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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa-· I 0 Mesa aver Newport • lllS Fires Driver :A: '"'· • Stabbing Suspe,ot ·'. l .. ,,. • .... ' .. -• "' • J. "~ ' . Trans£ erre'd to Hospital Psychiatrists Named to Study h·ene Tucker By ARTHUR R. ,VINSEL Of 1M D•llY 1'1111 flaff The wile of Costa Mesa City coun- cilman George A. Tucker today was ordered transferred to Orange County Medical Center, where psychiatrists will study whether she is capable· <>f aiding in her own defense on a murder charge. Mrs. Irene ~!. Tucker, '!l, of 1642 Minorca Drive, was ordered to return to Division 1, Orange County Superior Court, on July 22 at 1:45 p.m., for a report on the menta.t evaluation. Judge William Speirs appointed Dr. J'hillip O. Krmner, of Metropolitan Slate llospital, Norwalk, and Dr. Sig· mund Kocewick, of Fairview State Hospit&~. Cost.a Mesa,' to examine Mrs. Tucker. The defendant has been held without bail et Orange County Jail since the stabbing death of her next.door neighbor, Mrs. Harriett Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive, last Friday. Mrs. Tucker appeared before Judge Speirs with bet attorney, Paul Augustine Jr., seeming dazed and con· fused, just .. ohe did w~ dur· ing her arraignment in Harbor (S.. HOSPITAL, Page %) Laver Captures Tennis Tourney Rod Laver of ,Corona del Mar, swept to · a straight sets victory over Australian professional Tony Roche in today's singles 'finals or the annual Wimbledon tennis classic. And Orange Coast area fans will be able to see the show · ou television Saturday, 1 p.m.1 OlanneZ 7. A throng of 17,IXX> saw tbe touring pro. of Newport Beach Tennb Club capture the batde or left-hander• in an hour's time. Included in the crowd were 15 members of NBTC who made a special trip to England for the tournament. See deta1ls in today'1 Sporl ltctloo, Page H • • > • ORANGE COUNTY FAIR FLOAT ENTRY WAS HUNT INGTON PARAD E FAVOR ITE Queens from County Cities Smiled 0..pite Chilly Early Morning Weather Mo m Drowns in Laguna Pool ; Mu rder Charg ed • By RICHA RD P. NALL ot .... 0.llY '''" Jl.tf The clotlled body of an attractive 21. year-old mother who died under mysterioos cir cums ta nc e swas recovered from a m~l swimming pool in Laguna Beach early this morn- ing. Pollce a r r e s t e d the young wom.all's male companion on suspicion or murder pending a determination of cause of death and other factors sur· rounding the death. Police Lt. Robert McMurray Iden- tified the woman as Marie Rodriguez of Montebello. He 1aid the woman, .her three-year· old 90l1, Kenneth and Richard Anthony Najar, 23, a met.al plater from Bellflower, checked into the American Mot.I, 2130 S. Coast Highway, al 9:15 p.m. Thursday, ' Najar waa arrested by police altef the young woman's body was found at abut 1:20 a.m. McMurray said Najar was asleep or unconscious In the,motel room when officers knocked oo the door. The lieutenant said six red capsules, as yet unldenUfiedt and beer were found in the room . . McMurray said the body was seen by Ken Aebersold, 2060 Ocean Way. •te noUUed motel manager Albert Trondle and with a pool cleaning im· plement they retrieved the body. Dr. Manuel Richder or Fullerton, who was vacationing at the motel , ap- plied mouth·to-moutb re1U!citatioo unsuccessfully-and. pronounced the young woman dead. Police said Najar told them he ond the Rodriguez woman had gone swim- ming in their clothing but that he lost sight of 1her and 111umed &be bad lert. (SH DROWNING, Pas•%) Newport P olice Seek Snip er Who Fired at Driver Newport Beach police today were searching for a motorist sniper who fired one shot into the rear windshield or another driver's car before dawn today. ' The shooting incident occUrred at 1:40 a.m. on McicArt.hur Boulevard neat Harbor View Drive , according to the man who was shot at. Police identified him as Harvey \Valker, 28, of 900 Sea Lane. 11ley said Walker wNi not hit by the bullet. Walker told police he was south· bound on MacArthur returning home When the driver or a small car pulled in closely behlnd him. The next thing he knew, a bullet had ripped through the rear Windshield of hl$ car, he reported. The caliber of the slug, and descrip· ufi or the sniper were not disclosed. OD' DAILY PILOT • FRIDAY ).FJERNPC>N, ~UL Y 5, :r 968- ~ '11 NO. l'1. 4 laCTtoNI, W PAeas· Stopper .. FIRE ENGINES WHISTLE AND HOOT Fovr Year Old lloclcy K!iln Object• ~50,_000 PackHu_n_tington For64thHoliday Parade By JAMES MCNABB, Jr. or Ille O.lly Pli.t llatl Crowds estimate d by police at 150,000 vis1.tor1 josUed on Huntington Beach downtown 11treets Thur11day to view the clty'1 64th annual Fourtl\ of July parade extravaganza. Moving out smarUy at 11 a.m. the traditional Boy Scout and Long Beach Mounted Police vanguard led the 2 and one-h.alf hour procession of floats, bands, drill teams, novelties. pollti· cians and performers under . salty gray-blue skies. The Parade sweepstakes winner was the Stanton Chamber of Commerce float featuring Miss Stanton and Miss Junior Stanton. Mrs. Annie Dawson also of Stanton took the president's trophy with her "Spirit of '76" float carrying the Dawson family in authentic, hand· made ·costumes of the Revolutionary War period. · · The mayor's trophy went to Las Brizas Del Mar Auxiliary, Children's Jlome Society of California . The YM· CA Great River Nation won the Del Mar trophy with a t?oat float complete with whooping braves. JBS FLOAT FIRST The John Birch Society fioat featur- ing a large portrait ol missionary Army Capt. John Birch, after whom the society was named .. placed first in the non-theme division. . Police said the large crowd was "very orderly'' and reported lltUe trouble with crowd control and heavy • trarrlc both before and after the parade .. All 127 Huntington Beach police offfters were on duty. assisted by six Marine military policemen and a patrol he licopter. George. Putnam, te l evtslon newscaster, serving a11 equestrian grand marshal received heavy ap. plau11e as he toured the parade route.' Jeffye Blackard, Miss Huntington Beach, and Kare n Cutler, Huntington Beach JunJor Mis•. rode the queen's noat. There was no Miss Firecracker Ufb.year. WavJn,i:, kiss-blowing Don Galloway of lbo "Ironsides" televlllon show ar- rived late for his grand.marshal 1pot. Among the 2,700 paraders 1'or8 the Long Beacll Mounted :Police, 'Charles PavJu, carryini a 13 •tar America" Civil 7 Rag; Mayor Alvin Coen.and lamlly; Rep.-Craig Homer (R·Long Beach); and Rep. Richard Hanna (D· Anaheim). TROPHY WINNERS The complete list of trophy winners includes: , Tht!me Float General, president's trophy: Spirit of '76; Golden West College, Knott's Berry ,F~m. Theme F1oat Nelgb_b6r1Df City, mayor's trophy; Las Br1zas Del Mar, City of Anaheim. Theme Float Civic Organization, Del Mar trophy : YMCA Great River Na· lion, Huntington Beach Elks Lodge, Cub Pack Numbe r 296. Noa-theme Float Nelfltborlng City: Garden Grove Strawberry Festival, Westminster, San Clemente Chamber of Commerce. Non·tbeme F 1 oat Commercial: McDonalJi's HambUrgers. Noa-theme General: John Birth Society, Y·lndian Maidens, Banj~ I'~ Pickers Square Dance Club, Boy Scoiw (See PARADE ,Page Zl ' Weatlter II you survived the (JOit-Fourth ear-ringing, the weatherman Says you can blt forWard to a weekend or sunny afternoons and early morning for. High.I near 70. INSm E TODAY It's not an '°'JI ta.tk to. tum local ptoplt iftto· gr~at 1001k1 of crt but it'1 doM ae the Laguna Beech Pageant of the Ma1ttr1. See toda~'I W Hklftdtr. . -.. -, .. ,, ._ • T-" ,_ ... -wa n a r r ._ .. ,, -• ,_ .. --.. --• ........ ............ .. ---• ·-. • Art' ..... .. ... ,.. ce-. • -... _ ..... · '' ........ • " ...... . , ,. ' .... ·--'i ... _ . ---. 'Co': • --,/ ,,.,, lh:Fi -... \ • • ' ,1 DAILY PILOT F'rid.tJ, July S, 1961 Heavy Figlatitag Last of Marines ' Quits Khe Sanh SAIGON (UPI) -The last U.S. 'Ma· rines pulle<l out of Khe Sanh today aa American B52s defied Cominunist missiles and bombed targets just above the d,emolished fortress for the fifth consecutive day. · Marine forces withdrawing from Khe Sanh Thursday reported kllllng at least 17 North Vietnamese regulars in a force.-ot: about JOO who attacked a Leathern~ck C()!Umn three miles liOUth o! the fortress. Division, tol4 Wllklnsoa. "However, the b&se was a yoke around my neck." The withdrawal gave, up a base· which Americans had held /or 23 months. It was oace described as a vital link in the chain of defenses just below the DMZ. . The U.S. command said last week the changing pattern of the war· in the area made possible the giving up of Khe Sanh. It said allied troop« had more mobility at this time to counter infiltration . MASSED FLAGS MARK VANGUARD FOR HUNTINCJTON BEACH FOURTH OF JULY PARADE :r'rlditional Appe1r1nce of Long Be1ch ~ntecl Pollce Led Off Line of March. The Marines lost four mee killed .and 13 wounded in the 40-mlnute battle along Highway 9, the only open road from allied coastal baltiQns to Kbe Sanh . Pilot& tly:lng the BS2 strikes above Khe Sailh again6t tarleta in North Vietnam'• panhandle reported at least two surface-to-air missiles streaking toward the craft but both missed. Nearer SAigon, U.S. Army In· fantrymen still had no report on how many Communist soldiers died in an almost suicidal assault on a U.S. camp 40 miles northwest of • the capital, where the Viet Cong are believed massing 2,000 to 4,000 troops for a pusti toward the city. Fro• Pqe I PARADE ... 1'l""P Number One. -,. Float" Civil Air Patrol, U.S. Naval Weapons Station. '.._Draa.: FJve Points Shoppin& Cealer, Adoht Dairy -Earl Finley, Dr. llld Mn. Perry W. Hurst. Deeerated Alllol: Himtington Beach Emblem Club, women's Division Hun· "' tingCAJa Beach Chamber of Commerce, HlllltiJIClon ll<ach Board of Realtors. Nt1I m•w.,.,. Drtl1 Te11111: Junior . Mminel of La Puerrte, Precision· nalrel, tth District Ladies Auxlllary. MIUWJ DrW Tea1111 : Norton Air Force Bue, Radiomen Precision Drill of San Dieg-0, Edwards Air Force Bue. _Non-military Marching:: Westmi.nSter Elks Lodge , Girl Scout Cadettes. Military MarchJn&: U.S. Naval Sta· tioo, Long Beach; U.S. M&rines, Camp PendleWn. M1joreUe1: Evelyn's Starlettes, Lin Lovettes. Senior Toppers. Color Gaud1: Kingsmen Drum and Bugle Co.pc, 11th District U.S .C.0.t Guard; U.S. Marines Camp Pendleton. Color Guard.I (DO other parade un.lt): CoM.a Mesa Police, NavY Radiomen, Orange Police Depart· ment. Yoath Bandt: Glendale Youth Band. · Speclalty Bandt: Mac Pherson Highlander!, GleDgarry Highlanders. Julor Dnun ud Bulle C,rpo: Kingsm"1 Drum and Bug!<, Casianet- tes Drum and Bugle, King Royal Lancen. MWWJ Budo: 'l2nd U.S. Army; U.S. Naval Station, Loe Alamltos. AnUqae Aato: Newport Regional Group H01'6eless Carriage Club. Antique Auto: T. C. Archibald, Richard wd Thomas Warne, Wisdom B.everage Co. Group Specialty: Banda Nogai In· dian Dancers, Orange County Chapter SPEBSQSA (Barber shop singers). Individual Specialty: David Filbeck and Richard Foley, Donnie Tucker, \Vesbnin6ter Elks. Ladies Sll\ler l\lounted: Linda Lo ng. J\lexican Cbarro: Calvin Hong, Jr. Arabi an: Karen Potter, Patricia Manley. Indian !!tan: Chief Rolling Thunder, J esse Loco. Indian Lady: Cherie Fisher, Julie Joseph, Brend Potter. !\latched Pair Fancy \Ve Ii tern: Everett and Ervin Tibbits. Unique or Cf#me: Steve Hoban and Lori Lin nberger, Ke it b Liedhaldt and S anie Bushnell. Parade Ho se Sll\•er : Clarmce Sultzer. Barbara Bomberger. Parade Ho r1e Plain: C. A. Brush, Phylis Traylor. Spanish Seno~lta : Cheryl Desrosiers. Novelty: Clyde a11d June Saint Amant. Ardith Diemere, David Hunt. l\l alched Pair Spanish: Dell and Sookey Sepulveda. Ladies Fancy \\'est.ern: Betty Red· path. !\tens Fancy \\lestern : Bill Adams, E. H. \\'ray. • I • DAILY PILOT .... ,.,. ..... HwlW .. hecll w.. I 'If Rebert N. Weed rvbl1&Mr 1\01'l1t11 Ktt¥i! Rlfltor Thefl'l•I A. M11rpkl~t ,.....,.,,. Edltll!' J1c.k It. C.rfey '••I Nin•~ .,...._. Ma,...,-Adwt!ldnt Dln1d« otn, •• ~ MfM: »f Wnf .. V street .. .,.. ....,., zrn w ... 1.,.. . .., .. vtrc ..,._ ...... , m ,,_, •w- •• • r lllc:fil:.• 1t11 ttr..t '~ .. ,. ·----~ .. .. ....... u, tll• ,... • .............. tor =--'-.... ,, ...... ~~ ...... ..... ~ ..... ,.. ..... -_.. .. mi -----........ ~ ..... T I • · Dl41 MMlll c a a e• ,,,.....,. =;:W& :!"Ir.·== r..:.1: =: .:r J .:.-:-1-: :a:= . -_.__,. -u=-----...,. - ,, ..... .,,Cll/ff"' . --1: -:r*" ; -:-:,,, .-. • Assembly ·Unit ,Kills Bill For Harbor District Vote By JACK BROBAeK CH IM Dt~r f'a.t Sllft State legislation aimed at submitting the !ate of the Oraoge County Harbor District to county voters is dead for this session of the Ca l if or nia Legislature. The Assembly Moolcipal and County Governmeot Committee failed to pass the measure Wednesday but com- mittee chairman John Knox (0-Ricb- mond) warned.county representatives that if local action was not taken, the committee would again move into the picture next January. Knox said delay in action on the bill by ~semblyman John V. Briggs (R- Fullerton) ' ' w o u Id· give the supervisors one more chance to act on dissolution of the district." "U this action does not occur," Knox said, "I can assure you this committee will be very receptive to legislation in the near future." Knox leans heavily toward action by the Local Agency Formation Com· mission, an agency whJch was created through legislation sponsored by Knox. The Briggs bill was before the com· mi!-iee !or the second Ume. On June 26 ii was delayed to tack on a long llat of amenciz'2ents suggested by Newport Beach. · During Wednesday's hear I 11 g Assemblyman Robert Burke (ft-Hun- tington Beech) ~pted to 1•t the bill throu&11 committee. A vote to seDd it to the assembly floor !ailed, as did a second bill to keep the bill in com· mittee. The latter situation resulted, however, for committee inaction. Briggs said he was disappointed tha t . the bill failed to·clear committee but \varned that "I believe· that we have ser\·ed a .purpose in bringing the im· portance of this matter to the supervisors. We have placed the~ on tnho~c~. ~~ wi~1not .. ~~~~P~.inaction on !;!Ir Piu ~ any onger. Briggs' bill would have put the future Of the harbor district up to a vote of the county's electorate in No•ember. It had. the backing of the County League of Cities. Last week the supervjsors voted 4 to 1 to retain the harbor district as presently set up. Police to Cut Food Supply To Gunman With Hostage SYDNEY, Australia (UPI) -Police today cut oU fOOd to the besiege:!. gun. man threatening for four days to kill his tecn·age br·ide, her baby and "a · few coppers." ActiDg under his threats, police bad been sending into the iUrround t' house steak, fried eggs, curry and rice and fish 'n' chips as well as an armor piercing rine, ammunition and b aby supplies to \Vallace Mellish, 23, his bride Beryl Muddle, 18, and her 11- v;eek:-old son Leslie. Police Chief Norman Ailaa said from now on only food for baby Leslie \\-"Ould be sent in. "We can't let him starve," Allan said. "It is now a waiting game. It's not a war. In war lives are expendable. My mission is to save them," Allan said. His handling of his mission won him the praise of public opinion. Today J\ustralian newspapers turned on Allan for supplying the Armalite sniper rifle and 200 bullets to the petty · Criminal. The police chief said he had no choice , The chlef said l\1ellisb demanded tb.e weapon and ammunition unc!er thr€at of shooting his bride and the baby. Allan and jail chaplain Clive Paton had gone into the house to talk to Mellish. ''To refuse l\1ellish meant a death sentence for bhe baby, wife, the c\ergytnan and very probably myself too. I had to weigh the immediate From Page I DROWNING. •• I le vrent back to the room and Weflt lo sleep, said Mca.1urray. McMurray said the young wo1nan 11ad bruises on her body. lte said the physician and a deputy coroner thought at the scene that she may not have died of drowning. J-lowever, Jim Beisner, deputy cor· oner, said .later today that a mornlng autopsy indicated that drowning may have been the eause oC death. s'eisner also said there hH been no official determination yet pending out· t:ome or other tests. toxicology tests to pinpoint possible substances In thr woman's sytem. ~11:l\1urray said Police .ent Najar to the Orange County Medical Center for a physical examinaUoa to determine If it was safe for him to be placed in 111 cell. He was returned to the je.11 and locked up. f\1cl\1urray said the victim's 11on wes asleep. He wu talc~ to the police sta- tion where he ate a candy bar and wa! put to bed until hJs transfer to Sitton Hall. a )uvenile receiving facility in Orange. Police allio noWied the dead woman's erandparents. ' reality against the potential. "It meant he had one more weapon and he has an arsenal or assorted bombs , grenades, pis tols and a sawed of! shotgun," the chief explained. ' Miss Muddle, forced to marry Mellish at gunpoint after he broke into the house Tuesday, was proving little help to police. Allan said she kept guard while Mellish 11apped. She alscJ apparenUy tasted the. food to make sure it contained no sleeping drugs. Detective Chief Don Fergusson said he believes Mellish eventually will sur- render peacefully. He said police will honor still another promise made under threat -not to prosecute Mellish for the siege of the Sydney suburb. Allan said he is waiting for Mellish to telephone for surrender terms .. One detective disagreed on the waiting game. He told the Sydney Sun that Mellish'& threats are nothing but bluff. He said Mellish, would not shoot il police charged into the house. From Page I HOSPITAL ... District Judicial Court. Her husband and family were ab6ent from the courtroom during the brief hearing today, The defendant said nothing during the proceeding, as Judge Spein ap- pointed the psychiatrist& and ordered her moved to tbe medical center's plyehiatric facility. Costa Me6a Police Capt. E d Glasgow, meanwhile, s.Dki technicians at the Orange County Sheriff's Crime Lab have what they say may be the weapon used to kill Mrs . Westphal. It is a butcher knife, still being checked for possible blood traces fro1n the body of Mrs. Westphal. wtio was buried in Inglewood the day ~r ac- cused slayer, was arraigned. NEIGHBOR WITNESS A neighbor, OooDld V. Schenk, of 1644 Mioorca Drfve, is apparently the witness closest to knowing what ac· tually happened last Friday afternoon in the Mesa Verde area killing. He told lnveltigators he heard screams and a dog barking, "ran ouUide and found Mr6 . Westphd st.an· dir.g In Ule street, bleeding (rom a stab wound and in a state m shock . The victim staggered a~s 1'11 •lttet, collapoed to the ground and made a ttatement involving Mrs. Tucker in !be knifing, then aware.Uy died while wailli>g lot an ambulan<:t, No motive haS been determined end the wetpon used to Nb Mrs. W..qihAI has Dot been poclU~ly lden- Ufted, allhouth ln~otil•tors belleve lt ii; among kitchen uteDStl.s taken from tt)e Tucker bome. ,. . Khe Sanh, the scene of one of the heaviest lieges of the war earlier this year, was formally given Up tod4y as demolition teams dynamited U1e final two bunkers and about 3,500 Marines moved out on trucks and in helicop- ters. North Vietnamese snipers hit one of the truCks, and Communist com· mandos blew up a bridge, but Marine officers told UPI Correspondent Ray- mond Wilkinson the withdrawal was "a sueceu." "As far as I'm coocerned, I still own Khe Sanh," Maj. Gen. Raymond Davia, commander of the 3rd Marine ' Three American &oldiers were killed and 50 wow><led in the 500-round mortar and rocket b&rrage preceding the attack and during--the 21h-hour fight at Dau Tieng itself. In other developments: -President Nguyen Van Thie11-gave his blessing to a new alliance of 28 Vietnamese political and c i v i c organi~tions with all the earmarks of a pro-government political party. -U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman completed hls third day in Vietnam with another tour 0£ agricultural projects. He iJ to leave for Mllllila Saturday, 1 5 Priso_~ers Overpower Guards in Futile E~cape Plunge Vi.,tlm • FBI agents charged in Ha,vaii that 10 hippies stood by and looked on when artist John M. Gallagher, 19, of San Clemente fell to his death in dormant Haleakala volcano on Hav»ai· ian island of Maui. They fail- ed to report tragedy. Whisky Destroyed BARDSTOWN, Ky. (UPI) -More than $500,000 worth of s!ored whisky has gone down the drain. The whisky was destroyed Thursday night by fire at the Water!ill & Frazier distillery. Flames from the spec- tacular blaze could be seen for 15 miles, authorities said. r I ""' CHICAGO (UPI) -Five prisoners overpowered three guards, took their uniforms and guns and tried to scram-· ble over. t.he fence at the Cook County jail Thursday night. The prisoners, who fled their unlock· .eel cells, then engaged in a lengthy 'gunbattle with jail police and city and county authorities before one of their number was wounded. The other four were captured early this morning alter being out of thelr cells !or three hours. .The wounded prisoner was taken to Cook County Hospital where he was treated for gunshot wounds. None of the guards nor (>Olice who answered the call was injured de s p it e "miscellaneous" shooting, authorities said. Warden \Vlnston Moore said the five prisoners ·were able to pull their escape attempt because "some of- ficers didn't lock Uleir cells. It was negligence." He said the five Jru?n, not im· mediately identified, left their cells shortly before midnight Thursday. "They came down a dumbwaiter and waited in the yard untlltrthe tower men (guards) came through and ihen they overpowei:ed them," Moore said. "They gagged them. s w a pp e d uniforms and went to the tower," he said. Moore said the prisoners mounted the tower -which Is on the fence of the jail· -and tried to get over the fence. "They were on the fence," Moore said. "Lt. William Smith was getting off duty when he saw something suspicious. He yelled 'halt', they shot at him, he shot at them .'' Moore said dozens of squads of city police and Cook County sheriff's police answered an emergency call. • DREXEL'S GUILD HALL SID£ CHAIRS Rea. 89.. • SALE ARM CHAIRS Reg. 105. • • SALE OVAL TABLE Rea. 285. • • • SALE ••• 77. 89 .... 249. OUR SALE ALSO FEATURES SELECT GROUPS FROM , DREXEL, CENTURY, AND MARGIE CARSON GROUPS ALL AT GREATLY LAMPS, PICTURES, AREA RUGS ALSO INCLUDED. HENREDON, HERITAGE, KINDEL, REDUCED PRICES. ACCESSORIES, EXC:LUSIVI DEAUlS FOR: HENHDON -DREXn -HDITAM '° DAYS NO INTDEST -LONIHR mMs AYAILAIU ON Al'PIOYID C:HDIT ' 7eJ 111111. NIWl'ORT llAc:ff M2-201G 1721W-""'9 INTlllOllS - r.efaal1nnl ... .._ LA•UNA llACH 11111..... 14$ --Hwy Aud•I• AID-NSfD °"" PlllAT0 "m. t ,.... , ........... ., 0.-,.. c..., IMl-116J ' 4Mo41$1 ----~ ---·~-~-L--~----------=L=------·-------. ._,_,, ____ -_ .I I I I I t, ··' • --- Huntington Bea eh ' Yoar Hometown Dally Paper VOL 6l , NO~ lll, ~ SECTIOJllS, ~ ~A-SES \ • WI CENTS ( 150,000 ·Turn .Out for. 4th Para.de ' . . • ' SWEEPSTAKES PRIZE WON BY STANTON CHAMBER" OF COMMERCE ''W• ,T~· People" Theme Portraytd by Miu Stinton and .Her Court ROYAL FLOAT REVEALS HUNTINGTON BEACH 'S '76 SPIRIT • Qveon Joffyo Bloclulnl oncl Koren Cutlor, City's Junior Mi11 ORANGE COUNTY FAIR .FLOAT ENTRY WAS HUNTINGTON PARADE FAVORITE Ouuns from County Citios Smilod Dnplto Chilly Eorly Mornl119 WHthor Stanton · Chamber Wins Sweepstakes ' Tiuie Gi:QW$Sh~t For November 5 Bond Balloting Time is growing short for a bond issue proposition for parks and recrea- tion and for a new central city library being planned for Nov. 5 ballot, the Ci· ty Council has-been told. Councilmen were told by Acting City Administrator Brandfr Castle . that Aug. 1 is pretty near the deadline for getting the bond proposition on the November ballot. While Librarian Walter Johnson sakl he would tJ,ave a report on the needs of his departmen~ ready "in ·plenty of time," the park.Officials were less op- timistic. Councilman Jerry Math n e y , chainnan of a council committee making a study of the central city park proposal, said his committee could not meet the deadline. Department director N o r m a n Worthy said the rest Of the park needs report would be ready and that the central park idea would be under in· tensive study with the hope of having the figures feady by the Aug. l deadline. Councilmen noted that it Is likely the Huntington Beaoh Union High School District will have a bond issue pro· posal of between $18 million and $2.1 million on the November ballot. Councilman Jack Greer. qulpped that "the high schools seem always to have a bond issue on the ballot." By JAMES MtNABB, J,, Of "-!Hllf' ~lie! 511H Crowds estimated by police at 1501000 visitors jostled on Huntington Beach downtown streets Thursday to view the city's 64th annual Fourth of July parade extravaganza. Moving out smartly at 11 a.n1. the traditional Boy Scout and Long Beach Mounted Police vanguard led the .2 and one-half hour procession of floats, band!1 drill teams, novelties, politi~ cians and performers under salty gray·blue skies. The Parade sweepstakes winner was the Stanton Chamber of Commerce float featuring Miss Stant9n and Miss Junior Stanton. Mrs. Annie Dawson also of Stanton took the president's trophy with her 0 Splrlt of ·'76" float carrying the Dawson family in authentic, hand. made costumes of the Revolutionary War period. . The mayor's trophy weflt to Las Brizas Del Mar Auxiliary, Children's Home Society oC California. The YM· CA Great River Nation woo the Del Mar trophy with a boat float complete wl~ whooping braves. JBS FWAT FIRST The J ohn Birch Society Ociat featur· Ing a large portrait of missionary Army Capt, John Birch, after whom the society. was named, placed first in the non·theme division. Police 1 said the large crowd was "very · ordetly" and reported little trouble with crowd control and heavy traUic both before and after the j>arade. All lZ7 Huntington Beach police officers were OJl duty, assisted by six Marine mUitary policemen and a patrol helicopter. George Putnam, tel ev i s Ion newacaster, serving, as equestrian grand marshal received heavy ap- plau~e as he toured the parade route. Jeffye Blackard, MiSs Huntington Beach, and .. K.ar~n Cutler, Huntington Beach Junior Miss, rode the queen 's float. There was no Miss Firecracker this year. \Vaving, kiss-blowing Don Gallow;iy of the "Ironsides" television show ar· rived late for hiB grand marshal spot. · Among the 2. 700 paraders were the Long· Beach Mounted Police. Charles Pavlu. carrying a 13 star American Civil War flag; Mayor Alvin Coen and family: Rep. CrelSi!' Hosmer (R-Long Beach); and Rep. Ri chard Hanna (D· Anaheim). TROPHY WINNERS The complete list of trophy wirlners includes : Theme Float General, president's trophy: Spirit or '76; Golden West College, Knott's Berry Farm. Theme Float Neighboring City, mayor's trophy: Las Brizas Del Mar, City or Anaheim. Theme Float Civic Organization, Del Mar trbphy: YMCA Great River Na· tion, Huntington Bench Elks Lodge, Cub Pack Number 296. Non·theme Float Neighboring City: Garden Grove Strawberry Festi\·ut. Westminster. San Clemente Chamber or Co mmerce. Non·tbeme FI o at Commercial: McDonald's Hamburgers. Non-tbeme General: John Birch ~iety, Y-lndian Maidens , Banjo Assembly ljnit Kills Bil~ For Harbor District Vote By JACK BROBACK Of 111t IHll, Plitt Stiff State legislation .aimed at submitting the fate of the Orange County Harbor District 'to county voters is dead for this session of the CaJJfornia Legislature. The Assembly Municipal a.00. County Government Committee failed to pass the measure Wednesday but com- mittee chairman John Kno• (D·Rich· mond) warned county representaUves that if local actlon was not taken, the committee would again move into the picture next January. Kno• said delay in action on lhe bill by Aasemblyman Jobn V. Bl'lggs !R· Fullerton) ' ' w o u 1 d give the supervisors cme more chance to act on dissplution of the district." "U this action doe1 not occur." Knox 5aid. "I can assure you this committee will be very receptive to legislaUon in the near future." Knox leans heavily toward action by the Local Agency Formation Com· I • mission , an agency which was created through legislation sponsored by Knox. The Briggs bill was before the com· mittee for the second Ume. Oo-June 26 it was delayed Jo tack on a long list of amendments suggested by Newport Beach. • . r>uring Wednesday's be a' In g Assemblyman Robert Burke CR-Hun- tington Beach) attempted to get the bill through com.rnlttee .. A vote to send it to the assembly floor Jailed, as did a second bill to keep the bill in com· mittee. The latter situaUon resulted, however, for committee inaction. Briggs said he was disappointed that the bill failed to clear committee but warned that "I beilev.e that we have served a purpose in bringing the im· portance of this matter to the supervisors. We have placed them on notice and will not accept inact.Jon on their pan any tonger." Briggs' blU would have put the (Set HARBOR, Pace I) I Pickers Square Dance Club, Boy Scout Troop Nwnber One. l'llllltary Floats: Civil Air Patrol, U.S. Naval Weapons Station. Hone Drawn: Flve Points Shopping Center, Adohr Dairy -Earl Finley, Dr. and Mrs. Perry W. Hurst. Decorated Autos: Huntington Beach Emblem Club, Women's Division Hun~ tin-gton Beach Chamber of Commerce, l!untington Beach Board of Realtors. Non-military Drill Team1; Junior (See PARADE ,Page I) Last Marine -I • Pulls Out Of Iilie Sanll SAIGON ·(UPI) -The last U.S. Ma. rines pulled oot of Khe Sanh t.oday as American B52s defied CommUnist missiles and bombed targets just above the demolished fortress for the filth consecutive. day_. Marine forces , withdcawing from I Khe Sanh 'TbUrsday,reported. 'k.U11ng at least l.7 J'iortb .Vletna~ -regul*' in a force or· about 100 wb'O attacbd • Leatherneck column three miles south of the fortress. _ ~ The Marines Jost four men killed ~ and 13 wobndid in ~e 40-minu!e._,.,.':'1:''.1 along Hlgbway ,9, the OD,)y. open roa\I 1 from . am~ coast.at bastions tD Khe Sanh.. , · Pilots fljing the B52 strikes above Khe Sanh against targets Jn North Vietnam's.panhandle reported at least two. surface-to-air missiles streaking toward the. craft but both missed. Khe Sanh, the scene o( ooe of the ·heaviest sieges of the war earlier. this year, was fdrmally given up today as demolition teams dynamited the final two bunkers and about 3,500 Marines · moved out on• truckS' and in hellcop~ ters. North Vietnamese snipers hit one of the trucks, and Communist com- mandos blew up a bridge, but Marine officers told UPI Correspondent Ray· mond Wil..k..inson the withdrawal wu: "a success." , Laver Captures '(e1mis Tourney Rod Laver of Corona del Mar, swept to a straight sets vicOOry over Australian professional Tony Roche in today's singles finals of lbe annual \Vimbledon tennis classic. And Orange Coast area fans will bo able to see the show on television Saturday, 1 p.m .. Channel 7. A throng of 17 ,000 saw the touring pro of Newport Beach Tennis Club capture the battle of left-handers in a n hour's time. Included in "the crowd were· 15 members of. NBTC who made a Specia l trip to England for the tournament. See detallS in today's Sport Section, Page 14 . Orange Coal& Weather If you survived the post-Fowth ear ringing, the weatherman says you can look forward to ~ weekend of sunny afternoons and early morning fog. Highs near 70. INSIDE TODAY JC's not an eaay talk to turn loccl J)eOJ)lt into great work.s of art bui it's done at the Laguna Btach Pagean' of tM Ma.sttr.s. Set toda~'s Wttktndtr. '-fl 1 .. 11 l........ 11 --·-. --.. --Wlllt't °""" t Art~ It -.. ...... ,........, IJ \J'lllM lt•ll ,.. ..... l --. --. ••• c:•• •n ·, • --,_-"- j , . .. >. •• ·- • :! OA!L Y PILOT Friday. Jul1 S. 1968 • " " MASSED FLAGS MARK VANGUARD FDR HUN T.INGTDN BEACH FOURTH OF JULY PARADE Trldition•I Appe1r•nc• of Long Be1ch Mounted Police Led Off Line of Mlrch. ' Father Ross, Ex-Westminster Pastor, Dies The Rev. Robert Rosi, 52, former putor of Bles1ed Sacrament Catholic Church in Welt.minster, died Wed- nesday in T01Tance Memorial Hospital after suffering a heart attack. Father Ross was pastor of the church 1from 1940-1958. Father Ross was instrumental in building the pl'tlsent Blessed Sacra- ment pai-ish buildings in \Vestminster \vith the exceptions of the most recent additions. He came to the parish while the nev. Jolm 'McFadden waa pastor and became pastor \Vhen the Rev. l\.lcFad- den went to Lima, Peru for parish work. Following his atay at Weitmlnster. Father Ross transferred !o Buffalo, New York where he became bursar for the Columban seminary. After five J"ars at this post, Father Ross spent two years in Peru and Guatemala- where the Columban order is active. He next returned to Los Angeles where he was engaa:ed in parish work in the diocese. Father Ross, a native or Newburyport, Mass., ls survived by a brother, William , -of Santa Ana and a sister, Mary, ol Boston. Requiem Mass will be at 7 p.m. Fri· day (July 5) at Nativity. Catholic Church, 1447 Engracia Ave., TorranCil. -'Jbe /U.lleral mass will be ll a .m. Saturday (July e) at Ble111d sacra· ment Church, 14072 S. OUve, Weotmin· st« with interment in Good Shepherd Cemetery in Huntington Beach. The Rev. Joseph Murrin, present pastor at Blessed Sacrament Church, will officiate at the mus. Callanan Mission Mortuary, Garden Grove is handling the arrangements. From p .. ., l HARBOR .•.. future Of the harbor district up to a vote of the county's electorate in November. It had t.he bacltiJJg of the County League of Cities. Last week the supervisors voted ( to 1 to retain the harbor district as presently set up. , Chamber Complete~ Bi g ~oving Job llunting.ton Beach Chamber of Com - merce has completed moving its of· flees lrOm 314 5th St. to the Town and Country Shopping Center at Beach Boulevllfd south of Ellis Avenue. A f'!1''A;!_al opening celebration is scheduled for July 19 in conjunction with the grand opening of the entire shopping center, according t o Manager Dale Dunn. DAILY PILOT " ............. ~ '11.ol.orf N. WoM ,...,_ Tli•l'll•t Koo'<'il £dllor ThoM tt A. M11r,hl11e Mlll'lt91no Elltor Albort W. ltto1 Wllli1rr1 l 1td A11ocl1te H""'lf"'11111 INdl Edllw City Edl!W HWl ............ Offt&9 ~Of Ith Str•tt M1 llln1 M4 ..... u P.O. 111 7t0 92641 Offlff Offic11 ....._. IMch: 2211 w ... 1t1t11 19111 .... m , ... ,._.:»I W•I .. , tlr911 W911"M -..c1il1 m l'wwl A'<'t- Mom Drdwns in Laguna Pool; Murder Charged By RICHARD P. NALL ot lhl Dlllw I'll" ltlff The clothed body of an attractive 21· year-old m·other who died under mysterious ci.r cums tan ce s was recovered from a motel swimming pool in Laguna Beach earJy thl.s: morn· illg. - Police a r r e s t e d the young woman's male companion on suspicion of murder pending a determination of cause of death and other factors sur- rounding the death. Police Lt. Robert McMurray Iden· lilied tile woman as Maria Rodriguez of Montebello. He sajd the woman, her three·year- old son, Kenneth and Richard Anthony Najar, 23, a metal plater from Bellflower, checked into the American · Motel, 2f30 S. Coast Highway, at 9:15 p.m. Thursday. Najar was arrested by police after the young woman's body was found at abut 1:20 a.m. McMurray said Najar was asleep or unconscious in the motel room when officers knocked on the door. The lieutenant said six red capsules. as yet unidentified, and beer were found in the room. McMurray said the body was seen by Ken Aebersold, 2060 Ocean Way. He notified motel manager Albert Trondle and wiUt a pool cleaning im· plement they retrieved the body . Dr. Manuel Richder of Fullerton, who was vacationing at the motel, ap· plied mouth·to·mouth resuscitation unsuccessfully and pronounced the young woman dead. Police said Najar told them he and the Rodriguez woman had gone swim· ming in their clothing but that he lost sight of her and assumed she had left. He went back to the room and went to sleep, said McMUITay. McMurr.ay said the young woman had bruises on her body. He said the physician and a · deputy coroner thought at the scene that sbe may not have died of drowning. Bill Changing Rule on Loan Pacts Approved Real estate Contracts signed after Jan. 1, 1969 must allow purchagers to prepay loans at any time, according to \eglslation successfully p u s h e d through the Legislature by Sen. Ja·mes E. Whetmore CR-Fullerton). Introduction of SB 665 came after a committee investigated -claims by homebuyers in Huntington Beach that they had been denied permission to prepay loans on their homes purchas· ed under contracts. The homes ,are located in tracts mainly in the northwest part of tile ci· ty. Several homebuyers said they could nDt dispose of th.eip homes even though they had to move because .of transfer of employment, de a th , divorce and other reasons. The new legislation will not affect existing contracts, but the law and previous discussions between Whet· more and the lenders involved is ex· pected to reSult in a more permissive attitude of the lenders. . Wbetmore said that the legislation resulted fr0tn hearings held in Westminster during which it was brought out thf.lt: some subdividers, after selling a home to an individual, would refuse to accept prepaymmt in spite of tile fact that the purchaser had made substantial improvements on the property and was forced to leave the home. Dashing Mayor's Triumph Huntington Beach 1-tayor Alvin Coen (S:1irt sleeves) snaps vi~ory slring of Australian Jong distance runner Bill Emmerton., The nbbon is · held by race official Mrs. Prim Balatoni. 11Race'' kicks·oU the Huntington Center's Sports Spectacular si'aled for July 6-15, l ) \ \ • Fro• P .. e l PARADE .•. Marines of La Puente, Preclslon- naires, 4th District Ladles Auxiliary. MUltarY DrW Teams: Norton Air Force Bue, Radiomen Precision Drill of San Diego, Edwards Air Force Baae . No a . m 11lt1r y Marc b lac: Westminlter Elks Lodge, Girl Scout Cadettes. MWtary MarUlq: U.S. Naval Sta· ~-Beach; U.S. Marines, Camp M1jon:Ue1: Evelyn's Starlettes, Lin LoveUes, Senior joppers. Color Guards: Kingsmen Drum and Bugle Corps, 11th District U.S .Coest Guard; U.S. Marines Camp Pendleton, Color Guards (no other parade unll): Costa Mesa Police, Navy Radiomen, Orange Police Depart· ment. Youth Bands: Glendale Youth Band. Specialty Bands: Mac Pherson Highlanders, Glengarry Highlanders. Junior Drum and Bu*le Corps: KJngsmen Drum and Bugle, Castanet· tes Drum and Bugle, King Royal Lancers. MlUtary 11ands: 72nd U.S. Army; U.S. Naval Stalion, Los Alamitos. Antique Aukl: Newport Regional Groop Horseless Carriage Club. Antique Auto : T. C. Archibald, Richard £00 Thomas Warne, Wisdom Beverage Co. Group Specialty: Banda Nogai In· dian Dan~rs, Orange County Chapter SPEBSQSA (Barber shop singers). lndJvidual Specialty: David Filbeck and Richard Foley, Donnie Tucker, Westmfnster Elks. Ladies Sliver Mounted: Linda Long. Mexican Cbarro: Ca!Vln Hong, Jr. Arabian: Karen Potter, ~atrlcia Manley. .JodJan Man: Chief Rolling Thunder, J .... Loco. FIRE ENGINES WHISTLE AND HOOT Four Yoor Did llock)"Kloln Dbloct1 -r-~~~~~~~~ Indian Lady: Cherie Fisher, Julie J oseph, Brend Potter. Matched Pair Fancy We1tern : Everett and Ervin Tibbits. Unlqii.e or Costume: Steve Ho.ban and Lori Lindenberger, K e l t b Lledhaldt and Stephanie Bushnell. Parde Horse Silver: Clarence Sultzer, Barbara Bomberger. Parade Horse Plain: C. A. Brush, Phylis Traylor. . Spanish Senorita: Cheryl Desrosiers. Novelty: Clyde . and June Saint Amant, Ardith Diemere, David Hunt. Matched Pair Spanish: Dell and Sookey Sepulveda. Ladles Fancy We1tern: Betty Red· path. Mens Fancy \Ve1tern: Bill Adams, E. H. Wray. Working We1tern: Louise Heffley, Mark Shea. Riding Clubs: Long Be<:~h Mounted Police. . Ec1u~trlan Color Guard: Valley C~nter Vaqueros , Torrance Mounted Police. Mounted Police: w Verne Mounted Pollet. Western Mounted Group: ETl Cor· rat 38 Glendale River Riders, Rough Ridef'S of Rowland Heights. FamlJy Mounted: Mac Ke n z le Raiders. Junior Mounted Group: Sparkling Spur.s of Rlver$lde. Boys Quh Opens Doors on Friday For Little Sisters It's always been "No Girls Allowed" at the Huntington Beach Boys' Club and the boys like it that way. Friday night -willingly o t otherwise -the boys are suspending the rule long enough for a "Little Sister Night." The event will be held at the club, 319 Yorktown Ave., and features brothers and sisters parUcipaUng In a host of events such as ping-pong, box hockey, noc hockey and volleyball as teams, not brothers vs. sisters as some of the boys \Vanted. The boys do !aave an opportunity to get even, ho\vever. for later in the evening there will be a litUe sister - beauty e<>ntest. Each boy will be able to vote oo a sister {not his own) and the winning young lady will be crown· ed (under very careful supervision) ~y her brother. Club Executive Director Pat Downey said the club hopes to make this an annual event. r STORE-WIDE JULY SALE! • • ll ~ DREXEL'S GUILD HALL SIDE CHAIRS Rea. 19. ARM CHAIRS Rea. 1 OS. . • . OVAL TABU Rti.21~. • • • • • • • • SAlf SALE • SAlf 77~ ·~ .,~ ... 249 • • rauf..a11ll ...._ LAMNA ·llACH ........ 141 ..... c.-Hwy. ........... AID-HSIO OfllM PllDAt 'ft\ t ...... '"" '"" ..... ., 0..,.-c...., '*lltJ . I l 4-Hl I ~-'-~-------------------------------------- • • • p u a< a a a •~ a a a a CC c a ; ;q ,,_ a e .s !9!f ./-'•I Bea~h EDIT.ION VOL 61', NO~ r6·r, ~ SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES CAGUNA tie;(CH, CJ:llFdRNL( ERID:AY, JU(Y 5, ·1968 . . Mystery Drug Seized ur er Beach Units 01( Huge Motel Planned on Club Site Laguna Beach councilmen have ap. proved the concept Of a motel and business complex utilizing dty beach ptoperty despite vigorous opposition from Cooocilman Roy Ho\m. The proposal Crom engineer Bernard .. ' Syfan. calls for a llO-unit m~l Miere the Boy's Club and Gaslight Broiler DOW stand. Rough initial piaDs show an en· croachment of about 35 feet into Heis· !er Park and use of other property '., ' .~-. ,, ' Eiltt Travels Nortlaward Dressed in his familiar red sport coat Laguna Greeter ·Eiler Larson recognizes a friend :Crom his viewing post on the balcony of Hunting- ton Beach's Villa Sweden Restaurant. Eiler was in the neighboiing town for its annual Fourth of JuJy parade. See photos and story, Page 3. Councilmen Black Out Sawdust~ightShow Plan • The Sewdlllt F .. tivaI'• ~ light shOw wu blacked out Wed:!-'<lay by a split deCilion o! Laguna Beach coUndhnan. I · . . /. . However, 'the cou.ncil will 8llow a , marionette show on the prOP,trty dur· ing the &ix-week art eihibit' netr the Festival ol. ArU. \._ _ Councilmen voted 4 ·io 1 ~Y the sholf. · Councilman Charlton Boyd dl11ented. Boyd aaid too oft.ell a mino<ity wt- ni.on iJ: misunderstood: He siid he lttt 'the Festival of Arts bad reached IU plateau of success by having the r.-..ctom to try sometbillf oil the beaten poth. lie •tjd the light show concept Isn't . I ---·- really new, commenting that a small example Of it had been seen at the re- cent high tdtool gradUation . Cooncllman Richard Goldberg said he had not attended a preview of the show and did not intend to set hlmself up as ·a judge. He 1aid..several persons did object to 'Ille light show and lehjt ·· would be. a gathering place fer hippies. Goldberg noted that he bad votod for the Sawdust Festival originally to ac· camm<!date thote artists wishing to show their arts and crafts. Mayor, Glenn Vedder said he was suspldo~\Of a show that required a bqaro. of censorship. He 1aid such a show lhould.be under cover. He refer· red to the Siwdutt boerd11 offer to provld• auch •' CUllroL that the city .owns or wilt.own by con- demm.tioo. In return far city agreement to the proposal, Syfan would agree to furnish 28 parking spaces for ~lie. use. Holm attacked the proposal Wed- nesday night. He said he bad no in- fonnation regarding dimension and said parking would occupy a' con- siderable portion of the Main Beach. He said access to the city parking would be controlled by the hotel owners. In response to a request. by Syfan for an "indication of the city's feelings," Holm said: "I would like to respond in a specific way; I'm vt:ry much opposed .•. " Councilman Richard Goldberg said he would have to agree the. proposal was not detailed· enough to go into SJ>e(!i!ics and said be could only ap- prove or the general concept.· Councilman Joseph O'Sullivan said there were items in the plan that disturbed him but said he thought that things .could be worked out. Councilinan Cbulton Boyd said he did not tl>ink Syfan would plan somettrlng tilat could not be worked out and sugge9ted tbe matter 10· to study sessjon. Mayor Glenn Vedder said the dty certainly would have t'O give the plan a close hard look but said in principle the use of a hotel Hevelopment 11\. f:bat area seemed a good use. Syfan •nd Holm apparently did not . understand the situation . ind men- tioned that a great deal 9f ·parking had been deleted downtown. He said this is a chance for the city to actually ac- quire parking. He &aid he had. hoped there would be a unanimous open min- dedness.··. ·He stid Holm earlier had approved this type use of part of the Main ,I Beach. "We never talked about Heisler Park," said Holm. He &aid he felt strongly· about ,fteed for parking but said this would enable Syfan to buiid a motel development with 88 spaces of which th~ city would receive 28. He said the city could get Conrad Hilton dQwn to build in Heisler Park Jf it-only wanted to solve its tu: pro- "' blems for years to come. Councilmen voted 4-1 in favor of the concept, Holm voted no. Whittier Beauty Chosen as Laguna Lifeguard .Q A tanned, shapely bloode Is Laguna Beach Llfeguaros queen. • Smiling Adria Anderson, chosen from a field of 12 b' · · clad lovelies . She . is· a Whittier rfsld1nt vacationing with relatives · Lanna Beach. -1 Miss Anderson was t h entry of Lifeguard Jer! Powers, Guards selected contestarrts from the atious beaches they guard. 'lbe ~ootest began at 7 p.m. at the Main Beach ttreguard tower with a crowd1 about 210 persons looking on, Miss Anderson's princesses ~d run· nen up were Annette Hanson MKl HeidJ Winegafd. \ Judges for ttie event were 1rf:ayor Glenn Vedder, Lifeguard Chief ~em Dugger. Capt. Danny Coon , USN ret. ), Gordon S. Font and Rieb · P. Nall, Laguna-Beach DAILY P citf editor. Vandals Da1uagc Cemetery Crypts OCEANSIDE (AP) -Vandals have removed the remains ol one body am! damaged six crypts at Ocean View Cernc#ry, po~e INrid. today. Vandals broke into the cemetery Wednesday night and ripped the face plates off tix crypt!, ofDcers &I.id. 'Mle coffin coolainlnJ the body waa left on the cemetery tll'C>W>dt and replactd by the car«mr: '\ . •' e Ill Lifeguards' Queen QUEEN AND COURT -Four judges Thursday picked Adria Ander· son (left) as Laguna Beach Lifeguards beauty que~n in a contest held at the Main Beach Lifeguard tower at 7 P.m. Runners-up are Annette Hanson, standing next to the 18-year-old blonde winner, aiid Heidi Winegard. ~:i.FEGUARDS' FAVORITE -Laguna Beach lifeguard.Jell Powtrs, hat eyes for other, than drowning swimmers because Thursday he wa\ abl~ to pick out a girl to sponSQI' who was later chosen the new beailiy queen o~ the llfeguardi. Adria Anderson, 18, Whittier ·resident vililint'{tlatlvts in Liguna. Beach, was chosen from a field'~ 12 rlli·da~ beeuUes., · r-. .. Yolll' Hometown . Dally Pape~ ,TEN CENTS Pretty Mom Drowns 'In Pool By RICHARD P. NALL or 1t1e 0an,. rlt9t 11.rr The clothed body of an attractive 21- year-old mother who died under mysterious cir c um s t a nc es was recovered from a motel swimming pool in Laguna Beach early this morn· ing. Police arrested the young woman's male companion on suspicion of murder pending a determination of cause of death and other factors sur- , -'?oUnding the death. I. Police Lt. Robert McMurray iden- tified "the woman as Maria Rodriguez o( MontebeUo. He said the woman, her three-year- old son, Kenneth and Richard Anthony Najar, 23, a metal plater from Bellflower. checked into the American Motel, 2130 s. Coast IUghway, at 9:15 p.m. Thursday. Najar was arrested by-police after the young woman's body was lound at- abut l : 20 a .m. McMurray said Najai · was asleep or unconscious in the motel room when officers lmocked on the door. . The lieutenant said six red capsules, as yet unidentilied, and beer were found in the room. McMurray said the body was seen ..by Ken Aebersold, 2060 Ocean Way. He notified motel manager Albert Trondle and with a pool cleaning im- plement they retrieved the body. Dr. Manuel ruchder of Fullerton, who was vacationing at the motel, ap· plied mouth-to-mouth resuscitation unsllccessfully and pronounced the young woman dead. Police said Najµ told them he and the Rodriguez woll_lan had gone swim- ming in their clothing but that be lost sight of her and assumed she had lert. He went back to the room and went to sleep, said McMunay. McMurray said the you,na: woman had bruises on her body. He said the physician and a deputy coioner thought at the scene that she may not have died of drowning. However, J im Beisner, deputy car· oner, said later today that a morning autopsy indicated that drowning may have been ,the cause of death. Beisner also ~said there had been ho official determination yet pending out· come of other tests, to~cology tests to pinpoint possible substances in the woman's sytem. h1c~UJTay said police sent Najar to the Orange County Medical Center for a physical examination to determine if it was saf~ for him to be placed in a cell. He w.as returned to the jail and locked: up. McMurray said the victim's son was asleep. He was ta.ken to the police sta- , ti.on where he ate a candy bar and was put to bed until bis transfer to Sitton Hau, a Juvenile receiving facility in Orange. Police also noWied the dead woman's gr.andparents. · Oruge Coast Weatller . I! you survived the post-Fourth ear ringing, the weatherman ·says you can look forward to a weekend of suMy afternoons and early morning fog. Highs near 70. . INSmE TODAY 1t'1 1wt on ea.tu ta3k to "'"' locot people fnto grtat work.f oJ art but it'1 dont at the Loguna Beach Pagemit of tha Ma$ltr1. S~e toda~'I We11kendtr. . . ""'" , .. ,. T ....... M 11 --·-. --.. -----. Art...... IJ -" ·~II ....... t•ll , .. hMt I -. --. .... , .. '"" ' I • 2 DAILY PILOT Ftl~. JulJ 5, 1968 Clinic Gains Ground Putting heads together in Laguna Beach are members of c:ommunity groups initiating voluntary clinic for counSefing youngsters with dru.g abuse or related problerm. They are seated (left to right) Mrs. Patrick Randall and lifrs. John Solomon, lx>th of the Laguna Beach AJsistance ·League. Standing (left to right),_ are Dr. Louis A. Gottschuak, chair- man of the def:!a~ment of psychiatry and human behavior at the UCI School of Medicme and Dr. Neal Amsden former chiet of staff at South Coast Community Hospital. ' Man·•••alle· Pot User Could Turn On With 3 Drops WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal Narcotics and Dapgerous Drugs platll narcotics agents are concerned about to send 'Congress (fesh legislation to the possible appearance l>f man-made cover the sale and use of marijuana marijuana which is colorless and odorless but so powerful on!Y two or made in a laboratory, tl!e Post said. three drops in ·S: cigarette-can produce Currently, federal law covers only the same kick as natural marijuana, _natural marijuana wttich is grown. the Washington Post said today. Federal ollicials say marijuana was "Smuggling in synthetic marijuana first made synthetically ·four years could make the· $350 million a year ago by an lsraeli chemist. They say it heroin business look like peanuts," the is still extremely expensive to pro- paper quoted a narcotics agent as .~uce, the major factor that has kept it saying. from the illegal drug market:- "And it would be easy," be added. Federal officials fear, however, that ·'A little-alcohol and some coloring the price is bound to come down as and it could be brought in as after· more chemists tinker with it. shave l<>tion." "When this happens we may be in The Justice Department'& Bureau ot very deep trouble," one agent said. Council Denies Chambet $270 Ad~ertising Funds A Laguna Beach ·Chamber of C.Om- merce request !or '270 in interim advertisi.Dg 'funds brought both the cold shoulder and criticism 0 r chamber budgeti.llg by councilmen Wednesday. Publicist Richard Clark presented the request on behall of .the chamber. He said the mooey would buy a half page .i,n the Orange Conoty Digest. CoWl<ilman Richard Goldberg, a fonner chamber president, said: "I can appreciate the need and feel it is important to seize these op- portunities. It's a darn shame when the city has allocated $35,000 to the chamber of C<Jmmerce that there isn't 1270 to take advantage of this kmd of thing. . "This Is why the chamber or com· At·t on Display ' CommemOllating the Laguna Beach Art AssociFAJ.oo's 50th anniversary. the Pennanent Memorial Collection Js now on display at the Laguna Fed.era l Savings .and Loan, 2fiO Ocean Bl~. It will be there for the summer and can be viewed by visitors during busiDess hours, merce request for this year's funds concerns me so much." Mayor Glenn Vedder said, "Why don't you go to the hotel-motel people and ask them to advance' you fl7()." He said, "I think the whole council is quite uobllppy about the dlambet of commerce disposal of the $35,000 last year." Councilman Joseph O'Sullivan said he agreed with Goldberg. Councilmen h~ve yet to formally consider a chamber request !or funds in the cw- rent fisc.11 year. Paul W. Watern1an New Water Director The Laguna Beach County Water District annoWlced today that Laguna resident Paul \V. Waterman has been appointed to serve the unexpired term of the late director Ralph L. Bell. \Vatennan's term wUl nm tmtil the fall of 196i,. . Waterman is currently vice presi· dentfl or the Security Pacific National J ank, fonnerly known as the Security i''irst Nlitional Bank. .. He lives at 2fl1l Glenoeyre with his "'·de. Margaret, and four children. :euils Out , __ SAIGON (UPI) -'Ille !alt U.S. Ma- rines pulled oot· of Kile Sanh today ao AmOrlcan BS21 delied Commlllllst mlllllea md bombed targeta just above the demolllhed fortress for the fifth consecutive da1. • Marine forces withdrawing from Khe Sanh lbUf,lday r.eported killing-at leut 1'1 North Vietnamese regulars in a .force of about 1.00 who attacked a Leatb.erneCk column three miles aoutb of tbe fortress. The Marines lost !our me1! killed arid 13 Woun4ed 1n the 40-mlnute battle along Highway 9, the only open road from allied coastal bastions to Khe Silnh. Pilots !lying the B52 strikes above Khe Sanh against targets in North Vietnam's panhandle reported at least two surface:to-air missile& streaking toward the craft but both missed. Kbe Sanh, the scene of one of the heaviest sieges of the wa'r earlier this year, was formally given up today as demolition teams dynamited tbe final two bunkers and about 3,500 Marines moved out on truckt and in hellcop. ters. North Vietnamese 1alpen hit one of the truciJ, and Communist com- mandos blew up a bridge, but Marloe officers told UPI CorTespondent Ray- mond Wllkinlon the withdrawal was "a succesa.11 "As far as I'm concerned, I a till own Kbe Sanh," Maj. Gen. Raymond Davis, commander of tbe 3rd Marine Division, told Wlltinaoc. "However, the base was a yoke around my neck." • Tb& withdrawal gave up a base which American, had held for 23 months. It was once described as a vital link ~ the chain or defenaes just below the DMZ. The 11.S. command said last week the changing pattern Qt"the war in the area made possible die giving up of Khe Sanh. It said allied troops had more mobility at thir time to counter infiltration. Nearer Saigon. U.S. Army in- fantrymen still bad no report on how many Communist soldiers died in an almost suicidal assault on a U.S. camp 40 miles northwest of the capital, where the Viet Cong are believed massing 2,CKK> to 4\000 troops for a push toward the city. Three American· soldiers were kllled and 50 wounded in the 500-round mortar and rocket barrage preceding the attack and during tbe 2'h·hour fight at Dau Tieng itself. In other developments: -Presideiit Nguyen Van Thieu gave his blessing to a new alliance of 28 Vietnamese political and c i v i c organizations with all the earmarks or a pro-government political p&rty. -U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Orville Freeman completed hls third day in Vietnam with another tour or agricultural project&. He is to leave for Manila Saturday. Laguna Planning Vacancies Filled The face_ of the Laguna Beach Plan• ning Commission has changed, three· fifths of it at any rate. Mayor Glenn Vedder Wednesday night announced the appointment of two new planning commissioners, Dr. Joseph Tomehak, anthropologist and Charles M. Johnson, architect. Johnson replaces realtor Lloyd Milne and French replaces planning commission cbairmar. James Schmitz, both or whom resigned reCently. Vedder announced June 26 that Dr. Joseph Tomehak, anthropollgist and forr::Yet Costa Mesa councilman, would replace Wayne Hauger, cab 1 e television executive. DAILY PILOT __ ........... JteMrt N. W1ff -The111•t Ketvif £di• Thern•1 A. M11rph i1t• Mllnltlnt Editor Rlchtt4 P. N•ll lltllM INch City Editor . 'f' 37,000 Ignore Weather To Enj~y Laguna Beach . ,, J1ck JI:. c~ut.,. l'•wl Nin•it ........ ........ Adwerll&I~• Dlre<tor ----........ ....... 1 P.O. le1 ''' tJ,SJ W ..... AHllM OtW Offlc1' C..t9 -..: iJt.w .. t ..., Sttttt ...... '-Ou 1211 w ... lllOll ~ '"'-"'*• 9-dl: • Jiii fired A Fourth of July crowd or 37,000 persons was attracted to Laguna's beac~ de5pite partial overca&t and low surf . Lifeguard Jeff Powers, in describing Laver Captures Tennis Tourney Rod Laver ol Corona del Mar, swept to a straight sets victory over Australian profe11ional Tony Roche in today's singles finala of the aMual Wlrn.~ledon tennis cla11ic. And Orange Coast area fans will be able to &ee the show on te:levtsion Saturday, l p.m .. Channel 7. A throng of 17,000 saw the touring pro of Newport Beach Tennis Club capture the battle of left-handers.in an hour's time. Included in the crowd were 15 member1 of NBTC who made a spec:ial trip' to England for the tomnament. See details in today11 Sport Section, Page 14.. " , the ~ sur! making the ocean a~ar "like a lake"' sai11 there were ~.000 on !hO city beacllOs and 7.000 on the coun· ty bee~hes. • The low surf aod no Jiptides added up to no J'elllC\lf!C. "It w• 1 real euy July 4," commented Powen . . The sun finally came out at 3 p.m. The air temperature WIS 72 degrees while the water tempereture wu 63. Kenney Appofuted Institute Member Dlltrlct Su~eat. ol the eai-ano Ullllied Sd>ool I>ilU1ct Charles F. Kenney has -aP!JOlnted a member of. the tNtitute for Develop- ment of Educational Actlvtties. He will be one of 400 educttlonal leaders &elecUld from Amuica'1 near• Jy l!,000 1chool admlnlltratlon to participate Jn tho lniUtute'119(18 Sum- mer SemlMn boll>& held et Milli Col· Jege, Oaklaod, from Juq 7 t!lrvuChf: l Pl11119e V!etha FBI agents charged in Hawaii that JO hippies stood by and looked on when artist John M. G.allagher, 19, of San Clemente fell to his death in dOrmant Haleakala volcano on Hawai- ian island of Maui. They fail- ed to report trag~dy. • Thurston Schoo.I .Contractor Faces . . Delay Penalty r A general contractor may be penalized $8,350 ror allegedly taking too. much time in completing Thurston Junior High School in Laguna Beach. The Los Angeles firm of Gersten· berger and Pierson undertook the job ot constructing the school plant, and they were given 10 months in which to finish the project. They took 18 months, according to school officials. The firm was allowed some ex· tension time, due to rain and other variables, but the time from Dec. 25 (the date the plant was to have been • completed ) to May 28 (the date the plane "·as actually completed) wasn't planned for, school Officials said. It Is for that time span that the con".: tractor Js being penalized. According to a $50 per day Ii· quidated damages clause, which per· talns· to the unplanned extension, the -firm is being ~nalized $8,350 by the school district. - .building isn't tliat different," he sald. Milton Gerstenberger of the flrrn mentioned the problems they ran into, including adverse weather and delays on the part or sub-contractors. He added, "\Ve were try i n g dillegcntly to get the job done. We don't want to prove it's anyone's fault. All we're asking is consideration oo time." Ll3tening to the $8,350 figure being tossed around, he commented, "We 've put a lot of blood into this project. We just don't want to completely bleed to death.'' Charles Pierson ad-ded, "Nobody wanted to finish tbat .Job more than we." A debate centered on the fact that the work crews at times were quite small. The point of advene conditi.ocs was again brought up. Dr. Norman Browne, president of the school board, stated, "We have problems, too." He added, "The owner has some rights." Splinters Due Early Decision Over Location Dr. William Ullom, superintendent of 1chools, told school board members ........_ this week, construction shouldn't have required the 18 months it did. "The · The board voted unanimously to temporarily withhold the penalty, and negotiate the individual items before coming to any definite conclusions. . ' The Sawdust SplirUrs will have their day in court sooner then they had hoped. A decfsion by the Planning Com· mission giving the Sp 1 i nters permission to have their show at 346 N. Coast Highway has beeii appealed by William Salyer, Laguna artist and owner of· property within 300 feet of the location. The City Council is expected to give a ruling on this appeal at their July 17 meeting. Should. the couocil deny the appeal, then the Splinters' Show will go on only about.a week later than ex· pected. They were plamtlng !or their opening to coincide witll the Festival of Arts, which i!arts July 12. This enrly appeal will mean that a deci.slon could be reached on the loca· tion on July 17 and not on August 7, the date the council would have dec1d· ed. il an appeal had been made as late as July 11. J. M. Valentine had opposed the pro· perty use Ulrough an attorney at the Monday Planning Commission bear· ing. However, planners allowed the use. Had Valentine wai.(.ed until July 111 and then Connally appealed to the city council the matter could not have been heard until August 7. ' Assembly-, Unit Kills . Bill For Harbor District Vote By JACK BROBACK .01 1M D1Ur P'li.t Stitt State legislation aimed at submitting the fate of the Orange County Harbor District to county voters is dead for this session of the C a 1 i f o r n.i a Legislature. The AssemblY Municipal and County Government Committee failed to pass the measure Wednesday but com- mittee chairman John Knox (D-Rich- mond) warned county representatives that if local action was not taken, the committee would again move into the picture next January. Knox said delay in action on the bill by Assemblyman J ohn V. Briggs (R· Fullerton) 1 ' w o u I d give the supervisors one more chance to act on dissoluti°"! of the district.'' "ll this action aoes not occur.~· Kno:s: said, "I can assure you this committee will be very receptive to legislation in the near future." Knox leans heavily toward acUon by the Local Agency Formation Com· mission, an agency whim was created · through legislation sponsored by Knox. 7 7 I The Briggs bill was before the com- mittee for the second time. On June 26 it was delayed to tack on a long list of amendments suggested by Newport Beach. During Wednesday's he a r I n g Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun· tington Beach) attempted to get ·the bUl through committee. A vote to send it to the assembly floor failed, as did a second bill to keep the bill in com- mittee. The latter situation resulted, however, for committee inaction. Briggs said he was disappointed that the bill failed to clear committee but warned that "l believe that we have ser\·ed a purpose in bringing the lm· portance of this matter to the supervisors. We have placed them on notice and will not accept inaction on their part any longer." · Briggs' bill would have put the future Of the harbor district up to a vote of the county's electorate Jn .November. It had the backing of the County League of Cities. Last week the supervlsors voted 4 to 1 to retain the 'harbor district as presently set up. z t DREXEL'S GUILD HALL SIDE CHAIRS Rea. 89. • • • SAlE 77 .... ~ ARM -CHAIRS Reg. 105. • • • SAlE 89 .... OVAl TAllE Reg. 215 •. • • • ·SALE 249. OUR SALE ALSO FEATURES SELECT GROUPS FROM, DREXEL, HENREDON, HERITAGE.] KINDEL, CENTURY, ANO MARGIE CARSON GROUPS ALL AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. ACCESSORIES, LAMPS, PICTURES, A~EA RUGS ALSO INCLUDED. DCLUSl'll DIALUS _, HIN--DIDIL"-HEllTAH " DAYS NO lllTllm -LON-TlllllS AYAllAIU ON AIPllOftD c:llllT ZJ.. l.e lllWl'Olll' -CH Plwf1Ml1nmd ......, LANNA llACH · ----· MWOIO . 1mw-"'" . ·' '•.a.. 141 ...,. Cellt ...... ...W•• As -• r, w~ OPIR "'9At 'I'll. t ..... , ........... ~ c.-, .... ,,,. & .. ~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 'I I I ·~~~-~-~~""P~7'";'-~•r.·~':1~'r•-.. ..,...~,~ .. ,...,....~"'":'"!"~',...' ... =~~19"'"""'"'"'"+""'u .. oou=u .. uuooo"'!"u>Uowu..,u~u""l!@'""llll!lll"!"!""•.,.~•~•""*'"-"'"'"""'""'"•"'""'"'!!S'!'!!!"':~~~~ -. ---. Frlda1, July 5, 1%8 gAILY PILOT S 150~000 Torn Ont for Bea~h 4th · Parade • SWEEPSTAKES PRIZE WON BY STANTON CHAMBER 01' COMMERCE '!We The People" Theme Por'tr1yed by Miss Stinton •nd Her Court • • MASSED FLAGS MARK VANGUARD FOR HUNTINGTON BEACH FOURTH OF JULY PARADE Tr1dition1I Appe1r1nce of Long Beach Mounted Police Led Off Line of M1rc:h. ~~~~~~~~- .Earthquake Hits Southland, But Misses County /\ series of rolling earthquake- shook Southern California Thursda:i· but apparently nobody in Orang'-- Oounty knew about iL The shocks were timed at 5:36 p.m. and 5:45 p.m. and were centered 2;, miles offshore at Santa Barbara. Los Angeles police switc~ard ­ were deluged with calls from resident ~ there who felt the shocks but Orange Coast dwellers apparently felt nothing, because local police report no calls. ln fact, one Costa Mesa officer, · \vhen asked if his department had been called Thursd·ay, admitted, "I didn't even know we had o°Jf." Dr. Charles F. Richter, eismologist at Cal Tech in Pasadena, ded the first tremor at 4.75 on hi.S scale. The second was at 5, orl potentially dangerous. . Store windows were cracked tn · Goleta, north of Santa Barbara. where residents also reported canned goods \\'ere knocked from shelves. . Several boulders fell on the highway r:r San Marcos Pass, but no cars wet"e reported damaged, and the shock opened cracks in the highways around ·an ta Barbara. • , Heart Patient Suffers Ai1ment CAPE TOWN, Soulb Africa (UPI) - Dr. Philip Blaiberg, the world's longest surviving heart transplant pa- tient has developed lung troubles which are "giving rise to concern," it was announced today. Blaiberg, 59. is a patient at Groote Schuur Hospital where the transplant Was performed Jan. 2. A medical bulletin released late this afternoon said the former dentist was _suffering from "pulmonary (lung) compiicaUons." Medical <>merven speculated this could mean pneumonia. the ailment which caused the death or the first transplant patient, Louis Washkansky, in the same hospital last year. ORANGE COUNTY FAIR FLOAT ENTRY WAS HUNTINGTON PARADE FAVORITE Queens from County Cities Smiled D11pit1 Chilly Early Mornin11 We~th~r Holding Ho.stages Police Cut Gunman's Food SYDNEY. Australia (UPI) -Police today cut off food ta the besieged gun- man threatenin~ for four days to tJll his teen.age bnde, her baby and '·a . few coppers." Acting under his threats, police had been sending into the surrounded house steak, fried eggs, curry and rice and fish 'n' chips as well as an armor piercing rifle. ammunition and baby supplies to WaUace Mellish, 23. his bride Beryl Muddle, 18, and her 11· week-old son Leslie. Police Chief Norman Allan said from now on only food !or baby lieslie would be sent in, "We can't let him starve,'' Allan sald. "It ls now a ·w.aiting game. It's not a war. In war lives are expendable. My mission is to save them," Allan said. His handling of his DU;ssioa won him the praise of public optruon. Today Australian newspapers turned on Allan for supplying the Armalite sniper rifle and 200 bullets to the petty criminal. The police chief said he had no choice. The chief said Mellish demanded the weapon and ammunition under threat or shooting his bride and the baby. Allan and jail chaplain Clive Paton had gone into the house to talk to Mellish. "To· refuse Mellish meant a death sentence fos,-llhe baby, wife, the ctergymaa and very pflobably myself too. I had to weigh the immediate reality again>! the poten\ial. \ ·~1t meaDt be had one tnore weapon anci he bas an anenal of assorted !>9_mbs, gfenades, pistols a'nd a sawed 01\ shotgun," the chief exptelned. I Miss Muddle, forced to marry Mellish at gu npoint after he broke into the t},ouse Tuesday, was proving little help to poli ce. Allan said she kept guard while Mellish napped, She also apparently tasted the food to make sure it contained n& sleeping drugs. Detective Chief Don Fergusson said he believes Mellish eventually will sur· render peacefully_. He said police will honor still another promise made under threat -not to prlosecute Mellish for the siege ot ·the Sydney suburb. Allan said he is waiting ror Mellish to telephone for sUrrender terms. One detective disagreed on the waJting game. He told the Sydney Sun that Mellish's threats are nothing but bluff. He &aid MellJsh 1would not shoot if police cllfged into the hou se. I, _l__ ' I Stanton Chamber Wins Sweepstake·s " By JAMES MCNABB, Jr, Of tfle 0.lf'f PHet Sllltf Crowds estimated by police at 15Ci,OOO vis,itors jostled' on HunUngton Beach downtown streets Thursday to view the city's 64th annual Fourth of July parade extravaganza. Moving out smartly at 11 a.m. the traditional Boy Scout and Long Beach Mounted Police vanguard led the 2 and one-half hour procession of floats, bands, drill teams, novelties, politi- cians and performers ·under salty gray-blue skies. The Parade sweepstakes winner was the Stanton Chamber of Commerce float featuring Miss Stanton and Miss Junior Stanton. Mrs. Annie Dawson also of -Stanton t.pok the ·president's trophy with her •'Spirit of '76" float carrying the Dawson family in authentic, hand- made costumes of the Revolutionary War period. The mayor's trophy went to Las Brizas Del Mar Auxiliary, Children's Home Society of California. The YM· CA Great River Nation won the Del Mar trophy with a boat noat complete wJth whooping braves. JBS FLOAT FIRST The John Birch Society float featur· ing :i large portrait of missionary Army Capt. John Birch, after whom the society was named, placed fir st in the non-theme division. Police said the large crowd was ''very orderly" and reported little trouble with crowd control and heavy traffic both before and after the parade. All lZT Huntington Beach police officers were on duty, assisted by six Marine military policemen and a patrol helicopter. George Putnam, televi s ion newscaster, serving as equestrian grand marshal received heavy -ap· plaµse as he toured the parade route. Jeffye Blackard, ·Miss Huntington Beach, and Karen Cutler, Huntington Beach JuniOr' Miss, rode the queen's float. There was no Miss Firecrac}ter this year. Waving, kiss-blowing Don Galloway of the "Ironsides" television show ar· rived late for his grand marshal spot. Among the 2,700 paraders were the Long Beach Mounted Police, Charles Pavlu, carrying a 13 star American Civil War flag ; Mayor Alvin Coen and family;· Rep. Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach); and Rep. Richard Hanna (D· An3heim). TROPHY WINNERS The list of trophy winners includes. includes:. Theme· Float General, president's trophy: Spirit of .'76 ; Golden West College. Knott's Berry Farm. Theme Float Neighboring CUy, mayor's trophy; Las Brizas Del Mar, City of Anaheim. Theme Float Civic Organization, Del Mar trophy: YMCA Great River Na· tion, Huntington Beach Elks Lodge, Cub Pack Number 296. Non·theme Float Neighboring . City: Garden Grove Strawberry Festi\.'al, Westminster. San Clemente Chamber of Commerce. Non-theme F I o a t Commercial: McDonald's Hamburgers. Non.theme General: John Birch Society, Y-lnd.ian Maidens, Banjo P ickers Square Dance Club, Boy Scout Troop Number One. Military Flnats: Civil Air Patrol, U.S. Naval Weapons Station. Horse Drawn: Five Points Shopping Center, -Adohr Dairy -Earl Finley, Dr. and Mrt. Perry W. ·Hurst. ' Jieeor8ted Aato1: HuntingtQp. Beach . ,,. Emblem Club, Wmten's·Division Hun· tlngton Beiich <!:b&rilber of Commerce, Huntington Beach Board of Realtors. Non-military Drill Te~ma: Junior Marines ()( ~ P1.1et1te, Precision .. naires; 4lb Disbic\ l.adjeo Auxiliary. MilltarY. Drill Team1; Norton Air Force BaSe, Radiomen P.redsion Drill of San Diego1 Edwards Air Force Base. No n-m 111 tar y Ma re b tag: WestminSter EUts Lodge, Girl Scout ' Cadettes. Military Marching: U.S. Naval Sta- tion , Long Beach; U.S. Marines, Camp P....U.000. Violence Puts Mark on Trio Of Contenders By United Pre11 International The shadow of violence and d:isbrder in the nation made itsell felt in Independence day 'celebrations as presidential contenders from tbree parties pleaded for law and orde!' •. Americans must '':.Support the rule of law, lest the la of the jungle beoome the Law of an behavior, II said Vice President Hubert :A. Huniphrey as he was heCkled in front of Independence Hall in Philadelphia .. Law-abiding Americans are buying guns "becau.se they have lost faith in government's ability to protect them," said Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan in an old California Gold Rush town. "A good crease in the skull would stop this.'" said former AI8bama Gov. George C. Wallace before he left Min· neapolis where police earlier had to use disabling ' chemical spray and clubs to quell demonstrators. Humphrey, facing . boisterous an- tiwar pickets and •'McCarthy for President" signs, asserted the right of Americans to '"walk the street.s and proclaim their cause without fear of violence." · He departed from his prepared text, whidt called frir Americans to recognize "lnterdependeoce • • • with the family of man," only onc.e to remark in the direction ol. his an· tagonists that Americans must bear "the responsibility of the rule of law, lest the law of the jungle become the Jaw of hwnan behavior." Reagan, favorite son presidential candidate of California Republicans, said that if the government met its responsibility to protect its citizens, the purchase of weapons would pro· bably decrease. "Let government fulfill i t s responsibility to protect society from the lawbreakers, instead of the other w.ay around • _ . " he ~ a gathering at Columbia, Calif. WaHace, angered at a w i l d demonstration in M i n n e a p o l i s ' auditorium Wednesday night, said before returning home: "l can assure you that if I'm elected President, I'll show you how to keep Jaw and order. "A good crease in the skull would stop Utis'". " · FIRE ENGINES WHISTLE AND HOOT Four Yoor Oki llocky Kloln Ob ject• ·' • • -I i 11 I I I ·i I I I I I I • • GAILY '!LOT ·~ • ., ............. "9ffl • Police Chief J, C. Goodm•n Jr., 1pollecl Uu:ee BB gun1 at ,a recenl police auction in Charlotte, N.C., and of.dered them 'broken. "It woUld be pretty embarrassing for WI il children caught. <hooting. out window1 ·or piercing a playmate's eye were to say that f.hey bad ob- tained tile gun from Ille police de- partmen't,'1 he said. . ' ' . Hugo Vihlen, airlines pilot who ;Ust recently ~led across the Atlantic in a six-foot boat, get.s fitted with a fal!e beard for television appearan(:'es in M~mi Beach. Hair stylist Ruth Regi"M replaces the beard th.at Vihlen shat!· ed off after hi.$ homecoming from. Ca..sablanCa. • A few days ago, Joe Douglas, 52 . of Topeka, Kan., found a billfold containing $128 on a downtown street. The billfold belonged to R•y Hudson, 78, a retired man who said the money was all he had to live on for a month. Hudson gave Ooug- laS a $5 reward. Since then, Ooug- IBs, father · of :seven and guardian of ~ eighth, has received 1.0 let- ters containing rewards totaling $63. In addition , he was given $116 by a Topeka physician whom Doug- las Waited on at a country .club. • Singer R01emary Clooney an- nqunced today that she would re- tir~ at the end of her present en· gagement at a cl ub in Reno, Nev., on, .JuJ,y 25. She said she planned to . become a "full-time mother to my fiv~ children." Miss Clooney. 40; was formerly married to actor Jose Far~ar.: • ~~ ................ ,,,,,. ..... ~ The Ronl.onkoma Volunteer Fire Department oj. NPID York was practicing wattr rescues re· ~ cently when it had to call in the l· Suffolk County police -re.,cue 1 t helicopter to save threl'l of it.s 1 ~ me'n. The volunteers . werl'l ~ dumped into the wattr ns they l p. struggled to pull their "victim'' ~ t into their srnalt boat. ~ ,l-~~ . ~. • The greater Reno Chamber of Commerce has anno.unced that Danny Thomas has been named to receive the Third Annual Gover- nor's Trophy as "The performer \Vho has made outs tanding contri- butions to Nevada's fame as th e entertainment mecca· of the world." Thomas will receive the award July 14 at the Chamber's 65\h an- nual dinner, Previous winners were Jimmy Durante and Sa mmy Di vis J r. Frldi.y, Ju[y 5, 1968 .Police Use Ga~ Barrage . . To End Riot PA'ry:flliON, N.J. (UPI) -Police usuig tear g,U ·early today ·broic:e ·up bands of Puerto Rican and Negro youths who roamed the city 1mashing windOW$, emptying garbage cans and hurling missiles at patroln)en. No il\jLl'ie1 •l!l'e ~ in ~e­ disorders involving . gangs numbering from 10-to 200. About 800 penons participated in ttie disturbances., Police armted 21 pe.rs0Cl8 eo charges ol disorderly condud. Six policemen have been injured, ln·. eluding two seriously enough to be relieved from duty, alnce Monday, ~e first of a four night serie,s ot disturbances. . Eighty-four,wel'e anested and about 20 injured in the previous three night.1.- 'Jbe latest action started' about sun· down Th~y and rat:~ around the 'ctty until earlY this morning. *· * * Minneapolis Hit By Fireboinbirigs MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) -Fil· teen persons were injur~ and five youths held by po'.lice when three firebombings, window-breaking and other vandalism broke oot on the city'S South Side as a climax to a Hreworks shootoff Thursday night. Police said more than 100 youths ....... m06t·of them Negroes ~·took part ill the · disturbance near Powderhom Parle wftere the city fires <if a tracti- tionai displly to cap the Independence D.ay Celebration. Police confiscated 1 , crate 'of fire· bmnbs . * * * Memphis Police Onell Incident MEMPHIS. T...,, (UPI) -A crowd or 4Q.50 Negroes formed oil a street . Thursday nig'ht when two. policemen broke up a fig'bt between two Negroes outa.de a cafe. Police reinforcements rushed to the scene end-dispersed Ute group with lit· tle commotion. A bottle -apparently thrown at a police cruiser -struck a private car but caused no damage, police Olli<!. j . One of' Ute fighters, Jes{ilie James Neely. 21, was arrested end charged · wi1!1 disonlorly conduct, resistinog ar· rest and assault aod battery. The incident happened in a Negro n<ighbomood. Grey hound Skids, . Flips; 26 Hurt MACON . Ga. (lJPI ) -A Greyhound bus, en route from Chicago to Miami, overturned on a rainsllck highway Thursday nigbt, injuring 26 of the passengers. Authorities said two or three of the injured persons were in serious con- dition. They ·were taken to Macon hospitals. The bus driver .. William Parks. of Oflattanooga. Tenn., said Uie accident happened when he came to an in- tersection on ~orgia Highway 87, about IO miles north of Macoo. Parks, who was not hurt, said th e brakes apparently locked and the engine went dead. The veh.icle skidded and overturned into a field. Parks said the bus had stopped in Atlanta and was to stop again 1n Macon. , .. - •oGETHERNESS PLEDGED -The 10 children ot Mr. and Ml'll. Robert G . .Monjs, ot .Madera, Calif., were orphaned when their panmts were killed in an auto accident July 2. The children have vowed they } will not be separated. In tllis photo taken Thurs· day are: Judy, 16; KathleOI), 17; and Edward, 3 in front. Rear are Michael, 10; Jeffrey, 8; Linda 15: Carole, 14; twins Robert and Roberta, I!; 'and Theresa, 12. Remain a Family 10 Orphaned Children Pledged to Stay To gether 7Children Die When Boat Flips LAKE WALES, Fla. <AP) -Seven children on a holiday outin& and a man who was giving them a boabide drowned Thursday when their 12-foot outboard flipped over, hurling them in· to Lake Easy about five nµles south of hen!. The only survivor wu an 11-yt.ar-old girl who clung t.o the overturned boat and was rescued by a vacationing deputy sheriff. "When the first car got there, the families Of ttie kids were w1ding around in the water, crying · and searching for bodies," said Capt. Earl Br.anch ol the Polk County sheriff's department. "None of them could swim." The families were making an all-day Fourth of July outing of it, said a nearby cottage owner. '"Ibey had set up their picnic stuff early in the morn· ing." Branch :said William. Harrell, ~. of Lake Wcrles, loaded the eight children into the boat for a ride arOUlld the small lake. Raymond Parka of Wi.ntlr Jlaveh said he was fishing nearby w!Mp the boat started swinging toward tbl pie· nic site oo the bank . Jfe said the boat rolled over tn the middle of. tbe turn, pitching ita: cargo or ohlldten into 15 feet ol water about 100 yards from shore. The bodies were recovered during a MADERA (UPJ} -"We want to ' bave overwhelmed the family with oi-said their aU11l. '(We've always been th.ree-hwr search.by divers amd men . in boat.. with g<appling -· stay together, Father. Don't let t:hem fers to assist in many ways. proud of them. They are very The dead were listed as Ha.?Tell, separate us." "There's no telling how much money responsible children. In school, they Belinda Clay, 12, and her 14-year-old That, said the Rev. Salvatore Ben-has been received by the bank ~ are all outstanding.and they are con· sister, Cynthia, of Lakeland; their tivegena Thursday, ·was the tearful there's a whole slack of. letters there," stantly involve~ in activities. cousin, Jimmie Elaine Clay, 9, and Plea {rom the 10 orphaned children or sai·d one Maderan. "Th , al' •--I Sheila Jennings, 8, Carolyn Jones, 11, ey ve way& ~n a very c ose· Cynthia Jackson, 7, and Rhonda Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Mqrris, killec\. "All of them are reai smart kiQs,'' kl'lit family." Tucker, 10, all of Lake Wales. Tuesday ttight in a headon collision. 'F=======================================:::::::;:;:;:, Relatives, parishioner• at St. 11 Joachim's Catholic (]lurch and resident.s of this town of 16,00J are doing what they can to make the children's dream come true. 11We are al close,'.,aid J udy. 16, a pretty, darkhaired high school junior. "That's why we all want to 9tay together.'' While arrangements were being made for today's funeral. the town mobilized to see the children are not :separated. _ "Everyone's goal is to keep them together any way we can," said their aunt, Mary Lacbawici of Fresno. The children, who range ln age from 3 to 17. learned Tuesday night that their parents had just1been killed in a four-oar crash caused by a car headed the wrong way on a freeway. The driver of the wrong-way car was charged witt\ drunken driving and manslaughter. Relatives asked that the children, who remained in the family's yellow frame house just a block from the , Madera Union High School rour of the girL<i attend, not be interviewed . Since the accident. the tree-lined street has been lined with cars of friends and neighbors wanting to help. The children are Kathleen, 17, Judy, 16: Linda. 15; Carole, 14 : Theresa, 12; twins· Robert and Roberta. ti; Michael. 