 111 ""' Ctl'Y fll .,..,. Allt, tllfl Slye D l and be amateur or pro-86 a on ass f'utll"l1111'111for11W St1fw,HflOllll"'Colt1Mell.CountvalOr1-.Sl1tflf .. '""'"i.;. ol (111/«1111, Sl!:(Ull:fTV TITL• . e ays Outboard hydro re C 0 rd •l'Pflred Homtlr H. GrM!I kl'llwn 19 "" Cllll01'11ll. fl'lll 1 W• lrltl$tlr 11 1blut to ,. .... ,, .... !!1"'-',. •• ' O I• ••ol IMSU•ANCE COMf'l\NY. I Uil'llCM'llient fe-sEonal sailors. Competing .. bl "" --"""' ... -I• wbttrllto bt J'l'\IOt 1$ MOW.AID A AHO vv .,...,... ,_, I ... T--......, .. DIM .. ,... -bolder j\ 9f.830"1nph. .. It Ille Wll'llll I'll;~ -' l'LOltEtrtCE F. lAGl!ISE, T,.fnflfffl, ,_ J, I. IS. lHf ttJ.a cvi.cf lw" RDllEltT f , GUaNntlE• -Ope' ning Day yachts need not be owned b y Pi~ will be open at 7 a.Jn . ~~,~~xKui..r "" .. ,.... ~"=· :~ i:, n;.:.~."s::t LEGAL NOTICE ::;:,.:· :UJ:T~!lt..1~;:.:: entrant., nor need Uley be to drivers and at 8 a.m . fer ...,.. E. 1>1¥11 ., c..111on111. .-. •nM 1111-. •™· .... ...._., Offkttt Of th gi tr h Tans A dri·vers meet'ing wilt NII•,., "111>11c-Ct1111111111 7111 ,,_"" 10 bt 1r1n,,.,.,. 11 1tc:t1e11 ....., 11--. 111 ""' "'1c1 ., ,. ,._..., "' Shark bl.and Yacbt Club e 1ame re • y as t e · f'rtllCIH• ~ 111 11 .,. we11 •ttti s1r1111. c.itt ,..,... c:••T11'1c.t.TI Of' 1u11,.as• °''"" ~ c.1"°""" w ,..... ,,, nati"'-"llty J ... _ --· .. ts . be held .at 10 1 .m . Ind the o..-C-IV .. ' CllllllY .. Ot-. '""' .. C111for11F1. l'lc:Tn'IOVI MAMll llleflwll"' -_,., ....... 111'9' hu: ~ ita O,,.ning ""IOU ui w~ aN ..,, 1. t . ·u Mw c-tnlln • r.. · ""'° ,,_,,,. 11 dftulblf t11 -•• Tlw .,...,.lt!IMI ._ urtllY "" 11 -. llCI"-""-lttlnd """'* .......... .,. .......... .....,. ~ App·ucaU-tor entry in 1rs racing w1. start at J11111 rt , '"° '" All 11111ur1,. _..._, 11111 _. wtll ~ ... 1 '"""'-1, "' vi. Lia ._,., Wffdl or "''"'"' not1at .. ....,. .,.. Da.,, ceremoniet and dtdic. .... , noon. J111M11Nd Or•• C0111t Dlll\I ,. ..... o1 ""' ...,......,., ~ a-.. tll"GT· ",,_. IHd\, c.~. ,.... ~ "'· ,_,.... MMdl it.-._, • ~ ,.. ' • th be ~ · d . . MtY U, )'I. JI'"" J-1, ,... W... TID KIWI ..... llcatllll If .. Will ltlll ttttwi firm -If llA.Vt!W MAllHE Ja1 Ill ""'* t5:llil. .... I• If/ laMt Of. lion of .tts new clubhou!t, e race may ""'£.1ne Adult ticket prlcfl Is $2, 11 .. c..11 Mrtl. c-tY 11 Or•-· ''•'* co. Md""''~""" 1, ..,,._.., 1111 11c1e1 •1e.,..., wnc t.11M 11 1M11c 9Udltn from Secretary, SI o cum with children under 12 a c -., c.u1or1111. fotllwl11t --· ..._. -i. Mt 11111 i... c1Jfl, wt1t1w1 .. ,,..,,.,., •t i. 11111> cri"'nally achedu.led for Sun· "-'.J 8 . TL """ ..,., ,,_ttf" '"" 111 CllMlll'lllrM ... Mice .. retlftlla ti•• 1111ow1i _......,, ., """'""'ll!Cfl,. 1111 """"" &" ~V\y, ox 387, Ea1t ~mpanted by parents ad-1 n• .,. ,,, 1t1.,."" 0 111 *'et 1-. ,,.., ,, Cllt•IM Jema lli.hMd. m -'wK'lld9. ~ .. ..w Ttwt11"" .... o...i., daiy 1 00 .June 16. Setautet, N. y. milted free Orengo ,. _ ·st's .. '* ot """'"1<1 HTUJ., •1 """" M1111 c...-•• Mfir. C:•llfw11•• Truwt 1ri -"' .itwMt "' .. cov " i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~·;,,;;;;;;;~11 'AM If,. 111111 ,Ml, C-'1 el Ortf'tll, 111'9 ti DIM MIY IL tMI et.ti #itN, Cful!l'1 <Ill 0r.,_, lflllil tf C o m m o d o r e ~raJd c.n1orrii.. c111r111 J1m11 'hNlldl c....,..., lltlctlllllf • Most Complete s. '" .. t""'"' 1t "" '·•~i.·-. •" it111"' c.'""""'. °'-COlll'llY: n. ,..,. •.n Mt"' -"""'"·• SpM'la!r Hid tbe event Wll ""'~ ... _ '"" Ml•11w.1 """' 1rr Dll ,..,..., "· IHI, lltfep'I l'N• • Motlrv frlll 11 ii. """' m• twt ., "" E• ........_,... due ~ ... na. STA-TS NIXT WEDNESDAY-LIDO THEAT"E PRINTING Tr_,.,...."'"" 111'" .,.,,. tt11 ,..,, "'*lk 111 •!Id,.,. 11td ,,,.._ __ ., •""".,. w..t """"'Let 11" t"""t""~ W UIC 11'1~ ,._, -ref Cl\ir\ft JI-FllHIKtt llMWT\ f l trrftw Fl""" .. allOlfWI tft I ""9 H j•• o( • f Cllfed!Mff lmi,lttl. .. ~ .. ·----........... It .... _..... ..... , ...... '!..! wOna ..-y rnournma or SERVICE --Id •. ll:Od!lltfu •tAtKrlllelf .... Wlllllfl .""""""" ... Mita.,..._ .... ,..,. .... "' --1~-··-n~ ~ K Tt"Mlfttllf l:tt_ .......... •lltc:Vttd h NllllL Orll'IM c"""' lllJ'C .ie .xu. 1'Ua'-.. ' en-........ "' L.... IDll'lllCIAL SEAL) ....... ~ .... .,.,.. ...... lleM nedy Sunday ,.,..,._. II', l.9HIM .--e. Olllk *'°"*' .,, ... OWi ti TNIL. ' __._ , TrJMlwrtft Holl,., "'9flc-C1lllltfll• o.• M1Y "' !'M, The,,... ctubtlouse wlD,be ll/illililo' ...... Oil AM•lt:tCA, NT&SA l'rllldHI OfllOl 111 .. JICUJUTV TlT\.I INSUlll4NCI f 1-...i-r •• .J IM ...... Miii II. t Ori .... QlvlltY C°"11" ... NY ope1 ot .. _,,... .. u.vu .:xuruly ... _Ag, t.l..._...1 My <:enwi\lllltin ...,.,... .., J, 1. A,...,_ but I h • T. ~.. ·-.. . ..... ,..,.,. J-''· tm Aiilllatlllll YlDI "~ w~ -~!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~Jl __ f~~~642~~-43~2~1'..__J:~'="'~'~-~~O.=•:'"':...c..::•1~0·1:.E"~"'~'I ~Wltf 0.-•llH C-1 0.11\t f'llllt, ,._...... 0..... ~ hlf¥ 1"111111 cerentorliec, Spirk.I II.id. ;;: """1, It• ~ .. , ... Ml117, t'-Jl ..,. JIN J, lHI ...... NII 1. 14, tt. IW "* W.. ·---' --' .._.' ~ '::.._ -.:._~,:..-lo -~~~-----~--IB-•W-w~--··--·c,"-.~~""~-·~.w......._..........-..-..~0..--'"'"---~·-------------------------· •• 1 .. • \ DA.D.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE They Gaye Generously Busy Huntington Beach officials and citizens have set aside lime this week to honor two men whose c~ .. trlbuUons to the city have spanned several decades.\ Their fields of influence are far apart -one an educaUlr, ·the other a rancher and city councilman. But both are dedicated. sincere men who have shared their time and talents generously with their fet:. low citizens. Harold C. Pedersen was honored Tuesday night for his 24 years as superintendent of the Ocean View School District. The district boomed from one school to 19 and from 310 pupils to nearly 12,000 duririg his tenure: Tribute to him ranged from a resolution written by the. California Senate to a collection of testimonial letters handsomely bound by one of his district's teachers. Pedersen's days as a teacher and administrator have seen some truly exciting innovations in·education. from the appears.nee and use of schoolhouses to a new emphasis on each child and bow he 1earns. The Ocean View district has incorporated these changes -quietly but steadily, much as its superin~ tendent went about his job. Ernest H. Gisler was the guest of honor Wednes~ day at a dinner whose guests included most or the city's officials and leading bus~nessmen : . In two terms as city councilman, Gisler displayed a steadying hand and a conservative approach to ~unt~ ington Beach politics which was much needed at tunes. Member of a pioneer · ranching family, he saw the phenomenal boom of Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley from dusty farm land distinguished mainly by oil rigs to a city of 100,000. His interest in his city persevered through days and nights of wadin_g through city business and problems -many pf which lijld no perfect •.l[•wer. Two schools in the 14rea have been named fo• the Gisler family, one fo~ Robert Gisler and the most re-- cent for Ernest Gisler. The latter is slated for con· strucllon in the Huntington Beach Elementary District within the next year or two. Gisler and Pedersen will no doubt continue to con· tribute to their community as they have for a quarter or a century. That's Improvement! • June is .bildget month. It's appropriate to reflect on where 'Fountain Valley stands as t.he city stall pre- p3.res its 1968-69 fiscal portfolio. Two years ago, the West Orange County city bad 16 ,000 popul~tion, a budget of ,l,086,500. It was $250,000 in the red in the general fund and owed $300,000 to the Bank of America. Bankruptcy was just around the corner •.. if tha t far. Today Fountain VaUey has grown to 26,500. James NeaJ, ci.ty mana~er for two years now, is presenting to the City CouncII a balanced $1,541 ,076 list of expendi- tures for 1968-69. The $250,000 general fund deficit is gone and the municipality's debt has been reduced to $150,IXKt. Recreation services will be up a third over whitt they were last year. The Valley's new police force is soon to add five more peace officers. The city's streets are to receive $250,000 worth of improvement from Valley coffers alone. That's improvement! • H On_e of. Ironies A Reader Accorded an Aura of Legititnacy Of Our Time Physical test& given to European and American schoolchildren have shown that the European children are far more pbysicaily fit than oun, despite our greater resources in food and our greater emphasis on sports. There are two culprita here, I think: the automobile and the telephone. Unlike my generatiOll, the American child today uses these as substitutes for his legs. I must have walked 10 miles a day when I was a boy ; I doubt if the modern child walks 10 blocks a week. And regular walking is probably the best and cheapest fOnn of keeping fit. ONE OF THE mONIES of our time is that youngsters are provided with elabbrate 8lld expensive athletic pro- grams at school and elsewhere -and then they are bused or chauffeured to the sites of their endeavors. H they walked back and forth regularly, they wouldn't need such involved pro· gram1. The telephone, for all its useful.Dess, is another enemy of physical fitness among the young. I don't think I telephoned a friend more than once a month; if I wanted to see someone, I walked or biked over to his house. Nobody dreamed of chauffeuring me as a boy, and I rarely took a bus, ex- cept to go downtO'MJ once in a while. IN MY EARLY TEENS, my closest friend was Saul Bellow, the novelist. He and I lived about a mile and a half from each other, diagonally across a park. We would spend the late af. ternoon or evening together, and then walk each other home. When we got to my house, we decid- ed there was still more to talk about. so we would turn around, and I would walk him back to his house. And, often, we would turn around once again, and he would walk me back to mine. We wouJd sometimes do this three or four times, and think nothing of it -and do it three or four times a week. HE WAS ON TJJE track team (an excellent miler), and I was on the teil- nis team ; and we both got so much ex- ercise walking that we were always in top form, without the necessity !or calisthenJcs or special programs. Our school, in fact. didn't provide any. It ~s absurd to spend so much for athletic and fitness programs today, and at the same time allow children easy access to the telephone, the car or the bus, when they could just as easily (and more healthfully) walk to school or to a friend's house. But they seem to have enormous energy for everything -except a simple six· block stroll down the street. The mere thought of that exhausts their Jm. agination and brings on symptoms of immense fatigue. Telling a He From a She . It ls nice to know, where you're with another person, what sex that person is. Men, for example, traditionally feel more free to be themse1ves, are more at ease, even speak in a different man· ner if they are in the company of other men. They are also usually . more boisterous and less boyish. Women, "Oil the other hand, when in the company of women show just the opposite traits. They are more ill at case, less free to be them.selves, and in many cases profoundly less fe minJne and fun-worttiy. ONE OF THE increasing problems of civilization is how to tell one sex from the other. The passion ror con- formity appears to be gradually destroying many of the recogniuble differences between the sexes. Here are a few guidemarks that help .the interested bystander distinguish the hims from the hers: J( It likes, while swigging something straight from a paper cup, to stand in Dear Gloomy Gog: Weren't the people who run the !Ute btacb parka recently bragflng a.bout bow re1ponsive they are to local recre:adooal need.I? Since the best surfing l)e.. pas at 1unrl1e, why II H that Boin CbJca has to ,remain dos· ed and chained up vntU the ranger eome1 to work at 9 a.m. t -0. A. S. the backyard and brag about the barbecue sauce it has eoncooted, it is a man. If it wou ld rather go to an in· door cocktail party and gab what 1t doesn't know about ba"Seball and politics. it is a woman. Does it punch you in the ribs w'hile it tells a merry story? Has to be a buck. Does it place a soft but infinitely restraining hand upon your arm while it tells you its troubles? Has to be a doe. THE ONE THAT says, "Let's have another one." can be safely described , as male. The one that inq uires, "Oh. do you really th.ink I should ?" is un· doubtedly .. female. Out to the incinerator to deliver the garbage with a grim air of resignation trudges the husband. Out to the in- cinerator with a burst of oratory, "This isn't the way it happens in tbe apartment next door -after all, SHE ls married to a civilized man," walks a burdened wife. Does it accept love as a bond and a mystery that must be taken for granted? That's the eternal lad. Must Jt be a~ured or love and doe11o it de- mand that love's mystery be ex· pressed in words. howev8r lame and unhelprul, as well as In conduct. boweve.r eloquently mutual? That's the eternal lass. Tax Increase ChalC.nooc.btt, Fla.. Twin Clt7 Nflw1: '1Don't be 'urprised if there ii a Uil" inctelle. It ~been put on the shelf, but it is no • inJ taken oU." Updates an Old Cliche To the Editor: I -am writing this letter in the midst of monumental matters which enter my mind including personal, social, national, and worldwide conditions. While listening to radio reports of Senator Kennedy's condition, I am reminded of a letter which I drafted for submission to the DAILY PILOT about six months ago with a theme of "the importance of the individual" with a thread of "thinking basic and using cliches to guide the individual and the subsequent society toward an ultimate desirable situation for all." J did not submit that I~tter because in careful review I came to the con- clusion that we are now confronted with a national disease which might be tenned an almost impenetrable in· dividual egotism. TO BE l\10RE explicit, I felt l ·had something valuable to say but realized it would probably be met with argu. ment. criticism, and controversy rather than the co nsideration for which it was intended. Listening to the radio now and hear- ing how Congress will expedite actions to try to control the use or weapons and how perhaps millions of taxpay· ers' dollars will be spent for the pro· tection of presidential candidates and their families, etc., etc., I w i 11 use the same conclusion as the previous letter and hope it is not too subtle for anyone to understand. There is one cLiche [ have always felt was an excellent one, that is "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure." However, I think it is out- dated and should read ''a pound of prevention is worth a megaton of cure." R. W. MOORE Barldng Dog• To the Editor: Since S. G. Undine (who wrote about people with inferiority complexes who leave their dogs home alone to bark - a connection· I still don't see the logic of) is unlisted in the phone book. I cannot tell which of my neighbors he is -the one whose small c h i I d screams outside my window, the one whose son plays rock music at full volume. the one whose electric saw purrs on weekends, the one whose wife honks loudly when she wants the garage doc. opened. the one whose power boat warms up at six a.m., or the one whose teen-age son regards our small island as a speed· way. TRUE, I AM GUILTY of leaving my poor dog alone. far more than I would lf I had no other purpose in Jiff! than to make. hlm happy (he's a dog. not a "kid"). J work, visit family and friends. go out on dates, ~id fre· quent-ty travel. However, I am still far more quiel in the conduct of my life than are my neighbors. If they'll .agree not to disturb my sleep ever again, I'll agree to let someone hire a dog-sitter f« me. SERENA PAX tetter1 from readtr.t are welcome. NormallV writtrs should convey their messages in 300 word! or less. The rioht to condense letters to fit $pact' or elim(nate libel is rl!'.servtd. AU Jtt· t•r1 "'"'t include signatur"e a:; ~il· ingi oddrftS, but names will ~th­ held on rcq~.Jt. The Preachment of Violence Following are excerpts from an editorial in the June 6 edition of Tfu! Wall Street JoumaL: IC there is something radically wrong with contemporary society, we think in fairness it should be noted that it is not peculiar to America. Look priactically anywhere in the world and you find violence, stupe· fying irrationality and i n c i pie n t anarchy. Another way of putting it is that if there is sickness it is not just in any particular society or nation ; It is in man himself. Beyond all that, we think a special responsibility devolves on what may loosely be called the intellectual com- munity, the people who set the ,fashions in opinion. IN mE DJSTORTEI): rationale of many of them, violence is accorded an aura of legitimacy. This attitude is doubtless rooted in the fact that for a generation or more a m a r k e d permissiveness has been encouraged in home, school and judicial stan· dards. Not surprisingly, ours is . ·.. .... . .. ~. ~ becoming, and !lOt just here in A.merica, increasingly an age when anything goes, and more and more that is coming to include actual crime. Now intellectuals may be able to make fine distinct.Jons between the kind of violence which finds French· men ripping up paving stones and hurling them at each other and the kind expressed in ltie shooting of an Ametican Senator. (From some of the foreign comments on the "shocking conditions" in America, you mlght think the current French orgy of violence and anarchy had never ex- isted.) But psychopaths don't make distinctions; they are inevitably stimulated by the general condoning of violence. AND l\1AKE NO l\tlSTAKE, it is not only being condoned but applauded by opinion-moulders. Ministers of God have been heard advocating violence under certain conditions in such causes as civil rights. Other In· tellectuals justify the violence at Columbia University as a useful ad· vancer of social progress. Tbofe men are to be blamed for the precept and example they set, not least',the en· couragement they give to the derang· ed among us . Most people of course do not accept these concepts. Indeed, their. reaction to a specific crime and to violence in general is one of shocked disbelief. Still the moral confusions and the reiiulting disorder are undeniably spreading. TJIERE IS LITERALLY no way. in any case. to prevent crimes like that at Los Angeles Wednesday morning. Nor is there any easy way to see how man's drives, ln an age Of violence, are to be redirected to better purposes. But at least the leaders of opinion can stop the preachment of violenee and anarchy. They can begin -and it is high time -. to reassert the urgent claims of · order and reason for the safety of each or us and for the sake of society as a whole. Our Roles as F·armer Brown • By ELLSWORTH L. RICHARDSON Minister, The Neighborhood Congregational Church Laguna Beath Let's ga back East to the farm! It is springtime -the best time of au the year in that part of the country. The roads have humps in them -the ice has caused open fissures in the road. There is a breach, a sign of winter's wrath, her hoary breath! And spring ? The men at work rep.airing the breach ! Swollen brooks fed by winter snows have in their wanderlust broken over the banks and have found new river beds. Instead of making the turn in the bend as it did last August. the stream has now shot across the field where in August high.tasseled crowns of corn stood and wagged their silly heads! FAR~IER BROWN Is now at work repa.irin'g the breach! Some careless hunters, some heartless skiers have removed the top rails of fences and Farmer Brown must repair tt)e fences before the cows are let loose. Yes. winter has left its scars! In other places there are open breaches: some friendships have been torn asunder; some are anly held by slender tendrils of hope, of pride. We all have roles to play as Farmer Brown. We have hands to kiss. hurts to heal and wrongs to be forgiven. By George---. Dear Geroge: Wh-at do you do with problems yoo don't have an answer for? To whom do you turn for help and 1low much does it cost you? PUZZLED Dur Puzzled ' Oh, yes, I get lot$ of problems I can't solvt, but 1 have .a good researdl ;ta!f and they work cheap -ft just cosll me the price of a post ca.rd . Who do you thtok writes all thoH letters signed "Stumped" by Abby, ~I and the rect? f • What have we done bef<.ore in other springs? Into the breach of a broken friendship we have poured s pi t e , jealousy. an unwillingness to yield. salt, revenge ... the same old stuff! THE PLAY, "All YOW' Sons." was the story of a father Who did his bit for the war effort in World War II. With two sons in the service he was a manulactur~of engines for P-5ls. One day the . eman at the plant call- ed the man turer at home to say that some of e motors were defec- tive, the e 1ne heads were cracked. The manufacturer advised : "Fill 'em up. get rid or them. We 've got to fill our contract, so many a day. Yeah, we've got to make money you know!" The breach was filled with poor metal! IT SO HAPPENED that 21 pilots were killed as a result of this manufacturer's desire. to make money and he was indicted. sent to jail. Later Qu()tes C. R. Ballew, Sa n Dleio -"The way out of our present troubles is so simple It is frightening. It Is the ablllty of man to say: '1 want to help my fellov1 man and help myself.' " Or. E~t.htr 8. Cl111rt, Palo Alto pediatrician -"l loo k forward to a time "When all infants born In America will have a life expect.ancy ot about 100 years with small llkelihOod that they will die or be crlp. pied by any of the diseases or dlsordt'l's which have been 1 o prevalent." C. R. Beaaelt, El C.jon, on (Old crl1l1 -"AmttiOI 1UU is coasting .along m the presUge that wa1 built up by a century and a halt of sound money policy.'' on he got. out . It so happened later on, al.!lo, that the inevitable telegram from the government came to bis hou,e tell· ing of the death o! hi s son, Larry, overseas, in a crash landing. You got the feeling that perhaps it was one of the plaoes that his father had manufactured! But his mother wouldn't admit it. She said, "Larry is not dead. He will come back " She knew to admtt Larry's death would imply that her husband was a murderer. Indeed he was .• , n pilots dead! But when the 22nd wa1 killed, t:hat v.•as different! HOW THE PLA V ends I'll not reveal. The point of interest to us l1 this. A defective part. a breach, filled with poor metal, was patched. The father felt no respoosibility, no guilt, 21 pilots dead but tlley were somebody else's sons. His son dead, .maybe a defective part? Ah, fcrget· it! Yau can't forget it! The breach in an engine he.ad. patched up Wl.th old stuff! We can't repair with "old stuff'' some friendships t h a t have b e e n broken. The rather said at ont _point, "Let's be practical. You don't:.want me to be a Jesus do you?" That's just it, wt did expect him to be a JetUS, to be through with this old stuff, to be . willing to fOl'give, to be a repairer of the breach! Friday, June 7, 196_8 The editorial page of the · Daflv Pilot 1ceq to fnform and 1tim- ulate readers by prtsentiftb thts newspaper's c>pini01U and com- mentarv on topic1 of ini.erc1e and significance, bt1 providing a, forum for th.I ezprt1rlon of our rt~rs' opin1oni, cM bit prt11entrnq the diverse vfltD- polnts of fn/onned obt1m1eri and spoktimtn on toptc, of UlC day. J Robert N. Weed, l\1blllbtf':. - ,_ _________________ .._. __ ._......_...._ ........ ~--.......... -.. --~-~··---------------·-· ---------__ ._ .... ------------.. ----.. AT RAY VINES, ••• DURING OUR BIGGESt . CELEBRATiON ··~ 1968 VALIANT FtlLL FACTORY EQUIP. INCLUDING DELUXE WHEEL COVERS. STK. No. XV4724 Immediate Delivery SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE of 1968 Executive CHRYSLERS and PL YMOUTHS enables us to put the new car buyer into • new ear at tremendous savings. These cars have many, many extras. including Factory Air Conditioning, All carry the balance of Chrysler-Plymouth's famous' New Car Factory Warranty. 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VI, auto· matic, radio, heater, p o w e r stHring, white wall tires, air conditioned. Stk. 4545A 4349A 5795 5995 51395 51295 51095 . 51595 --111'!'1"1 ~--+------------+-----------+-----------1------------1~------~- GALAXIE 500. 2 Door Hardtop. Automatic transmission, radio, heater, white walls. Very sharp. Stk. 4701A 5995 '64 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN STATION WAGON. Automatic transmi ... si on, VS, radio, heater, power stHring, w·w tires. Stk. 1522A. 51095 • ' R 5 CHRYSLER '59 FORD Camper · '65 VW '63 VALIANT '65 PLYMOUTH NEtWPOt.RTt 2 d!"'. hardtop, •59 FORD LONG BED PICK UP. Radio, heatar. RHl sharp. White 4 DOOR SEDAN. Standard SATALITE. 2 DOOR hardtop, au om• ic ransmission, power wall tirH. Low miles. Stk. transmission, radio, heater, air automatic trans., rldio, heater, t I F t •. R & H with cam-r shell reedy for the s Hr ng, •c ory ir, • ,..-1403A conditioned. Stk. No. 1319A. power .... ring, air conditioned. Beautiful gold color. Stk. 14688. OPEN ROAO. Stk. 1562A. 52095 . 51095 '64 BARRACUDA '66 VOLVO Automatic · transmission, radio, heater, power 1tHring, VS, white walls, a sharp car at STATION WAGON 4 speod. Rtdio, heater, white walls. Stk. 1473A 51895 • '66 TORONADO DELUXE. Full power, factory air. Gold with white vinyl roof. \ ~95 '65 DODGE GT 2 DOOR HARDTOP. 4 speod, r..:tfo, heater, white wall tires. Stk. Wl501. \ '65 FORD 2 Doer Sedan. VI, automatic, power brak", otc. Siie. 4752" ' AHY9 CUI PUii TAX A UC. . OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK RAY I ES OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8:30, A.M. TO 10 P.M. 8:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M. CHRYSLER • PLYMOUTH • IMPERIAL 4201 WlllLOW • LONG .. BEACH AT THE LAKEWOOD TURNOFF FROM ORANGE COUNTY OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY 543·6663 527·2341 ' . ~ . . • } ·: ----------'------~ • .• _ ... ....._, ··''-+ e -· · w·-·tof•e··ot -•a •W··-ti•'•• .....,.,·>4G •.~ ....... .-...... ~---~ DAILV PILOT . . . -.. -.. _. .. .. . ,. .. -.... .RETURN -Judy Garland stars in ''I Could Go on Singing," tonight in color at 9 p.m. on Channel 2. The motion picture teUs the story of an internation- l; al entertainer who goes to London to renew .the bonds with the only people who ha ve meaning for her, a son born out ~f wed.lock and the boy's .father. TELEVISION VIEW$ RFK Funeral Story Unfolds By RICK DIJ BROW · !. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Television coverage of '1.he aftermath of the assassination of Sen. Robert -i<ennedy will continue through the weekend, inch.~d­ Jng the lying in state, the funeral and memonal .services. . The body of the slain presidential hopeful will -;lie in state today at St. Patrick's Cathedral in "'1Vew York City, and home viewers will be able to :watch the pubtiC mourninj, · _ On Saturday, television will cover a requiem lllass in St. Patrick's, the placing of the coffin on a train at New York 's Pennsylvania Station and the l rrival in Wa shington, O.C., about four-and-a-quart- e r hours later. · AFTER THAT, the cameras will transmit the '.Story of the motorcade as it passes the Senate Of- fice Building and the Department of Justice Build- ing en route to Arlington National Cemetery, where :'iurial services will be held. : On Sunday, NBC-TV will present extended cov- -erage of memorial services for the senator. { Al l three networks gave prominent attention to Thursday's sad yet historic proceedings. But NBC. TV wa~ the only network which devoted all of its regular coast-to-coast program time to prepara- ;tions for the fun eral and burial. And it plans to continue its blanket coverage today and Saturday. ~ "This is a serious and grievous time in Ameri- 'an history," said Reuven Fraok, executive vice ' , ing not oiily emphasizes this to the people in their ' ~esid ent o! NBC news, "and we think what we are -. es, but allows them to think about it in those l41rms. '' ~. THE NIGHTMARE of another day of tragic iiewing Thursday followed the announcement at Jbout 2 a.m. PDT by Kennedy's news secretary, frank Mankiewicz, that the senator had died. ··~ Later on there was an announcement of funeral 8t'rangements by Pierre Salinger, who had been llews sec retary for the senator's assassinated broth-er. President John F. Kennedy. ·-And on NBC-TV's morning "Today" program, Dr. John Spiegel,. head of Brandeis University's Lemberg Center for the Stud)' of Violence, noted that of American's past 20 presidents, there have been attempts on the lives of six -with four killed. .; FOR TELEVIEWERS, though, nothing em· fbasized the dreadful historic message of the day !S much as the cross-country flight of Sen. Ken- oedy's body from Los Angeles to New York -for on board the plane were the widows of three mur- dered American public figures ! Mrs. Robert F. K.~nnedy, Mrs. John F. Kennedy, and Mrs . Martin Luther Kin g. ~ Although all three networks were significant in thei r reporting of the day-long story Thursday, NBC-TV 's continuous blanket coverage maintain· ed. such a level of bri1lance and substance that it must rank as a magnificent chapter of broadcast- ing history: Such newsmen as Edwin Newman, John Chancellor, 09.vid-B'rinkJey, Sander Vanocur tind Ray Scherer jelled with a sophistication rarely Seen in any · news· meQ.ia . · · · · ONE OF NB:C-TV~s .features was a lengthy ses· sion of re~iscing br. three friends of the late sen: Kennedy and his wi e Ethel-Art Buchw3Id, J3Ck P aar and: Rene Carpenter. wife of astronaut Scott Carpenter. !nd the human dimension this discus- sion added to th,e day'J coverage was considerable. Dennis the Menace •• . , . . . -.... -. . ' . . . . ' ' ; ·--. .,, DON1T WORRY ABOUT IT. fOR r:RlfNDS WE'VE GOT SPECIAL TREATfl1a./T., GORDO '" """'llO<!Se "' "°""' ~ \IJ!U.. ·se. ' GXJl!::if:JZ . JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS Ali WOMEN! 1\lEM WINSOME WAIFS OF WILLOWY WAIST AN' l\ORLDLY WARDROBE! ... -- MUTI AND JEFF FIREFLY, YOU TEU. PEOPLE YOUR LIGHT GOES ON AND OFF ALL.T~E TIME 'CAUSE YOU GOT A L.OOSE CONNECTION? MISS PEACH ' FAANCJNE, Pl!RHAPS MARCIJ\ WQJl.D 8& WIL.UNG 1'0 1'E'ACH WU "TO SWIM AT CJ\MP THIS SUMMER · l 'M ~IHG lHt5 1t1· TH~ FORM OF~ SU&ee.STtoH, RHlNE.R. PQM'T YOU eveR TAlK lO JfNNIFffl P!LON .......... ,,,,,__-11t.,...,.......