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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1968-07-16 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa, --' ---T-"" -•;-..-...... ,. ......... DAILY PILOT ·shotgun Blasts Ro~k . TUESDAY 'AFTERN OON, ~ULY -'16, 1968 San(a Ana Re~ord Shop ~~~~~-''°~L;.:..;;•~·"°;;;;;.·~'"-:.;.••~•~cn~·~·~·~"-·~·-•-••'--~~~~~~~~~~~C-, ......................................................................................................... .. • * * * * * '--ti * * * * * * .. ":.:i * '-ti * * * •• • r1 e· oom1n a OU as County Fair Game JRVINE BOUND? -"Sweelpea" the anteater, is with Spots the Clown animal show now playing at the Orange County Fair. Sweet- pea, along with Giggles the sunbear from South East Asia and a trained flea circus are among the animals awaiting fialrgoers. There's Plenty to Do At Orange County Fair By J~CK CHAPPELL Of "'-ci.tlY l"li.t Steff County fain:, like death and taxes, never change. Orange County Fair, which opened today ls no exception. (See Page 8 for full schedule) Walk down the mall and you'll see and hear the exhibits by local merchants, the flower shows, the carney sideshows, exhibition hall filled with the wares of neighboring localities, with each exhibit, each town Money Ar gument Ends in In tent Murder Charge Shotgun blasts were fired Monday in a Santa Ana record store fight and two men arrested, one on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder. Police said the disturbance took place at the Record Rack, 1701 W. 1st St., Booked on the assauJt charge was Robert E. Whiting, 26, of Santa Ana, an employe of the record shop. Jailed on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon was Ocie Adams, 24, of Santa Ana . Oflicers said ·Ule argument started over money which Adams reportedly owed Whiting. Whiting, police said, circlered Adams to leave and not relurn wtthout the money. Adams returned with a _,, gauge 1hotgun Instead oC the mooey. Accordlng to WhiUng'a story, Ad.ams hit him on the alde oC the bead with the gun. He wrestled it away lronl him and fired 1 shot when Adams Deel. AdOJDJ returned to the fray and Ibis time be wu hit on the h .. d with the CWt and a second shot was fired. No one ,Jl'U injured. L saying, "look at us, we're great.'' Go back to the arena and you can see the Junior NatiGnal Horse Show. There young equestrians are making attimals 10 ti'mes larger than they perform. \Valk back aJong the stock pens and you can s~e the pride and joy of many yoWlgsters. Hogs, of ell colors, shapes and sizes; lambs, freshly clipped and combed ; au with their attendant masters continuously c l e a n i n g , bnll1:Ung. " Back a little farther you can see the cattle stallii. It is there that you'll find the e-0w with three horns and three eyes along with the prize, curried darlings of the groups like La Habra Future Farmers or the Fullerton Hap- py Hayseeds. tn the stock area, you'll also find the !arm's equivalent of a stage mother. She scurries around urging her children to get up in !ront when photographers are taking pictures, prodding them to clean, clip and comb or brush their animals. Judging will be gojng on almost con· tinuously from 9 a .m. until 3 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday back in the stock area. The interested city slicker can wander through the pens, poke his head .into the stAlls spotted with the red, white and blue prize ribbons and wonder jurt what makes the animal •lpriie." During the afternoon you can sit ·down on a bench holding cotton candy and a bot dog in one hand and a paper cup or Coke fn the otter. lnvariably, mustard will run down your finger• and drip on )'«Ir panle. The Popcorn T!l<alre, the puppet show, is on and the kids have crowded arQPJKI the little st.age. In the baci<ground 1he thr1l1s .. d •Pl\I• ol lhe Sid&<bOWI an being broa<Jcait by the (See FAIR, Page .Z) Controversial Church Loses Costa Mesa Home Long Session End s Chances For Reprieve By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ""' O.llY .. , ... stiff Costa Mesa's most unusual faith - annoying to its neighbors a nd aoothema to more established Harbor Area religioo.ist.s -lo6t its last chance Monday to remain in tlhe mode:s1 quarters it now occupies. ..,. Emotional tension and even a hint of bi~otry threaded the lengthy hearing in Which the City Council finally voted 4 to l to deny a three-month extension of tihe fledgling church's condltional use .permjt. The Institute of Ability, therefore, is rlC7W in violatiod of city ordinance .at 1862 Placentia Ave .. but the vote was tempered with 30 days of mercy to allow them to find a new sanctuary. Councilmian Willbam L. Sl Clair, speaking in conciliatory tones, at- tached e stipulation to his motion for denial to stay any city prosecution for at least one month. St. Clair noted that anim06'ity by neig'hbors again.st the three-year-0ld faith founded by the Rev. H. Charles Berner is growing and that the Institute of Ability is tibe logical choice to go. CHANGE NEEDED ''[ agree that a change must take place, but I Oon 't agree dlat a three· month exh!nsion of their pennit is too much to ask," commented Councilman George A. Tucker in casting a no vote. T,he Institute of Ability applied for a new, annual condltional use permit last February and the cit)' planning staff suggested ~y seek a three-year permit, but commissioners later sug- gested a 12-month limit. F·aced with an angry response from opponents, led by Bernard Cook, of 781 Center St., the City Council cut the permit ex-tension to tbree monUls and offered staff help in finding new sanctuary quarters. Cook .a.gain appeared before the City Council Mondiay, presenting a petition bearing 14 signatures, and repeated a long list of grievances against the Institute. some of them new ones. They include: noisy traffic, people sleeping overnight, lights on all night, Wl6igbtly grounds, auto repair on the church parking Jot, resultant droppini property values and other offenses. "1bis is out and out contempt,'' Cook declared concerning lnsUtute response to remedial rules Ja1d down by the City Councll 90 days ago, "there art incidents which we don't even care to mention." "We've seen girls sitting with their drflsses hiked up on the lawn," he -. Cook -who once spent a year (S.. INSTITUTE, P1fe Z) I Fore! It!'s Plane Pilot Finds Good Lie Near Fairway GoUers at Huntington SeacliCf Golf Course in Huntington Beach are used to flying objects around fairways, bu! Monday golfers agreed Ulat a Piper Comanche 140 was too muclt. The plane crash landed just past the 11th fairway shortly after 2:30 p.m. af. ter the pilot, Lynn Coffelt, 25, of 10485 Marguerita Ave., reported the engine had slDpped running In midair. Coffelt suffered minor facial cuts in the crash landing. Golfers said the pilot "didn't even yell 'fore' " as he sailed across the course some 100 to 200 feet high. The plane dropped low enough to uproot a few young trees on the course a nd to crash land on a bank at the edge of the course, stopped by a cable acUng as a fence. Coffelt said he was on his way back to Orange County Airport after touch and go landings at Long Beach Airport. At 1,500 feet near Newport Beach the powerplant "just quit," he said. 15,000 Worke~s Affected As Dougla s Strike Loom s More than 15,000 employes of the McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Corp. in I~untington Beach could be affected by a strike of two major aerospace unions tentatively scheduled for JuJy 29 If no settlement is reached before that deadline. Involved in a contract dispute are the International Association o t Machinists District (IAM) I.OOges 1578 and 720 and the United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 148. Members of both unions will meet on Sunday, the IAM at 11 a.m. at the Shrine Auditorium Jn Los Angeles and the UAW at 2 p.m. at the Long Beach Veterans Stadium. Members or both unions will be ask· ed to authorize termination of con· State Files Suit Against Dairy SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Slate has taken court action against Foremost Dairies, Inc., and Lucky Stores on charges of selling mllt cheaply. A '2 mJlllon suit waa flled Monday by Atty, G<n. Thomas C. Lynlh. ForemOlt waa accused of perlodk:olly maklng rellatel alter receiving the _I ..... price preocrlb- ed by Slate Agrlcllltur< DJm:lor Earl O:>ke for milk and crum. The suit sold Forem<lll had reb1Jed some fl.I million to Lucky alnce July 1967, tracts with the McDonnell Douglas Corp. on JuJy 28 which wouJd permit strike action by 54,000 employes on Ju. Jy 29. Flnal membership vote by both unions ls scheduled for July 2.8. Leaders o( the machinists union have met with the McDonnell Douglas management to discuss a new three- year contract to replace the one which expired Monday. Despite optimistic predictions by or. ficers of the aerospace firm, union or- ficials ere warning members today to make serious strike preparations. This means, union leaders said, it is too soon to say with assurance what the prospecta are for strike action. Ed Wlaneckl, preiddent of UAW Local 148, told his members that "the unpleasant but honest answer is that the chance of a strUte ls very hJgh." In addition to the McDonnell Douglas dJspute, the IAM 11 also in contract negotiations with Boeing, North American, Loclthttd Aircran Co. and several other aerospace fttrnll in the nation with a total or about 250,<XXI emp(oye1. Workers at Huntington Beach, Palmdale, Cape Kennedy, Sacramento and Vandenberg Air Force Base are among those who wollld be affected by the curnnt dispute. Loc:lthetd workers voled wt SU.day to 1trike it agreement on a · new· con· tract ts not reacbed ia a reuonable period. ' Loc:thetd wor1t1n did not set a date for a poulble lllke. Ne(Otlatlonl are coatlnutnr with all of the involved aerotpaee flrm1 and tndumy sources uy Ibey are op- timlltic about the prospects of a peaceful 1etllernenl .. .• ,- Skipper :feared Lost From Boat Found Adrift Orange County Harbor Department patrolmen will make another search }ate today for a Balboa Island men of· ficials pr~sume may have fallen over.board and drowned from a boat found circling Monday o(f Emerald Bay near Laguna Beach. The boat was found traveling in circles with no one in it. . The Harbor Departm..t txm It In tow, and · ilivestigation showed the driverless 14-foot ootboard belonpci to Alice P, Soeg, 228 P<m-1 St, Bit!boa Island. She oaid Roy Carmack, o1 801\I N. Bay Front, Balboa Is~and , should.have been at the tiller. Carmack hasn't been found. A \Search was made Monday af. ternoon by the U. S. Coast G!J&rd, Navy aircraft and helicopters, then diseontimied. "Ropefully the skipper will be found on land. We -don't know what ttie cR-curnstances are," .said Harbor Deparbnent Sergeant R a y m a n d Graham. Uneasy about the mysterious Jn. cident, he called the unmanned boat "a Utile \.ll08tural." Ora nge Weatller Summertime weather tend1 to be repeUtlous and today and tomorrow wUI be no exceptions. Temperatures will be in the 80s with morning and .evening low clouds. INSm E TODAY In the annala of the Morine Corps there ii now anoUMr namt! KM Sanh. S•t pictures of abandoll<d bcUo Page JS, C .... l"fllt 1 ...... I C......... iNI ...._ II ~ ............ t• (,...,.,. 11 ---• o.9111 ...... • OfM9t CMltr ' • iti\owca I ,.... ,._. 1a.1• l«ttrlli ,..,. J4 ..... .. .. ......... "'.. 11 ""* ....... ...,, P'IMMt lf.11 .,......... If P'ln C.... I n.tln II ........ 111 It ....._ 4 M«'M ...... 11 .... ..... ' .... ~ ............ .... ' • .. I I I I I I ~ DAILY PILOT NY-Moscow Bights Get Off Ground NEW YORK (UPI) -The sllwr, blue and white Soviet jet circled New York frJr en hour and 35 minutes. Then it gracefully rolled to a stop at Ken- nedy lntemaUonal Airport and made hiatory. 'lbe first Soviet commercial flight to the United States arrived Monday, capping 10 years of negotiations tha.t ran hot and cold according to the in· temational climate between the two superpowers. 'Ille s o v I et government-owned airline Aeronot Ilyushin 62 carried 98 Russians from Moscow to New York slightly ahead of its 10 hours, 45 minutes schedule time. But air traffic over the city was so great that the 186- seat jet had to join the stack circling overhead. Two Pan American World Airways jets -one , curying r .e g u I.a r · passengers and· the other making the inaugural New York-Moscow flight with VIPa -flew to Moscow Monday night. Each airline . will fly one flight a week with ,\eroflot stopping in Mon- treal and Pan Am stopping at Copenhagen. A round-trip ticket costa $1,109 in first class and $730 in tourist. The Ilyushin 62 holds 186 passengers. Pan Am's Boeing 7Cfl holds 199. Among the 93 to arrive Monday were 54 government officials and 39 paying custop.1en.-The customers walked directly from the plane to the international arrivals building. The of· · ~icials stayed at planeside. The Soviet flag and the U.S. flag waved side by side at the entranceway . to tbt greeting area where a news con· ferenee was held. · Among those meeting the Ilyushin were Undersecretary of State Eugene G. Rostow and J acob Malik, the Soviet U.N. ambassador. Ros tow said tpe new air service was part of a larger effort to improve r elations between the United States and the Soviet Union. Frotn Page l FAIR ... screams of tenified, satisfied patrons. Pretty soon, the sounds of the marching bands, or drum and bugle corps will be mixing with the other sounds of the fair, each sound trying to outdo the other. Later thJs evening, the traditional beauty pageant will be taking place in the amphitheater with all the county belles on parade. Miss Orange County Tomorrow will be chosen from among tflat group of girls, tonight at 9 p.m. And so for six days, UM!: Orange County Fair will display its wares to the awe and titillation of children of all ages. ·Even the middle·aged ones. Baby Girl Left Outside Church INGLEWOOD (UPI) -A 6-mooU1- old baby girl found abandoned outside a church named for the patron saint of mothers today was under care in a county facility for neglected children. The blue-eyed, blonde infant was tak-en to McLaren H.all in El Monte \\-:here attendants said sbe was in "very healthy" condition. The girl was placed out.side the rear entrance to St. Gerard's <l'lurch here early Monday by her mother who told priests oo the telephone, "J have been praying lo St. Geren! for help." 1be baby was le~ in a basket at the rear of t!le church. Next tu the basket was a baby bottle and feeding in- structions. A note was pinned to the girl's sweater. "Please take care of my baby," she wrote. "I will try to pick her up in about three week! when I should be in better financial condition." DAILY PILOT W• I,. c ... u_ ....... --h••hll• ,....., CAUPOIHIA Reltert N. WeM f'Wlllfltr Tho"''' Ktt¥il EdllOt Tho1t1a1 A. M11rphlnt MIMl!"I EClllor Jacl: Jt. C•rl.., P•11l Nln•n ..,..,.. ~ Adwrll•kls DI~ Oflictt t.esft MIMI i. Wet lhY Strftl ....,..... leed\1 nu w: .. !bolo . &wltY•nl Ut1I"• Bt•<.11 : m J.ottti A••- ,...,. .... a.cti: • Jltt """ TutSday, July 16, 1968 Victory in Peace'! Southern Swing • Reagan Ans~ers . W aliace · Threat· • By The Al1odated. Preu. California Gov. Ronald Reagan says his Swing through the South beginning thb week will be aimed against what some Republicans consider a growing threat from former Alabama Gov. G<orge c, Wallace. fund-raising appearances in Texas, Arkansas, ·Virginia, North Carolina, and Alabama. The Harris Survey released Monday showed Wallace favored by 15 percent of the voters, and taking twice as many votes from Republican can· didates a:s from Democrats. Pollster Louis Harris said in a copyright Washington Post story half Wallace's strength is in the South. Father Richard York (right), and serviceman Chuck Jones, 20 Fernandina Beach, Fla., participate io a special church service in San Francisco herald· ing eight servicemen's "resignation" from the arm· ed services . Five soldiers, two sailors an da Marine took part in the "service" in which they chained themselves to clergymen. Third party prealdential candidate Wallace bas been ahowlng increasing strength In public opinion polls and Reagan said Monday that Alabama Republicans in particular were con-· cerned about speculation Wallace "might eat into" Republican votes. "Very frankly," Reagan said in Sacramento, "the Republicans asked me bec,ause of the strength of Gov. Wallace. He is going to change the balance, possibl)'.." The Gallup Poll, reported Sunday that Wallace shows 16 percent voter support, and said that was nearly twice the strength he showed in April. New York Gov. Nelson A. U.S. Troops Defeat Huge The South also is considered Reagan's greatest source of preslden· tial strength outside California. The governor says be is not a preSidential contender but as a favorite-son can- didate could become one at the GOP national convention next month in Rockefeller, announced GOP con- tender, said meanwhile his nationwide: poll to indicate whether he or Richard M. Nixon would be the strongest Republican candidate will be con- ducted July 22-26. Rockefeller said be is convinced delegates want to nominate a winning candidate and said the poll results will be announced as soon as possible before the GOP convention which begins Aug. 5. Force • Ill of Reds SAIGON (AP) -U.S. troops pro. tect.ing the southern approaches to Saigon defeated a large enemy force Tuesday in a savage battle in the Mekong Delta. U.S. and South Vietnamese sources agreed that the enemy had pulled back around Saigon, easing a threat to the capital. But the fighting since Monday in the delta showed the Viet Cong and the North VietnameSe still were in force on the city's approaches. Infantrymen of the U.S. sth Division struck the enemy force 16 miles southeast o{ Saigon Monday and the battle raged on, until the early morning hours of Tuesday. Artillery, helicopter gunships and dive oo·mbers joined the battle. U.S. spokesman said 76 enemy troops were killed while the Americans lost seven dead and 21 wounded. The toll of enemy dead in another battle Mohday 40 miles deeper in the delta was raised from 104 to 116. In this fighting, about 1,000 U.S. 9th Division troops and more than 1,000 South Vietnamese cornered a large enemy force near the provincial capital of Phu Vinh. l).S. Navy gun- boats, along with artillery and warplanes, were thrown into the bat- tie. Allied casualties were given as 17 Americans and two South Vietnamese wounded. The two battles constituted. the heaviest fighting in several weeks, during which there has been a general ... lull in South Vietnam. While the threat to Saigon was reported eased, U.S. sources did not discount the possibility of a sudden at- tack, noting that enemy strategy calls for the greatest possible use or surprise. · None believes that the enemy has given up his aim to strike a blow at Saigon to embarrass the South Viet- namese government and to strengthen North Vi etnam's hand at the peace talks with tile United States in Paris. There were no reports of fighting elsewhere except near the demilitariz- ed zone dividing Vietnam. U.S. Marines reported 14 North Viet- namese were killed by artillery after a ba.nd of 30 enemy troops was spotted crossing an open field. U.S. Air Force B52 bombers carried out seven strikes Monday and early Tuesday, ranging from ntar the Cam- bodian border northwest of Saigon throog'h the centre.I highlands and into North Vietnam. Shorts So Short Sexy Sprinters Scandalize Starters LOND ON (UPI) -If Amateur .Mhletic As sociation officials are scan- dalized by the new shorts of Britain's girl sprinters, they need not look, one of the young ladies said today. The complaint was lodged by official starters at tll'ack meets. "Some of them have felt a little em- barrassed as the girls get down on their marks," said Miss Marea Hart- man who will direct Britain's women at the Olympics in Mexico City. "They consider that the athletes have been showing a little more than they should." She said the nation's women athletes are more attractive than ever but that was not the complaint. "Some girls curve a little more than others when they bend down," she said. Mary IWnd, an Olympic gold medal winner, said the new shorts were not indecent. "I know girls in the United States wear pants type shorts with nothing underneath," she said. "But Britlsh girls wear panties. "Anyway, the starters stand to one said and not behind," she said. "U they don't like it they needn't look." From Page l INSTITUTE ... ministering to his Lutheran church's congregation while farming in the Nevada high desert -also stressed Monday that religious persecution has no place in the current controversy. "I'm sick of newspaper articles mentioning religious persecutioo," be said, adding that neighbo{s were fighting the Institute as merely a hip- pie hangout before learning it was a bona.fide, nonpr ofit religious cor- poration. The Rev . Drew H. Renner, ssistant pastor or the Institute of Ability, spent some time rebutting Cook, suc· cessfully on most points of city law and apologetically on items of personal behavior. J~e said he sometimes stays after the 10 p.m. closing hour if a member is in a help session and intensely in- volved at that point, but that the Institute is officially closed . Rev. Renner said it is not against ci· ty law to leave a light on overnight for protection, adding that a guard legally sleeps on the premises due to a ,l,000 burglary some weeks ago. ASKED PREFERENCE Councilman Tucker -who has maintained sympathy to the Institute of Ability as an agency contributing in part to helping people -asked what neighbors would pre.fer in the area. Cook, acting as spokesman, said the questi'on hadn't come up among homeownersj but he assumed it had been a residence, at whjch time Rev. Berner noted it was previously a den- tal office. The ionl.ng is for ad· ministrative and professional Ute. Rev. Renner denied reportl the con- gregation -offered help by the city in tl.ndlng new quarters -had failed to make any effort, ciling three locations checked out only recenUy, One is the old Gree11vUJe School, in rural Santa l Ana. Tempers flared at one point when Rev. Renner charged Cook had told him the group was atheist and Leninist, bringing Cook to his feet in the audience with an angry denial of Renner's allegation. Rev. Berner finally took the podium to outline for the City Council that ttie First Amendment of the U.S. Constitu- tion forbids any law which will 'in· terfere with religious freedom. "\Ve're not a public danger. We 're not a public nuisance," Rev. Berner declared, "Consider the neighbors' ob- jections but override them." RESUMED COAIMENTARY Councilman Tucker resumed his commentary, noting that Cook said other churches in the neighborhood posed no problem, turning the state- ment around to reflect discrimination, at least to a degree. Some members of the Jnstitute ot Abillty wear beards and Tuclter pointed out that so dJd m any of the frontiersmen, founding fathers and signers of the American Declaration of Independence. "I do not choose to judge Mr. Cook." said Tucker evenly, "I believe we wiU all be judged at a later date. but pea. pie who think some of the things '1- pi:essed here have been -called biiz:ots ." It was at this polJlt that Sl Clair took steps to wind tit> the hearing ind the Institute -which will move Its seminary portion to lLucerne Valley in coming months -Jost out. "How can I judge your relll;ton, when I know so tittle about ltt" Coun· cilman Willard T. Jordan commented aner the vote, stresslng that the City Council is faced with concrtte pro- blems of the city -not ones of philosophy and theology. I --~-... ' Mekong Two raids were made in the North. one 30 miles and the other 35 miles southeast of Dong Hoi. The targets were truck parks, supply areas an- t!aircraft gun sites and artillery 1posi- llons. Elsewhere over the North Viet- namese panhandle, U.S. f I g ht er. bombers Dew 120 strike missions Mon- day. A communique said ';lines of communication and weapons sites con· tinued to be the prim-ary targets." U.S. headqu arters also announced an Air Force F105 Thunderchief was lost to enemy grocnd fire during strikes Sunday northwest of Dong Hoi, The pilot was picked up Monday by a rescue helicopter. It was the 866th announced loss of a U.S. plane in com- bat over the North in the war. It alsO was disclosed that an Air Force FlOO Super Sabre Jet was brought dow n Sunday by ground fire soutl1west of Hue in South Vietnam. The pilot was killed. While the war ground on, secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford went through a round of meetings with U.S. and South Vietnamese officials on the military situation. He will go to Honolulu later this week for a meeting between President Johnson and Presi· dent Nguyen·Van Thieu. Clifford spent about three hours with Thieu. He Wld him that Johnson·was look.Ing forward to seeing him ·in Honolulu. Miami Beach. . Re_agan leaves Thursday for GOP Senate . Group Holds Up College Seat Tax Bill ., A bill to require Saddleback Junior C<illege to pay a $150 tax on each of its students attending other schools may be dead, at least for this session of the legislature. The Senate Local Government Com- mittee, which is reviewing the bill in- troduced by Assemblyman Ken Cory (0-Anaheim), delayed action on it Monday In Sacramento. Since the . legislature is planning to .adjourn th is weekend, hopes of passing the bill have apparently faded. Saddleback Superintendent J a c k Roper, who attended. the Monday hearing, said a majority of the com- mittee members were opposed to passing the bill anyway if it had come up. . - "We'll abide by the law, whatever happens," the superintendent added. "Even if it's changed, we won't like it, but we'll abide by it. 0 H the bill is passed, Saddleback Junior College will 'be; required to•paf a total Of $300,lXX> to othei" schools, primarily Orange Coast College, for the 2,00'.> students it is not equipped to handle. State law requires a junior college to pay this $300 seat tax to another school for each of its students the se. cond institution must educate. Saddlebaclc has been exempt from paying this tax because a new college is allowed a three-year grace period before the law applies. Assemblyman Cory 's bill asked that the grace period be eliminated from the law. It was reviewed first by the Assembly education committee, which reduced the tax to $150. This amended measure was passed by the Assembly last November and sent to the Senate. Without the seat tax, Saddleback must pay $700 for each of its students attending other district school.s now. This is to cover the costs of educating the student, Superintendent Roper said. He estimated that 2DOO students liv- ing In the Saddleback district will have to "attend other schools this fall because the new junicr college will not offer programs for them. I llimK:0 has it! We lay it on the line ... DEEP SleimL .. CR KP CT CL CRR/R/1 ' THE ULTIMATE in CARPET CLEANING Recently, Deap Ste1m C1rpet Cle1ners introduced a new professional c1rpet cle1nin9 process fo this County •.• Prior to offerin9 this remerk1ble service to you, our customers, we conducted our: own comprehensive te1tin9 program in order to verify the cleims made for the process by its develop· ers. Not only did w~ fin~ Deep Steam to be 1 revolutionary departure from our traditional carpet clean· in9 method, but we found it to be absolutely saf. for all carpet and upholltery fabrics. Concurrent with· our te1tin9 program, we thoroughly tr1ined our personnel in the effective use of Deep Ste1m cleanin9 equipment •.. 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CALL TODAY : RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 21st Yur of ~rvlco in Orange County 2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA PHONE 546-3432 • ~ .... -"' ••• I I -.... , ... , ----.. , . -----~---- Huntington Bea eh Your Hometown Dally Paper voe 6f, NO. 170, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES TUESDAY, JULY 'f6, '1968 TEN CENTS Council Assail·s Park Board on Bond Issue By WILLIAM REED Of tM o.llY P'lltt IM" Lack or enthusiasm by recreation and park commissioners in Huntington Beach for a proposed bond iS!ue elec- tion in November brought the com- mission under heavy {ire from the City Council M1.lflday night. Councilman Jack Green charged that "the commissioners apparently 15,000 Affected are not interested 'in pursuirig a bond issue now despite instructioos from the council to prepare the needed figures so the council could decide on calling a bond election or not." To director of Recreation and Parks Norm Worthy, Green said that "We may have to take it out of your hands and put it into mOre competent ones." Wol1hy told tile couocil that "we aze· Strike May Hit Douglas Plant More than 15,000 employes of th e 11-icDonnell Douglas AstronauticS Corp. in j:{unUngton Beach could be affected by a strike or two major aerospace unions tentatively scheduled for July 29 if no settlement is reached before that deadline. Involved in a contract dispute are the International Association of Machinists District {lAM) Lodges 1578 and 720 and the United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 148. Members of both uoioru; will meet on Sunday, the IAM at It a.m. at the Sirrine Auditorium in Los Angeles and the UAW at 2 p.m. at the IA>ng Beach Veterans Stadium. ' Members of both unions will be ask· ed to authorize .termination C!f con· tracts with the McDonnell Douglas Corp. on July 28, which would permit strike action by 54,000 employes on Ju. ly 29. Final membership vote by both unions is scheduled for July 28. Leaders of the machinists union have met with the McDonnell Douglas n1anagement to discuss a new three· year contract to replace fhe one which expired Monday. Despite optimistic predictions by of- ficers of the aerospace firm, union of· fi cials are warning members today to 1nake serious strike preparations. This means, union leaders said, it is too soon to say with assurance what the prospects are for strike action. Ed \Vianecki, president of UA\V Local 148. told his member.s that "the unpleasant but honest answer ts that the chance of a strike is very high.'' Jn addition t.o the McDonnell Douglas dispute, the IAM is also in oontract negotiations with Boeing, North American, Lockheed Aircraft Co. and several other aerospace firms in the nation with. a total of abou t 250,000 employes. Treasurer Seeks Report On City's Cash Accounts During his U1ree months a s treasurer of Huntington Beach, he has not been able to secure • report on whether the city's $5.5 million is ac· tuaJly in local banks er not, Treasurer \Varren Hall told the City Council Monday night. Hall called on the council to order a report on the city's cash accounts "immediately" and to form a com· mittee to talk to the city's auditors about internal handling of the city's funds. "! took office on April 10 and asked them for an audit of the city's funds. I am disturt>W now because in the three months I have yet to receive a report Delay Approved In Civic Center Site Acquisition Two members of the Jluntington Beach City Council were caugh t with their membership down Monday night and were powerless to stop a delay in acquisition steps for the site of the new civic center until September. on whether the money is in the banks or ·not. ''I can onJy conclude that either the auditor is incompetent or that the report is being concealed for some rearon." Councilmen o r d e red the ad· m:!ni.stration to obtain a report "within 10 days." Although Treasurer Hall said he had requested the audit of C i t y Administrator Doyle Miller, who now is at home recovering from a heart at· Uck, Acting Administrator Brander Castle said that "Mr. Hall has never been in my office nor has he talked to me about a report.'' Castle agreed, however, that three months was a long time to await an auditor's report. Finance DI.rector Ben Arguello iaid that he had talked to the auditors and that "the funds are there and all right." "They saJd they found nothing wrong, but have had difficulty in get· ling information from the banks to m&ke the report. It's tru~ that three months is a long time for a cash audit." Hail renewed his pursuit of the mat· ter in the face of what he called "soft excuse" I'm CODCerned, gentlemen. excuse." I'm concerned, gentlemen. This matter has been overlooked long enough." don't ha"" -gll lnlormatlon to de- cide whether to go for a bond tuue now or not. I'm not too sure myself that a bond lssue: Is the thing to go for in a presidential election. It's a mistake." Green and Mayor Alvin M'. Coen noted that the commission was directed by the council to develop a list of itS needs which could be financ· ed through a bond inue. a oommlaaloners and WO<thy hove di'""'611ed land needs in an amoont cl about $14 million. Of this emount, some $4 million could be financed from current revenutl if the department's tax rate la upped to the full 20 cents allowed by law. "Some of the commJssioners don't want to go for a bond issue because they fear the tu rate woo't be. iJ>. creased U th• propolition passes/' c....,,· charged. '"Ve (the council) said that fir st v.-e'd raise the tax rate and if the peo- ple wanted an accelerated building program they could approve a bond issue. Now I'm not too sure we should give even • tax increase," Green said. City Attorney Don Donia told the cwncll that the amount of a propooed IN THE ROUGH -This Piper Chero!<ee 140 crash landed just past the 11th fairway of HuntingtOn Seacliff Golf Course in Huntington ~ch Monday tlAI\, Y ,ILOT Sltft ,.,.,. afternoon ;ifter losing power on a flight ~!ween Long Beach and the Orange County Airport. Pilot escaped with minor facial cuts. Fountain Valley Girl, 3, Saves Sister in Fire Three-year-old Gena WI n t e r' s unhooking of her 18-month-Old sister's bed harness may have saved the baby's life. F .. ,tain Valley firemen reported Monday. Gena. daut:;u • .:r or Mr. and Mrs. Harry Winters of 1702 Santa Rita St., awoke Friday at 9:20 p.m. to the burn· ing smells of her sleeping sister Jamie's bedclothing. She quickly unhooked the harness, lifted the baby cnto her own bed, then screamed for help, firemen said. The girls' father rushed in and car· ried them out, then extinguished the blaze with a garden hose while Inf· fering first and second degree burns on hls face and bands. Firemen attributed the blaze to a thin wire inserted in a wall plug beside the bed, possibly by ooe of the girls earlier in the day, Damage was estimated at $1 ,000. P ermit Granted To Hippie Shop A business license will be issued to owners o( the "It-Not $flop and Art Gallery'' at 4.14 Walnut Ave., Hun~ tin'gton Beach, today following ap- proval by the City Council M<lnday nigh.t. The approval came after Acting City Adlnln;stratcr Brander CasUe told the council tJ1at "further police and ad· ministration investigation shows that there is nc legal right to deny the shop a license." Councilmen, with COUncUman Henry Kiaufman dissenting, refused to gr.ant the llceme to Gary F. Bryant and Nyal D. 'Ibomas two wee.ks ago. Fore! It~s Plane Pilot Finds Good Lie Near Fairway Golfers at Huntingto n Seacliff Golf Course in liurilington Beach are used to fiying objects around fairways, but Monday goliers agreed that a Piper Cherokee 140 was too much. The plane crash landed just past the 11th fairway sbortly after 2:30 p.m. af. ter the pilot, Lynn Coffelt, 25, of 10485 Marguerita Ave .• reported the engine had stopped running in midair. Coffelt suffered minor fac ial cuts in the crash landing. Golfers said the pilot ''didn 't even yell 'fore'" as he sailed across the course some 100 to 200 feet high. The plane dropped low enougb to uproot a few young trees on the course and to crash land on a bank at the edge of the course, stopped by a cable acting as a fence. Coffelt 11ald he was on his way back to Orange County Airport after touch and go landings at Long Beach Airport. At 1,500 feet near Newport Beach the powerplant ''just quit," he said. Council Okays Motorcycle Training School Permit The roar of motorcycles will be heard racing around a track on Talbert Avenu e in Huntington Beach because the City Council was more sympathetic lo pleas for a track and training school than was the Planning Commission. Councilmen Monday night granted a permit.to Don England, of 13671 Sutter Drive, Westminster, for the motorcy. cle track on the north side of Talbert Avenue east of the railroad tracks and west of Beach Boulevard. Planners had denied the application Schoo l Mee t Sla ted Fountain Valley School District trustees hold a regular business meet· ing Thun;day beginning at 7:30 p.m. at Number One Lighthouse Lane., Fountain Valley. on the basis that the track was not a permitted use in the city. City At· torney Don Bonfa ruled that any Jegitimate use must be allowed 5omewhere in the city . Planners also cited possible noise and dust problems. Rofi Sloane, speaking for England, told the council that steps would be taken to control noise and dust pro- blems. He agreed to limiting track operation to 91 a.m. to 5 p.m. He said prµiclpal reason for building the track would be to Jeach proper riding techniques for Jl\Otorcycles. Sloane said that the Jand, which is zon· ed industrial, could not be developed now because of many postap:e stamp lots in the parcel, lots smaller than legal building size. A resolution authorizing COit· demnation steps to acquire a 9.23 acre parcel of Iaod across from Huntington Beach High School was rejected on a 3 to 2 roll call vote. Councilmen llenry Kaufman, Ted Bartlett and George McCracken, op- ponents or the hl&h school site, out· voted Councilman Jack Green and Mayor Alvin M. Coen. PO Cutbacks Affect Coast Councilmen agreed that the training facility would be of benefit to U1e community. So did PoUce Chief JOhn Seltzer who told the council that there has been no poUce problems with an area at Talbert and Golden West Street used every day by motorcycle enthusiasts. •1r think It's real good. My boy goc! nut there and I take him." Chier Sclltzer &aid. drawing an enthusiastic round ot applause rrom the partisan crowd. Councilmen Jerry Matn<y and Dooald D. Shiple7, both of whom favor the blgb school 1lte, are on vacation. Mayor Coen OC'dered the resoluttan rotlaned for cooricil rftonsldorttlon on Sept. 2 when a full oouncil presumably would overTUle Kauhnan, BarUett and McCracken, who favor locating the center downtown at the present clvic center location. Although the action eUectlvely stall~ official moves toward buying the dvic center 1lte, unoffict.11 negotiations with owner H'unUngton Beach Co. 1n1 t X• peeled to continue. New Subdivisions W 01i't Get Mail Se rvice B1 PAMELA POWEIL ..... .,...., ........... s.v.ral DeW home devolopments ID the °'"'1fe Coast area will be affecied by the latest w.avll!: Of postal SttVlce cutbacks annoonced by Po!tmaster Gentta1 \V. Marvlrf Watson this week. Saturday aod Sunday, window A:ervice at aJJ major city post olflces will be diocontlnued effect! .. JulJ 27 and lnd.Jvldual offlcet have been in· slnt<)ed to delay utendinc pogtal •' service into new tracts a n d development! ootll further noti«. Hardest l1il by the cut will be W8'Unlnster, Newport lle<ldl and Corona del Mar. Each has several ~vetopments under construction or near Ult occupancy stage. The cutback in essence mean~ that local offices which v.-oold serve new dev«lopm..U "1iere postal oervloe has not yet betn extended win not be eli1lible to opply for service from tile ~Iona! oltice 1111Ul further noUce. !Wsldents In -oreu mUI! plcl< up Cheir mail at general c1eu..., m&il windows in their community olfJces. "You can't just arbltrerty put a new tract on a man and tell him he has Ulat In addition to hi1 other eight hours cl work," Huntington Beach l'oslmaster Pete DiFoblo Aid. "Th• routes must flrat bt "liP"'Yed by the (Ste CUTBACKS, Poe• Z) ' There was no oppasiUon to the track upreSied at the meetlnc. Poor· March Ended WASl!INGTON (UPI) -The !Wv. Ralph D1vld Abermolhy tlld1y an· nounced the end or the Poor People's Campaign In Washington. Abernathy told a newa conference the last :m or snvat thousand . demon1trator1 wbo began arriving In the naUon '1 copital In May...,.. belnc sent ~me. bood is.sue fpr the parka must be known by the council &etalon on Aug. S if It is to be on the November ballot. Reluctant commissiOners or not, the council ordered Worthy to produce the figw·es by tbe Aug. 5 meeUng. A committee composed of Mrs. Lor- raine Faber. Lee Mosteller, Dr. Ralph Bauer and Bruce Williams is to mee~ Wedn<sday with s1all members to be· gin dsvelopment cl tile oost tlguno. Arson Seen As Two Flee From Fire Fire erupted on second floor or the Holt-Hepter building at the corner of Main Street and Ocean Avenue in Hun· tington Beach at 11 :35 a.m. today. The building was unoccupied at the time and has been under city con· demnation for the past siX months. Smoke was pouring out of aecond floor windows and air vents as fire units began to arrive. Smoke was drlf· ting heavily up Main Street on strength Of ocean winds. A large crowd of several hundred spectators was on hand to watch Hun- tington Beach firefighters battle the blaze. ·No cause was i mm e d I• te l y detennlned tor the fire. Extent ot damage could not be determined from the street level because 'of heavy con· centratlons o( smoke. There was some suspicion that arson may have been Involved Jn starting the aging structure afire. \VJtnesses told the DAILY PILOT lhat shortly before smoke began pour· ing from the old building, a bikini-clad girl and a boy in t·shirt and shorts . were seen fleeing at high speed from the building east on Ocean Avenue. Another witness said the building's second story had been a 11hipple haven.'' Eight "units of the Huntington Beach Fire Department were battling the blaze at noon today. · Observers said the fire appeared to be out of control. By !:?:al p.m. flames were leaping out or the roof and the building ap. peared to be fully engulfed in flames. Telephone sef'Vice was disrupted in the immediate downtown area. Costa Mesa'• aerial ladder truck arrivod on the scene about 12:15 p.m. for aeis· tan ... Officer Killed In Ai·my SNAFU SEOUL (UPI) -Two U. S. Army patrols fought a brief border skirmish with each other on July 10, killing the leader of one ol the American patrols, U.S. spokesmen said today. The spokesman said the two patrols each thought the other was • bend ot North Korean Infiltrators and opened fire as they kept watch along tbe Demilitarized Zone. Tbe victim was identified as !st Lt. Richard M. Johnson of Berkeley Springs, W. Va. Oraa•e Cou& Summertime weather tends to be reipeUtlous and today and tomorrow wm be no exceptions. Temptratures will be In the 803 with mornlnc and evening low clouds. INSIDE TODAY I• 1111 onllllll of lhf JloriM Corp1 lll<Tt ii now ... t.\er ' """'" KM &mil. s .. pfcl\lrt1 of abondoMd bon Pogo 13. • .... II " • • " " , .. ,, • .. " " -. -" ,..,... ,.. ,, ~ .......... ' on.et c.tr • loldlf ,.... ,,.,. ,_.,. ,.,. ................ ,, -II -" -. --. --.. -·)-)---~~---' .; ~ DAILY PILOT NY-Mo scow Flights Get Off Ground NEW YORK (UPI) -The sliver, blue and white Soviet jet circled New . ' York !or an hour and 35 mmutes . Then it gracefully rolled to a stop at Ken· nedy lpternatiooal Airport and made hl.<tory. The first Soviet commercial flight to the United States arrived Monday. capping 10 years oI negoUaUons that ran hot and cold according t• the In· ternattonal climate between the two superpowers. The So v I e t government.owned airline Aeroflot Ilyushin 62 carried 98 Russians from Moscow to New York 1Ughtly ahead of its 10 hours , 45 minutes schedule time. But air traffic over tbe city was.so great that the 186- seat jet had to join 'the stack clrc::ling overhead. Two Pan American \Vorld Airways jets -one carrying r e g u I a r passengers and the other n1ak.ing the maugural New York-Moscow flight with VIPs -Dew to Moscow Monday nJght. ' Each airline will fly one flight a week: with Aeroflot stopping in Mon· treat and Pan Am stopping at Copenhagen. A round-trip ticket costs $1 ,109 in fir st class and $730 in tourist. The Ilyushin 62 hold s 186 passengers. Pan Am's Boeing 7'1l holds 199. Among the 93 to arrive Monday \Vere 54 government officials and 39 paying customers. The customers walked direcUy from the plane to the international arrivals building. The of-· ficials stayed at planeside. The Soviet flag and the U.S. fla g \Vaved side by side at the entranceway to the greeting area where a news con· ference was held . Among those meeting the Ilyushin \\'ere Undersecretary of State Eu.gene G. Rostow and Jacob Malik, the Soviet U.N. ambassador. Rostow said the new air sr.rvlce was part of a larger . effort to Improve relations between the United States and the Soviet Union . Tumbling Oass Begins Thm·sday The second session of the Fountain Valley Parks and R ecreation Department's summer tumbling and acrobaUcs begins Thursday. The course, held on Tuesday antl Thursday evenings, will run four weeks, ending on Aug. 13. The classes will be held at the Fountain Valley High School gym . Children from the ages of 4-years up to 1001 grade are eligible t o participate. Sessions arc broken into groups. Boys and girls 4, 5, and 6 years of age go from 6 to 7 p.m.; boys in the 2nd throogh the 6th grade go from 1 to 8 p.m.; and there is a com- bined. class of boys and girls, 7th Ulrough the loth grade, from 8 to 9 p.m. The fee Ls ~ for the course. Sign.ups should be made at the Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater Avenue, Monday through Friday from 8 to S p.m . Registrations are not taken at the classes. Oil Firm Plans Fence 011 Bluff Signal Oil and Gas Co. \\'ill _build a fence from the bluffs area on Coast Highway in Huntington Beach to Golden \Vest Street and Install a Jandscaplng area in front of the fence . The project has been stalled for several months while an agreement was worked out between Signal Oil Co .• the state and city. Councilmen ratified the agreement Monday night. The fence and lanscaping area is to screen the rows of oil wells along the north side of Coast Hjghway. DAILY PILOT llwll""• ...... c.tW.. .. R•Hrt N. W••J "'1blW. Tht1t1•• K••'il Edllol' Th•/1'>•1 A. M11rphi111 M11111in1 Edl!O!' Albert W. l1t•1 Wlll11"' Reed AUOC:ltill Hu11lln9!on lle1't1 EdllW C:l!y EdllO!' H..,..... ..... Office l09 Ith Street M•lllnt A11Jr•11: r.o. l•x 7'0 t?641 Otktt om,., .._.., a.tcfl: 2211 W. B1!t1M Boule'fllnl C:•fll Mitt I ~ Weef .. , lll'ftl ...... BM<llt l2J '""' ••• ~ ... Tuesday, July 16, 1%8 Vietfn'.Y in Peace? Southern Swing Reagan Ans'f ers Wallace Threat -By The A11oelat.ed Preas California Gov. Ronald Reagan says his swing through the South beginning this week wW be abned against what · some Republicans consider a growing threat from former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. fund·ralslng appearances In Texa s, Arkansas , Virginia, North Carolinu, and Alabama. The Harris Swvey released Monday showed Wallace favored by 15 percent of the voters, and taking twice as many votes from Republican can· didates as from Democrats. Pollster Louis Harris said 1ri a copyright Washington Post story hall Wallace's strength Is in the South. Father Richard York (right), and serviceman Chuck Jones, 20 Fernandina Beach, Fla., parUcipate in a special church service in San Francisco herald· ing eight servicemen's "resignation" from the arm- ed services. Five soldiers, two sailors an da Marine took part in the "service .. in which they chained themselves to clergyznen. Thi.rd party presidential candldate Wallace ha& been showing increasing strength in public opinion polls and Reagan sald Mooday that Alabama Republicans in parUcular were con· cerned about 41peculation Wallace ~'might eat into" Republican votes. "Very frankly," R~agan sald in Sacramento, "the Republicans asked me because of the strength of Gov. Wallace. He is going: to change the balance, possibly." The Gallup Poll reported Sunday that \Vallace shows 16 percent voter support, and said th at was nearly twice the strength he showtd in April. New York Gov. Nelson A. Chamber, Council Okay Tourist Expansion Pinn ··continuous <:ooperation" and an agreement to "aggressively encour- age" expansion of tourjsm and busi- ness was approved Monday by direc- tors of the Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce and later by the City Council. The agreement came from the meeting July 8 of a new chamber- council committee. Chamber president Howard "Bud" Matheny, Manager Dale Dunn, Directors Steve Holden and C. E. "BUI" Woods and Coun· cilmen G e or g e McCracken, Ted Bartlett and Mayor Alvin M. Coen are on the committee. Matheny said that the next step is to form detailed plans !or implementing the new policy. City Hall observers say the policy plNl could lead even- tually to the city employing the chamber to perform some of the steps involved in encouraging business and industry. The chamber has been in financial trouble since it did :not renew a pact 'vlth the city for industrial services a cou.ple of years ago. UeSe Troops Whip Huge Enemy Force in Mekong SAIGON (AP) -U.S. troops pro- tecting the southern approaches to Saigon defeated a large enemy force Tuesday in a savage batUe in the Mekong Delta. U.S. and South Vietnamese liOUrces agreed that the enemy had pulled back around Saigon, easing a threat to the capital. But the fi ghti'ng since Monday in the delta shoy,:ed the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese still were in force on the clty's approaches . Infantrymen of the U.S. 9th Divi sion slruck the enemy force 16 miles so utheast of Saigon Monday and the battle raged on until the early morning hours of Tuesday. Artillery, helicopter gunships and dive bombers joined the battle. U.S. spokesman said 76 enemy troops were killed while the Americans lost seven dead and 21 wounded. The toll of enemy dead in another battle Monday 40 miles deeper in the delta was raised from 104 to 116. In this fighting, about 1,000 U.S. 9th Divi.sion troops and more than 1,000 South Vietnamese cornered a large Library Bond Iss ue Pla1med On Fall Ballot The City Council Monday ordered an ordinance drawn placing a $3.16 million bond issue proposal on the November ballot for the Huntington B~ach Public Library. If approved by the voters the bonds v.·ould buy a site for a new central library near Talbert Avenue and Golden West Street. !inance <:on- struction of a fi0.000 square foot building and completely stock It \\'ilh books. Librarian \Valter Johnson, who has advocated construction of a central library for several years, Immediately produced cost figures showing a need for $3,157.954. J1c said possible participation by the federal govern· n1ent could reduce cos ts by one third . The council will consider the ordinance calling for the issue to be put. on the November ballot at the Aug. 5 meeting. Board to Study Zo11c Request rounlain Valley Planning Con1· 1ni.ssion n1eets at i :30 p.m. \Vednesda v in council chambers of Cl1y Ila:\. 102W Slater Ave. Agenda items lr.c,Wde a zone change request by Joe Lopez on property on Talbert Avenue et.st of Brookhurst Street from agricultural to local business dl&trict. Also listed under public hea1'fl'lgs Is an appUcation for a conditional u~ permit sub.tnltted by John Stockwell tor construction Of a theater on the west side of Brookhurst Street south or \Varner Avenue. Under new business Is a request for .t revised conditional 1.1&e permit to allow cOMtrucuon of a Ill-bed 1eneral hospital on tho east 1lde of EucUd Street south Of \Varner Avmue. '· enemy force near the provincial capital of Pbu Vinh. U.S. Navy gun. boat.s, along with artillery and warplanes, were thrown into the bat. tle. Allied casualties were given as 17 Americans and two South Vleinamese W1l)lndtd .. "The two battles consUtuteif, · the l1eaviest fighting in severM I ~eeks, during v.·h..ich there has been a general lull in South Vietnam . While the threat to Saigon ,~·as reported eased, U.S. sources did not discount the possibility of a sudden at- tack, noting that enemy strategy calls for the greatest possible use of surprise. Bidding Sought On $2 Million Parking Project J-luntington Beach Parking Authority r.1onday night approved a call for bids on a parking lot project extending from the municipal pier to Beach Boulevard. Cost of the entire project to provide some 2,500 parking spact!s has been estimated at $2 million. The completed project is expected to bring 1n almost double the expected cost of repaying revenue bonds the ci- ty will sell to finance the work. A lighted and landscaped center me- dian and extensive landscaping on bolh sides of coast highway are in- cluded as a part of the job. Th e bid cal1 will go out as soon as all detalls of land acquisition are com· pleted . The authority. which is com· posed of the seven members of the ci. ty Council. also authorized acquisition of 1,300 feet or waterfront for the parking lot. From Page 1 CUTBACKS ... regional office.·· l·lunUngton Beach thus far has not been affected by the cutbacks . Postal routings for new and occupied tracts have already been approved and im· plemeated. The order to curb saturday mail service, wttich has not yet reached all offices in the area, was given last week after \Vatsoo pleaded with the Posl Office Department to restore funds slashed by Congress. The directive does permit a general delivcrj window to remain open for two hours on Saturday to deliver m ail to general delivery customers and for business finns whose mall ls reeuiarly handled Jn that manner. PIM6 by the Postmaster Gt.Dual also include a cutback Jn pe.nonnel by some 83,000 unless the funds aTe re.stored. An earlier dlrecUve issued by Watson instructed postmasters to fill only three of every four vacancies. No orfice In the ONnge Coast area ha~ betn alfected by the pcr&onnel cutback and will not be for some Ume . Home delivery on Saturday has been unaffected but plans are be.Ing con· sldm!d to eiiminate the clellvery by Sept. 1. • Vance Confers With LBJ Over . Talks Deadlock PARIS (UPI) -Cyrus R. Vance, deputy chief U.S. delesi;ate to the Viet- nam War talks with North Vietnam flew home today to brief PresJdeni Johnson on their deadlock. His departure coincided with warn- ings from Communist diplomatic sources that the longer the talks drag on the more it strengthens the position on Hanoi militants who want a military rather than a negotiated set-tlement. Vance's trip was understood to be part of Intensive consultations at the White House ln preparaUon for Presi- . dent Johnson's meeting with President Nguyen Vail. ThJeu of South Vietnam in Hawaii later this week. Defense Secretary Clark Clifford and Gen. Earle Wheeler; chairman of the U. S. Joint Chiefs of Stall, are visiUng South Vietnam and are ex· peeled to provide Johnson with the latest bJttlefleld informaUon . Vance told newsmen be fo r e boarding his plane for Washington "There ls no tangible progress tn the talks but I am not discouraged." His plane was due to arrive at Dulles In- ternational Airport ilt 4:SS p.m. CEDT). Vance is scheduled to meet also with Secretary of State Dean Rusk before returning. to Paris on Friday. The talks have been bogged down ro;lnce they opened more than two months ago. The South also ~ is considered Reagan:s greatest source of presiden- tial strength outside Callfornia. The governor says he is not a presidential contender but as a favorite -son can. didate could become one at tbe GOP national convention neXt month in Miami Beach. Reagan leaves Thursday for GOP Rockefeller, announced GOP con- tender, said meanwhile bis nationwide poll to indicate whether he or Richard M. Nixon would be the strongest Republican candidate will be con· ducted July 22·26. Rockefeller said he is convinced delegates want to nominate a winning candidate and ·said the poll result& 'vii i be announced as soon as possible before the GOP conve ntion wWch begins Aug . 5. Senate Group Holds Up College Seat Tax Bill A bill to require Saddleback Junior CoUege to pay a $150 tax on each of its stu~cnts attendjng other schools may be dead, at least for thi s session of the legis lalure. The Senate Local Government Com- mittee, which ls reviewing the bill in- troduced by Assemblyman Ken Cory (D·Anahelm), delayed action on it Monday in Sacramento. Since th e legislature is planning to adjourn this weekeild, hopes of pa·sslng tbe bill have apparently faded. Saddleback Sup~rintendent Jack Roper, who attended the Monday hearing, said a majority of the com- mittee members were opposed to passing the bill anyway if it had come up. "We'll abide by the law, whatever happens," the superinten dent added. "Even if it's changed, we won't like it, but we'll abide by it." If the bW is passed, Saddleback Junior College will be required to pay a total of '300.000 to other schools, primarily Orange Coast College, for the 2,000 students it is not equipped lo handle. State law requires a junior college to pay this $300 seat tax to another school for ea<:h of its students the se- cond institution must educate . Saddleback has been exempt from paying tWs tax because a new college is allowed a three-year grace period before the law applies. Assemblyman Cory's bill asked that the grace period be eliminated. from the law. It was 'reviewed first by the Assembly education committee, which reduced the tax to $150. This amended measure was passed by the Assembly last November and sent to the Senate. . \Vltbout the se at tu, saddleback must pay $700 for each of it.s students attending other district schools now. This is to cover the costs flf educating the student, Superintendent Roper said. He estimated that 2fXMl students llv· Ing in !ht Saddle back district will have to attend. other schools this fall because the new Junior colle&e will not offer programs for them. '""I 11'1'-= has it! We lay it on the line • • • O££P~teiinL"' CR1'PCT CLCRHIHC THE ULTIMATE ... ' .. in CARP~T CLEANING Ricently, Deep 'ste1m Cerpet Cl1ener1 lntrocluctd • new profe11ion1I c•rpet cl1ening proce11 fo this County •• , Prior to offering this r1mark1bl• 11rvic1 to you, our cu1tomer1, we co~ducted our own compr1hen1iv1 testing p~ogr1m in order to verify the cleim1 m1d1 for fJi• pro.c!•• by 1t1 d•velop• er1. Not only did w• find Diep Ste1m to be• r•.,.ol!Jtlon•ry d•p•rtur1 from our tr1d1t1on1! c1rp1t cl11n- in9 method, but we found it to b1 •bsolutely 1ef1 for. •II c1rp1t ond upholst1ry f1bric•. Concurr1nt with our t11tln9 progrem, we thoroughly treln•d our p•rconn1I in th1 eff•ctlve u11 of D11p Ste1m cleenlng equipment , .• Only wh•n w1 wer• completely ietisfied thet Diep Steem m1t with our standards did we offer this unlqu1 new 11rvk1 to you. A suc:cessful company'• reputation i1 it1 b11t 1dverti11ment. We l1y it on the line by cordi1lly in¥ifin g you to try s1f1ty•te1ted Deep St11m W1U.to-Wel C1rp1t ond Upholst1ry Cl•aning ••. The fin· est professional c1rp1t cleaning s1rvice yet d1velop1d for th1 industry. Pro tect th• lif1 of your c•rp1ts encl the b1euty of your hom1 by c1llin 9 tod1yl TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? W• ere dr1pery expert1I We 1tr111 quality of workm1n1h ip & instillation. Free Estfmates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: WHIN YOU WANT TME FINHT- CAU UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 y••r• of collective experience betwe•n the 2 men dolru1 your•work. All work done In ovr pl1nt. We pre-test •II f1bric1 b•for1 cl e1nln 9. FrH Estimates ·In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALL TODAY: -ISTIMATI RUG & UPHOLSTER.Y CLEANERS Our 21rt YHr of Service In Oron9e County 29So RANDOLPH COST A MESA PHONE 546·3432 , ' JOOEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 T~, ...., W. IM HI .... U AAUW Perks Coffee Hours Before officially opening the fall season of lecture& and study sessions, the Newport-Costa Mesa branch of ·the American Associa- tion oi University Women will orient continuing and prospective mem- bers on club activities. Traditionally the group arranges a series of coffees to acquaint members with programs, and again this year five gatherings have been planned. Hostesses, their addresses and dates of coffees are Mrs. W. Grady Thompson, 660 Kin gs Road, Newport Beach, July 31; Mrs. Lane B. Blank, 2748 Albatross Drive, Costa Mesa, Aug. 1; and Mrs. Richard Auelmann, 2701 Bluewat~r Drive, Corona del Mar, Aug. 14. Others are Mra. W. P . Krausnick, 309 Bowling Green Drive, Costa Mesa, Aug. 21, and Mrs. John Jackson, 16722 Lucia Lane, Hunt· ington Beach, Aug. 28. The Wednesday events, which will begin at 10 a.m., will provide an opportunity to learn of the AAUW fellowships programs and the 1ections in art, literature, gourmet dining, Spanish and bridge. Challenge of a Changing Society will be the theme for the com- ing year and will be pursued through four study topics which are The Growing Gap Between the Rich and Poor Nations, The Changing Poli .. tics of Education, Testing Values in a Changing Society, and Society's Reflection in the Arts. GROUNDS FOR ORIENTATION -To thoroughly study the Challenge of a Changing Society, the year's theme of AAUW, Newport-Costa Mesa Branch, a computer board is necessary say th e Mmes. Lane 'Blank, Ronald K. Arnold and Joho Jacksoo (left to right) as they invite conti11uing and prospective members to a series of coffees when study programs and other activities will be discussed. Membership is open to college graduates from institutions ap- proved by AAUW or from foreign institutions approved by the Inter· national Federation of University Women. Women interested in attending any of the coffee hours may call the membership chairman, Mrs. Ronald Arnold at 545-5214 for further information. Surf Sounds Traveling ADDRESS m i d. Atlantic. Pulling on tm seven-league boots a n d travelillg again is former mayor Don Shipley who has been joined by nephew Donald A. Shipley, 19, for a tour or London, France, Spain, Portugal, Morocco md perhaps Pari.s. The two Dons rtopped briefly in Baltimore and Washington, D.C. before b oarding the Queen- Elizabeth in New York. and will stop in Georgia enroute home to attend a niece's vte::Jding . The former mayor 's nephew currently is attending the University of California at Berkeley. HOME AFTER a year in Jamaica where she lived as an exctrange student i& Jan Royer, daughter of Or. and Mrs. R. Quentin Royer. Jan, who was a representative of the Inter-Christian Youtti. Exchange, is I o o k f n g forward to a vi5it this month from Marhetta Mattila from Finland. Mi!is Matilla was the Royer 's foster "daughter" when she was an AFS student in 1965.$). AND M 0 R E travelers returning. Paul and Gerrie Phillips spent a deligllt!ul three. weeks touring Mexico in addition to P a u I ' 1 attending the R o t a r y Convention in Mexico City. The Phillips cruised down on the Princess Italia with overnight stops in La Pu and Puerto Vallert.a before debarkin41 at Acapulco to ealcil a plane to Mexico Qty. As Long DEAR ANN LANDERS: I accepted a job with this organization eight months ago today. A woman I met here impresaed me as extremely bright and lrieudly. I lilr:ed her at once. Now the pn>blem : Th11 woman ha1 worn the . same ..washable tw"o-piece .. corduroy outfit every day lince we met. Sbe Is not hard up financially. Her husband bu a top..:t0tch position .and ahe allo makes an excellent Nlary. I have been to their borne and seen several dresses hanging in her closet. When I asked her why she never wore them 1he replied, "They are to6 large. I usfd to be quite heavy." J orrered to live her th• name of my alteration lady but the •aid. "It wouldn't be worth it'' Tbe woman ii nut and cllml., but lit Pioneer Days Lure Settlers In July, 1847, Brigham Young scanned the barren desert 1urroundin1 Salt Lake and proclaimed, "This 11 the Place." Since that time, MorrnODJ have celebrated the day aa lhelr official Pioneer Day. In Huntington Beacb, the Fiflll Ward, Relief Society of the Church of Jesus Christ ol Latter-day Saints will commemorate the occa11ion Mth a Pioneer Bazaar on Saturday, July 20. The public is invited to don typical pioneer costumea and join the celebration taking place at 14271 Locust St., Westminster. In keeping with the pioneer 1pirit, festivities will begin with a hearty lunch featuring barbecued ha.mo burgers and hot dogs, corn on the cob and wafenn Ion which will be served at 1:30 a .m. Between Z and J p.m. relay race · dron and a pie-eating contest for adults an teenagers will bt the feature attraction and following ese events will be Ibo around·the-block Pioneer Parad by the Children's Primary Organization. Game booths will be open all day, and also enticinl crowds will be booths featuring home-baked bread and putries, candy, pop com, soft drinks and white el• phants. · Highlighting the bazaar will be handcrafted quilts, clothing, embroidered pillow cases and dish towels, aprons, jewelry and noveltie1 which were fashioned during the Relief Society's homemaking meetings, de. 1lgned to encourage handcrafted and bomemak!nJ a kills. EARLY DAYS RECALLED -Homemaking skills will be demonstrated. during a Pioneer Bazaar spon· sored by the Filth Ward Relief Society of the Church of Jesus Cbrist of Latter-day Saints Satur· day, July 20. Displaying 50me of the assorted hand· made items which will be ottered for 1aie are (left to right) Mrs. Conway Nielsen, spiritual living lead- er. and crochet chairman, Mrs. Ralph Barnett, pres i- den~ and Mrs. Kenneth Vance, bazaar chairman. A barbecued chicken dinner at I : Ill p.m. will con- clude the celebration. All proceeds from the bazaar will support lhe many activities of the Society which cares for the poor, the sick and unfortunate, provldeo guidance and training in homemaking arts and rtrencthenl lh• virtues of com- munity life. as She Is Suited Up and Clean~Don't Scream ANN I.ANDERS ril can you lmaline w!\at that corduroy suit !ooks Uk' after being WCl1l every day for eigbt mon1h1 ? I do believe tbe dear 1~ wW wear that 1uit to her grave. Would she be offended if I presented her with a deccot dre11 in her 1ize? -WACO DEAR WACO: Save your moeey. \'our friend •a1 a psycholoitcal *"•C • 10111 wltll &bat corduroy aldt ud Ille will -. .. II weer It .. 11111 11111 elf ... -. Bo llt-il'li. ·- ind clean and don't make her hans·up Joor problem. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 was surprised that you made reference to the 1urgeoo who took ot.f the wrong leg by mi!Jtake. The medical profession doesn't like that ldnd of publicity. Several years .ago my wife was ln the hospital for a spinal diJc oper.a· Uon. The morning 1he w11 scheduled for SllrlOfY, a pllyliclan ·wll<od into her r-. eod ~ in his -I voi.ce, "You cerialn1y don't look like a woman of f18,." My wile repllelS, "I HOPE I don't I'm 45." The dOctor euJped and stammered, "Ub, I must have the wrong chart here." He left and returned a few moment.I later with the correct dw.rt. Heaven only knows what would have happened U the mistake hod not been di9covered. Tbt woman wbolt chert the doctor held may hl.vt been 1cbeduled for a can bladder opentlon or a thyroidectomy. I'm wriUnt to alert you to the fact ttiat docton are 'not God . They art human being• who make mistakes, juat like everyone elae. and Jt pays to check on them. - HUSBAND OF A NEAR·VICl'DI DEAR 111Jl18AND1 Tllau ,.. fer ,__.,_bef ... ,.._ lllal ._n an llOI God ud tHy male llllnatea tae tftfJ-ollo. I have eqtrflled tllM• vel'J tndmuU 1111111 ce1maa • nmeroa1 eteNtou. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Can you tell me pleue wbat the dutie1 of a minllter'1 wife an? WheD. ii 1he aup. posed 14 find time for hlr own family and the actlvitlel llht -flln 111111 not obliptlon1! I've 11tod Ibis q-of .. _11 lrlendl -... married 14 ministers and th.,. don 'I know the answer. Do you? -DAWN TO DUSK HELPMATE DEAR DAWN1 TlllJ problem Is 001 100 "Pl to lllt over wllll 1-derumu .. CONJ'IDENTW. TO Koor OWL: .~ Of ....... you Clll't sleep olllD--sleep days. Drar your ..,_. out el bod in the momlnf and fix bruldlll for your fami17. Perh1po tf ,.. wwe Hlf·Mrter J011f husblnd woulda'I have to be a crank. 0 Tlte Bride'• Gal4e," Aa LIDffn' 1'cM*let, aa1nr1 tom• ti IM mllt ,.... 2;:11y ...... - -..... 1.T•-Y.-"'1flltllll -... -".-·-·-Laaden. ta eare Of ..a. aew.,.,., eo<loellf a lolf, aeu-...., Ill• .... ODYelope ....... la <Oil. Am Landor• will be 11ad to help 1"" with your problems. Send tllem to be in ctn of lht DAILY PILOT, .mcl ... ~ ttamped. ..U.addltaed • ,. .. I I I J;f D~lV l'ILOT TUt~ay. July 16. 1%8 ·~ Horoscope Sharyn Uyesugi Married Cancer: Gain Allies A honeymoon in Carmel followed the services uniting in marriage two fonner University of Southern California students, Sharyn Emi Uyesu1i and Dr. Teruo Yama· moto. The couple spoke their wedding vows be- fore the Rev. Albert F. King at an altar flanked by baskets of pink and w~te gladio- las and carnations, in the Neighborhood Church, Palos Verdes. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ototaro Yamamoto of Torrance. His bride, daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kenji Uyesugi o[ Costa Mesa, was escorted. to the altar by her father while wNJ'ing an original gown of satin organza and jeweled afencon lace fa shioned in a trumpet silhouette with high jeweled neck· line and jabot front. A cascade of white rose- buds and lilies-of·lhe-valley formed her bou· quet. In attendance were maid of honor Miss Suzanne Durkin, m atron of honor Mrs. Randy Sopp and bridesmaid Miss Sherry Goddicksen, who were gowned ide~tically _in bright pink sleeveless dresses with white overdresses of Iace trimmed organza featur· ing mandarin necklines. Each carried a round bouquet of bright pink rosebuds with light pink carnations and ribbon streamers. Flower girl Miss Sherry Kawamura also wore bright pink with a white overdress em- broidered in daisies. Peter Lubisich as best man was joined by ushers Takeo Yamamoto, Keven Uyesugi. Richard McMahon and Ors. Craig Ola and Dennis Nakatam.i. A reception followed in the Plush Hors~. Redondo Beach. The bride, an Empire debutante, is an alumna of Newport Harbor High School. At use she studied education and became a member of both Kappa Alpha Theta and the Japan American society. The benedict, a graduate-of..... Phineas Banning High School, received his BA from USC in Asian Studies and is a recent grad· uat.e of the USC Dental School. He belongs to Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity and is cur· rently a captain in the United States Air Force. The couple will spend the next three years in Yokota, Japan, where Yamamoto ls stationed. Kitchen at Sea WEDNESDAY JULY 17 By SYDNEY OMARll .. The wise man controls hi.I desttny • • • Astrology polntl the wey .'" ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): Got new wight lnio po 1 a e 1 s ion s , You can Improve income potenUal. Be observant. You could find min« flaw which .aves YoU time and money. TAllRllS (Aprll 20-May 20): Cycle moves up. You can tuecesafully inaugurate chqe1. Important to get ldeu, lhO!lghll on paper. Key la mental orderliness. O,rtallize aims, g o a I 1 , ambit10111. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Much today appears to be undercover. Means there are · apt tu be sub le influences. Family member may ·be withhold ing i.n!onnatlon. No malicious inteDt. Realize others have right to privacy. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Now you gain allies, ftlend1. Shake off tendency Juniors Collettihg Now For Fall Rummage Sale MRS. TERUO YAMAMOTO Ta Reside in Japan Offerin& to help clean out area clc:ieeQ and pragea" are members of ttte Hun· tington Beach J u n i o r Womim's Clu~. The Juniors will be happy to have same of tbooe "wllit.e •le!JhanU" which currently .,., t.klng up apace llld collectlnc dust for Uleir fall rummage and bake sale. Mrs. Stanley Helii:nga, way1 and meam chairman, is 1enring at 1eneral chalrm111 !or tile, Nit which will taM place In September In Hunlinrldn Beocl>. Painters Welcomed Maidng their contribution toward encouraging budding artistic ta!ent are members of tlie Huntington Beach Jwtior Woman's Club. A course in beginning ·"""'"""'°"'"'" =!" .. _."••.,fw-• ,-,1;i;... techniques of painting with acrylics will be offered for six week! beginning Wednesday, July 17. cia.... will be cooductod ln the clubhouse, 420 loth A8lliat.i.na: Mrs. Hettinga are the Mmes. William Biss, Daniel Dregeset, Jack Hall, Edward Hannigan, George Kemp, James Mahan , Gorald Merigold, Ronald Panick, Michael Pharris, Ted Reddick, Charles Shep- pani, WUllam Stephenson, Wayne Tedder, E. u g e n e W!Wam1, BUI Wilson and Sam Wllilon. All proceeds will benefit the m a D y philanttlropies ipOlllOl'ed by the junior club, and anyone wishing to mU.e a dooation may call 11'".n. Hettinp, 893-0317. to brood. Look to future - 1tres1 optimi.3m . Many ot your hopes, wishes are due to be fulfilled. COuld be da,y to celebrate. LEO (July 23-Aog. 22): Assume responslbWty. Take lnltltrttve where c are er , ambitions are concerned. If yoo try to shirk duties, price could be exceedingly bigh. Know this and a c t accordingly. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Long-range view is best today. Minor problems due to dissolve. Travel i s highlighted, also greater self-expression. One wtio is at a distance offers valid suggestion. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 \: Pennit mate, partner to take initiative. You are at your best today providing a sense of balance. Your ideas sparkle. But others greatly benefit if you giv!! them &potlight. SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov . 21): Judgment is sound , but you tend to be impatient. You know what is right. but waiting becomes a. problem. Best to check w i t h authorities. Means be sure you are On right legal track. ·sAGITrARlllS (Nov. 22· Dk. 21): Be versatile. Don 't be bogged down with only one method. Tr Y , experiment -make brush strokes bold. Attend to basic task&. Relations with CO· workers due to improve. You'll be happier. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 19): During morning hours attend to details. Later, entertainment is on agenda and could include glamorous dine~ut date. Good.newsconcerning youngster could brighten day. AQllARlllS !Jon. 20-Feb. 18 ): Pace yourself. Check details. Be aware of rroperty values. If you don 't know, Mk. Do not permit pride to stand in way of enlightenment. Pay c 1 o s e alrt.ention to messages, calls. Soup, Salac' Sandwich St., Huntington Be a ch, between 9:30 and 11:30 ~ a.m., by Mrs. Frank Souza, instructor. A Ii m it e d number of openings are PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) : Forces tend to be scattered. Judgment subject to confusion. Best to hold back anj wa if. Picture becomes clear as additional facts u n f o I d . Relative's request might best be put off. JOAN HERING Brid•fo.bo Couple Select September Joan Louise Hering and her !iance Donald H . Otterman "-ill be married in the First Cltristian Church, Garden Grove, Sept. 14. tl'oll~I.., It lllt fourlll 1!1!clt In t wrlet °" -lo P"""•rt 1uccu1en1 mut1 tor 1ummertlm. u llot1.j By NANCY HYDEN WOODWARD NEW YORK (WNS) - Hint No. I If you are tired of dishing out one can of soup or another aJong with a sandwich, how ab o u t combining a couple? Mix onion and tomato 11oup, tomato and cream of Cl!lery, or onion and chicken gumbo. Hint No. ! U you want to heat up some buttered French or Italian bread and haven't space available on the stove. try the ship's manifold. First butter (with garlic, if desired) the bread, Club Bids The daughter of Mr. ud Mrs. Robert C. Hering of A bridge and can.a.st.a Glendale Is a graduate of party which will include a Newport Harbor Hi g b li~t lunobeoo is being School and Orange Coast offered by El Camino Real Colk!ge where 1he received Woman's Club of Dana her dental ass J sti ng P<>lnt at 12 :30 p.m. Tuesday, certificate. July 23 . The future bridegroom, The event. chaired by son of Mr . and Mrs. Lyle C. Mrs. Niles Welch, will raise Otterman of Huntington funds to support Services Beach, WM a student at for Ule Blind. The party Is Golden West College and being staged in Community oow ls attending Cal Poly in l!ouse, Dania Point. Pomona where he i s Prices are $5 per table or I majoring ln urbal planning. $1.25 oo an individual basis. Miss Hering's parents are Partnershlps m a y be fonner COllta Mesans. arranged. ' j iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil1 /?_..;,t,.rrloRAPERY I (...,Ot{, IJJ c;:. LE A N E fl 6 I lemove W•t•r Dam•t• • P"LAMI PROOFING EXCLUSIVE COUARANmD DRAPERY CLEANING Drepery Clnnlng. Perfect , ... rtll••• .. th• .,. .. your drapery, or tDO y,, r• pl•c•m•nt It cl••n•blL • No lhrlnk•t• e Ne WlltM HM41 • Perteet Pl••t '•ldlnt • '9rffct IYlft MIMI • W•t•r Itel" .. .,,...,.,, e Prehulon•I lntt•ll•tlu OUlt EXCLUSIVI llAVICI e ProffflleMI ltemciv•I • TW'fftl M•y le Arron ... e ,,... lltlm•tM e ,,... L•n Dre,_ Off for ""' • c.,,,. I 540-l366 642..0270 . ' f 111 ·llWPOIT ILYD.,, COSTA MESA I wrap heavily ia tin foll and place on manifold. By .the time your meal is ready the bread will be, too. Watch out, though, that it doesn't get too heated. 2 tablespoons A-1 sauce ~ pound melted butter or oleo 2 tablespoolll m e l t e d bacon fat d a s h W o r cestershire HEARTY TUNA SA·LAD sauce 2 cans tuna (or crabmeat) salt, l pa ckage of frozen pe:as pepper at 1 cup thinly sliced celery y,. cup w er or vinegar 2 J Yz.ounce jars cocktail Combine every th i.n g except chicken. P 1 a c e available, so interested 4 persons .cire urged to contact Mrs. Ja·met Mahan, Juniors fine arts chairman, a t 897--0897, u IOm a s possible. There will be a charge of Sl per lesson or '6 for the course, with proceeds to be used for a fine arts scholarship. REBECCA SKELTON N•ws Reveeltd FV Couple Tell Troth onions, drained ebic:ken .in covered pan or Oldsters ~ cup mayonnaise or casserole, coat chicken with 1bt • n r a I em en t of salad dressing mixture, add rematmng ~ca Mae Skelton and & lettuce cups to --• Ki'ck Heels Pvt. Richard E. Lyddon Jr. 1 tab\-.v.on lemon Juice eauce pan, ~r -~~!'~ cook 11h: hours. has been. announced by her l teaspoon soy sauce SIX Harbor Area Sen Io r parents, M.r . and Mrs. 118 teaspoon curry powder CH ILI JJEEF FOR Citizens club members will Gordon H. Skelton o r 1.8 teaspoon garlic salt l P:::und ground round beef gat.~r at the recre ation Fountain Valley. l cup cho'v mein nOodles l tablespoon butter or oleo center. Newport Be a c h The bride·elect is a ~ cup toasted, blanched l envelope on.ion soup mix tonight at 7:30 for a party graduate of Wilson High sil.ivered almonds l cup dairy sour cream w.hidl will include a picture· School, Long Beaob, Orange Let peas unfreeze on their 2 cans condensed chili tr.ip to Africa ..t ''hich Coart College and now own. beef IOUP stepping'• mwic for Ui.e Mtendl California St ate Drain tuna (or crabmeat) 2 soup cans of water square dancers tapping Ole College at Long Beach. IF TODAY IS YOllR BIRTHDAY you have knack of making moot or assets. Could make fine investment counselor. Social activity on u;Jgradc, and e x c i ti~ g contacts are made during vacation. TENDENCIES : Cycle high for Tfl.URUS. Special word to SCORPIO: pei'mit mate, partner to take initiative. Lodge Luncheon The Rebekah Lodge is r.osti ng a lllr:cheon :ind cerd p::irty in th!? L.o1ge Hall. Thursday, July 18. Tickets are SI. Th e luncheon-, which will include door prizes, will begin at i1:oon. and break into piecet and l tablespoon flour Virginia Reel. Her fllince, IOU of. Mr . and combine peu, c el er Y , I tablespoon chill powder The party ii "!"'• to Mrs. Rtchlrd E. Lyddon of h onion s, with mHt. C<>mbine Brown beef in butter, add anyoneove'l"50yeanola1e. Fountain Volley, attended Yoga Taug t mayonnaise, lemon juice, soup mix, chill beef soup, At the claee "-the evening HunUngton Beach H i g b soy sauce. curry powder and water. Bring to boil and refrelhmentl will be aerved. School, occ and UCI. He Halecrest Club o! Costa and garlic salt Add noodles let simmer five mlnytes. President Lee Desmond presenUy ts assigned to the Mesa is conducting Yoga to tuna mixture, add Add flour and chilJ powder has noted that tomorrow Defense Language Institute c la sses for ei1'Jt weeks mayonnaise mixture and to sour cream, stir into chili July 17, la Senior Cllli:ens1 in Montere.y . f!Nef"Y Thursday from 9 to toss lightly. Serve in lettuce and mix. Allow to simmer Day at the Orange County No date bas been selected 10:30 a.m. cups and sprinkle almonds but not boil. Serve with Fairgroonds. The Swinging for the wedding. SesS:ions begin July 18. over top. Serves 6. bread or s&Mines. And DolJ ies &.nd will lLick 0U1 jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii A· I CHICKEN remember, if for lunch, be the .afterno"on beginning at 211 2'h ·3 poundl chlcken, cut cure boat is anchored before p.m., and all Senior Citizetts 20th .;:;;=:'~'P'.:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~m:;;aki;·~n~g~l~t.===============ha~v=e=be==••::::w:g=:ed::=lo::=atte==nd==.= . ' • . ' . ~EGA .., • WHAT'S BITTER THAN AN OMEGA WATCH? A DIAMOND OMEGA! At Omega, one of every four employees Is a qua lfty control Inspector. It's 1 greal name ln fine timepieces. And these two beauties are u 1tylish 11 ttiey ire accurate. Both 1v1ilable In white or yellow 14 karat gold. Round model with t ight diamonds, $450. Six diamond rectangular atyto, $395. BA~KAMERICARD -M)ISTER CHARGE, too SL~VICK'S ofutekt.1,-..,, 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTE~ •44·1110 ANNIVERSARY SALE An ,. .. , Solectod From Oor Ret•lar Stock ••• Tiiis 11 Posttl•efJ Not "SALi" Morchandls•. DRESSES -MISSES, JUNIORS, mlTE MERCANDISE FROM ALL DEPARTMENTS G irdles ,Br•1. Ho,iory, J•w•lry, Millinery, Gloves, H•ndb•91, Dre11e1, Sweater Suit1 , Coats, S~irts, Blau111, Ling•rie and Boutique. SO~RT , , • kiCllM Ill thell -rlllblfc Ytluft. ft m!JSl uv "Ht cl'l1rges, ,,., llv 1w1ys, 11e1 1xcM!lon, IU U IH 111111.M ' . . FllR PARKIN6 IN OUR PATIO Ala CONDmONID FOR TOUR SHOPl'INCO l'LEASURI UIS r. COAST HWY. CORONA DIL MAR '7J-2HO \ • MEET OUR llEAUTY·M AKERS: Mr. Jimmy, Mr. J.R .. and R11lo1 MR. JIMMY CONT0 0 THE MAESTRO OF SCISSOR WIZARDRY HAS BEEN APPOINTED HAIR- STYLE DIRECTOR OP OUR SALON. DIREC't FROM NEW VORK 0 PARIS AND LONDON WHERE HE NUMBERED AMONG HIS CLIENTS THE JET sET's BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE1 HIS CREDO: COMBINE HAIRPIECES WITH YOUR OWN HAIR FOR EVENING; SET-TN CUTS, SET- L ESS WAVES FOR DAV• ANO, MR, J, R, ROMEO Afll ARTIST IN HAIR COLORING. DREAM OF BLONDE• BROWN OR A RAD IANT RED ,• .OUR MR , J. R, WILL FORMUl.ATE YOUR INDIVIDUAL SHAD E Wl:fH A C::HEM I ST 1!: YOU ARE INVITED TO CONSULT WITH OUR ·NEW 1 DISTINGUISHED COIF EXPERTS, COME IN WHILE WE1RE FEATURING THE NEW RESTOR'9 5ET-LES5 PERMANENT WAVE, ONLY 25.00 COMPLETE WITH STY\.ING 0 CIJT 1 AND REV1TALIZING RESTO R ~ CONDITI ONING TREATMENT• I N 04.JR P'ftENCH ROOM IEAUTY SALON , , • Lag·nna· Beaeh ED Il l ON voe. 6T, NO. 170, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES t:A'?;UNA B~R. CALIFOllNIA .TUESDAY, JUlY J6, l 968 • 0 ' rowns Boater Feared Lost Craft · Found Adrift Off Emerald BaJi Orange County Harbor Department patrolmen will make another search late today for a Balboa Island man of- fi cials presume may have fallen overboard and drowned from a boot found circling Monday off Emerald Bay near Laguna Beach. The boat wa5 found traveling in circles with no one in it. The Harbor Department took it in Crasli Kills M ari1ie Pilot From Laguna A Laguna Beach i1arine captain. on temporary assign ment at Fallon. Ne v .. \llas killed l'vlonday night when his single-seat jet crashed in the desert north of .Reno. The Third Marine Aircraft \Ving aviator , attached to Attack Squadron 214 at El Toro Marine Air Station. was identified as Capt. David W. Bittig of J34llk Glenneyre, Laguna Beach. 1-le wa1 on ·• two-week training mission at the Naval Auxiliary Air Station in Fallon. The Marine A4-C Skyhawk the cap· tain was piloting went down on an un· populated desert plateau 218 miles north of Reno. ?\1arine Corps officials are investigating the crash. Captain Bittig is survived by his , wire, Lynn, and two daughters. F estival Tram Caught in Mi shap One of the trams usecl to shuttle persons from dow ntown La guna Beach to the Festival o{ Arts 'vas involved in an act1dent Monday night. None of several persons aboard were injured when tram driver H"arold S. Totten, 19. of 2909 Alta Laguna, clip· ped a parked car while negotiating· a turn, police said. The car, a 1968 model parked il- legally in a red zone at the corner o( El Paseo Street and Laguna Avenue, was r egi stered to Robert H. Herbert of La Mirada. It was shoved into a legally parked car owned by Constance V. Kazmier- cwics of Mission Viejo. All three vehicles were slightly damaged, police said. tO~\~and investigation showed the driverless 14-foot outboard. belon eed tri Alice P. Sogg, 228 Pearl St., Balboa Island. She said Roy Carmack, of 8011,2 N. Bay Front, Balboa Island, should ha\'e been at the tiller. Carmack hasn't been found. A seim::h was made Monday al· ternoon by the U. S. Coast Guard, Navy aircraft and helicopters, then diseontinued. "Hopefully the skipper will be found on land. 'Ve don't know what the circumstances are," said Harbor Department Sergeant R a y m o n d Graham. Uneasy about the mysterious in· cident. he called the unman~ed boat "a little unnatural." Seat Tax Plan Dies • Ill Assembly A bill to require Saddleback .Junior Co llege to pay a $150 tax on each of its students attending other schools may be dead, at least for this session or the legislature. The Senate Local Gover nment Con1· tnittee, which is reviewing the bill in· troduced by Assemblyman Ken Cory (D·Anaheim), delayed action on it Monday· in Sacramento. Since the legislature is planning to adjourn this weekend, hopes or passing the bill have a pparentlY faded. Saddleback Superintendent J a c k Roper, \Vho attended the Monday hearing, said a majority of the com- mittee members were opposed to passing the bill anyway ii it bad come up. "We'll abide by the law, whatever happens," the superintendent added. "Even if it's changed. we won't like it, but we'll abide by it." If the bill is passed, Saddlcback Junior College will be required to pay a total of $300.000 to other schools. primarily Orange Coast College. for the 2,000 students it is not equipped to handle. State lay,• requires a junior college to pay this $300 seat tax to another school for each of its students the se· cond in stitution must educate. Saddieback has been exempt from paying this tax because a new college is allowed a three.year grace period before the law applies. Assemblyman Cory's bill a sked that the grace period be eliminated from the law. It wa~ revie"A·ed first by the Assembly education committee, which reduced the tax to $150. This amended measure was passed by the Assembly last November and sent to the Senate. \Vi thout the seat tax, Saddleback must pay $700 for each of its students attending other district schools now. 'fhis is to cover the costs of educating the student, Superintendent Roper said. He es.timated that 2000 studenta Jiv. ing in the Saddleback~dl&trlct.wil{Jiave to attend other 1cliooll this fall because the new junior college will not o!fer programs for ~m . Opera Stud ying Making Season Last for Year The Lyric Opera As&ociation of Orange County may expand frorn put· ting on a two-week opera season to become a 52-week repe.rtory company. They may, that is, if they can get $4 ,500 Crc m the Festival of .~rts. "Ooce the program gets under way," Leon Ettinger, .a director for the Opera, said, "it will make opera something viital to the community." The opera u headquartered in Laguna Beaoh. The repertory company will only get under way, thoui;tl, "if we c.an get the re:quisite fina:odn'g," Ettinger a eta ea. Right now , he said, the financial status isn't too good. Plans call for tlle r epertory to he un· der the·patronage of t~e opera com· pany, "We .ar e looking for more of a resident company," Ettinger said. The opera will hold audit.ions for 24 singers. Once trained, they will be available 52 weeks a year for operas within Orange County. There will still bee. two week opera serason. The opera is askmg UJe Festival of Arts for $4,500 to finance the training, through scholarsh.ips. As Of now tbe opera doesn't have tbe mo~y. But Ettinger said he fl opes to see the program under way by fall. '"\Ve v.·ant to expand interest in the opera throughout the count y," Et· linger said. I· ' I - , DArLY ,llOT,,..,. ~r T9111 I'~ SKY SCULPTURE -Artist Dion Wright looks out from :JO.foot-high tower that gjves new dimension to Sawdust Festival. Several meta l working artists add to it as they are moved to do so. What Is It? uy~~~?::~!E 'Tal~s:, ~~,m~::~~~:.\. 01 th• 01111 "1"'1 51111 aJ"tists. This thing is larger than any of There is lhi s JO.foot high con· us. Individuals phase in and phase gloineration of pipe, wagon whee IS, out." pulley5 and penn<1nts reared above the J !e has some hopes it will ouUast the Sawdust 1'~estival. Sawdust Festival, somehow surviving But what is it? intact beyond the Aug. 24 closing, but The four artists who have had a he doesn't know ht>w. hand in building lt call it variously: "There are no blueprints Sor "an as.s:emblage,'' "a happening,'' "an building it and no plans for what to do industrial collage" and even "a com· with it when it's done ," be saJd. "Good munications experiment." art has to be spontaneous. The last definition was offered by For the present, then, the monument Dion . \Vr ight who said the towering stands there, with strobe light on top structure is a dialogue among arti'sts 38 ni ghttime beacon. As it moves l\'ith sculpture tile 1nedium instead or them. the artists add to it. v.·ords. \Vright, Art Risley. Tim Cun· ningham and "the sage Or Ya11kee knowhow" Joe Miller are the artists. All are artistic met.al workers at least part-time. "-.'VI · all are long-time Laguna. residebts. The sculpture, untiUed, unplanned and unffnlshed, serves as the shop of exhibit booth for the artists. Jewelry and unfinished, serves as the shop or Sawdust Festival visitors beneath It. \Viii the macro-sculpture be sold ? "\Vhat would someon e do with it ?"' \Vrig ht parried. ''It's value is in using Because or its sheer size, if for no other reaso11, it is attracting a lot of a ttention. The tower frame ls some sort of World War II aircraft industry gantry. Pieces are welded, bolted, nailed, glued and sewn together. Wind chimes are the only mova)lle part. "Sculptors have a tendency to col- lect pfeces of stuff in hopes they will be able to do something with them someday," \Vr ight said. "This is what \Ve have been collecting f o r evidently." Sculpture Becomes Electra N II. T ,II.OT ,.... .., T-~ ART IN METAL -Sculptor Ron Whitacre displays his wares to in· teresled art buyen on iroundo al the Laguna Beach Festival o! Arts. Large offering at tight ts "Electra" "'111cb·may•be taken home for $600. ·' • • Artist Creates Female Fig ure in Steel ... By TOi\f GORi\1AN Of tlll o.111 Plltt Sltft' She ls called Electra by her creator, and 1be pretty much took her own ab ape. Electra ts a !leet sculpture ol a female, about seven teei hJgh .and weighing ·somewhere around I o piound1. I Her creator 11 Ron Whitacre, a m.. year-old Laguna resident of 15 months. You can 1ee them both at the Festival ol Arts, wh t re Wblticre is e:ithlblting for the first Ume. Ron, who baa been p:UnUne ''fOl' 11 1ong as J can remember," took up sculpture& about five 71•1 ago, Ht nptained the IW!tch by ..,tng, "Three dimensional dlect 11-ex-, pressive. \Vi th paintings you "A"alk lo the side and il disappears. A sculpture is, no matter Where you are." Electra wasn't always t h r e e dlmene:ionaJ. Originally, she was two 4 by 8 foot, sheetJ of sheet metal,, Four and one half day1 later, she was a sight to behold. A '600 worth of sight to behold. \Vhile Electra lOOks almon.tike any Uving \\"Qman would look In steel, thhe is one noticeable difference. She lacks a lace. But as Ron said. ''She didn't need a face." Electra came into the belng via~ a thought "olf the top o( my heed:.'' Ron explained. 111 wanted a large .ftg'are; She pr"etty, muob bUllt benelf;'1tRon contll!IJ•d. "She.was.romel!Jlni t bid to get out of my system." Ron has al.so built some figures with metal "strings" attached, much like a marionette. "They're my most sym. bolic pieces. EveryoM has strings at· tached, in one way or another.'' Ron said. Ron came Iron Ohio, whore the pa1n. tings are "coDJerVaUve." he bu since moved to Calilomia, and then to Laguna Beaeh. "JtJs a freer at· mosphere," accordbtg to the artist. "'The acceptance is bette:r. so You have more freedom in work,'' he conUnued. tie has, since his move Crom Ohio five years ago, gone from painUn1s to sculptures. "I couldn't U!n11 m;yseJf In palnUJlp," he llmply llalod. An4E1ecWa-..i 111 mc11n--meot . I .. • -· Today's Closing TEN CENTS Companion l(eptFrom Giving Help A lO·year·old boy swept off the rocks In Laguna Be a c h this morning drowned w h e n h i s com panion was restrained from swimming after him and man in a boat neaxby did not know how to swim. Rescurers recovered the boy's body at 12:1.0 p.m. Other persons on the beach ap. parently thought the men in the boat were going to save the struggling youth and watched as he went under. Divers rec-0vered the body off Treas- ure Island 'frailer Park at press Ume. The victim was tentatively identified as Allan Edwin Gray, visiting with J relatives at El Toro. The boy's mother, residence not known, was taken to South Coast Com· munity Hospital in shock. His lather. W•alter Gray, 37, Is a gumery sttgeant stationed CJ!. Da Nang, Vietnam, ac· cording to reports. -• The boy's aun t and uncle, wiU1 'vhom he was staying, are Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ri ce, 2~181 Campina Drive, Mission Viejo. The boy drowned about 8 a.m. lii! cousin, Steve, about Il yea,rs old, was. held back .by ~ 1widQl:ltl~ person who app;.rently feaNd he t,00 would drown trying to save Allan. Steve told sherilf's deputies be is a good swimmer and he figures he could have saved his cousin. Several m en in a Uni versal Stuclios n1 ovie boat reported they got within 10 reet of the boy before he went under. None aboard knew how to swim. Orange County Deputy Sherif{ Tom Sales, 'Cl, stripped to his shorts, but couldn't get to the boy. Laguna Beach and San Clemente (See DROWNED, Pafe Z) Art Festival Breaks Recor(l The LagUna Beach Festival Of Arts broke all records for the f i r :i; t weekend with 1,700 visitors from Fri~ day noon to Sunday night. About 1,500 persons viewed the ex· hibill opening weekend last year. Of the 1,700 there were 7,500 who at· tended the Pageant of Masters, a sell· out with 2,500 persons per night. . Art is selling well too, although no fi gures have been compiled on sales, Sally Reeves, Festival publicist said. She said widespread publicity ac· counts for the big draw. A request for a block of 24 tickets was just rtceived from the Philippines, she reported. Ten magazines have carried stmin on the Festival, including three airllna magazines which passengers browse through while flying to Southern California. After flipping through comment cards, Mrs:" Reeve said the most popular "living plcttrres" seem to be Gettysburg. the coins. Egyptian throne and the tapestry. Orange Coast Weatlaer Summertime weather tends to be repetitious and today and tomorrow will be no exceptions. 'f empcrature1 v.i ll be in the 60s with morning and evening low clouds. INSWE TODAY In. U.. "'"'"" of 1111 Marine Corps there fs now cmothrr name: KM Sanh. Set plctMrtt of abandoned bale Pape JB. ·I 1 O>U " " • ' M " , .. ,, • " " " -. -" MtfMI fl.. 14 "'"""' ...... ' 0r ..... ~ • Mei.I .... ,,,,. ,_.. ..,. Sttd:...,... l•U T....._ It -" == .: > ' . 2 DAILY PILOT lutSday, July 16, 1%8 Lagunagrins ly Pllll lnterl•ndl ''Er, ••. Don't Scratch The Finish: Dig?'' F orta·s Testifies to Role In White House Sessions WASHINGTON !AP) -Justice Abe Fortas told the Senate Judiciary Com· mjttee today he participated in \Vhite House meetings on the Vietnam war and on riots in the cities, But he insisted his role was only to summarize for the President what others said in the session. The justice, testifying on his nomination to be chief justice or the United States, said he was consulted on very few matters and that they have not been matters on which he could claim he was an expert. '"My role has been solely one who sits in the n1eeting while others ex· press their views," Fortas said. lie continued that the President "turns to me last to summarize ." This alone , he said, was the function he served at White House meetings. OLD LBJ FRIEND Fortas is an old friend and legal ad· Viser to the President. The leader of the fight to block his confirmation, Sen. Robert P. Griffinr (R·Mich.), read news reports to thC Senate, House Differ on Funds For Dana Marina A Congressional conference com· mittee m·ay have to reSQlve a $37,000 difference between H o u s e of Representatives and S e n a t e ap· propriations due to oome to Orange County. The Senate Appropriations Com· mittee M-0nday, in approving a bill carrying $4.7 billion for pubLic 'vorks projects, okayed $441,000 for the con· struction of Dana Point Harbor marina and $'>-85,000 for beach restora- tion in Newport Beach. Surfside and Sunset Beaoh. The House eai·\ier had cut recon1- meodations for these projects from the figure ttie Senate committee ap- proved to $425,000 for Dana Point and $270,000 fur the beaches. The $4. 7 billion approved by the Senate committee is $181 million below the figure set by President Johnson in January, OOt $228 million above the amount approved by the House. committee last week that Fortas has continued while on the bench to pl'y a big role in framing White House policy. Fort.as, asked about these aUega- tiow, said, "I have never initiated any suggestion or any proposal to the President of the United states." He said he never recommended anyone !or any positicm, aid that he did not discuss any legal issues or matters that could come to the court. As chief j'ustice, Fortas would suc· ceed Earl Warren. On the question of \Vhite Ifouse talks. Fortas said that on occasion Johnson has done him the honor of i;howing .. confidence in my ability to un· derstan.d a situation" and to "give him the pros and cons." At first, Fortas shied off from giving any specific example. He finaUy gave Vietnoam and the riots as illustrations, and said, "That's about it as I recall." Fortas flatly rejected as untrue a report in Time magazine that he wrote Johnson's message ordering federal troops into Detroit last summer to quell riots. "I saw it." Fortas said of the speech, "but.l did· not .wrlte it." NO FOUNDATION •1 Fortas described as "absolutely and totally Without any foun da1ion of fact'' reports in the New York Times Magazine of June 4, 1967, that he was involved in an unsuccessful campaign to land Bill D. Moyers the job as undersecretary of state. lie aJso disputed the magazine's report tJ1at he was involved. in efforts to get a federa1 judgeship for David G. Bress, the U. S. attorney !or the District of Columbia. ''I did not reco1nmend Mr . Bress for a U. S. judgeship," Fortas said. "I have never recommended anyone for a judgeship .. " As the committee members well knew, Fortas said. he {Ind President J ohnson have .been associated for a great many years, largely as lawyer and client, I-le said the President has confidence in his ability to analyze a situation. Sen. Albert Gore, in presenting For- tas to the committee, described him as a "distinguished son of Tennessee" and said.it was an honor and privilege to recommend his confirmation. For- tas was born in Memphis. Plan ··Board Picks Briggs Chairman By JEAN COX ot llMI OlllW 1"1111 ll1H Laguna Beach planners voted to put architect and veteran pl'anner Fred Brigg., at tbe helm Monday night. Brigg.s, a member of the planning commission for the past seven years, served once before as its chainnan in 1965. He is replacing form er chairman James Schmltz, the third c_om· mi sslioner to announce his resignation from the five-member group recently. Lloyd Milne, the first to resign, was replaced by UCI anthropology pro- fessor Joseph L. Tomchaj{ at the last meeting. Two new planners attending their first meeting to fill the void left by Wayne Hauser and Sohm.itz were den· list Robert E. French and Laguna Beach architect Charles Marland Johnson. H'Oward Holden, the only other ex- perienced planner, has served for six mon-t!h& on the commission. He was elected as vice president and will represent them on the Board of Ad· justment. In other business Monday night, planner5: -Approved a conditional use permit and request foc a division of land for the Southern California Edison Com· -pany to con,s.truot an electric substa· tion. including an S.foot secru.ity fence on EI Toro Road. The conditional use permit will be subject to aesthetic con· trols put on by the ArohilectW'e and Land Use Supervision Committee. -Denied Earl S. F-airbaim's varian· ce request to build a duplex on his oceantro.nt property at 104.5 Gaviota with relief from several ordinance re· quirements. -Delayed to the Aug. 5 meeting a decision on e variance request f:rom the Boys' Club of Laguna Beach to construct a facility at 1085 Laguna Canyon Road. The Boys' Club had been granted a variance in the past. but allowed It to lapse after six: months. ·-Extended for one year the Sandpiper's right to bave dancing on their premises at 1183 S. Coast Highway. -Acknowledged receipt of a letter from the Arch Beacti Heigh.ts As'SOCia- tion questioning certain bulilding prac- tices in the development and agreed to make a report on the situation. Funeral Held ~· For Puhli8he.,.• Robert Hancock Services for Robert K. Hancock, former publisher of the San Clemente Sun-Post and the San Juan Capistrano Coastline Dispatch were held today at the United Presbyterian Chw-ch, San Clemente. Mr. Hancock, 61, died at his home, 304 La Rambla, San Clemente, Friday after an illness of three months. He retired in 1966 to enjoy his hobby of sailboating. He was a participant in the Newport-Ensenada yacht races un- , ti! his illness this year. }le was publisher of s e v e r a I California papers during the past 30 years. They included Santa Maria Dai- ly Times and t.he Fontana Herald News. He leaves his wife, Ann, of the home: a son, Robert Jr., of San Juan. Puerto Rico; a daughter, Marcia Carlson of Canoga Park .and a grandchild. Interment will be at CresUawn Cemetery, Riverside. The bill now goes to the Senate for consideration. poosibly latff this "'eek. If the committee's recommendations are passed, the difference in ap- propriations will have to be resolved by ·a conference committee m·ade up of members of both branches o f Congress. PO Cutback to Affect DAILY PILOT i..,..o -c.Jlfenlo Reb•rt N. Wet d Pulllltl'ltr Thom•1 Kttvil Ed!!(lr Tllom•t A. Murphi11t M1rwtln1 Editor Rlch1rd P. Ntl1 Lt!MW leeth t lty Editor Jtck R. C.rlty Ptirl Nint 11 1u11ne11 Me.._ AdYfMl•ln1 OlrlKfor ---M•IUnt MMll: P.O. IN 444 92452 w ...... .,.. .. Oth•r Offices Coif• Mtl.i 330,Wlll •• , Slrclt ,.,_, ... Cllt !ti! W. llllMI' ll$1111Vfff Hlll'llll'lthll'i l ffdl : :iot $111 5trttl ' New Coast Subdivisions By r MIELA POWEU. 01 lh1 Dtll1 l"tlol lflff Several ne\v l1ome developments in 1he Orange Coast area will be affected by the latest wave or postal service cutbacks announced by Postn1aster· General \V. Marvin \Vatson this week. Saturday and Sund·ay. window ser vice at all major city post offices u·ill be ru scontinucd effective July 27 and individual offices have been in· structed to delay extending postal service into new tracts and developments until further notice, tlardest hit by the cut will be \Vestminster. Newport Be-a.ch and Corona de\ f\.1 ar. Each has several developme nts under construction or near U1e o~c upancy stage. The c::utback in essence n1cans tho t lc1-;:al offices whi~h u·ould serve nc\V devel())>ments where postal service has not yet been extended will not be eligible to apply for service from the regional office until further notice. Resklents in fue6e areas .must pick up their mail at general delivery mail windows ln their community offices. "You can't just arbitrarly put a new tract on a man and tell him he has that in adQltion to his other eight hours of work." Hwttlngton Beach Postmaster Pete DiFabio Nid. "The routes must fir st be :ipproved by the region.al office." Jluntington Beach thus far has not been affected by the cutbacks. Post.al routings for new and oc~led U.ctt haw alr<ody been approved and Im· I plemented. The order to curb Saturday mail service, which has not yet reached a ll o{flces in the area, was given last \reek after Watson pleaded with the Post Office Department to restore funds slashed by Congress. The directive does permit a general delivery window to remain open for two hours on Saturday to deliver m ail to general delivery customers and for business finns whose mail is regularly handled in that manner. Plans by the Postmaster General also include a cutbac.k in .personnel by so me 83,000 unless the funds are rcstcre<l. An earller directive issued ))y \Vatson. instructed postn1asters to flll only three of every four vacancies. No ofrlce in the Orange Coast area hos bet!n ·affected by the personnel cutback and·will not be 'for some ti.me. Home delivery on Saturday has been unaffected but plans are being con- sldered to eliminate the delivery by Sept. I. Hughes Wins Round NE W YORK (AP) -Howard Hughes has won another round tn his battle to buy 43 percent or the stock in the American Broadcasting Com· panies, Inc. But tile outcome of the tr .. ucllon nmllnl In doubL .. I • VETS AT DINNER -Commander Whitt Vallulll of Laguna Veterans. of Foreign Wars post meets dis- abled veterans co-hosted to dinner Monday night by CAIL Y PtLDT Sitt! Plllte Laguna American Legion. Guests also saw Art Festival, p uppet show and Pageant. Players Halt Playhouse Work to Help Festival The Laguna Community Players turned out to be good guys. And ~ere were no bad guys. In the Interest of civic harmony, the Players board of directors voted not to block a Festival of Arts deal with a contractor to delay building of a new playhouse. '11he playhouse site will be used for parking dw-ing the run of the Festival until Aug. 24. "The Laguna Community P layers are happy to turn this area over to the Festival as a gesture of gOOd will and in the interests of community welfare and accord," Players P r e s i d e n t George A. Gade said. · There were earlier indications the Players would like to use their city leasehold property to raise funds by selling parking. Their co11cession broug ht .smiles from all concerned. -Festival directors could smile because they will have more parkiJ'lg, less ooise and less dust. -City officials could smile because they will save $800 by not having to buy parking space that the Festival was losing to playhouse construction. -The contractor, Azar Construction Co., could smile because be will receive $1,500 from the Festival W Jay off the job for six weeks. MByor·-GJ.enn E. Vedder, wtlo ·wa~ personally involved in smoothing out 8IT'allgements. said the playliouse site will provide 45 parking spaces. The Players stipulated that they' are to be U{led by Festival persoiµiel only, on a no fee basis, and not be Used for revenue-producing public Parking .. Ma1ijuana Found Ready to Mail Laguna Beach Postman J e r r y Corano reported finding a small plastic bag. of marijuana Monday afternoon in a drop box behind the main Post Office, 570 Glenneyre St. The package was turned over to police for disposal. Contents, Police Lt. Robert McMur· ray said, were useless marijuaria stems and seeds left over from manicuring. From Page l DROWNED ••• llieguc:rds with diving gear began the search for the body. A Coast Guard helicopter joined in for a few hours, then left. The movte: compariy was on location filming a Weekly' televi!ietn series for next fall, "Fame is the Name (If the Game" starring Robert Stack. 100 Disabled Vets Treated By Art Festival One hundred disabled veterans were treated to dinner and an evening at the Festival <K Arts and Pageant of the Masters in Laguna Beach Monday night. Laguna American Legion a n d Veterans of Foreign Wars pos~ members were hosts for the dinner at the Legion Hall. The Festival admitted the veterans free to the grounds and Pageant. They also Were treated to the puppet show. Th e disabled servicemen were Crom the Navy hospital at Camp Pendleton and the Veterans' Association Hospital in Long Beach. Those at Pendleton, still on active du ty, are Vietnam veterans. 'The others are veterans of Korea, World \Var II, and in the' case of three oC the guests, World War J. ''This is one of the !inest things the town has done for disabled servicemen," Legion past commander O. W. Price said. Poor March Ended WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The Rev. Ralph David Abernathy today an- nounced the end ef the Poor People'• Campaign in Washington. · Abernathy told a ·:new.,: .. conference the · last 300 of several thousand· demonstrators who began arriving ill the nation's capital in May were being sent home. IDNBf:: has it! DEEP ~teimL ~ CR1'PCT CLCRnlnC THE ULTIMATE .•. We lay it on the line • • • in CARPET CLEANING Recently Deep Steem C•tpet Cleener1 introduced • new professionel cerp•t cl•enin9 proce11 fo thii Cou~ty , •• Prior tD offering thi1 remer~eb'9 1ervice to you, our customers, we co~ducted our own comprehensiYe te1tin9 prDgt•m in order to vetify the clelm• made for the pro~~· by its develop-- ers. Not only did we find Deep Ste1m to be a reYolut lonary depertur• from our tr1d1t1on•! cerp•t cl••n• in9 m•thod, but we found it to be eb1olutely 1efe for ell carpet end uphol1tery fabrict. Concurrent with our testing program, we thorDu9hly treined our per•~n~el in the effectiYe us• of D•~l!I' St•am cle ening equipment ... Only when we .,.,..,, compl etely 1at11f1ed that Deep Steem met with our standards did we offer this un ique new 1ervice to you. A successf\JI compeny's reputation is it• besT edYertisement. We ley it on the line b,Y cordielly lnYiti~9 you to try sefety-tested Deep Steem Well-to-Wei Cerpet and ~phol1tery Cleen1n9 • • · The fin· est profession•! carpet cleenin9 •ervice yet devtiloped for the 1ndu1try. Protect the life .of your c1rpet1 end the beeuty of your h~m• by celling todey! TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We •r• drepery ex_perts! We 1tre11 qu1lity Df workmenship & in1t1lletion. Free Estimates In Your Home At Yo ur Convenience. CAL[ TODAY: WMIN TOU ' WANT Tiii "NUT- CALL UPHOLSTERY CLEANING Jb yeer1 of coll•ctive experi•nce between the 2 men doing your worlr. All worlc dDne In our plent. We pre-test ell febrlc1 before cleenln9. Free Estif!11lts In Your Homo At Youl' Convenience. CALL TODAY: ... ISTIMATI RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS Our 2 lst YHr of Service in 2950 RANDOLPH f'HONE 546-3432 Or1n90 County COSTA MESA From Toi Areo C.it Zlolftt 7·Hff < \ Big Blaze Raging in Huntington j Fire erupted on second floor of the liolt·Hepter bull~g at the comer of Main Street and Ocean Avenue in Hun- Ungton Beach at 11:~ a.m. toda.Y. The building wa1 unoccupied at the time and has been under cltJ COil• demnatlon for the put &lJ: months. Smoke was pouring out of second floor windows and air venll u tire units began to arrive. Smote wu drif· ting heavily up Main Street on strength of ocean windl. A large crowd of several hundred spectators wu on band to Watch Hun· tington u .. ch linfllbllrl bottle the blue. No cause wu imme d ia tely determined for the flre. Extent of damage could not be determined from the street level because of heavy con· centrations of smoke. There was some suspicion that arson may have been involved in starting the aging structure· aftre. Witnesses told the DAILY PILOT that shorUy before 1moke bega,i pour~ tng from the old building, a bikini-clad girl and a boy in t-shirt and shorts were seen fleeing at high speed from the building east on Ocean Avenue. Another witness said the building's second story had been· a "hippie haven." Eight units Of the Huntington Beach Fire Department were batUing the blaze at noon today. Observers said tbe fire appeared to be out of control. By 12:20 p.m. flames were leaping out of the roof and the building ap- pear<d to be fully engulfed In flames. Telephone service was disrupted in the immediat.e downtown area. Costa Mesa's aerial Jadder truck arrived on the scene about 12:15 p.m. for usis- tanee. Money Argument Ends in Intent Murder Charge Shotgun blasts were fired Monday in a Santa Ana record store fight and two men arrested, cme on suspicion of assault with intent to commit murder. Police said the d.Jsturbance took place at the Record Rack, 1701 W. 1st St., Booked on the assauJt charge was Robert E. Whiting, 28, of Santa Ana, an employe of the record shop. Jailed on 1uspkion of assault with .a deadly weapon was Ocie Adams, 24, of Santa Ana. Officers said the argument started over money which Adams reportedly owed Whiting. Whiting, police said, ordered Adams to leave and not return without the money. Adams returned with a .20 gauge shotgun instead of the money. According to Whiting's story, Adams hit him on the side of the head with the gun. He wrestled it away from· him and fired a shot when Adams fled. Adams returned to the fray and this time he was hit on the head with the gun and a second shot was fired. No one was injured. Foreign Aid Hassle WASHINGTON (UPI) -The peren· nially embattled foreign aid program celebrates its 21st birthday this year with 5\lpporten working to make sure It bu a 22nd. Fore! IRVINE BOUND? -"Sweetpea" the anteater, Is with Spots the Clown animal show now playing at the Orange County Fair. Sweet· pea, along wi~ Giggles the sunbear from Sou~ East Asia and a trained flea ClJ'Cus are among the animals awaiting fairgoers. There's Plenty to Do At Orange County Fair PRIZE RAM -Fred Hutchin- son, 9, Fullerton, holds his pure-bred ram, Jet, 5 months, at the stock pens at the Orange County Fair which opens to- day. Fred is a member of the Happy Hayseeds club in Fuller· ton. 2 More Bodies ' Fo1o1nd in Crash NEEDLES, Calif. (UPI) -The bodies or the pilot and a maie passenger killed in the crash of a light plarie v.ttich also took the lives of a former Miss California and enother W0!1'1an last Saturday, were recovered Monday from the Colorado River. The body of Robert 0 . Thomas, 34, Gardena, the pilot of the Cessna 172, was sighted from ttie air •lying on the shore of ttie river about three miles south of the scene Of the crash. The bod y of Irwin Allen, 34, Lomjta, was found in the river a short time later. Also killed in the accident were Jeanne Venebles, 28. Visalia, Miss California of 1964, and a woman .iden- tified as Dorothy Claybusll, 24, Lomillr. Plane By JACK CHAPPELL Of flM EMllT Pli.t Sl•ff ' County fairs, like death and taxes, never change. Orange County Fair, which opened today is n.o exception. (See Page 8 for fuB schedule) Walk down tile mall and you'll see and hear the exhibits by local merchants, the flower shows, the carney sideshows, exhibition haJl filled with the wares of neighboring localities, with each exhibit, each town saying, "look at us , we're great." Go back to the arena .and you can see the Junior Naticmal Horse :;how. There young equestrians are making animals 10 ti'mes larger than they perform. Walk back along the stock pens and you can see the pride and joy of many youngsters. Hogs, of all colors, shapes and sizes; lambs, freshly clipped and combed; all with their attendant maS'lers continuously c l e a n i n g , brushing. Back a Utile farther you can see the cattle stalls. It Is there that you'll find the cow with three horns and three eyes along with the prize, curried darlings of tbe groups like La Habra Future Farmers or tbe Fullerton Hap. PY Hayseeds. In the stock area, you'll also find the farm's equivalent of a stage mother. She scurries around urging her children to get up in front when photographers are taking pictures, prodding them to clean, clip and comb or brush their animals. Judging will be going ori almost con- tinuously from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday back in the stock area. The interested city slicker can wander through the pens, poke his head into the stalls spotted with the red, white and blue pri?.e ribbons and wonder just what makes the aclmal "prize." During the afternoon you can sit down on a bench holding cotton candy and a hot dog in one hand and a paper cup o{ Coke fn the other. Invariably, mustard will run down your finger& and drip on your pants. The Popcorn Theatre, the puppet show , is on and the kids have crowded around the little stage. In the background the thrills ar'ld spills of the side-shows are being broadcast by the screams of te!Tified, satisfied patrons. Pretty soon, the sounds of the marching bands, or drum and bugle corps will be mixing with the other sounds of the fair, ea<:b aound trying to outdo the other. Pilot Finds Good Lie Near Fairway Later this evening, the traditional beauty pageant will be taking place in the amphitheater with all the county belles on parade. Mlss Orange County Tomorrow will be chosen from among that group of girls. tonight at 9 p.m. l\nd so for six days, the Orange Cou nty Fair will display its wares to the awe and titillation of children of all ages. Even the middle-aged ones. Golftrs at Huntington Seacliff Gou Course in Huntinjton Beach are used to fiying objects around fairways, but Monday golfers agreed that a P iper Cherokee 140 was too much. The plane crasn landed just past the · 11th fairway shortly after 2::.J p.m. af- ter the pilot, Lynn C<lllelt, 25, of 10f85 Marguerit.a Ave., reported the engine had stopped running in midair. Coffelt suffered minor facial cuts in the crash landing. GoUers said the pilot "didn't even yell 'fore' " as he sailed across tile course sC1me 100 to 200 feet high. The plane dropped low enough to uproot a few young trees on the course and to crash land on a bank at the edge of the course, stopped by a cable acting as a fence. Coffelt said he was on his way back to Orange County Airport after touch and go landings at Long Beacti Airport. At 1,500 feet near Newport Beach the powerplant "just quit," he 1aid. R edwood Park OK'd WAS!llNGTON (UPI) -The House voted overwhelmingly Monday to create a Redwood national park tn Northern California of at least ~.400 acres -with the promiae that a larger park is a certainty. IN ™I llOUOH -Thia Piper Cherokee 140 crash landed jusl past the 11th fairway of Huntington S..cllff Oclf CourN In Huntlallon Beach Mo~ ~ft.Y fltLOT ........... aflemoon after losing power on a !light between Long Beach and the Or8ll&t CoWlly Airport. PUol escaped with minor facial cuts. ~ TutMIQ, Ju/1 l b, 1%8 Enemy Force Beaten U.S. Troops Win Savage Delta Battk SAIGON (AP) -U.S. troops pro- tectlna the 1outhern approaches to Saigon defeated a large enemy force Tuesday ln a savage battle in the Mekon1 Delta. U.S. a.nd South Vietnamese sources agreed that the enemy had pulled back around Saigon, easing a threat to the capital. But the fighting since Monday in the delta showed the Viet C<lng and the North Vietnamese still were in force on the city's approaches. lnfantrymen of the U.S. 9th Division struck the enemy force 16 miles southeast of Saigon Monday and the battle raged on until the early morning hours of Tuesday. Artillery, helicopter gunships and dive bombers joined the battle. U.S. spokesman sa1d 76 enemy troops were killed while the Americans lost seven dead and 21-·wounded. The toll of enemy dead in another battle Monday 40 miles deeper in the delta was raised from 104 to 116. In Ibis fighting , about 1,000 U.S. 9th Division troops and more than l ,exxt Sduth Vietnamese cornered a large enemy force near the provincial capital Of Phu Vinh. U.S. Navy gun- boats, along with artillery and warplanes, were thrown into the bat- tle. Allied casualties were given as 17 Americans and two South Vietnamese wounded. The two battles cOMtituted the heaviest fighting ln several weeks, during which there has beeo a genera) lull in South Vietnam. While the threat to Saigon was reported eased, U.S. sources did not discount tbe possibility of a sudden at· tack, noting that enemy strategy calls for the greatest possible use of surprise. The Saigon Post said Thieu would leave for HoMlulu Thursday. in· dicating the conferences will be held Friday and Saturday. There was no official confirmation. The only date anoounced either here or in Washington is that the meeting would be around July 20. None believes that the enemy has given up his aim to strike a blow at Saigon t.o emba?Tass the South Viet· namese government and to strengthen North Vietnam's band at the peace talks with the United States in Paris. There wert no reports of. fighting elsewhere except near the demllltaJiz. ed zone dividing Vietnam. U.S. Marines reported 14 North Viet· namese were killed by artillery alter a band of 30 enemy troopa wa1 spotted crossing an open field. U.S. Air Force 852 bombers carried out seven strikes Monday and early Tuesday, ranging from near the Cam· bodian border northwest of Saigon through the central highlands and into North Vietnam. Two raids were made in the North, one 30 miles and the other 35 miles southeast of Dong Hoi. The targets were truck parks, supply areas, an· tlaircraft gun sites and artillery posi- tions. Elsewhere over the Nortt Viet· namese pantandle, U.S. fight e r • bombers flew 120 strike missions Mon- day. A communique said 0 1ines ol communication and wnpom attit eon· tinued to be the prillW)' lclell." U.S. headquarter• alto anno~ an Air Foree Flllll Thundercbltf WU !oat to enemy .,....d ~ durlnf .trikes Sunday northwett.1 of Don& Ho The pilot was picked up Mond,ay· by a rescue helicopter. It was the IMth announced loss of 1 U.S. plane in com· bat over the North in the war. · It also wa1 disclosed that an Air Force FlOO Super Sabre Jet wu brough t down Sunday by ground fin southwest of Hue ln South Vietnam. The pilot was killed. While the war ground on, secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford went through a round of meetings with U.S. and South Vietnamese official! on the military situation. He will go t.o Honolulu later this week for a meeting between President Johnson and Preli• dent Nguyen Van Thieu. UeSe-Russia Commercial Flights Get Off Ground NEW YORK (UPI) -The silver, blue and white SOviet jet circled New York for an hour and 35 minutes. Then it gracefully rolled to a stop at Ken. nedy International Airport and made history. The first Soviet commercial flight to the United States arrived Monday, capping 10 years oC negotiations that ran hot and cold according to the in- ternational climate between the two superpowers. The So v I et government-owned airline Aeroflot Ilyushin 62 e,arried 98 Russians from Moscow to New Yor k slightly ahead of its 10 hours, 45 minutes schedule time. But air traffic over the city was so great that the 186- seat jet had to join the stack circling overhead. Two Pan American World Airways jets -one carrying r e g u I a r passengers and the other making the 111augural New York-Moscow flight with VIPs -flew to ?t!oscow Monday PHONE COLLECT 213-728-7283 FREE ESTIMATE CHARGE ITI night. Each airline will fly one Oight a week with Aeronot stopping in Mon· treat and Pan Am stopping at Copenhagen. A round-trip ticket costa $1 ,109 in first class and S730 in tGUrist. The Ilyushin 62 holds 186 passengera. Pan Am's Boeing 7rtl holds 199. Among the 93 to arrive Monday were 54 government officials and 39 paying customers. The customer• walked direcµy from the plane to tht international arrivals building. The of· ficials stayed at planeside. The. Soviet flag and the U.S. flaC waved side by side at the entranceway to the greeting area wfiere a news con· ference was held. Among those meeting the Ilyushin were Undersecretary of State Eugene G. Rostow and Jacob Malik,~ Soviet U.N. ambassador. Rostow 1~ the new air service was part or a larger effort to improve relations between the United States and the Soviet Union. We'll clean your draperies for only ..• 1~R~IDTH ' unlined up to ) ' long 1~R~1orn unlined )'to 5' long 2~~1orn unlined 5' to 9' long PRICE INCLUDES TAKING DOWN AND REHANGING. 41 HOUR SUYICI Penneys uclusive new pr-.s de.ns •I typn of dr•peries beautifuly, draperies that could .never be cloaned before (even bHuty plHk al no . extra chorge). Makes lhftTI fool< and fHI almost like new. PENNEY'S CLEANING SERVICE , draperies • ....,,Nd, • bl•nkeh • --,illowt • accent ,,,. .. .I - -4 DAILY PILOT Tlltldq, Ju~ 16, 196& Appeal Deadline For Ray July 17 .. tc:-11111 .......... ""' ...., When Robert E. Rolllnson'• car stalled at an intersection at the top of a hill in downtown Bradford, Pa. he got out and gave it a push. The car rolled down the bill and crashed into the porch of the Cope- , • land African Methodist Episcopal Cbwtb. Police arrested the 80- year--0ld Robinson and charged him with dnmkeness. • Bill Holland, of SpringfUld, JU., trit's to turn mi&'fortunt into pTOjitable ad· vertiring a.s he placed the .rign behind his shattered jewelry store window. BiU holds the brick wed bl/ the thief who was certainl11 discriminating; he took m toatches but left a large tray of valuable rings untouched. • W•lter Bl•cknell, of Hartford, Conn., climbed the bars of his cell and broke ope n two outlets of the sprinkler system, police said. Water flowed throughout the area of the police lock-up and into eleva- tor shafts. Firemen spe~t ·more than t"'o hours mopping it up. Blacla;iell, 35; had been in jail on an intoxication charge. He was transferred to a maximwn secur· ity area of the local hospital. • Three Louisville (Kentucky) policemen were suspended for }our days for using a street .sign for pistol target pTactice. • M•ry O'Brien, 16, a studeat at Oelwin (Iowa) High School. ap- proached .Jan intersection with a "Yield • right -of -way" sign. She didn't stop the driver education car and it collided with another car causing only minor damage. The other vehicle was being driven by E. J. Forllch, Oelwln Chief of Po- lice. • The following sentence was con· tained in a recent report sub- i ;~i~~: t?.s;!'ei3cao~~i11~1,;~~~r ~~~ ~ slle did not deny that she accept- ed or denild the work that the employer offeTed to her. • A Miami bowling alley operator has collected 150 toy guns and one real. rifle in exchange. for free games. Casper Weber, manager of the Bird Bowl said "We want to get guns out of the bands of the kids so they won't have anything to do with them as they get older.'' LONDON (UPI) - A Brllllh court today bound over James Earl Rey, ac- cused slayer of Dr, Martin l.Alther King .k., for another eight days on charges of violating goo and pa.:ssport law>. Sourcei close to Ray's defense said Ml Iawyera were running into "local dlfficUlties" hampering Ills appeal against a cow't-<>rdered extradition to Amer.ica to stand trial for King's murder. Ray'a appearance at Bow Stree t Magistrates Court was routine. The law says he must be taken before a magistrate every eight days while beJd on the charges of carrying a gun and two !IOl'ged passports, charges on v.tiidl Ray was an-ested June 8 to end a wwldwide manhunt Defense sources said the "di!· ficultiet" they were taDdhg about were not administrative and not connected with legal obstacles to their contention Manufacturer ' Proposes Gun Control Plan NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI) -A !ireanns manu!acturer proposed to- day a four-paint gun control program including prohib~tion of mailocder sales and tlhe iss uing of gunowner identification cards. Friank Kenna, president of the Marlins Firearms Co., also urged ef- forts to educate the pubic about firearms although he said this would not solve the problem of armed crime. Kenna suggested legislation estab- lishing a three-day waiting period ror tlhe purchase of new guns, pro- hibiti.oo of mailorder gun sales, sales by licensed deelers only and gunowner identification cards issued in the man- ner of hunting licenses . "This controversy over gun control legislation must be the m o s t misunderstood. question in the history of America,'' Kenna said. "Education is the only effort you can prove to have had any effect at all." Kenna cited trailling prograJJ'M being conducted by 15 police departments throoghout t!fO oouiKry, in cluding Rockville, Corm., to teach women ov~ 18 to lose "their fear of firearms" and "defend themselves if necessary." Bubonic Plague Case in Denver DENVER (UPI) - Colorado health officials said Monday tests have revealed that 11 dead squirrels fou nd in Denver all showed positive signs of lhe bubonic plague. State and city officials launched an intensive study last. Monday alter a six-year-old Denver girl came down wi th the disease. It was the first case of plague in a human ever reported in Denver . A spokesman for tile Colorado Departmllll ci Public lleolth said squirrels are the leading suspect as carriers of the disease. More than 100 dead squirrels have been found in Denver in the past few days . Health officials have said there is cause foi' concern, but no cause for panic as a result of the outbreak. that King's sl"1'inl ...,. • poUUcal crime. Political cr~s are not sul;tject to the Anglo-Amencan extradition trea- ty. Ray's Brit.Wt lawyer, M i c b a e I Eugene, bas only one day left to file an appeal ot Ray's extradition ordel', is6ued two weeks ago. Frank Milk>n, Chief Metropolitan Magistrate, ordered Ra1 held unW Ju- ly 24 oo th.e gun and pu""°" chorges. Only a few spectators were on band when Ray arrived from Wandsworth Prison in a black maria escorted by three Jaguar police aui.sers. Fishbowl Cell Awaits Return Of James Ray MEMPIDS, Tenn. (UPI) -A "goldfish-bowl" cell await! J ames Earl Ray, the accused assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. If Ray's batue against extradition in London fails, he will be brought to MemphJs to stand trial for murder. A special cell is being equJpped-for him. A Shelby County official said Sheriff William Morris has told him uabout the special cell the1 will have for Ray. "They're going to have elosed- circuit television in it so they can watch him all the time and all. lt is really going to be fitted oul" Morris has refused to discuss the &r· rangements for Ray, charged with the sniper slaying of King as he stood on a motel balcony here last April 4. "That trial is really going to be something," the official said. Another county official said security police will be in the windows of all of· Oce buildings overlooking the Shelby County Criminal Courts building, and that traffic around the com1house will be restricted. Youths Run Wild In Pennsylvania For Filth Night YORK, Pa. (UPI) -Roving baods of youths hurled bricks, rocks and several fire bombs in a two-block area of a predominantly Negro district in South York early today. Severhl passing motorists were in- jured slightly and s e v e r a I · demonMraton were e.rrested during the disturbance which began sbort.ly after midnight. The youths dispersed about 6 a .m. and authorities said the situatioo was "under control." It w.as the fifth consecutive night of disturbances and came about 10 hours alter Mayor J ohn L. Snyder declared an "emergency" situation after con- sulting with the city'ti safety director and chief of police. The action provides police with an additlmal «> men to meet any un- foreseen iltuations. About ~ youths, mostly Negroes, assembled at the intenection of Maple and Duke atr-. bloct!ng traffic with gasoline soaked sofas which they set afire. They thmY bricks, rocks and stones at palSing motorists and several fire bombs were thrown into doorways of several· homes end business establishments. Air Conditioners Hum Stifling Heat, Humidity Hold Grip on Nation C•llfornla I Coate I There wm toe C0111!0e11D1t io... Cloudlnett f~ ll'lt Orafllol Co.11 In "· I , Allantt 8tktrll~ld e11mt rck (IOIM ..... l>luM CtM.ll'Wlttt Cltveltnd ... ~. 0.1 Moine• ""'"'' Fart WOl1fl ,,_, ·-·-· Ho.ti'°" ~nMI City ltt V-l os Antelft Mltml 1..0 Ml ..... ull:te Mlflnet POlll NfW OrlHna Htw Yortl Oakltnd ...... p-·--Pl\tlteltt.111• -· PlttW.I,.. ........ llt1111d City .... 8111ft ·-SI. ·l oult S.llntl St!! ltltt Cl11' ... -Slfl FrtncJ5e0 Slntf h ™r• ... ,. , ... _ ,,,.... .. WtlftlnttOll .... » ~ " " " .. ., ,. .. " " " " " ·~ '' 17 67 " .. " n .. " fl 75 " .. .. » .. " .. " fl 1' .1$ "' n " .. " " " n .. " " n " " " " " 10 .ca " " " ·~ " .... n n u " " .. " ff 7S ... .... " n " .. .. u " " " Jt .ti n " 1n " .. " ' MISSING LINKED -Eight servicemen, reported- ly .AWOL from the armed forces, chained them- selves to clergymen in a special church service heralding the youths' self-styled "resignation" from the military in San Francisco Monday. The aroup UP'I Tt ......... consists of five soldiers, two sailors and one Marine. Chuck Jones, 20, of Ferandina Beach, F1a., U.S. Anny, is shown chained to Father Richard York of Berkeley. Serviee111en •nesign" Chained to Clerics, They Begin 'Service of Liberation' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Eight Amt!rlcan servicemen, all absent without leave 'from their stations, began a special 48-hour church service MOliday as a ''?Wignation" from the armed. forces. There was no official reaction from the government, but it seemed unlike- ly the self·styled resignations would be accepted. FBI and military police spokesmen said they were "studying" the .situation. The servicemen-five 5olctiers, two sailors and a Marine -sat in · a semicircle chained to clergymen in the Howard Presbyterian Church for what tile paltor, the Rev. Thomas Dietrich, deecribed aa a 48-hour .. service of liberation." . The soldiers identified themselves aa James Seymour, 20, Deer Park, N.Y.; Steve Anderson, 17, Las Vegas, Nev.; Keith Mather, 21, San Bruno, Calif.; Chuek Jooes 20, Fernandina Beach, Fla.; and George Dounis, 21, Atlanta, Ga. The sailors are ..Paul Howard, 20, Roy, Utah, and bale Herrin, 20. Garland, Tex. Tile crewcut Marine is John Robinson, 18, Westport, Conn. The Rev. Dietrich opened the service with a prayer with about 70 peri;ou.s in attendance, including a few hippie types from the nearby Haight· Asbbury District. The youths. chained by the wrists to clergymen of five faiths, said they would consider themselves . "free men" wheii the service was concluded Wednesday afternoon. The Rev. Dietrich told newsmen if military police or FBI agents at· tempted to arrest the servicemen, all dressed in civilian clothes, they would be invited to participate in the service. If they refused, he said, they would be asked to leave on grounds of violating church sanctuary. :~,;:I :•I e_~ .. -.. :I . " JEAN COX, -- ,_...,, ........ 