10 ;'-'Jeffrey, 8: and Edward, 3 . "Nothing has been done legally yet.'' said Miss Lachawicz. "Somebody will have to be their legal guardian, but nothing has been decided yet. I can't say right now what will be done." Already the children have offers to live with relatives in New Jersey, Con· ~ord. Calif., and Fresno. A man in the foothill community of Twain Harte. Calif., has offered them a seven-room house. ln ·Madera, a trust has been set up in the name of the "Robert Morris Family" at the local bank Maderans Botiiein for S'our j 4ree ~"9~~r!<?~ ' c1faufioal Sift /or every/one cJJrarinera 8iavin9a AND LOAN ASSOCIATION WESTCL!FF at DOVER• NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. 92663 • (714) 642-4000 e Tennis ,., Everyone Shoes • • In Pea Soup Pantry: Fog ' Wilson • Dunlop • Davis • Bancroft Jr. Rakets-4.95 & 12.95 Adult Rackets -6.95 to 50.00 Dresses 13.00 & 14.95 Men's Shorts 4.95 to 13.95 Men's Shirts 5.00 Caps • Sox · • Bats • Balls • Mitts • Handball Gloves • Handballs • Volleyballs • Soccer Balls • Basketballs • Heavy Smog Warnin gs Ou t in L.A. Basin Callforai<! Tettaperuturea rl, Coaatal l~t "lfll blt whMh nl9'11 1NI ""°'"' 1.., "-• lle('omlllf _,,..,.,,. 10 •• ti knoft "'.._" "" ·~ tocll• -t-ro.i. NI""' ulCI morn1no l(IW ow1n111 t l'lll "~"'' roe wltfl ~•Ml• &llMV 1!1tr-. Y"'twa.•'1 ie ..... r•ll.H''I r~nllf'cl '"""'. """ llf """. lewlll ,,_ w.,... ,_,!\It? """ .... ""'""'· I Ii .S. Su.mmur" , '• Albu<l..erou1 ·--,1,111n•1 ll1ktralleld ... ~ Clllc-· Clndnn~ll Crtwl11'1d ... ~. Oft ..... 0.ITOll E11'"-1 Fort Worth "~"" H11t!N1 ' ,...,. _,,, ~=:-:~~ .... LOI Allftlts Mllflll Mll)w1uii:H MJ-..-el\I Hew Or1t1111 H""" y~ O.kllnd """" "''° RoblH p1111.-ll>hl1 ·-· .,......, 'orti.tfllll R1111d (llY • l.td lllltt . ·-Sacrl !Mflla SI. LOI.Ill S.lffltl Salt Ltkt Cl .... S.n OlttO s..i l"r111(1Ke Slfttl AM IMl9 lltrM,. ..... -· .. ™"'" W1tl!IMfllll "'"' L.tw ,,., " " ~ . " M 1°' ,, ~ " . ~ . " . " " " " " M » M M . .. ~ ~ 17 ~' Hl3 M 11 JI M " • ff " " "' . " . . .. n " • • . " " . " "' . ~ .• " " . .10 1 ' ... ,.., n ·" " . " .. .. " 101 n •• 1• •1 n " " . " .. " " . .. u " n » n "' " .. 101 11 ,, ·~ Men's Tennis Shoes-7.75 & 8.95 Ladies' Tennis Shoes -7.25 WILSON Tennis Balls -Can of 3/1.89 PINNSYLVANIA _ ·Tennis Balls -Can of 3/1.76 Raleigh Bikes Parts -Tires -Tubes Bike Repairing Table Tennis Sets Paddles -Balls -Nets ' . Shuffleboard Sets -16.95 Horseshoe Sets -8. 95-11. 95 Badminton Sets-9.95 4 Square Balls • Croquet Sets • Boxing Gloves • Punching Bags ·• Stop Watches - Swim Fins-Masks Snorkles Voit Duckfeet Rns -8.95 pr. Blemish Duckfeet - 6.95 pr. Snorldes -95c-1.~2.95 Masks -95c to 11.95 Swim Trunks -3.95 to 6.95 ,_,Racing Suits - 6.75 to 9.95 Racing Swim Caps -1.50 • • • fr1daY, July S, 1968 DAILY PILOT 9 For the · Record Meetlftfl• TMUltOAT HvllllllflOll 1 .. c11 LI0111 CIW. '"'"I"' hlicl'I IM. IWftllftllon a..dl,, : ... G:f'i:ot11t Sl'l11ft41 Club. _.. .,.,.,. tl'lrltltnMn. 111. •:II ""· P~t<ff, ~ Judt1 Wm, Ml le , 100 H •I =1m11utw ...... w • .tmf,..,.,. 1:W 1.m. Coe11 C.1n'fn1 .·Club. llt«Mtlofl lldl., int w. e11tiot arw., M.wll0/1 ltd\. ,.:J~c1'm(oelt ArcMDIOP SOCi.IV..L 8-tt MU59V!TI. S.ntt .l.111, 1;• 1.m. . Or1-COid llllWll Me111Wol Sl1,.rln1 Mll!llllc Ttinplt lolOI l tll s..-.r, NtwPOrt llN(PI,~·· p,m, H1rtlo!" ''" TM 1ler C Mt Vfl"dl COIHllrY (; COllll .!Xt., }:; .:~t H1rbor ~11111~ 'llkl 1..--. VII OPorlo, N IHdl. 1:00 .1..:::'ie1n , Lllon l"OSf GS, A,,.,.,k.1'1 L-.ilcn Hill, 545 W. 11111 St!'-'• C1111'1 """'' 1:00 1.m. Alr!erlc111 L"lon !lost I.JS If H"""I !1119ton llNdl, .1.IMl'kll'I Lftkill M,tU, Clwk (;Inter, Hunlll'llllOll tMd\ 1:119 H!'.;:i',;"°" 11.-dl J11111or C11tm11er cit COltlmfn:t, Shir.kif! 9M;d'l lnn. H~ 111'11111111 kedl, • ti.I'll. Hu11tl1111ot1 l1t<ll lllfTHllt No. »a. Ver.r1111 " WDfld W1r' v,f;_._.,,_, Hill .. Jlt Yorti-n A.YI., num 11111111'1 9"dl.2:311 p.m. Muo0111c Goldl!'I Kirbo!' Whl,. Sllrllll Ho. 91, MIOlllk. Temple Ulll lSlll s1r1et, HtwPOtt llet<ll. 1:0o 11.m. U.$. NIVll S.1 C1dolt C°""' 234$, 81fo r1nc1 llo.fd, S.ni. A111, 7 1.m. Ft10.111l1ln Vl!llY Klw111l1 Club, Fri "" Coll'. lfl1Sl lltKl'I Blvd., H11n11,,.1on ltlCh, n :IS P.rn. • H1111rlf1Qton Be.ell Mirth Lton. Clu • M"8dow'-r1t CountrY club, 11112 Grlll1m, Hllllllllltm INCi\, 1 •• m. flllll>AY H!H!llntlon lltedl Rtllll"I' c] II b I Shtr1lon Btcl'I Inn. Hu"'lntlon e .. ch, 12:10 P.m. ... -·· Mtrlntfl Lkwlt Club. Stvfl Sl'l!>!f .... W. Cotl! HlehWl'l't NtWPOrl ll~Ch, 12:15 r.1m. ... , Mtr V I I MalO!'l!Co LodDI, .....,lOll C Tem1>lt, HO\ \Siii st.: NewPGrt 1111ch. 7:3IO p.rn1 • '' UCI i=o1k De~ "'' ClmPUS HI . , Un\vertl!'f til c;1UtDrnl1, lrvlflt1 7:30 P:r:t1 Wlthaut P1rtMrs. Ol'lllOt' CounlY!. _MKI V1r6' CtlO.lnlf'f (;IUll, COl!t _.,, ! p.m. Cllf'l1!11n llUI .... ,_ ... " Commltl111, ll•lbClll lln <;11,111, Newpar! lleacll. 7:30 1.m. Fire Call• Hllll11M1M l1tcll W-.dly, July ), 10:05 1.m .. rnldlttl •Id, 1n11 hl<h •lvd. 10:%1 1.m., tnldlul tld. 1741 Nt"#ltnd l :SJ 1>.")., ~1.t tlrw. 11rQOkhur1t •rid 2:~~~ 9rHS 111'9, 506% Hell. 1:56 p.m .. 9"ftJ !Ire 1121 Juliet .. LIM' (:Of p.m •• cir tire. '1t llldl1naPOl11 7:09 p.m .. a11·uc111r1 !Ire, .50$2 Und• Circle KONA LANES 3rd ANNUAL CENT CENT CENT CENT 3 SALE SALE -SALE SALE SPECTACULAR DAYS REMAINING FRIDAY . . . . . • . . . . . JULY 5th, 1968 SATURDAY ........ JULY 6th, 1968 SUNDAY . . . • • • . . . . JUl'..Y 7th; 1968 9:00 •.m. until 12-midnite, each of the S•le D1y1! FABULOUS MON£Y-SAVIMG SPECIAlSI BOWLING--- REGULAR PRLCE FOR I st. (3rd, 5th, etc.) GAM!:. EACH 2nd-GAME (2nd , 4th, 6th, etc.) JUST A PENNY! NO LIMIT! Of11r v1lid, t '·'"·. 12 "'iO'ni9ht, 1 11 .C d1y1. Yuutlt l ow!. int Club (Y.l .C.I Mtmb''' p1y th1ir r1911ltr pric1 fo, 11ch lit, )rd, 91m1, tic. le for 2n,, 4tloi, etc. NP eth1r Kont L1n11 promPlluntl f11tu'' v1lid O'uring ~•·c1nt ,,r •. FOOD ------~--- lf1m1 on thl1 Sptcl1l M1n11 in,l11cl1cl in O;NI CINT SAU, only P1y _yrlc1 thown for flr1f 111111. Eich 21111 m11I of 1q111I p/c• or lower, (u1t • PINNYlll 15111 tloii1 m1n11 only, 11rv•' 111 Coff11 Shop, only). 1'1'9'11llfl, Fr1nch Roll, l11n1 ••••••••••·••••• 1 .0t P.llNCH DIP SAND., Fr•nch Fri11 • , , , , , , • , , , , •• 1.00 IPAa.Hml DINNI .. So11 p ., s.r.d .••••.•••••• 1.JO PllH • Pllll.· Vo9., Soup '' S1l1cl ,,, ••••••••• 1,11 CHICllN IN A IAIKIT ., ••• ,. ,. •••••••• ••••• ,1.JO CHAl·llOILID HAMIUla.11 •••• , •• ,, ,, ,, •• ,, , ,61 CHAlollOIUD CHllHIUIMI , •• , ••••• , • , , , .71 CNtu SID, bun, ch111• ······•••••••••••••••~ 1.11 PIJID IHllMP, Colo Sl1w, St111p • , , ,, •••• ,, ,, ,, • 1.71· IUAID VIAL CV'f'LIT, Tri111~ln'1 • •·•••••·~···• 1.11 COLI niam 01 HAM SAND,. ,,,,, •••• --:-::-:-.. .H HAUIUT STIAll. lri111min'1 ••• ,, ,, r . •••• •••• •• , 1.70 CHIP"I SAL.At IOWL •••• , , •• , , • , , , • • •. • •• •• , I .JI HOT lllP SANDWICH ••••••• , ••••••••• ,, •••• , 1.JS SPICIAL DUf'CttMAN SANDWICH ••••• , • • • • • • • • 1.Zt ION.A'S fl,MOUS "'IOWUUUl9U., ,,,,,,, ,, • 1.11 ..... , ................. At ___ .... _ .. ,, ... KONA LANES 26'9 HARIOR 545-1112 CO~A MISA Parents Stttdy School Program mv~ -A group o1 pol'en\s. mostly from tile Unlvers1ty Park area, hiilVe formed a conunlttee to study the seventh and e.ighUl gr.de curriculum o( the Se'n Jooquln &:llool Dtlittlct. 'lbe parent's advisory committee, formed three. weeb ago with ttie consent cl the acliool board, ls to make recommendations for changes by Aug. 16. Fred A-11a Of Fordview; El ' - Br~zil Trip Planned by Instructor chajnnan al the fiedglln& oommittee and father uf an eighth g,ader ln the d.lstrlct, said tile purpose Of tile group is to evaluate C<lUl'HS being taut1>t and t h • facilities for teaching tholn. "Some or the parents have felt the curriculum is Ji.eavy in certain areas, for in-- stance fol"eign lauguages," he said. On the other band, he added. the scienc. pro-- _.mi~ need up.claUog. After' the committe e makes its Aug. 16 report, it must disband, aCCO<dlng to the present agreement with the school boal'd. · Tile committee li! com- pooed of 18 people, inclu4ing representativ~s of t h e school di.strict, end meets M~s et 7:30 p.m. ol Irvine School. Parents of seventh and Professor Robert Taft of eigti.th grade. student.I who UCI depart me n·t of.-have suggestkol fer ctr· chemistry has been invited riculum changes may send to attend the international them to Mr. Agresta at the symposium on n U c 1 e a r scilool. · • U.S. Awards • UCI Pact Of $8,965· The Public Polley Research Organization at UCI has been given a federal contract to study how It.ate and 1 o c a l governments obtain advice on aclent.lfic and. technical matters. The Irvine grant or $8,985 is part of . a nine-state pro- ject spoosoced jointly by the National Sclence Foundation apd the Economic Develop· - PARKING LOT SALE WAREHOUSE LEASE 'EXPIRESI MUST VACATE IN. 7 DAYS • REDUCTIONS io 50% OFF! '25,000.00 WOllTH OF SPANISH, MIDITiRRANIAN AND MIXICAN PUitNITORI MUST II CU.ARID OUT OP RALPHS . . 10,000 SQ. FOOT WAREHOUSI IT JUL T 1 ITM. SALEJTARTS FRI. ·JULY 5th at 9:00 A.M. ~ .. WAREHOUSE 1953 Newport Blvd. (Cont•r .lord ftoadJ COSTA MESA magnetic resonance in Sao Paulo, Brazil, July 8 to 11. ment Admln!.atration of the . -~ Department of Commerce. l===~=~======-;;::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:= Professor T a f t has pioneered in applying p h y s i c a I meaaurementa toward systematic un- derstaDding of the rates of crganic dlemical reactions. At UCI, Taft and his researdl group have Jn4de extensive applications of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Four gr-a. duate spidents who have done their research work in th.is program have already received the PhD degree from UCI under the direc· ti.on of Professor Taft. Professor Tart also lee· tured recently to t h e Organic Reaction Mechanisms Conference at Brandeis University, and to the Gordon Conference on the chemistry and physics ol isotopes in Holderness, New Hampshire. DEA'l'H NOTICES Rolls Closed At Cal State FULLERTON Admilliool to Cal State Fullerton's Call -semester have closed, marking the earliest state cmlege cutoff in Southern California. . Ralph Bigelow, Fullerton campus director of ad· :missions and records, said a July ' 1 deadline w a s necessary becaus~ of an enrollment quota of 7 ,600 f u 11· ti,m e equivalent fiudents, -about 10,600 in· dividua:ls. 11t1..ine with· a Policy an· nounced earlier by Presl· d<nt William B. Langsdon, however, Bigelow noted that exceptions can be made for Vietnam veterans. Alttiough San Ftancl.sco and San Jose State College JACOB also have ceased admitting 01r1v 11. JIC<IO, 1n.1 lroakhunt1s1.. stude~-for ~-fall •·-' Huntlnritvn 811Ch. SuNlw, 111ri v uwo ~ w.<111, fr~~ .... ~'!"'Son:'°Ei~"'r JOl'IK ~~Fullerton is the first state H11nt1,..,11111 BHCI!. Sbter, Allie 011t1 or College in So uthern Fl1. I trlllddlllcl, l ~ r 1 • I · C . • or•nddllldrtn. Servlcn Mon. ul'I' 1, 1 alifonua to do so. 11.m. P•~llk. View ClllP11. r. RIV· mond I. llr1h1ms. ottlclltl1>1. 1 ... Ummtnt PIClllc Vltw Mftnor'le l Plrlt. Ptclrlc Vltw Mortwiry, dlrldun. MARTINEZ Wife Held The studies ~ designedl· to find out what kinda: of sclentlftc and tedllllcal ac· tivitie.1 are supported by state and local governments, Gd bow much Impact sclentlata a n d engineers have upon state and local government policy. Results of the studies are expected to he useful as an aid to state government.I now engaged in exploring techniques for using science and technology to promote s tate aoclo-economlc development. A new vice president af Fore!t L a w n Memorial· Parks was announced recently by Forest Lawn gener•l manager Frederick Llewellyn. E f fective immedlat.ely Charles N. Pink wJll be rerponsible for the. manage- ment af Forest L a w n Memorial-Park in Cypress, serving the greater Long NIGHT and DAY SERVICE 9:30 AM. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATUllDAT 10 AM. TO 6 P.M. In Assault Jft\11 P. Mlrtlnet, Sr. IOS.1 RO&I ~I.. Sttnton. Survived b~ wllr, GIU'd1IUD1ij/ -· Jt$UI P. Jr •• R1mlro P. I Ro0tl1. D1119hter1, AnMTI' 1nd Del • Sttl>d1Uthler1, AllCCI McQuwn, LCr• ,.1 ... •lld INbll TruUlla. SteP10n1, Cll1rtn 11111 Rlch•rd. BrOfhorn, Mlno1I, lll1m1rp Ind Jllhnl I 11r1ndc:l\lldr1n. A:os1no Fri. Ju~ I p.m. 11 Ptek F1m11v Ch111t1. 1rvk•1 s.1. 10130 1.m. SANTA ANA - A local Beach-Orange county areas.,;========±===================== Pink 1ucceedl vice Pres· ident 8Dd park manager Clark Hilton wbo has been appointed vice president of operations for all four Forest Lawn Memorial 11 Pftll f1mll'f t1l1111lel Fu111t1I Homt. SMICK housewi!e here Is in Orange 11k.,. 11. SmfQ, of !7n G1l"llln GrPV1 Co .. ~· j•'l ~ay · c•·-~ Blvd,, Wt1lrnl1111tr. Survived by wlft, U.U•.7 ... WU UAl&'"• tr-. °'~"'• AIYU v. wllkt•IOf!. 1 .with usault with int.ent to 1r1110c11u1h1tr. J ••e•t·•••ndchlklren. m·-der ·-h'"'and. Servka Wiii b9 In LOUl•Vlll•r Ky. LOCll ..... n,,1: ....,., 11T--nh by Pftll; F1m IY ColOl'!l11 Goldie A. Laster, 29, of Fll...,..L iiiERONY1'1US 1641 W. Highland st. WM ar- 0111 ""· Hr-.,.mu•, of · 2 s 1o1 res•~ -.. -da ru· ""t a1~r E1M1m1111 Lomll1. Survlvecl bY IOlli, 1.-t:'U .1.u ... ., Y &-• 1c: o. H. IJ'IG Frtnk L,_p•uvhttn Ev1 M. her husband, Jlllll«I, otag-ChwnPl(ln, tnd U!>ll Do<wdell. 10 1r1n0chlldrtn. ' 1~11-tr1lldclllldrm. gered. -to a grocery 11on!, Mrvlcft will bt In Elk City, Okll. "--·-t k f ! u .. LOCll 1rr1ni11me111t 11y Pffk. F1rn1rv • U\Nfl" a pac o c gare~IC:I c111on111 Fu...,11 Home. · and then asked a neighbor OSTENDORF Miidred T. Osltndot1. ol Folly Line, to take him to 8 . huspltal. wntbllnt. M1•. S11rv1veo:1 tw '°" Ed· Police ••'d Mrs Laster mullll, dMlol\ftt, M•f'f N1son. s(s1er1. · .,...... • Eme11111 eurt.1 and ,,.,..,.""' 11out11rd. ' stabbed her husband in the i rlnddl!klfell. s.tnkn ..,..,.. htld Fri. ,.m. 11 11esnd s....-1ment 0iurcn. back with a butcher knife. wt11m1n111r. Pm F1m11y eo1on111 His lung was -"""'••ed bul F-r•I Homtc. ''N"""w 'N· ·--·-0 ·be is llsted iD satisfactory 1111ch1rd J. c,,.,1on, w. 01 1201 Surrn111 con· dition toda y at t h e W1v. H-t BHch. Survived bv wlte, Atme. 1>111111Mtr. R1t1 Burt •' Llf1v11• Orange ~-unty Med Jc a I te, <;1llf,, 1nd Mlrlon P1rktr of ~11111 ......., Par kl. Mosquito Week Noted SANTA ANA -Calil<mia Mosquito Control We<!<, July 14·20, w.as officially en· d1.-.ed by the Board of Superviscm this week. The resolution WM ap- proved at the request ol the Orange County Mosquito Control Board. dtl Mir. Soni Rk.h1rd. llrothtr, Cen, ter. Thomll of M ch. 7 1r1n«llllClrtr1. Rotl ry Fri t 11.m. 11 Ovr L..:lv Outtn'' ~=============;::;:========"\! ot .1.111111 ~!lurch. M••• Soll. t 1.m. 1n:ll termtnl Good Sf!IPl!tra CttntlerY. f.:111 Mort\l•rY• CDtOIWI Ot1 Mir, dl!"lt- on. BUSH Or. J~ llutll, Private strvlcn w•• hlkl Fri.. July J. llellt Mor1u1...,., C11r· 11!11 dtl tMr. directors. COZENS 0--91 F. Co11n1, 12, II 11UYI W Ocn 11 Front. Hewlltlr1 8eech. Survlvo.d bv Wiit £11111, Soni, ~· W. 1iii1 Arlllur 16:. Dtuell,_.. Pearl l!.-H••k•lt Cl! w1111. {11 .. tt Loultt Bumi. Brllt!Mn Arthur tnd 1heodor1. u or•Mlcnlldren, l iirw1t .. r1111khlklrrft. s.tnio. Frt. 2 11 rn. 11 111111. Ch1Ptl, CDf-di! Mir. liit...,...111 P1clllc: Vlirw M~I l1rk. &tlti Morlu1rY. <;11r0111 dll ""'-'• dlr1JC· "" MANNIS BALTZ MORTUARIES C..... dd Mor OR :1-flM Co1ta Mell Ml 1-UU BELL BROADWAY \ MORTUARY TEEN DANCE SUND ARI Now h1pponln9 1t THE fi\OOSE HALL Tonltht 1-12 p.m. SUNDARI -One of the newest-groups around - Abe mwic they create is fresh, bard, clean and I heavy. A rombinatlon of Soul Blues and Pop. IDIUMMll-ltt Ar911~te11 il!_AllllT-D11111h H1nl91n 19U"Al-llle11 P1noptnl :VOCAU-W1yn1 Stbll'I 111d l•b Cl1min1 MOOll HAU 14ot u,.. Circle ~ " ........... -$1 ,H : Apl 1J•1 1 Cht tr 91t-4 M ...,_I 110 Broadway, Co1ta Me11 ll'---+--------------"'!I LI 1-3433 PACIFIC VIEW r MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortuar1 Chapel a50I Pacific View Drive Newport Bf:•Cb, CallfornJ.a IM4-%7ot PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL DOME '1111 Bolla Ave. We111nlnne~ n~ SMJTB'S MORTUARY 11%7 Mahi 81. BuU.1too Beacll LEM.119 WESTCLIFP . MORTUARY fll E. l'ltll 81., Colla Me11 ... ! •• WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARK Mortury a. Cemeh?ry C11lpel1 ICl81 Be1H! We1tmlDl&er Dl·l71S. •zm I See By Today's Want Ads • A couple of uNque Items. Here's a stained glass window •td an 1 1889 Qllme clock! • Someone ii Rllinc • aeJ1. propelled rob' lawn mow· er Ut.Iy i~:ycars o&d. Belt oUtr taket! e 'nl&t there ii tbe popul•r OPEN llOUSE Dl1WCI'· ORY to c:oovln!mtly bolp ""l' .... ht .. _I r · .. e A Honda Scrambler SOOcc ror 90llnt ludcy bo:yl e An ex~ eqWppe1 'G5 Oerdcee 180! ,., The VOikswagen with the automatic stick shift; ~ Used to be, Volkswagens were enough to make some-womin-glv.-) . up driving alrogether. Acc:elerator up ... clutch ln ... shlft .. ,lurch.~ _. Very embarraulng. Thars whYjwe developed the lurchless Volkswagen. A bug thot'I. equipped wltn an option. we call the automatic stick shift. It's an automatic because there's no clutch pedal to worry about. And because you can drive II around t11Wn all' day without shifting. Jrs a stick shift because It can also be taken through the gecus manually, just llke a real Volkswagen. (That's for you men .) And because at spteds over 55 mph .you con shift Into a higher, over-_ drive-type gear to save on gas. But the adv~ntages aren't all practical. In the lady bug, a gal can l_eel more like a woman. Because the only shift she has to think a!;iout, 1 Is tho one she's wearing.. ~ NIWl'OlT llACH Chick 'lv•r1on1 l"c. 2116 N•wrort Boul•vard 1714 673-0900 'bN JUAN CAl'ISTIANO 8111 Yet", l"c. J2152 Volle Rood 17141 49t-2UI ' HUNTIN•TON 11.ACH H.irbour Yollttwe11n 11711 l11eh loul1v1rd 17141 142-+IJJ • -.... .. DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ( I Bremer.· Takes ·over , Sadclleback Junlor College District •ullered a aet.. back on Ute eve of aw1nging open its temporary doors to the school's first.students thU fall. With campus abulld!ng, and programs beginning to jell. Jack Roper, superintendent-president, announced that he was leaving. He <leclined to accept a three-year contract for ,25,000 annually. Although aclminiJtering a junlor college .was a new job for &per, he bad done • cood Job In the organiza- tional pbue. Roper an<I bis boa~pparenUy had some diHer· ence about persoMel positions and budgeting, but there's bound to be a certain amount of this during the com plex task of building a college. Fortunately. Roper was backed up by some top-. notch people. One of these is the man who replaces hin1, Dr. Fred Bremer, 45. , Bremer was ruperintendent for five years of a Ne- braska 1cbool district lhat included a lunior college. He has been dean of liberal .arts for San a Ana College and chairman of the education department at Chapman College. · After receiving B.S. and M.A. degrees from the University of Nebraska, Bremer went on to take his doctorate in junior college administration from the University of Texas on a Kellogg Fellowship. He received this degree in 1965. With 22 years as a teacher and administrator at various levels, Bremer should be well qualified to keep Saddleback loping along. The next problem will be for the board to pick ~ jlood man to r~lace Bremw in the important post of dean of instruction. A college president generally relies Things Th~t . Kill Party's Spirit 'l'boufbt• At Laree: Why some couples give good parties and others do not has m'Jre to do with their unconsclous state of mind than with guests or refreshments or en· tertainment or any other physical fac· tor; for it is anxiety, rigidity and tuss- ing over the mere appearance of things that kill a party's spirit, no matter how ample the comestibles or how elaborate the decor. • • • A "pilot program" Is given the name ao that the organization sppnsorJng it can anticipate its failure without being held responsible for it. • • • If a company hires only executive applicants cut Crom the same pattern as its existing leaders, it is willfully throttling its opportunity to be in- novative -which, in m oder n technology, signi!ies the attrition that precedes corporate death. • • • Single people suffer unjusUy under our present income tax Jaws: their ix· emptions are propOrtionately too small, while the exemptions fol' depen. dents are proportionately too great - because the needs in a household do not increase in direct proportion to the number of people in the household, • • • \Vhy do politicians make rash, and inconsistent, promises to different segments of the electorate? Because they know that people hear only what they want to hear, and tune out what they are not interested in. • • • frustrations, accidental or otherwise: U Hitler had been a successful painter, there would have been no put.ch; if Napoleon had been acei!pted by the Russian army in 1799 (which reCused ,to give him the rank of ma· jor), there would havo,; been no Aust,erlltz, and no Waterloo. • • • The "second hand" in a clock is much more likely to be a lltUe off than the minute hand or hour hand -and we might not be quite so critical of "ephemeral" journalism if we look upon it as the second hand, with history as the minute h·and, and philosophy as the hour hand -thus. journalism needs regular correction by history, and history needs constant interpretation by philosophy, if any are to make sense. • • • Many people have a sadly deficient idea of "maturity" -they imagine that adulthood constitutes a rtnun· elation of childhood, when actually it must include and accept the good (and easily lost) values of childhood, and build upon them. 1 • . .• . . f\fost tyrannies are the res'uit of . Reformers who want to use the scllools primarily to correct injustices, and only secondarily to educate ch'ildre~: will find that under such con· ditipns me schools will be abl1.. to do neither. • Hospitals' Higher Costs To the Editor : I have a few remarks about hospitals and nursing homes thtt I believe a lot of folks will want to read. Hospital beds are becoming more expensive, so they say, and the owners blame a Jot of it on higher wages. I know of DO better excuse for an in- crease than to blame the nurses !or it and some lesser skilled help. I do not deny that costs have risen. But what I would like to know is why a room rented to my boy in 1942 or 1943 cost. I think, S8 or $10 &nd was a non· profit and tax-Cree room. and the room now rents !or $43 a day and is still non-profit and tax-Cree. WHERE DID TllE profits go on an increase Of four to five times the 1943 prices? And we are told these room rents mUlt rise. If I might get a little wall~~ed about it, I might suggest Bv George·~~~. Dear Georie: My .. boy friend is ~ news photographer and a very nice fUY but all.he thinks of Is his job. For instAnce, he took me · hor&eback rld.lne -the horse tbrtw me on a bridge aod J land· ed lo the river. Before he even fi1hed me out be took a pJcture of me. Do you think thb was right! CONCERNED O..r COocemed: : Decidedly nol He should have saJdl "One more." (You always neea a back.up 1bot in an acUon altuation Ute thal) I, • Letters from f'eaders are welcome. Normally 'Writers a:hould convey their messages in 300 worda or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate JibeJ is reserved. All let· ttr.t mU&t include tignature and fTl(lit- ing address, bui names will bt with- held on request. that these hospital operators are 11sk· ing for a large dose ol communism and public ownership and operation of the hospitals. It happens that way. Just rob the public long enough and the public will rebel and let them have it as they have in a number of countries. Wt had two new and very fine nur· .sing homes open recently and the going price is $400 pe.I' month for a four·bed \\'ard. That is $1,700 a month for a room -a pretty good take. I WONDER JUST llOW long a lot of you folks could t!ford that price, plus extras. Sooner or later the govun. ment must step in because very few people can alford that price. If a couple had $4,IXX> or '5.<KX> saved up and a small home 01 trailer, and an income to get by. how long do you thlnk It would takt! a nursing home to wipe them out? We need insurance, government-con. • troUtd, to finance that expen.s lve care, &.rid I thlnk it is r.ot far off. JAMEslSYDER . heavily -on his dean of instruc:Uon. This ts particularly true wbere a new achool ts in the making. Fortunately, when,. junior colle,es· are formed and have a good man at the helhf, thel'(I s ,generally a bustle and enthusiasm among students and faculty that carries 1hem over the Inevitable problems of the moment. This should be true at Saddleback as it has been in other areas. Another Hit. Pageant · 11 looks as if the Pageant of the Masters will have another hit on its hands. ·-· •-.. It the working press is any judge, the six living pictures previewed recenUy bespoke another great show, perhaps the best yet. The six subjects selected were a cross-section from the 26 "living pictures" that will be shoWn when the Pageant and Festival of Arts open their 33rd summer season on July 12. More than 400 volunteers from South Coast com- munities will make up the two casts and backstage crews that present the six-weeks of Pageant. The subject matter, about 80 percent new and i;ome favorites from the past, will span two hours nightly for 44 nights from lower stage to upper stage to the illum· inated hillsides of Irvine Bowl's natural amphitheater. Day and night some of the best work of about 185 area artists will be on display for the viewing public, an estimated 250,000 persons. Each year as the twin spectaculars roll arounrl. onr i:i; reminded anew that they are not only the cultural J:iants of the art colony but an impressive financial success. L Ma x Rafferty ls Unfair. High Noon i n Orange Count11 / Sophomoric Max Rafferty -the Purple Max - did a lot of bleating about the need to uphold the forces ol law and urder during his successful campaign Cor the Republican senatorlal nomination. At the same time he was doing his level best to undermine the U.S. Supreme Court with some of the wildest accusations unleashed since Joe McCarthy was flinging reckless insults at Gen, George bfarshall. OF COURSE, a slick demagogue like Rafferty can get away with such puerile ranting. 'Vhenever he accused the U.S. Supreme Court of harboring ''sociological reformers, ideological hacks and child-m:irrying mountain I climbers" -a line he must ha'Yc repeated a thousand times -hjs au- diences would break up with laughter. Once the hilarity was (.Iver, Rafferty \\'ould go right tln with his sermon, saying how important it is for everybody to have respect for the law. With this kind o( Corked.tongue hypocrisy, he was given the nomina- tion over a thoroughly decent man, Thomas Kuchel. WE DO NOT believe the U.S. Supreme Court is immune t o criticism, any more than is U1e Presi· dent or Congress. It is -oo institution of government, run by mortal men who make no cla4n -as RafferlY, does - to infallibility. Its performance must be judged by other mortal men. There are critics of the court whose opinions we respect, although we hold to the view that history will rate the \Varren Court very high indeed. These critics present cogent arguments in defense oC their positions. They do not harangue .the court or slander it. They merely di sagree with its opinions. BUT MAXWELL RAFFERTY'S vicious attacks on the court are more th~n we can take. They •re grossly un· fair and utterly sophomcric. They are the product oC a mind incapable of grasping anything more complex than thC multiplication tables. They are outright smears perpetrated by one tlf the most expert hucksters in the business. To say that he would have voted against confirmation of any of t.he justices now sitting on the U.S. Supreme Court is to stoy that he wou ld have turned his· back on some of the most brilliant men of this age and set· tied for mediocrity, a quality he doubtless apprecJates, having been blessed with such an a bundant supply himself. THE JUSTICES OF the U.S. Supreme Court do not deserve naC- ferty's venomous barbs, which he passes off in the form of a joke. They are true defenders of the Jaw, beUev· in g -as Rafferty does not -tb;:.t the ConstltutJon should protect the rights of all citizens, not just those who happen lo be white, AngJCkSaxoo, Protestant and rich. R('spect for the law can never be achieved 11 pubUc officials like Raf· ferty go around bad-mouthing tbe courts with ridicule and 1landerous per$on11I attacks oo the judges. Raf- ferty contributes to the breakdown of respect for the law every time he \'lllfles the court. The least he could do ls quit tallcing out of both aides of his mouth . Tbe Dally Callfor'll!'• Let the Lawmakers Know By NORMAN NIXON, M. D. Just four weeks ago mo st Americans were in mourning. Shocked by another Kennedy assassination. coming only a Cew weeks after the shooting of Martin Luther King, there was a spontaneous response of shock and guilt over the violence which permeates life in the United States. l\1any realized something was wrong with our way of living. The notion or a "sick society" prevailed but there was no precise definition of the causes of the sickness. Nearly everyone felt a need tn do something. lfundreds oC thousands of Americans wrote ta their senators and congre&smen in 'Vashington, pleading for Oue obvious legal step - a gun control Jaw with teeth in it. But after two days of hearinl(s last week, the Senate Judiciary subcommittee voted to postpone action on all gun control measures until July 9th -an in- excusable stall. The senators must have seen the recent Harris ·survey which reported that 81 out of every 100 Americans today want stronger gun laws, especially those re q u i r i D g registration of all firearms. HO\VEVER, SOl\lE disagree. in- cluding Bill Buckley's N at i on a I Review , the National Rifle Associa. tion , Robert Welch, Gov . Reagan and Congressman l:Jtt. Wrote Mr. Utt : "Gun laws have been misused by despots. They begin with registration, then taxation, then confiscation. Then a disarmed citizenry is at the mercy ()f men who may lack mercy. I will 9p- pose legislation which could lead to confiscation of gwts and to the overthrow of our government." lijmilarly, Gov. Reagan, who is ()P· posein'o any form of gun registration, said : "If, by any chance, a Communist dictatorship takes over, the citizens will need them to fight back with." Such muddled thinking does not reflect the Ceelings of most Americans today. OBVIOUSLY, TIIE United States cannot abolish private violence by laws or sanctions. But a responsible nation can insist that its federal and state lawmakers enact Jaws which will drastically reduce the availability of firearms. Robert Sherrill wrote in the New York Times last week: "It is high noon on capitol hill ... the gun debate has produced few profiles in courage, many profiles in politics." The same can be said of SacramentO and other state capitals. _ A responsible nation also will not continue to fill its air waves, movie screens and comic strips with ex· altations o! violence a·n d ir· responS'ibiUty. Yet violence o n television continues unabated WiU1 hundreds of killings, a t t e m p t e d murders, robberies; kidnappings and suicides, all enacted for our "en- tertainment" every week. And "Bon- nie and Clyde," the year's box-office smash, still is glorifying bank robbery and murder as a cure !or sexual im· potence -even though the trigger. happy outlaw pair finally get their come-uppance. RECENTI... Y A substantial number of-actors, directors and producers pledged in a trade paper ad- vertisement not to lend their talents "to add to the creation of a climate for murder, senseless brutality, aim- leSs cruelty, pointless and violent death." A noble gesture, but tht Neil- son ratings and box-office reei!ipt.s are the irrefutable guides. I! the public wants violence in its intertainment it will surely get it. It will not be easy -changing the current atmosphere of violence. Only one man pulled the assassin's trigger , but every one of us must tie responsi· hie for our words, our votes (or lack of them) and our actions for or against an atmosphere of violence. It behooves us to let those who now govern in Washington and Sacramento (and those we Will elect in NoYember), as well as the tycoons in motion pictures and television, know ezacUy how we feel. For it is high noon in Orange County too! Nixon's Political Comeback \VA SHlNGTON -Richard M. Nix- on. having seen his p r o b a b I e Republican delegate strength rise above the nominating level, is now concentrating on getting elected in November. The rank-and-file favorite of his par· ty, but not yet of the general elec- torate, bas made• no mistakes until now in his advance toward 1he presidential nomination. This is un- doubtedly the greatest political come- back of modern times considering the fact that Nixon's opposition has not been inconsiderable. The alternative to Nizon \\'as one of three leading Republicans who had been elected til offices Nixon could not capture, governors of their own states. Defeated for president and for governor oC California, Nixon was to see Gov. George Romney of Michigan withdraw. Gov. Ronald Reagan never entered as a formal candidate, a~d -Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, out·!ffid·~n as a candidate and badly trailing in measurable delegate strength. THJS TELLS US something about the Republican Party organization. It is essentially the same today as the Dear Gloomy Gus: This 4th of July ~·eekend re· minds me that It took 175 years and all of our wars to kill a million Americans. The automo- bile did the same thing ln 50 years and will kiU the second million· in 18 years! -F. !!. S. 'nlt1 fMtvN "'llt<l't ............. YffWf "' _,." ~ ef ,.. ........... ~ ,..., ... ,...,. .. • ...... , • .,.. Dmit' ,Jltt, ' .. organization which nominated Barry Goldwater in 1964 but moderately chastened by the disastrous results o[ that nomination. The organization moved toward Nixon out of fears that Reagan would be another Goldwater and in an attempt to placate the moderates afld liberals of the party who favored Rockefeller. Nixon was in this sense a com- promise. Although he is not a doc- trinaire conservative he has taken on the coloration of one, certainly in con-' trast to the prospective Democratic nominee. Nixon's problem is difficult and two· fold . 11e must awaken the interest of the moderates and progressives or the Republican Part.v on the one hand, and in a degree .sufficient to attract some dissident northern Democrats. He must also reclaim the southern con. servaUve Democrats who ,ravitat.e to George C. Wallace and threaten to destroy Nixon's chance to win southern electoral votes . \VALLA.CE. AT THE mon1ent, is the greater nemesis. The national public opinion polls show that Waltace sub- tracts from Nixon's potential. This may not hold itate-by-rtate but the general pattern has to be alarming to Nlxon strategl!lls. Tn 1960 when Nb:on ran against John F . Kennedy he canied Alabama, Arkansas. Florida, Kent u c k ":I. Oklahoma, Tennessee. Virtinla while eight unpledged electors In hilssl~sippi voted for the late Sen. Harry F. Byrd, Sr. Electoral 1'otes in these states totaled 71 . Some surveys now suggest that. In a three--way race with Hubert H. Humphrey and \Vatlace in southern states, Wallace wou·1d draw of! enough votes to briog In Nixon last and Humphrey first' by a narrow matgin. . TilE POSSIBLITY HAS to be measured, therefore, that Wallace will deny to Nixon southern states which he might carry if Wallace were not a candidate. On the ()ther hand • Humphrey is leading, according to the Hax:ris Poll, among low Income group!l Jn the North, including the white back ]ash troups which might be expected to respond to the Wallac.e candidacy. Nizon is thus not benefiting enough in the North from th~efection ()( Democrats to the 'Vallace tfcket. It is difficult to see what Nixon can do to change this situation without alienating those elements who con- sider him best qualified among the available candidates and intend to vote for him for that reason alone. Rockefeller has found N i x o n ' ~ vulnerability on this point by ex· ploiting the statement of Nixon's southern leader that Wallace ought to be supporting Nixon. IF SEN. EUGENE McCARTHY were to be entered as an independent candidate the problem would become even more compleL --WWW- Friday, Ju\)' 5, 1968 The editorial page of the Dall11. Pilot a:eek.t to fnfonn and 1tim- ulatt readt'rt by pre1enth1g thil newspapet'r opinfom ond com- mentarv on lOpici of interest and rignffiaince, bl/ providing a forum for the t:cpreuion of our n1ader1• opinioru, and bl/ presenUng t"-t diver.ta llie~ polnt.t of fnformtd ob1mier1 and .rpokesmen on_topic:1 of the c1av. Robel N. Weed, Publisher • I ---••• = .. . ...--, ___ s _u • i&il 1 a aca:a.z c a 2 2 sscsszz Newpor·t Barbor Your Hometown / EDl:tlON Dally Paper YOt 6f, lllO. rn, '4 S~TIOFIS, ~ PA°&ES NEWPORT BEACR, ~OFOJ{R(( FRIDAY, JULY !, ·1961 JliN CENTS H3rhor. Bill .Dies CommitteeEailS-to Pass Mea.sure DAILY PILOT P'Mi. W L'9 f'•YM 'Fireworks Batt' in Action Use, discharging, possession, ~oJ~ng, o~ m_ay~ even thinking about fireworks w1th1n ~h.e city hnuts of Newport Beaoh is absolutely prohibt~ed by law. Yet this was the· scene Fourth ol July rught on the Balboa Island waterfront. Law must be one of the most universallf ignored since Prohibition. Pass anoth~r sparkler, mom. Body Found in-Pool l!.T JACK BROBACK ~ Of .. ..., ""' ltlft Slate legislation aimed a~ submitting the fate of the Orange County Harbor District to county voters is dead for this session or the California Legislature. The Assembly Municipal and COW'lty Government Committee failed to pass the measure Wednesday but com .. mittee chairman John Knox CD-Rich· mond) warned county representatives that if local action was not taken, the committee would again move into the picture next January. Knox said delay in action on the bill by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R· Fullerton) ' ' w o u I d give the supervisors one more cbaoce to act on . Mesa Slaying · Suspect Sent ·To Hospital By AR11!UR R. VINSEL or .... .,..., '"" ,,.., The wile of Costa Mesa City Coun· cilman George A. TUcker today was ordered transferred to Orange County Medical Center, where psychiatrists will study whetaler she is capable of aiding in her own defense on a murder charge. Mrs. Irene M. TUcker, :.rl, of 1642 Minorca Drive, was_ ordered to· return to Division 1, Orange County Superior Court, on July 22 at 1:45 p.m., for a report on the mental evaluation. dissolutioo of the district." _ "If this action does not occur,'1 Knox said, "I can assure you this committee will be very receptive to leglllatlon in the near future." Knox leans heavily toward acUon by the Local ,\gency Formation Com· mission, an agency which was created through legislation sponsored by Knox. The Briggs bill was before the com- mittee !or 'the second time. On June 26 it was delayed tb tack on a long list of amendments suggested by Newport Beach. During Wednesday's he a r i n g Assemblyman Robert Burke (R-Hun- tington Beach) attempted to get the bill through committee. A vote to send it to the a ssembly floor failed, as did a ' ••t All~· Companion .Held e in .Young Mom's Death Judge WllHam Spein 8ppolnied Dr, Phillip O. ~Xnlw, el lflllap Al$M .- State· Hospital, Norwalk, ·and Dr. Sil• KILLED IN COLORADO CRASH mund Kocewick of Fairview State · l1me1 H.1 Morrl1 ' By R!CHARD P. NALL ot 1111 Dlllr P'llll Staff The clothed body of an attractive 21· year-old mother who died under mysterious cir cums ta nc es was recovered irom a motel swimming pool in Laguna Beach early t~s. morn· ing. Police arrested the young woman's male companiOn on suspicion of murder pending a determtnation of cause of death and other factors sur· rounding the death. Pollee Lt. Robert McMurray iden· tified tile woman as Marta Rodriguez; of Montebello. ' He said the woman, her three·year- old son, Kenneth and Richard Anthony Najar, 23, a metal plater from Bellflower, checked into the American Motel, 2130 S. Coast Highway, at 9: 15 p.m. Thursday. Najar was arrested by police after Last Marines Pull Out " Of Embattled Khe Sanh SAIGON (UPI) -The last U.S. Ma-the trucks, and Communist com- rincs pulled out of Khe Sanh today mandos blew up a bridge, but Marine as American B52s defied Communist offlcers•told UPI Correspondent Ray- missiles and bombed targets just mond \Vilk.Jnson the withdrawal was above tbe demolished fortress for the ''a success~ fifth consecutive day. "As far as I'm concerned, I still Marine forces withdrawing from own Khe Sanh," Maj. Gen . Raymond Khe Sanh Thursday reported killing at Davis, commander of 'the 3rd Marine least 17 North Vietnamese regulars in Division, told Wilkinson. a force of about 100 who attacked a "However, the base was a yoke Leatherneck column three miles south around my neck." of the fortress. The withdrawal gave up a base The Marines lost four men killed \Vhich Americans had held for 23 and 13 wounded in the 40·minute battle months. It was once described as a along Highway 9, the only open road vital link in the chain of defenses just from allied coastal bastions to Khe below the DMZ. Sanh. · The U.S. command said last week Pilots flying ~be B52 strlk~s above the changing pattern of the war in the Kbe Sanh against targets in North •. area made possible the giving up or Vietnam's panha?dle ~e~rted at l~s~ Khe Sanh. It said allied troops had two surface-to-arr m1ss1les strea~· more mobility at this time to counter toward the craft but both missed. infiltration. Khe 5anh, the scene of one .cf the Nearer Saigon, U.S. Army in· heaviest sieges of the. war earlier this fant.rymen still had no report on how year, was formally g1ve11; up toda>: as many Communist soldiers died in an demolition teams dynanll;ted the final almost suicidal a ssault on a U.S. camp two bunkers and about 3,500 Marines 40 miles northwest of the capital, moved out on trucks and in hellcop· where the Viet C-Ong are believed ters. . massing 2,000 to 4,000 troops ror a North Vietnamese snipers hit one of push toward the city. the young.woman's body was fou nd at abut 1:20 a.m. McMurray said Najar was asleep or unconscious in 1he motel room when officers knocked on the door. The lieutenant said six red capsules, as yet unidentified, and beer were found in the room. McMurray said the body was seen by Ken Aebersold, 2060 Ocean Way. lie notified motel manager Albert TrondJe and with a pool cleaning im- plement they retrieved the body. Dr. Manuel Richder of .Eullenon, who was vacationing at the motel, ap· plied mouth-to-mouth resuscitation unsuccessfully and pronounced the young woman dead. Police said Najar told them he and the Rodriguez woman had gone swim· ming in their clothing but that he lost sight of her and assumed she had left. He went back to the room and weD.t to sleep, said McMurray. McMurray said the young woman had bruises on her body. He said the physician and a deputy coroner thought at the scene that she may not have died of drowning. However, J im Beisner, deputy cor- oner, said later today that a morning autopsy indicated that drowning may have been the cause of death. Beisner also said there had been no official determination yet pending out· come or other tests, toxicology tests to pinpoint possible substances in the woman's sytem . l\1cMunay said police sent Najar to the Orange County Medical Center for a physical examination to determine if it was safe for him to be placed in a cell. He was returned to the jail and locked up. McMurray said the victim's son wus asleep. He was taken to the police sta· tion where he ate a candy bar and was put to bed until ltis transfer to Sitton Hall. a. juvenile receiving facility in Orange. Police also notified the dead woman's grandparents. HospiW, Coste Mesa, to examine Mr1. Tucker. The defendant has been held without bail at Orange county Jail since the stabbing death or her next-door neighbor, Mrs. Harriett Westphal, 68, of 1646 Minorca Drive, ·last Friday. Mrs. Tucker appeared before Judge Speirs with her attorney, Paul Augustine Jr., seeming dazed and con· fused, just as she did Wednesday dur· ing her arraignment · in Harbor District Judicial Court. Her 1\U5band and family were absent from tlie courtroom during Ille brief hearing today. The de£end,ant said nothint during the proceeding, as Judge Speirs ap- pointed the psychiatrists and ordered her moved to the medical center's psychiatric facility. Costa Mesa Police Capt. .B11'- Glasgow, meanwhile, suid technicians at the Orange County Sheriff's Crime Lab have what they say may be the weapon used to kill Mrs. WestphaJ. It Is a butcher knife, still being checked for possible blood traces from the body of Mrs. Westphal, who was buried in Inglewood the day her ac· cused slayer was arraigned. NEIGHBOR W!TNESS A neighbor, Donald V. Schenk, of 1644 Minorca Drive, is apparently the witness closest to knowing what ac- tually happened last Friday afternoon in the Mesa Verde area killing. He told investigators he heard screams and a dog barking, ran outside and lound Mrs. Westphal stan· ding in the street, bleeding 'from a stab wound and in a state of stock. The victim staggered across t'.I' street, collapsed to the ground and made a statement involving Mrs. . Tucker in the kn.i!ing, then apparently died while waiting for an ambulance. No motiVe has been determined and the wetpon USed to stab Mrs. Wfftphal has not been positively Iden· tified, although investigators believe it is· among kitchen utensils taken from the Tucker home. Laver Captures Tennis ~ourney Drug C~inic Helps Young Rod Laver of Corona del Mar. 1wept t~ a straight set& victory over Au1traUan professional Tony Roche in today's singles final& of the annual Wimbledon tennis classic. And Orange Coast area fant will be able to see the show on television saturday. 1 p.m., Channel 7. A throng ofil7,000 saw the touring pro of Ne~ Beach Tennis Club capture the battle of 1ef~·hander1 la an hour's time. Included In U1e crQWd were 15 members of·NBT( who made a special trip to England for the tournamtnt. See details in today's Sport rctloa, Pare H. -----"-=- Counseling Service Gaining Impetus in Laguna • ford to pay," 1aid Mrs. John SOiomon of tfle _AS6ist.ance League. By RICHARD P. NALL Of lttt h ltr , ... Sllltt A voluntary counseling clinic fOT youngster• of the drug...abuae gener.-- tlon gap era is under way in the Laguna area. Already funded by a J!,000 donation rrom the Assistance League of Laguna Beach. the pilot counstling program has gained impetus slnce Its quiet February be&lnnlnl-' with a fe"'( :1 ' families. • A cUnic for yollllgsters -with pro- blems of drug abuse and related ad- justment problems ia held each Thurs· day for those up to 18. Participation takes the willingness or both_ the youngster and the parents or guardian. "There was a distressing need for some type of care by qualified ~ !or tbose that could not a!· One of the first to oiler psychiatric skill wa1 Dr. Louis A. Gottschauk, chairman of the department or psychiatry and human behavior at the UCI SChool of Medicine. The basic goal, Dr. Gott.schauk Mid, is an attempt to bridge the gene.ration gap where you.nester• Involved. have a (Ste DRUG, ·Pare Z) ,. Newp0rt Man Dies in Auto In Cowrado Newport Beach re6ldent James Huston Morris, en route to a summer vacation in Europe, was killed Thurs- day night when ttie car in ~ch he was riding hit two pedestrians and a stalled car in northwestern Colorado. Son of Mr . .&11d Mrs. Jack H. Morris of 626A Cubhouse Road, he was a passenger in th'e car allegedly driven ' by Sharon M. Nuernburg, 25, of San Francisco. She and two other occupants of her car """." Sidney Anne Nuernburg, 4, of San Francisco and G8ry G. Martel, 22, or Whittier -were injured in the crash on Colorado Highway 2, four miles west of Craig. The Colorado SW.e Patrol said the Nuernbur,g car slammed into the rear of a parked car, which had run out of , gas. Two occupants of the ear, Walter A. Curtis, Jr., 26, and Brian David Curtis, 2, both of Craig, were struck and injured as they &tood. on the roadside. .. Morris had just completed one year of work towuds his master's degree at UC Santa Barbara. He was graduale<I from Newport Harbor High School. He is survived by his parents. Funeral plam are incomplete. 90,000 Enjoy Overcast Skies At Newport Independence Day dr~ 90,000 beachgoers ~ Ute shores of Newport Beach but overcast .skies kept most of the crowd out of the water, llfeguards reported today. .Despite the heavy turnout, only 13 rescues were loUed. AU were routine. The water temperature clung to a warm ~ degrees . with an air tem· peuture not much hiJber at~.· Boating activity also waa Intense but without locklent. Lifeguards said fireworks popped and Rashed along lbe beach alter 1un1N, "spite the fact they're lUecal Jn Newpl>rt. . . However, no arrelb .,m nporttd In o0nllu>c\loo with llt"'!orkr, and lhert w<A no report& ol ln)llrl••· ) . . ' second but to keep the bill in com- mittee. The latter situation resulted, however, for committee inaction. Briggs sai<t he waa diaaPpointed that the bill failed to clear committee but warned that "I believe that we have ser.,'ed a P!Dl>OSe ln bringing the im· portance of this matter to the supervisors. We have placed them on notice and will not accept inaction on their part any longer .. " Briggs' bill would have put the future Of the harbor district up to a vote of the coW'lty's electorate in November . .It had the backing of the County League of Cities. Last week the supervisors voted 4 to 1 to retain the harbor district as · presently set up. Police Seek Early Morning !Auto Sniper_ ' Newport Beach police today were searching for a motorist soi.per who fired one lhot into the 'rear windlhleld of another drivir•s car before dawn today. The shooting Incident occurred at 1:40 a.m. on MacArthur Boulevard near Harbor View Drive, accon:Ung to tile man who was shot at. Police identified him as Harvey Walker, 28, of 900 !;ea Lane, They &aid Walker was not'hit by the bullet. Walker told police he wu south· ~ Oil MacArthur returning -· wben Ule driver of a small car pulled In cli*l,fbehlod him. Tbe next llling he knew, a bullet had ripped '!>'OUP the rear wtndsbleid of hi& car, be reported. The caliber of the slug, and descrip- tion of the sniper were not disclosed. Narco Agents Fear Synthetic Marijuana Use z WASHINGTON (AP) -Federal narcotics agents are concerned about the possible appearance of man-made marijuana which is colorless and odorless but so powerful only two or three drops ln a cigarette can produce the same kick as natural marijuana, the Washington Post said today. "Smugg1lng in synthetic marijuana could make the $350 million a year heroin business look like peanuts,'' the paper' quoted a narcotics age.nt as saying. "And it would be easy," be added. 11A little alcohol and some coloring and it could be brought in ae: after• shave lotion." . The JusUce Department's Bureau of NarcotJcs and Dangerous Drugs plans to send Congress fresh legislation to cover the 1ale and U¥ of marijuana made in a laboratory, the Post said. Currently, federal law covers only natural marljuena which ii grown. Federal ofiici.als say m'arljlD.D.a wa1 first made synthetically four years ago by an Israeli chem.ill They say it (See NARCOT!CS, P•fe %) •• Oraalf e WeatlleP If you survived t.be post-Fourth . ear rtngiq:, the weatherman sayt you can look forward to a, weekend of aunny aftemoom and early morning fog. Hlghs mar 70. JNSmE TODAY It's "°' an CGIJI task to turn IO<OI f'<Opl. Imo !II'••• ...,.,., of art but ~&11 doM ot the LaQUM Beach Pageant ·of th• Jtosten. See todav'• W.eckc1tdu. ....,... w~• 1•w C•ltftrlllll t 1t1 ci.~ ,,.,. .,....... C-kt 47 ....... .. (~ M '-..... .. D-'111 Mii-t W 1 II r . ........ ,... ,. ....... .... . P'i..tt I Att -II ,.,_ C.itl t or,... q "'"' .... 1t ••• •• •• ,, Mtwltl ••••••• , """' "'" ......... ,._ ' ,.. .... . "'-"" c:..MJ ' "" r r • .., .... ~ I _. ...... I ...... ...,.. 11·1• n -"" I Z DAILY PILOT Jllant Plans Paris ·visit OnSafurday PARIS (UPI) -Secreury General Thant o! the United Nations will mage a brief one-day visit to Paris Saturday it was announced today. Thia prompt- ed speculation Thant would meet with North Vietnamese and American diploma.ts to di1eu&1 the deadlock in the Vietnam talks. Thant's visit to Paris just before the city was chosen as the site for the \alb in April was geoerally re&arded as high1y significant. There wen hopes he could breathe new life_ into the negotiations at this time. The announ<:emeDl of Thant's pen· ding anival came as a Soviet pledge o! cootinued mllltary and ......me aid t'O North Vietnamese strengthened J~anoi's ~and at the talks which are in recess UJ1til next week. The announced purposes of Thant's flight to Paris was a luncheon meeting with Foreign Minister Michel Debre, but diplomatic obaervers &aid talks with t!ie Americans and North Viet- namese were possible. The U.N. chief was at'riving from Geneva late Saturday morning. The Hanoi delegation wu juDilant over the pledge for renewed aid an· nounced. in Moscow Tb\D'1day, they said. It was expected to cement tbe delegation's hard.line .ttitude. American and North Vietnamese negotiators have met 11 timea: since their discussl.ons opened May 13. They have made no progress. The North Vietnameie have insi.Jted ~e United States halt uncondlUonally all bombing or North Vietnam. The Amerlcans have demanded Hanoi respond to a partial bombing halt onlered March 31 by scaling down figbtlng in South Viet· nam. A 12th· session is scheduled next week. The North Vietnamese government continued its hard line today by warn- ing Thai.land and South Korea they must stop sending troops to South Vietnam and by again demanding an.__ unconditional end to U.S. bombillg. "Everybody can see the losing posi- tion of the United States in South Viet- nam," a stat.ement of the foreign ministry in Hanoi broadcast on radio and monitored in Tokyo 1ald. The statement said the United States should withdraw from South Vietnam its troops and "troops of its satellites" and let the South Viet· namese settle their internal affairs by themselves. Newpo11 Beach Trustee Sought . Applicants are being sought to fill the Newport Beach trustee area seat on th'e Orange-Coast Junior College District board, vacated by retirement of Walter Loogmoor. His successor, to be chosen by the board, will finish out his term until June 30, 1968. The appoid.ed board member may then stand for election to a four-year ter-m. Trustees may make the &ppointment as early as next Wednesday night Interested persons should write to the board, stating their qualificatioos. Thief Gets Pistol Fron1 Newport Home A .22 caliber semi-automatic BereUa pistol was reported stoten Thursday from the home of George Peters, 6005 Seashore Drive. Also tiken from the residence was a sock filled with silver coins worth $140, Peters said. The cwner told pclice numercus people btd access to the house. There was DO sign of forced en1ry. • DAILY PILOT ---....... H. W1M -T\•111•• tc:"vil .... T1i•111•1 A. M11rphi111 MllM1111t aditor J,,..,.., F. C1llin1 N1W111rt 1Mt1 CltY Edlt9r J1clr l. C..rlty P111I Ni11111 91.itlftlM Nt1iltffW Mvlnl$Jlll Olrldll' ... .,... .... Offke Jll I Wwt l11llt911 llff. Metlt.t N14"111 P.O. h• 1171 t266J °""'om... """ Mfte: Ill W•tf 11'1' Sl""t uee-191C11~ m '"'"' ,,_ ~~Ill .. '"' 51,.,1 Friday, July 5, 1%8 DAILY l'ILOT Slaff l'Mf• Fall Injures ~esa Wor·k11aan Ambulance attendants belt construction worker Raymond E •. Smith, 35, of 1235 W. Palmyra Ave., Orange, to stretcher f~r transpo~~on to Hoag Memorial Hospital today. Smith was working on a building under construction at 2000 Parsons St., when he fell about 20 feet to the ground, injuring his back. §mith was still undergoing :r-rays to determine extent of his injuries shorily before noon. Mesa Child Recovering After Toss From Camel . A Cost.a Mesa tot thrown from a bucking camel featured in animal rides at the Harbor Shopping Center is convalescing today with her broken left leg in fJ. cast. Becky Warner, II\, daughter iJI Mr. and Mrs. Jim Warner, of 2241 Avalon St., was'injured Monday, but initial ex- amination at Hcag Memorial Hospital did not reveal the leg fracture. Police called to the sce.ne at 2300 Harbor Blvd., took the little girl and two compani.oo.s shaken up on the wild From p .. ,, 1 DRUGS ... stereotype of adults. The physicians involved also try and be a "relatively neutral" source er in- formation about the effect of drugs. Also in the clinics, .said the psychiatrist, "We have tried to bring in a few er college age lately -a peer group -preceptors who don't look as structured as we do." These, he said, are young persons, well bal~nced , who have made achievements. some or the youngsters with pro- blems have made one visit, others !lave continued at the clinics. The parents too are counseled if thef wish, said Got1shauk, to help them better understand what they're up against and what drugs involve. "\Ve focus our counseling at just these problems and not trying to restructure someone's personality," he said. The medical staff of South Coast Community Hospital has approved the program. The program was formed said Dr. G<>ttschauk, · oot in competition with the Orange County Chtld Guidance Clinic which has a wailing list cf 100. but because there was a re-al need a nd no other way in the county to get counseling for youngsters who need it and seek it. Dr. William truom, s ch o o I s superintendent, said the school's role is advising youngsters and parents oJ what the voluntary service entails, makina: them aware that it is there. Ullom said the i:ircw-.am need~ ad· ditional resources if It ts to continue, both funding and voluntary assistance from local psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers. Fire Causes $700 Damage lo Garage }<~ire of undetermined origin levelled .1. frame garage in Costa Mesa early tod ay causing a $700 loss Including the· slructure and its contents. Robert Bostwick's building at 214 Knox Place was a swirling mass ol flames Vl'hen firemen arrived on the scene about 6:30 a.m .. according to In· vestJgators. Owner Disturbed As Guest Departs The owner of a Costa Mesa motel became dlaturbed Thursday wbeii cleanup workers discovered a womA.n wbo left a Do Not. Disturb sign on her door wu no longcr there to be disturb· ed. Mrs. Beauice A. McDowell, of the Colonial Motel. 1967 Newport Blvd .. , said tbe woman allo left a $32 tab for the four days she had stayed there. ride to U1e hospital in a patrol car. Laura Tucker, of -2242 Avalon St.. and her brother J oD managed to hang oi\ as_ the saddle slipped beneath the buck1ng animal and suffered only bruises. "It was terrible," said· Mrs. Judy \Varner, who had taken the youdgsters to ride the animals, "Ute kids looked like rag dolls bouncing around." ~s. \Varner said Ute camel had stopped momentarily and Becky started to climb down, at wtl.ich time an attendant pushed her back onto the balky animal. At that moment, she said, the camel reared its head back and begitn j·um. ping 3.bout, but apparelltly calmed down later, so children continued to ride the hump-backed beast. She said owners of the camel olfered to take care of the matter, but the two families preferred to handle it through of!ici~l Police and insurance channels. Table Tennis Anyone? Try Fashion Island Table tennis, archery, goU or tennis anyone? Experts from all four sports will demonstrate their skills Friday and Saturday, July 5 and 6 in the Stage Ccurt area of Fashion Island in Newport Beach. Shoppers will be able to view their golf and tennis swings via delayed television monitors with comments on improvement by the pros. Archery __demonstrations will be given by M·arge Lammers, In- ternational Women's Open Archery Champion on Saturday, July 6 and table tennis exhibitions will be given by botlt professional and amateur participants Friday 10 a .m. to noon and l p.m. to 5 p.m.; and Saturday 11 a.m., 1 and 3 p.m. Exhibition Jump Kills Skydiver HOLT, Mich. (UPI) -Ron ShaOey, 31, Hasle~t. Mich,, fell to his death Thursday in a July 4 skydiving ex· hibition. Shafley, who had 250 jwnpe to his credit, including into water, plunged into a water-filled quarry pit from 7.500 feet before horrified spectators at the Holt Firemen's A1sociatlon Fourth cf July outing. • Just minutes before, Sharley ht <J tnade a jump safely with two other sp::irts paracuti.<;ts. Mrs. Sharley. n1o:her ol three small children. was among the spectators. Observers said ShuOey may havo blacked out before hilting the water. Frena Pflfl" 1 NARCOTICS. • • I!! &till extremely expensive to pro- duce, the major fa ctor that has kept It rrom the, illegal drug. market. F'ederal officials fear, however, that U1e price is bound to come down as more chemists Unker with it. "\Vhen this ha~ns we may be ln \1try deep tn>Wle, ' one aceat uJd. , 200 Fall Froip.Bridge Into Lake · ' ' ' LONGVIEW, wash. (AP) -A wooC!en lootl>ridge jammed with peo. pie watching fireworks collapSed Thundaf night, plUDgillg· ...,., of people hlto a lake near the center of Longview. All l!IParentlY survived. Police auet Rajpb Benefiel said as many as 200 Pff100S may have been. on the bridgt:. But no one could know for~. Skindlvus &eoured Lake Sacajewea today but said they found no bodies. AmbulanC:ea, hearses and even station wagons were pressed into service, hureying 89 penso111 to two hoopltalo. Seven were admitted to. St. Jobrl'a HospK&l for further treatment, two with broken legs. The footbridge w.as 14 feet high, five feet wide ' and about 100 feet Jong. Water underneath was up to eight feet deep. There_ was no current. The fireworks display, sponsored as in years past by the Jaycees, bad just ended and fourth of July celebrators were leaving the park that runs through the C<lllier of this planned, former company town when witnel6el heard & loud &Dip. ''The bridge bot'ed, then collapsed," said John Martin. "There were a lot of screams. Mothers didn't know where their babies wei'e, I beard pea. pie yelling, then it went down." The footbridge was closed at least . once dwing receot years because of rGtlten timbers. ~ ol the bridge, pulled to ~e today by a wrecker, showed sig'ns of rot. Don ·Gregory, a Cowlitz County reserve deputy, said the bridge had been closed to foot traffic several years e>go, but it was reopened when repairs were made. Still standing al one end of the bridge is a sign reading, ''No horses on bridge." Jewelry, Mink Stolen at BBC Close tc $2,000 in jeweiry and mink were taken from the Balboa Bay Club q>artment . or Eugene W o ct en , Newport Beach police reported today. PoUce said entry apparently was gained by using a key plac~ under the front door mat. Wooten said his apartmen~was not ran.sacked. Among missing articles he listed a $'150 mink jacket, f.225 pair of gold cuff links with rubies, and '240 w&tch. .. Bridge Arriving 1st Rocks From London Unloaded LONG BEACH .(UPI) -1be <***11..-of a --pla. heaviest 31)tique ever peddled to a rlch - ' Tbe 8Se tons' that arrtved aboard the Yank by the wily BrlUsb began com · Fossum aH the first ln.sta)Jmem.t of ing ashore Thursday. English an<t Scottish granite that will Dock hands hoisted M5 .tons of be reassembled as London Brldf' ln · d B ·d Lake Havasu City by 1971 . " granite blocks from the Lon on ri ge The bridge 1B an "an""9,ue" ·-of· out of the hold of the freighter SS ficially certifilid 1as suCh by 1tl)e t1.S. Fossum, while her Norwegian captain Customs. Thls judgment enabled the co1nmented: McCulloch firm to import the rocks "You Americans will make money duty free .. Otherwbe they might havO from. it. You make mooey from been taxed as bJlllding materlale. everything else." • Capt. Le.if 'E, Moen of the Fossum On Monday, the granite blocks will said it was the flrst time he and his start a 240-mlle journey by truck from fellow Vikings ever-sailed with a·car- Long Beach to Lake Hevasu City, go ot boulden. Ariz. There the bridge, purchased by "'To us it's crazy," he philosophized. McCulloch Properties Inc. for 12.4 "These rocks in our liolds. It'1 like the mtWon, will be reassembled as the America.D5 have rocks in their beads." Ul'I T•'-'lllfl Plunge Vlcdna FBI agents charged in Hawaii that 10 hippies stood by and looked on when artist John M. Gallagher, 19, of San Clemente fell to his death in-dormant Haleakala volcano on Hawai~ ian islarid of Maui. They fail· ed to report tragedy. Many Attending OCC Non-grads Nearly 13 percent cf students enroll· ed at Orange Coast CoUege during the ipring semester do not have a high school diploma , Dean of Admissions Kenneth Mowrey reported today. The law stipulales that students need only be 18 years old to attend junior college. Most of the 13 percent took practical courses in vocati9nal and technical fie lds to prepare-themselves for jobs. Road Dealhs ' Run Behind Predictions By United Preis laternattonal Tmlfic deaths today were running behind Natiooal Safety Council pre4ic- tions for the long Fourth of J!Jly boJio. day weekend. Tbe council, which predicted up to 800 would die on the nation's highways from 6 p.m. Wednesday to mtdolght Sunday, said early trenda Indlcaled the prediction might not be fulfilled. After the first 30 bours of the 102• hour holiday, the council reported that about four persons an hour were dying in trailic actidents, compared with a 5~2 average during the ·same period last year, when a record 732 died. "It's nice to th.ink we don't have to· set a new record every time we go cut on a holiday," said a council spokesman, who emphasized that the treacherous homeward trek still lay ahead for millions or vacationing m<•torists. ft' UPI count at 10 a.m. PST showed at least 216 persons killed in traffic ac· cidents. A breakdown of accidental deaths : Traffic 216 Drownings 71 Planes 6 Miscellaneous 34 Total 327 Heading the traffic casualty list were California wilh 19 deaths, Ohio with 13 and New York with 11. Four other states each counted 10. Eight persons, including seven 'children. drowned in Lake WaJes, Fla., when their boat overturned i n Thursday's most tragic holiday ac· cident. A man and three girls died in the collision of a convertible and sports car near Colden, N.Y., Thurs· day night. DREXEL'S GUILD · HALL SIDE CHAIRS . A!!M CHAIRS OVAL TABIJ Rea. 89. • SAi£ Reg. 105. SALE Req. 285. SALE 77 .. .. 89 ... . 249. OUR SALE ALSO FEATURES ·sELEo;. GROUPS FROM , DREXEL, HENREOOll, HERITAGE, KINDEL, CENTURY. ANO MARGIE CARSON GROUPS All AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. ACCESSORIES. LAMPS, PICTUR ES. AREA RUGS ALSO INCLUDED. IXCLUIM DU••s POl1 -·--DllDIL-~AM -.- tt DAYS NO 1111111ST-LON•B TlllllS AYAILAal Oii --C RIJ ?aJ,., ~ NIWFOU MACH MJ·ZOH 1121 w--· u.•UNA llACH Dftlpo'" 141 N .... C-Hwy. A:aft .. 11 AID-NllD OPIN RteAii' ~' ...... , ........... " ..... c..ty ..... ,,,, I I ---------- I ... • • -..-.. . . --,;;;: ;-~::;;:::::::::======== ----~-------' Friday, J11ty 5, 1%8 For the Fire Calls • H""llnt"" ••ac:ll W~Y. J111Y 3. 10:0$ •• m .• mtdlCll alo,"1tn1 ri.eoch e1va. 10,'ll 1.m .. rn••llal 11c1, 1741 Ntwlan.,,o 1 :Sl p.m., grass lire, Broollhurst I Garfield · ):20 p,m .. areu flre, $0.\2 Hell, 1:56 P.m., gr1ss lire, 1721 Jullettf!11eow ~:Ot p.m., car !Ire, 219 l"cllenaPO ,•, .• 7:09 p.m .• 01ruc111re fl", 5052 .. ""' Ci rt le DAILY PILOT 9 Record KONA LANES •• 3rd ANNUAL CENT CENT CENT CENT SALE SALE SALE SALE 3 SPECTACULAR DAYS REMAINING FRIDAY . . . . . . . . . . . JULY 5th, 1968 SATURDAY ......... JULY 6th, 1968 SUNDAY . . . . . . . . . . JULY 7th, 1968 9:00 1.m. until 12-midnite, e•ch of the Sele D1ysl FABULOUS MONEY· SA V1HG SPECIALS! .----. ...... BOWLING REGULAR PRICE FOR 1st, IJrd , 5th , etc.) GAME. EACH 2nd:GAME !2nd. 4th. 6th, etc,) JUST A PENNY! NO LIMIT! Off1r v11icf, • •.m. • 12 Pflidni9ht, •.II 4 dey1. Youth Bowl· in9 Club IY.l .C.I Mtft'lbir1 fllY ih1 ir ""'tul1 r pric• for 111ch lit, lrd, 91Pfl•, pc. le for 2nd, (th, 1tc. No olhtr Ko"' L1 n11 pr0Pfloiio111I f11f11r1 v•lid. tl11rin9 Oll t •Clllf 1111. FOOD ----------- ll•J"• 011 tlll1 Sptcl1I Mint. lnclucil1cil i" OMI CINT SAU, o~ly P1y prict 1h1wft for flrd m111. E1e~ 2nd Pfllll of 1q111 I pric .. or lowtr, j111t 1 PINNYlll 15111 thl1 Pfltftll anly, 11rt1d lft Coff11 Shop; only J, 1'1'9'· lllP, frt1tch Roll, S.1n1 , •• ,, , , •• , • , , ,, , 1.DO NINCH DIP SAND., Ft1nch Ftl11 .,, •••••••• ~ •• 1.to IPAtHtlTTI DINNll. Sou11 '' S1l1cil , , , , • , , • , , , , 1.10 PISH l PllU. V•t·• So1i111 or S1l1ct , ••,, ,, ,, ,, , 1.IO CMICllN IN A IASln •••••••••••••••••••••• 1.:to CHAlollOIUD HAMIUl•ll ••• , ••• , , , •• , • , , • , ,,I CHAl·llOILID CHIUllUl.~11 ', ,, ,, •• , , ,, ,, , .75 CHIU 1111. Mn, ch11i1 ••••••• • • • , , , , , ••• , • , • : 1.10 PllD IHllMP, C1lt Sl1w, Sovp • ••••••••••••••• 1.11· IUWD YIAL cmn. TriPflPflift'S ••• : •••••••••• 1.71 COLD TUlllT 01 HAM SAND., Frlt1 , , , ,, , , , , , .ti HALllUT ITIAK. Trlft'IPflin'1 , , • , , •••• ,, • , ,, , , ••• 1.71 CHIP'S SALAD IOWI. •• , ,, , , ,, ,, •• ,, •• ,, ,, • , , 1.JI Hot lllP SANDWICH • , • , .... , , •• •,., , , , , , , ,, , 1.11 IPICIAI. D"1'CHMAN U.NDWICH , •• •••••••• ,, , 1.11 IONA'I MMOUS "IOWLlllUIHI'" , ,, •• ,, ••• 1.11 ..... , • ..-...., ........ At ~ .... W......Wllh ...... 7·11·61 KONALANES 269' HARBOR 545·1112 COSTA MESA • San· Joaquin Dlstrlet . Parents Study School Program IRVINE - A g1¥>Up ol pa'l'ents, mo1tly from the University Pa.rk area, haVe formed a committee to study the seventh and eighth grade cutTlculum ol the San Joaqulli Sdhool DloUict. '!be parent's advisory committee,· formed tthree weeks ago with the COl\6ent of the school board, is to make recommendations for changes by Aug. 16. Fred A~ or 24341 Fordview, El Toro, . Brazil Trip Planned by lnstructo1· chaU:man of the fledgling committee and father, of an eighth grader in die distrlc~ said · the purpose Of the groop is to evaluate coqrses being taugllt and I h·e facilities for teaching them. '1Some of tile parents have felt tile cum.culum is beavy in certain areaa, for in~ sbance foreign lauguages." he said. On the other hand, .he added, tihe sc ience pro• g:11run might need up.dating. After the committee makes its Aug. 16 reJ)Ort, it must disband, according to the present agreement 'with the school board. The committee is com· pooed ol 18 people, Including representatives of t b e school district, aod meets Mondays at 7:30 p.m, at Irvine School. Parents of seventh and eighth grade students who have sug~estioos for cur- riculu1n rj1 anges may send them to ?ifr. Aifesta at the school. U.S. Awards UCI Pact Of $8,965 The Public Polley Research Organization at UCI has be~n given a federal contract to study bow· ltate and I o c a l governmentl obtain advice on scientific ·and teehnlcal matters. The Irvine· gr<\nt of $8,965 is part of a nine-state pro- ject sponsored.Jointly by the National Science Founda_tion and the EconomJc Develop~ ment Administration' of' tht JtT P~RKING LOT SALi t ' • • WAREHOUSE LEASE EXPIRESI' MUST VACATE IN 7 DAYS . ' REDUalONS to 50% OFF! 525,000.oet WORTH OF SPANISH, MIDmRRANIAN AND MEXICAN FURNITURI MUST II CLIAUD OUT Of RALPHS 10,000 SQ. F0oT WARIHOUSI IY JULY. 15TH. SALE STARTS . FRI. • JULY 5th at 9:00 A.M. -m!!!!!l!~~!!l!!lllm-' --· WAREHOUSE 1953 Newpo~ Blvd. (Corner rord Rood) COSTA MESA -' Professor ·Robert Taft of UCI department of chemistry has been invited to attend the international symposium on nu c 1 ear magnetic resonance in Sao Paulo, Br;wl, July 8 to 11. Professor T a f t has pioneered in ap p ly in g p h y s i c a 1 measurement9 toward s y st em a tic un. derstanding of the rates of organic ch~mical reactions. Rolls Closed At Cal State DepartmentMCommerce. i::::::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=: The studies a:r:e designed 1: At UCJ, Taft and his research group have made extensive applications of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. F o u r gra. duate students who have done their research \vork in this program have already received the PhD degree from UCI under the direc· tion of Professor Taft. Professor Taft also le<!· lured J:ecently · to t h e Organi·c Reaction Mechanisms Conference at Brandeis University, and to tl)e Gordon Conference on the chemistry and physics of isotopes in Holderness, New Hampshire. DEATH NOTICES to find out what kinds of scientific and tedmical ac- tivities are supported by state a nd local F U L L E n T 0 N govemmenit.s, and haw much Admissions to Cal State jmpact scientists a n d Fullerton's fall semester engineers have upon state have closed, marking the and local g 0 v er nm en t earliest state college cutoff policy. in Southern California. Ralph Bigelow, Fullerton Results of the studies are campus director of ad· expected to be useful as an missions and records, s&id a aid to state governmen.ts July 1 deadline w a s now engaged in exploring nece sary beca se of an techniques for W!iing science s . u and tec~logy to promote enrollm~t quota of. 7,600 . st 'ate s oc lo -e.conomic f u 11 • t 1 m e e q u ivalent development. students, -about 10,600 in· dividuals. In line with a pOlicy an- nounced_ earlier by Presi· dent William B. Langsdorf, however, Bigelow noted that exceptions can be made for Vietnam veterans. Although San Francisco and San Jose State College also have ceased admitting s.tudents for the fall term, Fullerton is the first State college in So uthern California to do so. Wife Held In Assault SANT A ANA -A local housewife here is in Orange County jail today charged with assault with int.ent to murder her husband. Goldie A. Laster, 29, of 1641 W. llighland St. WBO .... rested Thursday night aft.er her husband, James, stag. gered to a grocery sm., bought a pack of cigarettes and tben asked a neighbor to take him to a hospital. Police said Mrs. Laster stabbed her husband in the back with a butcher knife. His lung was punctured but he is listed in satisfactory co!ld:ition today at the Orange County Med 1 ca I Center . Mosquito Week Noted SANTA ANA -Calli..,.;. M-osquit.o Control Week, July 14-20, was officially en-dor.ed by the Board ol Supervisors tim week. 'nle resolution was ap- proved at the request of the Orange County Mooqulto Control Boerd. Rldl1rd J. Cot110fl, N, of J?O'I Surtllne W11. New1>«t Be1ch. Survived bv wife, Alm.. D1uqhler, Rita Burl of l1f1ye!· 1~, c1111 .. end ~rlon Parker of CorOlla dtl Mar. $on, Rkh1rd. ll•other, Tllom•• al Midi. 1 t r1nckhlldren, Rourv Fri. t p.m. ti Our Ltdw Queen,1;;:=======;;:==============:;1 of Angell Church. MISI S.t. ' 1.m. In. term...! Good 51\tipht rd Cl'mtlef'Y. 61 IU Mortv1ry, Corone !Ml Mir, clfrt e· ·~' BUSH Or. JD'.el'h Bush. Prlv•le servlcn -• '"" 'r1. Ju1v ~. 1111ll Mortuerv, cor-on• c11 !'Mr. cllrec lors. COZENS GtorM F. Cctens, 12, cf 111(1/1 W. Ocet<1 Front NewPOrt llM<ll. Survlvlld bY wife Elfen, 5on1, Gft,rge w. •Jld Arttiur I!::. 0.111111~ Pearl E. H•Sllell cf Wash. Si1l1r, Louise Burnt. Brolhtn Arthur 1111cl Thtoc!Dre. 1' 11ranclchltd....,., l 1re1t·11r1!1dchllclr&n. Services Ft1. 2 p,m, 1!'811tt Chall'll, (<>fO!'ll dll Mir. ln!ermel!f P1clllc vi.w M9"'0!'1el P1rk. a1nz MOrtv1rv, COl'Cl'tl d•I !'Mr, dlrK- "" MANNIS Troy F. MIMlli. (If 2501 H1rbor llYd.I Co1t1 Mf'M, Strvlce1 pencl!no • WtllCllll MorlUl(Y. BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR l-N40 Colla Mesa Ml 1-Wf BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY TEEN DANCE SUND ARI Now h1pp1nin9 at THE MOOSE HALL Tonight 1-12 p.m. SUNDARI -One o! the newest groups around - the music they create is fresh, hard, clean and beQvy. A combination o! Soul Blues an d Pop. DIUMMll-lr• Ar911"io11 IAISllT-D111nl1 H1rri91n GUITAl-Roft P111op1n1 YOCAU-W1y"1 Sabin '"d lob Cl1Pflln1 MOOll MALL 74ff LMtt ClrcM -M11tl1tf" ..... D...tt.1 ~S1 .00:>At"11·11 Get tt ff •4 N tller1l 111 Broadway, Costa Mesa 111--------------------:1 . LI 1-3433 II' PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PA11K CemeterJ e Morhllll'1 Chapel sset Paclflc View Drive Newport Beach, CaWornla 644-%700 PEEK FAMI LY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME '1801 Bolaa AYt. We1tml.aater 193.JS!S SMITl1'8 MORTUARY m Main SI. Baa~~au WEmUFI' MORTUARY 1%7 E. 11111 SI., Cotta Me11 ..... WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARlt Morlaary & Cem• .. 'l' Cb1pel1 1'801 Beaeb, We1lmlaster llSJ.17!5 • IN-ml . I ,. I See By Today's Want Ads e A couple of wUque items. Here·1 • stained glaM w i'n dow end an 1889 C.'hlme clock~ • Someone iJ u Ulna a atlt· propelled rotor lawn 1now· '1" only 2 )'ea.rt old. Best offer taketl e 'nlat thert ii the pooular OPDI HQ\JSE Dm.ElCT· ORYto°"1-belp ,,.. !lnll dlot .. _!al home." e A Honda Scrambler 31'.&c:c ror 9)tnC! lud(y boy! NIGHT and DAY SERVICE . . . ·• 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 .P.M.-S~TURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. The Volkswagen with the automatic: stick shift • ' Use1f1c.-be, Volkiwog ens were enough to make some women a~· · up driving altogether. Accelerolor up ... clutth ln ••• shlft ... lurch~' Very emborrassln.g. , ' · That's why we developechhe lurchless Volkswogen. A bug tho(1"\ equipped wilh on opllon we call !he automatic sllek shift. 11'1 an outomotic because there's no clulch pedal to worry about. And because you can drive ii around town oll'doy without shifting. It's a stick shift becouse ii con olso be token through the gea.rs manually, lust like,,a real Volkswagen. (Thors fur you men.) And because at speeds over SS mph you can shift Into a higher, ~ drive-lype gear to save on gas. • But the advantages aren't all practical. In the lady bug, a gal mri' feel more llkea woman. Because the only 1hlftihe has tothlnkabaut, Is the one she's wtallhg.· • ' • NEWPORT llACH Chick IYerson, Inc. 2114.Ne.wrort Boulev•rJ , 171~ 67,).0fOO 1! iii SAN JUAN CAPISllANO Bill Y1ttt, lnc1 JllU Volle ~ood 17141 499•226,I t . HUNTIN•TON llACM H1rbour Volbwa11• 1171 1 ••••h '°"'°"""" 17141 141"'4H . - I \ • I I • • ' • DAo;y PILOT EDITOBIA.L PAGE Cunningham's Challenge ' 'I can wait--how about you?' • Sometimes the success al a JCl>ool system rests with Ute silperlntendent. And not just .because of the directions he gives his staff. The confidence he inspires in the public can b1 the decisive factor. Dr, William L. Cunningham, a comuniLy-minded individual, this week took over as superintendent of Newport-Mesa schools. He has a reputation for being able to win public· support for the school program. That certainly will be his initial challenge at the -..._ helm of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. ~ It isn't that the majority of the 1axtJayers and resi· dens of the two cities don't support their schools. They do. Alhougb some o! the issues failed to receive-the necessary tw~thirds majority, Harbor Area citizens cast a resounding majQrlty vote for their schools in last October's bond election. But not enough, not enough to finance the very real immediate needs of the district. 1£ Cunningham can get the real message -the true needs -across, our local schools v:ill have strong support from ALL of the community. Surfers Deserve This Newport Beach surfers want the city to open up 10 more blocks in West Newport to morning surfing, under the blackball flag control system. Their spokesman has submitted a cogent argument to the City Council. The blackball system has worked at the Newport Pier area, he says, and he believes it will work elsewhere. At present, board surfing is permitted bety,•een • Newport Pier and 30th Street from 7:30 a.m. to noon. lf the surfers appear to be endangering beach swim- mers, lifeguards may hoist' a blackball flag calling off • Things That Kill Party's Spirit fhou&bll At Large< . Why some couples give good parties .and others do not has more to do with their unconscious state of mind than with guests or refreshments or en· tertalnment or any other physical rac· tor; for it is anxiety, rigidity and fuss- ing over the · mere appearance of things that kill a party's spirit, no matter how ample the comestibles or how elaborate the decor. • • • l'rustrations, accidental or otherwise: ll HtUer had been a successful .._painter, there would ·have been no putsch; if Napoleon had been accepted by the Russian army in 1799 (which' refused to give him tbe rank or ma- jor), there woiild havo.1 been no Austerlitz, and no Waterloo. • • • surfing. Surfers pay an annual $3 licensing fee for their boards. Theyire-paying-their share for city services such as lifeguard patrols. Deportment of surfers, city officials agree, has im- proved greatly since the inauguaratton of the licensing plan. . The city would be handing its youug people a wcll-earned favor by extending the surfing limits. 'f.l1e Policeman's P oliceman It's time to say goodbye to a good cop. Merrill V. Duncan, Newport Beach assistant police chief, will become police chief of the city of Orange the middle of this month. Duncan is a policeman's policeman. He wi'ft.be tak- ing to his new post 22 years' experience in law en!orcc- ment. Before joining the force in Newport Beacll three years ago, he had served nine years as a lieutenant and two years as a captain in the 'Los Angeles Police Department, where he rose to commander of the Wii· shire and Central divisions with a total of 247 officers. Duncan's leaving is a real loss to the community, not just in the law enforcement. He was active in the Y and numerous other community a ffairs. He is the kind of man who is liked by the public;tiand trusted by his officers. A typical example of his professional attention lo his work was a recent inquiry of the press on \\•hether police had given up trying to locate a suspected murd- erer. The victim had lived alone and was buried quietly after no one claimed his body. "No, we haven't and we won't give up," Duncan replied. "The man had no relatives, no one to repre- sent him. So we're representing him." N Max Rafferty ls Vnfair. High Noon ita Orange Couiaty , Sophomoric Max Rafferty -the Purple Max - did a lot of bleating about the need to uphold the forces or law and .:irder during his successful campaign for the Republican senatorial nomination. At the same time he was doing his level best to undermine the U.S. Supreme Court with some or the \l·iJdest sccusations unleasheJ si nce Joe McCarthy was fl inging reckless insults at Gen . George Marsh aU . OF COURSE. a slick Clemagogue like'"'R8friii'ty can get away with such puerile ranting. Whenever he accused the U.S. Supreme Court of harboring Let the Lawmakers Know . I By NORMAN MXON, M. D. Just four weeks ago m o st Americans were in mourning. Shocked by another Kennedy assassination. Coming only a few v.'eeks after the shooting of ~·tartin Luther King, there ( was a spontaneous response of shock then taxation. then confiscation. Then and guilt over the violence which .a disarmed cititenry is at the mercy permeates. lite in the . United States. of men who may lack mercy. l will op.. M_any realized s~n:ieth1ng was. wrong pose legislation which could lead to ~1~h our ":Yay.