-'" HOW~ BOTM AltE ANE! JEEP WfllT OFF KATHERtNE~ 10 SUM"'E« CAJAr A COUl'l.E l.HtJ JEEP? OF PAYS M:tO ANP KIJHYINE'S IN THE IOTCMEN GETTlNG YCJlll A SNACJC ! COUL.ONIT ... WANTONLY WEAVING THEIR WILY WEB OF WITI:HERf 'ROONP WE WEAK-KNEED \\ORT\ilESI... WIGGLIN' THEIR WENCHY WAVS WITH WARM-\\URDEP WIZARDRY llJ WAAP OUR \\tlBij!X WORLD WITH WRE10ED WRANG!.ES AN' WOOLLY m!:S! ~IC­ ~.l-IERE COMES l-IEE~YI. +IY, GIVE ME A OH ,.MMCJA, IF voi.i WOULD "Tl!ACH - I WOUCO FINJ\U.Y C&A~N, I WOULD&~ DeTERMINED "TO l.v.RN, AND I Pl<CMISE Y0u I \\OUl.D MAKE EVE~ HUMJ\N EFFORT "TO I.EARN IF \OU WOULD ONCY CDNSE/'lr TD TifACM ME TO SWIM ••• ·-_ ........ . ' ly Cllns M. Sd11ds By Harold Le Doux 'lOlf KEAU.V 5HOULPN1' H"VE PONE THAT, KA.n.ERINE •• UT . l'li\ 61..AP ¥OI Pit!' Y: . I l I By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith '/I -.......,,. .... ·~~-~ ?J;/1I1\ \'\ 'vo.OJLD ')OlJ LIKE 10 MEET H!M.l HE15 IN ™E OEN WA1CHINIS 1\' I ~-.,_,-"'-~-~-~~--------- I I ilDkl ''"tlO: (C). I 1:30 . .. rn.utttl (C) n.. flObttk ftw (C) ' • Movie: "Str•n&lf ftt• lttti1 1 n(' (1cl'l1ntur1) '64 -Dtlllt. Chin Sln1 Lona. ' t R I 0 t ' JUNE 7 I ', I J I·~ C ,,. .. 1 ~~""'""'" k. (C) The Flin.._ (C) -· n. Ill -...: (C) (60) Jeny Spldtr M11 (C) OUr pity. , . t: .. Spysm1sllt1 R .. In~ RtJIOf( (C)(30) turns." ind ''Th• Cun ol Z11111r1'" ... Mt• Sheol: (C) (90) aie thls ll!O<lllnl'• fllmL Louis Hyt, SU11r Ra1 Robinson. l:J5 0 Mowl1: "Sc1nd1I, Inc.." (mys. Sid Gould, Grice Mu~1y, and lady tuy) ·s7-Robtrt Hutton,' P1trlcll boxu Gayle ¥1nc1 1uut. WrlehL D.. ..... "'"" ..... '''° 11 ~Tho ·~"•Ide (C) hll" (1d'v1nture) 'l 6 -Micll11I Simson and Soli1tfi (t) Wh111n, }11111 Mull. .lollrllt)' ta tile c.nt.r Mlli.t .., (C) (30) ,, till [lrtll (C) ,_, Dllk (30) II) fKMll IMO: MMri Kn? "V~tl• Museum." 10:00 RR ~ S!wz111I (C) 0 Desptrbr § l1rdm111 (C) l:JO unc· 11tws Stnk:e (C) (60) lhii lofta (C) • Tiie CrOl'IJ , ... (C) (30) ' d: -fWI ... llld I Nm1 (30) Wit" ('JllSl:trn) '54 -WIYM Mdllll ""' (30) Mllfl'is. MMqlac s..n 1111.-: ''fi. ff) Cint M11lune 111ncl11 Man.ipment alld' Records." 10:30 f) I~ $pK1 lllost (C) fE Notl~ro 34 I AIOll Ant (C) • 7:CIO I) CIS [•1nln1 lhwl: (C) (30) Ceorp 11 tht l11nflt (C)1 Wa1t1r Cronkltl. 10:45 Movie: "StnnJtr •I M1 Dooi- 1 f TrMP (C) (JO) (drama) '56 -Mtcdon1ld C.rl)', I l.ovt LMq (30) P1tricl1 Med1n1. lillip11'1 lll1nd (30} 11:00,,,~Moby Dick (C) PNM'•: {C) "VIVI II Gente!" . M1jor L••tut l•stbll: LI C11111 VICl1 ( ) . ouls vs. Cincinnati. 7:JO 9 ({) T1M Wild, Wild West § ~ (J) The luU~ (C) ~ {60) 8 Mowie: "frontier G1mbl1r."' T1mn: (C) (60) ''Tht Moun· 11:30 CI) SuP1fm1n /Aqw.•1n (C) U ns of !ht Moon." Conc!usion. 0 (l7J (}) AmtriCln l1ndstlnd (C) O Movie: "Mr. H11tt's Holldl(' 0 Movie: (C) '"'Conqllld: 11 MJ- (comedy) 'SJ-Jacques T1li. H1t11ie cene" {adV1nt11ni) '63 -Gordon Pescaud. Scott, G!rlfYitve Grad. O @(l}Off T1 SH Ille Wizard: (CJ (60) "fl iwe1." Conciusion . 0 MlltlH $ Mowlt: (Cl "Tiit Xtn· ,. .. ~ ,.,... . .AFifP 0C'~ ~~4 .• •• ---· •• t.ailn" (t!Mmlure) '55 -Bur1 . Lancaster Diana L)'lln Di.lnnt Fos· 12.00 m Un Ctnto dt Millet ttr, Walt« M1ttti1u. ' 12:10 f.l (ff! (I) Jenn! Qlltlt (C) I Trdl or Coftseq11111* (Cl (30) 8 Movif:: ~) 81b1~ PaSSlll" hnJ 1itut11 (60) (1!N~tu1e) 41-M1dt!e111e Carroll, c.nc.rt ii .,....: Tht Amtiiun ster11ng Hayden. . , Brt• Quintet performs contempo. 0 @@ H1pp1n1n1 U : (C) C.r· r1ry m11sic: "MOYtmtnl !or Two ol Burnett .11uests. , T111mP1ts. Trombont and Pi1110," ID Blut Rill,~ Thootrr. 'Dantlf'· "M11sic for Br1st Clloir," ''Qulntel 0111 Journry. for Brus," and "Sonic Sequence." @m El Juldo dt los Hlfot I M..iaf V1ri11J 1:00 fl 9 ([}Tllo lont Ran,_ (C) 1:00 ,....,.. (C) (30) 0 ~le: (Cl "little Eapt" a:JO 9(I)11mtr ,,....USMC: (C) (comedy) 'Sl -Rllond1 F11mlnr. (JC Gomer 1rows 1 11rden bthlnd M1rll Stevens. tho b1rr1ekl, with tt11 bl1uinas cl 0 MovJ~: (C) "'Tltt En.•l'llJ hlow" ~· co~ntl, but Sgt. Carter tries (dJ1m1)_57-Robert Mitchum, Cur1 to 1quish lh1 hobby by spikin1 a J11rgens. W1lerm1!on with vodka. (II) m Opinion: W1shfni(on (C) I 0 ~SW Trek: (C) (60) 1:10 fJ IS (I) TIM Road Run Mr (C) . @ Mtn in 1 Strftc.lse: (C) m Movie: "Separate T1blu'' (dn · ) "W 1 They Kiiied Nolin.'' Mt· ma) '58-Dtborah Kerr, Rita HIY· • Gtll fl frlmed lor 1 murder. wor1h. David Niven. m ilt.,v 8rtffi11 (C) (90) 2::00 0 ~Cf) Prnject Htad Sttrt: (C) m HIWlff ·Ciiis (C) (30) A serits offering 1dventu1n In m INc:ulttion: ~'Thealre--An Ex· learnin1 lo eull1111!1y disadv1nta1td preulon of ·Todty." pre·school children. @El ti J1kie dt ... Hffos n t.tovie: (C) "The Mvenlmt " t:llO IJ a m fridty Nltfit Mowlt: (t) Toitup" (adventure) '64 -Guy f CoutdCio tt1 Sinfing" (d11m1) Madison, Nadi• Gray. '63-J11dy G1r1and, Dirk Bogarde, O Sportl Sptcltl: (C) "Olyrnplt J1d ~ll(man. Alirie M1tMahon Gomes Telethon." 1n October ol 6J ASlflu! (C) (lO) lhis year the Unittd Stales Olyrn· (!) hlentriol pie Team is destined to 1ttend lht 1:30 O 9 (!) Holtr-ocf Sq111ra: (C) Olympic Gam~ in' Mv:ico. City. (30) Ptilf Ma rshall hosts. Los Anieles 11 the l!ost tllf IOI 9 ltollywood '11rk PJl\'lnr (C) (30) !ht O:~mpic trials lo detumlM O (HI(}) Tht Cuns ol wm Son· members or the tlam wllo will nett: (C) (30) ''look for ttie Hcund rep!tstnt our countiy. }oday 1nd Oot." Will Is !lit defense toUnRI toru~ht, srM>r1s Pt!sonallties ~nd TY, wt\en Jell is tried for murder. (RJ 1110¥1e ind reccrd1ng s11rs w~ll per· m M"lt: (C) "8Lrlta'9 BHr' (wut· lorin lor you. All they ask is lh1t ern) '.W-Joel McCrea Unda Dar· yru mall in 10111 oonlriblfllon tor nell. ' tickets lo Ille tri~ls. The funds will ED Cn1tiw Plf1tn: A doctrmentary IO ~O llnun Oifr te1m's trip to on the p1oliflc F1enth novelist Mexico. 6eor1es Slme110n. ID Coronel ThNtrt: "Last ol the 10:00 n ID (!) Amtrlun rrvtlle s,e. Oespe11does." ill!: (C) (60) "Justice' tor AH?" 2::SO. Upfom 10: (C) A series dell· "'"'~ 1'11111111 Nm (C) (60) '"Ii with the many are1s of Id· ~ Judd, for 1111 Defense: e.nce related lo s~ace expe1lmenl•· (60) ' o love and Stand Mute." lion ind exp!crat1on. m Te::ipo (Cl (60) 0 Movie: "Runnin& Wiid" (drt· lld Lltti1111 Ntn (C) (60) f!!•) 'S&-M:mie Van Ooien, Wil· NET Pl1)'11o1119; "Thir1een ham Clmpbtll. A«•lnst Falt-TIM Lod1er." fJ Sllerloct Holm11 IE) t.dll Ubn fE Ch11 tn SU Cm 11:00 G Dlrlll O'a.ct: Report (C) (30) 3:00 II Thi J11n Sodtty: (C) "Should JefT)' D11nphy We Havt e fed111I Medictl Plln 0De 11a·Hw Min: (C) (30) in Ille U.s.r• St11delrts Imm Wai a:lor1e stinMr. Hllh School in Tonance 1nd lrom R TM Wlltlrntrs (30) San Pedro Hifh School in Sin In fhn: (C) (30) Barle1 Ward. Pedro deblle. 0 Mwit: "The Cr11t Jt\lel Rob-3:30 I! Molit: ''Tli'tnty MlUion Mlle! bliJ" (adventure) '50-D1vld Bri1n, to Elr1h" (sti·fil '57 -Winilm M1rjoriol Rl)'nolds. Hoppu, Joan Ta~lor. 81 L• Crane (C) (60) 0 Ai!iCUtturt USA: (C) "Tht F1r111 Mwlt: (C) "llln Htr ti Hff¥. Machinery Revol11lion." .... (dr1m1) '45 -Gene Tlfrnt)', m Chilltr Corrlill Wilde. (D Color Tltoatr1: (C) "Scudde· @m Flltl¥11 OI Ptlk11lu M11lcan11 Hoo! Scucld1·Hayl" ll:JO 1J Mevll: (C) "Tiiey hd1 West" 4:00 8 Hia:k allcl Wild (Cl (westlfnl 'S4-0onn1 R11d. Philip @ lJ) I i!1<1Au TIN been Carey. -Cr1i1 and Lee Brttdlowt: (C) A @I 00 TIM Ttnl1ht Shaw (C) The Breedloves 111 5fl•ed 1111nd1 0 Movlt: (CJ "Johnllf Ci11itar" in their own time. Cr1i1 is !flt (dr1m1) '53-.loln C1awlo1d, Scot1 holder of the world l111cf tptld • Bradl:._ rt00rd of 600.601 mph, ttt In D (ll) 11) Iott' lilMp Show (C) 1955. L111 Is !he W11men's 141"' l.Z..'ilO m .... ,,.. (C) spood rtcOfd holder at 308.56 mph. l2:JO CJ Ml'tit: "fllr In the Nlt;ht" Both rKO~s wtft tshbllsllad Oii I (mysltiy) '47-Piul Kell Ann t~ ~onnev1ll1 Sit.I F!1t1 in Utlh. Doran J, IJl1llz1n1 motion p1c!11re 1001111 o4 Q) Afi.Nipt Mrwlll: (Cl "Slvai• 1111 Breldlo'les' 1re1test memt~b Grinfo," "Erl-the CortQutror." o.? the trick .and specl1I m1ter11I "Hercutu, Prl3Gner of E:'t'i!." ind h1med for this p101r1m, ABC lo- "Weektnd If! H1v1111" are tonlihl's c1i51s on lh1 fem~d couple not films. merely as spor1s h111r1s. but as 6J AdioR TlMitri: "Amazon. ynun1. ex ubt11nl per30n·r·•·1 aff QllUt" the !rack IS Wtll. 1:00 II Mlrif: "bn't II Ro11111ntk'l"' • fJ Clurfll Chin (romance) '48-Vironicl Lakt Billy 4.30 9 ~@ sttepltchtst (C) Dt Wolle. • fI!I leKlllr '65 ' ., MOYTt: "stltloi I S.tltni'" 5:00 n a (I) HollywoM Pllt; lwa: (drama) '64-Ptltt Yan [)>ck, C.r· (C) Tilt $50.000·Addtd ln~lnood roll Blttr. Handielp Is 11n1 ol !ht se1son'1 8 Nftrs (C) m1jor te51S tor older h1ndlc1p horses ind tn impor1anl pr1llldt SATURDAY JUNE I . '·' 0 RN IN c . ' 7:ZO 8 Ifft U1 Thlt DtJ I Ntn c.I McCtel (C) _ .......... ,,,.,-.. ~ £lttdlwt Llvln1 (C) Mt. WWllloM (C) '"'Gil -""" (CJ tOOI UJ C1pt,ei1 X.npne (C) ' -·(Cl · "A-.." (wahr11) '32 .... --'1"11 SIJrartflout, Uord Nolin. to the $162.000 Hollywood Gold Cup oomlna 11p on July 13. Q Sptakln1 frHly: (C) Sol Lll'IO- .,,.ttl., U.S. Amll1ss1001 to !ht OAS, 1uest1. !'.] Sportl S,.Cl1I: !Cl "Proli11 o4 ~ Rookie." R11okle ba~ball pll)'lfl Con Money Ind luiy Hilill, both o! !ht Phll1delphi1 Phil!i•s. Ill PIOfiltd in lhl1 1por11 lllm. !> ~ ~ ABC' a Wldt WorW ti i lnlndtd (C) lroneo lnnftatlons BllltllN can Venart. 5:30 I R1~p,h Story (C) · Twlll&lll 2ont ' ""'"" ........ Complete Printi"g Service Top Quality -Fast Service . 11'1·'11Jii11 !19 642-4321 2211 W•t S.lboe Blvd. Newport hlch • •• 4 •• 4 •• '4 ............... .._... ... -- -... __________ ..._ ___ ------- -.,. ----...... ---·~·~-~ .... -...,, _____ --------.. _HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE f'ldlJ1 Ju11t 7, 1968 DAILY PILOT ,2J HOUSIS FOii SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HCUSES FOR S,.lLI HOUSES POR Sill! MOU5!5 FOii 5ALI HOUSES FOii SA Li Gt11tr1I IOOOGen•t'll 1080 Genor•I 1000 G-r•I IOOIO-r•I 1000 0....r•I 1000 1000G.n1ral 1000 G.ner1I ,~-~=;;;;:;;.;;;;;;~=~ 1000 MA TI LA BORDE, Realtor WONDERFUL WESTCLIFF LUXURY AT LOW COST. Bea utiful 15'x32' Swimming pool, three bedrooms, 1% baths f;Tus famlJy room borne, Built for modern ivlng -decorated in excellent taste. To- mo1TOw may be too late -be the proud owner of this one. HURRY!! ONLY $38,750. - $21,750 FURNISHED Fully carpe\ed and draped, CLF;AN THREE BEDROOM, I~ BATH HOME with dinette and modern Built-in kitchen. Fireplace and forced air heat. Covered patio and detache:d double garage. This attractive shake roof home is located near large shopping center and public transportation. OWNER WILL THROW IN THE FURNITURE AT LISTED PRICE. Call loday to see this bargain. Four Bedrooms~-Eastside An appealing YOUNG HOME in perfect taste. Located near St. Joachim's Church and paro- chial school. Huge master bedroom with pri· vate bath, completery carpeted name in neu· tral gold color. Modern kitchen with dish· washer and disposal. Sprinklers, oveNiize dou· hie ga rage and enclosed patio with bird av- ia1·y. IT'S A BEAUTY FOR ONLY $28,500. Ma y we show you. 646-0555 220 E. Seventffnth St. (E, 17th St. Shopping Centtr] Co1t1 Mesi you 'll like our fr iendly service Evenings 646-1050 or 642°9192 &stf¥,' Harbor Island Bayfront Home Excellent boating location with large Pirr & Slip and wide turning radius Z\14 Vis1a Del Om Newport Beach Summer At The Beach 4 Bedroom Homi- modern in every detail majestic trees enhance spaciOIIs private yard A \VOnde1·ful way to go~ Why not you too? Call us for excellent Sale1 & Leases along Upper Bay. Big spac- ious 3 8. 4 BR homes -some new • 90mc ResaJes. Pools, cabanas, putting greens, elec gar door opener, !hopping, schools -all close at hand. $157 .:ioo Call Jnhn ADell 673-7365 Ph. 644-1133 Open Houses THIS WEEKEND HOUSES FOR SALE 13 Bedroom) 312 Colton (Newport Shores), Npt. Bch. 642·3820 (Open Sat & Sun 1·51 439 Cambridge Circle, Costa Mesa 646·6545 16382 Eagle Ln., H.B. 642·1771 (Open Sat & Sun 1·6) *4500 Dorchester, Coro na del ~tar 675·3412 (Open Sat & Sun .l·5) 4612 Roxbury, Cameo Shores 673·8550 !Open Sat & Sun 1·5) ·522 Seaward. Corona Highlands, C1.l I 673-2222 !Open Sat & Sun 1-5) 316 Narcissus, Corona del Mar 673-6636 !Sat & Sun 13 Br. & Family or DeoJ 1801 Tradewinds Ln. (Baycrest) N.B. 642·5200 (Open Sunday 1·5: 2837 Tabago Place (M:esa Verde} CM 540·1720 (Sat & Sun 1:30·6) 4715 Dorchester. Cameo Highlands 642·6472 Ev•s: 673·3468 (O pen Sat only) *2526 Carnegie. CM 675·4630 Eves: 642·2253 !Open Sat & Sun 1·5) {~ Bedroom) 1324 Galaxy Dr., Dover Shores 642-8235 (OPEN DAIL YI 225 E. Wilson St., CM 646·6610 (Open daily) *4639 Fairfield, Cameo Shore6, CdM 675·3331 (Open Sat & Sun 1·5) *4627 ferham Dr., Cameo Shares 642·8235 (Open Daily) **333 Morningstar Ln ., Dover Shore~ 642·8235 (Open Dally) {4 Br. & Family or Den) 1314 Santiago Dr. NB (Dover Shore area) 642-3983 (Sat & Sun 1·51 221 Larkspur, Corona del Mar 675-4924 !Open Sunday) 8181 Burnham Circle, Htg. Bch. 962-8353 (Open Sat & Sun 1·5) 1501 Eton Place, ewport Beach 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 330 i'<>ppy, Corona del Mar 673·8550 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 18790 San Puqual, Foonlain Valley 540-1720 (SU~ 2-5) {5 Br. & F•mily or O.n) 1671 Pcpsus, Sont.. Ana Height. 675-1642 !Open Sunday 1-5) 211 V1> Nlct, Udo l.sland 648'3255 +•• ._. a W1"""911f ** .......... , ·- ~L~E PENINSULA SHORES Build Your Own Exciting Home In Dover st.ores llABBOR VIEW 011.1.s CORONA DEL MAR REALTY ' Lusk Homes •.• Location -Location! F8Wlous new cualom 4 l family roon1 tu•t completed by BOB CLEGG. Strlckin& new Pf.pen, lu$l!i carpetine 1: the nneal of locatiocll Jus1 in block from lTth fairway of Mesa Verde Country Club. Set-"Shirl.ey'a ope1 house" this weekend at M•ul Circle near Mesa Verde Drive. New Balboa Oceanfront Community • ~ y()t.lr own l1bulowi View location. Ouor.ty, Value, B11uty, Comfort . THREE NEW 4 & 5 Bedroom two • sl<>ry single family Homes and three Duplexes with a Deluxe owner's 3 Bedroom & Den Home upstairs, and a 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Rental down. Now ready for occupancy . Ocean and/or Bay Views, Family rooms, Wet Bars, radiant heat, insulated, carpeted, wall- ed, landscaped, self.-cleaning ovens. Formica kitchen cabinet.$., -"Powder rooms, Etc. Etc. Come see for yourself: • T.-11 Ivan Well$ le SolUI about the home you've al~ ways wanted. e Take> advantage. of thf' Cit· pcrien~ & top quality woiiananshl~ olfer_ed by these widely.known build- en; of custom homK. In the Southland's most desirable and fascinating area. A "" perb school system and University of C&lifornia's Irvine Ca pua just moments away lr9m Harbor View Hill!. Sensibly priced from $34,900 to $48,900 Directlona: M1cArtbur B.lvd. l.!om racllic Coaat Hwy. or Newport J'wy. Tum on San Joaquin Hills Rd., theo foJl?w ailJll \o model al"t!a. Open House • Save ni~y with their buyina powf'r and e.xcel- lent financin1 and terms. WSK !fi6 Magellllfl, in Mesa Del Mar. stw,>ly redecorated f01TI1er model home with buge riniahed rumpus room, 4 l&rie bedrooms &: l1mUy room.. New landacapina;, new driveway etc. See for wre this Saturday or &mday af- temoon. Name ycur terms. Coll"ll" RHlty 546-5810 \~·Adams at Harbor tNeer Cinema Thealret GOLD MEDALLION HOMES OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 "F" Street and Balboa Blvd. on secluded Balboa Peninsula Let us show you bow easy ant excitina; it can be.. ROY J . WARD CO. (R.1.ytte.st OCficel 1842 Santiago Dr. 646.1550 BOVll sABiis ContemPQl'1ry Spanish Bay- front Home, 4 BR, 4 baths. dining rm, Activity rm, ma&- nillcent entry hail with ~~~~~~~~= sweeping open rtalrway to • 2nd f\ocr. enormous kitcb- INCOME DELIGHT . 4 UNITS ONLY $5,400 DN. Garden style • Excel- lent rental area -$600 mo. income -No vac- ancy factor • 13.4% return -GREAT terms. Eves. 574-1875. COSTA MESA 3 deluxe duplexes only $3,000 dn. ea. Excellent rental area. Each with 2 BR • (1015 sq. ft.) Electric kitc hens, washer -dryers. Pri· vate patios. Terrilic terms. Priced from $79,600 to $109,600 Different? Decidedly! en. Pier I: Sljp. O.....ntt must This is· one Of the most e.x-sell! ¢ting homes we have been privileged to offer. Soaring limbered cathederal ceil-NEWPORT BEACH For further information call: Asking $16'1.~ Submit offers GI NO DOWN This may be the only home in Newporl Beach where you can use your GI benetits. This J bedroom, 2 bath hOme is as sharp as • tack! Has new ell!Ctric built -ins, a mammoth fittplace, huge picture windows look.in&: on- to a large back ylird and brick patio. Excellent re- frigerator, carpets and drap.. eries included. Approximate- ly $650 closina: costs 1nd im- pound11 required. Imm~ possE"SSion ! COLDWELL, BANKER . & CO. 2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH inp, l.\lood panelling, Palos 333 Morningat1r Lane Verde rock, indoor gan1~ns; ~ IRVINE TERRACE regal master bedroom suite. Undoubtedly the best buy in 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, game 1 . T "· 1 4 BR IDl3 WESTWFF DRIVE fiotS.7711 Open Evts. Opportunity in Corana del Mar 47 foot lo! south of the high- way • 3 bedroom 2 bath bome and ln.taw suite with paneled living room and fire- place, bed room and bath. Also 2 bedroom apartment Kl 9·3351 HARDWOOD FtOORS $21,995 51°/o Govt. Loan 3 BR 2 beth home with near new 501 Nylon carpets throughout. Built -in gas kitchen, shake shingle roof, hi&' ya with ~15"20 'paiio. $119 month pays a.11. N"!.poof •• Vlctor11 646-1111 with beam ceillllgs and fire-I !'!!!!!!!!!!~'l"!'l:'!''""!!!!- place. Separate p 11 I i o 1. $11,SOO Parking tor 4 cars. Room to FULL PRICE enlarge both unit&. $64 ,500 An unbelievable home Rt Colesworthy & Co. """ • 1ow '""' 0""' "" sturdy HARDWOOD 642-7777 F\.OOR.S with LA.RGE BED- ROOMS. Queen size kitchen 1904 Harl>or Blvd .. C.M. . ~ Open EvC's. with separate servioe .....,. ..... Ideal to live in or renl out ABUSED MISUSED 5 BR & family 1% baths that will requ!tt lots of pe.Jnt &: repair b.J! a llmart buyer can get this al a bargain price now. Only fi years old & in a good coovenienl area. Owner asking $24,900 -use your cr·or 1xey on EZ terma. )riC l'\l l.·\\11111 ~I 111\\11 \\ K ~Al l)t O as an investment. 121 ft. lot. Excellent Tetm!I. Call Now! COSTA t.-1ESA OFFICE 2629 Harbor Blvd. 545-M9.1 Open till 9 PM 67S-2000 Top of the World ••. ~. d . A.. rvine errace c.<0.1. • room, ........... .._...stom es1gn...., 3 bath d stl' bed- at"OUnd a sparkling pool! .!I, e1n"· m,' .;,,1,.1"' A th dJ . . _ .. _.. room open g o ""' mong .0 er stingw,.."""' 16 x 36 Pool. Workshop, blt- bomea in Bayc~t where In BBQ in kitchen, shake you O\.\'n the land. Most ex-1 ~. , _ ft I. 1 1 S""' """' roo . vver . ,INV *I . cep Iona or '"•"""· SM CXXI Ruth Pa~doll, Realtor Call fo~ Appl. Jim Westc.hff Dr. 642-5200 See the bo1ts in the bay and I i~==~~~~i:t 1 mitlton Iighl!i from thill I' gracious c;ustom r a n e h home.. Formal dining room, DOVER SHORES (PANICH rHOWC l Cf Mag>oifk•ot ."'" Viow horn• J J J A.I of great distinction in lhe. l spacious bedroom&. a la rge pool and located on a spac- io!Ja lot. $48,CXXI e••es~i~G \::;;•REALTY •• ..Anytlmo" 1801 Weatcliff Drive SPARKLING 3 bedroom, 2 bath, forcOO air heat. kitchen has range, ov- en, refrigerator, dishwa&her. washer. dryer. Prime resi- dential area. GT NO DOWN. Low, low F'HA or conven- tional $23 ,950. MATCHAM :ti!..,,,, 1 SS Rochester C.M. · 646-4837 Professional Zone finest location ln Dover Elegant 4 BR + iormal din-Shores. 4 BR, large 110CiaJ ing room is functional lo the rm. 4 baths, View of the. n'th degrtt. New contem· whole Harbor •rta. Com- porary SpanL<>h complete plc!ely carpeted, draped. with w/w acrilan carpets, and landscaped. Wrora~ ~le ~ntry. ~~ b!..ttu. Sl29,500 _e 1nvit1 ~spection. r"C'f' 1324 Gal1xy Drive $58,500 -io '" down. OPEN DAIL y ®• R2 ~:;~~~thdo~~~;Ile<ot ~--·---·· View of Harbor. Peninsula 1093 Baker, C.M. 546-5440 &. Catalina Island, $34,900 ~~~~~~~~~I 1st & Carnation St. INVESTOR'S DELIGHT $10,CXXI Down Newport Beach -Coast High· way. Comniercial Building. Tenific apPreciation value. Good lax sheller. Owner will carry l st T.D. COST A M~A Ol"FlCE 2629 Harbor Blvd. 545-M'Jl Open till 9 P?\-1 john macnab REAL TY COMPANY 881 DOVER DR . N.EWPORT BEACH t714) 642-8235 Need just I buyer for this terrific Mesa Verde borne. 4 .BR 3 bath. separate 18x23 family room, se.par1te din- ing room, huge yard with large heated I tillered pool. Drive by 2837 Ellesmere & call to M!e inside. Consider all offers. 293 E. 17th St. 646-4494 Coldwell, Banker OFFERS: New Bayfront. $84,500 New Dover Shores exclusive 4 BR + fam. rm. w/pier & slip -for lge. boat. Lge. ter· race on water pl us walled entry eourt. Best buy. - Joe Cl•arkson Bayshores-5 Bedroom Great area for large family. 2 pvt. beachee:, patrolled entry. Din. rm . & fam . rm. Fine home for gracious living ........ $57,500 Mrs. Raulston Harbor View Hills Lusk home 4 BR Carmel on popular quiet cove, cul de sac. Pool size lot, carpeting, water softener. Price $43,900. Let us show you this. Miss Leidy /Mrs . Burns $34,000 Irvine Terrace Lovely Santeoella home -3 large bed.- rooms, 2 baths, fam. rm. and breakfast room. Large patio with fine landscaping. Walter Haase One of a Kind! Broadmoor Resale -bteter than new. Most popular 4 Bdrm. plan with formal Din. Rm, Fam . Rm . Brkfst. Rm. and 2 fireplaces. Offer : ....... , ................ $54,500 Mrs. Harvey Ocean View Building Site -Hold for Investment or build to ~uit .V'Dur mrist particular require-- ments. Fee land . Ex c e 11 e n t financ. in~' .......................... $25,950 Charlotte Long Bay &. Beach Realty; Inc. Just Reduced .1W>a11~ Duplex witb Oce11n View ribl garagr., $37.!rJO Gcor11;e Willi11m80n. Rltr. OFFICE OPEN SATURDAYS Corona del Mar Offic• HONEY MOON COTT AGE The "fa stidious bride'' would love this immaculate 2 bedroom home complete with wall-to-wai f carpet, drapes, all basic fur niture and GARDEN that would have made Luther Bu rbank jealous. Price only -$29.000. Hurry! 675·3000 Eves: 548·8868 DUPLEX -CORNER LOCATION U you want a neat & clea n 2 bedroom home - a cheerful living room with fire- place -new wall-to-wall carpet & drapes -PLUS a one bedroom furnished apart- ment & 2 car garage-all for $41,000 - then call us for an eppointment. 675-3000 Ev .. : 548-7962 CAMEO HIGHLANDS The owner, An Architect, loves his "CAM- EO" home so much that he has bee n com- muting 130 miles a d'ay -but finally has yie lded -HE MIJST SELL. The 4 bed· rooms are spacious, the living room hu beamed ceiling, the kit.ohen Ls a drea.m . -AND THE OCEAN VIEW i• •pectacu- lar! ·Realistically priced @ $55,000. 675-3000 Eves: 1142-4788 YOU DON'T HAVE TO llE A MILLIONAIRE -Just live like one -in this sparkling clean 3 bedroom. 3 bath home in CHINA COVE. It ·has a TREMENDOUS BAY VIEW and you step right out I<> your own 00.ch. Price only $95,000. Tenm. 675-3000 Eva: 548-8868 Bay & leach Realty, Inc. 2407 I. c-t Hlplf, CdM 675-3000 I Newport Baich Offict QUIET ELEGANCE -BAYCREST AREA This customized 4 bdrm and Family Room Home was de.!ligned for the £utu re. Much consideration has been · given to comfort and easy m~intenance . Larg.e formal d~n· ing area; Kitche n and 1'1am1ly Room fin- ished in attractive satin finish wood. Qual- ity carpets and drapes. Entire home is decorated in excellent taste. Master bed· room ·has Roman bath and top grade fix· lures throughout. Entire garden artisti· ca lly landscaped: fenced for seclusion. Ex- clu sive area. $69. 750. 673·9200 Eves: 548·6629 OCEAN FRONT TRIPLEX first time listed. 3 Bed rooms each unit. Only 4 years old. Priced to sell furnished at $110,000. 673·9200 Eves: 548-11966 LEASE OPTION YOU'LL ENJOY THIS VIEW 3 bedroom compact home with minimum yard care, but nice ·patios for entertain- ing and to capture the Bay View. Owner wiO trade for area where horses are per- mitlJ!l<l . Owner anxious. $33,500. 873·9200 Eves: 673-8086 WATER FRONT-SAIL THROUGH SUMMER Fee Sim.pie corner -private pier and slip. 4 bedroom older home. W•lk to Lido Shops. Invalid owner will lease/option. or finance. Must move to smaller borne Im· mediately, $59.950. 673-9200 Eves: 673-8086 llALllOA BUNGALOW . Cute Beach House close I<> Bay on R·2 Lm. willh room to expand. Nicely fum· ished. An excelfent buy at $28,500 . Shown by appt. only. 673·9200 Eva: 54M968 Bay • leach Realty, lne. 2025 W. llolboo lllvd., NII 673-9200 673-4:150 OPEN ~:VE:S. BACK BAY -Clean 3 BR. 2 baths. carpets, d r a p e s , fir ep l 11ce, hl1 • In!!, landscaped, sprinklers. On qulel Cul de Sac stttt. SJ.1.500 -10'1{, On. MIZELL REALi'Y 543.2208 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH Kl 9-33S I SPECTACULAR VIEW-OCEAN and BAY Cliann11f Je11/ -Aparlm11nl6 . On Waterfront Neer NewpOrt HarMr lntrlM9 1515 0c .. n lllvd., Corona del Mor, C•lll. AMl'LE GUEST PARKING ncl BOAT SUI'S Why Not Enjoy The "Co11domlnl11111" Way of Life THI ADVANTAGIS WILL SURPRISI YOU You can purchue and get fee title -or le .. e U you prefer. ALL apla. have WATERFRONT VIEW. AD have two bedrooms and two baths. -WITH LARGE PATIO. YOU ARI INVITED TO INSPECT CUit l'URNISHID MODIL Biry $59,500 nd Up-I.ease $420 Moi11Ny • Up Phw 6 7J-171B for hrttler lllfanna11oii r .. , . -... ~ ... • ~ . < • , . • < , ./ ...... " . . . -. . ....... .. •• f . • - HOilsls FOR SALE HOUSl!S FOlt SALi! HOUSIS flOll SALi i~ OAILY "LOT H USES FOii SAL( , ...... JuM 7, l'l6S ~ES POlt SALi HOUSl!'.S 'Olt SAL! HOUSES POii SALi 1000 ~wl""' -G•n1r1I 1000 General i=~=;;;; 1000 CHn1rat lllO Conono def Mor l 250 Huntl,.t.n BNch 1400 ugu .. hodl 1705 DAILY PILOT CLASSl•llD INDIX TRl-UVEL BEAUTY ()utslandina .a BR home whb dlnln& room + family room . Wd. ber & ~locc. Only Z yeo.rs old. Outstandma lal'ld- IC@ina, llhake rooL 201048' a.lumlnwn ocwen!d pt.Uo. Ll· j!\1)1 llUls aCTOM !rorn Mt.- -VlcJo. SM. 750. JC/Ill,,. COATS ~ WAL'LACE REALTORS --546-4141- (0p.n Evenlngtl re:.LEGE I REALTY FOR Solo. Pae""'°" ,_ lay 1\1 *' wh<ew, 6 rm ""'" cmt Coroa• def Mar * Pool Tlmell hae + 5 rm aunt or """"-Newport lleclch Lr& 3 Bdm .. ...,.. Pork" Avocado It truit trtta. UC 7127 Leewanl. l'• aatP'e VIEW--4 IR home. llu kWdy btd pool ~· potlo. S><.<XJl. Bkn. land. l.oYely •"""'· "" 10x2S', covoted polio, loU ol OK. Pb: 714: 'f23.8lU or ~ lmmlallate S bed-3 bethl, a>nveru'bl.e dtn 00 bffu lndac:P'a. Garage b all ,., Put Senief .aM la,..., AM!lbl'leti DIAL DWCJ' 842""78 2U: 386-6.nl O\VNER room , format dinlQI.. L&r&e two lot.. Ideal for the AtUlt. paneled aod mak-:s excel No Down Payment! family room wttb maul.ve $65.00>. recreational &r'C6 when oot •UL j...,. HOUSES FOR SALi •ut1N1t1 •••T"'-........••. - v.lrraru. • wee lhi.. ablrp t Costa Mesa 1100 rode tlrwplace. Wtil priced be10.S Wied u 1 p.i'.'IP· -=:...-=-..-011,1c11PT•l . . ....•. .m Kn.... OPIN SAT & • SUN 1.5 ~.a..1 • • ............................. 1 ... INOUITll.AL. PIO,llTY .... .... BR in Glen )tar bomes •rta. VI ri M •t -·~· 461 ROXBURY He•VJ' lhakt; root. ,...... ta 494.nn COSTA •aA ................ u• c0MMl1tc1•L ......... .. °"'lier Just l'l)01ple1«t deco-_ cto a esa JEAN SMfTH, 2 only bav~ siv('ll. tbU ftnfl :J~ ::~.ir•.:::::::::::·:.H: ~~"·~~.-~~-~-~~.:::::::::= orauna:. Only $23,500 too! Homes R-ltor n::io Sq ft o1 ;radi>ut U-vtnc .. latbe .m pJutn-1' home BF.AUTY •PRIVACY ·N•I" cOLL•H P••it ···~·········nu 11ANCH11 ................ , .. ,, .. 1 • .1· t ....,.._ -i.. 1....,..... ......, s~ pl t.. of TLC (Tender 1.oY-· MIW1'CN:T llAClll •••..•• , ... ,Itel CITltUI OltOVIJ ............. .i V&CtJ\I • 1nrno:u1a e ........--l6 NEW Ji'oMEs ,,_......._ ....... ~ ~meo ,.,,.-.,. en..., nlftctnt day .l n.l&httime 1111W1101tT •••Mn .......... 1111 o\Ct1A01 ................ fttl lion. I.AW dcw.'11 payment IOr T -dn. •• ,. --,___ ,,_,_.,, Room tor Pool, lalp ~ In& Car.) Top location view• of I._ __ ... , lbote-a.t.i...OA COVIi ............ 1111 U.ICl ILl!NOll ............. mt 1 ....,... "" Jtr,,, IUlUI -..-... ._,._ bom lO'J' ---llllWP'OIT IMOlb ........... 1211 lllOIT PllO,lln' ......... ,,. FHA buyer1, too. Try us. From $23,950 Assume Si•/o Loan .. vwou. or Tlllllll Court. 3 amon1 __,., n. line tram a IJ*da-. like-u.Yca11T ................... 1m o•ANGI co. '•o•••rr ..... uw V BR, 2 baths, Ju.xurloul cu-. down. MW t bedrm home wttb IAYIHOlll ................... IDS OVT 0' ITATI ,.OI' ........ .-. 1lley ROlld at Vlctori.a , .. _, 3 bedl'Oocn, , .. -n.. rm., ........... _,. LISTER REALTY oov1• lltOllU ............... 1ttr MOUttTAIN • 01111T ........ a11 (J E f B khunt -'a _ .... , pe ... .,., .-W•~· open beamed otilJnp. paDo Wll'TCU'' ............. ml SUIOIVtSION LANO ... ., ."11 ust · o roo formal dinin& room, kitcben Or•n .. Cout Pr-rty 166ll Beech m. KB 842-6633 eled walls, d"m•"· ontry M.At101 Ml•"LA•DI ........ 1w 11:1A&. ISTATI 111vic1 ..... a11 Open Hou'" up ·oo blulf) ee ...... 11'9. Covered-Ua.. --""' UNIVlltlITT ,AJtl( ........... Im •.•. IXCNAlllOI ............. .. L'do " lot r _._ •• U<.16 -S32 Marguerite. CdM 673-&560 FHA VA hllll, din; ..... rm, 2 r;-1ac-1AC1C JAY .................... 1Mt t. •· WANT&o ............. '141 I .,z.e S. el a1ui.p~ ~·"'"'I •··•-~ -•. •• ·~ •••To•u•• ·-Jand. Hi&b above sea level ~;"~-.I«!. .... -;:::;__:="' $1450 down, $210 per mo. in-es, 3 b•rti.. ~ft pool, ttt· 1i'¥1w1~ T11ui9:"::::::::::::1Mi BUSINESS end • 32IKI J\Uchi&an Ave.. Of ["""""!!!!!!"""""""""~""""'[ Sharp 4 &: tam rm $28.SOO Home and '* ~ Norse Ave .. CM 3 I: t.m rm S2l.500 Built. in el!etric $$500 u.qw~ cllktlna taxet.. 4 bia at\a, r&ce,oovertdc:tecka .$89.500. ~~~~:: ::~1:fut..··::;:::::::: FINANCIAL ltitcbm. Convertl-JEAN .SMITH Honeymooners 1% baths. l1e kitchen with I EACOlll U.Y ................ l)fil IUllNISI o''OlTUNITlll ·'* • ....._,~.. extra '"'"'*rd.I. blt-in MO JRYmE COVE. Attractive 2 MT 11u.Nos ................. llM 1u11tt11s WAlllTl.D ..... ... ffl( to _,.,.,._'6 t .... ,. LIDO llLI .............. , .. 11$1 IWYISTMINT 0-"tl"'-.. .Qll Investment * 10261 \Vesley Circle. 11B Top loeatioo with 3 bdrm. • 2-stOI')' Mertditb G9rdtnl center. near new R-_ .. or Home Plus Income &: dbJe oven. 100& aepante bedrm, converHWe den home l.AL•OA llLANO ............ 1W INVISTMt:NT WAHTSO ' ..... ~IS ....... f U>f11 li llh ••-lot nl HUNT\MOTON •U.CM ........ 1... MOHE'r' TO LOAN ..... , .. , .... "'9 &ebooll. 0) E 17th st CM ~ am rm, v nn w OJI ...... corner cd¥ HUNTINGTON HA•IOU• ..... 140S Pl.ONSAL LOANS ............ . 3 and 4 BDRMS • 1A:21ty . • trpl1, upgraded quality w/ lllndacaped .• fenctd, lovely •OUHTAllll VALLIY ......... 1411 JIWILltY L.OANS ' .......•.. AM 2 bath bome 8 yrs. new. modem m every ddail. College R~lty ~5880 Fireplace. kitchen with built· 1500 Ademg at !!arbor ins. l;ia?Uwood noors plus l =~IN~··~"'i::;Clz"'="z'z"Jbo=:::z'~"'z:I' = 2 bedroom rental In rear. Let us 5hoY.-you bow to live In luxury for only $128 pe month * OPEN HOUSE * for the 'Cost Conscious' __ , .............. 1 ..... 1ed t1o '61CNI 11AL 1ucM ............... ,.., COLU.TIJIAL LOANS ......... .a» Fil"epla.tta:, auto g&nlgi! l>P. 2 BR 2 bl. -11t1 d w .. t-drps, ........... -... pa • <'l'N· IUNSlT llACN ............... 