1Nt u ·-,, Consul's Wife Masters Test Quaillications for a good diplomat's wife do not cenier around her tea·sipping abilities, according to Eduardo Picasso, a Peruvian consul and Orange County's first diplomatic representative. "S~e must ~e able to adapt to ~ifferent surroundings and languages, make fnends easily and be used to a fast pace of life," he commented. If so, he obviously has found the·perfect milte in Angelita Picasso bis wile for the past 21 years. . ' . The da~gbter of a Peruvian diplomat to Italy, Angelita has found it delightfully ~asy to ad_apt to her new Laguna Beach surroundings. An artist, she said, she really loves Laguna and finds it "quiet sim- ilar to the Italian Riviera." As soon as possible she hopes to get out and paint some or the "quaint corners or Laguna." Before doing so. she explained. 111 like to study the feeling of a place. I have been doing sketches in charcoal to use before I get started." Mrs. Picasso's academic art studies include 'four years at the Acea· demia di Belle Arti at Genoa and work under the patronage of the well known professor Vernazza and Giacomo Picollo of the Accademia de Brera in Milan. ·-t Like her husband, she speaks several languages, including French, Italian, Spanish and English. And if the route to people's hearts is through their stomachs, mak~ ing friends should be quite easy for her. Picasso boasts that his wife is a tremendous cook of Italian, French, Peruvian and American dishes. •• JI n .. .. • LIVING WITH DIPLOMACY -Eduardo Picasso, a ·Peruvian consu1 who has his offices in Anaheim, explains a diplom.il.tic problem to his talented wile Angelita. The couple res\d• In La· guna Beach with their daughter. Mrs. Picasso, an artist, is hop- ~ ing to paint pictures around the Art Colony and perhaps enter her work in the Festival of Arts next sea.son. Some of her specialties, she said, include anticuchos, which is a sort of Per uvian barbecue dish, and Ceviche, a fish roll marinated in lemon, chili and spice. , The Picasso family includes their 19-year·old daughter Mrs. Ronald Watts who is living With her parents while her husband is serving the U.S. Army In Vietnam. The Laguna Line Medical Men Take Off For Hawaiian Evening BY JEAN COX Of lh1 D1Ur ~Hot Stiff A LUAU which occurred recently in the Dana Strand Beach and Tenms Club would have been a most practiCal place to sprain an a11kle -there were more ll•an enough doctors in the h::i11se. The occasion was a party hosted by Dr. and Mrs. David Kawa s aki of Shorecliffs. San Clemente. in honor of Dr. and Mrs. Louis E. Potvin. About 125 guests , includin g m·any a re a doctors, were present to enjoy the Hawaiian buffet dinner and dancing. Dr . Potvin. formerly of Oamp Pendleton, has gone into practice with D r . 1'~:.\'asakf. He and his wife are making their new home in Mission Viejo. FOR THE N INTH consecutive ye ar. Auxiliary members of Soutfl Coast Community H06Pital will take well deserved bows before the hospillal's board Qf directnrs. 11~ To show "',,._their appre- ciation for the efforts of auxiliary wo- men, the board will present American Hospital As· JlAN cox sociation pins to each volunteer who has contributed 100 or more hours or service durina: the past year. According to Mrs. Thomas J. Fletcher, auxiliar y spokesman, about 125• such awards will be presented. Among tnose at the coffee will be hospital s t a f f members and doctor s and hospital board members along with area c i v i c dignitaries. A BEACH PART Y Saturday evening will mark the beginning of a new year of fund·r·aising ventures for the Revelers, a couples club dedicated to supporting the ·Child Guidance Clinic of Orange County. IV.r •. and Mrs. Ralph Brown, Mr. Ind Mrs. Howard Preston and Dr. and Mrs. Lou Haslewanter. Proceeds will go to the ~Costa Mesa center which is a nonprofit outpatient psychiatric clinic for the diagnosis and treatment of emotionally d f st ur bed children and adolescents in the county. The Revelers recent I y named Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Klauer of Monarch Bay as presidents. Assisting them will bt Dr. and N'J1 . Jame1 C. Townsend, fir 1 t vice presidenU ; Mr. and Mrs. R o I a n d Fribourg:bouse, second vice presidents; Dr. and Mrs. Jun Chino, treasurers, and Mr . and Mrs. Ralptl Brow n , secretaries. MISS BEA WHITTLESEY has returned from a tout of New Z e a I and which included several lectures before Bu si'n es s and Professional Women's Clubs In that country on their work with women parolees. ' A Laguna Beach resident, Early Risers Get the Coveted Pancake The 10 a.m. Volunteer Recognition Coffee will take pl ace in the hillside estate of Mr. and Mrs. J ose Rosan of San Juan Capistrano, and all "uxiliary member1 art ;nvited to attend. Stealul cooked ever a huge outdoor berbecut p i t . dancirtg and ente:rtainment will be one of the attractions at the fund· raiser. Arre.ngements for t h e evening are beinc made by she founded the Volunteer Women's Parole Advisory Cbmmittee of 0 range County and attempted to initiate inter¥f. in a similar venture ~ her travels. Early birds In Three An:b Bay will be de\IOOl'ina pancakes from 8 to II a.m. Sunday In the Tbnoe An:hes Ccmmunity Clubhouse. Mrs. Fritz Au•tennuehle, chairman of lhe annual breUfast, which it IJIOnsored by Three Arclt Bay Women's Association, ealll on Ralph Davenport; Three Ard! Bay A111cciation pmident, and ber bwband ne11 to right) for poncako creation. As .Long DEAR ANN LANDERS' I accepted a job with this organization eight months ago today. A woman I met here impressed me as extremely bright and friendly. I liked her at once. Now the problem : Th1s woman hu worn the tame washable two-.piece cordlD'Oy outfit every day since we ~ She 11 not hard up flnancially. lf€r htis:band bas a top-i!otch position Ud she a)lo-!D.lte_.s an excellent salary\] hl.v'e been"to their home and 1een """ral dresse1 hanging in her closet When I asked her why she never wore them she replied, "They are too large. I used to be quite heavy.'' I o{fered to give her the name of my alteratioJl lad)' but lhre said, "It wouldn't be worth Jl"' The woman ii neat ..t clean, but as She Is Suited Up and Clean-Don't Scream ANN LANDERS ~ can )'Otl Jmatine what that corduroy IUit looU lite after bcinl worn every day for eilht montbs? I do believe tM: dear lady will wear th.at suit to her grave. Would 1be be offended if [ presented ber with a decent drea in her 1ize? -WACO DEAR WACO: Slye J•r ...ey. Your Irle .. •11 a ptJcffloJlcal tMa( , ... ,~-....... 7 .......... ..w--·-•-llfallltlf lier ....... lie 1111..W -... It - ud deu ucl doa'I mile lier Uq·ap ,..,,,........ ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I w11 1urpriaed that you made reference to tbt surgeon who toot oU the wrong lei by m.i1tlke. The medical profession dotla't like that kind of pubticily. Several years ago my wile wu tn the holpital for 1i spinal disc opera- tion. The mornini 1ht WU 1tbeduled for ta?JVY, • pllyticlan -Into her room and -.Id lo bit - voice, "You certainly don't look like a wom.ai of 86.'' My wife replied, "I HOPE I don't. I'm 45.'' The doctor gulped and stammered, "Uh, I must have the wronf chart here." He left and returnee a few moment.I later with tho correcl diart. Heaven cnly bowl what would have ha_,..J If the miltlko bad not been d.llcovered. Tbe woman whose chart the doctor held may bave been 1cheduled for 1 gall bladder operation or a thyroldectomy. I'm wriUng to alert you to the fact tbat docton are not God . They are human beings who make mistakes, just llkt everyone el&e. and it pays to check Oft them. - HUSBAND OF A NEAR·VlCl'IM DEAR HUSBAND: -7M let 70ar leller. I he" be!-JOO ..- that dodon are DOt God and U.ey m.Ue mt1tate1 like e\leryone e11e. I ha\le expressed U.0.e very 1emtlme11tl la tlalt column OD aameroat oeeuloaa. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' Can you tell me pleue wbM. tbe dutlt1 of a mlniJter'a wife are? When ii •he ~~ pooed to find time for ber ...n family and Ibo actlvitieo oho cooildero flln and not obligations? I've •U:ed th.la question of Hvtral friends 1'tlo are married to mlnl""1 and they don't know the answer. Do youf -DAWN TO DUSK HELPMATE DEA/I DAWN: T1111 prolllem It - 111 111ttt te iaa: over wt6 10f11 e:Jeram•a. CONFIDENTIAL TO HOOf OWL: Of course you. can't aleep night.. Yoo sleep days. Drag your catou• out ~ bed in the morning and fiX breakfast for your family. Perhaps 1f you wre Hlf-starter your husband wouldn't have to be a er~ ..,,_ Bdde't Glide," Au LI ..... boolle1, ........ , ..... o11M_,... .... ill' ·-~--·--dblp. To reee1n ,.w <1p7 II tMa =.-" ..... ·-·-.. can If t.W1 ..,,.,.,.... ........ ,. lol(, ...,_, .... ~ ped e~ ud IS ceett la-. AM Landen will be clad to belp JOG With your problems. Send them to bar In ... of tho DAILY PILOT, onclfo. ... • tlampad, oell-addmted ... •elope. J4 . " . DAILY PILOT Tuesday, July l&. 1%8 . Horoscope Sharyn Uyesugi Married Cancer: Gain Allies A boneymDOll ln Carmel followed the 1ervices uniUng in marriage two fonner University of Southern California studenls, Sharyn Em! Uyesugl and Dr. Teruo Yama. moto. The cOuple spoke their weddinl vows be- fore the Rev. Albert F. King at M altar flanked by baskets of pink and white gladl<>- las and carnations, in the Nelghbo·rbood Church, Palos Verdes. . 'The bridegtoom is the son of fdr, and Mrs. Otot.aro Yamamoto of Torrance. His bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kenji Uyesugi of Costa Mesa, was escorted to the altar by her father while wearing an original gown of satin organza and jeweled aJencon lace fashioned in 1 \rumpet 1ilhouette with high jeweled neck· line and jabot front. A cascade of white rose- buds and lilies-of-the-valley formed her bou· queL In attendance were maid of honor Miss Suzanne Durkin, matron of honor Mrs. Randy Sopp and bridesmaid Miss . Sherry Goddicksen, who were gowned identically 10 bright pink sleeveless dresses with white overdresses of lace trimmed organza featur· ing mandarin necklines. Each carried a round bouquet of bright pink rosebuds with light pink carnations and ribbon streamers. Flower girl Miss Sherry Kawamura also wore bright pink with a white overdress em· broidered in daisies. • Peter Lubisich as best man was joined by ushers Takeo Yamamoto, Keven Uyesugi, Richard McMahon and Ors. Craig Ota and Dennis Nakatami. A reception followed in the Plush Horse, Redondo Beach. The bride, an Empire debutante, is an alumna of Newport Harbor High School. At USC she studied education and became a member of both Kappa Alpha Theta and the Japan American society. The benedict, a graduate of Phineas Banning High School, received his BA from USC in Asian Studies and is a recent grad· uate of the USC Dental School. He belongs to Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity and is cur· rently a captain in the United States Air Force. The couple will spend the next three years in Yokota, Japan, where Yamamoto ls stalioned. Kitchen at Sea MRS. TERUO YAMAMOTO To Reside in Japan WEDNESDAY JU~Y 17 B1 SYDNEY OMAllll "Thi wile ma eentroll. Ida deltilly • • • AllroiOIY polala lllo .., •• ARIES (lllardl 21-Aprll 19): Get .... in1llht !nto po1••11lon1 . You can inllll'OW !ncomt potenu.L Be obaervllll. You could find minor flaw wb!cb NYea you ·time and money. T,\URUS (April 20-Mly 20): Cydt IDOYOI up. You COD OUO<elllufly IJloUIUfatl chq11. lmporlanl lo sot ldou lhouCbU on paper. Key I. menial ordtrllne11. Qoyltalllle ahna, I o a I t • -hltlom. GEMINI (Moy 21-.lune 20): Miid> today _.,.. lo be undercover. MMDI then .. apt to be .•ub le lnflue.ncu. Family membeT may be witbboldtog .lntormation. No malic:IOUJ latent. Realize otber4 hive riChl to privacy. OANCEll (June 21.July 22): Now you Pin &llieo, lriendl. Sllalul ol1 tendency Juniors Collecting Now lo lrood. Look lo Mure - 1trou Gpllmllm. Mey of your booeo, wllbet are due to be ~ Could be day lo celel>nU. LEO (JUly »-Aut. 22): Al111mt -111w17. Tm lnltJatiw W'bve c a re e r , amblUom are concerned. U YW try to shirt dutJe1, price could be exceedingly hl1h. Know th.la and a c t accordingly. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Lone-range ·view ls best today, Minor problema due to diatolve. Travel i 1 blghllghted, .Uo greater celf-expres1lon. One who is at a distance offers Mild 1ugge1tion. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): PermJt mate, partner to take Initiative. You are at F F 11 R S I your best lodly providing a or a ummage a e 1enseolbalance. Your ideas . IPIJ"kle. But others greatly Offering lo help cle• out area cloeets and garages are members of tbe Hun· tington Beach J u n i o r Womm1'1 Qlub. The Juniors will be happy to have some or tboee "white eleP.hanU" which C'UlTf:nUy are tattnc up space and collecting dust for their faU. rum.mace and bake Nie. Mn. Stlllley Heltiilp, waye and uieam ~. is serving as a:eneral chairmon for Ille Nie -will tab place in September lo Hunlincton Beod!. Painters Welcomed Mai<ing their contrlbuilm toward encouraging buddllll artistic takot are members of the Huntington Beaeh Junior Woman's Club. •A coune in beelrmioC techniques of paintinc with acrylics will be offered for six weeks bec in n t n1 Wed!lelday, July 17. benefit if you give them Aloiating Mn.. Hettinga · spotlight. are t.be Mmes. William Bias, SCORPIO (Oct. 2J.Nov. Daniel Drageset, Jack Hail, 21 ): Judgment is sound. but Edward Hannig.an, George you . tend to be impatient. Kemp, James Mah an , You know what is right, but Gt.raid Met;igold, Ronald waiting becomes a problem. PMTick, Michael Pharris, Beat to check w I t h Ted Reddick, Cb•les Shep-authorities. Mee.na be sure pant, William stepbenson, you are on right legal track. Wayne Tedder, Eugene SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22- Wllllam., Bill Wlllon IOd Dee. 21): Be ve<saUle. Sam Wllaon. Don't be bogged down with All ;nceedJ will benefit only one method. T r y , the m a n 1 pbilan1hropiea experiment -make brush tpon.tond by the jt9or strokes bold. AM.end to basic club, and M'.IYODe wishing to task.I. .Relations with' CO· mM.e a dODlltion may call workers due to improve. l&n. Hettiola, ~17. You'll be happier. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 19): During morning h>url ~ to det.oill. Later, entertainment is on agenda and could include glamorous dine«tt date. .Good news concern t n g youngster could brighten day. AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 18): Pace yourseU. Check details. Be aware of p-operty value1. U you don't know, ad:. Do not permit pride to stand in way of enlightenment Pay c J o s e attention to me1.ages, oalls. Soup, Salad . Sandwich ~ will be cooduded ln the clubhouse, 420 loth St., Huntington B e a c h , bet"(een 9:30 IOd 11:30 a .m., by Mrs. Frank Souza, i.n&ructor. A limited number of openings are available, ao interested persons .-e urged to contact MA. James M'.abaa, ;rumors fine arts cbeirman; a t 897-0697, ... IOOll a. possible. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Forces tend to be scattered. Jud1ment subject to confusion. Best to hold back and wait. Picture becomes clear as additional facts u n f o 1 d . Relative's request mlght best be put off. JOAN HERING Brkl•to-bo Couple Select September ·J oan Louise Hering and her fiance Donald H • Otterman MU be married in the First Oiri..tlan Church, Gorden Grove, Sept. u . Tho daughter of 11'.r. and Mrs. Robert C. Hering of Glenda1e is a graduate or Newport H..-bor H ! g h School and Orange Coast . College where stie received her dental assl1ting certificate. 'Ibe future bridegroom. son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle C. Otte.rman o f Huntingtoo Beach, Wa& I student at Golden West College and now is attending Ce1 Poly in Pomona where he i 1 majoring ln urbal planning. Mias Hering's parents are fonner Costa Mesans. (l"ollawl!W " ... faurth lrtlel• 111 • ...... Oii ~ to IHWPll'e 8UCCVlenl inMll rw au'"""1"11me Miion.) B1 NANCY HYDEN WOODWARD NEW YORK (WNS) - Hint No. 1 U you are tired of dishing out one can of soup or another aloog with a sandwich, how a b o u t comblni..ng a couple? Mif onion and tomato soup, tomato mi crecn or celery, er ollion and chicken gumbo. Hint No. I U you want to heat up IOllltl buttered French or Italian bread llld haven't space available on the stove, try the ship's manifold. First butter (with garlic, if desired) the bread, Club Bids wrap heav·ily ia tin foll and 2 table&poons A·l sauce place oo manifold. By the ~ pound melted butter or time your meal is ready the oleo ~, bread will be, too. Watch 2 tablespooM m e 1 t e d ou~ tllough, that it doesn't bacon fat get too heeted. d a sh W or cestershire HEARTY TUNA SALAD sauce 2 cam tuna (or crabmeat) ~pper 1 packAge ol frozen peas 14. cup wafer or vinegar 1 cup thinly allced celery Combine e v e r y t h i n g 2 !' .... -:0:~ cock.tail except chicken. P 1 a c e There will be a Marte or $1 per lesson or M for Uie course, with proceeds to be used for a fine art s scholarshlp, L REBECCA SKELTON News Reve•lecf FY Couple Tell Troth Oldsters --. drlcken in covered pan oc % cup m&yonnaiae or casserole, coat chicken with 'Ibe en a: age m • n t of atJad dreising mixture, a d d remaimng Rebecca Mae Skelt.on and & lettuce cuJ>ll 1 • K01ck Heels Pvt. RICbard E. Lyddon'Jr. 1 tabl.....-lemon juice aauce 0 pan, cover anv. .... _.... cook l lh hours. hu been announced by her 1 teaspoon soy sauce Harbor Area S e n J o r parents, M.l'. and Mrs. 11' teaspoon curry powder CHILI· BEEF FOR SIX Citizens club members will Gordon H . Skelton o f ~ teaspoon garlic salt 1 pound ground round beef gat.'ler at Ule recreation Fountain Valley. 1 cup chow mein noodles 1 tablespoon butter or oleo center. Newport Be a c h The bride-elect is a 1h cup toasted, blanched 1 envelope onion soup mix tonight at 7:30 f« 1 party graduate or Wilson High slivered almonds 1 cup dairy sour cream w.hidh will Include a piot\lre· School, Long Beach, Orange Let~ unfreeze on their 2 cans condensed chill tr.ip to Africa and. 1tigh Coast College and now own . beef soup stepping" DM1Jic for the attende California state Drain tuna (or cnbme«l) 2 6'0Up cans of water aqurare dmceni tlppint the College at Long Beach. IOd break into pieces and I tablespoon flour Virginia lleel. Her flaDce, soa of Mr. and A bridge and ,,_ combine peu, c e 1 er Y • I tablespoon chili powdeT' The party ls G110n lo Mn. Rlcbacd E. Lyddon ol party which· will include a onioos, with meat. Combine Brown beef in buttt!r', add anyone over 50 yean ol age. Fountain Velley, attended light tundleoa is being rnayonnalte, ltllllOn juice, soup mix, chill beef soup, At the close d the evening Huntington Beach H i g b offered by El Cami.no Real soy aauce, curry powder and water. Bring l.o boil and refreshments will be lll'Ved. School, occ and UCI. He Woman's Chj) oi Dana and garlic salt. Add noodles let simmer five mrnutes. President Lee Desmond presently la asiigned to the P.oint at U :30 p.m . Tuesdey, to tum mixture, add Add flour and chill powder has noted that tomorrow1 DefeMe Language In1titute July 23. mayonnaise mixture and to sour cream, stir Into chili July 17, is Senior Citizens in Monterey . The event, chaired by toss lightly. Serve in lettuce and mix. Allow to simmer Day at the C7range County No date bas been selected Mrs. Niles Welch, will raise cups and sprinkle almonds but not boil. Serve with F.airgrounds. The Swinging for the wedding. fund! to support Services over top. Serws 6. bread or . saM:ines. And Dollies &.nd will kick off1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii for the Blind. The party ls A-1 CIOCKEN remember, 11 for lunch, be the .afternoon beginning at 2 11 being st.aged In Community 21/a·3 pounds chicken, cut aure boat is anchored before p.m., and all Senior Citizens House, Dam. Point. up making it. have been urged to attend. Prices are '5 per tohl< Of'!..:=~========~~=============== $1.25 oo an Individual basil. Partnerships m a y be arr.anged. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRmDAY you have knack of making most of assets. Could make fine investment counselor. SOcial acti~ity on u:igrade, and e x c 1 t 1 ~ g contacts are made during vacation. TENDENCIES: CJcle high for TJ\URUS. SpeCial word lo SCORPIO: permit mate, partner to take initiative. Lodge luncheon The Rebekah Lodge is hosUng a luncheon Rnd card p.'.'l.rty in the Lo1ge Hall , Thursday, July 18. Tickets are $1. T h e luncheon, which will include door prizes, will begin at noon. Yoga Taught Halecresl Club of Coola Mesa is (.'(Inducting Yoga classes for ei#lt weeks every 'Thursday from 9 to 10:30 a.m. Sessions begin July 18. 20th ANNIVERSARY SALE /;1_ .;.;,.'ITT D RAPER Y (_.,lJt{; IJLj ~ LE A N E fl 6 ltmoYe W1ter D1mege e Pl.AMI PIOOPINO EXCLUSIYI All It-Sal...... Fr-Ow Ret•lar Stoclc • • • nh ,, P..CtlYaly Not "SALE" Mere-... GoUARANTEED DRAPERY CLEANINGo Dr1pery Cl•nlnt· Perteet ,...NI"' ef the ... ef your lllr1 .. ry, .r 100% re- Jlecement If clNn1llle. •Ne lhrlnk ... e Ne WlltM HMll11 • ,.,.,_. , ... , , .. llllnt e 1"91'hct Inn Hernl . • Weter St1ln lemn.i e Prohul .... I lnttellett.n OUI IXCLUllVI SllllVICI DR e Pret...a.n.I lltMte¥11 AP. E RY • T"""' M•Y .. ..,, ...... ••C-LEAN-ER~l~-~·!•-:::h~"-~*::~ l • ,,.. LMn o....,.. ~ = Off ..,. uth & c.wry 20% 540-1366 642-0270 f 702 NEWPORT BlYD., COSTA MESA ., WHAT'S BETTER THAN AN OMEGA WATCH? A DIAMOND OMEGAI Al Omega, one of every tour employees Is a queffty control Inspector. It's a great name In tine tim1pleet1. And these two beauties ere as sfyllsh as I hey are accurete. Both ava!lable In white or yellow 14 karat gold. Round model with eight diamonds, $450.' Six diamond roc:tangulat atyte, $395. IANKAMERICARD -MASTER CHARGE, too SL~VICK'S cY~--- II F°"SHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-1110 DRESSIS -Ml~SIS. JUNIORS, l'ITITI MERCANDISE FROM ALL DEPARTMENTS GircUes ,Ires, Hosiery, Jewelry, Millinery, Gloves, Hendb1g1, Dr•11•1, Swe1ter Suits, Co1t1, Skirts, Blouses, Lingerie •nd Boutique . SOIRY ••• IMcvM " ..... 191'Nrt.lblt .......... _, MY "Ht; tfMrQel, l'IO let .-.... , l'IO IKdllfl-, Ml .. , .. 111111." ND PARITIN6 IN OUR PATIO All CONDmoNID l'Oll TOUI SHOl'l'IN6 l'UASUll Ull I. COAST HWY. CORONA DIL MAI 67J.Jtt0 • MHTOUll IEAUTY-MAKEllS: Mr. Ji••Y• Mr. J.R, onol llHtor MR0 JIMMY CONTO, THE MAESTRO OF SCtSSOft WIZARDRY HAS BEEN APPOINT.EC HAIR- STYt.E DIRECTOR OP' OUR SALONa DIRECT FROM HEW YORK• PARIS AHO LONDON WHERE HE NUMBERED AMONG HIS CLIENTS THE JET SET1S BEAUTIFUL PEOPL£1 HIS CREDO: COMBINE HAIRPIECES WITH YOUR OWN HAIR FOR EVENING; LESS WAVES FOR DAV• ANO, MR. J, R, ROMEO AN ARTIST IN HAIR COLORING, DREAM OJI' BLOND.£, BROWN OR A • RADIANT RED,, ,OUR MR, J, R, WILL FORMULATE YOUR INDIVIDUAL SHADE W ITH A CHEMIST 1~ YOU APIE INVITED TO ' CONSULT WITH OUR ·NEW, DISTINGUISHED COIF DCPERTS, COME IN WHILE WE1RE FEATURING THE HEW RESTORll SET-LESS PERMANENT WAVE, ONLY 25.00 COMP~ETE Wint STYLING, CUT, AHO REVITALIZING RESTORll CONDITIONING TREATMENT 1 IN OUR F?IEHCH ROOM BEAUTY &Al..ON. .. • • TUESDAY JULY M ••• "" .. -"' llO) ""' DunptlJ. • ..... ... I I 5 """ (C) (JO) • - --IQ,. (till ...... ,...... l.lwfolt-'\.lllJlt· '"" ............ ....,, IOdl "'"" Tlwi Colle11 ........ . ................. ,..., .. • • O"a.t: ---= CC) ..,. .... ..... (Wlltm) '51-'tlll Htrlill, Yvon11t De e.trto, NII Nicol. .......... (C) (30) IBM M ...... (30) fl!) WW'1 ""' ., __ ,, ... - --(C) (IO) B"" - -ICI l>Ol ...... , ... (30) Ill lildtlie'• .., (30) fD s,.ctnNI: {C) '1.eycr bf' L.,. •." Onld Prowltt looks 1t tilt 111M. of ae&lotists musurln1 tirnt by llJ· en of loldlrntnt 111d or1111ic 6tpo$. its on tllt ocee11 float. .,_"IQ ....... _ -(C) if""lltw .... ··-· ......... ., __ _ ~ ... :.t.:-7.'• ............... wrs . UW:.. 1:1. ""*"' II ... -. ......... '"° B 111 (I) -R (81) """ itNi tftim1111111• btcomtt tht lllf. 1ppointld nu,_,., kw 111 l,.ortd wild llon.. (R) B @OOI_,,_ (Y0l .. ,,,_ DDn't F-..t Ille Alllo- 111uts." P1t1I L)'l!dt lltllllb • 111 O'WZ..... ltUbitioAilt who Sib· Jtcts fOllJ lftd Ropr 19 I pfoCflm of riaotous •ertt. llld llarlllioft dill Jeannie tri• m rwittlln thwn witll htr :nttic. "It the "'" btck· fires. (II) o•.,...,..-m..., D @(J)""""'• -(C) (60) ·";hr 11i1mt1." Thi larill1s 1rw jaintd by lour AllMricln llDck· adt prisorteB Cit • Mllllofl bttiind tntmy tiML TlllJ WI ordCfld tlO loc~lt 1nd dtltr(lf I Q ltmlut aun. Slli!J Homailr ........ Mopn runt. <IO IJMlllM $ ... .,.._ ...._ Mlk.,.. (COClllidr) '9 -Shirtlr ... ---""' • .......... I : "Ur•11 LM1ue." A Pint! of locll ~ mM 4Ufftion f11nk Stlnlty about llis WDfk Ill tht comm11nity crp• ltlltioft. enlhlllule-t ~lOBlll!Cll"" -.. -(C) (10)-ltny urs INl'H buy Olw 1nd Lin61 1 lonl-ov.-dut wcddl11& ,,._nt, bllt tltet"ll llM to tbllifl It throustl • whol•lt cMt1w. (R) D @ I]) ""°' (C) (IO) ''()Od Glnptlfl Mawr Dit." How1rd DI Silvt IUflls U S.IWI, I hljlckw who h• rltumcd lo his trtdt lftw 1•11 111 prl:!Jon. Mikt H1ina ht· vesti11t" th• hlj1ckln1 af MVtr•i lrvcb 1nd finds lflt only clue ii 1 a1tdl Ol'I e.ch trucUR) m-" ·-(C) l!Ol ................... ............ ~. • -fCI .,, 1111 .loll• ..... ____ -·-..--(Cl (90) Laine. Jn 1184, 1 ~ 11-,.,, .,...., IUITIM tht r114urAibifltj rA flndl111 • the prll(I&" ,,.W far I .... itllt· • 1111 11• ... -(Cl N list.cl old ...... ....... Giorwt ..... . ·-· Ill <IOI ·-,, .. _.., ·---B-RflOl_W. ... IDllll .._. .._. .... BllRloc tc> -n. ..._" .. .................... iilll"(*'-+........V...loll ... ..... ..Oat-. ....... ·-... -R ¥ -= s 2 ----... WILLIE MUFFET DUM DE DUM. JU5 WALK IN' ALONG MINDIN MY'OWN BUSI NE.SS. ~~ MOON MULLINS - - -... m ,_ -fT ~!MLY OCQJRR!l> .. !tl~ 'll:RllO! ;.::;,. -..,_ • .,...,; 'TOM<,t>R.TAYl.01<·· ....... ~ HUlfMI, Word ...._ J SHOULt> BJ, -""" ..... _ ._,. .. ___ IXAMINED10 11..n.tllt, lift :, ttie eity _... K•9 ._. ...... Mr ... (d_rt-t>f:T6"RMlNi! IF ~ wit11 Collntry-Wllllnl Mii· •l '50-.loltn Gtrfllld, Mldlcl1M1 f;:)(.f;RCISe-IS g Plltlclpathlr 1N llllli W,nett1, Prllle. tO.~i'~·~F~O~l<;M~E'~.~(1 ~=-=-" ... Ed o!:d~ .. tolk • u (f) lllt """"' ... (C) 8 ROLLER CMl!S-llffl ( * T-BtRDS -. MIDWEST w t [1 •• t \ ., .. l ................. (dtl· mt) ·~ """"" Al••• ·--B IDJ IJl ,_, --<Cl .................... ffnJ*r) .. ......., "'"---<"' .-Ul'9} '35--Cotly 11ir111t. Utll • .,.. ..,.. .. Wll" (Cllll· ati$ '40-Jlll McCra. "Tiii Liii DAYTIM( MOYIES _,, - -'41-"""'111 cw-. UDtlt , I slit" ......... k10ID"1" .......... ~ .,. '54-Wam ....... hll ........ tcry) 'S5--0IM Oii\ Lita Mllet1. ............ ~(lb 4:11 ................. (..,..., •l '17-S-Ohcr. fl) ... '~M ...... . -• tl:illl" ........, -.w • """ ........... .... (Wiit· hltl!Cll. n) '51-f'•ul Mlwmlrt, Uh: Mllafl. • JOB PIUNTIN& • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS U11 WIST &lUOA ...... MUTI AND JEPF , MISS PEACH • ·--- • sea a Sil& • IYAEQ!SZ Ck-%-£.1 _,,,.e 9 co tSJ --· .. !f!' .. t ---------.; ~--• , <.., , -a s .. .-·-.--. . AS 'lt:IU we&.L )$OW, THERe ""1e. SCORES OF CO\W.UNmes JM OUR. OWlll 6TATE 1"AT LACI( I AOfqoATf MEDICAL. F,t.CIUTlfS • r:. SO ')t:IU11?E" SUR.!", l)R. iAYLOR-EXERCISE /II PE~Fi::CTI-Y o .K. fOR ME? 600!1NESS SAKES! 0 IS IT NIGHT? IT ~ !S SO BRIGHT 001; . I THOUGHT IT mi IS THE W>S PAY l MOON HANGIN' U!'THE~~ NOTTHtSUK! ly Cliartes M. Scliull By IUI Brewer ly Al Smith rT OIDN'T HAVE' NUT!UN'! ly M.a \I (' '• I' L ·:"' . - AFRICA AND AMERICA -Mike Wallace, above, moderates a panel discussion of African and Ame ... - ican Negroes on "Of Black America" tonight in color at 10 p.m. on Channe1 2. Th.ls is the third in a seven-part series tracing the history of th• Amerlcan Negro and the civil rights movemenL TELEVISION VIEWS Philbin Back With Bishop Dennis the ltJenace - ~·· .., .... • 1 POUND If llMlllT Nf1CT '1D ~ IJDt LYIH8 Oii MM llQM'QI.! • - I 1 ' I 1 " .. . • • . ' ' _' Jf DAILY PILOT 1.1iGAL NGTICB , f ilflt IU .. 1!11110• cou•T °" TH• ITATI! 01' CALll'OltNIA 1'01! THI! COUMTY OP OllAMOI! Iii• ........ . NOTICI! O• Ml!AlllNO 01' ,IJTITIOM l'Olt "llOIATI! 01' WILL AMO f'Ott Ll'tTl!ltS Tl!ITAMINTAIY E•l•lt d .MAIEL I'. l'ITlPATllllCI(, ......... T' NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN 1'11 LOTTA HOSTMAN t1111 flied .... ~ln I .. fllkln I« Pr•M "' Wlll I nd lor 11141- •na Ill Ltl'ters Tn11men11ry te """ ,.. tltl<Wler, reltrtnet 10 wtllch 11 n'lfflt tor fuM!ltr p1rtlcul11"1, tl'ld lhtl l"' llm41 Incl piece fll Mtrlflt '"' Nmt llll Mt!\ ti! for A\1111111 t. IHI, II t :JO 1,m ., lfl lllt CO</,,_ el ~Hrfmtnt No. 1 llf llld -1. 11 11111 Nor1h 1rMd'w11. ln rri. cnr ef S.fttt AM, C1ll!o,.,.l.I. Oaflllf: Julr n, 1Mt \IW. E. ST JOHN, County c~ ~ L Dvllt ... s. • .... rly Drtft • .........., Hllh, Ctllf9nllt, ttl1t T.i: tll: 2n·U11 ltf 211: 171.JIU ... ,,.,.,,.., "" •.rtn.-. ,.,,blli.hed Or•nff CO.II D•llY l"llol. Ju- ly ''· u , n. nru 121Mt ' PSA Gains ValCar Time for an tither 1ook at tax-exempt securities The pauage o·f the new 1urtu mak.ee tu.- aempt municipal aecuriti• an even moH valuable inveetment for many middle and high income familie1. Let'• look at just two ezampl•: For inve1tor1 who1e joint return annual in· oome i>: •... : . , ..... $20-24,000 $32-36,000 The equivalent la.t· obi< r,"eld n~ to eq.ua a5C,C,ta.i•e%empt yield before 1urtax wu: ....•........• (32%) (42%) 8.62% :M:UTU ASSETS OVER '425,000,000,00 OVER THE COUNTER • INGS • OTHP BRANCH ~l'ICES W..t ~. ea.1"9 Q-lo • - OAll.Y l'tUlf Jl, J -'~·~-- t , I • -..... ' J& DAILY PILOT -. Outpost · LQgged • Ill Marine Annals· '!n 111e long ennels of Me~ne Corps history -the shores of · Tripoli, Bdneeu Woo"d, ·Cheteeu Jhierry , lwo Jime -the neme of Khe Senh will renlc high end be long remembered. A nee rly useless piece of rocky reel estete in the fer northwest of South Vietnem, Kho S.nh, menned by e smeR group of Merinos, withstood everything thrown egeinst it in one of the most se~ege ex- tended sieges of the Vietnom Wor. It's defenders drove off the enemy, then ebondoned the bese thoy he<;! ·held so stubbornly in fevor of something more worthwhile end . more eesily d .. !ended. But et Khe S.nh the Merines hod _ shown they could not be budgecl, JAii photos UPlj NEWS FROM HOME -Two Marines carry a mail "'1ere It was· plaeecl to protect it from North Viel- saclt fr1lm !Ole liaDh's llDdergroUDd pool o!llce 1181Jlese artillery 'during helgllt of attack. GETIINO EXERCISI! -Marine wom out wllh and sandbagged bunkera evidence of lhe siege laid barbell on quiet Sun41.Y aftemOOD wilh barbed wire on lhe base for monlhl by North Vietnamese. " '· • draw, taking wllh them as much materiel as poe.- alble left over from the lllOll1lll-lollJ atece, ' Corps Abandons Khe Sanh Base After Bitter Siege in Which Communist Attacks Were Futile .... . . .. . . . .. .. . .. . . . . . .. . . • • • • . . . .. . . .. . .. . . .......... ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... ..... . . . . ···-...... . . . ... . . . . . . . N.VIETNAM 10 -.n111 HllSN IA'Tla .. '1~ ""'· Ml ••flfU •fSI'•~· MARINE OUTPOST ABANDONED, BUT NEVER FORGOTIEN UPI Now1m1p 1pot1 loc1tlon of Kho S.nh neu Looi Bordor RELAXATION -In a ocene impoelible earlier this evening while one of them entertains on a guitar :rear, MarinOI relu: before a bonllre on a SUnU.Y with marks of liege as backdrop, NO MAWS LAND -Support units mow IUDDlles tllnu"1 llll llMVl!1 damaged "DO 111811'1 Jlndlr ed Hlll 889, ocene of heavy fighting dlllini bitter batUe wltb lttac!rl"I Nortll Vietnamese. I l < Newport Harbor Today's 008lal EDITION VO~. 6)', NO. '170, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES NEWPORT aµcH, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, JULY :16, '1968 TEN CENTS Everybody Gets the • ID Aet City to Query All NB Horileowners on Goals By JEROME F. COWNS ot llHI c.llY f'lltt '"" Everybody In Newport Beach will soon get a chance to influence where his community is going and how it's going to get there. City councilmen Monday night agreed to ship out municipal "Goals and Objectives" questionnaires to some 14,000 households. The suggestion came from Planning Director Ernest M-ayer Jr. Gov. Reagan Answer To Wallace Dy The Associated Press California Gov. Ronald Reagan says his swing through the South beginning Otis week will be aimed against what some Republicans consider a growing threat from former Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace. , Third party presidential candidate \Vallace has been showing increasing strength in public opinion polls and Reagan said Monday that Alabama Republicans in particular were con- cerned about speculation Wallace "mhUlt eat into" Republic.an votes. "Very frankly," Reagan said ln Sacramento, "the Republicans asked me because of the strength ef Gov. \Vallace. He is going to change the balance, possibly." ·· • The South .atso is considered Reagan's greatest source of presiden- tial strength outside California. The governor says he is not a presidential contender but as a favorite·son can- didate 'COUid become one at the GOP national convention next month in Miami Beach. Reagan leaves Thursday for GOP fund-raising appearances in Texas, Arkansas, Vuginia, North Csrolina, and Alabama. 'The Hanis Survey released Monday showed Wallace favored by 15 percent o£ the voters, and taking twice as many votes from Republican can- didates as from Democrats. Pollster Louis Harris said in a copyright \Vashington Post story hulf \Vallace's strength is in the South. The Gallup Poll reported Sunday that Wallace shovis 16 percent voter support, and said that was nearly twice the strength be showed in April. New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, announced GOP con..- tender, said meanwhile bis nationwide poll to indicate whether he or Richard M:r Nixon would be the s1rongest Republican candidate will be con· ducted July 22-26. Rockefeller said he ls convinced delegates want to nominate a winning candidate and said the poll results will be announced as soon as possible before the GOP convention which begins Aug. ~. Streets, Alleys In West Newport --Faee Facelifting The wraps will come off a $30,000 study Wednesday night <>n how to straighten, Jevel and pave the tortuous aUey system of \Yest N e w ~ o r t s(ri!tching from the Newport Pier to the Santa ,Ana River. . . The formaUon of a special J~· provement district.to help pay for 1t mjght be in the offing. . The study was co m m I s s 1 one d 5everal n1onths ·ago to the Santa Ana flrm of Boyle En~lneering. Result.~ of their research will be made known In the informal public meeting 1tarting at 8 p.m. at City Hall. Cost.s of any extenaiW: alley work are still undetennlned, according to Public Wotk.s D-Joe Devlin, But tile d\y II J>oplng to lake a reading fn>m the public at . Wed• nesday'1 meeting on how much dreet Jm""°vement they wut. Devlin said. "Tile scope of the work lm't del1lled yet" he said. "Once we ~ wtiat tile public wants, we can theD put a dollar value on the work." Devlin aald rlnancing aptlons •e stiU open. However, he uld the forma• tion of a lpedal bnprOVement di$trict -undorlalen by a V<Jte ol Offected residenm -ts '1one VU'"/ •CCfll(•bl• method." He called it a "citizens' attitude survey.'' The responses, which w 11 t presumably be family consensuses, will be tabulated and consJdered by "Goals and Objectives" study com· mittees, now being formed. Purpose of the community-wide study is to establish guidelines for the city's growth during the next two decades. The study project, approved in con· cept by the council many months ago. has been called a do-it.yourself general plan. Before 1990, Mayer told councilmen, Newport's present 42,IXX> population is expected to triple. "The opportunity now exists for the city to choose its own destiny," he said, pointing out that "the greatest value of city planning lies in its effort in advance or urban growth -pro- jecting for tomorrow." A big step in determining what Newport's own peaple want their city to be like, he indicated, would be to simply 'ask them. For that reason he proposed the questionnaire, the ques- tions for which are yet to be developed. Mayer explained that a ''Goals and Objectives" steering committee, coiri· prising a councilman,· planning com· missioner and seven citizen sub· committee chairmen, would work with the city staU ln preparing the ques· tionnaJre or "attitude survey." It would be mailed out probably within a month. Each malling would include a return addressed envelope. The city's water bill malling list would be used, said Mayer. Coondlmen lll<ed the Idea. "It will be a big help to us In gathering source material,'" said Mayor Doreen Marshall. The plan was unanimously approved by the co uncil. P I a n n i n g com- missioners, who sat in on the "Goals and Objectives" discussion, informally endorsed the action. Said Mayer later: "Frankly, I didn't think Utey would all go for the idea. I'm happily surprised." Councilmen took other steps pushing the "Goals and Objectives" project (See GOALS, Pa1e I) .Boater Feared Lost DAILY f'ILOT,...... IW l.M f'IYM UPS AND DOWNS -Children scamper around 250-foot sheet-metal groin at 40th Street in Newport Beach as sand on south side (left) re1nains in place while beach on north has drifted awa y. The solu· lion, officials say, is to construct more groins up coast. Fading Beach May Get More Groins -Sampson The answer to heach erosion tn West Newport appears lo be more steel groins jutting into the ocean, similar to one at 401.h Street , it was reported today. "The 5heoel·metal groin installed oU * * * Cowit Officials Make Pitch for Erosion Funds By BRUCE BENSON Of 1111 o.ttr ,., ...... Llmited copies ol .a tale ol the sea will be shipped of! to Washington, D.C. the next couple ol days. And while the story wasn't written to win 111y award!, it ahould. hopefully· bring in $600,000 "'orlh of federal money ta help handJe future erosion problemi:; from. Newport. Beach to Seal Beach . Ken San1pson, Orange Co u n I y harbors director, said today his sta1f and others have put together thick in- formation packeU on the elfectivenesa of oo ui><rimental abeot·-al l">ID off -Street ID West Newport. "There'' no question about tl The bNch ii holding ,-.ny aouUt of tbe groin," Sampson sai'd. "ProblemJ io retaJnlog the beach to the north o! It are now the next phase." The te00,000 to be sought from CoDgTess would help flnl.nce the oe.xt •!Ope. Sampson said the rePort en route to Washington Is designed to .-thot ...i federal money bas got n1111lu, but that more lo needod ID ardor to (See EROSION, P1 .. JJ 40!.h Street appears t.o be se rvi ng a useful purpose," accol'ding to Ken Sampson , Orange County harbors dlre:ctor. "Another upcoast could probatly compartmtntize the sand." The 4{)lh sln!et groin juts perpen. dieularly into the 1ea. The beach south of it is remaining pretty much in place. But sand to the north of it haa been badly eroded away since last 1pring. . Sampson said llie current rate of erosion .north ot the 40th Street ex- perimental groin is causing no alarm in official circles. Beach width there is now about 40 feet. A few months ago it was more than 200 feet. Tidal onslaughts have • been slowly chopping Jt back. Sampson noted that $240,000 re· mains from last fall's f700,000 federal appropriation on the erosion project. The remaining money could go toward the building of an additional groin if needed, he said. Doc. Has Water front resident Dr. Llncotn O. Sheranlan may become a sailor without a alip: Newport Bead! PubUc Work.s Dlftc- tor Joe DeVlin is urging city COUD- cilmen'to conduct e public hearing on whether to revoke the phy1lclao'1 permit to keep boats at his dock. Under city policy, boats • t waterfront piers and noata should belong to 1he ptoOple who live lo the abutting residences. Tile clodor hu !oW' boau Ued to Ute dock ot h11 319 Via Udo Soud reslden<o. And !hoy don't all be!OD£ to Craft Found Adrift Off Emerald Bay Orange County llarbor Depart111enl patrolmen will make anoUler search late today for a Balboa Island man of- f:icials presume may have fallen overboard and drowned from a boat found circling Monday of.f Emerald Bay near Laguna Beach. TM boat was found traveling in circles with no ane in it. The Harbor Department took it in Ocean Sweeps Boy to Death Of: ~aguna· :_., A IO.year-old boy swept off the rocks in Laguna B e a c h this morning drowned w h e n h i s companion was restrained from swimming after lllm and man in a boat nearby did not know how to swim. R~curers recovered the boy's body at 12:20 p.m. Other persona on the b6acb ap- pareo.Uy thought the men in the boat were going to save the struggling youth and watched as he went under. Divers recovered the body off Treas· urc Island Trailer Park at press time. 'file victim was tentatively identific:l ns AIJan Ed't'·in Gray. vislling with relatives at El 'foro. The boy's mother, residence not known, was taken to South Coast Com· munity Hospital in shock. His father, W·aJter Gray,~. ts a gunnery tergeant stationed at Da Nang, Vietnam, ec· cording to rep<ns. The boy 's aunt and uncle. with wbom he was staying, are· Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ri ce, 25181 Campina Drive, Mis'Skl n Viejo. 1'he boy drowned about.a a.m. J-lis cousin, Steve, aboul 11 years old, was held back PY an unidentified person who apparently feared.he too would drown trying to save Allan. Steve told sheriff's deputies he Is a good swimmer and he !igures be· could have saved his cousin. Several men in a Universal stu~s movie boat reported they got within" IO feet of the boy before he went under. Nooe aboard knew how to· swim. Orange County Deputy Sheriff Tom Sales. 27, st{ipped to his shorts, but couldn't get to the boy, LagW\a Beach and San Clemente lifeguuds with <living gear began the search .for the body . A Coast · Gbard helicopter joined in !or a few hours, then left. • The movie company was on location filming a weekly television series ~ar next fall. "Fame is the Name of the Game" starTing Robert Stack .• .. low. and investi gation showed ti1c drivcrless 14·foot outboard belonged to Alice P. Sogg, 22.8 Pearl St., Balboa Island. She said Roy Carmack, of 8011,l N. Bay Front, Balboa Island, should have been :at the Wier .. Carmack hasn't been found. A search was made Monday af· ternoon by the U. S. Coast Guard, Navy aircraft and helicopters, then disc~ntin\led. "Hopefully the skipper w1U be found on land. \Ve don't know what the circumstances are," said Harbor Department Sergeant R a y m o n d Graham. Uneasy about the mysterious in- cident, he called the unmanned boat "a litUe oonatural." Sessio11 Su111i1aari%e1· Fortas Testifies To Role for LBJ "'I sa w it.'' Fortas said /.~e speech, "but I did not write lt." \VASlllNG1'0N (AP) -Juslice A!Jc Fortas told the Senate Judiciary Com· nlittee today he participated in White House· meetings on the Vietnam war and on riots in the cities. But he insisted his role was only to summarize for the Preaident what others said 1n the session. The justice, testifying on his nomination to be chief justice of the United States, Bald he was consulted on very rew matters and that they have not been matters on which he could clai1n he was an cxperl. "My role Ji;is l>ecn solel y one who sit S in the meeting ~hile others ex· press their views ," rortas said. He continued that the President "turns to me last to summarize." This alone, he said, was the function he aerved at White Houae nieetiags. Fonu lo on old lriend and legal ad· Viser to the Prealdent. · The leader of the fi&lht to block his confirmation, Sen. Robert P. Griffin, (R-Mich.), read news reports to the committee last week that Fort.as has continued while on the bench to play a bi g role 1n framing White l'lousc policy. ~'ortas. asked about Ulese allega. ·lions, aaid, "I have never initiated any suggestion or any proposal. to the President of the United States." · He said he never recommended anyone for any positlm, and that be did not discuss any legal iasuu: or matters that could cqµie 'to the court. As chief juatice, Fort.a.a wOuld suc- ceed Earl Warren. · · On the qlle6tion of White House talks. Fortas said that ·on occarion Johnson hrui: done him the hondr of showi1,1g "confidente in my ability to un· derstand a situation" and to '1give hin1 the pros aild cons ." .. ·• At first, Fortaa shJed ·oil r[rom"giving any specific example. He linally gave Vietnam imd the riots es illustrations, . and said, "That's about it as J recall." Fortn natty rejected aa untrue a report in Time magazine that he VtTOte Johnson's message' ordering. federal, tJwpii , Into Detroit last , 1ummer to quell riots. • • Fortas described as "ab6olutely and totally without any foundation of fac.t" reports in the New York Times Magazine of June 4, 1967, tbat he wu involved in an unsuccessf\11 campaign to land Bill D. Moyers tho job d , undersecretary of atate. He also dlaputed the magazine'• report that be was Jnvolved in efforts to get a feduat judgeship tor David G. Bress, the U. S. attorney for the District of Columbia. Roget's Resigns Teaching Post Newport Beach City Cc>•odlm1n Howard .Rogers has qllit bll school teadllnt job, H was learned today. Rogers1· • has been a mathematics teacher in the Long Beach sc~ool. system for the past five years, resigned to accept a Position with Wang M.athematics Laboratories. He will be the lab firm's Southern Calilornia representative. Rogera' new job will not 8.f!ect his council position, It was reported. He w~ elected twp yeBl'I ago from the Balboa Pealnsula cn.trtct .. Waag Laboratortes, headquartend in Tewksbury, Ma111 ., develops elec- tronic computer1 and .caclulators for use by, school l)'Mems and private in· , dustr)t. " .-· Sources said Rogers "fill make ••twice as much mon\!'y"'fn his new job. ·. .: Oraage coli81 '· weatf!er Dock Problems Summertime we:;ther 'l t~t'<i to be repeUtloua and today 1 ln4 ·tomorrow will be nu • Temperaturts-will be In the 1.rtiG ·" with morning ind eveniDg low clouds. ,. INSIDE ~DA'l' blm, accordiJlg to Devlin . Coundlmm have invited Dr. Shera. n.lm to come forward at their next meetiJll to protent bJs side ol, Ille ..... In 1 llalf report. Devlin poillll out to COW>Cllmen that &Up space camot be "sold. leased, sublet jlr tranalerrtd without the prior wrlfttn coosent ol th e clty." llowever, Devlln ·not.ea that. the doc· tor'• doclt currenUy f1nds four veasels calling Jt home. These IH a Nil.boat, 30 feet long, ooe power cruillr, and two 111111> each about.LI feet long. Deylin'• calling for 1 pubUc huiing opptrently, st1m1 fl'om the l•ct Utat Ute doctor lln't a ltnt.tlmo llfltndeT. Dr. Sber&Dlon wit lnwlved, In 1 slmlllr .U.ted 1Up vlolatlon ha April, 11167; according to the stall report. · At Utat ttme, complalnU were ·turn· ed In to Ute city about Illegally kept boat.I at th~ doctor's dock, and "upon req-b1. thil olUce; the boats wuo removed, ' the report notei. . . Complainll _.. ~wd thla )'ffr also. ·Devlin tlYI Dr. Sheranian was r~ue1ted in wrlUnt to femove boats lilat were not lib, but to no av&IL ,\ '" the Oft.nolr o/ tAc lfarfn.'\ Corpa that ir woso cnw>thw .....,., 1!:114 Sonia. Su plthirCI of abaildonfd bolt l'aQI JI. l -. """"' 11 M9tlll ,...... N ,,.. ..... """' . OP-.. c_,., ' _..,....... ,,.,. '""' .. ,. ' lllldl .........,, , .. ,, T.. ti ,.......,. .... n w.rw • ........... ' --... I -· .. -. . . ' . -: . • .. IWU PILOT No Ma:il Delivery . ' l Cutbacks Hit New Tracts OAtlY ,ILOT ~lift '"'i. By PAMELA POWE!l. 'Of ,... Dl\11 ''"' ll•ff Several new home developments in the Orange Coast area will be affected by the latest wave of postal service cutbacks announced by Postmaster General W. Marvin Watson this week. saturday and SUnday, window service at all major ciiy post olfices . will be discontinued effective July Z1 .and individual offices have been in~ structed to delay extending postal service into new tracts a n d developments until further notice. Hardest hit by the cut will be Westminster, Newport Beach and Vietnam Vets ...r To Get Equal Bill of Rights WASHINGTON (uPI) -The Senate has voted to put Vietnam veterans on a par with their Korean and World War II predecessors by providing them with an equal educational bill of rights. ABILITISM EXERCISE -Pretty Gail Wheatley, 16, a ministerial student and staff worker at Costa Me·sa's Institute of Ability, pond· ers question: "What is the Meaning of Life?" as assisant minister the Rev. Drew H. Renner monitors her mental reactions ·on GSR Meter, which' measures galvanic skin response. Device is like a so-- called lie detector, but more sensitive and aids members of the un- usual new faith in sessions for the breaking down of personal bar· riers, they say. By voice vote, tj:ie Sellate passed legis1ation Monday which would grarlt post.Korean veterans education a ssistance or training for a period equal to one and one·haU times the duration of active duty. A tWo-year veteran would get 36 months of schooling, enough to com- plete a four-year college education. From Page l EROSION ... Controversial Church make the ne>rthern Orange Coast free from erosion threats. A lot. is at stake in the $600,000 grant request from Congress. Must Quit Mesa Home For one thing, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has promised to assume respoOO.blllty for "adequate protection of the beach" providing the money is available. If the Corps stays on the job, the headache of fighting back the tides \vill be eased considerably on the municipal level. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of """ Dlllt '11•1 lllft Costa Mesa's most unu sual faith - annoying to its neighbors a n d anatflema to more established Harbor Area reUgiooiJts -lost its lut chance Monday to remain in the modest quarters it now occupies. Emotional tensJon and even a hint of bigotry thre8d<d the lengthy hearing :N'e1Vp0rt \V'ater Rates to Rise By 25% Sept. I Starting Sept. 1, the average Ne~i>ort Beach household will begin paying about 25 percent more a month for water. In dollar• and cent.!, that meaM the rate will go from about $5.14 to $6:40 monthly. Commercial and industrial users will pay comparably i n c r e a s e d charges, depeodiDe on the size of water meters. The boost was unanimously ap- proved by clty councilmen recently after a special report from councilmen Howard Rogers and Donald Mcinnis, compritlng the C<1Uncil's water com· mJttee. Rogers, committee chairman, said new rates were in order to meet In· creued costs of Metropolitan Water District water. Tbt rate hike generated little public comment and wu routine1y adopted. DAILY PILOT .._ __ lt•Mrt N. W1t4 -Tlio"''' K1nil .... n_,..,, A. M1rphi111 l!Unellnt atlltw J.,... F. C•l4in1 MlwNt iMcll CITY Editor JM• l. C.,ley p,.,J Ni,tn eullneu Mlowttr' AMrtlMl!t C>irKtor ... ..,.. ..... OfRic. 2211 Wirt ltllM1 ll•if. Mt111111 A4Ur .. n P.O. l•a 1171 t266J Otfi• Offlc•• COl!lf MeM: »O Wt$1 &•¥ Sl!'MI ~ .__, nt ,_, ,,.,.... "lllltl118t.:ln '""'; .. ~ ilrtM l in which the City C.OUncil finaUy voted 4 to 1 to deny a three-mo_nth extension of the fledgling church's conditional use permit. The Institute of Ability, tfltrefore, is now in violation of city ordinance at 1862 Placentia Ave., but the vote was tempered with 30 days of mercy to allow them to find a new sanctuary. Coundlrnan William L. SI. Clair, speaking in ' conciliatory tones, at- tached a stipU;}ation to his motion for denial to stay any city prosecution for . at 1east One month. St. Clair noted that animosity by neighbors against the three-year-old faith founded by the Rev. H. Charles Berner is growing and that the Institute of Ability is the le>gical choice to go. "I agree that a ch.a.nge must take place, but I don 't agree that a three· month extension of their permit is too much to ask," commented Councilman George A. Tucker in cuting a no vote. The InstiMe of Ability applied lo< a new, annual conditional use permit . last February and ~e city planning state suggested they seek a three-year permit, but commissioners later sug- gested a 12-month limit. Faced with an angry response from <>ppanents, led by Bernard Cook, of 781 Center St., the City Council cut the permit extension to three months and offered staff help in finding nevi• &anctuary quarters. Corps District Director Col. ~orJflan E. Pehrson recently assured the city that "we. are making every effor~! to , provide maxim Um beach er06ion 1'Jto· tection to the 35th to 50th Street area" in West Newport. Sampson said he is not anticipating any problems in getting the necessary money to continue erosi'on control. He noted the project was begun in 1962 with $2.7 million, and spw-red along last fall with fZ00,000. Sampson said he believes two more injections of research money will be needed before a complete erosion con· trol system is set up along the coast. After that, costs would be limited 1nosUy to maintenance, he predicted. The next two proposed federal ap· propriations are being labeled Phase Ill and Phase IV of the overall pro· gram. The two past appropriations were handed out on a forn1ula calling for state and local money to help match jt, The Connula, which Sampson said probably would be continued for the next two phases, nJM Uk' this: 67 percent -federal money. 16.5 percent -state beach and parks resources. 9.5 percent -local entities, in· eluding Orange County, the cities of Newport Beach and Huntington Beach, the J-luntington Beach Co . (a Signal· Standard Oil subsidiary), and the Surfside C-0lony. Schools Consider Ending Federal Plan for Lunches Newport·Mesa Unified Schoo I cash reimbursement on each llmch a District tonight wlU consider dropping school district using the program the federal Type-A pla1e lunches it has sells. The district also receives food been feeding students nearly 18 years. s·uppleriients or surplus commodities, The district's food s er v ice s she explained. 1 supervisor, Mrs. Eve Cremers, is re· But, she said, the reimbursements questing the ohange to luncttes have steadily decreased this year and regulated only by ttie school district "the progra.m is becoming expet1slve because a two-year study shows the to have." federal program is too costly and does She said the reimbunement in 1946 not offer enough variety. v.\1.s 9 cents a plate. At the beginning Currently. all the e 1 em en t ar y of last year. the district got back 5 schools serve students the federally· cents for each plate lunch it sold. By regulated Type-r\ lunch. It was drop· Jo'ebruary. the rebate had dropped to ped last year in {ive intermediate 3~!? cents per lunch. and at the end of schoo1s, Mrs. Cremers told the DAIL y the term, It had again dropped to 3 PILOT. cents . • o\nd only two of tl'te four hi .... schools Because Ule federal government re· ~· quires extensive bookkeeping for the offer the federal plate lunch. In those program, tbe ••efiiclenty gains by -II. llbe ellllmated only me-lourtb droppinl It will orraet tho 1ubaldy of the student. cboe:e the ptat. lunoh. losses/' the report to trustees ex· 11 i11o dlalrict lrilslffa approve drop· plains. ping the reden1I s<hool tunch progran1. the Type·A lunch, which Includes :titl'l. CremeN: 11.id the district will milk, sold for M cenll to students. The provt~ Jts own plate lunches. plate luncf'lf!s Mrs Cremers h~s to "We will not lower the nutritional otter will cost 30 cents without milk, va1ue of the luncheli we serve.'' she whtch sells for 5 ce nt.a:. assured. ''In fact. they may be higher Needy children, who have bttn get. in nutrition. Ung free lunches under provlsN>ns of "Thls way, too, we can oiler more the federal program, will not be variety and introduce new foods to the denied the gratis mea}s. children Jn a way they will accept." The lnlslees meet at 7:ll0 p.m. al the The Jledcral lunch pn>1ram gives a Costa Mese Hlgh Sdlool ~· I Corona del Mar. Each has several .developments under construction o.r , near Ule occupancy stage. The cutback in essence me-ans that local offices which would &erl'e. new develop1nents wtere postal iervlce has not yet been extended will not be eligible to apply for service from the regional office until further notice. Residents in these areas must pick up their mail at general delivery mail windows in their community offices. ''You can't just arbitrariy put a new tr act on a man and tell him he has that in ad<Hticm to his otbef eight hours of work," Huntington Beach Postmaster Pete DiFabio said: "The routes must first be-"approved by the regional office." ·· Huntington Beach thus far has not been affected by the cutbacks. Postal rouungs. for new and occupied tracts have already been approved and im· plemented. The order to curb Saturday mail service, which has not yet reached all oCfices in the area,. was given last week after Watson pleaded witb the Post Offlce Department to restore funds slashed by Congress. The directive does permit a general delivery window lo remain open for Hopwood Elected Head Of Library Trustees Newport Beach attorney John A. Hopwood today was named chairman of the City Library Board of Trustees. He will serve through Jun~. 1969. Hopv.>ood, who has been on the library board for the past seven years, succeeds Roger Hardacre a s chairman. Hopwood served as head of the library board once before a few years ago. Recently, he hu been in· stn,Jment.al in furthering plans 1or the expansion of the COila del Mar library. The $50,000 project is slated to get under way this fall. He is a resident of Corona del Mar and long-time administrative assistant to Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach). Hopwood was elected chairman unanlnimously by fellow 11 b r a r y trustees. Dr. Norman Blakely was named secretary to the five·man board. Blakely is dean of the ONlnge Coast College evening school. Teen-agers to Ride In LA Patrol Cars LOS ANGELES luPI) -In an el· fort to promote "a better UD• derstanding of each other," teen-agers from a dozen area cities will begin riding· in patrol cars with police on Monday. Under the program conceived by the Dist. Atty. Evelle J. Younger's Young Citizens Council, about 100 youngsters -boys and girls 16-18 years old -will join officers on their regular beats. NEW LIBRARY CHIEF CdM't Hopwood Earnings Record Set DETROIT (UPI) -Record nel earnings of $84.5 million for the second quarter have brought Chrysler Corp. $148.8 million -also a record -for the first hall of 1968, the auto company two hours on Saturday to deliver mail to general delivery customers and for bus.lness flrms whose mall is regularly handled in that manner. Plans by the Postmaster General also include a cutback in personnel by some 83,000 unless the funds are restored. An earlier directive issued b.Y Watson instructed postmasters ,to fill only three or every foot vacancies. No office in the Orange Coast area has been affected by the personnel cutback an~ will not be for some Ume. Home delivery on Saturday has been unaffected but plans are being con. sidered to eliminate the delivery by Sept. 1. From Page I GOALS • • • ahead. Among them: -They appointed Robert Shelton ~s council representative on the project s steering committee. Ed Hirth will be the alternate. -They agreed to include yachting interests' representation in the pro· gram. -They decided to name other steer· ing committee members Monday. . -They agreed to aim for an orien. tation session for all participants in the program sometime in early September. About 55 persons are ex· pected to be involved in various com· mittees and subcommittees. -They decided to strive for com· pletion of the entire program within six months of the orientation session. Councilmen also reaffirmed these areas of study: residential goals, com· mercial and industrial needs, traffic problems , public facilities (such as parks), beautification and harbor developments. "We're really beginning to move now ," said Mayor Marshall at the con• clusion of the 2;2-hour meeting. Man Convicted In Party Death LONG BEACH (UPI) -Henry: Coy McGee, 47, of Torrance, has been con· victed of voluntary manslaughter for fatally shooting a man during a new year's party last Jan. 1. McGee was found guilty Monday in the court of Superior. Court Judge Joh11> L: Bonnellan for the killing of Thomas Wadena. 35, of Long· Beach. Wadena was shot three times. ..,. ' Sentencing was set for· Aug. 9, and McGee's bail was allowed to stand at 110,000 •. 1111~ has "ti I . We lay it on the line • • • DEEP ~1§Zun_. t:RKPET t:LERnlnC THE ULTIMATE . in CARPET CLEANING R.c•ntly, De•p St••m Cerpet Cleen•rs introduced • new professional carp•+ clffnin9 ptoc•tl to this County , , • Prior to offtring this remerkabl, service to you, our customett, we concluct•d our. own compr•h•nsive telting program In order to veri~y the clelml mid• for the pro~~ss by ifs d!velop-o eri. Not only did we find Oe!p Steam to bee revolutionary deperture from our tr11d1t1on•! carpet cle•n• in9 method, but we found 1t to be •b•olutely lefe for ell carpet end upholstery febric• . Concurrent with our f•sting program, we thorou9hly trained our p•r•onnel in the effectiv• u1e ot Pt•D Stetm cl•anin9 equipment , . , Only when we were completely satisfied thet Deep Steem Met with " our 1t11nd11rds did we offer thls unique new lervice to you. A successful company'• reputetion is its be1t edverlisem•nt. Wt lay it on the line !,y cordielly invitint you to try 1ef11ty.te1ted Deep Steam Wal1°to0 W1I Cerptt end Upholstery Cleenint • , • The fin· 111t profe•1ionel cerp.t cleening service yet developed for the indu,try. Protect the life of your cerpeh end the beauty of your home by celling today! TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We •re drapery expert1! We 1tre11 quality of workmenshlp & in1tellation. Free Estimates In Your Home· At Your Convenience. CALL TOPAY: WHlll TOU WANT 1HI PINIST- CALL UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 years of collective exp•rience between the 2 men doint your work. All worlr done ln our plent. We pre.test all fel:irlc1 before cleenln9. Free Estim1t1s. In Your Home At Your Conv1ni1nc1. CALL TODAY: ... llS11lllA Tl RUG & UPt'.fOLSnRY CLEANERS Our 21st YHr of Service ln Oron9• Covnly 2950 RANDOLPH COSTA MESA ..._, .. _ l'HONE 546-3432 c.a Dahlo 7.0&H • l . ·------... ~· .. -· ·--··· a a a s a • • ""''''"..:< 311-~­ a s e a a a a a a ' .. . t> llA ANDERSON, ldlter T.....,, 111¥ If. INt Ml-CM P• ti . a ' • a AAUW Perks Coffee Hours . Before officially opening the fall season of lectUres and study sessions, the NeWport-Costa Mesa branch of the American Associa .. lion of University Women will orient continuing and prospective mem ... hers on club activities. Traditionally the group arranges a series of coffees to acquaint members with programs, and again this year five gatherings have been planned. HoStesses, their addresses and dates of coffees are Mrs. W. Grady Thompson, 660 Kings Road, Newport Beach, July 31; Mrs. Lar>e B. Blank, 2748 Albatross Drive, Costa Mesa, Aug. 7, and Mrs. Richard Auelmann, 2701 Bluewater Drive, Corona del Mar, Aug. 14. Others are Mrs. W. P. Krausnick, 309 Bowling Green Drive. Costa Mesa, Aug. 21, and Mrs. John Jackson, 16722 Lucia Lane, Hunt· ington Beach, Aug. 28. - The Wednesday events, which will begin at 10 a.m ., will provide an opportunity to learn of the AAUW fellowships programs and the sections in art, literature, gourmet dining, Spari.i sh and bridge. Chall enge of a Changing Society will be lhe theme for the com· ing year and will be pursued through four study topics which are The Growing Gap Between the Rich and Poor Nations, The Changing Poli· tics of Education, Testing Valu-es in a Changing Society, and Society's Reflection in the Arts. • GROUNDS FOR ORIENTATION -To thoroughly gtudy the Challenge of a Changing Society, the year's theme of AAUW, Newport-Costa Mesa Branch, a computer board is necessary say the Mmes. Lane Blank, Ronald K. Arnold and John Jackson (left to right) as they invite continuing and pr06ipective members to a series of coffees when sthdy programs and other activities will be discussed. Membership is open to college graduates from institutions a~ proved by AAUW or from foreign institutions approved by the Inter- national Federation of University Women. Women interested in attending any of the coffee hours may call the membership chainnan, Mrs. Ronald Arnold at 545-5214 for further infqrmation . .. Novel Family Ties Fifth Edition By KAY LARSON OI ftl• D•flr Piiot SI.ti F6ur generations of Creelys have been bound together like a r<ire volwne. The glue is a deep bond of common intereSts· · and, as Christopher Creely says, a simple r egard for each other. For more than 100 years the Creely family and its forbe<Jrs have been booksellers in California, and the recognition of their common heritage baa formed part of a quiet professional conviction. Books for the Creelys are more than just mer- cha nd ise : they allow a way of life rich in the fam- il y's fi rst love -people. The store on 17th Street in Costa Mesa , oper- ated by Christopher Creely and his mother, repre- sents the fourth generation of a long family line of book selJers and rare book dealers. · Bunster Creely, Christopher's father, speaks of" books end people he has known with an unconcealed sense of the richness of his past. The A~bey Book- store which he owned on Literary Row (6th Street between Hill and Figueroa) in Los Angeles was for years the "village well" around which gathered some of the top newspaper men in the city. At such times dialogue flowed like heady wine. SAN FRANC ISCO DEBUT The family history began two generations earl- ier, when Robert Holmes moved from Lancashire, England and ultimately settled in San Francisco, setting up the fir st Holmes Bookstore in the 1880s. Holm es' two sons and son-in-law then branched lnlo their own book bu sinesses. and the family lin e wa s established. Christopher's three young children may one day start the fifth generation, although he claims it's a bit early to tell (the oldest is only 7). . The quesion remalns how a family's interest and attitudes could be perpetuated generation after generation. In the Creelys' case there is no single ans"wer. In part there is the chance to render service. to share something enjoyable. Says Bunster, "this business offers a dividend of fascination. If you serve it diligently, you find yourself becoming a missionary. When you rin& up a sale you feel as Soon Out? though you have just imparted to someone a great experience." But beyond the bookstore itself is a reverence for ideas th at. unites the whole family. "What mat- ters more than a mystique of the bookstore, 'is our regard for each other," says Christopher. uwe en· joy books and people more than the book business." What is the secret of this four-generation solid- arity, perhaps unusual in an age of the fragmented family and the war between generations? Christo- pher Creelys' way of speaking may provide the clue. IDEAS HIS CALLING Creely is a soft spoken bu t deeply cultured man whose every sentence hints at a clarity of thought and a kind of all-encompassing fascination. His speech is enriched with examples drawn unselfcon- sciously from the collected writings of Oppenheimer 18th Century fiction or the latest archaelogicai dis- coveries in Mesopotamia, all absorbed into his thinking with a facile ability for pinpointing their significance within his and other people's lives. Says Creely of his family's ties, "\fe each sup-- port the others -our disagreements are of ideas rather than personalities. It's very necessary to divorce ideas from one's regard for the person hav- ing them." But if tolerance is the key, how is it to be taught for four generations? "What people really are is not so hidden after all . Thi s is the strength of some of Steinbeck's writ- ings -depicting people's incongruous actions yet showing how their confusion stems from a basic good will . Steinbeck taught the inherent dignity resident within each human being, a dignity which must be allowed to grow without fear and without frustration ... 