~f h v1n.g. The notion of..a.... ..... confjscalion of guns and to the sick so_c1ety ,P~e.va1.led but there was ovefthr ow o! our government." .. no p~ec1se de!1n1t1on of the causes or Similarly, Gov. Reagan, who is op- the sickness. posed to any form of gun registration. Nearl.Y evel'yone felt a need to do said : "If. by any chance, a Communist something. Hundreds of thousands or dictatorship takes over the citizens Americans Wr?te to th~ir senators ~nd will need them to fighi back with." congressmen. m Washtnj!"ton, pleadtni?" Such muddled thinking does not reflect for one obv1o_us legal _ste_p - a gun the feelings of most Americans today. television continues unabated with hundreds of killings, attempted murders, robberies. kidnappings and suicides. all enacted for our .. en- tertainment" every week. And 41Bon- nie and Clyde," the year's box-office smash, still is glorifying bank robbery and murder as a cure for se~al im- potence -even though the trigger- happy 11outlaw pair finally get their come-uppance. A "pilot program" is given the name so that the organization sponsorlng it can antJctpate its failure without being held responsible for it. The "second hand" in a clock is "sociological reformers, ideological much more likely to be a little off than '-"hacks and child-m:irrying mountain control law with teeth 1n ti. But after , two days of hearin~s Jast week. the OBVIOUSLY, THE United States RECENTLY A substantial number of actors, directors and producers pledged in a trade paper 'd- vertisement not to lend their taleb.ls "to add to the creation of a climate for murder, senseless brutality, aim- less cruelty. pointless and violent death." A noble gesture, but th~ Neil. son ratings and box~ffice receipts are the irrefutable guides. If the public wants violence in its intertainment it will surely get it. • • • 1£ a company hires only executive . applicants cut from the same pattern as its existing leaders, it is willfully throttling its opportunity to be in- novative -which, in m odern technology, signifies the attrition that precedes corporate death. • • • Single people suUer unjustly under our presept income tax laws; their ex- emptions are proportionately too small, while the exemptions for depen- dents are proportionately too great - because the needs in a household do not increase in d'trect proportion to the number of people in the household. • • • \Vhy do politicians make rash, and inconsistent. promises to different segments of the electorate? Because they know tht.t people hear only what they want to hear, and tune out what they are not interested in. • • • 1'·1ost tyrannies are the result of the minute hand or hour hand -and we might not be quite so critical of "ephemeral" journalism it we look upon it as the second hand, with history as the minute hand, and philosophy as the hour hand -thus, journalism needs regular correction by history, and history needs constant interpretation by philosophy, i£ any are to make sense. • • • Many people have a sadly deficient idea of "maturity" -they imagine that adulthood constitutes a r enun- ciation of childhood, when actually it must include and accept the good (and easily lost ) values of childhood, and tiuild upon them. • • • Reformers who want to use the st.hools primarily to correct injustices, .:nd only secondarily to educate children. will find that under such con· ditions the schools will be ablt. to do neither. • Hospitals' Higher Costs To the Editor: I have a few remarks about hospitals and nursing homes thit I believe a lot of folks will want to reaC.:. Jiospital beds are becoming more expensive. so they say, and the owners blame a lot of it on higher wages. 1 know or no better excuse for an in- crease than to blame the nurses £or 1t. and some lesser skilled help. • I do not deny that costs have risen. But what J would like to know is why a room rented to my boy in 1942 or 1943 cosl. I think, $8 or $10 <md was a non· profit and tax-free room. and the room now renU for $43 a day and is still non-profit a.nd tax-free. WHE RE DID THE pr9'its go on an increase of. four to live times the 1943 prices? And we are told these room renU must rise. Jf I might gel a little wall~yed about it, I J}l ight suggest Bfl George---. ne.,. Geor1w My boy friend is a news photographer and a very nice guy but all he thinks of Is his job. 1'"or Jnst.ance, he took me hOl"Hbact rtdinj -the horse threw me on a bridge a.nd J land· ed in the river. Before he even fl1hed me out be took a picture Of me. Do you. think this was rl&bt! CONCERNED Dear Concerned f Decidedly not He ahould have said, "One more." (You always need a beck-up 1hot lo an actJon 11Lualion Ult• Oat) ,. I ,..., ,. Letttr.t from reader.t are welcome. Normall11writtr11hould convey .their me.tsage.t in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel it reserved. AlL let- ters mu..tt include .!ignaiure and mail· i11g addres.!, but name.! will be with- held on request. that these hospital operators are a sk- ing for a large dose of communism and public ownership and operation ol the hospitals. Jt happens that way. Just rob the public long enough and the public will rebel and let them have it as they have in a number of countries. \\'c had two new and very fine nur- sing homes open recently and the going price is !450 per month for a four·bed v.·ard. That is ,1 ,700 a month for a room -;i pretty good take. I \\'ONOER JUST llOW long a Jot of you folks could &!ford that price, plus extras. Sooner or later the govern- ment must step ln because very few people can afford that price. If a couple h.ad $4,000 or $5,IXX> saved up and .a small home 01 trailer, and an income to ge t by, how Jong do you think It would tall\! a nursing home to wipe them out? We need Insurance. government.con- trolled, to rinance that expensive care, £nd J think ills r.ot far oft JAMES Sl DER climbers" - a line he must hc:.vc repeated a thousand times -his au· diences would break up with laughter. Once the hilarity was <iver, Ral£erty \vould go right on with his sermon, saying how important it is for everybody to have respect for the law. \Vith this kind of forked-tongue hypocrisy, he was given the nomina- tion over a thoroughly decent man, Thomas Kuchel, \VE DO NOT believe the U,S; Supreme Court is immune t o criticism, any more than is the Presi- dent or Congress. It is un institution of goverrunent, run by mortal men who make no claim -as Ra\(erty does - to Jnfalllbility. Its performance must be judged by other mortal men . There are critics of the cow·t whose opinions we respect, although we hold to the view that history will rate the \V arren Court very high indeed. These critics present cogent arguments in de fense of their positions. They do not harangue the court or slander it. They n1erely disagree with its opinions. B U T MAXWELL RAFFERTY'S vicious attacks on the court are more th£-n we can take. They care grossly un- fair and utterly sophomoric. They are lhe product of a min~ incapable of grasping anything more complex than the multiplication tables. They are outright smears perpetrated by one of the most expert hucksters in the business. To say that he would have voted against confirmation or any or the justices now sitting oh the U.S. Supreme Court is to s&y that he would have turned bis back on some 0£ the most brilliant men or this age and set· tied for mediocrity. a quality he doubtless appreciates, having been blessed v.·ith such an abundant 1upply himself. THE J USTICES OF the U.S. Supreme Court do not deserve Raf· ferty's venomous barbs. which he passes off In the form or a joke. They are true defenders or the law, beUcv· ing - as Rafferty does 11ot -thit the Constitution should protect the rights or all citizens, not just those who happen to be white, Anglo.Saxon, Protestant and rich. Re spoct for the law can never be achieved if pubUc officials Uke Raf. lerty go around bad-mouthin~ tbe courts with ridicule a11d slanderous personal atUicks on the judRes. Raf. fe_rty contributes to the breakdown of respect for the la.w every tlme he vilifies tile courL The least he c9uld do Is quit talking out of both sicles o! hls mouth . Tbe Dally Ca.UfornJan I Senate Judiciary subcommittee voted cannot abolish private violence by to postpone aclion on all gun control Jaws or sanctions. But a responsible measures until July 9th -a n in· nation can insist that its federal and excusable stall. The senators must state lawmakers enact laws which will have seen the recent Harris Survey drastically reduce the availability of which reported that 81 out of every 100 firearms. Robert Sherrill wrote in the Americans today want stronger gun New York Times last week: "It is high laws, especially those re q U i ring noo r. on capitol hill ... the gun debate registration ol all £irearms. ha.s produced few profiles in courage. 110\VEVER, SOl'tE d0isagree, in- cluding Bill Buckley's N a ti on a I Review. the National Rifle Associa- tion, Robert Welch, Gov. Rea ~an and Congressman Utt. Wrote Mr. Utt: "Gun laws have been misused by despots . They begin with registration, many profiles in politics." The same can be said of Sacramento and other state capitals. A responsible nation also will not continue to fill its air waves. movie screens and comic strips with ex- altations or violence a n d ir· responsibility. Ye t violence o n It will not bi easy -changing the current atmosphere of violence. Only one man pulled the assassin's trigger, but every one of us must be responsi- ble for our words, our votes (or lack of them) and our actions for or against an atmosphere of violence. It behooves us to let those who now govern in Washington and Sacramento (and those we will elect in November), as well as the tycoons in motion pictures and television . know exactly how we feel. For it is high noon in Orange County too! Nixon's Political Comeback \VASHINGTON -Richard M. Nix- on, having seen his p r o b a b 1 e Republican delegate strength rise above the nominating level, is now concentrating on getting elected in November. The rank-and-file favorite of his par- ty, but not yet of the general elec· torate. bas made no mistakes until now ·in his advance to\\'ard the presidential nomination. This is un- doubtedly the greatest political come- back of modern times considering the' fact that Nixon's opposition has not been inconsiderable. The alternative to Nixon wa11 one of three leadin~ Republicans who had been elected to offices Nixon could not capture, governors of their ow~ states. Defeated for president and for governor o~ California, Nixon was to see Gov. Gforge Romney of Michigan \\•ithdraw. Gov. Ronald Reagan never entered as a formal candidate, and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, ou~-!lnd·!n as a candidate and badly trailing 1n measurable delegate strength. TffiS TELLS US something about the Republican Party organization. It is essentially the same today as the Dear Gloomy Gus: Thls ~th of July weekend. re· minds me that It took 17S years and all of our wars to kill a million Amtrlcans. The automo- bile did the same thing in 50 ytars and will kill the Second mtlllon In 18 years ! -F. H. S. 1'1111 fu"1r1 nlm:h Afftn' •If,.. ,.., ftfftt11rl1J' '""" II "" .. .---. • ..... """ "' ....-"' ei..r111 au1, 01117 ~llfl. organization which nominated Barry Goldwater in 1964 but moderately chastened by the ctisastrous results of that nomination. The organization moved toward Nixon out of fj:iars that Reagan would be another Goldwater and in an attempt to placate the moderates and liberals of the party who favored Rockefeller. Nixon was in this sense a com- promise. Although he is not a doc- trinaire conservative he has taken on the coloration of one, certainly in con- trast to the prospective Democratic nominee. Nixon's problem is difficult and two- fold . He must awaken the interest of the moderates and progressives of the Republican Party on the one hand, and in a degree sufficient to attract some dissident northern Democrats. He must. also reclaim the southern con- servative Dem0ttats who }a'avltate to George C. Wallace and threaten to destroy Nixon's chance to w In :southern electoral votes. 'VALLACE, AT THE moment, is the · greater nemesis. The national pubttc opinion polls show that· Wallace sub· tracts irom Nixon's potential. Th(s may not hold state-by-stlite but the l:l't!nl!ral pattern has to be alarming to Nixon strategists. Jn 1960 when Nixon ran against John F . Kennedy he carrll!d Alabama. Ark1nsas. Florida, K e n t 11 c It y , Oklahoma, Tennessee. Vlrll!:inla Whtie eight unpledged electors In ?rti,slsslppi voted for the late Sen. lJarry F. Ryrd . Sr. Elector1l votes in these ~tates totaled 71. Some surveys now ~u~~e!<:t that, in a three.way race 1wlth Jtubcrt II Humphrey and \Vallaee In southern stnte11, Wallace would draw off 4!nou~h votes to bring ln Nixon last and l~umphrcy first by 3 narrow margin. TllE POSSIDLITY llAS to l>c '\ measured, therefore, that \Vallace will . deny to Nixon southern states which he might carry if Wallace were not a candidate. On the other h a n d • Humphrey is leading, according to the Harris Poll, among low income f;roups in the North, including the white back lash groups which might be expected to respond to the Wallace candidacy. Nixon is thus not benefiting enough in the North from the defection of Democrats to the \Vallac.e tick~t ... It is difficult to see what Nixon can do to change this situation without alienating those elements who con- sider him best qualified among the available candidates and intend to vote for him for that reason alone. Rockefeller has found N i x o n ' s vulnerability on this point by ex- ploiting the statement of Nixon's southern leader that Wallace ought to be supporting Nixon. IF SEN. EUGENE ~lcCARTDY were to be entered as an independent candidate the problem would become even mol'I Complex. ..... iiliiiliiiial-. Friday, July 5, 1968 The editorial page of the Daill/ Pilot nck.t to Inform o.nd .ttim· utate readers by preunting thil ncnD.spcpcr'• opinioni and com- mentarv on topici of intirc.t& and 1ignijicance. l.111 providing a forum for thfl erpre.ssion of Ot4T readers' opinions, and bt1 prcsflntil'lg tltc diverse vicw- poinU of fnformed obstrvers und spokesmen on topics of thc day. Robert N. \Yeed , Publisher I ---=-= -:::-~:::::::~":"::::::~:..:·.:· _____ ....:=:._..:-:..61-._ ..!.. .... ._ .L -----"---=~~~~~~-------------· • Costa Mesa· DAILY PILOT Yoar Hometown !EDl:tlOH Dally Paper VOL '6 r, "40. :ror, ~ SECJI0"4S, ~· PAGES COST;; IWIES;J;, CACIFOlf.11.( FRIDAY, ~U(Y 5, 1968 -.TEN CENTS Furor Boils Over Verde Homes Tract A furor now bolling ovef a proposed 19.5-acre bot!Sing de~~ which would gobble a portion of the Mesa Verde Country Olub is expedod to spill out before ttie Costa Mesa Plan· ni:ng Commis.9ion Monday night. The Mesa Verde Homeowner s Association is spearheading the drive lo thwart developer Wally Gayner's plan to subdivide the golf course.edge property into 91 lots. Spokesman Bill Gardner says heavi· ly organized members will appear before the Planning Commission when Gayner's zone change and tentative tract maps come up for coi;islderation. Planning Department officials say the two separate clumps of housing are somewhat kidney-shapped and prd'l!Cilde into the golf course from both Gisler Avenue and Lanai Drive. The propert.y, owned by R. A. \Vatt Co., o( Buena Park, is currently under recreational and institutional zoning and Gayner proposes it be changed to R·l, for single family residential use. Several.meetings have been held by angry residents or the area, both £or study of the project and subsequent organization to oppose it at every pOMible leve1 of combat. Tot Breaks Leg In Toss by Bucking Camel. A Costa Mesa tot thrown from a bucking camel featured in animal rides at the Harbor Shopping Center is convalescing today with her broken left leg in a cast. Becky Warner, 11h, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Warner, of 22.U Avalon St .. was injured Monday, but initial ex- amination at Hoag Memorial Hospital did not reveal the leg fracture. Police called to the scene at 2300 llarbor Blvd., took the little girl and two companions shaken up on the wild ride to the hosgilal in a patrol car. Laura Tucker, of 2242 Avalon St .. and her brother J on managed to hang on as the saddle slipped beneath the bucking animal and suffered only bruises. ''It was terrible," said Mrs. J udy \Varner, who had taken the youngsters to ride the animals, "the kids looked like rag dolls bouncing around." Mrs. Warner said the camel had slopped momentarily and Becky started to climb doWTI, at .which time an attendant pushed her back onto the balky aDimal. At that moment, she said, the camel reared its head back and began jum- ping about, but apparently calmed down later, so children continued to ride the hump-backed beast. She said owners of the camel off~red to lake care Of the matter, but the two families preferred. to handle it through official police and insurance channels. 'Missi1ig' Ma1i Found in Mesa A man whose wi fe had reported hi n1 n1issing fr om their Buena Park homt· ,vas arrested Thursday in Costa Mesn when he turned hlmseU in t-0 ~ patrolman, asking to do his time as ;. cookie thief. The man -who reportedly got away while being taken to a Veterans Administration hospital -was booked into 01\ange County Medical Center for psychiatric observation. OfClcer Wayne Harber said the man approacfled him at a service St'B.tion at 2502 Harbor Blvd., ..00 told him he consldi:!red it ttme to pay for a bound!.,. history o! bad deeds , in· eluding cookie theft. Mesa Man Reports Propeller The'ft The big, wooden propeller or a Costa Me&a rHldent disappeared in Newport Beach over the Fowth of July alter I the owner said he briefly ltft 1t outside a supermarket. J Gunnu Haug. o! 361 17th st .. Co51a Mt,., told polico be bad propped the 7· foot long propeller agai~st an ouWde wall of Richard's Market and went in· I side to make a purchase. He returned five mlnutet toter , and found the propeller wa s gone. Haug de&eribed h1s $100 prop a,, mnde of laminated wood, wM.h a hole in the nl'ddl!-, ' , Suspect in Hospital Mrs. Tucker to Have Psychiatric. Tests DAILY PILOT Stiff l"Mi. Fall Injures Mesa Worktnan . .\mbulance attendants belt construction worker Raymond E. Smith, 35 of 1235 W. Palmyra Ave., Orange, to stretcher for tra nsportation to' Hoag Memorial Hospital today. Smith was working on a building under construction at 2000 Parsons St., when he fell about 20 feet to the ground, injuring his back. Smith was still undergoing x-rays to determine extent of his injuries shortly before noo~. Mom Drowns in .Laguna Pool; Murder Charged By RICHARD P. NALt. 01 11M D1Mr 1'1191 Sl!Jft The clothed body of an attractive 21- year-old mother who died under mysterious-cir cums ta nc e s was recovered from a motel swimming pool in Laguna Beach early this morn· iog. Police arreste d the young woman's male companion on suspicion of murder pending a d"etermination of cause of death and other fa ctors Sur· rounding the death. Police Lt. Robert McMurray iden- tified the woman as Maria Rodriguez or Montebello. He said the woman, her three·year. old son, Kenneth and Richard Anth<1ny Najar, 23, a metal plater from Bellflower, checked into the American Motel. 2130 S. Coast llighway, at 9: 15 p.m, Thursday. · Najar was arrested by police alter the young woman's body was found at abut 1:20 a.m. McMurray said Najar was asleep or unconscious in the motel room when officers knocked on the door. · The lieutenant said six red capsules. as yet unidentified, and Peer were found in the room . McMurray said the body was seen by Ken Aebersold, 2060 OCean Way. He notified motel manager Alber: Trondle and with a pool cleaning im plement they retrieved the body. Dr. Manuel Richder of F.ullerton , who was vacationing at the motel, ap· plied mouth-ta:mouth resuscitation unsuccessfully and pronounced the young woman dead. Police said Najar told them he and the Rodriguez woman had gone swim- 1ning in their clothing but that he lost sight Of her and assumed she had left. He went. back to th e room and went tu sleep, said McMurray. McMurray said the young woman had bruises on ber body. He said the physician and a deputy coroner thought at the scene tha) she may not have died of drowning. However, J im Beisner, deputy cor· oner, said later today that a morning autopsy indicated that drowning may have been the cause of death. Beisner also said there had been no official determination yet pending <1ut- come of other tests, toxicology tests to pi npoin t possible substances in the woman's sytem. 1.fcMurray said police sent Najar to the Orange County Medical Center for a physical examination to detennlne if it was safe for him to be placed in a cell. He was returned to the jail and locked up. Mesa Girl Hit In Face After Verbal Excl1ange A 12.ye&r-old Costa Mesa girl was struck in tlle face Thursday by a m;:in she told to shut up after he !!.nd his girlfriend yelled obsceniti~ at the vie· fi m and two companions. Mary J . Fickler, of 934 W. 19th St .. was wa1king on Monrovia Avenue at Arbor Street with two companions when the pair drove by, hurling in· suits. "Shut up," the trio cried. "You can't tell me to shut up ,:' they quoted the suspect .as saying c:iter he stopped his car and got out, r~turning to slap Miss Fickler -smallest or th e trio -in the face. Based on a description of 1'he beard· ed man, his car and girl friend, in- vestigating officers said they probably know who he i.s. By ARmUR R. VINSEL Of111eDMtr ~Sid ·. The wife of Costa Mesa City Coun· cilman George A. Tucker today was ordered transferred to Orange County Medical Center, where psychiatrists will study whether she is capable of aiding in her own defense on a murder charge. Mrs . Jrene M. Tucker, 37, of 1642 Minorca Drive, was ordered to return to Division 1, Orange County Superior Court, on July 22 at l :45 p.m., for a report on the mental evaluation. Judge William Speirs appointed Dr. Phillip O. Kramer, Qf Metropolitan State Hospital, Norwalk, and Dr. Sig· mu nd Kocewick, of Fairview State Hospit.8.i, Costa Mesa1 t<> examine Mrs. Tucker. The defendant has been held without bail at Orange Coqnty Jail since the stabbing death of her next~oor neighbor, Mrs. ·Harriett· Westphal, 68, Last Marines Leave Fort Of Khe Sanh SAIGON (UP!) -The last U.S. Ma- rines pulled out of Khe Sanh today as A.merican B52s defied Communist missiles and bombed targets just above tbe demolished fortress for the fifth consecutive day. Marine forces withdrawing from Khe Sanh Thursday reported killin& at least 17 North Vietnamese regulars in a force of .about 100 who .attacked a Leatherneck column three miles south or the fortress. The Marines lost four met! killed and 13 wounded in the 40-minute batUe along lllghway 9, the only open road from allied · coastal bastions to Khe Sanh. Pilots flying the B52 strikes above Khe Sanh a'gainst t.atgets in North Vietnam's panhandle reQ!)tf:ed at least two surface·to-air missiles streaking toward the craft but both missed. Khe Sa nh, the scene of one of the heaviest sieges of the war earlier this year, was formally given up today as demolition teams dynamited the final two punkers and about 3.500 Marines movytl out on tfucks and in helicop- ters. North Vietnamese snipers hi t one of the trucks , and Communist com- mandos blew up a bridge, but Marine officers told UPI Correspondent Ray- mond Wilkinson the withdrawal was "a success.'' "'As far as I'm concerned, I still own Khe Sanh,'' Maj. Gen. Raymond Davis, commander of the 3rd Marine Divisio n, told Wilkinson. "llowever, the base was 1 yoke around my neck." The withdrawal gave up a base \vhich Americans had held for 23 months. It was once described as a vital link in the chain of defenses just below the DMZ. The U.S. command said last week the changing pattern of the war in the .area made possible the giving up of Khe Sanh. It said allied troops had more m<1blUty at thi.s time to counter infiltration. Nearer Saigon, U.S. Army in· fantrymen still had no report on how many Communist soldiers died in an almost suicidal assault on a U.S. camp 40 miles northwest of the capilal, where the Viet Cong are believed massing 2,000 to 4,000 troops for a push toward the city. Harbor Vote Bill Killed Briggs Measure Dies in .Assembly Committee By JACK BROBACK OI tM CMllW l"lltt SI_,, State legislaUon aimed at submitting the fate of tbe Orange County Harbor DlstrJct to county voters ts dead for this session or the Calif o rnit Legislature. · The Aueinbly Municipal and County Government Cammlttte failtd to pass the measure Wednesday but com· mlttee chainNn John Knoi; (D·Rich- mond) warned county representatives that lf local acUon was not taken , the committee would !!fiiain move lnto the picture next Jaou KnQx 11Jd delay Jn ction on the bill by. Assemblyman JOhn V. Briggs (R· Fullerton) • • w o ti Id give the supervisors ooe more chance to act. on d.i ssolutioo of the district." "U this acUon does not occur," Knox said, "I can assure you thJ s committee wJU be very receptive to legi11latlon in the near future." Knox leans heavily toward acUon by the Local Agency Formatlon Com- mluion, an a gency whloh wa s created through legislation sponsored by Knox. The Brtggs bill was before the com · mi!tee for the second time. On June 2.6 it was deleyed to tack on a long list of amendmenta suggested by Newport Beach. Ourlng Wednesday's he 1 r l n g AssemblYman Robert Burke (R·Hun· tington Beach) attempted to get tbe blll through committee. A vote to seod Jl to the as1embl7 floor failed, aa did a second bill to ~ep the bill in com· mittee. The latter situation resulted, however,' for committee inaction. Briggs said he was disappointed that the bill falled to clear committee but warned that ''I believe that we have sen ·ed a purpose In bri.nging the im· portance of thl1 matter to :lht supervisors. Wl!i have placed theJT\ on noUce and will not accept inaction on tl\elr pan any longe r:" Briggs' bill would have put the future ot the harbor d.Jstrict up to a "·ote or the county's electorate in November. It had the backing of the County League of Cities. Last week the supervisors voled 4 to 1 to rcte.ln the harbor district as presenUy set up. l of 1646 Minorca Drive, last Friday. Mrs. Tucker appeared before Judge Speirs with her attorney, Paul Augustine Jr., seeming dazed and con· fused , just as she did Wednetday dur· ing her arraignment in Harbor District Judicial Court. Her husband and family were abiient from the courtroom during the brief hearing today. The defendant said nothing during the proceeding, as Judge Speirs ap· pointed the psyeh.iatrists and ordered her moved to the medical center's psychiatJic facility. Costa MeSa Police Capt. E d .Glasgow, meanwhile, said tecllnicians Plu,..e Vletlm FBI agents charged in Hawaii that 10 hippies stood by a nd looked on whefl arUst John M. Gallagher, 19, of San Clemente fell to his death in dormant Haleakala volcano on Hawai- ian island of Maui. They fail· ed to report tragedy. " at the Orange County Sherilf's Crime Lab have what they say may be the weapon used to kill Mrs. Westphal .. lt ia a butcher tmre, still being checked for J>Ofislble blood traces from the body of Mrs. Westphal, who was buried in Inglewood the day ber ac· cused slayer was arraigned. A neighbor, Donnld V. Schenk, of 1644 Mioorca Drive, is apparently the witness clasest to knowing what ac- tually happened last Friday aftemooD in the Mesa Verde area killing. He told investigators ht beard screams and a dog barking, ran outside and found Mr9. Westpbai atan· ding in the street, bleeding from a stab wound and in a state of &hock. 'Ille victim staggered acro<1 VI• street, collapsed to the ground and made a statement involving Mrs. Tucker in ttie knifing, then apparently (See HOSPITAL, Page %) Police Seek Early Morning Auto Sniper Newport Beach polic•;.1$,,wtre searCblrig tor a motorfst sniper~o fired one sbot into the rear windshield or another driver's car before dawn today. The shooting incident occurred at 1:40 a.m. on MacArthur Boulevard noar Harbor View Drive, accordina: to th man who was shot at. Polltt idenU!ied him a.! Harvey Walker, 2.8, Of llOO Sea Lant. Tbey Mid Walker was not bit by the bullet. Walker told police he was south· bound on MacArthur returning home when the driver·<1f a small car pulled in closely behlnd·him. The next thing he knew, a bullet had ripped through the rear windshield of bis car, be reported. The calibel" of the slug, and descrip- tion of tbe 1niper were not disclosed. Canadian Majorette Corps To Visit Mesa July 12-14 Costa Mesa is going to be host to 48 Canadian youngsters. The visitors are members of the RhytJlmette Majorette Corps, of Win- nipeg, Manitoba, which is about to em· bark on a t r i p .to perform at t h e Calgary Stampede axl a.t Disney Ian;:!. "Your \Vorship," began a letter rrom the group's director, Miss Janel Narco Agents Fear Synthetic Marijuana Use WASHJN'GTON (AP) -~·edtral narcotics agents are concerned about the possible appearance of man-made marijuana which is colorless and odorless but so powerful only two or three drops in a cigarette can produce the same kick as natUNal marijuana, the W,ashington Post .said today. "Smuggling in synthetic marijuana could make the '350 million a year heroin bwiiness look like peanuts," the paper quoted a narcotics agent as saying. "And It would be easy," he added. "A IJttle ,alcohol and some r.oloring and it couJd be brought in as after· shave lotion." The Justice Departmeqt's Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs plans to send Congress fresh legislation to cover the sale and use of marijuana made ln a laboratory, the Post lllld. Currently, lederaf law clovers only natural marijuana w1tlch ls grown. Federal offlclals say marlJuan1 was first m1de syntbeticaDy four yMrs .ago by an Israeli chemist. Tbey ray lt is still extremely erpenaive to pro- duce, the major factor that has kept it !tom the W.gal drug market. Federal oUlclals fear, howe\/tt. that the price U bound to come down as more chemists tinker with It. "When this ha~n1 we may be lo very deep trouble, ' one agent sald. t, t.1.• Baril, and mailed to ~ayor Alvin L. Pinkley. She •aid they will be staying in Costa Mesa July 12-14, bu! as yet bad located no place Jn which to stay. "We are a mixed group of 46," she wrote, 36 le.dies aged 11 to 17, plus four supervisors, and five boYfi aged 15 to 17, plu~ one supervisor. A quick'canvass of local possibilities led to an acceptance by the First Bap- tist Church, 301 Magnolia Ave., where the party will ro.U out their sieeping bags. City Clerk C. K. Priest has sent a telegram ot: confirmation from His Worship Mafor Pinkley and officials today ae awaiting wcrd on the m'a· jorette COri>S' arrival. The group will be happy to give a guest performance in gratitude, ec· cording to Miss Baril. Weatller If you survived the post·Fourth ear ringing, the weatherman says you can look forward to a weekend of sunny afternoons and early' morning fog. Highs near 70. INSmE TODAY It's noc on ea.sv talk to iurn loco! ptoPle 'nto great work.t of art but it'• done at iht Laguna Beach Paoeani of the Ma.s!J11. see Cod.au'• W11kendtr. ,.._ -.._ , .. ,, " .._ • ·-CIMll!ltll ... -·-" :::: ..... • -.. .. --• •=:"..-....... ~ .. .. • ·-• ... -u '""' c .. • u DrllM ... 'I ...,... ....... .. ............ l+lt -.. ·-•lllllt , Hl!Mlt .._ • ... ...... 4 --• ~ .. , IVMe ....,_ • :::....... .. u --11•1, 1;1 } • __ _._ _______ ~c-..:'c._=~=-~"'---~ ----------- J ' % DAILY PILOT 200 Fall I • From Bridge • Into Lake LONGVIEW. Wash. (AP) -A wooden foetblidge jammed with pe~ ple watching fireworks collapSed Thurlday. night, plunging scores of people into a like near the center ot Loncview. All llll!>.,..Uy 1arvl•ed. Police Obi<! llalpb Boneflel IOld al muy u 200 persom may have been on the bridge. But no one could k..oow for certain. Sltindivers scoured Lake Sacajewea today but said they found no bodies. Ambulancel, hearse& IDd even Ution wagons were pressed into service, hurrying 89 person! to two hospitals. Seven nre admitted to St John's Hosptt&l for further treatment, two With broken lep. 'nle footbridge was-14 feet high+ five feet wlde aod aboui 100 feet long. Water underneath was up to eight feet deep. There was no cU?Tent. The fireworks display, sponsored as in yeara past by the Jaycee1, had just ended and lourih of July celebrators were leavinc the park that runs through tho C""'°f ol lhll planned, former company town when w1tneues beard a loud IDIP· '.'The bridle bowed, then collapoocJ." slld John Martin. ••There were a lot of tcream1. Motber1 didn't know where their babt11 were. I bell'd peo- ple yelllng, then it went down." The footbridge wu clOMd at leut once during recent year1 becau1e of rotten timbers. Piece. 0( the bridge, pulled to shore today by a wrecker, i;howed signs of rot. Don Gregory, a Cowlitz CoUDty reserve deputy, said the bridle had been closed to foot traffic several years ago, but it was reopened when repairi Were. made. Still 6tlnd.iDe at one end or the bridge Js a sign rtadmg, "No horses on bridge." Table Tennis Anyone? Try Fashion Island "fable tennis , arcbery, 10U or tennis anyone? Expen.. from all four 1ports will demonstrate their sldlk Friday and Salunlay. July 5 and e ID the ·Stoa• Court area of F.asbion Jsland in · • Newport Beach. . , ' Shoppers will be able to view their goU and tennis swings via delayed television monitors with comments on improvement by the pros. Archery demonstrations will be given by Marge. Lammers, Jn- ternatlonal Women's Open Archery Champion on Saturday, July 6 and table tennis exhibition• wUl be given by both profes1ional and amateur participap.ts Friday JO a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.; and Saturday 11 a.m., l and 3 p.m. Laver Captures Tennis Tourney Rod Laver of Corona del Mar. swept to a straight sets victory over Australian professional Tony Roche in toda y's singles finals of the annual \Vimbledon tennis classic. And Orange Coast area rans wilt be able to see the show on television Saturday, 1 p.m., Channel 7. A throng of 17 ,000 saw the touring pro of Newport Beach Tennis Club capture the battle of left.handers in an hour 's time. Jncluded in the cro"'d v.•ere 15 members of NBTC who made a special trip to England for the tournament. See dttails in today's Sport Section, Page 14. DAILY PILOT c.w. ..... c.rtfen'9 11"9'* N. w.,4 --Th.11111 K•t•il ..... Tli•111•1 A. Murphln• 14Ntlllt Eclllw J.~l It C11rl.., P1wl Nine" •wt:""' Ml,...., Ad'ttrllslfl1 P!r.clor c---JJO W•tt l1f Str•tt M1:i111t A44,..1; P.O. l1Jt 1160 'Z61' - DAll.Y Pll.DT '""" 1W Lt1 '"" 'Firework•. Ban' in Action ' Bridge Ar1·iving . . 1st Rocks From London U11loaded LONG BEACH (UPI) -The MIYl•I ontlquo ovtr podd1lcl to l rich yank by the w!ly British began com· 1ng ashore Tbun<)ay. Dock hands hoisted 8M tons of granite blocks from the London Bridge out Of the hold Of the !rel&ht.r· ,S& Fossum, while her Norwegian Captaih. commented : "You Americans will make 1noney from it. You make . money from everytbin& elH." On Moodly, Ibo &ranlte block• wlll ttart a JIO.mllo journey by truck from IAn& Beach to Lake Heva1u City, Arti. Tblro the bridge, purchased by McCulloch Propertln Inc. for 12.4 mllllon, wW be reu1embled as the Fr-P .. e J HOSPITAL ••. d.i'ed whJlt w1ltln1 for an ambulance. No motive b11 been determined and the weapon uted to ltab Mrs. Weatpbal bu not been poo!Uvely !den· filled, ald:iourh lnvelti11.tor1 believe it 11 am90g kltchfn utenlil1 taken from the Tucker home. Westmoreland's Kin Dies in War centrll feature of a tourist comple.1. Thi 1118 tou that arrived aboord the Fossum are the first installment ot English and Scottish granite 11\llt will be reassembled as London Bridge in Lake Havasu City by 1971. The . bridge .i1 . an •:1.ntiA.ue'' .-of· · flcJalJy certlfled,,.as 1uc:h1 by the U.S. C111tom1. Thll judim.m enabled tho McCulloch firm to import thi! rocks duty free. Otherwise lfley might .have been taxed as ~Wldlng ..naterials. Capt. Lell E. Moen Of the F:ouum said Jt wu tbe first Ume he and' his fellow Vikin gs evef s8.lled with a car. go or boulders. "To ua it's crazy," be philosophized. "These rocks in our holdli . Jt's like the Amerlc&n1 h&\'e rocks in their heads.'' Road Deaths Run Behind Precllctions By United Pre11 la&eraaUonal Traffic ·deaths today were runntna:- behind National Safety Council predlc· tio ns for the long Fourth of July holi- day wee1'end. Use, discharging, poaseaslon, holding, or maybe even thinking about fireworks within·the city llmita of Newport Beadl is aboolutely prohibited by Jaw. Yet tbi.i wu the scene Fourth ol July night on the Balboa Island waterfront. Law muat be one of the most universally ignored 1lnce Prohibition. Pw another sparkler, mom. SAIGON (AP) -Lt. COi. Frederick Van DeUltn, brotber·in·law of U.S. Anny Chief ol Slaff Gm.· Wlll!om C. Wetbnonland, wu kllled Wedneeday when hb bellcopler WU mot down in the Mekong Delta. The cowtcil, which P,redicted up to 800 would die on the naUon'a highways from 6 p.m. Wedoeaday tO mldlllght Sunday, aatd early trends indicated the predicUoa mljbt not be fulllllod. Thant's Paris Trip Linked To Peace Talks PARIS (UPI) -Secretary General Thant of the Uofted NaUona will ma1e ·a brief ooe-day vltlt to Parla Saturday it Y{.U announced today. Thi1 prompt· ed 1peculat1on Thant would meet with North Vietnamese and American diplomata to discuss the deadlbck in the Vietnam talks. - Thant's vil:lt to Paris ju1t before the city WU cbosen as the lite for the talks in April wa1 generally regarded as highly slgQiilcant. There were hopes be could breathe new lite into the neg0Ultton1 at thJ1 time. The announcement of Thant's pen· ding anival came as a Soviet pledge of continued military and cConomlc aid to North Vietnamese 1trengthened Hanoi's band at the talks which are in rece111 unW next week. The announced purposes of Thant's flight to Paris was a luncheon meeting with Foreign Minister Michel Debre, but diplomatic observers 1aid talks with the Americans and North Viet· namese were possible. :r'be U.N. chief was 'arriving from Geneva late Saturday morning. The Hanoi delegation wa s jubilant over the pledge for renewed aid an. nounced in Moscow Thursday, they said. It was expected to cement the delegation's hard·line attitude. American and North Vietnamese negotiators have met 11 times since their discussions opened May 13. They have made no progress. The North Vietnamese have Insisted the Uni ted States halt unconditionally all bombing of North Vietnam. The Americans have demanded HanoJ respond to a partial bombing halt ordered March 31 by scaling down fighting in South Viet- nam. A 12th session ls scheduled nexl v.•eek. The North Vielnan1ese governmen t continued its hard Une today by warn· ing Thailand and South Korea they must stop 1ending troops to South \'ietnam and by again demanding an uncoll<liUonal end to U.S. bombing. "Everybody can see the losing posi· tion of lhe United States in SouU1 Viet· nam," a statement of the foreign ministry In Hanoi. broadcast on radio and monitored in' Tokyo saJ,d . The statement sald the United States should withdraw from South Vietnam it.s troops and "troops of its sate llites" and let the South Viet· namese settle thelr internal affairs by themselves. The broadcast said th e warning was directed at President Park Chung Hee o£ South Korea and Prime Minister Thanom K.Jtttkachor n and Deputy Prime Mlnister Praphas Charusathien of Thailand. It said South Korea and Thailand intend to send more troops to Vietnam. Jeivelry, Mink Stolen at BBC Cl0<e to 12,000 in j.,..lry and mink were taken trom tbe Balboe Bay Club .q>a.rtment of Eugem W o o t e n , Newport Beach poUce n>port.d today. PollCe 1ald entry appartntly was gained by ustng a key p\eced under the front door mM. Wooten said his apartment was not ransacked. Among mi.S&lng articles he li&t.ed a '7:!0 mlnk Jacket, S225 pair or gold cu/f Hnks with r11bie1, and 1240 watch. I •• , 5 Prisoners Overpower Guards in Futile Escape Van Deu1en, :n, WM· ahot down just a rew hoW's after Wetbnoreland was sworn in as chief of staff in \Vashinrton. Westmoreland had com· manded U.S. force1 Jn Vietnam the last four years. Van Deusen was the brother of \Vestmoreland's wife, Katherine. He leaves a widow and three children in F'ayetteville, N.C. After the lint 30 hOlln ol the 102· hour holiday, the council reported thlit about" four persons an hour were dying in traffic_ accidents, compared wltb a 51~ average during the same period last year, when a record 732 died. "It's nice to think we don't have to set a new record every time we go out on a holiday,"· said a council sp okesman,' who emphasized that the treacherou s homeward trek 1tlll lay ahead for millions of vacationing mc.torlsts. Cl·IICAGO (UPI) -1''i ve prisoners · overpowered three guards, took their uniform s and guns and tried to scram· ble over the fence at the Cook Coun ty jaii Thursday night. The prisoners, who fled their unlock· ed cells, then engaged in a lengthy gunbattle with jail police and city and county authorities before one of their nu mber \\-'as wounded . The other four were captured early this morning after being out Of thelr cells for three hours. The wounded prisoner was taken to Cook County Hospital where he was treated for gunshot wounds. None or tbe gu8.rds nor police who answered tbe call was injured d e s p I t e ''miscellaneous " shooting, authorities said . . Warden Winston l\1oore 1ald the five prisoners were able to pull their c1cape attempt because ''some of· 229 Acres Burn In Four Blazes In South Area By UnJted Pres1 lnternatloaal Four range and forest fires were checked by fire fighters Thursday after burning 229 acres of the Southern Call!ornia countryside . The largest fin, near Beaumont, was contained by 125 firemen · and aerial tankers after biackenlng about 160 acres. A 60-acre fire ln the Strawberry Park area 15 miles north of Pasadena was contained after burning through 20 acres of trees and watershe:l land. "Some of the prettiest scenery in Southern Oalifornla was destroyed," said a spokesman for the U.S. Forest Service. The trees lost were big cone douglas fir and coulter pine trees . A brush fire in the Angeles National Forest was checked late Thursday after charring about four acres. The fire nine miles north of Azusa caused the closing of Highway 39 for a short lime. A small Lire in Chatsworth blackened five acres near Santa Susana Avenue and Topanga Canyon Boulevard. Lo6 Angeles city and coun· ty firemen controlled it about an hour after it broke out at 3 p.m. PDT. Many Attending OCC Non·gl'ads Nearly 13 percent of studenta enroll· cd at Orang! Coast COiiege during the spring semester do not have a high school diploma. Dean of Admission s Kenneth Mowrey repartcd today, The law sUpulates that students nt'cd only be 18 years old to attend junior college. · Most of the 13 percent took pracUca\ ('(lurses in vocational and technical fields to prepare themselves for jobs. Fire Causes $700 Damage to Garage Fire of undetermined brlgtn levelled a frame garage 1n Costa Mesa early today, causing a f100 los1 including the 1tructure and ill content.. Robert 8o1twtck'1 building at 214 Knox Place was a. swlrllrlg ma1s of na.me-5 when firemen arrived on lh• scene .about S:30 1.m., accordin1 to In• vesti.&1tor1. Iicers didn 't lock their cells. It v.•as negligence." lie said the five men, not im· mediately identified, left their cells shortly before midnight Thursday. '"They came down a dumbwaiter and waited in the yard unti l the tower men tguards ) came through and then they overpowered them," Moore said . .. They gagged them. s 'v a pp e d uniforms and '"ent to the tower ," he said. · Moore said the prisoners mounted the tower -which ls on the fence of the jail -and tried to get over the fence. . "They were on the fenc;:e," Moore saJd. "Lt William Srnith was getting oil duty when he saw something suspicious. He yelled 'halt', they shot at him, he shot at them." Moore said dozens of squads of city police and Cook County sherlff's police answered an emergency call. r Owner Disturbed As Guest Departs The owner of a Costa Mesa motel became disturbed Thursd&y when cleanup workera discovered a \voman wh o left a Do Not Disturb sign on her door was no longer there to be disturb- ed. · ~trs. Beatrice A. McDowell, of the Colonial Motel. 1967 Newport Blvd ... said the woman al!o left a $32 tab for the lour days she had sta ye d there. A1·t on Display ·Commemorating the Laguna BeJch Art Assoclr.tion's 50th anniversary, the Permanent Memorial Collect.Ion ls now on display at the Laguna Federal Savings and Loan, 260 Ocean Blvd . A UPI COWlt at 1 p.m. PST showed at least 238 persona killed In trafttc ac· cidents. -·~ A breakdown of accidental deaths: Traffic · 238 Drownings 81 Planes 7 Miscellaneous 39 Total 365 Heading the traffic casualty list were Calilor.Ua wltb 19 deaths, Ohio with 13 and New York with 11. Four other state1 each counted 10. Eight persons , UW:luding 1even clllldren. drowned ill Lake Wales, Fla., wfifll their boat overturned i n Thurisday'1 most tragic holiday ac· cident. A man and three girls died in the collision or a co:ivertible and sparts Car near Coldl!n, N.Y., Thurs· day night. ' ~ DREXEL'S GUILD HALL SIDE CHAIRS Reg. 19. ARM CHAIRS Reg. IOS. OVAL TABLE Reg. 215. • • • • SAlf 77 .... SALE 19 .... SAlf 249. OUR SALE ALSO FEATURES SELECT GROUPS FROM , DREXEL, HENREOON, HERITAGE, KINDEL, CENTURY. ANO MARGIE CARSON GROUPS ALL AT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. ACCESSORIES, LAMPS, PICTURES,.AREA RUGS ALSO INCLUDED. IXCLUSIYI DIAUIS POI: HINI--DUDI. -HHITA .. ft IATS NO f!ITllDT-L-TlllMS AYAllAU OM APPllOYID CMDIT 7.1., fe -OITllACH Ml·HIO 1727Wntcftff"'" ...... ... I ...... LA•UNA II.ACM ........ Ml ....,. c... Hwy. Au••lt AtO-NlfD MIN PRIDAT "n\ t "'-9 Tell ,._ MM! II 0...,. C..., 141-110 Friday, July S, 1%8 For the Fire Calb Mi1111tW191111 MM'-' w~ • .kt1Y a. 1•:r. t .m .. mtell(;&I e\f, 1711\ k&cll 11Y , 10:22 1:m., IMCllcel a"' 174 1 .Nll'IWl.nd 1 :$3 P.m .. QnH fir•, llrookfturll Ind Garf~ld 7:20 p.m .. flrltl fire. 50'2 Hell. 7:S6 p.m., 8'1"1!.S fire, m1 JulleMe LIN •:Ot p.m., car tire, 211 lncl!lntiJ>OIL""' 7:09 p.m., 11ructur1 llrt. S052 .I I Clrt~ DAILY PILOT 9 Record 7:10 "''""" trMtl fin, 7trl c.nm.wt1 Clrcl9 · T""~T4Ju~1 4.1~.U a.111 .. ll\tllllka.I ' ! 1,1'11., rnMrc:I I tu Oafttvl ... ·~~"r.. ,., T•rl« 2: ,.111 ••• , ... '"· ,,.. ....., Llflt_ -l ! '-111" flN ln ...... !Mllofl. 2"112 111 ..... r UM 3:14 '·"'·• 9N11 ""' ,.., .. Mii ''~· ~.~·"'"' nre...,. 1t11i. IMllll ..- ,,_ t : '""" oil .. 11. m 111!1 .,... '"Oc•ll .... • "~ •·•· ..... A''lfiE"+.=""' "" t : '""" ur n,.., • Wl'I t : '""" 1r111 rt, 11'11 .,.. 111~· 10;._l ,.i" !t~ll'I tlrt. Mlln ll'lf ~. f,,.,..,, utv 1:'1 1.11'1., ~ tit. um tend:..,..._.., 1 11• Vtrd1 W~• JUIY 1. 1:1111.m., t'Wll fl,., 1 p,11'1., flrt Ul 1~~ :~: =~~.~\f~': ,,,_ T111,1rtda\" July 4. 11" 1.m .. ctr nr .. Mil' Slllltlll t:"-''"'" h'lt~ flN, MG2 MHIJ!ll ... •:U 1.m .• ur tire, 1Mr ... t · •.m .. tr , 1 I 111111 ff:Htl'nlntl« d •,fll., If~ 1rr., tffl,1 'C11 Nulltt • '-"I• V111n' Wl!'dflttdly, Jltly 2. U:lJ 1.m., trlll . fLl'f, ·sr11tr 1f'lil M11no!l1 Ttwrtdly, J111Y '4, 1:11 •.m., tr1dl flt .. \1950 IM81101L1 L..-•.n Wtdnelcl1v, JI¥.' >S~·!l 1.m .. ,,..tl,..11 11r1. 1•1 1. e11t H ollw•Y J:S1 1.m.1 m1 ,.., Sllrf 11111 lend Mol .. , 461 , Miii Hlti/IWIY •~10 ,,,,,,,_ i:.r ",... '°"' Hltl'IWIY 1nd Em«lll ••v •:10 o.m .. u r rJ.ttJ. •• Llnlf. 51\tlm• 11.es11urenr.~n1~ .. Hlettw•Y W~y, J11 1liSl 1.111., .,.,, 111'11, (loulh . Ortc:I LIM i :ot p.m., auto 1,., lath 11111 T111tln s:r •. m .. 111s1 111rm. 1:ioo "-rbol' f :OlllYdii.111..c. t11,. 1l1rrn, Olllff' Ind H1rbot 111lvd. _, l:~l o.m.L l1IM 1lllrm. Gl111'r I H.,l:or 1111¥<1, T~1111.c1ar,_Ju1¥ ,, ll:« 1.m .. ~111n1 fire, zm S~$nt1r Dr!Ve 1,r 11.m., .,..~ d,,...n, :noo Harl!O r J:u"::m .• fll• 111rrn. UI~ St. Ind Tu SI In f:?S 11.m., 111,. 111rm. Centu $1. end 1o:'~rkp.m., 1rMh fire, 303' Fiii"*' 11~..,.P-"1·• 1uto tltt, J001 HI IG!''I'\~ fr\diy, Jll~;; 1.m., 81• I I _., :i001 H1rllor l'+'d, I 1:H 1.m.. ,,. ~: Kl!llllt P' ace Tllu~..l. i:J:.w1 li>t 1.m., tertkl ,.u11;.,,, .. "~r,.. l'lf_lt comer ol 'V-.e.dOf 11111 11111• Dr_1,,. 1:.: p,m., tll l ld. G4 Ml~ lG·IT°~., fflU f!rt, 102rMii1ijft Drive 1 0 1 t :16 11.rn.. Mee1lt11 un, Mir ner1 r v1 11111 81Y ~...._.. 1G·OJ 1.1t1.t_boal tire. <tff lllOre ...,, .. ,...,. i..lnlll ltlt' Ind llYfllllfL" .. MlrlM 1\:lS 1.m .• .erY1CI Cl Avt . KONALANES 3rd ANNUAL CENT CENT CENT CENT 3 SALE SALE SALE SALE SPECTACULAR DAYS REMAINING fRIDA Y . . . . . . • . . . . JULY 5th;. 1968 SATURDAY •••..•.. JULY 6th, 1968 SUNDAY . . . . . . . . . . JULY 7th, 1968 9;00 1.m. until 12-midnite, each of the 5111 D1y1I FABULOUS MONEY-SAVING SPECIAUI ---BOWLING --- REGULAR PRICE FOR I st. (3rd , Sth, etc.) GAME. E-ACH 2nd-GAME (2nd , ~th, blh, etc.) JUST A PENNY! NO LIMIT! Olf1r ••lid, • '·'"· • I 2 mldnithl, 111 oi d1yt. Yo11th lowl. Int Club IY.l .C.) M1111b1r1 ''Y th'1lr r1111ltr 1tric1 fir 11th l1t, Jrd, 911111, etc. le fir 2nd, '4th,.etc. N4i 1th1r l(p"' l.11111 promotio111I f11l11 r• valid tl11ri11t 1111-Cant ,.r •. POOD---.-. lt11t11 on thh Spacltl M1nu tn1hutlM in OHi CINT ·uu. ott}y P1y ,rice '"'""" for flt'lt 111111. E1clt 2nd m11I of 1q111I ;rice er lew1r, ivtt • PINNYUJ fStle tt.i1 1111n• 011ly, 1arvad In Coffie S~op, 011lyl. n•9• lllP, french Rotl, 111111 •., , • , •,.,,,,,., 1.H PUNCH DIP IANI .. fr•~ch Fri11 • , , ••,.,.,,,,, 1.M IPAhmt DINNI .. S•11p er Sela.I •••••••••••, 1.11 ' '''" 1 •••n. v.1 .. s~, ,, s.1.11 .......... , • ; 1.11 CHICllH IN A IASllT , , , , • , , , , , , , , , , , , •• , , , 1.11 CHAl-1101&.U HAMIUl•ll ••.••• , , ••• , , , , • • • .61 CHAl.alOIUD CHUSllUIMI , ,, •••••· ,, ••• .71 CHIU 1111, "•11, 1h111 ••••••••• ••••••••••••• 1.11 NIU SHllMP, Col• Slt w, $111, ••• ••••••••••••• 1.71 IUAID W1A1. CUTI.If, Trllflfl'll11'1 , , , o •••• , ,, ,,, 1.71 COLD TVlllT 01 HAM SAND., Fri1t • ,, ,, •• ••• .fl HAUIUT STIAI, Tri111mi11't •.,,. ,, ,, •• .......... • 1.71 CHD'S SALAD IOWI. , , •• , , • , , , , • , • : , , • , •,,., 1.JI HOT ... IAHDWICH • ...... , , •• • •• • •, • •., • •• • 1.JI IPICW tvTCMllAfll IAlflWICH , •••••• ,, •• ••, 1.JI IOMA'I PAMOUI "IOWLllliti•U'" •••••••••. 1.11 ' ----------------------------.;~~ hwlat .................... ~.,, ... KONALANES 26'9 HAlllOll 54$.1112 COSTA MESA San · Joaqaln District Parents Study Sclwol Program IRVJNE -A group o1 parents, m<isUy from ttie Univerllty Puk orea, have fcrmed a commlttee to study the sovenlh and eighth grede cuniculum ot the San Jooquln Sd>ool Dtslrict. 1be parent's ad v 11 o r y committee, f,onned tntee weeU •to with tile content ol the ect>ool -.i, i• to make recommendations for chaJ\ges by Aug. 18. Fred AgrelUI of 24341 Fordview , El Toro, Brazil 'frip _Planned by Instructor c:halnnan ol the Oedlllnl ccmmittee and father of an eighth grad« in Ille d!llrict, •aid tt>e -Of tile group is to evaluete c<UHI being taught and t h • facilities for teachI.ng them. ''Some of the parent1 bave felt the curriculum is heavy in certain are&t, for jn· stance for.in 11usua&e1.'' he said. On the oilier baDd, he added. tihe acience pro- grom nl.ight need up .dettna:. Arter tht commi tte e makes its Aug. ·14 repcrt, it must disband, according t, the present agreement with tile school bowd. The committee ii com· PoSe<i ol 18 p«>pie, Including representatives of t ti e i;cl;l-ool district, 'and meets MOJ'ldays at 7:30 p.m. at Irvine School. Parents of seventh and eighth grade s'.µdents who hnve suggestions for cur· rlculum changes may send them to Mr. Agresta at the school. U.S. Awards UCI Pact Of $8,965 The Public Polley Reseorcb Orllni>IUon at UCI bl1 boon given 1 federal contract to study how It.ate and 1 o c a l . governments obtain advice on scientific and technical matter1. The Irvine grant or $8,965 is part of a nine-stale pro- ject 1pon1ored jointly by U1e National Sclelice foundation and the Economic Develop· ment AdmlnlltraUon ol the PARKING LOT SALE . . WAREHOUSE LEASE EXPIRES! MUST VACATE IN 7 DAYS REDUCTIONS ~ 50% 4)FFI 121,000.00 WORTH OP ll'ANllH, MIDinllANIAN AND MIXICAN PUllNITl)U MUST II CUAUD out· Of IAUIHS . . . 10,000 SQ. FOOT WAUHOUll IY JULY 15TH. SALE STARTS FRI. • JULY 5th at 9:00 A.M. WAREHOUSE 1953 Newpor1 Blvd. (Conter Pord ltNdJ COSTA MESA- Professor Robert Taft of UCI department of cheml&iry has been invited to attend the internaUonal symposiqm on nu c 1 ear ma1neUc reaonance in Sao Paulo, Brui!, July 8 to JI. Professor T a f t has pioneered in applying p h y a i c a 1 meuurements toward 1 ys te ma tic un- derstanding of the rates of organic chem.Jcal reactions. Rolls Closed At Cal State Department ol Commerce. 1:;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=: 1be studies are designed!: At UCI, 'faft and his research group have madtr extensive appllcaUona of nuclear magnetic resonance spectrosc;opy. F o u r gra- duate students who have done their research work in this program have already received the PhD degree fr om UCI under the direc· Uon of Professor Taft. Professor Taft also lee· tured recently to t h e Organic Reaction Mechanisms Conference 4t Brandeis University, and to the Gordon Conference on the chemistry and /.hysic1 of isotopes in l!ol erne&s, New Hampshire. DEATH NOTICES JACOB 01l1Y I . Jtc:otl, i;:,.1 BrODkhllnl It .• HuntllWfoll &el , &urtlvtcl by rr:UOllltr" !1th« Ho',j; of H11n-f!lllOl'I tc:fl, IOn, ll1mer • J-1 OI 1,1111ln1loll ltldl, !liter, A 11 Olllt of r11. 1 ... ndet'li.i, 3 6 .. 1 .. 1r11'1Ckllllclftn. $trY ctt MOl'I, !,!If , 1 •·'"· P1clflc VIN th111tl. r. ,..,. mOl!d I. l111h1m1, altlc!1.inv. tn-11rnmen1 '•clflc View Memllfltl P'1rir.. P1dtk View MorflHlry, dlrldlft. MARTINEZ Jfti.11 '· .Mlrnnaz. Ir. 10M1 "'°'' 11,, Stll'llon. Surtl'llCI by w!t1, Outod1l~oeii' J11.u1 P. Jr .. Ramiro 'b' . ~rtnl Anndtl Incl ["· -M•t~ II lea MCCluten, or• FU LL EltTON Admissions to Cal State Fullerton's fall semester have closed, marking the earliest state college cutof£ in Southern Caillornia. Ralph B~low, Fullerton campus director of ad· minions and records, said a July I deadline was nece&i&f)' because of an enrollment quoti of 7 ,600 ftill~tlme equivalent students, ....: ·about 10,900 In· dlviduals. .• , In lint wt th a policy an- nounced earlier by Presi· . dent WWlam B. J4ngedorf. however, ~IftloW noted that exceptlonl can be made for Vletnam veterans. Althouib SIJ!. Franclaco and sin Joee State Colle&• also have cea1ed admitting students fo r the fall term, Fullerton is the first at.ate college in S outhe rn Calilorni1 to do oo. Wife Held In Assault ill a,.., btt Trull!lcl. i~N~. :harlft Ind ldl1rd. Brotllfn, nw!, Mnltl I nf Johll, I !ll'"l ndcll ldrtn. ONIY l"rl. July $~I km. ti PHii l'"llJlllY Chll'll. Mrt n 1. 1o::io 1,m. SANTA ANA - A local II ,. .. "•mlly Colon •I 1,111tr1J HOIN, SMICK housewife bere is in Oran1e 1a11.,. • 1m1tk. ot •n1 01n1e11 G'llY' ,..,..., ....... jail tochiy char~ Blvd., tiJHtml111ltr~_lurvf¥ed by W]ff, -~7 Iii .. " lrent , Dliucthltr, Am;e V. WUkertQn. I With 18Slult with intent to 1r1,g:l1u11hhlr, ~ 11rt11-ar1nddll'-lr.... murder her husb·~. Sorr'tlctt Wiil bl In l.Gul1vlllti KY. Loal alN ;i:~tiv PMk F1111 IY co1on111 Goldki A. Luter, 29, of to find out what kinda ol scientific and technical ac· tiviUes are supported by .state and local governments, and boW much impact scientists a n d engineers have UPoft state and local governm e nt Policy. Results of the studies are expected to be useful as an aid to state aovernmen~ now engaged . in exploring techniques far uising science and technology to promot4 stat e g,oclo•conomlc development ·-··· HIERONYJ\fUS 1641 W. Highland St. w• ar- 1111 M, H""'°"'mus, °' 111;1 -·-""'"-dl1 ru·-t o1-r Mosqu1"to lhtlm1n1 Loml!t. $urvl'<'ld l tons, ·-~ .au-• &"' loll:: . w. 111C1 ,,lllk L Oaughltn va M: her husband, amee, stag· hlmPICWI, tnd bp1I l>ovtat I. 111 ,,.ndctllldrtn. , •l'lll1r•llOdll~,..., s~ to a ll'008n' store. k N ed ~~e;,;~.~n ~111,.~"·,.~11; bought a pack of cigarettes wee ot coion111 "OSTENDORF and then asked a neighbor Miidred 1· °'lenclOff, of Folly line. to take him to a hospital . siNTA ANA -Callfomia ::"~t>oo;t~:," b:~~v~.~v _so;(,le,t Police said Mrs. Laster Mosquito Control Week, July 1mt1!111 1urke 1nd .wivm1 W'oo.1u1r • ' stabbed her husband in the 1(.20, was · officially en· fr~h1,1~1t.~:ivt'O':'n,11et~rJ:-1 back with a butcher knife. dcned by the Board ot w"""'~itw. ,.. F•mMY CPlonl• Hi 1 ct d b t s·-·-•-~-k F11Mr11 liO!N;Jt!!~L01or1N. s une wa& p UD ure u .. ~.,UUI .. uiu wet , 1.,-vN lle is listed In satisfactory Tbe resolution wu ap-~~~·~.~~r:::m'.'stn-11.1: ~~Ii:. condition today at the proved at the reque1t of the Almll. 0.U!IMer. Ritt Burt of LlftY•I· Or•nae County Med l ca J Oran1g1e County M,,_.,ulto '-• Cllll., Incl Mllrlon Parktt pf ~°'°"" -•e 'VV'1 HI Mer. Soni Richar<:I. erotn.,, Center n.~ ~-~ Tll«Mt o1 M di. 1 1r1ncldlllclran. Ii;;:;;:;;:. :::;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;~;;:';;:w~;;:~;;:;;:';;:;;:;;:;;:"j\ ll-IY l'rl.i.. t _11.m. t i Our Lr; .,.., ot A11111t Ulllfcl!. Mau Sit, 1.m. l11-term111t Good MMPl\trd tm41tltr'Y. tr MPrtvtiry, CWOM dtl /Mr, di~ Dr. JCllSlllll su!~r~v~te 1trtl~1 ,.. •r•· Ju" s. e11u MOM"'"' cor· on1 Ot Mar, dlrecton. COZENS TEEN DANCE SUND ARI II'"!' h1pponlnt 1t THE MOOSE HALL Tonight 1°12 p.m. Glof11 F. C0111 n1. tl. ol 211•1'1 W~ OcHll l"ron!rt H""'1 llNCh. lurtlY ... ,~,., ............ w .• Arlllllr • D1ughl'lr P'Nrl E .-H1~1fl ol w~. 11tttt Loul11 8urn1. llrOfllln Ar1"11f ltld ThtOOOl'I, 1• Qflnddlt1clrlft, 3 ll'll~r1ndChlldrlft. Servklt l"r1. 2 J.m. 11 8111'1: ChtPll1, C0t-dtl Mir. 111ttrmenf P1tU~ Vin M""°'ltl ,111t, e11n MPrNerY. CorOlll HI IMr, llllrec- """ MANNIS Trt~ f . Mlnnl1, ot 7.SO! H1rl!D( •tvd.i COlll Mwt. krtl<11 tttndll'IV I WHkMff Mprtutry • SUNDARI -One of the newest grou111 around - the music they create is !resh, hard, clean and heavy. A combination of Soul Blues and Pop. BALTZ MORTUARIES Cenu del Mir OR :J.Hll Cosio Me11 MI f.SIU BELL BROADWAY • MORnIARY DIUMMll-lr• Ar9•1nf•1t IAllllT-D111nl• H1rri11n •UtTAl-11:111 P1nop1n• YOCAU-.W1yn1 S1b1n 111d l oll Cl1mlnt MOOll NALL '"" LMta awe -"'""""" .._. D....._-Sl .H 1Afe911·11 Get It" -4 ltl tMNJ UIBroati•li:i;'llMe .. ii'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~\ PACIYIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Morta1ry CUpel -Paelllc View Drhe Newport Bea9, CalUonala 144-noo PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME '1Ml Bol11 Ave. .WeolmlDller IC-3515 SMJTR'8 MORTUARY m Mila SI. _ Rallqloo Buell LE MSll W!8reLll'I' MORTUARY Cfl E. 1'1111 8t., Cotll Mell ··-WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARK Mortaory lo C.mer.ry CUpel1 14111 lndl, Westmt.ttet lilJ.172$ e ll:J.IID '• I 4 I See By Today's Want Ads • A couple of unique items. Htt"e"• a atained 1lua w i ndow •nd &n 1M1 Chlme clock! • Son1eone la 1ellh\a a self· propelled ro4IDr Jawn JnOIA.'• tt onb' 2 Yetn old. BHt o~ takell NIGHT .nd DAY SERVICE t:~ AM. TO 9;30 it.M,..-SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 PM. The Volcswae•n with the automalic sticlc llift. Used to be, Volkswagens .were enough to make IOme women Oiv9 / l up driving altogether. Acceltrotar up ••• dutch ln.,.lhlft ••• lu~ Very 1mbarra11lng. · That's why wo developed th• lurchlos1 Volkswagen. A bug thal'a\ equipped with an option wo co ll the automatic stick shift. It'• an out0matlc because thoro'w no dutth l?"lal to worry about. And because you can drive it around town all° day without shifting,' It's a sttc:k shift because it can alao be taken through the gean manually, just like a real Volk>wagen. (n,ar1 for you men.) And because at 1peed1 over 55 mph you can shift Into a higher, ~ drive-l'[pe gear to save on ~as . But ilie advantages aren I all practical. In the lady ~1 ~aal ai' feel mono like a woman. Bec:ouse the only shift~ hill io 1n11a about. 11 lhe one she's wearing. ' ~ ·• NIWPORT lllACH SAN JUAN CAPISTUNO HUNTINeTOM llACM Chick lv1r1or1, Inc. l ill Yet", Inc::. H•rlsow V•lbwe,_ 1116 N•wrort loulovarcl 32152 Voll• Ro•d 11111 I01ch ... 1....., 17 14 '7l.O•OO 17141 49'·2161 11141 141-4411 ~ -~ ..• • • • .. -. . ' . . -- • DAD.\' PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Cunnillgharu's Challenge SomeUmes !he auccess of a school syslem rests wilh the auperlntendent · And not ju.st because of the directions be gives his -staU. The confidence he inspires In !he public can be lhe..Secialve 1actor. Dr. William L. Cunningham, a comunlty-mlnded individual, thls week took ov~r as superintendent oC Newport-Mesa schools. He bas a reputation for being able to win public support for the school program. That certainly will be his Initial challenge al the helm of the Newport-Mesa Unified School District. It Isn't that the majority of the ~ayers and resi· dens of the two cities don't support their schools. They do . Alhough some of the issuts failed to receive tbe necessary two-thirds majority, Harbor Area citizens cast a resounding majority vote for their schools in last October's bond election. But not enough, not enough to finance the very real immediate needs of the district. Jf Cunningham can get the real message -the true needs -across, our local schools will have strong support from ALL of the community. Might Be a Good Idea A Costa Mesa taxpayer, John B. Meier, complained. in a letter to the edjtor last week that the Ciy Counci l and the ·DAILY PILOT both are guilty of misleading the public on the city's tax rate. l-Ie made the same assertion in an appearance be- fore the council Monday night. Mr. Meier has a point. ·The $1 tax rate for each $100 of assessed valuation -which both the DAILY PILOT and the council applauded -represent the entire tax rate paid for city services in Costa Mesa. Tacked on to that $1 are various smaller taJ: rates for libraties, Things That Kill Party's Spirit J"bougbt1 At Lar&e: Why some couples give good parties and others do-not bas more to do with their unconsclous state of mind than with guests or refreshments or en· tertainment or any other physical fa<;; tor ; for it Is anxiety, rigidity and fuss· ing over the mere appearance of Utlnga that kill a party's spirit, no matter bow ample the comestibles or how elaborate the decor. • • • A "pilot program" is given the name so that the organization sponsoring it can anticipate its failure without being held responsible for it. • • • JC a company hires only executive applicants cut from the same patttrn as its existing leaders, it is willfully throttling its opportunity to be in- novative -which, in modern technology, signifies the attrition that precedes corporate death. • • • Single people suffer unjustly under our present income tax laws; their ex- emptions are proportionately too small, whlle the exemptions for depen- dents are proportionately too great - because the needs in a household do nOt increase in direct proportion to the number of people in the household. • • • \Vhy do politicians make rash, and Inconsistent ," promises to different segments of the electorate? Because they know that people hear only what ~hey want to hear, and tune out what they are not interested in. • • • Most tyrannies arc the result of frUstratlons, accidental or otherwise: U Hitler bad been a successful painter, there would have been no put1ch; if Napoleon had been accepted by the Russian army in 1799 (which refused to give him the rank of ma- jor), there would hav,,. been no Austerlitz, and nD Waterloo. • • • The "second hand" in a clock is much more likely to be a little off than the minute hand or hour hand -and we might not be quite so critical of ''ephemeral" journalism if we look upon it as the second hand, with history as the minute hand, and philosophy as the hour hand -thus, journalism needs regular correction by history, and history needs constant interpretation by philosophy, if any are to make sense. • • • l\1any people have a s:tdly deficient idea of "maturity" -they imagine that adulthood constitutes a renun· elation of childhood, when actually it must Include and accept the good (and easily Jost) values of childhood, and build upon them. • • • Reformers who want to use the schools primarily to correct injustices. £:.Rd only secondarily to educate children. will find that under such con· ditlons the schools will be ablt.. to do neither. Hospitals' Higher Costs To t he Editor: I have a few remarks about hospitals and nursing homes thr.t 1 believe a Jot of folks will want to read. llospital beds are becoming more expensive, so they say. and the owners blame a lot of it on higher wages. I know of no better excuse for an in· crease than to blame the nurses for it and some lesser skilled help. J do not deny that costs have risen. Dul what I would like to know is why a room rented to my boy in 1942 or 1943 cost, I think, ~ or $10 0:nd was a non· profit and tax-free room. and the room riow rents for $43 a day and is still non-profit and tax-free. \\1lERE DID THE profits go on ::i;n increase of four to five ti.ones the 1943 prices? And we are told these room rents must rise. If l might get a little wall-eyed about it. I might auggest B f# George ---. Dear Georie: My boy friend i:s a new s photographer and a very nice guy but all ht thinks of ls his job. For instance, he look me bcnebact riding -the horse threw me·on a bridge and I land· eel in the river. ~ore he tven lbbed me out be took a picture of me. Do you think this was rlfbl? CONCERNED Dear Concerned: DecldedlJ not Rt should have laid, •'()ae more." (You always need a Nc~up sbot in an actlon iutuallall llb thaL) fM~· "°~' . . Lttttr1 from readtr1 ar~ welcome. Normally writtr1 should convey their me.uage1 in 300 word.I or Jess. The right to condense letters to fit space or elimina~ libeJ is reserved. AU let- ters mu.si include signature and mail· ing address. but names wilJ be with- heJd on rtquest. that Utese hospital operators are ask· ing for a large dose of communism and public ownership and operation of the hospitals. Jt happens that way. Just rob the public long enough and the public will rebel and let them have it as they have in a number of countries. \Ve had two new and very fine nur· sing homes open recently 1nd the going price is $450 per month for a four·bed ward. That js Sl.700 a month for a room -a pretty good take. I WONDER JUST HOW long a lot o( you folks could :tfford that price, plus extras. Sooner or later the govern· ment must step in because very few pe:ople can af!ord that price. If a couple had S4,<MXI or $5,CKMl 'laved up and a small home 01 trailer, and an income to get by. bow long do you think It wouJd take a nursing home to "'ipe them out? \Ve need insurance. government-con- trolled, to finance that expensive care, end 1 think It ls r.ot far off. . JAMES SYDER •lrttl lights and •ewer and trash collecUon. And Mr. Meler Is correct in notlng that $1 Is the legal llmlt for the general taa rate wlless the councU as"ks voters to Sf.prove a higher rate. But we don t believe the City Councll was trying to mlslead Its citizens. Certainly the DAILY PILOT was not. Our point was simply that the general tax rate re- ms.ins the same as last year and, thank heavens, it is one.property tax rate that hasn't gone up. The more interesting part of Mr. Meier's presenta- tion wa s a pitch tor Costa Mesa to adopt a city charter and thus become a ncbarter city." This may not be such a bad idea. Charter cities diller from general law cities in thal more rigid ~uide lines are established f0:r the city's operations. Jt·1s, in effect, a set of laws tailored for the specific use of that particular city. Newport Beach is a charter cttr. .and has found the system quite workable -although 1t cer- taihJy hasn't solved all of Newport's problems . Several City Council candidates. have spoken out for charter ~overnment, only to forget the issue as soon as the election is over. Perhaps it is time the council did an up-to-date study on thP. issue and brought it out for public analysis and discussion. Golf Course Signs Costa Mesa is proud, and rightly so, of its sprawling·, new 3~hole municipal golf course. It's quite an attrac· tive surprise along llarbor Boulevard to encounter a pleasant stretch of greenery. It would be a good idea to tell people how lo find the entr;ance. It's on a side ro1ad and hard to find . Signs on Harbor Bqulevard would help the situation. AJso, a ~olf Course sign on Adams pointing toward Mesa Verde 1s confusing to those looking for the Costa ?..1es<i golf course. c Max Rafferty ls Unfair~ High Noon i1t Orange County , ' Sophonioric l\fax Rafferty -the. Purrle i\1a~ - did a lot of bleating about the need to uphold the forces of law and .>rder during his successful campaign for the Republican senatorial nomination. At the same time he was doing his level best to undermine lhe U.S. Supreme Court with some of the \\'ildest r.ccusations unleashed since Joe McCarthy was fl inging reckless insults at Gen. George Marshall. OF COURSE, a slick demagogue like Rafferty can get a\~1ay with such puerile ranting. \Vhenever he accused the U.S. Supreme Court of harboring ''sociological reformers. ideological hacks and child·lnltrying mountain climbers'' -a line he must hr.ve repeated a thousand limes -his au- diences 'vould break up with laughter. Once the hilarity was {Iver , Ra!!erty Y.1ould go right on \Vith his sermon. saying how important it is for everybody to have respect for the la\V. \Yith this kind of forked-tongue hyPocrisy, he was given the nomina- tion over a thoroughly decent man, Thomas Kuchel, \VE DO NOT believe the U.S. Supreme Court is i1nmune t n criticism, any more than is the Presi· dent or Congress. It is ~n institution of government, run by mortal men who make no claim - as Rafferty does - to lnfallibllity. Its performance must be judged by other mortal men. There are critics of the court whose opinions we respect, although lVe hold to the view that history will rate the \Varren Court very hi gh indeed. These critics present cogent arguments in defense o! their positions. They do not harangue the court or slander it. They merely disagree with its opinions. B U T MAXWELL RAFFERTY'S vicious allac.ks on the court are more lhr.-n we can take, They are grossly un· fair and utterly sophomcric. They are the product of a mind incapable of grasping anything more complex than the nlultiplication tables. They are outright smears perpetrated by one of the most expert hucksters in the busi ness. To say that he lvould have voled against con!irmalion of any or ti1e justices now sitting on the U.S. Supreme Court is to s&-y that he would have turned his back on some cf the most brilliant men of this age and set· tied for mediocrity, a quaJity he doubtless appreciates. having been blessed with such an abundant supply himself. THE JUSTICES OF the U.S. Supreme Court do not deserve Jtaf. ferty's venomous barbs, whic h he passes off In the form of a joke. They are true defenders oI the Jaw , believ· ing -as Rafferty ddes not -lh::.t the Constitution should protect the rights of all citizens, not Just those who happen to be whltti1 Anglo-Saxon, Protestant and rich. Respect for the law can never be achieved If public officials like Raf. !e!rty go around bad-mouthing the courts wlU1 ridicule and slanderous personal attacks on tlle judges. Raf- ferty contributes to the breakdown of respect for the law eve.ry time h_e v!Uries the court. The least he could do ls quit tat.kine out of both sides of his mouth. The Daily CalUol'ftfaa ' Let the Lawmakers Know By NOR!\L\N NIXON, lit. D. .Just four · weeks ago m o st Americans were in mourning. Shocked by another Kennedy assassination, coming only a few n•eeks ..after the shooting of Martin Luther King, there was a spontaneous response of shock and guilt over the violence which permeates life in the United States. h1any realized something was "Tong "'ith our way of living. The notion of a "sick society" prevailed but there wa:r:: no precise definition of the causes of the sickness. Nearly everyone felt a need to do something. Hundreds of thousands of Americans wrote to their senators and congressmen in Washington, pleadi~~ for one obvious legal step -a ~un conb·ol law 'vilh teeth in it. But after t\\'O days of hearin'!s last week. the Senate Judiciary subcommittee voted to postpone action on all gun control measures until July 9th -an in- excusable stall. The senators must have seen the recent Harris Survey which reported that 81 out of every JOO Americans today want stronger gun laws , especially those re qui r in g registration of all firearm s. 110\VEVER, SOJ\1E disagree. in- cluding Bill Buckley's N a t i o n a I Review. the National Ririe Associa- tion. Robert We lch, Gov. Rea~an and Congressman Utt. Wrote Mr. Utt: "Gun laws have been misused by despots. They begin with regis tration. E\rery~ay < Probl~ms , , -·"""--;{.. :.£;;.~_, then taxation. then confiscation. Then a disarmed citizenry is at the mercy of men who may lack mercy. I will op- pose legislation which -could lead to confiscation of guns and to tbe overthrow of our government." Similarly. Gov. Reagan, \vho is OP· Posed to any form of gun registration. said : "If. by any chance, a Communist dictatorship takes over, the citizens v.:ill need them to fight back with." .Such muddled thinking does not reflect the feelin gs of most Americans today. OBVIOUSLY, mE United Slates cannot abolish private violence by laws or sanctions. But a resPonsible nation can insist that its federal and state lawmakers enact laws whlch will drastically reduce the availability of firearms. Robert Sherrill wrote in the New York Times last week: "lt is hlgh noor. on capitol hill ... the gun debate has produced few profiles in courage. many profiles in Politics." The same can be said of Sacramento and other state capitals. A responsible nation also will not continue to fill its air waves, movie screens and comic strips with ex- altations of violence and ir· resPonsibility. Yet violence on television continues unabci.ted with hundreds of killings , at t em pt e d murders, robberies, kidnappings and suicides, all enacted for our "en· tertainment" every week. And 11Bon· nie and Clyde," the year's box-office smash, still is glorifying bank rob'bery and murder as a cure for sexual im· potence -even though the trigger- happy outlaw pair finally get their come-uppance. ' RECENTLY A substantial number of actors. directors and producers pledged in a trade •paper ad- vertise ment not to lend their talents ''to add to the creation of a climate for murder. senseless brutality, aim· less cruelty. pointless and violent death." A noble ge_5ture, but tht Neil· son ratings and box-office receipts are the irrefutable guides. If the public wants violence in its intertainment it will sureli get it. It will not be easy -changing the current atmosphere of violence. Only one man pulled the assassin's trigger, but every one of µs must be resPonsi· ble for our words, our votes (or lack of them) and our actions for or against an atmosphere of violence. lt behooves us to let those who now govern in \Vashington and Sacramento (and those we will elect in November), as well as the tycoons in motion pictures and television, know exactly how we feel. F or it is hi gh noon in Orange County too ! Nixon's Political Come hack \Vt\SHINGTON -Richard 1'.1, Nix- on . having seen his prob ab I e Republican delegate strength rise above the nominating level. is now concentrating on getting elected in November. The rank·and-file favorite or his par. ty but not yet of the general elec· to~ate. has made no mistakes until now in his advance toward the presidential nomination. This is un- doubtedly the greatest political come· back of modern times considering the fact that Nixon's opPosition_ has '!1ot been inconsiderable. The alternative to Nixon was one of three leading Republicans who had been elected to offices Nixon could not capture, governors of their ov.·n states. Defeated for president and for governor of California, Nixon was to see Gov, George Romney of Michigan withdraw Go1/. Ronald Reagan never entered as a formal candidate, and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, oU!·~d-!n as a candidate and badly trailing in measurable delegate strength. ' THIS TELLS US something about tJie. Republican Party organization. It is essentially the same today as the Dear Gloomy Gus: This -tith of July "'eekend re· minds me that It took 175 years and all of our wars to kill a n1illion Americans. Tho automo- bile did the same thing In 50 years and will kill the: second m.Ullon In 18 years! -F. II. S. Tiii• ;..,..,,. ,.,~ .... tn" 'llewl Ml ...utUMl'f !MM ef .... '"°'""-· .... """ ... "'"" " •'-"' on. o.11J 1"1:.t. organization which nominated Barry Goldwater in 1964 but moderately chastened by the disastrous results of that nomination. The organization moved tO\\'ard Nixon out of fears that Reagan v.:ould be another Goldwater and in an attempt to placate the moderates and liberals of the party who favored Rockefeller. Nixon "'as in this sense a com- promise. Although h.e is not a doc· trinaire conservative he has taken on the coloration of one . certainly in con- trast to the prospective Democratic nominee. Nixon's problem is difficult and hvn- fold . He must awaken the Interest of the modqate11 and progressives of the Republican Party on the one hand. and in a degree sufficient to attract some dissident northern Democrats. lle must also reclaim the southern con- servative Democrats who 11ITavltate lo George C. Wallace and threaten to destroy Nixon's chance to win southern electoral votes. \VALLACE. AT TRE moment, is the greater nemesis. The national publlc opinion Polls show that \Valh11ce sub- tracts from NiJl'.on's polentiil. 1'hi s may not hold stato.by-state. ibul the general pattern has to be alarming to Nixon strateglst.11. In 1960 when Nixon ran against John F.· Kennedy he carrlt'd Alabama, Arkansas. Florld1, KI!: n t u c k r , Oklahoma, Tennessee. Vlr,z:inia "'h!le eight unpledged electors in Mio;sis~ipni voted for the late Sen. llarry F . Ryrd. Sr. Electoral votes in these states totaled 71. Somt surveys now su~l(est that, In a three-way race with lluhtrt H 11umohrey and \Vallace in ~uthern st;tes. \Yallace would draw off entiul{h votes to bring in Nixon last and liumphrey flrst by a narrow margin . Tll E POSSIBLITY llAS In he -measured. therefore, that WaUace wilt deny to Nixon southern states whJch he. might carry if \Vallace were not a candidate. 6n the other h a n d , Humphrey Is leading, according to the Harris Poll, among 1ow income groups in the North , including the white back lash groups which might be expected to respond to the Wallace candidacy. Nixon is thus not benefiting enough in the North from the defection or Democrats to the \Vallace ticket. It is difficult to see what Nixon can do to change this situation without alienating those elements who con· sider him best qualified among the available candidates and intend to vote for him for that reason alone. Rockefeller has found Nixon.' s vulnerability on this point by ex· ploiting the statement of Nixon's southern leader Uiat Wallace ought to be supporting Nixon. IF SEN. EUGENE McCARTHY were to be entered as an independent candidate the problem would become even more comples. --iEEI- Friday, July 5, 1968 Tht editorial poae of the Daily P.ilot seekt to infonn and 1lim.- ulaU readtrl by prtstnting this newrpaptr'1 opiniom and com- mtntary on Wpicr of interest and sfgnt/icance, by providing a fOTum -for l.lu!' expression of our readers' opiniom. and by presenting th1 diverse tiitto- points of informtd ob.servers and spoktsmen on topics of &he doy. Robert N. \Veed, Publisher I i.l;;e1=a--.ic::;,;;;;;;.. ________ iiii _____ .._~-~~~----------------------------- I I --------------------------~-~--------.... ---......... .,.....~~~---~~------------,_.-....., BY WILLIAM REED Reeclls ••• In the Wincl 01' Greasy Murphy dropped in this morning kind of sad and droopy, like be had lost bis last oil well or that Herb Day bad caught up with him and made him do some cleaning of the rig. "It's seein' the parade again, winding its way through the down- town and back to Lake Park and w oblivion. Same thing is happen- tn' to the ol' downtown and I think it's sad. "I know all the young bomebuy- ers of Gospel Swamp are runnin' things today and I only h<>pe they'll have mercy on us poor old tim- ers." * Greasy looked as though he was lbout to be led away to the wall .1nd firing squad. I guessed the old oilman was talking about the City Council deciding tO move the civic center from the present loca- tion to about a mile away across Main Street from the }ijgh School. "We s h o u I d of fought a littJe harder a few years ago when there was more of us real "'Huntington Beachers than there was of them tractlanders. If we had only voted a~ainst all those annexations. "First they come in here and build all them houses, then grocery stores and shopping centers,. not right in..Jiuntington Beach, mind you, but way out there near Main Street and Beach Boulevard. Now they a re takin' our Civic Center away. What are we, the real citi- zens of the city, to do without a civic center? * "I'm not buyin' all the talk about signing petitions so as to take the old downtown out of the city because we are the city and you can't take Huntington Beach away from us and vice versa. "All in the world we wanted,was for you people out there to leave -us alone, to let us have our civic center and to keep your schools away from us. "Huntington Beach will be ruined by movin' the Civic Center way out there by the edge of the city. Why can't those tractlanders re- member who's city this really is and just pay their taxes silenUy·?'' Poor 01' Greasy, it's all been too much for him. W ommt Enters Guilty P'lea In Manslaughter . A 39-year-old woman wbo sbOt her Garden Grove police sergeant husband to death last April 7 Wednesda~ plead- ed guilty to involuntary manslaughter. Mrs. Eisie Wichman was scheduled for jury trial before Superior Judge William C. Speini. Her sudden plf:a circumvented a murder charge which the judge will dismiss at her probatioo hearing on July 25. The district attomey's office agreed to the amended complaint. Involuntary manslaughter is purllshable by 1·15 years in prison. A probation hearing and sentencing will be the schedule !or the July ,25 session. According to police reports, Mrs. Wichman shot her 38-year-old hus- band, a 10-year veteran of the police force, following a pre· dawn quarrel on Sunlay, April 17. She fired two shots from Wichman's police revolver into his chest. Dean Rusk Planning Long Weekend Rest WASHINGTON (UPI) -On the ad· viCf: of his doctors, Secretary o( State nean r.usk plans to take a "long \VE"ekend over the 4th of July holiday.'' l he secretary, who spends little 'ime away from his desk, has been offering from a low-grade fever o( , ndetermined origin. "CRUISE TO NOWHERE" -Members of Ocean View Little League Women's Auxiliary ar~ shown taking reservations and selling tickets for the cruise July 26. They are (Jeft to right), Mrs. George Mattas, Mrs. C. W. Phipps, Mrs. Jack Butcher and ..,. Mrs. A. Arndt. New Gold Rr.1sh? Coins Found in Colorado Rockies DENVER (UPI) -Gold. in the form Of $20 coins. has been found in the Colorado Rockies west of Denver and hopes for more has brought gold fever to some in the state. Rolland Osborne, head of the U.S. Secret Service in Denver, said Monday a Denver couple hunting for r ocks near Jamestown found a cache of 175 $20 gold pieces under a rock. The face value of the coins would be $3,500, but .Present market values of such coins would proba,bly push their value muclt higher. ~ Osborne said the couple, w)lom he refused to identify to proteCt Utem from harassment, would be able to keep ttie coins if no one was able to prove ownership within 3(), days. The coins. found Saturday. were located about five miles from the place a H>-year-old Jamestown boy found a similar cache of gold coins two years ago. The coins were found in a pile of rocks near Overland Pass. The boy was allowed to keep the coins . ,,.. .. Osborne said the coins apparently had been there for some time in- dicating someone buried them when the government was calling in gold pieces. Marines Taking Heaviest Casualties in Viet War WASHINGTON (AP) The Marines are taking much heavier casualties proportionately than the other U.S. armed services in the Viet- nam war. Marines have suffered about one- third of .the combat killed and wound- ed although numbering less than 14 percent of the total 615,000-man U. S. troop commitment in Southeast Asia. The Anny has lost more dead and wounded than tihe Marines -but has more than four times as many men in· volved in the war. The Air Force and Navy have been hit lightly compared with tale Marines and Army troops which carry the brunt of the ground war. Pentagon officials said the Marines have a bigger slice 0£ their force available for battle than the Army because they are furnished supply and oter support by the Navy and, to oUler support by the Navy and, to fiome extent, by the ·Army. The Army supp<>rts its own combat troops, as well as manning huge depots and other rear e c h e I o n facilities . As of June 22 , the United States had lost 25,367 killed in combat and 157,517 wounded. The Marines suffered 8,445, or 33 percent, killed and 55,480, or 35 per- cent, wounded. The Army sustained 15,545, 61 pe<- cent, of the batUe deaths and 94,964, or 60 pertenl, of the wounded. Principal Won't Forget This Busy School Year Anoth~r school year has ended for Dr. Thomas C. Dyer, school principal. He won 't forget this one. Oyer, a Newport Beach resident, is principal of Roosevelt High School in Los Angeles where this spring 150 students walked off of campus and engaged in a brief clash with police. Dyer was caught up in the middle or the "brown power" revolt that shook four eastside Los Angeles high schools in March. CAIJCASlAN S'l'AFF- Roosevelt High School is 80 percent Mexican-American, 10 percent Negro and 10 percent Japanese with a handful of whites. The teaching staff is predominantly Caucasian. Reflecting at his Newport Beach home, 2451 Marino Drive, oo the trou- ble, Dyer said he tried himself and ad· vised his teachers not to overreact. He believes the restraint they used had a cooling ef!ect on ~ students. "Most of the students, I felt, kept a v_ery level head about the whole thing," tie said. We had a high degree of absen- teeism for awhile. The young people didn't know quite how to handle it. "At the end Of the semester things were quite normal and we had a nice commencefnel;K.'' The 56-year-old principal said the lasting effect Of the "blow out," as the students called it, is an increased in- terest in eduCation among adults of the Mexican-American communities. GRIEVANCES The student walkouts and demonstrations spotlighted grievances including not enough Mex i c a n - American teadlers and too many students per class. Little Leaguers' Mothers Planning 'Nowl1ere Cruise' A "Cruise To Nowtl.ere" is being sponsored by the Ocean View Littll}. League Women's Auxiliary Friday, July 26. With ball games over sh«tly the auxiliary invites league parents to take a moonlight cruise (to nowhere) aboard the Magic Isle. The cruise will tour the harbor and the Long Beach shore line: Boardin~ time at the Catalina Terminal will be at 8:30 p.m . and departure will be Bt 9:15 p.m. The Magic Isle will return at 1:30 a.m . Snacks, dancing and a sing along will be. featW'ed on the evening cruise. Reservations are $5 and may be ob- tained by phoning Mrs. Jack Butcher at 842-1066 or Mrs. George Mattas at 847-4987. The public rqay make reservations: after July 15. Contract Given By Seal Beach For Water Works The Seal Beach City Council has awarded a $597,418 contract ror ex- tensive water works development despite objections from the second lowest bidder. The contract was awarded to G u n ther·Shirley-Penn Construction Co., Baldi,yin Park. The second lowest bidder, Sanitary Pipeline Co., protested the contract on the ground of lack of qualification of the winning bidder. Council members voted in favor of the low bidder following two hastily called closed-door sessions . Attorney Laurence A. Pe t er s , representing sM.itary Pipeline, argued that qualifications to perform certain aspects of the complicated engineering construction job should be regarded as inadequate. as presented by the con- tract awardee. The cguncil held that presentation of data by the Baldwin Park group was in accordance with current ~ractice. Lee Risner. city manager, said the augmented YMter system will add a 3,000,000·gallon capacity to the present city water supply. Included in the job are repairs to existing mains. laying of new lines and construction o f reservoirs and pumping stations. Contract completion time is set foc eight months. Approach Zone Law Extended Vintag~ Fraud The walkout from Roosevelt was sparked from out6:ide . MJUtant young men, including some who called themse1ves Brown Berets, urged the students to walk off campus. An emergency ordinance establishin' approach zones to Orange Counl\Y Airport was extended for one year Wednesday by the Board of Supervisors. Wine Made Witlwut Grapes? ASCOL! PICl!lNO, 11>oly (UPI) - The govennnent says Brum Ferrari. 