141' ..... L ESTATI LOANS ....... U4t arator, carpeting, drapertl!S, DOVER SHORES Atta. Sat • • _. • ev root. v.'&lk to IChooli. TURNER ASSOCIATES •A1.01N ••OVI .............. 1471 MOITOA01s. Trull .,... ... 1oat1 • ~-1 5 < ~ 2 home + near new Apl If LONO •UCM ................. 1,.. MONIY WANTIO ... .... fencing, landscaping. ~ to : ...-, tuU plus Guest n. •• Jen 68'2 No. Coot Blvd. u.1trwooo ................. ,.,. ANNOUNCEMENTS Michail Kay, Builder be, 2 haU bl., custom dlx """'""'' Laguna Beact ~U7T >UNOI coUNTY ............. 1• 546-2313 646-7171 Open Eve.s. -l !F~~~EAL 1 ESTATERS ------ WANTED Real E1tate Sales People. \VlIY NOT GET ON nlE BAND WAGON? Over 25 \'ears in Orange County • Foll w ge adv4!rtisin1 • lnter office teletype • Trainin& program • Ins"""" • Many other benefits Call &46-4494 • For interview O PEN HOUSE Sunday 12 to 5 · \YATER FRONT & SLIP - -Make-GUer • d bdrm. l ~ bath • #51'J Balboa Qwl'5, Newport Beach • 'rn.ADE or LEASE "C" THOMAS Reaftor 2'Z4 W. Coasl H\\.')'. 548-5627 Newf>ort Bch. Eve. 5'Y,).5643 .HANDY MAN Small 2 BR home Eastside Costa l\fesa. $17,500 Il3 E. 17th. Ct ., C.r.t. -Eastside For Retirement. 2 unibl, ea.ch with separa~ patio, fen~ back yard. Dble garage. Provincial Luxury $29.!lJO. Eutside Costa r.teu. JEAN SMITH, Realtor .... ,,,. WESTCLIFF Immaculate 3 BR in "Move ln' col'ldltion. Large Jiving ~ 2% baths, covered 1>8· tio. Best buy in town for 134.500. LIOO REALTY 3fOO Via Lido 673-8830 HUGE 1671· Pegasus S1nta Ana Hts. OPEN HOlJsE SUN l • 5 5 BR • Den a Din Rm • '2~ baths. Terrific Buy at $36,!iOO • Te.nna Ne-v.'POrt Beach RHJ.ty 675-1642 WANTED AGGRESSIVE SALESMAN Uberal Contract Contact: Gene Ncrvell Orange Coa.srProperty 332 Marguerite, CdM 673.ss50 HAVE BUYER wlth lar1e amount o1 cub plus ~ • to buy or trade: for Income, Apts. Land. etc. Up to $4,000,(0}. Ask for: 1it/Pureell, Rlch1rdson/Purcell Realty ~l, 646-43.11 Eves DAVIDSON Realty OPEN SAT & SUN .m9 Br9Y La. Of. .. Swim your ~ a-.¥' pool. Play )'d. A!MJ.me 51*" lotn. Rttr. 2750 Harbor SB , Oi1: 54f't.5460 Eva 5§.f9.ll ---~­$22,MJO_._ ... Open. _J.jou.Je 1801 Tr•d1winds Lan• SUNDAY 1·5 Baycresl !not ~ased Jandl TRADITIONAL C H A R M • with the wannth o1 oki red brick. a:Ieaminll: white &hut· ters, il'•c!OUI Georvian en- trance llanktd by arria1e lampt. Formal dining room, hugt-living room, 3 spacioo' bedrooms. powder room, game room with bar. A raiUbling custom built borne, exquisitt-IY decrirated '. • Ruth Pardoll, Realtor 1&6 Westclltt Dr. 64M200 $158 Per Month Ov;nw transferred-sayg .ell NO\\'~ Three: bedroomt1;, 2 baths. large fireplace, built· in ldtdlen, 13' X 3Y covered and enclosed patio, brand new wall to wall carpetin(. Excellent Jocatlol'I, near ele- mentary :tebool, chuttbes and shopping. Low inten!lt 5\i % FHA loan may br a• sumed and $158 per month would Include taxes~ IDt3 WESJ'CLI.FF DRIVE 646-rnJ. Opl!'n Eve11. Newport Hei9hts Cutie! You'll ]l)ve the panelled liv· ing room. 8oo(M) Big. 2 nice bedrooms, t l 1 e d kitchen. BeautifUI, large tront yard insures privacy. $21,0CJO \vith l eto/o dO'W?I. 646-7171 546-2313 OPEN EVES. THE~EAL , E STAT EJ;l.S horn F .... ,_ S45.<00 with $5.IXXI down 96 .. 7 ·-~03 °"' o• couwn ............. 1'8f end NOTICES Phonl!fi42.1.821 Eves642..SIM e. orm uin rm. 3· .,._L R I E 1 ~4 l .,....,...,. BUILDERS CLOSE OUT our Ofl STAT• ................ 16'11 N~IDE _ ·~ ~ 3 BR car gar, Feto »mpJe. $79,500 ..,. ancy •• ate• E Of THE LOCK STANTON .................. 1•11 •ou•o ,,.,.. "*' ........... '4111 ~,.,. .-<>.Al 2828 E. Coast Hwy, CdM BELL B Our loSI if )'OUJ' fain WISTMINST•• ................ l•U LOtT ....................... , formal din;_.,· b~ ~~~ 1314,Santlqo Or. SJ95 Down for this great 3 REDUCED TO SELL 1111owA.Y ctTY ................. 1411 PlltlONALI .. , ........... ~ -• • ....,.. <>'lV~ 673-3770 IANTA AU. ................ 1'21 ANNOUHCIMINTS ............ '411 floors, corner lot. dura.ble lin<iildo;;n,1.q;;-<;p;;;n2J '=:I========= hl!droom, 2 bath beauty. onlJ . 2-lefl SANTA ANA MOTi. ............ 1 .... l tltTNI .................. '411 d $1(0) down leue .-i 2 Sellor --·''""'· m"•t sell 3 •• ,. .. OllANOI! .................. lUS P'UNlllltALS . .. .............. ,. etached garage, work shop, • ...,..on ......... .... n.. ... TUSTltf .. . ................. 1641 PAIO OllTUAltY ............. 6'1J cover@d patio, beautiiul tree Stoey, 3 BR; 2 BA, crpta. HARD TO .. ND qukk. FUU prlcoe ts $18,990. El.ec kit • bl.t-ins · NOtTH TUSTIN' ............... 1'4J 'u:•ltAL or•1cT0•1 ....... 6414 A_._ bJt Ina alk to beach rl -" 1 .. 4NAHllM ................. 1650 ,L IUSTS ............ ., .. '411 shaded yan.1 and exceUent ......... ~ • w ' 2 BR So f H 2 b! lo Bdter '"""'now. Cftltr vac. tiko counter tops l lLVl!RAOO CAlllYOH ......... IUJ CARO OP' TNANICI ............ '414 residential area. $167 month pool, temi1. $30,SOO rent ' . 0 wy, Panoramic ~-n V1"iw LAGUNA Hll.U ................ 11• IN MEMOAIAM ............... '411 '~ mo "' w-•-.. t St Ocean vcoelient condition --r LAOUNA lllACN .............. ltff CEMl!Tll lY lOTI ............. '411 pays all CALL ~1161 ~. ' a.uiu • ' FOLLOW "OPEN HOUSE" LAGUNA Nt9U•L. ............ 110 CIMITllY CIYflTS ......... '41, c...n.o eves.) n~-•• v-• Nev.'POl't ~-0 w n tr Only $37,00l SIGNS IAN CLl!Mllf'TI ............ tn• CIMl!Tll!'•Y CIYP'TI -·······"''' -.. -.,,.... ~ 6«-116i1 rn-4320 Orang• Coast Property "'"JUAN u•1sT•ANo ...... 1121 c1.1MAT01111 .............. 4Gt Estate. ===-,---=---I UP SUMMJT TO U.PllTRAMO 91.o\CH ......... 1ns 1111IMOlllAL PA•ICI .....•.•... '4:11 __ .:..,---~---ICUSf-blt hm on w t ~, 332 Marguerite. CdM 67J..8550 -.. 'D"1 """"'."'° HGT$. DANA POINT .................. Int lUCTt.ONS ······· ............. '4ll! BY OWNER a e, &n11• ,_ ~· ~ u.tLS•Ao ..................... 11• o\VIATION 11•v1C1 .......... '4U l \\ill sell ... , ..... -.!. my 3 Back Ba,y. 24xl8 liv rm, 2 .... J.IU. in Lquna Beach OCIANSIOI ................... 11so TIAVEL ..................... '4U w.16 wcqi; BR 2ba 1aml b Id Isl 1351 ~ ~1-M-·····sr. SAN OllGO .... ,.., ....... 1715 AIR TRAMS,O•TATION ....... .... large bedl'OOm 2 bath home • ' • merv. pore • L 0 • J V """' ·~ ltlVlltSIOIE COUNn' ......... n• AUTO TllANSPO•TATION ..... '44.ll __. slip avail No. 12 Bayside Recine Exeelle-nt Finandnl HOUSl!s to•• Movao ...... 1to0 LIOAL Nor1c11 .: .......... MM • .,..uced to $28,750. Family VI :ni E. o•EN HOUSE r-• • • • • CONDOMINIUM ' ............ IHI •••MAN & TUTO•INO ....... 4tlll room, new carpeting large 1e. on Hwy. r-for h1ppine11 BY OWNER f~ri~~=~:so~Ai:Lil ·: ... ::l::: SERVICE DIRECTORY fenced yard on cul de aac Owner will tin&oce. 615-5688 SAT & SUN 1·5 Take a gpaciou~ 4 BR, 21it White W1ter Oc11n Vu RENTALS •ttOUNT•N• . .. ...... u. within walldna; distance oI REDUCED To pnce ot lota! 221 Vlo Nt·ce BA home. add all tbe "nice-PORTAFINA LAGUNA HoUHI Furnished :~:~,~~~1° ==~~:i~. ·;.'al19· .. ::I Npt High, elem., Jr Hl & Low dn., E-Z terrna Lovely ties" to give It &piee.; blend New custom bit Medallion 4 ••NllAL .. .. ......... 2tfl Ai~HALt, 0111 ................. '5211 Westclilf £hopping. LI 3BR2&bomeon2Iott.nr. Exclusive 5 bdrm, 4 be.th well with nice location &: br, 2!-i ba, tile roof, kitch-llNTAU TO SNARI ......... nos .. 0 IEPAllS .............. u. fonced yard & extra st,...,. .... bay Ir: OCf!Bll. Cl.Tl uae a• 2 •....._I"•~-. ~annal din convenience to bead:I & .ho... -!•·•·-·. ~~-""" i•v1w• ... ··········-··-····im :~:~s.~~tN:4'""' T-•tc. '54t---.~ bld. LNU ~ """"' "'' .,...,.... ""'' ,..,,...~ ......,......,. COSTA MitA .................. !l" aOAT M.l1NTINAHC··::::::::l6U' area. Terms flexible . 43!1 apts, rm. to Prk. rtar rm. Muter bdrin bu fire-ping;. lo•. the final touch, top, .,u-c1na-, ~~·ash-MllA DIL MA• .............. 21• ''''" ••••• ,, ..., 121 4h1: Qwn 67J.111.9 v•~., \UIUIW MIU. V.-ltOl!llt ' ...,.._. ' .......... Cambridge Circle, CM . er place & balcony overlooking bl.end all mgred.ients Ir: 1dd er, central vao.un, cptd. COl..Ll!Gll!' PA•IC .............. 211! tus1NESS s11tv1c1s ..••..•• I.Ml 646-6545 OCEMNFRONT DUPLEX. large patio. Over 3100 liq ft. A baPP)' family. For furtbe.~ $65,0CO, Exct-llent ftnancin&. NIWPOltT 1aACM ............ ttOI ~:.:~~~~ u1s""'••••••• .. ···"'' BY OWNER Good aimmtt rental. 24 br, Priced under owners co.tt. details, call owner. 847-664<1 6.1> NY~ PLACE ::.w!~i .. f:J:·1i .. .'.'.':.'.'.'.'.'.''mi ~:=~Nl!&NTT~~~,. •. :::::::::::;:!: ~ BR l "', BA f *'-e living units. _$64.900. Low dn. $88.SOO. Anxioul! Evf!I &. weekends. ~ ...................... 2221 CIMENT, C...crfh ............ "" 7t ..-..5 S4S.989'1 -DOVI!• ............... CHILO CA•1!, UUMM .......... 11 room. Fireplace ~ Larg-e ' ~ ev~ 'JEAN SMnH, Uml:DITH GARDE.,, TllE BlG ONE WllTCLIFfl . 'ii" .......... = CO .. TltACTM$ .... -······"" family room • modem.,=w~knd-~---~-~--E 1~. St CM ·~ _ l'IU[l tU DTama"· •---a-~•-•. ~=~~::stTY,_ '"' ···;· .. ····-CAlt,ET CL UN1No .......... "2:1 i; 'IUU , IUI •• ~ UC Ma6"'1 ,go.'11 nuou "' ........... •••••··-.;. CAll,l!T lAl'fH• & t•l'All 4'1i' kitchen. All --ted. Draw BY 0 w n er. H. r b 0 r --•'· lot. ' BR ... IACK lAY .................... ~ OllAP'lllES .... -~ R-ltor 5 BR 2 sto"" 3 b• lovely ao .... ..,, ue cor. • IAST •LVP'P ·· ................ ntt Dl!MOLIT 111 ................ " drapeg. Covered large petio. Hlghltndll. 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, -.,, -. den, 2 ~el&. Sunday Pie-llVINI! Tll.IU.CI ........... nu ORAflTlN~o s1RV1cil ':::::::::::m Beautitul landscaped. Nly lovely pa.tio. $3,000 under B1yfront Lido Isle cpts/dri>!, like new cond. lorial Li• rm, ~A"''sh t.,..,. cotoNA DBL MA• ........... r,: !'LliiCTJttCAL ................. "41 2500 !IQ. ft., many extras&: '-le, bit-In ,,::!.""'," ••• -.~n. IALIOA ................. lOUl,Ml!NT ••NTAU ' ......... ,. fenced . All llCbooll and mkt. value for quick uJe. 2 Story, 4 BR, 3 BA, 2 kitcb-owner trans. -any offer Sal 950 D ~ ~f:O ·,~~~NOS ................. = FENCING .................... .... shopping $24,500 Eagy finan. $29,000. 646-0647 or 646-5118 ens, best side of t.t.y. Could contide.red or will leue/ _,1~... -n. t open to IALaOA 1SLANO ... ::::::::::::rus ~~~ ... scr i~·•A lli.i:'iik."·· .. = cing. {Owner keeps rnort· OCT.AN VIEW, F-Sim""-be conYerted to duplex. uu~ HUNTINGTON IE.&CM ........ 240t GA•OINING .... :::::""· ) ·~ ·~2 "''"" .. .., option. Mission Rl"' 4~ ,OUNTA IN VALLl'I' .......... 2411 Ol'NEltAL Sl!•VICl!I ......... ...a gage .,..,,....£.<! CU:rtom home, 3 "'· l•g don, Watdl the hoe.ts come with-BRASHEAR REALTY "" SIAL •UCN ................. J>tso OttAOINO 01 E II F • LON• IEACff ................. Ult ' ICIHO ........... "'5 BY OWNER lovely garde!!. $54,900. For in ID' of front window. Spec· 847-8531 Eves. 8J9.1S37 xce. int inanc1ng OUN•• COUlllTY ............. UM :~1:N THU .................. "91 Lovely, new ultra modern a.ppt call THE OWND\ 642-tacula.r v I e w! Directly --,,.---:---,~~--1 Olannmg 3 BR, 2 ba home SANTA ANA ' ................... Mii OUN IHOP MA ............... ,7• G d 0 • WllTMIMSTll ................ 1'11 ffl!ALTff CLU ................. 6nt 2-stor:v • bdrm' (2 3064 Eves. Ir: weekend1. across from Balboa Bay ar •n GSIS lge level lot, walk to .cbool. M10WAY CtTY ............•.... 1616 H u IS .............. 619 king-size) 2 bat.bl (twin Club. A 4 bed dre Only $31<0'.I SANTAANANll•MTS ........ = H~U~~~~EAN1N'o"'•"""'""···= sinks). Fittp1ace: iar1e UNUSUAL Mobile ~e. 2 BY OWNER Rear,=~ A g:i:m~ Los Padre• ,Realty ~:t1f .. LaU.CH··::::::::::::::11ts ::~~!'f'TA~•coaAT'riiG ':::::m1 yard, quiet street near MAY br, 2 bA , fn>i , prv patio, &: PMn ' "t'V' 895 GI s LAOUNA HIOUIL ............ !707 lltON o..u_.. .......... ,141 Co. L -.~ .. , • ALL beach, Iota d ck>lf!ts. 1000 e or appointment to behold. Near Douglaa, enne~ t. JAN CLEMINTI .............. 111• llOMiNG .. '· lk. ........ ,,. s ~"~ + $18,_., 673-9412 -'--Js ... ~-··-· n-1. Laguna Beach Pb. 494-8833 SAN JUAN CA,ll'TltAHO ...... 17U INIUU.TINO ................... '111 I~. $2500 Down. 61,4% &qfl. • ,V"NQwneronb'.1-.......................... """"" lll:'I:' .. "v c1M..~ CA,ISTllA .. 0 aaACH ......... !7Jt INIUltANCE ................. ,741 1..oan'. 976 ""·-ver ~. , ~67~3-4971-"-'-===----ed •t FHA appraisal of OCEAN VIEW J BR. 2 Ba. DAN• H }lllT .................. 1u• INVllTIOATINO:;·~···,= ~ ~ " JUST LISTED• "'11::650 H , !pl 0.00 lo ··-· ed lllVlltllOI COUNTY ........... IANITOlttAL .. . ..• "' 549-2000 or 1-866-3389 DUPLEX • ..-u, . urry. . • p.al . n.o:o.;uC VACATION •l!NtALI ......... ,,.. Jt:Wll!'LltY ltl,All, ·tt:·•··· .. .... 2-atory, Koll cwt.om qu1Jjk.. LISTER RE.ALTY S29,800. 494-5678, 833-5441 CONDOMINIUM .............. tt5t LANOSCA,INO ..... . LARGE 3 br, 1%. ba, wood Excel location on peninaula. ..,, Now 8150 in Hunt. 8".ch oUPU!XES ,.,UltN ............ tt1s ~~.·•'•"•'vTH ... :::::::::::::=: llrs, w/w cpts, dbl aar. 2 BR&: J BR. Remodeled.. feature• thruout. 3 BR, '""""'" v. b RINTALS ..... . a•1cK ... fncd, nr Paro<'hial achl. $43,950. . OWNER. tam/dining rm, 3 baths, 2 J.V<>.u. """ac Blvd. 842-fi633 C d I I 1950 Hou,.. Unfurnl1L-..1 ':f~1~1C:.o', ,".~.0;,, .. :::::: •. : ... ti I $69 5CXI ijjiijiiiijjiJ on om n um nwu l"AINTINO, s .... n ...,. ...... MM Reduced to $23,950. ~245 Eves and wknds 613-:!!M · .A. rep aces· • -----'---'--'-.:. ••NeRA\, .............. 1000 l"ATIOS ..,., ............... .... Serl!! St. Owner 646-2309 BEST BUY-OWNER LIDO REALTY IMMACULATEI $153/Mo. ~C:.1s'..,"0~~5~1t ·:::::::;::::::li: flHoToo tA,HY ....... ·;· ...... = BY ow 11 er • tranderred 3 BR., 2 Bo., all ., ...... _ .. ~le., 3400 Via Lido 673-8830 4 BR cardinal ho~ llO clMn Heart of Nt'WJlOrt Harter Ml•A VEltOI ................ 1111 flLASTEltlNG, fl•kll. a11111f "-_ uiui. u., area INCLUDES . lnl COLLECOE r1.1t1C ............. 1111 ;~~,',"•, ........ :: . .,.. East&ide J bl-'· ra•'--"o w/w -·· d--• Walk to &: neat i1 as -""' as nl!W. pr1n.. · Nl'lll'PORT IEACM ............ :ntt ,00, ,,,•,, ... , IN• .......... ,,. · ~ .............. ....... ·· ·....,,. · l111"lders Ho-·~ AND TAXES ' ' ••••• ,,,, .. • .. hi. S"""' 3 BR w/fam rm., ....... 123.900 .••• ~, ..... Well located &: tairly ....iced with only 10% IWPOI. . ............ POWll SW•• ......... ··'"' ...-~• t"' dOWll I I NIWPOltT SHO•ll .......... ml P'UM' SE.TO l"ING ........... ffU 1% BA, bit-Ina. $24,000. 302i[==========' [ 5001 sq.ft . 4 BR &: maid'• at $28,500. $3400 will handlr. 0 st TD. Spacious 3 IAYtHoite:s ................ lttJ 1too Cl ............... mt Walnut St 646-193154>-7602 Newport Hgta. 1210 5 ba, 3 car pr. lib Iota. Pacific Shores Realty !3r with ALL extras lnclud-:tilf:Lr::i••• ·::::::::::;:::~ llAO~~~':.:.Nin.";,,1~···········:;: OPEN SAT/SUN 1.5 3 BR., 1" ea. Red-. N-· Unusual features. Must see 847-8586 Eves. 962-5408 mg private Cub And poo1a. uN1v1111TY '"'I.IC ........... m1 RlMoneL1NG & REPAiit' ..... 6940 n -. •• AVAIL __ ... _,. • !~~~~~~~~~ SEE MONTICEU..O. ltVINl ....................... J!• lll!'MODELINO, ICfTCNINI 'HI cptg.: h~e yd., quiet strttt. ni. ..... u.. Haven.. to lpPreciate. Broken Wei-IACIC IAY .................... J!4t :~~:~:s SNAlt,IN ...... ::::,"' Sla.~~ trma. Moy Br, 2 bl.+ 2 Br OcNn Vu come. 520 Via Udo Soud $201950 I.UT aLUfl1' ................. 12.u · .............. ,.,.. 1169 Aunusta, CM JV\rl>UUU In A I ···9 SO'.) r •<>7249 DOLL HOUSE Walt.er &: ' .... Inc. ·~1210 lll'VINI! Tl•a.&CI ............ J2U IEWJNG MACH/1111 •••Alltl "° "" trade. Owntagt 54&-5S80 c p . .,... ' . ,.._ 642-1615, Eves 67S-lfi69 ....,.. """"' ........ COi.OMA l)ll!'L MAit ........... me i:rLTJir~~NICS. Slwww., lk. .. ffU Must Bee this beautiful homr. Su cl L ah .. _. 3 BR 2 LUXURY BEACH APT •AL•OA ................. JJOI TE ............ ··"71 EASTSIDE By owner 4 Newport Shore• l220 BEST OF LIDO per ean"" ......... "' •AY 1su.Mos ................. llH TiL"e~1~~0 ... Nr1toL .......... ffn Marllle entry, 3 full sized 70 bathhome,exC£1lentcarpeta HOME ~n· Royale LIDO ISLE ................. :mi TILi! ~ ... ,, ........... "14 bdrms, 2 hath!. 1U22' liv-Bedroom 2 Bath must see to ;..:.;-...;:__.;__:.:__c.;:_:.;; I spacloua ft on No. Bay 2 bdr IALIOA 1SLANO ············· ·"" T1teE ~,-... M8rtlle ...... fnl believe """'.450. -E . \VALK to beach. club house Pier/Slip, beaut. Bcb, ...,,_l throughout, beautiful dlcbon-ms, 2 baths, carpeting, Nlw,01.T wl!ST ............. »n ... .. . ,,. "' . g room. bull';.,, "-· ~ ,..., •""'" .. _ 1 ....__ __ , .... ..i-...__ .......,,. • ..,.u... T H~NT1NGTON al!ACK ....... Moo T1L1v1s10N, ••,..1n "iiti. ... '"' · tru• ... ~ W"--pool 3 BR 2 ~·~ Im •4Bd 7Bd ....... _ u.oa awn. •1·11.11,..,err.,... OWD· ... "t'C'>,...,.... • ..,.,,........,, erms. N NT NOTO• •••••U• ..., U'HOLST••T ' ... I d A--........ Sl, 6f6-6610 . ....u... • ... ITl\I • m.,,. ""'"er I ... . . WELOtNO ... , ... ,,,,. p ace, ('!Jstom ma e .... ""¥' '-t cond $25 ~ ~· Apt -· -•-4 er must 11criflce at only Owner 499-3626 Fou•T~IN vALLl'I' ......... ,..,. .... ms •--f ~' -mE 3 B" 1• BA T -rnacum e · ......... ,,,.. · '~ ......... '""'' car pr. ••aL ''''" -• JOBS "'· ~' o """"~· tein= ~·• " ~ ~ 120.soo. , •• NTALS ................. -& EMPLOYMENT Lv rm. i-ic. din area 5ai ,.., ())tton. Owne!'. liG-3!20 R. C. GREER, R.Hlty " u.•01N 01tov1 .............. >471 ~r in petio, paneled oftice "I" ..,. " 3416 Via Lido 673-9300 Paul Jon•• Re•lty HouHS Furn111.-..1 LONO a~cH ............... ·"" 1g: :~~~~~ Mtlw ............ JHI m garage. 1~"°'"==· ~Owne=~·~·~"~8-:,....":.::.'°~-847-1266 Eves.,, • .,_.,.... ll'9U OIANOI OUNTY ............. Ult JOll WANTEO, -....... ,,.... Rl ' BDRM 0, 3 --• d-, ......., W1stcllff 1230 * SACR!F1CE! ...,. ........ SANTA ANA .................... :w11 tr. 64&-.'\928 Eve. 54~ lUJl,I <" ~""" I Rent•I 1 Sh 2005 w1sfM1NSTl!R ................ '411 ~£~e:•,,w,,••,,•N ............... ,... *LACHENMYER ... ft on Coon-· Club Oriv• For quick &ale. Vacant I&" 3 ftCOme or lnlaws7 I 0 1re MIDWAY CITY .............. Mlf AOENCISS, ,,,!' .............. 7DJI "' 0 EN HOUSE br on 50' lot. Best buy on SANTA ANA HllOHtt ......... wt HILP WANTIO ............... n• .$43,500 Owner. M6-J61T p !JDC •• MA A delighttul 3 BR 2 bath FEMALE Tee.chenr dnire 2 COASTAL . .. ............. ,,. AOt:NCIES, w-·"'"' .......... 1211 MOVE Up " SAT & SUN .............. dn, $57,000. ho + I U.OUNA ••ACM .............. )?OS NlL, WAN·•· ........... '* •• PRtv. PMV will pay cash Owner 00-6206, 67$.2447 me a 2 BR unit. Bit-in roommates share, lg u.OUHA NIOUIL •.....•...... sJW JOll-Mtft & w' ....._ ······''• Ca H. hi L..... 1000 Nottin,h1m Rd. Oven I: 11.~"e, w/w C".....,t· ocnfrnt hm c-.~uly Jae $67 '"" CLIMINT• .............. int .,0,.,,,,, --· .......•.. 1111 to ml!O i.g ands. A-Plus 1uT equity in your home. CHARMEn ·--<& -.-.,.. ,,.,,_. ~.... CA,llTAANO ···· ............ 17U "-,... Home, 3 &inns. 3 baths, Pr' I 546-8226 W11tc lff "' Ing, 2 car garage. Value & mo 61..-uoao CAPIST•ANO llACM .... -... 17Jt SCHOOLS. lNS TltUCTION .... ,_ -=-=~'"'=:;·~on~y~. ;;;::;:;:;,==ol L Loafl 7 2 BR plus, Furn. lrnmed ......_ ttrms t 1 $'7 900 CC G OANA l"01NT ................. 11 .. :~•,,•,•,•,,•,•,•ATION ....... ::::7MI Pl.us Family Rm, Plus a -OnCJ On ng ,~ o Pease. • . Ll.E E Or work'g rna.n CDMDOMINIUM ............... mt .................. 1'ft chil~s 'IV or Game roorn, .M;;•:.;•.;:•:..;:D.:;•;,.I ;;M;;•::;r:__~l:.:10::51 Been dreaming of relaxing in IHSion, uk:in1 .$42.500. Own-R. D. Slat•• Realty APt. to ghr, Pool. pvt. gar, cu,L1xe:s UNflU•N .......... t'11 MERCHANDISE FOR Plus Bi& Ocean View from -2200 sq It of culltcm West. er. 675-4134 847-3519 rro mo. 642-1~ aft 6 pm ~~";;;~~;NTAU .......... ms SALE AND TRAD! proresslonally lanclcaped . OWNER, POOL HOME ll!f horn , ~ LOVELY tra! &haded ipaHo: 0 H S F I h d flURN1Tu•11 I <BR 3 .... ,,~ c e ..... .,am no mOl'e-'BR. 3 Ba., --. --·•or pen ouse al/Sun N rt B h 2200 Apia. urn I • Ofl .. ICI "UIN1r'uitj'""'""" ... .,, gardt•n, $13,500. mmac.,, . .,., ·""" fer this profeMionally rlec-....-. .. _ lwpo eac •••••AL. ................. 4 .. O"l'ICI EOUIPMl!NT ........ IOlt CURT ""SH, Reallor ~=earp=~ .. =·=·~·~"":'::·:,...:=::"::u~d ..,.,_... • -'-"'·· tand-•ped llUite. J'llktr 1te.w.1t.v coJTA 11111sA .................. 41• sTo•• eou•,M•NT .::::::::·.11 W ""' 1 ""'"-' ""' 6~5200 .. ,1 •• 7 ~--. 16382 Eo•lo L OCEAN front duplex, .eclud. 1111•tA vttol ................ 4110 CAP.I!, RESTAUIANT ·901, 3 BR, tam nn • 2 bath home •.r-~ "fV ..,,~ ,., ane ~ Hlw•o•T 11ACM ............ 4tot •AR rou1•1111NT ......... 9011 Mc;;•;,.•:.;•:....;V:.;•::;r~d:.;•:_ __ ~1~1 ~10:i I• .... ,..., ... f-'•lru-liv· SPRING.__ ... 01 __ 3 "' Shall) 3 BR 2 bath home near kquie!~ Summer from Jl:.5. Ml...,OltT Hl!lo"n .......... 4211 Mouse HOLD ooooi ........... ..,. -.............. .... ..... UTIOll --" llhopplng school & nn....... .,. or ~pt w1nter leue $150 NIWPOl.T IHO•IS ........... 4nt GAIACI SALi . . ......... 90!1 LARGE 5'' % FHA LOAN Ing. 15x30 ft Vinyl covered din/rm, 11paciot11 cu,,t/bll · s """"6'«S. incl all 1 WllTCLIFF ............ eut "URM1Tu•1 AUCTiOii"'" .... Mtl • . pool, ,.tiO with outdoo• cor. 1-.. ~. o-/•gt. FHA-VA OK. $24.500 mo. uti itie1 . UIUVt:llSITY PAltK ........... 41'7 APflLIANCIS .......... :::::_ .... , .. 173> W. Coftst Highway &12-&172 EVES. 673-3468 $163 Mo. pays .w. 11. 6 " ..., "'""" PERRON REALTY CO 538-3232 or 637-1177 1Aac 11. Y .................... mt -NT1ou1s . ·1111 S~-e 1 !;""ting, oomplet-i •• t---'. 673-5111> .1.,,========= ["''T tLU"" .. . ............ 4141 s11w1No MAcH1·N ......... -.... ,21 3 BEORM "-""'' 3 ft.. & am. rm. ,... "'~ "'""""" &12-1771 1· fOltl1'4A OIL MAI ........... rut MUJtc.t.L INSTltUMi:'NT""··"11u FAMILY RM . POOL in M~ Verde. Deluxe Nol lellsehold. $55,SO'.l. --.-..""~""'"°~~-I Huntington Beach 2400 ALtoA ................... uoo ''"NOi a ORGANS ...... ::::;·,,. 0 POOL TIME IAY llLANOI ........... , ..... 4Ut ltAOIO ..... ,, ................. ·1t411 $2l.5001 carpeting • drapeg; ex· AD Huntln...._n Bo•ch 1•00 3 BR 2 •··•-. .,·-pato·o, LIDO 1sLE ................. •m r1L1v1110N ................. : ... .. rtly ·--• d •-·! •''"' ~ uou"" "'"" 14LIOA llL.&1110 " ........... USI Hl·l'I & STlltl O ftOO Dtli&ht.J'UI patio, bathhouse mani .. 'UI~ Y • r n.e<1 Sharp home on large Jot with fen~ yd Nr Broadwa :uNflNOTON &lACM ............ TAP'E 11co101ili"""···"·"m. •••·-·t h .. t~ , 011&_.. Fl'l)l. tn fam. rm. Sep. util. Eltate MEADOW HOME lovrly heated and filt,,-• ·~:rm · · Y· ouNTAIN VALLIY .......... 4411 CAMlitAs, ••U tP'M'iN·f'" · .. ...,,.. ... ~,. cu a: ~= $2!J ~ olJf'1"' 847~902 S•AL llACH .................. oMM MOllY IUP,Llll ......... :·:· ... pool 3 ~ F·-lly rm. ,75() J BR 2" "·th ........... pool. Expensive carpeting LON• IEACH ................ -''OllTIHO OOODJ .. ... · · ""' rm. J Take 'J'ndtt; !20 west coest high.......,. n ...... s, ~ cover· throoibout 4 1 bd D•ANitl couNTV ............. 4HI l1Nocuu11s, scoiiils ......... ..,. 2 bath home. Fireplace. De-546-!680 REALTOR 642.()344 ed patio. lmmal'ult1te. like · rg rms, Laguna 811ch 2705 •A•Dt:N 01tov1 .............. 4'1• M.•,st1LU.N1ous ..... ::::~:: .... sign~ for fun llvlna:. is~ili~fic.iiiv°";;:;;;;;~l· ......... ,,;,,,;,;,;,;,, ........... 1 new 1700 1 $28,0CO. Near Brookhurat Wl lTM1MSTelt , ............... 4411 sc. WAHTt:O ... .. "'' 540-1720 4 BDRMS. &: family mom ; . HAFFDA,,L tR. EALTY and Adami. Rare bara:•ln "41DWAY c1tY ................... 1• ~~=~NIRY, ltc.. : .. :::::::·::1,. --'. '-"""---'. w/completr Cameo Highland&, spacious t IJSTER REALTY ..... _ For··•-< yi••. 'AlllTA AHA ........ Ti ............ H IT01t1.o". .,. .................... 11'• TARBEU.. 20Ci6 Harbor ....... ...._...,.... .. _ 'ha On • ..., ~ "Home to Ma~ •---m•" ~ ... ,......,, ... IANTA ANA Hl lGH ............ •UILDOHO ;,;; ................... •rn sprlnJdm; built a I II I "'" · canyon, ..,..,;NJ, '""" w= f!»-4474 TUSTIN , ....... "41 ..... T.•IALI ., .. dl.shwasher, W/W ---• OWNER 673-4423 8740 Wamer 842-+ICli O~LY $19.850 3 Bdrms. 2 ha COAITAL .. ::::· ::.:: ....... :::::.70I SWAPS ..... .. ........ ::::····"" 1.a?'ler 2 BR home, ftrrplace. open l>H.mi!d ceillna1. doo· hie r.t1.r 1arage. R·2 lot. Oose to m!U"kets &: tra.n!pOtl&tian. $18,750 Wolll-McCardlo RltrL l810 Newport mvd .. C.M. >18-7729 ,,.....,......,. TRANSFERRED .. ... "".... t • kitchen w/bltru, fami'" V1c1t"1on Ront1l1 "6N'lt. t:•UNA ••ACM .............. tns PETS Ind LIVESTOC .. K ciniperles Larae ;patio. Onl• .,..50 DOWN. A 11 y 0 n e, 1 v '"""' •UHA NlltUIL. ............. •107 ''" · .,,." Coron• d1I Mar 1250 TOWNHOUS l"OOIT\, lrp c. hrdwood On u.N t LtMaMT• .............. 4111 ,,,, ,GENEllAL .............. -$%1,500. By Owner. 549--4.u.J . E. 2 bdrm., 2 newly -Int·• . -~ HAVE B ... _ ........ DAMA '°INT .................. 4141 .. ,, ................. , ... baths bltns ... M ni In ...... out eaut. 1w·n. Vl.~ln-~ll>LIX. ·~ ................ 4"'11 DOSS ........................ _ 3286 CALIFORN1A --1 a bh . ctps, patio, Obie gar, lncd yd. Close to front studio Apl. Pla.ya ~l c H'OOMINIUM .................. ~l~~~~kic .............. :::: ... :. 3 BR. 2 Ba .• dbl.. trplc .. bltn!!, Corona Hiqhlands """'' u se, Jlt.500. HAR· acbools and shp'g. 962-4391 Rey. $200 wkly. J u n e RENTALS ·" · ·· · · · · · · · · · "" CID. $25,950. Bdrm. 2 bath home, squee.Jcy ~1!t'~~~~nsen 15/Seopc 15. AlAo Mo. a: yrty Aptl. Unfurnf1hed ~!~~!~RNIA LIVING 32CSColondof'l. ~8 clean and neat. with pool.I;;"°"'""=~.::.,:;:.:.~ Fountain V1ll1y 1'410 rates. 6'73-t370 ••Nl!flAL ................... ,.. 1w1MM1No POOU'""""'·· .. = OPEN HOO!lll!' Sit I S\ln. 1-5; ----...;....;;;;J..._.;,,:;.:1~~;..:::.:.:;:~----'•OllTA M•IA ................. 11" 'ATIOS ............ ::::::;:::"n 1s siie back ya.rd, $39,SO'.l. _.. ,....._, 1__ O H MAKE A MEMO &o ptbar IA v1•01 ................ J11t o\WNINOs .. Coll-• Park 1115 R L St I kl RI ...._ ....,.,,Jrt.,~ Or. Owner pen oust NlwtoottT ••Ac" ........... m11 vAcAr10N• ..................... .,. -• • • r c 1r, tr. trMS. lmmttc. s BR., fam. up toyJ YoU no iCJlll'!I' Dffd, NIWPOitT HllOHTI .......... 1t11 ........ ... 6 yr old 3 BR beach home • mod. Ready to RO!!! CAYWOOO REALTY uig w. ~11 llwy. And anxkiv1 1to sell: large 4 NB 541290 bedroom, 21,i b1ths. Cathtd- ~~ nil ttlllnR livinlf mom, 1ep. 3 BR l• •-,_ llm nn l '!!!!!!!!!l!!!irn...;!i!!~'~'!!!!!J!!!!!!~J nn .. 1., "'·., bl-·. --.. Now sellina modtl home. Set aeU them tor cub wtth :~WP'"•,r,,.sH01t11 ........... ,sne TRANSPORTATION .,. -· .... 'J! d .,. a.r u .... -.. J84n Linden, FOUnt&in vaJ. ctUlified Ada. DlaJ MU671 uN1Y1•11TY ;.,•··r ·:::::::: .. :.: ::,t~~\YAcNn ............. ... e~ hims, loYety encl ~•r Artist's D 1· ht rape-1. Cov. i-do. Aleume if..y. t and 5 Bdrm h'Ml to.t111 tActtaAY ..................... D41 PO••• s ........... NII )11 W/f:h/ ipWo. $%1.500 • •g 5%'le GI LOAN S25.8'7S FHA. VA •••ma . .:;;;='-------~A.IT aLU111' ............ SHt IPlll!'~=~l~IJll .......... ::,.,. ~·--· •-~! y · 4 8 -·-~• d t ".1 OltOMA OIL. MA• ........... tHI •OAT Tt•O'••OAT ........... ... Lot· S0x175 R·2 Costa Meu C.n 1.one ~lal plu11 llTilllll hoo11e. $15,cm Georli:~ Wlllia.msori, Rltr. m-t.m . OPEN EVIS. arate dining I l•mily l'OOrrll + extnl large rumpus room Btas1 1ocaUon, ntar 11rhool. Dell• Real Estate ~14 Sale1m1n or Wom•n WANTED _~""===· ~-;;;:;~==='I iew r. '"""Ya"~e en, "'"'900 Owner 1 yr old, VA Builder will help on YOOr t.\l.IOA · ................... JJtt IOAT MA " 1 .......... tat ... 3 ba Oil 2 Iola. ()pfn Sat. 6 Joan. 4 BR 2 be.th, ff\m. closing "°""' S.. Of a'-·-IAY Ill.AMOS ............... .,PM •OAT u.J~=NAlfCI ........ ... Newport •-·ch 1200 Sun .. '~ p.m ........ a...-v. ,, ____ ~-. --~-··m ~· Th1's Page k100 •su: .................... N.sl MA••N• tQu1~"° ............ .... -. ~ ~vvv,, ... .,. ..... , .... ._1 o.10J u..,u,,. address or call ALIOool nuNo " ......... 1n1 •OAT SLIP MOO ......... ·• Or•ng• Coast P-rty Clrcle, RB~ LISTER RN•TY ·--NUNT1N•1'0• ••ACM ............ ao.t.T s11tYKu ••N• ........ .... ELEGANT B.ayview condo 3 ·-'"-•.,.=,...,.""~.::..==---Mft.I.. ~ HUlftAIN VAL.L.aY .......... '411 ao.t.T •• . .. ........... ,., • 3.12 P.f~rtt~ CdM 1 3BR.1~ BA 1Y dtt lhL 111ACM ...................... 90AT c,.:::l.s .............. :,.. Lp. BR., 2 lavish b11h11. 673•155g . •new .• va. LARGE 5 bdrm home with ~· llACN ................. ,.. ,11 .. 11119 llOA~ .............. ,..,, Poul&, -11. f"lc. Fl'e land.•~==-~....:.....:.___ cMt Yiew home. By Ownt.r, famlly room ca-•·-R .,",•.•,.•'°,,.~ ............. Nit tOAT .. ,, ................ ,,.. Only s:J.~ Owner 673-4356 10wNER Mllrt 8'11. 2 2 1 $~.900 C<I n v e 1t t Jon a I drapes, built f~I. fen~':.:i EACH ES WllTMINl'rll!' ... ·~ . .'.".".'.".':::::·:::l; :::~•:•AO•·::::::::::::·;;= LUXURY Condom -Btu"•' Larkspur Cd.M. ()ptn hou.te I=-==~~~----landsca-". Clooe to -a--':).DWAY CITY ................. Nlf l lJICllAl'TAtfTWD .............. ,.. " S•--'a .. tl ~ •· ,.,.. tfTA QA .......... -.... ,.Sf.1I •LYIHt ............... fllt G br. 3 bl.~ mrkt val Ill ... ......, n block from belt SPANISH 5 BR 1 ba. + ex-fT18r tchool •nd FountllJJI fANTA ANA Mlllttn ............ MOlllLI =Olfl ............ :". Eastsl.dl C·-om raham R•olty ~.~ ~.-.,--••·Coll bt1ct1. vi('W ar ocean. tru "mt to bch ..... 700 V•ll•y H~h c-• ....._~ t~m,,•, ......................... MOTO• MOM:: ................ .. ... .,.. ...V.J'o» vwr.., .,_, . · -· • • · '""""' llUfl1llll LA A .................. t1tl •ICYCLa1 ····-··•••• ... ni• (near Jll:JSt Offtcll!) Owner ~8 aft 5, 644-Cti09 M()d~MI 4 BR 2~ bll.tha, 90"11. Adell• C\rde 96'2-5020 buy $27.900 80-ZW2 68,972 llUNA lllAC'M ............. ,,. ILECTltK ................ ,,. N"" pa.Jn!, CUTiet' ~I. Im· 149 RJ -~ ~t..f~ dee: Jd d\en LAeUNA ttlOU•l,. .......... ,.m:f MOTOllCYC[:•I ......... .,,,,ftil rd mon ()rh by iiii•0iiiV·q-~~· ... ·.VL .. ,~NB ... 5 [WATERFRONT, 62 &lb(la .. ,....u.•r• I ' Must St'll! ~ A1r1um F0RSaleorrettMaraew3 ~· CLIMIMTI .............. ml MOTOUCOOT:1 ······•·•• .... .. :oo·: ~ mJI "' Cove1. 3 BR, f75.0CO \VIII land11etped. $ST.SOO Ca II home. 3 BR. Mf.kt Offer BR. 2 BA ~ 0. t.._:_tU:J'1NCf~'.~~~.:::::.: :~g ~1ce:s1a ,.,.fi·:::·: PERRON eREAL TY CO. IRVIN! VILLAGE 1 trlde for property, Ara.blan•1-61><9'll~===~~~-5241 C!enmy Or. 80-7227 t"Omlnlum wllh an tt'C?"ea· RIAL ESTATI. r•A1L•li. T~:~u''· ...... :,.,, 612-lm By Ownw 5PAnltb 2 br, on honef, ~TU Pr1m ELmANT SmMJ. J BR VAOANT-mlllt 8ell, S!o(fJl(i GI tion prtvilegea tn areen HOMES Generel ru.i:-::.1. ~~"' .. :::::".:".::·.= ll'M:I belt, bNI' pooJa. lbopo S BDRM, 2 b&, 2 patlol 2 rtr $39,500 316 Narduw: 4 BR. 2 BA, ~.,, $20.950 valley. Pr1oe Di,500. Rent · n-"-LU. "'-M ................. -T11:UCICI .:: .. ::::::;:;::::::::::: POOL HOME "'"• ~ -·~~,.1t ...._.,.. -,,,_ ••ta ....u. IJllU ................ JM .Ill" .... .. -.. -· • _,.......,, -1m1. rllnll'I. poof, M"1\lficent uw..... 00~ ~. Cltl)t. 646-6243 _,.,mo. Call !lfiS..J.596 •nTAU WAlllT'la ........... mt 'M'°•no .t.t.r+Oi .............. ~·· 3 BR Oio1ct: Euu:lde. W /w C111111!11n.Jt;. f!nr>1110t. AIJBllmf! SK 9' k>ln • VA kie 1.r no tll1f:I .,,th S1S5/mr:i pymnlL ll\SOIJ. By ......... MUm • MESAVERDE•••3 •·th ... ~. "'-o-•• , IOOMIMllllllT ................ Sl"OITCARI . ::::·.·.·.·.·.·.·.· ... ...... QA •uua· -· " ' MANY WQ loeM & 90A1il0 ..... ... . . "'6 ANT IOU It. CU.UICI .. 01· Dfn1nR. P'amQy rm. Pool. 144-1552 . NDmmt. OP. DON'T JUST WJSH tor smM-BUSIEST ~ • EACH WEEK ~LI. TllA1L11t COU•ra "" IAt• cA•s. ~ ......... ... ~ '"960 ,...,._ POR~ blV• bMlli -town. n,. DAILY n..-OUUT HOMES "" AUTO IVIHTI I ........... ,. "'i-"' -. . * _,__ NICE bomt, 1'tn. nr •hop-•la _ __..,. __ _. .. _.. ...... to tumbh )'OUr' boml p ,....,. fllilk. llMTALI '"' o\UTOt WAN'TIO ............... . ~ \.JUlt...-0 -••• 1!nd crttl bu1I tn .,. OUSWed ~. s... lltCOfllll 'ltOl'••TY ........... llllW CAIU ............. "" Daity Pllo& Want Ada? I ptar. at 'k:p, )~ bl to OCl&D Tan bldl • ''Bt•-~ ..&..J. -. lhDI • dirt. r __.. 'it':lf PWaltn' -IV'TO lU.••" ............... .. A1WUI • Go-Col 122JOO. OwMI-m-8MT portunfdel" NOW! _,.a a..uw Alts. ;;;!ii -T "AUi .. uta CA.al ••••• :::::::::::::::.., I • ~ -._ ---*.., .. -W'4 -"+ • W ¥ 9 $ 4¥ z+ '9 .. V. -·-'W. • ~-~·-··~-~----... ---• .. W .. --• .., _._ -----.. ....,.........._rm .. ---·-·---,---..._...._.+ -w ... -' RENTALS RENTALS HouMt Unfurnished HOU:Ms Unfurnl1h1d Costa MeM 3100 Huntington BNich 3400 DESIRABLE - • I HOME 2 BR., 1 BA., Larve Uv • rm Hrwd • fioof't, Cp1d .• Dn&pe1 iarb.dl1p, 1&rage, waler turn. ADULTS ONLY NO PETS ~~~1N1rr'0~:'¢Jrt ' Tri·k.~tl 5 BR + 16x32 lam. rm: 3 b a I h 1; carp, 6: drapes, bllnl. Wet bar, fenc- tod yard, $295 Mo.. Jease 133.1 Emereon (Nr. Mcfadden & Colden West). Broker 2U GE. Q...0021 or 897-4006 'rhU1, Junt 7, 1%8 RENTALS I RENTALS AplL Furnl1hod AptL Unfurnlahod Balboa 4300 Me11 Varda ' 5110 TS RENTALS REAL ESTATE BUSINESS ind AN~uUN Apt•. !Jnfurnl!~ _ Gen1r1I _____ 1._F._l.;.N.;.A_N_C_IA-'"L ___ 1 _.;•;;.nd;;..;.N;,;O:..Tc.:l.;C.;ES:._ __ Roomt ·for R•nt 5995 ~ -· ____ .;:6.;.100;:.:: 11 "Mo.;.;.;"c:'.:.Y.;W_•_n_t..;.od..;..._.;.;.'35.::0 Personals Balboa ~n. Roomy deluxe i BR Duplex. Bllna, cpll, drpl. Short blk lo ba.y or l'k.-e&n. SUS wk. Jul,)', S150 wk Aua. ~n Sun 12-4. 21 l Cypresa. ?13: 69Mi01:2 '435S 2 BR. downs.ta.in. newly Redcc. AYaiJ July l•t. S120 mo. Leue. ~I SMALL. Rm & ptv bath. "° cookl.ni, $)& l.ncl u t 11 • ,..._,CM N•wport le•c~c_...;,.52;..00;,.;. Motels. T!lr. Crt1. S.!!! JUST Con1pleted 2 BR, 2 ba l>llSlio-tty. Frpl, ch11de.llers, 6405 PORTAFINA LAGUNA lNTERJ:STlNG old pkl"'" X·ITEMINT Panoramic View Loll .t private papers of Judat· IS THE GltOUPJ White Wllfetr and· oout·· .. F'rom 1867 thN earl,)' 1900'• OtterbnlnalinJ Cpl.I I S11'1 lll)c vlev.·1 Doc:ll:e Cll,y, Cunnilon, Colo. Parliet; Tripa, Ol.tW.n wtlb ~ Nyes Pia!:* Salt Lake City 87343141 lnteff'..1t: Phu . Excl. •vc. La;un11. Beach CdM. I for Kiri .. loo! n4! 'f76.8!Ml ITI<> <!l4-9J88 ANNOUNCEMENTS !-9 pm. 213' OL. T-6814 lu1h cpta, drps. Iron 1ated 60x80 Oceanfront Lot pvt patlOI, c..-cmrnl wall• !Balboa Penir'l&Ulol $5 per night on weekly basis and up. '2384 \.1 .Newport Blvd., C.M. ,MS-9756 and NOTICES l"'ranchlte Now Avlilable btwn unlta, Mcdnlllon kitch., Guest Homa 5991 1743 E. Ckeat1front Street Found IFrM Adil 6400 NEWSPAPERS, out of •late I foreign; mq:aJ:lnti. Ens .. Germ., Ital., Span, Ft'e.J'ICh, DAILY PILOT %3 s"Rvu .. t ... •<-'-•OJ\ 1 Cement, Concrete 6600 CUSTOM PATlOS A Block waU•. Alao concrete •awlna .:r rtmoval. &42~1010 Fkxn-Wal!Q.Patios & Ell· polled Roc:kl. E x p t r t worfl:rrut.n11:blp. M2-1514 Child c.,.. 6610 HANSF;L Ir Crclel ChJld Care SlS Wttk. ~A Nl'WJIOC't Blvd., C.M. 5-13-21S<1 RATE RF.ASONABLE Across from C.OUntry Cub m~Dr. Ph~ 2 BR. Garage, palio, cpt1, drps, stove, re.l'rfa:, Tropica.1 aettlni for adults. 1 bllc --=-mi 2 BR.., 1% Ba., townhouse; carp., drapes, applh1.rM..'tS· Brooktlurat/ Adamg, S 1 2 8 , b13-7685 BACHELOR Apt, full kitch- en, utila pd, singll' girt only. SIOO yrly. 675-3186 F'A heat. Across frn. Coco's. I-------'---· I S II t d YOUNG part Alrd•lt· black '~• •-·1 PRIVATE Room fo• cld<•ly e ar ra e. . Watell Plaza . """'Ll"Vne. col lar . found Caa 1t "!!00" mo "~" ""39 ambl.liatory It n t I e. man ~7-0380 h ~ d Huntington B••ch 4400 -'-~CT-=~·~~-"-~'-"---,,--Nutritious meals & tender!"!~~~~~~~~""'! Hilt way, ....... vna el Mar. S1nt.1 An1 3610 2 Bdr apt . OC'ean vlew. I~ ·---615-2-440 dayr. China. Ruulilll; alfO •dull Contr.1ctot1 6620 ma11aztne1 4 p1perbacka, I ;,;;.;;;;,;,;.;;.:;;,;.;.o_ __ ..;,.:_;;.:;"I 2 BR, !tove &: refrig. Nice }'ll.rd.&: Patio. Adult oouple1 only. No peta. SU5 mo. 2575 B Santa Ana Ave. 83S-a,Jl2 Sparkling View. SecJudl'd 3 Bdr1n, C.arpeted, adulta Only. 642-6250 $235. 5 SR, 2 BA, crpl.I, drpe, bit-ins, fine NE area. Nr. SO Frwy Jun 16 549--0844 DELUXE 3 BR home with pool: avail. 7/1. Lease $300 mo. inc. pool aerv. S46--92ai 2 Bedroom, carpets, drapes, flrepla~. &by OK. S120 mo • 646-12.9J . -----'------1 BDRM fl/RNISHED Sl75 n'IO. Yrty . No children 1 ~'~"'~'"~·~·~""~· ~,....,,~;"'=:~~~1:R;;•n;c:h;n;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;6:1:5~0. SM grey part.poodle, male. SMALL ~ bedroom enclosed WALK TO BEACH or pets. 642..J97R eve1. M' R 1 1 5999 whl leai. face & d ie11. Flea yard, water paid. \!!15 s. S97.50 MO. 962-196'1 d .Id ISC, •n as N rth C l"f II y.,1 ll eri!d I B . I •--llOO ·-4 BR, 2 BA. crptd. f1 , 0 ern a I • <"O ar. e mann . V c nsto · .x..,,. morns · Acro&s streel from beach. OUTDOOR STORAGE &paer Shore Olli 6/.4. 6~35..'l'/' L1gun• .. BNch 4705 u bl t u 2 Ranch 3705 ,;;,;:=------$300. * &U-35.15 a1111 a e or rent. p to . !-~ND: ~1&rin1 HI ii h L __ •~g~•-•~•....;lle;.;c•~c~h--""''-" ruRNISHED bachrlor apt. and 113 A. Bolsa Ave. S.A. lk>f•uliful g"zing and limber-School. Plltfl.keet. hu iden- MONARCH BAY AREA Bc;AU Goll & Min View 3 BR & den, 2* ba, c:pts, Drps, trpl, pool. $'150 mo, Adults. 496.-1243 betw 1()..5 pm Prlv, bath, v.·a.lk to town &: Newport Shores 522:0 5'12--.%.'U land. easily accessible. Only tificatlon. 817-5632 beach, no t-ooking. S75 per 9 mlles from highv.•ay 99, 1 DUPLE.."< 3 BR, 2 ba, cpl£, REAL ESTATE l76S acres with 2 la...,e FART S iunese male cat mo. including TV cable &: drps, bltns, washer/dryer. Gan•ral . ., found Npe Hts 6 / 4 utilities. 494-26(» ---'-'---------·!creeks, lake and 5 rese-rvoirs 646-6551 · ' · lrg: p11to. S225 mo. 642-0603 A proposed dam will give ==~~--~--- -• oln~c~o~m~•.;__P_••~P~•~rt,;.:.v_~6000;:.;,.; this property ol to 5 miles of FOUND Grey carrier pigeon 1~•J TALS Apts. Unfurn!shed G•n•r•I 5000 Corona del Mar .5250 1-"• •-oi•••. er•~ ,1 ~ No. S42 lu ll grown 548-5961 .. WE Ate Sttk!ni conservative '"' u" ...., """"' .,....., invrsbrs who are satisfied per BC..Te. For further info to earn 18% after I~ pleaS(' call Glenn TI!ompson 1 .l~•~•~l-------640--1 taxes on a. fully secure invst-with: EckLoff & A11oc. Inc. rEMALI.'.: Cat. Dark grty Summer Rentals 3995 DELUXE Waterfront Lrg Duplex. Npt Island, boat dock, Jndry, garage. Min 2 \vks June and July or winter 2 BR, gar, t'.1>(s & drps, fncd ·season. 673-786i' wlmds. or yd, adlts only. Sill mo. 2619 am:96~74 coll. f:S~ ON TEN ACRES mnt. Agl. 642-~00 or 673-76'15 n . and whl yellow rollar, 1818 W. Chapma_n Ave. tinlid. Lost in m 0 vi n a 1875 N. Harbor, CM 640-8583 t\nnounc•m•nh ,.-;o -·-Coast Health Club Hospit111ity 1, Our Mo lO rREE SAUNA W!TH · SWEDISJI a.tASSAGE Open wkdy1 10 •m·ll pm Sundays 10 am-& pm 132 E. 18th St. 6fUiOOO Funerals 6412 WEST Ml NS TEil MEMORl~L PARK Mortu.1ry & Cemetery • Compl•t• funerals e ROOM ADDITIONS e L.T. Con11truction rantlly roomi;, khchen t1r units Single i.1ory or 2; plana custom de1lgned. For eetima!es & layout , phone; ~ • 847-1.511 • Llcenacd Contrac!or Ar~ldential -Con1n1erclal Maint & Repain. Fre8 Elit 673-2129 Remodel.Ing • AddiUona J . G. MacBeth. Lie. •675--5628 • Additions • Remodelln1 Fred H. Geiwick. Lie. 67J...600 .. 5'19"2110 6625 Elden Ave. 673-5270 I ~N~EW=~.,.,-1-'"'-,-al-l~~,~..,~ .. -m-,~fo $200 MO, lease; 3 BR, 2 Ba. AJTOWhead Mtns. furnished Fp.I., btt-ins: dbl . garage. $125 wk. or S65 * wk. Avail SILVER GATE Apartments Deluxe Bachelor Apt Uv rm, br. ki tch lo ba. 1 & 2 Bdrm Apt• 1 k 2 BR, Furn & Unfurn F1·plcs I Pti/Patios I Pools Tennis • Contnt'l Bkfst. 9 hole Putt/Green. 1~ units, 2 BR.. hardwood, lloor11, g3rages, laundry, $1 ,435 mo. Income. 5-18-3846 Orange, Cahf. Balbo!I Prnn 10 Dtstblurf. 541-2621, Evr~v.·knd$ JJ8...G7Z7 Reward. Call &.t4-1017 574 Hamilton, Costa Mesa . REWARD Return/lnro I.l'ish f rom $245 Cemetery lots CARPET & lllrniture clean- ing. Ory 1 .ho ii r. low from $130 pi·icet1! Credit avail. Carpet L.ge. yard. 642-2354 now. 833--0371 NEW 2 BR House. Garage, ATI'RACT 3 BR beach house $140 mo. E. Costa Meaa, Nr. in Balboa. Ava.ii June 15. Npl Couple. 642-3837 1150 wk. 6~~ Part fum. 3 BR. I BA, lg. RENT ALS yd .. oo Irvine. small fam . Apts. Furnis hed nnly . Sl!ll mo. 545-2740 3110 4 Bedroom, 2 b11.th homP. Mesa Verde. 1275 per mo. Gardener. 1 to 2 ye11.rs, Jean Smith Realtor 400 E. 17th SI.reel Costa Mesa, 646-3255 3200 Gen•r•I 4000 I IOLl.DA Y Pl.Al.A DELUXE. SpaciOU8 1-BR. F'um. apL SI:t'! + u!il. litd pool, am[)lr pal'lung. No children. No JK'!S. 196.'i Pomona, CM 642-5858 4100 Newport B•ach fREE,( 1 weeks rent: 2 BR 4 BR family room , ·11,, Ba. townhouse; ,::11.rage, cpts/cil'ps. Mwly painted patio. disposal: gardrner. outside.. $245/mo. C • 11 Vacant Sat. 6/8: 1 child 646-02:l8 ·oK. New carp, & paint. I M.:O:O~I>~ERN=~3 ~B~R~ .. ~,-ch°""hom---,-1 Unde11>riced, Sl50 fl'.lm. $.125 00 Oiannel. taniilies only, wifum. 616-3389. 24Zl Elden $27S mo. Caywood Riiy. Ave. 12), CM .... ""' BUY Like rent; $425 mo BR, 3 Ba., pier & float. Balboa Cove1 675-4331 $25 Wk. Up 3 e Studio I< Bach apls. 2 e Incl Utils I Phone wt¥. e Maid Service . TV a\faJl. e New Cafe & Bar Newport Shores 3220 3 Br A-frame. 'l baths, suncleck, swimming pool:o;, rec hall, Yearly lease. $2'25. Call aft 4 pm. 548-1625 Unlv•rsity Park 3237 2376 Newport Blvd. 54S-97:J5 ATTR.ACnVE 1 BR. W/w cpts, lrge <'Upboa.rds & closets. $85. 646-0GTI * S140 Util. paid . Oean 2 BR. furn. 1 Blk. K-Mart. 548-0787 962-1636 3 BR Apts with 3 baths. Near schools, freeways Walking distflllee to 00: 988 El C.1mino Apt. #I Costa Meta RENT J Rooms Furniture $25 Month 1-1.JU. OPTION TO BUY No deposit o.a.c. H.F.R.C. Furniture Rentals 517 W. 19th, C.M. ;;.lll-..14.'l<t 1568 W. Lncln, Anhm 774·2800 Cost• M••• 5100 HARBOit GREENS BACHELOR · UNFURN. from $100 Incl. util. 1 -21r.3BDRM. FURN. &: UNF'URN. Heated Pools, Otlld Care Center, Adj. In Shnppin1 - No pets allowed 2700 Peterson w..-,, at Har- bor &: Adams, c.osta Me1a. 54<--0370 4 SR, 21ii: baths, 2 fllilC!!, BLTNS & refrig. 2 yr lse &I 5265 mo. Avail June l~. F"IJRN I level 2 BR, 2 ba, 11 ~ iarden patios, lmmac. Avail I ~-- 3 SR, 2 baths, bltns, fTpl. Oloice loc. l or 2 yr 111e. 11 $260 mo. AVllll JWle 15. .July 15. 1170. 642-4859 Adu lts Onl.v $19.50 1 BR close to shops. Discrimin.ative Tenants do ;...__ ·... -for Preeti1e Address wntown . .,..,... qut ... -. pc . 548-34-02 I BDRM APT MARTINICj)UE GARDEN APTS. HOME & INCOME by Ownr Acre1ge 6200 Setter, Fem. "Amber" vie Exe depres/invest. oppty. 4 SEE Adv. under 6 2 1 0 s . Magnolia Ave. Newpart BR, res. Ir 10..2 br Apts, "Newberry S pr g 1 . !Kl West area Htg Bch 536-4473 pool, 2-yr old. E1ide 675-1393 acres." Call owner g.171640 BLACK Wallet & loose bills. Includes Endowment Care Service 673-3112 Everything ln oae-be.auUlt:il I ==========ol 900 Sn Lane, Cd.M 64\-3>11 I MacArthur nr. Coast lfwyt ·· eves & wknds. Corner of Springdale & --·· · · -----BusinHS R•nt.11 6060 Slalel' St. HB. 1;30 PM 6/6. place mca.rui less cor;t. No traffic problems. 11801 Be11r.h, WPstmin~tr.r 5.11-17'.!;i ~3-21Zl l ido Isl• 5351 • PRIME Retail Loc:<1tion e l Out of St.1t• Prop. 6208 REWARD S17-00l4 2 BR. rlf'n low!'r: frpl . QJts.. STO:lE 17 x 4{l ISLAND OF HAWAII LOST-Male Siamf'st cat, 3 Cem•tery Lots0:__~64:..:..1~1 drps. S:?.50 Y.Parly llH3 Harbor, CM 646-AA.)4 OWNER SAYS SEU. rnv l yrs of age, nf'ar Edwiu'<I~ & Walker Realty SJfOP For 1eese StJ:J mo 640 I rhoit•e lols in tw-A.uilful Edingf'r, H.B. Rew a rd . 67:i.5..?00 :..tR-1467 Y.:ve5"1·-:.q1 f~. fd eal loc:a1ion. Npt ! Nanawale Estatrs, Unit I 1_i_'2_-_JJ_7:t_. ------ LA.RGE Bayfront APT. 3 Sch. 675-M.5.1 5'1&-6TI3 WHITE female toy poodle 4 lmprovrd loes. bf>~• ~. In Pacific View Pk. Underprlc. rd Ill S25() Pl .. ~S,.2662 Bdrm, l ba. fir epl ace vie . Pacifi(: Sa ndlli T ravel 6435 $350 . Jse , Avail July 1. Office R•nt1I 6070 Mount. & O.sert 6210 c:hildren'a pel, day or nlte _;;,c.;:;_ ____ ..:..= ·J6-.8125 DRIVING tn Omaha. &:. Des APARTMENT MANAGERS in1ere.11tcd in bids o n replaCt"menl carperlng? We 1u·r expcr in this field . Call 5·1~-44711 rvr~. Lir. Con- ti·11crors. ----CARP'ET . Apl!'I . Home1 Quall~ in1>1allation. rree estlmalrs. All prir.es. 54fr4478 eves. Lie. Contract..v 673-1917 LAGUNA BEACH NEWBERRY Sprgs, 8 O "J . 1 /12 i\fo1nes, f'a vlng 6 , older ....... ,. In acres, hi-dry-desert. Buy all LOST: Men's gla.sseJ. drk G.1rdenine .vou Desk spaces available woman. travel lrtt, refs ;;;.:.:.,;c;o,::_~•-----Hu,ntington ~.!•ch 5400 3 BEDROOM UNfURN. ;i va.il. 6-15 J blk lo fl J>ts stol"t's n40. 2 Bed. 11nlum. Avail '&.26 n2S. Call owner 642.28.'fi or key at 77ci1 Ellis D 842-8303 2 Bedroom unl\Jrnished apt. Adults, no pcts. S90 Mo. 2!17 Geneva St-, H.B. 2 Br Duplex, pool, privacy, cpls, drps, 1 stry. 1ar. Like new. $130. 842-8.137 2 BR. extras, pool, kids OK. AvaH Jul_y J. $120. 962-?109 newest oHlce building t1! or pert. Level land, pump & framet. Vic of Npt Pier , rf'q. Call ~fott 8 AM . well -has Deen in alfalfa. 90 5/2G, * K.I 5-8860 ~ prime location in downtown 673--013~ • Laglina Beach. Air condi--n1an niade lakes in area, LONG Haired Chihuahua ====~====- tione.d, carpeted, beautiful fish raising, e.Uaila growing, Brn. Gold collar. S.A. Hgts. SERVICE DIRECTORY pAne.le.d partitioning. Two recreational. Ide~ f o ~ 540-4934 Babyaitting 6550 entrances: rur leads to trader park. Prtce uccd NEW Men's ctolhlng iIL :o'"-'-'---=----'---'- Mwtidpal parking lot& S50 Call owner !W7-e>40 l'.!vtll & brown paper bl11:. Vicinity of BABYSI'M'ER, Your home. per month for space. Add weekends. \7th Streel & Irvine 675--0753 Mother SS, xlnt reference.. SS for desk and chairs. Add BUNK beds, antiql.H! ice.box LOST Blk & hi r bbit Sal Guest cotlagf' or garage apt. SlO for business hours an-+ odds &: ends, and will . ht N 111; & Paalm · HB. as par1 salary. AvaU Jul,y awering service. All utilities throw in rather quaint cot· ~ · d r 536-819S ' \:ft; permanent. Call: 714: paid exct>pt telephone. tage. $3500 will take it. pJus ewar · 247-7903 Eves. Apple Valley DAILY PILOT 2~ acres. I 6405 222 FOREST AVENUE BRF.l.'K NO'IT RLTY 546-646.t P•rsona I Babys:t my home Monday thru Friday, renced yard. LAGUNA BEACH or residence. 548-6.155 FrH reliable, Paularino Schoot 4M-9466 2-R·l TOWN lots. Morongo Basic Boating Clasns a.rra. A·I refs. j46.6].Q3 WEU. Kept ,afficP for rrnl, Vallf'y, C111if. Building fast • Of!e!'cd to public by WlLL BRbysit. my hoinf'. Lagun• Be•ch 5705 cpts, drps, wood panels, 2~ $50,000. Owner, 9902 JamR-B•lboa Pow•r Squadron Pref infat1ts. Will rum CLA-"R-G-E-,-bcd--rm-, -,-b-,-un-. rm~. xlnt for contractor. cha Blvd ., Spring Valley, Cal Elementary Piloting Courses di;tpers & !ood. NB & 01 Ample parking & op!ional BUSINESS and Every Monday, Sta1tiniz 7 art'a 675-6793 • furnished apt. completely re--d 185 54'5319 •-d k yar space. mo. <r-FINANCIAL . PM, June lO Newport Har--WILL BABYSIT by th-, week decorated, has ... rge cc or (?13) 941-1368 bor Yacht Club, mW. Bay with view, walk to town and in my home: Good refa, MODERN Offi~ from f15 Bus. Opportunitiu 6300 Ave., Newport Beach ,...,2_31 ,.1 beach. $1~ on IHse. No "" per m o n t h. Secretarial OR, for your convenience -'========== children or ""ts. No brok· SPARE TIME lNCQ•1E • "'" service. Executive suite.. ~ " Every Tuesday. starting 7 Boat er.s. 494-2604 Oran"e County Bank Bkl .... , Booming new field. refilling PM, June U, Ensign School " .. -n..1 -'I · r Maintenance 230 E· 17th St., CM. &t2-14R5 ...,,.. '-"' ecung ITK)l')('y roin Irvine & Clitl Dr., Nf'wJKn1 6555 R•nt.11s W1nted 5990 new high quality c oin Beach, in Caletorium. No BUSINESS Woman needs 'j_ FC?R RENT operated dispensers in ttris advance registration neces- Approx. 60 ~-Ft. carpeted area. No aelting. To qu&lify sary. Enroll at class; if any Bdrm unfurn Apt, O:>!ita & drapes, •lr-<."Ond. you mu!lt have car, e?C· questions phone 548-1374 or Mesa., Newport, Corona de! MARINER'S BLDG. dlange references, S900 to 673•1855 .. JUNE S~lal. Boat.I hauled, bottom scrubbed & painted, SI.SO per ft. + paint &: zinc. All other maintenance + ANTHONY'S Garden Service 646-1941 COMPLETE CLEANUP LAWNS REPLAC~D Re-Us. montl\ly care. Prun· ing'. l.andscapin&'. Exp. hOr- ticulturist. JeP"n•M Gardener Exper.. complete yard service. free e1Umates • 548.7958 • --Cut & Ed~ Lllwn l\.1aintenance. Licensed. 548--4!l!S -5'1~70 aft 4 PM MOWING , Edging, vacalawn. Gen'! cleanup. Hauling. Odd dabs. * 5CM!li6 JAPANESE GARDENER Maintenance by the month. Good rer~. Exper546-7758 LAWN & Garden nWntm- anC"C. Cleanup · Spray • rer- tlli:r.e Com'I & Resi. 962-7:\4'.J Cut Ir. Edge Lawn Maintenancr. Llccn~cd. 54S-4*JS, 545-5870 a.ft ' pa,f * MOWING, edging, & clean Call BOB PE'JTI'I'. assoc. WJ.th Burr White, Realtor 833-0101 C.Onlpletely fumishrd. 131 flower-$7!1-50 646-7883 VERY Attractive 1 BR 1'railcr. $80. I BR Apt. $115. 132 W. Wilson 5411-9755 Mar, Htmtington Sch or 1515 Westclitl Dr., N.B. $3300 cash :iecured by fn. . . ru~~~ ~~RS Laguna. Up lo $100 mo. Contact Mrs. Rainio 642-400'.l venrory and equipment. Few BBC family Membership. UNFURN t BR. 2 BR . 3 BR Gar 11 g e 0 r c 8 r p 0 rt 2 cam'I., 1 indust., I w/livc hours weekly can net ex· ~Ill pay !ransfer lee. Mov- engine work, see us! up. Monthly ralm. Free Newport Dry Docks 675-1505 estimate. call 963-1911 * On the Bay at 20th St. * MOWING. edging &: clean ;;;,:::;::=====;= J up. Monthl)' rates. Free , 2 baths avaUable necessary. 642-0086 after 5 qtrs. Cos ta Mesa. cellent income. More full ing. fee. lt1cre~ J~ne l- 3250 p.m. Owner. 646-2130 time. F'or personal In -Must ll e 11 ~mmcdiate.ly-IC ::•:"'c::"=':...:d=•~l ~M='~'--'---$135 . 2 BDRM. fl('W crpts &: CarpeU:, drspes, garage Ex•c. S••king tervicw. aend name, addrcsa Ma_ke offer. Write Box M 139 2 BR, ,e:ardener, drapcg, drps, l6t:~ Sanla Ana Ave. llth & Sint.1 Ani, C.M. HOUSE for 9 member fami. Jndu1tri.1I Rentel 6090 and phone nunlbc'r to lnter-1 ..,:D~•~·'~'~P~'~'"'------ stove, fireplace, patio, water 1 _54_l-85_T2_. -"~'·_ml_-_·~-__ 6464233 646-5542 ly for 9 winter mos ea. year, State Dist. Co., 450 East 4th WILL pick up car o[ your paid. S250. 675-5995 $100 Clean Furn Bach Apt. Beginning Sept. 1968. Can M-1 new bldg on strl'!et front South, Suite 206, Salt Lake choice in Europe, for Brick, Masonry, etc. 6560 BRICK. Concrete. Car,:ientry Custom Cabine11. Small job& OK. Free Eat jMl2-6945 Util.<i Jni:l. no pets. 134 W. $110 furn hse all year. Call 777 Newton Way, CM, bet 17 City. Utah 84W. privilege or driving this Wil!lOll . 548-0522 2 nice bedrooms, upstairs. James Helfrich TI4 :833-1234 & 18 off Placentia. $145 mo PARTNER With S 1 5 0 00 summer, ship in fall. Pvt. Bu1inffs Servlc• 6562 Huntington Beach 3400 I _;=:;:$;;71)-~C.B~u-n_g_•'lo_w__ 11~ baths, carpels, drapes. ~·~"':.,c:""C:-------~~fBs Agt 833-0504, Own needed. 2 new pat~ntcd pty. OR 3-8316 3 BR, small yd, $140 lse. Employed adults 6-16-2982 Private patio, garage. WANTED lo R e n I un--mechank:al machine'!! now INTERESTING old pictures Avail July 1. 2 child OK. WALLACE AVE. VILLAS furnished house July I to 2,00J liq· fl . w I residencto. ready for marketing. Polen· & private l>llJ>m> of Judire. New cpts. &. drps. Nr. Newport Be.1ch 4200 2061-D WallaCt> Ave., CM Sept l Newport Beach. 3 C-2, Costa Mesa approved tial unlimited. 545-4412 eves. From 1867 thru early 1900's Beach Bl & Talbert. 17656 1--'-..:;.________ (just !IOU!h of Hamil!on Se. I bcdrms or more. Responsi· lor s:hop, storage. business. UPHOLSTERY 8 1 f Dodge City, Gunnison, Colo. PAINTING and Paperin1.Jf you call me we botb benefit. Exclusive but not expensive.. Try me and see. 541-3157 eslim111e. Call 968-19ll * ........ e JAPANE.5E GARDENING Service Cleanup, Landacap- inj'. 531-7034 aft 7 p.m. O.ner.11 Services 6612 Paintini, Plumbing, Cft'o pentry. Reas! Rel. Inaured. BankArncricard OK Call "Mike" 642-0348 3 SK., paneled den, din . rm. Screened !>lltiO, r a r p .. drapes, bltns. $250 Mo. 962-25711 VanBuren 213: 248--l9Zl 2 BR, den. 2 BA, upper dupl, --SPLIT L EVEL ble. neat family waiting on etc. $145. Owner. S4s-8888 11ale. Owner ma": ;:.•s1r:~ Salt Lake City 673-8.116 CdM Spark~:~~'i:;:1 ~~!Inert year leasr. select £am i\y. Lrg 2 & 3 BR. Cpts. dr~. ocw house bring built. Call between hrs. 8: 30 & 5 PM NEED to Reduce? H'ave a. 54a.09&4 PROfE&SIONAL W i n d o w ae11nlng Free e.t. Business, resid &: const. Crysta.I Win· daw Cleaning, 548·8737 $2'15. 642·6836 b!tns. Nr sllp'g cntr & sch1s. 6.12-6345 <1r 646-t550, agenl . daily. 2664 Ncwpor1 Blvd .. mrmbership. •,\ paid in 11 --------- 4210 2AA'i Mendoza . 54a.5421 * WANTED * ~ • Costa Mesa 642--0Hi8 Eves loca l health c·lut:i. !i49-J928 Bulld•rs 6570 Hiullnn Newport Hgts. Hoo 1 ' -• 6 • --'----"'-----ADULTS ONLY Re • Sept st on. ~ DRIVE-In rostauranl i n .,., • 1-----==-~~ REMODEL, repa irs 6730 2 BR unfurnished house in Huntington Beach. $135/mo. Call 646-0228 Ut1furn. I Bdrm. 2 Bdrm Duplex. D.oc bltns. 3 br or 2 br &: den Unfurn or "'-._ /8\ beach city doing trigh gl'05s. * TENNIS a.us MEM· In . _, · 1 a. 'lifJI plumb'g., pa ting, ei.ec., No chldrn or pel s. lrg pvt patio. Gar, $130. 1019 semi-um NB area. Collegf' 1 '' Asking low down. 7;J0-9AM BERSllJP. Newpr1 Bch Ten· c11.rpet1trY, reald., commerc., 2AfJ51,ii E. 16th _St. 646-tfbi Amf'rican Pl. Prof. Xln1 refs 528--6307 ' or after 5 PM. 673--6..10'7 nLs Oub, S800 54!1-3289 room additions. R e 1 s , 2 BR Townhouse 1 \.\ balhll. 30' to 40' Sa.iltx:at iOlll~ lo ~ I ==========o hA~l.CO::;.;~H~O~LJ~CSi;i..:C~AnoC;;;ny:;;;;m~o;;;;WI 675-30.38 LI1"It.E GIANT TRUO< Hauling. fi ' heigbth, 10' bed. You name it I haul. 'Rea. Big John 6-42-4030 WATERFRQro.'T condomin- ium Dix 2 br, p!iv boat slip, deck, SJ25. mo. 847-0011 Coron• d•I Mar 4250 bit-ins cpts I drps. n40tmo. thru neg.le<!!: I will live I-• 1n,,"'1 ~J Real Est•t• loans 6340 Harbor Arel! Phonf' 673·812-4 LUXURY 2 b'. OCEAN Ad,,lts 54" '"'32 ~ aboard & _maintain 1n im· t 1 ll 1 P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. C.1rf>9ntering 6590 u ........,., Pri. money for lat & 2nd ' JIAULING. Trash P:ckup Trimmlne. Anything · we do it all . Expe.r work. 545-2792 CLEAN Lota, garages, etc. Tree removal, dump, skip. backhoe, fill, grade. 962..fT-45 Immac 3 BR. 2 BA, 1 mile to beach. Avail June 24 $195 mo. * .l.16-8129 VIEW h d POOL \•-2 BR Gd l 1 1 maeutate cond. in exchange RE , __ f 11500 M t D • F .-d-S . I · 0 ucr . rn, apt, rp r., w _w ror USf'. 646-7083 • rll .. u.Jd.n5 rom up ee yn.1m1c r1en t REPAIRS * ALTERATION Xtras. Junp 15 to Sept \, n-pts, bltns. lg: PV1 patio, ~=7.~"'-'=----..,./ L........ Ji~ck Smith Co. sinre 1949 with 11terling qualities . CABINETS. Any i;tze job. lldl!s only. $400 mo 671-4222 pool. Sl45 mo. 546-516.1 UN F 2 BR. hse or Sj)!lc Apl , • 543-8381 e R.39-4990 e 23 yrs expcr. 54H713 REAL N' 1 B ~ NB. PPrm. Up to $16a. Ntp I ===~~~==== I 4300 Ice r a.pt. Merchant. 675-0921, 491-&rn YOUNG. Re9P0nslble cple., e Carpentry e Cahit1el! e BUSIFS'I' marketplace~ Ba boa xtras adults, no pets. Sec 539 eves. Mortgages, T.D.'1 6345 will "house1i1" your home & e Blt-in!! e Alterstkma e town. The DAll.Y P BAYF'RO'NT Bachelor & 1 Han1ilton btwn S:J0.7 pm =='~~~-----NOW'S THE SSO.OOO Seasoned TD on 160 pet~ for summer. &12-1!183 e Repairs e Rf'IS! 6'1&.9fl83 o...-_ ~ S ~ .':~ BR "'-'v. Uti'I pd. Summer 1 BR . priv polio, GE kitch. NEED double garagf' for FOR Sitl ha t money time 6 -=ort. ...,.... '"' , yearly ston.ge; p r e f f' r magnifkenl Oceanvirw lots c: c r er mem now!!! I ;,"E''."~:_1;ix!'~iv~.o~~ ~~-~'iod;:.-lJr;; chl.dm or Ea.stsidc Costa Mesa, f15 actively selling at $7950 ~l'!l~lp 6 nb =; Beach Cement, _c_~~~•t• 6600 Housecleening 6735 •APT. CLEANING * fut & thorough I furnish everythi~ 642-81~ "' Pt'r month. 673-2549 each: du!' 2 Yrt· Slrong enn 1 u ct:MENT Work, all lypes. C M 31 ooc M 3 100 ADULT fam . of 3 needs un-TIME FOR owner with $000,00J in· SClENTIFIC Swedish Ma&-No joh too .11ml'.lll. free e~t-1-IOUSECLEANlNG. Thurs., Fri . E;irperienced. x I nt reler .. hRVe l.!'arur. 00--0238 Coste Meu 3100 ost• Ha osta "" ve&l.f!X'nt 2Q'J disco u n I sage, stenm. 204 Orango, llB H. s~'fLlCK 540 °"''' fum. 3-4 BR. house w/boat • v .,...,., 1tor. & gar. To sioo. re1uma a n n u a I 16%. F"or appt. aJli.21144 Solvt a Simple Scrapl.bltd Word. Pu.ult' Jor 4 Chuckle: 0 Rearroooa lett1ra of the four s:rambl«t words, bl- low to fcr111 four tlmpla word&. - ~ ISOYVAR I ..__ . I ,, i.:..;. r.I' -r.:I ~I'...,..., ""Tl-t -'C~·.1 ls11uo I r.f~~ --~ i=..:_ .;..:::' ~, .--, ,~. ~~ '-..: ~ ~1M~U'""R:..,O;,.A...,...""T-11 '-uni. boy com.:nt,; on 14 ]1 I ( the movies: HI .like televlsJon ':::::·=~-=·=~·=~·_, better. It's not 10 for to Iii• " ,-.· 11-17 ~T;..:H~E.:,L;.:A:.:R;....,......,...-1 O c:-i ... "'' """''' ......,. .' I I I' I I' ~ ~ir!::., t:1 ~ ' .. PRINfNIJMWED. r V tETTERS "rN SOUA!'S rrtrrr1·1 e ~1~lfTTt~1 I I I I I I .I I • IHI' n. __.... ........ llW. 546-614~ 499-3844 Ni>f'd a G11rbe n11ang/e? C1£ARGE your want ad -now . .JOIN the ft'lngwn _, thf' INEED double garaae fur 111.orage, Laguna 8 e II C h area. 494-2667 QUICK CASH SAFE 12% 1afe rctum. 15565 Find It with a wnnt ad' Dial 642-5678 for R.ESULTI' t An.Y Pn.m WA1'1'T ADS~ first TD on m!lgll iflcct1t I--'-'"'---::::~::::~::::;;;::_-_-____ -_-:: ______ "':::--"""" Oceanview · 101, pay a b I e ,. ~ " :"'\ 155.6' mo Ind 8% d"<in 3 1)' S TAR G .A; 'Z ER: " 1\. 7 WANTED Garage tent a 1 Nev.rport Beach or Costa Mesa.. M&-2402 Wl'N'J'ER Rental 4 Bdrm hou!lt'. Near water, yn. $7,!YJO sal(' to good ~/~ Br CLAY It POLLAN UUA TH R 0 UGH A ' ~fn~~~n ,.,~"~;=,",,,~"~~~;;""=·-·~,._~""~;.=·~~-·'·~;·~g ~ .e!:~~,, M. You• Oaily Actfvlly C<ildt J:t.. SD'l' u m 1• :h...,11'.. ~ V Accordl"g to lh• Sinn. cd u @~fc,r Ki,tm 2nd Ttu.~t Dl'-ed 1% I~ ... 7.26-ll To develop me~sogt for Sctvrdov, .S.1.S.'•·O...m ..... """ Rooms for l•nt 5995 PRIV. Home, quiet: leP· en- try, Wtth t1t without kitch. $50, $60 Per mo. ot wkty 548-6986 AVAll. JuJy 1. Quiet mod hm O>tl. Pk. Malt. No" amokcr. ~s ~· MO mo. 5f6-3461 DAILY PILOT WANT AD f'Vet-wkndll. ~ ' NEW SU.15 up. W-w carpet Q Q ~ kit. •voll S•ml-p •lV , " ~ ~ZJ ~ 135 Albert Pl CM / ~ "--V ~ I .E~MPWY;;,;:_::_;c.ED:.,,-c;-~~lem~•~"·~-pvt--~ > , ent. nice kic, handy to bch • lhelps. $15 wk. ~'1'513 NEAR DOC ~ OK. Huge turn bdrm w/prl btth. -- Interest. Will rliscc;iun! 21%· l~J~~· '8-67 reod word~ corrC1pond1ng to "'.ri~" s-6-"·6'41~ Owed by seven doc!on. .If ,,.UM of your Zodioc birth !.lgn. 1eo111"10 Beau property. with $400,(XXJ it~\ ,.,R. 21 1 Hwltl> "r.. 61 TD oq. l• k:k eq. 714: 682-3189 or PO Box 1 ~M.-.~21 2Montv J2 Amo110 62"'0M~•"'r-« "°"'·u~ 2t52 River1fde, Cal. ~ 3You'" ~r:..,, ~t::".,.. 1.1~,,, TD T 's;!'~-<Mlon ~V.f1 651,...1101.,,,. 2·1G-<:V ' Bri""' your s 10 nist ....,.,. '6T '"" CWo\111 6 P••totll'IOtl"f 36 'l'ou'" o U.On'f,.l!Vi Deed Center where the 1 M&r J7 F0< 67 LN•otete.:ftr 1 b .. ,,,·, "'· J•ck Smith Co. CZ?. w..v 21 8 s..11 'lB Mtiy 68 ~ .... •00 ~ u "f..;,-J " F/'iJuNr u 9c.ou..t 391., 69 Md otc n '·-1323 N Brosdway, SA Open 9 ir\19.22 r. . .s IOA.,oov 40Tht ~e( ,...... ~1·'3-5'-t~~ to I\ Sal. Ph. 543-8381 I )~1·7' I I m.1...,.,... •1 En•••'"'" _. 1c.71 'JO~ O~.::_L,•s~~·c'~~~M~ ~~2' J!,§;~~ ~~~.. ~!~ .. d ~~.~~~~ """" M.;.1l 16S(lorlo.I• 46Ro•nv f6 T•ll JAN..,~~ BttyMortgageCo. 646-46fi.1 Of 47T rtk·~"' 1-1 3-:M·· ~14.17°21·1 l~con1-orv ,8 .~~ 7! •-'.101,-. 1.)fl1 ... M W -• 6311."' ~1.S 1tA-10!t ,~ .ie,. 19 r. ,., -· - oney ant..i;r <IV 1010 'j(!H" ao ·· ... •Q'''""" C .CKXl at 10 .\ 10 for 1' yr, lr'l!t.'ltred by 7 spectacular Octan Vltw lots valued at S7<1,000, with completion a• lllred by bond. $3$44 uo 21 A 51 T1vir I I fl.. ..._" 11 -~ JU\.~1' 2'2/MV 52 L-tl Md If .. 11 Cl::•" ... ~ AUQ 2' :u llfll'O 53 Vw< lJ Moil ,,..'i,"fJ"I ; ~""' 2• Todav ~ lui:kv I ' f....,llMI •·27-l'l42 • 1a.--:-1S ,, 5~ 11__,..1•lorl 15 -~... '4J.7l n-11 ueo.n. ~r>....,...,1 MAt-·OI' 71y_,.i1 570o.,. 17El<(.t-~ ~u:I. 2, 21 '-W>lt )! T..,ulll f! TSc.,.., 'II'. lll '/~iii 2JC>bt-· :.o o.--' 11.:.w MM Jl ·~ ~-~-·-·~.·,·1 ~ i-11>2~ " Good Advoet.c Nr111t1I "9.J2-81# ' SCRAMLETS ANSWERS IN CLA$51RCATION 8600 Kitch prlv. Ul wk. 546-2668 ns. UP •k W/kltchen S25 up Studio APQ. 231' New· port Blvd,. C.M. ~ $2S,000 for 6 months Al \0 and 10 with S100.<XXI tnurt deed on 200 ~artM-w lots u collateral. ~1131 ,41,77.71 ~ ® () '"''·»2' I 1. " --------------··---~-~-------~--___ ;._---------------~-~······-~-~·~·~· ~· ·~-~·-·-··~-~ --... ....... --...--. ----~ ... J I, ' • "' ·-' .. • ' ( ! \ .. . ~ . ,. -r .. ~· .:_.~-... -• .. _,~,,.,.r ,r--• 1.4 DAILY PILOT ' Fri4-Y, June 71 1%8 ,!i-*;;;;·;;;;~iiiiii!iiiiiiiiii!iiiii.ii!~·~-.JiJO~BiSS & EMPLOYMENT JOBS a EMPLOYMENT1JO BS a EMPtOYMIENl JQIS a EMPLOYMINT JOI S a llMl'LOYMINT ME RCHANDISI FOR MERCllAHD ISI FOR * * * * 'k * 1-------1--SALi AND Tiit.ADi SALE AND Tiit.ADE ' n -''tt.t~,P-_-W_•_n_t..i_,_M_an_7200__ Holp .• Wontld, MO~ 7200 Help .W•n!M,.t.lon 7200 H1~.::tod 7400 11o:.:.i:'tod 7400 Fum lht"' -l!)OO Fvmltu1'11 1000 WhNdy1 Want? Whaddy1 Got? SPECIAL C[;f(SSIFICATION FOii NA TUllA L BORN SWAPPElltS Special Rite s n--s 1;,,,..-s - •UL&• -.t.o MIJfl n.ct.UOl l-wrwt - -.. ·-· t-llWll« "" ..,_ ..... _ t-vou• .,_ _,., ~ ._. ._ M ~ ..... . ....,TMING FOii' $.I.I e .. rl:ADE$ ~l YI PHONE 642.-5671 Te P~ Your Tr1der'1. P•r1df1• Act S15M eoq tn 4 BR lam nn home Panorama Cily, S.Y. Valley. "For Orange c.tJunt)' Comm or ofti<:e bldg, In- vest·Rilt (213) ~7565 24' Olbin Cruiser. MW v.a eng,; sleeps 3; value SZ:,00: • l'ake-1'0'11. llki boat or clur F1orida kJt. &46-1616 25 View Acres Laguna Beach. So m e improve- ments, income $7'100. $2(3,· !XX) equity. For. TD's ar ? Owner • ..._. ....... , BEAUTY Salon. 6 ststionl. et1t1ib 10-yn Lido area. Will trd tree and clear $10,IXXJ toq. for R.E. or what-have- YoU. Bkr. 548--ml Finrida: Have tge 2 BR ey. press Garden area across trorn la~ & park. $16,CO'.I c~ar. Want units or small oome here. ownlagt 847-3444 Have: Guill'. OOme -trat1e - plan on deJuxe 4-plex w/ own~ 3 BR. For: your hotn:e. Call &!rt Molt Agt. &16-8811 or 8J3-0U7 DLX Bllboii. dplx 2 br, blfu 'K, furn alm05f no, cpt11, drps, lrpl, patio, fnc<I yd, Blk ocsn. Trd up Orange/ LA Co. units. 