0 Tolerance is· something that must be carefully taught; it's not the natural state of the organism. But it must be taught by example. You can teach things but not feelings. "Children aren't blind ; they understand what the parent means sometimes better than the parent himself does." LURE OF llOOKSELLING -Surrounded by their favorite pastimes, the Creelys share with 7 year old Anne some of the intrigue and adventure of their profession. The Creelys have been booksellers for four generations, and aome day Anne may make a fifth. Her lather Christopher (right) and grandpar- ents Bunster and Virglnia Creely own and operate the family bookstore in Costa MesL • As Long as She Is Suited Up and Clean-Don't Scream DEAR ANN LANDERS: I accept<d a job with this organization eight months ago today. A woman I met here impressed me as~ extremely bright and friendly. I liked ber at once. Now the prOblem : Thll woman bas worn the 1&1M washable two-pjece corduroy outfit every day sin~ we met. She ii not hard up financially. Her husband bu a top-notch position and she. also makes an excellent salary. I have been to their home and seen several dresses hanging in her closet When I asked her why she never wore them she replied, "They are too large. I used to be quite heavy." I oCfered to give her the name of my alteration lady but the said, "rt wouldn't be worth tt." The woman 11 neat and cte.n, but ANN I.ANDERS ~ can you imagine what that corduroy sult 1ooka like after being worn every day for e.lgbt months ? I do believe the dear lady will wear that suit to ber gave. Would 1he be offended U I pilesente.d her with a decent dress ln her aiu? -WACO DEAR WACO: Slve. yoa_r moDey. Your friend h11 a psychological Utlna 1ota1 lrilb fllat cor41W07 llllt ud ebe wUI eo11d•tte to wear tt uctl It ran. off btr kd:. Be IHDldaJ dial lbt lo 1eat and cku and .doa"t make lier bUl·"P your problem. ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: I wu surprlaed that you made. reference to the 1urgeon who took of! the wrong leg by mistake. The medical profession doesn't like that kind of publicity. Several years ago my wife was In the hospital for .a 1pinal d.i1c opera- tion . The morning she was scheduled for lurfery, J phylliclan walk!d Into ber room and aakl ID hU c!Hie1t voice, "You certainly don't look like a woman or fi6." My. wife replied. "I HOPE I don't. I'm 45." The doctor gulped and stammered, "Uh, I must hive the wrong chart here." He left and returne<! a few momenta later with the correct mart. Heaven only knows what would have happened If the mistake bad not been d!Jcovered. The woman wbote: chart the doctor held may have been scheduled for 1 gall bladder operation or a thyroidectomy. I'm writing to alert you to the fact that doctors are not God. They are human beings who make mistakes, just like everyone else, and it pays to cheek on them. - HUSBAND OF A NEAft.VJcrIM DEAR HUSBAND : Tllul: 1" lor 1tll1' -· I knew btlon ,.. . ..- that doctors ue not God and &hey make ml1talle1 llke everyone else. I have e1:pre11ed those very HnUmentl In tbJ1 column oa aumeroaa occulu1. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Can you tell me pleue what the duties of a minlater'1 wUe are? When ii she mp. po1ed to find time for ber own famlly and the acUviU.. 1be con1ldar1 fun mi not obligations? I've a1ked tbi1 question of 1everal friends no are married to mlnllten and they don't know the an1wer. Do you? -DAWN TO DUSK HELPMATE DEAR DAWN: 1'1111 ...... lem 11 oae yoa npt to talk over 1rith your dernmu. CONFIDENTIAL TO HOOT &WL: Of course you can't sleep nlgbtl. You sleep days. Drac your carcass out ol bed ID tbe morning IJld fix breaklut !or your family. Perhapt II you wm ael!·ltlarter your husband wouldn't bavt to bt a crank. "Tbe Bride'• Gllkte," AM La·t ... ~ 1uwer1 10me ti Ute mOlt ,,._ , ... 117 -·--·-..... dlap. To ...... , 1'V <OP1 II IMt compttbtllllYI plde, wrtle to Aa LIJMlen, la CIN Of UJl1 .,,.;.per.' eaelollea a 1o1a, ttU.Mdrt1tedJ 1tam- pec1 e1velope ud U ce• la cvla. Ann Landero will be C1Jd to help :I"" wtth your prob1ems. Send them to Mr ID °""' of tbe DAILY PILOT, eocloa. ID& • stamped, ¥111.addreooed -volope. • -~- a T . . .. . . . . .. .......... ..... --............ -..... _ ..... ···-··-~--·-- : • Horoscope ·' • Sharyn Uyesugi ·Married Cancer: Gain • I ! A honeymoon in Cannel followed the services unlUng ln marriage two former University of Southern California !lludents, Sharyn Emi Uyesugl and Dr. Teruo Yama- moto. The couple spoke their wedding vows be- fore the Rev. Albert F. King at an altar flanked by baskets ol pink and white gladio- las and carnations, in the Neighborhood Church, Palos Verdes. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ototaro Yamamoto of Torrance. His bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth 'Kenji Uyesugi of Costa Mesa, was escorted to the altar by her father while wearing an original gown of satin organza and jeweled alencon lace fashioned. in a trumpet silhouette. with high jeweled neck· line and jabot front. A cascade of white rose- buds and lilies-ol-the-valley formed her bou~ quet. Jn attendance were maid of honor Miss Suzanne Durkin, matron of honor Mrs. Randy Sopp and bridesmaid Miss Sherry Goddicksen, who were gowned identically in bright pink sleeveless dresses with white overdresses of lace trimmed organZa featur· ing mandarin necklines. Each carried • round bouquet ol bright pink rosebuds with light pink carnations and ribbon streamers. Flower girl Miss Sherry Kaw~ura also wore bright pink with a white overdress em· broidered in daisies. Pet.er Lubisich as best man was joined by' ushers Takeo Yamamoto, Keven Uyesugi, Richard McMahon and Ors. Craig Ota and DenniJI Nakatami. A reception followed in the Plush Horse, Redondo Beach. The bride, an Empire debutante, Is an alumna of Newport Harbor High School. At USC she studied education and became a member of both Kappa Alpha Theta and the Japan American society. The benediet, a graduate of Phineas Banning High School, received his BA from USC in Asian Studies and is a recent grad· uate cf the USC Dental School. He belong• to Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity and is cur· rently a captain in the United States Air Force. The couple will spend the next three years in Yokota, Japan, wheTe Yamamoto ls stationed. Kitchen at Sea • MRS. TERUO YAMAMOTO To R11id1 In Japan ' Hwff PMt9 WEDNESDAY JULY 17 By SYDNEY OMARR "The wise mu controb his destiny . . . Astrology points the •Y." ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): Get new insight into pos.se ss ions , You can improve income potential. Be observant. You could find mloor fl.aw which NVes you time and money. TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20): Cycle ·moves up. You can euccessfully lllaUIUJ'lte • ehqes. Important to get idtu, tbouihtl on peper. Key is mental orderliness. Q-ystallhe a.im1, I o a I 1 • ambitions. GEMINI (Moy 21.June 20): Mud> today IPP<ln to be undercover. Means there are apt 1o be su ,ble influences. Family member may be withholding infonnatlon. No malicious intent. Realir.e others have right to privacy. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Now you gain allies, friends. Shake off tendency Juniors Collecting Now For Fall Rummage Sale Offertag to belp cle• out area cloeets and garages are members of the Hun· tin&ton Beech J u n i o r Womm'1 Club. The Juniors will be happy to have some of tboee ''White ~ .. wlllcb eurr<ntly are taking up opace aod collecting du>! lor Uie!r fall rummage and bake Ale. Mro. SUillley Helti:np, W&)'I and meem cbainna:n, ii serving u aeneral c:halnmln for the Nie which will taloe place in September in Huntlniton -· Painters Welcomed Making their coutribution toward enc:>UTaging budding artaic ta.lent are members of the Huntington Beach Juni« Woman's Club. A course in begjnnlng techniques of painting with acrylics will be offered for six weeks beginnina Wednesday, July 17. Aa!ilting Mrs. HeWnga are the Mmes. William Biss, Daniel Drag-t, Jack Hall, Edward Hannigan, George Kemp, James M a h a n , Gerald Merigokl, Honold Pa.-rldc, Michael Pharril, Ted Reddick, Cbacl., Shep- panl, William St<phensoo, W-ayne Tedder, Eugene Wlllieml Bill Wllsoo aod Sam wtbon. AD proceeda will ber>efit the m a n 1 philanthropies tpOlllOred by the junior club, and ainyoDe wishing to mete a donation may call W.n. Het1inta, 893-0317. Soup, Salad. Sandwich Clasees will be conducted tn the clubhouse, 420 lOtb St., Huntington Be a ch , between 9;30 and 11:30 a.m., by Mrs. Frank Souza, instructor. A l j mite d number of openings are available, so interested persons are urged to contact Mr.s. James Mahan, Juniors fine arts chairman, a t 897--0697, as soon a 1 possible. JOAN HERING Brld•- Couple Select September Joan Louise Herill( and her lia<lce Donold H . ou.rm.n v.;tJ be married In tbe First Cbri!tian Church, Gorden Grove, Sept. H. Tbe daugl>ter of W.r. and Mn. Robert C. Herlng ot Glendale is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and Orantre Coast College where llbe received her dental a ssisting certificate. The future bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle C. Otterman o f Huntington Beach, was a student at Gclden West College and now is altendmg Cal Poly In Pomona where he i s majoring ln urbal plannin(. Mias Hering's parents are former Costa Mesans. AMa•ICA'I LA1t•UT f'ollCJIWI ... ft fht ~ •rtlclP !ft I --.. ,_ ~ ........ -... .... mMlt ,.,. wmmertlme 111f1Pn.J By NANCY HYDSN WOODWARD NEW VORK (WNS) - Hint No. 1 If you are tired of c:ti.&bin& out one can of soup or another &Iona with a undwiCb, bow • b 0 u t combinins • eooplo? Mix onicn ID! tomMo aoup, ~ ial cremn. of. celery, or oalon oad chicken flllllbo. llhdNo.IU""1-t• heat ~ tom9 buttered Fmd or ltallan bread and haven't space available on ttie stove, try the shi"p's manifold. First butttir (with earllc, if deei.red) the bread, Club Bids wr~ beavtly in tin foll and 2 t.able9p00ns A-1 sauce placo on mnlold, B1 Ille ¥• pound mell<d hutt.r o.- time your meal is ready the oleo treed will be, too. Watch 2 tablespooru m e 1 t e d out, tbougli, that It doesn't bacon fat get too heated. d a 1 h W o r cest.ershire HEAR1Y TUNA SALAD sauce .. ,, 2 cans tuna (or crabmeat) I pacl<ace ot ln>zen peu pepper 1 cup thJmy sliced celery ~ cup water or vinegar 2 31h-omce jars cocktail Combine e v e r y t b i n g omGl'.Bi drained except dlicken. p l a c e There will be a charge of $1 per lesson or $6 fur the course, wi'th proceeds to be used for a fine a r t s scholarship. REBECCA SKELTON News Rev•altd .FY Couple Tell Troth % "~ mo•o....ue ir chicl<en in eo .. red Pl" " Oldsters .W dreufne casserole, coat chicken with -'Ibe en g a g e m e n t of I lettuce CllJ>I mixtur<, a d d remaining K. , k H I R.e1>ecca Moe Skelton and 1 tabl-lemon juice oau<e to pan, cover and IC ee S Pvt. Richard E, Lyddon Jr. --~ cook J1L '--~ bas been announced by her 1 ..... __..n cnv sauce 7ll llV\UI). -.-_, CHILI BE F FOR SIX Harbor Area Sen Io r parents, Mr. and Mrs. ~ tea6y00n curry powder E Citizens clu'b members will Gordon H. Skelton o f ~ teaspoon garlic salt l pound ground round beef gather at Uie recreation Fountain Valley. 1 cup chow mein noodles 1 tablespoon butter or oleo center. New:port Be a c b The bride~lect is a ¥.. cup toasted, blanched 1 envelope onion soup mix tX>nigbt at 7:30 kw' a party graduate or Wils011 'High liivered aJ.mOndJ 1 cup dairy aour cream wttidl will include a ptcture.. School, Long Beadl, Orange Let Pell untreeze on thelr 2 cans coodensed chili trip to Africa aod "high Coast College and now own.. beef soup stepping" music for tilt ctende Cllifomia S t a t e Dram tum (or cnbmeat) 2 soup caos of niter equwe danct:rt tapping t.be College It Long Beach. and bred: Into pieces and I tablospoon floor Virginia Reel Her flance, >00 of Mr. and A bridge and e-combine peu, c e 1 er Y • I tableS[lOOn cllili powder 1be party h ..,.n to Mro. Ri-.1 E. Lyddon of party whidl will include a oniooe, with meat. Combine Brown beef in butter, add anyone over SO years of age. Fountlin Valley, attended light Jurdleon is being mayomaiM, lemon juice, soup mix, chili beef IOUp, At the close ol the evenin& Hunttneton Beach High offered by El cammo Real, IOY eauce, curry powder and water. Bring to boil and refl'eshnecMI! will be B«Ved. School, occ and UCI. He Womm's Clt* ol Dena and rarlic saM:. Add noodles Jet simmer five minutec. President Lee Desmond presently is assigned to the Point et 12 :30 p.m. Tueeday, to tuna mixture, add Add flour and chili powder has noted that tomorrow, Defense Language Institute July 23. mayonnaise mixture and to sour cream, stir into chili July 17, is Senior Citizens' in Mont.e!"ey. The event, chaired by t()SS lightly. Serve in lettuce and mix. Allow to simmer Day at the <>rat1ge County No date has ~n selected Mrs . Niles Weld!, will Nile cups a11d sprinkle almonds but wt boil. Serve with Fairgrounds. The Swinging for the wedding. funds to support Services over top. Servies 6. · bread or sa«.ines. And Dollies Band will kack off iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii f« the Blind. The party Is A-1 CHICKEN remember, if for lunch, be the afternoon beginning at 2 being ltaced in Ccmmunlty 21h-3 pounds chicken, cut sure boat is anchored before p.m., and ell Senior Cltizeas House , Daoa Poinl , -==,;up~=======,;makin;;;;;~·;,g~il::,. =======:::,ba•;:•;:be;::•n=urg==ed=='""=tte=nd=.= Pric .. .,. 15 per table Cl< J, Sl.25 "" an lndfvldual basis. Partnersbips m 1 y be arranged. . . . . . . . ..... Allies to brood. Look to lllUre - 1tre11 optimbm. Many of your hopes, wishes are due to be fullln.d. Could be dO)' to celebrate. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Assume responsibility. Take inlUative w'here career, am,biUon1 are concerned. 11 you try to ahirk dtJties, price could be exceedingly high. Know this and a c t accordingly. VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sept. 22): Long-range view U: best today. Minor proble1n1 due to distolve. Travel i a highlighted, also greater self-upression. One who is at a distance offers y,alid suggestion. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Permlt male, portne< to take iniUadv'e. You an at your best today providing a sense of balance. Your ideas prtle. But others greatly beiieflt if you give them spotlight. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Judgment ls sound , but you tend to be impatient. You know what is right, but waiting beooliies a profa;lem. Best to ctieck w I t b aUihort.Ues. Meant be sUTe you are on right legal track. SAGITl'AllIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Be versatile. Don't be bogged OOwn With only one method. T r y , experiment -make brush ltrokes bold. AM.end to basic tasks. Relatiom with co- workeTs due to improve. You'll be happier. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22- Jan. 19): During· morning OOurs attend to details. Later, entertainment is on agenda and coold include glmlorous dine-out date. Good news cone e rn in g _ youngster could brighten day. AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 18): Pace yourself. Check details. Be aware o f iwoperty values. U you don't know, asi:. Do not permit pride to stand in way cf enlightenment. Pay c 1 o s e attention to mess·age:s, calls. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Forces tend to be scattered. Jud·gment subject to confusion. Best to bold back and wait. Picture becomes clear as addition.al facts u n f o 1 d . Relative's request might best be put off. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTIIDAY you have knack of making moot of assets. Could make fine investment counselor. Social activity on upgrade, and e x cit i !1 g conbacts are made during vacation. TENDENCIES: Cycle high for Tl\URUS. Special word to SCORPIO: permit mate, partner to take initiative. Lodge luncheon The Rebekah Lodge is hosting a luncheon and card party in the Lodge Hall, Thursday, July 18. Tickets are $1. Tb e luncheon . which will include door prizes, will begin at noon. Yoga Taught H·alec:rest Club of Costa Mesa is conducting Yoga clas~ fOT eiW!t w~ks every Thursday from 9 to 10:30 e.m. Sessions begin July 18. 20th ANNIVHSARY SALE /?_ ..;.J.rrifl DRAPE RY ~IJLJ<;_~EANER6 •ttfteoft W•ter Dame .. e ,LAMI PIOO,INO EXCLUSIVI Al lhml S ... et..i "'-Ow R,..i. Stock , •• 11111 Is r..ttt.ely Not "SAU"' M....._.I,., DRESSES -MISSES, JUNIORS. mm •UARANTfED DRAl'HY CLEANIN• Dr•!Mry c1 .. nlnt. PerfM:t , ... "''"' of the ~· ., JM.Ir dr•!Mf"Y, ., 100% ,.. pl•cement If clMn•"' .. • No Shrlnk•t• e N• Wlltod HllHllt e PerfM:t PIMt feWlftl e Potfect IYtn Htmt • Watw Stain Jlomenl e ProhuleNI ln1t1ll1Hefl OUR IXCLUllVI lllVICI e Prof ... leNI llMWll e Ttnnt Mtiy le Arra ..... • ,,... lbtllNlt. e FrM LMR Dn,.. OH ,_ ullh a tarry 20% 540-1366 642-0270 f.702 ffEWPOIT IYD., COSTA MW I WHAT'S BETTER THAN AN OMEGA WATCH? A DIAMOND OMEGAI At Omega, one of ewry four employees Is a QUtrfty control lnapector. tt'aa grHt namt In fln1 tlrneplecu. And these two bHutl11 are• etylflh: •they.,.. accurate. Both available In wf>lte oryollow 14 karat gold. Round ,,_"""tight diamonds, $450. Six diamond 19Ctangular llyle, $396. IANKAMERICARO -MASTER CHARGE, loo 1 S FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 644-lllO ' L-----'---------------------~----------------- MERCANDISE FROM ALL DEPARTMENTS Girdles ,Bras, Hosiery, J•w•lry, Millinery, Glovos, Handb191, Dre11•1, Swoat•r Suits, Co1ts, S~irts, Blou1•11 Lin9erie and loutiqu•. SORRY ••• -..ciJM ....... -rtl•llkl ....i-.. flQf -.. ,.. ......... ., .... .,... .. '*~ •11111 ....... , ... ..... ~ IN OURPAM All CONDmONID !'OR YOUR SHOPl'IN• l'l.IASUH UU l COAST .HWY. CORONA DIL MAI '7J.2"0 ---------- -----~- MR, JIMMY CONTO, THE MAESTRO OP' SC1SSOR WIZARORY HAS BEEN APPOINTED HAIR- STYLE DIRECTOR OJf OUR SALON. DIRJ:CT FROM NEW YORK, PARIS AND LONDON WHERE HE NUMBERED AMONG HIS CLIENTS THE JET SET'S BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE• HIS CREDO! COMBINE HAIRPIECES WITH YOUR OWN HAIR FOR EVENING; SET-IN curs. SET- LESS WAVES FOR DAY• AND, MR, J, R, ROMEO AN ARTIST IN HAIR I I COLORING. DREAM OF BLONDE, BROWN OR A RADIANT RED •• ,ouR MR. J. R9 WIU. FORMULATE YOUR INDIVIDUAL SHADE WITH A CHEMIST1S YOU ARE INVITED TO CONSULT WITH OUR ·HEW, DISTINGUISHED COIF EXPERTS. COME IN WHILE WE1RE FEATURING THE NEW RESTORe SET-1..ESS PERMANENT WAVE, ONLY 25.00 COMP~ETE WITH STVL.ING, CUT, AND REVITAL1ZING RESTOR• CONDITIONING TltE.ATMDrr • IN.OUft . FRENCH ROOM •EAUTY SALON. -: - Costa Mesa Today'8 O •lag N.Y. Stoe.k8 voe. 6-r, NO. ·110, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PA"GES TUESDAY, ~U(Y 'f&, 1'968 JEN CENTS Controversial Church Must uitHome \ I bAll Y r lLOT ltaff ,...,_ ABIL ITISM. EXERCISE -Pretty Gal1 WheaUey, 16, a ministerial student and staff worker at Costa Mesa's Institute of Ability, pond- ers question : "\Vhat is the !\feaning of Life?" as as$isant minister the Rev. Drew H. Renner monitors her mental reactions on GSR J\.ileter, which measures galvanic skin response. Device is like a so- called lie detector. but more sensitive and aids members of the un· usual new faith in sessions Cor the breaking down of personal bar- riers, they say. ' Here and Now, That's l(ey to Group's Faith Religion is what one believes and applies to lire. not what assures the nature of one's existence in the af· terlife -which is a reality -but which isn't as important as the Here and Now. This is the basic belief of the Institute of Ability, 1862 Placentia Ave., whose biggest problem in the Here and Now today is finding a new plact to pursue their faith and studies. "&ur goal is to help people to in· crease their ability and to live their lives better in their own estimation." says the Rev. Drew J.I. Renner, assis- tant pastor of the small church. "\Ve've found the com m o n denominator in living life better is the improvement of one's relations with other people,'' he explains, agreeing that this somewhat parallels basic psychotherapy. Unfortunately for members of the Institute. the fact that each individual is considered to be God, plus the fact that Abilitism is not a Christ-centered . faith, makes ielations with some others exceedingly difficull "No. as a matter of raci we haven't," he answu:s drily when ask- ed if the Institute has been contacted by the Harbor Area Council of Churches. The Rev. Renner said Abilitism - founded here in 1965 by the Rev. ll. Charles Berner -is based on the con- cept that a person is. essentially, in- finite ability personified. .. He is creator of his ow n circumstances," the bearded you ng minister explains. "If a person is of infinite ability, then be is God. It is true that we are not a Christian religion, in the fun- damental orthodox sense. but neither (See RELIGION, Page Z) PO Cutback to Affect New Coast Subdivis ions By PAMELA POWELL Of .... Dll~ ...... ,,.., Several new home developments in the Orange Coast area will be affected by the latest wave of postal service cutbacks announced by Postmaster General W. Marvin \Vatson this week. Saturday and Sunday, w In d ow service at all major city post offices will be discontinued effective JuJy 27 and individual offices have been in· atrvcted to delay utelldlng posW service Jnto new !rads a\n d developments until turther Dodte. \ Hardest hit by the <'Ill will be Westminster, Newport Beech .and Corona de.I Mar. Each bas ~veral dev~lopm1nt1 under construct.ion or ne .. the oocupaney stage. The cut.back in essence means that 1-1 olJlcot which ~ atn1e new deYelopmeota -. )IClllol -lw not yet been ut.ncled will not be • eligible to apply for service from the regional office until further notice. Residents in these areas mllit pick up their mail at general delivery mail windo~·s in their community o(fices. "You can't just arbitrarly put a new t.i·act on a man and tell him he has that in addition to bis other eig1tt hours or work," Huntington Beach P08t.master Pete DiFabio Aid. "The rout.a mllll lir1t be approved by tile regional oflk<." u.-gtoo ---far bu not been affect..i by Ille CU1blc:b. Po&tal routings for new and occupied tract! have already been approved ·and im- plemented. The order to curb Saturdey mall service, which has not yet reached all oflices ln ~ area, wes glvtn laat week al1lor Wall-On pleAC!ed witll tile Poat Olllot Depwtment lo rectore !undo alaabed by Coocre<•· u..--~--~-==============~::::_- Enwtional Tension Surrounds Counc il Action By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of fll9 CMlllY Pllitt Sl•tf Costa Mesa's m06t unusual faith - annoying to its neighbors and anathema to more established Harbor Area religiocists -lost ils last chance Monday to remain in the modest quarters it now occupies. Emotional ttnslon and eve.n a hint of bigotry threaded the lengthy hearing i n wbich the City Council finally voted 4 to 1 to deny a three·moatb extension Southern Sw ing of. the fledgling churdl's conditional use permit. The Institute of Ability, therdore, is now in violation of city ordinance at 1862 Placentia Ave., but the vote was tempered with 30 days of mercy to allow them to find a new :sanctuary. Couneil.man Will>am L. St. Clair, speaking in conclliatory tones, at- tached a stipulation to his motion for denial to stay any city prosecution for at least one mont.h. Reagan Answers Wallace Threat By The ,\ssoelated llresli The llarris Survey released tvtonday California Gov. Ronald Reagan says showed \Vallace favored by 15 percent his sv.•ing through the South beginning of the voters, and taking twice as thiS week will be aimed against what many votes from Republican can· some Republicans consider a growing didates as from Democrats. Pollster threat from former Alabama Gov. Louis Harris said in a copyright George c. \Vallace. Washington Post story half \Yallace's strength is in the South. Third party presidential candidate The Gallup Poll reported Sunday Wallace has been showing increasing that Wallace shows 16 percent voter strength in public opinion polls and support. and said that was nearly Reagan_ said. Mondar that Alabama twice the strength he showed in April. Republicans 1.n parbcul~r were con-T New York Gov. Nelson A. ,~er.ned a~ut,, specula~l!J~, ~a.11;1.ce • · llockefeller, announced GOP con· mi ght eat into Republican 'V<>te:S. tender said meanwhlle his nationwide "Very frankly," Reagan said in poll to1indicate whether he or Richard Sacramento, "the Republicans asked M. Nixon would be the strongest me because of the strength <>f Gov. Republican candidate will be con· Wallace. ~e is going to change the ducted July 22·28. balance, possibly." The South .also is considered Reagan's greatest source of presiden- tial strength outside California. The governor says he is not a presidentia l contend er but as a !avoritc-son can- didate could become one at the GOP national convention next month in Miami Beach. Reagan leaves Thursday for GOP fund~raising appearances in Texas, Arkansas, Virginia, North Carolina, and Alabama. Strike Loomin g Against Douglas To Affect 15,000 More than 15,000 employes of the McDonnell Douglas Aatronautics Corp. in Huntington Beach could be afiected by a sb"i.ke of two major aerospace unions tentatively scheduled for July 29 if no settlement is reached before that deadline. Involved in a contract dispute are the International Association o r ~Jachinlsts Di strict (JAM) Lod ges 1578 and 720 and the United Auto Workt:rs (UAW) Local 148. Members of both unions will meet on Sunday, the JAM at 11 a.m. at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Anecles and the UAW at 2 p.m. at the Long Beach Veterans Stadium. Members of both unions will be ask· ed to authorize termlna.tion of con· tracts with the McDonnell Dr!':.lglas Corp. on July 2.8 which would permit strike action by 54,000 employPs on Ju- ly 29. Final membership vote by both union s is scheduled for July 2.8. Leaders of the machinists uniqn have m~t '\\'ith the A-fcDonnell Douglas management to discuss a new three· year contract to replace the one which expired Monday. DespJte optimistic predictions by of· fieers of the aerospace firm, union of- ficials are warning members today to make serious strike preparaUons. Mesa Musician In Wrong Ht.> use A Costa Mesa musician, dazed and murmuring about Batman, waa ar· reated In a garage this morning, after he wandered in thlnttng 1t was bis own ruldence and awakened the adjacent apartment renter, police reported. Larry C. Whit., 'Z1, of 700 W. 2lth SL, was booked on suspicion of prowl- ing and beiog under the influence of a drug following his arrest about dawn, police said. Mrs. Louiae E. Johnson, of 2019 Pomona Ave., told investlgaton White told her he was 1o his bouae and would ahe pl .... pt eut and abut the door when she Inquired about h1i presence. Verde Warns Not to Delay Tract Action Suspicious monitors from the Mesa Verde Homeowners Association Mon- day warned that any delay action in a bitterly opposed subdivision project ror the Mesa Verde Country Club \\iiU be futile. The action came fol\o\\"illl.! ::ln ?p- r arently misunderstood move by the Cit.v Council to refer the 91-lot ten- tative tract map and rezoning request back to the Planning Commission. Councilmen had been expecting to hold a public hearing on itie con· troversial proposal by both the R.A. Watt Co., owners of the club, along with developer Wally Gayner, two weeks fr om Monday night. "If there is merely a delay on the developer's part. he's wa sting hiS time," declared Norm French, of 2865 Stromboli Road . spokesman for the nlilitanlly anti-rezoning j!"roup. 1'-1ayor Alvin L. Pinkley. howe ver, said the nleasure merely eliminates one hearihg in the attempt by the Watt Company to develop the golf course. The City Council could hear the rezone bid on Aug. 5, with an expected crowd of 600 dissidents on band, after which time the firm would simply re- submit a new proposal for the golf course-gobbling tract. This way, he noted, the developers can try a new concept without wasting the public's and the council's time on another predestined rejection of the plan. French reiterated the group's op- position to even one square foot of rezoning, as outlined before the Plan- ning Commission last week in the largest protest demonstration ever in Costa Mesa memory. The collllcil went ahead, however. and set Aug. 5 as hearing date for a bid by Francis X. Shoen. of 1321 W. Park Lane, Santa Ana . to rezone four acres at Newport Boulevard and Baker Street. The elderly landowner wants a S\\'itch Cron1 manufacturing and in · dustrial use to commercial use, 50 he . can sell a service station site, but city oCficials want him to reduce the amount proposed for change. In other action Mooday the City Oouncll: -Passed a resolution by a 5-0 vote, condemnlng the acheduled cutback of Saturday counter aerv!ce at first and .second class U.S. Post Office fac1lltles in Orange County. -Awarded Sully·MJller Con~truction Co.. an '87,514 contract for Im- provement ot South Coast Drive from 11arbor Boulevard we1t 1.851 feet : Hyland Avenue lrom South Coast Drive to· SunDower Avenue, and (See COUNCIL, Pa,. I) St. Clair noted that animosity by neighbors aga!Nt the three-year-old faith founded by the Rev. H. Charles Bemer is growing and that the Institute of Ability is the logical choice to go. "1 agree that a change must take place, but I don't agree ttiat a three· month extension of their perm.it is too much to ask," commented Councilman George A. Tucker in C&fiting a no vote. Tile Jnstiwte o! Ability applied lo< a new, annual conditional use permit last February and the city planning staft suggested they seek a three-year permit, but commissioners· later sug· gested a 12-month limit. !<"'aced with an ancry response from opponents, led by Bernard Cook, of 781 Center St., the City Council cut the permit extension to three months.and offered st.aff help in finding new (See CONTROVERSIAL, Page Z) DAILY PILOT ..... i., lM "- UPS AND DOWNS -Children scamper around ~foot sheet-metal g roin at 40th· Street in Newport Beach as sand on south side (left) re1nains in place 'vhile beach on north has drifted aw:ay. The solu· tion, officials say, is to construct more groins up coast. Fading Beach May Get . . More Groins -Sampson The answer to beach erosion in West Newport appears to be more steel groins jutting into the ocean, similar to one at 40th Street, it was reported today. "The sheet-metal groin installed oU 40th Street appears to be serving a useful purpose," according tD Ken Sampson, Orange County harbors director. "Another upcoast CO\lld probably compartmentize the sand." The 40th street groin juts perpen. di cu \arty into the :sea. The beach south of it is remaining pretty much in place. But sand to the north ol it has ti,en badly eroded away since last spring. Marine Killed In J et Crash A Laguna IJeach Marine captain, on temporary ai1signment at Fallon, Nev., was killed Monday night when his slngle·seat Jet crashed ln tbe desert north of Reno. The Third Marine Alrtralt Wing aviator, attached to Attack Squlldn>n 214 at El Toro Marine Air Statton, was ldentlJled as CapL David W. Bittlg of 1341~ Glenneyre, Laguna Beach. He was on a two-week tralnJng mission at the Naval Auxillary Air Station in Fallon. The Martoe A4-C S)l;yhawk the cap. taln wa s piloting went down on an' un· populat~ desert plateau 218 miles north of Reno. Marlne Corp1 oUicials are Jnvnlillalinl the crash. captain Blt.Qg 11 1urmecl by his wile, Lyon, Mid two claalblen. • ' Sa111pson said the current rate or erosion north of the 40th. Street ex· perimental groin is causing no alarm in official circles. Beach width there is Dow about 40 reet. A few months ago it was more than 2CK> feet. TJdaJ onslaughts have been slowly chopping it back. Sampson noted that $240,ro:t re· mains from last fall's '700,000 federal appropriation on the erosion project. The remaining money couJd go toward the building of an additional groin if needed, he said. Or aage Coas& Weatller Summertime weather tenfl( to be repeUUoua and today ind tomorrow will be no ex cl . , . 1'cmperatures will be in the. 60li with niorning and evening low clouds. INSm E TODA l" In t/14 .. 11411 of t1w 11.W c.,,,. Vo<r• II -_,... name: Kha Sanlt. St• pktllnt of obandolled l>ol• !'of• 11. ··-' _ .. • , ....... ,.n --" ,_ .. " -·-.. ,.,._ " "',.... ...... • l>Ntll H9tlctl • ~c~ ' 01 ..... _ ' SMi9'~ , .. ,. l•IMtl ....... .. ·-. .. ·~--"-'-" .......... ..,, ...... , ... ., ··-" '"" c .... • -u -" ~= • -·-" • _..._. " .. • ~ . ·,-... % D~ll Y Pl LOT T11tld41, July 16, l t:WI Sesslot1 Su111t11ari%er Fortas Testifies To Role for LBJ WASHINGTON (AP) -Justl«i:< Abe Fortas told tbe Senate JucUciary Com- mittee today he participated in White House meetings on the Vletllam war and on r iots in the cities. But he insisted his role wu only lo Swnmariie for lbe President what others said ia the session. The justice, testifying on his nominaUon to be chief justice of the United St.ates, said .. he was consulted on very few matters and that they have not been matters on which be could claim he was an expert. "My role has been solely one who sits in the meeting while others ex· press their views," Fortas said. He continued that the President "turns to me Jast to summarize." This alone, he said, W&"li the !unction Vietnam Vets To Get Equal Bill of Rights WASHINGTON (uPil -The Senate has voted to put Vietnam veterans on a par with their Korean and World War II predecessors by provlding them with an equal educational bill of rights. By voice vote, the Senate passed legislation Monday which would grant post-Korean veterans e d u c a t I o n assistance or training for a period equal to one and one-hall times the duration of actlve duty. A two-year veteran would get 36 months of schooling, enough to com· :-lete a four-year rollege education. he served at White House meetings. Fortas ls an old friend and legal ad· viser to the P resident. The leader of the fight to block his confirmation, Sen. Robert P. Griffin. (R-Mlcb.), ·read news reports to the commJttee tut week that Fortu haa conthiued wblle on the bench tb play a big role in framing \Vhile House policy. Fortas. asked about these allega. lions, said, "I have never initiated any suggestion or any proposal to the President of the United States." lie said he never recommended anyone for any position, 8%ld that he did not discuss any legal issues or matters that could come to the court. As chief justice, Fort.as would SUC• ceed Earl Warren. On the question of White House talks, Fortas said that on occasion John(ion has done him the borlor or showing "confidence in my ability to un· derst.and a situation" and to "give him the pros and cons." At first, Fortas shied off from giving any specific example. He finally gave Vietnam and the riots as illustrations, and said, "That's about it as I recall." Fortas flatly rejected as untrue a report in Time magazine that he wrote Johnson's message ordering federal troops into Detroit last summer to quell riots. "I saw it," Fortas said of the speech, "but I did not write it." Fortas described as "absolutely and totally without any foundation of fact" reporta in the New York Times Magazine of.June 4, 1967, that he was involved in an unsuccessful campaign to l~ Bill D. Moyers the job as undersecretary of state. He also dl!puted the magazine's report that he was involved in efforts to get a federal judgeship for David G. Bress, the U. S. attomey for the District of Columbia. From Page l CONTROVERSIAL CHURCH ••• sanctuary quarters. Cook again appeared before the City Council Monday, presenting a petition bearing 14 sJgnatures, and repeated a long list of grievances against the Institute, some of them new ones. They include: noisy traffic, people sleeping overnlght, lights on all night, unsidltlY grounds, auto repair on ttie church parking lot, resultant dropping property values and other offenses. "'Ibis is out and out contempt," Cook declared concerning Institute response to remedial rules laid down by the City Council 90 days ago, "there are inddeots which we don't even care to mention." "We've seen girls Bitting with their dresses hiked up on the lawn," he added. Coot -wbo once spent a year ministering to his Lutheran church's congregation while farming in the Nevada high desert -also stressed Monday that religious persecution has no place in the cWTent controversy. "I'm sick or newspaper articles mentioning religious persecutioti," he said. adding that neighbors were fighting the Institute as merely a hip- pie hangout before learning it was a bonaflde, nonprofit religi'ous cor- poration. The Rev. Drew H. Renner. ssistant pastor of the Institute of Ability, spent some time rebutting Cook, sue· ces:sfully OD most points of city law and apalogetically on items o f personal behavior. He said he sometimes stays a fter the 10 p.m. closing hour if a member is in a help session and intensely in- volved at that point, but that the Institute is officially closed. Rev. Renner said it is not against ci· ty Jaw to leave a light on overnight for protect.ion, adding that a guard legally DAILY PILOT ____ .. lob1rt N. W11d 'llbllaMr Thom11 K11Y il EdltDI' Thom11 A. Murphino Mef\lllnt Ed!IW Jac.i l . C11rl1y Paul Ni1111t 1111:""1 MIMMr Ac1Yertiiln9 DlrK lor ---lJO W11t l1y Str11t Malih11 A44ra11: P.O. lei-1560 •2626 Oth1r Offlt11 ~ '""'I ttll W ...... aw JtYlflf I.I-a-~1 m ,.Hf'll ..... ...,. "lllllll\9191 I M<tr: M )11'1 lll'ftl sleeps on the premises due to a $1,000 burglary some weeks ago. Councilman Tucker -who has maintained sympathy to the Institute of Ability as an agency contributing in part to helping people -asked what neJghbors would prefer in the area. Cook, acting as spokesman, said the questi'on hadn't come up among homeowners, bul he assumed it had been a residence, at which time Rev. Berner noted it was previously a den· ta1 office. The zoning is for ad· ministrative and professional use. Rev. Reooer denied reports the con- gregation -offered help by the city ih finding new quarters -bad failed to make any effort, citing three locations checked out only recently. One is the old Greenville School, in rural Santa Ana. Tempers flared at one point when Rev. Renner charged Cook had told him the group was athelst and Leninist, bringing Cook to bis feet in the audience with an angry denial of Renner 's allegation. Rev. Berner finally took the podium to outline for the City C:OUncil that ttie First Amendment of the U.S. Constitu- tion forbids any law which will in· terfere with religious freedom. "We're not a public danger. \Ve're not a public nuisance," Rev. Berner declared, "Consider the neighbors' ob· jections but override them." RESUlllED COlllll!ENTARY Councilman Tucker resumed his commentary, noting that Cook said other churches in the neighborhood posed no problem. turning the state- ment around to renect discrimination, at least to a degree. Some members of the Institute of Ability wear beards and Tucker pointed out that so did many of the frontiersmen. founding father.! and signers of the American Declaration of Independence. "I do not choose to judge Mr. Cook." said Tucker evenly, "I believe ~·e will au be judged at a later date. but peo. pie who think some of the things ex. pressed here have been called bi,ii:ots." It \\•as at this point that St. Clalr took steps to wind up the hearing and the Institute -which will move its seminary portion to Lucerne Valley in coming months -Jost out. "How can I judge your reliqion , when I know so little about it?" Couo· cilman Willard T. Jordan commented after the vote, stressing that the City Council is faced with concrete pro· blems or the city -not ones of philosophy and theology. f'rom Page l COUNCIL ... Sunflower Avenue from H y 1 an d Avenut to a point 725 feet eest, under the state arterial highway financing program. -Awarded the same company another '81,107 contract for im- provement of Fairview Road from tbe san Diego Freeway to Sunflower Avenue under the gss tax fund U.!e. program. -Awarded a S13.312 contract to Alcorn Fence Co .• for construction of a chaln link fence between Fl.lrview state l1<>1pltal grounds and the Colla Mat Golf and Counll')' Club propert7. Seat. Tax Plan Dies 0 Ill Assembly -1 . A bill lo require Saddleback Junior College to pay a $150 ·tax on eacn ol lta students attending olher scliools may ~dead, at least·for this session of the· l~gislature. The Senate Local Government Com· mlttee, which is reviewing the bill ln- tr9(1~c~d by As.semblym!ll?-Ken Cory Mother of Six Held for Tests After Squabble • A Costa Mesa mother of sJx was ar· rested Monday night after a police of- ficer inv.estJgating a family squabble · found her loading a .25 caliber automatic, allegedly to use on her two oldest daughters. Mabel I. Howes, 43, of 257 E. 23rd St., was booked under a provision of the WeUare and lnstilutiooa Code and taken to Orange County Medical Center for psychiatric observation. (D·Anahelm), delayed action o~ ll litonday in S8$!amento. Since the legislature Is planning tO adjourn this \Veekend, hopes ot passing the bill have apparently faded. Saddleback. Superintendent J ~ c k Rope.r, who attended the Monday h~'g. said a majority of the com· nutt~e members were opposed to pass1ng the bill anyway tf it had come up. "We'll abide bY the law whatever happens,'' the Superintend~nt added "Even if it's changed, we won't like ii but we 'll ablde by it." ' If. the bill ls passed, Saddle~ck Juruor College will be required to pay a total of S300,000 to other schools primarily Orange Coast College, fo; the 2,000 students it i.s not equipped to handle. St.ate law requires a junior college to pay this $300 seat tax to another school for each of its students the se- cond institution must educate. Saddlebac.k has been exempt from paying th.is tax because a new college is allowed a three-year grace period before the law applies. Assemblyman Cory's bill asked that !ht.. grace period be eliminated from the law. It was reviewed first by the Assembly education committee, which reduced the tax to $150. This amended measure was passed by the Assembly last November and sent to the Senate: SKY SCULPTURE -Artist Dion Wright looks out from llG-foot-high tower that gives new dimension to Sawdust Festival. Several metal working artists add to it as they are moved to do so. Patrolman Art Appleman said he went to the Howes home shortly before 9 p.m. in response to a child beating report and was .conb.cted by Valerie C. Harmon, 16, and her 14- year-old sister Sidney. The patrolman said he went inside and talked to the d;straught Mrs. Howes, wt.o said the two girl! no longer wanted to live in the home and were to _be placed elsewhere by Welfare workers. Funeral Held For Publisher Robert Hancock What Is It? Sculpture 'Talks' at Sawdust Appleman saJd he went back out to confer with Valerie and Sidney on the family diliculty and returned back in· side to find Mrs. Hmves, loading a· clip containing two bullets into her automatic weapon. Services for Robert K. Hancock, former publisher of the San Clemente Sun-Post and the San Juan Oapistri.no CoasUlne Dispatch were held today at the United Presbyterian Church, San Clemente. By THOMAS FORTUNE 01 the 1)1111 ,It.I Iliff There is th.is 3().foot high con- glomeration of pipe, wagon wheels, pulleys and pennants reared above the Sawdust Festival. But what is it? The four artists who have had a band in building It call it variously : "an assemblage," "a happening," "an industrial collage" and even "a com- munications experiment." The last definifion was offered by Dion \Vrigh t who said the 'towering structW'e is a dialogue arqqagMtists with sculpture the medium711's•d or \1:ords. \Vrlght, Art Risley, Tim Cun- ningham and "the sage of Yankee knowhow'' Joe Miller are the artists. All are artistic metal workers at least part-time. And all are long-time Laguna residents. The sculpture, untitled, unplanned and unfinished, serves as the shop of exhibit booth for the artists. Jewelry and unfinished, serves as the shop or Sawdust Festival visitors beneath it. Will the macro-sculpture be sold? ''What would someone do with it?'' \Vrlght parried. "It's value Is in using it as communication between the artists. This thing is larger than any of us. Individuals phase in and phase out." He has some hopes it will ouUast the Sawdl16t Festival, somehow surviving intact beyond the Aug. 24 closing, but he doesn't know how. "There are no blueprints for building it and no plans for what to do RELIGION ... is Buddhism," he says. "\Ve don't disagree with any of the Christian teachings," he stresses, "we don't try to convince anyone or prea~h a doctrine above theirs. That 1s against our religion ." "Rather," he Says, "we prefer ~o help a person realize his own basic convictions about We and to be able to practice them in life." Essential to so-called clearing. ~es· sions used in the practice of Abllitism is the GSR meter, a machine similar to a lie dete<:tor device, or .polygraph. The subject of the clearing sess10~ holds two handgrips, into which a mt· nutq electrical current Is fed, not enoUgh to feel, but enough to ttgister mental response to specific questJoos. Former Institute or Ablllt,y member Robert Cantwtll developed the ma- chine, says the Rev. Renner, but.- ironlcally -he has bolted the faith and now reportedly works against lt: The Rev. Renner says the basic method i.s that the so-called cleare.r- si m ilar to a teacher or lherapist ln uature -attempts to help break down internal barriers that· exist. .. People are not open because they don't know each otMr,'' says Rev. Renner. "no one is totally open, but we are acting in a re.Ugtous eense by helping peopW: become more bmtst with themselves and others.'' He said most of the regu.Iar mem- bers ha.. just gotlon tllrougll Ulelr own minds in the procets of advance- ment. and the body now poHS aJlotber tl"!'mtndous barrier. "The emotions are even superMded by. bodily sensations one 4ets and whk:h elso act as berrlers, ' he ex· plained, IUcenlng one bodily sensation to tho cravina: or a cigarette. AbiliUsm can therefore lead to ces· satlon of sueh persooal vices and ls con.strucUve on tblt level aa well • • \Vi th it when it's done," he said. "Good art has to be spontaneous. For the present, then, the monument stands there, with strobe light on top as nighttime beacon. As it ~moves them, the artists add to it. Because of its sheer size, if for no other reason, it is attracting a lot of attention. The tower frame is some sort of \Vorld \Var lI aircraft industry gantry. Pieces are welded, bolted, nailed, glued and sewn together. Wind chimes are the only movable part. "Sculptors have a tendency to col- lect pieces of stuff in hopes they will be able to do something With them someday," Wright said. "This is what we have been collecting f o r evidently." "What are you doing?:' he asked. "I brought ~ose children into the world and I'm going to take them out," he quoted the woman as saying. The oUicer said he moved to disarm Mrs. Howes, Who ran down a hallway and tossed the gun into a closet after ruiding it in a canvas bag. · She later brought the weapon back, he said, but had hidden the loaded clip in the chair in which she was sitting, where he retrieved it. Police saic1 the two oldest girls were taken to the Albert Sitton borne for temporarily displaced youngsters, aloog with their four brothers and sisters. , They were identified as Suzette Bar- rett, 12, Melinda Howes, 7, and Dana and David Howes, both 6, her tow· headed twin boys. Mr. Hancock, 61, died at his borne, 304 T ... a Rambla, San Clemente, Friday after an illness of three months. He retired in 1966 to enjOy his bobby of sailboating. He was a participant in the Newport-Ensenada yacht races un- til his illness this year. He was publisher of s e v e r a 1 California papers during the pa.st 30 years. They included Santa Maria Dai- ly Times and the Fontana Herald News. • He leaves his wife, Ann, of the home; a son, Robert Jr., of .San Juan, Puerto Rico; a daughter, Marcia Carlson of Canoga Park and a grandchild. Interment Will be at Crestlawn Cemetery, Riverside. has it! We lay it on the line. • • DEEP '>telu!L .. 'cRllPCT CLCRHJnC THE ULTIMATE in CARPET CLEANING Recently, Oetp Staem C•rpet Cleenars it1troduced • t1•w profassion•I c•rptt cle•nlnq process fo this County • , • Prior to offerit19 this remark•ble service to you, our custom•rs, we ·conduct•d our. own comprehan1ive testing program in orcler to v•rlfy 'th• cl•ims made for the process by if1 Clffelop- er1, Not only did we find Oaep Steam to ba a revolutionary departure from our traclitionel carpet cle•n· it19 method, but wo found it to be eb1olutely safe for all cerpet •ncl uphol1fery febrics. Concurret1t with our testing progrem, we thorou9hly trained our personnal ln the effectiv e use of Deed. Steam cleaning equipment •.• Only when wa wera completely 1ati1fied that Daep Steam met with our 1tandard1 dicl wo offer thi1 unique new service to you, A succe11ful compeny's reputation is it1 best advertisament. We lay it on th81ine by cordially invitit19 you to try s•fefy.fested Doop Steam w.11.to-Wel C.rpat incl Uph.olstery Cleening ••• The fln· e1t profasslonal carpat claaning 11rviee yet clevaloped for the lnclu1try. Proteet the life of' your c•rpets •t1cl the be•ufy J your home by calling today! TIME FOR NEW DRAPES? We •re dr•pery t 11pertsl We stress quali ty of wor~man1hi p &: it11tal1•tion. Free E5timetes In Your Home At Your Convenience . CALL TODAY: WHIM TOU WANT THI l'lMDT- CAU UPHOLSTERY CLEANING 36 ye•rt of colltctil"e experience between the 2 men doln9 your work. All work don a i" out' plant. W• pre.ta1t •II fabric1 befora claenit19. Frff Estimates In Your Home At Your Convenience. CALl TODAY: -D'llMA11 RUG & UPHOLS,TE•Y CLEANERS Our 21st YHr of So.vie. in Oron90 County 2950 RANDOLPH COST A MESA l'HONE 546·!432 ' I ' I • DAILY •ILOT !J BY WILLIAM REED Dowptown: I-low It Can Be DevelQped •••ds ... In the Wind Anyone who really doubts the . need for the north-south Hunting· ton Beach Freeway or the east· west Coast Freeway just does not use either Beach Boulevard or Coast Highway. Traffic on either of these streets is miserable on weekdays durihg the rush hours and impossible on weekends. Going toward the beach on Beach Boulevard in the morning 'hours or away from the beach in the afternoons is bumper to bump- er. Mid-Beach Plan Details Objectives A document which has been discuss- ed only slightly outllde official cirtles in Hurltincton Belich ls the fotnlatlon for developmerit Of a Mw, 'lnd, hopefully, successful downtown com- mercial area. • Now considered bllgtud, the old commercial area baa been under study for two years by the clty'a Urban Lind Institute Cttizena Steering Committee. The committee developed a n d secured city council approval of the Mid-Beach Area Policy Plan. The council has appointed a 15-man com- mittee to Implement the goals set forth in the plan. One of the first official actions of the committee was to order the policy plell coverted iato a master plan for development of the mid-beach area. POLICY PLAN t'or the Mid-Beach Area ~ ... HUNTINGTON BBACll Coast Hig hway is much the same from Long Beach to Laguna Beach on these warm weekends as thou- sands of people pour from the sweltering confines of Los Angeles and head to the cool Orange Coast. * The policy plan coven at area roughly frOm Beach Boulevard north to just beyond Golden West Street along Paclflc Coast Highway and in· land to tbe prl>posed Coast Freeway line. DOWNTOWN REOEVELOPMENT -Map shows land uses and pr<>- jecta developed or encouraged by the Huntington Beach Urban Land Institute Citizens Steering Committee for rebuilding of the mid-beach area including the blighted downtown. Numbers and letters on map, refer to projects and goals listed in accompanying story. I went down to Laguna this week· end to catch some of the hustle and bustle of the opening of the Festi- val of the Arts and found the high- ways pretty jammed. In Laguna no one really seemed to care too much. Everyone seemed to be having a good time as they streamed from art show to art show mixing with the rather colorful beach crowd. I particularly enjoyed the 14th Annual All California Art Exhibit at the Laguna Beach Art Associa- tion, 307 Cliff Drive. My mother, who calls herself H. Carter Reed these days, is entered in the show. * Yv<>rute De Loyola of Huntington Beach is pretty mad at the direct· ors of Orange County Fair for cut- ting down on the number of rabbit entries in their big show in Costa Me sa and just before Natio'nal Rab- bit Week too. She points out that rabbits have qualities that humans could adopt (no not that one). "Rabbits are the cleanest vegetarians and th e y won't· talk back or crow." Her group, Golden West Rabbit ~Breeders Club, had a pot luck din- • ner Friday night to kick off Na- tional Rabbit Week and to promote · more rabbit shows in the county .,fair. She didn't say what was on "the menu. The policy statement is i!Xended as the basis for mutual agreements between public and private decision making grou1>5 and establishes the in- terrelationships among separate pro- ject goals necessary to create an economic environment conducive to attainment of the highest development potential of the vea, according to the preamble to 1he plan. Three categories of goals which establish general land use patterns and project pclorities fOr the mid· ' beach area are listed. -A reaffirmation that current pro- jects be carried through to fulfillment. -A statement, of project objectives to be initiated as immediate priorities. -Comprehenr>lve land use patterns which are goals dependent on the suc- cessful completion of current projects and immediate priority projects. Current projects include : (Numbers refer to awnber designations on the Beach Community Chest Thanks Fund Volunteers Huntington Beach Community Chest Motel, Smith's Mortuary and gave plaques and certificates to Stevenon Bros. members and to those who aided the In the corporia.tions and employes division winners were Brank of group in raiJing more than $90,000 this America, (Adams, Mal.n Street and year for the Community Chelt.'s 15 Huntington Harbour b r a n c h e s ) , member agencies. General Telephone Co., Huntington Awards went to president Bill Beach Co., Montgomery Ward, North Carlson and campaign director Steve American, Sears Roebuck, Southern Holden during a luncheon held Friday. California First Natiooal Bank, United Cited for aiding in going over the States National Bank. goal were postmaster Pete DiFabio, Corporations only were Albertsons, city administrative aide Bud Belsito, Anaheim Savings and Loan, Barker Dr. Richard King and Dr. Lawrence Brothers, · Crocker Citi%ens Bank, F. Rizzo , in the professlonaJ division; Hmnble Oil Co., Huntington Harbour Bill Reed and the DAILY PILOT, Phil Corp., William Lyocs Development Nordli and the Huntington Beach Corp., Macco Construction Co., Plan Independent; George Farquahr and ntng Research Associates , Security the Huntington Beach News and Mike Pacific National Bank, (Main street, Rafael and the Santa Ana Regi ster, in Edinger Avenue and Huntington tbe newspaper section. Harbour branches) Signal Oil Co., :Trustees to Meet • Dr. Dudley Boyce, O{ Golden West Southern California EcUson Co. , College and Dr. Clarence Hall, and Joe Southern Counties Gas Co., Standard Perry, of. Huntington Beach City Oil Co., State Farm Insurance Co., ; Trustees of Westminster School School District, in the school personnel Terry Buick, United California Bank. District meet tonight at the ad-division ; and in the business div ision, Employes only were tbote of Collins ministration building, 141 Cedarwood Avon, the DAILY PILOT, D. R. Man-radio and Hughes Aircraft. Ave., Westminster for a regular nlng Jr., CollectJon A§ency of Hun-Plaques also went to members of ""business meeting. Time is 7:3> p.m. tington Beach, Huntington Sboris each divilion aid.log in the campaign. ·~~~~~~~~~~"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"-~~~"-"'- " Eye• on '.l'onaorr°"' · Oruge County beauty contestants who'll vle for the' t!Ue, of Ml11 Oruge County Tomorrow at the Oranie County Fair tonlgbt are, from (left to right, front row) ,Donna Lee, 18, Miu Newport Beach; Nucy Jeu Alll90D :Ill, Mi11 Fountain Valley; Linda Harvey, 17, Miss Westminster; Susan Nail, 19, Miss Seal Beach; Carolyn Morrow, 18, Miss Yotba Linda; (secood row) Llsa Cowley, 17, Ml11 Anabe!m;.. Terri Frencb, 18, Min Garden Grove ; Melody Wrlibt, 18, Miu San Clemente; Marti Teller, 17, Miss Stea; Shelly Pulver, 19, Miss Ful- ... ler14n ; Jtatllleen Nielsen, 18, Ml11 La Habrt; tlllrd' row) Linda Barie McEvoy, 18, Ml11 Buena Park; Jeffye Blaclrard, 17, Miu HunUngton Beach; Kerry J. Abrah1ma1 Ia, Mila Tustin; Belinda Gillbam, 18, Min ~anta Ana; Pamila Reed, 18, MI11 Costa Meu; Ronnie Lopn, 17, Miss Stanton; Katie Alf- son, 18 Miu Loi Alamitos; Jacqueline Harper, :Ill, Mias Cypress; and .Patil Terrell, 18, Mias Corona de! Mar. Not abown La pllolo ii Marcia Lynne Roberti, 17, Miu Orange. J map) 1. Development of the city'i 9 ntiles of beach to its highest potential for recreational use. This project is in the p!anning and first building stages. 2. Development and expansion of uses oo the pier. Pier rebuilding and installation of a new lighting system is almost completed. 'I\Je future develop- ment plans for the pier are under study now. 3. Jmprovemellt of Pacific Coast HighWay along with border and me- dian landscaping. The state is cur- rently rebuilding the highway and the city'1 Parking Authority has approved plans for beautlftcation of tile roadway edges 9ld of the center median. 4. Development of the Huntington Pacific Apartments on the beach north of the pier. 'l1l.e $2 million project is neating completion. 5. Development of Huntington State Beach for more intensive re<:reational use. Construction of a parking lot has been partially completed. Other plans are under study. 6. :-1untingtoa Beach Co. 's goU course and Seacliff Development. The new goU course is open and plans are under way for the housing develop- ment surrounding the course. Immediate priority plans include: (Letters refer to letter deslgnatioos on map.) A. Establishment of the location Of future Coast Freeway interchanges. B. Promotion of industrial develop- ment near Coast F r e e w a y in- terchanges. PHONE COLLECT 213-728-7283 FREE ESTIMATE CHARGE IT! ...... ·~· C. Development of community buildings and a couventioo facUity complex. D. Establishing a dev~lopment pro- ject for the beach area north of the pier. The final goal categQrY lists futur.e land use depending on attainment of. other goal s li sted in the plan. (Letters refer to letters on map.) V. Hotels, recreation .00 com- merce. W. Office, community and com· mercial. X. Rald<ntlal, (One lo lbree stories). Y. Medium-high rise reaidential (three to six stories). Z. High rile residential (slz llorles and .above). We'll clean your I, draperies for only .•• l~~~IDTH unflnod up to 3' long l~R~IDTH unlined 3' to 5' lon9 ' PRICE INCWDES TAKING DOWN AND REHANGING. 41 HOUR SEIYICI Ponneys exclusive new proc011 cloons el types of droporios beoutlfuly, draperies thot covld novar be oloonod before (oven beouty pleots et no Htro charge~ Mokos them looli ond fHI almost t.ko now. PENNEY'S CLEANING SERVICE draporioo • INdtp....4. • bl•nl<oh • -rote< plllowa • ••-I rugs. . d • 4 DAILY PIUIT Appeal Deadline For Ray July l ,7 -~ -... °""" ... ,...., When Robert E. Robinson's car stalled at an intersection at the top of 8 hill in downtown Bradford, Pa., he got out and gave it a push. The car rolled down the hill and crashed into the porch of the Cope- land African Methodist Episcopal Church. Police arrested the 30-year~ld Robinson and charged him with drunkeness. • ' Bill Holland, .o/ ~pri"llJi<ld, Ill., tries to tu'm mi.&fortune into profitable ad· ) 1.1ertuano as he placed the sign behind :,.is 8"4ttered j,weirv &tor~ window. ' •BiU hot& tilt' brick wed by the thief JD ho war oertainl11 dilcriminating; he : jook riz '°'*"'' bMt ~ft a large trey ~oJ va~blc'· ritlQd· vntoucht'd. • Walter Blacknell, of Hartford, Conn., climbed the bars of his cell , ..and broke Open two outlets of the sprinkler system, police said. Water flowed. thrOU.ghOut the area . of th~ police loc~-1:1P an~ into eleva. tor shafts. Firemen spent -more than two pours mopping it lip. Blacknell, 35, had been in j ail on an intoxication char~e. He was "transferred to a maximum secur- ity area of the Jocal hospital. • Three Louisville (Kentuckt1) policemen were suspended for four days for using a street sign for pistol target practice, • Mary O'Brien, 16, a student at Oelwin (Iowa) High School, ap- proached an intersection with a "Yield -right -of· way" sign. She didn't stop the driver education car and it collided with another car causing only minor damage. The other vehicle was being driven by E. J . Fort.ch, Oelwin Chief of Po-· lice. • The following sentence was con- tained in a reunt report su,,_ mitted to Wiscomin'1 labor sec· retatt1: "She al!o alleged that she did not deny that 1he accept- . ed or den~d the work that the employer offered to her. • A Miami bowling alley operator has collected 150 toy guns and one reel rifle in exchange for free games. Casper Weber, manager of the Bird Bowl said "We want to get guns out of the hands of the kids so they won't have anything to do with them as Utey get older." LONDON (UPI) -A Brilllb court today bound over James Earl Rey, .C· cused slayer ol Dr. Martin Luther gmg Jr., foe -eight claya cm d!ar(es ol violating gun and poocport laws. Sourcea close to Ray's d.efmH aaid bis lawyers were running 'into "local dif(iculties'' hampering hla: appeal against a court-ordered extradition to America to s1sand trial for King's murder. Ray's appearance at Bow Street Magistrt.tea Court was routine. The. law •Y• be must be taken before a megiistrate evay eight days Tt'hile held oa the chargoe ol cany!ng • IUll and two forged passports, charges on which Ray WU art'erted June I to tnd a worldwide manhunt. Defense IOUttes said the "dif- llculU,." they_.. talldng "1>olrt"""' not edmlnlstratiw: and not connected with legal obltaclel to their cootenUon ' Manufacturer Proposes Gun .Control Plan NEW HAVEN,, Conn. (UPI) - A tireanns manu£acturer proposed to- day a four-point gun control progre.m including pro!Hbilion of mailorder sales aod tlbe jssuing el gunowner identification cardt. Friank Kenna, pre.sident o( the Marlins Firearm• Co., also w-ged ef. forts to educate the pubic about fire~s althoudl he said this 'fOUld not solve the problem of armed crime. KeMa suggested legislation estab- lishing a thJ"ee..day waitillg period for tile pun:base o! new guns, pro- hibition of mailorder gun sales, sales by licensed dealers only and gunowner identification c.ards issued in the man- ner of hunting"licenses . "This contxoversy over gun control legislation must be the m o s t , · misunderstood Question in the history of America.," Kenna said. "Education is the only effort you can prove to have haji any e!!ect at all." Kenna cited training programc 'being conducted by 15 po l i c e departments ~t tl>t ...-y, iJfclucling Rockville, Coon., to teach women over 18 to lose "Mr fear of firearms" and "defend themselves if necessary." Bubonic Plague Case in Denver DENVER (UPI) -Colorado health officials said Monday tests have revealed that 11 dead aquirrels found in Denver all showed positive signs of the bubonic plaeue. State and city oUicials launched an intensive study last Monday after a six-year-old Denver girl came down with the disease. It was the first case or plague in a human ever reported in Denver . A spokesman for the Colorado Department of Public Health said squirrels are the leading suspect as carriers of the disease. More than 100 dead squirrels have been !ound in Denver in the past few days. Healt!l officials have said there is cause for concern, but no cauae for panic as a reault Of the outbreak. !hat ~·1 alo)'IDt -• J>OllllQol crime. Pollllcol crim<a are not subject to the Anglo-American utradit!oa trea· ty. Ray's British lawyer, Mic b a e 1 Eugene, has only one day left to file an appeal of Ray'a extradition order, issued two weeks ago. . Frank Milton, Chief Metropolltaa Magiatrate, ordered Ray held until Ju- ly 24 on !Mgua and passport d!ergH. Only a !ew spectaton were on bend when Roy arrived from Wand..wortb Prison in a black. maria eseorted by three Jaguar police cruisers. Fishbowl Cell Awaits Return Of James Ray MEMPHIS, TellJ!. (UPI) -A "goldfish-bowl" cell awaits James Earl Ray, the accused uaa~sln of Dr~ MartlD Luther Kine Jr. If Ray's battle against extradition in London falls, he wtn be brought to Memphis to stand trial for murder. A special cell is being equJpped !or him. A Shelby County official said Sheriff Wllllam Morris has told him 0 about the special cell they wW hav1 for Ray. ''They're going to haYe closed- cirtuit television In it so they can watch him all the time and all. It is nally going to· be fitted out." Atorrls has refused to discuss the ar- rangements for Ray, charged with the sniper slaying of King as he s~ on a motel balcony hen! last April 4. "That trial is really going to be something," the official said . Another county official said sectnity police wlll ~ in the' windows of all of· fke buildings overlooking the Shelby County Criminal Courts building, and that traffic around the courthouse will be restricted. Youths Run Wild In Pennsylvania For Fifth. Night YORK, Pa. (UPI) -Roving bao<ll of. youths hw-led bricks, rocks and several fire bombs in a two-block area of a predominantly Negro district in South York eorly today. Several passing___ motoris were - jured slightly 8rRl s e v e r a l demonltraton were 8ITested during the disturbonce wllicb began aborily alter mldnlghl The youthl dispersed about 6 a .m. and authorltiet aald the situation waa ''under control." It was the filth consecutive night of dhturbances and came ebout 10 hows after Mayor John L. Snyder declared an "emergency" 11tuation after con- sulting with the clty'1 safety di.rector · and ch1el o! police. The action provides police with an additiorai eo men to meet any un· forelllHll. 