65. has broken the Jaw. Italian wine producers say what's worae. be bas undermined the world's f.aith in Italian wines. . . , Ferrari is accused of selUng milliOnl al • bottles of wine made wttbout gNtpes. Altogether 188 persons have beet\ charg<d with fraud , tax and food law violations. Among those accused are Fenari'a: sons, Giuseppe and Gl.-- carlo. Alroody, thJ pmtill lrorucripl ls 3,00J pages long and 955 witnesses are ready to give evidence. The defen· dantl hG.ve 83 defense lawyers. The prosecution says many ol the bottles u:ported by FerTQl'i were labeltd dllonU, 1M best 'knoWn ltsllan wine emong foreigners. Fenwt -p-.:ing IVs 19ke wine. 10 years ago, the ~ent say&, making it with a mtxture ol glyeerine, ammonia, potassium, fer· rocyanlde, dregs o< pres<od grapeo, citric acid and AD unidentified ''putrl· lying liquid." When the students massed at the fence one noon, Dyer ordered the gate open so no one would get hurt. About 150 studt!llts weot through but the rest returned to the school building. Many ol those who left returned the same day. Some of the student leaders came to him and he talked to them for three boors in his office. Telling them he had been working for them all along, bul'it takes time and money, he got them to temper tbeU-demands - knock out swimmMg pools and uk for better reading ln1tructJ.on. Then he invited e congrM1man and a member of tile board of education to speak together witb th• wtUcout leaders et a school a11sembly. L------------·-~=~---~""-""_,.. __ ~------------------------ ~ The ordinanct outlines h e i g b t regulations for buildings or other structure& such as: radio or television. transmitting towers in the cone- shaped approach zones both north and sOuth of ttle airport. The regulatk:lns art identical to the Federal A vlation Agency rules for ap- proaches to all airportl with runways ·over 3,200 feet in length. Structure heigh.ta are limited to one loot In height U> every ilO feet ol distance from the end of the runway, up to 10,CX'.K> fe61., and 40 feet for every loot for an addltiooll 40,000 feet. BuildlnC• out of· iM -h cone are oot Umlted In httaht. An example ii ll>e muJU-1wried hotel near the Los Angeles Int~I AUi>ort. \ Friday, JiJTy 5, 1968 DAILY PILOT J Effort Pays Ott Dropouts Drop · •• At Westminster . 'lly ANNETTE MOON Of ... 0.llf Pllet Sttff Dtopo\11< at Wesunln<ter High School have been on the decrease for the school year which just ended. The decreese is attributed in part to a concerted effort on the part of the profegsional staff to "keep students in school" and the "holdlng power" of the school's curricuiwn. Westmimter's tabulated dropout rate is only 3.6 percent, as compared to the average 17 percent dropout rate in Orange County. 1be national dropout rate is 30 to 40 percent. One of the factors of the low dropout percentage, school authorities say, is the advantage or the counselor-student ratio or 400 to 1. The high school administration and faculty have been awafe of the com- puter age ..Utucle 1llat tile olude!ll feell be it jutt a number. .,.,,. -~ Thertfore the school has strived to ~nt a strong academic program coui)led with stude~·government, club activity and rthletic compe(itior1i to provide students with 1 meaningful outlets · and at the same time satisfy the need for recognition. The 3,000 Westminster high school students have chosen "The Year of Scholan and Champions" u their motto for the forthcoming year. For those who do drop out, there ls a second chanct at Wintersburg High School, newly dedicated continuation school fa cility. The s c b o o I ac- commodC)ted 50 students from the Westminster attendance area with a §>eeialized part-day s c boo l ex· perience. • * * * * * * Why Youths Drop Out Here's a b'reakdown on reasons why 523 youngsters dropped high school classes as prepared by Westminster High School. Freshman Sophomore Junior Senior Administrative drop Adult Education Continuation School Graduate (mld·yee.r) Home Student Juvenile Hall. Marriage Boys · Girl1 Boys Girls Boys Glrll Boys Glrlt 86 109 97 1210 00 00 00 54 11 4 8 6 8 0 12 1 oo 00 00 916 l3 23 18 17 11 01 20 00 Move-out of state Move-within Calif. Transf~within Dist. Military Service Work 01 OJ 0-4 04 16 16 14 17 7 15 12 8 3432 2530 1713 9U 87 63 24 23 00 20 40 80 20 20 20 31 Total (Girls) 258 Total (Boys) 265 Grand total 523 72 70 total 142 69 72 total 141 52 51 toUl 103 72 85 tutaI 137 AustralianMob Tries ... To Storm U.S. Embassy MELBOURNE, Australia (UPI) - A mob of about 1,500 anti-American demonstrators Thursday attempted to storm and burn the U.S. Consulate, smashing every Window in the frorit of theb uiJding befoce mounted policll: Col'lege Applies For U.S. Money Orange Coast Junior College District has applied for federal funds to finance a program to train instructors to teach electronic data processing. The program, to cost $320,345 for three years, will consist of six-week sessions each summer. The district trustees also approved applying for an additional $170,424 in federal money to back two other pro- jects. Purpose of one iroject, at a cost of $20,424, is to train sophomore students to aid counselors in helping odler students select courses. 1be other, to cost SlS0,000 for three years, involves training teachers to Ute effectively in· structional media materiais. Wall Golltfl Vp drove them away. Police confisticated. aix one1(allon bottles of gasoline and tei-osen1 which demonstrators appart!nP,Y tmnded to burn down tbe consulate. More than eo persons were .ureal and many others were .injured in ricJ6o. ing by students. Trade unionista and anti-Vietnam organizations during tbe day. The violence coincided with U.S. Jn. dependenee Day commem«at:IUll Jn this Australian city. , Students marched on the CODIUlilD in commercial road to preeent an an. ti-Vietnam petition and a call wu sent out for police reinlorcementa when the mob swelled to 8bout 1,500. The demonstrators began stoning the consulate and mounted and foot polic• men were injured, the windDw8 in four police cars were smubed and mnoke bombs and firecrasckers were hurled by the rioters. One demorwtrator threw a red paint bomb wlllch opat, tered over the steps of the con.sulate. Police finally scattered the dempn- strators but they regrouped md marched lhruogti the sir-U> police headquarters to demand the releue ol all arreited students. When ~de­ mand was refuoed, fighting -. mt again. A crane ~ • w.11 of Goldett Welt College'• new technology llW· ' Ille building into ~i:..oo as the $391, 732 project geu into full 1wtni on the Huntlncton camptJJ. ~ . ~ • I f I l I • DAILY l'ILOT '~ --Deir,.... ·-Police Chief J. C. Goodm•n Jr.,, ~ tliree BB guns at a recent police: J1ucJ;911 in ebarlotte, N.C.; and• ordered them broken. "II wOuld be pretty embarrassing for US•ll cblldreil caught sh00\1111 oui wihdows or pierctni a playmate's eye 'Were to say Uiat they bad ob- -·the guo from the police de- partment," he said. 1 _, ·, --· Hugo Vihlen, airlines pilot who just recently sailed across the Atlantic in a sU ·foot boot, ger... fitted with a faUe beard for television appearances in fl-fiami Reach. Hair stylist Ruth Regina replaces the beard that Vihlen shat:· ed off. after ~is homecoming f rom. Casablanca. • A few days ago, Joe Douglas, 52, of Topeka, Kan., found a billiold containing $128 on a downtown street. The billfold belonged to Ray Hudson, 78, a retired man who said the money was all he ~had to live on for a month. Hudson gave Doug- las a $5 reward. Since then, Doug- las, father of seven and g uardia n of an eighth, has received ·20 let- ters' containing rewards totaling $63. ln addition, he was given $116 by a Topeka physician whom Doug- las waited on at ~ COµJ].try . cJub .. • Singer Rosemary Clooney an- nowiced. today that she would re- tire at the end of her present en- gagement at a club in Reno. Nev., on July 25. She said she planhed to ··become a "full-time mother to my: five chl!dren. "· Miss Clooney. 40,: was iformerly married to actor Jo~'-Ferrer. i .Tiu Ronlonkonw. Volunte~ i Fire Department of New York WG3 .-p ractici11g water r'(?6cues re- cently when it had to call in the ' Suffolk County police res cue ! helicopter to save three of it.s me-n. The volunteers were dumped into th~ water as they sttuggled to pull their "victim'' 't · into their nnaU boat. ' c..-,!!l?,l ... -·~ ,_ ..:. 9f!,J°':-J."'~ • The greater Reno Chamber of Commerce has announced that O.nny Thomas has been named to receive the Third .4..nnual Gover- nor's Trophy as ''The performer who has, made outstanding contri- butions to Nevada's fame as the entertainment mecca of the world." Thomas ~·ill receive the award July 14 at Ule Chamber's 65th an- nual dinner. Previous winners were Jimmy Durante and Sammy Davis Jr. Police Use Gas Barrage. ~ ' To End Riot PATERSON, .N.J. (UPI) -Police using te"ar gas early today broke up bands of Puerto Rican and Negro youths who roamed the city 1mashing windows, emptying garbage cans and hurling missiles at patrolmen. No injuries were reported in t.he disorders involving gangs numbering ftoin 10 .to 200. About 800 persons participated in the di sturbances. Police aJTested 21 persons on charges of disorderly conduct. Six policemen have been lnjured, in· eluding two seriouslY enough to be relieved from duty, since Monday, the first oI a tour night series of disturbance_,. Eighty-four were arrested and about 20 injured in the previ ous three nights. 'Ille latest actioo started about sun· ·down Thursday aiid raged a~nd the city until early thiS morning. * * * Minneapolis Hit By Firehombings MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (AP) -Fil- teen persmli were injured and five youths held by police when three firebombings, window-breaking and other· vandalism broke out on the city's. South Side as a climax to a fireworks shootoff Thursday night. Police said more than 100 youths - most of them Negroes -took part in the disturbance near Powderhom Parlt. where the city fires off a tradi- tional display to cap tbe Independence Day Celebration. Police confiscated a crate or fire- bombs . * * * Memphis Police Ouell Incident MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UPI) -A crowd of 40-50 Negroes formed on i street Thursday night when two policemen broke up a fight between two Negroes outside a cafe. , Police reinforcements rushed to the . scent. and dispened the group with lit- Ue commotion. A bottle -apparently thrown at a police cruiser -struck a private car but caused no damage. police said. one of the fightet6, Jes1ie .James Neely .. 21 , was arrested and charged wittJ disorderly conduct. resisting ar· rest and assault and battery. Th.e Incident, ha~ed in a Negro neighborhood. Greyhound Skids, Flips; 26 Hurt 'MACON, Ga . (-UPI) -A Greyhound bus. en route from Chicago to Miami, overturned on a: rainslick highway Thursday night, injuring 26 o{ the passengers. Authorities said two or thrl?f: of the injured persons were in serious con - dition. They were taken to Macon • hospitals. The bus driver. William Parks. of Ohattanooga, Tenn., said the accident happened when he came to an in· tersection on Georgia Highway 87. about 10 miles north of Macon. Parks,. who was not hurt, said the brakes apparently locked and the engine went dead. The vehi cle skidded and overturned .into a field . Parks said the bus had stopped in Atlanta and was kl stop again in Macon. ' • U .. I T1~11t11 TOGETHERNESS PLEDGED -The 10 children of 1'1r. an·d Mrs. Robert G. MoITis, of Madera, Calif., were orphaned when their parents were killed in an auto accident July 2. The children have vowed they will not be separated. In this photo taken Thurs· day are: JudY. 16; •Kathleen, 17: and Edward, 3 in front. Rear are Michael, 10; Jeffrey, 8; Linda 15; Carole, 14 ; twins Robert and Roberta, 11; 'and ·nieresa, 12. Re1i1ain a Family 10 Orphaned Children Pledged to Stay Together MADERA (UPI ) -"We want to ·stay together. Father. Don't let them separate us." That, said the Rev. Salvatore Ben· tivegena Thursday, was the tearful · plea from the 10 orphaned children of Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Morris, killed Tuesday night in a headon collision. Relatives, parishioners at S t . Joachim's Catholic Church an d residents of this town of 16,000 are doing what they can to make the children's dream come true. •·we are al close," said Judy. 16. a pretty. darkhaired high school junior. , "'That's why we all want to stay together.'' While arrangements were being made for today's funeral. the town mobilized to see the children are not separated. ''Everyone"s goal is to keep them together any way we can,"' said their aunt. Mary Lachawicz of Fresno. The children. who range in age from 3 to 17, learned Tuesday night that their parents had just been killed in. a four-car crash caused by a car headed the wrong way on a freeway. The driver of the wrong-way car was charged with drWlken driving and manslaugtitei:. have overwhelmed the rami\y with of- fers to assist in many ways. ''There's no telling hOw much money has been received· by the bank - "there's a whole stack of letters there.'' sai"cf one Maderan. "AU of them are rea,1 smart kids,'' • said their aunt. ··we've always been proud of them. They are very responsible children, In school. they are all outstanding and they are con- stantly involved in activities. "They've always been a very close- knit family." 7 Children Die When Boat Flips LAKE WALES. Fla. (AP) -Seven ehlldr.en on a holiday outing and a man who was giving them a boati"ide . drowned Thursday when their 12-toot outboard flipped over, hurling them in· to Lake Easy about five miles south ol here. The only survivor was an 11-year-old girl who clung lo the overturned ~~ and wu rescued by a vacatiorung deputy sberi!f. "When the first car got there, the families of the kids were wading around in the water, crying and searching for'bodies," said Capt Earl Branch o1 the Polk County sheriff's department. "None of them. cotild swim." The families were malting an all-day ·Fourth of July outing of il. said a nearby cottage qwner. "They had set up their picnic stiilf early in the morn· ing.·· Branch said William Harrell. 3.5, of Lake Wales, loaded the eight children into lhe boat for a ride around the small lake. ' . Raymond Parks of Winter Haven &aid he was fi_fhing nearby when the boat started sWinging toward tbe pie· nic site on the bank. He said the boat rolled over in the middle of the turn, pitching its cargo · of children into 15 feet of water about 100 yards from shore. The bod¥!s were recovered dtrlng a three-hour search by divers and men in boats with grappling hooks. The dead were listed as HllTeD, Belinda Clay, 12, and her 14-year-old sister, Cynthia, of Lakeland; their cousin, Jimmie Elaine Clay, 9, and Sheila Jennings, 8, Carolyn Jones, 11, Cynthia Jackson, 7, and Rhonda Tucker, 10, all of Lake Wales. WESTCUFF SHOPPING CENTt:R 4'<".r ?czl.<',,. MARINERS SAVINGS Relatives asked that the children. who remained in the famil)'.'s yellow frame house just a block from the Madera Union High School four of tile girls attend. not be interviewed. Since the accident. the tree-lined street has be.en lined with cars of friends and neighbors wanting tQ help. &rarinera 8.avin9a AND LOAN ASSOCIATION @ The children are Kathleen, 17, Judy, 16; Linda, 15; Carole, 14; Theresa , 12; twins Robert and Roberta, 11 ; ~1ichael. 10 ; Jeffrey-. 8: and Edward, 3 . "Nothing has been done legally yet.'' said Miss Lachawicz. ··somebody will have to be their legal guardian. but nothing has been decided yet. I can't say right oow what will be done." Already the children have offers to live with relatives in New Jersey. Con· cord. Calif., and Fresno. A man in the foothlll community of Twain Harte. Calif., has offered them a seven-room hou se. In Made~. a trust has been set up in the name of the "Robert Morris Family" at the local bank Maderans 'NESTCT.IFF at DOVER• NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. 92663 • (7'14 ) 642-4000 "' •o-00 master charge Baseball Shoes • In Pea Soup Pantry: Fog Tennis ,., Everyone Wilson • Dunlop • Davis • Bancroft Jr. Rakets -·4.95 & 12.95 Adult Rackets -6.95 to 50.00 Dresse' 13.00 & 14.95 Men's Shorts 4.95 to 13.95 Men's Shirts 5.00 Shirts • • Balls Caps • Sox • Bats •-Mitts • Handball Gloves • I Handballs • Volleyballs e Heavy Smog Warnings Out in L.A. Basin Callfo,...la Temperatures • " .\!11nl1 RakerJll~ld !l~marck lkll•t 8001,,.. Cllltoto Cl'1COnnotl Clf\leland Denver D" Mohlf•I O.trott • E11r8.o Fort Wortll .. _ HtleM 14-IUIU "''"'' IC1ni..1 C!tv L11 '11111 Loo A""e~ Mltml ,..lwwlo;H Ml1WMWOli1 New°''""' ""' YOf'll Olklall(I ....... ,. • .., lloblet Pll!ltdelltl'llt ......... Ptttsbllnil'I Portla/llCI 1t•l>ld c""' ll:H llvn .. ~ .s.cromenle 51. Louil S.NM1 S.11 Ukt Cit¥ Sen oi- s.11 Franc1'°' $1ftl1 JI.NI $111!1 lorblrt ...... -·~ ""'""" W1"1111tHIR Nloll Lew .. ,... » .. " " .. '" .. " " " ., . .., . " " B " n " " .. .. . .. . " " .., lOJ ,, ., 51 .. " . " " " '~ . " " M '° 17-S1 . " M " " ., " " a ., •M B " " .. " n • " .. ~ » IOI 1' ..... lot ,, ... ... " .. " " ~ ... " " " ... n " iif !! ·" "' "' \ Men's Tennis Shoes-7.75 & 8.95 Ladies' Tennis Shoes -7.25 WILSON Tennis Balls-Can of 3/1.89 PINNSTLYAHIA , ' Tennis Balls -Can of 3/1.76 Raleigh Bikes Parts -Tires -Tubes Bike Repairing Table Tennis Sets Paddles -Bans -Nets Shuffleboard Sets -16.95 Horseshoe Sets-8.95-11.95 Badminton Sets-9.95 / --- Soccer Balls e Basketballs • 4 Square Balls • Croquet Sets • Boxing Gloves • Punching 1 Bags • Stop Watches •• W~!J 37 ~ .. -i"l'WIW JL..ESWWW Swim Fins -Masks Snorkles Voit Duckfeet Fins -8.95 pr. Blemish Duckfeet ..:... 6. 9S pr. Snorkles -95c-1.9S-2.95 Masks-95c to 11.95 Swim Trunks-3.95 to 6.95 .....,. Racing Suits -6.75 to 9.95 Racing Swim Caps-1.SO • \ French Franc Slim.s a la Twiggy PARIS IUPll In France a gaUon ol gasoline cost.a Sl or more today and i1.1 going up. The national economy ii running &CVed. President Charles de Gaulle recently triumphed over a 10-million man strike. the Communist ~rty and rebel student11 . 1'1td a y ' s Frencll crislll is ln the pocketbook. The bankers talk · In big pictures -gold reserves falling, bank interest rates rising. But unlucky little Pierre looks at the ri!:ing C0!5t 'o( a haircut, a sleeping car berth to the Riviera vacation and -no small beef in France -a glass of table wine. -French officials said De Gaulle's government I 1 determined to live up to it& pledges not to devalue the franc. And that is the heart ol the matter. Devaluati.oc -now a:bout five francs equal •t -~uld strike French prestige and wipe out much o( the recent salary hikes. In the past 10 years, De Gaulle painfully, proudly built up its stores ol gold and foreign exchange cur- rencies. Once a postwar economic sickman, France ~y the e~d of May had '6.4 billion in Bank of France reserves. Then the trouble came. The big strike resulted in big wage increases. ll also wall~ industry with lost production and the cost ot the PIY boosts. In London, Zurich. and ottler world banklng center1, financiers reckoned the new look in Paris' france was more Twiggy than Anita Ekberg. Th"ey began selling francs, figuring boom was giving w'ay to bust in France. De Gil\llle ha' had already to shell out tl.3 billion in gold reserves to pay off the franc sellers and the end is not in sighL De Gaulle raised bank in- terest rates from 3.5 to 5 per cent in order to keep foreign money from fleeing France. No French govern· ment had done such a thing since prewar depression days. No one appeared sure SHOE SALE NOW 'IN P80GRESS Good Sefection in Men's, Women 's and Children 's Shoes from our famous brands. ~ 183 1 NEWPORT BLVD ,• COSTA MESA• Phone 548-9744 Portrait of a happy saver. CITY COUNCILMAN WILLIAM L. ST. CLAI R Bill St. Clair was elected to the City Council or Costa Mesa in April '6$. A product of 1he Costa Mesa/Newport Beach school system. Bill's ca~er has ranged from barbering lo ulcs and managemen t work. construc1ion engineer- ing and real estate in~lmcnts. ,Active in Boy Scouting, Rotary and 1hc American Legion, Bill is also Orange County Blood Chairman for the American Red Cross, a director of Cos1a Mesa Tomorrow, )nc. and a member of the Beautifications Commiuce of !he Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. Bill says: "AJ one wltn ltas fong bN!ll l'oncerntd abo11t lltc fi1t11rt! ••• that of Costa Mesa, n1yst!I/ and conring gtnerations •.• /'1•t /1elMdst!curc 111y future by placing sal'ings in Wilshire Fedtrol Sai'inzs, trhere they 'H'ork for 1ne by earn- irrr the hi'ghest insurtd rate possible." Funds received by the 10th of the month earn from the lst ... after tht 10th from the date of tKelpt. 5% becomes 5JAi % when compounded da ily alid held for• year. S.vin1s Insured to $15,000 by the Federal Savlnas anel Loan Insurance Corpora· tlon. Bonus: E•rn en e1tr• 1;. % on a 36-mon01 Certifieate Account In mult1pln of $1.000. ·1833 Newport Boulevard near Harbor• Cotti Mesa, C.liforn la • 642·4711 Hom• Offict ; Lot A1'ttl1t • I •• even that would work. French stockJ have been falling in exchanges aro11nd the world. De Gaulle only weeks ago had been scolding the United States and Bri- tain about their allegedly weak currencies, the dollar and the pound. Now the franc was under attack. He has taken more defEnsive measures. Reluctantl y his common market partners West Germany, Italy, Holland, Btlt!um and Luxembourg - are allowing De Gaulle to throw up protecti\·e tariffs to prote(:t his weakened economy. 1:he com m o n market was to have become this week one t.lg open market -no real tariff bar- riers at the border.s. liis partners were preSSJng Q Gaulle to be done with these temporary tariffs by year's end. Nasser in Mosc ow On Midea st Cri sis MOSCOW (UPI ) Kremlin leaders and Egyp- tian President Gam.il Abdel Nasser began talks today on the MK:ldle East crisis. Diplomatic J1nurces spe<:ulated the Soviet Unio n would ask lhe Arab leader to knuckle t1nde!" to certain Israeli demands for a set- tlement. The Kremlin may sui}:rest Nasser-make cert a i n unspecified territorial "ad- justments" with Israel as a step toward a viable peact, these sources said. if he ex,- pects increased Soviet ai~. Nasser and his t o p mil;tary adv\ser11 met with the Soviet Union 's ruling Troika -Communist party chief Leonid I. Brezhnev, President Nikolai Podgorny and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin -in Kremlin con- ferences scheduled to last all day. Both Kosygin and ~gyp· tian Foreign M i n i s t er Mahmoud Rirad met recefltly U.S. Oka ys _Employment Proposal A program to provide part-time or nearly full-time employment f ·o r disad- vantaged' Orange C.ounty youths has been approved by the United States Depart- ment of Labor. Rep . Richard T. Hanna ( D - Westmiaster) anaounced to- da y. The Netghborhood Youth Corp~, project is designed to provide summer work . ex· perience for 300 county yollths 16 to 21 years old. The employment prQgram will enable youths to remain in or return ro. school or to se~re w o r k experience leading to a permanent job. The prDgNm. to be ad- ministered by the Orange Countv Community Action council. wiJl cost 1138,100. The federal governmenfs share will amouat to 8125.400. Three Held In Stabbing KARLSRUHE. Germany (AP)-·Three Negro Ameri· can soldiers were stab- bed to death in a Fourth of July fight with a group of white soldiers. G e r m a n police reported tod<:~ ... U.S. Army authorities. while declining to give any details of the fight, said three soldiers had bee n taken into cu~tody in con- nection with the in<:ident. A spokesman said an urgent investigation is under way and identified ttie men held as Spec. 5 Marioo L. Cook. and Spec . 4 Maron G. Cook. 19-year-old t w i n brothers or Attall~ Ala ., and Pre. David H. Cq"Jeman, 21. of Gener<il Delivery, Tollhouse. Calif.' He declined to identify the slain men until th e i r famiHes have been notified. \rith-Gi.tnnar Jani.ng, the United Nation! mediator for the Middle East, and it ap- peared some new move was in the oofflng. Riad was on hand for today·s talks. repeatedly demanded Israeli repeatedly demanded lsreali troops be withdrawn from Arab territories captured in the six-day war in June, 1967. Israel has refused to end its occupation of Egyp- tian. Jordanian and Syrian territory t1ntil a peaceful settlement has been reach- ed. Nasser flew in Thursday to bear hugs and nine kisses from the three S o v i e t leaders. He is to leave Saturday. but is prepared to extend his stay if the discussions require it. • * * * Cease Fire Violations Continuing United Press International J()l-danian a n d Israeli forces exchanged h e a v y artiHery fire in the northern Jordan Valley early today. It was Uie fifth middle east cease-fire violation reported by Jordan this month. In Amman. a .Jordanian military spokesman said Israeli trooops o 'Pen e d arti.llery fire at midnight on Jordanian forci!s in the Wadi E\-Yabiss area 21 mile!!i south of the Sea o( Galilee. The ,JordaniA:nfi returned the fire and sustained no casualties, the spoelcsman said. A few hours Earlier King Hussein of Jordan had end· ed a visit to some border towns. Dad Sirhan Of Family As ks Return T A Y JBEl·I. Israeli-Oc- cupied .Jordan 1UPJ) -The father of the man cbarged in Sen. Robert F. Kennedy's assassination said Thursday! he wants to brin,I? his wife and other sons home from America for sslety. "They are unsafe there." Bishara Sirhan told United Press International. But he also said, "I also feel unsafe." He said his decision on bringing home his separat~d family came after one son in America -a brother of ac· cused killer Sirhan B . Sirhan -said he had been shot at twice Wednesday. The father said. "Wh y are they hunlin~ us now? What have we got to do with the incident?" ' The elder Sirhan said he plans to appeal to the U.S. Ambassador in Tel Aviv for the American government "to do its utmost for my famil y's protection." Laguna Beach School of Ari and Design 630 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD 7 I .._..9 .. 152 0 SUMMER PROGRAM Two·WHk Workshops JIM GILaaT D11i9n ~.d i• IOG-11 IUNTZ StucHo & Fi9ur• OAYID SCHNARL Portrait & Fi9ur• IOIUT FIA.Ml Advanced Oil llNNm llADIUIY Merine Oil Slx0 WHk Co1WH1 IUTH OS•OOD Oil Pa inting 1.0G!I AIMSTIONG Drewing DONNA SHAlllY Life Drewin g IOGl l AIMSTIONG Watereolor Start Joly I Jiiiy JZ .... s • .. , 1' .... ,, Start Joly I Joly I Joly 1Z """ 11 AUO CeNltla. k•,,..,.., QI ..... -'"' , ... ..,. .,. WRITE OR C~LL FOR FREE BROCHURE ----------~--------~ ~ ---- " Fr1d,u, J11!y 5, 1%8 $1.29 Boy's Boxer Jeans . 99c HM...,.wM1ht c•tt•11 ... 'flt, 1!.1tic w1l1t. l ,.clt1t1, C.MI hi l llff t .... Kai Kan MH ~i...ak llyle Dog food 5 ' •1 0 I y._ ,_.., f1 v e rl t1 .-r St'9dt ., ... ttllc 1-.... I,\" hlli4e ., • ......,_ ., ........ w..1 ,,, .... f11111 .......... $3.49 Enameled Toilet Seat I •2•' htMth H11W. IR white, 71llw, ,Mt. Wiii Mt .,ut., cnK. $1.39 Station Wagon Mat 99c ~ th'ilN ,.,.; . '""' "'''' fer ,.ti1, '°"ch, c•r, 66c Pack of 12 •2•• Ophthalmic Sunglasses €10 '1'' .... ,...., •• "' ""'!!' ... ,,... •"" ... flllllt'"""" 1'9 ch .... fNM. OllLV 11LOT $ .s13n 4# Bonded Acrylic · Shteping . Bag ., .. pt.W .......... \"lo --· .. ..,,...,. . . C..1 •• ..,. ..,... yffti ..... ., ... w,w .. 1.u,.. ltjn.r. .. •1•• s3.a7 Tape Tool Label Maker '2" $1.19 Cepacol Mouthwash ' 77c 14 01. bottle Vl..,1 --.h ........ ........... , ,.,.,. ..... ..,......,., ......., Dtotlorallt lie ' .. - I I • I 4- • • f DAllY l'ILOT t"dl1, Ju~ 5, 1'168 Victory Dance Held 15,000 Rally on 'Their' Berkeley Street From Win seme.. lint rellloed lo allow tile a<>me 1oclallst and anarchist orcaniut1M1, a recall Qf Gov. Ronald Rucan and the freeing ofvA Black Panther leader accused of killln& a BERKEL£Y -A festive busy street to be blocked, crowd of nearly 11,000 later reversed ilielf altet noisy demon 1 t ra to rs persona danced, sang, made threatened to bold the event political tpeeehtl • n d witb or wit.bout permU:aiOn. performed ~promptu plays An activist cOelitlon claimed Thunday on • ttreet where ~e two-block area· o f lets than a week a10 many '(elegraph Avenue 11 "our pollceman, · Of them ballled police In -·" ' The crOwd W\A 1 en· t.ertlained by rock bands, the San Francitco M l m e Troupe, a multitude Of guitar · playero and hippie artist., who drew col«fld ch&lk dealcna on t h e 1ldewalll:. cloudl of tear pa. The rally climaxed nearly The spirit was one of a aweekofdimlnisblng victory celebrMiOfl . violence which lt.arted when The lndepe-. Day police used clubs -toar rally w11 held in Telepph _ gu, on the aame ·street to Avenue near the Univenity break up .. UDMlthoriied cl California wi~ the bleu· r&lly supporting 1 t u d e a· t in1J of Ille dty council, alter s1rltm In l'r...,., The dl&tlnct -lr111rance of marijuana could be •nilled occulonally, but it wu not particularly prevolent. A dance featuring a nude man and a clothed Clrl attnlcled cooaiderable attention. two days Of stormy debate The young leftiJta set up between Berkeley officlall tables along T e 1 e c r a p h and young radical activist&. Avenue. Tbe city council, which 'Ibey sought support for Court Oka ye Santa Monica Strike ~~~GO~~!~ A Collapses; Men Back municipal court Jud&e nys It ls lawful for police to ren· der a drunk~n driving suspect unconscious by a neck hokl U be refused tD contribute blood for an in- toxicaUoo test. Judge Harry P. Bowman upheld a San Diego police officer's .use of _.a ' "sleeperbokl" on suapect. John M. Lem.m:>Ds, 46. Hearst Castle Draws Pickets SAN SIMEON I UPI) - ~ssmen on strike .again1t the Los ~geles Herald-Ex- aminer spent Independence Day at the Hearst Castle diistiibuting llter.ature . the castle, now a state park. -wes built by William Randolpti HNrst, founder of the publishing empire_ that owns the Herald-Examiner. SANT(i MONICA (UPI) -Iectors, olhtt employes are The first large scale strike being tlak.ert back on a "no ol. employes· u. e Califomja repri1111ls" buis. city wm ckMte to collapse to-The bus drivers, whose day. . 1JD.lon is an AFL..CIO fll. Bus driven 1ep:esented by tili.ate, made a separate 1lle Brotherhood of Raflway peace Wednesday wtth the Trainmen were scheduled to city. Most other workers go back to wock. were being counsel~ by the Oily manager Pen'y Scott Los Aogeles C 0 U D t y pi.med a meeting with tbe Employes Aaaoaratioa. · tt111"lder of the strikers -Throughout the strike, b who ft. one time numbered city cOOncll refused to ac- 750 -io wmt out details of cept outside mediltion. a retum. to their jobs. It denied the stritenr' plea 1be ctty stood pat in Its foc .a 10.4. percent wage in· insistence that several strik· creMe, .and stood pat on the ing trash collectcn won 't be 51/t percent wage ndse Offer taken back at all. Nick already made. Schmidt, president of ttie -'"-'=-=,=..,=,:::,.....,'-----I =r.:::::-~~~P= FAT OVERWEIGHT collection workers ha v e A••U•.,. i. '" •'"""' • _.... -.___ 1er11H•n. ..., 'l"llhct ullllll O*lllh. Y•v ~n t.old they can report for '""'' -. .. ,, ,., ., .,..., ,,......, •11. -b t ~-1 . bs oeri...11 OO•s NOT CONTAIN OANOlll· . • u Ul<ll JO . are ous THYllOID Oil DIGITALIS. Chi , .. aivaiJ.abl.e for only S1X ol. ti' 111cn1 1a1 M ltw *'"'· O.IM• •\.~ ' • h U.M 1114 ...... • "" 1Mr111tff: Wf':'IU. If Ml lllllf ... llf • ..,. ,_, hlll NNrYI 0th.en; were replaced dur· 1111 ''e11""" y.w ._..,, ,,.. "' r-w · the lvll 1111MY H ck. N• -'*" ...,_ Of. 1ng walkout. Scott has r1 .... 11 ~ wlfll "* _,....._ .,., accused trash collectors of threatening other employes. CNWIM4'1 Dnlt lteN • 1104 Aside fr~ the trash col· , New,.n 11"1. • ., .. Or4m ,.,'" 0 Interest from th~ !st of any month on funds received by the 10th. "'" ., .. , Interest frOm date of receipt aher · the 10th. · Interest to date of withdrawal on funds left 3 months or longer if account remains open until quar- ter's end. \ ~ y/ If 1Cot7, T'S TIME TO CHANGE Transfer your account TODA y f Easy to do ... just call or come in. WHERE you save DOES make a difference. 9 MUTUAL SAVINGS ASSETS OVER $425,000,000.00 --................... l .... ' ... CORONA DEL MAR 'a/J7 Eut Coast Highmy • Tclophooe 675·5010 ...toatm: J1.5J:ut9olcndoBou.leva.rd •PASADENA, C.11foml• 9111» Opon Saturday, July 6 -9 :00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. 1 I I . •, . l ' a a< s u a 84th ' u i££M§ __ SL&&& Lt ... " .......... -i..--- rnn@@~m~ . FINE FURNITURE, CARPETS LAMPS AND ACCESSORIES BIGGARS TWICE-YEARLY SALE FROM QUR REGULAR STOCK OF QUATITY MERCHANDISE CRAFTED BY THE NATION'S FOREMOST MANUFACTURERS ( ITEMIZED BB.OW IS A tARTIAL LIST Of BIGGAR'S WIDE SB.fCTION Of FINE HOME RJRHISHIHGS . ADDITIONAL l'IECES ON SAU IN EACH GROUPING • , AU ~S SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE DINING· ROOM A wide 1el«eion o/ bedroom furniture 4' 34k pricu -.wm.t group a 1ub1Jantially reduced. Many famous maker poup1 in open stock. You'll find excellent valuu in. many different &tyles tQ 1uit your dining room requirements. MENll£DOfl "WllEL "41EDITERRANEAN STYLING TRIPLE DRESSER ANTIQUE GOLD MJR!OR KING SIZE HEADBOARD W/FRAME HElffAGE "t.lllLLIOll"-TRADITIONAL STYLING REGULAR 415.00 89.00 289.00 SAL! 349.00 75.00 245.00 THllllAS'llU! "SUOVIA"41EDITERRANEAN STYLING TRESTLE TABLE SIDE CHAIR !RM CHAIR HERITAGE "CHAl£LU" REGULAR 335.00 75.00 19.00 SAL[ 229.00 49.00 59.00 TRIPLE DRESSEi MIRROR REGULAR 349.00 89.00 265.00 SALE 279.00 69.00 209.00 REGULAR SALE 74" CR!DEH2.I 519.00 299.00 CHEST AMERICAN Of MAmllSYRL[ "QUOlllll"-tDNT!Ml'ORARY STYLING TRIPLE DRESSER, MIRROR AND KING SIZE HEADBOARD 14" !OUND PEDESTAL JAIL! AND 4 SID! CHAIRS REGULAR 07.00 SALE 319.00 Fen.Lured in tltiJ .sale nre mariy groupJ inn variety of styles and fin.islieJ : som.e ~pen .•tock ; .so~ diJco,t· tinued nnd priced for cleara1tce. ConJOlidatetfJ French or Italian. groupJ for girU and Modern group for boys. Biggar1 "Ken.3ington." top qualiiy quilted nuutres1 and hond-tied box $pri,., set by A.ireloom. TWIN OR •ULL SIZE SET QUE!ll Sil! SET KING SIZE SET REGULAR 169.00 229.00 329.00 SAL! 149.00 199.00 289.00 SIMM(lfjS HIDE·A·BEDS I AIRELDDlt SLUMIERLDUNGES AT SAL! PRICES A tvide .,election of Cocktail, HElffAGE "VEllTURA" OCCASIONAL TABLES COCKTAIL TABLE END TABLE HALL CONSOLE LIVIN'i ROOM Lamp and Cigarette Tabla, Commode1, Oulu ll1&d Curio Cabinets DmEL "MRAllT0"41 EDIT!RRANEAN STYLING REGULAR 1119.1111 89.00 239.00 SAL£ 69.00 49.00 119.00 LAM~ TABLE HEXAGONAL COMMODE 2-DRAW!R COMMODE - REGULAR 129.00 179.00 139.00 SAU 109.00 149.00 115.00 TERMS: Budeet Accounts 1vail1ble. Pay II each month without 1 service char&•· loneer ttrms with 1 moderate service charge. AVAILABLE IN OPEN ST~ IN. IOTH MOR!llD AND HISPANIA FINISHES Ul'HOLSTERED FURNITURE fllOll ltGGAllS 01111 CUSTllll SllOP$-!OfAS 1111 LIMlllE CltlJis COIOOI 10 'IOUI OMl!I 111 111 UNL•rrt.D S[l(CTIOll Of FIRICS IT WJnY IEDUCOI l'WICIS. OfjE·Of·A·KIND FLOOR SAMPLE SOFAS AND CHAIRS DRASTICALLY IEDUClD FOR Ct.EARANct PAIAllNA -~ft• ..., • POMONA ·1 • ' . ~- Sinet 1926 IJ'j FOii FiNE HOMEFVllH/$HIHG! 1.U 1·· _AND llfTEll/011 DECOllATION SANT A ANA: Main at Eleventh ,_ ... ,_ o,.. .. ...., ,........ -,,.... 14J·1,J1 ,, I - - Friday, J11ly 5, 1968 DAILY •llOT 7 • \ EXTRA SAVINGS ON A~MERICA'S FINEST NA-ME APPLIANCES!;' , ,<t· -~ , --~.I ' -FRIGIDAIRE 406 LB. BIG. CAPACITY FREEZER • Extra large capacity! Holds up to 406 lbs. • Built in door lock with two keys, Guards freezer against ullallhorized ac- cess! . • l:oocealed magnetic door seal locks . eold ih and 111ainlai11& even tempei&- tures! • Super · efficie11t insulation and quality built cabinet to ful~ protect yoor frozen food! KEL VINA TOR ''SWINGER'' ' . ''NO FROST'' REFRIGERATOR COLOR STYUNll -~·--·--· --.... ·--~--lljll °'"" ... Offtl. . QUAUTY PlUS SWINGER STYUNG EQUALS THE . BEST IN MODERN IEFlllGEIATOll •"No Frosf' eirculating cold! • L!rge capacity freezer section of this Kelvinator is separately insulated to maintain zero cold temperature! • Door shelf furnishes extra space for frozen package storage! • Au!qmatic defrosting! The Kel· vinator humidiplate evaporator . collects extess moisture from refrigerator air in the form of frost! OOLS-UP TO 200: SQ;FT.: Frigida-ire· AlR CON:OJ:J,,OMER·~ · . ' . ~ . 5,000 ' B.T.U. • Cools up ii 200 sq. ft.!. • Window kit included -fits most windows! • Extra handy! Plug in anywhere! O'KEEFE & MERRITT 30'' ''CLASSIC'' GAS . RANGE ' THE' RAN&E . . WITH THE ·· ''CLASSIC LOOK'' • Easy:3-ilosition burner con- trols! • 25" wide, giant master "ty I capac1 . oven. • low temperature 140 dt- Pl OYen ttierroostat! • Willi!, AvocaOO •••• OPEN DAILY 'Ill 9 P .M. • SAT. & S.UN. 10 A.M~ TO: 6 P.M.·!. ~ • I hwt.!Nts. 11444 LStlh\YL ffS.1621 . . ' W. l.os A11.l11 ~ a AIUlmO i44i : Ml, · , 600 S. ..... '"'9 M. Ytctory'llri. I. ..... !No IL -11114 14U611 • IA·I-~· " • TOIWKE· 25405 ' '""' ... DA Mtll . ••... "'" 12191 .• """•Id. JIJ-HIO • ' ll ', 11 . . ' .. , ..... ,,.~, .. , ,._ -, . . ~ . •' ' ...... . ----. • .. ~ .-~------~--~-~ - ... ' • -·' ' : I " I I I I I I I I l " .. Frld•l'. Ju~ 5, 1968 LEGAL N011CE LEGAL N011CE LEGAL NOTICE --·--HOTIC• Of' INVITllM •IDI ~IRTl•.C .. T• CW IUllJlllQ Hatla 11. MrWr llWfl tlltl IN Clh' 111 •1CTITtoUS 111.t.M• F-'9111 Vil..,, ~Mfttt ~ fo Tiit Ulldttllt"'" 00. certH'r 1'11 11 (Git> n "" "'OwMf"' Wiii rtulw w ... tiv1 twt Ndltl9 I M INM 11 CO.II """'· .. .., ...., 1·• ,..M~ Mllnd9Y J111Y n c.11tot..i1, 11N1er ,... t1c1111ow f1m1 ,....,. '"" ...... iii. for"" •••nl ~ awotr.d "'cos·r,1, M£SA. SIGN SlllVIC£ Md,..., felt int CONlrvdklfl Ill N-l"ltk 811lldlnt .. kl fll'IYI II comllOSN at ""-followlt19 1nd Cltr H11! loddl'*--,..._., whDM MfM I" l11M llld •I.a el Slldl bld1 -II M re<:llYM 11 "" Ortlu ruJ~. ~ 1J IOllOWs: al no,. C!IY Cllttk. Clh' H111. l O'MI SM"" 11 A~O:. C.t1:!.t~i..2:°'ll'l· ICM1111 Drift, 11 ... A~e-. F-111" V1! ..... (1llforrtl1. Ind DllM .k1M 13 Ifft 11'\ill lie ~ '"" "'bllc:to,t ,..... •lolld c1v~ L Nern 11 HW 1bo¥t llltlill time. S" .. {If (1llfornl1. 0..1"11 COllnlY: PROMOTION MAN R°'lnald 0. Janet Mesa Company Appoints Rinn Max ltiM bas been ap- poirited mark eti ng ad· ministrator for Gen er at Morlitors, Inc., Costa M~. 'Island' Promoter Appointed Reginaldll. Jones. former advertising and public rela- tions director for Farber G 1 ad stone Development Co. 's Valley Plaza Shopping Center in Bakersfield, has been n a m e d promotions director for Fashion Island, NewpOrt Beach. Jones' appoinbnent was announced by Kent A . Berge, manager of Fashion Island. Jones, wtK> has spent more than 30 years in advertising, begal'I h i s career as a displ&')' designer for the Hudson'1 Bay Co. Cana.da's largest wholesale; and retailef. ,,., ... ... .... .. . .. . ,.. . .... .... '" . ... '" . '"' . • TEN YEAR DON-JONES INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE .... OI ~ (TO .AJ.Y lie$ '=-- tl,__"'!; OH * NrW lllK-1' IUI lll........ SI\ ""'flM.~!( l l NlW , .. ctijfUl llllU:W QT'! -llUl"" lltOIJlll(.Mt!lt ~ -...... MU> ~··­~ ~·~ K"-LlO ". ·~ l t1111r111 111111111111 1111 v11I Hl!llllHl l!l !tllfi11 tl!!ll• r I ; fruNDOl.VOll)Ol(IH 1~ J9" 1960 1961 I llil ll lll!IT!1ll1t~l pHIHl!tl !l!tlll!l11 111111111 l l!!l ll 1162 196J 1964 • l!illli& 1966 19'1 1968 Your Money's Worth Food Cost Hard to Swallow By-SLYVIA PORTER .... . .. -,,. -'"' . "" • Eldl bid """' conlorm Ind bl 0.. J"'"" 13, IHI. blfol'I me, I NOUIY ...-In h 11'111 ltwll1t1on. the PlllM l"llbllc '" ind for 11kl SI•"'· "r-llY 11.PKiflClllloM, IM 11t ·~ Cot1lr1d "°"'rfd Clrdl L.. N1UI Mlll:IW" fo me h ~la. Col"!• el HW Cotltr1ct lie tlll ""°" wl'loH Mint II 1Vbtcr1btd DOCUrflWlll .,. -911 flllo Md -111 h flll wllht11 IMlt'limlftl 11111 1dr;11DWllOI· Ollbllc: lnS!lldlofl I" IN 11ld ettk:fl 111 1111 Id 1'11 •~ewted the 11rne. °'*'""' 1M flf WUH1m l . l lurodl: & (OFFICIAL Sl!AL) · accordin'e to Rex Orton . . ' In 11943, he moved to California and b e c a m e advertising manager for the F. C. Na.sh department .sit.ore, Pas&dena. With the Daily Pasadena Star-News . until that newspaper was sold in 1956, Jones later spent two years with the Los Angeles Times-Mirror Co. in retail ad sales and public relations. If you make an errof in buying furniture, y o u ' r e almost surely stuck. It may take you years to correct your mistake and you'll pro- bably come out wi'th a pain· ful loss. But if you make an error in buying fruit. you can quickly learn from your mistake and come out ahead only days later when you again go shopping for food. lllg substantially from the day we determine to cdn- centrate on so doing . will vary depending on whether the juice is fresb , canned or frozen. Taste may be your deciding factor but the difference in vitamins will be insignificant. Auoc111ts, Ardlltecta, lUO l1nldtl JOMPll E. D111l1 "'brlw. (~ dll M1r. C1llfornl1. 1nd Nolll'Y Public.C1llfornl1 mey bol obl11Md 11 no,. Oltlct el 1M PrlJ\C.IPll OtflCI t11 ~ Ardllt*<t, br d-111111 •1e.OG for e1d> 0<11191 Cll\lntv lei ol ,_r1I J1Mr1t 1nd 1Helllt1tlom. MY CommlHlOll ExplrH Tlllt Mlosll will bl r-...ndtd ot1hr If fl!e June 11, 1110 11tf o1 COl\fr1ct DoaHM"tf dlllwr-" 1,. 1"11bllMICI Dr111111 C011I D1llY l"llot, rffllr!lld -lllt I/Ml In 9ood condlllOn JllM 14, 21, 2t _,Id Jl.llV ~. IHI lo.Ml. wltllb\ flw dlYt 1l'tlr It. ~II ..,nine. WAe• IATt l z · P...-111 fo tM Llbor CDlll flf tM Slit. · LEGAL N011CE DI C.IHWnl1, lollfhern Clllfornll 811lldl,.,, ____________ _ 1M C.5trvctlo!I TrMIH Councllt ,I 111111111'9 ind Gcri'lltnictlon TrNln C-IJ ,.....,11 flf ~ .... c-fy, tti. ew-Ila• 1.ctr-•••·m 111 ..... lfll -r•I ,,....11llftl r1N flf Plf" C•IT!,ic.t.T• 0, SUllNlllS dim! -for ttdl uefl et ,.,... flf l'ICTITIOUS l'lllM NAMlf worM!lll 11MDM1 ID '"°"9 tt1t C!Mtnlch Tl'll lll'lllenltnld di ~ QrtlfY ltllt wttlcl wrn lie _..... """ lllOCllSfvl bid-.,. .,.. CIOftlflldl"' I MIMU (" ~ MnJ 1llCI ,,.._ •NllllMlll rllll IN .. l"lrfMl't) II 3111 .. II IOld. A111hlfm, n1t1011 ti.low: C11lforn11. 11111111" tM flctltlllul firm 1111...e Attt clliultlutklfl .... ~*' ... ol CllEATtoNS •Y ANTONIO llld ltllt bollllw llllMI slllJI 111 Hid 11 tM cun.111 Mid flrm II ~ flf ""' f!Jllowlnt Wiii rllll fllr tlll ~tlbll trldt IMI ..,._., ""-Mmft, In fl.Ill llW ~ ClllllflQtiefL,Ja lftld wl!l'I IN 1boft Ill l'ftldencl l rl II follows. ~: lhtHI Tradn Cwl\dll. H l l'IY rites lltlld Arm.nlo f 1Uc1, U1 S. O..ntlllY. belllw l fl Mt Clll",....., et ... rlVIHlll br ANIMlm. C.llfomlll. Mbor t1r-.h dllrlnl"" bidd!M 11... Erle lloden. 12162 llrltt1nv Woadl DI' •• ot' CIO!ltrvdklfl lhM, IVdt r9Yl1i.. J.htJI Sl"ll Anl, C1llfornl1. be _...,.... 1 'irt o1 "" btlllw lhlN Jflhrl G. ,._ Ill, 1'°' S. Ceder. "'' ... 111. NIY ""'""· WIN•••· Yl-tlllo!I, ·~ Mo. A, Sin .. ,.,,., C•llfor"ll. motloll « oll'ltr """Its Wl1 bl 1" Id· DlllCI J-26. IM. d!llOll t. tit-~ llloltlll .... 1e1llo1. Antonio F'llot A•....tkli mn lie -lovllll '" _. Eric kdf!I 1am111¥. with Sld'loll 1m .s ., flit JllM G. ,._ 111 Clll"""' Llllor C....; STATE OF CALIFDllNIA.I °""1\1111 -.hill lie ""' for WOl'll COUNTY OF.Oii.ANGE )u dU'ector of marketing. R I n n ' s background in· eludes engineering a n d marketing responsibilities with ITT Barton Instr um.en ts, United G e o physical Corporation (Bendix) and Meteorology Research Inc. Jones is a member of the Advertising Association of the West and t.he Intern a- tional Council of Shopping Centers. SILVER BOOM 17141 115-2141 ~ ;111 lllClll el !I'll rw11llr d~t °" J11111 2'. lffl, b11c,. me, • Nol•IY wont Wiii jt n.·r1t1• -llrne el ttle P11bUc In Ind fw uold COllntv 1nd Sl1te, crin 1nwl¥td. Mt$OlllllY 1111Hred A111'Dn!o Felice. Eric GN1t W•t1r11 Clln ••cfllfltl "' •· 11th st .. SUI• ,.,.. , Holldrtl 111111 bl •11 llelldlYI rtcotflltl'd J. Boekn 1nd Jol'ln G. POM Ill know" tol!~::::::::::::~==~~~~~ The message is implicit in these tiny examples. Food is among the blggiest items in our cost of living and il is ttle single m06t expensive item. in the budgets of low and low-middle i n c o m e families . Yet, in contrast to the big.ticket items we buy only from time to time - furniture, .automobiles ap- pliances -we buy f~ at least once or twice a week. Thus, food rs the one area where we can correct costly errors easliy a nd start s-av- • I" ~ ~ltcltwo bl'"l"!ne ••r-1 "" lo ;. the Pfl'SO<\I whoit "1m11 CUT OUT 1#llUllll t. thl "'11wllr crllft, iWlcttbtd te the wlttzln 1"1tr11mtflt, i nd dlufflc9tlto'I .. tt.. ., wklMll Kk_...,.... lo me '""' thtY utc:Vtect _......,. Clll !I'll ,..itct. .. ...... ,.,.. It llllM ei. lftllldltorv -""' Cort-.Wll'nlu 111'1 lland 1nd st11. trlefor • """°"' • Clllfl'ICI I• iwll'dld (OFFICIAi. SEAL) Ind ~ iJI ........ Klifl'1o -· him te J. llt. Abbott "' riot .... llllfl tllf ._.1 ,,...,,M119 Not1rr Publlc-C1lllornl1 r1tn flf ,.. •1tm WI .. to 111 wotk1Mf1 Prlncl"I Off!"' '" .,....,.,_. Ill ""' ol<lltlml rlf t1'll eon-C-t1 ol Or11191 1rio:t. MY Commlnlon explrn llllal:UYa• Dec:fmber 21, Jt10. F-(-It¥ ""' 1f1111 I '"'"I _ l"llblllhld, Or-Coll! D1llY Piiot, rlO'I "-""'" n.• -..., lllDw! J-2t Ind J111Y I. 12, 19, INI 1UUI. ....,,,..,_,, r1fll. ,:::t.rl:O:a'._ Ml-........ u.15 LEGAL NOTICE llrldl,..r .•.... ,_.,,_ ............. A.a l------===------1 CAl,•lffa•s ,_.,. C.,.,...., ........................ S.tt c,allTIPtCAT• DI' IUllNISS • TIMI~ MW -·tor ··~··-· .It Tl'll IC1"tout ,lllM MAMI Mlttwf1tN •.. ......... ........ 2' llndlrtltllold do h«tOv cer111v "'" ,...., C.,_...lk.I .. .. . .. . . .... .:M .,.... ... ecww:ludl119 I rul HllM' lft. I'--"' !Houf" """"""' bvllrou1 1t: 1Ht Pomom1 An .. """"' c'-lfk.llloft .-.vi , Cod• Mell, C.IJlornl1, Uflder 1111 lie• cM ..........,.nc llllltr ' •ti.. I...,,_ -fill: l"DMDNA IN· a.11,.-r & LIMOt.IUM iAY•ll VSITMlNT GROUP NO. I ind truil .. Id C.,.,.. ~ & wt TI 11 flml .. C-l'd ol .lt>f HfloOl'l5 wilese CIMt.;;.';.JMtotii .................. S.2J 111~1~ ·~::'"7.".iutdl, . CtfMr>I ~. flelfllll ft "'-lint 1$41 AMfN Aw., Sultl 202, C01t1 """'' -dllM -•for ............ ,. J.et C.llf. c-1 Mltofl Jounw)I""" • . .. . 4.M Limited P1rtners: Weldon w. scno,.., F....,,..'" toe -PIDvr •IJ•v• 111 ~. lltlll SI•••· surtt A, Cott• Mll•·i Jll\lr""'""" ''"' CIHf.J Allln E. W1rrlt'lflon, 2100 l!LllCTlllCIAJlll l"tterson lfB, Cosl1 Me11, C1111.1 G-•I For.min ............... 12t Sd'HIYI« Con JOVntr. 1530 w. llllctr. Fortm1" .................. ,.,. •. :. 7."5.2 S11ll1 C., Cosll MllSI, C1llf.; Rlch1rd W. Joul'l'll)'mln ................... •.7S D1nl1!son, U30 ll1k1r St •• S11llt o. GU.Ziii Cost1 Me ... C1tlt.1 lloblrt J. Ftl'911lOll, Gl1111r ······ ...•..••.•••.••.• J.11 m w. ••1t1ndMJrv, F11lllfltlfl, C•tll.1 lllOM wo1ttca1s kmneth £. W11t1, lMl S1m1r Or., °"'9mlf!lel tt"Ofl Wort.ff' 3." C.-11 IM11, C1llf,; fr1ns II. H1n1an, 111!1\fen:I"' Ir"" wort.tr ::::::::: J.13 112• Comll'\OClore lid., N1wo>or1 llt1ch, Stl'Vdl.lr•I Iron wor~•r .......... '·" Clllf'.; lltobl!rt L. Fr1n<l1, 3:ll w. 111 .. Flltll'l\I" .&Sc -hlU'r """'' 1111" llllCl!llry, F~l1tr11111, C1l!l.1 Cl1r1nc:t J. h...,_.I cllulf'le1110ft • .....,...111111. M<•ldl, 15"111 Adi,.., SI.lit• 202. (11111 U.TNIR Mui. C1 Ul.1 Jolln W. Klll'll Jr. 1nd l.11'hlr .. , ... , ....•.... , • , •. ••.•. A.1'5 Jtllrtv H. MUlll, Sil Soutll llrool!h11rit For""'" flOI IHI 11\ift IK IOlf hour ltd., F11lllorton, C1Jff, rflOfl thin JourTllYl'Mn r1... WITNESS -hlnchl ll'llt 1$11! dlY flf U.•OlllllS Mlv, INI. l.1borln. -••I or con1trllclklfl 1.15 Clll"t<\C'I J. Skltdl, GtMr11 P111ner 0Per1h>'1 ..... lmltlf• ol ·-•tic Ind Weldon w. Schorw. All•" E. W••· •IKIOC IOOIS, vlbrw.111111 INchl... ..... '111'1111111. Sehl/vier (1111 JO'(lllf, llldllrd :tlfllll•• rnldl1nlc.11I tools llOI -rtle-W, D•nlt liOfl, Robert J, F•··-ic .... tv cllntlltd hertl" .. . . •. . (,l)t "'"' £. W11t1. Fr1ns R. HlllSO!l,' llobl!rt C-1 dllMHr (1111 1 Yd. ot' 11rwtr l. Fr1net1, Cllr~ J. Slitlth. Jolln W, mixers 1nd hltldtl"' 1111.. u-Kl"' Jr .. Jtffr1v H. MUii!. Limited """'' ••··· .................... (.Ot l"lrffllf$. Window clHner ................. 1.U STAT£ OF CAl.IFDllNIA ) Wetd'llM" .................. ).1t COUNTY OF Oii.ANGE ) H Fort,,_.n >oc ttr 1\ollr tf\Ol"I lflln TM llndtNltned, brlr19 61/IY 1-r~ l'llthtll cl111l1Jc1!\efl ,....,..1se11. 11tooi11 1nd 11rs: ' OP l!•ATINO l!MOllll•lllS Tiii! t>f It ,... Gl111ir1I ••rlnlr n1mtd G,_ 1 . . .. . . .. . . .. .. •.••• A.SJ I" 1'IM Atrteme"I ol Llml!td P1rtnerd\tp G.-2 .......... · · · .... ... •••••• (.71 ol POMONA INVESTMENT Gii.DUi" No Group, , ......................... J.01 \, Gr""'• .......................... s.12 Th1t l'lt hli rud tht torts1or G•Ollll J .......... , ...... •···•.. .• 5.Jl Ctrtllle.te ol ll111lneu Fk:IU111U1 Firm Gr-' .... "... .• . . • .. . . . . . S.U N1me Ind Ml'IO'Nt the contents tt>fr"" Forem1n 3Sc: Pl' hour IO'IO,. ttz1n Incl •II ll'lt t1ct1 lhtrtln 1t11wd 1,. tru. ' h!tllnt cl1nlllc1tl011 1llP91Vl11C1. Cll,.l\C9 J. SMttcll • ,AINTllll Sub1crlbed Incl iworn lo bli'Oft rfll !hit ll"11Mr brv1h 11•1""" ........... S,2t Hth d•V of M1y, 1961. J011rnevm111 Sproy ........... 3.$.1 (OFFIC IAL SEAi.) ,.11>• TllAD•I Mefllttl Cot!l111 P!UrflMl'I Incl l'lllwl'I . ' .. '... . s.u Nol•,.,. Pl.lbUc.C•lltornl• Gtner•I For1m1n -70% tbovl •ro.. Ptll!C'loe1 Office '" J111rnn"m11n r•I• Oron,11 COlltll'I ForllNn -10':"o 1bon Ir o I I Mir COfl'lrnl1ilon EllPl•H J~IH'MIYml" r1!1. DctolMt 2t Tt10 UllRl'I P!H tlnt Jou""'""" "' . 5.5' STATE OF CAL1Fo1tNIA ) UllR!y PIHliMI Forem1n $.11 COU NTY OF DltANGE I H r ~STl!lllllr:$ On 1111 1•111 d p·~•ft' l'llfllft'lllll ,_ •v ol MIY. 1961, btlort '"••-• • ·•· · · ..... · ·•• me, 1'111 1111Mr.1l11ntd. 1 Nol1ry Public 111 r llTtii TIMDI!• ............. , l .t(S Ind tor qld eo..orzty Ind SllM', "''°"'llY •-·~r T.-, .. ••·••• ,,.,, 1 Sol ti>Ptl f'ld Cl1~ J. SMeldl, Wtldoll W. r 'Ol'lllS " 5d'lor•, Allin E. W1trlt'lflot1, kl\OWll lo J'..,.,..,."'"" . ,. ........... 5.41 ~n::./'1110"" ,i:r~ yO'lo,,. 1111,,,. 11 wi.. •11t1 """""'" .•. . .......... s.n Kil ltd w 1111n INtrvmfflt •I'll "'or11tT111n .. . ............. s.n 110W Md 11111 llltv 11K111wd no,. "'!rT M•TAL WOllKflS ume. >°'"' ,.,.111 WCM"•er ......... 6.90 !OFFICIAL SEALl Hc1tln9 1111111i.r . . . . ........• '·°' Mlrt1re1 Collins Forttn1n -1K i llow JOllrnrtfl'loln Hol1,.,. P1,1bllc-C.tltornlt flN. PTlnc:IN I OltlCt In •.MITlllS Of1n1t C-tyt F-n 2k "' hllll" ll'IOl'I tl'lln MY (llfNT>lWofl EIJ>lflli ~-lltll C .. Hlflclllon lll"IVIH'd. ~· 21. lml Drlwn o1 dllmJI trvc:U, IHI fllln ( STATE OF CALIFORNIA v<b. . .. ............. , . .. . . . (.JO COUNTY Of ORANGE l H Ori...,. ol -fnldla. ( l'dl, 1lvt IHI On Ille 1)'111 llllV fill MIY, 1Ht btfott 111111 • Ydl. ' ' .•...... ' '·" ,,,., !ht Uncltflllned, I Ho!•rv l'\.11t1c 1" 0 •!¥'1111 ol lr11Ck .. iltllll Ptl'loMI <1111d-•1'4 for llld C01111t1 11nd St11te Pllf10lll llV flo lllt 1tiln A htM ...•. .'.... .. . (,SCI •-•red SchvYlet C.-1 Jov~r lt!cl'll"' Dl'lllf,. ol lrlleb. let•I 1'1Yi11141 t.1J11tf· W. Dlnltllllfl, ICtflnttll IE. W11t1: Frint It, Iv ...,.._ ' l flll 11 IOl\t . • , . (.):I H1111t11, k-h:I Int fo lie the ~ Dr!V9h ol Tr1111IH!ltx tnldl:1 1111111f 3 wllCllf: Mmet ,,. 111Pncrlt>M h> "" w!tlll" ytl'ft . ••• • . ., . •. .. . '·'' l"$1rurntnt 1flll 1cMnaw1tctt9d "''' !hr.' Drlwrs fl/I Tr1"1IHl'll11 trudi.1 ! Yd• or •~9Cll'lllf 1111 '"""· ,.,,.,, , ,.. . . ......••..... ( .• (OFFICIAi. S£A1.l T1La sen•• ,,,.,...,., com111 Tiii letllr ... , , .. , ... , , . , S.s.I Nol•,.,. P11bHc<11Uor"11 F-11 -CllH 11111'1 n """' n.•"' 1>rlfld111t 0tt1c1 111 °"''""' """-Dr1np C«l"tyt Tilt N•Li'•a M' Commlnlon EUlflli TllJI tltllr' He ...... , .... ,.... .•. A.4l OClobe!-tt'. Ul'O SIDlr STATl OF CALIFORNIA Tiit OwNf' ,,...._ ..... .m!llM ti r. COUNTY OF O•ANG£ 1 u ltCt"'9 llllf .... 1M Mn « .. WllW Ori the 2hl dip flf MIY, 1MI, ......... _. """"""tin fl( I " I 0 r"'. I It I • t ""· "" undlrtllnld, I Nat1rv l"ubll< In ... l#f'r i11N « 111 !M ............ , c.itt1<Mr 111111 "'1 Miii COU'lltv Incl SI•"'• -IOl'llllY _.,. fllt ........ Miii .-t ...... lltlt" ~. l'td lloblft L. Fr1nc:1., Jiii...,. H. lfll ... Dttl.. '"" llf, ~ N fllll to " thl HIWM CITY Of' '<IUNTAIN YALIAY ~-IN ll.ltrtcrllltd ti tht wt1111" MM"/ &. CM. Cltr Cawll kllltod .. •flll •Ctl-litdnf 11111 M all· ............ Grt1191 '*"' Dlllf' Piiot. J11> 1111'11. tr I. lt. -· llJMI (OflflCIAI. Sl!AI.} A..,l'E.•-Hol1f'1' hllllc: IOAT IUFFS . .. ,..,,. ..... ..,.~ ... ..,, ... -......... ... .......... .., ..... ,., ·---"~­~ ......... ., ..... ~---~· ii#f .... _-.. DAILY Sii .. ot C1 Mllmll l'rlfltlttl btfkl In Or111111 C-1'1 STATl OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OI' OllANGI! I ._ (Ill lfrle Hi"41 dlY flf ..... Y, l ... , &elO~ ""' ..... lill'llltriltnM •• Hot1ry l"llblk lfl .... ..,. 11111 ("""" lf!lll '''"'· --•hr N"ll'W..JClllll W. Kl"' Jr~ ~ 1$"" h "' ... --w1w1t 111me 1, lllbK"!t.. "" " "" wlllllfl ...,,,.._, •nd Kk_...,.M IMt M .. KVIM t1W Mlrfll !Ol'•ICIAL 'EAL) . AlnY E. ." ..... Nltlf'Y l"llbll( ,.. .. ,,,c.~ Pr1nt1NI Offk:I '" Or• ... Ctllnlf •llMltllld °''"" Cont D1il'I l"llet, Jill'le II, • IM JU'1 S, 12,. ltM !uwt ' ................. t. tt ••• t t •• * ••• * ** •••••••••••. Here's $2,500,000 for the South Coast County Water District ~··································~·········* Because new water facilities were needed, the electorate authorized the South Coast County Water District to issue bonds. Bank of America and its associated investment dealers purchased these bonds to give your communi ty the money it needs. ' lntL"feSt rates on the bonds were decided by cOrnpeHfioe bidding-a procedure required b·y law to obtain the lowest average interest rate for the taxpayer under current bond market oonditions. Interest rates also reflect the credit rating of ycur district. We, at Bank of America, bid on virtually all municipal bonds issued in the State- bccause we have confidence in the future of California and communiC. like youn. One thing that gives us con6denoe is that you and your neighbors wisely reoogni7.8 a demonstrated tn1th : pure water faciUties benefit all citizens. 11le quality rl a o0mmunity parallels the quality of its municipal JerViOl!IS. This is reftected i:n pop- erty values through the years. Bank of America and its associates are proud to play a key role in the~ of your rommunity. You may be interested in buying municipal bonds as a person<tl inYelltnleOt 'Ibey offer the advantage of tax 1Jx11m piincome and are available in denominatiOnS' of SS,(XXl You can purchase municipal hoods through your local Bank of America branch -or contact our Municipal Bond Department in San Franci!CO or Loe Angeles. • • NfW ISSUf 82,S00,000 South Cout C.OUnty Water District, Orange County, C.llfomt•, 81, !S, .5.IOS. 5-!!0I 11od .5V4l l968 Water Bonds. These bcrnds were olfered to investon at• dollar pr1oe to yield from 4.7.51 to .5.25•, ac:cording to maturily 1974-1998. TheK bcrnd1 ue oflert'd when, u and tf i:Ntd. ind received by us and .rubjed to approval of legality hy our 1ttom.ey1, I l'OflY of whote leg:.J opinion will be prinlcd on each bnnd. A ctrculu rf!lating to thCM bcrnds 111 11v•i11ble b'MI Bui. ol ~ Namm of othl!I' 11ndtt'Wrilm will be h.1miJMd tMI fefJl'f'lt, f BANK OF AMERICA HATtONM. TltUST A SAVINOI AUOCIATION IOO lfQlllTeOllUT STll'll1' U.M~Ml.lO .u.~ ... ANIAllOCIATD ... IOUTM ....... aTM:IT LOI AMMLUMM4 ........ THERE'S NO place but UP for food. costs. to go. The tax surcharge will not reduce the farmer's charges to middlemen for his pro· duce . The farmer is lagging enough behind as it is and farm prices are likely to go up rather than down. The t.a,x surcharge will not cut the costs or processing p a c kaging, transporting'. marketing food . These costs also are more likely to go up than down . THE TAX 'SURCHARGE certainly will not reduce your demand for food . The cut in your take·home pay isn't sufficiently big to do this and this is hardly the objective. You cannot reasonably argue that tihe a.n .ti. i n- fiati·onary tax surcharge will directly reduce the price o( food. Because you buy food so often, though , knowing the rules can help you save Qt.!ickly and perceptibly in this area -and with the summer specials here or on the way, this point is of more than u s u a I im· portance. Here are some key hints: Ill CHECK YOUR seasonal speclals now. With many fruits and vegetables coming to market in abun- dance in these weeks, you can slash the costs of these foods as much as SO percent from wfnter's levels. (2) Shop your specials. There will be extraordinary bargains in abundant foods in this period ahd if you can freeze or can store the foods, you can stretch out the savings. Be particularly alert too for summer specials on meats, poultry and fisti. (3) Consi.der quality in rel'ation to your use of the food. If corn on the cob is the heart of your meal, of course you will buy the best quality you can afford. But if you're using corn as part of another dish, you'll do just as well witfl a much less expensive form of corn. This awlles to a long list of fruits and vegetables. (4) COMPARE the costs of various forms of food. The cost of a glass of orange or grapefruit juice (5) Oheck the prices of private versus nationally advertised brands of foods you use Crequently. If the . private brand stocked by your local market is of a quality which pleases you and saws you money, use il. (6) Buy sudb foods as meat by C09I per portion Marketill!r Chief rather than overall price, To flnd this cost, divide the Richard E. Schmidt of price of tile amount you Tustin has been promo- purchase by the number of ted to marketing mana· portions the amount will ger for the Scientific supply . As an illustration, Instruments Division of say you pay 69 cents for a Beckman Instruments, pound of ground beef and Inc., Fullerton. Prev· for a pound of sparenl>s. iously he was fi eld The beef will provide four sales manager for the portions; because of fat and _d_i_v_is_io_n_. ______ _ bone the ribs will provide 1 1/3 portions. The beef costs 17 cents per serving ; the spareribs, 25 cents per servlng. (7) BUY SUCH foods as bread or cereals by cost per ounce or pound. There is no waste involved here so see whlt'h package offers ttie mo.st weight for the iden· tical price. (8) Compare package srzes in relation t.o how quickly you will consume the contents. The b i g economy package may be the least expensive but it will be so to you only if you use up the contents before they become stale or rancid, etc. (9) Learn how to rate con- venience foods. A frozen vegetable without w a s t e may actually be Jess costly than the fresh, vegetable with waste at a tower price (peas in the pod, for in· stance). A frozen meat din- ner may be even more ex- pensive than the price in· dicates because it contafus Jess meat than the dinner prepared from scratch. I COULD GO on with the hints indefinitely but these .are sufficient to pound home the central points ; you can quickly correct food buying mistakes if you want to and you can save substantially on food from this day Oil if you try to. And you can achieve this , even as tbe buyfug power of your dollar shrinks monthly to new .all-time lows. Loans Given For Business Buildings Orange County growth continues with !;he granting $353,000 for the construction of three loans totaling $3.53,IXX) for the construction of two busi.ness buildings and an apartment complex. Largest of the loans, all granted by the Ralph C. Sutro Co. of Los Angeles, is $140,000 for a two-story pro· fessional office building to go up at 370 W. Fourth St., Tustin . Managed by Hallmark Realty Co. of Tustiri', it is scheduled · for completion in August. Jack A. Thoner and Co. is the contractor and Ray Chermak of Santa Ana is architect. A loan or $136,000 went to John A. Kosha aod Edward E. Strickler for -.the con· struction of two concrete in~ dustrial buildings at 11800 Western Ave., Garden Grove. Re a1g an and Shoemaker are the architects, and York Con·struction Co. the building contractor. A one-story apartment complex will be constructed by Egon M. J ensen with a $77,000 loan. Architect for the unit to be erected at 12711 Buaro, Garden Grove, is Western Building Design. Annivers•rfl Portraits Miss HunUngton Beach, Jef(ye maclulrd, is being aketched by artist Beverll Carlson, 11 llunUngton Beach Mayor, Al Coen, ngbt, and Joe R. Treadwel Vice President of Anaheim Savings look on. The 4th anniversary of Anahel~ Savi ngs IJ bei ng celebrated this week through July 10. Free charcoal por· LraJts will be sketched and presented to customers and visitors al Anaheim Savin&• offices In Huntington Beach, Brea and Anaheim .. Friday, July 5, 1%8 DAILY PILOT 9 For the Record 3rd ANNUAL CENT CENT CENT CENT 3 SALE SALE SALE SALE SPECTACULAR DAYS REMAINING fRIDAY ........... JULY 5th, 1968 SATURDAY • • • • . . . . JULY 6th, 1968 SUNDAY . . . . . . . . . . JULY 7th, 1968 9:00 a.m. until 12·midnite, each of the Sale Daysi FABULOUS MONEY· SAVING SPECIALS! BOWLING REGULAR PRICE FOR I st, IJrd, 5th, etc.) GAME. EACH 2nd-GAME (2nd, 4th, 6t h, etc.) JUST A PENNY! NO LIMIT! Off1r v1lid, t 1.m .• 12 mid night, 111 4 d1y1. Youth lowl. ing Club [Y.l .C.J M1mO.r1 pay th1ir r1911lar pric1 fo r 11ch )1t, ]rd, 9111'1.1, etc. 1c for 2nd , ltli, 1tc. No olh1r Kon e le1111 promotio111I f1af11r1 •alid durl11t on1°c1nf .. , .. FOOD ------------"- lt1m1 111 tht1 Sp1cl1I M1nu l11clud1d i11 OMI CINT SAU. onty 1'1y prict 1how11 for flrtt 111111. Eich 2114 ~tel of 1qual pric1 or low1r, )1o11t .• PINNTlll (Silo th" m1n11 only, t1rv1d in Coff11 Shop, only), 1'1'9' lllfl, Fr111ch Roll, l1en1 • • • • • • • • ,.., • • • • • • I .00 P•INCH DIP SAND .. Fr111cll Fri11 ••• , •, •. • • • • • • 1.0f IPA•Hml DINNI .. So11p ., S1!1d •••••••••••• 1.11 PISH I PRIU. Veg., Soul' or Selod •••••••••••• 1.11 CHICllN IN A IASllT ••.•••••• , , • • • • • • • • • • • 1.Jt CHA•.a•OtUD HAMOUl•ll , • , • , , , • • • • • • • • • • • .II CHAl·l•OIUD CHIUllUl•ll , • , , • • • •• • • • • • .71 CHIU sm. t.1111, c!oi1111 •••• ' ••••••••••••••••• 1.1t PllD SHllMP, Colt S1•w, S•"'P • ,, •• ,, •• .-. •• • • • 1.71 IWDID ftAL Cun.IT, Tri111111i11't , •• • • •• ,, •• •• • 1.71 COLD TUlllY 01 HAM SAND. Fri1t ••• • • •• •• • .to H.AUOU1' ITIAk. Trl111111i11'1 • , •••••• • •• •• •• ••• • • 1.11 CHIP'S SALAD IOWL , ,, , , , , ,, ,, •••-•• • •• •• •• • 1.11 MOT lllP SANDWICH •• , : •••• , •• • • • • • •., • • • • • 1.JI SPICIAL DUTCHMAN SAMDWlCM •• • •• •••••• •• • 1.lt IONA'S PA.MOUi "IOWLlltVl•ll" ••• •, ••, • • 1.10 KONA LANES 2699 HARIOllt MJ.1112 COSTA MllA San .Joatpln District Parents Study School Program IRVINE -A group o( patents, mostly from the UnlversJ.ty Park area, ha've formed a cornmlt.tee to study the seventh and eighth grade curriculum ol. the Sen Jooquln Sdlool DIMricl. 'Ibe parent's advisory committee, formed thr~ weeks ago with tbe consent of the school boaro, is to make recommendations for changes by Aug. 16. Fred . A{OreSt:a of 24341 Fordview, El TOl'O, Brazil Trip Planned by _Instructor cha.innan o( the Qedgllng committee and father of aa eighth grader in tile dlstmt. said tlhe purpose Of the group is to ·evaluate oourae1 being taught and t h e facilities for teaching them. ,;Some or the parents have felt the curriculum is heavy in certain areat, for in· st.aoce rore-tgn lauguage!," Ile ,ald. On the other band, he added, the science pro- grom miglll need up.dating. After the committee makes its Aug. 16 report, it must disband, according to the present agreement with the scbOol board. The. C<ll11rnJttee ls com. Posed Of 18 people, including representatives of t b e school district, and. Inftts Mondays at 7:30 p.rn. at IFV!ne School. Parents of seventh and eighth grade students who have wggesti005 for cur- riculum changes may send them to Mr. Agresta at the sdiool. • U.S. Awards . . UCI Pact Of $8,965 Tbe Publlc Polley Research Organization at UCI has been given a federal contract to study how state and I o c a I governments obtain advice on scientific and technical matters. The ,Irvine grant o~ $8,965 is part of a nine·state pro- ject sponsored jointly by the National Science Foundation and the Ec;ooomlc Develop· ment AdmimstraUon of the • PARKING LOT SALi • I 1 WAREHOUSE LEASE EXPIRESI ' . ' .. MUST VACATE IN . 7 DAYS REDUtTIONS ti 50% OFF! s21,ooo.oo WORTH OP S'ANISH, MIDlnllllANEAN AND MIXICAN PUlltNITUliE MUST II CU.AUD OUT Or llALl'HS· . . 10,000 SQ. POOT WAREHOUSI IY JULY l~TH. SllESTiRTS . ~ ' . FRI. • JULY 5th at 9:00 A.M. WAREHOUSE 1953 Newport Blvd. (Comer lord _AoadJ COSTA MESA ' ' Professor Robert Taft of UCl department or chemistry has been invited to attend the international symposium on n u c l e a r magnetic resonaru:e In ·Sao Paulo, Brazil, July 8 to 11. Professor T a f t has pioneered ln app l yi n g p h y s i c a I measurements towards y st em a tic un· derstanding of the rates of organic chemical reactions. Rolls Oosed At Cal State Department of Commerce. r==============================================================~ The studies are designed At UCI, Taft and his research group have made extensive applications of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. F o u r gra. duate students who have done thelr research work in this program have already received the PhD degree from UCI under the direc· tion of Professor Taft. Professor Taft also lec- tured recently to t h e Organic Reaction Mechanisms Conference at Brandeis University, and to _tbaJi~on Conference on -the chemistry and physics-- of isotopes in llolderness, New Hampshire. . DEATH NOTICES JACOB D1l1y I . Jae.obi 19»1 8rodo:.tlu~l $1., Hunt1119ton Btaai. Survlvld b., cl1u~h'9ri Either A. Norton ol' Hy,.. tl111110n ioeac.h. Soll. Elmer L J-. of H1111tln111ot1 INCll. Shier, Allle Dllll ot Fla. I llf"lncldllld, l j r 1a 1- 11r1nckhlklr'1l. 5'rvkn Mon. "''" J, 1 p.m. P1cll!c vi-Ch11>el. Dr. R1Y-' mond I. 1 .. 1111ns, otlldlflr>'i. 1 ... u'"""*'t Pacific View Memor111 Perl(. P1c111c Vltw .v.ottu.ry, dlrtctori. MARTINEZ FULLERTON Admissions to Cal State Fullerton's fall semester have closed, markfug the earliest state college cutoff in Southern California. Ralph Bigelow, Fullerton campus director of ad· missions and records, said a July 1 deadline w a s necessary because of an enrollment quota of 7 ,600 full~ti~e equivalent students, -about 10,600 in· dlviduals. In line with a policy an· nounced earll_er by Presi· dent William B. Langsdorf, however, Bigelow noted that exceptiom can be made for Vietnam veterans. Although San Francl!co and Sa{' Jose Slate CoU.ge also have ceased admitting students for the fall tenn, Fullerton. is the first state college in Southern California to do so. to find out what kinds of scienutic and technical ac· tivitles are supported by s tate and 1o·cal governments, and how much impact tcientistl a n d englneera: have upon state and local government policy. Results of the studies are expected to be useful as an aid to state governments now eng"aged in exploring techniques for U&ing science and technology to promote state so .clo-economic developmenL Aide Named At Cemetery A· new vice president of Forest L a w n Memorial· Parks was announced recently by Forest Lawn general manager Frederick Llewellyn. E f feetive imml!diately Charles N. Pink Will be r~1ponsible for the manage. ment of Forest L a w n Memorial-Park in Cypre1s1 serving the greater Long NIGHT .nd DAY . SERVICE 9:IO A.M. TO 9:30 P.M--SATUlltDAY 10 AM. TO 6,.M. ' JIWI P. Martinet, Sr. 1aMI Rost St., Stan!Ol'I. SUNIVld by wilt, Glll0'1lui:>11 -· J1111• P. Jr., Rlft'l/ro P. Incl Robtrl. O.\!Dhllrs • .1.nnet11 Ind Della. Sllll'd.IUllhllrl. Allq McQllNn, Lor· r1lne •lld l5aboil Truilllo. si.11son1, Ch1rln Ind IUC1'11rd. Brolt'ltrt, Manuel, R-ro ind John. t 1r1ndchll<1ren. Rour"I' Fri. 1u1v s1 • ~m. 11 P.-F1mllv ChtPI . ltrv ces t. 10:30 1.m. 11 P .. F1m11v Co!onl1I untr1l Home. ·wife Held In Assault Beach-Orange County areu.j.=;:=:=:~=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::: Pint 1ucceedl vice Pres· ident and park manager Clark Hilton wtio has been appointed yice president of operations for all lour Forest Lawn Memorial SM I CK l•ktr I. Smlck, of $111 p,1rdt n Grove Fr1:~t'. C.':11'li'~~te:{yc$turv. v:llk~IO~l.lt( 11"ndd1u11hi.r, J 11rt1l·11r1ndchlldren. ~=:u~ ~ ... '"p;:1~!~r1.,K(·,~i FuMNI Home. HIERONYMUS OM M. Hltninvmu1, of 2 5 1O1 E.,...lman lornll1. Survlvtd by IOFI$, 0 . H. ,iiil Frtnk l ,_p111111111r1 !:YI M. Chtm11lon, Ind ..,..,1 Dowdell. 10 1r1111khlldl'"lll. f 1r111-11r1n0c:t!lldr111. Slrvlcn wl11 bl In Elk CllY. Oli;l1. Lot.ii 1rr1~1mtnll by Petir; F1mtl'( Colonll l f UMrll Homt. OSTENDORF Mildred T. Os!endorll of Foll~ LIM. WnlborO. M•"· S11rv Yed by ""'· Ed-mund Olll9hter. Mlr"I' Nii.on. Sisters, Emell,.. l urk• 1nd Mayme ew111r11. ~ l rtrdch11drtn. Slf'llct1 wt1r1 ltelll F ri. 1.ft'I. 11 lll111d S1cr1ment Qlurcrtl Wt1tm ln1ltr. l'etlt F1mllv Cotonll F11111r11 Homl. dlrKIDrl. CONLON SANT A ANA -A local housewUe here is in Orange County jail today charged with assault with intent to murder her husband. Goldie A. Laster, 29, of !Ml W. JllghJand St, was ar- rested Tbunday night aft.er her husband, James, stag- gered to a grocery store, bought a pack of cigarelle< · and then asked a neighbor ' to take him to a hospital. Police said Mrs. Laster stabbed her husband in the back with a butcher knife . His lung was p\lllctured but he· is listed in satisfactory condition today at t h e Orange County M e d 1 c a 1 Center. Parka. Mosquito Week Noted SANTA ANA -Calll~ Mosqulb> Control Week, July 14-20, was offic1ally en. dnNed by the Board o( SuperYl!ors tis week. 1'Wt reaolution was ap· FOVed at the requort of tile Oruge County Mooquito Corrtrol Boord. Rldl1rd J. Conlon, U , ol 12117 Surllllll WI'(, NtWl>Of"I Btlldl. s~rvlvlll bt wile, Alme. Oa\ICIMl.ft_ RIM 811rt of L1f1V•I· 19, C•lll., Ind M1rlon P1rktr ol oront cl•I M•r. *I Rlch1nl. llrotller, Tflom1t of M ch. 1 11r1ndchlldren. ROl&tv Fri. t p.m. 11 Our La<l'f O\ltln" ;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::"'jl of An;1l1 Chllrd!. Mau Sii. t 1.m. 1..:11 !l!"mtnl Good $hepl'lerd c...,,......,. &11n Mortu1rv, Coron.o dll Mer, dlrec· ""· BUSH Or. J""9h Blllh. Private 'ervlCt$ Wl!"t Mid Fri. J111v S. lllll Mor1\11,..,, Cw· on1 dtl Mir, dlrlctDrs. COZENS Gtor1111 F, CDlllnl, •?, Of 211'\lt W, 0c:ff!I F'°"ll Nl'WPtlr1 BIKh. Survived by wllt E 1n. SoM, Gtorgt w. Incl ArtlWr !· D11$hi.r Pterl E. H•lk•tt of W11fl. 11i.r, Lovl11 811m1. llrolhln Artflllr and Thl'OllOrl. \( or1ndchlldren, ) 1re1t·11r1nde1ltldrtn. Servkttl fr1. 2 pm 11 111t1 O\llpt!, Cor-dll Mer. 1tii.f-1T11nl P1cUle VltW Mtmorlll P1rk. ~It MOr1\131"'f, COi"-dll Mir, dlrtc- ton. MANNIS Troy F. MIMll. ol' UOl Hlrbor 11vd .. COlll MeM. ""'kit 1tndl111 .. , we11ctffl MorflHry. BALTZ MORTU~ Cer•oa de! Mar OR UQe Colla Me11 Ml 1-ZUI BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY TEEN DANCE SUN DARI Now happonln9 . •I THE MOOSE HALL Tonl9hl .. 12 p.m. SUNDARI -One of the newest groups around - the music they create is fresh, h~d, clean and heavy, A combination of Soul Bluea and Pop. DIUMMlt-lrv Art11nt111 IASlllT-01111111 H1rrl1111 •UJTAl-11.en P1uope111 YOCAU-Weyn1 Set.In end lolio Cl1mi111 MOOll HALL 7409 LMfe Chllt -H ............. D ....... -$1.H; .... IJ•ll htllM-4k...,_1 Ill BrNdway, Colla Me11 111..------------------:1 LI 14433 II: PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e Mortual'1 Cbapel S50I Paclflc View Drive New-pert Beacll, CaWonla .. Mf.Z'7DI · PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL SOME '1111 BolA Ave. ll'-ltlM SMl'l'll'S MORTUARY 1r1 Mala st. R-CloaB .. d Liii MAt ll'UTaDT MORTUABY m & 1'11' st., Cotla Me11 ··~- I See By Today's Want Ads e A couple of unique Items. He~·· a 1l&fned 1lua window and an 1889 ClUme clock! e Sarneme II Rlltrw a Hlf. ~lied nicor lawn mow· er anJ,y 2 )'Mn oid. Belt clfer t&kH! t"::'.: fft }" \', 1· ~' ~~AH' m.·-·-··-· -· The \Wcswagen with ·the automalk llid< shift., ' . ' . . . ' Us.eel to: be, Volkswagens were enough to · make ~me women gl119 ) up driving altogether. Accelerotor up , •. clutch 1n ••• shift;,. lurdl• Very embarrassing. , -• Thar1 why we developed tbe lurchless Yolkswogen. A bUg thot'a; equipped with an option we call the auiamalic 1tlck 1hlft. , Ws gn automatic becaU10 there'• na dutch pedal to worry about. Arid because y0u can drive It around town alf"day without shlfttng.' It's a stick 1hllt because It can allO be taken' thrGl!Qh the gea,s manually, just like a real Volkswagen. (Thar1 for you meri.) And bec!iuse at 1peed1 over 55 mph you can 1hlft Into a higher, -J driv&-type gear to save on gos. · But the odvanloges aren't all practical. In the la<fy bug, a gal am IHI more like a woman. Becou• the only shift she hOs to think about 11 the one she's ..... ~ng. ' . .• . · NIWPORT llACH Chick l•er1on1 Inc. 2116 N•wport 8oul1.-1rd 17141 673.0900 SAN JuAll CAPISTaANO 1111 Ya.fe1 1 Inc. llH2 V•il• Road 17141 4'9-2261 ' HUNTIQTON llACfl H•rHur Volliawlfoo 11711 .... h ... i.. ... 17141 142-44H -~------------------~-----------~-------- I DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P A GE Next Stei}: Build It Councilmen Mcnday lllgbt •elected officially ·a.,d we llope llnaUY a lite acrou Main Street irom Hunt· lngton 8-11 High School for !be proposed new $6 mil· !Ion civic center. Next .step Is to get the center planned and built. Over the pat momths Ibo · city bas colleced $1.00 eato cbfi mccrth from, houlebolds and from· some businesses cl dinnanco caplt.l Improvements under dlscuS5lon In· u g Ille new civic center. For too m.any yean1 talk on "what Huntington Beach needs" has been the main stock in trade of city leaders .. Now the people apparently want action and are wllling to pay for the civic needs. ' --Although the site has been officially selected by a ~ ,City Council .vote, there remains considerable op. poS1tion to building the cen~ across from the high school. Opposition comes mainly from the downtown area where the center has always been and where some residents expected it to remain. In other parts o! the city residents apparently are opposed only to further delays in construction of the new civic center. ~ It will take time to build a new center, of course, but unless the planning begins immediately the pro{ect will never. get off the drafting boards and into reali y. A 1ew of the opponents of .the high school site would prefer that the city had no new center rather than al· lowing it to go across from the high school and ouWJf the old downtown commercial area. Fortunately, most of those opposed to the high school site want a new civic center stronger than they want lo fight for locaUng II somewhere else now thal the decision has been made. . The council should not !el anything delay Ulis pro- Ject. The political decisions have been made and the matter should be In the hands of the planners today. With location of the new center a closed J1sue con- siderable attention should be given to disposal ~f the present civic center site and the eventual construction ot a convention center downtown. . ..,_ . Using the present site and the possibility ol a con· ~ention center to encourage retail sales which \\'Ould aid materially in reviving the old corrui-iercial center downtown, is a real challenge and one which must be m~ by council, admlnistrati~ businessmen alike. Longmoor's Grea.t Record Walter M. Longmoor has stepped down as the elder statesman. of Orange Coast Junior College District. -_ Now 75 years old, he served 20 years on the board of trustees. Longmoor served three terms as president of the board and during the 2Q..year span he attended at least 500 often long, tedious board meetings. Moreover, Longmoor has contributed 14Jears on the N~rt Beach Planning Commission, ha of them as chatrman. He has been president of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and of the Orange CO\IJllY Chamber. His is the record of a sel.Oess public servant. H Things That K.ill Max Rafferty ls Unfair. " Higla Noon in Orange C011nty . . , Party's Spirit SophOmoric Thoughh Al Lari., Why some couples give good parties and others do not has more to do with their unconscious. state of miod than with guests or refreshments or en· tertalnment or any other physical fac· tor; for lt ii anxiety, rigidity and fus s· ing over the mere appearance of things that kill a party's spirlt, no matter how ample the comestibles or how elaborate the decor. • • • A "pilot program" is given the name so Uuiit the organization spomoring it can 111ttcipate iU failure without being held responsible for ft. • • • l! a company hires only u:ecuUve applicants cut from the same pattern as its exJstlng leaders, it is wilUully throttling its opportunity to be in· novative -which, Jn m o d e r n technology, signifies the attrition that precedes corporate death. • • • Single people suffer unjustly under our present income tax laws; their ex- emptions are proportionately too small, while the exemptions for depen. dents are proportionately too great - because the needs in a household do not increase in direct proportion to the num,ber of people in the household. • • • \Vhy do politicians make rash, and Ip.consistent, promises to dillerent segments of the electorate? Because they know that people hear only what they want to hear, and tune out what they are not interested in . . . ' . ?-.lost tyrannies are the result or frustrations, accidental or otherwise ~ , If HiUer had been a s.ucce1aful painter, there would have been no putsch; if NapoleOn had been accepted by the Russian army in 1799 (which refused to give him the rank of ma- jor), there would havt: been no Austerlitz, and no \Vaterloo. • • • The "second hand'• in a clock Js much more likely to be a lltUe off than the minute hand or hour hand -and we might not be quite so critical of "ephemeral" journalism i1 we look upon it as the second hand, with history as the minute hand. and philosophy as the hour hand -thus, journalism needs regular correction· by history, and history needs constant interpretation by philosophy, if any are to make sense. • • • Many people have a sadly deficient idea of "maturity" -they imagine that adulthood constitutes a renun~ elation of childhood, when actually it must include and accept the good (and easily lost) values of childhood, and build upon them. • • • Reformers who want to use U1e schools primarily to correct injustices, and only secondarily to educate children, will find that under such con- ditions the schools wjll be able to do neither. Max. Rafferty -the Purple Max - did a lot of bleating about the need tO uphold the forces of law and order during ~is successfu l campaign for the Republican senatorial nomination. '""At ,the same time he was ®tng his level best to undermine the U.S. Supreme Court with some or the wildest accusations unle<f\9hed since Joe McCarthy was flinging reckless insults at Gen. George Marshall. . OF COURSE. a slick demagogue hke Rafferty can get away with such puerile ranting. \Vhenever he accused ~.he ~.S .. supreme Court of harboring soc10Iog1cal Teformers, ideological hacks and child-marrying ·mountain climbers" -a line he must ha'Ve repeated a thousand times -his au· diences would break up with laughter. Once the hilarity was over, Rafferty \vould go right on with his sermon saying how important it is fo~ everybody to have respect !or the law. With this kind at !orked·tongue hypocrisy, he was given the nomina· tion over a thoroughly decent man, Thomas Kuchel \VE DO NOT believe the U.S. Vikings' Athlete of Year Supreme Court is immune t o criticism. any mare than is the Presi· dent or Congress. It is mt institution of government, run by mortal men who make no claim -as Rafferty doe s - to infallibility. Its performance must be judged by other mortal men. Th ere are critics of the court whose opinions we respect, although we hold to the view that history will rate the Warren Court very high indeed. These critics present cogent arguments in defense af their positions. They do not harangue. the court or slander ii. They merely d1Sagree v.