713: 89IMi012 Frtt & Oear land, 10 acres in hills near Perris, Calif. TRADE SJ2,001 equity for local Income. ~'Tler. 673-4144 Air lnck..trl• Corpor· ation. manuf•cturer of lh,..ded producta nHcfs •Xf•rlenced F"'tener Pooplo. DAY OPBllll6S e Cente rleu Grlnders e Ac me Grldlty • 8'own l.Shorpe 2nd SHIFT . OPENINGS . e Dri ll. Operaton ' (Trainees) e Brow,,. & Shlrpo • Shav~r Operators • Pointing Operators a Cold Huder Operato" Frln~ benefits In· clud• profit sharing. APPLY IN PERSON ~11 I-1-4 P.M. AIR INDUSTRIES CORPORATION iu,s.CXXJ EQ., choice Bayview 3 BR % BA. all elec. 2-sty !,O<Xl' deeded townhou$e, for late car, 'ID's. lot, boat, !fr. Owner 673-4356 Mountain home: Big Bear- Moonridge. 2 BR., lrpl; ski, golf, fish. $10.M Equity. Trade: single residence, , 12570 Knott St. G•rden Grewe 892..5571 An equal opportunity employer Jr. Exec 3 Bdrm, ram rm, 2 bl. bowie in La Mirada. $4,IO) eq. Trade 0ttan view lot or house,. beach area. .....,,, 80 a~ unhnpr. farm land acroa from oper. mnches. Water/elec avail. SW,OOJ f' A: C. Want units or clei.r home. Own/A_gt 847-3444 12' X 8>' EXPANOO MQ.. BILE HOME, 2 br, plus cash. Trade for improvtd or unimproved income prop units ar loL 539-4970 1---------- Beautifu1 eastside Co 11 ta Mesa home. WW trade equi. ty for small house or eondo- minium. Call Rottmai1 Co. for info. 546-8222 ~ Income units on 21st St. in Costa Mesa. Trade for hoo1e or trust deeds. In· oome $402.50. Owner * ....,,.,, * Local m•nufactvrer has immecfNite openings for:· • Electronic Assemblen • Wiremen MACHDIE SHOP DISPATCHER · Mull be f1mlllar wllb maCblne lhop pnictk:cea. and •bilfty to reed blue- """"· -16 Hr M.in. Wort week Prod! sharing J. C. CARTER CO. 671 W. 17th St • Costa Meta , 54"3421 • Carpenlers Trailer or mobile home experieru,-e preferred. Ex- cellent benefit&. App\y in per!IOn • EXPLORfR MOTORHOME CORP. 4000 Campua Dl'.IYe Newport Beach Robinson's NEWPORT Has openlnt for MAINTBWICE EllGlllHR Permanent Position Excellent Bentflta APPl.Y Newport Store Monday thru Friday 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. An equal opportunil,)' employer MAY CO. So. Cont Pl•1a fnt.rviewlng for C•ra Sales Retail experience ~. Full time achedule. Part time sdledule evs A Sat. Ch•mico1l TrainH arday. Cbrnpr~.ensfte ~ Bri&ht ambitious, )'OODg man eftt irornm. Intenoiewfna WY RADIO DK. Dlsaeylud Hotel Aaahelm Hu u bnmedWt opcni.nc for a ~· Tbe job otJen a chiibenainl' eqltro ience in pleasant IWTOUlld- lnp. Five years account- ing and bookkffpin& txper. ience requittd. s.lary plus msu~ plan, fringe Mne- fiu. MaJe or female •ppll- cant ac~ptable. Send N>- 11t1me to: O. P.-MITCHELL E.xecutlw V.P. KEZY, INC. Dlaneyland Hotel An1helm, C•lif. WAIJRESS Good opportunity Muat have sood eppnl'&l'tt. APPLY lN PERSON 3-6 P .M. DAILY Snaclr Shop No. 1 2305 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mtr1 Ca. wanted to wart in produc-boun Mori • l'ri, 10.12 I: 1 -~-~~~~-- tioo. No """"'""" ...,,.,._ I-3. Apply Brunc:h Waltreu ed. 1 year college cbmeatry Employment Office Sunday onJy 4 bourg_ """"""-°""""' for ad-UPPER LEVEL vanceme:ot. ExcelJent bene-Equal opportuntt;y employer ms. c.aa Mr. SUrfas 1 or appL 525-8M8 HARLECO DIVISION Day AMERICAN Dlshwasfler HOSPITAL SUPPLY Full Time Irvine Industrial Complex Excellent Salary Career Opportunity ... cC1Dpany benelita. J oin todays fastest growing Appiy betw. 2-5 p.m. prote,.,on-MutuaJ Fund""' SNACl\SHOP No ex~ri~e ~-. 3444 E. Coad Hwy. We traw -full or part time Corona dtl Mar Mutual Fund Advfton, Five Crvwns Rettavr•nt 3801. E. c.o.at Hwy. Corona del Mar No phone calla plea_- -===,-===I S'l'El'ID/LEGAL TR.Ana:E. PflSOIWlf SKRfTARY !:XPERIENCED: Execu-. .... typewriter A -hand. Exo<ptlonal ......... opportuniQt! -APPLY- M1rshlll Comm1nicalions 2230 $. Anno SI. Sant• Ana~ Calif. 540-2820 Old World Mediterranean Spwiish Furniture All New Decorator' pkcet: and mom grou:plnp l"t'- tumed from dlJ,,,.,. '"""°" modol ......_ movt• ttudlOI. Decaratora c:anttl.latiotl: Hctlseful or~spe . iah l"Urnitute. llemt as toJJows: Gorgeous 8 tt. Sp&niah aofa 6 Matching Chair. Custom qullted "1th carved wood trim. R. JI) ft. sm.Jle carved wlwt llOfa. heavy ·nark O&k end tables A matching ooetr-- tall table. 8 Piece Kini: the Mediterra.lletUI oak pan.- eled bedroom •uite with tuU Klng size ~ springs ._ ma.ttreaa. Large Spanish &!car d!ntng room. Gt'>ld leaf Spanilh table lamps. Hllnsinr rwq ltunp1i etc., etc.. Eac_~ piece can be purdwed bldfvldtialJy. WW. .......... ...-$1685.00 MUST SACilFICI $698 00 FOR ONLY .. • • • • . • T•r1111 A••"•lil• -N•"'com•ri t. Cclifo,,.t• CNdlt Appro••G 1-ecli•t.ly An equal ~pportunity employer Furniture ................ ..,...,..11844 Newplll't Blvd. Costa Mesa (only) Electro- Mechanical • Assemblers Exper•nctd Hly. Computer Auembly. -APPLY Marshall Communicalio.ns 2230 S. Anno St. Soni• Ana, C1llf. 540-2820 EXPERIENCED PART-TIME - T,ELLEllt - UNITED CALIFORNIA hwy """' .,. t -w ........ s.. 'ttl ' JOBS a EMPLOYMENT JOBS a ·EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted 7400 Jobi .Min; Wom. 7500 Women ....;:..=:.;.._ __ _ PERSONNH CllRK Reapo&Wble woman for Front Office polltion h>- volving pa.yroll, typing, flllng tic. Personnel ex· perience prdand. Apply Plraonnol 10-t Moo thru Fri ROBlfSOlt'S FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH Produdion Jypisl. BUSDRIYERS Part time 10 month po&:itbt. Salary range $2.'l! to $3.39 hourly. Closing date for fil- ing June 18, 1968. Newport Mesa Unified School I>istrlct aas&ified Penonnei Ottre l90l Newport Blvd., O.ta Mesa. ~3:224 . MEN &: women to ctreulate popular petition, Muat be regi&t~ voter or Orange Co1Jnty. Good pay. lnquit-t at l9m E. 17th St., Room 212, Santa Ana « phone, 835-'336,,,..,..,,., School•lnolTuctlon 7600 PIANO leaom, young, exp., teacher, new in area. Grad. Sherwood Music S c: b o o l , Member Music Tea.cben Asaoc. Prtv. lessons fOf' tot& thru teens, Sue Denton li7 Magnolia.CMS<S-3191 . ......,,. 27' Trailer at Ca.ntai:nar Mexico. encl · cabana, bu- tane stove 6: frig., 1leeps 8. Trade for Cill', motor- cycle or t 6'n.3572 We a,. an ..t•bllthed eommerdal flnn with' llborol fringe bonolits. Only peopl• with •t lpst six months ex- peri•nce should apply lo Inc. L--"· I I Npt B. 1603 Wes1.clilf 64Ut2Z ..a1ng mport Dea er S.A. 1212 N. B~wa.y, Has opening for quaJitied Laguna Bea.ch at1oroey needa assistant h" bia probate secretary. Must be aeJI. starter, willing to a ccept responsibility I: have ex- cellent typing akilll on IBM Execotiw, SIH 80-00 WPM. No leia1 e x peri e n ce l>eCl!:ISal'Y· wm train. Stm-t $400 per month wi t h MER.IT. Reply Bo:t M-143, Daily Pilot. IANK For interesting office. Shorthand not necesMtY. Speed, accuracy and de- pendability a.re reqi.tired. SCHOOL Qllldren's vacation - rates. Orllcoat 10-Leuon Typing School. ~2859. 173 peJ: Mar, C.M. ~ 24 Apt units w/$%),000 eq. $27 M grosg inc. Trd for home, land or lot. J . Post- ma. Owner. 5f6..a030 :t 434, 536-1879 eve-wknds. Rave 2 BR & conv den, am tam rm, 1,.. BA, qita, ~ 2 trplcs. Best area Al· tadena, eq $12,000. Want heh dpbc/boose, 646-9'136 eves. 000 ac.. Ranch land w/water, S. Calif. $500 per ac. Trade all or part. WANT: Resi- dential or com1 income. Or- an~ County. Rltr. ~28(6 * * * 250 ac. Santa Barbara ~­ ty, Live stream, deer and quail. WANT: Large yacht llUitable for entertaining. Rltr. 615-2'6 WATERFRONT & dock: 3 BR. 3 Saltis. Equity $50,(KX) 'FOR: TD's, Condomin., or ·?,or lease/option. #2 Bal· boa Coves., 615-43.11. MOVING Arcadia lo Npt/ l..agwla area. Will trade up favoring you. Details under INpt R.E. fo r sale (1200). Owner I Agt 6'l5-4392. Bkn invited. * * * PAWIETRICS 929 B.ker StrHt Cost1Mosa 549-2221 -Day Busboys -Dishwashers APPLY IN PERSON M Moo. thMI Frl REUBEN E. lH 547-83.11 Auto Salesmain SALES Detail Man REPRESDITATlVES S.rvic• Writer Leading independe n t Lot M.n specialists dealing in over Dean Lewi1 Imports lOO mutual fun<k. expanding 1966 llarbor. C.M. 646-9303 in Orange County. Thia ill an y Ma opportunity to enter OUftCJ II dignified profesD:inal 1e1lin2: driven licmse for meaengtr full or part time Invertmeot with Daily Pilot dispatch de- exp not neceuary, we train. p&rtment Advancement, 547-6621. Mutual Fund company benefita. etc. See Investors Inc. 2100 N. Main, Mr. Rich at Daily Pilot, 330 Santa Alla West Bay between l :~ & 3 EXPERIEllUD Auto Parts. Man Apply Frro Riha p.m., Monday tlru Fri. REAL ESTATE. Shouldn't lnstructresses Fun time, niee appearance ... """' !igur<. Apply in penon Holiday Hoalth Spa mJ Ha.rtior Blvd. O.'.l8ta Mesa, Calif. 452.S MacArthur Blvd. Newport Bolch 540-4424 Applicaltta conaidered on mt!rlt ~rdlesa of ntt, reJigious <:l"ffd, mlor, na- tional origi!I or ancestry. JR. SECRETARY Young woman with minimum 2 yeva pnenl otftce ex-- perience. T)'Pe Ii!> wpm., tra& scribing experience a n d abortbancl desirable. Pl'.>si- AwJY ANNE HAUSER CNo phone calla pletae) William Pereira & Associates MlcArthvr & Ford Rd. Coron• del Mir WAITRESSES MERCHANDISE FOR SALE AND Tiit.ADE - Furniture 1000 Spanish MMl~err•M•n SHOWROOM SAMPLES 8 rt wood carved armed dJ.. van with· large man's match- ing chair; beautiful Mf!dl- temmean fabrics and col- ors. 5 Pc hexagon Spanish dark oak·top dining set with black or avocado framed chairs; decorativl! vinyl de- sign. 5 Pc Med~terraneM bedroom sd:-9 drawer Mr. & Mrs. dmlser, latge fnun. ed mftTOt, large nfte com- modes, matching pan.el de- SERVICt DIRECTORY ... k ,1C~ DIR•CTORY tnterior Decoratfng 6737 1 TILE, Ceramic 6974 151 E. Pacific Cst Hwy Newport Bt•ch STANSBURY BUICK you be selling the bottestl;-;,=="°"=~~~­area • Huntingtnn Beech t HOSJ!TAUTY H o a t e ~ a Can Phil McN•~ for appt ~ need! wonuan with Village Re.I Eeta.te · gilt of gab able to post bmd, !J62...Mn 5t&-8103 have car, typewriter and l"'===~~~"-',:O:CI enthusiasm for lellb:ig. Work ZJ4 -E. 17th st.. DELIYERYtLllle nigbt Costa conaista cl. •elCOlllini: new C.osta. Mesa Mesa. FWJ .t J>U'f time. 18 & resident& for fine J.ocal tlon involwa cotTeapondenct l:ypifl&, anawertna telephon- es and pneral receptmiat duties. HUNTINGTON SEACLIFF COUNTRY CLUI Call for appointment signed headboard. ' 5895. VALUE Full Prlco NOW $429.95 OR TERMS AS LOW AS $3.(l!) PER WEEK Ono Call C0..'1 All COMPL. DECOllATING • Painting, int. I: ext. • Custom Drapery • 0trtom carpetini e Wall Coverlnga e Color Coordination 20 Yra. Exper. FREE Est. Samples to YOUR Door. Uc. I: Ins. Rea. -O:urun. * Verne, the Tile Man * Oi.at. work. Install &: reipaira. No job too small. Pl.aater patch. Leaking s h o w e r ttfl8ir. 847-1~7/&l&--0206 JOBS & EMPLOYMENT BRANCH REPRESENTATIVE Young person who has aome co.llege training can pro- gress. on his own ability to a nianagement position. \Ye will assist this ptl'IC!n with Job Wantld. Men 7000 our formal training pro- gram, group be~fil! A: an CDl.J..EXJE student, veteran, equitable salary. 28. 8 rrs. p.o. exp. wants PACIFIC FINANCE llllmmer WtJrk. No eelling. 7089 WESTMINSTER 61,_.,., WESTMINSTER =====o---,,,c-~ I over. W!th own car and in-mrrdtanta Md usi.s~ C&...k Typist E XPE7lllllCED "~' trur"MCe. Apply at: 19'10 men:bants tn obtaining new Minimum 1 year general off- Selesman for Adverua1ng H•rbor Bl., CM afler 2 p.m. costomers. ean 544-&m ice experience. Type mini-I===~~-~~~ Specialty. Newspaper ·l,;;;ro;;;;,;;;;-';;;'::C''7'7"-Scl;7"""-"'-'o...:~.;.:.:..;;;::::_= I -v-"-• d· ... -CASH:rER Rettptionist. An Radio e•r helpful MOit "".'ESTERN Men'&. hair styl-LADY Over 25 for Fish 'N mwn..., wpm. ... -.i .,....,.., excellent opportunily i1 YoU unusual growth opparttmity lDg c h a m P \ o n want1 Clip!! restaurant managing HARLDCO D:IVISION have accurate cltrlcal abi~ ~rmanmt I: legitimat~ ~.n modell for future: ability preferred. Muat be ty and poi9e in handling sales job. Bo:t P-l(S, Dally ~mpeUboDs. Call: Mr. Roo able to "WOrk eves, Sat I: H~~~y cuab:mf>r cootact. HS grad Pilot 548-9174 Sun. Apply 10:30 -n am or ~ • • ,. • SmVICE Station Attend. full 2 pm -4 pm, 507 W. 00 Jrvfne lndu.strlaJ Complex PAClliC FINANCE Ht Fi T echnte1an time. Ex:perienCed. Over 21, Cllsta Mesa in the OJSta • 16612 Beach Blvd., HB Fer store in Costa Meu.. ~ '90 E. 17th St. C.M Mesa Plaza Relief R.N. Equal opportunity employer JJ?Munily to advance to ser· PAP.T ',rime-Janikr Early SALESGIRL Wanttd; top e"° 4-l2 P.M. Call 847·~ 53Ul66 (Will aeJI items individ!lll)y) NOOOWN Use Our Store Charge No fancy hont BUT • , QUALITY VALUES INSIDE! APROVED FURNITURE 21S9 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Daily ~9. 10.S Sunday • 5411-9660 • MODERN DECORATORS ••»"11 E X P E R I E N C E D Apt Equal opportunity employer INning 6755 maintenance, painl.ini, & YOUNG MEN 18 to 25 ---=-------='-'"""""=-· -·-"'-·-1£_19 ____ 1 Experienced or not. Learn vtce manager. Must be fa.. morning, good pay fO!' right perimce, iop salary. Better Full ti R N mlliar with solid state equip. person. Apply today at Th' re~-to-wear. I.Jllian'a, 3333 me • • menL Xlnt fringe benefita. Dorymen Restaurant, 2100 Bmtol St., .SO. O:iut Plata, M: 30 A.M. 646-8895 W. °'""' Pmn~ NB. C..la M•"· 549--0369 Apply In peroon WAITRESS Graveyard Sb.Ut cautt abop, experienced Over 2L Apply KONA LANES DESK, Contempo r ary, 59lh x 25lh" Philllpptne ma.IDg., protective glass top, $35. Oia.ir. Barcaloungt beige .. naugahyde. $ 3 5 . Couch, contemporary, go!d, s·, loam cushions, like new, S7S.. 968-1212 MY boole $l hr. Family iron-PART-TL\i:E BtnLDING OR sales wilh a guarantee. If ing, s p e c i a I i i ·j n 1 in GROUND M.AIN~ANCE. you can qualify I can oiler pa,nts.Jsbirts, J dy min. 642-1251 you: -o~-oo-'-~---SERVICE Station Salesman DENTAL SECREI'ARY No Phone calls please No Experience Ex~r tune-up &. blakes, Good typing, aimple book· Huntington hKh Necessary• Oldtr man fine. O\evron keeping. Gr o 0 m ing " Convale.ctnt Hoapital DINETI'E Sri, md tblt, an- tique port. bar., antique coo-- coo dock, lrg oil painted pictures, Fr. Prov end tble11. 1..adiPs clothing: sm-med. Men's; med. 673-54SI. CdM M·-h 1 C 1'.lo . Station, Adam& &. Magnolla, penoo•Uty a must. $-8556 18792 DelawaN! ':'"'~ aTe c ean 11 1 mia HB bennen 10 .l noon Jfuntfngkm Belch 543-3811 l=========l e $1SSper wH kMlary Job Wanffd, Lady 7020 a A new Cadillac :16!19 Harbor, O:>sta Meu Landscapint 6810 e M CAR p ET Cleanln&. F1oot ana9•mtnt driv1nJ:: record. Apply YELLOW CAB CO WAITRESSES. E""' only COUNTER GIRL GA YNOR'!11: LANDSCAPING 6; GARDrnING SERVICE Slate: li~ conttttr. Reildential -Commercial Yard a~p Free Est No job to big. 893.:t'J81 iJaperh1nging P•inting 6150 WALL Coverinta I: in- 11talla tion.s. See samples at home. llodcs -Foil • Vinyl Call 847-l659 before 8 a.m., Schw""'- PAINTING, exterior interior lie. ins. 17 )Ira exp. Fttt est. ~g..5325, Accauslical ceil- ings INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Painting. Fh!e: eslimatie. Lie & Ins. Special next 30 days. Call CHUCK 548-5314 e PAINTING -Interior & Exterior. Flft ealimates. Reasonable r•la· 646-:()15 Plumbing 6890 186 E. lGth SL • -Agencies, Wom•n 7300 need apply. Denny'a Coffee Neat, attractive manied pre-. Costa Mesa W k Shop. 1600 S. Cat Hwy., OfRCE Wftftll ferred for IO AM to 2 PM stripping. Waxing, Walls. Training Windows washed. 531..{667 We furnish everylhing e)(cept Job Want9CI. Lady 7020 RF.cEPI'IONJST, w i l ho u t typing. -Or wish telephone work. M&-4733 HOUSEKEEPER .l Cook ot daywork. Experienced. !J6-<T.l6 MANICURIST Would like wttkend work in busy shop. Call "OORJ.S", at &43-8534 desire to make money, Ap- ply 1500 Adams, Suile 303, Costa Mesa 11-4 p.m, daily. * 45 MEN * or • • : Laguna Bcb. No pbone call£ Vllft shift Good job txcel pay. An1'slanl Manager at YOUR conven1•nc• plse. TEMP<>RARY Immediate openings. Apply H . The "Temporary Division" 8 A 8 yS1 TT ER &: Adcting machine e_,.._;eu today at Th' Dorymen 2100 . ' of the Newport Personal H k H B "~' W. Ocean Front, N.B. {Expet1enct!dl. Excel.lenteo~d· Agency oUers pleasant, tap Fiousen:~r,6 ;,; ,••,•,.r ~. 5 day week m. vanc:enwnt opportunity. ~r-}Ja¥I job& {f kl~ the ve rvUI... .n.u1 o : duding Saturdays. m.6366 MA~EUSE Wanted. Age 2'J DECORATOR'S Weekend SelloQJt, Compk>te House. Decorators furni~ &; an- tique.a.. Sat: I to T, Sun Ir Mon: 10 to 7. 6.f.f..-03ll vice S~tioo or Garate ac-emp:!·er, of~) for the PM. 5 dyii, M7-4984 aft 5. to 32 Will train. Salary Open I 'o"m=1N"G""'roo,_m-,.-,,~. -,--~~;,-e l Needed immffllately for full ceptab e. ApplyJn penon qualified woman who liket ASSISTANI' bookkeeper _ of-BOOKKEEPER . F'ull I: Part-time. Rei I: no Oriental dark rosewood, but· or part time )ob. Oiai.n now LIDO CAR WASH to work just now and I.hen. fice ~ toe medical of. polict rttord. Apply in fet 8 chait'l5 Custom Thai expanding. 5 new locations 481 E. 11th Costa Mesa NEWPORT lice. Mlllt be able to work "1lJ. OiARGE penon 1l2 & 18th St., CM. silk cushions. Orig. $3500 in Orange County. Age un-REAL ESTA TE Personn•I A-ncy weekends. Salary open. Call To auist CPA -Tttaa-ol COMPANlON to elderly lady, Sac. $1500. 6U-&3& dt>r 35. Honest and willing 0., .. Do D -U 8-TTTI subttantial O::irp. N.B. Somt 45 • 60. M ....... _., .. -r·., & 2 M ~1 k N _ _. """ ver r NB ""' '"'"" •00 ., Rn.> e step tables, $15. wor ers. o expt>ri~ce Indepenuent tnendty office .._ ... 2 387·0• ' · nJU..ERE'ITES Earu up to typing • reeeptioni&t duties, car. "Live-in" 2 Dayi week. Oak desk, $20. White dress6' necc!Wl.ry. Salarirs from has opening for a.uoc.i.ate '" • .' 25 lo 40. Sal<>n. -· ~-• ~•2•---------Sal wkly pt lime ovtt 21 ~., -..a ...,..... ...... & nite stand $25. Call aft 4 Job Wi nted $3. 73 HOUR with 110me Jmowl~ in land Girl Friday ,$4$0.$475 Mn.. Uvan1a 54;_2915 or Mt. Mitchell 642·1626 MATURE Woman wanted for p.m. 54S-lG2S Mtn & Women 7030 It lnmme property, T 0 p Fee reimbursed. SmaU aales ~45 • · FACTORY child care 12 to 6 PM. OFT Wh ite quilted geetional -----Call Mr. Howard Si9-9950 Chmmiss'°'1. Dania Realty ofc of natl firm. Stable work EXPERIENCED &£ ""-'-...... .:-....... &nt. •p•RTMENT ~>;;;;-\U.;d;-"i;ci~J~Co~.,;,C~.~M:_,. ~ .. ~,.....':!"~~~ reronl an<! &ood IWin< ""· "· tor GOOD~P-AY TRAINEES ;;:;-;,.:.;,•,aft-,' Ll'. <mtom mode. lool" Hke MMAMN•GER Car Wash Help N -""" • -"=~·"'··,-.~~.=':'~-,,--.,--,-I ""'· °"" """· s.n l500· ~ SERVICE Station Mechanic ew oles and equip. Santa Nil 6'13-968S ' tor Plastic Moldini 25· ..-"'" MB-5104 F II I k d Full time. ~,1e-ed In Ana. ' J·-EXPER., Malun: saleslady, r-apu lo • ·-·oa a-a. Top u I ....... or w en s. ....,...., .... WAITRESS " .,. ....__""' & over oc.. W ...... ............. lull . 1 ;;;-::==~=~-~-I '" ..._,... "' .. _ tun ..... s, hrak-• wb,.J .,... ...... £o<O.-.•enc· ' Oo1\I • .uow, ~w time. a.dies appaul. 8' t'URVDJ SOFA. bei-. refef'(!J)ces. Mrs. M·• r t I n Min age 18, apPly in person -~... ... ........ ·--z ....___ 11 Me" K' • Ml •• al.ignml!!'lt. Top ---& J. R. Plerc:t Assoc. -''"'ncy '"'• grave,. ...... ..-... "'=" r. · ~ • Lady Shop, ZI4 S. perf oond $S0 Call aft 6 5~ or write 147 N. LIDO CAR \I/ASH --~0 e-Zi ~ ~ RN 11 7 Full Li •11 "·-·t H La n. h commiasion for -·-'"ied 1885 N...aT'tV>rt, C.M. 642-6720 rnmS" v•......,,,.., -me, ;;r-pa.rt ...,..,. wy, guna PC8C 549-3928 Pritchard Apt D, Fullerton. 481 E. 17th Costa Mesa ,.._.., _ .. ..., u LVN •11 fWI ~~~-~-~-~I man. ApPly Laguna Chevron DAY Catt. Oilldren 10 • ll M!. ;;r-llrne, Maid for motel work. NEW' Shop-New t{otpoint EXPERIENCED Manage-~~\,rJCE ....__821•tion1 · •1x~, BM S. cat Hwy, Laguna lkh. See Bett;y Bruce at Retired ~ OK. E/Side and ~~ tf~, ftSalariea !;48.,9755 washer~ price. Furn. And· ment of apt11. lfave rtferenc-_18 me .. uau ca pre e''""· AUTO SALES CM. 6U-SJ13.att ~pm opert. r1rnge """" ta. Park 5.13 C es. Prerer Laguna Beach Over 21. Prrma.nenL Hun! Oleap U5Cd cars. dirt)' hands, m f' MAKE PM-meet. Pet t!me !'1~ .... eo 0 nvalescent Center. Jcibl Min. Wom, 7500 ~· '"'""St. C.M. area. WUI be avlilab~ Aic Tuaoo, 140t N. Coast Hwy., ' i:J~ L X€C ~ .,... ...... Offi E I 1 1 ·-·R ... &a h "" ~"""' rood hours. Commission wk. Hrs optional .• lfrl. WAITRES.Y:S " Dlshwuh-ce qu pment 801 LEAKS? Gaa or watcr ~ 1111· 540-9936 ..._..,_ C'. • ";;l't'-"'"""" with guer. Gt'O\ll) Ins. J.&ency for C:arHr Girls Bailfoy ~1932_963-3'1M B.ABYSITI'ER 5 dqa per all hifta. Expe only tronically knttd unde" cc,o.. AGE 18-26, mechanical ap-Steady. No hot ahots. ClO W. Cout H")'., N.B. EXPERIENCED Preldloo\ wk. 6:00 to 3:30. Live fn or en,. 8 , r GES'I'ETNER Mimeograph menl, blacktop, lf'OUnd, Oomfftlc H1lp 703S tlt\Jde hitlptul but not 63S-l'440 By appoint. 646-3939 teleber pa T t-l i m •. in out. J child~n. MJ honM.. need •P'Pb'. Dt!nny 1 Cott~ No. m. Xlnl cond. $150 or walls, lhowe:n, ""' pl•ce. n~. 1 ·-·--....... _.. Reliable ufs, pref. 646-2609 Sb:Jp, IMIG S. Cst Hwy., best dfer. 8:JB..8669, 633-00ZI -., LIVE INS -..._ ..,,. _ _., Pl b. 1 DftIVER be5t AM.._........ .... , _ -.--· u1;;r-.....,l -Laguna Bch. No --..e caJls Repairt!'d. Water lintS clelln· • •n:-~ 1 um ing nc. "~ ~.._....-.. * FLORIST be 1"""" ed, p~asure restored. Employer P•Yh leea. 1526 -Newport Blvd. rOQte. ~ pan. tftTWJ job He lp W1ntM SAI.m;IRI.S. Between · P · Gar ... Sale CALL "LEAKS'" 6f2-034S George Byland Agency Costa Mt'h 642-1?5J for .-nbitioua tlteady adult. Women 7400 25--45: exper. mtr. Apn)pM: • Exper -Clppomrni.17 EXCEU.ENT Opportunit,y BankAmertc:ard OK 108• 8 E. l6di, S.A. 547-(139$ 2 Serv\ct Station ·attendnnl1 Corona tV-1 Mar • Irvine 6bup. 338.Q62 For app't. Call Mr. FeU.x 642-4103 tar skilled hair •fYlW. Mer-rtJRN .. toya, clo~s. baby wttfl exper., full or part IU'ffl. 962""'6J3 *' WAITRESSES. Ex Per_. Part Ttmt <X>QK. APPb' in P/f $2 hr i1Jat. CUstom6 rell Hair Deli;n. 2912 E. tum., Klauware. etc:. t0.5 * PLUMBlNG ; H•ln Want9d."Men 1200 tirne. Ray CAl"t'y Chevron, JANITORIAL St:rvice man F'Ull or. part tfrM. ~ K11rm pulOn: MESA LANF.S. 1700 service for est.ab Co. Mn. Cbut ff I I h w I\ 1, C.d.M. 19'>Swan Dr. OT 546-J364 ft(pajtfng .\ Remodeling 604 So. O.St H""''. LB"''"• .....,.,._ bel-r· -.o:n · d•oo· at K~ 'Co«ee Sbop. 3(60 $. Superior, CM Brown 540.1932, H.B. 9'15--JTlT GLIDER swing. bamboo set· Electtlc Sewer Oeaolng SERVICE Sta Attendant. ........ ~., o::--'"'~ ...,.. • .... • -.r • CM.st H11.'Y CdM All work JU&rtn. &U«>83 aver 21. l.IPt mech e:nier. °'""' 25-30 hrs. week, $l I-lour. ·· ' "NANNY" Mat'lh: s 1 t t er Operators -~ HAIR StyliJt, wtth lcUowlnt teoe, dothtng. Lots mbc. 281. Unkxi Station, m Superior, FRY COOK -Kitchen Helper &iqlflr. prd. ~W Aft 4 SE~ARY, &xp., 20 to :II, needed i.mJDed, DO' bomt. 5 Macti, Exp, Good pay. 1580 b' new Newport Bel:dr I =Sln=t•~IM~be!~~~~~ • PWMBINC NB • U.-5 f>.M· 6 di.YI Apply WANTED Bny l9 to 21, for aircraft ex 11 e u t Iv e , days Wk, g..2795 Monrovia, NB 64).JiBS ..ice. often a tree a.n,poo n.TRN, 8abll dthei & equip, REPAlRS 6f2..ll.28 REMODEL P/TlME Maintenance Man. HAMBURGER llrnR.Y ainsie, tor deck bm:L Send Oi-a~e ~rport. G&R MATURE MAIDS NEf.J>ED WANTED Expu. babywitter pi, pal4 vaeadcn A other wcuu:m. mite. 9213 LaGraJJ- f =========I ~n'I clean-up, Ute C'f'Plir n36 ~ntia, Costa Mtsa aU PArtlculan c/o Daily anytime . or 67M3lS own tl'aftll:pWtldon own tramp., my borne cla.¥t ~nenta. ~1955 dt Or., F.V. 962-9806 Sowl -6960 ,... 5111-1158 PART"' lull time gan!ener P!IO( Box 1'142 HAIR·SJ YLIST SJ~ hr' c.u S.1446 67J.5187 alt. 5 PM TEACHElltS 1700 T...,..p!o \Vay, NB. Ser.. I"'·=~"'-----.;..;..;.; SALES: Spmd a dime. hem-a.M b.Mdy-man. YOONG Mao with aoocf CArlLes CoiUures 673-4186 EXPEJtl6NCEO Ratel for BA.BYSl'JTER 5 dQa, wk, 2 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT m.a.rbl~ thl, baby ~. Altt ratlon.......,..2-.5145 about the bell dell ln town. Apply in perwi tor MUnmer trod: 9lJ'i1 3305 Newport Blv., N'pl Bch. mo«91) maid&; full time. atrt& s " t. w. aYt o.ta J'bone Mts. -Hol:*itk 111.lnttnp. Mille, All ftll.I· Neat. ao:urate. 20 yrs. vcp. _54!). __ 9862________ __J_A_MA.tCA ___ INN __ HOTEL ______ .... __ ina"'-· -"'"-'_ru __ -__ CHA.JtG£ your W1ll'lt ad now. ean tw app't., S73-9410 Mesa. m-c.m m.a:rr or 1!5-DH at\RGE' rn 8022 \ ,, I : ' -••• . -' .. . , _ • s i ! ' i • NABERS CADILLAc~s NO. I SALESMAN! Elegance in .action. ~p 1968' . 1968 CADILLACS N_OW ON DISPLAY Ava ilabl• for Demonstration ind Denvery ,~.....,_..,...,._ . , . . .. ,,.,.,,.,.,..,..,, . . OVER 60 QUALITY CADILLACS TO SELECT FROM '64 CADILLAC Sedan De Ville. Outsb.ndlng Sedan DeVlll e furnished in spe.rklln1 alpine white, plush matchlnc, nylon and leather Interior, full pow- er naturally including door lockll, facto!')' air condllionin£", Very carefully driven and shows meticulous ca.re inaldr ana out. $1895 · '63 CHEVROLET Chevy Il Hardtop coupe. Equipped with aut..,_ maUc trarumW1on, radio and heater. white side wall tires. This nice little Chevy Il hu the shining white exterior with original fac- tory Interior. This will make aome family an excelleni second car for school or shopping. Drive it home this wttke.nd. $595 '64 CADILLAC Coupe DeVllJe sporting a 11lver exterior with the black vinyl roof. This showpiece ls ~uip­ ped naturally with factory air conditioning and hu all the luxury power features includ· in1: power vents • steerlni: • brakes-. windows and the AM·FM radio. Drive this one home now! $1895 '66 OLDSMOBILE •The popular Toronad~Majestic gold extrrlor with bla<'k leatber interior. Automatic, radio, heater, power stt-P.ring, brakf's, windows and all luxury featurf'!l. A truly outstanding auto- mobile for this special weekend price of . , • $2795 '65 THUNDERBIRD The popular Landau Beautiful light coral with white root. Ru factory air conditioning, all power including window~. steering, brakes. sea ta. vent windoWL Tb.is ...is an oubt.andlni: low mileag~ car at a very low price. · . $1995 OTHER SPECIAl VAWES '6 7 2 DOOR COUPE DE VILLE e '64 4 DOOR<S~DAN DE VILLE e '67 4 DOOR SEDAN DE VILlE e '62 CHRYSLER 300 CPE e '65 FORD LTD H .T. COUPE e '63 OLDS F-85 4 DR. SEQ e '66 FORD FAIRLANE S.W. e '66 4 DOOR SEDAN DE VILLE e '61 CADILLAC H.T. COUPE e '66 MUSTANG H.T. COUPE e '65 THUNDERBIRD COUPE e '64 2 DOOR COUPE DE VILLE e . 65 OLDS 98 H.T. SEDAN e '65 CHEV. IMPALA H. T. CPE e '67 FORD 10 PASS. WAGON·• '64 FORD-{ONVERTIBLE e '63 CADILLAC SP.Clan DeVille. A a:limmering arctic whitr l'X· U>rior with 1eather and nylon intl'!rior. F11.ctory air conditioning, full IXl"'er including 6 way seat And a hOlt of otl"ler deluxP extras. Shows rxcell~t ~ by its prevloUll ownec. You shouldn't mi1S thu cne. $1395 '66 CADILLAC The ever popular Coupe: DeV\lle finished In Majestic royaJ blue fintSh with lavish m11.tch- ing leather and nylon Interior. All po_wer equipment of course and factory air condition- ing. This outstanding low mileage Cll.dillac has all of the Famous cad.iliac luxury features for your motoring pleasun-. $3595 -'61 CADILLAC Sedan DeVlll!'. Th!' populaT 4 windo"' model. Original metallic silver pine green. "1th hc_tr- monizing interior. All power equ1pmenl 1n• eluding 6 way seat. power vent windows. el!'C"- tronic eye, power door locks and of course factory air conditioning "for your driving plea- sure. $695 '64 CHEVROLET The ever popular Impala SuJ)t'r Sport. AzlN' bronze PXterlor with l:lf'ige top. V8 engine, 11.utom!l.tiC' transmission. powPr ~1rerinit. pow('r hrakr~. white sidP. wa.ll tir<'~. F'aC'tnry 11.ir l'On· ditionin~ to cool th"e inside on those warin drives. $1395 '65 MUSTANG Hardtop criupP. Fini.o;hed in a bright me~llic blue color with matching bucket seat interior. Special wheels with widf' oval tire~. F'or your pleasure It ha., the Muntz stereo pack. Radin 11.nd heater, tinfed ~lass and dual exhaust!l, This sporty and young car ~ without a doubt one of the best buvs you will make. $1395 SALIS DEPAltTMINT OPIN 1:30 A.M. te t P.M. Men. thnt ,rl. -t A.M. te I P.M. lat. & Sun . NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100 VOLKSWAGEN lmportocl Autoa 9600 --------VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN Autos Want..t 9700 . . . TRIUMPH -----· -. ---- WE PAY ..• CASH ror WI~ CUI • trucks juat call us for free estimate. GROTH CHEVROIIT Ask tor Sales Manaa:er 18211 Beach Bl., Huntington Beach KI o.3.131 Will Buy Und C1rs SEE JOHN COLDIRON For Tod1y'1 SpeC:i1ls $499 .63 Olds Coupe H.T. '61 T Bird, 11lr 'fi2 Ford Wll.i:On, Country Sr.dan $399 '6.1 DatSUll 4 dr '63 Rambler 4 door '61 Olds F'85 $299 ·so Mcrc\lry Park Lane 4 di' ·59 F'ord Wa~n '60 Falcon 4 door $199 ·so Mercury Waa:on 'fll Rambler 4 door '60 Rambltt Wagon '58 Mercut)' Waa;oo I~ • '63 BUKK Skylark coupe. V8. automatir cransmiuion, power steering power brakes. power win- dows, power seat. $1295 '65 RIVIERA Full powt:r equipment plus lat1ory air conditioring. Till steering wheel. $2795 STANSBURY BUICK 2100 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 646-9022 '66 RIVIERA Full power and factory air corditlonlng. Tilt steerina: whttl, strato bench seat. $3495 STANSBURY BUICK 2100 HARBOR· BLVD. COSTA MESA 646-9022 BUICK '65 BUKK Electra 225 coupe. Full pow- er equipment and lactOC1' air conditioning. Local one own- er car. Like new. $2495 STANSBURY BUICK 2100 HARBOR BLVD. COST A MESA 646-9022 '65 BUICK Sport wagon. VS engine. 11uto- matir transmis~ion. pov.·er st~ring, tilt steering 1vheel . $2395 STANSBURY BUICK 21 00 HARBOR BLVD. CO~TA MESA 646-9022 '66 BUKK Electr8. 2'2fi ha.n:ltop. Full power equjpment ,plus fac- tory 11.ir conditioning. Gold In color. S400 under Blue Book $2895 STANSBURY BUICK 2100 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 646-9022 NOW'S THE TIME FOfl QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD STATION WAGONS l ••• ·BOB LONGPRf . ,: PONTIAC .. ,7,.....C...... Station. Wagon ''~'· ,_ ........ ..-r·tir•k.., -........ llCIOry .11r, fldwy _,.,..,., tW rid:. $3788 Station Wagons· ,I <'\.. ._.. .,. Fate.. Station Wagon ''''"n .. r. lt•dla, h9er.r. \'I. 1111e1m1t1e 1T1nlml11llln, --.... ,..._ ro.r r.cL ., $1488 Station Wagons '6J Chevy II Nol'• 400 Station Wagon Station Wagons < ''\... '17 Poetlec llllatf.,. Station Wagon 6 ••tMn .. r. ltMla, ...... ,, - ................... ,.,.,,. all', "" '""""' ........ -· -fl. l'llOI rac-. 1tvmln• ...... & brlok• *'ll!M. w... ~d 1ldn. ' $39U Station 'Wagons ' 2 ' \. ''J Merury Station Wagon t N IHl!tlf", It ........... , YI,, -·'"'"'"' ....... ....... IM'I 4-Ph' 11t!MI _. ,,...,,. $1188 Station Wagons ...... Station Wagon TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION Uwod Co" 911GO U_, C1" t90iG IUICKi CHIVIOtlT ·' P/G, R/H, etc. Attractive ori&;. honduru .maroon w/ plustr saddle bud!:d 1e11t In .... hdtp. F•ct-'"· mony <"· CORVAIR tras. Lo Mi. Orig. owner·\--_;;~;c.:.:c:..::.:.:. __ 11 613-9'121 .Ev• '64 CORY AIR '64. CHEVY lrnpala 2 dr' ps. '64 Corvair Monza Corlv. 