1ltdat1.ona. About 300 youths, mostly Negroes, assembled at the intersection of Maple and Duke llreell, blacl!ing traffic wlth guoUne aoU:ed sofas which they set afire. They threw bricks, rocks and stones at pmdng motorists and aeveral fire bomb& were thrown ihto doorways of several homes and business estrablishments. Air Conditioners Hum Stifling Heat, Humidity 'Hold Grip on Nation Celifornla • Coastal TMA 'Wl'lll tlll '°"'!dtrt~hi ... clMI-tklrl9 tn. On-C.0.11 Ill ""' ,,.,..._ ...... tvffll"'" ,...y •ncl l'OmOr... "-Ill"'• 11¥1.. WIW to ~1111 Iii t1r1Y .n.r-. Wll'ICll 1r1 llt hlo ...._.. __ ., ... 11 ,,..,. "-· ( ' Atl1nt9 B1ktfllltl4il l !itmlrdt ... ·~ ... CtltQM Cll'Klnrlltl c1e .... 111M1 ...,_ ... .,._ ..... .,., ..... ·-·-H-1YIV ........ Ken1o11 CITY LI• V-• LOI Mwlll Ml1ml IMdl Mll\Otaut; .. Ml~ll N-Orltt"" Nt'W Yort ...... ...... ,-IM Reb1• ,-PIU1fti.tll1 ·-· '""''"' ........ ""'" (ltr RM ltwff ·-st. Lw .. 5ltlnl1 Sift Lilt• (tty ....... "" l'rllltlsu knte krt.1'1 ...... ·-,_, -- M~ ~ rtM. . .. " " " .. .... 11 •• u .. " " " " u .. " .. n " " " .. " " " " .. . " . " . " " n .n lO!I ,, .. .. .. " " " .. " .. " . " ... ,, l1 .oz . .. " ,. " . " " " • .... . " .. " ... .... " " " .. .... " .. .. . .., .,, .. '" " .. " I MISSING LINKED -Eight servicemen, re(>orted· ly AWOL from the armed forces, chained them· selves to clergymen in a special church service heralding the youths' self-styled ''resignation'' from the military in San Francisco Monday. 'lbe grvup u,., ....... consists of five soldiers, two sailors and one Marine. Chuck Jones, 20, of Ferandina Beach, Fla., U.S. Army, is shown chained to Father Richard York of Berkeley. •Resign!)· Chained to Clerics,_ They Begin 'Service of Liberation' 8 Servi~emen SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Eight American aervicemen, all absent without leave !rom their stations, began a special 48-<hour church service Monday a& a "resignation" from the armed forces. There was no official reaction from the government, but it seemed unlike- ly the self-styled resignations would be accepted. FBI and military police spokesmen said they were "studying" the situation. The servicemen-five soldiers, two sailors and a Marine -sat in a semicircle chained to clergymen in the Howard Presbyterian Church !or what the pastor, the Rev. Thcimas Dietrich, described as a 48·hour "service of liberation." · The soldiers idenUiied themselves as James Seymour, 20, Deer Park, N.Y.; Steve Anderson, 17, Las Vegas, Nev.; Keith Mather, 21, San Bruno, Calif.; Chuck Jones 20, Fernandina Beach, Fla.; and George Dounis, 23, Atlanta, Ga. The sailors are Paul Howard, 20 , Roy, Utah, and Dale Herrin, 20, Garland, Tex. The crewcut Marine is J ohn Robinson , 18, Westport, Conn. The Rev. Dietrich opened the service with a prayer with about 70 persons in attendance, including a few hippie types from the nearby Haight· Ashbury District'. The yo uths, chained by the wrists to clergymen of five faiths, said they would consider themselves "free men" when the service was concluded Wednesd3y afternoon. The Rev . Dietrich told newsmen if military police or FBI agents at· tempted to arrest the servicemen, all dressed in civilian clothes, they would be invited to participate in the service. I( they refused, he said, they would be asked to leave on grounds of violating church sanctuary. l 3 Million Coins Dollars • Gathers Value -By Phll lriterfancll • Tllt:sd•Y, Julr 16, 1968 DAILY PILOT 5 Ferries Return to Bay Are·a ·s~ene Line to Tiburon Quicker, Cheaper Tlian Buses ' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) and the Colden Gate and concerned, there's no com· pass the bar as if it didn't problem is money. Fog curled across San Fran· Bay bridges. parison between a hard seat exist. Then, as the ferry "If we dldn't we the boats cisco Bay and embraced lrOnioaUy, those are the on a bumpy bus inching its passes Alcatraz-, which ls for dghtseeing, we couldn't Alcatraz IsJand as the young very things t,bat may bring way over the bridge through about the half-way point, afford to operate the man stood on deck, swirling it back permanently. stop.and-go traffic and a tbey kind of silently get up, Tiburon ferry, It's just two a· martini .and idly watching The ferry rider can pick smooth sociable run ac.ross walk to tbe bar and buy a morning and two evening WASHINGTON (AP) -two pretty girls at the rail. up one of the 500-passenger the bay with the wind blow-single drink." runs and we couldn't subsist Stashed away in • sealed He was oo his way home red and while bay sightsee. ing through your hair. Though the regulars a .re on that;'' he said. vault in the bp.sement of the !rom work, and he'd almoSt lng boats used on the six-PJNCH TIGHT quick to push ferrying to Bedient said one solution Tr.••ury "-~ent ... A-gotten wed to this way of mile Tibw"on crossing ·at fed·up dri'vers and bus may be g o v e r n m e n t I ;;:_ -ost..--· 1 "''~ commuting. the Ferry Building, For most ferry com-riders, their pitch Ci!nters on subsidies -a subject which 0 wl'I; m unwrua pro-He and ~250 regulars do For the nex.t 3 5. 4 0 muters, the morning coffee its social advantages. San Francisco Mayor Jseph blem:s ever faced by the na-It dally from San Francisco minutes, he can skim over and donuts aod the af-But the future of large-Alioto has been pursuiJ)g tion's mooey men-what to to north bay Marin County the bay at 12 knots sampling ternoon cocktail hour -scale ferry operations w 111 with federal officials in do with three million silver _by one of transj>ortation's various aspects of "gracious drinks are 70 ceats each -undoubtedly binge on Washington. dollars. senior citizens, the ferry living" -including girl wat-have become nece~i~es whether the bay's senior San Francisco and W.arin The Treasury ht$ wrest\-boat. clling, drinking, b r i d g e rgrouather th1 angluluxarurlehs. ro"unda citizens can successfully County have j u s t ap- ed :wit!h the problem since The revival of the ferry ls playing and just plain talk· th ~ 0 b re . ti sti ~ adapt to the demands of proprlated $45,000 for a 1964 when it stopped feeding no idle luxury. It's not ing. e pine a lit e g · modern.day mass study cf possible ferry silver dollars into circula· limited to the rfch. The ~nt one-way fare LI o yd St ark of Bel-transportation. service between the two tion because all the re· 'Ibere's even an Alcatraz beats the bus cost to vedere, vice pre side n t areas. maining ones were wortbl.2'~-l~~~:::~~~~::~~~g=~~:.J Club dedicaUd to keeping Tiburon by a nickel. of a paint contracting !lrm, OPERATES FERRIES When city and county of· much more than $1 as col· -riJ.· -down the financial burden. And ferry fans are quick explained, "If you ride Lest.er Bedient, general ficials think i'n terms or the lectors items. ~! to note that the bus run regularly and buy two manager of Harbor Carriers ferry of the future, they en· One Treasury of· f i c i a 1 DIED DECADE AGO takes ·an hour-and drinks every night, the com-Inc., which operates t.be fer· vision 2,000 passenger boats estimated the _value in the "I Bee )VG! I~ ~-.1;:_~. ~. t,! h&wi bwinem The ferry died in San sometimes longer-during mlll:e bill adds up. riet1 and is part of the com-with speeds of 25 knots -a coin collectors market at with~ n.MW!il Francisco Bay 10 years ego rush periods. "Members of the Alcatraz pany that runs the sightsee-prospect that horrifies most roughly f15 million. -------------------because of the automobile As far as ferry users are Club walk on the boat and ing cruises, .said the crucial Tiburon commuters. The Joint Commission on l";i;i;~;;;i~~~~iiii;i;ii;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;i;;;~;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i the Coinage-the group or II ~::~~;:~:Ec~E Is White House Due Attan~ii·on a~·rg ,Qar .B'l'S/ review coinage T B J M policy-plans to disf:uss the 0 e ust onument silv.r dollar headaeti. in . detail at its next meeting Monday. !ST SUGGESTION But some officials don't look for a quick l!iolution. The commigsion has discussed the problem on and off 6:ince its first meeting in May, 1967. It now has before it, however, the first hard gug- gestion from a Treasury of. ficial. Robert A. W-allace, a.ssis- tant secretary of t h e TreasW'}', bas suggested <!iale of the silver dollars by the departmel1t at ttle col- lector·market value. More than 2.8 million o! the dollars now in Trtasury hmds were made at tlhe C·arson Cit, Nev., mint in the late 1880s. No silver dollars have been minted since 1935 and there are no plans at this time to mint any more. Place the dollars i n circulation and they will just disappear in the hands of coin collectors ood the coun- try won 't get what the coins are really worU!., t h e Treasury reasons. STUDIED BILLS Congress in 1966 con- sidered .bills to permit the Treasury to sell the coins foe $1 each to the heart and cancer societies which in turn would sell .them to coin- collectors .and dealers at a profii't. But the Treasury con- t.en~ed such a p l a n discriminated. against other groups just as worthy and insisted any profits should . go t('I thepublic, not to a private group. The silver in the coins is now wO'rth much more ttian their !ace value because of Uie sharp jump in the price of silver to more than $2 an ounce the past year. At a price of $1.29 an OWJCe, the silver content of the dollars is worth $1. Melting of the coins is barred by the Treasury, however, which intends to keep tlhe ban in effect in- definitely. The Orange Coast's Most Complete PRINTING SERVICE By MERRIMAN S~ll'lll UPI White House Reporter WASHINGTON (UPI) - Is the White House destined to become more of a museum than the home of future presidents? This question bas arisen in other politkal years, but M: seems to have more relevancy in 1968. None of the potential chief executives on c u r r e n t display has discussed the matter in so many words, but there is evidence poin· ting to a possibility, The president may decide that possibility is thi1: A new presideM may decide that despite custom and history, the White House is suitable as an office and a place for ~remonial en<tertainin.g, but no.t a house for pleasant family living. While this would be to ig- nore nearly two centuries <i tradition, there is no law re· quiring a pre&dent to main· tain his residence at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. SUBJECT RISES The subject came up some months ,ago before the tragic death of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Per.sons close to him said at the ti.me that Democratic nominati<>n and should he receive the Democratic nomination and go on to-win teh election, he and his family would Con- tinue to live in their home across the Potomac River at McLean, Va. More recel'litly, Vice Presi- dent Hubert H. Humphrey told friends t h a t it nominated and elected, he and his wife Muriel had no intention of giving up their large co-op apartment here in the Harbour Square sec- tion of Washington. Add these hints to other ! Ii c t fl : Sen. Eugene McCarthy, contesting Humphrey for the D em ocratic nomination, several weeks ago, albeit in the infectious atmosphere of a campaign crowd, spoke of tearing down the fence around the White House to let the general public closer to the seat of their govern- ment. Anyone familiz.r with c!lITent security problems wou1d have to conclude that an unfenced White Housee would afford the residents almost no privacy. It would be positively Jacksonian and without doubt, an interesting experiment in decidedJy un· JacksonJan ti.mes. NICE RESIDENCE On the Republican side of the matter, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller already has a handsome residence in the northwest 5 e c t i o n of Wt.6hington, a house which he USe<!i during frequent trips to the nation's capital on New York state business. Although he and his family have lived in the Executive Mansoin in Albany, they have had other f a m i 1 y quarters in New York City and the Hudson Valley. Thus they have not had to rely on the old official quarters in Albany as home. Rockefeller has given no public indication of bis feel· ings about life in the White House because he still faces a problem of. much greater immediacy -an uphill fight for the Republican nomina- tion. Thus, among the field of presidential possibilities, Republican Richard M. Nix- on, who has long sought to live in the Whi~e HQuse, seems iabput the most likely prospect to leave the cur- rent system unchanged if he is successful in his bid for the country's biehest offi1:e. The two Nixon daught.ers are in school. Jn fact, one of them, Julie, is engaged to be m·arried relatively soon to former President Dwight D. E is• nhower'.s grandson, David. 'lbere has been some talk in New York and Washington social circles that although Julie and David are considering a f;;.U wedding, that if Nixon win~ the GOP nomination, both families might &i.art think- ing in terms of a While House wedding ne1t year. WALLACE WILLING T h e independent can- didate, George Wall'8ce of A J a b a m a , undoubtedly would be more than willing to be a White House resident if the opportunity P"""!lt.d itseU, as would th e Republican perennial un· derdog, Harold E. Stassen. Many American! might wonder why any family with a chance at four rent·lree years in such a majestic dwelling as the White House would even think of living elsewhere. What thousands of tourists who tour the White House daily see truly is majestic and luxurious, but they see only the public NIGHT .nd DAY SERVICE , 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M.-SATURDAY TO A.M. TO 6 P.M. ' ·---·- DELUXE CHAMPION WM/111111 STRllPE VllRIS 2FOR$60 or ANY SIZE LISTED 8.45-15 8.85-14 8.85-15 9.00-15 9.15-15 'Fits lll(Jff Buicb, CadiUac1, Chryalm, 1111perial6, Lincolnl, MeTt:UrY•. Old11nobile1, Toronados, T·Birt11 NO MONEY DOWN Take rilontha to pay! Limitsd tims offsrl Buy now/ ..... , .• -•.•.. Prlcttl"' oh own ot firHtone .StorHr comp1titlv1ly priced at Pl19-Dtol.rt and at .df Mrvtc. ~ dllfllaying the flrtllont 1lgn, 9 ·95 $. j.~ '·~gs $J l~ ' 2 Stores to Serve You Better! COSTA MESA-NEWPORT BEACH ~75 E. 17th St. 646-2444 Super King Sizel ... ....,,.., ... flW I I rt .... wltlt m•P I • ...,. _... ldrft. 0:!'f9!W! HUNTINGTON BEACH 16171 Beach Blvd. 847-6081 BOTH STORES MONDAY • FRIDAY I A.M. • 9 P.M. ; ._ i .C OAll.V PILOT Tuosdo1. July 16, I~ 'Mind Your Own Business' ' ' Doctors Convinced Heart Transplants Will One Day Be Commonplace C;echs Renew · Red Pledge PRAGUE ( U P I) CuchoslovU!a today polite- ly told the Sofiet Un.loo .and its other crltleal comrades in the Warsaw Peet to mind thclr own bus.lness. Defense Minltter C o I . Hwtgary and Bulgaria held a pact meeting without Cieoho1lovakia • \o discuss the Communht reform drlve in thls country that has angered the RU56ians and other bloc regimes. • call the ''war oC nerves'" wiU! Moocow. \.. ''Every minute tl\a .. &61iet troops are overstaying their welcome probably c o s t s them the friendship of 100,000 Czechoslovakians,•• she said. CAPE TOWN, South Africa (UPI) -,Doctors -who pk>Deered the world's first buma.n heart transplants today ended a symposium convinced that heal't transplants y;ill one day become commonplace. Or. C. W,alter Llllehel of the United States told a news conference ttie "final conclusion" ci tbe J 2 participants in Uie Yi' •.!k long symposiuin was that "heart transplantaticn is here to stay." By po0ling the i r ex- perience, Lillehei said t..ie participants had learned a "great deal'' and as a resuJt the time needed to solve problems involved in heart and other organ transplants ·'will be greatly shortened." Phone Strike May Move Convention C lt"I C A G 0 (UPl)-The De.mocratic National Co nvention could be moved from Chicago if a strike by telephone company elec- trical workers is not f!etUed by the end of this week. Democratic N a t i o n a 1 France Tests 2nd Bomb PAPEETE, Tahiti (UPI) France tested a ''medium-powered" nuclear weapon Monday, the French Bastille day, at its ·Pacific test range 800 miles from Th.hi ti. The blast, second in a series that is to end in late August wi~ detonation 0£ France's first hydro g-e n weapc:lll, caused bitterness in Tahiti, where there js s tr o n g anti-nuclear sen- timent. Reports on Tahiti said the weapon te9ted M o n d a y ~ utilized enriched unranium rather than plutonium used in previous French tests. These reports could not be confirmed. The test was held at Miruroa Atoll. Tahitians said ttley feared the tests would contaminate wa'ter and fish in the region. Chairman John Bailey said Monday the party will have tO "take another look" iI the strike against the Illinois Bell Telephone Co . goes beyond the weekend. Bailey acknowledged that there was a question as to whether electrical equip- ment can be installed soon enough for news media to give the convention, scheduled to open Aug. 26, wfficient coverage. Meanwhile, the union's chief negotiator, R o b e r t Nickey, said Bell was "stall- ing" on a union offer to put the 69.Qay-old strike before binding arbitration. Nickey said the union was con- sidering legal action if the company rejected the union arbitration offer. The International BrotherhO<>d of Electrical Workers (IBEW) made the offer Saturday. The com· pany said it was studying the oiler and would respond "as expeditiously as possl· ble," but bad made no reply by early today. Nickey said the union was considering a complaint to the National Labor Rela- tions Board, that Bell had failed to bargain in good faith. He said any legal ac- tiori definitely w o u 1 d jeopardize the opening or the convention 1*fe. lie said thii..s ineluded the "'l'hat's quite contrary to . n1ajor problem of the body'~ the truth," he said. "What natural tendency to "reje~t''. we feel is that heart transplanted hearts a n d transpla:n.tatklo is for tJl,e pa- othcr organs. tient . who has permanent One suggesti~ disc:usSc~ · and in-etrievable damage in al the symposium, L1llche1 his · heart w h e r e a s said, was the creation of mechanical 'hearts will be of record centers in all the inestiIDable v a I u e to y,•orld's major cities where thousands of patients v.iho the blood al)d tissue types of ha v e t e m p 0 r a r y' pot~n.tial heart dooors and derangements of their heart reapients would be kept on functions. , LBJ Joins Nuclear Ban . ' . By Soviets file. "Perhaps one or the. n:iost q~NEVA (UPI) ~ Presi· By the ~se of s~oh cen-. c.om.lll:on te.mporary dent·Johnson, in a personal ters, he said, recipient and derangements· 1 s the .cor· to th 17 nation donor could be, "matched up · onary thrombosis, tihe so-, m.essage e · Gen. Martin Dzur, In an in· tervlew in the ofliclal Czech Communist party newspaper Rude P r a v o , pledged anew bl.s Liberal Red regime's allegiance to the East Bloc. Then be quoted from the bloc's Woarsa.w Pact Treaty Which says relaUona among member nations mu.at be "guided by the strlvlnll for mutural respect and , in- dependence and the prin- ciple of noninterference into the internal ailai:rs o f · another State." Dzur's interview appeared a day after the $<)vlet Un.ioo, East Germany, Po 1 and, Dz"°, like other Ciech leaders, obviously dkt not w.ant tG disturb ~ RusslaP1 too much. The Soviet Army sUll has 1:roop!5 and t«nks ln Ciecboslovakla, left over from Iut month's bloc war maneuvera and being very, very slowly withdrawn. _ "If anybody thinks far any reason whatsoever t:hat our democratization process is a withdrawal f r o m Com· munist ideals, then he is very much mistaken," Dzur said. · Uoofflc.lal Czechs were less diplomaticJ A woman interviewed on Prague television spoke of the ordeal Czech newspapers Many here had 1eared the Soviets would use force to keep the Cuohs in line. 'Mle fear centered on the in· fantry and tMlk forces sent into Ctechoslovakia 1 a s t month. 'The SovJet forces did not leave June 30 when the war games ended. They stayed, tbey promised to go, they stayed, they promised to go, they stayed, some went. Prague television s a 1 d Monday nl~ the pullout that began Saturday and which the Soviets bad said W<>uld take three days now .,. will stretch out unW at least r>unday. proper!Y" :ind ''all of us, called coronary attack, in D1s~·ament Conference, society as a whole, would w:hich recovery \\'Ould take joined the Soviet Union· to- thcn benefit by ~e .use of place in many whb D<?W die day in pledging to work for tlhese organs." He saJ.d su~h if their h~ were. g1veJ1 a riew measllt'es to curb scJ1em~s a.lready were 1n period of ass1sta~. . nuclear weapons. opera~on 1n so.~e of the "Also mechanical hearts Johnson wannly weleom- world s m·a,jor c1t1es. will be. of ~t value for ed Moscow's acceptance of L~ebei rejected . s ~ g-preparing ~tients for l:leart America's long.standing gesbons that meoharucal tMnsp~ntation and a I 8 0 proposal to negotiate a hear!-5 pose a threat to supporting t~err:. after heart limitation on and eventual U.S. Backs Mideast Peace Bid 1....---COSTA MESA---, HOWARD JOHNSON cardiac transplants. tra1l51llantaUon. reduction of missiles. * * * * * * Symposium Doctors Denounce Australian The President also men- tioned the possibility of reaching agreement on the JERUSALEM (UPI) peaceful use of the floors of President Johnson has real· the world's oceans, and ban· firmed United States sup- ning the installation of. sea-port (or a peaceful set- bed nuclear weapons. tlement of the ArB.b-Israeli Johnson's message was COnflict in a personal note to read to the conference by Premier Levi E s b k o I ; chief U . S . disarmament diplomatic sources zald to- MELBOURNE, Australia "I suggested that as we nl!gotiator William C. Foster day. - (UPI) -An Australian doc-are going in this direction at as the confer~nce resumed The note was delivered tor said today he was great speed, and not know-after a }ong recess to permit · Monday night by George misunderstood in suggesting Ing where we are getting to. United Nations discussion of BaU, U.S. Ambassador to mental patients be used for is it beyond the bounds of disarmament. the United Nations . donors in heart transplants. possibility that ... we could The s 0 vie t negotia~or, The note made no mention Dr. Max Griffith said the look at a mental institute Alexei A. Roshchin, in his of the five-point U.S. plan on suggestion, made a year ago and say here's an ament, a opening statement, r an the Middle East published in the Medical Journal o( child without any brains at through the nine points con-after the June 5-10, 1967 Australia, was made to all. We will use him as a tained in the July 1 disanna-Middle · East War, the make doctors think of the transplant. ment memorandum issued sources said. consequences instead of "I asked this as a purely by Premier Alexei Kosygin. Johnson's note called !or a c are en in g down the provocative question to try These-nine points included I as ti n g A!'ab-lsraeli set- transplant path. to underline in my mind, limitation and reduction of tlement based on ten1torial SPECIAL FISH FRY ALL YOU CAN EAT . ' Every Wednesday ·JuM 0 DOUBLE COCKTAIL For· the Price Of One 4:30 P.M. to 7 P.M. •• °"' Cocktell I.out• $ 19 Tasty bon•l•11 FISH fill•t. Crisp 9old•n brown fr•nch fri•s. Col• 1l•w. T •ri•r t•ut•. Hot roll. Butt•r. Doctors attending a four-anyway, that we are going missiles and the nuclear-integr~ty, Independence of day symposium on heart .ahead at such a rapid speed free seabed idea. all states, settlement of the Ho· WARD JOHNSON'S transplants in Cape Town without really thinking of There was no indication (Arab) refugee problem and denounced Griffith's article the consequences." that the missile talks W<Juld emphasized the need for all as ludicrous and "absolutely Griffith said he is opposed be held at once on the the states in the region to inhuman.'' to any transplants "for sidelines of the Disarm•· work out their own peace 2750 HARBOR BLVD. -COSTA MESA "If my critics had read -~lh>i<"~l~~~·::.• ____ ..!m!10e~n~t_<Co~n~fe"'re~n~c!;•·c_ ___ ..!1!;er'.!;m~s!:., .!:th:::e'-!:so:::ure::;:e!'.!':!'l:::d:... -"==================-=-the full article," Griffith e ica rcasogs. said. ''They would havel realized that my suggestion was made to make them 1 pause !or awhile. Now its • ALL CASH PRIZES DOUBLED 35 becomes $10 825 becomes $50 850 becomes $100 8100 becomes $200 "$2500 becomes *5000 Come to Chevron Island ·Five times more cash prizes than any Chevron Standard Game ever. And now each prize ls worth twice!!! much ! COMMUTER RIRLINE.S • FROM ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT $7JH 22 .minutes over the freeways in a 20 passenger Cable Jet to LA. International. Flights every hour. We call il ·rhe connection you've been wailing for.· We think you will too. Call your travel agent, your favorite airline or Cable Commuter at (714) 985-2803, \ ' CHEVRON DEALERS STANDARD STATIONS NO PURCHASE NECESSARY • LICENSED DRIVERS ONLY • • • .. , No Loeal Laws! . Gun Bill Changes May Anger Cities SACRAMENTO (AP) -A ban oa local f1rearm1 lawa has been. wrJttcn fnto the Ieglslature'1 major gun con- trol bill - a move that could stir the aDfer of local Of• ficlals seekln& to tourben their own lawa. The revision of the gun owner licensing measure was announced Monday by its author, Wlnfleld A. Shoemaker of Lompoc, Assembly Democratic! Caucus chairman. new gun ng!llrltlon In - Just u the otate ••crU<J law did to locaJ law1 in the pasl · Shoemaker 1ald the 1ix· hour Ctlmlnal Procedure Committee bearing Oil the meuure last weet brought out some of the objections. However, be sild "there is no diMgreement'' with the objectlves Of 1lle bill which he s a t d are "strengthening I aw en- forcement'• ablllty .to trace weapons" and keeping guns away from persons who are high risks to public safety. "'' T ....... Lost Boy ' Surprised At Alarm PALM SPRINGS (UPI) - "Wbo told you where I was?'• were the fl.rat words uttfftd by 10.year-Oid Bob- by Sitz When be was found by rescuers who had search· td for him since lut Thurs· d1y. 'Ibe San Diego youngster was found safe and unbanned Monday in Tab· qultl Canyon in the San Jacinto Mountains, about 13 miles from ldyllwUd where be was camping wtth a church group. Shoemaker reported the change in a news release on amendmenta drawn up to meet 11 legitlmate ob- jections" to the measure which still faces a vote in the Assembly Criminal Procedure Committee. · Shoemaker said a major objection was "that in the event of a takeover of the state by a foreign power, in· formation a b o u t who possesses firearms could be useful to the invaders .and enable them to disarm a potential resistance move· ment." BLACK PANTHER liART Y MEMBERS CIRCLE COURTHOUSli AS HUIY NEWTON TRIAL ·1tEGIN~ _ Bobby said he hodn't eaten aaything ror the entire Ume he was lost but drank water from a nearby atre:am. Other alterations were designed to prevent hardSbiPI to antique (Un coUectors and to calm those who are afraid of what a tougher gun control law would mean if the state ever were invaded. Shoemaker said his staff ·• deleted a leCtion cl the bill that would have allowed local agencies to design their own versions of gun controls, 50 the state, through passage of thls measure, w:lll pre-empt the field." If 1lle bill is signed into law, it would prnumably nullify existing l.o c a l firearms reg>Jlations -such as San Fraoc.isco's brmd DA to Ask Execution For Sirhan LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The district attorney's office plans to seek the death penalty for 5;.rhan B. Sirhan although investigators have not ruled out a conspiracy in the assassination of Sen. Robert F . Kennedy. Chief deputy dist. atty. Lynn D. Compton; head of the three-man prosecution team, said he ls preparing the cue against Sirhan ''with the idea of seeking the death penalty under the theory offlr st-degree murder which includes premeditation." Compton refused to say what evidence, if any, had been uncovered that would indicate a conspiracy was responsible for the shooting last June 5 at the Ambassador Hotel. Sirhan is scheduled to enter a plea Friday when his preliminary h e a r l n g resumes. Defense attorney Russell E. Parsons has refused to disclose the plea to be entered by the 24-year- old Jordanian. TURTLEFACED ROBBERY EMERYVILLE (UPI) 'J11e worlds of high fashion .and bank robbing collided Monday as four men wear- ing black turtleneck sweaters burst into a Bank of America branch bran- dishing. pistols. One robber ran in the back door and fired a shot at the ceiling as the other three appeared at the front guns in evidence. All had pulled their turtleneckJ up over their no1e1 for a mut. They escaped with $8,068. LEGAL NOTICE M11ma11:1t~I .Do FALSE TEETH Rock, Slld• or Sllp? , Don't lift lD , .... vi tu:e w.Ul 10CllltD1DC. wotl'O ..... ~ ,_ a t UM W1'0QI' U-..791' _. _..,. IUUI men -'-" ,.. ...,.... a Ut.U. 1'A4TaTW oa JO\lf Jl'l.a...._ PA8'IIZl'B ~ Diie ..aa ar-. ,,., .................... "' ia. ........................ . Dlm.UU. ... llt .. -. .. . ......... ""' ---.. -.. . 0. P.vtWl'S •aD .... .Jury Venire Hit "Personally I believe this is a very far-fetched and unlikely possibility," he sald. However, be amended the bW to enable the flreanns licenae files to be destroyed if the governor or actlng governor d e c i d e s there is a danger they may 2,500 Demonstrate at 'Huey' Trial Bobby appeared none the wane for his ordeal except for a few scralthes and bruises but was examined at Desert Hospital here. be captured. · "I believe that with this amendment, and unfounded but often expressed fear and objection to the measure has been alllyed," he said, adding that, "we have gone far beyond the customary practices in legislative draf: ting to accommodate anyone who expressed a n ob- jection." OAKLAND (UPI) -The Alam<da County Courthouse state finally put Huey P . chanting "Free Huey" and Newton on trial for murder oarrying signs that .said Monday. His lawyer tm-.''Anything 1-l'appens to Huey, mediately sought a 12th the Sky's the tJ.m.it." There delay, contending the jUry was only one minor incident. venire was stacked against · The demonstrators said his client, who founded the they would return when the Black P.anther party. trial of .the 2&-.year-old. black Newton the black militant power advoc-_te resumed ta. is Charged with first degree day.. · murder in the shooting NewtOn'1 trial .on charges death ol a policeman. . . he killed Oakland policeman demonstrators, equa l I y ·"John F. Frey, 25, last Oct. A b o u. t 2 , 5 0 0 1.8 was slow to get started. demonstratorr, e q u a 11 y Superior Court J u d g e divided between white and Monroe Friedman said be black, marched around tbe was going ahead with the heavily guarded 10.story trial unless stopped by a higher court. NewtOn's at· torneys already have won 11 delays. A 47-member jury panel, including six. Negroes, was called Monday and dllmiss· ed. unUl today as the court heard arguments a n d {e,timon; on a defense ma. tion to quash the panel because it was not repre1;en· uUve Of tbe <01111111ililty. Defense attorney Charles R. Garry &-gued the ll.rt of jury panelists "does not renect the community." He said the list from which the jurors were picked was ''loaded witb whlte racism." Now! YOU really can make buttonholes that look expert ... because there is a new and wonderful CJJUIEPINCJJU1TONHOLER on the 4 newest ·~OUCH&$EW . . zig-zag sewing machines by Singer! Just tum the dlal on the Built.Jn Buttonholer ..• and you turn out a perfect. buttonhole in seconds! ... Newest Golden TOUCH & SEW· sewing machine by SINGER has Bullt·ln · Buttonholer. So do ihree more of the five TOUCH &SEW machines. -,_ ~~ ' < ,,~. '\, ' . ,,. Whatelg 1.1..atw? A Speed Control with an Electron le sense that ~eeps the sewing speed constant no matter how thicJc or thin the fabric is. AllSofthenewat TOUCH & SEW machines have, The exclus1¥e Push-Button Bobbin that winds up !'.!B!!t in the machine, sms you 18 steps In ordinary bobbin winding. 7WOf&sl:'8~rr.:= Choose your favorite from $J499S "7ioti Ml p,,_,.,,,. fl ac 11 NG IR,_.,.,. SINGER .... ,......,,.-~. IUINA PAK •AlDIN •aOVI lllO On Th Mel ' 9911 Chapman TA 1-7540 510"4010 lu•n• Park C..ter Orange County Plata COSTA MDA HUNTIN•TON HACH 2100 Herbor llvd. Ed'ln9 ar at 8t 1ch Kl t -llH lt7-10'4 1 Heritor Cant1r Huntln9fon l11ch Canter .. ANAHllM Ill H. Lear• ·. 535.1 i26 Anaheim C.n+tr SANTA ANA Oowntewn 105 W. 4th St. Ki 2-1945 LA MIU.DA 11024 S. Lutw•il•r LA 1-1532 l• Mired• Ct nftr COSTA MISA lri1t•I & St.rif~.,. l40,2'll Soutft Co11t Plt1• About 200 Black Panthers lined up along two sider of the courthovse. They wore black trou3ers, b 1 a ck jacketi and bl'act befets. · . ~y· did net· jciln the . 400 marchers who walked sk>W· ly around the building, They stood •t pa.lade re!k 'The boy was sighted by a ., search helicopter when he waved to it. The first man to re•ch him was Al Andrews of the Rivei'slde Mountain Rescue Group Inc., who said the boy didn't reallze he was the object of a maJSive IM?<h. The only incldeat came when a group hauled dewn the U.S. Flag from in .hont of the courthouse. SberUf's deputies intervened and one arrest was made. Robe.rt A vak.ian, 25, son .of an Alameda County superior court judge, was booked oo charges of petty theft. Before t h e helicopter could land in ~ rugged country, ground crews had r to build a wooden platform and clear a 50· square foot area to accommodate the rotor blades. , SPECIAL PURCHASE FASHION . . FABRICS at SINGER 19~~-w~• ~ prlnb 1.,itntyt Pt1ln ind novelty only WllYtS-tolllll• ~todr-yd. clllld1111'•-· Wilt...,.r, 4f'wldL Oon1 dlloyl Sinctt ~ tllm febrics II • """' · 'C: 11wf"now we're pmlnc ttM·llVlnrs 11on1 to yo1. choosl from this ipoClli Mloctiao II ""' loco! SINE COOllt todlJI lllloti wp ,_, .. ff"' SI NO IR....,,, SINGER • GARDIN GROVE 8831 Chapman Oran9• County l'lcaa 530-4010 ANAHllM-515 N. a.-. Anaheim Center 535-1126 HUN11NGTON IEACH Edinger at leach Hmtinghlft Center "897-1041 COSTA MESA-2300 Hwior H...itor Center 549·1105 COSTA MISA lrlatol & 5-fl.-,"9ti Coa1t 1'1-540.263S AIR . Cl'UFOIUllA •• m-•1r llnT n Ill fllllll ••• •• , OUlt JIC.I 11111 IUClll SUl/m DEPAIT II T1llD llU.T fOll1Hl nan• SAN IWCISCO lllT AIU S14H ont1 MY fare plus tax FOii lltSmATIOltS • CALL YOut mm AGEllT DI AIR CAUfOllllA: '""' °""" r..oolr (714)51Ml!O 1~•"11 ""' LA. Zoitll 70111 .... CALIFORNIA lltEWJllm . I I :· .. ' . .. • ... ' ·. • I > For The Record ·-Meetings T"ldaz, Jult 16, 1968 Fair Schedule Lifeguard . Fund Cut · Schedule of events for the Orange County FJ.ir and Ex· po1itioo'1 alx<lay run from Tuesday throUllh Sunday b u follows : Protested • 9 a.m.-2 p.m. TUESDAY SANTA ANA -orange Junior National Horse Show -Arena Cout cities , got iome COD· FFA and 4·H Judging_ Judging Area sideration here Monday for Queen Preliminaries -Amphitheater their protests of cuts in the Popcorn Theatre.-Central Grounds county contribution to . FF A and 4-H -Judging Area lifeguard 1ervices. Horse Show -Arena The Board of Supervisors --- Queen Prelim1 -.Amphitheater restored '7,650 to the money Horse Show -Arena Horse Show -Arena to lie, paid to the cities ol Band and Parade -Parade Grounds the $32,322 county AdmJ.nia. Horse Show -Arena trative -OffiQ!l' Robert 'E. Band Parade -Pande Ground! Thomas bad cut from city Horse Show -Arena requests. Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds The communities will get Horse Show -Arena Trio Jailed For Assault On Officer Fire Calls 3-4 p.m. 4-5 p.m. MURtllltftft ._,. 5~ p ffi ll:•2 •.m. MOndlf, ur tire, !Oil · • Sin"" Orlon 6-7 pm l2 :l7 p,m .. pl111e cr1sh. welf crf 3000 • • Pelm Ave. 3:3' p,m, nscvt, s~mmtnltle ind 7 0 P!~hYr.t 1:n p.m., rft(u1, 11161 ..,,. p.m. G()fh1rd, SP. 4' U:st 1.m. Tut•dl'f, rn1cllul 11d, 311 ~VI A'(e. 8·9 p.m, Wn!mlllfkr 3:SJ 11.m. MllncltY. 1r1H flni, south of 75"12 Wt1tmlnstor Ave. F•nlalfl Val"'1 t:~1:;_m. Monday, niKut, 17~1 Santi 2·3 p.m. Queen Finals -Amphitheater 5 percent more than they ..... T •-"""JM -A trio ~-did last year, or $166,872. IUl:IUl.L ..-uv WE.DNESDAY They ~d re q u e 4 t e d evfdently didn't like the way Junior National Horse Show -Arena •191 -=~., the Angels game W86 going FFA and 4-H Judging -Judging Area • ,~. d Senior Citizens Show -Amphitheater The county has been reim· and deci ed to provide their Horse Show -Arena bursing the cities for own entertainment here at FFA and 4-H -Judging Area lifeguard services for the Anaheim Stadium were jail· Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds past decade on tile theory ed Monday night on chaiges Horse Show -Arena that most peoPJe who use of assaulting a police of· Horse Show -Arena the beaches ar.e n o t fi~r. Band and Parade -Parade Gr9unds residents or the city offerlng Anaheim police said Sgt. Horse Show -Arena the service. Gene Boyle moved into the Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds The five cities involved area where the three men Horse Show -Arena are Newport Beach, Hun· were blO'IVing 8 trumpet and Band and Parade -Parade Grounds tington Beach, L a g u n a throwi'ng beer around. Festival of Nations -Amphitheater Beach, Seal Beach and San When be asked them to Clemente. THURSDAY quiet down, th<!y aitacked him, Sgt. Boyle charged. He Junior National Horse Show -Arena was held in Anaheim Com· FFA and 4-H Jtldgint-Judging Area Landscape munily Hoapltal !or Pageant of the Flag -Amphitheater observation 1ulfering from Horr;e Show -Arena cuts and bruisn. Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds Bids Sought Jailed were ch a r 1 es Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds Mercurio, 41, of Bellllower; Horse Show -Arena E T•n<ri 23 f Horse Show -Arena Biddlng will open next ugene .._.., • 0 Horse Show -Arena month for a $620,000 con· DoWDey and John E · G tract to landscape three Williams.!. 28, of Norwalk. Band and Parade -Parade ro1P1ds They are charged with Horse Show -Arena miles of roadside along the ~sault on a police officer, Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds newly opened Interstate 405 resisting arrest and disturb· HOl"6e Sh.ow -Arena in West Orange County. . th The project ]Deludes the '-=m='g'=:;;e::::pe=ac:;;e:;;. ===;;:::::; Bar)?ersbop Quartet Contest-Ainphitheater roadside area from two·''" SHARP FRIDAY tenths mile southeast of Sheep Auction -Auction Grounds Brool<'hUTSt St. in F'ounatin 12:12 p,m., rt.cue! "12 Ctn!lntl Ave. (Oi i Mna ':ll 1.rn. Mondly, f1IH1 t !trrn, 27H Cll>lllt A~. 3 , • \1 :$0 1.m .. 11tu 111rrn SSll c ... 1er SI. ""t p.m. 310S p.m., trash llrt, ,jov. Park Orlvt 4.5 p ffi l :il p.m .. l1!u 111nn, Blktr Stroet • • 1rld Harbor Boulevtrd 5-6 p.m. Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds Valley t.o Beach Blvd. near Pageant of the Flag -Amphitheater \Vestmin.51.er · p t of th Fla A hith t The State Department of agean e g -mp ea er Public WOl'ks Monday set Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds Band .and Parade -Parade Grounds the opening for Aug. 22 in If you'rt 1 1h1rp tr•d•r, u1t lht DAILY PILOT'S ftmtut Oiint·A·llnt cl1nifi1d 1d1 S•f· urdtyf. M1k1 I btfttt dttl , • , whtthtr you'rt buyin9 er 1tlli119. •:n 11.m.. 1r1ss J111, 100th tncl of ,,7 v1~1rd w1r u-p.m. 4:06 p.m., rescve. '11 Ellh•r St. Beef and Hog Auction -Auction Grounds, _Los'.:'.:'.:~A:'.:n~ge::l:es:· _____ J=========== Band and Parade -Parade Grounds 6:1' p,m., m!sdl11vous 1l1rm, :!ISO CluMIOU.e Rotod 7-8 p.m. _D_E_A_T_H_N_O_T_l_C_E_S_ ::~lp~,;.. DAWSON Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds IRA Rodeo -Arena IRA Rodeo -Arena Tempo and Stevens -Amphitheater Back Porch Majority -Amphitheater ~~~~$ 11~~11~1:,b~·=ve~"~~""~1,~ Beef and Hog Auction -Auction Grounds J"n, DI 1111 ho<M; two son1, Carlton E. atld Greg Ft Dtwson, of Cot!t SATURDAY MtMi partnfs, Mr. tnd Mr1. EOWln C. 01woon, v+Mlla1 11.i. ... P11v1111 Turr11 r 2 3 p m Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds of E•tfer; Wanda StJeeper, Vlsall1; • · • l!osemarv Tll'll~k•r. Frnnn; •nd IRA Rodeo -Arena one trendchlld, Klntl11 K. Dtwoon. »rvicn, wec1~scr1r. 11 1.m., in lh• Up With People -Amphitheater c1111>9I If Pttlflc View. tn"r"'""'t, J , '. P1c111c v iew M1rnPri.1 P1rk. o lreo:led .-. p.m. Up With People -Amphitheater br P1_c:Ulc v'.PA'i1£EY~ , IRA Rodeo -Arena er1c E~ Ptuley, 2121 w1111e. Aw .. 4-5 p.m. Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds ~~iv:-'~r ~~~n:':', 4~~'."-Jg1r~:: ~ p.m. Band and Parade -Parade Grounds Rot>er• o. P1uifY1 brclMr, Stfl>Mn 7 ° pm Po~rn Th•atre Central Grounds Oougt1s Paul•; 1lllt•-. Shlrl Lr.nn, 111.8~ ' ·. r~~ "' - o1 111e ,._, m1i.rn11 .1ranap1ren1t, ·10 pin Tempo and Stevens -Amphitheater Mt-. Ind Mri. RsdforCI E. Dalley, $1n!t ' ' A1111 1>11trn11 1r1nc1rno111er, Mrs. ' Back Porch Mapority -Amphitheater F1unle Paui.v, West vlrglnl1. Miu of IRA Rodeo _ • -ena !fie AnAl!'h, WedntldtY. 7:il t .m,. St, n..i· • ~lms C.lllcllc Qlull:ll. · lnttrmenr, P•clllc$~'J"e:'~~ry. Olr~ltd b1 , SUNDAY . ROACH 3 , o. DH11,.·11.aec11. ™n Pcsiaa· L•11~. 2· p.m. Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds Minion v1110. 0t11 "' dff1h, July u . IM' Rodeo -Arena Survlvtd bf r..Jsblnd, J1mt• W. R~ch; • -""" dlu9M.,-, v11.,.1e euen1 Me11111. 3-4 p.m. 'Boys Club Variety Show -Amphltheater Off, tncl STB>llllllt Ltt, A I Of• IM • ~to:::en~, ~:'° :"i\i,.s'~":;: IRA Rodeo -Arena o01111d J. s1:1?. Services lodar, T1111~ 4-5 p.m. P(,.pcom Theatre -Central Grounds e~;.;,.1 tn~ ~~::W.!. ~t~~ • Bitnd and Parade -Parade Grounds ~·1c;1~c te~itic ~rltw 't:rif~1'1 \.i~w 5-6 p.m. Band and Parade -Parade Grounds Mori..,.rv. WHALL •7:3 p.rn. Popcorn Theatre -Central Grounds Atlhur 01n111 w11111. :t21 Ni rcluui, 8-JO p.m. Glen Campbell -Amphitheater corOlll de1 Mtr. 0111"' de•lfl, July is. Frank Welker Amphitheater ~ur11lvtc1 bf. Wiit, Corlnl\f. Of ~ llorne; -- SOfls, Arthur, Jr •. end Rot>ut. Lrnn: Sugatshoppe -Amphitheater "•Wlltllf', EU•n Madc!r!Clef, Dtlroil; IRA Rod. eo _ •-ena •rid lhl"W 11ru1dCl'llldrt11. S.....lct" tu ThurlOClay, , p.m~ In #It Clllpel 11 -----------------------v=11r1'~~~~1•~P•~'')~!11k DEATH NOTICES DEATB NOTl"'ES IN'Moi'l\ltrMARTIN -----=~-==----------~c:.._:__"':_::_:_ Jol\n 0. Marlin. :ns KLl'lh l"l1ce, CLARK • RAMIREZ Nrw;>on llttch. Dtlt ot dt-lth, July is. ~.~ ••. <0•,•,~, ·."!. 0.0,,.l_dtf!Jo'•"'·,,'.',~.~,.~,.el Jut1111 M. R1m!re1, INl1'1i '1"1-st .. S111"¥l"'9'11 bY Wlh , Alltt: four t<im,, "" "" "'· '• • '' -' .... •·· J 00 Chtt!n, Lent Be.chi Leo, !owt; Ptul, by wile, Fin Cl1rk1 son, Jtrr"/ Clark, in,..,,, urv.. uy 1cn, u 1111 Cos11 Ml'U, tncl Allrl>d,. Gl~llU !WO "'Y9h~. J1ce11111lyn 11run11tr, 1n 00 da11Qh'9!', O.brt J,/ bre!tl1r1, J111e Ind dluthlerr. Mr•. Merv Fr.nc:h. tlJWt, Corcnt "el. Mtri brollltr, R:t'ylYIOfl(t 0R1rnon1 S11ler1. E1thlr Rtmltlllt. •nd" Sl•ter Allee M•tfln, HOll\IWCIOll; Citric. tnclla1111 tltttr. Mn. Merl• Plltll• ll•mlrtr: L11l11 ·-tnd brolhtr, Robtrt Marll11, Otlrotl; tlsl1rj Btrnttt, K111n11 Ind thrtt M•rr,:ret Mttllneit l1lhtr, Jull1n Mrs. ~''''" GlrouJt. Anthelm; 1 a1i»11ch ll.,ren, . S.rvlns. w"~1div. Rim rtU lllOl!ttr, J111tllh!n1 Jtlfnlrtt. ' , ... R:os1rv. Thursdar 1:31 11.m .. PHii tt•n(tchlkl,.n 1nc1.-11t•l·Gr1Mc~lid. l ::IO '·'"·· n th1 Ct>aptl •! 'Paclllc Fe,..,Uy Cclonltl Funeral Horn._ it~ Ro.trv, Thurlday.L a p1m., St, JMchlm1 Vltw, "'Ith Rtll, Wtrl'tn Studer of· aulim M ' Od • • '' Tune in the Colorful Sound of Orange county M -I us1.c. RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM From Fc;ishion Island, Newport Beach C"tlhollc Cllur!Jl. 1te<t11oem Mau Friday, fclllllnf .. 111i.rintnt. Paeltlc View 111• r •v:i. : '·'"" · • 1,m,, St. Jotdllm•. Interment, Holy M1m0< ti Park, OlrKftd bf St!l P~lYCtri> Ctltloll(. 1,,hurdl, St1ntcn. St1>lllc:h1r Ctrn11trv. Olf'e<'ftll' bv llell llroaOW1y Mortu1ry, 110 Brctdwey,· _!"~";;""Li'~',,:'.'~"':._~":•~'"'.'._.'.:"~":"~"~' ======================= 11•-•Y Mll>r!utrv, nn lll'Ol<twtv, Co111 Me11, .. F11ner11 Homt. C'Oltl Mt••. ' DA VIS . llkRTLEY, JJI, Jamei W. H1rtlev, ·Jr, 7U Flcwtr St, Co.ti MtH. Ottt Of dttlh, JulY 16. 5ul'llJvtd bY "'lft, Htrrltl; two son<, Brltn, Monrov!11 tn(t J tmts R. Hartin. Hunl lllOtofl Bt8d'I/ "•uth11r, Mn. ~eoll Scohlleld, T"Ousend Daku brt>!ller, Rdl:ittt H•r1!fr. Dll;1tbqm11 1l1ter, Abby llodl'I, T.i11u · fester ""'"""'· Mri. JOln TI~ c "e· ck. P•~1 1nd nlnt' ertlldci.lklrer>. Stntice:1 Jloendlnt. lltll llrot<tway Mertu.IY, 110 lltPldwtW, CO$lt Mew. DALT.! MORTUARIES Conlu del Mar OR 3-94!0 Colla Meoa Mrs:uu BELL BROADWAY MORTU!JIY ' Ut Broadwty, Coata Me11 LI 8-Ml3 PACIFIC VIEW . MEMORIAL PARK Cemelery e Mortaary Chapel Siii Padfle Vie" Drive Newport Beach, cauton.la t4'-%'10I PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL l'IJNERAL DOME 71t1 Bola An. II'_ .. _ - SMITR'S MOllTllABT 11%'1 Mala 81. B-•lleado LE Miii WESTCLIFP llOllTl/ABT 4%1 E. J'/llo 81., Colla .... ...... WESTMINSTEB MEMORIAL PABlt M«tury 6 Cemetery Clsapdl ·--· "-Al-1711 e IN-%4%1 Ntoml II: .Oe~h. •n ) Ad1m1 St .. Midway CllV. Survlvtcl bf gr,.11bcn, K1nnelh Z~ll! Incl' Grt11dd&uGhltrj Ktlhy Ztrcll. Strvlce1: Wte111tU11v, ~·'"" Petk F1ml1y COfOnltl FuMrtl om•. ORLANDO Evt Orl111do, ;r.n .'rho'rPt Alie., W11trnln1i.r Su Lvtcl by !wt da1t11h.t1ri, F1or1n D1mfrvn, tlld 11dt 51..,..d::t i 11111 lhrte Wtnckhlldren. RDstrY, Wtcln'56.ly, • P.m.. Ptek F1t11llY Colon1al F1m1r•I Home Rt-ouftm M•u. lhYndey, t t .m., 11!eutd 5 • c r 1 m't n I Ctlllollc Chllrcti, Wutmln11t•, LUNA LET'S BE FRIENDLY Hunfinalon Beach Visitor 642-6014 Costa Mesa Visitor 642-6014 So. ColSf Visitor 494.0579 H1rbor Visitor 642-3535 U you bave ntw neighbors or Jmow of anyone movtna: to our area, please teD ua 10 that ,,. may extend a frlt11d17 welcome and help them to llecOm• acquainted In their .... llU!'oundtnp. I\ dUllU IS -21 "YESTERDAY MEETS TOMORROW" AT THE ALL-NEW 1968 ORANGE COUNTY FAIB &:EXPOSITION 1111 llUllll l!.W am Wed., July 17 "Fe1tival of Nation1"-c.st of l!IO Fri. & S.t., July 19-20 Nino Tempo •April Stevens The Back Pordl Majority Sun., July 21-Glen Campbell Comic Frank Welker 'A---* Galnt HN RecreaUofl Vtl'lk:le & loll ._ . * Jurtlor ,. Ir. lmlll Mini,.,.* * 1,000'• et [Xhfblb * .... & ...... F'lllttum * lpedll Cfli'*'9ft's -* * ,..,,.,...,. ..... * c.Msl...., * llA C .. lodaa Frf.,-8 Pm.: S.t.-2 ,_m.. & I p.M,: Sun.-4 p.m. I. 1 ,.,n. NIWJlOrl Blvd. & Fair Dr, Ccotl - TUE., JULY 16-"MISS ORANGE COUNTY TOMORROW" BEAUTY 'PAGEANT Sentf.flMll ~ p.m .. P"lnait-4 P.'"· CURTAIN T1MI POI Ila NAMI STAii SHOW1 l :Jt P.M. • • . Policeman's Trial ' ' Fellmv Officers Take Stand SANTA ANA -Two fellow o!ficer1 of Stanton nservt policeman Allen • ChrilUan w·ere called •• the ftrat prosecuUnc witnesses in bil trial on charges or in· voluntary mamlaUllhtor. BoUt Gfficer Carl Bradley and Sgt. George J . Boudreau were involved in the case in wblcb suspect Paul M. Aguilera wu shot and killed on Feb. 9. Testimony of the two of- ficers differed on a key poinl Were there Stanton department orders not to fire warnlng 1hota? Officer Bradley said he did not recall any such r,egulation. Sgt. Boudreau said there was such a regulation, that he had been sU1pended for four days without pay for such an act. Questioning by defense at- torney Matthew Kurilich brought out that Boudreau's suspension was under e dif· The trial re&umes today ferent chief than the one with Naranjo expected to be now headJng the Stanton called as a p~secutlon department. • Testimony dwelt on the witness. night of the shooUng which ___ LE_G_AL_N_OTl--CE-- was called "a very dark------------nlght" b both ffi JltOTICI!' TO CR•DtTORS y 0 . cers. . S\ll"ERIOR COURT 01" TH• Sgt. Boudreau said be and STAT• 011 CAl.ll"ORNIA •o• officer c b r is t 1 a 0 had TNE ctn::_~_::~,.o•ANo• responded to a call by Of· .E1t•tt of !RENE AGNEI COLE. tk• ricer Bradley that he had rJt~T~C~ ~~L~!:~~~H~:1vEN to "'' two suspects stopped. cr..:11tors 01 "" •bow '"'"""' t11c..:i1"t B dr . ftltf •II H •llMS lltvll!ll ct.Im• ""'"' Ille ou eau srud the two had w 1d decedent ••• ,..u1"9d to 111e ,,,...,, no identification and he told w1"' 1111 n.cn••"' 110IKhf1'1, "' ""ott1c• , of tht cltrk of lhl t bow .,olltltd i:ourl. er Bradley, "I guess well have 1o orewnt them, w1111 t11e neca .. ..., •-tak th in th " A h 'IOUChtrl. lo tllt unc11rs1anec1 11 Ltw w e em en. s e OHie• or Gilvin Jt.. KMiw. Attorllrl' •I did so he reached to search L1w, 4i. Ncrlh N•WPPrt. Boulevard. J ~ Narani·o a d both N•wPCM ee.ch. c1t1torn1t. '2'60, whlth 19 e. • J 0 tilt plect of M ines& pf "" uNlfrslglltd 111 Sllfl'W>l'ts attempted tO fiee. Ill• matter& P«ftlntng to !flt ft It ff crf •lld -r-~ dtctdent. wlllll11 slx monllls tfttr IM tint Boudreau said he cap-P1.1b11"11or1 .,, rti1. notiet. tured Naran1·0 immediately 01ftd J111r 11, 1M1. , Lavln141 K. C.l'flttn but that Bradley and Chrts· E•teuu111 cr1 t11t wn1 ti fte A il H of tilt tbcv• Nmtd dlctd...,1 an ran a r gu era. e GALVIN •· KIENe said he heard one or the or-••• Htf1fl ,._, ...... ,,,,., ficers yell "Halt," orie or ;:=.~::.iJ1'1"""1 nue twth o timh' 1es and then heard A=:~r ~::',..":'11c.,.,1 01111 l"lklt, e S o • JulY 16, 21, »ind Aut1usl '' lNl 121G-" NOW! NEW! PILOT PENNY PINCHER C~'SSIFIED ~DS WltH A NEW-LOW-RATE J LINES 2 TIMES $2.00 IN THIS! CLASSIFICATIONS! '•mitvr• IOOO Pi•-•O.,-11:10 OlllCo F....itvrw I010 Radio l200 Olflco lqul-nt I011 Telftition 1205 Sto.e Equipment 1012 HI.fl l Steroo 1210 C1fe, Rettwr1nt 1014 Tape Recorder. 1220 l•r Equipment 1015 C1mer1s &. EqulptMRt l300 Household Goods 8020 Hobby SuppliM l400 Appl I•-1100 Sporting Goods 1500 AntlqUN 1110 Sowing Machi-1120 llnoculan, Seo,.. 1550 Mu•lcall-1125 MleciefllMOUt l600 e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e • Ne lbom 0... tSG • Ne Commardal Fi11M e. e Ne c.,y C"-e No AW....latlona e START MAKING MONEY NOW! CALL 642-5678 , ASK FOR YOUR DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR AND YOU MAY CHARGE IT! • d lay be Ion - "' ~· ..,, ... -· tlk• I, Of u~ .... . " ar<I. .,, "" $l id llrll I kit • ... -.-141911 Tigers ~Leave'··-Town With Tait· Between Legs First Division Angels Host Cl.eveland Tonight . > . ' ' . . . ' i l . :· . . , . . . : • ' ! . • i ~ ' ! . : . By EARL GUSTKEY Of 1t1t Dlllf l'UM t tMf ~ Guess ~ho'• In the first dJvlsloo! --~n·t do anythipg rash like reserve World Series Ucket&. but It's a fact , the Angels will be reigning members o! the top hall of the American League tonight when they take on Cleveland at the Big A. The Angels' T'"° Murphy (2-2) will , tak• on Suddftl $am McDowell (M). : The An!!<ls didn't elbow their way ·into the first division the easy way. "They knocked off the league-leading Detroit Tigers, 4-0, Monday night to sweep a ~game series from the slumping Bengals., Since the All.Star game break, De- troit has dropped four out of five but they're still 24 games above .500. Credit a couple of home runs and a masteriul effort by George Brunet (11-9) !or Monday's 1hutoul Two -0 ago, Brunet tried a slider in ·~ game and, to bls SlUFisc, the dam tllblg -ked. "Every time I go out there the slider work.a better," Brunet told writers. He allov."ed QDl.y five bita, three of them to Al Kallne . Brunet seem«i extremely pleased with bil new pitch. "It's greet. And the way I'm throw- ing it, it's not going to be tpo bard on my arm." The homers were suppllecl by Jim Fregoot and, ol all people, Aurolio ROOriguez:. Fregosl bashed a bowitaer- like shot in the third .inning over tbe left field barrier and Rodriguez ripped a two-run job over the right field fence the lollowiDg Inning. "-"' .., n... Sa""*-' PULL SON, PULL -Ray Prochaska (right), offensive line coach for the Los Angeles Rams, checks the technique of. ropkie Dennis Brewster (60) on the exer~Genie Monday as Rams staged full work· out at Cal State College (Fullerton). Brew•ter is a l;.foot.-2, 245 pound guard from Brigham Young University, a sixth round draft choice by the Chicago Bears in '66, then traded to the Rams. As Cards Triumph Shannon Has Cakewalk, Another Pie for Osteen ST. LOUIS (AP) -It WaJ a cakewalk for Mike Shann<ln. but just an<>tber pie in the f~e for Claude Os· teen. Shannon celebrated his 29th birthday Mooday night with a two-run home.r that started the St. Louis Cardinals Dodger Slate Julr 16 OoODtrs •I Clnclllnlll July " Doclters II Clnc:.lnNtl Julr 11 Ood..-1 aT Clncltwltl Jvlr It DodrJl'I on Clllc:•to S:DO "·"'· KF1 (MO) J :OO P.m. KFI fUIH S:CID p,m, ICFI !MOI 7:5.Sp.m, KFI (640) toward a f..2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers. Six birthday cakes Shannon got from fans in the stands for the occasion. After the game the players were eying the cakes and Shannon was yelling, "Hey, don't touch that one; that's be one l'm going to take ham~.'' So out of respect for the club's home run (13) and runs batted in (47) · Jeader, the players left the cake alone. Shannon, very respectful ol. l01er Os· teen, 7-13, still hit the home run in the seventh inning. That evened the sC<Jre at 2-2. Dal Maxvill added a double and Phil Gagliano pinch-hit for winner Ray WashbU?1l , 7-3. Gagallano singlflf in Maxvill, then came home on Lou Brock's double. Dodger Man.ager Walter Alston call- ed it "a typical Osteen game. We just didn't get him enough runs." "Yeah," Osteen agreed, "I guess it was. Th.ii seems to be my story. J go seven, eight innings and then I find myself in a position to get beat. I'm not crying or feeling sorTy for myself, don't get me wrong. "It seems like every mistake I make hurts me,'' Osteen tried to keep the bitterness out of his voice. "And I can't even consider that pitch to Shan· non a mistake. It was down and be should have hit It into the dirt.'' "Boy. Frotool oewr bit a ball ay harder tban tha4" Rigney CClllUDO!lt*1 "And Rodrliue< bit the-out"' bls, too. ~ ' "Well, this tblng Is bellnning lo loot like 1 race •Cain for UI. l 1d like lt to mnaJ.o th4t way for 1 while -like until October. A Utile pitcb!D', a little A....i Sr.te Jiiiy It Metil w CIMI..... 1:11 ~. KMP'C fnOJ JlllYll ..._•wClwftll'ld 1:as~KMl'Cm11 Julr 1r """'* at Chkaw s:Ss p.m. KM'C m11 Julr 20 A119e1lalO.lc.l11t ll:!Gt,m.KMll'C(1ill h.ittin' and• little defeme -tbat'a all It takes." Rigney'• ptlehUlg COl1JS haa respond· ed. with some first rat.e pitching h1te- ly, but a vacancy has cropped up. Brunet, wbo bad lost aix straight --lo -. --..., --to-UfarMlllird -· Tho Ancell ·-"' oal1 -bib! all looor MlcktJ LoUch, 7~ Now llNlr marlla -......ii>*t llalttmonlw-Hdu<edto11' _. 11111 tbo7'rl oa11 n .. llload "' Ibo -Ill tbo all-iml*lanl ....... Jolt" colamD. "It loob l1b ,.. mlClrt bml a -nant raee, an. .U." aakS Allpl --Bill Rlpoy -Monday's victory, ''Tbe . Tlprs 111111 -JJ , ...... to !1111 ..... -- and that coald doilds It all.. Jim McGlolhllD, -lo Jlltcll W-.t&J'• -&(alul Clowland, .... bed lo --lllnl --.. bill.-llmilt. --. -Clort will pltob. Ono .. the Aqols' biC...W-- day lll(bt -· :12,0ll po1d ...... OZS -· wu mi band. A ~ per· Uoa of Ibo Uc!Mmnt WU provided by a beaut "' a braWI behind Ibo An-lti d-durtn( Illa fifth lnnin( • MTH" CALINll•tA •• ,... Ill lllrtl MCAii-· J •• = ... d .. 11 '• '*••d 4 I I ,._L M 't l t r..11111.1111 .. Jl ........ 11 I ft ..-..-.e ·• ,,,..,_,,.. , '' w.--... .. • ...... " • • • w.rt, a • t t IC-. ftt I I I ""1tww. ,, t l • """"" 1111 J 0 • T.......iil. • • e I A.~llloJ 1 t ....... " I It......,,,., I t t ""°" • 1 • • "-'· .. J • • '~" ... T•lt ll•tl•~ •t• ~ ..................... ---. .~ .................. ----4 a -Ke!IM, A. ......... LOI -~rett I. Q..,.._ 1. M -oe-... Hit -''""' {f), A. ...... Ill. .,. .. BLANKS LOOP LEADIRS 0..'90 Brunot Rams' Compound Has Mobile Atmosphere Family Reunion · for Patriarch Allen By RON EVANS ... 0..,. .......... George Allen. tbe gracious host, looked like tbe pairlar<h at a family reunion Monday aftemoon . One by one, he greeted his veteran football players at Cal S t • t e • s (Fullertoo) pracUce field. 1be much publicized ugument between the NFL's owners and players had been settled -at least for the next two years -and the Rams' C001pound at last looks like a football camp . Until Monday, Allen had to be con- tent witb coaching nine looesome rookies but there were 36 veterans, taxi squad members and 14 rookies on hand yesterday. The built of tile squad reports w-•Y and ..,. ~ ,..,,_ will be prlMDI. w-..i., ts olllclollJr 111o day ..u . are to lhow up but aome, Ulle Kea Im· an and Les Josephson, reported early Monday. Monday'• group wu fort\m1te that the thermometer cllmbed to no higher ~ Ill because AUen'• -lull acale 1968 W«kout WU a two-hcntt job tbet left a few absolutely breatblfl:s. "For tbe moat part, most ol the vet.erw seem to have ~tied 1n good shape," Allen commented II· l<rftrd . "Milt Plum came In good shape and so did Kelton Wtmton. But some ot them .u. go6nt to have to work Yer/ hord to pt lo 1hape ... Twenty-four wterans are due to. No Wilting .Without Wilt Is Battle Cry for 76ers PlllLADELPHIA (AP) -Jack Ramsay says he isn't counting on it, but he senses an emotional feeling among the Philadelphia 76ers' player• to .J'l'OVe they can win without Wilt Chamberlain. "The emotional prospect of winning without Wilt is there," Ramsay observed Monday at his first news conference since belng named coach of the 76ers. "They're (the players) thinking In this direction. Some have expressed a desire to show we can win without 'Wilt.'' Chamberlain was traded earlier thJs month to the Los Angeles Lakers for three players, leaving a 7-foot-1 Inch void under the hoops for Philadelphia, It will take more than emotion to get those rebounds, someone suggested. The 43-year~ld Ramsay, a l s o general manage!' of the 76ers, said he was aware of the problem. He talked of bow he planned to run tbe WilUeu 76ers. Ramsay plans t.o Install g.9 Luke Jackson at center, with Darrall Imhqff and perhaps rookie Craig Raymond u backup men. Jackson was a center at Pan Ameripan University and on the 196' U. S. Olympic team before sip. Ing with Philadelphia. Fonner '18ers' Coack Ale% Hannum always referred to Jackson as heir •P- parent to Chamberlain at center. J ackson is tough and mobile, ••t asked Luke If we traded Chamberlain would he be, ready to play center and he said 'yes,' " No Doubl.e 11.ision Ramsay related. Ramsay said tt w11 possible the 76era might be a better team without Chamberlain. "We'll be different in the k1nd of came we play. Th1t'1 for sure. "We can't concentrate on using. the poat, the deep post We'll have to nm more, play toug!ier defense. Billy eun. ntngham and Chet Walker will have to do more rebounding." "We have the best guard corpa in the league," Ramsay said. He refetted to Wally JOON, Hal Greer, Matty Goukas and Archie Clark, who with 1 Imhoff and Jerry Chambers came here from the Laker• In the Chamberlain deal. "We Intend to utWze the depth wt now have," nld the 4"'-ytar~ld co1ch. He plana to carry the aquad limit of 12 pl1yen "if I !HI each man can mate 1 contrtbuUon to the team." MEXICO VS U.S. AT GOLDEN WEST Un!led Sll6et MU champ!.., Phil· Ups Ill will battle the Mexicu Water Polo tllymplc team Wedneoclay nlllhl at Golden \Vest Collete, it WU g. -tbls morning. . Battle beglna at I o'cloct and admit· slon .ts free. Phlllipo cap111red 1lle natiooal crown SUndJy by bluUn( Footlllll A, 7·1. The tltllsu are poced by Tony Von Dorw. ~ great goalie from Holland whO la no?: I U.S. dU... Voss Opens Eye-It's OK C1-tJCAGO -It was good news for Bill Voss and the Chicago White Sox Sunday when the injured ouUielder opened his injured right eye for the first time since 1etting hit in the face by a Pete Richert pitch la Baltimore some 10 days earlier. Voss, former Harbor Area star, bad. normal sight according to his wife Donna, although the vision was blurry at first. There wu fear Voss might 1uffer double vision as • re1ult al a broken e><bllal-bone, or that perbapl be might even lose his tight. That ot course would be tbt end ol the promising y~ star's. major league CIJ'ffl". But Vou ts on bls way . down the Ion& ~OWI'J road, with another f1ve weeks tnactlvtty to MrYe. He returned to hi• home tn a Chicago auburb Monday and ts stlll lo quite a bit of pain. WU. Doona repo<ts tbat bls ae..,..Jy crushed face: is now back to normal, except for some swelling. "ActuallY he loolta pr.tty good," the lold tbt l)AJ. LY PILOT~tbls momtng. report Wtda-y. ·Four men won't come iD .unw tblt weekend, wbtn they are released from the National Guard. Tblt foursome in· cludea Tom Mack, Henry Dyer, Vllnis Ezerlna and Clancy Willlamt. Bel«e Allen put bls stalwart& thn>ugh ao bour's ~ of sideline paa plly1, be w1tdled them 1goniie through callttheolc1, ..utty drWa and workouts on the exer-<fenle machines. The Ram .,_hCI -to be 1Mng GLENN WHm Sports Editor Michl(an St.ate'• Jimmy Raye 1 Joi of attention at defensive back. But the odda are still against his sticking with the club -be was only a 16121 round draft choice. With tbe quality and quantlty of vela ret\U'ning, no more than one or two rookies will make il A better bet than Raye is the No. 2 c::OO!ce, Mike LaHood, the pulling guard from Wyomlng. The No. 1 choice was Gary Beban1 slnoe peddled to the Redskint. COIN FLIP PROVES FATAL TO HARTER BAASTAD, Sweden (AP) -Julie Heldman of New York wu awarded the women's singles title in the In· temational Swedish Tennis Cham. pionships Monday when her final match with Kathy Harter of Seal &each, Calif., was rained out. The title was determined by a flip of the coin. Me-aowhUe, American Emery Neale scored a 6-1, l>-0 vict.ory over Germany's Wollgang Lindlau in the day's only match in the lntenonal World Team Tournament. The United States , Italy, West Germany and Sweden are competing in the meet. In Pol.o Sel.eetions Newland Says Committee Bayoneted His Players ~eguerd department employ• Ed Newland is not ex~tly in the frame of mind for his work today, 1?thougb he certainly seem1 to be in humor to hold a few headl under water -providing: those belda are on the right bodtea. Newland la particularly peeved with the UnJted States Olympic water polo committee which Ed say1, "gave his boys a rotten deal" Sunday in making final aelectlons for the U.S. team training camp. BJ( Ed, wtio serves as UC lrv1M and Corona del Mar Swim Club polo boe:1, feels his tenors were bayoneted by the committee. Olympic coaches Art Lambert and Monte Nituowsld -1 Huntington Beach rt1idettt -tabbed CdM Swim Club players Ferdie Massimino, Mike Martin and Pat McClellan to join 211 ,other polol1lt at the Olympic tralnlnc camp next month. From tht 22 will come the ll·man team whkh wiU repreaent the USA at the Olympics In Mexico City thls October. Hmnc tbne o1 bls protege1 on that group made Newland a hippy fellow on Sunday -for awhile, anyway. However, hi• good f .. ltni turned to chagrin when Olympic Commlt!H chlPI reviled the coaches'. recom- mendatJona, leaving McClellan and Martin aa alternat.es. Muttmlno r<malned on tlio squad. "It WU geographical . poUUca," charge1 Big Ed. "A bunch of badp. pulhlnl MU guys socked It to mr kids and I don't Ulle ll Tiie committee picked some players who weren't even recommended by their own eoechu. "Vlc Lanm (committee chalnnon) It tilt CUY who really did -t ol tlio damage tout," cbargu Newtand. Serving on the committee "'Jth I.anon are such aquatics world personalities as Bob Horn (UCLA), Jim Schultz (Cal State of Long Beach), Jim Gaughran (Stanford), Andy Burke (former Olympic team manager). Nltllowakl defend• the eommlt- tee'a action. "Actually tlley 1eeept.. tel 18 of tbe %! fellow1 we 1ubmttte4 at team c1odldate11" Ile explalaL "And of. the %%, there are 14 or 15 'utoacb1ble1' and aoae of tllem w11 ei:cluded by the eommlttee. Tbe eucllea are aot 1apposed to b1ve a ftaal aay in the ebooslac of the Z!, malnly to keep them from loadlaf ap a ~am wttb their ow:a club pllyera. "Coroa1 •et Mir h11 aome nae pl1yen -and within 1 few yeua ---WHITE WASH llley'D h Ille tea .. to ba rec- wtlll aallnaJb'. Mu1lm111111 a lloe aD-roaad player. U McClellu lia- prove1 •• defeese aad U Martin •eepo .. bil Coed -t. tbey'D be· toagti to keep off a:.e im te•m we aeod to tile Olympics la Mn!U. Nttuawakl al10 prai1e1 the abUitiet ol Dave Alblelgh, Coata Mta polo cot.ch who resigned recenU, to move to Modulo (of all places). Lot AllHLat IT, LOUii ., .... , .~,~ ... Cr•wford. If J t t t ll'Odl. W • o 1 I ""-· lf 1 t • t J...,w, • • o 1 • p_...Jdl, :lb .. 0 • • ll1tod, d • • 0 • 'Cotton Picker' Not Bad at Net Game "Dave ls probably the best defensive JMft 011 1 mtun1 player on the country. And be'• really tougb. He's the kind ol ruy who fractures 1 nose, then lits in the w1tc and 1etl'tt bb:nl•lf. l'vt seen btm do fl" :· • . :· w.o.wil.ct 42aec--...1• •12 1 Hiller, c • 0 I t ~. Jb 2 I t I Lffellvra. a J t I 1 l"°"9'*• c J 0 t I F1lr1Y. rf ll O I 0 TOltft. rf J I I t l(.loTtt, ... \ t I t MAVlll, H I I I t P•rlll'r, lb ll 0 0 0 W_,Nlunl, P t 0 I 0 R.hll9', pl! I t t t o.tllli.... ... I 1 I I v_u.,., u :a o 1 o Pft!Mlft, • 1 o o o c.Ollfttl. • 1 o a o .,_. • • • 0 • Toi.i. 11111 T.t•ll • 31 •t • LOI A"""'I .... , ........ , 000 lOt tc19-t s. loult ............... flllO aet •-• E -J•wl...-, 1-..r11, Toa.ft. DP -Lft ... _. .. 1, SI. Louil I, LOI -La ..,,,... S. II, \.0\111 a. ti -Toi.ti. Milll'tllL l rodl. ,. -W. O.wlt. Hit -$Nn'*' CU). II -":;D~:i. ll •ll II IO C.O.i-(L.1-11) 64/J I • • fl • ··-1·111 ' • • • I Wllh""'1'! (W,7'4) 1 S J 'I 1 2 .... _ ,,, .. , lffllt -It.SS. AtltnOenc:t -24.otl. j MILWAUKEE, Wia. (AP) -Lester Sack spends moat of tilt tlme helpill( manage the family cotton farm near Clarksdele, Mlss. He also goto up to Mem.phis weekends for tennis, and mates • few tournaments. Tl'le 32-year-old farmer Nid he besa't played the game serloutly since he wu a member of the 1\alane UnlvertllJ taaln1 He was ranted. l'!tb by the U.S. Lawn Tenrut AaSoCiation lut ;;oear. Uta boot ranklo& wM 31st. I • sack decided to come to ~ .. lhb week !or the a., Court Cham· ptoruhlps, and while be loot his first· round match Monday 1 he provided • strong challenge for young Jaime Fillol of Cbile. " Pillot, seede<I RCOnd 1 rn o a I foreignen at the tolJMley, arrived lQ Milwaultee tmh from bls uJl"ll Vic. tory over Clift Richey of San Angelo, Tex., in Sunday's ftnal.s of the Wutena Champlomtilps • ladlampolla. Rl<hey, the No. 3 -· aclvanc:ed b7 default Monday. · There wert lint-round JMtch" oa tap today I<>< to~ Arthur Albe ol Richmond, Va., and No. 4 -C1art Greebaer ol New York. Ricbey11 liltm', defendlnl women'• tltllst, NlllCJ Richey, laced a MCOnd· JWnd -today -a lint ....... bye. Fillo!