·ith its opinions. To the Editor: flow come the DAILY PILOT's sports department hasn't done a feature on the tremendous sports pro- gram at Marina High School? It must be terrific because this year they had the basketball center that was the Sunset League Co.Player of the year named a high school All ·American, se2 cond team All·ClF. named to each All· Tourney team that Marina competed jn la.st year, and \\'as called by Bill Armstrong, coach of the · CIF Cham- pion Compton Tar.babes, the best high 11ehool center that he'd seen this year. and has probably been recruited bv more colleges than any ether preP athlete in Orange County. And au of this wasn't enough to gain him tlle honor as the Athlete af the Year at Marina. IF MARK SODERBERG wasn't the ·---B11 Geo1"9e---. n.ar Geori•: . My bay frltnd is a news photographer and a very nice guy but au he thlnb ol la his job. For ins~. he took me horseback rldl:nj -the horse threw me on a bridge aod I land· ed in the river. Before he even &bed m• out he toolc a pl-e of me. Do you think this was rlPtl CONCERNED Dur Coocorned: D<cldedfy not. He lhouid have •aid. "One mare." (You alwaya need a Net.up lhot kl. an action ulU1timl U1re tllol.) Lette11 from readers are welcome. Normally writers .should conveu their mes.ragei in 300 words or less. Thtt righi. '°· con~nse letters to fit space or ehm1nau hbel is reserved. All lei.. ~s must include signaiure and mail· 1ng address, bui name.s will be with- held on reque st. Athlete or the year for the 'Viking school, then the Springdale and Edinger instiWtlon must. have some athletic program. I hold no brief against the winner, the popular Mike Tamiyasu, but his Cfe1'.lentials pale a litUe in comparison. individually he gained Sunset League honors. but the f~!J>~ team was in the second diV1s1on. SOderberg garnered the aforementioned recognition and the basketball team went to the CIF .semi- flnals .. itark is scheduled to be a starter 1n the CJF ·LA City School cage contest at the Forum in JuJy. as well as the Orange County North·South game. Most Athlete of the Year winners at f\1artna as well as other schools, 8.re starters in two or three sporta. Here, tho~gh, the . issue 15 more clearly defined. -Tam1yasu is a football player -Soderberg is a basketball player. Tamlyasu "'u on the \'arslty basket. ball team, but hl11 most ardent ad· mlrers would have to admit he couldn't have been a starter on the JV team, so we are talking about two one- 1port·athletts. W. G. L. ' B U T MAXWELL RAFFER'l'Y'S \•lcious attacks on the court are more th~n ·we can take. They are grossly un· fair and utterly sophomoric. 11ley are the product of a mind incapable of grasping an}1hing more complex than the multiplication tables. 1bey are autright smears perpetrated by one of the most expert hucksten in the business. To say that he would have voted against confirmation of any of the justices now sitting an the U.S. Supreme Court is to SD)' that he would have turned hls back on some of the most brilliant men of this age and set- tled for mediocrity, a quality he doubtless appreciates. having been b!essed with such an abundant supply himself. TOE JUSTICES OF the U.S. Supreme Court do not deserve Raf· !crty's venomous barbs, wh ich he passes off in the form of a joke. They ~e true defenders ol. the Jaw, believ· 1ng -as RaUerty does not -th&t the ·Constitution should protect the rights of all citizens, not Just those who happen to be white, Anglo--Saxon, Protestant and rich. R~spect for Ule law can nev~ be achieved jf public affidal$ like Raf. f~rty go around bad·mouthlng the courts with ridicule and slanderous personal altaclts on the judges. Raf. rerty contributes to the breakdown of respect for the law every time he vilifies the court. The least tie cou1d do Is quit talklng out of both sides or hJa mouth. Tbe D•lly Calllomloo • Let the Lawmakers Know By NOR~IAN NIXON, M. D. Just four weeks ago mos t Americans were in mourning. Shocked by another Kennedy assassination coming only a few weeks after th~ shooting of Martin Luther King. there was a spontaneous response of shock and guilt over the violence which permeates life in the United States. Many realized something was wrong wltll our way of living. The notiod of a "sick society" prevailed but there was no precise definition of the causes of the sickness. Nearly cvPryone fell a need to do something. ~lundreds of thousands of Americans wrote to their senators and congressmen in \Vashington, pleading for one obvious legal step - a gun control law with teeth in it. But after two days of hearings last )Veek, the Senate Judiciary Subcommiltee voted to postpone action on all gun control meas1u·es unUI July 9th -an in- excusable stall. The senators must have seen the recent Harris Survev which reported that 81 out of every 100 Americans today want stronger gun laws, especially those r e q u ·i r i n g registration or all firearms. HOWEVER, SOJ\IE disagree, in· cluding Bill Buckley's N a ti on a I Review, the National Rifle Associa- tion, Robert \Velch, Gov. Reagan and Congressman Utt. \Vrote ?.1r. Utt: "Gun laws have been misused by despots. Tlley begin with registration. d' f . i~ ! ·, i. < .... "'"-"' then taxation, then confiscation. Then a dlsaimed ciUzenry is at the mercy of men who may lack mercy. I will op- pose legislation which could lead to confiscation of guns and to the avertllrow of our government." Similarly, Gov. Reagan, who is op- posed to any form of gun registration. said: "If. by any chance, a Communist dictatorship takes over, the citizens will need them to fight back with ." Such muddled thinking does not reflect the feelin gs of most Americans today. OBVIOUSLY, THE United States cannot abolish private violence by laws or sanctior;is. But a responsible nation can insist that lt.s federal and state lawmakers enact Jaws which will drastically reduce tlle availability of firearms. Robert Sherrill ·wrd'l:e in the ' New York Times last week: "It is high noon on capitol hill ... the gun debate has produced few profiles in courage, many profiles in politics." The same can be said of Sacramento and other state capitals. A responsible nation also will not continue to--.fill its air waves. movie screens and comic strips with ex. altations of violence and ir· responsibility. Yet violence on television continues unabated with hundreds of killings, at t e mp t e d murders, robberies, kidnappings and suicides, all enacted for our "en· tertainment'' every week. And 11Bon. nie and Clyde," the year's box-office smash, still is glorifying bank robbery and murder as a C'Ure for sexual im- potence -even though the trigger. happy ou'tlaw pair finally get their come-uppance. RECEt\"TL Y A substantial number of actors. directors and producers pledged in a trade paper ad· vertisement not to lend their talents "to add to the creation of a climate for murder, senseless brutality, aim· less cruelty, pointless and violent death." A noble gesture, but the Neil- son r.atings and box-office receipts are the irrefutable guides. If the public wants violence in its intertainment it will surely get it. It will not be easy -changing the current atmosphere of' violence. Only one man pulled the assassin's trigger, but every one of us must be responsi- ble for our words, our votes (or Jack of them) and our actions for or against an atmosphere of violence. It behooves us to let those who now govern in Washingtan and Sacrarnenta (and those we will elect in November), as well as the tycoons in motion pictures and television, know exactly how we feel. For it is high noon in Orange County too! Nixon's Political Comeback WASHINGTON -Richard M. Nix. on, having seen his prob ab I e Republican · delegate strength rise above the nominating level. is now concentrating on getting elected in November. The rank-and·flle favorite of his par· ty, but not yet of the general elec· torate, has made no mistakes untjl now in his advance toward ·the presidential nomination. This is un- doubtedly the greatest political come· back of modern times considering the fact that Nixon's opposition has not been inconsiderable. The alternative to Nixon was one of "three leading Republicans who had been e}e(:ted to offices Nixon could not capture, governors of their own states. Defeated for president and for governor of California, NiXon was to see Gov. George Romney of Michigan withdraw. Gov. Ronald Reagan never entered as a formal candidate, and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, out-and·in as a candidate and badly trailing in measurable delegate strength. THIS TELLS US something about the Republlcan Party organization. It 11 essentially the samt today u the Dear Gloomy Giis: This 4th of Ju.ty weekend re· minds me that It took 17$ years and aU of our wars to kill a million Americans. The automo- bile did the same thing Jn 50 years aDd will kUI the second mUUon In 18 years I -F. H. S. Tilli 1Mt11n l'tfllocl'l rwtft"' 'flilW\ ""' 11K9"1\lltll'J ..... 9f .. lli'Ww9"1'. ~ '*"'' "' """ ... ...,.., .... Dttlt' ,u ••. organization which nominated Barry Goldwater in 19&4 but moderat.ely chastened by th e disastrou s results ol that no1nination. The organization moved toward Nixon out of fears that Reagan would be another Goldwater and .An an attempt to placate the mod .. 'ates and liberals of the party who favored Rockefeller. Nixon was in this sense a com· promise. Although he is not a doc· trinaire conservative he has taken on the coloration of one, certainly in con- trast to the prospective Democratic nominee. Nixon's problem ls difficult and two- fold . He must awaken the interest of the moderates and progressives of the Republican Party on the one hand, and in a degree sufficient to attract some dissident northern Democrats. He must also reclaim the southern con- serv•tlve Democrats who gravitate to George C. Wallace and threaten to destroy Nixon's chance to w I n $Outhern electoral votes. WALLACE, AT mE moment. is the greater nemesis. The naUonal public opinion poll! show that Wallace sub- tracts from Nixon's potential. This may not hold stat&-by-st.a(e but the general pattern has to be alarming to Nixon strategists. In 1960 when Nlson ran against John F. Kennedy he carried Alabama, Arkansas, Florida. K e n t u c k v • Oklahoma, Tennessee. Vir~inia while eight unpledged electors in 1\1.lssissippi voted ror tlle late Sen. ltarry F. Byrd, St. Electoral vote5 in these states tot1led 71. Some surveys now suf(l.!est that, in a three-way race with lfubert H. Humphrey and \Vallace in southern states. Wallace would draw off enough votes to bring in Nixon last and Humphrey first by a narrow margin. mE POSSIUIJTY HAS to be measured, therefore, that \Vallace will deny to Nixon southern states which he might carry if Wallace 'vere not a candldate. On the other h a n d , Humphrey is leading, according to the llarris Poll, among low .income groups in the North, includlng the white back lash groups which might be expected to respond to the \Vallace candidacy. Nixon is thus not benefiting enough in the North from the defection of Democrats to the \Vallace ticket. It is difficult to see what Nixon can do to change this situation without alienating those elements who con· sider him best qualified among the available candidates and intend to vote for him for that reason alone. Rockefeller has found N i x o n ' s vulnerability on this paint by ex- ploiting the statement of Nixon's southern leader that Wallace ought to be supporting Nixon. IF SEN. EUGENE McCA.RTUY were to be entered as an independent candidate the problem would become even more complez. --WWW- Friday, July 5, 1968 The editorial page of the Dailv Pilot sec& to infortn and stim- ulate readers b~ presenting thU newspaper'1 optnio1u and com- mentary on topics of tntertsi ond significance, bt1 providing a forum for tht t;tprt.rsion of our reod4!rs' opjnion.s, and bt1 presenting tlit diverse vfew- Points of Informed obseroers and spokesnttn on topic• of tht aau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher • --- -• ... P•---0 --------------~~-~-~-~ ·--··--------~-·-· • • • • • • • i " . Psacock Hill's Proud .est Paces Show HURDLING HEARING BARRIERS -The Orange County Guild of the John Tracy Clinic will benefit from the fifth annual Pea .. cock Jlill National Horse Show which enters the <:enter ring on Saturday and Sunday, July 27 and 28, in Tustin. While Claudia Guild Places • Children First WiUt plans being formulated for a new facility to house between 80 and 100 children in addition to ex .. panding services to include youngsters now housed in Juvenile HaU, members of the Albert Sitton Children's Guild are anticipating a busy year. New activities which have been initiated include a regular program of exercises and active games, and a course of instruction in decorative art in addition to the highly successful good grooming project for girls and daily staffing of the library. New officers of the guild who will lead during tho comlng year include the Mmes. Neil Donovan, presi· dent ; James Martin, Ina Stephens and Leonerd E. Ferry, vic·e presidents; H. W. Griffiths and David Rubin, secretaries; H. G. Draves, treasurer, and Carleton Pember, parliamentarian. Committee chairmP.n include the Mmes. Robert Howes, service coordinator for Juvenile Hall and James ..., Martin for the Sitton Home; William Eldridge, hospi .. tality and sewing; Ferry, membership; Robert Egan, newsletter, and Thomas BeckwiUt, publicity. Making the announcement regarding the new facility was Mrs. Kenneth Boston, supervisor, who also has aMounced that Nick Scariano, family guidance counselor, is in ch·arge of group sessions for boys be- tween 14 and 18 years-old. The short-term program, which also includes the parents, makes' available the services of six counselors who alternate as part-time psychologists. In November counseling will be offered boys be- tween JO and 18. After a 60-day stay at the hall the youngsters are enrolled in public schools and return each Friday evening to continue with 1lhe counseling project. Prancing through their paces lo benefit the John Tracy Clinic will be leading horses and equestrians from all over Southern California when the filth annual Peacock Hill National Horse Show takes place Saturday and Sunday, July 26 and 2:1, in Tustln. • Horses and riders par ezcellence will vie for trophies and ribbons Jn addition to cash awards but the real benellclarles will be Orange County's preschool deaf and hard-ol-hearlng chlldren who annually are helped through proceeds of the show. Heading the llst of Orange County residents who annually support the show are Mr. and Mrs. Bernardo M. Yorba Jr., enthusiastic riders and members of the pioneer Yorba family who will be acting as h'onorary chairmen. · Serving as chairman of the event will be Mrs. Sumner Mann, and Frank Jordana of Santa Barbara will be show manager. On Saturday junior riders (17 years-old and un<!er) will compete wi~ working hunters, Western pleasure, jumpers, three-.gaited saddle and trail horses. ~ On Sunday, trophies, ribbons and more than $2500 in cash awardJ will be presented in events which will include working bunters, open green ~onformati.on hunters, SheUaDd ponies, Western pleasure, three-gaite4 saddle, hackney, Tennessee walkers, five-gaited saddle and conformation bunters. Among the perpetual trophies lo be awarded are the Jack R. Shelton memorial trophy; the' J. Howland Paddock, Robert Guggenheim Jr., Mon· row B .. Lukather, Newport Balboa Savings and Loan, O. W. Richard, Pea- cock Hill and the Orange County Guild -John Tracy Clinic Challenge trophies. Serving as trophy chairman is Mrs. Luther Poseland Jr. Show information may be obtained by calling the Peacock Hill Rid· ~~· 544-2650; Mrs. J ohn Vogelzang, 538-2053, or Mrs. Robert Todd, Purses for the 40 events in the show a re guaranteed by sponsors .. Jn the various classes who include the Messrs. and Mmes. William A. , Carver, 14, puts Skylark throu~h his paces Mrs. David Harrison (left) and Mrs. Keith Lau·er review plans foc the event which at~ tracts outstanding equestrians: from all over Oalifornia . .,..-·J __, • STR ETCH ING SERVIC E -Expanding their efforts lo include Juvenile Hall as Well as more youngsters who will be accommo- dated in a new facility now being planned are members of the Albert Sitton Children's Guild. Noting the increase in service is Thompson, Alwyn L. Cloud, R. B. Blaltiston Sr. and A. E. Weidman. others include tile Mmes. Spencer Tracy, William M. Rains, Ola Suitt and Donald Ayres, and Dr. and Mrs. 'C. K. Pearlman. Mrs. E. C. Lovret is chairman of the class sponsorship. (Ste CLINIC, Poge 12) Mrs. David Rubin, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Ina Stephens, second vice president, and Mrs. Jared Mulholland, unit super- visor. • . • • ·. -: ' • • • . Flame of Love Extinguished by an Ocean .. of 'Cold Water·'.: DEAR ANN LANDERS: You.bear a lot or talk about tbe serviceman who receives a "Dear Jotui" from bis girl back home wten he is chopping his way through some faraway jungle. My story is ju.st the opposite. You might call It a "Dear Jane." When John went overseas I prom· ised to write every day and I kept mr wonl. I sent him newspaper clip- pings, snapshots, homemade cookies, aloo many small but thoughlful gilta. 1 devoted an my spare time to letting him know I loved hlm and was living for the day when he would come home. This went on for 10 months. John wu nev1r a letter writer so t didn't expect much, but when he did Mite, his Jette.rt were warm and wonderlUJ and l read them over 10 ' ANN LANDERS in any ti.mes J knew them by beart. Yesterday J r eceived a note sayinc. "Sorry J didn't tell you sooner but J'm gtling to marry a Red O'oss girl J met here the weet J .nved." J am ln a daze. I don't know U J should forget about him, write i.nd wish him 1uct, or hope he'll change his mind and come home to me after all. My parents think be played a rotten trick on me. I'm confused and hurt. Please advise. --.t •.. . -JANE DEAR JANE: Pk:k up lho pie"'' and 1et back lo clrculatloa. And don 't bo blll<r, dear. A lonely «•1 1,• mUe1 away from hi• girl 11 ex- ceptloaall1 valnerable. The female• be meett oversea• may nM b e overwhelming bat they are over there. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My ~lfe suggested 1 write to you because our problem Is one we don't want to dlacuss with an,yooe ln tl>Js city. Last week our 16-year-old ion came • • home from boarding school. He said he had something important to tell me. From the look on his face I knew he was distressed. My first thought was, "He'1 goUen some girl in trou· ble." Well, Ann, I wish it were true, It would have been simple compared with ttie real problem. T h e boy c<1nfessed he is a bomo1ex- ua1. His mother and I are crushed. l blame mysell for falling as a father. J feel guilty for not spendlng more Ume with hlm. My wife 1ay1 this way of life was probably Jnruci<d on him ~Y tho other boys at school. Is it possible? Our son has alwa,ya been a fine stu- dent, an outitandlng athlete. popular i with both boy1 '"4 glrll. He ti allo very h1ndsome, almott beautlfu1, whl;h addt to tho irobtem. ~-----· " ... ..._. __ --- - - ---- -... --- -- - -... - --.. ~--· ------ -- --- -_J. - ----------- Sbould we seDd him to a coed high school next fall? He 11y1 he doesn't want to see a doctor because he's not sict. I assure you that bis ~lb.er and I are. Please advise. -HEARTBROKEN DAD .. DEAR DAD: luln lbal lbe boy ... 1 doctor. '1'1ten'1 a ctiaKe t bat be ml&ht DOt be a bomosenal Tbe amout or lporaace o• Wt 1abject ta appalllac. A oeod hlp 1<11001 ml(bl bo a food Idea. A ehuse of tet•l7 ... c.m· palllou eoa.Jd be belphd. Be aware, however, tllat Mmotenallt1 cauot be 11larueted ••" a 1ormal male to doa'I blame Ibo ICbool U If turu oal tllll Ille boy II a llomosonal. • . TIM:n It Mmt dl11peeme1t ame11 Ibo •• npnlflf wbal ... ,.. .. • •• homosexuality. Wb.lle lite v11t ma.: jodty of aulllodU.1 . aireo II II i-. raaJt ol a poor cblld.pareat re...,. tlo1t1hlp e1rl1 in the 1•ui1ter'1 llle;! lbtro are oilier tlloo1lot whlc~ ....W: DOI bo lolelly -.ie<J. TM ~ portut llllnc aow to 1o C•l lho boy lo < doclor ud hope 'lor Ille bnl. . ; . Want to say "rt0" to drlnkJn' without your . bu~n putting ymC down! Get cued lo. Write /or "Booo<- and You -For Teeni.gUs Only," b Ann Landon.' Send 35 cenll In coin; and a loag, sell-addressed, stamPeett e~ve1ope !Uh rour request. .. -! Ann LaDdor1 will be glad to help 1"'1 with your j>roblems. Send them lo h'.I)' Jn.care al the DAILY PILOT, enclooi· Ing a 1elf-addre1sed, · stamped e velope. I • • • ' • ,. ' . . ''.'J2 DAILY PILOT F'rldly, July .5, 1968 Golden Theme Heralds Fiftieth . Anniversary The Soldeo nwnbor llO was h o 1 te ss • s were the In otlo, Colo. At that time tile reaooo for the an· daughters and SOM·ln·law, • Stepilelll -tile younceit Dive......, ~on hOdor·, Mr. ·and ·Mrs. Kerl K. btnkln& o!Ocer In tile state log Mr· oad Mn. ManfOrll Mc(iowen and Mr, and Mr•. and w11 caUod ~ "baby L, Sto\JbepJ or IA&UDI William F. Blatnick of Sao btnm." Th• couple moved Beach and San Bernardino. Bernardino and N.r. and to San Beroarcllno in 1m. -~Ibo couple'& 50 years of Mrs. T. Jack Bradley of Stephem retired Oct. 1, P were celebrated lo Rialto. Jll62, trom the American e Lq\ma Hotel by more Mr. and Mr1. Stephens National Baolc where-loo had JOO guetts. ·Hoot. and were married June JI, J9J8, attained the p611tioD1 o1 :! .. senJor trust "Meer end vice preatdeot after ~ years :~ .. •• '• -:· ·: CELEBRATIONS IN LAGUNA Mr. and Mn. Manford Stephans with tba 'bank. • Ttit Stepbena Mre actrve lo communlly alfalri lo.Sao Bernardino .. The honored c o u p 1 e &reeled au•.U in '1>e patio actJololn1 1lle hotel Flowers Jo bloojll orouod the central fountain provided cokirful complementa to tbe refresh· meat table, which held a three-tiered wedding cake fr0&ted 1n gold u well as the · Stepheoa' original wedding picture and other memen- toa. The room was festive with wedding bells and golden flowers, carrying out the white and gold color scheme. AJ1lrtln1 at the reception were aia:ter1 aDd brothers, ~. nephew1 and grandchildren. Seven of the nine grandchildren were present. · Attending from out of town were Mrs. Stephens' sisters, Mrs. Roger Johnson of Dallas; Mrs. Don Earl Boatman of Joplin, Mo.; Mr1. Glen W. Robertson, Yuma, Col9.; Mrs. William Crawford, Long B e a c h ; :W..r1. A. L. Wells and hus- bahd, 1.Amg Beach, and Mrs . Stephens' brother, Lewis L. YlngUng of Fallbrook. Her husband's brothers and tbefr wives were Mr. · and Mrs. Warren Stephens of Upland and Mr. and Mrs. Roy C. Stepben1 of Fontana with their son Gary. Following the reception at the hotel 40 _immediate relatives were entertained at • garden buffet on the patio of tile Steph<DI' home in !Alguna. From Page 11 • GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY Mr. and Mr1. Jo1eph Hummel Past Enriches • SO-year Bonds Fi!ty years of marriage, all of it in California,were celebrated by 70 friends, neighbors and relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hum- mel in an impromptu recep· tion in the Ne wp a'r t Apartments. Green plants and flower- ing a z a l e a s , chrysan- themums and yellow rose buds, all gi!tt from well- wishers, provided a pro- fusion of colors tn the patio where the champagne and cake were served. Mrs. Vir-ginia Manuel a!!isted as hostess. Prior to the reception a professionally made card wishing the couple well had been sent by more than 50 friends and business associates, some o! over 50 years acquaintance. Atrs. Hummel was born in Pennsylvania and moved to Buffalo, N.Y.as a child. 'Vhen her father,· a well· known auctioneer, sold an important art auc;tion, th• Japanese Art Exhibit at the Pan Americui Fair, the family packed up and mov· ed. to California. C. H. O'Conner had a wagon built to order and wlUl a supply wagon, two hifed men, a buggy and sad- dle horses he crossed the continent with his family. taking 11 months and 15 days. They settled in L o s Angeles on West 1 a k e Avenue, when the city was almost nonexistent. When Mrs. Hummel graduated as a teacher she left the city to reside in Oatman. Ariz., where she met her future husband. They were mar· ried in Los Angeles. After two years of teachlng both husband and wife joined the 60 Years Together Family Honors Marlows .. Honored. by ~ members d their family were Mr. and Mrs. John Marlow of Co1ta M"a who celebrated thelr eoth wedding anniversary. Followlni a champagne toest a bufCet dhmer ·was served in Mr1. Ray Hole's home, tbe hon.orees' youncest daughtir fr o m Santa Ana. · Wl1hlne their parent! con· gratulat1ons were Walter Marlow of Stanford, M011t.; Monroe Marlow of Sant. Ana: Conley Marlow, Costa Me1a i Mrs. Orville Whit· field, Billings, Mont.: Mrs. Edgar Johnson, Co 1 ta Mesa; Bill Marlaw, Fon- tane; Mn. Urry Stoner, Coe ta Me1a; John Marlow Jr., El Pao, Tex., and Mr1. Be1ty Bullie, Santa Ana . In addition to the 10 children in ·the immediate family the Marlows have 25 grandcblldren including a set of twins and 26 great· grandchildren. The C<>uple were married J~ 28, 1908, tn Tennessee. They moved to Monts.m in 1916, and resided in that 5t.ate for 40 years. The senior Marlow wa1 employed aa a coal miner and later retired from the Great Northern Railroad. They moved to Costa MARRIED 60 YEARS Mr. and Mr1. John ~rlow Mesa in 1956 and ""'" feted anniversary by all 10 in 1958 on their 50tb wedding children and their funilles. Wedding .Pa-rtic ipants Assist at Celebration It's a small w<>rld, friends of Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Roper discovered when the couple celebrated a 45th weddin• anniversary recently. Among the 200 guests assembled in the Irvine Cove h<>me of the R0pers' son and daughter-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Eugene Roper, were two very special sisters from San Clemente. Mrs. Sidne y \Vin- teringham, who assisted at the serving table, was Mrs. Roper's college roommate , and a bridesmaid at the wedding party 45 years ago. Her sister, Mrs. William Hobs'on, sang the same two solos which she had sung at the original wedding in Bowen, Ill., and.again at a 25th wedding observance in the Ropers' former Kewanee, Ill. home. Both former teachers, the sisters two years ago wrote to the senior Ropers and asked them to help find a new home for them in the area. The Ropers introduced them to Colony Cove, a retirement area near San Clemente, where they now are •reeiding. Those receiving at the door were the M m e s • Margaret Wilson, Howard A. Mitchell and Ernrin Schwaer from Newport Beach, William Longfield and · George Teale from Laguna Beach and Martin Gurney from South Laguna. Mrs. Harold Daily and Mrs. Raymond C I a r k registered the guests. ... Clinic The Hummels were mar· ried in 1918 in Los Angeles and have lived in the state ever dnce, spending the la.st eight years in Newport Beach. firm of C. H. O'Connor and.P ___ ,,.,,,.._..., _________ .,.~ Som, and •dealt in real estate. Mrs. Vjekoslav Gradecek of Laguna Beach, pi&nist for the Monday Morning Club of Laguna, accompanied Mrs. Hobson. _ : • :: ·: :~,.. . . MRS. DAVID S. FORBES Home In Washington ~J ulia Nunez Becomes . . ~Mrs. David S. Forbes • ! Baskets of flowers and hndelabra edoroed the San· ta Ana Mtrloe Air Facility :(Jhap.1 wOOi Julia Alvina l:luoez becaJne tile bride of ~avid Stewart Forbes, aon .»f Mr. and Mrs. stewart H. J'orhes of Manhlleld, Mass. ~ · Chaplain John Sostrlch J)erformed the double ring '3ites. The bride is the !UnJghter of Mrs, Edward H. t.ari!y of Costa Mesa and •as given in marriage by tarey. ~ : She "·ore a lace gown leaturing a scalloped lleckline and a skirt that ex- ·~Dded into a cathedral '.0:-ain. Her floor length man- 4Ua was edged in lace, and l~ales Perk l:Club's Pot . : ·A wet.~th of rummage will S>e di.Imped on the doorstep er tbe Young SophisUcates lvomen'' Club, of Southern California at their general .tleeting Tuesday .. July 9, at ·f>e SecW""ity Finl National :paat, Gtrden Gn>ve. :: Chm member5 will be ~ for the Saturday, :JWJ 20~ rummage sale :Wlcti Is •iq>eel<d to supply fondl for the Buchcombor Center, Lang Beach. Mrs. John Stewmon or ltun· t1oJ1ot! llMcb Is chairman. """""' llemo for th• ~ l!aUr will be the lol>lc fir codialnnen Mn. Cary Lewll ol S.al lleKb and Mrs. Bruce -of Caota -.. They wUI bt , tdrtcd bJ com· -ID-hon the Mmes. ~ Otllln. Ed CJp<rt and Jalio~ she carried a bouquet of white roses and turquoise carnations. Attached to the bouquet was a crystal rosary which the matron of honer, Mrs. Ronald Street Sr. of Costa Mesa, carried. at her wedding. Mrs. Street was gowned in lime green and w o r e matching tulle rosettes as her headpiece. She carried pink, wbite ana yell<>w roses with lime green carnatJons and baby's breath. Siniuar gowns in turquoise were selected. for b e r bridesmaids, the M i s s e s Pamela Cermak, Katherine Bigelow, Linda 0 'Br I en , ~ Orbon and Karen Kiester, all of Costa Mesa. Als<> in turquoise was Lynn Garcia, flower girl. John Errera of Fullerton served as best man, while ushers were Rich Bartholomew of C o s t a Mesa, Ralph Harris of Cor- ona, Street and Tim Tompkins, Costa Mes a . Ronald Street Jr. was the ring bearer. Miss Charolette Plumlee Of Costa Mesa, soloist, was accompanied by John Graham at the organ. · A reCeptlon for 200 guesta followed !n th• NCO Club, where Mis1 Susan Orb.on of Costa Mesa circulated the guest book. Assisting v.·ere Mrs. James Deakin and Mrs. John Garcia, botb of Costa Mesa. Special guest ""as Mrs. Mary Forbes of Marshfield. The .. ,.lyweda are taking an extended trip up the coast to Bremerton, Wash. where the ·brldearoom will be stationed With the u. s . Navy. He r. a &radua\e of Menhfield llJgli Sdlool and h1I bride Is a graduate of Cocta 16eta High School ., Show patrone Include the Me11r1. and Mmes. Rober t Erbacter, Ro b ert Gug- genheim, Lester Saltow, c. W. Christe"Olon, J. Worth Alexander, Don W. Smith and Dr. and Mrs. Ben Free1. Joseph Hummel was born in Mitchell, S.D. and moved to Wisconsin where he lived on a farm. At the age of 19 be left for Alaskra, where he spent 6evefal yeus, finally following the Gold Rush to Oatman, Ariz. Upon Humn;iel'1 retire- ment the couple moved to Newport Beach. Mrs. Hum- mel is active in the Ebell, Tuesday and Thursday Morning clubs of Newport Beach. Also included are the Mmee. Geori• G. Hoag m, Daa U.tham, Alfred B. Payne, Frank Simmons, limy Jolm March and Cyril Magni.n, Dr. George McCan, and Dr. Robert N. Sbelton. Mrs. Conatantine is patrone11 chairman. Fountain Valley Nursery Accepting Enrollments other chairmen who are serving include the Mmes. Fred E hr 1 a m , assistant chalrmn; John stanley and Rlchtrd Marvin , program book; Robert Goold, ad· vertbl.Dg; Jack Friedman, coocesslom; Jack Smlth, horse show party ; Vogelzang, tickets; Robert Kelly, growlds, and Douglas Moran, treasurer, Dirck Meengs, is in charge of personnel programming. 'I'ickell to the annual event will be available after Sunday, July 14, by calling Tustin Travel, as.em. Pacesetter S e ptember enrollmenta D{)W are being accepted by tbe Happy Valley Preschool in Fountain Valley, ac· cording to llJrs. D. E. .Klugman. Classes for 4 year-olds will be conducted Monday, Wednesday and Friday, with tuition to be $12 per month. Three year--olds may be enrolled f<>r Tuesday and Thursday classes for an $8 fee with tuition to be $8 per month. Classes a r e c<>nducted between 9 and 11 :30 a.m. in the First Christian Church of Fountain Valley, located - Movie on Talbert near Magnolla Avenue, in Fountain Valley. The preschool also is ac- cepting donations of usable toys, playground equipment or money, and in charge of donations is Mn. R. L. Reynoldr, 1162.sl30. Parenti interested. 1 n enrolling their children In the nursery may contact Mrs. Gerald Foust, 847-8925, or wrJte the 1chool at P .O. Box 8163, Fountain Valley. The preschool is a member of the Orange County council of parent- P art 1c1 p at!on nursery schools and ls licensed by the state. · Gu ide On the second Wednesday of each mooth members of Pactsetter Chapter Chil- dren's Asthma Rese~ch In-""""-"'"""'..,.,""•----""'""'""'----• stitute and Hospital a r e summoned to meetings at 8 1e<:11ior1 Kott: Thl1 mD\I~ twldoJ 11 suU•b~ Hlrl\1 fOI'" '"'"'rn •11t: '"""" p.m. Mrs . Donald Perkal p~rM bl' ~ fllms cotrfmlHo:t ct •nd wrn ·-~ WHlllY. Your vlewl '"' l!A<>.l'IOnt\ • • H ... llM COUIK!I. PTA. Mrs. Ratxrt aollclted. Miili fheom la Mo\11• G11J<ho, ~ ...... _, will furnish Joe.a-SorltMe!l I• Prtllotftl •nd Mn. Hirt"' ... of llM PAlLY PILOT.I tion lnformaUon s_., 11 comrn11tH cn.1rrn1n. 11 11 FAMILY • lnttfldect 11 • rriffenct In O.krmlnl nv Tricks of Trade Told At UC Even ing Class "Suddenly ... You're a Homemaker" ls the tiUe of a short caurse designed especially for newlyweds, Tuesda.y evenings, July 9-23, 7:30 to 1:30 p.m. al the UC Agricultural Ertension Of· fice. 1000 S. Harbor Blvd .• Anaheim, Unlver1ity of CaJifornla home advisor Mrs. Dorothy Wenck will discuss topics of 1peclal tntere1t to brides, brlde(l'OOllls and about-to· be-married.I: "Food for Two" (July I); "Money Mattera" (July JS); and "Ttmeln Your Hands " (July 23 ). At each meeting )1Jss San- dra Vetter. Home economist for the ·City of Anaheim Utilities Dept, will demonstrate the preparation of quick, easy and in- expensive meals. Anyone who is new at the homemaking pme -men u well as women -Is wele<>me to attend the free series. Registration lJ at the door. Additional information may be obtained from Mr1. Wenck at , TT4-o284 or from Mr1. Vetter at 533-&449. HAPPIEST MlLLIONAIRE -Disney muslcal. FANTASTIC VOYAGE - Submarine c r e w is minlaturized and injected into a scientists's bloodstream to perform' dellcate operation. THE SHAKIEST GUN JN THE WEST -Slapstick western. SOUND OF MUSIC - Rodger s and liam- mer.stein musical. TEENS AND ADULTS FLIM-F~l MAN - Entertalnlng comedy. SECRET WAR OF HARRY FRIGG -Private becomes a hero in plan-to rescue five Allied genera.Is Imprisoned in villa during World War Jl. PLANET OF'TllE APES - Science flcUon. melodrama. GLENDA WARREN To Join Brlchs late Fall Ceremony Planned by Couple During a dinner party for close relatives and friends in the Newport Beach home of Mr. and Mrs. William C. Warren, they an.. nounced the engagement of their daughter, Glenda Warren to Gerald D. Katt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry B. Kalt of Tarzana. The couple plan to marry Dec. 14 in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach. Miss Warren, a 1985 Empire debutante, Is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School. She attended Orange Coast College and will receive her BS in math next year at Califor· nia Polytechnic College, San Luis Obispo where she is a member of Gamma Sigma Sigma, a national service sorority and the Kaydetle drill team. Her flance also will receive his BS in math from the same college next December. A member of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, he Is an ROTC Cadet and will receive his commission as second lieut- enant next June. • \Vhile re sid in g in Kewanee, where Dr. Roper practiced optometry for 27 years, the couple were ac· tive in the Fir~ Methodist Church which he servea-a board member and as a regular usher for more than 20 years. Mrs. Roper. also very active in the church, was president of the Fif· teenth Di.strict of the Illinois Federation of W o m e n • s Clubs. After making their home in Corona del Mar, Mrs. Roper was asked by the minister of the Community Chur;.:h of Corona de! Mar to call on new residents and for m a club. And thus the Tuesday Club of Newport Harbor was organized and under her leadership as president grew to a membership of 265. Later a Thursday Morning Club was launched and now has more than 400 mem· bers. The Wednesday Mom· Ing Club of Costa Mesa wns formed in 1963, and the \Vednesday Morning Club of Laguna, now th e South Coast Club. ha s expanded from 265 original members. The Monday Mt>rni.ng Clu~ of Huntington Beach was the fifth club. and the youngest of the c l u a s organized by the energetic Mrs. Roper was the Monday Morning Club of Laguna. After their son, Dr. Robert Roper, established a medical practice in Laguna, the senior Ropers moved to their present Cliff Drive home in the Art Colony. The family, which in· eludes the senior Ropers grandsol)s, Bobby, 6, and Richy, 4, spend much of their leisure time together in their Lake Atrowhead home. Meanwhile, the club organizer still finds time to work on her book, "Lady Take the Ohair." Convention Reported The Llie Insurance Cashiers and O ( f J c e Manager Association o f Orange County bas 1et Tut1day, July I, u the dato for lb monthly 11 i n n e r meeting in Wayne'• Steak House, Orange. Mrs. Mtrgan!I Chrlsiy and Miss Ruth Canino will report on the recent natlonal conventloD in San Diego. • ~---=~--,,. . .. --... . ..--, _,.,_...,.,.,.... Of; "'!;, .JI":'. > • l ~ • ~..;; , ' -·T""""<~-7' •• «•.,,r,C'.'1'>:""'"'""''r:',''f"~.-o._.,..,,..,,.. ...... ,... ...... _.,..,... ___ ... ...,_ ........... ~ .... ""!' ..... -~---,..,. .... ..,. ... -.,..,,...,_ __ ""'.' __ ~----.... -.='!"'-· • Horoscope Scorpio : Completing Task Could Pay Off SATURDAY, JULY 6 By SYDNEY OMARR "The wise man controls hls destiny . • • Astrology points lhe way," ARIES (March 21-April 19): During early hours there could be deception where purchases, sales, sav- ings are concerned. Later, there is greater clarffica- tion. G e t together ':N i t h mate, partner. Talk about money. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Obtain hint from ARlES message. Be aware of credits, debits. Straighten accounts1 Be flexible. Sense of humor is great ally. Promise may only appear to be broken. Be patient. GEMINI (May 21-June __ _,.,20).:..-Time to be thorough. Tonight, if you a r e divlomatic, there could be fine reuriion. Be willing to for.give and forget. Others will follow your example. Be big in best sense. CANCER (June 21·July 221 : Plea s ure indicated through activity with children. Tonight, your in- ner feelings are expressed. One who cares for you ex- presses appreciation. Avoid over5pending during recrea- tfon. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A misunderstanding a t ho me can be settled. Later, you are able to enjoy yourseU. Emotional needs could be fulfilled. Accent on greater domestic harmony. Be gracious, mature. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221: Check directions during any journey •• Tendency exists toward confusion. If you take your time, waste is avoided. Maintain steady pace. A void excess speed. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You may have to assume responsibility for acti.Ons of relative. This is not going to be as expensive as first in· dicated. Generally, a day for strengtilening ties with allies. SCORPIO COct. 23-Nov. 21): Finish task. Completion of assignment could mean money in the bank. Keep prom.fses -fuUill obliga- tions. You could gain in- formation of value. Remain a·lert to subtle trends. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Stress original ap· proach. Welcqme ne w con- tacts. Assert yourself; be independent. Cycle high. An exciting, n ew individual could enter your life . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan.' 19): Getting together with those w h o share in· terests is highly advisable. You-can collect facts, file data, prepare for future. Time .to consolidate; get house in order. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Social activity brings pleasure. Forego routine. Encourage change of pace. Look beyond immediate in· dications -expand. Strive for greater contact. Reach out for greater experience. PlSCES (Feb. l~March 20): Study AQUARIUS message. Long·range view is a necessi'ty. Refuse to be • bogged down with details. You are able to advance toward goals. Display your. ability to react d u r i n g emertency. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you lpve fami· ly, home and food . You have a taste for the good~things in life. You are affectionate, attractive to opposite sex. New contacts, experiences are part of current cycle. • GENERAL TElll- DENCIES: G o o d for plan- ting, fishing. Cycle high for ~AGlTTARIUS, CA· PRICORN. Spe c i a I word to CANCER: Express ap- preciation to one who ser ves your needs. To fll'ld out who's h1ckv for vau h• mOMY 1nd 10\/e, order Sydney Om1rr's boOllltt, "Secret Hinh for Men 11'1d Womitn.'' Send blrll!dl!e 11'1d .so citnlS to Om1rr AllrOIOOY Secr1!1, the DAILY PILOT, 80• 3240, Gr1r1d Cen!ral SI• !Ion, New Yoril, N.Y. 10011. Cactus Society Orange County Cactus and Succulent Society meets the first Wednesday at noon in Odd Fellows Hall, Costa Mesa. Mrs. Roy Jones at 548-5065 can be contacted for further infonnation. Mesa 'Seniors Community Re c reation Center in Costa Mesa is the scene of activity when Cos- ta Mesa S e n i o r Citizens meet at 11 a .m . every Tues- day. "BIRCID CIPISTllRD~ Land of the Dons UNS POILEJJ, SECLUDED 2'1. to 3 acre rancho sites amid the great oaks of Cleveland National Forest Deep in 1he great oak region · San Clemente, and Newport of the Cleveland National Beach. Only 23 scenic miles Forest lies a JOO.acre island of from San Juan Capistrano. rolling hills, warm vaUeys and Rancho Capistrano sites are gra.uy glades known as Rancho priced from S8,000 to S 18.000, Capistrano. Vast reaches of the terms 10% down, 15 years. National Forest recreation area s1retch in every direction, a Government-owned buffer agaiost population' and com· mercial encroachment. Rancho Capistrano will belo11g to just 133 owners, in /,•· SCENIC DRIVE: Take a drive to see lhl: fabled swallows of Mission San Juan Capistrano, then east on Hwy. 74 and follow the signs to Rancho Capistrano. You'll be welcomed! simple. Each of ~ 21 to ..--.,---------. 3 acre sites ii cleared and accessible to utilities and graded road. ADcient Spanish oaks still stand on most of 1hc sites. This private preserve, once sold, cau. never be duplicated. At Rancho Capistrano you'll enjoy assured xclusioa for an infinite future, the beauty of two private, stream-fed lakes, a te mperate year-rowid climate at 3300-ft. elevation, and JO. minute access to coutll recre- -- --ation at Laguna, Dana Pomc, . ._....,--~-----' Wrlte for our free1 illmtrlled brochure. lllCID CIPISTllRD 4S70 Campus Drive, SWte 2, Newport Beach, Calif. 92660 /~ ~ (7H) 5*7&13 · ~ • • OAILY PILOT , l' I' Sale! maternity fashions in cool summer styles } 0.99 were 15.00-20.00 Here is th.I big collection of fashions for the mother to be, all designed to flatter and keep you looking cool and pretty. Choose from myri11d styles and colors. Fabrics include Dacron• poly- ester, cotton, rayon. 5 to 15 and 6 to 18 . , _maternity shop 105 ... clearance of dresses for jrs and petites 7.99-14.99 were 13.00-26.00 Don't miss the values1 Choose from a fabulous assortment of styles in prints and solids, pastel, town darks and new neutrals. Fabrics include cotton, rayon and linen and rayon crepe and many others. S to 15; petites 3 to 13. young signature dresses 94 • ' ' . dresses with dots and dash in cool . summer styles } 0.99 were 13.00-15.00 --• --- Cool and figure flattering w\th a tale11t for looking just right wherever TOU happen to be ... on the town or for casual wear. And so packable they fit in- to your vacation plans ... and your suitcase at a price that fits your budgel Both are in acetate with bright white polka dots on grey, green or nCIVT blue and turquoise. Sizes 10 to 18. · boulevarc;I dresses 95 l\IL . .A. -y • • . • . .-. .. . . .. .. . . • • • • • •, -=: •• •• :-•• • •• :: :: .. •, . • ' -· · . ...... . ' ' ' , . ' ' .. ,. . ' .. .... .. .. ; .. .... may co south coast plaza, san ~iego freeway at 'bristol, costa mesa; shop monday through satur.day, 10:00 a.in. to 9:30 p.m. 546-m1, 675-3411 ::~:; :. w . -' I '• ... ·! .... • ~-----~------.----------------·--------------~---~----'-------"-..Lil -• ••• . . , .. _ ·= -' 0 2 , ...... -........ ..... ·- •11(, .... V PILG1' Frldl1, .I<~ 5, 1961 CdM Rocket Zooms to Wimbledon Title .. WIMBLEDON CHAMPION -Corona del Mar's Rod Laver breezed to a straight set! victory over Australian pro Tony ROC::h.e in ~oday's singl~s championships of the prestigious Wunbledon tennis classic. Orange Coast area fans will be able to see the show on television Saturday at 1 p.m . on Chan· net 7. I Big D Faces Reds .Can't Bench Whole Club ·: ~Says Frustrated Alston LOS ANGELES (AP) -Manager WtGter Alston says there's nothing w¥a:: with the Los Angeles Dodgers tnltj:Un't be cured by hitting help frQ111.Ron Fairly, Jim Lefebvre, Willie Dtfis and Zollo VersaUes . :¥J( those four were hitting t.he way t1ii:f: :Should be, we would be in pretty goiO -cJlape -we'd be at least four or fi~i:.·tames over .500," Alston said ~ after St. Louis handed the ~their fourth straight defeat, 3- 2 ... ~" •'* ........ ~·leries marked the first time the I>oirira have lost as many as four in a ~all year. ·~ pitching has been good and the d~e ia better than it waa last y~" Alaton said. "but the pr0blems art;o~violl!. We don't have speed or ...... .. • • Ikuna Star . ~ks Fourth • National Title power and we don't h l t for a hi g h lverage." "I can't bench the whole ball club." said Alston. He added that he is elated over the performances of two former San Francisco GlaDts , catcher Tom Hall er and left fielder Len Gabrielson. Lefebvre, hurt earlier thjs year, is batting .200. compared to his .262 Dodger Slate JulY ' DGOterl YI Clf'oCIM61\ 1:5511.m . kitt U«I) Ju1r ' OCC19tr1 .,. Clnclnriell 7;S! p,m, KFI (Ull July 1 Oodfft5 va Cfncl ...... 11 U:SS p.m. KFI 1..-1 Ju!Y 11 ~II Att1nt1 J:Oll ,.m. KFI !UGI July lt Dod!Mrl II AllHlll J:OG p,m. KF I (..a) Jutv 1) Dodotrl 11 Al .. nl1 11 :101.m. ICFI !Ul) lifetime percentage. F'airly is hitting .llH. compared to his .268 lifetime average. Davis is batting .221. far below his .265 lifetime norm. and Versalles is at "=180. compared to his lifetime mean of .249. Haller hit a run-scoring single and a double Thilrs&ay to lift his season average to .298. Gabrielson singled to set up a first-inning run and hit an eighth-inning h o m e r to raise h i s season average to .300. He has been to bat only 130 times this year but leads the Dodgers in homers with seven. Wrong Payoff For Double At Hollyparl\. INGLEWOOD IAP) -Hollywood Park-racetrack fans could have set off an unplanned July 4 demonstration ·- but didn't. An accidental error in manually in · serting data into the computer caused 'the daily double payoff to flash on at fl'l.80. The price remained oo the board for several minutes. Then the board went blank clnd re· mained that way for several minutes. When it came back on. tne double payoff officially w.as $60 -a dif· fe,rence of $32.80. There was some rumbling from the huge holiday crowd. but no real out· burst after the change. and there was none from the third race on . 'There was no explanation over the loudspeaker system. Later the track explained th a t the error was caught wit·hin four minutes of the cashing period and only 278 tickets out of a total of 3,74-0 so ld on the wlnnlng_combination were cashed at the erroneous figure. Fans who were paid off at the in· correct figure were advised to file claims for the difference al the in· formation windows. The claim& will be processed against ttie detailed records of the mutuel department. Laver Rips Roche in Straight Sets WIMBLEDO~. England (AP)-- Corona del Mar's Rod Laver won Wimbled.0~'1 first open men's singles tltle with a 6-3, 6-4, 6-2 victory today over Tony Roche, Of Australia. Both finalists are 1eft-banders and professionals -Laver with George McOall's group and Roche with Lamar Hunt's "Handsome Eight." Laver, twice a Wimbledon winner in his amateur days, was top-seeded. Roche, whose first Wimbledon final was this one, was seeded 15th or the 16 seeds this year. A packed crowd of 17,000 saw Laver gMdually get a grip on the match in Uie style that won him rus last tiUe here seveo yean ago._ _ Roche played a more consistent game, but Laver produced the flashes of genius that won the big points. At first it looked as though Laver might have a close match on his hands. Roche woD his first Ulree service games at love and came within a point of breaking Laver in the fifth game. But with a 4·3 lead, Laver unleashed two backhand service returns and lured Roche into errors. then hit a rorehand pass to lead 40-15 against service. Roche double-Caulted for the only WIM&LEOON -... 1con " tM RIMI L••l'f' T\111 Rodll 1111111 Ill tllt Wlmtl ..... OHi!' 1111111• Cl>tmPIOll ... 11111 AtH -U Ytr J, llltdle 1. hf'Vj(lt Whlllffl -l.tY&r 21, llllCl!e 2l. ·09v ....... 1Ylli -LIYlll' 5, lllCM I. Wlftlllat ......... -L-D. lltdlot t. WlnlllRt ..,..._. -LIYtr " llldM • Wl1111l11t lll<llllleNt -LI,,., 1. 11.-L Miss Tegart is an amateur. The second set followed a similar pa·ttern. Roche &bayed level to 3-3 and drOpped only two pOints in his first three service games. Again Laver struck suddenly. In the seventh game, he fired a series of returns -two forehands and two backhands -and broke through. Any hopes Roche had of staging a reco\•ety were quickly dashed when Laver ran up a 4.0 lead in the third set. , Laver finished off the match in ex· actly one hour with a . stabbing forehand volley, a characteristic thrust which had brought him points time in the match and lost the game. at many vital stages of the match. He had three points for a break back In the women's singles Saturday, in lhe next game, but Laver served Mrs. Billie Jean King of Loog Beach, and volleyed 'his way out of trouble Calif., will play Judy Tegart of and wrapped up the first set. From Australia. Mrs. King, now a pro will then on, it was all dow.nhill for the No .-'° be 'seeking her third st r a i g h t 1 pro. Wimbledon crown. • Tigers Unload on Halos Battered Angels Test Tribe - After 13-10 Holiday Setback F.rom Combined Wire Services CLEVELAND-The CalifMnia Ang- els who have to be in a state ol shock atter what happened to them in Detroit, open a series with the Cleveland Indians today. Bill R.igney's club came here four games under .5((1 -at 37-41 -after dropping four straight to the league. leading Tigers. The Angels are 14 games out of first place. California will use Rick Clark, the tough luck guy, against Sonny Siebert. who has an 8·5 record. Clark won his July 5 Jut¥ ' Jul¥ 1 Angel. Slate Antell II Cle""'-"" •:25 P.m. ICMPC 1710! A~lt II tl•wl1nd 11 :10 1.m. KMPC 1110) An11el• "' liotvt . (2) t :55 1.m. ICMPC !1101 last start after losing his firsrefitii decisions this season. The Tigers, who haven't won a pen- nant since 1945, apparently aren't to be denied in 1968. They hit six home runs to lie a club record in a 13-10 vic- tory over the Angels on Thursday. The win enabled them to maintain a lead of 81h games over second-place Cleveland. The Angels. who had three homers. took a 4-0 lead into the bottom of the second inning. That's when the Tig~s broke loose. - They took 37 minutes to complete their hall of the second. The Tiger onslaught included lhree homers hit in a nine-run second inning -biggest outburst this season by the * * * CALU1011MIA OETllOIT '~'llrbl 1~r~l'tll K1rt;1111ridl, r1 ~ 2 I O M(Aullfft., 211 J 1 1 l Freoosi. " s J J 1 S!11\leY. e1 ' 2 1 I llet>Ot, (! • 0 ' 2 Nor1hrUP, rt j J l j Hinton, p~ 1 0 0 II C1sh, lb ' ) J l Mlndier. 111 S l 1 3 0.!tr, H ! II O 0 51el<Mrdt, II J 0 0 ' W.Hor!on. II ' 1 , , ltnoop, 211 • I 1 O Frefll1n, e • l I 1 Sl!rl1no. c ' l , I Mllcllkk. SS • I , e A.ll:odrlgu•t. ... 0 0 0 0 'T'r•e"""""I. :Ill 3 , , II ll:ol1s. 11 II O O I SP11rm1, 1 O O O O Held, ltl 3 i o 11 1t11>en1. p n o o 11 Ellls, II ' 0 0 0 G.1.-n, "" I 1 0 0 eurtl'Jleier, 11 o a a a W''"· p o o o o P1ttln, II 0 0 0 0 L•"'-r, p 1 0 0 0 ShNTY. 11 0 II 0 0 H!l~r, 11 0 0 0 0 Mtiurtml!tl. 11 1 I 0 0 01v11mo. rf 1 a a o Tolali l'I 10 II I Tot1l1 lll U U ll C11Uornlt ........... , . . .. OIO 02(1 102 -10 Del~! • "·•••••" ... •••• OfO OM 02• -IJ league leaders. on . with 11 pit.Chers being cuffed about in the free swinging affair that 1aw the Angels add three circuit clouts o! . Cash and Jim Nortbrup each hit a pair of home runs. Bill Freehan. Norm Cash and Willie Horton all hit for the distance in the big second. , Cash and Northrup hit successive homers in the sixth inging while Northrup added another in the eighth. Both teams had their hitting shoes Don MincRer hi t e pair lor th e Angels and Jim Fregosi added another. • • I I f Voss Beaned CHICAGO -BW Voss, 1968 Yardley Trophy winner and former Orange Coast area athlete. is in I Baltimore hospital today after bei ng beaned Thursday by a Pete Richert pitch with two out in the ninth inning of the game between the Chicago White Sox and Baltimore Orioles. Voss suffered a fractured right cheekbone after being struck in th·e head by .the speeding ball. He also had several teeth loosened and has a crack at the base of tbe right eye. Voss was carried off the field on a stretcher and removed to the nearby hospital, where he'll remain for several days. Less than a month ago he was in· jured at Chicago when the White Sox moved him from right field to left field and he crashed into the unprotected wall while catching a fly ball ' BILL VOSS Fractures Record Yarborough Explodes For Firecracker Victory SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -Laguna BNCh's Bill Toomey and Run Hodge, the United States' top hopes to regain the Olympic decathlon gold medal, heed a field o( 00 Saturday in tl!e Na· tional AAU decathlon OOampi.onshipg. Don Drysdale, 10-5, will be on the mound for the Dodgers tonight in the start oC a three-game weekend series against Cincinnati. The Reds will stiart right·h81lder George Culver, 6-8. California Duo in Lead DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) - For William Caleb Yarborough ~peed is a way of Hie -the normal, slow way of doing things just doesn't agree with this son O{ a South Carolina tobacco farmer. tank and changes two tires in about 18.- seconds, fast enough for CaJe to turn the trick Thursday four times without givinc away a lead or a lap. 'l1le 29-year~ld Toomey is seeking his fourth straight AAU title. Te ..meet also serves as the Olym· pie TriaJs. The top 6 to 10 finishen are expected to go to South Lake Tahoe. Calif .. for high altitude training for the Olympic Games at Mexico City in Oc· tober. The finat Olympic decathlon selec· tiori trials will be held at South Lake Tahoe Sept. 6-7. Kodge, 28, holds the American record of 8,230 poinlii, a mark he set in 1981 while competing in the U. S.· Brltilh Commonwealth meet. trMmey's best performance wa.o; l~f l!"lnt.< In 19116. He won the 1967 PIO American Games decathlon with l ,Off .point.<. ID' hit only decathlon competition this year, Toomey SC'Ol'ed 7 .800 points at Ile Mt. San Antonio Relays ill April. Hodge, an undergraduate at UCLA and .>.•member of the Bruins' track teun:t>u not competed in a decathlon tbil'yeor. '"'Jbey're the class ol the meet," s.m Adami, the University of Call(anda at SaJlla Barbara track ........ tlld. He ls the meet director. -... lo fairly good llltlpl!, .. Adami" ~ "Bill hlld some minor lnjilrift thll year and Russ was --• lll'oln lnjury bul both IJll!Olf lo be d n,111 now." Bo-._.,. compolitlon at La. l'bta Sladlum bore eadt SWlday. .''lflo WGrld .,_ cl 8,319 point.< .,__ lut ,..ar by We I I Gln:ua7'1 Kurt Btndlin 1ppear1 ...te. T-.j and Bodle llpre lo be ooa· l*I» jlllt qulllfy for Ille South Lake T--tral.alal and llCll rllt hrjury by ~·-tllem..-k. .. . • • •• The Card.1 won Thursday's game in the eighth inning when Mike Shannon broke a 1·1 tie with a two-run homer off loser Claude Osteen, 7-11. IT. LOUIS LCI AHGILIS tbr hrbl •l•r ~1111 S a J o W.Otvlt. « ' O t O 5 1 2 l F>opavkll.211 4 1 1 I 4 0 00Gtbr~lt011.ll •l11 4Gl1Hi111otr,t •12! 4 111 Ltl•lwrt,lll 300t 3 000Pillktr,111 4000 • a 1 II F1lrey, rt l o 2 o 41 2051va~.1'11 101 0 lO OO V~1lla ... 3010 I 0 0 0 C.OllNfl, P 1 0 0 0 oooos1111o<t.1 oooa F1lr1y. p11 1 o o o TD11ls Jl J 10 3 T11t1l1 J3 l 10 1 SI. L011i1 001 ODO 02ll -3 LOii A11qeles . '' . . • . . HD 000 010 -2 I!: -McC1• ... "'· Vtr~!lfl. DP -St. Lo...11 I. Los Al'IN'lts 1. L08 -SI. LDUll •• Los Anvtle1 1. 28 -ktlolitld, J1 ... 1tr. Hiller. Hll -Sllln..,.. fill. G1br~ !71, S -W11hburn l, Verulle., C, 1)1,!ffn, '" H II W111>burn rW,•·l) 1 • 2 HtGrMr 1 1 (I Huthes ! 0 0 C.0.llll!ft fl ,1·lll l ·J/J 10 ' Suttvn Il l I I W" -$l/ftfll. TlfM -J ;)2, 71.MI. Ill •1 50 ' ' 3 • • • e a .11 . ' ' ' ' ' Att....S.f>Ct - At $125,000 Buick Open GRAND BLANC, Mich. (AP) -A couple of journeyman pros with only two PGA tournament v i c t o r i e s between them shared the lead going into today's second round of the $125,000 Buick Open Golf Tournament. Rod Funseth of San J ose. Calif., and Butcti Baird of Carlton Oaks. Calif., caned four-under-par 68s out of the long-playing 7 ,001-yard par · 7 2 Warwick Hills Goll and Country Club course Thursday. Bunched tightly one stroke off the pace were long-hitting Ma rt y Fleckman, South African Harold Hen · ning, Rod Horn, of Overl8nd Park. Kan.. and Don Feirfield Of Palm Sprins. Defending champion Julius Boros and U.S. Open champion Lee Trevin<i were with a group of 10 others two strokes behind the leaders. Baird. a 31-year.old, nine · year veteran Of the pro tour. had a chance lo grab the lead on his closing hole but turned in his only bogey of the day to back into a lie with Funseth. Baird. who earned his way through college by working in Texas oil refineries. had sunk a breaking 18-foot birdie putt on his 17th hole to go five under par. But he three-putted the 415-yard. par-4 ninth closi ng hole for a bogey after his second shot luckily hit a tree and fell 65 feet from the cup. Funseth, 35. in his eighth year on the tour, has been known as a long-hitting, but enatlc. golier. Yarborough -just "Cale'' to fans o( late model stock car racing -frac- tured the auto racing record book Thursday when he breezed to a 167 .247 miles an hour victory in an accident· free F irecracker 400. That's about 14 miles an hour faster than it has ever been done before and eclipses all-time .race records at Daytona and even Indianapolis. Cale's reaction? A smile on his boyish face and a prediction tihat he'll snap the magic 190 m.p.h. mark in qualifying here next 1',ebruary if the rules aren't changed on him. He was out front for 142 of the 160 laps. He has 1968 winnings of $96,781 . If being first has become a habit for Cale. being second is becoming .almost as much of a habit for Lee Roy Yarbrough of Columbia, S. C. -no relation but driver of a Mercury that is twin to Cale's. Area Foursome In Santa Oara Swim Invitational But it is not just at lhe wheel of his Mercury -whioh easily outpaces. the two-engine plane Cale pilots -that Ca1le Yarborough dwells on speed. SANTA CLARA -Corona del Mar' I The 29-year-old has a young dry Toni Hewitt heads a 4-girl contingent cleaning business. Even that sideline from the Orange Coast area which will business pushes speed under the name be competing in the Santa Clara "60-Mioote Ory Cleaners." Invitational swim meet this weekend. His pit crew tops the 22-gallon gas Miss Hewitt, American record ··~older-and former claimant to the Player Strike in Wait and See Stage world 200 meter butterfly record. will concentrate on two races in the meet. Her main event will be Saturday as she meets a 39-girl field in the 200 fly. However. some of the edge has beei;t taken off the duel with the absence of world recont holder Ada K o k I Holland) and ex-wi>rld standard bearer Kendis Moore Jrom the Phoenix Desert Rats. By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The strike -if there is one -of the National FootbaU League Players AssociaUon now bas reached the wait- .and-see stage. "Nobody is on strike now," veteran tackle Alex Karras said In Detroit. "We 'o\--on't know until Sunday When ian Francisco goes into camp if there's a strike 1t all. "AU ol die players will be on strlke ff there is no settlemut before next week." • John Gordy. president of the Players AssoclaUon. is maintaining of. fici al silence, but scores of players have said they received telegrams from hi mord«lng u-not lo repoli untu negoUqtions can be worked out wtth the owners. The onJY official comment since the break-up of a meeting between player representatives and an owner croup last weekend came tram Art Medell, NFL president. Ht s&ld lllt ~ Md rejocled lie I . owners' offer, particularly in 'the area of improved pension benefits . They ap· parently agreed on most, if not all, other point.<. San Francisco has tht Urst µmp opening -for roc>)gjes Sunday. Rookies .are not members o( the Players Association. Nineteen vetuan members of the 49ers, including Howard Mudd, Bruce Bosley, Ken Wlllard and Joe Cerne. said they would aot report 1t that time. Veterans were scheduled to report the following week. Detroit opens IU rookie camp J\tly 9, with Detroit and Green Bay scheduled the following day. San Francisco ower Lou Sp.adia, however, said he did not think 1 strike would take place. "I'm optimistic that it can be settled qulck1y," hf: said. Gordy, however, has declined com· ment on whether futurt talQ-between pla}'er representatives and owner1 are scheduled. Mlss Hewitt. whose lifetime be.st Is 2.23.6. figures to have tHings ber own way with Lea. Davis (2:27), Diane Giebel (2:28.3) and Patty Carello (3:29.3) the chle! competition. Mils Thornton will be ln the breast stroke and individual medley. Mi•• Carson joins MJss Hewitt io tbti 200 ny. And Barbar& lloonsell will be going in the individual medley. ,I ------------------------------------------------- .. ~· •• ~·---....... -•·:·•it . .. • • -. .... ..__ ... ..--.......... --.. . . ' .,... . . ...- -. ' I Sports In Brief Floyd Gets Slwt At Third ·Title STOCKHOLM, S w e d e n (AP) -Floyd Patterson gets a chance In Septomber to become a heavyweight boxing champion for the third time. The New Yorker alaned Thursday to meet Jimmy Ellis of Loµi<ville. Ky ., Sept. 14 fOr the World Boxing Association ve.r1ion of t h e heavyweight t.iUe. The fight will he held In the 52,CXJO.seat Raasunda soccer stadi'um with Ellis defending the WBA crown he won last April by defeating Jerry Quorry. * * * BOSTON -Jose Saatiaa:o, Boston Red Sox pltcb.lnS: ace 1uffer1RC from painful ten· donlti1 ln the right elbow, wa1 removed from the American Lea1ue All.Star team Sunday. Red. Sox Manager Dick WlWama, who will manage l b e AU-stars, announced that Gary Ben, owner of a a. 3 record with a !.73 earned PELE, MATES IN LA TILT Ttte world's highest paid athlete, the fabled Pele and his Santos of Brazil soccer •team, will meet · talented Necaxa Club of Mexico, Saturday night, in an international soccer match at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. Pele, who has led his team to four victories on their r ecent tour of the United states, reportedly e~ms the equivalcRI. to 250,0CKJ tax tree U. s. dollars for his high priced athletic endeavors. Tickets pM<:ed at "1 fo, adults and $1 for youths under 18 will be on sale at the Hoover street en· trance of the Coliseum starting at 10 a.m. Satur· day. All se ats will be general admission and seating will be on a first. come-fimt-sened basis. Helm-ti ..... Mtriet .... Sehl,...,, J•tr •• "" SllCtJ'-tlllnl '" -ll'lnt ..... 1:U P.M. . C ..... a l' .. t ll'lllST llACL J'h fuflonel. 2 vur ,.,11;1s. Clilml"8. Puri.e U500. To• clalml"" prkot SlJ,ltOC. New Err!Plr• ID V1lttoue11 ~lbOI llllH IW """"°'~') JGllV ()ml CW H1rrl1J PtlllNI Khll (W H1rmatl) Strl'"' Min tW H•rf1ckl l'oreltn Trlde 10 Plal'ctl Dvriemtc W•' CA •lnedel Cllvckls .,,.,. fH Jl.,.lnerl m 'M ;u "' "' '" "' "' raa ave.race for Boston, will replace SUtiace. * * * Attenctaoce .at major league baseball c a m e s Thursday waa oU lbarply from la.t July •. A total of 186,014 saw tbe ·majors play this year, com· pared with 254,9'l5 last season. The bulk of the drop came in the American League where 76,154 !anti turned out this t i m e • Whereas 135,5'71 saw last year's July 4 games. In the National League the total slipped from 119,348 lo 109,800. The biggest crowd was 29,587 in New York where the Mets played Pittsburgh in a doublehe.ader. Amerlcaa League Chicago at Battimore 19,256 California at Detroit 18,186 oakland at Boston 14,432 New York at Washin·gt.on 12.433 Mi nn esot a at Cleveland 11,347 Total 76,154 National League Pitts b urgh at New York 29,587 Ciric.innati at Houston 22,827 St.· Louis a t Los Angeles 21 ,681 Philad e l phia a t Chicago 21 ,516 Atlanta at San Fran· cisco 14,249 Total 109,810 Grand Total 185,964 * * * PH I LAD ELPHJA Penn '1 vanity crew aurg:ed to an early lead and never was beaded ill winning: the annual Independence Day Regatta on the Schuylkill River Thursday. The red and blue cr e w turned back s e ver a l challenges over the Z,000. meter course before winning in the 1tunnlng time of 5:41.5. St. Catharine Bo at Club el Ontario, Canada. was second and Vesper Boat Club of · Pblladelpbia was third La a beetle race. Harvard toot the varsity four whh coxswain race In a time of 6:!7.0, with M.l.T. second and College Boat Club third. . Hollypark Entries Sl \llNTM llACI. 7 IUrlenes. ) veer olds a, I/JI. Allow1ncn.. PUrH l!O.OOll. V1Ut¥ Aid for Cll!Ur , K1v Cee (J U.mDlttJ B1hrll0fll CW M.llornnJ Tr1""n"' Dusi (0 Pitta) 71111! Game IW H1,,ltl v ... ne Jlro IA Plntodtl w~. A!r11d co vi1as-11 Jlorn1nHcl1m (L P lrt'°...fY Jr.I "' "' 'tt "' "' "' "' l:IGNfM RACI , 11.1. "'lies. J "'"' olds. l+ol ...... ood Oerby. ""l'M $100.00D ..se.d. Gnas 1121.000. To wl_... 1112,. ... Old Men Run Mile Tonight Tonight la the mp>t old men can try to recoup those lost years by demodstrating their ability to run for one mile at Cllapman College. The occasion, which gets under WfiY at 7 o'clock, gives the elderly chaps a chance to attain t b e l r pel'60nll goals -whether it be breaking barriers of five, six, seven1 elgtlt. nine or 10 minutes. Or would you believe 15 minutes? Aft of these "athleteti" ara over M years of age. The occasion for this special event ls ttie 58th birthday of one competitol', BiH Selvin, cross.country coach a t Ohapman since 1900 and a physical educati.on teecher at Columbus T u s t i n Intermediate School, Tustin. Many of Selvin's friends will be on hand to help him celebrate his birthday. In t h e f ie ld of "yo ungster-s" will be: Mike Kish, 62; of Fontana. Warrtn Blaney, 64, of Los Angeles. Walt Fredericks, 64, of Pico Rivera. GOlflNG WITH :4ltltJ>ld p~ __________ .................. , .. .&......, MINIMIZE IACKSWING ON SHORT SHOTS A common errot th1t nO'llc• 1Qlf1rs SMm 1o mike is that they take 1 too~lon1.bac.kswin1 on short shots, They take it way back 1s thfy would on 1 _l~I shot (illustration I l) and. then they sort of d rop it into the ·ball. This produc1s1·sloppintss of the arms and wrists that usually re sults In scuffed shots. 0 • On all s~ots, esp·ecially short 1ppro1ch1s and putts, th e club· head rwust acce lerate .into th t b11ll. This acceleration is beS;t achieved with a ~ho rt backswing (illustration #2J Keep it short and then let your clubhead speed up naturally as you enter the hitting area (illu str~lion I 3). A short backswing and an acceleratin g downswif'lg will give y9u the fi rmness of ·arm and wrist that you need to make square club-ball con t~ct. • 1 i I i ! • f Archie Currie, 58. of Tustin. Arnold ,., .... f., ~ow TO IMnOVE YOIA PUTTING •• A c.opy tl Fred Grace, 70, of Los riiil hint...,.dted bookle t ii~ for 2oC w+.n you enclc.d a ttGlilpM, Angeles . •lf-odd,...d -· •kwat with )'Wf ,..,... to Arnold PGi...r, In -of thls ,....,...r. Bill Selvin, 58. of Orange. -~;i:a;;;;;;o;iiii;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;!,. Selvin will be tbe youngest "=' in the starting field for this R ' event, in which ti!< yoongest ace R esults .could be ttle slowt:,St and last. Especially since F r e d 0..,.,.., • .,. ____ ""'"".-._""'""'"'"'""""'""""'"" Grace, at 70, who runs about 150 miles a week and regularly enters marathon races, wiU be competing. Any man over 55 is welcome to come and help round out a larger field , ac· cording to Selvin. SEASO N OPEN SATURDA Y The 1968 hu n ting season on cotton tail and brush rabbits opens Satur· day in Sout h er n California's coastal coun· ties of Santa Barbara, Ventura, Lo s Angeles. Orange and Sao Diego. but the bunny season doesn't open until Sep· tember l in the inland co un ties of S an Bernardino, Riverside and lmperiat. In the coastal and in- land areas, ttte season ex- tends through J anuary 12 with t. bag and possession limit of fi ve cottontail, brush and pigmy rabbits ~T. J111Y t, IHI Clter & 1'111 Flrll It.Kr. I tvrlonv•. J ve1r Did• bred lr1 C.lifornl1. Ct1!ml119. Pura ..... 5o'f S.11« (h1rltdl Fool Tllf 8 111 !Gllll111n\ Tread The Tul'f !Med!n1) Time· -1.10 l/S. 5.60 l.1111 7.IO J.40 '·'° .. ~ AlsO r1n -Cagl~ Queen, P ril'C!li...,, Perlr1n, Tloer John, Klldllt Kld, Ml11 M.lc/Mlte, DDn'I L~. No scr1td'"'· Se(gncl R1u. 6 !ur'-'· l '"' old•. Allowar>Ct'S. P11"'° SltOGO. Ced.Ir Court IHlrtKkl JIY'I Doublt 1Yt~1) Crey Cricket CHtmwlJI Tlme -1.10. 11.00 I .tD 5.IWI '·'° J.40 ... Also r1n -Fire ,.w1v, la1 8ov. I ra"" llM, Jleboll!ICI, Pllol K .... I. H!lbu\11, Mo!tlow Mist. SPlnlsl't Att1U.. Scr1tciled -Sllck In TM MIHI, H1wt H Kid, INntent. COfl'm111tlsl Ql/l!«I, Modren. 0.lh' Ooubll. 16-SoY 1-UCI' .. ~edlr CCM'I, N ld WO.OD. Consollllon 0.ltv Oouble, 10 -SOY S.uce -1-Modren. 1111d U •. llO. Tlllrd ll:Kt. 1Yt miles. 4 Vl•r olds & 111>. Clllmlne. PurN .J.s.500. PF11rll'lt (P IMd1) It.to I.to J.'° Silent Trust [M1JIOr!'l1Y) '·'° ··'° Devll's Eeo CMedlM ) t.lO Timi! -1.50. Ali.o r•n -J '.t.ttencl, M!r ln111w. Ctn· !If TOP. TUik.i CliqlC. fl••lfY'corn. .. No tc.r1lches. l'O\lrtll r1ct . .51'1 turlOnOi. 2 Yt•r OldJ. AllGwances. Pun.e SXICIO. A -Gr e et 511t lc Jr.J Fief! Klrodl fPlntdll MaJor Glor'! IPleral Tlmt -l ,°' •tS. f PI n c -Y 1'.1G •.:io 3.QO f.'11 7..i ,. Ali.o r1n -A-G•Nk Vltll>ft, Gourmtt, Jack ~yfvesh!r, Northern llf!bel, Pl!d1Rt, Cllucklil fl O Y , P-INllah, Klssi"9 Jl l .... A-J. E. T1,.1ey, Jr, !•t ined tnll'Y'. Deep Sea Fish Report JIAllADISll COVl -1'1, •"8let1: N bit ... 31 bonito, J Nrr1wN. J ll1tlbul. bl,q, no barr10ldl, JJ bon!tio. 15 ltl!OONDG JU _..,, I lllllllul. ••r ... Jl -~' 11113 lllq, 111 Yen.wtell,. 111 HrrlCllA,. 1.m ulce roe• cod, '5 bonlhl. 1' barrecudl. lllU, ''' bofllte, 17 lllllbul. ,_ VINTUllA -Ill .... 11ni Ill Nu. 111-.et. '*" •ntlen; u betrecv&t, ,,, '' Mrrecud1. u llll!llul, 11 II"' cod, 7 1.1nd ben. 1,111 bonito. "' meckerel. ulrnon. ..,.,......., in ...,. Mu. 1.Jtl -..rte. Sc•1lcl'IH -ltltM Crou. Flllh ••ct. ' lurl01>111. • Ytlr okh &. Up, Clalml.,.. Pur.Mt MolOO. S•tln Sen tplrw:1y Jr.) t.~ l.tc 3.16 Bit 06ddv 11111 ILtmbedl !l.00 1.6(! Don E!lutrllo IM1,,.,rnevl Ti..,. -1.10 2/J. ' .. Also r•n -looron, Snlp1 tnd Sn•il1, ll•~dltYYllll, My Lt rk, All's 81by, No K ttfchft. l l•lh lttce. I "" miles. 1'111111 & mtrn J ve•r old1 & uft, Cl1ulllf'd •!i-I MH. Pu~ seoo. l'1rme r'1 01u1llltr I I l~lllrsl 10 . .0 l .«I •,10 Miu Kt ! lllrd IH1rmtl1) T.111 '·IWI Ultrt 0uHI ll•m~rtl J.IWI flm41 -1.U VS. .t.h.o r1n -T1l...,t•, E~t>o Fittt, Tow•rd, Clim.,, HOH!utl Helrl<H. Scrt lChfd -S.lnnl"' Around. Srifflll rAce. l lu•'-"'9•-l ve1r 111ds I. 1111. Cllnllled ' t lll>wtMH. Pur .. 11JOO, Dr. Jloy E. !Pl-.O) '·'° l .MI 3.0ll ~cfl•rln P•PP• (Mlhitr...,y) f.1'0 '·'° S~ fCtmit.tsl •.6(1 Tlm41 -1.ot 2/J, ~ Scrllched -J l1r Anti. + Elthlll ri ce. l 'O mlltt on lllt !Uri. l ""' 111d1 I. uo. .t.merlun lllncllu1>. Pl.H'H U0,000 ldcltcl. Pl<* PllllOrt 1t.i•rrll) 10.MI J.MI '·'° $elnlt~ /Hall) 1'."6 ll.?O JIAd ... II~ {Pinc.¥ Jr.) '·'0 Time -1.41 4JJ. Alscl r1n -Quicken TrH. lltlU Le9•, HIU 5111ne, lt lwtl. Golden Hw,...,• Ptu Tiit Br•rldv, 1'-Deck H1ncl, F -Jlun· nr,.. w ... t:11. 1'-Mulll91 l'leld. Sc••lcMG -JIDld M•k~r I!, llc.od H0g, Tllll G11me. Hel's C1<1el. Nlntt. rlt~ 0.-e mile 11n 1111! turl. • v.,.r old• J. ue. Cl1lmlnt. Puru 11SOO. l'ound Out (Hlrl•t-1 1.10 •.lit l .0 cu1lrtero /P1iomlnol a.oo s ~ Actor It !H1rm1!0 5 • .0 Time -1,JJ, Sc••lt l'led -Trecltr Ille:. Summer Sw.ndings s"'"'" u••ARA -n '"'IH" 7'0 "' l!lld'trel w11 ... ,..It SllNl"ft I roc.k cod, II P"' c.od. 22 lllNbuf, 310 U AL tEACH -7' .... 1tr11 tt1 w l'd '#ti! lffl . Frld1y, July S, 1968 DAILY '!LOT 15 Golden West Battles Pirates ·In ~ey Metro Clash Tonight By RAV PLUTKO • Of !IM OIUY ...... ... ... • Action in the talent laden Metro League bueball race centtts on an Oruige Coast area confrontaUon torUght when Ward's Pirates cla6h with Golden Weot Colle1e. Boyoen Field In Anobebn provldee the aettllll for Jl1e schoduled nln .. IMlng con· test, witb the P i r • t e 1 •!>Ol'llni • 1.0 qe, ln the series between the two teams. Opening pildl b billed for 7 pdD .. with I polr ol rlPI· handen expected lo do bal- tle -Gary Dunk<Jberser (f- 0) for the Pirates and Art 8peocor (2-1) fO< I b I Rutllero. Contreras (23.6·) In that tint meetli1 between tne telml, WW'• Pirates p o sted •·1·3 triumph, With 17 b a I t knocb more -IUl'Pi1iac Its tb.-e ol. a f feealv • ftreworks. • Tops • in HB Loop Actually, tcWct>t'• oulinl marks jllll Ille -.! of ·• hectic weekend for b tw o clubs as both have ~ baden •i.t.d &mday. Orange Coast area basket· ball powers resume action in Ute . summer league basketball league Tuesday after takjng the Fourth of July off from the current wars being stc:-ged at Hun· tingto n Beach and Marina high schools . Top attraction on Tuesday is at Marina where the Vikes 15--0) will ho st Westminster (4·11 in a 6 p.m. encounter. Mi ke Contreras of Huntington Beach leads the area scoring derby with 118 points on 45 fie ld g.oal s and 2..8 gratis shots ror an c:werage of 23.6 for the first five games. His lowest out· put in any single game is w. Roy Miller of l~untington arxl Marina's Kipp Baird follow with 99 points in third place. Baird. but twb field goals behind Contrt.ras With 43, will be a sophomore in the fall ." (•r•n• Ml M1r !l·H l"°"1PWfl lffCh O·Le1ry On N~ltles """' W!tlt Will la mt E"lllntt "~ So!llMtver "'•rll ... Corte• W1Uln l'G ~f Tll 3" ., 110 Jll 1• " 10 J 1l J I? 11 1 ' 11 J 11 11 6 ' 16 .i 0 I CQlt Mt11 O·O l'G "T fP " . " • " . " " • ' ' ' • ' " " n " .... ....... """ AutllR ... • • • ' , ' ' ' • ' " " • • • l'WMM"! "•*"" 1~1 ..,. TP ltedlftO'ld M IJ tJ N•ldo It t u OIUlt l'f I lt Vefdl 11 lJ J7 Al'"rtlll 1) • 3• M1mmer • t 72 M1cke¥ t I 10 Wtt-1r I 1 11 Slll\lllY t 1 1• 2t1111e11r f l 'f Arl~t J 1 1 +t11111irtt1tll (Mil CMlrer•i Mltlf'r Priddy Nld>ol• W~HO•ld --· H&rl W&llf" Sn,)' lier ··~ ll•l•d Motl•• "'" -~ IV If HunllW 01vl(IWft Slr•tford HH""I .... NNl'PMl~n H•v•n """" lhKt M1llr10H 'u~ Wela!•• llncl•IHI Po" Youn1 Mlrl ... IHI l'G l'T TP ~ " JI JI IJ ll " ' . ' . ' . , • • 1 : " " • " " " " " " • l'G "T TP '3 I] ... ll io n ,, , "' u J ,, 10 s 15 II ' 1l ' . " . . " ' . . ' . . . ' ' N.WMrl 11·JI l'G l'T TP ?• Jl u 11 ,, 66 11 11 4' IG 11 JI • ' ' ' • . " ' " • " " , ' ' WKIMln11w 1•·11 ll•Oll<!t'ICk '~" Powfrl $m1 llwoocl Mont110fllf!ry .. .. -~M lier• ~"­Tllomtl McOeMld FG FT Tll' ,. ,, 11 u lO 60 11 " 51 10 1 11 ' . " ' . ~ I 11 If • • 11 ' ' ' : l ~ Ward'• Pirate& me 1 t Chapman College in 12 p.m • test at Ore.np C O a I t College, U\en came back under ti!< lighU (7 p.m .) ., Memorial .Perlt in Santa . Ana for a duel with Long Beach City College. Meanwhile, Golden West has a 2 p.m~ date with Cal State College (Fullerton) at Memorial Park and a 7 p.m. enc-0unter with I e a g u e • leading Sant;;, Ana College a t Shaffer Field in Orange. Bott\ teams sport the op. portunities to pick u·p v.aluable g r o u n d' this weekend. but the key comes tonight with tbe Pira~ carting a 4-2·1 ·slate and the Rustlers a 2-3-2 mark. As for the individual bat· ting marks. Jesse Flores . and Mike 8ailey pace the Pirates with fine .364 and .360 efloots, but no ·-Other batter is above .300. In ract, the Bucs sport a , meager .194 team mark and have stroked just 13 RBis over those seven games. Golden We-st hou: carved a .240 team mark. with five men over the .300 plateau. Myron Pines, one of ttie top hitters in \he Eastern Conference this past season. contiooes his fine outj:iut oA the plate with a .345 ledger. Ramchargers Enter _Drag Championships Ge"41~ w"'t .. .....,.,_ Pliftf' •• .• ·•-' ... H A .... l l l l>I~ 1' 10 .W I lttvn n • .m l Mlrli• ,, I .)JJ , "L-r 116 .m ! Alli_, 11 6 .lll t N~uer 1• t ,290 I DeGter 11 • .tJS o [kl., s 1 • .2IO 0 £1tr•dl 21 • .17.f 2 Cl1u~ U 2 .1.0 O By DEKE HOULGATE O! ""' D-.11' Pllet Stiff The Ramchargers. unof· ficial "fa ctory" dragster ra.cing team from Detroit. will challenge the f u e I dragster fi'eld at the second annual U.S. Pro Dragster Championships JuJy 20 at Lions Drag Strip in Wilm· ington. \Vord of the dragster-only meet and its soaring prite fund -no\~: passing the $35.0CKJ mark -reached the Midwest this week by way of the world's most ef!icient grapevine. the one drag raeers tune in on. and an entry from the Ram- chargers arrived in the next mail. Driver Chuck Kurzawa, S-.er 10 1 • Ito I Teeu 10 1 .lot I 25, one of the first men to break the seven-second bar· %':!1 'J ~ 1: I . '•• t · · Hemandel lOMlt rier 1n u1e quar er-mile. will -O.M•H ' e ,ooo o I . . . Tolllt ,.. St ,J.10 :Kl ace his toughest quallfy1ng cha llenge yet this year . More than' JOO drivers are expected to go after_65 spots in top fuel. Included among local favorites is one of the a ll-time tough guys, Dave Beebe. "King of Garden Grove," in a brand new AA· FD machine, Beebe &: Fedak. Kunawa's best elapsed ti me, 6.76 seconds. m akes him a top contender. f-le was fast qualifier at the recently co m p I e t e d NJ-IRA Springnationals in New Jersey at 6.83 seconds. Pllr•r ~~~~ .• ~~ :.-·.r: ....••. l'lore1 11 I ,lt( l ll•lleY 2j t .ltll ) D•l~t 1• • .Uli I JeMlM :u t .ua l Selbert 17 ' ·'11 ' Pl""1' f 1 . !! ,.,...., ll f .121 l .-PN J• I ,lf7 1 Oliver f6 4 .IJ.I D111'1kefbfr0tr u · 1 . I U 1 w1.iw.o 2' .Ol1 • Pt!mtr t I .000 I II••• 4 e .-0 e Crtw ••.oot1t "'le'' , • .000 • sr,11n l • ·!! o K f:;.'11 222 : :\'r. I~ S&CONO llAC•. 1·1/1, "'lln 1111 ttw IUrf. 3 vttr old flll!n . Allowl MH.. Purse MOOI. Dewt " (L PlnCIY Jr.I 0'-Seo,orlty CJ klllMI) Don II fD Plertel m "' '" '" "' "' "' "' '" c•11ce beq . Nu, 2 llltTIO.ldl. 2' bonito, 2 Nllbuf. Cots+ cn-1 2 O 11'1'••••••••••••••••• SAN Ol&GO 11~1 -..Ul -Y ll•rwt ... 1 ... lers; H bon!fo, f blr· Coren1 dtl Mir 1 o1 FUR ALTERIDS Se1 Liie (J Ganralell "'-ny Velll IA V11tn11.ielil Winter P1llce (J klltr"ll Coed rw H•rr11l fl uthf:r 111~ (J l.Mn~rll Lovt! .... Elilnt CE Medlnl l *'Ion IL Plnc.Y Jrl Toucuh (W MlhorneYl S<irnmer Sor•-IA Pineda) '" "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '" Court l'ool ID lillll Pale•• CW H1rt1tkl A~ian Titer (W Htrm1tr) P1ra:ci: IA Plntdl) l'ldd!e II~ IL GIUle111\ Jkockt.tm (W ~FlorntY) ........ : • Ytlkrwltll, 1'0 bonltio, "" rlK.Udl, 2 Ulnd w. ... , lllltbut. UC lrv1~t , a tt.1rrecud1, IO Mn. CJl'I. l.efltll ·-LONG •IAC+t fPeclfk Sloel"lflslll"'l Golfttt Wnl 0 J 151 •nt1eri1 JO .,.._,.11, •l ber--213 lntlln; '"" Cl11CO N H, 111 '"'-"'' 0 1 r.cudl. "'1 bonllo. 324 c.ellco beu. n bonito. 1 vtlkrwl11l. ' Mr•.c..,..., ? Fuli.Tton I 1 """lie HI bin. UI elbecor1. lllllbut. ,....,...., Pier) -" 1n,1frt; Cnll Ml'!.I IAN PEDllO IJ2M SI. ~"') -t5 19$· 11111, J bllr'racucll, ~ bonito, '7 "A" s.rtNll StllMltnes .,..ltn; n ftlloWltl1, 111 tt.lrr.cudl, "-llbul .• ...._ lit •ntlen; il bonito, J '#tll Ln l t.JCI Clllco beSI, ' "-llllul, 1711 bonito. berr.cudl. <•1--111 LaMll"'I -J14 AlllnllC. JleH•rt~ Corp 1 0 IN_._ .....,...ntJ -1n •ntlen; 16 tl'lfllen• f MrrKUd1, 1.31112 bin, 111 &ucc•~~er ••r 1 O NINTH RACa. 1 11" mills on 1111 ¥tllowt1U, 11 lllrtKIHlt, •11 bonito, bonito, t y1llowt1ll,. l hlllbul. Courv's Res!tu••nl l 0 THlllO llAC•. 1·1/16 miles. 3 ve•r turf. 'VHr ollh a, IJll. Clilm!nt. Punt 1,CM2 t 1tlce bell, s:1 I.Ind Mn, 14 SAN CLBMl!Ntl -'" 1nt1ert; MrvOnla 1 0 elds. Clllmlnt. Pur11 N.!00. Tao 11000. Tao cl•lmll'lfl prl1;1 llUIO, "-llbllt. 1.011 bou. l.o&7 bonito. J blrr11eude, 2 Ctdlll.c Gne O 1 clalml ... Pirc• 110.1'00. Ad.~ [W Mthorr!tv) lit HVlllTIJfOTON •I ACM -'J ... ~rt l N llblst. • C.OSI• ~ Pollc1 0 1 T1-trv (W Mlllor~vl IH Et ClllOltTl l (JI (MIN I) llt I Mrr.c:udl, f bll!Jle, "'1 be.s. .. ,<H, OCEANSIOS -lU 1nelen; 3'D ber· J . t . C•rl't!' 0 l 5111111 ll:ultf' CW Hlf'm1hl 120 Jllck•IY' Ola H2 " 1nelen: ' tt.rrtcvdt. M bonito. • rtcUO., no M11. "311 bG'IHo. l Whitt "· Al'ldr•""' O 1 C1lllornt1 lkr( {J klltrll 11(1 ltO'f•l 1''1'l"dl IJ lAfl"bertl 122 Fltllbut. $6 Mu. HI ba .. , 1 Y'tllltW'ltll,' hl11bul. .. ... SefllNH "',,....'"" WF~i. (W HerrlO llJ 11.ayit Cldel (A Pined•) lU lll lWl"OtlT fOew'rl Lec:kwl -'IGI MALllU •ll ll -M ,.,. .. ,.., 104 Well Lltl FUEL DRAGSTERS • IEEIE I FEDAC • DUNN & REA TH • DANNY NATION • LELAND KOLi • TONY WATEIS • TOM LARKIN • DENNIS IACA • CIOSSLEY & AYIES .,. • HOW.A.ID CAM SPECIAL • WARIEN- COIUIN.MlllEI ltO'flt OHlf'I IL Pinc•~ Jrl '" P•P• (M Y1nt1) ,,, 1"911 .. : DJ beq , $61 bonito. y Ill•· blts1. 2 bonito. ·-ts lftt ltn; • D•n• L•bor•lorlfl I 0 Arin CM Y1nt1) 117 Ml<lilt IE Mtdlnl) lll r1Clldl. 1 vtllawtelL I• N llbut. lArt't llorll,.,' w,,,1c.Udl, 'llellbut, Dcwl11 Alrtrlfl 1 f ., c-Kid IA P1n..i11 llS l'ICllblt CL Plnc.v Jr.I 11' LI ....... , -111 •"'""'; :Ill """'"· 1" U.lllTA MONICA -122 •ntlul; •1• Mllltr SOlclilll~• 1 ol l'OUllTM llAC&. ' fllrlones. l Wtr Crou """ (J kllen.l 11, blu, I lleHlll/'I, I 11bf.car't. tt.u. 35 bort!hl. 6 "-llbul. Jllclllrd'1 Lklll ""kl. 1 01 eld1 j, \Ill, Allow•ncts. P11r:M WOOD. PORT NU&NllMll -11 .,,.....,.; 6JJ MAllllllA OIL ..... -1' lntk!t'S: u OlCl!Oll EIK!rCllll(I 0 11 Now Is 1111 Tlrfle Cit Vort) 111 Gr•nd Slim Mitt (0 H1lll 122 Clllol bna. :n llellbut, Ul ..ck Qld, Jl lllu. lslilldfr YActll Corl . 0o 1 - lludcwll'llllf' (J Llmberll l U Tiii Cuke {J Gen••le•I U1 11!111/to. OICIU•O -Ut 1"91t•s; "° boon. ,_ Joe"I fl•r -r-· Cueld Olnetr CD V•lltouerl IOI • _ ...... __ -__ ... __ •W_H_•_m_•_• ___ '_"_:":':"'"'=::':"c· c'="-"":::_'c'='""=·c..::"="':~='"='-="':.:..:~:::•c""=·='c'c'"="""'--:·:':'CMC""""::=:· __ C ... :C:.'C~C·O'-':":";_ _____ • __ l'artvM'I F111CY I• ll-11111 1110 •. _ W1r Fi.t {R C.-) IOI PrlnctM P.t IW ....... ,.,...,..,1 ns Goeo 011111 (M Y1n11) IOI Slid; In "-,.,,... (A PIMOel lU l'll'TH llA(I!. 1·111' Miies. l ve.or olds a. ua. Allowlnc.fl. J111rw 11IOCI. 511r ASNt IA Jllrltdll lU Grev Pewtl' fO Han) 1 u Corv111!t (J Stlle•I) llt Aclolll (I' Gerlt) -111 ltoM H01 IM Y-11 llt Tretflc. Chal'"1' CJ Lembtrll 112 lit Jolln A. IJ Gon111tll 117 Sl)ITH I ACI . 1·111' mllit. 1 ve.or old1. .t.llow1nc.tt. Plll'lt 17000, Gvlld DI Our Led¥ ot Plf'll9f\ltl loltlll, A--Molllt K!t11t1 (L Pl!KIY J•l 170 Prudeftf Str;t ID Hllll . t:lt fl•! l utti IA Pineda) 1 114 W1rrn Colon fl Umblf:rll 12'0 Tre""'°'lll~ CO PltfCll 12'0 C~r11 !W ~! 111 TIN ~ /.,. I ,., C-Kif fW H1r!Kkl 114 A--TOfll qt l.Mdolt 11. PlllUY J•I 117 A-< w..1m,..11..,. tr1111e11 """'· Twin (:beers TRENTON, N.J. CAP) Roy Van Neas, Trento n State College director of ath· letic11 had much to cheer about this fall. The president ol the New Jersey SUte C o I I e g e Athletic Conference divided Pct. GB .625 \519' 81! .511! 81! .513 9 .513 9 .488 II .486 Ii .474 t2 .443 141! .418 16\0 w Detroit 52 Clevelarld 45 Baltimore 41 Minnesota 39 Boston 38 Oiliand 38 L Tl 3J 35 38 38 "" Pct. GB .658 .549 .539 .506 .500 .<87 .4'14 .453 .427 .392 8\0 91! 12 121! 13\! 141> 18 18 20\0 his 1pare time cheering forJ 1--------------------------,---J Ule Trenton State soccer team and Ule Ruteert foot-J hn · b81ii, ~·Dave .... goalle 0 son & Son for Trenton. State'• soccer LtMCOLNoMIUCURY.COUMl-OIALIA team wtine Dave'• twln brother Bruct p 11 y t d -.100 W. COAST HWY. NIWPOIT ICM. q u 1 r tor b •ct •• • 1 L ___ :u:•:1'..'