811" cond., .A:l cond., one Sparkling ldlver metalk: owner, pnvat.e p a r t 'I · bl _ ... ,._ ....,. ---548-583S ue, "'"'""' ....,.., auto .... -. =~-~-~~~~1 R & H. Fresh, pert I pretty. '66 EL Ctmino, loaded A: Spedal this week~ Ollb' clean. By O'rlgiila.1 Owner. ~ plus T I L or pymntJ: ____ .... _""'---=I 81 low I S '57 a..,..., station wagon. VS. $37 Dn p1ymt & auto, aood shape, needs $37 per mo. O.A.C. paint. ~ 54&-S'm aft 5 Includes Tu, Uc. A: lnterHI ... BISCl.YNE. ..... ••• ELMORE 32.000 ml, Must sell. IMMAC 1109>~ 11 -~=~=~->-c~~1 15.Ul Beach Blvd., Watmnstr '58 CHF..1', :J!19: panel. Ma& Phone llM-3322 wheeh, ltirieo •ta Pe; aood '62 Corvair Spyder ccinvm. 4 tif't'll. $400. 536-9167 Spd. tran1., t1rbcJ..chw&er, HAVE '56 ~Bel AJr. RJH, ~te to11Deau Exeel tninsportitkln. S220. cover, new brake., w/w Call alttt 6:.Jl, 675-0052 tires. 847-8936 V1rl1nf -SH. ll.t-. ....... 11 ~,.;;:;;,;;.;..,~.;.~==l--=~"'""=~-'--Low, MW 11111N1t •• , I BARGAIN. '66 Olevelle '00 CORVAIR _ $1411 MallbQ 2 dr. Xl.111 cond. GOOD COllDmc»f ltT$. AIM • .,. ..... Milw $1500. Mulll aee. 499-3007 * &4114319 * '65 ~ Malibu Sta Wag, 1961 ,...... Blue. Xlot cond. ~ lhltlotl w ... ,.. 644-l548 !--..::..~.:.:..:.:;.:..: __ --------"--.,-,-CllEVllOLET-===--'·as .<X>RVETTE .. '°" ml., An U ... Clf'I Ari OW111ty C1111T't1 ... , Afllll Sl~ty Tft,...I "LH• hf n. lflchf'" BOB LONGPRf PONTIAC 13600. I leadl llwl. WESTMINSTIR PHONI "2-6655 GOCX> a»mmoN bfir. "w!Ua kiter .. • Spd., $1.50 * 56-8&16 42'1; x!nt cond. s 3 2 0 0 ' -~'=~·..,-----! 675-1618 '63 IMP ''"' -OW'l'lft'I .1=,-,""'==~=~~ --. -''63 CORVE'J"lf Convt, beaut a*!., tlll', PSfPB, AM/FM, ShArp cond, Must 11J,50.. ..... ajt $. . Rh. Jltn) 613-26159 -S OIEV A81S. $115h ot M ~ ....,, ,..o.. "" CONTINENTAL an... FM' ' I -----..i..-------·-I New C1rs HOONow Cira I t ~-< ,, Anm~sa,.Jr ~ie ' -Johnson & Son UNCOLN·MllCUIY.COU•AI DIAUI LARGE SELECTION OF ••• LllXllftY CARS with clauic tradition in fmpeccable t1sh1 exacting craftsma.nship and the ultimate in, prestige 7 .,, c..t. 4 DI', w ... .......,., ..... .,... .... ..tda.1 ....._, ... WMI ........ •114 , ... fff ..... ..tta 5'000 .... ,. ..... ,. ~d ... ..... 1ce4 Illy 11a. PllCID TO llLLt .,, CMt. c,.. ....., w-t. ...... •ltll •xtros ....... I .. lllr co& mM ...,_., 11,0fCI Mlle •••••ty. PllCID TO SILL 'M c.t. Ceasar .... ....._"' c.W -A tfW cleuk wfftl oll lnary Ql'tf• .. c.httll .. •It. ~':.~~ ~~:".. ~~-.·.~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2395 ... --......... ,. $2595 a,....., wM anrm, .... ,...w & ......... lffM GNeellli lo"' .... ,.,,.. ••.............. ·::.:.;,:-.................. $2095 . ... ''"' '"'~ $2195 T11rq11ai..t. f11 ll ,._, wlrll air. ~ ................... . Anniversary Sale- • •• FREE ••• Luggage Rack with tbe purcbue ot any New or Used Otr during our anniversary aale. Beau tlful Chrome Luggage Rack, Ideal for vacation or permanent use. ean be installed permanently or clamped on when needed. Ftta sedans or coupes and atatioa warona. (A $45.00 value). 1' ACATION TllllE. • • • HOW ABOUT A WAGON? ~lo::Z. Uko _... lmlitY...ow. $3795 .6,... Air co11dltla1d11t, M po..;. ...... c....,., ...... ......,.1 ....... l•b ..... ~ 1 .,.... ur _...factory •ir. w..I ~ car ••tr . · ..... ,. ...... c......, ........ ,,.. s~ .. •11to. ,,___ ....... 11..,. .... ,~ •........• $1595 $995 ~ COME SEE THESE NEAR NEW PASSENGER CARS ~'ti!"~ ..... --$2195 l.p.t .lfffs & cemol•~ Joctory olr. fltO.ect.aJ ..... Locel ... • . ... • • ... . ~'.1.t M::.'~•nv. s.ss. l"'f edN. ,,_ $3295 offr 14,000 mlJft. 50,000 Mlle Werrc11•fY· ''J M«c9"f' $2895 J Dr. HDTP. M•"'•*'· n.,I '°" 9'r -I0,000 .......... ,,. Sol4 .. •r • ........................... . ~':,~::;'Montclolr. IMIMesolr, $2595 I0,000 Mlle Warranty •••••••• , •• , , , ~ntoM .......... .-$1795 lwcl114'111 olr. Local car •••• , ••••••••• ... -.,~ $2495 Dtittw 4 Dr. wltti air. A f'MI "I• llt •• IAoking for an Anoerie•n Sport• Car for Grad ... tlon7 SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION '" . ., .,,,.~ .. ~ $2795 *1•4'11 ll7. AA ceNnr. ell Id .. of utNI. AU low"111llH,_ c-.. AA 50,000 MIM W~ils ........ , ., ••. ~~:i:':.11l11to., pr. str. ft. 10.000 $2395 Mlle. Like MW,••••••••••••••••••• :..~11l1ht llu. Air c0Mltlo11. $2695 A.t.. '1"0111. Pr. itffrl"to ,, . w ... ws. o....M -4 ..... .., 'fMllt w!Mw wko ...., W o ticket. Low_,... ••••••• , ~~w. 4 .,_t, ~ht c-t $1195 ..... TW.b o dn,...11t •.•.•••.... , . Antaiversary Sale I Ol'fN SUNDAY I John·son and Son UNCOUl·MERClllY .COUGAR-DUID _lilQ.JOO W. Coast Hwy._ Newport Beach . 548-ns1 642-0981 ....._ 1961 Ylll1lll '2065 .... , •• , tro4e 111 .11....... ' 011ty Ml.2t ,_ _,.... hr -J6 _., .... 1 /J daWll tn •IHI r--.. hldoHtl. Na. 196 2282 '65 Plymouth P'vry ...... V&. "'-"ltlc,. r• ~11, ,,..Mt', _.. """""" H"' 51395 '66 Mercury ca ..... w ~ ,.....,. ,_..., "9Wlt' __..., Allt '(:ONOITtONIN•. Hin 52222 '64 Barr'c'da ;,\lltlml"c "''"'mlMlllt, rfflt .......... tHnt '6& Riviera Y& -'lco ~ .... i.r. ,._. 111o1r1 .. a .,..., All COMDITIOM ..... ""1t 52999 ' ;64 Chevrolet llllfltfa ..,.,,.., """""""" , .. ~i..-....... .--....... Hl1, MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE '65 Imperial ' c-. t Dr. NoT«VI, dMlll.._ .......................... _., ~M:TOltl' Mii. '°" MIC. _....,.,. "°' 52666 All ...................... ..... • '63 Dodge 441 .......... """"' ....... -1'-'ln1. HJ• ~077 " ' '64 Ptymo11th ...,.__...._..,,_ .. . ........... ""' 51222 '66 Ford ............ ~,..., --- 2471: .. '13 Plymoutrt .,,. ..................... -,.... ....... ,.... =:t~ ~ACTOltY Arlt «*OITION ~ f'UI ~ $795 ' ~ .. ·~ " ·'&5 Dodge ' ~ .................... ---.-~ _ ... _ 5148, i Servi--"1rh c ... and Body Shop :i': :~ Opon .... 7:JO.t-.J0p.m.MM. ~ 7:30.5:30 ,..... :: T-llwu l'rl. _........_ ,. ............ "" ......... " ,, .. . ' . ..... ,t • • • ~ ' • r .._ .. • • ,. " t l",1 (1 11 .... I ! . ' ••• ' ... . " • • I• OA!lV l'llOT '""'' J'" 7, 1%8 MOO New C1r1 ''°° TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION u.;;· ca.. 9900 I Uaod ca... 9900 Uaod Can 9900 • I I I I I •. I I ORANGE CO'S. NEWEST MIKE McCARTHY BUICK, INC . • 0 OPE WITH SPECIAL GET TO KNOW YOU PRICES 1968 KADETTE 2 DOOR MOOa 31 . '68 CALIFORNIA "GS" with normal down including tax &. lie. for 36 months \lllTM llORM.'-L DOWll tt.ICll)D~ TJt,X & LI(:, l'"Oll 16 MC>f<ITHS DOUBLE CHECKED USED CARS I I 'I '64 COMET I CALIEN11 IMPALA '64 BUICK I I '66 CHEV. '66 OLDS '64 PONT. BON Hf VILLI 442 ~ -ho"'*kl9. 11-1 1..-11: I ~ dooM' 11-1. Mo. tr-.. Nd'° ,,__, _.. .ti«\ng, RI.I'!., .,,., ,.....,., -· RM! ..a WN : ·-,, 295 '1995 I '65 Mustang '65 PONT. 1 *· ~. ,K,.,, ..,, -..-~.R•I~ . '2295 '68 Cougar XR7 G.T.O. H1...n.. CM. '"=: W . -IM' -• ltlK IW" •· v1,,.,1 tao. 1.to11 If\"' 1i:, Kt\NI lftllu. NW« bNll I -.I, '3795 '67 LINCOLN '66 MERC. CONTIENTAL COlONY PARK 51.i=.-m· ,~ •ir :if." =-'-· I !tie PonT 11e '1895 '64 PONT. G.T.0. I !Ir. M,T. •~ceotlafla! -wfl'll ~~! :=-....,~ .f.r'"~i.d: '1795 '67 Mustang · 2 DOOR HARDTOP LE SABRE ~ •· i'l«d!OP "9clonr .-ir. I Golll Wilt\ IM!dll111 !nt.rlDr . '1795 I I '66 CHEV. I ··1 l 1 '66 OLDS I 98 CONVERTIBU Fl>ll _,,, ....,. llci'orv .ir, Gold I v •, -· Ir..,.. ,._,~ """ wl!I! wnli. to. ....:! .....,.IDr, -· \l.,Y -..,;'""_ lit• __ I '2195 '2495 I The most modem and complete sales service center in California and W. wtJI Ii. -11"9 llnl<dfft laltl 1"-1 s.rvlu IHitMfMM!t lottli>I< .. 1111 I -~· Gltlftroo boot<o ....... '"°" -Ill> t -91 ''"'' -. IW luld; WI-I ---~I "-Diell-W .,id "91!¥'" .,...loo Wt wll lllMI bt -.,.. ~ """'°' ...... t Ir ""-"' °""vfftlitnet, Our S..vlft ~! ...... IW.,.. I fll ll o!tff ljl t. l u!d! midi.met. flC.,,.. .. IMi ... ..... 1 1 I • 11 1 1 1 1 ' I I • SflYlct Dll'T .• OPIN TUIS. THIU Ill. • A.M. TI> 5 ~.M. -MON. I A.M. TO • ~.M. I _~MIKE McCARTHY BUICK, Inc.: · I 714-894-3341 • 15550 Beach Blvd. (Hwy. 39) • 213-672-6931 I 1 ILOCI NOITH Of THI IAN OftGO FllEIWAT . '.I s.les o.pt. O,..Mo!I. !In Fri. 91.m. le !Op.in, Sot. & S.... 'h1 6 p.m. \"'JESTMINSTER: ~65-............. 21.:~JI •• .,." • I ' ' . -------- UMd c.,. 9900 CONTINENTAL * Red Gala1rle * FORD FORD ------MARK Ill Private party baa available for 16.le • new 1969 MARK III. Pboo~ 644-0.148 before noon or after 4 pm. U no An1wer. try again. COUGAR '68 BRANO New. Cougar lease for $89.00 per mo. Johnson & Sm. 642-0981 FORD BEAUTIFUL t967 FORD V-3 liOTOP .. 500" SPORT. CPE. W/1uto. tl'alll., pwr.;g:eer,, R/H, etc., etc. SparklU:1g all fiesta red -l ln 10,<m! Op- l>OrlunllY for huge u.vina from new with this most deairabl.e low mileaae mo- del! Only $2489! 111 cu lot on Hai•' Jr r.1• -1 JOHNSON & SON '64 FORD Station wagon. VB Hlginr. Real extra s~ial this wrek· ""'· $995 '6.1 FORD Galaxie 500 VI, 2 dr., hardtop. Power ateer- 1ng , aut1>-, Radio, beater. Very good condition. Leav· inl:" (or Vietnam $200 &: take ovr-r payments ol $42.82. 646--0411 eve• a!ttr 5 pm « all day Sal & Sun. JEEP '65 Int Scout. Must .eU im, f whl drv, R&H, $~ or off, 531 catalina, Laa: B,d,, 675.5624 MERCURY 50 TOO MANY BRAND NEW 1968's! YirtaaHy every model and color manfacturtd to choose Ire&. EYlrJ car drastically rtduced frDM wi1dow slicker lll'ict 11 reduce ear stocl ii th shortest 110HiW. lime! SAMPLE SELL-OFF SAVINGS! 1968 OLDS "98" .C door Tow" Seda,,. Air cood., .tufomatic transmis- s~. power brakes, power steering, deluxe radio witn re.tf seat speak.,,.-, hea-ler, white sidewall ti res. t-inted olass. etc. Stock No. «2. Speciatty price tf 1968 CUTLASS .. Sport Coupe. Deluxe radio, power steering.. tint. °"'9s and windshield, fully sync. stand. trans., deluxe seat • belts front & rear, deluxe interior tqttip., Mt. s,m: •23. FW. l'ltl(( 48 MONTHS BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE WHILE THEY LAST! 48 MORE AT SIMllAR DISCOUNTS! USED CAR SPECIALS 1 1966 CADILLAC SC'dan DeV!llc, full pnwer, tilt &: tele., facto1·y air, vmyl top, leather interior, lo mi. 2 YEAR WARRANTY •4199 196S IUICK SPORT WAGON 9 Pll5ll. Automatic, power f:teering, radio, healPr. 2 YEAR WARRANTY •2399 1966 TORONADO Deluxe, full power, tilt·tele., AM/FM radio, fa ctory air. 2 YEAR WARRANTY •3499 1966 OLDSMOBILE "9i'; i door hardto1l. Full power, factory air condition. l YEAR WARRANTY •2799 1967 MUSTANG COUPE Automatic, radio, heater, power ateering, factory air. l YEAlt WARRANTY •2499 1967 CUSTOM DELTA COUl'f Aulnmatlc, radln, heater, power gteerin11:. bucket Aeats. vinyl roof, factory air. 2 YEAR WAltRANTY •3399 1966 RIVIERA Sport.s coupe. Full power equipment and iactocy air conditioning. 2 YEAR WARRANTY ~3499 1965 IMPALA COUPE Automatic, power steerini, radio and heater. 2 YEAR WARRANTY •1699 1966 VISTA CRUISER 9 passenger wagon. Automatic, power 1leerifiz, R&:H, factory air conditioning. l YEAR WARRANTY •3199 1967 PONTIAC GTO 2 Door H.T. 4 speed, '8ctory stereo tapt. · 15,000 mile car. NEW CAR WARRANTY •2999 1966 OLDSMOllLE cunESs CUSTOM SUPREME, Radio, heater, automatie. power steering. 2 VIAR WARRANTY •2399 1965 'OLDSMOllLE LUXURY SEDAN Full power, vinyl top, fActory air. 2 YI.A lt WARRANTY '2499 2851 IARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA llW CARS 546-5550 --'IS l -· - - ·-- . - -.. / < IS THIS AY TO RUN 'AN AUTO AGENCY ••• ' ~ YOIJ BET IT IS • ' IN JUST 3 SHORT MONTHS • 3rd MONTH ANNIVERSARY SALE ORANGE COUNTY"S ( FABULOUS DISCOUNTS LARGEST ON ANY NEW PONTIAC IN STOCK PONTIAC DEALER ••• THANKS AGAIN ••• ORANGE COUNTY!I!==::===~==::::::=~======= ··195~::" 1---_ ........... , _ _....._. :,....,AUfY CONTROl'ED-SAIEIY iiSIED ..... . ONLY AT . """""' Doh Longpre Pa.,.n • \ 3600 ..... lll¥d. Wwl•I ur, c.llf. Cllt ____ a ....... l'ola:ll. Cuail1• ir C ... .. ,._ .. Spal• ... Tlrw Toah & Jallk .. .._ing111s a 'l•lllsll• " 1>11Qdlonal 51tnwl1 lill. todio ~ All ColldllhllklSI --__.;~-- } . '1C'. ii'.. , a a a ~ a a 0 "' • a a a · .. tJ'. a a 11( -. '66 MUSTANG W.O ••::wlllo M ,..__ .....,.. .......... . '66 PONTIAC '66 PONTIAC 1988 '63 CHEVY II ITATIOll wi.eott '63 MERCURY --,, .... .,. ......... -- v.._ __...,....,, radle, ..... 8-f' ......... beltW' ... ----;;....._-- QUALITY CONTROLLED SAFETY TESTED USED CARS '63 . PONnAc Y'IHTUIU. '65 FALCON '66 FAIRLANE ----.. XI. --·v ... Mornotlc. ,. ... , .. _,.,., tiiucktt MGta. I bf'crnd -o.vtClfl -·~· 11ok -· oo ~ M hop• u...I C:-II JM' •If ldt:Ce tlNi C9' .. Meli ......... chd:MI to ...t _. .... r1111.,.•llfll stm.i• .. Al_.,•• , .......... ~ ,. ....... ,,.. ....... , - llRVICI ·, ' ' ' -. '64 GTO · COUf'• s-; ·-·v.a. ~c. radio. Mat· •. _ . ._. ... -- br9ke$. FACTOllY Al It CONDITIONING. OWIWd 11¥ • ldlll9 ~r '65 TEMPEST 4 DOOll • atll,..., autem8'11c. '65 FORD CUSTOM M 51188 '66 BUICK '2188 '67 FIREBIRD 52888 ... . . -------------~ ----------------. ___________________ _:__ __ • • r ' ~ .,,._ ... ,•:J:' • . 3Q DAILY PILOT • t rrtd1J, Junt 7, 1968 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATI ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTAT ION 99CMIUtodC1,. 9900 Utod C1,. t900 UMcl C•rt 9900 1JMd Can 990U Used C•n 990(. CONNELL CHEVROLET USED CARS '66 FORD GALAXIE 4 door hardtop, V8, 11utom1Lti¢, air cond., electric windows, ra4io, heater, liilver blue with blue Interior. 51995 '62 CHEVROLEJ Pickup I.fuck. 6 cylinder, stick shift, 8' Fltttside bod.y, clean. '65 CHEVROLET Malibu super sport convertible. Y8, automatic, powf'r steering, radio, heater, tahltian turq, with white vinyl bucket seats. '66 MUSTANG ·Hardtop coupe. VB, 1tutomatic, powf'r steering, radio, heater, white with rtd interior. '67 MUSTANG GT 2 plus 2 fastback. 4 speed, power steer· Ing, radio and heater, deluxe interior option. 52395 Montclair hardtop coupe. VB, automatic, power steering, radio, heater, low mile· age, ermine white with blue interior. 51795 Sport COUJX". VS, automatic, power ish~er­ lng, radio, heate.r, gothic gold. A well kept car 1.•.'ith low mileage. 51295 '66 CHEVROt.ET Impala sPort coupe. Automatic, power steering, radio, heater, factory air, vinyl root, gold wilh beige interior. 52195 '63 RIVIERA Ha rdtop coupe. Automatic, air cond .. full power, radio, heater, ermine white with red leather trirri. • '64 CHEVROLET 1" Inn pickup. 8' Fltt>l~d!', V8,. auto- matic, r11dio, heater, custom cab. -'65 MUST ANG ConvcrtiblP, 'Radio, heater, silver with black vinyl interior. '64 CHEVROLET Impala 4 door. V8, automatic, po\\·rr ateerina:, radio, hl'ater, Rilver blue iu-tonl'. 5895 STATION WAGON SALE_ '66 BUICK F.state sport wagon. Automatic, power steering, factory air, radio and heater, white with red interior. '66 CHEVELLE Malibu Station wagon. Automatic, power steering, 327 VB, factory air, r a d i o, heater, butternut .):'ellow. 52495 '66 CHEVY II Nova station wagon. VB, automatic, pow- er steering, R&H. A rare compact wagon, ermine white with blue interior. '65 CHEVELLE Malibu station· wagon. VB, automatic, power steering, factory air conditioning, radio, heater, tilt wheel, tropical tur· quoise. '64 CHEVROLET • 9 passenger wagon. 327 VB, automatic, power steering, factory air conditioning, radio, heater. Ermine white. .. $1895 . '66 CHEVROLET Sport van . Radio and heater, gree n and white tu.tone with deluxe vinyl interior. 52195 PRICES GOOD THIS WEEK ONLY '67 EL CAMINO Custom, VS. automatic, power steering. radio and heater, ermlne whlte, 52595 '64 PLYMOUTH Sport Fury coupe. VB, automatic trans- mission, po~r 1tecrinr, radio and heat-er. 51295 '62 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Factory air conditioninji, automatic, full power, radio and heater. 51395 '64 CHEVELLE MaJibu sport coupe. V8, automatic, pow· er steering, radio, heater, factory air cond., low mileage and clean as new. 51695 '62 f.ALCON Station wagon. 6 cylinder t'ngine, stand- a.rd rransmission. - 5495 '66 CAPRICE Custom coupe. 327 VS, automatic, JJOW<'r steering, factory air conditioning, radio, heater, like new. 52695 '67 IMPALA S!lOrt coupe. VB, automatic, power steering, factory air conditioning, radio, heater, tro- pical turquoise. 52695 -'66 MALIBU S.S. Coupe, 396 VS, automatic, power steering, factory air conditioning, tachometer, but- ternut yellow with black vinyl roof. 52695 '65 ·CHEVROLET · ·Monza coupe. Fa c l or y air conditioning. Automatic, radio, heater, ermine white with blue vinyl bucket se11ts. $1495_ '65 EL CAMINO Custom. V8, 4 speed. radio and heater, white v.•ilh green interior. '67 DATSUN Dcluxt' 4 Door sedan. Under 4,000 original miles, 4 speed transi'nission, radio and heat· '67 MUSTANG Hardtop c nu p e. Automatic transmission, r11dio, hester, 8,000 original miles. Mwt SN'! CONNELL 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ~~:s546-1203 ~:s546-1200 * MUST CLEAR OUT * OUR LOSS -YOUR GAIN OYER 20 -1967 MUSTANGS IN STOCK. MANY WITH AIR CONDITIONING. -$2399 - ALSO '65 l '6' MDD£lS AT llG -llG SAVING.Sii -HO WHOllSALIRS, ~LIAS! - SAU ~Rlct SALi ~RICI ·'81 PLYMOUTH ••• $499 '65 BARRACUDA $1399 ...... .._._'""" !,_-... ~. · '14 CHEVROLET ••• $599 '64 CHRYSLER ••• $1499 I ._. '"'9:. "..:tllPJ ....,..._ '68 PLYMOUTH ... $1499 .loute 1 ..... 1. _. J--ftCI...,. -Ill. 5/>lnl '82 v.w ...... $999 '83 DART H.T.,,,, $999-'.!_ ~~~!'~~;..::.: !.~699 '14 RAMBLER • • • • $999 '66 CHRYSLER ••• $2399 ..._ ~~ ..-. ·--fl"ldf. '87 BONIEYIUE $2999 11 VWAIT •••• $1199 .................... "-'""· ....... -· '88 IMPERIAL • , • $3299 '8fi CHEVROLET $1199 '88 RIVIERA • • • • $3399 ,_ __ '81 llPERIAL ••• $4299 ...,,. ,,., .....,., ....... '8fi IUSTOI ••• $1199 "· t. ~...,..,... v• ,... _. ...... Pl YMOUTH CHRYSlER m:PERIAl GMC TRUCKS i \I 81tl1erts 10080 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. ·~ GARDEN GROVE JE 7-7800 W • MERCURY MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC STUDEBAKEll T·BIRD ---* JUST 7,699 MILES! t.1UST Sell 1964 Olds. FS.l 1---------1957 STUDEl3AKER. Law * Be d '67 MUSTANG V-8, Dl..X. CUtlass. air rond, pow. S. ROY CARVER mileage, classic lines, excel yon HDTOP. w / auto. trans., r.-1 a k r or fe r. IH2·2713 PONTIAC · cond, Leaving area. ear Depreciation! pwr. stet"!', &>st rl\rlin. w/ 494·?.620 \"'f'l'ke.ods k PVl'!I. C!ln't J!.O. $200673-3179 CJ..ASSJC beaut. 1960 TIIUN-wall~. f"IC .. Plr. Sparkling '56 Old~. line rrans, i::ood »25 Harbar Bl., Carta Mea ========~I DER.BIRD 5 JlflS!I. ~port cpe. mn1an rf'ri • Shr>\>.•mom r.onrl. motor & tires. Makr orrrr. Kl 6-4444 T·BIRD Fac1. ''A1R C0.'110." full pwr thrtl-0\IL A mnart monl'y Priv prty. ~1S-6795 evP.s, Oranre County'• E:xc!Ulfive eqp!. Teal blur w/ immac. choicr nvrr nrw For -wknds. Dealer for koll1 -Royce and * Luxury and 2 lonr bltJ(' intPr. A rrtrf" '68 MERCURY ONL y $2495! '65 Olds 98 Holida v ~NrMair, Bentty. find in a fully depreciated l~t rar ln1 nn llru·Uor Blvd. full powPr. mu ~! sell !his ILLNESS forcr5 snip of ·i;:i Sty'8! machint' in near new cond. JOHNSON & SON BEAUTIFUL CAR ! hi & Pon1iac· GP. llnmacu.!ate. 1963 "rHUNDERBIRD ~PASS That's fun to d1ive? •· ~1nntclair 'l Door hard!op. . k' ~•o c""" •o.ooo miles. top quality nrw HDTOP SDnRT CPE. W/ Cash. '·•,"~ ,,.,,,,1 mtl,s. U--' .. ~ L1ncoln--i\olercury wre · """"'""" ., 'v • '""' '"-''" ;, Hres, wire wheels, $1350. Call fa ct. "AIR COND.", full .lsl car lot on !!arbor Blvd. l.c'o"' warrantv. . f'llC!oty Crn;tit Me.""!I Br'Bne.h '6.1 Cutlass._ on v e r! i b I e JOHNSON & SON l!l4J 11 bo Bl d 64 ' 7= d R.l.l--0004 rpwr. rqp(. Spati(lin~ inca air condilioning. Bca11tiful · -ar r 11 • ____ •· ""' Perfec1 coo ition. S 97 5. -silvC"r w/ plush silver sable ear. '65 MUSTANG _4=94"-:!089======"° RAMBLER vinyl inter. Be th<' real dis--$3695 Auton1atic, VS. power !lc<'r· -tinctivc you. f'or Only - ;,,,. i.e10,,, ,;" ""'"n1u1. PLYMOUTH •66 RAMBLER $12951 Only $1799. low dov.·n OAC.1---------. _ . ., lst car \ol on Harbor 81,,.rl. STANSBURY $59.64 per mon1h. '67 VALIANT automatic PS 2 Dr. Scd11n. Stick shtfl with JOHNSON & SON BUICK HOLIDAY RAMBLER etc. Very low mileage as r11d10, we11ther eye healer. 196.<t Harbor Blvd. new. $1995. 646-149'2 Aqua with contrasting inter-Lincoln-Mel'C\J ry 2100 HARBOR BLVD. --=========1 ~65--11~. -,-~-~,--~-• ior. A reel milagc maker. Costa Mesa Branch COSTA MESA 64'9022 -' Sate 1te, "'!"'• x nt conu. u-OLDSMOBILE $1200. or $150. & take o"'er Blu(' Book says $1455 '()ur 19'11 Harbor Blvd. 642-1000 Lincoln-Mcrtury COllta Mesa Branch 100 Ha rbor Bl,,.d. 642-7000 '63 T-Bird. full pwr, rad tires, 5,00'.l mi on new eng. Top cond. 1 ownr, $1ffi0. 54<-5836 Is Your Ad in our clasirilieds? Someone will be lookin;: for it. Dial 642-5678 MUSTANG , _______ _ payments. 673-701'2 Price this weekend $ll00.00 \\'.hite elepba.'lts? Din1e-a·liM '65 CUTLASS PONTIAC . r:· .: • L "' ""'m" " •••••••••••••••••• 4 SP~EDS ·a; o!rl, ··442·· cu"'" co""'· $44 o. p•ym• & •. .STATION WAGONS •. Yl'llow w i I h contras1ing R Bl D $44 OA C SPECIALIST black inlerior. 4 sprl , 11ir '67 Fl E R lncludf'~ ~~.~f~. & l~te'rest HIGH PERFORMANCE rnnrt . All lhr f'xtras. A rral '67 Pontiar Firebird '"IClO" ELMORE • e NEW TOYOTA TRADES e • CUSTOM CARS _;f)i ng machinr !lnd J;how. Coupe. NittSt in Orange • WAGOM CITY • LARGE5T SELECTION IN room rrcsh. Blul" Book s11ys County. Flashing red with n ORANGE COUNTY $19~:..oo Our SJlecial th!~ black contrasting bucket 15.Dl Beoach Blvd .. Wstmnstr • 4 D $ • S wrckC'nd S17•1:1.00 Plus T & L scats all , G.M. acc. incl air Phone 89-1-3322 • '63 CHEV• 6 P:: stick. 1 075 • elected Auto or pa.v1111s a ~ low 11s rond .. custom trim option, '65 RAMBLER • • Center $67.00 On paymt & P. · Str., mag whls., adj. ST-ATION WAGON, autom11· • '64 F-ORD. 4 Door. $1375 • l?ll32 Harbor Blvd. r1374646 $67.00 per mo. O.A.C. Mocks, wide Ol.'als. Tn1ly a tic, radio. heater, power Auto .. A/cond • 'li6 MUSTA.t'l'G Sprint S,._..ia1. lnclud('~ T11 :<, Lie. & JntC'rcsl gorgoous automobile. Spec. !!leering._ spotleM, $1399 oi-• '60 CHEV Nomad. $775 : Au lo lran.s. radio, r-~C'ry ELMORE iaJ Thig ~i;17S:Oo ~lh dg~~-:hii~~.r=. • • Auto., P.S, clesn. low mileage, Call Includes our written I yr HOLIDAY RAMBLER •"65 FIAT 4 Door. $775 • fi73-45&19 15300 Betlch Blvd., Wstmnstr wa1Tanty 1969 II rho Bl 30 m1>9 '66 Mustang Convertible. V8, Phont 894-:l.'l2l ELMORE ' • r vd. • M II~ $ • automatic, power steerin~ '53 Olds Finl: transportation, '64 RAMBLER -station • '67 CHEV. A;o,, ·P.S. 2375 • and lop. Good condition. good motor -Make offer. • wagon, J.'JI dlr, r Id Io, Sl91Xl. Cail a.ft 4 pm, 548-3507 Pvt Pty Evrs It all day t;;JOO Beach Bl\'d., Wstmnstr hl!flter, automatic. While u-• '67 DATSUN Auto $1675 • '6S Mustang. VttY dean. Wkcnds 67l-&116 Phone S94-33Z'2 ~:~ ~~';"'~e':n ~~;::: • 30 ~pg. • 29,000 actual miles 1962 Olds Starfire. Fae aJr. 4 SPEEDS Car in perf~t shape! Take • '65 v w lSDD $1375 •• Reas. 646-.JOOI) AU 'power. Good conditiqn. SPECIAUST trade or $150 ca 11 b . • • • Series. '6'1 MUS'!' ANG V8 3 """'· Im-$199 * 53&-7118 HIGH P"'"FOn"'NCE Pttymoo,. $29. mo. C'1 • '66 FORD 4 Doo" $1775 • maculalP condition. $7150. '&4 OLDS Sll\rfire. full power, Cf( "'""" after 11. 494-9773 or 639-3i1T Auto., P.S. By Own<t. 64&-7231 '"· 40.l'OO mil.,. lllllO. CUSTOM CARS •64 RAMBLER • • 1967 Mus'·-,,,,~-k-.• ,.,. S.12-l~i LARGEST SELECTION IN V8 . ' DR Llk '64 PEUGEOT • ""'· $1075 -~ -" ORANGE COUNTY .~ .. '. ~!!m. ~'1•1-d•. _ 13! . .: • 25 mpq. • aU!O, vs. CXC'CI (':::fld, l~t 'S.i Old,; Cutlaas 4~. conv. ...,~ ot:r.1".I "' "" .. °"~ $2250 takes. 546-4:l40 Aull). full J)()\1.1'.!r. leAthf!r. Selected Auto per month. OAC. Phone • e WRITTEN 1 YR. WARRANTY • '6$ Mu.1'ltg GT. Disc ..... ~1."'· SJ4:,0 • ......,,.. Center 64H'o.(;02:Lll0. AY RAMBLER •• • $50.00 ON. PYMT., 0.A.C. •• ps, blue--iP'l'I w/blk int, ex-T9.'i..1 OLDS 4-dr. Olauffeur 130.tl Harbor Blvd. ~7-4646 ,,., cutd.11595. c.11548-448.I '""" '"' • "''" .,.ooo. 196• "'""'' m..i. ELMORE MOTORS , orig mil". $300. 5411-7847 66 Pontioo J..,Ma'"· Pb, .,, •63 AMERICAN • TOYOTA • 65 Mustang 2 + 2 V8, auto, pwr wlndowa air cond ps,goodcond,$1!m548-3507 '67 OLDS. Cutlass Sup~me aulo. bucket 'seal.t, lS,!XXi 37,(0) miles. l owner. • • aft 4 Full pwr., air, bl_k. vinyl miles. Mint cond-Sl395. $599 I 1SMO 'llACH WllTMINITl lt lf4..U22 • Need a Garbenstan&Jer lop. A"''"''' · 1i,..;104 54<}-"'50 ex! 715. All .g,30 HOLIOA64"., ~ILElt ••••••••••••••••• Find h with a want-ad! SOCK rr 1'0 'EM164&-~.:..;:ml;;:':_ _______ r----~---o;-- ., -0 /. '· ., d i. ;. • d •· ). ? ,, - • • • • • • • • • • • • • • t • • • • • • • • I I I • . --------.-.. --....... •=.• ••••••••••••••••••• 0 •• w 4. ···················"· 4444445 ·1 . . ' . ..------· ·OTHER NEW PONTI ACS BEING . OFffRED WITH . COMPARABLE SAVINGS! ••• ORDll NOW • IT'S WAGDN:- TIME! • ltlNE ' - GREAT RESALE STATION WAGONS! '66 CHEVROLET HOVI 1!1tlon ""''°"· RIOio Ind hell· et. •utotn1lic: lr1n1mlnlon. FULL PRICE '66 OLDSMOBILE Vitti CNIHr ""''°"· Aldla, l>eollh!r, 1utamatk. -1tll'tl'lnt &-... 1n- -· factory 11r c:ondltlo1lln1. s3077 FULL PRICE '66 PONTIAC c1111in.. t N uentt• ""''°"· Po.,.er •'"'\:'\!'.,clr1m1llc, _,r ""lndo'#:I, -r tt, 11ctory •Ir. $3277 FULL l'l:ICI HARDTOP CPE. ROY CARVER'S -. - -. . . '66 CHEVROLET !11!1 Air 1t1llon ""lton· R911111 lf>CI Mlltt. 1utomtlk lr•nwniulon. FULL PllCE '66 PONTIAC 81111MV1111 1t1lion ""19Dfl. llt9111o, hell· el". 1utom1tlc, -• 1!•rlnt. -• ""1...0-S, IKfwY llr C'Olldlllofl!nt . $3377 FULL' PRICE '65 MERtURY Colclrw lillril 4 Dr. 6 P11Hn11tr ""''°"· \IL 1utometk, -r ateerln1, .. 1dlo, he11er, IKIOrY 1lr, -"If• ""•111. s2m PULL PllCI ' 9IOONow Ce,. FHlEBIRD I PLUS LIC. AND TAX '65 BUKK ~ ""'von. Aotomltk tr1ntmlu lon, r9111o •nd hffler. FULL PRICI '67 PONTIAC 9 NIM"IOl!t t•KVll,,. ""''°"· l"-r 1ltuln1, ,...,lo, hul1r, Miit' WSW t!re1, llcitUy 1lr, luteate urrltr. $3m FUU Pl lCI '63 OLDSMOBILE Fletll 4 Door 6 P81-r •"""· \IL ""'10INI ' k • ~-11Hrl1111, rldlo, hN!ff, -"lie ""1111, IKtlWY •II', $1677 FULL PllCI ••IOONew Con Frktay, JuM 7, }968 DAJLV PILOT 3l ' 9~Ntw C1.rs~'---'9IOO=~ .... =-·-=C::•;,;";......-....:9IOO=-~=~;: .. ~:;:W-::c:::.-:..: .. ~:::::9:.::IOO=---- " • Each of th·e Ma9nific•nt Five comes equipped wl#i a full complement of firebird features for '61.-lncludinCJ such as wi~e-oval tires, slimline buck.•ts, deep-plla cerpeting, space-saver spare, and 1imulatad bur.I w0od 9rain desh. New engines for new performance pleasure. New int .. riors for new luxury. New r••r suspension enhances the ride. New ventilation sys- tem eliminates vent windows. Ona of these five Great '61 American Sports is waiting for Y•" ..• MAKE THIS _rev~ _YEf'R: TO GO WIDE-TRACKING.·. ' . . 350 CONVERT • . • . IT'S TRUE. THE FABULOUS 1968 PONTIAC AT ROY CARVER'S HA 'IC ATTRACTED THE FINEST TRADES AVAILABLE TOD.A YI SO BUY MOW! . . EACH AND IVERY "CARVER.CARE·CAR" CARRiES THE EXCLUSIVE 100% WARRANTY ON ALL ENGINE, TRANSMISllON AND DIFFERENTIAL COMPONENTS! ' .. '66 GTO '63 VOOOW AGENS '65 GTO R9111f end IM!•ler, •utom.1llc ,,.,.. J TO CHOOS• ~IOM R•t:lio and M•lff, .utomallc I••• minion, pa-11ftfl1111. l'Tkff ll1n Al minion, "°'*"' 1!eerlnt , IKlof°Y t lr cllftdttlonl1111. $2577 "$1277 $2377 FULL PllCI FULL PllCI FULL PllCI '67 COUGAR '67 GTO '66 VOLKSWAGEN 1 Door h.9rd!OI'. 11t·ad111, l!Qlet, 1111~ Rl<llo trld llQMr, 4 i.P9M tr1nwnfl. S.O.n. lltat:llD, hNh!r, 4 ~. 1ow ITlllk ,,_,,,.lot!. -''-'"'· ..... mlll1 .. , ""'"' aldl "JMll llr•. /ICtory •If' COl!dltlolllng, $1677. s3277 s2977 FULL PRICI FULL PllCI FULL PllCI '61 PONTIAC • '65 PONTIAC '66 DODGE aon.-tlle OOV•. It.Mii), htl t .... -r llonnevlll• ~. ltldlo Mid '*'-"· 0111. 4 door &eden. ' CYiinder enel...e, alftorlntl, l u!QITMllk, POfl'tf ""ll'ldoM, 111101Nlk 1r1111mlulen. ll"W•r •INr• rldlo llld '°""''• """''lit •Ide """' fkl9ry •Ir condltionl1tt. ln1. tint. . s3477 $2177 s1577 PULL PllCI ' •uu HICI PULL NICI • r ,. \ ' ' , ' . -. • • • .. ,, ~!~ SUPERMARKET Over "" •ere of Robins-Select · l'\ew cir tr1de·in1 to choose from EXCLUSIVE! Look !0< the RT-130 seal on the car o! your choice, it means that car has· been reconditioned to pass 130 vital electronic tests for reli'ability, performance, and safety. • IAGNOSTIC CENTER EXACT SCIENTIFIC AN· AL YSIS IN SO. CAU- FORNIA'S FIRST FORD DIAGNOSTIC CENTER PROVES IT FOR YOU. r----------1 I FREE! 25 ;:;~~:~ FREE! I With This COllflOll I I 011 Purch .. e of an11 l/1ecl Car I During Our 47th Anniver1ar11 I I SALE! I I 1 p., Cu1tomer-Mu1t be presantecl within 24 hrs. •' Al•.1 l'.1111!!!1 - - - - - - - - - Cu1tom1. 6 to choo1• from . 4 Dr, '67 Ford VI, •uto, R&H. 20 % down •r $1595 tr•d• $46 p•r mo. l6 mo. b · •m I• No. P77t 7 '66 Chevrolet "6", R&H, f•ctory •quipp•d, 4 S1195 Dr. 20 '/'. down or tr•d• $43 p•r mo. lO mo. SZCl91 '65 Fairlane 500 2 Or. H.T. VI, •uto., R&H, $1395 f•ctory •ir, TYSl91 '~7 c rf Gt ........... ""' ;, .... '" 0 In a dow11 or tr.de $46 p•r me. 36 ;i. , fl'lo. Ul!Sl10 "" ·~ ~-Sl495 .. , ' '63 Ford XL '...l:t.T. VI •. 2.· Or, Fult j_?er: s1o95 ~ f1 ctory •ir. 16 'I'. down or tr1d• $49 e;•r mo. 24 mo. PRCll2 '67 Galaxie 500 2 Dr. H.T. VI, •uto, R&H, $2195 PS. 20% down or tr•d• $61 p•r mo . 16 mo . UOF419 '61 v lk 2 Door 1•d•n. 20% dowll er O $Wgn, rr~~;1s11 ,., mo. 24 "'~· S895 '65 F d F 100 '""•· ,,, .. WI ,,.,,, ••. '" or • down or fr1d• $42 p•• mo. 10 mo. 546240 S1195 MUST ANG SALE 15 WAGONS "SAlE" 15 -t 5 to choo1• from -'60 lhrw '67 20 •• t.hoo11 fro111. '6' & 'I' cyl., 4 mod.Ii. 6 to 10 p•111119•r-1om• with 1pd1., 1ufo1, 1om1 w/PS I •ir, '65 iir. PLYMOUTH -'66 MERC COM- thru '47 111od1l1. Conv1rt1, t.p•1. & 2 MUT.ER _ ECONO IUS'S -FORDS plus 2 f•1tb.ck1. .....: FALCONS _;_ FAIRLANES ...:. EXAMPLE '65 ~~STANG $1295 H.T, Fvll., 1quipp•d. VI, R&H. •ulo, PS, 10'!. down or tr1d• $49 pt• mo. JO TTIOI, PDP147 COUNTRY SEDANS. EXAMPLE '67 :g~~.. $2995 I 0 P111. Full pow•r, VI, •ulo, R&H. 20 '/. dow11 ot fr1d• $79 per mo. 36 mo. U Glll NEW '68 ENGLISH FORD DELUXE CORTINA 2 DR. SEDAN lwt. eM nt. 4eccir ... .,,., WSW ''""' Miit 6c ..... .,.. .... """9.ri.a. ,,..,.. .... litr,. I .,.,, w.,_,. wltti ......._ tiff, ffl11t ........ c ...... ct9f'· ,......,. • • ,, .,,-~"' r _, .. · .... , .. ? ....., ,Jr ... .,, r ,,.. .-,... • r . J. ~-••• -( ... . -...... ;··-··--·-· bHn operated by, several different ownen -but ~· .,., family bijslneu half acres crf the .lftOst modern Ford sales and service facilities on the W•t Coast! THE STOPS ARE OUT FOR JU:NE!. NOTHING TO BUY ! JUST COME IN AND REGISTER. PR l ·Z E DRAWINGS EVERY SATURDAY AT II A.M. YOU NE ED NOT SUPER SAVINGS WIN! s·u PER SA V I N--G S . OPEN· HOUSE ~ . . . , . THIS FRIDA\Y AND SATUIDo!I\ STOP IN,AND JOIN.·US · , FOR cofflll AND DO!l!ITS FR EE._ t;ANDY l IAW>ONS · · FO• THI KJOS FREE USE OF DELUXE AIR COND. CAMPER FOR ONE WEEK 4 LUCKY WINN·ERS FREE POLAROID CAMERAS Given Every Week . OVER 30 PRIZES IN ALL! TRUCKS AND CAMPERS SUPER SAVINGS I PERF~~":i~NCE New '68 Truck-Camper Pkg. NEW '68 SHELBY AMERICAN I FOOT CAB.OVER CAMPER Fully e411ippe4, Ice ltei • .., 1toni • Mlf~Ofltalllff w.tef GT·SOO CONVERTIBLE •"Ptem • 1 JY /11 OV etecttlcal • .,.,. .... dlMtN • t.o.,.pleM· $ 3 5 9 5 ly f•~""°" & .......... ""'' 6. M,, .... °'' 4._.i ........... •h< ...... OW'·•-.. ""'· $411 os1 ha-, nN., tilt m . wt.I., ... 