~ "°'*7'1 matdl wltb a Mllrat.tttvlclor)'._SocL Charla P...U ol Puorto Rico, ~ mtlooally and -... cond al Miiwaukee, alto hid his handa lull -· beatlo( -Ed Grubb, Santa Monica, Callt., 1-7, 7.f, .. •• • M1r11 Rlel.., ol E-. Ill., -llftb ~ ol b1I -t In llral(bt -· .. did -Smith, Pu-. OoUI., and Bob Lull, Loa Anp!N,' -llsth llld H.alh, ....,...UtelJ. Obvloualyi Albleleh 11 a 10Ud bet to -tht tr p to llllxico City. or ... ,._ •t oa: Meiila'1 Olympic ftter pelt ltam wlll play Cotta M... (Coal Cll,,...) Jiiiy II al Otute Cealt c.Dece. P1a1 be&lu at ~ , ... F..a.ttllt cu be -ltr '1 ~~•) ud M cnta (l:ldt). Coadl Fallertoe'1 Met111 t&l.Dd a pod ...... al "-tti;L oll Ille °'1mpiaM lnm _., ....... I J J 9 OAll V PILOT ' First for Southland Tracks Los Alamitos Night Scene The tlectrlc bill at Los Alomitoa Race Trac~ wiU begin soarlne lnto the higher bracket.a next T u e a d a y night. That's the night track owner Fl'anlc Venels Jr., nicks on his light swi.tch and l1oods the quarter horse rac- ing facility wkh Sl.7 million worth of Ulumination. It'll be the first-ever night racing show in Southern Callfomla and the season wtU last from Tuesdl.y unw Nov. 11. Actually, thot 1tretch will be interrupted. The track closes down for the Pomona Fair, Sept. 9-0ct. 1. Vessels claima hia plant Is now the mbst brighUy light- ed sports facility in Ameri- ca. Group and individual ticket inquiries at the track indicate that Los Alamitos will probably record its big· gest year ever at the gate. Post time during the noc· turnal season will be 7:45. Night N clng has a history of rewarding its investon. Like t.be joke goes, at the night races you have both the employed as well a& the unemployed cllentele. At Roosevelt Raceway in New York, for instance, business was bad before the lights went in. But after that, business skyrocketed and the lights are generally conaidered to have saved Connell's 15-game Streak Curtailed by San Clemente I Connell Chevrolet's 15· game win streak in Connie Mack baseball action is at an end. Marine, meanwhile, couldn't find an .available field and was: forced to postpone its match with Miaston Viejo. Connell' s first Joss was rolled up in a disastrous se- cond inning when S an Clemente capitalized· on five -walks .and a fielder's choice to score three times. verdict over Tustin came largely to its five·run second wt.en Rick Spradling, Dave Carlisle and Mike Robinson, loaded the bases and Pat OatToll, Ruly Membrila and Paul Santy followed with a single, double and sacrifice to set it up fur Chucl: Daugherty's double. the track from extinction. The lighting apparatus has captufed most of Los Alamitos' advance publicity this summer bu't there've been other changes, too. The clubhouse section box: se,>.t,.--rrav~~n taken out ~00 replaCed with dining bles and chalrs. That c:tve has doubled Loe Ala'ntUos' dining capacity. The lighll will be turned on for the first time Friday evening at a press preview. Mi~way Pads Lead For First Midway City, 14·2 In Spotlight on Winner'• Cirek San Clemente t core d three tlmes in .the second in- ning without tlle benefit of a base hit and hung on to defeat Connell by a 4-2 count at TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa, Monday night, tag- ging Connell wi-th its first defeat of the season . West-Grove scored five in the second frame and went on to defeat Tustin by a 7-6 count at Fountain Valley Hi gh School and B r e a polished o f f Hantington Harbour by a 5-2 count. San Clemente picked up .another tally in the third before O>nnell struck back for two runs in the bottom of the inning when Bob Llnnert singled home two runs. Huntington Harbour t.oot a brief 1-0 lead against Brea in the fll'st inning on Bob Ryder's run-scoring single. American Legion ba1ebaU, hosts Newport Harbor on Wednesday afternoon at Westminster High School trying to improve ill lead over the Fullerton Dodgers (11-5) in the final stages of the National League. Game time is 5:30. Midway Ctty is on a four. game winning 9treak after disposing of Son·Low Mon4 day night by a 7-2 count in. an abbreviated five-inning game. There has to be a winner in golf and it was this team of Deanne Helperin (left) and Lucille Pad- dock (center) which copped top honors over the weekend in the 18th annual Santa Ana Country Club Hollypark Entries ............................................. ;;._ .,,,,.,..... __ o.m. Clol1r • 1"1tl FllST RACE. 6 l~rlon9t. 3 Vtlr olds. Clalmlnt. PurH s.iooo. Cl1lml1111 price ''""· •m "' '" l lS ·-1'11 ,,. "' '" "' '" SECOND It.I.CE. One m\je. 3 l • ye1r old m1llknt. Pune M500. Fun Of Trcublt (J L1mben) F lee! A!l<>1! IL Plnc1y Jr) King Klld•re (0 Hill) S1"4 M1rll (W H1rt1ck) P1mP~rl!d King !R CUYIPIU Tuk N R<MI (l Gllllgenl He!'t Pu"""T IW H1rmal1) Fl3mlng UrH (W Mlh°"""'l Mot~'• !rt (A Plnl!dl l "' "' '" ,,. "' "' "' "' "' THIRD RACE. 5'~ turl""g' 1 ye1r old IY'lld"' collt I. gtlc!lng• brde In C1lllornl1. Clelmlng. Punt 1-!(lOO. Cl1imln11 price llG.000. Mar-al Hirt IA Pl.....S.l Emffror Smllll CW l't1rm111} A.l~tr King !E MN!ln•f Dr•von Horst CR BllW'Kol Sun Gun""' \W M••l!orntvl BritM Gun""' (W Mel'IO<...,.y) Br,oM S1>11ll\vhl CW H•rlad:) Hl\Of\tr IJ Stlltrll Silly l!tmlr\ IA Dlu l fltclrooftwie (R C•mN tj Ht rm1n'1 (Ill~ (W Ht rrl• l op Etolt ID Hell) H1mmu•1t>l (R Vorii:l At .. l ll1/Me Otlloh!lul $ummtr 10 PINct l N11111n Ot!toll CJ Sellen) E•~nct ol Time CJ Arterbllrnl 11;0 Cll!t IA 0 111) Iron Adm ro l fJ Limber!) Fa~l!t CM Y1ne:) "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' "' '" "' "' '" "' "' "' FOURTH 11.l(I!. ' turlq,>fl. l Vtlr ol<I>, Anow1ncn. Puri.e ~KIO. tmPlt JudHll Sllltrl\Ood, l!inlt'• Comet t R C•mP11) F1't "'w'1 10 Pltrct) H\1'>111~ ( F'!nc•v Jr I Full Mtllurt CA Plned1) CuPld DM<'td ID Vtln.11uezl Modern IJ Lemi.ro FIFTH ltACE. ' !urlon111. ~ 'Ifft oldi & UP. Cl1lml1111. Pur .. MCOO. TOP cl1lmln9 Price '5000. Ror>Ofl Club, Everv Ch1nc1 CW H1rma111 "' "' "' '" '" '" ,,. "' "' '" "' "' A-J, w. P1-11rdo tralrlllll entrv. SIXTH ltACE. 6 furl-1. 2 n1r okl fllllel, AllOWJinCH . Pun.e S6mO. ~·1 Own CW Htrmehl "' Htrtf A. ID Httll OJPMrv fA Dl1l) llOll" Of llUllDrll (J Stl!ers\ E111tes Ptl (A Plnedtl CUM'lllll Liii (0 Plfl"U) Sri.p H1nca fL Plnur Jrl )( 111 '" "' Dumptn Gc:ddetl (W M1llorney) 1u Kl11ln1 1tl1111 CJ Lamberti "' SIEVl!r.TH llACE. f lurlMOt. ] !"' old fUI n . Aflowencn. Pur11 S 500. Senti Monlc1 81., S1'rln1 Club. M&rceltl (W H1rr!1l 11! G•l"I' Crlck1! (W H1rm1hl 11·1 Bl.., Jolie (A Pl,,fde) 112 Ol•mond DIP (J Sallert) H2 Supply Boe! (A Df•ll >11 12 T~tv Wint (M YtMZ) 111 Curr111h Ml1 (0 Htll) 112 Flr1! D•nc1 (A: llltr.ccil 111 l!tOHTH llACE. l 1·1' mllll ail ttlt lurl. J y11r old1 t. UP. Allow1nce1. Puri.e uooo.. "C1rll'I" Pomtwil (L Pinc1y Jr.) Out Of Focv, (M Y1ner) Bllls1rno JI (W M•llorM"l'I Fl~! Or F ll~r ID PltrCll Ro.td Mi ker 11 (W H1nn111} Hut~llP Kid• (E Mfttlna) "' m "' "' "' '" H!NTH llACE. 1 \.11 mll11. • Vj" olds a. up. c111m1n11. Pun.t uaoo. DP c111mlr>11 Price s1000. "' '" '" "' '" '" "' "' '" ". '" Deep Sea Fish Report Springer Captures Senior women's member-guest tourney. Helperin is from the host club and Paddock is from Mesa Verde Coun- try Club. Tournament chairman Marguerite Sears crowned the winning team which fired a 128 net score. RACE RESULTS HOLLYWOOD l"ARK llESULTS MOHOAY, JULY u, lffl Cltlr & 1'11! l'IRIT llACI!. 6 lurlon111. 3 vur old1. Cltlmlng, Purte &-1000. G1l1r1110wn (Travl110) 21.60 11.60 6.60 HontV'I Urchin (A 0 111) B .00 1.60 5olld Eddlt (A Plnt011) •.olO Tl~l.11. Alto Rln -Wln All, Alllltltown, El Gr11. llrl1r v1111, DYmP1'111, Abll1oe, J,mfy,, Prince J ut11n, Murph, Scr1tched -F'1l1'1• Auln B•••· l lv1t"f Monte, Nellve Blue Rules, Blufttone. SECOND llACI!, ' furlollll1. ] " I y11r old m1lde" flllln . Puri.e MSOO. F11I Move (W Mthorney) 1.-.0 S.'11 4.60 F'IHI Clnclv CW H1rt1ckl 13.00 l.«I Kauffman &: Broad * * * Score "'1 IMlflt1 . ". Tu,tln JOO 701-f, 6 • W11t-Grove ISJ OlX-7 I J w111.o,.v1 f11 .. HI•, 1J Roberb , 1b Carroll, If Mtmbrlla, C S•nlY, cf D1~herty, :lb Mick, P Spradling, lb McKIOtl, 1b t•rll,lt, rf Tolt ll Roblnto"• 'l"b Coiner. rl Bohnen. If Moum1n, d All/t , H lt•fft rlY, lb Hormulll, lb Hoklrl"9t , c 8••""· p Tolall • ' , , , , , , , , n Tu1llR C'I .. • • , , ' , ' , , n • • , ' ' • • ' ' ' ' 7 • ' ' ' ' ' • ' • ' • H ltll ' ' . , ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' . . ' N ltll , . ' . , ' • • • • ' . • • ' , ' . . ' However, the losers could net but one single from that point on and went down peaceably. West-Grove's o n e - r u n * * * ·~ Hunllntton """""'"" Ruiz, d Moudy, d Goodaker, It Me11!1, C B1rc11. r1 A:Yder, lb Srmon1. rl E1rlt'f, lb Snvlkr. 1b Chfflt, SI Hot'V1t, p 81n•11•1, p Tot•ll * * . ". "' ........ \ 100 1~2 1 Htrbevr (2) .. . , . ' ' ' ' ' . ' . , . , . ' ' ' ' ' . ' ' ' . n ' * H ltll ' . • • . ' ' . • • ' ' • •• • • • • ' . . ' . ' , ' Sc""' 1W IR11l11n S..,, Clof1Mnl1 031 CICIO 0-..t ' 0 Connell D02 ODO ~2 l o c-11 tn0 A II N ltll a. Ll"'1trt, r1 ,, o0 '• •' Hluoitrl. d W1llll,1b 1 0 00 Lri'l?f, :ti 3 o O • , Wlrbilll'IOn, 11 S 0 0 0 Snyder, c 3 0 0 0 POP WARNER SIGNUPS SET Pop W a r n e r football registration in Fountain Valley for boys between the ages of 10 and 13 will be held at two ldcations Saturday. Registration _will be held from 10 a.m. to S p.m. at the G e m c o Department store and at Fountain Valley Elemen- tary School. F u rther information can be obtained by calling 962-6050 or 962-9904. The winners scored twice in the opening round and came right back with five in the second stanza to breeze. Eddie Bane (8-2) struck out six in going the route. Five runs d:lecked in for Midway in the second when with two out, John Hogan walked .a,nd Bane doubled.· Sctrt ~ 111111- Midway City $o~Low a " • 2!0 Ol)-J 10 :l CICIO 20-J 1 1 Mlfttr CltJ (1) Runell, lb w. McC1rtner, d Dedrld<, d Sm/Ill, ~ Jim Hosi1n, lb Klll'ftr. 2b Wiiier, c P. Mct1rtntY, rf John Hot1n, u ll1ne, p Totals ... ' , ' , ' .. ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' . ' ' ' ' .. ' H 1111 , ' , . ' ' , ' ' ' • • ' . • • • • ' ' " , $.,tvriPMrm1 IW Hlr,...f1) 10.70 n m-1.10 Jf5. Also ll•n -F'l"tl"" Tl>oughl, No•m1 Clalre, CloH Bt lllncl, Br1dwelt, Blntilt Jo, Prlncn 1 Kon1, AlwfVI on Sunder, CIHObe, 5ocll l Fll1111. In Baseball Congress Ct mPt>lll, If l I I 0 ~1~.~h'i~~ 1b ~ 0 T : <-,•,,, .... ~ .. ,,, .. p Scr11clled -In T~ A•ln, Cal~ Me Boyt, Accurt cv, So1rklln9 Rullall. DAIL'I' ODUILI!, S.Ol l•rl-& lf. l'art fMw, 1'1111 1111.IO. THIRD RACE. SV. lurlollll1. 1 veer old milden• brt<I In C1HfO<"nl1. Cl1lm- ln9, Putlt MOOO. I'm Alrlgl!I J1ck {M Y1n11) 1.10 ~.DO ,.IQ l lllte Scrlb /Mt llornevl S.40 3.60 Doctor Doti 800 (W H1r!lck) '·60 Tlm-1.05 115. Ali.o Ren -Kllel Mt Swttt. Cam1111!0, Annie Mu1t, Full Oren, Gcjdrn Cor1>0r1 I, Ml9MY V!Clor, Grotirld P11wer. Duffer, Secolo. Scr1lc1'td -Mel« Re1..,n. Mark ol Hirt,. Eleclrooll sm1. MIH Cll1r91 OU, Fourpence. Trlo·O·Lt•. FOU"TH RACE. S'h fll•lont11. 2 veer old fltllet. Clatmlng. Purse 1•500. Fterv Vtnut !P lntd1l 10.60 10.IO 5.40 Slnii1"9 5url !W H1rt1ckl 17.IO 1.60 RobblM EH IJ L1mberf) 2.1(1 Tlm-1.0ol 1/5, A"4 R1n -Mont v Ml•tt, Miss Ple18dn . Ann'I L1dv. Fort~tr OUn. Cmltr ll1kony, £111t 'I Wlrionlv, Time Trlo1>tr. $i;r1lcMd -OurtPOlttr, OU'I' Return. Grind Old Ntmt. F'll1TH llACE. 6 turloMs. f'llllet & m1rn I '''' old1 & l>P. Cl1lmlnt1. Purse '6000. c11v'1 Honev !Plntd1l 1'.IO 6.60 3.60 !Urdlt'I PHI IJ Lamblrf) •.oo '·" 5ecludt<I ~!tr IJ Arltrbllrnl 3,~ Tlm-1.10 :115. Al10 Ren -F'lyln1 Do!, Dev1!'1 Rule, Teu ll ullal!, Scr1tc1'td -Polho Ple. S1KTH RACE. ' furlonv•. l year old 11111"1. Cl1lm!"11. Pu•1t ISOOO. MIH Muslc1/ (W MallorneyJ 9.0C 3.IO 1.IO Pea Jacket t J L1mberl) 3.oo ;.60 Pltllll A:!ckey CA Plnt<11) l .60 Tlm..._1.10 2/S. Also Ren -MT11 C•e11r. r ortreu. Rfm.Dl>kl, Trulv Lo~tly, M1keede11. No Scr1tchn. SEVENTH RACE. ' furl!!n91, 3 Ytlr olds a. UP. Allowances. Pur1e ~500. Fire Awt v !Pit •«) •.70 5,0C 1,60 Brave Blue fM Y1...,.r) U.60 1.1(1 Wtr Fl19 {R Ctmpld 10.00 Timt-1.ot 3/S. Also R1n -Urttnl, llo• BO"f', DDl.lbl-, t<1 Up, Slick In Ille Miid, Gin Tour. No kr•lcl\H. EIGHTH AACE . Ont mllt"" Ille rvt. J vetr 1>1d lllhn. Allow1ncn. Pu~ 17SOO. Dr1ton Outen IP!ercel 11.'lt J.10 110 !rl5ll M•ll !Plnc1v J t) J.IO 1,IO Bib~ Lt !l Gltl!genl 1.70 Tlme-1.JI J/S. At10 Ran -trvt11I D!Khfl•, !.._ SP•n11. au""'• B•l>f, Fesli>erk, <Mllnet1, Chtnllla, Grlna. Scr1lcllt<I Slr•wt>erN C1o¥er. Sliver Goblet. NINTH llACI'. IV. milts. 4 vtl r 1>10. .. UP. Cl•lmln{I. Putte ~-Grtclou1 HHlol! (F G~rltl 6.IO l .10 J.10 Llfflt Rt<I M~n !B!t nto) •.IO 4.70 T1m!rlsh !O Ht!IJ 5.to Tlme-1,50. Scret~lll!d -Oulla Dude. Mlle Frf:l,~ rl , i , Area Clubs Seek SIR Cllfnllltl 10 Jon"' lb Rnd\an, ti t sum1, c Ol1mtnf, 1b McDon"''• 2tl Proul, Cl BD"tlt, H A1u1. P Premno. r1 ... • • ' . . ' H aa1 I l . ' : ! ' g ' . Tourney Advance Tota!1 ' ' , ' ' ' ' ' n • I I . ' • • Fountain Valley a n d Westminster journey to Memor ial Park in Santa Ana to compete for the right to return to Perris Hill Park in San Bernardino on Sun· day in the National Ba5eball Congress Tournament Foun tain Va 11 e y is * * * s.;.,. b' lnllln" " H E 5 1 ,,!1 A n a An11tl1 000 OOI IXIO-O 4 0 F oun l•l n V•lltY 100 CICIO 00•-I l 0 Fwn11h1 \1111e, (lJ Whitt, 31) Wt llect . u Hefler, 1b Ellt r. c Tllom.a1. II Cll1varrl1, 1b Ltt, P Rln~r. ri C1mot>e11, cl Tot1I' ... , . ' . ' ' ' . ' . ' . ' . , . ' . . ' H ltll • • • • ' ' • • • • • • ' . ' . • • ' ' * * * SCI,. ~' !Mints It H I SI" ii.rnlrdlno 000 000 10'-S I I Founll!n V1!. 100 000 OJ~-J 1 I F'ovnl1ln \11l~l t~~ H "'1 W1ll&CI. H S I 0 0 White. lb-~ I 1 J 0 Htl!tt, lb ' 0 I 1 Dunc1n. It s 1 l l Mtrtln. f1 .S 1 l I M•riln, rl ' 0 I O Ell~r. c • 0 2 1 L«,CI '000 Ch•v•rri1, Jb I 0 I O Th<lmls. 2bo3b 3 o o o Sl8!1lt. p I 0 0 0 Tolll1 JI! l 9 J * * * . " S. lllrMntlno Oii 0 0 100-11 11 wesrm!nnl!r 200 001 11»-1 11 Wnlmlnttwf 10 l"r"st, U M1u1tw. lb G•rl:lntr. cl Low...•, c c ......... P.<'b Renrro, II Or1nPr, lb l rooll:mt n. 11 Davit, lb•2b Jent'"' p Tolllt ... ' . • • . ' ' ' • I l ! ' ' if : N a11 ' . • • ' . ' . 1 i • • ' . ' . ii f scheduled to duel Fontana at 1 p.m. and Westminster is set for the Santa Ana Angels in the second of the twin bill. game AU of th.is came about alter Fountain Valley split in the opening round on Sun· day at San Bernardino and Westminster lost its only clash with the San Bernardino In land · Collegians, 11-4. Fount.ain Valley just did gel by the Saitta Ana Angels, 1-0 but lost to San Bernardino by a 5.3 count. Troy Wins In Overtime Troy toppled Mater Oei, 75-69, in overtime at UC Irvine in a Costa Mesa Recreation basketball league tilt Monday night to knock the Monarchs out of a first place tie. Fullerton forfeited I t s match with Saddleback. Tom Walker was high· point man for Mater Dei Mth 18 counters, while Ralph Chandos and Bob Gibert chipped in with 13 apiece. Sc.rt '' OV1rttn Trov tJ Jl 13 1f t-7! Moler Dtl 11 70 15 II 1-4t ·~"" W•lkff Miit< Dt~~ .. ~T l"I' Tl" 1 i ~ ,, i ~ : :~ Foun~ain Valley garnered only one hit off Angel pit- ching, but it was enough to score the only run of the game when Dick Hefler bla sted a solo home run in the fir st inning. Westminster took a 2.{l lead over San Bernardino, only to have the hosts come back with six in the second inning tO win going away.' Clltndo$ Rats ... " LIV!JQUf Frln WI/I Tof1l1 i i ! J By the Tail ~.j ,J ,~ Id T,.., 11.ffa ,.1 ,.,, T,. There's little difficulty in identifying yellowlai an ·~ ""-· Mlfn!JIM W11$on Scllnorr Miiier Oldendorl T11l1/1 1~ 0,, 'j !I Ed Stief of Costa Mesa made certain of that as he f 3 , 11 landed this fine foursome. Stief was aboard the Sea , o 2 2 Horse out of Davey's Locker in Newport Beach and J 1f ,,!_ -';'.!.f _::hoo:::k:.:ed::..h::i::s~g::•::m:.:s:...:o_ff_C_a_t_al_i_n_a_I_s_Ia_n_d_. _____ _ Baseball Standings the MARK Ill AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Detroit Balti more Cleveland Boston California Oakland Minnesota New York Chicago Washington W L Pct. 56 32 .636 GB 48 :n .565 611 so 41 .549 1n 45 40 .529 911 4? 45 .483 llY.a 42 45 .4S.1 J3 1h 41 45 .477 14 39 45 .464 IS 37 47 .440 17 :10 53 .361 2311 St. Louis Atlanta Philadelphia San Francisco Cincinn ati Chicago New York Pittsburgh Loi Angeles Houston W L P~t. 58 31 .652 48 40 .545 45 40 .529 45 44 .506 42 41 .488 43 47 .478 41 43 .461 40 47 .460 41 49 .4541 38 51 •1427 Mlnll•r'' "'''"' Mttlll•''' 11n111ts GB 911 JI 13 1411 1511 17 17 11 1711 20 CoronadelMar All -comers Track C~!ctoo J, WtJl!l~tton 2 P1'll•dtl11~11 S. New Yor-J St. L1i1l1 I, LM Anl!llll 1 C1tV1!11ncl' 4. Ml"MIOll 1 Al!i nl• , $.In Frlncl.ct 1 0.~lend 11, llMll>!I J "" lflnl ) lltll!mo" •• N-Yo .. ' Clllc:too t . Plll1bllrwtt l (10 ..... C•llfOnllt 1, Otl~I I Ho\111911 ti Clnd"n•tl, rl ln Tldtr'• 0 1-,,.,, ... .,.t~,·-, ,,--~ •ve111 Brain Springer, t r a c k coach ol. Costa Mesa High School, c aptured the unJor's mile In the Corona de! Mar alJ-(.IO"'ers track and r I e Id meet Monday afte rnoon lo day's .action. Spr inger 's 5:10.4. highlight t h e time wa s Com plete resul ts: '° HH -1. l!11~fot1Ml 1. V1n !UCll l kr!119'1r tCM), !mat U.O. I 100-1, LKV !Mt •1 1. Kf!ll {VP) J i!lol>t1 ICG!. T•me· \l.S. NO -I. Eck \CU'! 1. S•lllor~ !Tull l. Minn 11..,.1 t _, 1:51.1. 12111..H -I. 11.fdilor J. E~•rfs J. It~-. Time: U.•. $f!'llor'I Miit -1. 5.,..,._, ICM) 1. Bt•IT'r ). WOl>d fHB ). Time; S:IOf. csr:ro...s1 J. :+e :i~~~'~1m!~ ,~JV,""' no -I B•~~~n !Mfr\ 1. M!H"V (Lii s111ei J, ~. Wlflton. T me: 1•.~ hnlOO' I l~I. R. W!f\!go 1. 0 . W.,,_ IOl'I. J, ~o !lllrd. Time: H.I. MO -I. MaM 1. Ptln t l. Ne "'I'll. TIIM: Jt.O Cron COlll'llrv -1. Ctn""" !8YUl I S.""ord J, Llh~I. T11M: ll :it O, Miit W•lll -1, OVtf'loft lltrldoor1! l. t llft"rl l. Ot.frlnldll. TlfTMI: l :lt,t. SP -1. V1t1Dt11rlff 2. No Hll:Ol'l.i or tnlrd. Dltl.itee: .. 416. LJ -1. AnotrMlll t. MC.Altrty J. "ld'tmonO. Ol1t111Ct~ 21.1. PV-1. McMl(flflM J, l "fltp, ), /'i'O third. He('ll'llJ ,,.., /. DtllNll (McLt ltl 11.JI II O.ll1nd (00.-,_.1, Ntw Yllf'k ml _,,. a ,......,,.., """' t·•l. ni.111 Cltwllncl (McDowatl ,..., ,, Ctl!f0n'll1 (Mu..iw Clllc-IH ..... IJI I I PllHadtWtll (Sl'lon ... ,. J·tl, nloll! "11"1 1-11 -I. McG1v~HIU t. H1,.ml1 h llDft ($.lnll-M ) II MIMIMll /CllaMe LOl A .... tltt (ONJlllll MM} •I Clnc'-tl !COMI J. Ed•J-:~ H::::t: .. 1 1•fl,"'~19hl IMt~YI .. ~~,,;:~!) tf HOvllOn IL...,l1ttr f.I), 120 LH -I, R.ttltt (NH) J. H1""' l•lll""'rt (Ht,,,ln lo.tl 81 Chic-(Plten tlan I {Marl J ""'lhltd TllM: li.t. ).lfwM···-.. -'·',',·.~"! •. ,, ... ·-· .. , .... nltll:.... ,~l-(Slclldll f.111 11 St. LO\lls 100 -·1. Btrrtti !LI 2, lleet.,. (CMI ~ ... ii-~~-fu!!!!J-@:-.,,c'!.!!?i!~~-ii.;-1.!l:!OlJ~"'!.....J~'~..!!:!hl ..!!••'0''------------1 l. /'4Q IMra, Time: 11.1. 1·""' 'l'tril: !I•~·'" Incl' Yt l'Wnlc ~I), 1, IW!:ft!lhl ,., '" IM ' n "'° -1. LM9tbar"1' llAI f. COii L. l M D I ILfnco1n1 J, H-tM1r1. 1...,., 1:J1.1, Orange Co.'i Oldest & Most Re1p«cted mco n· trcvrt1 ea er Mlle -I.Cote 1. Murrt Y J. Mttc1tt, n;;: ~=~·1a1rrtll ,, 11-f ICMI I, Fl"""'· Tlmt: M.f. !l20 -l. RIUe t. Murri\' I. l lt l'lk. fhne: J-!oe.1. $P -l. Sl1n1 1"41 Rklltrdlon J , H•w~ (Marl. Ol1l1nc1: '7-1, LJ -11 Haun !Mlr l t. No 1tc:Ofld or "'lrO, 011 ln<t: 1t.,. NJ -1. Morr11.<.I (CIM) '· 0 1rbl1 J. No l!l!ra. H1!1nE'M , ..... . "'-'# Johnson & Son I. r MERCURV . I rNC:0l N ' 642-0911 900 W. COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH 545-1271 "Tht mo.st auihoritatlvelv .styltd, dtcWvcly individual motor car of thi! generationH ' OROER. THE 1••• MARK Ill TODAY ANO lE AS SUR ED 0~ EAR.LY DELIVERY IMMtDIATI DILIYllY AVAii.AiU ON 1.,. LINCOLN CONTININTALS 100 -I, l lt"ll !CdMI 1. l'tfll~ !SA Vt lllYl Ne llllrd, Tl""°: U.f (CCIMI, f l<r'll! lOJ, no -t. F'ollln !$ v1111~1 1. ''"'"t l------------------------------------------------------• I, • J • • y • • .t g t • d r I l t I I DAILY PILOT 11 , San Clemente Elf ectively 'Stops the World' ..... --..... cl:-.. Norte• TO c••OITOIU -........ --· .. -_,,... . .... _. ..... •T4T•~--uiM'91A... ,.,, ..... C:OU•T Titl ,,.,.. IOll ccw•r OJf THI ., • .,. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE L&<lAL NOTICE By TOM TITUS ot ... Diii' "1111 S'lltl Few musicals are better sUited for the restrlctlons or community thelttr "'"than l1 "St4p Ule World -1 Want to Conlinuous--Open Noon l'lus WALTER MAnHAU 111 "A GUIO .. FOi THI MA•ltlD MAN" .. 111 ,.lctu,.. It Cll&r ENDS TUISDAY ''THE DEVILS IRIG.1.Dl" Wllllllm MllMll-CUii Rotll,,_ "FIST FUU. OF DOLLARS" SON COlOR -- o by Deluxe·~ HIT NO. 2 -"YOUNG AMERICANS" St•rlnt T• Yo11119 Amertwu ·cot1.11.1oi,, P1CTu11cs "'....,._,. Stanley Kramer 111~• Spencer I Sidney I Katharine TRACY POITIER HEPBURN guess who's Coming to dinner_ ll~l'lNICOl.Ofl' 2:1S -S:DO -7:30 -9:30 P.M. -iUNTINGTON •IU.CM • •47·•80t ._ wAl.TlR BUDDY BREN NAN · EBSEN ti.SHY IJI~ )l)lill !NIU WARR EN . DAVIDSON. BLAIR ~M-•1 'IM.llT rlCIWiD ~IT COX· DEACON· RUSSEll ENDS TUESDAY Motl11ees Dallv -12 Noon Storts WedMSdcrr John Wop• 1" "GREIN IERm" .J\llleAndrews .. •1u" July 17th w-T1rffi·'M":U10 Get Oft," as two other O r a n g e , County, eroups proved qulte coocluaivel.)' 1D recent year1. Now the B r itish ·fiavored satire with one of the m ost exc eption a l scores of the s ixties has come to the Sa n Clemen te C omm un i ty Theater as that pltyhouse's first musfc al production. Here It encounters and ge nerally overc omes 1 ts mos t taxing logls tlcaJ prob· lems to date. Scaled down to fit Ule hat· box stage of the CAbrillo Playtlouse, • ' S to p the Wor ld" U given... a floe but limited staging by Ricbard HEID OVBI Tho Most T1lkod AbOut MoYlo "l'l.ANl'r OP. THI Anl IS A ILOCKIUSTlll PASCINATIN•I Ll1 Smitlt, Co1mopolll111 ,_ ...... CONTINUOUS DAILY FIOM J P.M. ,,_.. at 2:1 S • 6:JO • '1 o:OO NEW lllBOA J>"i~!'l.==:::T::_H::E.'AT RE 709 !AST BALBOA BLVD. B.l.LBDA P1NINSUU· 673-4041 e ENDS TONIGHT e "SOUND OF MUSIC" 6:30 •11d 10:00 e STARTS WEDNISDAY e C011tl1111•111 fro111 J:JO Wed.-Sat. & S1111. -Nlthtlv frmnt 6:30- -RIOTOUS Co.FIATUIE- •• ,..-.--.--·!re="i'f'' ·}" . ~do fllW~tl l lAOI -............ .... to hi~l•• IUo 1,i. -01. 1·1151 Ends T onlght Joll11 w.,,.. "THE GREEN BERETS" STARTS WIDHllDAY IXCLUSIYI JULIE AS YOU LOVE HER ... Singing, Dancing, Delighting! .1\ur ANli1>1ft~-r-' lltAll'Y T'YLEI> MC>Cll>r CAllClL CHANNING .IAMES l'Cllll ,.,..,~~ --·· ~raeo. ll Is a quite pleaafng produc Uon, but one !'hlch !Illa ohort ol 1111 ... . cellent potential. "Stop the World" w11 written as a toLlf de f~ tor Anthony Newl!y, and hence must succetd or fall on the virtuosity ot tu Ut- tlech1p, a most dem.t.ndinC role whic h followa I t 1 character from b I r t h through 1 shotgun mMrl1ge, busl.nfl:11 succeaa, 1 poUUcal career, knl'gbthood. a n d eventual death. 1Jttlf1Ch1p U sammy Glick wllll a Cockney 1 e ee n t who stretches from a tea bl&: to a title by looldng out for old number one. In the bands of Rell Love· joy, Llttlechap ls 1dequato but un!llllng, eng1gln( but unimaginative. His reodt.Uon of the vocaJ numbers, even ti>~ poignant "Wbot Kind o! FoOl am I!'' is lacking in rapport and hampered by wooden manntrlams. Lovejoy excels only in h1a solo scenes with the Jm· aglnary boss, where h1I op- portunistic c h a r a c t e r begim to take h o l d • Throughout most of Ule play., he appears stifltd by his sUI'J"OWKliftgs a n d his Cockney accent reflects a lack of homework. Co nversely, Francesca L'Hoit tWTis in an excellent performance in the multiple roles of Littlechap'1 long. suffering wife and hls three international loves. S h e d isplays exuberance, energy and enthusiasm in Utis challenging assi'gnment and, predictably, her portrayal of ........ ,. ·-•• Indians Whoop . .lt .. Up AT The Big A CLEVELAND INDIANS "Tonight •nd Tomorrow Both Gam•s •t 8 p.m. T1CUT1': MIMlll ... -IUL to If',& ,,. -~. ·-· Mutkell'-,,.UotlMll~ ..... -~~ MlllLOll.llUla .... Tldoill,MMolto,CI& ··-R--~--'"'"I ·-... _ ~ .... .. ... CA&.IJCNI•"' '" 01' CALI~··· llOl u1111 -_,.. M -.,.., '"" MANI TMI CCM.l•TT Of' OllAIMI ntl Couttn' Of" 09:ANOI ol b~ -... _..._ .... .... .... ..,. -..,.,,, """ .,....._. ..-ncll efl MAii• • l'ftmM I ... tt a.Alli P..UCll l TTA ...... el An"-" MlcNel ~ --•-.-"'--•--. ,.. NOl.ATI 9' .. u AMD .... l'Al"M.10. •• ~ .. CUlltlE 0.C....... 4QlllV ~ -me-r-u:r""U TllTAMIJnt.lll:Y 1".+JIALIO. ... '-• CU.ill L. NOTICI II Hl ltUY GIVEN II N ductloa, which ..... beta up.. ...... .. &. MILVIN ~VISOM, """ALIO ... .. Cl.AAA ""'""''°' t,..I,.,. fl ... ..,... ...,,.... ""'9dMt ,._....... ,,. ---•-1 .,,.....,.,, 0...-C. ._. •II -1111\'I,. ci9lfll• -.JMf t1te -ou ""' 1111111 ftnll'I• NOTIC8 ti ttlJtltv OfYIN 'TNt NOTlCI 11 MIJtllY OIVIM " lfM MW ~ -ftoW!tW It fl .. """'-tloa Ibo bu I mlal c::bor\11 AU'M4 KNOX IA&.YltOfll .... ni... ...... ~ .. tht ....... MnOtll ~ """' ... '*'-FY 'IOltlCf'llr&. Ill tht ftlt1m M-1 .J •-hi• Ill • ......... ,.,... .. fll will llftf W ... t lft --,,.,_VllW cllllN IP!MI IN Oii tht d«l f/I Ifie ....,, .,lltled ""'" W' -w -:fti.JQIP .......... ,....,... ,....._..,,_ ................ .,... ,,_.,... .. «• "*"' ......... ""'"·' wlltl "" ~"' -•-• .... , b ......,, """""' ........ II ~ ... Wllll .. ~ ~ Ill ... tilflot It tht llndfftltftllf ·~ ...... , J ....... Hl'IU• ,.-... IMt ... """' Mil If .. Cllft If .......... 11t1111 _,, W If lw A"°""r 1'tttr ( t~ ~= c b 0 nosrlPbat Georcfne :-.:....~ .... ~ ~~ = ~-::"" ~""., ~ =-~I -Coil• Mt... c.i11or111e Gier but a bit lbl.Q OD ~ .. -~ Mt. 1 .. MW If Mr ~ ltOllltT "· IUftNf;Tf, ~ 111 ":11-~1:. tlwl-• of ll'le lllJamtatl llomUy lllfTJ' """" at • ~'' .... WW •If C.~ A-. $wtll .._ .. , tht ...... of MW clK'°""t~~::i 1:: and 'AnJI it.tra.en con-"'::::;:-, .. ,. ~"=" .. ~~...!: ~11-,:-,..:: =:-.n ... ""11,., ""•11ci11ori., t1111 trJl)ute floe __,.,,l'ID.IDctl U W, I . •T JOHN, ~ Cltrll ,.,...lfthll tt tht "''" .. •kl ....,.,, O.rtf JIJM 11, IHI. r-"" ...,_ ... ---. 'llllt11111 alll -"'* lttw 1111 flnil Mllcit-Htltll M OWortr tbe two dlupteft, wtdle -....... -...... .... ..... tltfl .. lfllt lllflw. l!Ktt11lrl. dolnt: double duty ill tbei£'5=-".,. o. ... ~w:_1~._.i.11o ~~,:;:."~ cborul llDe fir ,......_ ....... lMlt'1trta ,...,. (, ,._., • ~ ~ ~ DlllY •1w, Oltflel ..... 1111... , ................ Mualc.U,, the dlmlnutlve Mr 1a. 11.,.. • 111w1 APllM '*""° ..-.... c•• .._, c.t..::t. ntM Nturlt of tbe proddon 11 LEGAL N011CE =ti',°:'!=" ~ ~ hiwMll JDOlt: ~ Mtbou.lb tbe :. ..... c.:=,_ "1IGI,..., Ono11te eo. .. Ofilf\'" ,.11111, number *'Gcllma Build a • .,...... "" 0111 ,...,. .IWll • •lld .11.1,. L •· , .. 1,.. uowt. M •-1-'' 1--·1LMI olf In COTIS'IC&T• ., ........ n. ....:,,.., -........... llrt. LEGAL NOTICE OUDw.w. M ,,__,.. PICTITIOUS '1MI ,.,,,.,.... onn.. C...t 0.IPI' ,.li.t. ft.De ._le 1All etfectlve are "" '""" "••• • _,..,, ""' .,.. ,_ ,.-w Jwtr t. ' -, .. 1•· 111oM1.1------::::=.:.:.:.:=. __ ..,I • """illocn. I _...... .. IW 9tMfl ' JHfl the lbow'1 two majcir 1oa.&1, •M .. MllM:ll•• w. c......_ """" LEGAL NOTICE 1110Ttc1 "° c1:1111TOu .. ~ 1n My u1:..M-•" _ .... "" ,........ """ -" J•1111" 011 '""• "1:""'"'11 VIA."W '111\.loQI .WU l'LOftllft ... hf •Ill,.,._ i. ~ CS.S. '1t1 .. 1-u cc ''What K1Dd of Fool am IT'' " ... .......,.. ...,_l•l.,... -1•1 ,..... Nofb 1s ~ ,....;. t9 ~, Cl'ldlfors ~.. ~-.. oml = Ill Ml ... ""9(1) "' ....._ -• CtltTl,ICATI °' aUSIMIU OI PAUL a, l"Oln lnll .... l!STAT~()pl wnut Will flM'•z C C .....,,.., "ICTITK>VI MAMS JOE A W1Llflt -... T ':.Lumbered'' 11 molt an. ...,. e. ••IMa. m.1 OttMll st .. n. ••••* • antf'I' """ '"~·hi•'-~ 1' .;:.r-ron. • '"T ...,,.. ~ c....,.., -....ct1111 , ........... 11 ,.., WntmlMl9r ,.lttr, Seti a..ui C • ~ polntlDI 'bfotuH Lovejoy Mlle M. 1:--. 11»1 o.-11., Oef-A....,, W.tnlltw..,, C•""""'°• """""° WM 1111 CMltonlJt ... , ~. "er.,..., Sltf9' -•~ Jn dell -'-• It ......__ M ~ C.llfomlil. lltcfllllM tlrm -of It AN 0 ' S • I "" tr1nt .... 11111evt per....... Y,.,.-a UVl:U Oii,.. Jul¥ S. I.... TJtOl'ICM. FISH ...... tlllol Mid llrm h ::.!:. in:.'° FflANI( KALI!, Tt9l<lfltlf, ooe _ polt.tton out trod, fail· . It.wt o. hlllll ==--: :1111111_,,.fel::,IM"'~ '""'!':: A.._, Lo':' .:::;--C.::11..,!"!t cro: inl to UH ""1at J.ltUI ftalt ,_ M. It...... • fllleWl1 A._..,, Stite Of C111tar111 .. . ...,. "' c.--. Of11111 c-,.,1 l!f\11111 s tt.,.., 602 Dowfl l>t'tw T,,. PIWtlty '° .,. 1r1111,."" " loc.t.d be bu. ...:k "".!' :..1:-.=-..:.• :.r=~ H"'"lllleltll' lfKll, C.~f. 11'111 J1ntl ~ ~tr:::.: IS~ ~1r. lffl BMdl, C-IY of For ttteateraoers ltll1 un· .....,.. ltellli't o . .._ ,..,. ,_ M. a11111, 602 0own or1w, M111111n1tlli'I S.ld •..,.:..,., ~1llfor1111. I Iv with "stop th ••'-"-" -" k llM --...u., C.llf. ••· An •lodl 111 "'" dt;;<rlbld 1" "'*11 a'ID uar e WIW>M 111-(•l ,,, 1utiKrlbtd ~ "" w1ttt. O•lld J"""' n, lHI. ,,,;. .-wlll • xt_., ""'_, Worid," the production is 11111111n.1-nt •I'd Kk.-lldlld '"'" u · Edwin,•. •,•,..M 11,,,,..,., •• Setl"B:'~ •=r!'t:i' ~·~~. • ll A-"" •"A ..-: 4A S 1C111wd IM Mm• Jtntl 111 •N:f loCllted 1 Se I "' •"",... we WUil.ll WC u1p w an (OFFICIAL SEA0L) Sl•I• ol C.lllor1111. Or•"t• C111111Y: BeKh Cou11~ of. Btldt ,.,.,.. SHI Clen:· ite. those who have Joyc1 M•,..1111111 0n Ju111 2t. 1 ... , ~•er• lfll, • Not1rv c.11,,,;1111 O••nv1, s11r. or .cl I NOlll"I "llO!lc<1llloml1 PllbMc Ill Ind tor .. Id Stitt, Hf'S0!\111'1 TIM bulk aeen other ataglna:s may not ""'"IP•I onic. 111 •-•red Ed'wln s ll.11'111 1nd J1111t s111 °",,, itter ~~':•d w111 .,. COMummt1M d I b oj ent OfotllP C-TY lt•l'lll 1i:;nowt1 to Mt to bt IM Ptl'MIM IO·OO AM I I )' ol Au1u1I, lfft. 1t er YI! M mUC e oym · ,,_., C-IMIOll 1-.1.... ""'-111""91 1r. wbl.crilltd hi !ht wlll'lln P~clflc ·A~.:.I Lit:. Esctvw1, l11e., '"' ~ show c o n tin u e s w,. u. 1111 11Utrvm111t 1nd lduW#...,... 1111" ei'. Lot AnHln. ~~"' ,,, c:i:i~. c_,., err Th d Frid d l'Vl:I~ Of1"" (Mlt Otlh° "llllt, t'CllltiCI llM 11mt. So '9r 11 k,_,, to llM t ' • ur• ays, 1y1 In Jwtr •• It. n. .. '"' 1171 ... (OFf'ICIAL Sll!:A L) lllnlMu. 1111'1111 Ind add r1nsl9'11, '" ·~~-for the --••-e JM<1111llne I!. Mor••n Tr1.,.,. ••• ,,, ... "* br "'' .,.~wv .. ,,I "'~"'~ "'--"'"' LEGAL NOTICE Kol1rv PllbHc<tHlomll ,,, ... ;:.....-IM ll1r11 YMrs l1tl PM!. weekends at the Cabrillo Pr111c:11111 ot11c. I" oi,.., jury 1 1,.. Pllyhou1e, 200 A v e n l d a P.-n ~~·ir~::::,. Ex,1rn Fr11i'..i "··1,, Cabrlllo at Ola Vista ClltTl,ICATI o,. •USINISS. NDVtmlltr u, IHI La Tr1ndt•e. ' S'ICTITIOVS NAMI l'vtlll.r.<! °''"" Co•nl 01lly "llol. ,,:.•r:,. If-..., lllC. -----------·! TIMI undersJ111oed dotl «r11f'I' 11'11 !1 _. J uPI' t. t , .. n, 1"8 11J7 ... L ::fie Aw, dllcfl"' I riv.rncu It .... e .. t 17111 Strtitt. • ..... ICll, C1DI. ttlM N-1 Bud!. C1lllornl1, under tlM lie-AL NOTICE sc,.. NI. :1111 "STOf' TNI WOltLO -I WANT TO lll'lo\IJ firm ,...,,,. of DE LANO'S HAllt LEG "ulllh llM Ori"" COillf 0.ltr ,.llaf. ••T 01'1'.. FASHIOHS 1nd ll'llt 11kl llrm la com-July It. lt6t 1!tl ... A mu11ctl 11Ur1 bY Lellll Brleu111 Ind -o:i of 1111 follow!'"' Plr*I. w11oM1 111-NOTICI TO Cll!OfTOltS """'°"" NIWll'I'• dl•1Clld tor kh1rd ln full 11111 Pl•C• of noilde""' 11 ,, fol.. SU,.lllOlt COUIT 01' THI! LEGAL NOTICE Anderl~ C~lll'h.J. bY G10r11l111 !OWi· STATI 01' CALll'OltNIA l'Olt ~1.li":i'~ n ~t:;;_i':"t:; 911lrkt 8 lerrttto, HtS Vtll1C9 TNI CO':_'!.::S.OltANOI HOTICI 0,. TltVITEl'I IALI mullllY Thlller urtd•¥• lflrouefl Lt .... Coall Me .. , C1Nf. fUJ6, f; Ill Ill MYltTA e HEWETT tllo 0.. Nt. all Sf~td•.,1 wnUI Auo. J 11 llM Cd1rUlo 01,.. JuPI' f, \.... 1 1 .. YA.TA Esi ELLE HfWETT, Jufy 30. lt6t, I t 11 :00 A.M . UN ION E~hou ... 20I A'ffftld1 Obrlllo, $111 Beilrlce B. B1rrstlo k1111wt1 •1 "' BANI(. •• TtVltw uno1r I nd ,.,,.1uinl to "*"-· TMI CAIT , SI•"" C1Htornl1, Or11191 Counf'I': o;::,.~!: IS HIREBY GIVEN to tl'lt OHd ol T/'Vl1 dlled JuPI' 2J, 1"5, midi Llltl1ct11p lt'41 \.ftllOV Oii JuPI' 2. \NL kforl -· I Noltry cnodlklrl llf tilt itwiv. llliMd dtcMHll ~ T0HDMAS A, COX ANO KATHLEEN E ._ ..... ,, .. ,F L'Hol l'vbfllc In tlld kH" .. Id Stitt. P1n.01'11lly Ill I I 11'11 .... C X, llusbillll Ind wlll tlld noomlfd ..... '.. . •. • . ••• rltlC .. CI r _,.. Bt1lrlt1 8 •••rtlto k-" ft'ltl •II ""°"' hlVI'"' c IN ••• ... Ju Pl' )0 lff,5 111 Book ,,,, ,. Su~ .••...•••••.... ltomll? H1rrv .. lie Tiie ""°" wl!otl ........ II .. Id dtcldlnl .... "41Ulted .. lilt tMm. flct&I ··~rcls 111 1111 · .,M•Ulo!Of· :1111 ........... . .. Anll I~ ::..C.,.lbtd to tllt wlll'llll ll\llnJml!ll Md wtlll 1111 MCflllf'I' vwc:htn. kl 11M ctllce ltlCOr'Oer of Or•,,,. CounlY ewe /r'kwn 1111 Cl'IOl'lll ...... ken11 JICObM'I, NG'lll •ck-lttdeld .... IXICUt.d lh• .. rnt. ol"" cltrk of""' •boW et'llllltd '°""'or •l'ffft to lfCUrt Ill llldtbltd,;.. '1 , 1•· Llttl9 Llttl«tlal>. ku" • O.ry 1': ... llr !llAL) lo 111'Htnl lhtrn, wlll'I 1111 M«llll'Y o1 UNION BANI(, 1 CllllOl'lll 1 n -.,.or f'audll. J ..... wu-. """"' (row, Mtllrllttl ShlW ¥0\ldllrt, lo 1111 11ndenlllltd c/O Ell•'•· Will ltJI ,, Pllbllc I Ud(on to' h=·:: LMI Ol1rnond Notll"I Pllblle:. C11lforn\1 L-. B1r1 .... r .. M., .... Altoi'MVI ,, dff' tar Clsl'I (PAYAB LE AT TIME OF MVllC ,, JoY'I Don19!11d: Cr118 Ollrro Pt111c101I Olll(I 111 L1w, ,., 0. BoK lffL N..-.orl Btecll, SALE IN LAWl'UL MONEY OF THE Oren11.1 Covnll' C1llfornl1 "'6l wlllefl 11 1111 PllCI Ill VNITEO STATES) 11 1111 Wiii inltinct Mv CommlHIOll E•Plr11 bullntll of !I'll 111'1dtrsltllld In •II M•ll•rs lo ll111of! Bink ,, 500 SOutll M1ln Str111 It Mtrch U, Ull Pl"llnl"" to !I'll 1111111 ef .. Id dt<edf'nl, Lt Vet1 AvMUI In t111 City DI Ort"'' Ind ,.ubllihtd or11111• Caa11 Dill? Piiot, within six montlll 11ttr 1111 tlr•I PYbll~· Caunty of Or1nH, Sitt• o1 Cillfomlt 111 Julv t. 14, 1l. 3'0, 1t6t • Ill-WI lion Of 11111 110t1c1, right, !!111, •nd 1nr1r111 COf\ve ved 10' •"'1 Tl"ckets on Sale D11td J111., 1. IHI. ."°w held b? II u11111r U ld Oftd 111 "' LEGAL NOTICE Roe.if P. '"'11' OfOPfrfY 1ltu1ll In lllt City of Cott: •---· Exec11tor of Ill• Will Meu, 111 lt ld C1111nry 11111 STiit ~-·ri~ 1-llf 1111 111o\1 named dtctftnt Id 111 ' .... ,.. Tickets for the Anaheim NOTICI 01' 1N/i5~1D TltANSl'Rlt •1LeJt1, LO•w•. IAUNGllt a PARCEL 1: t I R ' l ' ii.NO LeA1RIACk MY•ltl Tti.e Wh t 12'.0CI '"' ot lot 'IM of engagemen o l n g l n g Nollt1 11 h•r•b., ,1....., 11111 MAJtTIN P. ,..o tu 1ftl. N~ M ... Trad, in 1111 (ff'I',,, C:0t- Brotbers and Barnum and KltuGeR. o.c.s .• Tr1n111ror. "' Mil u. :;;::,.. '::~.!'!,'"'" "'° ~.11=~ ~IY o1 Or1111e, s1111 cf Baily Circus, opening at the r.~,,,:~;.:i~,,.,~170 :11 !!f.:i: ...8:!i Pllb"lftld 0r11111 COllt 011tv ,.1101. ! ,.,, 1 'cf ',lt'~7i'.'~'!0.:!,1111n~ Anaheim Convention Center ,,_,,., 10: U!ASEQUI P COltPOll.A. JlllY 1• '· 11• n. ,,.. MUI =~'t., °' "" o;ounf'I' recorc11r of Mid Arena Aug 6 are now on TLoN. A CALIFORN IA c o•"· 1n11ndH LEGAL NOTICE ,.Altc EL ,. , · 1 Tr111tltr .. (LKlor), " 211 SOUth Gli. TIM E ' sale at the box office all or1.,., c11v of B..,....., Hu11, c1111om111 °' ~~' ~00...fttt cf the Wat 1M.oa '"' Tl A · ' 1nd 11'111 n ld lnlendtcl Tr1n1ltrt1 CL... ......,, "' N~ ~ T,ICI, In Mutual cket genctes, all lot), LEASEQUIP COltPORATION. ~ ClltTl .. ICATI 0,. au11t1•ss. "" clly "' Coal• Miii, COii""' ol Wallich's Music City stores 11nC11 to i..Mt>ldl to Mid MARTIN "· '1cr1T1ous HAMI ~::0':::.:.111/: c1~11°'!11r1, 1111tr m1p --• U Unit d ""lil ni ICRUGEll.. o.o .s., Tr1n1l1rot IL"_), Tl'll vndtnltllM OOtl (trtlf'I' ti.e 11 Mltull•MIMI Ml 1 "'" 1 ct .. "" a e ..... or a !I'll Mid ... .._.. "'°"'""· • ... ... , •• c.'ldllCllM • M llllM II lt.W 0 NIWJIOrl t:Ollllfy flC ~ Pl, II lh• olllc• of !ht Banks in Orange Cnnnty de1crlpllal'I Iii wllldl b •• 1o11ow1. to-wll : 11¥11., c1:111 ~ C.lllonol• ulllk• IM Slld ult °!,.111': ··~~-cou~~· ll.;=============,;~~~~~~~~-~~.~~·=.1 Oent•I tc1ulpmt11t, offlc1 ec111!pmtnf, llclll ... " ' • CAMiltA WORIC m ..... uul w1111out lvmllu•• tllll flxtur11 11'd loc1ttd 11 2'! "" M-CO'ltn1nt or w1rr1n!v, 11tPrt11 or lmplled Lll>IH\I AVlllllt. CllY of L .. Ul'll Btidl, OALLl!llY ll'd 11111 Mid fl"" 11 (-r .. 1 .. 11111 !Ille. POIHHlon. Dr ,,.;. t'O!dlt:I Nanc: COAIT H*N'KI' !,L'IC IT.* MATINEES DAILY * C1lllol'nl1, 11141 t111! 11ld Hit ind-" °' 11'11 loltowln1 P91'1Gn (I), wllos• aimbr1rw: ... to Pl'I tilt prlrw:lptl """' or ,.. leewbtcli:; trlllllcllOll It to bt Ml'M(ll 111 fUll tl'd •llCt{IJ of rtll• Mid llOlt, lttUfld br .. Id Died, to wit: TIMES - 1 :45 . con1um1Nhd on IM tJ"' d1v or Juf'I', dlllCI 11 11 folio-.~ Mj.OOD.00, Wllll lnrtrnt from AilrU 7, 1NJ lt6t, 11 10 1.m .• 11 tilt ofllc• Of Jdln P. L1m111n. •ts St11111 J t., Cot> •I Ille rt11 of"'"",..,.. An1111m,•1 r111i!d j 5:05 ' 1:30 L111-1lp C...Wlll-. ti 212 SOUlh It Miii, CllJf. noll Provided, ldVlllCei, II 1nv. vnclff 1111 ;~~~~:!;":~ • Gtlt Orlw, City-of ..... riv HIU1, Cillo 0.lld Jwlr I, 1Nt terms ol .. Id Offd1 len. cl'11r"' tnd •~· tom!•. Jollll P. l.11!111111 iltn1es of 1111 trutltt •ncl of 1111 1ru111 ..,__ ·• WDI•• I JIM ·e~· Otltd 11111 hi 0•¥ of Ju,.,. lt6t. S!11t of C111fornl1, Ort'"'' C-IY: cretltd b'I s1/d Deed. <J.> _,,_ '1$ LEASl!!QUIP CORPORATION Oil Jul)' I, lftl, ~fort ""'• 1 No!tl"I Tiit IM111/lcr1rv undtr Mid Dted, ttv -=.• -M :i ' l'I Mllvlll Btrm1n ,.ubllc 111 ll'lll for nld Sl•ll, PlrlO!'llllY ri11on ol I br11ch or del1ull In !ht -~OUM> °' !all ' 1.11-~lt ~111M ,_...., Jdlll ,. Limllln k.-il 10 "" obllg1t10"1 .. t11rld lherell,, t11r1to10t1 212 s. 0111 Orlw · ••tculld •1111 .i.11~1red to 1111 11ndtrtl•'*' .. .,.,;,. HUii. C111wn11, Mn 11 11t 1111 "'""ill wtroH namrfl) 11 1 wrllltn 01<11r1tron o1 or1111tt ind o... /COLOJt ,.uDllthed Llllllll Btl(fl 01IPI' "llOf, 9\llllerlbtd lo !hi wlthl" lll1trvm1nt Ind mind for S•ll, Ind Wr lHet'I notice ol •lilLnc Jllll' H, lt6t 1202 ... Kkllll'Wltdtld '" •••cvled '"' .. -. bfftdl Ind l lK!lon lo U UM "'' Ull• l\l~;::;::;::;::;::;~;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;JI '-'-'----~===---· ICOFl'ICIAL SEAL) d.,.stenld to 111t Mid or-•IY to ntlity LEGAL NOTICE 1toseu1 c. ICllOw, 11ld oblle111on1, '"" lh•r••lltr, Oi'I Mlrch NOlll"I Pultlk ·C•lllOl'flll 11, \Mt. llM Undtfl'8ntd (1111111 .. Id •1t-.... 11.m M¥ CommlHIOll EltPll'll llCll1R cf bre1cll '"" •S.CtlOfl .. bt NOTICll TO CltllOITOltS J11I' J, IHI rtaotdtd cm Booli: lll4, Pin tf2 cf Of. 01' IVLK T1tAN1,1• AHO ,.11bll11Md 0••-Cott! OallY Pllol, llcl•I lt1coru In Mid ·~,.. onic.. INTENTION TO IXICUTll: JwlY 2, '· 16, n . 1Nt. lUMI (SEAL I SRCUl.ITY INTR•llT AGllllfMIMT Oiltd: Jutr J, 1Nt. ISIQ. 6101..1117 U.C.C.I LEGAL NOTICE VNION BANI(, Nollce 11 !Mrtbt' 1lwn to cred11of• 1111 •t Mid Trusl"· Crossword Puzzle ACROSS l Charlts: Abbr. 5 Pltased 9 Ont of lht est1tts 14 HouKhold furnishing lttm 15 Trsvtled In 1 vthlcl• l' llroadw•v production 17 Image of a dlvlnlly 18 Roo11 to swing·-: Z words 19 Publlcly obstrvablt 1Q 1958 Kobtl pt1ce ptlze winner 11 Circus tmploytt U Coln5 of Norw.,. 24 lmprtsslon- m1t lng dt vt ct 26 l lnd 28 Ctrtaln p:u•· lie offtcers: Abbt. 29 F1lghltntd 33 Time or!'~ Jr.. Tr1nqull Uy 37 Nu111btf' 38 Br•vol )9 Gl ov•nnl Cal>olo -40 lllntral deJ!OSlt • • 41 Trtt ~2 Flhrtc Y nttfdl)''• P1ul1 Solved: ""' Wl"'lll n11Md ttl'lllS 11111 • bulk ,.... B., A~ Ltlldl. tr1fllflr' 1r!d tllt tXt<llHOll of I HC\lrllY CllTl,U~ATI OP IUllNISS Auttiorlred S1911a1or '*"'-' 1grttmtnl 1rt 1lloul to bt m•dl ,.ICTITIOUS 1'$.t.MI A'"nt L11!U1. 43 Kind of tey 44 Tht briny: Z words 4f. Prohibit 47 Support 48 H1z1rds Sl Insult SS Flfst publlc 1pptlt9llCI • 57 Wtlsh torm Of Jolm SI Old World ..... 60 Allowet' to hlTI ltmporarlly ll U.S. city 61 Enroll In • co11p1Ullon fl3 Stt 42 Across •4 Thertfot• •s Irish poll "-lord lndlc atlnt •g:tttflllll •1 Tre1ttd f1btlc DOWN 1 Unrt;tnt-r1tt n1lUr1 of 11.n · 8 DllCOftfJ ' In f1var 10 C11Un9 etr of llltglMCI H Cantlnuovsly Clft•61t Placn with C•rl 22 tllt•t cut 1S Pt1sldtntlll nlctn•t 17 Whtn Dublin Is: Abbr. 1• Not 9lvtn to ltYll)' l F1st1ntt1 30 Bird Z "l'rt --t": Jl WUllln: z words Comb. fo,. 3 Lovt: II. 32 llld 1111••1 4 Very good )) $hows 5 For frtt ont's y11rs 6 Otc•PJloo J! Eu~pesn • flllllc.ullll Europtln pl1.ce c1plltl Oii t«llll'\ll troiofff'I' ht r 1 I11 If t Ir The lllldlnltntd dotl ctl'flly ht ts (lift-Ol>ff'lllOlll Offlctr dlKf!bld. dllellllf I blnl11111 ti 171' N_,.i Blvd .• ,... ,,,,. Tiit 111-11'1d bll11111u lddrtu of tfle c.... Miii, C•tllot111t. r.Hldtr 1111 lie· IW!td Or11111 Cott! 0.llr ,.llol. l"ltlldH tr1n1frror 1111 lllltndld ""''"' tit!-firm .,.,,,. ri1 W1rrtn'• F1ctory JuPI' '· U, 21. IHI 117S-61 tlrlv lrt: Jl!ltltY It. ltli.\M. 5Cl7 W. ltlll Olnocl Mttflll'OW Ct11l1r tnd MQM'IO• SI .. Cott• Men, C1lllornl1. C111fef' -W1rr111'1 F1ctory Olrrd 11111 LEGAL ~OTICE Tiit n1m1 ind riv.1-1 lddrn1 llf 1111 tll•I Mid """ 11 c~ of llM tollow-1-,,,.,=~---'------ lnltrldtd lrtmftrM lllCI lnttncMd dlblcl' 1111 ",_(I) WhOll "'""(I). 111 full 1N:f IN THI IVPlllt!Olt COVltT 0, TNI 11: ANDY CAltltOLL. f2t1 HIOll nl Or .. plam(t ) .. rnldl!lct 11 II filHOWll ITATll 01' CALl,OINIA l'OJt HUl'ltlllltoll Buell, c11norn11. • W•n'lll Otbrtn '-· m N. Sllltlt, THI! COVHTY Qf' OltANO• Thlt "" """"'' ,.--riv "r11111n °''"" C1llfonll• AcnoN NO, , .. "' Mfttll l1 Mtcrlbtd In tftllrtl et: Dtlld j Ulll 27, 1"8. ALIAS SUMMONI Mlterl1lt, IUOP llfl, "'' r '• hJ1n~1 ~~ SI tit ot C1llfornli . Orinte (IM!fy: ll;OBEltT O. BELOUO, ,.ltlnlllt. YI.. M. ..Ul-nt, 111d 11 loetled I • On JulY I, 1t6t, btfor1 me, 1 Nolel'Y SMALE, C. W, ,.Rl!SCOTT, ANO ALSO St .• Cotti Mt11. C1lltornl1. h l -IJllUc 111 11111 ,_. .. Id Stlh, "''°"'"" ALL OTHER PERSONS UNKNOWN Thtt t'tll pllc1 wMrt the ert II l!lilllrld W1frt11 Dlllrt11 Bonner k,_n CLAIMING ANY ll.1GHT TITL E, -·1 dilttr11itd bulli:; lr•111ftr 11111 l~KUl!on of• fl -lo bt 1111 Plt°IOll "'-llt-II l!STATE, L1EN Oil INTl!REST IN THE 7/16/6. t!J MCVrtt)" l11!1r11I ttrHMrnl I• lnttndM : wblClrbed l'O 1M wllhln 1n11,_1 Ind REAL PJtOPEATY DESCRIBED IN THE .. aouumm1led II •I tllt llffltt tck-ltdtld 1'11ntclllld1111 ...... COM,.LAINT ADVERSE TO THE PU.IN· )l Cltlf I .,....,...,. •M...w Cllll'ltl"Y' X7l W. •th (OFl'ICIAL Sl!ALl • TIFF'S OWNERSHIP Oil ANY CLOUD '' Sum110Mf St .. lll A ... 1111. C1tlloml• fOll0,5, on or JOlll'h E. 01vt1 ON PLAINTIFF'S TITLI! THERl!TO. .. .tftr Jut\' fl, lUI. Nolll"I Publlc·C•ll"*°nl• SUEO HERE1"9 AS DOl!S ON !!: to I COUu "l1r 11 11 knowll to .. Id p1,,ltl, tllt "'ll'ICIPll Offlc1 In THll.OUGH ONE HVNOltEO, 111Clutl~1, 40 tkMt Wotnl fdllowl"t lddl!IOllll b!.1Jln111 "'""' •I'd 0t1111t CounlY Olftnd1nt1. 41 Pl1c1 for Mdr .. Nt Vied b'I .. Id Plrlltl wlll'l!n 1111 Mr Commlllloi<I Eu1rn PEOPLE OF THE STATI' OF .. ,,. trlmtnls: ~': :i:~n~::.:..:,1~1·:.~~..,,.., NOM. ,.llblb= J:~:.79cot1! 011tv ,.llCll, Ju. ~:.::~:,~:IA to '"' •boYt "1""'1 In Ofllll Br 111kl ln ltMled cllMor; Nont. IY 2, f, 1', 21, IM 113Mol Yow 1r1 ...,...,_, dirt<!" to 1111 1 "'11• 43 EXpo ll 01tec11 JulY '· IHI. i.11 i11Ndl111 Jn r-to thl wrltJfd subject ,.,.., Jt. Rnm LEGAL NOTICE -lllnt °' Ille •bovl 111med ,. .. 1n111t 4' Ont trho Md? c 1rron wtltl "" cllrl( Ill Ille 1boYI tnll!ltd o;ourt •Nl.OC Ill 1111 1bo¥1 et1lllled Kllon ~nt advls, •• l'llblltlltd, ... Or-• CNP DllPI' ,i~ MOTICI 0, ::.~~ °' ltlAl -!ml '°" In .. kl court. wlll'l!ll TE"9 caut on Jllf'I' M, ,.Of'lltTY AT ,..IVATI IAL• d•n 1119' JM Sff"ltct Oi'I "°"of 11111 11111 46 Thin s1r1, ,.., _..,..n "'"1m0111. If """Id ·w1111111 11141 1bov1 of wood LEGAL NOTICE 111 "" 1...,..,.., c.u,, °' "" 11,19 ., ,..,_, CGl.llllY. or wlll'lln THiii.TY Mn II "I .... C.llfflnlll tor Ille C-f'I " or...... ltf'Yld •lwwhtrt. .. ltenW ,... "·"' tlftl' .. "" *""' .......... "' TfNA You ... htrttw llCllllltd t111t llllllu reo Sfudtnl MOTl(I' TO Cltl'DITOltl NEWIUltGH Ilse a:-11 KATIE IO flll t wrlft.,. r-11Yt Plndl111, Mid 49 f:aUtt 0, IULK TltANll'llt ,t,MD NEWBUltOH: O.C .. lld. -lllnllff wlll f1k1 ludt"""I tor tifl' ~· 50 llttctlts INTINTION TO llXl'CUTI Noflcl II "'""" •twll lllet .,,.. or ~ ftmlfldecl In 1111 verified 0 _._ dts SICUlt.ITY INT•JtlST AOltllMINf ~ win ttll II ,rm .. Mii to -lllitt II l rlll ... -r.ontr1d. or Wiii r ,..n 111n. "'1,.111 v .c .c .1 ltA hllflttl ,..,. "'" .....,.. 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Cost Down by $50 Million SACRAMENTO(AP) The latest fftlmated cost of Calilornie.'i ·state Water Project has been revised downward by '50 mlllion from lat year to $2. 71 billion, the State Water Re.sources Department says. A department spokesman said the reduction was caus· ed in put by cuOI in ad· mlnistrative overhead costs and "a lot of little things." But the price tag might have to be revised upward during the coming months beeause of new labor con- tracts, said the spokesman, who asked that he not be identified. La.st year's estimated was $2.83 billion. The project still is running geneNllly oo schedule, with planned delivery ol water at the 1outliern terminus in RiveI'6i.de County by 1972, the department said in its annual report on the waler proj.ect. Joaquin Delta to Southern California. The report said the pro- ject facts an estimated long -term deflcit ol $269 million, but W. does not take into account m million in new money put into the project ju.st last mt>Nh by the legisla-. A new bond 1asue to carry the full plan to fruition is in· evitable, the report said, but just when the is.sue will be needed, and how much, can't be determined at this point. The project WM launched in 1980 with approval by the voters of a $1. 75 billion bond issue to build a network of daml, · reservoirs, canals, pumping pl• n ta and aqueducts-all designed to d e 1 i v. e r .water from Northern California to the moisture-deficient South. OVER HALF COMPLETE • The spikesman said "we lost some Ume" in the ~ ject achedule lM:t y e a r b e c a u 1 e of uncertainty about the financing of Per· ris Reservoir in Riverside County. But water aitll is expected to reach Perria by 1972 although the reservoir · ai.id ~bution system may riot be fully complete, he said. Schock Sailing School Jr. and Sr. Pr••''"'' Lesions AYeileble ,, S1l:i•h+ l ldo1 111d S1nt1n11 .. , ........................ . MHMM Pm-. latnl&tJM SC:HOCK SAILIN6 SCHOOi. HH ~. N.W,_, '-M• . 6JJ.Jtl0 lfflS SUNllAY JULl 21 4:00 PM. THE LAE:T DOWNTOWN BULLFl~HT UNTii .. SEPl~ ....... "" ..... ,, M.r1111nam• ..,._ .. "Lirnpy/' a pet rabbit owned by Chris Foster, Car· mel, Ind., finds swimming in the family pool the best way to have fun and keej> cool irt the swnmer. "Limpy" (he bad a broken leg when he was young) has just learned how to dive from a diving board. (L). He gets out of the pool through an overflow hole (upper R). When he's not swimming or diving, he enjoys riding around on a toy surfboard (lower R). Chris, son of Dr. and Mr~. Lee Foster, is 16 and raises a number of rabbits, but says "Limpy" is his favorite. GOING !ZI MILES The report, re l eased Thurs. said wate!', now is flowing through 221 miles Of the J><opooed ~ -mile long California Aqueduct running from the Sacramento • Sao A departrn<ot spokesman said the project now is 57 percent complete with 23 percent more under con- tract, The state has mt call- ed for bids on the remaining 20 percent or comstruction cum!lltly planned. Negro Re-enlistments Drop Dramatically WASHINGTON (AP) - Negro re-enlistments in the Army have dropped dramatically, according to a Pentagon report covering 1967. The development, which officials says is puzzling, has triggered a study to find out why. Officials are reluctant to link racial unrest with the slide of Negro fir5t term re-enlistment r a t e s from 66.5 percent in 1966 to only 31.7 percent last year. One senior official said, "nobody knows why" Negro soldiers showed such an abrupt change of attitude toward signing up f o r another hitch after com- pleting a first enlistment or a draft tour. "I'm just as puzzled as you are," the official told a reporter. He said his ex- perts are analyzing the situation. 'The Anny said, "It must be noted there is a cor- responding drop in re-enlist- ment rates for Caucasians a s well." The report does reflect a decline in white first term re·enlisbnent rates from 20 percent in 1966 to 12.8 per- cent in 1967. But this decline \\'BS not nearly as severe as among Negro soldiers. Asked for its explanation of the drop·off the army said it believes that risk of death or injury and possible repeat tours in Vietnam are "major determining fac- tors." The report on "Negro participation in the Armed Forces" regi.steredc first tenn re-enlistment dips for all the other services, but by on1y a few percentage points in each case. The single exception was a slight uptrend in re· enlistments by w h i t e ainnen-from 16 percent in 1966 to 17.3 percent in 1967. At the same time, Negro airmen re-enlistments went from 30.l percerrt to 26.9 percent. The rate of white sailors re-enlisting in the Navy declined from 17.6 percent in 1966 to 16.7 percent in 1967; the rate of Negroes from 24.7 to 22.5 percent. In the Marines, white re- enlisbnents totaled 10.5 per- cent ln 1966 and 9. 7 percent last year. The Negro re- enlistment rate in Ule Corps went from 19.5 percent to 15.9 percent. U, as the Army suggests, its drop-off in re-enlistments is attributable to the risk of death or wound, the same factor apparently does not apply in the case of the M•arlne Corps, to judge by the relatively slight re- enlistment decline among the marines. Between them, the: Army and Marines have absorbed about 95 per<:ent cf the U.S. casualties in the Vietnam War. One possible explanation for ithe contrasting re-i!nlist- menJ situation between the Army and the other services may be because the Anny I draws heavily on two.year ·· draftees while the other services are 15taffed mainly by volunteers. Draftees, many of them probably reluctant to go to uniform in the first place, might be expected to shun a military career in the face of rising danger. 'The new report shows that Negro deaths in action through la st year ran somewhat ahead of the pro· portion of Negroes serving in Vietnam, Thailand and aboard Naval vessels in Vietnam waters. A total of 2,252 Negro servicemen were listed as killed in action through the end of 1967. This was 14.1 percent of the overall 16,0'l2 Americans killed by the enemy. At the same ti m e , Negroes accounted for 55,904, or 9.8 per<:ent of the 568,132 U.S. servicemen in- volved in the war. Newport Girl Given Honor Sarah Mais has been a.warded $100 and a medallion as N e w p o r t Harbor High School's Calif ornia League Outstanding Student. The award V.'18:5 presented by Newport Balboa Savings Assi1Stan t Secretary Florienne Launt. I See by Today's Want Ads -·-• A multiplex stereo "•Ith ~bd:,..."'-:;:i ampex recorder In large walnut cabinet w I t b 2 matching spe&kel's. • A private party has '100 po.in or dose out brand name shoeg_ Le.dies or chlld~n and very low prices, • 68' chain link fence with gate for a nominal price Is )'OW'S if )"OU remove Jt! •A "character" 20 foot boat wilh marine motor is avail· able to the penoo looking for fun in the Harbor. e A CHERRY CHINA CAB- -- I Free personal checking accounts with a minimum balance of $300 .at Security Bank. Regardless of how many checks you write, keep a minimum balance of $300 in your personal checking account, ana there is no monthly service charge. If your minimum balance drops be- low $300, a new, graduated fee schedule applies. Check into a Security Bank check- ing account. Then take one home and use it. A lot. Make your financial partner • SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK INET • • • and h:cellent buy.Th!smay~j"'1the ll-~~~~~~~~~~~~~:--~~--:;;-~:-;--;:-;-~;-~~--;~;:;-~~~:-:--r;:~;--~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ,... . .., ....,, ,_,,. Orange Coast's No. 1 Paper! The Daily Pilot ~---------. - • JODl!AN HASTINGS, 642-4321 TlllllN,, .11111 U, 1Nf Mt P• II AAUW Perks Coffee Hours Before officially epening the fall season of lectures and study aessions, the Newport-Costa Mesa branch ·of the American Associa- tion of University Women will orient continuing and prospective mem- bers on club activities. Traditionally the group arranges a series of coffees to acquaint members with programs, and again this year five gatherings have been planned. Hostesses, their addresses and dates of coffees are Mrs. W. Grady Thompson, 660 Kings Road, Newport Beach, July 31; Mrs. Lane B. Blank, 2748 Albatross Drive, Costa Mesa, Aug. 7, and Mrs. Richard Auelmann, 2701 Bluewater Drive, Corona del Mar, Aug. 14. Others are Mn. W. P . Krausnick, 309 BoWling Green Drive, Costa Mesa, Aug. 21, and Mrs. John Jackson, 16~ Lucia Lane, Hunt- ington Beach, Aug. 28. · The Wednesday events, which will begin at 10 a.m., will provide an opportunity to learn of the AAUW fellowships programs and the sections in art, literature, gourmet dining, Spanish and bridge. Challenge of a Changing Society will be the theme for the com· ing year and will be pursued through four study topics which are The Growing Gap Between the Rich and Poor Nations, The Changing Poli· tics of Education, Testing Values in a Changing Society, and Society's Reflection in the Arts. GROUNDS FOR ORIENTATION -To lhoroughly study the Challenge of a Changing Society, the year's theme of AAUW, Newport-Costa Mesa Branch, a computer board is necessary say th e Mmes. Lane Blank, Ronald K. Arnold and John Jackson (left to right) as they invite continuing and prospective members to a series of coffees when study programs and other activities will be discussed. Membership is open to college graduates from institutions ap- pi'oved by AAUW or from foreign institutions approved by the Inter· national Federation of University Women. Women interested in attending any of the coffee hours may call the membership chairman, Mr1. Ronald Arnold at 545-5214 fur further information. ~ ·- Surf Sounds Traveling ADDRESS mid· Atlantic. Pulling on hiis seven-J.eague boots a n d traveling again is former mrayor Don Shipley who bas been joined by nephew Donald A. Shipley, 19, for a tnur of London, France, Spain, Portugal, Morocco and perilaps Paris. The two Dom stopped briefly in Baltimore and Washington, D.C. before boarding tile Queen Elizabeth in New York, .and will sf.op in Georgia enroute home to attend a niece's wedding. The former mayor's nephew. curre ntly U .attending the University of California at Berkeley. HOME AFTER a year in Jamaica \Vflere she lived as an exchange student is Jan Royer, daug!iter of Dr . .and Mrs. R. Quentin Royer. Jan, who was a representative of the Inter-Christian Youth Excha1nge, is 1 o o k f n g forward to a visit tflis month from Marh~ Mattila from Finland. Miss Matilla was the Royer 's foster "daughter" when she was an AFS student in 1965-66. AND M 0 R E travelers returning. Paul and Gerrie PhilliP< spent a deliglttlul three weeks. touring Mexico in additi'on to P a u I' 1 attending the R o t a r y Convention in. Mexico City. The Phillips cruised down on the Princesis ltaUe with overnight stops in La Paz and Puerto V a:llerta before debarkill« at Acapulco to catx!b. a plane to Mexico aty. As Long DEAR ANN LANDERS: I accepted a job with this organization eight months ago today, A woman I met here impressed me as extremely bright and frlen:lb'. 1 liked her at once. Now the problem : This woman has worn the ..ne washable two-piece corduroy outfit every day since we met. Sbe i.s not hard up financially. Her husband bas a top41.otch position .and she also makes an excellent Nlary. I heve been to their home and seen 1ewral dresses hanging in her closet. When I asked her wtly she never wore them she replied, "They are too large. I used to be quite heavy." I offered to give her the IDlmt at m)' alteration lady but tile said, "lt wouldn't be worth tt." Tho ........ ill -aal cleon, but-- • Pioneer Days Lure Settlers ID July, 1847, Brigham Young scanned the barren desert surrowuling Salt Lake and proclaimed, "This Is the Place." Since that time, Mormons have celebrated the day as their official Pioneer Day. In Huntington Beach, the Fifth Ward, Relief Society of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will commemorate the occasion with a Pioneer Bazaar on Saturday, July 20. The public is invited to don typical pioneer costumes and join the celebration taking place at 14271 Locust St., Westminster. In keeping with the pioneer spirit, festivities will begin with a hearty lunch featuring barbecµed ham· burgers and hot dogs, corn on the cob and watermelon wllich will be served at 1:30 a.m. Between 2 and 3 p.m. relay races for the children and a piwating contest for adults and teenagers will be the feature attraction and following these events will be the around·the-block Pioneer Parade by the Children'• Primary Organization. Game booths will be open all day, and also enticing crowds will be booths featuring home-baked bread and pastries, candy, pop com, soft drinks and white ele- phants. Highlighting the bazaar will be handcrafted quilts, clothing, embroidered pillow cases and dish towels, aprons, jewelry and novelties which were fashioned during the Relief Society's homemaking meetings, de- signed to encourage handcrafted and homemaking sltills. EARLY DAYS . RECALLED -Homemaking skills will be demonstrated during a Pioneer Bazaar span~ sored by the Fifth Ward Relief Society of the C·hurch of Jesu1 Christ of L8tter-day Saints Sattir· day, July 20. Displaying some of the assorted hand- made items which will be offered for sale are (left to right) Mn. Conway Nielsen, 1piritual living lead- er and crochet chairman, Mrs. Ralph Barnell, presi- dent, and Mrs. Kenneth Vance, bazaar chairman. A barbecued chicken dinner at 5:30 p.m. will con- clude the celebration. All proceeds from the bazaar will support lhe many activities of the Society which cares for the PQOr, the sick and unfortunate, provide& guidance and training in homemaking arts and atrengthens the virtues of com- munity life. as She Is Suited Up and Clean-Don't Scream ANN LANDERS [il can you imagine what that corduroy suit looks like after being worn every day for eight months? I do believe the dear lady will wear that suit to her grave. Would 1be be offended if I presented her with a decent dress in her size? -WACO DEAR WACO: Save your money. Your friend bas 1 psycbologtcal thing: &olnt with that eorduny 11dt and Ille wlll condnite to wear tt •ntll It falll olf ..... -. Bo tllaUr.J Iha& tlN la .... and clean and don't mate beF b••C·lfll your problem. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was surprised that you made reference to the surgeon who took <Xi the Wrong leg by mistake. The medical profe11ion doesn't like that kind of pubUcity. Sev1ral years ago my Wife wu in the hOlpltal for" a 1ptnal dilc opera· tlon. The morning lhe wU ICheduled lf>r aurfery. a pllyslclan .U:ed Into htr room ..i llid Ill Illa - voice, "You certainly don't loot like a wome of 66." My wife replied, 0 1 HOPE 1 don't. I'm 45." The dbctor gulped 8lld stammered, ·~ 1 mu1t haw the wrong chart here.' He left and. returned a few moments later with the correct mut. Heaven only know what would have bal'l"""'1 If tile mistake had not been d..llcOvered. The woman wbo9t chart the doctor held may heve betn scheduled for a gan bladder operaUon or a thyroldectomy. I'm wtltJnc to alert you to the fact tbat docton: ere not God. They .are human beings who make mistakes, just like everyone else, and it pays to check on them. - HUSBAND OF A ,NEAR-VJCIIM DEAR HUSBAND• nollk you for ,_ JeUor, I llllew belon 700 - I•, Ula& doeton are aot God ud tbeJ mU:t mll&Un ~ every-..e ellt. I have e1preued tllltt very ltlltl.meata la 111• cotmna oa 1umerou occallou. DEAR ANN t:A.NDERS : Can you tell me pleue what tbe dutle1 ot a mJniJter'1 wife are? Wben11 1he ~ posed to llDd limo for her own 1""1lly ond tht actMtieo ahe COMiden 11111 ID! not obligation•? J'v1 uktd this question. of 1everal frienda 'Wt\o are married to mlnlslel:s mL they don 't -the _,.er, DO you! -DAWN TO DUSK HELPMATE ' DEAR DAWN< 'Alt problem la - 700 11t!tt to iait over with ,.., &rnmu. ' 'CONFIDENTIAL TO Boor OWL: or-·· you-~ altop .... YWu . aleep deya. Drll your eareu1 out ci« bed In tile morning and llx breallfut for your lmnib'. PerhlP'I ti you .... 1elf·*'ier '°"' buaband wouldrt haft to be a crank. 11Tbe Brfde't Gulde." Au Landen' booklet, amwtr1 1ome of die mMt ,,.. q .. 1111 oali:e<I ... 1111 ... obtal ..,... dta,ca. Te -· . l* cep7 ti lldt comprebeulve ,_., write lit Au Lucien, la eare el IM1 aewspapw, eaclollDC I inl1 NU~1lt41 ._. pod ... elope and u eeDlo ID ttlo. Ano Linder• wDI be glad to belp 7au wtth your problems. Send them to her In oaro of tile DAILY PILOO', encl ... ~~ atamped, 1111...sdreutd - ,• ' . ,, . .. J4 DAll.Y l'ILOT r...,.,, ,~, 16, 196,8 Horoscope • Sharyn Uyesugl MarriecsJ.1 Cancer: Gain Allies A honeymoon In Carmel followed the 1ervlces unitln( 14_ marriage two former Unlvmily of Southern C&lilornia ltudenll, Sharyn Em! Uyesuil and Dr. Tonio Yama- moto. . Tbe couple 1poke their wedding vow1 t>.- fore the Rev. Albert F. King at an altar flanked by baskets of pink and white gladlo- Ju and carnations, In the Neighborhood Church, Palos Verdes. The bridegroom Is the son of Mr. and Mn. Ototaro Yamamoto of Torrance. His bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. '• I WEDNESDAY JULY 17 By SYDNEY OMAIUI u'l'hl lrial IDID control& Ills deotlny • . , A1trolo1y points the -·" ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19): Get -lnJIJhl lnto po1c e11ton s . \'ou can lmpn>Y< 11\COm• potential. lit cbaervant. You could f1nd m1nar flaw which NVes )'OU time aod. money. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Cycle move1 up. You can tuece1afUU1 Lnaugurate Change1. Important to get ldeu, tbougbts on peper. Key la ment.al orderliness. 0-,lt&lliH aim.a, I o a I 1 , ambitl.oM. GEMINI (May 2hJune 20): Much today appears to be v.odercover. MNn1 there ,,.. apt to be •ub le in.Ol*K:t1. F,.lmilY member may be withholding Information. No malicious intent. Realize other• have right to privacy. CANCER (June 21.J uly . 22): Now you gain allies, 'frlettdl. Shake off tendency0 " to brood. Look to future - 1tre11 opUmJam. Many of )'(lur bope1, wU:het are ~ to be fullllled. Could be day to celebnrQ. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A1su.me respon1ibWty. Take inlUaitive Where c 1 re er, ambition! are concerned. If yoo. try to ahlrk duUe1, price could be exceedingly high. Know thla and a c t accordingly. VIRGO !Aug. 23-Sept. 22): ' . Kenneth Kenji Uyesugi of Costa Mesa, was escorted to the altar by her father while wMring an original 1own of satin organza and jeweled alencon lace fashioned in a trumpet ll!houett. with high jeweled neck- line and jabot front. A cascade of white rose- buds and lilies-of.the-valley formed her bou- quet. In attendance were maid of honor Miss Suzanne Durkin, matron of honor Mrs. Randy Sopp and brtdesmald Miss Sherry Goddlcksen, who were gowned identically in bright pink: sleeveless dresses with white overdresses of lace trimmed organza featur- ing mandarin necklines, Each carried a round bouquet of blight pink rosebuds with light pint carnations and ribbon 1treamer1. Juniors Collecting Now Long-range vliew iJ best today. Minor problems due to c:Usaolve. Travel l 1 highlighted, also greater self~xpression. One who is at a distance offer1 wUd suggestion. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' Permit mate, partner. to take initiative, You are at your best today providing a sense of balance. Your ideas spark.le. But otben greatly benefit if you give them spotlight. . . For Fall Rummage Sale Flower girl Miss Sherry Kawamura also wore bright pink with a white overdress em· broldered in daisies. Peter Lubtsich as best man was joined by ushers Takeo Yamamoto, Keven Uyesugi, Richard McMahon and On. Craig Ota and Dennis Nakatami. ' A reception followed in the Plush Horse, Redondo Beach. The brtde, an Empire debutante, Is an alumna of Newport Harbor High School. Al use she studied education and became a member of both Kappa Alpha Theta and the Japan American society. The benedict, a graduate o1 Phineas Banning High School, received his BA from USC in Asian Studies and is a recent grad· uate ()f the USC Dental School. He belongs to Phi Sigma Kappa fraternity and is cur· renlly a captain In the United States Air Force. The couple will spend the next three years in Yokota, Japan, where Yamamoto Is stationed. • Kitchen at Sea MRS. TERUO YAMAMOTO To Reside In Japan -- Offertnc to belp cle111 out area cloeetl and iaraa:es are member• of the Hun~ tingtoo Beach Junio r Woman'• Qub. The JUJUor1 will be hippy to h•• rm, Of tt>Ole 0 whlte e~". wt:Jldl curnntly .. •e...Uttng up 11poce and' c:ollectlng durt f« their fall rummage end bake oale. Ml'I. Slallley Hellillga, waya and IDffnt chalnnan, 11 Hl'ViDc at general chairmon for tl>e oale which will -place hi September hi HlllllhlClon Beodl. Painters Welcomed · MatJac their conlribption toward encouraging budding ..u.t1c talent are members of the Huntington Beach Junior Womao'1 Club. A course in be~minc techniques of painting with acrylie$ will be offered for six weeks beginning Wednesday, July 17. Soup, Salad . Sandwich Cia.... wW be cooducted In the clubhouse, 420 loth St., HuOOngton B each , between 9:30 and 11:30 a.m., by Mrs. Frank Souza, inistructor. A l i m i t e d number of openings are available, 10 interested persons Me urged to contact Mrs. J~s Mahan, Junior• fine arU cheirman, a t Wf-fXJ1'1, N IOOD a I possible. JOAN HERING Brld•to-bo Couple Select September Joan Louise Hering and her flance Dooald H . Ot:terman will be married in the First OlrlstJan Church, Garden Grove, Sept. 14. !l"tllowlfl!I h h lourttl •rflcll-111 • Mrl• ... l!ciw lo P~... lll«llltrll ..... 