.n::.:.1 ___ :'4~J~..,~·~1 -~---~~ 1opllam«t. • • • \. ---~----------- SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY 1q68 LINCOLN CONTINENT AL SALE 9 Contin•nt•I D1monstr•t ors Coup 1i & S1d1ns FROM l OOO TO ~000 MILES A LL WITH LEATHER INTERIORS ALL FULL POW ER A LL W ITH AIR CONDITIONING ALL WITH VINYL TOPS All u NLICENSEO ALL WITH 50,000 MILE WARRANTY SPECIAL ~RCHASE Titre• '67 C.11'tiH11tol C.....nllil•• All Fvll Pow•r Ail He•• Air CetHI. All H ove UllCl er 1100 Mil•• ....II H i ve I0,000 Mlt w.,.,.rttr FUNNY CARS • TOM GIOVI • IMl'lllAL KUSTOMS • PISANO HOS. • ASSASSINATION I • CHAIUE AUEH • lllATONS COUGAI • GAS IONDA • DESTIOYO JRI' • SAMl'SON • ENGINE MAJTEIS I • MONDEUO & MATSU~AIA • GIOUNDSHAKEIS JI. • GINUINI • RAN DY l lADFOIO SUSl'INSION • DI MAmo l lOS, • PARAPHDNALIA • I UllCHOlDEI HOS. • THURMON D llOS. • WAllOClt NO. 2 . SATURDAY JU LY 6 • 7 P.M. These Great can • , , PLUS Motorcycle Exhibition by Ken Brown PLUS Nill, Aerobatic Champion Bob H11end1111 RACEWAY .. -• , " DAILY PILOT I f;J 'f, Juf'f 5, 1961 OFF AND RUNNING -First across the line in the Los Angeles to Honolulu multi-buµ race was Buddy Ebsen of Newport Beach on Polynesian Concept • . . .. -·· ·~.~.~.-::-~_::,~.--~--~::-::-:~:::-:-:.:.::-::::-:::::::"'.::.:.::.:.:_::.:-:::::"'.,~t~•~.-.":''.":.,,~,~.~ ... ~.~-·.·.·_·,· ... • .. • .. ·.·7 .... , .. _ .. ,·~ ............ ·.·, .. ,· ....... _ ....... _., ..... , ... _ .......................................... .. -- (No. 35, left). Othe<s are from left mfr Loo SBYC· Laaj Kai Balboa YC; Illusion, SBYC; and Jam~ Arness' Seasrnoke, which quickly grabbed the lead. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE 'JtO'TICI 15 Hl•E•Y GIVEN "'-' • "' d .. d .i.cr1011 and Wit .. NOTtC• o" .L.CTtON ~I tltdklll N1 beMI ullld aM Wfll ilffl -\111111 1;00 .. tlcQ ''"'" on .iia.t NOTICE IS l'llEJlflY OJY(N ,,._, a ......., •I f·ot o'c:lodl am Oii ffle mot"'" iiOtiCI OJ iLilftoii 1 1 ll'e Nld flll 'flit !)rel <111'1 « JvlY, Ifft. dt .. y, ~II 1119 tlfl\t WU be tlo..0, w>td al tl«Tlo!I Ml ..... ci11td •1111 wlH fn1 fll MIG' elK!loll 1~ "1111 11 Ill ~tot Wllllln lm1rowmt11f Oltlrkt NO t of 141 lmPl-1 DlUrlct Wit ~ M lltlf Oil lf>t J'Jrd .... or J111Y. tNI, · ·~• ' DO 1 ffle Mw!l°"'NtlUtl Wtltr Olllrl(t IOI' &lllllM a 1111111'1 tl«;Tloft pttclnct ftr ttwl Within ln111rov..m.nt Dl1tr'lct No, l•A = "I 1 o'clodl jl,11'1,. toll IMI Ofy, fllt -.ir-01 wtiml"I f ll'llt YO! 1'111',_ of h01dl"9 Mid •IKtlo!I. Ttwi 111!1~ !SEWER) of tf\s Mllullllrl-NlMI W•I., n "~ Sl\fill ti. Closed. 411 Mid 1,..rOYf!netlf ~tr~ ttle ,~Z Inti lllK9 lw MIO ll•MJ'ld SMH M , ... Df1trkl for Tiie 1111.H"ll<IM of wbn'llltlne to Selol l'""'ov.m.nt Olllrlct .... II con- ,_, of w!Mllfler or ftOt w•vlouttr ,11 •l•ai htr•ff'Wllt.r cltt.IOllfttod, •nd "" lllt \IOflo•s ol Mill 1m11rov-1 Dl1lrlct 1r11vt. • 1Jnti. •ledlon .,Klnct tw tr.. lllorlltd blrl I Ml.cl I ollll • P«lQllf htr•l,,.lter ... mid, 1111,,. Hrtona Ill• 1r-.1 of w~· ... "'' _,,..,loltfly PU-• Ill llclklhlf Mid •1.ctlon. T,,. HI• tftn llol'ldl fJ1 r;;,:~VflOll~~~tlrkt ~!' llHtllltd Ind ffllllltd IO W.t. •t Mkl 111(• .Vlt'IOrllltd wt w.lu.,.q -·t M!(ttllon 11 ... 'PIKI fW Mid tl't(lnCf .... ti tit I,,. 1 of .. 1 .. OJitrkt Wll tit ltllltd ·"' tron, Ila .... bttn Ul'Olnlld ., mtfl'lti.fJ of bond• Ill ltr\IH'OWmtfll Oltlrkl NO. '""' l'fl(I "-'911\f"'"' dtt}f,,.ltd, Ind ll>f whitMr 91nfr I <ll!llMllCll'I llondt 0, I lllfi 80&1'd of £iecllon. In"""''' J\ldff (SEWElltl OI Nl4 Ohtrld .,,,II bl l11ued, Nr-ll"tl ... flff ntmed, blllW Hrto•" ,,,_, Ol1~ld Nt 1 OI tlild 01: Ind ci.r11:1. rnHdl ... ty, 11111 •• •lltMlltea 11111 ...... lier ·-·I Dllllttllan bonds of ~111,.. ... IM •lltllltd to YON., Mid •!U• rict In ff1t 9dlflt._I ' IOI G200oot fol" 1tld hMd (JI Election. Whl<ll lmptOYtl!Wlnt Ol1lrld No. l·A CSEWElltl ... ~ •-'nltd ts mtn'lblfJ ol w.11 Ill llllllotlltd ::tn I ' alt1""tn Wll, In lfll °'"r In whldl of Mill Ol1~lct tn Ille •dctll'-I 1m1111111 lfle lolrd of EIK11on. lllWK"!Or, Jud~• "''"" •I"" In Ille ,,!.':ti1ot10t11t1:" """,,. l»Hilltld, fm • ..., Yll(tl\CI .. °" OI 11~.oo.oco lhell M •ulho•lild Ind ~nd Cltrkt, rhHCltv•lv, ano I I lfllrNll•• lll•flw llf for111 In tftf II( I • !fie lotr<l ot Ei.ctLon II •llY OI the lp!#ld, lot .,,. ,llr-1r1lld "' .... pro-, N ld lotl'll of Elecllon, Wflldl ""'lcll llondt _,,.111 be ' ":r 4j al °" 1Nmbtt1 aPPOlnlld lo Mid Bo.•d lit -!tltll htrtllllfttr "' forlfl In 11111 t lt.rn1r11 lhel~ Ill !fie Otde• In wlllcll .... _b II ... i.Yftd ',':,' C~llc-= ... IEllCllon do Ml •lleftcl ., Ille -11111 ol notice, all of wtddl bol'l4lt fhall be HY1bll ~ .,. •Ntlnled, Ill! •nv YtClllCIH Oii Cl I I 1"" ,,_ ~I. lrom tllMUmenh lo bl lfylfd tnd c:iol· !fie &oll'd Ill Elef;tton II 1nv Of 1~1 ~I ~trl~ndt wltllln MN Im. POLl,.ING PLACE! IKIH t.11c1Wlve1v u-landt within Hid ~blt1 IPHllllld fl) H id llotrd 01 $111¢ bolldl """be.tr lnttr I I " CttOWN VALLEY ELEMENTARY lmPn:>Vtmll'll Ol•l•kl. !Ion do not 1n.nd II lfMI -11!119 ol Of' r•ttt i ft .eCI 1' 11 11 rt SCHOOL. 1'tm CroWfl V1Uev Pa1"11;w1y, StlCI bDndl .... u i..r l11htn!t.t ti 1 ttt9 lfMI Hit. f7'1o) ,., ':""'""' ':!y11bli9""'..:.1!"~~nt lHUnl Nl1uel, C1ll1tmr1 II'" riles 11111 ht •xcNCI MYetl "'' uni POLLING PLACE• Ille tCN I r ft ' v, IMlllCtol'i lNl Hr tnnum, P1Y1bk 1tml•111n11tll'1', CJIOWN VAl..1..EY ELEMENTAll:'I' IN!'ll 11 1 ..: ..:.::~Mu!..""' n!' :r; lltutrl E. 011111,.ll, tnfl vl1 Potlolt, Ille K"'81 tt tf or rites and 11~ of HY· .SCHOOi,., 2'1'2 Crown V1lltV P1rtw1v, tlltrtol · l."un. N1t11e1, C1llfornl• tHn mMt lo be '"ftrmklld """ lh<t. wle l.11...,.. Nl1w1, C1l!10r11l1 nit b.11ttt ,__. .11/dve; llle•ttf. llUPldor: '111 ""form ,,·Jr~":. •=ltll Pl~ll bl Gt111w T. R.evnoklt, ?$"16? Adel•lllt Tiie IMllol' \IMd •• Ille ellcilon th•ll 111 R.otlll E. CllePHll, 29>1'1 YI• .-or1ol1, 1111 Wlflf Codi Tiit tol=I~ '6 ,''1 OrlYt, LltllM Hlt11el, CIUlorll.11 mn In lht form pr1w:r!bed b, SlcllOll 3!1°' of L1011111 Hlt111f, Ctlllwnll '1'11 11111,_1. ™H bf OOMrvtcl· • C1trlt1: lllt W11tr COdt. Tllfi tolloo\'lfll r• Jlldte: (•) E1cll b911ot Wil bl Mr. lee Andr .... 1, 2"31 la Her"'°", tu!remenb .iitll Ill ~Id: GtMY T, liltYnokll, 2S1'2 Adelankt Mrfoftfed llM ICrtlSI Ille ... """';!,, :I l.11wi1 Nltlltl. C1lll. mn <•l E&ch •lllllot 111111 hive • Drive. l••~"· Nltlutl. C1llltml1 ,.,,17 1111 11111o1 two IM!lft dOwfl ind P••lltl Anni Nord11rom, mn vii Portola, Hrlorated lln• tcrou ths tc. ll'O>llon o1 C~k•: It It'll loll lfltreof l'rom 11111 MrforifH l•"""' Nlt,,..1, Cllll. mn tlle btllot two lnchn dOWll tnd P•••llel Mr, l..ft Andrewt, 2"431 l1 Htrrrt0$4' llne to lfll "" oi 1f1t INllot 1 vertlul AINrr•1l•1: t.1 llie tOP lfllreof. From mis Jelior•IHI Lt""'' Nle111r. Cam. '1677 l!lfforttff lln. 111111 bl PIKld 111 Ille Ttre!ll ,Mirr., mn L11 Cruct1. llM 111 Ille tOP ol lfll t11l10f • vutlcel Ari/It Notdllrom, 29J1! vlt Pono! .. tff!Nr of ttoe 11111o11 l•11-Nl1 .... 1, c.111. mn 1>1•to•1IHI llM wn bl 1111cld 111 111e L1tun11 Nlcwer, c.111, mn CIO Abolla thl perfor1fed 11,... alld "' JIJIW Slilot, um ,1,0oe11nl9 orive, unler of 1111 bellol; ArterNlet: both tlde1of1111 YertlCll Mrloi'llllon lf'M! l1tun1 N!1u1I, (1111, '1617 Cbl Above Ills l>ef'lor111d llM •nd Oii Tt11111 Mlrrt, ffll1 LI• Crucet, blllol 111111 bl prlnlld with !fie Mme rJI Irene Lan1tord. 2'3111 v11 Poffl:lll, bolt! 1ldft of "" 119rtlc11 pertoretlon IM Lt1u"' Nlouet, Calll, n•n 1111 llTIPl'Olltmt'lll Ol•lrlct, 1111 11•1• ol l,."11111 NJouel, C1lltornlt t:Hn blllol $11111 be prlnlecl With 1111 tw1me ol JuM Sip,, 2»» ,t,de!1n10 Orlve, Jiit •IKflon tnd ll'le bllllot numMr. AU To be ouaUl!K at • "JOit• •"" 11 flt''""' 1M t~ro-..ment Ol1trld, "-d•ll of lt1Ut11 Nl11.11J, C11Jt. '2671 llllloh $twlll be numberld conM(VflYll'Y lllllct te wit tt Hid 11actlon, "'9 peNGn lllt •llctfon •nd 1111 lllllol number. All lrwM ltntlord, !9311 vii Portola, •l&tllnt wllh n\lll'lber -· m11t1 M t lloldtr ol !Ult In ttld lmproY• bllloh tllall be numbered comttutlvtlY L•;utlfl NIOueL, C11Jlornl1 9261' le! Atlova ll>e pertort~ 11111 •nd 11 ernent Oltlrlct. ,t, "llolde• ot 11111" $/!ill tt1rtl111 Wllh n11mbtr _, To be CIUtllllld IJ 1 YOltr and to be -lllt I.it Of ,,,. ,..rtlCll "rfortllOn lftlH "'"n tile owner ol tlCOl'd ol fee 11111 11 (c) ,1,bQve Ille P'lrlorated JIM and lo tilled I'll "°'' 11 »Id eltdlcn, Ill• P'lnon bl prlnled: "Number o1 \IOlllS •nlllltd l1nd. Etch llOltr 1h1ll lie~ -!ll YOll Ille left ol I~ vertical pert.,,1llon 5/ltll must bl I holder ol lllle tn stld lmprove- 11 citl:"; 10' ff<h OOU1r's wortll of land lo wlllch be IN'ln~; Number of votes tnll!led ment Ol1lrJcl, A ''holder of title'' sh1U (Cl) Abo\11 lfll 1>1rf0talld llftt !fie hCI holds lllleo. An tntumt11I for the It ctSt• ; mu11 fN owntr of TIC'llrd Of ftlt llllt lo lcllowfllf thtll be prlnfl<:I In lllfi ti!''"' Ol1trlct not ~IYlll!il been made •nd levlHI (d) Abo11<11 1t>t ...,...,,,ltd HM the land, EKfl volt• shall ll1ve one Ill volt enumer1ltd: tor tr.. v1tr In wlllc~ $1ld e!Kllon 11 It tollow!1111 1h1JI be prl11led In 1111 Otder for e1<11 dollar's worth of """ to wlllcll fl) The ,..,... ot tr.. h•\IN'O\ltmt111 be held, the 1111 ~111lltecl •1stument roll enum.e111ec1 : ht tio_ld1 11111, ,1,n ••~-! tor the Olslrlct 11111 tt.t d1l1 (JI eltdlorl; of the County of Orang• 1t concluslve (ll The Mm• ol Ille lmpnivemenl Dltlrltt not h1vl11t bffn midi 111d levied U) "N11t11bor ot vofet inlllllcl 1o nldef'I:• o1 OWftt•lhlP •nd ot the-v11111l of Ol1trlct •net the d1le of tied Jon; tor "lhe vear In whl<ll $1ld eled!Oll Is to uil:": llnd IO ownld. E...,,.., voter, ,,, Ills letll Cl),, "Number of YOllJ tnlllled lo N llfilcl, Ille lad 1C1u1ll11d tHeHm.nl mil 13) A Hiid bl1ck line. tmmedlal11Y '"''"'nltllve, m1y vote ellher ln l'el'Wll c11I: I of lhO C0<0nty Of Or1ntt 11 co11duslve 11ndllr ""' llM shall Ill prlntHI: "Fold or by • perton """' ·-1111.o' IS ))ls pro-(31 A Hiid black UM. lmmed;~t.IY •Vldf!f!c• of OWntl'llllP Ind of me Ylfue of bottom o1blotloluP1o t11Ji 1tne," xY. "lell1I repres1nt1llYf'' me1m •n of, llndtr the nne 1hlll be prlnlHI: Fokl 11"<:1 "'owned, Ev1ry voter, or ~11 "'9•1 l•l Tr. bond prOPOllllon lo be llcJtl of a corPOrt!Lon own!lll land tnd botrom of blllot 1111 11 this HM." repr .. elll1l!ve, mlY volt 1lll>lr In pencn 111bll'llttld t.i the voter1. mt1M 1 1111rdl1n, exte11lor or •Cl· t•) Tht bond pr11P01lllon lo be DI' br, • Hr.on dlll'I' tPPOlnlecl •1 Ills Pto- (e) """'""1111 si1u1res Pll ll be ,lac-ml11l1tr1lor ol !ht etltlt of Ill• holder of :wbmlllHI to the Yo1tr1. l!'f'. lt111I repres~11t1ll~" mNllt 1n of• td 1ri.r "" pr-ltlOll 1111 11\t rhlhl sl,.. 11th! 1o l•nd wno t•l I• IPllOlnlHI under ii) APPrOPrl1te s1111ttes Wll N PllC· nc111 of • corJ10r111on ow111111 l1nd 1nd of the blllol; Ille ,llWt f1I lMs Stitt, tbl 11 enlllltd 10 HI •lier "'-Pn:IPOl!llorl on 1111! rlg~I side me1n1 I •~•rdl1n, tXKutor Ill' •0. (f) Al>lorOPrJalt w.11111 iMtr1JCllorll POuftslon of the est1l•'s 1011<1, 1nd tel Is of Ille lllllol; m!nl1tr11or ol lh• nt1te of lllfi llcllder af Seasmoke Takes Lead Two Newport Boats Hold Lead to Tahiti NOTICI 01' INTl:NT!ON TO INGAGI mlY bl 'laced on tf\f; blllof. aulhorltld bY tllf, •-lnllno court lo e•· (I) Appro..rlate YOllnt lnsl1'11Ctlons llfht lo l1nd wno fa) JI IPP<>ln!td Under IN TNI SALi 01' ALCOHOLIC Tt>tt on lhl bllloh to be Ufld al nld trcl .. lhe 1>1non1! rJ1llt pr1Yllt91 or lm· meY be plecHI °" the bl!lot. l~t laws ol ltlls Sl1Te, (bl h fflllflHI !ft llVl!lltAOl!l ti.dlon Ill tdcHlloll lo tllY Olhlr INtt.l"S munlty w.blch ... Sffks ~ •Ket'Cl'ICI, •ttore Tlltl °" lht bllloll " be uwd If wld "°"'51IOll of Ille ftl1te'1 lend. tnd le) II \July 3, lffl rtQulred by law, ther1 Wit 111 prlllted t 1ttt1I rtPrt1e11l1l!ve miy vote 11 ••Id tle<:llon In lddltlon lo '"" Olhtr matte.-s I Ulllcrllecl bV Ille 1PPC111!1119 court lo eX• TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: lllblfintJtlPV ""ftllowlM: Eleellon • certlllHI COPY of wld tlllftorJty, rt11ulrH1 by law, there shill be prJnlld trt:IH lht person1I rt1hl, prlvllfllf or Im· Subitcf to IHuance Ill' the l!ct11te 11,_ OFFICIAL llALLOT ' wl\Jcll 5/litl be kept 11\d tiled with lhl subst1111!1J1Y !hi followlnt: munJty which he Sffks TO exercl~ Before Plied for, notice 11 hereby tlve11 the! tne IMPROVEMENT D1STlltlCT relvrns of the eltc:tlon. OFFICIAL BALLOT I l9511J repr111nt1tlvt m1v VOit at s1ld undtnlonecl llr-to sen •lcol'lclllc .... NO 1 No •PPOllllmlf\I of I Pro•V lft•ll be tMPROVEMENT DISTRICT eltctlQll, he mull present to Ille 8oltd of bever.o•t •I "" llr•mfltl, dllcrlbld II OF v1lld, ICCtt>led, or I Wiit 1Jlcwed lflertllfl NO. l·A tSEWERJ Eltc:llon. cerl!llld COPY Of Hid IUlhorltv. follows: MOULTON•NIGU!L WATER DISTRICT unlfts 11 meets 111 o1 the tollow11111 r~ OF . Which ll\111 be kept ind filed wlfh the 6SO l11u111 C1nYon Rd. SPEC~AI,. BONO ELECTION 11ulrem1nll: ft) 11 ls In wrlll1111; fbl JI Ii MOULTON-NIGUEL WATER 015Tll:ICT retuMJ ol the ei.ctlon. In Transpac Brisk westerly winds 'sped the seven catamanms and one tJ'jmaran oo theSr wa:y to Honolulu today in the third biennial multi-hull ·t:rianspac race. Buddy ' IDbsen's J6..foot Polynesian concept from Balboa Yadlt Club was first .to cross the starting line at ,Point Fermin yesterday, but ·.~soon o-vediauled by Jim ·Arness' 58-foot Seasmoke. LAYC. Vic Stern's Imi Loa from Seal Beach Yacht Club was among the leaders as the ·ei~t boats beat toward the west end of Catalina. Others in hot pursuit . were : Auriga, :r7 -foot himaran, Bob Cameron, SGYC; Manu Iwa, 49-foot \\'etch, Lance Reventlow, MYC; Lani Kai , 46-loot ket.ch, Martin Cnunrine, BYC; Glass Sli]lpe1" II, 48.- .foot ketch, Jay Johnson, SBYC; and illusion, 41-foot ketch, Gordoo Cann, SBYC. Persephone Green water was sweep· ing the decks of the lead boiats in ttle Los Angeles to Tahiti raee today ru; they drove toward the finish at i'>apeete. Henry Wheeler's Arnnji and TMl Corkett's Salacia, bottl from Newport, are ex· pect.ed to finish the 3571· mile Cl"'OSsing Saturday. Aranji had 296 mile6 to go after a. 205-mile 24-hour run 11ltursdey. Sa>acia had a 206· mi.le 00.y and was 339·rniles out. Jaodb Wood's Chiriqui reported green water over her bows as she logged the best daY's run of 22.5 miles, but she still bad 418 miles to go. Ohiriqui's crew repaired the broken headstay that had -slowed her during the previous two days. Fuller Callaway's Rapture was 490 miles from the fini:s11 after -a 205 mile day's run. Race Taken By Powell Wlllll. er of WNG BEACH (UPI) -Dick Powell Of Manhattan Beacti, Calif., hias captured Uie 2fi6 cubic Ulch claS6 for vale Trophy llhe second s!r<U!lht year at I Ule west Long Beach Lions SANTA BARB AR A _ club inboard sweep5takes Geor regoatla. ge Griffith's Cal-40 Pa'· 'Ilhere were three other sephone from Los Angeles repeart winners nwrsmey at y ~cht Club was the handicap the 19th annual competition WlllDer Thursday in the 4s. .at the Long Beadt Marine mile Vale Trophy Race from ~d.ium. Santa Barbara to Santa ·eruz Island and return. Wayne Thompson of . The race was the opener Nortnridge, Calif., won the m the. Southern California 150 cubic incti class. The Yachting Assn. 5 um m e r other repeat v:iclf:ors were regatta being cooducted Joe SChulte o! Rolling Hills, here over the long Fourth of Calli., in tile 145 cubic inch July weekend. class and J erry &iIIard o4 First to finish the island San Pednl, Calif., in the 280 .circuit was Jim Whilhite's _.,.,_,_·c_m_· _ob_c_lass __ • ___ _ 64-foot Aphene from St.I Francis Yacht Club in 6.2910 hours. Persephone finished in 6.5985 hours but her cor· reeled tfme o{ 5.4845 hours easily nabbed the top prize. Following are c I ass results: Class A first , Persephone : second, Sprite, Harry Lundberg. SBYC: third. Release, George Sturges. NlfYC; fourth. Ci· moon, John Noble . SBYC; fi fth, Agronaut, Mort An· dron. SBYC. ClaS6 B -first. Papoose Cliff Tuckei:-. hBYC; second: Iguana, Bob Grant, SBYC : ttrird. Galadroiel, H a 1 ~e.veridge, SBYC ; fourth, .'St. Croix. John Yabsley ;l;BYC; fifth, Bellweather, T: '.Flanigan, MYC. ~Boating ' 'OC;ain • JD Shows Sales • : Boat, outboard motor and :trailer dollar vo1ume of llipments for Ute month of A!l>rlI, 1968 llhOWtd gains acl'OfM the board compared !io April 1981; aecording to ·;uie jWlt monlltly statislical :teport of the N&tional !/.HOciation oi Engine and :Boat Maoofacwron and tile iJ!oatiot lndultey ..... oc1 •• lion. The combllled dollar -lrlcreMI for ail calegorlec waa 15 percent for the month. 'lbe increase for tM 19ell model year to April { .. ffil mooU>s) waa 15.t percent over the seme period in tbe 1967 model year. Ev1ry week MMCO s1ti11i11 mor• thin 10,000 tr1n1ml111on probl1m1, You aet Ir•• towins. • frte rold· cllttk, 1111, efti~i•nt Se1Yk:-r..01t limH in ju1t one dt y, And with A-'MCO. )'our trtntmission ctn be protected by over 500 MMCO Cen• Mrs co1st to co111. Every minute tnd II h11f, IOIYM· -Pl'llYll • , , Y•u•t.· .. 1, .. ,. u-..IAIM .. AAMCOI 1741 .....,.,, ... 644-1''' Garden Grove ,.., ..,.... .,..... ''"' .... ,,.... Senta An• m L l'lnlt 11, .. • .. l1tun1 •e•d! J I 2l 1"41 IXKultd tw Ille person .... lfl•I represe11-SPECIAL BONO ELECTION No aPPOlnlmenl of I pro1y !.11111 be Doug S•-~··· ~ , Star P11nu111I to •lid! l11tentlon. !he u... To volt 11~~ ~ crcm (+) ln lht tallve of lht person wflo, In 1ccord1nc1 July ~l, 1Ht Ytlld, •ccepled, or• vote 1ttowed thereon !Jil:l.~wea ... ...,r S-, dtr~ltnecl 11 IPPIYlnt II the Oep1r1mtnt llt'llllllil 111:,fll! ilflr tr.. wo«l "YES" or with the prov1110111 ol Sl!dlon 3SOOl of Ill! To Yo!e, 111mP 1 crou It~ 111 ..'"" unltu ·11 meels 111 of Ille tollowlnt ,.. Dancer end Ed Spaulding's o1 Alco/'oollc Bev•r•;• Control tor l11ueilce •llf:r 1111 word "NO." ,t,H mirkll Olfler· Ctllfornll Water Cod•, Is enlltled ft. !ht v~:""' "'1u•red•~~~rO~A~wd ,:es or <111l•~nll: (1) fl Is In wrltlnt; (bl II 1, Misty··~ ported I on orltl ... 1 •11PllC1IJon of tn tlcollollc wl1tr llltCle 1,. -fwblOclln All dllllll-votes ltll' whlch me pn:>XY 11 vtven; (cl If a er Ille wor · mi 1 otl>lr· auculecl ..., Ille Pt'"10n or 1'911 re11restn· re 76 -Gfld 79() bev1r-llcel'ISI (QI' llte"Mll lol' lllete tllltMllll mil'kl 1 iorliiddfn tnd 11 adlnowltdtHI; 11)(1 (d> 11 specifies !hf w!i.e m1de "'' forbidden. All Cllsll,.. t1llYt of !he person wl\o, 111 •ccordante miles -.....h..•ely ~m Preml1es •• lollowt: • -· ,.11 1! •1tc:llon 11 wlllc~ 11 11 to be 111e<f. gul•lllnt marks ire 1orbldden tnd with !he pnwf1!on1 of SK!lon 3SOOl of the .' . '"'"I">""" ' u v SEASONAL ON SALE BEER 11. 'WINE mt o """ ot """'· Tht lpPOlnlment of 1 Pn:llY un be u1HI make the blllot veld. C1i11trnl1 Wtler Code, Is enllllld to the the finifill. CBON,t, FIDE PVllLIC EATING t11l' ~1of'::'N ""1• "'·· i::'1·-~a~ cnlv at lhe etecilon U>e<lflld. E119ry •• II YOU Wto1191V m.or•, tt1r. or deface YOfff for which The PrGllY rs gl119n; Cc) It PLACE) 1 • lltn .,_..,.,. PPOfnlfnenl of 1 proK'I' Is revocable al lht !Ills ballet, return ll to llw! lnspeclor of It acknowledged; 1nd ldJ II $J>KllJH 11\1 Anyone desiring to Protest lhe IHU111Ct electlon •nd DllltJn •nolller. plfoe•u•• Of lh• person e~ecuth19 11 11 anv ele.;tlon and obtain another. election 11 which ti Is to be used. of •uCll lktnie(1J mtY fill 1 v•rffitd 11ro-If,... before the P!rtOll lt>POlntHI •• proxy Tht tPPOlnlment of 1 pro,.., ctn lie u•ed test with lnY Oftlc1 of lht D1'P1rtmenl of 1hell ~IYt cest • billet re11restnllne the llONO PROPOSITION; 511111 onlr 11 !ht eledlon lPfCllleel. Every ... Thist~g 'Alcoholic Bever-COlllrol, within '.Ill volts for WM(h me ePPOlntmenl WIS the Moul!-Nlouel W1ltr Oh· pPOJntmenl of 1 11roxY ts rtYO(lbht el "'- d1r1 of IM d1te lllt pr-e<I 1>rtmlM11 llOHD PlltOPOSITIOH: SIMI! tlvtll. trlCI 11\C\Jr 111 1ddlllOt11l lndtbl· PIM111re of the Person execut!111 II It 111Y were llrll POl!HI, 11111111 1round1 lor the MOUl!on-Nleuel W11tr 0 1... 11 IWO-lhlras 12/3) ol ,the Witt (1$t II Hlness llld lnue oer.eral abll· time btlore !he Pl!rl<lll IPPOlnled 1s proxY denl11 at provided by l1w, The prtmllft Irk! lncur 111 lddlllon1I lndtbf· »Id tlectlOll f1vor lht ls1utn<t of stld talion bonds for lmproll9rMlll 111111 ll1ve c1•I I ballot rt11rt>HntJ119 1111! Interest Pushed •if not ,,_ licensed Jor the :i.tlf! of tdneu t nd luue !Mlltrll oDll11· bonds neeeu1ry lo 1ccompllsh IM Olstrtct No. l·,I, (SEWERI llOll!I for whlc~ lhe IPPOlntmenl was 1fcohollc bever•ves. Tiie form of ver(f!CI· lion bondl lor Improvement 1mend«t 111an ol worU 11 llettln di.crib-titer~ In lllfi i mount ot 111,.. t lven. lion may be obt1!nld from tnr oH!ce of Olslrlct Ho. I lfll•eol In Ille eel, llld bond• fer lmprovffnf!lll O!slrltl "30,000 for the tc<1ulil1lon •nd If two-lhlnll 12/3) al IM votes cesl 11 the Ot111rlmenl. ' tmount Clf IJ,200,000 for The No. 1 ollill be 1 S $ u 1 d •nd told . tor consrruttlon <It ""Oriti for Ille 11ld elecHon f1vor ll>t 1$1Ulll(f! of 11Td BRACK, Lucien P, 1coultlllon ind c011ttrvcllon ot ~ !>llfPOMI Mii forth herein, subiect bonds nectss1ry lo 1ccom1>ll•h Ill• BURT, Richard 0 , wcncs for IM Pl'odllCllon, lrtnl-It Ille provl1lons of $ecllon 35950.i of the cotlectlon, lree!ment .ind dis-amendHI plan of works 11 herein dHCrlt>- SCHMITZ, Jlmtl J, I ' > "''' '"II Wlltr Codi. PCSll f1I sewage, waatj Ind YES eel, Hid bondt fA• lmorovtmenl Olstrlct Publ!5/lecl Or1nee Co-11 O•llv ''"'· Jo· m 11 on, • "'111 1 t!r on E~Cfftl It otherwlst provldHI Jn the storm w1ttr. lncl11dln1 trunk "' Ir 5, 1f61 1\U-61 f1I w1ter fol" lrrl1111on, donws-CiHltrnl• Wilt• Olstrlcl Law, Dlvl•!on 13 Hwtn, iewige treilment Ind No, l·A (SEWER) 11!11! llt lnuecl alld sold A propooal far a district· LEGAL NOTICE wide series of r.a<!es for ttJe 1------------s th Calif NOTICE 01" PUILI( Hl'AlltlNG OU ' ern ontla Thistle NOTICE. 15 HEREBY GIVEN ""' "'" fleet h&s been presented by want to Section s..:n.1 d Arllcle 1v, teadt I"S in the several fleets c1<1101er v 1, of "'" 111, 0 1v111on v o1 • Ille Helllh Ind S1ltly Code of !ht Sllle The series is designed to of c1111wn11, 1 'ubllc heerln• wUI be ·n art• · ti · and held on July 11, J1161. 11 7:30 P.m. In ltle I crease p 1c1pa on m c0<0nc11 Ch1m11trs o1 ""' c11v H•ll of "" erlh·ance ttie social ~ts City of .cm11 Me-11, 11 11 F1!r orivt . of • 'ThisUing " C05!1 Mtw, C1llloml1, 11 which 11kl tlmt . "" Bo.rd ol Olre<:ID<I of the COlll Mell The progl'am calls for a 51n11erv 011trlt1 wrn lll!lr 1nd determine Se V e ~race ''trailering" ~ro!esls Ind oblKl!ont, If lllV, lo !he . P•OPOlfll 1tsessmont for lr1lh 1nd t•r· senes to be sailed in the t1111t co11ec:11on •• sel fcrth 111 1 '"'"'' winter months. A hi...,,.,·point 111ec1 w1111 Ille Secr111,,. of me Olttrrct . El" 11 lhe offices of tl'lf D!1trlcl, n F1lr scoring system WO U I d Ortvc, Colt• Mna, c1n1or1111. detennine the winne.ns NOTICE IS HEREBY FURTHER GIV-' EN 11111 lhe 11kl nll>Ort on Ille In Ille 1be sc!heduJe Of l'ace5 offices al lht· CCIII Mn1 S.n!l1N OIS· would be called tfle Sun lrlct, n F1rr Orlve, Slh Fltor. Rcom 509, ~-~ Se · .,J,o,..ti..n ·~~ rn1v be 1t1e1m!llld belween !ht "°"" of ........_.. r1es . ~ """' W1\lu 8:00 11.m. to J:OO p,m. the E:arl Gilman """"--h:v JANE ANGEL Oa . , .. ~"'.t"'"_. Cltrlt al Ille 0!1lrlct race at liforrua Yacht Publhhed or1ne1 coatt 0111y Pllct, Club and cootinuing through Jul'!' ,5, 12. ·,Ht 11.ua the Ea.stern Regatta at Balboa Yacht Club. Keeper I and perpetual tr op h j es would be awarded. The DAILY PILOT Covers Boating Crossword P117.Zle ACROSS 1 Certain structures 6 Family member 10 Southern state: Nickname 14 Old World rodent 48 Business """" 51 Holes In the ground 53 Having outline of an egg 54 Perl. to a A1ath. subject 59 Show lie, lndu1trl1I and ll'llln!clp1I of Ille water Codf!, wld election shall be water rttlimitlon fic!lltle., for the PU'ii1'" HI forth ~;;o·5su~lfct P11.--.et, !n(ludlnt 1111 m1lor YES t.tUecl, lw!kl and conducted 111 the miMer oumplnt 1111111115, Including ltle 10 the Prov• 0111 of SK!ion , O Ill water tr•nsmlu lon Pll'elllll!$ provlcltd In tilt bV·l1w1 1doPted bv the extension of t1clllllH of t~e W~~;e;1oc1:i olherwlte pr<1vldecl !n the Ind dlllrlbullon II""' re1er· BOl•d of Ol•ti:lors of seld Olslrlct, IP-district lo furnl1h St/Vitt to Cil!for1111 water O!sl'1cl Law, O!Vlt!on J3 volrs, fT11!er1 111d PllmPlllll Ill• pro,,... by tilt Bo1rd 111 S11perYl5ors of pybtlt avencle1, prlvUe ccn>0r· of the Weier Codt. s•ld elect!c" shall bt llont, 1nd tor the fortto!Mt Or11110 Counti' •nd o,n Ille wllll tile Ccun· atlooi 1>r pe.-sons outside "'" --celled. held and con!luc!ecl fn tlle m111ner tPPUrtf'l'l•nttl 1nd IPPUrftMnl ty llecorder of wJd ounlv. provided In 1111! b<t·llWS 1do1>IHI by !ho WOtt;, t nd lncludlnt 1U l1nd, Thlt nol!tt Is 1tven Pursuant to a district, and lncllldlnt 111 lend, Bo.rd of Olrectori of $1fd Olstrlcl, 11>< -· rr1w!utlon et "" Board ol Olrttlors of etsements Ind Olher PrOl>ertv HI tw s I e1..,...nts and othe• prapt•l'f Moul!On·Nlo11tl Weier Ol1lrlct •CIOPled on necessary llll!•efor for the l1nd1 Prov the 801rd of 11perv!1cr$ " nec1t11arv there!.,, '"' Ille l1nds -, 101• ''' ol MIY. lftl. Ind lnllib!tenls within lht ex· Orange Coun1Y and on Ille with lht CO<.!,,. "' 1-k k•r 11•1 .... "' " Iv Recorder ol 1tld County. I •H•'"' 11111 W "n ""' IVAR 0 . HANSON ttr!or boundaries of wld Im-T~ls notlCt Is olven 1111rsuenl In 1 nttrlw bou...UrltS OI 11ld Presld.nt cl the provemf!f!t Olslr!CI No. l·A lmpl'OYMfltnl Ol1lrlC1 No, I tnd Bo.rd ol Olrecto.-s OI (SEWER) Ind !or the ac~ulsl· ~eso\rll~I ef 1":.Z ro-~ I~ ID!~~ of lor .n. aciaulsltlon OI Plrt o1 NO MGulton-Nlguel W1ter Ols!rlcl tlOll of 9111 o1 lhe 0Ptri111111 n:'u';:· d•~u~ M!Y~r1961~ 't • en 1111 °"rllfllt tund1 of 11ld ALEX,t,NOER BOWIE fu[lds Ill' Slid lmPmuemtnl Oh· !VAR 0. H,t,NSON Improvement Dlttrlct (pr"' Secret1rv of lht tricl {brC'lllded th•I Ille 1ct1I Presldtnl of the vJdod 11111 1111 tof•I 1moun1 ol lln11d of Dlre<:!<>•t of tmount cf iuch fund• sc IC• 8c1rd of Olrecto" of iuch funch 11 •'wired 111111 Mcullon-Nlguel Weier Olstrld CIU!red s/llll ncf exceed 111 NO MOU!ton·Nlguel Weier D!s!rlcl llof 1xclled 1n •mount IMUll lo IV,1,JI 0 . HANSON ' amount t<IUtl IO Ille lOlll ALE.XANDER BOWIE the totll OPtrttJnt COlh al nld EUGENE W, BELL OPeritlng cos" of wlcl 111'1· Secre!ery al l!lt Improvement Oltlrlcl ltr. ,_ TORlltEY H. WEBB ••••••••• DI••••<• •• , • ••• 801rd of Ofrectors of ANTHONY R. MOISO """>> •• I I DI 1 1 I Vflr period. II ftllm1ted by IM H L REMMERS veer Pe•lacl, II es11m1teel bY """' cn· .. ltut WI tr • r c B<*rd of Dlrtelon o1 s.1ill Ols-JAMES D RtVE.NES Ille Bo.rd of Olrtcton of u!d !VAR 0. HANSON lrlCIJ end tundl lor the ply-o•e•••• e·. M•'H>• D> > I I < > •• I >kA EUGENE W. BELL men! of evttY e•P!nM of •1ld O~ec'i;rs ot ' ~: ~ ::KY u;;;~en°;, ·; ::r.; TORREY ... WEBB lmorov·--I '''''''' wlllch II Moo-·"'lo·-I ,t,NTHONY Iii. MOISO I• p.W:t,'1;·;...lll M Incurred ind wih~"'i)~rrkf l~m~~:~~1~"1wl~ls!r~t r.£'i~re~ H, l . REMMERS become PIYtblt before Ille ex· Publ!1hed L11oun1 Be1ch OtllY Piiot. ind 11tcome i>av•blt before lh• ~~~~~ ~. r:x;,f~1~S plrallon ol one Yt1r from Jullf 21 Ind Jul'!' S, 12, It, IKI 11~ e•P!r11!on al one Ytlr trorn Olrector, ol me completion of 1ttd worlt• LEGAL NOTICE Ille completion ol seld wortr.s MOYll011<Nl1t11tl (lncllldlng, !hi lnltre1t on Hid Ontlud!ll9 the lnl1!rell on s1ld Wtltr Oillrlct bondl Wllldl 11 dUI 1nd PIV• bond! Wlllch Is due ..... p1y1blt Publl!j.I\..., l1111~ •••ell DlllY P iiot, 1b!t prior lo ltl1I d1le 1nd Pll:·HGl'I prior to thit dile and for Wiiie/\ June 21 and July 5, 12, 19, 1961 1119-61 tor W'llldo monf'Yt of the lin-NOTICE TO ClltEDITOlltS m~yo,., tkA lmo•-omont OI .. SUPER.10111 COURT OF THI! "' ""' •• Pl'OYfmtnl Ol1lrlct In Illa lrHll' ST,t,TE OI' CALIFORNIA trlCI In Ille lrtl!UrJ ol""11ld 011· Ur"( of !llkt Ol1trlCI OI' !her~ FOllt THE COUNTY OF Oll:ANGE lrl(I "' !llere11!ft lo lie re- 1l1tr lo lie f'ICl!IVecl bV said Nt. ,t, ... JU celvecl by 11ld Improvement lmprovemtnl Ol1rrlct lrom an Es!tle of Claire Lucrflll PaPtlf!O, also Ol1trlcl lrom en •••essmenl pr~ l lSetltnenl Pl'IYIOUllY levied known II Claire Pe~11eo. ~l'IO known •• Y!OUSIY levll!d ... l111dtq111!f!), are l"'d1<1u1!eJ, ind the e1t11>-Clilre l. PiPtlfll, and a1 Cl1r1 Papaleo~ 1nd the e111bllshment ol 111 115/lmenl of 111 ol ""' bond 0Ke11ed. tne bond re~rve fund O<OI of the reserve 1111111 OUI Ill' lhe P...,. NOTICE JS HE.REBY GIVEN lo lllt proc""°1 Of the tllt o1 s1ld ette11 of the Nie OI Slid bonds, crtdllors of the above neml!d decllde11t bonds, said llol\01 lo belr tnltr· »Id bond1 IP btlr J11tere1t 11111 111 persons h1v!111 tl1lnu 1g1ln1! Ille e l it 1 •tit or rares nol to 11 1 r1t1 or r1IH not to ti• ••Id dKl'denl ire rt11ulrecl lo file lllem, exceed 7% per 1n11um, ,..,. ceecl 7"' ~r 111num, pey1bll with the neces11rv vouclll!rs, In "the office ible stml-innuill'f, me •ctuil 1eml.,11nu1Uv, the tdu1I rtle of 1111 clertr. of lhl •bove entltle<l 'our!, or rile or r1te1 •nd llm•1 et PIY• or r1te1 1nd tlfrlft f1f 'IYrntnl to pr11.nt thf!ll'I, wtm Ille necesurv ment to be dt!ermlnHI 1t or to be dlttrmlMd 11 or prlw vouchers, lo m, undersigned 11 the oHlce Prier 10 mo 11 __ ol wi. IMre-~ -~ 11 of fl.tr Attorney Rebert P. Bunnen. 8615 """ lo ,,_ llml "' tile ther..,. 1 Celltorn1a All9nut, $oulh Gile, C11lfor11r1 ol 1!1 In 1ctord1nce with !hi ln tC(D<dlnt:.I' W!lh !he Pll n OI ~ which II "" PllCI of bu1lntS1 of the plan Ill' WOl"kl for lmProveme11t wcncs for 1mprovome11t Otllrlct llllllerslgnecl In ell matte" perf•lnlnt to Olstrld No, l·,t, {SEWER) 11 Ho. 1 It herelof0111 a.......ted the es!•ll of seld dtceclent, w\lhln six heretofore 1m....iH1 by 1nd de· by 11!1 ""ct!bed 111 Rtsolutlon months elt.r fM flrst pvbllc1tlon of this Krlbed In Jlt\lolullcn No. :IOI No. 2't ol !ht to.rd ol 0 1-nttlce. of tM a01rd ol OlrKtors of 11111 rtcton of tn11 Olstrld, •nd 01leel June 2A. 1968. • O!llrlcf, 1nd $1111! !h• Moullon- .i.111 the MOUll011-Nl111tl W111!r Claire Ktmletn P11p1lto Nlouel W•ltr 0111r\ct Issue pre- Oldrld luue prwloutlY 11.>-Ex1<:utrl• vlously eurnorlzld but unlssuHI t11orl•ed but unlltulld 1tntr1I Of ltle E1!1te of Ille 11ener•I obllt•tlon bona. lot ob1l111\on bonds for lmpr-Above n1med cltcedenl Improvement Olttrlcl NI. l·A mtnl Oltlrltl Ho. 1 for Ille ""'' Rllllt1 P, Sllntltft (SEWER) !c.r mot PUrPOSt o1 POI• of ctrrvl"' our 11ld MU Ctllflrlll• •v111111• c1rrvlnt out wkl '"""""" S.11111 G•tt, C1Mllrwl1 "2M 1menclld ~11n? Tit: CUJI 5'4·11H 1>!1n? AllerM'I' fir ElKUlrl• l'--------------Tttt PCll for 111d 11Ktlon 1h1U be Publl1htd Or11111e Coa1t Oa!IY Pllol, LEGAL NOTICE ,.,.,. CaJIT1F ICAT£ OF 8USIH£.5S FICTITIOUS H-,ME Tiit underil11ned doe• <ertl!v he I• en,.. duCllllO 1 butl11ess al 617 South Harbor, ,t,nehelm, Ct lllwnla, under the llctlliGus firm llllM cl AMERICAN SWIMMING POOL MAIHTENANCE CO. Ind tl\1! Hid trrm 11 composHI ot lht !cllowlnt person. wllost Mme In lull alld piece of resldenc1 II •1 lollowo: Harold E. H1vs, 109SS Wrt1htwood lent, Norlll Hol!Vwood, Cel!f. Olltd Junt 11, 1968, H"Old E. HIYI $Ille ol C1llforn11, Or1nee CO..nlv : o~ J1111e Jt, 1™, before ""' • Nor1rv Public 111 1n<1 for said S!tf1, per1onallv •11pe1rl!d HAROLD E. HAYS ~11own In m• lo bt !he P~tion wllose name 11 subscrib- ed to lht wl!Mn lnslr\lml>'I 1nd lt~nowledgecl II• e••cu!ecl lht s1me. (OFFICIAL SEALJ NII Gllber! Nol1ry Public . Celltornlt Pr1nclp11 Offlc1 In Lot A~el•s Cownrv MY Comml•Slon EXPl•e1 Ftbruarv J, 1969 Publlsh<!CI Or1119e Cta" D111Y Pll~t. 15 Scottish furniture designer lb Opera rolr 17 Choleric 18 Lowly di splea.surt fi O Pay attention! 61 Loop with running knot 7/5/68 -.! ti 7:00 o'clodi; t.m., on 1111 mom-JuM 2t and JulY 5. u. 19, !Ht 1122"8. M June 11, 11 and July S, n , 1968 1076-U worker 19 Microor· ganism 20 Kln dof overcoat 22 Signification 23 Levee 24 Pla ced 26 Fed. Housing Administra- tion : Abbr. 29 Movable cover 30 Anatomy: Abbr. 31 BJz:arie 33 Make larger 37 "The Morning Watch " author 38 Barter 40 Gmnn rivl!I 41 Stretch out 43 Lady --44 Red uce to wreckage 45 Posed 47 -bodkins! 62 Pett. to Gaellc- speakin g people 63 Cutting side of a blade 64 Section of Englan d fi5 Oid a color· ing Job Mt See 18 Across 67 Winier phenomenon I Agricultural area ' Electtomo· live force: Abbr. 10 Gourm1nds : 2 words 11 Ten· percenter 12 -··· code 13 Equipped with gun.s 21 Indulge in winter sporl DOWN 22 Remaining painful 1 Slight fl emofY mistake 25 --In a 2 Roll call while answer 26 YoUng 3 Part of anlmal "Q .E.D" 27 Extensive 4 Showed 28 Egyptian fatuous de ity fondness 32 Remell!btred 5 Unfruitful with grief It Cleansed 33 Man's 7 Notion name ~~,.....,r.,-.,,-r.,~ ,--.,,-r.,-,.-.. 17 7 .. " "" 34 Transport· atlon med ium JS Wearing boots 36 Offends 38 "--Is It!" 39 Tu rncoat 42 Air 43 Is presl!lt 45 Oral 4fi Objective 48 Ran easily 49 Color 50 Brin g Into existence 52 Kind of seat 55 Therefore 56 Move aimlessly 57 Conversa· tl onal phrase: 2 words 51 Sure thing: lnform1I 60 In the know: Slang 12 1151'8 • ' LEGAL NOTICE -- -·--...... __ ..,. ... ~. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE • .. • -• • - LE.GENO ·------· -------------___ ,,_ • ·-- -·-·- - LEGAL NOTICE '" =· --- rrl··' Cl •r ~-I CITY OF COST,t, MtSA, t 41."0RNlA l't._. Dl:"-'ITllOtl lllSTRICTING MAP -....,. . B/8 • ~----------. -------···--·-·· --~-·--------------- ... ---------;""'"""""""-.. .. ....-----· ...........--.......... --· ----.. .. ...... .. ----~----------------..... ------------...... .,. ...................... ,.1111 .... ... , ... > ' o ... ~ I o o • " • I ~J.':10: .. ~ JUlY I 12:30 m All-Nf&bt Sllow: (C) "Horrlble Or. HltdlcoU," "f«tlan lntrlfue," "MiahtJ Unaa.• •nd "Thi Plntl ind tilt Sim Clrt" ani lllOWIL m Adioft 1'1111'1: .. Hndln' for 1191'1'111." Sf,TUROAY JULY I 7:05 B Co111t1r11M1 MIN: (C) ""-M."" If ••snbW' (td'ftntllfl) '5J-[rrol Flynn. 7,2011 •"' u. ™' ..,,_ 7,3011--(C) llC..M .... (C) .,_ ...... .. • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS One Of Tll• Llrt•rt Feclll+I•• 111 Or11tp CM1tft PILOT PRINT I NG NIWNIT llACM ... DR. KILDARE MUTI AND JEFF MISS PEACH ,\ • . . - % • ly Cliaites M. Selim ..------..., ( IT LDOl<5 Ul(E A fl)IJ)IHit'IN cnMlillQI ! ly IOI Brewer DAIL V '11.0T J 7 ' RURAL LIFE -Chet H1mU•r narrates a docum~n. !-'¥ on the people who live m rural United 8ta1'• tonight In color at 10 p.m. on Channel 4. 'Tht o• hour special 1nvestigate1 the perllOllal· Jibilosopbies of people who have remained 1n or near -the places they were raised and why they decided to carry on family traditions. TELEVISION VIEWS • New Serie8 Reviewed Dennis tfle Menace . . '• • ·' • . .. .. .... --,----.. -... . .-.... ·-.... "'. ~ ., .. ., .~-.-...... . -.., . . • 18 DAILY PILOT F'tlda)', July 5, 19611 ' 1DGISJ VOIUMI DODGI DIAi.ii • • II CAlllORNIA N0.1 GIGANTIC SPECIAL PURCHASE 4 DAY-4ih~of ·JULY SALE OPIN 9 /A.M. 10 MIDNIGHT THUUDAY, JULY 4th, PRIDAY, JULY Ith SATURDAY, JULY 6th, SUNDAY, JULY. 7th ......................... __ ...,.. ' .. _......_. .... .., ..... i. ..._ ....... ,.. ....... rHd: ............. "" ....... Ct........ ' DILUXI 41DOOll D111. 101 111111 • 01.111 br1k- l11t IY'I., • he1!u & dr- fro1t1r • H111rd fl11hln! .,. I .... • ptdd.i~ ~Hh & • sor • l•tk-1111 ll)ht' • M\<111 1pud WiPt"' w w11ht.., Nk for ltoct Nt. 15'11. '11 ,_,_...., ''"'Ii·,,,..,. •71 f;itTAL DOWN PAYMENT I '2499 TOTAL PRICE t ~~: .... . IMMEDIAn DILIVllY lilll'l'IWll1 l11d'4, • & lictnw & flllfl!U ch1tte"""' ,_,,hi!"" tpp1ntf llaflt crHit •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IAIBOR DODGE 1RUCIC & CAMPER CENTER ' . ~= £:.~_...,, 1/2 Ton Pkkup anti Camper l'••lfllN with I fOOI c1b _, ~r, 1ltt' A. ... .illllf!1. AU. fllf Stock NI. 392. • ~,: ..!.H DODOI 1/2· Ton Pickup 128" whttl Ms. SW.ptllrie. All fll,'Oel, :!I ..,.M "fll- th,. ''"'"·• H.O. llrtt, ~r llthter, ~O • .,rin91, A>.k hlr Stock No. 719. 561 561 Ji'ttJ' TOTAL NICf DIUVllT Tot'&&. NICI ~TAX & llC:llUI ~TAX & UCUlll Pl'/IMl!tl lntlU<lt llA & lic ... M & fiNlflCI dJl "tl'lll ... mDlllhl Ill I~ Hflk C..illf -::· M Milt=~l!01ifiiiitt'ViN fully (quipped With Clm,tr Peck111 Ft11tlly w.,.. -._ .... • 318, V-8 e~g. • 12,000 lb. front springs • 14,000 lb. re1r springs • (5) 8x15x15 8 ply tires • R11d10 • Heeler • Dudl Wesf Coast mirrors • Bunks • Refrig1r1tor • Sink • Slovt • Dinetle • Bllilt-in wardrobe. Ask for Stock No, 433 • ............ Dtll"'Y, $107 $107 .• -3--6·-2· ,. ~~:: 'O::~,:o,:" TOT:l,-::"LT _ ~ ---·-.T ln I Lk9M 'l'Ymtn'1 loc111!1. ht & llwiw & fin111C1 cti.111t1 ..., .. '""'Ills'",...,...,... Nnk tf94Jt 0 ~tfi.':.iBiT;R.0" 0 100% UNCONDITtoNAl GUARANTEE THIS STAR STATES IN WRITING THAT HARIOR DODGE GUARANTEIS THE CAR 100% AGAINST MECHANICAL DEFICTS FOR 100 DAYS OR 4,000 MllES WHICH EYEI COMES fllST AFTER PURCHASE. THIS INCLUDES ALL MECHANICAL· PAIT$, [lfCTRICAl EQUIPMINT, IATTilY, SPEEDOMETER, RADIO, HEATll DN All CARS. THIS GUARANTEE COVERS All PAITS AND I.AIOI FIE('TO YOU. ~~il ~:volUMt! . VOLUME! . ~\; '"'"'"1"'•11 SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE • Purchases Some Brand New, Executive Some Used, CHARGERS, DARTS, CORONETS, POLARA • MONACOS& WAGONS ,,-A ......--------. I" tf'\ Difi't ~tilillR HlTWHIRlll , . -. -~ IJ!llllldiatt Delivery On Ivory MYtrtf'" Ctr TYPICAL UUIPU1 OP .. aa flCJOIY PUI~ Offll , 1961 CttAllGER Fully equipped with Ftctory 1(r coodl:ionlng ~ • To"'utflif9 nto1111tk tr1n1mlulen • Y .. 1111lne • Pewer lfffrl• • lad'9 • He1tw • Ylnyl' ~ f'fff • Wtw tln1 • lucklf Mth • HIHlw11 he..tlllhtt •,Full vlwyl Interior • Nylen t.,,.thit • lt1r tfK11: 1,..ktr • Full r1el111 l111trv1Mnt1tlo11 • fnnt 1tr fffm Hit • EIKtrk tlotl • 11,1111,.r 1u1rd1 • Ash h'IJ lltht • H.D. '''""' • H.D. tenlon swey Hr. •71 TOlAl DOWN rATMfNT •71 TOJAL MONfHLf PA'l'MINT ·5 2499 TOTAL PRICE t J~r"'' P1y1111ntt lncludl llJ & JltlftH & .. n111e1 ch1r;.1'" 4 -tm'" IJIOfOVH "nk crHit Used low Mileage IYSWl 571 Carries Ba Janet of New Car Warr. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s59 s59 TOTAL DOWN TOTAL MONlll --1968 DARIS OIOICICf- • P1dd.d dllh • Sett blffl • All vt!'YI interior • He1t1r & deft'Osttr. Ask for Stock No. 909 end 134. 52 059 PAYMINf PAYMINI TOTAL NICI t J::... -· f'Vln!L 111<1\Mle T&l I nnent1 tM!rttl. ·-"'·~ llMt uMlt ..-11n DIUYDY . ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• "::D '68 CORONET DILUXI MODIL • Ou1I horn 1ystem • Tinted wfndshitld • Dt luM whul covtl'1 • Oelux1 trim • fotm front 111ts • White 1idtw1lt t ir1s. Ask for Stock No. 536. TOTAL DOWN TOTAL MONTH 5238 ........ "™'"' '°' ... ~ t .at... ,,...._ IMlvdl J&L lo ""...:c. ltill'ltl • 41 11111. t11 _,,,,__ ~a:.. ..... 11n ·......, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IRAND NEW '68 POLARA $2 s39 s39 TOTAL DOWN TOTAL MONTM PAYMINT PAYMINT TOTAL .. IC. t ik~Nll '1mt1. rncl~T!L & fl11111Ct dll"" .. •-.. ,,.,..... Mtlk-"" 1.-1An llUVDT •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ANOTHER HARBOR DODGE flRSTI 48 Months Bank Financing Now Avall•bl• On All New Cars & New Trucks In Stock On Approved lank Credit \ \ \ ' ' \ ' , I ., ' 1· '• '' ,, .. , ,,,, ~USED CAR SUPERMARKET All PAYMENTS ON USED CARS INCLUDE TAX & LICENSE FEES AND All FINANCE CHARGES ON 36 MONTHS ON APPROVED BANK CREDIT ,'.:!fSC:lflYRllJ,_9lRATNl l l1ct)'ll1 t doe•. lull f1dory 1qui•. (NG, 3%). Gold $fer •s66 :r:.L s19 w:~ s19~~t~. + TA.X I. llC. PTMT. PfMT. '66 DODGE CORONn A11111Mt1c, httter • ...;ft; 1th1r ,.;;-,t; ~H Olll 5766 ::: . $26 ~ $26 .lllll. +TAX & LJC. nllf. PfMT. ILUI IOOk NICI $910 11,111 1001C Piia $1411 '" CHEVRM lr!\!!A!.A ids 1-dt. h•rdtof, lift 1111'0., ~. ltr. •~.UT lflt., b\ltQl lllh, _,..ti,... fltv lJ.I) s96.. TOTAL s33 ,., .. s33 ..... " + T~C. = 'WJ:.· . ·~~ FALCON f.UTVRA fully •ll!li• Wiiii 11111.r, 1utom.lic 1rensrnluf011, 1frtui1 l~ltr., tit. (hr. 09ff) $-866 :::.L s29· = s29 ~'~tt +TAX I. UC. n•r. nMl. ILUI IOOlt NICI $1455 llUI IOOIC NICI $1395 1W1 IOOk l'lltCI $1120 '. =•o§ .~~~mt• V-1, 1&11, !Oll'°l•.•lnyl loiterior, ~lltt.11 1111 .. CHPfll. (WIA '91) $966 :~ s33 ~ s33 .:fltl. +'¥•Pl PMl, ...,, • 066 CH~!.OLET fKI. tlr, V-1, rt.tlt, llllllf, tlllllmllit, urp1h ,(UG 901) $966 TOTAL s3"t "'" +T~IC. • = '65 CHEVROLET IMIJAlA l'wr. '1Hri~1. tvlt., Iii!, Y!n1t txl. u rPfh, 11C. (vi"v 359) s 9 6 L T~~: s3 3 l:.!t.\ s3 3 .:r.:i. "+'1.1 •uc. ma. ffllf. $33 ""' M1llll. ""'· A¥1 IOOlt PUCI 616H ILUI IOOIC Ntcl $1111 IWI IOOIC JllllCI $1170 '~6 M\!JtA~ ~ODI V .. , ,.4\t1 l1t1!tr, IM.~tl Hill, Wt11 te wtll ttrjllft, (RIU, 9") '66 PLYMOUTH FURT 11 ,,ct . .it, V-1, ,_,, 1tr., mil,-Mllfr, 1"iihfti.fk. iSM' 010) $1066 T,:t,:: $36 = $36 ~::tl. ·f. TA.JC & UC. PTMT. nMT. s 1466 :'oc':' s50 = s50 ~1ll\. I+ TAX & Lit. n•T. "''"· llUI IOOIC PllCI $1 ... 1LU1 IOOIC PllCI $2071 ~ FORD iiA:tR&:ANE COUNTRY SQR. Pl9', lit, ..... hmlty Wlgon. VI, pwr. 1h:,;-,;;:-1llle.,-f~li Vi~yl. niEIOsi -- $1766 +Er~1c. $60 ~~ S60;rJJ.. '66 FORD FAIRLANE 500 GTA ""· "'· 1-i. ,..,..., "° .... ; ,, .... ,,. lw1u.. llM. '""' """'-Mtllm, _.., ••II ff Wiil •!Pltl. !M.V ""21 · $176L :'0: $60 '"'' $60 m" '11+r...x auc. :r.r. 'WJl.· '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA I fMr 111~ 327 .,.,,, II.I(. ,.,,,: ltttr., tvt... -· n,,W. Yll'ltl lllftl'. fTlll. "°I 51966 ::: $67 w.:: $67 :.lll. +~AX a UC. "Mr. "111~ ILUI IOOIC PltCI $2420 VOLK SWAGEN CENTER '60 VOLKSWAGEN I .... , lldlt, llNttr, WSW. ISNX 201) 466-w~1 s16:::: s16 .I:''. -.'+T•l.U.. ,.,.._ = '62 VOLKSWAGEN a ~ ... .-. ""'"· (1lfl oni ~s66 Wot/ $19:::: s19:t:'. +T1•&U1. ,........ = '63 VOLKSWAGEN $6'-6· ' -6 hMri;l,oc 611$23 = 523 .:r"~ +Tu &!& ,.,_. = '64 VOLKSWAGEN 2 doot, ' ljWtd, llfffff. (l'FV 079) $766 ::ltt $26 = $26 , ... + Tu & LI&. ,.,.,. :=::: •• 4 ..W, kdoil -· !HCC oU11 5966· Wot/ $26 =:.s26.::;;· I +Tul l"-..,.., ....._ '66 VOLKSWAGEN r,l'fllldl,, .. -. ~ 7•1J 1366 +7! .... 546.5. '46:5. OPEN 9 A.M. TO MIDNIGHT Open All Day Sunclay Se ffabla fspanal ' .,. • ILUI IOOlt NICl•flMO 1LU1 IOOIC PltCI $1171 ~~~~~,,...,,...~,,...~~":'""~~,,-==11 • I -I • ~--~ -----------. --·-----...... --------------·----- ----·--------· -- ---·--...... ---·-.... ,-.._ .__ 0 . ... , ....... 1 ,1 , .. \ I I .. -.....-~ .. "" ·-.... -..---.. ,. .... -___.....-....----..----·----·-~~~-·--__,... ....... .,_ ________ .,....--______ ....,...,.. ____ -::~ RAY . VINES IS· RAVI.NG .. MID SUMMER DURING THIS BIG -.EVEN T YO U· CAN SAVE SSS ••• NEW 1968 VALIANT FULL FACTORY EQUIPMENT INCLUDING DELUXI WHEEL COVERS STOCK No. XY4724 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY "THE REAL SWEETHEART Of' THE COMPACTS" ,. SPECIAL FACTORY. PURCHASE of 1968 EHcutive CHRYSLERS ind PLYMOUTHS enobles us to put the new car buyer into • new car at tremendous saVings. These ears hav9 'many, many extras, including Factory Air Conditioning. All carry the balance of Chrysler-Plymouth's famous New Car Fattory Werranty. SAVE $ $ $ $ SAVE $ $ $ $ SA VE$$$$ ,, 1968 CHRYSLER NEWPORT $ . ''383'' lfUIP. WITH ••• IN•INI. AUTOMAne TUNS.. U.DIO, HIATll. POWU STDllN6, 01114 TIUS. NIAi NIW. . STOCK No. C4401 '66 JAGUAR '63 CHEVROLET '66 vw '63 IMPALA lmmecul1te, low mil .. , 4 speed, STATION WAGON. VB, auto· Rldlo, hNter, 4 speed, low Super Sport, 1utom1tic trans· matic, rHlo, he1ter, p o w 1 r miMlon, · radio, helter, power wiia whMh, r1dlo, he1t1r, NII steering, white wall tir11, 1ir milOL Stk. No. 4S24A -ring, whit• walls. Stk. # oharp. conditioned. Stk. 4S4SA 4713A. $3 69 5 $1095 $1395 $1195 '65MUSTANG • '65 CHRYSLER '59 FORD Camper '64 FALCON 4 1pHCI, radio, h11titr, real NEWPORT 2 door hardtop, '59 FORD LONG BED PICK UP. 2 Door. St1nd1rd tr1n1ml11lon, 1utom1tlc tr1n1ml11lon, power sh1rp. Stk. N~. 1 S2S. ..1 .. rln9, F1ctory ai r, R & H. with c1mper shell retdy for tht radio, heater, 1 nice lltle cir. JIMutiful gold color. Stk. 1461B. OPEN ROAD. Stk. I 562A. Siie. No. 4S118 51595 52095 51095 5895 '67 IMPERIAL '67 MUSTANG '65 BAR·RACUDA '68 BARRACUDA CRO~N IMPERIAL 4 door VI, 1utom1tlc, radio, heifer, Automaitlc tr1n1mlasion, r1dio, VI,, 1utom1ttc tr1n1ml11lon, r•· hard top, full power, factory pow1r •IHring, f1ctory 1fr, Stk. huter, power ttMrlng, .air ccm· dlo, heater, power tfMring, fac · du1I 1lr. lal1nci1 of warranty. No. U11417 . dltlonlng. Stk. #U14S3. tory air, very lharp. 54695 $2295 51695 53295 NEW 1968 BARRACUDA "CHAMPION OF THE FASTBACKS" • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY STOCK # XV45l9· Loaded 11 with Automatic Transl'T)ission Deluxe Wheel Covers. Big 225 Eng. 695x 14 Ti res, Bench Seats, Etc. '63 DODGE '65 DODGE 4 door, VI, automatic tr•n• CUSTOM BIO. Automatic tr-., minion, radio, he1t1r, white rocllo, heater, _, _..,. wail th·"' Stk.1S90A _. br1bo. Stk. 4222A. 5899 51395 '64 FORD '66 MUSTANG COUNTRY SEDAN STATION VI, l)J*°mlflc tr1nsmlialon, WAGON, automatic tr1n1ml• slon, power 1t11rln9, rHlo, radio, heater, power 1teeri3, h11t1r, white wall tlrM, Stk. white w•ll lirft. Stk. #U141 • 1522A $ 51895 '65 CHRYSLER '64 CHEVROLET 4 door h1rcl tofi. "300", auto-IMPALA t PASSENGER STA. m1tlc tr1n1m 11lon, r1dkt, TION WAGON. Autem1tl1 heifer, power st•rlng, ·=•r transmiuion, power ltMrl,.J: brak .. , factory air. I rlc redio, Mater, · tuel• windows. Stk. # UTS19. Sit..• 1S77A $ 195 $ l :JO A.M. ,TO 10 .P.M. ' OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK . y OPEN 7 DAY,S 'A WEEK· ·1 CHR¥SLE:R • P·LYMOUTH • IMPERIAi.. I l :JO A.M. TO 10 P .M. . 4201 Wl·LLOW · • LO.NG BEACH ·.· AT THE LAKEWOOD TURNOFF . FROM OU_NGE COUNTY OF THE SAN DIEGQ_FRllWAY 426-7301 543 6663 527·2341· ............. --.-.i~--_.,.-.... ___ ................ ~ ... ..._.:. -· --. ----------------------·--~------------ ----.... ... I ~~ .. -•· ' . Jul) • 1'!68 HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSIS POii SALi 1~~"0U~S~U~f~O~lt~A~L~•~~\:HOU:~l~S~F~O~R~SA~L~I~ HOUSES POii SALi HOUSES FOR SALi! ;~~~--~iii el 1000 Gener.ti .1000 Gener•I lCIOOGener•I 1000 Gener1I BARBOR VIEW n11.1.s HOUSES FOii SALi 1000 Gen•r•I 1/1 UDO REALTY ,..rnu ... . ''The ... o( Udo hie" MOOlllN C TOM Liaht a. a1ry J.tt«y a a. 3 bath with family rm & amdi.d:. P r c • d 14 sell at ,59,500. --.----- ltlDUCIOI Extra sbam 3 BR. ~lus 2 bath do hom•. Street 14 Strut location near Club. July L&t. Furnlahed or unfurnlsh (Furnished). -------- REAL LIDO VALUE 5 BR plus family rm, and dlnlnJ rm on . ft. Street 14 Street lot. 'A sleeper at thtS pn '65,000. -------- IRVINE TERRACE One ot the very few hornet ln this AtN with • tefllU"lte family roorn. 13 Bedroom.I, 2 baW, 2 ~eel. IPftcioul ,..nl. ""·"" Coll for Apt>I. DOVER SHORES Jmn11u.'\ll1t~ Home with an outstlU1dinr View ~ the Back Bl.,)'. l Bed.ro!>m• " mW1 rom , 31,S tle.tN, over 4,001 ~ ft~tituUY dee> orated. . For Nie -bf:.Jlnfum. OPENS ~~UN 1226 Pol1rh:,r. DOVER SHORE;>. l>rQl.aOc Home with a View CORONA DEL MAR Lusk Homos .•• Ouar.ty, Valut, S..uty, Comfort In the Southland's moat desirable and fascinating area. A su- perb achoo! system and University of Callforni1's Irvlnt cam. pus Just moments away from Hubor View Hills. Sensibly priced from DlrectJooa: MacArthur Blvd. trom $34,900 to $48,900 . WSK Pacific c.out llwy. or Newport Fwy. 1\tm on San Joaquin Hill.I Rd., thea foll"" lllll'I to model area, __ .,......, ....... _.._ .• HOMES ' Bedrooms, 3 baths, he9.t· """"'."iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..... Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiilii ed. pool .Wltb Jaeuu:i bm- MESA VERDE CAMBRIDGE 18012 lutler Ave. UNIVERSITY PARK IRVINE open Sat & Sun 1-5 MOit 1ikd.)' you'll be imPl'I!• ed w1th thlJ heme ror ~ or the sa1ne re•aoos that at· tracted the p~t owners IUCh u : * New " growing deYelop-ment • good cha.nee tor .,_ predatim ill valLte. * Well-planned community * F.a:sily acoeulble to Jm. w1y1 A Beaches * Well-planned home • 4 bedrooms, dinlne room le ... * Ample yll'd for childmi, yet handy to comrnuni~ pools and park areas Pric.d """t '0 $33.900 • Good 1~11 .• G'r.>-3000 Eves: 54&-8868 PENINSULA SHORES New Balboa ' Oceanfront ·community THREE NEW 4 &. 5 Bedroom two • sl4ry single family Homes and three Duplex .. with a Deluie owner·• 3 Bedroom & Den Home upstairs, and a 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Renlal down. Now ready for occupancy. Ocean and/or Bay Views, Family roonui, Wet Bars, radiant heat, insulated, carpeted, .wall· ed, landscaped, sell~leaning ovens. Formic• kitchen cabinets, Powder rooms, Etc. Etc. Come see for yourself: GOLD MEDALLION HOMES ELEGANT BAYFRONT 'J'I$ graciow Bayf~nt .home la~ks no.thing foi:: full enjoyment of Life on Lido. Pier. & Slip for large boat plus your o~n sandy sw1~· ming beach. Exciting Bay View fro~ tra~1· tional Living rm & Dining rm. Spacious ~n· side patio compliments the charming Family nn. 4 large family Bedrooms, 4 Baths plus Guest Powder Rm. Prime location, $215,000. taio. Radiant g&S H&bt in ~ patio, 21 x 2) Ubrary with I'\-~· 12x 12 Sewtn.,m. OLLEGE 'ln kitchen, 3 larie BRs. formal dininR room & f1mily room. Tree shaded front yard with shuffle bciard court in back. Quiet cul-d~sac loca· .tion. 51h o/o insurnnce' loan can be assumed. Only $32 ,500. Bay & Beach OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1.S "F" Street and Balboa Blvd. on Hc:luded lalboa Peninsula 'LIDO REAL TY S400 Via Lido 673-1830 •.ooo ., n. rrn.:;oo REAL TV II for Appl. SHORES Contempora Span1ah ·Bay. front Home, Bit, 4 baths, dining rm, Ac nn. mag. niliecnt mtry · with sweeping operl I to 2nd floor, enonnou . ftl, Pier & Slip. Owner un "'"' Asking U67,50'.I Submit otfer1 333 Mornin91Jar Line Wow! • BR home, only SZl,750. Hdwd firs. neat landscap- ing & great 5% % Joan take mtt -Veta or non.vets alike. Call now! Loc1tion, Location! BIG HOUSE-SMALL PAYMENT 4 BRs & family room. Payment only $158 all. Would trade for older home in Santa Ana. See this one you can't beat it. $20,750. ;ca.., COATS & WALLACE REALTORS Re1lty, Inc. 1-107 E. Cout Hwy., CdM Hard to Find JN MESA VERDE Big 4 bedroom & guest. 2 baths, IPQI'klini,: new car- pets,. covered patio, gafage bas been converted lo large recreation room or guest1 house. Immedlate poasees. sion with lO'io down or as. sume low interest !oen with minimum down . FP $23,500 546-2313 6"6-7171 Priced from $79,600 to $109,600 , For furth•r lnform•tlon tall: COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH Kl 9·335+ 675-2000 1-------•ll!!!i!!!!l!!!li!!P.~!'ll· OPEN SAT & SUN Spanish Modern FORECLOSURE-REPOSSESSION??? Fabulous new custom 4 ilt tam nn + formal din. rm iu&t completed near 17th ra.Irway ol Mesa Ven:le ~try aub. Open almost dall)o on Maui Circle ju1t ott .~· 1491 BAKER STREET i\1eAA Verde Dr. ti's a show. COSTA MESA, CALIF. Open Eves. Sunken Uving Rm. """ nod> ""'' ' """°""' VA or FHA home bu 2 specioo1 be.tbs, S BEDROOMS -family room QJae roof, luh tropical • Built -in t:lectrlc ·kltcben, ~. bJilt~in and • Qildren'a play hoose in eotmtr)' type ftreplace. VA· rear. TOP LOCATION. Eves CANT. $95.00 Tutal Move-- 96Z..8197 tn O>st! to Vets. Low Down 19 OFFICES FHA. Orange Coontya ...._ Open Houses THIS WEEKEND ....... ...., 'AMIMf .... JM .... wat I • • ,. ................ All ............ ~ w .. ................... .., ............. .. ...... la ....,.. DAILY PILOT WANT ADS • ...,_, Rewl ... ,... ................ ,. '"' -.,...... ht ... ..u ... ., ............ &~·--· ftW.y. HOUSES FOR SALE (3 Bedroom! 2231 Miner Stree~ Costa Me.a 548-0385 (Sat & Sun 12·6) 1226 Polaris Dr., Dover Shores (714) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 201 Via Nice, Lido Isle 673-5166 (Sun 1·5) 2420 University D., Newport Beach 546-1211, eves 544-2617 (Sat.Sun 1-4:30) 359 Ramona Way, Costa Mesa 540-1720 (Sat & Sun 1-6) *1506 Irvine, Newport Beacll 541).1720 (Sat & Sun 1·6) (3 Br. & Family or Den) 4715 Dorchester, Cameo Highlands 642-6472 (Open Sat) 218 Villanova Rd., Costa Mesa 830-2537, 540-7957 Call for Appl. 980 Presidio Drive, Costia Mesa 545-5487 (Open Daily) 435 Santa Ana Av•., (Newport Heights) NB 642-3766, 548-8905 (Sat & Sun) 1801 Tradewinds Lane (Daycrest), N.B. 642·5200 (Sun 12-5) 16382 Eagle Lane, Huntington Beach 642·1771 (S at & Sun 1·6) (4 Bedroom) **312 Evening Star (Dover Shores) NB 548-6252 (Open Sat & Sun 10·5) 1534 Antiuga W31'f, Dover Shores (714) 642-8235 (Sat Only) · **333 Morning Stiar Lane, Dover Shores (714) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 14 Br. & Family or' Den) *1924 Leeward Lane, Baycrest (7 14) 642-8235 (Sun only) 2024 Koma~ Mesa Verde, Costa Mesa 675-162 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2821 Setting Sun, Harbor View Hills , CdM 675-5930 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 2722 Canary Dr., Mesa Verde, Coota Mesa . 545-0987 (Open Daily) 359 Coolidge Ave, Costa Mesa 545-8582 (Call for Appl.) *1723 Terrapin Way (llaycrest) Npt Bch Of! Shij>way Lane (Sun 12·51 18012 Butler. University Park, Cali!. 675·3000 Eves: 646-5227 (Sat & Sun) 1801 Bayadere, Irvine Terrace, CdM 675-3-000 Eves: 673-0554 (Sat & Sun) *1589 Santiago Dr. (Daycrest) Npt Bch 646-7755 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1501 Eaton P1A<e, w .. tcliff 646-3255 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 91193 Windes Dr., Orang. 673-8550 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (5 Br. & Femily or Den) 912 Bellis, Eutblu!f, Npt Bch 644-1133 (Sunday 1 'UU Dusk) 318 Princeton Dr., College !Wk 675-5726 (Fri.sat.Sun) 2018 Windward Lane (Baycrest) Npt Bch off Tradewlnda Lane (Open SUn 12-5) CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE (2 Bedroom) 1515 Oonnnll Lane (DoHr Shores) NB 64J.6508 • (Sat & Sun) ............... . ···-"'· - john macnab p\<1{'{'! !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!l!!!ii!!!i!!!!i!ii~!lii!i!i!!i!t!I!!!!!!!! Four Bedrooms 4 ledrooms , ..,HE ~EAL. 1 E STATEF<.S: 1-------- House & G1rden Ch1rm 'lbe pk-ture book appeal ol a charming Neow England 2 story home with weathered MISSION TILE REALTY OOMPANY 881. DOVER OR. NE.VIPORT BEACH (714) 6"2-8235 Colloge Roalty 546-5880 1500 Adam& 1t Harb>r (Near Onema 'l'bel.ter) Robin Hood Ln. -Eastside Pool 5 l/4 °/o Interesting wood -shingled 11kllng, & profusion of wrought iron, COSI'A MESA • Formal din· Interest gleaming fresh paint! 3 BR, sets off thi.11 classic 4 BR An l.JJl>ealina YOUNG JiOME ing room, family room, fire-No Interest increase, no 2 baths, Jg. living & dining Newport Beach h o m e in perfect taste. Localed pl.ace, \arge enclosed patio, room overlooking lovely gar. near St. Joachim's Church 2 car gar .• TRADE FOR points to picy. 3 bedroom den & park-like yard. Deluxe with formal dining room, BAYFRONT HOME Extra large Pier & Slip with wide turning radius modern 4 Bedroom home bmuttAll ~ enhance .padou• private yard our best Baytmnt bey and parochial achoo!. Huge E OR DU Mesa Verde, built·in lcib:b-Id• .... -! "'-·It • Sycamore parquet family room, maintained Homes this oib_ SMALLER HOM . ..........1 '"-"""''"' "''" tiled t b d built in master bedroom with prl· .,,.,.EX IN HARBOR IDGH en, " .......... CllJl)eta, -..5e fenc-tree i! lmmaaii•te! On we ar an · ice fl.Ill had for many yn. l bath p1 I ,.,._, ed vard. $144 lb te Fully Vil. e , com ete Y car-AREA. Eve1 968-30'13 or ,,~ per man COV· winding tree.shaded road in vacuum sys m . Permanent, off-white fiat In-peted home in neuiral l"ld ere: all. Translen-ed owner ted · be t -d terlocldng tile rool. 3 BR, 3 968-35(6 Newport Hts., near all carpe m s r.•a e ba.c. (1 ,.· over1ize &XI sq color. MOOem kitchen with 19 OFFtCES 181>'1 sell , . $22,950 I lldv:>ol11. BETI'ER HURRY! Acrilan feir long wear U'-" dishwasher • n d disposal. 'Coleswo !L & c On! $31 :;oo k e p I ,, .••• ft. gu ,w/dorl< nnl. I.go ll• Onmgo Coontys Wg8t _ rmy Q, Y • . . easy up e p. oo • ~ nn, minu'ed wall tireplace. Sprinklerir, cwendze d<d>le Ruth P•rdoll, RNltor yard for fun & frolic ·- at $157.500 Beautiful covered "8tio. garage and .mclose4 patio 642.7777 100'5 West cliff Dr. 642·52UI and YOU OWN THE with bird aviary. IT'S A LAND Shade tree1 ~ waterfall. BEAUTY FOR-. 0 NL y 19CM Hariior Blvd., C.M. ! Completely fenced & sprin-$28,!EO. s u BM r T LOW 293 E. 17th St. , 6-16-4494 Open Eves. $5800 ion ~= ~~=:.!"·:: DOWN. POOL HOME~23,500 C,OUNTRY LIVING 0 .JJ.. u.1 CUPAN plus $50. Call Exel/ Agt, .lll!!l!ll!l!l~~~~l!!!I~ I Unbelieveable -four bed· Yoo don't have to be a mil-pen 0 e IMMEDI~TE oc . Eves: 67J. 7365 673-0173 lor appt. Better room1 two baths giant COY· lionaire to get away from CY OIJ this new home un- HURRY! This Ad will ap. qect Pa~ leadm'g to beau-the bustle~ bustle of city SUNDA~ 12k'-5L der builder's warranty pear only ONCE~ tifWly landse&.pecl"pooi area. living. J¥S{ see this 3 bed-1620 W•rw1c •ne OPEN DAILY 16' X 1f living room with room ranch home with It'• Westclill Area 441 Windward Lane Newport Heighh arthtic !lagstooo llreplatt. la~ yant and patios. Spariding fre>h • newly doc-(Bet. 21st & 22nd, off Walklng dist~ to all sh~ $21,950 orated 3 BR home with fam-Tustin) On GoK ·Course UNDER $4S,OOO OPEN SAT & SUN 1-5 m4 KORNAT MESA VERDE $1,900 and T.L.C. 4 bedroom Eves. Call 646-lffiJ ping. Don't mis. another • "Ring" Uy room & &eparete gl~ss 2 beth home coo Id ht> charm· day of enjoying tlill ftne • f: ~sed lanai overlooking l:ng with 80tlle pnlnt and im· ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; family home Won't ·IUt • 642-•SPRING I8x30' pool with cabena. Un· Hal aginatlon. Large fenced yard Ivan Wells' Only $23 500. • • 7m ..._RE. AT '1lV' derprlced for area al $43,500. oo 11. quiet 1treet. Low ' • .~ .l'U.l.l J. DON'T MISS THIS! F.H.A. term~ available. Exciting 2'."Story • "Anytime'' Ruth P•rdoll, Re•ltor Pinchin 4 BR + den, formal dining rm, fireplace CORBIN-MARTIN Colesworthy & Co. Model Home S69S TOlol Down 10 v .. , 11"' w..iclil1 D" &12-5200 • ,.__ There'& 1 view from ·every Immaculate.( Bedroom, used ff b V' ff'll MJ·Z4'1 REM .. ."l'dM 675-1662 6"2-7777 room or !hi> beautiful.• BR "'43 WESTCL!FF DRIVE bricl<lu·epl•oe; dining room. ar or 1ew I s l!!!1!!1!!.11!!7S!l!-4!l!l!l!'2!!1, .-!!!1!11•!!111!!!!!!! 19:M Harbor Blvd., C.M. 3 bath hom.e in Dover Shor-.,A., 'PPI• ~ """' Spotless in and out!" Quiet Open Eves. es. 2.Stocy boom ceilings & -~-"-~---~--·~_.ei. tn!e lined J;trcet. cioae to Corona del M•r LIJXURIOiJS-r========='-==='='===~ 2-story fireplace in living C Del M the beacb and new psrk for Luk built homes localed room; separate dinini; area orona ar the kids. tn the Southland'• most d~ DUPLEX HOME Coldwell, .Banker OFFERS: Harbor Island Spacious 5 BR home. Den w/fireplace , Maid's quarters, Entry, Patio nicely liand- scaped. Front flagstone terNlce, Pier & Slip. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . ,195,000 Mrs. Raulston Udo Isle 70' Lot Chann galore·, fabulous new carpet. 1¥ge 2 story home on 2 full lots. Liberal terms. ~~fo1~ L.;~g ................. '69,500 4 Br 3 lath With l'ool Well landscaped oorner lot is the setting foc this gracious home. Formal din. room, carpets, drapes. Beautifully decorated. ........................... $89,500 Miss Leidy/Mrs. Burn! New Excl.-Comeo Shores 3 BR, Fom. Rm. 2'h ba + large poolside rumpus. or 4th Bdrm . Elegant fam . home w/lots of stone & gla~. Great ocean view. ........................ $82,500 Joe Clarkson Waterfront With Slip Lovely custom home newly carpeted, draped and painted -slip for large boat - best waterfront commurnty of fin_e homes. ........................... $59,500 W-alter Haase Harbor View Resale See this 4 BR Lusk home on pool size lot. Carpeting, drapes. soft water, are some of the quality features. Call for details. ........................... $43,900 Mrs. Bums/M'iss Leidy View Home-Just Usted Panoramic ocean view from front tettace. !iv. rm. & master BDR. Beautifully land· scaped court yard & patio w/enansive mountain view. Ready to move ln-S Bdrm + din. rm ..................... $44,5 00 Mrs. Harvey OFFICE OPEN SATURDAYS COLDWELL, IANKU & CO. 2200 I . COAST HIGHWAY NEWPORT BEACH ' + family room with pe.rquet Duplex ' · alrable & caacinatini area. hardwood ftoors. Elegant On OC'e6ll side of Pacific Scl:ioolt A: Calif. lrvini• Have you been looking for a like nev.' modem, luxurious, qulet, one -story duplex home'! We found it for :you! YOU will enjoy the lirflpft.ce in the large living room, the beautiful kitchl!n with built· lnll, two bit bedrooms with l<*ls ot storage. Both \Zllt.1 woukl bring $260 per tnmth. ~ la the ultimate in pride of. owq_ttshlp income ~ erty. Mliy trade for loc:aJ 2 or 3 bedroom home. carpeting, draperies, wall Hgtiwy .• This beautifully Ctmplia just rn om t n t 1 ~. landscaping. It hu maintained lnromf' is full away. Senctbly priced fro11 beet one ot 1he moct admir-ol ~. • Both living 768'l EDINGER ru~ 'H6t!;ti ed Ivan Wells' modl?l home. room1 have fireplaces. · 84:?4455 OPEN EVES. Directions: MacArthur Blvd. Now you can buy le move Large "WOrkshop in rear. • In be• ~-1 -·-· Roof --'-from Pacific Cout Hwy. or iOl'e """'"' ....... "'· top sund ... """ with bay 2 Acre Estate Newport Fwy. Turn on San $81,200 & ocoon view. -at $48,900 Roy -J, Ward Co. with exCt'llent terms. HORSE CORRALS Joa.quin HUii Rd., then (Baycrest OUiceJ 646--7171 e 546--2313 Riding ·ring with beautiful .4, follow 11\gns to model area. J842 Santi&@ Dr 646-156(] BR, 3 bath home • oversize -TM An'swer TO-- garage, custom thruout. Property T •x Bite $15,750 Fam rm, 2 Fittplaces. Ex· BITE BACK 3 Bedrooms. Top EAST'SIDE pensive carpettne thruout Buy this custom built duplex location. Breakfast nook in $82,00J. near town Ii: city park. kitchen. Detached Garage. -Oi" .... iiiiiiii~iiiii;;;;-• 9993 Windes Dr. You'll have a home for un- HUge Lot. Au.une existing BREATHTAKING Orange, C1I. dtt $15,(0), tennant pa,ys lor loan pa,yment of S~ per YE'S, it'll truly httathtalring-OPEN SAT & SUN 1 ·5 other home plus .the taxes. 2)43 WESTCUFF DRIVE month. Rc.11 BARGAIN. the view, that is, from this Or•nge Coe1t Property How does that grab you? buUcling 1ite overlooking ll2 Marguerite, Cru\1 673-8550 for $'29,500. easy terms. Rott-646-TIU Open Ewa. M.,. Venle ilimtcy Oub S23 950 man O>. Ag"'t • 5'6-8'lll day DfWXE JB,I PLEXES Lake A Fairway'. Slightly or nit.e or mp by our off10e IU elevated, with 158' ol front. f 2199 Fairview Rd., C.M. We <X>STA 1'!ESA ()lo"".Jo'ICE 2629 Harbor Blvd. ... along lhe >iliw•l'-CJwn. 1 block to "-"'• cent•r-. 3 hav. !he key. $43,500 & $44,SOO en offering at $25,000. bedrooms + den, 2 bethl, liiii.i.i;i;iii""iiii"'"""'"" I O>ll.,.. Realty ~ ""'location. Low down. OPEN DAILY 1 • 5 st>-9491 Open 'til 9 PM Delta ,..., "''''' 6'&44H' 1628 Santiago Owner'• unit with fireple.ce, dishw~. built -in kitdl- en & with all the finest de- tailing. The otl'ler 2 rentlls help PAY YOUR WAY. Call now &. see the finest. ln income tax shelter. WHY PAY TAXES! SPECTACULAR VIEW-OCEAN ond BAY Clann 11/ fZ11/ -Aparlm11nl6 On W1terfront NHr Newport H1rbor Entrance ~52.S Oc••n Blvd., Coron1 del M•r, C•llf. AMl'LE GUEST PARKING ond IOAT SUI'S Why Not Enjoy The "Condominium"' Way of Life THE ADVANTAGES WILL SURPRISI YOU You can purchls. and get fee tiUo -or leuo U 1"'1 prefer. ALL apts. hlfe WATERFRONT VIEW. All bavo two bedrooms and two baths. -WITH LARGE PATIO. YOU A'E INVITED TO INSPECT OUR FURNISHED MODEL luy $59,500 and Up-Lease $420 Motilllfy & Up Phone 673-1718 for further lnfomiutloii • ' BAYCRESI' Ch!tom-blt by Ivan Wells, deNxe 4 Bdrm, 4 bath, for· tnal din. rm. tam. rm. H/F pool. Vacant · will trade for income or vacruit acrege. "C" THOMAS Realtor 224 W, Cout Hwy 548-55a7 I N@WpOrt Bdi. Eve. 56-5643 Newport ot Vlctorl1 Corona del Mar ~11 South of Highway in 200 block. Steps to beach 3 BR (~pen 1% be.th, 14 x 20 living room, Evenlnp) Ureplace + lamily room, -====~=~~-=1 blt·irui, lg dining area, ~ Ii vice porch, quality CBfl!eta .l drapes, dble garage. Low ; down, V•cant. Rltr. 646-3928 EVe11. 494.9309 *LACHENMYER B/B Owner Transferred A magnificent home. Just * * ~ enough. ot the early Callfor. * * nia charm -and a view of 4 Star • 4 Bdrma the Harbor and Blue Pacific: Phu Family Rm from all Picture windows. EASTBLUFF .,,,, home b only 2 ,...,. old Good Buys • Sell fut and in top condition. It'1 a ' -.... c:onvlnood -3 -· -~ B&mQoo St. room aM Den borne with Z"l01 Bamboo St. maey delightful extn11 • ml • 2Sl7 C.talJ)8. St. the Pri • ...._ ~ VI 'oe 11 onli $19,(m, • l"ftile!JUU1111 P# Tenns ~ SAT ' SUN 1-5 615-m· Eve1r 673-((64 DAVll; Ree!ty 6'2-1CIOll lay & ~ 1539 Santiago Dr· i1 .. 11y, Inc. Out.tandioa 8"ya.,st ham. ,.,., E. O>ast Highway. OdM .... I llw~ .... 3\1 """"· ......................... -., 10""'1 dlni. .,.,.,,, Lute DAVIDSON" Realty """"' """ ' OOOl $153 PITI OPIN SAT/SUN 1.5 • ...,. FHA lo111. 3 BR+ Chorl" Arnold ~--1~ i.tt. -Jerry Frevd ..... ......,. 1111 ...,. -6'6-1'1$ :::."· :mo RulMr 51!, a.I Dial -"' lll3UL1'! -IM!tl. - " I I . . .,. . . . . . . .. . .. . . ... \ ..... ... '' _ ........... , .................................... ~,. -......... . ....... -, .... ,, .... . . . -.. ~ ..... . .; . . .. -.... - I J111J l'Hia HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi -HOUSES FOA SALi -HOUSIS FOR SALi • .:..:H.:.OU.:.S:.:l.:.S..:.f..:O.:.;R.:.;l .:..:A.:.LI:;_ 1 ;H.:..:OU=SE::;S:...;...FO;.,;R;...S;...A.:.;L..:I _ General HOUS!S FOR SALll HOUSIS POii SALi DAILY PU.OT ~ HOUSll POR W:I 1200 L .. un• Nl..,.I 1707Lafino Nlguol 1000 BUY Of THE'YEAR l!J.NE.SS FORC&S SALE. Del -n...,, l.argt l5xOI Living room, l.Dd bi& tsai Family room. Cood ailed G.E. -. ldtchon wtlh dishwasher and lots ot clbt- neta. 'l'hreoe lara:c bedroo.m& wtth ]~ tiled blllht. Extra nice landKapi.n; 1'~ yard care to minimum. This beau- tiful home is oa a quiet F.ulSkle Oil · de · sac. You r.an buy thUi excelle:nt home with onJ.y 10% down. Full Price only $28,750. CAJ.J,. NOW. ,,ilS WON'T LAST!!! Eves, Call 64&-1050 PANORAMK VIEW 1003 Baker, C.M. PACESflTER DREAM 0Utstandin£ 3 BR home backs up to Adams school groonds. Beautifully landscaped with built-in BBQ. Slate entry with parquet tloor in hall & family room. Sbarp & dee.n. $32,500 -5%.% loon can be assumed. General IAYCRE$T . ASSUME EXJsnNG Sii" 1mn M this (llLltatandifll J lult bedroom, PU.JS rt&an. tlc t&mUy rcoM, PU.IS for- mal dlnin& rooM, PLUS brttkfast roooi ovt.rlookmJ: beaotiM 1"'\on, P L U S room for poi\lil. OWNER wEsJcLFF OWNER LEAVING Sl'ATE Thia ii the besl buy ln • • bedroom home in Westcllff. Rooo1 for pool, Room for bolet. Room for cblldren. £x. ~llent location clcm to ......oi., pe,r\< and UbtuY. Jean Smith· Realtor 400 E. 17th, Costa MNa 646-3255 OWNERS MOVED Need just l buyer for this terrific Mesa Vudt borne. 4 BR 3 b1tb, &eparate 18x23 family room, aeparate dln- ina: room. huge y&J.'d with larre heated I filtered pool, Drivt by 2837 Elltmert k call to set inside. Consider all ofters. Newport .et Victorl• 646-8111 (Open Calll' contemporvy, a tndy mocie:m. &ow, r&mbllni rock· roofed home. AttiltiOllb d• lfatled planter• with luah ttoplcal planlb:t&tl. A Broedmoor &ward wlM.lnl de.San. Pulh bulton Uvina tn thlo .......... .n "" kitcbe:n, breakfaat nook, and a Jarse Wnlly nn with fir~ placie. • lqe Bdrma, ,3 bathll, ma11ter BR wit}! lOx 6 druainr rm w/marble top va.nity, tnd tull lmath · mir· ron, $52,000. Smal ViHa Reduced tD '45.000. Modem, ln4 immaculate l Bdrm sur- rounded by cooi patioL Walk to i!vecythlnc. Fwmal l>ining Quollty. Bdnn, ""'·. baU.., 18 x XI ft living rm. VU pa· tiOI. Owner will finance. ;:Cle;:n;;;or""•;..l _,_ __ _;l;.:0;;;-00 ~eneral 1000 CM!• Moso 1)00 Nowporl leach Real Estate Salesman Cal'ffl' Opportunity Experlenoed ln 1dlin1 VA l riv. Homt•, plenty ot ftoor time, A tralnlna: avalJable. financial betp to qualillf!d. i\'tt Ina. Bonus plan, and other co. benefits. One 01 Oranae County• !arrest Real Estate crgantiaUon1. Con- tact Harry Boggs Mar. 19 OFFICES Orange County• La.rs:e1t firstfj~ r,§1(' 2-114 Vista Del Oro Newport h eh Rare U1tln9 Bluffs very ~ .a Sedtooms • 2 full bllh& fireplace, pool plus lovtly open ceillni' nt'hr ~ wlltl ir111ny xtru Gre1t troubl• frff family home -$30,995 Ph. 644·1133 293 E. 17th St, 646-4494 ............................ J 4 BEOOOOMS • tamlly mom HALECREST . 2 bolho. 6 yri. old. Wolk to school. 10% dn. Well land- scaped lot. HIRDWOOD ROORS o..r.: ~~_. ONLY m ,trJO • Owner forte! OCEAN VIEW I Fl"C aimp!e io aell thl• kwely 3 68, 2 3 Br. la.rte famUy f'09dl bath Meu Verdi! home. olfertd by prt pt)'. MUlt Larp Mt·ln Jdtetien, built· "II' SM.900. SC-3064 inl, Rood carpets • drllP!t, ========= overalted earage & quiet Newport HgtL 1210 1trffl· Only $144 per month includts f)l'inc .. int .. taxes It Some Yl«W ln1. CALL 540-1~1 {open trom thll 3 BR, 2 bath bomt ewt) Htrita&e Reel F..tate: 1110 BY Owner 4 BR . • den or aueet room 2~ balh a, &e1)6rBle dining mo1n, IO!ldB of cla&et& & 1 tor• ge, laridacape:d & newly pairl(ed. S9rif1kll"r' syslem. ~.m 2008 Balearic. 54&-0932 2976 Jacaranda Pool + 3 BR, 2 ba, Owner ready to move • be.lter than new th1vout. Call to lie!':. Madge Du.viii, Rltr. 642·7COI 3 BR, 2 BA, fam rm, blt·inl, 2 trplcs, close to sehools & ahoppina:. '25,900, l 0 ~ down.~ on a hi&h k>t. F plc. pa.tio, dblc pr on alley w/extra paridng. Pride of ownerlh.ip vea, OwMr wants to aeU now. )25,900. GRAHAM REAL TY tNear NB Potrt OIHcc) 646-24.14 SPLIT LEVEL Medlt•rr1nMn 3 BR 2 b&~ 1pt1dou11 living room w/hi&h beamed ceil· ings, encloHd dt!ek, elect. dumb waiter, 2 eiecgooic garage dool"9. Clo&e to ac:Dools. $37 ,$0, 0 w n e r 642-31$;,~ AV AIL lmmed. Qi[f Haven l Br, 2 be. &: 2 Br Oc8.n Vu Inc Apt. $49,500. Mi-7249 3 BR. Fam. Rm. Nr llthools A&11t.1me f.!;l,600 Govemment $26,500. GI loan 5%.%. W\11 Balboa Coves 1215 Loan. No new loan fee · no caTT)' serond. 54(i..{)807, 1674 --------- lncre•se intef'ellt r•tes (6%) I SI CM WATERFRONT 3 BR 2 bath 3 BR + huge tamUv ........ 293 E. t...._ &. &16-44!H 1.;;:."":::'::.:::;.· .=· .:.·--=~ ., '""'" •u1 a-bl. 'A"" private 11ier &: float. $50,500. -·~-. 1800 •• ft of ..........i O\VNER, •=i-U IC ......... aq. n '""" "' •-din •-( 4) 529-370!! after S PM living. Po,ymenta 110> month REDUCED! fl .< BR. 3 Ba.: . rm.~ lnc.Jl>des everytlling, E •·-3 BR plus 2 fam. rm. 2722 Canary Dr, N xtra s.-..1" . $44,000 Open Daily 54s-o987 •wport be.th Lldo home. Street to Dover Shore1 1227 • Come ''d// tje ••• Sea Loven · Skin Divers • Bel<h Combers, and all woo love lo hunt aeuhells by the Mui>ore. Monarch Bay la the new beach frontier, 1UIJ quiet & peaceful. We have 8 spec- tacular homes In thl> Finest Beach Community -Exclusive &: private Beach & Tennr.. Club, 3 & 4 bed· rooms with a magnificent view of the Blue Pacific and Islands. Three minutes from the new Dana Point Marina. Come see fur yourself - real Lux u r y living. •s2,ooo. $95,000. 17117 32681 Quee n Catherine Dr. 32651 Queen C ather ine Dr. 32631 Quee n Catherine Dr. 22811 32821 Crown Cooot 1Jr. 32831 Crown Coatst Dr. 32852 Monarch Bay Dr. 32892 King John Lane King Chari .. Lano Ba" 499-3041 499.2150 at Street location near Cub, BIG POOL.· 4 BR, by owner. DELUXE Victoria A•.a.hlo J"1y bt. FumW.· ~,!°;.,B,;;.,~ ocbool. CONDOMINIUM Lido lal• 1351 I Huntington INch 1400 ed or Unfurnished. $54,0CJO 995 MOVE IN 644-1111 t.Futilishedl. Beautifully Furnished TRADE: LIDO ISLE $ • For Sala by OWNER B'YFRONT UNITS Nociosina:costa. 3 BR 2bdt, In..... LIDO REALTY Coll .. e Pork 1115 ~ 1 "" I E -..-1 •• l 3400 Via Lkto 673-8830 =="-:..::."'-----2 Br. 2'iii ba. Dover Shores FOR BAYFRONT 9J x 100 fenced kit• ""II>" I/ l :~::;;~·~•~n~n=g=•~1·~~~?~~~~~ !IMM.AC J hr, tam rm, 2 bA, 15L"i CbrTiwall Ln. ~ HOME 673 •345 ed, carpets, drapes. ela:t. ~ OOilt-in R&O, -...... 161 O Kl119s Road "NEWPORT BEACH" dbl ""'· .iee bit·""· '"" • WATERFRONT • BR OPEN SAT• sUN Pr!"'" both"' ...._BR • + 3 B ••-.,, 700 q>ts & drps, nr sch.ls & wi~-1 •-"·. 3 b•. ~. ---•~-• Driw by this immaculate 3 B/B auui, ....,, 124500 ...... o •• 5 ""* UVU'i VP"" l BR, den.&w11.1a"eu ~ • .,,.., IJ5G ,,., · Ranch modem . blt·lnl'I. &hops. • · ......,....__, .... Sat/ Sun 10-5. 312 Evening 67>4234 .JJ. bdrin, family room, &Pee-St~ ru~ 0,0 o~2 118 Via Qui1.o month ind!Jdin& tax.el. a tacular view home. we have Lease/Option Beautiful area· HURRY! 1200---=~=· =·"·""'~==== Newport le1ch -h 1400 pen o~e .. letter from Slate Hiway or Trade "'OCEANVJEW -f.5,900" Westcliff 1230 Hunt1ntton a..c ' $22,950. SUN DA y 12. 5 ~v:: =~I ::~~; 3 bedroom, 2 beth view home Huge 2 Bdrm•. 2 ha, 50xU1 Widow's Walk .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;! nmed. Possession v~ 3'T:: 2 ~ ~ = 1723 Terr1pin Line Freeway, Owners will help on Hillside. Nice pe.tio atta. Fi.replace. Below market! Scan the inscrutable sea from FIREWORKS livine room, Pl.km V.rde BAYCREST qualUied ~with tinanc-~~t ds ~~~t &. polisbj HOME W-4000 the roo l lop hideaway or G:limmering over Newport's OPEN Sat/Sun 1-6 .tone~. w/w mrpet. lnh'iguing custom • built 3 ing. Very arudoua ~'-·they ;eight~SU:rea. O:::'ei~ 0w';11 DAVIDSON Realty this tall, dark, and hand· Back Bay wW be aeen trom 16382 Eagle Lin• ing, draptt, built-in r-. BR & convertible den home •re moving lo '-"'1sure C .,1ne Oceanfront Triplex; th• h-t ,.~ of •••-ol-·~-p 3 BR home. nMr It oven, ~ It trade tor home whe1>e wn· NORTH osta M .. • ... "'' am u.... c-~ ..... designed round glass-walled World. This is truly 11. custom 11:1\ile your -uit;y is growing aant WKtcliH home. Spoc--~-•,, -g. Oougl.as fenced. MO\'e in today. 1-•1 •··il ~ I I ••!""" ing ""l'mits horses, or Large 4 BR, formaJ dining ~-. ,., 111,;11UU1 garden & water ... open to "" t >KOOU Y • .,. .uuu. ..-"---oath YOO" feet. Lushious ;.....,. 3 BR pJ f miJ • ~---Clti:I. VA -FHA IJ _, d' Ing , ,,..., -.... ~. ,,..3 ......., Lease I ,..._...._ with small room + family room. Neer Ul!"I• • """"' • ua a Y nn -= '""""'' .. " the ky, Form ... In room. v•~.,......, .c..ves; uo '""""""' ~· 3 BR, 2 beth a"'~,..-enta & 2 g1· •-· bo••· f OK. A.-...;--' at -"-~-la & B ch down pe.yment. All for Catbolic O\urdl. $31,950 '""' "'" lS•culng u111, pro 8-rr--_... Breakfast room O\'ell\IUf\.Ulg y ea with dens, furnish Income ionally decorated, carpeted S23 750 l.x32, pool ··•th --1--' $33,500. Rltr. 2750 Harbor 5B, ad . .1. I 1 Cor B~W'll & Gerliekl 1!1Jgc ReJ' EstJtt "' --~ ~ R It I PLUS tax :•ue tfr. and draped. Outdoor patio CO ~ M-lan.' ...... fee iimple k>t in ea y, nc. 673-9200 Eves: 673-8036 546-5460 r:ve1 .545--5142 Low down ,. ""ll ··c•-nao PERRON REAL TY • 962-4-171 ............... - COA -· -w B-'"-Blvd NB B & B h • ... ""' •ia lf'ad! to l5x30 fl pool. $56,-"""Im ~ TS finest residential area.I ==-==·=~=~===·=·== ' ay eac Sl3~.500 500. 181h&Orange,CM ,,_ VACANT ~ WAL~AcE ~=.;~~~~:,,;. Realty, Inc. Costa M11• 1100 Burr While, Realtor @ R··• l26'1 ~~Ra~~~ wtlh ., S200l -· REALTORS Ruth Pordoll, RHltor CONDOMINIUM ""' w. Bal"" Bl•d • NB 1;:.:.:.;V:;..=;;:;__. _M __ ..;. >;,;' _.,.,. '""ii' room. wot ~ , ,_, BRo 2 1lolho -5-46-4141-t605 Westcliff Dr. 612-5200 IC:"ona esa 2001 Newport Blvd te i:.r &; mom. for p:IQl table, I cAiOm KITCHEN (Open Evenings) ::=:=:=:=:=:=:::=:=:= 12 BR l1A bath, large spacious ~--• C I • H Newport Beach ._,... mod l!'iect. kitchen with rooms with tlr$lact, dish--rv••n 0 on••I omes 67>4630 Eves: 642-2253 .,...,, Wetl ccut hipa.y em " Uke new earxHtion l'l:l:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=: I y GI fHA wuher, fre!hl,y decorated Here's traditionaJ chann 18 NEW HOMES 642-0344 anytime eatin; area, ~le dininR ./ Walk to Catholic t• BU • s1s2 rm. Rect'eationat lllft blended with Clllllom built Low dn. 6* % JO.yr loan room • big BR.Iii + llf!Wing School "' 01urch REDUCED $2550 2i,~ years old. 3 BR + huge second story rec. room, large rear yard, built-in stereo + Intercom. Only S29,950 Newport at Victoria 646-8811 (C•ll Anytime) Thi~ cute 3 BR home has been Government appraised. You mwst &ct quickly. In excellent location compltte with w/w carpets & drapes, fenced yard with &prinklen & 20' covered f10tio. Price f.?'l,750 EZ to buy. I' \I I • \\ 1111 1 .-.i \U\\ll\\ I""""" k I \ I I l ' 'I 11PJ3 Baker, C_M. with large pool. 2400 Elden, quality? A low, rambling From $24,950 Hang Ten . University Park 1237 at"ea, 3 bethll ,i..eJ'le lelced i 5 min. to Beach" Unit #13. Drive by&: call home ol red brick&. "'1lite Valley Road al Victoria · · url --~ ---"=~..;_.;.;.._;.;;;"-I lot, l'OOl1\ 1or pool. New car· Freeway shutter des"•"ed round EnJoy watching s euvua-pets. 530,995. $3100 down. BRASHEAR REALTY Newport s, .,... • • (Just E. of Brookhurst tics fl''Om }'OW' protected OPEi" SAT • SUN M!ll at picturesque patio ·1: a &arden up on bluH) lanai in this compact Ocean-Village 2, luxurious extras l a f llJfiNljvru eg 147-8531 Eveg. ~1090 ~: Victori1 Classie Geordan entranee Lido 1iZe Iota, fee simple front cottage. 2 BR, 1~ BR, 2 ba, atrium, 10 ft ceil-Cor Brooktwrst & Garfield HOUSTON HOUSTON ..: ip'aced by carriage lamps, land -High above sea level. balhs • patio w/firepl1ce -ings, lush pl.ants in 3 96.1-44n 546-8100 Owner IMYing. Sharp cM.n 3 -- 646-8111 formal dining room, powder Built-in electric kitchen. ,, ,....., DOWN J?:a.rdens, mirrored d os@t • ... _ ... -·• .. _ -~ · h ba ft.2 zoning -.......,.. . doo 1 . ..-___ .-.....-BR 2 ...._...., cw.~11.c t. "'°"', · game room wit r, Convenient to shopping cen-Good inveslment a1 lot value l"9 g arnorou.a IP&CIOUS .., ~..........._.. large lot, lhinsl• raot, mm- beautiful bedrooms, Sup. ter, near schoolR. l..and 4 11.t $47,500 entertaining, $26,500. Exe. wlFE WANTED! pll'tely landJCaped. electric erbly decorated! Choice BDRMS _ 1 & 2 sty, Fire-B , R I investment near 00. By To appreci9te .s mpeciot• built-in R&:O, 1amUy rmn,·· Newport 8J'f:il & not lease-place11, carpeting, draperiea, urr White, ea tor ,,,,"""'==r=""""'====== aa.. eleeult dinin&: nQll:, earpeD. ... pel'. Primd -- hold, Rare for $67,500. fencing, landscaping. Irvine luxury atl])eting ~ llPUid-Jaw me.ril:el. $26,75'.t -low Ruth Pardoll,_RNltor Michael Key, Build•r 2901Newport Blvd 1238 ing ean:ten kitchen~ ckN.'npaymmt.Move fnany. 16(6 Westcliff Dr. 642-5:.n:I Phone 642.282]. Eves 642-5100 Newport Beach IRVINE out to 1n a:aure pool, Full tinM'. -- ~ MOVE UP!. EXECUTIVE HOME /;:=:==:::::=:=:=:=:==: J An immaculate home in ex- New Listinq .. clu11ive B~t. LuxuriouB to Cameo Highland&. A-Pim Home. 3 Bclrma, 3 baths, Plull F&mily Rm, Plus a childrt'na TV or Game room, Plus Big Ocean v~ tmm profeWonal.Jy landscap@(I garden, $43,500. HORSEY AREA y' 'II EXCALlmUSIVEh 615-46.10 """ 64~2253 v;r:o ... ~i 1~.:. ~':c-:: .... :: • .:;~~... lfll"l"f.@"l"';"'!!E ... m-m-11•1 lmm•c"1•1o ooll hou .. ·.n I age osp ere * PRICE •h,,,,,.;ng & ....... 11, •. "'··1 1"'~-~~~Ev~ .. ~-~-~~1 Cor Brookh""'. Mold huge A·l lot. Newly carpet-. REDUCED * 500. By owner. 297.4373 er 967-4471 5tM100 ed w;th channrug Swod;•h with 1961 LUXURIES 442-2741. DIVORCE Corona del Mar m•"" bodroom outt wtth rarde'I & !IOla.rlum. Charming traditional home. 2 3 BR., 2 beth1, famOy Bdrm!! + 2 rm. sleeping mom with bar, formal din- loh. Hobby room. Sep. din. ing room&; a hobby room. CURT DOSH, Realtor fireplace. Comblne a coun-heart ol the NEWPORT HAR· BUILDER of THIS NEW try •tmollJ)here and an out-BOR !ll'ell a f'4onticello home l,<m sq ft CUsroM HOME Back Bay 1240 fortff aale on thia J BR 2 Blanding pride of owenn;hlp makes it right. J BR &. den llAS OTHER INTER~S. halh home. Fl.r!plaoe, !am- P1clflc Shores lltNtty OFFERS Attniri~ rmt&i.11 front l lo 5 bedroomz u low u $139/mbnth. 1730 W. C'off.lfl Higbwlf 642-6472 EVES. 673·3468 nn. Dark rm. In garage. On Beautifully landsc.aped, home. Only $21 ,250. ~lay or. 3 & 4 BR .. Only S20,!M M YOU SAVE S200J. This BAC:X BAY In County Cor· ily room with built-in BBQ, consider GI tr.rms. :"'llh luxury .OOill·inll & year n1urti desired Saycresl loc rldor. BY OWNER $22,500. l walJdne distance to PlJ'tlCh· round extenor maintenance ·l-4 br, lam rm, 3 ba, makes BR. home with detached Isl School & ahopping. Open + Country Club living, with this an ideal exec family garage. Large separate yard 10 all terms, Yoor lis~s ..,. urgently needed h leaae or rmt. 45 ' lot . -. $39,950. on fee land $59,500. 3 BR. HOME NORTH EAST CM Hardwood Coors, large yard lot with acceSll to rear for boat or camper, VACANT. Immediate possession. twin heated pools, private home al a price below equal area, ideal for boat or R. D. Slat" Ruftors Mr!!. Raul&ton 1001 GIDffirOOO LANE club. home. Consider trade, 1617 trailer storage. 5%. % loan MT.J5l9 HiO LEXINGTON LANE Trdewinds 159,500 544-SJ..17 can be assumed. C a l J ""3 WES!···"" URIVE 1714) 546-1210 '"-0181 . 64>-214' altor 6 pm. BUILDERS 646-Till C::cn Evf'S.l "°=~-.'-c""'-'-o=.:__---======~- OWNER 642-4ffi!'.I la..._ .. -".. -985J Continental ~ HUNTINGTON BEACH ~~ 841-M Coldwell, Banker & Co. 2 BR, 1\1 bath" '"""' GONE ONLY S21,8'l. Fanl.,tic ' EXECUTIVES BACK BAY REPOSSESSION BR hom e on quie1 cut-de·SRC 24a> University DMvr ~'h acrPs & 111.rge custom NeRr new l large BR1, car- 3 BDRM, heated pool, walk. Jng dist HB grammar 6 }Ii sch!. Owner 5J6.6627. 22ot E. (Ollll HhrMWtY NtWl)Orf ae.ch, C•lllornll Kl t.u11 OR 1·11111 4 a.ctrooms-2 Baths BARGAIN nJ' the Month~ ThiMACULATE home with hi-lo pile csiveting. Bllilt·in kitchen. Built -in vacuum cleaner sylllem. f'illered S\VtMMING PQOL.. TER- RIFIC location. $23,500. NO DOWN Vet!!. $1 ,400 DOWN FHA. $700 DOWN fHA-VE'I' COSfA M.r..>t\ Of(.'~CE 2629 Harbot· mval 54..'"l-9491 ()pen till 9 PM john macnab CAMEO HIGHLANDS Special oiler on 7 homes due to reposaessiofl by OWDl':l'- oontr.ctor. One-3 BR with family room It one--4 BR with family room. Both with oeean view. Priced at $311,- ~ &. $43.SOO. ~llent terms available. Call for appl. 642-1235 6 DELUXE 3 IR. UNITS UKE NEW 1i{ Acre completely-fenced with block will West Bluff area. $825 mo bloome. 642.1nt ""rfi- 5qufflt Your SS and bey this 3 BR l" hi.th borne. Near church11:1 East- stde, CMta Mesa $21,500. George WilliamllOfl , Rltr. 6734350 OPD\' EVES. BUILDERS 1 ACRE -R-4 547 ::«J Westbluff Cowity 1m1. Possible JO wtitll. 642.1n1 AnytirM SlB,500 W•lls·McC•rdl• Rltra. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 548-1129 Eves 644--0684 WANTED Real Estate ~a.Je11 People. WHY NOT GET ON nlE BAND WAGON? Over 2S Yean in Orange CoW1ty • Full page advertisinl • Inter office teletype • Training proaram • lnlUl'UICe • Many other bl':flefitt Call 646-4494 • For interview !..~~hlt. Nicel.Y 1~~ r P .. ~ 1 f'.1• ·, custom Newport Bay Condo. hnme l BR, dftl, 2 bath!!. pe!ed, hu,l:!e fa mily mom, "''--"" Y ()6.ln ""• •JP.aUti u 3 Rrh'l'Tl 2 Bath ]UX\lry. Will 'tr;1;de? CALL GLEN elect1ir. kltcben. lmmed. ro 1'1..oR.lOA. Now v11('. Im-cusrom builC-in k 11 ~ h" n • f"rf' l11nd S.'!6,500 QUEEN 540-1.151 (a,>en eves ) PQ68Caslon. 10% down· now med ......,,_ Spo•''"' 3 BR lovcly covem:t patio & many n--s 1 & 0 •• 1 , 30 H 126 = """ ... ni ce bearing lruil trte&. ...,,,.,n • 11 ->3UO --.: p.m, t!ritage Real Eslllf' ·'""· Mme. Prestige area, !'%. bt, Mu,,I sell • !lllbmll M Y fredarick b•te1 2 STORY home. 4 BR '" 3 LlSrER. REALTY 847-G).\1 m&!ISiVI' dbl trpl , near-new reasonable 1Her. CAl.L MR. 51f>.12t1 rvrs. 5#.2617 BA. Large COYe™ patio. NO DN TO vm P:ounteln Valley 1410 ' l.DVFl..Y J Br. 2 Ba with. _ EXTRAS. Patio, I • r f e: Int. + !162-1678 atter 5 'pm carpeting, COY patio. huge BLACf\ ~1151 4opc n eves) BES1' Buy in Bluf'fs Com. Prof. Land• c ap e d . Lo tam rm & room !or boat or Heritege Real Escate unity, 3 BR, 1 BA . 2 r11r maintenance yard. P rin-Sharp 4 BR Dutch Haven, Westminster 161 lrlr. Fol"Ct>d to scU for 22 • r. carf>('t!I, dmpeB, patln, rli-·;:::;:::.:;::;:::;_ __ .:.;;;.:.::i= $32!))(1 IO~ S .500. EASTStOE. Submit R"Rr •. 1 min. to hc11!'h nr cipals only. 646-4.515' condi·a 111 w n, rul-dc-!lac - b ' • " or an i·rason-on term11. Quiet tret lifll':d harlmr. 2 rn1n lo Vlllagr cL~U~XU=R~Y-3~b-r-. ,~ .. -,~h -00-00~0. t Prl ed · h l ~ le orfcr. CAU. RAY llt.n'.'l':t 3 ice sized BRi; 2 ShoppinJ.; Cenler. 2 min 10 Rttte-· c ng 1 at on Y GAULT MQ..tJ5l topen l'V('ll) baths.' ha1~ flooi'S, ~U· Cd M High. Spacious, 2rttn frpl. pool. golf, ltt land. $23.500. Heritage Real Elltate ble garage, huge encloeed surroundings. Pool . S33.900. Owner translt'f'red. $32,500 P1ul JoM1 RMlty patio or MJmpus room Ovmcr 644-155l 1 ..,"~'-0w..~~'·~""'""',-!3°'n~o--847-1266 Eves. st2-5M<I COUEGE PARK Wttho"t a 00"bl -"'" 1" SUBMIT ON TE RMS Lowel y ' BR 2 ~ BA. Loan THIS WON'T WT OPEN HOUSE the money. PrK:«:I to sell • Almost new 1 Bdrm, 3 bathe Bal S28,QXI. Make Oller. FRI • SAT • SUN need5 some Tender Lovin2 Owner • 54&-8870 C CAL •~1 5 I fp\c, elct bH·in kH 4 BR 2 bath. A real !!harp LUXURY 3 1R ramily room + huae. play *' room COYering entire 2rx:I floor ita tuper sharp only SZ7,950. Nothlna dcftrn ' to veterans. Low 1'RA Terms. 