1•""5-pwr. top ,.,.,. BRAND NEW '68 FORD STYLESIDE . bullt 111 ,.,, Hr. Ma11y etMt e1tn11. Stll. N•. 460 l'kll1p. 1 ll" wlleelbme. All .,., ·~ t1 t.nillll II Y••' clll•• & sltoter •1111·.tH fttlre te hft f1111. DISC OUNTED 876.71 COMPLETE TRUCK AND CAMPER FROM WINDOW STICK ER -.. _...._.. . --~---·--~-~~~-----· . ___ .._ -------- I Frid1y; June 7, 1968 ·JUDGE HARMON G. SCO. VILLE OF THE WEST- 1 MINSTER MUNICIPAL COURT COMMENTS ON A SHORTAGE OF PEIJMA.. NENl' JUDGES IN DORO. THY. PIER'S PAGE 3 MEET THE P E 0 P l E FEATURE . . A MUSICAL FOR CHIL- DREN, HANSEL A N D .GRETE'L, SHOULD GIV.E .THE LOCAL YOUNG SET · :SOME Nl;W IDEAS OF ·WHAT· TO DO W I T H BREAD CRUMBS, GIN- GERBREAD MEN AND wrrct-tES THEY Fl~D. IN :THE WOODS. FOR OLD-;' ·ER Kii;)~ •. A ~STO~Y. ON .PAGE 7 SHOULD BRING ·BACK FOND Mf:MORIES -OF · AN ALWAYS POPU- .LAR STORY. IF FISH IS YvUR FANCY, DON WILSON 'S OUT AND ABOUT COLUMN, PAGES I Tt1ROUGH 11, }4AS. A STORY ON . TWO NEW SEA SPOTS, WHERE THE DINER MAY ENJOY A NICE VIEW ALONG WITH HIS MEAL. OTHER O.C. ENTERTAINMENT MAY BE FOUND ON PAG~S 6 l'~O.f~M t • ~-- \ 1 0 l .E! . ••'- J Special Events · DANCE -The Newport Beach Department of Beaches and Recreation is sponsoring a dance for junior blgb school students on Fri., June 7 from 7 to 10 p.m. in the girl's gym or Newport Harbor High School, 600 N. Irvine St., Newport Beach. Tickets, 75c, will be sold at the door. L.B. HIGH CONCERT -The Laguna Beach High School music department is presenting the band and chorus in a Spring Concert, Fri., June 7 at 8 p.m. in the high school audHorium, 625 Park Ave., Laguna Beach. There is no ad- mission charge. SCOUT-0-RAMA -Approximately 350 displays showing Boy Scout and Cub Scout crafts and skills will be featured at the Orange County Scout-0-Rama, Sat., June 8, from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Orange County Fairgrounds. 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. A parade of scouts and marching bands will precede the Fairground activities. The parade will begin on Arlington St. at 9:30 a.m. and march to the Fairgrounds. Tickets, $1 for adults, free to those in scout uniforms and persons under 16, are available from scouts or will be sold at the rate. CHILDREN'S TtIBA't't.:K -A chiJJt"e11's musical production of Hansel and Gretel will be per- formed Sat., June 8 at 10:30 a.m., and al I and 3 p.m. in the Lyceum of Cost a Mesa High School. ?;650 N. Fairview Road. The musical is sponsored by the Women's Committee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society. A dona- tion of $1 f<>r adults and 50c for children will be asked at the door. See feature P:ipe 7. ART OEMONS'fRA'l'lvl'I -'l'ne La1;u..1a o\!et.:h Art Association is sponsoring an art demonstra- tion in connection with their current exhibit of American watercolors. Sat., June 8 Morris Shubin will demonstrate painting beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the Main Gallery of the Laguna Beach Art Association Gallery, 'JIJ7 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Resulting paintings wW be auctioned. Admission for members of the As· sociation, $1.50, non~members. $2. ADVENTURE 1''1LM -1'11e only California show· ing of the film, "Northern Safari," a wildlife moti on picture of Australia will be shown in the Lindy Opera House, Wilshire Blvd. at La Brea, Los Angeles, on June 7 and 8 at 8 p.m. A matinee will be held at 2 p.m. on June 8. Ti ckets, $.1, $3.50 and $4, available at the box office. Phone (21~) 389-2020 for further infor· malion. l:oming Up CARNJVAL -The fifth annual Youth Cent&.. Car• nival will be held June 14 and 15 al U1e Center. Fifth and Iris Sts., Corona del Mar. Hours: Sat., June 14, noon to 9 p.m.: Sun., June 15, 1 to 9 p.m. Activities Include games, fun rides and booths. There is no entry fee. Proceeds will go to further Youth Center improvements. 1• OrtnH C:-t Wttletnftr GU IDE TO FUN t:oming Up DANCE CONCERT -An "Out-of-School Dance Concert" featuring the Mothers of Invention, Pacific Gas and Electric and the Young Men will be held Sat., June 15 at a p.m. in the Ex- hibition Hall of the Anaheim Convention Cen· ter, 800 W. Katella, Anaheim. Tickets, $3.50, are available from the Convention Center, Wal· lichs Music City stores and Mutual ticket agen· cies. Phone ~962. FLOWER SHOW -The California National Fu· chsia Society is presenting its 14th Annual Fu- chsia and Shade Plant Show, June H, 15 and 16 at the •Orange County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Hours: June 14,,3 to 9 p.m.; June 15, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; June 16, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Admission, '1 for adults, 50c for those under 16, free for children under 12 accompanied by adult. HORSE CAPAlJc;S -A musical on horseback, ~ "Horse Capades," will be held in the Arena of the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella, Anaheim, on June 21 through 23. Performance times: Fri., June 21, 8 p.m.; Sat., June 22, 2 and 8 p.m.; Sun., June 23, 2 and 6 p.m. Tick- ets, from $2.50, are available at the Convention Center's box office, Wallichs Music City stores and Mutual ticket agencies. P laces to Go /\I'\ Cv ESTANCIA AOOul!: -An bistunc landmark locat- ed at Adams and Mesa Verde Dr. West. Costa Mesa. Originally a way station for lndians, the historic adobe has been restored and furnished and is open to the public from l to 5 p.m on Sat. and Sun. No admission chrirge For information phone 549-09'l2 AU'fOMOTIVE MUSEUM -Hnggs Cunningham · Automotive Museum located at 250 Baker Street, at the corner of Red H~ Costa Msea. Hours : 10 am. to 5 p.m. daily. Museum features a collection of vintage, classic, racing and sports cars plus engine displays. Admission adults •t.85, students and mili~y 85c. children under 10 free. Phone 546-7660. MOV11£LANU OF 'l'HE AlR-Flight and space mu· • seum, featuring a collection of movie and bis- rorical planes dating back to 1910. Hours 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily, Orange County Airport. Tickets $1.25 adults, 75c juniors, 12-17, 50c children 5-J J. under 5 free. Phone 545-5021. KNOTT'S UEJtK Y "'ARM -Attractions Include Ghost Town , unique shops, theater, trading post, and rides; Beach Blvd., Buena Park. Hours 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. Admission to Ghost Town, $1 for adults. 2-"c for children under 12. Phone 522-1131 MOVIELANU WAX MUSEUM-Creations in wax or famous stars and scenes of yesteryear, lav- ish costumes. ln the Palace of Living Art there are replicas of famous sculpture In marble. Tickets: adults $2, juniors 13-17, $1.50, children 5-12. 75 cents. 7711 Beach Blvd., Buena Park. Hours: Sun. through Tbw-s. 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.; Fri. and Sat. 9 a.m. lo 11 p.m. Phone 522-1154. Places to Go JAPANESE DEER PARK -Located at.Santa Alla Freeway and Knott Ave., in Buena Park~ Houra 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily. Admission $1 for adults, 50c for children. 2.00 tame deer to pet· and feed plus bears, swans, dove pavilion and Japanese tea house. Pbooe 523-2381. DISNEYLAND · -World famous amusement park bas rides for young and old, 1313 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. Hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wed. throueh Fri,; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sat. and Sun. Phone M3M56. • --..:,p~rts ANGELS BASEBALL -California Angels YI the Washington Senators June 14 at 8 p.m. and June 15 at 1 -p.m. in the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 State College Blvd., Anaheim. Tickelil available in Orange County at United Calif. Banks, Mutual ticket agencies and Wallichs Music City stores. Phone 633-2000. DODGERS -The Los Angeles Dodgers vs the Philadelphia Phillies June 7 and 8 at 8 p.m., June 9 at 1 p.m.; New York Mets June 10, 11 and 12 at 8 p.m. in the Dodgers' Stadium, 1750 Stadium Way, Los Angeles. Tickets available locally at Wallichs Music City stores and Mu- tual ticket agencies. HORSE RACING -Thoroughbred horse racing at Hollywood Park, Century Blvd. at Prairie Ave., Inglewood, post time Tues. through Fri. 1:45 p.m.; Sat. 1:15 p.m., $50,000 Inglewood Handi- cap Sat., June 8. COVER: What hasn't the hamburger-eating boy on the cover ever missed? Why, the Co- rona del Mar Carnival! Amid the transitory Orange County population, young Charlie Lin· den, now eight, born and raised in CdM, seems a permanent part of the scene. He's been busy selling tickets fot the $500 U.S. Bond award, and he'll be enjoying the Carnival next week- end with hi s ·friends. See feature on Page 5. Gulde To FUil Meet The People Designer's Notebook Corona del Mar Carnival Garden Note1 Fuchsia Show Hansel and Gretel Out 1 N' About Current Art Exhibits Decorator's Comer Live Theater Movies ORANGE COAST Page i Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Page 6 Page I Page 7 Pages 8-11 Page 12 Page 13 Page 15 Pages 14, 15 mmamammaa MAGAZINE Friday, June 7, 1968 Or•ntt Cota! WEl!K•NOEll M11•1l11t IS PUblllhN FrlCl'YI 11 - MCllOll ti IM DAii. Y I'll.OT llY IN OrlllN CNJt Plltlhlllllll Co,. Ntwl'Ort ltach, Hunn111t• ltach, Coal• Mtse, Lount lttd1, Wnt> mlnsler t nd Fount•lll VUty, CllllOf'lli.. A'*tu: Pttt ottic. at.11 lt7S. NtWHrt ltlell, c.lllorll~ '166l. Pboce 642--4321 Lucy BeU Edl&or Mate1111t Sec11ti1..i0AIL V "U Frtdly, Ju11t 1, 1• His Boyhood Hardships Because Harmon G. Scoville, Judge of the Westminster Municipal Court, was willing to work hard and long as a young boy, he reaped the rewards of a professional life and Westminster gained a citizen of dedica· tion and integrity. Born in Ogden, Utah, Harmon Scoville came to Los Angeles when he was 11 years old, after his family bad been hit by the depression. While going to school be worked in his father's broom factory and, at the age of 14, he began to deliver newspapers for the Los Angeles Times, rising at four every morning to handle his job. After he was graduated from Los Angeles High School in 1940, he at· ''a1ulnt Stclltn-DAIL Y PILOT rr.<>ay, Jvnt 7, 1'61 Shape JUdge~s Career tended UCLA for three years. continuing with the Times tulltime, work- ing· up from an assistant managtr to road man. When ROTC students were called into active duly during World War II, be was sent to Officers Candidate School in Fort Benning. Georgia and then trained troops in Fort Meade, Maryland, before going overseas to join Patton's Third Army. Because of his college training, upon arriving ln Europe Harmon Scoville became an assistant provost marshal, which he remained until he was released from the service in 1946. • A year later be earned a degree from UCLA and entered Stanford\ Law School. In 1950 he received bis law degree and joined the Los An· geles firm of Trippet, Newcomer, Yoakum and Thomas where he remain- ed for five years until opening his own practice in Westminster. Governor Reagan, in May of 1967, appointed Harmon Scoville judge of the Huntington Beach~eal Beach Judicial District (this became part of the West Orange County Judicial District at the beginning of this year). "Of the 22 municipal court judges in Orange County, only three have been am><>inted in this district,,. Judge Scoville points out. 11 In the Anahein\ district there are eight judges for 406,000 people, but in our western part of the county we have only three judges for 408,000, or slightly more, people. We have three additional judges on loan from San Clemente, Anaheim and Earp, California and we rely on local attorney1 to donat~ their ti.ma with- out pay, but it isn't the same ~shaving six permanent men," be asserts . • "Just when the judges on loan understand how we do things, it's time for them to go back to their own districts. So all the administrative work falls on the three permanent judges rather than on six. Though we try hard to prevent it, the court schedule gets backed up," he explains. Judge Scoville, whose 60-bour workweek includes two or three eve. nings, states, "We don't want the people to be short of judicial time, but . we do feel we are entitled to the same consideration as judges in other areas." He adds that Assemblyman Burke has a bill pending in the legis4 lature which may bring new judges to this district next year. A past president of the Westminster Chamber of Commerce, West- minster-Midway City Rotary Club and the Orange County Bar As sociation. Judge Scoville also has been a bishop in the Mormon Church_. He ~ow is president of the Garden Grove Mormon Stake. Presently he 1s acting as Continu.d On P •1• 14 . "IT'S BIKINI TIME IN NEWPORT!" DIET NOW .•• It's eesy when yo~ serve these "low Celoried" Fruits and vegetables that are just coming "in se~son." e ~NG CHERRIES e ROY AL APRICOTS e TREE RIPE PEACHES e CANTALOUPES e CRENSHAW MELONS e FRESH RASPIERRIES e COACHELLA GRAPEFRUIT e HAWAIIAN PINEAPPlE e SEEDLESS GRAPES e AND MANY. MANY MORE You'll look like a "model" in your Bikini after you eet these low caloried fruih, aft~r all, "It', Bikin i Time in Newport." SAVE! SO YOU CAN TREAT DAD ON FATHER'S DAY! r -------Flrat Of TM S.0.0• 1 -----le.Wt GIANT SIZE -r.I Flnt Of TM. S.0.0• ------I I FRESH . I 1. TOMATOES I I ~!~;: I L Witt. Ttils CHpH I ------- LEnUCE I Ocea. --. -- I I I I I -- ROYAL APRICOTS IOC1b. Ullllt-1 Lbs. Witt. TWt c..,.. ------COUPONS EXPIRI . JUNE 12tll - Father's Day is June 16th, take him out to dinner for a change, with the grocery money you've "chiseled" PHONE: 673-8715 NEWPORT PRODUCE °'9f9 C.."'Y'• ,__ hwt.tPrMMeO .......... ·81' Newport llvd. .... , ....... 1a I I I ~' • I I ~ c i t FUCHSIAS ON PARADE ) Cluenc. Eastwood, at left, president of the Natienal Fuchsia Society and Don Davis, chairman of the 14th annual Fuchsia Show, cM<k out the pr09- rpa of tome of the coforlul flowers to be on dl•play. Green Thumbs get ready! Hundreds of prize-worthy fuchsias, be- gonias, ferns, bromeJiads and many other types of flowers are awaiting your discerning eye and well-deserved admiration during this year's 14th annual Fuchsia and Shade Plant Show. Tbe show, sponsored by the Cali- fornia NationaJ Fuchsia Society will take place June 14. 15 and 16 at the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. If you happen to be one of those unfortunate individuals who can't tell a bromeliad from a dandeUon, much less grow one. don't despair. The colorful flowers all will be clearly marked and an educational booth will be open to give tips on how to grow fuch~ias and other shade plants. A qualified gardener will be available to answer questions from beginner and old band alike. Eighteen chapters of the Fuchsia Society plus hundreds <>l individ- uals and commercial ccncems will have booths and displays to help make it one of the largest and most colorful of the shows to date. Many of the displays will be competing for awards and prizes. Organ music. a square dance exhibition. barbershop quartet and doo r prizes will add to the entertainment and fun. Last year, approximately 3,000 people visited the flower show, pit- ting their opinions against the judges' decisions of winning Dowers and f'xh_ibils. An even larger turnout is hoped for this year. Judges will award trophies as well as ribbons to the prize exhibit in each category. First place awards for the best plant in the show, best hanging basket and other categories netted over 30 first-place trophies for gardeners last year. For garden enthusiasts interested in joining the society, a member- ship booth will be localed at the show which will be held in the Commer- cial Building of the fairgrounds. Hours will be Friday, June 14, 3 to 9 p.m.; Saturday, June 15, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m .. and Sunday, June 1&, 10 a.m. to 6 p.rn. Tickets, available at the gate, are $1 for adults, 50 cents for juniors 12 to 16 and free lo children under 12 if accompanied by an adult. .. -DlllGNIR'S NOTEBOOK Color BY J. RUSS~ll -TUMELSON, ORANGE COUNTY DESIGNER-OECORA TOR () A .-_. • .~ ~ "' Color is used every~ day in so many functions of • / our Jives. lt is used to distinguish one precision instru- ment from another in the scientific field -for keys to warning devices in spacecraft -as a warning light in automobiles and in many other areas. Its effect on human beings bas become a highJy specialized tech- nology not only in the vario• fi elds or business, hos- pitals and scientifi c endeavors, but in our homes as well. On. can be specific about almost any subject ex- cept color. Some individuals are more sensitive to the various differences in color than others are. Children adore bright, bold colors. However. in the home the use of such bold colors ne~s professional guidance. more than for the paler hues. Personal and emotional needs rather than Ca~s and current trends determine individual choices of color. One must realize that color is innate and a part or one's makeup as much as the heart and lungs are a part of the body. Color is un- \Quchable -it is within and must be drawn out as an expression of the being -of personality. Many people have a great urge for color. but are timid about using it. They need to be coaxed, cajoled and even pushed into doing somethin~ daring, brave and J?ood. Often a good Question regarding color might be "Whal color do you like, but fear to use?" . Many people need professional help with colors. !"1rst they need ~o be presented with an idea -a good idea. Then that idea must be painted verbally in such a way the clie_nt ~an visu~lize the comoleled project. Whe_n a color 1s smcere_ly introduced with added sug. ges.tions fo_r rugs. curtains. wall coverings and acces- sories, a visual method of elimination is achieved and hundreds of other colors al'ld designs ere automatically discarded. Some good points to consider when choosing colors are: . -Whal period furniture do vou have or anticipate buying? · -What colors interest you most" -Do you have to work around existing colors. such as carpeting, walls. curtains, etc. -Do you want an unusual or a more conservative effect? - . -ls ~our mate (or are other family members) rnterested m your color project? -With what colors ca n the entire family live? NEXT WEEK MORE ON COLOR ..... _ .. ___ .,.. .. __ . ____ ··----- .,, . ' 1 Plffse •ddress inquiries •nd questions by Jett. to,: Designers Notebook, Weekender Magazine! Post Office 801 I 875, Newport Beach, California. MetiellN s.dlle-OAILY P'IL • • Co~ona del Mar Carniv.al RoHs .A·r-oumd Again "I could ride on this all day • • . " "This must be how Mommy fHls when,fh• drives the car." MaHllM s.c......_oAtL Y PILOT Fri~f, J-I, 1"I ,, ·. · Take a ride on. a Ferris wheel and help lay a tennis court. Throw darts and do your share toward lighting a ball field. Whirl around on, the merry-go-round and you'll be helping enl arge a teen room in whlch young- sters will have good, wholesome fun. • . ' Some 5,000 people are expected to attend the filth annual Corona del Mar Carnival next weekend al the Youth Center to raise funds to improve the center's facilities. As a non-profit, independent organi zation the Youth Center, fou nded iJt 1954, is supported by local citizens and service clubs. By agreement with the City of Newport Beach, the Parks, Beach and Recreation Department offers a recreational program and maintains the center, but capital improvements are the center's responsibility. Pro- ceeds from past carnivals have built and lighted a baseball field, constru~t- . ed two tennis c.ourts and a basketball court, and, most recently, lighted the parking area. Future plans include enlarging the teen room and mak· ing improvements on ~he basketball courts. The recteatio1Lprogram is In full swing..iA Corona del Mar from Sep- teJ:!lh'er 'to June after school hours, and from 9 a.m . t_o 5 p.m. weekdays in the summer months. As many as 2,000 children use the Youlh Cente r weekly during summer vacation. Another use of the center is for a coop-- erative nursery schoOl , and activities ranging from teen dances and Boy ~oout programs to sen i n r <'ili"en<;' rn->0 tir11•s are held in the center's building. . Carnival hours will be from noon until 9 p.m. on !)aturday, June 15, and from 1 to 9 p.m. on Sunday, the 16th, at the Youth Center at Fifth and I ris in Corona del Mar. There will be a wide variety of prizes for games of skill with darts and baseballs. Booths will include whirl-painted pic- tures and jingle boards, and the traditional hotdogs, hamburgers, pop corn and ice -cream cones will be sold. Volunteers from service organizations throughout the community will operate the booths. Youngsters are busy selling tickets for a ~ U.S. Savings Bond for which the winner need not be present at the time of the drawing. There ls no admission charge to the carnival. ~ ·~·1 ~ r=======·===============i1GARDEN NOTES ti "Doi' 0114--Kem-Ca _..: Why is It'• the answer to modern gardening the complete fertilizer PLUS TERR-0-VITE supplies the important nulrient1 all Plants mus1 have 10 thrive. TIERR-0 -VITE contains elements that enter Into the manufacture of vital root-forming eniymea and also r~uces transplanting shock. Tl!RR-0-VITE'a heavy concentration of Chelating Agents plus Chelated Iron, Zi(IC ond Mongoneie help to prevent and cure Chlorosis (yellow foliage) in· ·duced by high concentrations of olkoli in s~il or water. TWRR-0-VITE'a chemic.al reactions in the soil break down Adobe, Coliche, Hardpan a nd Alkoll aoils 10 they con be broken with a trowel instead of a tractor. TERR·O·VITE'a Wetter-Water principle saves water ,ond fertilizer by reducing runoff. You don't need to and Sweat lore Holes to gel fertilizer down deep V').<.~~k in soil where plonh really fMd ~-rtfJ Just Spray onTERR..O·VITE Ot. $2.75 . Gal. $6.75 CHA-KIM-CO FRUIT & VEGnAB DUST Really KILLS TOMATO HORNWORM and Corn EARWORM "SAYS SO RIGHT ON fHI URL. • Also controls other Insect pests and plant 'dlaeaset llYISED · 1• Uttill If '1tc" C......C1'1 HOUICUl.TUUl CUIDI .. FE ·It JtW Miiers w wrttt I 0r .... c ... , ........... . June Means WOrk To Gardene • Don Horton Prepares For Summer Depending on your point of view, June can be a bappy month or a tryi month. School i6 out in June and there are hordes of children and not a f teachers Who are made happy by this fact. On the other band, there are qui a few mothers who have their reserwtions about the event. So it is in the gar<k!n .. If all one bas to do ts admire the flowers, pi bouquets, and harvest the home-grown fruit and vegetables, June is ind a joyous month. But somewhere behind the blossoms and crops are a f back pains and quite a few beads of perspiration. To keep the garden loo ing its best this time of year, there is a continuing battle with weeds, inse and other plant problems. Watering and fertilizing also make their deman this month. It's best not t9 ~ behind on the weedin.g. A small weed ts easier to p than a large one. Should the weeds go to seed it's all the more to contend wi next year. A number of chemical weed killers are on the market, but befo using one be sure you thoroughly unde~tand bo.w to apply it and its fu tions. Some weed ~illers kill everything. Some are only t.empo.rnry and pla in~ in that same ground may be done in a few weeb. OOler weed killel'5 aoil sterilants, and where they are used nothing will grow for a year or t 'These are very useful for killing weeds that come up in sidewalk dl'lcks. , Then there are selective weed killers. One will k:ilI any broadlea{ pla but not grasses, so it can be used to kill dandelions plaintain dock and oth such weeds in grass lawns. There are other weed killers that only kill certa weeds in didlondra lawns. Some work by killing the groWtng weeds a others V10rk on the weed seeds. It seems as if a new c~mical weed tiller two comes out every year. The best thing to do Js takt your 1peclfic we problem to your nurseryman and let him prescribe the proper trMtme · Keep after insects. Aphids, spider mites a=cllillars are very tro b~me at this time of yt!lal', The new systemic es an very elf«ti against sucking insects such u aphlda and thrfps. Chewing insects atKh · caterpillars in ti! the various lptdel don't ellt enough ~ the planta to bt c ~Ued by the ayatemla.. They mmt be tilled by CIODtaot sprays such 11 D and Sevin. Many of the all-purpose sprays have both systemics and con sprays in combination. June la 1n excellent month to plant small transplanta ol the hot •at.h annua.b sum <M zinnias, asters, marigolds, celosia, petunias and portulaca. ' HANSEL GRETEL WOVEN , GINGERBREAD HOUSE IN WOODS S T I L L AT T R A C TS Y 0 U N G .S T ER S The aqe-~ld tale of Hansel and Gretel's adventure · in the .woods and at the ginqerbread house of the evil witch will be spun before the wondering eyes of spellbound children in Costa Mesa this Saturday, June -8 . At three se parate performances at 10:30 a.m., I and 3 p.m. in the Lyceum of the High School. the Costa Mesa Women's Committee of the Orange County Philharmonic Society will present the children's fantasy. Faculty member William Clarke adopted the script and wrote the lyrics. The music was composect-by David Agress. Gerald Schroeder and David Tyler and sets and lighting will be under the di~ection of David Agress. Costumes were desig ned and made by committee members. The cast COQSists of Costa Mesa High School students Patt Bagley as Gretel, Karlene Whittington as Hansel, Kari Varney as the witch and Fred Sutton, the father. Al so Melodie Keller as Gull , Kathy Lair as Pigeon, Jean Varney and Solveig Lindblom. Donations of 50 cents for children and one dollar for adults will support the efforts of the Philharmonic Society. Tickets ore .available at the .door. And then the father under th• spell of the witch, took H•nsel •nd Gretel into the forest. "Co;,,• with me, children," h• said • • • Ml tallM Stctlltt--OAILY PILOT Frlu y, Jllftt 7, lHI ' .J "How can we help poor Hansel and Gretel?" Pigeon, Kathy Lair, and Gull, :-~ayed by Melodie Keller, will try thei r ha rdest to be of assistance •.• "Oh, what will we do to save ourselves?" Hansel and Gretel have some quick thinking to do to ouhmut the witch • • • OHllllC..-1 .......... • I • • ' Waterbug Wonderla nd Calling all waterbugs .•. calling all \\-aterbugs ! Human type, lhat is ... or, more speci· fi cally ... you Orange Coast out-n-abouter.s who prefer your whistle-wetters and/or cuh- n.uy classics ser.ved at a bar or table over- looki ng the water. Two new aqua-adjoiners have opened. for business in the area ... and they rrught prove to be just what the drink-dine ~oclor ordered as treatment for your parllcular symptoms. Here's what they have to offer ... in a1 d~c.:or sense and menu-w ise. First, let's clarify a liltle. One, although having prowled the. prem- i '>CS of both spas, this scribbler has dmed at n ~i tber. Two customer comment to date regard- ing the fare of each has ranged from "good'' to "excellent." Now ... give them a waistline ·whirl and draw.your own conclusions. • OCEAN OVERLOOKER The Fisherm,an, sprawling at the shore end of Huntington Beach pier, is an ocean overlooker that also happens to be one of the roomiest repast retailers hereabouts. This biggie seats 219 diners in its main room, 90 ;'Iii 'l'he EntranC!e To Balboa Jsla11d" PRESENTS MARK DAVIDSON AND THE BIG SOUND FRIDAY-SA TURD A Y-SUNDA Y DAVIDSON TRIO TUESDAY THRU THURSDAY ./I SPECIAL "SUNDAY SESSION" FOOD & DRINK BUFFET -S9c BLOODY MARYS -SOc 9:00 · 2:00 • "PERSONALIZED SERVICE" DAY OR NIGHT BANQUET FACILITIES • 1045 BAYSIDE DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675-0200 e BUSINESSMEN'S LUNCHEON e SUPERB DINNERS e ENTERTAINMENT VILLAGE INN OUT 'N' ·ABOUT: Orange Co~ in the cocktail Jounge and, if need be,. an a dditional 50 in a third ''standby" room. Which would seem to eliminate any pos· sibility of a dine-out wait period here. The Fisherman's "view" is a sweeping, picture-window-framed panorama of beach and ocean. Luncheon and early evening patrons will enjoy it imm~nsely .... and. it might behoove this establishment's b1g-w1gs to .s~udy after-dark floodlighting techniques as a possible exciting added for later-hour diners. SEAFOOD AND STEAKS Chef Hank Wischnewski (Hotel Laguna, Harrah's and the Golden Hotel, Lake Tahoe) serves up a s trictly seafood and steak menu at The Fisherman. CJ)oj1 ~oberto~ Family Restaurant "Where the Food it Me~ic•n- Not l.,,itetion" Try 0. Stff• P~ & Stffll Ro11eltere Meo!. tllrv Tlwn. 12 """ 10 ,,M. • Ff1 •• S.t. 12 N-. Mi41tllfllt 1985 HARBOR BL VD., C.M. 548-9927 Schroeder's Chef's Inn A Gourmet Menu of Taste and Choice ... and Time to Enjoy It! Children's Dinnen ••• 1h·Pr1ce . "BEA TIPOSSIDENTES" MAXIM? MAGaC? MADNESS? lounge Sota11ds of tfle JIMMY VANN TRIO Except T uesdoy For Reservations Telephone 675-0470 ~201 East Coast Hwy. -Corona del Mar DON JOSE' MEXICAN RESTAURANT - -proudly prese11ts -- Bayde11 Causey Trio "'o"' ._" t./:'i, ~ f\~~ f\i,~ ~+ HAYDEN CAUSEY, CHARLES MURCHISON JOSEPHINE COURREGES C f,ormtrly With The OeCnlro Sisters I ENCHILADA & TACO ........ $1.30 CHIU RELLENO-ENCHILADA .. $1 .45 S«VM "''"' rlca. "'"" ............ UIM e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adami (at Magnolia) Hunt. Be1eh 962-7911 With soup, salad and potato included, these are the dinners you will select !rom at this pierside pretty: Louisiana prawns, $3.50; Alaskan salmon steak, $3.75; halibut steak, $3.25; swordfish steak, $3.25; English sole, $3.50 ; Monterey abalone steak, $4.25 ; Idaho trout. $3.50; frog legs, $4.50 ; Neptune's brochette, $3.95; lobster Newburg with rice pilaf, $4.25; combination seafood plate, $3.75 ; Australian lobster tail, $5.75; surf and turf (steak and lobster), $5.95; stuffed Idaho trout, $4.50 ; New York steak, $5.50; filet mignon, $5.95 ; ground sirloin steak with mushroom sauce, $2.95; steak sandwich, garni, $3.25; shrimp or crab Louis, $2.95; deviled crab. $3. 75. For the l i t t 1 e fisherman: Louisiana prawns, ground sirloin steak or fried chick- en. $1.50. LOUNGE LIKEABLES In the aforementioned massive cocktail lounge, you'll find a selection of "you name it" libations available ... mixmastered by a crew of Orange County's best: Paul Dunham, TH' DORYMEN FISH 'N CHIPS TAKE HOME OR SERVED HERE! ~aving a Party This Weekend? Buy a Bucketful of 'Hearty Eating' at Oorymen Feed the Skipper & 4 Hungry Mates for $4.00. Regular Price $5.00 Bucket of Shrimp $6.00 • FISH 'N CHIPS $1.00 • SHRIMP 'N CHIPS $1.50 Call in your order -Ready on arrival 2100 W. OCEAN FIONT NEWPORT IEACH Pt.one: 67l·l200 11 0 .111 •• 1 o ,.... hllw 9i1a1cl, . FRENCH RESTAURANT Twe Lecotlons • • • COSTA MESA Cw11ff ef lt•delpll & lrhtol 540 . 