11 for :wmmerllrne Miion.i By NANCY HYDEN WOODWARD NEW YORK (WNS) - Hint No. 1 If you are tired of dishing out one oan of 1oup or another atocig with a sandwich, how a b o u t comblning a couple? Mix oniCJll md. toma(o !OUp, tometo and cream of celery, or onion and chicken gumbo. Hint No. Z If you want to heat up JOme buttered French or Italian bread and haven't space available on the stove, try the ship's manifold. First butter (with garlic, 11 deoired ) the breed, Club Bids wrap heav·Uy le tin foll and 2 tablespoong A·I sauce place oo manifold. By t.he y, pound melted butter or time your meal ii ready the oleo bread will be, too. Watch 2 tablespoou. me It e d out, tti.oug11, that it doesn't bacon fat get too heated. d a 1 h W o r cestershire HEARTY TUNA SALAD 1auee 2 cans tuna (or crabmeat) Nit l packa·ge ol. frozen peu pepper I cup thinly sliced celery .y, cup water or vinegar 2 31h-0unce jars cocktail 'CombU>e every thin I 1bere will be a charge of $1 per 1euon or '8 for t.he coune, with proceed.1 to be used for a fine arts 1cbolarlhip. oni'om, drained except dllcke.n. P 1 a c e . dliclten in co .. red pon "' Oldsters % cup mayonoa1ae or caS9eT'Ole, coat chicken with salad dressing mixture, 8 d d remainfng ~ ~t~~c::riemoo juice oauce to pan, cover aM Kick H'-!!IS ~~Y" cook I~ hours. ~ 1 teaspoon IOY sauce Harbor Area S e n 1 o r ~ teaspoon curty powder CHIU BEEF FOR SIX Citizene: clut> members will ~ teaspoon garlic aalt 1 pound ground round beef gather at the recreation 1 cup chow meln noodles 1 tablespoon butter or oleo center, Newport Be a ch 1,1. cup toasted, blanched 1 envelope onion 1oup mix tonight et 7:30 for a party 54.ivered almonds 1 cup dairy IO\a cream wtiich will include a pi<.'ture· Let pea:s unfreeze on their %_ can1 con.denied chill trip ta Atrl.oa llld "higb own. beef IOUp stepping" mwic for tbe Drain tuna (or crabmeat) 2 .soup cans of waiter ~ dancers Nppng tbe The daughter of 11'.r. and Mrs. Robert C. Herlng of Glendale ls a graduate of Newport Harbcit Hi g h School and Orange Coast College where she received her dental a1sj1t i ng certificate. aoo break ioto pieces ind I teble9poon flour Vlr.glnia Reel. A bridge and canesta C'Olllbine pel.I, c e 1 e r y , 1 tablespoon chili powder 'lbe party b open to party whi<:b will ioctude a onf:ons, with meat. Combine Brown beef in bu1ter, Mid anyone OWi' 50 yean of age. The future bridegroom, san. of Mr. and Mrs . Lyle C. Ottennan o f Huntington Be.a.ch, was a student at Golden Weit College and now Ls attending Cal Poly in Pomona where he i s majorlng In urbaJ planning. light tundleon jg being mayollftaise, lemon juice, soup mix, chill beef IOtJP, At the cloM d. the evening offered by El camino Real •oy sauce, curry powder and water. Bring to boll and refretilm«* wtll be tened. Woma11 's Club ol Dana and garlic salt. Add noodles let simmer ftve mututes. Pre1ident Lee Deamond Point at 12 :~ p.m. Tuesday, to tuna mixture, add Add fJour end chili powder hM noted that tomorrow1 July 23. mayonnaise mixture and to sour cream, stir into chill July 17, it Senicr Cltilens The event, chaind by ton lightly. Serve in lettuce and mix. AD<nr to llrnmer Day at the Orange County Mrs. Niles Welch, will raise cups and sprinkle almonds but not boil. Serve with Fairgrouodl. 'nle Swtnilng funds to support Services over top. Serve• I. bread or s.altines. And Dollies Bend wW tic:t off ror ile Blind. The party ls A·l cmCKEN remember, if for lunch, be the eftemoon beginninc: at 2 being staged in Couununlty 21h:-3 pound& chicken, cut sure boat b: anchored before p.m., and ell Senior Citizena House, Dana Point. up making it. have been urged to attend. Prlceti are $5 per table or I,:;=~========~~~~======='====;==== Miss Hering's parents are former COila Mesans. $1 .25 on an inaivldual basil. Pertnershrips m a y be arranged. AMl•IC4'1 UltllST ~_ .. ;,irlfloRAPERY U}(,l Ul.J c,;.L EA NE I! 6 IWM'ff W•ht' D•m• .. e l'LAMI PROOFING IXCl.USIYI •UAIANTEED DIAPHY CLEANINCi ore,.,., CIMftlftl. Pert.ct ,...,..1... .. the e1• ., ywr 4ra,.ry, ., 1M Y. ,._ pl•clfMftt tf clMn•~le. •Ne Shrink.,. •NeWlit.IH .... e Perfect ,. .. , F.Wlnt e Pierfwt Inn HllM • Wetw lhht alfMftt e '"'"'llMI IMt•ll•"- ~~!'"t OUR IXCLUllVI lllVICI ii • ,,., ........ 1 ......... eTWM1M1yle~ • ,,... lbttmetel e ,,_ L•n Dr•,_ 20% on~~!~: ... I f702 lfWPOlf llYD., COSTA MESA WHArS BETTER THAN AN OM~GA WATCH? A DIAMOND OMEGA! Al Omeg1, one of every four employeee Is a qalftty control lnapector. It's • great namt k'I fine timeptecea. And these two beauttea .,. • lf)'tflh as tttey are accurate. Both available In white or ,.now 14 karat gold. Round modei with olghtdlomondl, $<50. Six dlol-.l 19Ctangular Jlylo, $395. 8ANICAMERICARD -M~TEJI. CHARGE, too SLA,.YICK'S cY~_,,- 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER 6+1-IHO ' AllHtlnc Mrs. Heltlnga are 1he Mmea. William Bias, Daniel Drageeet, Jack Hall, Edward Hannig.an, George Kemp, James Ma ha n , Gerald Mertgold, Ronald Ferrick, Michael Pbanll, Ted Reddick, Chwles Sh~ pard, William Stephenson, Wayne Tedder, Eugene Willlams, 'BW 1\IU'°" and Sam WilJon. All proceeds will benefit the m a n y philantbroptes tponaored by the jUDior club, end 111yone wishing to mate a donation may caU IV'..n. Hetfuito, ~17. REBECCA SKELTON New• Reve•led FV Couple Tell Troth 1be engagement of Rebecca Mae Skelton and Pvt. Richard E. Lyddon J r. has been .announced by her pa.refits, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon H. Skelton of Foutltain Valley. 'lbe bride~lect ia a graduate of Wilson lligb School, Long Beaoo, Orange Coast College and now attends Cllliforn.ia S t a t e College at Lo.ng Beach. Her flance, 80tl of Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Lyddon of Fountain Valley, attended HunUnjton Beach H i g h School, 0CC and UC!. He presently iJ assigned to the Defense Language Institute· Jn Monterey. No date baa been selected for the wedding. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Judgment ls sound, but you tend ti> be impatient. You know what is right, but waiting becomes a problem. Best to check w i t h autltoritle1. Meen1 be sure you are on right legal track. SAGl'l'TARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Be versaWe. Don't be bogged down with only one method. T r y , ~xperiment -make brush strokes bold. Attend to basic task!. Relations with co- workers due to improve. You'll be happier. . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22· Jan. 19): During morning houri attend to details. Later, entertaimnent iJ on agenda and could include glamorous dine-00t date. Goodnewaconcerning youngster could brighten day. AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 18): Pace yourseU. Check details. Be aware of (l'operty value!. If you don't know, ask. Do not permit pride to stand in way of enlightenment. Pay c l o s e atrtention to messages, calls. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20): Forces tend to be scattered. Judgment subject to confusion. Best to hold back and wait. Picture becomes clear as additional facts u n fol d . Relative's request might best be put off. IF TODAV IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have knack of making mQ9f. of assets. Could make fine investment counselor. Social activity on upgrade. and ex cit i !'-g contacts are made during vacation. TENDENCIES : Cycle high for Tf\URUS. Special word to SCORPIO: permit mate, partner to take initiative. Lodge Luncheon The Rebekah Lodge is hosting a luncheon and card party in the Lodge Halt , Thursday, July 18. Tickets are $1. Th e luncheon, which will include door prizes, will begin at noon. Yoga Taught Halecrest Club of Costa Mesa Is conducting :Yoga classes for eii;tit weeks tNery Thursday from 9 to 10:30 a .m. Sessions begin July 18. 20th ANNIVERSARY SALE Al lt1111s SlllCtld Fr-Ow l191ta. Stodo • • • This h Posltl•O., Not "SALi'" Mt«hall4l11. DRESSES -MISSES, JUNIORS, rnITI MERCANDISE FROM " ALL DEPARTMENTS Girdles ,Br•s, Hosiery, Jewelry., Millinery, Glove1 , H•ndb•g1, Ore11es , Swe•ter Suits, Co1t1, Skirts, Blou1e1, Lingerie •nd Boutique. SOllY .•• ~ of hst -rti:•IO Vl lUl'I , W9 fflllll .. ., "NI C ... '91'1. flO llY _,.,,, llO uc"911on. •II Ml" 111111," Fltll PARll'IN~ IN OUR PATIO All CONDITIONID FOi YOUR SHOPPINCi PLEASUH ZSU I. COAST HWT. COIONA Oil. MAI '7l-2ffil ' • MHTOUI IEAUTY-MAKEiS: Mr. Jl••y, Mr. J.I, and le1tor MR. JIMMY COHTO, THE MAESTRO ()F SCJSSOR WIZAR0ft'Y HAS BEEN APPOINTED HAllt- STYLE DIRECTOR OfP OUR SALON. DIRECT FROM NEW VORt<, PARIS AHO L.OHDOtl WHERE HE NUMBERED AMONG HIS CLIENTS THE JET SET15 BEAl.ITIFUL PEOPLE. HTS CRmo: COMBINE ' HAIRPIECES WITH YOUR OWN HAIR FOR EVENING; SET-IN CUTS, SET- LESS WAVES F°OR DAV• AN0 1 MR, J, R, ROMEO AN ARTIST IN HAIR COLORING, DREAM OF BLONDE 1 BROWN OR A RADIANT RE01 ,1 0UR MR. J. R, Wlt.L FORMULATE YOUR INDIVIDUAL SHADE WITH A CHEMIST1S YOU ARE INVITED TO CONSULT WITH OUR · NEW, DISTINGUISHED COii" EXPERTS. COME IN WHILE WE11tE FEATURING THE NEW R£STORe SET~ESS PERMANENT WAVE, ONLY 25.00 COMPLETE WITH STYLING, CUT• AND REVITALIZING AESTOR• CONDITIONING 'rREATMENT • IN OUR f'RENCH ROOM BEMITY SAL.ON . T U E5 D AY MJt .. -·· ... -.. .-ii ""' llim .... en ,,.,, .. , ..... ..,ft(I) ·-- -IQ"" c-. ... ,... ~ "I.I•-· flrl" *'*'ilMt JoiRM WOl'llf, -... JN Dllllp .... ICfMfl-wrh" ..... V. ,.... fJ. ftlMli ..... .,. ..... lrlNt" (Wllttn1) '51-Vffl Htflill. YWlllM DI etm, N• NicGI. ·-... "' (30! .......... (30) m-. .... ........... l :ID II IMC ..... lerw. (C) (Ill) a"' .._ -ct> <30! ., ...... , ... (30) ............ ~ 1!.1---.: fC) "UJw ., l111· .... DwH! PTOlll'itl loob It ... "°" " Polalilb llllllllli111 time bJ ,.,. .. " Mdlllltflt .cl ~ depot. its • thl -flmr. ........ ""ID CIS - -!Cl !!OI Wat\lr~ •. _ .... ........... ·---!"!~tr-'?.'.:: """*"' -...--..... _. t'lld: .. •L ...._ ... -. ........ ,,.. •n -"' ..,. ..., • 1he ciiiiiCi aw b1eaM91 .. llff. 'l'POi• ....... -·--wild b . ~ II QJCIJ I ..... Ill ...._ t') (lb) ..,,.. Dan, ,... .. All:ftt. .ull... Palll lrnde .... .. lft ~ Mlflitloililf ..,. --)«:ts T Oflf Md RopJ '9 I Pftllfllll of rilOfOUS ---Md ~ di91:. Jn• Mel m rwitilfhe 1111111 wittl lttf !Miik. Mt "" '"" ... fires. (A) ·---111• o @m -. ...._ tc1 (60) ·w.r ,, __ .. ,... lorffl11 lfl joined °' .... AIMricn tfotk. aft prillOl!lfl Ofl • --~ blhilld lftemy llMI. ""' -otdnd .. locate 11111 ..,,, I IMllt ..._ "'"· s.i, ,...... .... w """" (U'lllt. (It) ·-·---·---.... --... *'-..... " ...... ..., --·--et.~;:..,,. _...,...,.__ ~ ... .,_ ~1'udl•••i••· ........ .. .... --·~-­.. -...... -_ ........ _ ...... ...... "" Miio.id. .... !Cl l90I tll "" ............ : •"""ii'~ Aj:11Mt ,._. $dloollMlttl'. (R) ... - ~lOIDill(i)"" --(f) (30fl.trrr Uf• 111'11 b!lf Dlvt Ind lil'ld• I lon&·OWMdUI w.ddln1 prant, bvt thtJ'll ""' m obt1h1 l tllroucti 1 wtio1 ... 1t de:lll«. (R) D l!!J CD ,,,,., tCI (30) "~' Glnptm M1¥W Dit." How.nl DI Siln 1L1tsb n SIM, 1 ltijaWr wtio i.. niturMd to llis t1a61 •rt• JWl't In pri-. Mike H~ i11- 11tsti1M the Mjld.inc llf ...... 1 trucks 111d ftftdl the onlr due ii ii ICfttd1 .. ..c:ti truck. ti) m """"' .. 1fMI t1t • • ............ l!:l&W ..... 1.K:tl ·-_.,..,.. (dto-~ ....... """"· 111111""'9 -· B D rJl •--111 ................... IN) .._ ....... ,..., ,... •• '-· B!nllII"" - -Ill ., "' ... "' ......... -""'" "". '1ilt Flbul-DoNlpl" lfld "The KIUd Strllll:." .... _____ , 11 -hNft MecMnrll, GordOfl ,_ ._. .., .. ..,. ........ ...... («ll!llllJ) '46 -Dtnlril lllkwl'I", Jmft c.tmn, ...... Liii;.. ···-··'"'"' ......... ·-· Jll."'11 LPc _.........,, • __ ............ _"'. __ ...... .................... .... ._..,~ .,.. '* ---.,,_ -°"""Ii• a•&flt 'T I a·• t14uul11.-ktl."T ....... , ._ .,_. ...,. ,..._._. .... ... ...... -,.._.,_. ~ ""' ..... ·-· .... -... ~ ... -.. _. -•) ,_,_. ... ... ... ~ ..... -·---- e . JC)B-PRINTIN~ • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS U11 WllT IAUOA aa , MIWPOl'f llACH ly Cliarles M. Scliub • - WILLIE MUFFET By Bill Brewer 1-Jb JUDGE PARKER By Harold Le Doux 1JJC=============="::(~"'"~""';;;;Y~TM;;;;;IN6;;:;irrru.,.--ae-6ETT1:-:::·~ .. ~:-7: ... ~.~~-.. -u~~~ ..... ~ ...... ~·~w~H~ILE~-~·l""""'o;::;'3~-!"""""' ... ~ l'M 6l..AP YOl'l:e GOING MC.JC ti -rnAT I'll If' E.l.RLV ANP HEI. WlTl-l lt!i •. ANP I FEEl. AWFUL TAKIN6 P'Otll'T YOIJ WOUV 1D WOll!K wml THE COUNTY E!W· Pll:ACTICAUY JOB AT THE THEATEi YOU'll HAVE All If' ¥OUR Tl~E Ul<E A.&Off THAT ••• A.NP GINEER'S OFFICE, RAflP'V! ITS NEVEJI: GET TO WILL KEEP MER' C*T SLINPA.VS TO-llftS, Wi:,pti:IVER! CJ.LL ME SAM! HARP WORK 6ttT WILL !E SEE s.HEILA.! LATE AT Hl6HT! 6ETHER! GOOP~ 'KXI! By Ferd JohMon l"'.:.so~'llE SUR~, !>II • .,......,,.-,-----.,,..,,...--.,...--,---,~~I .. rr S.IDD!'NLY OCCtJRRel> "TO Mti, PQ.TAY&.OR·· tSHoUU> E¥, IXAMIHEI> 10 DETJRM lt4 Ml' ·~•Rtt«•"' o.1G FOi> ME. Ml&HT \ INQUIRE AS i? YOUR ll()TIVE FOR CALL ING- UroN MY DAUGHTER tN n1E M IDOl.E OF THE NIGHT? MUTI AND JEff MISS PEACH """"-- T.AYl.OR--•••ROSE Ill PE•F•CTLY O.tc. R>Fl ~ 1\1A1 \STHE MOON HANGIN' UP THERE, HONE'!; NOTn1E SUNJ I CMIPAWAY EVERYTMING ill~ DOESN'T LOOK LIKE ONE! , .. Jot<l'S By Tom K. Ryan WH'(, I~ BELIEVE IT IS] BUT IT IS SO BRIGHT, I CAN~ 5EE NO STARS! '? I Til?SE WILL BE FORTHCOMING t.'OMENTARU..Yi By Al Smith By Mel IT'S EASY, WHl!N · 'IO<I F~L Uiq; CIRAWIN<> /----'\.. !UT 'lO<J e»rr. .. I DAILY 1'11.!IT AFRICA AND AMERICA -Mike Wallace, above, moderates a panel discussion of African and Amer- ican Negroes on "Of Black America" tonight in color at 10 p.m. on Chann el 2. This is the third in a seven-part series tracing the history of the American Negro and the civil rightS movement. TELEVISION VIEWS Philbin Back With Bishop By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Regis Philbin, who emotionally walked off ABC-TV's Joey Bishop ahow last week before millions of viewers because he believed the network was unhappy with him, re.- turns to the series tonight. Bishop stood by his 35--year-old announcer-side- kick during the fuss and spent the weekend coax- ing him to come back. The final friendly persuasion, at a meeting in Bishop's home Monday, resulted in Philbin agreeing to resume his duties. On tonight's show, taped Monday evening, Bishop says : ''I've had a very difficult week. ladies and gentlemen. The Vice President of the United States canceled out on me twice, and Regis canceled on me once. But all's well that ends well." He then introduces Philbin, who gets a rousing . reception as the band plays "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling" -and after some kidding about the squabble, the show goes on. At his home, before the Monday taping, Bishop said he did not believe it was ABC-TV or.the net• work's new president, Elton Rule, that made Phil- bin feel the television organization was down on him. "There's always one guy who'.s trying to prove himself a big man -make a name," said Bishop. "Underlings get to Regis -and to me too. But I've gone throuh 25 years of nightclubs, and I let it go off my back." Before Philbin decided to return, Bishop said he had spoken to Rule and explained that if his side- kick did come back he would have to kid the situa· tion because it was the way he -as a comedian - works. Bishop said the network president "wu terrific about it" and quoted him as saying : "If you want to kid Elton Rule, you can cer- tainly kid him.'' Waiting for Philbin to arrive at his home Mon- day, Bishop said wires and telephone calls since the flareup last Wednesday were very favorable to the announcer. He described his spoken attitude to Philbin in the following manner: •iJt's on this basis: All right, some guy doesn't like you. I love you. And I'm paying you ." Bishop also noted that he has artistic control over the show.-, In his on-the--air resignation; Philbin expressed the belief that Bishop had protected him from net- work executives who wanted to get rid of him. Ht explained he did not want to hurt Bishop's chances with the show . The two are friends. In fact, they went to a club, "The Factory." Sunday night and s hot pool. ABC-TV said Pbilbin's statements were ''un- warranted and have no basis in faCt." However, it has also been suggested that some network officials rather than wanting to fire Philbin, wished to re- duce his contributions to the show, including hi• opening byplay with Bi shop. ~ Pointing to his program's achievements, Bishop responded : 0 If anyone at the network think• a few minutes o( the show -the thing Regis and I do -could make the difference between succea1 and failure, then we're in reel trouble." Dennis the Menace ' , .... ...... • 1 root> IT R\QHT NIXT 1t> ~ L/ID'I . LVINQ OH Mell SIQMAQI,!, • • Jf DAILY l'llOT tnM•:NOTD • PSA Gains ValCar IWUTU ASSETS OVER Mn,000,000.00 HIEAD crl'lC2 319a.tC1l1 11111 i-11111 -..c.•1•et1ae ! OVER THE COUNTER INGS • OTHIRMANCHG+m ----• £ ... + • .. I ..... -a: ~ I I ' ' I . " Monday's CJosing Prices -Complete New York Juty _ 1968 DAILY PILOT ,. Stock Exchange List ' • I \ !• 9AILY PILOT Tl!Hdq, July 16, 1%8 , Lonely Ou:tpost ·Logged • Ill \ Marine Annals· • In the long onnols of Morine Corps history -the shores of TriP.,li, Belleou Wood , Choteo u . :rhierry, lwo Jimo -the nome of Khe Sonh will ronk high ond be long remembered. A neorly useless piece of rocky reol estote in the for northwest of South Vietnom, Khe Sonh, monned by l! small group of Marines, with stood everything thrown against it in one of the most savage ex• tended sieges of the Vietnom Wor. It's defenders drove off the enemy, then obondoned the bose they hod held so stubbornly in fovor of something more worthwhile end more eosily de- fended. But ot Khe Sonh the Morines hod shown they could not be budged. (All photos UPI) NEWS FROM HOME -Two Marines carry a mail sack trom Kho Sanh's underground post office ~· GETTING EXERCISE -Marine works out with barbell on quiet Sunday afternoon with batbed wire .. where it was placed to protect it from North Viet- namese artillery during height of attack. and sandbagged bunkers evidenc.e of the siege laid on the base for months by North Vietnamese. """'"'~' ":"f ,;·,.~, CLEANING UP -Bunkers sround the Kbe Sanh bUI. are dlsmanUed ~1. 7-farlnes preparing to with· draw, tak\Jlg_ with them as much materiel as po .. sible left over from the months·long siege. • •\ Corps Abandons Khe Sanh Base After Bitter Siege in Which . Communist Attacks Were Futile .... ..... .... ..... .... . . . . . ::::: .... ......... ..... . . . . . ····· ····· ::::: • ·::::: . . . . . . . . :·:::: . N.VIETNAM ... LAOS '" . . . . . . ... . .. . . ... . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ................. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ··················· .................. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ................... . . . . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . ·::::::.·:.·· ............. . 10 Mt LES MARINE OUTPOST ABANDONED, BUT NEVER FORGOTTEN UPI Newsmap spots location of Khe Sanh near Laos Border RELAXATION -In a scene impossible earlier thi s year, Marines relax before a bonfire on a Sunday evening while one of them entertains on a guitar with marks of siege as backdrop . NO MAN'S LAND -Support units move supplle1 through the heavily damaged "no men's land" and '· Hill 689, scene of heavy fighting during hitter batU• with attacking North Vietnamese. ' • . DAILY ,!LOT Everyone Has Something That Someone Else Want.- You Can Sd It, And It, Trade It Wrlh e Wint Ad HOUSES ,OR SALE HOUS•S ,OR SAL• HOUSD FOR sALm Coot• Mow 1110 Newport ... ch )200 "-" ...... -1400 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES F OR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSIS FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SAL• Gonoral • 1000 -al 1000 General 1000 Genor•I llOO 000 ----r•I 1 MEn MR. A·I A·l LOCATION-Cul-de-sue St. j\.1 SIZE· Four Bedrooms + Dell, 1% Baths. . A·l SCHOOLS • Safe walk to nll·grammur achool with Qhlldren's play park thru Orange O>Qat O:lilcge. A·l MAJOR SHOP.· %i block A·l PRICE • vllllff.'d at FHA appralslal or $25,000 • A·l 'fERMS -$1700 initial Divestment. Call us for A-1 SERVICE. Ow W nts.A I' Mld-Wffk Special ner a c ion °"'of a kind IU6 P" month Now . wJnrlpol .,,. m1 .... st. No down to Veta and »w down F .H.A. to all. Bred neW REDUCED $2750 """'" ovor hardwo o d ftoorl. New vin.YI in the might kitchen and both beth.a. s roomy bedrooms. Cedar ablnde ftlOf and 2 cu ganae. ~rear yanl. $71,000. liuge 2nd sklry rec. room easily convertible to 4th & 5th bedrooms + 3rd bath. (Go Fairview to Paulerino East to Van Buren North to Carson East to Roo9evelt) Only $29,750 Newport a t Victoria 6''6-8811 Colesworthy & Co. 642-7m .. 100I Harbor mw., C.M. ~Eves. Corona del Mar 219 JA9MINE Sweeplag P1nor1m1 of Newport Bay blah In Hartor View Hllls thla bome olfen an \lftlUl'PllJaed View both day & nlgbt very aeparate living nn fDnnal dining room tamlly room w/tireptace: betlutiful muter bedroom Ill.lite~ onto .... , .... pool tastef\J.lly deool"llted Call now at onlY $52,500 Cootact: (Open Open Dilly 1 .. s Beverl.Y Pa"riovlch 4 houses from beach l BR, Eves. 6'7U316 $500 DOWN On thla • brednlom, 2 ti.th famUy home. Cole to every- tbl.ng'.. Juat introduced to the market -WOJt't be around long! $UO per month 8'" dudes prlaclpal • interut. 2043 WES'l't.....u<'f DRIVE 6'&-1711 Opon """· SWIMMING POOL Victoria Mesa King's Place WALK TO llACH GI no down FHA $2.150 down Homes t.ove4r Ranch •lYte home 1n full , r 1 e • P&, 150. 0wner 16 NEW BflMiz Sdllo8Rquldolnl ,~ .. delln~-:-tron&ferred. 3 BR 2 bllh, '-· dn. 6liM. !Q.-io.n. 1 .... tm, "-· • • ~---· ,_.. 79 J• cben /quany tile blt 1na ~ ovm, ..... """ room, From $24 950 w • • ' 19--ie u........ room with , nook, cov1rtd patio, tncll ....--P YU'6 Valley Road at Victoria yard beauUf\llly landtcaped. <Jwt E. o1 Brookbunt Elt~te tale at $32,500. Of. op on blultl fers CCC'ISldertd General Lk1o alze lots. tee PmPle GRAHAK Rl'.Ain &£24lf land • Wah above aea level. CNHl' N.B. Pon •Offtce) Bullt·ill electric kl.tcbea.1~=~~-~=~­Convenient to &bopping cm-Clitt Dr. Newport Height& ter, near achoola. 3 and f Acrou from pe.r\c. 2 atory 4 BDRMS .. 1 1: 2 sty. f1te. Br. 2 b&. din mi, crpts, p1acea.. carpetln& cftpe:riea drps, kit bltna. Tree shaded tencing, landscaPIJ'lg. ' ba<* patio Xlnt storage, 1llage Real f state l' °''· •rookh""' & CUflold Rental lnfannatlOn "'2-44n 546-8130 C. F. Coleoworthy & c;!. ELEPHANT SIZED 1904 Harbor ai..i." Mlch1el K1y Builder aoee to all .:hla. Fine avail Phone 642-2821 Evet &GS106 $43,500. 6m843 COLLEGE PARK ••ad! ':J..0~:! """"· $22,750 tlol>. N.w...., l'OOOI. Nut ro BEDROOMS COSTA MESA • Royal blue w/• ~ting. Rent•I• te Share 20IS service: poi-ch, l BR + den Evenings) • l"-bath, 14x20 living room loiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ..,, ........... ..., ...... .,.1 + la.-ge 1""1Jy ,..m, Jarie SHARP SHARP VIEW OF BAY !ireplaoe, '"'" kH-with 3 BR, 2 bath Ylith $m down -assume 1 lone payable $148 per month including taxes. 60xl00 fenced lot, landscaped double garage, c&J1)ets, drape •, built-in electric R&:O. nAlil48tax-eleo- 1ilage Real Estate Lowest prieecl home in this park, beach &: waterfront ~ flight area. Large coey Yap now land. R . 2. owe room with fireplace, 3 bed· 80% loan. $26,$0. 673-Z!S6 rooms and family room -A + 2 baths + tree-form pa· CX>I..LroE Students ~ ~...: tio + BBQ &: large fenced roommatee for mnl1nl!I' to yard + owners will pay aha.re lrg 4 Br house 1n Npt potnll for FHA or GI finano-$7D/mo. 642-6822 ing. Price! Call It ask! "·-ta ~ 2; b<rilt-Jo" ,...,.,., din Ing COLLEGE PARK AND OCEAN "'"· """"' pore!>, gooc1 Thi• m,.rut;oent '""" prop-""'°" & "''""'· 3 ""' gar. 3 BR + family + profession· erty has just been reduced age on alley + sun deck. Sf6..8103 962-44TI perfect ~ for the budget Newport Hgb. 1210 STAGE COACH mind«l-Ownu.Nodownto E S'--lot CHARM-$23,5001 Voi. o' low down FHA. Irate , .. TRADEWINDS RL TY. ;;.~='------842-5011 or 842-5012 RUSH AUG.1-.31. 3 Br. 2 ba. All ap. Pia~. 2,000 1q. ft. livtiic area. Oeanin&: I a d J 1 gardener. $500. 54s...m2 ally landscaped & gprlnkler. $5,000. Built on 3 levels to Low down. Vacant. Anxious. ed lawn both front &: rear take advantage of watching Rltr. 646-39'l8 Eves. 494-9308 yards. Asswne $19,000 GI sail boats, sun sets and glori-*LACHENMYER loan at SIA.% -$156 per oos Catalina. A must see • month includes everything, breathtaking • )I hours a J{ENT BEATER INCOME PLUS i.Oveatflrstglance! Cypress, 546-2313 · 646-7171 with 4 car garage, and fine palm.1 & stare trees, eon'al Open Ev•. 3 Br, 2 bath home. Just oft fenoe. King-sized bedrooms, Clitt Drive, asking $33,900, rustic built·ln bar in cozy GRAHAM REALTY 646-2414 den. Brick fireplace in living CNe.ar NB 1Ut: Office) Owner carry 1st TD, amaU ctn, low tnt. & no loan costs. l BR 2 ba.tha, lg upstairs rumpus room to tiniah aa )'OU choo9e. ProtHlionall,y Corona del Mir 2250 l BDRMS. plua orl• -qtra, lge. end ;pttlo, leue. Adllill. $195. ~ Newport day. $45,000. Looking I.er a k7N interest loan? This Is It ~ $180 per month Including ~. $2500 will handle. Deluxe Triplex 2 BR+ room. DeligbtfUl covered AVAILimmed,alttHaven3 tunny+ living room patio. Cllstom teetllftS in·l---====~--I Br, 2 bl.&: 2 Br Ocean Vu landscaped. at Victorl1 646-8811 (Open Evenings) NEAR BEACH 18 UNITS *Trade Trade* Trade SUNSET BEACH' Walk to OCt'M • aportment and mo- tel u n I t s. 16% return • Trade for California or Ida· ho property. Wally Droiun Eves. 698-3073. + dolu:ie kltcl>en -.,.. & .... 1112'l6'll SHRUNK Inc Apt. $49,!00. 543-?2~ -" del TARBD..L lSlll Beach Blvd. 1 BR I< 2 BR, ll!j. uxe Only the price has shrunk on BY Owner: 3 Bl;t. 1 b& at· $44,500 $22,950 this eo:i;y, attractive, 3 BR tractive well.kept. Nr ICbools Income $430 by Sept. VA or :mA 3 BR 2 ha, pool-cottage. st~. quality, and $26,750 er 1' 6f6..3079 0043 Ws.5TCLlFF DRIVE Newport med yard. Crptl, fireplace, appeuance rem a. In the B &16--?'TU Open Eves. it blttns. Near all. aame. Nev SCI.1th Coast 1yshorff 1225 Harbor Yl'ew H1'lls Vlctorl• OWNER MOVING PJua. 'B•u... '"""" yan1,1~'-------'-v.,, oiffn 3 BR'" bath,... -". -.-. p,;.,. Quality Plus Coronil del Mir 646-8811 tio, Near all. Only $19,900 Just reduced to $25,SOO, FHA ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"! Rltrs.. 642-9730 Eves.~ 5%% loan maybe assumed BAYSHORES ':'the ':;w':~·~' m~~·~~ Cool Ill (Opoft • KENNEDY Burr Wh't R II Oetalls to ouit. pol'loctiooolst. with a dive into the sparkling !wnlnpl I e, ea Or 2 Bdrms, with new every-Mftftfc Isle . sirable £: tasd.nating area. l----:;;:---..;;-1;;;;;...,.,....,...,...,...,...,,. --. Schools & Calif. lrv!Juo pool of this big 5 BR, 3 bath I f 2901 Newport Blvd. thing. Try $32,500. Spend a bewltchlng week ln Campus just momenta former model home at only EAmlDE JR(PlfX . Newport Beach De Laney R•al Estate WHY PAY RENT? the true land of t:nChN!ot· away. Sensibly pn'ced froni $35,<XX>. It's e. reposses.<;ion· &st' ~· ~ ...,.,,. 2828 E. Coest Hwy., QIM Neat 3 BR 1% bath, carpet., menl. Neat, clean, cottqea yet it is immaculate. One u • ..,..,.,,,,,. Eves. 6'fl.m39 673.3nO drapes &: electric built.ins. for weekly rentals in • $34.900 to $48·900 loon ot $31,500 with 6.6% 2 BRs each, fine condition, Full price $15,tm. LUSK HOMES interest. will not be increas--rea ty rood dote 1r1 location, 2 HOMES ON I LOT -Paclftc Shore11 Realty trancini Avalon, catallna. Directions: MacArthur Blvd. S29 900 Quality constructed 2 yrs. DoV•r Shor" 1227 536-88!M Eves. 962--8701 ALSO aelect resklential ~ ~m Pa,.;fi,. Coa•t H-. ,... ed. A real delightful large ' . old . . N erty for sale. • . LI" ..... ... ~.1 "' fa-H •• ~. ...,,4 Vista n..J On> Woll-"-~-rdl Rltr1 • 111 nice E'WPOrt Heights ftJ Nc:ivport Fwy. Turn OD San coLLEG"~ ·E~· R~EA. • ....... .,.,, O:<>nn ;O'IJ.N-·-&a.ch 1810 N~-BJ~ c M. district. Extra largf! ll·"--L 0 T-L'. Vltw. Low B Wh't R I . Joaqoin !!ills Rd., !hon " .. ---~· owpol'l .... . . ""% I bold -·~· N SEA HAVEN .urr I e, 81 548--7129 Eves 644-0684 room, dining area. Separate ease , "" x .uu av. o. ... follow signs to model area. Home SwH t Home UNENDING VIEW I'll======== patios and garages. One la 285 Santi&iQ $21,500, build COTTAGE , 2901 Newport mvd. "" _ $20,900 01 beautiful green bell 1• already rented -$29,500 _ YoUr own-644-2039 eves For retired couple or newly· Newport Beach "' New 5 Bedrooms Delightful covered patio! Ideal adult property. PENINSULA PT. Try 103 dcr.vn. weds. 2 BR, carpets, drapes, 675-4630 Evea: 642-2'f 646-7171 546-2313 OPEN EVES. BRASHEAR REAL TY 847-8531 Eves. 839-1537 Vac1tlon ltent1l1 Assume 51/4°/o PAUol-., s bo:droe>d. Loan bath poo1 and '"' '°" dltioned $251) pr mo lemr:f WITH LOW DOWN w .. k a w..irand nta. 1i.t.; Lovely 3 &: family room. ~ after 6 pm. Also have repossesskm. HAFn>AL REALTY Summer bntals :z;;o "Home to Match Income'" 8740 Wamer 842-44<1> Baycrest Free swim pool too. King Excellent invesbnent Ol&tom·Blt. Beauty! 3 BR., 546-2313 646-7171 University P1rk 1237 electric built·:lna. Clean _ 293 E. 17th SI. ~ sized bedrooms. Formal din· plus maximum privacy Fam.rm, frplc., Ek!e.·Kitth. Op.n Eves. VJLLAGE.l lllX extras 3 Br, &harp home. Only Sl8,500. I or 2 Br. Apts. fum. ~:;-!""""'""'""'""'""'""'""' .. 4:i:!.~!!u ~~~:!!, ~·. ing room. Picture windows 2 Br + all muff advt. N~~ ..... ~R•:• "'E,.taooot,· Co. 2 ba, atrium,, ll ft ceilings, LISTER REAL TY blk to bch. $125 £: $150 wb· Buy OR RE.NT --~ •J--0• '"-"· J'k an! $25 900 ~-~ 3 J .. -• d J-• 16610 Bo•oh Bl., HB 842-6633 1209 W. Bolboo Bl•d., ~ fam rm with enclosed wet ave. """ u.., pan ... 1 e Y · ' 100 E. B·'boa Blvd., BA''--....,, gar ens, m ••""..,.. -·--.;; •--· t •--· • "" ···u33 u ~-cl 1 HOME & INCOME * '""5189 * bar. Pool-size lot you own. ~me presen uua.uong one .,....... ORJole 3--04() osetJ, g am a pa c Io us How-flexible can you get? Fine View .......... $89,500 makehp~~~ of $125 a POOL TIME entertaining;26,500. Exe. In---3 BR 1'1'1 bath older home + NbayEW•2 ~~~ .. ~,st-31~ Look atlhis buy CIFHA w 1·--H mont . ~ n-.. tak . t •• ,_ D VIDSON R lty vest. Nr UCl 833-0»1 -...Mn t du..J .....,___ """""'' <X'1l:I ..... VA low dn . pym~I. Owne; a '""' aase T_ARB=-E-""~~""58'4"-'".::F.ding<='-=r "; ... BED= =-:;:; =~ A ea owner. ·~~;. 11~:~ =s ~ Bay Ave. Balboa . "'· :1 .. "~ :;!.."! '!,°'. ~ ,:=,n!~2~:"!~ .. =,.,":.th~;'"~~ ':.~~~~~:;;.;.:·i M~·~;;-:s2s,0~~01'1_rv=_= ... :::::::::::-'1=;;.2"3~1 ~';lASHEAR REALTY Bc~1!°:i:u~~·Ju:~.:: Prices • we have two -'-·.·well, D--'·er & (o, Sarni, all schools &: church-POCL separate. A little 10•1 DOWN IRVINE 8•7·8531 Eves. 968-1178 Sept. 673-lSQ.3; •99--2.U6 $23,850 as is -S24.!M, all \Ml Udllll naint A _ .. •--i --rk -akes fam, 1% ba. Nr schooiB. IO BY NPT •~ l BR I • l ?2111 E, CNlt .. ,..,...., es. Nice nelgti>orhood. Call r-"' .,,.. ;:r ......... ., "' RI 25 A...L.-3 BR. + family -I''-'· 500. By owner. 297-4.373 or 0WNER4 lk, townhouse D<."I• • 5 eeps "" newly painted & yard plant-H.-.-t ._., Cal"-"" lo• Wonna••-_1.. TA•• this the year's BEST BUY Ir. 70 Hn1"UUr SB, CM .......... ,.. Vil'·-1 2 BR S asher blk to Ocean, $60 per :Wk• ~ T-" cl ,_ c ll K1 t-~ Oil *'*' • UVIJ "'"'J .....,., ....,,. ..,.._ __ ,, f>46.5460 Eves. 545-49tJ. bnth newly decorated. NI,.,. ""6e • panlsh, . w I dryer, carpeled, J Jy 1 "''· ...... e your K>n.~. a 1 '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!""I C-"agho• ha• ••-k · e.t only $1•,;;vu . .r;..u;t:.11ent "" .__1 1 . d -~ R 1 . u • Aval Aug. 642-1272 now. 1 · ..., • .. ..,. ey. Terms. v 1 E w patio, fenced yard. green ...., t ocalion, nr. UCI, rai'=. e ng, bltn range, -Great Value T. H. McArdle Broker Martin R. E. S48-6332 ~j~• & """'uon. 124,· ~';,•'1;:;.~.1y n~.'soo'".· !:"ooo• ',:.,"N'::iTS""w~~~:.' '! -~~·l!i&IJ~ll I~~:Usio~~~~r:~c~ OCEAN from dining room &: BY Owner Mesa Verde 4 Br. I======== down. Ea.sy tenns on ·~d. 1633-4863 Aft er 5 PM)"'7 ·--· ~ 222 W. Wison, CM 642--6817 • lovely garden kitchen. 4 2 Ba, fam rm. 2 brick frplcs Ea1tbluff 1242 Days 536-7581, 968-4760 eves 1 BDRM, View, nr beaeft, family room, two fireplaces, OWNER bltns, new shag crpts thru---------'-• wknd•. 1~-e bedrooms&: 21L ha"-. -'"" nice • ..., wk· 2 bdnn ~" 2~~ be.tbs. Overlooking fu. -...5 n wa out New paint, playhsc. BLUFFS, Rare "G'' p La n: 1 --;~-=-==-=:--1 64., ~ .. ::;-' _ 64•., 0,.,,., •,.o.w, ••• 1003 Baker. c .it 546-M40 w.·11 Soll FHA or VA ~ ~..!.. OBFFlvdICE Delt1 Reil Estate 127 ~" " I NO DOWN GI ~.,. ...-.;14UV ~ ture ·park and close to fu· '""" "°"'""" ,.,.JV. 54~ntl after 6 pm Spacious 4 br, 3 ba, By The Best $21 ,500 Buys ture OOat marina. 0 n l y 3 BR, 2 balhs, living room 54~9491 Open 'W ·9 PM . 6464414 or Sun, Owner. $37,950 844--0740 1 Bedroom tumtahed aij:. You 'll agree when you see it. $35.!50. + lSx20 rumpus room with · 0 Fro LOVELY Mesa Verde 3 Br Spacious S BR, family room, ~ Block to beach. Weew•: It's locatl'd in a lovely new Aa "Ring" fireplace, double garage. Cffn nt fam rm, Many extras ; Corona del Mir 1250 in lovely 2 story Glen Mar. $.SS. Newport Bch 642-0lll schools and shopping and a .·~ .. 111':. •SPRING Priced to sell fast at $23,000. • h b First ti~ offered. Corner Large )o(, ideal tor children'. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I A must see le buy at $28,500. VICI'ORIA Beach (ocean h~ lot. There's 3 bed--"'" Rltr. 646-3928 ~. 642--0185 10 n mGCftG lot, ~e liv rm, very best Can assume existing low in-LOWEST PRICED Peul Jonn Reilty side) Lacwia Beach alK._6 '<>om•, 2 baths, ""Y briok •• =.•RE .. An~·~-:I'Y,., * l.ac:henmyer looation. 147.!00. '""'loon. 2 BEDROOM 647-1266 Ev.,. 536-2<65 l;;';'l50=wXJyrai;;·,-'..,._...,. ___ '-_•I fireplace. Large kitchen ,........ Ivan Well , BAY FRONT HOME =e Willlamsori, Rltr. 31.28 C.OUntry Club Dr. C.M. Tu·o bath boine in CdM. RENTALS , with modem built·ins. Deep N 1 One of the tine&t Ba)'.front !!!!!!!l~!!'!!!!!!J!O~P~EN~~EVE~S. 3032 CAPRI LANE, C.M., Has room for additional Fountain V1ll•y 1410 Houlff Unfvml"*' pile carpets. Double Garage. 5 UNITS •west Model Homes in Newport Bead.. 4 Ex tlv U It $26 600 ~" 4 BR 3 ba, lonn.i din nn, BR, 4 b ,1 "-,-~th-~-$695 DOWN ""' " & Doc<.,.. wilJ " ••••••••· • ••• ' LARGE 5 b<droom l% b th Costa "--•1-......, for appointlll('flt. On The Beach fa / .... w• ...,...--= appreciate thiii deluxe home O.L1ncy Rei l Estate ho Se •1 a ,._. • ..,.. m rm w wet bar, 3 car room fanna.l dining room Exeellent neighborhood, 3 &: on 15th falraW) of Mesa 2828 E. COIUil Hwy., CdM me. All parbl ~~~ am i 1 Y $49 ,500 gar. C°!1tnct now for Aug. 1arge' 90Cia1 mom. Pier and 4 BR, 2 ba, all blt·ins, crpts, Verde C. c . Drive by -673-3770 :w·ted I td·uia~mpletcly 3 BR -2 BATHS_;. oompJ(lbon & choose your Slip. This is a truly custom spmklrs, fenced. Fr o m phone 67:J..26S4: eve rpe ra,... ... Fenced Lovely yard. Fully dra . W\V DOWN. Step out of the door into the water. All furn. isbed. Terrific appreciation and tax shelter. Mr. Boggs eves. 968-35C6. own colors AND carpeting. home of great quality. $2.f 900 OWN . -Near Schools, shopping and Available immediatdy Roy J . \Va.rd Co. 646--1550 OPEN DAD..Y ' ' ER, Republic 2400 fll· 81lbol Penln1ul1 1300 San Dlero Freeway . month. Day1 call~. 7S82 l.""DINGER 842-4455 OPEN EVES. M·l on 63.S x 108 lot, S ren- tals, $39,000 1st TD, Low Dn. OR TRADE $75,000 (Lot south avail) 6734521 MOST 333 Morning Stir Line 545-242• days. 5'J6.9480 eve& ~·~. B!. 3~.; c:~~mo:. liiiiiiii!ii!iiiiiiii!!iiiiiiiijiiiiiii T842-23<2;;;;;;;-;:,..,,;;::--;;;::-c,,,--ask for David. Eveninp Reaoonable. 3 BR Jn cornno (7141 642-8235 144,000 °"'" n,;_iy 54_5-0981 915 West Bay Ave. LOVELY 3 B,. 2 ba with ox-67J.<66Ji : , de\ Mar High District, It's Cott• Met• 1100 tru. Patio, large l o t , MARRlED Ccq>le: 2 ~ the sharpest in Santa Ana 3 BR. 2 Ba. Fam room, bltns, 3 plus BR'a. Unobatructed $26,500. 962-l678 house, 2 small chlldreli ~ Heights. S2:l,750. $175 MON'lll PAYS ALL. 2 frplcs, close to schools & View of Bay, Private patio, Gv. No pell. $95 Mo. See-at: Newport Beach ~ty Beautiful 3 BR home with •hopping, $25,900. 10% down wet bar. G1rd•n Grove 1475 916 w. 18th. 646-«n3 Aftil.J fi75.lG42 clliltom bu.Ut-in k 1 t c be n, *545--0622 OPEN SAT & SUN 1 .. 5 -:-----'--CC:.::. I PM for info. •• 3 BR Westside home, interk>r large C(JVered patio, tully 1 -:------...:.C:..:::~ 5 BR. Plus pool, west Garden ., SPECTACULAR VIEW-OCEAN and IAY C~annBf JZ~/ --4parlmBnl6 On Wlt9rfront NNr Newport H1rbor 1Entr1nw 2525 Oce•n Blvd., Co.ron1 d1I M.r, Calif. AMPLE GUEST PARKING and BOAT SUPS . Why Not Enjoy The "Condominium" Way of Ufe T HE ADVANTAGES WILL SURPRISE YOU You can purchase and get fee title -or leue If you prefer. ALL apb. have WATERFRONT VIEW. All have two bedrooms and two batbs. -WITH LARGE PATIO. YO U ARE INVITED TO INSPECT OUR F U RNISHED MODEL Buy $59,500 and Up -LHse $445 Manthly & Up PhoM 673-1788 for further lnfor-9101 ....,.,,uy '<decorat<d. HWT> cupeo.d • drap<d & tm-Newport Beach 1200 p I B H & C Grov•. Decking, llOd>cpd, 2 BR.; ,.,. ... , polio; ._, on this one! ma.culate yard. Why rent? SACRIFICE.. Must Sell • 8 8 lff8 Q, aprlnklers, Cl"9lf, drps, 2 drape!I, stove, re 1 r ta,. 642·1n1 With maxttnum down, )'l.'.lll tr d bef J"'" 20 Ba frplcs, 2 story, $36,400. Troplcal aettUw, for._. Anytime m1.y move in tomotTOw! a e ore "'.I • Y 642-4353 5322 Trinette e 897·&598 l Blk, thops. $1.50 Mo. CAIL 541)..lJSt (open eves,) View Custom Conde., 3 br, 2 544-4780 H ba hm. 2,<n) sq, tt. 2 atty, -Lagun1 Be1ch 1705 ==,.-,---~~~-• erltage Real Estate w/pools, goll, etc. Loan bal 2146 Miramar UEASE, de)uxe 3 Ba ~ NEW LISTING ln Mesa Del S29 300 Offerr 673-<1356 * JUST REDUCED $2,000 ticello townhoute, pooL..4 Mar, neat 3 • fam nn, . . . Near new. Owner transferred Short walk to Beach -North recrntioo. Adultl cml,y $1'5. w/upgntded carp et Jn 1 , 2200 SQ. ft • • br, 2~ ba, -mu.at sell. ' BR dlnin& end, ocean a1de of hwy. 2 br, 546-0l78 L..--· FrJ>!, Le Family Rm. Db!. nn. ' ===--..,,,,,_-.,..,,._! !'!'~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!•I mJrn. fencing ettating encl. Ga Pool walldn dial 1o den, ipatlo, 2 t r p 11 , 3 BDRMS nev 19th and ffRr.. H .... y-n Cott-~-·an!, walk1 .. ~ distance • • I OPEN SAT & SUN 1 • S ape e1 a c u la r ~ew ot -N .. ._ --""""';:f "'6 to achl'a -playground & •• _ .. 0~$1(1;.f'ta)e -$20,900 to all school.a including OC:C. city Jib. Owner • 642..(1936, eve ryt h Ing • baa 646-822'2. -~ Ft-ult Jreft & flowen galOtt. "~~~"' "$25;ostJ. WESTCLIFF JEWEL Pete Barrett & Co. • .. rythlng. 1-inl, no Delightful covered patio. '-0.....,e Realty 546-58fll point Joan. $45,700. Bkr. New-rt IMch Newly dee, 3 BR 2 baths •M-7578 _. King &iud bedrooma. For-BY 0 W NE R : Cambridge Family nn. ~ patio. 642-4353 BAYCREST: n.-i-•· .. mal din!ng room. Picture model. Collere Park. 3 Ir&: 14 5 RAMSHACKLE _,,..,. wlndowa ovtrlook the. free hr, 2 ba, xtra kg fam nn, 2 1 ' 9 O Owner, 1206 RANOi: HOUSE immaculate • Bftr. 2% ~ swim pool 11'1 parit·like yard. U5ed brick frpls, cpta:, drpa -;;P;;';-m;;bro;;;;;;k•;;l.o;;:o642-425-;;;-;';:";l;::ll;L::;lclo=..::l•::;le:..._ __ _;1::3::5.:.l I Early Calif ranch 11y1e, on home, lluwd to Plltlo. A Olarmirlg split rail fence. ~· A Ruitlc Beauty. 1812 HlghlaDd Dr,, Harbol' ntaote .ize lot, extericr wood heated pool. 2 ~. ·Paymenta leu than rent. S27,!IOO. MG-1957 or ~253'1 Highlanda; 4 BR. 2 Ba, e SACRIFICE e pllri", hvy ahakt roofllnet, built-in kih:bm, earpeti 4 540-lt.n $32.~ 548-2847; 1-129-2908 Owner Mutt Sell Spacious 2 lge pltture windowa, 3 BR, draperta. $400/mo w!tb TARBEU. 2955 Harbor BY OWNER 3 Br. w/w Owner Br. home on 52' atrada CGr1> den, 2 ba, mod/it. Mlsaion pool care. 2 year lease. 'tt1' apt.s In llv rm I ball Wood LUXURY 3 br 2 bath condo ner lot at ONCE! Reduced Rlty 4IM--OT31 DOVER SHORq .&Rm.A: "NEWPORT BEACH" f + 3 Ba tbs, $33, 700 Ranch modem • blt·lna. Beautiful area • HURRY! P~ELING Lri back yar trpl, p:iol, adr, fee land'. $8,tnl to 1ell at leu than lot .......................... 1 Ba.utitlllJy deci:ntlld a, FHA APPRAISED' at Owner transferred. $32.500 fthte. Price $50,tm. By MAGNIFICENT d.raaiadc 1arp S9anl1 Ja ~~ Will Soll 1'"''°· By Ownu. 642-3311 ~:, Opon HO\lJ< """-H. OCEAN VIEW -· t 11&-3 boa., .ir.51 OCEAN VIEW I Fee &imp~ ----$5,950 -: •mall, but levd lot. nn It PIDIDed famib roanl "OCEAN VIEW -1'5.900" BY OWNER -124,!00, 10% 3 B•. tarie taml!y ,..m LITTLE CHARMER mo down -"'3 mo. tn41 lift !up .. __ lol -~lil..:.~~eei! ~~ !;t,,k,.~· ~Xln~ ; c&~ ~~ ~-3:;: 3r:-2 ~':·: er.mo ;: ie!e~':'=.. • .. q.o yard for botUtrlr. t """'' film • Evm BOAT! Terri-NEW 4 BR • 2 Bl HOME &t2-«l90 nr achls/abopt. 548-T!l.3, MOVE !iii Near new 4 BR., ftc:: rental hi.story M1 ,500. fam rm, VJ.tw of Oout Must AVAJL Aac lat, ear Unit flier $1000 DOWN 6'>-0721 fl"pl., now cpU. nr. bo..a. R. C. OREER, 'R..ity aoill -lw Dn. $32,500 jnr pool. ~ - 3 huge BRs, larre lam "" BY OWNER M•" .,n. 4 lr. 2 m,ooo. Open w..-; 351 :MIO Via Udo m930ll LOS PADRI S RL TY ~ 2 car -! 1111, with dble llOne lrplc, bit-Im ba. tom ""· bl""-ft>lo. 1&. 6'lnd Sl Ownu m-<ll'4 -TWO STORY 885 GI.._ Sa..t ll> -IZIO mo"" -Incl·~--••-•-~--p hid Jot. ll!.9'0. -8.\YCREST BY OWNER 4 ~·--!.apaa -491-8833 -SW.: ----~. "'"leii:""UlftwldoloLOpon!.-51--.,. S.2501q It--~ .• I baths, plus din-S..A-Rnlty,,.,.,,. fl'Ct cond iMk!e ll oul Large IV"lll Wf& butiL Fee id, ine· Som& view trom apac, BY 0WNDL 2 BR. dtn, l'rii • ,,. a... Btfd .. ~ brick paUo. F1ne Mea Vtr· 4. $2),500. 19tO WbltUer. 2'1.00 WiDckrard Lane matr. sulet. Lee. shady patio bl.. Dalnblt dl:tt aectkm. Oe locttloo. CALL DAVE OR ,...,,,,....,,.,..,~.,.....,'°"--~ -=-=~=~=--1 WALKER REAL TY 135,000. <9<-1'12, -T LARRY 540-ll.52 owner/bier. 3 BR, l~ ht, 1*rn nn, frpl, l BR, 1~ BA, x!nt toe. m.5200 5C8-1Cl Evtl SALES ASSOCIATES Ira yani, """'· 511% loon Or lot. 131.500 TRADE IW!Y BU!IDT -., 15 •• -UL u •••• -~ $21,900°"""54._..,. R.RooaMymJ,,~ ~~ERnJl. °" ..... Tllo DAILY P1IDT '.w .,... _QI_.. . _.. ..... ,. .. ~ .... ~ o.....,. ltedla .... opportunity, Ilciolble ,.,,.. MESA DEL MAR 3 Br., -BIJAur, ..000, oceon .i.w. ! dlowtawd bl ea.,rrw Mo. --6 -.... lncol::ne. c.n tar appt. rm. $26,000. OWNER. 9') BR, 2 BA, all convtnlencts. 1"llrn Mcie to ·~21 11 Op. ...its• HOME -_..Dr.HH<IJ °""'1'.lOotl:JDc•IHl-1* -llro''**1 ~~~~~~-· -~~----~~·-~~~~~- • • -·-• • - . ·- ' ' DAll.V Pft.OT RENTAL1 HouMS UnfurnlahH Newport Bl•ch 3200 NEW 3 br, f ba, boat dock, sun deck r.amib' only. $350 mo. 3605 Finley ~1 ! :;· . .wport H1lghtt 3210 ' , ... }VAIL Sept l. 9 mo lse. CU!lom 3 Br., 2 be, crpu, drapes, bit-ins, $250 mo. V.'ater pa.ld. 646-2891 I I: ~ ' ' ~ ,, ,. •' ,, ' N1wport Shores 3220 NEWPORT SHORES 2 SR .Ir. Den on yeara lease $190 mo. 6fl-34XI il Corona ffl M•r 3250 ;: FOR LE~SE ~ • 2 BR, elec blt·tns. crpts, .1; : drps-, w/pool, $235 mo. .._ t;.H. Robertson Rltr. 675-2440 ,, Huntington Beach 3400 I ,..... __ ...:S=O=ME'l'==H=IN=G=N=E=W=--.;;SO;;;;;;:M=E=T=H=l=N=G=D=IF=F=E=RE=N=T=l=l:....:.;,NOW I I '~ ~P_l_L_O_T~P=-E_N_N_Y_P~•~N=--C_H_E_R__.ft==1\ ~-i~-T I 3 ll··nes 2 t1·mes $ 200_ DIAL 642-5671 ...... Ca&ilf Toi Few 540.1220 Jmt S.,: "CHARGE m" Ne~-ewer $10 • • • ' • ~ ~rALS RENTALS RENTALS I REALE.STAT& REAL ESTATE BUSINESS ond ANNOUNCEMENTS SERVICE DIRECTO~Y HouH1 Unfurnished Apts. Unfurnl1htcf Apts. Unfurnished Gen1r11 · GtMr•I FINANCIAL and NOTICES Contrectol"I .. 20 Newport BMch 4200 Cotta Mesa $100 Huntington hlch 5400 Income Property 6000 lots 6100 Bus. Opportvnitl• 6300 'p1rson1l1 6405 Licensed Corltractor' BEAUTIFUL Waterfront DELUXE Waterfront 2 Br. 2 TERRIFIC 4 UNITS 1.5 ACRE M-1 AFFILIATE FLY TO CATALINA Re.11tdential -Cornmttc1al Apt, 2 Br, patio, boat dock, HARBOR ba. $275 lease. Slip avail. 3 yrs old, 3 BR, 2 ba, Fplc Level lot in best M·l location INVESTOR DAI.LY FUGH'I'S FROM Malnt Ii Rep&in. Free Est wkly ~ summer rental or 592...ss&3 aft 5:30, wkend tn each. 3 rented -you live 20Cbc326 • at approJCimately ORANGE COUNTY' AIR-673-7129 ' , :!!'t!'!.... lease. S403 Finley GREENS , -::an;Yti=·m;;•,_· ==='===-free. Prim CdM loc. nto,OOJ 90c aq, tt. $59,500 -owner MANAGER PORT. Catalina • Veras Addition& * RemodeliJl,£ ,,..........,.,., 1. CORBIN-MARTIN wlll help finance. -$25,00J Ca.sh Required Airlines. e S46-661.2 Fred H. Gerwick, Lie, L1gun1 Booch 5705 REALTORS 67>-166'1 546-2313 646,7171 0rang, County bued lran·l;===;0:;=== 67HOU * 54>-Z!>J 1 BR. Yearly. Avail Im- mediately $98 mo. inclu. util. 2 BR., nr. ocean. Cpts & gar. $145 Lease. Avail. Sept. l.St 128~ 461h St. 548-8319 BACHELOR • UNFURN. from $100 -~-------Open Evu. • clDse marlcetina: & sales AA~n~n~•!!"!!"•~•!!mo!.'!!nto~-_!64~1~0 I ;::::=;=::;:=:=;==7=-I WTELY l br 2 ba view apt Business Rent•I 6060 company .eeks a partner/ -C•rpet L•yin9 & i with garage. No steps. Lie manager for tbis omce. Ex-l i5ette.HHealth Rep11r ' .. 26 $175 mo. 494-7891 BALBOA lSLAND tor lease. .....n•lon --am _,,_ Ou r--,.......,.. ·~ .... "" Hospitality is r Motto _ .... -. !. __ Store or oHice space to lhe SffVioes of a oornpetant, FREE SA.UNA wmi CARPET • lJc. ~ Rentals Wanted 5990 900 sq. ft. 675-2065 reliable, sales oriented in-SWEDISH MASSAGE all prices • frtt ~tea * URGENT * =="""====I OCEAN VIEW LOJS dlvidu.U ·w;lh a bad<growxl ()pon wkdy• 10 am. ll pm 540-4478 """"" · ·' Office R1nt•I 6070 of pa' st successet. Franchise g ... day, 10 am. s pm : • YOUNG Lady with multiple ... . sclerosis and well behaved __.LAGUNA BEACH 8Qxl35 level .••••••• $'14,500 exd "tor. helpful bult not~~ ,_ 519 ~..:Broadway Dr1peri.. "30 Cennan S h e Ph er d com-Air Conditioned 80x UO level ·•••·••· $17,000 w~ cy ~eS::thm~ ... of-IA!ng Beau• (213) 437.7009 * ZAFF.INO'S •:!: ~~~~el Mar 2 Br. Apt. ..... "','ec1" ~oom·ed•,•oon ~=f.~ips:~ D o,N FORES',' AV~, bl E In -u~-; ......... ut··u····.$10,<XXI fice. foCnnARIOL., LPOI P1,.cco.Loly 25% off -All tabriC.: 644-2562 ' -es spaces ava1 a e '"""rgroun ~ erms This is an unusual opportu· er Y ay Y eau 18'12% Newport, CM 64ifaoo ~======== N ~ B h 5200 ment with fenced or encl-newest office building at R. Nattress Rllr. 642-1485 n•'ty lo• a ,.,..,~.,.~, ~'--Salon in Westcll1f Plaza, has -1-•-w_,_po_ .. _.c..o.•-••=-=.;;.;: I <>sed yard. Old Hunttngtoo prime location in downtown iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-'i[ ' ........ '""" ""-' joined the staff at _H_u_n_ti_n~g_to_n_B_o_o_ch_«OO __ , Yearly rentals -water Beach location preferred. Laguna Qeach. Air rondi-60x80 Oceanfronf Lot cere, aggressive ttllnker to PETER CHRISTIAN Elictrlc.I FREE Utilities, fui-n apt. nr front, 2 BR, !kn, large Reasonabte rent i>lea.se, am tlooed, carpeted, beautiful (Balboa.Peninsula) join with a HtabUshed org. N1wporter Inn ELECTRICIAN, Lie & bch. Yrly °"Wkly. $125-up. patio $300. 2 BR upper on fixed income. Phone paneled partitioning. Two 1748 E. Oceanfront Street ~edt ls fa.st becoming recog-Beauty Salon 64«!340 bonded. Small ~. ·~ll66 ·~ •m $225. Dock space avail. 536-4937 1! no ans. Ph 536-2225 entrances: Frontage on Sell or trlde ,.,_,. natlmally. 0 mainten. & reNli ..... ~ ~ .>J<rol Fore•t Ave., rear leads to Qualified penoo will draw pin Sundays by appt. ..-- Shore Properties Apartment W•nted 537--0380 1250 k + " tvrE l BR, carpets, drapes, Munclpal perking lota, $50 a w . &al. 50-.v o( Bab! &:: Smith Bldg. Contr. I:. rd.rig, dispoAl. L&e fmced Lagun1 Buch 4705 673-900:> or 675-4747 evea. Before Sept. l6t a two per month for space. Desk . . the profit& whidl should tar now constructing a Gold r ·i ... · .. ! ,, ani. Glll'dener. Adults. No . 2 BR 2 BA COTTAGE Ideal Bachelor, bedroom unfut'l'lished + 2 and chairs available for $5. PARTIAL Ocean ~ew, ~-exceed the lnvstmnt in the Medallion Home at 432 9':'.:"::"::·;,.":.:':..·::1941c::.::<r:..8'=:>--"2931"--NEW tu~ed . . P ' Newly painted. Fireplace. bath en ht floor. Eldeorly BU!lnesa hours answering • ona del M_ar .. Choice, o litze 1st yr. Mendoza Terrace, Corona LINOLEUM, carpet, til~ fte- •··--all electriC b.ult-llll. an~ Refrig & stove comb. Patio. couple with no chil~n oc aervi~ available for $10. lot NOT lease~. (..()vely If you can quali{y, have the Hilhlands, Cormadel Mar model, repair. Many"..,,m· floors :: 3 BR. Cpts. &. ~pes Avail. ramie view overlooking Ali-$125 ee af1 6 pm wk dys. pets. Recent owner with All utilities paid except trees. 673-2010 Realtor. req. funds &: are ready to nants. Free est. m-)$n. ,. Aug. lat. Fenced yard. '°Be•-•. $185. ~3755 l9ll OI" -. NB •-t J t--, Und-----------1 ' ' ' .: Slto lease. Nr. Beach Blv. ui ...,~ u ..,, """' ui .re"' .... " ... · ~ telephone. 2 LOTS on 'Santiap, NB roll up your aieeves to go 54l-86&t ;: 17650 Van Blli'tn 842-6997 RENTALS NEWPORT Riviera. Back '175. 646-4519 DAILY PILOT cash, terma or trade. Fee to "W'Oric immed. -Write _F;"";";';';;l';;;;;;;;;64;;l;;2 ·<>•• ~'. S BDRM, 2 be, den. frpl, Apts. Unfurnished Bay. Ava.ii July 27. 3 BR 21n: BUSINESS Woman needs l 222 FOREST AVENUE simple.~ . about )'(lW'Rll, in de ta i 1 • G•rd1nin9 ~ •," '"'"'"''"-•,POOL. Rd, --'--------1 BA. w1w '""· """· "' """"" Apt, c M, LAGUNA BEACH R h 6150 cg;., phone no.l •""'will WESTMINSTER ---~----.-• "t '$225 lse ~7652 Gener1I 5000 bit-ins. Large pool & rec. Newport, Corona del Me.r, 4M-9466 •nc H be contacted for a penonal MEMORIAL PARK ANTHONY'S :·-.;! " iiiiiij;iii!iiii!iiijii!ji,pml Pet OK 1245 mo. 542-2307 twnt Bch « l.2guna. To DELUXE OFFICE in!ftview. All replies in Garden ServH:1·: 'J 2 BR, near park, a 11 $100 mo. Gar or carport 1000 SQ. FT. CARPETS _ RANCH HOME strictest oontidenoe. Write Mortu1rv &. Cemeterv 64'1948 .,. ' a~cea,w/wcpts,drps,~ VENDOME 2134 VISTA Laredo The 5 PO ., ·1 LANDSC~APING '.-.',. ,• Call (21J) 3»-7882 Bluffs Condominluml 4 BR, necessary. 642--0083 alter PRIVATE RESTROOM and 3 bedrooms and swimming to: · · Box 900, Costa Compl1t1 fun1r1l1 1' 3 BA, popular "G" plan, pm.. kitchen facllltles. Oni,y $1$ pool. Includes 2 bedroom Mesa, Cal.U, from $245 LAWNS REMODELiti 1 3 BR. 2 Ba., C&fl>., drps. Gas Make reservations NO\V crpts, drpli. Avail 8-15. $350 BUSINESS Family seeking mo. Year lease. guest house and 8 stall barn. c$, ,1"1esa .. 0 lSh rgive Cemetery lots Exp horticulturist"· .. : ~-..... :;..~~~her. Near Newly Redecorated per mo., on year lease. winter lease. Oc.ean or Bay STORE ROOM COSTA MESA Northeast of Tustin on 3 ac-i---------from $130 Reas. monthly Garci:ir'llhg ' Close to Shopping, Park YRLY Unfurn 4 BR 2 bath. front only. 3 or 4 Br. 2 Ba. 1200 SQ. FT.· BUSY TiiOR-res of gently sloping land Investment Oppor. 6310 Includes Endowment care J•p•n•se G•rd1Mr, Boys Club & Girls Club 4904B, Seashore Dr. Cl) 673-STIS OFARE -LEASE $200 MO. entirely fenced. $98,~. Forl------'-'----'-' !Everything in one beautiful Exper., complete ~ .. " " ' • ' 3705 MONARCH BAY AR E A LOVELY OCEAN VIEW. 3 BR le den, 2 BA, cpta, Drps, • trpl. pool. $300 mo. dulls 496-1243 betw 10-5 pm L1gun1 Niguel 3707 ' 3 BR 2 baths, 6 mo. old ·1 I ' i home, large backyard. $225 mo • ....- C~dominium 3950 ~ $300 DELUXE 3 Br. 2,<XX> sq. ~ ft. Newport Back Bay. View ~ Pool. All elec. bltns, crpts, ~ drps. Dbl gar. 646-2670 : ·~· ~,::c::.c:c,:.::;::....=.c:...:__ •'1 __ :.I AL~ ~· '~ Apb. Furnished .,..,_,_ __ ~---- : Cosio MolO 4100 ~ ~ snJDIO Apt. over garage, ~ Twin beds. Kitchenett ; w/disposal, dressing room, : sbo"ol•er and tub. Beamed •· .ceilings, crptd, frplc, Walk . 1 ? ''to banks It. mrkts. SlOO !or :: :1-$115 for 2 incl. util. $25 . ~c l eaning deposit, ~:· ,:itespooslble adul14 on I y. • 548-4093 $25 Wk. Up ~ • Studio ' Bach apts. : e Incl Ufill A: Phone lil!l'V. ~ • Maid Serv1ce -1V avail. ~ • Nrw Cafe I Bar ~ 2376 Newport Blvd. 548-9755 f: . * Lcje 1 BR * ~ . ~ta, drps, displ.. p .a l i o, ~ i;ar. Adul.11, no pets $150 mo. ~ &>e to appreciate. 2017 -B f OIArle SI., 5f8.6030, 646-1841 ! NEAR OCC: 1 BR. furn. apt. , • w/b!lns &: all util. furn. 1 ;: 546-5648 Afler 4 PM l . 2 BDR townhse I% ba, bit· ~ ln1, crpts, drpg $140 mo ' :' ' ' Adits. 3000 Coolidge Apt IT 2 BR. furn. Adults, no petl Avail. Aug. lst. $130 B Scott Pl. 646-2323 ;,_DIAL direct 642-5678, charge your ad, then sit back and listen to the phone ring! e Specious 3 Br's, 2 Ba 533-1351 548-9411 FURN/Unturn; For divorcee EVEc;: KI 7-l,Q"'· further information please SAFE -7% ON YOUR place means less cost. service. Free estimafn e Swim Pool, Put/green 1.==o,;"-'=====' I & 2 sclU age chldrn. U15 mo call Glenn.Thompson with MONEY No traffic problems. 548-7958 e ~: e Frpl, Indiv/lndry fac'ls East Bluff 5242 max. CM area. 646-4965 Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. Church Bonds 14801 Beach, Westminm.er IJJ'AA'PPi\ANNEESS:Ee~GG'ARDAii'D>i~ii l 1845 Anah1im Ave. -1818 \V. Chapman Ave. li~~~:l~~~37;·1:'"=~~~1 531=·=172=5 =====":~::':'":1 M · • 1 R-" C.M. 642-2824 PRESTIGE Town Homes Guest Homes 5998 Orang amt c eanup. Cl.I• e. "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! [For lease, 2 br & den & 3 br 2!1J E. 17th St. 646-4494 541•2621. Eve:~~~·53s-6727 Real Est1t1 Loans 6340 Reas monthly r a*"" s . "! with 2 or 21,2 baths. Gold PRIVATE Room for elderly Eve. 646-5752 C1m1t1ry Lots 6411 827-5248 alt6 pm .:•! RENT J'ifedallion aU elec. Your own lady in licensed guest home. l---.A7j,-.C,.-on-d"l"'ti"'o_n_o"°'d--:?RROW on Your Equity GRAVE.SITE For s a 1 e, STUDENTS workinr ~ir 3 Rooms furniture key to pool. 2-car gar. Rent , ="'=6-=33=91~._.----,--= Offic•s &. Ouk Sp•<e 1A_cc_•_•,,9" _____ 6_2.;.00..c1 F~ vate 2~, M1ortN•· m.,,on;y Pacific View'M em 0 r i al way thru college. · Atl;en $25 M th 1: .ee appr11.1sa · 0 ig. Bros. lndsc ......tnrs· _J..p. on staru at S250 mo. PRlVATE Room for am-with central secretarial, zer-ATIENTIO ALSO Park. 6"' '"W4' FUlL OPI'ION TO BUY 845 Amigo Way, Npt. Bch. bulatory lady. Good food . ox end telephone answering N 90% 1st TD loans to sn .soo 548--0935 lawn care. 64&--4203 ~ .• ~J No deposit o.a.c. . Nice surroundings. 548-4753 service, up to 2,(XX) sq, ft. DEVELOPERS & Serving Orang' Cnty 18 yrs. Jt EL I AB L E : R'el.:s. H.f.R.C. l·Ciiioiil'Oiiiiniii1iidiiioiiliiMoiiiiriiiiiiii52jjjSjjjO 5999 The Mutual Bldg. _ INVESTORS Sattler Mortgage Co., Inc. Travel 6435 w/Orlental care. Cle~s furniture Rentals II Misc. R1ntals 2863 E. Coast Hwy, CdM * 80 LEVEL ACRES * 336 E 17th St. Costa Mesa & odd jobs. V l n c .-d t . 517 w . 19th, C.M. 548-3481 TWO Garages for rent Call 8 Af.! to 5 PM 6754070 Ideally located in high-dry m21n ' S4S.OOU •C~~e~~eew~:l;;·• 642-0326 · •. :} 1568 w. Lnclll, Anhm Tlf-2800 ~ .... ; $l.O each. 918 Palm St., MEDICAL Suite pe.rtially dese; (no smog problems, My car, you drive 536--4562 GARDENER , : ; NEW Dehn: 1ge 2 BR. 2 BA, fl,. Huntington Beach tum. Dover Dr. area. Ample won erlul dry-air!) L eve I Mortgages, T.D.'s 6345 Reliable &:: Experi~ blk • Ort• paking. Larger e c e pt Ion land, pump & well on pro~ A R · 6530 675-4952 ·-· N. Laguna. 1 10 ocellll erty. Just 18 miles East of $5,565 lst TD on spectacular .. ~to epairs park. Leaae. 49'-4Cli0 eve ON TEN ACRES REAL ESTATE ~:;rat~~~ger ~= ~'. Barstow (where great ex-Oceanview lot, Sold for Garage stalls for rent. MOWING, Edging. vaca19*n. 1 &: 2 BR, Furn &:: Unfum General pansion bas already begun!) $7,950. Pa,yable 1% per Gen'J cleanup. Hau1J11r.! Costa Mes• 5100 from $150 mo. Frplcs I Pri/ 6000 fice. 0r·s private lounge. 00 man • mod• '-"•• in month including 8"0 . All d"e Hoists, air compressor le Odd Jobs. * 548.:69f5 -;==;;=====I p · I p 1 T · Co lncomo Pl'Oporty Approx 2.000 en, ft. 644--2924 ........,. ... 3 ~· " accessories. 842-6020 • atios oos. enn15 -n-""" area! Ideal for resort yrs 10% discount safely l =========~IGEN 'L Clellll-up, tree .tv, tnt'l Bkfst. 9 hole PutV between 4-Spm, de v e 1 Op men t, alfaUa returns approx 12% per yr_ Babysitting 6550 rotolil, grading, sprln~. Excellent, park -like sur- roundings for adults requir- ing peace & quiet. Green. BUILDER'S BONUS 1738 AN AHEIM, C.M. 500 sq. growing, fish raising. etc. 494-1137 lawns, haul'g. Reas.~ 0001 Sea Lane, CdM 644-26ll 1n7.36grounAnohed lml!OO<' -~,-.u!e,.11750; • , • opportunities boundless. $1390 2nd TD payable 1% per LICENSED Babysitting in e JAPANESE GARDEN.!JiG Discriminative Tenants 1, 2 & 3 BDRM . .APT'S. POOL. NO CHILDREN M11cArthur nr. Coast Hwy) ~.,.. .,.. • LA.< • ff m lh · lud' 10% all d ho A D Buy Corporation and ~ers manufactures rep. Shelving, .. ~.us is a rare o erillg, af-5 on incc rng ue my me. ny age. ay or Service Cleanu p, Lancllc$P:- MARTINUj)UE GARDEN APTS. 2 BR, 1 bath cottage $180 mo, on lee.se. Delancy Realty 673-3770 2 BR, garage, stove, refrig., 18th & Santa Ana, C.M. Avail July 22. $135. 213: call Mrs, Henderson 646-5542 431-1195 lm Santa Ana, Apt 113, C.1"1.1•2-,BD=RM"·°'s"°."'1"°11,...,.>a"u..,.-,"h-,."',-,.. STEVENS VILLA NEW -LUXURIOUS 1 &. 2 BDRM. APTS. From $13 Month pool. Sl&> Mo., yearly Avail. now. 6'14-ll30 Lido Isle 5351 1-------· Carpets, drapes, al l built· STEPS 'IU BAY & SHOPS ins. Adults only. No pets. <Lg. 2 BR .• study, 2 ba, I...se 384 Avocado, CM Mgr. Apt 8 Adults. 673-7502, 673-ll39 SPAC. 4 BR., fam. rm. townhouse; Newport Upper Huntington Beach 5400 iBay; pool, rec. I a c i l . - Children, pets OK . $260, Jse. SPLIT level 3 Br. 1* ha aU &12~797 elec bltins dswhr, displ, SPAC., lmmac. 2 BR. Sl50. crpts, drapes. Encl gar & Ad It N kin •~ carport. Patio, pool & lrpJ c. u ~· o S!110 g, no peu.. Call 536-3190 2 Pattos: pnvacy. 675-4859 AITR Se t h . 2 WATERFRONT 2BR. 2 Ba . BR ·· p. •'"" °"'1 '1· apt. Frpl.: boat slip avail. ·· carp., rps., rp ·· L 1295 I 1· "~ gar. Lease $130. &i8-8428 S:~5144 : w 5 1P .,... .... IS YOUR AD IN CLAss:- FlED? Someone will be BUSIEST marketplace In looking for it. Dial 642-567& town. The DAILY PILOT for quick, efficient results. Oaasified section. Save will throw in lots + z BR bl & d k Ph fording the investor a great yl'!I. over~ excellent nite. ing. 531-7034 aft 7p.m .• · •• la ea es s etc. one, future! Personal circum-Oceanvlew Jot. 20% dis-546--6274 house as OOnus + room for Schworer 673-2654 stan-• 1_, ~ .. ;. •A'•·. oth-count. 494-lll7 ,.,..~,....,-~~~~~ Yard Cleanup Lawn MOwbig 12 units on this well located E T .. c ....... u1..,-.. H S Senior girl will babysit , ;,.h H lln p T·,.., rproperty that js close to FOR R N er, smaller parcels avail-ANNOUNCEMENTS for babies or small chil4ren ._ t au g ower -s Harbor Shopping aree.. Approx. 450 Sq. Ft. carpeted able below market value. and NOTICES your home. XLNT REFS. Exp. 5'18-5963/!162-22'72 · -· $329'50 & drapes, air-cond. Call· owner; 847-6640 Eves/ 646-3.546 FOR Commercial I..ancl&c.Pe ' MARINER'S BL.IX;. weekends. Found (FrH Adt) 6400 Mainteriance. Ba.y l:....uld- • COATS 1515 WestcliU Dr., N.B. IO LEVEL A CO e BABYSIT Or board any-scape Services. 54&95M. , Contact Mrs. Rainio 642-400'.l c. LORADO FOUND; Ferrui\e German time. Pri room, reasona·ble. & RIVl."'lt. ~ ~IG RIVER Shephent Very friendly; Also ironing. NE CM 646-9078 Cut &: Edge Lawn : WALLACE SEX:RETARIAL SERVICE devel, Riverside County. Vic. 17th&: Santa Ana, C~ta •Wll.L BABYSIT Maintenance, Licensed.· REA~ TORS Modern otfices, carpets, air $7,990, $100 dn, $80 mo. Mesa. Taking to Shelter 548-4808, 545-5870 aft 4 PM SU-4141-cond. parking. From S65 per 675-S017, L.A. 213 467-2133 Friday -Call: 834-3181 *EVENINGS. LOW COST Maintenance month Orange County Bank ..,,,========'I *646-6490 (Open Evenings) Bldg 230 E 17 •• s c -{telephone No. ot shelter). MOW -EDGE -SPR.\Y . . .,, t., osta R E Wanted 6241!1;:·='="=~=~-~ FERTll.IZE 96i.'"' Mesa 642-1485 • • •67 ESTANCIA Hi bo}'!I class Brick, M•sonry, etc. ___ · •• ,...9• Investor's Delight Terrific leverage tremendous depreciation writeoff (I o w, land to improvem!!nt rato). NO eXterior maintenance or yard work to worry about. Complete recreation fa cill· tics and good established tenants. &iy 1 to 20 units .and laugh at "tax time", Monticello Hom11 546-1210 Courtesy to Brokers EXECtmV·E Office iuite, WANTED ring, vie 10th at beach. 6560 Japanese Gardening · 320 sq. ft. Glendale Fed ~EOIATEL y In itials inside. J dent if y. Prole111ionaI Malnten&nee 646-5381 BRICK, Concrete, Carpentry 64&«i6J Bldg, CdM. Reasooe.ble. e in Monarch Bay area, ===-;;=:---,,-custom Cabinets. Small job$ 675-6444 Laguna. Cash buyer. Need FEMALE Kitten • yellow OK. Free Est. 962-6945 J APANE.SE GARDENEk SUITES AVAILABLE S50 &: 4 BR home. buy or lease atrlpes. Vii;,. Came.lion & I===='===== EXPER, ttliable malnt: Urp. 1no Orange Ave. C.M. with ,option to buy, or good Ocean Blvd. CdM. 673-1347, Builders 6570 Reas. mo rates. 892-3219: 548-6713 View lot. ~cipa.ls only {ask fm-Gail) 54~9200 1---------Gardening complete service ple~se. 213-33.s-4066 days or LADIES Wrist watch found REM 0 DEL, repairs 30 yrr.. exp. Reliable, ; BEACH It. Slater stores for lease. 1050 sq. ft. -!kJO sq. tt. jzt3) 38'2-2397 lndustri•I R1nt•I 6090 LG. 3 Br. Older hm &: lg lot. Ideal for I'i-Tfg. re.ntaJ. 936 Sunset CM MB-&55 332-5368 eves. in vie 2200 Oceanfront N.B. plumb'g,, painting, elec., dependable. &t2-4389 ~ BUSINESS •nd 7/11. 675-1065 Must Identify carpentry, resid,, commerc. F INANCIAL 1'90m add. Reas. 675-3038 ----"-----IWHT Tom cat w/grey tail. REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS B 0 I ti . 6300 Vic 16th It. Tustin .. C.M. C'" N-Any . . b us. ppor un 1es 646-5994 t>.DI .:.. , ,3, 51ze ]O , 23 yrs exper. 548-6Tl3 Ntn'VILLE, U.S.A. is now FOUND Chihuahua female aceepting appliC'a.tiontJ for dog on Thurin, CMta Mesa. C•bin1tm•king 6580 franchises in Orange Coon-646-8416. ty ' -Uon .. l I~~~~---~-CUSTOM Jdt. cabints. bthrm. General Servlcet ~2 PROFESS. Window, wa~ & fir. cleaning; bu 1 I n e s:~ , resid., & construction. ; Crystal Window Oeanint Free Estimates ~ ' ' ' ' ' No Matter What It Is moaey. time & ieffort. Look now!!! 6 Houses on comm. acre, room for more. 165-169 E. Zlst, Costa Mesa. Do not disturb tenants. Prine. oob'. By owner 1-S -0328 4200 SQ. Ft. In modern con- crete buildlna M-2 z.one $300 mo. {213) 434-5082 · ~.. s Me walting n BL K& Wht; puppy vie. Npt. pullrnans, formica tops exc. Anaheim, Laguna B c h . Bch.-673--6613 Balboa Island & other areas· I==~--~--~ work reas. 847-9832 Hauling ' ~1io LITl'LE GlANT TRUC!< Hauling. 6' height, 10' bid. You name It I haul. ._ Big John 642-4030 .. ,. I r t • ''• f r • . • i· l ! • : ' YOU CAN SELL IT WITH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD For Fast Se.vice & Expert Assistance DIAL 642-5678 DIRECT : JUST SAY CHARGE IT! i l... ......................................... 1 • • ·~ \ - 5100 Cost• Mes• 5100 Cost• Mesa 5100 Sl.4 ,950 <:Uh req. Fully YNG Grey It white kitten vie ========= 9CCtlred invest. sh 0 u Id CdM. 6T.J..8nl C1mtnt, Concrwte 6600 return 1st yr. Call for appt SKIS. Identify. CEMENT Work, all kinds. Bell, Cal 92660 '42-3912 Instant credit -all major &<Z-m3 °" write. to 16171========= credit cards incl oil cards ./ HAULING Trash i>~ We1k:liff Dr., Sune 210 Npt. =L°'='-----....;640:..;,;_1 honored. 12 Mos to pay. Trimming. Anything ::Wt! tlo Solve a Simple SCTamb!ed WoTd Puzzle for a Chuckle WHY Work for somrone CAT 7110 V"ic Ma.ms Sch. Reuoneble. 530-4644 _ H A.ii. Exper wo11t 56-~· else! 8e your own ~! Mesa Verde. Large1 grey EXPERT CEMENT WORK CLEAN Loll, garagei,~. 0 l!eorronge l•llen of th• fou r tc1ombl&d words b• low lo form lo,ur ~mpl• word1. IGULDEC I .1111'1' IVEG ·AL I t.1-.- 1 ...,. 1 -.,:r-r--i CockloU matte<, 'Who! o _ _ _ guy he ill He wolhes h is f••t ~~-'-"'--'-'1 -IS in block coffH so they won't I-to -on him." t-.,---,-.,...-.-T-1 0 Compl.M th• dtuc~I• ~eel I I ~Y filling ln tht ml151n;i ww:M'd• _ . -you d•velop ft1:1m "9 No. 3 b•low. Pl1NT NUMBERED lETIERS IN THESE SQUARES • UNSCRAMSl.E LETTERS I FOR A.NSWEt ·-"'" .......... ,....., ... You can have your own atripe. lon.r fur, pregnant. Reuonable Prices, Local Tree removal, dumP,: ., , yardagr shop in the heart ol May be lnjtittd. Reward! Contractor. Work Guar. backhoe, till, rrade. 9li ~· 1~~a~:~: a:m=: 54&-8949 free Estimates. - .. 642-9496 Hounclunlng ·'7i5 m-ey. 15.000.00., gt( In •1'B~R~O~WN="'Al°"U"'ga_t_o<....,.b"illf"'ol"d,...,...in FLOORS-Walks-Patios & -----"--...;;-i.f'I ..., """'-•-" ftA-••H CLEANING -tnstde-.::·-•t. Includes $8,000.00 inventory phone booth next to """"~ n.u<:IUI· Ex P er t _... and fixture&. ntE REAL Albertson's mkt, 19th It Workmanship, 642-8514 Painting, rug cle~~­wash.lng. Free est. ESTATrnS .:.. 54fr2313 Harb. Rew. 642-7890 CUSTOM PATIOS &: UNIQUE FRANCHISE PART-Irish settor found in Block walls. Also ~e. 1r;,ning ,,7J: For men & women with mgt vK:. Santa Ana Aw. and sawing Ii removal . 842-1010. ~ M Dr Fl a collar and -KEPHART'S Custom ;_:_,j_ ability. No exp; we train. esa · e CEMENT Work, all types. ~ Ottered b)' lntemaHonal leather collar. 642.-4816 No job too small. Frtt est. h11 moved to 130 E 17~MI Ylll'dlgt Fair. $15,l.XXI to LADIES Timex watch, blk H. STUFUa< 548-8615 T. CM. Open Mon-8at '• S25,00J invst opens retail band mt 7/12 Hts. Harbor Licensed_ Quality lRONTNG: My borne .wre Vt aS!IOC wtth this ram-area. R.ewt.td 842-1~ or Cement work. 839-5006 hr. Speedy service • ous Co. Jim Owens. 546-46f7 962-3242. IRONINGS: .$1 hour SERVICE f'IUff &: Fold M=D<ED=,.. ... =m°'e::,.-, ::wb;::tC'w::/;;:bl""k, Chlld C•,. 6610 962-m2 LAUNDROMAT Establllbed brn, F, vk: MeM de.I Mar, ~-------- U yrs at 788 w. 19th Costa lost 713 RewM'd 54&-6230 SPEQAL Summer DlY Care Janitori•I Mesa. nettin& flJOO. Long Hot balanced meall, snacks. lease, t;uit .COttple. Ownera P;.,•:.•:.:-;:;.;;:c•l:.:•---....;6405..;.:.;o State Uc. 2'Ai to 6 yrs, 7 am- ""· LI ·~-7 .o.u 6 pm, $18 Wttk. Oavls rt'Ul·w c. O"oNTU, ....... OUCS 6 PM. ALCOH AnonymOu9 Montessori Schools, 1525 N. B===~=~~--~I Harbor Atta. Pbcme 673-S'rn Santa Ana, C.M. 646-3706. BRIGHTER SIDE JM-H° Q-pt cleenlna, nrw.. ~ lndu$t'I, Resld'I, 548-(q, • :::t EAUTY SHOP 6 mo. old P.O. Box 1223 Oleta MeA . owner mu$t Jca~ ucrif!ct DYNAMIC FRIENDS $2.500. Be&dl area. THE l'•• ll" ~ "REAL ESTATERS 6'6-1171. With ettr .... qua uCI 1.w Centradort 6620 Ask ror "VM" tor u. and those who"'&re. 539-334l. SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9900 •"" e.0·1. C<ARGE....,. want od now. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ PAnOS • Patio Covert Room Additions, Uc. ~ Day•E•e-.Wlmdt L1ndscopln9 "IP CORRAL'S Lnd1c p;.~ 8oJot1Ulng Senr. f'r'N n (Have own equ l prfti1 ~764 .·:; t • • I ;Y !20 - - t--130 -: ' I 1866 ~ ' . itbo, l203 ;.... 165 ~ •m· Im. ' • ! !!. ' ~ .. -pt ~·· ... ' ' ~ ~·· j ; -' • ~ . in: "' h. p , "' 'fiG Ip, -' ,• PM ~ • l '149 :ic; . • • = .i2 +- ---~~~~---~--------~!!191...--------------------------------~ .. __ '!'lll_llli!ml_ll!ll_lllll!l_lllll!_•I Twldor, Mt 16. lM DAILY M 1;, 1" * * JOIS 1 IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT Miil & IMPLOYMINT .IOll I llMl't.O'l'M ~~~~!!![!'p~;CJ;f,,j;;i'j~ ~ W•"'""' -7200 !WjJ Won!M,-7200 ~ w-7100 . , ... _...!;!!' •!!':~.:'-'!!!. __ ..J.7:!•!! :: =~:-:=1 ;:;;W;;•;;;;-;;";;;;;;;;~j;;I ii .; ' ,. ,. ·' " " Pliiid JNOO lind TD • • _...euis S BK. ma-, s-ya $!'Mo. Want Chnp Chty. .hime.J.-- . Ed. CM: w 13&1119 Evet. • 1!B5 YAMAHA, IO, TRADE t« 25 Ill Jda d. MW' carpet A ped. 'lnde Hite new Uh. ... -.....,... -. H•ve i.t "5 2-Dr. Ftlrd. Kew ttr.; radio, heater, :. fl*. ~! Wmt furn. b' apt. CIO N. New- 111d. Hftopart Bch. -* * # 12 a.n. O:IYNi 3 Jiil watertroot with pier, Wll --·"'* k ditleft:ace abow: $35.UIO loan. LI I.rm CLEAR -4 Unltl Nm. oceu 'fiew, 1" bile. Npt. ....................... liflD Wte -. -• tnda. ·1m14 Olurt ...... l'BC521 DEWXE 3 BR 3 M bn -Gotl .o:...e, pool. ...... --..... $15,llOO. eq. Want 1Dcomit Ullitl. Dula 11117 a..-· !!!A Goins -JUs. Trade for Sprts car • .u. have '95 n.d J'..coao.Vaa f'actnry camper. Pop up. Trade for ! . Ms.3791 JO n ·a Shull. Trtr, MU ecmtamed, o:ce:l eond. For: .....,., __ hame, mobile bome, 'ID'• .. ,_ WELDER ---..:r.::1:r m .. """' 8r;.. ~-,. SECURITY ::. ~ =.!' = p, . : 0...... '=.°..1 i.u C.Xec ....... 11o-•.a C1111w ,..1._-..·a. E-l'tlmtl! 1 Wiii werk en ma1w-pporhlftn... ~ ., cu.. G1rta -r 111J1 T ..... n ltMMI • :t ·-· ""'"'1·-.... ~ ~-.. Ge"· """""""··.~~ Typist ASSIST AN iiAlCii ~ ~ • PIUONNIL II -· ..... lei-ta19 _.....,._ _,_ -aito·lllllfll. No~ calli AMMCY "I -'< 19 opeclllcetiaM. L-I Sen C-nte ._.,..,. ____ ,, -· -· 0-t W L '"" -. j: ll•••l,..2y.anweW. ,._, .. ......,._ -ho" plNll"' -------Blvd.CM c.to-1 ... --or Cor-: :.. -.::.:-: Help W-c-, ,..:!·-~ =rl~~~ ;: BAKER -l'MIJ .,...,,,. l llM'~ It, l !,' tHlcat'-••--Y ~ w-7400 -..... ~-'' ... --· alte obllta. No -calll ......... I ' • r-v~...... ~ wlH tnln thlrp 1• ctudl,. •cueMnt...., piwe. 'Rlndwll'1 Donut M7"'72I 1 Conta<t Jl1n 1.