31. Prl'nceton Or. arc. L ~ J 1 open C horn I H · R I r -ustcw:n • bit. Patkl , deck E tbl ff t242 e S21 CXX1 Don't luy a House 5 BR plus fam nn, 2~ baths. ~v~a erltage ea ~tate near Oct>an. ONLY S45.500 1-•-• __ u_____ . CA.LL. ART LISTER REAL TY 16612 Beach Bl. HB M2 Buy a Way of Ut. 2.00> ., n. ts x ' Oft. ""'. 934 SENATE '"' v1, L;oo 613-9300 VIEW • BY OWNER SLA lES REAL TY •~~~""l~"'!~~'!: I ered petio. Immac 3 BR 7 Be nylon ~. SACRIFICE. Mwu 811:11 -Im mac 5 Br. din 2% ba l'le<: 847..J.)19 962.7:.;9 ,L;,:e_,,9.:;un;o•:...: ... :;::.:<h;;__..:..;..:;;;:i;: How •aovt This $11,IOOI ~ ~:: ~~-~i SCENIC ~=~eel ~:,;.1z~uie1~!: tradl! befm-e July a>. Bay .:;.; C:.:19 lndscpg. :om SWIM FREE Unusual Archttectvre Solid home, lll'.i.D1d vaJue! 3 ~ Includes 3 BR, e ba, un-PROPERTIES Walk lo achla Best Dea.I in View custom Condo. 3 br, 7 LOADED With u ft I q u bedroom, 2 bfttha, dining .. n .. d si ed h 6~"1"" area. Owner Mual SeU ba/ hm. 2,000 aq. ft. 2 •try, M 12 0 Have l wibelieYable sharp fetoturft a. be-inc Oft ocnn ll'efl f« entertaining • COY• usu....., e gn o m I'. ,.,., ..., $20,000 Termt1. Open 1-6. w pools, goH, ect. 1oaJ1 b81 ,_c_o_ro_n_•_4_•_1 _e_r ___ 5_, tlomes with heated poola r aide of. h~y ' north oend. 2 0.:-to Belch, of CWI'9e! -""lrt•-'ft.,...,..,._.,"~~;;~~~~':,.,-$29 JOO Of! 1 673--t356 Cho Ice oJ 3 or 4 BRs, 2 ered patio for 1urnmer par1.-$21,$0 includes 11.JJ. ''The World BY OWNER: Ol.mhridge ,;,;;;,·~;;· """"'::.:,.· ;,:;:-=::;:=...,-,I ''The World bath!. Why not rN.lly ~ br, den, frpl., 2 b., A RP il!ll. Mature ~ &: fruit CHESHIRE' model. Collep Parle. 3 trg CHARMING adult Baytront r. __ .,,, this summer? beach •hwr. Dbl. pr, otN. trees. High bkd: fence tor REAL ESI'ATE at Your Feet'' br. 2 ba, xtta lrg fam rm, 2 home. 2 BR, 2 bath, ti,>k:. at Your r"W9'1" LlSTER REALTY' M2-6633 patio with trpl. 3 decks. end complete privacy. Unbe9.t· 615.2SOO ev~: 642·3615 Harbor View Hfllt, CdM u..ed brick tripls, cpt1,drpll -Kitchen idea I !or en-Harbor Vl.w Hiiis, C-'M -;;::=:-===-==~ • v\e-w to behold! DfVIX'C able at the price. ~lm. 4 + + family rm, dining lndscJiing. A Rmtic Bee.uiy, l I' II' I fl In in g . BoR! l!'lip 4 + + family rm, ditllng THIS DIRTY DOG loreta qu.lck Alie. JUlt TARBELL 2955 Harbor LOWEST PRICE rm, wet bflr. Jmmedl•le Oc-$27,900. 540-7957 or 83()-2537 ;=e SJI.500 0 w n er rm, wet bar. Immediate (le. Ma to he aold ttUs week. l ~= :!.:~":: :Spo~ V I E W ~ zhot':~ on lp~~/J f cupancy, SS.000 down. BY OWNER • $24,500, l br, •2't!O;i;-'i5i;Q'--,k,--;<-b:cc--;,°"ll.-cb-I cupancy, 15,00011.!-A T"·y BR 18 x 22 dtn, 2 batht. Tcy Low UJic:eep fun baule! Bkr. • 1• c, 11• BOYD REAL TV 1% !:>a, Full cpl~ & drps, · .. r. 9, BOYD L $995 down. ~7571 epta/&pa a: oov. J>9tio, Only 3629 E.' Cbast Hwv, QIM Ind··~. --, Y•'d for ...... , f'rpi, Lg Family Rm. Dbl. :.3'l9 E. Coe.at Hwy, CdM HAP:FDAL REALTY m.m Alaa:n\ FHA b.n -# .... ...., AU .,.,. G Pool wa.Jktn d1lt Count Every Ster e 675-5'930 and/or trlr. Xlnt loc. w. ol. 1 • • I ~XI "Home lo Match Income" and all this ruck--~ .. ~ .!1~ ~~1151mo. FOR SALE er EX~~=.-.. G-E-I Hartxir. 548-mJ, 64W7'l1 to IChl'i • playrround • OPEN HOUSE Sat/Swi ll-6 11«1 Wa.me:r au.+t!lii ,., .. ., OCEAN fruTi dinJna niorn • ~ pnten ldteMn. • &&rp bt!dlooma I: 2'1S bad:w. _,,,..,. .....n. ,,~,, ,,,_ ~, aft a f"ity lib. Owner • 5(2..(836. ln the Cl l y below. S BR :. (GPft! ewa) Herlta~ Rftl h Orange Cnty, or L.A.1~--------SOI AC»Cia. 2 BR, fll>lc, 53101 LOAN home (F.ntertainment "--· Dolt• Roel Ellato ....... " FAtate home. Fall>rook area. l'n Monticello Townhouse $1000 Down bautitul encloled p•tio 14 /0 di") Nr. Top ,0 tbeWadd. - ac w/Yiew, a rm ranch Me Fadna OOObouse-Pool area. Let.Ill' opt. 3 Br. 2 B& bltnl, w/tit.""'1 BBQ. Price nduc· Ltv rm w/walli ot ..... ~ 950 OCEANFRONT S22, PENINSULA PT. Bon Bey VA or FHA lovd:Y s BR., 2 d•rllng 2 BR. Fplc, ., ft .... """ .... ,..,., ........ lol, 156,000. fr1>k, blt-LM, INllr Orange Balboa R8il Eat.ate QJ. o:.ut c:onep a c.M. Hilb. 100 E. Blltboll Bl\ld .. Balboa. MIZELL Rt!'alt;y 541-m OtUcHc .Mlt'.t SALES ASSOCIATES 1~~~~~~~ 115/15 opllt M"""""'"' $695 DOWN --·-- Aplut ~.a..~ ~:st,, or rental. 3 Br. 2 s.. <Gtiorgetown crpts1 ,: ~~ bch. 2 poola f!d. 5N:~u2a~!'flng • 2 Low Dn 1 _. floor to cftlinc, btt-.b, YOC.uu ~ u u treec. Lrr model) aw. 111&. e:nn ... ,....,...,,. CHMl.MING SpJnlsh 2 br + Dr\ -• In•• aun drenched Plb. M9,51».. pool, J*Uo. SS4,mo Bkn. 155 Yorktown IAn. 546-9'1$ LUXURY Condom -Blutft, 4 pest rm, xtra parking,' E ' IRASHEAllt RE L TY LOS PADRES RLTY'. ~; ~~~ otlCLEANc==~3-=BR~. ~,-=BA--~ BR, 3 BA. Mu&t tell! Owner kit, By owner. 321 Poppy, M'l'-1531 Eves. 8JS.15lT Cll':Ml':)'Z'e St. t.quna J1e1cb -'-;=:;..;;.;;;=:=--I ™"' """· """' l>rkok """"· t'l&.soo. c.n """"r m-1"' Room for Trailer 494-8833. FIXER-UPPER fireplace. Deteched garage. ~ws 11.ft 5, 8"4!09. Cameo Hlghlanda, apaciou• 4 «' )'OUJ' boat. l..ovdf com~ HANDYMAN SP!XIALf 2 BR f\lm. houll':, R·2 -.,e • $22,5QO All!ume: $16,0XI F1tA "5, DEN, ( BA.nlS" br, 2 ba. On canym, $.16,Sll), 3 BR 2 ti.th + den. nrl3 olde holm hu am bet· - ,__ lot. !'Ith St. -· •l!\lf. -'54S-<l10.I °""" • ~--. 6 -..., s OWNER 113-442.1 H •··-I -• ~ -~ • ~·--, ,.. APFDAL REAL TY tcr ~· " ~-,, ....._L •Vl-.bo m.ll"'»., •..'.'_DRM • · ""' ""soo..,....!; "ur :.!!'.:."':;. '!:.."'° Lido 11i. U51 ··-to *"" ""°"'"" '"' bl/ln>m 8 e • • • · Exciting 2-Story 1~...,*:.,- lvan Wl'!lll' model bcmi! I --~=,.-;=-;--- 3 6 • Bedrocms % bo., all bJi!Mna, - l)lrin>Jen.lenced .....-.... 56-lOt _,.. 5M-9QO .-..:. oon rl, H lo< ~.... .... 119, -~= -· 1740 w..,,.. -SP<••llnl S 811. 6 M. 2 -.. ,..,"" MUl:n St., CM. -MOVE'"' Ntu -• BR., .... h +Home +Apt S99.SO Total Cost ~. "~~.'""--= 8USlNF.SS Is Rome . 80xlt0' BY OWR M• aell. C. br. 2 trpl., new cpts. nr. be-a.ch. Nonh 8t¥front home + Apt ~....,..,. with v1ew. 2 • su.ry -LIDO ISLE nn,. dining -.ru fun nn , t SPRING FRESH • Neud. l BR 3 bl. Bey r:o. & mow: Br, din I rm, II* elllf/tllt in beflft .moo&. ttartl. CIOI'. Ip Pldo. 0.. I At'i l'\'.lr Dail1 PUal Want Ads. Roy J, ..... <». -.,.. Dt.I - kit Et.a+ai&i. 122,000 er make bL tam rm. bl.Im.. frplc. 11. $28,lm, Open wtt:kel'ldt; 351 tpaclool 5 Bd, dm. din, f to ~ vtltrena. C. larp dlpal S25~1SO. Million ctte:r frlCI lot. $23,950. 564582 82lld St. 0wntt f75..014t &. 2 pe,tlm, 2 8d, 2 bl Apt. BRI electr1c ldtdlen tntn,y •911S S. Oii HWJ, $OT.U Kennedy a ...... Ml& DEL MAR 3 Br •• tam IS YOUll AJ) IN ILAIS1· I ..,. --V1LW $11>.000 ....... ""' "" """'· BY OWNER. I Br, 2 ...... n:IA •VA ...... a\lllllable rm. S-,000. OWNER nEDf lot1•M will Ilia R. C. GRm., Ree.lt)t US1'ER. REALTY 8CU833 oce&ri 'riew. $»,a . ,.. ltGIT.IO !&8'39 , lll!IO Prdidio 56-6C7 laDldrw W .. tMl1 .....,., 3'16 V\l Udo m.an:I Wllltl •I •ts•t ciu......une m.6W or .... ' ................... .._ __ ..... .... _________ _ ------------------~-- • I • \ --: D.\ILY PllOT . J•o 1%8 -· SOltlETBING. NEW-SOMETHING DIFFERENTll NOWll PILOT PENNY PINCH,ER ~WANT ADS • • DIAL 642~ 3 I1nes . 2 times s200 North c-••r Tall "'" 540-1220 Juat lly: "CHARGE IT!" HOUSIS FOR SALi RENTALS ~cN .-ALS RENTALS -. , • RENTALS I .<cln~LS RENTALS' RENTALS Ho-Fuml1hod Hou-Unfurnlahod HouMI Unfuml-_H~ Unfumllhod _A-.plL~:-L'u-m_lahod _____ 1_..;A_,p:;;l;;L..;f:.;u:;;r;.;nl:;;11:;;'>0d;;;;..__ AplL Unfuml1hod 'i!L~·~, .... ~i1i .. i•ihiiiiii1~70~5i l~~~======~~l~~~======~§l~~~~~==~~I --I• 0.-•I · 2000 Gonorol 3000 Nowport Booch :1200 Bock Boy :1240 Coato -4100 Huntington l!Mch 4400 Coato Mou 5100 AlABYUXA SPECIAL l BR. ~-4. l b1k to Ocean COLLEGE PARK LEASE 3 Mino. ~amu, $25 Wk. Up 110l ,...1155 ""'· i... dlx 2 b,. LARGE 3 llR. APTS. ~·~ ... 6042'11 r-• 1Dcl Uttll Ii: Phone e., spactousfJO' pool. Adltsl982'1 wa.Udnc d1stanCe to 00: .. E~!i'AL$ Apia. Unfuml- WMtmln1tw 5612 LA!lCE l bdrm. q,ta. drpo. blt-1111. Louodry ..... Sll5 10090 Mcfaddtti M7-H13 A~'.NB.'80peorYr\cJuty. 38edroomHome ·l'4baths. U~-r lay lease ~mRefcirJ!OOCallmo. ~ e Studloli: 8acb tlptl l~ ba studio, b e aide Near lthoola. treewaya, 11llS OU>E l!OUSE ~ ========I Beautilul yan! ·no peb. rn> N W & NEAR NEW 1_N=A=2-3=1=8S===== e Mild Service • TV av.ill. MMpt• Lane 962-3S85 981 EL CAMINO SEEN BEITER DAYS. Jm.. Re"t1l1 to Share 2005 month on lease. 2-M Bdrm Condominium I· C Me L19un1 leach 5705 posing 2 story a.rchlt.:ture. 6'f3.«i68 Evenings• Wk.ends Spanish irtyle Homes Corona del Mar 3250 •New Cal• 6 Bar L B h 4705 Apt. #I osta 11 ::;<:.;:;;..;=..;.;.----I witb exttdor oi wood ~ 1 GJRL to Mi.att beach boute. i!IUfTOUOded by rolling 23'l6 Newport Blvd. MS-97$ egunl eec * WALK to beech & town * board.Udmg. rustic :shingle, $50 mo. Call after 6 p,m. Greenbelts, pools, lll)[he LUX. lih:bdt. ratio. ref. in-fiJRmsHm 3 BR, y •rd NE1N fw'nished 2 BR 2 BA, Newport Buch 5200 2 BR 2 BA vttY la.rp apt enclotwl by used bride 673-4121 • Cotta Mesa JlDO with BeyviewL Inside wrcom, p., b@:e., b!am, liv. Gar. Near K Mart $150 mo. all electric built-ins. PaJ11> with view from prtv.te deck.' wmcbtimllencing.LOCA· ========:.-CHAR.MING home 3 BR 2 are all the modem~emu. rm.,.., Bch., wtr, gdner, Teem OK 373 Wilaon. ramicviewovttlookingAJi.. EASTBLUFF built-ma,. carpeted 6 dr"P" TED A FE w~ BLQCKS Coste Mesi 2100 from S225 tu $425 furn, $2XI. 2910 Third Ave. Bachelor vety nice $85. Util. ao Beach. $185. 499-3156 ed. large ftfri&:, all new.ll' FROM THE BEACH. ~~:n:~ depending upon location l"'OIM.==-:--.,.,,-,, . .,,-,:-;:;,...., 261 Mesa "D" ~7342 OCEAN Vlew Studio Apt, cln FOR LEASE decorated. No chQdren or SprawllQg 3 BDRM· & MOBILE Home. C 0 m P • flttplace. $185/mo Chil~n EASTBLUFF BEA.t.rr. Oceanvi'!' 3 BR, 2 SPACIOUS 1 BR, w/w epta, Ji.nbo J bo, 180 N. Coast 18 New PN1tlf1 pets, no one under«>, p&.ue DEN ftoor plan, (COULD Furn i •he d Cloee to OK Call Dave M y h r t be..,, 2 Fpk:, tM.lntl(iiOl, dr\18. elect. blt-ins, quiet Hwy, Beach Quiet buildlng. $166 mo with BE CONVERTED TO 4 everything! 545-91.Z7 aft 6 "~" llSl u~•·-· R 1 REALTY refrig, wuher/dcyer. Avail Iii'"'" nr ch-le 1-....-... Town HOl'MI ee.blt l gaNge .Mgr491-3Df Bo•••s.) SERVICED BY 2 ~-te oa •-t;~ t 1 A •~ .-iar. 1-~A ""~ ....,"" ..... .....-,...,..,..,...._, '""" 3 'BR fumisbed house avail .,,.... 2'll4 VJ.na Del Oro ug, .uot. ~ ........, . ..,,.,..,._, Adults ooly. 560412 eves &: .tENT LS Gold Medalk>n all electric LO'/ELY 2 hr 2 ha view apt BATHS. SPACIOUS 22 FT. immediately $175 mo. Ag!. 4 BR, 1% BA. Fireplace. Newport Beach AVAI.L.~\lb',lOth. 2 Br. frple. wlmds A U"fumllfted li"''"" A: private patio with p.ra1e. No ltef*. LM IJV. RM., wrm OAK 546-4141 Fenced. Nr .mol!I. Dble 644-1133 drp1,i ppl,Gat:nE1>. ATI'RACTlVE 1 b-, w/w !-= .. ====;;_-•""6 e , $1'3mo.494-7~ PL,\NK n.ooas, wood.,... ======== * 64&-0Ul * cptl, _ -·~ • ·'-"'· General 5000 eled walls, EXTENSIVE Newport Beech 2200 gar. Redecorated ill.side $175 ... 6 ..... .,,.,. -• .......,.., 2 bedroom + den &: 3 bed-Rent1l1 W1ntecl USE OF GLASS AF'FORU) mo. See aft July 7th. AVAIL Aug 1st, eot' Unit 4 BR. 3 Ba., range, ref:rlg. $85 642-7748 RENT fuc.n with i! or 2'iii baths AN EXa::LLENT 0 CE A·N HOUSE w/f!need Jard 2 Br. 968-2467, 6-1 PM ing ;ool. Carpets, drapes dshw'!lhr. Adult., no pet.a. ~ • e YOUNG Lady with mol~ VIDii: Lerp kltdlen with on Owmel. An.il winttt o"°UPLEX='='-°',~bdr~n-1,~l~!i~ba-. =E.· I bl.t-inll, 2 cac ca:port. 3 BR. $260. 424 Poinsetti.1615-5218 Newport Beoch 4200 3 R$ooma5 Mofumlture Yoor <M'll large 2-car ~· sclerosis and ftll btha 1. t t • c b e d Dll"lING RM., leue. Abe> unit avail on side, qits, drpg p a t i o, 2~ 'bltha. S2SO mo on leaae. 2 nth AutaQwatic door apew!l' avail. Gennan s be p b e r d conr: RANGE le OV'Dl, R1EFRIG. wt.ter. Yrb' leue 2 Br. bltina, 240 CtcU Pl $165 Ml AVAILABLE NOW rou. 0Pl10N TO BUY e panion needi an unfumiablld IN MATC!!IilG CU'PER -~--·-----:1-222'1 2 BR, 2 Ba,.,.,,,..., di-po, Huntington looch 3400 .~Y-rty '-as·•-N ~t ~·-°""'" °"'""'°""'h°""""a-~-hlt-kls, S200moC1n lease. .....-.,.. ..,. -• o --.....-o.a.e, .-.v; TONE C0WR. DISHMSrR., Corono dol Mor 2250 2 BR. 2 Ba, .... Uving 613-366.1 Ev'"' ..._ FREE RENTAL BOOK l Bdnn Unlum ........ $13S H.F.R.C. • """""' -..:;. """' wilh !...,.. "" en<$ GARB. DlSP. ~. 1 ---------1 I: dining arM. Older home. Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. Drop In and Browse 1 Bdrm Unfunl ••.••••• 150 Fumiture Rent1l1 ~frige'a~ a: e. Oiled Ylfd. Cid Huntmctm Tbla oJd brAue o-111 the 2 BR., frpl,, F.-'. hNt; all ap-Will rellt torellAble party 2025 W. Ba.lboaBlvd., NB WE HAVE SOME 2 BR Unturn ••....••.• :m 517 W.19th, C.M. 548-34.81 ~~~.~= ~~ . .,; thlnea )QI ~ looking h pliancet;; wfw CllJ1>., drps., for $90 rm. 540-9'ID AIL 2 BR Furn "D .... .iew :m •=<» W ~ -A 1-~-"-774 2800 Yl'.Q' pel'!IOl'lal kf!Y to pool. ~ ~ In .. _ ...... '---l;._ AV Aug lat. oor Unit tac-' ._,,., •· ww • ...... ......, lUUIW • • ..... fix--' mcome. Pbcml & Ul!9QI ~.BUT IT'S bar; view, peW. $3'.6, p.11 & $1'15, 3 BR., l% BATHS . -3 BR Untw-n, Lldo 1 "" ""' BADLY m NEED OF water ptld. 673-1304 mg Carpet., drapes, Ba.Yfrorl 2501---------1 Rent starting: at t.SO mo at 536-49.l7 if no ana. ph 536-2225 PAINT a.EAN UP A: FAstsideCosta.Mesa bl.t-ins,2carc.rport,3BR, 3BRFurnt ........... 325 Cost1 Mu1 5100 e • • • L Be h 2705 6'15-1657 64S-7CM2 2%baths.$'250moonleaae. ............ R45AM1GOWAY RESPONSIBlE worktn1 SOME MlNOR REPAIRS. llUM ac $100 2 Br. encl. yd. gar nr. AVAILABLE NOW '1682 EDINGER LEAS,E/OPTION . NEWPORT BEACH woman wffh 2 llMll, tramtl tll~~p'fgct;°: NICELY tum 2 B: I: den, ev«')'tbing. No P'f:m! 165 2 BR, 2 Ba. OU"Pets. drpe, 8424455 or MB-5140 SBR,NptSbores ........ 250 HARBOR =""'"""~,,..,,..,==~! =es~w•=~·~ HURRY• HURRY• HURRY• new1> ...i.e. y_,,, , ..... E.n.tstt-Th8--0328 ,::;""!mE:,~~· ""· 211ba,2 ...,., , ,,. Burr White, Realtor J"1Yearty Leases ,.ro ....i. will .. ..-.':~=:!~L~ ~~~e~l52Hi&h t.fe..Verde 3llO ~~~~:~'..~ :.·1:!~Sm!~ 2001NewportBlvd. GREENS ~=~:°.::::::::.$: :~~ach~9t9~ PHONE fT14) 49t-m31 ~ ~ ~:~ :e~= --------EXECUTIVE 4 BR Ii tam qualified exec. 968-1730 Ne6~1!.rBea30 ch SACHELOR .. UNF\JRN. 2 BR Unfum ..... ··•·• 200 Eves. 499-2442 Daya . ._ $190-Vacant. Clo 11 I to rm., 2 ftnipl&ees, pool & 4 BR. 2 ba., frpl., blt-ins, new· .-v from $ 100' 2 BR Furn, Bayview • • 3CKJ Businesa woman needs 1 Br Apartments ='=omily=''=·=-======-1 eYef'Ylhing. Brand n t w maintet)ll.llCE!. lmmarulate ly lndscpd hick yard, $225 3 BR Unturn. Lido unfum Apt. CM, N~ FOr S.le 1980 Su'"""r Rtnt1l1 2910 Aztec pd crptg. 3 Br. 2 Ba, conditioo, in B&,ycrtost. $400 mo leMe. 16441 Pago Pago ~I Will !WE i tncl. ntil. Bayfront ••••••••••• 250 Corona del Mar, Hunt M lji!:::~i:i:iiiii::O tam.. frple, Bltn. lS86 permo.Realtor642-S200 Cittle962--&370 Y 1 ·21:3,!.D~.., 3 BR Fum .••••••....•• ~ orLaguna.ToSlOOmo.Gar Bllboa Pm. n--deiuxe Myrtle'WOOll. 5 3 g. 4 0 3 2 3 BR. 2 to-1-1 · nJRN, le u''r usw,. LEASE /OPTION or carport neceaMJ')' C ...... Mor ·~ .,.,..,,. N N 3 BR -·"~··patio; .... ADULTS ONLY _ ... Pools, °'"" c... . Ol'OftCI .,.. i at~ Bltm, epts, eGr eW • Beach. Garde--in e I • BR, Npt Sbo.res ••• , , • 250 642-0086 atfer 5 p.m. - ~ ~ ~.. J I A S f Center, Adj. to SMppina: -I,,-=-,;;..,,,,,-;-:-,-,-.,,.., Income Units ~~· ~"' ~"' Collogo Pork 3115 Famil> nn, .,,Ut -lev'1, .... ChH<h-... ,. .. OK. ca.p.. I u y. ug. -ep. No pets allowed Burr White, Realtor 5 YR. Old g!rt & 2 dogw 6 2 Ocee.nside cl ~.. OCMn. $135 wk. July --'"--------·I mutts, $!iO mo yrly lease. dra.pe:a. $195. 536-1144 2700 Peterson Wa7, at Har-well-trained adutts deliN ~ ~..., $1SQ Week, Auguat 3 BR IV. be.th, eowttd patio. Mrs. Harvey 675-200> lJKE n.ew 4 Bt. 2 Ba. untum FURNISHED APT. bar &: Adam•, Com .Mesa. 2!K11 Newport Blvd. bornt! in Newport Mft;$1.t) 'IDc:atld m 211 cypr. 642-'1292 Walk to oc:r. ~/mo. Agt. AVAD... A1.1g. lat: 3 BR., 2~ hae. ma. $185 mo. 6092 2 BEDROOMS -2 BATIIS 5t6-o370 Newport Beach to $200 Month. 644-0f13 two Dc:llB' Jots MOVE in m:y kwely 3 Br 546-4141 Ba. Crl)ts. & drps .• bltllL'l, Kmtr Dr. I H'lg. B cb • Waterfronl/Loe li!!!~!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 675-4630 -~-~· -..O>mplelolyltn .. ooi·I======== Pool. l2'0 Mo .. h.,e ......,., 817-7385 BOAT SLIPS M·J,.DERN •• --, Rooms for Rent 5"5 ....,. __........o::m.& or TV1....fltett0. linens. etc. In Newport IMch 3200 642-1896 ' · Cha I R-j " ......., fl8J ,,.. .... -Bch. Avail ,.~. •·-"' ==-~~~,~~= i BR. .,,c, oorp:, m,,. .. ,1,.. nne ....,. BRAND NEW' uid:ng S'lt.500 ~ 15. ~ "-J•-.. S BDRM, newly dee, N~ AVAIL. Aug. ht; 3 BR., 2% bltM:. !rpl, patio, e:rn. yd., 2525 Oce1" Blvd,, CdM • • • Ooatact "=&ffi:i;iF;;;i;;;;;r-:;;;;;: Hts. m 11 Jlllllft Rd. MI Ba. Opts. 6 ck'ps., bltns, pr. $135 Mo. 847-5.n . 673-1788 luxurious Apts. Mn. Pll.vtoricb rorrAGE. mdmed )Vd, Pool. $250 r&:>,.. le a• e · ....._ 1~ bib tD beedt, S..:222 642-1896 _ .. _ 4 BR, 2 h!t, bit-ins, new cpts 1 & 2 Bdrm1 ews, l'BGl8 & PU!t ..-N Schm!der YEARLY· to mature em-Fro r-1"" ocmn "1iew, ~ f. $100 NEW Ba)' View Bluff 3 BR ' "'.....,. r. 1 m ~_...... mo. wt. a-5873 or f9l..3!D.1. 2,L ha. Comm. p 0 o I Pk &: 8Chl.. 842-1003 P o)'@d wmne.n, no pets. 1 Avail 1st wk of July Th • p n BR & gar. UM of beaut. Fully led A: draped ~LAGOCW<.--. . IS age $400/mo • Yrly i... Bia. Soni• Ano Holghta 3630 patio "" """""'· 3 blclL. ~Built In& poolmille,2BR.2BA,newly ,;":::3-ml;;::;;.,,=~~-~0 1---:'.:::--::-~=:--1 ocean & tnkta, $110. Rem. Adultl ooly. No pets INVF ',lM~ N T ... tam. A'1d Jd:y ]5.31 • Aua BAYSHOJ\ES • Unfurn 3 BR 1 BR. Houae $100. exchngd. 673-6427 Com " . •~ 3 .--p te pnvicy! I.EAL TORS ~ · -· YMT)J' leaR $250 mo. All util pd. BEAUTIFUL 673-4400 2 BR Font, m SEASHORE REACHES Realtor ,.....,., * '4&-0347 * Apt, 2 er. patio,::'::'. S~vens VIiia j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•!!!!!!!!lj Dr, NB. Sl'll wtc. 615-l'lm wkly _ summ.tr rental or 384 Avocld4?.$t..tt C.M. (633-4llia After I PMJ Newport Hel9htt 3210 Duplexn Unfum. 3975 winter leue. 3401 Fiolty Manager • &12·2864 NOW'S THI TIME FOR QUICK .CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD ~ 2-BR bculo; 68 972 ~~·T•-~ 2 Br. 2 Be 3 Bdrm, all --.11aneet1. 675-4039 ~ ---6 ~-vn ~ ~ ==..,,.-.,..,.,-..-"""~ Excellent, park -like sur--.... ...._ «m-' ~ &: tarn room. k!n~ c.arpe1:1, rec atta. Newly STEPS to. oceu, lux 2 BR, 2 roundings for adults ~- btalM. $115-$'Ill. m.'l'm yard, Near d . 548-3936, d~~ .. H. B. 962-1544 BA. patio. $200. wk. $10J ing J>MCe & quiet. ~ en dlmlnel. i.t HOMES l:~82T~'8000~~7.~~~~:1!~;;~~~~2i~I mo. or yrly be 5119 River Di3criminative Tenants ftoar-2 Br. A.VIII Aar. Summer Rent1l1 3995 Ave. 642-:m.5 or 838-5TI2 l . 2 &: 3 BDRM. A.PI'S. * ~ * Newport Shorea :1220 ~ ~-------1NEW Deluxe-all--e~ home in Corona del Mir 4250 .. .........._ NO CHILDREN B.W!OA r.laod; -· 1 llR. NEWPORT SHORES AlTo.t>ead M ... ~ 1-------'-' MARTINIQUE eol (oloo. ll; ...._ Jl17, EACH WEEK 2 BR• Den on,......,..., 1125 wtc "'$Iii \I wk. Avail FURN 4' Bach•lor Unit GARD.EN . APTS. Aqr., !ept. 114: f99..231S $190 mo. 642-3430 blJW. 833.am $125 mo. kid utila. (Age Need a Gutienefq'et I 'R"E"'N"T"A"L;-5.-----· I over 40) Delancy Rlty. 18th &: Santa Ana, C.M. ftld tt wttb a want ad! Dial &a.SrB fer RESULTS Apta. Furnished 673-3770, Clll·Mra. Hendenon IWl)..S542 --------~1 _ _::!::!::..:..:'.!.:::::::::__ 1 SHARE Apt., Ip. priv. room, 1m Santa Ana . Apt ill, C.M. BA YFRONT Apt, 2 BR, 2 BA, 2 car garage, Private pool, utilitie1 furn., no pets, Yeftl'ly lease. $4(lO mo. 646-1522, 548-4690, 6'1'3-2f01 NEW soundproof 2 BR, 2 BA acrou bn Wstclift Plaza, 1665 Irvine '18$4200, 642- 0239. 3 BDRMS. 2 baths. Steps to boy. $>l0.mm>. -I>· rm aubhowe Rd. 642-1615 (e-reniqp: 67'5-l(i6g) NEAR BEACH. Leeu. 2 BR 1% bath&. Adultl!i. Sl.65/mo. Util '(ltf. 67l-318l nrec .. Corona dal M.r 5250 ~-~~:.;~ ON TEN ACRES LARGE! PltUUlt! in pivUt home. Working men cay, 646-7504 REAL ·ESTATE G1ner1I Income Property 6000 NEW INDUSTRIAL Choice Santa Ana loeatioil.. Leased , 2 tenant l)iidldtnp Will return a spendlhl. of 9.7% on equlty ~ """ Icing 7% % lOlll1. Full price $95,00l. F o r informatkln plesse call K. W. Small wttb Eckhoff. & Auoc:~ lnc. 1818 W. Chapman Ave. Orange, Calif. 541-2621, Evea-wknds 53&-S9'D. Busln ... R•nt•I 6060 l & 2 BR. Furn & Unlum STORE Bulldillg. l'arldiw. • from $150 mo. Frplcs I Pri/ ft froot .. ~ 3364 N Patioa I Poolll. T-•-. ,._.._ .....s;t . Npx.t -. USE THIS HANDY POSTAGE PAID Cosio Melo 4100 -· '°""·-..South of 1028 EL CAMINO DR. NEW' mv 1 Br · Hiway. 673-6904 Deluxe 3 BR. $150. Respons.. "'......., '-"'.... Blvd. 548-2134 tnt1 . Bkfst. 9 bole Putt/ ========:.I Green. Office Rent1I WANT, AD ORDER BLANK ~·=:~~~;:: A~~~N~~oo. ~~'"'~i~ - $65 UTII. Pa.id. Man ovtr 30. 2 BR with frpl, cpm,drps, AND REACH THE ORANGE COASTS BIGGEST MARKET No pets. a.ck ""· Mt , Hunt1ng1o11 Beoch 4400 ""°' '""'' • ..,,., i.-g '""' -----...... --...-... ............. -~~-.....--··-·····.-.--·············-------I pm. 5t5-15M, 879-2594 2 BDRM DOWNTOWN HB yd with pool, main.tt!DIUlee 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE UNI-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES S!l5 mo. 1 Br. Util pd. pool, ..;deck, ebClo9ed pl"; incl. $175. 642-4422 Pri patio, Quiet, cleen. 2 bloclm to ocean. Apply 2 BR. Duplex. 1rg f~ Adult&. No pets. &err5ru m..(: 10th St )Wd. G11r. 2 dr!dm <*:, $100 l----r---r---..----.----r--2--.--,--.---7--.--11--l'Dn'IALW'-;dll'o;:,.;;,,..,_,;;;:;;m-;-;;;;;;; ruRN. duplex, 1 b&Tn.and mo. 1940 ~~Pl. nMa TlMD T1Mn TlMll your .a. then aft back ·and garage I blk mm beach • VW".-iil * 1---~·J----·1----1----l----l-.!!!~-l-~~-l-~~~-l-~~!.-I listen to die phone ring! $1«1 mo. ~7146 LEASE: 3 BR. oando.; all bltM. carp., drapts. TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION llB5 p., mootb S40-f.&54 $4.50 $6.IO $10.65 . $15.90 UHd Can 9900Uaod Cors 9900 CLEAN 2 h<h-blt-ino. N • w r----1----1·----t----1-----1·-;;5.1i,--1-11:21-l!ll3Jii:-l-s:20:10-11~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,1carpe~. Adu!~ $135 mo. $5.10 $8.21 $13.10 $20.10 '-"""dry. 516-7'85. AL ROBERTS GMC TRUCKS 111" -3 BR. Unlum. NE w $6.00 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30 -.336 cahrilloSL NEW LOCATION SALE rIDV d.:r~~ IT .... PAYMENT l!NCl.OSED 0 SEND Bill 0 TO Pt•Ull COST '66 CHR ¥-1. .,.. .. ,.. hl.lk• hw ••• ,,,, ••• cl1y1, li..ttfn11l111 • , • , , ,, , •• , , , • , , • , , , , •• , •••• , •·• v. 1'111 Pickup. A11t1., rt · clio, h11t"', '''' 1t.p lt1mp1r. H11 111w 1 1/t' c1in per, 1l11p1 6 -Co'"· '59 POID 1/1 y_. llCICUP v.1, •tick thiff. r1dlo, h11t· t r, ,.,, 1tep ll1mp1r. . occ. 1125 & 11«> Call ,,,. ..... S40-00l9 900 Sea l..ftne, CdM 644-2.611 (MacArthur nr. Coast Hwy) $175. 2 BR Ccrona High- landa. Patio, lndry. Adults. 613-(132 Eva-weekenda. 2 BR, 1 bath cottage $180 mo. on leaee. DelmcJ' Realty 613-37'10 607D MEDICAL Suite s-rtiaDy tum. Dover Dr. area. ~ -· '-.....,.., area, 6 uam rooma~ Lohonl..., ....... -... fice. Dr'• prlvat. buwt- ....... 2.1m aq. lt -21!f between f-5 pm. - =======:I COOTA MESA. 111\!:l 5'51 ANSWERING SERVICB ---------I Offen a.Jr e<oliticDed cmc. Lido Lale SPAOOUS 2 bdr, den, 1% A de9k spe.ee + aecretartll be., crpts, drapes, adult& no tttVice if needed. $25 I: up; pell. $265. &73-'1502. 1870 PLACENl'IA, CM ~unti"gton Buch 5400 l BR. apt., cup., drt>s., elee. ...... fz1ll, patio, .... )'d .. gar. $125 Mo. 847-5300 NICE • Quiet 2 Br. duplex """"' ....... -· 11». * M><.131 6U-Ol2'I SECRErAIUAL SDtV!CE M----.olr cood. -· ,_ "" ,,.. ...... ~ °"""" -Bldr. DJ E. lTlh SL, °"""' M.e9. fin.1485. .. scxx. rr ro ·mi 3200 Newport leoch J200 CleuHlc..tit" , , • , • ,, ,, •• , , ,, , • ,, , , , • , , , • , , , • , , , , , , , , , , , , , •• , , , , • , Na.,. , •• , , •.,, ,, , , , , , • , • , , , , , , , •, •,,,, , , , , , • , , , , , , , , , , , , • , • , • , , Put only e111 wONI 111 •1th 1111c1 1kv1. hu:lucl• y1ur eddr1n er pho11• nu111b.r. 11i1 co.+ .f your 1d 11 1t tti1 111cl ef the 1!111 111 which the l11t word 1f your ail h writ• t.n. Add $2.00 •rlr• 1f you d11!,. 1111 1f DAil Y PILOT l o• 11,..lc1 with m1il1.I ,.. 1li11. ,, .... '65 POID CAMPll '63 CHIYIOLIT %T• VI, 111+o1111tic i711u,. rid. io, lr.11+.r, 1rlt1 t•• h 11 ... ScC\\dllA-""'/&~~s· ....ic1,.. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ; •• City •, • • • • • '' •• •' • • •, • • '•, • , • • •, "'""' • , • , • , • •,,, •• • •• , •, • • • • • -- CUT Hlll-PAJ'TI ON YOUI INYILON IUSINESS •EPLY MAIL fW c.. ....... q, Clllh .... ~ Otwn'9 Coat DAILY PILOT P.O. a.1HO . c:.t. M.., C.llf. 92626 Cit ..... Do,t. '• ' - ----.... --------------c ••• .....___ .......... ,_ •••• a-·-·-- I V1 Ton Pie.kip. Coll'lpl•k- ly •'h111.c1, ,.., llf•p 1p1ci•I ff,.1, litw "'ii•• ... ~Ull'lpt•, ,.. .. I' ''"'~ ltt•cly .. 901 C.M!Ntt. '64 POID CAMPO '63 ~- 'It T Oii P'lcbp. ll:11r St•p v.1, •tick sh!~. ,.,, ... , laoump4r, h11t.r, 11•w I' "11mp1r, n•w ,.int. A llffle ''"'P•.........Cornplete i•w•I. '62 ......... ........ '57 POU II TM V.6, Allt COHO., U.JICHOO rtcllo, kttw. rttt ,...., VI, tlltCIM•tfc. 1'tdio, li te .. lM.imp., witli I' c.11rtp•t - Complete_ •r, ,..,... l"•iat. "'4111t Mt t. '68 NIW •MC appr~i• ... CAMPll '66-.... 1/t Te11 Mchp. J111ht, c.•1· ••• .... H.D • 1lwkh, lte41t, katw, " • t f low H.p. , .. , 1,Mrtp with -. 1¥1 ' DANA ,,,.,..._ .u ...... ,.,..,1 .,....... b· C.Mpkt. ... 11 ... ,.,.dttlett. l rifll thl1 A.4, y.vt trHe 111 9! •••• l .. .,., t\11 w11k. w ...... MlllY ..,. ef R111"1111 -.,.. -·· C.OfM 111 h .... ebt•fet• ef "' Nr91frta. Al ROBERTS T=KS 13172 HARBOR BLVD. l lTWHM -.UOEN $11:0\'I ILVD. a 5.S. FIHWAY ........ PM.UMll1 ' Soll>O a,sinlple So<mn,bld Won! Piu:zl< for •Chuckle ............... ., .. ,.., .... --... low '° fen fc:iur lit11Pl9 ... 1•0TCAL I .111rr. ' I · I I I • -----------SCRAMLETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION toJt . -.. r _ _..._ - --- - - - -~·!.--- ---·---------___ ___. __ _.-. __________ ....o=:..-.-.-"'--~-- • • ~ ! • . -. \ •1 .... a1y li l1nds 5350B•y Island< 53509•y lsl•nch 5350 • . • S©~~lA-.?&'Btrs· . Solve 4 Simple Scrombled Word Puzzle for a Chuclcle O lecmonoe .. "-"' of tM fovr tcrombled word• be-low to form four s!mplt word1. IDIGHIN '111r1 fNI T EW · 1 r I I I r I ~·,~I YI' I -I I Ono lw>ogor lo onolher. ;-;~-:;~-;:;;:~-=~-=.?:J~'1 love to hear that girl ta lk, . 1 Hy TS u·p 7-f 1 ~~lly when she hos her , t I I I 1 O Complet. the chud:le quot•d . by fillin; In the mf»ing wotd1 • • you deve!cp from sr.., No. 3 .below. ! ~~'~:;~~~:f~ETTERS r 12 ,, r I' I' I' 1 ~ *~~:.~·inms I I I I I • I I • -................ ,,,_..., loc, SCRAMLETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9300 NOW! NEW!. PILOT PENNY PINCHER C["ASSIFIED ADS WiTH A NEW-LOW-RATE 3 LINES 2 TIMES $2.00 IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! Furnitur• 1000 Pi•nos & Organs 8130 Office Furn iture 8010 Rad io 8200 Office Equipment 8011 T elnision 8205 Store Equipme nt 8012 Hi·Fi & Starao 8210 Cafe, R"taur•nt 8014 Tape Recorders 1220 B•r Equipment 8015 C•mer•s & Equipment 8300 Household Goods 8020 Hobby Suppli•s 8400 Appli•nces 8100 Sporting Goods 8500 Antiques 8110 Sewing Machin" 81 20 Binocul•rs, Scopes 1550 Musical Instruments 8125 Miscell aneous 8600 e IACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e e No Item Over $50 • No Commerci•l Firms • e No Copy Ch1nges e No Abbrevl•t ions • START MAKING MONEY NOW! CALL 642-5678 .___ ASK FOR YOUR DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT! ........ ··'· ........... ~ I •' .... -..-"' , ............. , ..... ., ... ..,.~ Gener ii (!EAL ESTATI REAL I STAT I General ANNOUNCEMI NTS ind NOTICU Offico Ront11 6070 Acr.... 6200 Lw 6401 LAGUNA BEACH 28 AORE.'l ''°"""°•Orang• LADY Elgin diamond wrilt ON FOR.ES'i' AV~UE land in Valley Ccnttt. W1ttch, Fuhkia l • l 1 n d, Detlk &pat'N llVa.Hebl<' in Several tttmendOUI view Rew•d. Return to Sue ne~1('6t oC'ti« buildlni; ~t witea ol Paunta VaUey & Statum, tru Obl1po, Apt U, prime loc1tion in downtown Palomar Mt. adjoins new Long Seidl, 90804 Laguna ~ach. Mr ('Ondj. _ai'Ove. You won't 11re thl• . u ""'' 1%8 * -*·- tioned. CiU'peted, beautiful $1200 ~er At!'e prke agaln BROWN AUJptcr b1luold In paneled partition.Ina. T ~· 0 this aree. Low d 0 w n . phone booth next t o entrances: frontage on 8ft-20'l'l Albtrt11<>n'1 n lt.t. 19th Ir f'orest Ave., rear leads to T BEAl.mFUL Lake View Harli. Rew. 641-1890 ri.tunclpal parking lots. $50 acres in one of FallbroOks S~E Female, dtclawed. ·per month for VJM!tt>, Desk best IP'QVe & home aree1. Vic Republic homes, M'6& WhHdyl Want? Whltldyt ht? and chairs available for $5. several ideal home sites. Vttde. Reward! 545-4813, SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR 8U5lneaa hours answtring Horses OK. A jewel .,, 549-0022 '"-u itervk'f' avatlabl"' for s10. s.n iro. 841_m 1 NATURAL IORN ~nAPPll.S All u!ilitiH paid e-xct'!(lt ·. N •ss "" LOST: end of June, Sealpoint Special llate te.l ephonr. l:iU:il ., a Siame11e cat. Ea1lblulf Lmk J llMt _ S tlmei _ S ltucb DAILY Pttm FINANCIAL HomN iirea. Childr6l"a pet; 1.uLU -u MUl1 INQ.UDI ,_ f'O""~ AVENU"" reward &44--(f,91 \-MlmJ rou MW io .,...,_ 1-WMI' "°" _. ~ waa. -~L. ~· '"' 8 Opportun1"t1"• 6300 '-VOu• ,._. fl'Mlll• •*--......,, 11nn ., ...,.1&1119. l..AG UNA BEACH u.. l..OO'l': Blk female Cock·a-poo ...... OTMINO FOR lALI! -TltAOQ OML'tl 494·9466 SPARE TlME rNCOME puppy. Flea collar. V1c PHONE 642..5671 ~N~e-wp__;:.o:..rt::: Beach Booming new held refilling Irvine ' Santa Isabel. r. Piece Your TrNer't P1rHIH A.cl a?<f col!ect.ing n~y from 548-3955 . 432-5&i sq ft . each office. new higti quality c 0 l n LADIES Gold Omega ,watch ~ tncon~e wut& on 211t St. LEASED Commercial. Ex.- Thriving business area, with operated d~nse.i·a in d_tia w/gold band. So. Cout m Costa Mesa. Trade for CHANGE for Units. Fortin pa.rkini;;:. Utilities paid. aJ'ff.. No M"lhng. To qualify Plaza, Weetclift area: Fri· house or trust det!ds. In-Co. 1700 WHtclilf Dr. 642- Division of Highw1 ys you mt.1st have car. ex· day. Ample reward. 646-4'?66 come $402;50. Owner. SOO>. 548-0390. 1\1r. Co ttwaJd change re!erencee, $900 to . , _1 Btw *54.s.au:l* \Zl31 6~3514 8-11 sm. $.1300 cash secured by in· NYLON Sall M-38 ~ n :Kl llNIT Mol I Ex_.___ EQUITY of $350: '59 VOJ., · ~ Ctiffhaven & Beaoon b8.y. e · '"""11e VO (TurtJeback . Xlnt condl ___ wk. da.y!'. ventory Md ~1pmenl. ew R d $lO Ms.-5168 ror Apts. or larger Moiel. WUl n·ade for an" kind nf • .. ·-~"" OAJLV PILOT "-.. SlitVICE DllllCTOl'i HeYMclN nlnt '7U a.EAN!NG • .._ ---.... -...u wuhlnr· .,.,.. .... M-610.\ lrenlnt 6755 Kl'F!IART'S cu.tom troo- jiis hu lllCMd to l30 r; lf, Slldt. T, CM. W!ll ho Ill oil .... Sat l Sun .... pldno>. _,"' .... ..... a: ne-a.t. n tr. MMll5 3007-8 Tllltln Aw. CM L1ndoc1pl"1 6110 KEtP mT THE LAWN uni• )'00 -tbt r!Pt--· """"'-· tiller'I. .. f!t111!"1. ....... ~enl -... ,etld!a J'OU need for p-rof•••l eeial la.ndlJcaping fnim A to Z RENTAL cm!'m, 19<» Newport Blvd, a.ta M-. 64.2-11111. Rea.ltJmble rateL GAYNOR'S LAN'OSC\PING & GARDDDNG SER.VICE Statt liceiued contretr, . Retidf!D.tilll -COmJnl!f'dal I Ytni a~anup Frtt Est Air-Cond itioned "°""' •• .. ekly can net f'X· ~ar · ' Jo~o.rtin Co 1703 WestcHtt Dr. -... U t 1\1 f JI MCYI'ORCYCLE. 5.16·9860 U Offices & Desk Spice <'e t'11 income. ore ~ "-•"5 642-5(XX) 548-2.'llfi Nn job to bif. fl93.Bl CORRAL'S Lndrcp1 ' Rototilling Serv. Fl'M e!t. 25 View Acres L1.guna (Hawown1qtiJpm 1'n t tin1r. for ~'liOOal 1n-Person1l1 -nl'I 1t1nsw1>r CRll ag&in . \\1!h ct>ntral secretarial, Zf'r· 1ervif'W , send name, •ddreas TRADE $23,000 equity in 8 ox and telephone answering and phone number to Inter· Single? Wldewecf? UNITS. 31,.; yrs old. s an service. s t-a1e Dist. Oo., 1811 West Divorc.d? Pedro. Fully ocaip!ed: for The M"t"ol Bldg. KateU•, SUit• 221, Anah•im. INTRA MA TICS PROPERTY in N"'JIOrt 2863 E. Coast Hwy. CdM Calif 9'28)4 Beacb arta 675-4815 Call 8 AN. to 5 PM 675-4070 • A aenous &cientific aelection · · UNIQUE FRANCHISE llt'!rvice offerin& the most in TRADE sea!Klned 1st T.D. For men & women with mgt comprehensive professional plus 2 M·l lots fur Costa ability. No exp: we train. computeriied matching. For Mesa home. Tota.l P.Quity Offered by International -_ penoanl, private interview $12,C.OO. Broke-r. 646-8226 2 c.1m'I., 1 indust., l w/livt qtrs. Costa Mesa. Owner. 646-2131) Yardage Fair. $15,000 to without obligation: 4 BR. 2 'Baths: So. We 1 t _C_•_m_me_r_c_;,_1 ___ 60_1_5 $25,000 .inv1t opens rebtll 1<!I 7.fi&M, SWte 817 S.nta Ana: val. $18,fiOO: 111,... in asa>c with tllis him· Union 8&nk Sq., OrftnRe, Cal. lade for va.ea.nt land, ~ M·l 5 RENTA11t lnr.ome $&10 mn. l Can ~ l'llillP<:l l . lM TD S.~.000. Pnm M mo itid TaXH • . 3 yn; pt~.id Int. $66,'*', 873-4521 <Mary) ()l)!I Clo. Jim Owen1, fl4&.4fH7 (Ottioetl tlwuout S. CRI.\ bil homf', car, m · •. m..1, MARm:T, tie.rt ot. IAguna. INTEREST or !! OwnP.1' M&.1616. Bc:h. ahop'1. ttn~ TMaJ • EXTR.AORDINAlRE ~I 31' Cabin O'ui!lf'1' ~ appn:DC Sl.5,000. Net FM Diiwriminl.tina Couplt!I l!lllO, lltM 6, twin V~'s 11uto f!urungll Sl0.000 to $12,000 M Sing!t'I! Partiea ·trip!!:-pl.lot f!tc. Value SlJ,000. yearly. 494-3748 « 49t-15.16. outirigs. Original &: unique. Want vecant lot (If' !!?! Industrial Rental 6090 Ask for Mr. Burks. THE GROUP 673-2431 ·--ESl'ABLJSHED v e nding (TJ.4) 776-6941 1213) !>L '7..6844 DLX-""'~,,,,_,.,,--,,,._,~~,~br-bl~tn N EW P 0 RT Be A e h , route H.B. atta. Few hn:. Franchises Av8llable K. tum -~--"'· ·--. workshop/stx.-aize: b I o e k ..,,.,..,,u ~l" ... -" ..... : . I per month. Net good re.tum. RENOWNED HINDU .i.-, ~. JIOtio, tnol -~. \\•au, w1ute inter.; g, I eat from ~'K'.11 Call •TT""" .... .,.. .. .., ru security pkg. Storage yd,' nv ment ...,.,... SPIRmJAMLO • Blk CIOe9Jl, Trd up Orange/ avail. Re-ason. SUit. Cont'r. 536-3360. Spiritual te.1dlngs alv e n I..ACo. units 642-7292 941 1-• Own FOR Sal b F ~-dally: 9 AM-10 PM Sllt-Sµn · -,.,.,., f'r. e Y owner - a .... .., i .... t,•~. lJll N. El....__, __ 1,(KXI Aetts North calit Shop, Westcliff a re a · ...... """' ........ w..., Randi Ti her f ] Loll 6100 Proln&ble-bu.sines& f!'St. 3 Real, San Clcmenl. 49'J..'Ml2 . · m . · llml and, .:::.:.=-=--=="-----huntinJl' k fillhing. WANT --------yrs. 646-454-t 546---7511 •fter FLY TO CATALINA 1~ property, m·s or fllJb. OCEAN VIEW LOTS • pm. DAILY rumrrs FROM mil. o'""' RllY. m1001 Bee.eh. So m e improv~ !16'1-4.'164 ments, income $T100. $3f3,. ======== IXKI equity. Eor TD'1 or ? Paperhe n1ln1 [ Owner. 494.e3, ~7. P1intlng 4150 CLEAR dhc Applt Valley &: PAPERHANGER. Will pa.int. I Hesperia \ot. Value $11,00). s a mp I e s , FI o t k • • Trade for small going h.lsi· F n i 111-Viriyl. SCHWARTZ nes:i: Oninge Cly or Pl''Op. 847-1659 11tock, l'QWtie1, etc. 67~!i>76,p --A-lNT_l_N_G-,-..,-p-,-.. -,-.. -.-. -If &i2-9120 you call mt we both bet:\etit. NEW S&S J6 FIBER·TEAK SLOOP, ~ aux, slJ>S 6, man.v XV.1. $25.(0J vaJu•. TrRrif' for property, 'I'D's tt "llrii'llll'hoiii fi'J'5..28.'l8. a.EAR -4 Unita h1rn. ocean view, % blk. Npt. pier, best rental area. $58,· 500 take IUI, hse in trade. 2006% c.ourt Ave ., 673-652'7 Excl1.111ivt but not expmliv!. Try me 11nd eee. 541-l151 e PAINTING I FENCDI e Interior Ir Ext:f!'rior -546-78~ JNTDtlOR &: EXTERIOR Painting. Fret estimatt. Lie· &: i... CHUCK 54&-6314 Painting, Window W&.lhiQg: 20 yn exp: lbrly at Job. Refs. 54-8-.2920 alt 4 FN e PAINTING I FENCEE e Interior &: Exleri« 54&-78BT 4 CHAIR deluxe Barber Shop Top kx:., N. Costa Mesa Shop'~ Centrr. Trade ror "sea90l'lel" ro or aold n~.t! ~5880 Plumbint College IUty 6190 MUsr Sell, cute beacb ..;.. ORANGE CJJUNTY AJR.. •"' V * * * * * e 24 HOUR SERVICE e Rt1 x 135 levrl ...... $24,500 lllhop. See! Make offer! PORT. Catalina -~ * Plumbing . repairs, remodel- 80 x 120 level ...... $17,(0) ~1914 AM or aft 5:JO -__!A~ic~li~n•~·~· ~·~,,......~~~-l!!!!'!~!'!!!!!!l!~!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!~!!!!!!! --,.========'! in«. Eltttric R'ftl' dean-70 x 101 ............ Sl0,000 ... * PHONE PAL* * SERVICE DIRECTORY ::i.Ch!'v i. .• i: 0 1"" ~t:"1 ORY ing. All work guar. 64&-ltDT Unden;noond util • tprms Bus. Wanted 6305 SAFE & INEXPENSIVE R Nattress Rltr. 642-1435 MEET BY PHONE 8u1inff1 5ervice 6562 ;C::e:_rpe.::;lc_C::.:;l•::•:::n:;:ln::;t,__;:66~2:;5 Remodel., Repeir, 6940 PORTAFINA LAGUNA Convalescent Home P .O. Box U9l, Irvine~ Public Stenographer CARPETS CLE AN ER, WHY WAIT FOR SPEnAL PanoramicViewl.rM ed Will 1 **FULL membership XEROX.\Ml:MID f\RfG HTER with SALF.8 on9pecialtmla for White water and oaast· ~~~t ~ 1 ,.,. "',,, Newport Beach Temis Club. .,.,,., E 17th st., CM Bri..,..-Tcne ahem ........ Gi·-· I job •-· line views ......,. ~•=f!'I' e-au wi ~ e;•n ....., .,., the.t spe:c1a ? DUlruw 426 Nyes Pl•ct option. Estab. «under Be!lt offer. 644-0'?:fi **Call Vick!' • 642·14115 your carpets rl!g ularly everythingyouneed!orpro... Uiguna Bc11.ch constructiCl'1. ok. Dr's ere ALCOHOLICS A.nonymout 9Cheduled care. Rent elec-fessional b om • main- (TI4) 4.94-9388 iritertst¢. Write Box M Harbor Area. Phone 613·3'724. Builden 6570 tric shampooer, 99c aJI day. tenenace from A to Z REN· 154 Dally Pilot. P .O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. 1---------"= . A to Z RENTAL CENTER, TAL CF.NrER 1118 Newp'.111 ---'--"'-"'-'-----IREMODEL, r e p.&i r 1 lfle6 N-........,rt Blvd., ca.to Bl d Cot M •••"-60xl0 Oceanfront Lot -========='I HOLIDAY He a It h Spe, plumb'g. --fiiffifihg tlec. ..~.,... v ., 5 a eaa. '""'-.LUl<I <Balbna. Pe'l\insulal -Membtnhlp for •It; call ' . ' ' Mesa. 642-1180. We deliver REMODEL Ir REPAIR 1748 E. Oceanfront Street Reel Esta te Loans 6340 675-5332 Aft 5 PM carpentry, resid., conunerc. ,...~n•-. Paint. Pluter • room add. Reas. 675-3038 G 6680 ...... ...,. .. 3 Sell or tr•de BORROW on Your Equity . DYNA~C ~S REPAIRS *ALTERATIONS _e_r_d_•_n_in.c1 _____ 1-.;;&;.;Concco;;;;;;....'-'-· Olc_k_o<>-_1_197-I 537-0lM Privatt lnd Mortg. money With .terhng qualities for CABINEI'S. Any size job. ANTHONY'S . Sewing 6960 J<'rtt apPraisal. No oblie. t.hoee who cart. 539-3341. 23 yre eiaper. 54U'?l3 Gardon Se rv1"co PARTIAL Ocean view; Cor· ona de.I Mar. O>oice o'size lot Nar leasehold. Lovely trees. 673-2010 Realtor. WORTH MUCH MORE M·l ' lot oo Placettia. Price At.<;O AL TERATION5?? 00% _1st TD loans to $71,500 Announcements '4l0 Carpenterl"t 6590 646-1941 THE GOWN SHOP!! Serving Orange Olty 18 yrs. . CARPENTRY I..ANDSCAPING 27J6 E. 0'>8st Hwy., CdM Sattler Mortgsge Co .. Inc. Coast H Ith Club LAWNS REMODELED~ 673-6015 336 E 17th St .. C06la Mesa . ff MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Exp hortioolturist. All I" -"2 5••5 $18,000. 673-4521 (Mary) LAGUNA BEACH, sweeping view, city improyemenll!. Sl0.900. 4!J4....ffi09 Brokc>.r 642-2J7l 5t5-0)ll Hospitality ill Our Motto Too Small. Cabinet in gal'· Rieu. monlbly Gardening erl ion--• -=co.-=•=~---FREE SAUNA WITH ages Ir o t her cabinels. Neat, accuratt, :Xt )Tl. exp. TOP $$$$$$ SWEDISH ~GE 545-8175 Eves 646-2372 Days Ex pert Japen ... For 1st Trust De.eek Open wkdys JO am-11 pm H. o . AndersOn. Gerdening TILE, Cer•mlc 6974 ~3 lllnytime 644-1043 Sundays IO am...S pm CARPENTERIN_G __ W_O_RK-. Cut gras1, @dging, trimming, 1---"---------l 132 E 18th St 642-5090 weeding in the Dower bed!. *Verne, the Ti.le Man * Mortgages, T .D:1 6345 · · Patios, ~Jding 1111.11 doors in· by month. Free estimatea. Cust. work. Install a repairs. Out o f St•te Prop. 6208 I ==:'---"::::'--'-":..:.:C..:o::.:;1---------=-l st.alled. • 546-7887 548-5182 or 646·0384 No job too small. Pl.uter $5,565 lst TD on spectacular Funerals " 6412 •Carpentry • Cabinets • patch. Leaking ihow e r '66 HOUSE Trlr. 55xl2' wide; Oceanvlew lot. Sold for t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 1 J1p•ne" Gardener repair. M7-19'5'?/846--0'l06 white &: tan w/concrete $7,950. Payable 1% per I• e Blt·in• •A tentiona • ExJ>er .. complete yard · porch: pump house, :.! wells, rrDltti Including 8%. All due WESTMINSTER • Repairs • Reas! fi46..9583 llel"Vi~. Free estimate.a JOBS & EMPLOYMENT 500 gal. system;on hillside, 3 :y!'S 10% discount Mfely MEMORIAL PARK --------• 548-7$8 • Job Want.ct, Men 7000 tree shaded 100 x 200' lot, 2 retums approx 12% per yr. Cement; Concrete 6600 PAINTING, Ext er i 0 r . I mi. from Gr~'• Fercy 494-ll37 Mortu•ry & Cemetery ·---te!'ii:r lie. ins. 17 yrs up. f AM l LY Man need• Dflm, Arkansa!. Complete, $1390 2nd TD Jlllyable l% per Complete funer1ls EXPERT CEMENT WORK Free est. 5 4 g _ 5 3 2 5, pan-lime Mll'k. Eve a ! $7,2'70 Cash. Owner-962-61D. month including 10% all due f rom $245 ReRllCflable Prices, Loc9.I Acoustical ceiJ. pre!etTed. No cka to &al' I ACREAGE° kr sale on the 5 yni. CoVera e-xcellrnt Cemetery lob Contractor. Work Guar. J. R. Hodg'e : hauling, trim. ~79'1 brautitul Salmon ruver d Oceanvitw Jot. 20% dis-from $130 Frtt Estimates .... 642-9496 . gllt'de!i· landsc . Idaho. Each five acrt lot count. 494-1137 Includes Endowment Care CONCRETE.' block, Spanish ~Up. L~. ~~: Job W•ntec:I, Lady 7020 hu frontage on the Sa1.rnori OWNER ts $12 000 f t Everything in one beautiful tile, wrought iron, wOOI &: L&guna Beach i-·ic Bkkpr-Secy nttdl pert River and on U.S. HJ.Way m nws'"ooo horn' .. trs place mea.na leu cost. alwn. roofs. Lie. 545-5107 R "'"'°°"L~~~~~~-_,_ 93. For further information Cl'1. • •· ii yrs, N trafti bl E I J>.. B L E : R e as . timt wmit nte, wir:emm. . Il-"oomb "' 5%% 64&-9041 °1J....., c pro ems. FL 0 0 R S..Walks-Palios & w/Oriental cart. CleaJHJpi COl\$1:., RE, hotel A: penon. wnte to UI 08.1=========1 'IOUJ. Beach, Westminster ~.,..i n --••· E. p, rt N~ F--Id-~ """' 5311""" ~ nAK: " Ir. odd phi. V Ince n t . nd exp. Allio PBX or UI . .,, ""'" ...,.,, .,,,...,.. Money W1nted 6350 • •1.:1 89~2421 Workmanship. 642-8514 642--0326 HOiStessing. 833-035f evea Ii Mount. & Desert 6210 CUSTOM PATIOS-.-STUDEN'l'S working t!'leir wkend:ll 10-/. Auto Tr•nsport 6445 Block wa.lla. -"'•A concre1e CERTIFIED "~ Cr o •• ,.__. way th ru col.le.gt. Allen n.o:u A mNTION Tntf!rest on $17,WJ 18l TD: 2 NEED ride t &: fr ork: sawing&: remo,,aJ. &12-1010. Bros. lndsc grdnn comp. Water Safety m.troct::m yr. term. Secured by 40 . 0 om w ·!..:==--=..===-== wants job u Utegmnt or DEVELOPERS & acres land wcrth $40,CO>. VK':. Brookhurst I: Garfield ~ Work, all types. lawn care. 646-4203 swim instruc!Dr. Cal l INVESTORS Mr Adams Bkr 49Hiffi0 to 0C Ail'J)Ol"t . 968-4220 aft 5 No Job too •mall. Free E'llL GEN'!.. Clean-up, tree eerv, 6?3-TI3S * 80 LEVEL ACRES* A NNouNceMENTS SERVICE: DIRECTORY H. STUFIJICK ~!Els_ rototil, grading, sprinklers,1 ---------1 Ideally located in high-dry end NOTICES LicenHd -Quality lawns, haul'g. Reas, 64(;.5848 HOUSEX::LEANING, balf.day bl Aul Re • 6530 in N ewport a r f!•. dr.se.11 (no smog pro ems, __ ...!._ pairs Cement work. 839-5IXi6 GARDENER References. S41-9863 aft 5 wonderful dry-air!) Leve I F nd (f Ad ) ,.~ •-1 · bl •--· ---• land, pump & well on prop. ou rH • -Garage &ta.Us for-rent. Child Care 6610 n.c-1a e &: £1A...,nen"~ PM f'rty. J ullf. I8 mil~ East ol SOMEBODY·s Pet cat. Gray ~:cls~=i:.rn= I: SPECIAL Summtr Day Care JAPANES~~RDENER CARPET •Cleaning. F1oor &rstow (whert J[l'eat ex. and tortotst half • grown Hot balanced meals, snacks. M . It.ripping. Waxing, Walla, pansion h.111 elre«dy begun!) f('IT]ale. A f I t~ I i·o n ate, Babysitting 6550 S lie 2~ 6 1 aintenanc~ by the month. Wil'ldow-s washed. 5rll-«i67 90 man • made ta:ea in housebroken. Nr. Coilege 6 llllt ·$lS t;; r'' 0 an:i-Good n:h. Exper 54&-T158 HOOSEWORK. c m. dQ. ,t1;re.1! Ideal for r ;.s or t and Wlbon. 548-4681 RELIABLE Parent w i 11 pm. tt • avia e JAPANESE GARD~G Exit· Local aree,. de v e Io pm e n t. alfalfa Bl.K F maJ La.b dor babysit or board my home Monte.MOri Schools, 1525 N. Service Otanup, J..andscap. e 60-8006 e growing, fish raising, etc. py. · 6/:0. v~c Bal~ ~: anytime. While~ vacatl~ Santa Ana, C.M. fi46..3'706. Jng, 531-7034 &ft 7p.m • . • . opportunities boundless. No tap. Now at Dr. or work. ~'{ nn. Reaa Contractors 6620 LAWN SERVICE $15 MO. ThJg is a rnre ottering, af. Stockton'• VDM . 673-lcrJO. rates. Abo roning. lOc a pc,!-'-=;;..;;.=.;.;;.--....::;::::. ~-bl ~r ---• b . han CM 646-90'? 00 '"""',.......... e, cn,1 e--.... ford ing the -Investor a IJ'eat PERSIAN Cat •lttdditb nng gen. , 8 • R TM ADDmONS e Weekly Service. 962-6419. future! Penonal circum. lont. Will lady who called I Would likt to care for 1 L. · O!n1tnlctkin CUt I: Edie lAwn stances forct this sale; oth-e,arfier in wee:k pl:eue con. •mall child or baby my Fa~ily room.a, kitchtn or Maintenance. Lketmd. P!', smaller parcels avail-tact 675-423S afftt 11 home, days er nights tor un1t1. Single lltol')' or 2; 5iR-4808, 54-5-58'10 aft 4 PM •bl~ hf!IO'N market value. · working Mom. 642-'lOtl pla.ns custom designed. For ()ill owner: M7.fi16«1 Eve.a/ FOUND: About 1 yr. old ABYSITrIN estimates .t: layout, pboM: LOW cosr Maintenance weekends Siamese. tflill. red collar. 8 G llCh. ~)'OU!' e 84-7-1511 e MOW -EDGE -SPRAY · Mooticello. 2332 Richmond ~ at min~, cook Md. Licensed Cantraetor FERTil.IZE. 962--1349 Acre... 6'200 Wa1, CM = HSIT.e. _.~ma. 968-~-Re&Jdential -O:nnmereial MOWING. Edgiic-, vaolJawa LAD~ Oirrtttlve I ens · IKIY age, mo'~ Mllint A R@pairs. Ft-ff Est Gtm'l clruup, Hautm,. Secluded Yaney ., ..... v1< ""' """"' s1., : :i!:'~ m-2129 Odd'°"'· • -N:B. Gii 8/29 Addttionl * Remodelinr Numeroua iprings, a ereek sr.-eemaro found in Ctronl LIC Ollll> CARE. inta.nta -l!'red H. Gerwick, Uc. Chner•f S....IC.. 6612 and • small Jake are on this 11 2 ,.... 146 •O"et or Oaiik" ttudded de.I Mar. Pie.. c • * &46-mt * 673-6041 * 549-%1.'70 LJC Swditb Ma••11••• la.nd. Propmy aJ.90 n.1 a 6'fl...58'M .uk for Nancy. PATIOS 8 Patio Covers Et:Jru'.»>EAN TRAINED bea.ut:ltul born!'! with • #Wim. mJND White mMe 1titteft nr BABYSrrrING -my Meaa Room Additlon1, Lie. n_4 !137-4145 Palm Sprinp min« pool JU'ld ium house N"'JIOl't Hilb I c h o o J Verde home. Dayt. St&--7831 642-!652 l>eyt.Ere-Wknda all nertll'!d In tht foothill•~ '46-4207 • l rlclc, M.Mnry, .tc. Remodeling e Mclttltn H1ullrtt 6730 mil8 north d. !~800ndido. FOONt> mUa mlnlaiturt poo. 6560 J. G. MacBetb, Uc. NJ -n75,000. ror ~ die. ""'-.,... -· ~ • LlT1'LE GIANT TRUCK JlaWb:lc, •• htlabt. 10' bed. '"" ,_,,,...., rill GI•.., 11!1'7-12911 BRIO<. °""""· ~I======== Tbampoon Wllh SMALL llioctc q ~°"'~~ lOlll C1rpot Cloe""" 6'25 = ;,:" ~ 1-11. ....._ Eckhoff & "-• Inc. '4M!fl Mofo Cloonl"I Senf.. I W.UIJNG. 'l'rMll -1818 W. Ott,pman Aw. lual-•--•--6562 •-•-• 6401 ....... Fioon, .. _~ ...,..,., -'l'limmlng. --... do ~1·2671~~:i:·5.'J8.67'17 :Lest:::.: _____ __;;.;.;.;IPROFESSIONAL.ch0raf. upboillff'l'. 1'rft nt. JWU. hall. Expn>wmir..5f6..2792 LG . Blk. doll-"tt• atttflk tinr A f:rttin~ tfme dent ta I A o:munerc .. a.EAN l.otll, prqn. etc. on chelt. IA No. 3337. J12fi anll. Rrl.J n te .._ i.J SM-Clll 'l'ftt removal, clump, tk1p, Llna>bi 'fl'lf. °' --llOCI< IT TO 'EMI bocld>ot, 1111. ...... 96W7'5 .~ • Domestic Help 7035 LIVEINS ~..,..­ c.or.., B-41ollCY 1i.; B E. 16th, S.A. 547-<J395 Cbineae 1fv.Mnl. Oieerftll Pennanent. Explr:lenced. Far Eut Alft'IC1 M2"'703 Holp Wonted, ~ 7'200 Autioo\8UO trmwmlMm A eombln•tioQ ll&f'lt, t.VJ' duty medl&nlc, Mu.It brt _. perimced in bydromatSe a ___ ut_ -· -. condi-tion• •~~ CMtact ot ciall l\oblrt..ftot- .1~ 540-9100 Nabers c.cna.c SIJMl\IER.EMPLOnm<T l'nll-1'ootblll --w.t ...,.. ... ~ ... ,e ---lfto:D pr<f, -._11 AM 1or --BUTCHER, E:xper, f\J.b ttnw.. C.U U.. 49M<IO QI n.OIJo ~l!di • ---.... --....... ---..................... -.. --.... -:... -.. -.... --..... -·----·------------.. ~--·~· .... ~h~·~·~ ~·~ ·--..... --.... 'I' -~ ~" -.... --.... -------------. --- • ,, \ - SP \ . . , • • • • ... . -• •r ....... -1'" "!* '• -• -··~···· ........... _ .. , ' .. I I '• # .. .. 'i • . . . .. . . • ' I DAil y Pilot ""~ I ... MERCHANDISI FOR SALi AND TRADE TRANSPORTATION . ,.... • llMPLOfMiNI -::.:=.:•::..::;.:.:;.;;.::O;..;Y;;.MaN=-'' l~'O;;;U;;;;;.6;:..;;IMPl.;.;.;;....:.O;;..Y_MIHT_.'-' , .J:.:'O:::IS=-=6;..;IM=P.;:;L;;;OY;;.M.;.;l;;.;NT.;.;. M!RCHANDISI FOR , • SAL! AND TRADI! Help W1nhld, '-7200 Help W1n!M Help W1nlod ...:==-:="-'==-1 MERCHANDISI FOii · SALi AND TRADI MEllCHANDlll FOR SAll AND TRADE S1llbooto 9010 SALi$, 3 ONL Y1 Retorol'-of ... or ·~P'!'i•nca $975 FIUT MO. • PotmUU II )'Oil aincere. 1.y wane to wort. llld ~ bi& money, Cati toUow 01"'-~,... -writ. GM ardif:r ~ and lf !""' mil do lttet 7 can offer you • f125 wooldy .. r.,, • -C1dlll1c furn. • Worlc 6 hrs • d1y • y..,.. offlc1 to cloyt e Executl'tti tralnlne • Bonuapl•n • No a nvauint1 .1500 A.duns. SWt,e 303 OJStl MMa 11 .... pm. daib'· • Precision Sheet Metal Mechanics Programm'r 111111130 c ......... """ er Pitt 1ltno -... _....<14 ..... ..,.w. of pro- 1r•mmln9 a full S. d llC "''""'" PLEAS& CAIL Mr. Chord FOR APPOlNTMENT D•yt 541-2201 E-s.4M541 Cla-Val Co. Costa Mesa "" equal """"'"'"" employer Loe.I manufacturer h11 Immediate openings for: w, 7400 Women 7400 Furnlluro 1000 -. ... 1--------Pl1nao a °'Vons 1130 Ml1c1ll1n...,. UGO FREE TO YOU r.mo H, _.,-. Billing Clerk lxporl--.1. Subot1n- H1I typl111 roqulrod. Perm•nent, eood op- portunity! toll or 1pply1 Cla-Val Co. 17th & Plee1ntl1 COlta Mesa s4a.2201 An """1 opportunity _ ... EXPE:RID'lCID NEW ACCOUNTS Cl ERK SKRETARY Fum.ltu..re rttunlfd from ~ plQ •tudSc». modtl bomH, decoratorl caDC'ellatSoa. ~ A Medlt,m.nean etc. Rp FURNITURE 1144 Newport Blvd., CM eTery nla:ht til 9 Wtd., Sat. & S\ln. 'tll I Office Equipment 8011 GESrETNE:R ll!mqraph No. 120. Xlrit cond. $150 or beet offer. 836-8669, 63.1--0922 --~ -·----IDcludJ.na 2 .... ol Illa; July 4th W..Und AUCTION sorr, ton1>1e,, wt old w.. ",,,_· boot -6 pi.no .. °""" Solel by ldtt ... -• pott> tnll<r. $1195. 541-1111 Kenatie-Wurtit.zeN"llcber Fri., July 5, 7:30 p.m. tr&lotd, l maiet • t female, betwec 5 • 1 PM • - Kallllbe p'Ud wu Pl85 New • UICd Fumltutt, Top perecm.Uty pJ:ue. adjufted to lT SLOOP, New rn * now $1'1'00 Name fUm1ture lD bedroom pre ~baol«a. 616-2821 t/5 ria1aa • outboU'd. ~ wurutur ~ wu ~ 1ea, dln1nc room am, china NF.ED special borne with *'°· Raclnl Sabot 10mbe.U ~ =-· ~~ah..~ huse ~tot (2) Retriev« ~141f, MWlS'J : • *"""'58> bihlet. COOllllOd«, -iGolden). Sh-rd · l1lllC 14·-11ocp,b4L LowN!)' Oram WU $85 madtlnes cheltl detb, Dop. Malt I: f • male • aate A fut. New Alls. 1185: * DOW $16«i bunk bf!ds, t-*: ...... 541).6113 bd. 3 P.M. T/4 i\ua Zone Boat Co., B&Jq .. Wurlitzer Orran wu $1145 lamps; pl~ mattreuea, POODLE. Bltck, B moot!t old C'ORONADO 25 !;...=;: * now f1Z 1V's, Ste1'!()a, rddaenton, 1~. cute u a button I: t 213: f43..ll34 di,)' :- All 1Jke New * 1\IU)' Gwr. lltovee, Wtl.abtts, ck)oert A hoUMbrOken. Will give 1o JTT~ Evm . e LOW C MOS. 1'DUttB e MUCH Mon.El faml],y with aood dtlldmi. KrI'E No. 607 Coed cond 11t-~or191 5111 ~ Gould Mutic Compony WINDY'S AUCTION 545-"1>0 715 .., ... -ii. dorl<l•oe"iq GARAGE Sale nt. I: Sat, . CDfi N. Main S.A., $47.00Sl RATS. Varloua colon, with Jl!lClle l13-a&26 l<r ,!!'!:°!ti. ott· July 5th • 6th: 10 AM to I Special SaMt I ""5\1 Ncwpon m..i. ..~ 1~~·;::::~~~ 12" SNOWBIRD. l!.co<ly=w; ioe: in Q>rona del Mar. 9Klrt-S;30 PM. Offtce dmk '' • WE otcer our greatert ~ Tmy's md,g. MaU'1. 114 M.terl NHtil ...U.. St.50. hand &:: tfpinc eue11tial m I m e o g r, a II h : I r ea~ &tock d. new A Wied piano& am.a Mesa 64S.aG86 ,54M064:,;:;;,;,,...,,,,,.--,,=,-.,~ I ALSO: rrm:tmother s brua ~. 1; c:qana • at 5pec:1a1 Sum. OPEN DAILY 9 1o 4 IARGE, Giant Bird of WINNING Race Sabot No P Ti -.n. tellc: tbl.ea., andque mer Sale prices! Paradise yau dii and haul. OU wtth meaaurement <e> art 1rne bronze; Vk. s Id e b 0 a rd • WHATEVER look HEIRLOOM Gun c •• e 2321 Aralia IF.utbluft) NPf. File Clettc: klrie-1l1e S p atilsh Sl&h ·we~:':.t~ beavy •ol..ldoalc,maey--614-1:& 114 tifteate.$300 ~ bedspread; cblM. tea aets; pdoe :t'tl'I will PQ. partmenta, hldden dnlwen, 4 BEA.UT, BUc: mitten-toed U' FIBDlGLAS Wlboat 1nc: Jame typiJ'lg. P\eue ee.ll: bric-a-brac, papubac~. etc. WARD'S BALDWIN sn.roro suo er otter; &.rtboard, kittens. Nttd IPtCial bo:meL trailer xtru. Xlnt coo;l. :r~;-: 8ffdl Realty, Irie. ~l:ariners Dr., NB 11111 NN'PC)rt, CM 642-8484 8'4", cwd cond $25; desert A1ao, yng. female Cll wot Beet ">ffer. f94..ai85 6n9'200 Evell: 548..fiEl66 ----~~-~ PIANOS & ORGANS car cooler S2: ehett ot flli>AY· ~ bdott l 715 S.Utna: leuons, 40' alooe; SOFA bred, end tables, dw, drawers $4: oJd Jr. en-b--• r nu.l 7 Reuonable rate.; avail fer Seamstresses l table lamp. cameraa, )rg NEW A USED cydopedia $3; L 1 o n e I GERMAN Shep ~ e e d'larter 646-9660 548.2592 '1 tblecloth w/ n a pk In • • Splnets, comolet, IJ"8.l)d Mlcroeoope, :dot. S 1 0 : moc. all llbota:/68 license. ~ for sail' loft in beadi pianos from $.199. Orpris Gilber ...._ __ ,_. "'• .. ..t.. Good· watch betw. 6 pm -8 LIDO 14 No JC), 2 Mtl 1Bi11; ~ -MachlniSt-s _...,_•'Wiremen UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 2712 W. Coed Hwy. gullor. girl'• clothing, n 14; ......:: ... _ .. ,, ... .,, ~·• -39 11< lull •-• -or --area. f!rmn $795. ............. 170. ~••-•, L...-•·-pm '"°""~, CJUa'\ "-.... • -· HOURLY SALARY jewelry, Rabt Jet fotmtl.ln -.. , ..........., ~ 6*-5150 TOP head. 12 lo 5 Thurs thru Sun. WAU.ICHS -MANNING'S 15c:-$25c; Few 1P reoonh, 5 FLUFFY Kittens; 3 cans of ;-_·,.;-';i;i'=;::-:=:--;=--1 Power madtlne eXper, in an,y 18174 Ms,yapple Way. Irvine. MUSIC CITY mvoo l5c· Adju!table auto cat food with each kitten. CAL 20, firlly equip, for field wludJle. 833-0085 3400 So. Bri&tol llllll acr~n ll: S I n I e r 2103.C Santa Ana Ave., ~;,, arulaing, Excel.~ Min & Lathe lranslcom Corp. 151 W. 18th SI. Coata Mesa 642-9000 Public Relafions and Siles $400 per month base to a:tart plus commission plus au to allowance. Work local area. Excel· lent career opportunit:Y. Call Mr. lle1lor 642-7353 COOK Experienced breakfast A. luodl. Mtait be fut. Excel- lent money and opportun- ity. Apply in pcl'90l'1 only. Surf & Slrfoln 5930 Pac. Cit. Hwy. Newport Be•ch SALES REPRESENTATIVES Leading Indepe n dent 511f:dallsts dealing in mer 100 mutual funds, expandln& in Orange County. Thi.I is an opp ortu n ity lo enter dlpitied pro!essionaJ sdlin« full or part time Investment l!ICp riot necesaary, we train. 5f1-WJ., Mutual F u n d Investors Inc. 2100 N. Main, Santa Ana FRY COOK Experienced only. Nights. Salary open. No phone calil. Apply after 3 p.m. FIVE CROWNS RESTAURANT 3801 E. Coast Hwy. Corona del Mar Manager Train•• Holiday Hee.Ith s p a II 0>5ta Mesa and Ans· heim. Must have neat ap- pe&rance, able to meet and deal with prop!,, No experience neeessarye. We train. Apply in pe['l!()n 2300 Harbor Blvd .. Cosla Mesa . UNENCUMBERED y o u n g man lor adventure on large boat. Must hav' t1·ansporta- tion. Prefer expcr with mf'<:hanlca l k c 1 r pe n l r 1kllls, See owner after 8 PM at 310 Fernando, Apl 103, Balboa. Young Men 18-28 We are 1n ..tabll1hed commercial firm with llber1I fringe beneflh. Only people with at INst alx months •X· perlence ahould apply to Newport Be•ch 646-2431 An '"'"' ..-w111y _._ HANNA SAILMAKERS So. Coast Plaza • 541).2165 uprtpt vacuum, needl; belt Costa Mesa 7/5 861 W. 18, 01 548-3464 T;::!le -=-~~~rs:: $10: 1olding mr. lOe et.. ALL white Sllepherd -Collie MALIBU Otn'RIGGER Jr.: ADVERTISING Furn; Household 1tt m 1 ; T1l1vl1lon 1205 Lagun1 Bcb. 49'-1701 eves & mix, good nature, 1 yr old, Top condition-d8Cr'Cll. at Sales girl Jot pennaneot part Many Mlsc.21 --.. -BLA--CK-""&----.-AM_;;;·:;FM::;I wkernb. tree to good borne. 494--1623 • rides the surf, 49'-SOCi time WO!'k. Tue& lhru Fri. SAT ONLY. '16 Irls, O:!M. ate bi. 1-0iiOiiOiiOiiOiiOii ... _ 7/5 17' SNIPE, glassed huU, Appllalnts O'.Xl&idered on merit repn:Deu of race, religiot.ts creed, color, na· tlonal mrtn or ancestry. 8:30 • 4:30MU. Sa!'>'·,.~~ ooham-lalley). 675-4006 li reo . fl record player, SWIMMING POOL 00 =-=us=LE=-=Bcdc-.c-,..,at"'"'"":-and:'::: .sails, gean good cond. MRi mission. .,. e we. ve ~ .$75. AU in me. 18 Ft Pool, FUter, SID'hce inc trailer. ~ da.aaified or ~ uper-GLJ\.IEWARE, Cartos> car-o;c;:;;;:;;--;;;;v;=,..-,.,,,.-,I Sldmrne-, Malritenance KJt. s pr I n 111. Gocd condition PARAMETRICS ienoe. Pbone for -riPOint· rier, high chair, electrlc WAUlUT OLYMPIC color FREE Ground Pad. !l62-l3«i 2158'2 Polynesian 35' YAWL By Owner ment. cn4> 646-lliOO. sweeper, elea:rlc motoni. TV -STEREO eomb. Xlnt $149.ll U!.., Huntgtn Bcb 7/4 Must 11!11in10 day1! 929 B•ker StrHt Caot1Melo 549.2221 ~~mi:· 89(J1 eood, USO or otter 6#-1606 SECARD POOL LOVABLE tiger kitten, 10 e Gn6'704 e Jobt--Mln. Wom. 7500 MISC GARAGE SALE! HI-Fl & Stereo 1210 323 s. ~~Ort.rip ~:~:col::: 30~anA:'He~:": .. st;: Cashier HOltelS ORGANIZERS HUNTINGTCtl HARBOUR ,.._llm 116 .i.c main.......,. ""'""••!o d>e"""'1 growlh 11091W-.Satl~. ITEREOJ.9'8oolld-*AUCTION* ONE tar1 c SHvct Raclqi Sabot,.,cell"" ---------1Neat •)Jlleal'in&, no oper. • CARPOOERS neceuary. INo ltudall1 please:) Appb' in person: ._ jmmel'l'8te iooJme for 842-7659 or !HT-1.670 ccneole model. 1Jb new, rdri-tor, needs llDme condition. Extru. $.l25. s --Balance $19.35 or amal1 U yoa 1'ill lell • ti.IJ ·~·~ ttxiee who can recruit, train Ootbes, vacwms, Housebokl. payments. Credit Dept. Jive Windy a try repaft. Youn fat 1be t.akini;i: • 644-USS • Trailer or mobile home experil!nef! preferred. Excellent ~elits. Bob'• Big Boy JM E. 17tb St., C.M. &: ..,._,.,;7., others. Ex-aJ~ m.lsc. Weekdays attl!t 6. All .,..., .......,. thil Se.ti SUn only. 646-4660 SNOWBlu'"' Fibe"'las& ~,2 -... -64&-0 ~•U);J Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m. "..., ·• - people preferred. 646-Slm Sat-Sun. 196. w· d I Auct'on B 2 MOO otd female puppy, lil!tl of Ails, trlr, aood . day or eves. 2219 Rutgeni, Apt A, CM T•pe Record1r1 8220 tn y 1 1 arn Germ. Shep & Collie mix. 64~7, &l2-3430 CLOTHING OF ALL SIZES. Behind Tmiy'a Bide. Mat1 546-1678 7/5 SEMl·ntired oouple for 5c _ $2. TANDBERG Stereo rttmler 20'15'iii. N--... CM 646-86116 Apply ln person EXPLORER MOTORHOME CORP. 4000 Campus Drive Newport Beach WAI'I'R.CiSES A: Cocktail 'Catlxiic Rectory N.B. Cook· .... .,.... .. waitreaset:. Sharp, fresh, all-Ing, hswrk & 1 om e 2080 Monrovia Ave. CM Model 64, canying cue, A · ......... · " ·--'· ·-...l Sony head set model DR-le merican ._..,.. gu' wruer ,, ...... work. Lvg. quarters It GARAGE SALE Sal 1()..6 $385. S45-i4S8 28 to compliment xlnt 1ur-n.lary. Hskpr only may be 10336 Cardinal Ave. F.V. rounding! in all new San con&idered. 644--0200 Misc. items & furn . Franciscan cuisine restaur. REAL ESI'ATE. Shouldn't C•m1ra1 & Equip. 1300 'Remnants, samples & Mill N wport Beach . ~s Sat. Only 8 a.m. to 2 nr. e pier. you be selling the hottest Appll•ncu 1100 MANSFIELD 8 mm movie p.m. 929 Baker, Costa Mesa X1nt workiZJi oond. area / Huntington Beach? camera, projector, acreenl ~--=-~,.-,~~--'-615-1114. 67:1-7629 Call for appt. Villagc R. E. WASHERS $29.95: ""'"' """"·""""and -$50. Pool ·Tables KNlmD FABRICS .-FOR SALE AUTO Dl.SPATCHER ;962-«==11=546-81==°"=== $35: Freeun 175: """<·· "'7-6639 Ncw • ,._. ..... $99.50 coppcrtone & Avoc.; Guar. -=========;= _________ 1Must know auto components, -Up. Tennis, Champion dlspatch experience helpful. Agencies, Men & 540-lO'JS Sporting Goods 8500 Quality $3-1.50 up. CAREER Mr. Cooper. Women 7550 FULL size electric 1tove. ~....., STOVES -s C•ll Frank RAY VINES -·-· ----A"tom•tio •tarnng tmm. 8 ·~··0• • ~· •1==-=-"538.o311 OPPORTUNITY! Chry~u-P!ymouth ARGUS ~',i;,.""'1><' oontrol. $50. ~~~FOAM 'RUBBER. cut lo'"'· FREE Fill dirt, a.s much or Power Cruiser• a.s little a.s you need. 35• E1£0 Trunk c a b I n >15-_""'7836~"""'°',---...::715.: cruiser xlnt running COl!d. FREE Fill dirt. New canvas end. for alter 644-1523 dedt, new uphol I: radio. 114 FREE 4 mo old Wiemara- ner puppy, female. Ver 1 Intelligent. 642-4513 eves. Pet Baby Rabbits 531-4781 Evenings Ask $2,050. 673-4186 eves, Spffd-Skl Booto 90ilo LEA VlNG state must aell 15' fiberglass boat •• trlr • 40 hp outboard. New cova. 7/4 $T75 or offer, 646-7616 P~E~T~s~.-n~d~L~l"'V~E~ST~oc=K~ SAGlIFICE! 14" .. boet.."ll! hp mlr. Xlnt! $250 « cu: Catt 8120 trade. 838-7~ Join todays !a.st.est growing 543-6663 -f>2'1·2341 WORK NEAR HOME A to z RENTAL CENTER, Uph supPlies, 1 ab r i c 5 , prote:Woo-Mutual Fund sile1 TYPIST, attr. girl for BookkHper to TB $375 WHIRLPOOL Washer $45. 1809 N~rt Blvd, COBta naugahyde. Fact. outlet. Ru&ei Bl No experience necessary· part-time work in nice S.Cret•z 70/60 to $450 Ken mo r t dry'r $25. Mesa.. 642-1D>. Eveeytbing l...ow' pre. A-1 Foam Fabric ~IANi:., ·anAU "'• ~=======I Boat Maint1n1nc1 90a3 YACHT Mainteaance It repair at ~ dock. Ex- perienced. Reaa. 548-7807 • W iri 195 DU.l1ue9e .Uttl!ns, reg, We train 4 full or part time oftice~ type 50-60 WPM. Rent.A ar G•I $303 estinghou!le re g. · for your oomfort , •• tor & Uphol&tery SuP::ly Co., 311 & Stud Service. 546-8858 Mutu•I Fund AdviMrs, Prefer light shorthand. Serv St• Mec:h•nic $540· _Xlnt·cond. 67H146 your outdoor fun. we E. 5th St., s.A. 835-U81 ========= Inc ~·1 lo -·1 u 0 1111 M • Bo R · TOR deliver. • ........ r a..,. · ,,_. us1c x ep11r KELVINA QJppertonel ========= Miac. W•nted 1610 Npt B. l!iOJ Westcllff 64U422 !Newport &ach) $2.75 hr refrlg, ll.50. G E Dellt co~ 8600 -'--'----:.:.;..: S.A. 1212 N. Bl'!'adv.ray ~.~B~OO=K .. K .. E""E""P""E""R~.~ Tronic , ... m tone port di&hwshr, bread-Miscell•neoua $$ CASH $$ 547-833:1 Quiel 1 -giri office Dana to $3.25 hr ="'=d=top"'=. =l150~·~5'0-45-~2!l-~ MOVING Must s e I I We pay ca.sh for: BAR'IIIDIR AppJ.y in person S.11 &: 3-6 Mon. thru Sat REUBEH E. l£E 151 E. Co.st Highway Newport Blach Point area, It. s H, type 50, ARGUS EMPLOYMENT FREEZER $40, refrigerator hou.setiold t:um-.Appliances, ./ Firrniture ,/ Appliances neat, BOme reoep. duties. Sal CONSULTANT AGENCY $35, T, V. ll5, boys bike no, la<hes clothing aize 12. All in !/ Antiques ./ Tools open. Mr. Migge f96..1256 ~ Westcliff, N.B. 548-7796 washer-dryer SlO. S36-Jl63 xlnt oond. Fri & Sat 9-5. 1TI5 ON ITEM or _ BARMAIDS. . . • 1624 E. 17th St., S.A. 547-6336 MOVING. gas dryer, 1 year. Labrador Dr. CM (Mesa COMPLETE HOUSEFUL. , .• and GO.GO ARGUS Sears Deluxe S:oft Heat Verdel S45-29f4 Call 547-6748 or 821..s2n DANCERS Model $95. &17-1670 SMALL boat with 3~ hp eng WANTED 5 r 6 ft 8of bed $300 per week WORK NEAR HOME $100; R ave 11 Monza . 0 · a . . 6.18-5483 or 6Jl.9763 Comp Oplr to $400 Antique• 8110 Raceway fl)· 2 b 1 a c k Oto: if needs upholster111i· G•I Frld•y $450 wrought ~ dn $20. R.easonable. Call 548-475.1 LEGAL SECRETARY Typiit Lite SH $350 DOTJ"{'S ANTrQUES 6"75-l73! WANT to gct r1d ""'' ShorlhMd A: typing Computer op $550 Reopet1ing at 111151 Beach old TV that's not vrorw-7 •1· I Calli Bl~ S -7""" FOAM twin sil' ~ springs ....... " m yr. . exp. Jr Acct d~ $550 ~ .... , tanron . ..,,... """' You caU, I haul 5f84934 Salary Open. 548-7756 If ma.ttmlls. Like new, pa.ldt-:=;'=:='=::==:=:::: Lumbr Yd lk exp $550 S 1 M hi ll20 $149.50 each set. FOR quick I'~•-h" Executive Secr1t1ry ARGUS EMPLOYMENT IW ng IC Ml We % price. White :teWin& mac 1n1ry, etc. , 1700 BookkHplr-Account•nf Aaaistant lo President. Short-CONSULTANT AGENCT 1967 Singer Touch.Q.r-.1atic madt in F&b. $25. 673-2665 FORKLIFT $59S thru P & L. Experienced tt-hand 100..120. Typing 70-!ID. IDt3 Westcliff, N.B. 548·7196 Consol,, du' to Hines:!!. 41A" REFLECTING CLARK $695 • runs .eood •.. ,~. Piefer man over 50. 546-0938 •=-E 11th St s A ~, <•Y A I " z · Z ~.,, u..u~ ..--. • ., •• '" ..........., u oma .. c. ig-ag, uu on-Telescope with Oock Drive 639-2691, Eves. 897·2433 Established commer!cial EXPER. Food & Cocktail HAVE OPENINGS FOR hol~. blind hem&, overcasts EquatGl'ial M01J11t s 6 5 1'1lg. Send resume to Box waitresses: Hun t 1 n gt 0 n SHARP TRACT SALES. etc. No at1achn1cnts nttded. 642-l329 FREE TO YOU f..f.155 C/0 Daily Pilot. Seacliff Country Club Guar •till good. $38.66 or 66 F PERSON. EXCELLENT $4.75 mo. can ~16 SELF~ed rotor lawn . Fry Cook EYBM'. '""=""""~-.,."'-,--'~""'°'~I.~ OPPORTUNITY FOR mower: 2 yn:, old; paid ADORABLE Puppies 1 wks BOB'S COFFEE sro-; CHILD Care-hskp. 12-6 pm. TOP PRODUCER. MR. 1967 Singt:r Repossession $126, best Ufe:r takes . old. Mother &mail Samoyed. 1409 S. El Cimino Reel Must have OV.'?I car. Perm. ANAKIN 962.1381 Console, Zig.Zag, button-644-0438 We need love. 673-!HG 7/4 Good cooditioM· Call for holes , blind hems, over· PART B kt--• San Oementt: 492-1353 details. CdM 075-2514 SUPERIOR AGENCY casts, many fancy stitches FR I G JD A I R E E 1 e c urme!le """s ne.,., 1857 Harlior Bl, Costa Mesa ctc.~$41.25 m-$6. mo. Gua:r. stove-oven·hood, counter good homes. 646-6133 alt Agencies, Wo'm•n 7300 Executive Secretary Legal background !or Admln- See Bet!)' Bruce al istrative Partner Newport Beach Jaw lirm. 546-~. m• COOK • PART Tlr.tE t.1J xec Apply m person. Agency for Career Girts P.1ESA LANES. 410 W. c.oast Hwy., N.B. 1703 Superior Ave. CM By appoint. 646-3939 e SALESLADY expe.r\enced -------jewelry prd'rred. 35 or (Established in 1946) still OK. Call 52J..0090 mod, like new. SllO or offer 6 7/4 Send $1.00 for SINGER Touch & sew 499-2661 5 DARK brown klttens ·cute Preferred Resume Special iii::·zaa:, Model 626. WEDDING Dress, this year'• & cuddly, need homes! format & recommendations Purchased new 1967. Nev!'!' Miss Betsy. White linen, 962--0936 715 School .. lnatructlon 7600 used. $250. 675-1158 8:30 daisy applique, g1.z, 10 $5.5. PLAYFUL 1 wk old kitleM, a.m. -4:30 p.m. 54H269 need nke hoole. Alreftdy Muaical Inst. 8125 SCHOOL CbUdreri's vacation FENDER Amp. Made fCI" rates. <ltlk:oat 10.Lesson club or profes1ional GREAT Books We 1 t, r n houBetiroken. &45-4101 7/6 \Vor\d set. Also ba rgain. REG. Cocker Spaniel&, 2 Encyclopedia set & Jr. males, free to lovh~ hom'8, u 4-9360. 893-1669, ~149 115 Dog1 8825 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS 3 months old AKC REGISTERED Champion Blood linea Bred for Quality &: Temperament All Shots A: Worming P edigree with each PUP 837·38ffi Eves. aft. 6:30 Pl\t Weekends ftfter 9 AA! MARTINCREST KENNEU Great Dane, Lab Retriever & Beagle puppies. AKC. Out· standing blood lines, iteady temperament. 546-0989. DOBEru.tAN PUPS, diam· pfon .tock: xlnt temperament; AKC. Terms. &17-3807 Poodle pups, miniature, 6 wkl old, $15. Must sell this week! 962·7936 BEAGLE • 1rlALE 3 yrs old. PEDIGREE l35-* 962-5212 AKC Sable Collie pups, 4 wks., champ. e:ired. $50 & Up. M2·7318 RARE St edition LHASA AP&O. POODLE pupPy. Sm. blk -female $35. •99--2128 AKC Toy Poodles 7 wks. Females, 1 chor-1 blk. * 847-1087 * Marine Equip. 9035 25 WA'IT heath radio tel. $100. Heath RDF $35. * eves. 54s.8776 * 225 HP GREY MARlNE ens. & lnU'Js. comp!. rebuilt. • G(l-8271, eves. 545-2584 * Boat Slip Mooring 9036 *BOAT SLIPS.* Power boatl up to 22' $1.50 per ft. 642-9'101 Boat-Yacht Chart1r1 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Cobalt -Stung -Frane - Jailed -T AIUi Youth disicussing a Wfd. ding: "The: guests laughed at me when I brough morik· l'YS to the weddlnf. The fn. vilation Sllld, 001M with TAILS." e CHARTER THE FINEST New fO' Ketch 67J..2517 • rn.2400 CAL 2'4 SAILING SLOOP $25 PER DAY OR ti:i0 PER WEEK S0.'1528 Fi1hing Boah Typing School.. 543-2859. 173 M:Ordina. Vibro Iux revf:'l'b. Sales promotion jobs avail, Del !\tar, C.M. Cost $329 ll!ll for S19'J. or Larie lnf'I. corp. $10.CXXl l!i!: -S.cr•t•ry-Girl Frht•y Exp. Bind,cy Help MERCHANDISE FOR make ofter. 968-4354 Help W1nted older. Excellent opp t y l Women 7400 MS-.3402 UPHOLSl'ERING -$79.50, 2 BABY Rats, beige & 'Nht or RARE 1st edition Lhasa A peo -Poodle puppy. Sm. blk 4 female $35. 499-2128 pc. (European· crattlmen) IXk • wht. >nnt pets for Horlll 26' SPORT fi4hlng boat, b&It year. l\1anag:ement opportu. Pleesa.nt Npt Beach office. MARTEC SALE AND TRADE CLASSICAL Guitar l ~. n!Uc1. Call 10 'am • 2 pm Xlnt opportunity. InteUi. REPRODUCTIONS Furniture IOOO Llke new $100 or make oUer 539-1183. gence & iniUatlve euenllai .. l.~=~15~TI=Pia~ce-m_to_N_B~~ ----673-2151 KEN'S RESTAURANT Life insurance exper, type WAITRESS Graveyard llrilt SPANISH/MEOITT EL.EX:. Guitar 3pk:k up, iood Under New Management fl(), Call belw 9 & I weekdays only. , , * ROOM GROUPINGS * cond. $35. Amplifier $35. NEEDS EXP. FRY COOKS tor appl. &tU.667 or 515-347~ Cott&&e. CoUee Shop Uvina:. dining room and 536-4046 REF'S. BREAKFAST SHTF'T. Office Maniger-Full 562 W. 19th st. 0.1.8. Mesa bedroom -as low e.s $3. wk. ===· ====== COME TN AT 2 PM OR Charne lookkffnar D.'PBRJENCF:D Waitress Optn 9-9 daily,.JG-5 Sun. ~~~_E~g~!'~'-.~~ . CAU.. ANY1lfl-IE 6T.\.~1 • .--A •• I s I A _ .. ~tail appliance expelien~. Pv>Y n person. w 0 pprOYsv COLLEGE Student wilh ,,. "--'et •14 N NeWftN'l CBM 4171 f!qWp. Se.Jary f8XI ... -.. · · .... -. Furniture perienoe. Full limf! sun1mer pkui. _B"t"'..i"."N=.B;;.=-::-=-= part time during &Choo! at ~1 8 B"ABYS~R 8 -5 ... 2159 Harbor, Coeta Mesa Olevron Station on beach in " r' rown 548-J4l9 M th' 'Fr 3 ~"ri. · ~j"'· 548-9660 Laguna. NO hippiP'S· Mimit SERVICE station man, lube on ru • ; ns l-;;==-:-.,,:,:':;7"':-::--:-= & Jt med! day shirt Kood 5, one •· own transp. F'RI-561: IM. 2 ~ SS I: $15. be 18. Salary plus t'Om-poy, &md··-olf. ..:. ••• &tl-9793 aJt g 2 chests $7.50 et,. Mab cheat NOW HERE -the new Super90undln& T·200 Hammond Spinet orian -tha finest yet' SCHMIDT-PHILLIPS CO. 1901 N. Main O 20th Santa Ana Free tst. del, pickup, 215 dllld. 548-1662 7/6 ________ l;;.8;.;;3~ link, head, bunks. Sacrlti& Main. HB "Berny" 536-6405 MALE Coc-a-Poo. shots &: MODEL ~ bone. Red $1800, 547-48SS aftu 5 PM DELTA 8" radial saw on a license to ROOd home with dun ll'Nlft. 8 yn okt. 30" x 8' sturdy bmcb on fenced ya.rd, 962--030'1 116 Pleasure & equitation. Show whee.ls. $150. 2320 Eiden, 1'.lA.LE puppy, 10 week5; i,s exp., esp. good for childrn. Costa M'8a Pointer; good w:ltti children. _6J9.-0ZTI"c.=------- Made to cri:ler -any color, 962-7633 116 Hors~ riding leS!IOM. ~tor grapes, candles I. 2 BROWN And one white Your l'M:ne or mine. Alrcr•ft 9100 ONE OF' A KIND 1963 P""3.S Bonanza 1!155 S-l5 Bonanza MISSION BEECHCRAN .. 0 .C. AirpJrt &J0..2T.ll Exceptionally Equipped.I '65 Cherokf!e 180 MISSION BEEOICRAJi"f 0.C. Airport 540-2'm other aceeucries. m.-3438 female ~ pip. 2 Jnalf: =:-oC.=ll~N-'Mlcy=~· -'6-'73-..;7.::48=9- TEAK Det!ik with matching white rats. 6«2-6224 716 WANT To rent, lease or buy chair ·noo. Surfboard 10', BEAtrrlf'UL kittens s wg acreap 1uitable for 4 $65. 548-4203 old. hskbrim, We611ed. n-ee horaet, Mr. Q)o;;er. 577-2341 AUTO Washer $25; Re.frig to loving home. 644-0141 7/6 ~~PC?_R~~N - Pl: Stove w/cel\tet" grill 3 ADORABLE ldtw. 6 Boats & Yachh 9000 Mobile Hornet 9200 ~. 764 W. m St., CM lft'tks old· H\ln4fnctnrl Bch 1---------1 m ission wilt! raJ1e1. 4%-9003 -· '"' ...,., 2 ___.stove•~• S25 pumping. Vie'jo Unkin Serv. FRY Cook ~30 yrs. 2718 Npt ...,, ~---..,.,, ' PARKING A t I e n d a n t ..... 11 La Po• Rd. M'·-•-81 .... ,._.1 Mesa. Good refrla $20, D'ld tab~, -• M ._ ..... _ ""u ia&lUll ""' ....,.., -i0 •--p• N--..i.~. FOR SALE WurlitJ.er Sph>Ct 25' STEEL poles for Flap or area. 536-m.36 716 JULY special. Boats hauled, DEUJX 2 BR 2 BA, beaut '""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!!! .. 1 lites $10 eBCh. FREE: pl~ of asphalt butWm ICTubbed ~ J)9\nted, lndlCpd, Jdult park. ztna. can $46-5,392 driwway. 892-8628 7/6 $1.!MI pu ft .•• plllnt • zinc. nr octan. Lquna. 499-2583 wante<>-ust"" 18 &: UIU'l:T, Viejo. 837-4826 M2~ ""' ..... ,. · "" ..._,,,,, Appb' alter 6 p.m. Ill double bfdatffd $25. JOO plano. Mahopny, cherry, .l Reuben E. Let Parkins lot, SALESLADY PIT U hr £Uar. F'utler BIMLlndona Villa, Balboe. End, of walnut wood. 'Very rood Nf!WpOl't Beach Full N 1¥1-rt time. Exp, JR Brush customtt RN. H.B. condiUon. $385,. 548-4'm i: JR. PEI ltE Dress Shop'. F.V .. 1'fra. Brown S40-1931 MARBLE Top coffee t1ble., PIANO Wanted, Print' ...... 215" :a 40" FOLDER ~tor 1-MARTEX: Call for Appt. fl68..3l1J F.V. IUnd Stitch Oper. bra.u pedestals. 63" tong, ty want.I to buy piano fo.r flt'PRODUC'MONS WAITRESSES Garmel'lt manufacturtt 1SMI 31'' hl,sb. $45 ~ c1sh. 54J..9335 15-17 Pllfttitla NB C8ll ~Ir. Zimmer MonroYl• N.B. 642-2886. KING 1be bed $25. Duncan LOWRY Electric orpri. Peri SERVICE Stsitioa attm!ant, Bl~ Dolphin 615-4004 NURSES Phyfe din tie i: matn $25. con4. $1700 new, will .ell fuD a part dmt-Dlp!r, anly SALES, p11ort tlme S2 per hr. needed for private dllb' Dreatt' $10. 962-3503 $700 . .f.M-1224 after 6 aJlPbr 1t Xl711A Pu Road, ruannteed lri start. 0vtt n. . e 64~ e DOUBLE Bed fhime with GOOD pradke piano -Ull!!d MIMtm'VllL!jo.af--~745 l:B4B="y"s=u=·1=m=---=M1=bom=-:-,,-or headboard and matching $100. Larry Bentdlc t . tAftL-::=::::r:.IJl.;.;::;n:.•=•-'•"p:;a_p_e_r I ~L VN=-:$-'°'l~l-:Cll&:c--,.-,-:N~.,..--.-.. -I )'OUn. 5 days. with miJTor J60. 548-0063 439--027•. evta. 8'12-CM de:UverJ" route Htmtlnp:ln ply Bl1*' Ooov. Heep., Ul9 64f..U1S GAS Dr)ltr I: 'tralhe1'. l'ull CONN elec. crpn; anlern Btac*.. ~married"*'+ !· Hemlock W11, S.A. HSKPR-O:lok, child are. bed with~• many style: 2 manua1s: .ldnt cm- 216 h ... day. llT-2300 i L. V .N., ..i1t1 ohllt. Apply Uve In. rm a TV •• Alvy. l-:::Ollier:'ii'-:....,,_":::;:-:;~=21::-62== ditton. 5*-2990 COOK; l.xperiencecf. Lquna Betich Nur1ln1 Rt:fl. H.8.arta. 53&-1248 Stud'°eouchalmc.t1'"'$&'1i· '* EVERE'rl' 111'.llid walnut cau Mr. Zlmmtt Home, ~. BABYSIT M>' home:, cril1 Gold~~ !!XU~. nprlght, pxl ftctfon l tone. a. Dolpb& m-«IOt Manicurist N ... d mpan mature nttd appl,y, I ~,..,.:50).21:;;:;,TT;:.,._"':;...615-:::,;:2589"== $ISO. - --.... "'1wf<.1M>4!218M-ll.. Dlol 604618 6lr RESULTS __ ;::·OWl=:::GE=m=-- All other ma1nlenance , • LARGE Secti:Jnal I o f a CUTE KUteris, Yil!Med • engine work, see us-M 927i U8l!!&Ne: S35 Lawn Vee Jr ~ househrnken. 548-4635 7/4 Newport Dr)' Docks 675-1505 I :.;;:.:ln::;l ..:B:.:ik::ll::_ __ _:.;;;.;:1 Rttl mower 1$25 548-1147 HELP! Save UA 3 Mlorable On the Bay al 201h St. MESA MINI BIKE Wheel chl.ir, folds SSO kittl!t'll. 499-2128 114 S960 18' Lonestar. ~n Alum. Sales • Parts • ~irl Sewm&'. machine W.50 PUPPLES to good home, 9 11 HP EvinNde. Efec. •fart· ZM7 Harbor OI e 548-lm' • &t&-%132 • ueks, mbi:ed. 6'73!488'1 114 er. Tandem trailer. Many STAINED Jd.-. window $30. BUNNIES 81&ck" w'1J,te ~ ~tra,1! OH &fZ.1261, 646-0196 Mof'ercycl11 '300 1389 Ollme cloclc $«). al 545-7450 7/4 16' n.QERGLASS nm.boot G!:Tn'NG Dntte.11 M<D> Day cloci: SlO. 6f2..8MS • MALE POODLE Many utru. 40 h P tessa Scorpion 250 CC g.. TOO!SpiuriJirw ~ e:,~ S me. old 642-8581 ev1nn•. Like new. 962--0.136 tr.1, dirt A road. Brand •• ~ ~ BEAG' "' a.I 3 _, .. T un or e\'l!!ll. new. O.t SMXI s el I n4" LAriclpur OIM --..,m e )'I'S ....... 0 LI K E NE w 1 g I $585. 675-5111 MAN"S diat'l'md .._ 'ii catat good home onty. 96W2:U t IS ' 'TRA \'ELDt'' --1.,, ..=:::.... ____ .:.,;:..:.;;.~I ' .. ,. """" " '56 TRIUMPH 650 CC dltt C!lllet ttone. Cbet t&OO. sell ~s, 1 FCJ, 1 black. runMiout wtm 33 bp Jobneon b'.. ~ -........ -lor $250or tradt. 9fS8..4.'154 615-44M 7/5 motor.Saa1lice!f7l.ei676 .... ...,.,,...,..,, ... ,e. Coeta Mea. 646-1.ZT • E'YE-Tebbfnr; beauL, lux~ CUTE Grey kltten1, 7 wb, SOU'IH O>ut 18. Bly ot ofl TH.E SUN NEVER SETS • urlcua, 1q lutine laahes. bouif!broken. 67S-1911 716 ltxn fi!hkl.r, Maey extras. • O .. tfled's action pa#W. °'°: 646-0368 for app't. SMALL uuble dawmport m.-u?4 For u ad ID •D miul4 White ---&11' Dlmt+Unt b&ul 548-f147 7/6 Dail1 PUot Wut adatl the dock, dial !G:f!1': -----_ .-..-......_ __ ......__.,. #'rttte.-· - - -- - -...-·--..-------.------.-. .-..a ~~~-""'--~"""UIUl.._.._. ................................. :,,0~ ........... ._. .... ~.:..0 ................. .. 10 -d, IL ' 13 ! . - '° ... ... - -' .. r ii; . ~ r:- 1 n . .. = 10 In Id. " Jo , IO •• .. ~. iii "' 13 • ~- 15 el. ... * 16 s od· "" '1<· ;.. !th ST DO "" u, I = rs ' " -. IO ... ... "' . I ,. . t -. -• ... o4 - ,. ......... ". + .. • •• • ' C•mpers I -OPBI ROAD iFACTORY DIRECT I SALE ............. -...... , ............ . ,,, ... \.•·"\I .·•t+ •• , -·------_.....:; ........ __ _ • ' . ..... ···~ .... --., ,, . ' . . .. 9600 TRANSl'ORTATION '' ' . . . c-·•·":""---~ -. .. ,_ .. .. . \ . -· __ ,... .. '' ,r -------July 1968 DAILY PILOT~ f!tANSPORTATION UMd Cart TRANSPORTATION ITltANSl'OltTATION Sport c... '9610 ,Vied.Cart 990UIU'-Md..;.;....;c_.,."----"°";,.:..;..; CHEVROLET .; STATION Wagon 1960 Bui ck lnvecta Good tires. $450. 548-4548 '55 CAD Conv, irnmac, nr new tires, full pwr, Looks &: runs great! $375 54~7594 CHARGE IT! CA MARO CHEVROLET ONE THING 'ABOUT 'A USED VW IT LOOU AS HOMILY AS A NIW ONI. S. ...._ YH pt ... .,..., .... ft't .. _. !Ille ..... ltf l'WI ,..,.., ....... ., ...._ .._...,. lleft ,_.i ... WW 16 ,.a.r ..t.ty· •M ,...,.,.. ... mt. AMI lleft .. 100% ......... 111..t .... ..,.., • ..,.... ... -I• w•111..i ,_... fer ll Hys • 1 IOI ........ wlllc•••• .-ftrd. WIMlt ,..·,.~ ptftltf h • ...... Ht •afr IHb .i..t-. It rA1 tW _,,tee. -: ........ lrWMhll-. ,.., .... tr.Rt .... ._... .... ._.. ""9-. efMtrlMI .,.,... '67 vw '67 vw '58 vw SH., lM. ••HY Ml!•lp'd s.R,., S • • r • • f, P.lty PANEL Factory Nltullt 1ff7 +-· "J•lp'4 + ...... VW 9n1IM, new Jllnt •xc.rltnt condltt.n. . r '1699 '1799 $999 '66 vw '66 vw '65 vw left•. Wlllte .•• 11, .... ,., ra1tHck. White, Fully Sedan, Gray. Pul + Nclll1. 9411ulp'd + rdle. -.ulp"d + AM/PM. '1599 $1799 $1499 '65 vw '65 vw '64 vw lt4an, .... Air coM. & S..,._l. W •It•· Filly SMan, G r • • n, Fully' racllo. ... ,.,+ ..... eciiulp'd + radle. $1599 '1799 $1299 '63 vw '62 vw '60 GHIA ............ " .... ,., ..... .... ... ., .. lllp'lll c • .,. ...... '91ty ..... , •• + ....... +.-. +-· •1199 '1099 $999 '61 GHIA '63Poncho '62 vw C.1•rtlli•, I.... h I I r --·-' ...... 'T..; ......... ,Mk· ............... ...... up. wfth ..., ..... am,.. •999 '3199 .. ... ~ 999 -- 549.0101 in-1190 1970 Harbor llYd., Costa Mesa --------. -- ..... . --'· ..... -,, ... _.... • 1 '· • -.... i: .,, "' ..... s:-.. \ ..... ~ ........ ,..._ --1. ; .j .. :· -· . . • --: July-1968 · NSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'ORTATION Cm 9900\hod c.,. r 9900UHd Ca,. 9900\IHd c ... Y'!'CMIUHdC.,. 9900 Used Can 9900 UMd C.rt -u .... c ... ' ,~ONNELL CHEVROLET'S -USED CAR CENTER SPECIALS '65 IMPALA '67 CHEVROLET 'station wagon. 327 V8, .1utomatic. air oond., PS, radio, hea ter,_ tahitlan turQ. w/turq., \'inyl lnlP..r. Extra clf'an. tRDY Delu:i.:P sporl van. Automatic, radio, healer, 3 seal8, red and white ~1th red df'luxe inf Prior. tTYV5JOI •62) $2295 52495 '65 CHEVROLET '63 RIVIERA !.iallbu supel'" 11porl f'nnvertibJP. VI'. automatic, pov.•t>r ~l!'f'rin~. radio, hPah•r. tahlti&n turq. with "'hite \'inyl bucket Hardtop COllPt'· Aut omatic, alr cond., full P<>"'cr, radio, heater, ermine ~·bite "1th red leather trlm. IOKK960) seats. <NCC803l $1695 51895 '66 MUSTANG '64 CHEVROLET Hardtop coupe. VB. auton:iatic. _ po1,1•er steering, radio. heater, "'h1te "ith red interior. (VCU160) 51795 i..r ton pickup. 8' l''leetside, V8, auto· matic::, radio, heater, cu.st. cab. IR284171 51595 '65 IMPALA '64 FALCON Sport coupe. VB, automatic. pow!?r steer- ing, radio, heater, Mtin sih•er with black interior. (0RB990) 51395 f\Jttn·a H.T. CO\llJt'. V8, automatic. po"-'er stt"ering, radio, hrater. fTOT758) 51295 '65 MERCURY '64 CHEVROLET Montclair hardtop coupe. VS, automatir. power r;teering, radio, heater, low mile· a&e. ermine white with b!ul! interior. Impa la . V·B, Ru tomfltJc, pow~r slPerinJ:, radio, heater, silver blue tu- tone. No. 69\A (RVM685) $1795 ' 5895 CONNELL 2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ~:546-1203 ~Ts 546-1200 '64 PONTIAC Grand Prix. VB. automatic, power steer- ing, elec, windows, R&H. Danube blue w/white vinyl roof. (NQX710) 51195 _ '64 FALCON Deluxe .station wagon . Automatic, power steering, radio, heater, ermine white w/ blue vinyl interior. (HGF848) 51295 .'64 RAMBLER Classic 770 .station wagon . Automatic, power steering, radio, heater, blue with blue interior. (MPN106) 51095 ----------------------~ '64 FALCON Station wagon. Automatic, power steer· ing, radio. heater, ermine white w/};llue interior. (HGF848) '66 CHEVROLET Sport Van. Radio and heater, green and white tu-tone with deluxe vinYI interior. (TGT221) 52195 - . '65 PLYMOUTH Fury 4 Dr. Sed~ VS, automatic, factory air condltlonln,i, ivory with blue lnlf'r-- lor .. fHOU599) 51395 . '62 CADILLAC Sedan DeVille. Factoey air conditioning, automatic, full power, radio and hea~r. lESR5mJ 51195 '68 CHEVELLE -Malibu. Automatic, radio, heilter, pow~ er 1tttring, CVIM 6911 $2895 '67 CAMARO 327 V8, autom11t\C', radio, heater, power steering. CULS185) 52495 '66 CAPRICE Custom coupe. 327 V8, automatic, power steering, factory air conditioning, radio, heater, like new. No. Pl624- 52695 '67 EL CAMINO C\latom. V8, automatic, power ateerinJ', radio and heater, ermine w hltf'. (V4-2925) 52595 ' '64 CORVETTE Futback. 4 speed. AM·FM, JOO H.P. V8 eng., pot;.itraction axle, excellent condition. (JJ?.801) 52695 '67 FIREBIRD Hardtop coupe. 4 speed, pnwer steerina;, radio. heater, Verdoro green with black bucket 1eat1. (UOF972) 5279_5 '65 CHEVROLET Monza coupe. Factory air l'nndltloning. Automatic, radio, he&l!'r, erml~ white with blue vinyl bucket 11eaU. No. R1582 51495 '64 BUICK ~ Skylark 4-Door. Automatic. power stttr· ing, radio, heater, gold with aaddle interior. CWX1'135l 5995 ' - -. -Used Cars 9900 I Used (;an 9900 Used (a~ 9900 -. -- . cm oc1 A 9600 1moortoc1 Autos 9600 lmportot! Autos 96001mportod Autos 9600 CHEVROLET . CHEVROLET CHRYSLER ------1 =i-~po;iirti;iiiii~uti;ii"~;iiiii;i;iiii~iii;i;i~;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiii..:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij 1963 Oimet OJstoni ~tation 1_964_Lln_rol_"_Con_tm.n_"_J <1 :2j '66 CHEVY Impala hard top, 1964-IMPALA Super Sport ps, '63 CHRYSLER, 1'"'ull pwr Wa.gon ~ Dr: ~ mile~ Dr Town Sedan. Full pow· COMET CONTINENTAL t!· -.&ft PATSEL• ::Dick SIMONS . . ~ .. ·~ .. . sport coupe. dlr, exotic pb. Auto. Air cond. Periect 11.ir bucket stoaU;, imma.c. 1n· thrifty six Wlth mck. rad10 1 1 · conc:l'tion and bla k lmh · t · I ·' 5 11ide & out. 764 w ......... SL and heater. Gold metalic er, ac °!""Y ~ 1 ' . green, c p in er1or. cond. Ca I 11.1ter pm. ~u• fini._" wi"" m•t~•-· _,1 l•_ather mtenor. , ~ spuitling V-8, automatic, power 642~82 CM "'' m u.u.i'b .., ... a .__,, fi 1·• Full ___ , . 1 . Full .....,__ _ .. uver me ..... c n ..... steering, low milea. Will .. ,,um enor. r,-.,_..,. ._,.., Pri $19!15 .... olde< ........ Pymnto CHRYSLER COMET J"o' ""HNlotso""NHorl>o& 'sBolvdN. bl:,.,,.;... H""" Blvd -. :: :;• . .. . -- SERVING THE HARBOR AREA FOR OVER· 5 YEARS ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF THEIR NEW LOCATION $46.86· 494-9773 or 639-3617 JOHNSON & SON '66 STA Wag. A-1 cond. V-8, SACRIFICE, leaving &N>a. '62 MERCURY Comet. 2 dr Lincoln-Mt auto, pwr 11tr, fac ft:ir. Sac! '67 O!rysler 2 door, air. RI 11. n d a rd. red. radio & • Cosla Mesa ~ch O:l~il:~:=e~:zch $1895. 644-1665 $2995. 67?.-2776 hf'Atl"r. $650. 548-58fi6 I. U Harbor Blvd. 642-'lU\O l~.l Harbor Blvlf. 642.7ffi0 •••• ~~=ES~~;;. ;.·cn.m·· •• ~YW-HER·E·· .. J =~=\:,.·r~:!~i f. t rond. 772-7440 Mon. thru NOW AT OUR NEW LOCATION ,-~~;,,~~.:::..~~ "'_.,., '65 CONTINl:NTAL . ELMORE MOTO ·;·-bl"' full pow ... ·" AUTO CENTERINC. t CHOOSE YOUR TOY OT A FROM THE LARGEST s!! : ~~~~~~~~~ 64 2-1450, a-18-4326 Just Arrived 1969 "Corolla" : : CORVAIR SPECIALIZING IN BEA UTJFUL LATE MODEL SPORTS CARS HERE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPW OF THE KIND OF CARS WE SELL 1966 MGB. ONLY 11,000 MILES 1967 TOYOTA SPORT 800 COUPE (Only 2 in California) 1967 MGB. ONLY 15,000 MILES 1963 VW SQUAREBACK WITH 39,000 MILES 1967 DATSUN 1600 SPT. CPE. 16,000 MILES 1966 VW WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING $2495 (2) '67 MUSTANGS FULL POWER, AIR COND. FACTORY WARRANTY. 15,000 I. 16 ,000 MILES. All Of OUR CARS ARE GUARANTEED FOR YOUR ASSURANCEll OPEN SUNDAYS 10:00 A.M. 10 4:00 P.M. (}oltln W.jt AUTO CENTER Inc. 1984 NEWPORT BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA 642-8460 • ,_ , --· -----......___.-__-~. -. : ' :. f t i i : : • FINANCING AYAILAILE OM APPIOYU CllDfT .......................... • • ! FREE i : . ! LAS VEGAS i i VACATION ! f 3 DAYS-2 NIGHTS : i AT TNt : i llACIEllDA Ham i ! ........ ~ .......... : .. ,.,...... ""'""""' : •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 158 BEACH BLVD. WESTMINST-ER Ji.REE LAS VEGAS VACATION WTTI-1 A '62 Corvalr Lakewood Wa;;on artic \O.'hlte with con. trasting blur in!erior. f'resh f and pretty 1g r.iin be. Ger thi.• mUeagr maker. This wffk:end only $695 $1770 ;~~ : Er~~~E : 15.UI Beech Blvd., Wttmn11tr AMERICAN CAR 1961 <l>•v Monu """ .. ; .. TRADES WANTED • .; with red vynJ intf'fior. Aut(l.