3641 Ottter locotiolt-l99•H ........ f4· 1 f11 -A FEW ITEMS FROM OUR MENU - Chicken with Mushroom •....................... 1.40 Veal Cordon Bleu .................................... 3.50 Veal Oscar I Gerard's Special I _ .......... 3.15 Trout Stuffed with Crib -················--··1.85 Sweetbread Ch1ueur ....... -................. 1.75 Tri pe • le Mode de c .. n _ .................... 1.75 DIHet tntMet S.., M S.W, Yot1t•l1 lo ..,_.. .. OPEN 5 P.M.• 11 P.M. CLOSED MONDAY MfflGM ~AILY PILOT pneey, .,_ ,, n.a 1ge County's Restaurant and Entertainment Scene • JAY T PILOT .. ,, 1ua • • • The Quill and Boston BuJI ; Sam Miller, The Sportsman, La Cave, Black Knight, The Normandy, Larry Ramos, Reuben E. Lee, Palisades, The Galaxy. The concoction of your choice will be served by either Sandy Henry, former Villa Nova, Newport beautifier or Karen Bortt, longtime Palisades hostess eyefuJ. Piano doodling nightly at The Fisherman by Buddy Rhoner. Manager at TF, Kenneth Chessman. CHANNEL CHARMER The second new Waterside Wonderful awaiting your trial and judgment would be Ancient Mariner, Newport Beach. ~~ • A real chamfer, this one ... and. safe to say .•• a shoo-in for much, much, MUCH success. El Matador FAMILY RESTAURANT AUTHENTIC MEXICAN FOOD No. 10-liteliU ... & T-. wl .. rke, beau, tOltMltfl, HIM, ... , ., ............. $1.50 No. 11-l Tacpltos wltli GYOC•MOlo -co, rlco, bffM, tostoclltos, Mlso, , .. , or Mio4 .... SI.SO .. ow LUNCHEON Sf'ECIALS Ope11: Mo11. tin T1111rs. -11 :00.11 :00 Fri.· Set. -11 :00.11 :JO Su11. 12:00· 11 :00 p.nt. 17'8 N-pon lh41. (At lltli St.I Con M-642-6417 RICK CHADBOURNE COMBO TUESDAY THRU 'SUNDAY FROM 9 P.M. FREE 'CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT FILMSI Dally U11tll t p.111. Mo11d~l2a .... , Mo1141oy NIN 1111""4 Toumoments BILL MARTINI'S 130 E. 17tll COST A MESA Passport to the real thing Beware of domeatlo imitations. No substi. tute for crisp, dellcloua variety prepared from • eentury·old recipe brought over from Ena• lend by Haddon Salt, himself, American end 8rltith currency chMr• .. fuffy tcotpttd. 64•·1111 H. SALT, esq. AUTHENTIC ENGLISH Wsfi& CliJPS SHOPPE COWGE CENTER H1rbor 1t Adema -Cotti Meta . -...... led~AlLY ,.LOT ""-• ~ 1, lM By Don Wilson Located opposite M'Goo's on Coast High- way the Ancient Mariner is a delightful com· bo df adequate parking area, low-silbouette- shake roof, dark wood ·and sandy brick ex· terror , . . plus dining room-lounge d~or and view that you'll come away from talking about. Huge, floor-to-ceiling windows offer a breathtaking view of Newport Channel here . . . complimenting green carpeting, dark· wood tables and chairs, ship models, seafar· ing paintings and woodcarvings, a two-way fireplace adorned by numerous copp~r ket- tles, pots, pans and ladles that separate the edible enclosure and potion parlor. RICH is the word for this latest Ancient Mariner, sister-store of another bearing that name in the Santa Ana area . . . in all re- spects except price of entrees. WITW-SALAD BOWL ·Served with Jarge salad bowl at each table (you dish up as much as you desire Returned By Popular Demand! The F1bulou1 EDDIE CANO QUARID Doacl•t-Ufltll11' fro• 1:45 N'911tty b cept SH cley e COCKTAILS e DINNER e DANCING FOR RESERVATIONS: 536-1421 NOW! ~ DANCING singing with Mlft~\M tlOltE NEWPORT BEAOI • BAllOA PENINSULA FOR RESE!tVATIONS (71'4) 673·-4633 ~ with choice of dressing$) lhls Is the bnt of lare-at AM : _.. Top sirloin steak, $3.95 ; teriyak1 top sir· Join steak, $4.25; beef kabob, $2.95 ; New York steak, $4.95; sealood combination, $3.50; shrimp teriy~ $3.25; lobster, $5.50; sword· fish, $3.50. All accompanied by bread and choice of coffee or tea. A la carte add eds: corn on the cob, 50 cents; baked Idaho potato. 50 cents ; arti· - choke, 75 cents; dessert of the day, 75 cents; milk, 15 cents. No more to be said here abou\ the new Ancient Mariner. Only seeing is believing. l I Satu1·day Surprise Like many readers probab)y did, thjs out· n-abouter just "sorta killed'' the recent long weekend ... scooting here for a newly beard of potable, there fo'r a recommended repast. Happiest occasion of all was dropping in at Dagny Persson's Skandia Smorgasbord, Laguna Beach. Located on Broadway just off Coast High· way in that stroke and smear settlement, La Continued On P•ge 10 ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY 1S TWO GREAT REST AU RANTS ~&]B)oo~ • •LUNCHEON •DINNER • CO~CKT AILS • MAL & MARY BETH DUO TUESDAY THROUGH SA TU RDA Y • 3 7 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER BETWEEN BUFFUMS AND BROADWAY Open: Weekdays-Luncheon: 11·5 Dinners: 5:00-12:00 Saturdays-Luncheon: 11:00-5:00 Dinners: 5:00-12:00 Sundays-Dinners: 4:00-12:00 RESERVATIONS '644-2030 ~------------------------------ \ • TRIO PLAYS NIGHTLY The only thing we overlook • at the Victor Hugo Inn is · the Pacific 9cean. We have comphmenlary hors d'oeuvres from 3 p.m. to 6 p.tn.; fashion shows Wednesdays and r ridays; a man-sized cocktail, Superb luncheons and dinners daily. Don't overlook us! V1noR "uGo Inn Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home. Chit Drive at Coast Highway Lagun a Beach -494 ·~4 77 "-~ltSITAU•A~T STAG CHINESE CASlhO 111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560 Open Vear Round Dally 12-12 Fri and Sat. 'tll 3 a.m. ...... e • • ----------------------------- J!e Saini :Jropez RESTAURANT FRANCAIS French Specialty Chef Rene' I fo rmerly with Rom•noff's I 3012 Newport Blvd. New port Beach , OPEN DAILY 5:30 P.M. TIL 10:30 P.M. llosed Monday--673-7883 '10 °'"' .. c ... t ' Wttllt!Mltr PIERINO IENIGNl'S Newport hoc .. 673·2930 The Jimmy Van Trio entertains fr'om 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. every night but Tuesday at the Chef's Inn in Corona del Ma r. Pictured left to right are Don Manning on t h e drums~ Jimmy Vann at the piano and Barr Doty, bass. Inn patrons have been enjoying the trio's long engagement. SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH Largest Selection of Tropical F i s h & Supplies in the area. Now 2 Locations 211 W. WILSON, COSTA MESA (Off l'airvitW Rd.) 541-7"1 in.a, Rlvtnidt or.-NtwPort Buell (behind lht Posl Oflict) 646-ISJ6 lluncheon weekda~s [I] inner served in 1h1 Grand Ma1111er • S71 S. MAIN, ORANGB Resem tlons: S42-3S9S (Closed Sunday) Continued From P1~ 9 Persson's neat and tidy establishment turn- ed out to be a wonderful Saturday Surprise • . . and one this restaurant reviewer fully pl ans to revisit again and again, no matter what day it might' be. EXCELLENT EDIBLES There are numerous fine smorgasbo1 d~ to be tried in Orange County . . . but SS just has to be one of the best. Not that Dagny Persson & Son have come up with fantastically different availabl~. but each salad, each pate', each main c.durser here has such a wonderfully distinctive and individual taste that they truly are "differ:- ent." Don't miss this one ... and don't let the lack of a "big town" flash exterior ... or even, perhaps, difficulty in parking ... make you deviate from your course. Once inside sirandia Smargasbord and seated at a table enjoying whatever you select from a lengthy choice of condiments, you'll fully understand the enthusiasm ex- pressed herein. The cost? Oh , yes ... a TREMENDOUS $1.25 for luncheon, $1.85 for dinner. Open seven days a week. From 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., Monday through Saturday 12 noon lo 9 p.m. Sundays. N 0 TES 0 f ' A N 0 M A I) A new take-out fish-n-chips factory ..• H. Salt, Esq ..•. ready to serve you at its College Center, Costa Mesa, location. A franchise operation, you 'II be hearing more about this one (column-wise) in the very n~ar future. Recent birthdays at Whlte Horse Inn, Newport Beach. Dole-out doll Sally Reinberg and owner John Ryder. Sorry about popping Continued on.. Page 11 MATADOR ROOM A Dininf Adccnlur• CLUB SEVILLE . Coclclaill Di"'"' Enlntainm1nt CABARET GO-CO Ft'" in lh• Skv Dor1cln1 Superb culth11' 1erced 111 111• GRAND manntr ••• £nltrlnillmtnl from modtra/1 lo MOD • , • Dancing, cocktoil1 and 1h11 mo11 brouti/ul roomJ in tht W ttl N.n lo DIS/\'EYLAND In lhe lun c11pitof o/ lhe world. 1 FAJ:EDMAW WAv-~' ANAllllBI 772-7717 the GRAND HOTEL RIVIERA RESTAURANT Continental Cuisine Cocktails Serving Lttncheon and Dinner Monday through Saturday. Now Open Sundays, 4·10 p.m. W• u• locat•d on th• Briltol StrHt 1ide betwHn Mull•n I Bluett and the May Co. SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3313 S. lrlstol Costa w... 540-3140 Matnlne Sectlell-0-AL'W' r1LOT ,rlfty, JVIM 11 1Ht tT "' .._...... ________________________________ _ -· I 0 u T 'N' AB .Ou T I Continued From Page 10 that f~tive party balloon, SaJJy . . . but blame it on those WHI hot-buttered martinis. They'll do it everytime .•. or SOMETHING! The "best" again, John. * Strictly for restaurant owners and /or managers: The DAILY PILOT plans publica- tion of its first annual "Start O' Summer Sipe Sup-Swing Section" on Tuesday, June 25. Design~ to acquaint vacationers (and locals) with all necessary information regarding where to find what in your field this will be a highly retainable reader piece. For rep- resentation, give a call to this out-n-abouter. Egad . . . more work! But . . . should be a gas putting ~e section together. * Name change noted. The Fogcutter, Newport Beach, now displaying a different sobriquet ... Th•Capt~i~'s Gig. Understand same ownership still at the helm. * How to make a day off reallyi>ay. Just ask Ema Jones, Stuft.Shirt, Newport Beach., cocktail cutey or husband, "Jonesy" Jones, plankman at Villa Nova, Newport, ditto city. Ulla nova YOU'LL ENJOY OUR SUNDAY BRUNCH 11 A.M. TO 3 P.M. r1eu1porl l1J1 COAST HUiHWAY NIWPOU IEACH Dlnntr StrYH 'Ill I:•'·"'· • 3801 EAsT CoAST HIGHWAY <:oRONA DF.L MA1, CALIFORNIA PHONE: (714) 675-1374 RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED b42-7180 l:M P.N. • J:to A.M. hly YOU WON'T "TOP*" I THIS HOUSE SPECIAL TY ANYWHERE! U.S. AA CHOICE 1/2 LB. AGED TOP SIRLOIN STEAK INCLUDES CHOICE OF CLAM CHOW- DER OR ROQUEFORT SALAD, BAKED POTATO W/SOUR CREAM & CHIVES, GARLIC TOAST. •NO PUN INTENDED • s19s _}(ona _}(ai RESTAURANT RESERVATIONS: 892-1177 EDWARDS AT BOLSA HUNTINGTON BEACH TAKE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY TO GOLDEN WEST TURNOFF • RIGHT ON BOLSA TO EDWARDS AVENUE IMNliM Secn--oAtl. Y "LOT Fr1'9Y, _,_ 1, It .. Alter attending the May 27 California ' Bartenders• Guild Cocktail Competition at the Beverly lillton, this pleased pair travel-· ed next day to nearby Hollypark to complete their two-day vocation~ vacation. Among other winning tickets cashed, ••Jonesy" turned in a pair of beautifuls on the daily double. The duo's Jong green gain? Altogether • •• over $800. Now. THAT'S ''take home" pay! COSTA MISA HOWARD JOHNSON'S Euery ~ ednesday •• SPEOAL FISH FRY Speaking of Villa Nova. Newport ••• it happened there. All You Can Eat ..............••• Every Friday She ... attractive and charming ... sat down at the bar and was immediately asked by Stag He ... good looking and looking ... if she would care for a libation. She murmured something about "a tall Scotch and soda," which He hastily ordered. FRIED CLAM • PLATE · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · She almost immediately requested a Brave Bull ... which, when served ... she banded over her shoulder to boy friend-type who had wandered in between order one and order two. With both drinks already rung up on his tab (as he requested, not knowing boy friend had made the scene behind his back) Stag He paid up, murmured a hasty "gOod night'' and fled, shaking bis 'head, into the night! Tba's all! All Day -Every Day "Dabble-Bubble Cocktail'' Double Drink for the Price of One 2750 HARIOR BOULEVARD ~evos~iw~ros - Uno or Dos Senors y Senoras! Ki ck the Sunday Morning Feeling with The NEWPORTER INN'S new Mucho Grande Huevos Rancheros fernando says .•• Mucho bueno con Margarita 'I tequila mary for excltinc entrees 1nd superb service "THE BISTRO Cafe de 11 Pair a Parisian delight 1107 .IAM8otf.£ ROAD • NEWm BEACH • phone 644-1700 ' " LIDO LOUNGE Contirwous DlllClnc from 5 p.m. BILL McCLURE DUO 5 p.m.0 8 p.m. HERB-JOE TRIO 8:30 p.m. • 1 :45 1.m. " HUNT BREAKFAST Sundays 9 1.m. • 2 p.m . " FAST FEAST for the busy auy and 111 wee~m 11 :30 e.m. • t30 p,m, ~ °'=11 \ 4 ~ I { { • I I • • • > • • , ..... .. There are new spirits in lhast Tawn Ill Something wondrous is happening at Knoll's Berry Farm ... right smaclc in tho -·'-Jdle of Ghost Town. You voices. You look around. And no one's there ... A clatuvrous coach rumbles down the street. You hear it. But you can't SM It. And the only man who can explain these wonderful new mysteries hos gone off to bring back some more. He's Uncle Thaddeus P. Kn~lt. And along with his remarkable time machine, he's going to turn Ghost Town into the rarest, most exciting place around. •-.Right now, he's got Andy Devine hooked up to one of his strange inventions. And Andy will be around all summer ..• because we've made him the new town marshal of Ghost Town. Come to Knoll's Berry Farm soon ... and go back with Uncle Thaddeus to a time you'll never forget. M-flit<l-M l?fDTT'S 11111 Fiii M«la.M 25¢ admits children, 3 to 12. Adults: $1. Annual paaa for 2: ~· fREE PARKING. FREE ACCESS TO KNOTTS DINING ROOMS & SHOPS. On Beach Blvd. (Hwy. 39) 2 miles south of Santa Ana Freeway. Open 10 AM to 11 PM Daily-10 AM to 10 PM Sunday. LOOKING FOR SOMETHING TO DO? FOR SOME PLACE TO GO? THE WEEKENDER IS FULL OF IDEAS ' CURRENT ART EXHIBITS NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during reg- ular banking hours, the cartoons or Orange County artist, Virgil ''Vip" Partch. Dick Shaw, Phil lnterlandi and guest cartoonists. MUTUAL SAVINGS ANO LOAN -2867 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. On exhibit during regular business hours, during June, work by seven teenage art students. CQRONA DEL ~AR LIBRARY -420 Marigold, Corona del Mar. On exhibit during regular lib- rary hours through June. hooked rues by Joe Monte I. COFFEE GARDEN GA LLERY -26~ E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. Hours: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon. through Sat. ~he Newport Harbor Service League, which. sponsors the gallE":ry, JI displaying paintings by Alton Raible through J une 10. BALBOA PAVILION GALLERY -400 Main St., Balboa. Hours~ Wed. through Sun. 1 t«ir 5 p.m.; Mon. 6 to 9 p.m. No admission charge. Cur· rently on exhibit. "If I Had $1,000 ... " col- lectors' choices of art they would purchase. CHALi.iS GALLERY -1390 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Hours : 11 a.m.· to 5 p.m. daily. CL1rrently on exhibit portraits and collages by Evelyn Gathings Buller, bronze and wood sculp- ture by Miriam Shelton and paintings by Mark Florian. There is no admission charge. STUDIO FIVE -499 N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Currently on exhibit. through June 29, one-man show of oil paintings by Evelyn De- light Carpenter. LAGUNA BEACH ART ASSOCIATION -Gallery, 307 ClifC Drive, Laguna Beach. Hours: Mon, through Sat. 12 to 5 p.m.; Sun. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Curreqtly on exhibit. watercolors by members of the American Watercolor Society. Donation for non-members, 50c. Phone '49'1·6531 for furth· er information. HUNTINGTON BEACH CENTER -7TI7 Edinger, Hurrt,ington Beach. On exhibit June 7 and 8 during ·regular business hours paintings by members of the Westminster Art Association. SO. CALI F . FIRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach Blvd.. Huntington Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours through June 28, paint- ings of Walter Wedlock presented by the Hunt- ington Beach Art League . DORIA N HUNTER GALLERY -524 W. Common- wealth Ave.. Fullerton. Hours: Mon. through Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Currently on exhibit acry· lie .and enamel painti ngs oy Thomas Holste. CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours: Tuei;. through Sat. 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.j Thurs. eve- ning 7 to 9 p.m. No admission charge. Cur- rently on exhibit. exploratory photographs by Robert D. Routh or Anaheim. WESTERN ART GALLE RY -Saddleback Inn, E. First St. and Santa Ana Freeway, Santa Ana. On exhibit, beginning June 11. during regular business hours, paintings of the old West by Donald Putnam and Ronald Erickson. Maria's Artistry In Oils Visit O rang• County'& Most r-----E_l_e .._•_n_t_Art Gall•ry M.,;,f.,~ttn ART SU,,LIES lOOlt And All Tradlllontl Palnllnv1 & INSTRUCTION 'r•mn ot ... 1. t• hblk Opett 7 Day1 • Wfflt CerMr .t HOoKHUtlST & ADAMS Te.a.. At 6:H & 11:01 JAMES HEN"V STEW RT · FOIDI FIRE CREEK A1uf At 1:05 011lr ~Ja&ll.TTW ~DUHAW.AT EVHHI& i1i'CC~.E ·o --·--------..... --""" ...... ,,.., .. --·----·--lln· * HEY KIDS!* 119 Pol si..w Sot. 1 :00 Set "FllECIEEK" Ftiil Hour Of Your Fnorbo Carteo11s l Co..ctles Pia Free Grob1 l Muell Moro! 11..-st Sot. Show A11ywlleql .... ......, ..... Mt ... nt Wlfl-ti 2 AcNemr Awarlh werr .. IHllY-l"•Y• Dunaw1y "lo1111lo l Clr4e" In Ctlor S.My oen• • Coler "Up Tiie Dowe Stolfccne .. Show Stam At D111k ChildrM Un4«1~ FUil ( o<, IA '•1l ~A PAULO I TM H•llftl O.Wle 1111 Evert Alan UdO-GMrM Pe .... lrd "Tiie Corpet"99en" coler SllYe MC011ffR • Coler "Nowodo S111lth" lttcemmtndd tor ACIVllS H..W -·'~ 531·1271 l 1"1tf ll'r Ille DevN Hllftfflfl ltoMrf Wa•er "Tiie Sow ... S...n" Color Vincent Price e Celer "Tiie Co11q11..-or Wor111" ltecemmendtf fer #dulls -·~~:4 I Music e Comedy e Celer I E IYil P ruler "Stor Awar, J"'' Jerry Lewis ''Tiie 119 Moutti" FOUNTAIN VALLEY I Wall Disney PreM11h-l11 Color I', MlcMurn r-Tem111y s1 .... "Tiie Hepplest Mllllo11alto" Carl Reiner e Colet' ''Tllo bado1t1 Aro Co ...... Tiie ll111slo111 Are CoMlttt" . 9Ndl~ t tT,_ ...... Thi HMlesl Deullle 1111 •v1r1 AIH L•H-GIW,. P-lnll "Tiie Corpetltoften" col°' Steve McO-n e CtMr "NevetMSMltli" ltKem-lldef fer A•lts For Advertising In The Weekender Phone 642 -4321 Me .. dM S.U--c>AIL Y f'ILG:r l'rld•1· '"""' I. ,,.. -I J II'/ 'It l " ' r ' r 1 I rn.oT . '· "'' • • Touch Beginning with that first pink bow in her hair, Jittle girl knows she's special. .) He.r development into womanhood coven many phases, often incJuding the tomboy one - but her innateJy female nature begins to assert itsed early. She loves to dr~s itP and play house. She uses her wiles on her daddy. Sh~ revels in a feminine room of her own. -Looking toward the futu~e. the wi se parent chooses fumit"ure that will serve throughout a girl's childhood and teens. A design that takes equally well to little-girl ~uffies and the more so- phisticated taste of a teenager is most practical. White painted fu rniture seems made to order for a lady's bedroom, whatever her age. She' can have her white and color, too, with a frankly fem- inine furniture style. "Beautique," by Basic-Witz, is designed with soft, antiqued-white finish that may be trimmed with Wedgwood blue bands on the door and drawer fronts. If desired, the blue m ay be replaced. by any «her color to match or hjgblighl fabrics, wallpaper, paint or access'ories. The ·most off-beat tones, as well as all the more standard colors.. may be ma~ched -and the young lady -will. e>ave furniture thal' s custom finished especially for her. Choose furniture lines that are slim, gracelul and basically simple, making the furniture suit- able for any age. Certain pieces, such as a prin- cess bed with a suggestion of a canopy at the bead especially are ,ppealing to the young set. Otbe~s. such as an escritoire, find favor with old- er owners. Storage pieces should be chosen to take in stride the transition from toys and tiny dresses to sweate1s and school books. A piece <tr two more ma~ be a~ded as daugh· ter's needs increase. lt even IS possible to C'hang.e the color accents as time goes by. After the furniture has served its young own- er long and well in her bedroom at home, it is ready to start a new life away from bo~e whe!l she marries or starts a career. Good basic furn1:- ture knows no age Jimits. It can go on indefinite- ly as the basis of a room for a lady -and a lady never tells her age. Mltal:I .. Sectlett-OAILY ,.ILOT l•..W.y, M.., SI, ltff Is Appea·Jing . .. A hHvonly hnen for • teen•ger II • room ex- clulively devoted· to her lnterHts, whether they be fashion designing, record hoPfM"I or •~tive sports. The ruffl .. of linle girlhood in tfte room shown below give w•y to a more sophlstic•ted decor H the little girl m•kes the tr•nsltion into wom•nhood. Growing up is more fun in a bedroom pl•nned for the yHrs from tot to teenager -•nd beyond into married life. Thi1 prince11 bed 11 sure to appNI to any little girl's heart. The ruffle trim crHtes just • suggestion of • canopy. The dust ruffle with b•ll fringe on the bottom m•k•s • tidy •ppear•nce. Trim on dr•peries is of m•tch· int b•ll frin.-. i lmla 11· .rtdv 11 • . llATI IOI! i : :. ' JAMES HETZER'S . . . • I ~·1'1~'!r.!•~r,i}: ·e1•c~1·· • • . ' . . . . . . . . •,,_ . : \ ~ i 1 l ~. :I ~~ ~ ! • AU. Nltf'OMIMC~ JUO .,,., JUt e ALL IUTS HIOWIQ • • •Wedneedey: 1 6. I l"M Seturd•y: 3 6. I l"M • • •Thure4e}': I l"W,. Sundey: l l"M : e ,.,.rldq. I l"M 6Sund•)f: 5 l"M • ! U:!t!!!t!J!l!'!!'J!.~~.lM.t~st.: • '-~ • Welllck llM Cl-'t • All ....... ~t.e • ,._ 1714l 71'-1U. e ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ,llleltrt N~~N~~~U ................ ...... RAY EHR Rb BS 1/ld Tl" RAELETTS · · SIAT1"°"II .......... 1'tllrt .. Mllea .... e.llf ..... c. .. U7 ·~.!!.:.& Ml Alttlftt • ....._ Mte1t Ctlr't • Nil ..._. ........ f ..... OHt ,. .. ,.., 2ntl SMASH WEIK COME AS YOU All! YOU WON'T WYI THAT WAY! PEOPLE IN THE KNOW ALONG THE ORANGE COAST READ OUT 'N' ABO.UT WEEKLY FOR UP TO DATE REST AU RANT INFORMATION ,i.it me:sa ,.,.,~ ~· •. ,·.r · J'A Mt KIDS MATINEE SATUROAY·2 P.M. ........ ALSO CAITOONS . .... . ·' .... I u .1l11z ~ '.:...J,._ • First Run llullfo4 1,_ AM S....,. "CHU BASCO" "SWEET ~VEM8ER" .... s.-, ...... . All SEATS • 50c ......... l :JO.t:tl c._._, 7:2 .. 11:11 II"· Ceetlllee• 1 :Jt Sultey 1"1C1111r.oa&OM A PAMMOUNT PClVM AUO HILD OYll -~~~C:::-2.:!!..J E.._ Sllow St.ts 7 P·•·• Cotlt. ht. h• I, S.1. tr.111 2 Co111int Soon -"THI HAPPIEST MILLIONAlll" LIDO NEWPORT BEACH PHONE OR 3-8350 EVE. SHOW 6:45; CONTINUOUS SUNDAY A TENSE POLICE DRAMA , , • The Story of "MADIGA N" -Hard Working Cop! ~ RICHARD HENRY INGER WIDMARK· FONDA· STEVENS 'MADiGAN'@ LJ a so t JI Onr. t CAii "f W-tnCIW • MEET THE PEOPLE Continued From Pae-3 chairman of the Eagle Scout Character Board of Review and of the Huntington Beach Law Day USA celebration. Judge Scoville and his wife Donna met while he was attending Stanford. Married 1n 1949 they have five children, Craig 16, Karen 13, Brent 11, Christine 7 and Scott 5. In his free time the Judge enjoys hunt- ing and target practice.~ He swims every morning and is an avid ~in collector. For their vacations the Scovilles attend the International Rotary Conventions so that the youngsters may meet and know children from all over the world. Pulling together the jigsaw pieces of his life, Harmon G. Scoville bas developed as a judge who combines simflicity with integrity. dignity with a sense o humor and ability with dedication. • • • THE LUXURIOUS NEW IAlll:A THEATRE HOMI OP IOCIUNe CHAii lOOll I 709 EAST IALIOA llYD. \ \j. IALIOA PUUISUU • '13-4141 ~ • CHllO WtTH 'AHNT ONLY • o,.. 6:4'--S.n4kty 2:1 s NOW-INDS TUESDAY 1· · .. ~ JUUE CHlUS'llE ;~ TERENCESl'AMP ~ A ft. PMNMIOIC .....r. f>.: V' METllOQOl.Olt ••. AR FRml THE 'IADDl\C lRllWJr olao -Dorothy Pier For Adverti1lng in The Weekender Phone 642 -4321 CoMt:- MUSIC Faye Dunaway and Warren -Beatty star in "Bonnie and Clyde," at the Surf ThHtre, Huntington Beach. • . 'Charlton He1ton plays the role of a western- er in ''Will Penny," now 1howl119 at the Lido, Newport Beach and Edwards Cinema West, Westminster. "WE HA VE A STOCK FROM BACH TO ROCK" • BAND INSTRUMENTS 0 PIANOS • DRUMS e RECORDS • GUITARS • RENTALS 8 INSTRUCTION • REPA IR • SHEET MUSIC ~......., CllTJlll'llelr . . ClfJlf • ldlldr .. .. tlll••• • 1Wst'ill RIAfl _, TIIPWlr TECllNICOlOI M~ CAAWf'ORD • OlMR RUD A UN l'il llSAl Rll!ASC Storts WedMsdoy-J1111e 12 Exch1sl•• Area Showf .. E'tet1l1191: ':JO I t :JO Moth1ee: Wed., Sot. & S•t1. at 2:l~Not Co11tt.,•011t 1. AMPLIFIERS THRU ZITHERs.-.iOME OF THE FINEST NAME BRANDS IN THE MUSIC FIELD 2. OVER 200 YEARS OF MUSICAL EXPERIENCE TO SERVE YOU 3. WE PRACTICI HARMONY IN SALES ANO SERVICE 4. THERE IS ALWAYS A SALE AT COAST MUSIC Me111l11t s.cfion-OAIL Y l'ILOl Fndly, Jlfflt 7, l •U -----iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•-----------------~ Tn• PAT BOONE Show ,., .... , Ills lpocr.t C..· . 1'~ ~ MILLS BROTHERS f~. & THE PEARCE SISTERS • ~ SEATS "ow II llltlM)'l•ll4 TMIN .. Offlc4 • s.. C.lif. lllw.llt c ... '" s. Hllf St .. l• Aftrtln • W.llic~t lll•tlc Cllf'• • All lll~lllet A .. llCI .. • ,.._ (714) 71'-nit THE lAGUNA PLA YKOUSE Pretenll TIM Of'allte C-ty Pl'Mllttt et Wllllen! H..i.r1 -'Ive ntM .. SLOW DANCE ON THE KILLING GROUND" Dlrteled tir Jiitin FtrUCCA 11t OcH11 °Aw., 4t4-I0'1 11n ~ o,.. 1 , .... '"· s...> Flnt Time Shown To- gether. S.e it now on one of the largest scrMns In Or1nge County. Specl1 I P.T.A. Saturd1y Mlltin.._10:30 A.M. "THE BRAVE ONE" -All Setts 50c M•tnlne Stctio..-DAILY PILOT FrlCley, Ju~• 7, 1'61 lxcluslve Ar .. Run ... LIVE THEATER OPENING THIS WEEK "The Petrified Forest" A suspense drama, "The Petr Wed Forest," will be presented at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St., Huntington Beach, Fri. and Sat., opening June 7, running through June 29. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone 847·1631 for further information. "A Streetcar Named Desire" The South Coast Repertory, Third Step Theatre, 1827 Newport Bl\'.d., Costa Mesa, will present Ten- nessee Williams' drama, "A Streetcar Named De- sire" beginning June . 7. Performances Thurs. through Sat. closing July 14. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. STILL RUNNING "The Night of the Iguana" A Tennessee Williams drama, "The Night of the Iguana," w~ be presented by the Fullerton Foot· lighters Fri. and Sat. through June 8 in the Muck· enthaler Center, 113 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Ptione 528.a683. -"Nobody Loves an Albatro11" A comedy about today's ~mtertainment industry, "Nobody Loves an Albatross," is being presented Fri. and Sat., through June 8 by the Orange Studio Theater, 1995 N. State College Blvd., Orange. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone 533-2233. "Ray Charles Show" Composer·arranger Ray Charles and his band are appearing with guest performers, The Raeletts, through June 9 at the Melodyland Theatre, 10 Freed- man Way, Anaheim. Performances : Fri. 8:30 p.m.; Sat. 6:30 and 9:30 p.m.; Sun. 3 and 8 p.m. Phone 833-6617 tor further information. "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground" "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground," a contempor- ary drama, is being presented through June 12 at the Laguna Playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach. Performances Wed. through Sat., curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone 494-8061. Exclutive Coastal ArH Run .......... _. fef ... ""'" Felftlly • • lllACH •~ • T •Lui • 4 HUlltY INDS SOON H UNTINGTON l•ACH t 847•1109 - THE YEAR'S HAPPIEST MUSICAL , •. with the year's happiest cast! · FooeTa-. SOUTH COAST DX .. LAZA THEATRR S.n Die10 frMWly at Bristol • 546·2711 Now Showing 11tis is dR. ZAius. bRilliANT sciENrisr. EMiNENT Mol.oQiAN. .ltE WARNS: bewAM of MAN M bu-. kuNT ltiM dowN. CAqEJtiM.fOR MAN is A rliREAT TO civi.izATioN ON 1itE pl AllEToF* · ~ mmllV.fC* ADES IOX 01',.CI OPllNS WllEkDAYS 61M P'.M. Set. & Sn. U Ne .. CO.HIT- "ENTER LAUGHING'' ---~ ..... ,...,., SllefleyW11Nr1 De.lie .... IXCLUSrVI AltlA •NGAGIMINT STAIT5 WIDNISDAY ACltES 01' l'ltEE P'ARKIHO F coaTA Mll•A SOUTH COAST DX ptLAZA THEATR• S.. D"9e Freeway at lrlttol 546-2711 COOLED BY REFRIGERATION WEEKENDER MAGAZINE Phone 642-4321 OrlllM GNU 1 ~ Wfflltnder V I l I 1 .. . • ' ~ l 1 • t l ·WIDE OVAL -l .IRES Tubeless 'WltewaHs 29!.~. 2.50 D-70x14 /F-70x14 ~ G 70x14 3 388 G 70x15 &. Ta 2.64 FOR BETTER MILEAGE 1tt 1 n $15.ae . DRIVE ON . DUNLOP TIRES . . GOLD CUP · TUBELE$S NYLON . 60o x 13 ... 650x ·u WHITI WAL.LS UO MOii 7H I 14 775 I 14 775 I 11 $17.81 I 121 I 14 lff I 1 $11.81 PLUS EX. TAX t.55 TO 2.05 AND OLD TIRE. 1911 UhU •• HllJ 6.00.lJ FREI * Mounting *Wheel INI· ancl:f for th• lift tfre. DUNLOP Gold Seal C-60 Full 4 Ply .Prtmium Tube~ Yf~ite Wall . Certffiecf .sa~e At JOO MPH • $2·3.87 $25.87 7.JS114 7.75111 7.75114 6.15115 1.21114 l .1l1H 1.50.14 7.J11U 1.00.14 7.1h15 $27.87 $29.87 1.45115 •. 55114 t.15111 l .f!IU Uhll U0.14 1.11111 U0.11 Plus Ex. Tax 1.34 to 2.89 and old tirt . uoo 12 ·oz. TUMBLER by Anton Hocking with Gasoline Purchase Retread Tires BLACK WHITE 8!~ .9:~ Plus Rec1pable Tread ( WIDE-OVAL RETREADS Plus Rec1ppeble Tre9d .front .End .. Alignment • Correct caster, camber· • Inspect and ·adjl:lst stee~ng • Correct toe-fo, to~-out only , • .., 14''''"'"' Much has beeft Siid I I I Much his been written about i1dials but d~OP RADIALS THE TIRES ,Of TOMORROW ARE HERE TODAYI •••••••••••••• SIZES IN STOCK NOW TO FIT MOST CARSI e SAFE At SUSTAINED SPEEDS TO 125 MPH e R.AYON CORD BELT RADIAL CONSTRUCTION FOR OPTIMUM CORNERING CONTROL e SUPER-WIDE TREAD e PHENOMENAL TRACTION e EXTENDED TREAD LIFE DUNLOP SP-•1 NEW SP ....:. SPORTS RADIAl I • FOR THI · sPOm-•HN.DlD DllVH S'f'M -rt•t•m-Qv-., RNlal ,.,, ctllftrvc- tleil, llUI With rv"911. .. llltcull tl'liMI ""'"' tw IUH Ill~ 1114 lltl "'19"TllllC• t vetl ~ !tit reu1 ... 11 •1vjil1 c~lli-. Slltl .. flt 111-'" llrtvera klftlll If e1n lttm Mlltl It "'"'''"'· • e EASIER. SURER HANDLING IN ANY DRIVING MANEUVER e UNMATCHED WET. HOLD PERFORMANCE e SAFETY-SHOULDER PR.OTECTION Dunlop Rediel1-Pertormenc1-proved winners in the world'i tou9h11t lnternetionel Rellya ••• including the 1967 Monte Cerio Relly. PRICE 11t,.,ml11tllY lllrt. -· 111111 e..-illlry tlru -111411 WORTH It I lixlrl lift lift t Ytn -*r Mrftlt tlrM11t ctNitittls mlkH ll*n I llilr9ale. 0.n.., I tlt dieb ,,.. llf'ttf 11el11 IMI Oun.._ 1-.11llty CMIJ ... '"'"· -"LUS- GOOD HOUSllRPING . . . . BRAKE SPECIAL . COMPLETE •RAKE Jo·a · ' I • *Iola laeludes: ' e Ntw 8rekt Shott e Rebuild Wheel Cyli11dtr • Turn Drumc e Arc Shon e lniptcl Muter Cylindt~ e Bleed end Adjuit lrektJ EXIDE Batteries J6 Melttll 5._ .... '-Vo'". . 12 Volts· Meet c .. Most Con CORONA DEL MAR TIRE & TEXACO SERVICE EAST COAST HWY. PHONE 675-2266 CORONA DEl MAR