-IH *-A 1_,. Otrical dlvhlual; . t..i, _ ... _.,. -1911 ,.._,CM (7141 546 lnO rao UNOI' lty, IM vonder/-IU'MlE Couple to mana&• 'Mlzsll)e s,aem l>tY. ATLANnc RESEARCH ... _._ - _.....11y "' De11.1"'-·... STACO lllC .... ,,_ 11.1.... 20 ..it """· No dtldm, .. -"'""'I'"*'" . rlDWRI ' • -· lie alllo 19 -pota. ICT-6411 --"' .... n. ••nf91J typo p 5 Q ., ..., ....--Oen-Personnel 11n ••kar st. , ....... ..,,_.,_ Coda- ... barM!IMt.l)t. Dw t.boratorit•, • looll S4f-3041 Phone P-1 ltcn.Ury dtctrardcs nwiufaetur1q lar appointmfnt, coaw&ft1 hu an opentnc '42.ff21 .... _ ... ----™ ' azn-6 ,.. --Oert. Dlltlel Mdudt II( TO( Pitik and tmployee C(l\oo 1-------- I ~ '""'::-~ !i ASSIMIUlS MAlllllH lllC. ...... -.....U..t llMI.. -*lt1'. N"'t bo ma· ------- 'ENGINEER hft, well cqaniud. and ~ '° commwlicate t:f-i.ctl...,.. -. DAiil ........... ~ ... ...._ __ . _.. rWDt opcience ID -.ctrmlc wwwipment . _ _......._,.. ->""----.... -""'---VIDt DANA Centact ,~ I=lll (7141 ' Mloollo s,.-DI•. ATLANTIC RESEARCH Cl)Rl'()IUnON A DIT; of ,,,. __ _ ml Harlior llvtl. C.ta -.. C.IH. 1.;.s. M. E. ..... t .,.iuato to Service ~~,,:.~ LaborNtorl", Inc. 2401 CAMPUS DR. mVINE, CALIF. (Neer Orqe Co.. Airport) An ..... ...,.,...,,.., employer L1bor1torlft, Inc. CONVALEICDi'l' AIDE '601 CAMPUS DR. ror ,nme bome. run or IRVINE CALIF. put limit. An1 are. ----~----1 (Near Onnae Co. Airport) HOUSEKFll>Dt C~tomer Relatlonl An equal opportllnltr IJve ta or out. 1'111 or put and SalM employer tlme. No .lee! Neat attr1ctlve Iadie1 to call HOMIMAKllS rw,,_.1or dWi1ion of national --ARGUS WOltK NEAii HOMI S..y Adv Mtlr te $525 LNn Proc...., $400 lkkp" Thru Tl $400 Pl'Od'n Supv ta $700 forltllft Opor to $475 ,......c .... $20dt AllOUS IMPLOYMIHT CONSVLTAHri: AG!JfCX 20U Westdltt, NB 541-11'11& 16'.M E. 17th, S.A. 5fT-6318 newpolt . peisnnnel _ egancy 133 Dover Dr., N.I. 642-3170 549.2743 Schoolo-lnatrudl ... 7600 • (IUI' prHel'lt cuatomen llM E. lttb, Santa AM and help establlah new one1. MtWC fll.ldent w a n t 1 .....,. ""' '°""""""'· REGISTER NOW! Racllo-T1lephon1 -_,, '"' rlut• co"'f"l"Y· Salary $I 0,000. Excellent opportunity. -mab 1525' moothly. 01.-h 5111 or OormeL $1.lll .......... MAU .. . ' .. . ' .. .. ' ' ' • -· typnr ... """" bookkeeping. Able t(!: ."8" small ~ttt ud. .,... 10 ...... Mthlmi ' I ' " ' ' -I ... ' I ., ' .. ' ' " ., .. 'I " ' ' toX!O STORE llldr. w/20x30 .,_, .,._ 1o1; w.11o111--------(714) 646-9'41 Cor -·Apply. o.m.,.,., llunes 'Aide ........ --Youn• ..... -11"'""1 w..-.An.,Gudlll · ::!!~:':.: f;SOl;;;;;;;OOL;;=.~OU!dml==•'"1 _va_oa-=tien-l~•"':S t= ::=: Btv., Olllarlo, val. llO,IJllD. Trade up Jcr comrntl'C. In in CdM arta. 1 • ... NEED MOTOllCYCLI __ ...... ; ........ -.ine. new Hftt. "50 • ' .................. 494-'DOf * * * CARllR Ol'PORTUNrrYI Join..,.,.,._......,. L ... I ....,ufacturor haa -.. ....... """"Mia 1 ........... Opotl .... ,.,, Nospeience~ Wotnm-lallorporttlme e ~ Mvtva1 Pun4 AhlHn, Inc. NptB.lbW-HUm I .A. 1212 N. 8- 5'7-mt Wo IN lft "'1bllthe4 eemmerdal firm with liberal lrl ... hneflh. Only _ .. with al ........ """"'"' .... ,.,i-ohwhl apply .. PARAMORICS '2tlakar- Coda-. 549.2221 MECHAlllC s.c .... ,.,-r1 frlday Triinl"" Progr• YELLOW CA• co. """· Cldlcoat ~ MW..,,. _.. -l Pleuut Npt, BMcb offlce. 'WWI . m, E. lltb St. ~Sc~ SCl-2118. lfS XI n t opportunity. lnttlll-IPONsortD> BY Co.ta M-' • Jel)Ce A Initiative eaentSal. !!rr' To c 0 mp• 1 er SWIM LF.SSONs by a pm- Ufc insurance exPel', type 'ark Lide ~ rqr, lluat be feask>nal )'O'lr pool. ~· 60, Call betw 9 A 1 Weekda.11 Convalescent Hosplt1I accw'ate t;yplst • rood witb Bee. Reu. 54S-lf:98 fl:r appt 642.aT or Sf5.M'19 l+e Superior Newport s-dri numberL Jab 1 n c 1 u d ea GUITAR. 1-ona in rock, tilk TOUCH UP GIRLS Jul7 11th iM. !be Slot. ...... / 1111n1 I -l .......,.., Pub w-. Elcper. ....,..,.. .. J1boto NO CX>ST to tndc ol ~. by 81).1'113 touch llP • )l'inled dradt qualitled appllclntl Pmddna I operatlnl'. lmlll -"''--';;,Pup:=,,,U,.-,ol"-::--,--- bolrds. Dnployment suan.nt..t computer. M2-9630 TIMICbet c'·zF:al pi&ar CHEMFLEX upon MIWactoey fLOlllST, ••porle....i "'"' 'l1'ompoon ,...., 3'117 llirdt, NB st&-~ tompletioa of the count Call 5'1-7tM E4uol -'"""' ,mp1oyer SALi AND TllAOI KINDERGARTEN Te..,i,,, LADIES ,.... Man. W-. 7500 MlllCHANDISI FOR with credentlala; for dald W . FurnltuN IOOO ...... port ..... Muat hove OMEN J ( car.AppiyAPRO~No , GIRLS 1 1 5' 1UVDUA Sofabed -·-' -$111 wli .! " ........ ..--HS sr&d. mWW,.. d· plete. Some bac~ I " .....rw-.. : O~TnH n f $2.11.. ·: Would UM IZ(lfM e..,.ft. •""· HS ..... nitjf_jiy complete. Vt'll1 pQ w::s~ F to exper operator. : , u,. ...... .. $4 .. " -· ·' " ' 29 Fubicm ldand. NB. w/tlwptld eu&lln, good. !33-1333 Phme wttk no up, nee. nalllEV (0 c:md. fl» 2 ntvti rockers Fully nperlenced. • fl.75 hr. to st111: + txinaae.. ruwn1. 1 • .,.1 ~ ... -• Wlnted Must be able to read witll -« -ple atep end >I lllllntl Clerk· Typlat wt th enthua!um. w""' ,,,._ JN table $20. ' .. ---M• ·: Recent txp, nee. Small con-1:30 pm • 1:30 pm. No Jq. dl&in S1IXI IL ~1083 ,...... (: ..,,tial offic<. So. La..,,a otta, plwt """""""" Newport leach LM!IG Room, -'"°"' $421 ' arte. Start '376 per mo.' Air-oci:ad.oftkt'·lf'OUPlns. bedroom eontempnry (he P.WJ : BNJ:for Appt. a't'd. A)llply 1D3 E. l'hh H ltl 'ftlnut, 2821 P!bble Dr. 2 ,f. y OU NG Ex per It. Sultit 30fla.A. betwn Tua-Forlt ~":-O>rma del M#, Stt before ~~::e ~~ll~ in mllltair7 WAITRESSES Ken' tlnlsGnnd..(AcroaS.A.or MllW9 m JulJ 20. Phone Ml-2576 complete. Sharp.~ Restaurant ~· n e: Nnrpmt frwn) 1:30 J7ll • betx'e I pm polet4 )'OUDC mu. manqement. J® E. eo..t T:30 pm only. e SltOITING GOODS GltEY J'onnica top table, 2 pO.itkm. ?i Comblnotlon IJoo mochanic Hwy., OlN Call for oppt Glrl Frhlay • HARDWARE ,.._ 1 dlalro. Xlnt O>Od. "' 6 --...,..al 1'13-81 s.s,..... w.U round<d -e COSMETICS Call aft Int. ,..._IJJ! .... T... ": ~mu ...,..eel man.MustbaveCadlll9c•·Ol'11CE lllM.pr, full ~.60wprneledliceSIWINGMACHINES RA.1TAN J'wNbae, com-T,.ff ! ern~t ID .appU. pttlence. ~t compuy dmr• boaldceeper, thru t)tprlWrlter · Aoo.1racy -"' pine room full. llcriflce $121 : ml7lt ntlrement income. beneflta. Contaet Mr. Bob 8nandal •tmMDt. Atuo tlaL c.p.ble of !tecet -=ctal\JI . operl-'175. 9D-62l2 Career poe.ltSon with •· Nllht abilt 4 p.m. to 11 Rop1lkl for Interview. exper. New deaknhip HB ~lies. Salary Clllfts ence pre1ernd. Genm:lul QULTPZ> Seta llOld a snen tlonal concern. SffldN HllVICI DIUCTOllY JOBS lo IMPLOYMliNl p.m. Phone 11••Ellf ,11\1111( ...., Kon"°"""°" 521-«M "":::," ;;:.,_ ~ bmellt_.... -•ollw011t.....,,i. 1n ,..... man 20 unllo GI .... L 6110 .lo~ WantM, La..,. 7020 '7i.llll for •l'fll· AIKIU UWAUI WANT Ma-W-to 541-""' Sonia Ana AJ'PLY 11' Pl:RJQC pd oond.llS•>.111>-1'11 ~O ~~~ph= YNOl\'S • ,._ • ...,..G • .... y _ ~-•~. -'" SALES '600 Huiliar Blvd. work II kbry. Fall time. COff u.....-Monda1 ttn l'tib7 3 P0XZ Secticml $1$, JMrw bunable edu.caUon "I°" -~......,..._.-u, .a.oftU ni:w --• -... ww Co.ta Mesa M!).11(1) Exp.· pref. Aw17 & t M .... .....,. a. t -roam chair $25. 2 end tables l1'Ull available. 1 I: GARDENING SER.VICE care h lady er sent in~ llEPllDENTAT!VE! 1'nDch'i Putry ll'JO w C1ahler/Host"' .,m a.m. • :.,., p.m. c:ond &C-T8tl j state HO<ONd -· """'· Ll&bt ......_. OK. Loedlnr Ind op• nd .. t SALIS -·St a< · DAYS Xlnt · FEM.AU , R.tOJmtW. Cornmercl&l Be9t cl t4ttwww from ~ dedrw ii O't'S PoeldonopenlnMarlcetincin WAITJtE&il ~~--Cocktail W1ltN11 J. (, PElllEY (0, ~-"-..... -... ~ ·,·:, Yard Ceulp l'tee Est local ra. 5i8-4S34 11» mutual funcll. expqdfltc s.In Div, Must be 20-71, ' .._~.'C'I~, DAYS -- No job too wt. m..1581. PX!trI'AllY, fut ......,_. in. Oruwe eo..t:J. 'l'bll la 111 nM.t aggreutve, with cu, mature. l :JO-a p.m. 1 d&ya. ApPly ln PttlOn N C nte -.moT, Ml-lnt HB C..~ ~: ~-.. opport11nl t7 to entilr nne college. Start $ll» f'!I' SUndl¥cG. -'PPb' tn penon Sheraton S...ch Inn ew~rt • r .. .,,.a '•, pod at ft..-, bOIMIDOker, dtplfted Pft"eMkmal ltUJnc mmth. Rapkl advaneement HAMBUJtGER HENRY 2lll2 OceU1 Ave 24 P11hl0fl ltlal'Hf Office Purnftv,. I010 $411 te .., \'• h,.rha"fl"I :::;:a•· S day wk . full or put time lsrfttbnml ~ 1-3 p.m. LIDO DIS. ml Placmtla, Colta Mtsa Huntington Beach Newport le1ch, Callf. Some typln1 and a••• hlntl"' 6UO exp not neeeuary, ft trUt. TRIBUTORS 12132 Gardea DENTAL Aul.tut, ch & I 'I' 01TICE rue: ,,,.. KJnc, • bookkeeplnr. Able to nn !---'"----..::.:;.: DAILY HouNwork $2.25 hr. MT..c:L Mutual l' • n d Grove Blva., Garden Grove. side, experienced. No phone INSllECTORS An equal opport\lnlt:J thw• lie will lock. lbe small computtt and krWw . JI'~ And P I -:We. U ~!!e, own irwportation ... ~Inc. 2100 N. M PL•TEll can,. Apply at 81 o2 lmmtdlatwithe opportunity 1ot employer ~-· '821 0 ~beloreJJr, ~y -. 10 key addln1 m&cbln'1 l JOU_. me we tlodl benefit ~ ta .nn& "" Westminster An. SUite B, women eXper, in print• ua .-.: "'"' • ~: . DcdmtYe ha)-not expenmlve DAYWORX. I AM~ J p M' , Immtdiate Clllll0rtunff7 tor W..tmlnaUr Id drcaltl and mulWQa" Pbane 144-251' b@fore 8 pn ....... )! ,TrJ me Ind ..e. 5ils.3l51 Mature. Expariel.:ed. Ex ('Mil person. oper. la Jl'eclzlkn • baud. w B I ,,..... . , PAPERllANGER. wm paint. ...,.,._.. 111>-1• WI\ tltcbo • >l•ttnr for printed WOMAN To "°"" "' 0-t CHEMfLEX U en S Office ·~-nt I011 $110 " lamplee. 7'loek1• drmibl and rmaldlQ'lr ~IP.M.•~A.M.Appq 3717 Blrdl, NB 5tl-n.m --·---·· Aecur&U! t;yptna, WlD i._ Experi-=wd brM.ldut • board. )ft pe9Cll, no ~ calla Equal opportunltr •.Ttr-"•0._-•• _....... .... r tau1ht caahlertn1 and .Iii l' o 11>-VbQ!t SQIWARTI Jolt WantMI hMch. MUil be fut. ExctJ. CHEMFLEX pleue. Wlndtiell'a Donut Newport l11ch'1 auto. Typewriter, Ro ya I phases of brokerap bofll, • "7-1800 Man I W-7030 leftt "'°"" an4 ..,....,. 1191 Btrcl>, NB 5'6-7llO Shop. 2917 H.-Blvd. 3 ClRU Stondard, """1 ,,..,.bit. neu • INTERIOR A EXTDUCI\ ~. AppJy m ~ mJy. J:qumJ opportunity enq.i&oyer e SICRITARY e '::t~~p::;.n.: new11t and most Add1nr machine, 10 key. ! Polnt!Jw. """ estimate. TOP APT MNG'T TIAM Sllrf I: Slrlol• T>Pe 56 ..,.,,, ...., SH. Ex· --5 day wt.. 1111 In. uciti-c...i..,. Thmnohx cooler. Kodak •-T1•11 . ! .: Uc. 6 1111. arucx 5Q.QIC Dix only, N.B. ""' ,... IOAT MECHANIC por i..tp!ul. Pleuont .....,_ n .11 .,...,.-...,.,.,. . ., Rodi-Print O>pler. '*'"" to SHO ~ '* ~ '* fttTed. e.xper. • Ma. Aftll S9JO Pee. Ctt. Hwy. bperienced with dinel uee ofc. Are 22-«1. For appt mtdiao-i... ...-. ._I. •T eaa restaurant now ot SO.UM u "°" have had I Expert Sept. !. 531!-l345 Nowpert ....... ud ... mo. "Y ~ , • to 1 ycor oClloo , otloer moriM .,,...., 19thSL SUlteJ.llooto.._ a"oplin9appoou-Qa,...Salo I022 compony will train,,..,,. ,.._,..., .-. Domodlc Help 70H &HOY THERll ....._ llli:lllCAL MSIBTANT FD<'LE, .... " lo .,_ tioM for • nter. . ' ' , PAINTING Intftiar/Ellflertor. -" .Jeneen Marine Corp. Pw.onable, • t tr a c t Iv e ~ ud IDllMn'I m ' <X>UCH wttb meh:w book· I ·l'l'M..a.utet! UVEIN'S Dr1fhmut NeM..11 215 Fk:hl'r, Costa Meta. inject!ona • .,:;r.-wlr,NoS&t, wrytmallnoftltytnlll'IUll4> e •-..1 Waltr-cw sttna. needs~ lln11"'1 ~I--;: "", '* IG-tlllll * F.mployer pays 1efll wtth thomlP Jrnowledp cl Garden Grove 530-6680 tm1nc ebop No expmm ,._ I reo:werln.c $25; &rfboard, 0,...... ;: ~-PAl>ll'ING I ~CEll. G.oop B71ud -............ -IUN to -........ lol<tlad7 • """· °""' ..-.• ..;.,,. . .._,_. Ceclct•ll W•lt-.............. 1'5; v.nm .... + -••ult., Interior Ir Exterkr um BE. llth, I.A. MT..al!S I• ii boat mamdacturw. drtft.in r'lltnlaat, ~ ILLIN CAlnR ck.J, Apply mos,..._ DIW. e DJahw1tMrs motor, nolM maker for b1s Must be exPtl'. WW.., !MS-1117 a.m.11r.-.. a-<111 1'1'ce -lmd .,.. ..,.. ,,.._,... Call Ladlao Halierd .. hor Uth, 0... "-e lllSMyl eydo,ll: ""'""-""'°' ...... J.IP1¥ • A/ltt<C: ~ PmneneDt. ~. ._ and ..s.,,. dptCted '° betwen I a 10 All f'1l.41eO m.mo rrAP.T Your Own ..._ • C..U a 14 ow all:lrtlt. IDo IDllc :: • Ph.MnWnt 6l90 hr Sul ~ IGl10I Mr. VkW' M~ l2ll for appt. a.ERK ...._. with 80rM u a PltiHc at.no. We'H e larllindert I rabbit ~ Unedlor lft1 wlnt· ...... ,.... :• .J , LmbrshlN. Blvd., Nd SERVICE Station Mtendmt .,.. hlrnWl ollicc f!f coat, au fJ; beet up te "'9 ,; • .~1 PLUMBING JI ffr. RrV. rW1t WantM, Min 7200 HoUywood, C.W. llD exiper. ~ Fun time dlQ'I, bowlqe fll. ~~ ' llOIDt ~ ~2 = PLEASE APPLY bed dl•M A 2 ctn, all for S/H 90, Type ts. Noi" '-..... Uc., lmur.; T•• I Andtnco Union ~·-......_ llontod ---. ,_,, ond M D<"1 Ill: old Jr. .....,..,.....13: ........,,,. Slnslt, ,_, · -._r. --· IXPERIMENTAL ... ,!..;;/:...,.1 -llti -Oleta-,;.;: 5'tM3S1 NB .'.!'!'.""" ~ ~ ---· -II: ••-ttve. eu-ett poat ' DI-.,.. ISTS --~ -· IMl).UDI WORKING mother needl "-"-• _,a-, h:IUl•eewm Mll•Dl'r. er.am'• J.5o.SZc; Fft FM 11151'1tllbla. ,1 ::'.,e:11HOURSERVICE• MACHIN ·-_ ............... ,., --ol•e••·• lllWDUt~ LP.-.la,mMO&;..... :: , PlwDb!Jlr·-......w. IW>, no..--line, fi. ,_ .-, --llEOWllC, -· "'"' pa Ill T:• om. 0... ..._ -. Sopl. lhnl J-. --. ...i -..,, .... T• :· ! •. -....., -...-.llled -......... tien ..... 11 -i. ....._ ... -. !-. 1oo1y MU!.'2 1:-.:!Jl am. M pa-· 211 I. C.-Hwy. --. -or"°"' SUI .! , i;,. All -,..,. .... ,'°' sd. 5 yr ..-.... Attrac-"-f.U, -W • .i..., ...... lllll'• Auto Repotr UVE-11' --· la 5'1-2712 Nowport lloach -dn lOo .._ '-2 yr1 ..,_ -"""' : ' ave ••re• I: bewfttl • 8rurta Am. 1747 An&htlm. CJll. -.mt exd'llJlle IGr room I Mid. BABYSl'ITD. M7 iliorM. Bch. •t'JOl tWI I wlmdl. U1ru. ....... 6 . -.-.M- ' ' ~ 1., ..,..,, '"° J.d•anced ICJDltkl, lac. SUMMEft EMPIPYKmr YARD SAL&UIAN, ,_. Mother won. nJ&Ma, Vic. el: t :e .U1 Ill 4;C5. Mt9 t11rq PAlT.·TIMI H1D10LD ttem.a, wnrtnc llU... :: l2Sl V.k:tmia, CK Prof-Foc6111 Tam needl m. e c • n I c a 1 e x ' er, O.C.C. MS--41M1 1'rt. 5.,. old &b'l $25 ,.,.._ GENERAL Ol'JD: PBX 11PPt1"11. 11118c a .... flam. :: • •. JtDIODELAJtEPAIR .,....,. w t eppeiam,. ...., ...... fa'JllaMftt emplojn...t, 5 IDLEHn malu! eou .. 1 a. -.-afters PM ap11r., Sat.• 8lm. t p.m. ,,_., .. s.m. U. rm ~~illf •• , ~ a,.,..,, · Paint· Plut• An e11Q11 flllPt1' tm~ ,..,_.. mm. ..-17 to 21 ...,,_ W-£..R.tntak. 2111 • hllentte p tr ..-. 'w. irii«> b' Clftlce tiMI. n. 11 U ,.m. • nt. A lat. owtMlll Dr. BB :: ::. lrO:lncme.IMd:IG-l7'J D&IVJ:Jl Te ••li't'er Prtl ~I a.m.. ....... Harbor.Of train. HD Mn. Dre•I Nit 2 mo, ttwn low 19t. ll p..m. 1I T &m. __. llOYJNGI ..._ ,atlo I: t J'll -_., 1111 .. :, . !lf•tr-•~ tNO ~ ,, ..t ...,. ..,. Jl5 w. a St., 'l\lsda. e IUS IOY e 51).1D2 Also w ftiltlnl 9Cda. ~ -~ 1~ *._ 1 •1t ,_fin. tnae. 91M011-TYDe eo. Stmontte ... _ ·-- -I -I IDVJCE Ill-in a o, rou, TIME DRJ.l'DtY OPDATOR.s Coll Mr. --- ---• •' D ~a.do, l'V o-lmlnol Jno. 1: :~ -~ .... tt It• 11 La. A1P1 eqer. J\al time_... .... l'l«tl..o.ltlfwy.,i..... Appl) .. CW* Draperiet BABYS'IT!lt. R t i -lit All GARAGE SALZ I ..,, :; ; . r-t. MC:UIW, • J'l'L exp. ta ..... HPI• • • • r ~~r ~.,,. "=. Ill., • m• Mr. w...s '85.1 .... tfB. S.ltll pt .... u, I :7wt ~ i : PUL~TIMI ,__ CJoMll. Bii t I I 11:!!.a I. :,•1 l!!;;:::::;i!::"'=======··~--~ .....,.., CM. RRYfi ltat. AttalS!llC LVNJ..lldtliPN--.'l'bp w&•wt ..... DI & .. -p•Y•L•CdD: ....... ~Ollf. ...-•• : TILi, c........ "74 -.... --uu -:m-• -·· A • " Cl+·-COOi<-. ntr•••· -111.,0........ '!:!:;.,--°"".,:.~ .,.. ......... -... .. -.......... 1100 •1••· · -•v--.,e.fteMu* va -r-• ... ,., Mdwk' ;;;i:;;:::;:; -• -·-II *> ... tlllliltrpe ,,·•le'I ~ 11Pt .,....,............. SWllAllKP .. ~P.Jt.to4A.11.1i::': A11Mlll, ....... noo PrtDll'IUll.l"dlr' ............. ., £ .... ,... HUJSAm: ln .... 11 • VACUUMS • hei.'I)' ..... • .... Job ... ...n. -,.. .. II a.am --" I=·· -· -............. HJ. -· Coll ---.. t:• ..... .. • ""'*" • -5!£. .,;;..!':; :(.,..... i.-.. ••••er Su~..,., 2Ul~OlllD.,.... leachAruO,..llRll r .V,.Mrl.lllW'IMO-• Alllrt:irKrs.Mwrd LABTllCJl:o.ut. ll•••l:ll•OllllVM:llllm ta.-. ....... MT-11117-~ a-1..--8"' IN5 --· Gld"'-IH ... ,..,,, lltlO ri'JliT -Job W .,._ lo. 1:• -lo U f.IL 111 II. 1Ttll, Clf, -JOii i IWiLOTMlliri Pm-nt ......... -NI -.1#1 -ap ,,., -lo -. $1.a .... Re--TOP PJ.Y. • J ,.._ lo U:• -£iITi! iiWil ..... -· :. · ---........ -lllNo,.,-.-_.,a111..,. ........ ..., ~Po .. nso.11a-· ·-•n,.,...,,,,,.... -- - -llotoll!llN Ii ' ,.,,. WlllllM, I.My 1029 ~· ---. "~ • -Loon - • _ ._ -1111111 TIDll 'Ilia -111. -' .$f.U .,,.... JOaWaC • -· om 111< • -. -"" ta iiAliiWiii • .. -" " 1 .... • 1 ,.... 1 'til•ii•'f.ciii;r.•iiiiiiiiS J • ~ ,_ fllYCOdlC "'-• .,. -•G91•.•..., ...... P11 _,,~.._. 11111..,_•--Coll•.._.., 1CIPnu•l•..,; f :·:-.,:"o1., ·~"1':·.='m.:=' ~,er.:_: :.: ....... =:.!:::S·::::·a.= iltii:~:..ee::=11r . .::riiX Qr: t .::..:.:.:t:',;.= ;::-... •.!r.~ roolN. ;: .DAJLYPifbTll'.urrMll 0..-... __ .....,,_ ............. 1.11. ...... .Aw.-=•••--0....JI. Mll9' 1'ttll1 om W, _ _,.._..,. 1'!1lQiJii&f66dli. :Aile ......... --Dllllt Wliil•r ......... 17eJ:.?llll,OIM-.......... CM. -------__ ......,.._ THE.=-QmCICD===YOU=:..::;C>:;;l:;;J·:.i..--------i I ~ ------------ , J . ' . .. ' r ·~rator : • • !· leceives • • • • ta1cellation • : • . ' • • • of !m,000.00 • • ~Spanish & ' .. • • • • • ·-• • • • ' . • • • • -• • • • ' Mediter- ranean Furniture ~ All New Top • . -.. / . .. : Q1111ily Brand • i ·~~-A ' • ·! . .kt•iW.J Dream ': l · ionll iis ·on Display ! .... , ..... .. -.· ' Twsd11, Juty l6, 1968 M R HANDI FOR MERCHANDIU FOR !MERCHANDISE FOR SALi AND TRADE ~LE-AND ·~~ Sl\~E ·AND Tj\AOE flurnJtvre , IOOO Spanish/ Medi" • Si!owroom Samples 8' Wood carved arm divan, lg. man's ehairi beaut fabrics . s Pc hexagon dark oak din , set, w /black OT' avocado framed chairs; 5 Pc BR set, 9-dr Mr. & Mrs. dresser, lg mirror, 2 commodes, paneled headboard. VALUE $195 -FULL PRICE $429.95 or term• •• low 11 $3.00 wffk Items Sold Individually -No Down - Use Our Store Charge -No Fancy Front FRE E TO YOU -----·-·---TQ Q\lallfled Kome ; beaut. AKC Male Sl. Berne.rd. 4 yre. old and companion; •matt, f@male ~te We~t Highltuid Tc:rrkrr, A KC . MUST GO TOGEI'HER. All shots. Jtancbptelerred 545-38ll 7118 2 'GREY And blk, 6 wks old kittens, 2 male, 1 female, hsebrim, and long-haired variety. 646--7996 after 1 pril 7/18 but -Quality Values Inside! PETS •nd LIV~TOCK Approved Furniture -2159 Harbor, CM c11, 8820 D•lly 9-9, 10-5 Sund1y e 541-9660 Appli1nc• 1100 Ml1cell1neou1 1600 'For Sale ACTA -CFA CaJtery as a unit or individually. 962-1159 ::.Dog='----..:::8825 WASHERS $29.95; dryers $35; Freezers $75; Retrig., coppertone & Avoc.; Guar. SWIMMING POOL WIRE Fox Teni.er pups. 18 Ft Pool, Filter, Surface AKC Olamp ,fock. 540-1095 Skimmer, Maintenance Kit. * 642-9939 • FREE Ground P&.d. • Antiqua 8110 _ _,_ ___ _ GARAGE full ot small item1 . Pattern glaas, cafnival, art $149.88 SECARD POOL 323 S. Main, Oran&e 532-1992 etc, Dealers welcome. 218 ""'""""""!!!!!!!!!!""""""' '2nd, Npt Bch,.....,,. * AUCTION * CHERRY China Cabinet $50, U you will sell or buy 842-8063 after 5'.30 or give Windy a try Wknds. Auctions Friday 7:3' p.m. Sewing M~hln~.!__8·120 1967 SINGER {3) freight damaged for $38 .88, Automatic Zig-Zag sewing machines. New warranty OK. Button holes, blind hem&, overcasts etc. No at- tachment& needed .. For SS. New slightly s c rat c hed cabinet with machine, while the~ last. Terms n .25 wk. on approved credit. call 526-<616 812S W indy's Auction Barn Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'l 20751Ai Newport. CM 646--8686 POOL TABLES New & used $97.50 up. Table tennis, Poker tbles, bars & stools, indoor games, etc. Discount prices! BADGER SALES, 409 S. Main, Orange or Call Frank 538-0311. Open 12-8 p.m. except Wed. DE COR ATIV E Bi-fold interior doors (4 pruiela) each panel 17~" x 6' 6lh" Quality ~wood, antique white with gold trim; all hardware. 499 -2152 or BASSET, M'ALE. 11 weelai. Papen. $50 ....,833 lrish Setter Puppiee AKC Reg. Mal.es & fe-males • 546-4789 • " . ._ "-1-.. --. . - I P~T~ •nd LIVEST~C,K j ~~.~·~~~~~.I ~S~ATl~,N_ I TRANSPORTATION lmportO<I ~'.".°'"--"°°- Ci.:OS _._, _ 1125 0op ~ ao.11 & Yoc:hll 9000 I Motorcy<ln ~ MG GERMAN SHEPHERD DOBERMAN pupplo WE MUST MOVE.THE HARLEY Davt"'°n 1963, ,68 MG PUPS Ch•.rn.pioo 1toc:k, FOLLOWING BOATSI Fu·u~. cqLlip. Sell outrlabt or 4 mont.M old Xlnl temperament. 1958: 16' Cmttlr)' lnboard ttade for smlr bike. For sale C£1' OUR LEADERSHJP; ·AKC REGlSTE~O AKC. Terms. 847-3807 $1~ 1966 Crown Imper i a I SAVINGS BEFORE Champlon~Biood lines 196.1 18' Crest.liner Inboard Chrysler $3,600. Wurlitzer YOU BUY! 11 Bred IM ·Hor..... 8830 , $lm5 like new $400. 546-2376 fl . . Quality & Tempttamcnl 2 BLUEPOINT Siamese, ot 1960 20' H~ll,ywoock:ralt Out· 196? mIUMPH Bonneville Ill• Li...:~ Shots l Wonning ffi(ll, old. Sbota &. h&ebrkn. l board •• : ......... '. ••• $1995 2,000 mi. Bes4. otter takes. 'WI. 1.CU.IO Pedl~ with each PVP femle. 1 mle. 4~ , 1966 16' Qry11Jer Out'boord ~2617. tv8. 61S-2.f9'J IMCt'\h · • R31·3865 Eves. aft. ti:)') PM nsoo '67 Hooda 300 Scrambler 'rrvnTS ' Weekends after 9 AM TRANSPORTATION WEST COA&'T YACl-ITS 1200 rnllei. $51!> 1966 Harbor c M ~ '· ITALIAN GREYHOUND pup. 3.1.1.1 W. Coe.al Rwy. Cllll Chuck 545-&tU O•y1 ' . . 9:q plei. AKC reg, Q\amp_ion Bolts & Y1chtl . 9000 Newport Arct>ee Marina , '65 M?B, lt blue. bomb! la breed Ideal pet! l male l ....,,.y -1a1. &-;;·.h.t1;ed, Npt. Bch.. 642-TIU beautiful condlt10n ; n e W temal~ fl.25 .00 ~ch, mc1i'..ct. "'vi.. -r --• Trailer. Tr1vel MU Pirelli tires, deta~ble l~lf ing shots and papers. Call bottom scrubbed' & painted, S1llbo1ts 9010 gage-s~ rack, cha.ins, w" $1,90 per ft. .. paint...\ z!nc. LEA YING State must aell 13' bl di br kes extru. 64&1481. AU other main~enaitce • · 17' SLOOP. SleeJll 2. NfW '66 Aristocrat trlr. Sips 4, 3 ~~ ~n~ • .'.n...i lei Ake SHETLAND SlIEEP engine work, s~ ua. standina:. rigging &. OU!· burner stove ice box. u~ed • 1 one ·fl 800 ~10'l1 <ii" dog !Miniature Collie). Newport Dry Docks 61>1505 boa.rd. $475 or trftde for vw times. Cost U400 sell $775 or :94-17~ ' · •: ' Best In litter? EXQUISITE! On the Bay at 2001 St. .. or truck. &f2....319'l 0 r offf!!'. 64&-7616 \ Rieb sable & white. Male. TRADE hnport or Domestic 548-1487 att•. MGB '63, WW, radio, trod•: 3., Xln t '66 APACHE CBuft'alo) tent ...... d •-r""'ber. Low milta.!• 72 mos. t emperament. car ror -prox.~ft inboard. ..,,,.....,_GENCT ·-· • -Ch I. ~~ "'" ~. ~.. Ll>u.rl, Sale! 0 r trlr. Sips 6., IDcludea add-r..... ,....,..,,_ .............. 49G-966¢• amp 1nes .• .u.i • .nv-u~_. boat. South Coaat or bea rtful 24, ~ h . 1 . ..... .. ., u........ • ..... ..., · BOXERS for Sale. Show or Lapeslack preferred but not . u 1 a 1 1 an a-room, dinette & heater. '55 MG TF in good coa-' S d •-~-n-~·. Phone 646--9303 ask Trimaran sloop. Bes l $700. 847-5951 ...:u-. W. ;_ .'. ..... _,_ ~ •• ,· pet, tu service, uutU-u1..ug, ........... ofter-637 9458 .... ""' ... ~ W1>=J.D •• ...., dog training, b a t b in g . fer Disk. · · -16' TRA VELEZE, ice box, 546-3'15t :.' BETII-EL BOXER KEN-15• FIBERGLA$ Runabout .SCHOCK Endeavor 26' sloop stove, oven. Sips 8. Surge .: NELS. 8'17-5036 Traveler ~ hp _~ohnson, race eq. Cruise. Terms brks. New cond. $999 . ·.·• ,•: Sn.KEY Temer pu~ AKC dude trlr. Xlnt cond. $1200. avail. 834-2037 d'a Y S • 540-2358 PORSCHE .:~ " ~ stk, m J s -$1 25, 646--425.S 54~157 ewes. STORAGE, Trailers, boats, 675-5261 CHARACTEm Boat, 2 o ·, • SAILBOAT & trailer e etc. $1.50 per mo. Work AKC BASSET PUPS Grey marine mt!·: fun 16' Skimmer w/dacron sails. apace. 642-2601 & 548--3261 Tri-colored. Reason. 540-8638 harbor toat. $15QO. ~ In good s~ & ready to 18 ft. HO'USETRAILER, go! $400. M2-0030 FURNISHED $4511 SNOWBIRD Fiberglass 432, 2 324 E. 20 St. Costa Mesa '65 C Coupe Oirome w~ Luggage rack. Bia~ New paint. Michelirws. ~ 842-8063aft 5:30crwk · ' '66 PORSCHE " 912; ~ cond. Loaded! MOO Rtt! :. sets of sails, trlr, good cood. 642-0117' 642--3430 Tr1llers, Utility 9450 543-9534 After 6 PM • 1 . . I 14' NEWLY Retin fiberglaS6 . .. Xlnt cond. $495. 306* Cn.nd Canal BJ, 673.-3973 TRAILER 61Ai x 11% single ,. • •. ax1, Duat ., "'" "" "••" 1 __ ...:T:.:O:.Y.:..:O:.T:.:Ac..:_-ll;:•l"~H; good for moving U75 2342 ,. " ~ , 20' Clipper class sloop Just painted. $600. • 67>2176 * 14' Fibetgla!s sloop, keel, · safe & fast. New sails. $595. Fun Zone Boat Co., Balboa 5NOWBIRD No, 561. Xlnt cond. Well equip. $400 * 673-8182 * 1 241h' COL. CH Sacr $3,700. W/Extras. S~ 4 • 6. Encl. Aead. 714-ni'.-038.S O:>lgate Dr., C.M. FrH L11 Veg•\:!;': Vac1tion With ~··· •: Truck1 9500 '66 TOYOTA~\ ·' '65 DATSUN JA T. dlr. pick '66 Toyota Sede.ll. 'lbr ~ up. Sky blue. Thia is the sought a ft e r ~ ~ work horse of tbf! truck built today. Art)c ~~ Wl~ market. $125· Cash or trade. oontrasting in~r · ~~ Pymts $36.86 mo. 494-9773 or matic trans., ~. ~ 639-3617 etc. Up to 30 m.p.r . ~'1 ;:::;:::;~~o--,v"-8,,-A=tc l h.p. doing the .)00. *!-., '66 DODGE Van. · u o. choose Erom as ICM' aS:'7~. ~ RIH. All window. Lo mi. • $1495 :: ·: :· · Ove• fi00.000 worth • of .Sp1ni1h/ Mldltt furn. to choose from FENDER Telee&.Sler Guitar Pel"lect cond. Like new. Sac. $130 cash only. Zl.02 Florida St. Apt A HB 837--0791 ;.. PRIVATE Party ha& 700 pairs of close out: brand namr shoes, Chi Id r ens ladies. Fiats/heel's, etc. $1-$6. See at 158fil Willelt Lane HB or caJ I 89'2-0319 PILOT SCHOCK RaCing -sabot with $1 7 00 *499 -4!liS ELMORE~~: dolly. $300. 646-1970 :J.:c":.Pl=------9_5_1:-:0I •. ~· MOTORS '64 JEEP Wagoneer -4 whl TOYOTA i drive, hubs, air cond, R&H, Phone 894-3320 .• ;. Power Cruisers 9020 ems· ·as follows: Gor· s'3;~.tcµstom quilt· sofa· with separate ,.pillows with heavy k ·trim deoor and atching chair, 3 mat.Ch- k occasional tables, (2) " tan· decorator lamps, laniing chain 1 w a g • I mps in · wrought iron, •• : In 8·piece king size mas. •• ' r bedroom suite in pe. paneled mediter· ing size mattress & bo.x Pi1no1 & Org1ns 8130 -----··--· -. ! Special Sale ! e WE oHer our greatest atock of new & used pianos & organs • at Special ium- mer Sale prices! e WHATEVER you an, look. ing for -we have it &: at a price you will pay. WARD'S BALDWIN snJDIO 1801 Newport·, CM 642-8484 -Decorator'• Delight Stodar1 5' Grftnd $699. We did the inside -you do the outside. Mayer·Baby -we did the in- llidr & outside, ebooy. $849. Many other Grand specials~ W ALLiCl--IS.MANN ING'S MUSIC CITY So. Coast Plaza • 544).2165 NOW HERE -the new Sup<!rsounding T-200 Hammond Spinet orpn -the finest yet' SCHMIDT-PHILLIPS CO. 1907 N. Main 0 20th Santa Ana Misc. Wanted 8610 WA N TE D : O !i v elti Underwood tape calculatDr. 16866 Beach BJ.vd. 847-9100 FREE TO YOU · gJ. -Spanish decor i lining·set, etc., etc. Any OUR Father is Blue Persian our mother is silver tabby & we 5 kittens turned out absolUtely adorable. Tho it breaks their hearts, our yng owners must find good home lor Us, 546·406.5 7/15 KIITENS -Take your pick - Mini, midi and maxi sizes. 7 weeks old, box-trained and weaned. Some with 6 toes. Cu te and pl ayfu l . 642-1695 ~/16 SHJNY Black Go-Together , .£at5. Mom & Daugbtl'r "Kangaroo" & "Blackie" Very amusing t'haracters. Both spllyed. 642-7857 3Jt ~ ... ~ ... ~ ......... .,! 5 6116 Conn deluxe, theater organ, •• . J ece can be purchased ~·s. p .. ,, wh•·,,, 6 .'\2 pedals, full percussion. ""'' ' "", " wks. old To good homes. Used as studio organ. Save : &idividually. Drop ill' Also pure white female cat l $2500. Full new organ war· Id th b yr o wi onr rown l'ye G,..,.tyld. · and one hlue eye. Days ou Music Comp1ny 89'2-5081 £Vcs. 5.1S-4862 7 !Hi 2045 N. Main, S.A .. 547-0681 •• : pid see our selection of : i>P q~ality Spanish and : l'ectiteITan.ean fu mi- £u r e. Fantastically LOVABLE Female r.alico Baldwin walnut spinet piano, 4 Years old. Like tabbq. All Jhots -<>.mer will help pay spaying. Also n{'Yi $545. assortment of k i l le n s Gould Music: Company S42-200'l 7/lf • . d" ce .. 206 N . .Main, S.A., 547-0iSJ , ORGANIC Fertilil'l'r, horsr manurf' & wood shavings. Combined mulch & '. . ; lomplele houseful ·~ •• ; i.. .......... 51528°0 • I • ' .. •• : ~ust sacrifice '• : : . '69800 ; ,,~., ......... . i t ~ -v j a Tirms Avail1ble ,. J llewcomers·to Califor ni1 • • }~ , • CrMlt Approved •• •• j E lmmedi•tely .~ ... ... .. · • We carry our ·" ·~ ' .. / : oWn account• Television 8205 TV Console. 21" acrn. Good Condition. S26. 673--4!M Hi-Fi & Ster90 8210 MULTIPLEX .Stereo with Ampex l"e<.'Order. L 11 t' g <' walnut cagi1K'I v"ith 2 m11tchinR: &peakl'l'S. Like n<'w. 28:!1 Pebble D r .. Corona de! Mar. See hefort- ,Ju ly 20. PhonP 644-2576 brforr 8 pn1 STEREO 196S .'JOlid state, (!{)f)SO!r mOdel. Like nf'W, Balance $79.11 or smftll JlftYmenls. CN>dit Dept. 535-7289 Sporting Goods 8500 SUR F'BOARD 9'8" .I Arob~. J mahoi: strillgt"l's. mahol!: 111]1 block, simf·~Pf'ed Skag. Xlnt mnd. 113()..1954 SUR F"BOARD Vt>lzy9·g·;-:- 2oocl for beginners. Good rond. $45. 962-11741 Miscellaneous 1600 } : . ~ ! ,_. •7.,~ .... ,., .. ]. FOAM RUBBER. CU1 10 size, ;l• .• :.. •·. .f Uph "'Pl>li". I ' b, I < " . naugahyde. F11ct. ootlet, Low pre. A·l F'oam Fabric • & Upholstery Supply Co., 311 :F•rniture e. ~h s1 .. s .•. "'""81 :; •. i,.. HI f1: Beautiful Walnut • • Slerf'O c11binet with mooo .. :. ,' ti\Mi 'v AT AM-f'M l>hono c:ompmenta. :"'lP.• r s100. 646-10'17 or 4!»-L70l • ,,. ., ~~·· • PROV. OliM r.abine1 $150: 2 :., " pc. $('ci., lot'I 10', $1~ ' .:!'.~-~.""' Blvd.1 '"~='0-';=~~=·2-234=cha=·\'.-l50~·~Trum~- ,.,.,.. UPHOLSTERING -S79.50, 2 ! '1 .~• .Mesi pc. <European crafumen) • ...,_,. Free est, del, pickup, ns • Main, HB "Remy" 536-6405 ;_·t·t ••,1 ; Made to mler -l1lY color, : ~· 'tU f oeccrawr ~·.candles a: :/ .' I I . ~ acCfAClr1~1. 3!0-3438 W06., ht., Juil, 'Ill 6 TRER,MOFA X Copy •. ' macbrrlt. tc!'Cttl..A.r)I model 6AG$125- fertilizer. 546--4931 a f t 5:'.IO 8/15 BLACK. Ma.Ir Labrador pup-- PY 3 mos. F'rtt to good home wllg yd. UwPS chldrn. 64'.l-941.1 7118 MA.LE Purebred m i n . Poodle, 1 ~ yr old blk. all shots. Likt.'S cats. \('"frific watch dog. 67:\--0::167 7/18 1'VO CUtr and playful male tiger killf'ns. 2031 2 So. We6t Cypress, Santa Ana Heig hts 546-9963 1ns BLACK Cocker Malr. Wini. good adult home. This happy clown unhappily dis!lkes kids. IH2-1598 7/16 l''R.EE ki1tens havr Mo!& 5 months old. Adorablf'. 3 malf'S, I IC'male. Healthy. livel,y. 644-0167. 7117 2 ADORABLE Male kittens, motht>r WR.'\ SiamooP 6 wks . old. 201 30th Sl. Newport Bf'R<".h 7/16 MALE, Parl DAthahund Good wa1c ti d og , ~~1942 7/18 BEAUTIFUL YC1t.mg frma!r Seaipolnt, p u r ' bred ~2-2002 7116 FREE Beautiful yng <"OCker- spaniel to good h o m e W/fcnC'fld yrd, 537-0ll(l 7/16 2 FEMALE Kit1('1'111 7 wks old . One ar~Y. one Tabby . 54~ 7/16 KfTI'ENS 2 ,ltley IAbbitll 10 wks . old ftmales hou8ebroken. 839-0722 7/16 ·f1t.EE Broken canc:rt'le '*""" 7116 4 MO, old ~ nWe kitten Ml llhot11. Vtry alfecikJna.te 6t&-51Cll T/18 ~ -CUet lovt1ble fcmaJe. Netdl &ood home. g'13-3!196. 7/18 FREE To yau Black Bunny. 54M'l"Z6 7116 PENNY .. , PINCHER CLASSIFIED ADS WITH A NEW-LOW-RATE 3 LINES l TIMES IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! Furniture Office Furniture Office Equipment Store Equipment Cafe, Restaurant Bir Equipment Household Goods Appli1nc;e1 Antiques Sewing M•chines Musical Instruments • t!lcH ITEM 8000 8010 8011 1012 8014 1015 8020 1100 8110 8120 1125 Pianos & Or91ns Radio Television Hi.Fi & Stereo T•pe Recorders C•mer11 &. Equipment Hobby Supplies Sporting Goods 'Binocul1r1, Scopt"S Miscellaneous MUST BE PRICED e No Item Over $50 e No Commercl1I Firm• • • No Copy Changes e No Abbre¥i1tion1 • 1130 8200 1205 1210 1220 8300 8400 8500 1550 8600 ' • START MAKING MONEY N_OW! CALL ' ' -.. 642-5678 ASK FOR YOUR DAILY PILOT AD-VISOR AND YOU MAY CHA~GE IT! SACRIFICE 22' c a b i n cruiser; twin 3.5 H P Evinrudes: ive bait tank, covers .. & extras. Xlnt CClld. SI ,375 534--4252 25' OWENS Cab. cruiser; xlnt cond., loaded: sac! 547-7103: 675--5088 evt'f>. Speed-Ski Bo•ll 9030 17'10" SANGER SK·427 Oiev. Inside adj. cavatation plate. Usrd 1 yr, $4300 542-5184 eves. LEAVING State must sell. 15' Fibergla£s 'aki boat 40 hp outboard •. tr'lliler, cover & skis. $675 or o#-er. 646-7616 OVER 50 MPH, 21' CAntu:ry Coronado; urgent. ntUJt ~ti, make otler,646-lOO:t Bo1t Maintenance 9033 custom rear pad: Immac. 15300 B ch Blvd. W~~ $2100 673-9060. 67a-2526 ea · · 1952 WILLYS JE"e,> 4 wheel drive, Olev 327 eng. Extras 100 numerous to mention. 548-0072 '68 TOYOTA : GET OUR LEADERSHIP, SAVINGS BEFORE ;· YOU BUY!!! •: • c::·:~. ~CF BRl:~20 ejfGll ~ Convert('(! Continental Trail-IMPORTS .~ way bus. All new power ~ train, engine, trans, etc. · Fully self contained. many 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-!:l3(13 C'\JStom ff'a!ur!'s, including TOYOTA · C"Cramic tile _in bflths & ki:ch. ·• : en. fully carpeted through· out. ete .. S9500. will consider trafics. Prefer :IO lo 40 ft boat. Bus. phonr 892.fi655. HEADQUARTERS El-MORE ·-i Home phone 530-0896 Al Long 15300 Brach Blvd., Wstirmsir ELEC'l'RlC Autoette and bat-Phone 894-3322 tery ctiarger, good cond. $275 64&-5393 VOLKSWAGEN ; S KIPPER & Bo at Dune Buggies 9525 '66 VW DELUXE ~ maintenance work wanted - power only. Part • time 548-..\561 -~ LOADED! 26,000 miles mt BAJ A BUGGY _BUILDERS speedometer. Belonged. tb Completed Buggies & Acces-little 'ole school te.ic~ :itt sorics. Used VW Parts San Clemente. Take 11'15 9035 20706 Laguna Canyon Road cash dels dlr-O!' tta<te M1rine Eq~i.P_·____ Laguna Beach 494-3100 Pymt.s S36'.86. Call a fter 11: ~5 WATI heath radio $100. Healh RDF $35 . • eves. 545-8776 * tel. 9600 494.9773 or 639-3617. Imported Autos ,66 VW 1300 SEDAN. Radio ~ CHRYS. V~ Marine engs. w/trans. Xlnt con d . 673-9620 Tues-Sat 8 to 6 Boat Sl ip Mooring 9036 WASTED: Slip mooring for 22' Saiiboa1. From July 30-Sept 5. Call coU. (Zl31 791·1611 I ~~f:r ~· :'Jti!jl~ r:a.2~~ ext 341 1s.51 or 541.5153 aJ ter 5:30. e DOCK SPACE $1.50 h . % Pwr hoat up lo '!1' e 6Ta-4747 e Boat· Yacht Ch1rter1 9039 WE BUY w/s/w very dean. Must sell immed, n275 675-3072 ANY CLEAN LATE MODEL SPORTS CARS. eves. '67 VOLKSWAGEN F•s·l back with very low mileage. Dir. 548-7751 Top Dollar To You '67 VW Squareback. Sunroof. Golden West Radio Xlnt cond. $2200. Call AUTO CENTER Inc art s 673-4228 1-~=o-'c=~--1 191!4 Newport Blvd. '67 VW, 15.IXXJ mi., Costa l\.1esa 642-8460 radio, xlnt cond. $1QJO e Spot Cash Ior Imports • 54&-2774 • We pay more ror any import '65 VW. Clean. Sharp. Near regardless of year, make new tond. Sl095 Pri prty~ Qr condition. Try us before 847-5955 eves . you sell. E L M 0 RE --,.68=vw=-.-.. ~,-,..,,-,..-<tio"·- MOTORS. 15.100 Beach Blvd. PERFECT CONDITION! ; \Veslminster. 894-3322. e 673-466l e AUSTIN HEALEY '6' KARMAN Gh;,. N" .... ( new tires. Good cond. , e CHARTER THE FINEST ---------$995 * 842-4988 / New 40' Ketch 19.\7 AUSTIN H EALEY, , 673-2517 e 675-2400 needs '67 VW Bug, 12,0CXl milesZ 11 little work, $350. Xlnt conditim . $1675.~' ; Sailing lessons, 40' sloop 968-a679 can Oiuck S45-S413 Dayti : Reasonable rates; avail for charter 64C-OC>SO 518-2592 BUJEWA1'ER CHARTERS 27'-40' U-Drive Skip, Avail Day/wk. 646-9000 24 hrs, ·~ SUztOO: 120 Stn!et.. 3,IXX> mi. Xlnt cond. GLAS British VOLVO . ... • '68 VOLVO._.: • • • ""' * ..-..7610 ========I "' BSA 350 oe. """'cooditico MG ~A~u=To~s WANTED $400. 675--1746 -WUI ~ ciish for 1mpon.41 Allata1e M~t:r '64 MCB -'Orit Cond. auto., Uf'I to $500. Tl) .,. • ·~" Almost -wi.. WI><•" · 11650. ELMORE ; Sllcrtftcie 4214. ~ 642-2398 llttt 5 PM, CM 9Slt Gktden CJ"OYe 1 lO - :· :. ~ • ~ •• • •• • " .. '· ' ' * -•• .;: 1 ~ .. .. " •• ~ • . • • . "" • • • • -.. lb ~ l1S ""· 11, "" "' m :e. of. all .. . • --'-,, . • • . "' . . - l\ r • ~ f. ~. ~ ; ; '· ~: • • I \ t: ~ • • • • • • • ~ • J "' l • • -i . 1 i .. .< . •••• - ·l'•-re1- tno1 •1 eer at "Al Roberts Chrv•ler• Pl.-.at• ''2 DODGE WAGON $399 ''2· CHEV • WAGON $499 '64 FORD HARDTOP .s9900 DEUYERS '"' $99 R•miiler W•1•11 , , i';':.,th HT .. $149 ~~~ll•c , , , , , .. $399 ...... $399 ...... $599 ' ::::. •........ $799 196J $899 Cliry1l1r , • , • , , • ,,,, Ce11ti11111tal lfll For4 W•t· .... $899 . ... $899 ,,,, $899 l1"11p1l1 •••••••• "" $999 TA C1111•1.+ •,,, ltll $899 1?odg1 W11. , ••• ~!!: HT , , , , , •• $999 ~~~''" ..... $1099 ~~~~rolet , ... $1199 g,~. SS ..... $1199 ~·.~: ... , ..... s 1299 ~!t~ ... w., ... $1499 !'~ ......... $1499 ~::~ ........ $1599 :;,:~ ........ $1699 ~~ ....... $1799 ~~'.! ... .., .... $1899 1!~r!cw41 , , , , $1999 :!~1, HT .... $2199 .... s~­Wil4c·• Kr • , ~77 ' ~~~''" ...... $2399 r;;, $2899 .__.. ...... 111 ••••• ,;.. $2999 lr11p1rl1I •••••• .~~ ........ $2999 AL ·ROBERTS ,,_. __ a . .......... y, ••• "' .. 8' • .. JE 7-7800 .. e PLYMount e -e CHITSUI e ···~· e MIC TIUCIS e TRANSPORTATION TllANSPOllTATION TRANSPORTATION TllANSPOllTATION .tlutoo Wan!M •700 U-Caro 9900 UIOd Cars t900 Uood Con WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOi USED CARS COMBJ. OIYROUT CHMOL!T FORD PON11AC TOOAY'S SHCIAL '67 fAIRLANE 500 4 SPEED W a...1'lilt -Hri Fm! VI with pow«-· SPIC' AL15TS tap. a... ma..eeoew owner, uato lhtft. Ndio, bfttw, •kl. "" · Locol eor. Hu--uau -· .,._...,.. HIGH P.IRfOltMANCI 1nC. ..,., mtfl. -lln> ....... Cu oameo......,.. CUSTOM CARS ... tinted ... Bnnd MW d lactoty MW' cu .,.,.. LUlGDT SD..l'.CTION IN UNI. l°"" Part. • 1Abor tee to 50,CDJ mUa. Cl\ANCE COUN1'Y euarantw, sm>. A S'tandout at $23'l'O 5e1tctec1 A11to HOLIDAY llAMILIR HOLIDAY RAll\ILIR -H.-8l ... Coot& M-l90I H.-Bhd, 0>ota M-Center a 11ct1cr Jll>d, W CHEVY -lwd .... 'I! CALAXIE 500 VI. a dr llllSI llorbor 811d. m.- Coota ..... '*UIS _.. ...,.., I°'· _,. -,._. "-· ROY C .. RYU ...... block pllioh Int........ ..... -lint.-. New " WE IUY V-1. • .-.11c, ..... -... bad< ...... -"' PONTIAC ANY CLEAN -·· low mllet. WW ......... A-1 lh .... """".. --Ill., ..... - I .. TE MODEL lob ..i.. .... l'ymntl .... ~ """ $ .. .. Kl' 4444 ~ ... ! .....-m .. 63941lf Sa~: Sl"ORTS CARS. ... OIEVELLE .._ -"' Fwd, FORD, Stadlller : ,.r:..:t-· -·-~ Top Dolltl' To Yoa RAH. p1, budreta, !l,000 ml. brand new red paint, v-1. • - Goldon Waot --·ll""lllM30I ot1ck obilt, ...., chrome --~""'""'u.-=::-=-=· AUTO CENTER lncl ;=='==='==I-. -"""' 1"'5. u C::"!:, :!.'':t..!, ~ U8I Niwpart RMI. COMET W086 $1500 cuh, bal 11>11, $1U1 Ollta MeA ~ Good, cleln '59 Ford mo &t&-9191 '11 f Dr. Com1t Station v~ $225. St&-4538 =--===~----o<»r:?Tndt ,,,,.,clclcv k. Wqm Automatic. Cal l COsle,o.ta.Mn& 'ID PON'IUC Veatura •• it to Jlm. ~ Ext ITJ.-1112 aft 5 brdtop, xlnt mech cond,. MERCURY -......... pb, Mil, ... """""' ... .._ "" 6"-1431 power •teerilW. air CCID-,. <X>LONY Parle .t&tlioa I ·.~ .. ~BO=NNEV==n-1x~-,~--------·-"°°--• di-. -oa.mo -bnnd new. $31111). lwd top. hlly oqu!Pl>ed CONTINENTAL ~~"r'i= ;:!n-;:lh ,.., llllOO. D~. SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS , ~ -Hoist -Cawl - Hopper -GO to SLEEP Cocktail cN.ltft: "What • guy he ii! He wuhe9 bb feet in black coft'et IO they won't GO to SLEEP on him." NEED .ti CAR? CAN'T BE FINANCEDT •Bumupt? •Repo11:--.t eBM. Cndlt! e Dmrced:T 8 Mllitary e Nn tn .V..1' Makr Payday.Payment. McCARTHY MOTORS 1420 So. MaJn I: F.dingtt (2 ~ N. cl. Sean) Santa Ana Ph 5C2-350"l '64 Continental ~':':' •• ~~'"": / AIR cnm ··~ "°" ·~ BomeYme. Xlnt c(qf .• Grfft 'If. Llncol:ll Cbltinmtlll 4 0r1 ,-:.;;..::;:;.,.,=~~----I touring car. Under Blue Town Sedui. Has full pow. 1.-r llE!\CURY Four door Boqk. 4!K-Ml2 er with factor)' air. Imm~ ~· , power 1teekc and •g 4 BONNEVILLE ulate thru out wUh .Uver ·• Individual appoint· Coovertible At r c 0 n d . ?Mtallc finish. Now thlf , Dir. 518-Tr.D. LOADED- $100).QJ car new can be $1295 * 6#-0el bought for $1895.00. ht ear lot on Harbor Blvd. 'fll LE MANS Hardtop. 4 mOI JOHNSON & SON ... MUSTANG, ... ~ low old, ' dr, 3 opd, """' "'"'· v .... n.t otlet. 142-m Lincokt-Mem117 mil~. radio I: beat!!'. C.M. ea.ta MHI. Brux:h $Z50. cub A: take over 1,,,c68"=VENWRA==~=coo-v-. =Blk~l' I l94l Harbor Blvd. 642-7050 paymenJa; ol $52. per mo. 50-5247 wht, kmed, xlnt cond, PX10 LEASE From. Orange Coun. p"ft pt;y 529-ZS'l FUUrtn ty'1 oldest Lincoln MttCUrf '65 MUSTANG 6; auto., ·a GRAND Prix, full pwr, Chtipr deaJenblp. Johni«l radio, MW tires A thoekl: a: Son. Newport. Colla MeH xlnt cond. $1500 or offer air, ldnt cond, 1ood Utt•. 60-ailBl 67>3717 $125G 173--3247' S73-67l1 I======== --°"" ""'"'" Good '65 LINCOLN. Power, air OLDSMOBILE CIDl. Mund 5tM!3'l «>nd, ).,the,. 32,600 ml. u- cd cond. $2600. 833-1530 AIR CONDITIONED '59 OlJ)6 Sedan. Power steer- ing i-brakel. Automatic, SAFE SECOND CAR ndlo, beat«, omooth quiet. '6' ~RVAJR d b Good tires. Big buy at $2$. 'v u coupe. HOLIDAY RAMBLER CORYAIR ,RAMBLER Stidt, radki, ht:t.ter. A KtJOd --~A7U'CTION ane, ISAO 1900 Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa 'ft; Fon:l 6 Muatang. ID num-HOLIDAY RAMBLER 1963 OLDS Convertible. P/•, tier 5R07TI77333, Uc number JM Hlll'bor Blvd, Costa Mesa ~lb white w/blue int. Nu mu 806 bOdy type ae11 en. '62 O:::nair M 4 Dr ti~. xtnt cond. $995. Will Tab nur:iber 51H68!11i. Sale 4 9P(I., 1v'I'!' :.. RJH, take trade <n4) 897-7970 Mmday, Jutv 29, I P .M. at $325. m-29112 'II ~ Delta 4 door wHh liBll Beadl Bhd,. ~-'t5CORVAIRO:na· tSOHP air ccmdltionln&. Dlr. AIR CONDITIONED "tfi Ramhler CJ.auk: VI Sta- tion Wagon. Auto. s II t ft. t"fld~. beater, rack. Extra l'QOd. Near JWW dre-9. ~ $1575. HOLIDAY RAMBLER 1900 Hamor Blvd, Costa Mna ton BMdl... turbocharred. $900 ca • h 1.~"->-=m~'=~~-~~ . (Cherry), 575-f099 Aft! PM '67 OLDS CUtlau Convrt. '63 -• Dr., o.&ttom 7'10 Rmnbler. Mmt .ellt '550, er bl!lt oner. --·-BUICK l-==:~~~::'==1 v.,., """'' n,1m ""· m1. T·llRD I CORY """ •till utwmty. m.<m1 ----""·--TEACHER's great looldna: ,Cl II: '65 JET' Star a 2 dr bdtop, '15 LANDAU -by owner, '62 Skylark. R&H, P.S., air, '6.1 roRvt"rff 2' TOPS. '66 Yf!r'/ dn, see to~. q *· dt.rk blue, nu tlru WSW' IH.ther int. 43,00) ac-q ... ~. Many Xtru? ~ 586--0731. g to 5 Exceptional. $18i. ec:z...a4 tual miles. Best oiler ~.RJt~ Best offer .I========= 67J.mS · 7TW1lt '"' ""-1307 uk 1" PLYMOUTH VALIANT DON'T need 3 can. '66 Buick ".!o.et, Le Sabre, air, ps, pb,_23,0lll 196J.=~w~HI=t=,;~Q>a~vt-.~Hn!~tp-.1 19a> PLYMOUTH Station '67 SIGNET 1;1 dt. P"'. air, mi, $2695. ~3471 ' Auto • ....-. Xlat __ .. Wagm Good condition. $225. FM:. Very Oeu! 1'IDandllc ·-,·-~.,·pm ~vuu.. * 673-8563 * 5Cl--29TD 1959 BUIClC pwr. •tr 1r; brka. ..,... ....., ~ -=-~=-=-=-=-=-=-~I ll92~0...,_.,.~i:~31J '9 CORVETrE. Cloan •••••••••••••••••• ., CADILLAC ''1 CADJLl.A.C ~ Dorado, &it cood. Loaded with xtru $UJO. Call OR 3-7692, 6 to 9 Eves. 1939 CADil.LAC 4 dr. Sedu w/trunk. Suitable to restore 6G-F. Mctlw eood shape. 842-""'1 CA MARO :=.:.~~,;-;.s.e .. ..,: CLE AN· UP• COUGAR_ e '68. . : II lCR.-7 '°""""' I ""'" Mil • • my demonatr1tor Im-. • =· caJI And 1 • 200 NEW '61 POllDS NOW ~--~~-':.'-' • .,.!, ~ • •• ~·-•• -·~ ~ ~· AVAILABLE AT DISCOUNTS coin ,.......,. C • u I., • LOWER THAN EVEll llEFOREI deal<nhlp. N ....... °"'• • • M ... ...._ • '68 COUGAR Bnnd ...... • '61 MUSTAllG (llllVERTJIU $7740. VI and bulc Riot)' • Vil I • BY OWNER 1961 Camaro 321 VI, ,, ... +.p. •lffo., llH., ..... 1,, WSW, PS.. • Auto. Nw l-._ Iii rub-e-quipment. No biib emf. ac-• P-Ghc. br1h1, wh eel c.e••rt, .,ocl1I pelllf. IWll· --eeatries; Orange Q:Qlty'a J971 . SeW •-f., t••••· Z0 '4 tlew• ,, wiMo ber. P /S. RH. VERY d • L~ • • deul.. Son in • e r v i c e. 0 1 e • t ................ -Mercury '7' ,... .... JI ...._ !;;·~T.O~:':; ·~=::: s2795 ! CA.MARO 'fi7 a 350 4 spd., and •teerizlc P650 Dlr. • ..., -low ml. .... new! 513-&ta.. .... POU CUITOM s595 =-==·=-==· ~==""=·== 1167 ditlon ~ O~i glr:'o:tl . VI, 11to111otlc. 20 % ••w11 or tr14o 121 • ~. ~I! 541-Tislme · • ,., 1110. 24 Mo. HOT704 • CHEYR.01.!T '11 PA.RKWOOD C 11 •" Station Waaon. allto lranl, pwr stt, ndlo. XI at medwikaI cand. Must •ell imml!d. ~ 7758 d a y 1 , 494-632'1 l!Vl!I 'i4 CHEV Impala, White, air, ps, bl!W tir._ n,000 mi, .tereo il bpi!, Jllnt concl, enc owner Jn.,q fir Earope, $15«1c•5tl).GD '17 COUGAR XR 7. • I ·. ''1 -· C111TOMI • I 11495 • l8 1DOI ftf!ff Loaded fl990 I J .. ch•-freM. 4 Or. VI, o.t.., llH. 20f. I tsi.«;19 · •-"., "•'• $41 C ,. •. b1tt1r!• Ho. P7717 TUNSPOll"ATION IPICIAU DODGE • New 1v1r19l11t JI c1r1 por w11k tfi1t SA YE • --------• c111 M roiall..i 1t whol1ul111 "" • NEW 1961 Dodp Olarger. . ,.~nc. loot tfri1 •••l•rt "h11 '"'' c1r1. • !Mc en1ln• • to.ded!. •"~LTD $1995 includlnc air cmdl.danln& .• H.T. Mt1., l I H, f.11 ,_.,,, H•. 71JllA. • 40.,0XI mi left oa warnnty .•. 20% tl1w11 ct n14• ti•,., ... J6 -· • Take over payments cl • !90.lll p<>0 mo. W Inn . 1 • ''1 MUITAftl ' '2195 Aviation. 540-9690 2 t• ch•-f,..., F•ctoty "'"'..,.·'fl , • -=~=-="..-''--,~--1 • ....... with If wlth•11t rs, llH. TETt24 - NEW t• Dod.-a.rrl!I', • UJDllJ. 11i 4e'wti et"''-t••"' 111•· JI'"· • ... ..... -""' ... cond, ... "" "" lei• ""e is 'WAGOllS "~Alf" is e :'!'!"",..· ~."':,__ -r..~ti~. •• '11 OIEVY lmp9pl. btautlful ........, "... ,..,,. .. "'' 11 ,. ..._ ,,_ -'M ""' "IJ ,._ ......._ ~ • ---. v. Ml)..9690 • ' .. 11 , ••••• , --............. ~ .. •--~ '61 DODGE Oarree RT, • Pt.TM<>lllM -'" MRC COllllomt -• PIS, autc. Good cood, BJ OOG ti trans! 1COHO IUl'I -fOlll -PALCOMI -vwner. '650 &G-6101 2• m 9 ' OM>tr "" • PAllUMD -COUNTIT MIAMI -CHln • .t. Mb o'nnmai. lfT-&m II WAHN -COVNTIT 19u1m • 1112 CHEVY --· ===="====I• """"'' -.. atue Book; ... at m FORD • '65 COUNTRY SIDAN WAGON • KaJn 8t. Hunt 8"dl or ciaD ---------1 A.t.111otl•, RIH, hff ,.._,,,HY. •••~., M tla • ' 11 -;,56:;.7-41.;:o;<JC..,.,,-,;=::-:=:::-·1 '83 r0JtD LTD, .All I FM . 141 per MO. Jt ••· fPCC.llJ 'fl Bel-Ali' ••tlclt ..... , Jib', .... -.... -xlnt • $1095 ,. R/H, pwr ....... ; $llllJ. cond, low mlleo, $111ltl • • =-=·;,•::,._ao.=1U7!=o:=·==-I m-1m oft 5,30 l -. • z~a:-~ S'b~: THEODORE .: ":n.. "."1,f" :::: : .. FOllll Golall ' ... =~~:....~ _.... ........ -.. ROBINS • ~,.,_., __ :-~:.::,· i ~!~§~~··FORD ~~fEN6 ! :=8 rm."':f100~.,,., ~ e 2060 HARBoR, COSTA MESA.· ,_. OIEVllOU:r ltajlmt ·u ,,_ ....... 'jf, , 64 2.00 I 0 ;;:"' ... ~ wu11•--:;:-.• •••••••••••••••• .. I • - Tlit!Uf. Jlly 16, 1968 DAILY "LOT JI Brond New 1968 VALIANT 2 door Stock Ne. 1022 ' A truly fine luxury ci1r - lri1ncl New 1968 Imp erial Crown 4 cir, •• ' • hard top. Complataly lo•d•d with •'f'ery con- caivi1ble axfT&. Save 13'47 on this beaut. Sta.cir: No. 922 Ch .... fNm • 11111 Mlectt.n .t lrn,...lilll all •t cl...-.ut prke&. l ... ----------------------..... ~ '64 IUICK '64 PLYMOUTH '66 CORY!Tl'E ll«trl. \'t, ......_tic., radlo. llllflr, ,,,..,,. t Door!' ...,.,,..., v• ...,91,.., $t1Mr11. VI. • ...-ct, IWi-'M radio,. ,,,,._. .ioor1,. • br•kn, l111111ry ur. ""°"""k trantm1ulon, r9dlo. tllJC .,.. .... ,,, ('.Olllllllon!M. ,.... ....., llflllf', -r llNl'lM . #CJ4 $3295 $1388 $1399 '66 CHRYSLER '68 PLYMOUTH '68 CHEVROLET ,..., •.• o..:. cYflMW, .....,..... """"°"1 I Door H.T. ve, """"tic. '"'1 l'lll"J I Dr. H.T. -'"'°""lie, rldloOM~Ltwllll ..... ....,.., ........ JIOlll'ff' ....,1,... .... """"'· .,._. .......... ----. WSW, ,ACTOflY Allll ....... llkltl.,.. COf+Ol:flONli.o. Ml. l'Kt. $2295 $1895 ..,,....,, 1141 $3325 '6B CHRYSUR '64 CHRYSLER '63 VOLVO .......,. _.,..,.., .... -...ftt,. M-1. YI -IM. •IClfftltlc rllllo. ,_..,, '°""" 1'"'1nl. ..-" ......,... ...... ,... ""' ...,...., t Door. • __., ""11te well ",..· br•ktt. '"' Clllldltklll ................ ~ 1i.1M, lf4/ll, -..... ~ ~ ...,., """· $1333 $999 $3495 All .:ivortised cars are plus tu lllCI 5...,.. Pricn good 'til 10 PM, 5-Ny, 'Jt.tly 21 • ' Dr. Spock and the Law It -·t '""' too unUJual these daya lo !Ind that the people wbo Ht themselvea up u iraot lnterpr•ters and 1poeters for their own Interpretation of Amtrlca's cause can't live within the framewor-t that cave them the right lo speak out Take Ule case of Dr. Benjamlo Spock. Found llJJlty of CO<Uplracy for leading young men to evade U. S. draft laws, the baby doctor seems unable to 1raap the fact thet he -like all Americans -ls bound lo llvo within the law of the land. No sooner had sentence been pronounce'.d than Dr. Spock joined a demonstration nearby in Boston and loudly denounced the judge and bis.OQ.Ul"t -and, bas- ically, the American system of jurispntclence. Judge FranciJ J . W. Ford bad pointed out that young men are receiving three years in prison for evact.. Ing the draft and It would be preposterous lo permit those who counsel and lead the draft evaders to go free. While their appeals are being formalized -and that may teke up to two years -Dr. Spock has indicated ht will continue to "go on working against the wa.r." So long as be does th.at, no one really should ob- ject. It is well within the right!: of every American to question the war in Vietnam and to speak out against It If that is bis belief. This does not mean continued abuse, evasion or flouting of the law. Dr. Spock has no more rights in that direction than any other American. It's Shrunk Again Unless you got a raise from th e boss yesterday, you'll have less take-home pay from this week'1 pay .. check. All of those headlines and all that talk about Mr. Johnson's surcharge reached your Jevel Monday. On that day, a bigger bite started to come out of your check for income tax purposes. And chances are pretty gOod that, despite the in- creased withholding, it may not · be quite large ~u&h lo pay your total Income .tax bW at the end ot the year. The withholding lhi• year wW be Increased by 10 pen:enl U you have been paying f30 a week, you WU! now be paying '33. u you have been paying $40, your weekly withholding Is now '4f. The 10 percent llgure makes It easy to calcu!ate, but the situation is realJy more complex. The Lrue rate of the surcharge is 7~ percent, but since it is being charged only for the last 5\-2 months of the year, it figures out pretty close to 10 percent if you are ta make up for the months you didn't pay the surcharie be- tween January and mid-July. 1 If you compute that to its inevitable conclusion, our accountant friends say, you'll unfortunately still be in the hole a litUe at the end of the year. For practicaJ purposes what you'll owe is 2'h percent of the 10 percent surcharge. Jn round figures, if you are a married man with four dependenta and an income of '10,000, you will owe about $30 more than was withheld from yoW' salary at the end of 1968. Jn short, you'd better be squirreling a few dollars away -even whUe you're shaking your head sadly at the shrinking paycheck. 10. Days of Hope Seventy Orange County youngsters will have an opportunity to trade 10 days of a distressing poverty en· vironment for 10 days of fresh mountain air, outdoor activity and campfire fellowship. They will be guests of UC Irvine's UNICAMP org· anization -a student-financed and student-operated camping program that fills a serious need for Orange County's underpriviledged youngsters. But there is one problem -the program needs money. UCI students already have raised $2,000, but they need $2,000 more. If you would like to help, the address is UNICAMP, Inter-Faith Center, '201 Campus Drive, Irvine, California. • ~ l.Wt', f 111.\T 6l.fJ >JN ~6..s1E.ijP, 'fal1t 14 RE.11Alti mtJt l AA.··; l'aledictory Address Praised Why the Negro Hates His Joh Voice for His Generation? , the Editor: Shortly after the d a y Of •:ommencement e x e r c i 1 e 1 at Westminster High School, letters from , concerned parents .appeared in this • colwnn. '11hese parents w e r e concerned because they said that the valedictorian, Calvin Hoff, had in hls 'address encouraged draft-dodging, pot, premarital se:s:, civil disobedience, am other equally cmtroversial issues. Tbis valedictory address appeared on the Comment Page of July 13. First o( iaD, l 'd like to say that I wish I were half as brave as CaJvin Hoff ; he probably knew that tome people would try to twilt hi1 worda: around -or perhaps mt uoderltllnd them at all. But l'm }X'OUd to know that one ot my eeneration bad the tutl to p\it bis feeliql !do words! PERHAPS the thing for those concerned parents to do would be to read tb.1.11 address for themselves, and decide on the tone of it. They might react differently this Ume. It is &tressed over and over again that his words are merely que«t.ions in ·his mlnd, as indeed they must be in everyone's mind, even if some can't or. won 't admit Jt. And perhaps these parenU missed something else in Mr. Hoffa's speech: " ... ultimMlely each indJvidual must find his own answers." Was that the trouble with his apeedl? Are these questlons which should remain buried and not deaJt with_. according to these parents? GRANTED, !iO!ne ol. the que&tioos don't bother some ol our ,Parents - how many middk--aged fatben WOITY about being drafted? But what abut tileir sons? If you're •gainst wv in any form, what is it like to decide whether to be a draft-dodger ..t be scorned or to fight and kill am!' have to live with your cm"Science? I thank God I don't have that decision. But what •bout my brattier? And how m1n1 ef ... J'll"t!9 are ~eMln from ""4lenl .,.. wti-. No"""lll' wrlt•D •.toould _.,. their IMIH,. In M words tw Ilsa fh• rl1ht 1'o ~ l•tttrt tll flt l~U' tw •llmlntlr •fkl 11 r .. ,...td. AU '"'9ra muil lncl!Jdl 11,,..tu,. ~nd lfltllt"' ~ but n.m. Wiii be wllhheld ,,. '"""'· there when we say the Pledge or Allegiance every morning at nine o'clock? Have they seen the kida bend over their desks wiping the 1leep oot or their eyes and making fun of the voice saying the meanJngle1 s syllables? Parents, please don't jump in anguish ; in school the PledJe is on the same level as "Thirty days hath Se!>l<mber." Th< lint tim• I thought about the meaning was my sophomore yell' in high school: no, I'm not proud tI. t.hat -but I wonder how many adults there are who still hlv.n't thought lbout it? AS FOR US IN G Dylan's "Bloftl' in the Wind,'' perhaps that was the best part. So please, parents. don't condemn Calvin Hoff for doing what every young person •hoold do ; ask questions. And don't say that I'm against the draft ot the Pledge -J didn't give any answers either. No one can tell anyone the answers -they must come from each individual Perhaps, if we wUl liaten to them, with more men · like Calvin Hoff we can find• little peace in the world and once more be proud to be Americans. DODI LAMPL Hi111 Sdioot Junior 'T•e Real D•ntrer' To the Editor: . Mr. Fred W. · Vots (letter July 9) seems concerned that the John Birch Society paid tribute to California's fallen war dead, on the 192nd anniversary of tb1 P'reedom of ow Lauuna Author Scores An Orange Coast author, acclaimed for his novel 4 'Cemmand Deciston"'and for :ftw other books and numerous mq:azine articles and movie scripts', has his name on a new piece of Americana worth -more than worth -the time it takes to read its 252 pages. The author is William Wister Haines or South Laguna and his new novel is "Tbe Jmage,'' a first rate revelation ol, a1 the dust jacket puts it, "tht ccnruct in a great corporation between one man's puslonate integrity and. anothe.r's passion for powe-r." HAINES' Y""~ lb lhil book concerns the ''moven and 1baten" in American Industry, bow they 1ot that way, thelr mixed motiv1tiont, their pel'IOllO! livu. To write mch a boot, Haines couldn~ .dnnr oa Jllll hil lmag!notion. He must have had personal uperie.nce iDjjde tllt "farftllel" which James Mkbeolr tried, not &oo 1ucce11ful1y. to ;!:;•., iD b I 1 DOWl, '1H1wlil." Mlrt r r WM led astray by the blu at por-..Wde the -"forflw" m Hnd, Haiw.~ used hit ...,.,. Into typlcaI Ainerican bt•' 'C smrtbi, ~Jy tn the m-. It spin a 1tln1 and qait. -lie JUL '1'.111 -j8cbl ls .. hon.st .. -al Ille <oa•bl of lllil novel. As 11 oa71, '"nlo lm.,." ls a -.1 of ,.-., -.llfo. It ,,_ the 'lll!lon ~ ~ lad.tty. 1'o..rmnent, and -~ lot l Wll' whlch is t'alled P'oreign Policy. ·~ IMAGE" is the story of the conflicts within the Barkle family -a household name synonymous with American Industrial genius . Peter Barkle began as a farm boy who said hil braJns wue all in his hands. He had ingenious skill with machlnery. 'But bis brother Elgin hid talent of another aort -the drive and guile to bring tAJgether a corporation and rovernment subtldy. All this brought together tn one lam.Uy the conJllcta of the power struales -pm'IOn1t, mechanical and poUUcel 'Ille -..-h•s • blghly absorbing climax which, onJ.1 a few dtcades ago: wnuld h••• been considered out of thl~ world ridiculous. But not In the pruent era of Splt'I Ale wonders. JUST UI! people, the present-day Amtrlcan lnd111trlal operation ts complex and f\111 or c:ontndJctions. South Llp:na's William Wisttt Haines bu broupt off more than Just an absorbin' novel in "Tbt lmqe" (Simon and Sc:hut1et, New York, •u11 J : tllroUlh lllll boot 11e llves '" inltgbt Into the human upect of prtsent-d1y Americu industry lt'hlch Jsn't re1idJly av1Uable otherwt11 1hort 11 .. periencln1 it In per-. -A.W.B, • . . great nation. (The Voss Jetter expressed distress regarding the Birch Society entry in the Huntington Beach Fourth of July Parade.-Ed.) Common sense must ask if Mr. Voss knows where the real internal danger to this Republic lies. He iask1 cttlz.ens to protest. I am not 1 member of the John Birch Society, but I dare to protest his insulting diatribe containing vehement invective and dialectics against tht: Society, whose participation in t.'ie parade 1parked the conscience of every peraoa who loves this great America. Mr. Voss's parroted. fa mil i a r harangues of the libblabs and left wing extremists. Therefore I "take heed" and know that the B i r c h Society is actively dedicated to the preservation of our great nation under God and the Constitution. MRS. LORRAINE E. WILLIAMS. Vo••' Reapoaae To the Editor ' In responst: to Miss Jensen's letter defending tbe John Birch Society Fourth ol. July p1rade entry, I would only make two brief comments. First, I would like to thank her for correcting my error in counting only 800 marchers, when, in fact, t:M" were 1200. SECOND, I fully acknowledge my debt to the men who died In Viet Nam in. deferise of my right to openly eJ.· press my opinions. However, it is an ineluctable conclusion that many of these men disapproved of the war in which they wen engaged. It is certainly not my purpo1e here to argue the morality or immcnlity of that war; I would 1ug1est, however, that it does not do tho,se men sreat honor to enlist their mute names in a political cause with which they might haw thoroughly disagreed. If there are any who would not admit slogans such as "Victory Then Peace" represent politicaJ causes, then I must 1ugge1t they are either dishonest or lragically naive. Vktory then peace clearly ad. voe.ates a political objective and im· pUe1 a direct refutation of the ad· ministration polley of peace through neroUa.Uon. Negotiation consists of compromise and mutual concession. Clearly anyone who insists on vie· Wry first can not favor ne1otiation. Plainly it is political, not educa. tional, to circulate petitions criticizing American foreign trade policy and to organize and finance a natiooal cam· paign J.o impeach the Chief Justice of t~ Supreme Court, unless the word educational has assumed s n m e m}'lterious and recondite new mean· ing 11 10 often seems to happen to words that tppear in the vocabulll'y of far rllht dopna. FRED W. VOSS Ne Mlllt•19e11 To tbe F.dltor: I really don't believe Mr. Fred W. Vou gave hi1 article much thoucht when ~ wrole it. First ol all, he mode dlscriminotlng remarb about people who like to show their patriotbrn. Al for ttie:lr coetumes, don 'l moat parldea have eottumes? Why didn 't ht plct '"' the mllltary Ind N•vy bands! t have searched aod resear<:hed and have )'et to find 1ny llkellne.11 <A mJU· blncy In Jolln Blrch pamphlets or else· """"'· I am proud ol my herllqe and will match It wilh ony one In th!a nation. Maytio I -Id be a Bircher. 1. II:. AU:ltA!rol!:ll Dear Gloomy Gus: Orange CouDty Animal Con- trol should be renamed "Orange County Animal GestaPo." -K 0. Tlllt .. ..,,,.. Nl'llt.. __. vi.. ... _,1 ... rllY tfMtN •I ttt. ""-9Hf'. SIM '"r "' -It •IMlllY ..._ O.llJ ,.llM. FlllB Probe • Won't Dodge McNamara The FlllB, navy ver1ion of the controversial TFX warplane, is gone from Pentagon defense plans but not forgotten by Its congressional critics. The , senate l nve stigation 1 subcommittee has begun an inquiry to determine just how much money was 1peat in the W·fated attempt to build a common fighter for the navy and air force . The 1ubcommlttee, headed by Sen. John L. McClellan, D-Ark., began investigating the TFX procurement contract 1s early as 1983:. McClellan has been a 1harp critic of the navy version of the plane, arguing that prototypes failed to meet aircraft carrier require.menu. THE PENTAGON finally scrubbed the FlllB last week after the House Armed Service1 committet: followed tho lead ol the Senato and denied authorl.z.aUon for further work. The withholding action had been recommended by McClellan 's subcommittee. The subcommittee staff was already at work preparing for the wind-up heraing! on tht: FlllB. According to subcommittee 1ources, the heerJngs will center on the points : -Row mucll money was w a s t e d in tryin1 to give reality to the dream •of former De:fense Secretary Robert S. McNamara -1 fl1hter pl:tne which could be standard for the Air Force and the Navy! -Who wa1 rt1p••1fble for pressing the FltlB concept, over the strong opposition of military experts? It will be a real surprise if McNamara, now head of the World Bank, is not the subcommittee's major target.. He contended that the plane, serving both services, would save many mlllion1 of dollar1. Troubles ol. the FlllA, tbe air fOt"te version of the plane, will also figure in the McClellan subcommittee's inquiry. Members want to find out whether the alr force plane Is worth the money wlUch has been spent to develop il EIGllT or Tift, FUIA lighters have crashed, including a couple of planes from a unit deployed for 1ervlce ln the Vietnam war. The FlilB wu envisioned 11 a major protection for neet units. It was to mount the newl,y-developed Phoenix •lr·to·alr mlasllt wblcb Is d•slgned .. protect. a11inst other alrcraft ·aDCf cruJse-type tnJsslle1. Robert Allftl _. hb_GGM ... When I was 15 years old, 1 began working as a copyboy on .a newspaper. &oing to school days while working nights. I didn't have to; I jWit wanted to. But 1uppose that I had to -and suppos~. further, that I knew I could never rise above the copy boy level. What incentive would I have had to work hard and well. to take on extra assignments, to study my craft diligently, to prepare myself for eventual promotion? In a dead-end job, I would eoon get to have a deQd end. I DON'T TIDNK enough pe<iple understand this about Negro workers · -in the past. and sWI to a large extent today. White people tend to evaluate Negro workers by white standards and expectations, not by the more realistic appraisal Negroes make of their own chances. Work must have a goal beyond mere subsistence ir it is t,o give the worker any esprit or interest in the job beyond the mere paycheck. The job must promise promotion, or must be esst:ntially interesting, or at the least pay enough so that the worker can anticipate a higher standard of living, for his children if not for himself. MOST JOBS available bJ Negroes in this country, in this century, have been deficient in all three elements. They have been dull and meaningless labor, offering no chance for advancement, aod paying so little that . only day,l.osday sathfactiont ~uld be fuUilled . The "sense of the future,'' which keeps most white people •.~11 baa not operated, or only dimly, among the mass of Negro workers. The whites' complaints about the Negroes' indolence and 'indifference to showing up on time (or at all) ignores the psychological gap between white and black "time sense ." Whites live more for the future, because they have a future; blacks for the present, since the future looks loo bleak to contemplate. AS ELLIOT UEJ;SOW puts it in his recent 'study of NegrO street corner men, "the job fails the man, and then the man fails the job." If only dull, dirty and dead.-end jobs are available to l:llacks, they lose whatever self~ esteem they might have had, and would just as soon loaf or take relief as work -especiaUY when ·most of the jobs open to them don 't even allow them to support a family in a manly, self-respecting, and decent fashion. Asking them to "shape up" is as fatuous and cruel as asking a man to do the broad jump after we have broken both his legs. This should be a tr ul1m, acknowledged by tile white community -particularly in a society such at ours, where "incentive" is the key word in our scramble for materlll advancement Why the Negro, being a victim rather than a beneficiary of our Incentive aystem , ii yet expected to beht.n the way we do, is a. symptom of our own sickness more than ol b.il. The Spoil,er for Nixon Tht moot ~ Gallup p.. hll giW!l Nets.o A. Rodt-• pllilol answer to hls dwnand tor a DlltiOft.. wide sempllng of -.., ... stt>onfMt Republican presidential nominee. Rockefeller apPean to be straoeer than Richard M. Nixon by an insecure margin, but the poll results indicett hia nomination would dlurn up lfJ many curren•s and croM-currentl that the outcome of the election would be utterly unpredict.able ar.i with a Sood chance of ending up in tbe House " Representa.Uves. Some ol the reported rewltas an do}'(tiright weird. This mudl Is understandab~. Nixon is stronger than Rockefeller among Republicans by a factor of 50 per cent. Btrr NOW LISTEN. Roc;ltofeller's nomination would send aboi.it 20 per cent Of Nixon'• support 1kittering.to Hubert H. Humphrey and George A. Wallace. WaDlce W(IU}d be the big gaine.r. He would cut d o w rt Humphrey'• vot,e alto. He would skyrocket into a poisltlon ol sweeping the SouUi with • plurality of S9 per cent, and gain 7 per cent nationwide over his pro1pecttve ICOrt if Nixoa were the candjdate. Welliece is thus more a spoiler tban was ru1pected. He tp0ll.s It for Nixon, for Rockefe:ller and for Humphrey. He tells Re:publicans that whomever they nominate they prob1bly cannot win a ~ty of electora1 votes. He ttlls the ·Democrati he will take the South totally away from them and prevent Utt election Of tilt DeinocratJ.c candldala, Btrr THE GALLUP POLL also lllilCly "'Pl'll"' ,onot1ter argument tor .. -of Nixao,....,, tbouP it 8how5 RockefeHer to be a sU'oopr cllldidate. The argument runs lite th 11 : 1f Wallace's vote is to sk)T~ .with · Rock~eller as thf: Republicaa nominee, Wallace Ihay very well wJ.a enough electoral votes to deny I majority to either the Republican ,or Democratic candid.ate. In that 'cile the election goes into the HOU91 of Represen<alivos, one vote per state and witti a majority re-quired . All margins in tht Gallup poJ.1, except Wallace's gains, are so nei-rOw as to be inconclusive and so nexihle fi1 to frighten oU hasty conclusions of th• strongest Republican candJdate. Bit& th.ere i.5 no doubt about Wallace. Wfdl Rockefeller as the R e· p u b 1 i.c a I oandidate Wallace zooms. ---itiili-·· Tuesday, July 16, 1968 .. Th• editorial poge of tbt Dailr Pilot 1tek$ io Inform and rt:fm.. ulat« Ttoderi br preufteing t~ M10rpope:r'1 opi71.iom and ~ • """"''11 on topics of lnl<- ond 1ignificanc1, b~ providing a forum /OT Ult lXJ>f'trifbft of our read.trs' opinion.i, and' &v preamtfng thf divrrst view. Points of infonned olJ1Sroer1 and spokt.tmen on topici of tM da~. • Robert N. Weed. Pu~llsllor • • . --~--~~~ ----=.....:.,~~~-------------------