- ..A matic . rndki k hrRt~r. fi1ll \f Pricii S.U"1. Also many morp ,. in stock. • JOH'NsoN'&soN Lincoln·Merrury t C.Osta Mesa Branch ~ 11911 Harbor Blvd. 642-7{'6(] 'f I '62 CORVAJR MONZA $250 : Autom, new tires. Blick Ir Maroon. Cll'an. 1147-165$1 fi.1 MONZA SPYDER Xlnl °"1di Hon $699 i .......,, '64 MONZA 4 IJ!>d. m the floor. Good tlrs 1150 536-8.S41 CORVEnl '63 CORVETTE 2 'l'QPS, 'ts mr. l body. M&ny Xtru! Must 11ell. Br.tit "ff tr , 774-4ll!t or ~1307 1sk Jor 0..:k. COUGAR : • ~-... '?';l~2! ••• , ~-· i : : • .......... 'Ill COUGAR AM·FM Heat,.r Low miltll.£1! S.1.500. 6'13-l!<M orlll~ Ev~11. 0.1!)' Pilot Wknt Ads? f Al•aya 1 Go-(;()? • .. . . . .. ' <= :.:: ·--·= ·- --- ··= ·- --· -= --= -= == I -. -.- l~!.'!!~!~·~rlM~A~-~~MGO~~·"'~""~"~ ... ~A~u~-~~'600~,u..a-c... -TllANSPOllTATION II COUCiAR UM c... -Uooc1c ... · PORD "/Jiff maxe'J " TOYOTA · Orange COlltlly'r lewd Dealership ·opfJN NOW . . at 1181 BEACH BLVD. Huntingfon Bch. 847-8555 ,..,.,. ..... , 1969 TOYO-TA COROLLA THI 11•-lf p•rfor-11e41 che111pln frM Tc.yet•, 2 d• 1•d1n, oquip1»9tl wffli en 111 tyttclwo-11 4- •P•" tren11ni1•io11 wlfft 1 fleer--untotel 1ffclr: •1", Htetor, whltt w•ll ff,.., th1tM 911..,. •ll!Yt irlm,' beck·up light, etc, $1770 ' DIUYIRID +:.~~ HIRll .. W • have the entire selection of new Toy· otas including tho Land Cruiser rMdy for im.,,.diato dor.vory! { DODGE 1967 c.up.. H.T. Cpo. Al»-rnEE LAS VEGAS kian wbile 'Ntlll belutlf\ll VACA110N wrnl A blue ·...i 1ntor1or. Pow..-_'64 DODGI DAllT '64 POllD'STA. WAG. ......... aldo.,RAB.U,IXll Bog';;:!• ndlo, 1* •. Tlle()luotrySqulra ... allba mDe1. StlD ...... --.,. war--cDr, beip. R-. lilll UM !eauttM pom wtitte rmtY. Full Pr1c. 1*. brud new -.m tab trwll w1th wood graln trtm. eon. ht car lot en Harb:>r Blvd. or $125 cash dels. Pymta trastlng blue vtnyl interior. JOl:INSON 'I< SON lll-86 mo. Call .,,..u, "11-..,,....,.,11.ar.Au ... J:v• IJDcom.Memlr')' IT'D or mstT. a lulsap rack. SboMoom ():)sta Mesa Branch frffh. Specla1 this wetktnd 1911 -Blvd. &Q.'llllO FALCON only $1>96.00 '*"' TAL or pe.ymll u law u .. dll '61 FALCON 2 dr. Sedan. l p1ymt 6 '83.00 per mo 0.A.C. DODGE .... $315 ,.,.... ...... Ile ..... __ =TI~~~ •oom.m• ELMORE '65 DODGE DART FORD TOYDTA hardtop. 1bit Is the bard to ,67 FORD c.ouna.,. ~-·'-M'.1ra\8 ftnd G.T. model Beautiful ~-· Ph. IM-3D tn Sllvu metal.le g:t'eell, wagon. Moa erttn in war. lSD Beadl Blvd., Wltmnltr automatic trans, new wsw ~· 390 ~~-•ut1~:.. P'N!'· titel. 'Ihlly a pretty M.ltomo-•netr, pwr ......... , .... -... &Jr 4 SPEID b11e $pedal ..,.. 11 .. oo cood. Call 646-8176 "'"' "1 SPECIALISTS pl_; T&L Ir ..,...,11 u k,,. 328 J:. 191b st., CM HIGH PERFORMANCE "' '&6 FORD Galaxy ""''· alr, CUSTOM CARS $51 dn "--yml & "I 27,000 mi.; pwr. ltetr A. r-' ~ wlubtt.. Xlnt. $1 , I 9 I • LARG!.!r SELIX."TJON IN per mo. 0.A.C. induda tu. ---ORANGE COUNl'Y lie. l lnterut. ~ ' ELMORE . •31 FORD -'5' °"" .,.. Selected Alltel • -.._ "* d ,...., Ce11ter neeck b:>dy wcrt. $40lt or TOYOTA. 11ut<t1er . .....,,. .... ma H....,. lllvd. m- MOTCIUJ DIAL direct 642'"5678, awi-'64 F1lrl1ne 894-3320 """ ... -alt -ml ""' 15.100 Bee.ch Blvd., wmpnm lilten ID the pbla ruw1 6'l5-47'!fi 9abo Now Cano PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MONDAY, JULY 8th 4- S A ' • :~~~~~ . .,~.~~-~-.$316'6' 37 rtclio, ltu .. r, pow•• 1t.•ri11g, ·ftctory ' .. t ir c•11clitioni11g, white wi ll tirt1, Hnkcl gl11t. Stock N'o. 270-21. '68 OLDS s331ft26 Cutlt11 "S" Hol. Coup•. VI, •ufo. 0 . '"'tic, r.c11., i...t•r, pow•r 1+.1ri"9 I br•k•1, f•ctory 1ir co11cl., WSW, ti"t•cl 91111. Gold. · ~.~'! .:~ ~~.~~"" ... s2s992s dio, h••t•r, pow•r lf••tlng, whit• weU1, tlntlfd wfnd1hl1ld. No. 159 ~.E!f .• '.~~.~~~~ '"'"· $2825 74 ,_..., 1+.arl~. whit• 1ld1 w1ll1, tlnt•cl wlrt~hhi•ld. No. 553 EVE!lY VAWE RAltD USED CAR USltD BELOW GUARANTEED TO BE KELLY BLUE BOOK '65 OLDS · $422400 J1tst1r II " Door H1rdlop. v.1, tllfo· I 111etic, rtdio, h••l•r, pow•r 1t1•ri119, whi .. wtll tlr••· Stoc• No. 541A. Under Whol•1•I• llu1 l oot -. :~.~~ !~~~!~,..... '949°° redl•, h-•tw, 11w•r •t.•rl119, fecfory , t it co11ditlo11l119. whit. w•ll fir••· Stock No. 172A. U114.r Wholt0 ••I• llue l••k. . '.~. ~~~!~.L~.~"1'"'11'$1099°° rtdl•, .._. .. ,, , • .,,., .... 1119, whit. w•n .1 • • , tlr••· St•ck N•. S7-4A. Uncl•r Wholiwl• 11111 look. '68 OLDS Del. s31· 89°' H•llct.y· S.dtll.' v.1, •ufomttlc, r•dl•, ht1t1r, pow•r 1t••rin9,. ,'j..w•r ..... k ... ftctory t it 1•11ditlonl11... whit• w•ll 'tlr•t, tl!fhtl tl•1t. Stock No. 101-22. :~ .. ~~~ ... ~!~ .. "'''· s3.597 53 h••+-•, p.ow•r 1te.ring, pow•r ~r•k•1, f1ckfy elr .. nclitfonl119, whlt. will tltfl, tlf!tH ti•••· St.ck No. 101.20. ~.~?. .:~ .. ~~~ ..... :. $41902" ,ow•r 1f••ri"I• whit• wtll tir•1, tfllt.4 £ wi"dllii•ld. N•. 110 '68 OLDS Cutlass .$356177 St•tio11 W•9011, V-1, e1tom1tic, r•cllo, h•tl•r, pow•r •*••ring, pow•r l.rek•1, f•ctory air eeitdltlo11l11t. whlf• will tlrt" tinted tie-. lfMlt No. -401-Jl. WHOLESALE OR LESS! '67 FALCON · $104900 2 Do°' SMen. 6 cylind•r, 1ticlt .Mft, · r•di•, h1•f•r. whit• will tir•1. St.&lt No. IJJA. Under Whol•1•I• llu• Ioele. ;~.~~~.~~~~,~~~;:'107 400 whit• wtll ·tl•••· st':: Ne, Al26J, UM•t Wheltttl• l lu• ..,_ •• '63 OLDS e..,., ........ flc, ,.41., hti ..... ,. ... ~ rt.•rlrtt• l .. ck 'Ne, 1'1-10. UH• Whot11•I• 1111 ... ~ • '67 CHEVELLE M•libe ,,.,. c•upe. ·VI, ••hlfl•Kc, RIH, ,._ st••ri"t· Stock N•. SI IA. Uncl•t Whel•1el• llM 1 .. k. s74r, Dozens. More To .. Choose From Cl..anc• .Prices Effectlye Through Monday, July 8 ' OTHER DEALERS ADVERTISE IT ••• WE DO m ~ wz ARI NEVm SAnsFlll> U?mL YOO AllE" 2850 HARBOR UNITERSITT ' BLVD. COSTA MESA NIW 146 IHO usm 146-5553 .. JulJ . IM 2Dr.Hntop FINEST WAGON ON ' THE ROAD lllAND NEW '61 CHIYSUll TOWN & COUNTIY WA•ON laqdecf _.. atrw ...._ •IHlw "1!.::r." ,_ :w ..... ff Lltflt-..... Tlnf9d Wl.::ield !~u.~ M•">' Mo,. I.ti~ L. Wlilttlldowofta Staci N •. 67J '68 PLYMOUTH l'Ul'Y Ill c.rwt. VI. autD., lt&H. -&'-I~ .. brllket. l'ACTORY AJll: COHDITIOHINll, Jl'•d. Mmlnt)' Nit. tGf $3222 '64 RAMBLER $799 • .... w..-vt. eutofnltk, ... lo, llMIW, ,.._. ff91rin9, ........ Ndc. ... ,,.,....... ... - $2195 '64 BUICK ~llctr .. VI. ..--1k, rlcllo, '*"''" ,,.,,. 1'911N & tlrtkts, IUXUrt ~. ... "" $1311 '66 CHRYSLER ....._, \::'.; M.T. VI, ....... , .... ,..., ...... t._ ..... ....... ..... ___ .... _ ' $1195 '65 IMPERIAL ~ 2 Dr. H.T. vt. ...._, lt6H. .......... ....,11 .............. l'ACTCMIY All COMO. l'act. _,'!"' ....... $2551 ----------.... -· ..... ----------------............ -..._ .. -.... --------.... ----....--------.... .._ -----···--,·--~ .............. , ............................ ~ ......... _,,,_ .... _.._, ... I S ' ,., • •• • 'J w w--. 'Y '!:I -.1 1 -,,.. ..,,, "J ") .t,• ,t.;··1 r: .. •1 "'I -'• • •1 •t ¥ ~ i ,1 f '• • "'+o'. \' • r r ii. ,. ' t if • • • ., • D!.!' '.' .. -"T July l'Jfil " ' -"'.~ ~ :i 1• PONTIAC j. lm¥lll- BOB LONGPRE PONTIAC WITH THE 1ST BIG EXECUTl_VE CAR SALE SAVE from sticker price Charming (heapies with Bumper Value • 1968 FIREBIRD "400" SAVE from sticker price $ DOWN DELIVERS ANY CAR IN STOCK Verdore Green, loeded includ- ing •ir with low, low miles. Motor No. IU 142556. 19&8 CATALINA 4-0oor Hardtop, V•tdora Green. Lo•ded with elmost ev•ry extt•. SAVE from sticker price $ '65 DATSUN PU TRUCK '63 MINI JEEP QUAUTY CONTROL sum TESTfD USED CARS' -Plus Tax & Lie. On Approved Credit- M•1111f•c41lrff liy C••li•11 I• St11 Di1~t1. Tioit 4 itYli11tl1r ••fflp1•t• wift. Cemp•r kp it •••• "' t• ,. ,,, ""'""'' 11111. $588 '61 FALCON 4-DOOll '62 PONT. CATALINA J-4'1or l.1rclfop, ttdi1 111d h11!tr, t ulom1fic, ,-wer 1t.trillf . \11ry cl11n . $988 '65 TEMPEST 4-tl11r, r1.li1 111d h1e+.r, t u+.mttic, 111 111f- .te1uli11t car. $1188 '63 PONTIAC St1+i11 '""'''"· Te"',..,+ •11•t."', l1di1 I h11t1r, t11+1,..,1fic tren1min i111, fl,,11 ¥i11yl '""'· $988 < '~ON BEACH BLVD. , AT THE ; GARDEN GROVE · FREEWAY . 13600 BEACH BLVD., R1dio. h11!1r, ••c1ll111! contlition, 11mpl1t1 with ''"'"'' 1h1ll , $1188 '55 FORD 4-door, .111lom1lit , Clt111 &tr. $248 ' '62 DODGE POLARA \1-1, a11lom1lic, power 1!1111"t· $488 '63 CHEV. IMP. CONY • '62 FORD 'h-TON 6 ~li11d1r, l -tpeecl, ••w p•i•t, $988 fUAIJn' C011110llm • IAll1T - V ... ...:;;,: ..... -,,_ ........... ..,......_,CA .. ,......o.r...., ~ ~ -a 1'(. '"'"~ II. ' 0 ::.::...... i : g -a "" .......... ,..... 'l!l a ::-:.. ~ ~ ·-----------a }(. ,..,.. ______ a ,,; =---·----~ ~ ,_ _______ .)!( a ..... (II 0 J( "'----D o< Cllto" ....,... 1!!l a --~ 1ill a -a }( -------0 ~ ::WJ/' .,;-8,m1c :r..U • WESTMINSTER • 892-6655 ; People h•ve been buying With confidence and satisfaction from Bob Longpr• for 20 ye•r• Qu11ity Con- trolled, Safety Tested Used Cars Thi1 1tick•t on 1v•ry lob l on9pr1 U11cl C•r i1 your ••1ur- •nc1 th1 cir .h•1 b .... ••••• d '"' ch1,~1d •• m••t our ki9h ··-co .. ditio ... d . 1t1nd•rd1 . .-.u Clfl ••• r•,ondi- tionecl to l11t i nd pric1d la •• 111 11!'.vl!'l'Y Qllailf'f CllfllrnllHI 111· '' 1ere<:1 Boll Ll"llOre uwcr Cl f II equl-d wlltl f brand new ' ply wft] .. Wiii lifll '63 MERCURY o~ V ... 1!,J!Omlllc, rHlo. lltr .. 0 -sr1111!rl"'' whllew1H !Ires. Stk. Na, 16.lt'l. '63 PONTIAC --leml"'· ...... Jl,_H, Hnftd 0 glas.o. 1111;. NI. ll07' . '66 PONTIAC '65 CMEV. ~lrnP. SS, m VI, ''" ,_., a· '-,JP•I-. •..c:, ti.,,, I., J ,_ 0.'flOfl 4 pl'f WIW. lie-• osu m . s.i988 '63 PONTIAC -VINTUltA COU'°I 0 V·I, •Illa.. r•d .. htr., 11Wr 1•eerl"t• PW• br•ku, •w tire.. ll"le<I 11111, 5tk, Ne, ""'· '63 PONTIAC 1""'\Gr•fld l"rlJ.', lo..ied •""'fm0 V r.clla, full power, flKI. •l• <Olld. f new D1V!Oft • pl'f llrn. '64 · Volkswagen 0 ITATIOM WANN S•ll.i••• Mell: v1rl1nt. OM owntl'". lmm1CVl11• t;lll'ldl· tlon. Ve,., loW miles. '63 MERCURY ~"uu 100~r. •·01u. 1111tlen V w-. f,... Dl'l'ffl,, ~"IV ,,_ '65 PONTIAC • JTRANSPORTATION TkANSPORTA TION TRANSPORTATION I ·Used Cars 9900 Used Cars 9900 Uud Cars 9900 FORD FORD FORD '.WERE: . .s\f f GH PRICES! '59 WAG. T .sa l !IP· hu~t link. AFB quad duel exh. Be!!: Dffer/ $250. 598.1064 '!'ii FORD 4 dr R&.H, auto lo mi good running cond. $250 or I'll-st Dlf 545--0666 '6.1 GALAXIE 500, .Ya eng, 4 dr-, R&H,CruisemAtic. $975 540-4:1;4 ~ ~ 1637 " ,; Inventory Reduction SALE! .loe Revilla ~ Thi• I• o.., Leader '67 Codlllec Co•,. lo Vlllo Full power, ''''· 1ir, new ci r WI•· r1nly, 9r1y, rid 11•ih1r interior. Im. ,.,,c, co,,dition! l'lllCID TO SELL! $4795 '61 Codlllec Ct•,. • Ylllo Turquoi11, bl1ck le1th1r int1rior, lew fr!il11, futl pow1r, f1cl. 1ir. leouliful! NEW CAii W.4.1111.4.NTY. $5195 '61 CHlllec SH.11 • VIiie Norm1,.dy blw1, bl.ck vinyl tap, blw1 ;,.1., f1ct. •ir, full p11w1r, low ,.,a11, NIW CAii WAllllANTT. $5295 'U CodUI« SM.a • Ylllo Whit., h1u• ¥inyl hiop, hlu• int. lot •I c•r. 14,000 1ct111I mil11, 1 own•r, full ,ow1r, f1ct. 1ir. YEllY Sl'ICIAL $4395 ., ....... a--. $1895 LLEN '67 Codllloc c.11,. • VIII• Sil-. er, bl 1ck vinyl !op, ••d leetl.er inter., lik 1 new. low mil t•. N1w ct r werr1n+y, full pow1•. f1cl. 1ir cond. GOllGlOUS! $5395 '67 Codllloc c •• ,. 4e Ylllo Ch,,t .. ut l l r11wn, bei~e ~i11yl top, bei9• leetl.er inl•rior, full pow••, f1cl. ~; .. N•• "' w1 n 1"~· llEAL IEAUTY! $5195 '67 Codllloc El DOf'Mo Gold, brown ¥inyl lop, 11ddl1 !11th- " int., full pow1r, f1 cl. 1ir, ,,. mil11, NEW CAii WAllllANTT. II· OTIC! $6395 '66 CHlllec C••,. • Viii. Y•ll ow, b11ck 1+1. •. int. w/bl.ck ¥i nyl tnp, I 11w11••· loc•I c1•. 16,000 "'ile1. •LAMOllOUSI $4495 'St FOf'4 T·IW L .. .:.. "'a, •. 1.,11 c1•. A 111.&L •1.&u- TY i ONLY $695 '67 Codllloc Co1po do VII .. Blue, ble,k vinyl lop, hlu 1 ;,.t1ri1Jr, lull pow'" f•ct. •ir, low mil11, "'w c•• "''"'""'· YEllY Sl'ICIAL! $5195 • ,, Codllloc: So4o11 • Yillo o •• 1c 9'''"· bl1t k ¥i11yl top, bl1ck i"lerior, full pow1r, f1 cl. 1ir, crui1e co,.hol, 1ler10 ••die, '•· mil,., ,ACT. W.4.1111.4.NTY. YUMMY! $5395 '66 Codllloc SHH do V10o 11ue, hl1ek ltkr. i .. t., full pow1r, f•cl. 1ir, low mil11, NEW CAii WAllllAN· fl. llEAL CLASS! $4095 '62 CHllloc Co1po 4o Ylllo l ur9ufldy, full power, f1cl. 1ir. I ow"''· loc•I Cit. 40,000 ACTUAL MILIS. $1795 .,, ....... Dr. Mu1t 11• thi1 ci r, l•w ,,.;1,,, LOCAL CAii. $1195 H1r1 •• 1•rv1 you over th1 \.oticl•y1. 20 Y•1 " ••P· '67 Codllloc So.-• VII .. Turci ., hl1ck i11t., full paw•r. f•ct. 1ir, low ""ile1. NEW CAI WAlllANTY. STUNNINlil $5195 '66 Codll'-S.-. • YIHo 81ig1 --A r••I •p.oci1I huy. Li~• 111w. l11w mile1, f•ct. 1ir, FULL POWEii. $3895 BUI lo1te• .. ,, OLDSMOBILE·CADILLAC, INC. 494 ,1084 1150 So. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach Imported Autos 96001mported Autos 96001mportitd Autos 9600 Save -by Shopping in Laguna Beach • • la1'9est Stock in History s .. & Drive Thu All Ntw TOYOTA '1770 Corolla 2 Dr. full pric• + ••• a lie. • AU Colon • All Equipment • Financin9 AvaUable Once you drive a Toyota -- There "IS" no other car! -is the key lo o better Buy! 900 SO. COAST HWY. Laguna Beach 494.7503 ---------~ -··--·----~-~~~-~•L-~ ....... AL-~-~•~A.._.. .. ._.~-~---~-~--------·-•----- ' . . . .. . ------------. ------+ I • • .., .,i • • • • ,. .. • " .. •• iol ~ ' ........ ••' .. . . ..... ..-.. -... ~ .. . . . -.. ,. . ... . . ~ .. • .-COMMAND PERFORMANCE -. , . "Command P erformance." This is a particularly good time to a8k Nabers Cadillac for a "Command Perform· &nee" ••• an ideal op portunity to take the wheel of the elegant 1968 Cadill a c and experience the respomiveoess • of the largest, smoothest V.S engine ever to power a pa88C11ger car. Enjoy Ca dil- lac's quiet comfort an4 the convenience of its many power auist8. A "Command Performance" t~t drive will he. yours for the asking. •• • •• At last our new Cadillac inventory has increa sed -we'r e r eady to ta lk business -in your favor •• All Mod els ·;; Stock '65 PLYMOUTH The Spo~ Barracuda model. A beautiful lit- tle turquobe car with black buc ket seat in- tl!rlor fully equipped including VS engine, radio and heater, tinted glass and of course white aide wall tires. This will make a perfect car tor the kids or wife. $1333 . '65 RAMBLER Hardtop mupe. The ever popular Clwitc · 'T10 model. Equipped with V8 engine, reclining bucQt seats, radio and beat.er, white side wall tire&. A fine little arctic white car with all whill! vinyl interior. This one won't be here Jong so be ·sure you are the lucky buy@?', be here tint $999 '67 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille. Stunning Monll!rey green ex- terior with black vinyl roof and full leather interior. Full power including power vent win- dowa and of course factory air conditioning. Don't wait on this one because it won't list long at this Drive Me Home This Weekend Prke. $4777 ~ OLDSMOBILE The popular Y-BS model 4 door. Fully equip. ped with automatic tranmllssion, power slttr· tn&. radio and heater, white side wall tires, tinted glass. A beautiful desert gold e>rterior with original factory air conditioning. A lot of car for very little money. Take lhi.I one honM this weekend for only . $888 OVER 60 QUALITY CADILLACS TO SELECT FROM '65 CONTINENTAL A 1tunning Goddeu gold automobile wttb full leather matching:' Interior. Has all the power accessories including power seat,. power win· dows, power steering, power brakes, power antenna, po~r vent windows, AM/FM radlo, cruise control and for summer driving tn com- fort factory air conditioning. An abaolute)¥ betluWul car at a low price of $2555 '65 CADILLAC _Sedan DeVille Montft'ey gl'ffn with white. vinyl roof and nylon and leather Interior. Full power equipment including power door locks. power vent windows. Ult steering wheel, AM/ FM radio plus rnueh more, Don't mW tb1I outltandlq buy at • . . $2777 '63 PONTIAC The elegant Bonneville model equipped with a~tlc transmission, radio and heat@r, JJOwer i;teering, power brakes, fun ,vinyl in- terior, tinted glass, white side wall Jirea and llir conditionln.g. This beautiful light gold Pontiac wiUt matching Interior Is sale priced' tor a quick aale this week. Be sure to test drive-this one. $999 '64 CADILLAC Coupe DeVllle sporting a silver e>rterior with the black vinyl roof. This 1howptece is equip- pt!d naturally with factory air copditionlng and has all th@ luxury PQWer features lnchld- lng power vents -steering • brakes • windows and t.be AM/FM radio. Drive thil one home now! $1888 '63 CHEVROLET The Impala ' Door hardtop, a ~cy popular model. tully equipped with VB engine, radio and heater, power ateering. white 5.ide we.ll t1tt'I, and of COU1'1;e factory air condltionlnr. Beautiful aqua finish with matching interior. Absolutely clean. $999 . '63 CAD ILLAC That m011t popular El Dorado convertible. Thls automobUe i1 flnished-·ln arctic white with beauttful red leather Interior. Has all the C&dlllac power accessories Including power bucket aeata, power windowa, power vent win- dows, electric eye, cenll!r console, plus much more. 'I'hil is an absolutely aora;eoua automo-bile., $1666 '64 IMPERIAL Crown ' door hardtop Beautiful: majestic blue e>rterlor with leather and tapestry inll!r!.or. Fully equipped with power 1teerlng, power brakes, power windows, power 6 way aeet, automatic dimmtl", AM/TM radlO and of .;ourse factory alr condltloning This ls the top of the Chry1der Imperial line and ls tn ex- cellent condition 51777 '67 CORVETIE Stingray fastback. This one wjll dennitely have to be seen to be tul1y apJ>reclatm. l t'1 a iillvtt sre1 with bl&ck vinyl bucke\ ..... ta and J>O\\'~ by the 427 V8 (3-2bbl carbs) engine with ' 11peed tranamlsslon, aluminwn wbeel1, apeclal rear tires, trarud.1torlzed Ignition, AM/ FM radio, power window and les1 than 9,000 aetual mlles. Tbil cv II hardly used Be IUl"e to see It · $4222 SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN '62 CADILLAC Hardtop sedan. Alpine white exterior with harmonizing: interior. Power equipped with power steering:, power brakea, power 6 way i;eat, electric eye, white aide wall tirec. tinted glaM and much more, Thb older C.dlllac atlll has more than enough drfving lert to suit the busiest mail. or woman. You can't afford not to take a look at this one for onl¥, , .• • $999 '63 CONTINENT AL- stunntng blue exterior with matchin1 lnter· Jor and white top. Thia car hu very, very low mileage and i;hows outstanding care. Fully equipped I ncluding power steering, power , braktt, power windows, power seats, tinted glass, power vent windoW'IS, whill! side wall tires, cndse control and fact, air condition&• $1222 '63 CADILLAC Sedan DtVllle. :l shimmerlnr topaz gold exttt. tor with leather and nylon interior. All luxury equipment including power 1teering, poWer windows, pbwer seata, tinted glasa. power vent windows, white aide wall Urea, crul.ae control. and factory air conditioning. Tb.Ls fine automobile ahowa the meticulous care by its .-ownen. $1444 I~ CADILLAC_ 4-beauttflalb' lln1sMd Emperor blue C'a"'Dae -, wfih harmonizing lntertor: All Ute rtcUJar ·cadWac power features including .poww I way .eat, power ateertn.r. power . brJkes, power windows, and of coune factorY air condltio~ Ing. At this price you an afford to at Jeut . look. Ready for de~lvery right ii.ow. $3666 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM MONDAY thru FRIDAY-9:00 AM to 6:00 PM SATURDAY and SUNDAY , YOUR FACTORY AU'l'HORIZED CADILLAC DEALER SERVING THE ORANGE COAST HARBOR AREA NAB ·ERS 2600 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 540-9100 FORD OLDSMOBILE Leasina Now Practical For Everyone lnereasing numbe'rs of Amttfcana now lease lhe family car -and for 1ome very good reasons. ·so P<»ITIAc 0ota11na .-1-------1 T·BIRD · Roy CARVER ffl't. N.,. top • -i.,drL '66 AMERICAN Cpe. B QI. __ ....;...;::.;.;.;;;_."---~ '62 FAIRLANE SOO Sport '62 OLDS 6, F-85 ~ LEAVING STATEI -··SIM. M6-<l388 '"°"· 1-mil,., e!ean car. FREE LAS VEGAS PONTIAC IXAMPl.I: ' You can now leue a brand new C.OUgar for $92.00• per month, and juat look at what It Includes: Full aervtce and malnll!nance fOl' the next two years ,_ 40000 mlles, AT NO IXTRA COIT TQ YOU1• Your 'twI maintenance lease will Include the fo • lowing tet'Vices: 1. A •.a 11111• .m a warranty, lncl..illnt •II ,.,ts ..... l•Mr· t. All .... .., •M Miner .......... IMlutlfftl "'"'"" utlena, .. ,, allll fitters. a. .,_ .... Con ....... -'"' ............ , .. Nt5-'91tm. •1111 DlstrllM.rtw A.-lrs. 4. Tr•_..._. MJwfiMtntll .... ,.,.1,., ,iue atw h4 MJulltiMnfl .aM ,.,.,,.._ . a. lrab MJwlw•t .. llnlnp, ,.,.,,., ~VI wtMel ............... ,_. "' T1rm retllfellL 70 Alff •1111 •II ,.,..,. Miner •M _...., Wh•1at W ... ........ ....... u:cepf '-'•'" .,.... frem MC ....... ef allillen _, Mllect, L We wtll l*y ,,_, ......... Car. t. Allf_f ·_. en ._ • ar "'-Jlll:u• •R & Seft, All ,.. ......... -.... CNlltt. OTHBIXA-... lftlC. ITA-... -.. WAMIL » -.. ---... .._.,. ..... r:; ... '1: .!..; :; ................... =" . .t:-·1·65-= , .. i::.•125• -·--,._ ·-,._ ..,.. ..... .,.,. ... ,. . ....,., ............ ,, ...... 9'•n. ...... , ...... ,.. JOHNSON Alll IOll .... --• $1"1 .... 642-0tll Coupe V-8, bucket seats. oonv, blue wtwtit top, g{)O(I Mustaellimmed. '64LeMNHI PONTIAC Prioed atSU99. VACA1"ION wrrH A •uto, eng .... "°""· 1195. 3300. Kl 6-4444 --------' ••. !::Ill... Nk<st ID °'""P Cbm\Y, $'!50 Trumon ........ 543-2419 ..................... auto, ""' ..... lo ml SIB---BJ., Colla -RAMBLER e '67 FORD T-llR.D MERCURY 0~~,..~,-~r -• '61BONNEVULEconv.New a.._°""""' -'62w RAMBLER "Ill" Sta. ~-(~• ·-~ nbla"-~-r..s. ~~· rw;.,,t\.1 .. ~." V1-·--tl.rea.Xlntcond.LthrinL, DMr.Wltolll ·lt(IJClland 9in,nHrneweng.,pwr. ---.lf........-......:":...s~-.,.. • ,..."""' .... 1963 Ma-wry Oiatom. Mm· dr. Navajo 'M:Ute. '545. buckf$ eeets. $595. 54&-136T Btinft • lteer1nc and brakel, R/fl. -~ or-tape dedl plat ID otbtr ex· • terey 2 ctr H.T. Pbweor steier-Beaut!\ Hurry! S&cl St&-0866 -iiliiiiiliiiiliiiiiiii;iii,~jiyl.liiiiii•iiiill~ad&:;,· ,;:"":"'~·~· ._~=~-..l-iiliiiM"ii_.umiiii•iiiii!i tru. Blut Book 1QS$3815.00 ' in& • brako1, factory air C.M. alttt 5 pm. Our spedal fbj1 weektnd oond1tion.A ~oneownerTm:inado,'6l,llkeMW,kMld-$499 NO CAil OVER $499 $35fS r =::1:r ,:1~~i. ·==·ml,""'=·= • . _ . ELM 0 01AE JOHNSON & SdN PONTIAC T~ .·. Linooln-Memll"Y 89l-33a c.osta Mesa Eftncf1 1967 Pontiac IA Mana Cpe, 15.'.QJ 8etdl Blvd., Wstmnstr 19U Harb:r Blvd. M2-1f&J ~ ft bun Jl'eeD ~'~~~mouth $9995 :~~·~'!~~oath $6995 , 1Dl!tllic with lik@ new black * EXCEPTDIAL! _ , 62 MERC R/H, New tires 6 yYn1 '1terior .Over heed omn 1990 'm1JNDDEIRD 5 p1111, brUea. Oeen. 1 owner. 1ix, auto., power atffrills., SPT. a»E. r.ct. '' $595. * 548-3'7'l1 w.dlo ol heats-. 1"ull Pria! c:Dm.", ft1D pwr. eqpt. At. '63 MERC Man.uJer S55 RA $1995. trtctlve t..1 bb:a w/bnrmc . 'SS IUICK '199 '60 PLYMOUTH '299 'It CHIYltOl.IT '299 .,,, •• to. H.T. VI, auto, 6, •tick. H, pt1Nf!t Stetrin& il Brak-1st oar Jot on Harbor Blvd. l t11W blue mtw. 1 JD 10,0XI '16 DO.,._ '1H ~·99 ... ca"°"" --. JOHNSON & SON s.. .,_, lloloCIUFICE ....Cd>. 'ii PL YMOU'" ·~99 '60 DOIMll VI, a•t.. H.T. 2 0.. ........ PS. MUSTANG 0:.,.-:.,""::,.: . .X,HNSO:i"'SON 4 SPEED llll -m... ea.1a10 "16 OUIS '1H 'ii PONTIAC '2H '60 MLCOll ~ ... H VI, ••f., ............. .... tlolfl: • .. liOiD SPECIAUSTS 4 SPEED · SPECIALISTS ':!:J:~J HIGH l'IRl'OllMANCI O!W«.lr COUllTT CUSTOM CAU CUSTOM CARS LARGEST lll!UlCTIOK IN Sil•~:"'° S~ um u.-mv.i. ?rn.-C111ter "' MrrAU.tC ,, -. um Jlari>c!r -. !13'f- ._ tap, V ....... nc, 'II P O HTIAC •a 1• _..,,..,x-$Mlll. o..t.»it"'""'*"'"" :mo ........ ow $1111 Pr!-· - '65 MUSTANG V8 Auto. x1nt Ia Your Ad tn our cla.medsT oond, $1300 or Mt. otter. Someone wUI be Jootl:na Irr -It. Did gu..,. "H PORO '199 w.,...-v1 . '11 IAMiilit '1H A.t-etlc. 0 11 INfLJllf -• 1 " 4,,..., AUTO DISCOUNT CENTER }OM HARllOll I L YD • COSTA MIU. w.,... ....... '29i' 'ff POU '2H ........ oyl. ... yALiA)ri '2H :A.t.1t1affir. '63 DODGE . DART . , ........ -.-.......... .. '699 .,, Ml.CON ~" ..--. . ... Ml.COii '399 *4H PHONE 642-4621 LIDcsob..akim7 0...--llll -.... ea.'llllO WT~ Oi&,.llbli Only ____ ... ....... - ) ---__ ............................... ----·· --------------.-...------.... ""· --·-_,.._'"'~-.. ~ ............... .. I I l • r -.,_..,.._ ... , .. -... .. .. • ... <I _ .. ,... v • ;so _ D~ll.OT Fridi)', Jub' 5, 1%8 ~.,,.~'i....,...._=.;.........,9IOO'""'"'H"'•""w-.cm=--~-•AOWc... -9IOO -ea.. --· 9IOO -ea.. ·-HOON.w ea,. --noo-c.,. 9100Now Caro • , • 9IOO N.w C1r1 FINE CARS! FRANKLY, WE DON'T FEEL THAT THE CAR ON THE LEFT IS A BETTER CAR THAN THE PONTIAC. A . BIT MORE LUXURIOUS; * .. :and at Roy Carver Pontiac you get the same high quality service on Pontiac that you would if you owned a Rolls-Royce! ·-TRUE. MORE EXPENSIVE ••• OF COURSE. AND A LOT MORE EXCLUSIVE BECAUSE WE ARE SELLING MORE PONTIACS THAN EVER. SO COME IN AND-BUY OUR OTHER FINE CAR! GRAND PRIX ... · . • • • RESTRAINED ELEGANCE IN -THE CLASSIC STYLE . GRAND PRIX '65 PONTIAC C111fom T1mp11t 2 door h1 rd- top. VI, '4 1p11d, r1dio i nd 0 h11!1r, while 1id1 w1H tirt•. $1677 FULL PlllCI '6 7 BONNEVILLt 2 Door h1 rdtop. Turbo·hvd••· 11'11iic., pow1r tl11ri1111. pow1r brtk1t, r1die, h11t1r, while wall~. factory 1ir conditioning. $3377 fUll PRICE '65 Muslang 2 plus 2 F11+b1c~. \11:, 1u+.1rn1 lic, redio, hteler, wl.it1 1id1 well tir11, 26.411 mil11 . $1677 FULL l'RICI '68 FIREBIRD lSO. VI, 1uto..,1+ic. p11we • s+t,rl119. rndio, "······ wllile side well litt l, f.tcle ry 1ir, $3277 'ULL l'RICI Catalina •.. · Big , Bold and Beautiful. A True Pontiac! . $195 W~~~~UR as low as GOOD CREDIT '66 MUSTANG Co11p1. \II, 1ufom1tic, pDwlr 1t11rin9, r1dio, h11t1r, ... hil1 wi lls, r•.J87 mil11, yellow with, bl1el. interior. $2177 FULL r1uc1 '67 FIREBIRD 400 VI. 4 sp11cl .,.1111mi1tio11, radio, h11!1 r, f111rly new tri-whit1 1id1 waif tires, in factory w1rr.111~. $2877 FULL f'lllCE '61 CHEVROLET M11l;bu l•6 S.S. luc~1! 1~1h & C""IOlt, 4 1p11d, •edio, h11+1•. wide ov1l tirt1, vt ry low mile. 191. $2777 FULL l'RICI '65 CHEVROLET Cot1 1. 4 •P•"d .,,.,,..,iui11,., ••· dio end "'''''• t.419 wh11l1. $1377 FULL l'RICI '66 CHEVROl.fT Y. ton pic.11p with c1mp•t. VI, powen;ilid1, p1w1r 1t11rin9, RI· H, 1plit rims, 0•1r1i11 tir11, H.D. e1mp1r 1q11ipm1nt. $2777 FULL PRICE '66 FORD R1nd11ro. VI, 1utom1tic, ll'D••• 1!11rin9, rad io and h11t.r, white 1id1 wall tir11, 16,265 miles. $1977 f.l:'LL l'llCl '63 BONNEVlllf • 0 .. 11. i. ... 1+11p. Hvil•1,..1tir., power .+1eri119, rtdio, "'''''· whil1 1id1 will lir11, $1177 FULL NICl '66 BONNfVlill • Door herdtop . Hydrern1+ic, power d1eri119 ,rtdio, i.11+er, whil• 1id• w1U1. pow•• wift · dow1, feclo"'I eir co11ditioni119. $2677 FULL l'RICl Firebird ! ..... and a fab- ulous five to select from . You won't find a better stock in Southern Cali- fornia . ' '67 GTO l Or. H.T. VI, 4 1p11d, power 1l11ri119, R&H, red lin1t, 1!1r10 l1p1, rn1rid111 blue w/m1tch. in- ter, while vinyl roof, Fie.I. w1r- r1nly. $3177 PULL PllCI '65 CHEVROLET lrnp1l1 1up1• lporl. VI, powt•· 91id 1, power li11rin9. redio end h11!1r. while 1id1 well lir11. $1977 FULL l'llCl '65 LE MANS C11•..,erlible. VI. eutol'l'lelic, power li11ring. r1dio, h11+••. "'" WSW tir11. ft clory ~ir. power windows, $1977 FULL l'RICl '65 TEMPEST l Ono• 1ede.,. VI. 111+0,..1t1c. power 1!11ri11 9. r1dio, lie1 l1r, white w1 1!1, f1clory t it, JS,647 mi111. $1777 FU LL l'llCI Motor Trend Magazines "Car Of The Year"· A good selec- tion from 'which to choose. BUY NOW! '66 T·BIRD Aul1m1lic., power 1!11rin11 • br1k11 -window1 • 111h, radio ind h11l1r, while w1ll1, fa c- tory 1ir conditionin9. $3077 NILL PRICE '67 COUGAR VI, pow1r li11rin9, redio end h11t1r, whit1 1id1 wi ll ti111, only 11.715 mil11. $2777 FULL l'llCI '66 GTO l Door !.1rdtop. VI , !.ydrern1ti~ . power 1+11eri11g, redio. i.11+1r, new red lint tir11, I S,8.,4 rnile1. $2577 'ULL l'RICI '62 LE MANS Convertible. Au+o..,1tic, r1di.,, li11+1•, wh ite 1id1 wi ll fir11, 41,645 ..,;re •. El1uli111 blue wiHi wf,i+1 lop. $877 'ULL PRICI '65 MERCURY <4 Door, ·6 P•"· Colo11y r1rk, W19on. VI, 1ulom1tic, 1'5, ''· radio, h11l1r, white wills, f1c- lory air. $2477 FULL PRICE '66 OLDS Vi1!1 Crui1er 4 door 6 pe11111. 91r we9on. Aulom1tic, pow1r 1t11fin9, r1dio, h11!1r, WSW. ' power window1, f1clory eir con· ditioning . $2977 FULL PRICE '66 CATALINA 4 Door h11rd+op. \II, hydr11011lic, pow1r 1+11ri119. r11di11, heeler, wh ile w1ll1, blec~ vinyl roof. $1911 FULL l'llCI ' '66 VOLKSWAGEN 1 Door. 4 speed tr1111mit1io11, r1die ,.,d l.11ter. $1577 FULL l'RICI ii .. .I -•••• -•• -• --.... -4 _,..._.,...., _____ ~.._ ........ _ -~--• 9IOO l967MUSTANG2+2 111.MeoMmlO. ~::fJl.o.,.;..""1-St. lllcllo I. HH l9". 516ft9 $99 Dn. $62.28 Mo. Our Prico · \7 1966 JtlP WAGOf'llll '""' 1oot '°'*· 4 DAY SELL-OUT Of LATE MODEL llEW CAR TRADE·lllS! • k;YI •wtwll drlw lloodll II. _ ..... $1699 Lie. ).lo. ltGV :II» $99 Dn. $52.33 Mo. Our Prico 1---------~Ate ALL USED 1963 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX f 1tll """· Al<. ( .... LK. Ht. GC:I '" $29 Dn. $28.51 Mo. Our Pritt - 19'3 PLYMOUTH 4-llOOI Pufl l'K10r'Y E'lull . Lie. HI . TI Y .. $29 Dn. $15.40 ~-Ovr P~co 1966 DODGE 440 •i.. ••um ,_ """'-· ......... ""-''"' $1599 fK10rY PurtMM 5toc~. N•. PJ<IO'I $H Dn. $39.49 Mo. Our Pritt 1966TOY0Tl $1599 ~.irJr.\Jftl, ,._Air ~. $99"0.:. ~144 Mo.,,. Price ~~~ SITAR . ~WJ:: CA~S · ... * ...... 100°/o GUARANTEED Bolll PARTS l LABOR P11s CASH BACll At •II Oort '"' llol J 5111" 1uar1ftlffd, di.ck l!lt •lndlhleld "' !hi C., """' Mi.cl fllr ll'lll tllClfl -0,11 Dilly 'Tll 10 INCLUDING SUNDAY I' SE HABLA ESPANOL Al IMd ... Wm.I hued OD 3S rDQI, O.A.C. All °'" Jiited td>jocl ... ~-- YOU DOll'T llEED CASH B1y On Beaelt City's EASY CREDn! • U you don't think you have enough equity • U other dealers have refus- ed you credit • U you hlVI just started oft a new job WE'LL HELP YOU SET UP CREDIT AND STilJ. SAVE YOU MONEY! 1966V·W $1399 H.o<IO Miit c•r. l lc.. Ho, SIX JM $99 Dn. $49.17 Mo. Full Prlco 1965 KARMlllN GHtl s1299 ll IH, 4-t_.t. Lit. KO. ltJS .._., $79 Dt1. $43.26 Mo. Full Prlc• . 1965 V·W 5QUAllUCK $1499 Goo.cl Corid. i,.,_.i. lie. No ... UH NI $59' Dn: $47.20 Mo. Full Prlco . 1965 iNGUIH FORD . · ~V~'l·w-. ""''·Tr-.. Lie. tiM. 51199 $39 Dn. $38.02 Mo. fuU Prlco 1962 FORD FALCON 6-C'fl, AlllQ, 11/M. A rHI 1t..,o-11· ti°" 1111cl1I. Lk: NO. LIU> "1 $29 Dn . $11.61 Mo. full Prl'' 196lT-lllDCOIMlT.. $1499 ,1111 ,,_, A.Ir CW, Lie. lie, Nlltl' Mii $59. Dn. $45.n Mo. Foll Price 1962 DOOGI DART • $ r:.,=rin"'..., v ... '" ltJM, Lia. 199 FUUPIKI '· NEW :1968 DODGE . CHARGER '\ 4 BIG . ·.SlAS~BANG BARGAIN .. ·DA ·YS!- -~ I ~, •. NEW1968D08i . CORONET E $ $6 9 •O'AL DH.$6'9 . . :rv~'t::f lllCJl>dlllf T• & LI-. • ........ O.A.r • • .. L ---... ___.._ - " '( . •• I • 0 • 4 • ---. • WE HAVE JUST BEGUN TO 8LAS1 PRICES This FRIDAY ancl SATURDAY 200 NEW 1968 -· - .. i.iES GALAXIES .T.BIRDS""° FMRL~' • NA AT DISCOUNTS HOTTER THA + 0 • 0 • P a • u ; w c a w • (WEEKEND)·· I - BRAND NEW 1968 MUSTANG HARDTOPS $ 'A veri.ty of ~olors fn ·stocri •nd ready for immediet9 deliv•ry. All factory: ~ equiP.ped witfl heeter, sid• mirror, s••t belts; erm r•sts., Hclr:up lights, IMJck•t s••h, cerpets, door trim, recite~ pan~I mouldin91, all vinyl uphol .. 1t•~ wlndshiekl withers, end much mor•. BRAND NEW 1968 . FORD CUSTOM 2 DOOR SEDAN V-1 engin•, cruis-o-matic, pow•r st••rin9, radio, haatar, whit• s\d• wells, hody side mouldings, ramota ·side mirror, tinted glass, and much more. Stock Number 956, 200 more bit 11•-inch wheelbase 1961'1 discountad this Friday and Saturday. ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME .FORD DEALER TBl8 FOB. YOUB. llEALTll... NOW •.• we c1n sclentific•I· ly 1n11if11 and check Ovtr 100 1r111 on each used car that affects lh performance prior to selling it. You buy with built in confidence when you buy a Theodore Robins Used Car th1t cir· rl• the Diegnostlc sticker. TIMM c1rs ire tu•r1ntHCl • 100-; •• , . . TWO ACRES OF USED CARS TO CHOOSE FROM! '" POID LTD H.T. Auto., RI H, full pow•r. No. 7SSIA. 20 % down or tr•cl1 $56 p•r 11'10. )6 mo, s1995 2 • '67 MUSTANCiS $2195 2 to cho1e frolft. F•cfory w•rronty. VI, eufa., with or without PS, RIH. TEY•l4 ._UJDlll. 11% down or trede $66 per mo. )6 mo. '67 COAi.AXii 500 H.T. VI, full power, oi r co11d., •uto., R.&H, PS. 20% down or tr ode $19 ,., m11. 16 mo. UAS I 0 I 'U CHECKER 4 DOOi I P'o11 . RIH. •ir r.ond., I'S. 20% dow11 ~ +r•d• Sll P•• 1no. 2• 1110 , RpiRISO $2095 s795 1 S WAGONS "SAL£" 1 S 11 ......... --'Ml ..... '67 , __ .... • .. 10 ,.. ...... --whit .... coodllloolot. PLYMOUTH -'H MEIC COMMUTll - ECONO IUS'S -POIDS -FALCONS - FAllLANIS -COUNTIT SIDANS -CHEVY II WASON -COUNTIT SQUllU h .. ple: '*"°"· ve. "*'·• 't#M.<t9~.TU J!..D~tt._ w ,,., "'°· ,. mo. SOL'25. $1995 '68 MUSTA-r.G CONVER·TIBLE VI, power top, auto., R&H, console, WSW, PS., P-disc bra•••, wh11I· cO't'1r1, 1p1ch11I ptiint. IWl8397). Sold new for $369S. 20 '"!. down or trade $7J per mo, 36 mo. $2695 '61 CADILLAC 4 DI. H.T. Full pow•r, •it c:o11d. 20% dow11 or tr•dt $29 p•r rno. 24 1110. tJWV97l ) 3 -'67 FORD CUSTOMS • 3 ] to choo•• from. 4 Dr. VI, •Uto .. RIH. 20 % dew11 or trod1 $45 p1r rno. hornpl• No. P771 7 '60 MERCURY COMET 2 Dr. D•lu••· For.tery •quipp•d. 20% dewn o< tr•do, SI 1 p•r mo. 24 111•. (UJD791 1 TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS Now t ¥•ro9i119 I 5 co" p1r w••k th1t c:t M r•to11•d 1t whol•1•I• to th• pultlic. I••+ th1 doolor1 on th•I• old•r c1r1. '63 IUICK SPECIAL hlly ·•quippod, VI, Rodi• I H1otor, 1'.S., ·20% down or tr1do SI p•r mo. 24 mo, IUTL7]6l $395 $895 '61 VOLKSWA6EN 2 door s•d•n. 20 '/. dow11 or tr•d• $15 p•r rno, 24 rno. 11C471 s795 '61 FALCON 4 DOOR l'owd•r bluo. F•c:tory oq11ipp.d. l•• I lir.0111• dow11, $19 pM 1110., 2• 1110. LNL9.62 $299 '64 FOID CUSTOM VI, •11torn•tic:. 20 '/. do wn or fT•do $21 p•r rno, 24 !l'lo. NOY704 s595 ' .. '65 FORD CiALAXIE 500 XL 2 deor H.T, Full pew1r, f1r.tory oir. lur.~ot 11•h, •uto., R&H. 20 'I. dewn or trod• $56 p•r rne ., 10 mo, PGG]l 1 s1595 MUSTANG SALE 20 TO CHOOSI PIOM "6" & "I" CYLINDDS. 4 SPUDS. AUTO MA TICS, SOME WITH POWD sm11N• & All CONDITIONINCi. 1965 THIU 1 t67 MODELS, CONYEITllLIS, COUPES AND z+z FASTllACKS. IXAMPLI: '65 MUsTANG VI H.T, Milly oquippod. VI, RIH, 1ir r.•nd. 10 ,$1 down•• tr•d• $47 p•r mo, ]0 mo. TXU 571 USED CAR SALE . PRICES GOOD FOil 72 HOURS· ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVED CREDIT. I. ; -,., •" ' -,. _. -" -'I A • ' ' •• ~ ,· , I • • • • • r • • • I .. . , , , ' . .. . . . .. ... I \ EDWARD SHIN, CHEP OP FIVE CROWNS RESTAU. RANT IN CORONA Dlt, MAR IS THI! SUBJECT Of f)OROTHY PllR'S MEET tHE PEOPLI f EATUQ ON PAGE 3. WANT TO SEPARATI A CORNER Of THI ROOM OR DIVIDE DINING AND LIVING AREAS? J. RUS. JELL . TUM&LSON LISTI TEN DIFFERENT WAYS IT CAN BE DONE 'N HIS D ... SIGNElt(S NOT I B 00 K COLUMN ON PAGE 4. PAMIL y DINING IN cozy COPPEI SHOPS AND kl· .GANT IATIRllS II DI .. CUSSED IN DON WILSON'I OUT 'W·AllOUT COLUMN, PAGIS I THROUGH 11 OTHER INTIRTAINMINT MAY IE POUND ON PAG- U I THROUGH 15 THll WllK. WE E K E N D E R. • .. J I PAGEANT -OF· T-HE MA.STE RI .-.. ~ Special Evenl8 GROVE CONCERT -A youth talent show ol out- st.andlng band.I and lndividuall will be held OD the Soroptimist House patio at Long Beach State College, 6101 E. Seventh st., Long Beacb, ·Fri., July 5, beginning at 8:30 p.m. ~ ~ INSTANT THEATER -An evening of diam a. dance and improvised sketches y.'ill be per- formed each Fri. and Sat. evening at the Studio ol Modero Arts, 336 N. Coast Hlgbway, Laguna Beach. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Reservations are required and may be made by phoning 4~31S. A donation of $2 will be asked. CIRCUS -The J~s Hetzer Intercontinental Cir· cus now is being held at Melodyland Theatre, 10 Freedom Way, Anaheim. Shows, Wed. 1 and 8 p.m.; 'Jburs. and Fri. 8 p.m .; Sat. 3 and 8 p.m.; Sun. l and 5 p.m. Tickets, $2.50 and $3.50. available at the Melodyland box of· fice and Mutual ticket agencies. Special half· price tickets for juniors, 16 and under, will be sold for all Wed. and Thurs. shows and Sun. 5 p.m. performances. Phone 776-7460 for fur- ther in(ormation. Circus runs through July 14. SHAKESPEARE 1o·~11VAL -'J.be 19lh annual San Diego Sum.mer National Shakespeare Fes- tival is being held through Sept. 15 at the Old Globe Theater in Balboa Parle, San Dlego. Plays being presented this summer are "As You Like It," "Hamlet" and "King John.'' Performances nightly except Mon. with mat- loees scheduled for Wed., Sat. and Sun. For further information phone 239-9139. l:oming lJp LAGUNA ART FESTIVAL -The 33rd annual La- guna Beach FesUval of A.rt_, and Pageant of the Masters will be held July 12 through August 24 at the Laguna Beach Festival Grounds. Tickets for Pageant of the Masters, a living recreation of famous art works, are on sale by mail order to Pageant of the Masters, Irvine Bowl, Laguna Beach, or at the box of· lice daily 10 a.m . to 5 p.m. Prices range from $2 lo $6 and include admission to the Festival grounds. Single admission to the grounds, where art work of all kinds will be displayed and sold is 50c for adults, lOc for children. Hours: noon to midnight daily, Phone 494-1145 tor further information. See Feature. Pages 5-7. ORANGE COUNTY lo~Ant -1'he annual Orange County Fair will be held July 16 through 21 at Ule fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. Activities include industrial and art exhibits, midway rides, a horse show, a rodeo, helicopter rides and entertainment by singer Glen Camp. bell, tbe Bact Porch Majority and othera. Tleketa, adulta, ,1, students, 13-18, 80c, cl\lldren under 12, 30c, or if accompanied by an adult. tree. Exhibits and entertainment are included iD tbe admlsalon price. Rodeo tickets range from fl.50 to SS, available at the fairgrounds. -2 ·-::-~ '."'"" ' ., GUIDE TO FUN Coming Up TWILIGHT CONCERT -The Orange County Phil· harmonic Society is presenting the San-Diego Symphony Orchestra under the direction of John Scott Trottet;, July 21 at 5 :30 p.m. in Campus Park at UCI, 7601 Irvine St., Irvine. 'lbere will be no admission charge. Places to Go CATALINA BOAT -The Island Holiday boat ts making daily trips to Catalina Island leaving froQl the Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main St., Balboa at 9 a.m. and returning at 7 p.m. Roundtrip fare for adults $8.50; ~n. S.12, $4.25 and youngsters under · 5 free. Reservations re- quired, phone 613-5245. BARBOR CRUISES -Boat rours of Newport Har- bor's historical sites, famous houses, islands and poin~ of interest leave daily from the Fun Zone dock, between Palm and Main Sts., Bal· boa, hourly 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tickets for 90- minute cruise, adults, $2; children, S..12, Sl, youngsters under 5, free. A 45-minute cruise is also available. Phone 673-0'l40. AUTOMOTIVE MUSEUM -Brigga Cunningham Automotive Museum located at 250 Baker Street, at the corner of Red Hill, Costa Mesa. Hours: 10 a .m. to 5 p.m. daily. Museum features a collection of vintage, classic, racing and sports cars plus engine displays. Admission, adulb Sl.85, students and military 85c, children under 10 free. Phone 546-7660. ES'rANCIA ADOBE -An historic landmark locat- ed at Adams and Mesa Verde Dr. West, Costa Mesa. Originally a way station for Indians, the historic; adobe baa bee~ restored and furnished and is open to the public from 1 to 5 p.m. on Sat. and Sun. No admission charge. For information phone 549-09'22. JdOVlELAND OF THE AIR ..... Flight and space museum, featuring a collection of movie and historical planes dating back to 1910. Hours 10 _ a.m. -5:00 p.m. daily, Orange County Airport. Tlcke~ fl,25 adults, 75c juniors, 50c children. Phone 545-.so'll. JAPANESE DEER PARK -Located at Santa Ana Freeway and Knott Ave., ID Buena Park. Houre t a .m. to 9 p.m. daily. Admlaaion fl for adults, IOc foe children. 200 tame deer to pet and feed plua bears, swans. dove paVWoo and JapaneH tea house. Phone 523-2381. KNOTl"S BERRY FAU -AUracUona lnclude Gbolt Town, unJque sbOps, theater, trading po1t, and rides; Beach Blvd., Buena Park. Hours 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily. Ad.mission to Ghost Town, fl for adults. 25c for children under 12. Pboae 522·11Sl. • • Places to Go DISNEYLAND -World-famous amusement part ha.I rides for young and old, 1313 S. Harbo,r Blvd., Anaheim. Hours: 8 a.m. ·to midnlght Sun. through Thurs.; 8 a.m. to 1 a.m . Fri. and Sat. Phone 533-4456. CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -~ North Main St., Santa Ana. The only general mu.seWJt in Orange County has exhibits which emphasize the history and culture of this area. Also haJ apecial lectures and exhibits. For more infor- mation phone 542-5456. No admission charge. MISSION WAX MUSEUM-Life-size wax figures by Josephine Tussard, all are imported from Lon- don: admission for adults, $1.25; students and aervicemen, 90c ; children wider 12, 50c. Lo- cated across from old mission, San Juan Capi· 1l'ano, open daily from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sports ANGELS BASEBALL -California Ang'els va the Boston Red Sox, July 11, 12 at 8 p.m., July 13 at 1 p.m., in the Anaheim Stadium, 2000 State College Blvd., Anaheim. Tickets available in Orange County at United Call. Banks, Mu- tual ticket agencies and Wallichs Music City stores. Phone 633-2000. DODGERS -The Los Angeles Dodgers vs the Cin· cinnati Reds July 5, 6 at 8 p.m., JuJy 7 at 1 p.m.; Chicago Cubs July 19, 2.0 at 8 p.m., July 21 at 1 p.m. in the Dodgers' Stadium, 1750 Sta- dium Way, Los Angeles. Tickets available loc· ally at Wallichs Music City store and Mutual ticket agencies. HORSE RACING -Thoroughbred horse racing at Hollywood Park, Century Blvd. at Prairie Ave., Inglewood, post time Tues. through Fri. l : ts p.m.; Sat. 1:15 p.m., $100,000 Hollywood Derby Sat., July 6. DRAG RACING -Races will be held Wed. &-11 p.m. Sat. elimination races begin at 7:30 p.m. at OC International Raceway, Santa Ana Freeway at Laguna Canyon Rd. Admission, $2, general; '2.50 reserved. Phone 838-3593 for information. COVER: . Jean Simeon chardin's ~'Cellar Boy'' comes to life during the famed Pageant of the Masters held in Laguna Beaoh. Danny Swan- son, who poses on the cover, is joined by hun- dreds of volunteers in the difficult task of mak- ing local residents into the subjects of some orl th~ world's greatest art. A feature on Pages 5 through 7 takes a look at some of the oobind the scenes ww k that makes it all possible. . ...... . Gulde to Fun Meet the People Gatden Notes Designer's Notebook Laguna Art Festival Out 'N' About Mexico Rodeo Ugbtest Mexico Current Arl Exhibits Curtent Theater Movies ORANGE COAST Page% Page S Page 4 Page 4 Pace• S-7 Pages 8-11 Page 1% Page 1! Page 13 Page 13 Pages H, 15 maaaammma MAGAZIN! Jlaly 5, 1911 ---CNSI WEe1taNOIER MHlllM II ,...... ,,.._,. U .. _.... .. tlll 041LY f'ILOf ......... Ceelt .......... C... .......,, a.tdl. Hlllllllltf• ..._, Cwta 1MM. a.-lwtl. ..... lfllMtw • ._ ~.-. ... v • ...,. CatlMnlll. ·--· ""' OttlCe .. 1111. .............. c.i ........ ~ Pboae f'a..m1 IAcy BeU ......... I di eAtL.l' ,,...,, -... Ma Fri Ed Shin Holds His Fellowmen In High Esteem • One ingredient which Edward Shin, Chef of the Five Crowns Restau- rant in Corona del Mar, stirs liberally into every dish, never is mentioned in cook books, but he believes a restaurant's reputation is built on it. That ingredient i5 a deep understanding of people. From busboys through the most famous guest, he has an uncanny perception of what makes each happy. "I try t.o make each person feel important," says the young Costa Mesa resident, "because they are important. In a restaurant the dishwasti. er is as important as the cook and the cook is as important as the manage- ment. P•tricia Falkenhain and Robert Gerrlne-r are two members of tht Amari· can ConHrvatory Tb.•tra presenting Moliere'• comedy, "Tartuffe," at the Huntington Hartford Theatre through July 13. The ACT, • relativaty new but wtll·raceived r..,.rtory group, else wHI present Dylan Thomas' "Under Milkwood" baglMlng July 15. ......... ied6M DAILY ~ILOT F ..... y. Jllll'S.1,._ ~~~;n=~~~~)~~~·~e-J~~x ,.j "Do you know how many people it takes to satisfy one customer? At the Five Crowns it takes 70! From the parking lot attendant through the waitress, we have to work as a team bo satisfy one person. The customer is our business." Perhaps the reason Ed understands people so well is that even at his young age he has seen a great deaf of life. In 1936, only one year after he was born in Kong Ju, Korea, his fam- ily fled to-Manchuria, when the Japanese occupied their country. T~ey re- mained exiled until the end of World War IL Then they made their way back to their homeland in any manner they could, riding mule carts or aboard the tops of trains. Many times they simply walked. During the Korean War, Ed served as a private in the Republic of Korea .Army. Whea.the war w.as oye1· he came to the United States as a foreign student. Although he had studied English in high school be didn't lea.rn to speak the language until he came to this country. Since then he bas taught himself another language -Spanish. At the "Montefey Peninsula College Ed Shin majored in ho111e econ· omics. He was the only man in a class with 20 girls. After receiving his associate of arts degree, he transferred to San Jose State where he major. ed in home economics. To support himself Ed worked as a dishwasher, tater moving up to bus boy, waiter and fry cook. After be was graduated in 1959, he was sure the doors to success would open, but when he applied for jobs, he saw those doors slam because he wasn't a citizen. He then applied for a permanent resident's vis' and only a few months ago, after more than eight years, it was granted. In five years he will automatically become a citizen. Since bis chances of becoming a home economist or food technician looked slim Shin decided to gain more experience in the restaurant field. For two yei.rs he traveled through Northern California working in every capacity that restaurants offered. Then in 1962 he joined the Lawry's o.rg- anization as a sauce cook in their Mediterranea Restaurant. The following year he was made roving chef. Daily he visited a different Lawry's res~u­ rant in preparation for the time when he would be made chef of the Five Crowns at its opening. Ed does not find it incongruous that be is a Korean preparing English Contlnu.l'CI on Page 14 NEWPORT'S HEADQU~RTERS FOR LOCAL PRODUCE FRESH PICKED SWEET LOCAL CORN EVERY DAYI FRESH PICKED LOCAL MUSHROOMS EVERY DAYl FRESH PICKED LOCAL TOMATOES EVERY DAYl FRESH PICKED LOCAL PEPPERS EVERY DA YI FRESH PICKED LOCAL CUCUMIERS EVERY DA YI ,. aec1 llMll9y. ma11y more, al at tlie lowest prices 111 town! CHECK THESE SPECIALS CLIP THESE COUPONS AND SAYE! ..... -------- -- - - --, I • I Newpwt 'roduc• Qu•llty Newport 'l'Olluc• Qu•&lty 1 Newport Product Quality LOCAL I LOCAL LOCAL I I Tomatoes I Sweet Corn I Cucumbers I I !~ .~ I ~.r. ·'=" I 1 OLI: ~5' I I With th&. Coupon a With this Cou'°" I With this Ctupon ______________ .... COUPONS EXPIRE JULY 10, 1 HI These rest.ur•nh want the best for thtir c:udomer11 thet's why thty buy thtir product at Newport Produce, p•troniu theml The Chart House, 81lboa Bay Club, Swin Chalet, N•wport & Balboa Piers, Tht Riviera, and 176 others. How about you callin9 u11 .. Wllate 9..nty la Tiie ~ Of Tiie H ... " NEWPORT 261' PHONE: N..,_. PRODUCE .... 673-8715 ...... Or..-c..t(• ....... , ....... ........ ....... 0., ...... or.....""" WHlllAMr 3 .. ·----..,..·----. ' GARDIN NORI . I •1 ~· Amaryllis F~om Seed AN EASY GROWER The wide-ffarint trumpeis o( amaryllis are some of the most attrac- tive fl owers. They come in shades or red, pink and orange as weJl as pure white. Ideally suited to our coast climate th ey wilJ grow well here with a minimum of care and a maximum of snail bait. Surprisingly, since they are bulbs, they are rather easy to grow from seed. The best success is had with fresh seed. which ripens at this time of yea r. Plant the seed in flats or pots that contain a so il mix rich in lea(mold. The large seeds are black and papery. and should be covered with about a half inch ol the soil mix. They will start to come ,up in th ree or fou r weeks. Seedlings should be kept moist but not sopping wet. As soon as the small seedlings are big enough to handle they should be transplanted lo another fl at or put in to a pot, several together, allowing space for so me growi ng before further transplanting. When the small bulbs have four or five leaves th ey can be planted directly in the ground , which should have plenty of leafmold worked jnto it. With luck and good care the first bloom will come in about th ree years. It will be well worth th e wait if good seed was planted. You can purchase seed from seed specialists or from some amaryllis bulb specialists.• Good seed is not inexpensive but neither are the bulbs. Jf you have your own bulbs you can make your own crosses an d thi s is very interesting and rewarding. Until recently most o{ the really fine amaryllis have been Dut~h hy- brids which have been bred for growing in pots. Tl1e hardy American var- ieties did nol have the desirable large fl at flowers and pure colors of the Dutch hybrids. Most of the American varieties were red with white stripes down the center of each petal. A lot of them still are seen in the spring. Crones have been made between th e two, breeding large-flowered hardy varieties that rival the Dutch hybrids in both color and form. Th ere also are miniature varieti es that have small flowers with th e same pure colo rs and flower form of the regular hybricts. However. these flowers are cnly-.r thll"d Tn size. They make nice pot pl ants and also are more attractive as cut flowers than are the large hybrids. -Don Horton •t" ftrlditi<m to 1eg11lor ~et<l c<Jm f><mies an Amoryllts ~p<'Cio/1st stlli11g SCfil iJ Rubert D. Goe<le»t , P.O. Bu:r 6534, Jm:k$0'1Ville, Fla., 32205. · .... , . , DESIGNER'S NOTEBOOK Dividers BY J. RUSSELL TUMELSON. ORANGE COUNTY DESIGNER-DECORATOR SUGGESTIONS FOR DIVIDERS -Suspended bar areas with Spanjsh screen above counter ..• -Woven b.ads, bamboo and rattan in colors .•. -Bookcase or curio ca binet visible from both sides ... -Colored glass and wood ••• -Louvre screens o.-shutters ceiling to floor . . . -Filigree wood patterns fin- ished to ma tch fu rniture and then antiqued ... -Sculptured stone and plastic sections •.. -Textured rough sawn wood, pecky cypress or wormy chestnut placed in slanted vertical sections. -Metal grill inserted into wood frames ... -Wrought iron sections in a multitude of patterns and desig ns. NEXT WEEK WALL PANELING Please address inquiries and questions by letter to: Designers Notebook, W eekender Magazine, Post Office Box 1875, Newport Beach, California. Ma .. ll,,. )t ct--OAILY P'llO P'riM1• Jiiiy J, If >R 14 Once Again· Models Will the rHI cellar boy please step forth? Danny Swanson, also shown on the cover, model for JNn Char· d in's "Cell.r Boy," Is one of the many votuntHrs who hH another member of hls ~amily participatlnt In the Pateant of the Masters. His mother, Ruth DeVriH Swanson, portra ys Chardin'• "S c u 11 • r y Maid," right. Danny 11 shown, left, " the c:ell•r boy. Below, he and his mother relaJC betw"" r• hearsals. , MANY FAMILY MEMBERS SHARE IN UNIQUE MODELING OF ART "Don'l just do something -stand there!'' might well be the com· mand given by producer Don Williamson as he helps models into positk>n tor the Pageant of the Masters in Laguna Beach. Each year, for a period of six weeks, during the world-famous Fes- tival of Arts, great works of art are re-created nightly on the Irvine Bowl stage. Living models Who portray characters in the art work ar~.required to femain c-0mpletely moti-0nless for as long as the curtain remains open -anywhere from 60 to 90 seronds. ln its 33rd year, Laguna's Festival, still the only one of. its kind in the world, conti~ues to amaze and thrill its visitors. Opening on July 12 this summer, the Festnval wil l run through August 24. Pageant of the Masters first was shown in 1934, in ttle third year ol. t~estival's carter, although s<>rl'le of Laguna Beach's ol.dtimers insist that li portraits 6fe included in the Festival in '32 and '33, 1be first at.- t ts at the lj~rig portrayal of the work of the masters was quite casual a rather crudt. Over the years the Pageant of the MHters has been developed t.o sucb a UQ• degree that visitors comie Clrom all over the country to view the spec.. ta~\llar. . Sioce its ioduction the Festival only has missed four years -those dt.u'lng World Wa.t 1J. Now a nonprofit corporation with 2,445 members, the FAllv.al is vlew«l by a quarter of a million people each year .• 'IV..~ S.Ct!M-O~~LY l"ILOT ,, •• ,. , ... , s. '"' , ·-~ ' Prepare Living Portraits The crew and production staf( work day and night to pl'O(iuce the two-hour outdoor event. Students. housewives and businessmen lel'l'O' the craft under the direction of a few paid professionals. About 500 local people, from civic leaders to school youngsters, vol- unteer each summer to serve in the cast or on the crew of the Pageant. Two casts of about 130 people each alternate each week f-0r the 44-night run of the s11ectacle. Some famnies have several members appearing in the living portraits. Occasionally, when a model in the living portraits is absent, it is dif- ficult to replace him due to requirements of age, build or some other physical characteristic. It is not unusual for a visitor, peering at an artist's booth, t<> be askled if he would act as a substitute. Moments later he might find him- self on stage, in ~laborate makeup, under the scrutiny oo 5,000 eyes. The switch in~ of large sets in a matter of seconds is one of· the main production problems. Live' narration by Howard Grallam and Live music from a 21·piece orchestra directed bv Vic Schoen. combine to turn an art sh<>w into highly successful show business. Pa,eeant of the Masters even effects the United States Maorine Air Force. The government has arranged to change the flight patterns from El Toro so that jets do not Cly over the 2.500 seat natural amphitheater durini? the scheduled run of the Festival. Arts and crafts of about 180 of the area's artists may be seen on the Festival grounds. Daily, from noon until midnight, many of the artists are on ha nd to demonstrate their stills. A pup~t show with regularly· scheduled performances will be presented each day by Rene and his marl- onettes. Th~e also will be a .-estaurant and snack sbop for patrons. Seats for the Pageant or the Masters may be reserved by calling the Irvine Bowl box office, 49.4-1147. Festival · Of ·The Arts Opens In Laguna Beach • ' .,,._ c .... ......... Toulou•• 0 l1utrec'1 Jane Avril, the French cancan dancer, 11 portr1yed by Leah Harlan and Francoise Winiftkl of Laguna BHch, Is 1 dupllcatlon of Lau. tree'• first-rough sketch of the famous post•r, top l•ft, and the Jane of the finished poster, top right. Working mod· els at left are Bert Pettey, hair~tyllnt director, Jo Willlamson, wardrobe di- rector and Betty Tuttle, wardl'Ok ... 1l1tant, In the usual order, ....... Ste*" Nl\.Y '1 .. .... y,l«Jt. 1 mid Bustle Of Preparation And Anticipation ''Egyptian Throne," (1360 I . C.) by an unkrwwn artist, Is a portrayal that lnvolvH grHt detall. Above, models :rony Francisco, left, and Jan S.. quelra, both of Laguna Beach, are prepared for their posftlon1. Jo Wllllern- aon checkl thef r costumes. The INorest of this magniflcently-wrought eohl throne 11 ahown here H It appeer1 for the llvl.,. reproduction. Queen Ank· hesenamun i1 encMnting King Tutankhamen with perfume. The throne wH one of the artifacts found In the king'• tomb. The actual utwork 11 ,... produced, above right. Below right, the finished llv~ portrait. "-llM fectlll DNL Y P'tl.Of rlUJ, \l_,ll' JI INf'". • " .. • • ' --~' ._c.-1 •112111• ,,, ... , "•"'. ,,,,, • \ • Smaller Salons For the nonce, let's forget the area'• Gastronomical Gigantics, its Entree E¥pan- sives, its Condiment Colossals. We'll dwell, instead, on some of UMI smaller sip-n-sup salons .. . . those establish· ments more generally referred to as 'family type" restauran~. There are countless ol same hereabouts • • . where Mom and Dad and ttle kids can enjoy good food and drink in spotless sur- roundings, served quickly and efficiently at eoonomk al tariffs. Here are a fftv to l.eep In mind when planning that "Jl"oup" effort. MANY MENUS As Jn the ~pacler spas, you can find just about any entree those tas~ buds are water- ing for. For the beef eaters, it's pretty hard to beat the offerings ot Bill Stewart and hia Costa Mesa and Huntington Bea.ch Sizz1e!" op- erations. . Presents Another First For The Newport Areri DISCOTHQUE RED VELVET The Whole Ball of Wax ls Now at The Villa Marina Strobe & Psychedelic 9 P .M. Nl6HTLY CLOSED MONDAY No Cover-No Minimum You Must Be 21 • e DINNER SPECIALS NIGHTLY • DAILY BUFFET LUNCHEON • BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLI "fKalllua~ "At The Entra11c:e To B•lbo. lsl•nd" 1045 BAYSIDE DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH 675-0200 VILLAGE INN 129 Mnln. 673-4530 l1tboe L . OUT . 'N' ABOUT: At these two roomy and attractively dee. orated locations you'll find: top lirloin steak, •t.39; New York cut steak, •t.59i ~half pound ground round steak, 89 cents. All ol these entrees are served accompanied by baked potato or French Fries, plus roll and butter. For an additional 2-i cents, mi.zed green salad with choice of dressidg. Other Sizzler Selections: gulf shrimp, $1.19; fish and chips, 89 centa; a truly dell· cloua steak aandwich served on sesame roll with French fries, 89 cents. · Of course the BIG one . . . in a familJ senae ... at SizQer is that Monday night spe. \ cial. Between the hours ol 2 • 9 p.m .... that regularly-priced top sirloin lteak dinner at $1.39 drops down to •t.09, with dlildren'1 portions going for hal~ that amount. And ... to straighten out one ol the mi&- ronceptione of all ~mei Bill Stewart does not aerve 10th lfade, tsK1erized beef at bis lo- cations He ia a oonscientioua restaurant man Returned By Populu 0.m•ndl The F1bulovs EDDIE CAIO QUARTO _ hMi.9-................ 1:-41 ........, llrcept St.Mey e COCKTAILS e DINNER e DANCING FOR RESERYATIONSz 536-1421 21112 OcNn Avenue RICK CHADBOURNE COMBO TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY FROM 9 P.M. . FREE CHAMPIONSHIP FIGHT FILMSI Delly Ulltlf t , .... ~2• ... Mot1., Nl'9 .!!!!!!!_4 T .. ,........ .. BILL MARTINI'S 111 I. 17.. COSTA MIS.A 646-1111 FISH 'N CHIPS ARE TERRIFIC AT TH' DORYMEN ALL YOU CAN EAT -$1.00 Juicy, tender fileta in • bo.t with • deck full of golden chip pot•toes •nd the 1pecl1I 11l•d. SPECIAL OFFER! IUY A IOAT OF PllH 'N CHIPS -.rr A llCONI 01· Dll NII WITH THIS COUPON. FOOD TO &O OR SERVED HERE CALL IN ORDERSi 673-2200 2100 W. Ocean Front, Newport hacll "OVERLOOKINCi THE NEWPORT PIER" • who demandl ••• obtains ••• and Mnee only the beet. Tab It from one who ·hie 11mpled and been convinced. A.M. And P.M. Anothtr -jOOd bet for famlly-peuJ>I would be Dick Church's Cdfte Tree. Cosla Mesa. Here; you ~an enjoy well:J>nPlred pleu- •rs monailll. noon and/or nllllt. . Oolfee 'lfte speciala on the brukfut, lundleon and dinner menua include: buainell- NOW '~TINUCXJS ... ETAUWT APPEARING DANCING tor u citi• tlllrHt IN THI! FROM -~·fl"f .. LIDO I pm Tiil llmO Cllt .. ", .. , * • l'•ltl111 *6tfit LOUNGE J pm-8 pm MT llWfAST ....,. ....... ~ 8:3()pm-BILL~URI FAST f'UST J:4Som "'"" _, awu• pt .....,.JJJO lt.• f:lO,"' 1107 ~ ROAD • NEWPORT llMlH • """9 •l7CIO ............... NILY ""°' ,.,.,. _., .. ,, .. nd r. L ' ••• By Don Wilson man's breakfast (Engliah multiD or tout, ~ic• and coffee), 45 cent.I. Pancake IMdwi. 'ch three hotcakes, one egg, two ltript ol bacon), cents. Rancn band's bre9klfut or Wood&- man's breakfast (and these will satisfy any. me), 75 cents. Midday munching: hambUJllera galo ... • . . a l>lafn and simple, through muahf"oom, Polyneliall ~ dleelebol'Jer, surf rider. Colfee Tree and the Big John • . . at prices l'aniinl 66 cents tG-fl.20. Other sand··. wichea: bei!il dip, 71 cent., chili sa·bro-11 (ham- burger on bun covered with chill and cheese), 85 centa; Reuben&~me, $1.15; Slim Jim, $1.25; Businesan:an'1 Steak Sandwich, $1.55. Homeetyl• dinners: breaded veal cut]iet, •t.45; hamburger .teat, •t.55; baby beet llv· er, $1.515; ~·fried cblcken, $1. 75; Spen-cer steak, t1:80. .. 1beee main-coursers served with choicie of ltOUp or salad, hot rolb or rye-krisp and you-name-it potato. INJOY DININ• AT SCHROEDER'S S·TEAK HOUSE (formerly Cheri Inn) ·futurin9 · Std. CWck•, LolKter, Uf'd lilts House Speci•lty 15 02. T-Bone Steak $1.95 "BEA nPOSSIDENTES" MGIM?° Mogle? M9d .. n1 lounge Sounds of the JIMMY VAN . TRIO Nlthtty he.pt T'*41ay Open Delly 1.-Tueldey-1 ,.....-Sun4ay 4 ,..... 1211 IA.IT COAlt HIGHWAY -COltONA DIL MAI For· I-NII-Ttl1p•111 675-0470 The Finest Quality Choice STEAK Money Con Buy .•• AT A llDICULOUILY LOW PllCll • PIATUIJH ••. ''THE LIVE WIRES" IAY AND MAl•I JUISDA Y THROU•H IATURDA Y .J<ona _}(al RllTAURANT Re..,wadon11 892-1111 IDWAIDI .t IQl;IA HUNnNeTON llACH '1A~,m •mYilfi r •• ·'f05AIDS'Av..rul -... ..... DAILY, .. ,..., . .,.,,,, .. - • Different Diets For the dietary dabbler who is seekina that "something different," thece are numer· ous inexpeMive protein palaces to cbOOM from. Always offering a wide aelection of aa.lad1 and entreea are the area's smorgasbord bowi- es ... and we have some extremely good ones . . . Skandia Smorgasbord, Laguna Beach; Sir George, ·Huntington Beach; Nordic Smorgas- bord, CQe&a Mesa; Villa Sweden, Cocon. del Mar. Might-Vy Mexican resta~rants:'Don Jose, Huntington Beech; Amigos, C<>sta Mesa; Mitla STILL THE BEST PRIME RIB • • • FOR LESSI 91NNll INCLUDU -SOUP 01 SALAD, s3ts IAHD POTATO, HOISHADISH SAUCI, Ill.AD AND lunll 0,.. S, P.M.•11 P.~. ge!~!<l RESTAURANT Twe Leutle• •.• COSTA MESA .................... 540. 3641 OtW Lecetlett -L..t-e ..... CLOUD MONDAY ENTERTAINMENT-DANCING HIGBTLY · with THE ALPHABETICALS e c.at.11 H_. laterNIMt• e MAL & MARY lrnt DUO Our Memor•ble Menu fHtu;esi ,rime Rib ef l~ef, ltHlrt, Reck of l•mb, Dover Sole, SautHd AWlorte, Ro.It Duckin9 •nd Yorkshire SauH9e, Queen~ ~nn 777 SOUTH MAIN ITRHT ORANQI No • .,.4 ef Town I C.Untry, Opposite f11hion s,..,.,. US·ISS5 Mulcan Jleltaunnt, Ca1ta V...; Doe Robe .. - 11, c-. Mt11; r. POlllda, Coita M.... ~ l'Wl·ll-ChiPt tana.ra lbou1d mate tncu Hank's Fbh end Chips. , Newport BeacbJ Dor:Ymen. ditto city; ortginaJ. n.h-n.Cbipa, ~ alea; 'rbe Saucy Swan, Costa Mesa. There U'9 numel'oua names to remember for future trial: Snack Shope, Coco'• Denny'a, a>atey'a Pilla Parlon~ ~· Steak, Howard's, Pancak• House, M't>-N-m's ... · . and on ind en and on. 4'r To reiteNte . . . no Miealtimt Musivu, theee ••• ~t you will definitely find both the food proffered at them, and the COit, to ,.,ur liking Laguna Lineup Speaking of "jlryin&" ••. bow 100( bu it been line. you've cru.iaed (on land, that is) down the cout to enjoy 1 bite in Laguna Beach? • 'lbere are plenty ol places to do just that in Bruah.Stroke-By-The-Sea. . On• of the artilt coJooy'a m<>1t intimaW ,:" calorie castles ii The Cellar . . . a down- ltairs hideaway that feature. most commend· able meaJa, liberal UbatJons and the ,Wtar- Continuecl on P... 10 ONE OF ORANGE COUNTY'S TWO GREAT RESTAURANTS llobl\u~ • •LUNCHEON •DINNER •COCKTAILS • lolann11 Earl Trio MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY • 17 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER BETWEEN BUFFUMS AND BROADWAY Open: Weekdays-Luncheon: 11·1 D'fnner1: &:00-12:00 Saturd1y1-Lunch1on: 11:00-&:00 Dinnen1 1:00.12:00 Sundaya-Dinntra: 4:00.12:00 RESERVATIONS 644-2030 ..... __ . WI ' fl ............................ .-------------------~~~ l l 1 1 ' ··1i~ Jfe ~s~rman ')i .. ·- ~ : '\. <; lt the Pii·r HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF RESE.RVATIONS 536-255~· .... .· -' ·.I~• .... '11 _ ' ' ' DON JOSE' MEXICAN REST AU RANT LUNCHEONS From • • • • • • • • • 7(1¢ COCKTAILS and · ENTERTAINMENT ENCHILADA & TACO .....••• $1.30 CHILI RELLENO-ENCHILADA .•. $1.45 ~.. ..,_ wffll rice. ..................... ..... e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adams (at Magnolia) Hunt. Beach 962-7911 Tor SIRLOIN l.39 SiEAK •••••••••• NEW YORI( 1 59 CUT STEAK • • • • .. • 'IJ lb. GROUND 89c ROUND STEAK .• All ABOVE INClUOI! 9AKED POTATO OR P:RENCH FltlES, ROLL I. IUTTElt. DELICIOUS STUil SANDWICH "IF MORE PEOPLE WOULD TRY SIZZLER Fo..Uy s.... ........ Tiiey Wo•W Not O.ty BE SMARTER ... httorFff 9114 lie•. Al Wolll" HAMIUl•ll • • • • 49c CHIDI ••••• ••••• 54c OlllSS 'EM UP AT P:REI! GOODY &Altl DILICIOUS 1 19 •uLF SHRIMr • • • • • WITH FRENCH FRIES •Q' S...IM Rell 89• COfFH 1 "• Fr-' Frt.s ~ (All YM ... *hlU ~ ALL STEAKS SERVED ON SIZZLIN' PLATTERSI FIS.~ I. CHl'5 89 Mlncl Gf'fftl Sele4 24 w/Friu • • • • • • • • . • • • C Choice of Draui119 • • C CHEf"S 79 SALAD . •• •••••• •. • C e DAILY LUNCHEON SPECIALS e I MONDAY FAMILY NIGHT J :OO • 9:00 P.M. $1 09Li Rt1. s1.lf TOP SIRLOIN STEAK CHILD'S PORTION Vi ,..ICI e FAMILY STEAK HOUSES HUNTINGTON llACH I COSTA MESA HIUGRl!N SQUARE TOWN & COUNTRY HHINO TEXACO STATION llSSJ ..... ....._ f6J.lf1J L 11'11 & ..... Alie M2·74t2 • 1q~CNlf ......... ...... ~,. ln the mlddle of 1 forest In Subia Bay, Philippinn, at least 1 half• mile from civlllution, WHkend· er Editor, Lucy Bell was astound· ed to find this Colonel Sanders' Kentucky Chicken rMtaurant. It was 11 bright and sparkling clean as those familiar to Orange Coun- ty residents. Thought our readers would be interested In thf1 ob- scure location of one of their f • vorite chicken chefs. PIHINO HNl6Nl'S 'Uffa r/ova .nu,port 11 JI COAST HICJHWA Y NIWPOIJ HACH RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED 642-7180 1:00 P.M. • J :OO A.M. Delly YOU'LL ENJOY OUR SUNDAY BRUNCH 11 A.M. TO 3 P.M. 3801 EAsr CoASr HIGHWAY· CoRONA DF.L MAI. CALIFORNIA PHONf.: (714) 675-1374 ftMEU ltESTAUUNT Continental Cui1IM Cockt1il1 Serving Luncheon and Dinner Monda11 through Saturda11. Closed Sin¢o~1 Open for Private Partit1 Onl11 We ere loc1te4 •• the lrr1tol str .. t aide betwee11 Mull.. I lluett ud the Mey Ce. SOUTH COAST PLAZA nu s. 1r1n1 c......... 140.1141 lltUtcheon weekdays lllinMr urvedln tM Grand Manner • $71 S. MAIN, ORANOI Jlaervadona: 542r3S9S (Cloled Sunday) MIW led• DMLY PILOT ,,..._ """J. 1HI ·.• OUT 'N' ABOUT Continued From P• 9 get-aloogs of John Cooke. You might remem- ber Cooke from his lengthy stay at Saddleback Inn, too Laguna Beach. You'U find-him at The Cellar address, Wednesdays through Sundays. A long, long timer in LB is Benton's Cof. fee Shop . . . located right on Coast High· way entering the downtown area. Here . . . breakflast time, anytime; luncheon and dinner. With a wide-spread (and oft-ordered) menu, B~ton's is probably most famous for the homemade pastries available there. Fantastic cakes and pies. Elegant Eateries Lucien Brack's Old Brussels is a delightful dinery of dark wood, gold table cloths and napkins (during our last visit), bric-a-brac you'll chat about and warm fll'ellghl New York beef roast the principal palate pleaser at Old Brussels. For exotics . . . in both food and drink • • • it's The Outrigger in Laguna Beach. A place-of gurgling waterfalls and over- head palm frond sweeps, 'The Outrigger has . it all . . . from tall and cools right on through an imposing menu of South Seas succulents. for Luncheon, Dinner, SundaJI Brunch, a tru• adventurt in dining - the "Celestials" appearing Frlda11, Saturda11 and Sundau for your enJovment • • • ............ QAIU f"t\OT P'llllly, '"" •• "" Many More · As in the above case of the famUy-sty16 dining-dens there are far too many ucellent restaurants in· Laguna Beach to cover indi- vidually herein. However. jot these down as "Lagun2 Look-Ats:'' The White House, Andree's, Royal Hawaiian, Victor Hugo's, Hotel Laguna (Sea Terrace Room). Saddteback-By·The-Sea, La Strada, House of Hyun. NOTES OF A NOMAD We try . . . but sometimes it's just impossible to be infallible. Apologies . . . through this reference to the column a couple of weeks ago . . . to El French, Quiet Wonun, Corona del Mar. What's it all about? Merely this. Throughout one entire segment of that column, we kept ref erring to El "Thomas" as landlord of the QW. The fact that we once labored for four years in the company of one . . . El 'Thomas . . . at Another newspaper is no excuse for such a boo-boo; although, truthfulJy, it was the reason. Anyhow . • . sorry El FRENCH. A new kick at The Red Carpet, Balboa, involves patrons of that very nice beer bar "goin' clammin'." Yep ... when season and tides are right, a group heads for the Channel, scoops up the number of clams required and retires again to the RC where they boil those beauties and wash them down with that icy and bubbly. Not too bad a route to go ! To the inquirers: no definite date set as yet for the doors of that new Don The Beach- comber (Coro~ del Mar) to s w i n g open. Ground has not even been broken yet, so, obviously, any actual operation of the spa is still quite a way off. Add inquirers: word has that the near- ing-completion Wu·ben's, Newport Beach, will be doling out those Cantonese condiments ..• and coolers ... approximately July 15. Tha's all! rrom the btaollful new 811:7 Room oC lb• OraacS Bott.I, ove.r'lookln• D11oe11an<1. P'1reworlul besin at 1:00 •cb nlait <lurtaa th• eommer, Entertainment nl~htl7 b7 DEL NADZAU1 ~n front «M ,.m. ......... _ ,,.... .. M11111ll,... Real C1111tnese Food . Mt here or t1ke home. STA& CHiii WlhO 111 21st Pl., Newport leach Oliole 3-9560 Open Ve., ftound DaJly 11·11 ffrt 8M lat 'tit I a.m. El Matador FAMILY RESTAURANT AUTHINTIC MUICAN FOOD N .. 10 bc•ll'• & T-. wllt .tee. ..................... ... ... , er..._ ........ Sl.10 He.11-lT-.ltetwllt•._...._ ..... rte., ................. _,..,...,et ..e.I •.•• SI.JO riOW All-CONDmoND LUNCHION lnCIALI 0,..1 ..... tin n.n. -I I : ... 11 :to M .. Set. -lllfl.ll:Jt S.. U:M-11:00 p ... 1761 ..._,.... It"-(At 1M It.I C.... W.. MZ.6417 THE ADVERTISING AGENCY of Welkup end Down- ing end Stein, Inc., hes edvised their client, Woody'1 Wharf Bar and Resteurent, 2318 Newport Blvd., to discontinue newspaper edvertising. The egency feel1 thet Woody's fine food e~d beverages spHk for themselves I including the femous 'Weter Front' et. mosphere I. This is NOT en edvertisementl We repHt ••• this is NOT en edvertisement! Signed, Rudy Welkup Jr., Hnior copywriter . / (WATCH 'OR NIXT WEEK'S NOT ADVHTISIMINT) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••• lf' . ,~~ Pl\Vlbton • • • • • • • THE HISTORIC PAVILION Swings Again • "'Ct • • with Newport'I own at the pi1no bar Si111(ing a11d playing your favorite tu11es mid req11tm, Wednesday tlaru Saturday night,, ~ ... dinntr with the mO$f 1pu1acular harbor vici111 Ill Newport .•. from 5:00 ttJch • • • • • • ,, evening ~· ~ion Sta •. w,,ere \~ .. SINCE 1905 ~"4' • llWPOIT lueH lllUOll NalWlll • • Loo~ f°' tht Llghttcl Cu pole ( rM'rt 'lrurfv '""'" fl) • • ••••••••••• --- or ... c....+1' • or 'I I ·- '\ . Lightest Mexico By John Abney MEXICA'l\" RODEO • Mexico's top rated movie and recording star, Tony Aguilar, right, is current· ly appearing in his Na· tional Mexico Rodeo in the Los Angeles Sports Arena, through July 7. Shown with him are his wife, film star Flor Sil· .,_vestre; and his seven year-old son, Tony J r. A fellnr from Arizona wrote asking about work for bilin&Ual youngsters in Mesico. He says they have Spanish and English .speaking high school dropouts, some of wbom are above average intelligence and could do clerical work. And be asks if there is a market for employment in Mexico City for this type of boy or girl. No sir. I'm afraid not. It's a little more complicated than just coming to Mexico and going to work. First of all, the labor laws here require that the heavy percentage of employees in any comoany be Mexican citizens. Otherwise, the offices would be over- run with foreigners and that would cut Mex:- icans out or work in their own country. Foreigners do live and work here but ·the first thing you have to do is find a company that wants your services. This company then has to write a letter to the immigration department here requesting that you be given working papers and the department in- vestigates the whole business to see what the balance of employees in said company is. This takes lime. Sometimes several months. Q. Is there an off-season when hotel rates •re lower? A. Yes ma'am. The big season with full rates runs from about the first of December to the end of April. The "off- season" goes from the end o( April to December. Rates are down 25 or 30 percent but the hotels often are filled up. * ---~--~--------..... -~ --- Q. Are rfl•rv•tlont MCHt•ry In Me•lce? We like te travel when the spirit mev•• us . A. I'll admit that ts the nicest way oC getting around but you're taking a risk. During, the big season you often can't get acoommodations anywhere. When the so-called off-season starts, you have the white collar workers. school teachers and so on, ~oming down on the eronomy tours. This keeps the ·hotels at a brisk leyel If you plan to drift around the country, I would '5uggest you get res· ervati011s in advance unless you stay u£f the beaten paths. *" Q. Can you recommend good but not ex- pensive hotels in Guadalajara, Acapulco and Mexico City? A. I like the Hotel Fenix: in Guada!a· jara. Acapulco has so many hotels that it's tough to single out any one. However1 I usually stay at the Maris because it is located right on the beach and Ute rates are right. As to Mexico City, since you're driving down why not try Shirley Courts located in the center of town? The food is excellent and the tari££ is not high. * Q. Where can we get a list of trailer courts in Mexico? A. Try the AAA guide book to Mexico and Central America. They have a list of everything you'll need and [ belie,·e they quote prices as well. (Questions on Mexico? Write John Abney, San Francisco 1730, Mexico City 12, Mexico.) -..-. *'"' DAl~Y f'l~OT "" .......... "" . ~ ... Current -Art Exhibits CHALUS GALLERY -1390 S. Coasf Highway, Laguna Beach. On exhibit daily 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. thmugb July, a one-woman show of oils by Jo Anne Mix. · SO. CAUF. F IRST NAT'L BANK -17122 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours through July 2.6, oil peintings by Huntington Art League memtH?r. Teressa Uzzardo. · NEWPORT BEACH CITY HALL -3300 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. On exhibit during regu· lar business hours, a one-man show. James Clutter's "Retrospective Collection," sponsored. by tbe N.B. Art. Committee. · NE WPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Bayside· Drive, Newport Beach. On exhibit during reg. ular business hours through July, the weavings and tapestries of Jean Tillman of Anaheim and Marian Sanders of Costa Mesa. STILL RUNNING "Tlte Petrified Forest" A suspense drama, "The Petrified forest,'' is tH?ing presented at the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 Main St., Huntington Beach. Fri. and Sat., through July 6. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone 847-1631 for further informaffot "Adventures In a Paper Bag .. An evening of experimental theater combining act- ing and film, will tH? presented. by the South Coast Repertory. Second Step Theatre in their production "Adventures in a Paper Bag." Performances at the SCR Theater, 2815 Villa Way, Newport Beach wiU be held Fri., Sat. and Sun. through July 7. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone &46-1363 for further information. .. May Yo ur House Be Free From Norzl~s'' A satirical comedy, "May Your House Be Free From Nozzles," is being presented. at the Orange Studio Theatre. 195 N. State College, Orange. Performances are on Thurs., Fri. and Sat. at 8:30 p.m. through July 11 . Phone 526-6614 for further information. "A Stttetcar Nanted De1lre" The South Coast Repertory, Thir d Step Theatre. '1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, iJ presenting Ten. nessee WilJiams' drama, "A Streetcar Named De· sire." Performances Thurs. through Sat. closing July 14. Curtain time 8:30 p.m. Phone 646-1363. ~liM St.ctle-OAIL \' rltOf k!Ny, J.,!y J, IHI - ..... , . CAMERA WORK GALLERY -l834D Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours through July 13, print.41 by photographer Edmund Teske and "The Mexi- can PortfoUo" by Paul Strand. CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY -420 Marigold, Corona del Mar. On exhibit during regular Ji. brary hours through JuJy, onginal magazine covers done by local artists. CHARLES BOWERS MUSEUM -~2 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours: Tues. through Sat. 10 a.m. to 4:30.J>.m.; Sun. 1 to 5 p.m.; Thurs. eve· ning 7 to 9 p.m . No admission charge. On ex- hibit beginning July 6, a juried craftsmen and designer show by members ol the Orange Coun- ty Art Association. · WESTERN ART GAU.ERV -Saddleback Inn, E. First St .. and Santa Ana Freeway, Santa Ana. Currently on exhibit, during regular busjness hours, paintings of the old West by Donald Putnam and Ronald Erickson. l Current Live ' Theater "Marrlagt tf Figaro" ~e· ''Maniage of F igaro" is tH?ing presented in English translation at the ()()mmunily P layhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St.. Long Beach through July 'rl. Perlormances scheduled Fri. and Sat. beginning at 8:15 p.m. During the Fourth of July holiday week- end, productions wm be held on Sat. and Sun. eve- nings. J uly 6 and 7. Phone 1213) 434-6435 for fur· ther information. OPENING THIS WEEK "Tbt Odd Couple'' Neil Simon's comedy. "The Odd Couple," is being presented at the Laguna Playhouse, 319 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach, July 5 through July 21. Perform- ances Thurs. through Sun. at 8:30 p.m. Phone 494-8061 for ticket information. "Little Rkbard Revue'' The ''Little Richard Revue," starring Little Rich- ard. Bo Dlddley and Wolfman Jack, will be staged JuJy 8 and 9 at Melodyland Theatre, 10 Freedman Way, Anaheim. Curtain tJme 8:30 p.m. P hone 776-7460 for ticket Information. "SoalMl er Music" Rodgers and Hammerstein's ''Sound of Music" will be presented J uly Jl through 21 by the Long Beach Civic Ugbt Opera Association in the Concert Hall of the Municipal Auditorium, 'PO E . Seaside Drive, Long Beach. Phone (213) 432-792.6 for furlh· er information. IA&UIA PlA YHOUSE SUMMER THEATRE THE ODD COUPLE ... A Neil Si"'•" co"'e.ly +flat lif "' l ree4'wey for more then 2 )H rt •• • ...,.... ..... I -..,.. .wy 21-n.n ..... S-. C...... l :JI A.I ..... I--' -H .H TMn. & S.... SJ.II M. & s.t. COMIN6 -A ..... 1 -... Wt _. .. SWEET CHARITY 494-1061 SUNDAY JULY7 4:0D P.ll IOWITOWN BUllRINC Cellrfll Mwuttwa cer...., Pnllttflll.tt FUll llAT.01 JISl FAIWI IUIZ JAl••iAn EllY CAVAZOS ACIMATIC aoWNS •UIEUCl,lllI&llMI -• TllCI ........ • Ill NII • 1Un ...... .,.mu A BALLET OF HORSES 1 ll Y 4-5-6-7 • L.A. JPOITS AIBIA SHOWS ADM. """'-2:M-7cte ,... $2.00, $J.00, $4.00 M . l :JI ,... Chll«lren 'Under 12, S.. J 1JM1JI P·•· s-. J1J1.7cte p.a. Helf Price HATS NOW AT ................ ~ & All ....... no.t ,. ...... w ......... c-. For Fwther h1fe r1t1etie11 CALL 74•·• I l I Or=13 :ntE MOST BEAlRIRJl THEATRE IN THE WORID ID WARDS' HAUOR at ADAMS. COSTA MESA. P110NE 546-3102 - BEST SCREENPLAY! WIWAMROSE COl.UM81A PICTUMS pttltlllt 1 · Stanley Kramer • Pftd\K\lon Spencer 1· Sidn~ TRACY _POITIER Katharine HEPBURN guesa who's com•n1 · to dinner ;• HouahtDn IWl'1M'OI. ~ ................................. .,NUYllMMC'l. Tt~ I I 2 Ac .. ••r A__. WlaHt'I MATINID DAILY • ..tl'ttn!IMICI l(llMult e t:JI. •:•. 11•. f :Jt ,,.,, axtn SMw , .... 11 :U '·"'· Tiit_ ... ...,_ •• "01161NAL fAMILT IAND" • N .. ...,... .... ,...., THE IMICM ~llOll ..- A BLAKE EDWARDS Pl>OUCOOll 0 •• ., ..... ,._. In »~<,' ~ ~ .... ' , , . I . "J • : . .oj < I ..i I ' I ,.,,. ' : • i I J' ' ' ": t .. ' I ' ~ • 4 ' I .~... ..~ ~ > ·' ... •' • :Iii. ~ • ..... ~--~;,;,, EXCLUSIVE HOLIDAY SHOW ROd Steiger stars in "No Way to TrHt • Lady" now showing at the Harbor Drive-In, Santa Ana. Peter 'Sellers is the life of the party but •I· most the duth of his host in ''Th• Party'' now at Edwards Huntintton Cinema, Hunt· f ngton Beach and the Lido, Newport Beach. MEET THE PEOPLE Continued From Page 3 food for Americans. "Good Iood is univer- sal," he says. "Except for some very unusual dishes, people of all countries recognize it immediately." When he is at home, the chef enjoys gardening and reading books, both in English and Korean. He and his .wife, Hannah, a gi rl he had known in Korea who came to Los An· geles to study music, have three children, Howard 5, Edna 4, and 3-year-old Stuart. Chef Ed Shin likens his restaurant team to a family where each of the members knows and appreciates the work of the oth- ers. As the head of the Five Crown's family, he is a patient and understanding father. -Dorothy Pier . -----·-·--lffWUll 11-11 lllO\ll I Mii llllllt rtr'fL Special P.T .A. Matinee Saturday -"MISTY" -10:30 1.m. -All Seats 50c TROPICAL FISH Largest Selection ·of Tropical F i s h & Supplies in the area. Now 2 Loutlona 21t W. WILSON, COSTA MHA (lff F•lrvlew ... , ._7"1 111·0, ltlvenlde oi.,.....ew,.,, •Mell (lMlllM IM P'MI Office) •4HSU FOR Advertising in the Weekender Phone 642·4321 HELD OVER Now Continuous Open Noon " CLOSELY PICKWICK~ !~~~,~~~.~! 540-2191 --1743 Hollywood llYd, Mollpttd (213) HO ... 191 20TH IDlllY· Rll pi.-. dwdroN ~ESTON "' EXCLUSIVE COUNTY RUN HELD OVER En Sltew Stam 6:45 Co11t. S11tMloy fro• J p.-. DON'T JUST STAND THERE ... IUN FOi THE FUN! WATCHED~ ... .-. .... ._ 'TRAINS GB TICHNICOU>tl hr ...... ...... MINtlM StctlM-0.-J LY .. ILOt' .. , ..... .,.., .. "" ~ llE~--~Ll9' ~ATRE NOMI OP IOCKING CHAii LOOU I 701 EAST IAl.BOA ILVD. i.WBOA P£N!NSULA• 673-4041 .... 11•wn11 c ......... Dely,,_J:H .... ,11cee • •:• ...... Welt DllMY'• "NATUln HALP ACU- FIATUU sum 1:00. 6:JO • 10:00 :····. iE4r -............ ..,-4117 Wttlenl Act.......SCIMCe 'ktlell , ... N-· Ce.., "H ....... " ltlWtf Wtldl e C.ter "FaaJastlcYoyep" · W.,._ Ww II Adlelll Wiii-H..._ Cliff lltllertMA • .,... Dftll'1 lrtfode" ...... , ,,,. Only • C:•ler .ltd! r•..ce • c.ter ''To IUI • Dr..-" SMwll ., 11:11 C)tfy -~ ..... "'!'---ill _., ...... . UJ.1%71 IC•IMf'I.. ...,._,. .,.__ Tl'llCY S~ f'elllw "fhoM Wllo't Co•I .. to Dla..,7" llleW9 •I 1:11 & U :M e C:.ter RM Stel9tr e c;_, "No Wflf to Treat • Lody" SIMwll •t ll1M OlllY -----. ._ .... ... • 147·35'1 W•"· Dblley Cl•Hk e Celer "S..w WWto •d no 21t• Cellr Hit "Fllppor'1 Now A4w .. ..,. ... FOUNTAIN VALLEY ...... ,.., -~ 112·2411 • .......,. Adllll TlftM .. -· .,..... • ..,.. • C.lw "Tllo ................ '""" ti •:• .. 1h11 ......... .. ,.. IJ4GU ·---~All ... .,. DeMM9rtlll '-....... ............. .....,.. et a.a a 111• • c.- ""' .._ • Clllll' ........... ...._ et Its• Ollflt \ Mlo9 ..... ~AJLY f'ILOT l'r•, J-'Y 1, 19'1 MOVIE SCENES Tommy StMle definitely IY1 problems In ''The Happl .. t Miiiionaire" at the Surf ThMter, Huntington Beach. A scene from "'Sound of Music," starrlnt . Julie Andrews, now belnt shown af the Bal- boa· ThMter on the peninsula • Cliff Robertson, Wllllem Holden end Vince Edwards In a teene from "TM Devil's lrl- _..., now at the Port ThMter, Corona c1e1 Mar and Paulo Driv•ln, CMt• Mesa. LAST 7 PllllOIMANCISI ....... ............... nv. ••. ----.. ......... .-. .................... -. ....... . . • ........... -.., c-tr crttk8 "A STREETCAR NAMED ·aESll·E" n.n. ...... ,,. , .... 11*9 ... TllMtN, Ctlll ..... A,....._ H .. 11Hl11I Pl• '"foctl•• la• .. "Adventul'ff In • P•per Bat'• IM 1-.. n.,tre pn.s., 11» """· C...... ._ 0..... -1111 Mlow 646-UU • ~ • lELIPHONI 541·1552 FOi INFOIMATION • EXCLUSIVE RRST RUN SHOWING •LlllD-.illllYIL'SBBI" · 1JJAM HUI ·Wff mSI ·VIII er&a 4119 .............. -itW SICOND llG HIT . ~ A ........ ..,.. ......... ,. "A FISTPUL OP DOLLARS" Clint Eutwood .. er;r.~11 ~ i " This Slot · Machine . For iust a dime, you hi.t tlie tac1Cpot every time. You get local news and 1port1 plus complete stock market reports, features on fashions and foods from the world of women, Information on 1csience1, scshool and I • politics. And that's not even mentlonln9 the bonan1a of bar9ain1 you'll find in the ads. Risk a few c•nta. lnrlch your life for a dime. t Ctihst • • • ' REALLY PAYS OFF DAILY -PILOT -.ut• Jectllll-OAILY PIL• • J .. , '· 1 -